The evening world. Newspaper, July 14, 1922, Page 17

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SALLY’S SUMMER —By Caroline Crawford. Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World), by Preas Publishing Company. Does a Girl Ever Marry Her Summer Beau? Sally Peters, a New York girl, 1s spending ner summer vacation In the country. On the train whe met Richard Bonnington, tn whom she took great ifterest and who ha: Promised to visit the place where she | staying. Her adventures are just commenc- ing—this 1s the fifth installment of tho story, Begin it to-day. INTRODUCTIONS, ALLY rowed about with the con- genial twins until supper time, then the girls came ashore ‘and walking up to Sally's boarding place promised to call for her in time to take her to the dance. “The young men don't always bother to call for us,"’ they told Sally “We girls go to a dance in bunches, then we pair off and the young men | BEGAN CAREER AS BRAKEMAN, NOW R. R. PRESIDENT! Stanton Ennes, Newly Elected Head of the Wheeling and Lake Erie R. R., Says He Just “Started at the Bottom” and “Worked Hard All the Way Up.” By hardest problems of my thirty-eight -Gallitzin; or the Baltimore and Ohto years of railroad work. The B, & O. and learned the number by Patterson not only was one of the largest car- Creek, you would get a score that af- riers of troops and munitions, but fects the supply of bread in Europe was one of the hardest, if not the and heat in New England. hardest, hit by the influenza epidemic, ‘That sort of thing 1s more inter- which, as you will remember, came esting to us than Ruth’s hitting {s to at a most critical time when men the fans.’ Playing a fascinating game, think. ing of human welfare and comfort as he gets the statistics—that 1s Stanton Ennes. He has not been a trumpet blower for Stanton Ennes, but on the con- trary has relied absolutely upon his integrity of performance to be found out and to carry him forward and up. And though it has been a personal policy that has pald out big, the for- Missourl Pacifie brakeman pro- Donald C. Dougherty. rovriens, 1922 (New York Bvening World), by Press Publishing Company. O hear Stanton Ennes tell it, al, there is no particular signifi- cance to be attached to the statement that the newly elected President of the Wheeling and Lake Eria Railroad thirty-eight years ago was brakeman throwing switches out on the Missouri Pacific Railroad. a that is because it is Mr. Ennes o is the new President of the Wheeling and Lake Erie. The fact that you can name In a breath all the railroad “‘brakies’’ who have wound up their careers as rail road Presidents does not seem to stir Mr. Ennes at all—and that is because were so difficult to replace because mer he is just a genuinely modest man. that there is nothing ubout it He says: ‘‘I'm no novelty. Ali the 1 worth telling to the public. take us home."* railroad Presidets got to the top by “Why,” he asks, ‘don't you just 41 the supper table Sally was fright starting somewhere at the bottom—in let me alone until) 1 have had a py, diakppotited with’ -thev-iniéaw: ® roundhouse or a division office or as chance to make good on this new e expected a séa food dinner and ap lee or something delicate for a telegrapher—and by working hard job hud all the way up. And neither !s the additional fact if dessert. Instead she was served with that Stanton Ennes's pat was he I (6) K YOUR canned vegetables, @ lamb stew and railréader before lim, engaged in the 4 hee Ravan construction end of the railroad busi- ive pudding. ‘There were no hand ness, & matter worth recording on BEST some young mem at the table. In print paper, in the estimation of Mr = fact, there were no young men at all, Ennes. y Doris Doscher—~/ and a cro eved, gray-haired woman canes didn't urge his son The elder Enon: n't urg tee ae to go into railroading nor did he help the crowd ente;tained Dear Miss Doscher: the lad get hia first fob. Young Stan ILL. you kindly tell me -t#blespoon in all ‘sorts of fantastic ton got part way through high schoo \X/ ! 1 de 4 ways and still balancing it on the en he was sixteon, picked up tele We Gen ee Cry aa: bis OOM phy with the Western Union hair? It is long, but for is ; worked #8 am operator for severa the past year has become very Thank heavens I met those cute years and then took luis first breke- of enlistments and munitions making. thin, especially the ends, Will twins,” thought Sally, “and if it : A y man’s dob with the of ob Sod at Net wants ae hty-eight deaths pero or aule vaseline oor hadn't been for Ri¢hard Bonnington St. Louis, not particularly because of down at the division germinal of the hair thick? | am alee troy- pecciee anything more pressing than that the Keyger in just a few watMe and had bled with some dandruff. Can “Ud the fact he is coming down to young fellow was just then looking to appeal to the Western lines for you tell me what to use to re- ‘See me every week-end, T believe [ for @ job and caught on to the fact volunteers” move it? Lo EsF. should hop back to the city to-night."’ as M. P. Books a chap like bim : Bee stocky, §ray-haired. kindly What you need {9 a thorough mas- She wound her way up the creaky for $60 a month ‘aced Ennes must have met “the hard- saging of the scalp, commencing from ats : So you cannot put a pink cioud of est problems of his thirty-elght ye P. stairs to her room and began to dress 1 pulde upward ov quently Dlades and working the entire scalp. Fre- airing the hair is also help- ful. Yes, liquid vaseline or olive oil is splendid for encouraging the growth of the hair and will also pi vent the dandruff from forming: tor the dance. As she stood before the mirror and viewed herself in a dell- cate lavender and cerise crepe, back- less and sleeveless, she smiled to her- self. That dress would be all right in the city, but out here in the wilds of ance up behind Mr. Ennes's ve- of railroad work Inning as a railroader if you let him have his way about it It was back in 1884 that Stanton Ennes first put his dinner pail, lan in convincing fash- ion, for when the Government re- turned the railroads to their owners after the war President Danie! Willard of the Baltimore and Ohio invited Mr Ennes to remain at his post as Mana- B' ¥ Round Lake, amidst the cotton and tern and in the caboose of a Mis. ger instead of returning to the West sourt Pacific train. Eighteen years ern Maryland. Mr. Ennes accepted and Dear Miss Doscher: gingham dresses, tt would be the talk passed before his work brought him remained with the B. & ©. until 1921 1am a constant reader of your of theevening. Well, never mind, she was going to give those ladies who mage tatting while they tattled some- thing to talk about When the twine called for her she when he was ele and General Man and Lake Eric until July “1 thi ted Vice President er of the Wheeling Mhat office he held year when he columns, Will'you please let me know how to reduce my arms an they are fat and flabby, 1 alum diluted in cold water any at the age of thirty-eight to his first executive position, that of superin tendent of what {s now called the Jop lin Division of that road. Two years A ceeded William M Dunean as Presi cod and will that harden the threw a scarf over her shgulders and aE Lgl eae lah Lk Fa Bent Ae DUASAN Recomm ine CRALNAR Habby flesh? Also lat me know ran down to the old-fashioned parlor Maryland, an sare Troscie ‘ime lof the Board f Fuller's earth end peroxide to meet them cession, with aac and Be ne = will whiten the akin. D. M. D. The dance was to bs held in a dot. hike ceca, bt inet Pi letein to talk ith Exercises that develop the muscice t2&¢ Which the boys of Round Lake Rired for the seston. One of the sisters acted ae cho: Bs sandwiches and ices wéte pro- vided by means Of seasonal club dues. resented to mary éf the vhes they glatee! an@ noted the ing gowa they ardly and stocd atdut @ ar earand with the Wheel Ohio and ing and Lak e As Mr. Exnet, ase-topped d Creveland, s bare fashicz, ices and 2t- réay and help to “She's a seach. ene of them wild ¢! round reason tinue u: ts are go! ! have ms: ANXIOUS. leave yellow ace an ap- you rinse the in the usual manner. Dear Miss Doscher: tho How did sho get that way?" These and other comments wers beginning to get upon Sally's nerves when Retty Dare suddenly rushed toward her with a vory dapter looking young man dressed in white flannel trousers and a blue ccat. His eyes were beaming and he extended a cordial hand which grasped hers like 2 the same ss 4 ome Presiden ? nd, he took Mr. General Su d Hater he made b jst that road. s along to be t and two ye: Genera! Man: Please tell me something for 4 ong lost brother's. When, in 1918, the Government th , “ . . . e ‘Miss Pet he sad when t ook over the railroads, Arthur most interesting game that {8 play Ce aera ee, ie sre) ecoiaienevc it kalaver warete uive Thompson was appointe Federal he fans gather around the score- ! of a feather. I am up here on busi- manager of the Baltimore and Ohio, hoard on the way home from work * BEONBY; ness, but I heard you were on pleas- the Western Maryland and several to sce whether Rabe Ruth has cracked | YOU must improve the general cir- ure’ Just where the pleasure wild smaller lines, Mr, Thompson trans- out another home run culation of the body to avold excessive come in I have yet to discover, but erred Mr. Ennes, placing him in “But if you called the Texington Perspiration under the rms. Relief joy rejoice that we found each other harge of the Baltimore and Ohio Avenue office of the New York Cen- MY be had, however, by bathing first ang get away from all these star- astern lines with headquarters at and asked them how many loads With an - er daa following with yazers,'* 3altlmore. put through Buffalo; the ‘his powder: ORIERRREE But I like them," persisted Sally. “And that war time experience office ®t the Pennsylva- oxide of zis ; araniten ran away from the city just to . Ennes, “was full of the nia and asked how many loads over Wheat starch A 50 grammes with real country people," nee “You like to shock them,” laughed “> Billy Croton. Then, without usking ° rs . 7 her whether she wished to dance, he / College Girls Will Study N. Y. Social Work | sates ae ee, _) her onto the floor as an old-fashione waltz, fishermen, struck up. ‘Let's fox trot it and show them a played by these bleary-eyed few new fangles,"’ he whispered, and s this gayly dressed city couple swung out every eye was upon them. They danced three dances and then, because there was no place to talk and sit a dance out, young Croton and Sally walked down toward the lake. To-morrow—Moonlight and a row- boat, BIBLE QUESTIONS And Answers a ) QUESTIONS, Who was Saul's Father? In what land they live? 3. Who watched the basket in the bulrushes wherein Moses lay? 4. How many sons had Naomi and Elimelech? 5 What were th names? 6. Who was David's Father? ANSWERS. Kish was Saul's father. Saul and his father lived in the land of Benjamin. 3, Miriam, the sister of Moses, watched the basket while he lay in the bulrushes, ft; 2. 1 Left to right—Margaret Hoogs, (Wellesley); Mary Lloyd, (Wells); Alice Decker, (Smith); Mildred 4. Naomi and Elimelech had two Taylor, (Vassar); Margaret Byrd, (Swarthmere): Jennie Cravens, (Mt. Holyoke); Dorothy Baker, (Rad- sons. liffe); Mildred Seeley, (Connecticut, College); and Grace Carson (Bryn Mawr), who represent their college Their names were Mahlon and t ‘Junior Month," conducted by the New York Charity Organization Society to give undergraduates a con hilion @eption ef modern social work, They will spend a month studying social cdnditions in New Yorks David father was Jesse, FRIDAY, JULY 14, 1922, Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening O many extra hours for exercise! So many moments for sports In the late afternoons! Are you one of the tennis enthusiasts? And what clothes are you wearing to make yourself comfortable while about your favorite sport? Now this is the big idea: How to look spick and span while at the same time you are putting every ounce of your energy into the fol- lowing of an exciting game. It. isn't 80 easy a matter to get/all hot and sticky and to finish your match look- ing as fresh as a daisy. Indeed, that is a feat supposed to be monopolized by the few endowed by Heaven with that enviable gift of always looking as though they had just stepped from a bandbox. But aster all, it amounts to @ certain supply of good sense ex- hibited at the Ume you are planning your summer clothes There are certain frocks which look good all the way through a gam: of teinis and after it is over for sev eral more hours. But there are cor tain others which are destined to wilt away, in the Course of a heated game, until they eventually become mere shadows of their former selves and leave their wearer looking as though she had gone through about thing ‘imaginable to attaining winning ef the game Well, Lenglen established a new stylé when she was in this country, and this year more than one tennis girl is following her good example. She wore a one-piece dress of white China silk made extra full in the skirt and with a free and easy cut to the waist. It was the coolest and nicest, not to say the most becoming thing that she could have thought out. And this year, with the more- than-usua) vogue for white, it finds an especial place of notice in the hearts of all the younger girls who have their notions set upon the gamo of tennis as their own peculiar ex- pression of sports and the way they are done Then, with « head-dress of white ribbon Bound tightly around straying locks and tied in a I:not di- rectly in back, you have somet! which not only Idols eco! but ts c: and which lasts through the ravages of the game with the mést astonish: ig whl to look charming until ll festivities dre over. fome of the girls are Wk thay ary tennis costume. Of course, ys the white skirt to asd, wh you of wi made 6 every the any you will always want to have a white ekir some sort to go with it. Ta the futume, the weartag white linen cerise eweater, Sho creates a spot upon the landscape which stands out by itself and succecds being most colorful. Now she could wear khaki knickers, which, after all, are so easy to obtain and which, with one of the rainbow striped sweaters make the sportiest sort of a get-up. Or sho ts could even, if it were a coolish day, wear the knickers from her homespun suit with a sweater or with merely a tailored sills blouse to carry out the ess jackets are mucn liked by the girls who are playing ten- nis regularly, They are becoming enough to make @ tennis costume beautiful, and then they can be 80 casily removed when the game grows sufficiently warm and exciting to war- rant the removing and putting aside f all extra clothing, here is an especially smart one of this type. It is.smade of jade green flannel and is bound with white braid. Then it is worn with a white flannel skirt, and all is well! Now, as for a hat! Well, when it comes to the actual game, a hat Is the last requisite necessary, But to and from it is almost always n necessity. rhe hat that turns up all the way round and drags down picturesquely out the ears (as thé one worn with sleeveless jacket), is chosen by ———— To-day’s Anniversary MOST interesting incident took place on July 14, 1776, in which George Washington and Lord Howe were the principal actors. It seems that Lord Howe had occasion to write Washington a letter, and he addressed it, “George Wash- ington, Esq.” The latter refused to accept the letter addressed in this manner and returned it un- opened. Then Lord Howe tried this time addre the again, ng letter to “George Washington, etc., ete, etc.” He was again rebuffed. Finally he decided that if he wanted Washington to read what he had to say he might as yell address his letter properly And he did SE een oe What the Girl Who Plays Tennis Should The Ideal Costume Is One Which Will Look Spick and Span After the Most Strenuous Set and Yet Give a Maximum of Comfort By Margery Wells World) by Press Publishing Company. most tennis girls. It is a satisfactory adjunct to the costume chosen, what- and whether the hat is Mmadé of leghorn or silk or felt, it is bound to serve its purpose through all sorts of weather and all kinds of games. The tennis auit shown at the right gives every freedom for action. It has knickers and a thin sweater for this season of the year, The sleeveless jacket below has a place of its own in the wardrobe of the tennis girl. Nisa henna ee and chucké priceless canrat eteel-embroidered safe. Lithogta>* of Barnum & Bailey trapeze troup: yt PL Ee SIE OOS ee hung on wall to fll yawnt: That makes Pop an ert co! Me benefactor merowned prince and t tell Bow far they Mough cotillion Ber ed at wearing dinest ng it in close! Aarne! undies $ and mink wrar: by wealthy, & ces are they're tossed into bur slar-proof stérage with muskrat an ins batting as substitutes. Ye can’t beat the rich! ane ty cee Paste Jewels Our Best Families Now Wear ’'Em Same as the Lower Crust By Neal R. O’Hara Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company NAPPY caper of the idie wealthy is toting paste jewels to social Don’t Spoil Your Child’s Hair by Washing It When you wash your child's hair, be careful what you use. Most sonps and prepared shampoos contain too muck Notion is limitless in its scope. If alkali, which is very injurious, as it dries clite hides real trinkets and rings the scalp and makes the hair britth The best thing to use is Mulsified soirees and leaving the real in paste, why not lock up wine cel- cocoanut oil shampoo, fat this is pure goods back home in the safe. That lar and serve mucilage for cock- and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap is tough on parlor Raffles, but pret- ty soft for the safe crackers. In case of loss, any social czarina can r tails? Let swell-dressed scions file away tailored suits and fascinate debutantes with blue over- young and beats anything else all to pieces. 2 Simply put two or three teasponnfuls of Mulsified in a cup or glass with a little warm water, then moisten the hair with cover 30 cents’ worth of glass alls, Sounds awful silly, but what's water and rub it in. It makes an abund- Sates WN eRIR EHS, (RL elats dim? ance of fiche sreainy Tether cleanses 2 na 2 thoroughly, and rinses out easily. The than $3.50. Proving for first time in hair dries quickly and evenly, and is world history that It doesn't pay to When kiddie is born with gold soft, fresh looking» bright, fluffy, wavy advertise. To-day indulgent husband hops up Fifth Avenue on afternoon precedin poon in mouth, doctor's first job is and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens to drop it in vault and substitute tin and takes out every particle of dust, dirt orn betwe naby's itp: Sry _ and dandruff. You can get Mulsified at horn between baby's Ups, "WOR Upe cag drug store, and a few onnces will leat wife's birthday, Buys $60,000 laval- percrust swain goes and gets en- gyoryone in the family for months, Be liere at Tuppenny'’s. Then walks “aged, he gives sweetie a pawn sure your druggist gives you Mulsified, three blocks north to Wellworth's ticket for three-karat solitaire and . five-and-ten-cent joint and grav3 Slips neat brass knuckle on her lett mate to necklace at glass beal hand's third finger. Papa buys counter, Rembrandt for family art galler Wifey throws spasm of blis her trophy, kisses hubby on both pink ears and gives hefty jools to head butler to throw in family vauit AA : Trots out to social tournament that Individuality evening with dime’s worth of plat si - sound. ek Shima Eatir in matters of dress lineup visiting fair sex turns isti i green at beholding gift. Five dozen distinguish people of other hubbies square themselvé good taste from the mass. Summerclothes keep, their fresh, new look when laundered with Fluffy Ruffles Stareh next morning by buying up $40,000, 100 worth of jewels to offset sp ing string of gems that were mad to retail at 10 cents straight rk ‘That is Four Hundred’s formula. Grab off choice purchas at high expense and throw it in yeas leading The thin starch « proof vault. Then trot out hollow which goes into the ubstitute that takes onlooker fabric and will not breath away. Idea is catching on stick to the iron. like a fish k Soci re buy? a & hook, Social ace bu Independent Starch Co., Inc. forty-room villa at Newport NeW YORK spends summer ip his Indifference, Europe to show grocer for trial package Cf

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