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How tai aes alia eite aaa ie tis mE ‘Love Letters’’ They Are the Keys to A Lover’s Heart— | Unlocking It'to Let ~ Your Love In or Locking the Love Out By Betty Vincent. Copyright, 1022 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. HIS ts the time of year when Jack goes away to collegs and love letters fly thick and fast. It is the time of year when lovers who met upon a@ummeér vacations are exchanging missives of love and plans for future days. The postman's ring sets one’s heart a-beating and often the @ffice mail contains a dainty lavender or plik envelope delicately scented with violet or old rose, LOVE LETTERS ! ‘They are the key to his and to her Many things may be written which Gre dificult to say. Love may be ex- Pressed with thought and deep sin- @erity. Phrases and expressions may ‘be jotted down which will be dear and Sweet long years hence. Long years hence! That is just the point. Are You writing your young man or your Young woman the type of letter which may be put away and kept? Are you writing love letters to be proud of? Letters which breathe forth a love so Pure. and so divine that these heart mussives may be read to your children or shown upon your silver wedding day? * Don't make your love letters cheap. Don't put in words of love or feeling which will not ‘read well in years to * A love letter should grow more autiful as time goes on. It should be so sweet and tender that when a wife steals off by herself to reread it @ome day a mist will come to her eyes and she will look back to those court- whip days with reverence and devo- tion, Letters which are full of maudlin itiment, which breathe forth silly titles of “‘babykins’’ and “honey- Bunch” and read like missives of heroines in dime novels and breach of Promise cases are not thg true court- ship letters. They are not the sin- @ere, heartfelt letters of the young man and the young women who in- fend to marry and glorify their love. By this I do not mean that you must refrain from love terms or ex- Dressions of endearment. Every young ‘woman and young man desires a true Tove letter, but let your terms of en- dearment be sincere and true. Let them ring true and be the words and expressions of a real red blooded young man and a sincere, deep feeling girl, It is always best to write a letter hich breathes of something besides Just love. A love letter which relates entirely to ‘‘our love’ and “our view @f life’ becomes eyotistical und even @ bit tiresome.. Put human interest and life into your letter. If you hear @ good joke writd it out for him or her, If you meet with a humorous ident or the professor drags his it in the mud, write about it. Every young man and woman has a keen @ense of bumor and the ridiculous. They love life and all that relates to Ufe. Do not leave this of their Baturo undeveloped as far as you ato eoncerned. The business man, the travelling salesman, the boy at college all like letters from their sweethearts which tell of something else besides ‘How much I miss you’ and “Oh, how happy I shall be when we are to- ‘The Bvents World will Address ‘Kitchenette Kink “Editor, Kitchenette $1.00 each Evening World, 63 gether again. A letter which relates to love only becomes maudlin. But a letter which is full of human inter- est with several precious inserts of love or the sentimental js refreshing and wholesome, It can be read and reread just for those ‘Special smat- terin, of heartfelt love. Put a halo about that love letter you write to him or her. Make it in- teresting, sincere, real. Write it in your best, legible hand and put your finest, deepest thoughts into it, Make it @ love letter to be proud of, a let- ter which may be shown in later years, a letter which represents your sentiments in thelr highest form, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, to Write Your Maxims °* Modern Maid By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Copyriaht, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co, In the drama of matrimony every man invariably forgets the lines with which he made his greatest hit during the rehearsal of courtship. T devolves upon Don Juan first to convince every ‘‘misunderstood” wife that he sees many things about her to which her husband is blind, before he can hope to share the husband's angle of vision. That Frenchman who noted that wholly displeasing alking!"* “Dear” or ‘Hone: Then, when you're “Dick.” Note to young the misfortunes of others were never to us probably had overheard some woman tel.ing her friend, in tones of unctuous commiser- tion, that she “REALLY ought to know how people are ives: Always call your husband instead of Tom, Dick or Harry. divorced and married to Harry, you'll never) make the slip of addressing him as "Tom" or ‘The Prohibitionigts may lead us all to water, but it's the bootleggers and home-brewers who make us drink. Une reason why men have always sald that women have no sense of humor is because, unti! the last few y years, it hasn't been permissible for a man to tell a woman anything really funny. , It must be so nice to be a man. When some woman a the new tariff, he can just look at her kindly and say, couldn't possibly make you understand!"” him to explain ‘im ‘sorry, but I No wonder a clever woman is a better Mar than a man—she's had so much practice in making her husband’: excuses! ‘When a vamp can make the middle-aged feel young and the young feel mature, she gets 'em going—and How to Make Your Old Suit Into the Latest Style Y omall amount to change it. rt has become pass#@ For you ean style another season, using the same suit and only spending a It only requires a camisole lining and one DROP SKIRT ON A CAMISOLE LINING suit with the long It be in and a quarter yardé of paisley silk for the waist—and the diagrams will show how the magic change is made. When New York Was Young Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Preas Publishing Co. AUNT MARGARET'S OTELS, apartments and even bungalows thrive—but for some reason or other the boarding- house has always had a struggle for existence. Annals of history show it was ever thus. In the early dds of New York the King tor from readers. ‘ark Kow, New York City. Copyright, 1923 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. KEEP FLOUR SIFTER HANDY. HAVE found it has saved me many trips to the flour barrel by always having on the stone shelf a can vwith a sifter top, filled with flour, ype with the top that can be closed keep out dust. This 1] use in mak- ing gravy and sauces, also in frying Potatoes and meat, Just a dash, and it makes them brown s0 nicely. 8. E. M. NO MORE ONION TEARS, To keep eyes from watering when peeling onlons—let the water run in fhe kitchen sink close to where you working. You can also wet the fe occasionally and this will take ee smarting from the eyes, K. W. SINK MAKES WASHTUB. In most kitchenettes there is only @no washtub, but if you go to the 10- oant store and get a daisy s'nk stop- Per you can make the sink do the Bame as » tub, 9i60 using sink stopper when washing dishes. Then there is @ ewthes arior that work? with a pulley the full length and width of your little kitchen, with open slats you put your wash on and pull it up we the celling and it is out of the way f|nd you can-go on with your other ‘work, A NOVEL SPICE JARS. F have just a kitchenette apartment ‘and therefore anything that I got for {t had to be quite small, I needed a set of jars for spices, etc. ,but all those that I had seen in the stones were too large, and also there were quite a few that I would never use. I took the smallest and next to the smallest size of Mayonnaise jurs, washed them out thoroughly, and filled them, labelling them with or- dinary stickers. If I find that there is a spice that I do net uso often enough to warrant its having a spe- cial jar all that I have to do is wasb off the label and put another one on for something that I use frequently, A. M. 8 CHEESECLOTH DISH WIPERS, I find that using pleces of cheese- cloth for drying dishes is much bet- ter than linen towels, us they are easier to launder, I take the best cheesecloth and cut in one-yard Bgnures and hem the two ends. E. B. BABY’S BOTTLE SHELF. For the mother that has a baby that takes & nursing bottte, a good {dea is to put up a small shelf over the sink. Put bottles, borle acia and cup for nipples on this shelf. Under the shelf put small hooks, on wich hang the bottle brush and the funnel. Theo you never have to hunt all over when it is time for baby's feeding. J. W. FOUND PLACE FOR MEAT- GRINDER. My kitchenette has neither table nor chair, window ledge nor shelf avail- able to fasten the meat-grinder on to. The furniture in the reat of the apart- ment offers no ledge I am willing to mar by the clamp. Finally, I found that the washboard legs will slip under the sink faucets and then the board extends far enough beyond the bowl to provide @ good firm ledge for the grinder, GD. BOARDING ‘HOUSE. boarding-house was especially frowned on, The dame who abandoned her home to “board? was looked upon as an idle, shiftless creature and accord- ingly dutifully snubbed. Yet here and there records show “there was al- ways to be found a fair sprinkling of human kind to enliven the boardifig- house paflor There however to the was one noted exception, unpopular boarding That, be it known, was ‘Aunt Margaret's Boarding House'’ of $1 Broadway, which was patro largely by ladies, due to its reput tion of being “eminently respectable Pictures of Aunt Margaret herself offer no special inducement to pros- pective boarders. In her plain frock, @ sort of cross between an old-time Mother Hubbard and a present-day bungalow apron, her scrimpy cap which sheltered @ hank of hair lumped on the back of her neck and her eagle eye, she bears out the boast of one of + bourders who has recorded that “no detective could surpass her px Ing qualities."’ Be that as it may, there must have been a warn heart somewhere under the cold bungalow apron, becaus house was much in favor and cepted by strangers of note, foreign and native. Many visitors are said to have preferred Aunt Margare:'s to the fashionable hotels of the das whose reputations were not aways so eminently respkctable. But asi from the respeotabilits the low had little to offer. The parlors were dimly lighted, and the long dining room wus barren except for cheap long tables, boasting good .ood but served always in cheap crockery and house. 0. ed glass. It was in the dimly-lMehted parlor of No, 61 Broudway, however, that Sinclair, father of M Edy ot. rest, made b debut « boarders at Aunt Margaret's Bourding House with ‘'The Mistletoe Bough" his great song hit. coming. Barbara's Beaux By Caroline Crawford. Copyrsht, 1922 (New York Eventing World) by Press Publishing Co. THE OTHER GIRL. 66] JOW tong have you known H Bruce Wiimington?"" asked Betty Blondeau ae she lighted a cigarette after luncheon. Barbara noticed that several other girls were smoking, but it rather an- noyed her to see a girl puff away at a cigarette in public. She and Betty had been having a pretty hard time to struggle through luncheon together. It is always difficult for the girl who is in love to have to “talk to the other girl? “L never met him until I came to the magazine to sell him some pic- tures,” she said in reply to the ques- tion Miss Blondeau asked. “Oh, I rather fancied he'd known you a long time by the way he treated you," smiled the young woman between pufts of her cigarette. “He's been just crazy about me for three years, but I only bat an eye- jash at him occasionally. I let him take me to lunch several times a week because it saves money, but he's only one of my gentlemen friends."* Barbara winced. How could any girl speak so lightly of Brace Wilming- ton? “The only way to get a man crazy about you is tu keep him guessing,” continued Betty: Blondeau, ‘That's my method and I never knew it to fall. TI flit from one to anotherand none of them really knows whether I care for them or not.’ “I don't suppose you know your? self,’ flashed Barbara. “{ don't. And what's more I don’t want to know. It's more fun to keep myself guessing In a way. On Mon- day I think I'm in love with Bruce, Tuesday I find myself in love with an architect and by Wednesday I'm in love with Bruce again. It's lots of fun.’" The two girls were walking baci to the office again and as they walked Barbara thought. Here was just the chance she had been waiting for. Her model, Marion Middleton, was en- amored with Jim Brady, a married college student. Why not introduce him to Betty and start a wild flirta- tion? That seemed the only way to save Marion from a blind and hopeless infatuation “Do you know any of the Columbia students?" she asked Betty. Betty shook her head mournfully. “No, I've never had the goud fortune to meet college chaps," she replied rather gloomily. d give the world to know a regular college rah, rah boy.”” “I can fix it for you," eagerly volunteered Barbara warming up @ bit. “I have a studio right up in the Columbia Heights section and I know one of the most dashing students in the college. I'll haye him up and invite a number of other young people and we'll have a great evening. This chap is a beau of my model's, but a hittle thing iike that wouldn't wor ou." Say, I guess you have my num- ber,” beamed Betty, ‘‘Really, I'd be ashamed to admit the number of en- gaged couples I've come between, But what's a girl golng to d» when she's young and full of pep’?"" All is fair in and grinned Barbara us she saw her own dear Marion weeping at her knee at the loss of Jim Brady. She would in- troduce Marin to Dan Dover, even to Bruce Wilmington if she could tn any way get her thoughts from Jim. Bar- bara also desired Bruce Wilmington to see Betty Blondeau as she laid her cap for the dashing young college student. If he saw how flirtatious t was would he continue r such marked attention? “Let's set the date for to-morr evening," she said aloud “I'm ready," smileé Betty (To-Morrow—An Exciting Evening.) \ w to 1922, ‘ . Can You Beat It! ‘Trade Mark Reg. U. B. Pat, Off. By Roy L. The Jarr Family McCardell. Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by; Press Pubilahing Co. RS. JARR had not arisen from her seat near the front window to greet her spouse when he had turned the key in the lock and en- tered. Neither did she answer him when he cheerfully asked her how she was, but gazed down the dark street with saddened visage. “I suppose you care a great deal how I feel,” she remarked finally in a doleful tone, “Sure, I do!" was the cheery re- joinder. “But tell me,'’ he went on, “what are we going to have for supper? 1 don’t care what It ts, I'm terribly hungry.” “If all you think of your home is the meals you get tn tt you'd better gO out and pay your attentions to Gertrude.” “Anybody worrying you? Anything worrying you?" Mr. Jarr anked at this. “Yes, everybody's worrying me: everything is worrying me," sald Mra Jarr, and « tear rolled down her cheek. ‘What's the use of any- thing?" she added. “Why, everything is all eried Edward Jarr, optimist. have a nice home, nice children, Our health is good, we are no deeper in debt than we generally are. I've have & g00d fob, you've got a new dress aud @ new hat. Mrs. I think we're lucky.’ 50, @vi- 9 8 fatlod to rise at pleasant pictu tlie present . Jarr deseribed, Whereupon he presaged the future glowingly, Jarr did for her splr “And Tm guing to get @ raise of ealary, I feel sure!'’ He didn’t feel sure, but he thought the Statement ould cheer her, “And don't forget that Uncle Henry has lots of money and when he dies he'll surely leave it, to us. Then we'll send Willie to, col-. lege and we'l] go to the Orient and stay a year and I'll get you the finest clothes that money can buy and-——" “Don't talk foolish!” Mrs. Jarr in- terrupted. ‘When you see I'm not feeling well, why do you come and make fun of me? We'll never be bet- ter off than we are now. Things are only going from bad to worse——" “We're better off than a lot of other people are,” replied Mr. Jarr. “The boss is worried about his health and his business and his wife's extrava~ gance, and the way she flirts with Kkies worries him greatly.” Mrs. Jarr sat up and took notice. “And the Stryver: continued Mr. Jarr, “Stryver ts being sued for stock swindling and It's liable to get in the papers and ruin him, and he may go to jail. And Rangle has been sick a week and his office docked his pay, and Mra. Diggory, wife of the bosa’s silent partner, has left her hua- band and tg suing him for divorce and has attached his money in bank and his property and money due him from our firm and everything.” “IL always said that man Doggery a sald it!” ex ¢ Jarr, brightening up. “I'm glad she found him out!” “And Mrs. Hickett was down to see me to-day,” Mr, Jarr went on, “She wants to get a ¥ little prop- erty, but it's yily mort- gaged. ‘That worthless son of hers is arrested for passing bad checks again, There, you see, other people fre a lot worse off t are “Yes,” said Mrs. Jarr cheerfully, “it isn't such a bad old world after ali!" " osh Has York advanco showings in MOD shoes in the New’ York shops Is a waterproof boot that will probably take the place of the ga- loshes, It resembles the Russian boot in style, It is made of the same waterproof fabri¢ as the “#aloeh” and has a broad cuff of black or eray trakhan cloth turned up for additional pr Snap concenled by the astriakhan cuff makes It possible to open the boot to slip it over a pump or oxford. The boot ts lined with wool fleece and !s a A sing! ning World) by Press Pub a New Successor hing © great improvement both in appearance and comfort on the formerly popular nt, (New York trent By Press Pu © Wortay Co. NO ULL WRITE IT. SOHERODY, MICHHT HEAR WE ARE TH ONES THE OUR FLATS ARE So THIN. | COULD, READ WHAT HE idea came from a smart little girl in a fashionable millinery salon. She had dangles bob- bing from her ears that created @ great envy in the hearts of the girls who saw her, They were amber with the most lovely old gold settings, and they bobbed way down to her shoul- de ine. “Where did you get the earrings?” she was asked. “Oh,"s she whispered, ‘‘they were discarded from the trimming of a dress and I just thought I'd try to make them into earrings. I took a small palr of tweezers and cheap pair rrings and then, with smal! wire, I fastened on these dangles She had achieved the prettiest sort of a decoration for herself and she had every reason to be proud of therm, for they looked like sometiting old and Oriental which might have been handed down as a precious he!risom, And she had done them, every bit, herself. You can do the same, and with new standard. By Doris Doscher Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Prese Publishing Co. EAR MISS DOSCHER: Will you please tell me what I can do to keep my face from swelling at night? If you sleep with a light in your eyes, dose that have a tendency to make the eyes swell? For what, especially, was the egg and lemon massage for the face good? F. he That your tace swelle at night is probably due to the fact that you have poor ventilation in your bed- room. Yow tnust never retire at night until you have opened the window from the top and bottom as far as \t will go. If this makes you feel chilly, apply more covers, but you cannot do without this air at night without fil effects. Having a light. Ut in the room in which you sleep is very bad for your eyes, as ey need the dark ness complete rest. The egg ant iemon application forms a face in and aids in whitening the skin Dear Miss Doscher: Please tell me what you mean \ \ THEWALLS BETWEEN The Sewing Basket Make Your Own Earrings | Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. | By Maurice Ketten a RIGHT YOu ARE | THESE WALLS ARE VERY THIN a ONLY ILLS other sorts of tassels and things, if” | You just keep your eyes ope:) Se you © ubout the shops and stop to pur- ase a little something which, per- | haps, was never destined for a ear- > \ ring, but can, in all probability, set a by the leg swinging exercise for reducins the hips and legs. Will the prepar: ns for removing su- perfluous hair injure the face? _THANK YOU. Send self-addressed envelope for directions for leg swinging exerctse. It all depends upon what preparation you refer to. It Is always best to try any preparation on the skin of the arm first aa it ta less sensitive and you can better Judge the results,