Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
. Story proving that first love 2 world and other young men + lives, is told in this story. Manton. and ho bobbed hair and wore brown his exes brightened ana a wealth of begining.” i Thou came the next day in the ) They played bail and marbles together and when no other children Wers/Rround Peter would even play DapeF-dolls with her. On rainy day: he Came into her apartment and Jes- sie'e-mother made them cambric tea andigitve them jolly tarts. They were MAZES anivin clos at actiool’ desples the Hifference in their ages and when tha¥eiwere old enough to go to high wehdoh they sciected a co-ed school §ustl {8 be tosether Ofstourse te and Veter had quarrels but they always made them up. Zven thous is sometimes elapsed and Peter spent much time with boys while Jessie took to her girl ghums, they managed to pateh things up in due time and really be better’ friends than ever before. But it was in the graduation year @t high schoo! that Jessie realized howNery dear Peter was to her. And ft wax then that Peter began to watch Jessie and be certain that he beat all other boys to ask lier to the dances and footbsll games, “When did it al! happen? When did.we first fall in love, Jex: ovked Peter onc day as they sauntered ho: from high school together, "I can't Femember anything without your Playing some part in it.’ “Oh, Peter, Tin so affild we will find out it’s only girl and boy loy paid Jessie, ‘Mother often says It only puppy love and we'll both fall in love with other people.” “Do you think you'll find another Peter?"" “Ho, I'm sure of myself tfraid you'll find another Jr I'm sie.’ “When 1 find amvther girl lie you, the world will ste oing around @ every ny." emphatically deciared Peter, t hand and swing i, as they Then let and e it to Je Peter a large amethyst which her grandmother had given her. The pact was sealed. They were lovers to the end of the world , Their t Obsta f HEN Jessie was rendy for » oW hool she always placed a house fern in the window and then Peter, v dining room win- dows faced t window would run downstairs and meet her. It was simply wonderful to be so Near and to have such a splendid method of signals. But it was” just when Peter and Jessie were most in love that Jesse's father and mother decided to pitch their tents in another neighborhood. “What do you think? ome day as they me from high school. “{ think you're the prettiest girl who ever walked this earth,” laughed especial asked Je on their ay Peter. "Now, how often have I told you You must quit making love to until wo are both graduated from Nigh school,” said Jessic. ‘We'll be graduated in June and tn business and then we can honey-bunny each otiier to death, for you'll be nineteen and be eighteen But, Peter, that’s not what I waned to tell you. We're x0- {ng to move!" “Move?” exclaimed Peter in a yotce which could not have been any more surprised if she had sald she was going to the North Pole or to China to do missionary work. Yes, move,” replied Jessic. **Moth- er says we lived in this apartment for yeers and few people live in an apart~ ment house longer than two or three years. Sho says she's tired of this Meighborhood and detests every room in our apartment. ‘The kitchen ts tco small, the bedrooms open into the din- ing-room and we are going and that's all there is to that. Peter, going away rom you! ‘But didn't you tell yo what {t would mean to u: “Silly boy, she only patted my head and sald, ‘Puppy-love, child, you're almost old enough to meet a real man now?" Where are you going?’’ was Pe- ter’s ext question. #kr5 the suburbs." "Ye Gods,” cried Peter, who was actually white now. “Ol, come Peter, it bad," suddenly laug the true optimistic Eve-spirit coming to her rescue. ‘*We'll probably get a motor car, keep chickens, have a d and you can come out and spend ti whble-end with us.” “Yes, mo with my puppy-love!’’ Oh, bot mother kes you.” #¥% ad so docs fath r mother won't be so ed Jessie with all * eoun- “FIRST LOVE” is a modern “Paul and Virginia” in a great city like New York. Jessie Jackson and Peter Manton, childhood sweethearts, who lived in adjoining = apartment houses, played together on the streets, did not realize the depth of their love until their high school day What happened later, whef both entered the business Begin reading it to-day. Love's Beginning. Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company. ISIE JACKSON often wondered just when she first began to love Poter But there were so many times when she “might have fallen im love” that she always gave it up with a sigh and realized taat sho amd Peter were made foreach other and that was all there was to it Bhe remembered the time when she was six years old and moved into the apartment which adjoined the one where Peter lived. ghirts. Peter was looking out of the window watching the moving yan which: brought Jessie and her family next door to him* When he saw Jessie moutn. ‘Then he opened the window and called down: “What's your name?” ‘Bho told him and he sald; “Mine' may be a lasting affair even and women came into their Peter was seven corduroy knickers and sta waite smiles played about his merry little Peter gave Jessic his seal ring and Jessie gave Peter a large methyst her grandmother hai 's Peter Manton," and that was “their given her. The pact was sealed. tered Peter, ‘I met him the other They were lovers to the end of the jorning and he never even said world. od-day’ to me."" “Oh, that's just his way,"* apologized Jessie, “when he's thinking about making money he doesn't bother to speak to anybody.” “Well, one thing's certain,” said Peter quite ignoring Jossie’s desire to make amends for her parent, ‘‘they won't dare take you out of high school just when you are to graduate this simply wouldn't stand it, that's all. Why, Jessie, if they took you out of high school and tried to transfer you to a surburban one 1'd go and see your father at his office and just have it out with him.’ They were standing under an old maple tree in the school yard. Peter the June. bent over and Kisted Jessie for th No, I'll seo you every day, old frst time and it was t t she Peter boy niled Jessie, “Ll just realized how much she loved hi It couldn't stand it if I didn’t.’ wasn't just tho kiss which counted “Stand it?” cried Peter In manly ®0 much, It was his protective at- tones (for he had had his first real titude. barber's shave that morning.) “I To-Morrow—Moving Away-) Maxims of a Modern Maid By Margucrite Mooers Marshall. Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company. When a woman tells a man that she feels so safe with him, he must be a combined Joseph and Moses if he escapes the impulse to show her she’s not so darned safe, after all! ¥ the time a young wife has explained to three different and attract men that her husband doesn't understand her, she begins to believe it hersetf! . A job is ever so much more satisfactory than a man of ways—but when a woman indulges in “a good a job won't pat ier on the shoulder and croon, There, there, little girl!” Sometimes a cat says ‘Miau! miau!" and some- times she says that you're so sensible not to put on long skirts, even though the snort ones do look posi- tively quaint! Who says that a man can’t take a hint? After he's tried to make six separate dutes with a girl and every time she's had a previous engagement, it begins to dawn upon him that perhaps she isn’t enamored of his society. You may send a boy to college, but you cannot make him think! The theory that women say “no” when they mean “yes was first invented and later popularized by al] the men whose yanity and egotism will never take “no” for an answ I's the clever lover who makes a woman ls giving him that she quite forgets his original offens © such a good time for- Don Juan usually decides to reform and live down his reputation when he finds that he can no longer Ive up to it. _ Exercise Chart—No. 6 By Doris Doscher. Evening World's Ph. ure Authority and Lecturer for the New Yor! ard af Education oe Body Bending Exercise 1—Clasp the hands and placo them behind the lower part of the head. Relax all muscles of tho spine. 2—Force the head from side to side while the body is slowly bending as low as possible, meanwhile keeping the knees rigid. Save ‘This Chart and Watch fo: the Seventh One in Next day's Evening World Mon- Copyright, 1922 (The New York Evening World) by Press Pub. Co, 1 AAA AAA D HE above exercise is the sixth of a series belng demonstrated by Miss Doscher in the Washington Irving High School Saturday at P, M, Charts of th excreixes this page of The Evening World the following Monday save them and complete the set. These exercises are elxo b Newark. evrru gymnasium every publish« Clip them ou 7 broadcated 6.15 2, ae ratio from WOR Was Young Copyright, 1922, by the Prese Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World. WINDUST'S CAVE. PLE who live in some of the newer towns out West find New York interesting and picturesque because of the surprises that It holds iu store for the adventurer into nooks and corners in its largo number of garrets ansd cellars. This was true of carly New York just as it Is of New York to-day, the love of tnusual haunts being evidently un inheritance. There used to be an old basement on Park Row, just a few steps south of the old Park Theatre, where any night between the acts or after the show, crowds of notables gathered. Over the Park Row entrance to the cave were inscribed the words “Nunquam non Paratns,"* but those who didn't know much about Latin knew the place as Windust’s Cave, or Ed Windust's Saloon. The cave was a rendesvous for theatrical people, newspaper men artists, musicians, &c., and in {ts later gays came to be visited by people about town who wanted to hear a flow of wit and sce such notables as Cooper, Cooke, Edmund Kean, The Wuallacks, ‘Tyrone Power, Junius Viutus Booth, E Williams, Me: Donald Clarke, the mad poet, Price the manager and other celebrities. There critics met actors whom they had panned, and kissed and made up over the foaming tankards, and man. agers told actors and critics alike the distinctions between art and business. Stalls for six ranged alongside the wall where supper could be had fol- lowed by drinks. On the whitewashed walls were quaint old*pluy-bills, por- traits of actors and the famous sword which Garrick used to commit his his- trionie murders. i Ed Windust's fame spread about town and in a few years he piled up a sum which made him ambitious, Accordingly, in 1836, he opened the Athenueum Hotel, on the corner of Broadway and Leonard, It imposing structure, but the utmo- sphere of the old cellar was entirely lacking. ‘The business did not follow Hd to his spacious quarters and a few years later he returned to his old stand, To Please a Man, “Wear Blue.” I’ you want to please a man wear blue, was un Leonne De Cambrey Hurtzman, the noted psychologist of Wilkins. burg, Pa., says that every man js charmed with the woman who wears f your husband leaves home pet- want, !f you have an early quarrel, you should be ¢ ress that evening,” warns Mr. nan. “You should never wear brillant red nor hard purple, but a soft, warm blue, with a bit of gold about It somewhere, will go a long way toward putting him in good humor again. Colors have a powerful effect on masculine temperaments." Colors have a symbolic meaning, apd tests made by Justrow in the United States and Wissler in Europe show that blue welds the strongest attraction upon men and red upon women, making blue a feminine color and red a masculine one, Arrah B. Evarts, who has compiled the sym- bolle meaning of colors among the various nations, says that color sym- bolism follows, the world over, fairly well marked lines, White 1s the color of the deity, of purity, of unity, of immortality, Black 1s tho color of sin and death Red 1s the color of passions and of creative force. Bine is the color of dness, impassivity ..nd truth Green of activity, yellow of religiow splrations and beneficence, purple of passion and royal blood, “Perhaps few men are aware that they like blue," says the noted psy chologist, “but take the average man to a ball room filled with pretty girls and asi him to pick out the pret- morning: reful how tlest girl and ninety-nine times out of a hundred he'll select some lit girl in blue."’ Copyright, 1922 (New CONVERTIBLE STORM DOOR. F one {s so fortunate as to have an | outside screen door to the kite: ette, this 1s a splendid way to pr vide an excellent storm door for the winter, Get some dark green or blac paper muslin as wide as the screen door and twice as long. Tack @ pie the length of the door on the outsidi ef the screen door and another length on the inside. It is durable und keeps out the bitter cold WwW. c. 1 KINK WITH CAKE PAN. To prevent cake from sticking to pan, butter and sprinkle flour on top. The cake will not stick, but come our a nico ght brown. USEFUL KNIFE. small kitehenette whe tool of many ures Ix doub! rved kn old fe cucumbers as well, and its two edged blade whittles the last i k ‘ DECEMBER 4, 1922. By Roy L. The Jarr Family McCardell. Copyright, 1022 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Company. laying out Mr, Jarr's clothes while he was initiating himself into the Order of the Morning Bath. And being only a human wife sho could not resist giving the trousers Mr. Jarr had worn the day before a Joggle as she went past them. It was a scientific joggle, and from the trousers pockets poured bills and pleces of silver, Mrs. Jarr picked the money up— six dollars in bills and three in sil- ver. | IKE a dutiful wife Mrs. Jarr was “There he ts again, with the care- less way he throwns money around," she said to herself, ‘And if he should lose any of it I know he'd blame me and say I took it, though I never would touch a cent!" However, she counted the money over again. “I think I'll punish him for his carelessness and, anyway, I'll wager he doesn't know how much he came home with last night,’" she thought, “I'll just take four dollars of it and put it in that empty powder Kitchenette Kinks From Evening World Readers. York Evening World) by Press Publiehing Company. st for the economical creamed 1 or hash Gs USE LAST YEAR'S “LID.” Bind the top of an old straw hat with tape and it makes a fine mat for hot dishes. B. A, G. FOR LATE COMERS. Instead of putting food en to keep hot for covering it closely and setting It o late com with a tir a saucepan of hot water, plan will keep th id hot and at the same time prevent It om drying R. D. SUBSTITUTE WASH POWDER. I found out that if 1 run out of scouring cleanser I ha take its place. [ use st I find them very goud tchen utensi! 1 SAVES THE BROOM. added te {own jar on the bureau and seo if he misses {t."* So she placed the four dollar bills, tightly rolled, In the bureau ornament. Then ‘she laid out Mr. Jarr's newly pressed ‘other suit’ and went to the dining room to arrange the table for breakfast. a Mr. Jarr came in tn due time and, attiring himself in his other sult, began the transferring of the various Portable articles a man deems neces- sary to carry as ballast from the gar- ments of yesterday—his watch, his keys, his fountain pen, his pencil, his knife, his note book, his card caso, sundry letters, his subway tickets from the patch pocket in his coat and, last but not least, his money. And then, putting on his shirt and collar, he found himself a collar but- ton shy, After a search through all the usual Places falled to locate the missing button, his eye fell upon tne various silver trays and ornaments on the bureau. In the empty powder jar he found a collar button that wasn’t working and the four dollars in bills he had heen relleved of. “Aha!” said Mr, Jarr to himself. “Now, if I left my money around carelessly like that, Mrs. Jarr would soon make away with it, She's always talking about the domestic nancial stringency, and yet I'll bet she put this in here weeks ago and has for- gotten all about it. I'll just take It and seo if she misses It." So saying, Mr. Jarr pocketed the four dollars. “Need any money to-day?’ he asked casually at breakfast, for he wanted to bring up the subject of Mrs. Jarr's carelessness, Yeu, indeed I do," satd Mrs. Jare readily. “Well, I can let you have four dol- lara | came across unexpectedly,”’ Mr. Jarr replied. What good will four dollars do me?" asked Mrs. J. “L need a great deal more than four dollars, but Til take it.’ So Mr. Jarr, chuckling to himself, handed over the bills. Downtown thut day Mr, Ja found as far as he could reme r, that he was money out somewhere. And the next day Mrs. Jarr, going to the pow- der box, overed the four dollars had taken were ratast e can wh ound it or n w t. As Ir. J) e's raid to ythiy out finding four dollars Jeach of them imr solved that it’s no wonder Ure don So tangled, the te fnances ar ———_—$—_—_————————————————————— Home Decoration Shading the Light on the Ceiling. HAT to do with the Nght on the ceiling {is an insistent question with the home deco- rator. You know that those white glass globes give a pallor to every one gathered underneath them. But how to eliminate the difficulty ts often too laborious a question for the home decorator with Hmited time to be able to face, The first idea is to remove the white glass globe and to park it away in @ conventent closet. Then take a wire ring of the circumference of the discarded shade. Now buy a strip of printed silk that will go nicely with the decorations of your room both with relation to design and to color- ing. As a@ ining for that strip of silk use a@ piece of pink cotton voile, bast- ing it to the silk before you commence operations, The pink, you know, helps the Mwht to be becoming, not to say flattering, to yourself and all of your family and guests, Now over the wire ring sew one side of this silk and Its lining, fulling It on as you go. After that completed, finish the outside with a narrow strip of gold or silver braid. Now fasten the ring with its cover- ing to the celling by using brass brady hammered into the ce!ling and gather the fullness of the silk plus lining into @ tight knob under the lighting bulbs, At that point, to cover the possibl unevenness of the finish, attach a« tassel made of fringe rolled round and round and topped by a bright glass bead or two to tone in with the gen- erul color scheme. By this method of lighting arrange- ment, you will have gained an effect of blissful Nght which your room has seemed all along to crave, ————___——_ Look Your Best By Doris Copyright, 1922 (New York EAR MISS DOSCHER: | am a gird 17 years old, and weigh 102 pounds. | am 5 feet 2 inches tall, Is my height correct for my age? How much should | weigh? Kindly let me know how | can gain at least ten pounds, | had long hair, but now it ia short. Will yeu let me know how to make it grow long again? D. F. You ave the correct weight for your height, but about an inch shorter than the average he of a girl of your nortening of your du The be to the 1 wa hatr splitting of the to overcome this e acalp and to brush down ‘ x. <A little vase be rubbed in during This will hasten thi massa. growth of the Doscher. ening World) by Press Publishing Company. Drinking plenty of milk and get- ting more rest, especially before and after meals and being careful to mas- ticate your foed thoroughly are great aids in gaining weight, Dear Miss Boscher: Would greatly appreciate your telling me a remedy for a red nose and enlarged pores. Have great difficulty with powder on my nose. L.A. Learning to breathe properly helps to tuke away the tendency to a red nose, Bating tndigestible and highly spiced foods 1s often its cause. If you place a vanishing cream on the nose before applying the powder you will have less difficulty in making It stay on, but be sure to remove all traces of the powder at night. Bathe the none in hot water and rinse with cold to which a few drops of benzoin have been added.