7w - f7ir V- is p;'f EVENING LEDaER-PEILADELPHIA; TUESDAY, FEBRUARY (J, 1917 If HOW YOU MAY 'ADD WHAT "YOU LACK" TO YOUR BEAUTY By LUCREZIA BORI Tho Famout Spanish Prima Donna, ....i .1...- fnr (n tim nasi imu .vn your Bwndmother cannot remember. .J wnders would K through tho Btree irJlns their wares In ix half musical little .an. : that went like this: tons """ -What il ye Im., "What il'yp IncK, "What d'ye lack to day?'' The day of the ven der la past, hut htn llttlo song remains, I Bine It to you i , "What d'ye lack to day," to make jou beautiful'? Perhaps It Is a, pair of shln.ns eyes, hair that N luxuriant and shining-, like spun gold, or maybe you have both of these lovely for a clear, pinK-amr si v Mm f ( ! tUCllKEIA IIOIII Matures, and low? ,,,... v.-, - ,-- ,,.,. ., roso petal. "Tauty cannot' be "peddled about but If you tel mo what ou lack I may be able tell roujiow to supply your "eeds If you WSnt a pair of eyes that shine wl h tho Joy of llvlnff. you must, lrst of Til hao healtli; then ou must hnvo n Jufflclent amount of sleep earn night to wn them from .becoming .lull and t red leoklnB nor darn you ocrtax your sight by reading In a bad light An occasional eye bath using a saturated Bolutlon of boraclc acid and mi eye run tiIII help to keep tho ojes In a healthy condition ... If your hair Is falling out. or appears life less and dull, follow this treatment to le tore It lo Its original beauty: Pally mas Yct tho scalp and brush the hair, sham mo It once every three weeks nnd apply tho following hair tonic four times .1 week: 11AIH TONIC n.nrttn ... - drain ?l'n?lure of eantharide. . """ Oil rlrlnl r'n" OH rormar '" P Hay rum (enough to make) eight ounces. Completion trouble mo more rommon than any others .To Improve a skin that is jellow In color nnd cuarbe of teture cleanse It eery nlghl befoic retiring with warm water, a pute, eget.ble soap and a com plexion brush ittnse the skin well with or ni V er n,ul ""P'y R reliable skin food are I, ."?'" Tl" form". If tho tissues von i..Veed. "f ""urlshment; the latter, If iirJ. 1 '." Kec" ,ho "kin from becoming ',, nml "cny Brink plenty of water dally :,"' c,,?,r,clt '' the open air every morn ,', I'-'linmnte greasy foods and sweets J.i,?L yo"r"llet. nd jou will soon notice a riiango for the better whic your complex Imi is concerned , Uelmv I" printed the formula for a sim ple and ine.pensln cold cream: Almonl oil . fnrmaceil Whit wnx coi.n cuham 4 ounces 4 ounces . t nunc Melt tllC nils Ittlil tltn wtur lf.DOiap WI.Ati Ihey are thoroughly blended, add the toee- water slowly, Ijcatlng constantly with. 6iier roru. If tin enlarged Vores. apply this astringent lotion: smoothness of your skin Is marred ASTIllN(Ji:.T LOTION Alum Almond' milk illilVkl' ilosfwater . To sralnit 1!4 ounces 0 ounces Dissolve the alum In the rosewater, then pour gently Into the. almond milk, with constant agitation. Apply with soft linen cloth exery night before letlrlng Perhaps jou lack smooth, white hands nnd would ghe almost anything to possess them. There Is nothing Oetter than honey lotion to bring about tho desired results The following Ingredients nre needed to compound tho lotion: 1IONKY LOTION KOK THK HANDS W ' : I IWJ : I W (Hi ' m lmWl-i .il Strained honev l.emotl Juice ColoKn 1 ounc 1 ounce 1 ounce MK thoroughlv and rub well Into the hands at night, then wear a pair of large kid gloes, the plms perforated for en tllatlon, while you sleep Almost eer. woman knows Just exactly what Is lacking to make her good looking, but often falls to set about trying to cor rect these deficiencies If you fear to trust jour beauty to our own hands, con sult 11 tellable beauty specialist. In whom jou can l.avc absolute confidence Then follow his or her directions "to the letter " "('cipjrinht 1 FIREMEN SHOW METTLE AT GIMBEL BLAZE Heroism Equal to . Emergency When Flames Menace Large Business District As a result of the heroic labors pel formed by the men of Chief Mutphy's command, the fire In tho Glmbel warehouse was pre xentcd from eating Its destructive way across a considerable, section of the city with an appetite whetted by biting cold and a drhlng wind, As a Hccondatj result of that herculean task successfully performed, several mem bers of tho already depleted fire-flghtlng force of the city of Philadelphia are In hos pitals or Incapacitated from duty today. There Is no one available to supply their places with their companies, which for the most part arc located within the zone known ' as tho "(Ire belt." for tlm city does not maintain nty list of substitutes and there Is no emergency fund from which Chief Murphy may draw to hlie the needed men to equip bis buteau, This situation has been made known to City Councils by the chief in his annual report, by the firemen themselves in their campaign for more equitable hours and proper paj hy numerous petitions bearing the signature of virtually every business man on Chestnut and Market streets, tho insurance men of Philadelphia and, finally, ly the wives and children of the firemen. To these appeals of the practical mer chant, the calculating bioker. the depen dent, and to all other arguments the mem bers of Councils have replied by a sllenco that Is eloquent In Its contrast to tho re sponse of the firemen on Saturday when the warehouse flro menaced a coodly por tion of the western Market street business (tctlon. At rlfk of life and llmli these underpaid and o envoi ked servants of a city that has long borno tho brand of "corrupt and contented" carried frozen hosellnes up ice crufted ladders to pour the feeble water streams that trickled from the nozzles Into the infeino of flame and heat that con fronted them Thej clung to their posts In some cases until chopped away by ax bearlng comrades, or In other instances pa troled the lilazlng Interior of the building In search of Imprisoned emploj'es until their own peril became so imminent that they were obliged to leap for life Into blankets or nets held by tholr fellows on the streets. Expressions of sympathy and approbation of their bravery have been received by the firemen from citizens who witnessed their desperate and victorious battle, and many persons who reallzo now, as never before, the Justice of the firemen's claim to a tale ef pay nt least ccpial to the salary given to a City Hall messenger or elevator oper ator, have so expressed themselves In letters to the officials of tho buteau Many of theso sjmpath zers learned to day for tho first time. also, that Philadel phia does not pay Its injured flienien, even though disabled In performance, of their duty The medical attendance furnished . is charged to the fireman himself, whether H cornea from his family physic an or hos pital. This treatment frequenttj extends over a period long after the fire to which It owes its origin has been forgotten, nnd adds to the nlready heavy financial burden f'fh ,,,e hoseman Is compelled to hear In addition to his household expenses. Chief Murphy and the firemen's cam PS'M committee are hnnefiil that the les- son of the (Umbel warehouse fire will ve as an additional Incentive for Coun cils to yield to the request of the firemen and their friends for a consideration of the existing conditions In the Rureau and rve to put an end to the neglect of that- "ecnuai ana most loyal or tlio various arms " the municipal protective system TWO GIRLS BADLY BURNED; IN SERIOUS CONDITION Father of One Also in Critical Condi tion as Result of Effort to Save His Child iTr. ,lttIe B,r'a- bad'y burned when their 5.f.i .B cauht "re. aro reported an In a critical condition today. Tho father.of one "also in a serious condition, arising from mp,a ,0 save "ls child. t,, ,,,.8lrls are Anna Hibbs, nine years old, ,1 "-.DIHman street, who Is In the Kpla copal Hospital, and Sarah Colton, twelve jears old. of 800 South Fourth street. Sarah in the Pennsylvania Hospital nlong" with ner rather, Mason Colton. who was burned the n faco nnd hands ln beatl"B out MARRIED 51 YEARS Ex-Mayor and Mrs. Richard T. Collings, ?i Collingswood, to Celebrate fif?vrNa00"""' J" Keb- The SlchaiS iJ"$$S annlve'-Bary of cx-Mayor UaiS ih5lr oId homestead, corner of it? n m3 LtM avenues, tot Ight. "UavnV.ii 1gVvh0 rved .seve.nl term aa ka&rtai .:.r,v. " vu i onn fls iijj:,eUt'-,!:ri,".H,on'.mi5? m. 2r-v p mw w BrvaMaai AMATEUR WIRELESS AT SERVICE OF U.S. HOME, SWEET HOME; IS IT OBSOLETE OR NOT? Feminists Say It Has Passed. Conservatives and Divorce Experts Contradict Hy M'LISS The home? Ancient Institution; How much longer Is It to be with us? Feminist declaim loudly that it should go If woman is to develop. Conservatives moan loudly that It should stay, but that It Is going so fast that If somebody doesn't come forward and save It It will have passed nvvny before we know It Some leformera suggest that the Stale step In and assume charge of the children nnd tho kitchen ; others advise that woman bo forced back from her tjpewrltcr to the cook stove and cradle. Miss Tiera Farrow demands that women lellnqulsh their Ideals Instantly and uncqulvocallj. Miss Farrow Is Kansas Cltj-'s first woman divorce proctor. I'nlinppy homes, their causes and remedies, are her specialty From a comprehensive observation of the way people ruthlessly tear down their house hold gods and throw them to the dogs or the four winds, she has declared against ideals, because nine times out of ten ideals, particular the kind that women vision, are the false, romantic sort that crumble to the ground when compared with a real concrete man, IDKAI.S THAT WITHKlt 'Because women dream of movie heroes with wavy hair and caressing ejes as mates," MJss Farrow said, "they decide marriage Is a failure when their plumber or carpenter husbands prove commsnplace "Because her Ideal of married life, born of novel reading, as a rose garden of love, does not come true, the young wife grows discontented and falls to make a success of her Job as a homemaker. "Of com ae the fault Is not all with the woman In perhaps the greater number of unsuccessful marriages tho men are to blame, but there would be many more happy homes If girls were brought up with less romantic Ideas." It's a curious thing about women that just so soon as they fall In love their mind's ej-e refuses to co-ordinate with their body's ee. The object of their affection may be possessed of a bald head, a girth measuring forty-five Inches and no chin nt all. He may use snuff and wear a celluloid collar and yet to the lovelorn one be Is a combination of Adonis. Apollo Belvedere and James K. Hackett rolled Into one. In short, he Is 11 being made to serve as an Ideal nnd poor fellow, though ho may do his level best to fill the bill, If the awaken ing ever comes there's a smash. And that's how the divorce proctor gets her statistics. The Ideal, to quote the lexicographer. Is "the standard of perfection, beauty, moral or physical excellence: a perfect tjps whether a icality or a conception qnly." Most women nnd nil men cherish ideals Hut whereas, given the creature comforts, a man can philosophically reconcile his ideal with an Individual who sometimes indulges In curl papers and often smears her nose with cold cream, a woman's romantic visions are apt to totter at the too frequent sight of an unshaven chin and a tousled head, MODEIIN XOVEI.IHT DIFFERENT Time was when most novels stopped at the nltar. Wise nuthorsv conscious of their dependence on the woman reader, refused to budge their heroes and heroines one step beyond the hj'meneal shrine. To have truth fully portrayed the events succeeding the ceremony. Ihey felt, would hav been to have administered at once a shattering blow to the old adage, "They lived harplly ever afterward." Modern novelists are braver and more cynical. They start their heroes and heroines nt tho altar and show, unromantl-callj-, how. In the majority of cases, mar riage doesn't, or almost doesn't, work But despite tho disenchanting activity of the modern novelist, does nnjbody take him seriously? Do marriage statistics fall off as a result 6f his pessimistic revelations? Do girls cease to marry their fascinating Ideals? They do not. Miss Farrow has her divorce figures to prove It. Photo h V .1 Press llurean MRS. E. T. HUTTERWORTH Energetic ''mother of two children, who advises women to dance to avoid colds and keep youiiR and healthful. Learns He Is Heir to $1,000,000 Estate KANE, P.T, Feb. 6. News that ho was heir to a 11.000,000 estate, through the death of an uncle, Tatrlck Hurke, at Flint, Mich, was received bete yestciday by Charles .7. Burke, of Erie, who was attend ing the exemplification of the third degree Knights of Columbus by tho local council Mr Burke departed Immediately for Flint A BRUSH YOUR TEETH WITH I cAlbodon I fANP THEY'lL BE CLEAN , . What Do You Use on Your Tooth Brush? Modern people use a CREAM not a paste, for paitea are doughy and gritty. Albodon U a dental CREAM the best-balanced in formula, the most perfect in consistency. It does not harden; it has no, grit; it is freo from coloring matter, ALBODON standi highest In cleansing and polishing properties frry dmtUt knn I A. tarmuU $y MuryfMUrttufHj' , , More Than 200 Stations in New Jersey Counties Ready for Government Service A photograph Itlustrntlng this stnrr M penr. on the plrtdrlnl pane. More than two hundred amateur wireless stations In the New Jersey counties Imme diately adjacent to Philadelphia are at the command of the Federal Clovernment In tho event of war. There Is a competent, though ntnateur, operator with each station, and It Is expected that each will volunteer his services. These stations aro under the supervision , of the South Jersey ltadlo Association, of which C Waldo Batchelor. of Collingswood, Is president. Mr Batchelor has n power ful station at his home, as has each of the other olllcers of the association Many of the stations at present are equipped- for 1 lecelvlng only, but can be relltted within a few hours to send as well. Each member of the association who has sending equipment also has u (iovernment license, as an operator, having passed all the Federal tests Others nre declared to be ready to undergo the examination with everj' icason to believe they will be success ful. The association was formed hy a group of bojs nnd young men last June At that time thero were only sixteen membeis, nil in Camden Countj. At present they have spread until thej- take In nil of Camden, flloucester, Burlington. Ocean, Cumberland nnd Cape May Counties and part of Salem Countj. The membership das giowti to more than 209 Most of the operators are fron sixteen to twenty years of age. with a few older men as the leadeis Thev are catrying on a continuous round of lei lutes nnd tesearrli work tojncrejse their proficiency and also Impiovlng their equipment Several havo completed Improvements on the standard equipment, and these are ill uso bj- pro fessionals One member alreadj' has en tered the naval service, as an operator. Herman Precaution in St. Thomas ST THOMAS. Feb 6 In the expecta tion that tho Danish West Indian Islands will soon be transfeiied to the Cnitcd States, the Herman Consul hero has trans, ferred the title deeds nf Ceiman property 111 St Thomas to Danish ownershp HIGH COST OF EGGS 23 CENTS A DOZEN, SAY POULTRYMEN Can't Understand In Reading; Why Re tail Prlco Should lie Moro Than Double ItEADINO, Pa Feb, 6. Moro Heading residents who claim there Is no necessity for tho high prlco of eggs nre being henrd from. John Brown has twelve, ordinary barnyard hens which In tho thlrty-ono days In January laid 240 eggs, Tho total cost of feed was I 75 for the month, or about eight cents a doien. The average, cost per dozen iggs In malntnlmng hens, account ing for everything, for an cntlro year was twenty-three cents. Ho cannot understand why eggs should bo sixty cents per dozen and moro and says that It Is beyond ull teason. Other amateur poultrymcn In this city who keep poultry declaro that they lire helping to fight tho egg trust with twelve to twenty hens, and that tho eggs aro cost ing them fiom eighteen to twenty-two cents u dozen 15,000 WOMEN READY FOR WAR RELIEF WORK More Than 30 Emergency Hos pitals and Full List of Supplies Available Women In tho Pennsylvania Women's Division for National Preparedness nre mobilized and ready for actton. Tho 15,000 members of tho division havo mado an In ventory of their supplies nnd decided to aid tho lied Cross In whatever may bo decided upon Tho Inventory. Mrs. J. Gardner Cassatt, nctlng chairman of tho division, has an nounced, showed that moro than thirty emergency hospitals, two hundred nurses, forty fast motorcars. 75,000 surgical dress ings and $50,000 In cash were available, for aid. The co-operation with tho Ited Cross was planned In order to facilitate tho work of r ' JML MSB . fc' relief nnd bring the various branch a harmonious union so that they 'wilt I expense an J" avoid duplication. '. A naval base hospital and two r base hospitals wilt be established If situation becomes more serious. The. : baso will probably bo established at y til I'Plscopal Hospital, while the army baa will bo placed In the University and Femr sylvanta Hospitals, "- . WILL TELL LINCOLN'S STORY, 'M bunuay s i-uouc meager to truoum Story of Youth's Inspiration . $r .... MBJ.M AM.t IM. !. ,, ,M VIBtB 4L& Id J .. juunn mt:ii cnurawiiiiK iij viiiuu nip immJ) ucr ui puccca.i mm uuiik women Binvingj In "crM nnmethpre" fn thn wnrlrl nr. nlwshfe Inspired by tho llfo of Abraham I.lncohw i tho man who as a noy reau ins books BY. the light from the, fireplace after he ha4 spent long days nt arduous toll. In celebration of Lincoln's Birthday act nlvcrsary tho Public Ledger next Sunday will publish a striking nrtlcle by Joseph Jackson on tho llfo of Lincoln, who re mains an exnmple, a teacher, a master nnd an Inspiration to struggling youth,,, though ho has been dead half a century. "SKTS COST OF POTATOES Rucks County Hureau Finds It Not Less Than Forty Cents DOYI.FSTOWN. Pa., Feb. 6 Because a 1'IuinMeadvlllo farmer nstcrted ho raised his potatoes at a cost of nineteen cents n bushel, a committee representing the Bucks County Farm Bureau, headed by Jf, 12. Gar ber. county farm agent. Investigated and made out an' expense list, showing that po tatoes cannot possibly be raised at less than forty rents it bushel They agreed to allow a yield of 200 bushels to thn ncre. nnd not one farmer In ten gets a yield this large. This Is the expense list: Ten bushels of seed potatoes nt $1 40. $14. man and two horses plowing half it day $2; cutting potatoes, $2; planting with machine, two men and two hoises $2 50; cultivating four times. $4; fertilizer, 600 pounds ?, nt $30 $7.50: manure, nine tons at $2 and tprc.idlng. $27; parls greening twice. $1; digging and putting avvaj-, $12; sorting and measuring, $3 j tent of ground, J5. Total, $80. P I Wife Dies an Hour After Husband SCUANTOX. Pa.. Feb 0- Mr. and Mrs. David (J. Miller, of Moscow, a suburb of' this city, died within ono hour. Mr. Miller was ninety jenr old and the news of his demise brought about his wife's end They had been married sixty-seven j-ears. FOUNDED 1858 DeweeS Quality nnd Standard Famous Over Half Ccnttiry " T Dinner and Evening Gowns Anniversary Sale Prices S35, S45. S55t SOS Regular Prices $60.00, $65.00, $75.00, $80.00 Made in ttie very latest mode lone lines, pointed draperies. stvr panel, fascinating sleeves, smartest trimmings. One of the al values which vvc shall offer during this Anniversary month. Black Nets, handsomely trimmed with black and iridescent sequins. Colored Nets, trimmed with chiffon velvet, silvcrcmbroidery and lace. White Nets, trimmed in iridescent sequins or silver lace. B. F . De wees, 1122 Chestnut St. modest Ull US 11 J Act Now Act Wow 1 HOW much do you know? ' How much do you earn? Are you above or below the line of 4 average-intelligence, average-income ' ' ? If you are keeping step with Twentieth-century progress, you realize that you must know more and more every day. And what you know must be facts. Generalities don't help you out. It is obvious that you can't accumulate all the knowledge you need by traveling and talking to others nor can you carry in your head all you want to know outside your own personal experiences. Therefore, the new Britannica is indispensable to you BECAUSE it deals with life and civilization and progress in the broadest sense. Its scope is universal comprising the sum and substance of human thought and activity. It covers everything under the sun and the sun itself. This great library of knowledge consisting of 30,000 pages teeming with facts and information is the work of 1500 master minds, the world's foremost experts m every line. Its contents are too comprehensive to be adequately described here. 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No promise can be given as to how long the remaining sets will last. Therefore we urge you to act immediately as the only way of getting the new Bri tannica in the popular "Handy Volume" form, printed on genuine India paper. You certainly want it in this, its most useful form. India paper is the most wonderful, most useful paper made. It is light-weight, thin and strong. Its use for the new Britannica was a near-miracle in book publishing, it made it possible to put this great Library of all Knowledge in convenient form 29 compact volumes, requiring only 29 inches of shelf space. And remember-when the sets now on tiapd are sold, no more, can be, fe.d printed on this famous paper. Bocauoo war has entirely cut off tho supply of the special kind of flax necessary to manufacture this beautiful paper. The flax is grown only in Great BriWn. BeWum and Germany-flirf no more can be had. That's the who o story. . 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'In Philadelphia, see and order at GIMBELS V- , NINTH AND MARKET STREETS KJP, "'h -kft' .Ads? ?.&r Mk BBHUf . - f ,MM BHRiS MM i, iJP;UH mmmwBmW dmmBmnmwmmnmmmmm y. a yStfSfWSfWfMSSfWfSfffMSSSSSSSSMJSMSSMMS'MSJd SEARS, ROEBUCK and CO CUaio Gentlemen: Please send me, free, "Th Book of 100 Wonden," illustrated, giving interesting information on a hundred subjects, and full information about Tho Encyclopaedia Britannica. Also, tell me1 what I'havo to pay for one of the remaining sets of the "Handy Vol ume" Issue of the Britannica printed on genuine India paper. ' ? MM :.t'i Name. Jh&Ll i-aE" k BBBiBsr ma sub bkbuhbsh. to -v fy 7 ; . ' Jr -i ,r l , . w. ...,, 1 A. ' ft Scfc.yrMitAv' 'i - , Utrik&JfaiSSa&titokJ- timm