1 Allies Handing Peace Treaty to the Turks ■■ --- SCHOOL Beauty Chats DAYS By EDNA KENT FORBES A B O U T R E D U C T IO N ID you ever eat baked celery? Stewed celery? Celery and oyster broth? Celery Is not Just a relish to go with a lurge dinner. It Is splendid food In Itself— and it will not add weight. I f the woman who wants to reduce quickly, comfortably, and without looking old after she Is thin will substitute celery fo r soup or fatty vegetables, she will lessen her avoir­ dupois. I f you want to grow thin, you must not eat milk, cream or cheese, for milk Is 4 per cent fat and cream and cheese 18 per cent. You must not eat the meat o f the pig— which is .‘10 to 40 per cent fat, bacon being almost 70 per cent. You must not eat olive oil for that Is 100 per cent fat. Indeed. It la D First photograph received here showing the allies handing (he peace treaty to Turkey’s representatives In the ministry of foreign utfulrs at 1’arls. The Ottoman delegates are at the table In the center. England's Oldest Relic Is Being Reconstructed Rann-dom Reels By HOW AR D L. RANN Pioneers By GEORGE M A T T H E W ADAMS S> a v a w . w . w . w T H E COLD SORE Offered by Pierpont Morgan to U. S. ON ROOSEVELT’S PEW Eat of Foods That Will Not Add Flesh Yet Will Nourish You. the fattiest form of nourishment. You must not eat wheat, buckwheat, rice, oats, potatoes, macaroni or corn, for these contain from 1 to 4 per cent o f fat. Neither must you eat sugar or candy, figs, bananas, grapes, chest» nuts or walnuts, for these contain either fats or carbo-hydrates, which are fattening. This sounds like a long list, but In reality it is a very little one. A ll other meats you can have, and fish and oysters, green vegetables and salads, eggs, fruits. I have given the above list of the foods most necessary to avoid, since It Is easy to memorize. The woman going In for reduction will know then what foods not to order for her table. Avoid drinking with meals, as this Increases flesh. The worst things to give up are sugar nnd butter and cream. But tea taken weak with lemon Is more deli­ cate than tea with cream and In place o f sugar one can purchase saccharine (Copyright.) . w M v av a v ............................( ( H A T you are nnd what you have you owe largely to the blood­ sweating efforts of IMoneers. Every notable name in History, since Time started, represents Pioneering o f some sort. Not all were Finishers, but all were Starters. I f you want to be a Pioneer— W HE cold sore is a small, plnlc growth on the human lip which Is more pninful to a sensitive, shrink­ ing nnture than upsetting the consom­ me at a six o’clock dinner. It is one o f nuture’s efforts to humble pride, and Is sometimes so successful that Start Something. the victim will not appear at the mov­ ing-picture show for a week. W att was a Pioneer In revealing the A ll medical authorities agree that powers o f Steam. He got his first the cause o f the cold sore is harder to Ideas from his Mother's stove kettle I locate than the relation o f the aver­ Sir Isaac Newton evolved the Idea of age sermon to the text. Some Investi­ Gravitation from throwing an Apple gators declare It Is caused by the same Into the air. Today he is recognized germ which brings on the hot-riveted as one of the world's greatest Pioneers hay fever, while others say that It is In the field o f Science. Thus it has al­ due to eating the self-rising pancake. ways been. By Thinking, even YOU This latter theory seems to be dlsprov- may— en by the fact that thousands of peo­ Start Something. ple eat layer after layer of pnneakes Woolworth, the Pioneer In Five and every morning In the year without In­ curring a solitary blemish, while oth­ Ten cent stores, received his Idea from ers who live an abstemious life on a conversation in a small New York oatmeal crackers and last night’s country store where he was at the time milk are oftentimes stricken with a a Clerk. The Idea was free to every­ cold sore which resembles a blushing one— but Woolworth had the Nerve young onion. and Initiative to— The cold sore chooses its own time Start Something. fo r budding. It Is very particular to Remember this: if an Idea comes put In an appearance the day before some voluptuous social event, and to you that you consider valuable and when w or» with a decollete gown nnd you don't work It out, some one some­ pink enrnations makes a captivating where at some time is almost sure to color scheme. Every once In a while do so— and receive the Glory for It! we read In the newspapers of some So, day by day, keep the Pioneering high society wedding having to be post­ Instinct alive. Be known as one not poned on account of the groom’s ab­ afraid to— sence, but in nenrly all o f these cases Start Something. It will be found that the bride-elect has come down with a luminous cold sore which ennnot be hidden behind n (ulle voile with any degree o f suc­ cess. It requires great fortitude and will power for nn enraptured groom to stand up at the altar and run his neck through the yoke, under such cir­ By E D G A R A. GUEST cumstances, but It has been done. There is no known cure for the cold SINCE JESSIE DIED. sore except patience nnd hope. Some victims carry a camphor bottle nnd W e understand a lot o f things we never did before. And it seems that to each other Ma I Ye DrKovratD ÔUA ColUAGue'S WAT if THE P a T)£ n T and I are meaning more. pfraNfAv ts or EATf to « MUCH h < j t v a v t im io t ta n q I don’t know how to say it, but since CCXUIOWV KCO B Tb in e Me. cacai little Jessie died TWt INFLAMMATION W ORLD W ill M A M S ava TE» N\ e have learned that to be happy we must travel side by side. You can share your joys and pleas­ ures, but you never come to know Just the real depth o f loving till you've got a common woe. T Stonehenge, England's oldest relic, about which there are stories and legends, weird and mysterious, Is being reconstructed. The photograph show Stone No. 7 being set upright by means of modern screw jacks. m w Juát Folks (Copyright.) The bronze tablet overlaid with gold, which 1ms been placed on the pew that was occupied for many years by Theodore Koosevelt nnd Ills family In the Collegiate Church of St. Nicho­ las, New York elty. It Is the gift of the consistory o f the church. J¡¿á¿¿j£aisKD1- President Wilson has asked congress for authority to accept ns n gift to the l ulled States the home of J. I ’ lerpont Morgan nt Nos. l.'l and 14 l'rluce's Hale, London, to be used as a permanent American embassy. REV. DOM M O C Q U E R E A U The Car Nut. That every village has one. Is a thing you can't dispute. He Is a sort of genius—a mechanical ga­ loot. Back in the old bicycle days he rode a racing wheel— He'd tell how many centuries he'd done right oft the reel! And when he wasn’t riding one, he had a pedal off— He was as loony over ''bikes” as some men over golf. But now he's In the seventh heaven; there's gear-grease on his mug. And he can tinker all he likes—the vil­ lage auto bug! The keenest Joy his soul can know Is tak­ ing one apart; To grind the carbon from a valve plumb satisfies his heart. To wear a set o f Jumpers and a greasy cap. why, say! Upon a sea of glory he Just simply floats awayl And when he has one out to test. Its viscera all showing Without the hood, he listening close to hear how It la going: Mmmm-hmmmmm! There Isn't anything could ever, ever put Another drop of bliss Into the being of that nut! Wine Flows Freely in Boston Folks psy h!m for the work, but shuck»! It's such a waste of money. He'd d » the same thing for his board, be­ cause to him It's funny. He'd use a monkey wrench at meals If anyone would let him; He'd tie hts tie with a stllson—sure! That stunt would never fret him. He hooks up wlfey with the pliers, with skilful twist and tug. He eats, drinks, dreams machinery—this village auto-bus. s • s Company. Fight, and the world fights with yoa Neutral, and yon neut alone. • • s Isn’ t It O dd? T li* lo n ger a paved road has been down, the hatter we know it has been kept up. e • • Newly Defined. I>om Mocquereau. O. S. IV, out "W hat Is your Idea o f being really o f the director» o f the International Intoxicated T‘ Host.si policemen hurling bottles of rare wines and whiskies against the Congress of the C.eorglan Chant, held “A condition In which the Intoxica­ wall of station Itt. The liquor*, wine» and ales were s e iz e d In various raids, at St. Patrlckjt Cathedral, New York, te« cannot explain how be happened to f H % " _______ llev. Authorities agree that the cause of the cold sore ie harder to locate than the relation of the average sermon to the text. apply the contents In a stealthy man­ ner, while other* go forth defiantly Into the world wearing a quarter sec­ tion o f black court-plaster. When a cold sore settles on the upper lip o f man he can always circumvent It by growing a thick, branching mustache, but woinnn Is denied tills precious priv­ ilege and Is obliged to suffer In si­ lence. The cold sore Is probably given so that we will not become too proud of our looks. The man who can show pride with a bulbous cold sore on his lower Up has reached the point where any further Inflation would result In a blow-out. (Copyright.) -------- O-------- How Earth “Falls Away.” The surface o f the earth In ore geo­ graphical mile “ falls away" or departs from a straight line S.04 Inches. -------- O-------- Bachelors, Stay Out of Indial In India. If a mao Is not married at the tateet by his twenty-fifth year, his reputation suffer». W e're past the hurt of fretting—we can talk about it now, She slipped away so gently and the fever left her brijw So softly that we didn’t know we lost her, but instead W e thought her only sleeping as we* watched beside her bed. Then the doctor, I remember, raised his head, os if to say What his eyes had told already, and Ma fainted dead away. Cp to then I thought that money was the thing I ought to get And I fnncled, once I had It, I should never have a fret. But 1 saw that I had wasted precious hours in seeking wealth. I had made n tidy fortune, but I couldn’t buy her health. And I saw this truth much clearer than I'd ever seen before: That the rich man and the poor man . have to let death through the door. W e’re not half so keen for money as one time we used to be I am thinking more o f mother and she's thinking more o f me, Now we spend more time together, and I know we're meaning more T o each other on life’s Journey, than we’ve ever meant before. It was hard to understand It I Oh. the dreary nights we’ve cried! But we re found the depth o f loving, since the day that Jessie died! (Copyright by Edgar A. dueat)