Newspaper Page Text
American Sunday Monthly Magazine Section
13
Clean Teeth
Never Decay
The nearest approach to per- j
feet cleanliness of the teeth is
H obtained by the daily use of
4 Calox. It’s the Oxygen in Calox
j (in the form of peroxide of hy-
drogen) that renders it so per
fect a cleanser of the mouth
and cleanser and whitener of
the teeth.
The Buffalo Medical Journal says:
“It may be confidently asserted that Calox
is the only dentifrice that will sterilize the
mouth and arrest decay without injury to the
4 soft tissues. It is the most scientific tooth
Vj powder which the laboratory has yet
• ; produced.”
All Druggists 25c
■
Sample and Booklet free on
request.
McKesson &
ROBBINS
NEW YORK
Ask for the
• Calox Tooth
Brush,
35c
V
ill
Hi
II
‘Ml
1 iiii
f i!
It is every woman’s right to always
retain the beautiful complexion of
youth.
CARMEN Powder
lends a blushing, youthful, bcautious
complexion—without showing powder
and retains its delightful
ance until removed,
enefits and softens
the skin. Unlike
other powders.
White. Flesh. Pink
and Cream. Toilet
size. SOc.
t Stafford-Miller Co.,
543 Olive Street,
St. Loui*, Mo.
Carmen
Powder
y
The Man WhoPut the
E E s in FEET
Look for the Trade-Mark Picture on
the Label when buying
ALLEN’S F00T=EASE
Trade-Mark The Antiseptic Powder for Tender,
Aching Feet. Sold everywhere, J5c. Sample FREE.
Address, ALLEN S. OLMSTED, Lc Roy, N. Y.
POEMS WANTED
.18 MONEY IN succtSSFUL SONS! Entirely NEW and
■ UNEQUALLED fLAN. Send U* your Poems or Melo-
I dies. YOU MAY IE AILE TO WAITE A HIT. FASTEIMERI-
1 ENCE UMNECESiANY. Publication 8UARAWTEE0. if ac-
_ _ I rentable by the WORLO I LANOEJT. reliable SOHO
: We paTSo per cent. NAYWORTH J MUSICAL MASAIINE and 8EAUTI-
fULLY IllUBTMATED BOOK explaining our SQUARE DEAL NAB, BRIE. Senfl us
Four work for Mil advice. HAYWORTH MUSIC PUI.00..6630. WASHINOTOH. 0. A.
What die NANCE
Will Wear
T he fault-
1 e s s 1 y
correct
“nance” as he
arrives from
Paris or Picca
dilly will, of
course, wear a
cane, a monocle
and a “tooth
brush ” moustache. The
cane is important as an
indication that its owner
has never carried anything
useful, nor used his hands
for any useful purpose.
The monocle serves the
same purpose for the mind
that the cane serves for
the hands, it proves that
the mind is not in use. It is impossible to
experience thought or even emotion without
some slight change of expression. Any
change of expression at once causes the
monocle to fall off.
For a live American, the wearing of a
monocle is very difficult. Even the stupidest
people are liable to be struck with an idea—
and bang goes the monocle. The best
training is six months in the quiet well-bred
atmosphere of England where as Ethel
Barrymore said, “No gentleman ever says
anything interesting.”
If six months in London is impracticable,
the best substitute is an exhibit of cubist
and futurist paintings. This is warranted
to abort and mummify all mental processes.
The vacant stare which goes with monocle
wearing is easily acquired. It is hard to see
much through the monocle, but the other
eye is sufficient to avoid running into ob- .
stacles and this is sufficient for the “nance.” '
Coat sleeves are worn rather short that
cuffs may project several inches. The idea
is not merely to look queer, but, as in all
other details to indicate that no use of the
hands is contemplated. The handkerchief
should be carried in the cuff not the pocket.
The trousers should be creased oniy as
far down as half way from the knee to the
bottom. This proves that you have a valet
of your own, as the common tailor presses
them in the natural way. As soon as the
tailors adopt this style it must be abandoned.
Curve your spine, pull your hat down over
your ears, keep your knees and elbows bent,
hold your cane upside down, and remember
this year’s canes have twice as long ferrules
as last year’s, gaze fixedly at nothing, try to
act as if you were walking in your sleep and
nine people out of ten will think you just
stepped off the Lusitania.
1905; Guinevere’s Lover
(Continued, from preceding page)
affection for me hidden much longer, if he
was unable to hide his feelings more ef
fectually.
“It is always the same,” she exclaimed, j
"No matter how watchful the deus ex ma- {
china is, one of the actors always gives the J
thing away. Now, for heaven’s sake,
Guinevere, be like ice to-morrow night at
the Hunt ball!”
I tried to be, with the result that Hugh [
was angry and reproachful when we did (
sit out a dance together. He would not
listen to reason, and, I saw, was jealous of!
even dear old Sir John.
These are phases which love has to go
through, I suppose, when it is as great as
ours, and separation makes life a torment.
I am sitting alone in the grey dawn in !
the turret chamber now, and I cannot keep
my thoughts from rushing ahead. In seven
weeks Humphrey will have returned—when
all meetings will be impossible. Alas! and
alas! what will happen then?
(To be Continued)
Jack London's
Latest and Greatest Short Novel
The SCARLET PLAGUE
Begins uv
OURNEXT ISSUE
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Do you realize what that means? Of all steel mecha
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IVER JOHNSON
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