The evening world. Newspaper, March 15, 1917, Page 15

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The Evening World’s | Perfect Figure asad Conducted by Pauline Furlong _ To Make Perfectiy Proportioned for Their Height Women Now Fifteen or More Pounds Over or Under Their Proper Weight. Congringht, 1017, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York bre World.) Swimming Stroke Exercise. Developing—Lesson XXIII. SWIMMING stroke exercise {s shown with this lesson, Stand with f 4 dowoward, cluows close to sides, left foot bi knees rigid. from the floor, and thrust the arms out stralgut in front of the body, The right leg is then bent at the knee and the left leg back and rigid. Return the arms to the chest and take the starting position. ten times. ‘This movement strengthens and exercises nearly all parts body, including (he legs, arms, shoulders, &c, Repeat it ten times, The only way to attain the highest possible degree of mental and phys feal development and efficiency is through persistent physical training, which also develops the brain, and the possession of a large muscle and néfve force gives confidence and ability to the possessor, he constant feeling of fatigue from which so many women suffer will entirely disappear when the body recelves a reasonable amount of exercise to rid it of the accumulations of w: matter and poisons which are con- stantly ficlently active to bring a! action of the eliminative organs. Lesson Talks and Answers to Queries. HE best and healthiest material | fection for underclothing, at all seasons | V0 not use Koap and wate of th ix pure Mnen, be- | uP ae ‘i the mois | to bathe wiiteh is coll water constantly belng undue fri thrown from (Me) ITCHING AFTER BATH—\W. K body, through the! Avoid hot baths and strong pores of the skin, | Use 4 mild castile soap, and very lit { the r blood elrculation and stimulate the ente through them, eames, lotions or hot I am sure a doctor you a good, mild antiseptic the skin with, Use only and clean towels without jon, yoar, cause tar the thumbs resting on the chest, bends open and together, palms | ‘k about twelve inches, | Quickly shift the Weight to the right foot, without moving It} Do this about | amount of | being thrown off by tue body, and dally exercises should be suf: | | soaps, | s taken up{ tle of any kind, Rub‘ a little ollv 2 TURE be axe wet olf on the skin after drying’ thor- | 3 and transmitted | oughly with a soft towel, | , to tho air, other- elie bist, wine serious din-| NEAR-SIGHTEDNESS — o1tvt:) PAULINE FURLONG ai <|G.: Have the eyes examined by an | saad orders and Come) | niet, who will probably tt them mon “colds” will result. Linen dries much rapidly than woo! and also absorbs moisture with pre if you need them. "This is th Avoid strain- more y ing the eyes meanwhile. “qutcker;cotton 1s the neat most =) Cour con YEARS sirable material for underclothing pig cer y curable thtousn and silk the next. | proper diet, active eliminative or- Most persons, who have worn linen | guns and open air exercises Can You Beat It! (Th Now York Evening Copsrrtght. 19) by The Pree Puldling Os, vorid) WHO ISTHAT HAN }IN THE ERLOR ? | ise \_BACHELOR 2 } HE IS A LONESOME TRAVELLI ALESM) 1 MET AT TH ss Rea ken ME TO GO To THE THEATRE . “THAT'S ALL KNOW DID HE TEULYOU HE WAS MARRIED?) garments know that they are much) Jess irritating than any other and those with excessiy experience. | To keep the body at normal tem-' ¢ perature it is healthier to wear an) extra outer garment when exposed ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE to the cold than to continually wear heavy under garments which do not} ¢ EVERY TWO WEEKS. permit the skin to breathe properly, | & when indoors. | Linen undergarments prevent un- |... due heating of the surface of the) § skin and hinder the accumulation of moisture which keeps the skin in an unhealthy relaxed condition, and en- courages a damp and decomposing BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED Hager Newspaper Service.) HIECHIING CHAPTERS ‘Qualermain, famous Bo irascos| THE. TVORY CHILD of the bot it tm packets of hard poison sugar every- where about its body, making them very fast they could no! th well bleating to the drive it in e myself, Baas. 1 thought that 1 would go to look tn the cave. “I lit the little lantern f had with me and, holding it in one hand and my stick in the other, I crept into the hole, Before I had erawled ten paves saw something white stretched along the ground, It was the belly of the great snake, Baas, which lay upon its buck quite dead, “L know that it was dead, for I lit three wax matcher, setting them to burn upon its tall and tt never stirred, all over Its stm swobin Then | tied the twely long hair, so feep in able or rub off, tun “After this 1 untied the goat, led it I ave and It kept nost up the mouth of the there for a time whl Near L mK wondering how I should for I did not wish to enter As it happened, 3 F % 4 not have troubled about that. as any live snake will do when it ny Med loo] eee i When the goat was wi five yards fects fire. Then I came home, Baas, Sores. closely woven. materia of the cave It stopped bleating, stood feeling very proud because I had out- Should also be avoided and the i still and shivereu. Then it began to great-grandfather of all inf are decidedly go forward with [itue Jumps, 8 snakes who killed Bena my friend, eterable boon eter arb sey rough vt didnot want fo Koy yet and had made the way clear for us ‘ ore a constant must do so. Also, Haas, L felt” as to walk through the cave. earneeie, rey ny yoo the akin, though 1 wished to Ko with it, Sol — ‘That is all the story, Baas, Now anich is, conducive. to. free skin lay down and. put iy heels againet T must go to wash those dishes.” and Per cal condl- ok, leu go of the goat. off he went. thing and bet! jeal condi rock, leaving & Ton, Bumielent must t “Holding on to the stone, I peeped to worn to keep the body under the seat i after the goat, for [ hid t some CHAPTER XIV. clothing at the normal temperature, jo be bild. | Haw in tun slays the take aud thing stirring in the cave aking & 0 Guile beanie ane meich is from seventy-s feat, ‘They command bitn Yo tell the wo soft noise Nke a white lady eighty-six dearces }. jo si a al tipon the floor. There In the black- sundown thé three of us ummer clothing. should wetgh ness I saw two little sparks of fire, started boldly forth wearing this is not too much in winter for} (Continued) Haus. ‘Then I heard a sound of hiss- Wendah dresses which Ra those exposed to the cold, like four big kettles boiling all at E a ere HERB isn't much story, sand a tittie bleat from the goat, nall had bought and carryir QUPEAFLUOUS HAIR—BDITIT| | Baas." replied Hans be- ‘Then everything grew nice and quiet save x ARCH ARAM aane to! X To temporarily rewove th ies he sulphide one part pro- ed chalk two parts, made into # Paste with water. Apply to the hatrs and wash off with water within two use barium ong pulls at his pipe, “because thing was ao stele | CASY Baas, did you not hear , Nothing but the electric } rele will Yemove the hairs perma-|that those goats on the mountain nently, {were good for One who dwelt in t | mountain PIMPLES AND BOILS— MES. 6 hb had nearly gone out, I¢ you have pimples and bolls! “I did. What of it, Hans? n spite of the fact that you have| “Who would b« One who dwelt followed careful diet, baths, exerc iy mountain ep the Father of and water drinking for a year, the ul 1 the eave, Haw condition must be local, You should | | 'No doubt, Hans: but how ean you consults physician, When pimples Kill n snake by feeding it "Ve well, Baas, in one of those and large pores exist on the fa one * ible that some In-| boxes are some pounds of stuff which, and ne iad when mixed with w in used ——————— pnd skull ‘You mean arsenic erystals,” 1 rn _ 4 > jsaid with a flash of inspiration Ramous VV Omen «||P concise whataee cuit them Baa | “Bena told me . was deadly iy twenty-nine years since Louisa | iso Baas, it caine into my May Alcott died, but hor books for}mind thar if i could inake that grew the young are as widely read as/*néhe swallow enough of this poison during her Jifetime, while her master- “So ; cs iting +. Pee plece, “Little Women,” has been dra-| 00 | RO your Keys: and to de- matized with success. This year |)". ane oC th marks the eemi-centenary of the pub: | )0\") af square-tace lication of “Little Women,” the book |! ci ; rare ares eae which made Miss Alcott’s reputation. | HERA WraTee Ea Ear Tk, Appearing in 1967, 60,000 copies were) Poon ei ‘ther box and got out two wold the first year, and it has been read | oy... py, ‘a 5 nleant "Hale with great pleasure by each auceeed= | Pound at the nolson, fal ing generation, Miss Alcott was born | ang , olllng wate in Gormnantown, n Sa tut eatin Me, meeaty wrote her first book, “iiowe fae PU when sie wis oniy seven ‘ Was a achiool teacher for sev : but during the Civil War she Sit as a horpital nurse in Washin Hany t and wrote of her eapertenc eng pa the title of “Hospital > “ery health tani made it Burope and mpleted “Little 0 : her return vm fate Priyeo im the was {al 11 Ano ned Serer 4 mead Girl,” t H : books whieh wade her . ther of children and poured itt and L went some way off, sat down {the lantern in our pockets little to one side of ave, and — An hour's walk up the hill, guided Waited to seo if anything happened, by Hans, brought us to the mouth of “It must have been nearly an hour the tunnel, ‘To tell the truth, 1 could later that mething 1 gin to have ed it had been longer, fo: happen, Baas, It was as though as we drow near all sorts of d sacks filled with chaff were being assailed me What tf Hang really beaten against » walls there in had been drinking and invented thus the cave ‘ thought [ to myself, story to account for his absence? your stomach is beginning to ache, Wha the snake had recovered and, as that goat hud litte horns on from a merely temporary indisposi- its head—to which I tied two of the tion? What if it had a wife and bags of the n, Baas—and, ike family living in that cave, every one all snake 1 have spikes of them thirsting for vengeance? in your throut pointl lownwards, We it w too late t hesitate vou won't be ab it up again, now, but secretly L hoped that one of ‘then there wa as though # the others would prefer to lead the % mpat as dancing way. We reached the place and lis a ance 4a e to @ music toned. 1. was silent aaa tomb, Then of his hat brave fellow Hans lit the lan cn, Buns, of a tern and said pidaen Fag ee ete OF 8 bo you atop here, while T go to re mn that wheat If you hear anything happen to : ' stark my MP. You Will have time to run away “rs nmy head, farnever Words thal made me feel somewhat $ there been such another ar fn Ashamed of myself the vorld. Those that tive in Howev Knowing that he was - OMT bucks in Zululand are quick as & weasel und silent asa ca npared to this-one, fig We let him go. A minute or two late Lafter yard of him, He suddenly he reappeared out of the stood his darknoss, for he had turned the metal cM OU WHETHER | HEIS MARRIED) OR NOT HE DIDN'T HAVE TO ~A MARRIED MAN ALWAYS TURNS HIS BACK WHEN COUNTING MONEY — Your, FATHER re ALWAYS DID SO In Which the Famous Allan Quatermain Goes on a Strange Ques that 1 began to fear there might be y Maurice Kette IF HE IS MARRIED 1 DON'T WANT To { WASTE_MY TINE a| WITH HIM “AND HE HAS } SUCH & KIND FACE” —— w little behind ber and supporting her no exit. In this 1 was mistaken, arms, who also bore feather bonnets however, for at Its termination we but without the golden snake, and found 4 hole Just large enough tor a were clad ia tight-Otting tranaparent man to welk in upright and so dif- cult to climb through that it became clear to us that certainly t was not ts the path by which the White Kendab Approached tielr sane It must have been not more than half an hour befor t dawn th Hans, who was leading we were pushing our way through thick bushes al the Ume—halted hurriedly, saying: Slop, Haas, we are on the edge of & cliff, When f thrust my stick for- ward it stands on nothing.” Needless to say we pulled up dead and so remained without stirring rut that swered, garmentts. My “Tien t tiod!" whispered Ragnall, “it wife! silent and thank Him is alive and well," I an- she She stood still while the pi priestesses raised umphant ery of welcome and respectively flower from (he two topmort platters ind held the u0 ehild in he; “a and thrice all the peated a Then Ha- 8 liited and @ the an st corn ¢ first to the Mpa of the arms and secondly to her inch, for who could say what might lips. be beyond us? Ragnall wished to ex This emon conelu two amine ve ground with the jantern Attendant women led her round the abou to consent, though altar to the stone eh upon wh i lily, when suddenly [ heard «he seated herself. At fire was murmurir and through the kindled in the bowl on the tripod in of bushes saw lights moving ont of the ehair It burnt up tn distanc forty feet or more a thin blue fia to whiel Harut below us. The we gave up all idea and heav as threw some of making further use of the lantern thing that caused the flaw to turn and crov ed still as mice in our » smoke Then Is t 1 prefer bus waiting for the dawn er so while describing this It came at last. In the east a emony, was caused to bend he peared a fair arly flush that hy bead forward, so that it was en- degrees spread itself over the whole eloped in the smoke exactly as ate arch of the nd was welcomed ond - ud done ne years before the barking of monkeys and the call in the drawing room at Tagnall Cas in the depths of the de tle, Presently the smoke died away d forest. Next a ray from the and the two attendants with the risen sun, @ single spear of light, feathered headdresses straightened shot suddenly across the sky, and as her in the chair where she sat still appeared from the darkness below holding the babe against her breast arose a sound of chanting, low and as she might have dono to nurse it, sweet to hear. It died away, and for but with her head bent forward lke little while there was allen broken that of a person in 4 awoon, only by a rustling sound like to that Harut stepped forw of people taking their seats In a dark eared to speak to the ¢ theatre. Now the skies began to fume and @ length, the He told them that the oracle fore fell back the light to pour Itself into a misty #aw with the Black Kendah, nw beneath us like streams of ffom which they could only emerge Manu aal gems into a bowl, driv- Victorlous by the ald of the atrangers ing away the shadows in their midst. ‘The oracle condemned Moreover, in what 1 will call the tho idlling of one of these strangers arena stood a temple that in Its main Navage--and foretold that heavy tol itlines, although small, exactly ree must be paid for his death. And—to { those stfll to be seen in MY mirprive—he said that the oracle t Was displeased becnuse a While wom front of the sanctuary door an had been etolen and held pris- a large block of la which I oner ided was an altar, and tn front — Harut ceased, and there wae at- of this a stone x id a basin also lence while this portentous message Supported upon a low tris sank into the minds of his audience her, behind the sanctuary, ngth they seeined to understand juare house with window |t; ominous nature and from them places A arose @ Untversa!, simultan- O ie upon An suddenly the eous n. As it died away tha two 4 where t top of a Shield over the bull ye of the lan- ' thrown attendants dressed as goddesses aa ide himself into tern, and even in that light I could t Issued Juted tho personification of the Lady i stones and of hia see thal he was grinning sant Isis to rise from her ae ac " I hid behind my It all right, Baas,” he sald ave rin plet he was AL audience, and th them to your reverend father > in We went ar there, arue wrapped in clos « draperies the ests and priestesses, bowed be. not see m Then at ene n the floor of the cave lay of matertal so thir e whiteness fog bh lifted the symbol of rushed away down ¢ C @ stone dead of her t could be seen beneath the id, heiding it Ligh above her sny horse could gal r self proved to be not Her ha was outspread behind ad, whereo voe ey bowed ryped that he had ¢ ve &, Perhaps 150 feet, no more, and she w a address or bonnet with the deepest venera sught of goin It w tan artific natural of @litte from the fre ius she Was gone the oon- lo #o le 4 hollow in the lava .ro w vis of which r a little golden snake, In f | may eall leaving where, so T mad pose had been we au her arms & hore what at that dis armed down into the !to wait till daylight, [t was by 4 t of steam. oward tance seemed to naked child 1 6 temple through its Ha for ab half an ft end it narrowed so much With her cama two women, walking eastern gate, which was now opened @ ach " Or ‘Good { sald, aseu gan aro 4 not jump € lo en — Se confidence which I did not feel. Now ' nate }OPPORTUNITY + By Edgar Franklin bw.) (go lawn, 18 eal PED. ae t | Wherein Chance Thrusts a Carcer Upon One Who Didn't Wand It, con of on wa y ; Y Begins on Vhis Page March 19 hays The Evening World’s Kiddie Klub Korner _ Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Kiddie Cousins, | AM SURE EVERY ONE OF YOU WANTS TO TAKE PART IN THE COMING Pageant, WHICH WILL BE THE Biggest Feature of the Kiddie Klub Year. COME AND LEARN YOUR PART. Rehearsal at Washington Irving High School, No. 40 Irving Place, Manhattan, BETWEEN 2 AND 3 mM. Saturday, March 17, WE WILL HAVE SOME JOLLY 8ST. PATRICK'S FUN, TOO Dear Cousins o° Mine: ‘ Come, every one of you, to the KIDDIE KLUB PAGEANT rehearsals at which ail tried and true klub members meet each Saturday afternoon, Tam glad that so many, many of our older mombers attend, because they are particularly fitted for active participation in the outdoor fore, Every member js Invited. We need you, my cousin, who reads this, to help make the PAGEANT a success, We need you to help show the Kiddies of New York—of all the world in fi (for there will bo motion pictures taken of our pagoant)— Just what a large, clever and beautiful group of young people you are. Come and work to this end! 1 have another bully good time tn store for you this Saturday—different from but Just as enjoyable as Miss Maw sang for us last week. ‘Things will be done tn honor of the good Saint Patrick, and some Jolly fun we'll have, sure enough, mavourneons. Cousin Eleanor P. B.—Seats will be reverved for grown-ups escorting children, and the meeting will be conducted with (he usual order for which my cousins de- serve so much credit, | Dicky and Dot in the Wonder City —— By Mary Graham Bonner————— | Commright, 1917, by The Prem Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) | Weather | Bureau. | ggy THINK,” sata | I Uncle John, “that we will aeo what the weather is going to be to-morrow, | We want to go on 4 trip and we need a nico day for tt." ® ean't tell | whether it looks . i like rain or not,” | replied Dicky as y \ looked ‘up at [] eX, = <S _s Tataaetlatahdd A SIGN ON THE DOOR SAID “WEATHER “dt looks ans | BUREAU. | though it would be | nica to-morrow,” said Dot, for she wanted it to be nice and she thought jit best to be very cheerful about the weather | “Hut continu “It would be nice if we could,” an- swered Dicky, That would be funny,” said Dot. ‘As if any one could really tell about the weather, No, the weather bas it pretty much its own way and does as it pleases, Haine or is bright—Jjust as - | wants" “But suppose I should te we can really find out about thi weather, and that we are bound fo: place where they can tell us? waid Vocle John, Hoth the children opened their eyes wide and looked at Uncle John. “We can really find out we might as well find 1 Uncle John, out,” you tha the eastern gate of the amphitheatre a what the This road we followed unseen until weather Sine io kar? fore us. @ walked through it with “ ” 7, out attracting any attention, perhaps Nea indeed,” said Unele Jahn. And he led the children into an enormous se Hoth poople were either) putidin, " omethe: ; is. ‘There they got into an er taaetes Mas th ing, or per- elevator and up they went past many Wrapped In white robes. At the | {00° They were the only people in the car, At last they got out and went tnto a room with j white Jordy and their servant! read “Weather Muteausys oo tee come to visit Hurut, as he tn These two children want to know vited them to do, ring us, we pray!) what the weather is going to be to- you, into the presence of Harut,”" morrow and how you can tell apout veryone wheeled round and stared | it,” said Uncle John as they went in- at us mouth of the tunnel we stopped and {called out In a loud voice The standing tse ro in the shadow of | side. the wateway tunnel, for the sun be “Is going to be a@ fine \- vd-Us was LIL low, My word, how, morrow.” answered the ia so they did stare litte colder than to-day. We have 4 man rushed through | instruments which I will show you the his white robe streaming and by theye and the condition of the on the wind, shouting as he it is emerged | atmosphere we can tell whethe: \ or going to from tho tu in, or snow, or free © Wriext# and Priestesses of the | broil! onild, ancient serpent is de Dicky and Dot looked at the tn- 1 whose office it is to feed the m struments in amazement “And pent on the day of the new moon! then," continued the man, “che news have found him dead in his house papers take our report on what the You hear,” {interpolated catuly,| weather is going to be and publish “The Pather of Snakes { It, Yo the .papers get to so 1 wont to know how 1 will many le, and that is the way we y We looked on it and tt died can let every one know about the Vresentiy Harut appeared looking, | weather 1 reflected, the very picture of Abra Artd when the children got down ham softened by touch of the|helow Uncle John bought « news ine uncholla of Job, {at is, ag 1 have | paper in which the weather repert 8 Imagined | thone striarchs,| was given just as they had heard {t He bowed to us with his usual Orien- | froin the man in the Weather Bureau tal courtesy, and we bowed back to| oftice him. Then Harut remarked tn his! The idea for to-day'e story was Ree ilar Bagiish, which I suppose the| euggested by Natalie jempner, aged te Kendah took for some tongue | th , of No, 21 h “So you get her eh? Why you|_ We wf ney 91 ter, each scoepted ides tor fet here, ho ie ¢ 1 yor ge er City Marie. Pat your name, 5 t mage Mall to Wonder et Editor, talk," T brok trending | Lreuing World, No. A Park Row, New You. warningly upon Ragnal foot "We that you believe its words It sald that we alone can help you to con quer the Black Kendah if you will and melt our lead, #0 that the guns we have cannot speak with Jana and! DI With Simba, and after that wo will do other things that I need not tell you | | eip yee We wil burn our powder | | i ARKLUB MEMBERS Shor 8 ploture of our ows Kinde nam offeo asked we to her mare yee of ie Kub- blue and But if you promise what we ask, then oleate 30 Techen 1 lashes. wo will fight for you against Jana oa Teme, ‘etlees and ‘ops and Sinvba and teach yo! men to use LY the fifty rifles which we have here ais with us, and by our help yeu shall IN conquer. Do you understand? a Ho nodded and, stroking his long f . - beard, asked How to Join the Klub What you want us promise, eh : ciliata iar Wo want you to promise that after | OEGtyniwa sith any number, elip eut ote of Jana ts dead and the Hlack Kendah | BB *ONIND Bes ar ped ure ¢ Away you will give up to 4 us unharmed that lady whom you have n, A will bring | : vga. Nhe her and us safe! tof r countr mail them to iddie Kiuo, by the roads you know 1 mean. | ening werd * Xo. a while that you will let this lord seo ge gg C] hin wife OUR Your & After « long confab VMarut ADDRESS. 1 informe tus that t vcauon Wil be cept our terina if we pledg opie Whats (Mi lon’ sean ef tae On lord Ragnalla wife unt t ur ae fo deliverance came. 1 Rag: | PIN COUPON NUMBER objected t any de but Le ‘ »wed him the folly of op- |] EVENING WORLD position, and the bargain was sealed, (I ENT Dole el ype (To Be Continued) i

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