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- “HOME PAGE For Physical Preparedness | U.S. Army Exercises Posed by Pauline Furtong Evening World Publishes These Exercises to-Help All Men and Women Prepare for Any Call to Service. + wovngiit, 1017, by the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), 4S POSITION 2 POSITION SES POSITION FIRST SET—Wand Exercise No. 9. N studying the army “setting up” exercises I notice that they are de-| | signed to pring into play muscles {n all parts of the body, though many persons have the impression that they are for the shoulders and chest alone, to encourage erect carriage. Many regular readers are familiar with | the knee raising exercises. To-day’s benefits the lower trunk muscles, hips, thighs, abdomen and interna! organs. Start to-day’s exercise with heels together, arms extended fn front| of the body, head and chest well up, as shown in figure one. Then on| the second count raise the arms in front of the body and on a level with| the hips as shown in figure two. Next raise the right knee and touch the wand with it, as shown in che large centre picture, No. 3, but do not crouch, nor bend the body or shoulders to accomplish this. If you have to do so you are not suf-| ficiently practiced to master this exercise, and should not attempt it-until | you can do so with grace, polse and ease. Proceed by ratsing the left knee as shown in figure four and then mm the fifth count return to starting position, shown in figure five. Do this exercise several minutes, It is the best one in this sertes for lend- ing valance. Answers to Queries. | SHOULDER BLADE PROTRUDES | AGE TO EXERCISE—F, W. C.:)—M. R.: Incorrect standing or sitting One 1s never too old to take mild | position has probably caused this. All walks, deep broaths and some of the | Chest exercises, espectally chest rais-| simplo stretching and relaxing exer- 1s will help overcome this condition, | HOT LEMON WATER IN MORN- ets, By Maurice Ketten HE ty OuR, Most LUABLE CLERIC HE 1S CRAZY To FIGHT ‘Such Is Life! HE DOESN'T LOOK STRONG ENouGH To FIGHT. STAY HERE Yes, HE IS THE STRONGEST MAN IN THE PLACE THAT'S, THE KIND oF FELLOWS WE NEED To FIGHT » No, HE ISA CONSCIENTIOUS OBTECTOR? IS HE Going To ENUST 2 ’ Thursday, May 3, 1917 The Evening World’s Kiddie Klub Korner Conductell by Eleanor Schorer 66T'M a bit late getting break-° fast this morn- ing.” confessed Prof. Bom bus, peeping into @ steaming cal- d@ron. “TI have put a delicious egg in. You will not mind waiting, I hope.” No, the obildren would not mind. ‘They settled them- | selves In cozy nooks while five, ten, fit- teen minutes passed without any abate THEY SAILED AWAY ON A “SHIP OF THE im the kettle’s fury. DESERT.” ‘The children’s looks questioned each other. After forty | fl#bters too. One kick of their foot has been the end of many a hunter miautes the Professor plunged @ huge! 104 many a horse.” dipper into the boiling pot and] "an the while Bombus was speaking brought out an egg as big as his head! |he and the children ate their novel As they stared in wonderment at See with great relish. this huge breakfast, things about berg oi ge | thom were rapidly changing shape.|of Bob and Bess, as they packed up So when they recovered from their| and sailed away on the “ships of the : desert.” breakfast surprise another greeted | “it sstea by Abraham Horowits, them. They were in the midst of anlage fourteen, No. 396 Grove Street, African desert! Within a basin| Jersey City. scooped in the sand lay fifteen more |, Toul wi ba ae Mie ge gat atin of sep tanita Ike tue Professor's | Tiptree ao wie oe eae roakfas 07, “We must leave directly,” sald the| Hyeaise Worlt No. 5 Pack Row, fort Professor, “because Madam Ostrich | ,.oity iin Mung: tBgGhinnse and curtifiente will be here shortly. Her husband has tha Miastns Chek Pack | Just left after his night vigil upon the je Kiddie Ktul |eges. She will sit the whole day “YOUNG MANHATTAN” through. It 19 not true that these| |S to be held in Central Park on Sat- urday, May parents leave the task of hatching | Rehears: ale every Betucday at thetr young to Old Sol, He ts far too} Washington leving Hig! hool, No mercilessly hot down hero at midday. | 40 Lig To janhattan, and daily i k Playground Centres of hob) eee ee tree be en- Basneu in around Urely destroye: r hate! ” The party had scarcely secreted| Questions and Answers. | themselves behind the dromedaries at tn wh “congo its in ~ diate | which Bombus had brought along| .\.J0."tne hee om '° Tete of & per when Madame Ostrich came up at 4} 9. How cop T get. By wg Mi 9, q | pace of twenty-alx miles an hour and | ‘ure Beltae? settled her three hundred pounds upon the nest. There she could bardly p--—, be distinguished from the sand. Inhie, We eee ee o father bird has black plumage | jin the (kman ndwarsing and {s quite as difficult to see at! O° May we, vt night as Madam is by day,” sald Bombus. oe “It is really queer to think that) 0 Cah te Tenet and Grew pletares these giants among birds cannot fly, write They could ages ago, but are gradu: |," ally outgrowing thelr bird charac: | | , teristics. Once they had five toes. | ‘yt 5 Only two remain and in a few genera | arays shots en | tions one of these will have disap. || Q. Mort we ‘rille a whole story or fut « ‘n "dl peared and the big birds bave hoofs x ‘e yy A Geta!’ Iike those of horees! | ‘shot vie sree ae “They are tremendously powerful | (ve creature ow lower that you are ING—GRACE D.: Use Julce of half a femon tn a large glass of hot water @ half hour before breakfast. This will cleanee the mouth and lining of the stomach, stimulate and help you|$ _ SEST NOVELS PUBLISHED do otart the day right, reek PAGE COMPLETE —— Y TWO WEEK’ HOT LEMON WATER—MRs. fk. | ks B.: This is beneficial for fat womon and stimulates the sluggish liver, | Olears the lining of the stomach and | whitens the skin, Take It a half hour |» before breakfast, each day. Use juice @f half a lemon and a glass of hot}; (oppo, ee A, vee LO SYNO@SIS OF PRECEDING OHAPTERS, mm mod Northwest Mov WHOLE WHEAT BISCUITS— MRS. EDNA P.: These are not fat tening and are wholesome. CHEWING GUM—D, A. W.; I do) CHAPTER XVI. Bot think gum chewing has any bad UDDENLY Cameron found @ffects on the throat, Of course, It is himself vividly awai bi- a@nnoying to others near you. agonally across the face of the bill in front of him, a ew score yarus and rer, came Quickly Cameron dropped b a Jutting rock, Easily, y with ver, a Blip oF THING in most of its modern 5 Carne oa it te’ Weanine forms is as old as the beginning | ciearly visth starlignt. There of the world, | Was no mistaking that horse or t While the baths of the Greeks were TUvr o other horse tn all the terri es could take that slippery, slith Gistinguished by a rigid simplicity, | (yy hill with a tread so lignt and sure, the Persians exercised their ingenuity} and no other rider in the Western and taste in luxurious adornment of country could bendie Bis al these places, Alexander the Great) ti ied rocks of that treacherous hil Boars into verbul rhapsodies over t sia It was Nighthawk and his beauteous deco 1s of the baths| master used by the conquered and fugitiy Darius, But to the fine example Romans, during ne fers, is due | digenous to tae the vegiuning 180, Suny) but with t aqueduct tha river lito the breathed Cameron to sible? By ‘Raven! Is it pe I would not ha » Superintendent w : Het a villain, a black-hearted is the brains be- I ought to have that I was He vor my eyes all rage that surged up through 1 » D eart stimulated his dormant en the sual puvlic vi origh nto new life. With a de Clodius. Mecuenas t ni h } 1 t h public baths at iis own ex and | ond set off up the hill on the trom his Wine each ruler made rel ty appearing nan, ove upon the exampics of bis 1 fell like predecessors in the cousiruciion of priiie OAING BASIE ta hia mntieclan Greece's buildings, known as therm earness to his brain, Ho was ready whieh con.ainea hot merely bath t 4 he knew it lay rovins, but gyminusia, reaaing hails and Hbra AK Domitian, Dionysiv Diocletian outdou always potent bid fi Phe Konan baths, acco tus ana duc nius, contained swin wing pools, vapor rooms and bh rooms constructed y line of the Turis! rads my “L might N off just hich he ard the left and awa 5 the mouth of the funnel. A killed cowboy with sufficient nervy 1 first class horse, might turn t day, Unt being com- jerd away from the cut-bank into by the empioyment of servants, | | coulee that led down from Whose duty it Was to anoint bathers end of the fence, but for a man on with a pulpy soapy substance, or with foot the thin 7 oils and pomades, " termin The swimming and hot alr baths the effort of Rome and other Italian cities grad- | ually falling In disuse, were main tained in full force in pt and Turkey, the custom gradually ad 5 Was quite however, No man can certainly cattle will behave when ex- cited and at night he stood t ance, Germany i nglan ; hous Russell lov t the revival, about the of t \ Fighteenth’ Century, of ing. which from the time o! Saxons | it nding of wero heat had fallen into disuse, and from this upon the resounding prairi custom dates the wholesome love of A half moon hung over the round top the Bnglish for cold wim ming. — of the hill revealing the blac’ eu mass of steers, Uicir hoofs pounding artillery, their horns rat- ou mean i, Cameron?” Yes, with all my heart. it God ever made one, and you have shown it to-night.” Ah!" said Raven, sigh as he sank back and leaned up against his horse, It Is long since I have had @ tleman!" she wailed, lapsing Into her Highland specob, the brave heart. She swayed back and forth upon her knees with hands clasped and tears her cheeks, bending over the white face that lay so still in the moonlight and touched with the majesty of death, CHAPTER XVIII. N the rampart hills overlook- ing an Indian encampment un was shining pleas- The winter, after its fina) savage kick, had van- {shed and summer, crowding hard upon spring, was wooing the bluffs to don their summer Like distant ting riflery. 4 hundred mounted toward the swiftly approaching In- at a distance of ‘kaven! Rave " shouted Cameron, “On guard! with a kind of rode toward farther side of the funnel and tovk spot at which running down his stand at ven heard, locked up and saw the n bearing down upon him horse, tov, saw the approaching foo and, gathering himself, in two short leaps rushed like a whirlwind at him, but, awerving aside, the Indian avoid- rging stallion. there was some hope of divertin, rushing herd from the cul-bank the “Quick, Martin!” said Cameron. “He 16 wounded,” Where?” said the doctor, kneeling down beside him and tear- hg open his coat and v i!” eried the doctor, e doctor paused abruptly. "What do you say? tin, he la not badly wounded her knees beside on Lo Ansell drawing hia gun, snot out Indian a man on horsevac lion on its prey the With a Wicked sere Betore that fur and pony went down and over in front of t shot reverberated tnroug! a horse leaped At the inwian us leap both Oh, Dr, Mar- As the Indian spr “Oh, it Is cold, cold,” sho cried ough rushing tears, “Can you not and. hillside Oh, you must not let him °” ica robes of green, Cameron stood talking to Jerry, “Listen, Jerry!" head is back. t rusaing mass raight across Indian crumpled up and oping lightly, with never a doctor was silently and swiftly with his syringe I have just seon bim and bis son with ied Crow, Trotting Wolt and Runnivg re three others “Thank God! Cameron, as he came up, strug i There Sioux I think they ; at any rate I did not know them the coulee and Now what do “Yes, I have got him, with his hand to his side, two steers in | ed to the earth, sed the follows revolver rang took the Sarcee trail. you think is up?” “Trotting Wolf bees Crow beeg Chief—ver’ bad! ver’ bad! Dunno me-look somet'ing ‘e mebbe, Ver’ Barceo Reserv fell upon his horse and feebly kick > not tell mr thawk, old boy,’ J over toward bis horse the sound to chafe the dying man's ling upon tt tide behind, me from h'east lood-—-Iiegan—den Black What dey do’ more of them!” ron, drawing out his Kuna, ‘aineron, my boy, Motra?” he said, surprise KO © BO hat fs the question, Jerry,” said ay he Coolly loaded his’ empty these devils to hell. to Weeswam? Reever—Manitou It In no better eo: “By Jove, Jerry, I believe yon may ko to the Wigwam here onee-—nor t about this Ghost River? [don't know wo caught them Ktaven had sui anaskis half day Long beard? Di. i] ing-dance dere How shall TI kno slight quive wioot Know ¢ Tt ts possible A SOLDIER OF MANHATTAN The Story of a Patriot im the Stirring Days of America’s Youth Wil Begin on This } ail in at Fort | Cousin Eleanor. Connor hall go right on—that ts if I see any signe,” "Bon! Good!" ead Jerry. And without further word he slipped on to his horse and Sisappeared into the darkness, Pras it Sate ne Kind ew. CHAPTER XIX, SUP Siow, Eocata“Elnor ts my ame AMBRON’S vistt t. Crowfoot} 77 MAROANHT RANTS some iectlte, proved unavailing, but 1 strengthened his convio~ ea a ee tions of Impending trouble, “he creeper Then @ day's ride brought bim to| “"yye"Ped"thed made Kananaskis, where the Sun Dance Trail ends on one side of the Bow| Pech itultrn thet set River and the Ghost River Trat! be- made slowing D gins on the other. There he found “? ‘ Bue poe a = sm signs to indicate that Jerry was be- fore him on his way to the Manitou Rock. As Cameron was preparing to NEW CLUB PENNANT. camp for the night there came over him a strong but unaccountable pre- sentiment of approaching evil, ire resistible feeling that he ought to press forward, bs wl I will be seeing spooks next!" he said impatiently to himself, “L suppose it is the ‘lighiander in me that Is seeing visions and dreaming | dreams, T must eat, however, no matter what is going to happen.” ving his horse saddled, but re- feod tea and made bis | own supper. As he was eating the feeling grew more strongly upon him that he should not camp but go for- wagd, At the same tine he made the discovery that the weartness that had almost overpowered him during the last half hour of his ride had com- pietely vanished. Hence, with the i eling of half contemptuous anger at Imself for yielding to his presenti. | he. packed up a. kit again, | KIDDIE CLUB bridied bis horse and rode on, COUPON NO. some hours of steady plod- | e s began to be sensibly | birch and poplar gave 1ce and pine and the un- | most disappeared, The etter, winding be trees which with part and ely high corrido: art nnn tA HOW KLUB MEMBERS CAN Earn 25¢ a Week FOR SPENDING MONEY. Just get twenty-five of your srown-up friends and_ relatives fo save thelr WORLDS for you every day sinless rom the lofty ald, giving to the trees an For every six WORLDS, wheth- 1 weird appearance, Along | {& MORNING or EVENING week nt vlemn, gray-festooned | $4ay editgns, TH nd corridors Cameron rode | vay you ONE CE wit ) uncanny sensation that ur Por keen eyes were peering out upon WORLDS, from either side Impatiently Or ONE ¢ at off the DAY WORLD and three DAILY fr At length, forc WORLDS, either MORNING or growing darkness, he dee to E ING editions. camp, when through the shadowy and Deliver your papers and collect your payment on SATURDAY silent forest there ne to him the w ind of running water, 1t| {MORNINGS at any of the follow- w » Camere the sound uman almost cal Annex, Ne. 13! us tO & ver ached 1393 Broad- t picketing his 4 h listance down the| Hundred Twenty-fifth wire and away from the tr e ot. Bronx Office, No, 410 East One } himself in his blanket to s » bigh tree) QHundred and Forty-ninth Street. t filled ¢ forest olsles with al Brooklyn Office, Ne, 317 Fulton’ Fort unear his eye fol- | 35treet. lov You will be paid at the rate! “ wiven for whi number of he WORLDS you iver, but NO: OTHER papers will be accepted. (To Be Continued.)