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U.S. Army Exercises And First Aid Lessons By PAULINE FURL PIPE THE LONG ple WEARS A insmijuenen Be pr npr Recnute ten Advice in the Selection of Materials and Styles for All Types. Published by The Evening World to Help Men and Women LIMBS ARE Not Furnished by The Boening World's Expert, 4 y Prepare for Any Call to Service. By Mildred Lodewick . Coprright, 1917, by The Pres Publishing Co, (The New York Hrening World) Coneright, 1917, by the Prem Publishing Op, (The New York B cing Wockt) FOURTH SET—Leg Exercises Nos. 7 and 8. Descriph “Rocking.” UST ae wes. Original Designs for _The Home Dressmaker: « 4 ERL and toe raising is shown regula lq in figure 7. It is called aan | salt tad “Rocking” in the army series. Bt Practice {t on the following counts! Mee genres: a 4 . “On toes, down, onetwo,” &, The ysndliy unk od: mae alhag 3 name of the exercise, “raise on toes,” Stig td ME ce TRY muat be called first, betcnes ap Ertl pbeend ag functs to the feminine toilette and apparel of the feminine allled in a visible harmony with one’ SHE IS Bow LEGGED SHE WEARS A, SusPecteD own thoughts, amb!- LONG tions, surroundings, THAT'S WHY SHE WEARS Beate cue a Like THA’ &o. We ‘call this the ALONG SKIRT {S CLUB Footed m expression of person- ality, and ail women Heel Raising. A variation of the above is shown in-tigure 8. Raise first on the heel of right foot and then on heel of the left. Use the command “right, left, ‘Mocking, one-two,” &o., for this, \ eet Ratat “FIRST AID”—Lesson No. 3. ANY injured persons develop more serious injuries through being moved from the place in which they were hurt and it is a mistake to move them unless positive that in doing so you will not cause greater injury or pain. was © eens When the bones in the body are broken it ts Lond betd gust be ited really dangerous to move the injured one before the SDI coupdetion doctor arrives, because frequently the ends of the that gives this coveted broken bones are very sharp and have edges like a perfection. In dress knife and moving only causes greater misery as ‘well as tm all things, the as adding complication to the injury. . simple effects are the In order to determine the extent of an injury it 4s often necessary to remove some of the clothing and the utmost care and gentleness must be used to ; oder prevent greater injury and pain, otherwise serious Pomplications may arise, 4 Answers to Health and Beauty Questions. CREAM SAUCE—MRS, H. G.:|cause the profuse pefspiration and Cauliflower and Brussels sprouts|may cause other disturbances, Watch the diet and eontrol the appetite. Do outlined ail around La er mae Te ey not allow her to eat all foods the other members of the family eat. She| | SHE WEARS A LONG * HOw RidicuLous! NO, NO, SHE HAS You with a band of con- ; ! trasting fabric, Either sap gan dig ieee honar pie A Aine areal sue later in life.| | SKIRT TOHIDE HER. SHE WEARS A, LONG A Wooden LEG , & coarse or fine weave from any hind of fruit allowed in the| 0° Reavy at 150 pounds. tw much) | WOODEN LEG KIRT To KEEP THE ANY WIFE Sa IT. TOKNO of linen would be a obesity diet and served with bolled| peveLop CALF OF LEG—MRS. S OSQUITOES FROM 4 happy medium of ex- preasi t k, salad dressing. T. Gu All exercines for the less, heel / BITING HER ANKLES Wi with Micuibaes wah t » ai q ‘. DARK LINES AROUND THE|and especially bicycline, wall nares sleeves of white ba- safe means of naive simplicity. It is of the samo material as the frock and on the model at the right Is EYES AND MOUTH8—N, F: Dark| velop the calf of leg to normal size 1a : + | |ttete or handkerohiet circles ground the eyes show lowered | tWo or three months, nen. The little yoke, ‘ vitality and loss of rest, I do not which {s open in front, PRETTY SUMMER DESIGN THAT ANY ; SCANT EYEBROWS —PSTHER know what, makes the dark line!1 * freq vaseline or lanolin tities allows the eyelets and WOMAN CAN FOLLOW. around the neck, but I.am sure scrub-| into the brows with a small tooth buttons no legitimate ¢ g bing with soap and water will not we. each ae Seto them. use, but a tiny under- [ ‘5 0, do not clip them, as this makes bs . , help you any LOR Um, ee teat a ached a ol Krad inswers to Queries, 1 NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA—N. N.: en ee a BLACKHEADS—MARGARET R.: Exercises will overcome this, ©8-| you ghould not scrub the face so bard | pecially with careful dict. Breathe| that it is red and irritated all the deeply and give the blood hetter| next day. Just use the brush, pre-| NB |} nourtsnment, for tho starving nerves, | Viously softened In hot water, with strong friction to stimulate the circu- @nd you will cure this trouble. lation of the blood to the face, Then | oE |) mapte sugan—uns. F. ,;/! SPply a Ilttle alconol and witch hazel, | 3 equal parts, te the pores of nose and Maple sugar, like cane sugar, should Fit hd 5 be eaten sparingly by those with kid- ; M2 —where the blackheads appear, ney trouble, as well as others, COFFEE—MRS. FRANK H.: One eup of coffee a day can hardly harm ae ee By Talbot if NIGHTMARE—MRS, D. V.: Indi- J 4 gestion and constipation cause this. Avoid late suppers and keep the sys- PY rmmmnnrrnnnnnnmannnnnnnQnAAAOCCOAAAAPOOAAY great rock a minute later, and was returned they would scarcely believe traiiy that lead to Khinjan! ‘The “rch and looked up, but on tem clean, Get really tired }efore re- HOW ONE MAN SAVED INDIA faced by 4 blank wall of shale that him to be the officer they had known, wood bore the marks of #eige and yard sido of the door the their stead. At the loft I have sumgested @ red and white check gingham or 4 mus- tard and white check voile, with white yoke, vest points and sleeve |bands. ‘The eash, which ties in the | ack, completes the charm of the | apron. Am 52 years of ego, “and ask your advice for a pret atyle to make black taffeta d Am 5 feet 2 inches tall, stout through the bust, weigh 175 }-/ pounds, I want é dress for street ant * travelling wi Thanking you, | tiring in order to encourage sound brought his horse up all standing, It Hut he convinced them and an- fracture and repair, aes aheor and blank, and there. was ho pS 5 rbid dreams are caused by ‘wy ’ led steep up for a thousand feet to nounced himself as a man who could The door was swung open after a 5 MRS. 3 Serres disorders and indigestion and FOR BRITAIN—THE WAR’S MOST the wky-line, There waa not eo much cure ills, time, pulled by a rope, manipulated means of reaching the ledge from % should not treated with drugs. FASCINATING ROMANCE as a goat-track to show in which Mey God protect me! I have need from wbove by unseen hands, dagide wale sag Tange had adaresea ar Shawl colar and mnia and nightmare can never be direction the mare had gone, nor a of it!” said King, “What shall my was another blind wail, twenty feet prough @ gap Under an arc! a with ryadicin : sound of any kind to guide him, new name be? Give ye me a name!” behind the first, To the right a low @ far corner of the courtyard came cuffs of white satin, . BYNOPRS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, He dismounted and stumbled about fay, choose thou!” urged Jamail, barricade blocked the pussuge und & one-eyed, lean-looking villain in bisek melee MRS. D. H.; Athelstan King dian et vice ig. ordered to work with a nati memei on foot for about ten minutes with drawing nearer. provided a safe vantage point from Afridi dress who leaned on a long) i - en thenla not let the child take | Yaeita le EGE Bae te Spat fe ae ie tae Tags ha Daal Pan eat hia eyes two fect from the earth, try- "Very well. ihan is a title of ree which it could be swept by a hall of un and stared at them under his braiding. P 4 iol: y se Hanes, and lentes ove Mate ¥ Yee, ing to find some trace of hoof. Then spect. Since I wish for respect, I will lead; but to the left path un- hand ter leisurely consideration — | ig Btgbated maps’ ie atthiolent to five Mongar, pad eytindns of Yeemint, wep, taforme, Wee tees He et Heenede mith Nis ear to. the call myself Khan, Nemo me n'village Obstructed for more chen e hundred he rubbed hie nose sowiy with One | Festion Ritter, Wow York Brening World: 2 Sowa! ground. ‘There was no result, the firat name you can think of-- yards between the wails, to where the finger, spat cohtemptueualy, and then) I have « dress SEs After some thought he mounted quick!” Way waa blocked by another teak used ‘the finger to beckon them, | tengt dull blue : | CHAPTER VIIL/ among boulders with an unusual sort and began to hunt the way back, re- “Kurram," sald Ismail, at a hagard, door, set in unscalavle rock, crooking it queerly and turning on pest yen ph Pte Good Sto T1es | een y» Of torch; and as there was no answer membering turns and (wists with 4 “Kurram is good. Kurran 1 amt High above the door was 4 ledge of his hevl. He did not one word. | - ‘ pot | fd ERE'S wishing you luck!” King drew his pistol, took about gift for direction that natives might Kurram Kban is my nate hencef rock that crossed like a bridge from King led the way aj tm on| which I would like to — } said King. “It's time to, thirty seconds’ aim and fired. He well have envied him. He found his ward! Kurram Khan the dakitar!” Wall to wall, with a parapet of stone foot, for even in the “f¥tiie," where! have made into « } VANISHING TRICK. . fired. h the blue light. back to the fi f th d at built upon it, pierced for rifle-fire. ruelty is a virtue, @ man may be| A . I go, alr." red straight at the b : way back to the fot of the road at a cinta 1 bon At, Plerced fc ie ‘ "4 | dreay teehee Ge } » sir. . 4 et > vere iecninke ine cur of 7 . As they approached this second excused, on “economic grounds, for | ‘ WO joel Tada 92 8 eet Ho rose from the dinner isda binck allonce, ee almost any hundred would have vecn CHAPTER X. door, & Hangar turban, not Unlike showing mercy to his beast, Hie mon |@ral wear, am magician were the guests at table between himself and “Now you've jolly well done tt, lost hopelessly; and close to the road HEY wero the part of a night King's own, uppeared above the par~ tuxged ‘tho wear animala along be- thirty-five years old, ; dinner. Courtenay, the Major who was in haven't you!” the Rangar laughed in he overtook Darya Khan, hugging his BB) ana a day and @ night and bet on the Jedge and a voice he reo- hind him, through the gap under tho| have dark browa | a‘ d with him h ' ) : H d :. d v § the stage,” one of his friends ob-| iif tity waited In the dark, chilled It was a minute before King an- this galloping away?” ho asked, reaching Khinjan, d upon thee be peace!" King siden were the walls of square stono| Weigh 150 pounds } served: "but Tam inclined to think| by" tho cold wind whistling down the swored, for both animals were all but — “Nay, sahio; T knew nothing of It! Tt was ten of @ blazing forenoon, answered Jn the Paahty tongue, for towers, or tometimen of Any suggestions i 4 y' e' jungs ounted ith thelr se the riders’ “to! c ay to Khin- and th n had heated 6 rocks the is” are polite, wha h walled ompounds, | oe ypu are handicapped when you are] Khyber. jews Gunga sat, mounted, frantic with thelr sense oF ae dere I was told to lead the way to and vhe aun had heated up the rocks Ue Hille’ are Sonecwallag SOneOURGt: | | which you can give until it was pain to walk on them came to | ™e ,for the making probably led up| Will be much appre. en. Not fifty yards| clated. Is the color away from your apparatus, ” Rewa Gunga's face beamed down At intervals th ys ” personal servant rode another horse. to get them back under control. “Come on, then! r to . oppe e e t ; “To an extent, yes,” the magician | Fonind them were the mules, and then "How do you know whose light It “Where are the others?” he asked, and amony: to alk, when they es on him, wreath din real wo fnet narrow door yr*\ admitted; “but there are many|in a cluster, each with a load of some was?" King demanded, when the when he had gained the road aguin, ‘0 lust esc At and came in sight seemed to include mockery to overhead J of k wn cre lle-wide le p at him at ap : He | = things I can do anywhere on @ mo-| sort on his head, Were the thirty pris~ horse and mare were head to head "Gone!" boomed lamall. Pearine Tiles the upraneaere LUNE Peco UP Be in eae any EO SA aa 28") becoming to me? 4 ment’s notice.” ee unig ns (OOK charge of them @qwin. as preafranged. She promised roe ed hed ant ceainy Inthe i that has no other human habita- daszled hie eyes, King could not be head Kbinjan hag been webullt| | MISS TR. W. 7 ne “Let. me see you do something) «Are you armed?" King asked, as me a signal at the point where I am middle of the road stood his second Hon wie @ march because none pcp Duy 3 seeaes to —% eet singe its last destruction by some ex-| The color should Of now.” soon as he could see the whites of to leave the track!” fj horse, and three mules with his bag- 44.0 build, - b teaned, mie mld, “Here you are, my Man. pert who knew all about atrest fight-|hecome you. A white Valle” es MAIL right. ‘Take, for instance, this| the Rangar's eyes through the gloom. “Where's that guide?” demanded gage, including the unmarked modi- O08 Fn Hage bag leaned. 50 8 ee a eo eam intended eid pene Old Jerusalom, the Place! georgette tucked vest A ‘Brussels sprouts and the| ‘You jolly well bet Iam!" the Ran- King; and Darya Khan came forward cine chest, Close to them were threo a eneath than half suspected he w: ed could have contained a civil war of a| £°°" and collar, steak, the Brussels sprouts an gas lavanied out of the night, with his rifle cocked men, making the party now only six Path ladder to understand that. But the Rangar’s hundred factions and @Ull bave op-| PUCk# around hipa, ’ ma. mee Boulder, crag and loose rock faded and ready. all told, including Darya Khan, bim- |" “iszags to the valley that is Khin- conversation took another line, poved stout resistance to an outside) —_—— i “In a very few minutes we will] into gloom behind; in front on both | “Did she not say Khinjan 19 the self and Ismail. jun'a dry mouts it needed ¢ “By Jove!” he chuckled, “Whe ex : | ashlon tattle, Diesles cai j all of them to entirely disap- ragged hillsides were beginning destination?” “And thou? Poa anticnte Geis ta dt ‘4 i pected you, @he gfessed you are 4 y gave on to courtyard, and Iam thirteen year& | oe, SY sown alaaraia, Jose in; and the wind, whose home “Aye!” the fellow answered. “Tam thy man! She bade me be ‘He animals could be guided down it. hound whe ean hunt well on a dry square to alley, till unexpeoted- old, and would @ | ey Founee ae is in Allah's refuse heap, whistled as it. “I know the way to Khinjan, That ¢hy mani" @ antwals, weary to death any- and she dared bet you will ly at last a seomingly blind passage 7 | —— syearched busily among the black ra- 18 not it, Get down there and find out —_——--- i es i a iy epee In spite of wil odds: But whe turned sharply and (opened ona pleased if you would fF N'T WASTE HIS VACATION.) vines. ‘Th esently the shadow of What that light was, Shout back what 7 ” - ha he men sat and seram- aidn't expect you in Kangar dress! Stratght street of fair width and sign a shirt waist. } GOULDN’ Sheth tie ota iene I Ente sh Khyber walls You find HAPTER IX. biel. And tho heat ros up to mest No, by Jove!” You jolly well will tke more than half @ mile long for meas % havettl i “as 4 “| began t them, and King drew The man obeyed instantly and 2R a time King urged his : 2% oe Ine the wind out of her sail was lined on etther hand with mat tt t ) cations and tangles them up. sprang down int But K r werk { and the 7 notley dwellings, out of , whieh ¥ pretty plaite * rein to count them all and let them ang down into darkness, But King } horse to @ jogrtrot, and the busy under {t, stoking. King made no answer, For one : boa x | declared a perance lectu close up. To have let them strag h hardly giv the grder when i f bai hie 1 Aue 7 thing, the word “hound,” even in '0tler crowd of people swarmed to skirt of white serge to some time ago. “A man took the} after tha, point would be tantamoun ame told him he had sent a na- five Hillmen pattered in bis It was midday when at last they voglish, ie not essentially a compl and his men. There wear it with, I have { teamer for Boston with his wife. But| to murder probably, on an errand he had no Iking for wake. The night was cold faim fngering their bruises und ment. ‘But he had a better reavon nd het lorena ted had several dressew ¥ rs minute he got aboard he disap- \de last!” he ordered Rewa Gunga, himself heahmuted: imiiiens enough to make flesh creep, yoarcel for the heat haze than that, o ine that the West @ag intloted Mane Wid nade after your styley ‘Wi peared in the black, il-smelling hole| “Y ih wot, the only other pistol, wh 9 baal Se ea con diptity but {t was imagination that herded | nusa of stone t iy Did you find the way enally ane too-willing Ka here of lh | Lah and always admire ( ere tee te Oe Wome pees inte misarya Kahn, @ Buide who met them, olselessly in the dark from rock to them until they touched the horse's “Te he parched? Have they cut his Mme of mud of mats—of akin them, I* have blond is wife hurried down to the bar anc tae teu. rock rump and kept the whites of their t oth, b . ; ind who had’ become In leu! rock P F b Ait, tongue out on the road : air and blue eyes said to him: Pa So Ki drove both spu h . » ‘ps & thousand souls came out i : Sa s nt, had a rifle; so King gave hin & ng drove both spurs home and eyes evpr showing as they glanced ords ¢ tion wan asked in Pash 0 wate “ ‘Oh, George, come Up on deck and Ing commission on’ the right Set his unwilling horse to scrambling 40 ieee dng right wo ata AS Oret OAe Be at lamail and the others, {? Watch, all told, Not an eye of MARID D { enjoy the scenery, The hills and downward at an angle he could not * left and right, ; t above, with his toad but. King answer aris tn quased the | Goveramont A blouse uf fine bag Wh wos sro 108 PeaUttul” in bear! They moved off again in deep silence, uess, into blackness he could fe They trotted on until the bed of # ! in ‘dirty’ linen that be . "OR, as for th 6 anid, anlaam- Government hege prappings, or the A se i . After swallowing bis ninth bee 4 : sare ! Crusing the animal to find a footing the Khyber began to grow very nar- ip i 5: . ot nner Foyerame rand on the mules, collar, Fw | Age y oo do looking like ghosts in search of some- | r 5 , bandaged corpse ng again in the fastidious mani Maat il * Z 4 Lad ol A Re A dot jau| body to ferry across the Btyx, Where his own eyes could make out row, and All Masiid Fort could not iyo? “Who comes unin. of & native gentleman, “I know no yeti ay fet id Moe correctly, ox A} fae! . eT wee “Taook, nothing, be much more than a mile away. yited into Kiinjan?” other tongue than Pashtw and my }iQ\) : ey sbould. Aw a —— . | Rene 3mm eens lees ny yaravon “Look ‘To his disgust he heard the Rangar ‘Then King drew rein and dismounte King bethought him of Yasmint’s own Rajasthani, My name Kur- ht "a lang tele want tee oes GETTING RIPE. ‘ Geet ecenoryt —rathinde! “Look!” follow immediately. To hip even for he would have been challen tallaman. H id it up and the ram Khan, | ask admittance brand one-felt want; but by the HE scene is tald on the top of a 7 manatee, canna After a second or two he caught a greater disgust the black mare over- had he ridden much further, A chal- jan giited in the aun. Yet, although He held up his wrist to show the \uinea wn | mou teeeenie He [ mnibus. The girl seated next UTTERLY INNOCENT. glimpse of bluish flame that flashed took him, And even then, with his jange in the Khyber after dark ¢ 4 are keener than an old bracelet, and high over his head ang that. om him a Wo A rage to the rough workingnan had @ ( MAN who ts steadily employed, | suddenly and died again, somewhere OWN mount stumbling and nearly sists invariably of @ volley at Jid not believe the thing the Rangar laughed crime. § ‘other in ” : iy os + MA? adily hl Nelow to the right. “Phen all at onee pitching him headforemost at each range, nized at that angle Shabash!” he laughed. ‘Woll — He knew the atreet of old, al 4 sh Which pie Anaily had a day off, and de-|ine fame burned brighter and atead- lurch, he was forced to admire the There King sent a man to the fort wnce. Another thought done! Enter, Kurram Khan, and be {t had. chanesd perbapa’ gees truding arest Ohi elded to go fishing, taking his|jer and began to move and to grow, mare's goatlike agility, for she de- with a note for his brother, avk to him. He turned welcome, thou and thy men. Be wel he had seen it. Tt wast raist ar. Ab + luncheon with him, says Everybody's) | “Ilalt!"' “King thundered; and his s¢« nded into the gorge in Tunning him to come down the pass, as he 4 wht Ismai! in the « inher nam and at the end of it, just niild: endure it hae 7 vel 'e creck |Volee Was as. shary and unexpected leaps, never setting a wrong foot not want to be seen, When the other & with both hands. Somebody pulled a rope and the as on his previous visit, there's ape if + Mogesine, When he reached the creel (0. pistol crack. This was Pime. When he and his horse reached the arrived, a man amazingly like hin mel” howled the watoke door yawned Wide, Fiving co's kind a stone menus when’ iene stood 4 penknife out of bre he discovered that ho had dropped the} thing tangible, that a man bottom at last he found the Rangar self, King sent his little bodyguard he parapet, disappearing ins of courtyard whose high walls al- back at a steep anglo against the ! ‘ weeded to svarpen i lunch packet somewhere oe the road | tackle—@ perfect ant.dote for ner waiting for him to outpust duty, Then the two of lowed no view of anything but hot mountainnide. ? is boot. The gin and hastened back to lookefor it, Pres- | ""Phe blue light continued on a aig" them talked long and earnestly, And at teak door blue sky, King hurried under the (To Be Continued.) atehed 1 alarm, ‘ ‘ tly he met a husky negro, who was! gag course, as if a man Were running arks from the by the light of an electric torch th ad heen ; Whatever aid you going to dott i logking happy and wioking Ula teeth 4 ht king up in second King made the fypt King ince ne, and King w AAA DOP LORI ORL LOCO LEP LL LOLOL EI LLP DLLOLORI | gy, ; * you find anything on the roa front of him, and a wild ride 80 good an imitation of a native tha n they could ha -) On, y jeedn't ' 0 ‘+ ; @s you came along?” asked the gen- BEST NOVEL® PUBLI gun such as he had ne hone would have belleved him. w rwlne gor THE SPY + By James Fenimore Cooper $' Oh: you, needn't worry yourseiaiiaaE tleman. dreamed of, Then King took from his black bag a ¢ vith its six-inch tea n y y, : ‘ n edge of his penkal “No, sah," answered the negro, “1/$ ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE But then the mare swerved sud- native costume, into which he sub- and bronze bolts its weight must be A Story of New York in the Revolution ne of Bie Densnlia 1 pianit Bnd powbing. Couran't a dog ¢ EVERY TWO WEEKS. denly behind a boulder and was have fo up h ext me thear t into my ear there's harvest.” —Tid-Bite thes merged the man who had been, When guessed at in tons—yet u horse can 4) i is tome. He spurred round the same hie brosher had goue'and the’ navidan fardiy carry'a nan along cay st the Larmmannnnnnnnnstl lt Begin on This Page Jisly 2 annnnnnnnne. j 4 )