The evening world. Newspaper, June 27, 1917, Page 15

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U. S. Army Exercises And First Aid Lessons By PAULINE FURLONG Published by The Evening World to Help Men and Women t Prepare for Any Call to Service. Coorricht. 1917. tw the Press Publishing Co, (The New York Eventne World), FOURTH SET—Leg Exercises Nos. 17 and 18, Guard Position, 4 N this position the weight of the body is supported evenly on both legs, knees slightly bent, feet nearly at right angles, firmly Planted twice the length of the foot apart, the one in the fear three inches to the right or left of the one in the front, one shoulder advanced, the other thrown back, head crect, arms to thrust as shown in figure 1? 17. To assume the position, com- “mand: “Guard, right (or left). Gaara Position. Recover,” &o. Guard Step Position. "The leg specified is moved forward, much the same as in No, 17, but the ftnee is fully extended; knee of other leg slightly bent and carries the Weight of the body, which is not turned as in “Guard” position, but remains to the front, arms the same, Commands: No. 1, “Right (or left) sideward;” 2, “Guard step;” No. 3, “Recover, FIRST AID LESSONS. No.8—Stimulants and Internal Treatment for Shock. T= patient suffering from shock must be warmed and stimulated In e Guard Step. very possible way while waiting for the doctor, who should be sent for immediately, Place the injured one on the back, with the head low, so that the brain may get plenty of blood, and give stimulants when the patient is able to swallow. Half teaspoonful aromatic spirits of ammonia in half Glass of water, or hot tea or coffee should be given when procurable, Alcoholic stimulants are usually beneficial and a Blass of wine, a dessertspoontul of whiskey or brandy, with an equal quantity of water, or a teaspoonful of pure alcohol, with three times the quantity of water, are safe remedies and usually easily procured. Whilo many persons object to the use of alcohol in any form it should be administered to the injured when there iS no @ubstitute at hand. Those who make a business of first ald treat- Ments should carry other stimulants than those containing aloohol, be- eau: in Jarge doses it is very depressing and not as effective as the others Mentioned, Aromatic spinits of ammonia has none of the disadvantages Mf whiskey or alcohol and ts the very best first aid stimulant, Ammonia, smelling salts or hartshorn should be held to the nose of the unconscious perso Stimulants should be given hot internally and externally, as heat is ® sreat stimulant. in itself aside from the stimulating qualities of the Hauid given, Answers to Health and Beauty Questions. ~~ KEEPING HAIR IN CURL—MRB. | disease, You are undoubtedly low in Ny H.: Brush white of egg dituted| vitality and general strength. Con. with equal parts water on the ‘hair| tinue with mild exercises and deep and then roll strands up in tissue|>reathing and you will overcome until dry. ‘This keeps the hair | *h!s, mettilh even in dampness, — — ABOUT SALT—MRS. G. Hu: WHITEHEADS—D. L.: -White-jnot take the advice of your ides N6 World Daily Magazine y Ma E CANGO To SEAREST IR. VACATION ERTHS ON THE ry e 00 MS 10} Re Ala actis . LL JANUARY WE NUST TRY SOMEWHERE ELSE Cane N R.R. Teer ee QUT IF THEI MOuUNTAINREST Too LATE | VACATION IS OVER. IN TEN MINUTES ANE SLEEPING AND HOTEL SERVATIONS, TF NOTA BERTH To BE HAD ON ANY RR. MOUNTAIN Tl must be treated much the same blackheads. Uso sulphur or tar poap and hot water and then ringe the face in cold water. Careful diet is also Smportant. ont _ ALUM SOLUTION FOR FLABBY BKIN—-MRS. D. B.: Use two table pat hot powdered alum and one it ry hot water, Let stand over night | then strain through gauze. Mop this on the flabby chin several times bach day and let dry on, Alcohol and alum also make another gvod astrin- t for the same purposes. Use one jpoonful powdered alum and two punces alcohol. * DEVELOP ARMS—EDITH F.: Chest raising, tennis, rowing and are best for this. GREEN CORN—MRS. GRACH: Fes, green corn is fattening and s0 | are peas, but not asparagus, string beans and radishes, Ft +H | BAD BREATH—AMY 7: Usunily | pne.can tell if the breath is foul by the taste in the mouth. Bad breath ls the result of so many different | ponditions—de epee i et t » constipatio eee to ave a remedy without | gnowing cause. PALPITATION—EMMA D.: The Buttering and loud beating, after ex prtion, are not indications of heart | | | THEY ALL MEAN WELL, ‘6 HAT'S the matter?" asked W the young doctor of a patient who seemed ex- remely pessimistic regarding his chances. “Oh, I don't know, doctor; but I feel hat I shall never pull through here.” “Nonsense, my boy — nonesense, Why, your case 1s absolu the same is an Slinces I had @ year agg. Yet ook at me—strong and hearty as * replied the patient, “but then L expect you had a good doctor,” Antonio Light jan Bio Light. PROBABLY SATISFIED, ECRETARY OF WAR BAKER} S tells a story of a country youth | who was driy 1 air with his swee art when fresh pop “My, Abner, aln't that nice?” said he girl. * nt what nice?” asked stupid bner. “Why, the, popcorn; ywtully good," 1 gi “It does smell kind o' fine : youth, Vil jest drive loser so you can x HIS WIFE'S HANDICAP, T the tarmors'’ conference in the | A eountry store the talk drifted| to the work done by the various wives of the committee present, *Wal,” contributed Uncle Ez, “my wife ig one in a lion, She gets up nD the mornin’, milks seventeen cows, | gets breakfast for ton hard-workin nen before 6 o'clock, by hex “She must be a vary robu woman," rolunteered the reial traveller who happened to be present, “No, stranger, she aint what you'd go strong; she more pale and leate like, Giosh;" with a burst of | fasm, “if that woman was only wrong, I don't know the work she t do!""—-Everybody's Magazine. | and take several tablespoonfuls of salt each day in water or on foods, This may lead to serious complica- tions too numerous to mention and can do no good, (winisinisincaieaeelanin HOW ONE MAN SAVED INDIA FOR BRITAIN—THE WAR'S MOST FASCINATING ROMANCE (Qopyright, the Hobbe-Merril! Oo.) SYNOPSI5 OF PRECEDING CHAPT DRS Athelian King of th or Kai ye la f Under the hil, man and worn hillmen that, ah ey may Wak lig clicumatances Yoder CHAPTER XX. (Continued) ry UHAMMAD ANIM shall f } answer to you for your } brother's head!" she said with a littlé nod. “At present we need him. Let him preach his jihad and loose it at the right time, After that he will be in the way! Yow shall name his death—Earth's Drink—slow torture--fire! Will that content you? N he sald, with a dry laugh, “What more can you ask?" “Less! My brother died at the head of his men. He couldn't ask more, ith-a-beard alone,” and of course he stood So, she on the footstool of one, her eyes and his were on level. She laid hands on his shoul- ders and looked into his eyes until ald see his own twin portraits that were glowing sunset Heart of the Hills? The Heart med to burn in her, said, and stepping his arm t the thro to curtains in @ wall, and m into long hewn pass- vex from cavern into cavern, until even the Rock of Gibraltar seemed I's house in comparison You et i Khinjan Cayes by a cl under this floor, Well-beloved, ere 18 no other entrance! 1 Sleeper cut these slots for his archer Then he had another thought and set these caldrons in place, to boll oll to down, Could any army force a igh by the route which you ton-welght cc each hole. She showed him a@ cave in which boxes were stacked in high square piles, Dynamite bombs!" she boasted. “How many box I forget! Too many to count! Women brought them all the way from the sea, for even Muhammad Anim could’ not make Afridi riflemen carry loads, have wondered what Bull-with-a- beard will say when he misses his precious dynamite!" “You've enough in there to blow the marvelling at the er caldrony, one to Onnnnnnnnnennnenne BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE EVERY TWO WEEKS, I rwrrrrrrrrrrrnrns ‘“Ma’’ Sunday’s Intimate Talks With Young Girls THE DIVORCE LAWYER'S OFFICE By “Ma” Sunday (Wife of Billy Sunday, the Famous Evangelist) HARD-WORKING little mother came to me the other day, swore me to secrecy and confidentially asked my advice in her dilemma. Her daughter, a fine, high-minded girl, just graduated from business college, had been delighted when, a week previous, she had succeeded in obtainimg a position at a good salary with a well-known law firm. They treated her with the utmost courtesy and respect, Seemingly, she had nothing to fj complain of, and yet the mother noticed that when her daughter came home at night her usually clear, open countenance wore a furtive, pained expression, as if she had had some kind vf a shock. She questioned the girl closely, and finally her daughter broke down and cried: “Oh, mother, I never knew such dreadful things could exist as I have learned in the last few days! My employers are just as nice to meas they can be, but they are divorce lawyers and part of my work is to type the intimate detajis and reports they get from their detectives and others as evidence in their cases, These details are often of such character that the newspapers wouldn't print them. I feel as though I have been smirched even in typewriting them, and I am so ashamed and troubled about it when I get through that I cannot look my employers or even you, mother dear, in the face!” The poor parent didn’t know what to do, Her daughter could not efford to be without a position, and competition was keen, If she changed? he might be Jumping from bad to worse and get a place where she was in en even worse environment. What ought she to do about it? I told the perplexed mother, no matter what privations she and her daughter had to endure for the time being, not to let the girl stay in the divorce office a moment longer; that {t was a position for a man stenog- rapher and not an innocent girl; that the moral effect of having to transcribe the oftentimes unspeakable details connected with many divorce cases, especially in New York State, would be a far greater injury to her character #han any physical deprivation. The poet spoke truly who said: “Vice 1g a monster of so frightful mien, As to be hated needs but to be seen; Yet seen too oft, familiar with her face, We first endure, then pity, then embrace,” It {s Indeed true that as the mind thinks so will the body eventually act. We always sin mentally first before we do so physically, The constant as- sociation with vicious thoughts and scenes cannot help having @ reaction on the mind of a young girl, which ts like a wax surface, responsive to every impression. The more alien to her nature the deeper and more indelible becomes impression by very force of contrast. So let mothers take heed, lest in their desire for their daughters’ ad- vancement In life they neglect to find out the true detatis and environment of the work in which they are employed. There are sordid facta which « pure woman need never know, and which, when heard, seize upon her-#m- agination because of their very viclousness, , (Copyright, 1017, by The Bell Syndicate, ine.) _ By Talbot Mundy | Her sweet breath was in bis nos- understands and man I think she stabbed him, loved him better, would have been no 1 will love you better than she couraged to greater daring by his alt- woman who In another moment she was tn his arms, clinging to him, kissing him And if any man has felt on his lips the kiss of all the scented glamour of tell what King's “Why don't you kill me?” she asked would do no ¢ and then there “Would you kil me if you thought to expect him to take but ‘he made her in dis a tas If it were patest Joke she had ever heard It set her in the best humor possible, was kissed by Cleopatra, come to life and talk of {tt King’s arm is strong, and he did not stand like an Idol. owl was, like the Sleoper's, and the dark hair three days old on it softened nothing of its lines. hose and steady, eyes suggested no compromise, yas gv0d to look at. His head might tasted the delir- had taken the 1 swift minute chuckling to herself as if the one © bursting so must hers 5 1 rrown inté a hundr in Urdu, and in two min given for a ma “L have needed you!” she whispered, peas war eayture poiliee brother waa inuniercd fi ; een all alone! and had given It to King to read. 1 have need- Eee ae hewn in the wall--put them on and him to the curtains he had en- ad him through them, Mountain up!" King advised her, somebody fired a pistol least would n her lips sought his again, and be the collapse knew how long it was be- she began to understand that was winning stood hang- ack to the leather, facing hundred thousand tons of rock on top unfathomable dark. There 1s no other way out?” said, and he “Earth's Drin her arms did not cling so tightly, though his strong right arm was Ii @ stanchion, Hut she looked at him darkly after that, and he got the impression that the thought was not new to her, anc she did not thank him for the roof sour Capt you see then yonder in the Was winning, , arms and Kissed her @ better trusted me. e read it and passed it back to her, will not disbelleve me,” “Can you guess where the darkness knew he had won, he set her 2 the footstool of the even pitied her As she tossed the shoulder her eyes She showed him where eleven hun? d Mauser rifles stood in racks in another cave, with boxes of ammu- nition piled beside th “They will be sure you are mad, and will belleve the witnesses led the letter and addressed it with only a serawh on its outer cove shuddered and she ohuckled “Could you return alone by the way Ismail brought She felt tho pity hair back over her with another mean in others!" “Will you try? sent no medic. { am not afraid,” heard the echo? I know you heard the echo, You think because you, you can feed my love on Indian Government? ink my love is 4 weapon to use Your love for me may You are not stores, and no blan- r commanding start with this , with more amuse- tugged at him and led him back the tunnel and to the throne she mado him sit at > food had been cle Ktewa Gunga rough other She raised her head lke a wolf-—like and howled lone wolf that has found no quarry—molancholy, mean, welt for a better time s1 thought you, Athelstan!* followed her through leather cur- outer chamber, There wan & pause of nearly « mi "hen in the darkr tom wolf-pack took up th and for three long minutes there was din beside which the voice of living wolv slumber song. haired Madonna to some slir CHA PTER XXI. You think a Kiss is th 1 bodies lay like a When it ceased, KI the new angle ing his hand yet tighter, d him down the step told him to put on his #lip- . as If he were a child, led him through @ gap on to a ledge of rock that hung thousands of feet the home of thunder, 4 ledge often wondered! bain de eiasashll cole keness to himself Was actually start- Have you seen that b that seemed to fit him His heart was like to pity her, knowing how tilted back toward the watching the Was that a dages There they sat, 4 had Kissed her, and And there they saw the dawn to go back to India, except aw its conquerer, neense and all the breath of gave buttons from your 7 I have put tt on Ww to him, and it was so they “Blow of ros watched the us touched them, they de: aiwiva aa Glan India and 1 am shoulder and strands hair blown past his face what are you ti asked him at last, “Of India, Princess.” “what of India? “She Hes helpless.” of her golden Rewa Gunga shall take art thou? I will speed thy res well-belovéd! change from King of the Khyber Rifle Regiment to Kurram Khar now into my w my King ag She rose, wi shall see them on their them the letter way and shall give when they reach the Khyber and send them into India with it, Rewa Gunga shall return and tell me jelous of him? Athelstan—Haten! he would have failed her! I think s rms outstretched to Sereeeeereeeennennananananen, THE SPY + By James Fenimore Cooper A Story of New York in the Revolution Will Begin on This Pane July 2 , then we shall talk again tamed poetry wel ward thelr ser She «miles in death hecauss aid them there r as if her threats melted as they met his, stooé up, too, for manner's s were eye to eye again—almost Up to tossed her bra him, only en chin and la More Uses for ____ Stale Bread READ ts the food most com- noe monly wasted in American “You shall love me better! You households, says the State Col- shall love better than your life! |lege of Agriculture. Because bread Then, for love of me, you #hall own | nus been the moat Inexpensive food of the India you think you love! This letter phat} Fol" he tapped her| th? diet for many years dt has often bosom. — “It best to cut you off, been wasted; now the habit persists from India firat, You shall lose that| in spite of its increased cost. you may win! Good, fresh bread has a spongy CHAPTER XX. texture, which In time disappears, | leaving It dry and crumbly, the mois- iH King awoke he lay on @ dual! Ah W comfortable bed ina cave he| yr, Sracually Passing out thr “Ah! You love India?” the crust, Bread a@ little too stale had never seen, but there z to be appetizing may be fresh wan no trace of Yasmini “4 aay Re Sreaneees By putting It dnto the oven a few min- Rarbarte splendor and splen- utes, Rolls and biscuits which have dor that was not by any means bar- hero tenes Saisiaetl eae abn cane | greater purface in proportion to 00 a d he logged chairs, graven bronze vases | '"! slae dry out more rapidly than and 4 yak-hair shawl worth @ rajan’s | O¢¥es Of bread, Those may be tresh- ransom ened by immersing them quickly in The cave was spacious and not boiling water and putting them into gloomy, for there was a wide door, 4 hot oven to dry out, They may ba apparently unguarded, and another served hot and will t square opening cut in the rook to| o% and will taste as fresh es serve as @ window. Through both | When fit baked, openings ight streamed in like taut| ‘The une of bread crumbs for seal- threads of Yasmini's golden hale | joy strings of a golden gither, on which | bed dishes, atuming meats and in his own heart's promptings played a| fY!# 1s not new to most housekeep- tune. jers. It 1s pointed out, however, that ae bea ne 'aea how long he hes fow persons realize that bread crumbs Sitar ate sleep a0 reets GAR may be used a9 a substitute for part of bis present freshnes#—and from |°f ‘he flour in cakes, cookies and the fact that it was a morning sun | puddings. The crumb of the tntertor n that shone through the openings—| of the loaf, or that of . quick breads, tha vo . fo oe eee oe efock | outa be used in preference to the He became consctous of human Iife|rumb of the erust in the following pons by and Hatged 40 the door to| recipes: look A six-foot le of smooth rock ended just at the door and| PANCAKES, sloped in the other direction sharply | ON cup crumbs, two and a quarter downward toward another opening in| CUPS skim milk, one-half cup flour, the cliff side, three or four hundred | four tea#poonfuls baking powder, of yards away and two hundred. fect | ‘e4spoonful salt, sugar, fat, one eg lower Gown, | Soak crumbs in milk for three-quar- Behind him in a cor at the back | ters hour, Add other ingredients and of the cave was a narrow fissure, | Ck like ordinary pancak hung with a leat ner euesale, shat was INDIAN PUDDING, oubtless t oor into nJan's) One cup fine crumbs, one quart heart; but the only wey E8 the outer | sacim milk, one-third cup sugar, two waterfall looked like a little stream | one-quarter teaspoonful 4 below. we was in a very eagle's! cloves, cinnamon, cald the erut Mod eat net opt, Khindan's!in milk, add other ingredients; bake Sra mile above him, {” * 44arter| one and one-half hours in slow oven, Round’ the corner, ten foot from| Variation: Use stale corn bread the entrance, stood F guard, armed to | erumba the teeth, with a rifle, a sword, two pistols and a long curved Khyber | HOW TO BB YOUR OWN CHEMIST knife stuck handy In his girdle. He | VERY woman can be her own spoke to the man and received no an che: swer. He picked up a# splinter of rock | E shemist and analyse one thing and threw it. ‘The fellow looked at| at least—the potato. The neces: him then, He spoke again, The man| sary implements are found in every transferred his rifle to the other hand | home—a grater, @ tin cup and a piece Hie slas with his free fingers. | of cheesecloth. Stretch the cheese- King le D puzzled, The man J opened his mouth and showed that his | cloth over the cup, place your grater tongue was missing, He had been|on the cloth and grate the potato, made dumb, - pes are made to fit| The water will pass through the cloth square holes. King went in again, to wait on events and shudder jee by measuring it you will find (To Be Continued.) that ft !s about four-fifths of the | potato, The starch granules are so minute that they pass easily the cheesecloth, The remainder of the solid substance is a woody fibre called cellujose After pouring the water off starch, dry the latter, and you will have the exact tion of starch the potato containe@,

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