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* ” ) cation Beauty Hints nd First Aid Course By PAULINE FURLONG , How to Ceercine, and What You Should Do to Get the Most Prom Your Outing ty te Pree Ptatee Oe (ihe New Tet Benning ene By Jack Callahan a ste pen f 1 < ; ( —--— -~--- yw, (on Gooov* Now YiA BO,WK AGO ) , 1 won't WANE WK} ME FOR AP Coe) (lo WET MY wick Lint CABARETTE | / ' Ste) “ BATHING SUIT MEY Won'T GE HONE ; ffove TO SHARKS ———— 7? BCFORE MIDNIGHT? § 9.5. VASA We eae ‘ ,« SUBMARINES, 4 caeaiaieal / A : yy | ETC. THE SuaLic ) | \ 1S REQUESTED i ~~ necessary | NOT TO BATHE . o> ON THIS BEACH WA RL rrarea j : | WE SEASHORE \ | om ZT Your own | | WHER . ire \ | t j two © ure efter eating and hike | part Aeain until complete reacuion and reat have } 4. ; r to mins a meal than run the risk of bringing about an at ute indigestion, cramps and colicky paina, which precede the eparis of the abd that eurf bathing, when @ per , tly after eating, frequently causea. The early 1 « plunge t is the most beneficial, and braces the eyatem for the « 4 , too, the sun t# not hot enough to burn the ekin « nd pa FIRST AID LESSONS. No. 36. Broken Knee Cap. DKEN knee cap is easily detected by the first ald student becaune @eep groove may be felt in the knee-cap immediately beneath the The patient is to the ground, Uke tn other leg injuries, and times from slight shock again the serv COAT ANT Pree Pevmeming Co OFT Reve THAT HIGHWAY MAN DOESN'T KNOW IT BUT THAT SUIT WASN'T MINE, IT BELONGED TO MY BROTHER . W ISN'T THAT ner "D0 CUTE ! att. G Lik FIDO WANTS Lx To HELP ME witH MY WAR GARDEN # of a physician are required and care also used in handlin the leg. Stra nh tt and place @ thin board. ble, to the ck of the leg and thigh with the middle of the site the bend of the knee, This should be as wide as the thigh ) and softly padded, before tying into position with atrips of cloth handkerchiefs. Remember not to place bandage over the break pho, but tie one immediately above and one just below the knee, | Answers to Health and Beauty Questions PREVENT CORNS—rTH! :|,| RIGGS DISEASE—MKS, HARRY fitting shoes and care of the T.: Most denusts advise aweak solution prevent all kinds of corns,|°f #ne chloride for thin€rouble, You ld consult your dentist at on causes most of them and! about this and do not allow it to d 8 and perspiration cause soft| velop further, *Keep the toes separated with| and apply oxide of zine powder], WRINKLED HANDS — wns. vent woft corns. Always dry/; HANK M:: | Keep the hands out of tween the tos after bathing.| cocoa butter td make them eave FOR ACIDITY—Mns, H. G.;| 424 White, pe gil crink & great deat of] on ‘and avold coffec, tea and al- Fresh vegetables and fruits, | — MRS, H. 3 OERiN de a crlcetane tomatoes and asparagus, may | cannot answer, ‘There are so many m freely, Starchy, heavy vege-| different kind of kidney troubl white bread, fried foods, pas-| You should consult a docto ; f < rt nd sweets must be eliminated ne he diet. Daily baths and sweat and out-door, vigorous exer-|,, MOUTH BREATHING—croran| @ also advised. I if you wear a chin band at night the pikes mouth will stay closed. These also r R STOMACH AND INDIGES. | duce double chin and prevent eaggir A. D.: Exercises Valuable | muscles, eting this condition, but if inue to eat wrong combina- food and too much "of "all [TOI Ie A inns OF Wien Teor Nee " t hope for relief! taken with nu will not ‘harm any alor , and is really benefictal for those | O” BUSCOR “ZPOU) GORNEROALION: AYU | cacaniieciciineneeiicicacnbipaancinshouihinesanmeninses seieuiel aiamecon —_—__—_ For this|o ‘“Ma’’ Sunday’s Intimate Talks THE MISTAKE THAT MOLLIB MADE. By Ma" Sunda Wite of Billy Sunday, the Famous Evengotiot.) TREETOOD tte mu pad sé . ' The young woman he wee really little me ener re. titel story Peeled (he sentence again ond again tn her My brart bled for her Bhe looked ao week ond Wan Ond goriinh and eo utierly tnadequate tn ber Gght with the tig. wid world. | sould pt wre the m who probally already had for gotten ber as an tnoident by (he wayatde mm Mth other unwritten tragedies of mod ero womanhood She had been @ high eehool ' vania town end would ave bees graduated in eft months, Twe or three evenings each week she end some of her friends made a he Her sory w dreds of © bon of attendin @ moving plo re theatre There was no @00d reason why ty should pass the principal hotel im the town to do no, but they made ft @ point of going that way was there that the travelling salesmen always “put up.” and, al- though the girls didn't admit tt, they seemed to enjoy the looks of admi- ration from these men with city alrs and stylish clothes They saw no harm fn a Iittle “Innocent flirtation” And thus the man came into Mollie's life, who from @ casual tntroduction progre violent lovemaking that awept the girl off her feet. She had accompanted in surreptitiously to @ nearby city, where they were to be married, and elie had left a note for her mother and father announcing the fact. Aud then she had awakened from @ month of blias to face the truth. The maa with whom hor life was to have been one long honeymoon had disap- poared, The marriage had never taken place, Many women have echoed to me Mollie's words: “I trusted him so much.” Phat t# Just tt, A girl will trust ber whole future to a man about whom she knows next to nothing. But a merchant wouldn't trust the samo jman with $50 worth of goods without investigating him from A to Z. Poor Mollie! And there thousands of others like her who never wake up until the alarm clock of tragedy jangles in their ears. A man | who will begin bis acquaintance with a woman in «@ street corner flirta | tion will bear watching | On the other hand, @ woman who will let her friendship with a man become serious without making him produce the proper credentia! taking @ Jump tn the dark that is mighty apt to land her in the quick- ands, She ts going further with her reputation than any bank would go with {ts money, And her reputation ought to be a whole lot more valuable, A bank can make more money, but it is the hardest thing in the world for a woman to win back a reputation. This doesn't mean that a girl ought to be suspicious of everything in trousers, All men are not bad. But every girl has a right to hold herself {at a premium, She has a right to insist that the man prove his worth. | This ts not only her prerogative but her duty. She is staking her whole | 'te If she ts willing to do this on the strength of a smooth tongue and an olly smile the fault fs hers, And also the punishment. | (Copyright, 1917, by The Rell Syndicate, Ima), ed rapidiy to « w to Can Vegetables _and Fruits at Home & Seventh Divis did the seemingly We didn't get up as far as some of LIFE IN THE TRENCHES FROM DAY TO DAY impossible; day and night the Gere the cars had been, but we got quite . mans poured ls into us, and stilt fur enough to eult me. What with Thia series of articies was furnished by the United States | Told by William J. Robinson weteld on. Then their artillery fre tho racket our gun was making and Department of Agriculture, and the information contained ” would slacken, and they tld hurl the noise of the bullets bouncing off 4s reliable down to minute details, | An American “Tommy” Who Has Seen It All their superior numbers against our our armor plate, It was no place for a in ® vain nervous man, The hard part for mo ht, was the inactivity, simply altting » I should be “contemptible ttle arm 4—August the Month for Many Green Things.| Gen G ne sineess endeavor to crush us by shoor wo HEN tanning tomatoes scald] Wash and trim the mushrooms, If Witllam J, Rodtnaon, the author, gow to England on a busivow trip and catches the war &8 It wore, there and waiting in ¢ one and one-half minutes or) #™Mall, can them Whole; if large, they | fete. He enliste in a cavairy regiment and is sent to the frat et once, His regiment rach ‘Tho enemy aeomed to rise out of wanted ¥ ay be c ‘0 sections a » | the town of Howlers, and he is quartered on an agneabio family who make hima fea at bume, He r; 7 Woe didn't at here ry I until skins loosen, Cold dip,| ™4¥, be cut into sections, Blanch the 4 the ground and sweep toward us lke © didn't stay t no very long, ve stems and cares, Pack dl-| item Tene Henan eae Tani ia ee ee ee ee @ great tidal wave, but our machino and [ was not sorry for it, either. ly into cans or hot jars, Press into very cold water, Pack in CHAPTER Ill services, He put in a word for me ured steel into them at the That was my only trip in an armored with tablespoon, Add no water, iid-d wd any and add botling water = - : and I was given the car, but only six hundred shots per minute, ear, and I'in not particular about hav put in level teaspoonful salt per| ‘9 Cov" one leve! teaspoonful of HAT afternoon about 4 o'clock ynt} sul . : y'd go down Ike grass before ing any more, thank you salt to the quart, Viace rubbers ang | until a regular driver could be s« . Put rubbers and caps of jars ¢ jars in om, not tight. shells began to drop into the cured, e. If they did reach ar I was advised that the only way I position, not tight, ‘ iia: It was whilo I was drivi os at all, they never went back t letely, Sterilize for twenty that I saw the City of Yp' ! about It, could escape being sent back to Eng- land was to be transferred to the g this car for the HANDLING TUBER PLANTS, exit. It was my firat timo for 90 minutes, | town, and we made @ quick ¢ y putes in outtit described at end of] itoot and tuber vegetables, such as|under fire, and it was far, from ryt tine, ‘There had not been a avell With the end of the first battle of Ariny Service Corps. ‘This corps, the le. carrots, parsnips, salsity, bi turn-lagreeable. I had often wondered Hvis tired to a village Royal Engineers and the Royal Army vent area . s, | f oat ‘potatos a ‘able. a ft in the place yet, and it certainly was our divish >a village K ‘ a ‘ “He peppers in “insvoten ond | Hise, color, and ‘degree ‘of ripsness | Whether I would bo acared Or not @ Ane old town, called St, Joun Capelle, While the Medical Corps are the three largeat © them until the skins separate] Wash thoroughly, use vegetable| Well, I found out then, and I Ono afternoon I was wafting in the Belgian civillans had been so nice to corps in the British Army, When the meat, Remove the skins, pre Sealt or blanch in hot water | certainly was scared. Since then I ear for some staff officer in the us on the way di from Ostend, [ you join the A. S.C. you are r them solid in hot glass jars or| sufficiently to loosen the skin, Dip tren wothahed about thas tu: q . jee ne ash Me a duet alice tal ; ns. Add water. “Add one level| uickly into cold water, Scrape or| Nave often worered about that fam- Grand Place, when I heard a lot of ai sorry to say that we found them sure Just what you wi nt In for, poonful of salt per quart, Put| pare to remove skin, Pack whole|!l¥, and what they would think of shooting shouting. I looked qver exactly the opposite here, Wo had because as @ rule an A. §. C. man ts rubbers and caps of jurs in posi-| Vesetables, slices, or cross-section | me for advising them that they were jn the direction of the noise and saw not been tn the town thice hours be- eligible for general enlistment, and Ree ene cee Sad, HP ja] Race Ti ck eines ere OF be Cans 1B no dangers that some of our troops were all firing fore we had three Be peasanty that means that he may be used for ety Pp Add boiling hot water untl) i Add | yt " bh t harry aT level teaspoonful salt to quart, Place| It didn’t take us long to move, and into the air, And there above was arrested and convi of snage, any branch of the service when he js f hull vegetabl wh ag| THbvers and tops of Jars in position; |it t# a good thing It didn't, for as wo the firxt German Taubo I had ever ‘There was a wit on a hill Just needed, * ee Weintieaa hasan uot | PATHally weal, But i ane Cap and| were leaving the town we could ses seen. The pilot was flying very low, back of the vill nd some one nd- My luck had held good wo far, and Joppers, cabbage and Brussels | minutes oe tely Sterilize for! 4 Germans coming over tho hill and within easy rifle range, wo I ot ticed that as 4 wo entered the I decided that I might as well push oui, “Blanch in live steam for|~ small beets that run forty to tho| about four milos away, We won- excited and dragged @ut my Vv » this started to go, Jt @ Mttle bit more, and so I got ve or ten minutes. Momove and dip!) quart are the most suitable size for | dered why we didn't go to meet them, and began firing at him too, His r “ ow ta breath of alr transferred, J found that | was to a & uickly in cold water, Pack in hot) first o sor tin cans and add boiling hot} 8 packing, The older the t the more chance there is for } but apparently our time was not yet, chine, I heard afterward, was abse |. My duties were very Mght. At- lutely riddled with bullets and b be attached to the o Army ¢ tuff of the Fifth ater until jars or Un cans are full.) of col When preparing the be o ins were sig but as that corps was JAdd one level teaxpoontul of salt to) jeave on one inch of the stem and) tached to Capt, Colvin I had the care Was wounded tn three places, That this way fot yet in , Pies Naas ach quart. Put ruvbers and caps of all of the tail while blanching. Blanca seer lary and bad was my first shot at a German, If fhe other case wag even worse, for anything that t 1 up. m4 potion, Het Heh Bee Un | not gore than five minutes, and cold. |C! his Hotes ane & ate was in Ypres too that T saw even One of our an old Bel- It became known that I could ride , Beans completely. dip. The skin should be scraped from|ride behind him wherever he went " ge ae 8 cide our s es . ia I t Blanch lima beans, peas, and other! the beet, not, peeled. Beets should be| when mounted, That 1s about all I hundred of the Prussian ard gian with a} his arm, and a yelo, and so f was tem- Premvinaire OF comuinations of thers 18) packed whole, if | posslbl Well] nad to do. Of course when the regi- Prought in, and [ must say that they asked 1 wh in it porarliy attached a8 & a@pare rid live steam for five or ten minutes! canned beets will show «@ slieht Loss | fs yen ne ute wid were some of tho finest look! wol- 5 ieee Neyer Fa Matieataehins Gun ae Dip quickly in cold water, Pack im-/ of color when removed from the| Ment went tnto action my duty would Were avn” oF tim abelk Kuti Sere ADELINE ; vn mediately in bot glass jars or tn| canner, but will brighten up in a few! bo to follow the Captain, f i igs . ‘ £6 # machines a ply my cans: Add boiling hot water to fill| days. daieeh ee eri. alias fellows and our in on exam cycles with @ side-car 4, but container, $74 level tea mpoontul salt) A largo number of cultivated and ys ; “ ny sip ps looked aig small { t 1 two ad a aice cu ned Jer quart, Place rubbers and caps of | wild greens are ed an canned fe an was hero | em } age ng ’ dara in position, not tight, Beal tin! by this method will make a succu-! that we joined up with the Beventh It was s 1 ata ‘ = ficans completely. Steriiize for 180) lent and valuable food for the winte \fantry Division, ‘There was very wae weke * # minutes, Jand spring months. Among the eulti- | 1" rer ige ened ty mana got aathican ita eee CAULIFLOWER AND MUSH. |v ated greens are Swiss chard, kal tle 1B. ' fo, @ thelr fi # like jth p ‘ ROOMS, Chin cabbage leaves, ipland | know Just what we Were going to do, M00" Tt / , ‘ “ “7 cress, French endive, cabt prouts, |Our chaps went on pa every ap Fe H ; r Use the flowered portion of caull-)timip tops, you jer New | q A iohaliy thay wauid run (1mm. WoeD 1 S 4 : ef flower, Plunse it into cold brine (one Rg apinach, beet topa, dandelion, | 2a%+ and o ; cna Gib panio (hay papi half pound salt to twelve quarts of | ¢ fonder daahech warouternatieg [into ® German patrol and there ie ee : bina Water), Allow the cauliflower to re- | istard, dtussian mustard, collards, | Would be a scrap, eae t HA nitbor main in this brine for one hour, |) ies PAR IeRYaRS anne , ‘ Be rt 4 6 real w \ Fs Blanch it three minutes and dip| And tender rape leaves, Among tho) During our stay at Zillebcke tt WAS i29 what was happening motes ee : j Yquickly into cold water, Pack it in NAP IAH sour dock, amartweed, | @ecided that all untrained men were gi, over, b with a ae ‘na vaneis / eels . mH | phot Slass Jars or tin cans, Vill with | grouts, purslane, or “pusley,” poke-|to be returned to England td finish ¢ Serena flanged tote Sd ous ’ dere *! {boiling water and add a level tea- | Sh") Ae dpaet ea Pe tat : Pace & oe ul of salt per quart, Put rub-| Word 8p yk My ag hed thelr tra ani poked very fly, I remember aceing my 4cOr mount a e Kune or threes 4 F ae 1 peron 4, wild mustard and milkw iahvaatie twa going to land back ; : nes et re and onpe of jare In poaltion, not nder sprouts and young leaves), | ™ ’ peepee: coming, 80 I got ou 1 started the pounde While I was w to Ee Ss OUTFIT TO BE MADE AT HOME, |{ that riding fonee aiidectded. the °neine Thera w und 1 ou w 1 I Unless you are absolutely sure that) Home-made canning outfits are con. | ‘8 Matter wi im one wan killeg, (22 Just bebind ¢ ar, and a3 thé made one trip s armored car— ou knOW a mushroom when you sea structed of such utensils as wash | driver of Gen, Byng's car was killed, omcer went to step in, a piece of shull ¢ ts to say, went Into action with 4+, 4 1 dragged the { ft, do not run tho risk of gathering boilers, tin pails, milk cans, metal | so I went to the Captain and told him out one of theso horses In two. ied feat pane ge. “a llpe and using for food what you think are | wash tubs and’ lard pails, Buch y could drive a car and I offered my “ay woo Late hl: Si aaa Bap hacipnce aah Me a and t n mushrooms, A largo number of per- canners should have well fitting covers 8 soon as f th rked by expert gu A SE pot ee ns ara natianne| avery vear hecansal and falaa bottoma or lifting nlatforma town we were all right, for while tn® «simply acting a8 a spare driver in eee, iP ee card Many | of metal or wood, The latter are to | BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED § shells continued screaming over us, case anything serious happened. ‘Tho plants closely resemble | support Jars or cans to prevent direct | til) burati he to’ nody of the ¢ 0 4 wi ule edible mushrooms, Can ‘mushroomel conloct an Pog trigiratey genet | ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE $ they were still t rating in tho town. body of the car was covered with bul immediately after picking; if allowed|a free circulation of water and steam | (EVERY TWO WEEKS. ‘This waa the beginning of the first let proof steel, and it was bullet proof pave been given it f r wv stan they become unfit for us around and upder the containers, Y FOURTEEN MONTHS AT THE F Hventually we reached the place on the Menin road known as “hell-fire corner,” and I think the name must y tts condt- battle of Ypres, in which the Utila wa .. ton that night As the star-shelle RONT went up the whole place would be despatch waa to be carried about almost as light as day. The Ger- two miles along the road which fol- mang were shelling the road and the lows the bank of the Yser Canal. alr was filled with all kinds of mis» This road was constantly being allen swept by German machine gun and That road was Hterally a death rifle fire, The despatch was to be trap, and how #0 many came out handed to a French commander who without being touched i# one of the Waa waiting for it. mystories that never oan be ex- ‘Tho first man was given a copy of plained. We could hear two of the the despatch and he started out with guns which had got there before us !t. ‘This road ran right under the fn action further up the road, We none of the Germans and was in full ntinued to feel our way along until View of thetr trenches all the way, wo came to where our officer was It waa 80 swept by machine gun and walting for us. Ho showed us our Fifle fire that it seomed as if no one position and went back to look for Could possibly live through a hun« the machina that had not yet ar- dred yards of it. save The first man started and waa Our position was in a ditch just #00n out of aight. They waited in by a placo where the road had been Valn for @ certain length of time cut by an old aupport trench, We for @ signal that he had arrived, and eased the machine into the ditch and then — called = “Number Two,” got her firmly fixed, Our officer cama “Number Two" started out, but we dawhing buck and told us to cover 4W him go down before he had gone the road where tt led out from the # hundred yards, German trenches. Then it was sim- ‘Then “Number Three” etarted, I¢ a cauo of watt until they started W4S pitiful to watoh those poor chaps. lee Horn Coat auartan When @ man knew it was his turn Wo nat there for two hours before Xt I coult see the poor fellow wo suw any signs of activity, but Mervously working on his machine, when it did come tt caine with a rush, 246d prime the engine, than open Hundreds of Germans seemed to rise 824 close the throttle quickly several from nowhere, and that road was Mine@#—anything, in fact, to keep him~ ‘savatly’ 4 4 with them self busy. When his number would Dick, t gunner, opened at the be called he'd hesitate @ second and first in, and the machine guns from Rerhaps flood the carbureter, then our trenches were pouring 1t into he'd take his despatch gud suddenly them, too, They went down In hun- dash out, dreds and, while our fire checked Six of these foNows went down in y still camo on, less than half an hour, “Number ring feeling Seven" was a young fellow whose © 1 don't know, 1 wish I did, for he was ce y the nerviest man I them somewhat, It was certain) to be streaming bullets into the Gers them still advance, } minutes of this the mana and After e¢ v s blew for "cease fire” and our Seven" was hardly out fantry Jumped the parapet and of the officer's mouth before he bad went r thom with the bayonet, Bis despatch and was on bis way They broke the attack right there, About five minutes later the signal 1, more than that, they took two came that the despatch had been de 4, lvered, —— My officer told me afterward that CHAPTER IV, tho French General to whom he had PEW days after this an handed the despatch had taken the lent occurred that, to Medaille Militaire off his own breast y way of thinking, way and pinned it on that of the most wonderful tne of German trench young e spateh rider, He was also la er happened, Volun- awarded oe Vi a Cross and 1 riders for “dangerous given a co fon It is things for, About elgh- ike this that make one proud to offered themselves, belong to such an army. and of course all were accepted, A (To Bo Contin THE GREEN-GOODS KING +t By Arthur B, Reeve Ancther Fascinating Story of Craig Kennedy, the Scientific Detective i WILL BEGIN ON THIS PAGE MONDAY, AUG, 13 work" 10d.) P LS a a