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Daily . the body of Civided te onsen tial to be * er is of an in produ anae » special duty! the work are cre the netural re-! the body ss com: | Posed of celis, and when any organ falls to properly th i th Gault of some individual cell, just a the defent of an army te the result! @f the {i health or inefficiency of tach soldier Therefore the health of the b @epends entirely upon the health of Cells Of Which It ts composed and cx health depends entirely upon nvtri pron. PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS — G@. M. B: These are not alw the | Fesult of internal trouble, th Rearly always, Sometines blackheads | Peeult from greasy, unc n skin and implies, or may be the iesult of in- ection. If you reaily take exerci baths, breathe right and eat simple foods, internal conditions can hardly caure yours. Ciean the face with Warm soap and water, without fric- | tion over the pimples and then wipe lime water over the greasy nose on @ pufl of cotton many times each day, + SHOES CAUSE SWELLING — MARTIN F.: Yes, leather shoes fre- quently cause the feet to swell and burn, even though the feet are clean @nd well cared for at all times. You; gghould return them to your dealer be- | lore they cause more trouble. GYLCERINE—MRS, W. R: No,| yeerine will not cause superfluous! ir. It is drying and best for the oily complexion and blackheads. I Juted with equal parts of rose wa ft makes a cheap and effective lotion for chapped, red hands, dark neck | it 1 slightly and rough complexion, bleaching. STEAMING THE FACE —wrs.| LN. Be tele I do not advise steaming | unless the pores are hopes sxed and the face dotted | with blackheads, aming causes | flesh to relax and makes tt ap- M sneha Pauline Furiong’s Article on Health and Exercise THE PRINCIPLES |eome by supplying them with swiftly | paper pined about Pear loose and heavy and often opens tion. OF HEALTA, vidual call, ther of bone, mur ie oF Mucous mem oo n reotlve @ constant fap wey pore, healthy bleed, an thie whet bt by proper Butrition and to « to resist @ ain power cone freedom from pain, clear mea tollly aed strength the health of the je te Moet cesential ure 4 te not the eply thing necessary to cell health, en the rapid cireu ” it te one of the most joteresting an@ important bed\ly tune lene. Constant deep breathing and a few minutew’ dally practice of some rim ple phyrical exercises will kesp the active and wh 108 moving blood and Increased nutri. tion Muscular activity stimulates al! of the bodily functions, and therpy causes increased demand for outri von, which can only be supylied| through pure blood, created from wholesome foods and exercise. Answers to Health and Beauty Questions. the pores to such a degree that they never quite ¢ vin, Im that case hothing but skin peeling will restore the skin to fir smooth texture, If you do steam the face, bold It over a bow vf very bot water, with a news- the head to keep n in. Lo not do this long nough to reiden or burn the ekin, Then wash with pure giycerine soap and hot water and finish with much old Water bathing. Then rub the © Ilabtly with ice and apply witch hazel and half alcohol on a puff of cotton to contract the pores, Tais is & good treatment for sallow, greasy skin, but should not be used moro than once each week. Bie PERSPIRING HANDS—MRs, B, D. K.: Excessive perspiring of the hands is due to nervous condition. Alcohol one ounce, belladonna one- f ounce, mixed and rubbed tn the alms will prove an effective local application, SCALP AND SUNLIGHT—E. F. at ‘oo much strong sun will blea the hair to many different shades, cause eye strain and frequently head- aches. This can do the hair and scaip no real good. Airing and sunning the hair in moderate heat 1s beneticial, however, HEAD SOUNDS—MRS, F. Vv. C.: These may be caused by catarrh or colds. They also may be the result of nervous derangement and Indiges- fave a physician examine you. Fottow THESE DIRECTIONS AND You CAN MAKE A SWEATER sate dl JOHN VE MADE MY FIRST SWEATER (WISH You'D TRY TON -—_— Your FiksT SWEATER | With Sketches Is a Captain (ooreight,, 1917, by Lirice Bairnstather ‘ SYNOPSIS OF RIX y gO into the tren egogoment, and alter: e@bout twelve smal! hou he left our humble longings from the dugout About this time t The cold and rain were comfort was at its heist, Getermined to ; him gort of a place he had m trench and went oft t ceedingly call t next night, It was the first on change of life presented by ev lage, and this was the start of two months’ “village” life for me, I went from our old trench after dusk on ‘ , My Usual round of ihe machine Kun When over 1 strtich off nek act the field beh ar trench to the village, and waded up what had been t and only street, Out of the mangled wi of houses I w h ne my pal had c his res MUL. ated, water ' tr ing into this ruin and that, until at the end of the sir vbout four hun dred yards from our own t nes, I nt 4 tip from the sen us to nd’s new d « ‘| ¥, fentry, which hous a Hudson live in? it sma down U ot mth 5 hank c along the de serted ruin of end on tt a small c t in eared, standing about f “ k from the road, This was the place the sentry meant rignt enough, and in I went at the hole in the pluster wall, The front door, having apparently stopped vomething or other previously, was conspicuous by ita absence, All was dark. I groped my way qiong round to the bank, stumbling wer various bits of debris on the Foound, umtil I found the opening in- A Real Story of Life in the Trenches Mubliahed under arrange N our following trip to the tres 9 and @ couple of farms, tomett ogethe © live somewhere in the villag under w When my stable companion had gone 1 4 to get to live In. by the Author st Mr. Bairnsfather, an English Artist, in the English Army EDING CHAPT! CHAPTER VII, , (Continued. ) some of us had the courage to walk into the mangled old village just be- hind our front line and examine th ruins. It had just occasionally caught our attention as we looked back from our trenches; mutilated and deserted, @ dirty skeleton of what once had been a small village—very small— Anyway, we heard that it had been decided to put some men tnto the village, and hold it, as @ Becond line. The platoon commander with whom I lived happened to be the man @elected to have charge of the men in the village, wit Consequently one night his servant and small be- hich we lived were very poor, and altogether physical dis- naturally and to see what 1 well remember that h_1 realized the chances of a sever next night, to what must om bad be the room where to elected live. Not a which Was as would be hes not far one there e to an opening covered with 1 sack, Pulling this @ little to I Was grevied with a vc ¢ uifocaung smoke, 1 proceec ver, and diving in under inside the room, In the the smoke, sitting beside a snd battered fire bucke got ot nan, his face illuminated by’ the Nght from the fire. The i was bathed in mys- here's Mr, Hud- sked. 8 out havin’ a look barbed in front of the 1 think, sir; but he'll be back this is whe he stays now.” i deter 1 to wait, and, to fill in the Lune, Blarted to examine the cot. tage. it was the first house I had been into on the firing line, and, unsavory wreck of @ place as it was, it gave ‘ A delightful feeling of’ comfort to sit one-flagged floor and look Upon four perforated walls and a red root, The worst possible house in the world would be an in provement on any of those dugouts we had in the trenches, ‘The front room had been blown away, leaving a back room and a couple of lean-tox Which opened out from it, An attic under the thatched roof with all one EIGHTY STITCHES ACROSS THE Back i AuvoAGY VUE CUliyieKeU ue OMEN Aue vb es The outer and inn 1lls were aii Whole the; all I can and have to do ade of that stuff wn a8 wattle 18 to hitch up in some central place, nd daub—sort of carin like plaster and this Is just, as central ag that worked into and around hurdies, A rotten trench we've just come from bullet wou ¢ go through “Of course it is," ho replied. “If I of th er, and so Were you I'd come alor and sta y had. I r with ine, and go to all your places loon th he fre ere If h attack comes you'll Germans, 1 fo the t to get from one place to top of a pepper another much easier than vu were A sound @ { a man trying to gtuck in that trench. You'd never be waltz with a cream separator sug- abie to move from there when an a a gested to my mind that some one hod k and bombardment had started tripped and fallen over that mysterl- Having given the matter a little obstacle outs which I had further consideration [ decided to noticed on entering, d presently | move from dug-out to this cot beard Hud volce cursing through tage, so ' the village and went the sack doorway back across the Meld to the trench to He came in nd saw me examining » to the necessary a ngements. the plac “Hul a'r re tor I got back to my lair and shouted are you?" he ex Are you for my & a “Here, Smith, I said, “I'm going to fix up at one of the houses in the village. This place of ours here ts no more central than ning to stay b 12" I don't quite know yet," I replied, “Tt doesn't seem a bad idea, as 1 have A HOPELESS DAWN—RAIN, MUD, DAMP COKE AND DUG.OUT DOWN 8TREAM, A IN D BI RR TS By Bruce Bairns father tue Vilage, aun houses is a damn this clay hole hore. vuw vi ueee iKht better than 1 want you wo collect all my stuff and bring tt along; I'll show you the way.” So ) t fow gings bav~ 1, we out for That was my last of that fearful trench, A worse one I know could not be found, My new life in the village now started, and I soon saw that tt had {ts advantoges. For instance, there was a slight chance of foncing off some of the rain and water. But my knowledge of “front” by this time was such that I knew there were corresponding disndvan- tages, and my instinct told me that tho village would present a fr crop of dangers and troubles quit ewual to those of the trench, though slightly different in style. I had now started off on my two months’ so- fourn in the village of St. Yvon. CHAPTER VIII, UDSON, myself, his servant and my servant, all crushed into that house that night, What @ relief it was! We slept in our €reatcoats on the floor, which was bard as most floors are, and dirtier than tho gouerality, but being out of the water and adie to stretch one's aelf at fu! length made up for al) defictenc’ Hudson and 1 both slept in the per- forated room; the men in the larger chamber, Bear the fire bucket, T got up just before dawn as usual and taking advantage of tho gray stole about the village und nd the house, sizing up the lo y and seeing how my position stood with regurd to the various ma ¥ gun emplace ents, T dawn breaking, I had to skulk back Into the house again, as it w for us to keep up the ¢ serted house In village. We had to lurk inside ali day, or “De. wo Went out, creep about with enormous caution, and go off down ® slight slope at the back unul we got to the edge of the wood, which wo knew must be le’ to th nemy, I spent this day making horough Investigation of the house creeping about all its compone ports and thinking out how we co st utilize itw lit advantages. Hudson had orept out to examine t village by stealth, and Tw with plots for fortitying the “cas and for being able to make durse 4 &y SnUK &S We could In this frail she cottage, I found a hole in the boards of the attlo and pulled elf Up into tt thereby, This attic, as J haye said before, pad all one end blown away, but the wo sloping thatched sides remained. Pocketknife and thus obtained a view of the German trenches without co mitting the error of looking through the blown out end, which would hav clearly shown an’ observer that house was occupted, Looking through the slit I had made I obtained « Panoramte view, more or less, of the The Evening World's Kiddie Klub Korner CONDUCTED BY ELEANOR SCHORER avorite ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Hero (Award Winner.) | Born tn Nardin County, Ky,, Feb. 1?, 1809. Died at Washington April 15, 186. Coperigns. 1917, by the Prowe Pubilabin New York Kvening World) M favorite hero is Abraham) 1 think the best thing he did wae 1 ao % he wae 6 free the slaves. Th: the . United Btates a free eountr | friend of the Nothing | “When soldiers were k lied’ and thete was too amall and lowly for his. | p shed about them, he alway tee, Animals as well as human he- | & tall he could for them Pf ings were treated with kinds by | @¥ay, and » Imes he wrote letters “ F to fathers and mothers and told them him. He did not have the je *| how sorry he felt for them, 1 wiah E to go to as we child day jcould have known him, | would like have, but he waa very to} (0 have talked to him. He loved little n, and often walked vr to|chidren, you know. J am sure if he to ‘hool, He w always woore| Was living now and could see this big people were, Ih ing to what| «reat war he would do just as Prest- they said, In hopes of learning more, | d Wilson is doing, fighting for Ho wasn't a bit vain, and thought | freedom, |for a long time before he Int the peo-| By MARJORIE SMY THR (age 7), | ple name him for President No. 1676 Fulton street, Brooklyn | OLIVER HAZARD PERRY, Honorable Mention, Born @ South Kingston, R. 1, Died HF hero I ike best was young IP and brave, His name ts Oliver H, Perry When war broke out tm 1812, Perry enlisted as @ patriot and went to | sea, | The ships which Perry fought In were made of wood, as there were |no tron ships at that time, | There were nine ships, three brigs, lave schooners, and one sloop, in ali bearing fifty-four guns and 543 men. He was sent to drive the British ! ' from Lake i, and thus co- joperate with the land forces, ("Phe British Meet consixted of six | venn two brigs, three schooners jand ne small haere bi all Pega y-three guns and men wy daylight on Bept. 10. Berry eotied out to meet the British fleet. Tue battle began in earnest about nm. rry’s flagship, the Lawrence, got within canister shot, but held out for © hours. rhe British turned all their guns lon Perry's flagship, the Lawrence, juntil it was so torn to Pieces by shot land shell that it began to sink Perry and his brother with his re- maining comrades sailed over to the German trenches and our own, The eq view, in short, was this: One saw the| Myr Dear Cousins: bucks of our own trenches, then the| Is {t not great fun, moving about ‘No man’s land” and beyond that peed re tin the front ‘of the. German | ike this? How many times wo fave trenches. TI saw exactly how the|done tt. Well, this ix the season house stood with regard to the Po-|moying. It is being done by thou- sition, und also noticed that it had | Meee ramities, why not by our two dangerous sides which fa 1 the tion formed two rm4ns, 43 our pos sides of @ triangle, I then proceeded to explore the house, In the walls I found a great many bullets which had stuck be- tween the bricks of the solitary chimney or imbedded themselves in oodwork of the door or support- posts at the corners, Among the straw in the attle I found @ typical selection of pathetic little trifles, two pairs of very tiny clogs, evidently | belonging to some child about four or five years old, one or two old and bat. tered hats and a quantity of spinning materlal and instruments, Ihave the small clogs at my home now, tho only souvenir I have of that house at Bt, Yvon. Having concluded my examination I rept out back to the wood and took a look at tt from there, “Yes,” I thought | great family? We are a family, you know, @ family of cousins and all dear to each other. It is nice to have our Klub here tn this Korner, It is a larger homo than we have ever had before. much | print { hope you boys and girls will take advantage of this and send a great many poems and stories and compost- tions outside the contests, because there will be more room in which to “Contributions From Klub We are going to be very Members.” ‘happy in this home. SEPTEMBER DRAWING CONTEST. will be for Klub Cousins to tllustrate {n pletures some event in news— something that happens this month to myself, “it's all very nice, but, by| Gad, we'll have to look out that they | don't neq us and get to think we're in this village, or they'll give us a warm time." It had gone very much against my thought-out views on trench ware fare, coming to this house at all, for I 4 that you read about in your fhowspaper. It will be just as if you were an artist employed by a news- @ « An Un had learned by the experiences of | thers that the best maxim to remem- r was “Don't live In a how However, wo had decided to lve tn Louse wood I determined to take a few ele mentary and common sense preva % Hudson had returned when I back, and together we discussed house, the position and everything could think of in connect * business, as we sat on the floor and id our miiday meat of bully beef and ult, rounded up by tea and plum 4 apple jam spread neat from the| 1 on odd corners of broken biscuits, We thorougily talked over th n of possitile fortifteations 4 cautions, 1 said, "What 1 wan. 1s an emergency exit gor we can stand @ litle ohy they start to shell us” Hie agreed, and we both pile up all the odd bricks, w lying out at the back of the hous, against the forated wall, and thon sicep there Uttle mind, (To Te Continued.) A eeeteraeaceenraeeare eee Ey | A COURTSHIP IN DISGUISE A Whole Ocean Was Hardly Big Enough for This Rapid Fire Romance ‘nae the Story on the Home Page Monday, Sept. 24 LL PRL PPD ALLL LOL LOLOL ALPE PLP PLL LRP PPP PPL but as Lerept back from the | father ler state of | Hanes of snit (me day Merorle came running to her who eet mading & and crted Holeu has joined the wonderful Kiddie Kin 4 abe showed me her lovely pin, 1 wish I could Jol paver jouldn’t yor Eveniog World home every night, in payert”* Her father smiled as she asked bring Th with stead of the don't knew on and frends, always wan! Marjorie thought @ 1 koow! The Kiddie Kiub Komer ts 4 only on Tasedars, Thuredlaya and Saiur ‘Treae days 1 could have my paper, while ery you could have youry.”* anxiously, but ber father Tn’ a abort time Ma: ‘oked Jb Avenue, Brookiyn: The Bad Boy. Once there was a bad boy who lovet to throw 8, One day he went fuhtng, nything, ‘The next day aught ope fish, chanted fatry, And as he t up for bait the fairy put and io tint was an wae beginntog to cut | \ W sh over him, be then caded all the aniieis | he that he hind burt and told them to | + tn eh ti, the bad beg 13 Klub Pin” \ulho dy ‘They did 0s they ware (old, and fret th re kta 2 fast ad they could, until he ald ho would never irom, anys oe, i levers tigow « stna et aa eolunal again. for he hecwain Gian bary wine Ye “hy Eo TALE age deren, No, Th ot intarahty ceriithate wath’ Place, Oity, , | COUPON NO. 214 Little “Sanshine Ove, oot 9, many year ago, there lived « Cousin Eleanor’s Klub Kolumn The drawing contest for this month | < at Port of Spain, Istand of Trinidad Niagara, which tate the surrendered, after thet came ter hours of British ships | 4 tighting five one being sunk On Sept. 12 Gen. Harrison reeetved Perry's famous despatch, “We hav met the enemy and they are oure,”’ two ships, two brits and one schooner, This battle resulted in the recapture of Detroit After this battle Gen. Harrison attacked the lish and their Ir dian allles at the Thames River, ended in victory for the Americans. The battle helped greatly in end- ing the troublesome wars with the Indians, which had cost the United States nearly 20,000 men and $5,000,- 000 in money, After this battle the British forces were never again very strong in the West, cumseh’s union of Indian tribes was broken up, and Tecumseh him- self was slain, |. These are the reasons Oliver Perry is _my_hero, Ry WILLIAM A. DUNPTTY, aged ven, No, 399 Fourth Avenue, Brook- jiyn, N.Y. NOTE.—Perry's mother fitted him to command others by teaching him early to abe. * ” paper to draw illustrations for the news stories It prints. Of course you should plek out some news that ts Interesting td everybody as well ag to | yourself, hia contest will elose Saturday, Sept. 29. One dollar will be awarded to each Klub Cousin who makes and vomits the best new drawing for his or her age. HOW TO EARN A KLUB PENNANT TWENTY-TWO-INCH felt pen- A nant, made in the Klub colors, bine and gold, and bearing the Kiddie Klub name, will be given free to every Klub member who eecures tive new members, and to every new Klub member who brings in with him or her four other new members, Six coupons, numbered in rotation, must be sent in with each new name, to- gether with the signature, age and address of each new member, just as required when individual kiddies ap- ply for membership. Members who cannot save the cou- | pons may obtain pennants by send- ing 10 cents, with nam Affectionately, Cousin Eleanor. Contributions From Klub Member ~~ “tomate Decauae of All the children because of her wweet die | ttle ict who bad thin for her motto end you will always be hap 4 the village loved bor pest tion At the ak aed village lived @ very crom ane near an One day ed down to bia cottage, The farprised to see her end tne refused, and oo vo will, * won the beart 1 he moved to the e could se “Blame fi 1 that he wae the from (bat day om, that any om, LACOUR, age twetve, : a HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AND OBTAIN YOUR PIN, josg a ———— ee