The evening world. Newspaper, October 4, 1917, Page 21

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BOME PAGE The Pauline Furlong Women’s National Army For Health Ort te he Pree Pevteting Ce Pie Nee Tet Breeke Hot ore DAILY DRILL No. 13--For the Housewife. OMEN whe are chrontently tired wil! eventuatiy fall inte @ both mentally end yelcaly, and thie condition te partioulariy Prevalent among home workers. 1 frequently beve cocasion to pity cortale women he confide that (hey envy me the privilege of menial work, and thle te indeed @ deplorabie condition, because our minds are trained tn early youth for better things than mitre drudgery im the kitchen. At the seme time, housework and dally duties, both mental and physical, are just what you make them and when enough thought ts allowed for dividing them up and making the most of the ciroumstances which eurround you el) taske wt!) appear lighter and will be SETS portormed tn a happier frame of mind. We all khow that the greatest disease tn this country fe “nerves” — the Mle woman nes the condition on lack of employment and the worker on overwork; but, whatever the cause, the formation of other habite which make you forget yourself will surely cure the worrt case of nerves 1 know women _ who complain that | they have to run up and down the stairs many times each day, and this exer- cise in itself can be made beneficial to ‘ihe entire body if property taken, which means not only correct position, but proper frame of mind as well. Consider any work as play to derive g00d effects trom it. All of us must love the work we do, otherwise It cannot be well done, and the attitude of mind plays the most important part in accomplishing the tasks of Ife. It is entirely possible to be well by thinking you are, expecially if you live properly mean- while. Stout readers who want to reduce the legs, hips and abdomen should welcome opportunities to climb stairs during the day, because then they will not have to allow so much time for monotonous exercises at other times of the day. To properly climb stairs and get lene best out of the exercise a fresh curtent of alr should be moving through the halls. Step on the edge | with the ball of the foot and keep the |shouldera well back and head erect, jas shown in the fIlustration. Climb with a brisk, alert step, be- cause this encourages deep breavaing and overcomes short-windedneas. If you feel “winded” at the top of the stair, practise the following breath- ing exercise, lying on couch or bed: Place the open palms on the stomach and press downward. Take a deep breath until the hands are raised up with the movement of the stomach. Hold {t and count five slowly, then exhale. Do this until breathing is natural, —- Answers to Health and Beauty { Questions. ENLARGED KNUCKLES—MRS. WALTER R.: These may be mors easily avoided than removed, Hard | \ ] Evening World Daily Magazine Sud . was VE Bou (Ya Parser res PPING, aur ’ ee es = —™4\- |) SOMETHING SURE | No HOME SHou! For THE HOUSE 7 EW THOUT ONE i comes work and heavy lifting often cause hem. LINES ON THE NECK—MR8. LAURA G.; For those lines behind the ars use p Magsage with the tips of the fingers and some good cold cream, Bathe the neck in hot water ind soap cach night and then rinse with much cold water, Do this be- ore tho massage. This treatment jorings the blood to the sallow dry jeck and makes it appear pink and ? so removes collar [ABEL C.: Mix talcum powder powdered bo- with one teaspoonful -vaclo acid, one-half teaspoon calcine magnesia and powdered orris root to scent désired odor, This should be sifted through bolting or placed in a besing a . Tale nurse, ‘Trask forms an a chamois bag, so that it will come | pin stout’ soldier of fortine named Cayte I Tnmediaveyy through the material to the face | Trask is jealous, Then he eater an atuletle coetest, puedly be ie seth and smooth and ane, ta invaikl inthe first cabin uly: and ¢hinks himself ate. tn ‘on Introduced to rise, 0 ib or, and is Drask i recognized and. b main orders some the BLOOD MAKING FOODS—MRSs, H. M. B.: If you are anemic you must | ™ learn to exercise and breathe deeply and rest and live in the open air as much as possible, Drink much water apd eat spinach, raw eggs and milk, if well tolerated by the stomach; also potatoes, beans, peas, cereals. Grape \,juice 1s also beneficial for the thin “anemic woman, TO CURE CATARRH—ARTHUR Wt If you keep the body clean inside and out—that is, take datly baths, 0 ) better still, Turkish baths, at least once a week, in connection with the daily bath—keep the Dowels open, eat light greens and salads, drink much water and take physical exercises you will help overcome this distressing disease. ‘Trask persuades @ waiter {0 morning, The weather is very bad, CHAPTER XVII. (Continued,) HE weather proved so bad that there were few passengers in to breakfast. Trask had just ‘a single patron—Sidne# Sands. And he did not fail to take ad- vantage of his situation. Hoe was begininng to fret against the role when wor reached him that the ship would not put in at Key West after all. The storm made it a dangerous thing to attempt, and Capt. Blodgett had decided to run straight for Gal- veston, It was there that Trask ceased to be a waiter. Heediess of conse- quences, he took off his uniform and sought out Sidney Sands. Together they stood watching the wild world of water that swirled about the ship, ALCOHOL AND RESORCIN FOR DANDRUFF—HARRY A.: Make this tonie as follows: Alcohol, one ounce vesorcin, twenty grains, Remember that cleanliness, brushing, shanpovs and massage are also necessary to premove dandruff and keep it away. — threatening to engulf it at any HORSEBACK RIDING — ETHEL | minute. R.: This is a beneficial exercise, es-| A heavy shock sent them both fly- pecially when taken on a cross-sad-|ing against the wall. From below dje, The side saddie frequently causes | came a noise s0 ominous that Trask's one hip to develop more than the| heart skipped a beat, It was @ sound her. Hard muscles, formed through | of tearing metal, & id jangle of uch riding, cannot be remedied, machinery, & pound against the sides of the ship, ough some GRACKING JOINTS—MRs. W, K.| giant were wieldin, ledge upon Hi Lack of lubricating ofl tn ‘the | her. joints of the body may cause this. It| It lasted for sever! nds, then may @lso be caused by misplaced| became suddenly stilled. structures, Why not consult an osteo- path? PALPITATION OF HEART WHEN IN BED-—MKS. THOMAS F.: Indl- gestion, fatigue, worry, excitement, yowered vitality, may cause this.| Aina the cause to overcome it, Eat | wery Nghtly and nat later than two “Have we struck something?” she asked quickly. “I don’t think go. Walt here, I'll see if I can find out.” As he went in search of an officer, Trask noticed that a perceptible change had come over the ship. She was rolling sluggishly, heavily, as at last weary of the fight. She was no yours before retiring. longer exchanging blow for blow —_—_ - with her furlous antagonist, but FAT KNEES--HELENBE R,: Heavy| seemed to be yielding to the on- massage will help remove super€aous fat from the insides of the knees, but \\ if the bones are too large on the in- ner sides, nothing will correct the condition. SULPHUR WATER FOR POOR SKIN--NELLIN R: By no means nould you drink sulphur water. You Hable to be told most anything siaught, bowing ber head to the in- evitable, It was mn more diffleult to walk than before, and Trask made slow progress. He was gone for several minute and returned to find her still stan: ing at her oo of observation, with a look in her eyes that contained more of curiosity than anxiety. yy your acquaintances, Eat and| “We broke a shaft,” he explained, drink natural and wholesome things| ‘And we're not moving at all? and the system will take care of the| ‘Not much, I'm afraid; although COMICON Os “ an officer says they'll probably keep ~ sHohaage places with ith ‘and goes on duty ta the 4, HOW TWO WOMEN LOVED ONE MAN WHO WAS REALLY SOMEBODY ELSE The Cleverest Story of the Year k A. Munsey Company.) OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, for his health, persuades his friend, William Trask, Gets into s wheel chair and, is tased in charge by one quaintance * Keot, whom be with @ id ‘a bocond cabin passenger, who the ship under control. There are two shafts, and the other is atill working.” “Well, what does it mean, then?” “It means that after this wind blows itself out we'll go on our way to Galveston under ene screw. But while this lasts we're actually mov~ ing backward. She wasn't any more than holding her own before it hap- pened.” Sidney was plainly interested, but not alarmed. “I knew something was going to bappen when [| looked at father's barometers," she said. ‘I think they must have known about the shaft, Father insists they are almost bu- man. They're clairvoyant, anyhow, By the way, did you know they were reading a de under twenty-eight this morning?’ 's that remarkable?” ‘Why, it is tremendous! It's an adventure all by itself. Any time you see a baromter at twenty-elght you've seen something. When father hears of this hurricene he'll almost die of remorse for haying missed tt.” The Gulf Stream wes taking the hurricane on her beam rather than in her teeth, for the efforts of a single screw would not sultice to keep her head to the front. Worried pas- sengers were staggering about, seek~ ing information where they could get it, being assured by stewards that there was not the remotest chance of danger, and that such things as the mere’ snapping of a tail shaft were too common to ba worth con- versation, But there was an air of tense expectancy in the cabin; the atmosphere tingled with electric waves of apprehension, The ship was wallowing now, her single screw battling desperately against the press of the waves and the wind, yet unable to head her up against it. An officer ollsking passed their porthole again, and stopped to stare out at the white fury, They saw him start, become rigid and thrust his head forward, as though for a nearer view of some- thing. Then he wiped the spray out of his eyes and stared again. Half a minute later he raised slags to his eyes and stared throug! tha a h Presently he made a gesture of com. mand, From out of the swirl of froth that swept the deck appeared You BET! You'd LIKE To HAVE A MILLION oF TREN Do Your X-mas Shopping Now WHERE Dip You Hide iT ? WHAT IS IT FoR? By Maurice Ketten ‘a « . ] EVEave oy OUGHT TD HAVE ONE ) fp) IT Wit HELP KAN Tis KAISER { Thursday, ” ’ My The Evening World's Kiddie Klub Korner CONDUCTED BY ELEANOR SCHORER Favorite — he hee toe Be er Hero DAVID FPARRAGUT, dtoneredic Mention fore at Campbells Ktation, Kee ’ maa Portamouth, WW AVID GLANGOW FAnNAGIT “ whose captw ° rite Aw ere 8 - posen Warras bs oe 1 admre determin . — fuccee , , oS nowt ° Gut entered M teresting o ut| that pow began wee pega aiming Vartog Moule , Hay t . The Tenne gave « to the stagee of Wertiord ‘ t Civil War Yarra. Hartt ; we is the % a wnand ¢ iter « pamane ail the whips that purre uid be spared and cut bie way up ° ft (be Mississippi and capture Now ot Mevte hh Orleans It was his tren Many obstacles confronted him, but| Wil! and dogged determination that and capture it be would or die tn tn ina eee sate & more to be seen on both banks. Farragut vo yeare afer his da cut bis away 6 one dente Rs. pb « exploit, the rank of Admiral wos and at last be tated thee eutly conferred on Warragut, He was t poe */ frst man to hold thie p nin the On the mamorable day of Aprit 3, | \merican Navy and well he desorved After ed Neotin ne wnt fenders ity saurrettersed "ta | ggltf, WILLIAM J. CONNELLY, ae Farragut and No. took “possession |{N*Iv& No. 4 "reno Mreet, ‘New | Farragut was the hero of the day| Rg NY os cee | and his name wan on the lips of every | t ean piten, 0 widesipmen'e ‘Geet ped m he War “ot “itd when ; Neat he turned bis attention jena We Sees price manta of | of the rie LAFAYETTE, Parts, N 1824 eager crowds fi ] the cities and Villages to we this hero, Thousands of ehlidren the boy in wh! fore him sin blue Jackets and the girls Ireanes, noattored lowers be Everybody knew the story h nobleman who, at the ag of nineteen, had left friends, wife, home and native land to cast his lot with strange people, 000 miles away, dom. his own and fitted out a mi re expense he bough vessel with y supplies and salled for Seven weeks later he landed in Georgetown, B. C., and at once went to Philadelphia to offer his services to Congress. He speared vemel to (Honorable Mention.) Born at Castle of Chavagnac in Auvergne, France, Sept. May 20, 1834. Wrote to a member of Congress in Which he said: “After the aacr have made | have the right to exact | two favors; one is, to serve at my | OWN expense, the other, to serve as 4 jvolunteer.”. He then was made Major General. He served W ton 6, 1757; diced at 8 an aide and a per: { he Battle of Mon uth was fought on a hot Sunday In June, 1778, From 4 lock in the mornin, t dusk Lafayette fought like . Baha, 1784, the year after peace was de- clared, Lafayette vintted this country for the second time, He made Wash- ington @ long visit at Mount Vernon, went over the old battlefields, and bs =e sis ee _By HELEN JOST, age fourteen, No. 239 Scholes Street, Brookly ‘a Quresswonsnssscssocssesssssssses APPA PELL LPL PP PPL PALL iy Cousin Eleanor’s Klub Kolumn } Dear Cousins: CTOBER'S contest ts going to be a composition contest, In it not great sport to have a drawing contest one month and a the figure of a sallor. handed him the glass and pointed to @ spot out in the sea. The sallor studied it for an instant, returned the glass and nodded. Without a second glance at the ocean, they bur- ried forward along the deck, fight- ing their way against the hur Something off to leeward had been discovered, The discovery had been verified. Trask and the girl looked at each other inquiringly, What was to it? The explanation was swift In com- ing. Trask gripped the girl's arm and pointed seaward, as @ rain squall passed. There, rising sullenly on the crest of a comber, was the outline of @ vessel—a black, sinister thing, with the stumps of masts sticking out of her deck, As they watched she slid from sight. Sidney gasped. For what seemed an interminablg, time the sea was feain barren of anything save rush- | waves and flying spume, ‘Then, rolling with sickening deliberateness, the vision appeared again. “A wreck?” she whispered. He nodded as he watched it dis- appear once more into a valley be- tween two great waves. “Do you suppose there is anybody —aboand?”" “Perhaps. Watt. I want to find out something more.” She stayed at the porthole, while ‘Trask made his way out of the sa loon, He came back wearing & visage so grave that she questioned him anxiously with her eyes. He re- plied: ‘Sidney, there's some danger.” “T could tell that when I saw you. t is ft?" “This ship is only partly under control, We're really drifting, al- though one screw 1s still working. And that thing out there" He pointed to the dark hulk, now less than @ quarter of @ mile dis tant. You mean we may hit it” she asked quickly. ; “It'a right in the line of our drift.” There was a struggling procession of figures in sou'wosters along the deck, ‘They were dragging some heavy object. Even above the road of the storm Trask caught the faint echo of @ voice shouting commands “Do you know,” he sald, "I am rather glad Capt. Blodgett ts boss of this ship. I don't like but be impresses me, in @ way.” “I was thinking the same thing only a minute ago,” she answered “If there is anything to be pt. Blodgett will do 1t,” They were nearer to the derelict now, grimly drifting upon it broad- side. News of the periP seemed to have spread through the ship by a sort of telepathy, Scores of passen- gers crowded at the portholes watch- ing the half-crippled ship and the wholly disabled one narrow the dis- lance between them. Suddenly the girl clutched Trask's hand tightly and oried: re ie somebody aboard it!” looked, but could seo nothing. “Up on one of the masta!" she sald, Pointing. “I saw something move Now he made out a huddled mass clinging near the top of the only whole spar that was left in the ves- and apparently a square-rigger there was a im¢ ment in the mass, Somethtig wi Dozens of watchers caught the signal, There they volce: the new discovery, Searcely two hundred yards sep arated the vessels, for the Stream, with her high freeboard, was drifting far half-submerged hulk in her lee. ‘Let The officer sel, which had been a three-master * As watched it wos murmur ¢ # in the saloon, more rapidly tha wo further forward,” The peril of the Gulf Stream herself was forgotten in By E.J. Rath THE TERRORISTS Craig Kennedy, the Famous Detective, Undertakes a Strange Case. Begin the Story on This Page Next Monday, Oct. 8 aw D- if deck and selzed it bs were close, it n the said Although the was almost im- sible to see what they did with it, the seas buried them from sight ‘Trask. “We can see better.” Petia lah asa eh et He gripped her arm tightly, and “Pray foi 1" together they staggered toward tie called ANE Maa hie ee” rave tue bow, ‘pausing now and then to cling ony chancel” © sofMe support when the ship ca- — Iter lipn we ently reened perilously under the” on: her steady agen’ vitor ey Put slaught of the .wind, Watch te struggle. There was a booming noise from ‘There was a siout, followed by @ somewhere om the deck. A projec cheer, The Gulf Stream waa cleart ule, followed by @ long, sinuous line, — “\We'r Ing them!” cried Sid- shot out from the Gulf Stream. It ney, hi white with pity. described @ high arc, poised for a — But Capt. Blodgett: wan not leave ute above the derelict and then Ing them. ‘The gun on the forward ged downward toward (he deck boomed again and another line 1 it reached? cleared the short space of water be- One of the figures clinging to the tween the vessels, It was select and mast detached Itself from the group hauled upon, and presently. another and began @ slow and painful svent of the whrouds, his body de- fat- tened against them by the pressure hawser went out through chock of the Gulf Stream Minutes the bow ased, and a new motion of the wind, was apparent ship. With her He reached the deck and clung “ingle crew threshing tho sea at top desperately to the rail for a minute, *Peed, the gan to d slowly apparently” waiting to regain his !to the gule thing more than strength, Then he began to work '@ power of her es was moving his way slowly aft, pausing several °F Now. It was the pull of the two times as the seas tried totsnatch nim “Wsers that linked her to the drifting from his precarious footing. Abourd bulK. A third time the gun sent & line, the Gulf Stream there was an agony “Nd till another hawser began to pay of waiting. out. Capt. Blodgett was making sure. He stooped and groped for some- | There Was a furtous pitching as the thing on the deck, An instant later # head slowly, yet with cec- he began to retrace his s ty, swung to face the terrific seas, teringly he made his way directly over the pi shrouds by which he had di bow lay the dark form of t He began to climb, Another figure |Most hidden again by t Ber 4 itself from the group and {eth reat hawse drawn crawled down to meet him taut by the ft, went out from the ‘The line had reached! “ appeared Into the The Gulf Stream waa still bearing MC@% There was the jangle of the down upon the hulk that menaced Df!) and the throbbing of the engines her; !t seemed that only a miracle Cetsed could save her from collis What . Cart. Blodgett's ship was riding to was Capt. Blodgett trying to do? ® *°4 anchor. Suddenly the steady throb of her aaa ; ning Screw eased. ‘Trask ai CHAPTER XVIII, | exchanged anxious glances: UT—aboard nie t {he ship shivered as the engines eae ey iy 9 started again. Impercoptibly at tirs Ae hecomes of them?” aaked then with ominous slowness, the Gulf the girl, as the Guif Stream Stream began to edge crahwise out steadied down to a rhythmic of @ cour i bring ne oe plunging, her prow pointed trying to Blodget y and crippled effrt on the derelict hau els neared +o Was @mazement and Stream was delibe sh his vessel to peril that threatened her! + packed — ateadily, ner and further out’ of th: ney had former 4rift, the end of the hawser ot the Ty 1 the wreck now, and several *hip is as safe as a bank. We scrambled recklessly dowa to this out now, and when (he r full speed astern, but it ser attached to it went over the side and into the ong the watching pas- crawling into the teeth of the ask shook his he an. hurricane. 4, He knew, as ed on each He was not id every body aboard the steamer, that Capt Blodgett had achieved something; but the significance of it he did not un- derstand. Gulf St before, after half an hour con- hurrying group gat ¢ line vbove the roar sto: ee It was apparent that the am was safe, even safer than f hazard, An officer entered the saloon and a ered about him. “No cause for alarm,” he sald, rais- ing his votce so that it could be heard ride biow is | over we'll make Galveston with no 1 trouble at “And t body ask ‘The officer waved his hand with a ure almost of indiffe: That's just a detall, nce. he . id “We'll get them off with a breeches * buoy." ‘There was a murmured prayer of ,, relief in the cabin. Tho officer made his way forward tol the again, and lowed him, Bidney and Trask ger to astute and disagreeable master of the Gulf 8 man oc eam was doing for upants of his sea an hu- nor. They found that still another line into the face of the gale, and that it had gone true, as Blodgett had aimed had been sent out all the others the gun himself, A struggling crew on the forward buoy deck drugged out a breeches and mounted it on the slender Line. It seemed small and puny in the fa of the gale, yet Captain Blod clearly had faith in it. that came from somewhere out the bow, Minutes elapsed before the pas- sengers on the Gulf Stream saw tt again, for a fresh cloud of rain de- seended, blotting out every glimpse of the derelict. It was close uboard, out of the crest of a sea, when they sighted ft. An instant later the buoy came in over the rail and was t With a pull in the mist the buoy disappeared over writing contest the next? The subject is, “THANKSGIVING.” » you see how well that will work out? All through Thanksgiving month—that is next month, Novem. ber—your clever compositions on that Dig festive day will appear in this column, There are ever so many interosting , things to say about Thanksgiving— from the frst Thanksgiving Day, when our Puritan ancestors gave thanks for @ safe voyage and a free@ country to live and worship in, down to the present day, with its family feasts of brown turkey and its raga. mufin fun, We will have lots of tun writing and afterward reading what others have had to say about one of the Jolliest days the year round. Cousin Eleanor. “on the wreck?” some- arrestee ; pi aas } From Kiddies |, SARA AAAARAARADRRDADERORDDADR ‘The Delighifal Prise, ‘The gids of Mim impatiently for her to announce the winser of the Pleased to aay toet Luctile Jone ls the * said Lneille stepped forward, and what do you shink she received? ‘The pleasantast surprise—a Kiddie Klub pin and certificate, Laeiile wae very happy. | By JULIA BENDER, aged twelve, No. 80 Bast ‘One Hundred and Sixteenth Street, City, 1 winner Our Klub. ‘The Kiddie Kiub ts the dearest Kiub, With colors dazzling bright. ‘Mars why [sare my pennies to buyy The Breotag World exch night, Written by AGNES KR, GANNON, No, Sid Kast Seventeenth Street, city, What Janet Fou oa little girl named wi in the country with her mother, | Mer father worked in the city and did nat come but he pout The Krening World and cag eK ola, eine and By ETH 125 Ditmas ay seized by. a knot of d ands who HOW TO EARN A KLUB PENNANT, awatted It. TWENTY-TWO-INCH felt pen- Two men were lifted out. One of A , de in the Klub them was able to walk, but the other Haak made 1o Ihe AG) Aaleee was a limp figure, He was carried blue and gold, and bearing the into the cabin, followed by his fellow, Kiddie Klub name, will be given free voyager, The buoy went out into the! to every Klub member who secures storm again wa Faaibiay d to eval Three’ trips tt made, and three | A¥e new members, and to every new times it came back to the Gulf Stream | Klub member who brings in with him freighted with miserable and ex- or her four other new mempers, Six hausted creatures. The captain of foupons, numbered in- rotation, must relict climbed out heavily upon be sent in with each new name, to- the deck, last of all survivors, sa- Kether with the signature, age and luted mechanically, and collapse@ address of each new member, Just loosely as he did fo. 4s roquired when individual kiddies British bark, a young of- y for meinbers ficer, as Trask sought him out in the mbers who ¢ cabin. “The first’ blow took the pons may obtain pennants by sending sticks out of her, But they're not in 10 cents with name, bad st It tan't cold, and they've only been tn the rigging about six f wnnnnnnmnnnnnnnan® hours, Lacky guys, I call them.” HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AND He went off whistling, balancing OBTAIN YOUR PIN, himself skilfully on the plunging Merinins ue a platform underneath his feet, i Trask and the girl looked at each other, Her eyes were shining with excitement “| think I'm beginning to lov tain Blodgett!" she exclaimed, wonderful!" (To Be Continued.) BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE EVERY TWO WEEKS, tote in which you must » YOUR NAME, AGE ADDRESS. re_not over fifteen yeam of ; a. Every meiiber is mente! with a silver gray Klub Pia aud courcnina ae a* pe bia ee

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