The evening world. Newspaper, May 8, 1918, Page 15

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HOME PA Wednesday; —— GE | May 8 KQ Inventors Find New Ideas For Home Improvements Their Latest Devices Include Means of Heating Water for Shaving, Stopping the Rattle in Windows and Finding That Elusive Electric Light Pull Chain in the Dark Heats Water Over the Gas Jet. be seen in the dark. The bead is 60 constructed that it can be easily at- OR heating a quick cup of shav-| tached to the ball tip of pull chain Jn ing water on the bathroom gas common us6, Jet, or for night emergencies In ” ’ the bedroom, this invention, imus-| Keeps ’Em Hot or Cold. trated in Popular Science Monthly, A CUP designed to keep the con- {a especially adapted. Tho frame fits tents hot or cold as desired is eeourely over the gas tip and holds a made by fittl | a glass recep- square cuplike drawer to be filled tacle into a Ger- with the water or other liquid to be mansilveror heated, nickel base, as Spring citp shown by this picture from the Sfowier holder Illustrated World The glass, how- ever, does not reach the bottom of the receiver, and in the com- partment thus formed is placed hot water or cracked fee to give the desired temperature, A generous helping of !ce cream or several eggs may be served. Automatic Closet Slide. VERY novel addition to the clothes closet has recently been devised which saves the house- | “al. B Drawer\ Containing avid Metal Wedge for Windows O PRE [ ti.» rattiing of win- dows a simplo metal article has the sash by means of a screw ins @J at one end, cays Popular Mec Stops Rattle of Sash. Deen dovised which fastens to jos, Extending at right angies from wife from entering it v hen she wishes | to remove @ garment from its hanger, | A touch of the hand brings out a siide, bearing the clothes, wich can| be replaced by pushing it back. This | picture from the Illustrated World | shows how the device operates. These | slides aro designed in sets, made to| fit any closet, and installed without the least difficulty. | ‘This arrangement 1s spectally handy | wherotthere is a lack of closet space for the floor may bo utilized for shoes | as the housewife has no fon to enter, | the free end of the device ts a spring: member head that can be inserted hatween the sash and the weather strip, effectually taking up any play tl.st may exist between the two parts. Luminous Bead Helps You O MORE fumbling in the dark ventor, whose device is re nted here Find Electric Light Fiz- ture in the Dark. N for the pull chain to Nght that elusive electric bulb, for an in- from Popular Mechanics, has solved the problem with a luminous bead Famous (Copyright, 1918, by Reilly & Britton Co, SYNOPSIS Ol Albert N. Depew, seaman enllsta i Ty array PRE Le yes there clad 010, CHAPTER XIII. (Continued,) HBR were hammocks on our deck and we jumped into them to get warm, but the Gor- mans caine down thetr revolvers and bayonets and took the ham- on the end of the chaln, The bead is a @ all glass tube containing a tiny radiates sufficle: Cottage Cheese Recipes. TTAGE cheese may be served Plain as the main dish of a luncheon or supper in place of cold meat, Variations—Mi!x broken nut meats, with chipped pimente finaly cut aren faasin amadt aad peppers, diced cucumbers, or other Peas aratan ch risp vegetables with the cheese, the decks and told us to sleep thera, They could not have done a worse trick than that, > Then thoy put Jocks on the p holes and told us that any one caught fiddling with the locks would be shot This was because we might ght a British or French man-of-war Jat any time, and as the Moewe was sailing under the British flag and try- ing to keep out of trouble, they did not want us at the ports aignallr dish, onion juico and parsley od combina make a ; Beason dry cheese, Into a but- tered earthen or enamel dish, chill it, turn dt out on a platter, and serve it in slices like cold veal loat. Mix with the cheese a small quan- tity of left over et, finely ground, and season the whole with mado tard, Serve this in slices, or turn the mold out on a bor- der of lettuco leaves, Buggested Menu—Molded cottage cheese, buked po lettuce, tomatoes or cucumbers, pone or oatineal muffins, Gunner Depew, 2 oF corr mt at once, erisp corn , coffee or with SARAM AND SUGAR, and had a fight we would have died naGe 0 ae OF OER jown there like rats, breakfast or supper, Variations—A The Moewo had already captured berries, peaches or other fresh fru: aire, Mount Temple, Cam canned fru raisins, cut dates or ‘and the K APNE other dried fruits, brown sugar, honey, pag the we of these vousele bee jam or marmalade or chopped nui Sugec menu for a summer ‘ween decks with us, These men told breakf. Totta cheese with ercam us how the ¢ mans were treating and (corntinkes +d); them, and It looked to me as though aoeeied. vi Ary Bread ene ao? the evening would be sp n playing potatoes or a ¢ sand @ pleasant time would be ai Tallis i ERE had by all—not, A CITY OF RESTAURANTS, | The men now beman running up hundred mille /2%4 down in a line to keep warm, but vested in the |! took @ little run on my own hook tae in tena and treated myself to as much of a siving employment to ap- once-over of the ship as I could half @ million persons The boys trom the other ships told The Germans Take Depew Prisoner On Board the Moewe, eter VELVET. SAVING PorRTIERE WHAT ARE THese DOLL DISHES FoR D THEY Ape THe Oo (t's ToRACCO~ SAVING: TOBACCO WEAR- (f SAVING the delirious man up on deck, and Lord knows what they did with him, because wo never saw him again But we did not hear any sound tht they might have made In shootiug bim. Raider Phen the Germans an shelling. 1 thoy kept it up some time time the firing quit, this n—the chap who had his ses broken—was walking up and down the deck holding tou his when he bumped up ry on his blind side, 'T! Kin uash him all over t He knocked him down several lit his lip for about f Inches with the butt of his rev Tho rest of us were just lay our hands on the sentry, | sentries warned us off with their ee volvers, and ono of them clipped me on the head with the hilt of bis bayo= net when I started forward When we picked Mallen up he had lost his monocle and was as blin the one lens teck times and us that when the Moewo fired it was a caso for prayers, be bled Ik vuse she trem a ‘ hey never a pat, but as tough as ‘ever knew what she was battling with, and minut two one of the men caine 1 know myself that it is an awful sen- Up with monocle, He had f +e sation down there between decks }t far away f Where Majlen nd there was not 8» much 1 figuring t any nent your ship h on the lens. Mallen “ will be hit and the whole bunch of hure glad to get it. Part ¢ i you 8 band that fitted over the r y slung a big still on it, #0 we t feed b p bisoutt rubbed it until the edge was bardtack—to us and ne dixies » and to eb 8 deck again, way to keep tk nd 4 t was not Mallen w stn to sit around, and tryin to 4 eye Wo must ha t , though, when It was al hold and I would od laugh if I had not t We could not go to sicep because the docks were we r could we sit n down with fort for the same , thought we and when we came up @ British or way they were ny minute, and br’ the other ship's skips wo would stay aboard, It was the French coliler 11 before we Theodore, hove to off the starboa nown locker, Side with a prize crew from the © following Mocwe abourd and wigwagging t v's engines began tho raider. to ishake her up a bit, and Then the Germans began shouting, w 1 ur blades jump out yusted us below deck ci: the water every < ina while where we had and tear away went ahead in . smoke, from what net and we were | do not Know, but it was almost im athe in it, When the As tr to get away u # Ua were tae ea mat att nats pulling for c to win and One of the boys others hoping the Moewe would get Frits for clothing, and her heels clear and keop us from get- : an hte ting ours a Ad nek mead The Dutchtes were running up and Walt Jeck yelling like wild men, He - f our men begun to yell t Ms jumped up and made @ pass ; wh at him but guns started firing. Af w misse 1m » but the firing stopped and t 4 pot very much, Tuen they dragged Wo, aud after about an hour they bad NEW Food ~SAVING, SHES y Maurice Ketten | THE LATeST IN FURNITURE. Woad - SAVING CHAIRS FUR SAVING DEVICE Your NECK {| “Al \ WITH Your. )}))) OWN HAIR, f. 4 iI! A Best SAVING oF ALL. MONEY— SAVING MONEY Wood- SAVING MATCHES .- THEY NEVER BURN the Old Man of the Yarrowdale wboard, She was a British ship char- tered by the French and bound for Hrest and Liverpool with a very Vuluabla cargo aboard—aeroplanes, ammunition. food and automobdiios. non. they rousted us on deck fain the St. Theodore was st but she had th Yar for company, Hoth were trailing t ing pretty close on deck we saw at work on the bout ten rafts, an to pl tins o rafts, nagined they were got us over the side and let us rafty, But instead, they began tell ink Ua We Would land in the States, nd then they rousted us between decks again, had only been thera a short nh some of the German off] « came down c f any of rane I I W 8 A urn e& was pretty nasty, and ° t nen had narcow escapes from etween the Moewe and fi ts when the swells rocked u fell from tho ta i hb eck ont wit t 4 1 wa t b M act bud brought over several boatioads SUSPENSE WITHOUT A FAUSE A STORY Begin It on This Page Next Monday of hardtack, and we threw ft into No. 8 hold. This was to be our food for some time, CHAPTER XIV. HEY had a coolle ¢ on tho Yarrowdale, and when they routed them on deck, the coolles began to p and though it.4s nothing to 1 at, 1 could not help but chuckle at the way of them went ab: talking to thelr vartous gods, They wero be ginning to smeil danger and were pretty nervous, I one of the coolles had a cane and a pair alin beach trousers, loading them fn th t taken baci t Louw a ba ws the G 4 shot Phen the no he i Ire r the t runs from ‘ re: nd sa G n 1 a 1 he said wo ferent, eatitlt delightful when com- pared coats sons only thing which dif- ferentinted one coat from the eo tarbits! of appearance for a woman,no matter how many had, similarity ono’ While we accepted it at the time, we have gradually tired every ‘So, t black and striped allk and all-colored coats wo are grateful, There 1s no being tractl fitted There erente deligh styles sweat very fitting, longe: lot with styles of slip-ons or sleeve woman has all the opportunity to exert her own in- dividuality vary The signed for to-day may flannel or Jersey, A scarf collar with the ends con- mpicuously buttoned the style feature, (match it, Oddly enough, there are no, PORT coats this of fulnes: For The Evening World’s Home Dressmakers By Mildred Lodewick Oapyright, 1018, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Brening World), Sport Coat of New Design ? season are showing a ver- y which ts quite to the sweater of a fow # back, whon the the other was olor, Besides es- hing a sameness changos she this created a in every 8 appearance. become of looking Ike other woman, his year, when velvet coats Jorsey are shown us ono articularly fa- the atraight, hanging Jacket quite as at- ve as the seml- or belted one, » has been d a number of itfully different in knitted ers, Some are short and close oers are rand have a and arious also the loss jackets, a needed SILK, FLANNEL OR JERSEY SUITABLE FOR THIS COAT. ' / ARADO | eee and to her wardrobe, coat I have de- is a type which bo worn any time during the It is bullt on the new straight and 19 sulted te elther silk, visible pockets, but such necessities, havo not been forgotten, Lengthwise slashes underneath the scarf at each side just below the belt line are ef< fective. Developed in purple flannel with white pearl buttons this coat would be distinctively modish, to the cont is with cuffs which | Answers to Queries Fashion Fiitor, The Evening World: Some of us thought of overpowertng the crew and taking the vessel into pane our own hands, and we got the rest ati of the sane or nearly @ane men. toe | Fashion Paltor TW wether and tried to get up a acheme| Will you ple for doing It I was stron for the advise me how to plan and so were Mallen and several ac Avaka ce oes others, but tho Limey officers, who |h&ve & ; wera with vu sed against it, | closed sample o! They sald the Germans were taking | dull blue soft satin us to a neutral country, where WO made? 1 am six- would interned, which was just) () Savana what the Germans had told us, but) teen years old an what few of us believed would like tt to ome others sa that if we| wear to a wedding 1 anything the Germans would | ong jater for # 6 time bombs, We replied that |” at least the vans would go Weat | Wear, Am thin and with us, but they could not see that | small for my age, vere Was any glory in that, For my ANNA C. T, thou t aans would | yy ; not fre the b the last mio. The deap tucks and that bave @ chance put in with T have three yards of striped voile, like sama plo (narrow blue and white) and would kd it other vollo or ramie for @ summer dress, simple but Any thirty years old, rather stout; @ blond type! with plenty of color, MISS C, P. + Plain blue linen of chambray would com¢ bine prettily in the style I have shown, to use with becoming. | may be a i a | t uta they got # I h knote, or y oO hn put up a talk about it, and tt was funny to y nae e t the Soft cream lace al pF this ¢ front ¢ onde 1 ting t \ equal chance of = way, oven If many of Us Mid | pion Eultor, The Mvening World Ww are eee a ae i id , I would greatly 1 r, ‘This last German appreciate a design sioatH Filed hecatien: We t yours for. & Gare could y unless wo were \ rose colored Unen f und there Was No mutiny ‘ ‘ 1 been better for us it . ae tried { ideas of my own a what we about clothes, am wives Prat | 6¢ S inches tal, t ature. that is sp tll cage at wanta We were not wed to open th y DR, H 1 w , ‘ Lue White organdy era u t ad fs and the same A s the front of ‘ White pearl \ : nes Cov= » Wy: » linen, A ums give hi t the same t \ Ja t back as tert : \ . 3 See design for wna Mrs, D. R. I ae aThh OIL REPLACING COAL, ; et Tn NID locomotives are ume ove © now 1 in twenty-one States row on f » railroads and on him in t ack in this country curt room They ume 42,000,000 barrels of gf (To Be Continued) Vyourly, ie

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