The evening world. Newspaper, October 8, 1918, Page 19

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Pauline Furlong’s Talks. On Health and Beauty _Famous “Peace Moves” HOME PAGE October 8, 1918 | The Evening World’s ; Kiddie Klub Korner?! How Proper Foods Aid Health, Copyright, 1918, by The Prews Publishing Co. (The New York Bvening World), FEW days ago I explained to my readers the kinds of foods required A to produce different results upon the auman body. ‘To-day 1 shall tell how these foods are used up in the body to produce energy and heat and build tissue. Foods are burned in the system in much the same manner that fuel is 4 burned in a stove. This is called oxidation, and it is that which produces energy. This process of oxida- dation helps the body to carry on the vital processes, circulation, digestion, breataing and elimination and aids it in keeping up normal and healthy tempera- ture. In other words, the oxidation of food and the burning up and rebuilding of cells in the body con- stitutes the vital process called life. Through this wonderful process the little cells A which form the body are constantly torn down and in normal health are as constantly eliminated from tae body in the form of waste matter, while new cells are built up to take the places of those burned out, and so long as life endures this process must continue, It therefore follows naturally that the health will be im- paired by either a too rapid or a too slow destruction of cells as well as by a too rapid or a too slow reproduction of them. And it is only through an intelligent selection of nourishing foods, taken in just the proper amount, that the body can be sustained at the highest pitch of healta. Hence, I hold that any woman can we!! afford to take the time and trouble to learn the food values of the various fuels with which she is to supply er body. Don't be afraid of a few such words as “calories,” “proteins” and “carbo-hydrates.” They won't hurt you, unless, indeed, they take ven- gBeance on you for failure to understand them. MILK OF MAGNESIA FOR ACID- ITY—MRS. J. N. BL LUMBAGO—ARTHUR E. fi e ack, dite A. pane 36 the Baek, ciMeiity, tol Fo man your round thie: bo bene HONEST, JUDGE straighten up, tenderness and sore- | q¢f,t™ id vou found this go bones > ness around the seat of the pain are} mouth and it may be taken internally among the siens. Treatment must de-| also. Directions come on the bottlea. CEMME GO ,A ma- pend on the cause—rheumatism, laria, ovefwork, strain, exercise for the trunk hot fomentations, hot ba are recommended nd splendid remedy for and sand rest BOW LE After y —GRACE R, wn nothing will Vincent little critical and reserved, but they swarm up. And why don't you Y rest Y. M. C. A.? a welcome there for When you know men they can introduce you to nice girls, ing, trang rs, writ “I am eighteen ge, and have a number of 1 friends, but no matter how hard I try I cannot keep the friendship of By Bettie T and that !s not to make his Of course, if you are very fona of some unhappy hours when HERE is one thing which every tng away harder for him by w @ certain young man who has been Pride and patriotism are swallowed Advice to Lovers girl owes to her soldier friend, worrying and general dolefulness. called to the colors you cannot escape up in the thought of what may lie in your front of him, But keep this anxiety] any one girl for any length of time; to yourself. Sharing it with him will] that is, have one that I could call my accomplish nothing, will not keep him #irl friend. Would be very grateful ‘amp and, eventually, your advice as to what I should Your manifestations (“Fr you are polite srcuranaioval of depression will simply be afyou should be able to keep. every weight on him, taking away from the 1 worth keep splendid cheerfulness and pluck with which our American boys are meet-| ing the call to war service On the other h if you “send him away with a smile” you will be heightening his morale, making it - easier for him to fi maki = se healthier ronger—for = sion oft the opening door THE REST OF Your WEEK'S PAY ! | WoNn’T DISTURB MY NEIGHBORS A_STORY OF GERMAN RAIDERS OFF THE COAST Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Conrrieht 1918 by The Pree Publishing Oo, (The New Tork Brening Work), You SHOULD HAVE THOUGHT OF THIS, WILLY, WHEN You GOT INTO MY PRESERVES ase ea eewcecee , bs Pe | By ANNA VERDERBER, aged twelve years, Brooklyn, September Contest Award Winner. ae | \ : ~] ’ : e * : ousin Eleanor’s Klub Kolumn i , i Py wish to be that correspondent? If #0, Dear Cousins o’ Mine: Writ ana Wc mine O you know that we have five COUSIN BLEANOR. cousins in the Silvi family, and that they are five of the most MEMORIES. “NUFF” ME eye! 1 active, loyal cousins we can boast? They are Cousins Eleanor, Fred, Al- bert and Mafalda, who have each won THAT'S WHAT you ToLD Memories of he weet home, And of a mother there #0 dear, Whose hair is slowly turning white And who's lost most of her cheer, > > a Kiddie Klub pennant, and John,! For she thinks of her son so far a N who has just distinguished himself] In the midst of the great strife, Me THE by winning his fourth Blue, White| And she asks of Him in heaven LAST TIME, and Gold etandard, To spare her son his life, | Think what this means, cousins! It means that this little family of five has brought forty new cousins Into our klub, That is @ record to be proud of, Certainly we are proud of it, and they must be Cousin John has asked that his new pennant be sent to one of our French orphan cousins, but instead I am sending it to two of our members in the Sister Republic. Are you won- dering how that can be done? It ds really quite simple, You see, Cousins Christine Deslander and Rodger Des- lander are sister and brother, and f have sent Cousin John's thoughtful gift to them, In time Cousin John will receive a delightful little letter of appreciation from these friends across the sea. | French'children are very grateful ard very polite, When it comes, Cousin Jolin will give it to us to publist in he Korner for all to read, | Cousin Eleanor. . S.—There are a few little letters B Memorles of his sweetheart, Sad, no longer gay, For she thinks of her darling boy | Ever so far away— Way over the ocean, That great, big pond of foam, | And she, too, Is asking God , To guide him safely home, Memories of baby sister For "Big Buddy” gone away Far ov s. wide se ; To the thickest of the fray. “I miss him—oh, so much! O Dod, please top dis fuss, Cus muvver an me is waiting For him to tome back to us.” Memortes of himself a) So far away from hom: He is thinking of the time When his work will be all done He asks God to protect them ‘Till the war is at an enc And prayers of « teful th To Him each one will se a BEATRICE LEE, OUR CHANCE TO HELP. We must reach six billion, lish children in my office Reach it good and strong, ithors are waiting for an an-| For our country needs it— | swer to come across the Atlantie from Spending would be wrong, Spending would be wrong. We must send the call O'er our land so vast, | All must be subseribers, } Days for waste are past, Days for was lan Amertean correspondent. Do you We should all be . Working hard and fast | To got the folks a-lending . “ + if we would win at last, me : our co ho is— do it. Have you a pis If we would win at last, akpcuatid’ thorafore’) help! S ° h Ss: b Pl ur country in some one w By bor Ne hiding her devil may fg y EDNA ELFE, Elmhurst, New your country and yourself, Suspicion in the Submarine Plot viecv ivitioras. proialeed PRIVATE PEAT |" mre. , “Living here, then!" — 1 Her Wedding Silver. urns to a New ource, ith “ee Te eet eter bs noe ie ee . There's a star in @ window of @ boy i Si 1h. writen? Uf expect to be Taare Several Surprises Mrs, Murghall hesitated. “No ono back in “THERE'S NO BLINKIN’ USE TO DIE,” A | k Sai vany anarile aud would Tikavol —definitel nst , , ete Al Regi ky si age! ag is Licut toward en ed up BRITISH VETERAN TOLD HIM, AND WHEN | “and Blue, ] valuable advice regarding the mark apanIt vo) urued! 7s) , SWAY HE . ing of I know it has | lke Je) A WATE ene ye ea ids beeeeane anal A BULLET CAME HIS WAY HE JUST HUNG eg a Ras anes vane been ct tor brides to have y ben mes illiams ve k as a w ON TO THAT IDEA—-SO HE IS HERE TO- Now don't be a miner, alah on rea | 2 shall tively together . , 7 If you wish to can the Kaiser, ets a atten SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CIAPTERS, it As 1 Eben's cot- DAY WITH A BANG-UP STORY OF THE WAR Then give, give, give, maiden | ‘am, buts (Copyright, rank A. Alun told her tages ttle structure That our boys may live. i} people s¢ Hobart a H Fe uy , Woman exulteds they ' ° By DOROTHY PLANT, aged ten | ; : hen penitently: “L ought not to « Hebe i His blinds were W t h f (e) 2 Ch ft years, New York Cit sensible to u en IM his—infirmity that repels me, But 1 in 1 laid aside PENNANT WINNERS, cially th . Tiat Soule cannot bear the sight of hin. 1 hate 1 v xg. Hoda: Margaret G. Macdonald, Wood- \ . se thet, B him—and I'm atraid of him." She aj used until the owner § ae S But he saw no more of the lame his course to head straight for it.) haven, L. I. of a now na and in all probability | ! ir etree ard ae any a first,” he whispered, man, Another ten minutes and the monu-| Agnes Pascarelle, Pleasantville, will for years, I hav end | tie waters ot the ; be : iy guard sme concent t reared itself from the water be- | N-J r yea have a nd | He received a from a Vii run it CHAPTER XII © him, | Lester Kern, New York, who received a beautiful ver tea] a German ink ight. We no 1, 4} a d Ee eh ERe Great blocks of stone were set to- | lillian Kuhfahl, West Brighton, servic her maiden initial en-|j Pi fr OA aR tated pales <UOMSLHAE PRR nat ta ire eM ut Fen reached the , and bound with bolts of iron | 5) Braved on each piece ar Tins a \ inn toe BE PATNY pee. pat id ci ae ht ed oF -, ey ane hind water's edge, in his flight W the monument. It lifted al Margie tereee Bree, = 7 of silver with her new wii) Hvar & Nande ip er Gheskar CIEE aravon dy leaving ajar be before Licut, Morse, he et oF no ubove high tide, and oraine Hofman, Closter WM. Wallen ee ran ae Shavs TAGRHABA IG ought Td ¢ up and plunged in till the water vs, Eben had been HOW TO EARN A KLUB PENNAN maiden initial, but I see no re CHAP sola XI. of letters which f rose to his waist, then dove, Under vam arou; ye th SWaNTErMeinoe te) a ‘ou should not use your new ae 7 ee “Oh, IT i. water, he turned sharply and swam a the * fn the ”u prefer dh ae ory Hy Meee aa ne nu | : n strokes to his right, turned in- und climbed to bearing the Ki if you prefer them. red: tt 1 ed and heard is--allowed Oo A V p ¢ nu t free ti — 3 s sawn bably arrest him—seize him r it 1 ehore and rose in the shelter of a Lie vumen etree 9 ' Por ‘a no sound, Hours later ¢ set he can do no more them a t He rock whem the seaweed hung thick ve top of the pile of stone was pera an P. writes: “T have Just turned the mist from black to we have, Do you The Lieutenant he ou y ed the open I 1 He drew the heavy strands about bis bout ton f iuare, ‘The bug-light | coupons’ aumbered to New York to work, and I know ray, and presently the fog lifted al- really think t he ! in heead and remained half-subn LNA (tie top of a Little hight nem tee ae: Most no one, In my home town I had | together y found themselves Morso exclaimed. “Let | Hovart lapped nis h nd on, the As Leped t 1 hidden until uM rrge gave | a0 Foun While at aa required” when ‘epply “foe lots of friends amo ther fel-| \ with the last force of Gorman wards forien Fable. “ADaCLUInIT! © De eriad. TRG fend r + ea Cee a ee els bottor Humient itself, 1t was! Members who preter to msy obtain pennants hy v le work! Hobart is right. It is time, The only saf f A t Hi doa rock from th a nS nding 10 cents with eames. fows, and I was acquainted with " four w below the ‘ thing to do." 1 be hohim, stripped off bi Ves, r en Koen climbed wi “ girls, It seems awfully lonely hb tl r t reached the ficer lifted his hand = Mrs, Marsh r She was Ti r und shirt, made a bund fu d na and he gave ly a and I don't want the sort of frien : again Eben Scour's canoe have i" he cas trembling" Hobart 4 Unose things with the rock inthe mid Hh NaVER THO Mua Tete eae ESSAY CONTEST. j ean pick up in a barroom or in the} lay on the breakwater and Eben wa ‘i Ng? hadariie Hu Hota ens Pie eae neue, 1 } hin i a "f ment 1 the f ion Subject: “Why I Love the Kiddie White Light district, I should talking to 1ill Mark B ac art read; tako a great resp kre in a ler hi one Klub to know some chaps of own a nul from Kben's co! f data projected responsibillty—in him at y unt £ | oe 4 P ; tou hed ne nN prizes of fouy Thre Stomne and a few nice girls. How can I get} tag ated HOF hesitated, turned toward the son ithe £ ke and hea » awarded each of our Kiddie Klub acquainted in this big, busy town?" J into his + t » por con A Peart dear Uhuedonte | An 4 ne A Ha. I! Ly os ad Y ages from six to fifteen Bo fricndly with the men among|tainin ges and after | Phe ip the number Bee gebEs enue estination was the ‘monument, ‘vi ele inclusive, who write the best essays whom you work, They may scum a with it wpnere's a little more, Wait she urke M i 1 te cor Gan atole aa an ir's head on Why I Love the Kiddie Hus | = Sos = : M and showed “fle finished halation awiftis. quarter from the Barbetto, but at this Tey Tae Fssava must not exceed one Fi Wecainali tae FS minha iin: ancer, What ia Aue 3 think { : tha a arian fron tne Hammett, DHE BE thi Be eee hundred and fitty words (150) ; irst- Vaccination Law, |! aw with Hobart asked, Morse showed him day,” Licut, Morse t ‘ irrent. that would carry clam " ¢ Contestants must state thelr iy V 8 es the paper on which he had tle js the best time hey t Ran tena that t a NAME, ADDRESS, AGE AND HE first compulsory vaccination | t! five w o £0 Morse "Mf, ace i : way t Naah voile Piette CERTIFY UMNER act was passed in ngland | evied, ed b : you — Hobart nodde right. But—I 5 f Stoene oO 4 yo ir Address Cousin Eleanor, Evening a sixty-four years ag Ten) “L t assented away," he taunte shall keep an Haba i" Yex—of cour World Kiddie Klub, No. 63 Park years later vaccination ne ob-|*You-know that work. G pallid rombling, | ‘That was not hard, 4 ‘ 1; his Tho other da 1, and they Row, New York City ligatory in Scotland cland, | r afternoon he and 4 i Aue r way wea “hava a | Contest closes October 30 and this means of prote t| o 1 nt to bit of paper hg impact of \ ! What in tim smallpox has since eval w " grouping of a Hoba ! \ s were concerned with m. eof t Hlemen at the Rar. @ sannnnemmmammmemnmme nner in nearly ali civi y i ter indicated byt entae. tn b Lieutenant Moye | Hobart {HOW TO JOIN THE CLUB AND * rly to admi M " f! 7 atl. an sf Y They tried t > ‘ There was, of course, much opposi-|in i translation, and then h ee eo t The night wae i the rain P at eat eres . OBTAIN YOUR PIN. , he ered that beat now and io 1 nwam off H Beginning with any oume tion to the new law in many quar- | applied rs to the simil be the |} ' et What ber, Sut out six of the cou. $ ters, and a ; urs rest of tho Don't trouble howe ' r 3 ° pons Tu Ff were formed, shall swiftly 1 fos ing to se hat we—might day ta many p: | f t 1 ; Wane ane tye yea | @ is Eben 1 n fr? yeonly, "Do y I H 2 wh de hnate on ove luding four jy some one | : , but he failed, Scour was M ; ian A the belt f.mab. atiackod ut e bleuty’ ie in touch with the nny ' t ' Ms eX+ hopt wy; and c = for $*Klub Pin.” ¥0 threatened to burn the new ed Sut—they don’t “Hobart glanced at dusk fell Hobart sought Morse. pe 1 v . are of 1) children up to, aistees years of fices, but the police suc “Why? he asked. softly to—arrest him,” he said Ai pe ahad thamcatawslwanlincsa his t aide anu hes aboard hentt | tates ene og Lee quelling the disturbance, “Intuition,” Mrs. M vely, “Are you with me-or in, He dove and was lost to sight. swung to awim with it behind him, You must be, Suih.s sllres oar Bled Bia sed 4 2u know ‘I'm Morse ran up and down the brink of minutes later he caught the ee COUPON NO. trict! auppnee Hote the beet wey the water wentohine far w. is hen nA wlow af the bie-lleht Throneh 8 am Roane mamitiad 9 ing that tl agreed. to reappear, the fog ahead of him, and corrected t 4T@ Be Codbtinued.) er ’ » ~~! Sy 2 vn ~ Si a_i al ae ; es =

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