The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1918, Page 21

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‘Rough ‘Towel Exercises For Cool Fall Mornings By Pauline Furlong Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Brening World), ORNING is probably the best brain for a good advocate changin cause you to bend the left knee. thoroughly relaxed, ms ONIONS FOR HEALTH—H. J. F.: Onions, cooked or raw, are benefl clal for the health, Raw better than cooked. Onions contain sulphur and other things beneficial to the generai healtn, and tney also quiet the nerves and induce sleep. OLIVE OIL—M. G. D.: I would not advise you to use olive oll to fatten @ thin face, It frequently makes the skin sallow and may encourage the growth of superfluous hair. You must build up the entire body to make the face fill out, but even then, if the bony structure is ®haped to form a thin face, nothing will do much good toward changing its contour, SUPERFLUOUS HAIR — MAT JORY K.: Do not use de orles, as they only induce a heavier growth by stimulating the action of the skin, Go to a competent clectrolysist have the hairs removed by tha tric need DREAMS N ged system, cause this sort of sleep d no 1 Oo. permits rebuilding ¢ Sues, which goes on extensively dur- ing the night. YELLOW COMPLEXION—M. P: Clogged system, pi reulat! digestion or jaun cau No ext Betty Vincent's Advice to Lovers HE arental con | to which s F to my readers question disturb a of elt Bex. This is peculiarly a question, in my opinion, to be decided te ‘the individual netimes to according case, Sor parents are right and wise in obj ing to the marriage of their childre and the ons should be heeded. Somotin: ‘ »ple assur and do their ly, to ruin the charge, ak- most unfair at st, however, innoce young ilves in their ing generally, no girl under twenty- one should atrempt to marry in op- position to the wil, of ber father and . mother; they can take legal action an th ute, at any rate, if she does so, On the other hand, a young woman or @ youn™ man over twenty- sone is not even | an infant and should be presume uble of choose Ing a mate for herself or himself, A young man usually dos marry the girl he wants—provided he can get hor—whatever his 5 s may say But young women often promote the cwn unhap y too subsery pin b defer the perha; t short ed ctions of their fam tes: Tam twenty years ‘ ich in love With ‘ He is go- next week and wants m efore he goes, but my t time to marry uns ‘ yea old. : , je soldier, but Jo so without my . Please © me your adyive, as 1 do not know what to do, It you at home, under twen ne and Hopend ent ! ad other * rm h ay bout that he r r mother d PrOV rm bec 1 y me which my friend } vin heart mothe f you ' In f you , will nak man a dwt you two love each other, L th: ou have a perfect right to marr; ‘Phe 's objection seems unrea- sonable, Q ya v ——— Bending and Stretching Improve Muscles. While it is true that the muscles are usually stiff and unyielding in the early morning, a warm ‘bath, followed by a oool shower and an alcohol rub soon causes them to relax and re- gain their elasticity. exercise stimulate blood circulation and clear the Our towel exercises to-day are fully iNustrated in the three pictures, and you may follow them in ad- dition to the first exercises shown In this series, or practice them as @ separate exercisa Personally, 1 many different sets of muscles into play. Start the towel exercises shown to-day by assuming an erect posi- tion with the heels togetier, arms extended, towel grasped tightly in the hands and about a foot from the hips. Bring the hands up over tae head, tarust out the right leg, as shown in the second illustration, which will Then without moving the feet, bend body to the right side as far as you can reach without strain, in figure three. You may gradually bend down nearer the floor as you become more expert, but do not attempt to do so until the muscles are onions are time to practice the towel exercises. ‘The morning bath and morning day's work. ig the movements in order to bring shown Simple exercises practiced in the home with or without apparatus of any kind are benefictal, and this simple little series of towel movements be followed every day without inconvenience or unnecessary expense. thts condition. blood, due Bile in the tissues and to obstruction in the bile WANTS WEIGHT—HARRIET G. For five feet five inches tall and (hitly years of age you snowd weign about 135 pounds siripped, ABOUT MUSCLES — RALPH G.: ‘The muscles are many jn number #4 they give shape and symmetry to ihe body and form a covering for the |bones. The muscles are one of the |prineipal agents in producing active notion and when in condition through physical exe 8, they remain sup. |Ple and elastic, as nature intended | Muscles which’ are not constantly used soon \ deteriorate and in tine lose their uscfulness, |, ABOUT EGGS—VIVIAN RB.: Strict- iM sink in salt water will jiy fresh eggs w and a bad Jealt or fresh eee fi t im either 4 wa h eggs arc ulmost transpary en held to the and the s chtly roush | Ho When Leas CHAPTER XV. (Continued,) T ten minutes befor a long, dark shape slid si- lently past the ument, and not two hundred yards to the south of it, and Hben » 1 o'clock knew It for a submarine, The U boat owed and came to @ stop while yeh could still discern its shadowy form d for a mome id a boat to t ame, and bber y he picked out ¢ dows night, At 2 o'clock he counted some cer y seven U boats |iving within h nile of the light, {their lon d barely silhouetted against the starlit waters, No lights showed on them; no sounds came from them, They were like great creatures of the deep, éeping were, There was something inhuman and uncanny about them, oppressive, isben trem- i. | At exactly 2.80 narine bell waded Ashore, Eben ad de which u 6 his key to him, and he raged in- nability now to unde alli med to come p craft; it was evidently ge. The bell sounded for perhaps five minutes, then ceased. Half an hour later it sounded again, and then began what Eben quickly od was a roll 1 of the ts, The eraft on which the Ger- man commander was stationed was calling to her sister-ships, and each in turn answered her, The first time this call was given Eben was slow in understanding its nature, but when it | began @ second time he was alert, wan Outsider Took a Hand In the Submarine Attack HOME PAGE Friday, October 11, 1918 Joun, We NEED WHAT'S Tae MATTER. NEW CURTAINS TAH BRoKe WITH THOSE CURTAINS > \'ve Tust PAId FIFTY DoLLARS, FORTHE MOVING AND TEN For THe PACKING We NEED New PoRTIERES . THESE ARE TOO SHORT. THE DOORS HERE ARE WE NEED ANEW RUG Too, THIS ONE IS Too SHALL FOR THIS ROOM NOTHING? You HAVE IN ONE FLAT EVER Firs 'N ANOTHER! DARN AND | HAD A VAGUE IMPRESSION WE Moved HERE To SAVE MONEY THIS FLAT IS FIVE DotLARS A MONTH CHEAPER “THAN OUR OLD ONE Tey ARE Tao NARROW OUR OLD Fi ou - IT'S Gong TS Costus A COUPLE oF HUNDRED DOLLARS To FIX THIS FLAT \T'S CHEAPER. To Pay RENT THAN TO MOVE , Yes, Yes, A_STORY OF GERMAN RAIDERS OFF THE COAST. chamb the bee on top of had for so long a time tens wad know. ut that he must go to her Monument H unee went fer to their task, He caine to @ littl he knew toward the t Jof tho island, cottase on the shore and saw that It ‘There were automobiles for hire in where Carl Linder was waiting, and was not inhabited, ‘and he climbed town, Eben found one and en- his heart leaped at sight of a red light to the veraida and lay down upon ed tho man to drive him the two that glowed thrice there. the floor, and the hard boards were to the Barbette, ‘They wet ou t Ex ected ‘The signal was given, his work was grateful and soothing to his tired through the #haded streeta, with ‘p done, the submarines were trapped. body. He fell asleep. the Ane, woilte houses est in’ tele Within five minutes barges would bo ‘The sun woke him. ‘The sky had dropping bomb-nets and mine-layers clouded over and the morning was 1 : would be busy c¢! Bw eve avenue dark and ominous, Eben sat up, the bay, No submarin wld reach aerog the bays ‘ that line of t t an hour Out eyone where the porpoise SU SerALT Raith Moma tees Within that time the purse-line would pla the gulls were circling and Nelson {a one of & puinwer culouy atm quick Maine settlement, called The Dares, be drawn, the purse-net closed screaming, At first en thought Others resent Gio Kil "Maras" Auiue Maraial? aud "het moist aod inn Scour, Baring a ead, Olintering crashes tunt ben—a they were feeding on some refuse in Sd" tida “uve beat costal Jaan the ine ‘has bea abot tirugh the bead by #Ba blinding detonation! Another! the water, after a moment. he Pender oN a Slates Sal Waitermand te wt bearoed chat g'Oeriaad auvunariue Sas Deon beEBK Tr stinctively the lame man wheoled Siw that ‘they never lighted. ‘They i Oe oe ee ton that Bow isis to the northern side of the monu- flew round and round; they scream thened by the fact that, Bowls nent and dove. When his head came 4nd cried and dipped. They were furtushitig, eo far" tlobart’s “hait Yeulous” #usyiclot fobart ses to the surface shells were scream’, g Vastly concerned, ben felt @ trem- ot iuel estls under water, It te connote af across the top of the monument bling wonder what it was they saw pours gi ents ehte Ni. arrives ‘iar ssuere at #2 bug-light was no longer Mashing; it 1 the | a shee water there fete Sone te zialling dea 91,8 lee oep fleet, eer See fh was a splintered wreck. Shells tore that ee perturbed them, | Hears a seriws ar “ bell and Uakes this to be t der sea communi® at it, flung it bodily into the sea a en ty war ne P’nait epee deers ty A bln oof Pat. “More, and. they Sear. | The €M° pon the face of thw waters, su quiet i ee a pty SS PG Eat ogy Rode ‘ nfisers ahd aotne suninowa nd so calin a moment before, pan. Wilking, he passed up the harbor t demonium had burst. ‘The Germans ye Yue and Cree th hehpey rman, Sool that the U had seen the signalling light; they Hla dlige Br te tn Oe He ls at the Light tower propand to ge wensed their peril, they sought to de- Pp ed for the Admit officer's voice came bay. and when and @ that stroy it “They're too late, too late,” to him across the wire, Eben aaid Each boat, he judged, was desig- w red; and he turned and went, goeyr nated by a number, for the signals diving for long spaces to escape the sci followed an orderly’ sequence, THe shell” fragments, toward the shore Tale 1s Scour, Have you closed Lest call—one tap—was answered bY north of the light; toward sufety 7 mt later his hei a single tap from some boat at a dis- pening him plungers scoured the on mo t eri ve his Bh ort leaped tance, the bell’s note coming 183 water for trace of | Phe COU. eee ie nnuo ne rene Memeo cuit loudly to Eben’s ears, Then the first }, the shouts of imen upon the Ne half-hour after your algnal,’ sald boat gave two taps, and a second yp onyment, ne Ad mira, Wats UP ee plunger answered. Three, and the an- a considerable part of the flotiils at- awer; four, five. Then @ new series. % se salle ne 8 ne Two taps close together, a single one CHAPTER XVI. De ecereen ace following, and the answer in kind. Erin rian actin’ waeinen iat cy 6 ight Eben While the calls went on, Eben lis- epeR EN) Stee Cree 5a faa ee Cannes tened, counted under his breath, had left monumen' Not one ree, mines exploded) “One, two, three, four, five" — about a hundred yards be- #0 Sia tap nee anata He counted twenty-four calla from ind motor boat was ® me bee And ue the flagship of the submarine flotilla 4 on the deck o herp ps Twenty-three calls were answered, 00s8ed from t on rs evidently by the l mut designated. of one of the U bots, 1 six men up: and tt ree One—the call was three taps together with rifles tumbled into it. ‘The en- P ned back Up the and one following—failed to answer ue s Ph ane aan vund bay. The bunt is beginning now.” “pwenty-three answer,” I:ben whis- Sine started, and they swept around “Waoniien ieft the telephone he pered. “One gives the calls. at the monument and headed toward the walked up through the town, uncou hieans twenty-four are here.” He ghore to intercept the lame man, scious of the fact that his drenched hesitated thoughtfully, One plunger ‘sed the monument an and shrunken garmenta were w was yet to come, if the full twenty. A@ they passed Thole bows tracting curious eyes, His work w five were to keep the rendezvous. He electric searchilht on r done; and one desire now, his hesitated, and while he stood thinking sant @ darting gleam across the unexpressed desire, was to reach the the flagship called ones, and then water, and it ewept back and forth, Harbette, to find Anne, 8 uin, for the missing craft : le papa rll WwW would do, what he woul TUE anetne cathe. stiende Someing the bead of the ayimming V8 He maul Ae, wes he woul When inned confidently, Us br no longer Man, Bben ¢ und. The dim watched the » and still lay upon the ne swung in his course t in- Eben decided ex- #tead of heading straight for shore 1° om b rophor vught to B is enough, vitantly. be went obliquely, sw “A fair bag.” you suggest He tore off the microphone re- Five minutes later Eben reached 1 celvers, threw them from him They Shore, He climbed the steep beach, 9 A P A pbina f flipped over the elds of the monument (panting @ Uitte, and because the Go Over the Top With This Canadian Boy satin and Geargettd Heht, took his Coat ond thrine one damp chill of morning was in the ee . ha ei shoe pued tho flan nt Sh thrice Ob wip he ran at a steady Jog for a hun In One of the War’s Best Stories Of cull Bike oes He waited a moment, then repeated dred yards or so until his blood was that is not tov | ne signal. i and then in te w . le94 racine warmly through his body . less, pF. LB c r code apelled out: “Subs here. Drow “ 4 y LSP EP PETS would © appro- Sy mare neat Opening Chapter Next Monday 3 sii stews ‘When the last letter was epelied out Knowing hie task was done; the re- ' Chenille embubldery. Velvet Eben ¢ropped down out of the light laxing of muscles and mind which “a |sleeve banda ee ROT rs bowers of trees on either hand, and so emerged into the open country Keyond the last house the road climbed a steep hill, from the top of Which one could see far down the bay, As they re d the crest of the hill, When touched the driver on the shoulder, op,” he called, “See yonder, What is that?’ He pointed, and their straining eyes plerced the skies to the southward, “nd both saw against @ slate-biue cloud @ tiny dot that moved, — It moved from cast to West across the Kile, seem Bo slowly. 1 scarce to crawl, It went Yet en knew it was speeding faster than the fastest train, I fntahed tts tward cour the dot became a bar against t Qs tho great plane Ulted and whee 4nd turned east again, “It's an airy pla Eben nodded ; driver cried. The man gripped his n. “Bay, d'you hear the shooting out tm the bay jast nignt? I bet there's One of them submarines up here,” ‘There 1s,” said Eben, “And that aiuryplane’s comin’ to find her, aint’ it? “{ believe you're right,” Eben agreed, “Drive on and we'll ace," That sudden fussillade of shots tn the night had waked the people of the Harbette, av it had waked ail sleepers On the shores avout the bay, Bill Marks peered into the night, puz zing, wonderin, nd when the sun rose he was ou n his veranda to tee What Wace might have remained the battle he belleved had oc curred He only the bare ve white struct hight had been blown t i. There was no ol ything had occurred n the bay th Aw monument, swept bus- nto the sign that that white ir rau- vibily over & spot out gulls wheeled aod shrieked cous cries, Marks went to find John Renton, “Did you hear the guns asked John? he Bill. was sty" They waked ma What PRIVATE PEAT js: Origi nal Fashion Designs For The Evening World's. Home Dressmakers By Mildred Lodewick Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, (Tht New York Brening World), Attractive Frock of Simple Design. © attain distine- tion In « frock, one often has the feeling that it ts difficult, merely be- cause the import- ance of this quality is dominant tn one's mind, Im reality the only difficult part } often is im the ] concetving of an idea, and not in the carrying out of tt Other times the #mall touches which main distinction merely require patient but easy workmanaht: For the woman who makes her own clothes, it te well to choose atyles where distinction ts achieved with the least labor, My 4 sign to-day ta offered for her aid. The de- tall which lends it special grace ts the long length of groe- grain ribbon which turns over from the round neck to drop down the front of the bodice, disre- garding the supposed authority of the belt, but tucking iteelf up voluntarily under its lower edge, and than dropping the full length of the skirt, to be held on the under eide of the hem. The skirt as- sumes @ one-sided effect in the tunic which starts at the left side and drops diagonally te the lower edge of the skirt on the right side, disappearing into the side seam. ‘The embroidery which trima the front also terminates at the mide seam. The embroidery on the bodice terminates each aide of the back, while down the centre as far as the hip line cloth covered buttons, elaborated with em- broidery, lend the necessary trim- ming touch, This frock would be beautiful if made of soft rose red or copper color ROSE RED OR COPPER COLOR DUVETYN PRETTY SHADES FOR THIS DRESS. duvetyn, with silk embroidery and the same color grosgrain ribbon, Any other color is suitable, however, in almost any other soft silk or woollen material, In silk the texture must needs be of good quality and heayy \enough to hang weightily, otherwise the frock would appear cheap, Beaver satin is good for this purpose, being not too glossy, yet soft and rich loe~ ing. Answers to Queries. Fashion Editor, The Eventna World: What mat uid you advise ph for @ dremet ds of brown vek: he dewign 1 selected re- quires an inserted apron front panel on skirt and on the waist a bag | portion in panel effect, of contrasting material, Thought to use button trim. ming of the same fabric. NORA D. Velour or satin would combine well, the former giving a more practtoab effect, suitable for the street, while the satin is more dressy, Marks shook bis head, ight’s gone,” Gone?” Shot clean off the monument. 1] can geo some pleces of at still there through my glasses.” Benton brought his own glasses, and “The bug- the two from Benton's veranda ios Eaten ing Wort: . studied the wrecked light, Others | oo Patter, The Prening bitery ike tee joined them, ‘The Barbette humiued | I would like » te with the discuswion, And then, while make over my eves they were at breakfast, the Benton ning drown ¢¢< Mee hone rang, 5 por from the naval base are winter and ask your for ail people on the shore to leave] advice. It wap,® their ho and find shelter,” the op violet taffeta wit erator told him, © are subma- over tunle of gold rines in the bay; and the entrance has been closed, and the destroyers are lace. There were woe to hunt them down, There is lace sleeves, capa of shells striking the cot- als da draped art. T woul When John Benton went out to roma gp ba bear this word to those who had no| like to change the telephones, saw the first wero general effect, and plane in the southern sky. ‘Ten min a the gold Ince .t# poe tee gee: ae Lae iS ane now tarnished will irrying up the lane toward the main have to use sormie~ road, Marks, Lewis, Benton, Nelson Hobart elected to sta Benton told Mrs. Marshall, # and thing else, Am 16 years old MISS E. & white and still; but she than celwally, He asked for Anne, and Use what is good of the skirt for told him Anne had left the cottase | proud andi aif oopk:) ok Ane y, wea no doubt im safety longl aig piaitings use svlf culor net. before this At the Morse cottage Mra, Morse] guenion iditor. The Evening World: and the baly were preparing to louve.|” Kindly advise me woat kind of fur Mrs, Morse said the lieutenant had to use on @ Fre 1 biue velour suit, gone out at the sound of the guns! Ay alinort wu seems to look Gnd had not returned, She seeined | yey with \t , to you to to feel no concern for him, | gusgest 6 L will When Benton returned to his own | give you my de years cottage, Marks and Lewin Joined him oid. have. t srown eyes, on th veranda there, AM aeroplane medium skir if with color at was circling In the alr, high above che | thes, and red lips ; and four others y € ng MI ML. from the south Five minutes later Would suggest squirre ag Tagst a@ flotilla of twelve destroyers in triple y thfu and modish, line rounded the point to the south wa and swept up toward the m 1 Fe F *. T nu A swarm of chasers surround-| 1 am , ed them, ® years of These craft pcattered across the nd ea r wed down, lay at rew Above pret att bd circled Now @ score of plane tress that can be Var out in the bay @ alivery spout » schoo a of water lifted high, and a full de- fairs in the evening tonation came to the ears of th en such A. on the veranda, “One of the es s yo dropped a bomb!” John cried, " eof y it fall.” very (To Ro luded.) Wha

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