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| | | eS S 3 Dar Pa NR ae . Rough Towel Exercises [Can You For Cool Fall Mornings 9 | By .Pauline. Furlong | |) HAVE Cur af Coperight, 1018, by The Prove Publishing Co, (The New York Bvening World, td FINGER Muscular Activity Necessary for All WANT TO See THe 7 Doctor. STRETCHING exéreise, combined with others, ts illustrated to-day, | Figure 1 ghows the beginning of it. Stand with heels together, towel resting on small of the back, and held tightly at its ends ‘ “in ‘both Ninds. Plunge forward with the right foot | and bring the arms up over head, as shown in tllustra- Hog No, and alm to reach the ceiling, but do not ratse on the toes to do so. Lower the arms to first position across the back, bring right leg and foot fo position, and then plunge forward in the same tanner with ‘the left foot. Do this exercise quickly, with muscles tensed, and at the finish of {t relax and rest @ moment or more. : ‘To-day’s exercise combines one for muscles at) sides of waist, which are brought into play through raising the arms, and | those ‘of shoulders, arms, hips and thighs. | All classes of persons need physical exercises. Those who perfofm | mental tasks need thei ‘to off-set continyal strain on the brain. House- keepers need them to bring other muscles into play than those which are | used jn the daily routine of hoysework, and idle women need them, per- | haps most of all, to bring variety into an otherwise monotonous life. Mow. often we have heard women who are at leisure all day and con- Stantly complaining of headache, blame this dull pain on many conditions Whieb-are not really responsible for it. There are also other classes of | womeh whe suffer from headache caused by monotony—the country women | who, whilé théy work -long hours each day, never vary thelr labors. To bot | of these types—the lazy, as well as the overworked—physical ex- | ercisés; takén™‘at intervals during. the day, will stimulate the blood, Strengthen the pousclés, telax the brain and bring them out of themselves. | | I THave car MY FINGER DOCTOR WHAT JS, SOMNAMBULISM? |} | MARY P.: Somnambulism is walk Renee Peps eerer ein aking bad Zine ointment helps to re-| ing th the sleep, and indicates a 4 Move the eruptions, athe cpether tp Abaet Grent excite- moent.extreme fatigue, Indigestion, er- rors in diét, late ektin etc, are some CREAM— MRS. W. ET: Cream Of the causes.’ Simple dict, outdoor | Wil not injure the liver or other or- exerclaes, coptdube water drinking, | S42 #04 1s a valuable food for those frequent aang well wwentilated| WHO can digest it. sleepin roomy, will help cura. som= mpegs Dambuljsitee LENGTH OF HAIR-R Dp. 1:! valli ts Thoré js no particular age at which VEGETABLES FOR THE NERVE: he hairs stops growing, Sickness, ‘BYATIMOK: Ay: ) All» wholesom circulation, impure blood angi foods are good for the. nerves be ‘ cause it to do so, | cause they enrich the blood. Spin hair will not ach, raw fruits ahd vesetubles nrc but massage richvin iron end minerals and inake | the. blood, purerand. rich. HOME PAGE ° - a Friday, October 18, 1918 te ; fj) NY talteted ‘ ieee be ee dbah 2 syn Alban hearreinen = Beat It! .xutttzns. PLEASE, Take A SEAT IN THe Profle By Maurice Ketten | You HAVE INFLUENZA _ PEOPLE OUGHT To RE CAREFUL WHERE THEY Go THESE DAYS . ITS INFEcTIouS You SEEN To HAVE A BAD COLD Too ea deuree ey 4 uf t Ul fas TloN Room Wen WAITING Ta SEE You Atour MY FINGER ECZEMA’'ON HANDS (Nerf T.: | Verema YW hot contagious, but ft gomotiines eprpads mopidly on its vir tim,. Keep tig affected parts ay from Soa; i water and wear pub- i . co 0) The Housewife’s ee |The Canadians Begin to Make Merry i And Hurt the Enemy’ “ Feelings’’ : Scrapbook H” debses4 ¥ 4M ,sider, the. results superior. to hak, obtained wby .the. former use. 1 whéat Molin! in Making mix equa porfdng of comm Mohr and Wheat Nour who huve ov ' The story of Private Peat has been screened into a special Paramount- | Arteraft picture, now be eet Care alla ks canner! ing shown at leading theatres, all winter without their becoming moldy §¢ you cover the stalk which! sy wag attached to the vine, with sealing VAR (Copyright, Growett & Dunlap.) OPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTY Te thero is any squash left from din her boil It until soft, then mash Je hot put it Intwan dir tight Viner, Run a, silvor kuite CHAPTER vi, t thing that our com rs did wag to undwich id, down tLe the inadian boys in with the and by entrenching they sdag‘of the contatnor to permit all air slNarepatinns Gate S tho wa ts o ehape before p¥tting on cover cor ist i i a na take un Suusah thus’ prepared will keep inde. | doubt we of the 1st Division were the retrieve, finitely and will always be ready for/ greenest troops that’ ever landed in They were tho pies France and the ‘ q bay 574 In two short turns that we spent OtY 8 ' Whien putting fenuls rarquets awoy with the British, we learned more than for,tho. winter, rub the strings w: ' . A \ Vaseline. ‘This will prevent. the au-| We Could have otherwise in a month's ¢ noygdce. of,.prokcn stfings in the|training, We also me inspired f spring. ov I with t "Keep ¢ and crack @ oan ‘ g.3: TSF joke” spirit that is so eplendidly e Melt the Short ends of the ca KimiosBaxon i and mix them with equal par gp one : : y turpentine. This will give you an| { am not an Englishman, and I ! excellent polish for the hardwood) did not think v tuch of an bng- ; i floors, |lishman before ghing overseas, L re- 4 nad - n more or less as not Ie We d You can keep cwntdins from, gather loworth while’ It d ete WW i ing dust by blowing against’ screens ee He or. at windowsy if you-vever dress Yes ho & ‘ 1 welgbta-With-whilercotian and pat outn is very mm es es be: inte thedhem,, Lhe wwmber 404). THe Bagiish chuins up birt i ' j we Wil do picely,and five ol i. raiticeaie fonnunlie theay will avswer tle ‘purpose. j,aul ° Se eA 6 SoteRT fand ce ality of the English are a ‘THe beef used for soups will make | tad Vhere is none of it @ good salad: When cold cut it into dico*and add er 4 onions of w the onion juice. A potatoes I : cut? lute vubes may ibe added if de sired. cttprimkl ver this a French or an mayennaina odreaving. Garnish hard boiled eggs und serve on lettuce Nye ara } loaves. we gained h i Un wake tnt ; wae * wee purpose, bis bulldog tenacity and his other days. ul no wa Td‘ keep the coffee pot clean and | MsSouctiace Peay overcoats. had i whuasoma wagh it after each using! amy nover iInatructe Jus by word greater number of us bh bb with hot water’ > Once 4 a He lived his creed in his boots. A very 7 week Tl the ret with yw rounds, He never knows that oots of rubber reache one teaspoonful lof, ebokt n, therefore a beating is Knees, At first we cr it thit’bo'!t thoroughly far ten minutes, © have ed the eaane t , ' then rinse and Holl in clear water, by assvciation with ‘ t Nothing .is Abpoying to the i 7 hoysewife in couking than falling iD balr. To present this try boiling sux bs BOG “lied onionsy, slusmering tem : iam At Mg-end, and sruin wl tie lauia, und had La position to these terrible afl (the wa andiwithout @ moment's hesitation, I ‘To us who had come from the Mor In three wooks’ time -YoUceany prod: a sately cook swithout dear Dains iny ther foodies «i 4 Wet Krew y | would send English troops and Eng- ‘of lish troops only, i We of the Allied army knew noth. Northwest the weather was a terrible trial. Our winters were possibly more severe, but we could stand them Wo were about thirty yards from the so much b Tho nights pass quickly enough be~ cold in contrast to the damp, misty, cause at night we have plenty to do, Germans’ trench. Of course it would soak ill Of this non-zero coun- But even while carrying out duties at not take nine seconds for the bomb ur t night, the thers t many humorous things happen, to travel thirty yards; rather would mo ter some two or for instance, the passing of it arrive in three seconds, and give three d ges up and down the line, Hans and Frits opportunity ‘to pick shell of ice the civilian message-sending it up comfortably and return it in which we ¢ his would might appear much the same day or time for its explosion to kill us and crackle round our ‘and the cold night, but not so, In the day we not them. Thus the order was to would eat into the very bone, At can speak without fear of being count ut least five--one, two, three, dawn the tee would begin to break overheard, but at night no one knows four, five--slowly and carefully, after ip and & steady sleet fall, but that be 4 few et would turn to rain, and & Later the the the fuse was lighted and before the bomb left the dl Every one had his eyes glued to Hl sounds. So uld pussy till we were & d with ears cocked for thiough to the skin. At night the Communications have to be made the periscope, except myself, I watch- f would com and stiffen with Sometimes the change of ed the fuse in the hand of that red- ) to our tortured bodies, it alter the meaning of haired guy. He started to count-— Jay another thaw and rain, and se disaster, one, two, and his hand began to » the end of our turn, ¢ 6 A message at night is whispered In shake; at three his hand was moving hy bullet. would lowest tones from man to man, ‘This about violently; at four the bomb fell, ix y branch of the service for the — T wonder if there is any one tn the ung reeruit to practise, It means much, and a thoughtless error is un there to pardonable, ‘The first man receives we the communication from the oMcer, Through the silence will come a soft world who thinks that we stopped » that bomb explode, No, didn't. There was a chance right there for for the quick thinker, the man of “His. . The next in line will creep initiative, to win the Vv, C. Somehow viestive up and get the words. He in turn our initiative took us in the other P he ofthe Calls to the next. man and whispers direction, It is Ny wonderful \ have had, On the order, fast the average man can beat appreciable in It was one night early in the fight- when he knows thet A W) fit wag !ne that Maj. Kirkpatrick sent the should he linger ‘hed. to ‘the Message down the line four hundred jong, ‘The way we trave : owhere, Yards along traverse and up the trenches was not 1 . r one to tell Ce slow And thoy W " uw forcemen 5 Usually there is something going ‘ That was the mess on, but there are days when a man 1 we That was the me would not think there was a war at te) ’ hone, Mitted it to the next man, To Capt. all, It ix not every day at the front Pane Parkes the message ran jn « hurried that both sides are shelling « i) y would Whisper “Maj. Kirkpatrich ays to strafing We once faced r ; : ‘ uid toll Capt. Parkes to send up ‘three Saxon regiment and for nearly " und fourpence’ to the right in @ week ither wide fret a bullet 4 ; HL " particular Saxon regiment sald to * ‘ ! tre r Kirkpatr received "We ure axons you are . 4 b ; und fourpence he Was Saxon > bit fusey paw ; tate of collapse, Luckily, shooting 4 you won't , ‘ not serious, OF P as our turns car eriodically, we ft ite have lost heavily. faced them and did not a c imperative it is to Aetually. we sen / ! absolute aceurney parties in the daytime h x J % \ 1 mp in, at nights there are different’ and British, but such things do not te ‘4 vir’ Kinds of raids to be carried out. J happen any more, And such « situa b Lae bably a raid by wire cutters, or 4 tion never yet happened with a Prus. ’ : sibly an actual trench raid ‘ pian or Bavarian regiment, ‘Th ; in Pranee are not meant for sleep. de lke to ehoat for the sal 4 MOsWer ‘Phere is usually one hour on duty he their rifles go. off wou L ‘ V knows We and two hours off, and something ‘There are days, when fighting at 1 your allot- doing all the while close quarters, that both sides feel : mere : 1 can never forget the first bomb pretty good. ‘The morning will t ‘ a AVE (haut was thrown from our trench. pright d we m open the pro { e WM- Volunteers were asked for this new ceedings by trying to German tr = ar and risky jot T will not songs, and y will join in by sing v ne of the boy who v ing Britis? but alwa in a sar our seetion, but he er, after putt! yrds to TER V. red-haired chap I dare not write CHAPTER VIII. killed, It is notic 1 we got t f singing i" iniihia Gankhen ihe wa are imy { shout wer to t nemy } F of others in bravery, for a mor trenches. Nd taal wernent metimes ment or tw nyway quest their commanders 1 to the point That day there was an additional and impertinent cs about the af these days Supply of mud and) water in our their nation, One thing [ean . Pee tre never slow in in artee may be In ‘ mpl and usually t bi : ry who is a true Pel Mis Voice vibrant with pride as would inquire after the health Rereakeian Pan Wh Carty tha he sald, “Just you wait and see me “Von Woodenburg," blow those fellows to just you wait and see!" In those days of makeshift bombs there Was # ulne-second fuse in nithereens— o'Clock,” tue “C Burst. a jocular wa thing abou! own Prince, Hans would take this in ) slamming back some- Bir frid Laurier, spirits of the with him to the place where grim reality vapishes and troubles are forgotten, ' .| ent from Georgette or | dressiness, ¥ and very strong, would rally to the aoazine Original Fashion Designs | For The Evening World's Home Dressmakers By Mildred Lodewick ‘ Copyright, 1918 by The Prese Publisting Ca, (The New York Brening World). A Charming Negligee of Artistic Lines PRETTY room A gown 9 as flattering to @ woman as an evening gown, and therefore should not be omitted from any wardrobe Bspecialiy should the woman who does not have the opportunity wear evening attire bray advantage of this jeans of enhancing Ber charma Lovely and* becoming colors, whether pale or vivid, of materials either soft and transparent or rich and velvety may be draped and ranged on artiatic lines, In @ negligee that ts an easy ao- eomplishment, for this piece of wearing ep- parel tg bound by no wevere law of the mode, having in this respect an advantage over the evening gown, which must incorpo- rate the quality of style Tam offering an at- tractive design tn which two materials of contrasting texture are artistically comb!ned. |The heavier fabric | may bo satin, velvet or corduroy, and the somi-transparent might be will-o'-the- wisp, which is differ- o} chiffon cloth because it has w fine, Invisible stripe through it which lends to its general To develop this neg- ligee @ foundation of sil mull is necessary, on etraight kimona linea To this, across the back, the main gown portion ts silk tassels effers @ trimming up the attached to form @ blouse at the one Pes aed tassels weight the ling In front the heavier fabric ts Pariou, ‘ cut away. to show @ chemisetta of| introduced for thin een ensue the will-o’-the-wisp, attached to bg ireg ony) Ag Paermrt er Lh velvet jati and over which the tle) wi ja’ 01 @, and ano bea ie ‘tie nogligee hang trom the| Drick-red yelveteon with pale neck. Slipped on over the head, no Georgetia opening is visible, but @ line of little Answer to Queries. Pachim Bitte, The Dreniog World: I bave started to TWO CONTRASTING MATERIALS PRETTILY COMBINED, ° t diue Lloyd George, or Sir Sham Shoes, but when we really wanted to get Frit goat we would tease him about she Kaiser. We would shout “Gott steafo der Kalser!" That would put them up tn e air higher than @ balloon, utd tool like Retting out and hitting one another, but we dare not even raise a finger because a sniper would take it off. But after a lul} there ts always a storm, so before many min- nites a bullet would go “crack,” which would be the signal for thousands of rifles on both sides to commence an incessant firing. All this over mo- thing, and nobody getting hurt, It put me in mind of a couple of old women scrapping over @ back~ yard fence, and as we say back home, “all fussed up and no place to 60. CHAPTER IX. T the outset of the war there ‘as much speculation as to the response the Lion's cubs would make to the call for Britain herself never doubted her children, now fully grown [ [E Fashion Editor, The venting Iam nineteen years of age and have a well developed figure. Would you be eo kind as to aketch @ atyle for @ beaver brown duvetyn dress? The same {s to be worn for office work and in the street, I would like a collar on it as I have no separate fur piece, only a top coat. MiSS lL. A, M. The collar can be help. that old flag ay in the earlier days of thelr greater dependency, But Britain, England, is of the Brer Rabbit type sits still agd says nuffin’ Indian troop: Jed in France, came and took up their idea may be abroad that because the] or it can be unlaced Hiindu troops hin Fr when to the office, Tucked insets form the trimming. THE TEACHER TAUGHT, ey had be r and u o the warmth brightness Hi had presented white feathers and d f their homeland; they came t 1 and rain and mud and! to consumptive youse fen, i unknown disco 3. It was too civillan clothes; she had both fain, the Indian is made for| ered wounded soldiers with her effer ae pate vescentamlability; she had suspected every soldier's wife she met of secret | drinking; she had pried into the pri- vate affairs of munition workers; and now she was busy teaching young mothers how to bring up their chil- dren One morning she saw a small boy standing a street corner, looking very disconsolate, and not very well nourlmhed. “Haven't you any home, little boy?” “Yessum!" of trench life was too | (To Be Continued.) your parents look . Ta nQ | properly DE MAUPASSANT Dud’ does ow look here, little man, you » your inother along to the Cen all to-morrow to hear my leo- the upbringing of ehildren, By the way, what is your after THE~— Master Story Teller TO-MORROW shut up talking nonsense, mother!" exclatmed boy. you know 7H own nite aa t Fela e sha