The evening world. Newspaper, November 19, 1918, Page 15

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Pau On Health ah ee How to Avoid ) F all things fatal to good looks keep the blood ac of the body Into the outer skin of t Ke ing arises and, as line Furlong’s T gious diseases cannot get a chance to develop. readers understand that when a common cold attacks the system the blood has been driven from the surface prevented from returning to the surface. Whe alks and Beauty Copyright, 1918, by Tho Press Publishing Os, (The New York Evening World.) | Taking Cold Sea ee a common cold is probably the most guilty, bringing, as {t does, red nose, watery eyes, fever blisters, &e. Proper living will prevent this from attacking any one. Daily exercises for the various muscles of the body tive, so that simple and even conta- Most the interior and the capillaries at he body contract 60 that the blood is A chilly feel- the vessels deeper In the tissues close, ¥ body becomes more and more chilled until the back a, entire body Now, bs the se gt persons sation of chilliness. fll Immediately get up, , this is the beginning of a cold, and , close al windows and wrap up @ sweater by a coai or gas fire, which ts the worst thing that could pos dy happen to them My advice on preventing this gre at destroyer of beauty and health is GQPEN AND NOT CLOSE the windows, or else go out into the open air *@t least a half hour, properly but not too heavily clad. Breathe lou deep inhalations of crisp fresh air and walk with a rapid, 1g stride, head and shoulders well back, untf] the body feels warm and aglow ag without progres wkings and slippers ple, drink several gis ap top and bottom, being careful wot Take a hot of wate {gown and bed cot wertngs very warm but not Before retiring practice the stationary running exercise—run- ing—by an open window, in a warm dressing gown, bath in a warm bath-room, eat an and sleep In a room with windows to be in a direct draught. Have sleep- The Housewife’s Scrapbook GOQD mind can be made of \ celery and walnuts mixed with mayonnaise and served on let~ ee. Use one-third walnuts and Q-thirds celery, Another appetizing 4 is made by scalding and boll- 0 large onion until soft, When @ lice it and mix with 5! iced beets, @ shredded celery, Season with fg and pepper and add oi) and vine- | F to taste. ee | Lemons can be kept fresh if you} ee them on paper and turn a@ @bler over each one. When making cakes of corn flour @ addition of a little fat will make | @m light and more tender. Bo not add salt to the soup in cook | until it is thoroughly skimmed. é salt will prevent the scum from fing. @ave the bacon rinds and cook tem with lentils or dried peas for i 5 beans oF wp, or boil them with beans o1 @bage to give these vegetables a od savor, you have no oxalic acid at hand 5% if a lemon dipped in icacious in cleaning per ar brass ware, Wouldn't it be a good idea to paste ‘a card the hints given for remov- ® stains and hang it where it is ily accessible in cuse of ni A ain is often readily removed when Bnediately treated Try fishline for hanging p'ctvres. is inconspicuous and fully as fong as wire, It is preferable for | gall pictures because it hangs faighter than the wire. t sponre it 9 clean your black c¢ th strong black c¢ to which @ @ drops of ammonia have been fded, Then rub with a piece of dari Gollen cloth, For that hole in the granite or tin | ns mix putty with linseed oi} until ft and apply it on outside of hi away the twine from into the house. If] igs wound into | Do not thro ireels that come itch kind of twine ; fparate balls as it comes along | #11 be no arduous task and there will } twine on hand whenever required, ‘ou can draw threads for hem- tching quite easily if you wet, a all brush and rub it over a cake soap until you get a lather, then frub over t threads you wish to aw. 4 carpets the Always sweep rugs tay of the grain Brushing against he grain roughens the sur and it dndg to brush the dust in instead of ht. Paste a piece of old rubber over ch support of the stepladder, It will eady the ladder and prevent possl- le falls, It will also protect the floors. [Kimonos and nightgowns that are ly worn n be made to do service dress protectors. They usually fit over the hangers and entirely squares, Put them pan and heat in the oven, being careful that they do not scorch. In about a half hour you will find each square double its and you will have a sutisfactory stufting ting into small into » baking for your pillow. I HOME PAGE / Tuesday, November 19, 1918 Coprriett, 1914, The Wrens Pit ie New York Evening Co, ford.) ‘i By Maurice Ketten | | GUYNEMER’S the winged por ot rau Gueriel ct CHAPTER XI. (Condinued.) 66 TFT, vould be like the person to wh you giv beaull- ful jewel which he shuts up at the bottem af a drawer, should I hide my decorations,” Le as continued, “I consider that acting I do is an act of courtesy on my part toward those who have decorated me, as well as an act of j to aviation itself.” “Il am the first to suffer the an- noyances of publicity, but I maintain that I cannot do otherwise, and that I wear cross, You of parade, » you how rae I am not less modest because all my medals and my know that I have a horror you know my love for simplicity at least understand but ‘any there who spread the port abroad that I am a swagserer, puifed up with pride, I just let them talk, for it does not matter to me, and it will not affect either my mode of thought action, Moreover, you may be sure that if they bad as many medals, they are the very ones hanging me, are or of who would have a war er far below the bar, “phere is only one moment when I regretted at first this exhibition of medals, that was when I met a brave Poilu, one of those heroes, of which there are so many, no knows. They bave suffered far more than we, they have suffered anxieties, emotions which we do not know how to comprebend, and they are very in- adequately rewarded. I was afraid chat they might say: ‘Those aviators are lucky, everything is for whom one them." wer the dress. If the lower edge is all dust can be excluded. Tt you haven't a feather pillow to into the cushion cut cotton bat+ But, no, that was not their thought, and I took special note of the spectful way in which they saluted me. And that look they gave me was re- was Just twelity Ww lis muted 10 Dag a To_TEACH US PATIENCE MY Boy AY St Posf- The Evening World Kiddie KI Conducted by Eleanor Schorer Copyright, 1918. by The Press Publistl Buster’s To the Rescue. USTER and Mr. Elephant started B off at sunrise to try to reseve Mr. Fox, who had been carriod away by the circus. They had a long Journey before them. because the cir+ cus had moved on to the next village. Over the hill they went and to the river, across which Mr, Hephant swam, holding Buster tn his trank so he didn't even get wet, — Without pping to rest, they kept om, the buy fellow carrying Buster whenever got tired. It was after dark the circus came in sight, were hung Bee the people “We can't d show ts over, you had better go to sleep,’ Buster did as he was told, and when he opened his eyes as a few lights showed around th | Without a sound, he and Mr | phant slipped toward the one in the animals were. kept. Pushing aside the canvas Mr. Blephant led the way insid It was pitch ¢ \. but all around them they could hear the animals moving in thelr cage Mr, Fox must be over in that ner,” whispered the big fellow, started forward, when there burst forth a dreadful sound. Buster's hair stood on end as the lions and tigers and wolves took up the roar. he hea Big lights n poles, and they could t. ng into the t nything till aft said Mr. Ble They Cousin Eleanor’ Dear Kiddie Klub Cousins O you realize what a Dig part you have played im bringing about these “Gghtless days” and the glorious pei that is to follow’ I have often wondered if you do, agd have written this letter to make you fully understand of what great ser- vice you have been to your country. vink first of the tens of millions dollars’ worth of Liberty bonds of Co l/YNEMEPR-THE ACE OF ACES BY JACQUES MORTANE OWN STORY OF HIS 53 VICTORIES IN THE AIR, AS TOLD BY THE GREAT FLYER TO THE NARRALOR Translated by Clifton Harby Levy BYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, (Copyright, Moffat bad & wilicuk Give io joining (Le Aniauwn Wore Yard & Co.) ee a yecsud ae bse yaUOR ANShisetig several medal aud be “Kowa ase iain “Guyuemee’s ations, ‘he believea Lis was a-ceyted the sweetest, the most vibrant eulogy that I could receive, You may be sure that they know how to recognize the aviator who reflects honor upon the profe the other kind. That is the reason that they feel not a bit Jealous of those whom they have sion—and seen at work, collaborating with them and letting them sce those tumbles of Boches in Guynemer hastened to leave the hos- pital, He was not yet perfectly well, but one great reason impelled him to hurry: the Flanders offensive! He wanted to take part in it, all the more now that the machine of which he expected marvels, and which had already received its very violent bap- tsm of fire, was ready, having been fully repaired, The two convalescents rec the pilot and his aeroplane—were to co te the cure by the aid of fresh air—murderous indeed for the Boches, It by telephone that the Ace of Aces gave me the facts concerning these last successes, He wanted te tell me that he had not been able to come into my office because he had to leave again that very evening. “You wrote in the Petit Parisien,” said he, “that 1 got my fiftieth on the same day as my forty-ninth, but this I brought them down twenty-four hours apart, at 9 o'clock night, and they fell in the ne For the first time I f d out what my aeroplane could do; my two adversaries were pulver- ized and seattered through space “On July 27 1 was with Deullin. re is @ man of whom you can never Say enough as to bis courage and skill, He is an athlete in the full meaning of that word, and I know is inexact, at game borhood ix few pilots who ere finer and more first thing in my mind Was .veu- to ‘write about deserves it. He able aviator, but adroit. You ought him oftener, for he is not only a rem: he is a real soul, and this fact ts suf- ficiently rare for us td point it out insistently in him!" 1 answered Capt. Guynemer that I had been desirous of showing my readers the beauty of the career of Capt. (then Lieutenant) Deullin, for a long time, but I had been com- pelled to so very timidly on arious occasions, for | knew that it was very distasteful to him when he was taken up in the papers. * replied the Ace of he has a horror of publicity do "Oh, of course Aces, He is excessively modest, and many pilots who bave not f as many Victories to their credit are much better know: [hut that parenthesis has deprived me of the story of your forty-ninth.” ‘I was with Deullin when we countered a 220 horse power Albatross: of the latest type, which soared over & patrol of eight other Boches. It had a most idiotic air, It seemed to say to its comrades, ‘Don't bother yourself about anything, 1 am c And it gave itself such condescending airs toward these young chickens as if taking them to the hen-coop. At i t these were the ideas that oe curred to me about at Ace, suf ficiently an Ace to be placed as leader of so important a troop of aeroplanes. I came up from the rear, approached to within a few metres Boom! The result was immediate, the machine was cut in two and burst into flame, the wings on one side, the fuselage on the other, There Was @ general ‘scatteration’ and the great swaggerer was finally burned to a cinder between Lar Roulers, “On the There was semarck and next day it was harder, istance on the part of my adversary, and I shall long remember my fiftieth! My op- ponent was certainly an Ace, After a first shell which missed the target, 1 made a turn so as to reload at my ease and then come back to the a tack, when the Boche with great ad- dress and coolness took upon himself to attack as if he were going to come of victorious and received me with a yolley which cut through a spar of my machine, damaged the rudder, the cowl and struck the exhaust pipe My Spad was in evil case, but the geance. And really the man in front of me was a man and not a coward, But at momen like these a man must not allow himself to give way to sentimentalism, I fired! My opponent, who had a D. F. Wa crumpled up in flames, like the one of yesterday, almost at his side!" “But what about your fight with an English pilot?" “How do you know anything about that story?” “Isn't it my business to know all about every one of your fights? But they tell that story in so many dif ferent ways that I must know the real story from your own lips "Oh, it wan very simple! 1 had just come out of a n of clouds when I English aeroplane some dis- tance away. H ame toward me and saw an as soon as he was within range he firing. I turned and twisted every way to show him my or markings, but he persisted yhat was I to do? I had to make a very rapid decision, If I dived he would follow me and possibly bring me lown, If U did not fire back he would certainly ‘get’ me. I must put him out of commission, I did not hesi- t ny longer. Most fortunately at that time I still had my machine gun with me, and without tt what would I have done? We were quit near our own lines, and by planing he could come down there, so I had to fire a few shots at his motor. I aimed—with what anguish of mind pulled the trigger and waited. He had been hit and I saw him at once steer toward our lines, What luck that I had not killed him! I came down after him and made myself known to him, The poor boy had been hit by one bullet in the leg—a few weeks of vacation, nothing more but I never saw a man more con- fused than he, He excused himself so sincerely and voelferously that toward the end I asked myself if it (Founded was not [ that had a bullet tn the leg thful pilot, who had brought down a Boche, that time, and he was so he wanted to bring down in front of him, without stopping to think about the distinguishing marks. Other errors like this are possible at a certain dis- tance, and several cases, more or less tr “He was a just a real one happy that everything he saw before sie, have been recorded, It even happened to me one day when I saw A group of acroplanes, I came up to them to protect them, for I thought that I had recognized them as French, But they were Boches. e | was, and I would not even pretend to retreat, ‘They were five, and I fought with them and put them all to flight.” CHAPTER XII. NE question had interested me especially, for [ have discussed it in La Guerre Aerienn “Now that you buve your fifty Foches, don't you think that it is time for you to take a needed rest? You have shown what an Ace of Aces can but is it not imprudent to tempt fortune indefinitely? Don't you think that if you took charge of a school for teaching the tactics of by aeroplane you would render greater © to France than by remaining on the front? Would under Guynemer bring more victims than one Guy- After the very hard through which you have passed em than years, don't you think (hat few months at the rear ould do you @ tremendous amount hunting serv nol twenty dow nemer? rp cam- re two f good?" My dear Mortane, never talk to me about going to the rear, If we are to remain 1 friends, TI would never consent to take charge of a school, Besides, I would possibly be a very poor professor, and I think The Veiled Princess We Come”) on “Lafayette, A Mystery Story You Will Want to Solve. Complete in One Week, Beginning Monday that I can accomplish far more example than by precept. The pre- ceptors are not the payers. I want to pay my debt to France and to try to lengthen my list of successes tn-| cessantly. Look at Ball, whom we tried to wend to a school. At the end of a fow weeks he became frivitfully homesick for the front, came back here, [am like him, And then too if the public hears nothing about me for some time they will say ‘Gu: nemer? He has been caught at last!” Yes, at that moment they will forget my fifty victories, and will know only that others are fighting and that 1 am not with them, “I know very well that I shall end by staying there. They always say with reassuring conviction, ‘They all get theirs!’ Don't you think that I have not thought of this? Don't you think that when I saw that poor Auger land on our soil to breathe his last im our arms fight- ing with three other Boches that this not my first But I bave been waiting for this ever since my very first fight! I am simply trying to postpone it to the very last moment and to avenge my- self royally in advance before I fall “There are some pilots whom you could never persuade to go to the rear, even to teach the students of our science, There was Dorme, who brought down one Boche a day, and be was certainly one who would not play such @ passive part. “And then to be @ professor—any- body can be one, and they are often those who are least capable In the air, and yet can give the very best lessons. The proof of this is that hunting is taught the greater part of the time by those who have never really done any hunting themselves! “As for me, 48 long as I am able, I shall be at the front, to defend my Utle of Ace of Aces,” (To Be Continued.) was QOaZ! Adventures By Uncle Harry thought?| Cousins have meant to Uncle Sam ||” ; $ ub Korner ing Co, (The New York Brenine World.) ext minute two men came with lights, Quick as a flash Mr, caught up Buster and stepped i the line of cireus elephants, jained to a stake. He stood there | slowly waving his trunk from , to side, as elephants do when are comfortable and well fed, the men went around and sho the animals to be quiet. Mr, phant way such @ fine acter thought he belonged to the ireiM After a while the noise stopped the men went away, “The hyena started the rae Mr, Klephant whispered; “he ak makes trouble. Come along. Moving to a cage, Mr. ite; gently shook the door, Som went “baa.” He tried another Mr. Foxt’* came the ly, Fox's ¢ the door, Mr. Nfted h rt and led the werd the ten outside he ea Mr. Fox and Buster and bi away as fast as he could go. i Well, you wouldn't have known Fox. All his old smartness gone, He Was so glad to be ree Just cried. He wanted to stop. tell ail that had happened. “No,” said Mr. Elephant, “we eet away before the cireus nen | that you are gone. You can telhy to-morrow.” pe s Klub Kolumn f that have beem sold by kiddies, safe to say there is hardly a Kiddie Klvo member, from those ‘id enough te lisp the words to who are smart enough to mi speech, who has not inspired e¢ duced some one—a parent, a fi or & Mere stranger—to bay U Sam securities, A glance at one of the instal of the Kiddie Klub War Serviey or Ro! for Liberty Loan subs will give some idem of the of bonds which have been 0 | by the Kiddies themselves and o part you members are playing ig the: affairs of the country as bond ers. T might mention dozens ot | Klub members who in the fires’ es months after we entered the war | f E Sam—reeruiting for the U. & | and Navy. | I do not know of a single Cousin who bas talent as an e tainer who has not at some time formed for our brave boys tn and the boys in blue here in camps. And you must not forget that books you collected for the Boys and the tinfoll you saved to bay smokes made them happier, them fight better, help. win, Tens of thousands of Kiddie members who used to fritter am! their leisure hours turned about, answer to Uncle Sam's call and 2 kan earning money in a numbet of 7 different ways and investing quarter in ‘Thrift Stamps, All this, to say nothing of Red Cross work which is ala big @ subject tm itself to write in a little korner, One hundred thousand pairs of hands, one hundred thousand willing feet, one hundred « loyal hearts, all working with ome purpose—a hundred thousand pairs of eyes looking steadfast toward one goal—Victory. This is what my | could be found speaking on the ptt. | elpgl streets of New York, tel | every true American's duty to U i Cousin Eleanor, — OCTOBER CONTEST AWARD WIN~ | NER. ; i WHY I LOVE THE KIDDIE KLE, 2 I love the Kiddie Klub beca' 8 fi H bi its fine influence over the oc! that belong to ft. It is very pa boosting War Savings Stamps @nd Liberty bonds, It Is very charttable, helping the war orphans and of France and Belgium, It is the $ Klub for children, and we all proud that some one has taken pains and time to show their int In children. Another thing I abo the Klub is the contesta, contests encourage the child show their talents in drawin writing compositions. In our. p nd compositions we have a express our loyalty to the Kiddie and U. 8 A. Last but not least the outings In which the members the Klub plan their part in ente: ing the children. These outings: bring the members together, a them @ chance to meet the other bers and Cousin Eleanor, By ISIDORE twelve, Coney If HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB OBTAIN YOUR PIN, “Klub Pin” & A shiniowe we we Sree. £ MS iver “eras Mab Pha ane certificate, COUPON NO. BE

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