The evening world. Newspaper, February 12, 1919, Page 13

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AGN ins MAN Reh OUI: EFORE me are two wails of woe tre tins of “tattlers.” One of the meanest of. human be- the man or girl who tries to break up love or even friendship by “telling tales behind a party's back." This does not apply, of course, to the honest well wisher who tries to ave some one from a pitfall by warni duly backed by proof, but only to the talebearcr’ who takes advantage of the third party's wb- elics to destroy his character and gath something for himself, From “M. K. “About four months ago I made the agquaintanee of a ne lady and r her very much until one * told me she did not want to ‘again, Later I found out a friend of mine to whom I had introduced the girl had poisoned her mind against me. I had taken the young ludy to the theatre, but was feeling very ill and had to go home I made my excuses and suggested that my friend would eee her safely heme. She agreed. My friend bought some candy and escorted her home. On the way, it seoms, he told her every k of to break her friendship with me. He said that ag Twas in tho Navy she should know better than with m “Lo succeeded in making her be- eve I was a bad fol and now I have lost the friendship of both of th Listening to the Tale- Bearer. Only the « 1 the world ip with a mao ings n the mere “say so” gain by the tale ng. The girl the.gtorics were true, and give » gaANce to u e@sps to me that if she rea m or tor you uld have don sits have forgiving foomw the 4 aly love T Also think that if you cared deeply for her you would bave made her eve in you despite all th man could say. Why not t your whole story, wh. end bad to! between au bt other her er it is, good ther, and let her choose nest man and a man who steals the reputation of his friend?—that is, if you do not re- Rabbi ABI at their ne way ‘ t so nece for the of the stricken Purey A rabbit i tds young ly fit fc ng when 1 to make p of this select one with soft hairs, the edges of which ure smooth. Tho claws s de smooth and sharp. A young rabbit has a oti Np fs narrow Ravbits can bo boile rodsied The ould after killing, bnt til they 4 and wipe." back into two parts. 7 accomplished dy holding firmly in the back and pa knife underneath near the bending {t back. The liver at ' polled wit) ooked tea Bytes and minced very fine then meat in a saucopan and cover with hoewater. Boil very gently, A medium wiséd rabbit will require forty-five minutes cooking. When tender it can be smothered with onions or served with a liver sauce, To broil nicely rabbit should de cooked over a charcoal tire, 2 with M1 pepper jubt before they aredone and pour over melted butter mixéd with a little vinegar and made mustard. Before roasting & @eessing sun Truss the foreie legs forward. 1 bedy and the cleft in the broiled of wn soon he @ rabbit stuff with as for ® chicken s buck and the hind ten thin slices of bacon over the shoulders and Bake in a quick oven tone end @ half hours, vasting frequently with vutter ny water, Turn tue rablt occ y to brown it on al sides, When half done dredge it with flour and continue the basting. Serve with brown gravy which the minecd liver 1s boiled and a Littl nuts adde A delicious way of serving rabbit is fg Cut it in pieces and soak in weak iftha wa Hinse in clear wa an, Cover fh vy bit ple makes a tasty dish sand div.de ak in warm te about a half-inch thick, Make Role in contre amt bake about one heer and a quarter, ‘Ravpit is had something to! uld have asked you, M. K. &., if} “9% ts Served Atiow itt : day Then pour vinegur and place te rabbit and spice in saucepan with ata 1a of lemon, Stew | ¢ re > Hiquor, F noth in but Ke tables po flour and to brown ained Hquor & con- Lane tablespoontul of vir fo taste with salt, pepper, allspice, cloves and nutm iin or wipe. Season with or, parsiey pped fine and, ¢ is dosira vallot might | cows, t be to small pieces 1) with flour and “place Advice on Courtship And Marriage By Betty Vincent gard this girl as being too shallow |and unsteadfagt to bother with! ) “D. L.” has this to say: “I am @ young stenographer and considered very protty and taking. Although | only 17 I have broken quite a fow| rts. I do not mean to make these help it if they fall for my baby ways. I love a handsome man three and le is one of our soldier boys. But he were loving and true. than I, and who pais with moe con- stantly, has found ‘through some source that he is a lover of the may life, goes to cabarets and ts in com- |Pany with indecent girls at times, | “I don't know whether to believe these rumors, as he is a constant vis- |itor at my home and a great friend {of the family for six years. He often jepeaks of girls he has met, but they seem Very respectable girls and he kno ail of their pareats, I know the boys he gocs around with and so do my parents, and they think them nico chaps. It must be that he is keeping something from both his boy friends and my Please te me how 1 can get to the bottom of this affair, Remember, I love him dearly and am not jealous." Your case, “D, C. L.,” seems to be a uestion of whether to put faith in rumors” or in the judgment of your family and frionds, Why not “get to | the bottom of the affair’ im the sim- plost possible way fr the source of ber information cing {t down? letters while abroud were ng and true,” and you have had dence in him for six years past, you so ready to believe he is from his boy now that ke is love him dearly and are | not jealous,” your own heart will dic- tite your course. ‘Tell him frankly |what you have heard, and judge for yourselt his answers. — Most wretched situations in this world from some one failing to deal J openly with facts as they are. A little |plain” speaking, backed by slucerity and nee, would clear up many fancied wronge and trouble e your friend a chance to ex; in New Ways. a into a har cus the ‘es, and boil two hours HOME PAGE Wednesday, February 12, ddl | Capriati. 101 by Toe Dives Pilih ew York Breaing By Maurice Ketten men and boys love me, but I cannot | # half years my senior, I thought at | firet it was his uniform I loved, for} iw back again in his civilian clothes | how and I find I gtill love him, He| takes me to various places of amuse- | |ment and his letters while overseas | | “Now, my sister, three years older | all the way down the by asking your WHO HAD loyalty are a part of pan lined with good suet th salt and pepper ul of water, Cover with the crust, securely pressing down The German Spies Continue to Get In Their Good Work, but in the on End They Pay the Price YNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS Copymaht, 1918, by I the out Ar as a guover CHAPTER V. (Comte) » out the o POINT That same afternoon my gun lev- celled the or demolis , and knowing b vo see the gray clad inmates poppin out of the doors and windows, Juds of my astonishment! Not a sol soul left the building my gun bad suroyed, 1 watched each one of t in (urn and in turn was awar nothing for my pains, From other iowever, hundreds of men rushed, ary between imy conversation with tl ian and the effcet of fire found lodging in the bi head, t k € ne a direct conscious thing that set me th t goon to be a niliarity beeween this Ale our house, go and come as hi i | there nig jerally at Jot it at Jmade thes cant indeed, me, but later 6 Then we "stood n Follow! j this wo wi routine of ¢ net aning Up our pet a tlon, and while working away, frie: farmer came along with one of hi io, Whe sa dane we were working ae a ee For The Evening World’s Home Dressmakers. By Mildred Lodewick Govrriah’ by The Prose Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World) Dark Blue Serge, Trimmed With Braid or Straw. NE of the most @ typ of dres y née girls iy tho middy Diouse and skirt, And many ts the fair one who, outgrown her middy days, le some frock that could Jend her the same care-froe, youthful, flat atmonphere. sign to-day — offe these possibilities with the added at- tribute of dignity, which is achieved by the long turn-back revers that continue front. Tho frock would be smartest developed in dark blue ree with red or black braid trim- ming. Cut in a one piece style, the upper portion is formed by a deep shaped yoke which is the only rellef of the plain foundation, The same shaped Ine is repeated on the al low es where the r portion is ut tached to tho upper. Affecting the sallor collar, yet untque in its interpretation, is the collar on this which gives © effect of ening itself out into th narro rs but which may be seamed at | the waistline, or at the neckline, und the strap A YOUTHFUL MODEL THAT INCORPO- RATES DIGNITY, such 4 novel tead of ‘ miming, t whim of Dame 1 | be indulged in, and th te} ; you, straw in gay colors, and | s40 weaves, the same us is} + hats, may now be seen deco- | frocks, and though one cannot that there 1s anything gracious | y feminine about ft, It ikos a new note that will no doubt tent. Vestion Editor, Lruning World: Will you please design me a pretty school dress to Be mude of four yards navy blue serge? T am seventeen years old, 5 feet 3 inches tall, bust 35, hips @4, Weight 118 poundé, shton taken up to a certain ¢ GEANT REGINALD GRANT | of our Algerian trooper; be had mate & hasty exit. Friend farmer and his wife wero ested, taken aw: and placed there the traitorous couple got their orts—they were taken equare and shot. Next morning about ten o'clock we got a “Stand to!” as a bombardment had begun and Frits had started com- ‘We stopped him, ceased tirt Kr-kr-kr-p! Ne ige S They asked cted them, after giving them a drink ed from that a eadquarters were, and a num other questions, used by us for perfect English, ‘orner to cross a pantoon bridge over Yeer Canal Appleton & Co.) 4 Of the was, Reginaht Grest One day an Algerian to shell forme Lowe, pote woot tens all out sooner had we Kr-krkr-p! Bang! coming down so fast that we vhelter at the cookhouse. While there Munsey thought he would Uke to have a look at the situation generally in the surrounding cauntry, through the medium of a hole in the of the cookhou roof, and he hopped on top of a box out in the direction of The most notable object there and he had not y and tales w Lim eh guards c The Algerian ay ~ be kept in constant re mado off fo: tome oe asked who would volunteer We were all dirty, thirsty, “asy and tired, und I offered to go. ambled over to the Lurmhouse, stup- ving to speak to the Captain’ for a moment on the way, when I heard a lode; it had demoliybed No, they wanted and told them « men who nad two prisone my bate pmolish and and looked the town clock, been looking long before he noticed the hands moving this way and that; watched closely and then called, “Come here, and watch the clock to a point of vantage and in a few minutes we were fied that the shell fire that was rain- ing upon us was being directed the hands of the clock. that when th hs big bh were ox- posed to another as bo nodded approvingly afd walked off. about twenty aAmedisately be signed to me damned cow away,” cow off and put it in the barn, but he Lad no sooncr gone tha He burried the We all jumped Ker-kr-krapt ‘and watched, Captain and I he bottom of their hols ved by twenty fe mpared to t yond all gh that they Were filled guns 1 watched through the giaases were knocked off our fe: bottle was broken and I did not take time to get another, but ma guns, They were hammering our bat lertes thoroughly now and I waa t to take shelter, farmhouse and asked We observed t field heade long hand moved right, potted a farmhor it moved left, 3 @ach minutes meant t -five yards increase or dec case might be. small hand moved one minute it meant three yards right; two r utes, six yards, and so on; if it veered to f when both hands turned at once twelve o'clock we deduced fror fire that some object was re that was done hand would go all the way and the fire would increase to Glar hurricane; round, it wo hand going all the way round, the fire ad they scurried away our guns cup, which she husband would not per 4 them, dropping them by in and helped themselves my light, [ inquired A sort of @ subconscious connection ¢ destruction being mpivte that it was done asking and being refused Just leaving best pals whom it has ev and went ¢ ny gun my tit wes not until later that ‘aptains. “Did nything pecudt he asked me; nis white cow?" hin I hadn't noted any- ar, that I had noticed he white cow out wounding sev Their presence ng farmer's actions un- ran he bad the ntly could mised, drinking ffeo with the inmates, sleeping sand making himself gen- ome. I didn't think much nts tnivialities very signifi- had taken bh We watched intently for some time, keeping our eyes glued on the move- ment of the hands in canjunction with and then the matter wa phoned to headquarters, A result of thelr combination guns and cloch- work was the destruction our pleoes and two rn Another battery observer had noticed the clockwork at same time that we were watching | and the gendarmes were notified they made a trip to the top of the tower in double-quick time, finding aman in @ British uniform and one in French uniform; the man with the British uniform wore cap and he British cap, confined in the basement of @ ruined cuilding and a guard That night I was sent to the tren-h headquarters to do guard duty, and next day, about ; | was standing in the door- house where pump had blown in on Scotty, and I Was accosted by two men who wero battery was shot up. “Did the cow stop in front of your “Yea, tt stopped before each one of N the way where the shel! “nat afternoon Fritz attempted to over our way and on a “Stand to" we jumped to the uns and drove to sauce aad allow it to] him back, sending acrosg 200 expres- sions of our good will in record time, you will hear And he left in @ hurry, trom this,” He phoned the gendarmes in the city and searched it thoroug Upstairs they found parts lamp and a complete to aratus; there was afs> in bis stove « system that bad besa in- augurated for forcing up a shower of this apparatus found in the houses of a number of had pald the penalty for their work. Then they made a search in which were found hundreds of tins of beef and jam, all of which had come from our rations, and then was explained the mysterious disappearance grub. There was no trace to be found urh the usual aking her ready for the next visita. larre white animal, leading it with @ rope and permitting her to aze. He walked aloug in front of Jeep pie plate. Add a cupful) my gun, where it stopped and grazed Cover with @ puff | awhfle; going in-like manner in front | of each of the guna. Then he led the animal over to the other side of the house, where it grazed in front of the io nice when served as a|Freneh 76's. potled pudding, Place the pieces of gabbit and slices of oither oF | hard, getting our pete in shape, I noticed a sh the two main that had stuck there without explod- For a shel to explode, it is necessary that the nose of the fuse, containing the detonator, shall como in contact with a solid substance, tn order to make ignition and cause the explosion, This had not been dgne; orway, with the candle | “Grant, I don't quite get this eavet atch ‘and bolt; howing it to me again?” “Blow out the light,. you fool," 1 of the cellar, “All right” and he did so and 1 started babk. As he answered me I heard simultaneously the report of a This dress will Bet worn without @ coat iu the spring. BE Vv. A tay red cosa could finish collars j hovnna bullet 0 pockets, Red me. When L got to the door I s #1 in front of 1 r the bod end Day 4 e ; " J received t ns through | Delt, held with round the head. P ae nickel buttons, Blac’ CHAPTER VI, i silk arrows, UIE third battle of Ypres com-| puanion watine, trening World nenced June 2, lasting uaul! L would. like to June 15, 1 Y make up for adainty Woods was a cluster of trees, com- summer frock some umber, 294 pale green silk and about 1,000 in ‘ ere t fir and noblest cotton Ge tte, 1 4 hy of their various tyoes=,bave two aud one. oak, elm, ash and beech, ‘They were} halt yards of wide 1 m1 me mile outside the city lace banding like 4 northwesterly direction, One af! sample, which could sn northeast and) be used ff you think ithwest ho middle advisable, Am thir woods. Six yours of age, | The morning of the &i was a boau-| slender, five feet two | ; tiful summ nature was in| inches 1 rfoct rep birds sang gaily, MRS. G snd fragras Use your banding’ We were/in t w to lend] our moraing | you height, French blue fuille ribbon on sleeves and ack of neck Miss DB. 2 Le Mra. G. coufe de used for juation freck, employiag white batiste and real filet lace trenches ahea ws und charg.ng | FROM AN INVENTOR'S ‘ i Sh NOTE BOOK tricity bas been adapted te ermans pre the | different purposes abews nd came ling } «in carnate, drunk with ny of t ae Apparent success and dry bran will quietidly Py. On thi ie cr velvet and wootlest era » to have invented ttle battery wever will light perfecuy even ut Little Our aminunit esr el) rema Plumbago is t { important ies, retre neral product of Ceylon, which Bas” m i a t 1,000 min t : rie ee t Seats w ) be hung on auto. {with wa s they were Joors t ry additional page +60" to car 1 te sengers have been invented. t ne en moe : <6 3 if w ’ m u A uff has been tavented at that 5 ur an 1 eanr aceldentally locked, ¢ parts, Ono of ums had ready for 1 i ” We ret . . . t. My pals with feet to our ri elr aramunition as 4 tree produce a “ ) the natives ture of textiles, Seasoning wood brings into the before were upon then ye space about 10 per cent, mene and they, died there; they w than when the wood was gnegm, incinerated alive in their little nit ee the general » other guns, f did not gr by smoke shells that started every-| Sixty milgs of thread spun trom thing ablaze as they exploded, fibre of « species of Italian (To Be Continued.) weighs but two and a half

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