The evening world. Newspaper, February 14, 1919, Page 21

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Pauline Furlong’s Talks On Health and Beauty Copyrlaht, 1018, by Tho Vress Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World If You Get Stout You Have Only Yourself to Blame ANY readers write and ask me about the Turkish bath as a reducer, and while I think this method admirable for several reasons, I do not think that the Turkish or any other kind of bath will reduco weight materially unless the obesity diet is strictly followeed out along with the baths. ‘Turkish baths certainly do ciéan the system and help melt superfluous fat. They open the pores and cause profuse perspiration and remove acids and pol- ons from the body. Then, too, the rubs which accom- pany the Turkish bath also h dislodge superfluous fat. Even the robust woman should not take more than two Turkish baths a week, and even less if she fe — oe any fatigue after them. Hot epsom salts baths have also been recommended to the stout woman, but I am convinced that it Is ) the hot water and not the salts which re helps most. Of course, the i Jazy woman can find many things to try which are easier than exercise and | @trlet diet, but she will not obtain the resilts that her persistent sister Fealizes after several weeks’ determined efforts to take off weight. Mentality has everything to do with the condition of our health, and even with ttre length of time we live, and every woman Who desires to Maintain health, normal figure and long life may do 80 if she persists in taking this view of life. When you lose confidence in yourself the whole world loses confidence in you, and if you let go of yourself and decide you | éte getting old and have a perfect right to get fat you will find yourself { dlowly but-surely losing your grip on all the things worth while in life Keep up your baths, your exercise, daily walks and all outdoor Sports you practised when you were younger, for they will help keep you Young and go @ long way in making you w nd mentally. Tam giving the formula for ‘Ithompson’s obesity salad dressing to-day, i} @5 promised several readers Boiled Salad Dressing.—Heat Ka yhave le of three eggs, whites of two ergs, ono | Will ft } teaspoon Engli ae half teaspoon, salt, one- physically t your al “me d enve hat [ of canc address, and a stamped, if you self-ad- nd one alf teaspoon in | have { Paprika, dash of cayenne, one pervonally ‘ tg watsiions. i cup of /M4ny cases, and will gladly grant fata Wited. aoa Gok | | you an interview if you desire. Thou. vinegar, diluted if strong. Cook like ds of persons are sufferit oft custar tssarily from this dread d I would be glad to tell them what 1 CANCER—MES. WALTER y about its cure, JAdvice on Courtship And Marriage By Betty Vincent G: ) “B. BY writes: “I am seventeen j A the breaks an ap- years old and in love with a young} pointment ‘with a girl for any|man three years my senior, Hol but the most serious o d,| Knows I love him and I think be loves He one { fading to: kedp his engagement, | makes no attempt to explain or apol- | ar ogize for his derelictions, is one va- very affectionate when wa in the company of other When we meet in tho riety of cad. treet or if he meots me when ho is It scems'to me that a girl who of- | ¥ young r he sec to | tends in @ like manner is a caddess, |slight me, I don't know what tho] 4f I may coin the word. In a vain at- | trouble as I am sure he n't be a certain! ine, be he praises| ly makes lis friends, Could you | young man please tell. me where the troub 6 is?" Ips deliberately breaks it, 8 Naturally tn young man is decent- | sven try air » ignore her d when he sees you o | lesy, to use no stronge or when he is in the compan: e is quite as blamewort ver mea. I sea no reason why | man who fails a ¢ hould complain, | e and place he promises PEP DAST yo Uae aT, There ix bo reason why 4 man ith whom a girl “makes a dat should not aggrievod. If the girl offers no xplanation he certainly us the bt to demand one—or to avoid 1 pany in the future he Broke Her Word. mad¢ I am twenty- younger than m: aid anything Do you thin @ business way—ne about not meet! that I should ep let her speak to no way to blame CHAPTER VII. (Continy me. K to ne fir at all. of n formed om ong into jon wa uite often with her. Estill woul ue gun pit, shells were found untruthful in her wa the guus w the men were wiit- jesse 2 fn do without her.” {#28 them, and J thought I saw tear for an explanat ! net) That's for lu give it, or if it is e he on it, ‘The gunners ‘ee 0c t ture . avoid her |fast w w Aven them = | Was proceeding nicely when an lotace Greeley s |i. (a vce nice : iDapet potted our punition y | Penny Paper — bile niet eet v vient; was found Shepard as ed ag printer years wer an ev sined withou ak weed mn ‘ r w enth pulled bac of on to al n not only ar of the railnoad, of am uthwes he way the qeoure plac List in Amorics that the 1 e Brass W and we cover it and some brush, shell holes for them, two in length with eeley whi ag nut OF us nal with him. "Gh ce large beng man, KO sons puiled up there, un hich has become 5 immunition, eight hun- nid always a thousand rounds apteco, wmortal ed. ‘Tribune, ine t orders to open up as an ne fi 1 pate. it, and is ne our new thor of the was r his ia and on early darkness we from the | hes, ailhoug aiep! Was distinctly audible as they fas here and there vainly looking for our humming ne Ween eneret HOME Friday, February 14, 1919 PAGE FER) PREVENT USE NAID'S IRN! GSE OLD Tires Ma RAISE Your COUCH Reed hake sr E ST Room UNDER IT . Household Hints USE YOUR COLD RADIATOR FoR AN UMBRELLA STAND Barrels MAKE CHEAP Comp: CHAIRS ORTABLE Copyright, 1918. ¥ The Prom Pit iabii Tue New York Irene, oie By Maurice Ketten IN A PINCH , A ScReEN MARES AN EXTRA BEDROOM. “THE CORNER BEHIND AN OPEN DOOR NAKES ACozy DEN A DISCARDED BARY CARRIAGE MAKES A Goon TEA WAGON =~ The Bath That Was Interrupted by a German Shell one years old. for the game company as I LT ike her : very must, She has a very chang SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. pllattion ay 18, by D. Appleton & ( able disposition. Sho w supposed ar is, by D. Apel a & ) rie eee yto do £0, and since then she este Ungeinee teh Hranegort ie spoken to me ont phone on ned them rs’ badly Pay ligne and to the Tare front hne trenches!’ opened thirty minutes; our tele- ported there was such a un the barrage that they could not see the intantry, but the 8 Were on fire » Empire bat- . tomether with heavy nuval guns hud been brought up, and ar- 1 trains, were all concentrating trip-hammers on the 4 now evident that every n the woods must be di It living au, nothing uld live under th cane of fire. next attacked the road, stop- Uie German reserves and am- n from getting near, Then-- net the tr remult of the day's work the German front- ee housand prison- r nd wounded piled “aps; wher r the eye turned, shell boles, aches and ditches packed with Wounded, dead and Our Captain aske for volunteor « vers, and T offered, We went le place where once was Ma we Copse Woods, but w ho here and wa. t not b le + and the trunks were littered fore the battle commenced this s Wan one of the loveliest place country round about that o t Piowers, 8 and tho rarest of plants’ of were there in abundance, This day Was @ searred ruin; the savagery destruction was pable, wound dead and the Mount Sore A peep at o pull so terrible it Is our w ong th wounded to the top first stopping to tak they were adly battered up; thought at was might have a again, We honist's aut on bund for Lieut, asn't there; he d tken pris f there, but ntly chance to use t reached our old tel: the hill, looked a Matthews, but he had been’ wounded oner, Wo establi cation hed } at once, back while wa bu up cur front, Our men were now coming back from their trip and our batter- jes pul up one of ibe Gervest bare nes hold the minuni- nuns wn oO. BY 5 enlisted tr s T have ever witnessed to pro- them on their return, CHAPTER IX. VER near Hooge was a la naval gun of high velocity and long range, mounted on an armored train, The partic ular purpose of this nautical mon- r was to t up obje a hort notice, such as a body of moving troops, a battery on the road, a train 1 ude for i of ammunition wage coaled in a tunnel! m use, and when it its missives o first proje end the mes, aside It was at this time pay @ttention to the Square Ingue—the tittle station Dital there--and jt bad becom diabolical nuiss that it termined to resort to heroic to “get it." A monster b: work and the was con- 8 upecitle would discharg destruction rom it would wunnel, n shoot buck it Pay § particula in Pop nd the Ji much & was de- measures Don Was mission the of the floa! correspondenc guns, which was operating on a short railroad built by the Canadian Pacific Railway It was of tho ved that the first work on should be devoted to Gern utting th an naval gun out of action. In this section the German bx wer tho air, and gave control of the Ypres dared not attempt the thera for a long time, finally determined to lau and it Was brought up one With its Voluntewrs, inflated during tho night ar pched in the morn ing. Promptly at 10 o’cloek, when was ready for raising, Gorman planes bummed busily overtiead, 1 spite their activities the L up and was doing on work on its vati naval nuisance Lore ached its > Ovjective OwkArY NO tions and records, Then—Kr-kr-kr Kr-kr-kr-p! And the she . menoed to som Around Then it Was u case ng the bag down, whieh war 7 > easy. ‘These ob- } Vallon bulloons are rated frum & large armored truck, to which they ure fustened, and the truck run along carrying the uir-bag with | attuched with a long cable, it handied just as 4 toy balloon wo be carried by a boy~when the boy runs along the balloon runs with hin Attached to the bottom of the bag is @ basket, usually holding f observers, with a parachute for ea man, and while in the alr they hay to work as fast us possible, because their stay in the azure is as short a tho energies of Fritz can make 1 If the wind is up the aky cloudy it is one chanes iu a dozen tnat they will escape before the planes st them, a5 the swing of the basket makes it difficult ia the extreme fur _ ST |) Be MADE USEFUL iy T MAKES A DANDY 4S 4G CUP AND SAves dines BATH TUB For SHALL BATH Room YOUR TELE PHONE CAN COLLAPSABLE SOORING UTENSILS FoR RITCHENErre dea Qs REVOLVING TABLE FoR SMALL RooMy Oe al | SERGEANT REGINALD GRANT |) ~ rag tec them to notice the dunger until it is upon them, On this morning the first indica- tion that they had that their tne Was up was the swooping down of a cluster of birds of death on all sides The weather was foxgy, a suff wind blowing, and the basket swingti from side to side, Ttris was the first time an attempt had been made to float .. balloon in the Ypres salient, as the danger was too obvious to take the risk. However, as I say, the chance was taken, It so happened that our guns were taking a breath- ing speil, and we stood on the top of our gun pit eagerly watohing the fall of tho balloon and its esca, The road along which the armor d tr had pun ran at one point quite clo» aul to the German lines, and the planes were now coming th every moment and bembing tt every quarter, Telephone and graph wires running from trenches to headquarters and all parts of th: lines intervened between the alioon and safety, and there was nothing for them but to cut the wires to let the bag get thro Each minute men in fi tho danger increased, but t truck scramble wire the nipped tt and the up th their nippers sed through. This was done tedly — before reached its haven, Bets were freely made by every man in my gun crew, with the odds of 6 to 1, that the en- emy would get it, Somehow I had an inspiration that she would navigate the storm, and I took up fers in m} battery against lost, Her mission of had been accomplished, but whe mt through the wires she flouted to wayon line, and the result of hare was disastrous in th German shells follo with the swiduousty bu of snowballing a fo har splendid horses mangled to a jelly by the explosi amongst them. When it got to the wagon line th crew on the truck commenced to pu {t down @ y could, but when half-way to ad & flyin shel) split the ¢ twain as 1 1 as it could have been done wit ade, and the bag floated away remaining {wo men out ¢ rman lines, When the descent mimenced two of the crew had taken to their parachutes and jot away safely Anti-aircraft puns now opened up on it from our lines in an endeavor to destroy tt and prevent it gett nto the 1s of the enemy, and German i anes and anti-alreraft guns were at it, #0 that it was a tar concerned. This, perhaps, the only incident in the en war to date where both the B and the Germans were equally bent upon the destruction of a com- mon object The wind suddenly changed and a Steady current of alr in the oth direction brought it back over ourown. lines; then the two remaining men felzed Che oppormalty to leave the Goater in ¢hele parwonxnes, droning to safety. A bevy of our plan went after riddled it wi vullets, causing the gas to and it finally sank majestically to ground After the third battle of Yp cooled down we were permit to the rear as fur ax Poperinghe f the purpose of giving ourselves # pouring, as We Were filthy with dirt and with lice, My particular chum on this journey wag the little tel Phonist, Fox, who had been through every big battle up to that time, in Jing the Sanctuary Woods We gut ml stealing rides on upon whieh hor a finger nail ~ eight miles off, by any passing vehic eonld fasten a tor ammunition wagon lorries, amb lances, supply ns tks WO WE thor tired \ wage we persuaded th y oan us horses for th the journey, which he to do. But the ly, Were mul for the boneyard had put the y were useless f , and they were val of th veterina receive capital punis! time I dug my spurs in my in a mad endeavor to make mount, i in tho ko, the only result was a kick air with its hind foe When I got to Po: the mule and mysel y for the ride on the Par to the wagon 1 been riding for t and my work ‘ pelled to walk n three or fou the ot mn re sim Affectod. » made our way to t yin ings and per . welcon a cong i thir When I was next, the woman a tendant hat me @ shirt; ao . then drawers I filled my tub wit of wate from the tap and 1 ath ot merry -heart« as trons. fomond inte i Ken crowd, foaprag wid yumplig aut of the tubs to eVary.Gceuzi2n 1B a pelimell rush, er el Original Fashion Designs _ For The Evening World’s Home Dressmakers | By Mildred Lodewick | Copy . 9, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Fvening World), \A Pretty Summer Costume Combining Twx Materials. women are to wear @ g n Dame filmy fabrics at wheo has skirt nipulation th b ind to be way of drag The reason for this time | Fashion na the | wv of fabric | evident~drapery may | Swathe the figure, « plenty of m | ” grace and richness, yet main taining a slim outline, and a ng an ex treme narrowness at the ankles. When tho ec nenelice ceca eta TE capi inccipncinntindpnd drapery is manipu- | lated in le harg- § | ng ona, a nar- row foundation skirt, which reveals itself below the ¢ y londs the decreed nar- row effect at the ankles, while above, vy the soft fabric but ‘ naturally sinks in to ; the lim foundation. Al really — feiminine 2, women adore filmy 4, | fabrics, but those who *. inust consider prac- 5 ticality sometimes § foel conscientious 3 . ut indulging in $ them. A heavier fab- then might t ee ee | cotoring with soft taf- feta in t sar ably “lL with insparent one $ with the result of a 3 dressy yok being ; aon practival ‘ 4 a 1 am, of $ 4 day would F} + ity combining ‘ & | wil t Ww ina $ ’ brown and duit blue 3 é : $ ; $ changeable effect, The taffeta is employe WILL O' THE WISP GRACIOUSLY ALLIED for the plun kimono WITH TAFFETA. t, and the wide® * lines of embroidery floss in brow: while the transparent the-wiap, delicately ridged in} blue or gold, The loops which d weaving, forms the tunic, the} #0 piquanty around the lower ede undercuffs, and the tiny yoke!of the girdle are of the silk, eithe oped saat mentioned por- Picot-edged or made double thick ten ied with an individual Ress, with mo edgé I have suggeste aaa actieved by a half-inch fold & pretty character touch to th being barred with frock, in the dark brown velvet rit Lia’ bon that entwines the girdle, drippin Wil you suggest 1° way to make over pale green chiffoo dress, macy with @ long tuntc helter-sk some | halt 2 168 yards wide t women attend Waist is drape cramble for sa across front, ant civillans, coming from their hous 4 mad Push, added to the confu- When long flowing sleeve wohed to silver shoulder straps, Ar 25 years old, welg 117 pounds, tall ant slim, MISS C. L. H. the smoke of the explosion thirty of the bathers lay dead round the tubs, and forty unded, all more or less badly. three mninutes more shells planted, some of them landin yin the square, and, to my Drape cream oot- I learned later that Fox, ored lace over . um, there had paid the wand you These shells were #reen material, tak ing out from th width of tunic coming from the n miles distant wght shelter in the enough to make ce © r hole they could ‘ night. I searched front and back per oe iny inulee and was thankful to| tions of waist, Sapphire dlue,,velves find tt wh had left it, t to a} ribbon, ‘ F ed of oats, waited : He eed ae eed ber tha | Pashion Raitor, The Zrming Woe, eras explosions breaking in the| 1 would like to have y ' immediat hood, and utterly| made a pretty brick ; ‘ that Twas count: | peg Ahene =: ta n nds un t had finished. bi I Trader cover 66% ‘nt T returned | DUSiNess wear, I never 7 a ta © wagon line 1 in much be buy roady-made / \ oe t an coming down, for wt clothes, for they do not \ ! to thank the feed of oats. become me or fit me, 40 q 1th gave tne a new hold on life; 1] 2ecom 9 \ felt ten years younger and eral} Will you please aid mo ‘e "i with a design? I have Vin 1 Jearned day the station] 36-inch bust but hips / , "i “" n4ghe iad been ai | that are only 34 inches. /; \ 3 hepired that he had a wire rune |Am@ five feet five inches yo 1 from the n depot straight}tall. I am a little i German lines, together with] short-walated, G. me oth apparatus, and)" crhis design should } t 4 ‘i Was duo to! become you, Do not fit ii that tue bathers |it very snug at waist- p the tub line and finish bodice i} ha wo the ugh " e.| at least one inch below Ynres t normal w we finally man - nd thigh, and | Fashion Buiter, The dive n “3 \mmune from | anh cha an ‘ i Mt you advi G Ki sition with| me to get for late 1 ‘ tom n nber of spring and sum. nodian Infantry carrying mer wear? Will silic ba hand grenades suits be modish this 1 dis “gi sat year? If so whet to my color would you sug Iwas appalied by one of the gest for ar rifying sihts T have seen at thirty years of ag One of the ping of @ gren- : . wrked loose in the bag and ex- 5 fect 4 inches ta, ated, Bowing Mis right hand and have light browa x completely off, I have seen scores . edi yponin of whioh in its ree assy ik yes sand times more piexlon with Ui and $e color, brown eyes, thing suddenness, the total unex. weigh 121 pounds, and the fearful spurting ss W, blood that filled me more sie een Tia, or than anything before Silke poplin will Re used extensively for I was standing but three feet be- both suits aad hind hin. As quick as T could t gave dresses, This @e- him aid and yelled for a stretcher, but | gign is practical, with a newelty thing that could be done ved until sundown, «to me Sean da. tripe silk veo) for gpring and linen or organdy one for summer 4 protty tap coloror dark blug , 1

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