The evening world. Newspaper, March 5, 1919, Page 17

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1 . — Pauline Furlong’s Talks / on Health and Beauty it, 119, by the Prose Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) othe Diet for the Thin Woman. LENDER women are usually dyspeptic, and for this they witt| S have to make an intelligent study of the nutritive values of foods, and, after experimenting on some and learning which ones really agree best with them, follow this diet. It is an absolute impossibility to outline a fixed diet for all thin women, not nearly so easy a task as outlining one for the fat ones. Dyspeptics should not overtax the digestion and never eat a great variety of food at any one meal. Learn to curb your appetite, if it is unusually large, and, after several days or a week of self-denial, you will not have the desire for so much food. Drinking large amounts of either hot or cold liquids with meals must also be avoided because this dilates the digestive organs and also has a tendency to keep you from properly masticating the food. A small amount of water or other liquid, taken slowly and at intervals during the meal, will not prove harmful, however, Slender women who can digest cream and chocolate should take these two heavy but fattening drinks several times a day in preference to tea nd coffee, which should be entirely avoided, if possible, or else taken in very small quantities, Two foods are particularly friendly to the thin woman trying to gain weight. They are rice and baked potatoes. with good sweet butter and taken at least several times a week. Rice pudding made with eggs and raisins is also particularly fattening. Dates and figs, which are laxative and nourishing, should be eaten in place of candies and heavy sweets, which are difficult to digest. Raw and cooked fruits are blood purifiers and act as stimulants and cleansers for the system, do salads of fresh vegetables dressed with olive oil and a little lemon or a cooked sauce made from sour milk, eggs, ko. Buttermilk as well as sweet milk should be taken freely by slender as well as fat women. Buttermilk is nourishing and slightly laxative, Both should be well covered | || Gouty or rheumatic thin women must avoid all stimulating foods, al- cohol, tea, coffee, sweets, &c., and eat dark breads and toast in preference | to hot, soft, doughy ones. | Advice on Courtship And Marriage | By Betty Vincent (The New York Ev Coprright, 1919, by the Presa Publishing Co, Frankness. 1 We See letters come to me describ-| his attitude toward her. A man is ing perplexities which could| easily fooled in these. matters--a all be cleared up by the exer-| Woman almost never, Man's vanity cise of frankness. “Toby” writes: “| Often makes it impossible for him to have reason to believe that a certain| realize that a woman does not return girl I know has serious feelings for| "is love, He persists in. belteving me. But I know that we can never|%h® does, even after she may have de anything more to each other than| Palnly refused him. But a woman, friends. She lives in a distant State | Perceiving that she and I don't know whether to write and | certain man, tell her my position or trust to chance | ™*ditely und turns her interest else- that her ideas will change in the | Where, his is what I advise you to natural course of time.” do. If he loves you, he will promptly Toby should leave tho girl in doubt fllow, If h not you will prove No longer. It is hard to tell a person: YOUF case and at the same time save something that is sure to hurt the, Y°UFr dignity, feclings, But it is more cruel to ad- minister the shock after affection is deeply rooted, There are a number ways in which Toby can make girl un- derstand without saying in so many words: “I do not care for you and never shall, except as a friend. You must not love me.” That, of course, would bo unnecessarily brutal, Be- @ides, there Is the chance that Toby |* may be mistaken as to her or him. Men have been wrong t Fe in thinking girls cared deeply fo unnot captivat usually drops him im on ot feelings An Engagement on the Western Front IT GeTs NY GOAT! L NEED HELP INCOME TAX RETURN 1 CAN You HELP ME WITH THIS, 9 I} CANYou Fit our AN INCOME (TAX Return ? HIM. No! Bur a Feuow NEXT DOOR FHINKS HE CAN . Go AND See us they unhooked and got into action. One of the officers under me had been killed by this time and very many of the men. In the afternoon about 2 mor 1 and we made better progress. But toward yning the rain descendec nd our é ere 01 ? progress ended, fhe battlefield be- Lote le gelled Copyright, 1918, by John Lane Company Eaten ee dak ok ial cane the rend ing kind. OPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAD frks, vhich we had built was cut up too Toby could write about his social) ¥ After meeting the American girl in New York who Wusvited this manuscript the author—eome badly for any more traf Goings in way to show that he ts! Cert oiliser tn the Koglish aruy—wee'e ber again in Waite, where abe has goue 10 take up Med were weary and drenched to {ntereated in hin (ramediate surrounds | Gol tee of fy Bask to the trove ie Center tes Gisten cease ceca: come) the bone when we started back in r 1+ | tell her ef if, Back in the frout line trenches, he begins this series of letters, writiug iuto them all search of our battery, Our enthusiasm ings. He could throw out a hint in} hp lang her 1a person, During iuie work he coutinusay dreams of the git 88d Was exhauxted, Through the gather- every letter (and he must not make | ne Greamme Tale the Mantacrict, bleh be sever (etende ber to on, ing shadows burying par’ were his letters too frequent, by the way) . groping, picking up the dead. At tne that doubtless the girl herself was CHAPTER XVI, adjective, No one could who had not guns nothing had been built but the | ", been there, It was glorious because &Un pits; they were little more than having a gay and happy time and (Continued). it Was so immense. soggy platforms. Rain was trickling might herself be on the verge of “the ROM now on I have no very Four times we planted our flags, With & malicious constancy in every ¢ big love.” He coujd make it plain in clear recollections, only gen- and each t ne sent an N.C, O, with gs My bat i bed foun wai e " runners buck. At the furthest point Was left of a dugout, whieh le a@ pleasant way that he would te cral impressions, I remem- we inet the first batch of nae ors, Nad dispossessed several corpses, happy to hear she was interested in ber the wild laughter of the ‘They were so foul that you could There had spread my sleeping “some one." He could sugarcoat his|chaps who accompanied me, and the smell them ata hundred yards, There 1 was too tired to eat oF uns Plain speaking by hinting that “of|euriously winged sense IL had, as if AMY al of the a ne a ace piety Be im t toll @oune euigaa # i eco! aus a Tommy with a bloody ¢ a tot of Ih course a bunch of chaps must helr had ly cast aside my body. Yandage round his head and a rife il, morning, eagerly waiting” for her smile and] yor a moment we halted on the cocked, whom they carried shoulder | Between the dayy that followed 1 her “Yes.” And that no one would |top of the trenches © Man's Land high on a_ stretcher Far away, Cannot distinguish, They were full o 7 , 7 a z t t id dive anc a eu isery it be gladder than he (Toby) to hear|boiled and bubbled like rocks over through the haze OF rest. We could pepe aaa, Be ciuare Gavat she was happy. All this is far easier|which a tumultous sea was break- [swine pening one partne enile dry. We were always pushing our to do by letter than face to face, andling, It was strewn with the dead ‘rhen we turned back to get our men SUNS @ Jittle further up We lived Toby should have no. trouble in find-|and dying. There were men with to Work. I found them in the trench SiWays tn the pa rah rate Pe iy ar legs, had le em and About didn't seem to matter is ing a way to keep the girl's friend-|broken spines. and legs, clawit a them chrourh the Bates the mont part iron rations-—bully bi ship without misleading her as to his|their way on hands and knees yy», pe or arrag® and hard tack, $0 much for our, n our Jonel came up. You'd own feelings, Be frank, in short But|through the mud to get back to better wait,” he said. urely you're Merle. : ade up of be tactful. safoty. Every thirty fect or so shells not going to take them in through OUP Adventures were made ip We ke , rf . a that?” I told him that 1 was, He. folng forward to the ridge to obsury 'o "M,C T would say, “Heed|were detonating, throwing Up @& pot nd’ aly les : to ths They were real adventures. One neve ‘ore he could © me orders what the young man is trying to tell|spray of death, How human reason contrary a shell got him. 1 have since KeW Where our infantry were for two you in actions, which invariably |could survive was a marvel, It seams heard that he is dead Gaye to) eae mane we speak louder than word vidently | Unreal to me—a horror which L have | My, chaps ywere splendid, = There keanch > Ue ings nite 7 nan re aa ake wasn't one who didn't work his heart Were ene Psy: aha he !s8 being frank w N you, yet you!" 1 about. P : out. Very soon the Germans coin. Which * Tefuse to see the po! | In every curtain of fire there l8 & menced gassing, and we had to weat ) “Every time I ask him to go any- {rent which can be found If you keep our mask 8 no joke to Wield a ny had } Low where,” writes M. GC, A., “he is going |Your head and look for tt-a place *pade in a mask, but these chaps nev it w y Ac Sanine. cinadhencavineite lwhare Se : er stopped, Every now and then une # to \ m6 Ise he invite | Where of two eneiny would top over, Sometimes he ta him to the house he always postp: nes | Has e a UP 1 be {tA BOP: proved to be gassed and sometimes tow 1 the visit fora week or #0, He says! menced our advance. 1b old abell. Wounded: If wounded we bound niin ayes fa he loves me, butt don't know how to}holes to right and loft of ua dead thy" Gut of the barrage to recover, hedges hia battalions wer y Ad out. P oo Jeaught by the Hquid fire, and had When he better he Jnyariably marching. All day, trom sunrise 49 My deay M you HAVE found ent he Hau me buck. P pluck was pupcr we observers 1 our te proved by words al the young all cochineal in color 1, Presently I got sick of havin, back word of latest develup Voc jnvedhvs SUA WERE E ay) fio the explosives, l4V€ mys Wounded men where t me man truly ly would want Wena: Peat ae te hye very fell, so I started in a h of the Gor I think the most wonderful sight I to be with you as often as possible. | rom or minnie gaged at ua desper. min d its, Most of the former Saw was our cavalry riding down to Certainly be would not permit your| ately, We passed them--we had no tenants were dead, but every now and capture a certain town, 1 was hidden Invitations to be put Je by the} time to help--and came to then I would find some one in hiding. aye ack within ten of thei “previous en n Surely ott wire entangioments. Here routed a gang of them out and they passed, an nee the girls’ society would not attractive | NGO, and a runner to tape the 1 It was about midday when our is what I s When the to him if he cared in a serious way | back first battery came up and got into the plain y for you The German front line was a sight @ction just behind us, It hadn't been saddles and set off at a gall eyes noi ann fapldevarention elsh (WILOD.L Dave I forget, Lsupposs there long when an enemy plane came to a vil from 4 eo hoF con tus! a e, Dit inst have bean five feet broad swooped down and turned its mu- mans came out carrying love? hea a man loves belleve | at least six in depth, It was a river chine gun on them. ye gunners who flag before them, Our chaps halted me, a girl ALWAYS KNOWS IT. \ of blood, choked to the brim = witn weren't yates ammunition or fire parle wung round , Lie Woman's dependence wpon man for|dead and dying Germans, They lay ing bad to stand by with rifles and try hauneh and came teart ck, . PF . there silent, Waxen, with eyes wide to pick off the pilot What h pened lying low along thelr horses’ ! ing, from love to food 1 y dd ‘ Q OOH BRST but doled. Many of them were to them afterwards I don't know, tor learned afterward what the ¢ ns re throughout centuries and] pounded into pulp, They had ail been the building of the road carried us had sald: “Wo have two whiga-ban: . has developed in her a sort |allve that morning beyond them. From now on brigady batteries trained on you and any r shall sicken ou if I go on, No after brigade of feld guns commenced quantity of machine guns, You had of sixth y rs a y though the man wy to imitate love im jous. You won't understand the last to overtake us, They followed us so better surrender.” It closely that it was dificult to keep ahead, The moment they had reached er tire the Germans opened up. As true. our men commenced hurriedly to re- Tew horses action, attack, Ax If the battle ¢ pull Ge out rible now you to the end, hot wa perbag oth meet we sinaller than the You may istence be think tha whom 1 saw pi give me the kisses whic were not allowed, That wish ls mere AN INCOME TAX RETURN ITMAYBE A NUT BuT 1AM NoT THE ONLY cut clean in find that the infantry w rar of the guns, As T ¢ certain town the German: gaged in street fighting. Orv 8 against We're what's k battery.” W ns until our his would to me vin @ at out. gun Whave s before d remain undaunted, 1 think of you, if th only not that death Love 1 on. worlds—there mugt worlda—in whicif T you if 1 miss you i at I, So poor and humat jould be capable pirit. give end ¢ 1 wan all 6 no onfidence must be ¢ guessed. He wouls He need me not We much to each ot at love is wasted. d high in seem strange riptioy of them, And yet there is to lure me your gray ¢ nosphere of slway ye back from wit at rest—you unconscious womanliness, like to know that when I am dead your arms and . while I lived, you would take me in ——— ee halt shing from their saddle: and our infantry we ain I went forward only or war started, I rejoice in the did to find that es of death selfishly, 1 in t may have met too i! er Bt es and your No DouBT I'M A NUT] ENGED HELP and sin all rections, When they again passed my haystack there was not more than half of them left, They seemed de- mented; death pounded behind then. But even more dramatic was the scene I witnessed two evenin, as 1 was forward as liaison officer, sud denly, as the sun was setting, the whole German front | started to move back. They look like a m of ants as they rushed ward, T phoned the news to my div m, and was recalled to help to Buide he batteries up. What a night had! Everywhere — he were foundering, The mud wa, glue; it held th down when ey fell. By dawn only one of our batteries was in ere out amo in 4 were battery is in that town now and line 1 raln moved forward, The wire in front of the support nehes his been put up behind us Us nown Nd e knock ounded ter ag I shall think of ldo One, t you mu. t finish Theres be so many hall suvely n this one 1 and puny of this lar that God's n reater t has create is ¢ Thoa' trenc! loved their ideal that they could die for it. ‘There is something godlike in such self-abnegat "God so loved the world that He gave His only be- gotten Son," t men so loved the world that t gave themselves, Though the ideal for which they die may be mistaken, whether they be Qnglish, French or Germans, seem som to strive up toward 1's level. ‘To do that is religion, am almost jealous of th which after my ghastly # you, death with men die we can’ but you, You ntense your I should Conyrieh HIT LDREN'S & C clothes are it a realm of thelr own, and the moth who is suecesstul in the developing of her at all of being success own attire Is not sure ful with those of her | ieee ne is | naturally apt to strive | toward individuality, land in so doing is more | than likely to ron inte a snare, ‘The Hines may | abide by the mandates of simplicity, but they are for tiny tot. Here is w the ever pretty, ever popular and, one might way, dy, hand embroidery comes the rescue, A simple application of it ts sure to lend @ magical air of youthfulness, No more delightful proof of this fact could be desired than the de sign Lam offering here | While in front the et. fect is of a dreas, at the sides the bodice tukes on unusual pro- | portions, dropping ina | dignified way to hang the skirt like a To accentuate at effect, tw pockets are — placed where the hands may h them most vow and to call attention to this fea ture, a of birds, or ducks, are embrotd | ered by hand, either tr outline atiteh or solid, ‘This playful trimming touch accomplishes a trick, counteracting |the severity of this portion of the frock, ‘The hand embroidery as trim- ming ts further carried out in feath- erstitehing to finiwh the flat little © lar and narrow cuffs, also to decorate the rather narrow skirt, With the k buttoning up the back, it would at the front of the bodice was hed open just to give reason for the long ribbon streamers which, after dutifully lacing the slash together, daughter, § too severe he re Botuen ne! Bearitt over re to over at. the ¢ | rea veniently, un wor ° sentiment. What good would your and trying to get some cover over lips do me when mine are silent? them. The important thing ts not to i t ka; they would be recorded . pets ae on enemy asroplane photographs. CHAPTER XVH. After such along walt, two nights IRE we are » wo are #80 L recelved your last letter, You HERE wo are now wo aro PKG, t roculted your otten me, You compelled to lead a t hadn't forgotten n tall, You have turvy sort of an existence, been I. but you’ better now, You We hive pulled into an don't tell what waa the matter—only : é that it was 4 sligit septic-polsoning SHAS. Pile Of pure contracted through a seratch, when elit Germana, We have , 1 were doin: something for a knock » in @ wall, through wounded s What was that which we have pushed the muzzlos of fomething? 1 want to ask so many! pretty red and white silk check, our guns; tor the rest, we dare not uesuons which [ must combine with something build any overhead cover, but have ..59 they sent you down to Monte! ¢} 5 for a frock as there are but three simply strung up camouflage netting, Carlo to ¢ leac You give @ &4Y]} yards, Will you please advise me Hy day we dare not move about for Picture ¢ erblan Offl-| What fabric and atyle would be suite fear we should ve spotted. Bnemy ¢¢hs wh from wounds! apie? Am twenty-three years of ag®, ry 4 wre continually passing over; OF On | o that ex -lhave black hair, good compiexiem one man seen walkin ight give ston one 0! m gave you of bis) without much color, but my lips are away our posit Sy we hide in Bayety. “We do not wish to live to) req, Wil) the check goods become holes in the gr by day and work ¥¢ old only to live while we can.” I) me? Am 6 feet 3 1-2 inches tall, like fend: night. ‘Sheree ens SUnnoee IF Te hada neted (On SHAE ‘Miss J.C. other reason why we have ta lie low! Couldn't. { couldn't forget that men| | ‘The material should become yew bardir W here to fie with Were dying and fighting, It waa im- well, With ft you could ne Oe in open nts if the enemy breaks hie ta seize my own legitimate | Wiite Georgette for a foundation through? meanwhile we only in, {pn ‘nd not to remember, | blouse portion with stra 6. @ ie Attacks and When an SOM has been Was thin weakness or atrength? 1] ch iso collar, « re ne te See eee? Fimeuit for tha don't know, One can’t retraverse the| Pleatings of white Georgette ete oe up our fasa when pasts nouling can change things now, | fulsh band trimming on skirt, Pete tiahinivuc ten wine ee young Serbian, 1 pave nol . aa the an Relate RAE Who Wish | old--or ) live while 1| Fashion Editor, The Kveuing Wort Would have dreamed in 191% that C# 4.4a4 my chance to live while we] 1 am seventeen years of age and am Ree eee ee na tial were In waris, but Il hadn't the heart] anxious to have a pretty Georgette Adventure? We're ail dog-tired, but t@ ke it; I couldn't forget the chape|orebe dress made which I can wear fall ot tight. Oar intartey haven't $8 the lino-my chaps—tho bad only | this spring and summer, As I do not peen relieved since the t day of ty chance of have many slothes, phe oe veh ne offen wey’ re unt an would have liked to have been at} Somewhat — practical. a ey re ean an Monte Carlo with you, I'm glad you| Would you suggest? Also what sort of Hee eect Rha’ Mil TAe paauionate, MATERG Hut fT shouldn't have {ining should be used? = Miss M, G contempt for the Germa When veen happy; Um happler where Tam. Y did not state your oring, 80 they aren't fighting they sle You felt that, too sense of diss] Can only suggest @ color with regard Wee Aumite ik whe ws satisfaction that pe Should dance | tO practicability, ‘The neutral tones iGany Mate ndererounds 7h and be merry wh thers were | are always practical, such as tan oF mans left Meee iithy ‘condition; Pacing their bodies between them| Stay, and one of these could be en- he daarase 4 sotting them cleanes, 0d tramedy livened With a picot-edged gros-grain We sear Jare to l@ht fires; the (Vo Be Continued.) ribbon entwining the waist line, ‘This wmok tou presence aieeceiaiiceiatiekaciaiein could be varied from peacock blue, ena sae: F ceonea Jcerine, apple green, dull blue, &c., and M et heh et Ce TT int trom Shay, though, He[on very practical ‘occasions could be tr t eas | ld ia neat a [climinated, A net foundation ts ustte MARAT Dolnoned a Dy ahot PAL A) ally employed, but often completed at or Therk: wae the /we Usel 4 a is It from] bottom with a band of the Georgette, : : it up viola J 1 old devic * eo al is ey pea to prevent detect handwrit. | GOOD IDEA. ‘Phat taught us a lesson Well, t \ sive, what oMIE LLOYD GEORGR, dane entnce ain ene 0 We have you to say this fine morning?” | J speaking at a dinner, was ex- darkneaa t : Hoe ope the envelope, carefully | plaining that while war was @ with the f preserving dt and not tearing the| horrible thing, It d nationa vanish unde 1, as he had @aid, waa! faster than any other one thing, He balephong written, [t bore his name| pointed out that war brought about It's difficult ‘to jm ations, More medical dla enh aa 4 nor | covert nd developed more poet bole ae ae of paver and writers than did peace. It hag of freedom wit even extended to privte families, ey F this means;| "A friend of mine recently became the little beauties ¢ the proud father of a lusty boy, For edad est ele ov Prye ' tureo nights he bravely walked ths Abe i al = Joor, but on the fourth, when be Boat Me eneue Peat uanre wetehe FROM THE FASCINAT= |«: ns bome "from “the, ‘office, | Be climb out and atart to work " 1 oy orought with him @ ie of soothe climb out and atart to work, Menind ING, INTRIGUE. STORY |tne sup 1 white road, down’ which “Ob, Jnmes” excinimed his ra hight the ammunition is brough ) when she saw the la ' we used the limbers they would be ls dangerous to « ve to a child of bis heard by the enemy; then again, if age’ By Chester K. Steele a limber were hit or ditched it would hold up the traffic. Just at present we're building pits to take our shells Sve. Home Dressmakers By Mildred Lodewick 1019, by the Prem Publishing Co | A Smart School Frock for a Kiddie. HAND EMBROIDERY PROUDLY TRIMS (The New York Evening World.) b THIS FROCK. drop in such a childlike, care free manner, Fashion Raitor, The B ing World What would you advise for a line ing for a tan velour cape? ‘I will wear it Instead of a sult this spring with serge di 3. Am twenty-threg years of age. Miss D. J.J. Black satin would be smart and practical, or a dark blue and tan printed pussy willow silk would be pretty. Fagdon EAitor, The Evening World: Will you please design me a pretty style of dress for lemon colored light welght wool velour, to be worn this spring in the street? Am thirty years of age, five feet five inches tall, weigh 140 pounds, Lf possible | would like to have a little hand embroidery on it as 1 do it very weil, Mrs, W. A perfectly plain frock, made tat a slightly Moyen-age walst-line an narrow sash ends tying in back, the neck cut a becoming round or square, skirt narrow with lap seam in Could beautifully elaborated wit kiay worsted or silk embroidery done in a block or oval pattern around) the lower part of skirt, and in thy front of waist, upward from walste line, or downward from neck, Fashion Wititor, Evening Worl: ; I bought a remnant of some very “Don't worry, reeraa 8 bet. band, “tam to take Begins on this page next Money, pall saree wn Hea " ea a ry t

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