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| aa : HOME PAGE | FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1919 | Health and B LARGE PORES—Mrs. Walter P.: ‘Use no grease or cold cream on coarse skin, Wash the face in soap and water, rinse carefully and dry gently with a soft towel. Then apply some 0f the following astringent: Tannic acid, 15 grains; camphor water, 6 ounces, CAMPHOR TO REDUCE BUST— Margery F.: Use camphor spirits to reduce the bust. It is made from the bought camphor spirits, about a pint, to which must be added several small cakes of gum camphor. POCK MARKS—thel HL: These, if mot too deeply rooted, may be re- moved through professional skin Peeling. Do not attempt to do this at home, and be sure you have @ good operator. SUPERFLUOUS HAIR—Mattie Bz Do not know the cause of super- filvous hair, but local dapilatories ‘will stimulate the growth and make it worse in time. Only the electric needie will permanentiy remove it, ami this will positively remove the hairs forever, tf done by @ competent operator. (HENNA FOR REDDENING THE HAIR—Mabel G.: Indigo added to the henna makes the hair black, and only the henna paste alone will redden the r WANG NAILS—Sorah G.: These must be carofully trimmed away with small sharp cuticle scissors and the hande kept dry and out of water as mach as possibia. TO MAKE THE HAIR WAVY— fre. Lena D.: Use some of the fol- lowing bandoline on the strands be- Pauline Furlong Answers Coprricht, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) eauty Queries fore wrapping up the curls in kids or paper: Oil of almonds, 1% dram; rose water, 1 1-2 pints; tragacanth, 1-12 dram. TREATMENT FOR BUNIONS— Harry N.: Buntons, like other ail- ments and disfigurements, are more easily avoided than cured, and when they are in advanced stage they re- quire the services of a surgeon. How- ever, bunions may be successfully treated at home and much reliet may be obtained through simple remedies, easily and economically made in the home. Wide, comfortable shoes should be worn, and all pressure, which is the cause of bunions, should be re- moved. A pad may be purchased or one made from chamois skin folded several times and a hole cut in the centro to help relieve the pressure from shoes. Bathe the bunion in hot water for about a half-hour to reduce the inflammation and then paint some of the following lotion over the anion to relieve the pain and swelling: Take equal parts of tincture of lodine, car- bolic acid, glycerine, or equal parts of belladonna’ and tincture of jodine, and paint on the bunion about three times a day. Be sure and trim away all the calloused flesh around the bunion with a sharp sterilized knife before applying either of the lotions given. FEVER BLISTERS—Marion G.: Touch the fever blister with a puff of cotton saturated with camphor spirits or nitre or a@ little powdered alum. They come from disordered stomach or cold. PERSPIRING AND FOUL ®MELL- ING FEET—Kathorine F.: Soak tho feet in hot water and soap for half an hour and then bind them with gauze saturated with some of the following lotion: Alcohol, one quart; oarbolic acid, two teaspoonfuls; glycerine, two teaspoonfuls. Here are some kicks sent to The Evening World today. They will Qxterest you. You will agree with many of these people. What's your kick? ‘Write it out and send tt to the Kick @tso your opinion of what these othe ‘The Crowd On the Corner, othe “Kick” Militor: New York City, Oct. 29. My kick is against the kick that most people make about young fel- Jows standing on the corner, I am ene of about twenty-five respectable fellows who have started a club s0 Mat we would not have to “hang ground the corner.” After hunting for almost two months we have not been able to secure a meeting room. ff any of the people who kick about ‘this can help us find a place we will my only too glad to meet there. sha R BULLOCK. jo Vote for Overseas Veteran? New York City, Oct 29. Me the “Kick” For: I havo a kick, and I think that it twa just one. I fought for my cqun- try In France, and received a ma- chine gun bullet through my right Tung. When I went to register a fow days ago I was informed'that I could not vote as I had not been living in the State the required length of tim I have been living here since my dis- charge nine months ago. I spent eighteen months in the army. Perhaps some one ean tell me how I could b the war at the same time. in Union Hill? racy. Am I not entitled to yote for it? HARRY S, GADDIS, No “Change” on Bus Tine. New York City, Oct. 29, % the “Kick Piieor: Recently I was at the corner of Sith Street and Fifth Avenue waiting fora bus. When I got on I discover- Jed that the smallest change I had was @ five dollar bill. The cohductor could not change it for me, and told me that I would have to get off un- Jess I could get something smaller, This incident would not have been 60 bad were it not for the fact that I was In France and was wounded there in the lung. I live on Riverside Drive and have to go home by the bus. It is almost Impossible for me to be in the air, especially cold air, for any length of time. That is not my idea of good service, cL G. Not Lodged in the White House, Union Fill, N. J., Oct. 29. ‘De the “Kick” Editor: I wish to register @ kick against that blatherskite of a Senator who DoYou Know? HA Copyright, 191%, by ‘The Preas Publishing Co, ite New "Fork mvenlng Worlds) L Ww was the name of the great Spanish fleet defeated by the English %& Who wrote “Little Women?” 3, How many acres are in @ sec- tion of land? 4 In what State was gold first found on the Pacific Coast? 5, What: disease is carried by the body louse? i 6, What stick is gene golf when on the greer 7. What Englishman was the see ond person to reach the South Pole 8 Who is Chief of Staff of the American Army? 9 What are the sun-dried bricks called which are used to build houses in Mexico? 10. What gas is used to make arti- ficial ice? 4, On. what cas live? 12, What is the name of the big- ‘eypt cut on the Panama Canal? ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY'S QUESTIONS. Baden-Powell; 2, caffeine: 3, 5,4, Rohits; 6, solchaki 6, Leon- 1,'M exico; '8, Philippines; 9 Bunyan; 1, South Amer- abre, lly used in continent did the “ ve lived here and fought in| ‘Were | there any battles of the war fought | I fought for democ- | Editor of The Evening World, Write 7 New Yorkers have to say. is trying to get himselg before the People at the expense of our es- teemed President. This blatherskite, I do not wish to mention his other name, as he would be tickled to death to have it in every paper in the country, but you can very easily guess it is lodged in every political tree that ever grew in our fair land. Our President has suffered enough great war began to kill a dozen men, and we have never heard a whimper out of him. Instead he was willing at all times to spend and be spent, that he might carry our Nation through the awful crisis in safety, Of course, no man that ever lived will please everybody, at least none that ever lodged in the White House or ever will lodge there. ROGER ADAIR. mentally and physically since the | Copyright 1018, fe The Prem Iititial (Tho New York Evenin By Maurice Ketten eid) [ Can You Beat It! Quan To (PAID Five TrHous SAND CASH For IT +~— So (0 Who OWNS THar’s THAT My MAGNIFICENT is) MANSION D OME AREN'T Yoy he NG STR SING] fe) OR is HIGHER WAGES, No, | An STERY, Love and drawn in v background of the snow cap Mckay of The Secret Service are Germany’s Plan of World Conquest. hob-nails, the soles must have fallen Years seemed to her to pass in the sneered. “You didn't get your mt- ; from, her hunter's shoes dreadful darkness of that descent as poison at the spring after all. ‘The War—a story of thrills a5 For ten minutes, perhaps, the two she felt her downwant, guided Yankeos are foxes after all! He ig men continued on, then halted before by the touch of her feet and the con- laughed his loud, nasal, snickering id colors against the towering @ great mass of debris, uprooted tact of her hand along the*unseen laugh--“Poxes are foxes but men ped Alp: Ina trees, long dead, the vast, mangled wall. ‘ are men. Do you understand that, roots and tops of which sprawled in Again and again she stopped to you damned vixen? swift rush of action, Beeb Pr rith aay Kay every direction between massea of rest and to check tho rush o Will you let me kill myself?" ehe carried rock, bowlders, ang an indescribable cst terror that threatened a asked in a low but steady voice. confusion of ‘brush and upheaved ments her consci r in med surprised, then realizing through intrigue, plots and attacks, foiling earth. There was no in. the wi had asked that mercy, Meanwhile the algnaller had laid Mala. The thick darkness wa showed all his teoth and smirked a aside his flags and while the officer fubric clogging her move her out of narrow-slitte looked on he picked up a heavy sap- SWathin . brushing across “Where is McKay?" be repeated ling from among the fallen trees, that she seemed actually to fe She remained mute Will you tell me where he is to Cumvetehh 2080, Oe Gennes H, Dosen O Using this as a lever, he rolled aside horrible obscurity as some concrete yon Copyright, 1918-1919, by International Magazine Company, @ tree trunk, then another, and finally pune ies Ding haw and temnne Coen be, ae pe eer @ bowlder. her with an increasing weight that “No SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, onder figure. Wiil you tell me tt & «7! ac ae INZ Erm, sang and wuld nes dork to oe, Cane sie New Tork tates ‘That will do,” remarked the. of. oo en head, your trench kr it. coe. te mie, Usek Oiien cert eee cepts Oran ete nian, Mateee cer, “Take your fags and go atend THere was something sray ahead. Tr 6 yy, y In her face inter stroved. Tt telle how Mckay wae made «drunkard Uy, the ermang ia the effort to get \woruation Then Evelyn Brith, rising cautiously » 14° There wae light sickly DIN- ested «and amused him and be GE bine MAO monutiine Bas landed le, Hem Tere, tee come tas, Bi comin Me Eiip Meg to her scarred knees, saw tho sig. Hole lt secriad to aproud, but mow waited her reply with curiosity, ‘The girl visits Lim at the hospital, where ho tella fing iu the naller gather up his flags and step © ‘ight A Ge A A ant elle “No! aha whisp ‘1. Ube Alps, and send an army underground into France, He is unprisoned, ‘sud comes to New the bowlder on the edge.of the wind- 2 piesa i bn sae! to be found if L promise to shoot York "Cader aline Rriuhs care ho taken cure Tor Alcobciiamy ‘ahd topuiher ar the art fur Franey fall, Tut it was deeper than that, for Tarins— the hollow te OE ANE eT tore inne Riri cee Crash Rowe, Foets ai le pened, oe of dianilted Girama taanie ind senwe ear We Gescended to his knees, to*his “WA be through Geptia anasin ine she burst out with a stran- MMicr s battle A fow weeks later they arrive in Switurland, cross over the wire and waist, his shoulders; and then his ini dre Cunvd and: looked out apon SiN Germans Praniae the pices Cate Mae date rea tue Pereehe Sing face head” disappeared into some hole ‘the gorge wher, level with the huge hted another cigarette and, inthe Two Hundred which she could not se bet Vad bay Net LF Acai do singly ryy aud if find ® poisoned spring and, (0 fool their pursuers, leave marks \ : r who had remained, river raged and dashed against clift 44 L a whi drank and, crazed by pain, east themeclves from the cliff, Lye hears @ German signaiman sendiug » calmly smoking his cigarette, MUNG ang stone, flinging tons o' ay into BD uoare rather dirty—-ail wossage from the oliff wp to Ue valley. the remains of it over the cliff, turned, the air until the whole gorge was a But you ought to be . surveyed the forest behind him with Gnvying sea of mist. Here wna th you're’ washed." S minute deliberation, then stepped into ‘.. * ihe oauve hbhe Sane vayed where she stood, CHAPTER IX. Fromtwand along the, worsen ota 'on the excavation down which the slg- oe Oe eens fon. Jhon tase fighting to retain consciousness, (Continued.) Loree ved ot leaves’ and peered after aller had disappeared, was done, But ag sh » te ngth was obbing, Me LE voice stopped: the signaller yy. oy), The girl waited; and while waiting men stepped from behind a boulder et k to tha glade whipped his dirty tattered She must make up her mind she cut a long white sliver from th Lefore move one of the iding her, his inflame flags in the sunlight for a few quickly; the two men were drawing beech-tree and carved an arrow point- men kle f her ring, “leering ‘mask for ome! 0. seased @WaY from her—alinost out of sight ing toward the heap of ¢ n, nerveless rm by th 1 that her nearness a moments more, then ceased DW) with the keen tip of her trench-knife shoulder trene’ intay ; dia chim and stood stiffly at attention, his sun- “On her ragged knees among the she scratched on the silvery bark knife from her convulsive grasp, Then Sudd ; 1 hold r, ‘ serxe 1 dazzled gaze fixed on a far mountain leaves she groped for his coat where “An underground way in ¢he wind- he sald in English: a hea » nd . shy prvi slope, whore something glittered, por- he had flung it, for the weather had fall, T have followed them. Ycllow- | “Get up.” And the other, the wir. 10), Tee ev age pear PR Nes bs turned oppresive in the forests of Les hair. nalman, struck her across her back from bay pls by bapa the mirror of a hello, Errues—and fumbling, she found his She crept stealthily our into the With the furled flags so that sho lost nil s aac esr Me el Presently, in the same disagree- notebook and pencil, and tore out @ sunshine through the vast abatis of her balance and fell forward on her Croll Any Ol Biel Md able, distinct, nasal and measured leaf the fallen trees and came to the edge tee Aa Nasa thane voice, the speaker resumed the mes- “Kay, dear, two Prussians in Swiss of tho hole. Looking down fearfully You are the Brith woman, are YOU jij fouling the wi s with the Bag mountain dress have been signalling #he realized at once t this was the not?” he demanded. Aow, d pr across the knees of Thusis that our dry, rocky stairs of some subter- She wasailent “Kayt™ she sald a we Pi ae ped orening it tine meen bodies have not been discovered In ranean watercourse through which in oe Teakee Sek” De Net, Oe, ade tay, tin pack atresnad te ble Bi eeaae cuaniegne the ravine, They have started for the springtime, great ficlds of melting mn AAG MAMOR UP OW ¥ ot eve 1 Intelligence Officer, MeKay, and bis piving by a way evidently known to show poured in torrents down the faco BOR a Patteamctenae aed thvugh, sufferihg afters having ‘hem and which they apeak of as the ‘of, the precipice below, 0 her ara” ne sienauer 1¢ thing, ‘hia he shot drudk at a spring ‘the water of which Vi Mala, You told me to stay here, There were no loose stones to be oo nad : acd ry wahoo ad istol a} nd the en b tired < “ but I dare not let this last chanoe go seen; the rocky aller had one HAr KB nG Peaton One he stream, tract we had prepared for them according your fligs and ‘across the stream t 5 ving to plan, had either jumped or fallen {0 discover what we have Geen wees Borne Slee NRBUInOere Sat EO tua uke’ Soe 4 trenn bowlder to bowlder, and she t the eastward cliffs of Les Er- 19 for—a path to the plateau below. but the rocks were fearfully slippery, enatier saluted nye A him run to the door of the Tee tie eit thgoush “whieh I take my pistol and your trench shining with a vitreous polish whert mnallier saluted, gathered the Toy Te tig Wwonpon, then enter, flows the Staubbach, knife and I will try to leave signs for the torrents of many thousand years {Psy " cilimpini, rock ng mit of the Sbe could not hear the shots; she ‘But, Up to last oteht, my men, to follow, They have started had worn them smooth land DeuRant at TISrBhy: Waited, ihalf-deqd, until he eame out who descended by the Via Mala, ong the cliffs and they are And this was what they called the “exow said the officer, “strip off ##uin, reloading bis pistol have boen unable to find the podies Ne. nearly out of sight, so Tmust Vii Mala!—this unsuspected and , at" A drop ur two of almost sentding of these two Americans, althouss burs,. Yellow-batr. secrot underground way that led, God 0" 4 yee ae broth 1 her, Ho held her in hero im on the cliffs above, every ‘Tht bit of paper she irft on her knew hiow, into the terrific depths be- jl, "ned pores hae Goat ur 1 fed her-mot much—and lence that they plunged down bed of leaves and pinned it to the low. “Ht foucht of avery tou 1 let her stretch out on the sun- there to the valley of the brook be- ground with a twig. ‘Then she rose | She t! @ last look upward Where soveral times he struck hene-once 86 come ange low, which ja how being searched.” painfully, drew in her belt and laced they say God dwells somewhere be- i : 9 sunset he @wakened her Pp y a ¥ sharply that the blood gushed from The voice ceased; the flags whistled her tattered shoes, and, taking, the hind tho veil of blinding blue; then jer mouth and nose; but. still sh vin, and be fed her—tmore this and snapped in the wind for a little trench-knife and pistol, limped out ho stepped downward into the fought nim; and when ae. while jonger, then the signaller came among the trees, shad ws hia search of her person, After the sun went down she slept to stiffest attention. The girl was half naked tn her a rod or two she could walk atroaked with sweat and ind ho stretched ont beside “Tell them we descend by the Via rags; her skirt scarcely hung to her upright as long as she could retain her gj) gmeared with her bli her, one arm under her head and Mala," added the nasal yoice. shoulders, and she fastened the stag- insecure footing on the glasvy, un- “Damned cat of a Yankee!” he about her neck The flags swung sharply into mo- horn buttons on her jacket. Her even floor of rock; and a vague deimi- panied, “stand there where you are Moonttant silvered her face when tion for @ few moments more; then which left both knees bare, light reigned there making objects or Ll blow your face Where's shi while the shadow the Prnasian officer pocketed his Jen thee and held out pretty distinct enough for her to see the McKay?” slip ned ‘trom his face, too, notebook; the signaller furled his well, the heavy wool stockings stalactites and stalagmites like dis- |.No answer, “Kay? he whispered, fiage, ani, an toey tasted and weds Eaped) jhad it mat beep fox the gplored teoth ina chavaur-de-rivm, 86 “Bo you tricked us eht” he “Xe, Yellow-bain” Copyricht, implicity Characterizes IH wheels of ie fashion have been turning with euch rapidity that one style has scarcely haf the chance to try its own fate before another one is launched, and the result is that there ts a most con- fusing variety of styles called fashions of the day. The ulti- mato result — the fashion of a month from now is conceded to be a conundrum, Ono or the other style may win out in tts popularity, but fust now it looks as though the full skirt, either In tunic form as my sketch shows, or minus the under- skirt, and shorter, is least to have recognition,” And as for bodices, it 19 mostly a matter of matching it up with the style of the skirt. Some designers are giving considerable ft to the bodice, but my opinion is that it will not find favor, except perhaps for a sertain type of outside gar- ment. The straight or slightly fitted bodice ike that pic- tured is perhaps new- er than the draped or bloused effects, but one can choose, Close fitting sleeves are rivaling the wide ones for those who care for long sleeves, but short ones have gained a surprising amount of favor, For women still young It is quite a delightful fashion, but @ long sleeve decidedly becomes an older woman. However, this win- ter she, too, will wear short ones, but I hope always accompanied by gloves, Gloves, on the-other Gand, may be often gracefully omitted by the younger person, as may be proven is at And, after a little while she turned her face to his and her lips rested on dis Lying #0, unstirring, she fell asleep once more comers CHAPTER X. LL that morning American in- fantry had been passing through Delle over the Bol- fort road. ‘The sun of noon saw no end to them. The endless columa of shadows, keeping pace with them, lengthened with the afternoon along their lengthening line. Now and then John Recklow opened the heavy wooden door tn bi garden wall and watched them swinging alomg the Belfort road, their right elbows brushing Switzer- land, their high sun-reddened pillar of dust drifting almost into Germany, and their heavy tread thundering throngh that artery of France like the prophetic pulse of victory “We are or ur way!" laughed the Yankee buglos. At twlight, sitting again In the gar- den, John Recklow raised his q ey and saw two dead souls to his garden by the litte door in the wall In it you, Kay McKay?" he said at last Hut the shock of the enc fettered him so that he wly to the woman who was now mneving toward him across the grass. "Kivelyn ." he said, taking her thin hands in his own, which were tr bling now It's @ year, steadily. “More than a year,” said McKay tn his dead voice With his left hand, then, John Reck- low took McKay's gaunt hand, and stood so, mute, looking at him and at the girl beside him, God!" he said blankly, Then, with no emphasia; “1's rather more than a year! + they sent me unter still Iked very he complained un- two fire-charred skulls—the head of a man and the head ofa woman, . . . That was a year ago, . . , After your pigeon arrived . « » IT found the scorched lla wrapped in a Swiss newspaper-—lyi inside the garden wall—over therejon the grass! And the swine bad w n y names on the siculls, to Evelyn Erith’s eyes the ume 1e Light—thy spectre of a smile 4 Kecklow looked at her he re red the living glory she had been; and wrath blazed wildly nhim, “What have they done you?’ he avked tn an unsteady e. But MeKay laid bis hand on tecklow’s arm? Noth It 1s what they have not done r. That's all she and sleep. “Come into the house." Candies twinkled on the little table mare tha ip nay eas pes sere Pi bias needs New and Original ° For Smart Fashion Designs é = By Mildred Lodewick = 9, by The Pres Publishing Ci by observing the Miss strolling down | “Women ——————— I (The New York Bventng World.) ' a Blue Velveteen Dress. THIS MODEL SHOWS THE VERY FULE TUNIC, the avenue on any of these days. My design to-<iay is ttended tor duvetyn, a ght weight velour, Its velveteen, in a light navy color, ’ lack of trimming characterizes these ft ba when hepa | bo expected, but a piece metal doth paskes through slashed in the bodice and connects the tumio in effect. Wide cuffs correspond ‘with’ the wide rolling collar, in the depths of an armchaty, jer chin gunk on her breast, Recklow sat opposite wetting on @ pad in shorthand. Po ay — ing bis ragged elbows on the oth, his haggard face Ddetween Botht hands, went on talking in @ eglep 1 mechanical yoice which am som Will alone flogged Into speech: “Killed two of them and took Gate clothes and papers,” he conttzged movotonously, “that wae last Ame uit--near the end of the month, ‘The Bocho has tens of working there, And every one * them was insane.” “What!” peak a the way Seen eee raling—the o: y way they @aped operate, I think all that enormens work has been done by the inane during the last forty — ‘ea the Boche have from the insane. Knyees "nes Leal jority of them died in harness. These: who became uselese—intractable 4 crippled—were merely returned the asylums from which they nad! been drafted, And the nobody a ment saw to it that nobody have access to them. \ “Besides, who would crazy man or woman if they about the Great Secret?” He covered his visage with bony hands and rested so for moments, then, forcing it he Roche for forty years Bae drafted the insane from every @ay- lum in the empire to do this sigen- tle work for him children, ch done the physical work... Pyramids were builded ao, they aay. ‘And in’ this manner te below finished that colossal engineering work which is never spoken of among the Hoches except when necessary, and which is known among them as the Great Secret. . . » Recklow, it was conceived as a vast engineering ect forty-eight years ago—in a « the Franco-Prussian Wan, It was begun that same year. it is practically finished, Except tor one obstacle. Recklow’s lifted eyes staret atti oe over bis pad. (To Be Concinded) > The Heritag of The Desert By Zane Grey A Western oasis, set where 3) igh mountain ranges lools 3) owp upon the sands of the uinted) Desert—such ig the 40 ane Grey’s gripping famous au y of the old haa im ( Southwest, the days of high adventure romance, Weaving through ta t colorful the lowe §- n for a male will be run seria — ab ve ° itty od gla ito os o> * { y