Woma RAVE YOU SEEN IT? Ohildren, have you seen the bud- dins Of the trees in valleys low? Have you watched it creeping, swarms. Up the mountains, soft and slow? Weaving here a. plush-like mantle, Brownish, greylsh, reddish, green, Changing, changig, daily, hourly, Pill it shines in ‘emerald sheen? A WORD PUZZLE The shepherd set out one c storming. "I'm going to h a sale," he t——-—- his wife. And taking some sheep from the f-—- he s—-—— them for a bag of B Here is a jolly little puzzle. The missing six words all end with the nme three letters. Can you oom- piete them? Answer: The letters are OLD. RARE EGGS Only eight mos. eggs are known to exist, and they are all in mus- euzns. The mao was a giant bird, like ‘annals n’s kw pushing one foot, then the other. clear out to its farthest reach, then with your arms do the same thing. Complain out loud. $811188 and saying "Oh.” Mid ‘ m" 3° your heart's content. KeeP 011 stretching and oomlilalfllw 1mm you are really awake. Then take a very deep breath, hold it and expel it and repeat several times. You'll be surprised how much brighter the momma beams W look about this time, And w" will realize, with a grovwifld “term m the day. that you are not as tired and sleepy as you thousht W“ W811). Once you are out of bed, continue your stretching and yawning, and. if you have time and feel so inclin- ed, put yourself through a course of morning exercises. I: all this consideration for your own nerves and muscles doesn't induce a. happier morning outlook. there really is something the mat- ter with you. Maybe you need a vacation! 9 . ENGLISH WOMAN BECOMES i‘ LORD MARCHER. For only the third time in nearly the ostrich, which roamed the for- ests 01’ New Zealand long, long ago. All the moss died or were killed by the Maoxis long before the English explorers and settlers Went to New Zculand. Two moa eggs were presented to the Auckland Museum a few months ago, and the museum Pwllle regard them as a gift of ex- 1 father, Sir'Marteine Owen Lloyd. Even u the garden is “mu ceptional value, for there are only six other moa eggs known. 1.000 y€nrs a woman is Lord Mar- cher of the Barony of Kemes in Pembrokeshire, created in the time of William the conqueror. Mrs. Nesta Withington, wife of F. E. Wiihington, of Fringford Lodge, Biecestcr. Eng, has just succeeded as the 26th holder of that high and ancient ofllce on the death of her baronet. I Fortunately the times Go not re- an‘ n A444 lm -:- Social and Personal I ' GARDENING 133-.» JD-D-fiilfl-fifl. LAWN WORK SUGGESTIONS Early spring is the time for lawn work. Grass makes its best growth in the 000i weather. Of course where a new lawn is to be made it will be impossible to work the earth until the frost has disappear- ed completely and the soil will not muddy the boots. If the earth is worked too scon it will pscksind cause trouble later on. With the es- tablished lawn, however, repairs can be started before the last snow has gone. It is a good plan in the spring to sprinkle a. little high class seed over all thin spots, and allow snow or rain to carry this down into the soil. when frost is soft, experts advise the first roll- ing, using a fairly light implement. As the ground becomes dried more weight is added to the roller and the job continued once a week un- til the ground is hard. This rolling in addition to levelling off klwlls and ironing out foot prints, pushes the tiny roots firmly back into the soil and encourages early growth. During an open winter especially the grass is heaved up and the air is liable to get at the roots. This, unless the turf is pushed . back again, usually kills or weakens the growth. One of the easiest ways of getting rid of weeds in a. lawn and at the same time improving the grass is to apply plant food regu- larly. FLOWERS GROW ANXWHERE and shaded or the soil is very poor certain flowers will do well. There Both of the two moa eggs were quire today that the Lord Marcher, is somclhmg w m‘ into any 9mm" found with skeletons of moss many-shall ride at the head of an armed, ‘mlmm and i‘ 15 l“ ‘um fitting y"?! H30. but it l5 only recently force to protect the ‘fifngPsh rount- that the chief Pleasure mm‘ 3"‘ that they have been handed over to the museum for safe keeping. SISTERS MEET FOR FIRST TIME TN FORTY YEARS Two sisters met recently for the first time for 40 years. They were‘ Mrs. Green, aged 84, Glamorgan, Wales, and Mrs. Webb, aged 80, a widow, of West Earling. London (Ens) The meeting was a great surprise to Mrs. Green. She answered a call in the family general shop and there found hcr sister. She was so overcome with excite- ment that shc had to rcccivc medl- cal attention. Mrs. Webb lives near another elderly sister, and although all three regularly’ communicate with each ovhcr, thc- proposed visit t0 isirs. Grccn was kept secret. BEDROOM CHAIRS jAttrnctive chairs for bedrooms miay easily be made from ordinary mock-chairs by covering the scat with chihtz or cretonne to match the curtains and covers in the ‘ room. A small hanging cushion for the back of the chair should be made and similarly covered. 'l‘1~lc wooden frame of the chair may be marnelied in white or in any suit- able color. If a. more substantial cover is preferred darnczl wool- work on canvas may be used. These covers are warm and crun- fortable, and if zigzag or herring- bone patterns are worked in two or three shades a soft and 1110:15- ing effect is produced. THOSE LUCKY PEOPLE WHO ‘VAKE UP SINGING Some lucky folks wake up sing- ing. Don't begrudge them their gift. Just loam from the-m and try to stimulate their gaiety. ‘There's a trick in getting-going mornings. Thc first secret is not to l-YY Jumping out of bggl unless you just can't help it, you ful 5r, "PC9933" I! your first thoughts air: dark oncs and _\'0ur first impulse is to pull the covers over your 1mm] and go back to sloop, take it edgy, YET-VII and stretch and ymcn 0min and try a cars mcihocl rvf ilrewhmk every Single muscle by Nervous and LL wnmcn at some pcriod of their lives nrcd a strengthcnixvg tonic like Dr. Picrcos Favorite Prcscrip- lion. Rcari xvhnt Mrs, Ifvciyn Abcil uf 8O Muir Arc, Niagara ' Fails, Ont, says; "x ~ f "My stomach bothered me terribly and cvcnllung l sic srcnlul lo nnueeafe me. eak ‘ appointment of the mayor of the ies from the hordes of Wales. The privileges include the annual ancient borough of New-port, Pem- brokeshire. and the maintenance of a. bodyguard of homagers equip- ,pod mm haiberds. - “Hundreds of years ago the of- fice was held on two occasions by women of my family," said Mrs. ‘Wii-hingfon, "and in due course my idaughier will succeed me." l ._.__i_____ HAVE SEVERAL JACKETS FOR EVENING IVEAR I V, Several jackets will give you a. ‘change of evening frock . . . es- pecially if the frock is black chif- lfon. You could have a cape type iof matching chiffon. Then on an- ‘othcr evening wear a Gibson Girl puffed sleeve jacket of plain, striped ior checked taffeta. And for still, iunotiicr change, use an organdlel ijackct, having full ruffled armlets and tight waistlength fitted bodice. New blue, matching the sky on a summer night, is a smart choice for an informal supper frock . . - and do wear any time when you're in [doubt as to the formality of the loccasion. Usually it's crisped up with white organdie ruching or islcevc treatment, a frilly organdie ijnckct, or it tailored pique waist- iecat jacket. LINEN SUITS 1N VOGUE Linen suits are going to have an important place in summer ward- lrobcs this year. You now can buy liinen suiting in dark, practical col- ors including black. “CHE!!!” CHOIR The problem of maintaining a choir when economic conditions prohibit has been solved by the Presbyterian Church of the Con- vent in New York. Plionograph records of choirv singing are played and alnplified at the Sunday evening services. The congregation sings to the ac- companimcilt of electrical trans- ‘crlptions of the choir music from Jamous churches all over the Iworld. It has been contended more elaborate programs can be offered than it could present with its own reduced choir. Great Things Only a great number of small things that have been carefully colbctcd t/rgctlicn-Fcnelon. RIF ron um vnvzs Take Lydia E. Pinkhnm’e v Vegetable Compound Wine an rind daring than herd tlmee. They are the ones who mun bear the burdens 0| aha h . When the husband comm home with ens moauy In his pay It h tbeva: who must struggle and mnlu bee! of thing. I suffrrcd hum l\l‘.'I!|l7lll'I\ also and my ap. pelvic was poor, I was wry ncrvnus and If! on Ire flnd...wmnoul..e nervous, cry Lydia l. Plnkhnmfi Vegeta- bleConl TIHTI‘ lmd any slrr-mlih, llmlflllflll‘! and dim lljriia aim mmic mc n ivmlvl", Hut Dr. Pierce’! FMuniP. Prrwrriplinn put me right on my_ feel again. rid me of lire stomach complaint, also that nervous feeling and the headaches and dizzy spCIIS." 1 Idle Dr. [lane's Clinic, Bllalo, fl. X, und. What you need ls l tonic ma: give you the strength to carry en. '9! c of iee won: who report ea “Th, a gum roughed by this medicine. u! a mm your arug- Ascend Ind the result‘ r- ‘awn; Vwrs-H» leaves -. ,.. ¢_--.-~vv:e-Qvr1vwrwrr:1'~,' ~ deningis derived. In permanently shaded quarters, that is where there is shade from some building or fence the year round, tuberous mated begonlas, pansles, and wild flowers will do well. In fact, they prefer this location to any other. In partial shade, the clarkia, nn- nual larkspur. lllplnc, nicotine, Phlox and verbcna should be grown. On poor soil, portulaca is a favorite as well as aiyssum, swfet scented stocks, lunum, cnledulas, oalllopsis, suuflowczs, schizunthus. salpigfosss, ‘~ marigoids, petunibs. and any others. ‘These will alsn more successfully resist dry weath- er than most others. For cutting purposes, there is a very 10h‘; ‘list to choose from but it“should in- clude gy-psophila (baby's brtath) useful for making up bouquets. salplgiosaifl. sweet was. rimmi- cosrnos, asters, marigoids mid sca- bosa. If fragrance is prized include stocks, nicotine, mignonette, alys- sum, sweet sultan and vcrbenas. In the evenings particularly a few of these will fill the whole Qflfdvfl with a delightful odor. There are Severn hardy annuals which can be picked with long stems lust be- fore the bloom opens and dried for winter bouquets. Those include the straw flower, statice, ncrocllnium rhodanthc and many 0th?" ' FEEDING ROSE PLANTS Those fine roses which expel‘- lcnced gardeners grow are not the result of chance, but are produced by supplying the plants with plen- ty of food and moisture! L! you would have blossoms as finc, you must copy their mcthods. Roses of the hybrid tcn, or ever- blooming type, do not like company. They should be grown in a bed which is free from the roots of trees and ‘shrubs and apart from other plants. R-cpare the soil 0f the rose bed to a depth of two feet 1f possible, never less than l2 inch- es, Unlegg the soil contains good quantities of organic material, as evidenced by its friable condition. decomposed organic material such as compost or leaf mould should be incorporated in it. The rose bed must be well drain- ed. A heavy soil la preferable be- cause it holds moisture wcll. Since s heavy soil drains slowly, unless the rose bed is on a slope 01' l" l" elevated posit/on, artificial drain- age should be provided. For established rose plants an applicutlbfi of plant food should be made in the spring at the rate of four pounds per hundred square feet, or one rounded tablespoonful per square foot. Cover the ground around each plant as far out as the top growth extcnda-Thls measures llpproxlmltlly the spread of the roots. six to eight weeks later a two pound application should be made. Do not apply plant food af- ter August 1. As an aid in retain- ing soil moisture, s mulch of rooted or peat moss should be maintained. out but while the soil remains very ‘ WOO¢v¢ ‘ “iuiuiiiiufiii AAAAAAAL44A_AA‘ “,,o.."---"---.-..-"-- n- ‘Dorothy Dbc’ Letter ' Boss’s Wife Who Forced Secretary to Abandon Make-up and Then Jeered Her Drabness; Tragedy of Woman of 50 Whose Hus- band Has Outgrown Her pea,» Miss DIX-—M)' boss is e. flne man and 1 am an efficient office vt-oman, so an is well except that his wife feels that she has a right to dictate about my clothes and personal emarmw The 11m W”! 1 "Y" to work my employer said that his wife didn't ap- prove of my style of dress and she didn't like me to wear beads in the office. All right. I left oi! the beads and started dressing ten years older, wearing nothing but black, brown and navy blue. A little later he told me that his wife wished that he would call my attention to my use of lipstick and rouge. She didn't think either one appropriate for the office. 0. K. again. No more make-up. The other day I heard through another source that she said I was beginning to look like m old, wornout married woman. She said I was pale-looking. drab lips and no color. _ I would leave, e/xcept that I dare not give up a What. should I do? TROUBL-ED. good job in these times. Answer: ‘ Well, at all events, you don't need to be troubled about losing your job, because you have evidently achieved the ideal of drabness which your employer's wife had in mind for you,and which keeps her from being Jealous of you, and that is some pay for being frumpy in these days when good pay envelopes are as scarce as hens’ teeth. Nor need you take to heart the fact that your boss's bones commented on the fact that you looked like a wornout, old married woman, because that is exactly the way she wants you to look and she was publicly pro- claiming her own astuteness in robbing you of your good looks and con- gratulating herself that she is a wife who has sense enough to make her husband's secretary haul down her colors and fly no more gay and allur- ing flags. ' Of course, it is an impudent and outrageous thing for her to dictate to you about your clothes and your complexion. '.l‘hat is none of her busi- ness. She has no more right to tell you how to dress and mt make-up to put on than you haveto criticize her taste, but inasmuch as your em- ployer scems to be completely under his wife's thumb, and you would un- doubtedly gct fired if you should make the snappy retort to her she dc- serves, I'd park my lipstick and my beads until times are better and work more plentiful. But it is a pity for any woman to get l0 soured that she begrudges youth its hour of beauty and adornment and would strip it of the gay I e C'_— AAAAAAA F?-§i= ' and‘ 1 fab esp and Hades" wl and‘ a l ions Flavour Hem In Hades, ls hul economical, Take 6 slices of cooked hem, 1 teaspoon of Cohen's Mustard, 1 ‘ ,. sauce, 2 tablespoon: of let. Mix the mustard’, vinegar, eoninga. Coat each when smoking hot put In the hem slices. Brown quic delicate shade on either aide. A lot depends on that teaspoon of mustard. Beam: to Include ii and be equally sure the mustard Is Colmenk. Then your "Ham in that rightly belongs to It. _ olmans ankaananaa réi lwmww ‘Adana eppcilalng.‘ Easy lo prepare loo and so vary If you follow this almple recipe. n orcuier self and see- allce o! hem with mixture. Place hi In firing pen ly to a each 0F vinegar, uli and paprika have a testy flavour and the savoury, eppeiixing appeal “'5'” Mustard AIDS DIGESTION’ OTIG frippcries that it loves. I always feel sorry for age that is so jaundiced with envy that it does not enjoy looking at a pretty young girl, and that does not feel an instinctive desire to smother her in pink chiflons and party frocks and satin slippers and bangles and chains. Of course, a business girl should dress like a business girl. That is merely the good taste of being appropriated gowned. Appearances count for a lot and she should look like an efficient, serious-minded young woman who is on her Job instead of being diked out in fuss and feathers like a debutante on her way to a pink tea. But that doesn't mean that she need be shabby or frumpy, and still less does it mean that she shouldn't have a. wave in her hair nor a curl 0n the nape of her neck, nor use the means that Heaven hos vouchsafed us oi turning a sallow complexion into a fair and rosy one. , On the contrary, it is part of a business girl's business to be as good- looking as possible. It helps trade and it helps the girl do better work because it braces up her morale. No girl can have any pep if she knows she is looking like something the cat brought in, but if a glance at her mirror shows her that she resembles a million dollars, she feels equal to tackling anything and breaking down the sales resistance of the stub- borncst customer or getting out the last letter and clearing her desk be- fore she leaves. . And another point that your boss's wife seems to miss is that it is important for a business girl to make the most of her looks because the offices where she works are her happy hunting ground for a husband. The society girl mcets men at dinners and parties and balls, but the busi- ness girl has few social contacts. she meets men where she works, and if she doesn't catch the eye of some eligible youth there she is sunk. And how can she do this if she has to wear drab frocks and unbecom- ing hats and no paint and powder? So I implore the bosses‘ wives to have a heart and lay off their hus- bands‘ employee's clothes. let them remember the time when they were girls and liked to doll themselves up. Or let them ask themselves how they would like to take away their own daughters‘ pretty clothes and oom- pacts. DOROTHY DIX. O O O O O Dear Miss Dix-Suppose a couple who were very much alike when they married at 20 find themselves at 50 very different from each other. suppose the man still feels young and seeks a. young woman because his wife is twice as large as when he married her and has no longer the in- tercst for him she had when younger. can you offer any words of com- fort for the woman? Is Nature, man or woman wrong? X. o Answer: Probably Nature is the culprit in most of such cases because it brings about growth, which is so often a tragedy in marriage. A young boy and girl marry, seemingly well suited to each er. They have been reared in the same environment, have the same ha. ts and tastes and to all ap- pearances have about an equal amount of intelligence. But one stands still and the other grows. One reads and studies and improves his or her mind and takes 0n culture and gets a bigger and broader viewpoint, and the other stays put, with never a new idea or a new thought, with no interest beyond the little daily round of duties, the little home circle. And the result is that the two are unequally yolked together and the marriage is s failure. Both are lonely, the one who has soared to the heights and the one who stays in the valley. Few marriages are more unhappy than those of the man and [woman who are forced to live to- gether, but whose souls are as far apart as if they inhabited different worlds. For this reason every bride and bridegroom should start out on their honeymoon sking a definite, intelligent effort to keep in touch with each other. They should cultivate the some interests and try-to make themselves companionable to each other. The man should not absorb himself in his business and the woman devote herself to the children, but they should work together, for in that way alone can they keep in step with each other. A woman can keep her husband from developing away from her if she will begin in time, but if she waits until she is 50 it is too late. Then nothing is left for her but to reconcile herself to the situation and find other interests in life. DpROTHY 131x, O O O O O O Dear Miss Dix-Why is it so desperately hard to convince the modcrn girl that there is any such thing as a really righteous youig man whose thoughts are pure and noble and whose intentions are honorable? DONALD. Answer‘ Probably because she has seen so few of them. It is hard to believe in prehistoric animals even after you have seen their skeletons in the museums. who pay any attention to a girl who was quiet and Mme-loving. _ . D030!!! DB _ 1' ,...'.~,_ ._.... . . _ totalled 5,608,503 pounds, compared with 2,426,930 ‘Ihere are plenty of girls who have never beheld in the flesh a. man .. . who didn't try to kiss them the first time be sew them, or who didn't make them pay for being taken to the movies by being pawed over or ‘I N T S .,t,,.s,,~t-p. .--c. .. .. Coffee Imports Higher, Green coffee imported in March . in February and 4,278,966 in March, 1932. The M91111 imwrts came from the foi- lowing countries for the most part: Jamaica 2263,1118 pounds, British East Africa 1,198,436, Brazil 701,- 176, Colombia 682,616, Mexico, 88,- 218, United Kingdom 202,854, Brit- ish Guiana 104,315. The Mnmmt from British countries was 3,779.- 423 pounds and from foreign coun- tries 1329,0190. like Magic 0n Faded Curtains Quickly lesions-er O lives lew (islet-h All Ilene lwmtieae your 115;‘! glzlazfiiapgedcohwrtmiym slip-covers, table-linen. cw, bright and cheerful again! And it won't cost you Jol- Iars. Justafcwoermforafew packages of Timex. And it won't take you Kenn. Justafewnlirmassolyour time is all that Timex needs. Yo: donétlnheve to be an ' . ' to: hnn' gs on “Page: egrolreeeional result! y“! hflhtime outlrpSun wag: . ‘m. _ . I which to calaooeeons ‘lug ' and "MT-fie... 15¢ ‘Iii . WWW» Wwellw MwIDYI§ M1112 COOKiS comvsza CHEESE STICKS First Philosopher-Of course even young man thinks he'd be perfectlr. happy if he could only have his 0km \ will. Second Philosopher-Yes, and the older he grows the happier he is t4 think that be didn't have it. One cup grated cheese, 1 cup flour. little salt and pepper, butter the also a small egg, meitcd; water to mix like pie crust. Line pans with the rolled-out mix- ture, and out in sticks. Bake till golden (about five minuinl) A deer old lady on board ship i1 the tropics was very anxious to M the equator. The calitflln. I0 will! her, handed her a telescope, at thl same time pulling a hair from his head and holding it in front o! ti! telescope as the old lady eeserlf peered through. "Oh, yes," she 01404 "I see lt-and there‘: a camel walle, . ing along it." GRANDMOTHEWS BUNS Three cups lukewarm water, ‘A cup lard, 1 cup ausar. 1 w? w!‘- rants, 1 tablespoon salt, 1 arv vow- cakm 1% o; 2 quarts bread dour. Dissolve yeast cake in it c1119 warm water for about 10 minutes. Melt the mo. Put water. luau". nit and lard into mixing pen. Add die- solved yeast cake and enough flour to make e. stiff batter. Beat hard and let rise till light. This should be done in the middle of the 11km“!!- At bedtime add the currents and flour enough to make u. dough stiff enqufl; not to stick to the handl- Bet in a warm place. overnight. In the morning dough should be twist original bulk. Knead liihtly and 104 rise, form into small buns. P1!“ i" a buttered pan, and let rise Bill! till almost treble their size. Brush the tops with milk and susfll‘. u‘ bake in e. medium oven half Bl hour. (Over aso demos. drovrina i4 300 degrees.) f} Dlaintiness With Chic Styles 111415115111) FURNISHED _____--r-_ I! ANNAIHJI IORTMNGIDN She'll love itl Well I guess! It has all the newest futures, besides the smart fabriu that fashion it. Navy blue crinkly crepe silk ig- splred the original. The sleeves, sol- lar and tie help marvelously in cre- ating an unusual effect in carrot- red crepe overplaided in blue. Note the wrapped arrangement cf the bodice and interesting skirt treatment. litkeesilymadeandotanunbe- lievably small coat. ' \ Grey crepe Jumper is just the cut- est idea ever with yellow and white checked gingham guimpe. style Ne. 906 is designed in sius 11, 13, 1a and 17 years. . Size 1e requires 2% yards of ae- incb material for jumper for blouse and 95 yard of 86-inch lining. Price of mum ‘b 1a cents m stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. m. sot. am s...-.-.¢-.e..nse-|ns-..a...-- e Name ee..-......-..-..s...-...-...}¢--.ue street Addml Oity ~ Btlto l! you wish a beautiful sheet of transfer embroidery containing over 5° defilsm. send 1s cents additional DItternNoJSW. AMorningSmile‘ ‘