i 11cc» a m‘? --___- _- U 28 193s Am‘ dam‘ m‘ a '"H+oe v-wvvqv 17w HOUSE WIFE and HER ACTIVITIES nonunion. woum noticed m» plenum - And El we looked for people's virtues, And their faults refused to see, What a conaforvtable, happy, place this world would _ comma roan‘ ~_ Export-ant facts to remember in paring pork and other meats are meets which are allowed to on the surface before the ani- ham has escaped from the in- wiii not have as pleasant a as they would have below 9B degrees i curing must therefore be car- '.ricd on in a room the temperature of which does not long remain beFoW 36 deaees- iuion Department of flgriculture. i TABLOID .;'.l‘o remove printing from flour bags, lay the bag on a table and, tzover all the printing with a thin layer of lard. Roll up and let stand flor two or three days, then unroll and wash in hot suds, or boil out in suds. Elie-Do you really like conceited hien better than others? She—What others‘! WORKING CHEAP ‘What does Satan pay you for swearing?" asked one gentleman of another. “He doesn't pay me anything," was the reply. "Well, you work cheap, to lay aside the character of a. gentleman. to irlfllotso much on your friendi mid-civil people; to suffer, and lastly to risk losing your own precious soul, and all for nothing. You certainly do work cheap-verey cheap indeed." A Sunday school teacher asked a‘. pupil what he knew about Solomon. i “He was very found of animals," declared the child. "Why do you think that?" _ "Because he had 300 porouplncs." DIP I-‘ADED DRESS If the color and pattern of the house dram have fledded until it yustlooknrstber aoiledin colonwlw pscbuysomsofthsdyeihatiaon abs market that removes the color entirely and leaves the ores e clean white? It may be reduced to my shade desired. and you will feel muohmom ocnafortebleinit. CHINESE WOMEN WIN RECOGNITION The professions in which women are winning recognition at Nau- king China, included teaching. Midl- cine. lww was“ Terminat- iourmlism, po wor , dNwll- ' lng, banking, book selling and. mis- callaneom office work. To brighten the aluminum ware around the kitchen, take some lemon juice, rub it on with a cloth and than wash in warm water. Lemon is Just as helpful in bright- ening copper and brass. TEN RULES 0F SUCCESS l. ‘Plain-l; straight and YOu will act straight. Analyse things-get all the fdcts -lbefore concluding. Develop the habit of cleanliness and orderliness. Set up 3 reasonable goal and then determine to rewh it. Take advice but do your thinking and conduding. Cheer up the other iellow~keep your troubles to yourselL-no one likes a complainer. . Never admit to anyone-even ycurself—that you are licked. Spend a. little less than you have earned. Make friemk, but remember the best friends wear out if you use them. 10. Do not be afraid to dream-c little dreaming-imagination -is necessary for ST-IXGSS.—(EX.) OWIl AN UPLEASANT FOOT TROUBLE ‘There is a not very common, but unfortunately, not very rare, affec- tion of the feet, which is known as Bromidrosis. The outstanding symptom is excessive perspiration. and a. very unpleasant sme‘l ‘Though possibly the condition is a local manifestation of some general disorder, effective treat- ment at present ls almost entirely local. Attention should of course, be paid to the general health, but care of the feet will yield the most Raising 3 Greatest Trials in Combafed by one thing Nature stores in Oatmeal! Children ‘L Tom: w," - 3'” [bl ‘l. mbly 11114" NOW we know wbyan osuasal breakfueworks wooden for children. Wise old Nature m» aounglters MUST have Vitamin B. Yet le worth of dsllcloul Quaker Outs contains more of it than I calus of hash yeast." IIOICI precious vitamin B iii-delicious Quaker Oats and into ‘aded onladsil of‘ Quake: Jars. l: l: one cf News’: basic foods-rid: in minerals cc build red blood and cam. Rich in valuable vitamin v B. d reinforced with Iunshine vitamin D-witbout which bones ‘E533; vvvvvvy vwvvvvvwvvvvvv vvv¢¢vv vvv v - I13 I.’- Litsrqflw 1'8 42' Reaches your Cup lass bum tumbled cuninvl u! m iwzlzficrt". ....... h RTBT(§*W'M' CQLE% profitable return. Sensible, wide. eaw-fiting boots or shoes should be worn: socks should be changed daily, and should be washed before being reworm; two, or preferably three, times a day, the feet should be bathed in warm water, with coal tar soap. thoroughly dried with a towel, and then aponged with a lotion consisting of one drachin of tincture of iodine, six drachms oi’ iodine of potash, and half a pint of water. The lotion should be allowed to dry on; and then the feet should be dusted all over with a little of the following miiaturez-Two drechma of salicylic acid. bwo ounces of starch powder, and half a pound of talc powder. A little of this powder may, with advantage, be sprinkled in the socks as well. THE COOK'S CORNER SAVUVLRY SUET BALLS One-half pound flour. 1 teaspoon minced parsley, % pound minced suet, l teaspoon salt. B6 teaspoon pepper, a dust. of powdered sweet herbs, Vi. teaspoon baking powder. Mix all ingredients together with cold water, form into balls, large or small. Cook in stews or gravy, ab- lowing half to one hour, according to size. rssrrw \ cur-mu Pastry cream is a stand-by with ail chefs. It is a routine job of a cook to make pastry cream every afternoon, so that it will be ready lo use next mornng. This is a much thicker custard than usually made by women. The chef always runs it through a Chinese strainer (a fun- imrmvnl. llsalrllzi: @531?! v.14- Ber M“ --' “I Want Montlfs Vacation From My Husband Each Year,” Cries Wife Who Sees Rom‘- ance Vanishing. Don't Pity Man Who Marries Beneath Him, Pity His Wife Who is Both Lonely and Humiliated" DcarMissDk-lamtrylliltoflndoutwhetherlresliylovsmyhus- band or not. After several months of marriage we are beginning to flno‘ fault with each other and get into arguments about trifles. I feel as if I should geI, away from him for one month out of every year in order to fully appreciate him. mother And his think that I am crazy to feel that way, but l: do. tobadonesboutit? Iat-bereauchathingss needing a change from the one you love? E. ' Answer: Certainlythersissuchatbingaanesding acbsngefromthoaswclovqendlnotmly husbands and wives but tbs diflerem. members ofafamilytookvacatwnsfromsschothar every now and then, it would do more than take the curse oi! domestic life. nomattsrhowfondwasreofwfilill. dayaftsrdll‘. m» we have; a steady diet of them, bore us to tears because we know ev theyusay it. All of their little peculiarities get on that. we will scream at the way the? rel coffee or break an egg. The IBPBNNOD 0! as the continual dropping of water on their Inquisition. Bo we w. w the pl!“ who" faults of those with whom we are too closely m: u is separation, m go m mouah Iver to their virtues. All of us have known pal-cat's and row while they were Wither. - ungrateful and undutiful and tbs children were tyrants, yet as soon as the ohildlm own they became devoted to each otblr. enough about what s splendid 1 the children became lyrical over dear sisters and brothers who fought like gather, but who exhitgilt-ed the most loyal as the werese a ' Ei/"en mcthcprzrshculcrtaka vscstims from Int sake and for the children's saka. Whm I Iwian housekeeping and slaps am’ sort cd old llllll if ihl begins m nag at the children and say ‘don't to overt-Irina simply means that she is sunfeited with change and to get away from her 1W hr go she comes back full of pep and new for 600d the children angels instead of brat!» h: on earth to her instead of tbs prison it As for husbands and wivu. it ll separate sometimes if they are their golden weddi-uz day. The a iuluoaci or steamship ticket, and intelligence to take it when indicated I would aavs may s being broken up. whenever a husband and wife all to In silence because they KIJQW l! "N? IPOIK it. irritates the wife to madness for her he reels like choking her because aha iaft wuen he growls over the dinner arose ashes 0n U18 11°91‘. U"? symptoms and know that the A little change fan momentous, seeing new people. things, JUBI the Blip}? 0 acre. ihey Win come oget-ber refreshed, with a, new viewpoint esticity ano on each other. Try it and see if it doeelft work. I O I I I I Dear Miss Dix-My huabmdaudlhavebem married ninsyeerssnd have one child. l was a very pretty girl and he was much in Iovs with me when we were married, and we were very happy for tbs first year. i am a good cook and housekeeper and very affectionate but our trouble ls that .L have very little education. Don't like to read, while my husband is a brilliant mail, has a. college (iegrfie and a. wonderful pea-ton. now he is tired of me, never speaks to ma except to tell ms how dumb l am- E E g it‘ lézgi E5552: E 5 ti ncl-ahaped, fine-mesh strainer used in all hotel kitchens) into a shallow pan; it is then covered with wax paper while warm, to prevent. a crust from forming on top, and placed in refrigerator overnight. Pas Cream: 1% cups acsldcd mLLk, 2 tablespoons bread flour, 2 tab cornstarch, ‘A cup gran- ulated sugar, ‘A. teaspoon salt, ‘A cup cold milk, 2 eggs, 56 cup gran- ulated sugar, 1 teaspoon vanilla. scald milk in tOp part of double boiler. After dry ingredients have been measured and blended, mans a smooth paste with the cold milk. Add- to scolded milk and cook thor- oughly. Beat eggs with the sugar and add slowly to cornstarch cus- tard. Cook for few seconds. Remove from fir, and add vanilla. Strain and pour into shallow pans, cover with waxed paper. This recipe makes 1 quart. ' Grandmother's Quilt Patterns uoss our. to banquets and dinners and social affairs and clubs whlis I sit at home and cry with lonsiiness, for he is ashamed to taks ms with him because i wouldnt ti» m. he has no affection for me, for the physical at- traction s gone. ‘rell men to marry in their own class and not. break some poor girl's heart. by marrying her and men being ashamed of her. A WOMAN WHO KNOWS. Answer: when we speak of a man who has outgrown his wife, our sympathy is always for ms man wnu has mat noucn with nu wile because he has gone forward while ans has stayed put. We pity mm because he has no companionship at home and wink uow lonely he muss be, tied no a wife who cannot. enter mto any o1 his hopes and Bspxatlons, nor understand when he tries w tell ncr of the secret Ulullglli-S that a man reveals onl) w ms woman who is the other half of his soul. . Bu: if ws have tears to sued, we one with whom we should bedaw them is the outgrown wirqthe woman who has lost the little hold upon her husband that her physical appeal once gave her, yhe woman who knows that. her husband is tired o: her and ashamed of her, not because of anything that she naa done, but because sne is JUSD as Goa made her and as she was ea the time that he picked her out for a wife. Tbs man has, at least, the commotion oi his success. He has the solacsthathsflndalnthsrelourocsofhisownmindlis has thssxoits- msnt of the entertaining society in which ha moves, m; conversation of witty and intelligent men and woman to make up for the talk of a dull domestic wife who knows nothing except the price of Breen groceries and what the children are doing and the neighborhood gossip. _ But the poor wife has nothing to make up to her for having no com- panionship in marriage, for her husband la lust as boring to her as ans is boringtohimflhsianomcrsinterestcdinhisbookathanhsisinher pots and pans. Bbs no more enjoys face-ring his highbr friends discuss the Einstein theory than he docs hearing Mrs. Brown tell about how to cook cabbage. If he tries to take her with him, she is miserable, know ing herself not wanted and out o1 place, that people ask her only through politeness and try to talk to her from a sense of duty. And if her hus- band goes wlthouthsr, ha flaunts her shame to their world. Bo the man who marries a girl who la his ntellectual mfarior illBt N- csuas he ia temporarily caught by harlfretty face doss hsr a greater wrong than ha does himself. Ha ruins her fe more compiatel, than he does his own. For the time comes when her face loses its prattinesa and her youth is gone and he turns to women of his own class for companionship. Then none so poor and none to be so pitted as the lonely, dumb wife who could have been so happy married to some man on her own intsllectual level, who would luvs had the some interests and liked tbs suns things that she does. DORDTHY DIX. we‘ AMcrningSmilc f “I can always count on ...1'.‘“#.:...':""'* c s: cc w 1 m I! "h. _1 > or, n the .1... .1 school. or“... DIAMOND h5g0? £3251 full. m I 99 W ‘d gm b” m dxdn . - 3%: 1-5?" aamst ‘ wanna‘? quilt dazzlin- Pllll-ili Win. w gnu: ma‘?! " Quill"! m!!! bei- lief- "° ‘““‘ "‘ m?‘ "°" 1W" i" "mm" m?" irlttt. l‘... -..':.'.'.: Allwforallasamswhsacu gnu-mm; gguh-mmsnuniuucussanwsnsyg, mum“, they really an bsttardyn!" , . Bo what's . any other One thing to promote happiness and once stirred the contents wooden Tells Howl ‘m! YORKSHIRI VENUS am IT- Her mnlfnndim White Python l Dy Mart Clunnmg. Author of “ling Cobra" '- CHAPIEB i’! l-I-BTIALS A MARCH The day following his kidnapping K. 3., his head still aching from the effects of the hashlsh they had given him, was released by the Khambas from his stifling captivity. ‘Irina a rore round his waist they made him walk in front of their leader's shaggy Manchurian pony. ‘Ililraking with all the power of m5 keen brain, he was convinced that Kanga, his servant's brother, would deliver his message to the watcher w Qliomofo. and that. the news of the kidnapping and the Timur Khan bombshell would certainly bc flashed to India and Lhasa: and some time or other, reach Colin Gray. And then Colin Gray would "act". of course. . . . In the mean- time, ha must find out exactly what the Khambas’: orders were, mu lay his plans accordingly. Then his chance came, Tryino to s'icc ofl’ the corner cf a brick of tea, the knife of the Kham- bl! .. ~- a1 1).... cutting a deep gash in his forearm. "I am an amchi. Khan," sa-d KB." impassively, watching the win eflorts of the other three to staunch the hemorrhage. “Shirl l examine the wound and dress it?" Rolling up his seeves, K .8. took an artery forceps from his instru- ment-case. . That evening, he sat by the Khambasb fire, drinking the inevi- table saltmbuttered tea. a welcome and voluble guest. But from his mcdicins cases he extracted a. three-ounce bottle of tincture of opium, which he slipped into the breast of his robe. “Tea is better made by men than by women.” said K. B. filling up his drinking bowl. "In Calcutta there lives a merchant so wealthy that he could build a hundred gompas and feed all the lamas in them for ten years and not know he had done it! He puts into his tea the juice of a. tea plant which grows on the top of a devil-haunted mountain in China.‘ K, B. smacked his lips in a gustatory ecstasy. The Khambss prickcd up their Ira. "Have you any of it left, amchi?" queried the leader of the Kharnbas, his eyes glittering. The cut in his arm was hurting. him bldly; pos- aizly this magic tea would soothe pain. Kllpouredahssvydossofths norcotlc into their four drinking bowls and pretended to put sorna into his own. Ibur sausage-Ilka foreiingars at. of four bowls, which were immea- iataly drained to the drell- ‘But hardly had this happened when the distant sound of gsllopin hoofa coming from ths di ion of Luntss, was heard. ‘ I. B. glanced quickly around him. Two of the Khsmbss were already . The other to‘? hearing to s l.‘ Dorothy Dix 3 Letter Bod I ' N She Keeps Slim; 1 s PERFECT FIGURE WITH THE? _ candid letter :- M ..measuremema IIo. I can‘ honest; re uIar! m Y honestly a lkl b ha d lkétnldtltkll‘... I Our orders were to bound, to Chorjiefl .._a it? band him over, Khan In person!" The Bengali’: mind worked swift- ly. He must get sway. If ha were _ bound and his captors overcome by the drug. he would be at the mercy of’ any cut-throat bandit who might come along. And Ohorjieff might ar- rive at any moment. ‘Gathering up his yellow robes in both hands, he ran into tbs night. Ran as he had never run in his life. The leader of the Khambu, reel"- iaing what had happened shouted to his drowsing companions and start- ed cfl in pursuit. Normally he would soon have overhauled the Bengali, but. happily the night was dark and the drug potent. Then shortness cf breath brought "Enclosed you wIII find newspaper AID OF-KRUSCHEN SALTs? Tvlo hundred women of graceful form com title off'Y,9rkshlra Venus." at Shefileld. Englan , winner-M's. Mariorls Green-wt: remarkable similarity to those of the famous Venus dc Mllo : The tlcle of the Yorkshire Venus has not’ u I winner with an false pride. She admits with frankness that t s maintenance of hsrperfect figure very largely. to a dally dose of Kruschen Salts. Read h" ‘ ted for the . Hers lnhq T ca: measurements show | I: due 2 photographs of myself. ractlcally correspond wIth those of Venus dc ' say I have kept my figure In taklng Kruschsn Sa ts regularly. I stoned two years ago when I i had an IIIneu bordsrlng on rheumatldfever. I have taken them 7 ‘sImi-aészzd T’: fee! a: flt o: a gddle. and have got rId Z n: to In m arms on Is s, . ~' selects? Venus of Yorkshne av!- ‘ m Sm“ be," such o perfect flgurs. Do lswlm proportion by '_- ne Is asking me how I keep Diet or other thIngs? I mug] I cannot swlm. Ida not dIet. In fact, my sisters tease me a uf eating so well, so Ican only to Kruschen SaItsP-(Slgned) Marlorle B. Venus do Milo reen. Yorkshire Venus W!‘ h‘ Wei ht l. 5" ‘ "slush: Sftizgilnt, PP" "new Arm || Ins. W Forearm 9,3,,“ ‘u’ l ins, N Bk m 34 in‘. " Isl-m. will! 11 I,“ =2. 35 ins. Knee u ‘M’ n. nah‘ Calf cglf |3 h". Ankle Ankle al m, Yomtceunk IIh,I d fl lame um build up "f: .3311’. ‘Win31 vinllnbceisrdzzrtfitr“: 52$? youthful high spIrIu-by raking a dilly Knudsen ll a sclsntlflc blond of various mineral ulrs found lnshelwatan of those European by generations of people to Improve rhalr health and figure. Ge: a 75c. hotels o! Kruachen Salas te-day (I: lam laur wsslu). and rake hall a csupoonful In a glass of he: waw - first thing every morning. . . Spa which have been used Bengali to a standstill?’ . B. listened in the rapid inter. - vals of his own swrmrous breathing, I Again he started to run, laboring for . svery breath. suddenly la tripped: pitched for‘ . ward; and with a. atlfled exclam- t ation of fear, rolled down an appar- " ently endlam slope, sciousneas. O I I I I I His arms pinioned behind him Colin Gray's guards hustled bla from Cynifl presence into tbl tsmplal . . filming‘ sharply right, t the third entrance, tbs long a wearisome progress to his prism houlehsgsn. ‘ (To Bo Continued.) Now rnatrona may have attractive home wear, as well as their slim young sLstera. Today's good looking model will be appreciated by the smart bonsa- wlfe. Cut along princess lines, with panels from shoulders to hem. given a fluid line down the entire model and malkes the hips appear smaller. yourself about the ales or short. The decorative pocket l b! .‘.d..........--...- “tun... ...-.unss-.-...,,,..-,.,, Fashions l-vjrsginn GQKIIIQI. B "‘ 371% into uncoa-r , gut my figure down v