Hints » \ “ma: iawmo soon after oillns the sewing machine.‘ ‘excess on will soil the goods. This ‘can be prevented by tying s emallpiece- or action string tightly ground the needle bar, near the place where the bar grips the needle. moon rsnlriuo Paint the baseboard the same color as the floor oi the mom, and the danger oi soiling the baseboard while cleaning will be eliminated to a great extent. ' BOILING POTATOES To improve the flavor oi boiled trash-potatoes add a sprig of mint to the water. WHEAT QUEEN GQOD BUSINESS WOMAN BUBLEITE, Kas. August. 22—A middle-fled woman. oi as is proving that there's money to be lnsdsin wheat farming,‘ with or without farm "relief." ‘Ihey call Mrs. Ida Watkins the ‘wheat queen" of Kansas primarily because her iarm illustrates an application 0i big blminess methods to sgrlelsltilre. she has adapted __ metropolitan factory methods to her s,s00 aeyes title. ' ‘ , , A cattle queen oi.’ Oklahoma before the came tpfiarsasto ‘raise golden lields 0d grain on s large scale Mrawaikins} a widow. will see her 20 years isrlhihg olilhsxedthis year by the largest crop she has harvested. -Andtbiswomanwho isshowing lhewaytothewhsetfarnler-s oithe nus‘ here to earn that i inthe °n1y the most modern nlent. ‘ ‘ ,‘ ‘ "h" the lime they are hired. rsih ‘or. shine. Tractors work day and nights Her business sinewdn, has’ been demonstrated min-e than once toher iinancial advantage. , Lsstyear she. had ihtlillacres in wheat and when 50.000 bushels were harveetied, she- declded she wouldn't sell any oi it for less than/ti a bushel she waited and with proiit.r ' - "he ulhbr" was left with a ranch with 1,050 head oi’ cattle. Assuming bhargg 5h‘; 99".. ated the ranch for eight years trout‘- ably before she was lured to Kansas h? the PWBPM: ‘of rrest omits in wheat. She bought some land ior a crop witch brought her‘ 08.800 ‘rhe act-ease was increased to 2B0 in lim and in iour yel-rrshe sold 038.000 worth oi wheat irom that tract, This year she expects tonal-vest 15.000‘ bushels. ~ Mrs. Watkins’ farm is ashow place during the harvest seasons. she employee scores oi ‘men who workin three shiits oi eight hours each; to, complete the gathering oi grain? in amlnllnum time. . , .‘ Mrs. Watkinshasher owb phy about rarmlng‘ and it ildillidns no ory for farm reliei To-‘tbgcoriw rary‘, she avers there‘."isiib"more‘ profitable business in tlie midwest than isrrning. and‘; jfbeiieves that wheat iarmers will ‘find riellehin cooperating in and quark- eting their crop. ‘ " -‘ . f "Hard work, "mixed with.,.‘common sense. never starved toldeatlnon a Kansas rsrm. ahe oztedtlhijslsss said west is no whho collared executive; .5he direotsthe/workoi her iarm and a study oLher owrppi-oii-ta indic- aies the basis ior statement. " _ “ .~ x; sues an replace them. _ Stimulants and ‘They frequent! than 00d.- will q re lace lost ener c manufactured .‘ all the essenti . ,.fresh of orgeaalfi: » upon whi ‘y _ pedal! re ‘ . ilirglssdd sari .1. preseacinOsu eaailydi -v.,.l sold 7 15c. as seem‘ Feed your Nerves’ - and forget them ‘. ~ TiSimpossibletoforgetnerves that are nagging day and night, rendering life almost un- bearable. Tbe cause is sample. Strained nerves are star-veil nerves. During the daily grind you aye “burnin up" nerve cells and til- are doing nothing to Tbs solution also u 11mph drugs are useless: do much more harm ha: you require la nouris meat — nourishment. that is correcel balanced. Nourishment that ckly rebuild worn nerves an. supply this in abun ant measures Nature and Science combimd Oultisu is not a mere h! sure of its sevgralniwadv. ‘chum - Ovslmseretalnnavniillpelfflls- ' " '\' ' ' Pm“... a] elemfntsbof its valu- _ ‘ ‘ _ e in dieots — I P‘ . ‘b! 8"‘ {which enbedyflmlth - - llosphoroue compound!‘ ‘ _ ghe brain and and creamy est pastures. vwertiiiifihfoi _ _ ' For bu!!!) ‘tbs jlfif T0903 ._ Ovsltlvmar and betvfieguflm . in M81194‘ ' , -- W-‘S-igheicw“ Ovaltisse hazard miz- ’ ‘ ieats. 1M" ; - . c ley slur.‘ ' ‘ ' nerves ‘ All the I , . l. .- mehesemeht .. o1 the rat-m." , 511° hens accounts oi all , . ‘Raucous GUARDIAN \ ‘- fniqsrcsst", '. u llMdbYl-IIOIQIIOIIII-"x ‘ '1 _ j"? u." experience have tlught - r .‘ "1 _ , u! the harvest comes she V’ d d "" l surnervises the great . "I 'k.mxlggf Qrothy mam,“ she issystemstic anlfbusiaess u. ’ i ' .» ~ " - ' ’ .‘ ‘M““.|“.» . j- doesirt lulderatand he i - ‘- lfqlliéjliusldaitlenial ’ Reason. That r‘ No Woman ' r ‘CanjEver Understanda Man is That at Motifs ‘r -" ‘ifilature isSimple, While a. Womalfs is, the» ‘. Most ‘Complicated Thingnh Earth” oompleintloifvery dlsimlntlcd husband is that’ his wife doesn't imlieretshd The wcii oi every unhappy wife is that her husband r, and both men and women go through the world on When her husband died in i002, she‘ $3,500 and in the first year harvested r. .' marked irom $50 to ‘$49.75. . ‘ ‘ ‘luvs h" 5519a‘ run tbroughll-le laundry after she has nnished them bezause“ ‘ to tears because she wants to be thought high-brow. _ are the style ‘and she wouldrather he in-her coiiin than‘ be out of lesion. ’“ "mhusqiu herd-gets y- bring her a bo-ceht bunch oi flowers oh her birthday . “m, ‘m; ‘h; m going u; change and preiersosne little cake-eater - to d l Whi- or course, men and women don't understand each ' ‘other. They never have understood each other. ‘ They ucver will. It lsshQ tsr impossibility. They can't derstand each cth because God made them diflererlt and gave them ‘ cause their training "and development has been along difierellt lines, and it isl because each sex is a riddle w women are perpetuallyvlntcresting to each other. ‘ ‘ A The ‘thing ‘that iniflwes ll plan abouts woman is /the uncertainty as to which way the cat is going to jump and he marries her to find out. , plant-l: that she can spend her life in working out i! she marrifi him an . with‘ no oi ever getting the right answer, ' ‘ b. \ " fundamental reason that no woman csnever" understand a man ,1! » that a man's nature is simple, while a. woman's is the most complicated thlfld on ‘eartlzi 9A man docs the thing he .wanis to do lust because he wants to ‘dotfit and without any otlfler reason whatsoever for doing it and that is a ' iiafliing mystery that rho-woman can comprehend. because when she does a "ihlD-ffilldfi are a million secret reasons ior her‘ action. c , . 1a» marbeats because hols hungry and he‘ chooses the irlhd oi food be _“reliahes. fie buys a naqsuit because he needs it or because it " ‘ris to ‘strike hisfiancy.‘ He‘ goes to see the kind oi plays ho‘ likes and readrt-he- fboors‘ he lovesahd so iar as possible he does thethmgs that he enjoys doing. “Butiwlien a woman eats she is considering the cost oi the dish and count-fill her calories ind wondering u she hadn't betterspshd the money on c-ohlaon. handkerbhiei instead of on" lobster mayonnaise and trying to estimate how lsttedibgit‘ is. ' ~ r . -~ . ' ' when ‘she buys a new drew she doesn't go into a shop and take the first thing thhfis oiiared her because it suits her and is whgt she needs andiis ‘the right: price. ribs looks at the rrocirs in half a dOIieh other stores and ‘decides on the one she buys at. l‘_ast because shethlnks st will put out the eye of hel‘ rivtl or she buys’ something site doesn't want because it hes been ' booksd-shelpathcs and that make hes ieel that she needs to the women in her set are reading them. She goes w plays that bore her ' ' ' She ‘wears shoes hat tortur. hes-‘and clothes that make net-risk ‘death from exposure because ey A woman-seldom‘ doesfanything just purely and simply because she wants ‘oorlo- that particuigr thins. she 01935-311158! or reirains irons doinl them because oiiwhat people willlsay,‘ becauge ‘shc wants to be smart. be- cause slfelwsnts to be seen in the right places and walk undk the‘ right awn- ingsfbécausoshe is a social ‘climber and wants a hand up from B01110 Wm" aboveher, becuse she-wants to be elected orehd my rctrischbr her lodge. or7president ofjcthe Browning Club. . ' n l,‘ a woman has so many reasons for doing tile thing she does our she never understands that a man acts mainly on lmllifl-lfl- 5° 511° goes probing and probing into his hidden motive and when she doesn t hnd it sh; concludes that he is deep and inscrutable and supsrhumaniy clever- It 1s like old‘ story oi the diplomat with whose subtlety nobody could cope and whosesecrefwas that he was always periectly truthiul an: irank. ‘ , g .‘ r I \ guph‘ stress upon llttls'_thlngs and particularly why their happiness depends upon the small alnenitie. in_ omestic life- Thhy 01"“ ‘mdfifilfl-m "h? 1 wlielias in be constantly ass ‘ that her husband sl-ill loves her when every day of his life he is proving his devotion to her by acts that spear louder tharr words. ' . They can't understand why the women whose husband has» lull? Elven 1W! a tbogsshd-dollir“ coat she a diamond ring consider: heme}! hcslwted and or ttiivfinnlversary oi ‘their marriage, nor can they comprehend why an ' l ‘ ' rains woman, wants her husband to lie to llor and tell her that ehs ls more bsautlru r: a0 than she was st so. ‘ ‘ m". Re marl worrie. about the_ state of his wlie‘s alifitlon X01‘ 111m‘ ll 19W as she is givillgi good-perfonnalice or wiie and mo r, because it doesn t rtor, as long ‘ssbe is ncuedtdhls own fireside. does hesee any reseosi why be should se-ehwtvrmlflieihifhlmi 11° "411 1"" h" '1“ ‘n’ marathon be should ooctihuauy announce that he u. an honest msh. _ yqtlpgealja understand why their husbands won't feed them ' “M” 5M "m; ma; understand why women crave for heroism-solar‘ form out». innhmereiiiefvmw WWW" 11" .1=“""1"' Mignon.‘ g‘ for‘ use food user never set-v gm.“ g man‘; moral val _ , nor how he can bus sjhhoslmdesstsnd that he has the iujse w " ' eqylayhookey rrom school ‘bsslsiometber whehit isover. r t‘ with . bratty with“ a‘ still hunt ior some aiiinity who will understand‘ eirent points oi vieyv. Bc-r that keeps the othenser guessing that men and ‘ The, thing that makes a man iascinatirlg to awoman is his being a cross word we" whe“ m“ i." ‘m m’ “p?” up’ d put little bits of cotton up your nos- . x r V The thing that men never can understand about womeli is why they put \ l Milady Begonia! Iranians i I BEAUTY QUESTIONS ANSWEBVED Blachlng Facial H!!! Dear Miss Leeds - How can 1 ' bleach facial hairs?! am dark and y have brown eyes. What shade of i-ougs . and what colors in clothes should I wsari. _ 1401B LEEDS. TITANIA. Answer-Adan: (c) drops house- hold ammonia in three (3) table- spooniuls peroutide to milks the bleach. Do not apply it around the "11! 101K069 out the ammonia fumes. _Make the mixture in an open dish or cup. You might try gbrick or deep- red shade oi rouge. Becoming colors for your clothes include deep brown, mahogany, deep ‘brilliant yellow. ecru, navy. bronze-green. dull pink, apri- eot, coral, bright-red, rust,- brick-red, burnt orange, Argentine red. lipstick‘ red, black with bright. trimming. deep cream. For a striking efiezt for sports clothes you may use bright blues and Brccns, white tinged with blue or 9018b and the light sun-tan shades L015 LEEDS. _ Olly Hair Dear Miss Leeds-ti) What. would prevent oily hair? (2) What is good for chlarsed POree? (s) 1,slh 1v years 01d. 5 feet 2% inches tall. and weigh I9 Wands. 1s this correct? " . BROWN EYES. 1 Answer-O‘) The basis oi all your beauty problems is ‘no doubt your underweight condtion. . The tiny muscles that control the opchings oi‘ the pores lvrhlch are oil and iwcat shade) are weslr and flabby s. ac- oo oi yourtpoor physical tone. 5o you, hat build yourself up‘ first oi all. For a local treatment, wash your .1 Pe roan-sail? r ‘ ash ion s, . to salon, Jibs .‘,-.‘ Literature d ‘ j ma.» Pays! in b» artful] demand Paris Jlwsutyculmrekcan- full] studied by flair beauty dictator. Many tbs continent com to consult Madame Payer s» problem 0ft“)! can. l .~, wbcnmvypbue lowlim women of "I recommend to my clients the soap of palm and olive oils, which sepa- rately have great cosmetic value _.und which, in. the blending cf Palmolive Seq?» We 501151)’ efeiilive- ” 12 Rue Rscrlzrsuee. Pears Today, Mme. Si? . In Paris . . Mme. PAYOT ‘ world-famous beauty specialist ‘ advises this 2-minute l beauty method OR many years the elite of Paris have listened Fro the beauty advice of Mme. Payot, teacher of ' l- many beauty specialists. Palmolive Soap, in a simple 2-minute treatment, ‘ _‘ and warns against the harsh eficcu of the wrong ‘ ‘ kind of soap. Here is beauty news, indeed! ‘ r “Since I commenced to recommend Palmolive Soap to my clients, the difference is immediately apparent. This home cleansing rule gives the cor- rccr foundation for the use of rny and Lotion N0. 1." Here is the famous Palmolive rrearmcnflrecom- mended all over the world, as Madame Payot would _ ‘ advise it: make acreamy lather of Palmolive Soap ‘ and warm water. With bpth hands massage this well ' into the skin rwo minutes. Thea rinse, first with warm water, gradually with colder. Try it, rot-lights ‘ PALM oaavr? soars \ Payot advises the daily use of Creme No. l. hair with tincture of green soap once v- week- Apply ahf astringent scalp tonic twice a week. ‘ (3) condition will impmvg g5 W" build up your health. Wash your 11°! W151! 801D end water every day andflnishwithaniceruboracold water rinse. Dry and pat ion ‘some witch-babel. Avoid constlpltion and dlsestive troubles. i3). The average weight for your-age arm hglghf,‘ l‘; between us, and 11a pounds, You need to ‘gain at least ilitsen pounds. Eat more nourishing food and be sure to sleep nine hours each night. LOIS LEEDS. Where to Part the llair Dear lislss Leeds-u) w-iilty face is rather large. Should 1 part my hgu- in the middle or on one side’! (2) How often should 1 shampdo itTIt is dark brown. What sort oi rinse will give it a richer color? (3) Will vase- 111" mike the eyelashes grow longer? ‘ AUDREY. Answer-(l) 0d the side, rather nelr the‘ center. ‘ (2) Twice a month is “wally oft-en mush for the sham- POO- You mllht use a henna rinse to brink out the reddish tones and give your ‘hair a richer color. Use tar seen tor the lhemnoo. (s; Yes, lh most cases. LOIS LEEDS. » Physical ;5peolflonllen| Dear Miss Leeds-I am l5 years old, 5 feet’? inches tall and Weigh 10d pounds. My measurements are: Ankle, m; our. nltithlsb; it; hips, as; -waist, M; bust. 20%. Arc these cor- rect? 1 - Answer-You are ' a‘ few pounds‘ below the "averael weight ior your ale and height. . glfour calf and bust measurtments are i ‘little small. ‘l?! to gain dve or six pounds in the next" r 1 was brand It can be had in sizes l8, i8 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 irlohbs bust. In the medium slae, it talbes but 3% yards oi material in the 40-inch width with‘ ‘ti. yard of 36-inch con- trast, Wool Jersey in almond green with matching silk crepe is stunning ior golf. ‘ Nzvy blue wool crepe with vivid red trim is practical choice ior sireot. travel or classroom. Purple silk crepe‘ self trimmedi silk crepe in gay print on navy ' ground with plain blending tone silk crepe, and canton crepe in claret red are exclusive but inexpensive by i making this swagger sports dress, w-lth extremely slender lines. Pattern price 15 cents. Be sure| to fill in size of pattern. Address Pattern Department. The Large Fashion Magazine is 15 cents, but; only l0 cents when ordered with a' pattern. N0. 2714 Size...r.......-...t........ Iroses-boos..-c..R;;;nosscssssoeee\“‘ ‘ ‘ Are Wearing “ illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By dnnebfihelorthington Etiquette Bykobertaue Q. l-iow should asparagus be eaten? A, The tender ends of aspsresiil '" may be separated with the fork and after these are eaten, llit the remain- ing stalks to the mouth with the fingers. ' Q. should a man use his initials in ' social correspondence? A. No. l-le should sign his full name, ‘ i‘ Frank Williams Harris. Q. Should a husband take Part in, his wife's “At Home" day? A. No; the average business man does not. A\Morning Smile‘ Mrs. Black-And where be your‘. daughtenMi-s. White? ,_‘_‘.‘ - Mrs. Whitez-I sent her out to domestic service. She weren't r to me in the house. v v ‘toss-sue. resum- wool- . _ eleven‘ ehia woman's iityld "llo. fit ,.cis.=in$i"f ha" e WNW “CANADA'S KOW"