Health Hints -:- Fashions -:- Woman's Work -:- Household Topics, You need never worry about results in ! baking if you use KC BAKING POWDER It has been a stand by for a quarter of a century. Guaran teed under all pure food laws. Oil Ounces forOK4 PREPAREDNESS Always be prepared to give) that W Wain ff. CraduttUm, Aantrentrv er Holiday Gift by opening ereellt aeeearat with at, A0 eaeeptlonally deetrtblo collMtlan of high-trade Dlataaadt, Watches and Jewelry U at fW mMfei A little raaa mimtf pMN e lift .( rara beauty at year pea- mm ai aaoa. 1 aa aaiaaaa ran My ai au aaiawaia weaaiy ar aMiiaiy 1 55 .7 wait VMklv r i VMlfltttM. Vsmiv Cmm (11 Md UM It, r4U It f Mi ?rt 1L.. Ria, k aolid tola Ultlal Prftlna" a-J. 11 waaa. ti waaa. ' TM Maa'a Rlaf Pitt Balchar half an raved, 14k aalld tU, (In . (it Ctenoid HJO 1 MonUl. Na. 141 U "al lien, hand mada, aalld told, Kn llah flnl.h, 1 (In. brilliant Dla nand, li rati Pearll, Baroqua Paarl Drop. 1R Ineh aalld laid chain. Prlae. (Mi a Maatk, ...SU.50 Opaa dally Mil S p. m. Saturdana till SiSO. Call ar write (or llluitratad eataloe No. 01. Fhant Dowlaa HI and aalaiman will tall with artlelaa dtiirad. ArwR9f Til MTIM. SjtJBL SKIS KaVSaUifatf (tear Safeguarding the Feet Recently, in lecturing to a group of young women, I made the statement that women who wear tight ihoei doom themtelves to obesity and bad breath. Such was the conclusion. Perhaps the reasoning may influence some who would refuse to be guided by the flat statement of conclusion. Every woman wishes to be attract ivewants to be pretty if she can in any event, at near it as possible. If she cannot be pretty she wants to develop at least one pretty feature. A small foot with a narrow toe ap peals to tome. A young girl is liable to yield to the temptation to cramp her feet. Suddosc she gains that end let us see what she pays for it. When she cramps the front end ol hrr . !(), together she SDreads the bones of the ball of the foot. This makes corns and bunions. When she wears shoes that are too narrow or too short she disarranges the struc tures of her feet and in time she de velops fallen arches or some other form of painful feet. ' ". When she wears neeis tnat are too high and too narrow she induces oaint in the calves of her legs. No one with bunions, painful feet, or flat tened arches will exercise, txercise is out of the question when the feet are uncomfortable. The woman who does not work or exercise has soft, flabby muscles. If her leg and arm muscles are flabby her abdominal muscles are certain to be flabby also. A woman who. does not exercise and who has flabby muscles is reasonably certain to get fat After 40 she is very apt to become obese. If the ab dominal muscles are flabby the ab domen is liable to sag, displacing the abdominal organs more or less. A woman whose teet are uncom fortable, who does no physical work, takes little exercise, has soft, flabby muscles and a sagging abdomen, will probably develop constipation. The cause of bad breath may be the nose, the tonsils or the teeth. Al though the proof is not conclusive, the probability is that the most fre quent cause is the absorption of cer tain substances from the intestinal tract. The proof is conclusive that under certain circumstances aromatic substances are formed in the intes 'tines, absorbed into the blood, and excreted by certain organs. We know of certain aromatic substances formed -in the body ana present in tne breath in diabetes. One way to tem porarily relieve naa Dream it 10 kc a purge send eat very lightly for three days. Bad breath is often present in the constipated. ' ' The girl who wears tight shoes eains what she is after for the time she has a shapely foot. But here is what she pays for it in time: Mis shapen feet, painful feet, bad posture, flabby muscles, obesity. Is it worth the price? It happened the lecture was given to girls. It applies to boyi as well. Dr. A. W. Evans, in St. Louis Globe Democrat. "Dick and Dan" They Catch the Vacation Fever & . By Nell Brinkley Copyright, 111. International New Berrtea. Safe mm Infanta tad Inlidt HORLICK'S THE OtUQIMM, MALTED MILK Rich milk, malted train, la powder form. For infanta, uvaJidaaif growing children. Pure nutrition, upbuilding At whole body. Inviforataa nursing mothera tat the aged. More nutritious than tea, coffee, ate Intttntly prepared. Raquirat do cooking. Substitute! Cost YOU Sub Prict Bee Want Ads produce results, Advertising is the pen dulumthat keeps buy ing and selling in motion old I DICK was a poor young man. That is, of course, he had a million ties in a great flowering cluster, and, v like the much sniffed-at girl, never had any to wear on himself: he had a beautiful black bag that he tooWrov-, ina" his bother gave him neat mannish brushes with silver beaten into the backs and his initials quietly tucked , in the port corner; he had a velvet house gowft lined with silk that he'd been given by his sister, who was older than he, and loved him fiercely and valiantly through all their comradeship together and clear acoss the strange lands that lay between them from col ege time until he took his dive into the big world-sea and lived on what he could earn himself; he had his golf truck and his fishing outfit, the mandolin left over from roaring, routine- alee club days, one "dresstus" suit and the hat he fished in. ' Well, and a few pictures of girls who had been the t pretty flowers along his cheery, harmless pathway that had seemed always to run in sunny ways. This sounds ' most wealthy. Just the same he was a poor young man. For he was a civil and mining engineer and hung over blueprints from a high stcl and tried to see the country that lay before him in little blue and black lines like a city-darkened spider's web. He managed to see some of the glimmer and dew of the reality that it was a dull map of. And he only had two weeks' vacation.- So he was a poor young man. r.m a rlav when he came down with the. vacation r fever, and his mind went off swimming and picking wet tiger titles under the pines and was very ill-tempered when he snatched it back again. So he and Dan, who lived quietly with him in his room that looked over a green park, but was not "large and airy," went to battle with this room, and when they came out of the first assault they had torn all things that went to make tip a vacation from their moorings and had segregated them into a heap in the center of the room. And then they sat. them down, all wet and weary and grinning happy, and read faithfully in the beautiful folders of railroad lines, and boat trails,' and summer hotels, and country farms. And their hearts fluttered, and they whispered and nudged, and read aloul, and cried, "listen to this," and pondered and pictured and criticised. And their Joy and their trouble was on them as you will seel NELL BRINKLEY. Worth Knowing When Ironing, sprinkle" orris root under the ironing sheet. This imparts 1 delicate neriume to freshly laun To prevent onions from sprouting, let onions dry, heat a poker red hot and with it singe the roots. Put in a dry place and you will find they will keep perfectly. COOL COLORADO Tha Grace of Order Is Calling " You NOW to the Playground of the Nation. ' y -It costs no more to eome to Colorado and enjoy a real outdoor life vacation and return home full of life and vigor, ready for busi. nesB, than it does to take an ordinary time killing vacation that gets on your nerves. , Nature has endowed Colorado with oppor tunities for the tourist that no other section has to offer. You will never know why an Ex-President of the United States called Colorado the Nation's Playground until you visit cool, sunny Colorado and enjoy the invigorating tonic of her mountain breezes and scenic grandeur unequaled any where in the world. . - It's all very well to tell one to keep a bureau drawer tidy by using neat boxes for each set of one's posses sions," whimsically complained a lit tle bride. "What advice covers the fact that every time the drawer is pulled open or pushed in, all the boxes slide around and back and for ward, so that you never know how it's going to look when you go to it in a hurry? No matter how care fully I arrange mine, I'd get no credit for tidiness if any particular person happened to be looking over my shoulder into my top drawer. ' And the pantry ones are almost as bad I" The United States Government has recognized the need of outdoor recreation for every man, woman anc.child in America. Nine National Parks have been selected by the Government as American recreation spots, Denver is the Gate way to them. Rocky Mountain National Park and Mesa Verde National Park are in Colorado These Godmade parks with man-made auto high ways and railroads belong to you. Why not use them this summert .' If Plan Your Vacation Denver Way to the COOL Colorado Rockies Where you can enloy In cool comfort the unequaled picturesque grandeur of majestic inow-capped mountains that thrill you with prtda when yon visit them and realize that they are your heritage "America's Bummer Playground." Plan to come to Colorado and bring your family tola trammer. See Denver's New Mountain Parks and Rooky Mountain National Park Thirty-eight other r" d trelley aeenle tripe; fourteen one Cay trips. Trout Fishing, Camping, Mountain Climbing and Hitting. Lew round-trip rates en all rallreade te Denver. Scenic Motor Highways. TWO VACATION BOOKLETS Free On Request - They tell where to to, what ts tat, what It coata and bow to at to the principal vacation apott ana tcenlc trlpt In Colo rado. Log of auto roads telan var'a New Mountain Parka con tour map of the Colorado Rock lot from Lont'a to Plka'a Peak. . Pictures of prlnotpal aconot and things you can do whllo enjoy ing your vacation Dtnvar way. lAsk Option? ' m IMIIlTi fi 1751 WeerrlhSO 1(1)11 PJIIitl? 4-reHvmcoLO l INSIST that your dealer, send you mission Bell CANTALOUPES Their quality s Is dependable al ways the same uniform ripeness, deliciously good flavor sweet, . fresh and taste ufc You are protected against substitu- . tion when you buy Mission Bells all the genuine bear this trade mark uticker v Ale Mltilon Bell ea a Cantaloupe Indicate! Quality -Los for the) eH" Arakelioa Bret, et Co., Grower. Iwnerlal Valla?. Cat, Omcaai Fraana. CaU she added. "The knife boxes slide' around, until I get fairly ashamed when I look into them." "But that is not a difficult thing to remedy I" laughed her older and wiser friend. "I had the same trouble until I reasoned out what to do. If the boxes you use are of pasteboard, get a dozen or two good strong thumb tacks, or even some of these push pins. The thumb tacks are flatter, and don't interfere, but the pins go in farther. Then push them right through the bottoms of the boxes, and fasten them to the wood of the drawer. Use your good sense about it, using a pin that will go well into the wood without going through to the other side. . "Of course, it would be possible to glue the boxes to the wood of the drawers, but in a bureau one wants to have the white lining pad, or towel. or whatever one uses, in. between. The pins don't hurt the lining, and are easy to take out at any time when you want to clean the drawer, or to rearrange the places for keeping things. But so long as they are in nothing will budge from its proper place. I use them also for fastening the paper lace ,to the edges of the shelves in my pantry and kitchen cup boards. Mothers Magazine. - Girl Workers Who Win Out - By JANE M'LEAN. "If you want to do something, why don't you learn to trim hats?" Edith's father said, looking at her Over the evening paper. "Trim hats," said Edith disdainfully. "Why, I know how to do that al ready." ' "All the more reason why you should do it, then," persisted her fa ther. - - "But, father, there's nothing excit ing about trimming hats. I want to do something to make money; I want to be independent; but trimming hats seems such a mediocre thing to do. Why, I've done my hats and helped other girls with hats all my life. When I set about doing something in ear nest, I want it be something worth while." "Did you ever hear that old say ing about doing a thing well?" said her father. "1 have," said Edith, smiling. "Learn to do one thing well, and no matter how small it is the world will make a pathway to your door." Edith repeated it to herself thought fully. "It isn't a bit what I had dreamed of doing," she sighed. tent ' .ss 1 llfif ' J Cold Consomme. Although many soups can be made with water, they will be richer and more nourishing if, instead of water, they are made witn me nquor which meat has been boilei this consommee take two or three nnunds of lee of veal, a bunch of sweet herbs, mace-bay leaves, parsley and two ounces of vermicelli. , Cut the meat in very thin slices, put it into a pot; break up the bones as small at possible, and put them on top of the meat. Add the mace herbs and vermicelli to the meat and pour over all three quarts of boiling water. - - ' By CONSTANCY CLARKE. Simmer the whole for twelve hours over a very slow fire. Then turn the whole into a soup saucepan and sim- Po"lmer again till it it reduced to three pints, clearing . 011 uie. atuu aa n risea. Then strain the soup and let it stand two hours to clear, after which pour it carefully into another pan, wfthout mixing any of the sedi ment from the bottom with it. Put on ice to chill and serve in cups with salted tracken. To reduce the labor in preparing soup on hot days beef cubes may be used. , (Tomorrow Sugar Cookies.) , "But you know something about it, you have an idea about how to begin. It's for you to experiment and find a way to make the work fascinating." "That sounds promising; well, I can try anyway." And Edith resolved to finr! a mv tn m,L. tia. um,lr t V. thing of beauty that she had always dreamed a career must be. Edith Lanning's father had been wealthy just now he was facing a business crisis. Edith had always had plenty of money. At the school where she had gone for two years she had developed a remarkable talent for hats. An old hat in Edith's skillful fingers could be so changed as to give it a different aspect. She used to do it as a favor for the girls, and her own hats were always models of Frenchiness. The girls used to oh and ah about her wonderful knack, and exclaim delightedly: "Oh, Edith, you could easily make money doing hats if you ever had to." The time had come when Edith just naturally wanted to do something. And now, as her father said, she ought to take the talent that had been given her and turn it, to some good use. The idea that finally came, to her was not particularly brilliant, but she resolved to try it out. She invested a small sum in straw, flowers, rib bons and maline. Then she walked through several hat shops, got some ideas and went home, resolved to try them out. After a hard day's work, she had two hats ready for wear even to the silken linings fastened in their crowns. It had been so exciting mak-1 ing tnem, dui sne naa retrained troni saying a thing to any one in the family. She packed both hats carefully in a hat box and went down to the lit tle shop where she had seen them displayed. A rather slim, pretty girl asked Edith what they could do for her. "I want to see madarrie herself." Edith explained sweetly, and a mo ment later a stout woman with gray hair came out of the inner room and looked Edith over in a tuperiot manner. Edith took the hats out of the hos and displayed them proudly.- ' "Of course you recognize these hats," she explained to the astonished woman. "I copied them from two models of yours.. One was priced at $28 and the other at $40. Both of these cosl $8.60. Do you think you would have any use for me here? : ''; '-,' Madame looked at the girl shrewd ly, taking in her youth, her eager ness, her attraction, at one glance. Then she smiled. "Young lady," she said finally. "I can use you. Would $20 a week do for a beginning? You. can go into the designing room immediately. Do you like thit kind of work?" - - -,"I love : it I" Edith responded promptly, suddenly conscious ' that father had been right; she would de velop the talent tliat had been given her. Already she was on the right road to success.-