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ae oe fpr eatin Seat eee ree PAGE TWO MOTHER HAS linery Store, Farm, and Others in Addition to Home WAS TR INED NURSE} By NEA Service. Putnam, Tex., Nov. 7.—When M Mary Guyton isn’t assigning gues to rooms in her hotel here, she’s in her restaurant supervising the menu or serving customers. When she isn’t in her millinary store showing a woman the latest creation, sh with her When she isn’t pigs.and poultry, she’ cring her eight-year-old Mary. Or oil field of leasing acreage or fix tracts. And when she any of these capacit found furnishing advic nam neighbors, Outside of that, Mrs. Guyton has all the time in the world to her- self! Yet, in an emergency, she will go ut and nurse a sick man or woman to health. For she is the only train- ‘ed nurse in Callahan county. She stopped actual practice at the death of her husband, a surgeon. Counselor, Too. Mrs, Guyton comes from Trenton, N. J., and has been here only five years. In that time she has won the confidence of the farmers and oil men in this region to such an ex- tent that they come to her with their troubles and problems, tell her hour secrets and follow her advice lke an expert's. lier yreaest interest lies in the ot discret whch she manages for the men who own the wells, She owus three wells herself and takes ‘as much interest in those of the others as she does in her own. She v men call their “good Holstein cows. elling some of her daughter, he ‘might be out managing an 10 wells, drawing maps, ing drilling con- occupied in she may be to her Put- isn't Pee eeshutelcis! no-amslljramn: shackle affair, either. It is of Span- ish mission style, with a large lobby, spacious dining-room and contains 60 rooms. That's an imposing hos- teiry for a town the size of Putnam. Hard, persistent work, patience, a square deal for everybody.” This 1s how she explains She manages her varied affairs. “I try to help people, and I enjoy it. And I find they re- member and help me.” Simple Housewife, But Mrs. Guyton is no masculine type of woman. She is gentility per- sonified, She has her womanly frail- ties and habits, and she dresses just as any housewife would—usually in a simple gingham dress. “Women ought not to be tied down to the home any more than men,” "she believes. “The business world is open to women as it never was be- fore, and they ought to take advan- tage of it, “I think it a mistake to devote so much time to club work. How much greater benefit would women get by putting all this time and energy into business.” In fact, she thinks, women ought to be at least as good as men in , business. “Women are better adapted to de- tails,” she explains. “A man wants to hurry through and pass up details that may have much importance, and ‘a. woman will take her time and con- sider what, the man thinks are trifle’, Mother Practices Law With Son By NEA Service. Cincinnati, Nov, 7.—Mother and son are practicing law together here, And they are only waiting now for daughter and sister to join-the firm. It's all come about through Mrs. Jessie Adler's ambition and determi- nation to go through college and legal school with her sqn, Sherman. Funny part is, she beat him _through the bar examination by a year. Now, she's an assistant coun- ty prosecutor. She is the first wo- m.n ever to be appointed to this ouice in Hamilton county. She’s Suffragette. Mrs, Adier, though an ardent suf- itegette ior years, is distinctly fem- anine, Yet she doesn’t require courtesies that aren’t extended to nen, while she’s about her profes- sional duties, “when I go into the offices where men are smoking and have their hats on and their feet on their desks,” she says, “I feel like an intruder. “Why, then, should I ask them to at men as an invited guest at a social tunctjon?” But Home Woman, “Just the same,” she admits, “1 like a man. bettf if he extends me the same courtesy in my profession- al life that he would accord me on ‘meeting me socially. I’ve been'a wo- men 44 years longer than I’ve’ been an* assistant prosecutor.” “Mrs. Adler's daughter is 14, Just nas she’s through prep schoo} and college, she expects to’ pore over the, ‘Jaw books and get Teady to partnershi; partner, “is to prove that ith a perfectly ‘splendid daughter, a son as 's probably: at her dairy | at home moth- | | | | 1 | How's this for regal beauty? ingest daughter of King Ferdin She'll be 15 in December. Quite snappy, aren't they? | SPEAKING OR ROYALTY— VARIED DUTIES IN BUSINESS Runs Hotel, Restaurant, Mil-| The young miss is Princess Iieana, and and Queen Marie of Rumania. And what do yeu think of her pet Spitzes a legal colleague and a home where the machinery never is in evidence, a politienl success.” VOLUNTEERS 10. AID DISABLED can be Great Army to Carry For- ward “Forget - Me - Not- Day” Throughout Country A great volunteer army of “For- get-Me-Not Day” workers will be in| the field on Saturday, November 10, | to distribute millions of little for- nots to the public-spirited s of America; in the inter of the nation’s wounded- and dis: abled vi ns of the great war, “and heartily endorsed by proved President Calvin Coolidge, at Wash- ington, D. C., and prominent govern- ment, state and civic throughout the United States, The for the relief and welfare, as well as legislative and rehabilitation as- sistance, of the wounded and dis- abled American veterans of the great war, of whom there are more than 100,000 in all parts of the United States, National Commander James A, Mc- Farland of the Disabled American Veterans of the World War, under whose auspices “Forget-Me-Not Day” will be conducted in several hundred cities and town in the United States on Saturday, November 10, has re- j patriotic, fraternal and civic organ- izations everywhere in the country. MeFarland’s ‘plea for “priority for | | the disabled men in all things,” has sounded a popular chord wherever the doughty little southerner, com- mander of the nation’s maimed and wounded veterans of the great war, has spokg. The Central Trust Co, of Cincinnati, Ohio, is national Me-Not Day” campaign. Hundreds of workers are prepar- ing for the observance of “Forget- Me-Not Day” in this city; and the local disabled boys are confident that their drive will be a tremendous suc- cess. A citizens’ committee is as- sisting the Disabled American Vet- crans in their plans for Saturday’s campaign; and high school girls, ‘ourg ladies, club women, Gold Star Mothers, War Mothers, Service Star Legion members, Auxiliary workers, public-spirited citizens and ar ~vorkers, public-sp'rited citizens and part in the arrangements for Satur. ‘ay’s big “Forget-Me-Not Day” cam naign here. Farmer Proves . Tanpen, N. D., Nov. 7.—The story of Frank Horlacher, a farmer living near here, micht well be entitled “From Nothing- But Ill Health to, Farming Success.” In the last threc years Horlacher Undertakers / ‘Em! DAY PHONE 246 VETS SATURDAY Plans for this year’s “Forget-Me- | campaign have been ap- | officials ' procecds of the day are to be used; ceived the assurance of support from | treasurer for the “National Forget- war workers, are all taking an active | Dairying Pays, i WEBB BROTHERS = ibalmers Licensed Embalmer in Charge has earned an annual income of $3,- 500 from his 840 gere farm, which is typical in its modest equipment and layout of a well cultivated north- t rm. Some years ago he moved to North Balota from Chicago. On arriving ot this farm @e bought three ordi- nary scrub cows but followed this past shortly afterward with the lit'on of a purebred Holstein sire. W she farming looked like a losing proposition to him so he sowed this crop only three times. By 1916 he decided to develop his dairy enter- prise at a time when his neighbors were showing their greatest enthu- | si over wheat. , One neighbor wanted to get rid of his dairy herd |and Horlacher bought his 11 head of grade dairy cattle, With this start he has built up a jherd which now consists of 36-head | of cattle. | All of his profits have been made on his cows. He sells sweet cream and gets a premium for it because he keeps it cool and sanitary. | A Wise Fellow “You say Smithers is remarkable. | What’s remarkable about him?’ “Made a trip abroad, and when he returned he hadn’t the slightest idea | how to save Europe."—American Le- gion Weekly. HAIR STAYS COMBED, GLOSSY \Millions Use It - Few Cents . Buys Jar at Drugstore Keeps Hair Combed Even obstinate, unruly or sham- poocd hair stays combed all day in any style you like, “Hair-Groom” is a dignified combing cream which gives that natural gloss and well- groomed effect to your hair — that final touch to good dress both in bu: incss and on socit!! océasi “Hai Groom” is greascle grow thick, heavy, lustrous hair. Be- ware of greasy, harmful imitatfons. ! St aaa waweweree \ Funeral Directors also helps | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE RETURNS ‘EXPERT READS _ FUTURE FROM HANDWRITING | Has Reveated Things of Past and Future of Many by Glimpse of Penmanship By Miltof Bronner | NEA Service Staff, Correspondent. | | London, Nov. 7.—If you haye any secreth from your wife, your mother- in-law, your business boss, or the | police, give a wide berth to Rafacl |Schermann, who is on his way to | America, And above all, don't let him get his eyes on any of your | handwriting. For Schermann is declared to be ig je modern miracle man, Just 2 couple of lines, idly scrawled by you, jreveals to him you past and your ifuture, your aptitudes, your habits, | your illnesses, everything ‘a person | would ,want to know about you and, | perhaps, more than you know about | | Yourself. Schermann, whose people are of | Polish origin, used to work at:a re-| {gular job in wie as fire dam- |ages appraiser. Suddenly he discov- \ered his extraordinary powers as a | graphologist and has been at it ever | since, giving exhibitions of his gifts | before scientific men in Vienna, Bud- japest, Prague and Zurich. 1; There is no possibility of his hav- ing a card index on all the people | whose handwriting he examines, The | stuff doesn’t even have to be signed. All he needs is a few lines of your | ordinary script. | By some unexplained gift he at | ence deduces from this a physical th psychical photograph of | Otto Wiedfeld, German ambassador to the United States, again is in this country, having arrived at New York recently. He will take up his duties in Washington. He has brought: with hi mdraft -c? a com- mercial treaty to submit for con- i sideration, \ writer, telling about his gait, voice and gestures, aptitudes and failings, |state of health, likes and dislikes, | \traits of character and temperament. But that is not all. | The accumulation of personal, psy- | cho-physical detail is merely the raw material of his vision. detail revealed to him by the dots! said to tell the course of your life. Three samples: FIRST--He analyzed the handwrit- ing of a man who came to him. /Seh-! ermfann said the writer used to have his face smooth shaven; that the} heavy black. mustache was something | designed to disguise him; that he was in trouble because of his clever néss at imitating other ~ people’ script, Not long after, the man was | arrested by the police as a forger| for whom a warrant had been stand- | ing. SECOND—A young woman submit- | ted her handwriting. He told her! she -had quarreled with her lover, had taken to drugs and was con. templating suicide. She confé’sed i was true. THIRD—Another girl showed the} script of her sweetheart. He. told! hér the young man had incipient tu- berculosis and advised her to. wait until he was cured. The doctof's ex- |! amination showed this was the truth. In Vienna where he lives they. say that of the analyses made by Scher- mann 70 per cent were correct, 22 per cent partly right and partly ff wrong and only, 8 per cent totally, in error. Schermann personally strong- ly objects to being classed with clairvoyants and mediums. has a sixth sense. He has been care- 4 full watched by Professor Benedikt, the, famous alienist of Vienna Uni- versity. Benedikt admits seeing some wonderful things, but says he alts by explain them. | Schermann’s own theory is the whole individuality of a with all the details of his microscopically contained in | seript and the trained ¢ye perceives | | all in a sequence of pictures passing like those of a movie film. And just as a movie film ean be reversed, so Schermann can reverse Out of this} your script, he can tell you about nd line of your handwriting, he is|can tell you what your handwriting his process. Just as from looking: at A new syrup mr mellow and delicate No you can get a delicious new syrup made by. : the world’s largest packers of sugar cane prod- - : ucts. 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Geeote bristle -dauber.and big jamb's wool polisher. oi “The Shine S for Mine!” ee mericas Home Shoe Polish ya quick, and WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1923 is like. of people's handwriting have in a majority of cases been very similar to the real handwriting. |“Winter Hints” For Farmers Made Washington, Nov. winter has led the De Agriculture to announce a timely farmers’ bulletins and circu= lars useful to the ,public. includes: “Frost and the Prevention ind Storage Houses,” “Pork on the Farm: Killing, Curing and Canning,” Storage,” ‘Operating a Home Heating Plant,” \“The Bedbug,” “Care of Mature) un officer—Life. “Diseases of Apples in Walk upstairs are you out of ten‘days and every element . This year the Z a skirt for every gets credit for it, , 000 new cotton were pes f one CHI SES It is claimed his imitations made by {merely studying the person himself list of The list | f Damage from It,” “Potato Storage YOUR DANGER SIGNAL your danger signal. It calls for a change in your food habits. You are ae! bat starchy (fat io, . Rat Shredded Wheat Biscuit with milk for better you feel. Itis a balanced ration’ Contains ish the human right proportion. Easy to digest because so thorough: Two Biscuits with hot milk and alittle cream makea satisfying pe Delicious with fruits. 126,000 Miles of Cloth for Cement Sacks To keep cement moving ae the mills to the many building jobs always under way, Cement manufacturers require an quantity of sacks. ‘ably more than 225,000,000 sacks. These Yepresent enough cotton cloth to make United States—126,000 miles of 30-inch fabric. Even a moderate sized mill which ships say 1,000,000 barrels a year must =! have 2,000,000 or so sacks, ‘When a customer returns a sack he able. The convenient returnable sack means that each plant has to have large departments’ where men and women sew, sort, clean and count sacks continu- ously. This work alone costs the industry nearly $1,250,000 a year. And gement manufacturers keep in- creasing their sack inventories so that . they can ship promptly, Last year they purchased a total of more than alone over 50,000,000 were needed; for sincreased supplies over 30,000,000, In addition over vate paper bags used representing 7, steadily eoving investment the portland cement - PORTLAND CEMENT ASSOCIATION 111 West Washington Sent / A National Pi apse ed antes Se ie nie Fowls”, “Lining and Loading Cars of Potatoes for protection from cold,” | “Sweet Potato Storage,” “Measuring and Marketing Farm Timber,” and “Harvesting and Storing Ice on the Farm.” No Wonder She Kicked LAWYER—I have succeeded in making a scttlement with your hus- band that is-eminently fair to both {of you. MRS. TRIPLEWED—Fair to both! T could have done that myself. What ‘do you think I hired you for?—Bos- ton Globe. The Skipper Knew WAITER—That man at the last table wants ‘1 drink for nothing. CAPTAIN—Well, tell him we'll ‘| have him-arrested for impersonate tothe top step- - breath’? That's see how — needed tonour- body,andinthe - ly cooked. industry has consider- woman and girl in the if it is usable or repair- , 100,000,- sacks, For replacements 000,000 pounds of conitainers causes a industry. CAGO =