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Show THE SUNDAY HERALD, SUNDAY, JUNE 13, 1924 : THE WAY YOU I Something to Think About ARE By DOUGLAS MALLOCH IB of the chain and Its THE link, quite as familiar to names bright school childien ai are the rt William and Mary, gets but scant old atory folk, so recognition from present-dathat frivolities with they occupied have no Inclination to look for the core in proverbs. chain." they will tell A chain Is anent Its you, so why philosophize weakest link or the carelessness of a blacksmith ! . A good many of us are Indisposed to search Into the reason and nature of things because It Involves a little real thinking. We are strong and grand and noble. We have great affairs to handle, so Thj bother with antiquated saws which are apt to scrape our fine sensibilities or out off a rotten bough or which would two of onr never do, because we should be former disgraced before our friends. We hear a great deal about the "missing link," but little is said regarding the "weakest link," which really concerns the truly noble men and women who are seeking to brighten the world and wake It better, by giving encouragement to the weaklings e of humanity and helping them to strong and It Is good to meet these Immune people and hear them talk, praising others but never complimenting They renllze the frailties tiat hold them back In their efforts to no good, but keep pressing forward, deaf to tattling tongues and doing the best they can. They know that somewhere In their y physical and moral make-uthere is a weak link likely at any moment to anap. But this knowledge does not deter them from doing their full duty. We, who doubt their sincerity, would be a sorry lot Indeed If these good souls were not among us. Without them our chain might break and our ship be lost, for we incline to obstinacy, snobbery disbelief, Irreverence, extravagance, looseness nf speech, selfishness, hate, disrespect for the aged and disregard of the commandments. Theirs Is a life of love and devotion, tilled with well doing and an abundance of faith. And ours, shame upon us. Is Just the opposite, held here by a chain of many weak links, liable to break at any hour and set us adrift upon a storming sea, uulighted by a single ray of hope! p by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) self-estee- you walk. That the world will Judge, whatever you claim. That the world will praise, world will blame. It's the way you do, not say. Not the way you spend, ou pay. It will like the least, or most, It's the way you work, you boast. or the the way you but the way will like th It's the way you sing, not the way you sigh. Not the way you whine, but the way you try. That will hold you down, or will help you far Not the way you seem, but the way you are! 2) vEt"i ryf7;7.'i a ..a, JW (Copyright he whispered complacently. side," The very next day, as It happened, John King brought home to dinner an old college friend who had become a theatrical manager. "Do you know a Mr. SmlleyT" asked the theater man. Mrs. King shuddered. "Smiley wants a comedy part In our new play. I was Interested to know he has your backing, Mrs. King," John's friend went on deferentially. "Mr. Smlley's part In my mind Is pure tragedy," broke in Mrs. King with emphasis. "Oh, In that case. Smiley wouldn't do," ended the other. And , ir.Iley never knew why his histrionic ambitions had been so suddenly snuffed out, as he pursued his habit of trying to be funny. HAVE YOU THIS HABIT? ' ( by MEN YOU MAY MARRY By E. R. PEYSER Has man like this proposed to you; Symptoms: Very bossy acts as if you were a machine; In fact, treats everyone thnt way. Rather stout, dresses quietly, doesn't stick at anything long, only has a Job for a few months at o time, thinks be knows more than liis superiors, gossips and gets in wrong all over the place. Talks in platitudes and thinks he Is clever because he always has a put remark. Thinks you can anchor him at one Job. IN FACT No dreadnaught anchor could Metropolitan Newspaper Service.) keep him "put." 0 Prescription for cock Gallons of stand-pa- t HOW HE FELT tails served at one time. ABOUT IT. Show him the boss Isn't a boss Tour wife's dog is gone, eh? x liecause he knows nothing. What reward are $ ABSORB THIS: you offering? The right platitude is no sub- Ten dollars to $ stitute for the right attitude. the man who A by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.! finds him and doesn't bring him back. for your table o he Young Lady Acro&s the Way illlll!!Ulllllllllil!i!li:illlillli:illll!li!lllllllllll!lllli;ili;iil'UI"l Hour und sour milk, one-ha- lf tenspoon-fu- l f of soda, teaspoonful of egg. two salt, one of sugar and three Mix of melted shortening. gem pans and drop Into This and bake In a moderate oven. amount makes six gems. one-hal- table-spoonfu-ls well-beate- n table-spoonfu- of food we serve to our depends largely upon the y. If tiu.re .,re children In the family, they npe(j j,i;,jni wholesome, food. They nlso should have f fnjit an", vppetuhieg. ,i,n.y "nring the warm weather a day with-ou- t Is advisable and all' rntts s,"'iild he (1((wn in qntity.willThe ovprfat are much better if go they 'm""'t a meal occasionally, letting digestive tract have a rest. i.utter, cream and rich foods should be voided hy those who are inclined 10 tt'-a- t ft One may use skim milk for this dish if there Is any reason to cut down on the fat for the family. Prepare the Place in a chicken ns for fricassee. huklng dish after it 1ms been rolled in seasoned flour and fried a delicate brown In butter. Cover with sweet milk and bake for several hours in a The milk will cook moderate oven. down and with the flour make a delicious gravy to serve with the chicken. if! )i fn,s r. one cupful much difference who Is prime minister of Kngland, as long as King George Is there to run things. r each of graham y maJmm TiiBim mm vn October 26, 1914, ths wonderful littlo, Jackie, first saw the light of day in the city of Los Angeles. Jackie's father was prominent in musical life. Jackie's first appearance on the stags was at the age of two, in a New York theater, where his dad was playing. At four Jackie was taken under the Jackie is wing of Charles Chaplin. loved the world over, as the star of "movie" stars. DON'T BAI.VK, Wkats in a Name?" r MILDRED MARSHALL (), 1921. weatern Newapaper union. j 25c Hatl ilfies, and brought ruin upon herself and her husband. Aelfwine (elf darling), daughter of Its source ELLA InIs an elfin name. earl of Southampton, was Knut's the the where elvea, Fairyland, first wife. A bishop of Lichfield was or white spirits, were supposed to be called Aelfwine, but he preferred to gifted shadowy beings given to Influ- be addressed as Aella. This Is the of mortals. lives the encing strangely of Ella, and It seems first appearance Ella means "elf's friend." curious that It should have been of a The elf king was called Elberlch. masculine name. His fairy kindred and their popularity Aella, as It was then spelled, named In England and Ireland, established for the execution of Rag' the the use of elf names early in history. nar sponsor and It was Aelie of Lodbrog. Everyone remembers Aelfglfu, the un- Delra whose name caused Gregory fortunate Elgiva, whose beauty was the Great to say that "Alleluja" should like the fairy gift which her name slg- be sung In those regions. Ella Is much used in this country, but her significance Is so little known, that her popularity must be attributed to harmony of sound. The opal Is Ella's tallsmanlc gem, but the fairy, which popular superstition declares Is Imprisoned within the stone, must be a good fairy, for Ella Is promised many friends, success and much" happiness. Friday Is her lucky day and 2 her lucky number. Extenuation Tom C. Spencer, Houston lumbet man, recently visited a sick Rotarlao In the hospital. In the next room wai a pntlent swathed In bandages. A visitor dropped into this room, and through the open door Mr. Spencei heard him exclaim: "But surely you weren't to hunt for a gns leak with a match !" "Well, you see," replied the patient weakly, "It said on the box they wers safety matches." Houston Post. simple-enoug- DONTiSTRY the DO JCnkvWATCH inlofn Siwn TEST Can Yon Hear? PUc watch to nf than draw arway. You should bear tick at ' 3b wchaa. Uoaa a nnciur an prevent your propar b earing by Wheeler Syndicate. Ine ) O John Kendrlck LEONARD EAR OIL f A LINE O' CHEER By both HuJ NateM and Daetf. Juat rub tt back of aara mad tnaert in eetnla. For Sale Everywhere. latmnmtmg dmmcrtptiv tfbder meat upon nqaest, A. O. LEONARD, loe. 70 Stb At. New York n lie, Bangs. CITY FLOWERS THERE may be flowers In the She Knew fields. But sometimes on the city by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) Friend You know, my dear, poverty treads close upon the heels of great and unexpected wealth. Mrs. Nuricli Ain't It the truth! Don't you know I can't get out of my car to go Into a shop without some beggar following me right to the door! Philadelphia Bulletin. street surge of weedy yields rare bloom I chance to meet-S- ome Reflections of a Bachelor Girl Btj HELEN . woman may be a goddess THE asame boy, a temptation to a married man and a menace to a bachelor. flower of childhood on the way ROWLAND wywwwwejejejapwieiejeaiir'ewej figure, and most of Ids really worthwhile illusions, but has shed most of his egoism, liii cynicism, his foolish dreams, and all his impossible expectations of life. Of pain, with eyes like violets. Whose laughter eases the dark day Of all its trials and regrets; Good Business Rules flower of womanhood that goes Down to the arid depths of care. And like some lovely human rose With beauty veils the sorrow there. Some is ripe for matrimony until has been broken at least J) by McClure newspaper Syndicate.) 1n China, a wife can be divorced In the first girl who threw him half a minute for talking too much. -- Oangel In disguise. Oil, Reno, where is thy sting! Grief Ahead. When science has made all the womEvery man believes that woman's Somehow, a srlrl In breeches only en ravishingly beautiful who will darn "sphere" is marriage ; but that a girl seems to look more girly! should never, never think about it, exa homely man's socks? Chicago News. (Copyright by Helen Rowland.) until beautiful In the abstract, cept some man mentions it to her. thing of the physical characteristics of True love says. "Love me or I sufthe girl's future husband can be difer!" Infatuation says, "Love me or vined by the shape and size of the I'll make YOU suffer!" cabbage stolen. In no case can she select the cabbage hut must take the Youth's idea of "sucepss" consists In first that comes to hand some say c covering the course (of life) with the pull It with her eyes shut. fewest possible strokes (of elTort). In Scotland the same superstition Is a common Hallowe'en custom, hanis the magic age at which Forty-fivded down from time immemoral, and a nmn tins Just begun to LIVE when H IRDINQ KINQ was glorified in poetry by Kotiert By lie still retain? all his tooth, some of Burns. Only In Scotland they do not his hair, t lie outlines of his youthful put the whole cabbage but only the CABBAGES AND LOVE stalk over the door am say that the amount of earth clinging to the root indicates the size of the forI ITOS kcJo " foy SO iui TN MANY parts of the country a ;irl tune the girl's husband will have. This who Is becoming anxious about tier superstition is inherited from our barprospects of matrimony goes out to a barous ancestors of northern Europe neighbor's' cabbage patch at nij;ht. to whom cabbage and kale were nearly steals a cabbage and places it over the what onions and garlic were to the house door. The man upon whom the Egyptians. Egyptians even deified the cabbage falls wbeu the door is opened onion and if the Teuton and the Celt Is the man she is destined to marry did not exactly deify the cabbage they It is held by most authorities that held it lu high respect as possessing with this charm can only be worked many mystic qualities and gave It a success upon Allhallowe'en and that place only a little lower than the grain In the midst of life we are In death, the girl should go through a graveyard god. Most appropriate vegetable to but it is often possible to postpone the on her way to steal the cabbage. In divine by. some sections It is believed that some Interment. (S by McClure Newapaper Sj ollcala.) No man his heart once; and over is au FLY KILLER at vonr daaiar or by EXPRKSS.Mepeid. Il.tl. HAROLD SOalEKS. 1W Da Kelt Ave.. Brooklyn, H.I. S ELLA t Flies! jmmmm ::ii;iiiiciui!iniiiramitJ!iiiiKiiiiiii'ffltffliDiii J airuplo, lift rmlj. 4niiKlu. ft lefcl, Row 11 Kill All our name; it's History; meaning; wkenca it vJaj derrOed; significance; your luck;? day and lucky jewel ( ft at THET SPRCaJ) DISEASB Pland anywtura. DAISY FLY KILLER attraete and kula all "tea. Nral. Ihh, ornamental, eonnniant ene .eheap.Mad 'tan. uunuiMf of mataL rean't iDill or tlo over aill not eoll or iniuni anything. Guaranteed. FACTS about A business man submits these "Four cardinal rules In business," which are good In any line of work : The square deal. Live up to your word. Discourage gossip and loyalty. Promote the most efficient nmn. A successful Knew His Limitations not to know how women's I profess hearts are wooed and won. To me they have always been matters of riddle and Irving. admiration. Washington I I ($) by McClure Newauaoer SyodlcaleJ euta. rashe. "Val'nc .. Petroleum J,V ir and hat- I cab-bag- e U m one-hal- Take Ml Amid the V Klr,.hv f.wwl liL-Fruit Cream. Mjitoex, should lie eaten sparingly. one egg white Into n bowl, Iireuk Ntr'.,'en(itiH foods are easily decom- - add f glass of Jelly and two Pnxt'd. pxpeeiaiiy during the warm of sugar; beat until tablespoonfuls from this stiff Jiither. The to stand. Serve In sherhet enough "composition are more or less polson-'- ! flaThe young lady across the way sayi cups topped with sweetened and anil rare should be used In she doesn't suppose it really makes serving vored whipped cream. I " For 'operation. months I had a tired, slt'epv feeling all day, and when night would come I would be bo nervous I couldn't stay in bed. Our druggist recommended the VegetableCompound to my husband and he bought four bottles. 1 have taken very one and I think 1 have a right to raise your medicine." Mrs. J. B. fIoixeman, 2214 . Marshal Street, Greenville, Texas. For fifty years Lydia E. Pinkham'd Vege table Compound has been used by women from girlhood through middla age. It is a dependable medicine for troubles common to women. Such symptoms as Mrs. Hoileman had are relieved by correcting the cause of the trouble, For sale by druggists everywhere. Superstitions Baked Chrcken in Milk. I"!! on Welt'lir audi suf-fre- It lnerciifii the Irritation, lit Ml'HHKLL KYB QheWhy d good-size- kind 'p'lK families "Words cannot Greenville, Texas. express how much pood Lydia E. Fink- I ham k vegetable Compound bas done forme. Every month I would have cramps and headache, ana I felt like I wits freez d ing to death. I in this way from the time I was a young girl, and all the doctors said was INFLAMED LIDS bride-to-b- mmrmmmmmmm variety Rich Man, Mother," He Said. palace Witch Teg knew she could not grant his wish. There wus one thing she could do, and that was to help him get money, and this she did by changing the big rocks around her mountain cave Into fat pigs which Yaco drove to the market and sold for gold. Soon the gold began to pile up In the corner of the cave, for Yaco's pigs were the finest In the market and brought the highest prices. "Soon I will be a rich man, mother," said laco one day, "and I shall live In a palace, and when you see me riding In my coach with four prancing horses you will be proud of your son." Witch Teg listened with downcast eyes, for she began to understand that this selfish son had no thought of her, but would leave her as soon as he was rich enough to satisfy his greed. If Yaco had seen his mother's eyes his answer to her question would perhaps have been more guarded, but he didn't and so when Witch Teg asked, "And how shall I be able to see so fine a person as you will be when you drive out In such style? You cannot drive up the side of the mountain." "Oh, you can sit at the foot of the mountain some day and I will drive past," replied the ungrateful Yaco. "You will not expect me to notice you, of course, for I could not have a witch for my mother, you know, and live In a palace." "No, no," nnswered the witch, "that would never do." But she did not Intend that her selfish son should leave her to live in a cave while he rode about In a beautiful conch ashamed to own her for hU mother. One morning when Yaco started for market the pigs he drove before him were the plumpest and finest he had ever driven down the mountain and Yaco thought of the gold he would bring back to add to his store. Yaco did not know that his mother. 'Soon I'll Be L hearts are more than coronets simple faith than Norman blood Tennyson. Vegetable Compound rwininiiiin BooL Itlot tier's Coo And liefore the sun was up and while the mountain was yet misty In the early morning, bad gone part way down the mountain and, hiretchlng out her bony arms and hands, had caused water to run over the rocks and form a brook. If be bud l.e would not have guessed the reason, but bis witch mother was making sure her son could not leave her. She knew that all charms are broken when the one ttjMin whom the spell Is cast fcteps Into running water. Ymco she bud formed from an ugly black rock that stood by her doorway, and now tdie would let hlui take bis form again. Slowly down the mountainside Witch Teg watched her son driving his pigs. For a minute Yuen stopped when he saw the water. Then, seeing It was not deep, he drove the pigs In. Before bis astonished eyes they resumed their former shae a heap of straes. Y'aco stopped In to touch the stones and Instantly he became one of them, only big, black and ugly Just the shape he had been when Witch Teg changed him Into the son of a witch. The village folks at the font of the mountain point out the black rock and call It the Witch's Son because It Is shaped like the head of a man, hut they do not know that once It was Yaco, the son of Witch Teg, who was ashamed of bis witch mother. by McClure Newapaper Syndloate.) 1 HoweVr It be. t seems to me Jis only noble to be good. who SCHOOL PAlS A f THE uuuuuixiiniuiijiuiiniiiiUiiuimauaiiiiiitiJifaiiuiiiiii:i th son of old Witch Teg. lived on the mountain side, wanted to be rich. lie did not want to live In a cave with his Witch Mother, though she did everything within the pow er of her magic arm to make hlui happy. It was not, however. In the power of Witch Teg to give gold to her boii, or to any one else. Stones she could change Into or mountains into rocks and trees, and It was whispered she had changed more than one Into the shape of a wild animal. So when her son asked for gold that he might become rich and live In a YAW. by McClure Newapaper Syndicate ) By Margaret Morison Sinn,., WITCH TEG'S SON ani-nml- s not the way Have You This Habit? lawn party became an occasion when Mrs. Alexander King appeared on the arm of her son, John. Impressive, that Is, to all but Mr. Smiley. Presently Mrs. King beard a stage whisper behind her: "Do you enjoy a Joke?" She turned to find Mr.' Smiley knocking out the rung of a camp stool so that anyone sitting down upon It would be precipitated to the ground. "It's for John," he explained. Now Mrs. King did not wish to put John In the position of being protected by his mother; so she said nothing though she kept her eye on the "Joke." Then someone came to speak to her, and she turned away. The next minute she heard a frightened cry. A distinguished French woman was visiting town at the time. And it was she, not John King, who bad fallen victim to Mr. Smlley's American humor. An evil fate seemed to pursue Mrs. About King after that lawn party. naif way through the winter a business friend of her husband died, and out of respect to him she went to the funeral. She was ushered to a pew well forward. As she sat waiting for the service to begin, she noticed that someone else had slipped In beside her. She looked up, and to her horror, there was Smiley; and a glance at his countenance made her realize that his habit of lmnter was upon him. When she knelt for the prayer, she found that two cushions had been slipped before her; she was offered a hymnal npside down ; and during the reading Smiley tried to show her caricatures of the mourners that he was drawing on the back of an old envelope. "We might as well see the funny Words Failed to Express Benefit Received from Lydia L Pinkh&m'a TT'S the way you live, not the way you tulk, Sot the way you preach, but the way hetu-selve- MR. SMILEY YOUNG GIRL 4 6y F. A. UMIKER THE WEAKEST LINK SUFFERED SINCE Jackie Coogan J CHESlOYoA J (Vaseline ' j ht BTv1 aj, Tr i" lIBoi-u- i vteaj 1 v "v" , itiMorr- - |