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Show , JUST HUMANS Vy Cent Carr g $t& O t0000 0 00F000C00000O eocH3WOddd0OCicwoddOfic; A LITTLE SONG Nancy Drcxel . 0OWddddiH,i:O0o00!:;5 By DOUGLAS 0O t kiuij; I sing. words or anything, t neer tie - ' - It Into rii e never pluxei! It any time t'n mu Mrt Instrument, ABOUT MOTHER OCEAN I yt ftili t.tcjl 1 Bu' I can A you how It I me t v vent heart little tune to sing like whippoorwills sunset hours from wooded bills And I tune tuner quite forgtt The suiii;. eltliouh I know It not on tuner tio.ir hir door But th.it I hem llui? song on e more. When sunset hours your footsteps I I lui' e Ui bring ;i little on t'Jurr M N I 8t1 one i 1 sing w I roMfqres," said luixe my friends " smiled to himself, tin world could I ' say lh.it Mother Ocean was ceitiiuly great. on see, there Is n lot to toe," mild Mother Oivan "Now. when then- - Is a lot to it person it means that that rson has diameter and bruins and nil t h it sort of thing. "But when': say that there Is n tot to m,. I men i not only stub things I i ean then Is a great deal of sl.e to tee "I'erlcps I shouldn't mix It In Inst Unit fashion But I'm not fussy uhont OW um too powerful to Speak. nond Ml y , I have had people traveling upon me and they haxe talked most yet Ip hot t At . Itroxxiile ""I Thai seemed ii f skies and dune Bc-t-i- IKI! nil g.eiit also have tnanx I Billie It came; dearer name, it M I Mot hoi tell, you how Vim iitlleil And-l- ) In 1- THINK ABOUT to your health, and If you have praise Clod and vnlue It next to a Look It good condolence Bf F. 'A. WALKER . for hxulth la the accord bleeaihg that mortals are capabla of-- n blessing that money cannot buy Isaac Walton. DAN CUPID IN DOUBT sorrow of a thousand THE secret homes Is that the Elaine of the tower does not prove to be capable of protecting the battlement And this falling, you will find, If you look Into the matter without prejudice, Is the root of s growing evil which hi spreading Its branches like a noxious tree In every part of the world. As the boughs cast their shadows where the sun ought to shine, there comes the alarming conviction that home life is losing Its cluirm; old-tim- e that the newly murried are turning t hoarding houses and hotels, afraid to accept sueh responsibilities as their fathers and mothers assumed with every evidence of gladness. This trend of the new generation Is the meaning of the hue and cry against landlords, extravagant rents, pressure of hard times, discontent and the ceaseless grinding of the mills lu the divorce courts. Dan Cupid, with his quiver of arrows, standing at the crossroads, hiding In gardens of roses, or waiting at splashing fountains where moonbeams silver the waters. Is not tle merry, saucy and confident little Imp that be was a generation ago. Ills lips hove lost their smiling curl and his chubby hands are a bit un steady as be bends his bow and lets fly an arrow. Aud oftener than not, unless his arrow be tipped with gold and studded with gems, be misses bis mark. In the olden days, the love that cared and tang at the twang of tlie bow, also busied Itself In building a nest of Its own, and the beautiful ladv of the tower could make the aides' bread and broil a steak ,to a turn, proud of her accomplishments. But those were the delectable days of the Darbys and tha Joans, when the lady stood unafraid on the battlement and helped her lord to win the fray. Love then was real and It lasted from the springtime of orange to the sere and yellow leaves of autumn, down to the anowa and the lost sigh of winter. And all through their lives. In the glorious years and In the somber, the married pairs held their Jroth and song from the Joy In their "hearts: Hand m hand whan our Ufa waa May. Hand in hand whan our hair la gray. And here Is the sentiment that keeps love delicate, sweet and beautiful through the eternal ages ! KB bv MaOuf Wawnar typdtmt t bios-som- e 10 SOf What Does Your Child Went to Know Qk - L AsiwrrW bauara boltuaxly, FOOD SUGGESTIONS I N MAN) homes the price of good milk keeps the poor mother from buying whut her children really need. Other foods during Infancy muy be slighted, but milk la necessary and should be their ronstunt food. Strong tfiines and fine teeth depend Umhi calcium; In combination with phoa phorus It Is their chief mlnerul element. Milk supplies these compounds Calcium la found In the outer coats of cereals, hence the value of whole wheat, oatmeal and corn In the menu. Another Invuluuhle food Is found In vegetables. They furnish iron In large proportions as well as other minerals and valuable vltumlnes. Pear Bavarian Craam. Drain the sirup from u can of of a package peat a. Soften one-thirh of gelati.i In cupful of cold water, then add to one cupful of heated pear Juice. Add the Juice of one lemon and one-thir- d of a cupful of sugar. Turn half of this mixture Into an oval mold of ope quart size, set on Ice to cblll. Set the rest of the mix ture to harden. Cut thin slices from the halved pears and line the mold. Do not put these In place until the Jelly becomes one-fourt- the remainder of the pears of sieve. Soften of gelatin In a little cold let It dissolve over bot water. Add the pear pulp, the Juice of a lemon and the grated rind, of a cupful of sugar, atlr over Ice water until set, then fold In one cupful of whipped cream. When stiff enough to hold Its shape finish filling the When serving unmold on a mold. platter and garnish with roses of whipped cream and cubes of Tut through a a package water and firm. one-thir- d one-thir- d bright-colore- Jelly. Quinces tn Casserole. core and fill cavities of quinces with sugar, add three tablespoonfuls of water for each qulnc. cover and bake until tender In s casserole. Serve with the sirup from the dish and cream and sugar. .Wash Peach Betty. Use the soft crumbs from the cen ter of a stale loaf. Ml three cupful cupfut of the crumbs with of melted butter. Put s layer of the crumbs Into a baking dish and place over them sliced peaches, sprinkling each layer with sugar; add a Mr of grated orange peel, or any spice preferred. Cover the dish while baking, then remove the cover to brown. one-bol- f to college to ge an education. Some of the best Informed and eduented men 1 know never got past grammar school. But If you really desire an education you cun, usually manage to get one or part of one. For there Is no such being as a cimpletely educated person. No person can cram Into one head knowledge of all the literatures, all the sciences and all the philosophies, or Into one body skill In all physical labors, sports and exercises. But the person who .Is anxious to acquire culture can generally succeed In acquiring It. The first thing to do Is to observe what goes on shout you. Knowledge Is not confined to books and never has been. You can pick up a great deal of It In everyday life. Especially If you are on the lookgo "I conaidcr of one i rest-time?- I Am Too I Powerful to Mind, Mother Nature.- - - Said beautifully. They have uaed fine wonts and they have talked really very gfandly. But that didn't bother me. I let them know tliut 1 was superior to that. Ro I have tossed and rocked nnd hsve told the Wave children to have aa rough u party aa they wished and then It wus more than the fine tnlkera could do to keep up such grand talk. "They Just didn't say anything, except: 'Oh, dear, but I feel poorly. And there la nothing very brainy about that. Well, us I was saying, I huve my friends nnd my enemies. My Wave children are nty family, ao I'm not awaking of them. They love met Just think what It means to have a mother who lets you out for It. Observe people unrt see how they act In different situations nnd under different conditions Then think about wlmt you haxe seen Then reud. And remember that SB hooks are not alike. Rome hooks teach us something. Others are Just about valueless for anything except killing time. t If ou art Interested In the will he hooks that try to select useful to you as well as Interesting. Your librarian will probably be glad to help you select the books you my J, c. - ttr - OOOtjHPOOgHMHOHWiOOOOOODOOPPgi n 41 41 For Meditation i 4 " Billie Brownie shook hi "They rame down and v Mother Ocean said. Tl me by the hour aa though see too much of me. They walked along b and they watched me I morning and at nlgbtfal moment they could. They had been aeeini nothing but the ocean foi yet when they were on Ii did not arouse that affer that 1 did. Oh, It waa most Inten how they loved Die. And now, Billie Brov think I'll tell you about a like me, or any of my time. 1 feel too happy to do too happy, Billie Brownie And Itlllle Brownie and Ro with a wave of his back to Brnwnleland and tell them about Mother Oc and great admirers. (Coprrt(bt) THE WHY of SUPERSTITIONS By H. Don't M. afraid to Indulge your own Inclinations. If your trend Is toward science you will probably want to spec Ilze lu scientific works. If you Isllke sciences there Is certainly no very strong reason for forcing FOR THE GOOSE It sudy them. salt; help me to sorrow, embodies Some people do not the superstition. like even to put aalt UMn another person's plate, considering It equivalent to wishing one's neighbor misfortune, aays Dyer. This auperatl lion hus received' considerable atten tlon from writers npon folklore and It la one which prevails widely, both In tills country and tn Europe. The moat plausible explanation given of Its origin la that It cornea from a cua-toof the ancients of using salt In sacrifices. Salt wua considered aa In corruptible and It waa sprinkled upon the head of the victim shout to be sacrificed, doubtless with the idea of making the sacrifice more acceptlble to the gods. Human ancrlfice. we must remember waa exceedingly prevalent among our forelieara upon this earth Therefore when we help our neigh bor at table to aalt we dedlcute bint as It were, to sacrifice which would be unpleasant for our neighbor. Th nfic h human sacrifice has long ceased, yet the significance of the act of helping to salt continues aa a pop ular superstition IB y MaCler NwePr IndlMti t e Some people can always find time for s little reading no matter how busy they are. You do not have to take a day off to read seriously Make your spore time pay you a few dividends In culture. Remember that because a hook In a classic It Is not necessarily dull and anreadaMe. It must have something to recommend IL A bad man mny acquire lasting fame but not a bad hook. Select the books that will teach you something If yon are Interested In learning. Rut however much you read, remember that all knowledge does not lie In books. A great scholar mny he densely ignorant of how to care for Ms body. Rooks reflect the lives of others. And they are not Infallible. They will help to educate you but don't depend on them alone. Let your own life educate you, too. k t ByVIoUBrotl brings people that believe MANY luck to a person to help him to aalt The old aaylng Help me to Too might as well read about the subjects In which you are Interested. Because If you attempt to force your education It will probably not progress very far. KB JC1NQ SALT AND SORROW . yourself to 1RVINQ . A MAN'LL In' him forgive a w up. If she c vlnce him its' because ah him. But when a man tells a afraid of her, even If ahe. lleve It. she knows It's appla sauce. The best laundress In the world couldn't make a livin' In a country where the people go around naked. by 67 men? The answer la amphatl-tally no. . Tbs world will undoubted ly be made better by tbe Invention el modern machinery. Terhaps ao bet- FOR THE GANDKR Ry refusln to loan him money you might lose a friend forever. But relations ain't that easy. man whose actions'll stand any searchlight don't have to be ac cartful about plcklo hie words. A No matter how careful Ita built, a bridge Is no use If U'a shorter than the stream. ter eolation can be brought forvarj than that suggested by Secretary Da- -via, who Insists that machinery strengthens tha Uvea of men, that men will be working at seventy yean with the aid ot machinery whs c-a- ga otherwise would be eet aside at forty flva or fifty, and that with every la machine should come some Invention of ways of using tbe man whose labor la saved. bor-aavln- g (A 1111. WaaUra NevapAp - Catos.) O : SUPERSTITIOUS Don't think Jnst because Jonah did It that you're gonna get anywhere lookin down in Ihe mouth I . fCopyrlaht.) , SUE '3 How It Started Bell STMtleats. Im.1 OMMMM By . Jean Newton ' OOOOOOOOOOOOCKKKKrOOOOOOOOO one-hal- GIVING A THRASHtNC" it SSS. WMtfS Nwpspt "O' Beliefs Concerning Self Tit Is said N Tha moon Is shining Just tha $am Up In the haavans bluo It's only that tha sun's rad flama'a Tha brighter xf tha I the irate .fat her-- to nun. It niuy-- be bis says Inxub-ordlna- le to us from. the Jexlconof.tbe, farm and ihe whpatfleJtL The reference la to the method of., beating .grain to I . that the old practice ot to chase throwing salt on a "dour" fire who In the chimney demons awey the Is still briskly fro burning It keep of the Scotprevalent In some parts A more general betish Highlands. lief la that salt will cure toothache. remedy that . was. by the way. In universal favor among the Jews of ancient Palestine. It would lie Interesting to know if this curative prop fiction. erty In salt is fact or 'LL give you a thrashing." going xut of It was forthe but oow. accepted style mula of a generation ago Anyway the word thrash Is atlll nagd aa a synonym Mr beating or whipping.' , The expression la figurative, coming well-beate- 1 I er ttaciui lot of talk about elimiThere an ye nWver-Incrossings," nating grade la no det there Felice, but lot to reduce the a done they hare -, number or reckless drivers.la a g , (cwrhiki) u arndiot.i Vhat Fires' Cost Fires on Anierlca'nvfurii. all preventable. cost SlfiO.OO0.aiO a ycur and tha lofs of 3,500 tariff Hies. Fann and Fireside. purify it o f waste which wus called "thrashing" from which we have the thrashing." modern It is al!y comprehensible that i tiject of the beating vylteir"' be en nbstrejojniua toy or n fodfcbf d.ksten'l of n stalk of wheat ahonld have been appra theY ro d"M''i IV but form prlntH) " hnp-pea- - .. J i , for-me- want L m , Nancy Drexal, whoa real name to Dorothy Kitchen, featured motion picture player, waa born In Naw York She made bar professional city. debut at eight In the comic opera ; Later eht The Royal Vagabond. , waa In Floradora." Shv eat winner btfo.York beauty entering motion pictures. Among pictures are prep and Pap and Rlhey he Cop. - Mist Drexel to a blonde, five feet, one Inch tall and weight 103 pounds. land "But, Billie Brownie, how do you think they spent their three-fourth- two.-tCopyrt- m I you might," said Billie Brownie, "ThAn." continued Mother Ocean, "1 must tell you of fhe men ,who arrived mne few nt h little seaport town days ago. They had been on a long, long ocean Journey. They had come from the Fur Bast. "And they hud arrived, at last, on one-hal- . WHAt PUT8 THE MOON OUT THE DAVTIMET , "I Brownie, 1 friends." "And well Filling tor Pumpkin Pie. f cupfuls of siftTo one and f tesspoonful ed pumpkin add each of salt, mace, one teMpoonful of lemon extract ginger, a few drops of or a little of the grated rind of lemon, . cupful of honey, two s eggs, one cupful each of swept cream end mflk. - 5 ? hope It doesnt get ton rough, But I ulso hope' It doesnt she said. too calm. get T dont rare to ho becalmed and sit out doing nothing on the water fqr hours lit a time. suppose not, the old uaxul gen tlenmu said, but do you know I have llxeil almost all of nty long life at sen and rTnTxe never hen bored wllh the sea for a moment? "Tve alw'itys loved It belter than anytlUug else In the world no mutter how It Is. tX'nw, that old gentleman, Billie GETTING AN EDUCATION r OU do not have to 4 tleman. John BUke By rf J he Just us rough ns ever you wish. Ila. ha, that a something! "Of rourse, some might not think so, hut I do! , "I want to tell you about my friends how, though. - "A little jtlrl was going sailing with She her brother In one of my bays was talking t an old, old navul gen- Uncommon Sense SOMETHING TO - little o I'.luMi I I'- 0 feO-- OO O 0 0 O O C atHSO CHCHCHMhU C-- llWH-- 1 I, I 1 y M ALLOC H SHE HAS HEARD THAT If you should accidentally mlscouR tha day of the month oh, feet, ahak i your gladdest charleston for it sign th.'.t you will receive a presen or legacy. 4iJb - H'Clur Nwipir ejmrtli-- 1 d mere perfume fiitKioi of Nen.'e wife. I jfTome ill Arabia produced t. a x.;r f f , . w. |