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Show $ !Jsi 5AU1Li ,tjt t h 1 3 I! I H.WK a little song 1 ring. hasn't words or anything. 1 never t de It Into Hr e, I never played It any time On any sort of Instrument. . , cculi 't tell I Put ou how It ABOUT MOTHER OCEAN 1 I g.eat i rent tires," said I Mother Ocean. I liave. tny friends and also have many enemies" T.Uie ltrownle smiled .to himself, and yet no one In the world could h Ip hut say that Mother Ocean was certainly great. I mi see, there la a lot to me,'' said Mother Ocean. "Now. when there U " let to h person It means that thut l"rson has character und bruins und ad that sort of thing. "Put when : suy that there Is a mt to me mean not only'such things I lean thete Is a great deal of size to M venL 1 , 1 tme never quite I force t 1 The! song, although I kuow It not You never near ' Our cottage door Put that 1 heat That song once more. When sunset hours your i me. shouldn't sny It In Just "Perhaps t Pnt fashion. Put I'm not fussy about 1 am too how speak. powerful to 1 footsteps timid "Why, 1 hnve hud people traveling upon me and they liave tulked most bring have 1 - a Oy little song Mi I sing 8adlrata.) Nrwir Our o- I IKK-al- l 1 can tell you how It came: I ou culled tne by a dearer name, And In i heart A little tune That seemed n part if skies and June Ih'Cun to sing like w hip poor wills At sunset hour from womlcd hills And By IS IT TOO LATE TO COME IN V" NO. COME IN AND MAKE YOURSELF AT HOME! THINK ABOUT Bj Look to your health,-- and If you have It praiae Qod and value it next to a good conaclence; for health la the Bee-e- F. A. WALKER nd 01 DAN CUPID IN DOUBT secret sorrow of a thousand homes Is that the Elaine of the tower does not prove to be capable of protecting the battlement And this failing, yon will find. If yon look Into the matter without prejudice, Is the root of a growing evil which Is spreading Its branches like s noxious tree lo 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 churm; that the newly murrled are turning t boarding houses and hotels, afraid lo accept such responsibilities as their fathers and mothers assumed with every evidence of gladuesa. t lemma that mortal art capablt a bleating that money cannot buy Isaac Walton. FOOD SUGGESTIONS THE old-tim- e This trend of the new generation Is the meaning of the hue and cry agalnst landlords, extravagant rents, pressure of hard times, discontent and the ceaseless grinding of the mitts In the divorce courts. Dan Cupid, with his quiver of standing at the crossroads, hiding in gardens of roses, or waiting at splashing fountains where moonbeams silver the waters, is not tlje merry, saucy and confident little Imp that be was a generation ago. Bis 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. And oftener than not, unless his arrow be tipped with gold and studded with gems, be misses his mark. la the olden days, the love that scared and sang at the twang of the bow, also buBled' Itself In building a nest of its own, end the beautiful ladv of the tower could make the airiest bread and broil a steak ,to a turn, proud of her accomplishments. But those were the delectable days of the Darbys snd the Joans, .when the lady stood unafraid on the battlement and helped her lord to win the ar-row- fray. , Love then waa real and It lasted from the springtime of orange blossoms to the sere and yellow leaves of autumn, down to tha anowa and the last sigh of winter. And all through their Uvea. In the glorious years and In the somber, the married palra held tbelr troth and sang from the Joy In their Ttearts: Hand in hand whan our lift waa May, Hand hand when ear hair la gray, And here Is the sentiment that keeps love delicate, tweet and besnti-fu- l through the eternal ages! b MeCHw HrwuaPt Smdkwtt : o MS What Does Your Child Went to Know I N MANY homes the price of good, milk keeps the poor mother from buying what her children reully 'need. Other foods during infancy may be slighted, but milk Is necessary and should be their constant food. Strong tlhnes and fine leeth deiend uo calcium; In combination with phosphorus It Is their chief mineral element. Milk supplies these compounds Calcium Is fouup In the outer eout of cereals, hence the value of whole wheal, oatmeal - AajiwfW Sy . In the Another tnvuluuhle food Is found tu vegetables. They furnish Iron In Urge proportions as well as other minerals und valuable yltamtnes. Pear Bavarian Cream. Drain the sirup from u can of of a package peuTJ. Soften of gelatl.i In cupful of cold water, then add to one cupful of heated pear juice. Add the Juice of one lemoir and of a cupful of sugar. Turn half of this mixture Into an oval mold of one quart size, set on Ice to chill. Set the rest of the mixture to harden. Cut thin slices from the halved pears and line the mold. Do not put these In place until the Jelly becomes firm. Put the remainder of the pears of through a sieve. Soften a package of gelatin In a little cold water and let It dissolve over hot water. Add the pear pulp, the Juice of a lemon and the grated rind, of a cupful of sugar, stir over Ice water until set, then fold In one cupful of whipped crekm. When stiff enough to bold Its shspe finish filling the When serving unmold on a mold. platter and garnish with roses of whipped cream snd cubes of one-thir- d h one-thir- d one-thir- d one-thir- d OC do Dot hnve to go to college to ge an education. Some of the best informed aud educated men I know never got past grammar school. Put If yon really desire an education you can, usually manage to get one or part of one. For there Is no such being as a cimpletely educated fill table-spoonful- s one-ha- lf I Am Toe Powerful to Mind," Said Mother Nature'." beautifully. have They words and they very gfandly. have fine used talked really But that didn't bother me. 1 let them know that I waa auperior to that So I hove tossed and rocked and have told the Wave children to have as rough a party aa they wished and then It was more than the fine talkers could do to keep up such grand talk. "They Just didnt any anything, except : Oh, dear, but I feel poorly.' Aud there ia nothing very brainy atxwt thnt Well, aa 1 waa aaylng, I have my friends and my enemies. My Wave children are niy family, so Im not speaking of them. They loye me! Just think what It means to have mother who lets you CTHE By H. Don't hi afraid to Indulge your own Inclinations. If yonr trend Is toward science yon will probably want to sprc'.llze In scientific wcffks. If yon lslike sciences there is certainly no very strong reason for forcing yourself to riudy them. Yon might as well read about the subjects la which yon ere Interested. Because If yon attempt to force your education It will probably not progress very far. In learning. - the daytime? , The moon la shining Just tbs sam Dp In the heaven's blue only that tha suns, red tamea Tha brighter of the two. , tOepyriabO labor-sgrln- 1 feel too happy to do that Much too happy, lllllle Brownie." And Itlllle Brownie understood. So with a wavs of his cap be went back to Brownleland and Fairyland to lt ' Many suggestions have been f to remedy .this eonfllthm. soma respects baa become eery i The problem has been partially t by tha opening up of new tin. c. automohlla - max employment toriea, tha electrical Industry, the C 5 Industry, building of new roads, c But. there have taken care of on' a j small per cent of those whose L ? has been dispensed with because c mechanical devices. Tbs mechanical miracle, which l j created tbs displacement of man bor, calls for a mors drastic and d nits solution than permitting tha na: ral course of events to take care t the problem. '. ... . . What la tha solution? Does prov resa demand that tha mechanic; miracle be set aside? Is tha solstice to be found in going back to the old order of things, when tt took 100 men to do what can now be accomplished by 67 men? Tbs answer Is emphatl cally na , Tbs world will undoubtedly be made better by the Invention cf modern machinery. Terhaps no t:V ter solution can be brought forward than that suggested by Secretary who Insists "that machinery strengthens tha lives of men, that mea will be working at seventy years ? age with the aid of machinery who ; otherwise would be set aside at forty-- ) fire or fifty, and that with every la-- ! machine should come some Invention of ways of using tbe man whose labor la saved. v tell them about Mother Ocean's friends and great admirers. (Coprrlfht) -- of .But when a man tells a woman he's afraid of her, even If she'd like to be Here It. she knows Its apple sauce. The beet laundress In tbs world couldn't make a livin' In a country where tbs people go sronnd naked. . D--v- ia, FOR THE QANDKR By refusin' to loan him money yon might lose a friend forever. But rela- tions tint that easy. mss whose actions'll stand any searchlight don't have to ha sc careful about pickin' hie words. A bor-aavln- 1ISL - Cepjrribt.t . , - - SUE that you're gome get anywhere lookin' down In the mouth, DsIml) ' WxMnjjmjptpe O-- SUPERSTITIOUS Don't think Just because Jonah did It, g (A matter bow carefnl It's built. a bridge le no use If ITs shorter than tbs stream. No -- - ; 4 ooooooxxvvcv(Kyyo Jean Newton I.L give yoa a thrashing says tha Irsta father to hla Insubordinate son. It may ha going out of style oow. but It was the accepted formula of a generation ago Anyway the word "thrash" Is still . used, as a synonym for beating- or whipping. Tli expression Is figurative, coming to ns frointhe lexicon of. the farm and the ahcatfleld. Tbq reference la to the method of beating grain to purify II of waste which was called thrashing front .which we have the . - Beliefs Concerning Sell WHAT PUT 8 THE MOON OUT IN miracle that enables one man O t better and more quickly what t : used to do. With tha lnventl i g machine t'--r every com Invention of ways of ualrj t man wboso labor la saved." Tbe Is that unless this la a:. pllshed new machinery does not is t long run save labor but really wi- I ) It" Is said that the old practice of chase throwing salt on a dour" fire to In the chimney who demons the away is still keep It from burning briskly In some parts of the Scotprevalent betish Highlands. A more general Toothache. will core lief Is that salt remedy that. was, by the sky. in universal faro? among the Jews of ancient Palestine. It would be InteIf this curative proprring tosuitknow or fiction. la fact erly In ttj ooooooooooooooooooeooooooo GIVING A "THRASHING" 'HcbU. nUntlJL Wwpapw ! c that 67 men, working c 3 shorter number of hours, can 8: .? 100 men did in 1809. Coe tng on this condition. Secretary I : r remarked: -- Every day aeea fertlon cf acme new meet' oounced time. By lf tvra A recent meeting of the Nal ATIndustrial conference It wex How It Started well-beste- IKS. W y MECHANICAL MIRACLE forgive a woman for people that believe it bring. AMAHLL up, If shs can MANY luck ony conhim to to three-fourth- . oooooo-B- LEONARD A. BARRETT FOR THF. GOOSE mie-fortnn- t For Meditation lMUle Brownie shook his head. "They came down and watched me," Mother Ocean Bald. "They watched me by the hour aa though they couldn't see too much of me. "They walked along by the beach and they watched ms In the early morning snd at nightfall and every moment they could. "They had been seeing practically nothing but tbe ocean for weeks, and yet when they were on land the land did not arouaa that affection In them that I did. "Oh, It was moat Interesting to see how they loved me. "And now, Billie Brownie, 1 don't think I'll tell you about any who dou't like me, or any of my enemies this vince him Its' because she's afraid him. si k. By Viola Brothers Short person help to Bait The old saying Help me to salt; help me to sorrow, embodies 8ome people do not the superstition. like even to pnt salt Uon another person's plate, considering It equivalent to wishing ones neighbor says Dyer. This superstl lion has received considerably attention from writers upon folklore sod tt Is ons which prevails widely, both In tills country and In Europe. The most plausible explanation given of Its origin Is that It comes from a cue tom of the ancients of using ealt In sacrifices. Salt wot ronaldered aa In corruptible snd It waa aprlnkled upon the head of the victim about to be sacrificed, doubtless with tbe Idee of making the sacrifice more acceptlble to the gods. Human snrrlflce. we must remember was exceedingly prevalent among our forebears upon this earth , Therefore when we help our neigh bor at table to salt we dedicate him as It were, to sacrifice which would for our neighbor. be unpleasant Thoncb .human sacrifice has long ceased, yet the significance of the act of helping to Mil continues as a pop olar superstition.' Ifi bf Matter HenMNr Crsgiaat hi A..im .Aiis A - , Vn SALT AND SORROW k ' Nancy Drexel, whoa real name le I -motion featured plo Dorothy Kitchen, turo player, wae born In New York J her professional She mad city. debut at eight In the comic opera - 1 "The Royal Vagabond., Later s"9 j ? W. was- was; In Floradora. " eenteet York beauty winner I motion , plcturae. Among entering latest plcturae art "Prap and Pt?" and -- Riley he Cop." Mia Drexel lx a blonds, five feet, on Inch tall and weighs 103 pounds. " IKVINQ KINQ r. '""T SUPERSTITIONS waut Filling for Pumpkin Plo. cupfuls of siftTo ouo and f add teaajmonfnl ed pumpkin each of salt. mace, one teaspoonful of extract ginger, a few drops of lemon lemon, of rind or m little of the grated two honey, s .cupful... jpf s eggs, one enpful each of sweet cream snd milk. - r gen-tlotnu- WHY of one-hal- fcAUAKA BOURJAILY r for-m- But however much yon read, remember that all knowledge does not lie In hooka A great scholar may be to care for densely Ignorant of how " bis body. Books reflect the tires of others. And they are not Infallible. They wlU help to educate yoo but don't depend on them alone. Let yonr own life educate yon, too. (A b the Bll Sraaieat. Im.1 O Quinces an Casserole. "I rest-time?- labors, sports and exercises. Cut the person who Is anxious to acquire culture can generally sncceed In acquiring It The first thing to do Is to observe what goes on shout yon. Knowledge Is not confined to books and never has been. Ton can pick np a great deal of it In everyday life. Especially if you are on the lookout for It. Observe people und see how they net In different situations and under different conditions. Then think about what you have awn. Then read. And remember that aII books are not alike. Some books teach ns something. Others tre just about valueless for anything except killing time. If ou are Interested In the try to select hooks that will be oseful to you as well as Interesting Y'our librarian will probably be glad to help you select tbs book you Peach Betty. Use the soft crumbe from the cen ter of a stale loaf. Mix three cupful rupful of the " crumbs wltb of melted butter. Put a layer of the crumbs Into baking dish sod place siloed over them peaches, sprinkling each layer with sugar; add a hit of grated range peeL or any spice preferred. Cover the dish while baking, then remove The cover to brown. Jelly. ! "But, Billie Brownie, how do yon think they spent their holiday and No verson 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 cavities of Wash' core and quinces with sugar, add three of water for each qulnc. cover snd bake until tender In a casserole. Serve with the sirup from the dish and cream r.d sugar. bright-colore- hope It doesn't 'get too rough, But I also hope It doesn't get too calm. 'I don't cure to he h'onlroe and sit out doing nothing on the water for hours at a time. aupMse not, the old naval said, hut do you know 1 have lived almost all of .my long life at tea and I huve never been bored wllh the sea for a moment? I've alwuya loved tt better than anything else In the world no matter how It Is. 'ow, thnt old gentlemun, Billie Brownie, I consider one of nty "1 she said. land. person. Some people can always find time for s' little reeding no matter .bow busy they are. Ton do not have to take a day off to read seriously. Make your spare time pay you a few dividends la culture. Remember that because a hook U s classic It Is not necessarily dull and unreadable. It must have something to recommend It A bad man may acquire lasting fame hut not a bad book. Select the books that will teach you something if you are Interested one-ha- ; ; com and menu. one-fourt- John Blaka GETTING AN EDUCATION SOMETHING TO tleman. friends, "And well you. might. shld Billie Brownie. "ThPh, continued Mother Ocean, I must tell Jou of tbe men nlio arrived at a little seaport town some few days ago. They had been on a long, long ocean Journey, They had coma from the Far East. And they had arrived, at last on Uncommon Sense -- he Just ns rough' as ever you, slsh. 11a, hu. that's something "Of course, some tnlghl not thlhk so, hut I do! "1 want to tell you about my friends now, though. "A little girl was going sailing with her brother In one of my hays. She was talking to hu old, old naval gen- modern Nc-i- mm O Srsdloat - - l "There Is a lot of talk about elimiV7Kat Fires Coat nating grade crossings." says Flivver-tnFlrraToa American farms, all tlierfc la no de "but Felice, flag j cost $15Q,000,(K)0 a year ami lot a reduce done to the have they tba nt 3,500 farm Ihci. Farm Vs Cumber of, reckless drivers." and Fireside. ; (CserrlsbL) g If you should accidentally mi; the day of th month oh, fe:t, t your gladdest charleston for it a sign-thyou will receive a y ;tr or legacy. it vniti by rf Home uwn "threshing." it Is eadly comprehensible , Sr MaCluM CHE HAS HEARD THAT te.the object of Lb besting rn nbstreiert.ua farmhand Instead of a stalk to-b- e the word should have been printed to dcMt.'r form - tbjcnier.t.' y ht u tuat hnp-peta-- d rt hoy or f wheat appr "Jue Ntw-na- -- - 3 f Nvri.'e i X',ru-ii- l J all Arabia produced if. L I- a f |