Just Folks By EDGAR A. GUEST » THE FISHING OUTFIT. You may talk of stylish raiment, You may boast your broadcloth fine, And the price you gave in payment May be treble that of mine. But there's one suit I'd nof trade you Though it's shabby and it's thin, &or the garb your tallor made yous That's the tattered, Mud-bespattered Suit that I go fishing in. There's no king in silks and laces And with jewels on his hreast With whom I would alter places. There's no man so richly dressed Or so like a fashion panel That his luxuries to win I would swap my shirt.of flannel A&d the rusty Frayed and dusty Suit that I go fishing In. "Tis an outfit meant.for pleasure, It is freedom’s raiment, It's a garb that I shall treasure Till my time of life Is through Though perhaps it looks the saddest Of all robes for mortal skin 1 am proudest and I'm gladdest In that easy Old and greasy Buit that I go fishing in. 100; THE FARM TRACTOR HE farm tractor Is an automobile which is minug the joy rider al tachment. Nobody sever tried to take a joy ride on the corrugated Iron seal of a modern farm tractor without hav- ing his spine eaved In farther than the entrance to the grand canyon of Arizona. * The mission of the farin tractor Is to jerk four 16-inch stirring plows over a cornfleld withoup showing any spavins, ringbones or other signs of wear and tear. For many years the American farmer was obliged to rely upon the obedient but work horse whenever he wanted to plow corn, and whenever the horse be- came indisposed or short of breath he had to be laid’ up for repairs and at $2 per tink. a horse would die by leaning up sult of eating something which was not intended for his stomach. This made farming almost as expensive ns The farm tractor will do the of six horses when it Is hitt evlinders. It not have does to (Copyright by Edgar A. Guest.) neither does it stop In the 4 Hoo hoo! Poy (one on! We 2 our ‘arbsdlis on ual al Hen! } \ “7, NAA i» goo, Ea, fet Ym id by. the Hingd? vr Tet Po Last Night's Dreams | IL —What They Mean DID YOU DREAM OF FALLING? HIS Us one of the standard or typ- ical the scientists have expended a vast amount of “gray matter.” They are] generally dreams of peculiar vivid- ness. Lucretius—35 B, C., brated Roman philosopher, in his work | on psychology speaks of this dream) «nd Cervantes in “Don Quixote” makes | the innkeeper’s daughter say that she has many times experienced this dream and awakened to find herself as weak and shaken as if she had reaily fallen. Some think that the classic myth of the fall of Icarus into the Iearian sea originated in a dream of this kind by some ancient Greek. Havelock Ellis is Inclined to at- tribute this dream to purely physical causes. He thinks it may be due to the fact that our respiratory action (breathing) becomes depressed and at the same time the outer nerves of our gkin are reduced to a state of Insensi- bility so that the skin becomes ab- normally Insensitive to the contact and pressure of the bed “and the sensation of falling Is necessarily aroused.” i* Freud, on the other hand, regards the dream of falling as purely psy- chological, It is a dream repeating fmpressions from childhood. “What uncle,” says he, "hag never played falling with a child by rocking it on his knee and then suddenly stretching out his leg, or by lifting It high and then pretending to withdraw the sup. port? Again all children have fallen occasionally and then been pleked up and fondled,” The mystics accept the dream as one of direct symbolism, If yon dream that you fall from a height and pick yourself up quickly you will at- tain to honor and riches. But If you stay where yon fell troubles and losses threaten you. To wake up before yon strike bottom, as many dreamers do, would appear te save the day for yon though this 1s not quite so fortunate as to dgeam that yon pick yourself up after the fall, (Copyright) minim {Jo msn. Being Right. Sufficient for the right 1s the con- Taming Them Down, A great many Interesting and quar rel some men are made dull and plac ia a happy marriage.—Life, un furrow on a hot day blue bottle fly with its rear hoof. will do any work there Is on the farm except washing dishes and making beds, although these attachments will probably he put on later, Owing Lo the difficuity of securing horses which will not die In an off. hand manner or give out at *he knees in the middle of the afternoon, the farm tractor is bound to be more popu- to remove a It Farm Except Washing Dishes i Making Beds. Iar than the candidate le des not to It run the Again. er for of the petulant hired therefore it he stay. (Copyright) the lot | sweetens man, is come to By OFORGE MATTHEW ADAMS i ful Incen ne Al The IRt tion, Jou onnnot Friend, that mak hat {rier esting: it is the force of Mystery ou cgnstant. iy nt it, and for which you sacrifice and tirelessly It § work, 8 the Mystery, all wrapped up In tion of nature-——it + Mystery that hangs ilke a it the very thought of Eternity it fascinating. It manifesta = makes the is of really It is the Insp Mystery that ig able to Immediately fire and warm efforts and make your attainable, If you w to recognize save wou. conscious life that fe wonderful. ration of your fondest ma en this Periodically for a moment % The two great Poles of life itself are by Mystery-—-from Birth about the only really unmys thing In life is this—that Suc cess and Honor and Happiness, surels | follow Work well performed. ough it bounded Death, i terlous COOK Yes, count me’'a lover of Earth With its tears or its mirth; Its wine that is bitter or bread that Is Woe lee With the pink apple trees and the brown honey bees. And the warm golden sands And its queer little, love-hallowed things That are sacred as archangels’ wings Or the stars that are seven! «Louise Bowman. Baked Mackerel, Take two medium-sized fish, split and remove heads. Put Into a but. tered dripping pan, dot with butter and pour over one and one-third cup fuls of rich milk. Bake twenty-five minutes in a hot oven. Good Cakes for the Family. A good fruit eake which may be Eept six months and a square of which may be iced when it is to be served Is a good economy. Ginger Drops. : Beat one egg: add one cupful of mo- Insses, one cupful of sugar, one cupful of sifted flour, and one-half cupful of melted shortening, Dissolve one and onehalf teaspoonfuls of soda In one o- MILITANT: MARY ~ SHED: DRESS selonsnans of being right. # “TOO! EF ivaHgh BOOK cupful of sour milk, add three and one half cupfuls of flour and a tablespoon- ful of ginger, When all the Ingredi- ents are added, add one tablespoon ful of molasses. Drop from a spoon onto a greased, floured dripping pan. Bake In a moderate oven. Mexican Potato Salad. Mix one tablespoonful of flour with one tablespoonful of melted butter or bacon fat, add™ one-half teaspoonful of salt, two teaspoonfuls of chill pow- der and one cupful of vinegar: cook until smooth, Cut potatoes into small dice, add finely chopped onjons to sea. son, then the dressing and serve. Panned Tomatoes. Select firm, even sized tomatoes, cut in halves, dip In flour and put cut side down in a pan in which has been melt. ed two tablespoonfuls of butter, Cook over a hot fire until brown; remove the tomntoes to a hot dish and mix In fn pan of sauce made of two tablespoon. fuls of flour, one cupful of milk and one teaspoonful of chill powder, with one-half teaspoonful of salt, Boil ten minutes and pour over the tomatoes. Bread Sticks. Remove the crusts from slices of stale bread, cut In strips five Inches | long and one-half inch wide. Roll In | melted butter and brown delicately In {the oven. Serve with salad or with cheese, In place of creckers. Escalloped Noodles, Prepare noodles—the home-made kind ave much better for this dish: put a layer of noodles In a baking dish, add a white sauce, using broth and milk, season well and cook until smooth, Put a layer of the snuce over the noodles, another layer of noodles nnd finish with buttered crumbs, Bake until the noodles are well done. Chick: en broth or val broth are especially good with this dish, Cnpvrinhii. 1020, Western Nowsnanes fatan ca airship. have it in charge for the That Have Gone Down in Great Lakes. Mra. Margarst Campbell Goodman Has Recovered Fortunes From Wrecks on Floors of Inland Clevelnns Goodmazr the wile Pewablc Nueeomd 0 ed, Mrs scope of tracts 1« Mra, Goodman in Mount a her school day ).. her i inter resent Came sted In r suite of wont dos exhibition deep diving in the diver under water fo remaining minutes, Treasure on Sea Bottom. This feat of vineced her that sx the sea for wi Ving floor of deep-sea di suring treasu Con. the ken res would be business, Remembering the Pewn Mrs uch discouragement, She wen Mich., and found Capt. John Per who had with his father, ghthouse In Thunder Bay, and watched the whip Souder, Later, Mrs, McKay, n McKay joss of hie, Good man, after m forme stood Goodman located George in of the Pew able, in the cap living Cleve “FATH ER OF VICTORY” wed Mrs. Ise rat g op ns of Logs. 1 salvagh y Salvage Cargo ¢ fni's next contre eserter 1 Erie In 18064, hag a8 release fror the owners and will begin = July 1. This schoo of walnut y the Bhe mer os fen in expects no the For ye or CHrgo, @Soodmar 2,000 POLES WEEKLY TO U. ¢ Hebrew Sheltering and Immigrant sg Branch Office Warsaw. Society Oper in Lives Ohio Youth Fears Firing Squad Because of Visit to GIVES UP AFTER TW YEARS Hides In Hills, Feeds on Herbs and Wild Berries and Such Scanty Food as His Wife Got ta Him, Chillicothe, O.—Stories of how a during the Civil war had been brought in a nearby village by a United marshal and shot, brought visions of a simi fate to Carl Amer- and impel almost firing lar than Sher rather Camp two Years a squad at int Amerine, drafted 0 the army, a wife and two-year old babe at home, in the quiet, picturesque hills. less than a thou- The bustling thou. sands at the camp, military restraint numbered and an impelling desire to see his wife and baby boy led him to quit eamp to see them without obtaining Fears Firing Squad. At home, his father, a tottering vet- sculptor, artist, Visions of the firing squad flashed through his mind. Kissing his Conditions in Europe Not Attrac- tive to Tourists. Poor Hotel Accommodations and Soarcity of Food Keep Ameri cans at Home. Washington.—Sponsors of “See America First” ideas will find consola- tion in the stories reaching the Unit- od States of conditions in Europe whieh tend to discourage “going abroad” this year. One of the big ob- stacles to tourists of foreign lands is the lack of transportation facilities. Throughout the continent rolling stock is at a premium and passenger serve ice is badly crippled. While conditions in France and Eng: and are not pleasant for the tourist, eastern and southern Poland and parts of Germany are even less attractive, Typhold fever and spotted fever have i Tourists to Europe this summer will prices at home, for the Europeans have boosted the prices of nearly ev- erything which is to be sold to Ameri. ean tourists, This is most noticeable in Germany, where the practice of dis. eriminating against Afoericans Is ram- pant. Much of the same discrimination existe In and France, al- though the go nts are doing ev erything to check it, For many months Europe has suf. fered from the effects of the unfavor- able rate of foreign exchange in en- deavoring to buy commodities in the United States, and the American tour Int Is now paying some of that defiett, The use of springs is done away with in a new cord operated device for opening and closing Hemi fe and bab) hill Am 1 he slept most of the forth or ng the when the Poy aris rug ged % of ws fein erine ot ind time, iy at night and at 14 re was little His only f as his wife colid ild berries and fields, could catch, lived is said one per- ve been defended y did he watch his hiding. place that he had been » except his wife and a wmnee of be he ar or iy Ro close] approaches to few ny: ago horities had abandoned for Amerine. Three weeks ago an attorney friend «of the family became interested impjored the wife to have her husband return and | give himself up. She steadfastly held that her husband would be shot if Leaptured and refused to have shim re turn. Clarence Stone of Adelphi managed ito get word to the youth last week {that his was not a case of desertion, {and there was no danger of a firing squad. Amerine cautiously left his | hiding place, and visited Stone's home, where they went over the situation. He agreed to give himself up. Amerine again went to Stone's home, His wife brought his uniform, which she had preserved for him and had neatly pressed for the occasion. With Stone and an attorney, Amerine went to Camp Sherman and surrendered to the adjutant. He made no comment except to express himself as being well pleased that "it is all over” Bor Well, He or the Hen Deserves a Medal Los Angeles~Edward Schaf. fer of Broadway, Venice, has one hen In his flock of eight that has distinguish herself. She i= a Plymouth 2 years old. During the past two weeks she has laid fourteen eggs, not one of which weighed less then six ounces nor measured less than eight and Tne inches around. Schaffer ‘ there is no doubt that it Tn been the same hen in each in- stance, for each egg bears a trademark which consists of two pronounced elevated rings around one end of the egg. Seve > More Power to the Tractor, % Danville, Ky.—What the tractor. haa « search and ord
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers