i A els THE COLD SORE HE cold sore Is a small, pink growth on the human lip which is more painful to a sensitive, shrink- ing nature than upsetting the consom- me at a six o'clock dinner, It Is one of nature's efforts to humble pride, and is sometimes so successful that the victim will not appear at the mov- ing-picture show for a week. All medical authorities agree that the cause of the cold sore is harder to INE DISCOVERED THAT if THE PATIENT EATS Too MUCH HAT" Cory-ON-THE* COB THE INFLAMMATION will 88 AGGRAVATED | WoNDER FL DisCoveny, Poon Authorities agree that the cause of | the cold sore is harder to locate than the relation of the average sermon to the text. locate than the relation of the aver age sermon to the text. Some investi gators declare it is caused by the same germ which brings on the hot-riveted hay fever, while others say that it is due to eating the self-rising pancake, | This latter theory seems to be disprov- | en by the fact that thousands of peo- | ple eat layer after layer of pancakes | every morning in the year without in- curring a solitary blemish, while oth- an life kers abstemious and last n stricken = resembles a bius who live ers oatmeal crac milk oftentimes cold which young onion The are sore chooses its own time * cold sore Last Night's Dreams —What They Mean QUARRELING. OCTOR CORIAT says “Everybody D dreams and ridiculous it may ap. pear.” But with the prophetic quality of Says: “From a strictl such an interpr superficial full cognizance which stance regard to dreams he scientific standpoint ition would very that it did not take Into all the complex facts may produce a dream.” For in it proved what the the fut ture never ¥ v he in must be event "f existed iretold™ a in either the scious unconscions thought of the dreamer. In my experience I have yet failed to find one genuinely prophetic dream. Yet all the seientis study ef from standpoint is still in its Infancy one scientist gos far to gest that as our waking theughts fre- quently contain the germs of our fu ture ac wir dream thoughts | may have in them similar germs, Dr. Char.es Mackay, in his known “Extraordinary sions.” WH at *hoe helief In the quality of dreams but re. “It has subsistéd through all that normal or physical as wish r con or * ts agree that the scientific and sug. dreams a 8 50 as tions 8a « wells Deln- proj hetic marks the chi ges 1 the record of five to the the belief” wotld explain a with a friend as gz to life of some dormant idea regarding that friend lurking In the subconsclousness, Given the whole MOTHER’S COOK BOOK irs testimony universal fusion of The dream of quarreling scientists the springi for budding. It Is very particular to | put in an appearance the day before | some. voluptuous social event, and when worn with a decollete gown and | pink earnations makes a captivating color scheme, " Every once In a while we read in the newspapers of some high society wedding having to be post. poned on account of the groom's ab- sence, but in nearly all of these cases it will be found that the bride-elect has come down with a luminous cold sore which cannot be hidden behind a tulle velle with any degreé¢ of suc- It requires great fortitude and neck thrqugh the yoke, under such elr- There is no known cure for the cold sore except patience and hope. Some victims carry a camphor bottle and apply the contents in a stealthy man ner, while others go forth deflantly | into the world wearing a quarter sec | tion of black court-plaster. When a cold sore settles on the upper lip of man he can always circumvent it by growing a thick, branching mustache, but woman is denied this precious priv- | lege and Is obliged to suffer in si | lence, The cold sore is probably given so The man who ean show further inflation would result in| fn blow-out, (Copyright) Pioneers By GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS WwW" sweating AT you are and what you have you owe largely to the blood. efforts of Ploneers, Every started, represents Ploneering of some sort, Not all were Finishers, but all were Starters, If you want to be a Plonegr— Start Something. powers of Steam, He got Ideas from his Mother's stove kettle! Gravitation from throwing an into the alr, in the fleld of Science, Thus it has al- ways been. By Thinking, even YOU may -—— Start Something. Woolworth, the Pioneer in Five and Ten cent stores, received his Idea from a conversation In a small New York country store where he was at the time a Clerk. The idea was {ree to every- one—but Woolworth had the Nerve and Initiative to— . Start Something, Iden iunhle SOLE. to it! neering not Remember this: if an comes to you that you consider v you don’t work It ont, some one Is almost sure the for day, keep Be where at same time Glory the | known a 1 and by do so day instinct afraid to— receive Sa, % ye. one Start Something. 3 atcha bryin 6 j= , Ketch a bird LECH =a # ip E Jt i h ide , Bosra { eee bm mtr sm { 3 Jevver ‘hear staat 7X = that {eller devin "m r= { Grorgen thal he rieh = 13 ©by fandin tod wan urn busindss i 113% Ww Fil dream Freud would, doubtless, see it) tinged with neurosis, | What say the mystics? f quarreling with yom hey say that to dream of sweetheart means that you are going other better than ever. To quarrel with a friend means that your friendship Is secure fand that you will shortly enjoy yourself in his company, though some of the mystics i i love each If you quarrel with a stranger it Is an omen that you will soon make the acquaintance | of an undesirable person. Any dream | tion of estrangements and constancy in friendship. So quarrel all you wang to in dreamland and keep the peace in the waking world. (Copyright) a Emerald earth and azure sky, Busy bee and dragon fly, Bobolinks singing in the grass, Dalsies nodding in a mass, Fruit Cake Baked in Fireless Cooker, Use any preferred fruit cake; place in round pans or use the shallow cook. er kettle, Bake for two hours be tween two soapstone radiators, heated 20 minutes over an ordinary gas flame, Open the cooker the first 15 minutes to allow the first heat and steam to es. cape, thing ol the old This method can be used for weédding requires long slow cooking, Seasonable Dishes. berry shortcake will be found in the following : . Strawberry Dumpling. Put one pint of flour into a bowl; add to it half a, teaspoonful of ealt and a teaspoonful of baking powder; rub In carefully a tablespeonful of but- ter and add sufficient milk to moisten, Kupead lightly, wand roll out into a sheet about a sixteenth of an inch in thickness, Cut with a large round cut- ter, put three large berries in the cen o— | ter of each round; fold over the dough, rolling it carefully so that the opening is closed, stand in a greased baking pan, brush the top with milk and bake lin a quick oven for 15 minutes. Serve { with strawberry butter, made by beat. ling to a cream two tablespoonfuls of | butter and adding one cupful of pow- dered sugar gradually. Add one mash | ed berry, beat well; add another until {four good-sized berries are odd) { Dish and stand aside to harden. | (Copyright, 1820, Western Newspaper Union) . ’ But-now-the- kind «peas-I-raise Just Folks By EDGAR A. GUEST SINCE JESSIE DIED. a lot bef He, We understand never did seems that of things we And It each other Ma and I are meaning more. I don’t know bow to say it, but since little Jessie died We have learned that to be happy we must travel side by wide, share your joys and pleas but you never come to to You ean fires, know Just the real depth of loving till you've £0 8 common woe, We're past the hurt of fretting—we can tafk about it now, fever left ber brow So softly that we didn’t know we lost her, but instead watched beside her bed, Then the doctor, 1 remember, his head, as if to say ralsed Ma fainted dead away. Up to then I thought that money was the thing I ought to get never have a fret. But I saw that I had wasted preclous hours in seeking wealth, made a tidy fortune, couldn't buy her health, And 1 saw this truth much clearer than I'd ever seen before: That the rich man end the poor man have to let death through the door, I had but 1 We're not half go keen for money as one time we used to be I am thinking more. of mother and . + she's thinking more of me, Now we spend more time together, and I know we're meaning more To each other on life's Journey, than we've ever meant before, It was bard to understand it! Oh, the dreary nights we've cried! But we've found the depth of loving, since the day that Jessie died. (Convright by Edgar A. Guest) of gathered TOUSANDS anxjous citi 760 had streets of Ph H wns assermbid on it was Cress Knowp the that the Declarati Independence would be tal day. 8 the th of congress vote on of id b hour the Bell In in the ince of the Independ Hall piaced hi hin Liberts ad X toonle had been steeple, s little to give IRN clanging 100 times, it has ourth 31 at all in 1756. There couldn't be, for the the Declaration of a contihhuing operation pretty much the whole that Incidentall July of fact of July Celebrat reason that t! lasted year, tion was 2, Ins Moreover, it wins not July 4 was fixed upon And it she thee Leal Lie fey id Fou celebrate.” Philadelphia July To was celebration get tion of Independence with American for the independence, The American colonists began with the idea of securing the right guaranteed them ishmen by Magna Charta, the Bill of Rights, and their own charters. The idea of separation and independ- ence was an afterthought and an out- growth of the hostilities faced by the British Lexington and Concord. start Revolution achievement f 03 ¢ ns gens of Mecklenburg county, Carolina, in May, 1775, was one of the earliest manifest public opinion. In January of 1770, Thomas Paine's pamphlet “Common Sense” appeared and gave lhe move ment a tremendous impetus, June 7, 1778, Richard Henry Lee, under in- gtructions from Virginia, presented to the continental congress his famous resolution which reads: “Resolved, That these United Colo- | niles are and of right ought to be, free | and independent states; that they are | absolved from all allegiance {| British Crown, and that all political | connection between them and the | state of Great Britain is and ought to be totally dissolved; | “That it is expedient forthwith to {| take the most effectual medsures for | forming foreign alliances; “That a plan of confederation be | prepared and transmitted to the res. | pective colonies for their considera- | tion and opprobation.” Here, in fact, was the Declaration of independence in a nutshell. June 8, congress went unto a committee of whole to consider the resolution, For various reasons the delegates were not “Scientific” Legislators For lack of technical knowledge, leg islators are sometimes gulity of pass. ing measures that are soon found open to severe criticlsm and sometimes fall to accomplish the end which was in- tended and desired. To overcome this condition mm Australian doctor has come to the fore with a scientific first ald for legislators. He suggests that “royal commissiopers of sclence” be appointed in each house of the Aus Cele dellverer God solemnized ion to parade, with shows lis, bonfires, one end ¢ is from and {il this con this tine from he other, wertore,” n presented the I hen now inration committee, the docu ment known the Declarat of Independence. It was adopted the John EE afternoon of July 4. nt of the congress. affixed Thompson It then printed and sent off to the sev. eral instructed to prepare the doen Charles countersigned as secretin ry. was colonies. July 135, the clerk was mt for Properly engrossed, it was ail who present Others signed in ber and one member, Colonel McKean, { did not sign until 1781. men- | bers, for one reason or another, never did sign It, signatures, : signed by were members, Septem. Seven Pennsylvania, being the first colons | to receive its Declaration Inde pendence, was the first formally to make public the action of congress, | July 8 a general election day in Penns | | sylvanin, was chosen as the time. Al crowd of about 1.000 gathered near | the platform erected by the Philosoph- i ileal society seven years | from which Rittenhouse observed the | transit of Venus. Mounted upon this, { Colonel John Nixon read the doen | ment in his big volce and winsome | | Deborah Logan, leaning over the wall | of the Norris homestead, which was | { upon the present site of the customs | house, heard him quite plainly, Both she and Charles Biddle, writing of the scene In their diaries, make the com- ment that “few respectable persons | were present.” This was not remark. able, for Philadelphia's wealthy class | of that day was outright Tory In its gympathy and John Dickinson, Ed- | ward Biddle, Thomas Willing and the | others expressed its sentiments ac curately when they voted against the Lee resolution. After the reading the rrowd gave three huzzas and took down the king's | arms from the state house. The bell | of before i tralinn parliament, who should have the right to be heard at the bar of the house on any matter in which science plays a part. They would devote their whole time to this work and be paid such salaries as would attract men of the highest talents Roman Way With Peace Negotiators In the brave days of the early Ro man republic the consuls might in deed npegotinte and sign treaties of peace on their own responsibility, But being began the celel wharge of of the thirteen U £4 Bat alam » afternoon an elegan congress, to president council and speaker the gen- army Con- 4 mels of the of several town music taken twenty-sixth De- and heightened with some fine perform- joyous occasion, British deserters service of the Conti of Georgia, being up the filled up the intervals with feux de jole. “After dinner a number of toasts were drunk, breathing independ- ence and a genuine love of liberty and commemarating the memories of those patriots who gal- the ho were in nd of the of attended to the of drawn before door, all worthy brave and freedom and the righteous cause of their country. “Each toast was followed by a dis. of artillery and small arms plece of music by the Hessian band. The glorious Fourth July was reiterated three times, accompanied with triple discharges of in defense of charge and a suitable “Toward evening several troops of and corps of artillery and a brigade of North Carolina forces which grand army were drawn up In Sec ond street and reviewed by congress and the general officers, “The evening was closed with the ringing of bells and at night there wns a grand exhibition of fireworks, which began and concluded with thir teen rockets on the common, and the “Everything was conducted with the greatest order and decorum and the face of joy and gladness was uni versal, “Thus may the Fourth of July, that glorious and ever-nemorable day, be celebrated through America by the hosts of freedom from age to age till time shall be no more. Amen and amen,” #® if the senate and people failed to rate ify, the correct practice was to sur render the dbnsuls to the enemy. Thus, necording to Cicero (De Officils III, 30) Titus Veturius and Spurius Pos tumius were delivered up to the Sam. nites, with whom they had negotinted an unsatisfactory peace. Ang on a much later occasion Calos Manecinus, who had negotiated a peace treaty with the Numantizd whieh the sepate fafled to ratify, was on his own motion surrendered to the enemy ~New Re . public, :