Last Night's Dreams — What They Mean EATING. she HE question of eating is a very se- rious and unsettled one in Dream- and and about it the authorities dis- pute as acrimoniously as do those giv- en to the eating habit In the world of realities over who is responsible for the present high cost of living. According to some, to dream that you are eating In cempany with others, either at the family dinper-table or at a banquet, Is a sign that you will be successful in profitable undertakings and that your surroundings wifi be pleasant and cheerful. The opposing school warns you to beware of attend- ing a dream banquet as that signifies that secret enemies are plotting against you, recommending only a small family party at the table. To dream eating at all, some of the oracles, means that you are going to spend money foolishly, to which the other side retorts that every one does, sometimes, spend money foolish- ly but not on the banquets of Dream. land, which are with profit and success, Perhaps the reason for this disagreement of mystic au thorities ig that the old saying “What one man’s meat another man's poison” holds good in realm of shaduw as wel as out of it and that the phantom food of dream tables gives nourishment and strength some egos while it gives others psychic | indigestion. As the to agree on the eating subject the read- The ob- say of say atiended the is the 10 authorities refuse er must determine it for himself, next you dream of serve what happens and which school of mystics i8 right. As | to different articles of food the pessimists admit that it Is a good sign to dream of eating broiled meat. Po- tatoes are looked upon with favor but the ban is placed upon turnips, as they mean quarreling, and are de-| time eating then even salads pp ] Oh gee! Looky thera, Tom! Fl There's » couple o Hshin poles, BA ow they're oll »iggdd up, too! Gimn chrissms! Dend you wisht we 3id Wt have Go 4 fe { wheel Lis fost €m ,1 betcha! 1 wonder if we Tad rk Detter take'on down to the erick gn fry CWNETS — . » Re hank that's what wed cughts do, Tom? / 2 A — rebadly have fo 2 we A on a he shan hele fh the owners, Put -oughts be honest the owners have fo fre 7 PT do ym want ? red Pell, wed miss Schoc) Wn we Title a Theres too — hoch ond hy fake he a cen ’ nmi EES re nt Bh hse sd Tern {2 €he right — clared to be distinctly unwholesome, | Oysters, especially if raw, are the most highly recommended of dream foods, Jaten in any form they denote friend. 3 t i splendid SUCCeSseR, | if raw pessimists can nst | that they menn that vou are | to become a gourmand. Many | that to dream of being at a ban- | means that you will soon go on! or will change place of business, say aera agi quet a journey your resi These is un- dence or same people say that while it THE WATERMELON i HE watermelon is a pleasing and | harmless which is 20 per cent water and SU per cent seeds much on the order of picnic lemonade. Owing to the lack of alcohol In the | watermelon, fs much in favor with the clergy and can be shipped into a | dry without requiring the tomer that it is bought medicinal purposes only, beverage it state Cus. to swear for Watermelons grown largely 0 used to sustain and When 1» i ariel $18, nre 1 the South and are i inflate the i colored brother. Ww abble-Jointed hin itermeial greedy, cotton has pound for a around a thirty- and wrapped settled back SONOrous na look as if had o him and to him and engine. The ment which fire pump to shut off the forgoiten look of perfect content fastens itself upon the face of a Georgia darkey who has Te vr aio) ®1X Or eight seeds and enter two-story watermel- ons, all, is enough to cause a hardened dyspeptic to jump off the lake front. presence of the watermelon seed is a nding reproach, Watermelons intended ‘or ship-| ment are picked before they have had | time to on | surface, into the far North and bonght unsight and unseen by people hope for the | best, All such purchases are ususily | followed by disappointment and & re- Eco- ! rit res when get anywhere except ¥ the they are sent who sto | » 1 bellious uprising io the stomach, nomical housewives try d, the average hunts (Copyright) ) — grocer such a d lool. » a dream banquet 10 ent nt 1u your. elf, to see others eating foretells great If you married you shall wed the one | uccoess in oll your enterprises, ove and live happy ever after with dutiful children, (Copyright) = and menissssessin: § Prisms By EDGAR A. GUEST THE FRONT SEAT. little ride, but liked was i Ind wWiuys {io by the driver's side. front seat w in bob-sleigh, coach And I tH cushions the back. "wr The as the maneuvered void in We children used to scramble then to share the driver's sent, And long the pout I wore when I wus not that treat, Though times have changed old 1 still other io allowed and 1 confess 1 race and then get my favorite place, unin ETOWD-Ups now auto cushions flue and innu- iti the used to be, spme the stylish rigs, me, today =n id every growwap boy nungers for the seat in front es for its joy, by the driver's the charm it did glad, youthful days gone by when I was just a kid. sti and sera And side still riding holds in those « . “Fal IMALIEEE THIS gay, to is 10 fying erty and as returus bent on a bu 1 he question 3 $1 ¢ dic gince a storm, wiratterized by f low an onwe with a velocity of hour.” The tornado, on dust-whirl, with very violent path for many mil falls so lifted sure often them.” But they rag that and 1 open shall be very long ago, For tl here. the east thoug clones or made them or produc word i= the right ii *To thes Ho phenomen the early settlers did from distant eastern i fare aimost were f the told one « wonders of over and over visitors {0 items of news to papers that Heity,” 8S. D. F *The result has been the «YR fora, J ¥ BT ELLIS BEAN, IV JUTE, [505 [ol “> .. a A w Coat a “eyclone Mississippi En unusuasi 3 § ive indicate to simmer vi} 4 phirase to be According GO summer, rang wwican twister is not a CYCIon violent of extent, ily report a calm cloud, or, more From this descends INOves cloud storms, ‘it touches f= really more commonly is described as resem- phant's trunk or gigantic snake as it writhes and sways back and forth in its progress, Other observers have stated that it reminded them “T's 1 is a “funnel- funnel. it destructive ed. an ele ORITow The wind is too of a rope swinging back and forth from the clouds i} A ae sien i cloud the color is it Is ouds of large case of 0 except near the structures : ring dust and debris, the are Hin ithin ie r air w= round, where kf So » usually much darker.” upon a Kansas grew A still better simile, it w i seem, is that balloon, seudding ¥ fever whatesc: wind and drs BER on along the coming ns creating fanta 3 h these storms ho special s1} pub- meteorologist, it's keep 1. Ld it | Toyvryyiysy . ISELIN UNE FOUr eve, ope 1 Ago owing to some peculiar influence exerted by the Great Lakes, but this spring a real twister visited its suburbs to the northwest. as thought It is estimated by the weather experts that “for any specific area or farm of e the probability of being visited by a tornado is less than 1-16 of 1 per cent per century.” other part of the country, when, as a matter of oie square mil fact, there ig no reason to believe, in the light of they, are any more numerous here, area considered, than in any other states in this part of the country.” lightning, do not strike the same spot twice. Anyway, Kansas became ertheless it ie of record that Codell, Rooks co and the thing eventually became Kan., was hit three years (n succession on May The watermelon he been grown this country hundred years and thousands have heen eaten by our col- 18 in | | 1 hurry, as 1 used to do, to claim that | f+ GEORGE MATTHEW ADAMS favorite place, : + i And when a tonneau ! wear a I try to hide the my best to envy of the for a i avaliable data, seat is mine I | face, I feel, and do smile, in $+ that There is a popular feeling cyclones, like Nex. nty, solemn tl race of Success is won Just Second | KIN MOST ALWAYS TELL IF A WATERMELON'S RIPE - BUT, T' MAKE Sure OU YE HE like ang Second Wind witit » other race | : “the cycivne state such a on Wind. ix nothing more scandal But man MIND PLUGGIN' THIS ONE FOR ME lr) comme Jo LSA Taal = wr Quis rr | the Surface. lege professors and other shining in- tellects, but nobody has ever discov- ered a way to prevent it from running to seeds and clogging up the windpipe of the trustful Northerner. The wa- termelon would be served at polite so- the harrowing fear on the part of the hostess that some nervous mile guest will get a few seeds upside down In his neck ani have to be operated on with a pair of duckbill pliers. To a country which boasts the incubator baby and the noncorrosive banana the Wasabi Bd sh or less than reserve power responding and carrying one through to the end. le a Second Wind Performer. Some people never experience See | ond Wind—simply because they never put forth the necessary effort to en able them to draw on thelr reserve lung space. But the reserve is there just the same, i Be a Second Wind Performer, i The successful man goes through all the little processes of failure and dis | courngement and defeat—then he gets his Second Wind--pushes all the set. | backs aside, and carrving great mo- | mentum, he goes on and on, This Is always the story of the one who has | § i until the Second Wind is reached, i ee a Second Wind Performer, If you want to experience the de. | light and power that results from the | acquiring of your Second Wind you | have but to do more than you are told to do-—more than you have to do. Second Wind comes through Initiative, Enthusiasm and Determination, Be an Second Wind Performer, MOTHER'S COOK BOOK “When you taste a blueberry ple that you have just made and feel a thrill of pride at its delicious flavor, always re- berries.” a—- Rhubarb Conserve. five pounds of sugar, Take five Cut up the fruit, put through n ment grinder. Cook all —— Cherry Preserves, Take two pints of sugar, one small front gnaws at we all the while. 1 1 want to be where I can see the road | that les ahead, ! To watch the trees go flying by and | see the country spread i Before me as 1 spin along, for there | I miss the fear That seems to grip the soul of me | while riding In the rear. Today 1 fi oar gind to share drive three strive Pa.” youngsters, madly the “seat with And very plainly see, Maneuver in their artful ways to sit | iu front with me, were piled up In the rear. The child in all of us still longs to watch the engineer, And happler hearts we seem to own | when we're allowed to ride, No matter what the ear may be, close by the driver's side, (Copyright by Edgar A. Guést) dish and let stand overnight, In the morning seal in sterfle cans, cold. Grape Conserve, Take seven pounds of ripe granes. Pulp them, removing the seeds, then to the sking and seeds add the grated vind and strained juice of four oranges, ihe Juley of two lemons, boll together fifteen minutes, then add five pounds of sugar, one pound of seeded raisins, one pint of canned cherries drained from thelr juice and one-half pound of peean meats, and one cupful of wa. ter, Cook fifteen minutes then pour into glnsses or Jars, (Copyright, 1620, Western Newspaper Union.) the cyclone to its lair. gator is still among her hair, tionally long hair; that AS RRR wispe filled with sand, SN Ea a, AEE AA LE ATEER RE MRE AAAS of it was never seen again, SI RRR es tree. SAN RESIN WE 2 ¥ gator did pretty weil, SE RRR esting bit: a : as SEE ’ bs 25 at the same hour of the day. The crop of “cyclone stories” is very large every year. The plain truth is that almost anything that is told may as well be believed. There seems to be no limit to the fantastic vagaries of these twist. ers. For example, here's what an official weather bureau record says, in part: “The freakish occurrences that result from these storms will tax the credulity of a person who has never seen them. The often recited Instances of straws being blown with such violence that they are left sticking in the bark and the wood of a tree or post, have to be seen in order to be appre- clated. Chickens are sometimes stripped of their feathers and left alive, though more ortes they ure killed, “An instance has been related on credible au thority of a dresser being smashed to kindling and its mirror being carried some distance and set down against a fence without being cracked; also, of a window sash being blown from a railway de- pot, which was demolished, and laid down on an adjoining Inwn with a heavy iron scale weight on it without the glass being broken. “One of the raarkable features noted is the number of almost miraculous escapes” It is easy enough to understand that a house may be “exploded ;” the passing twister creates a partial vacuum and the house, if tightly closed, is blown to pieces by the pressure of the air inside ft. This vacuum also explains why feathers are pulled off chickens, since the quills contain air. But when wheat straws are driven into a green trees then it's time to wonder, of the It contains facts or tore In ht PP oy ds el gn Here's an irter- a A Persons # SE 45, 7, 5 v ¥ A, Va A, th NASR 5 Pi AtseadeataatIR RASA SY ., AFAR A WSS AAAS A RAS AION IN LN tA ed a Hen WN b, & United States Treasury Notes The words “Thesaur: Amer: Sep tent : Sigil,” on every treasury note ise sued by the government are abbrevi ated words for “Seal of the Treasury of North American.” The Revolution ary government of the United States was continued under the Constitution without any change In some depart ments. By an sct of the Continental Fither Youngest of Family, congress of September 28, 1778, the | Age Is trying to get back to youth treasury was organized with an au- | and It is resenting the semi-contempt- ditor, comptroller and treasurer, and | nous respect of the younger genera. the same officers still run the treas- | tion. There is one eminent artist in ury under the secretary and his as- | London who absolutely refuses to ad. sistants, and all paper money and | mit that he Is rny older than Hix bonds have the seal, not of the youngest child—and he has many chil. United States of America, but of dren. The boys and girls do not eal the treasury of North America. It hm “sir” or even “father.” was the United States of North Amer all call him “George” And “Gecrze” lea which made treaties with France remains the youngest and the most and Spain‘in 1778, Benjamin Franklin popular of the family. ~London Crop: acting as commissioner for Congress. cle,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers