HR Invit Xo pa dE iba lf LL] Grand Rapids, Mich, the biggest cipal speaker at the One Hundredth aald. President Coolidge, T. J and Robert Irwin HORORCHOROROHON. By NELLIE WHOLESOME dessert which wiil be enjoyed by the children, is: Butterscotch Pudding. Aleit one cupfu! of hrown sugur and two tablespoonfuls of butter, ccok un til brown in an iron frying pan, using are not to burn. Pour over the mix ture two cupfuls of hot milk and sim mer until Meanwhile sonk a one-inch slice of bread in cetd wa ter until soft, and cram ble into hits. Pour the milk over the two heaten egg yolks, a bit of and a spoenful of vanilla, [Pour a buttered baking dish and bake pan of water for twenty-five Cover with a whites until stiff, tablespoonfuls of powdered Brown in a moderate oven. dissolved squeeze out bread, add snlt into ne minn es meringue. using the egg two niddding heaten |1 Hr Scalloped Saimon. Make an ordinary using two tablespoenfuls each of but ter and flour and one cupful of milk Flake and add to it one green penper and up rather or eight, ing to size or taste, Just ing add a few walnut with buttered crumbs and brown. white sauce one can of salmon finely gently. Cut shredded cook ripe olives coarsely—six accord hefore serv ments, cover Pineapple Rice. Cook one-half cupful of rice in two quarts boiling water until tender, but unbroken Drain, blanch with cold water. Cut two cupfuls of sliced pineapple into small pieces. Peat one cupful of heavy cream until stiff. Fold the cream and pineapple into the rice Serve in sherbet eups garnished with maraschino cherries, of Dumplings With Steak, Season well a steak which has been well browned in a hot frying pan on hoth sides. Cover with boiling wuter and drop on top of the meat any good A Bird «CO O WE can hear of some of the other birds in the world besides those we see, I'm going to tell you of still another Bird Talk they had In the zoo when they told each other who *hey were and some of their family ways. “1 think,” the Sandman continoed, “that it is nice to hear of different birds around different parts of the world just as it is nice to know of _ Agreed That They Did.” different people and of foreign lands and of interesting places. “Ro 1 will tell you of some more of the birds’ own storles about them. ‘pelves, “+; said the Grass Finch, ‘come from Australia. There | am a very popular cage bird. 1 am very, very small and dainty. “We do not mind If we have very small quarters, and we do not mind if the little birdlings share the smallest of quarters with us, “And the Birds All MAXWELL { CHOROROROROHCHO dumpling mixture, fuls en the steak Let cook for ten necording to size, Drop hiy teaspoon nnd rightly twelve minutes, oOver to Franconia Potatoes. 2 i fiir » ny - potatoes in holling ater for minutes, drain and place roast, basting often with starn Newspaper Union.) i FRR The Happy House By DOUGLAS MALLOCH H' Bappy any house could That a happy famiiy-— had of kindness when A house that the sort Whe with they spoke spoke, unk they twice hefore they Or, HB indness recall, Think spenk at all And what a Where all done Fo tell the pleasant tedday They heard and saw at work and play And hurts to happy house the one came home when day was things not come home their shout, With How happy any house would seem kind of house that mothers dream, Where each would de his proper part, and do it with a willing heart, And not expect just one or two To wait on them, like some folk tHlow happy nny house would grow if those within would make It so, Not envy others, but be giad For everything thelr own house had How happy any house could be— And. more than that, how ensily. (®. 1928. by Douglas Malloch.) tory for By MARTHA MARTIN something to complain about, The do. “1 mean by quarters the same as anyone would mean by speaking of their home. 1 do not mean money, of course you understand! “Well, | have a gray head and | have nn black throat and a black tail The rest of my feathers are a mix ture of tan and red and a dull yel low,’ “My name, said another bird, "is the Black-'heeked Love Bird. and | vomse from Bast Africa. | have soft black feathered cheeks. “We welcome the little hirds to the zoo. None of us are very sirong. but we keep pretty well “We have green feathers and red throats and tan heads and our beuka are like the beaks of paroquets, ols very small’ “9 am the Brush Bronze Wing Pt geen from Eastern Australia,’ said the next speaker at the meeting. “qq e¢ome from Eastern Australia, ax I've said, but you're hearing so nminy stories that | thought 1 would repent that so that you are doubly sure of remembering it “1 like tow, swampy underbrush kind of country, and 1 can fly quickly. “But | seldom do fly, | have gray- prown wings with touches of green snd orange. My breast is gray and slate blue in color, and 1 am supposed to be very pretty. 1 hope you all think so, too. “And the birds all agreed that they did. “q am the Java Sparrow,’ said the next one. ‘1 am pot very unusual, “+ lave white cheeks and a black head and a little of my throat Is hiack. too. “‘My beak Is pink and my body i= of gray slate color, and folks say I'w nice looking. “ “The little birdiings are born here by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) IE IS no i miragement of topher to that If he had Ameri in 140°, red iL a nol 34 disco iy few soneb ered would have very years thereafter After mer earned to sall the great Western continent have escaped notice for ath of gituntion was ably by a Briton North America, who said after he had the continent that the re thing would have been U padn't discovered America the Genoese was at least seek new land, and he made all the and nll the priva that are necessary to really explolis, of the important coverers in the world—the men have isolated disease germs, and found means to destroy them-—were not al ways lookin, for exactly what they found, ut they were looking for the same sort of thing—for micro-organisms of time, admir touring + Columbus expressed crossed markable Columbus jut ing a sacrifices suffered tions great dis who Some more in the zoo, too, for they think we have such a big, big home here’ “Dear me, dear me,’ said the Jack son Whydah bird, ‘1 was afraid thal there would pot be time for me (0 tell my story. “qq come from British East Africa | am black and 1 am very fat and puffed out and good-natured looking. “1 have brownish touches on my wings, and my tail is long and feath ery as a nice tail should be, and 18 curved beautifully. “It hangs down very far. I'm proud of the way my tail hangs down. i“ Well, | believe the meeting Is over, but even so, 1 will chirp, chirp, chirp.’ “And the Jackson Whydah chirped, chirped, chirped,” ended the Sandman (Copyright) 0 © (aprtgha. 90), by Tow Bell Spniomn, fou t “Some married women think they should be privileged to keep thelr maiden names,” says Reno Kitzl, and some husbands wish they bad, 4 i s 8 8 3 8 8 8 8 8 8b BE TEE I ARTF wy oe ge Be ge ge de So BL So ttt BLL Lt PETIT TT A A Eres Rss vv 0 fofoeforireeoteetmbrobetodeiedededebded I* YOU read the religious advertis ing you have perbaps come aeross a series of announcements with a heading, “The Origin of Man” Not al} religious advertising is in teresting, although ht sheuld be, but this particular series arouses cuiiosity and leads to thinking. The origin of man has becn # sub- ject of discussion and thought ever since the first man began to wonder “Where did | come from?” Science has delved deep Into the question, theologians have written libraries about it and the nonbeliever, in anything but chance, has smiled in u self-satisfied way at the wide diversios 61 those who would attrib ute and piace the real source of man thing is certain, if can be certain, man aid not He was not the resuly of ol The thirteen elements which are as sociated in the flesh und and muscles and tissues did not happen te fall together. And if they had by chanee come 10 gether it would secount for the brain. the intelligence and the power of reason which eharacterize the ho man being above the lower forms of fife. The book of tells us thot man was made in the image and like- ness of the Creator. Elsewhere in the Scriptures are told that God is Spirit, The associating of the ments would result in the that the creation of God was spiritunl material his origin, pinnacle of ull things History Is made up y of what he has done, Science is made up wholly of what he has discovered All law is the summarization of what the right ' eiation $onlualualesteclociusd Fala ewYy anything HAPPEN nce One hones not Genesis we wo slate stutement and not Whatever man is the apex, the existing only determined as hasis All believes he has of conduct. he does it rd consists of what he shall be Naor from matter so mac we cuane, the whence all, whether keystone the valley You only usk not ask wreh was quarried ip on the mountain By JOHN BLAKE kind or another, an all the eredit which they - * * here are now n continents discover, and onl a few more of | to be explored and fo tracts and on globe remain fed, Look ot that which a modern map of the region around left white, find are fined are very small, But discoverers will be at work for all time shall ahle und never be t on thelr achievements. we to set a imi in the department of human afflic tion. their work is only a little more than a century old, as far as scientific knowledge is concerned, and not until every tiny animated creature preys on the human or brute is discovered and circumvented, the work be complete. which gystem will of use It is within the memory most men Hving that a way tricity for the aid of men was covered. although Franklin learned that the lightnings were composed of it. and found a way to bring some of it to earth from the clouds and im prison It The day will probably come-—per haps within the next hundred years— when the forces of nature, developing water and wave power will supply all the heat we need, and it will no long er be needful to dig into the land for coal, We have learned to fly, but not yet to fly around the world in a continu: ous flight. That will come— perhaps sooner than we think, Some Columbus may now be on the track of the way to accomplish it The last discoverer of all will teach elec dis to be worthy te bear the burden A That Is the most tion regarding man. Has he and is he proving himself worthy of that power of dominion which, if he does pot believe was divinely upon him, he has ashmost nssumed? put important ques universally The question Is one which may be applied to mankind as a whole no more justly than each of us may ap ply it to himself, (© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) — Prmscrassnens Some Quacks By VIOLA BRCTHERS SHORE — SET m— FOR THE GOOSE— about N EVER He i thoughts. But them, your inmost never tell the truth about neither, An unbecoming hat lasts the est, Funny, ain't it, the more you iake away from nu hole the bigger il grows and the more you give of yourself, the richer you get Learnin’ will sever hurt you none Even lessons from a forger cant you no harm if you dont use em. FOR THE GANDER know on 5 {8 like he don’t be that na might bousehroke, A mun nothin not dumb Even boat don’t will, if a paper Yon can’t from a (Or from a roman that vy wg} wig EXPEC Wie hungry woman ain’ ary man Or from a hung 8 lity of after war and he | make un sHineRs, to on way and behave Intell nor | for he will liv. ige will be a thousand yea sou ever Know long irs can be the face a earth charted, surely the mind and the be plumbed, rea as it does fathomed ves he how to hat it (Copyright) discovered to be, ought ccs § Jomo Colorado’s Distinction < y 460 IR ih known as e the Unplon. Of ti of Alaska) height, and Washington 1. are, probably, at least five more of this altitude in which remain unnamed. It is of the in altitude. 350 peaks Sold above 120k) * td die of named peake the United States {exclusive of which exceed feet Colorado has in California 12, 14.0000 42, There peaks (Colorado esti that one-seventh state 10.000 feet at least feet, 220 13,000 mated stands above that It above feet, above contains 11.000 150 above 14,000 feet. feet and 47 Versatile Pumpkin “The pumpkin, or pompion,” we read in Peter's General History of Connec- ticut. 1781, “is one of the greatest blessings and held sacred in New Eng land. Of its meat {# made beer, bread, custards, sauce, molasses, vinegar and. on Thanksgiving days, pies, as a sub- stitute for what the blue laws brand as anti-Christian minced ples."—Bos. ton Transcript. “Stubby,” fled Cross, Cumming, surgeon received a sliver plate donated After a romp. in the snow there is nothing so delicious nor So g as MONARCH Cocoa and Teenie Weenie Peanut Butter sandwiches. 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Tablets re- Be Test That Works n dress and make up to make are as young as fool a slice of Tired and Achy Mornings? Too Often This Warns of Sluggish Kidneys. OS morning find you stiff, achy— “all worn out?” Bo you feel tired and drowsy—sufier nagging backache, headache and dizzy spells? Are the kidney secretions scanty and burning in passage? Too often this indicates sluggish kidneys and shouldn't be lected. oan's Pills, a stimulant diuretic; increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of waste impurities. Users everywhere endorse Doan's. Ask your neighbor! DOAN’ PILLS 60c A STIMULANT DIURETIC <& KIDNEYS Foster-Milburn Co. Pig Chem Buffalo KY. Stop Coughing The more you cough the worse you fee lungs become. Give them a chance tg heal. ¢ : it at your drug store. G. G. Green, Ine, Woodbury, N. J. 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Gariield Tea as Your mother)s Remedy