Mu). Charles M. Stedman, the youngest member, LF Tas iL Underwood is the oldest mieiiber of aged twenty-six (right), nn i * i N THE barnyard quite often there wus story telling. One of the bene would tell the little chicks stories of other chicks and of adventures they bad had and of good and bad deeds they had performed. Mother Turkey would tell her chit dren how they should act and would explain to them how mizerable, for example, little turkeys had been who had disobeyed their mothers and had let their feet get wet during the first weeks of their lives. Red Top the Rooster would boast of the disys when he had been a young rooster and tell of how every one had paid attention to him and bad listened, amazed and wonder-struck, at his crowing The pigs would grunt and squeal and tell of famous pigs in the fawily —pigs who bad been splendidly greedy and wonderful enters! There were stories to tell which would make the animals laugh and grin and at times the barnyard was tilled with the laughter of the barn yurd animals—such funny laughter as It is, Maybe you have heard 100, it at times? 8 BS SS Sn ts Eas se 8 8 8 2s tb A 0.1 TAIT pea agg ely E SHALL call him Mickey for the very good reason that that was his name. HIs mother called him that, his little sweetheart called him that, and te those two the name will always be sacred. He was a worthy namesake of him with the flaming sword. Mickey gave hig life for another When he might have saved himself he did not falter in doing what he thought to be his duty in saving the life of his playmate, The falling girder he might have watched from a standpoint of safety but if he had he would have seen the ohject of his boyish affection mangled and kitted. Rather than that be chose to risk his life for her safety and risking he lost It. for that be no monument Mickey. A little marker is all will tell where he Is buried Noe éulogies will be written to recite his virtues, no songs to sound his praise Yet Mickey evidenced and displayed that quality of which it 1s said, “great. er love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.” Mickey exhibited that highest type of courage, the courage which neituer fiears nor hopes for praise, which Is not buoyed up by applause oor Sup morted by the expectation. of reward Goethe. who wrote wonderfully of many things, sald “Courage and mod esty are the most unequivecal of vir There will oe te rth helt etd e Lincoln's Day OCOOOOOO By DOUGLAS M ALLOCH Pal pp pot pete .® N LINCOLN'S day men or I millions of them, With fine, old-fashion honer in their hearts. We read their records now, and lesrn to love them, As down the sges Lincoln's day de parts. many then found sanely, The true contentment and the wiser way, Yes, often wealth plainly, However much it made, in Lincoln's day. + a ae ¥ 3 Y $ } ¥ $ lived, For living simply, lived quietly and In Lincoln's day then millions sought the churches On Sunday morning seeking truth and light, f.aid bare their hearts, the that heaven searches, Asked God to judge them and to set them right. Oh. there were millions the the lowly, Who felt the need to ask. the need to pray, The need of gomething higher, some thing holy, To help them live their Hives in Lin coln’s day. hearts n. the high, Lincoln's day had many gentle mothers, manly Sons, good to see. “Now time moves on. Thank God, each time has others, Good men and women as could ever be. The noley few may live thelr lives in. slightly, May jest at God, and jazz the hours away, But there are many millions iiving rightly, Just as there were, Lincoln's day. (® by McClure Newspaper gyndieate.) wns J Yes, And and danghters my friends, In Nothing to Be Feared Geodesy is not i disease, It Is the name of the selenca that concerns it. self with measuring the earth, Dodod ot 8 8 8 8 bbb lel beled lee dneeelocl odd FT A TT A I AIT TTT TTT yyy vyv sv vy By F. A. WALKER tues for they are of the kind that hypocrisy cannot imitate” What is courage and why once in a great while do we do something truly courageous? Courage is of two types. The physi cal which braves bodily danger. The mental which rises above all opinion *hysical courage is shared alike by man and beast. The bulldog, the game cock. scores of varieties of both beast and bird will fight ngainst tremendous odds and yield only when nature ends their struggles. That Is courage with out logic, neither very lofty nor in spiring. Man alone of all creation may let courage and reason, each exercising its proper influence, determine action True courage knows nothing of fear. Its eyes are fixed wholly on the desired result, bridging whatever lies between, Ambition, courage and persistence those three are the greatest factors in a successful life. Ambition is worth without the other two. Courage is useless unless there Is something to which it may be definitely and ex pressiy applied. Persistence without ambition and courage is like a rall road ticket which has ne destination named upon it. It will take you some where but you do not know where, The kind of courage that Mickey had could both dare and do. He faced his duty, as duty seemed to him, and less (@ hy MoClure Newspaper Syndicate.) J ws Forests Need Leaves Are you tempted to rake up the leaves In the woodlot to burn or to use elsewhere? Remember that the leaf litter on the greund Is “bread and meat” to the growing timber, RedealenteaBualoatociestoiueieseslosetosfaslosortotoiontudoiulet rh rTaTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTITITTYT™Y 2.8.5 8 8 8 8 8 2 3 Tiny yy went through te the end withoat fal tering or fear. Somewhere, some there will be a temple erected to everyday heroes; men and women and boys and girls who in thelr eommon activities, their everyday ves, face and master with unflinching resolu tion the doties and tasks that they encounter. Somewhere among the tablets in that temple Mickey's name wil be in. scribed. You could not have a worthier ambition than to have yours beside It. (2) by McClure Newspaper BEyndicate.) wmf, Prose PWVAAAMAVIINY Table Etiquette OO» O0 time, perhaps By M. IRVING KING AAA AAAs ZAHRA T IS to be hoped that no one who reads these articles will be guilty of such a breach of table etiquette as to spin a knife around at tahle. Yet it anyone should so far forget himself ns to do such a thing let him be sure and spin the knife back again in a re direction or he Will have bad This superstition is one of which the essential and explanatory part has dropped out, in the of the centuries, The key to it is found in the folk. tore of some remote English districts where the superstition reads that if the knife is spun from right to left it must at once be spun backward from jeft to right. That is If it is spun “against the sun™ it must be spun back “with the sun”—in the direction of the movements of the hands of a clock, This makes the whole t! clear—the superstition is a remnant of sun-worship. The movement from left to right is in conformity with the apparent course of the sun and was called the “ceremenial circuit” Thus did the Egyptian priests move in procession, worshiping the sun-god Ra, when Memmon's statue sang to the rising day by the shores of the Nile. To reverse this sacred, cere monial elreuit would, of course, be a sacrilege sure to be punished by the offended sun-god, unless amends were quickly made by resuming the ordained sunwise order of movement. So the current superstition regarding knife twirling should run. If at table you should, through forgetfulness, twirl your knife from right to left be sure and twirl it bock again from left to right, or sunwise, or bad luck will get yon, (Eby McClure Newspaper Syndicate) verse luck. course ing By MARTHA MARTIN Of course, too, at times the anhmuls did all sorts of things which would never be forgotten and later on these actions would be described even sounger chicks and turkeys and pigs and ducks. Mrs. White Hen told when she was a bride one admired her wedding feathers said that they were just suitable, every one really should have white for a wedding. The parrot the back io of the days and how every and for in the porch enormous squeaked cage on and “All He Did Was to Call for His Doc. tor Friends.” screamed and yelled at times wilh merriment for he had lots to say for himself and lots to remember. The parrot had. at one time, helped to collect money for a hospital. The money had been needed badly aopdihe parrot had sat up on a balcony and had ehrieked: “We need money. The money for the hospital ters. Help the pita) with your money.” doctors need Help the doc und the doctors From Every one had looked up and had seen that the parrot was aking these cries and it was the parret who wus so successful in raising the funds that were needed That was a faver- ite story in the barnyard, and the par rot was very proud of that, Then the parrot had at escaped from the hospital thought It would be rather fun to go off adventuring. And one day he gmt sway and flew up te the branch of » near-by tree, but all he disk when there was to call for fends and they opened his cage door so that he was ahle to go back te safety and his own real home. And later on be had been ali 1, time he had one his doctor fr given te ALLS bo at XPOY HE nas —— RRWRXXWWVRNR the farmer who owned this barnyard Yes, the parrot was a splendid par rot to have around, so many adven tures had he had! So story telling and wonderful deeds tad their part in the life of the barn: yard. And this fife in the barnyard along so that every day it seemed that the animals were even happler than the duy before. Darh, the dog, was like a private watchman for them, and altogether the barnyard was as jolly and pleas unt a place as ever a group of baru yard animals could have. And the heard ron stories tell about went when that to barnyard animals had they their to act but that were being told al} about, pigs grunted, the rooster crowed, the hens cackled, the ducks quacked, and ald the others chatteved in thelr own peculiar way and said: “Weil, we're glad people know of us! After all we're a pretty line sel of animals ™ only and glories them the Copyright € Pm PU ey Oak: Quack - nN PACAP, x Be WEED 4 ¥ By Viola Brothers Shore HH HAT RE AHR ARRAN R ARIE FOR THE GOOSE—~ wen may be cnke eaters, but § CME \ what most women'd like to be is cake-eaters-and-havers thinks her Germano ain't so pitiful her platinum an that is platinum that 1 silver ne the one hinks ja l. after months sweetheart you and ix the er un and iiss a foun jones mot! ore more; FOR THE GANDER-— Non who the fiivver hel ANSwers one the wheel, if tier fee, the that's go hand on any. or a loan is wortl it quick. An apology ble if yon make ke tw you don't ine it need Once sou leave a8 sna self argpund your leg, to expeck nu to leave without bitin’ of another, The driver's got sot ideas and the traffic cop's got (Coprrizht) one FAA AAA AB Pel CEES ~~ BS ra > PLLRLLILLeSS SELLE OR 8 tasty dich to serve as a lunch FY the following will be found most appetizing: Sweetbreads and Mushroom Ramekins. Cook a pair of sweetbreads in acide tated water for fifteen minutes, then plunge into cold water and cut inte small pieces. To the measure of swweethreads add an equal weasure of chopped mushrooms. Add two tes spoonfuls of lemon juice, one half ten spoonful of sait, a pineb of nulmeg and a dnsh of pepper. Melt two tublespoonfuls of butter and cook a thin slice of onion finely chopped; when yellow add the sweetbread mix. ture and cook two minutes; now add one cupful of bechamel sauce, one chopped truffle and one-half eupful of cream. Fill the ramekin dishes, cover with buttered bread crumbs and bake until brown, Quick Coffee Cake. Break one egg into a cup and beat well: fil} the cup with milk, mix and sift the dry ingredients, cut in one tablespoonful of butter, using one and one-fourth cupfuls of flour and two and one-half teaspoonfuls of baking powder and three tablespoonfuls of supervision, sugar with salt Add flour mixture pan After cover with the spoonfuls of of butter and two flour. Mix until well in a quick oven. one-half teaspoonful of liquid slowly to the and spread in a shallos mixing and foliowing sugar, 1 the ng, Four table two tablespoon spread ul tablespoonfuls of blended. Bake Spinach, French Style, it fresh, cook only the which clings to it after washing until tender teturn to the heat, add four table spoonfuls of butter cooked with three tablespoonfuls of flour and two-thirds of a cupful of chicken stock. Season with a teaspoonful of powdered sugar, salt and pepper to taste, a grating of nutmeg, lemon rind. (Es 1928. Western Newspaper Unidn.) anes Prima PANINI NINOS NS NTN NANI TNS © HOW THE CUPBOARD 607 IT'S NAME By JEAN NEWTON WAI, a g “] re with water Cook NINN NNN, in the cupboard” we frequent: hear today when what chest” to “the sideboard” or closet.” which origin is now obsolete the term sur vives and Is frequently applied to its modern substitutes, “the dish language from the fact that the caps and plates of a household originally built over the meat dresser whose nse corresponded to our modern serving table, In antique pleces and reproduc. tions the literal cupboard can still ba seen, unenclosed, over the dresser, and so bearing iHttle resesmblance to the eloset arrangements which are frequently endowed with its name to. day. (Copyright) A Real Triumph ¥ One of the major viclories man ean achieve ig the triumph over trivialties. We let little, totally Insignificant in. cidents loom so large that they de stroy our peace of mind Such a habit denotes a very (imlted capacity for thinking and a small soul, FPN BL ed WOMEN, BUILD uP YOUR HEALTH! Roanoke, Va.—" There i nothing like Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrips or tion for weak women. I became all rur own din health, hac no Lappetite and coud not sleep. My nerv.s were so unstrung J could not lie still, My back acho, I Fad pains io my side lost in weight and had no strength left, 1 was just as misers' Vy able as 1 could be when I decided to take the ‘Presc ription.” It strengthened my I could eat and sleep and was soon well and strong. I went from 117 to 130 and never felt better.”"—Mrs. A. C. Hamilton, 506 Commonwealth Ave. N. E. All dealers. Send 10¢ for trial packags of tablets to Dr. Pierce's, Buffalo, N. Y. nerves, BUSINESS PLACES FOR BALE RESTAURANT city: sean 7% diving rms 8p rice $8.206. File EwriRy WTORE 30 yre.. males § and r. & (2 story dg. subrents 16.500. Pile 3-191 FURNITU RE Wor K—~REAL ESTATE ! city consists of 1 store 24x: e 2 fen; I work t ice for recpts §L40 and down, M2305 ' ; jie J-2320 LE- COLE. COMPANY New York, KN, VV. Mich, THE APPL 22 Unien Squares - - Bldg. - PHONOGRAPH £0 will make your oid sEraph equni the fost rament The Awntral Tone-arm."”” an RINE nK new invention and musical sensation, produces y supreme effect in Vol- Clear ness Fuliness a beauty of tune Dever sre possible Musicians “ritics pronounes It rjoue” Tone arm ex pure gold plated dds elegance 10 SPPeAra nce talking machine Unscrew old Tone arm aed replace with Astral “Serpentine Tone-arm”™ in three minutes. Does not it Portables. In eoroering this treasure today. state mame and mode! of your machine An Tend present. Agyuis wanted Address Awtral Corporation, Dept C. 1812 Chestout’ St Philadelphia, Peon “INSTANT HEAT BAGGY stays Best 12 he Hlelleves pain, warms body sbeolwtely safe and depentable Hurmless edoriess, cannc leak Heats without Fire. Het Water or Electricity. Only ounce WRIET DOCOREE TY $1.80 prepaid Repre fit en wanted Instawt Heat Bag Company, » North Dearborn SE, Chiengo. HOUSE DOING VERY PROY- together with building and 4 Oceah £41 Md. , owner mucrifice for $16,000 ind St, NWN. XY. AG ENTS LA L ETTU FOOT POWDER best “ profit free parle Pi RO DAU COMPANY. Ts Henry #Str NE ww YORK CITY. For Wounds and Sores Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh Money tuck for first bottle if wot suited. Al donbors. A Poor Job I think you're the me alive Husband—That’s hard on yourself, According to your mother, you bare been the making of me. BOARDING tables Business real onts wishon to retire Empire Brokers, eanest ‘Have Kidneys Examined By Your Doctor| | Take Salts to Wash Kidneys if Back Pains You or Bladder Bothers Flush your Kidneys by drinking a quart of water each day, also take salts occasionally, says a noted age thority, who teils us that too much rich food forms acids which almost paralyze the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They be- sluggish and weaken; then you may suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains in the back or sick beadache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated, tnd when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the channels often get sore and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or threé times during the night. Te kelp neutralize these irritating to help cleanse the kidneys come take a tablespeonful This famous salts is combined with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush to neutralize the acids in the system relieving bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpensive, canmet In- jure and makes a delightful efferves- Operating by electricity, a x portable Deep Chest Colds or a Raw Sore Throat END QUICKLY WHEN YOU USE Btubborm © he MORO u “oul and Colda t Shans quickly, may lead to a on ble = Bee Nome or Throat, such se Pullboss in Ears, Deafoess and Head Nolses or wt oH eo. Chest a by B pons yrnon ou can avold them Tale £5 BOE Bs itwo " and heals the A nParnod A : va lonpena up & Cough or Cold Wn the or Chest, 12 kills the germs, Then you’ know how soon a RIYe racking Cough wi Us Surpristag h ow promptly It soe up Prom Aged ha viis, and takes hold By Oonghe. La ne a ; heats thi sore tort Lritated A Suing of the POE slope Annoy tiekie n the throat X ob why thousands prefer © or Coda. in FE you Sve tric tried n Sor ai Cnroat witli, Bronenfns and a Oetartnal abn: LEE
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers