te toffee efeleieleini Toriedeefeslefofofonfecfedufufofcfofesie ering fobeteieh AVE you ever thought to your self: “What Is the mast beau- titful thing of all the wonders that God created?” Not the sea, cruel. Not the sky. It is too vast for our eonception and too unfathomable, ~ Not a flower. While it is wondrous iy beautiful It has no soul. The most wonderful thing in the world Is the human being, and of these the more beautiful is woman. One of the most worthy tributes to woman ever written was from the pen of Lafeadio Hearn—a -writer whose grace of expression and splendid style entitles him to a much greater place among writers of Engli8h than he is popularly assigned. In his “Out of the East" is an essay on “The Eternal Feminine” and in {t is this: “Whatsoever has once been likened to woman by art or thought has heen strangely informed and transformed by that momentary symbolism. What. ever delights us Imagination has fem- fnized—the rose of dawn—the vast caress of day—night and the lights of heaven—even the undulations of the eternal hills. And flowers, the flush of fruit, and all things fragrant, fair and gracious; the genial seasons with their voices; the laughter of streams, and whisper of leaves, and rippling, ot song within the shadows: all sights, or sounds, or sensations that can touch our love of loveliness, of delicacy, of sweetness, of gentleness, make for us vague drearhs of woman,’ It is too turbulent and One of France's most famous gol Jants, said: “There are no ugly wom- en-—there are only women who do not Know how to look pretty.” Real beauty is in the mind and its outward expression and what goes on in the mind has an extraordinary ef- fect on the body. Could you conceive of a loving moth. GIRLIGAG® Ar “Some bankers begin their careers as runners,” says Cynical Sue, “and some end them that way.” (Copyright) Mississippi’s Secession Mississippi, in state convention, adopted a secession ordinance declar- ing the state's aliegiance to the United States of America at an end on Jan wary 0. 1861, following the lead of S|cuth Carolina, which was the first state to secede. BPPVIVIPPIPPIIIVIVPIIP The “luck” that 1 believe in Is that which comes with work: And no one ever finds it Who's content to wish and shirk. The men the world calls “lucky” Will tell you every one, That success comes.not with wishing Bu! by hard work, bravely done, -Eben Rexford, PUT ON A FEW FRILLS It COSTS thought, rather than very much money to send foods to the table with the attractive garnishes that make hotel meals so delightful for the average “home folks,” There is really no good reason why even a fairly busy housewife should pot treat her “home folks” to prettily gar pished dishes, Dietitians, psychologistyy péurolo- gists, all agree that food does more good, Is more readily digested and as similated, If eaten in pleasant sur. roundings, In a pleasant mood, and if it is appealing to the eye as well as to the palate. The garnish, in other words, 1s as much a matter of good digestion as of style. The garnish should be edible as well as pretty, whenever possible, and most garnishes, with the exception of the frilled paper tips placed on chops and crown roasts, are good ent. Asparagus Mousse. Cook one bunch of finely cut as paragus with some of the threedinch tips removed, and cook separately one cupful of medium white sauce, one tablespoonful of gelatin, one-eighth. teaspoonful of grated nutmeg, one fourth teaspoonful of paprika, one eupful of stiffly whipped cream. Soak the gelatin five minutes in two table spoonfuls of cold waterr.add to the hot diced asparagus and the white sauce, blend veil, add seasonings, fold in the whipped eream and pour into a well.wetted mold and let chill sev. eral hours. Unmold on lettuce, gar. nish with asparagus points dipped in French dressing, Serve with mayon- paise Increase the amount of gelatin er who would not be beautiful? Could you think of a woman with a baby cuddled In her arms, even though that mother came from the slums and wore the hablliments of direst poverty, as being other than a supreme expres. sion of beauty? Madame de Stael, one of the most briilinnt women France ever produced, wits noticeably unattractive In face and figure, but of her it was said “She talks herself into a beauty.” Cultivate your beauty of mind and thought. Spend more for books than for rouge and lip sticks. Be sure that ne outward comeliness can atone for an evident lack of intelligence. Peo- ple will remember what you said and how you said it long after they have forgotten how you looked and what you wore. If you are a woman keep In mind always that you are In reality the most amd of God's creations snd live up to the reputation. (@ by MeClurs Newspaper Syudicaje.) The cause of the riot was Back” and “Self Rule for India” of the Simon investigating conn w— control, Go the mob ost “Simon pe ice The cried, HERE used to be a bellet preva- lent throughout the world that the eyesight of savages wus far su. perior to that of clvilized men. Pioneers In new countries noticed that their native guldes could look into a tree, and see there a bird which was invisible to the white They saw them look at the hori- zon, shading their eyes, and then an- nounce tht a deer stood there white man could see no deer He put the Indian's discovery of it down to his miraculous eyesight. It is that the mun. The probable white man SPEPIIPLIDEIR 2 SQUAWKS HWW By Viola Brothers Shore FOR THE GOOSE— ¢ OU can't learn some ‘'m from ev- erybody you talk to. But you can from everybody that talks tb you. The greatest misfortune for a wom- an ain't to stop bein’ loved, “ft's to stop lovin’, Doin’ more favors for people that proved they was ungrateful Is awful noble; but & terrible waste of time. FOR THE GANDER-— The worst swearin' a tax! driver can do to you don't hurt as much as the littlest bump. If you must use flowers of speech, be sure they're perfectly fresh, If you let on as how you're very good, a lotta people doubts you. But if you let on as haw you're very bad. everybody doubts yon. {Copyricht)y if made In hot weather or molded in a large mold. Chestnuts and Ham. Alternate thinly sliced cooked ham and mashed chestnuts In a baking dish, season with sage or marjoram and bits of putter. Finish with the chestnuts on top. Bake until brown. Mashed chesinuls as a vegetable are delicious; serve with sausage, Chestnuts with apples make a good combination for salad. The nuts may be either cooked or simply blanched and sliced (Es 1928, Western Newspaper Union) By JOHN BLAKE could see the bird as well as did the savage. In fact after attention he d He also, a deer, Only he did not know {it deer, and the savage did For long experience had taught the savage what a deer looked like at a great distanee, He could not possibly mistake It for a bowlder or a bummock of gross, as the white man could, The while man had never seen 8 deer at a distance, Or he had never taken to look into a tree long e intently enough it was called to nis td see it, without doubt, saw It was Was = the trouble wugh and to Sietin a a bird from the foliage among which it was hidden by its protective coloring » - * - * * - Much the same thing Is observed passengers on ocean steamships. The officers on the bridge will wok at the horizon and detect an lceberg. invisible to the passengers It ig not because thelr eyes are bet. ter, it is because they know how to distinguish the motionless white of the leeberg from the moving white of the waves This is supplementing sight observation, And that is what makes the dif. ference between the educated and the uneducated. by with 4 ~F The savage can neither read nor write, yet he is educated In the es sentinls of his existence. The sallor may be illiterate, yet he knows how to use his eyes better than does the college professor in the deck chalr, * . » » ® ® - We all start falrly equal with gard to the senses It Is in their use that we differ. And it Is that difference that makes re (E by MeClure Newapaper Eyndicate.) us wseful to people. It is the seqing eye of the author which enables to remember and describe the which make background of his work, It Is the seeing eye of the which enables him to produce terplece, Yet the difference and author and other really in the eye at all, It Is the brain behind the makes It a secing eye, and that brain must be trained by hard work, or it will mever amount to much. “oo oy right ¥ ourselves and him sCenes painter between people is not eye 0000000000000 ORIGIN OF “BLOCKHEAD" © By JEAN NEWTON OO0O0000000000QO0VO0V000 OOOOOC OR the origin of thi used constantly one who appenrs to us to be ly stupid, one whom we we friend Shakespeare riolanus”™ follows : “Your wit will another Q Q © Q Q 3 O00 0001 is word wh to describe so extreme want £0 merely to it is in his the ich ie me to call a dunce, must our oid “0 that he coined word as not man's will; it is wedged up In a blockhead The reference made by the word was to the then familiar dummy beads which stood In the show windows of the wig makers of the day. Like faces of the wax figures which are oc 80 soon out stror as ny 1.” . ence to them Is found ar follows: maker's stand.” (Copyright) THERE Is nothing that has ever taken the place of Bayer Aspirin as an antidote for pain. Safe, or physi cians wouldn't use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several mid lion users would have turned to some- thing else. But get rez! Bayer Aspirin (at any drugstore) with Bayer on the box, and the word genuine printed in Aspirin is ayer Manufacture & Moposceticacidester of Salieylicaeld Some Evidence That Old Wash Did Shake the well-known sports- hus returped to New York te out a patent on a balloon jump which, he says, the jump two miles Stone, take ing device with balloon in perfec ct “Heretof Nes York can safely, Mr reporter Stone sald to a “balloon jumping Every time vards or so sre in the air wash White. a ghost ore, know, saw come de ecow-shed ucket er milk In mah sound, rush at me.’ Cal Clay. yon shake, vuten iTS A moanin’ fone maid Did Ah was scalrt, said hain't sayin’ for but whem Ah de milk gabe butter in de Ah Ah Ah finds a'l pound o' suttin dat shook ; Linme free Left Cat With Firemen Two fashionably dressed women walked Into an Augusta (Maine) fire carrying a well-fed cat MW ss I'M GOING to tell you this eve ning,” said the Sandman, “about the smart baby Moles and the Mole family. “As you know, derground. “Their home nest is of leaves and grass and it is. too, under the ground. From their home nest is a long, wind ing tunnel which they build through the earth. “They must keep the earth out f the nest. and so It 1s pushed upward to the surface. You can Imagine the work it ie for these little creatures, so tiny and yet so clever. “From the nest there is a special runway by which the Moles can o% cape “if danger suddenly overtakes them when they're In their nest “So that they really have fortresses, too, you see! “And all this Is done by little crea- tures who are almost blind. They have lived underground ro much, and so constantly, that they cao hardly see at all “Some of them cannot see at all the Moles live un- A delegation Hungary recently were arrested, to the present government in “The Moles bave pointed ncses, which are very strong, and which help them in their burrowing. They siso have front paws, which too, are very strong. “But these are their only tools. They do not have the help of carpenters tools, but they work ouly with what they have themselves. It is so won. derful to see what they can do. + “And often they will burrow great, great. distances In a short time. for they work steadily, and so powerfully. and so energetically. “These Moles I'm telling you about this evening are cousins of the Star Nosed Molee. and are sometimes known as the Oregon Moles “Now, there were three little bahy Moles who had been born In the early “The Moles Have Pointed Noses Which Are Very Strong.” spring. They did not remain helpless for long. And in less than two months they had grown to be almost as big as their parents and were helping in the building of tunnels and the plan: ning of their home, “The Moles, as you know, build mounds and they have tunnels for roadways to their nests and also other tunnels which they use for hunting. “At night the Moles come to the surface und look for food. Sometimes they have a long tunnel under a fence, which is used as a general road. “That ig, in much the same way as we have # malin road along which lots of pecple walk, or run, or ride, and ns we have our little private gar den path and our own halls leading intn different rooms, “Now, little Moles,’ sald Mola, “this is Male sdvica Mother deb bbb id “Do not nothing. A a disgrace, up on the waste Mole sour time doing would consider that how earth know they left the cat. The next they appeared to claim the It developed that they had de- the city, working. * ‘We, for example, most all of the time. fieve In resting. ing. “*We want to build, and we want to look for food Insects and nice worms are what we like. Of course we like drinks of water, too. be good providers of fond we've al ways found we must look for It, “We couldn't sit still and have It come to us Good earih makes a dif- ference, tap. us In rich soll we can find more to eat. “But | cannot talk more. | have given you are working al- We do not be We believe In work. to you any Mole | Little Moles graduste from schools very, very soon months.’ “So the smart baby the work all Moles must do.” {Capvrieht.! » LEIP IIIEEIIIEEEINILS : Asking Sons > : : By Douglas. W Malloch od GE is always asking youth, Asking favors, that's the gruth, What, you ask, does age desire? If you'd know, then ask a sire There are favors, certain ones, Sires are always asking sons Sires are asking sons to play in a clean and decent way, Seeking pleasures, but the kind That will leave them pure of mind. Brave of heart, and strong of will Purer, braver, stronger still, Sires are asking sons to spend Time, before the time shall end. For their hours of study, toe, Doing what they need to do That their future may be made Fruitful with some honest trade Sires will labor, sires provide, Sires will walk that sons may ride, Asking, ns each father delves, Sons they help to help themselves. These the favors, this the task; Does it seem so much to nek? 0 1928 Douglas Mallseh) and confidence In itibility of Augus cat was taboo implicit ere the had hotels wh they ta's fire fighters, A Genie Hint And is that ali? Garden Guide—Yes, you all the flowers, but the— forget-me-nots! IN BAD HEALTH FOR SIX YEARS Lydia E. Piokhany's s Vegetable Arapahoe, a want to tell you just what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound has done for me. 1 was in bad health for about six years. My merves were all to pieces. I could not sleep and wasn't able to do my house- work. Now I feel #0 much better! I sleep like » baby. I can do all my housework, washing and iron- ing and feel fine all the time. I help my husband some in the field, too, so You see we have something to ise the Vegetable Compound for. 1 will gladly answer all letters asking about the Lydia E. Pinkham's medicines.” ~Mzs, Lurmes Hmss, Box 665, Westuood, Ouliloria. Visitor- Flower A Vegetable Method That Overcomes Constipation Btick to tho vegetable method of over. coming constipation. Doctors recom. d It. Stop teari your insides out h strong mineral purgatlives and habit-creating Iaxatives. The best way to establish natural bowel regularity is through the use of Wright's Indian Vegetable Pilla. Their action is purely Histai and avis. At ararein the ous laxative : roggists or 372 Pearl 81, N, Y. Ony.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers