in the high portions in of dollars, thelr worst, Faust welting snow capacity, flooding vast amounting to millions waters were TuSR at Sefer feted Which Place Is Best 0000 By Douglas Malloch shire ele piie l 'VE seen this tand From coast to coast, For I've been ev'rywhere Almost; And some Me which The North Or East folks is best; or South or West? ask The North has grain, The South has flow'rs, And East and West Their sunlit hours; But this 1 find, The more | roam, That ev'ry place Is someone's home The South has flow'rs, The North has snow, But someone loves The Eskimo, The West has hills, The East has farms, But maids have lips And men have arms So. North or South Or East or West, [t's plain to see Which place is it's where men And where maids ct And you will find That's ev'rywhere! (& 1928. Douglas Malloch.) best. fos © Ye A PPEPPIVEPVEPOPT LLP A GOVERNMENT attorney large American city is noted the success he has had in prosecuiing lawbreakers. fis staff is composed almost entirely of young men, some of whom are only a few months out of law school or col- lege, in a for Occasionally these young men make mistakes which a lawyer of greater experience would not make. One of them did, in fact, do just this at the trial of a famous lawbreaker. After the trial was over | asked the government attorney why he did aot employ older men, fle said: “The government me only a few thousand dollars each of my subordinates. quently 1 can pay them only gmall salaries, “For such a smal amount | can get alder men who have not been success. ful attorneys and who are willing to work for little pay. “Or 1 ean get youngsters who are just breaking into the game. Twenty years from now these same youngsters will be commanding the top salaries in the legal profession. “Shall 1 get the other, experienced, mediocre lawyer or the younger, greener man? gives for Conse. very {@ by MaClure Newspaper Syndicate.) northern doing picture Sierras swellédyg 12 Sacramento valley, an airplane damage to view, of North fesferfe deified Ge Guede Ped uo} teed ead Cl Jesde dee “- ge HE been Sone from the sent in a box in the city who was very fond garden had re garden h the ad city flowers to one of this particular eived the hox And after one others followed pox had many long. for the first box the first flowers came spring, and they followed one right after the other after that. And oh. how the flowers {rom the garden did enjoy their reception when they arrived. They greeted “You dear pale lavend Indy said che from the irden, “how are, You just the chids “And red Come, wis sent when out in the were so delightfully. r tul the received the flowers beautiful you color or ips, as or = are of here are the lovely pink and tufps—and here is an one! and yellow orange-colored “Here are the dear white 11 their pretty soft green leaves and dear lear me, how even the very of the garden.” And then the lady saw some the hottom of the box and she that the ferns were so new that they had searecely uncurled themselves, almost cried. “Why ferns.” when | was a fern acs and ue, twigs smell so sweetly ferns in a suw she she said, “1 grew you And your fragrance like that the garden where almost makes me cry. Happiness often makes want to little oweet is dark corner of I put you that it 8O cool one rns,” cry. fe she said. And the ferns thought it was lovely By JOHN BLAKE wy have youngster.’ always preferred the . * . It has often been sald that nothing takes the place of experience. Like most maxims it is subject to several qualifications, A green man will undoubtedly make mistakes which, with more experience, he would avoid. But when it comes to a contest between experience and mediocrity on the one side and green. ness and intelligence on the other I'll back the latter. » . * The very fact that a man has shown little promise before arriving at forty Neal Christians do not carry thelr religion, their religion carries them. ft ix not a welght; it is wings. —~H. E Fosdick HE following are a few every day good things which may be prepared with little expense: Yorkshire Pudding. Take one cupful of sweet milk, one cupful of flour, two eggs, one-half tea- spoonful of salt. Mix the salt and flour, add the milk gradually to form a paste; then add eggs beaten, sep arating yolks and whites. Cover the pan of batter—or if baked in gem pinsa—with the fat from the roasting pan. Serve with roast beef. Bake in a hot oven. Jelly Dessert. Tike one glass of jelly, the white of un egg and one-half cupful of heavy cream, Put the jelly and the unbeat- en white of egg in a bowl, beat until stiff. Serve in sherbet glasses topped with sweetened and flavored whipped cream, Cheese Custard Supper Dish, Spread us many slices of bread as there are members of the family, cov. er in a deep dish with a costard, using two eggs’ to.un pint of milk, with a pinch of salt, Pour over the buttered ® Nevada orcharils, was rivers to more than homes and highways taken while the flood and PBR SOBEL PPE LT dee PhP Leite oe By H. a Bobb bee LMOST any farmer's boy knows that it he is out looking for the cows, and he comes to an ant-hill, and cries out three times, “Doodle! doodle! doodle!” the ants will scam- per away aud the direction In which they run will show the direction in which the cows have strayed. The cry of “doodle” Is uftered to scare the ants and set them running; for the doodle-bug is the ants’ enemy. So much so that one name for him is the “ant-lion,” The doodle-bug digs holes and lays ambushes to catch the ant; the ant is his favorite food. The ant is supposed to know this and, there fore, t¢ be filled with terror ut the name of its enemy-—a terror which sets it running That the ant should understand human speech and recognize the name of its dreaded enemy is perfectly in accord with the ideas of our primitive ancestors who appear to have ceived man and the other members of the animal kingdom as belng able, un- der certain conditions, of talking to- gether in quite a chatty manner. But while the ability of man to understand and speak the language of birds and beasts was regarded as a special gift, «Con conferred by some magical process as a rule, the power of beast and bird to weep a tear or two or three, did. and, ton, she was homesick 181 a little, for that where It $0 and had planted the Tr they of her ns she then, it garden spol cool where she ferns, wis teare because pothing ferns loved her hought there was nicer “The Lovely Pink and Red and Yellow Tulips.” han tears of affection. The rain was happy and the rain wept and when the ralp wept the ferns were so happy for they Tears of King made them grow and ’ ' foved tears of happiness the Rain t them happlpess from and kep fresh Of green, the ¢¢ the plants in house cour nip a or fifty makes it probable that he will never ¢u anything outstanding. Where as, a young, promising fellow, green he may be, has always possibili- ties, HE of course, likes to make his training school for smart youngsters. But no smart employer likes to fill his office with mediocre assistants, either. It usually costs real money to em ploy brains plus experience, Intelligent youngsters make takes. But they can usually than hold their own with middle mediocrity. No man, business a mis- more -aged (Copyright.y bread after sprinkling It generously with finely-cut or grated cheese. Bake until puffy and the custard firm, Serve at once as it is much like an omelet it falls after a few minutes in the air. ' Corn Bread. Take one cupful each of sour gream, brown sugar, flour and corn meal, one teaspoonful of soda, two well beaten eges and a little salt, Bake in a hot oven. Potato Salad. The secret of a good potato salad Is in the seasoning. Potatoes should be cut Into small cubes and marinated with a thin dressing or with a French dressing for several hours before gerving. It is hard for seasoning to enter Into a cooked potato. With the addition of finely-cubed cucumber, a small onlon finely minced added to potatoes that bave been cooked in their jackets, cooled and skinned and diced, with a good salad dressing there is no reason for a poor salad. A little finely-cut celery always im. proves a potato salad as does the add: ing of a hard cooked egg or two, Lemon Jelly with pineapple, a lit tle celery and salad dressing, makes a salad which is especially refreshing. (@ 1988, Western Newspaper Union) Pee PPP | sald they weren't the much of now as during the wu there were no flowers at all. But stili they couldn't complain, for on all the windy days they still put out of the window and could drink the lovely refreshing rain water, And Creeping Charlie grew and more all the time, for he anxious to have a look at everyihiog that he spread himself this wuy that way. ought NO vinter time when were more Wis 850 and The garden flowers were very much for they first arrived were afraid It was to hot for them ino the where there secined to heat. But the windows were quickly opened they arrived and that the heat turned off, which was surely an honor to the garden It let the thought plensed, thie y LOG when going he Hne much City be so flowers noticed the garden ufter wns flowers, how much the lady who re know of by m thes were ceived them, “Ob garden flowers” she said to them, “how I remember gar den parade of flowers, beginning in the spring and lasting all through the sum mer into the fall, “And flowers well the y the per b low the jen used i with newspa newspapers would not stened them down at from the gary how we 10 cover u in the fall and =o the we fa corners with gravel path. “Yes, the pebbl for the ga “We always will away, I hliies es even used to work rden all loved the garden, and we love the gar “And even if 1 ot den now all the time, 1 can see in awhile, and the flowers will be sent to me when 4d can’t go to them. “You travel! so beautifully, dear you keep so fresh, and den. Cann see the gar it ones flow ers, yet your journey one.” And the flowers | Whispered in thelr sweet flower w ay “We would not fade for anything, for the one who sends us loves us, and the one who receives as loves us, and we want her to see us as we are!” Coprrizhiy {Oe is a long gecogeonado? ! i i a o “% to understand the speech of man ap pears to have been taken for granted, something as of course. When primitive man cried to a hen the hen ran away. Of course she understood! But to understand what the hen sald when she cackled was # more difficult matter requiring the ald of magie. $8o, of course, the ants understand when you ery “Doodle!” That aunts run in the di- rection of the cows is ap idea which has its origin in that delfication’ of the bovine species which was so common among the Aryan The scared ants are seeking the protection of the gods. AH unknown to himself the farmer boy who eried “Doodle!” to find the strayed cows stepping back through long ages to man's primal estate, (© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.) mss Jnr GRUGAGY® “St Shoo! THCES. op gio 00 ay Pie Bell Spm, fon | “1 earth time," sw: ays probably that 10 be 80 popul here a scientist more in the Onhserving Olivia, explains why ft ar with coal agealers.” soe sAVS welehs winter Bers | Timely H its By Viola Brothers Shore 00 OO0000000000000C00O0O00000 FOR THE GOOSE-— I, nnderstand. it's And if YOU ter not ain't necessary. het. you don’t to talk i i muci. Part of sickness is talkin about iL your Women roves keep a soft sg the man that wanted for the to marry woman that didn’ gpendthrift’il 3 AR KR Miser. fittle fel Copyrighiny low, Sun Power A square n pish at st gecording lo a ing at the Massachusetts Institute of Teel.nology, who is working on equip ment for and power. B le of sunshine will len SARK (NK) horsepower professor of engipeer catching storing wi they were doings deeded Feel 1 Tired and Achy? Too Often This Warns of Sluggish Kidneys. 1 AVE? Stiff? Achy? Sure 5 kidneys are working right? a gish kidneys allow waste poisons to eccumulate and make one languid, tired and achy, with often duil head- aches; dizziness and nagging back- ache. A common warning is too fre. quent, scanty or burning excretions. Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic, increase the secretion of the kidneys and thus aid in the elimination of bodily waste, Users everywhere en- dorse Doan's. Ask your neighbort DOAN’ PILLS 60c¢ ASTIMULART DIURETIC 7% KIDNEYS Foster-Milburn Co Mig Chem Buflalo NY Blooming health is ev- ident in a clear com- Wrights 225% Pills “THE TONIC-LAXATIVE™ At Druggisis er 372 Pearl St, KX. ¥Y. City. World’ ® Largest Statue \ argest statue of world § is to be erected tio de Janeiro, a huge i 100 feet bigh, Magazine. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers