S WE read chapter of the Cospel according to St. Mat- thew, we find these two verses : “And thought Consider the sixth why take ye for raiment? the lilies of the field, how they grow; they toil not, neither do they spin: “And yet I say unto You, that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.” And it is these flowers which, than anything else, have become the symbols of Easter which we celebrate this year on April 20. As such a sym- bol the lily has a double significance. It is one of the earliest spring flow- ers. It typifies the rebirth of nature after the long winter sleep. In its dry, brown bulb life lies dormant dur- ing the winter and then when spring comes, this life begins to stir. First it pushes out the tender green leaves, and then the buds appear. Finally the white blossom comes forth In all its glory as the perfect emblem of resur- rected life, Its other significance is a religious one, its snow-white purity being emble- matic of the flawless life of Christ whose resurrection from the tomb we commemorate on Easter day. In fact, no other flower has a place in the re- ligious life and literature of the Chris- tian world to compare to the lily. Yet its glory Is not so new as Christianity, ancient though the beginnings of that religion may seem to us. The Greeks and the Romans prized it above all flowers and in their ear- Her civilizations it had already come *to symbolize purity and virtue, It was because of the place lilies had won In the popular esteem that they found place In the early paintings of the Virgin, The angel Gabriel was de- picted carrying them in annunciation pictures and it is because of this that the most beautiful of these flowers, Lillom condidam, most used at Easter, Is called the madonna lily. Although this trumpet-like blossom is the best known of all the members of the lily family, there are others which are very interesting even though they do not have such significance for us as the madonna lily. In the high Himalayas In Asia grows a great lily ten feet tall. Agents of the United States government found a magnificent specimen of lily In China a generation ago—a lily of the madonna type, but bardier—and brought it to America and they have been offering it to citl- zens to plant from coast to coast, Most of the llies that are native to America are radiant with color. There is the turk’s cap, for Instance, that flaunts the deep yellow of its many blooms through the waste stretches of parts of New England. Great, stal- wart stalks, sometimes nine feet tall, has the turk's cap. It may have half a dozen orange blooms at its top, but those who have tamed this plant and given it care have induced it to pro- vide as many as 40 blossoms, A quite different American flower is the little trout lily which likes to grow along the streams or in the deep woods. With the nourishment it has saved up in its bulb it starts growing In the early spring and Is likely to have bloomed before the leaves of the trees have grown to the stage of mak- ing shade to interfere with it. A ra- diant yellow, the trout lily stands out vividly against its background of more The blue flag running to purple is another American lily that has found itself a home in many gardens. The mottled tiger lily has been a favorite for many generations. In California the “leopard lily lights the heather dun,” and the late shorn meadow Is often red with their bloom. The red lillies of New England, how. ever, outshine them all and have in. gpired many a poet of that region. Lacey Larcom spoke of them as “red Iles blazing out of the thicket,” Paul ‘Hamilton Hayne thought that the red Jily “stands from all her sister flow- ers apart.” An Easter Flower “To make one petal. myriads of atoms (each In itself a planeiary system of electrons) must climb and whee! to their exmet stations in the design.” —Siate- ment of a scientist, Up-whispered by what Power, Deeper than moon or sun Must each of the myriad atoms of this flower To its own point of the colored pattern run; Each atom, from earth's gloom, A clean sun-cluster driven To make, at its bright goal, one grain of bloom, Or fleck with rose ome petal's odge in Heaven? What blind roots lifted wp This sacramental sign, Transmuting thelr dark food, in this wild What Music was concealed, What Loges in this loam, That the Celestial Beauty here revealed Should thus be struggling t its lost bome 7 Whence was the radiant storm, The still up-rushing somg, That built of formless earth this heavenly form, Redeeming with art, the world's blind Unlocking everywhere The spirit’s Wintry prison, And whispering from the grave, here! Not here! He is not dead. The Light you seek Is risen!" 7? wAlfred Noyes in the Washington Star. “Not Probably the most remarkable lly in the world is the yucca, or spanish bayonet, of the arid plains of the Southwest. There the lily becomes a plant that Is quite treelike and lives for years, The lily leaves become harsh, daggertipped Implements to serve the purpose of repelling attack. These may sit close to the ground or, again, they may stand as high as a man on horseback, From the cluster of leaf armor there springs now and again a tall stalk that may reach like a flagpole into the desert sunshine. At the top of this staff there forms and finally breaks into bloom such an assem- blage of pure white, bell-like, richly- perfumed, and in every way perfect lilies as nature produces nowhere else in a single cluster. It Is given to the desert to grow the greatest of all the lily-bearing plants despite the fact that the chief habitat of the breed seems to be the marsh. Lilles all grow from bulbs, This bulb-making capacity of the lily fam- fly Is one of its dominant traits, It and the six petals to all lily blooms are marks of the tribe. Tulips, daf- fodils, hyacinths, crocuses, all are ae- tually, because they spring from bulbs, members of the lily family. But beautiful as are these members of the lily family, there are others which are utilitarian rather than pure- ly ornamental and which, although like the “lilies of the fleid which toll not,” do furnish mankind with edible crops, Surprising though It may be, botanists will tell you that some of our com es are In reality “lilies.” There Is na that Is boug! in bundles xactly n mon vegetal like ig abo hi form that would | Aspara iy. sus plants just coming thro ah the ground If they were allowed to grow would throw out tall, liy-like and crown them with six-tipg ers that any observer would be to identify as ilies stalk od flow =D be rd 8, J TCO EXPENSIVE A PASTIME “Why daughter working?” friend. “1 can’t afford to let plied the family man “What the heck do you menn, afford it?’ demended the BF, “Say, she couldn't even earn th let alone all the party ses she would need to wear to growled the FF. A. are you so opposed to your f i asked the bach- her work,” re can’t ie silk stockings dres work,” IT SEEMS LARGER “You think square feet, “Of course it Is “Did you fn square yard | eh " try ane? alley ms rau; ever Here's s Auothor see Ver minor poet; ur effusions 1 car will now iL the majors you day before you kK Down te Snails Pace the mat ! 3 4 3 ter, offi as the A Medal for This Judge—So you hroke Man! i he store what ou doing # Prisoner. . the put Single ¢ only one friend only one ‘friend on earth, Yes, Stranger Why don't you get anoth asparagus in an dil a let down to its pretensions, however, Is not the worst. If truth must be told, the onion Is a lily The onion is a lily that has been bred through centuries for the devel. opment of its bulb and the suppres. sion of its top. So it has come about that the bulb may be three inches across and the top so Insignificant that, when it has dried up, it hardly appears at all. Yet when this top Is growing and flowering it is like those delicate plants of the window sills which sometimes are called tube roses, but which actually are a delicate, re fined and fragrant lily that comes out of the Orient. Onions came from the Near Easl and In ancient days furnished a sta ple food for the rural inhabitants of Greece and Italy. Not only was gar Hie a food, but it was reputed to have medicinal value and to be helpful to the stomach in its functions. These two bulb vegetables, the Cin derellas of the plant food world, ride about the earth in trainloads and ship loads, The material service they ren der Is greater than that of all the oth er lillies put together, One would have to look far in all the relationships of nature to find a contrast more strik ing than that of the Easter lily and the garlic of the Mediterranean, Even though the lily is the one per fect symbol of Easter, there are two others which through the centuries have become so closely associated with this red-letter day in our calen dars that we think of them almost as quickly, In thinking of Easter, as we do of the lily. They are the rabbit and the egg. The association of the rabbit or hare with Easter has its foundations in the ancient belief in European and Aslatie countries that the hare Is the symbol for the moon. In fact, the Chinese represent the moon as a rabbit pound- ing rice in a mortar, while Hindu and Japanese artists paint the hare across the face of the moon. As the time of the Easter festival Is governed by the phases of the moon this may be an ex- planation of thelr connection. Since the Resurrection of Christ oc curred In the spring, it Is easy to see how the symbols of the egg and all revived life In the springtime came to be associated with this event in the history of Christianity. The egg as a symbol was taken over by the He brews as an emblem of their delivery from bondage and next the early Christians took it over as their sym. bol of the resurrection. This { Too Much Competition Lady—Haow come you are Tramp—Crowded out of my profes. sion, I'm a sky writer from Pittsburgh. | i Happy Individual “1 am not thin-skinned. 1 am first to laugh at my own foolishness, “What a merry life you must lead.” ~Gutierrez (Madrid), the va LOTS OF FUN dee aes. Bug— Gee, thizg Is the best ride I've ever been on and it don’t cost any thing either. Fair Exchange When a man proposes But straightway on his shoulder Fler head is dropped instead. He's apt to lose his head. Changed With Age Fussy lady (who has been a long time in selecting her purchase) But | don't think this is lamb. It looks to me like mutton, Exasperated butcher—It was lamb when I first showed it to you, madam. Believed in Hereafter Bob—Do you believe In the bere after? Babe-—\Why-a--yes, Bob—-Well, how about a little neck: ing? That's what I'm here after, Man Displaced Annabelle-—Mabel hasn't a thought for anything nowadays except her new automobile. She's perfectly In love with it George (sadly)-Another case of mun being displaced by machinery. What, Indeed? “Don’t see any more stuff like Spar. tacus to the Gladiators.” “Eh “What's become of all those fellers that wrote for the old Third Reader?” PA When Babies Babies will cry, often for no apparent reason. You may not know what's wrong, but you can always give Castoria. This soon has your little one comforted; if not, you should call a doctor, Don't experiment with medicines ntended for the stronger systems of adults! Most of ‘those little upsets are soon soothed away by a little of this pleasant-tasting, gentle-acting children’s remedy that children like. It may be the stomach, or may be the little bowels. Or in the case of older children, a sluggish, ¢ con- stipated condition, Castoria is still Egyptian Marriage Contracts | Marriage contracts were in among orl Egyptians, according to und in the Nile region by The known nup- there da from 5050 ich were dran vogue tablets f¢ explorers, curiiest tial contract 3. CC. the by the husba luted as follows: that we should unit me other in ri; tos terms of nd. has been t since God wi with us wedlock, after tl manner of ey wWike thee four ery free therefore man and every woman, I have give a a a a a FAMILY DOCTOR LEARNED THIS ABOUT ¢ CONSTIPATION Dr. Caldwell loved people, His years of practice convinced him many were uining | their health by careless selection of laxatives. He determined to write a harmless pre- scription which would get at the cause of constipation, and correct it. Today, the prescription he wrote $n 1885 is the world's most popular laxative! He prescribed a mixture of herbs and other pure ingredients now known as Dr. Latdwell's Syrup Pepsin, in thousands of cases where bad breath, coated tongue, gas, headaches, biliousness and lack of appetite or encrgy showed the bowels of men, women and children were sluggish. It proved successful in even the most obstinate cases; old folks liked it for it never gripes; children liked its pleasant taste, All * drugstores today have Dr. Caldwell’s Sy Pope in bottles. A Bad Habit “He i= flighty. He Ig uncertain™ John J. Raskob, the brilliant finan- cler, was criticizing an unsuccessful business man. “Anybody,” Mr. Raskoh went on, three or four times it is best to have done with him, “It's all very ended, well” Mr, the habit of doing it.” Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills contain only vegetable which act as a gentle purgative. 25¢ a box. 372 Pearl 8t., N. Y. Adv, Children are spanked for tellin lies and fear of spanking makes them tell them. What to do? Kosa dito s | Aves tabi ess woman te but br Ref | Sug the Somers ant Bow the thing to give. It is almost certain to clear up minor ailment, and could by no possi- bility do the youngest child the slightest harm. So it's the first thing to think of when a child has a coated tongue; won't play, can't sleep, is fretful or out of sorts, Get the genuine; it always has Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on the package. any oR SAL Fol ot i 3] E 20 BEAL TIF 'L RK HL ¥ C01 OR} D #1 finished Img ¢ $ POR fire y git Ban iteing Doh, SN pe 100 SILK PIECES Plain and as, Assorted Fancy Cclors RACY co. Box 0833 » ouis, Me F.o ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES & AGENTS! Yerbo Short tening Figver- $ret ry Vv iil Bay Wanted. Female « nerves Institute, 508 Fif(d Lodies Be Deaptifal } 5 A GFF 208 Rea 1} { i re n ANT Full er Part nite vervewhere a Bourbon Poultry Medicine foreach chick Galiyin ari nk or feed stim uiatos appetite, aids digestion, regs ates bowels, prom on henith, Jesscns chanoe of disease infection. On market for &b rears. Small size 8c, ball pint 6. pint 61.50 At druggists. or sent by mall Bourbon Remedy Co., Box 7, Lexington, Ky. —SEEaamm———— BEWARE OF WORMS IN CHILDREN Worms quickly ruin a child's health. 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