e your home JAK Floors k. Make your home more aluable for rental or sale. rature. ORING BUREAU ding CHICAGO liberate trate—Could the mo- ded hitting you? 'e could, your wor- choice of hitting me n' ‘e picked me, is to be encouraged l the average. est Rooms ury That melike r, brighter, more olor and vivacity pointed lounges d the excellence transcends per- eed, make your nemorable one. reasonable that must approve. ms with Bath om $3.00 to $5.00 -LELAND [EL Detroit, Michigan > Michigan Theater) JEN, Jr., Manager ? 15d ation ) . ROOMS FROM 0 PER DAY ful tself.” (ip that class.,”— yurnal, u can, before you JUNG LADIES! Culture! ‘St growing profession, tors, diplomas issued, Anteed. dations for students, r outstanding offer. ne.) r Li COLLEGE Difise) Court 2857 a. Globe Barber College lids, Sties, relieved application \NOL vowel Diseases ; drugs and may old. Stomach ex- gas, constipation, and kindred ail- you cannot get it . write direct, en- ckage, to Pharm- Broadway, N. Y. § Rats, Mice, \nts, Fleas, Bed $1. Guaranteed. Columbus, Ohio, ~ THE PATTON COURIER eee mt tata 0h Serving Hot Lunch Cafeteria Style. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) It has been found that children who must go some distance to school and either carry lunch from home or get part or all of it at school are much better off when at least one hot dish is provided, such as soup or cocoa, or an entire not meal, usually served cafeteria style. Not only do the chil- dren feel better and do better work in the afternoon session when they have had hot food for lunch, but in many instances the food provided at the school is a valuable lesson in food selection. In some instances the preparation of it is turned over to the older girls, so that it becomes a part of their home economics training. In other cases various mothers take turns in coming to the school to prepare the lunch. Still another plan is for the children to bring their own food ready for heating and to appoint several children to help the teacher in doing so. gradually absorb ideas about food se- lection and preparation, and often this is the entering wedge to a better knowledge of food in the child's home, and to greater interest in the subject of nutrition. The relation between good health and the right food is brought out when the school lunch is properly directed and planned by a group or committee. Cleanly habits of eating are learned, too, and the children are usually sbetter off when lunching in an orderly way under su- pervision than when left to their own devices. The United States Department of Agriculture suggests that in communi- ties which do not at present have a hot dish at the school lunch, a group of mothers might get together and see how the matter could be arranged. If the children are to pay for what they’ get, rather than bring the food, the price charged must be within the reach of all, usually only the cost of REAL “TARZAN” CARED FOR BY BABOON MOTHER Lad, Kidnaped by Animals, Still Shows Symptoms of Wild State. London.—“Tarzan” has come true, and Kipling's “Mowgli,” who was reared by the wolves, is not so far fetched as adult readers may suppose, according to the report which has just reached here from Johannesburg, Sout. Africa, of the discovery of a “baboon boy.” According to the story, a South Af- rican native baby was kidnaped from his kraal by baboons, was cared for by a baboon foster mother for years and spent a large period of his boyhood | roaming the wilds with the troop. About 25 years ago two troopers of the old Cape police were making their way through wild country in South- east Cape Province when they came on a troop of baboons. They fired at them and the troop scampered away, But one monkey who tailed off at the rear seemed to be wounded. The troopers galloped up to the laggard and, to their astonishment, found in- stead of a baboon a well-grown native boy hopping along on all-fours after his departed associates. Bit Captors. When they came to close quarters with the boy he scratched and bit them fiercely and put up a eonsid- | erable fight before he was overpow- ered. His naked state made it ex- ceedingly difficult for the troopers to get a firm grip on him. All efforts to trace the captive’s par- entage proved futile. He was, there- fore, handed over to the authorities of a mental hospital in a neighboring town, where he was kept for a year and given the name of Lucas. The | Waste of Elders Factor in Stirring Feeling of | Poverty in Child By DR. W. F. SCHRADER, Fort Wayne, Ind. NLY in the new sense of being comparative rather than actual can the word poverty be emphasized in any discussion of Juvenile delinquency. We can ignore poverty in the sense that the child characters of Dickens knew it, for the simple reason that it is practically non-existent in any civilized land today and never existed in the United States. But the inability of the poor boy in high school to take his gir! to the school dance because of his empty pockets is as truly poverty as is the empty stomach of the young Chinese in devastated and war-torn China. The high-school girl unable to buy a pair of three-inch spike-heel shoes that cost $11 suffers poverty as real to her as does her Russian cousin who has to go barefoot. : False standards and values set up by extravagant elders are a moving | cause in youthful delinquency. What can we expect of our youth in view of the example set them by their elders? Eighty per cent of the automo- biles sold iu this country are bought on the installment plan because the buyer has not the cash. The same thing is true of almost every com- modity in lesser degree. We are living in credit. The poor boy sees credit on every hand, but none for him. On every hand the money value and not the inherent worth of a thing is emphasized. Too often, also, his moral education has been left to chance acquaintances of the street cor- ner, the barber shop and poolroom. Religion Loses Cause for Existence in Con- forming to the World’s Ideas By REV. HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK, Baptist, New York. Christianity is largely on the defensive for the simple reason that Christians have conformed themselves and their message so largely to this world that they are indistinguishable from it. As a matter of fact, this In practically all cases the children | materials and fuel. vertical lines from shoulder to hem, CORRECT LINES 5 jad 2» made by the flat plaits and the long FOR A MATRON flat tie, the plain set-in sleeves, and the correct length of the skirt. The | distance of the hemline from the floor | is appropriate for a woman of heavy build. The material is gray crepe re- | lieved only by the simple groups of | buttons and varicolored banding on | the collar. Choosing Clothes for Stout Woman Is Important. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The woman who is somewhat in- clined to stoutness, especially if she has white or gray hair, needs to give In the other dress there is a mistake in every detail. The dark blue satin is combined with a large figured chif very careful attention to the seiec- | fon. The shiny satin seems to make | tion of her clothes with a view to em- phasizing her dignity and correcting the appearance of size. She must the figure stouter than it actually is. Belting it in at the waist brings out | the fullness of the bust and hips need- Was Cared For by a Baboon Foster Mother. yroved to be his favorite diet and his appetite was enormous. Though mi Raw mealies and prickly pears I him by kindness. But it was found | extremely difficult to make him walk | take to train him. Finally, G. H.| | Smith, the owner of a large farm in | | the Bathurst district of the Cape Prov- | ince, heard of Lucas and so, some 24 | | years ago, the “baboon boy” came | { under the care of his present em- | | ployer. Becomes Docile Boy. Mr. Smith at first was worried | | about the task he had undertaken, but Lucas had by this time lost his orig- | | inal dislike of human beings. and was | | a comparatively docile native boy, | though still possessing odd, monkey-| | ish mannerisms. i Mistake in Every Detail of This Outfit, Lael en onry Sposk English, as his | duties bring him into contact mostly | lessly, and interferes with the tir. | with only his master and mistress. | making the general impression one of | He is very fond of children, and his | untidiness. The large puffy kimono | SPecial delight Is to take care of his | sleeves are inappropriate on fleshy | employer's little ones. Today Mr. | | | | { | | | | | | Desirable Dress for Stout Woman. avoid fussy styles, lines crossing the tigure horizontally, shiny fabrics, vivid colors, large patterns, tight belts, and too short skirts. In these two illustra- fcr . > won} ; i nn | Smith would ne xchange S . tions of the same person posed by the | arms and by wearing the skirt so | = cial 2 a 2 ge his phe $1: 1 o 1 i 3 (C ¢ $ a United States Department of Agricul- | short, a ridiculous chopped-off appear- | He wi oe gain for any other i 3 3 or wo native workers. esirable dress has long | ance is given to the figure. . : ture, the d @ EH a Lucas does not mind talking about eee = what he remembers of his boyhood | { with the baboons. He tells how one Prevent Needless Waste Yau Sem | big baboon used to take him in its of Foods at the Table | arms on cold nights and put him | Family prejudices ueouc foods may | warmly to sleep in the undergrowth | defeat the most earnest efforts to set | of the bush, and of how edible erick- “Sensible trai ets were collected from the ground Orange Sherbet Makes Pleasing Summer Dessert | Orange or lemon sherbet is easy | to make and very refreshing as a hot weather dessert. Pure fruit juice | an economical table, 1 should be used in making it. The bu- | ing when children are little will pre- | to appease the pangs of ever-present reau of home economics gives the rec- | vent the formation of many of these | hunger. On request, Lucas will even | ipe below : prejudices. Even if adults do have | go down on all fours and give an ex- | Orange Sherbat. faulty food habits, they can often be | hibition of how he marched with the 1% cupfuls orange 1 cupful cream | reasoned out of them. baboon herd. | juice or 3 cupfuls rich Get everybody in the family to see 1% cupfuls sugar milk the need for economy and to recognize | %_tershoonfal 3 tablespoonfyly the fact that no good food should be Seated on Dynamite, salt lemon juice boy was unable to talk and showed a ! great dislike for orthodox human food. | | | | | chievous, he turned out not to be vi-| cious and was soon won to those about | { { upright. Attempts were made to place: the | | boy with some one who would under- | | would be contrary to all American tradition, ) 2 cupfuls milk and Heat one cupful of milk and add the sugar. Stir until the sugar is dis- solved. Add the other ingredients. Use a freezing mixture of one part salt and four to six parts of ice, and turn the crank of the freezer slowly. After freezing, remove the dasher, pack the freezer with more ice and salt, and let the sherbet stand for an hour to ripen in flavor, Lemon sherbet may be made in this same way by omitting the orange juice, and using enough lemon juice to give the desired flavor. wasted after it once enters the kitchen, The high cost of the table is sometimes aceahle rarbao ai A eb . trageanls 10 the on garbage bail, Ad | on a box of dynamite, Andy Andrews mit that some flavors are more tempt- | touched a match to the explosives and ing than others, but convince the fam- | blew himself to bits at the Braehelm ily that there is now such a wide vari- | ine of the Amherst Coal company. ety of acceptable flavors that each one | mpa explosion wrecked four rooms can be pleased a large part of the | of the mine clubhouse, where Andrews time. Show them that in selecting | lived. H's roommate, entering the o : . ’ = - foods in the market you have to be room as Andrews lighted the match, guided by what is available, by what narrowly escaped death after an effort will be different from yesterday's to prevent the suicide. menu, and tomorrow's, too, and most Despondency over the loss of $500, important of all, by what will make Blows Himself Up | Logan, W. Va.—Seating himself up- stolen from Andrews while he slept, up a balanced diet, was belwved the cause of his act. main interest in life is not the thing by which we earn our daily bread, generation’s low morals and its low philosophy are in desperate need of a challenger, and the church should be about its business. When religion harmonizes itself with the world and conforms itself to the status quo it loses its message, vacates its mission and surrenders its | reason for existence. The glory of Christianity has been its non-con- | formity. The central problem of organized Christianity is whether it has | enough spiritual vigor to challenge this modern age, or, instead, is simply | going to take the color-blend of popular morality and popular philosophy. There are plenty of so-called Christians whose morality it would be | difficult to distinguish from the morality of the crowd. Our democratic confidence in a majority vote makes that easy. Of course, on any fine issue the majority is sure to be wrong. We know this and yet there is prodigious pressure in a democracy | where politically it is a point of honor to respect majority decisions. We feel also that it is not so bad to conform to the general average and the | majority vote. A Christianity that thus compromises with popular morality instead of challenging it has lost its reason for existence. ' Romantic Love Frequently Leads Couples Into Disastrous Wedlock By DR. LOUIS E. BISCH, Neuropsychiatcist. Romantic love—that first blinding burst of infatuation—is really a disease. Don’t marry while you are under its influence. Such love is a nervous disorder, the psychoanalyst explains. It is the emotional equi- librium that is chiefly upset, and this in turn may upset the purely mental as well as the physical balance. Practically all normal humans are subject to the conditions from which such a neurosis can arise. They begin in earliest childhood when, in the case of a boy, the mother becomes a romantic ideal of womanhood. As the child approaches maturity he clings to the romantic idealization, feeding it with romantic fiction and with his own imagination. As you grow older and the world gives you a few hard knocks, you lose a lot of your faith in romance. But, sooner or later, the young man meets a girl who, in appearance and superficial characteristics at least, approxi- mates his ideal. Then all of this bottled-up romance that has been ac- cumulating for years bursts forth when the dam of reserve breaks. The result is an emotional upheaval that makes its subject entirely { abnormal, unable to discern the real qualities of the girl or her fitness to be his wife or to be a mother. Such love is actually blind. Tendency Toward Aristocracy of Learning Against American Tradition By DR. STRATTON D. BROOKS, President University of Missouri. “democratic” are worthy of as much Efforts to keep education consideration as the means of restoring agriculture to its proper economic condition. In every class of school, college and university there has been an almost unbelievable increase in attendance. Part of this increase is due to the fact families of poor economic opportunities have recognized | clearly that under present conditions of competition, the high school graduate has a better opportunity for earning a livelihood than the one | whose education is limited to the elementary course. This situation in high school has, of course, affected colleges. The endowed colleges in some cases have restricted the numbers seeking | admission through increasing requirements and tuition. The higher | academic requirements often necessitate an additional high school year of special preparation. The result of both of these restrictions is to limit the attendance largely to the well-to-do. The accompanying tendency is to create an aristocracy of learning nearly parallel with the aristocracy of wealth, a condition that exists in some European countries, but which Main Interests of Life Should Be Found Out- side One’s Occupation By MRS. BARBARA WOTTON, London University. Work is objectionable. For most of those engaged in industrial labor today their main job should be their use of leisure. We must find our lifes interest outside our work, which is something we ought to get done as quickly as possible. We ought to run civilization on the theory that our | he cffereq. SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” - Lonuine Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets, you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by mil- lions and prescribed by physicians over 25 years for Headache Neuralgia Colds Pain Neuritis Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets. Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Sallcylicacid Toil “Can I get you to toil in a good cause?’ “Always. Do you want me to sing or play cards?’ Satisfying Effect Findlay, Ohio.—“l have used Dr. Pierce's medicines and cannot say enough in their praise. Dr Pierce's 7 Golden Medical Dis- covery is the best blood enricher and builder of a run- down system I have ever taken. I have given it to my family and have taken it myself to build me up when rundown in health and suffering from v5 poor circulation. I found it just excellent as a builder and blood enricher—the results were very satisfactory.” — Mrs. W. H. Campbell, 600 E. High St. If your druggist does not sell the Golden Medical Discovery, in liquid or tablets, you can obtain a pkg. of the tablets by sending 65 cents to the Dr. Pierce Clinic, in Buffalo, N. Y. Unwelcome Serenade They were jolly good fellows, all seven of them—at least they felt that way at three o'clock in the morning following an old-fashioned soiree in New York. To wind up a perfect eve- | ning they decided to serenade the fair | lady of one love-sick member. With | voices loud but not altogether clear | the male septet parked below a win- dow and raised their faces to heaven in their fervor. After the impromptu | concert the gentlemen found them- | selves in the custody of the law—they had serenaded under a window of the dormitory of a police station where | a weary bachelor cop was trying to get some sleep.—Exchange. “Who will drive this car awav for $59,” read the sign on the dilapidated vehicle in the dealer's window. A man passed the store, read the sign and entered. “I'll take a chance,” “Where's the money ?"'—- Answers. Willing Father—Oh, so you wish to marry my daughter? Do you know she is used to all the luxuries of life? Poor Suitor—Fine! And I can eas ily adapt myself. Some kinds of mayflies emerge as winged insects one e®ming and end their careers before sun-up the next morning. The New Woman Governor Weeks of Vermont, who designed the 4 by 6-foot birthday card sent to President Coolidge in South Dakota, has the Vermonter’s sturdy hatred of ultra-modern fashions and customs. At a Montpelier reception a banker nodded in the direction of a New York lady in a very short skirt who sat with her knees crossed smoking a cigarette in a long tube. “A new woman, I suppose,” he sald. Governor Weeks glanced at the lady and observed : “l should say an old woman re painted.” Dr. Seer Julia—What is the cure for love at first sight? Amelia—Second sight. Hoxsie’s Croup Remedy, the life saver of chil- dren. No opium. No nausea. 50 cts. All drug- gists, Kells Co., Newburgh, N. Y., Mfrs.—Adv. Money might go farther if it did not travel so fast. Keep Your Butter] Uniform and | Hold Your Customers Don't wait for your customers to complain about the variable color of your butter. Keep your butter that Elden June color everybody likes by putting a few drops of Dandelion Butter Color into the churn. It is purely vegetable, wholesome and ab- solutely tasteless. It meets all State and National Food laws. All large creameries have used Dandelion Butter Color for years. It does not col- or buttermilk. You can et the large bottles or 35¢c from all drug or grocery stores. Wells & Richardson Co., Ine. Burlington, Vermont SEND US YOUR OLD GOLD, PLATINUM, Teeth, Old Coins. Check sent by return mail, A. BERNON 719 Hippodrome Building, Cleveland, Ohlo. Florida Home—N 5 room, bath, elec. arge lot. Rent t location. J. n Park, Fla. 0il and Gas, Buy Now, For leases and ro; tier in t 3 oil fields of Texas desc ription write Hotel, Pampa, Texas. price t Gaither, W. N. U,, PITTSBURGH, NO. 46-1927 tough, live rubber lengthen its life HE ‘“‘muscles” of tough, live rubber give astonishing endurance and rec- ord-breaking long life—without adding weight—to Top Notch Buddy Boots. but hcw to get the earning over and done with quickly. These ribs or muscles, strong as whale- bone, add strength to the tops and pre- vent them from cracking. The tough gray soles stand up under the hardest going in muck and stumps, in ditches, slush or ice. The longest- wearing boot your money can buy. Inshort, hip and Storm King Lengths. For dependable, distinctive boots, arctics and rubbers, al- ways look for the Top Notch Cross. The most reliable stores / | OP N carry the complete Top Notch OTCH linefor men, women and child- A GUARANTEE A ol 1 | M E “ul F MILEAG! ren. The Beacon Falls Rubber Rubber Footwear Shoe Co., Beacon Falls, Conn.