The Chattanooga News. (Chattanooga, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1928 Page: 3 of 6
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10
y JUST HUMANS 11
By Gene Carr
etz
rtothi2:icBooIk
Where another would have had
Laundry lines with flapping elects
the ha l made a garden close
Where her little world retreats
—Sidney Drake
—
EVERYDAY GOOD THINGS
ti OAK a nice fat m cb
mackerel overht
skin side up Drain and 6811pV the
water several times if it is very salt
In the morning for breakfast cover
with thin craam and bake in a hot
MTH twenty minutes Serve with
baked potatoes If the fish is very
thick pour boiling water over it at
first and simmer for ten minutes
drain and then a413 the cream
—
Dried Beef With Cream
Take one-fourth of a pound Of dried
beef cover with boiling water and let
stand ten minutes then drain Dilute
One and one-half tablespoonfuls of
tour with enough cold water to pour
easily tanking a smooth paste add
one cupful of scalded cream cook in
a double holler ten minutes Add beef
and reheat
—
Hamburg Steak
Make a mound of chopped seasoned
meat adding a pinch of cloves and
grated onion vvith salt nod pepper to
season and cover the top wit trips
of salt pork lint on in latticed Iona
Bake remove carefully and place on
I hot platter servd with mushroem
fli uce
—
Vermont Chicken Soup
Reheat six cupfuls of cnicken St OeiC
PPHStMing With salt and pepper and a
grated onion Add one head of let-
tue shredded and one cupful of green
Peas Simmer until the vegetables are
done Beat one egg add enough stale
bread entail's to make a paste and
roll into small halls Drop these into
the boiling sollp and sininter ten Min-
utes then serve
—
Roast Beef With Gravy
I'lace thinly sliced roast wet on a
platter and pour over It reheated
gravy to cover
—
Meat and Nut Balls
Take one cupful of chopped sea-
soned veal add One dozen chopped
almonds One egg one-half teaspoonful
of salt and pepper to taste Mix and
roil into balls place In a baking pan
and pour one cupful of rich highlY
seasoned tomato sauce over them
When hot serve garnished with water
cress
((E) 1528 Western Newspoper Union)
t"t"" :":4
d
What Does Your Child
Want to Know 9
Answered by
t BARBARA BOURJAILY
to4!-4
WHY ARE ICE COLD FOODS BAD
FOR ME?
They chill the stomach Juices
And keep them from their duty
Of turning food to rich red blood
To give you health and beauty
Copy right
f) McClure New5paperSyndiute
wat
THE PLANTAIN
V
e
V7
But Mother had to telephone
Mother had matters of her own
And so he had to dress alone
- fre!N
There is a pante in his heart
Rut not of fear—but Just to start
The day not having done his part
0
"OH MAMMA COME LOOK AT TH' BIRDS MENDIN' THEIR NESTS!"
TARDY
t
(f By DOUGLAS MALLOCH (")
(e)
TM' fumbling hands and awk-
ward feet
A youngster slips into his seat
Ashamed the teacher's look to meet
And something of rebellion too
"Of course she'll Maine it all on you
And think you played It Isn't true"
'
Ah what's the trse of toeing good?
Ile ran the fastest that he could
She won't believe him No one would
And so he stumbles through the day
And stutters things he has to say
And wishes he could run away
Maybe he was ti little slow
That's W hy he's late Well maybe so
1 1(1 says but 110W was lie to know?
Mother tutti duties to he doae
And quite florgot about her son
"My goodness Here's you cap Now
run 1"
Rut whe-rt the children stand in line
If some one istrt there at nine
I hope the fault Is never mine
(rE) toi McClure Newspaper Syndics toL)
—
ctHE WHY of
SUPERSTITIONS
By H IRVINQ KINQ
ffillAT pestiferous weed the plantain
Which people have to dig out Of
their lawns and dooryards is anything
hut a romantic or mystic plant in ap-
pearance and yet it figures prominent
ly In myth and superstition In this
country it appears in folk-meditine as
a cure for bee stings and something
to "draw out poison" front tiny wound
or sore
The Indians call it white It littl'S
foot for 1vitit the white man the
plantain ettme to this country as
has traveled In his company to all
parts of the earth A native of tem-
perate Asia and Europe the weed has
wandered always with the white man
and never appears where he is net or
has not !Wen This can be accountei
for of course Alt hoot calling upon
the supernatural The insidious seed
may he accidentally carried abroal
Just es the Jimsonweed came to this
country in n load of discharged bal-
last from liritish ships Intl to the
unrellecting there Is something rather
uncanny in the way In which the
plant:tin follows the white man's foot-
steps The name Itself is front
"plants" meaning the sole of the foot
In this country and England the
plantain Is sometimes called way-
bread and the fact that it so persist
ently haunts the tracks of man is tic
counted for by an old legend of Ger-
man origin to the effect that it was
formerly a maiden who after long
waiting in vain by the wayside for
her lover was changed into this Nveed
And In this form she tuts ever since
haunted the footsteps of men looking
for the recreant one In this ancient
legend we see again the idea of primi-
tive tlin n Of a metamorphosis by
Which animal and vegetable forms
were changed the one into the other
To those who regarded mankind as
descended from the oak or the ash it
seemed quite natural that a disconso-
late maiden should be changed Into a
plantain
t') by McClure Newspaper Syudicatel
THE CHATTANOOGA NEWS
SOMETHING TO
THINK ABOUT
By F A WALKER
Bucin OF 5ELFISHNESS
IPI
AT THE first moment you suspect
that you are being contaminated
bY the insidious blight c selfishness
summon up ail the tSanrAdi and cou-
rage with Odell you are invested and
make a valiant light ere you fall a
PITY to one of the most destrucGve
forces for evil in the werld
A viv utterly at variance with the
peace and happiness of mankind It
will be found on reflection that self-
ishness is at the bottom of the greater
number of our tormenting troubles
and sorrows
If hy our Individual will and faith
this ban of selfishness could be cir-
cumvented and abolished there would
he no more war no more forced im-
portrishment of the NN Tali no more
la'gVars with outstretched hands no
mole hard-faced misers no more brok-
en hearts and homes or despairing
shames
instead of being enslaved the X(Jrld
Vt'OUht be free
Our cities and towns permanently
divorced from this baneful curse
would he adorned with art tilled with
the music of happy voices where
work and worth would lock fills and
go rejoicing On the way while lips
would be rich with words of love and
truth and praise
The cruel eyes of !iced would be
transformed to cheering lights of ten-
der compassiiim shining alike on the
frail and the strong illuminating the
dark places with glorious rays of
!ogle and gleaming like friendly lamps
all along the roads of life
Pitiful indeed is the 'victim of
seifishness
Ile knows nothing of the pure en-
joyment of earthly existence nothing
if the sweet dreams of heaven—for
both are quite beyond his reach
Ile is blind to the beautiful deaf to
charity conscious only of self keep-
ing his eyes stubbornly closed to the
straight fora rd course
And if he would dare admit It he
Is so miserly and miserable that tt
little child shrinks from his touch
and his thin coterie of acquaintances
pass him by with a feeling which he
intuitively knows is one of dread dis-
gust and deep reproach
If On your pathway through life
you want the sun to shine where be-
neath Its golden beams you can clasp
the hands of sincere friends and be
a true friend in return not only to
them but to the widow and orphan as
well flee from the blighting touch of
selfishness as you would from a pesti-
lence and pray God to give you
strength until the end
no by McClure Newspaper Syndicate)
S
A
By Viola Brothers Shore
FOR THE GOOSE
T il EE'S no flaws In a thing you
lt
want had enough
A monkey might have a velvet suit
hut that only makes him more of a
monkey
—
A film!) woman if you get her mI
enough you might make a smart wom-
an mita her I:ut a smart WOMIlli if
you get her goat she makes a fool
out ft herself
FOR THE GANDER—
The old pants Is gen'rally made outa
better stuff than the new patch
—
There's no turn of luck so had hut
what a smart man can slueoze some
advantage outa It and none so good
but what a fool can't somehow man-
age to burn his fingers
A good player ain't always the win-
ner nut the winner Is always a good
player
: SUPERSTITIOUS E
E a SUE 4 4 4 E
S
0 O
(Copy rig ht)
I'
mow
nettot
SHE HAS HEARD THAT—
If you will count the number of
strawberries on a cake and name the
last one to correspond to that letter
of the alphabet—oh goody It's good
guessing—the letter will be the In
Riot of your -"one and only!'
by McClure NeViMpaper Syndicate)
ABOUT THE DINNER
THE dinner wouldn't amount to
A morn without Our presence"
sail lamb roast
"l'ou would burn and you would not
be very nice" said the water which
had been put into the tin with the
lamb to keep It from burning "if it
were not for the water"
"And you could never be cooked if
It were not for me" said the stove
"And you would never have been
lighted if it luoi not been for me
said a match which was now what
would be called a "used match"
"And you would have gone very
lueerly if we had riot been turned Just
as ye should have been" said tli !
dumpers belonging to the stove
rIhIP OVVII would never have become
warm if we haul not made the tire
burn well" said the members Of the
roal family
"And we gave everything the first
111 3
-----
-''''''''--------
t71 P
7DT
-
'And They Do Need a Dessert" Said
the Apple Pie
start" said the kindling
'You wouldn't be so good if we
weren't to go along with you for the
dinner" said the potatoes to the lamb
"You wouldn't be a real meal if we
didn't come along too" said the
bread
"And what about butter?" asked
tho butter
The lamb was cooking and was be-
coming nice and brown on the out-
side "Every one wants water" said the
jug which at that tnotnent was being
tilled with water
"Every one wants gravy" said the
gravy
"And they do need a dessert" said
HOME OWNERSHIP
IN 1920 forty-five people out of every
hundred owned their own homes
It Is estimated that in 1930 one-half
of the entire population of our own
country will own their homes Two
factors account for this condition
One Is the Increase in the wage scale
the other is the spirit of thrift Sta-
tistics show that savings accounts
never reached so high a figure as at
the present time The American liank
ers' association in a recent report
laid: "Equal distribution of the na
ion's savings would give each person
In the United St-ites $220" These
savings were Increased In 1927 over
1926 by more than a billion dollars
Much of the credit for this heah by
state of affairs is attrihutable to the
tanks arid loan companies who in
ways encourage the habit of thrift
A dollar at 6 per cent interest Mill
annually will doubie Itself
In about sixteen years Saved monev
has real earning power It works
while you sleep The satisfaction and
pleasure derived from saving is even
irr ea ter than that derived from spend-
ing money
There Is an Important difference be-
tween necessities and luxuries This
distinction Is often forgotten Luxu-
ries are the things we want but can
do without and they demand about
three times as pitiCii money as do the
necessities Saving does not mean
that the necessities nmst be discarded
but it does mean that less money be
sprnt upon mere luxuries
The price which economy dem arab
Is courage and sacrifice but the re-
ward is worth the cost More real
satisfaction Is obtained from saving
money than from spending It espe-
cially when with saved funds we pur-
chase an acre and call It 1101VE
(a) 1928 Western Newspaper Union)
-0
(C by McClure Newspaper Syndicate)
the atiPte Pie fia It Waited Up Olt
t)tate or
"And a cup of tea will be Iveteolned
by several at the table" said the tea
as it was being introduced to the boil-
ing water
"Of eonrse" said the salt "some of
you—such as the lamb and the pota-
toes would not be Try good if we
didn't go) along with you
"We were needed by you potatoes
when you were being prepared"
"I know ho'll ask for three lumps
of sugar in their tea" said the sugar
In the sugar bowl
"And milk will be efiked fer WO"
Said the milk in the milk jug
"The pie would never have been pie
vitilout us" said the tipples "at least
It would never have been tipple Pier
"And the pie CrUSt WOUld haVe beell
a sad pie crust If It hadn't been tor
flour and baking powder butter wa-
ter and a little salt" said these things
toget her
"But It needed some one who knew
how to put them together" said ti
little creature who just oppeared 1111I
WhO Said her name was Fairy limb
'Yes it would have been a dread-
ful pie crust if some one had just
gone and thrown all those things to-
gether into a bowl without tiny sense
or thought or knowledge of how to
make a pie crust
"But you're till so silly all of you
"In the first plave of all the stove
would never have been started with-
out a 11111111111 being starting It
"In the second place none of you
would have turned out right if you
had not been properly made
"And again you all form a part of
the goodness of the dinner The lamb
plays the most important part in this
meal—but everything bus to work to-
gether "It's the same way with people
They must Pull together to get the
best results and the real happiness
and so must a dinner to wake it a
fitteeeSs
"Yell will be a fine meal—all of you
—because each did Its ONVa part to
make the meal a tine one And the
one who cooked (Le tine dinner knew
how much little things such us sea-
soning had to do with tasty food
"Now you're going In to be eaten
dinner but even as good as you ore
you would not be enjoyed if the peo-
ple didn't have good appetites
"Oh yes many things together make
a perfect whole!"
And Fairy Ybab was off us the din-
ner was taken up to be served
(Copyright1
How It Started
By JEAN NEWTON
"PERIPATETIC"
ONE does not have to be erudite to
know the word "peripatetic" a9
related to a school of philosophy that
of the disciples of Aristotle the Creek
philosopher
In everyday speech we find the
word used in the sense of traveling
moving w'andering Its modern use in
this sense hofwever Is usually satir-
ical or jocular
It may seem a tar cry from the
philosophy of Aristotle to a modern
itineaant yet It is precisely in that
connection that we have the interest-
ing story of the word's origin
"Peripatetic" is of Creek derivation
and means literally "to walk" It was
from the circumsIance that the fol-
lowers of Aristotle meeting In the
"garden" of the Lyceum were known
to walk about during study that they
came to be called "Peripatellcs" and
their philosophy "peripatetic"
Popalarized by these aralent schol—
ars the term has survived in common
speech Where today It Is used more or
less ligirtly in Its original sense of
moving from place to place
(copyright)
Ilk 1 "newts 14
0---
o-o-q
--
kA lot of good people bemoan the
passing of the corset" says Corpulent
Cora "and I know myself it's a great
aid to uprightness"
Severe Sentence
Judge—What's your occupation?
Prisoner—rrn a coal dealer your
honor
Judge—Thirty days on one of your
rock plies! '
I
®0(:)®®)3)®TSN(:)®IS(i)(yilj()
0OFAC!')(i')®®&-Ci)®0®C!)0
Louise Brooks
CONTROL
MIM'
00
CDO(iX1
Louise Brooks a petite brunette
whose dancing In Ziegfeld's Follies
and "Louis the 14th" was one of the
sensations of a recent theatrical sea-
son was signed by a prominent mo-
tion picture producer to a long-term
contract following her outstanding
work in "The American Venus" Miss
Brooks is a native of Wichita Kan
She has jet-black hair dark-brown
eyes and weighs 120 pounds
Uncommon Sense
By John Blake
GOLFERS who were astonished at
the remarkable record of Bobbie
Jones who some time ago defeated all
the American amateurs at their own
game can remember the Uwe when
this lad on missing a punt would
stamp on his putter or throw It vio-
lently away
Jones had tetnperament which ht
necessary to all high achievement
But before he could become a maw
ter of the game he had to take the
temper out of ids temperament and
this after long self-discipline he ha
succeeded in doing
Sometimes qualities which are th3
real elements of success become ob
stades to success
The Bible written many years ago
tells us that he who ruleth his own
spirit is greater than he who taketb-
a city
But in all probability the men who
took cities in those days ruled theft
spirits first so they combined two
sorts of greatness
Then men Ivho do great things la
the world are usually nervous !magi
native men who have high ideals of
the way things should be done and
who are impatient with themselves fot
not attaining those ideals
That Is why they get into rage
when they make mistakes and because
ofthose rages continue to make more
and worse mistakes
To manage oneself Is a long bard
job yet It must be done and done
efficiently before one can manage any-
body else or succmq1 in a great task-
There Is little doubt that this Jones
chap will succeed In life as well as In
golf In work as well as In play
Ile has the intelligence to know that
superiority In a sport Is really noth
In and he has the detertninatIon to
exercise the self-government which
will enable him to succeed in other
things
It Is customary to regard young
men who are prone to fly into violent
rages over their failures as ontitied
for life
This Is a mistake The fact that:
they do fly Into rages proves that 'Key
know what they ought to do and have
no patience with themselves when
they cannot do it
It is the spring In the steel which
makes It superior to iron but the
spring must be controlled and care-
fully adjusted if it is to be useful In
mechanics
Sometimes the slow plodding tem-
perament will go farther than the bril-
liant one but never It the brilliant one
Is properly managed
All the world's greatest geniuses
have been eccentric Rut It Is a iris
take to regard eccentricity ti3 genius
The men who have reduced their
eccentricities to the minimum and
kept a constant check on them are
lphose who are most likely to get Intro
the Ilall of F'ame—after they are
dead—and to enjoy the regards ut
high reputation while they are living
Young Mr Jones has set a valuable
example not only to golfers but to all
young men everywhere
Learning to control himself was a
tough job But he tlid It and wi to)
able to continue to do It whenever It
Is necessary
(enpyrtghtl
)---
On Shipboard
First Passenger—Come on up mkt
see the Iceberg!
Seeonti Passenger--I'm twI Inter-
ested I've got an etertriv refrigerator
at Inane
tr)-
Realism
Fattier—flow 4) you like your 41
town Tommy?
Tonitny—It's OP right 'but I neet
about six more illttog stations
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:tite brunette
feld's Follies
as one of the
:heatrical sea-
)roainent ao
a long-term
outstanding
Venus" Miss
Wichita Kan
-I dark-brown
ands
Sense
ake
astonished at
ord of Bobbie
o defeated all
at their own
le Uwe when
punt would
throw It vio-
cut which Is
:hlevement
lecorne a tune-
d to take the
uerament and
ipline he has
vhich are th3
ft become ob
Lfly yearsago
uleth his own
le who taketb
the men who
vs ruled theft
combined two
rent things la
ervous !magi-
high ideals of
be done and
themselves for
LIS
et into rage
s and because
to make more
I a long hard
me and done
'I manage any-
! a great task-
hat this Jones
! as well as in
In play
? to know that
s really !loth
ertnination to
nment which
ceed in other
regard young
ly into violent
as audited
rhe fact that:
oyes that
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nselves when
e steel which
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plodding tern-
than the brit-
a brilliant one
test geniuses
t it is a rnie
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reduced their
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!y to get Int()
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? regards of
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rlyt41 '4'4 A44(o 4 T7'--1" r311! -pr titNr -141'6 4A' A T TIIE first moment you suspect ABOUT THE DINNER the apple pie fiS It Waited 111)011 fi s br " le ' ' ' Oft g 47
1 " ("
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bY th0 insidious blight c'' selfishness 1
"And a cup of tea will be Iveleomed '-'- i--48401
by several lit the table" t the tell ''' 111"oi)- lit
51' p 44 :''' i 16S
S1 '4 1 '' '15444 P that you are being contaminated late
II 4
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) - 1 summon 11) II the rel d1 and cou I IIE dinner wouldn't amount to
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(7 ‘' V:f 1 ' littICII Wit hOti t our presence
I
° 14)- iti"4' il htzi ill ")Ill r age vitt! twii
tileli y011 are nvete
' Tsd and as as being int r oduced to the boil
1
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-- --- - -54 make a valiant tight ere you fall a gall tit lamb roast it w
':ei- -111K7g' M':'SX'-'''
'
N tsi' 'r--- —A 3- 4- - -
u would burn and 3ou would not ing water
':V :7'4-174t
I') I) ' aF IA PITY to one of the most destructive "nrse i he salt o
" sad t °Sme of i:ii
1-P- 7"- V
-?' ev W ve very nice" said the water which Of eo
vou-such s he lamb and h ot
te pa- -rr4
osA
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tll forces for il in the erld ''"'N
- -
'" H's
t ?A1111-r!
I I i e ce utte r ly tit V art nce a w ith the
i - - :s peace and happiness of mankindt It had been ut Into the tin with a t
the
lamb to kee p
4- ' " f ti t '
Were not o p it from hinning "if It
r le wa er' toes would not be ( vry good if we
didn't gi) :don r with you
"' "i
"44:: : 4: ' '' -'''s - A
1 1: i- 3e-l'As r 1 will h A vi e found on reflection tha self- tVi5:: :'46 ' - -:?)0
"We were needed by You lultatm's '''-'3'--''' -''' -11'7't-' '
ishness is at the bottom of the greater "And you could never lie cooked if
when you sere being prepared" k-?'?!A 4 : ::
r -rl ( : 1 11111 number of our tormenting troubles It were not for me" said the stove
"I know who'll ask for three lumps
I
t "And vou would never have been
4
'1 and sorrows
of sugar In their tea" said the sugar
-'-' ' t( '-''' -cr lbhted if it had not been for me
s
in the sugar bowl
A' se
' ii ' ' : :: ' r 01'L ' 'illSV 7-
said a match Which VHS now What
t
i
If hy our Individ ual will and faith "And milk will he esked for too" :s 1 - ' apt would be called a "used Wt" '4 -4 ' -1' n: Is
oi 61 fi " -isr-ss-Z7 - A t- '1 ' this ban Of selfishness could lie cir- said the milk in the milk jug
i ' 1
:- fi-'(ke viAl eti- ' !1774-!i ) eunivented and abolished there would "And you would have gone very
"The pie would never have been pie o!' :'
4 : : lueerly if we had riot been turned just -
At A- c
I)( no more war no more ortut un- s" slid the tipples "at least s
without u 411444
o '''' tki as we should have been" said the
1 1 i- '-t- 4 '401" '?' ':'Pl: ' -44I)'
' ' - -
'-':'-1:C pov
I ar ishme nt o f the ye
ah' no mor e the t
1
I dampers belonoing to sove "k ' '
it WOW d never h:tve been tipple pie! e
" t 1 '
1 1 ) : 4::':-:oss
g f
4 :fk ::ittif O f
1 est4) vir beggars with outstretched hands no
' i il a )y : ' - ti 47- more hard faced misers no more law- t
41$1111610
ti :sk: '11 'i :f-- immtii e n hea rts and homes or despairing
t '"Ihe oven would IleVer have become
warm if we had not made the fire
' burn well” said the members of the "And the pie CrilSt WOUld hfiVe been -
a sad pie crust If It hadn't been for
flour and b aking powder butter wa- Louise Brooks a petite brunette
AtroP) s0 -:-‘1- '' -'' ' "'-' — - ' !:' shames I ter and a little salt" said these things whose dancing In Ziegfeld's Follieti
I 14 'f - — f
) analiaiiiiiiiikt0041111101MISM Instead of being ellShtVed the world 7 11
toot flintily and "Louis the 14th" was one of the
4 e" ifil'11 "And we gave everything the first together sensations of a recent theatrical sea
1 440 would be free "Itut It needed some one who knew
' :if 1!1'ff' ---- Ct ' -47411' !1'77"-7- Our cities and towns permanently how to put them toget her" said a son was signed by a prominent mo
- t'l lt 'the cmiture who just appeared 11111 tion picture producer to a long-term
t)4'4 - y:
divorced from this baneful curse ' in r'zwiTaTio
contract following her outstanding
4 ‘ 16
4 '-' -' -' --:?S:'r:::c ----- 1 )11':ed xvold(1 h a
e dorned with art tilled w ith
'V ' ' re h N 4tOlgt3 Wit0 said her name Was Pairy limb
work in "The American Venus" Miss
tatiss- 444er the musi c of happy voices whe
"'sirse- -----1-- ' p -i''- s 4 'Ves it u'ould have been a dreau- Brooks is a native of Wichita Kan
V and wor w
th ould m
lock arms and I- ful pie crust if stone one had just She has jet-black hair dark-brown
- --- s go roicing on the wit3' while liPs
-
ej
ttit' gone tll those thi to-
and weighs 120 pounds
eyes
e an hrown a se ngs
4e14V etZtle 'Ps -
"PON WOUld be rieti with words of love and
'TI'lli) gether Into a bowl without any sense ()
2!) McClure New5paperSyndiute truth and praise or thought or knowledge of how to
The cruel eyes of Lriced would be pi f -
i 4619 make a pie crust
'OH MAMMA COME LOOK AT TH' BIRDS MENDIN' THEIR NESTS!" transformed to cheering lights of ten- - 1 I ' - (7 "But you're till so silly all of you
der compassion shining alike on the 47s4z--)" ct - "I first pl ve of all tile stove UncOmmon Sense
4 i frail anti the strong illuminating the - --:-ece would never have been started with
n the a
---!!''-'-! dark Places with glorious rays of '"7 -01 ----- - "-----
out a Ittlfillill being tarting It
vfloiher'5'CooKliooR (-!: TARDY t ! tope and gleaming like friendly lamps 11to
'A '
- il"' CT--
as---
----- s
"In the second Mace none of von Bu John Blake
-
-
4 perate Asia anti Europe the weed has
) 1 — — There Is an Important difTerence he (copyright)
-
i I tArte2 I wandered e r Always with the white man t SUPERSTITIOUS : —
tol nve appear s where he is ne or — tween necessities and luxuries This 0
11 1: —
— — distinction is often forgotten Luxu-
e 4 4 a- ries are the things we want but can -
- RE) 1528 Western Newspnper Union) IlitS iiiit !Weil Tliii Calt be ficeou
nt" — SUE
0
GIPL1GAGP
for of course MI hout calling upon — —
V--e :-C-' ‘ — do without and they demand about
i 1 ( 1 6 a the supernatural The insidious seed three times as 11111Cli money as (I() the
t 1 i
! 'What Does Your Child may he acchhontally carried i
tbroal ' necessities Saving does not mean
P fl Just as the Jimsonweed came to this 0
4 Want to Know country ill a load of discharged hal- that the necessities nmst toe discarded
but it does
!neat that less money be
last from Ilritish ships Pot to the
I- I Answered by unreflecting there is something rather § 2's e I-i sprnt upon mere luxuries 40 f
t BARBARA BOURJAILY
Z uncanny in the way In which the j Avt- The price which economy demands - I
1
1
-:4
: 1
i 40tc I
7- steps T In this country a
":' plant:tin folltms the white man's foot-
—he name itself is from
"plants" meaning the sole of the foot
arid England the
plantain Is sometimes called way- I
ikc:A'
c-izVV47: t
1 - u
Yi-r CI ---
N IS courage and sacrifice but the re-
ward is worth the cost More real
satisfaction Is obtained from saving
rcnaeyyw than e firtolmsasvpeedn df
when with luringd funds tvtTersolu'er-- (Ili-
Ir'llili7
p
tt1:Mt
bread and the fact that x 1928 Western Newspaper Union)
at it so persist v
C7A J die chase an acre and call It 1101VE
t
11 --'N ently haunts the tracks of m an Is tic fIA
t ----o
pi III counted for by an old legend of Ger-
man origin to the effect that It was rr
i1
tlIZIld formerly a maiden who after long 1 ‘ 1Y)4
6 - Irt - 0
02 ow i
yr
waiting In vain by the wayside for 44 4 f6 I 17:1 I
q it
f her lover was changed into this weed '''' ' 1
24 "Norliik Om 2 Ilk Imo 1
C ------""--- -' And In this fm or she has ever since
e kA lot of good people bent
----- --J 76
I haunted the footsteps of noon looking l
0 haun
- to - 1 passing of the corset" says C(
lost
' for the recreant one In this ancient
--- Cora "and I know myself Its
legend we see again the idea Of prim N Pt ' I aid to uprightness"
i- 01)
otilll
I '
r '
k-'''j
At WHY ARE ICE COLD FOODS BAD the tlitlin of a m m
etaorphos bY ' V ' 0
is imits
NVIIICI) tillilliiil and vegetable forms 0
SHE HAS HEARD THAT—
il20A I W
1 r
Vitt A I I
'huh —
V'
A FOR ME? were changed the one into the other If you will count the number of 2y0 go
111 IP Severe Sentence
To those who regarded mankind as strawberries on a cake and name the )1000 pk y o'
A! tit v- i
They chili descended from the oak or the ash It last one to correspond to that letter 2tirvitt Judge—What's your occupat
-t the stomach Juices 0 t
1 semed quite natural that a disconso- of the alphabet—oh goody It's good tocligN Prisoner—I'm a coal dente
And keep them from their duty
Of turning food to rich red blood lit N 6
I
late nmiden should be changed Into a guessing—the letter will be the In
4 lik A
'Cal of your -"one and only ' Judge—Thirty days 013 one
1 For Meditation I
00000
By LEONARD A BARRETT -
I
w§1
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Easton, Mrs. Lucy L. The Chattanooga News. (Chattanooga, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 21, 1928, newspaper, June 21, 1928; Chattanooga, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2074097/m1/3/: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.