The ? hildren,s Corner ? doro"uwuho>ds ROCKING HORSE PUZZLE Bcn?' - -ai: 2 A tey? ?. Abbnvia*. r. ; r i. y%rr. ,r ? . r T. I:s % '??ar . r t. A ' ? V?rt La;--, an S What toDfl ? rail Father. *. Pa 4 a - ht r.. a. ! fr ~ I. To h&v? ?!A:?r. LATEST NEWS FROM GOBLIN TOWN A K 1 - ? . by Sc'sj*' rs J': Charles K. Tiny ha.? been awarded a har.d 3 de--'- ; f r sir:? one-hundreth f a yard is ? ninety ?Ighth f fe ?e?. :.r!. j Miss Pinky L F-iy wn t ti'.e I top of a currant 1 us'r. v. hen the C"*v I sneezed, but F>r. V. -rl -r.a r- ; ? rts that ' ?he Is '??'it of ; :r..*<-r Queen Titan:*, engaged is cwnsir.g ir. r.l - 7 r* King ON'.-r. r. .-pent the week-*:.-! Id High Grass F<.<r?:st, ^ <-r*? hunted the w ! 1 d potato t'r.e fe Ilufus J. Tiddle r :t. tl? Fairy Str-.ag Man. held In mid-air a live eater;:'.: r weigh ing f ur elevenths -fa gram. The ap plause was so tremendous t : . a t a blade of grass nearly began to wave. E'uke Atom's trained butterflies eas ily defeated Count E. -n's flock by half a wing. The monster Spider is in a mixed BP frenzy because Clarence <"?. Pack rut-bed gum stickum all over the web T*rhlle the Spider snored. The Three Blind Mice tried on crys tal spectacles and beg to announce that they can now see perfectly. I^uffball will be played this after noon on Flat Rock Stadium between the University of Plllywlnkle and lilcroacope college. Richard Q. Brownie, after visiting = SUPERSTITIOUS 5 E ? ? ? SUE ? < ' r o SHE HAD HEARD THAT? If you have money In your pocket the first time you see the new moon flutter, little purse strings, wave for joy ? because it is a sign you will not be broke before the next moon. (?? bv MeClure N'pwsparer Syndicate.) Spontaneous Action Oar spontaneous action is always the oest- Yon cannot with your best deliberation and heed come So close to any question as your spontaneous glance shall bring you.? Ralph Waldo Emerson. Sunday Meditation A good dinner may make up for a poor sermon, bur we never have known a man who was content with a poor dinner because he had listened to a good sermon. ? Exchange. Tie Pastor Says: The reason why the Scripture speaks of a certain crowded way as lead ing to destruction is that those who travel It do not obey the traffic regulations. ? John Andrew Holmes. 1 the hemes c? Earth People, relates t that he t!ck!e<S three bovs <*-n the r. se i at 2:00 A. M. ; *L.. *S!sDered aon THE SURPRISED MOUSE wes a now- ' r.nt :,ib ??I**-!, sr. ! nibbled, an'i nib" > i ?va? :!*'?? ? ribblir.e t: -tr< -* -t people !.?:! * t want hirr. to . 1 ? e. ? Mr. Z~z witz*s ? f c'.'thes ir. the . leather tr-.r.k. Wh ?* r. Mr. Zez'witz *.*? e:.r *o j-'it r,r. hi? : ?? v s~it, there were ' . ?*3 the ? ? ' * : ' ? ! here ar.d there. h*:t the ' rr.er?-:y cav.? a *!:.y :^hter fr- U?*Ier th -e war::. s*.-:iin pife. He t':.' * he wa.? a very wise i r:-''tise. ar.'i knew all about traps an 2 j ******************* ********************************* ******** ********************* ! To Change the World ? Change Yourself I * o o >c * By JEAN NEWTON % * sje ****?**?*********?=!?******************#*********************?**********?*?***********??* ?? tit hat on earth are you doing?" ? V asked one woman of another, whom she found on hands and knees under a hot sun in a field on the side of a hill. "I'm hunting for a four-leaf clover," was the answer. "You know I'm not superstitious, but there's something abom finding a four-leaf clover that makes me feel everything will be all right- So I've been up here all after noon looking for one. but r.o luck yet." That Sume woman, an Intelligent person, by the way, who was up there all afternoon hunting for a four-leaf clover that would make "everything all right," had wilfully, carelessly, oooooooooooooooooooooooooc When the Old ? Club Meets g By Douglas Malloch ? E O 00000000000000000000000000 ? HAVE my club, as most men do, * With leather rockers scattered thrcugl. And shining glass upon the table. And yet how strange we're never able. However much of wealth we boast, To buy the things we want the most; For I'd trade all the glass and leather For that old gang just once together ? Just once to have the old club meet That met up alley, not up street. In that old clubhouse that we builded. Although it was not great nor gilded. We picked a board up here and there, A tattered ru^, a broken chair. And only when your purse is slender You really know a tin can's splendor. 1 wonder where they are tonight? Perhaps, like me, without a light They sit before the fading embers And ev'ry man of them remembers. Yes, fellows, as I think of yon Perhaps you're sitting thinking, too. I bear no voice, I catcb no greeting. And yet perhaps the club is meeting, (ft. Its*. Dougla# Malloch.) A PUZZLE Four states ar -? : .r. tie--.- ; - * - " - in tier, s ;-art ? yw j r.arr.e them? One afters'" ~n n. -i?e f ri=".e*~r' In Tommy's The shoe r>~ . ???i a l.iee. and "xhea T?*?mrny saw *:.e slee: .: .,* aov.^'s tall sticking ottt, he put : :s ? ? wj. v*rr and laced up the chouse's tall. Th?*re was f r h:~* a:"'! Toiiimj's fv t. be- ; !e. ' * t": ?? tr did not feel v- rv r- - r:. v ?-*. and .fter Tommy i . ;.-es>- - laced his tail. r-.r in: -\e r: :.T : bfhaved himself f r the re.-: of life. ? V.r. t seemingly without thought, gotten her self into a most unhappy situation. She had ignored advice, had denied at tention to the clamorings of her own common sense in ronflict with stubborn impulses which first caused a foolish quarrel with her husband and then carried it further, forcing situations which only aggravated the matter and caused further friction and unhappi ness. Driven by a perverse impulse, she had refused to harken to reason, turned a deaf ear to glimmerings of understanding within herself. She would not make the effort to think, to put on the brakes when she was in rapid fashion being taken downhill. And yet she spent an afternoon on a hillside in a hot sun. trying to find a four-leaf clover ? for good luck. It reminds me of the man who was told when he said "What's the use ? jou can't change the world **Oh. GIRUGfcBv^ "Engagements arc not so long as they used to be," saya Observing Olivia, "But, for that matter, neither are marriages." (? by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) ,1 I ? I . . ' ' ' ' ' 1 ' ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 ' ' ' ' ? , . WILL SUPERVISE NICARAGUA ELECTIONS f L? :t to Alfred W. John?"D am' Capt. Frank Fulton, as they - : r NIoar. - : ; the -S. S. Santa M r".:. raptain Johnson is the :..t r i'i the ri.:* * :! ard ? elections committee, and coes to Nicaragua : r the purp?>? ? < f s^per. i>:: - the elections ti.^re. Captain Fulton is n *r?asur?-r. i ; r?-?juesr of the Nicaragua n government an 1 -.mr* . . j ointed Ly r; ?* Supreme court of that country. . . . ..... . . . ... . . . ... ; Avoid the Monotonous Diet By NELLIE MAXWELL I lhere is so rr" rhere Is such r unreasoning p?.s>. - for activity! \:d so we sk in-. the surface of all ?J.: its: we never lock ri svn into the; .?r:Y.* *?:d ?.-e the pc -:ifi of help and ' :re which they nvcr *. contain. \ t TITH the fresh gr-en vegetables ? * * carrots, radish- < and beets so ] ientlful in the market? one need not have a monotonous diet. Coffee Sponge. Soak two tabI*?pooDfuls of gelatin ir one-fourth cupful of water. Dis , solve In two cupfuls of strong coffee, I add three-fourths of a cupful of sugar. ' strain into a bowl and set Into ice I water. Cool slightly, beat with a wire ; egg whip until the mixture is quite stiff. IV. tl in the stiffly beaten whites of three e^?'s and continue beating until the mixture holds its shape. Turn into individual molds, dipped into ice water and chill on Ice. Un yes you can ? all you have to do is change yourself." The good luck for which that wom an was searching was obviously a change for better control within her self. And she sought it on a hillside, in the form of a four-leaf clover. <? by the Bell Syndicate. Inc.) Harbin's Sudden Rite The story of the city of Harbin re sembles that of an American mining or oil town become important over night. For many years its place on the map was an insignificant one, but v\ith the construction of the railroad in 1S96 it became a flourishing city. Because of its strategic position Har bin became an important Russian mil itary center during the Itusso- Jap anese war. Used Every Day in Bridge Our Mr. Ripley reports that "smajs m r m j 1 m e boetalevjprenenvgttavjras" was the word used by Galileo to hide the secret of his discovery of Saturn. And, as near as we can recall, a lady bridge player the other night ured the same word to hide her discovery that her partner had reneged and that the opposition, instead of going down one, would make the contract. ? Arkansas Gazette. First American Synagog The first synagog in North America was established on Manhattan island in 1654, says Time, the Newsmagazine. It was founded by Spanish and Por tuguese Jews from Brazil, whither many bad fled after rhe expulsion of the Jews from Spain and Portugal in 1492 under Ferdinand and Isabella. Decorators Well Paid Decorating dinner tables for private parties is a well-paid business in New York, the fees charged ranging from $200 to $1,000. Many firms of this sort earn from $20,000 to $30,000 a year. mold and pipe with whipped cr<Min, sweetened and flavored in rose - .apes. Peach Canapes. Bake a sponge cake in a dripp'ng pan; it should be one inch i: ne?s when baked. Cool, cut with cut ters or in squares. Cook in a small amount of butter until delicately browned on both sides. Cook fresh peaches, peeled and cut into halves In a rich sirup until soft. Drain and sprinkle with powdered sugar, a :\;w grains of mace and a few drops of lemon juice. Reheat the peaches in two tabiespoonfuls of butter, adding two or three at a time. When hot serve on the cake with a foamy Tarts are such dainty little cakes to serve for tea or as a dessert. They may be cut from small bits of left over pastry or may be baked in small patty pans. The tilling may be Jelly, a cooked orange or lemon cream and topped with a meringue, or a simple little sauce of crushed fruit, topped with whipped cream. There are any number of ways of serving them, and they Take the place of pie. which is so often spoiled in appearance by cutting. Foamy Sauce. Cream one-half cupful of butter, add gradually one cupful of confection ers' sugar, stirring constantly : add one beaten egg and three tabiespoon fuls of orange Juice. Turn Into a double boiler and beat while beating. Turn Into a hot sauceboat and sprin kle with nutmeg. (?. 1930. Western Newspaper Union.) jij Nutty Natural } ? History J ? ?Y HUGH HUTTON ? g THE SUDANESE WUMP TUE wump is a creature well known to antiquity, having been brought up into Egypt from the Sedan over 6,OOo years ago. Its resemblance to the Sphinx has led archeologists to be lieve that it posed as the orlgtoal model for that monument. Although of a very retiring nature. Its favorite food is lion tails, and its persistent depredations among the lion herds have left the SudaD w.ui hardly a fully-tailed lion. An acorn head with lop-eared pea nut kernels is the most striking char acteristic of this animal. Along with this go a double peanut body, to which are attached toothpick legs and split peanut feet. The eyes are spots ot white paint with Ink spots and the flerce expression must be handled very carefully. ?c) Metropolitan Newspaper Service.)

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