m SECTION Interesting Features for the Entire Family | Something to Think About By F. A. WALKER of Will, you tm In your grief that you cannot do it Pride scores as dictator. Like a beggar you sup on Its dry crusts, and go to bed night after night with an ache in your heart and a atlng in your conscience. Yet you keep going crookedly about the byways and highways of life and continue year after year the ragged practice of unbending your neck or curving your Hps with a friendly smile. It no longer matters so much how your behavior appears to the glaring eyes of the world, so you persist stubbornly to air your pride and flout It In public places, dropping daily a little lower from the high Ideals so sacred to you In the peaceful, hallowed days of friendship. In the background of every pic* ture depleting human unhapplness you will find an ugly blur of color quite at variance with the rules of harmony, caused by a slip of the tongue or a spurt of passionate anger between two persons, communities or nations. If you will study the blur Intently, you will find that it Is the evil thing that destroys peace and strews battlefields with rivulets of blood. If you have a true friend, give SlIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimmillimilE j him or her the best of which pure friendship Is capable of giving; or. BAGGED PRACTICE RIENDSHIP, the most sacred of all moral bonds, is never appreciated at its full worth until by some nBlooked for snap of its golden moortr. pg it takes fright and flies away. In the excitement of the moment, the loss may not be keenly felt, but is the years ride by In their swift chariots, lines mark the face and strands of silver streak the hair, there comes to the loser an inexpressible sense of loneliness which sharply reminds him or her of the glorious sun that has set behind the ftrple hills. A friendship which multiplied Joys Kd divided sorrows is* gone forever. As you repeat this word "gone" In tfce night when you are alone, and ipiii in the morning and at Internals through the day, it comes upon you with a new and terrible meaning. How gladly you would erase It, but ifc spite of your oft boasted strength TXTDDIES SIX | Will M. Maupin I jSf' i*' ten Kv DON'T WORRY! PHEN the sun is blaring bet^ . Don't worry!' V -' JKTien the breezes bloweth apt, LijlI i ' Don't worry! - * Think how It affects the corn; Bumper crop, as sure's you're born-- Get up smiling every awra, *' Drat worry! ' - - When the Iceman "brtligs til Don't worry! Keep your tongue and temper stiB. Don't worry! fay his huge outrageous toll, for they've got you in a hole-- If not ice, them It's for eoi# •: • / : Dent worry! siblings lrok bad the country through? Don't worry! iCan't help things by looking blue. Don't worry! •mile and just keep on your way, ^ Things will work out right some day, fo let nothing yo« dismay-- Don't worry! If you have quarreled, bregik the truce and heaven will bless you! (©. 1M2. by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.) YOUR<Z" to R«m9 Yoar HAND SUSSES CapabBMss w bmmi That Mak* f«r Success or Failure as Shows la Your Palm LOSS OF MONEY AS WB may read by various sign* in the hand that the fortunes subject has acquired, or is to acquire, wealth through inheritance or through his or her own exertions/ so we may read also, in the hand, the loss of wealth, after it has been possessed and enjoyed. Inspect carefully the finger of Saturn, the middle or ring finger, near the top, for a star. If it appears plainly near the edge of the finger, it Indicates loss of position and money. See also thte Mount of Samoney. See also the mount* of Saturn, which lies at the base of the base or beginning of the mount, a zigzag line, the same loss is indicated. Naturally, it must be understood that these signs, as so many others in the hand, are not always perfectly clear and well-marked, and great care must be exercised In reading them, in conjunction with the other marks and signs In the hand. (Copyright by the Wheeler SyitdlosM, X*o.) O The Scream of the PI pea. It is claimed for the bagpipes, by some admirers that it Is among the oldest of musical Instruments. Whether or nbt the oldest, It is certainly the loudest of all instruments. The duke of Sutherland owns a bagpipe which figured at Prestonpans, and must, therefore, be nearly 200 years old, yel it can still be heard at a distance ol eight miles. A | SCHOOLDAYS |*| Bvery dark chad in yaw alght-#, Dont worry! JBas a silver lining bright./ ; Don't worry! f f«on't let troubl^ trouble J*M; ust refuse to fret and stew; 3Po your own good sense prove litis1 ",y Don't worry! Hot, of course, hat what sf thaif Don't worry! It will make the hanUMt J|t> Don't worry! •Toil today--tomorrow rest; ; Brace your nerves to stand each teat, For whatever Is, Is best-- ; - Don't worry! (Copyright by W1U M. Maupln.) S*WCta: TUB KfT gM, IF i Pwcneo V*l.VDt>, VW* ht C o D O of ^ewn * **ao» I* • *HgUr 0 COOfcSe uw- ru" Ml' «e»o % * CWWVftuKS' SAM . W waft SMbit? M> KMt V) &X vei eofwe«® rwht HM«e. 0v*c*ea» <J«e>Se0 U6t<THi»t MJk. ThtiE. •gpeeo txsT6M> ^ f, vfkuOP, Ml tK* <Niue w T«k»W- <m* «*• Ml ' Oop?rl(htf liil, WMtin Newcpapar VMM*. If you're feel in" kind o' loneaom*. If you're feelln* kind o* blue. If you're apt to be forgetful of 4he bl«aln'i owned by you, Thon lt'a time you went to doctor!#' for , each little burn and amert, Oive yourself a little doctorin' tn^Hkd,; region of the heart.--Keech. ^ DISHES FOR THE CAMPER These are good filling dishes, and not hard to prepare or at all complicated as- to materials : Plymouth 8uccotaih.-- Take two cupful s of corned beef stock, two cupfuls of chicken stock, one cupful of diced Plymouth 8uccota«h.--Take two cupfuls of corned beef stock, two cupfuls' of chicken stock, one cupful of diced comed beef, one cupful of diced chicken, two cupfnls of sweet corn, one and one-half cupfuls of diced potato, the same of diced turnip and dry lima beans. Soak the beans over night and cook two hours, add stock and beans and cook slowly, then add the vegetables and seasoning one boor before serving. Cornish Pasty.--Cut a pound of round of beef In one-haJf Inch dice, slice potatoes and two or three onions. Hake a rich biscuit dough and line a deep pastry tin; put in a layer of the meat, cever over all, leaving vents for the steam to escape. Bake until the vegetables are tender--two hours or less. When done, wrap the pasty in a cloth and set out to steam for ten minutes. This softens the crust and seasons it. Serve cut up like pie. The moisture in the fresh meat and vegetables' will be sufficient. Rice and Egg Dish.--Take one-half cupful of rice, wash and drain, add a tablespoonful of butter yrtth the rice In a saucepan and fry until yellow; add water and cook until tender, then add a little milk, seasonings and three eggs; stir until the eggs are scrambled and serve hot. This makes a dish which extends the egg, and one which is wholesome. Suet Pudding.*--To one quart of boiling milk add one-half cupful of cornmeal, one-half teaspoonful of salt; stir until scalded, add" another quart of milk, two beaten eggs, a cupful of sugar, a cupful or less of raisins and one-half cupful of chopped suet, mixed with a tablespoonful or two of flour. Bake In a slow oven for three hours, stirring occasionally lor^ thtt^ftrst featf of the cooking. Tills is the big biplane which crashed to earth on the farm ot Geoflt* J. lfcCall, near Croton, N. Y., laden with unbroken bottles of Scotch and Irish whisky which had evidently been brought from Canada. In the plane were found alao a woman's powder puff and a much used route map. Pius XI Works 16 Hours a Day Has Hatty, Frugal Atoals When lie Feels He Can Spare Time From His Duties. SMtlOTY RULES MS UFE Unuaual Number of Audiences Granted by Pontiff in Few Months--Refuses ; ?v Allow Traditions to 1 ntej^^a With Mode of "Just ae the purest gold needs a little alloy to harden it and make it practical for use, »o the person with the most brilliant mind needs con^on In order to succeed." •th\ DELECTABLE DISHES • up •iiwii' Sense • • • $jr JOHN BLAKE m TEN YEARS TO THE boy of eight, ten yeAfg *b an eternity. Ten years ago he had no existence. Ten years more and he will be a man in stature-- a size that seems to him far beyond attainment. To the boy of twenty-one, ten years, while not a lifetime, Is a long stretch ahead. •t the end of the coming ten years he. will be well on his way to wherever he is going, success or failure. If he could understand just how much those ten years mean, just what can be done with them, just what they will yield If rightly cultivated, there would be far less trouble and distress in the world. To the man of forty, ten years are ten years which must not be wasted. The next ten years are his best, as far as productivity is concerned. If he has not made the last ten years count, he still hat -a chance with the next ten. ffoit® I M THE CHEERFUL CHERUB d*j\cin$ k*t rvi$kt with my ncu "too ioo3»«--~ IKope tWt tka <jiri ^ 14 never krowj I smiled ir\ witk t kr\guorov3 £r*a*. fc.dly 1 vp "toes.M'i After that, unless he is a phenomenon, the chance will be gone. He can progress after fifty, go farther than he has ever gone, but rarely unless he is going strong on bis fiftieth birthday. Look at your remaining years as an asset. Examine the next ten of them for opportunity, and see if you can allot to each enough work to carry yoa at a better pace into the next decade. - Ten years wisely employed at any time after twenty ought to make a man either a success or a failure. They may not be enough to bring a fortune, but they ought to bring habits and methods which later will insure independence. Compare the next ten years. with the last, and determine that these stretches of time, now empty and unimproved, shall be filled with achievement that is worth while. You can put Into them almost anything you choose--work, effort, thought, or Idling, and time wasting. Almost any man can be made or broken in ten years. Tou have at least that time before you If you are the age of the average newspaper reader. Make up yonr mind that even if the last ten years counted for nothing the next ten will count for much. Make that purpose, and stick to it. And these coming ten years will be the best you have ever knovm. (Copyright by John Blake.) „ o . World's Water Power. The total available horsepower In the world derivable from falling water is reckoned at 439,000,000. Africa leads with 190,000,000. Asia has 71,- 000,000. Europe is credited with 46,- 000,000, South America with 54,000,'- 000 and JBtorth >ni«rl<?n wUfe 00ft "Worry ana optimism cannot travel the same road, to say nothing of going In the same company. A real food worrier is not generally sought after, either in business or social life." FOR THE FAMILY MEAL O MAKE hot lunch sandwiches, chop remnants of ham fine; season and moisten with cream or melted butter and put on buttered slices of bread. Press the slices firmly together and trim them in oblongs or squares. Beat one egg, add from a cupful to a pint of milk, according to the number of sandwiches; add a little pepper and salt and dip each sandwich In the mixture, turning once or twice until well saturated. Brown delicately on both sides in a hot frying pan with a little butter. Serve at once on a hot platter, garnished with parsley or nasturtium leaves and blossoms. Sandwiches filled with Jelly may be fried the same way, dusted with povjrdUyed sugar and served as deuert ; Apple 8alad. Slice tender apples thinly/ leaving the skin remain if bright red. Mix with half as much finely-cut celery, chopped onion or cabbage. Add enough thick cooked salad dressing to hold the mixture together. Peanut butter may be used in place of the dressing If desired; season with salt, pepper and thin with a little vinegar and water. Serve on lettuce oc jpple ci|ps. , . ^ For a nice occasion the following dessert is one especially good to serve: Coronado B a* varian C r e am.-- Soak two ounces of gelatin in cold water. Take one quart of the ripe str a w b e r r 1 eg, crush and mix with one pound of powdered sugp#* Beat three cupfuls of double cream tmtll stiff. Add the dissolved gelatin to the crushed fruit, then stir until the mixture begins tc set. Mix lightly with the whipped cream; fill the molds and set on ice to harden. When ready to serve, dip the molds in hot water an Instant and mold. Decorate with whipped cream and nice ripe berries. Scotoh Shorthread- -- Weigh two pounds of bread flour, one pound of butter and one and one-half pounds of sugar. Sift the flour, and set the pan in the oven until it is slightly warm, using a spoon to stir and expose it to the heat. Cream the butter until it is white and will keep its shape when lifted with a spoon, then add the sugar gradually, beating until the whole is well mixed. Using the hands, mix the butter, sugar and flour together, squeezing and kneading until the ingredients are well mixed. The better the mixing thfe shorter the bread. Lay the dough on a molding board, very lightly floured, and press out the mixture with the palms of the hands into a sheet one-half inch thick. Do not use the rolling pin or add any more flour. Heat a sharp knife and cut the dough in squares oblong or triangular. Bake in a moderate oven un til a golden brown. Some prefer to bake the bread In a sheet, pricking it well with a fork. Clabbered Milk.--Set away a pan of milk rlth with cream to sour and thicken. Chill and serve with scraped maple sugar or brown sugar and grated nutmeg. This is not only good but exceedingly wholesome. Cherry Betty.--Take fresh ripe cherries and well buttered crumbs, put a layer with sugar alternating until the baking dish is full. Bake until the cherries are well done. Serve with hard sauce. Apple Salad.---Take two cupfuls of diced apples, one cupful of diced celery and one-fourth cupful of pecan meats, mix with a highly-seasoned mayonnaise and serve on lettuce. •' Mint Jelly.--Prepare apple or plum jelly and, when cooling, add a bunch of mint. When pouring into the glasses, a few drops of peppermint may be added to enhance the flavor. Hamburger Ste* ' -V round steak througn fhe meat grinder adding a pinch of cloves, with the usual seasoning of salt and pepper and one-half of a small hot pepper rubbed to a paste (using the canned chili, though the plmentoes will do), adding tabasco sauce. Pat the meat Into a flat cake and broil under a W)t gas flame or over clear coals. Turn until both sides are seared, then cook more slowly until done to the center. Serve covered with melted butter and sprigs of parsley. -- . . . Vt» It It, by WmUvb N*w«pap«r Union.) | WitW and Will ttOt BOtt Home.--Plus XI is a man who thrives on work, and he insists, against his doctor's orders on devoting at least 16 hours of the 24 to management of Hie church. Probably never since the time of Leo XIII have so many audiences been granted as in the last few months with diplomats as well as pilgrims. The papal entourage, accustomed to Benedict's precision in keeping to one o'clock as his luncheon hour, find it a little difficult to adapt themselves to Pius' new rule--that audiences come first and meal time Is a second consideration. Many thousand pilgrims hastened to Rome for the Eucharistlc congress and within a certain number of days were due to be on their homeward journey. In consideration of this the pope decided that all the different groups of pilgrims must be received and greeted within this limited time. This necessitated making the holy father's luncheon a movable feast. Some days he .lunches at two o'clock and sometimes a few minutes before, but never at one o'clock or 12 :30 o'clock, which was always Pius X's hour. Though the pope's doctor insists that no man can stand this and keep well, hard work In Rome being contrary to habit and the climate, the holy father's only answer Is 'that be has always been a busy man and likes to get through what he sets out to do. No amount of remonstrating causes him to change his mind. Breaks Old Custom. It always has been the custom for the pope to have the walls of his suite covered not with paper but with damask, and up to the present every pope has accepted what was tradition in papal housefurnishlng. When Plus XI visited his apartments on the third floor of his palace he ordered that the tapestry be taken down, the walls scraped and white wall paper put up. with the exception of his private chapel, which was to remain decorated with damask.. if The papal private suite consists of seven rooms, besides a waiting room, and a modern bathroom, which was remodeled this year. There is, besides the pope's bedroom, drawing room, dining room, two waiting rooms, study and chapel, a suite for th» private secretaries Monsignor Gonfalonleri and Monsignor Venini, who held their posts with the pope when he was archbishop of Milan. Plus XI's chapel is the room where Benedict died. The present bedroom was under rhe last pontificate the private chapel. It is a moderate-sized room, with a brass bedstead, a mahogany chest of drawers and small desk. Above the bed Is a large picture of the Madonna of Good Counsel. On the chest of drawers is a small mirror, the only one in the suite of rooms. Three straight chairs, one in front of the desk, one by the bed and one against the wall, complete the rest of the furniture In the room. When the private secretaries suggested that an easy chair would be of use his holiness pointed out that he had given up sitting In easy chairs, as he feared It would make him grow stout Cares Nothing for Tradition. Bis holiness Is not one to allow tradition to interfere with bis usual mode of life. He wishes to follow the same simple customs he has been used to all his life. One of these Is that in his own private apartments he has around him only his personal attendants, who know his love of simplicity and abide by It. In his life down In the papal reception rooms he allows the tradition of centuries to be kept op. For this reason no one is allowed in New York.--Through the confession of two criminals detectives were led to a safe deposit box maintained in a bank for the disposition of stolen property. Abe Harris and Louis Klein pleaded guilty to possessing burglars' tools and Klein agreed to open the box. A visit to the bank revealed the box was empty. It was not known that they rented the safe depofclt box until the arrest of a third man. The police believe that another man may have had a key and removed valuables since the arrest of Klein and Harris. his bedroom until he is dressed and has entered his study fbr his breakfast. His own personal attendant looks after his needs when he is in his private apartment. This man, Giuseppe Malvestltl, was the personal servant of Cardinal Ferrari and passed into the service of Cardinal Rattl when he became archbishop of Milan. He is a capable, sensible valet, who keeps his own counsel, and takes good cafe of the pope. Before the present pontificate, three men did his work. Besides caring for the private rooms, he assists in the service of ushering in those who in the morning are received In audience ir the state rooms, downstairs. With the exception of Malvestltl and the two private secretaries, Pope Pius made very few changes after his election. When he notified his desire that the four secret participant chamberlains, "camerieti segreti participant!," who attend during the week, should retain their posts held during Benedict's pontificate, he also added that his own particular'secretary, Monsignor Gonfalonleri, should be made chamberlain. It was pointed out to him that there had always been four chamberlains, never five. "Never mind," said the pope, "we will make my secretary, not the fifth, but the first one." Has Efficient Assfstanta. t„' In this way Pope Plus ha« tarrounded himself with assistants who have proved their efficiency in the years they have been with him. He has chosen these men from his own province, Lombardy. They all know their duties and never have to be told a second time. For Instance, the pope never allows his desk to become littered with papers. He probably readp. more papers and reviews than any! other man. He has his own book ofj press clippings shown to him every) day, besides reading carefully his ow®[ Milanese paper, yet nothing is allowed to be left about. The same rule is kept) in his study, upstairs v and down. EM insists on neatness and quickness. Oft a day he probably examines, beside# his usual correspondence, ten very diflft* : } cult and serious documents, each on* being brought to him in turn. The severity of his private rooms M softened by the number of flowetfl - placed about on his desk and on thai 1 dining room table. He always has been , passionately fond of flowers, and in the library at Milan he always had • small vase with flowers in it This love of his Is so well known that on his birthday his Milanese friends sent * so many flowers that his prlvattl rooms were full of them. ? ^ Expects Instant Obedience. . , ' r\ Plus is an undemonstrative mat^* very calm and very sure in everything he does; but once his mind is made up f he expects absolute and instant obe- I dience. A short while ago he notified his valet to arrange that rooms In one of the outer wings of the palace should be prepared for his old housekeeper, who was coming from Milan. This 1 derly woman, Slgnora Linda, wai << housekeeper to the pope's mother from his boyhood, and at the time of the death of Slgnora Rattl, a few years ? ago, she retired to a convent, as the pope had not then been appointed cardinal archbishop of Milan. When !*• succeeded Cardinal Ferrari he sent word to the Slgnora Linda to coma j and take charge of the archiepiscopil. palace. Soon afterward Cardinal Ratti w*a elected pope. Naturally everyoaa thought that she would have to !•» ; turn to the convent again. But Pop® Pius decided that she should come to Rome and take •care of his vestments and clothes, so that in her old aft she might still be looked after by tha Rattl family. When the pope's entourage heard of this decision they pointed out to him that, though Pius X desired to have his sister live in the Vatican, the op- !| position was so great that he had bee® - : forced to arrange about taking a house in St. Peter's square. "For centuriea the popes have abided by this rule, * your holiness." To which Pope PiO» ; replied: "Well, we ure pope now, and future popes can follow our example." v . . . 4 * * . • • " , V r ' r i ' It J Radio Masher Peeves Outraged and Indignant P«wiyM#li IpfMhT Complaint t+Jtodtr ? •fnor ef ttate; j... Philadelphia. -- Bnter the rattto masher. His initial appearance In the ether was related by Governor Sproul of Pennsylvania at a recent banquet here. "I received a letter the other day," said the governor, "from a very outraged and indignant woman who had just purchased a radio set. 'I was enjoying a lovely concert,' the letter read, "when suddenly a coarse voice broke In in the middle of it and shouted: "Is there any good-looking dame listening to this? Because if there is I want her to meet me at the corner of the Friends' graveyard In Quakertown tomorrow night at eight o'clock. I've got a bottle of hooch in my car and if I like her IH take b*r to Atlantic City.' "In order to paaa the buck to the federal government," the governor remarked, chuckling, "I wrote thai the development of radio had come so suddenly that we have not had time yet to become conversant with the peculiar conditions it creates, but that I trusted due action would be taken to prevent this form of outlaw broadh caster from Inflicting his personality on the world at large." Actually "Sight Unseen." fn Morocco, youths and maidens fare badly' indeed, for they are not even allowed to see each other before the wedding. Now and again a venturous youth will hide himself in the room when the young woman is coming to pay the customary state call upon nls mother, but even this needs to be done with a considerable amount of cau- Engineer Finds Chicks Where He Left Eggs Groveland, Cal.--Tom McKen nn an engineer of the Hetch Hetchy railroad, was back in camp today with six young chickens hatched from the heat locomotive boiler. Mcanticlpating that be wuuiu away from camp at meal hours, placed the eggs in the engine cab about 25 days ago. He forgot provisions until he peeping of ».«ly £ as they broke shells yesterday. of the Kenna, would be through their SEA LION BOARDS SE*PUHE Boards Craft on Destroyer Range N«v |he Coronado Islanda and A* 7* - <;'ri fuaea to Get Off. San Diego, Cal.--A bold aea lion toak charge of a seaplane, No." 8, on * r destroyer rangf near the Coronado Islands recently. The seaplane, in charge of Bnatga : Edward Dolleck, alighted on the water to wait for the destroyers to take their poeitlon for practice, and the side door of the aft compartment was | open to let the gases from the engine | escape. Suddenly the ensign and Ms %- crew were surprised to hear a re- . | sounding "woof from the compart- |* ment. In it they found a sea lien k weighing some 76 pounds which had evidently foundered up the Incline leading to the compartment and | elded to remain. The crew tried to put the sea lion off, but he resented that attempt, fighting bravely, and bit one of the i crew in the arm. Then the crew decided to let him stay and piled life * preservers on him to keep him quiet, J In that position he was taken back North Island to serve as a mascot the seaplane force. CAUSES MOTHER'S DEATH Child Jumps Into Her Lap and Cau^i^ Internal Injuries That Prove : ^ Fatal. - • r MAKE ROPE OF GOPHER TAILS Weed That Will Net Pl*pt. Circassian walnut Is heavier than Work Against Rodents In Montana Effectively Illustrated In Itop* Made by Indians. ^ Helena, Mont.--A rope made of 8, 000 gopher (ground squirrel) tails was recently on display at the ollro ef the Montu1" extension director, awaiting dhlpmeat to the biological survey of the United States Department of Ag- Blackfoot Indian chief, Split-Ear, and his tribal assistants,1 who live near Browning, In Glacier county, Montana. The Indians have taken an active Interest in the campatgn against the rodents, and after burying more than 1,400 ground squirrels, decided to save for the IB-foot rope now on exhibition. It is estimated that at least 10,000 rodents were destroyed by the ifcnltiue. The rope was made kf the Indians daring the drlt*. PotteviUCy Bai" By into his mother's arms, Edward Bartyi eleven years old, unintentionally caused the death of Mrs. Alice Child* fort^-five years old, at Port Carhea, The boy was a child by a former marriage. Mrs. Chllds was seated lu a rocking chair when the boy, coming la from play, jumped into her lap. Mm Chllds was at once taken violently M .with internal Injuries and soon died. Bullet Lande In Victim's Vest Pocket. Dover, O.--Tearing through a wte> dow, a showcase, a section of pressed! ham, and an apron, a revolver bullet fired outside the meat market of Saafruel Groff landed in GrofTs vest pocket without breaking the skin. The was fired by one of two men robbed the market, stealing $20 and a rifiet * Oil Is extracted from corn salting tpxn the manufacture oi tay, star**, giacoee and sirujK I I