| Japanese Children Learn About Farm Labor JAPANESE youngsters, spending *■* their summer vacation on farms In Shizuoka prefecture, furnish their own motive power as they haul wheat from the fields beneath a blistering sun. The children are sent to the farms annually In keep ing with a movement Inaugurated a few years ago to school the chil dren in farming. II BEOTIME STORY £ > By THORNTON W. BURGESS ||| SAMMY JAY BRINGS LIGHTFOOT WORD SAMMY Jay la one of those who believe In the wisdom of the old saying, “Early to bed and early to rise.” Sammy needs no alarm clock to get him up early In the morning. He is awake as soon us It Is light enough to see and wastes no time wishing he could sleep a little long er. His stomach wouldn't let him If he wanted to. Sammy always wakes up hungry. In this he Is no different from all his feathered neighbors. So the minute Sammy gets his eyes open he mukes his toilet, for “He’s Coming 1” Cried Sammy. Sammy is very neat, and starts out to bunt for bis breukfust. Long ago Sammy discovered that there is no Bafer time of day to visit the door yards of those two-legged creatures called men. than very early In the morning. On this particular morn ing he had planned to fly over to Farmer Brown’s dooryard. but at the last minute he changed his mind. Instead he flew over to the dooryard of another farm. It was so very early In the morning that Sammy didn't expect to find anybody stir ring so you can guess how surprised he was when just as he came In sight of the dooryard he saw the door of the farm house open and a man step out. Sammy stopped In the top of the nearest tree. “Now what Is that man doing up as early as this?’’ muttered Sammy. Then he caught sight of something under the mnn’s arm. He didn’t have to look twice to know what It was. It was a gun. Yes, sir, It was a gun; a ter rlble gun. ‘'Hal" exclaimed Sammy, and quite forgot that his stomach wns empty. “Now, who can that fellow be after so early In the morning? I wonder If he Is going over to the Big River after Mr. and Mrs. Quack, or If he Is going to the dear Old Brier-patch to look for Peter Rah bit, or If he is going to the Old Pas ture In search of Reddy Fox, or if It Is Mr. and Mrs. Grouse he hopes to kill. I think I'll sit right here and watch." So Sammy sat In the top of the tree and watched the hunter with the terrible gun. He saw him head straight for the Green Forest “It’s Mr. and Mrs. Grouse after ail, I guess,” thought Sammy. “If I knew Just where they were I’d go over and warn them.” But Sammy didn't know just where they were and he knew that it might take him a long time to find them so he once more began to think of breakfust; and then, right then, another thought popped into his head. He thought of Light foot the Deer. Sammy watched the hunter enter the Green Forest, then silently fol lowed him. From the way the hunter moved Sammy decided that he wasn’t thinking of Mr. and Mrs. Grouse. ‘‘It's Light foot the Deer, sure ns I live!" muttered Sammy. “He ought to be wnrned. He cer tainly ought to be wnrned. I know right where he Is. I believe I’ll warn him myself." Sammy found Llghtfoot right where he had expected to. “He's coming!" cried Sammy. “A hunter with a terrible gun Is coming!” ® T. W. Burgess.—WNU Servloe. Best French Worker Albert Parrot, a brleklnyer, has been named the best workman In France and has received the Le gion of Honor decoration In recogni tion of his ability. The award fol lowed a competition which takes place every three or four years In which workers In nil trades take part "Longitude Harrison" John Harrison (1093 1770), an English Inventor, became celebrated as “Longitude Harrison.” When the British government offered prizes for the discovery of a method for determining the longitude at sea within 60, 40 nnd 30 geographical miles, he made four chronometers, now In the Greenwich royal observ atory. each with a compensation curb to the balance wheel All qualified for the first prize No News Is Good News \ HOPE NOTHING HAS HAPPENED LETS SEE,ITS BEEN FOUR DAYS’ SINCE \'VE R&tEIVEP A LETTER IXtyvfc PROBABLY R?R6orreN all ablpot me —=r ['Mu yoo please.siwo 1 b(ME MORE MONEV f hWEfet STAyiN6 ANOTHER Grandmother’s Recipe for Bread By ANNE CAMPBELL THERE In a book where It had long been spread, I found Grandmother’s recipe for bread, Written by her dear hand, and placed inside A cook-book long ago, for me, a bride, 1 had not tried It for a dozen years, And gazed upon it now with falling tears. For I could see her silver head once more, Gent to a little child beside her door. I smelled the home made bread she baked for me, And churned for Grandmother In memory. The buttery door stood open, for no bar Kept me from Grandmother's tall cooky Jar. The curtains blew In the October air, Her bird snng. telling me the world was fair. The carpets made of rags, the tidies’ fold Upon the Morris chair, like her, grown old. Are memories of precious years, long sped, Caught In recl|>e for making bread. Copyright—WNU Service. Question box i, ED WYNN, ' 'he Perfect Fool Dear Mr. Wynn: A friend of mine always tells me he can’t afford to run an automo bile. Yet l know he owns one. What do you make of that? Truly yours, , 1*. ANNO. Answer: That’s why he knows he can’t afford to run one. Dear Mr. Wynn: What does It mean when It Is said a man Is In the “crenm of society?’’ Sincerely N. V. USS. Answer: That simply means he Is thick. Dear Mr. Wynn: I stopped to look In the window of a drug store today and I saw the window tilled with red rubber' gloves. I suppose you’ll think I’m dumb, but I Just must ask you. What In the world are rubber gloves used for? Yours truly, JIMMY NEEWHISKERS. Answer: Rubber gloves, my boy. Do You Know— That the first clock was the clepsydra or water-clock, in troduced at Rome about 158 B. C , by Scipio Nasica? The earliest complete clock of which there is certain record, was made by a Saracen me chanic in the Thirteenth cen tury. fj McClure Newt-paper Syndicate WNU Rervtca are worn by people who want to wash their hands without getting them wet. Dear Mr. Wynn: I advertised in the papers for a servant and today my ad was an swered by a man who said he Just left your employment. In answer ing my question about why he left you, he said that he absolutely left you without any angry words. Is this true? Sincerely, I. N. GAGEDHIM. Answer: It Is true. I was In the bnth and he just locked the door, packed his things and went away as quiet as possible. © Assortated Newspaper*. WNU service. through JEAN NEWTON A WOMAN S EYES ON THE WOMAN WHO CRAVES PRESTIGE WHATEVER may be her virtues and her graces, there is one type of woman who can never be successful In marriage, a noted au thor tells us. Ani that Is the tvorn an with a sex Inferiority complex. Though she may be a perfect angel, such a woman Is unfit to be a wife. The trouble with her, we are told, is that her first Interest Is always maintaining her prestige. With a feminine Inferiority complex she Is not confident of herself and her abll D1SHES BY FAMOUS COOKS A S MACARONI, spaghetti and ** noodles are all such popular foods and take the place In a meal of other starchy foods such as pota toes, we enjoy a few new ways of preparing such dishes. Rector’s Spaghetti and Chicken Salad. Take one-half pound of elbow spaghetti, two cupfuls of diced chick en. one cupful of chopped celery, one tablespoonful of onion, one tea spoonful of salt, one-half cupful of mayonnaise, two tabelspoonfuls of chopped green pepper, one table spoonful of plmlento or minced red pepper, one tablespoonful of capers, lettuce or watercress. Cook the spaghetti until tender. Drain and chllL Add the remaining Ingredi ents and mix lightly. Serve on let tuce or cress with goldenrod sauce, which Is made by rubbing several hard-cooked eggs through a sieve. Salmon or tuna may be used in place of chicken. Liver With Noodles. Take five ounces of noodles, cook until tender In boiling salted water. Drain. Line a casserole with them and set aside to become firm. Cut a pound of liver In slices and scald In a cupful of boiling water. Drain and cut fine. Fry a carrot and on ion In three tablespoonfuls of bacon fat, using one-half cupful of onion and one-fourth of a cupful of chopped cooked carrot. Add three tablespoonfuls of flour, when brown add one and one-half cupfuls of soup stock and the liver. Season well, cook until thick, pour Into the cas serole, cover with crumbs and brown. © Western Newspaper Union. ities, and therefore needs constant affirmation of her worth in the opin ion of others. That disqualifies her entirely for the role of a wife. It seems to me that «.he impor tance of this point lies not in fol lowing to its conclusion the question of how the desire for personal pres tige Interferes with the require ments for a woman’s success in marriage. We a know that. It would seem ore to the point to consider that a craving for atten tion, a desire for prestige is very likely to disqualify a woman—or for that matter a man—for success in anything. There is nothing In the world that so Interfere^ with accomplish ment and with enjoyment of life as having one eye on what other peo ple will say or think. There Is nothing so distracting as to be pre occupied in gaining the good will or good opinion of others. There is no surer short-cut *o failure than the effort to shine. People who have creative work, distinguished achie\ement, to their credit, have succeeded because they did their work for its iwn sake. People who are most highly regard ed by the world are those who have cared little for the world’s acclaim. People who have the greatest expe rience of happiness are those who pursue the even tenor of their way, doing their best according to their lights, playing the game for the sake of the game, without thought to an other's opinion, or to admiration or applause. For the Class Room Dark brown soutache is used ef fectively to trim this two-piece dress of brown and white shepherd check woolen, which Is designated for classroom wear. The skirt is pleated all around. The velvet as cot scarf, leather belt and buttons are dark brown. Tar Bate of Many Product* Tar, obtained during the manu facture of gas from coal. Is the base of more than 2,000 byproducts, including dyes, antiseptics, scents, flavoring essences, aspirins, and moth balls. City of Leontopolia The city of Leontopolis was an ancient city In the Delta of Egypt. The name is also a later designa tion for NIcephorlum, a fortified town of Mesopotamia, on the Eu phrates. Grave Oddly Marked Over the ancient grave of an un identified person in Wilmington, N. C„ stands a monument bearing carved designs of snakes, a devil’s head and the head of an elephant They Believe in Being Prepared C\V. UOLI.INSON, left, and tils brother, J. \V. ltolllnson, thrifty resi • dents of Oklahoma, believe in preparedness, so they have built, ai small expense, their own coffins. The caskets are all ready, even to the satin pillows, to receive the owners in fine style at the proper time. “Sunburst” Collar and Cuff Set for Fall Bt GRANDMOTHER CLARK This Collar uo