An Alter Dinner Talk Bij Litfle Tommu Jones i r i i m IF OTSTllPS HAPPENED ONCEAMcjflK of course rr would be grand BUT REALTY ONCE A TffiSB IS JUST ABOUT AIL I CAN STAND Little Rastus And tne Turkey mfflOinKETlHDATTURKSEZ Cln rwn - pnnPJ BUTCOLLT DATTURKHE DONE KETCH27 e CHRISTMAS PIES A Novel Sport For a Childrens Party In Holiday Time Have a large pan covered with brown tissue paper to look like pie crust In side the pie have these letters to which are attached ribbons the other end of which come through the pie crust The letters neatly cut out are Six as two iiis three es four rs three ys one c two hs two ss one t two ns one d two ps one w and one L The children sit around the pie each holding one thread They sing Sing a sons of Christmas A pie crust full of fun Find the wish we wish you When the game is done Then they pull the letters out and pin them on their breasts Then be- k HyiitfHr S SrL IGtSrjk THE CniJISTMAS PIE gins the fun of puzzling out how the children should stand in a line so that the letters will form a sentence When in proper position the letters will make A MERRY CHRIST MAS AXD A HAPPY NEW YEAR ffiHIK2 MEYD Vjt - -- I Jim SSAW gaj V - Iffe fB m X - - lZ SA DICKAS HE COT INTOBED ISUBELT HAVEGCTABKLHEAD rrrSoCKSARBSPSMAU INSTEAD w SCHWALMER BOYS AND GIRLS Their Quaint Costumes and Their Odd Christmas Dance Over in Hesse Nassau a district In Germany there is a section of the Hessian people who present an inter esting study particularly in regard to their quaint Christmas customs These people live in the valley of the river Schwalm The Schwalmer boys wear a peculiar round hat or cap without brim or visor It resembles in shape a small cheese box They wear a sort of coat with skirt reaching be- fep 4P SCHWALMER BOY AND GIRL low the knees something on the order of the highlanders kilt and white socks with black bows The Schwalmer girls also wear white stockings with the black bows Their skirts reach scarcely below the knees It is the fashion to wear several stiff skirts which stand out from the per son much in the manner of the hoop skirts of our own grandmothers On their heads the girls wear a funny little pill box sort of hat to which are attached broad bands tied under the chin completely concealing the ears The boys and girls have an outdoor dance at Christmas when the weather favors Each village has a favorite danc ing ground where the young people gath er for the fun The boys stand in a semi circle while the girls line up to await their partners Everybody maintains a dignilied silence Finally one boy steps forward to the maiden of his choice lifts his arm and bows pro foundly Each of the boys in his turn then goes through the same ceremony of choosing his partner who is his for the day Then begins the dance which is vigorous and hearty v a A - - IUM1 irsyr r s yn R3trrs v e- j a r 2eirfy ji JK t A V0 T - p I II io Jfl ICOC i Tbe peach stopple plum and pear Are nice s uXcarj be Bur just give me fte frail fetrs Qptbeggd dd CbnVroastteet Milk Fed Edible Rats The Chinese diplomat regarded his grilled frogs legs with faint disgust I suppose they are good he fal tered It Is hard though to conquer my repulsion Yet they are clean clean feeders eh The American laughed long and loud You he cried are repelled by frogs legs you who eat dogs and rats Ah but said the Chinaman our edible dogs and rats are the cleanest feeders Imaginable They are equal to celery fed duck or California peach fed hog They are conflued in runs you know and to make their flesh white and delicate they are fed on mushes of bread and milk and vege tablesno meat whatever You Americans think it disgusting to eat rats and dogs because you imag ine them fattening on carrion and offal But these frogs here No Im afraid I cant They may have fed on some tramp suicide for all 1 know He pushed back his plate and waited for the next course The Elusive Chuckwalla The chuckwalla Is one of the most interesting of the creatures to be found in southern Californias great desert The chuckwalla seeks to es cape his adversary by crawling Into a crevice of a rock so narrow that it seems impossible to get him out But the Indians have learned all his tricks and how to circumvent them To the I desert aborigine the chuckwalla is al luring He feasts on the chuckwalla hence he grows wise as to Its habits He takes a piece of strong wire or a bent twig and poking it into the crev ice he taps the chuckwalla on the end of the nose In a moment the angered reptile exhales a kind of hiss the noise being made by a rapid expulsion of the breath As he thus exhales he loses his hold on the rocks and In a moment the Indian pulls on his tail 4s speedily as a flash of lightning the chuckwalla inhales again and tightens himself in his recess Another tap on his nose and then exhalation another pull another exhalation so it goes un til at last the Indian has him In hand Then he cooks him Suburban Life Depth at Which Miners Can Work Below fifty feet the temperature rises in the proportion of one degree for every sixty five feet of depth ex cept where currents of water carry the heat away The result is that at a depth of about 4000 feet we reach a temperature of 98 degrees or blood heat This renders it exceedingly dif ficult to work coal pits below that depth This is the reason that Great Britains coal commission decided that mines are not workable below 4000 feet The thickness of the solid rocks building up the crust of the earth is at least thirty to forty miles At that depth the heat is such as would reduce everything on the surface of the earth to liquid But the pressure of the over lying rocks is so great that until the relation of the heat to the pressure is known it cannot be said whether the earth at that depth is fluid or solid Chicago Tribune Not Lost In London The confession of the provost or the Great St Bernard hospice that he al most got lost in London and found it more bewildering than his own Alps recalls to the London Chronicle a re markable feat of the great guide Mel chior Anderegg of Meiringen He had never seen a larger town than Berne when he visited London and when two famous climbers Leslie Stephen and T W Hinchliff met him at Lon don Bridge station and walked with him thence to Lincolns Inn Fields there was a thick London fog Never theless when a day or two later the three were at the same station return ing from a trip to Woolwich Mr Hinchliff confidently said Now Mel chior you will lead us back home And straight to Lincolns Inn Fields Melchior cuided them pausing only once Why Joyner Left Home Are you ready to receive the obliga tions V asked the most upright su preme hocus pocus of the Order of Hoot Owls I am said the candidate firmly Then take a sip of this prussic acid place your right hand in this pot of boiling lead rest your left hand upon this revolving buzzsaw close your eyes and repeat after me Early next morning shreds of Joy ners clothing were found upon the bushes and trees all along the road to Pottsville thirty miles distant and at Scrabbletown sixty miles away he was reported still headed west Judge Knew the Symptoms The Minister John John I am sur prised to see you What good does it tdo you getting muddled like this put ting you off your work When you go to bed you cannot sleep your tongue is parched your head is like to split and you have no appetite John Gie us yer hand sir yeve been drunk yerself Philadelphia Inquirer A Useful Key What is this peculiar key on your typewriter I never saw it on any be- I fore Hist My own invention When ever you cant spell a word you press this key and it makes a blur Boston Transcript Changed -Nell Maud couldnt have thought much of that fellow she married Belle Why Nell She boasts that she has made another man of him Phila delphia Record Everybody stumbles but no man need He in the mud Gentleman j frjVi jy Pangwangliag A little dubious as to Ihe exact shade of significance but certainly al luring to the ear is pangwangle It expresses well what does It express a checrluess under minor discom forts a humorous optimism under small misfortunes though indeed these seem dignified definitions for so in formal a word I just pangwaugled home In the rain saj s a friend of mine and I know he got there drench ed but good tempered We went pangwangllng off to the theater last flight says my nearest neighbor and I feel pretty certain they had been blue over something and felt the need of some small gayety It would do us all good if we pangwangled a bit more I think A very meaning word is the south erners honing My honey Ive just been honing to see you It is not so stilted as Ive been longing and It is much more emphatic thai Ive been wanting Its a warm affectionate intimate word honing Let me put it into the addendum well toward the front for I love the sound of it These words are not slang They are not exactly as one high brow friend informed me low colloquialisms They have a place in language and they add considerably to its color Atlantic An Outside Vegetarian If you are not an outside vegeta rian you are not really a vegetarian at all The speaker -was a member of Philadelphias little vegetarian church uptown An odd figure in his gray health shirt gray ventilated suit gray knit gloves gray aerated hat gray cloth boots he continued An inside vegetarian is one who puts in his inte rior nothing that has been procured by the slaughter of animals An outside vegetarian puts on his exterior noth ing that has been procured by the slaughter of animals See my gloves vegetable gloves of cotton riot made of the skins of mur dered kids See mj boots woven owing nothing to some poor murdered calf See my buttons wooden not made of grisly bones Inside and out side so the quaint faddist concluded I am a vegetarian and inside and outside I get along without the murder of any creature fish flesh or fowl There are many like me New York Press Slipper Allum Tea The sidewalk stand a soap box was littered with rolls of brown bark to bacco twists and withered switches tied with twine The proprietor a brown and shriveled old colored wo man sat on another box A passing woman lingered to ask the old aunty the meaning of her wares Dese tbacca twisses is for moffs an de red oak bark is good for cuts an de slipper allum chips is a cure for ole maids You ought to make a fortune out of that aunty How does it work Huh huh chile das as easy as a possum climin a tree You see ole maid ladies is most in ginral lean an lonesome lookin an slipper allum tea makes em fat When dey gets fat dey gets chipperish an some genmuu gwine come along an take a miration to em unless dey takes to drinkiu de tea too late huh huh New York Post Who Said Gunpowder I dont want you to get scared at this story began the baldheaded man but I hope youve all got good nerves The listeners eagerly drew together Well began the narrator people lose their lives sometimes in the stran gest ways I know an Irishman poor fellow who a few months ago sat down on what he supposed was a keg of black sand to have a smoke After finishing the first pipe he knocked the live ashes into the keg There hap pened to be a crowd of workmen standing by at the time and Many killed exclaimed a breath less listener Many what Killed blown up Why Nothing explosive about black sand is there London Scraps His Conceit The Abbe Pradt a rushlight of Na poleons time was a most conceited man The Duke of Wellington met him in Taris at a dinner given in honor of himself The abbe made a long ora tion chiefly on the state of political affairs and concluded with the words We owe the salvation of Europe to one man alone Before he gave me time to blush said the duke he put his hand on his heart and continued To me An Oath of Silence In certain districts of vTestern Aus tralia there are women who take an oath to remain silent after the death of their husbands In some cases they Will remain mute for two years after the funeral and very often the oath Is kept also by the mother and moth-In-law of the deceased Paris Revile Medicale The Poets Poets are born and not made But they aint born tagged opined B rural philosopher Their fathers consequently hafter go ahead and ed dicate em jest as if they was going to be good fer something Louisville Courier Journal Defined Pa what is a knocker A knocker my boy is a man who usually finds fault with another map who is doing something better than he could do it himself Detroit Free Press When men are friends there is no need of justice Aristotle ABOUT ADVERTISING NO 6 If It Fits You Wear i his Cap By Herbert Kaufman Advertising isnt a crucible with which lazy bigoted and incapable merchants can turn incompetency into success but one into which brains and tenacity and courage can be poured and changed into dollars It is only a short cut across the fields not a moving platform You cant get there without going some Its a game in which the workei not the shirker gets rich By its measurement every man stands for what he is and for what he does not for what he was and what he did Every day in the advertising world is another day and has to be taken care of with the same energy as its yesterday The quitter cant survive where the plugge7 has a ghost of a chance Advertising doesnt take the place of busi ness talent or business management It simply tells what the business is znhow it is managed The snob whose father created and who is content to live on what was handed to him cant stand up against the man who knows he must build for himself What makes you think thtyou are entitled to prosper as well as a competitor who works twice as hard for his prosperity Why should as many people come to your store as patronize a shop that makes an endeavor to get their trade and shows them that it is worth while to come to its doors Why should a newspaper send as many cus tomers to you in half the time it took to fill an establishment which advertised twice as long and paid twice as much for its publicity This is the day when the best man wins after he proves that he is the best man when the best store wins when it has shown that it is the best store when the best goods win after theyve been demonstrated to be the best goods If you want the you cant get it by lying inder the tree with your mouth open waiting for it to drop too many other men are willing to climb out on the limb and risk their necks in their eagerness to get it away from you It is a mans game this advertising just hanging on and tugging and straining all the time to get and keep ahead It is the finite ex pression of the law of competition which sits in blind folded justice over the markets of the world Copyright 190S by Tribune Company Chicago R F D NO 1 They had a Christmas tree at the Pickens school in district No 31 Miss Geneva Fitch teacher and the report is that they never had a finer bigger time In district No 3 Miss Dena Mette teacher a Christmas tree was also a big attraction The exercises were well at tended and every one enjoyed the oc casion W E Bower has bought a farm near Denver where his son Amos has land and will move there in the spring IJis son Ed will occupy the farm here Nelson Downs has purchased 10 acres frnm CZnrnlrl Wilnnv nn tho fnur ners paying S1G0 an acre for the same J Arthur Eandel is home from Franklin for the holidays Will return to school next Monday Mrs ffm Stadler of Minden Nebr is here visiting her parents Mrand Mrs Jos Downs Mr Dietz and family of Colorado are visiting Fred Lenhart and family this week Marsh Phillippi and wife and John son girls were at Dudekd Christmas Jake Frichtner is at home Both 0 K The cash system and the edible life strengthening quality cf D C Marshs meats And they go well together You pay for what you get only and get only what you want i CBQCECS siyyWZB II E DURHAM A PAINTING and PAPER HANGING 6S I make a specialty of paper hanging and carry a wei se lected stouk of wall paper Work guaranteed and pricps reasonable Phone Red 2GT WSQSi Ssrb rKvlvTrPvv v Kfi r iMiiri i IlfrS OPPORTUNITY We want the asUtanrt of the ladies - Tho e who n will be jriven a J2 - piece Decorated China Dinner jset Do - not mi d an opportunity like this Send - us your name and we will tell you all about it j c wood co Expert Cleaners and Dyers Lincoln Nebraska yifiiiLiittlliti - S r r i i