__________ VERNONIA EAGLE 21 stays long at their kitchen.’ I believe 11 that!" * Lora looked hopefully at her hus­ band. He could, sometimes, think of perfectly wonderful ways out of diffi­ culties. And he just must do so now. Tiie family in the “little white house” bade fair to disrupt the neighbornood. Mrs. Neville mourned the loss of h r best ferns, trampled by Milly and 7- ' ■ Billy and their older and younger by D. J. Walsh. brothers and sister. one has taken the little I Mr. Parsons, who raised choice white house, Ted. I could, roses, vowed he would tan the hides L 7 hardly pass this morning for ■ of the little devils who destroyed a the moving van in front of it. i whole row of his best peas. Every-» and the children! There must be a: body had some grievance. And oddly dozen, or else they are the here-and- ’ enough, the worst day of the week there kind that multiply themselves’ for the “Terrors” was Sunday. Lora And there was a dog that tried to! giggled that it was because their name chase my car off the street. Oh. (’lies-1 was Holliday. But Ted walked home ter street will be lively enough now. i from the station with Mr. Holliday a I’m glad they don’t live next door. Two time or two, and after that always had blocks off Is as close as I want that a word of pity for the man. dog.” “His wife’s been dead two years, Lora Minton addl'd an extra spoon Lora. Aaid he hasn’t a relative to help of whipped cream to Ted’s lunip-o’-Jov him out. And hired maids—what are pudding. She saw a teasing laugh they? He says the kids are worse threatening from the twinkle of his with him anyway, because he hates to eye. He knew her criticisms of old make them think 1dm a bear -when and she knew his delight in them. they’ve nobody else. “But I don’t care, Ted,” she went “Let’s pile them into the car next on. “That fs the dearest little hou e Suudjty—all we can, and take them and arranged so wonderfully inside. out to Aunt Meda’s for the day. She’s To have a family of harum-scarum brought up five boys of her own, and youngsters tear It up, and after mv on that big farm they can’t hurt much. dearest friend lived there, and was I think they need a chance to just so happy so short a while, I wish some break loose, if you ask me. The city’s one lovable had come.” no place for a live kid. Gosh! Lora— “Lovable? Aren’t children that? T what would I have done when I was noticed as I came home tonight that ten if I’d had to play up and down a they adore their father, at least. About street—no swimming hole, no or­ five were meeting him at the corner chard—” and hanging on him wherever they Lora remembered that about the or- could, all the way into the house.” chard the next Sunday when they had “Healthy youngsters, but somehow safely deposited five scrambling Hol­ I a bit taggy-looking. Reminded me -X lidays in Aunt Meda’s hack yard. That what our bunch were like when mother good lady did not seem alarmed st had been away somewhere for a week. the avalanche, but Lora trembled. She Maybe—” hoped apple trees, peach trees, the Lorn grew thoughtful. She hadn’t barn itself, would be standing when seen anyone who could be identified as night came. She could not understand “mother” in the three or four times the older lady’s cheerful acceptance of she had passed tli/' house that day Billy’s falling from his first apple tree on marketing or shopping bent. Her and Milly’s decoration with a couple interest In the place itself could be of bee stings. And the dinner the chil­ excused, too, since her nearest friend, dren ate would certainly kill them. Yet night came, and all were well Anne Saxton, had too briefly known the house as home before an untimely and dirty. Mr. Holliday even had a death. Lorn had hoped that some one ! relieved air and looked rested after would come there who might In a a long talk with Aunt Meda In the measure replace Anne. But this wild grape arbor. “You won’t have so many passen­ brood! And only a stout woman with “maid” stamped all over her was In gers going home,” smiled Aunt Meda, evidence to rule the young mob. Per­ as Lora began to hunt for her motor haps there wasn’t anyone else? Any­ epat. “The two* older boys and the twins one but a father—helpless things, fa­ will stay with me for a while. It was thers ! Next morning when Lora drove her pitiful, Lora, to see how hungry they little» car down the street as she went were for the things that are everyday marketing she made a point of care­ here on the farm. Little Milly had u fully surveying the “little white great bunch of weeds gathered to take home; she said they were lonesome, house.” A boy and girl -of eight or so were the ‘flowers in the fence corner.’ swinging on the gate. The girl’s broxfrn That’s what she is, Lora. A flower in hair was pulled back until her eyes a fence corner, and she’ll turn into u seemed drawn upward, but her face weed if somebody doesn’t care for her. “Come to think, the weeds, as we was clean. Too clean to be natural. The boy’s blouse lacked a button and (Hill them, were flowers until they were he had on one brown and one black so neglected—until nobody cared for shoe. Another child of indeterminate them. “Trouble? Mercy I What are w* sex came whooping around the house followed by the offending dog of the here foe*, child?” Lora thought hard about that last day before. A last fleeting glance at the dwelling showed no two blinds speech of Aunt Meda’s. Thought all raised to the same height—sure proof the way borne, while the baby “Bun­ to Lora’s mind that a hired head was ny,” slept in her lap. And when Ted stopped at the “little white house” tn in charge. “Even the day after one moves the let Mr. Holliday alight with “Bunny,” shades are evened, if nothing else. Ami Lora said with a bit of a catch in her voice: * those pony children ! “Teddy, dear—the baby is so sound “I wonder who they are. anyway? Maybe some of us can do something.” asleep, yve’d better take her on home But no one seemed able to find out with us. And—and—I wish you'd let anything about the newcomers, except me borrow her a lot, Mr. HolLiday. what the children volunteered In their She’s too little to have noboby care. excursions about the neighborhood. We could care a lot for her—Ted These were enough. Lora would say. and I.” And Ted heartily agreed, with a after the new dog bad chased her pet cat “Mistah” so far up the porch th.it glow at his heart for the kindness of it took a ladder rnd long coaxing to his Lord for even a stray blossom. persuade kitty that earth was safe for felines. SuJ allow Has No Peer “Ted! Can’t you speak to that gen­ as Master of Flight tleman about those awful children? The swallows and swifts may be The twins—Milly and Billy—broke the cellar window with their ball yester­ said to be the only small birds in the day. And that little one. Runny, they .ull division : and they have gifts very call her, came in with Mrs. Adams nearly peculiar to themselves. The when she called here this afternoon, body and skeleton have been light­ and Mrs. Adams thought she was some ened by an elaborate apparatus of child I had adopted. She told Mrs. air sacs, as if nature were striving to Adams she was going to live here, if produce a craft lighter than air, a tiny you please. And I don’t think Sirs. airship. Tliis form of adaptation, common in Adams altogether believed me when I said the little imp Just played around some degree to many birds, has our gate as if it were her own. al­ reached its highest development in though she lived two blocks down the the swallows, and, accompanied by a street. I think Mrs. Adams thought wing of considerable length and a tail i was ashamed of the child—some poor that Is both rudder and plane, it-gives them un ease and grace quite their relation or something. e “Ted! Isn’t there anything to do? 'own. They can glide so low as Just to dip And that housekeeper they have is so simple! Milly says ‘dddd.v lias to take their wings in the cool water. They what the agency send cause nobody can turn and twist with a smoothness THEIR WAYSIDE FRIENDS FINNEY OF THE FORCE chut hides the shurpuess of the angle. The upper ulr or tower air is till the same to them. They ure so conscious of their mastery that, tender though they are in beak and body and claw, they will chase and mob any enemy. I hav > many times watched them compel he retreat of u cat by driving at him iio close as, you would swear, to touch his ears. The cat did not so much au attempt to strike, and soon retired utterly cowed. We have all seen them mobbing birds of prey and curvetting round them, In repeated area, having no trouble to keep pace, though they travel many times the dis­ tance. The point has been made by Oliver Wendell Holmes In a charming, if rather elaborate, metaphor, In which he compared their excursions with the thoughts of a nlmble-witted listener to a slow preacher. He could wander pleasantly In this direction and that, yet be sure of keeping the thread of the preacher's journey when he might wish to return.—Sir W. Beach Thomas In the Atlantic Monthly. ____________________________ Thursday, July 14, 1927 r> ild-flavored vegetable, such as potatoes of lima beans; one vege-' able of pronounced flavor, like ( ■: luliflower, cabbage, or onions; o te which is either sour itself, or ■ ir ay be served with vinegar, spin-1 ach, or beets, for instance. Second, there must be variety of texture. Variety in texture is obtained by having one vegetable with a crisp crust, like corn fritters, or scallop­ ed tomatoes; a second vegetable served with sauce; and a third sim­ ply cooked in water, as peas, or string beans, are usually cooked. A raw vegetable, such as celery or radishes, lends still further variety. The third point to remember in connection with a vegetable dinner is to include some protein foods in the meal. As a rule, one of the vegetables should be beans, or peas, which are comparatively rich in pro­ tein. Or one of the vegetables may be served with a protein food, such as cheese, milk, eggs or chopped Record» Earth’» Movement I meat. Examples of vegetables com-' The apparatus in the Academy of | bined with protein foods are green Sciences in Washington that Illustrates peppers or tomatoes stuffed with the movement of the earth is a Fou­ a meat mixture, cauliflower or po­ cault pendulum. Foucault, a French tatoes scalloped with cheese, spin­ scientist, explained the fact of the rotation of the earth by hanging a ach with hard-boiled eggs, and heavy ball by a tine wire from the | sweet corn pudding made with milk dome of the Pantheon In Paris. This I and eggs. pendulum was set swinging In a cer­ Cottage cheese is high in food tain direction, but gradually the direc­ value. It contains all the constitu­ tion of the swing appeared to change, ents of milk, excepting cream. Like as indicated by marks made upon the milk, cottage cheese is a source of door. As no force whatever had acted protein, which is used to build and upon the pendulum. It was evident that the whole earth was turning repair body tissue. There are many dishes which can be made with cot- around. tage^ cheese. Cottage cheese served plain is especially pleasing in sum- “Inside" Information mer. Many people like it with rich There are three points to rem­ ¡cream, and a little salt, or with ember,, in preparing a vegetable din­ , cream and sugar. Sour cream, or ner. First there must be a variety melted butter, improves the flavor of flavor. So far as flavor is con­ of cottage cheese, and increas»» cerned, a good combination is one the food value. Cottage cheese I makes a delicious sandwich filling,1 The bureau of Dairy Industry of specially for the picnic season of'i.ie United States department of the year. For sandwiches, moisten i griculture estimates that the cow- ■ he cheese with sweet cream, and testing association costs the mem- lavor it with a little chopped par- 1 ers less than one cent per day aley, chopped or sliced olives, sliced p er cow on the average. celery, pimentoes, horseradish Span- Hampers and barrels for shipping ish onions, pickles, or nuts. Some cabbage are rapidly being replaced people like the flavor of caraway I y crates. Crates are sturdier, eus- seeds in cottage cheese. This spread i.-r to load, they allow better ven- is equally good on white bread, rye tilation, and permit the cabbage to bread, nut bread, or brown bread, be displayed more effectively. THE NEW Hot Plate Vaporizer Will Give You More Miles per Gallon More Power----- Smoother Operation Less Carbon----- Easier Starting Less Crankcase Dilution Bring in your Ford today and let us put one on. $9.00 Installation Extra. Crawford Motor Co. 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