THE TULSA DAILY WORLD, 1VKDNKBP A Y, APRIL 10, 1913 V I V R 11 mm If You Failed to Secure a Ticket to The World's Great Cooking School, Arrangements Have Been Made to Pass Y ou in at the Door. Visit Today and Learn to Make English Tea Cake ElLilW ill YONS' BEST FLOUR 15 1 Is Designated as The Of flclal Floor Hor use in me World's Big Cooking Contest to be decided nexl Saturday (Read Contest Rules.) 1 The demand is already very heavy, and though two more carloads of this flour are now enrouto they may be unavoidably delayed causing a shortage. If your grocer does not handle this flour call us on phone 3279, and we will ask him to supply you, thereby helping you to win one of the many prizes of this great contest. Place Your Order TODAY and Prepare For Tire Big Baking Contest GROCER YMEN If you do not handle Lyon's Best Flour it will be well to place your order earlv. Phone 3279. LYONS' BROKERAGE CO. AGENTS CONTESTANTS If your dealer does not handle Lyon's Best Flour urge him to place his order early so you will not be disappointed. I 1 If I F mm -Chosen Exclusively tor the World looking School THE TULSA WORLD'S Lecture- Demonstrating Course on Practical Cooking Conducted by MISS EDITH L. CLIFT. At Grand Theatre, Today, 2:30 p. m. TODAY'S PROGRAMME MENU SPANISH HASH WITH TOMATO SAUCE ENGLISH TEACAKE BANANA SHORTCAKE WITH WHIPPED CREAM Remember Across The Street From The Cook ing School There's a Complete Line of Furniture Don 't neglect the other rooms of the house in preference to the kitch en. We can furnish them complete. 'Visit our Store" See Our Window Dis play of Beds. BUMGARNER & DOWNING 122-4 East Second Street J CAPTURING TOM BY WILL BEAT. nclk .mm PAR8LC :: was driving along (lie state road to wnnl Middleton. HIh bona was old, and be wa not hurrying him. The wagon was old, and hi was giving il a fair show, ho was pretty old himself, and if he sol in Middleton be fore dark II was timo enough. I'ncle Jim waa descending the hill bound t'uher'B when he saw a girl on u bicycle approaching him. A8 ill.' came Within a teW rods the front "Well, cry nwuy all you want to, "Well, I'm Uncle Jim Paraioa, the' and than I'll h"lp you to get started man that goes around settln' hrol.iii remember to have Live around here, again, 1 don't no t sou before. anywhere?" "N-no!" "lust so. Keep up the trying till the pain stops. No hurry, you kno". legs for grasshoppers and putting new horns on rows when the natural oneH get knocked off. I've got a sort of friendly feeling for living things. Didn't know hut you had a leg or some ribs broken." Wheel Itruck a Htone and she went Bid I vi nnri down Into the road ditch and lay there. She had fallen hard, and though no bones were broken she was half uncon Brif us. - ' Whoa, now, but that's all-fired bad!" said Uncle .Mm as he descend ed from Ills wagon ' Hope she ain't killed Wi ran t afford to lose any of our itirls In this county." lie had lifted her o""r on the grass When the girl recovered her senses and sat Hp 'f llP lla'' ,H'"n 'oung mini she wouldn't have shed a tear. When she saw thai he waa old .nd fatherly she began to weep. "Hurt e, of courae," he said with half laugh, "and crying Is good for hurts Olad It didn't breal your Oot a I undle strapped on me I aee. Kind o' going some s'- -m AND HO TOM AND JANET MADE UP, ne'k bike. Where?" "V-yea she sobbd. When my daughter Prue was home ahe'd sometimes cry from aunup to sundown, and she said aha felt the better for It." "I'll not shed another tear!" ex claimed the girl aa she auddenly straightened up. "What did you atop for? Why didn't you go on about your bualneaa? What It It to you whether I'm hurt or not?" "No, I havent. I waa crying be cause because " "Because you are In trouble. I knew that ten minutes ago. I'll alt right down here and you can tell m all about It." Uncle Jim had a sympathetic voice, a kindly way and a fatherly , face. The girl looked at him for a moment and then decided to trust him, Queer, too, she wouldn't have' told the story to a grandma. "1 live tlie other side of Middle ton," she begun "YeB, and you needn't tell ma your name If you don't want to." "My father's name Is Haskell, and mine Is Janet." "You can break right off and go to crying again, If you want to. I'm no hand to be prying." Hut 1 want to tell you. Father's had a horse die, mother's got a felon on her linger and the house la up set." "Of course of course. I've had a horBe die, and I've suffered with u felon." And mother she--up and boxed nay ears this morning! Would you stand that?" "Well, I was 20 years old When dad gave uie the best licking, and he laid it on smart, too. I reckon you ain't much more than turned IS." "I'm most If. Nobody can box my ears, even If they have got a felon! , Didn't I have my trouble, too? ! Wasn't mine greater than the oth ers? Wain't I thinking of It with teuri In my ayaj when I forgot . scald out the chart t" "I guesa you were. If you haun't you'd have t. dded the churn for sure." The old hnr etood peacefully sleeping In the middle of the road.i and Uncle Jim looked up at him and! gave the girl a chance. He knew 1 that more waa :omtng "It was awful trouble," she said. Tom Drake an 1 1 are aa good as en-, gaged, and yet because we bad a lit tle bit of a quarrel he unit and Is going with another girl She's tall and bony, and the toes In whi n she walks and Hhe's got a cist In one eye." "Start and garters, but what can all him!" exclaimed Uncle Jim. "Why, when you were still ko rods off I was saying to myself that I'd never teen a handsomer girl! Lord, but whi-n you rolled off that bike you did it like' a perfect lidyf" "And ko when Tom said he wouldn't coma again, and 1 forgot tt scald the churn, and mother boxed my ears with her Well hand, 1 made up my mind to to -" "Don't say It If you don't want to, I know you dlddu't make up your mind to Jump Into the well." "No to run away!" "Well, woll! Just bundled up a few things and took to your bike, eh? M) daughter, I'rue, hid In the barn all day once bsCBUM I called her a ninny, hut she didn't git fur ther than that I ain't the prying kind, but maybe I might ask where you are running to?" ':'I I don't k-n-o-w!" came a long-drawn wail, followed by teara and sobs. "(lot any money?" "N-o-o-o! " "Oot any aunts or uncles?" "N-o-b-o-d-y!" "Wail, I alnl one to discourage anybody, but It looks a leetle dubi ous The hike's busted and you'll have to walk. Quaff you got a few brulaea when you fall. too. A glrl can't take such a Hop as that with out hurling some, even If ibe'l good looking anil smart as a whip." UNCLK J'M. "If I'm good looking and smart why did loin leave me and take up with that bony girl.'" daman dad the n alden aa her sobs ceased all at once. "YOU don't uuderr.tniid human na ture yet," replied I'n'ie Jim. ' Young folks that don't love never qu.irri There's nothing to quarrel about. They love and quarrel and make up and get married. That's the pro gnm, and It goes clear back to the year one. Always so always so " "And Tom will come back?" 'a.Ui t. ilea Just dlng to get bark right now. I'm drlvn' to Mlddleton, anyhow, and so i might as well drive beyond. I'll put the bike in the wagon and you climb in. Your folks have missed you by this time, but you can hide the bund. a and say you went out to have i cry. I sort of guess Tom will be over to) see you this very night." "Say, you aro the best man In all this world'" exclaimed Janet as ah rose up. "(), pshaw' I ain't a patching It some folks. I'm Just try lug to bg half way decent as I Jog ilong through the world. "If Tom cornea over, anil I thlnlc he will, you just stand him off for while. Look at him as If you didn't know bl in Tell him no tinware Is wanted today. Tell him you don't thlhk your father wants a windmill or an) wire fencing. "Let him realize what a girl b? a lost and then unbind by dtgrCSf. tf member that you have beard his name somewhere In connection sjlh a girl that toes in Talk tbout thj Weather and the measles, and by and h down on his knees he'll Hop, inj you can padlock him." When Lucie Jim let tn ftlr! slight gear her home he drove a mile far ther to see Tom Drak" And I long throe ream went by before dels Jim pulled his old horse up short one Cay In front of a farmhouse to say to a worn hi at the gate and a thlld haiii lug to her apron: "Yes, air, you flopped iff thai blki that day like a perfect lady, and I'm kind of thinking that the girl that toed In had to tee out long ago!"