The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 04, 1927, Image 6

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    ST
Story |
HER BIRD VISITOR
civ! oam sald
hos-
and
now
6 LITTLE girl named Jerry,”
the Sandman, *was ill in a
pital, Oh, had felt sick
had had so wretched a time, but
she was feeling better and she
sitting up in bed every day
eral hours,
“She had
half an hour
aay
chair,
she 80
wis
for seve
sat up in a chair for a
now every day, and
was sitting up In
her supper, a
canary bird flew in the window,
was afraid the little bird would
very much frightened, 8o she spoke to
him in the softest tone of voice,
“1 don't know your name,
shall eall you Dicky Bird
The little canary had perched
one
her
little
Jerry
he
while she
having
go 1
said.
upon
she
“Won't You Have Some Supper?”
Asked Jerry.
thie back of a chair
had spoken to,
looked at Jerry and,
on chirped
to her,
“Oh, bird,
lite you Jerry,
little bird chirped as
that he was very gia
with hls manners
‘You must hae been a pet bird
and I suppose you flew out of an open
window and then your way,’
Jerry continued,
“The little bird
though to agree,
“1 wonder if
said.
“Once
then he gang a bit of a soug a
ind
and now that he
he turned and
putting his head
a littl weting
heen
one side, e Bre
ittle how
you dear
are. sald
o-
the
thouch
dd she was plea
lost
chirped again as
you re hungry,
Jerry
to sav he
earn a
“Jerry put
and put
distance away
nice
1d erumd
saucer saucer
her on a
irom
Soon the little bird flew over to the
bureau. He had been watching Jerry
very closely,
“Won't you
asked Jerry.
“And the little
answer to her
the bread crumbs. He seemed so tame
that Jerry decided would put
some crumbs on her hand and hold
ner hand to see if he would come
and eat from hand, And
enough, he did. He did not seem
be frightened at oll, In fact,
as thouzh it was not at all
for him to be fed,
“Then Jerry nice,
ceisp lettuce which tray
and gave it to the bird before she put
any dressing on her lettuce, For
knew that salt and pepper and vine
gar and oil would no: he for the
bird. And the bird pte the plece of
lettuce from her fingers und when he
had tinished he perched himself upon
Jerry's first finger, holding on with
his little claws
“Then he
finger as though
little more, young
“And Jerry
“She
have some supper?
thouzh In
ne of
bird,
question,
ins
tried sor
she
out
her su
It
LO
he acted
unusual
leaf
ou
took a of
wis her
she
ve t
SOO
at Jerry's
could eat a
gave a peck
to say, yg
lady.’
the hint,
sSogie more
took
him
he that, and then
him 4 few cake crumbs and be
those, Next, Jerry put some
little «u
drink
rave ettnee
and te she gave
ate
peer and bot
Sole wale
little shower bath,
“How Jerry
she said, ‘it
{
one's drinking saucer,
need a bath ever
give you.
And anyway,
ellent,
Mmanuers ure ext
bee reedy and vet you have
ng 1) 3
to enjoy your supper.’
fins
nurse «
tray. I've a
Jerry, ‘and 1 feel so aguch, bet
ready. You cant sine |
cheered me f
“Jerry hed hier supper and pret
amie is to lake
sSo0n oO
‘Oh, little visitor,
he
the
ched hims
“And then he beg
a magnificent
Oh, it was
Jerry did enjoy
“Well, tl
te
* Was
S01
a wonde
Ws were
¢ § ffs
fore she ¢3
owner knew
3
giving happine
with children”
(Copyright)
SAWS]!
By Viola Brothers Shore
FOR THE GOOSE—
VEN wasted effort as bad as
wasted time,
ain't
It's on'y idle people that could find
time for everything, and they cant.
half
her
who knows
know about
It's a wise
she would
woman
like to
neighbors,
Vivacity in #8 woman Is like dope, A
tittle'll pep up. But much’il
innke a fiend outa you,
you {on
You can make yourself believe there
ain't no sun by merely shuttin® your-
gelf in a dark room and closin’ your
eyes.
FOR THE GANDER
If a girl ain't stopped bein’ a fool at
twenty, chances are she never will
willin® to give
in’ his daughter
A man that's
money for marr}
have a reason,
you
must
Don't accept her mother's estimate
of the girl you're thinkin' of marryin’,
Or your mother’s neither,
1Copyright.)
© by McClure Nowspape r Syndicate.)
8 For Meditation |:
O00000
By LEONARD A. BARRETT
CiViIC PRIDE
of his recent addresses to an
of wen, Roger
remarked, “If statistics
thing, it Is the
of Towson's,
thing in busi
materials or
The
body,
N ONE
I assembly
W. Babson
have taught
truth of that
namely: ‘The biggest
ness is not
markets: but
gest thing in men Is not
or muscle: but soul. Wi prices,
and conditions can be adjusted; but
attitudes, and relationships
can only be converted.”
The thing in any
not skyscrapers or statements of
banks and but the spirit
which makes the community what it
is, and that is civie pride. Emerson
wrote, “Great men are they who see
that the spiritual is stronger than
any material force,” Elihu Root said
in one of his public “No
man is truly happy who depends upon
outward things for happiness” A
community is dependent upon
thing more important than money if
it is to foster a life that is worth
while, Civic pride puts into the com-
munity life that which makes the evi
of prosperity pos Civie
is sort of a spiritual thing that
purposes, moral
norms, cultivates the for the
beautiful, and the ideal. Civie pride
is responsible for the “tone” of a com-
munity. It will not tolerate what de-
pletes its moral energy. It will clean
up a city of it needs it. It will see
that “movies” and theaters have clean
and wholesome plays. It will pat
forth every effort te control the crime
wave If such exists,
Somehow we lastinctively do not
like the man who speaks slightingly
of hig city when he Is away from It
“Paul was a resident of no mean
city.” Civie pride not only makes a
community but It enriches our own
business
me one
statement
machinery,
rather
men. big
mind
ages,
motives
biggest city is
industries,
nddresses,
[SOE
dences dble,
pride
creates motives,
desire
T
“V/hen in doubt, waar black.” That
in style and aren't quite
how a certain new color
affect their type of beauty. BDe-
erry completed the motion picture
ply Jomo
THE WHY of
SUPERSTITIONS
By H. IRVING KING
A LOVE POTION
SO Dans ove
that it
Courts
potions
Is amnz-
should be
Mrs,
int Lore ™
Vit to work
that
» Dusy
the
Here Is
Animal and Pls
American
Take a m
fen and
in O85 drops
ith part of
divorce
one, sald by
in her *
Folklore so-
to be
and-white
bap pe .
popuinr imber
rose ves for
of
un
drops of the resulting
~~
e-nots and boll
the si
If three
are put into
affect
for
Seer
anything the per
y
hase ions you desire to cap
sired result Is
ig 10
This charm out
for there
of
Lose
to work
warrant for the v
irtus
greddients in such cuses
from most ancient mes have
mystie
and
hed ith iin formal
Midsumt to be used In
tions whic that
un pls
greatest
considered 10 Possess
es In matte if love were
ner eve
h would indicate
nts
lities whie
dawn of bh
Many
flower
story
nre the
ow the hecame
love matiers,
A eel
lovin
ng
story is the host “R
got into trouble by
and was not al
return Eden until
had planted the flower
forget-me-not In
earth.
danghter of earth
to the
loved
aw called
the
ture Ne
orner of
by M ws ndioate
iy
a per ¥y
6
5
{
i
¥
{
lives, The place where we live and
have our home should claim our first
civie loyalty,
place Just like the old home town,
(@, 1927, by Western Newspaper Union.)
Do YouKnow
27 | hat: ane Fees
*T her zo Gall an ex-
or pression which
one tine
all over our country,
Judge Beaver had a
was driven by
certain
the mare
agher” is
was at
trotting mare
one Gallagher,
the judge en
trotting meet,
that for
judge and so
trotter. At the
v hich
aeeasion
at a
thought
would catch the
noted fast
m a
sports once
hey
ntered #
just about even, neck to neck
hen the excited judge shouted, “Let
Gallagher” and Gallagher
the word, let loose the lines
mare picked up her feet
from her opponent
and came In at the
atehing
the
Turnquist,
1. Western Newapapetr Union.)
asonissinall Jonsmnss
GIRLGAGY?
Anna 8,
(0 192
“5
A
ad
Pog WY by The BO Bans ted
BW
uy there i« anything worse for =
girl than having no mother to guide
Se oy
ing a boy friend who insists on dri
ing the flivver with one hand”
vorrrreePeee
THE
KITCHEN gi
CABINET fe
(@, 1021, Western Newspaper Union.)
To him who chooses sacrifice for
his fate there often come the best
gifts, to see deep into the un~
senrchable and smilingly to build
as though within a pleasure park,
upon the boundary of the ideal
COMMON FOODS
—
Our common foods are those
are the oftenest served in a
" hazard manner,
when they should
ba served with
the greatest care,
to make them at-
tractive, The real
ingenuity of the
cook Is shown in
the manner she
serves and the attention she gives to
commonplace things,
which
hap
Flemish Carrots.~(ut the carrots ip
thin slices, using a vegetable cutter so
that they wjll be uniform, Let them
stand In cold water to crisp them if
old. For a pint of carrots. melt a
tablespoonful of butter, add one-fourth
of a cupful of chopped onion and balf
a teaspoonful of sugar. Cover and let
cook very slowly, using care pot to
scorch them, When the onion is yel-
tow add one cupful of beef broth and
sinner until the carrots which have
been added are well cooked. Sprinkle
with parsley and serve,
Split Pea Soup.~Souk two cupfuls
of split peas ower night, drain and
cover with two quarts of water, cook
slowly with one small ovlon chopped,
three stalks of celery, a few sprigs of
parsicy and a carrot cut fine, Cook
two slices of pork in the water for an
hour or less before adding the
When well cooked, rub through a
sieve and bind with two tablespoon-
fuls of flour When
bot serve at
aS,
each and butter.
once,
Coconut Bread Pudding —Sonk a
pint of bread pint
milk, add
grated coconut
wsilk, Add
grated lemon
baking dish
slowly,
Chicken Goulash~This is a
dish to extend a small
chicken, Dice two medi
and fry in two tablespoonfuls of
olive oil for five minutes, Season with
pper and add a mush.
hand. Then add one cup
of
or
of
of
of
crumbs
three
in i
tablespoon fuls
and pint
four tablespoonfuls
rind and
Bake in
another
of
into s
water s ery
pour
hot
good
of
um-sized pota-
amount
toes
salt fow
root
fu
garll
witer,
ar 1
nd pe
$
ns if at
chicken, one
of
fe, erushed, a cupful of broth
ntil the px
cooked clove
cover and cook
weil
Tasty Foods.
salad which will be
year:
Tuna
Take
fish
Ha
t » il Li
Loess lone
are
Here Is a in
season all the
Fish
one cupful
Salad. —
of 14
two hard
four
COO
sweet pickles
¥ Cut
1d cel
TY ih pleces and
add to the
Add =»
leas of
ghtly with n
fish
or
flaked
tablespoonfal
ith a dash of cayenne
tuce
Mexican Ham.—Lay a slice of ham
two ck in a
casserole well with »
and a
Cover with
three
and serve,
one-half inches th
after rubbing it
teaspoonful mustard
spoonful of brown sugar.
potatoes (wo or
and
of table
sliced inches
and pepper, cover with milk and bake
like escalloped potatoes in a slow
oven at least two hours,
Date Tapioca ~—Stir three table
spoonfuls of tapioca with one-half
cupful of sugar inte three pints of
milk. Cook until the tapioca is clear
Cool and stir into it one cupful of
of vanilla aod lemon and
pinch of salt. Bake in a buttered bak.
ing dish and serve with stoned dates
and cream.
Eggs a la Caracus.—Melt one table
spoonful of butter in a hot saucepan,
add a quarter of a pound of dried beef
finely cut and a tablespoonful of
grated cheese. Toss until the beef is
slightly frizzled, then add one cupful
of stewed tomatoes, four beaten eggs,
cayenne and white pepper. Stir and
cook until creamy. Serve garnished
with parsley.
Strawberry Whip.~Mix one cupful
of crushed berries with one-third cup
ful of powdered sugar or more if
needed to sweeten, Beat the whites
of the eggs stiff, add one-third of a
cupful of sugar and one-fourth tea
spoonful of cream of tartar: beat
again. Combine the mixtures and
serve in sherbet cups with sponge
cake,
Pineapple Lacto.—Dissolve three
fourths of a cupful of sugur in three
cupfuls of buttermilk, add three
fourths of a cupful of pineapple and
the julce of two lemons. Freeze as
Buttermilk Jelly~Dissolve two ta
vlespoonfuls of gelatin in cold water
to cover, add the juice of two oranges,
the juice of a lemon, three-fourths
cupful of sugar aud three cupfuls of
buttermilk. fot stand to mold
Serve cold.
Tomato Rabbit Sandwich~Spread
whole wheat bread (crusts removed)
with butter, mustard, a bit of wor
cestershire sauce and a slice of tomato.
with another slice of buttered bread.
Fry in a little butter until the bread
is well browned on both sides.
Aan Wry wet
A New Way to
Make Jellies
Without Staining Fingers—Without
Long Hours of Bolling—Without
Depending Upon Berries or
Fruit Being in Season,
One of the most Interesting and yet
one of the simplest new products in
{ the food field is called minute Jelly.
! It is pure fruit or berry juice already
bolled down und concentrated, To
this concentrated jul fruit pectin
in the right amount has been added,
The pectin is that part of fruit which
makes jelly “jell,” It Is as pure and
wholesome fuled
To make tiuke
| bottle of
| A sauce pa
| cording to dire
| boil a few 7»
{ Jelly gl: and
{ cold you have the
| fruit jelly ever tasted.
A few bottles kept on hand, selected
| according to your taste for jellies, and
| you ean make up a few glasses just
| as you want it. One small bottle makes
| two glasses of Jelly, If you to
{ try two gond us twenty-five
| eents and we will give you your choice
| of mint, plocapple, orange,
| raspberry, strawberry or blackberry.
| Or four bottles—all different —for fifty
| pents, Address Department WU, Gen
| eral Packing Corp. Cranford, New
| Jersey. —Ady
the fruit
the jell:
ort rated
ius
the little
pour
and sugar ac-
etiong on the hottle
Then pour
when it has
fous
CON juice, in
ndd water
and
inutes into
become
pure
KO8
most deli
you
wish
bottles
grape,
Pecans
the ecommerce
fon of pect is at present in Texas,
Oklahoma, Foulsiana, Mississippi,
Georgia ane forida
f
of al nrodac-
ins
ut
the tree Ix
fromm Indians
and vi 1thwes into Mex
| South astern tutes and Calif
have
{i extent,
ares
pecan growing to some
ht bas hoen little com
: mort
WOMEN OF
MIDDLE AGE
Praise Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound
Mrs. Annie Kwinskt of 526 1st Ave.
nue Milwaukee, Wis, writes that she
became so weak and
rundown that she
was not able to do
her housework, She
saw the name Lydia
E, Pinkham's Vege-
table Ct mpound in
the paper and caid
to her husban 4,
will try medi
cine and see if it
will help me.” She
says she took six
bottles end is feel.
that
ing much bette:
Mrs. Mattie Adams, who
Downing Btreet, irewton, Ala.,
as follows: “A friend
Lydia E. Pinkbham's Veg
pound and since taking
a different woman.”
With her children grown up, the mid-
dleaged woman finds time to do the
things she never had time to do before
~read the new books, see the new
plays, enjoy her grandchildren, take
an active part In church and civic
affairs, Far from being pushed aside
by the younger set, she finds a full,
rich life of her own, That is, if ber
health is good.
Thousands of
they owe the
Lydia E. Pink
lives In
writ
re econ imendi
Com
stable
it 1 feel
women past say
vigor and to
inkh 8 Vegetable Co I
pound, and are rec ommending it to
their friends and ‘Belghbors.
fifty
H iealth
HAIR BALSAM
Bemoves Dandruff Stops Hair Falling
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
nd $3.
a a Che # Birmpisiate. NY
HINDERCORNS Bemoves Corns, Cal-
ouses, ete, stops all pain, ensures ovmiorn wo the
fort, makes walking easy. 5c by mall or at Drag:
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, X. L.
BOILS
Theres quick, positive,
ARBOIL
CENEROUS 30¢ BOX
jats — — - Money back
Av
As An
Pr EGLe TE
eyelids or oth:
You
and gafes
3 MITCHELL
EYE SALVE.
HALL & RUCKEL
New York City
HAY © ix
absolute rel
in the wor
THE HAY-O CO. Sendance
i= not
ry
Pehavior that
ing can easily be ve
all people of good taste,
_—---
-— -
Tr.
Liquid
50c and 75¢
$1.25
Spray Gun .............35¢
.-
Ata...
-
-
for somethi
HAIR on a
sation.
ALD H