The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 19, 1928, Image 3

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    HR
Invit
Xo pa dE
iba lf
LL]
Grand Rapids, Mich, the biggest
cipal speaker at the One Hundredth
aald. President Coolidge, T. J
and Robert Irwin
HORORCHOROROHON. By NELLIE
WHOLESOME dessert which wiil
be enjoyed by the children, is:
Butterscotch Pudding.
Aleit one cupfu! of hrown sugur and
two tablespoonfuls of butter, ccok un
til brown in an iron frying pan, using
are not to burn. Pour over the mix
ture two cupfuls of hot milk and sim
mer until Meanwhile sonk
a one-inch slice of bread in cetd wa
ter until soft, and cram
ble into hits.
Pour the milk over the
two heaten egg yolks, a bit of
and a spoenful of vanilla, [Pour
a buttered baking dish and bake
pan of water for twenty-five
Cover with a
whites until stiff,
tablespoonfuls of powdered
Brown in a moderate oven.
dissolved
squeeze out
bread, add
snlt
into
ne
minn es
meringue. using the egg
two
niddding
heaten
|1
Hr
Scalloped Saimon.
Make an ordinary
using two tablespoenfuls each of but
ter and flour and one cupful of milk
Flake and add to
it one green penper
and up
rather or eight,
ing to size or taste, Just
ing add a few walnut
with buttered crumbs and brown.
white sauce
one can of salmon
finely
gently. Cut
shredded
cook ripe olives
coarsely—six accord
hefore serv
ments, cover
Pineapple Rice.
Cook one-half cupful of rice in two
quarts boiling water until tender,
but unbroken Drain, blanch with
cold water. Cut two cupfuls of sliced
pineapple into small pieces. Peat one
cupful of heavy cream until stiff. Fold
the cream and pineapple into the rice
Serve in sherbet eups garnished with
maraschino cherries,
of
Dumplings With Steak,
Season well a steak which has been
well browned in a hot frying pan on
hoth sides. Cover with boiling wuter
and drop on top of the meat any good
A Bird
«CO O WE can hear of some of the
other birds in the world besides
those we see, I'm going to tell you of
still another Bird Talk they had In
the zoo when they told each other who
*hey were and some of their family
ways.
“1 think,” the Sandman continoed,
“that it is nice to hear of different
birds around different parts of the
world just as it is nice to know of
_
Agreed That They
Did.”
different people and of foreign lands
and of interesting places.
“Ro 1 will tell you of some more of
the birds’ own storles about them.
‘pelves,
“+; said the Grass Finch, ‘come
from Australia. There | am a very
popular cage bird. 1 am very, very
small and dainty.
“We do not mind If we have very
small quarters, and we do not mind if
the little birdlings share the smallest
of quarters with us,
“And the Birds All
MAXWELL { CHOROROROROHCHO
dumpling mixture,
fuls en the steak
Let cook for ten
necording to size,
Drop hiy teaspoon
nnd rightly
twelve minutes,
oOver
to
Franconia Potatoes.
2 i fiir » ny -
potatoes in holling ater for
minutes, drain and place
roast, basting often with
starn Newspaper Union.)
i
FRR
The
Happy House
By DOUGLAS MALLOCH
H' Bappy any house could
That a happy famiiy-—
had of
kindness when
A house that the sort
Whe with they
spoke
spoke,
unk
they
twice hefore they
Or, HB indness recall,
Think spenk at all
And what a
Where all
done
Fo tell the pleasant tedday
They heard and saw at work and play
And hurts to
happy house the one
came home when day was
things
not come home their
shout,
With
How happy any house would seem
kind of house that mothers
dream,
Where each would de his proper part,
and do it with a willing heart,
And not expect just one or two
To wait on them, like some folk
tHlow happy nny house would grow
if those within would make It so,
Not envy others, but be giad
For everything thelr own house had
How happy any house could be—
And. more than that, how ensily.
(®. 1928. by Douglas Malloch.)
tory for
By MARTHA MARTIN
something to complain about,
The
do.
“1 mean by quarters the same as
anyone would mean by speaking of
their home. 1 do not mean money,
of course you understand!
“Well, | have a gray head and |
have nn black throat and a black tail
The rest of my feathers are a mix
ture of tan and red and a dull yel
low,’
“My name, said another bird, "is
the Black-'heeked Love Bird. and |
vomse from Bast Africa. | have soft
black feathered cheeks.
“We welcome the little hirds to
the zoo. None of us are very sirong.
but we keep pretty well
“We have green feathers and red
throats and tan heads and our beuka
are like the beaks of paroquets, ols
very small’
“9 am the Brush Bronze Wing Pt
geen from Eastern Australia,’ said the
next speaker at the meeting.
“qq e¢ome from Eastern Australia,
ax I've said, but you're hearing so
nminy stories that | thought 1 would
repent that so that you are doubly
sure of remembering it
“1 like tow, swampy underbrush
kind of country, and 1 can fly quickly.
“But | seldom do fly, | have gray-
prown wings with touches of green
snd orange. My breast is gray and
slate blue in color, and 1 am supposed
to be very pretty. 1 hope you all
think so, too.
“And the birds all agreed that they
did.
“q am the Java Sparrow,’ said the
next one. ‘1 am pot very unusual,
“+ lave white cheeks and a black
head and a little of my throat Is hiack.
too.
“‘My beak Is pink and my body i=
of gray slate color, and folks say I'w
nice looking.
“ “The little birdiings are born here
by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
IE IS no i miragement of
topher to that If he had
Ameri in 140°,
red iL a
nol
34
disco iy
few
soneb
ered
would have very
years thereafter
After mer earned to sall the
great Western continent
have escaped notice for
ath of
gituntion was
ably by a Briton
North America, who said after he had
the continent that the re
thing would have been U
padn't discovered America
the Genoese was at least seek
new land, and he made all the
and nll the priva
that are necessary to really
explolis,
of the important
coverers in the world—the men
have isolated disease germs, and found
means to destroy them-—were not al
ways lookin, for exactly what they
found,
ut they were looking for the same
sort of thing—for micro-organisms of
time,
admir
touring
+ Columbus
expressed
crossed
markable
Columbus
jut
ing a
sacrifices suffered
tions
great
dis
who
Some more
in the zoo, too, for they think we
have such a big, big home here’
“Dear me, dear me,’ said the Jack
son Whydah bird, ‘1 was afraid thal
there would pot be time for me (0
tell my story.
“qq come from British East Africa
| am black and 1 am very fat and
puffed out and good-natured looking.
“1 have brownish touches on my
wings, and my tail is long and feath
ery as a nice tail should be, and 18
curved beautifully.
“It hangs down very far. I'm proud
of the way my tail hangs down.
i“ Well, | believe the meeting Is
over, but even so, 1 will chirp, chirp,
chirp.’
“And the Jackson Whydah chirped,
chirped, chirped,” ended the Sandman
(Copyright)
0
© (aprtgha. 90), by Tow Bell Spniomn, fou t
“Some married women think they
should be privileged to keep thelr
maiden names,” says Reno Kitzl, and
some husbands wish they bad,
4
i
s 8 8 3 8 8 8 8 8 8b BE
TEE I ARTF wy
oe ge Be ge ge de So BL So ttt BLL Lt
PETIT TT A A Eres Rss vv 0
fofoeforireeoteetmbrobetodeiedededebded
I* YOU read the religious advertis
ing you have perbaps come aeross
a series of announcements with a
heading, “The Origin of Man”
Not al} religious advertising is in
teresting, although ht sheuld be, but
this particular series arouses cuiiosity
and leads to thinking.
The origin of man has becn # sub-
ject of discussion and thought ever
since the first man began to wonder
“Where did | come from?”
Science has delved deep Into the
question, theologians have written
libraries about it and the nonbeliever,
in anything but chance, has smiled
in u self-satisfied way at the wide
diversios 61 those who would attrib
ute and piace the real source of man
thing is certain, if
can be certain, man aid not
He was not the resuly of ol
The thirteen elements which are as
sociated in the flesh und and
muscles and tissues did not happen te
fall together.
And if they had by chanee come 10
gether it would secount for the
brain. the intelligence and the power
of reason which eharacterize the ho
man being above the lower forms of
fife.
The book of tells us thot
man was made in the image and like-
ness of the Creator. Elsewhere in the
Scriptures are told that God is
Spirit,
The associating of the
ments would result in the
that the creation of God was spiritunl
material
his origin,
pinnacle of ull
things History Is made up y of
what he has done, Science is made
up wholly of what he has discovered
All law is the summarization of what
the right
'
eiation
$onlualualesteclociusd
Fala ewYy
anything
HAPPEN
nce
One
hones
not
Genesis
we
wo slate
stutement
and not
Whatever man is the
apex, the existing
only
determined as hasis
All
believes
he has
of conduct.
he
does it
rd consists of
what he shall be
Naor
from
matter so mac
we cuane,
the
whence
all,
whether keystone
the valley
You only usk
not ask
wreh was quarried ip
on the
mountain
By JOHN BLAKE
kind or another, an
all the eredit which they
- * *
here are now n continents
discover, and onl a few more
of |
to be explored and
fo
tracts
and on globe remain
fed,
Look ot
that
which
a modern map of
the region around
left white,
find
are
fined are very small,
But discoverers will be at work for
all time shall ahle
und never be
t on thelr achievements.
we
to set a imi
in the department of human afflic
tion. their work is only a little more
than a century old, as far as scientific
knowledge is concerned, and not until
every tiny animated creature
preys on the human or brute
is discovered and circumvented,
the work be complete.
which
gystem
will
of
use
It is within the memory most
men Hving that a way
tricity for the aid of men was
covered. although Franklin learned
that the lightnings were composed of
it. and found a way to bring some of
it to earth from the clouds and im
prison It
The day will probably come-—per
haps within the next hundred years—
when the forces of nature, developing
water and wave power will supply all
the heat we need, and it will no long
er be needful to dig into the land for
coal,
We have learned to fly, but not yet
to fly around the world in a continu:
ous flight. That will come— perhaps
sooner than we think,
Some Columbus may now be on the
track of the way to accomplish it
The last discoverer of all will teach
elec
dis
to
be worthy te bear the burden
A
That Is the most
tion regarding man. Has he and is
he proving himself worthy of that
power of dominion which, if he does
pot believe was divinely
upon him, he has ashmost
nssumed?
put
important ques
universally
The question Is one which may be
applied to mankind as a whole no
more justly than each of us may ap
ply it to himself,
(© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
— Prmscrassnens
Some Quacks
By VIOLA BRCTHERS SHORE
— SET m—
FOR THE GOOSE—
about
N EVER He
i thoughts. But
them,
your inmost
never tell the
truth about neither,
An unbecoming hat lasts the
est,
Funny, ain't it, the more you iake
away from nu hole the bigger il grows
and the more you give of yourself, the
richer you get
Learnin’ will sever hurt you none
Even lessons from a forger cant
you no harm if you dont use em.
FOR THE GANDER
know
on 5
{8 like he don’t
be
that na
might
bousehroke,
A mun
nothin not dumb
Even boat don’t
will,
if a paper
Yon can’t from a
(Or from a
roman that
vy wg} wig
EXPEC Wie
hungry woman
ain’
ary man
Or from a
hung
8 lity
of
after
war and
he |
make un
sHineRs,
to on
way
and behave Intell
nor |
for he will
liv.
ige
will
be a
thousand yea
sou ever Know
long
irs
can be
the face
a earth
charted, surely the
mind
and the
be plumbed, rea
as it does fathomed
ves
he how to
hat it
(Copyright)
discovered
to be,
ought
ccs § Jomo
Colorado’s Distinction
< y
460 IR ih
known as e
the Unplon. Of ti
of
Alaska)
height,
and Washington 1.
are, probably, at least five more
of this altitude in
which remain unnamed. It is
of the
in altitude.
350 peaks
Sold
above 120k)
* td
die of
named peake the United States
{exclusive of which exceed
feet Colorado has
in
California 12,
14.0000
42,
There
peaks (Colorado
esti
that one-seventh state
10.000 feet
at least
feet, 220
13,000
mated
stands above
that It
above
feet,
above
contains
11.000
150 above
14,000 feet.
feet and 47
Versatile Pumpkin
“The pumpkin, or pompion,” we read
in Peter's General History of Connec-
ticut. 1781, “is one of the greatest
blessings and held sacred in New Eng
land. Of its meat {# made beer, bread,
custards, sauce, molasses, vinegar and.
on Thanksgiving days, pies, as a sub-
stitute for what the blue laws brand
as anti-Christian minced ples."—Bos.
ton Transcript.
“Stubby,”
fled Cross,
Cumming, surgeon
received a sliver plate donated
After a romp. in the snow
there is nothing so delicious
nor So g as MONARCH
Cocoa and Teenie Weenie
Peanut Butter sandwiches.
MONA
QUALITY
FOOD PRODUCTS
MONARCH CANNED FREGETABLES, every
vegetable thet grows ... and the aream of the
«op . . « MONARCH CANNED FRUITS, the
“prime pick” of the world’s finest grchards . . .
MONARCH COFFEE, TEA AND COCOA, f
you paid adollar a pound, you couldn't buy finer
quality . . MONARCH PICKLES, sweet gher-
kins, dills, sweet mixed pickles, chows and relishes
er MONARCH CATSUP AND CHILI SAUCE
made from Monarch tomatoes grown from
Monarch seed .. .and the fomausMonarch Teenie
W cemse Specialties,
REID, MURDOCH & CO.
(Established 1853)
General Offices,
Chicago, HL
Great Physiologist
On July 22, 1502, Marie Francois X
Bichat, a celebrated French psysiolo
died. He was the founder of
scientific histold and pathological
his chief works is
Life and Death”
1
gist,
EY
anntomy fine of
“Researches on
Headaches from Slight Colds
laxative BROMO QUININE 1
leve the He by curing the Cold
Look for s ure of BE W. Grove on
the box -Adv.
Tablets re-
Be
Test That Works
n dress and make up to make
are as young as
fool a slice of
Tired and Achy
Mornings?
Too Often This Warns of
Sluggish Kidneys.
OS morning find you stiff, achy—
“all worn out?” Bo you feel tired
and drowsy—sufier nagging backache,
headache and dizzy spells? Are the
kidney secretions scanty and burning
in passage? Too often this indicates
sluggish kidneys and shouldn't be
lected.
oan's Pills, a stimulant diuretic;
increase the secretion of the kidneys
and thus aid in the elimination of
waste impurities. Users everywhere
endorse Doan's. Ask your neighbor!
DOAN’ PILLS
60c
A STIMULANT DIURETIC <& KIDNEYS
Foster-Milburn Co. Pig Chem Buffalo KY.
Stop Coughing
The more you cough the worse you fee
lungs become. Give them a chance tg
heal. ¢ :
it at your drug store. G. G. Green, Ine,
Woodbury, N. J.
Doctor Claims CAMPHOROLE
How the New Discov Brings the Marvel.
ous Secret of a N, J, Doctor to Every
Suffering Man or Woman,
Thousands are suffering from this bor.
fible condition, which is mostly caused by
deposits in the joints, The reason for these
deposits i= because the blood flows mote
slowly, and the little spaces in these Joints
where the arteries end, and the veins be-
gin, are smaller than any part of the
body. Therefore, the deposits in the blood
are more lable to lodge in the joints of
the shoulders, elbows, Wrists, knees, ankivse,
toes, hands, ete
CAMPHOROLE, the new powerfal pene
trating treatment of Dr. Brigadell's =
rapidly absorbed in these areas and alle
the joints in driving out these deposits that
cause yon trouble, From the first application
of CAMPHOROLE you will feel a soothing,
healing sensation as it penetrates the tis
sue, going deep Into (he joints, “asing the
trouble, stimulating etreulation,
At
All
Beware
of
Substitutes
CAMPHOROLE, Ine, A C CITY, NJ.
Gariield Tea
as Your
mother)s Remedy