The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 07, 1929, Image 6

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    Zi
ABOUT TWO-YEAR-OLDS
CS VERY one is, at one time of his
< or her life, two years old. Every
one reaches that age not at the same
time as every one else, but after hav.
{ng spent just the sume length of time
in the world.
No one who has deen in the world
years can ever be two years old again,
Nor enn anyone who has only been in
the world a year and a half suddenly,
pver night, become two years old.
There are no handicaps in this race.
No one is allowed to be ahead of one's
time. But every one can get as much
into the time as possible—some more
than others.
Peggy was two years old. It was
just as much of an event in the family
as though no one else had ever heen
two years old. That made it so nice,
Yet Peggy's brother had been two
In the Center of All Was a Cake
With Two Candics.
years old right in their very own fam
ily. He was almost ten now.
3ut Peggy was two. And every one
in the was . shouting about It
There was Beck wko wus busy in
the Kitchen Hg to herself now
Becky didn’t talk much in the very
early morning. If you spoke to her
she mumbled. And her mouth looked
funny, too. It went in and looked
queer and her lips looked thin and
rather long and were pressed tightly
together.
“You
house
mustn't ask her why
doesn’t talk to you when she
gets up,” Peggy's mother
“She's sensitive about her
Pegoy puzzied over that.
Decky sensitive about
one hour and not at another?
tive, It seemed, meant
being hurt in a person's feelings,
Now Becky was talking
“Bless her darlin’ little heart,
Just guess | will make her a cake”
Peggy knew she wasn't supposed
hear this, and yet she wus sent
she
first
tad said
teeth.”
Why was
her
Sensi
to
How It Started
By JEAN NEWTON
0000000000000 000000000000K
LORD AND LADY
SKED to guess at the origin of the
words “Lord and Lady” one
would choose an exalted derivation
ut the mill of research grinds on
—let the chips fall where they may!
What disillusionment to the bearers
of the titles to learn that a “lord.”
from the Anglo-Saxon “hiaford™ was
originally simply “keeper of the loaf”
“hiaford” meaning literally “bread
keeper.” And since the original lord
of the manor fed his tenants at his
board or from his hoard, since he was
their only source of supply, the pame
was not inappropriate,
“Lady,” too, it is interesting to note
has a similar derivation-—-the “giver
of the loaf” or mistress of the house
hold.
(Copyright.)
GABBY GERTIE
———
“Strange-~it makes a girl soar when
the boy friend asks her to fly with
him"
from one room to another--all hecause
it was her birthday. Oh, but she liked
being sent from one room Lo an
other
It was exciting, They sent her
in such an interesting way.
Even Deborah was too busy to talk
to her. Dehorah was very seldom as
busy as that. Deborah used to take
het walking In the afternvon, How
she loved taking hold of Deborah's
hand and going down to the great
wharves and watching the boats, and
the nice round island right out in the
water,
Peggy talked to herself and to Gyp,
the little stuffed dog which had be
longed to Peggy's ULrother, Peggy
could talk now. She had been saying
more amd more words every day. But
when she wanted to have a really
good time she talked a language all
her own, It was just right for play.
talk. No one could understand her
except grandma, and grandma was
very wise,
The other would say:
child saying?”
Then Peggy would use
jut grandma would say:
“That's all perfectly good play:
talk and Peggy and Gyp understand
it—and | believe 1 too"
Grandma really did know more than
anyone—even more than her mother
and her daddy and her brother,
Her brother come rusifng toward
her now, He was dressed In funny
old clothes, with a big hat which come
down his head. He carried a
brass bell which looked like 8 man po
matter which way sou held it. The
man had no back. [If you turned the
bell around It was the same man fac
ing you at the as it was the
other way.
Her brother rang
the
too,
looked.
away
“What is the
real words.
don,
over
back
bell, Then
ail dressed up
the
others came along,
dress
pro
knew how
all right. The
cession had started with Peggy
her brother leading the way, ringing
the bell and shouting:
to
They
themselves up,
“Little Peggy Is two years old,
Two years old today!
We wish her happy returns—we do,
On this her Natal Day!
Her brother whispered to her that
Natal day meant the same as birth
day. She sat In a big chair before
the birthday table now with ribbons
und flowers about it,
In the center of all was a8 cuke
two candles burning so gayly.
such presents!
est of all was nn big cloth ent which
sat up very and he made
friends with Gyp at once.
lucky,
Oh,
old!
And
straight,
it was such fun to be two years
(Copyright)
CTHE WHY of
SUPERSTITIONS
By H. IRVING KING
DIVINING BYTEA GROUNDS
fragments of tea leaves remain
ing in the cup after the tea has been
drunk is a polite form of sorcery with
which we are all familiar. Doubtless
you can think of at least one woman
of your acquaintance who is particu
larly expert at It,
Having imbibed your tea, turn the
cup upside down in the saucer and
whirl it around three times Turn
the cup rightside up again and ex
amine the leaf fragments clinging to
bottom and sides. There lles your
future.
In this magic we have a double
header—a combination of two ancient
systems of divination, hydromancy
and ceromancy.
Hydromancy was much practiced in
ancient Egypt. A bowl or cup was
filled with water and a selected per
son, generally a young boy, gazed
into It until he berume hypnotized
and “saw things” when the hypnotist
magician interpreted what the boy
thought he saw. [It was the same
trick which the strolling magicians
of North Afrien perform today by
means of a drop of ink In a boy's
hand and which many travelers have
witnessed. When Joseph sent his
messengers to find his silver cup In
Benjamin's sack he instructed them to
say: “Is not this my lord's cup In
which my lord drinketh and wherein
he divineth? Hence the mystic qual
ities of the cup.
The signification of the tea leaves
is an echo of ceromancy which econ
sisted of dropping melted wax into
water and divining by the forms the
wax assumed In cooling.
Ceromancy is a very old art but tea
wag only Introduced into Europe in
the Seventeenth century, yet the prim.
itive mind, still subsisting in man, at
means of foretelling the future as that
same mind had seized upon the melted
wax some thousands of years before.
(E& by MeClure Newson por Byndicate.)
Defined
“Propaganda” Is any process of en.
lightening the public mind with an
opinion we do pot share.-Boston
Herald,
John Breeden
DDOOPRLeRebdR bebe bere eet
This handsome chap, endeavoring
to reach stardom in the “movies” is
to be sen in “Masquerade,” a Movie.
tone production. Breeden is a mil.
lionaire in his own right. He stands
five feet eleven inches, has, dark
broevn curley hair and clear gray
eyes. His early ambition was to be.
come a locomotive engineer, but he
got over that when he went to Vienna
to study music. He went on the stage
the intention of becoming a star,
“P=
COOLOOOOOD
For Meditation
000000
By LEONARD A. BARRETT
SOGO00
EXPERIENCE
Ee UENCE 1s a very valuable
asset in life for the following rea
First: It is a Witilam
the late psychologist of Har
gniversity, coined the phrase,
“The Pragmatic Test" It may be
high sounding, but its meaning Is |
very simple. The test of truth is ex-
perience. We know the value of a
certain fertilizer because of the appli
cation we have
made of It to the
particular we
are responsible for
cultivating, Infor.
mation of 8 new
discovery way
reach us from some
person in whom we
have
and for that
fie cept
statement as trae;
but our faith
passes Into knowl
per.
made
sons fest,
James,
vard
soll
confidence,
res.
son
we the
edge when we
sonally have
the experiment. If |
we are not able to
make the esperi
ment we must accept the statement of
others; this is faith, When our ex.
perience tells us it is true, we possess
a knowledge which no one
from uns. In very many
mon place and ordinary,
is the test of truth A
L. A Barrett.
can tafe
ways, com
experience
statement
until we know
from experience, it is not true.
Experience is a teacher. Many
persons fall in life because they re
fuse to learn {rom experience. Every
person makes mistakes. No one is
infallible. The first mistake is usual.
ly pardonable, but there is no reason
why the same mistake should be re.
peated the second time. Continuing
to do the thing, which experience has
clearly taught was a mistake, Is most
futile. If experience has taught me
that a bee stings, 1 deserve to be
stung if 1 deliberately subject myself
to that danger again. The lessons |
which experience teaches are most
valuable, because from them we léarn |
our sources of strength as well as of
weakness,
Experience 1s a valuable legacy.
Would it not have been a wonderful
thing if Lincoln could have had a suc.
cessor? It seems strange, but true, |
that no person can continue another |
person's work in the sense of doing !
It just as the other person would
have done it. We ean, however, bulld
upon another's foundation, because in
his work he has left us hig personal
experience. The most valuable her
Itage we can ever leave to our chil
dren is not money, but an experience
expressed In character and ideals
(©, 1959, Western Newspaper Union.)
0
(6B by MeClure Remsiaver Syndicate)
Their Working Speed
A. ~How many have you working hs
your concern?
B.—Oh, about half of them,
Industrial Center Made
Into City of Gardens
Essen, the city of smokestacks,
fron and steel center of Germany, hus
been converted into a city of gurdens
by a system which has aroused the
envy of many other towns and made
it the antithesis of the general con-
ception of what a mill town looks like.
Careful city planning has been
partly responsible for this result, but
a farsighted policy by Alfred Krupp,
founder of the famous steel works, is
also entitled to much eredit, Dec ades
ago Herr Krupp set aside comfortable
one-family houses for his workers, and
the city has been lald out in such a
way that the mills are confined to one
section, business houses and office
buildings to another and residences to
a third
In this third section gardening
become the favorite family sport.
municipality has encouraged this
aside tracts of land and
can lense a plot with a tool
on it for a ridiculosly low rent.
There has grown up a wholesome riv-
the
has
The
by
any
as to who among the
vegetables,
A garden falr was
of oy HCTres.
30.000
laid
T0000
out
Some rose
dahlias, uncounted
thousands of other flowers and shrubs
there, Ar
skill was used in the grouping,
ener's craft also
object lesson
bushes,
ianted
scientifie gard
wns used to create an
other cities,
Ugly Wayside Stands
Should Be Abolished
not the only puis
may destroy the beauty
the western
are great be-
necessary
Signboards
ances which
scenic route, In
ure
distances
{ween
that
towns, it is almost
be way
motorists may hase
route. Many of these
astily
there gide sia
pure supplies
stands are
shacks, bh thrown together
summer us
In
¢ only.
1028, during a visit to the
tional parks, Mrs. John D.
er. Jr., was impressed with
of beautifying American roasdsic
g to the nat
ganized =»
des, es
pecially those leadin
parks, Accordingly
with an annual
wortions, for the
stand, Si
plan board of srch
which will furnish plans and
hout
Bp
which nj
areas,
way
she or
contest,
erous prog
wayside
hod i tects,
de stands wit cost.
fo
pears to be ef.
for waysl
is an entirely
problem
fective In several
new smch
one
reports of state high commissions
of ates that they he
the direction
several eastern st
lieve th is In
of more at
e tendency
well
M. A brig ht, In
Post.
tractive and
side star Horace
Saturday Evening
3
3%, -
the
Proper Tree Protection
long ngo a tree in Mis
souri took out £500 in
a fine oid tree that stands
He values that tree hig 3
But there 8 another form eof insur
ance tha
real benefit to the tree,
investment in the tree
sure its longer life and
for the tree to
elements ngainst which
for existence.
Many trees are
Usually the greatest
trees which have sharp
Not over
That
which w
witherand
it must fght
er ns the tree grows older.
storm, or even on a still day, the
branches will snap or the fork split
down, leaving the tree disfigured and
permanently ruined as a thing
beauty.
Duties Before Architect
respected in his community, who uses
and le
tunities to help bring the kingdom of
heaven to hep upon earth,” says Fred
erick P. Kepoel, president of the Car
negie corporation,
“He can do it by the creation of
beauty, by participation in community
enterprises such as town and regional
planning and the development of parks
neglected in the schools.
“He ean do It by organizing groups
of people to create objects of beauty,
and there are many more groups of
this sort than Is generally realized.”
Beautify the Highways
“Make Missourl Beautiful” wouldn't
be entirely satisfactory as a slogan for
beautifying the paved highways that
now cross the state, Missouri is bea
tiful, but its roadways might offer op
portunity for beautification. Trees
may be planted and at many points,
flowerbeds laid out. This example
should induce thousands of private
property owners to beautify their own
frontage.-~F, H, Collier in the St
Louis Globe-Democrat,
Ready to Help Buy Home
Ready assistance awaits the man
‘who wants to own a home. Your em
ployer, your banker, your contractor,
your realtor and your builder are
ready to help you give your family
the many advantages snd savings that
come with owning a home.
If
from your druggist today,
ve getable
Work of Patient Artist
In a shop at Nantucket, say
Boston Bedford |
(Mags.) girls notic looked like
a cherry stone set a bare like that
of a collar button. They Inquired
what It was and were told It
spoon holder, and when they
incredulous, the proprietor
shop removed the cherry st
k out of it two dozen
hind
New
ed what
an
Globe, tome
Wis 2
looked
of the
ane from
its base and shoo
ach gu
yet
won
an
bowl, one which
than a micro
The novelty was
hold no
drop of tea
would
scopic
the work of na
more
Niantucketer whose
keenness of vision anc skill
leraft excited admiration and wonder,
YOU HAVE A DOCTOR'S
WORD FOR THIS
LAXATIVE
=)
Tn 1875, an earnest g man
began to practice medicis As a
family doctor, he saw the harm in
barsh purgatives for constipation
and began to search for something
harmless to the sensitive bowels.
Out of his experience was born
a famous prescription, He wrote it
thousands of times. It proved an
ideal laxative for old and young.
As people saw how marvelously the
most sluggish bowels are started
and bad breath, headaches, fever-
ishness, nausea, gas, poor appetite,
and such disorders, are relicved by
the prescription, it became neces-
sary to put it up ready for
Today, Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pep-
sin, as it is called, is the world’s
most popular laxative. It never
varies from Dr. Caldwell’s original
effective and harmless formula.
All drugstores have it.
Too Many “Tellers”
A middle-aged banker, who has just
taken up the ancient and Irritating
Scottish game, found the usual num-
ber of amateur advisers at every tee
150
18C.
Just how to stand, Just where to look
and then just what was wrong with
each stroke, until, worn out and baf.
fled, he exclaimed: "There are actu
ally more ‘tellers’ on this course than
there are In the banks !™
Whatever you try, you d¢ not hear
the shouts of approval until you have
stcceeded,
Why is it that some believe In can.
Compound
LYNN, MASS,
| For Best Results
in Home Dyeing
You can always
give richer, deep-
more bril liant
colors to faded or
out-of-style dress-
es, hose, coats,
draperies, ete., with
Diamond Dyes.
And the colors stay
vt
er,
in throug
wear and w
highest quality
tet
the very 3
Ple enty of pure
Diamond Dyes easy to use.
go on evenly without spotting or
streaking. Try them next time
and see why authorities recom.
mend them; why mi illions of women
will use no other dyes.
You get Diamo n Dyes for the
same price as ordinary dyes; 15¢,
at any drug store.
A. O. LEONARD, Inc.
70 Fifth Ave, New York City
av AL ITY ES LL EFS
Mature, layia Pullet i ne, Parred
White and tuff Hock {odd Wyandoties
Anconas, MM ” d Giants, at
$2.00 and ger stock at lowes
cede every week ip
prices. Baby eo}
the yemr. $13.00
Rabbits at barg 5 ¢ e ui
rabbits preduced 3d
H igh qual ity i
delivery ’
NATIONAL BARIIT AND Pot LTRY FARM
General Didributors of Breading Stock snd
_ Chicks, GETTYSBURG, PA.
Promp*
Justa ted tal
over ¢ pleces gx
1 your name In our dire
3 months 20%. Addr
J.B LUX
R 2 Bex 5 - = Watervliet,
wh
Mich
Grand Sheep Farm or General Farming ©
improved road, large dn dwelling, ness
ake 2 reams throug! 10 r 1
G1 oyd M Hallenbec
PAINS FROM RHYD
backache colda sprains
gives immediate relief
wipald African Snake
264 Ww. A004 S. KN. ¥. ¢
STOF SUFFERING
MATISM, headache,
African #£y Oil
order at FOR
11
Oil Ce. Bl "Epstein,
86c. wnd $1.60 at Drogine
7 4 Bisons Chem, W ka Patobopue X.Y
FLORESTON SHAMPOO-Idesl for nse in
connection with Parker's Hair Baissm. Makes the
hair soft and Buffy. 50 cents by mall or at “2
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, K
W.N.U, | BALTIMORE, NO. 44.1929
That Was That
“I think you should show your par
ents some respect and ask them if you
can do things before you do them,’
said her dad sharply.
“Be a wasie of time, dad,” retorted
his modern daughter, “you'd say no
and I'd do them anyway.”
Class Distinction
Sailor—Man overboard!
Wife of the Man in the Water—Par
don me-—a gentleman. My husband is
a first-class passenger. Pearson's.
Man's emancipation brought more
murders, so does woman's,
THE NEW