The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 24, 1930, Image 9

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    DONO LENT
nglerwood wilnole read
By ELMO SCOTT WATSON
ROM Texas
arnouncement that If
present plans are car-
ried out a monument is
to be erected on
state capitsl grounds
at Austin as a memorial
to the wild mustang
which such an
important the
development of Texas
and the whole Southwest, The m
ment for such a memorial was started
by a Fort Worth citizen, and
suggestion a
which to erect
ing raised amon
state,
Up In last year a
plaque, bearing a bas-relief of a mule
and was dedicated by
Ladies of the Golden North, an aux-
lliary of the Alaska-Yukon Pioneers,
to perpetuate the memory of the fdith-
ful pack animals, both mules and
horses, who their lives on the
White Pass trail during the Klondike
gold rush days. With Gov, George A.
Parks of Alaska and George Black,
member of the Canadian parliament
from Yukon territory, officiating, the
dedication took place near Inspiration
Point above the famous Dead Horse
Gulch.
These two memorials are the latest,
but by no means the only ones which
have been erected to honor members
of the equine world. Go down to
Lexington, Ky.,, and drive out along
the Winchester pike until you come to
Hamburg Place, the farm of J. E.
Madden. Nestling in a little grove of
trees on this farm is what is thought
to be the only cemetery for horse cel-
ebrities in the world. Dominating the
grassy plot of ground of less than an
acre and enclosed by a stone wall
stands a statue of a horse. Upon the
foundation on which the statue stands
is this inscription, “Nancy Hanks
2:04" For this is the last resting
place of the world champion trotter
from 1802 to 180M,
Nor is Nancy the only great horse
honored in this “Resting Place of
Celebrities” or “Westminster abbey of
the Turf.” as this graveyard ig ealled,
Another monument marks the grave
of Hamburg Belle, whose world's race
record of 2:01% stood for many years
and whose victory over the great
Uhlan at Cleveland In 1909, when she
gtepoed two heats In 2:01% and
201%, is a ciassic in merican
harness racing. Other stones tell the
name and fame of Miss Kearney, the
mether of Zev, winner of the Interna-
tional race of 1024; Plaudit, winner
of 2 Kentucky derby; Silicon, 2:13%,
dam of Siliko, trotting champion of
Europe ; Major Delmar, 1:50, the trot-
ting marvel of his time; Ida Pickwick,
mown as the “Queen of the West";
Ogden and Plaudit, both famous turf
names; Star Shoot, for five consecu-
tive years the running world's lead.
ing sire; Imp, “the Black Whirlwind,”
credited with winning 60 races, thus
earning the title of “Queen of the
East,” and Lady Sterling, famous as
the mother of Sir Barton and Sir
Martin,
Hidden away in a field near Crown
Point, N. Y., stands a simple granite
the
COmes
the
played
part in
und of
the monun
Alaska bronze
a horse, the
lost
x
* CAMEMBERT
Underwood w
except on one side where Is chiseled
this inscription:
“PINK”
“Died Sunday, May 25, 1886,
30 years horse
master 25 and
known to show fatigue while
age
carried his
was
This
years never
other
and fiying artil-
¥ g from want of food
and exhaustion. He was present in
and 34
hester, Orange
Bull Run,
tysburg, Hanover, Va.;
ains, Buckland Mills, The
Wilderness, Court
Anna, Ashland, White
North
Swamp, Reams Station
horses in cavalry
ery were d
KR skirmishes battles, no-
i Wine
fourt-
Hanover,
Spotsylvania
House,
Oak
The master Gen. John
Hammond, who through the
Civil war in Company H of the Fifth
New York cavalry and whose name
went on roll of honor for meri-
torious service. And Memorial
day the grave of this equine “hero”
ir decorated with the graves
of the human warrior dead.
Even more traditional than love of
man for his horse is his love for his
og. So it is not surpriging that in
various parts of the world may be
found monuments erected to the mem.
ory of “man's best friend.” Most fa-
mous of these, perhaps, is Lord By-
ron's monument to his Newfoundland,
oatswain, In abbey In
Nottingham,
Brig
ig
served
was
the
each
along
d
Newstead
ngland,
In Central park In New York city
stands a bronze statue of a dog which
commemoraies an incident that has
a part of the heroic legend
of America. For this is the statue of
Balto, an important member of the
team which Leonhard Seppala
over those 675 snowy miles,
from Nenana to Nome, Alaska, earry-
ing his precious load of diphtheria
serum to a frozen city In the throes
of the epidemic, while the
world awaited with breathless Inter-
est to hear the result of his race
against death, And a similar bronze
statue is soon to stand either in the
Tiergarten or Under den Linden in
lerlin which will perpetuate the mem-
ory of the Red Cross dogs who served
go heroically in the World war,
It is not especially unusual, per-
haps, for man to erect monuments to
hig two best friends, the horse and the
dog, but it is unusual for him to erect
a monument to a cow. For that rea-
son the statue of Segis Pletertje Pros.
pect, a Holstein cow, which stands
over her grave on the banks of the
Snoqualmie river near Seattle, Wash,
is unique among memorials, The rea-
son for this honor is explained by the
inscription on the bronze tablet at the
base of the statve., It reads as fol-
lows :
“Here lived and gave her service
to mankind Segis Pletertje Prospect,
world's champion milk cow. Born
1013, died 19205, Twice she regis-
tered production records that sect
her fame above all dairy cattle of
any age. In each of two years she
exceeded 16500 quarts of milk,
1,400 pounds of butter, yielding for
the two a total of 33.9022 quarts of
milk, 2865.18 pounds of butter.
become
dog
drove
whole
mndermwood
Sired by a king and of purest Hol
stein strain, she herself bore
and daughters of champie
ment. Finest type
patient animal that is
named ‘The Foster Mother of
Human Race,’ her queenly worth de
served the gratitude
earn
dass in ti Salt Lake valley,
shows the beginning of agriculture In
the arid West his fam
ily and a yoke of work re
claiming the The =e
ond
by crickets,
a pioneer and
oxen ut
desert soll
the wheat fields
The
head, on his
shows avYerrun
pioneer man sits
3 X
took
face a
grief. But the
with bowed
of helplessness and f.
pioneer woman is lifting up
to the skies as sees a miracle
about to take Winging
the mountains into the valley
great flock of gulls, The third bronze
shows the harvest days. The gulls
have devoured the crickets, the crops
are saved and the pioneers in the wil
will have bread On the
tablet these words “Ren
Gull Monument. Erected in grateful re
membrance of the mercy of God to the
Mormon pioneers.” monu
ment is an everlasting story in stone
of one of the most beautiful and dra
matic incidents in American history
the of how the gulls saved the
wheat flelds of Utah in 1848
While monuments to horses” dog
and gulls are unusual
there is one monument which is abso
jutely unique. There is only one mon
ument in the world to
stands near the little city of Vimou
tiers in the Camembert district of
Normandy, France, on the farm of a
certain Beau Moncel, where lived dur
ing the latter half of the Eighteenth
century Marie Harel, who is credited
with being the inventor of Camembort
cheese, Not only is the fame of this
Norman milk maid commemorated b)
this stone shaft on the farm where
she worked, but in Main Place in the
city of Vimoutiers Itself is a stetue
of her, back of which Is a stone bas
relief showing the farmhouse on the
Marcel farm, where she was born In
her face
she
place, aver
come a
derness
fourth
are
Thus this
story
enough,
COWS
cheese! it
1:1 1817 and where she made the new
the world over,
These monuments were erected
through the efforts of a New York
doctor, Joseph Korim. For many
yenrs he conducted a sanatorium In
New York, where the only medicine
he gave his patients for all kinds of
stomach allments was Pilsener beer
and Camembert cheese. Because of
his gratitude to the Inventor of the
cheese with which he made so many
people well and saved thelr lives, he
made a romantic pligrimage to Vimoun-
tiers a year or so ago, and the result
was this most unusua! of all mono.
ments.
ommuni
v7 Buildin
Appearance Adds Much
to Value of Property
I do not think, says a real estate
expert, writing In the Washington
Star, there is an owner of any kind
of goods who will get the same angle
on maintenance as do some property
owners, A storekeeper maintains his
place of business In the most attrac-
tive fashion and presents his stock In
such a way as to interest buyers. The
property owner in many cases ap-
pears to feel that it Is not necessary to
keep a property modern or maintain it
in good condition to either sell or rent
it. There are innumerable cuses that
could be cited wherein an expenditure
of a few property has
added a thousand dollars to its selling
price or greatly increased the return
from its rental. Persons buying or
renting real estate are influenced just
as much by
or property
dollars on un
mdition of the stock
mind
a8 are the buyers of any other com-
modity.
Proper
is a the sale or rental of it
that cannot be disregarded by the
owner except at a financial loss to
himself, better
this
forerunner of
and it can be made
the o«
which they have in
maintenance of
factor in
real estate
time to
subiect
There is no
glve active interest to
than now, Spring Is a
blossom and bloom,
Just such a sen
owner wiao
son for the property
will
his real estate,
adequately maintain
because from such ac.
tion on his part a profit + buyer or
a desirable tena nay blossom and
the resul
bloom us
Commence Work on Lawn
as Early as
spring, lawns should be
On a
plication of equal par
ashes and ground t
meal at th
rate of five pounds per 100 square feet
will provide
A little go
the fertill
Get
weather permit proper
working Seed sown early
will get established before hot weath.
Tribute to Progression
f this newspa
ir in Opp recently
» note the pe
Thes
}
Hens) t« ’
vidence there,
npleted their
ive erected many
street paving.
new business
houses and improved and enlarged
others. There
many of the
do eredit to any city.
is attractiveness about
there that
The business
ways shown a pro-
would
stores
men of « hinve a
women of
the
Wp
gressive spirit, The
that city take an
civie well-being of Opp. The city is
also interest in
clean and the lawns are well kept and
there is everywhere a manifestation
of community pride which is hearten-
visitor.—An
ing to the ohserving
dalusgia (Ore.) Star
Plan City From Start
Smaller
find in
ul argu
commend a cor
before errors puss be-
City
communities
may
larger cities some very forcef
ments to policy of
recting errors
yond the point of
planning and
beauty and
nity efficiency as
correction
contribute to
and commu
increasing
yroperty values, City
poning
convenience
well as
and safeguarding
planning remaing city planning up to a
certain point of progress, then it be-
roOmes rebuilding. It is easy to
train a twig, but difficult and often im-
possible to change a tree.
city
Beautify Highways
Garden clubs taking their ae-
tivities to the state highways in an ef-
fort to beautify these for the pleasure
of * passing motorists. At a recent
meeting of the Garden club of Georgia
at Atlanta it was decided the club
would sponsor the beautificaton of the
highway between Atlanta and Rome,
an nearby town, with shrubbery and
flowers.
are
Houses Behind Times
Everywhere about us we see change
Farming, manufactur.
office methods Improve almost
No longer is anything impos.
sible of accomplishmend. No precedent
is so strong that it cannot be broken.
Yet in this age of fast movement some
12,000,000 homes remain as they were
puilt, anywhere from 15 to 100 years
ngo,
ing,
Consider Front Yard
It 1s typically American to want to
appear well to others. Why not start
in the front yard? It Is here that the
pesser-by gains his impression of the
home. What sort of an Impression
does your front yard make?—Ex-
Doctor’s PRESCRIPTION
when system is sluggish;
costs nothing to try
When your bowels need help, the mildest thing
that will do the work is always the sensible choice.
Take a laxative that a family doctor has used for all
sorts of cases of constipation. Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin is so pleasant to the taste, so
gentle in its action, it 1s given children of tender
age and yet it is just as thorough and effective as
stronger preparations. Pure senna, and harmless
laxative herbs; ingredients that soon start a gentle
muscular action. Avoid a coated tongue, bad breath,
bilious headaches, etc. Every drug store has Dr.
Caldwell’s famous prescription in big bottles. Or
just write Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, Monticello,
lll, for a free trial bottle.
j i
PEPSIM SYRup on
Yad Morr |
MOWTHELAD 643 win 8
RET
Simile
Bees Act as Ventilators
similes: As i
Add
piling an
bridged diet
useless as
Webster's
come every hive are
index to una it is to keep It ventilated by fun
fonary. | ning their w
fing the Stomacks ant Bower
TTT TLE TAL i
Ll - a
Children will fret, often for no
apparent reason. But there's al-
ways one sure way to comfort a
restless, fretful child. Castorial
mless as the recipe on the
mild and f
favd
ana
understand. A coated tongue calls
for a few drops to ward off consti-
pation ; so does any suggestion of
bad breath.
don't eat well, don't rest well,
have any little upset—this
vegetable preparation is
all that's needed to set everythin
to rights. Genuine Castoria
Chas. H. Fletcher's signature on
the wrapper. Doctors prescribe it.
than
that is mes:
systems of adults,
That's the beauty of this special
children’s remedy! It may be
given the tiniest infant—as often
as there is any need. In cases of
colic, diarrhea, or similar disturb-
ance, it is invaluable. But it has
everyday uses all mothers should
come
inc
Whether you loan a
When you are in a figl you don’t | lest doll
friend your
Blessed }
what he
have to wy h them, wants it for,
‘Says Men Want Pals, Not
Patients!
YHE was engaged! She was the
happiest girl in the world.
A round of teas and parties, a
whirl of pleasure, and she began
to wonder what was the matter.
Too tired to go out—and he—
was he becoming tired of her?
It was at this point that Miss
Margaret Belden of Los Angeles
woke up to the fact that some-
thing had to be done about it.
“Men want pals, not patients”
she writes. “I went right to my
doctor. Do you know what he
said? Rest—and Nujol!
“With a prayer in my heart
and Nujol in my medicine
cabinet I began to fight back to
being the healthy, robust, happy
girl I had been before. Two months
passed. No more tears—no more
worrying, no more bad dreams, To-
day I beat him on the tennis court,
and although he can out-swim me,
I make him work doing it. It’s good
to be happy. It's good to be free,
physically, and be able to share, any
time, in sports or dancing or any-
thing else with the one you love!”
Here's another one who has learned
that the simplest and surest way to
be well and full of good spirits is to
clear the bodily poisons out of your
system regularly. Not with power-
ful drugs, but normally, naturally,
easily. Doctors and nurses recom-
mend such a natural treatment as
Nujol, because this crystal-clear
liquid isn’t 3 medicine at all! It can-
not harm even a little baby! It con-
tains absolutely no drugs. It is
simply internal lubrication that your
body needs like any other machine.
Good looks and good spirits—do
they spell popularity? You know
they do! Get a bottle of Nujol to-
night in any drug store. Sold in
sealed packages only—trademarked
“Nujol.” Insist on Nujol by name.
It costs but a few cents—and it will
make you feel like a million dollars.
aw more
ng punishment than of inflic
There are two things a man takes The
with Advice and
cine,
provides Ways
misgivings: medi osc
The only hotel in Atlantic City serving
a tray breakfast to guests each morning
up to 11:00 o'clock WITHOUT CHARGE!
Every room equi with a
private bath tub or shower
NORTH CAROLINA AV. aor BOARDWALK Aianlic (ily |
The Complete Skin
Treatment @
©
Ointment
Talcum
Consistent use of
Cuatieura preparations will
do much to make—and keep
~your skin healthy andclear.
Soap 25a. Olmtavent 25¢. and 50s. Taboum Zhe. Propricters:
Potter Drug & Chensiesl Corporation, Maiden, Mao,