THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA. CC MOTNRETTO} 2 HOUSEWIFE | Shoes Must Have Air.—Do not keep your shoes in the boxes in which they were delivered. Shoes require air to preserve them and they should never be kept in an air-tight box. Keep ther in a shoe bag. » * 0 A Parning Ball.—A discarded electric light bulb makes a good darning ball. ee * 0 Inexpensive Stew.—Chop two onions and a large carrot finely, and cut a pound of neck lamb into small pieces. Put into a sauce- pan with one cup macaroni brok- en into small lengths, cover with warm water and season. Let it simmer gently for one and a half hours. » * * Removing Blueing Spots.—Blue- ing spots on white clothing can be removed by boiling in clear water. » * * Serving Omelets. — Omelets should be placed on hot platters to keep them from falling. ® * * Save Table Surface.—If you will place a folded cloth under a dish which contains foods to be beaten you'll find the table surface will be saved many marks and the dish will be kept steady. Yes, Constipation Is Serious But It Can't Poison You! Say Doctors Modern doctors now say that the old idea of poisons getting into your blood from consti- pation is BUNK. They claim that constipe~ tion swells up the bowels causing on nerves in the digestive tract, his nerve pressure is what causes frequent biliows spells, dizziness, headaches, upset stomach ull, tired-out feeling, sleepless nights, coated tongue, bad taste and loss of appetite. Don’t suffer hours or even days longer than oecessary. You must GET THAT PRES. SURE OFF THE NERVES TO GET RELIEF. Flush the intestinal system, When offending wastes are gone the Pr return to normal size and nerve pressure STOPS. Al most at once you feel marvelously refreshed, blues vanish, and life looks bright again, That is why e0 many doctors are now ine sisting on gentle but QUICK ACTION. That is why YOU should insist on Adlerika. This efficient intestinal evacuant contains SEVEN carminative and cathartic ingredients. Adlerika acts on the stomach as well as the entire intestinal tract. Adlerika relieves stomach GAS at once and often removes bowel congestion in hall am hour. No violent action, no after effects, just quicA results, Recommended by many and druggists for 35 years. Cruel Punishment Hatred is self-punishment.—Ho- sea Ballou. GET RID OF BIG UGLY PORES PLENTY OF DATES NOW... DENTON'S FACIAL MAGNESIA MADE HER SKIN FRESH, YOUNG, BEAUTIFUL Romance hasn't a chance when X spoil skin-texture. Men Watch your complexion take on new beauty Even the first few treatments with Denton’s Facial difference. With special oda . combination. - ' EAB. ov avs ssssmmmessnsnnsnsmmn : 8700t AdHIOIR oo oueneeneennnnns 2 rn nnnsnnnnes SU ousss enn BSR ae SA si ninssn =) olUr==—s AdvertisingDollar Buys something more than space and circulation in the columns of this newspaper. It buys space and circulation plus the favorable consideration of our readers for this newspaper and its advertising patrons. Let Us Tell You More About It i about: Species of Candidates. ANTA MONICA, CALIF.—It takes all kinds of candidates to make up this world. Maybe that's why the world seems so overcrowded, There's the candidate who belongs to all the secret orders; if he left off his emblems, he'd catch cold; knows every grand hailing sign there is; hasn't missed a lodge brother's fu- neral in years; can hardly wait for the next one to die. No campaign complete without him. Candidate special- izing in the hearty handshake, the neck- embrace, the shoul- der-slap, the bear-hug, the gift of remembering every voter by his first name, and the affectionate inquiry regarding the wife and kiddies. When he kisses a baby, it sounds like somebody taking off a pair of wet overshoes. Usually has a weath- erbeaten wife needing a new hat. Strutty candidate who's constantly leading an imaginary parade of 50,000 faithful followers. poke his chest away out and then follows it majestically down the street, A common or standardized species. . * * * Biblical Wisdom. N THE Book of Nahum, Chapter II, I came upon this verse: “The chariots shall rage in Irvin 8. Cobb the the broad ways; they shall seem like torches, they shall run like the lightnings." Those Old Testament prophets Because I traveled by night through a main thoroughfare leading But not even an inspired seer of iled in this year of grace 1937 A. D. (automo- destruction)—or a people so speed-mad. * * . How to Fight Japs. \\/ HENEVER we have a Jap- anese war scare, I think of Uncle Lum Whittemore, back in wisdom as he hitched one practiced instep on a brass rail and dent flies for the tidbit of free lunch One day a fellow asked Uncle he'd do if the yellow peril boys in- America. “I'd hunt me a hollow tree in the deep woods,” he the owls would have to fetch me my I been readin’ up on them Japs. They're fatalists." “What's a fatalist?"” said. demanded “Near ez I kin make out,” stated the veteran, “‘a fatalist is a party that thinks you're doin’ him a deep Hollywood Fashions. Hollywood fashions are too gar- If he's talking about Hollywood I say they're just garish ish. males, enough. garish than they are, visitors would petition. And I want the champion- whole suit made out of it. then keep in a bureau drawer be- cause I'm not so brave as Bob is; and also 1 keep the drawer closed because I can’t stand those sudden dazzling glares. And Bing Crosby is either color-blind or thinks every- body else is. But his crooning is mighty soothing. And so it goes— red, pink, green, purple, orange, sky-blue and here and there a dash of lavender. Our local boys gladden the land- scape with the sort of clothes I'd wear, too—only my wife won't let me. Stop, look, listen! That's our sartorial motto, and these jealous designers back east can kindly go jump in a dye-pot. IRVIN 8S. COBB. ©--WNU Service, Home of the Celt Little reference is made to Brit. tany in the ancient classics, save that Pliny speaks of it as the ‘‘Look- ing-on Peninsula,” with its eye and vigion set upon the Atlantic, and Caesar tells something of the fight- ing qualities of the Veneti who in- habited the southwestern seacoast. As is well known, it is the home of the Celt, and neither the highlands of Scotland nor the west of Ireland, nor Wales can produce a finer type of that ancient race that dowered Europe with a civilization long be- fore Homer sang of the Greek gods. HEADLINES FROM THE LIVES OF PEOPLE LIKE YOURSELF! a — “Rattlesnake Kate” By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter ELLO, EVERYBODY: Get this one right hot off the waffle iron, members of the Adventurers’ club. It's about a brave, hard-fighting, quick- | thinking woman. | Lots of people think women aren't brave. But when it comes down to | a case of life or death, just watch ‘em. And then, throw in the life of a baby to fight for and—well, you'll find that old Rudyard Kipling was right about the female of the species. Why, this adventure is so absolutely out of the ordinary, that I hardly believed it myself, when Mrs. Kate Slaughterback, Fort Lupton, Colo., told it to me. This is what happened in 1925, on the twenty-eighth day of October. You kpow what kind of a day that would be out in Colorado. Animals bots around everywhere, storing up food or making for winter quar- ters. Little snap in the air—migratory wild fowl coming down from the north bound for the warm waters of the tropics. Well, early that morning hunters had been banging away before day- er to follow the crippled birds, so she decided to ride out and pick off There Was a Huge Snake Coiled. She saddled up the old pinto. Got down her .22 Remington, lifted Off they went, across the fields to the fence that separated a pasture from the Kate hopped off the pony to open the gate. And, right there Kate Fought Rattlers for Two Solid Hours. at the gate post, coiled up and ready to fight anything that came along— was a huge rattlesnake. Didn't bother that Western woman much. She stepped back to the pony, took the rifle out of the saddle and blew the head right off that cocky reptile But he had his gang with him. No sooner had that rifle eracked-—no sooner had the snake sounded his dying rattie than another angry whir-r-r sounded from the tall, dry grass. Another warning sounded from the left—still another from a different direction. Three glistening, thick-bellied rattlers slithered into the open and toward Kate. The Remington cracked three times in quick succession and three sets of rattles beat out a death-tattoo on the ground Mrs. Slaughterback reloaded her rifle. She looked up quickly in the direction of a strange sound-—a sound like the rustle of the wind among ripe corn. First five—then ten—then twenty or thirty rattlesnakes were undu- lating into the open IN BATTLE FORMATION. Their pointed heads were erect—their fangs darting. They were ready to avenge their compan- ions in the interrupted migration. Still the nerve of the ranch woman held steady. She realized she could not kill twenty or thirty savage snakes with her little rifle. What she wanted was a stout club. There was only one in sight. Kate chuckled as she saw that the club was stuck into the ground and bore a sign, “No Hunting—Keep Out.” Fought Dozens With a Club. She plucked that stake out of the ground. Smashed off the sign and turned to tackle the serpent army. Her eyes met a horrible sight. There were no longer twenty or thirty attackers. They were sliding noiselessly in from all di- rections. Right and left, behind and before—she looked into ven- omous eyes that blazed green like an endless row of traflie lights. She was surrounded. The first rattler to reach her coiled to strike. Kate swung, the club, barely three feet long, and the dying tail flicked her hand. On came the others. Some circling. Some darting in. Little Ernest was crying in the saddle. Brownie—the pony—was trembling. If he should rear, the baby would be thrown among the snakes. Kate was afraid then—afraid for herself and her little boy. She re- doubled her blows. A rattler sprang clear of the ground. Kate caught it with her club as a baseball batter would swing on a home run. Another rattler sprang. It missed her hand by a half inch. She could feel its breath as the jaws snapped. A sound behind her. Coiled and poised for a thrust at her stockinged leg was another foe. She struck backward. The snake uncoiled, its head crushed. The slithery chain of reptiles seemed endless. They darted and struck from all sides. The club thudded hundreds of times. Dying snakes writhed in piles. Kate, hardly moving from her tracks, fought on—fought for two solid hours before she climbed painfully, nerve wracked, back into the saddle. Her Nickname Well Earned. Brownie darted for the ranch house. Mrs. Slaughterback tumbled from the saddle, clasping little Ernest. Her hands were raw flesh and blisters—her eyes bloodshot and her face swollen. Her amazing adventure spread like wildfire through the Colorado country. Down from the cities raced newspaper reporters and photog- raphers. Pn the boys lined her up beside her grisly foes. Cameras told the true story of her kill. ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY RATTLESNAKES. I said to her, “lI hear your friends have a nickname for you now- ‘Rattlesnake Kate." “Yes,” she said. “And I'm proud of it." © WNU Service, Canyon Named for Mormon Bryce Canyon National park is 55 square miles in size and has been under jurisdiction of the fed- eral government since it was first named a national monument in 1923. The “canyon,” which in reality is a great horseshoe-shaped amphithea- ter three miles long and two miles wide, was named after Ebenezer Bryce, a Mormon pioneer who set- tiled there in the early seventies. It is filled with a myriad of fantastic figures cut through the pnk and white limy sandstone of the Paun. saugunt plateau. “Heavy” Water Explained “Heavy” water has attracted wide scientific interest. Like ordi- nary water it is composed of two parts hydrogen and one part oxy- gen, although its hydrogen has an atomic weight of two instead of one, the usual atomic weight of hydro- gen. This difference makes prop- erties altogether distinct from those of ordinary water. At first a scien- tific curiosity, it is produced on a commercial scale for the treatment of cancer, using special nickel steel and pure nickel in manufacturing equipment to safeguard its purity. Historic Hoaxes 0 By ELMO SCOTT WATSON © Western Newspaper Union, That “Rare Old Sale Bill” BOUT every so often some newspaper records the fact that ‘“a sale bill of an auction held near- ly a century ago is the rare pos- session of John Jones of this vicin- Having sold my farm and am leaving Oregon Territory, by ox team, will offer on March 1, 1849, all of my personal property, to-wit: All ox teams, except two teams, Buck and Ben, and Tom #nd Jerry; two milk cows. 1 gray mare and colt, pair oxen and yoke, 2 ox carts, 1 iron plow with wood mole board, 808 feet of poplar weather boards, 1.000 3 foot clap boards, 1,500 10-foot fence rails, 1 60-gallon soap kettle, 80 sugar troughs, made of white ash timber, 10 gallons of maple syrup, 2 spinning wheels, pounds mutton tallow, 20 pounds of beef tallow, 1 large loon made by Jerry Wilson, 300 poles, 100 split Loops, 1X empty barrels, 1 32-gallon Johnson-Miller whiskey, 7 years old; 20 gallon of apple brandy, 1 40-gallse copper still, cak-tanned leather, 1 dozex real books, 4 handle hooks, 3 scythes and cradles, 1 dozen wooden pitchforks, one-half interest in tanyard, 1 32.caliber rifie, bullet mold and powder horn, rifis made by Ben Miller, 50 gallons of soft soap, hams, bacon, lard, 40 gallons sor- ghum molasses, 6 head of fox hounds, all soft-mouthed, except one. At the same time I will sell my negro slaves, two men, thirty five and fifty years old; 2 boys, twelve and eighteen; and two mulatto wenches, forty and thirty-six years old. Will sell together to same party as will not separate them. Terms of sale: Cash in hand, or note to draw 4 per cent interest with Bib McCon- nell’'s security. My home is two miles south of Versailles, Ky.. on MoConn's ferry pike. Sale begins at 8 o'clock a. m. Plenty to drink and eat. —J. L. Moss That sale bill is interesting only because its publication is a modern echo of the beginning of the bitter dispute whic shook the na- tion—the anti-slavery crusade. For it originated in the mind of some Abolitionist propagandist and it was iely circulated as an example of rors of slavery. Alhough uation was that other slave- barrel of h once hor owners were not so thoughtful and would willingly break the hearts of their slaves by separating husband from wife and sons and daughters from their parents when the blacks” were put on auction block * * » Monkey Cotton Pickers of the Cham- we 11 ui the fortunate N 1834 the secretary ber of Commerce at Victc Texas, received a secutive editor of a hich said siructions from a Y national magazine to dig out and write up the story of some man who imported monkeys some years ago and attempted to train them to pick cotton. My search for the facts seems to indicate that this experi- ment was made somewhere in the vicinity of Victoria.” The Chamber of Commerce man wrote back to the editor and told him the real story of the cotton picking monkeys. It was this: Back in 1884 Editor Jeff Mcle- discovered that his Victoria Advocate was going to be mighty ghort of news one week. So he set his imagination to work and when the Advocate came out no one was more surprised than was Ranch- man James A. McFaddin to learn that he had imported a large num- ber of African monkeys and was training them to pick cotton for him. But he had a good laugh over the story, as did his friends and as did the readers of the Texas Siftings at Austin, when the yarn was re- printed in that paper. Everyone recognized the story for what it was —a hoax. But 50 years later it bobbed up again as a “true story’ — thereby resembling so many other “true stories” which we hear ev- ery day. ria, the letter from very Were Their Faces Red! POLITICIAN is always willing to oblige a constituent, else he's no politician. So when several high government officials in Washington during received a letter from Ithaca, N. Y., Smiles Ducky A certain rather exclusive club had replaced it= familiar black- coated staff with young and, in some cases, pretty waitresses, One day a member who had been strongly opposed to the change arrived at the club for lunch. “How's the chicken?’ he asked an attractive waitress rather gruffly. “Oh, I'm fine,” she replied perkily. “And how's the old pel- ican himself feeling?"’ Magistrate (to talkative prison- | er)—Will you stop talking and al- | low me to get in a short sentence? Knew the Plea A little boy at the local school | speech day came forward on the | platform and began to recite, | * ‘Friends, Romans, country- | men—lend me your ears,” he | began. | “That must be the Smythe boy,” | said one of the listening mothers, | with feeling. “They're always try- | Jng to borrow something.” MESTAY HOME FROM WORK ? NO S/R! NOT WHEN GENUINE BAYER ASPIRIN £ASES HEADACHE IN A FEW MINUTES bd Am IY The inexpensive way to ease head- aches — if you want fast results— is with Bayer Aspinn. The instant the pain starts, simply take 2 Bayer tablets with a half glass of water. Usually in a few minutes relief arrives. Bayer tablets are quick-acting because they disintegrate in a few seconds — ready to start their work of relief almost immediately alter taking. It costs only 2¢ or 3¢ to relieve most headaches — when you get the new economy tin. You pay only 25 cents for 24 tablets — about 1¢ apiece. Make sure to get the genuine by insisting on Bayer Aspirin. 156.2% virtually 1 cent a tablet Good Work There's many a good bit o’ work done with a sad heart.—George Eliot. ' Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines request in it. It said that a group Creom which goes the seat of trouble and aids ture to soothe and heal the his for his part in the organization of the Republican party in New York state.” Wouldn't these officials send messages to be read at the dinner? They would indeed! One of them wired, “It is a pleasure to testify to the career of that sturdy patriot who first planted the ideals of our party in this region of the country. If he were living today he would be the first to rejoice in evidence everywhere present that our gov- ernment still is safe in the hands of the people.” Others paid like tribute to this “pioneer Republican.” And then their faces grew ex- ceedingly red when it was revealed that there never had been a real Hugo N. Frye. That was the name used by the editors of a humor column in the Cornell Daily Sun in publishing their flippancies in that newspaper. Another pronunciation of his name is “you go and fry,” which, in the student slang of those days, was the equivalent of “O, go and lay an egg” or “Go and sit on a tack.” Sometimes a politician can be just a little bit too obliging! b i