The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 25, 1939, Image 6

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    Mexicana Adds That |
Smartness to Linen
Pattern 6317
Mexico, land of excitement and |
color, served as inspiration for |
these fascinating designs for lin-
ens. Bright prints from your
scrap bag form the easy applique
patches while simple embroidery |
adds the finishing touches. You |
can turn out a delightful tea cloth, |
towel or scarf quick as a wink! |
Pattern 6317 contains a transfer |
pattern of four motifs averaging |
5% by 8% inches; patterns for ap~ |
plique patches; materials needed; |
color schemes; illustrations of |
stitches. i
To obtain this pattern, send 15 |
cents in coins to The Sewing Cir- |
cle, Household Arts Dept. 250 W. |
14th St., New York, N. Y.
Please write your name, ad- |
dress and pattern number plainly. |
A Quiet Scene
URN out of the way a little, good |
scholar, toward yonder high honey- |
suckle hedge; there we'll sit and sing
whilst this shower falls so gently upon |
the teeming earth, and gives yet a sweet. |
er smell to the lovely flowers that adern
these verdant meadows.
Look, under that broad beechtree I |
sat down when I was last this way, |
a-fishing, and the birds in the adjoining |
grove seemed to have a friendly conten |
tion with an echo, whose dead voice |
seemed to live in a hollow tree, near |
to the brow of that primrese-hill; there |
I sat viewing the other streams glide |
silently toward their center, the tem. |
peau sea; yel some times opposed |
y rugged roots, and pebble stones,
which broke their waves, and turned |
them into foam; and sometimes | be- i
gulled time by viewing the harmless |
lambs, some leaping securely in the cool
shade, while others disported them. |
selves in the cheerful sun; and saw oth- |
ers craving comfort from the swollen |
udders of their bleating dams, As I
thus sat, these other sights had so fully |
possessed my sou! with content, that I |
thought, as the poet hath happily ex ;
pressed it: i
I was for that time lifted above earth:
And possessed joys not promised in my |
birth,
—lzaak Walton.
e—— ——— a ——————————
How Women
in Their 40’s
Can Attract Men
Here's good advice for a woman during her
change (usually from 88 to 52), who fea
she'll lose her appeal to men, who worries
Sboaut hot Sashes, ote Gf Dep. Gin apelin,
upset nerves and moody speils.
RE pd herearat c7atR te abe ak | SA
a system ton ¥
E. Pinkbham's Vegetable Com d, made
expecially for women. It helps Nature build
up ph ce, thus helps give more
vacity to enjoy life and sssist calming
jittery nerves and disturbing dy inptons that
often accompany change Bld
WORTH TRYING!
Angry Defenders i
Truth often suffers more by the
heat of its defenders than from
the arguments of its opposers.— |
William Penn. |
MANY INSECTS
ON FLOWERS » FRUITS
VEGETABLES & SHRUBS
Too Great a Price
A laugh costs too much when
bought at the expense of virtue.—
A wonderful aid for boils
where a drawing agent
is indicated. Soothing
and comforting Fine for
children and
Practical. Economiesl,
On earth the broken arcs; in
heaven, a perfect round.—Robert
Browning.
to start your shop-
SHOPPING
ping tour is in
your favorite easy-
Tour =n
Make habit of reading the sdvestss-
in this paper every week.
Shin Dore. Sv] Yast Tisy
WHO'S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
EW YORK. — Radio, automo-
biles, airplanes, moving pic-
tures and virtually all the other
technical ten-strikes of the modern
Dives in Cellar,
Brings Up Our
Television Set
between
World's fair is television, which took
its bow with a telecast at the inaug-
ural ceremonies.
Unlike Britain's garret inven-
tor, John Logie Baird, Allen B.
Du Mont, putting his by-line on
the new television set, came
along through the “channels” in
which promising young techni-
cians are grooved these days.
Out of Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute in 1923, he was em-
ployed as a tube engineer with
the Westinghouse company in
Bloomfield, N. J., until 1937,
when he became chief engineer
of the De Forest Radio compa-
ny. But, when he caught the
television germ, he did just what
Baird did, the only difference be-
ing that he holed up in a cellar
instead of an attic. \
The hunch
the flickering
deck. So he dived into his
ment, built his laboratory and stayed
come up with a cathode-ray tube
In 1937, Mr. Du Mont rounded
up some capital and built a siz.
able two-story laboratory at
Montelair, N. J., employing 42
men, By 1938, Paramount pic-
tures had declared itself in in
a big way, and, at last accounts,
Mr. Du Mont's enterprise was
virtually a subsidiary of this eor-
poration. That is interesting in
view of the fact that, in Eng-
land, they already are televising
events for the moving picture
screen. It is indicated that the
Du Mont rig may be subject to
the same development,
tle
OL. EDWARD STARLING, who
confers with Albert Canning,
chief constable of Scotland Yard,
about guarding the British king and
Chameleon-Like >. 5, °° their
visit here, is an
Sleuth to Guard American of
the “Deadwood
Dick” tradition
reserved, tight-lipped Kentuckian,
with a sombrero, the guardian of
He will be there
He merges with the scenery
like a chameleon,
He saved Clemenceau’s life
during the Paris peace confer.
ence. Guarding Woodrow Wil.
son, he rode in an automobile
immediately behind the “Ti-
ger's” car. He saw an assassin
level a gun. Shooting from the
hip in a lightning draw, he
cracked the killer's wrist,
interviews police, maitres d'hotel,
transportation officials and chefs,
receptive energies.
At 17, he was a deputy sheriff
of Hopkinsville, Ky. As a s
cial agent for the railroads, he
touched off his first national
headlines by trapping the “Cali-
fornia Kid,” a desperate ma-
rauder who had long eluded cap-
ture, President Theodore Roose-
velt gave him special assign.
ments which routed him into the
White House secret service de-
tail in 1913. In 1935, he be-
came head of the detail, which
congress had authorized after
assassination of President Me-
Kinley,
He is six feet tall, gaunt and se-
rious, graying now, the better to
fade into the crowd.
Su
OHN R. STEELMAN, the govern-
ment's special mediator in the
Appalachian soft coal dispute, was
once a ‘blanket stiff,” riding the
Ex-Blanket Stiff [oue.."' tn the
Boils Down Our from Arkansas
3 to the western
Labor Disputes wheat fields.
There, in the post-war boom days,
he earned $9 a day and invested his
savings in a Henderson college A. B.,
a Vanderbilt M. A. and a University
of North Carolina Ph. D. Heading
the government conciliation service,
he smoothed out 4231 labor dis.
putes, involving 1,618,400 workers, in
the 1938 fiscal year, He was an
Arkansas farm boy, working the
southern logging camps. He is tall
and dark, and friendly and easy-
going in manner.
Released by Conaolidated News Features,
Star Dust
% Law Forces a Fake
% NO for Life of Child Star
% U. S. Groceries to Europe
bee By Virginia Vale
HERE'LL be a bit of fak-
ing about Principal Pro-
duction's “Way Down South,”
but it's not the fault of the
producer, Sol Lesser. The
story of the picture is laid in
Louisiana; it deals with plan-
tation life in pre-Civil war
days. One of the high lights
of the picture is a sugar cane
festival, the autumn celebra-
tion of the harvesting season.
Lesser ordered a freight car of Lou-
isiana sugar cane, and
field will be used
BOBBY BREEN
rehearsing for two weeks, so that
sic will have the true beauty and
Peggy Ann Garner, a six-year-old
native of Los Angeles, won out over
100 other children in tests to find
just the right child to play the part
of Carole Lombard’'s daughter in
“Memory of Love.” She is inex-
perienced, but she has charm and
bard, Helen Vinson and Katherine
Alexander, starting, perhaps, on the
road to fame.
aes
Of course, this matter of being a
movie star isn’t half so much fun
for a child as other children are
likely to think it is. Irene Dare,
(another six-year-old) who is work-
ing in “Everything on Ice,” can tes-
tify to that. She rises at 6:30 every
morning, practices skating until
eleven, then has a ballet lesson for
an hour. After lunch she has a
an accomplished skater, Her spare
a"
after all.
sss smn
When he and his wife travel in En
American groceries, because he
doesn’t like continental food.
sonst
Another radio serial will reach
the screen before so very long. It is
“Hometown,” heard over WLS,
which stars Lulu Belle and Skyland
Scotty, and will be filmed by Re-
publie Productions.
Whenever a new engineer is as.
signed to the Charlie McCarthy pro-
gram he’s initiated with the same
gag. Don Ameche and Edgar Ber.
gen pulled it on the latest reeruit.
They stood in front of a microphone,
moving their lips but not uttering a
sound, while the engineer nearly
went wild trying to find the trouble.
siamo
ODDS AND ENDS-The CBS Hit Pa
rade now enjoys the highest rating in its
history, and Mark Warnow's contract has
SMUGGLER!
a diplomat passing through the cus-
past the official.
“Excuse me, sir,” said the officer,
respectfully, "but have you declared
that case?’
“No,” was the reply. “I'm travel:
ing under diplomatic privileges, and
these are important dispatches.”
“Well,” answered the customs of-
ficer, *“the neck of one of your
dispatches is sticking out of the
case.”
Has That Effect
“Some people thirst after fame,
others after wealth, others after
said the romantic young
man, with a sigh.
not in the same mood, however,
wt
she said.
“Yes?” asked the lover, eagerly.
“Salt fish!" was the crushing re
MODERN VERSION
Actor—The next line is: “A horse!
A horse! My kingdom for a horse!”
Manager—But, my dear fellow,
that will scarcely be understood in
this day—make it an automobile!
Good Guess
“Did you go to the doctor the oth-
er day, John?"
“Yes, 1 did.”
had?"
“Very nearly.”
“What do you mean, very near-
iy?”
“Well, I had $5.00 and he charged
Words of Action
“Which is the better,” inquired
the young patriot, “to be a silver
tongued orator or a practical poli
tician?"’
“It depends,” answered Senator
Sorghum, “on your personal ambi-
tions. Some people desire the last
word and others are concerned sole
ly about the first ballot.”
It Shouldn't Matter!
“Say, what do you call this?” de-
randed the petulant customer of
the waitress. “Is it beef or mut-
“Can't you tell?” she asked.
“No, 1 can't!”
“Well, then,” said the waitress.
“why worry about it?"
Too Many Bites
Angler—1 certainly do.
the back of my neck!
Co-operation
punish his six-year-old son.
saying his prayers.
“Please, Lord, make me a good
boy,” pleaded the child. “I asked
you yesterdzy, but I guess you over-
looked it."
TEACH HIM A LESSON
“l don't know what to do with
that boy of mine. He won't go to
school, he won't work and he's al
ways asking me for money?”
“Why don’t you get him a job as
collector for an installment house?"
The Little Less
Anxious Sportsman (who thinks he
has backed a winner)—Did you
send off that wire in time?
Village Postmistress- Yes, gir, but
the money was a penny short so 1
left out the name of the horse.
Oxygen
The teacher of a chemistry class
asked:
“For what purpose do automobile
Shops use oxygen?"
“For the carburetors to breathe,”
a pupil responded.
The secret of this modern
miracle is refrigeration. Vast
ated cars, thousands upon
thousands of refrigerated
trucks, refrigerated ware-
houses and refrigeration
equipment in stores. All this
has been done for a single
and at its best until it reaches
the home.
At this point the responsibility
shifts to the homemaker. And if
she falls down on her job, then all
previous efforts to keep food free
from spoilage have been in vain,
Homemaker’'s Responsibility
As guardian of her family’s
most important
tasks is to see to it
that all food is safe-
guarded against
contamination in.
til it reaches he
table. This means
that perishable
foods must contin-
ue to be refrigerat-
ed properly in the
home. For only in
the ravages of micro-organisms
which are always ready to attack
foods when conditions are favora-
ble for their growth,
Two essentials are necessary for
satisfactory food preservation in
the home.
must be stored at a temperature
of from 40 to 45 degrees Fahren-
heit—never at a temperature high-
er than 50 degrees. Second, the
maintained. Too much moisture
will encourage the growth of bac-
teria; too little will dehydrate
fruits and vegetables apd make
Home Care of Foods
Both requirements are met by
a good household refrigerator:
and the homemaker who appreci-
ates the importance of keeping
foods sound and wholesome will
regard an efficient refrigerator as
an investment in good health. It
is especially necessary that the
food supply be properly refrigerat-
ed during the warmer weather of
spring and summer, in order to
prevent the consumption of dishes
that may have become contami-
nated without any marked altera-
tion in appearance, taste or odor.
Highly Perishable Foods
Milk is often regarded as the
most perishable of all foods, be-
fore, essential that this splendid
4%
-
1
| ble after it is delivered, and kept
| there until the moment it is to be
fused. Milk should never be al
| lowed to stand at room tempera-
{ ture for any length of time. For
iit has been demonstrated that
i when it is held at 40 degrees—an
ideal temperature—before deliv-
tery, then allowed to stand at a
| room temperature of 75 degrees
| for an hour and a half, and again
| refrigerated, a rapid increase in
| bacteria occurs.
Other types of protein foods alse
{ present a favorable medium for
| bacterial growth when they are
| held at temperatures higher than
{50 degrees. These include meat,
| fish, meat broths, gelatin, custards
{and creamed foods. It is advisa-
| ble to keep these foods, as well as
{the milk supply, in the coldest
| part of the refrigerator,
| Fruits and Vegetables
Fruits and vegetables soon lose
ent unless they
| are protected against warm, dry
{ air; and they are likewise subject
{to the action of micro-organisms
which result in decay. But when
stored in a modern refrigerator,
i these mineral- and vitamin-rich
foods can be kept in perfect condi-
| tion for considerable periods, thus
| making it possible to take
tage of favorable market
| ings.
Guarding Against Mold
; As a rule, warmer weather also
increases the problem of combat-
{ing molds. For given moisture
and warmth, molds will grow on
anything. However, the
most hospitable hosts are acid
| fruits, such as oranges, lemons,
berries or tomatoes; sweets, such
as jams and jellies; bread and
meat. While molds are physio-
logically harmless if eaten, they
definitely spoil the taste and ap-
pearance of food.
Mold growths can be killed by
{ boiling. They are retarded by the
{dry circulating air of an efficient
| refrigerator. It is to allow for
air circulation that berries should
| be stored uncovered—if possible,
spread out so that the air can
reach more than just the top
layer.
Frequent inspection of all food
| supplies, including those the
bread box, and the prompt elimi-
nation of any items showing signs
of mold, will help to keep it from
spreading.
Constant vigilance on the part of
the homemaker in caring for foods
on hand will avoid a needless
drain on the food budget and will
safeguard the health of every
member of the family.
©-WNU CC. Houston Goudiss 1839-63,
acvan-
offer-
{ almost
!
in
AROUND |
the HOUSE
Mice Avoid Camphor.—Pieces
of gum camphor placed near
books on the shelves will protect
.
Waste Tea—Pour left-over tea
windows.
* * .
Onion Odor.—A little mustard
agreeable odor.
. . »
Hot Water Marks.—Should you
spill hot water on a polished table
and it leaves a mark, rub it gen:
tly with spirits of camphor and
finish off with a gentle rubbing of
furniture polish,
- .-
Refrigerator Deodorant.—Put a
piece of charcoal on one of the
shelves of the refrigerator. It acts
as an absorbent for all odors and
purifies the air.
.« » @
Washing Cretonne.—When wash-
ing cretonne or similar materiai,
the colors of which may fade in
soap and water, try using water in
which a large bag of bran has
been boiled. Give a final rinse in
fresh bran water and salt.
-
Easy on the Curlains.—Before
washing net or lace curtains, steep
overnight in a tub of cold water to
which has been added half a cup-
ful of ammonia. This draws out
the dirt without soap and rubbing.
Next morning rinse the curtains
and squeeze through warm suds.
La
Killing Earth Worms.—-To ex.
terminate earth worms from pot
ted plants, thrust unburnt sulphur
matchheads, heads down, into the
earth around the plants. Use from
two to six matches, according to
the size of the plant.
Brightening Chinaware, — Dis-
colored china or any other crock-
ery ware can be freed of discol-
oration marks by applying a solu-
tion of salt and vinegar.
@ - *
Make Shakers Work.—To keep
the metal tops of salt shakers from
corroding, cover the inside with
melted paraffine. While the par-
affine is cooling the holes may be
opened with a pin.
you