THE PATTON COURIER CASTORIA” ispecially for Infants Idren of All Ages Fletcher's Castoria has for over 30 years as a nless substitute for Cas- oric, Teething Drops and ps. Contains no narcot- directions are on each 'sicians everywhere rec- bears signature of t handy for burns, 8S, wounds, bruises, and cracked skin, es and felons, | local application > colds on the chest, Wuhan, ower of Canton T This picture shows the best of the Cantonese troops, products inauguration of Sun Foo, son of the late Dr. Sun Yat Sen, as mayor of the Wuhan cities. Inset is Sun making his | inaugural address. The ceremonies marked the transfer of the seat of the nationalist government from Canton to | . | of the roops at Sun’s Inauguration ; | Whampoo FAI academy, gathered for mbago, varicose 1 eczema, vith lanoline (pure combined withanti- Paling, pain-reliev- . Randle ©o., Ploua, 0, “8 siisacEs KESIS IL 3urrosiTomies -E $1.00 EE BOOKLET annot supply you. order arges prepaid, from IEDICINE CO, } ST.. CHICAGO, ILL. MED JOINTS luce in- sprains, Quickly quittor, res, Will 4 air. You i nies a Existence of « layer in the upper air which bends radio waves buck to earth has been verified as the result | e. of experiments just concluded by Dr. G. Breit (left) and Dr. M A. ready to department of territorial magnetism of the Carnegie institution in Washington. The scientists compute the Wed “ceiling” to be about 100 miles above the earth, although it rose and fell within a range of 50 to 130 miles. RBIN AE Ty Re Saving Ymplement - 66 9 if “Top KERS i Co, Le Roy, N.Y. Head Noises VED RY ) EAR OIL ERT IN Sosrens Price $1 FNESS" on request, 70 FIFTH AVE, N, Y. | sts. i ET ue to Colds | OR 60 YEARS At all Druggists urn Ring ired by law to re- they break the en- ruling of the Vir- enls, declares the —— 6 BELLANS Hot water Sure Relief ANS GESTION old Everywhere JATIONS ediate relief and tors prescribe ships of gre weld George I. attorney for northern Illinois, succeeding Edwin A. took place in the Federal court in Chicago. They Verify Existence of the Radio “Ceiling” tha Atlantic fleet at Guantanamo where New U. S. District Attorney Swom Olson, the annual “Eyes of the Navy” at Guantanamo These are not sausages, but navy blimps ready to be taken aboard the maneuvers | QQ. Johnson (right) taxing the oath as t nited States district i The ceremony REWARD FOR BRAVERY | when ! his of will work. the grandfather passed will his property and money. BUSY IN NICARAGUA Charles Eberhardt, American min- {ster to Nicaragua, is taking an ac- tive part in the negotiations to bring | peace to that much disturbed republic. 1 | | | the | | | | strangest thing. oY MARY G BONNER. —— COPYRIGHT BY WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION 2 PETER’S TRIP “There was once,” said Daddy, “a Ifttle boy named Peter who had al ways longed to see the man In the moon. “Every night when there was 1 full moon he would sit at his window and look ly face of the old man until came so sleepy he would have to go to bed. “One night he sat watching so long that he fell sound asleep by the window. “It was not long Fell Sound Asleep. He “The larger and moon larger, and soon it wus | back of a tree near his window. “He could see quite plainly the jol-' | Iv old face of his beloved man in the | moon looking jollier and fatter than ever, “The old man grinned from ear to ear at Peter, and in a moment or two he spoke: “ ‘Well, Now, Peter, here 1 am, | how do you like me? “And, as he spoke, he chuckled and i laughed. “ ‘Oh, I think you're wonderful,’ said | Peter, with wild enthusiasm and joy. “‘So you think I'm wonderful, do you? Ha, ha! Well, that is a joke. “ ‘But there certainly isn't any one | else just like me, that’s true enough, i: “'So ! cause ! told him he would remember the act. | | Both ladies died some time ago and | away named Clark as beneficiary | Clark | use the money for Christianity | wonderful be What about maybe I am I am so queer. that? | *“‘Oh, no,’ said Peter, ‘you're won- derful because you're so fat and jolly and because you're always laughing and seeming to have a good time. “At that the old man in the moon laughed some more and said: | *“‘Well, you're a funny little chap, too. All folks don’t think it's such a | compliment to he fat, but I do. { “It's the way I am, you seer and Tuve (righ ‘esearch investig rs | e | q¢’ i e (right), research investigators in the | it's best to be satisfied with the way | vou are, isn't it? “‘If you really like me then I'll take you off in my chariot of mist to visit the stars, and you'll call on all the bright queens of the stars, who sparkle so you can see them from down on the earth. “So off went Peter with In the moon for the most trip. “They visited all the stars, saw the the man gorgeous and all the little elves and brownies. “Then the man in the moon showed Peter where in the sky he stayed and { how he moved every could see a full moon every month. “And Peter could see down below all the wee little houses (they looked go small from | | where Peter was) | and the earth. which looked ve funny and small, too, from up in the moon. “Pater feit An little afraid at first that he'd fall, but as he'd never heard of the man | | Rev, BE. Clark, Baptist minister | 1 00 0 1 | of Houston, Texas, who has fallen| ° ae | hele to $800,000. Thirty-three years | tar! he felt com | ngo he was enroute back to the Unit- | freed, 1 ) | ed States from Sydney, Australia, | Alas, ‘al tno when two girls were washed on, | soon fhe lunes hoard. He jumped in and held them | nd to end, TOF off Went Peter, up until help came. Thelr grandfa- | Peter hears] the . ther, on board, thanked Clark and | distant sound af & Bragkast bell. “As he yawned he realized he had been asleep all night by the window, but oh, such a gorgeous sleep as it had been!" RIDDLES Why are matches like jokes? Because they are always made light i of. What table has no legs to stand on? The multiplication table. "* »* » Why don't they need horses in the Jsle of Wight? Ryde. - - - When is money damp? When it is due (dew) in the morn- ing and missed (mist) at night. - - . While 1 was going through the woods I found something, picked it up at the funny, jol- | before he saw the | | never tire, he be- | dressing. . | small cups made seemed to be growing | ture, - (The KITCHEN (@®, 1927, Western Newspaper Union.) | | A hearty welcome manifested in kindly and polite attentions will make a very plaln meal more en~ Joyable than a banquet. SALAD SUGGESTIONS A salad is one dish of which we | One reason for this may be that it appears in such a variety of combinations. A left-over may be used in a salad without any ques- tion as to its | right of second | Appearance. | Macaroni and Celery Salad.—Take | one pint of boiled macaroni which has been cut into half-inch pieces, add one pint of celery cut into the same sized pieces, add one ecupful of chopped nuts and one cupful of good salad Line a salad bowl with let- tuce and heap Into it the salad mix- Chill and serve. This will serve eight portions. Tomato and Cheese Salad.—Arrange from tomatoes on lettuce leaves, fill with cream cheese which has been seasoned well and mixed with chopped nuts. Add a spoonful of mayonnaise at the side of the dish. Camabination Salad.—When one has | a little celery, a half cupful or less of bright fairy queens who live in them | week so that all | the little boys and girls in the world | | and | lemon extract. Because every one prefers Cowes to | | whites of two eggs. crisp tznger cabbage, cut the celery, add the cabbage (shredded), an ap- ple finely diced, and a bit of red pep- per or green if at hand, a tablespoon- ful of scraped onion; mix all with a good nayonnaise or well-seasoned boiled dressing and serve on lettuce. Hot Potato Salad.—Wash six medi- um-sized potatoes and cook in boiling | salted water until soft. the skins and cut cubes. dish with potatoes, season with salt, pepper, sprinkle with finely chopped parsley. Mix two tablespoonfuls each of tarragon and cider vinegar and four tablespoonfuls of olive oil; add one sliee of onion cut one-third of an inch thick. Bring to the boiling point, pour over the potatoes, cover, let stand in the oven until thoroughly hot. Celery and Cabbage Salad.—Cut the outside leaves from a firm, hard head of cabbage. Cut out the center ani shred with a sharp knife. Let stand one hour in ice water. Drain as dry as possible. Mix with equal parts of celery cut into small pieces. Moisten with cream dressing and refill the eab- bage. Soup a !a Sevigne.—Reat the yolks of six eggs in a pint of cold bouillon. Cook for a few minutes in a double boiler. When the mixture has been well thickened, remove from the fire, When cold cut into slices and place in the bottom of a soup tureen. Add hot consomme or bouillon and serve. Delicious Desserts. When one has a few bread crumbs Cool, remove | into thin slices or | Cover the bottom of a baking | OLDS, chills and changes in tempera- ture impose extra strain on our kidneys. Sluggish- ness of function is apt to permit some retention of body-poisons in the blood and make one more susceptible to the ills of winter. Presence of this unfiltered waste makes one listless, tired and achy Doan’s Pills Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys 60c all dealers. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfg. Chemists, Buffalo, N. ‘IF Winter chills bring varied ills (—the time good ‘elimination is most important -—causes drowsy head- ‘aches, dizziness and often a toxic backache. Dis- turbed function is often evidenced by scanty or burning secretions. At such times a stimulant diuretic to the kidneysis indicated. Doan’s Pills have been winning friends for more than forty years. Ask your neighbor! Cut Poor Figure in His Nightshirt| In “Bill Nye: His Own Life Story,” | Frank Wilson Nye tells the following: | Before Nye left the Boomerang some admirers, after spending the evening | | | { together, stopped ut his home on their way home at about 1 a. m. to tell him what a genius he was. The house was | in darkness and every one in It sound asleep. That made no difference. They tried to find “Auld Luang knocked on the door and a key in which to sing Syne.” Being suddenly awakened, Bill failed voices and They apol- to recognize his friends’ demanded, “Who's there?” ogized and assured him they hated to disturb him, but inasmuch as he might not live till morning they must let him without that he was a know relay | genius. | Aspiri | pres And one of them added as he turned to go: “I don’t care how much of a genius a man Is, looks like devil in his nightshirt.” he Take Tablets Without Fear If You See the Safety “Bayer Cross.” Warning! “Bayer” on package or on tablets you not getting the genuine Bayer n proved safe by millions and cribed by physicians for 26 years. Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. | Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. { Kept Old Bells Ringing Every night for more than 700 years | the bells of the church in the village try the following recipe: Queen of Pud. dings.— Take one | pint of bread | crumbs, one quart of milk, one cup- ful of the volks of four eggs, sugar, one tablespoonful of butter and one teaspoonful Mix and bake, spread Cover whites, a layer of jelly over the top. with meringue of the egg a the juice and rind of lemon. Brown in the oven. Rice Pudding.—Cook one-half ecup- ful of rice five minutes in a pint of milk, cool, add the yolks of four eggs well beaten, three-fourths of a cupful a of | {| beaten stiff with one cupful of sugar, of sugar and one tablespoonful of but- | ter, one-half ecupful of raising | (chopped), a grated nutmeg, the | whites of the eggs beaten stiff. Bake one hour and serve cold. Italian Cream.—Soften box of gelatin in one cupful of milk, add a pint of boiling milk and the volks of four eggs, stir while boiling and sweeten to taste. Take from the heat, add flavoring and the whites of the eggs heaten to a stiff froth. Pour into a mold to harden. Frozen Peaches.—Take one can of | peaches or twelve large ones, put through a sieve, add one pint of water, | two cupfuls of sugar, the juice of a lemon and the whites of three eggs. Mix well and freeze either in a freezer or in a mold packed in ice and salt. Another nice ice cream with peaches is prepared thus: Put peaches through a sleve, add one pint of cream and one pint of milk, the juice of a lemon and the Freeze as usual. Bavarian Cream.—Take one a one-half a | pint of | beaten | quart | | of sweet cream, the yolks of four eggs, { one-half bex of gelatin, one cupful of | sugar, two teaspoonfuls of vanilla. | Soak the gelatin in one cupful of cold | water for half ag hour, then add one pint of boiling cream, add the yolks of | | beaten to a stiff froth. and could not find it, put it down | again, ran home, looked for it, found it. did not want it, and threw it away. | What was it? A thorn in my foot, Essentials for Boy vet No boy has ever developed men tal and moral initiative and lecader- ship without learning to work and | earn and save.—Eugene M. Couch, Not Guilty Soph—Did you take a bath? Frosh—No, ls there one missing. — The American Boy Mugazina. i fuls of butter. the eggs well beaten, heat until it be gins to thicken, then take from the heat and add another pint of cream | Mold and set on ice to chill. Grape Juice Sauce.—Cook a spoonful of cornstarch with one cup ful of hoiling water, one-fourth of a cupful of sugar, a teaspoonful of lemon juice or vinegar and two tablespoon- Mix well and add one half cupful of grape juice with a grat ing of nutmeg, table. | of Hailsham, England, have record was almost broken through a strike of bellringers. A | woman organist saved the situation by taking it upon herself to ring the bells un the ferences bellringers’ weeks til dif- the adjusted. for several over could be One of the hus used since 1198 and church register dates back to 1558. heen used by millions for 50 years. Drug stores and general stores sell bottles of “Dandelion” for 35 cents.—Adv. Getting Restless The profiteer's wife gave a musical was uneasy at the be- eveping., She cvinning because the music didn’t start. | She went to the conductor of the or- chestra she had engaged and said: “Why don’t you men begin to play?” “Oh, they are tuning up!” “Tuning up? now? I ordered you a week ago.'— Pearson's Weekly. the | Unless you see the name | pro- | claimed the curfew hour, but the long { recently | wages the bells in the church tower | Why are they doing it | I "No Doubt About It Frances—*“Are you sure he loves vou, and you alone?’ Gladys—"Oh, ves: more then than at any other time.” Special Offer to Victims of Indigestion Your Druggist Says Pleasant to Take, Elixir Must Help Poor Distressed Stomachs or Money Gladly Refunded. You can be so distressed with gas and fullness from poor digestion or dyspepsia that you think your heart is going to stép beating. Your stomach may be so distended that your breathing is short and gaspy. You are dizzy and pray for quick relief—what’s to be done. Just one tablespoonful of Dare's Mentha Pepsin and speedily the gas | disappears, the pressing on the heart | DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN ceases and you ean breathe deep and naturally. Oh! What blessed relief; but why not get rid of such attacks altogether? | Why have them at all? | , Especially when any druggist any- where guarantees Dare’s Mentha Pep- sin, a pleasant elixir, to help you or money back. RHEUMATIC] PAINS Stiff Joints, Neuritis, | Gout, Headaches, Sciatica promptly | | iF QPHIRIN TABLETS | | SST TR. RE SCT I. Sr | Sold by leading druggists, or send $1.50 for a box te { | BRAM CHEMICALCO. 3107W. Ere Av..P NN 1/ RTT KEMP'S Sor Coughs’ | Hotel in Air { A giant dirigible that will provide | every luxury available at the finest | hostelries of the world is now under construction at Friedrichshaven, Ger- many, for persons traveling. between Spain and South America. The new | | air liner will be capable of carrying | 100 passengers, luggage, crew and mails, | Hoxsie's Croup Remedy checlis congestion of | the lungs. Used with great success for forty | years, Kells Co., Newburgh, N. Y., Mfrs.—Adv. An organic glass has been invented | in Austria which transmits ultra-violet | rays of the sun, which are stopped by | ordinary gl + | —— Many a fool | prize where wise ' blanks. has drawn a golden men drew only SAY “BAYER ASPIRIN” and INSIST! Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Pain Headache Neuralgia N T Lumbago Rheumatism euritis oothache DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only ‘‘Baver” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. 12 tablets Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicrlicacid afer
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers