r Needlessly? —"Several times I Pierce's Favorite I do think {it is the very best tonic and nervine a woman cal take. During the time I was bringing up my family I found the ‘Prescription’ very helpful. It gives a woman strength at that time, builds up the nerves and re- lleves her of a lot of distressed feel- 1e mental state as al. Also on several I have taken ‘Fa- mn’ when rundown, s and always found It seems to build in my body."— att, 171 Niagara St. ets or liquid. OL CHILDREN ARE SICKLY thers who value their n comfort and the [fare of their children, uld never be without ox of Mother Gray's eet Powders for ldren for use through- . the season. They ak up Colds, Regu- » the Bowels, Relieve yerishness, Constipa- 1, Teething Disorders, adache and Stomach yubles. Used by Mothers hese powders give satisfac- es. Don't accept any ge sent Free. AY CO., Le Roy, N. Y. NUINE HYPO PHOSPHITES nedy to prevent and Colds, Bronchial and .ost Appetite, Dys- omach, Indigestion, d, Sallow Complex- trength and similar 8s requiring a recon- ARE OLD WINE At your druggist’s or by mail e HYPO-COD sells stores or by mail “o., Wheeling, W.Va. uarantee HYPO-COD ick and Weak JRGH, NO. 11.-1927. e Result ghts of Work erally wear himself according to Wil- k, protessor of psy- a university. He ican Magazine the o was taken to a examination of overwork. nuked the boy's par- im to become over- ed, to his amaze- had done practi- all. The youth's carry one pan of m a spring a quar- his home, a task f discipline. But so much that he inking about what he had to do. vhose pst vessel, a liner is planned in Eng- hip now afloat, the t in length. ither imitate the m.—Montaigne. ring lac le, Nervous. ost Health a: rength, putsflesh odies, cleanses isons of ddnstipa- r. Itismadefrom rbs according to ym your life. En- strength. Take ruggist’s. More es sold. THE PATTON COURIER constantly The smile of your may itua heroic cheer ~ Ankuochun Machine Gunners on Yangtse Front | | KITCHEN | Ts a > mn q i CABINET | Your Seeds | S-- wad | | Machine gunners on duty along tonese. First Photographs of Portuguese Rebellion the Yangtse froamt, where the Ankuochun forces are fighting against the Can- J Rebellious troops in Oporto in a trench dug in the middle of the street during the recent futile attempt at a revo- lution. Inset is Gen. Souza Diaz, leader of the uprising. FOR PORTO RICO Bonnie MacLeary, New York sculp tor, with the statue she has just com pleted for Porto Rico, in honor of the island's greatest patriot, Munos RI- vera. It will be unveiled July 17 oan the campus of the University of Porto Rico, San Juan. The symbolic bronze | figure stands eight feet in height. HAS A SOVIET JOB Col. Hugh L. authority on power projects, will be Cooper, named chief consulting the soviet authorities In the constregg- tion of the $60,000,000 Dneiper river | hydro-electric project, according to dispatches from Moscow. Colonel Cooper has been chief engineer in the Niagara Falls power development, the Muscle Shoals project, and the Keo- kuk dam American | engineer to | Pack of ‘Doughboy Is Reduced : [ : LOSI = % LITE LITE During pedce time, at least, the doughboys will carry a much lighter pack than they carried in the World war, according to announcement by the War | department. The weight of the pack has been reduced from 79 pounds (as fllustrated at the right) to 51 pounds (as at the left). New York Tries Musical Operations i an 4 Music has been successfully employed at St. Marks hospital, New York to minimize the psychic shock experienced by adults while undergoing operations performed under spinal anesthesia. This picture of cue of the | operations shows the patient using an ear phone device. | Radio Post No. 404 of Dallas, Texas, | recently installed its officers by radio. | December that the | ranged for an | the public of Legion work, the Le- | Station WRNY (the Hotel Roosevelt) | from 7 to 7:15 p. m. each Wednesday. | eially | Rand of the American legion of Min- Copy tor This Department Supplied by the American Legion News Service.) | | RADIO PUT TO USE BY LEGION POSTS Among the many big endeavors of | the American Legion this year, the radio broadcasting programs by Le- gion posts and state departments, the latter provided for by mandate of the national convention held in Phila- delphia, are proving to be a wonder- | ful success. As nearly as possible, | some state department of the Legion | broadcasts each week, There are nu- merous Legion loeal posts that have | | weekly programs, and one post in Ok- | lahoma City holds its weekly meetings | by radio-on account of the members | being scattered over a large territory. | . | A typical illustration of how .the programs are received by the general public is the vase of the Hudson coun- | ty committee of New Jersey, which | has been broadcasting from station | WAAT (235 meters), Jersey City. | The programs proved so popular in! committee ar- | “American Legion | hour” from 7 to 8 p. m. every} Tuesday, and is now presenting them { each week. ! “We give each post in the country a chance to supply talent which is made | up entirely of Legionnaires,” James H, Clarke, county adjutant, reported to national headquarters in Indian- apolis, Ind. “We have post orches- tras, singers, monologists, story tell- ers, comedians and a variety of other numbers. Many of the Legionnaires have had professional experience, We also include in our program short tulks on the work of the Legion, making our programs both entertain- ing and educational.” Besides using the radio to inform gion is now employing it to educate Legionnaires how to talk French. The lessons are broadcast from | The wave length is 374 meters. The teacher is Mlle. Alice Blum, famous in the World war for teaching the troops an easy way of learning to talk enough French to answer prac- tical purposes. The lessons are espe- built for the second trip to | France. Legion Wedding Feature of Welcome to R. R. Rand When State Commander Rufus R. nesota recently made a tour of the Second district of that state he was welcomed in | airmont by 200 Legion- | naires as guests of Lee (C. Prentice post of Fairmont, and entertained with a Legion “wedding” in which the { bridegroom was held to the ceremony | at the point of a bayonet, after sud- | of Hinkey Dinkey Parley Voo were | | followed with the Shakopee funeral || | dirge. The “Aower girls,” denly disappearing once, The “bride” was dressed in lace curtains and wore a six-shooter. The wedding notes two husky | Legionnaires, tripped along behind the padre, strewing onion peel nose and carrying Danish red rays cabbage | roses, cigarettes and matches. A big ring was carried on a mattress and | when the padre asked if there were | | any objections to the “marriage,” one Legionnaire insisted that the “bride- groom's” check for the ring had been returned marked “no funds.” Nominal Travel Charges for Visitors to Europe The second A. E. F. of the Legion will offer the chance of a lifetime for veterans to visit Europe upon the nominal travel charge. American rail- roads have granted one-way fare for the round trip from the Legionnaire's home town to the port of embarkation. Steamship fares for Legionnaires Paris bound, range from $145.80 up. Through the co-operation of the battle monuments commission and the French government tours to all sectors of northern France and Belgium where American troops were billeted and en- gaged have been arranged. These tours, starfing and ending in Paris, | will cost from $5 to $16.50 and with | one exception include a visft to one of the large American cemeteries abroad. Legionnaires will be saved more than $1,000,000 while globe trotting on *®he continent by the elimination of pass- port and passport vises. Disabled Veterans Are Scattered Over World According to figures announced by the American Legion's national reha- bilitation committee in Washington, disabled American veterans of the World war are scattered in almost every part of the world. A total of 317 veterans are being cared for in hospitals outside the United States un- | der covutract with the United States | veterans’ bureau. These men are in the Canal 2®ne, Huwali, Philippine islands, Porto Rico, Guam, Canada, | Belgium, British West Indies, Den- mark, England, France, India, Ireland, Italy, Yugo-Slavia, Norway, Rumania Scotland, Sweden, Wales and Switzer land. ’ | { Use as a | brick shaped pan. | egar and | draws out the flavor. Above the floods of earthly agonies, Mrs. Browning. TASTY SANDWICHES A filling which makes a most satis- | fying one for a large company is pre- | pared by using | fresh beef and | pork cooked to- | gether at a sim- | mering tempera- | ture in plenty of | water to cover, us- ing the broth to mix with the meat | after chopping. Season well with salt | and pdpper and add plenty of salad | dressing; then spread on bread. Nice to serve at an outdoor party with hot coffee, Egg and Onion Sandwiches.—Finely | | i chop four hard-cooked eggs. Chop a | large or two small, mild, southern onions. Chop fine water cress, pepper grass or lettuce. Moisten with mayon- naise or cooked salad dressing. Spread on thin slices of bread with salad dressing and the mixture for filling. Chicken and Green Pepper Sand- wiches.—Take one cupful of chopped and pounded chicken, add one finely chopped green pepper that has been purboiled ten minutes. Mix thorough- ly with the chicken and moisten with | mayonnaise or cooked salad dressing. | filling with crisp lettuce leaves between slices of white bread. Pimento, Lettuce and Chive Sand- wiches.—Drain a can of pimentoes, | rinse with cold water and dry. Finely | tuce, add to these two tablespoonfuls [ of finely minced chives; moisten with mayonnaise and use as a Sandwich filling. Corned Beef corned beef until it falls in shreds. Drain and arrange the meat fibers lengthwise with some of the fat, in a Reduce the liquor to one cupful or more and pour over the meat. Place a weight above it and get in a cool place overnight. Unmold and cut into thin slices, spread with horseradish butter and cover with meat. Spread an equal number of slices of bread with mayonnaise, cov- er with a thin slice of Spanish onion dipped in French dressing. Put to- | gether in pairs, press edges together, trim and cut into triangles. lce Cream Candy.—Boil together without stirring, until brittle, three cupfuls of sugar, one-half cupful of | water, one-half tablespoonful of vin- one-fourth teaspoonful of cream of tartar. Turn onto a well- buttered platter to cool. As the edges cool fold toward the center. Sandwiches.—Cook | As soon | ! as it can be handled pull until white and glossy. Flavor, while pulling, with rose, orange, lemon, sassafras or va- nilla, Cut into sticks or small pieces with a large pair of shears. Broths and Gruels. For those who have the care of the sick and convalescent, food is a most important item to consider, Jroth is a liquid containing the juice of the solu- ble parts of meat and bone which have been extract- ed by long cook- ing. When cold, it | 18 more or less solid, according to the gelatinous nature of the ingredients, The chief object in making broth is to obtain the largest amount of nutri- ment from the meat, so we cut it into small pieces to have as much surface as possible to come in contact with the water. Soaking in cold water and then bringing to a simmering point A tightly cov- ered kettle which will retain as much as possible of the steam is desirable, otherwise much of the flavor is lost by evaporation, Mutton Broth.—Mutton broth is the accepted kind for the invalid. Wipe a plece of the neck weighing two pounds, cut off all the skin and fat and cut the meat into small pieces, Put the bones and meat into a kettle, add cold water and let stand an hour to extract the juices. Heat gradually to the boiling point, season with salt | and pepper and simmer for two hours, but do not allow to boil. Remove the fat and strain through a coarse sieve, Serve hot. Beef Broth.—Cut three pounds of solid heef from the shin or shoulder into small pieces, put with the bone into an earthen jar, cover with ! cold water and bring to the simmer- twelve hours in a Strain, season, and ing point; cook slow oven, cold, remove the fat. Serve cold as jelly or heat until just melted and palatably hot. Three tablespoonfuls of rice or bar- lev may be added to the mutton or beef broth; cook until the grains are tender. Scones. —Mix and sift two cupfuls of flour, four teasponfuls of baking pow der, two teaspoonfuls of sugar, one half teaspoonful of salt. Rub in four tablespoonfuls of butter, add two well beaten eggs and one-third of a cupful Toss on a floured hoard, when of cream. roll out and cut into diamond shapes with a knife, brush with egg and sprinkle with sugar and bake in a hot oven fifteen minutes. | Nese Mayme | Genuine “Pine Tree” Brand Farm Seeds — Clover, Alfalfa, Alsike, Timothy — are sold by the dealer who displays the orange and green “Sign of Good Crops.” There's a “Pine Tree” dealer near you. He handles “Pine Tree” brand seeds because they are re-cleaned, reliable, of known origin —safe for you to SOW. It will pay you to talk with him before you buy your seed this Spring. Watch your favorite farm magazine for an interesting series of “Pine Tree” advertise- ments showing how re-cleaned seeds are produced. "PINE TREE FARM SEEDS “Ww, They live bec HBrown and Buff chop and rub through a sieve. Chop | [8 ise Selivary guaranteed. Postpaid. 1 ne > aves of let- | s€n. rite today one cupful of the outer leaves of let- | SCHWEGLER’S HATCHERY RO-BRED" B “LIVE AND LAY" BY | ause they are bred from healthy, free range breeders that have thrived and gained in vigor for generations. They lay be- cause they are from selected and tested high egg power stock, White, Leghorns, Barred and White Rocks, R. I. Reds, Anconas, Buff Orpingtons, White Wyandottes. 12¢c and up. 100% Member International Chick for FREE Chick Book. 215 Northampton BUFFALO, N.Y, To Be Sure! Jobby—What is the “status quo”? IFather—Something that High hats were once worn by every man and dignity was much gnore often insulted in those days. cially prepared for Infants i To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Proven directions on each package. Let ’Em Rip “How do you tune these jazz instru ments?” “You don’t.” Our greatest fault is that we judge everybody as if he had perfect judg ment and perfect morals, FOR. comes in | | over the radio, I think.—Judge. Conservatism “Your constituents are enthusiastic over your public remarks.” “That shows how desirable it is to | be conservative,” said Senator Sor- ghum. “I haven't said a word since I j Wishey everybody a Happy New Year.” CASTORIA MOTHER :— Fletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harm- less Substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Teething Drops and Soothing Syrups, espe- 1 arms and Children all ages. Arbol hon Physicians everywhere recommend it. A Riddle - “Why are a fisherman and a shep- herd like beggars? “Because they live by crook.” hock and - Prosperity asks for fidelity; adver- i sity extraets it.—Seneca, Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Pain Neuralgia Headache Neuritis Toothache Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Safe Aspirin is ‘he trade mark of Bayer Manu Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proven directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. facture of Monoaceticacidester of Selicyliczcid
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers