The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, March 24, 1927, Image 2

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    THE PATTON COURIER
Photograph shows a general view of Kobe, Japan, one of the centers affected by the most recent Japanese earth-
quake which Is reported to have taken a toll of 5,000 lives,
‘New Quake Takes 5,000 Lives in Japan
EE Te
Picture shows the destruction wrought in
ADOPT FRENCH PHONE |
The continental, or “krench,”
of phone, with receiver and transmit
ter held in one hand will go into use |
in this country very soon. The New
York Telephone company has heen ex- |
perimenting for some time In an effort |
to produce this type of phone, .
Lybe
ONCE RULED RUSSIA
who
Alexander F. Kerensky, was
head of the first revolutionary govern
ment set up in Russia in 1917, recently |
arrived in the United States. He says |
his visit has no political significance.
A Reminder
Jerry—You remind me
thing. 1 can’t think what.
Ted—Oh, yes. Probably the five you
owe me,
of some-
|
{
|
|
I now
this small Nicaragua town. Scarcely a building was left standing.
New Thermionic Microammeter
ROA ia
A tenth of a thousandth of a millionth of an ampere change in current can
be detected by the use of the microammeter, an instrument developed |
the standardizing laboratory of the West Lynn works of the General |
Rlectric company, as part of the equipment which replaces the human eye in
making tests on incandescent lamps, currents in insulators, radio tubes, and
other electrical appliances,
Gets Mascot
anid
driver,
E. R. Place, student at Northwestern university, with “Husky the Ficst,”
presented by Seppala to the university as a wmuscot
The photograph shows Leonard Seppala, famous dog sled
| chicanery,
Lie U0 NeareR. noreal {if}
Ean], Por “Limes
ENOWnE AD
Chesence SEEMET OCARER.
Will THY ARMS ARounp te FOLD;
A AM Dune, BROTMER , OYinG SOON YOU'LL
MISS ME nt YOUR (BERTH,
FOR pv FoRm Win, Seon BE Ling
JJ MEAL Tue oeeaw't BAY SUNS -
fd
SOMETHING TCO
THINK ABOUT
By F. A. WALKER
WHEN I WAS
TWENTY-ONE
BY JOSEPH KAYE
HEAT AND PRESSURE
V HEN subjected to intense heat
and great pressure, pure carbon
is converted into a beautiful diamond,
the gen prized by all the world for its
mystic charin and brilliancy.
This would seem to show that In
man, as in carbon, heat and pressure
dre necessary to bring out his finer
qualities, frequently concealed by a
rough exterior.
It is a common answer to say that
many of our greatest painters, writ-
ers, musicians, merchants and states-
men have risen to illustrious distine-
tion through heat of strife and pres-
sure of endeavor.
The heat and pressure were needed
to develop their worth.
As to their internal ability, their
penetrating judgment and their innate
will-power, they, themselves, possibly
were in doubt, until pressure of re-
| sponsibility and the heat of friction
started the flame,
In the stern turmoil they found
themselves. Then came the awaken-
ing, and in a way of their own they
marched bravely on to achievement
before a gaping world.
Their own individuality, their own
force, their strict adherence to duteous
obligations te and the
faith they had carried them
through.
To make it
were
one another,
within,
avoided
friend or
they
with
and
plainer,
frank
enemy, shunned tricks vanities
and held steadfastly to their course.
You may have many talents hidden
in a napkin, but if they be not brought
out and used under heat and pressure,
they will never be of any value,
Whatever makes for finished accom-
plishment, makes for energy, activity, |
fervor, sweat of the brow and
of the spirit.
peace
No man or woman, how- |
ever gifted, can attain distinction with- |
out the hard rub and strain of con-
flict.
“In the sweat of thy face shalt thou
eat bread,” is a divine decree, just as
true at this hour as it was “in
cool of the day,” when it
nounced by Jehovah in the garden of
Eden,
Do your work in gladness.
it all your heat and pressure, and you
will find that you are happier and bet-
ter for the exertion, at peace with
yourself and with your neighbors,
(® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
- cl Jerri
the
was
HE YOUNG LADY
ACROSS THE WAY
The young lady u
thie condition of the
great influence upon the general health
and it’s a wise plan to consult a good
dentist at the first indication of pyro
mania.
(& bv
ross thie way says
teeth exerts a
MoChire Nawapapar Syndicate.)
{
|
pro- |
Put into |
| when a prospective husband captured
| the moon, which begins to wane when
| an ancient practice of the Teutons by
At 21—George Harvey was a Re-
porter,
“WW us I reached my eighteenth
YY birthday my native state of
Vermont was not big enough. I nved-
ed more room. [ wanted to educate a
whole lot of people at once, so I went
to the Springfield Republican. I had
collected enough money in some way
to buy my ticket and financed my first
enterprise by borrowing the entire
legacy bequeathed by my grandmoth-
er to my sister, amounting to ten dol-
lars. With that store of capital 1
ventured forth and in due course of
time I reached the office of Samuel
Bowles, the younger.
“The first
tion that
tion for
for
related to
services,
considera-
compensa-
presumably to be
rendered. He asked me politely, bat
firmly, much I expected. I had
my dreams of opulence due to arrive
at that time, but when I looked upon
that impassive face and reflected that
perhaps after all T was not absolute-
the successful
the Republican my
out and from the $15
I had fondly anticipated
got down to ten dollars.
wads about right. To that
I demurred and we discussed the sub-
ject thoroughly.
mised on $6.
question
arose
now
ly essential to con-
tinnance of
courage cozed
a week that
spending 1
He said six
Finally we compro-
“1 passed my twenty-first birthday
as a reporter, serving after the
Springfield Republican, the (hicago
News and the New York World in
turn.—G. B. M. Harvey.”
TODAY :-
from his
becoming a
George Harvey graduated
newspaper work and after
distinguished magazine
and political writer,
for time
sador to Great Britain.
(© by
editor
and
resigned,
some served as ambas-
McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
LO
How It Started
By JEAN NEWTON
THE HONEYMOON
WWaun vou not be Indignant if
for the origin of that divine hab-
it, the honeymoon, 1 could give you
nothing more romantic than the the-
ory that it dates back to the time
his woman and dragged her by the
baler to his cave, where, to prevent her
from appealing to relatives for
release, he Kept her for a time in se-
clusion?
Likewise, wouldn't you
hopeful! girls, and you,
youths, scoff at me, were I to tell you
her
hate me,
sanguine
that because love has been likened to
at its full, the married couple's period
of mutual aifection is called the “hon-
eymoon'?
Both
for the origin of
name, The fact is,
honeymoon is traced back directly to
advanced
the custom and Its
however, that the
theories have been
which newly wedded couples drank
mead or hydromel (honey wine) for
thirty days after their marriage—the
honey month,” or “honeymoon.”
To the glory of the honeymoon be it
that it that
Attila, the king
Huns said
his death was caused by drinking
was to this custom
and
succutbhed It is
said
cruel invincible
f the '
that
too much on his wedding night,
(Copyright)
0)
Turbine Pressure
Locomotives are regarded us power-
ful, yer none of them operate at steam
pressure higher than 300 pounds ver
square inch, Steam pressures four
times as great, 12,000 pounds, are
used to operate turbines generating
electricity in power plants in Boston
and Milwaukee
Spring Will Have
Its Violets
By DOUGLAS MALLOCH
has questions, earth has an-
M px swers,
Man Is always doubting things,
Man the crone among the dancers-—
Would he had the faith of spring's!
Man beholds the blossoms perish,
Things we love and things we cherish—
Mourning roses, he forgets
Spring will have its violets.
$3
We who weep because of crosses,
Would that we could understand;
Has not Mother Earth her losses
When November smites the land?
Not too long she gives to grieving;
Mother Earth goes on believing;
Though her heart the rose regreis,
Spring will have Its violets,
Mother Earth in chill October
Hears the thunders in the sky,
Sees the woods turn sour and sober,
Sees the blossoms fade and die.
But, when winter brings Decembers,
Though the roses she remembers,
Forward now her face she sets—
Spring will have its violets.
You who lose some lovely treasura,
Think not then that all Is lost:
Life has many a quiet pleasure,
There are meadows yet uncrossed,
Loving yet, yet keep on living;
Losing, learn the joy of glving;
Though the day so darkly sets,
Spring will have its violets!
(@ by McClure Newsoaper Syndicate.)
It is as much a duty we owe to the
world to be ornamental as to be use-
ful.
Give to your friends a cordial wel-
come, as well as a variety of cakes and
pastry; lacking the welcome the food
is tasteless.
ECONOMICAL DISHES
-
had may be made to go twice as |
far and the dish still be as val- |
uable from a nutritive standpoint, if |
combined with cereals and vegetables. |
Serbian Rice.
Wipe with a damp cloth a small |
piece of the shoulder of lamb. Cut |
it into small pieces and brown in al
little hot fat. Add one small onion |
and a carrot finely diced, season with
salt and paprika and cayenne. Cover
with water and simmer for an hour
then add three tablespoonfuls each of
barley and rice, adding more water as |
needed. Season if needed and serve
hot.
Mutton Stew.
Take a mutton from the (
neck, cut into serving-sized pieces, put
to cook with a sprig of parsley, a bay |
leaf, two cloves, two peppercorns end
cover with Let simmer for
two hours, then add a carrot or two;
add six potatoes cut into thick slices,
one cupful of potato and simmer until
the meat and tender
Remove the bay leaf and the parsley
Remove the skin from the |
piece of
water.
vegetables are
and serve.
mutton and it will also remove the |
woolly flavor which is so objection- |
able. |
Ham Balls.
Take one cupful of finely minced
cooked ham, one cupful of bread |
crumbs, two cupfuls potatoes cooked, |
two tablespoonfuls of butter, two eggs |
and a dash of cayenne. Melt the but- |
ter and beat all together very light. |
Shape into flat cakes, dip into egg |
and crumbs and fry brown. |
Sheep’s Kidneys en Brochette.
Take six kidneys, cut
through the center, remove the fat |
and white veins. Wash well, cover
with boiling water and let stand five
minutes, then wipe dry. Cut a
fourth of a pound of bacon Into slices
half the size of the kidney, place on
a skewer a piece of kidney, then of
hacon, two pieces of kidney to each
sheeps’
skewer. Place on a broiler, baste
with fat and cook over a hot fire five
minutes.
(©. 1927, Western Newspaper Union.)
O
Seton ’
PR Tooled
: What Does Your Child i
Want to Knew 9
Sere
Answered by
% BARBARA BOURJAILY ® 3
aed Sour
WHAT CARRIES OUR VOICE OVE
THE TELEPHONE?
Vi-bra-tions move along the wire
By electricity—
That unseen force that gives to us
Half of the things we sce.
(Copyright)
- ese: siren Sarin
Ro R li f
The great value of Bell-Ans in ths
relliefof digestive disorders ofthe stomach
and bowels is proved by {te substantial
{ncrease in use every year for the past
thirty years. Promptly and properiy
taken we have never known It to fall.
Send for free samples to Bell & Co., Ine,
Orangeburg, N.Y. ’
Perfectly Harmless to Young or Old
BELL-ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
25¢ and 75¢ Pké’s.Sold Everywhere
THOUSAND DOLLARS CASH BUYS STOCK
of merchandise in profitable business with
distribution rights. Write
J. E. Sweet, 28 West 44th St, N. Y. City,
BURNS naSCALDS
Stop the throbbing and smarking
at once with a seothing touch of
Resino
Doesn’t Sound Like It
Bill—Has Tom learned to play the
saxophone?
Jill—It's hard to tell.—Life.
other verml.
“Dead
Why buy many bottles of
fuges when one bottle of Dr. Peery's
Shot” will work without fail? Adv.
Politeness is toe wero mark of love's
thermometer.
No Cold
Fever headache or grippe~
Colds break in a day for the millions who
ure Hill's. Headache and fever stop. [a
Grippe is checked. All in a way so reliable
that druggists grarantee results. Colds are
too imyor.ant to treat in lesser ways.
be Sure Its Wille Price 30c
CASCARA &/ QUININE
wo
Get Red Box with portrait
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c and $1.00 at Druggists
) nx Chem. Wks Patchogue,
HINDERCORNS Removes Corns, ry
louses, ete., stops all pain, ensures comfort to the
feet, makes walking easy. 1c by mail or at Drug-
gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N. ¥.
Callouses
Quick, safe, sure relief from ¥§
painful callouses on the feet. P
At all drug and shoe stores
Dr Scholls GRA
Zino-pads nize
OLD COINS MAY BE VALUABLE. Send de-
e, d
seriptio zn, condition, etc. 1 wi
n and foreign. Reliable
nphis, Philadelphia, Pa
FOR OVER
200 YEARS
haarlem oil has been a world-
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
lumbago and uric acid conditions.
GOLD MED4,
))
~ HAARLEM OIL
correct internal troubles, stimulate vital
organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist
on the original genuine Goro MEbpAL.
DEMAND GENUINE
&>HYPO COD
COD LIVER 0!L“% HYPO PHOSPHITES
A guaranteed remedy to prevent and
overcome Coughs, Colds, Bronchial and
Lung Affections, Lost Appetite, Dys-
pepsia, Pains in Stomach, Indigestion,
Pimples, Bad Blood, Sallow Complex-
ion, Lost Weight, Strength and similar
run-down conditions requiring a recon-
structive tonic.
TASTES LIKE RARE OLD WINE
SAMPLE At your druggist’s
FREE or by mail.
NOTE: Large size HYPO-COD sells
for $1.00 at drug stores or by mail.
The Earle Chemical Co.,, Wheeling, W.Va.
Your Druggist Will Guarantee HYPO-COD
to Help the Sick and Weak
i
I A LS SAO YO TN AR ORI
WORMS SAP A
CHILD'S VERY LIFE
Does your child grit his
teeth? Pick his nostrils? Have
a disordered stomach? These
are symptoms of worms—
those deadly parasites which
will so quickly ruin a child's
health.
At the first sign of worms, give
your child Frey's Vermifuge. For 75
years Frey's Vermifuge has been
America’s safe, vegetable worm med-
icine. Buy it today at your druggist’'s
Frey’s Vermifuge
Expels Worms
[i etd
Help Kid
| y Dr
Mc
Help Neu
tating
Kidney and bla
result from acidit
thority. The kid
acid from the blo
the bladder, wher
jrritate and inflal
ing, scalding sens
an irritation at t
der. obliging you
or three times du
sufferer is in con
sees somet]
ter pi
seqisation and is
there is difficulty
Bladder weakn
it because they
tion. While it is
and sometimes
often one of the
10 overde 3
soft
ounces of Jad
and take
water,
macist
glass of water he
tinue this for tw
will help neutra
system so they n
irritation to
v organs, wl
3
Jad Salts is
from the
juice, con
made
lemon
js used hy thous
sunhject to urin
by acid irritatie
ro had effects
Here
you
SUCCESS
30c & 20
Harmless, purel
Children's Regula
Guaranteed non-o
MRS. WIN
The Infavts’
stipation an
given it at teet
Safe, pleasant
markable and €
| Ac All bg
¥ Druggists
cA Linime
Pains. Po
Soothing.
- Wi Ly
Man
To relieve
Pain in Stom
Also for
Bruises, Cu
Feet and Ch
To relieve
Inflammator
ache.
Sold by
and guarante
The Geo. H.
’
’
’
f
¢
’
¢
¢
f
’
’
¢
’
¢
¢
¢
¢
/
f
¢
¢
¢
’
famwwmwwwws
Specia
indi
Your Drugg
Elixir Mu
Stomae
You can
and fulines
dyspepsia t
jis going to
Your sto!
that your by
You are
relief—wha
Just one
Mentha Pe
disappears,
ceases and
naturally.
Oh! WI
not get rid
Why have
Especiall
where gual
gin, a ples
money bac