Seeking “White” Bird Baltimore, Md.—Dr, James A, Ny- degger, who has had considerable ex- perience in exploring in Newfound: land, will lead a party afoot in an ex- ploration trip to the tablelands of the island, in search of traces of the plane of Nungesser and Coli, who were lost while attempting the first westward flight of the Atlantic. Confident that Nunge<ser's plane, the White Bird, spanned the Atlantic, only to meet disastrous head winds and be forced off hor course, as was the Bremen, Doctor Nydegger says he will explore every mile of the interior of the island. He said: AAA INAARANAA AN, FREE SALVATIO NAA AA By THCMAS ARKLE CLARK Dean of Men, University of illinois. N HEY were singing lustily at the re- vival meeting, and 1 was joining in with my cracked voice which wus in the process, quite embarrassing to me, of changing. “Salvation’s free, for you and me, Im glad salvation's free.” Sum Gregory, who had accepted confidently the simple faith propound- ed by the evangelist, and had just been baptized in the stream which ran through Cloyd’s pasture, took the song literally. He had done everything which the minister had laid down for him to do; he was quite at peace and in his simple mind. for t told me so. he was safe for all time and safe for eternity. There was nothing further for him to deo. He had got something very precious to him practically for SUCH 1S LIFE “My impression is that they crashed against tall trees or a mountain while lost in fog. There were a dozen re ports thax persons had heard their motor along the coast. The Guggen- heim foundation spent thousands of dollars searching from the air for traces of their plane, but if they were lost in the tablelands the wreck could not be seen from the air. “The White Bird would disappear from sight like a baseball in grass three feet high. \Vith two or three trusted guides I will follow the Grand Codary river into the dense woods of the island. nothing, and that was a new expe- rience for Sam But he was quite mistaken. We get nothing worth while in the world, and possibly nothing in the next absolu tely free. We don't always pay what a thing is worth, but we pay, and it wasn't long before Sam knew that if he were to be saved there was a price to be paid. He had taken on some heavy obligations when he stood up and joined the church. There was a slight financial obligation, but this did vot disturb him. lle had never contributed before to the support of the church, barring the stray nickel which dropped inte the contribution box when he had a girl with him at the evening service, but the five dol lars which he would be expected to subscribe did not worry him, But there were other things. He had been rather profane up to the time of his joining the church, and he had a high temper which must now be subdued, and he had despised some ot the neighbors with whom he had done business, and now “Love one another, for love is the fulfilling of the law” — Some Elephant | | was the “l will send the guides back and forth across the island, crossing and recrossing until every mile of unex- plored territory is covered, | am con- fident 1 will find traces of them, “While 1 hold out no hope that they are alive, 1 believe we will find their wrecked plane. It is a little over a year since their hrave attempt to fly from France to America failed, and it is not too late to make a final search. “Nungesser’s mother has always maintained that somebody will find the White Bird. 1 hope that I will be the fortunate man.” commandment. Sam was game. He was in no way a grafter. When he made an obligation he met it, and he came to see that salvation isn’t quite free. Nothing is. It must be paid for in love and sacrifice and self-control. It is worth all that it costs, but there is a price to be paid. Sam paid it. No one ever heard him utter a profane word after the revival was over. He lived in peace and har- mony with his family and with his neighbors. He came in time to see that generous giving was an obligation which he could not evade if he would pay what he should, and he saw, too, that the debt he owed for the salva- tion which was dear to him was one which he could never really pay, any more than he could fully meet the debt of obligation which he owed to his mother, and so he kept on trying to pay until the end. Merely to accept a religious creed he saw wus not enough. It didn't make him safe even for all time much less for eternity, it simply piled upon him a debt which try as he might he could never fully wipe out. (©. 1928 Western Newspaper Union ) THE PATTON COURIER Made Fuel Pipe From Kelp Root East Harpswell, Maine.—Patching a motor engine with seaweed and mak- ing it run is the latest achievement of Yankee ingenuity. When Carroll Merriam started for a trip in his motor boat to haul his lobster pots he found that nocturnal marauders had stripped his craft They stole oars, brass running lights, six cells of battery and oilskins, and. worst of all, they cut his six-foot copper gasoline feed line connecting the tank with the carburetor. With no place within miles where be could obtain copper pipe, with no Jrivtededeldedsdedduledndedsduinlidodeiniotedg % African “Blue” Wildcat 3 & & i Placed in Jersey Zoo i & Camden, N. J.—A “blue” wild & 3 cat, said to be the only one ever 3 oP seen by a white man, and a goril- & % la, one of two in captivity in & Ameria, were among the collec % tion of wild animals Jules L. + Buck, hunter and animal trainer, * brought from his last hunting & expedition in Africa to his howe in East Camden, & & A specimen of the rare gherzi % 3 3 + and one of the gerbrazza tribes » & of monkeys, captured in central & & Africa, also have been placed in J + cages at the Buck menage, The & famous hunter regards a pigmy & T mouse, scarcely larger thar a % 4 bee. as one of his rarest prizes. R oo 3 900004 %04 20% 0 %04 0a %0 00% s+ 04 ee 0s es es ee es’ PX EEC Mussolini is “dear chief” to inti- mate fellow-Fascists, “your excellen- cy” to those not so intimate and “his excellency” to those still farther away. By Charles Sughroe | | near neighbors and with an order to | furnish fifty fine lobsters at H0 cents | a pound for a noontime shore dinner, | Merriam showed that Yankee inge- | nuity still flourishes, He had a battery for a radio set in | «his home, and this he soon connected | with his motor. Then he rowed his dory out a few hundred yards to the Seal ledges, where he found a piece of kelp or devil's apron with an eight-foot stem that was hollow. Taking this ashore. he pushed one end over the end of | the severed pipe projecting from his fuel tank and the other end left at the carburetor. Wrapping them tightly many times from a roll of friction tape, he thus | improvised out of the hollow stalk a fuel pipe line that :nabled him to | haul his traps and fill kis order, From the Wise Read not to contradict and confute, nor to believe and take for granted, | nor to find talk and discourse, but to weigh and consider. Some hooks are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and di- gested; that is, some books are to be | read only in parts, others to be read, | but not curiously, and some few to be | read wholly and with diligence and | attention.— Bacon. | | | A girl can safely | marry a young man | whose love survives | the test of viewing | her picture taken in the family group. COOL HOT WEATHER DRESS FOR GIRL Excellent Type of Sleeveless Garment for Summer. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Here's an excellent type of sleeve- less dress for a little girl to wear on warm afternoons in summer. It was designed by the bureau of home eco- nomics to be made from any plain commercial pattern that has kimono sleves with a seam on the shoulder. The armholes are made at the point most becoming to the child. Carried out in white or pastel shades, it is pretty enough for a party, and yet if developed in colors, such as old rose, green, delft blue or even darker | shades, it would be entirely suitable for ordinary wear on hot summer days. The material is fine cotton voile, and the only trimming consists of the stitched design in leaf green yarn, and the neck binding and tie of green voile to match. This dress is so sim- ple that it can be cut out and made on the sewing machine in about two hours. The armholes and front opening are bound in the white voile, and slight rathers are taken in at the neck and bound in green voile. To make the | stitched trimming, the yarn is wound " SHRINKAGE IN HAM™ CAN BE PREVENTED Thermometer Assures Suc- cess in Cooking Meat. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Could there be any roast meat more savory and appetizing for high days and holidays than a choice baked ham, crusted with browned sugar, studded with cloves, and redolent of the spicy pan gravy with which it bas been basted? Success in cooking such a ham to a turn is assured if you use a meat thermometer, the bureau of home economics of the United States Department of Agriculture tells us. Whether 8 ham is to be boiled or baked, it cooks more rapidly and shrinks less when the rind is left on it. Make a tiny slit with a sharp knife or a steel skewer and insert the meat thermometer through the rind into the center of the thickest part of the ham, place it on a rack in a large kettle, cover with hot water, and cook at the simmering point until the meat thermometer registers 160 degrees Fahrenheit. Remove from the fire and let the ham cool in the liquor. The temperature of the ham wili reach 170 degrees to 174 degrees Fahren- heit before it drops. Before baking a ham, soak it overnight in water to cover. Place it on a rack in an open pan and bake in a slow oven (260 de- grees Fahrenheit) until the thermom- eter in the meat registers 160 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature at the center of the ham continues to rise for about 45, minutes after it is re- moved from the oven and it will reach 170 degrees to 174 degrees Fahrenheit, Take off the rind, score the fat, coat with the brown sugar mixture, and return to the oven. Whether boiled or baked, the time required for the ham to reach 160 degrees Fahrenheit will be about 25 minutes to the pound. In addition to greater uniformity of results at different times of cooking and more exactness in results, the thermometer helps to prevent over- cooking, so often the cause of lost flavor, poor appearance, and unnec- essary shrinkage, ® Chicago ha tion school. He It a fuse shoul for those girls minor electrical I AND You DIpNT TAKE ME = 1 THINK I'LL CRY MOM, WE K7 SNEAKED OFF TO THE Apricot Charlotte Good as “Company” Dessert “company” dessert that AND THEY HAD THE CUTEST ELEPHANT VES, SIR, AND IT WAS SOME SEE HIM SUCK UP Here's a PEANUTS WITH HIS your guests, whether young or old, It must be made sev- eral hours before it is wanted, and that is always an advantage, since it permits the housewife to “get the dessert out of the way” and give her attention to other dishes on the menu. The bureau of home economics will appeal to y ) : ) 4 } 3 < : 3 ; £ 2 ) ) A new type c attack while on in motion, A Cool Hot Weather Dress for a | sponsors the recipe: Little Girl. 1 boil » Ib. dried apricots 2 cup boiling wa- T | ILDEN IS {5 Muster News on the bobbin, after loosening the | 2% cups cold water ter ’ Bities ‘nel . es tc. 11% tbs. gelatin 1% pint whipping a ata : Ae oo ; ae a oe __ | shuttle tension, and white thread i284 1 eup sugar cream used for the upper stitch. The design | 14 teaspoonful salt AUSTRALIAN STAR | NEWEST IN PAJAMAS is marked and stitched on the wrong : . | side of the material. The turned-back Wash the apricots and soak them | corners of the square pockets are also | Over night in 2 cupfuls of cold wa- 3 trimmed with the stitching. These | ter Cook the apricots until soft e } e } 1 | } ] e pockets are made of a double square |! in the water in which they were | of voile, and turned with tha seams | S0aked and press them through a { in. They are in keeping with the de- | fine sieve or collander. Put the 3; sign on the front. cupful of cold water over the gelatin | . . . 5 | is a o ides 1S f after it stands for 5 mi 'S Penzance, England. — A famous | « eereiesirleleniesientestond | of the Arthurian legend, about the It is a good idea to use a double 2A0 Brie $ stands 9? hntes 20g Te 2 tne : ver . y ling ate p oel- stretch of the Cornish cliff on the | DIPPING INTO 3 | year 1147. At the close of that cen bias neck binding about three-fourths | the a ; : y i h He ype the gol north shore of Cornwall, properly & Y # | tury, it seems evident, the Norman of an inch wide when folded. The raw | atin as ( evolve , then 8 d the sugar, known as Church Cliff, will soon be- | SCIENCE % | family of De Hornacot, seated at edges and the top of the dress gre | ae and apricot pup ¢ ill and fold 3 ie 3 : : v 2 y oa yr rit i i i 1@ Cred J > as DQ rhi come u national monument if plans 3 a isin al Hornacot, in North Hamerton, had a seamed together, with the binding ly- in t le Cre um Ww hic ; 128 been whipped. § 3 PEI a PELL 0000, 00 Mee, e%, p : ine o o <i d | 2 8 Sery g y i ars made by Rev. A. Blissard Barnes, a y di CERES | grant of the manor of Bossinney, in- ing on the right side of the garment. | Lipo & serving dish with lady jagers % s v " : : : r clices 3 co cake i viear of Tintagel, come to maturity % Yellow Fever Heroism cluding, no doubt, the Island of Tin. The binding is then folded over, but | °F slices of Tons cake, and pile the . TN] 160 bd p. | : « ee y OQ $ "1¢ x "e Zn pg > ) this year. "This stretch of cliff, about 5 The lite ot “ie ‘Shrond of & | tagel. They thereafter took the name does not have raw edges to be turned Shriect muse ightly in the center. OU acres in area, stands as a bul- 2 collow fever was learned. onls ~ of Tintagel as a part of the family | under on the other side. A second | Place the dish in the cold for an hour 1 . 3 Cd v das C . . % . i Hitohing . ale ter . . ro fore <Oervi wark against the Atlantic rollers, and % ifter great sacrifice of life and B name, which is thought to indicate | stitching, also on the right side, very | OF Ore before serving, commands magnificent views of a x health on the part of American 3 | that there was some castle or mansion | close to the first seam, holds the fold- | . countryside which is rich with legends % doctors and others who in Cubs & on the island for them to reside in. ed edge and makes a neat finish, Cottage Cheese p i ni : | %* a 3 Nl : Pr : | ms ‘ » dresses ar | % : : of Arthur Pendragon and his Knights & allowed themselves to be bitten 5 The isle of Tintagel and the ruins | Hems on any dresses are much more | One gallon of skim milk will make of the Round Table. 50 . % by mosquitoes which had previ upon it now belong to the prince of | attractive if put in by hand, and often | about one and one half pounds of cot- Below nsuihiff, amd within view % ously bitten yellow fever pa. + | Wales, as duke of Cornwall. Much of | set better than when stitched on the | tage cheese. If the milk is sweet it : fom Its. yop, is. the procipiioys island | & venis. Dr. Jesse W. Lazear, 3 | the other lund of especial note in the | machine. On children’s dresses hand- should be placed in a pan and left in flobert Pearce, Australia S champion | rock upon which are a portion of the & the first to sacrifice his life & | region is similarly protected for pos | sewed hems facilitate letting the dress | a clean, warm place at a temperature Sculler und winner of the President's | ruins of an ancient castle, by popular 3 died at the age of thirty-four. '% | terity. But the area along Church down when necessary. The first hem | of about 75 degrees F. until it clab- cup, snapped in his shell, a few days | belief the birthplace of the afterward & (@. 1928. Western Newspaper Union» +» | cliff, which is atached to the glebe | should be very wide to allow for | bers, when it should have a clean, sour BR 1} Py a isle ’ i > » hrs 2 ino Ar N € od ¢ 5 mi , 3 1¢ oi 2 ile 3 : : : « before % len the island continent fot celebrated King Arthur. Not far eo ee land of the vicarage of Tintagel, is | growth. In sheer materials like voile, | flavor. Ordinarily this takes about 30 Europe, where he represents Australia | away is the stone marked Slaughter the property of the church, and as | the turned-under part of the hem will | hours. A small quantity of clean-fla- a | q iden chor + KRY ‘ at. m—————— r——— ee . x | > ot if 3F ie 3 . . : : in the Olympics. bridge, where many say the last bat such may be sold at any time, pro- ! look best if it is the full width of the vored sour milk mixed with the sweet tle of Arthur was fought, and where | half of the Ninth century, and Spun | vided proper authority is obtained | hem, and the allowance for letting { milk will hasten the process, accord- Stopping It is a wonderful gift to know when to stop. When you have finished your business you are adding to the general smoothness of life's organization and to the happiness of your acquaint- ances if you will give up the floor to some one else. Talk, to some, is like a brook that dribbles on indefinitely. the last of the Pendragons received his fatal wound. Doubt Arthur Ever Existed. Milton, in his History of Britain, ramarks: “Who Arthur was, and whether any such person reigned in Britain, hath been doubted heretofore, and may again with good reason.” Scholars and historians have pointed out that there is little evidence worth since by poets and singers into a glis- tening web of fancies and romance, have made the figures as real and be- lievable as those of the more authen- tic persons of history. The proof of this lies in the num ber of English tourists who visit the ruins at Tintagel, the Town at Came!- ford, the battlefield at Slaughter bridge, and other spots closely asso from the ecclesiastical commissioners, Since the increase in the tourist trade of the region began, the value of the land for building sites has steadily gone up. Rev. A. Blissard Barnes and others interested in the sentimental value of the cliff front have been alarmed lately lest an es- petially fine offer induces the church to sell, allowing the cliffs to fall into An attractive idea in lounging pa Jamas—this outfit is called the Apache | pajamas. A modernistic block design | trims the silver cloth coat and is re | peated down the sides of the widely- { flared red satin trousers. Modernistic | jewelry is worn with this outfit. The oldest typewriters were down can be taken care of in way. this | ing to the United States Department of Agriculture, CREAM CHEESE IN ROLLED SANDWICHES William T. Tilden American Davis cup been barred from pa international tennis been disqualified as announced by the Un Tennis association th Moss, executive secre Better end in the middle of a word | consideration that Arthur was more ciated with the legend, In the last private hands. equipped with -apital letters only. | than talk even ® few minutes too long. | than the creation of natural myth. | half-decade Americans, too, have Al are quickly forgiven Yet to many Cornishmen, and to Eng- | found Cornwall. In increasing num- | — Ty ii - id AND HIS Short speeches Long speeches leave a memory.—Grove Patterson; in the Mo- bile Register. lasting bad Long Trip for lishmen and Americans as well, the heroic tales of the son of Uther, re corded first by Nennius in the latter Floating Dock Tx PR I'hie first world when compieted), being towed down the River Tyne in Englund on its K.600-mile trip te. Singapore in the Straits Settlements. section of the new 50,000-ton Yoating dock (the largest in the It is being built for the British admiralty and Is expected to be completed by Novewber, 1928, bers the summer tourists have invad: ed the quiet country at the south of England to “bathe on her white beaches at Penzance, Newquay, and Perranporth, to visit the fanious tin mines near Redruth and Camborne, and to stand on the ground made fa- mous by the tale of Arthur Pendragon, in the north, Ruined Castle Draws Many. The chief interest at Tintagel, of course, is the ruined castle, which is popularly referred to as King Arthu castle and so represented to tourists Regardless of the truth of this claim, the spot has genuine historic associ ations of later date, though it is now generally acknowledged that the crumbling ruins are of a period pos- terior to the Norman conqueror. A few knglish writers, however, moved to defend the legends of the Pendragon, have declared it possible that the cas tle, or some mansion or dwelling, must have existed there before the Con- quest: that it was later restored by the Normans in their own style, At any rate, there must have been some sort of castle on the Island of Tintagel, or Tintagol, when Geoffrey of Monmouth, the most believable of the early writers, recorded his version World’s Greatest Race Begins CE ge | | | Cream Cheese Mixed With {Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The rolled sandwiches in the illus- tration, taken by the United States Department of Agriculture, are spread wigh cream cheese mixed with finely chopped watercress. Chow chow, chili sauce, or any ‘desired pickle mixture might have been used in place of the watercress. Equal parts of soft cheese, chopped olives, pimentos, or green peppers, and nuts might be used. Many different finely chopped vegeta- bles may be worked into cream cheese to be used in this way. Some of the best liked are parsley, watercress, let- tuce, spring onions, chives, radishes, cucumbers, and celery. Onion or lem- Finely Chopped Watercress. on juice may be included in the sea- soning. The bread for rolled sandwiches should be fresh and elastic in texture, so that it will not crumble or break when rolled. Spread the sandwicn mixture on the cut end of the loaf, then with a very sharp knife, cut off the thinnest possible slice, roll it up, and trim the ends. Toasted crackers are ussd for the round sandwiches. In a hollow on top of each a little colorful Jelly fa placed. These crackers should not be spread until just before they are te be eaten, as the cheese softens the crackers if allowed to stand, % aK NO Gov. Alfred FE. Smi nominee for President, ocratic donkey “Sam I executive mansion in /
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers