DR. CALDWELL'S THREE RULES cd THE PATTON COURIER Earth Not Stable New York.—The earth's crust prob- ably is not *dead” and finished in shape, the American Association for the Advancement of Science was told by Dr. Bailey Willis of Stanford uni- versity. “We know the kind of rock that underlies the sea,” he said, “from seis- mographs., With aid of earthquakes we can sink our plummets more than half way to the center of the earth. We know the velocity at which shocks travel. the depths at whieh they pass through or around the earth, and the kind of rock they pass through, “We know that the earth is en. veloped about 2,000 miles thick with elastic rock, below which is a core about 2,000 miles in radius, apparent. ly Inelastic, very hard, probably iron. which may be melted.” The heat that causes blisters, he ing up preparatory to causing land shifts. The theory is that scores of miles down in the rocks that form the skin of mother earth, great blis- ters form, as big as whole states, and ra that as they melt the rocks, the re- Instead, even the stable bottom of sulting wupthrusts make the earth's | the Atlantic ocean now may be heat- | surface what ft is, and whatever it | : may change to. | | | | | But there was nothing of possible human catastrophe in Doctor Willis’ picture, for he spoke in the new time concept of science, his changes re- quiring milllons of years. He named well known places where on the slow time scale such shifts actually now ing blisters—asthenolitns, we call them, “Conditions favorable to formation of asthenoliths appear likely to de: velop in those layers thirty to six hun- dred miles below the earth's surface, and probably only those within less than one hundred miles of the surface directly affect it. “A blister may grow several hun: twenty miles deep, containing one or eventually breaks around the mar- gins, where eruptions follow, and finally the cover falls into the emptied center. Conditions thus theoretically sketched are features of the smaller depressions that are the deeps of the oceans. The Windward and Hawaiian islands are examples of volcanic ridges surrounding such deeps. “A blister requires perhaps several million years to grow. A very large dred miles across, and be ten to | more million cubie miles. The cover | If Back Hurts Begin on Salts | I Flush Your Kidneys Occasionally by Drinking Quarts of Good Water | | { | No man or woman can make a mis- take by flushing the kidneys occasion- | ally, says a well-known authority. | Too much rich food creates acids which clog the kidney pores so that they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from ! the blood. Then you get sick. Rheu- | matism, headaches, liver trouble, | nervousness, constipation, dizziness, | sleeplessness, bladder disorders often number of eruptions, a great many | come from sluggish kidneys. blisters and an enormous lapse of | The moment you feel a dull ache in time must have been required to form pe kidneys or your back hurts, or if seem under way, Doctor Willis’ address inaugurated the annual convention of the associa- Dr. Caldwell watched the results of. | constipation for 47 years, and believed that #o matter how careful people are sald, probably does not emanate from the earth’s inner core, of their health, diet and exercise, con- stipation will occur from time to time. Of next importance, then, is how to treat | |\'ZZ7{(\ rf. Loos it when it comes, Dr. Caldwell always NV LISS 2) was in favor of getting as close to nature Wie] HoT as possible, hence his remedy for constj- pation is a mild vegetable compound. It can not harm the most delicate system tion. His subject was “the Origin and Development of Continents.” He said all continents are great plateaus of granite, standing high above the sea bottonis, which are of basalt, a heavl- er rock. “Compression by gravity,” he added. “Is capable of producing all the heat of which we have evidence. As rocks heat, the melting tends to extend lat erally faster than upward, thus form- cla Africa, Eurasia and the Americas in this way. The complex structure of each continent corresponds with the multiplicity of actions required by the theory.” and is not habit forming. The Doctor never did approve of dras- tic physics and purges. He did not believe they were good for human beings to put into their system. Use Syrup Pepsin for yourself and members of the family in constipation, biliousness, sour and cramp stomach, bad breath, no appetite, if aches, and to break up fevers and colds. Get a bottle today, at any drugstore and observe these three rules of health: Keeper the head cool, the feet warm, the bowels open. For a free trial bottle, just write “Syrup Pepsin,” Dept. BB, Monticello, Illinois. “Excuse It, Please!” They tell a story in Washington about a certain legislator noted for his ready wit. One day while in con- = vou MUST LEARN TO 2) | TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF =DO YOU KNOW WHAT © Western Newspaper Union versation with an official of the local telephone company the latter men- tioned that he knew of a young woin- | an who wanted to get a job as secre- tary on “The Hill,” as the capitol is known. “I'm sorry, but I don’t know of any- thing,” the solon advised, but, as an afterthought: “Why don’t you give her a job yourself—in your Wrong Number department!” SHOULD ONE GO: TO COLLEGE? » By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK 3 Dean of Men, University of Illinois. PN © » & o> >. © © I am right in the midst of high school commencements while 1 am writing these par- agraphs, running here and there to give the young person just grad- uating advige as to what to do and where to do it. Most of these young people are going to college whether they have any particu- lar talent for Mrs. Margaret Washington Tells How to Get Rid of a Severe Cold “Last August I took a very severe cold ands it seemed that I couldn't break it up. I got so bad that I was confined to my bed for five weeks, doctoring all the time without getting | any relief. I had no appetite, natural- ly lost flesh. In fact, I had given up ail hopes of ever getting any better, “A friend recommended Milks Emul- sion and I commenced its use. When able to leave my bed I weighed 111 2 ; pounds. Now, after taking Milks Emul- : Ri sion five weeks, I weigh 125 pounds, study or not. It feel better than I have felt in two | I8 the vogue now to do so; a boy who years, can eat anything, have no ef- does not go to college is almost as Jocts oi She sold ahd wos every way, | peculiar as a twenty-year-old with ank God and Milks Emulsion for | eg whiskers. c 02 restoring my health” MRS. MARGA- | [O08 Whiskers, } 5a uised 2 Sod RET WASHINGTON, 1699 E. 14th | MaDV questions by young ang o St., Winston-Salem, N. C. relative to educational procedure after Sold by all druggists under a guar- | Dish school and these I shall make antee to give satisfaction or money | Some attempt to answer. refunded. The Milks Emulsion Co. | Should one go to college? Terre Haute, Ind.—Adyv. There is no categorical answer to the question. It depends upon condi- | | Canada’s Great Record tions just as the advisability of- get- Canada heads the world in aerial | ting married does. There is no doubt surveying, The photographing in five | that an overwhelming majority of years of 200,000 square miles of | those who have attained distinction hitherto inaccessible country, which, | in this country in practically every nevertheless, is richly endowed with | line of work have had college train- natural resources, has created a world | Ing, and that those who will attain and is equivalent to eight | Such distinction will have a similar completely around the world | training. The trained mind grasps a situation more quickly than an un- trained one, adapts itself more readily to new and strange conditions, has a broader vision and better under- stands human nature. The men who have most succeeded have had col- lege training or minds which would have readily adapted themselves to it really does bring vou out of it com- | such training. Some young people pletely. Even if it’s grippe, this meth- | have not the financial backing neces- od works, only takes longer, Pape’s | sary to go through college, nor the Cold Compound is in tablet form. | concentration of mind and the phy- Pleasant-tasting, but it surely has the | sique to earn their way while carry- “authority I"—Adyv. ing a college course. These may well — hesitate before going to college. Hot Stuff The work of college demands men- Blinks—1 hear he made a fiery | tal curiosity—an interest in every speech last night. | problem which concerns itself with Jinks—Yes, he had to keep drinking human thought and human life. Too water all through it to prevent his | few people have such an interest. No burning words from blistering his | one should go to college who does not veeal cords.~Cincinnati Enquirer, record, flights with a photograph taken of every foot of the way. Worth Knowing When Winter Cold Comes: Did you ever hear of a five-hour remedy for colds? There is one, and educated man or woman must have had a good many years of pretty con- stant association with books, and un- less that association is one which brings enjoyment and enthusiasm the work is likely to be pretty indifferent- ly done. 1 see scores of young people in college who have no real Interest in study, who go to their books with reluctance and dragging feet and who lay them down with a sigh of joyful relief when the assigned task has been indifferently completed. Such people have no place in college. Their task in life is to do some practical rather than intellectual job of which there are still plenty to be done. Those who do not like work should try some other activity of life than that involved in a college training. There is toil involved if one does well in college, and responsibility, and the better one does the more respon- sibility is laid on his shoulders. The person who is looking for an easy time in life has no business to go to college. for the college graduates of the coun- try who are worth the name are work- ing the hardest and carrying the heaviest responsibilities. The less one knows the easier time he is bikely to have, (©, 1929, Western Newspaper Union.) Vinegar can be made not enly from apples, but from any fruit, NEW BALL MAGNATE William F. Kenny, president of one of the biggest contracting concerns of New York, who has bought a 20 per cent interest in the Naticna! Ex- hibition company, more popilarly known 2s the New York Giants. | like books and reading and study. The f | | Helped By Lydia E. Pink- | ham’s Vegetable Compound Fairhaven, Mass—“I am taking | Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com | pound during thc | Change of Life and | I think it is a won | derful tonic. Wher | I feel nervous and | run-down my hus band gets me a bot tle right away. Ii | is a great help tc | me and I think | that if other peopl: | would only take i | when they feel al | run-down and tak | it as the directions say, they woul | find it a great benefit. My worst symy toms were nervousness and tired feel ings, I could not sleep nights and ) did not care about my work. I wa: :0 mervous I would ery if anyon looked at me.”—Mgs., Ava Besse, 196 Washington Street, Fairhaven, Mass. Interior of the orthodox Friends’ has been chosen by President-Elect and Mrs. Hoover ws their regular place of worship after they enter the White House. Where the Hoovers Will Worship Meeting h»use in Washington which bs SCIENCE Bright blue creates many of Holly- wood’s smartest costumes this season. Doris Hill, screen star, uses this color for a street costume, combining gray caracul fur and animated blue tweed with excellent results. The hat re- peats the blue i» a new material called tweed felt. Unusual Home Wichita, Kan.—George Dooley of Wichita is the head of a peaceful household consisting of his wife, his former wife, and his five-year-old daughter, Katherine, When Mrs. Daisy Dooley received her divorce from Dooley the court ruled Katherine should be in the cus- tody of her mother three days out of each five, and with the father the re- mainder of the time. Dooley remar- ried, and now all live in the same house. The two Mrs, Dooleys declare they are not in the least jealous of each other. Katherine receives the loving attentions of both her mother and her stepmother, who co-operated in giving her a merry Christmas day. When asked which of her mothers she loved most, Katherine replied: “I love both of them. [ love my mamma and I love Neva, and I love my dad- dy lots and lots.” Dooley, who Is United States quar- antine inspector for this district, said he was very happy over the success of his unusual arrangement. “You know some people have fun- ny ideas about marriage,” he said. Man Both Grandfather, Great-Grandsire in Day Danville, N. Y.—Becoming a grand- father and great grandfather in a day was the good fortune of C. E. Green of this village. The grandson is Jacob Albert Green, son of George H. Green of New York city, while the great-granddaughter is Miss Barbara Jane McNeil, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Harold E. McNeil of San Diego, Calif. Don’t cast your bread upon the wa- ters today and ex- pect’ to have it come back tomorrow in the form of sponge cake. “They can’t see how a scheme like this will work. “For five months | was on the Chi- cago police force and both my present and ex-wife were with me. All of the beys used to wonder how I could man- age it, Some declared ‘I can’t even get along with one woman, how can you live with two? But I really am happy and so are they.” the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage, or at- | tended by a sensation of scalding, be- ! gin to drink soft water in quantities: | also get about four ounces of Jad { Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of wa- ter before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine. [ This famous salts is made from tls acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for years to help flush clogged kid- | neys and stimulate them to activity, | also to help neutralize the acids in | the system so they no longer cause | irritation, thus often relieving bladder disorders, Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot | injure; makes a delightful efferves- | cent lithia-water drinR, which every- | one can take now and then to help | keep the kidneys clean and the blood | pure, thereby often preventing serlous The present Mrs. Dooley (Neva) ex- | kidney complications. plained the situation this way: “Last October I lost my only child, | MADE HANFORD’S #3a= | a little boy. Kitty is taking his place in my life and at the same time fill ing her mother’s heart with joy.” WROTE PRIZE ESSAY | | | Malcolm D. Almack of Palo Alto, Calif, fifteen years old, was given first prize in the Durant competition for the best essay by a high school pupil on the solution of the prohibition problem. Young Almack, the son of a Stanford university professor, was students who entered the competition. Under the terms of the award-he re- ceives $1,000 and the Palo Alto high school receives $4,000. “Forever American” | among several hundred high = Washington.— Through the gift of the French village of Moyenmoutier of the ground occupied by’ the grave of Lieut. Thomas R. Plummer of New Bedford, Mass. a controversy of ten years comes to an end. Unlike most American families whose sons fell in France, the Plum- mers strongly desired that Lieutenant Plummer’s Body be left in the little [French cemetery where it was buried two days before the armistice was signed and a few days before the Croix de Guerre awarded him by the French government was received. This caused the unwinding of much red tape. Lieutenant Plummer, al though fifty years of age when the war broke out, enlisted in the Amer- ican Red Cross and was assigned to the French village of Moyenmoutier, just behind the French lines. There he did such valiant work that he was beloved by the entire population of the village. They buried him with highest DIPPING INTO 2000000 OOVDVDVDVDDOOOOD Why Fish Are Cold Blooded The fish is a cold-blooded ani- mal because of the lack of oxy- &® gen in the wuter. Mdn and the ® higher types of animals produce body heat from the oxygen in the air and in this way maintain a steady body temperature. The tish can only take on the temperature of the water in which it lives. (©): 1929 Western Newspaper Unlon.) oo & DOOYOO OVYY YYYP YoyoT honors in their own village cemetery. His death was the result of unselfish devotion to sick and wounded French soldiers, When the work of removing Amer- fcan soldiers’ bodies to government cemeteries in this country and France began Lieutenant Plummer’s grave was one of the few isolated ones marked “Do not disturb.” The government could not leave soldier’s bodies without definite title to the land or without assurance that graves would be properly cared for, however, | After much interchange of corre- | spondence between the town council | of Moyenmoutier, the cemetery givis) sion of the quartermaster corps of the United States army and the family of | Lieutenant Plummer, the problem | was solved with receipt of the title | to the ground occupied by the grave. i —— Automobile owners increase by 100,- | 000 each year in Great Britain, { Can Get Too Much, Even of a Good Thing it | | | | | | ‘BUT TH WEATHER MAN Took HIM AT HIS WORD AN’ 50 YOU SEE -—A MAN WiLL CHANGE H1S MIND , | IT MUST BE GOOD | SINCE 1846 Balsam of Myrrh Try it for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, etc. All dealers are authorized to refund your money for the first bottle if not suited. Just the Thing | Woman Customer (to druggist)—My 'usband’s nerves are that bad 'e can’t | seem to get ahead; ’e’s lost his am- bition. Do you think it would do any | good to give 'im a dose of the aspir- | ing tablets?—Boston Transcript. Scientific search for Chinese an- tiquities is hampered by the people's belief that disturbing the ancient i-graves will bring misfortune. MOTH ER RAYS SWEET Po CHILDREN A testimonial fromalady in California, whose name will be given if requested. ‘I have been using Mother Gray ’s Powders these last 15 years and all my friends and neighbors are using them just now during the “Flu.” They are fine for checking the fever. In 1918 I mailed them by the dozen boxes to Imperial Valley to a friend who was nursing down there during the “Flu.” Children who are troubled with constipation, feverishness, bowel trouble or take cold easily, get quick relief from these powders that Mothers have recommended for over 30 years. For sale at all drug Stores. TRADE MARK If you are suffering from Rheumatism, Sub-Acute or Muscular, Lumbago or Gout, write to us and we will send you | a $1.00 bottle of KUHN’S RHEUMA- TIC REMEDY for 25 cents. This trial offer good for one bottle only to people who have never used our Remedy. KUHN REMEDY CO. 1855 MILWAUKEE AVE. Dept. 0 65 CHICAGO, ILL Many Visit Gettysburg Gettyshurg, battlefield shrine of the United States, draws more than 2,000,- 000 tourists annually. This was esti- mated by battlefield officials following publication of the quarterly report of the battlefield guides. During the quarter which ended in September guides conducted 472,112 persons over the field where this gredt battle of the Civil war was fought. Within the Reach of every woman—health and strength. They're brought to you by Doctor Pierce's Fa- vorite Prescription, which is sold by druggists. It will build up, strengthen and in- vigorate the “run-down,” nervous, or delicate woman. One who has used it re- marked :—*“I was so nervous I felt” like crying all the time. I could not sleep, was always tired, had dizzy spells, no desire to go, my ‘pep’ was all gone. I did not know what to do as I had no more faith in doctors or medicine. When we moved to Ohio my ne advised me to try Dr. Pierce’s I Prescription. I got some, also the littls cathartic ‘Pellets.’ They work wondet= fully together.”—Mrs, ‘J. W. Paxton, 1707 Niles Ave, Warren, Ohio. . Write to Dr. Pierce’s Invalids Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for free advice One (Prepared by the United § of Agricultur The remodeled living Roop’s country home i county, Va., is one of | features of the house, most successful change: fected. After consulting demonstration agent, i that a boxed-in stairwe tirely removed from be and the window in the ner, and also a partitic room and a narrow hal staircase was used f stairs, As a result th much better proporti proved in every way. was restored and repa floor and woodwork and selected pieces of retained and done ove cheted rag rugs were floors. By the advice of f ONION REMAI FOOD | Has Ever Been teemed as Artic (Prepared by the United of Agricultu From the earliest tir have authentic record been highly esteemed food. In desert regio used also as a preven travelers and soldiers The original home o which there are man; probably southern As ders of the Mediterra Egyptians cultivate the dawn of their histc W. R. Beattie, of th Department of Agric the Egyptians offer co "Pexas producers of wi muda onions. The onion, says Mr. to a widely variable cepa, which forms a tanical family of pl cludes many of the 1 forms of asparagus ¢ gimilar plants with a enlarged root, A char family is that most grow naturally upon abundance of moistur being natives of low-l the seashore. Anoth of plants like the or gus is that they will siderable salt in the they grow. Conditio enfon culture are fou tions of the United crop is widely growr Good prices for oni likely to stimulate I the next year. This because commercial their acreage but al prices will lead mar plant onions in small gardens that supply needs of the growers local markets in com field-grown crop. Or tensive culture, wh particularly adaptabl and back-let culture grower can cultivate in the time outside h employment. The a an acre of onions is els, but on soils that fertile good cultivat in yields of from 4( an acre. Lettuce for Fo Garnish Lettuce is a value be used as the main as a garnish. The fresh green make any meal lool A plate of plain lett the most tempting weather, and as it is to prepare; it shoul Lettuce is rich in go in addition to meals appetizing, it Head lettuce is form for salads, bu be served chopped a plain lettuce sala sections or separa form cups for the any kind of salad’d but French and dressings are gener
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers