e depesd on Bayer make short work of did you know it’s in the worse pains or neuritis? Rheu- , Don’t suffer when can bring complete delay, and without ot affect the heart. e of genuine Bayer ven directions with should be familiar, are much needless PIRIN ark of Bayer Manufacture lester of Salicylicacid — mem )F WORMS | CHILDREN kly ruin a child’s r child grits his s nostrils, has a mach—beware! 'm symptoms! ut delay—free your 1ese health-destroy- se him Frey's Ver- 1's safe, vegetable or 75 years. Buy it sts! ermifuge Worms ETC SEO re You Eat wvered that the gas- 1tenced by the men- he individual, that tears is like poison the quality of food ortant as the men- e eater.—American ute you ever flatter EE Nl RIPTION TE IN 1892 2 I] started to practice /5, the needs for a 8 great as today. lives, ate plaig, got plenty of fresh early there were urges for the relief L Dr. Caldwell did for human beings. r constipation that ractice, and which in 1892 under the II's Syrup Pepsin, remedy, intended wind elderly people, such a mild, safe 8 proven its worth rest. selling liquid the confidence of to get relief from , flatolence, indi- ite aid sleep, bad 3, fevers. At your “Syrup Pepsin,” Illinois, for free Parasites red by parasites en, but domestic | in small areas pestered than in en than the wor- ‘n to other peo- per—and all e misery of ht shoes know n’s Foot=Ease kesthe friction makes dancing y en's Ease kage and a Foot= i Doll, address ase, Le Roy, N.Y. THE PATTON COURIER | | { | I ALS | NOT GOLD i i THAT— 1} (© by D. J. Walsh.) VHIRLEY looked at her new friend with softly shining eyes. “I some- times wonder if I deserve so much happiness. Just think, Alice, Ted has the lot completely paid for and has made three payments on our new bungalow. Isn't it wonderful to be engaged?” Alice regarded her tolerantly. “If a four-room cottage in a new subdi- vision satisfies you it is very nice, For myself, I have ambitions. You haven't met any of my friends yet, Harold writes poetry.” Shirley turned quite pink with in- dignation. “Poetry doesn’t pay as well as plumbing, Ted is getting along splendidly. He has put in all the plumbing in the new house himself evenings. You ought to see my sink; double drainboards and set 36 inches from the floor instead of the usual 29. There is a shower over the tub, too.” Alice rubbed at her already glisten- ing nails. “You seem very domestic,” she drawled. “I like to go to dances evenings. What do you think of my new ring?” Silently Shirley stared at the large diamond, fully four times as large as the tiny, perfect jewel Ted had so proudly presented her with, “It is beautiful,” she said at last, “but it must have cost a great deal.” “But naturally,” Alice practiced this phrase, one heard at a theater, “Har- old wishes me to have only the best. Don’t you think he is awfully hand- some?” “Ye-as,” Shirley agreed with a men- tal reservation that she hardly under- stood herself. Harold puzzled her. Tall and slim with black varnished hair brushed to a snakelike smooth- ness he did not fit in with the rest of them. His clothes, too, were not those of their crowd. Ted had a good, $45-suit that fitted him nicely but it wasn’t in the same class with Harold's. Ted disliked Harold and had even asked his sweetheart to drop Alice. “Alice has lost her head over so- ciety. For a laundry sorter to talk about living at an apartment hotel and being near for theaters and dances is a scream. Money doesn’t come that easy. What will she do when she is old and needs a home? Better go easy on that sort of stuff, Shirley. We're ordinary folks and we want to get ahead while we're young enough to work and plan for the future. Alice spends every cent she has to try to dress up to Harold.” Shirley, thinking over this speech, had to admit that Ted was right. “Harold wants you to come with us to see the circus parade,” said Alice. “Isn’t it lucky the boss is such a good fellow? I never worked anywhere be- fore that T got two hours off for it. I wish it fell on a Saturday, though. Then we could spend the whole after- noon running around.” “Oh, no, 1 can’t,” Shirley answered quickly. seowled. “And, why not?” “Why—that is—I just can’t.” “You've been acting awful snippy lately. I know Ted doesn’t like me and you're letting him run you. Afraid he'll break off with you, I suppose.” “I am not. Ted loves me.” “Maybe; it's plain he doesn’t trust you, though. I think he’s jealous of Harold's good looks.” *No.” Shirley spoke without much enthusiasm. A girl doesn’t like the implication that she isn’t trusted. “Then be yourself and come with us. What are you going to do with the two hours? Hang around this place?” And Shirley found herself accom- panying the two. She had pinned on a cluster of flowers, given by Ted. Harold cast a displeased glance at the decoration. “Any need for that?” he drawled. Shirley shrugged. “It’s going to stay there, though.” The three were now walking up the street, the distant band quickened movements. A short man with an odd scar across the left cheek slipped through the crowd and whispered to Harold, then vanished. Harold wheeled about. “Say, girls, I'm frightfully sorry. I've got to hur- ry to help out a friend who is lunch- ing at Hotel Ritzmore and who has forgotten his billfold. It will take all my ready money and I'll have none left to treat. Miss Shirley, will you do me an immense favor?” “What is it?” she asked, instinctive- ly disliking the way his eyes shifted from her direct regard. : “It’s to take this,” he brought out from his pocket an emerald ring, square and exquisitely cut, “and run into the pawnshop on the corner and get as much as he'll give you. I'll take Alice with me and we'll meet you in the lobby of the hotel.” The girl stared at him in amaze- yient. Although she had weakly per- mitted Alice to drag her along when she did not wish to offend Ted by accompanying her, she did not lack spirit and this proposal didn’t sound good to her. “Most certainly not. What should I know. about pawning jewels?” Harold frowned at the clear tones that carried several feet and brought some surprised glances at them. “No need of shouting. Really, Alice, your friend does not show much courtesy. 1 thought you would enjoy going to the hotel and,” he glanced severely at Shirley, “I had planned to take both you girls in there for a bite after the parcde. Of course, though, the plan must he given up now as I have to hurry away.” “I'll do it, Harold,” cried Alice eager- ly. “I don’t mind it a bit. is too fine to go into a pawnshop she As Shirley | SCHEDULING THE HOME MAKER'S DAY can wait in a doorway for me and | Makes Work Run Smoothly we'll meet you at the hotel.” Harold pressed the glittering into, her hand and vanished in the crowd. “You did your best to spoil the day, Shirley. I'm afraid Harold is disap- pointed in you.” “I don't care, I—oh, Alice, there is Ted, now.” Alice went on her errand and Ted beamed as he saw Shirley. “I hope you won't mind, Ted, they really insisted upon my joining them. Couldn’t we make four now?” The brightness had faded from Ted's face as he followed Shirley's glance and saw Alice. “No, we could not,” he said curtly. “I don’t like Harold. I think he's making a fool of Alice.” “We were going to get a bite at the Ritzmore,” pleaded Shirley, dazzled at the thought of the hotel. “It doesn’t sound good to me. haps I'd better be on my way and leave you to your grand friends.” “No, let's go by ourselves. I'll tell Alice; there she is.” Alice was angry and showed it, “After Harold made such a point of having you come I think you are downright shabby.” Ted drew Shirley’s hand through his ring arm. “After all, Alice, she happens to be my girl, not Harold's. We'll walk with you to the hotel, though.” Harold was waiting outside for them. As Shirley started to explain her change of plans an officer joined them. Department of and Reduces Some Tasks. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Scheduling all the time-taking activ- ities of the household makes the work run smoothly and shows the home maker how she can reduce the amount of work to be done, says the bureau of home economics, United States Agriculture. A time schedule is easy to prepare, The hu- | reau says to begin by making a list of all activities that go on in a suc- | some Per- | cessfully run home. Some occur ev- ery day or several times a day. Cth- ers are once-a-week or one-a-month tasks. Then estimate the time need- ed for doing each one. Don't forget to include some periods of rest and leisure, time for irregular work, and minutes every morning and afternoon for the ever-occurring but never-expected interruptions of house- keeping. Next distribute the work and other periods by days of the week, arrang- | ing them in the order they occur, and with regard to the fixed activities that must be considered—meals, chil- dren’s naps or school hours, the time the man of the house gets home from work, rising time, bedtime, the best hours of the day to devote to the long, heavy once-a-week jobs. It may | be necessary to rearrange the day's “Which girl pawned an emerald ring | | done. just now?” Alice grew very white, ever, looked bored. “She did,” he said, indicating Shir- ley. *1 did not.” Harold, how- work somewhat to fit everything in —to get up a little earlier or shift the dinner hour a bit, but it can be Some of the customary tasks can be done less frequently without detri- ment to the family well-being. Some | can be done more efficiently; some | need not be done as painstakingly as Alice started to speak, but Harold's | eyes deterred her and she stood mute. “Which one was it, Ike?” demanded the officer, motioning in two plain- clothes men to detain Harold. “This one,” noticed she wasn’t wearing Ike looked at Alice. “I | flowers. | The other one has quite a bunch of | | she has released a good many scat- them and some ribbon, too.” “What difference does it make?” quavered Alice, bursting into tears. “The difference is that the ring was stolen from Mrs. Jerrold’s handbag about ar hour ago. Sam, the dip, got it and passed it on to this fellow, Slick Dick is his name. Come along to the judge.” Alice drew off her engagement ring: “Wouldn't you take this and let me go? I hadn't any idea that ring was stolen, please.” The officer glanced at it contemptu- ously: “It’s against the law to try to bribe an officer but, girlie, look at it. Pure glass. He handed you a boner all right. Come on and tell it to the judge.” When Shirley had been vouched for by Ted's employer and was permitted | to go free she looked up at him: “If | | other you hadn't given me those flowers | I might have had a hard time prov- ing I hadn't pawned the ring. The | officer followed us and he knew I hadn’t put the flowers on afterward.” “Harold, or rather, Slick Dick, coaxed Alice to make you her chum so that you could be blamed for what he wanted done.” Shirley touched his sleeve repent- antly: “After this, Ted, I'll do as you think best. Think,” she shuddered, “if you had to go home and tell moth- er I was in jail. We'll keep away from folks who sneer at cottages and —love, Ted.” Asphalt Bed Reveals Glacial Age Remains Bones that tell what kinds of ani- mals roamed the valley of California a hundred thousand years ago, while eastern America was buried under the great glacial ice sheet, have been dis- covered in an asphalt bed in Carpin- teria, in the southern part of Santa Jarbara county. Sealed for ages against decay in the germ-excluding bitumen, they are only now being brought to light and are finding their way to the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History, where specialists studied them. The report of these scientists pub- lished in Science tells a dramatic story in which the actors were beasts and birds now extinct, but resembling ex- isting form and in some cases prac- tically duplicating them. They found bones of deer, horses, rabbits and even of skunks. Beasts of prey were repre- sented by three species of the fox-wolf group. “For wherever the cause fis will the eagles be gathered together. This text receives startling illustra- tion in the makeup of the group of birds whose bones were discovered in the asphalt pits. There were twenty five specimens of one kind of eagle, fifteen of hawks and several of fowls, vultures and condor-like birds. The usually accepted theory is that herbivorous animals trying to the treacherous, sticky, tar-like stuff were entangled and killed and that the predatory animals and birds, com- ing to feast on thelr bodies, were in their turn caught. In addition to the animal bones, there were many pieces of wood, pine cones and other plant remains. These tell a fantastic story of their own. At the present time there exists on the shores of Monterey bay, 200 miles to the north, a group of trees found nowhere else on earth, Of these pecu- liar plants, specimens of both of the pines and one of the cypresses have been found embedded in the asphalt here at this distant point, together with fragments of other plants now characteristic of the Monterey regior. there Cross | in the winter. once seemed necessary; some can be cut off the list entirely by turning them over to others in the family, or by using a commercial service or a ready-made product. Such changes can be made little by little, until the home maker who always felt driven by her work suddenly realizes that tered hours and minutes to do the things she has always wanted time for, wm Buttered Spring Onions on Toast Are Welcomed Variety in vegetables seems to be more universally desired than is the case with any other group of foods. We can eat an orange every morning, and bread with every meal, potatoes almost every day, and the reappear- ing meat roast as long as it lasts, if only the vegetables are varied and combined in different ways. One of the joys of the spring months is that they bring to most of us a few more changes in the vegetable part of our menu. Even our winter friend, the onion, arrives in such a different dress that we welcome it as practically an- vegetable in the springtime, from the large round onion we knew Here's a suggestion from the bureau of home economics for serving spring onions in a dainty and appetizing way: Allow six or seven onions for each serving. After trimming the green tops from the onions, cook them until tender in lightly salted boiling water, in an un- covered vessel. This will take only about 20 minutes for fresh, young onions. When they have cooked ten- der, drain, add more salt if needed, and season with melted butter. In the meantime toast slices of bread. Arrange the onions as you would as- paragus on .the toast, and serve. finger-sized Government Recipe for Yeast-Raised Doughnuts | For a good many people, doughnuts “like mother used to make” are al- | ways yeast-raised doughnuts, which have a somewhat different texture from those made with baking powder, As in making any yeast breads or cakes, several hours must be allowed between the first mixing and each of the two rising periods. The recipe is from the bureau of home economics. 1 yeast cake 3% to 4 cups sifted soft wheat flour nutmeg 1 cup scalded milk 1 egg 114 tsp. salt 3, cup sugar 3% tsp. 2 tbs. butter Scald the milk, add the butter, and when lukewarm add the yeast and sugar. Stir in one ard one-half cup- fuls flour, Allow the sponge to stand in a warm place until very light. Add the beaten egg and the rest of the flour, which has been sifted with the salt and nutmeg. Knead, until thor- oughly mixed. The dough should be softer than bread dough. Cover and set in a warm place to rise. When light, roll from one-half to three-quar- | ters inch thick on a lightly floured board, cut with a doughnut cutter, cover, and set in a warm place until almost double in bulk. Heat the fat in a heavy kettle to the temperature between 330 degrees Fahrenheit to 340 degrees Fahrenheit, Put in the doughnuts with the raised side of the doughnut down in the fat, and turn when brown on the under- side. These doughnuts should be | cooked through in three or four min- utes. Drain om absorbent paper and sprinkle with powdered sugar while hot, : Elevate Bread Pudding by Adding Chocolate You can elevate a plain bread pud- ding from its usual humble status by adding a little chocolate, and serving | it with plain or whipped cream, It is good either hot or cold. The di- rections for making it are from the bureau of home economics. 2 cups fine stale 2; cup sugar bread crumbs 2, eggs 4 cups milk 4 tsp. salt 2 squares unsweet- 1% tsp, vanilla ened chocolate Melt the chocolate in a double boil- er, add the sugar, and then gradually add the milk, When well mixed, add the bread crumbs and salt. Beat the eggs and stir into them a portion of the hot mixture and then add this to the part in the double boiler, Re- move from the heat and add the va- nilla, Pour into a greased baking dish, set in a vessel partly filled with water, and bake in a moderate oven until the pudding is firm in the cen- ter when cut with a pointed knife. Pickled Cherries Make Very Delicious Relish | his affidavit has been obtained Lehing | Spiced cherries, preserved with vinegar, make a good relish. Here are directions for making them given by the bureau of home economics. Wash and pit large sour, red cher- ries. To the desired amount of cher- ries add three-fourths of their weight or measure of sugar. Sprinkle the sugar over the fruit in layers and let them stand overnight. In the morning stir until the sugar is dissolved and then press the juice well from the cherri Tie a small quantity of whole spices in a loose cheesecloth bag, drop this into the juice, and boil it down until it !s three-fourths of the original quantity. While the sirup is hot pour it over the drained cher- ries, and add 2 tablespoonfuls vinegar to each pint. Seal and let stand about two weeks to become well blended be- fore using. PS. POT ROAST OF BEEF IS ALWAYS POPULAR Pot Roast of Beef With Vegetables (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) A cross arm of beef was used for the pot roast in the illustration. Oth- er cuts of beef suitable for cooking in this way are chuck ribs, clod, round, and rump. The secret of a well-fla- vored pot roast lies in first browning the meat wel! and then cooking {it very slowly for a long time in a tight- ly-covered vessel with just a little added water. Some of the juices of the meat will cook out so that when the meat is done there will be consid- erably more liquid in the pan than you put in. All of this liquid is util- ized in making the gravy, so none of the goodness of the meat is lost. There is all the difference in the world hetween a roast made in this way and a piece of boiled meat, which has lost much of its flavor in the sur- rounding water. In describing the cooking of several of the less tender cuts of beef, the bu- reau of home economics gives these suggestions for making an attractive and delicious pot roast: Select a piece from four to six pounds in weight. Wipe with a damp cloth, Rub the meat with salt, pep- per, and flour. Brown the meat on all sides in a heavy kettle, using about three tablespoonfuls of beef fat. Slip a low rack under the meat, add one- half cupful of water, cover tightly, and simmer until tender, The time required for cooking cannot be defi- nitely stated, but it will probably be about three hours. Turn the roast oc- casionally, When the meat is done remove from the kettle, skim off the excess fat from the liquid, and meas- ure the remainds For each cupfal of gravy desired, measure two table- spoonfuls of fat and return to the | kettle, add one and a half to two ta- blespoonfuls of ir and stir until well blended ar slightly browned. Then add one cupful of the meat iter and stir until e gravy with salt, | 'd parsley. Serve | hot platter with 'd stuffed onions. | he following vege- tables may be cooled in the pot with the roast. Carrots. celery, onions, po- | tatoes, tomatoes 1nd turnips. Add | during the last hour of cooking the | meat, stock or of cold smooth, Season pepper, and chop the pot roast on buttered carrots If desired, any of menhorst store. | thousands of persons and visited scores | of towns and villages, they have ob- | Bremen the same afiernoon. | can give testimony that they did not | faculty | that Tuck, who likes ' Rooster Wins Finish | child. i Executioner Falters, 3 Bandit Finishes Job ¥ | . Zagreb, Croatia.—Four ban- Td 3 dits were hanged here publicly, ¥ | + one of them placing the rope + | around his neck and springing JX Lk the trap himself when the exe- + | cutioner faltered. The executions were the first . In Croatia in 13 years. They + were at the instance of General . Zivkovitch, who recently be- * came premier in the sweeping . government changes made by 3 1 .. 5. King Alexander, The executioner and his as- sistant failed three times to adjust the noose around Mrba- nez's neck, whereupon the lat- ter seized the rope and brushed the executioners aside, saying: “Get out of here. Your hands Trier ieieieleelerlenteslae tee} Toto to tS I rv ey vy Toul To 0 0 0 0. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 yy yy 4 and brain are frozen, Let me ++ complete the job myself.” + Then he placed the rope + around his neck calmly and 1 kicked the trap. TT TT TTT ' SERVE SENTENCE; CLAIM INNOCENCE | Proof. Berlin.~In 1914 two men, whose | names are Lehing and Schmidt, were | sentenced in a Delmenhorst court to | 14 years’ imprisonment after being convicted on a charge of having com- mitted a murder while robbing a Del- In 1921 they were re- | leased from prison, their having been shortened because of good behavior. Immediately upon being freed they set about the apparently impossible task of proving that they were innocent of the crime for which they spent seven years in jail. Now, however, after another seven vears, during which they talked to sentences | | Germans Now Start Hunt for | | | | | | | tained sworn affidavits from three peo- ple asserting that they were miles away from the scene of the robbery at the time that it was taking place. A woman by the name of Haschinsky testified before the criminal court in Oldenburg that she had met and talked with the two men in a shop in Bremen at five o'clock on the day of the mur- der; it was at five o'clock that the murder took place. A married couple likewise recalled under oath that they | had met the men on the street in | A fourth witness, who it is believed return to Delmenhorst until the fol- lowing day, is now being sought. When | and Schmidt intend to apply for the compensation to which German law entitles all persons unjustly convicted. | Twins at Minnesota U. Puzzle to Teachers Minneapolis, Minn. — “Nip” and “Tuck” Teeter, twin brothers attend- ing the University of Minnesota, find | it most convenient always to have a “double” available, Students and faculty members have despaired of ever being able to Is | tinguish between the Teeter boys. | When Tuck turned in a stellar per- | formance in a wrestling match against Iowa university, Nip was con- gratulated on all sides. Friends say Tuck never turns down an invitation to a party because if | he can't go Nip can, and nobody will | be the wiser. Both brothers deny, however, that they fill in “dates” for each other, Recently the were aroused suspicions of the over rumors science, writes Nip's chemistry examinations while Nip fills in for Tuck in history tests. Or it may be Tip who likes science and who threw the Iowa wrestler— that’s where they have the edge on professors and fellow students, Fight With an Eagle Sarasota, Fla.—Ed Zwinggii, a dairy- man near here, brought to Sarasota a story of a finish fight between a six-months-old Plymouth Rock rooster and an eagle in which the cock came | | out victorious. | He exhibited the wounded rooster | in support of the tale. He and his | wife heard a commotion in the barn- | said, and distinguishing a feathered bodies, yard, he whirling went to investigate just as both com- melee of | [ | batants collapsed. | The eagle, measuring six feet one | inch from wing to wing tip, was dead. | hurt. | whom the | for mount- ing, expressed the belief that the | rooster delivered a chance blow in a | eagle | The rooster was badly A local taxidermist, to ole carcass was brought le spot just as the vulner: | swooped down. Bothered by Conscience, | { | \ Pays for Stolen Melons | Holland, Mich.—The common chilg- | hood prank of stealing na | weighed so heavily upon the mind of | a Hollander that after years of smit- | ten conscience he has at last puid | for the stolen fruit. A “G0-cent piece was contained in an anonymous letter | postmarked “Holland” received br | James Kollen of Overisel. A single paragraph of expanation was inclosed: “Toward swiping watermelons when a Thanks.” "Viuii vicar did it! ESTORES strength and brings back the old appetite with a vengeance. That's the story the world over . . . wherever PERUNA is known. It’s the IRON in it . . . together with certain roots and herbs, known and used by doctors everywhere. Tales of stubborn coughs due to colds, of shattered health, lost weight, sapped energy all have the same happy ending when this good old internal medicine plays its part. PERUNA brings results, almost with the very first spoonful, You’ll crave your meals; you'll digest and assimilate food better; you'll build weight . . . good, firm, useful flesh day after day. One bottle usually works wonders. Stimulates . « . actually seems to rejuvenate, Just you try it and see. [ U | A GARR PER i Photos Reveal Gaits of Horses and Dogs For the purpose of investigation and observation by scientists and horse there is being pre- pared for exhibition at the American Museum of Natural History in New York the skeletons of a racing horse and a running dog. mounted side as in action, offering opportunity for comparison of the respective gaits of the two ani- breeders, These are to be side by mals. Before starting the work on the horse Doctor Chubb devoted a great deal of time tc studying the anatomy of the horse, particularly while the horse was in action on the track, but thorough enough and certain questions arose in the doctor's mind which he this was not regarded as | concluded could only he settled by a series of pictures taken from a point over a horse's back while the animal was in motion. It do this at the race tracks so various experiments were tried at the mu- seum. By means of ropes stretched from the museum roof to the base of a tree some T0 yards away, a block and fall, Doctor Chubb hoisted him- self up 50 feet into a painter's chair, was impossible to from which point, with his camera wedged between his feet, he took sev- eral photographs of a race horse speeding over a roadway below. Designed especially to burn a grade of coal of comparatively value, a huge engine constructed for the Northern Pacific railway is 125 feet long, weighs more than 1,000,000 pounds and has 34 wheels, including the 12 on the tender, says Popular Me- chanics Magazine. An interesting fea- low-heating ture is the mechanical steker which will crush, deliver, and distribute about the huge firebox, more than 22 tons of coal an hour. It is expected that the locomotive will be haul, in one train, cars that are now made up into two. able to Come Seben Officer—Yes, you honor, it's a case of “shake well before using.” Judge—Oh, a patent medicine case? Officer—No, sir, a dice game. ete ees t————————— - 1 Wrights :2:%Pills “THE TONIC-LAXATIVE" Hotel Kilkeary During your stayin PITTSBURGH enjoy that homelike atmosphere Right in the heart of Pittsburgh’s business and theatrical district, you can find that congenial atmosphere at home . Rates— $2 Single, $3 — $4 $5 Double. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers