LDWELL'S THREE RULES ell watched the results of for 47 years, and believed ter how careful people are Ith, diet and exercise, con- 1 occur from time to time. rtance, then, is how to treat omes. Dr. Caldwell always of getting as close to nature ence his remedy for consti- nild vegetable compound. It n the most delicate system abit forming. - never did approve of dras- 1d purges. He did not believe od for human beings to put stem. Use Syrup Pepsin for members of the family in biliousners, sour and crampy | breath, no appetite, head- break up fevers and colds. today, at any drugstore and three rules of health: Keep , the feet warm, the bowels free trial bottle, just write in,” Dept. BB, Moaticello, sent stage of the game the » isn’t in it with the wid- S. bed Wire Cuts 's Balsam of Myrrh irst bottle if not suited. Alf dealers, Eh —— = Upward Path kiss you it makes ne I man.” re trying to get to heaven pot Comiort juick relief of hot, tired, ng, smarting feet shake ootzEase, the antiseptic owder, into your shoes. It e friction from the shoes kes walking or dangag a Sold everywhere. “Allen's ot:Ease EVERY DAY »» Free Trial package and a =Ease Walking Doll, Address, ’s Foot = Ease, Le Roy, N. Y. hopp’ng Note match polite- “I'd have trying to ned the woman, here.” e your sample, said the eriously pursued affords nt.—Seneca, kes] io veeler a coated tongue, fetid rid skin gives evidence ich—try Phillips Milk of ited with this perfect an- helps the system keep eet, That every stomach es. Take it whenever a brings any discomfort, k of Magnesia has won 'sement. And convinced n and women they didn’t ition.” Don’t diet, and just resnember Phillips xe, and always effective, Phillips is important; ft genuine product, “Milk has been the U. 8. regis nark of the Charles H nical Co. and its pre- les H. Phillips since 1875 [ILLIPS F UMIGATING CLOSET PROTECTS CLOTHING . TE i (Tretarcy by the United states Department of Agriculture.) If you have a.roomy closet with a tight-fitting door and smooth uncracked walls, you can use it for fumigating wool garments before storing them over the summer. carbon disulphid or carbon tetrachlorid will free clothing from any moth in- festation that may have occurred be- fore the garments were given atten- tion. If the closet is not needed the clothing, after being fumigated, may be left in it until wanted again. Or the fumigation may be done as an ex- tra precaution and the clothes then wrapped in tight packages or placed in trunks or cedar chests for safe keeping. The bureau of entomology of the United States Department of Agricul- ture gives the following directions for fumigating a closet: Since the gas formed by evaporation Fumigation with | T— Closet Prepared for Fumigation Against Moths. of either carbon disulphid or carbon tetrachlorid is heavier than air, fumi- gation is done by placing the liquid in a shallow dish on a shelf of the closet, as shown in the illustration. closet 2by 5 by 7 feet, use about three- fourths of a cupful of carbon disulphid or about one and a half cupfuls of car- bon tetrachlorid. As soon as the liquid has been poured into the dish shut the door and seal cracks about it with gummed paper, or paste on strips of firm paper, using a flour paste. Seal- ing the door prevents the gas from es- caping rapidly and keeps clothes moths from crawling into the closet by way of the cracks and offsetting the good of the fumigation, Carbon tetrachlorid has the great advantage over carbon disulphid that its gas is neither explosive nor inflam- mable, hence there is no risk of fire in its use. NATIONAL DISHES ALWAYS POPULAR Hungarian Goulash Because of Its Tasty Ingredients. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Every nation has a dish that is es- pecially popular with a great many people, either because of its flavor, or the native ingredients used, or a method of cooking that has become widely used in that country. Thus we hear of Italian “polenta,” “rizotto,” or “raviola”; of Armenian “kebabs”; of Austrian “Wienerschnitzel”; of Eng- lish meat pie, or Irish stew. Some of these national dishes came into being among rural people, and are indica: tive of the kinds of foods obtainable close at hand; many of them are due to combinations of flavor and methods of cooking used with the less tender cuts of meat to make them palatable. And so, in final analysis, Hungarian goulash appears to be just a special kind of stew, using meats that are best cooked by slow, moist heat, com- bined with vegetables and seasonings that not only appeal to the Hungarian but to the cosmopolitan palate. Various recipes are found for making it, per- haps because in different sections of Hungary there were differences in ob- tainable foods. Here is a very tasty goulash vouched for by the bureau of home economics as being not only good to eat and smell, but the “real thing” in Hungarian preferences. 3, 1b. round steak 2 cups boiling 8 1b. lean pork water 34 1b. salt pork 2 bay leaves 1 cup diced carrots 2 whole cloves 1% cups diced po- 1% tsp. salt tatoes 11% tbs. flour 4 small onions, 1 small green sliced pepper, sliced Wipe the fresh pork and beef with a damp cloth and cut into cubes. Cut the salt pork into very small pieces and brown it in a skillet until crisp. Add the other meat which has been sprinkled with the flour, and sear the meat on all sides, stirring frequently to prevent burning. Add the onion and the pepper and cook for a few minutes. Turn this mixture into a saucepan, and all the other ingredi- ents except the potatoes and the salt, cover, and simmer for 40 to 50 min- utes. Then add the potatoes and the salt, and continue to simmer the mix- ture in a covered vessel until the meat is tender. Remove the bay leaves. Turn the goulash in a serving dish and sprinkle with chopped parsley. Strawberry Jelly Strawberries make good jam or pre- serves, used whole, but the juice alone will not “jell” like many other fruit juices, because it is deficient in pectin. There is a way of remedying this dif- ficulty, if you are fond of the delicious flavor of fresh strawberries in every form. Pectin may be added, the bu- reau of home economics says. You can extract the pectin yourself from apples or citrus fruit, or you can buy the commercial kind. If the berries are especially lacking in acid, one tea- spoonful of lemon juice may be added for each cup of strawberry juice just before the jelly test is reached. The lemon juice also helps to keep the bright red color. Directions for mak- ing the necessary pectin may be ob- tained by writing to the United States Department of Agriculture, DON'T STOOP OVER TO PREPARE EGGS Housewife Should Assume Correct Posture in Work. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) At this time of year when eggs are plentiful and many good dishes are be- ing made with them, there is nothing unusual in seeing a housewife bent over a table vigorously using an egg beater. It’s too bad, however, for any woman to assume such a bad posture for doing any of her frequently re- curring household tasks, for by repeti- tion she trains her muscles and bones into whatever position she habitually takes. It would be an easy thing for her, in the first place, to stand with back straight and still beat eggs, if she simply thinks about how she is standing. She might help herself tc maintain a good position while at work at the kitchen table if she had a set of blocks made to put under the legs of the table and raise it to a more effective and comfortable work- ing height. Extension workers among farm women in many states have recently been stressing the importance of good posture and working levels suited to the individual. The illustration, taken by the United States Department oi Don’t Stoop Over to Beat Eggs or to Do Other Household Tasks. Agriculture, shows a woman in Hamp- | shire county, Massachusetts, demon- strating the effect of having to bend over a work table. Other demonstra- tions have included correct and incor- rect posture while washing dishes, mopping floors, oven, and other common activities in the ordinary farm household routine labors. Attention must be given to posture no matter what work is being done. The reward of any effort to improve the height of working surfaces and household equipment generally in or- der to assure good posture at work is For a | handling food at the | a noticeable lessening of fatigne and ! often a reduction in the time spent on | a giver task. The net result is of course greater leisure and increased ability to enjoy and use it to advan- ' tage. MARY WAS WHEN { MARRIED {© by D. J. Walsh.) RS. JOHNSON gazed out thoughtfully at the misty tops of the Blue Ridge mountains, but she did not see the dim blueness. She was thinking of the wedding of her daughter, Mary. “l reckon,” she murmured, half- aloud after a long interval, “that there is something mighty wrong about me. 1 didn't feel like erying and taking on when Mary went off on her wed- ding trip. Will is a good, steady boy and has a home ready for her; he is a bit stubborn, but there's nothing mean about him and [I like a man to be decided. Poor Mary, how she sobbed and cried when she kissed me goodby. 1 felt real ashamed—what’s that, Victoria?” she asked, turning as a kinky black head surmounted by a frilled white cap was stuck timidly arcund the door. “How yo’ feelin’ Hopes yo’ ain't takin’ on about Mis§ Mary. 8he suah felt bad—mighty bad—when theyall went away”—Vic- toria had now propelled her huge bulk now, ma'am? into the room and held out a glass of | | Iced lemonade sympathetically. “Jess’ drink this, honey, and yoall will feel bettah, yassum, ma'am.” Mrs. Johnson accepted the glass contritely. Faithful old Victoria had more feeling than she possessed. She resumed her task of setting the dainty bedroom to rights. In the excitement preceding the wedding many little du- ties had been swept aside and her housewifely soul longed to restore the usual meticulous order to her belong- ings. “I came right up, my dear,” cried a high-pitched voice. “I just knew how you'd be taking on. [I just want you to reread Emerson’s ‘Compensation.’ | I know you will find something in it to comfort you.” Miss Martha tip- toed over to the window down the shade. Mrs. Johnson, ashamed of her own apathy, thought that they could hard- ly be more sympathetic if there had been a death in the house. “I thought,” she remarked, “that I'd tidy up things a bit—" The long, aristocratic hand of the visitor was dropped gently on her shoulder. “Yes, yes, it will take your mind off your loneliness; we are com- ing over to sit on your piazza tonight 80 you won't mourn.” Meanwhile Mary, on her wedding trip, found herself wondering over her own callous nature. She adored her mother, but she had not left her for long. When the pleasant trip with the man of her choice had ended she would return to the town where she had been born and live within a block of her old home. “How 1 shall hate to go home to get my clothes and lit- tle belongings,” she thought, “Mother. will feel so dreadfully that I shall al- most regret my marriage and feel that I was unbearably selfish in leav- ing her. Life is very perplexing at times, for she wanted me to marry Will, but—" “Not regretting your marriage, al- ready, honey?” Will's tone was joe- ular, but he looked sharply at his bride's clouded face. No man enjoys the feeling that he is not all-efficient. Mary roused herself, but the feel- ing that her mother suffered during her absence almost spoiled her honey- | moon. “You see, Will, I have been everything to mother and it is a great loss to her. don’t feel like going down to the dance when she is at home crying her poor heart out.” Will snapped his fingers nervously as he looked his bewilderment. “But she was satisfied to have you marry me. I have a good bungalow ready for you and you'll have every com- fort. In a year more the peach or- | chard will be bearing heavily and that means a doubled income—" “Oh, it isn’t the money part of ft. You don’t understand women, Will, You see, mother lives in the past. I feel perfectly certain that at this mo- | over | ment mother is sitting looking my baby pictures or grieving over lit- tle curls that she has saved.” So Mary refused to join the others down in the hotel ballroom and eried herself to sleep while she berated her- self for her own hardness of heart. Will unable to see her viewpoint, was distinctly sulky. her away by main force and he felt that it was an effront to him to greet him with tear-stained face and sub- dued manner. “I always supposed a honeymoon was a blissful time, but I'll sure be glad when she gets back where she can console her mother,” he thought. So the days dragged and finally | Mary persuaded her husband to take her home two days sooner. “Mother writes very bravely, but, of course, I can read between the lines and I know how she is longing for me. If we could take the ten o'clock train we would get in Crozet at three o'clock in the morning.” “Just as you like.” Will still felt that things were out of tune and he was glad to move on. Mrs. Johnson was sleeping quietly in her sleeping-porch on the first floor when she was aroused by a light step on the piazza. “I know you are lying awake, mother, so you won't be startled.” Mary was rapidly approach- ing the couch. Mrs. Johnson opened her eyes with a guilty sensation. Mary had grieved 0 much over the separation that she bad cut short her honeymoon smd and pulled | He had not carried | | was becoming even happler tha had but recently passed him on the highway. The idea is that a man who drives fast loses head and they are making the ishment fit | the crime.” Precaution Recently a little boy 1 been told that the stork had lef im a baby brother. When his grandmother THE PATTON COURIER she g had slept through the oighis slug- | gishly. When the two women had gone into | Mrs. Johnson's bedroom Mary scru- tinized her mother’s face. “Why, you are looking splendid; your eyes are not red and you 100K so rested.” “1 haven't had much time to fret. | You see, I thought I'd get all the peaches for both of us done up while vou were away and I have packed up all your things and they are in place.” “That was just what I came home to do. | didn’t want you to grieve over every little treasure that was filled with memories of my childhood, and what in the world made you work over the peaches alone? Don’t you | know that I want to do for you now that I shall be at home without any office work to keep my days filled up?” “I love to do things for you, Mary. That is the greatest pleasure I have, I would have been perfectly content- ed during your absence if I hadn't felt that you—”" Mrs. Johnson paused ab- ruptly while her face flushed. Mary looked at her sharply and suddenly her small face crinkled up into a smile of comprehension. “You | are a fraud, pure and simple. 1 don’t believe you have fretted for me one bit. Mother, have we both been won- dering over our own lack of proper feeling? 1 just dreaded taking away my clothes and leaving you deserted and here you have been having a per- | fectly good time looking forward to my return.” After a moment Mrs. Johnson | joined in the gale of laughter which | was now convulsing the girl. “Mary, | child, I'm afraid we are both too | practical to spend the precious mo- ments of life In sobbing over imag. | inary griefs. We are going to spend | the rest of our lives within a stone’s | | throw of each other and will really see more of each other because you | will no lorger have to work at stenog- raphy. [I could not see hut what life n ever, | unnatural but 1 felt mother—" Mary giggled in a most unmatronly | manner. “We'll never tell a soul,” she | began, “except Will. 1 absolutely | spoiled our trip by fretting over your | supposed loneliness.” that 1 was un | At that moment Will knocked. | “Well, you don’t look as though you | had suffered so much,” he began, ey- ing the sweet-faced woman, who looked very attractive in her soft trail- ing neglizee of palest pink. “Mary was so depressed—" They gayly explained the situation to him while he gazed. at them in a masculine stupefaction. “And don’t tell a soul, Will. You see, we shall live within a stone’s throw, after all,” ended Mary. “I couldn't tell what I don’t yet understand, but I’m glad to know that Mary isn’t regretting her bargain. 1 was beginning to wonder—" “Miss Mary, I'se suab-glad to see vou home again. How is yo’ all afeel- in’? Yore pooh mother has about fretted herself sick ovar youh. Is yo’ all gwine to stay heah the rest of the night?” “No, Victoria, we are going to the bungalow, just a stone's throw away,” laughed Mary, jumping up and enjoy- ing the scandalized amazement on her old nurse's face. Motorists Must Watch Their Step in China We do not suggest literal emulation, says the Detroit Free Press, neverthe- less the following comment from the Los Angeles Times is a reminder that they really do some things very well in China: “Automobiles are still tures in some sections the rwdes governing t! are rather strict. Rigl of Pekin there is a st speed of 15 miles an he According to the stor those who exceed this rate are likely to' have their heads cut off and ex- hibited on posts along the road. It must have a depressing effect upon a motorist to suddenly come upon the blood-dripping bean of some guy who strange crea- f China and eir movement the shadow etch where a r is the limit. f an observer showed him and intently at it in its little clothes. “But, grandma, didn’t it catch cold coming?” he asked anxiously, “Qh, no, I don’t think so,” his grandmother, “Well, anyway, you'd better rub his chest and give him some nasty medi- cine,” said Bobby from his vast ex- perience, the baby, gazed long replied New Helicogyre Tested Trials of the helicog) the new invention of Signor Vitt Isacco of Italy, were made recently the Brit- | ish air ministry, According to the new inventor helicogyres are machines ending ver- v point in ntally. The It for the capable of rising and des tically, of remaining at : midair, and of flying hori: machine being tested was | alr ministry. Dogs Gain Favor in Turkey Less than a generation ago a dog was anathema to the Turk—Constan- tinople’s many mongrels wore prover- bial—but now they are de rigueur as pets, which shows how quickly: Mus- tapha Kemal’s modernizing program is working, says Living Age. He him- self has been photographed with a half-dozen dogs, “I Never Worry when theyre in the Whippet ” This low-priced car has every modern feature Jor driving safety and dependable performance DVANCED, modern engineering through- out the entire chassis of the new Superior Whippet is responsible for smoothness and relia- bility of performance, consummate ease of han- dling, and maximum driving safety. Whippet’s big four-wheel brakes are of the posi- tive, mechanical type—acting quickly and surely. Both the Whippet Four and Whippet Six have considerably greater braking area than any of their Other important Whippet advan- tagesinclude extra long wheelbase, oversize balloon competitors. tires, full force-feed lubrication, silent timing chain, “Finger-Tip Control,” higher compression engine, invar-strut pistons, and, in the Six, a heavy seven- bearing crankshaft. Line includes Coach, Roadster, 4- passenger Roadster, Collegiate WHIPPET 6 SEDAN Small Down Payment Balance in 12 easy monthly payments SEE YOUR NEAREST DEALER Line includes Coach, Coupe, De Luxe Sedan, Roadster. All Willys- Overland prices Jo.b. Toledo, Ohicy and specifications sube ect to change without notice, J 4 »“ " w WHIPPET 4 SEDAN Small Down Payment Balance in12 easy monthly payments SEE YOUR NEAREST DEALER Coupe, De Luxe Sedan, Roadster, Touring, Commercial Chassis. WILLYS- OVERLAND, Inc. TOLEDO, OHIO Alfonso’ s New Name Cosden Cobb, the millionaire to- bacco planter of Kentucky, said on disembarking from the Berengaria in New York: “I met the king of Spain in Lon- don. He isn’t as gay in dress as he used to was, but he is gayer than ever in spirit. “When engagement of Primo de Rivera he gave a gay laugh. “‘Oh,” he said, ‘you musn’t call me King Alfonso any more. My name is Secundo de Rivera now. The Rebel “Patient put out of hospital for re- fusing to be weighed,” reads a current news item. “I got tired of being dragged out of bed,” he declared. Tired? Doesn't he mean weigh-worn? —Farm and Fireside. Famine and gluttony alike drive na- ture away from the heart of man.— Theodore Parker. RI BOR: There are three trying periods in a woman's life: when the girl matures to womanhood, when a woman gives birth to her first child, when a woman reaches middle age. At these times Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound helps to re- store normal health and vigor. LYDIA E. 'PINKHAMS . © VEGETABLE COMPOUND LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED. CO. LYNN, MASS, PEP/ The foe of PEPis Con- stipation. Th The foe of andthe Friend malol Ps Wrights INDIAN Pills “THE TONIC- pei Pearl St. « N. XY. City, At Drusgists or 372 W.N. u., PITTSBURGH, NO. 28-1925. I congratulated him on the | Grass-Hook Might Help to Mend Broken Heart “Germany paid the Allies a billion and a half marks in reparations last | year,” said Representative Homer | Hoch, of Kansas, “That's a lot of money, it's money that Germany can ill spare, but the only sympathy that goes out to her | like the feed man’s, “A feed man went to a neighbor's house one morning, knocked, and said: “ ‘Is Jake in? “ ‘Goodness, no!” said Mrs, Jake. ‘Haven't you heard? Poor Jake passed | out this morning at half past three.’ | “‘Well, well, well! That sure is] bad news. Why, I didn't even know | old Jake was sick. | “‘It was very sudden. den, indeed.’ i “‘Dear me! I can hardly bear it. I'm heartbroken, to tell you the truth. in her hard luck : | Very sud- By the way, did Jake say anything about that grass hook he borrowed from me, befare he died? "—Detroit Free Press. Value of Resistance No doubt a world in which matter never got out of place and became dirt, in which iron had no flaws and wood no cracks, in which gardens had no weeds and food grew ready cooked, in which clothes never wore out and washing was as easy as advertise- ments describe it, in which the right word was not hard to find and rules had no exceptions, and things never went wrong, would be a much easier place to live in. But for purposes of training and development it would be worth nothing at all. It is the re- : sistance fhat puts us on our mettle; it is the conquest of the reluctant istuff that educates the worker. I wish you enough difficulties to keep you and make you strong and skillful, —Henry Van Dyke, To Be—Or Not to Be Workingman—Can 1 find a job here? Joss—Let me see! Here's a man who isn’t here today. If he isn’t here tomorrow either, I'll send him away and you can get his job, It is human nature to attribute the success of others to chance. There is nothing so like a wise man las a fool who holds his tongue. In Daily Use THOUSANDS of women have come the hair live and glossy. Soap 25¢. Ointment 25¢. and 50c. Address:* PEF Cuticura Shaving Stick 25c. over all the world to regard Cuticura as the true natural aid to a lovely skin and attractive hands and hair. Regular daily use of Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment when required, purifies and beautifies the skin, cleanses the scalp and keeps Talcum 25c¢. Sample each free. ‘Cuticura,” Dept. B6, Malden, Mass. Be Seated “‘Inquirin’ Ike Edwards,’ the walk- in’ questionnaire, asks more foolish questions than any other 19 folks put together,” says old Dan Dapple. “The only thing he ain't asked to date is whether frogs, when they sit down, used toad stools.”—Farm and Fire side, Must Have Brains He—They say fish is good brain food. She—Yes; but it’s useless to eat it if vou have no brain to feed, > oulellus APARTMENT HOTEL; Beautifully furnished apartments of 1.2 &3 rooms ~ located in the SCHENLEY PARK DISTRICT DEAL LO ON ON Pe BOULEV ARDS AT 245 MELWOOD AVE PITTSBURGH OWNERSHIP S STORE —B{ TL owner “10 WE able ea d LADIES READY Greensburg rare bargain. Price $15,( 7 AUTO AGE Ne ky ATROBE, PA. : oWIe rs will » P-15 GAS ST ATION=INDIANA, Rqing Prope 23 al 1 PA. ; well known 5.000. File P-15489, AT MARKET ] ( 000 : bar- n pr P COAL ‘AND BUILDERS SU PPLY | Spring wor Jerse] buy, | Incl 0 2 0 25. THE APPLE-COT, E COMPANY | 1002 Transportation Bldg., Detroit, Mich. | : MOODY'S ‘W DIME BANK | Selling thou banks, stores, om street Two samples | per 1,000. DAN MO ) DY, St., Chicago, I. | w Wonderful Opportunity ; and women 1 & rge pr 5 sts 6c, sells q < r $1 i now. N.Y TeBe ard Lisbon St. Lewiston, Me. Hob-Nobs. “Will Make You Peppy”; “vou w v vy a wor send $1 for (2 ed veland, Ohije. l AND INSTRUC- | found three bee- [4% | ISTOL VERMONT. | oo ASH. FOR YOUR PROPERTY j Fe arn ss or residence N matter where Te hi cate Free inform n. Interna-~ tional Niared: Co.,, Ford Bldg.. Detroit. Help Wanted—Male, Fema $20 108 stamping names on kevche nple and instructions 26c, P. Keytag, Ft Worth, Teg.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers