end them just loment you've the signal, or 5, OF Soreness. “3 serious when Sayer Aspirin. hes, neuralgic fering caused and so safe as They make directions in IN lester of Sa Simple sician es Natural le Well | by the physician ries considers it a ish Dr. Dobson’s ujol. nurses themselves jou to use Nujol the poisons out of 1 have them), be- ns are what make depressed, low in fe to use Nujol, , medicine; it con= o drugs; it cannot est baby: it forms n-fattening. Nujol al lubrication. iid Mean te You weeks we have had * s from people all lling us how Nujol to happiness and g their bodies in- bu can buy Nujol res at any drug a few cents, and it cel like a million ight. Use it regu- ks, and learn the piness that comes tful health! Many Uses se of wood in this l. The next in im- r, then come fencing, wood wood and mine elpful Remedy for 8 bation and Diarrhoed Feverishness ,0SS OF SLEEP 1¢ there! therefrom ini Simite Sime Signature of TAUR CO NEW YORK) ——— recipe on the f you see Chas. gnature, it is It is harmless infant; doctors m the recipe on mild it is, and e systems. But storia until g THE PATTON COURIER 000 BELLE’S BEAUTY SECRET REVEALED 0-0000000000000000000000000 (© by D. J. Walsh.) ELLE NORTON jerked the bu- reau over into the opposite cor- ner from where it had always stood. Instead of coming over her shoulder the light from the win- dow now fell directly upon her face. She had a queer jumpy feeling in her breast. It was true she was losing her looks, such as they were. Mrs. Polk had told her so just this afternoon when they met at Mary Graham's. Mrs. Polk always gave tongue to any- thing that popped into her head. She herself was marvelously smooth- skinned at eighty and she declared she had never used anything but soap and water on her face. It was patent Belle at eighty would be a sight to behold. Anyway, wasn't there the Blossom beauty shoppe? She'd trust to that to fix her up somehow. She ran down- stairs to the telephone. A moment later she had made an appointment morning, rather in- she ought to be next because for ten the convenient doing her soliciting for the member- ship drive then. She'd have to tuck that soliciting in somewhere before the day ended. Still, nothing mattered so much as that Edgar Sheldon shouldn't come back after twelve vears’ absence and find her looking “awful.” Jelle was punctual to her appoint- ment next morning. She sank into the chair and let deft-fingered Martha Blossom do soothing things to her scalp, her face, her throat. This beauty doctoring business was certainly rest- ful. She drew a deep breath and re- laxed for the first time since Ella went to the hospital for an operation and sent the twins over for Aunt Belle to look after. Right on the heels of that had come Aunt Annie, high blood- pressured and dieting, for a long visit. Then mother had had a touch of lum- bago. The day she had been too busy to prepare anything but creamed cod- fish on toast for lunch, Nell Appleby with a motoring party had dropped in. To top all Edgar Sheldon had writ- ten after years. of silence to say that he was coming back for a few days and wanted especially to see her. That might mean anything or nothing. But it certainly did involve entertaining all the old crowd for his sake. Such thoughts as these ran through her head as Martha Blossom’s delicate finger-tips essayed to smooth out lines, creases, hollows. Lunch to get after this treatment and a full afternoon to follow. But, at least, she'd look de- cent and that always upholds a wom- an. She looked into the ‘mirror. “Oh, dear! I'm twisting my face again. That undoes all you've accomplished, doesn’t it?” Martha Blossom smiled encouragingly and patted on more astringent cream. 3y midafternoon Belle realized that her facial done much for her after all. Mary Graham had suggested that she take a tonic. That tooth she should have had filled long ago tuning up. But she couldn't take time to the dentist's. She simply had to get a pitcher of broth massage hadn’t was to go ready for Ella's supper. Ella was home from the hospital now, in fine shape, but still in need of a little coddling. At ten minutes to six Belle snatched the blue pitcher of chicken broth and started on a run for her sister's house, two blocks away. Ella was pleased with the broth. She was always with everything, for nature and life had molded her in a soft, amiable, charming way. With her sunny hair and color scarcely impaired was a distinct fretted Belle. your breath,” pleased she dark, by appendicitis, contrast to slim, “Sit and suggested Ella. “Can’t. Mother isn’t feeling She's sent for Doctor Pratt.” “Why doesn’t she try Doctor Sev- erance, as I told her?” asked Ella. “Dr. Pratt is an old dear, but he lets mother eat too many things she shouldn’t. You're not looking partic- ularly well, dear. Why don’t you see Martha Blossom?” “Good gracious! I did, hours, just this morning.” “Oh, well. Maybe you need a tonic,” sighed Ella. That sigh was the last straw. hurried away. She hadn’t gone heard a persistent down catch well, for two elle a block when she “Mieuw!” behind her. Looking round, she saw that Ella's yellow cat Wuz was following her. She attempted to drive him back. He stopped. She went on. Again again at her heals. She was near a corner, where traffic was thick, and she must cross the street. That cat! Ella thought the world of him. If she could get hold of him she would carry him back home. Jut Wuz was wily. When Belle’s hand almost touched him he scampered out the crosswalk. Belle took after She heard the grindirg of brakes, great red truck loem over her. struck the aspsalt with a “Mieuw!” Wuz upon him. saw a Then she slap. Traffic paused as strong arms lifted her. From the doorway of a great, yel- low, square-built house a shrill old voice was screaming: “Bring her to me!” And that’s where they took her, to Mrs. An hour quieted down. Ella Anna Shaw had gone mother's. Doctor Severance, big, Polk's. ater the excitement had had been told. right over to kind- Polk | applied to the whole section in the dixies had the largest circulation, | ly, deep voiced, had assured Mrs. that there wasn't a thing the matter with her patient but shock, a few bruises and general exhaustion. But he insisted that she must stay in bed for a week at least, see nobody, sleep much and eat nourishing food. It was delightful in the great old- fashioned room with the scent of rose leaves rising from the glossy linen and golden silk coverlid. Mrs. Polk the perfect hostess. She enjoyed hav- ing somebody to do for, the stir of extra telephone calls, flowers and visitors. And Anna, Mrs. Polk's valued maid, delighted in fixing the invalid’s tray three times daily, with between. All the two women and Doc- tor Severance demanded of Belle was that she be a good child and carry out their orders. A good child! And it was so long since Belle had thought of her- self as being anything but frazzled and frayed and run down at heel. Besides, she was learning that Mrs. Polk wasn't a sharp-tongued old critie, but a big-souled, big-minded, big- hearted woman, generous to the degree. That week was a lovely dream. Then one afternoon Belle arose. She looked in the glass and started with sur prise. She had gained pounds, there wasn't a line in her face, luster had come back to her hair and eyes. Doctor Severance took her home. And there she found an ovation, flow- ers, cards of greeting, chicken, all Just as if she had been away on a journey. The following evening Mary Gra- ham entertained for Edgar Sheldon. Belle met him there for the first time. old and he same way. “You've got darned pretty, he said admiringly. had the caressing | Belle,” red roses little black' crepe frock, Those roses had come from Doctor Severance. He was a recent widower and he was try- ing to make her believe he needed her. This knowledge was beautifying Belle as much as rest and good feed- ing, for it brought her happiness, the happiness she thought she had missed altogether. Term “Dixie” Ascribed to Old Currency Note Up the river on the steamboats came the $10 notes. For all steamboatmen when in New Orleans did their bank- ing at the Banque des Citoyens. They were printed, these $10 notes, in Eng- lish on one side and in French on the other for the convenience of both the Creoles and Auglo-Saxons. In large letters on the back of each note was ten. You could see the dix before you saw the note, it was said. “A dix note is always good,” re- marked a steamboat mate in Cincin- nati, counting his pay money. “You're right,” responded the clerk. “A ‘dixie’ fellows say down South.” Unlettered as they were they pro- nounced the DIX as it was spelled. The town where the “dixies” came from they called “dixie’s land.” “I'm going down the river after dixies,” said the flatboatmen, of whom there were still a goodly the rivers as late as 1850. “I bought this horse down in the dixie country,” remarked a traveler on | the wharf at Louisville. and the sectional of the southern people became more manifest with the dark- ening of the war clouds, the term “dixie’s land” came gradually to be As time homogeneity went on From there on, a step only was needed to extend the borders until it braced all the United States territory south of the Mason-Dixon line.—From “The Pageant of Pockets,” by Garnett Laidlaw. Schoolgirl Howlers The following school girl “howlers have been collected by a Overseas: “The whole world, was | snacks | last | | | He was even better looking than of | elle failed to thrill and wondered | why. Then she looked down at the rich | she was wearing with her | engraved “DIX,” the French word for | is bon-bon, as these French | number on | which | em- | writer in | except the Unit- | ed States, lies in the temperance zone,” says one school girl. To the | question, “What king came after Queen Elizabeth?” an alert young | thing replied: “Philip of Spain, but | she turned him down.” { Q. What do you understand by suf- fering for righteousness? A. Having to go to Sunday school. Q. What is a herbaceous border? | A. A herbaceous boarder is one who will not eat meat.—Toronto Globe. | winter Aztec Sport According to archeologists, a game | that was a strange mixture of soccer and basketball was popular with the Mayas and Aztecs. Huge stone rings were set up on walls, and the player striking a rubber ball only with wrist, shoulder, elbow or hip, would attempt to send it through them. This was cen- | turies before rubber was known in Eu- | rope. For protection the players wore leather pads on the parts which had contact with the ball. The game pro- vided the major sport of the times, and great amphitheaters surrounded the courts on which the teams played. | Vibration Effects A certain amount of vibration is set up by a dog or other animal in cross- ing a suspension bridge, Such vibra- tion might be sufficient to damage a bridge in the case of a large body of men all keeping step together, and with soldiers the order is often given to break step while going over a bridge. A musical instrument sets up sound vibrations and in extreme in- stances these vibrations might be suf- ficiently powerful to break windows. ! (Prepared by the United States Department | should be completely screened to keep | Curried Chicken With Carrots Shredded Good Every housewife likes to hear of a new way of cooking chicken, which is necessarily one of the most frequently served foods appearing on the menu, especially on the farm where the poul- try yard must do its duty by the fam- ily table. This recipe from India, for curried fowl with carrots and rice, has been tested by the bureau of home economics, United States Department of Agriculture, and found delicious. Many East Indian dishes are flavored with curry powder, and British people | who have lived in India have returned to their native land with a taste for this seasoning, so that gradually we in the West have become acquainted with it. Curried Fowl With Shredded Carrots. | 1 fowl weighing 3 2 cups shredded to 4 Ibs. carrots, cooked 1 quart water 1 tsp. curry | 3% cup sliced onion 11% tsp. salt Flour Disjoint the fowl and simmer in the water to which one teaspoonful of salt has been added. When the fowl is tender, drain it and measure the llquid, For each cupful of liquid, blend two tablespoonfuls of flour with two table- | spoonfuls of fat removed from the top of the broth. Cook the carrots in a small amount of the chicken fat, add the broth, the blended flour, and fat and cook until thickened. Then add the curry and the remaining half tea- spoonful of salt. Remove the skin from the back and legs of the fowl and add the meat and carrots to the sauce. Allow the meat to heat through, tak- ing care that the meat and carrots do { not become broken while stirring. { Serve the chicken with flaky boiled | rice. Pineapple Salad Prepare a pineapple by cutting slices straight across and removing the core with a core cutter, or use canned pine- apple which is already cut in this way. As this is to be served on individual dishes, chill some bleached lettuce and place a large leaf or several small leaves upon each plate. Lay a slice of pineapple upon the leaf and fill the cavity with thick mayonnaise. Use English walnut halves to garnish the pineapple around the edge, using about six pieces. Prune Cookies Mix one beaten egg with one table- spoonful of melted fat. Add one-half teaspoonful of salt, one cup of coco- nut, one-half cup of cooked prunes (drained, stoned and cut in pieces), one-half cupful of chopped nuts and one teaspoonful of lemon juice, Mix and spread in small flat cakes on a cookie sheet. Bake in a moderate oven for fifteen to twenty minutes. school lunch box. Scotch Shortbread Is Delicious for Dessert Justly famed for its delicious flavor, Scotch shortbread is often imported to serve with afternoon tea or bever- ages of any sort, or with fruit for des. sert. In the present state of the but. ter market, which is at its lowest price level in several years, it will pay the housewife to make some shorthrrad herself for home consumption, If carefully stored in a moderately cool place and in a tight container it will keep crisp and good-flavored for sev- eral weeks. The recipe is from the bureau of home economics of the Unit- ed States Department of Agriculture, 31% cups sifted flour ¥% cup sugar 1 cup butter 1% tsp. salt Sift the flour, salt, and sugar on a bread board. Break the butter into small pieces and work into the dry ingredients by pressing with the palm of the hand and the wrist, until there fs a smooth even mixture, dough into a ball and roll out about three-fourths of an Inch thick, Prick well with a fork, and place in a pan with high sides to prevent the short- bread from browning too quickly around the edges. Bake in a very moderate oven, at a or Laperntare be- tween 275 degrees F. 300 degrees F., for 35 minutes, or until a pale amber tint. Allow shortbread to stand an hour or two before serving so that it becomes crisp and thoroughly set. Then break it into small pieces and serve, Scalloped Cabbage and Apples Are Excellent How to cook cabbage in different ways so that the family will eat plenty of this vitamine-rich vegetable through the months when other fresh vegeta- bles are hard to get, is a problem that assumes major *significance for the conscientious housewife in winter time. If you haven't tried cabbage and apples together, you will find the combination to be delicious, and of course your storage room will produce both ingredients for it. The bureau of home econonomics gives the recipe below : 2 quarts shredded 1 tsp. sugar cabbage 2 to 4 tbs, butter 1 quart tart sliced or " other fat buttered crumbs apples 2 tsp. salt br In a 1 greased baking dish place al- ternate layers of the cabbage and apples, seasoning each with salt and fat and sprinkling the sugar on the apples. Over the last layer spread the buttered crumbs. Cover, and bake in a moderate oven for 45 minutes, or until the cabbage and apples are ten- der. Toward the last remove the cov- er so the crumbs can brown. Serve in the baking dish. COLD BOX OUT-OF-DOORS IS CONVENIENT | | | | | | | | These cookies are delicious for the | | | | | A Ons AAA A NR HE AAA AAA or 3 $800 Cold Box for Fond Reachsd From Kitchen. of Agriculture.) During the coldest months of the in some climates it is often possible to keep foods safely if they are stored in a cold box out-of-doors Cold Box for Food, Seen From Outside, but convenient to the a box should be there is kitchen. Such arranged so that circulation of air, but it out fdust and insects. Food should be covered. In very cold weather there is danger of freezing any food ex- posed to out-of-doors temperatures, and so it is unwise to use a cold box for foods that might be injured if frozen. In those cases some spot that is very cold but not freezing in tem- perature may be found for storage, as in a cellar, or a pantry near the kitch- en but not outside. In climates where the winter temperatures vary consid- erahly from day to day, often rising to “Indian summer” periods, the safest place to store foods the year around is in a reliable refrigerator. When the clin ite permits the use of a cold box during the winter sea- son, the type illustrated will be found very practical. The picture was taken by the United States Department of Agriculture on a Virginia farm. The county home demonstration agent sug- gested this improvement in connection with a Kitchen contest. The owner in- wall of the ing the outside of Clapboards ished the Screen shelf, one matct kitchen. house fin- cold box on the outside. wire protected the bottom ! which was otherwise left open | to permit air to circulate. A glass door in the wall near the sink opens directly into the kitchen so that the ! housewife can store her food or take it out of the box very conveniently, stalled a set of slat shelves on the | Make the | & trustee of the | Methodist church in Jersey City. throat | | | | ! | | | | help it,’ i In local |e atholics during the time of the Ref- | ormation. | men who would call at | as Andrew shot a rabbit and placed it in his bag. Later he sat rest and laid his gun and the bag on the ground. The rabbit came to life and kicked the trig- ger on Goodry’s gun, ing ¢ down to discharg- load ‘of buckshot into the sportsman’s foot, STRANGLES WIFE; ENDS OWN LIFE | | | | | | | | | Ailing Husband in Dread of Cancer. | - { Jersey City, N. J.—With a box of candy for his mother, Sumner EE. Bar- | ton called at the four-room apartment of his parents. Wher no one an- swered his knocks, Mr. Barton en- tered with a pass key. He found his mother lying in ped with a piece of cotton tape bound tightly about throat. In the bathroom was the body of his father, Sumn: H. Barton, six- ty-five years old, an employee of the Lehigh Valley raiiroad and for years Brown Memorial His was slashed and a razor lay be- side the body. On a table in the bedroom note in an unsealed envelope. son opened it and read: “l am very sorry for having mother and for what I am about to do to myself, and 1 am hoping that God in His infinite =ercy will for- give ae for both acts, but ca.cer is was a killed beginning to show on the left side of | my underlip. Mother and neither am I, and it is a matter of a short time when we would he a burden to you all, Forgive me. Goad- by to you all, Will, Ida Sumner, and the children.” The police were notified and their was not investigation showed that Mr. Bar- ton and his wife, who was fifty-two years old, had last been seen on Thursday. On that day, about m., a neighbor reported that he had heard a noise which he described as a “rumpus” from the Barton apartment. The deaths were officially recorded on the police blotter as homicide suicide. Puts Bullet Through Heart of Racketeer | New York.—A woman in fear of her | life leaned from a second floor win- dow on Elton street, Brooklyn, and fired two shots into he body of a man who stood pounding her front door. a man with fence and fled. He fel in a heap and him leaped the paling She told the police how it happened and her confession, according to po- ended the search for the slayer racketeer’s collection man whose was found on the Elton street lice, of a body doorstep, The woman, Agnes Ambrosia, daugh- ter-in-law of the owner of a bakery at that address, declared that her father-in-law had received a letter de- | manding that he pay 00 to two | his home, Tl identified he dead man, Ingu tentatively is believed by [ police to have been a lieutenant of | the gang leader who fell heir to the mantle of the slain Frankie Y The gang's racket, they said, is levying tribute for “protection” on Brooklyn | bakeries, | Wink of “Corpse” Sends Curious Youth Fleeing Shelby, Mont.—Critically injured in an auto crash, Dr. O. P. Davis was | being transported from the hospital to | the train in a hearse with glass sides. | A young | breed of that which is man, one of sensation evidently hunters ever present at fires and { rushed up and glued his nose to the | side of the hearse, an eyeful of a real Suddenly the “corpse” horrified youth’s mouth fell optic closed in an indisputable wink. With a howl of ht, the took to his heels. “He looked so the doctor explained later, He wanted to get “corpse.” glassy eye of the open, frig serious | Miner Loses His Life When Buried in Stucco Grand hapids, Mich.—Engulfed by tons of powdered stucco, Andrew Gaca, a miner, was suffocated at one of the mines of the Grand Rapids Plaster company. Gaca was buried to the eyes and, although standing up, was so firmly held he could not brush the stucco from his mouth and nose. Fel low employees believe he had been imprisoned half an hour when they found him. Gaca leaves a wife and four children, Norwegian Boys Find Ancient Church Cavern Copenhagen.— While two boys were working on th Telmarken, one of them leg in a crevice, which led to the dis covery of a large cave containing stone benches It appears the cave is identical with a church named Binbbang, long tradition, which alive was used by CH HHH HHH HHH HHH HH Here's News: Man Is Shot by Rabbit # | tinggold, Ga. — James H., Goodry, local sportsman, is minus | two toes because he was shot by a rabbit, Goodry went hunting. He | oF Z : o her | The | well | Ada 10 a. | IL Gop MeEpAaL | “Kitchen - and | nous gun butt against a bullet wound in the heart. | sparkled a bit and, as the { one | youth | couldn’t | Wa. N. UL. PITTSBURGH. NO. 8..1930. FREE tested” Flour. Get Full Set at Your Grocer’s Today. 12 of My Famous Simplified Cake, Pastry and Hot Bread Recipes, Inside Every Sack of GOLD MEDAL “Kitchen Qetty Crock ora Now there’s a new, far simpler way in baking— Gop MEDAL ““ Kitchen-tested”’ Flour and Special ‘ Kitchen-tested” Recipes. Women everywhere are changing to it. Just to find out how it works, | accept FREE 12 famous simpli- { fied recipes for unusual cakes, cookies, pastries and hot breads, including that for Orange Rolls, illustrated above. Get a full set of these remarkable recipes from your grocer today inside every sack of GoLp MEDAL ‘ Kitchen-tested”’ Flour. 919 Only 3 Women In 276 Failed To Equal These ~~ ORANGE ROLLS First Time They Tried! | ™ A New, Simplified Way in Home Baking— | “KITCHEN-TESTED” Flour and Recipes | “Listen in to Betty Crocker 10:45 to 11:00 A. M. Tuesday and Thurs~ day, Eastern Standard Time. World's Rarest Volumes Collected for Vatican There is much ado in cultural cen- ters which plan to participate in the celebrations listed for Pope Pius’ | sacerdotal jubilee year by donating rare great scientific and lit- erary value with which to enrich the | Vatican library. Premier Mussolini | was presumably the first to books for his holiness bh; block a valuable collection belonging { to the Chigis with additional historical books of present sending in data, the whole found in their dwelling, forming his main office or ministry of foreign affairs. Marchese | Ferraiolo followed suit and a cargo of first editions which his noble ancestors had been collecting for turies arrived at the bronze door. est reports in movement has assumed an interna tional aspect, for Germany, France, um, Ireland, Portugal and Scan dinavia have been dusting out na tional shelves and paying postage rates to Vatican City. Benedictions the | world round are installing suitable quarters to collect volumes destined for the library. Labor Saving Hubby—These portable houses ought to be easy to house clean in. Wife—Not any different from any other houses. You can let wind Hubby—Yes, they are down and have the the dirt out. the sides blow accidents, | A whole in the has hardly generation who grown up cities know what a stovepipe is. Q = Boschee’s Syrup soothes instantly, ends irritation quickly! GUARANTEED. Nev sr ,be without with Boschees aa. SYRUP druggists MAKE THIS A GOOD WINTER Keep the bowels open, the system clean and free from impurities that poison and bring oncolds, headaches and all the rest of the trou- bles th: at comes from biliousness due to constipation.Ask your druggist today for Dr. Boice’s Prescription Tablets and insist on getting them—or send for a Iz rge ¢ prepaid. Money back guarantee BOICE MEDICINE COMPANY 630 G Street, S. W. Washington, D. C. Tested Standard agents and mar ati Cu tt,912 W Formulas Tonroe small | « cen- | Rome are that the | | 1822 CENTER AVE. - Stations: WCAE or WGR.”’ tested” BUSINESS OPPORTUN ITIES PACKING HOUSE, ¢ , stock wild invoice $10,000; owners i other business; plants in Pe 35 ton : elevator; 2 gen~- power; complete artment, capacity 3 plant did a busi- building, 2 storie supply light and e manufacturing ¢ pounds we: this 5s of $40,000 wee and with proper man- can in ase; complete fleet of t p g holds 4 cars. Very sé of this type offered a 50,000 > of §$ AU TOMOTIVE AND El terms. one of the finest of its present ow et: has contr Auto Lite, can get exc Bosch products, 1 Ze nith tock will invoice $40,000 ye TE ST. AL RANT, 18. connection, brick, won- eceipts other all $42,000, We Help Finance PHONE, WIRE, WRITE Arley Investment Ulmer Bldg. - Cherry 60660 ( Je ve land, “Ohio. New York Corre sponde nt Suite 610 - = - imes Building Sunshine +» + « —All Winter Long AT the Foremost Desert Resori? of the West— marvelous climate — warm sunny» days — clear starlit nights — dry invigerating air splendid roads — georgeous mountain: scenes — finest hotels—the deal winter home.. Write Croe & Chaffey PALM SPRINGS C alifornia LADIES interested in spare time home work write immediately enclosing stamp. Ex- perience unnecessary. Rare opportun- ity. Address HADA, 73 MANHATTAN AVENUE, BUFFALO, N. Y. PAPERHANGERS — DECORATORS ake more money with a line that is easy to sell, One | of the largest selections of WALLFAPER in Western Penna. A line of MODERN-ULTRA MODERN-CONSERV 4: TIVE designs. Our Motto: ‘A sale with every shaw- ing.” Write now for your 1930 sample books, stating past experience as Paperhanger or Decorator. Write SHRIBER WALLPAPER CO. PITTSBURGH, PA. ointment s Wanted Desc riptive folder free MARION HATCHERIES, Rt. 6 N, Marion, Ohio $10,000.00 A YEAR in th JAY Zz. RI D, 78 GORTON BUFF AL Y. Y 256 HEREFORD CATTLE HARRY BA FAIR ow WANTED—MEN OR WOMEN
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers