ash Out y Poison lurts or Bladder ‘ou, Begin ; Salts eys hurt and your n't get scared and our stomach with excite the kidneys tire urinary tract, 8 clean like you clean, by flushing d, harmless salts ove the body's uri- fimulates them to ty. The function o filter the blood. train from it 500 waste, so we can the vital impor- 2 kidneys active, 1 water—you can’t Iso get from any ur ounces of Jad poonful in a glass akfast each morn- and your kidneys This famous salts cid of grapes and d with lithia, and ears to help clean ed kidneys; also ids in the system r a source of irrl- relieving bladder ensive, cannot in- htful effervescent which everyone then to help keep and active. Try e water drinking, rill wonder what ney trouble and nfection ord’s f Myrrh torefund your money If not suited is done on pur- ude, it isn’t, etable Pills have nedy since 1837 and all disorders and bowels, 25¢ N. ¥. Adv. e not always, for ATIVE. IN ME A PROVAL? J do to help the y bad breath, fiegs,- or 1 1 of constipa- these organs. vs what will vithout harm. ative in your e approval of uct, known to lwell’s Syrup doctor’s pre- 1 bowels. It original pre- aldwell wrote | many years red safe and ten and chil- m herbs and ts; so it is can form no this popular stores. ROBLEM who is peevish ly sick. Many say they al- p a package of Gray’sSweet 8 on hand for needed. They colds, relieve ness, worms, on, headache, zg disorders iach troubles, as a tonic to le system. rood for older Sold by Drug- ywhere. >» Address, » Le Roy, N. Y, MAREMEDY of Asthma your druge 1d one dol= SAMPLE. Buffalo,N.Y. bam oi THE PATTON COURIER HANDY DINING ALCOVE FOR LIGHT MEALS A Radio Set in a Dining (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) No doubt you, Mrs, Housewife, like to hear music and other good things coming in “over the air” while_your hands are busy. So you need to have the radio located somewhere near the kitchen without having it ins your way. In a farm home in Virginia the radio set, with a cabinet for parts, tools, and other paraphernalia the man of the house considers his own— it is placed in a little dining alcove Just off the kitchen, as the United States Department of Agriculture has shown in the accompanying picture. Alcove Near the Kitchen. An extra pantry or store-room could possibly be transformed into a useful dining alcove of this kind. A great many farm kitchens are ar- ranged nowadays to have a little al- cove at one side for quick serving of the lighter meals. Or, in a large kitchen, the cooking equipment is grouped at one end and a dining-table and chairs are placed at the other, sometimes screened off. The addition of a radio set in either arrangement affords the housewife much pleasure and often profit. “Dinner music” can be picked up at mealtime if the fam- ily likes it, BEAN SOUP GOOD DISH FOR WINTER Salt Pork Is Favorite Season- ing for Dried Legumes. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) Soups from the various dried leg- umes are nourishing and appealing in cold weather. Different seasonings are preferred with different vegeta- bles—green peas, or chick or cow peas, navy, kidney, black, or lima beans, lentils, or other legumes. The dried legumes are soaked overnight or longer to help make them tender, and then cooked in added water with some or all of the seasonings until they are soft enough to press through a sieve to remove the skins. Addi- tional thickening may or may not be used. Salt pork is a favorite and old- fashioned seasoning for all of the dried legume soups, since it furnishes both fat and flavor. Many people like butter just as well for the same pur- pose, and if pork is not on hand, use butter to taste. Here is a recipe for one of these soups, made from navy or black beans, given by the bureau of home economics, United States De- partment of Agriculture: 1 pint dried navy 4 celery stalks or black beans 1 tbs. flour Cold water 2 tbs. water 14 1b, salt pork Salt 1 onion Pepper Wash and soak the beans overnight in two quarts of cold water. The next morning add two more quarts of wa- ter, the salt pork, onion and celery, and cook until the beans are soft. Re- move the salt pork, cut into small pieces, press the beans through a sieve, and save all the liquid. Com- bine all these ingredients, reheat, and add the flour and water, which have been well mixed. Add the salt and pepper and cook for a few minutes. Serve with a slice of lemon on the top of each portion. Cabbage Is One of Best Sources of Vitamine “C” The most recent information we have on the occurrence of vitamines in vege- tables, indicates that the vitamine C content is highest when the foods that supply this vitamine are used raw or cooked only a very short time. Cab- bage is one of the best sources of vi- tamine C if properly cooked, or, better still, served raw. Those who like the crisp texture and pungent flavor of raw cabbage will find some of these qualities present in cabbage cooked just a few minutes in hot milk, The method of preparing it is described by the bureau of home economics of the United States Departinent of Agri- culture. 8 cups milk 3 tbs. melted but- 13% quarts shredded ter cabbage 3 tbs. flour 1 cup cream or rich Salt miik Pepper Heat the milk and cook the cabbage in it for two minutes. Add the cupful of cream or rich milk, the blended but- ter and flour, and the seasoning, cook rapidly for three or four minutes, and stir constantly. The result is cabbage delicate in flavor and color. Why Eggs? Eggs cooked below the boiling point of water are more easily and quickly digested than are boiled eggs. Com- pared with other foods, eggs are eas- ily and quickly digested. Eggs are a tissue building food, be- ing rich fn protein and mineral mat- ter. They are among the first foods to be fed to little children, because they are sorich in iron, and because the proteins, fats and mineral substances are especially well suited to building Food Habits Developed in Childhood Are Best Good food habits, developed in childhood under wise guidance, are the foundation of good nutrition through life. With the best of inten- tions parents may make mistakes in the management of their children at the table, erring by overindulgence or ill-advised strictness. With patience and careful methods children’s food habits can bg retrained, but it is, of course, much simpler to build good food habits from the start. A child ean become accustomed from babyhood to a variety of foods, flavors and food textures, says Miss C. Rowena Schmidt, of the bureau of home economics, in leaflet 42-1, Good Food Habits for Children, just issued by the United States Department of Agriculture. As the child grows, says Miss Schmidt, take it for granted that he will enjoy the food set be- fore him. Don’t talk about “how good it is for him.” Let the adults of the without comment all wholesome, well- prepared foods, and let the mother make it her responsibility to see that the special dishes for the child are not only suitable in kind, but careful- ly cooked and attractively served in fairly small portions. Meals should come at regular hours, and there should be no “piecing” to spoil the appetite. Make meals the oc- casion for pleasant comradeship, whether the child has his own food separately or eats with the family. Bright colored individual dishes and small table implements that the child can handle personally add interest. Never Eat Raw Pork as It May Cause Illness Cook pork well! To eat raw pork is dangerous owing to the risk of con- tracting the disease called trichinosis. Trichinosis. causes serious illness and sometimes death. It comes from very small worms, known as trichinae, that live in a small proportion of hogs and remain in the pork. Thorough cooking will kill these parasites and make them harmless. If meat con- taining them is eaten without being well cooked, they multiply rapidly in the intestines, get into the blood sup- ply and scatter into the muscles where they grow in little lemon-shaped nests which they form within the muscles. No dependable treatment is known for the disease. : Some people like the flavor of raw pork in sausages, hams, and other meats. But it is dangemous to eat it, Often whole families get sick after eating raw pork at a feast or party. The only safe way is to cook pork well so that the heat goes all through it and kills every worm, making them harmless. This warning is frequently given by the United States Department of Agri- culture and is now repeated by Dr. Benjamin Schwartz in Leaflet No. 34-1, Trichinosis; a Disease Caused by Eat- ing Raw Pork, just published for free distribution by the department. Lightweight Meat Cuts Favored The present-day meat consumer wants his purchase in a small “pack- age.” Proper weight is a matter of increasing importance, says the bureau of agricultural economics, United States Department of Agriculture, and in the New York market a difference of 25 pounds above or below the car- cass weight desired may lower the price $1 or more per 100 pounds. Dur- ing the late fall, winter, and spring heavy lamb cuts, for instance, often sell at several cents a pound lower than similar qualities in lighter weights. Looks Better, Too Linoleum is said to wear much bet- terter if varnished when new and waxed lightly every month after wash- body tissues. ing. family set a good example by eating ! RAZORBACK SOW | - FIGHTS PANTHER TO SAVE BROOD “Attacking Cat Limps Howl- ing Away After Brush With Pig. West Polnt, Ga.—Wild razor-back hogs will fight without quarter in de- fense of their young. Even the panthers which infest the wilds of the Martin lake country in Alabama are no match for an infuri- ated sow driven to protect her brood, according to Guy Coffee, editor of the West Point News, who reports wit- nessing such a battle. Coffee was on a hunting trip to Mar- tin lake and arose early to roam the wilds with his rifle. He shortly came upon the wild sow, leading her brood to breakfast. Shortly a panther ar- rived to dispute possession of the pigs. The Panther Lunges. With a grunt of warning, the sow scampered the pigs into a protecting pit, then stood guard against the ever | shortening, increasingly menacing cir ( cles of the attacking eat—about the | ste of a large dog. Always. Coffee said, the sow kept hetween the cat i and her young. Finally the panther lunged. The sow made a successful parry and caught the cat’s paw in her jaws. the cat extricated herself to limp howling away to lick the mangled member, During the fight which by no means ended with the first direct contact, Cof- fee said, both the sow and the cat in There Followed-a Wild Flurry. their own respective and effective ways called out loudly for reinforce- ments. Reinforcements Come. The cat's came first, a male mate menacing circle. Together they drove the sow into the shallow pit and al- ternately leaped over it, slashing vi- ciously with their paws. Throughout it all, Coffee said, the sow refused to budge despite 4 rap- idly increasing quota of wounds which shredded her ears and streaked her back with bleeding gashes. The fight was so unequal, the edi- tor said, that he opened fire on the male cat, sending him spinning _on his ear just as aid for the sow came charging through the briars. And while the original attacker limped hurriedly away, Coffee said, the razor-back re- inforcements tore her mate to pieces. A few days later, Coffee said, he went back to the same loeality and saw the battle-scarred sow again lead- ing her brood, apparently well on the way to complete recovery. Americans Lead World in Consumption of Soap Chicago.—Monday wash days and Saturday night baths have combined to place Americans at the top of the soap consuming nations.” This is in spite of the reluctance of little junior to have his ears washed, according to Roscoe C. Edlund, general director of the Cleanliness institute, at the an- nual meeting of the Association of ers here, Higher cleanliness standards incul- cated into our people hy physicians, ors have made necessary the output of 3,000,000,000 pounds of soap each year, Compared to our 25 pound per erage in most European countries. Boy’s Mistake Moves Picture of Ex-Governor as it hung in the hallway of the ex- { '! youngster. was hanged, too,” exclaimed the Later the portrait was transferred to a less conspicuous part of the build- | ing. But both the charges preferred { by the youngster were untrue. Sir Edmund died a natural death. Three | years after he had been appointed | governor of New England by King James II, in 1686, a revolution broke out and his imprisonment followed. He was tried on piracy charges which | failed to be proved. There followed a wild flurry in which | which came bounding over the briars, | went to her side and joined in the | American Soap and Glycerine Produc | public’ health authorities, and educat- | 1 capita average is the four pound av- | | | | | | { pened to you! © DANIEL GOT INTO STORY-EOOK STUF JS IGEORBREIL SSORHC es of 3 39% ot z 2 536? wr 2A 136236 50550, Le , Arla Mr AreA (@by D. J. 2) ERTON KEITH was too. well bred to slam t use door, but certainly he no scruples against slamm his car door. It helped immensely! tting his high- powered roadster ha » wide street at the limit helpe 50. Another quarrel with Eleanor other—mean- ing they were growi ore and more numerous. And al over nothing —why he and Elear 1d absolutely nothing on earth to gree about! It wasn't as if t had to clash with poverty or stru vith the rear- ing of children, or r with inter- fering relatives. N lousy—there | was nothing to ca iscord along that line. Being a urally strove to fig the existing conditio 3ut he could not do So he let his car as he longed to do <his feelings, never again! He hadn't killed the « thanks to his | four-wheel brakes d the Lord! (Probably the Lord 11d come first.) At least Keith thoucht so, later. But he, Keith (and np ly the Lord) i stayed by the boy's bedside at! the hospital all that first night—though Eleanor telephoned him on an av- ! erage of once every She'd tak- | en one of her nery headaches up- ion learning of the , and why | did not Berton com home to her? The headache, concluded, { would not kill he it who knew vhen the little ch would breathe his last? Looking vn at him lying there so still hite brought Keith nat- reason for his home life. back to Berton I 's mind the | morning he had st after a night | in hell—and looked n at the fine ‘leanor’s child et—the child [little form of his a in the small white who had never bh ed even one fleeting breath of | n life, He hadrn’t regretied its death so much then—he had too glad over Eleanor, that she coming back to him—back- from t¢ icy, grasping hand that had plucl at her strug- gling spirit through the long, long hours of the night. But if he had lived, that wee boy 1eirs, and some angry fool had run 1 dowe—as he had run this boy down— He asked Eleanor this question when he reached howe. And Eleanor looked at bhimi™ #7 long, searching glance, and shuddered . . . What was that she had laid up in her mind to say to Berton? Anyway, she'd wait, | for Berton was terribly cut up about { the accident. If he felt like that she really ought to go and see the child herself. That night at the table Keith sat smiling a broad smile, “What in the world, Berton, qq you | see funny?” inquired his wife. |~ “I was thinking of Daniel.” “Daniel ?” “The chap I hurt, you know. 1 { asked him when I came by the hos- | pital a while ago if he was in pain. [ ‘You mean does it hurt, mister? he | said, with his little face all white and | twisted. ‘I'll say it does! But my | mother, she named me Daniel so's I'd | be brave, D'ye reckon she knew this was goin’ to happen to me? I b'lieve | this is 'most bad as bein’ in a lion's den!” But I believe, Eleanor, that | the old Daniel didn’t have anything on { this little Daniel when it comes to | bravery!” The next morning Eleanor went to see Daniel for herself. And Berton | Keith found himself looking forward | to his visits with the boy. Even aft- | er he was back home in the weather- | beaten old house on the corner of Mill | and Harvey streets, Keith always stopped by to see him. He was glad | he had that case of Porter's, for it | took him by the child's home on every | trip. And he was a lonely little chap, | living as he did with his spinster | aunt, whose every breath was a com- | plaint against the responsibility of i the child, | Keith carried books to Daniel—the | most wonderful ones he could find— and upon learning that the aunt had no time to read them to him (Keith | wondered what she did with her time) | he, busy lawyer that he was, read them himself. He found a greater thrill in watching the child's eyes grow wide in wonder, or narrow in pity, than watching the face of any prisoner he had ever seen at the bar. “Nice things al’ays happen to fel- lows in story books, don’t they, Mr. Keith?” “Most always, Daniel, yes,” agreed Berton Keith, “Gee, I wish I was a story-book Boston, Mass.—A schoolboy pointed | boy!” to a portrait of Gov. Edmund Andros | “The sama here, kiddie.” “Don’t nice” things happen to you, ecutive chamber of the statehouse. | eitheg, Mr. Keith? Mis’ Keith is nice “Why, that man was a pirate and he | —gee, she's pretty !—and she hap- 1" “Sure, Daniel! And Pvé got you for my pal, too! I'm sitting high, I'll say am I!” Daniel laughed at the little rhyme. “Boys in stories dcn’t get hurt this a-way—and they never do have to go to a orphanage, do they, Mr, Keith?” “Who sald anything about an or- phanage?” inquired Keith quickly. “Aunt Julia. She's goin’ to send me soen’s I'm well. She can’t make her | little money stretch over both of us— I don't want Aunt Julia's money if she's not got it!” Berton Keith was called away that afternoon to another city, He would be gone for a week. “When I get back,” he told Eleanor, snapping his bag to, “I'm going to search this town over in an effort to find some lonely somebody who will take that child and make him happy. I'll pay them well, for as long as I live I intend to look after Daniel!” The night Keith returned Eleanor met him at the train. He could not remember when he had ever seen his wife's eyes so eager and bright. She'd probably been happier in his absence, “Do you know what day this is, Ber- ton?’ she asked, squeezing his arm, Her birthday, and he'd failed to re- member! Now, for it was in the win- ter, Their wedding anniversary. No, that was in the fall, and this was June, “You never do remember it)” | laughed Eleanor, “Your birthday! And | I've got the darlingest gift for you that I could find!” He guessed all the way home, re- calling every birthday gift he had ever received in all his thirty-odd years, But he had no luck. Eleanor was ju- bilant over his failure. | When they reached home he found that the table was laid for dinner. In the center was a huge cake with its candles. A man with a birthday cake and candles! No wonder he couldn't guess! Cakes with candles were for children, “When we are seated Hannah will bring in the—surprise!” said Eleanor, smiling. They sat down at the table in a mysterious silence. And Hannah brought in—Daniel! Pale, grinning, tenderly in “his chair. Keith had not noticed that the table was set for three! “He's ours, Berton,” said Eleanor, tears brimming her eyes, “to“keep for For COLD We all catch colds and they can make us miserable; but yours needn’t last long if you will do this: Take two or three tablets of Bayer Aspirin just as soon as possible after a cold starts. Stay in the house if you can—keep warm. Repeat with another tablet or two of Bayer Aspirin every three or four hours, if those Take a good laxative when symptoms of cold persist. you retire, and keep bowels open. If throat is sore, dissolve three tablets in a quarter-glassful of .water and gargle. This. soothes inflammation and reduces infection. There is nothing like Bayer Aspirin for a cold, or sore throat. almost instantly. are absolutely harmless to the heart. dressed-up Daniel, and placed him |’ A & B® | | BER BE R Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Better to ignore the children than to scold them-all the least, are happier. They, at —~— - . our -very own—if you want him!” “But do you?” asked Berton Keith quickly. a | “Do I? Why, Berton, do you real- | ize that we've not had a quarrel since we've known Daniel? We've had him | to think about and talk about in- | stead of getting on each other's nerves! Don't you know that there | are very, very few cases in this world where only two persons can live to- gether year in and year out without fighting?” Keith got up and went around to her and kissed her. “You solved all this yourself! And I thought I was the lawyer!” “Of course, I didn’t think of it my- self, It's everywhere—even in every story book you pick up! The cake— you see, it has only five candles—is for Daniel, celebrating this day he fis born to us. Your birthday gift, Ber- ton, is Daniel—our son!” Daniel put his small hand into the | eager one of the blg man’s awkwardly. “Welcome to our home, Daniel, my boy !” said a voice a bit husky. “Gee, Mr. Keith,” Daniel grinned back at him, “so many nice things are happ’nin to me I must be a reg'lar story-book boy!” “Yes, sir, Daniel,” agreed Berton | Keith, warmly, “there's a whole lot of story-book stuff taking place around | "m here! | : | Research Throws Light on Elizabethan Times | Three important discoveries in con- | nection with Elizabethan meeting of the London Shakespeare league in the London Day Training | college, Southampton row, says the | London Times. ) Dr. J. Leslie Hotson of Harvard | university, who discovered in the | patent rolls at the record office the re- | port of the inquest into the death of | Christopher Marlowe, the poet, in a| tavern at Deptford, said that he had | now traced, through a document found | by Sir Syndey Lee in the records of | the Middlesex sessions, a bond given | by two men of East Smithfield and | also by Christopher Marlowe, for Mar- | lowe’s appearance at Newgate on some | charge or other. | “We do not know what the charge | was,” added Doctor Hotson, ‘but eon- | sidering that £20 (worth five to eight times that amount now) was put up| for Marlowe's appearance, it showed | that he had good friends. T searched | the records of 1565 and later at St.!| 3otolph’s, Aldgate, and found that the | two bondsmen were churchwardens | and also that Ingram Frizer, who | killed Marlowe, became a deputy as-| sessor of taxes at Aldgate.” William Poel, chairman of the! league, said that W. J. Lawrence, & member of the league, had written to | say that he had found indisputable | proof that “Hamlet” had been pro | duced in the year 1600 and that de { tails of the find would be given by Mp | Lawrence in the course of lectures hg | had been invited to deliver before the | students of Harvard university. | The third discovery was made pub- | lic by St. John Ervine. He said that a | hitherto unknown diary had been | found in an English country house! which gave personal references to | Shakespeare. These placed him as a man of eminence among his contem- | poraries. Mr. Ervine had been trying | to get hold of the diary, but so far the owner had kept its contents secret, Picturesque Troopers The name “hussars’” formerly was | confined to the light cavalry of the Hungarian army, but it is now applied | to that in other Eurepean armies | which possess similar characteristics. The hussars are described as “light. | carbine, brilliantly uniformed an | | horse treopers, armed with saber | formerly wearing dolman and busby.’ Fliers Say Courage Varies Children hate to take medicine as a rule, but every child loves the taste of Castoria. And this pure vegetable preparation is just as good as it tastes; just as bland and harmless as thé recipe reads. (The wrapper tells you just what Castoria contains.) When Baby’s cry warns of colic, a few drops of Castoria has him soothed, asleep again in a jiffy. Nothing is more valuable in diar- rhea. When coated tongue or bad breath tell of constipation, invoke its gentle aid to cleanse and regu- late a child's bowels. children’s diseases, use it to keep the system from clogging. Your doctor will tell [ There are more than enough people research | who are rather repetitiously “beg par- were announced at the annual opening | jonipg.” In colds: or you Castoria resigned to And it relieves aches and pains The genuine tablets, marked Bayer, Does thought flow more easily out of a lead pencil than out of typewriter | keys? Some think: so, Net Contents 15 Fluid Drachm a fresh her window sills every day? 2 hhllusie ALCOHOL - 3 PER CENT. AVegelable Preparation forks- similating the Food by fr ting the Stomachs and Bowelsof Thereby Promoting Digestion Cheerfulness and Rest Coslain® § neither Opium, Morphine aot Mineral. NoT NARCOTIC Racipeof Gd Di SANUELPTORR A helpful Remedy for Coe! and Disses nd UT Ut (ass deserves a place in the family medicine cabinet until your child is grown. He knows it is safe for the tiniest baby; effective for a boy in his teens, With this special children’s remedy handy, you need never risk giving a boy or girl medicine meant for grown-ups. Castoria is sold in every drug store; the genuine always bears Chas. H. Fletcher’s signature. Is a city housekeeper to be forever layer of soot om with the Way they Feel EROPLANE pilots tell us that their cour- age, their whole attitude toward flying, varies from day to day, with the way they feel. If they feel full of pep, healthy, they can try anything —nothing fright- ens them. Their nerve is unshak- en; their skill keen; their flying is machine-like in its perfection. It is an entirely different story, however, if. they wake up in the morning feeling sick, down in the mouth. Then fly- ing becomes a real danger. | Member of the “Caterpillar Club” earns his right to membership by 5000 foot Emergency Jump. This is the les~ son we can learn from airmen. It is the lesson that points to Nujol— the simple, natu- ral, normal way— without the use of drugs or medi- cines to keep the body internally clean of the poi- sons that slow it up. Nujol is pure, tasteless, color=- less as clear water. It forms no habit; it cannot hurt even a baby. See how the sunshine floods into your }ife when you are really well. Get @ bottle of Nujol in its sealed pack- age at any drug What isthe matter with thesebrave | store. It costs only a few cents people when they are not up to par? The natural poisons in their bodies have not been swept away. They are allowing their brains tobe clouded and dulled by poisons which should not be permitted to remain in the body. bottle today. and it makes you feel like a million dollars. Find out for yourself what Nujol will do for you this very night, You can be at top-notch effi- siency and happy #il the time. Get a Insure Him a Healthy Skin through life by using Cuticura | Soap Cleansing, Heal. ing, Sosthing | and Antiseptic Soap 25¢. Ointment 25¢. and 50c, Talcum 25e. Proprietors: Potter Drug & Chemical Corpora tion, Malden, Mass. ———————— eet
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers