Lg THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1931 PAGE THREL ‘AMERICA’S TIN WORLD- TRAVELERS MERICA has something whi the whole world seeks. It sought by the grand-duke Ww lives in princely splendor at Biar- ritz beneath the purple peaks the Pyrenees, teries of Baghdad, the Arab chi tain in white and crimson clo who toys with alleged eigh course dinners, back in the hill country of Algeria. It is held in high esteem by the swarthy crew of half-naked Arabs who man tramp steamers over storm-tossed ‘waters of the Syrian coast and by placid little peasant girls who pick tulips in tranquil Holland meadows. The coveted something is Ameri- can canned foods. Exporters foods processed high adventure — providing faraway places at all. Where, example—right quick, without get- Addis Ababa? Bahrien? Cospicua? Yet ting out your atlas—is these are places as familiar as B, C to the exporting trade which with queer stamps, asking for food in Ameri- every day receives letters queer postmarks and can tin They are Ethiopia, Malta, respectively. A Comprehensive Cruise cans. How would you like to book a world cruise to some of these Your tour would include not only every capital in Europe but you would journey to such Africa; Bangkok, Siam; Batavia, Java; places? places + as Accra, West the caliph with power to conjure up all the mys- 1 in this country| if have on their list of applicants,| countries whose very mention sug-| i“ gest to most of us mystery and Ba. i have ever heard of some of these h the Persian Gulf and ch | Bulwayo, Southern Rhodesia; ig | Curitylia, Para, Brazil, Durban, ho | South Africa; Elizabethville, Bel- gian Congo; Hejaz, Arabia; Hel- of | singfors, Finland; Jaffa, Pales- tine; Jeddah, Hedjaz; Kobe, Japan; Khartoum, Egypt; Medan, ef- | Sumatra; Montevideo, Uruguay, ak | Piraeus, Greece; Saigon, French ty-| Indo-China; Semerang, Java; Valetta, Malta; and Zagreb, Jugo- slavia. Trading Treasures And if your luggage were large /| enough to be laden with a suf- ficient supply of canned foods— such popular foods for example as salmon, peaches, cherries, toma- toes, corn and peas which are so cheap here at home that we forget their real value—you might barter them for treasures of rare ivory, say, from Cairo, laces from Bar- celona, old wines from Palermo, gorgeously woven cloth from Shanghai, silks from Calcutta, bal- sam and beautiful wood from Sal- vador—or perhaps a brand new Panama hat from Panama. After all, we Americans are a bit ‘spoiled, when it comes to eat- ing. We expect, when we sit down to a meal to have not only a choice i OT wh re rt C= NTT pre fl] os Meee gaan Oe yi of : LN “ we for A, of the wealth of food which is so in easily available from our own great agricultural expanses, but foods from every other land and sea—in season or out. It is only when we have traveled far from home that we realize how limited other menus may be. Or how en- riched they may become with canned foods. Not long ago a farmer boy from the fertile acres of Wisconsin felt the lure of the sea. He joined the salmon fleet, ready to brave the perils of the north and spear sal- mon with the Indians, as the old tales told. But salmon fishing had progressed far since the days when nobody knew what salmon tasted like except people who had lived on the shores of waters where salmon ran. found himself on board a ship loaded with tin plate, machinery and endless supplies for canning as well as catching the fish. He lived, not on salmon as he had supposed he would, but on corn from Iowa and Illinois— the whole kernels as succulent and sweet as if they had just come from the cornfield—tomatoes, red and juicy from th ripe into cans—tender peas from his own fields in Wisconsin, and every sort of food from home, thanks to the canning industry. it, for the canning crew some- times makes long journeys by dog team and snowshoes to the ice- bound rivers for their catch—and there was plenty of salmon. But if you catch salmon all day long Jyou are not apt to order it for dinner in the evening. You prefer a steak and onions, and perhaps strawberries. —all over the world, in fact, like our other leading canned foods. It is sent up to the grand-ducal \ manor to go into a Biarritz sal- mon soufflé, to Baghdad to tickle the palate of the caliph, and to Al- geria where the Arab chieftain is fed up on three straight courses of smothered chicken.®* ~ And the boy lumber, There was adventure—plenty of So the salmon is sent elsewhere =Huntsville- Church services for Sunday. M. X. Church, morning worship 9:30 a. m. Sunday School, 10:30 a. m. Epworth League, 6:45 p. m. Christian Church morning worship 3:30 a. m. ‘Sunday School 10:30 a. m. Christian Endeav- or 6:30 p. m. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ide, son Glenwood, Mrs. A. R. Holcomb spent | Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kees- ler at Monticello, New York. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Randall enter- tained at dinner on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Archie Boyer Mrs. Barber Boy- er Monroe of Kingston. Mrs. John Headman is visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs. Taggart at Bloomsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Race of Noxen were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Randall on Sunday. ~Rulkle- Mrs. Clarence Roote and son Fred- die spent the week end with her sis- ter Mrs. John Brader of Parsons. Mrs. Martha MacDonald of K Wilkes- Barre spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Herdman and fam ily. Mr, and Mrs. A. C. Devens and Mr. and Mrs. Chris Eipper of East Dal- las motored to Towanda on Sunday and had dinner at Hotel Kauffman at that place. Mrs. Marvin Elston entertained at dinner on Tuesday Mrs. Jane Mann of Wilkes-Barre, Mrs. Harvey Sweezy, Miss Frances Sweezy, Mrs. Cragg Herdman, Phyllis Sweezy, Mrs. Stanley Elston and daughter Eleanor, Mrs. Owen Ide and children, Jane and Don- nie, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Elston and children, Wayne and Guie. Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Morgan and son John, of Wilkes-Barre and Mrs. Clara Ashburner and sons Grant and William were callers at the W. S. Kunkle home on Sunday. Birthday Party A birthday party was given for Frank Martin and Harry Martin Jr, at the home of the former on Satur- Hallowe'en and other games was en- joyed and lunch was served at a late hour. Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Wil- liam Martin, Virgil, Mary and Ziba, Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Waggner, Billy and Betty Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. George Bellas, Edward and Arthur Bellas, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lameroux, Fredis Lameroux, Mr. and Mrs. George Shaver, Erma ‘and George Shaver, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. James Knecht, Mr. and | Mrs. Harry Martin, Marilla, Harry Jr., land Peppy Martin, Bud Neyhart, Mr. {and Mrs. Frank Martin, Robert and | ese Martin. 0 | —~Alderson- | Mr, and Mrs; Raymond Garinger ac- Mr. and Mrs. Z. E. Gar- jinger on a motor trip to Maine, N. ] 1 companied ] Y.; on Saturday and returned home osx | Sunday evening. | A number of Alderson people drove [to Vernon last Wednesday and spent | the afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. {Clyde Eggleston. Mrs. Eggleston ser- ved a tasty lunch to Mrs. George Ar- mitage, Mrs. Peter Delaney and daugh- ter, Mrs. Estella Enders, Mrs. John Kuchta, Mrs. George Smith, Emma | ton. | Miss Florence Hausch of Laketon spent the week end with Mrs. A. J. Garringer. Mrs. Lucy Altemus spent a few jdays last week with her daughter, Mrs. | Haskins at Sugar Notch. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Kitchen and daughter motored to Bloomsburg on Sunday with Mrs. and Mrs. Frank Jackson to visit Miss Ruth Jackson, who is a student at Bloomsburg State Teachers College. Miss Genevieve York and Esther Garinger made a business trip to Wil- kes-Barre on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Biery spent the week end recently, with their children, Mrs. Albert -Adams, Mrs. William Sy mon, and Otto Biery, at Plainfield, N. J. I Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Rogers and son Ber- nard, motored to Towanda on Sunday, and were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Oakes. On Wednesday evening of last week the Cherrio Club of Harvey’s Lake en- tertained at a delightful Hallowe'en party at the Rosengrant bungalow. The rooms were beautifully decorated with autumn leaves and orange and black crepe paper. 'The evening was spent in games and dancing. At a Odenkirchen, and Mr. Samuel Eggles- late hour a tasty lunch was served to the Misses Margaret Rosengrant, Wilma, Ayers, Esther and Adda Gar- inger, and Lillian and Genevieve York. Messrs James Gary, Mike Kuchta, Al- | bert ‘Armitage, Peter Kuchta, Ted | Woolbert and Willard Gary. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Thompson and son Russell of Kingston spent Sun- day with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Condon, and Mrs. Mary Thompson. All local hunters reported good luck on the first day, most of them receiv- ing their limit. Ie ah TO HOLD CHICKEN SUPPER | Ladies’ Aid society of Bast Dallas I'M E. Church will hold | chicken supper and bazaar Thursday | evening, November 12 starting at 5 p. m. Tickets: adults 50c, children 35c. its annual Pretty But Dumb | Beauty and dumbness are not nec- essarily twins. It’s perfectly possible to be exceedingly fair of face and still not a moron; while on the other hana, it, isn't ‘necessary to be dumb in order to be beautiful. Recently Albert Edward Wiggam, author, made remarks to this effect during the course of a lecture deliv- ered in Chicago. Mr. Wiggam, no doubt, had plenty of authority sn which to base his but somehow, it seemed a lot more t2 the point to have a woman’s opinion on the subject—and especially a woman whose daily life brings her into cons tact with hundreds of other girls and women. So Miss H. Jean Crawford, dean of women at the University ot Pennsylvania, was asked for her opin- ion. Miss Crawford had very definite ideas concerning this business of beauty. “Of course, beauty and dumb- ness don’t necessarily go hand-in- hand,” she said. “There are plenty of girls who have both good looks and brains, but, remember, our ideas of beauty are rather different from what they used to be. Most of us are more interested in the intellectual type of beauty than in the rather insipid kind that might be described as ‘beautiful but dumb.’ College Girls Attractive “As far as college girls g0,” she continued, ‘as a rule they are intel- lectual, otherwise they would not come to college. And most of them, I think have the kind of attractiveness that might be called good looks rather than beauty—that is, fineness of face rath- er than actual beauty of features. In other words, they have strength and good health and vigor—they are hand- some rather than beautiful. “Of course, there are exceptions to this general rule. There are girls, who have beautiful regularity of feature and exquisite attractiveness of ap- pearance on the surface, with no brains or character or personality to back it up. They are so pretty that they don’t have to be bright. “They are very sweet looking, and that’s all. But that type of beauty is not apt to be found among col- lege girls. The ‘baby doll’ type 1s not the kind that feels the need of a college ‘education. And since most girls nowadays do go to college, it would seem to follow that that type is growing less and less frequent. “To my mind, the most beautiful people are the most natural. the ones who don’t stop to consider whether they are beautiful or not. They don't, spend their entire time thinking how they look, how best they may bring conclusivus, Loses Meaning out this point or that, what clothes {they must wear in order always to | be They as stunning as possible. devote ; their attention to their minds and souls ‘and these things shine forth to make them really beautiful. Some Are Obtuse “There are lots of beautiful ple very, peo- who are clever, but usually they are so clever that very they don’t let their beauty become cloying. Beauty is not their only possession, or even their most im- portant one. They have charm and personality besides, and it is these which really count.” Miss Crawford, however, deny the existence dumbness as a combination, met people who are. beautiful but dumb,” she declared, “but I think they are very rare. I have met very few perso«s wh) appeal to me as beautiful who are not intellectual Without intellect to back it, a face can have no real beauty of expres- sion. Charm and personality and magnetism are more fascinating than mere regularity of feature and beauty of coloring, Character and sweetness of nature come’ from the soul. “My theory is that any one can be beautiful who cultivates the inner qualities rather than the outward appearance. Lots of persons who are have that beauty of soul which hag reveloped as they have grown in mental and spiritual stature. And on the other hand, lots of persons woh were once considered beautiful as girls. lose all that beauty as they grow older. They coursen and be- come just the opposite from beauti- ful, since back of their smoothness of skin and loveliness of feature there was no real charm or grace of Souk” 3 does not of beauty and “I have Have you bought your No-Tresspas. sing signs? We are selling lots of them. tf cultivating | \ Smilin’ Charlie Says Get your poultry records from the Dallas Post. 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