1 p86 the ge henm wedneaday evening june 7th 1939 printing service wharyoowant when you want it beartwjrn kept him awake afraid to eat square med whata worry he most haw been to his wife no food agreed with him add indigestion made him positively wretched in this letter his wile tcba how he got welcome relief my husband developed a wretched form of gastric acidity she write meals were a misery to him he of- iteii could not s ep far heartburn fsuslness kept him from home a great deal but when he did get a spell at home i gave him kruschen salts i ww amazed at the rest that weary look left his race and nis indi gestion gradually disappeared it is a treat to hear him say im hungry it seems too good to be true mrsj the numerous salts in kruschen help to promote a natural flow of the digestive and other vital juices of the i body soon after you start on krus- fchen you will find that you are able to enjoy your food without distressing after effects and as you per with the little dally dose you will see that kruschen brings glorious re- quality printing business cards letterheads envelopes invoices statements booklets catalogues ruled forms circulars dodgers posters sale bills if it is quality printing you want at a cost no greater than you might pay for inferior work then you will give us the opportunity of making estimate on your next order for printed matter no job too large or too small our service de part rrien t is at your call to help with layout type selection and form of presentation there is no extra charge for such service simply value of home paper you never miss the water till the vell runs dr is a saying well known to most and the people of wukes- barre pennsylvania a city of 100 000 population had it proven to them for almost six mon hs when their news papers were compelled to suspend i publication through labor troubles i outside papers were available to the i people of that city but they were not i satisfactory and when the wilkes barre papers resumed publication 38 business establishments used special advertising space to express their de light under the heading we mis ed you and needed you we are glad to have you back appeared the following tribute to the local press return to publication of wilkes i barre s three newspapers is an evl dence of such fundamental importance to this community that the under signed merchants nave felt impelled to take this means of extending their congratulations to the publishers to their employees and the entire com munity we know that no normal healthy i civic life can long be maintained with out strong independent local papers it is not only the civic but the patri otic duty of every citizen to support local newspapers and contribute i what he can to their healthful rune i ttoning 1 we merchants here gathered to gether therefore wish the newspapers of wilkes barre every success in re sumption of their longsuspended service to tne community mans qoeat for gold b tncedbjck to 2900 b c it was once believed that the may as alone were among the ancient races that did not know the value of sold little gold was found in their greaj ruined temples that vie for sun with the chicle trees in the yuca tan and central american jungles and although nuggets have been found lying near the sites of the southern j4aya ciues the working of gold into jewelry and religious ob jects had not been considered a part of their culture says the detroit news when an earthquake broke open a temple at copan honduras and dis closed tombs filled with gold orna ments the central americans were placed in the same category with the aztecs toltecs and peruvians of the inca empire for appreciation of the yellow metal in old world annals the story of mans quest for golcujias been traced back to at least 2900 b c in egypt when under the first dynasty there occurred the first recorded washing of gold it was not long before man was aware that gold is to be found in practically all rocks and in the sea water as well it is fairly definite that the mayas were m touch commercially with people of a somewhat similar cul ture in costa rica who made the delicately carved gold frogs and but terflies little by little the theory is being established that the pre- columbian peoples of central and south america carried on a nourish ing international trade not unlike that of later times and it seems probable that the gold found in the maya country was an import from other shores praying mantis insect lives in warm section the mantis order orthoptera family manudae genus mantis spe- tcies mantis rehgiosa is a vora clous carnivorous insect called also praying mantis from its habit when watching for prey of sitting up with its forefeet folded as if in prayer the french call it pne dieu other names for it are john ny cockhorse and soothsayer greek mantis these insects which are slow in their motions usually sit on the branches of trees and shrubs waiting for some other bisect to pass when they seize and bold it with their front feet and tear it to pieces praying mantis are most abun dant in tropical regions especially we trust in africa where they are venerated tha never again will an circumstance by the hottentots but they are found arise to interrupt their steady dailj i also in the warmer parts of europe fulfillment of the vital missions they australia and america the amer perform for the community nos have sbtm trotminy us most mbundefstgod animal in the whole world is the pig as soon as his name la mentioned someone in any crowd begins to talk about filthy animals and nasty dirty beasta it would surprise some of those people to know the truth the pig is wherever possible a cleanly animal that left to his own devices it is the only animal that fwlll balance its own diet and hat it has real intel ligence if pigs are kep in a pig yard or the oldhfashloned type about ten jteet square and seldom if ever c j od out they have no cnoice but to filthy no animal coj i keep clean under those circumstances especially if pails of garbage wen dumped into an inad equate trou in the pen everal times a day and the leftovers allowed to decay there is a reason for everything a pig does which is more than we can say for a great many human beings when a pig plows under a hole in the mud and wallows in it that is because it suffers greatly from the heat and knows that a mud bath is cooling when he squeals just before mealtime it is because he knows it is time to re mind his owner of the hour a mother pig makes a comfortable nest for her little ones using any material at hand and earning it some distance in her mouth if you should give a pig five pounds a day or each of a hundred different foods it would eat just enough of the right elements to balance its diet in stead or devouring all the sweets or all the starches at once no other animal that we know of will do this a mother pig will fight desperately to defend her young she has many different sounds from the gentle grunt with which she calls her chil dren to meals to the startled whoop with which she warns them of danger and even to an angry snarling when she is about to attack an enemy her squealing expresses hunger and im patience or pain in the don valley made famous by ernest thompson seton just outside toronto is the wellknown donalda farms here each pig has a separate tiled pen with a cement floor it sleeps on a raised platform on a truss of clean straw running water con stanuy circulates through a trough at one end of the pen during the day a radio plays soft music these pigs are no only spotlessly clean and ab solutely odorless but they are conten ted and healthy when they go out side it is to graze in broad meadows of clover amply shaded by great trees if you want to understand pigs gel a baby one and bring him up on a bottle in a few days time he will learn to follow you wherever you go and will amuse you by his antics for he is a down at heart after such an experience you will neer again mis understand his race in our dumb animals ri phone no 8 tk georgetown herald give a man a dessert by frmmees lee b twas long after christmas and all through the boom not a podding was stirring not ten a mousse the cubes la tha lea box were chiliad with despair twis twva by the tlmi piece no dessert vu there when all of a snddtn there arose such a clatter and almost before you could say jack robinson a delicious choco late mousse had been whipped to gether packed in the freezing tray and a deasertless meal avoided believe you me that a something in any man s language regal chocolate mousae 1 squares unsweeteno i choco late cup sugar lah or salt j4 cap boiling water 3 pee oikn well beaten 1 teaspoon 3nilla 2 cups cream whipped add chocolate sugar and salt to water and heat in double boil r 10 minutes stirring occasionally thin beat with rotary epe beater unt i blended pour blow it over kk yolks stirring well cool add vantlla and fold in wl lpi 1 cream turn into free linn tnj of automa tie refrigerator and 1ft manrf 3 to 4 hours or turn mixture into mold filling it to overflowing rnter with waxed paper and pr mier tcm ly down over paptr i jck in c nl parts ice and salt 3 to i hours serves aged palgrave resident dies 1 lean species stagomantis carolina known as rear horse devil- prior to the observance of horse and mulekiller found in 100ui birthday robert austain the southern and western states g passed away suddenly at his 1 devours caterpillars and insects and thus does much good a south american species mantis argenti na is said to catch and devour even small birds pigeon s milk pigeon s milk is the nime ben to a milky secretion which is eject ed from the crops of both mile and fcmnle does ind pigeons md fed to their oung during the early i starts pifieon s milk is not com posed of food that has been partl digested and then regurgitated os often supposed ilthnugh it irny scre to moisten sucl tood certiin i cells in the double wjiis of the crop undergo a change to a clevrlike substance and this substance when mixed with mucus ind perhaps an other juice makes up the white fluid fed to the young if the oung die or ire removed during this period both parents suffer st ercl and may die from the turgid congestion of the excessively developed walls of the crop pigeon s milk also has a figurative meaning being ipplied to something thit does not exist such as an imaginary article for which a novice is sent on a fool a errand pajgrave bom in king township mr bolton was a son of the ate william bolton and amelia par ker bolton ho claimed to be the first white woman bom in york count longer lt was hereditarj his iran nt 11 nil to be more than ninety vt rs of age jrtat uncle died at uit age or 106 ik redded uw gnaier part of hb hh 111 kinj m a bion townshipb wit or lew irs in the owen bo nd dktnri ht evenluallj re turned to hls re idence at black he w cri s ink i ar palkrnvc a vouuk man mr bolton was n ud lor hi endurance six feet iw inch in l ikht hi often work il wo in hifu without sleep while uu ed m ihe construction of uie old r ii d tr ink n rrtm gauge railroad ii neither cir mk nor smoked and i rbiud li own jrwit igc o haid work h i irvued b hus wile a step- da ikhur man bolton i daughter vcni cunpbell two soils wll n owtn sound and robert a onto and a brother john bolton onto characterbuilding must be made to fit the day of the automobile and the radio alfred m imndon australia claims it has the greatest number of tall people in the world ice ice ice ice delivered any place in town phone in your order wood of all kinds at right prices wire fencing and supplies we can build you any type of fence you desire hydro poles cedar posts any length c e smith georgetown rr 2 phone 84 r 13 edisons electric lamp for many years physicists here and abroad knew the basic principle of the incandescent electric lamp time and again various man at tempted to make such lamps by put ting a carbon rod in a vacuum with in a glass container and then run nmg an electric current through the rod but always such heat devel oped that the lamp burst the mo ment it was lighted modern light ing had to wait until edison got the idea that if the carbon filament were made fine enough no such heat would be developed tried it and it worked these are but three of countless examples that show how thin are the barriers that sometimes separated humanity from whole oceans of unknown truth the weakest to the wall there are many phcases the meaning of which has entirely changed since they were first coined when we say the weakest shall go to the wall we mean that the fittest will survive but ortg lnally it meant something quite dif ferent in medieval times accord mg to pearson s london weekly the churches of england though strong ly built and outwardly beautiful were crudely finished inside rush mats and reeds covered the floor and there were to seats for the com mob people but round the inner wall a atone bench was cut this bench was r tor the old and the infirm it was therefore a com men cry in church the weakest to the wah loan condition conditions on which licenses will be kranted monev lenders under lhe small loans act parsed at the pres en session of parliament and effec ue next jan 1st have been announc all money lenders whose inclusive charges exceed 12 per cent a year up on the amount actually received by ux borrower or the euqlvalent there of are required to obtain j icenses it is to be a condition of the issue of such license to any person hat the experience character and general fit ness of such person or if such per son is a corporation of the officers and directors are such as to warrant the belief the applicant will carry on with efficiency honesty and fairness to borrowers provision is made also for the in vcsugatton of the loan business of non licensed lenders that is those whose charges do not exceed 12 per cent when applications are made licenses questionnaires will be sent calling for information as to the past experience and loaning practices of the applicant the act applies to all money lend era and defines that term to mean persons other than chartered banks carrying on the business of money lending registered pawnbrokers are excluded consideration paid for a wage assignment is deemed to be a loan of money timely advice three prominent california educa tors all connected with the san jose state college went on a ruling trip had a fine days sport and started to row ashore anotherzpwboai went breeslng by and the ouanarhane4 them with youae guys trying to make shore yea cametbe answering chorus of three well why dent yon try pulling hi that anchor stoeton globe a bank wbebk small accounts are wblcomk seven years ago we couldnt have bought the doorknobs today the bouse is ours its small but its paid for thanks to that bank of montreal savings plan we followed bank of montreal sstaaushsd isit georgetown branch j r smith manager youe bank and how you may use ix atk ft iaitt clearing sale of spring millinery hisses claridge announce a clearing sale of spring millinery prices from 100 up misses claridge main street georgetown herald block uprturs qwsnapshot cuil i softer shadows baby blanket on the lawn la a line reflector note the soft pleasing light effect it produce here use such a reflector when you can especially whan taking informal portrait if we compare a picture- or a snow scene with almost any summer picture we observe a marked dif ference in lhe shadows n the sum mor picture shadows tend to be strong and black in the winter pic ture shadows possena beauthul clearness and transparency and the effect tend to he quite pleating the reason for this difference is ttiat snow on the ground is a fine rrfittlor whlrh ltsht into all bhndow anas and brightens them in unmitipr grfn pnsi does not have this tamo rfletink power and therefore shadows arc darker however even in summer we can brighten the shadows ot a subject if we use aome sort of improvised re flector a book or newspaper held in a person a lap will often serve as such a reflector helping hluralnate the face and soften shadows there it a subject is placed near a wall of a white honse and stands bo that the wall reflects light to the shadow bide of hla face a more pleasing picture may be obtained the babys blanket on the lawn is an excellent reflector which softens shadows in the child s race and clothing soft transparent shadows are generally desirable in an informal portrait especially if we want a truthful likeness of our subject open shade as on the bhady side of a bouse often provides a suitable light ing the subject in open shide la illuminated byhtfrt reflected from the sky i istead of direct sunlight naturally since this llrht is weaker exposure should be increased to about twice normal a very short time or balb exposure may be necessary with a box camera or in expensive folding camera form the habit of observing shad own vhen you take a picture be on guard against broad hat brims that shade features too much and be ware of lighting that is too harsh or eontrasty for good effect usually a simple reflecting device will solve such problems and help toq get a better picture u7 john van oofldar