The Ferris Wheel (Ferris, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1929 Page: 4 of 12
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Is. i
FERRIS
WHEEL
JUST HHMANS
9y Cmi Carr
^£F"^
Makes Life
Sweeter
i
Too mil' ll In isii loo rlrii u
or i<h> much smoking. Lots of (hinge
cause sour stomach, lint one tlilntt inn
correct It <|iii<’l:ly. I'lillli|w Milk of
Miignosl* will ulkulliilze l In* mill.
ThIU* H Spoonful lit tills plr.IHUIlt
preparation, uml the system U soon
IWWlcflMl.
I'tillllpn Is HlwuyM ready to relieve
dl»lrt>KM from ovreutlng; to check nil
acidity; or ocufrullr.» nicotine. lie-
•ui>mlM*r tills for your own I'oinfort;
for riii* Main* of those arouinl you.
Kndorsed liy |>tiyhIoIhiio, IiiiI limy al
ways Niiy 1‘hUltp*. I Min’t liny some-
thing i*ljw* mikI expect tin* mi mo r«-
•un*t m
ILLIPS
Milk T
m
IAR« * «
\#//}
BMcOuit K.'">pir»> svihIhsI*
The Bird* of Life ill
_____________ . ►
<>
By DOUGLAS MALLOCK |
"WHY OON'TCH A
WRIST WATCHf"
CAN
BROTHER, AN' BUY THIS NICE
IF NOT « sparrow p**ri«b
I Jim l!if cures,
Tlo*n how in 11 uni’ll to rlmrli b
Birds of theirs!
I ijo not mean Hu* swallow
or tit** h.'-ii.
Hill nil lIn* J \» tlml follow
After Ini’U. /
*» .1. ‘
Thorn la tin* hint of luughlcr.
Bird of low*,
'Tim hlr<ln tlml follow mi *r
fthds above,
TlfflRT la tin* rohlu singing
In tin* iron,
Tli. ro ia thn aoiiit upsprlugiig
In you umi mi*.
If It la wio.-;s lo Niiihh'ii
Itlnla tliul slug,
Whirl of tin* thought* Hint gladden
Everything?
Who nii'i'la it miiiIt** with sneering,
l.ovi* with hill*,
Moiiiii ilny almli alum! with fearing
At God's Killi'.
I O, |9iO, Ihuisl*. Mull... h I
11 —
flUotheriCooK Book
What li.il.oot it.ma the wort "cheer-
f ti I noon" Imply? It maun* a . .oil»nti*.l J
k|. rl! il tn. ina a puri* luoirt: it inruns
a k I ml anil loving dlrpiislUnn II imoin*
humility and rharlty It tiu-aii* a iiuii*
an.ua eppfcclutlon of other* and a
modest opinion «f aalf.—Tliu. kariiy.
THINGS WE ALL LIKE
Port*
Wg.
ff'% vyM
? TAtfeN
. hr.
*
"Now
you'll like
bran"
-
L
of Magnesia
For Galled Horses
Hanford’s Balsam of Myrrh
It—if b*ak (or lr.1 b*4tl. it nmt aaltud M Mat
Why We
What We Do
by M. K. THOMSON. Pb. D.
uPISO’S
./»'*“ COUlfhS
•eeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee
WHY WE ARE CHEERFUL
*TpilK iioriu.il lo’ulih.v person
* II
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tonic
Stops Malaria, Roatoroa
Strength and Energy. It
Purifies and Enriches the Blood.
You can feel iu Strengthening,
Invigorating Effect. 60c.
(Pleasant to Taka)
wmmrnmm
OILS
ENOCD—NO LANCINfi
2k/f Car boil contain* ,
that quickly draw
wont l*oil or carbuoilr.
■.pleading,
iat. Or a<
Inaradlaala
or t cor* of
tilopu pain
nil today
. --------- 0*1 Car bn. I today
fa &&&!?* l°
la Tuba wMh Pm Wt-o
Attaohmanl, 7b|
Jg. In Mu boa.
aoo.
RAZO
OINTMENT
lltfjftnuitMil tncurrsnyribieof
llrhinvr, lilind. Hlitxliiif nr Pro-,
trudimr Pi I** or money refunded.
= '
Lava"* Logic
tie llkeil her fur the way she lllrle.l,
fur tin* trick she Im.l ef curling tier
lipg till<i hii Irrewl dlble pout, fur the
lltlle phllleil skirls lie Mure tti.it
Showed tier ilimpleil knees, fur I lit*
tv MV she whispered "darling Imy."
No eventually they were married.
a • a a ,
tie divorced her for the way mIii*
flirted, for the trick she hud of . url
IriK li«*r ll|.s Into un Irrc-d %Uhlc p ml,
for llie Hllle pluited skirl*. . . ,—
Kuiisua t Ity Slur
It'a High Now
Hill—lie's gathering m.iterlnl for
his novel iiom
Ed Tiaveling n round the world’/
Hill—No, colleetlnK waste pnper.
la
usually cheerful. I'lieerfulneNM la
tile rill'* Pltlier llmll .................
The optimistic nltltiide la like a
gauge. It l0ith*>i*ea thut nil la well.
The opposite nlliilph* showy Unit
there ia aomellilng wrong.
We ar*» cheerful because It la pleas-
ant to lie iiiui wuy mid w* usually
prefer the pleasant feeling* and emo-
tion! to llieir AlrfMMites. Cheerfulness
Inis In II the note of hope mid eg-
pei'lnn. y. Tills Is it decided iiaaet In
the struKKle of life. Our chances of
geltinM what we want mid of over-
eotnliiK dotl'Mitti**m and dangers are In
creased hv milnteinliiK a cheerful
frnnie of initnl.
It ia I*.* uus.* of tills fa.' thut we
often pretend to he cheerful Slid
optimistic when we an* fur from It.
It helps us to keep up a good courage
which la so essential to success.
We are also cheerful because we
have discovered that It has a more
fnvorahlc effect on others. No one
wants to lie aasoclHted with a grouch.
"I.nugh Mint the world laughs with
you ; weep Mild you weep alone." The
world pluecs a high premium on Joy,
laughter and cheerfulness. Those
who make others laugh are extremely
popular. They tire welcome every-
where.
Cheerfulness Is desirable not only
as a nieaiiM of lietting wluit we want,
hut It Im also ileslruhle in Its own
right us hii end in iiself.
I “leasure Mini happiness which can
not exist without m cheerful dlsposl
tlon are ii part of life and n very Im
portant port. We live for these e\
pcrlctiocs. When we lone them wo
seek lo retain Ihem. When We liavee’l
them we move earth and heaven to
attain them.
lie) i*y M." lur* Nrwseaaor Syndlcat*.)
------I)-----
SUPERSTITIOUS
« • • SUE • » «
Don’t Let That Cold
Turn Into “Flu”
Juif Rub
A way
Danger
That cold may
turn into "Flu/’
Grippe or. even
worse, I’neu-
m -nia, unless
you take care of
it at once. i..-
ItubMusterole *
on the congested ,
IMlta and see how 1 •
quickly it brings relief as effectively
ai the messy old mustard plaster.
Musterole, made from pure oil of
mustard, camphor, menthol and other
•ample ingredients, is a counter irri-
tant which stimulates circulation and
helps break up the cold.
You will fed a warm tingle ai it
enters the pores, then a cooling actua-
tion that brings welcome relief.
Jara A Tube*
Vi. -*1
Orttvr than m muitarJ platter
SHE HAS HEARD THAT—
If you will go upatalra backward,
eating a Hard boiled egg without any
aalt, meanwhile looking in a glatl—
girlie, get ready to grab—for it ii aaid
that you will see your future hubby
looking at you over your left ehoul
dcr.
M N«'Wrtf»»|M*r Nyri'li* tf• • >
Sight Reitored by Shuck
Nhe- U ul !’ii. I Miller restored (hr
y .Jil ill ii mum at Itordeuux, ; m*e.
In IHifi he was aciidenlnllv tdtlldeil.
anil an opi'i'aliou iierfurmed tipuu his
eyes pruyed UPatlecosiful. ItecenUy,
when he plunged his head under a
cold water tap lie felt sudden puiii* In
Ills eyes, anil then found Im could see.
SOMETHING TO
THINK ABOUT
By F. A. WALKER
illions choose this
ally against constipation
. . - If -
because it is so effective
and the bran flakes are
MIRACLES
A lll'Aldilt Wl'llea the fullowlng:
** "I note that In giving ua
something to think nlaiut, you fre
I|uentl\ refer lo the lllhle. I mil mi
earnest student of the serlpttires, hut
there is one part of them tlint I cull
not understand and tlml Is the ml
I'li' h's. I wish you would write mi
article nhout them,"
The reality of the miracles has ul
ways been the first thing atiuck.-d h.v
1 hose w ill! were Ulihehevei s III the
Christian religion,
Voltaire, iihhollgh before lie died he
ereeted ii church which bore the In-
script Ion; *“|hs> erexlt Voltaire.”
("Voltaire erected this lo find"), was
un unhid lever mid of the miracles, he
said: “A miracle Is h suspension of
the inws of nature; sueh a thing nev-
er did and never enn lake phice."
I.et us siipiHiNo that In the Interior
of Africa there lived a man who nev
er having seen Ice knew nothing of
Its character or properties.
Another native who hud traveled to
a cold cl'male saw men and even
horses upheld by I he surface of a
river
'Vouhl not the first man receive the
lory of what Ida companion had seen
with utter unbelief?
Would to* not say, “What you tell
me cannot la* I rue la-cause they would
ink ns so ill as they stepped on the
water? To remain on the surfaee
would l»“ ii suspension of the laws of
nature and so cannot he true."
The Bishop of Itlpon, In a sermon
preached during the war and listened
to hv at least one American soldier,
mild! *\\ miracle Is not contrary to
nature, tmt contrary to our conception
of nature.”
Two thousand years liefure the
Christian era Sanscrit history tells of
the miracles of Menu and Inter of
Clirlstlin. mill the religious llleralure
of India, by far the most voluminous
of all religious writings, gives thou-
sands of incidents of “supernatural"
happenings.
Tor nearly three centuries after the
death of Christ the historians of tluit
period hove written down the accounts
of miracles. Tacitus and Suetonius
recile them mid even the raising of
the dead Is reeorded as having result-
ed from tin* application of religious
truths.
If ibis tie so-If miracles result from
tin* application of truth then they
are as possible in the Twentieth ren
tury as In the first.
Certain It Is that there has never
been a great religion from the time
.if Bruhum and Ills "Institutes" down
to the present which has not had Its
record "f marvels which Is ii hotter
CWlisiatioti of llie Greek original than
miracle." And profane ns well as
siic-ed v riiTigs have lent their a ip-
poit lo the recordings.
But why let the question of the au-
thenticity of the lieu 11 tig of the lepers
or the eurliig of the blind nr even the
resuscitation of the dead Interfere
with the acceptance of the Idea of an
all knowing, all powerful and all-lov-
ing Creator?
Art...... the springing grass, the
bursting (lower, the beauty of nature
and (he wonders of tin* human hotly
and Intelligence each a marvel, a mi-
racle. past all explanation and hninuu
comprehension?
Every sunrise and every star lit sky
Is a wonder a thousand limes greater "
tluin nil the miracles ever written
down.
"The world,” said Martin Luther,
"Is full of inirncles.” Few of them we
niidet-slalid, lilt of them we ii.........
Why quarrel or question Unit all
tilings are possible to the Creator?
u, l>> M, • lur* N> w-ipnp.r M>lull, an- )
I1TIIV use the vicious add vinegars
»V that are sold In the markets so
freely when lemon Juice Is always to
la- obi allied; all add Unit Is whole
some to llie stomach and may he used
In ii lyonniil- e or french dressing uml
served wit Ii no four of had results?
Here Is a new one you may wish to
try:
Orang* Vinegar.
Si ruin the Julee of six Inrg** oranges,
place In a glass Jar, add one dis-
solved cake CM-omitrcssed yeast, cov-
er With a cheese doth mid let stand
In n warm place for about a month,
or until sour enough to suit the taste.
Serve mi lettuce with mayonnaise
dressing.
Raw Vegetable Salad.
Dissolve one package of lemon gel-
atin In a pint of hulling water, add
Ivvo tiihlespoolifllls ot lemon Ji'h'e,
one half teaspoonful of salt, a thisli
or two of ea,venue and chili. Take
one half cupful each of diced heels
raw carrots, raw raiding* and celery
When the gelatin Is slightly thick
eneil add the ve„.,aides and put Inti
Individual molds. Chill until firm.
Serve on lettuce wit Ii mayonnaise
dressing.
Orange Custard With Meringue.
I'eel mid remove all the white tltiei
from three svvisd navel oranges. Slice
very thin uml arrange Uu* slices In n
glass serving dish. Cover with a
hulled custard which has been pee
pared from I w o eggs, a pi.it of tullli
and one-third of a cupful of sugar.
Flavor wilh a hit of grated orange
rind and chill thoroughly before pour
lug over the fruit. Top with whipped
cream In rose-, garnish wilh a cube
of raspberry Jelly uml serve.
Orar.ga Frosting for Caka.
Take one cupful of sugar one Uilr'l
eilpful of orange Julee, llie grilled
rind of an orange and put to cook un
III It forms ii iliOcud. I'o no: stir while
cooking Four In n tine stream over
the well liculeli white of nil egg mid
heat until thick and tlrm enough ta
so delicious
POST’S
BRAN FLARES
• l«» P Co
WITH
far.
OTHER PARTS OP WHEAT
Gigantic Phyaique of
Primitive Man Proved
A man powerful enough to ciuumi-
In hattla to the death with a huge
huffulo ut a sire and type lew ex
llint Is considered by uillhorllies to
have been traced by a discovery re
ported from the Transvaal. The hones
and skull of a primitive man were
fount! lying near llie fossilised lames
of a Klilllt huffulo, whose head meas-
ures IJ feet across.
"Tills appears to he evidence of a
race of men earlier than the negro,
!■ South Afrleu, for whom search has
been Hindi- for u considerable time,"
said Sir Arthur Woodward, former
keeper of the geological section of
the British museum. If this ts so
llie disco-ery Is of grout ImportaiP-e.
"In the absence of more Information
it Is Impossible to give even an ap-
proximate date when this type of
limn may have lived, hut the tames
aro probably not older than some
specimens hi the British museum It
la quite likely thut tills mini died lu
lighting the buffalo and that he was u
normul man of Ids time."
A great deal of sympathy Is utter-
ly wasted oil henpecked hushaiids.
Fortune smiles
ut minty.
at few and laughs
Kill Devil Hill Shift*
Though llie tablet to llie llr«| suc-
cessful llight of un airplane recently
unveiled ut Kitty Hawk, N. (’„ Is sup-
po-ed to mark the scene of the
M'rlglit brothers notable exploit, Kill
I>evII hill from which they launched
lliclr p: uu* mi Unit memorable day
twenty-live years ago lias slilflisl a
mile northward from Its position at
that lime. The strong sea winds
which piny over the sand dunes of
that region lire responsible. How-
ever, the site Is near enough for tho
purpose of honoring the cradle of
aviation,*— I’ulblinder Magazine.
Sail U«ed a* Landing Field
Tests with 11 luff' hall drugged by
ii moving ship and used as a binding
place for hydroplunes lire reported te
have been successful In Germany. A
plane repeatedly started mid landed
on (lie sail, which gave a smoother
area than the w iter itself.
Large*! National Park
Yellowstone Is the largest national
park and luis rn area of square
miles.
No one cures for your cheerful talk
If It Isu't also smart.
Floppy Is the wife who S*il» the
heart her husband loses.
stay on the cake.
_
Bridge Croquette*.
Take two cupfuls of any well sea-
soned. chopped. ......... meat, mil;
with one cupful of very thick white
sauce. Mold Into any desired form,
dip Into egg and crumbs and fry In
deep fnt. Adding a hit of chopped
green pepper, parsley, olives or onion
adds variety and tlnvor. T make tlo*
Ulick entice Use one cupful of mil
and one third cupful of Hour with
four tahlcspo infills of halter, season
Ing to taste.
re). Wntirn N®w»i»ip#p l m >n )
■:*»» 11 ......... »»
Radiola I
- gets the best
that 's on the air
sa
What Does Your Child
Want to Know
Antwtred hr
BARBARA BOURJAILY •
O
W
-
* J
■ km
ft. J
Most popular type of Radiola ever
designed. Faithful, realistic repro-
duction over a wide range. Inexpen-
sire operation from house current.
for alternating current
(Id** Radiotront)
iil
1
•95
HOW 00 CLOTHES KEEP US
WARM
Our bodia* art lik* furnaett
And manufacture h«at—
Our clothing n,u*t hold this warmth
clot* in
From top of head to feet.
(C'eprrlelit.)
Ath tha sr*i Rt.A Radiola Dvolrr f*
demonstrate the "IIT for you and tell
you about the RCA Time Payment Plan.
i -
BCA RAOIOI
*e*oe
By tae teseiee
...
■
•*iierees
;,ii
wm
i
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The Ferris Wheel (Ferris, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, April 5, 1929, newspaper, April 5, 1929; Ferris, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1102723/m1/4/: accessed May 22, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ferris Public Library.