Show :TI1E GARLAND TIM ES Jail ffi Guest Reaches Washington HOW TO' n Mass— Alfred P Salem who lives In a house that connects with th old Witch jail found In a secluded part of the Jail a jailer’s bill dating back to 1629 of Eleven persons were accused witchcraft Three of them were was pressed hanged and another to death according to the bill Two births were also recorded THE FACE IN THE MOON UTAH Wisconsin Finds Witchcraft Bill in Old npmironDnMVain’ ephee jimmy garth waite cO GARLAND S H© 1 Shooting a face in the moon people say is certain to me That the face I can see in a way Is the right or the wrong one to see 0 by Harper & Brother— WNU SAUSAGE CAKES AS A SUPPER DISH on to Meal Cool Evenings EDITII Bj cool days are here the NOW woman housekeeper adds sausage to her list of quickly prepared meats While sausage gained Its early In Its role at the breakfast reputation table It has been given a place at luncheon and at supper In these days of light breakfasts and commuting If you like sausage cakes you will flnd very good sausage meat usually at a lower price than the sausage links There are a number of packaged sausage products as well as specialties of Individual butcher shops which you may use habitually because of your special taste In seasoning Where I use sausage cakes or llhhs I like to cook them the same way either In the oven or In A heavy frying pan with a tightly fitting cover The sausages do hot shrink as much when they are cooked this way and it Is not necessary o prick the links An Interesting use for BAUsage' Is to cover it with- - some biscuit dough otjdL to bake ft fir a Rot oth Apples may be cored and filled with the meat before the are baked A ringof sausages nround A chicken — or even a duck — will make It stretch ns I found to my own great advantage a week or so ago w hpn extra In for dinher when I guests walked was serving duck that M I That Word “Macaroni” Service Good Addition BARBER Add onion and mushrooms one quarter cup water and teaspoon sugar Cover and cook over low fire until beans are tender Heat egg yolk add cream parsley and lemon juice Add this mixture to the beans and stir until hot Add seasoning to taste Serve © Bell 8ndlcate — WNU Senlc be a favorite dish MACARONI may populace but It Is safe to assume that the most extreme macaroni fan would not think of this food of slender tubes made from flour paste as associated with "blessed” or Its name as another name for happiness Yet that Is how It started The Italian “maccheroni” is derived from the Greek where It meant ‘‘blessed" "happiness” and later was’ applied to a funeral feast It Is Inferred that this name was given It from the circumstances that the dish was eaten at such feasts In honor of the dead “macaroni” was used In Incidentally the Eighteenth century to describe a class of traveled young men affecting sense of “fop" a sense In the ways from the fact that derived probably macaroni was looked upon as a luxury Also during our Revolution a body of from Maryland who wore troops a showy uniform were f) Be Syndicate —WNU Servlca DIZZY DRAMAS Now By Joe Bowers Playing — “DUCKS’ © S Establishes Pub!!o Ledger Camp Gliders teaspoon Mix and In the handling as San cut twenty grees minutes In a hot oven Fahrenheit) Sausage With Scrambled 6 English muffins pound sausage meat 6 eggs cup tomato or mushroom 1 Inc— WNU Servic Drouth Disastrous to American Desert Mirage Dragoon Arlz— Drouth apparently is even disastrous to mirages One of the greatest mirages of the American desert four miles east of there has disappeared Although the illusion has been seen for as many years as the oldest settlor remembers it lias been gone since the first of July The mirage on a trnnscontincntil has attracted thousands of highway tourists It was one of the largest in the world a grent "sheet of water" extending for ten miles in length salt and sift dry Ingredients shortening Add milk little as possible and roll Cut with to Inch thickness a good sized biscuit cutter (two and one half inches In diameter) and crease dull n the middle with edge of a Tlace a heaped tenspoonful of knife ground sausage on each half biscuit and turn the other half over It pinchBake ing the two edges together well (423 de- Eggs M fi9U fo classify all the disturbance! yet Right now they are annoying After a while they won’t be noticed That’s the way with things In New enough as York A recent Bale of Manhattan real es tate wns somewhat out of the ordinary In the first place the property a street block valued at $125000() had been In the possession of but on owner almost two and a half centuries In the second place there never had been a mortgage on It The Trinity Church corporation was the owner and the property a part of the old Trinity farm was granted to the church bj the British crown In 1697 In the tlmi of William and Mary Trinity farm was the original grant the British crown to Trinity church Its Infancy The boundaries with a few variations coincide with those of the lower Manhattan disIndustrial trict and a bountiful crop of skyscrapers ha 8 grown on land that once was fertile fields Trinity's holdings are taxed on an assessed valuation of and there are $30(100 000 worth of church properties which are tax exof In to Slipping along from lighthouses there were those throe pickpockets gentlemen of that profession who spent street poa night In the lice station As a cell mate they had a plumber a rather mussed and drunken pTumbor who didn’t look as If he empt and done much plumbing lately hacj therefore was no prospect at all "Ills ofllcq Subway eavesdropping: When the plumber faced the judge Is under his hat— and the premises Aro the next morning and made an offer vacant’ to pay the policeman © Bell srmllcit —WNU Service whose uniform he had torn In a Utile encounter $5 damages nnd to take the pledge the a were bit Interested pickpockets They were still more Interested when the jHdge accepted the offer and the plumber drew out a roll of $233 and made payment after he had kissed the ItBMOVE machine oil from linen Bible and bade farewell to booze for It stand until the stain disapa year were released for pears then wash It In worm water and The pickpockets lack of evidence They didn’t seem to soap be entirely happy however After meringue lias been placed on a pie In it should bo cooked in a very Moving to another neighborhood slow oven for 12 to 15 minutes The New York Is like moving to another we We found that out when meringue then will stand up when cool city came down from Washington Heights To prevent a gas stove from rusting to Riverside drive and One Hundred and Fourth street We found it out rub the entire Inside with a flannel over cloth which has been saturated with we when moved again recently from Riverside drive to Central park sweet oil West Save a pnrt of a roll of paper after Now Instead of looking out on the flashing river with Its continuous traf a room has been papered When patchfic and its two direction ice cakes In ing Is needed the paper will be readily the winter — they go either up or down available C) the to the tide — we look stream according Newspaper WNU fcervlca out on a mess of big rocks In the park a new set Also we have encountered Prone to It wns the On the drive of noises constant swisli of traffic with now and French Scientist Finds then t! e whistle of a train or a boat Paris — Flowers are apt to be feverHaven't been in the new location long ish to the says a communication French Academy of Sciences by Professor Blaringhein reporting his obserthe vations on of plants temperature Some of the flowers that are given to developing abnormal temperatures ' v- he says are the narcissus the nasturtium and the dandelion Most flowers are given to higher temperahowever J1'! tures at budding time sometimes sev eral degrees above the temperature of the surrounding air This Is easily v 10 noted In svveetpea buds between o’clock In the morning and noon The male flowers of dioecious and monoecious plants are warmer In temperature than the female flowers of the same plant at the same state of de- 'r Savory Sausages for in Virginia Cook small sausages until they are Remove from pan Va — Out ro regain light and brown Big Meadows fKur off all but twTo tablespoons of world gliding supremacy the United fat and add one tablespoon butter two States has established a national glider tablespoons minced celery nnd one half camp here In the heart of Shenandoah National park cup tomato catsup (to Stir until hot and The nation’s foremost glider planes pound sausage) 6ere with sausages on buttered toast and pilots now are assembled on the crest of the Blue Ridge mountains for Sausage Biscuits another chance at world records Vi cup ground sausage If the camp proves successful It Is 4 teaspoons powder baking believed the National Park service will 4 tablespoons shortening create a glider center rivaling the 2 cups flour world renowned German camp in the cup milk 1 Anderson a J P Morgan & Co Is one of Ihe very few— and the only— Individual who owns lighthouse outright It’s a used lighthouse and therefore may not have been a bargain at $1150 which was the price he paid the government for It but still customers for used lighthouses are not many For years the light kept ships off the rocks at Grinnell Point up in Maine It wms still In fairly good condition But times and aids to navigaIts usetion changed and It with an fulness So the government ever ready use for money sold It along with eight others InterIt seems that Mr Anderson’s Is confined est In lighthouses to this one because It Is close to the This asproperty he owns up there sumption Is borne out by the fact that having bought It he doesn’t Intendto make any use of It whatsoever A partner possibly a real Francisco Exposition May Be on an Island - - - ' f1 rv- - ' j ' f Flowers ‘ilJS' I fr velopment Says: Fever 1 1 It has been proposed that the San Francisco exposition of 1938 be constructed on an Island made out of Jthe Yerba Buena shoals This combined air view and drawing shows how the fair (left center) and the completed San bridge would look with Berkeley Oakland and Pie dmont In the background must be ntration on his gun Stream! extremely con- 114 must bd ex- tremely The wlngshot wltht shotgup m He hand Is exactly the opposite j requires great target concentration lie must be first second nq hasj barrage of shot pellets to fling a£ bis target Ills target II hwvrnU faster than ever deer could Vun It Is smaller Also tangs Is limited quicker than the Also h)s gun He must shoot rifleman’s bullet about a third as fast Cons©he must pay more attento "lead”' or “forward allow- Only quently tion ance" Both of his eyes must be wide At least 60 per cent of hts open on the vision must be concentrated flying target Only about 80 per cent on his gun And about 10 per cent on the area of which the target Is the center From this you can readily see that any form of “hind sight” on the breech of a shotgun barrel Is an absurdity It tends to make a sort of wlngshot out of you and about the only type of shot you can have any of with hope any degree of hitting regularity will be the straightaway shot that requires no absolutely "lead" to the absolute dub the man In the world to teach to Is the good rifleman who has never used a shotgun Trained to absolute when shooting he will Invariaconcentrate bly squint one eye about 80 per cent of the vision of the other eye on the gun and then try to get on the flying target with all the precision he would ordinarily employ In punching holes In a paat a hundred yards per It simply can’t be done The wlngshot must be The standard front bend at the muzzle Is all he has time — or eyesight— to be aware of And he doesn't see much of that Q Western Newspaper Union Next hardest Blight Did Not Destroy Sturdy Chestnut Trees For several years It has been Indicated that the chestnut tree that was threatened with complete destruction hy the blight or bark disease appearing thirty years ago China by way of Europe wns Seek Trace coining back Four years ago In a resenrch cirof Prehistoric Life cular prepared by John E Lakovlew Ore— Six scientists from for the Pennsylvania departthe University of Oregon and StnaforJ ment of forests and waters It was university are exploring for evidences stated that "the persistent sproutof prehistoric life in the Guano Lake ing ability of the chestnut Is Its ranch region They hoped to discover main hope For twenty years It how far north the "Great Basin” cul- has persistently met Its death loss races was estab- with repeated crops of new sprouts ture of prehistoric A wide variety of Indian rock The blight has not lished jet been able to kill all the root systems from which writings and other signs of prehistoric races have been found In the region These sprouts sprouts develop are the main battleground of the Plymouth Rock Draw blight" Now It Is stated Plymouth Mass — Plymouth Rock by Flenry El America’s blrthstone attracted tourists In a service letter of the Clepper from 47 states and 43 foreign countries I’ennsjlvania department of forests of 10000— this year —a total Only and waters that many blighted New Mexico was unrepresented In the chestnut sprouts have been found list of states that are 35 feet tall with dlameterr Scientists and spread with Split the muffins Place under the broiler the sausage While broiling poach for five minutes the eggs and place an egg on each Tour muffin tomato or mushroom sauce over them and sene at once pieces and He has but a scious of his gun He single bullet In the chamber must' drlTe that bullet with all the accuracy that keen eyesight and between brain careful and trigger finger can muster Even on running game as big as a deer he must use a high degree of precision that enforces major concentration on the front bead I know of course that many deer s are killed In Maine and the and in the mountains of Pennsylvania every year by hunters who merely snap shoot without seeing their sights or even their rifle barrels The shots are usually at Bhort- range frequently less than 50 yards such a snap Sometimes shot Is necessary Rather often as a matter of fact But no good rifle-- ’ man ever tries such a snap unless there Is no other way out of It And many Is the deer wounded by tyros too excited and too nervous to aim that Is left to die an agonizing death In the forest perhaps days later No the rifleman with his single bullet needs all the sighting aid b? can get He requires great conce' from sauce Special String Reans pound string beans onion 4 cip sliced mushrooms I egg yolk II cup cream 1 teaspoon minced parsley 1 teaspoon lemon juice Salt Paprika Topper N'utmeg Yash beans and cut Into Inch ”r TO U Field animal In the first place such a gadget violates the first principle In wingshooting by enforcing too much concentration of attention on the gun The “peep" or aperture sight wgs a wonderful step ahead In accurate rifle shooting The good rifle Bhot however £My Neighbor ' Itff apple sausages rings linked potatoes Carrots with brown butter Tumpkln tarts Coffee Methods of Preparation: Light oven Scrub potatoes and bake Core and slice apples Bake sausages with apples heat and Open can of diced carrots dress Open can bouillon and heat Make coffee lake sturgeon donated by the Wisconsin conservation Ibis commission being lifted on a train Into a barrel filled with water was placed In the bureau of fisheries aquarium In Washington He replaced “Old Spencer’ a favorite Inhabitant of the aquarium who died It' Quick Meul ITot Bouillon Baked ?s- - How It Started By Jean Newton Editor once In a while come with spare time on his hands tries his bright genius at of shotgun new form a creating that will make a good “Bight” wlngshot out of a man overnight In my humble opinion this Is tha “perpetual motion machine” of the world wingshooting About ten years ago when I knew a great deal less about wingshooting than I have since learned even I thought I had a real idea for one of these contraptions that would result In a shooter becoming a a lngshot about the third day after he began using It Alas — I have since acquired and good sense enough experience to know that there ain’t no such EVERY and the Russian British Wasserkuppe and French national gliding camps A quarter of a century ago the United States led the world In motor less flying Work of permanently Improving this natural glider area has been undertaken by members of the Three Hundred and Fiftieth company Civilian Conserx ation "corps THERE’S ©' By Bob Nichols of 6 Inches |