CENTRAL POINT HERALD OCT. 5, 1916 C entral P oint H erald GIFTS FROM SPACE Gb As W m . R. B k o w k k . Publisher AN lo<-al newspaper A Central Point and the Koifue Ulvar V »!!«•>. I HI V HAPf R in kept on HI* at the D akc A d I r(i i I» vkhtihing A g e n c y . I n c , 427 South Main Street. I»a Angelet«. and 'iT* Market St re* i. S.»n F r a n - wh» re routract« for leJver- iiaina ca« U; made for if P ubl ished E veky T hursday . hubarni-tion juice, fl.fjij per year, in advance. f W j? K I T C H E N (IP B O A U D VARIOUS SW EETBREAD S. VK I I > S W E E T B R E A D S - Take one | mhi iitl of sw tu?t bmnlR two B IH blO Sponil fll I h o f fill. HH 11 H ll*l pepper Souk Hie NWeetlireuils in **ol«l wuter f*»r tifteen miiiiiies to extra« ! tin* hiooil Remove the pipes und mem brnne parboil in suited wuter and drain. I'm them in n baking dlsli and ..... . ove, , 1 , 0,0 ,l„. lut. «Idol, has been hunted linke until hrown find serve with tomtit«» sum e Boiled Sweetlocnds. One pound of sweet bi ends, « mi ** pint of boiling water. I ut ] f u ten .spoon fill of salt and one ta blespoonfill of vinegar or lemon luiee Soak tin* sweet breads in void water for llfieen minutes and after removing the pipes and membranes cook Hie residue in boiling water, to whirl) the lemon julre or vinegar and salt have been lidded When they are lender plunge them Into eohl wuter to harden and * 01 < i break them Into small pieces and serve in while sauce Steamed Sweetbreads. One pair of sweet breads, one t»ibU*sfMitmfu! of but •or. a «punter of h < iipful of stock, sail and pepper f’ut tlie sweetbreads into cold water and bring to a boil Sim iner for three minutes then put them into a basin of cold water to make them tii in Trim away all gristle and fat, but do not remove I he skin Spread the butter oil a plate lay In the sweet breads, add the stock, salt and pep per. Cover and steam for forty min life». Oartilsb with watercress and serve with white sauce. Broiled Sweet breads. One pound of sweetbreads and salt and pepper Par boll tlie sweetbreads and split cross wise. Sprinkle with salt and peppet and broil for live minutes Serve will) butter sauce. Escalloped Sweetbreads and Brains —Parboil oh If'*» brains and sweetbreads and throw them Into cold water to blanch Then remove tlie skin and membranes and chop I hem together >\dd nearly half a cupful of rich milk three hard bulled eggs, chopped: sail and pepper to taste, a tablespoon fill of butter, stir together and fait In rauie kins Cover the top with cracker crumbs and grated cheese and bake In tho oven until brown Serve In the ramekins. The lteinocriits seem t«» realize, to their dismay, that If they can t per anude Mr Hughes to change from plaintiff t « » defendant the ease Is lost The president •‘will not take the Mump," but “ Mill lie* * »•»I invitations to apeak at different p aces" Chair man Vance Met onnlcU is as Machia y c*11la h as a musi, melon. It is not M’hnt Wilson lias kept us out of but m hat lie's gol us Into that * omits ut preseni •b •!• *!• + *!• V ILL A A ID LD BY W IL S O N ’S FAVOR A N D BACKING In M anli last Villa made a raid Into American territory He was a bandit lender who®* career of »ucc»»afui infamy i ad been greatly aided by Mr W il­ son's favor and backinj. He Mils at the bead «*f Mexican s.»| dlers whose arms and munitions hail been supplied to them III eoiisei|iietlce «»f Mr. Wilson’s re versing Mr. T a f t ’s p *11« v nt.d lifting the embargo against arms mid munitions Int«» Met!« • l hey attack«-«! C«»lutubus. Nev. Mexl ' * and klll«'*l a number «»f « ivilitins Hint a h 11 ui I >ei of rutted States tro«»ps On the next da> the president Issued an Htm«»mc «» nient that iide*juiite f«»r< «-s would bo s«'iit In pursuit of Villa “ with the single object *»f capturing tilín " On April 8th. the an nouiu'emcnt Mas made from the White House tVint the troops Mould remain In Me\h«* until Villa m ^ s capture«! It mss furthermore nnnoiin'»*«1 in the |tivss dlspHt« lu*s from Washing ton that lie was t<> I k * taken ‘•dead «a alise Fine wonts! Only they meant nothing He Is liot dead. II«* has 11 «»I l*oen taken alhe. From S|»coeh **f Colonel Til... lore It«» »^evelt. IV Uterini at l.ewlston. Me . in IV half «»f Charles K Hughes. •j® •P ‘ •!• .p .p *p .p .p .p *p d* -p + ■ Mr Wilson timing the pt*«t few day* lias I h m . me mi, h h life long nppotieill uf the pork Istrrel tint l » 1 I* alm,»t Furry now he , 11.1 n ' t »ct.» some of t!'.**,- Mil*. Secretary M, \d,*> r i r n * Treasury iiiipl.'v ees again-t t»*, militi |H»!ltleal not Iv 11 » m,,l If 111,'' iliin't disot*'» I li.* older ttj<-> *iv ilLciy to be Uniuccd School Athletics . i RY ON THE BROILER. Wonderful Meteorites That Drop to Us Out of the Sky. ONCE REGARDED AS SACRED. In th* Early Days Thay Ware Ob jacta of Ravaranca and Worahip. aa la tha Famous Stona at Mecca To­ day— Thair Fiary Flight to Earth. In considering the wonders of tbe universe bare you ever realized bow conspicuous among them are tbe me- tenrPei. those wonderful messages dropped from tbe sky fur us to wonder at and study? They ore the only ma ferial objects which come to the earth from the vast outer world. Among the collections shown In the Nntlnnul museum ut Washington Is a remarkably tine exhibit of meteorites It Includes complete meteorites rung lug in size from the merest pebbles to 1 «reni bowlder like musses and easts re I>r, m Iii, tug gtunt form» like tlnit " f Ita culili lto, « tit, t, bus linen estltuulcd to weigh twenty five tons ami still rests where It fell in Mexico. The National museum has Issued a handbook mid descriptive catalogue of I the meteorite colleetlons in tlie mu ream, written liy Dr (leorge I’ Mer j rill, head eurnlor of geology, from j which the following Is all ahstrnel- j Although meteorites iiresumnhly have | fallen sluee time Immemorial, skep- 11,‘lstn was felt at tirst liy hotli the C an d id ate fo r D s t r lc t A tto rn e y for Jackson C iu n ty popu’ai and selentltle mtrnls regarding the possibilities of stones falling from •J« s^s »J* »J, »J* «1* ••« »!« »J« «J, »J* *J« »J« »J« *J* spin e In the few early recorded eases HURRY TRIPS BY ACTORS. ♦ where meteorites seen to full were re j W ILSO N KISSED THE H AND covered they were regarded as objects Mansfield's Record Quick Jump From J- RED W ITH AM ERICAN of reverence Mild worahip A stone New Orleans to Chicago. BLOOD. will, h fell In ancient Phrygia. In Asia Envious persons have been known to Minor, about VOO years before Christ poob|Hiob tlie actor who thinks that President Wilson explicitly was worshiped ns Cybele. tlie mother Ids l ie is not all cakes and ale. Many shows that the Carrunzlstas, uot of the gods Another, which dates years ago we thought the limit had once, but repeatedly, made at­ back to the seventh century. Is still been reached when E. L. Davenport tacks on American towns and + preserved at Mecca, where It Is built acted at a matinee In Philadelphia and killed American citizens and mu­ + Into tlie northeast corner of the Kn’a dupll-nted the performance tn New tilated them In September, Hilo. + ba and revered as one of the holiest of York the same night, l.ater came the Y'ct on Oct. 19, 1915, less than a + relies. The great Casas Gratifies Iron sensational jump of Lawrence Barrett mouth later, this same 1 Resident weighing about 3.000 pounds now In by special train from New York to Wilson, through his same secre­ + the national collection at Washington, Sun Francisco In less than four days tary of state, formally announc­ + was found In un ancient Mexican ruin and the Joseph Brook-.lauuiigcbeU leap ed to Carranza's agent that It + awMlhed In mummy clothes In a man from Milwaukee to Philadelphia be­ was Ills "pleasure” to take the + tier lo Indicate that It jvas held In tween Saturday midnight and Monday qji|> nunity “of extending rec- •F more than ordinary veuerutlon by the In time for a regular performance In ogniiion to the de facto govern­ + prehistoric Inliabltunls the latter city. ment of Mexico of which Gen­ + The earliest known undoubted me On e ItIchard Mansfield’s energies eral Venustlano Carranza Is the + teorlies still preserved are those of compassed s hurry trip between New chief executive." President W il­ + Kllsigen. Bohemia and Enslshelm. I'p Orleans and Chicago. On a Saturday son i Inis recognized the govern­ + tier Alsace. The first mentioned Is evening he presented “Julius Caesar” ment w hich. Ids own secretary of + Iron, the second a stone. The Iron was In the Crescent City and on the next stale declares, hail been less 4 found somewhere about tlie year 1400 succeeding Monday evening he repeat­ th in a month previously engaged 4 of our era. The Euslshelm stone, seen ed the experience III Chicago. Mean­ In repealed assaults upon Ameri­ 4 to fall on Nov HI. 1 lit-, about the time while lie had traveled ii thousand miles cans anil in the Invasion of Atuer- 4 - Columbus made Ids discoveries, whs and transported nli the ponderous tin. icau soil, the government at + accompanied with a loud crash like pediments of his well remembered pro­ w hose head was General Car­ 4 * thunder Portions of this stone are to duction of the Shakespeare classic. ranza. who, less than two months ♦ lie seen In the Nuthiunl museum ex This I* how it was done: previously, on Aug. ‘J, 1915, had 4 - hi bit A special train In ten cars was under contemptuously refused to pny ♦ The fall of a meteorite Is usually ac steam In New Orleans at the close of any heed to any representations 4 - eotii| aided by noises variously descrlb the engagement As soon os a scene of of president Wilson on behalf of 4 - c alioukl appivprlate a I'xpcrlnicuta have shown that the gviHidovll.r owing to their extremely quarter of a lillllon dollar«, thè uuiouut be -1 tsmdu,'turs of lightning, placed In isuili iiilletory character Some stone* of a «bigie jear's lire lo««, to (he or- tl i order of conductivity, are metals, vvlib Ii fell In Stvrla In 1859 are stated giinlxutlon and «upport of a bureau of ga- oke. graphite, solutions of salts. to have remained In a state of Incan tire |>reventlon. calltng to die work of a, ids and water. f tbe | u-t. the limes Its volume of vlKtibevl water third Is that of Willamette Ore. ! beatevi to 7 > degrees C. and then weighing 31 to? pounds The-e sre all Th® Plumb Lin® In Porto Rico. ,'rv b g It with filter pa| er Iron meteorites Tlie l«r"e*t known Therc aie pia , « «b e re thè dlreefloti Individual aerolite of meleorte «tone 1« of a pumi!» I r e i * ii.it certi,-al. Irregn thsl of Kn.valiltiva Itungarr weighing Isrlties yf denslty In thè ®ru*t y ( thè -Mexr\,Cat' Soltis Vs> pound* now In the Vienna gioia» mar prtslme tilt* pbeuomeuoa en I lev) on me yesterdaT National museum A retnarkab e I m M i • In : tw t'r Merrill « « > « ttiat s i known nve fonti.I In «he I* and of l’orto Ilice he fohl me he tin 1 some time teorlte» were produced by the active « bere thè possible answers: Geometry N useful, you may be told, or geometry affords excellent mental discipline. Geometry Is useful. Well, how useful iui«l in what w ays? Professor David E. Smith, professor of the teaching of mathe­ matics In Teachers' college, tells us. "Not more than 23 per cent of tlie propositions (iu l>rui»«jsituuj3 iiu geometry) ^cuiucuj j have unvc any an.? genuine applications outside of geom- « t e r ” « n.l n i c t t n v r i l i o l i vi d I ill V d i i d k t etry.” And a ,1 distinguished physicist has assured uie that tbe 75 per cent of propositions that are of no use are -ot even needed to prove the 25 per cent that are of some use. The teachers of plane geometry have therefore a very considerable task if they are going to justify the time spent on geometry on the ground that geometry is useful. Nor ls their task easier if they take the other horn of the dilemma. Sup- pose one ilid get "mental discipline" from geometry Is It the sort of men- tal discipline that life calls for and gives? Geometry as taught ls a deductive science. That Is, from certain assump­ tions called axioms anil postulates a long series of propositions is developed If the study of geometry really devel­ oped that kind of thinking, whom would it help but lawyers? For prac­ tical life calls for a very different type of thinking. In actual life people observe, or they should observe, and on this basis make a limited inference which leads to ac­ tion. If the action taken fails, they ob­ serve further, construct other hypothe­ ses and act again. It is the method of trial on error. I f there Is to be any mental disci­ pline, ought it not to be of the type rep­ resented by science rather than the type represented by the conventional treatment of geometry? — Abraham Flexner In Atlantic Monthly. Evelyn and the Simplon Pas». The Simplon pass was a famous high- way of travel long before Napoleon eon- structed the highroad. Milton came home that way from his grand tour. and so did John Evelyn. The latter traveler went in fear of his life, not only expecting avalanches to fall on him, but being apprehensive lest bears and wolves should assail him. The only actual harm which happened, however, was that his companion's dog killed a goat belonging to one of the peasants and that heavy com­ pensation hud to be paid—"a pistole," says the diary, "for the goat and ten more for attempting to ride away." Just Three Thing®. In the American Magazine a Chicago business man tells bow he regained his health after a nervous breakdown when he was forty-eight He says: "Just three things are absolute neces­ sities for the smooth running and Ion- gevlty of these human machines of ours. They arc pure air, pure water snd plain food. 1-ood ulone has a price. Both air atid water are Clod's free gifts. Aud yet not one person in ten thousand breathes enough pure air. not one In a thousand drinks enough pure water, and nearly all uf us eat too much " Athletics are in full swing on the local school ground. Jumping standards have been made and are in constant use every day. Swings are being made on many - o - f the large „ trees w o anti d m ajoiity oi the pupils are engaged in this delightful sport, Several o f the rooms have pur- chased balls and bats and the great national uastime is being played in amature Style, ^ time permits, other school » r * ... « - ground apparatus will be placed on the grounds, including parallel bars, rings, teeter bars, a giant stiide, etc. u iu a u lo t?, As iiu no ju football is played lici here, th e high school boys are looking X' ___________ 1 1 „ „ ___ _____ _______ _ __ • forward to a strenuous season in liasket ball. Mr. Smitn, teacher i , the grades, is to be the ath­ letic coach this year and will hbve charge o f the sqtiEd. The ..... ........... ................- * i v. pio peels are very bright for a championship team, as three of last year’s team are back and p le n ty o f new material to fill up the vacancies. Dunlap, the star i guard of last y e a r, will be in the I t r y o u t th js f a „ # ^ ,a8t y e a r g R o s s a n d A |U _ fo r w a r d s > * again compete for those posi­ tions. There is a wealth o f ma­ terial from which to develope a guard and center and with such a squad as this Coach Smith expects to bring home the cham­ pionship. MONSTER BLUE WHALES. The Most Gigantic Creatures This World Has Ever Known. It has beeu said that tbe first duty of a whale Is to be large. The blue whala ls then tbe most successful whale, for it is the largest creature which has ever existed on the earth or In Its waters. Even those extinct gi ,Dt rep­ tiles, the dinosaurs, which splashed along the borders of the iulaud seas of Wyoming and Montana 3,000,000 years could j ago, w u ,« not ..... approach n, v.. a j blue whale \ '‘iIlR'r in length or weight In 1903 ~ n *~ blue 1“ whale 1 1 was weighed In sections at Newfoundland. The animal Was seventy-eight feet long, thirty-five feet around the shoulders, the head was nineteen feet In length and the tail sixteen feet from tip to tip. The total weight was sixty-three tons. Tbe flesh weighed forty tons, the blub­ ber eight tons, the blood, viscera and baleen seven tons and the bones eight tons. Exaggerated accounts of the size of blue whales are current even In repu­ table hooks on natural history, but the largest specimen which has yet been actually measured and recorded ls 187 feet long, stranded a few years ago upon the coast of New Zealand. It must have weighed at least seventy- five tons. Whales are able to attain such an enormous size because their bodies are supported by tbe water In which they live. A bird Is limited to tbe weight which Its wings can bear up In the air. A animal If «. it becomes too large — land “* » * .« mi « . « , „ uewmtra mu Cannot hold Its body off the ground or readily more about and ls doomed to rertaln destruction. But a whale has to face none of these problems aud can grow without restraint. Because whales live In a supporting me,Hum their young are of enormous size at birth, in some iustances the calf being almost half the length of Its mother. I once took a twenty-five foot bali.v, which weighed about eight tons, from an eighty-five foot blue whale.— Bov t'hnpmnn Andrews lu New York Independent. Long Journey® Made by Whales. The whales that swim about tlie Is- whlch lie off the coast of Nor­ way and Finland In March and April travel Immense distances. In May they turn up ut tlie Azores or even at the Bermudas and sometimes pay a visit lo the Antilles. They sw im fast, for lu June they are back again off Norway. Some of those whales have l>oen known to bring back evidences of where they have liven, for harpoons of the peculiar Two W ar Songs. kind use,I off the coast of South A inert­ C arlyle said that "Scots W ha Ilae” ia have been found stuck in them .-St was the finest war song ever penned lames' Cuzette. by uiii u It was cunqiosed on horse­ back while Robert Burns was crossing a wild moor in a thunderstorm. But lt Albinos. The human species offers frequent ex- has never become a real w ar song like tuples of Individuals attacked by al­ the 'Marseillaise," which ha« had pow­ binism. It ls found oftenest among er to fire the French to a white heat men of the black race. White albinos of patriotism for more than a century have si,In of n peculiar paleness, blond and which still retains Its hold upon hair, w hite or colorless beard, pink iris the nation.—1 ondon Answers. and red pupils. The negro albino has skin of variable aspect. In some cases Behind In th© New». It Is white gs milk and In others It Is Teacher— What do you know about Itke wax or. rather, resembles tlie hue Washington crossing the Delaware? of a corpse. Boy—Nothing, tua'um! The boy sklp- It'd us on our paper this morning!— W h i t Won't They Say? Boston Globe. 'Did he tell you that you are the only girl he has ever loved?" Fore® of Habit. Yes and he went further than ttiat." "Fee Miss Annie driving that ear? He did? What else did lie say?" She told me she got It at half price." He said that I was aNo the only "A t ber old tricks, I gee—still driv­ girl he ever intended to lo v e "— De- ing a bargain."-Boston American. troit Free Press. Every Home can have a Musical Instrument VTonâerfu! Valut* in Pianos. Plaÿçr Piano* Talking Machine*, Etc. — tnosntocsrry wh,t \ 1 V e are ■ known to csrry only what istofvi. i is *c>od. wKat what w «ill endure and what s ^ -»* — Coup°n *°r . tifili ^ B p fC ad / 11 p p0rtUnJ' lD l * tD CkY * 0 3 " , - ®cfd <* t‘ is fuJy worth thepne* f.),c.t. Our 1 ».«> payment t-n r, pi.ee the best a 5 >berO'»«'- . ,ia>uon. ?'c* musical instrument, within every- 1 L k «l one , reach Fill out the coupon ! ,\o®oe* •» c ^ _ f t or write tor catalogue». | fCow-?*1 L « 1\ tlna«»*cM**‘ * s i y Sherman & lav& C a \ -'RECL'N o»«»*‘ u