The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1932 Page: 6 of 10
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THE PADUCAH POST
Thursday, July 21, 1932
Panel on Buffalo's ISciv City Hall
I!!
BEDTIME STORY
Pajama Ensemble
By THORNTON »V. BURGESS
LONGLEGS CALLS
RATTLES A IHIEF
The
reckless tongue is quite the
worst
Of all the thing* I know.
So watch your tongue and guard
your tongue.
And let you tongue be slow.
NK ot the symbolic panels designed t>y Albert Stewart, sculptor, ol
New York, and placed over the entrance of the doors o* the new
$7,000,000 city hall of Buffalo, which was dedicated on July 1.
iTolHefiCooR Book
A FEW SAUCES
A WELL made and approprfaN
* * Situce will take an ordinary
meat dishout of Its class, making it
a real creation. The following are
a few that are different:
of butter, one tablespoonful of rich
cream and two tahlespoonfuls of
lemon mice. Another is prepared
with a white sauce, two hard cooked
eggs chopped fine and salt and pep
per to taste. Allow two eggs to each
pint of white sauce. This is good
served with cauliflower.
Mustard Sauce.
To one teaspoonful of evaporated
milk add one teuspoonfu! of mus
turd, mix well and then heat in
„ , . , eight tahlespoonfuls of olive oil. .
sugar, horseradish and made nms- | (1 hv (|am, „ne piespnonlul l,mvmviml like lightning and snap
' ..... ------- ' of vjntl„nr ping up Hie iish in his great spear
19n2. Western Newspaper t'nlon
Breton Beef Sauce.
Take one tablespoonful each
A Ql'ICK tongue is apt to he a
■ * reckless tongue, and a reckless
tongue is one that says things with
out stopping to think if they he true
nr of what harm they may do by be
ing repeated. The tongues of some
people seem to be reckless all the
lime. Gossipy tongues almost always
arc reckless. Oilier tongues become
reckless when their owners lose
their tempers. It was this way with
tlie tongue of Long tegs the Heron
lhat beautiful summer day. Long
legs lost tiis temper and then tie
said tilings which lie wouldn't have
said il he had stopped to rhink.
You see, Longlegs was very
hungry, and he waited patiently for
a long, long time for his breakfast.
You know Longlegs Is a fisherman,
and he is one ot those who wait tor
their meats to come to them Instead
of going after them. Little Joe Oi-
ler is a fisherman, but he is the
other kind. He is such a famous
swimmer that he can chase and
catcli tish. Longlegs Isn't a swim
tiier ai all. so he has to wait for
llie lisli to swim near enough to
where lie is standing for him to
catch one by darling his long neck
tard, mis with four tublespoouiuls
of vinegar.
Lamb Sauce.
I’oud one fourth cupful of boiling
water over four tahlespoonfuls of
chopped mint leaves, let stand until
cold, then add two tahlespoonfuls
of vinegar and enough orange mar
uialade to make a thick sauce.
I "I' *
I like hill.
Americans on Old Caravan Route
on this particular morning
when Longlegs had waited and wait
ed so [tutloutly and at last a school
ot minnows had come swimming In
almost within reach It had been
more than he could stand to have
Untiles Hie Kingfisher suddenly dart
down and seize the biggest minnow
Longlegs had counted ns surely his
at the same time frightening away
all ttie other minnows.
“You're a thief!” he screamed at
Hatties. “You're a robber! That
was my tish !’•
liattles the Kingfisher chuckled.
It wasn't a pleasant chuckle to hear,
because Itnttles hasn't a pleasant
voice. He didn't reply at once be
cause he was loo busy swallowing
Hint big. fat minnow. It was so big
that it stuck in Ids throat, and ne
had to twist and squirm and wrig-
gle nnd gulp and gasp to gel it
down. Bat at last It was down.
Then he looked across at Longlegs
and chuckled again.
“If it was yours why didn't you
catch It?” he usked. “1 didu't
DINKEIS&UHL
CElEIMfi
Unusual Meat Sauce.
Mix together two tablespoonfuls
of brown sugar, one teuspooriful of
grated chocolate, one-half ctipfu ot
preserved currants, one tablespoon-
ful of shredded orange peel and the
same amount of capers. Pour met
these ingredients a cupful of vine-
gar and let stand for several hours
Before serving struin off the extra
vinegar.
Bright green print crepe was user
In creating this smart pajama en
senihle. The wide kid licit is ot
green, with mother of-penrl buckle
An eton Jacket completed the cos
Mime.
A Djnkelsbuhl Parade.
(Prepared by
Society.
National Geographic
11 niftnn D. C.)
KONERS
Rattles the Kingfisher Chuckled.
Egg Sauce for Fish.
Mash rlie ,\olks of three hard
rooked eggs with two tahlespoonfuls j
AN OLD MAN’S
ENVY
By DOUGLAS MALLOCH
A LL an old man’s tasks are done
One by one
All his races have been run.
Now he sits beside the tire.
Old Grandsire.
Little now tits limbs to 'ire.
All of youth’s tasks lie ahead,
Roads to tread.
Things to master and to dread.
Age is like an ancient mill, ^
Gray and still.
All tlie grist ground that It will.
Youth can never quiet sit.
Smoke a bit.
With all life ahead of it.
Youth must up and on its way.
While the gray
Sit and think and smoke all day.
Youth must up and sow the grain.
Shift the crane—
And I hear youth's voice complain
A A. I.hh of .Yew York (center), formerly of Pittsburgh nnd Cleve-
land. and A. t Kane of Milwaukee, as they appeared with their small
native attendant and pack mule, en route from China to India via an old
t hinese caravan route. '1 lie party journeyed overland from Saigon.
French Imlo-China. m Calcutta, and is shown halting for a swim in
western Yunnan, China.
YOUR HOME
and YOU
By BETSY CALLISTER
KNOWS--!
TANNED SKINS
NE of the tirst concerns of the
V-A old-fashioned girl after the
All an old man's tasks are done,
And his fun—
Let me tell you this, my son:
Nothing would seem hard to do
If you knew
How an old man envies you.
1932 Malloch l-IVNII service
Setting New Record
days of her summer vacation were
over was to contrive somehow to re
move the sunburned tones of tier
skin. She used dozens of lemons to
whiten her neck and face tried a
variety of so-called skin wliiteners.
and kept herself as much out ot
the sunshine us possible.
Not so the girl of today. It Is
with pride unit happiness that our
friends wno have had Hieir vacation
show us their sunburned arms and
faces, and usually they assure you
that now Hint they have ncqnlied
their fashionable sun tanned com
plexion they nre not going to permit
it to fade. Girls In city offices tnk<
time from Hieir lunch hour to husk
in the midday sun on tlie roofs, oi
hurry home ai Hie end of the work
ing day Intending to take their sun
hath before (till Sol has gone loo
far down in Hie horizon to he of any j
fY«“;
“Pop, What Is an onion?"
“Vegetable equipped with wire-
less.”
l©. 193! Bril Syndicate. 1—\ NU Service.
I even know you were over there,
j Not that tt would have made any
j difference.” he added with another
! harsh chuckle, “for tish belong to
j whoever can catch them, and that
[ fat minnow didn't belong to you be
| cause you hadn't caught it.”
“It did too!” retorted Longlegs.
! and his voice was as harsh as Itat
] ties' voice. “I was Just going to
| catch it when you stole tt. You re
a rldef, I tell you. Pm going to tell
! everybody that you’re a thief. You
' stole my breakfast I”
Rattles chuckled again. You see.
j having that big fat minnow in nis
; stomach he simply couldn't lose tits
temper. You know temper is very
largely a matter of an empty stom-
ach. Tlie stomach of Longlegs was
empty and so Ids temper was very
j very had. while the stomach of Rat-
tles was full, and so Ills temper was
very, very good.
“Go ahead! Go ahead, Longlegs!”
said he. "Yon tell everybody that
I'm a thief, and I’ll tell everybody
that you're a long-legged long
necked, cross grained, bad-tempered,
lazy dnnotldng, who waits for Ids
meals to come to him Instead of go
Ing after them. Everybody knows
that I never stole anything In my
life, and everybody knows that you
nre Just what I have said you are.
It Is true I haven't many friends,
hut ft Is because I don't want them.
Rut It Is just ns true that you
haven't either. It Is easy enough to
call names, and 1 guess I can do ns
well as you can. So go ahead. Gall
Ing me a thief doesn’t make me one.
nnd you know as well as I do that
minnow didn't belong to anybody
until It was caught. Just to’pay
yon for losing your temper I'm go-
ing to stay right here by the Stnll
Ing Pool, nnd you ought to know, tf
yon don't, that I can bent you fish-
ing every time. If you’ll take my
advice you'll go over to the Big
River. You’ll fill your stomach
sootier there, and then you'll feel bet-
ter."
Longlegs opened his mouth for an
\\ a-lii nil ton,
(WNU Service.)
T"“v 1NKELSBUHL, quaint Bava-
I ) rlan town, ts donning holiday
attire. This summer It will
jelehrate the three hundredth an-
niversary of the raising of the siege
of King Gustnvus Adolphus’ Swed-
ish army, during Hie Thirty Years’
war.
Atirsitinm Lincoln wrote Hie Get
Dinkelshulil is one of Bavaria's
medieval gems. Visitors to Bavaria,
however, have heeded the call of
its larger sister communities—Nu-
remberg, Rothenburg and Nordlin-
gen—hut have passed Dinkelshulil
Ivy. Approaching Dinkelshulil from
across the lovely valley through
which the tiny Wornltz curries its
waters to the rushing Danube, the
traveler beholds a living fairytale
town—a vision from the long-gone
Middle ages. Crossing a bridge over
Hie broad, lily-padded moat which
was once the city's first line of de-
fense and entering through one of
11lie* tower gates, it would occasion
little surprise to tie challenged
tyslnirg address while traveling from brusquely by some ancient sentinel
Washington to Gettysburg ou Hit in lieUnet and coat of mail. How-
hack of an envelope.
BONERS are actual humor-
ous tidbits found in examina-
tion papers, essays, etc., by
teachers.
ever, once within tlie town, the trav-
eler finds a fascinating picture of
serenity.
The urge for speed has not
readied Dinkelshulil; streets still
echo to tlie clatter and clump of
horses and oxen. People liveplneidly,
A metaphor is a thing you shout farming the fertile fields of the sur-
through rounding valley or conducting the
• • . ; same small enterprises which en-
Queen Elizabeth was a virgin' the attention °f generations
queen, and she was never married their forbears. 1 liere is no air
She was so fond ot dresses that she dilapidation about the place,
was never seen without one on. She Everything is incredibly old blit ex-
wns beautiful and clever with a red treuiely well preserved. Tradition
head and freckles. j is hallowed nnd kept alive here, and
... j changes that would alter the medie-
Knlse doctrine means giving pro !v:1^ characteristics of the city are
pie the wrong medicine.
Blockheads were tlie pun cause
of Hie War of 1812.
A democracy believes in God and
a republic doesn't.
Everybody needs a holiday from
one's year end to another.
The press today is the mouth-or-
gan of tlie people.
A planet Is a body of earth sur
rounded by sky.
© 1932 Bell Syndicate.—WNU Servlr,.
not tolerated. Tlie council sees to
it that when repairs have to be
mode on the houses they are carried
out In such a manner ns to preserve
the original form, and no shrieking
signs may he displayed.
The main streets of the city radi-
ate toward the cardinal points from
a central plaza and are lined with
shops and with fine old patrician
houses. Time-mellowed buildings,
gabled and timbered, rest cozlly
against each other, while occasion-
ally an architectural giant rears Its
steep-sided roof above the others,
proclaiming to all comers Its sturdy
old age. Branching off from the
main thoroughfare are narrow,
winding lanes and side streets which
abound in treasures of medieval
artistry. Exquisite examples of
frame and stucco building, Intricate,
angry retort, then closed It without
saying a word. He knew that wtial
Rattles said was true, and to tell
(lie truth lie was a wee hit ashamed t . , „ ,
Finally he spread his hig wings and !‘®"dLforgf^L'.r°" ™!!TL?™* "Ha
Hupped away In the direction ot the * ’
Big River. Rattles the Kingfisher
chuckled noisily. Then lie fixed his
bright eyes on tlie Shining Pool
to watch for minnows.
Kg). 1932. bvT W niirgpp* ) — W\i Service
Old Cutter Bear Fitted for Another Byrd Trip
Kvelyu Ftrraru. of the Illinois
Women's Athletic dub. setting a
now Americnn record In tlie dlscuf
throw with a heave of 111 feet. II
Inches, at the recent Central A. A.
|J. me I' '
use In Hits way.
Once Hie girl tn the office whose
desk happens In he near a window
where the sun shone bright on sum 1
mer days received the sympathy ot J
her associates; now the sunniest J
S|hiI8 In Hie office are Hie most rut !
eted and 11 Is only Hie old fogies j
who insist on having the green !
shades drawn.
This changed attitude Is reflect en
in Hip preparations sold for Hie ip !
lief of sunburn. The demand new !
is for creams or lotions that prevent !
blistering or irritation without nciu j
ally removing Hie bronze tones ol
thp skin.
((g). 19.12 McFIuta Newspaper Syndicate.)
rvlrp)
(WNU Rerv
Jenner Not Discoverer
Jenner is Immortal as tlie disenv
erer of vaccination for smallpox.
Another person, unknown to fame,
also made this discovery—and lie
fore the man who has the credit
for IL That discoverer was Lady
Mary Wottley Montague. And she
In turn learned what she knew from
unknown people In Turkey while
i traveling In that country.
Vf IEW of the old const guard cut
ter Rear taken at (inkland. Calif
Just before site willed for Itoston via
the Panama ennui, to take on stores
and crew for a trip to the Aniarrlh
under command of Admiral Itt.lmrd
B. Byrd. Tlie Hear was cmnpleicU
overhauled nnd refitted nt the <<nii
fornln port und renamed Rear o'
Oukland.
nnd beautiful, secluded courts nnd
gardens await the explorer of these
enchanting byways.
Old Trades Survive.
Trades that are dying out In
other places still exist In Dlnkels-
buhl. Coopers make barrels by
hand In the open air. Copper-
smiths hammer out pots and kettles.
; linking tins, and other utensils, for
1 copper In the kitchen Is still held In
j high esteem In the small cities and
! In country districts, nnd one of the
j few surviving pewter molders still
plies his trade here.
Everywhere, hanging over the
doorways, are wonderfully executed
wrought-Iron signs indicative of the
activities carried on within. One
might infer that at some time In
DlnkplHhiihl's history the guild of
smiths was a power within the
town. At any rate, the signs lend
■ to the streets over which they
swing a note of peculiar Interest,
i As In so ninny South German
towns, tlie houses are for the most
part gayly painted.
I Overshadowing the market place,
as Indeed It overshadows every-
thing else In the efty, Is Ihe Church
| Saint George, built during the lat-
! ter part of the Fifteenth century,
when Dinkel8buh! was at the
height of Its Influence. To the 8,000
Inhabitants It represents something
more than a place of worship. It Is
an expression of all the civic pride
nnd aspirations of the sturdy old
hurglierg who directed Its erection.
And right well they succeeded, for
saint George’* la perhaps the flneet
mte Gothic church In southern Ger-
many. The design and execution
of the structure were placed In the
nhle hands of the muter architect
Nikolaus Racier von Alzey. At the
same time that he received this
commission the city fathers of
near-by Nordlingen engaged him to
build their cathedral. But Nord-
lingers had Just reason to complain
of their bargain, for they saw lit-
tle of the great artist. His heart
was in the work at Dinkelsbuhl, and
there lie spent most of Ids time.
Saint George's was under construc-
tion for nearly half a century, and
when the time came to build the
great tower planned for It, funds
were not available. The master’s
vision was never completely real-
ized, but the stamp of his greatness
abides In the Interior with Its soar-
ing arched ceiling.
Dinkelshulil was founded long be-
fore the Normans conquered Eng-
land. More than a thousand years
ago a group of Franconian peasant
warriors had settled on an eleva-
tion in the Wornitz valley. There,
when not engaged in fighting foi
their existence against raiding
Franks or Magyars, they raised
grain. About the year 028, nt the
command of Emperor Heinrich the
First, walls were erected around
the tiny settlement, and there came
into being a fortified city destined
to withstand the strifes and In
trigucs of n millennium nnd to play
an important role in the pageant ot
history which those ten centuries
were to unfold.
Origin of City’s Name.
There Is division of opinion as to
the origin of the city's name. Some
authorities claim the early Fran-
conian settlement was on a low
hill (huliel) belonging to a man
named Dlnko or Tinko. Thus Dink-
elsbuhl. Others assert that the
chief crop of the locality gave the
city its name, and that It means
wheat (Dinkel) hill (Buhel). How-
ever the city came by Its name, It
prospered. The location was a fa-
vored one, easy of defense, and on
a much-frequented route from the
old Roman empire Into Germany.
From the beginning It belonged
to the Imperial family, and Its gov-
ernment passed by gift or grant or
sale to various South German
nobles. The famous Frederick Bar-
harossu Intended at one time to give
the city as a wedding present to
his son Konrad, duke of Rothen-
burg. but his plans miscarried, and
nearly two centuries later. In 1381,
Emperor Karl IV granted It as an
hereditary feudal tenure to the
prince of Oettlngen. The same year
the citizens bought the nobleman's
rights from him In perpetuity and
Dinkelsbuhl began Its career as a
“free city.”
Many of the emperors of the Holy
Roman empire visited Dinkelsbuhl
and whenever one came there was
a ceremonious reception on the mar-
ket square, at which the council
presented to the emperor and bis
entourage the “customary” gifts.
What these amounted to Is shown
by a record In the municipal
archives dealing with a visit of Em-
peror Maximilian II on June 12,
1570.
The Dlnkelsbuhlers have been
known for centuries as “Die Blaus-
leder,” “the blue cookers.” A fa-
vorite method of serving carp,
trout, and certain other fish In Ger-
many ts “blue cooked"—that Is,
boiled In water to which a little vin-
egar has been added. The process
Is called “blausleden,” and those
who do the “blue boiling’’ are
“Blnusleder.”
In the early middle ages the au-
thorities of Dinkelsbuhl succeeded
In catching a robber and murderer
who had been carrying on his grue-
some occupation for a long time. A
special session of the council was
called on a hot summer afternoon
to decide what punishment to mete
out to him. One of the cooncllmen,
who was a trifle deaf, went to
sleep during the debate and
dreamed that his cook was about to
prepare a line carp for him. When
the time came for him to vote onAcw
the question before the council, h7"
fellow member poked hint In the
ribs and asked:
“Hannes, what do you say we
■hall do with our robber?”
Hannes, rudely awakened from
bis dream, thought It was bis cock
asking about the carp.
“BlausledenI" (Boll him blue), he
answered.
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Carlock, E. A. The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 26, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 21, 1932, newspaper, July 21, 1932; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth723796/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.