The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 02, 1914, Image 7

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    few of his prayers are answered
RINGWORM SPREAD ON HAND
R. F. D. No. 2, Box 67, ElHjay, Ga.
“My son's ringworm began on the |
back of his hand. A flery red spot |
came about as large as a dime and it
would itch so badly he would scratch
it till it bled. It began to spread till
it went all over his hand. He would
just scream every time I went to wash
it. The nail came off on the middle
finger.
“I used ~~ and it got worse
all the time. The trouble lasted two
or three months. Then I sent and got
some Cuticura Soap and Ointment and |
began to use them. I would
his hand with the Cuticura Soap and
dry it good and apply the Cuticura
Ointment. Relief was found in two
or three days and the ringworm was
cured in two weeks after using Cuti
cura Soap and Ointment.” (8igned)
Josie Parks, Jan, 4, 1913.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post
card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.” —Ady
Fortunately for the average man. |
|
Does man ever foot his wife's bills
without kicking?
Ninportant to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
What is bred in the bone she
ifn the soup.
Dr. Pierce's Pelle
easy to take &
orate stomac!
gripe.
WE up
Turkeys are innocent birds
any woman can stuff them.
i WILLIAMS’
LONG SICKNESS
Yields To Lyd Lydia E Pink.
ham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Elkhart, Ind. :—*“1 suffered for four-
teen years from organic inflammation,
female weakness,
pain and irregulari-
ties. The pains in
By A. B. GRAHAM,
College of Agriculture, Ohio Univer
sity.
Haven and earth
8 tree,
And his work
his own reward shall be
Lucy Larcom
Proclamations and programs
never planted trees or
school grounds. It is altogether proper
that a day be set apart for tree plant
ing Seize the opportunity,
some trees and spades and trees
be planted. The most excellent things
that have been written about trees,
green fields, beautiful streams and na-
ture's cozy corners should assist us to
gee and respond in feeling to the beau-
ties of nature Let Arbor Day be a
time for both sentiment and planting
if either must be omitted for the day,
Jet the sentiment go and plant a tree
alone
will
No planting should 1}
fere with the pasground:
directly in front of the
be left open
right and left of the
shrubs as snowball,
@ done to inter
The space
should
front Such
flowering
ANNAN NAPS NPN NNN ~
SUGGESTIVE LIST OF
For dry
Black
The mt
Kentu k v coffee
Hox el if
or thin soils:
locust
iberries
Norway spruce
Scotch pine
almond,
bridal wreath,
should be
llacs,
sweat clove
spireas or
and roses
planted in masses not many
apart to give the most pleasing
appearance
Climbing roses
should be planted
house. Peo
hardy plants
Daffodils
and crocuses should be planted
These bulbs winter very
come forth with the first
davs
shrub in the hands of a
Il oil his spade with
push iit ground
ight of ination, will
Arbor Day that will be long
The bould bulld
ting fence of public
igh that
and
bloom before
other
school closes
many
tulips
well and
WArm spring
A tree or
willing boy, who wi
seriousness into the
with a we determ
people 8
a protec sentiment
Neighbor Indifferent's
jump it, so tight
2 cannot
ate so tight
become
Doolitties
Agricul
Eta ER A
* cottonwood
maple
PA.
Unseen in its approach,
tect in its early stages, and cruelly
painful in its later forms, uric acid
poisoning is a disease too often fatal
Bright's discase is one of the final
stages of uric acid poisoning. It kills
in our country every year more men
than any other allment
except two-—consumption and pneu-
monia. Bright's disease and uric acid
poisoning usually start in some kidney
weakness that would not be hard to
cure, if discovered early, so it is well
to know the early signs of kidney dis-
When uric acid is formed too fast
ache, dizziness, heart palpitation, and
with disturbances of the urine,
Real
acld forms into gravel or stone in the
kidney, or ervetallizes into jagzed bits
in the muscles, joints or on the nerve
tubings. Then follow the awful pains
ica, neuritis, lumbago or kidney colic
Loery Picture
Tells ao Story
———
id y y y y
I don’t know what ails
{It is but a further step to dropsy or
| Bright's disease
| Be warned by backache, by sediment
{inthe kidney secretions, by painful scant
| or too frequent passages. Cure the weak-
tened kidneys, Use Doan’s Kidney Pills
| ~& medicine made just for weak kid-
i nevs, that has been proved good in years
| of use, in thousands of cases-—the rems-
that is recommended by grateful
| users from coast to coast.
fo
ey
Georgia Woman Almost Gave Up in Despair
snye:
from
Dae
5 acid
y BOCTE joris were wear ity
frequent passage and bothered me
eatly at night. My back go! y wel
painful and there was a8 bearing-down
through my lcins Ag the discuss
, sovers paine ran frown y hesd
down through mn inte
mont ev»
even six
ight no re
this eritical
i
i
| Mre Babra Burgess, Oe Oa
| oy : aT go 1 puffer
Tipe ame
territ
de and Himb I ri
rs othing helped me
onthe’ treatment by doctors bro
f I was in despair While
ndition, | begur ’
and the relief was miracu
I had Zo six bo
eft m That » "PL
' 1 have never suffered vince.”
i four yenrs ago and
When a fool has
never satisiied
Putnam Fadeles
the kettle Ady
8 Dyes do
not stain
Charming Hostess.
“Did she make ;
“No, but she mad
Brooklyn Life
FAR BETTER THAN Qu ININE.
Elixir Babek cur 5 h
Quinine f{ $¢
impunity by «
“Having su
ver for seve
iATIA
from « '
' Gu
en dows
ed 8 pe t ire
Elixir a BO certs
by Parcels Post pr
ski & Washingtor
4 fr
paid
Damned With Faint Praise
Won By His Courte
“Why did she remarry
isband?
“Qhe
bles ©
CUBIC Dave
Nalem "
I had a rough
would
BEGIN NOW
If you have not decided upon what
Spring Medicine
aS take, HY
WBIGHT eZ
Sy vE = CErapis))
oo arousing the liver
They cleanse the system of accumulated
impurities and
PURIFY THE BLOOD
There's opel. in Ice
We for a Homie
nan doe (
pu ih
7 ®5
A Fz on invited
Glacier Ice Company
Merchate-Laclede Bldg. St. Louis, Me.
Ag RBG
Pri Sadia) Fem Y
» ison FE Coleman, Wash
Hooks Tree. Hig
or Pisrencn. a, eeu,
. + 1 Perfection Katiting Fil EE Willer
wel 80s
my sides were in- For
creased by walking The
or standing on my Red
willows
or scarlet
maple
feet and I had such
awful bearing down
feelings, was de-
pressed in spirits
and became thin and
pale with dul 1 heavy
eyes. I had six doe-
tors from whom I received only tempo-
rary relief. 1 decided to give Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair
trial and also the Sanative Wash. [ have
now used the remedies for four months
and cannot express my thanks for what
they have done for me.
““If these hnes will be of any benefit
you have my permission to publish
them.” — Mrs. SApiE WILLIAMS,
James Street, Elkhart, Indiana.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native roots and herbs,
contains no narcotic or harmful drugs,
and to-day hokds the record of being the
most successful remedy for female ills
we know of, andthousands of voluntary
testimonials on file in the Pinkham
laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to
prove this fact.
If you have the slightest doubt
that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta~
ble Compound will help yon, write
to Lydia E.Pinkham | ledicineCo,
(confidential) Lynn, Mass. forad-
vice. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
PREVENTION —=p.
better than cure. Tutt's Pills if taken In time
ar ¢ not only a remedy for, but will prevent
SICK HEADACHE,
billousness, constipation and kindred diseases,
Tult’s Pills
W.L. DOUGLAS!
455
|
r BUY ror CASH oLD JEWEL RY, dias
monds, pearis and all Brecidus stones Hest
references furnished gpert repalrin of
Jewelry. T.A. Cmy, 1 ai entane, New ork.
FOR BALE~160 A. IN PRINCE GRORGES
ch, Md.; 37 a cult. & r. houses, barn, out.
biden. orch H.C Deltn. Townshend MA
LS By 4 Sida RELIEVES
SORE EYES
Wide Avake Agent
with easily dem.
an. Br
The
Red or white |
European
Hemlock
For country or
American elm
Sugar or hard
American
11
vy eglern
alders
irch
larch
spruce
guburban planting:
maple
linden
catalpa
Scarlet oak
Tulip poplar
umber
windbreaks
Tuc
For
Osage
or northern
screens ang
Orange
Russian mulberry
] ist
Norway spruc
3 pruce
pilie
¥
By WILLIAM R. LAZENBY.
Professor of Forestry, Ohio State Uni.
versity.
Transplanting is a necessary prac
tice in connection with modern meth:
be divided
lifting the plant,
plants. It may
divisions or steps:
While the immediate result of trans-
of the
In spite of these advantages, thou
plants die annually as a result of im.
proper transplanting, and still other
thousands are weakened and stunted
beyond all hope of satisfactory recov-
ery. The losses are the more deplor
able because they can, in a great meas
ure, be prevented.
Digging the holes for the plants is
an important part of transplanting.
Whatever the method of preparing the
woil, the holes should be dug large
enough to receive the roots of the
\
plants in their natural position, and
from two to three inches deeper than
they were found in the nursery. The
poorer and harder the soil, the larger
and deeper the holes should be. On
the plow,
rapid and
hole at a
better way
time
of digging one
of the tree
In filling the soil around the roots.
the top should be used first, worked
and carefully compacted about the
roots At the same time the
should be lifted and shaken slightly.
This will have a tendency to direct
the roots downward and fill In thor
oughly under the crown. The dirt
should be compacted into the hole until
it is two-thirds full; the remainder of
the soil should be left loose, so that it
will act as a mulch to hold the mois.
ture around the roots. :
Watering will not usually be neces
sary, but in case it is, the soll should
be compacted into the hole until it is
two-thirds or three-fourths full, then
watered copiously. One or two buckets
of water to each plant should be used,
and after the water has entirely dis
appeared the hole should be filled with
loose soll. Watering during the sume
mer months should be done at consid
erable intervals and then done thor
oughly until the soll 1s completely
saturated.
N. } has
machine in wh
is provided with
and coc lapeing
paste appiving
plied on a
vices carried
for pasting
ceiling
CLEVER WIFE
Knew How to Keep Peace in Family.
It is quite significant, the number of
who get well of alarming
heart trouble when they let up on cof
fee and use Postum as the beverage at
There is nothing surprising about it,
—gaffeine-—in coffee is not
Postum, which is made of clean, hard
wheat,
“Two years ago I was having so
trouble with my heart,” writes
a lady in Washington, “that at times
me to a specialist to have my heart
“The doctor said he could find no
me,
“A neighbor of ours, an old man,
tions.
“He drank the Postum and did not
know the difference, and is still using
it to hie lasting benefit. He tells his
wife that the ‘coffee’ is better than it
used to be, go she smiles with him and
keeps peace in the family by serving
Postum instead of coffees.”
Name given by the Postum Co,
Battle Creek, Mich.
Postum now comes in two forms:
Regular Postum -—- must be well
botled. 16c and 250 packages,
Instant Postum-—Iis a soluble pow.
er. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly
a cup of hot water and, with cream
and sugar, makes a delicious beverage
Instantly, 30c and 60c tins,
The cost per cup of both kinds is
about the same,
“There's a Reason” for Postum.
~gold by Grocers
§
W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 14-1814
As n matter of fact it is
ber right and her duty to
enjoy perfect heaith and
strength—to be Junt ;
strong and healthy as mz
perhaps more 80—in view
¥
strong and healthy, Don’t resi
back ACHER, NDErvous ETVORN,
even chance that you wil
research
alt of years of patient
smen’s peculiar
BARGE
Try it now
rt of the globe have wetified
» Buffaia, }
——
The pain in
housands of
voice the same opinion. Here's
Relieved Pain in Back.
I went th a doctor but be
did not do me any good, so |
jorchascd a bottle of Sloan's
iniment, and now [am a well
woman, aiways keep 8 bot
tie of Sloan's 1 ment in the
house" «= Mis Maida Common,
304 Myvile Ave, Broskiyn, NY
Sciatic Rheumatiom,
“We have used Sloan's Lind
ment for over gix years and
found it the best we ever used,
When my wife had sciatic
rhenmatism the only thing that
did her any good was Sloan's
Liniment. We cannot praise it
highly enough.” «= Mr. Perige,
Des Moines, lowe,
I got & bottle of Sloan's
rat deal. | write this be.
a fine Liniroent on the
s Liniment., '~dMm
Address Dr. Earl 8. Sloan, Inc.
. » »
as a matter of course; most Infant
Freres goers namin, ake, Trt tims aad
y DRS. D. FAHRNEY & SON, Hacrasrows, Ma,