The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 13, 1916, Image 6

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    ES ———— rer—
Glass of Hot Water
Before Breakfast
a Splendid Habit
Open sluices of the system each
morning and wash away the
poisonous, stagnant matter,
i
Those of us who are accustomed to
feel dull and heavy when we arise:
ach, lame back, can, instead, both
took and feel as fresh as a daisy always
by washing the poisons and toxins
from. the body with phosphated
water each morning
We should drink, before breakfast.
a glass of real hot water with a tea
epoouftl of limestone phosphate
ft to flush from the stomach,
kidneys and ten yards of bowels the
previous day's indigestible waste
bile and poisonous toxins:
soul
thus cleans
|
tire alimentary canal before
more food Into the stomach.
The action of limestone phosphat:
is wonderfully invigorating. It
out all the sour fermentation 3,
waste and acidity and gives
aglendid appetite for breakfast
8 said to be hut a little while
the roses begin to appear in
cheoks. A ter pound of
#gone phosphate will cost very lit i
your druggist or fro: , but
is suflicient to make anyone who is
tothered with bil
#éon, stomach trouble
& real enth 5st
ternal sanit
assured that you w
feel better in every
Adv,
qu
store, b
lousness,
raeumatism
the subject of in
‘ry it and you are
I1 look better and
way shortly. —
constipa-
or
on
ation. 1
Sooner or later the
pay up or come dow
TENDER SKINNED BABIES
With Rashes and Irritations
Comfort in Cuticura. Trial
in.
Free.
Baby's tender skin requires
aoothing properties such as are found
ARMY OFFICERS BELIEVE WAR-
FARE IN MEXICO WILL BE
LONG DRAWN OUT,
DICKMAN'S CHASE OF GARZA
Captures Most of Band, but Leader Es
capes—Diplomacy to Cost Uncle
Sam More Money—Indian Via-
itors at Capital,
By GEORGE CLINTON.
Washington.—¥§rom past experi-
ences trailing and fighting bandits,
army officers bere and ou the border
realize that the present warfare is
likely to be long drawn out. They un-
questionably would prefer a pitched
battle and to have the thing over with
past along the border in Mexico makes
it seem probable to army men that
there will be a splitting up of the
the captures or killings must be made
in detail,
It is
there may be one f
the
ourse
the
ree
also possible, of ¢
ight
i ¢
renegade 1o
before sep
aration of into
thal the en- |
sive and that |
given for |
units. be
gagement will 1
thus an opportunity
scattering
it may
t
be deci
wiil be
the
In the year 1891 a band of Me
led a man who
the of Villa
fiyl and gave |
that they |
to effect
cea ‘ae 4
by named Garza had
of characteristics
apiit Into
the United State
wanted to do in
There is on record one specific |
is typical of many
may prove to be the coun
individual man hunts which
must be undertaken before |
Villa's scattered followers are
tured, band after band, aud the round-
12 fragments
3 forces all
order cap
case which
and which
rpart
Of
tix
Ver
cleansing and Cuticura
especially
baby’s skin is irritated rashy.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Ady.
Ointment so
and
War Makes Geographers.
‘The war has made geographs
ua all. It s«
creased the
Yondon.
Londoners, born and dwellers in Lon
don, were offered
their hospital the
Gelected | ston court
Soctive, and one
bad seen it before.
saying In Lon
for really sees
fs at all ov
the statement,
A Ce
rs
has also
Lon knowledge
Six wounded officers, all
mts an
mercia of hig
don, a Londoner
lifelong residor
n the Blu
a
Hue
from
} adres
Cood.-By Birch.
the school uptodate?
they use an slectric
HANDY HUSBAND
Knew How to Get Part of the Break.
fast.
“I know one dish I can prepare for
breakfast as well as any cook on
earth,’ sald my husband one morning
when the cook was ill and he had vol
unteered to help get breakfast. He
eppoared with his dish and 1 discov
ered it was Crape-Nuts which, of
course, was easy to prepare for it was
parfectly cooked at the factory, but it
was a pood illustration of the conven
fenco of having Grape-Nuts about.
“We took up Grape-Nuts immedi
ately aftor returning from a five years’
sojourn in a hot country. Our stom
echs were in bad condition and we
were in poor health generally,
“In a day or two we liked Grape
Nuts better than any other kind of
food on the table. We both gained
etoadily in health and strength, and
this was caused by Grape-Nuts and
Postum.
“A friend of ours had a similar ex
perience. She was seriously 11 with
Indigestion and could fia nothing to
ent that would not give her heartburn
aud palpiiation; especially at night,
“She found that a small dish of
Graps-Nuts with cream made her a
aatisfactory supper and gave her a
comfortable night's rest. In a short
time she gained peveral pounds in
weight.”
“Thero’s a Reason.” Name given by
Pootum Co,, Battle Creek, Mich,
Hyver rend the above letter? A mew
ne sppoars from time to time, They
a. Eehuine, true, and full of human
rest.
it.
now
During the}
was a first
avalry, sta
How Dickman Did
Joseph T. Dickman is
of the Second cavalry
he
of the Third
tioned on the border. The
of the Mexican chieftain had split up
into bands and alternately were hiding |
and malding. Lieutenant Dickman wa |
with orders to trail through |
saction of the He |
Ti followers |
on a scout
a certain country
possibilities in the case, and when he
had gone some distance from the head:
ing and went by the left flank al
place where the
out toward the clear country
It Is not probable that ans tody but |
day just how he |
» make
morning alter there had
ar
unsuccessful bunting for the s
members of the guerrilla band
Dick led his
straight AWaAy al ¢
order su
know, thou
business was
were explicit and s
A volley
concealed in the l
front. It was a waste
t got quick,
ling tha
1d months of practically |
man
detachment
ing gait. He
hat made his
small
Eave an
men
saw nothing, |
3 3 i
that
at The or
¥ v }
thing
mean
troops’
but
opened
harp
Leader Never Wa
Two
zales
’ aught at th
they thought they were
round
whole
s Caught.
re
(ea
pels, Penave
andit ct and |
had |
where
The |
and in al
captive
de i
band of
hem. |
members of |
Cateri-
vd
rv has been heard of from that
with any followers,
@ very place
safest
swung them
the outfit
day Dickman m
in a sharp fight anothe:
the outlaws, capturing seve
While virtually all
held
The n
feated
oxt
ral of
he
no E. Garza, the leader, escaped ar
Is Villa also to escape at
expense of the capture of his fol
High Cost of Foreign Service.
Diplomacy {as to cost Uncle Sam
money than ever before. The
is at fault. The diplomatic and
consular appropriation bills for 1017,
a8 reported in the house, earry about
$1,500.00 more than the same bills
1916
It may be that congress on the plea
of economy will refuse to grant the
Increase asked, but if it shall go re
fuse it seoms likely that a good many
diplomatic and consular officers will
follow the example set by a few of
their brethren and resign from the
service, Senators and representa
tives take 20 cents a mile for thelr
travel from their homes to Washing.
ton and back again, but they have al
lowed in times past only five cents
a mile to diplomatic and consular offi
cers who are at best pald only small
salaries,
The state department has taken cog
nizance of the condition of affairs as
they relate to the diplomatic and con-
sular service. The price of living has
gone up all over the world and In
many cases the cost of transportation
likewise has risen. A memorandum
prepared at the department for con.
gress reads like this;
“A careful computation based upon
the number of actual transfers and
promotions of officers shows that the
existing allowance, five cents a mile,
falls to reimburse the actual expenses
of traveling of an unmarried consular
officer by from two mills to ten cents
a mile; and where an officer is mar
ried the allowances has failed to reim-
burse the actual expense by from 6
mills to $1.02 a mile, according
to the number of members of the
oficer's family and the quantity of
household effects ‘ransferred to the
new post, I'he average loss of each
officer is estimated to have been 18
motion or transfer.”
Transfers Not Popular,
Officials of the state department and
consular officers themselves
that a man in the service
look forward with any great amount of
pleasure to a transfer from one post
does
|
|
|
|
|
|
last held
consuls
a little better than the
The consular agents and of
the United States government get
small salaries and so when a man has
to give up two or three hundred dol
lars every year or two because Uncle
Sam seen fit to him from
place to place, he thinks that he ought
to be given travel pay.
one
has move
Once on a time diplomatic and con
of the
little for the
t to attend to the needs
who happened to
countries or the
wore ac
mean
that
gular officers Government did
comparatively home gov
roment
AlInarid
get into t
itios to
axcep
of All Clitiz
rouble
which th IT
It
CONngr
als
credited. some
3 a
bers of Ha think
the
States
that it
foreign
duct
40 years
state
from ti
business
Ameri
is cor
Was
the
gets
on
Ha
they
thors
rosigus i
conditions
e888 they are
uniess
is travel and
1508 they can coditinua to
without running up
fy cannot see their way
The state department
has told something about the
conditions words
“The cost of living has increased In
and m other countries and
the lower
salaries inadequate
ntadn themselves
Aa0
BOE
made for lv-
not
ir places
which th
pay.
COugress
fn
clear to
in these
Europe Any
officers of lasses
finding their
able them to mai
ir nner,
suls having private
g upon their own funds to sup
their as
@ fow
prop
incomes are
in
! salaries. inasmuch
158 will not decreasa,
and as there is good reason for the be.
will continue Ww inc:
they
the
case,
utmost importance that pro.
to supplement
salaries « consular
found
necessary.”
the regular offi
shall be upon
government is trying to ind
of young men
service of the govern
ourse, in the lower
are small
they are
of high
ICH
10 antler
consular
ment, to begin, o
where the salaries
yfi¢ that
men
ials say
getling
the
becauss
abilit meagerness of
the al some
& man either
have his own or els
in live in other words, the
be ap
ity to office and
always to the
who m AY
Dosta in
i
a
he cannd
wants to able to
bi
abil
be forced
rich
LO
to
give
men ay od
ability
Red Me Washington,
Woll,
came to
day or
some
Prairie f
0
who
West a
fix
commiss
13
two ago
tribal m the foner
slled at the offices of
chief of staff of
to pay his
spoke no Eng
eral Scott under
g of the language of his
the latter preferred to carry on
the conversation In the sign language
For fully fifteen minutes the chief of
staff and the chief of the Blackfeet
talked together Then the general
turned to some visitors who were in
the offi and explained what ths
plainsiman had said. Curiously enough,
Buffalo Bill dropped into the office at
the time that Prairie Bear was present
The scout and the chief talked in the
sign language and the first thing that
the red man sald in sign words after
Buffalo Bill had removed his hat was
that the scout did not have as much
hair as In the days when he waa fol
lowing the western trails,
Indians are coming to Washington
constantly, and as most of the visitors
are old men who eling to the old dress
and the old customs they arrive ar
rayed in all the feathers and other
finery of days that aro. gone. They
make a picturesque showing on the
broad avenues and in the parks, whore
they attract instant and general atten.
tion There is a boarding house in
Washington exclusively for Indian vis
itors, and there the red men are made
more comfortable, perhaps, than they
are in their frontier homes, but it is
possible, of course, that the white
man's idea of comfort does not agree
with that of his fellow of another
color
Always Look Up General Miles.
Gen, Nelson A. Miles lives tn Wash
ington The general ia getting on
toward the fourscore milestone,
seemingly he is as active physically as
ever, Miles fought nearly every kind
States army,
©
nett
caller, p
i
on
days produced, and the old men among
the visitors when they are hore always
try to see the general. He understood
the sign language well, and although,
of course, his conversation with the
reds ordinarily Ia earried on in their
own language or in English, it cocoa
plonally happens that the plainsmon
and the soldier talk together with thelr
hands.
WILSON REPUBLICANS
Question of How Penrose, Despite
Brumbaugh Can Get An “Un.
instructed” Delegation.
Harrisburg, March. — Men aiming
for a big vote for Governor Brum-
baugh in the primary election, as a!
candidate for President, and to elect!
as national dele persons
pledged to support the “popular
choice” of the prin arc finding |
here and there, “Wilson Republi
who are not enlisting for
the Qover: or the
Penrose
CAMPS,
er, of
cratic
gatas
ary,
cans,”
either forces
+}
ao
I.. Morganthal
County
Der
that,
in
friends
or's
in
Chairman PF.
the Dauphin
Committees, ays
of himself and
signatures the n
to Pre
on
have met
publicans
tion {if
so, and
re<lectd
Den
he
element factional
oO
rounds
on
place
the
tion
name
be
wou
or )
sign the
them
as favor
{dant
iden
ked
id
lowed
who
law
whom he
of the
who
the
regards
mn Pre
OCTALS
BAYS, did
ari) This
truct
“unin
which
WE 1pport
* Should Br
Yous
date’s district,
nly
OnLy
it in the
the ballot
whose vols
ligale
however, ou
in Brumbaug!
ts nt least,
apite Pen:
an outcome
consider hia point m
his forces elected
at large,
giate a8 a
shall not
fight or suffer
Oae
uch
all ive del
control
If Brum.
Penrose
humiliation
agate provi
the wh
back out
MAY BE SPLIT LIKE 1912
this Presidential
a National
something like that of 1912 is
cated by the preparations which
Progressives
made in their Harrisbur
convent
ed that
That may
split
indi
the
have
conference
in Chi
the dele.
State will stand
the regular Re-|
nomination of
other acceptable
candidate for President, or put |
ap a separate Progressive candidate
and fight if the Republican Conven-
year
Republican
®
on
nis
is pro:
this
with
the
cago It
gation from
ready to agree
publicans on
fo
which split the party
Evidently the Pro-
gressive backers of Governor Bram-
baugh ns a Presidential candidate
will regard him as unsmirched by |
“baneful influences” as long as |
yse of his name may serve the
Rooseveltian purposes,
influences”
is
iif
PEOPLE PAY FOR BRUMBAUGH
The fact that the Citizens’ Repub |
jean League, of Philadelphia, is re-|
garded. as a helper of Benator Pen-|
roge against the forces of Governor |
frumbaunzh and Mayor Smith, of |
Philadelphia, does not weaken the |
League's exposure of the detailing of |
Benjamin MM. Sharp, to whom, as |
Chief Clerk of the Bureau of Welghts |
and Measures, the city of Philadel: |
phia pays $1,800 a year, to be attach. |
ed temporarily to the working forces |
of the Harrisburg Campaign Commit- |
tes that is backing the Governor for
President. Sharp may think he has
ot SSAA - pt" -
the same right to do this as the
$12,000 Attorney GQeneral, Francis
Shunk Brown, and various other high
#alaried State offceholders have to ed
vote to the Brumbaugh
the time and energy for which
interests.
GANG HURTS BTATE’'S PORT
Poor
transit
and to
hold
while
}
old Philadelphia, eager
relief to the
people who cannot
of a must be
the and Republi
bosses continue dispute
ed change in 1€ BUDS 3
Penngylvanians generally;
for the prosperity thelr
port on the Delaware, perceive
of the old story of
uffer from the “g
even
sirap, pater
Mayor can
the
over propo
Oi
great
epetition
& clly's
people of the State have wanted
that interests promoted
al aid, but, prior
advent Dear rat
at Washington, cor
rness of hel
aid to
he selfishue
f the R
atives
nded
adr
1 Phila
port's
fe rif
and nation
of the Or
such
other
epul
upon
iy ©
for its
GRU
NDY'S LOW WAGES
Millis of Republican Machine
8 Got $0.24 a Week
P A fre Peon tha
Bos
asked fon
y was refused
rked from 5:45 at night
+ ’ y rir v »
the n orping, with
J
OF TEXTILE MILLS
BOOM
Indicate Good
ry Workers.
The
Plant Expansions
Times for Fa
3 neo
ete
Cio
great
ila-
nost
of
into piant
it of the mills
Wanted” placards,
f ye industries the scar
city of factory labor is being felt which
itaclf proof of busy times, Most
the worsted milla are behind
The Cambridge worsted
which operates twenty
recently made twenty
increase its working
is now moving to larger
quarters where twenty additional
are being Installed
Mills on cotton goods are also very
busy, the demand for fabrics
being featured in trade reports as
the heaviest in years, with the ex.
port demand steadily on the in
crease Mills are sald to have ac
cepted big orders for delivery up to
July 1st Industries allied to the
textile mills are made to share in
the boom of worsieds and cottons.
A firm of tank manufacturers, for
instance, announce that for the last
uix months their plant has been
pushed to its capacity to keep up
new business The foregoing
indications of good times and pros
perity are the more interesting be
cause they show themaeives in this
“Presidential year"
pro
thon
sands
are
displaying
many ©
in is
of
orders
company
loom plant
per cent
force and
in
a
a
in
looms
dress
On “Preparedness,” former Secre
tary of State P. C. Knox in h's speech
at the York Chamber
bangaet sald: “We must be prepared
to defend our home and our liberty
and the measure of that preparcdnes:
must be gauged by the sober, though!
ful, patrotically disinterested advice
and counsel of thote whom the nation
itself has trained andl eduented In or
der that they may authoritativel;
gpeak and instruct us upon these mat
tora."
PROSPERITY IN
WESTERN CANAD
| 800 Million Dollars in New Wealth
Added in 1915.
Canada ae a whole hag enjoyed won.
prosperity In 1916, from the
products of the farm, the orchard and
the centres of industry. No country
wrote a brighter page of history in
agricultural and industrial develop
ment during 1915 than Canada Nearly
a billion bushels of grain produced
Taxes in Western Canada average $24
and will not 26 per quarter
section, which ides all taxes, No
| taxes on improvements.
When Western Canada was faced
| with her enormous harvest last fal
| the mijitary authorities that
soldiers in Canada could give the Hm
pire no better service for the time
being than to eseist in harvesting the
crops. For that reason leave of ab
was given Ww soldiers whe
| wished to work in the harvest fields,
and their labor wes an import fae
tor in harvesting the big crops success
fully.
exceed
inc
decided
genco
vid
ans
ecessity for increasing the ag
comn ing
in 19816, ¢ it in
soldiers Can
from
in the spring for
i ; enable
them to plant the seed crops
in every Provinee of the Dominio
The fact that the
] ing and barve
% as being of the
is perhaps the best
conscription or any in
crease of taxes which would reduce
agricultural activity of Canada
will never be considered by the author
{ties
Owing to the number who have an
listed for overseas services it has been
found necessary to secure farm labor
in the United States. It is hoped that
fifty thousand can be secured —Adver
tisement,
inction
is
ention
in leave of absence
¥
i: Gover:
izes the seed
: OKT
{
ror
anaca s Ccrojg
@ evi
at
110 poriand
dence th
the
when 1h
ted only by the
wn
din aloe
feet!
‘Kidney Medicine That
Stands the Highest
go I began har
and
praise for it as
#0
if the
tang
have
HTS
anee
speak
[Laon
mend
ree
to be
lieine
rding it
™ a
mp Root, wr
iR overy
1 which customers
ve have learned t
in
mp-R wbove all other kidney
dies. From the demand I judge if
the rally used kidney me
in this country nd reports
are
<
oe to recon
it
is
rega
favorabde
aways
yours
M=COY, JR
T¥
£0
.
armaey,
- res ton: LEKRA,
Ja u
caghte
SAN 1
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.
Binghamton, N.Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yoe
{i Send ten cent Co,
hot
wiil
nfer.
biad-
mention
cent and one
sale ot all drug
“ Kilmer 4
N 4 . SG & { ize
“a
valuable
he kidneys and
be sure and
Te
1i8¥
Ar Re
ores. — Ady
rage wanis others to
by sna hin
The ave
Te 1 as sail,
GIRL COULD
"NOT WORK
How She Was Relieved from
Pain by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound.
Taunton, Mass, —* [ had pains in both
sides and when my periods came [ had
to stay at home
from work and suf-
fer a long time
{f One day a woman
i came to our house
and ssked my
mother why I was
suffering. Mother
told ber that I suf-
fered every month
and she said, * Why
don't you buy a
= bottle of Lydia E.
| Pinkham's Vegetable Compound?’ M
mother bought it and the next month i
was 50 well that I worked all the month
without staying et home aday. Iam
in good health now and have told lots of
girls about it.” Miss Crarice Mor,
22 Russell Street, Taunton, Mass,
Thousands of girls suffer in silence
every month rather than consult a phy-
sidan, If girls who are troubled with
paintal or irregular periods, backache,
vendache, dragging-down sensations,
fainting spells or indigestion would take
Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Co
pound, a safe and pure remedy a
irom roots and herbs, much sufloring
night be avoided.
Write to Lydia E. Pinkham Madicine
Co., Lynn, Mase. (confidential) for free
advice which will prove helpful,
GALLSTONES
Avold aperstions Positiyn peed e FR EE
No OF eleanita same, WHte far ony
Gallstone Resedy Co. Dost C-0210 8 Deir) orn St Sluis
MCN EN
hg Book of Truth ond Festa Di tany