The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, November 28, 1918, Image 6

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    HOW MRS. BOYD
AVOIDED AN
OPERATION
Canton, Ohio.—‘‘1 suffered from a
|
suffering, and two
doctors decided
that I would have
to go through an
operation before I
could get well
‘“ My mother, who
had been helped by
Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Com.
pound, advised me
to try it before sub-
mitting to an opera-
tion. Itrelievedma
from my troubles
go I can do my house work without any
difficu'ty. 1 advise any woman who is
afflicted with female troubles to give
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound a trial and it will do as much for
them.’’— Mrs. Marie Boyp, 1421 Bth
8t., N. E., Canton, Ohio.
Sometimes there are serious condi
tions where a hospital operation is the
only alternative, but on the other hand
so many women have been cured by this
famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, after
doctors have said that an operation was
necessary — every woman who wants
to avoid an operation should give it a
fair trial before submitting to such a
trying ordeal.
If complications exist, write to Lydia
E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass,,
for advice. The result of many years
experience is at your service.
When You Need a Good Tonic
Take BABEK
THH QUICK AND SURE CURE FOR
Malaria, Chills, Fever and Grippe
CONTAINS NO QUININE _
ALL DRUGGISTS or by P Post
from K & Co., Washing
sreel
. prepald,
n, D. «
ocrewski
Immediate Shipments
New South Corn Mill
me
FOL a :
promptly
ders filied
wday
AMERICAN CORN MILL CO. Bex 37, Winstea Selem N.C
HAD NO CHANCE WITH HIM
Easy to Understand Why Blinkers Car.
ried Off the Honors With His
Carnival Costume
ve
as a re-
Thousands
of under-
nourished
people have
found that
(rape:Nuts
‘food —
a scientific
blend of nour
ishing cereals
helps
wonderfully
in buildin
health an
happiness.
Needs no
Sugar
-
THE CENT
Ps
CHANGE COMES OVER
ITALY ON BASEBALL
velopment of Game.
Sport Has Been Virtually Unknown
There, Though Played by Ameri.
can Boys at College in Rome
Declared Too Rough.
John Evers writes from France that
he soon may be sent to Italy to teach
baseball to that country’s soldiers, and
yet it was only a few months ago the
Italian refused to permit
on
government
a shipment of baseball equipment
it
classed as ev
hasn't
2, but before
was a nonessential
£
to be en i
Italy
riv-
been a nation fa-
the Amerl
may be sending
lus learned of the great American
game of baseball, after the French mil
itary authorities had officially ordered
that they be Instructed by Yankee sol-
dier details, was to “cuss” the umpire.
The Americans consider this a sign of
distinct progress among thelr pupils
and they have redoubled their efforts
to drill into them the finer points of
the game, And baseball has taken big
talk of an after-the-war “League |
National” with Paris, Marseilles, Ly-|
ons, Tours, Strassburg, Bordeaux and |
other French cities composing the cir |
calt,
is
Sport Was Needed.
About the time the “work or fight” |
law put a damper on the sport in the!
States the French military leaders |
who had seen the Americans playing
in every place or square in most of the |
cittes and villages of France, decided |
that it was a sport conducive to phy-|
sique needed in military tral
t sked the American
to teach thelr
ning and
hey a authorities
for detalls men
ically every French barra ew |
given a «
ands,
‘i
ae lines was
letal
» American comms They
equipment and Issued
written in French for th
the
edure of the |
1t ior
ction
tr
Instruction Begins.
in August the detail
rs first appeared on an impr
Early
struct
AAS -~
Former Lightweight Champion
World Is Now Private in United
States Army.
Sm—
Freddie Welsh, former
; f 0 §
Freddie Welsh.
vate in the United States army. He
is attached to the medical service and
stationed at Washington.
MACK SEES GRE
Leader of Athletics Predicts Big
Things for Baseball—People
Thirst for Sport.
“Baseball is going to come back
strong,” asserts Connie Mack. “if
peace is arranged during the winter,
the season of 1919 will be one of the
on record, for the people are
thirsting for a return of sport on an
unrestricted scale,
“personally, I am not in favor of
resuming baseball until the war ends.
It has been suggested that some of
the large major league clubs 4n the
best
posed of players under the military
nge,
“This would never he a success, for
the fans would not take a half-hour's
“p am’ against anything that will
| tend to cheapen baseball, I would
much rather see the parks closed than
try to palm off the spurious article on
the baseball public”
Club Free of Debt,
Olympia A. A. of Philadelphia re-
cently reorganized for the 1918-19 sea-
gon. ‘The treasurer's report showed
the total receipts for the past year to
pe £18087161. The club is free of
debt. It conducts weekly boxing shows
with an occasional special show in ad-
dition bedween foremost boxers
i
through rudimentary explanati with
athletle instructors
regiments eager scholars,
more than fifty men each
puzzled over intricate explanations for
forty minutes each,
tail appeared twice a week thereafter
and with the ald af their guide bool
the polilus to absorb such
and men 30
as
classes of
began
At the end of three weeks’ practice
the French soldiers learned of
the fine points of the game and were
f
many
thoroughly imbued with the
the
the
spirit o
After |
were organized
great Ameri
ley
and a series of games played,
the men to learn the game from expe- |
rience and not from observation, plays |
being explained as the pro- |
sed.
Instruction Discontinued.
the
» to
pastime,
nn
first son teams
allowing |
game
soldiers but from
at the headquar
gpend
1s
CHR
six wie
14 Can core ral, nc
called him out on a close
fon at first.
Pt I AA A AAA SSA
RST PLAYER TO BE KILLED
York Giants, Meets Death Fight.
ing in France,
Edward IL. Grant, former third base
many major league baseball players in
the service to give hig life for his coun- |
At the outhreak of the
joined the officers’ training camp at
Plattsburg and is wed a
firet lieutenant, wn detailed
d soon went over
war Grant |
was commies
He was the
Upton a
‘apt
Franklin, Mass, where he was born |
in 1883. {
His wns
at Harvard 4 where he
proved to be an exes n 1s Af}
he played with |
Lynn, Mass, |
year went to Jersey
His
work attracted the attention of major |
league scouts and in 1907 he was =ign
ed by the Philadelphia National league
club, for which he played third base
tin 1911. Then he war traded to
Cinéinnati for MeQuillan, Paskert,
sean, ain Grant was a native of |
first experience in baseh
n wy
univer
yer
ter graduation in 1900
an club at
and the following
City of the old Eastern league,
independ: nt
Beebe and Rowan, He remained with
the Reds till 1213, when he was pur
chased by New York.
jrant finished the seasons of 1914
and 1915 with the Giants and then re-
| Hired In order to devote himself to his |
law work in Boston, As soon as the
war broke out he joined the colors.
Grant was a clever third sacker and
a falr hitter, his best major league
| batting record heing 2060 in 1900, when
with the Quakers. He hit 322 when
with Jersey City in 1906,
CHARLES O'BRIEN IS KILLED
Gained Football Fame at Bucknell
Some Years Ago—Also Helped
. Warner at Carlisle.
——
First Lieutenant Charles O'Brien of
laseball ha
Italy, the
1 {
a college fi
8 heen virtually
ugh it has been
ir Ameri-
can boys, For a time they played their
in a public park
on In wonder boys
caught the 11 with their bare
hands, It fin v was stopped | ofli-
. who cor rerous, It
unknown in
games and natives
he
the
yy
may be remembered the
1014 the White Sox
were refused a po it to pl
in Rome for the same
api for the permit
' d the ball
ig the
it
rous to be al
that the
Italy have been up
rougher experience than pla)
ball, so the task of teaching
American may be
ay a game
reason. Upon
ving the official
and }
nature
was too rougl
then decided
and too dang
game,
lowed,
Since
time young 1
=
figRins
game
r
The of
suitable fi
year around mu
i will stir up the fighting
i the men of the Italian army,
and that spirit should live the
war Is ove It might not be surpriss
ing If in few the
climate Italy is especially
wv baseball, being warm the
ch as it is in Califor-
spirit
® when
Tr.
’ arg tf . Lr AR
a Years irom Low
jor leagues
'nited States
BELGIANS IN
ALL ATHLETICS
Compete in Boxing Shows and Other
Events Behind Lines—Water
Sport Is Big Thing.
at-
more
ch
© not Pn
£ be
Wor
RUrpris« fn the num of
ald n
fo may
ention t
or less
Belgians 1 it
behind the
western front, but the
by no means newcomers
ing ther events
in ath! .
Water sports are naturally the big
mtry wh
so much sea coast
ch has so many
in pro-
thing in a con
and
rivers
wrtion to its and in §
ulation Belgiun
to its Pog
jes in the nun
all cour
ng ol nd the nt
ng cin
training
They
se Belg
in
1914
ly, the
1
ET
The Henley
open to at
st rowing hom
won by the Clul
Belgian "07 and "00,
in 1814,
ia) Rowing
other
% Fig ©" the
10005,
ing 1065 Harvard
and ti
won
won the
Sydney (Austra
it in In
crews have won
instituted in
WOus cup pie
club
En
4
event
year aglisl
.
bi
was first
SPEAKER IS NAVAL AVIATOR
Premier Centerfieider of G:zat Nation
al Game Now a Student at Mas-
sachusetts School,
Tris Speaker, for years the premier
centerfielder of the great national
game, is now a student naval aviator
at the Massachusetts Tech. Naval
Aviators’ school. Tris has been con-
Wilkes-Barre, who was recently kill
od In action in France, gained foot- |
ball fame at Bucknell some years ago,
when the student body cheered him as
Pit O'Brien. He also helped Glenn
Warner conch the Carlisle Indians,
Shellenback to Enter Aviation,
Frank Shellenback, pitcher for the |
White Sox, is waiting for his call to |
the aviation school at Berkeley, He
passed all his tests the other day and
he expects to be called to the ground
school,
Billiard Players Organize.
The National Asociation of Amateur
Billiard Players has been incorporated
under the laws of the state of New
York.
Tris Speaker.
ing any soft berths for himself. And
the same grace and finesse piloting
his seaplane that he exhibited on the
baseball diamond, LL
ASTHMA
INSTANTLY BELIEVED WITH
1011010)
OR MONEY REFUNDED ASK ANY DRUGGIST
PROVEN SWAMP-ROOT
AIDS WEAK KIENE(S
bladder
sing and |
mdition |
most, As
The symptoms of kidney and
croubles often very distro
leave the system in a run-down ¢
The kidneys
nie
seem to suffer all
victim complams of Jame
as these danger signal
kidney troubi
Dr. Kilmer’
many people say, f trengt
ens the kidneys, 18 1 dendi k
liver and bladder
an herbal und, has
ing effect the |}
most immediately noticed
by those who use it
yHicH, vo
h
iney,
mpo
n idneys Wii
in
y
i Cc
A trial wil
be in need of it.
your nearest drug
ment al once,
However,
great
mvince
jetter get
anyone wl
t bottle
1
and start
store,
wish first
nd
inghamton
if you
paration
Kilmer & Ce
rr tor
[ree —
| “Our Good
Standby f
Over 20 Ye
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured rer's Liniment i
OO they
When writ
paper Ady
ww
i
samy
2i'8
Y a good
GILBERT BROS. & CO.
BALTIMORE, MD,
RY
BK
SILK HOBIE
What Determines Meat and
Live-Stock Prices?
Some stock men still think that Swift &
Company —and other big pockers—can pay
as little for live-stock as they wish.
Some consumers are still le
that the packers can charge
dressed meat as they
This 1s not true. These prices are fixed by
a law of human nature as old as human
nature itself —the law of supply and demand.
When more people want meat than there
is meat to be had, the scramble along the line
to get it for them sends prices up. When
there is more meat than there are people who
want it, the scramble all along the
rid of it within a few days, while
fresh, sends prices down.
When prices of meat go up, Swift &
Company not only can pay the producer
more, but has to pay him more, or some
other packer will.
Similarly, when prices recede all down the
line Swift & Company cannot continue to pay
the producer the same prices as before, and
still remain in the packing business.
All the packer can do is to keep the expense
of turning stock into meat at a minimum,
so that the consumer can get as much as
possible for his money, and the producer as
much as possible for his live-stock.
Thanks to its splendid plants, modern
methods, branch houses, car routes, fleet of
refrigerator cars, experience and organization,
Swift & Company is able to pay for live
cattle 90 per cent of what it receives for beef
and by-products, and to cover expense of
production and distribution, as well as its
profit (a small fraction of a cent per pound),
out of the other 10 per cent.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
believe
ior
{o
as much
wish.
yyy
iis a
1
line {o pet
it is stil