The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 09, 1919, Image 6

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    “BEST MEDICINE
FOR WOMEN"
What Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound Did
For Ohio Woman.
i
PENNSYLVANIA
TATE ITEMS |
STATE IT 2
C—O,
[re—————————LLY
West Chester.—Engineers are mak-
Ing preliminary survey for a
Portsmouth, Ohio.—**I suffered from |
frregularities, pains in my side and was |
80 weak at times I |
could part get |
around to my |
work, and as I had |
four in my family
and three boarders |
it made it very hard |
for me. Ly
Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound |
was recommended |
to me. I took it |
and it has restored |
my health. It is |
certainly the best |
medicine for woman’s ailments I ever |
saw.’'—Mrs. Sara SHAW, R. No. 1, |
Portsmouth, Ohio. i
Mrs. Shaw proved the merit of this
medicine and wrote this letter in order
that other suffering women may find
relief as she did.
Women who are suffering as she was
should not drag along from day to day
without giving this famous root and |
herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound, a trial. For special
advice in regard to such ailments write
to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn,
Mass. The result of its forty years
experience is at your service,
In any Shape — No Matter if Broken
OLD GOLD, SILVER OR PLATINUM
OLD OR NW JEWELRY
Tinfoll, pewter or ecilapsible tubes.
ton jarge: Bothing too small. CASH by return
mail »ods held ten days subject to approval
C. H. HOWELL, Metals Broker
U+407 Barkison Ave, Kast COLUMBUS, O10
Nothing
Financial Arrangement.
“What does natere do when
ture falls dye?”
“1 suppose she collecis it by means
af grassy banks.”
UPSET STOMACH
PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN AT ONCE ENDS
SOURNESS, GASES, ACIDITY,
INDIGESTION.
Undigested food! Lumps of pain;
belching gas, acids and sourness, When
your stomach is all upset, here is in-
stant relief—No waiting!
mois-
The moment you eat a table* of
Pape’s Diapepsin all the indigestion
pain, dyspepsia misery, the sourness,
gases and stomach acidity ends,
Pape's Diapepsin tablets cost little
at any drug store but there Ix no surer
or quicker stomach relief known. Adv,
The Point of View.
“Don’t you like hot water
home?” “That depends on
min it.”
AAA AIS Si
WOMEN SUFFERERS MAY
NEED SWAMP-ROOT
in the
whether
Thousands upon thousands of women
have kidney and bladder trouble and
never suspect it.
Women's complaints often prove to be
pothing else but kidney trouble, or the
result of kidney or bladder disease. i
If the kidneys arz mot in a healthy |
gansgto become diseased. i
Pain in the back, headache, loss of am- |
bition, nervousness, are often times symp-
toms of kidney trouble. |
Don’t delay starting treatment. Dr. |
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a physician's pre-
scription sbiained at any drug store, may |
be just the remedy needed to overcome
such conditions.
mediately from any drug store.
However, if you wish first to test this |
t preparation send ten cents fo Dr.
ilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and |
mention this paper.—Ady.
Masked Battery.
“Pa, what {8 a masked battery?’ |
“Pretty lips concealing a shrewish |
tongue, my son.”--Boston Transcript.
important to Mothers :
Examine carefully every bottle of |
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it |
Bears the
Signature of y '
In Use for Over enrs,
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Too Much to Stand.
“l went into the battle singing.”
“Then no wonder you got the Huns
road between Weatherly and Ashmore,
West Chester.——All farmers’ insti
far ahead as January 9 have
postponed on account of Influenza,
New Castle Despite the war time
bition act, Lawrence county
for
them at
Papers are now be-
with thelr applications
to present
February 10
ing filled our.
Maueh Chunk. ~— Snow to the depth
4 covers the upper see
and the
the first
this season.
uf several inclu
of the
wenther is very cold
tion Lehigh valley
This Is
in this section
Hazleton Edward RB
I examiner the fed
d that
» labor
Enow
1o
employ.
fh
Kennedy,
of eral
despite
gituat'o
is far from
impossible
« for
miners
of Red
211.000 w
vi council has got ye! |
il
Sommit Hill
nda
tend the |
of it
stown.—~Th
i door at
» Mertztown high sehonl
i}
ie
L100 talk
paintin
MeKinley
el in
Krick
Oakiand.-
Willian
i, wns
were kill
the hands «
A flock
1 A Micha
ently 3
*
nf
bof a
beiaghit ar
IRS }
?
el
were badly maimed
.
i
a3 ae
two ad re
the fnelosure, but
identification tag
will ArTES od
White Haven Jane
of Bast Side
not he
boron! « hear here,
and for
at
of Kidder
wa
constable
Jhdge
Harry A
in
Barb
Kelper,
¥
Chunk.
table for the distriet
glides,
West Chester. —Willizgm Proctor, for-
ty-elght, formerly dog catcher in the
of Parkesburg, in prison
in which he re.
rough is
wounding James Brady, white follow
an aliereation. Brady in a
Contesville hospital and Proctor is he
held to await the result of his
ne in
rg
x i
The
Marysville
arysviile, working foree In
preference freight
fier
being continually augumented by the
of soldiers returning from
France. The supply of labor has not
especialiy as members of the
Beaver Falls Tmpetus is being g2'v-
en a movement lately started for the
M. CL A bullding for the returning
soldiers and sallors, with the appoint.
ment of a committee to plan a work
ing basis, Members of the committee
are same of the best-known men of the
community.
Lobation The 2500 employes of the
flershey Chocolate company, at the
Hershey plant have been notified of
the payment, to be made early In the
new year, of a 5 per cent bonus on
their 1918 earhings. The Hershey
rompany has been working on war
orders and only recently compléted a
monster government order for Christ.
mas chocolates for the American
troops on overseas duty,
Erle ~The Manufacturers’ assoc’a.
tien of this eity entered complaint be.
fore the publie service commission
agaist the new rates.of the Mutual
“Telephone company, :
Chambershurg. —Negtoration of two
passenger and mall trains on the Cam
beriand Valley road is petitioned for
by the citizens of Chambershurg
Heverly. Falling asleep on the rall-
rond track near Hevorly, Clearfield
{ county, John Hollinko was run over
by a train, and is dying In a hospital,
Harrisburg.-—All eritieally 11 with
influenza, Otis B, Tripn, his wife and
| four children were (akon helpless from
| thelr home to a Harr sburg hospital
Chambershurg ating ord
ers regarding admission of
during the influenza quar
| moving pleture houses he
For vi
children
vay
:
clos,
Harrisburg.
denth sentence of
| Armstrong, to life
i been granted on an official
is
Carlisle.-
of
Luther Knox,
imprisonment
{‘ommutation fhe
of
teport that
insane,
The
dier
he
nnldent! fied shel
go long under ti
mg heen fornd to be Sor.
of Bridgeport,
1-
shacked so! t-
ment here |
geant Charlies Pemburs,
Conn
Pottstown
decided to
ngahnsi
The
Summa;
of the
board
measures
school has
tnke
violatlien
titendance
Read
compulsory
aw,
ing Twenty Reading members
th regiment, en
tl, now a pa
won, were kill
moving ple
re
of deh
sre and settled on
Jersey Cet
nf for
hefore
Friyrad
royoa
flour an
He has In
farmers In
hoener
Host, near
here
“rie power, nnd
grning to the prac
ng i otird feed
shipped from the west
Will AM. Bender,
track laborer on the
k and
er (rain
home. gr
gi nstend
Rin
vie sIruc
While
failed
1.
tir
¥ Dietrich, »n
! » Firs: Reform
ented the church with
a8 a Christine
Chrizgtmas Mr. Deirich rave the
eMmbHier «
an S100 check gift
i Las
treasuey
purchiise of 1 new pipe organ
Reading — Thomas 1. Toker, of this
an Argonne battle survi
vor, at home here recovering from the
effects of ghs as granted a marriage
Heense to wed Mise Catharine A. Hef
i feran, daughter of Mrs Catherine Hef
His broiler. Sergeant Harry
Toker, was killed In the Argonne,
Mauch Chunk. Every one of the nu
merous rural postoffices In Carbon
county has now been abandoned, and
former patrons furnished with free ro-
i #21 delivery,
Allentown.—Paul T., thréeyearold
son of Peter Druockenmiller, was kill.
od in a singular manner when a hoard,
forming part of a pen In which a
Christus goose was confined, fell on
child,
instant death.
Heallertown,— Wilson
far this season has
foxes,
Dethlehem. The Rotary club has
given the Childrei's Home a $100 Lib.
erty Bond,
Reading Berke © 8thbbl
contributed more than 21000 to a fund
to fight tuberculos’'s in that county.
ale
ity.
Tow
OES
w
ferman
3
the
Fritchman,
captured
S50
six
first Lehigton soldier to arrive home
from France. He was located at an
avintion station in France,
Doylestown. The Preshyterian Wo.
men's Missionary society. here sent o
colored mission in Charleston, 8, C.
he was run down by a mine motor re
sulted in the death of Edward Me.
Nuilty here,
Bunbury. Charles, thirteen-yearold
son of Henry M. Umbeolts, died
as the result of breaking a fog In n
fall a year ago.
GERMANY MUST PAY
Kaiser's Men Responsible for
Millions of Murders.
CANNOT PAY FOR LIVES LOST
i
1
| Nation Must Be Forced to Pay and
Pay and Pay, Until It Has
Learned That Might Is
Not Right.
By WRIGHT A. PATTERSON.
There are in France and Belgium
today very close to 38,000,000 soldier
graves that would not have been there
had Germany not started a war of con-
quest to gratify the selfish ambitions of
a selfish people for world domination.
In these graves are buried the
heroes of America, of England, of
France, of Belgium, of Italy, of Can-
nda, of Australia, of South Africa, of
India, of Portugal, of Morocco, of
; China and other parts of the world.
These heroes gave thelr Hves that the
cruelly selfish plans of the Boche
might be defeated; that the world
might be a dwelling place for freemen
pnd not for the slaves of autocracy.
And the war in which they made
punish the nations that have commit-
ted the most terrible erimes known to
modern times, at least, by making the
people of these nations work only that
they may pay.
Among the saddest sights to be
the spot where g soldier met death by
thousands of these seen
sides of the thousand miles of road-
ways I covered in Belgium and north-
ern France, and in very many cases
they marked the spot where a German
shell had caught a transport driver as
front.
ly graves were herole American boys,
herole French boys, hervole
boys, and they have pald the great
price that the Boche might not
stroy the freedom of the world.
DRUFF MAKES
HAR FALL OUT
| A small bottle of “Danderine”
keeps hair thick, strong,
beautiful.
Girls! Try this! Doubles beauty
of your hair in a few
moments.
AR
comparison with this sacrifice.
tween the methods of the Boche and
those of the nations that have been
fighting the Germans. Here He buried
soldiers. Around each cemetery
French have bulit a fence. Over each
Germany only to gratify the selfish |
greed of a people who had been taught
that might is right,
I realized the tragic Interest of
America in these graves as I walked
over the hilltop at Guillimont farm,
near the village of Bony, and found
there two large cemeteries in which
American dead lle buried. 1 realized
it anew as Gen. Henry Rawlinson,
commanding the Fourth British army,
recounted to me the incidents of that
battle in which American troops made
the first break In the Hindenburg line,
and when he told me of the wonderful
gallantry of those American boys, “the
most gallant troops that ever fought
on a battlefield.”
Today more than 1.000 of those gal-
lant American boys are buried in sol
dier graves on that battlefield, and lit.
tle wooden crosses mark their resting
places,
Severe Lesson for Germany.
German money cannot pay for those
lives, hut that spirit of greed, of wan-
tonness, of selfish ambition, that pro-
duced the senseless, needless war in
which they died, must be crushed, and
it can be crushed only by making the
German pay, and pay, and pay, until
he has learned that might is not right
and that war for the purposes of con-
I quest and domination is not profitable.
An American regiment, to which 1
had belonged some years ago, and in
which were enrolled many personal
friends, had fought on that field. As
I walked beside the long rows of
wooden crosses, and knew that some
of them marked the resting places of
my friends, I felt, as any other Ameri.
| ean would have felt under the same
conditions, that Germany must pay in
' order that Germany should learn that
might is not right.
I am sure that every father, every
mother, every brother, every sister,
every relative and friend of those
American boys who are buried on Eu-
ropean battlefields will feel that Ger-
many must pay and pay heavily for
| the desolation she has caused through
out the world.
There is on the Somme battlefields,
' pot far from what once was the beau
tiful little city of Peronne, a soldiers’
| pemetery in which British troops are
buried. On each little wooden cross
| had been painted the name of the sol
dier buried beneath it, as well as the
| Jetter of his company and the number
of his battalion. In the onrush of the
| fluns last March this cemetery was
| taken, and the wanton cruelty of the
| Boche 1s nowise better illustrated than
. by the fact that he went through that
| cemetery and painted out the names
| of these British dead.
|
emphasizes the need that Germany
pay for the desecration of the graves
of the allied soldiers committed by her
troops in France,
Further Display of Impudence,
an insult to the French people. Here
are buried a large number of German
officers,
government erected
a magnificent
of these German officers, and over the
graves stand elaborate marble and
granite monuments erected to
memory of these German officers
on what has always been French soil,
and they stand there as one of the
ted by the German nation in this war.
This is but another of the many,
many incidents that add to the ser)
ousness of the crimes committed by
pay.
A very considerable portion of the
soil of Belgium and northern France
is today given over to the graves of
soldiers of the allles, and these sol-
dier boys would not be dead, these
Within ten minntes after an appli
ation of Danderine you can not find a
single trace of dandruff or falling hair
and your scalp will not teh, but what
will please you most will be after a few
weeks use, when you see pew hair, fine
end downy at first—yes—but really
new halr-—growing all over the sealp.
A little Danderine jmmedintely dou-
bles the beauty of your hair. No dif-
dull, and
moisten a ith Dan-
ie how faded, brittle
rAERY. Just ith
derine & draw it through
your hair, taking one small strand at a
time, The effect is amazing-—your hai
will be light, fiuffy and wavy, and have
an sppearance of abundance; i
comparable lu soft & and luxg-
rianoce,
Gel a
Danderine for a
store or toilet cour
nd carefully
an in-
8
Kanowiton's
by careless treatment—that's all—you
ol hair and lots
of it if you will just try a little Dan-
| derine.— Adv,
Rara Avis
Knicker—Is Jones original?
Bocker—Very:; when he
Job he doesn’t that it is a great
sacrifice
acoopt %
4
el on
LOOK AT CHILD'S
TONGUE IF SICK,
CROSS, FEVERISH
HURRY, MOTHER! REMOVE POI-
SONS FROM LITTLE STOMACH,
LIVER, BOWELS.
GIVE CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS
AT ONCE IF BILIOUS OR
homes would not today be in mourn.
war for the purposes of conguest and
loot; a war conducted with all the
whntonness and cruelty of savages.
Why should they not pay, and pay,
and pay, until they find that an un-
holy war, such as they waged, is the
most unprofitable business in which
man can engage?
SPARROWS’ NESTS IN A SHIP
Attracted by Graingand Not at All Af.
fected by Noise, Birds Make
Home There.
A large tramp steamer had been
towed into a northeast coast port for
repairs. After having discharged ber
cargo of grain, she was placed in ga
dry dock, situated in the middle of a
with all the usual accompaniment of
whistles, shouting of men, and other
noises common to all such works,
Look at the tongue, mother! If
+ coated, it is a sure sign that your lit.
tie one's stomach, liver and bowels
needs a gentle, thorough cleansing at
once.
When peevish, cross, listless, pale,
doesn’t sleep, docsn’t eat or act natu
rally, or is feverish, stomach sour,
breath bad; has stomach-ache, sore
throat, diarrheen, full of cold, give a
teaspoonfal of “California Syrup of
Figs,” and in a few hours ail the foul,
constipated waste, undigested food
ond sour bile gently moves out of the
little bowels without griping, and you
have a wel], playful child again.
You needn't conx sick children to
take this harmless “fruit laxative ™
they love its delicious taste, and it
always makes them feel splendid,
i Ask your druggist for a bottle of
. "California Syrup of Figs” which has
| directions for babies, children of all
‘ages and for grownups plainly on the
bottle. - Beware of counterfeits sold
« here. To be sure You get the genuine,
ask to see that it is made by the “Call
| fornia Fig Syrup Company.” I.cfuse
. any other kind with contempt.—Ady,