The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 16, 1919, Image 6

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    Suffered For Years
Back and Kidneys Were in
Bad Shape, But Doan’s
Removed all the Trouble
“My kidneys were so weak that the
least cold I caught would affect them
and start my k aching until I
could bardly endure the misery,” says
Mrs. D. C. Ross, 973 Fulton St., Brook:
, N. Y. “In the morning when I
rat got up, my back
was so lame, could
hardly bend over and
any move sent darts of
pain through my kid.
neys. It was hard for
me to walk up stairs or
stoop, and to move
while lying down sent
darts of pain. through
me.
“The kidney secre- MRS. ROSS
tions were scanty and distressing and
the water remained in my system, mak-
ing my feet end hands swell, There
were dark circles under my eyes and
became so dizzy I could hardly see.
I had rheumatic pains in my knees and
it was all I could do to get around.
For years I was in that shape and I
wore plasters and used all kinds of
dicine to no avail until 1 tried
Doan’s Kidney Pills. They rid me
of the trouble and strengt ened my
back and kidneys. When I have taken
Doan's since, they have always bene-
fited me.”
Sworn to before me.
L. N. VAUGHAN, Notary Public.
Sat Baste at Aaj Sioee Se alex |
’ Rn
DOAN DNL
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
3 Clear Your Skin
Save Your Har
Ca,
PENNSYLVANIA
BRIEFS
who makes a living at this
caught one hed fox, a gray fox,
The wife of a henpecked husband
hasn't much to crow over.
When Baby is Teeth
gROVNS BABY Bow sk, lL sorreet
omach an wel troabl 3 harm
Bee directions on the bottle. Henly
It's a good thing to have opinions
and it's a better thing to keep the lid
on them sometimes,
A postal ecard to Garfield Tea Co,
Brooklyn, N. Y., asking for a sample
will repay you.-—Adv,
Their Class.
fare |
fice is
Seom—
"A
his ¢haracter.”
“Then a lot
books.”
man's an open book to
must be blank
of them
First to Export Oysters.
Jacob Ockers, known as the “Oyster
King." who died recently at his Long
Isiand (N. Y.) home, was the ox-
porter of to
name came to be Known in all ma
which the blue point oysters fou
foreign His foreign
ments the first year amo { to only
1.000 barrels ort busi
ness became the large kind in
the Unitgl States,
30.000 barrels annually.
first
Ovsters Europe, and
countries, ship-
No Cure for Influenza.
An article the i
umns of the .
Medical
no specific
Ish influenza. Most of
recommended are not only ridiculous
buf are actually harmful. Hyper en-
thusiasm appiled to moral and esthe
tic ideals is a praiseworthy emotion,
but as related to medienl
usually and a snare.
United States public health
having been besieged with
regarding this and that method
treatment, has issued a special bulletin
In which it is emphasized that there
Is no specific cure for influenza yet
known and that the chief reliance
must be placed upon good hygiene,
from editorial
association at
Span-
“cures”
for so called
Cures
the
selence is
The
ice,
a delusion
|OTY
inquiries
Of
ment. First of all employ a physi
News Notes,
skunk and twelve muskrats, he reports
The total membership of the
Waynesboro Red Cross thus far is
1934. The amount received in cash
is $2114, and applications for mem-
bership are still being received,
The G. B. Markle company, which
cut down the rentals for miners’
tages, in Hazleton, 50 per cent when
the United States entered the war so
that employes could feel freer to buy
Liberty Bonds, put into effect an In-
crease to the old scale. The company
was the only coal corporation in the
region that lowered during the
conflict,
The Lancaster, Oxford
ern, the baby railroad
Lancaster county, has
from the junker temporarily.
rectors held a
down a proposition to sell, rel g on
the freightaate granted by
McAdoo to from bank
ruptey. Last was
erated at a
School children of the
ughs, Mifflin and Mifllintown, have en-
rolled in the Junior Red CO
lantly, every school child In the
boroughs having affiliated with
body,
Start of what may be a shake-up in
the New Castle police force occurred
when the resignation of Officer Wil
Ham Reynolds was presented to the
mayor and accepted Several other
changes are reported as impending
A coroner's jury in Chester charged
Dennis M. Rubina, sixteen years old,
with causing the death of LL W, Wy
land, who was killed by an automobile
that Rubino was driving,
claiming the accident was dt
Cot.
rents
and South.
of southern
saved
The di-
heen
increase
them
the
save
Year road op
joss
twin horo
ross gal
LWo
the
the jury
* to Care.
who
lessness on the
wns held under
Lancaster county grist millers
the city of Lebanon
gocept the «
settlement of the
BUS
nore
yaler
recent
from
the i
millers
£18
Ir
have
H D
and
There wer
all
effort %
a boy, healthy-looking ba
An
i
being made
pure bred Berkshi
mn country
Mahoning
Farm
retuned
re pige In
H F. Long
farmer,
Carbs this year
Acre, A
County
Rahn has
olng
il
lege, Longnere
g
bought seven HK)
ponds h, r
A system of
on breeding
rR es
pany
$
we ititny %
ThRISIEATS r
vining
heen inangurated at
Institute New Bloor
Edward Holopmn WrTneY 4 .
recently I from the
United States service, Is In charge
Mechanicsburg men are
planning the organization of a board
trnde in order to promote the
of the A pred min
: wa week. An
organization will be effected and con
stitution and by laws adopted at an-
other meeting Monday evening
Evan Morris was committed to the
Manch Chunk ail on the charge of as.
enuit and battery and highway rob-
bery. It alleged that Morriz rob
bed Clem Carrol, of Lansford, of
$158, and Carrol alleges he 1s a wits
ness to testify that Morris boasted of
and showed what he got by knocking
him down. Morris was released on
ball,
Willlmm A. Wallace, hurgess of
Forty Fort, has resigned his office. He
in
ant
sor, dischnrges
bukinoees
of bout
intrests
iv meeting
borongh
held last
on
t
iB
ugh most of the time decided to retire
from office. The post pays $200 month
field.
Two men He dead at an undertaking
room in Woodlawn, the victims of as
phyxiation
They went to sleep in
Thieves sawed the lock from tha
door at the main gntrance of the Merts.
sown high school bulding and nis
the $100 talking machine presented to
the school by a former principal. This
was the sixth time the
was robbed within the last two years,
and the schoolrooms were almost ens
tirely stripped of thelr mural adorn.
ments, including valuable ofl paintings
of Presidents Lincoln and McKinley.
The matter has been placed In the
schoolhouse
Despite the war thine
act, Luwrence county llguor
holders are going ahead with
applications for leenses and
to present them at court on February
10. Papers are now filled out,
The of pardons will
meet at Harrisburg, Wednesday,
clear up all business,
prohibition
Heense
expect
being
slate board
Caught
North
restes
coal at
Andrew
to death
under falling
Mahanoy colliery,
crushed
Re
wins
William Forester, a Seranton insur
ance man, has been appointed fuel ad-
in Lackawanna county.
Groff, aged six years,
was frizhtfully burned when
over an oll stove while ar
minstirator
Horace
Marietia,
Kicked
of
from a small gas stove,
Residents of Pittston have made a
present bridge 1s a rele of the past,
that it is unsafe and that Increased
travel demands better facilities
The expenses of the Lehighton
board of health for the yoar 1918 were
S567 89, largely due to the quarantine
for influenza,
Marshall, a fell
her home near Wilkes
dying a
widow
Mrs. Mars
wh stulrs at
broke her neck,
ater,
services for
Wente
associntion
r de
n Penn
vill be
memorial
or Of the
remen’s
SJisviile h school
160,
in a twenty-f
Stoel works,
in his
iil
winm January
fn Smith, fall at
fractured
death
been
oof
+ Bethlehem
which resulted
Irn Frankenfield
elected president of the Al Wn
Fraternal Order of Po-
his skull,
Officer has
ete
branch of the
4
Hoe,
There are
Easton's
enrolled
at
AX}
aliens
school
250 adult
night the
averages more than
sthiehem council has fixed the ax
and will get 2815,
SHSN O00 in 1018
nine mills
nst
when
ven by
killed
dr
The
ither
the, only
Abram Nesbitt, multi.
millionaire and Luzerne county's rich.
man, died from a short
pneumonia at Wilkes-Barre
8x years of age Her
husband and two sons survive
The body of Private
lartholomew, who died
nt Fort Crockett, Tex,
Bethlehem He in United
States service at Panama. While on
home on a furlough he was
He was removed from the
Fort Crockett and cared for
until death ensued. He was thirty.
five years old and leaves a widow
and a mother,
Missing since Inst Wednesday, the
body of 1. E. Nicholson, of Connells.
ville, employed on the B. and O. rail
rond, was found under a bridge al
Little Pulls, W. Va, where it Is be-
Hleved he fell during the high water.
A widow and one son survive,
There are now but fourteen patients
Hiness of
She
eat
was
forty father,
George PF
of the
arrived In
wns the
his
stricken,
train at
way
tution ean be closed this week,
The Manufacturers’ Association of
Clymer Misstmer, Pottstown’'s health
officer, for the twenty-fourth consecuy.
tive year has been elected secretary
of the Philadelphia Fire company, of
ed elty assessor of Easton, and Irwin
J. Kutz assistant assessor,
The 1910 triennial nssessment shows
property values at Lansdale have in.
ereased only 87000, while at North
Wales the Increase is $11,025,
The Mauch Chunk canteen ladies
a Tcabar just aud fru August
Ge
i
i
]
:
i
The Norristown court appointed B
Dodd Condiy, of Philadelphia, official
court reporter at a salary of $2000 a
year,
The Carbon county commissioners
$38.20,
While there were twenty-nine deaths
in Norristown In December, there
Eight hundred safety razors, four
cases of condensed milk and 600
pounds of ton were stolen from a New
Jersey Central freight car In the AL
lentown yards, ¥ i.
Victory Clothes Successfully
Launched as Change for
Youngsters.
tial Lining for a Jacket, as Well as
Being Suitable for Frocks for
Children.
New York.~~Nothing so delights the
heart of a child as to hold a fag in its
are linked. Wasn't 'it Gals-
worthy who gave us that association
of the two gay elements of life in sny-
flags flying?
It was clever, therefore, of the de-
signers to launch the youngsters into
Victory clothes, The elders may ex-
press their relief from the tension of
terror that handcuffed us all for four
years by bursting out of the chrysallis
into the butterfly, but thelr clothes
not be parts of the flag,
tinz
wil
It is not fit-
writes a leading fashion suthor-
that any but youth wenr
ity, should
combined with a certain skill, make |
the alluring Victory clothes of this |
i
hour,
There sre tiny frocks for tiny chile
—
tiny, colored fringe as a lining for
Juckets, It had the triple qualities of
endurance, originality and cheapness,
this new lining. It was a
necessity, so Doucet thought, but it
speedily became a plece of economy
that threatened to be a high fashion.
| Probably the spring will make it ex-
ceedingly popular,
for those who deplore the lack of serv
ice in cont linings, especially in these
days when one Is not sure of dyes,
The use of unbleached muslin for
interior decoration has become well es.
tablished, especially for country homes
where curtains of this fabrie are edged
i
|
i
NOROOM FOR
PESSIMISM
Canada as a Nation Builder.
in the
burdens
task
the
With Canada’s great
war before the public,
piliow shams sare made of it with bor.
dark blue,
Came Out of the South.
One woman who was enchanted with
ft Victory frock of this fabric
ed: “Why, that's the material
to cover my Ironing board!” It
And it will wear as well on a youngster
ironing board.
of costumery for
thie South,
eached
Lag
This
dren
Virginia, where
well known
war, its re
Chie
Out
style
came out of of
i muslin i=
paint
un
and ti}
trictions, privy
ion of
fons and
economies, is still a terrible memory
born after the
Civil
Wy
It is
war,
rather a strange thing that some
venile clothes that have been designed
——
a Ss
a
A rte
Bn
£
a
‘
little boy's “Victory™
tong ribbons that are run through two |
buttonholes in the front or back of a |
the hem.
There are frocks for older children
which are made of red, white and blue
stripes held in by soft sashes of col
ored bunting in the three colors,
There is a return to a far-off and
ing frocks for children between eight
with white turnover collar and cuffs.
bunting with straight little cuirass
blouses of blue bunting fastened in a
straight line down the front with red
buttons, The cuffs and collar are
They are made of white linen edged
with linen lace and touched with red
and blue buttons,
There are red and blue hair ribbons
for girls; there are red and white
striped awning rompers for the nurs.
ery fastened with blue bone buttons;
and one of the successful frocks of the
season is made of ordinary unbleached
muslin smocked with red, white and
blue worsted threads, the design giv
ing a blurred Impression of the fing.
1t was a clever idea, this, to turn out
the children of the land in flag cos
tumes, making them” living, Joyous
sytubols of the red, white and blue
which today is the bannes of freedom
all over the world. And it is not only
our flag that they represent; it is the
flags of the allies. »
ever since the war began, Many a
youngster going to a party in a house
which stands on a pedestal of millions,
as well as others who trail into Cen-
tral park with their expensive French
nurses, are wearing adorable frocks
from some little southern town, made
very often by aged fingers that have
kept the art of rolling whipping,
ton threads.
Children Lead Fachions,
The season has
those who are interested in juvenile
clothes the fact that the youngsters
are sometimes well in the lead with
new fashions and that their elders
stumble along after them.
Once upon a time, when the world
was young and cruel, it considered it
correct for children to be encased in
bones and costumed in brocade and
metal, heavy embroideries, long skirts
and stiffly-pointed bodices, It was
cruel to make youth the resemblance
of age, Today we make age the re-
semblance of youth. In that ies our
virility, our enthusiasm and our sane
ity. The children lead the way in
belts around hips, short sleeves,
smocked blouses, bobbed hair, socks,
low-heelod shoes, straight lines and
uncorseted figures. Their mothers,
and sometimes thelr grandmothers,
imitate them.
It behooves women to look upon this
parade of fashions with interest, for
carried, and her recent victory in sub-
$175,000,000 the Oth Vie-
tory Bond Loan more than she asked,
Be would be a skeptic who would as
socliate the word pessimism her
present condition. Canada deplores
the heavy human loss which she has
euffered, but even those akin to those
lost in battle say cheerfulness
that while the sas & great, the
cause was wonderful, and accept
their sufferings with grace. It may
well be sald there 1s no room in Can
ada today for the pessimist, The age
riculturzl production the country
has doubled in four years. $140,000,
000 are the railway earnings today
or 3% times what they were ten years
ago, while the bank deposits are now
£1,733,000000 as compared with $138.
000,000 thirty
10
with
with
rifice wi
of
Years ago.
There i8 a wonderful se for
the future.
It is with
faces an
umphed
promi
that Canadas
ers oO ii Si ws tri-
soul isis of
war, war Cans wis 8
borrower, and expected to cont 80
for many years. For the past year and
a half havé seen her
self, has been furnishing
credits to other nations,
A
Transcript” says:
“The peopie at home have not been
lagging behind the boys at the front io
courage, re: and effi
The development of (
dustry is
front rank.
ficials can
the manufacturing plant Canada
built up In four in
partment after Department
found American industr
they were t
full story may
The
“nt Is
from the
transformed
the conf
over the tes
the
sefore
ings
we her finance
She
Li%0
recent article the “Boston
in
purcefuiness ency.
ida’s war in-
industrial romance of
rican Government of-
+ efficiency of
has
De-
8 eRlImainy
1.1000 000 000,
ad to
world, and
to be
sement
in no Coa
gon
vert
other
For What
Ailed Him,
k had explained at
that
books
— as soc————
Important to all Women
Readers of this Paper
thousands of women
14
ider trouble and never
Thousands upon
have kidney or bia
suspect it.
Womens’ complaints often prove to be
nothing else but kidney trouble, or the
resull of kidney or bladder disease.
If the kidneys are not in a healthy com.
dition, they may cause the other organs
to become diseased.
You may suffer pain in the back, head.
ache and loss of ambition.
Poor health makes you nervous, irrita-
ble and maybe despondent; it makes
anyone 0.
But hundreds of women claim that Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, by réstori
health to the kidneys, proved to be Just
the remedy needed to overcome such
A good kidney medicine,
real healing and curative value,
pervous,
Many send for a sample bottle
what Swamp Root, the great Srimey
liver and bladder medicine will do
Fhe. ry reader of joie paper,
is not already tried it, enclosing
femts to Dr. Kitmer & ]
; ¥ receive samp
medi Tout You "ean pr ae
am an at
stores. Adv.
Knew Human Nature.
The old lady who declared It ime
possible to please some people certain.
ly sald something.
3 : ok
a ice sndipsetion, sislchuadachiy
on of Tea. Drink om retiee
Don’t wear your bathing suit to a
New Year's party Just to show
you have one,
: rule the waves In the
WY