The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 04, 1920, Image 7

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    “DANDERINE” STOPS
HAIR FALLING OUT
A few cents will save your
hair and double its
beauty.
Hurry!
A little “Danderine” cools, cleanses
and makes the feverish, itchy scalp
soft and pliable; then this stimulating
tonic pene the famished hair
roots, revitalizing and invigorating ev-
ery hair in the head, thus stopping the
hair falling out, getting thin, scraggly
or fading.
After a few application of “Dander-
ine” you seldom find a fallen hair or a
particle of dandruff, besides every hair
‘shows more life, vigor, brightness, color
and thickness,
A few cents buys a
lightful “Danderine” at
toilet counter.—Ady.
trates to
of de-
bottle
Business.
Reno-—He always rubs it
people, fri
Henry-
Reno
into the
3 or no friends,
Always knocking,
Neo; he's an osteopath.
RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR.
To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum,
a small box of Barbo Compound, and 3
oz. of glycerine. Apply to the hair twice a
week until it becomes the desired shade,
Any druggist can put this up or you can
mix it at home at very little cost, It wil
eh?
and will make harsh hair soft and glossy.
It will not eo'or the scalp, is not sticky or
greasy, and does not rub off. —Adv,
A woman's sphere is the home.
bride Is willing to
this,
Any
of a week admit
For Constipation use a natural remedy.
Garfield Tea is composed of carefully se
lected herbs only. At all drug stores.—Adyv.
idea of a well
Our bred man is one
whe never boasts of his dough.
6 BELL-ANS
| Hot water
THE “BLUES”
Caused by
Acid-Stomach
Mil = of peoples who worry, are despone
dent, ve ape 2 deg mn, feel
biue 2 ¥ ’ elan ol belleve that
these cc influences
over no control
be traced
to an ir nal sour Nor is
it to be wonders
ning with such wel
digestion, belching
will, If not checke
degrees or organs
nervous eye ¥ anged. Digestion
suffers. The bl i verished. Health
and strength are undermined. The victim of
acid-stomach, he may not know
the caus feelin his hope,
courage r slipping. And
truly life worth much to the
man or = who has acld-stomach!
Get rid of it! Don't let acid-stomach hold
You bach wreck your health, make your
days miserable, make you a victim of the
“bi and gloomy thoughts! Theres is a
ious modern ronedy called EATONIC
that brings, ! wuch quick relief from your
stomach mis cf--gets your stomach to rights
—eimalkes it rong, scol, sweet and comfort.
able. Helps you get back your strength. vigor,
vitality. enthusiasm and good cheer So
many thousands upon thousands of sufferers
have used EATONIC with such marvelously
helpful results that we are sure you will
feel the same way If you will just give it a
trial. Get a big 60 cent box of EATONICw
the good tasting tablets that you eat ike a
bit of candy from your druggist today. He
will return your money if results are not
even more than you expect
EATONIC
(FOR YOUR ACID-STOMACH)
JUST WHAT YOU NEED
DR. CARTERS K. & B. TEA
Health-Building Tea Every Other
Night for Two Weeks.
Take it till your bowels are in per-
with health and your skin grows clear
and healthy. At the same time don't
forget that there is nothing you can
give the cross, fretful child that will
do it more good.
ie
| “HE TRAVELS
FASTEST”
voi.
By ELIZABETH Y. MILLER :
OOOO GSOLOLLLLLILSoL Lot
(Copyright.)
Arthur Brooks was an ambitious
young man. When he married 'Theo-
icra he took her to live in one of the
lersey suburbs, The rent was
and the neighborhood not too fastidi
For be It understood that Ar-
ambition ran pot to luxuries,
the accumulation of wealth,
low
| DUS,
thur's
it te
He
| thrifty,
| souple of
was the type of
saving type—who keeps a
dime banks In
the
ten-cent
constant
wherein
which
to the walter
ne on his desk at office
2¢ dropped the pleces
| *ightfully belonged
®
the other
On
served him at
hiffonier
lunch, on
at home, the chiffonler
orange for the devouring of
| oennies,
Theodora, “allow-
who was not
anced” in the orthodox,
»s which were dropped
banks
ind
the
0 her.
pen
home
slim-bladed was a safe ally,
filched
much as a
urally
not accu
But they
penknife
{| she from them sometimes so
whole dollar at once, Nat-
the
very
home savings
fast,
married a whole
detected
enough
imulate
had been
Arthur
his young wife in her pllferings.
he read her
kind. In a
force of it rolled
water off a
thrifty by na
and helping
year before Brooks
ecture which
aificent of its way,
ever, the off
like
was
dora
She not ture; she
weeded money
‘t was by far an easier and surer way
of getting It
Arthur,
“And
ously,
money ?
than
why.” he continued,
“should you need
Aren't fed?
you enough of everything?”
“Plenty,” Theodora
of everything but
any
you Haven't
said
noney,
¢
“But what did you need money for?
he persisted
back
Sir
forth ind
lovely
into mar-
t and forgot to question
For Theod
had been quite differs
ead er ante.
edents, upbringing
from his. In
papier-mache
unknown,
Her
from
oranges wore
things
So was a count,
family had luxuriously
hand to mouth, and there
always a huge pile of bills waiting to
paid. But this irritating fact in
no wise lessened the number of gowns
that Theodora and her mother bought,
nor forced the family to dine on corn.
od preference to chicken.
There were theater trips In Theodora's
antenuptial days, cabs, restaurant din.
ners, and wildly extravagant times at
Christmas,
Theodora's
bank ac
lived
was
be
beef In
wedded life was quite
different. They lived well within her
husband's Income—unnecessarily
it sometimes seemed-—and to her cred-
| It be it sald, that she did her best to
take kindly to the new regime. In-
| deed, considering all that had gone
before, Theodora did remarkably well,
She loved her thrifty husband and, in
ia way, she was happy.
| Arthur, too, was happy in a way.
He would have been happler, perhaps,
If matrimony had been less expensive,
{ but saving was with him a constito-
| tional instinct, and his regrets did not
| reflect measurably upon Theodora.
There were times when his love for
| her swept him like a tempest.
Her clear brown eyes; her halr,
satiny and smooth like the brown wing
of a bird; her slender figure, moving
so lithely to household tasks: her
pretty white hands, which no amount
of toll seemed to harden, were all.
powerful lodestones to draw him to
her,
And yet It conld not be denied,
Theodora, with all her physical at.
tractions, was a lLorrible expense,
There were times when Arihur Brooks
took to brooding over what might
have been. If, for Instance. he hadn't
married, or had put off mirrying until
a more “suitable” time. He figured
up how cheaply he might have lived,
If he hadn't married! Heavens!
How he could have saved!
Even a cheap flat, with a wife whe
#0,
hud no sense of money value, and ap
impending baby-~how it ate into one's
income! Arthur Brooks realized that
he had made a foolish mistake in mar
rying so young. Naturally, however,
he did not tell this to Theodora. He
wis not unkindly enough for that, and
besides, it was he who had nsked her
to marry him. She had not been over-
ly anxious at first. Arthur, though
economical, was just.
And then, as by a horrifying
acle, the thing happened.
The little baby, for ward-
robe Arthur's precious dime and pen-
ny banks had been rifled, ar
rived, It hovered for only brief
hour in this unlovely world, and then,
clasping hand, wandered
back again great
from whence it
They buried
hugged to
lips thnt
in their
mir-
whose
at last
one
Theodora's
the unknown
came,
Theodora
her bosom,
he had
wonted
and sath li
brushed
into
with
The loved
smile:
smooth ke a
forever.
the money for a simple
daughter's
tell
y which
pay =a
was easy to see where poor The
got some of her habits
And so it happened that Arthur
commenced life anew
and
Snowy
gathered
for her memory
Arthur that
should
shie took
have gone instead
long-standing grocer's
wlora
shiftless
wisdom no
It was a ht, and
the wide
nig
about
eral
club [tself spoke
eloquently of
t. There
reading
red-shaded
chairs, and th
rugs which cost fabulous prices.
afford to
were long mahogany
leather easy
a rich could seek
man
here,
as it
©n-
Yet, often happens even
g
stim-
under the
their after-dinner cigars
gentle
ulus of were
the cost of living and the
old
for the benefit
fellow, ox-
heeked
gen of his
audience
us poor as Job's turkey
}
he asserted
af it for
iH work
« and 1
little
Brooks pill w
Arthur :
his arms on the polished mah
and
“a
table uttered a stifled ore
GRANTED BENEFIT OF ORDEAL
Not Condemned Before Civen So
Called “Trial”
A clear distinction mst be made be
tween fetish and witehe
writer In the Wide
The former is regarded by
man as perfectly legitimate;
raft. says a
World Magazine,
Sol 8
RCs
the
the Int-
and all
over Africa methods are
used, as in olden days in England, with
witches,
One or other of the law-god-cult so
cleties—those secret bearing
guch names as Purvoh, Oru, Egho., Uk-
ukiwe, ete. ~intervenes, and a trial by
ordeal follows. In fact, anyone can
claim that right, A says to B: “You're
a witch” “I'm not!" ejaculates B.
who Immediately takes a calabar bean
and swallows It.
sick: therefore he Is the guilty per
summary
societies
mechanism of the law soclety has
heard of the dispute.
a lot of expense, he has a right to call
in the ald of the society; but he
needn't.
use In an African village. Miss Kings-
ley relates that you have only to shout
“Ifot” at a man or woman in Calabar,
or “Ndo teh!” In Fjortland, and the
whole population, so good-tempered
the moment before, is turned blood
thirsty. But, mind you, the ordeal
must prove the gullt first, before the
witch Is literally torn to pleces,
Age of Wisdom,
He—Old Grogsby told me today
that he sincerely regretted his mis
spent youth,
She-—I'm delighted to hear that he's
repented at last.Columbia (8. C)
State,
Well, They Had Fingers.
As late as the revolution of 1688 (n
England few English nobletien owned
more than a dozen forks.
Gossip About
Spring Coats
BOUT
begin ts
cont’
burden-
uraen
aven in Hose si { % of the
now
spring
thelr
host m
Come noc
debut and
skes it plair
stomed to
the cont
sithouette
startling howe
They are
needed
Are raw ganged to button
“rr
ar
ug when and
they
thrown open when the
Beits do not
130i 8
}
AERE i= such an unending variety
in and smocks in ail the
displays of spring merchandise, that it
to make a choice with the
certainty that #t ix n one, }
takes repeated visits to the shops and
blouses
wisn
what
styles are favored aud what features
persist. Fashion reporters learn from
experience that they are expecied to
detect the successful models and styles
features and it is not hard to do this,
In the two new blouses shown in the
picture above, two of the outstanding
and successful features of the new
styles are emphasized. No woman
need hesitate to follow their sugges
tions In making her selections for
spring. One blouse of georgette, In
two colors, reveals the
color combinations and fanciful ef
fects. The other, of fine white voile,
with filet Ince and needlework as adorn.
ment, portrays a different character of
blouse, but one that promises to lead
all others as (he favorite of gentle
women,
made and the lace need on It is an eles
gant example of fine work. It is ut
” alana PR
with
hand-run tucks at each side
sprays on ft,
nbhle The work in it is worth while
because voile and filet are blessed with
fron constitutions, with all their dain-
tinese, and will outlast any other fab-
ric used in blouses,
The under and overblouse idea and
clever use of color, find themselves
happily set forth in the blouse of
georgette in which dark blue is posed
over pale tan colorg with the tiniest
buttons in the lighter color playing the
part of trimming. They outline all
the edges of the slashed body and
sleeves, algo the neck and cuffs. But
the designer's brigat, particular
achievement In this model appears in
the narrow ribbon in a Roman stripe
that finishes fe neck and sleeves and
{pusses in a band around the under
[bodice and upper sleeve. It ix a gay,
| brilliant and fine Anishing touch,
hoa Gots
Pneumonia
often follows a
Neglected Cold
KILL THE COLD!
gills
BROMIDE
Standard cold remedy for 20 years
~ifi tablet form-—safe, sure, no
opiates—breaks up a cold in 24
hours—relieves grip in 3 days
Money back if it fails Toe
has a Red
genuine box
top with Mr. Hill's
picture.
At All Drug Stores
BETTER
DEAD
Life is a burden when the body
is racked with pain. Everything
worries and the victim becomes
despondent and downhearted. To
bring back the sunshine take
GOLD MEDAL
1
2 [CAPSULES | APSULES
The national remedy of Holland for over
200 years; itis an enemy of all pains re-
sulting from kidney, liver and uric acid
troubles. All druggists, three sizes.
Lock for the name Cold Medal on every hex
sccept po imitation
Pimples, Freckles and Blemishes
REMOVED BY
Shechier’s European Facial Cream,
Seap and Blood Purifier
which are proven rome
dies, also excellent skin
besutifiers,
A trial will convince
you. Satisfaction assured
or money refunded.
We send Facial Cream
and Soap {or only $1.00,
All the three for $2.00,
Bend your order today,
direct to the manulsc.
turers. : % ~
SHECHTER & CO.
Liggettnllyors
KING PIN
CHEWING
The tastiest
tobacco you
ever tasted.
BEND
FOR THE BOOK OF
101 BEST SONGS
1 ~pontaining more than 100 favorite se-
lactions for home, school and meeting
Words and usic complete; beavy paper cover;
postage prepaid, Send 102, now, coin or stamps,
—
Ww Richmond, Virginia
hat Made Ric nd Musical™
———
Department
“The House
3 pe
hr
Not Noticeable.
{ living is terri}
“XY es but 1 his few people are
. i i i
anxiou oney.”
DS a
CONVENIENT!
m————
if Constipated, Bilious of
Headachy, take
*“Cascarets.”’
Cascarets never gripe, sicken or in
convenience one like Salts, Oil, Calo
bilious, head-
the liver
Don't stay sick,
Remove
Why
you ever experi-
No Need.
“Don’t you want to invest in a talk-
“Not much. I married one.”
GREEN'S AUSUST FLOWER
Constipation Invites other troubles
which come speedily unless quickly
checked and overcome by Green's
August Flower which is a gentle laxe-
tive, regulates digestion both in
stomach and intestines, cleans and
sweetens th stomach and alimentary
canal, stimulates the liver to secrete
the bMe and impurities from the blood.
It is a sovereign remedy used in many
thousands of households all over the
civilized world for more than half a
century by those who have suffered
with indigestion, nervous dyspepsia,
sluggish liver, coming up of food, pal
pitation, constipation and other in
testinal troubles. Sold by druggists
and dealers everywhere. Try a bottle,
take no substitute—Adv,
The fish aiways bite well when you
can't go,
IN,
IE Nast
o> E
or Adult,