The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, March 29, 1923, Image 6

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    .
A
NO OPERATION
FOR HER
She Took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
‘table Compound and Escaped the
Operation Doctor Advised
Louisville, Ky. — *‘ I wish to thank you
for what your medicine has done ve
me. I was in bed for
eight or nine days
everymonth and had
a great deal of nin,
The doctor said my
only relief was an
operation. I read of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s
medicines and tried
the Vegetable Com-
pound and the Sana-
tive Wash, and they
surely did wonders
. : for me. I feel fine
al the time now, also am picking up in
weight, I will tell any one that your
ines are wonderful, and you may
ublish my letter if you wish.” —Mrs.
pt BoOEHNLEIN, 1130 Ash St., Louis-
ville, Ky.
Backache, nervousness, painful times,
irregularity, tired and run-down feel-
ings, are STnpioge, of female troubles.
Lydia E. ham’s Vegetable Com-
nd should be taken whenever there
reason to fear such troubles. It con-
tains nothing that can injure, and tends
to tone and strengthen the organs
eT so that they may work in a
healthy, normal manner. t it help
> as Tt has thousands of others, Lydia
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is
Bow selling almost all over the world.
WHAT IT MEANS
T0 BE “RUN DOWN”
A “RUN DOWN" feeling is a dan-
ger signal. If you neglect it,
you are leaving the door wide
open to dangerous diseases.
Build yourself up to health and
strength with Gude's Pepto-Mangan,
it will purify and enrich your blood,
tone up your nervous system, and help
you eat well, sleep well and feel well,
. Gude's Pepto-Mangan iS a time-tried
tonic, recommended by physicians for
over 30 years. At your druggist—
liquid or tablets, as you prefer.
Per lie "
angan
Tonic and Blood Enricher
I TR I
Grayiia |
Original color easily and safely
gestored by Mary T. Goldman's
Hair Color Restorer. A clear, colot-
less liquid, clean as water. For gray,
faded, bleached, streaked®or dye-
discolored hair. Write for free trial
bottle. State color or enclose logk
of hair.
Tesi It on one lock of halr.
MARY T. GOLDMAN
WAC Goldman Bidg., St. Paul. Mian.
FREE
[ITH
BOTTLE
to Remove Easily.
The woman with
March because it is
face with
tender skin dreads
likely to cover her
ugly freckles No matter how
thick her veil, the sun and Winds haw a
strong tendency to make her freckle
double streagth--makes It possible for
keap their akin clear and white. No matter
how stubborn a case of freckies you have, the
double strength Othins should remove them
Get an ounce from your druggist and
banish the freckles. Money back If it falls
GREEN MOUNTAIN
COMPOUND
vicky relleves the distress
ng paroxysms. Used for
85 years and result of long
experience in treatment of
throat and lung diseases
Dr. J. H. Gulid.
BOX, Treatise on Asthma, it a
‘shutiss, Hastaens ete,
n request. 2Me. and ie
at druggists. 23 . QUILD ©0., RUPERT, VT
————
IAA A ARE
CONSTIPATION
Russian Misgovernment,
Owing -to the lack of fuel and cap-
tal, 20,000 miles of railway under the
Russian soviet have been elosed,
All things come to him wie waits,
except the reputation of being a
hustler, -
o_o”
Dr. Peery's "Dead Bhot” Is not a “los
ange” or “myrup.’” but a real on tain]
done of medicine which cleans out Worms
or Tapeworm with a single doss. Adv,
“Make no expense but to do good
to others or yourself."-—RBenjamin
Besutiful Byes, li like fine |
Le
EZ
wong
by :
A. Falfontaine
Deck
All
All
e dl Tar wilh
{ ge lil lies with
All
All
lu- 1a!
Al-
Saw the Savior
Leave the Tomb
It is strange to consider the fact
that the most extraordinary event in
the world's history
no human being.
Jesus rose from the dead,
body beheld His resurrection.
The soldiers placed as guards at the
but
i
the body was gone,
| stone (which sealed the entrance)
! rolled away, and soon afterward, go
| Ing In, they found the tomb empty.
Mary Magdalen was first to arrive
at the tomb the next morning, which
was Sunday. Finding It empty, save
for the white linen cloths in which the
body had been wrapped, she hastened
In great distress to Peter and John,
her supposition being that It hid been
stolen.
Peter and John could hardly believe
what she toid them, but, going to the
sepulcher thereupon, they verified her
statement.
John had been an eyewitness of the
crucifixion. He knew that Jesus was
dend, and to his mind that tremendous
fact was final. To all the follow:
ers of the Master His death was a
shock pecullarly dreadful because
they had taken It for granted that He
could never dle. After His execution,
they had no notion that He would
return to them, and, as will presently
be shown, even the apostles were at
first wholly Incredulous of His resur
rection.
John tells how he saw the soldiers
break the bones of the two thieves,
as they hung on their erossss, to
hasten thelr death; and, further,
that they did not do this to Christ
because Fle was dead already—a fact
which wns made sure by a spear which
one of the soldiers thrust Intd Jesus
side.
Tomb Quarded by Soldiers.
Jesus had preached doctrines ich
the authorities In Jerusalem regarded
as dangerously socialistic. In add!
tion, His teachings had given offense
to the Jewish priesthood, which stirred
up popular feeling against Him. Ar
rested on trumped-up cha He was
condemned to death to tisfy the
mob and appease the rancor of His
high-placed enemies,
Pilate, though he weakly yielded to
the demand for Jesus’ condemnation,
had himself no sympathy with the pro
ceedings, It was therefore with en.
. tire willingness that he granted to
Joseph of Arimathea permission to
take down the body and see to its in-
terment,
Joseph of Arimathea was a rich
man. He had, a short time previous
ty, ordered the construction of a burial
vault, cut out of molld rock—-presum-
ably for the use of his own family.
De
5
aster (Farol
ey 4. 8.18. Wodges.
(n -CPNSE rare lingt
fm earth A
«le -
wrapped In white
linen, was taken and lald, out to await
embalming.
Thereupon it was that certain Jews
went to Pllate and said to him: “Sir, |
we remember that the Deceiver said, |
{ while He was yet alive: ‘After Tiree |
days I will rise again’ Command, |
therefore, that His sepulcher be made
sure, lest His disciples come by night |
and steal Him away, and say unto the
people, ‘He Is risen from the dead.”
Pliate granted the request, and sent
| a squad of soldiers to guard the tomb,
| against the opening of which they
rolled a large bowlder, to close it
But In the night an earthquake came:
the bowlder was rolled’ away, and,
when the soldiers entered the sepul
cher, a little later, the body had dis
appeared.
An Angel Appears.
We read: “One of the soldiers
came and sald, ‘Know that Jesus is,
risen!" The Jews sald, ‘How? And
he replied, ‘First there was an earth.
| quake; then an angel of the Lord,
! bearing lightning, came down from
Heaven and rolled away the stone,
“ ©
And the angel answered and
said unto the woman, Fear not |
ye: for | know that ye seek
Jesus that was crucified. He is
not here, for Me is risen as He
said ~Matt. 28; 5.6.
ww o
and sat upon it. And, through fear, |
all of us soldiers became as dead men,
and could neither flee nor speak."”
The soldiers, worried lest the dis
appearance of the body bring punish-
ment upon them, sought advice from
the high priests, who gave them
money, saying, “Say you His disciples
came at night and stole Him away
while we were asleep” The priests
promised to square the matter with
Pllate, and so the affair was adjusted,
"He Is Risen”
The same morning (Sunday), after
Mary Magdalen, Peter and John Mad
visited the tomb and gone away again,
women came to embalm the body In
accordance with the Jewish custom,
bringing myrrh and aleee fog the pur
pose. On entering the sepulchar they
saw (according to’ St. Mark), an angel
~<a young man sitting on the right
side, clothed In a long white garment.”
They were frightened. But the angel
sald: "Be not affrighted. Ye seek
Jesus of Nazareth, which was cruck
fied. He Is risen; He Is not here”
The immediate followers of Jesus
were mot only overwhelmed with dis
tress by His death, hut felt a very
natural alarm for thelr own safety,
They could not fall to perceive that
they were In great danger. At any
moment they might be arrested as
criminals, and meet the same hideous
fate as that which had overtaken their
Master.
Their best chance was to scatter
and bide. and remain hidden until
Ring.
-From the Livin E Chit areh.
the excitement was over. This,
fact, was what they did,
They do not seem to have paid
serious attention to what Jesus told
them about His approaching death,
again.
the
That this Is true is proved by
incredulity with which they
At first they refused to believe it at
Christ Appears to Mary.
Two women (Luke 24:11) told them
that Jesus had appeared to them near
ally taken hold of Hig feet; but the
credible story,
Mary Magdalem (Mark 16:11)
them that she alse had seen
Master,
her to touch Him. They thought that
she
delusion.
that they had seen the Savior; that
He had talked with them, and had
walked with them to Emmaus, a vil
lage eight miles from Jerusalem
whereupon He had suddenly vanished.
Their story (Mark 16:18) received no
credence.
All three of these appearances oo
curred on the very day of the resur
rection: and it was Io the evening of
the same day that Jesus presented
sultation) in the “upper room,” where
in the Last Supper had been held
Even the evidence of their own
senses did not convince them of His
corporal reality until they touched
His wounded side and saw Him par
take of food, *
Thomas Doubted,
Thomas was not one of the com
party gathered on that occasion; and
when they said to him afterward,
“We have seen the Lord,” he refused
to believe, saying, “Except I shall see
in His hands the print of the nails,
and thrust my hand into His side, 1
will not believe”
When Jesus appeared to the apos
ties In the “upper room” they tock
Him for a ghost. Only by talking and
euting with them was He able to sai
isfy them that He was not a disem
bodied spirit. The two women who
saw Him near the sepulcher on the
morning of that day had at first the
same idea; and It is llkely that the
same Is true of Mary Magdalen,
Nor did the apostles easily over
come this first lmpression. When,
more than a week later, He appeared
to seven of them at the Sea of Gall
lee, they falled at first to recognize
Him, and their first emotion was that
of fear. This, too, notwithstanding
the fact that all of them had seen
Him again two or three days eariler,
when He convinced the doubting
Thoman that He wns xy risen In’
the flesh by showing His wounded
hands, feet and side,
»
GREAT MEN MERELY HUMAN
“Select of the Earth” Really Differ
Very Little From the Rect
of Mankind.
Once when a grave ambassador vis
ited an English king he was ushered
into a room where he found the king
on all fours, his son mounted upon
his back and riding him hard. Around
the tables, in and out between the
chairs, the horse traveled while the
gray-haired ambassador cheered the
rider on,
Abraham Lincoln carried a load of
responsibility and care that might
have staggered the bravest man, but
sore distress he
found thme to slip away to spend an
hour with Tad, and when his duties
culled him from home he could still
a note to the child
had left behind-—tender little mes
thought and
Roosevelt—there was n
but he found time to fa-
He knew how to
Remember that story
“hide and seek” In the
pack of youngsters In
He was then President of
United States, There was every
should have cried off
he was not as young
his office was one of
dignity and of such re
sponsibility to make his life not
his own, but a people's trust. Still
he played with the children,
Fine object lessons may be learned
from a study of the lives of
noted people around the earth.—Col-
uwbia Record,
Our own
tremendous
as
home
Twanging the Lyre.
The Kansan snd the Texan were
telling each other of the thoroughgo-
ing, efficient nature of cyclones
thelr respective states,
Sald the Kansan: “Well,
in 1908 and I wes
Knew it was there, -about
down, but I had just got down a
thousand and ran out of money, Fig-
ured I was busted. Along came a
Kansas twister and didn't do a thing
but suck the bottom out of that well
Hard to be-
lieve, but the well's there yet”
Said the Texan: “Sure, I believe it
That's nothing. During the drought
of '87T my cattle In west Texas were
dying fast. 1 set cut to drill for wa-
ter,
digging dust,
over to town and ask the school
teacher how far I could go before I
struck China. Well,
cyclone
sir, it
came along,
When [| got
back there was a lake a mile across
and spreading fast, and the strange
part was that the water was a regu-
lar Chinese yellow and jnst wiggling
with cross-eyed tadpoles.”-—New Or
leans Times Pleayune,
Trapping the “Fiu”™ Germ.
Germ of the “flu” hess been “iso
lated.” which is the doctors’ word for
it Is, no doubt, dashing wildly about,
gnashing its teeth with rage; and as
demoniacally possessed of the will to
do evil as if it were a balefuleyed
George slew
There are dragons in our day, too;
are as ravenous of sentient life as
anything which wandered among the
great ferns of the steaming prehis
toric ages, although & microscopic
them look no more ferocious than a
hyphen or the point of a needle,
All the large predatory animals that
way to extinction. It is the invisible
have now to fear; and our resentment
against the influenza germ hardens
our hearts almost to a desire to prac.
tice cruelty upon it, If that were pos-
sible,
Had Money Enough.
Twenty years ago or so there used
to be a story of a negro bey who re
fused to cerry a grip uptown for a
traveling salesman. “Give you =a
quarter,” offered the salesman “I
got a quarter, boss.” The same little
darky, mow grown, was encountered
by a Kansas City man on a dark
street the other night. As there was
no one about, the Kansas City man
shied to the edge of the sidewalk,
giving the darky plenty of room.
“Nev' mind, mister,” the darky as
sured him. *I ain't gonna hold you
up. I got as uch money ss you
have.”
Inspiring Interest.
“It took me a long time to get the
opposition editor out home te print
that extract from my speech” nfur
mured Senator Sorghum.
“How did you manage it?"
“Wrote It in a letter addressed to
somebody else, but apparently put into
the wrong envelope and marked it
conspicuously, ‘Not for Publication"
An Oversight,
Dyughter—How do you like my
new evening gown, father?
Father—My dear girl; you surely
aren't going out with half of your
back exposed? :
Daughter (looking In mirror)—Oh,
it's that stupid dressmaker’s fault;
she forgot to cut off the other half!
Twenty Year.Old Beatin F
' the medical officer at Belchamp,
sex, England, » ,
‘
%
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relief from
CORNS
One ins - and the pain of th
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Corns oF using corrosive acids. Then. ane
tiseptic; waterprool. Sires for cores, cals
louses, bunions. Get 8 bow todsy at your
druggist’ # of shoe dealer's,
Dr Scholl's
Zino-pa
Made in the laboratories of The Scholl
Mig. Co., makers of Dv. Schall's Foot
Com fort Appliances, Arch Supports, etc.
Put one on—the pain is gone!
Established 1875
| World's Largest selling ‘2 medicine
: ley's
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A man is as old as his organs ; he
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performing their functions. Keep
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LATHROP’S
HAARLEM OIL
The world" s standard remedy for kidney,
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’
Hall's Catarrh Medicine
Those who are in a “run down” condi
tion will notice that Catarrh bothers
them much more than when they are in
geod health. This fact proves that while
aatzh ln 4 local dilense i 12 Sreatly
rena fo constitutional conditions.
ALLS TARKH MEDICINE con-
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———
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