The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 19, 1923, Image 6

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    MRS. EARLS
TELLS WOMEN
How Backache and Periodic
Pains Yield to Lydia E.Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound
Olean, N. Y. — “Ev month my
blood would go to my head and I would
havesuchaheadache,
nosebleed, backache
and pains that I could
not do my work. At
night I could not get
my rest and nothing
seemed to do me any |
good. I readsome of |
your testimonials |
about what Lydiz E.
Pinkham’ 8 Vegeta-
ble Compound had
. 'f done for others, 60 I |
——1 decided to try it. 1]
had only taken two bottles when I began |
to be better, and my back did not hurt
me nor my head ache. I felt like anew
woman. The Vegetable Compound isa
splendid medicine and I will always rec-
ommendit.”’-Mre., A. D. EARLS, 630
N. 6th St., Olean, N. Y.
Mrs. Kelsey adds her Testimony
Copenhagen, N. Y.~*‘I read your
advertisement in thé papers and my i
husband induced me to take Lydia
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to get |
relief from pains and weakness, I was |
80 weak that 1 could not walk at times. |
Now I can do my housework and help |
my husband out doors, too. 1 am willin
for you topublish this letter if you thin
it will help others.””—Mrs. HERBERT |
Keisey, R.F.D., Copenhagen, N.Y. |
His Condition, |
“fafe Swiggins was drunk when he |
driv’ past yur yesterday, wasn't he?” |
asked the constable, i
“I d’know,” replied Gap Johnson of |
Rampus Ridge, “but I noticed that he |
had wheel off’'m his wagon, for |
some reason or ruther, and was sorter |
chattering about how blame’ wabbly |
the infernal contraptions
three wheels,"—Kansas City Star.
one
went on |
Some of the “wisdom of age” is!
gumption not to waste time pursuing |
the unattainable,
Stop Laxatives
Which Only Aggravate
Constipation
Nujol is a lubricant—mnot a
medicineor laxative
not gripe. When you are con-
stipated, not enough of Na-
ture’s lubricating liquid is
produced inthe boweltokeep
the food waste soft and mov-
ing. Doctors prescribe Nujol
because it acts like this natu-
ral lubricantand thussecures
regular bowel movements
by Nature's own method—
lubrication. Try it today.
=socan-
Nujol
LA TE Rh
LUBRICANT=NOT A LAXATIVE
A
Stow
DEATH
Aches, pains, nervousness, diffi
culty in urinating, often mean
serious disorders. The world’s
standard remedy for kidney, liver,
bladder and uric acid troubles-—
LATHROP'S
MEL
HAARLEM OIL
bring quick relief and often ward off
deadly distases. Known as the national
remedy of Holland for more than 200
years. All druggists, in three sizes.
Look for the name Gold Medal on every
box and accept no imitation
hs
One size smaller and walk in comfort |
by using Allen’s Foot-LCase, the |
antiseptic, healing powder for the feet
Shaken into the shoes Allen’s Foot- |
Ease makes tight or new shoes feel |
easy; gives instant relief to corns, bunions |
and callouses; prevents Blisters, Callous |
and Sore Spots ard gives rest to tired,
aching, swollen feet. 1,500,000 pounds of
powder for the {set were used by our
Army and Navy during the War, Sold
everywhere, For Free Sample and a
Foot-Ease Walking Doll, address
Allen's Foot-Ease, Le Roy, N. Y.
KEEP
HALES HONEY
OF HOREHOLIND AND TAR
DIKES TOO
[KeepYourSkin-Pores)
Active and Healthy
With Cuticura Soap
Soap 25e, Ointment 25 and 50¢, Talcum 25¢.
Smith, W. Lafayette, Detroit, Mich
lesalor’ Wb prices
Who now retailing at jovuine’ prices
Acey X42
postoard brings
\
Tl A
BETTY'S DREAM
wy OU are going to sleep In the
four-poster 1 had when 1 was
married,” sald Aunt Polly, opening the
door to her guest room and holding the |
candle so Betty could see, “and this |
silk quilt is made from pieces of my |
dresses and those of many of my |
friends when we were all young and |
danced ‘as gayly as you do, my dear, |
though I dare say you think Uncle |
Peter and 1 are too old-fashioned to!
ever have danced.” . i
“Oh, no, indeed’ answered Betty,
as she looked at the pretty bits of
silk In the quilt, “I can almost see
i
i
{
i
i
I NEC fn
“You Are Going to Sleep in the Four.
Poster.”
minuet. Did Uncle Peter
n vest®"
“He did,
in that
wear a
my dear. and the very vest
drawer-—the bottom one.
Betty the bed.
she
was looking at big
Her nose wus on
billowy helght |
For Aunt Polly drew al
two-stepped ladder from under
riflles of the bed
ght, 1 Aunt Polly,
you pull that silk quilt over
well”
swith |
WALA
a level
answer
“Good-ni lear,”
a Ril
le sure
Fl
“How
ope you sleep
can 1 sleeping
roomful of
replied Betty,
First, she
in this
old-fashioned
help
things *™
at the wonderful
then she opened the folded
long at the bits of
wonderful
said aloud,
peeked
and looked
silks, “Oh, you
ioned things!”
beautiful
old-fash-
she “How
are!”
“Old-fashioned,
near Betty's
ug and heard
you
indeed
ear. and
rustiing
Bald a
she felt
a sound,
i
i
i
|
wis so astonished,
The silk quilt seemed to have lifted
flowered silks and the plain ones as
well were old-fashioned gowns—the
styles were In the days of hoopskirts.
One flowered silk gown that seemed
to be more aristocratic than the oth-
ers was rustling with indignation.
“To think I am called old-fashioned
when I was brought over from France
for my lady to wear at the big ball!
“Was, my dear sanld a shim-
mering gown of silver and blue that
changed as It moved and the candle
light fell upon it. Betty thought she
blew out the light, but as she turned
her eyes from the beautiful dresses
she saw It lighted, standing on the old
wns,’
The soft, blue
to smooth matters over,
get
dress
“Why
are
tried
should
called
silvery
hecanse
it sald.
heantiful that night
ball, and your flowers are
angry we
“You were very
the big
as bright as the night you danced the
minuet.”
This enlm the flowered
seemed to
“Oh,
wonder
dance!
the spinet
ul musie that
wonderful
became of
that was a
what
made such wonderf
“Here.”
to come from the foot of the hed.
ich seemed
“I'm
changed. |
am really new-fashioned
beautiful spinet of the old days, but
new and shining
might be ealled
the rest of you!”
was the reply w
here, friends, but sadly
“HOt
made into a fesk,
Ah, that I,
fashioned w
100, old.
ith
all the
wf board and look over
jetty
fe
S11 WW gowns hurry to
the
“What is
they
“Yes,
“1 have
made me beautiful
the mu
“Yon
;
interrupted the
iter with you?
asked, have lost—"
spinet desk,
lost my soul—the things that
longer enn
it 1 for
I make sweet musi aust be
flent.”
v lang right out loud,
ever
Bet
%
t it
le i to her sur
in
through the sn she sat up and
rubbed | biack horder
of the beautiful sill the
prise Lie v he sur peering
was on
oO
OOOOOGONOOOCOOROGLO0 HOOT CH
Colleen Moore
SOUVOLLO0UOOLORGOOROOOOOON
Unlike many leading ladies of the
screen, charming Colieen Moore, the
“movie” star, has never been on the
epeaking stage. She was born in Port
Huron, Mich, and was educated in
the Convent of the Holy Name in
Tampa, Fla. Miss Moore at various
times has lived in a number of other
cities. In private life, she admits be-
ing a plain person, with no hobbies,
but a tremendous ambition to make
good. Many of her admirers agree
with one accord that her ambition has
been realized. This is one of her iat
est pictures,
the hed St
at her
then a tap sounded on
At Polly’
to Betty's “Come In”
floor side ie
pulled it
and jus
door
dream
ain
the
it « smiling 1:
ice
are
ape
feCidre Nowapape
y
25eSeaeacans
mal the
BY MARY
MARSHALL
DUFFEE
BAD BREEDING
fist
sal gold are not
current
the
ai
only coin
Silver
the world
virtue, tox Passer
Furip.des
T IS always a temptation for those
who discuss mutters of politeness
and etiquette to become arbitrary and
to say that who do thus-and-thus
are ill bred, and that those who do so
are well bred Such a list
be bound to be unfafr and
interesting rgely in giving
of of the one ‘who
it. In matters of superficial
etiquette we should not sit in Judg-
ment on others, especially in a land
like ours where family and racial
traditions vary extensively.
there are some things that remain the
same the world over—little acts that
jght be regarded as earmarks of bad
HORE
and-so
point view
HO
m
breeding
gible a
are today.
things :
ago
are
as they
these
thousand
Among
yours
them
sgve for the
You would be
onetime acquaintance
most grievous offense.
a Name?”
B vaoreD
MARSHALL
MADELINE
history is responsible for |
of Madeline, The only pos |
IBLE
origin
Testament story of the tragic figure, |
Mary Magdalen, Magdalen, it seems, |
is not a surname, but merely trans |
lates irito “of Magdala,” the village of |
the searlet woman's birth, and Is re- |
garded ns an adjective of place,
So the soft harinony of “Magdalen”
was not employed as nu proper name at
that time, but history records that
various institutions, or rescue homes
for unfortunate girls, sprang up under
the name, until it began to be used as
synonymous for fallen women, Writers,
artists, and poets, who find fascination
in portraying the type of Mary Mag:
dalen, with her luxury, her embrold-
But
finally the “Mary” was dropped com:
pletely and only Magdalen persisted
and waxed popular,
Each nation has taken the name
stamp of Individual spelling. England
eliminating the
Madeline,
her Madnlens,
for the soft sound;
calls
“en
leine; Spain and Rassia, Mgdelina,
The French also claim the derivations
Magdalene, Madien, Lene, and Len
chen. Maddalena is the Italian ver
sion and Lell is Swiss,
Despite the story of Madeline's ori
rather to pogtray the shyest and nfost
virtucas of maidems, the typical sweet:
heart to whom young lovers write
odes. The best known poem to “Ever
Varying Madeline” runs:
Smiling, frowning, svermore,
Thou art perfect in love lore,
Hevealings deep and clear are thine,
Of wealthy smiles; but who may know,
Whether smile or frown be sweeter,
; Who may know?
Madeline's jewel Is the moonstone,
that gem so potent for lovers who may
read their future in Its opalescent
depths. If she wears her talismanic
stone, Madeline may have her heart's
her lucky day.
(© by the Whesler Syndicate, Ine)
¥
i justified in cutting the man who has
i robbed your safe or attempted your
| life or kidnaped your child or eloped
with your but just because Mr
A. has biackballed you In the club to
which you hoped to belong, or because
Mrs. B. has to
catcher that is gol
unmuzzied, or because those CO
dren throw putty balls at your front
windows, is no reason why you should
cut any of the A's,
To reveal any information of a con-
fidentinl nature that has been revealed
to you by anyone while a guest in your
house, There 8 an law of hospitality
that would prevent you from
that whether you lived on this side of
he world or the other; whether you
lived a thousand years ago or a thou-
sand years hence
To reveal any infdrma
tion concerning any one that you have
wife,
the dog-
round
chil
complained
"no
ag
your pet
Vg or C's
derogatory
relationship.
| his religious duty to keep secrets that
{he hears In the confessional, no less
doeg the doctor keep a sealed
mouth, concerning his patients. It
| seems almost as much a matter of
i RO
| seamstress who by chance
broadenst,
(©. 1922, by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
wan Pons
Get Some of Life's Pleasures.
Too many who are poor, or who are
in moderate circumstances, are putting
off happiness until they are wealthy,
‘It Is well to remember there is no hap-
piness except in the present. No mat-
ter how little a man has, part of It
should be spent In making life pleas.
ant for his wife and self~—L. C. Dill-
man.
Keni
Use of “X” as Signature.
The use of ghe X ar signature of
| persons unable to write began when
kings and nobles used it, whether able
to write or not, a5 a symbol that they
pledged themselves by the Christian
faith to the truth of the/ matter to
which they affixed it. *
wml Pisses
- aap
A LINE 0’ CHEER
By John Kendrick Bangs.
THE FLYING HOUR
Sm
OME folks think of Tomorrow,
nd some of Yesterday
th all the joy and sorrow
hat lingered on the way,
But in this world of foment
My task is fAnding how
To seize the Jha moment,
And make the best of Now,
© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate)
Yh
Achievements in 1922.
Has Bravely Met and Overcome De-
pression Following the War—Finan-
clal Standing as Nation High,
The year 1922 in Canada, Western
Canada particularly, has been a year
of quiet achievement. If there has
been nothing in its development of a
spectacular nature, there has been
1923 is entered
The year
of
of
of
the
its
the
the
productivity
vast riches
all other
keenly the cycle of
the © spurious
business coming
(Canada, In common with
has felt
lepression following
activity and inflated
war. It has met and overcome many
obstacles In the path of its prosperity.
The year passed, has
seen the silver lining out from
the edger of the dark cloud and has
demonstrated to the world the celerity
which this country to
changed conditions. This is evidenced
by the fact that Canada
the first among I’ countries
currencies fell below par to bring that
currency back to par, and even for a
time above par. It 418 this {a the face
of what insuperable difficul-
ties, Increased its exports, lessened its
imports, and generally set Its business
house in order,
The high standing of Canada as a
nation Is by the with
which her bonds are absorbed and by
the high prices pald for and
Winnipeg, it may be in a
recent flotation a higher
price than even any provincial govern-
ment for some
Western Canada
its largest grain
of grain, live stock, cereal and dairy
il en all
neighborhood of
Just however,
peep
can adjust itself
has been
whose
seemed
shown euRe
them,
mentioned,
obtained
time.
in
crop
1922 harvested
Its production
products wi in
produce In the
Hon dollars
there
marketed,
a bil
and
diss p-
is not
remains that this
! io
com
has been,
still i=
pointment that 1¢ tots alue
but the
vast sum
West,
if
gus in the ligquidat
laroer
Hrger
money has come the
in
of
is f
the process of
or ng
a
much
fon of obii-
+ past, it is but a
road to that
vhi all are looking.
In the process of reaching this pros-
perity it is Inevitable that there must
be some failures,
Ax 8 matter of fact,
of many prominent busine
1022 saw the corner definitely turned
and that 1923 will commence the up-
ward swing Advertisement
and undoubtedly true,
of it
gations incurred
i
ia
safer and saner,
prosperity
longer
{to
it is the opinion
i men that
Buying Him a Suit
This difference
mother and
When him
him a suit of clothes she knows
how much is going to
for it, and she'll keep the clerks busy
is the
father
mother takes downtown
to buy
Just she pay
showing suitx until she finds what she
wants at the j wants,
When dad takes down
pick
she
him
his
to be
much
ice
he
suit,
lets
boy out own
goes home only
paid twice
Exchange
as us he
Better
the
vour plans
that
less often
people understand you,
will they say “No” to
Do YO
your cost of
Unless you see the name “Baver” on
package or on tablets you are not get-
ting the genuine product pre-
scribed by physicians over twentytwo
years and proved safe by millions for
layer
Colds
Toothache
Earache
Neuralgia
Headache
Lumbago
Rheumatism
Pain, Pain
Tablets of Aspirin”
Each unbroken package contains
Handy
CW
ties of
Accept “Bayer
only,
proper directions, of
boxes
Drug
twelve tablets cost 1
cents,
sell he 24 and 100
the mark of Bayer
Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of
salicylicacid
gisls aiso
Asperin in trade
Advertisement.
Oil in Australia.
The as ¢
employed by
sigtant 1 geologist
the Freney Kimberley Oil
very |
ore at Mount
The
128 feet. and between
ie
goveruipen
company sends wpeful report
Wynne
bore
shout the oll
Kimi
down
hundred and
twenty-fir
riey, AUsSiralia, is
the one
hundred
asked 1
One
and hrough
broken strata with seams filled
with
asphalt migrated
The pros
| within defi
from ollb-bearing
pect area is now
limits,
and there
before
nite which fies the work,
wpects of a successful
Are pr
vers
FOR OVER 40 YEARS
HALIL/S CATARRH MEDICINE hss
been used successfully in the treatment
of Catarrh,
HALL'SB CATARRYE MEDICINE con-
gists of an Ointment which Quickly
Relieves by local application, and the
Internal Medicige., a Tonic, which acts
through the Blood on the Mucous Sur-
faces, thus reducing the inflammation.
Sold by all druggists
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio.
{gsue fong
Dislike,
ded liar, an in-
ferninl id blackguard!”
cried one disputant.
“And you ar
chronic thief an
yelled the other.
“Oh, fie! fie!” sald old Festus Pester,
pushing forward. “Please explain what
nil this is about before you begin to
fight. While I love trouble as much as
any man, and more than most, I dislike
to see my citizens killed untii
a driveling
a
idot, =
lounging loafer!
fellow
Star
Cuticura Comforts Baby's Skin
When red, rough and itching, by hot
baths of Cuticura Soap and touches of
Cuticura Ointment. Also make use
now and then of that exquisitely scent-
ed dusting powder, Cuticura Talcum,
of the Indispensable Cuticura
Something Like That.
Teacher—Jonnny, what were
Ju-
John—Quch,
———————— OS ARAMA
To relate your experience is usually
the best advice,
ICREASE
nd that cannc?
hands are .
new bags needed.
tly to your
factured products.
. ,
W. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO. 15.1923.
ee 5 HM BAAN Ss
No Favoriti
Barber—“A little brilliantine on.
hair, sit? The Bald ’
I think I'll have a Httle on both. "—
Punch, London.