The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 25, 1923, Image 2

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    ‘
MRS. HINCKLEY
NERVOUS WRECK
Tells Women How She Was Restored
to Perfect Health by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Memphis, Tenn.~=* Two years ago I
was completely run-down and mynerves
were a wreck. I could
not sweep a reom
without resting. I
could not do my work
except a little at a
time, and the doc-
tor's medicine did
jnot help me. One
day some one threw
vour little book on to
my porch, and in it I
jiread several testimo-
he : == had beenlike myself.
1 went right out and got me a bottle of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, and before I had taken the whole
of that bottle I knew it was helping me,
months I took two more. Now I am in
perfect health. 1 do all of my own work
table
—Mrs,
1 know Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve
Compound gave me my health.’
O. J. HINCKLEY, 316
phis, Tenn.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Private Text-
Book upon
Women "’ will be sent you free upon re-
uest. Write to The Lydia E. Pinkham
edicine Co., Lynn, Mass. This
contains valuable information.
CHESEBROUCH MANUFACTURING CO.
Consollda
Sate Street Now York
Vaseline
Reg US Par OFF
Yellow or White
PETROLEUM JELLY
UICK
RELIEF
ir
HONEY-~TA
EstasuisueD 1875
S000 Tee Test or Trine Sexvins Tuas Genensnion!
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES
~ GREEN MOUNTAIN
pT
—
I, TILE BROWN BEAR lay watch.
him through the branches of the pine
trees that grew just outside the door
of the cuve where he and Mother Bear
lived. Little Brown Bear was not
sleepy, for he had taken a very long
afternoon nap. But le meant to lie
He could hear
the eave,
By and by the wind began to blow
Little Brown Bear
Its
“Brown Bear Lay Watching Stars.”
and full of musle and
lulled Little Brown
wis soft
often
sleep.
sleepy. So he just lay quietly
watching the stars wink and twinkle
through the tossing branches and lis
wind.
sigh,” he said, at last to himself,
He lay down a little while longer.
Then slowly and as quietly as a
clumpsy little brown bear can move he
got up and walked out of the cave,
“What makes the pine tree sigh?”
he asked of a little worm that glowed
in the dark.
But the little worm was stup!d and
could not help Little Brown Bear,
Little Bear heard whirr
Brown a
COMPOUND
; ing paroxyasms.
A Loe 55 years and result of long
A experience In treatment of
throat snd lung diseases
Dr. J. H. Gulid. EE TRIA
causes, treatment, ete., sent
on request. 2356 and 3.00 at
druggista. J. H. Gulid Co., Box 71, Rupert, Vi.
’
Oysters and Clams,
For 48 hours young oysters enjoy
fréedom as moving creatures. Then
they settle down for life. Among the
oysters’ enemies are the starfish, These
five-fingered gentry sometimes destroy
a whole bad In one night, There are
giant clams weighing 50 pounds. Lim-
pets, a shell fish found stuck to rocks
when the tide goes out, have kept
many an English fisherman's family
from starvation In unlucky seasons.
Limpets go on traveling expeditions at
night. but by a wonderful homing in-
gtinct, return to exactly the same spot
ou thelr “home” rock.
Gas From Wood Waste,
Utilizing wood waste for generat
Ing gas is claimed by a Swedish saw-
mill operator to save 70 per cent of
the fuel used when the chips and saw.
dust are burned directly onder the
boiler. Added te this econoiny is a
lure production of valuable by-prosd-
wets, including aclds, wood alcohol, and
tar,
Sometimes the maney of the silent
partner does the talking.
ma i an
Getting rich quick ix as difficult as
ft is dangerous and exciting.
Hall's Catarrh
Medicine 1. oxo:
Treatment, both
local and internal, and has been success
forty years. Sold by all druggists.
¥. j. CHENEY & OO. Toledo, Okio
ADH ©, C, Boefor Asthine, Hay Fewer,
at Fatarch, Coughs, Colds, Croup,
Wohaaping Covi; Tonle, Hady -Hullder .
Bottle 82, Cady Parker Med Co, rood .
7
saw a bat
“Hello, ba
here a min
bat flew do and leghted
by the
flying about,
' he erled. “Come down
ute, will von?
he
a bush
Bear.
“You
bed,” said the bat,
“Well, then" said
Bear, “so ought you."
“No, I always siny
the bat.
“Well,
Little
onght to he home and In
old
Brown
who wns
Little
up at night”
“You see, | sieep all day.”
sald
don't he cross,
Bear. *1
please,” said
Brown want to
*
The bat listened. he pine tree
and was sighing softly.
ALINE 0’ CHEER 1!
By John Kendrick: Bangs. ‘
STIMULANT
&e
O RISE at dawn In time to
view
The roses filled with morning
dew
me a cup
quaff
.A brew of joy to kill the chaff
That ies along the dusty way
That I must tread throughout the
day.
And lend new vigor to the stride
That leads me on to eventide,
Whence with the setting of the
sun
I go to rest from duties done.
2 by MeClare Newspaper Syndicate.)
-
Gives from which to
(0
| It's the wind that makes the pine tree
, sigh. Good night, Little Brown Bear.”
“Oh, wait a minute,” sald Little
| Brown Bear, *1 want to ask
more questions,
muke the pine tree sigh?”
“Oh, because It does,” snapped the
bat, getting cross, for he wanted to
be off on his nightly travel.
“Yes, but why does It?" still ques
tioned
| satisfied with the answers,
”
uny fur coat or
sleep In. IT you
You would sigh,
off he flew
Little Brown
comfortable cave to
hadn't any, maybe
Bear wns all
the stars were hidden. The pine tree
sighed louder and louder, and then the
{ other trees began to sigh, too
| Little Brown Bear thought of
{ eave and his mother and off he shut
| led for home and snuggled down
| his bed of leaves close to his mother
“1 guess Mr. Bat Is right,” he sald
sleepily. “If I didn't have a nice fur
and a nice cave to sleep In. |
i guess I would sigh like the pine tree.”
“What are you talking about 7” asked
| his mother, but Little Brown Bear was
| fast
©
Q
I cont
asleep,
192%. by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
25250505285
DM AN RT KO SR GR BY EN
Walter Long
ER ON
| perience that Waiter Long, character
§ aster, entered the motion
field. He is
| the “movie” stars. He was born
| 1884 at Milford, N. H. He is five feet
| eleven inches tall and weighs 175
| pounds. His hair is brown and his
eyes are gray.
0
m=! the
By MARY
MARSHALL
DUFFEE
Cems
Drinking health to bride and groom,
we wish them store of happy days.—
| Tennyson
AT YOUR WEDDING
if
{ FTEN it really ns
least important personage
| nected with the preparation for a
{large and festive wedding is
i bridegroom. For one thing, strict so-
| cial usage says that a
i should not see his bride on
! of the wedding until the ceremony
i immediately it, usually
at his own howe, or a guest
at the home of a friend or relative of
{ the bride If he Is mu a young
{ woman in anothe
ntions for
been made if
i rangepents pel to
| of lugguge have to be made,
| attended
the
con.
seems
the
bridegrooia
he
ar
hie
before ®O
| remains
nil
have
nr
gending
WEA T
prepas
st-minute
the
ive
they are
best who is
to by his man,
bie go-between for the bride
bride's Tamils the
a vert
groom and the on
day of the wedding.
st
the of the
the
| bridegroom-to-be should make inqguir
her boo
for
CRTOOm to
t
Before ny wedding
bride concerning
and of her
| it is the privilege of the bri
| order these He should
{ however, without consulting
{ bride, as the choice would naturally
| depend somewhat on the style of her
| wedding dress and bridegroom's
flowers would decidedly depend en
| tirely on the color of thelr frocks. The
| bride's bouquet and the bouquets of
of his
les
quet that attendants,
i
do
ney
first
the
the home of the bride the
| ered at
i morning of the wedding, but the bride.
{ bears one of his personal cards
| Unless the bridegroom is married In
i
!
ater, he remembers to send to the
| home of the bride a sultcase contain.
| lng his traveling suit and various
| dressing accessories. The bridegroom,
| as well as the bride, makes a special
point to dress for the departure in
an inconspicuous manner and would
| therefore lay aside the dress cicthes,
1 suitable for traveling.
| Beforé the wedding the bridegroom
=D
BE CHEERFUL
EVER wobry because you are ill,
or because you fear sickness may
lie before you,
Complaining anly aggravates an nji-
the shorter path to health,
One may pass through Hie
yeur after year dnd Jeende after de
or sickness. But sooner or hater his
turn wil come,
Certainly every precpution should
he taken to prevent
Stites hus edn greatly redueed In
recent years, Everyone hs good
cause for rejoicing thift the percentage
of deaths from disensé In the Ament
the World war was insignificant in
comparison with the rate per thousand
Path
T
But. even with all the discoveries
and expertness of modern medical
men and surgeons, every person must
expect to experience some pain and
fliness once in a while. It Is, there
fore, folly te go about complaining
and unhappy when ore is not physi
cally A-l
The most beautifal thingk in the
| world look badly at times and #ick-
pess is by ne meas csafined to
humans, Rearls, of which nearly
eviryone is Aoifd, get 111 just as uf
and women and reqgire n change 3(
climate or atmosphere.
iy Wheeler Syndicate, Ine.)
HE KNEW.
Me: 1 wish
| PY x would be nice
IB George, you
: know 1'migoink to
| TE | marry him soo.
Bebby: 1 bin
! dy mice #0 about a
i hl 3 dons "fellors at
Re dat yo
. Was. geld
marry.
252525 2525252525252525252525250
the
1 should put fee for the cler
{in a small
his best
| to the bridegrs
when he
of course in ap incongpicuous manner,
Here something that the
groom doesn’t nlways remember to do,
but it Is something that is quite neces
sary, and that is to bid the mother
| and father of the bride
to compliment the mother for the
| ding entertainment, for he
member that his he
that is hon
ayinan
+ envelope and give it
i to who gives it
swin after the ceremony,
gives It to the clergyman
is bride
good by
must re
and
her
sles
of
she is
he the most red
Newspaper Syadicate.)
“What'sinaName?”
By MILDRED MARSHALL
ead nah if
SELL ILSIERNNND
Facts shout your name; its history:
meaning: whence it was derived; sig.
nificance; your lucky day, tocky jewel
PIAA AANA ANA BA A AAA
CROSS TIOOTRRReesT Taio
BAA AA AA AA AAA AA FAA AA AAS 250
ULA
BEULAH
BEULAH
ost
one of the oldest
of the
ans “married” and is the
of the title “Land of
allegorical name, it
Isract
more
shall thy
Desolate ;
is and
sacred
It me
contracted form
Beulah” As an
was prophetically appiled to
in Isaigh: “Thou shalt no
termed Forsaken; neither
land any more be termed
but thou shalt be
and thy land Beulah:
religious
names
Py
€G
for the Lord
be married.”
WR
d Evening,
Fairy Tale
OF NAR SRAIiAL] PONER
=
MOOBWA THE GREAT
“Greatest of all the members of the
deer family,” sald Daddy, *“is the
moose, He is the most splendid of all
the deer in the great wide world und
he is splendid In looks and in strength
and in brains,
“The moose is called Mooswa In In-
talk, which means wood eater,
this mighty monarch, but
moose Is brave
victory over him,
“As you know,
oh,
he
“If he has been taught from a baby
to be with people he Is
“But he Is not anxious to take any
chances if he has not been
For to him
tures with guns
fought against,
grown. He is brownish gray
color and he runs very quickly.
seventy-five pounds
born, which
that Iater
when
considering on &
“A mother moose keeps
after her, though once in a while she
him up the
goes
In
off
covered
while she
“If the baby moose {8 8 boy she is
very careful that father shall not
him, for a is very
his
futher moose
“The Baby Moose.”
iq of
in the family,
become
a little
hoy
fen Tove
pL fic
fearing the may
'
he is
tl
t
ie boy is but
father is so jealous, and
separated
he mother keeps them
i moose will
t Lier da ig t aby
» moose | am going
was named Mooswa
“He had lived a
it
people
and wild, but
re and more
every year, with great guns to hunt
the m family. :
“Many of his family had
been moving farther and farther
north. They were brave, but they did
pot want to take any chances and
where was cold
where Cale, mo
ro
members
Great had few
of popularity. But
it was thought
of recent
sufficiently
logs
years
| revival.
| of course, it has flourished uninter-
eration to generation to insure the per.
| petuation of its heritage. It is regard
ed as an especlally loeky name and
one which promises material, as weil
as spiritual riches,
Coral Is Beulah's talismanic stone,
It will bring her bodily health and
dn ancient fgend. But it must never
he chipped er broken If it is desired
to exercise its magic powers, Fridav
is Beulah's lucky day and 2 her lucky
sumber,
{© by Wheeler Byndicate, Ine)
O
No Old Bookshops in Norway.
Norway, like China, has no old book-
sho “hristinniy, of course was only
ap vinclnl town in Seandinavia when,
a few years ago. the partition oe
purred, and even now, as the Norse
“enpital, 1t 1s a good deal less metro
pligan in atmosphere dnd trading
amenities than Portsmouth or Bourne
‘mough of Cardiff. After assiduous in-
quires i mafaged to reach a rather
forlorm hookshop down near the docks
and was offered, ng a genidae antiquity,
a devotional treatise dated 1848! The
[old ‘Seandipaviun books are fo be
{ found in the half-dozen “Antikvariuis”
of Wodcholm, They are fascinating
Hd bookshops, dusty and sob-webbed-—
four of them Wish numbers of formes
and soe evén a century Yefore. In
ome of them 1' foun three years agh
bn lot of RIZEvIrs ap gry low prises
In arbither n couple of very nneibmy
Bibles hound @ worm-enten wooden
hoards, whith a yird of Fon chain
fnched. ~~ Bosseit Digby, in Nunchos-
rer Guurdiun,
4
{
i
!
{
{
i
i
i
i
These were fine
and in the
too
these parts were especially good,
“But it was autumn now and Moos
thinking of many things.
dered if the beautiful
become his mate,
“He was modest for all his great.
ness and splendor and majesty-—per-
went backwards by being conceited.
foolishly, to see Miss Moose and he
told her of his love,
“9 so wish you wonid do me the
gregt honer te become my mate, Me
said.
“It would make me so happy to
wander with you through this wigter
which Is pow approaching. We couid
travel so far, we ceuld see 0 much.
Perhaps we could go farther nerth,
where the guns are fewsr and yet
where still there are willow swamps.
"We cou see so much of the
great Sorest world sad’ of the deep
underbrush lands’
“Miss Moose hud for seme time ad-
mired Moeswa Ggeat, She had
admired every hit of hiz splendid
seeive hundred poun of moose
beard Ms splendid voice mafing love
from ctyiog-—=0 happy the,
“So off want Modewa the dt with
bis bride. Me wlfed My shovélllke
antlers in the early wi gd Began
wing pew ones, but atl ‘the Gms
they wandersd through. slow,
farsher, north where yune 4 abt
put an’ end to thelr hap
a
» ¥
| St.
i%
Stop their pain
in one minute!
For quick lasting relief from corns,
Dr. Scholl's Zino-pads stop the pain
in one minute by removing the cause
~friction and pressure,
Zino-pads are thin, safe, antiseptic,
healing, waterproof and cannot pro.
duce infection or any bad aftereffects,
“Three sizes—for corns, callouses and
bunions. Cost but a trifie. Get a box te
day at your druggist’s or shoe dealer's,
Dr Scholls
Zino-pads
Put one on ~ the pain is gone
-— ————— cr
Portugal's National Epic.
The national epic of Portugal is the
“Lusiad” written by Luls Vaz de
published in
says the Detroit News, The great
which t
my
oF § ay
has been transi into
many was 3 hy
in io
after he
Portugal,
‘Lusiad™
Although
of |
beg
he was In exile
languages,
while
to
allowed return to
were printed In Lisbon
“Lusiag™
tremendous suce
the
WHS, 88 8 piece terature,
eas, It netted it
little financial f
epitaph, destroyed in
lived poor and neglected and so
vu ley
sein
g ——
ids
———————— a — ——————————
WOMEN! DYE FADED
THINGS NEW AGAIN
Dye or Tint Any Worn, Shabby Gan
ment or Drapery.
Diamond Dyes
Each 15-cent package of “Diamond
Dyes” contains directions so
any woinan can
worn, faded
ghe has never
any color at
ment,
simple
dye or tint any
thing new, even if
dyed before. Choose
drug store-—Advertise
bog
that
old,
Local Pride.
“Deo get your
Paris?
“Not any more,” answered Miss
Cayenne. "We've gotten so we oan
make ‘em look just as queer and cost
just as much right in our own home
town”
you gowns from
Back Given Out?
dt's bard to do one’s work
kevery dey brings morning lameness,
throbbing backache, and a dull, tired
feeling. If you suffer thus, why not
find out the cause? Likely it's your
kidneys. Headaches, dizziness and
bladder irregularities may give further
proof that your kidneys need help.
Don’t risk neglect! Use Doan's Kidney
Pills. Thousands have been helped by
Doan’s. They should help you. Ask
your neighdor!
A Maryland Case
J. F. Blunt, Com-
merce Bt, Centre-
when
considerably and
the muscles of i’
back were sore a
it made it difficult
for me to stoop
' My kidneys acted
irregularly, also, 1
® Doan's Kidney
liz and they sopn
LI had me free from
the backaches and my kidneys were
in good order.
Get Doar’s stvmy Store, 80¢ a Boy
DOAN’S KIDNEY
PILLS
FOSTER MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.