The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 24, 1924, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
a
om © ~ =| Sure Relief
DELL-ANS
25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
ASTHMA
DR.LD.KELLOGG'S ASTHMA REMEDY
for the prompt relief of Asthma
and Hay Fever, Ask your druge
sist for it. 25 cents and one dol-
ar. Write for FREE SAMPLE.
Northrop & Lyman Co.,Inc., Buffalo, N.Y.
KELLOSS
YOUR BLOGD NEEDS
THIS IRON TONIC
UDE'S Pepto-Mangan provides
iron in just the form most
readily assimilated —a form
which will not irritate the weakest
stomach nor injure the teeth, but
which efféctively enriches the blood
and invigorates the body. At your
druggist’s in liquid and tablet form.
: To sea for yourself
Free Trial Tablets 35 Seuitn-suniding
value of Gude's Pepto-Mangan, write today
for generous Trial Package of Tablets, Send
no Money — just mame and address to
M. J. Breitenbach Co., 53 Warren 5t., N. XY.
Gude’s
Pepto-Mangan
Tonic and Blood Enricher)
HALES HONEY
OF HOREHOUND AND TAR
relieves colds, coughing,
throat and bronchial trou
les in a good, old fashioned,
safs, quick; home way,
JOe¢ at all druggists.
For aching esth—
Pike's Toot
CHESEBROUOH MFG. CO, CONSD,
17 State Su New York
Vaseline
MC US PAT OFT.
PETROLEUM JELLY
THE CENTRE
STRANGER DOLL
GCQUIR Is pretty, you cannot deny
that,” said Teddy Bear, “but never
In my ddy have I seen a’ doll just lke
her and you all know that I have seen
many come and go.” :
‘Her dress Is not quite the latest
style,” remarked Paper Doll, though
it is something like my new gown.
But then clothes are so expensive
these days.”
“But her halr, just look at her hdlr,”
said Rosetta, the French Doll. “Little
tight curls all over her head that you
must admit are far from the very lat-
est style of dressing the halr nowa-
days. Why, you can see both of her
ears.”
Poor little Stranger Doll felt very
uncomfortable for she knew what was
the matter, She had been taken from
a bureau drawer !n an attic where
she had lived many years.
i
“You Are Worth All the Dolls in the |
World.”
had been smoothed out a bit, her curls
pulled a little to make them stand up |
and then she was given to a little girl |
who had In her day known many dolls. |
She was old-fashioned. Stranger
Doll knew that. Her head was made
of wax nnd that was the reason she
looked so strange to the playroom |
folk. i
Then one night a terrible’ thing hap-
pened. Stranger Doll had been left |
close to the steam pipes and her pret-
“I knew she was terribly painted,” |
sald Rosetta. “Poor thing, her face!
CThe Why
Superstitions
By H IRVING KING
Cuticura Soap
ree SHAVES eee
Have you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
DOGS AND HEALTH
Ir IS a general superstition all over |
the United States that the heaith |
of children is improved by having them |
play with dogs; and in many localities |
it is believed that a sick child-—or, as
many say, even a grown person--can
be cured by having a dog sleep in the |
A publication of the
American Folk-Lore soclety has the!
following instance: !
“A few years ago a young man in’
Holyoke, Mass, (a common-sense per-
gon) had a chlld {ll with dumb ague,
By advice he got a pup and put it In
the child's eradle. The dog broke out
in sores and the child got well”
Here, again, we bave that form of
sympathetic magic known as the
magic of contact—the ancient primi
“tive belief. The dog sympathetically
absorbs the disease of the patient by
bging brought into contact with him-——J
draws it out, as It were,
As to the selection of a dog for the
curative process, the dog was one of
the three animals-—the other two be-
ing the lion and the goat—sacred to
Jove, Mercury (some say Mars) and
Pan. To put a goat or a lion In a
child's crib might be a trifie Inconveni-
ent, but the dog Is easy. Thus in
working the cure we not only get the
benefit of sympathetic magic, but in
voke the beneficent power of the great
gods to whom the dog Is sacred.
(© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
ann Presses
The Spanish Main,
fhe name Spain Malin was popular-
ERI
ofa di Fe fl
o)
ty given by English voyagers, during
turies, to the north coast of South
American, between the Orinoco river and
the Isthmus of Darien, and also to
the Spanish provinces of Central
gen. The expression “Spanish Main”
is also used to denote the Caribbean
gen Itself, ‘especially In connection
with the buccaneers who Infested
i
Is quite spoiled. 1 should not he a
bit surprised if her huir was false as
well, or at least that it Is colored.”
“But 1 thought your cheeks were
painted and Paper Doll's as well”
ventured Teddy Bear.” [1 thought all
dolls had—"
“It does not come off, Teddy,” sald
Paper Doll with a flirt of ‘her skirts
and a toss of her head.
“We could sit beside the steam
pipes, Teddy Bear, all day and all
night,” sald Rosetta, “and we would
look just—just as we do now.”
Poor Strarger Doll was not only un-
comfortable, but unhappy and miser-
able. She wished herself back In the
drawer In the attle and she wondered
what would hecome of her now that
her face was spoiled,
For some
did not see
night
they
dnys the playroom folk
Stranger Doll and then
sitting in a chair by the |
saw a beautiful doll. At]
It was Stranger Doll with a new head
and a new gown.
“lI think we had hetter speak to
her,” sald Rosetta. “You can tell she
is worth knowing by the way she
dfesses.”
So all the toys sald, “Good evening,”
“We are so glad to have you live!
“Yon are so dif-
No one worth |
am eertain” |
But Teddy Bear thought he saw al
in the eves of the new doll |
when he looked Ht her cunning |
little kid hands he knew the secret. |
“I won't tell,” he whispered as he |
sald good night. “I liked you the way |
you were, just as well as I do now, |
and that is a great deal”
“Oh, I am so glad,” replied the new
Doll, "and 1 will tel! you something. !
de
Shirley Mason
Handsome Shirley Mason, the
“movie” star, was born in Brooklyn,
N. Y, in 1902. She is the daughter of
Emil Flugrath, and a sister of Viola
She be.
gan her stage career at the age of
three. At the age of thirteen she
Joined the oid Edison studics, When
she was fifteen she adopted the name
of Shirley Mason. 8he has been seen
in a number of prominent productions.
I am not filled with sawdust Illke
Rosetta and other dolls of today. |
am made of good strong kid and filled
with cotton,
“The man at the doll hospital sald
1 was worth a dozen dolls such as are |
made In these days and that [ would |
last for years yet.” |
“You are worth all the dolls In the |
world,” whispered Teddy, sitting down i
close her, while Rosetta
beside and |
room looked on with envy.
(& by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
“Whats in
a Name?”
BY MILDRED
MARSHALL
PHOEBE
HOEBE, quaintest and most charm-
ing of names, was first in use among
It is derived from Phoebus,
god, or Apolio and signifies
empire,
the sun
According to Greek mythology, the |
original Phoebe was the daughter of |
Gaea. According to a tradition adopt-
ed by Aeschylus, she bequeathed the
Deiphic oracle to Apollo, son of her |
daughter Leto. Poetic license calls |
the moon personified “Phoebe.”
“Phoebe our sister,” the deaconess of |
Cenchrea, was commended by Saint
Paul to the Romans: but she has few
in England, where
she typifies the quaint, demure’ old
fashioned type so popular with British
writers and poets,
The Italian Febe refers only to the
moon and is rarely used as a proper
name. It was In reference to the noble
qualities of the huntress goddess of
the moon that Spenser named his love. |
ly Belphoebe, as he also called his |
other warlike heroine, Britomartis, an |
individual who lager became Identified |
with Artemis, the moon goodess. Ar
temis, of course, is the italian Diana, |
and Diana, as the sister of Apollo, was |
frequently called Phoebe, 86 the re- |
intionship, seemingly so terplexing and |
Interwoven, Is really logical
In England, Phoebe was a favorite
name for rural maidens, and the poets |
bestowed it upon the simple rustic
charmers to whom they wrote odes and
esas Iss EAT LA YYTYYYY
Men You May Marry
By E. R. PEYSER
Has a Man Like This Proposed
to You?
Symptoms: Collar stands out # |
from his neck—the high nonturn 4 |
over kind—tie flat, ready-made * |
(probably). Red carpet slippers
are the most moving like
“movie” he would appreciate
“Had a hard day In the office,”
he tells you; “every one on earth
ecnme to see the boss and 1 bad
to stave ‘em off— Such ques
tioning takes me sick, There
are so many fools in the world,
awfully tiresome answering
questions.” Yet he is the kind
who always bringe you a few
sweetments, wishes every time
they might be better, but they
never seem to improve in brand.
IN FACT
He himself pever seems to Ime
prove, :
Prescription to His Bride:
inhale dally a vapor of
stand pat patties. love
what he Is, not what he isn't
Absorb This:
vou CAN LEAD A MAN TO
THE ALTAR BUT HE
DOESN'T ALWAYS ALTER
|
Prssssssssssnssssssnssnsnen
@ by MeClure Newspaper Syndicats \
dasestuanasssssnsnsnanay
lucky day end lucky jewel
0
roundelays. Phoebe's virtues are
tolled in “The Rural Mald™:
Her homesgun dress in simple neatness
jen :
And for no glaring equipage she sighs; |
Her reputation which is alliher boast, |
In a malicious visit ne'er was lost: i
No midnight masquerade her beauty |
wenrs . :
not paint, the fading bloom |
repairs |
Crystal is Phoebe's tallsmanie jewel |
It's clear transiucent beauty is be
To dream of it sig- |
nifies true friends. Monday is Phoebe's
{(E by Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.)
meen Pssst
frovsssssssscntnsnsnnnansd |
A Line o’ Cheer
By John Kendrick Bangs.
hii hh ER Ay
THE VERDICT
AME or no fames,
It’s all the same to me.
I'll play the game without a
name
If only it may be,
When my full course at last is
run,
Men who speak true
May call the things I do
Well done.
(© by MeClure Newspaper Syndicats )
Prrsrsssnsusssassascsanssnnns
AAR RRTLTRRRARAARRARAARR RRR RE.
o ean}
a
How to read your char.
acteristics and tendon.
cles the
capabilities or
weaknesses that make
YOU
HAND =z vas
CARRIAGE AND MOT/ONS OF THE
HANDS
EE
fIEN a person caries the hands
in front of the body, or slightly
at the side, and moves them continual
ly, or almost always, waving them
ahout as though to keep them from
touching anything, or to keep any-
thing from touching them, It Is a sign
of a nature that Is suspicious, looking
about for traps, ete. In some subjects,
to be judged by other characteristics,
this is, of course, a sign, since
it dendtes earefulness, watchfulness,
and a desire to Investigate mutters
before passing Judgment upon them.
We sometimes encounter the sub.
Jeet who keeps the hands clasped in
front, with. the palms together, In
very many cases (t. ls a woman who
carries the hand« thus, She is calm
and placid In temper, looking at life
through the’ philosopher's spectacles
Such a persom will let the hand be
read in a quiet, unhurried manner. and
is a good “subject.” Of course, all of
the other types that have been de
seribed wil, thelr mental and
moral chara ieg—to some ex.
tent, at leust-<hy the manner In
which they submit thelr hands te
reading. g
© by Wheeler Syndicate. ine)
§
£
Dadd skvening
fairy Tale,
oY ry Grahan
Bonner
CONV RICHT IBY WEITERN EW IPE PER (oN
PIGS’ PARTY
“Grunt, grunt,” sald
Porky Plg.
“Squeal, squeal,” sald Miss Ham.
“What Is all the excitement?’ asked
Brother Bacon,
“Yen, tell me,” sald Sammy Bausage,
“And I want to know too,” sald Bir
Benjamin Bacon.
“I'd like to know ™
va! Tork.
“You have something to tell us,
you two,” sald Mrs, Pink Plg, as she
looked at Grandfather Porky Plg and
Miss Ham, and pointed her snout in
their direction,
“Mrs, Pink Pilg, is right,” sald Pinks
Pig's mother, and Mr. Pinky Pilg said
“She is Squeal, squeal,
is right”
“Well”
Pig,
talk when all of you are speaking.”
“It is hard,” squealed Miss Ham,
“Well, we will not say anything ex
cept to ask you to tell us,” sald Broth-
er Bacon, “Will we, Pigs?
“No,” squealed all the pigs
“Now, let us all all together ™
Brother Bacon added, “Miss Ham and
Porky Plg, tell us what have to
say.”
And when Brother Bacon sald “One
two, three,” all the pigs sald together
what Brother Bacon had sald before
“in the first place” Grand
father Porky Plg, “Miss and 1]
Grandfather
sald Bir Perei-
right,
sald Grandfather
say,
you
said
Ham
“} Have a Splendid Banquet”
AR party
“Miss Ham would be the hostess
in all the and 1
host and them all
guests
he the receive as
came.” *
“Why that sounds fine,”
er Bacon
"
sald Broth
sage
“Magnificent,”
n
“Gorgeous,”
squealed Sir Benja
grunied Sir
“Ton
seribe.”
"
“Of
“you'll
nice for mere words to de
said Pinky Plg.
said Master Pink Pig
said Brother Bacon
have a delicious banquet™
sald Grandfather Porky
agree,’
course,”
ves,”
“Of course,” sald Miss Ham.
“And of course you'll invite all of
us to come? inquired Brother Bacon
He could not quite understand why
Miss Ham and Grandfathef Porky Pig
had decided on such an idea as this,
and he wondered,
“We will invite every one of you™
said Miss Ham.
“Not one will we leave out™
Grandfather Porky Pig
“How truly delightful,” squealed all
the pigs.
“When is the party to be? asked
Brother Bacon,
“We thoflght of having It tomorrow,”
sald Miss Ham,
“At three in the afternoon if that
would be convenient” added Grand
father Porky Pig.
“Then we could lie around after
ward and have a cozy snooze,” he
added in mhuch the tone that some one
would usdin saying,
“And then we can have time for a
nice talk”
“We could have a good rest before
supper,” sald Porky.
“Well,” sald Brother Bacon, “I'm
sure we'd all be delighted to come.
Simply delighted, and we all accept
with pleasure.”
“We all do,” said the pigs together.
“Then at three tomorrow,” sald Miss
Ham.
“At three tomorrow,”
father Porky Pig.
“We'll all be there,” said the other
pigs.
The next afternoon at three all the
plgs were on hand-—or on foot—for the
party.
“As hostess of this party,” sald Miss
Ham, "I mean to entertain you all
this afternoon by showing you how
much a hostess can eat. I %have a
splendid banquet here for myself.”
“And 1 mean to show you the same
as a host,” sald Grandfather Porky.
“And the hanguet is not to be for
the guests?’ squealed Brother Bacon,
“Certainly not,” sald Grandfather
Porky, "It's to be a Pig Banquet,
you know."
“Yes, 1 know now.” sald Brother
Bacon sadly as he and the other
guests tried to grab what they could
from their hostess and host—Miss
Ham and Grandfather Porky,
The Moths Diet. :
Prof. (In zoology lab.)-~What insect
Aves on the least food?
Bright Pupll—The moth. It eats
said
said Grand.
4
TGIRLS! HAIR GROWS
THICK AND BEAUTIFUL
35.Cent “Danderine” Does Wonders for
Lifeless, Neglected Hair,
. A gleamy mass
of luxuriant hair
full of gloss, lus
ter and iife short.
ly follows 8 genu-
ine toning up of
neglected © scalps
with dependable
“Danderine.”
Falling bhalr
ftehing sealp and
the dandruff Is
corrected Immediately. Thin, dry,
wispy or fading hair is quickly invigo-
rated, taking on pew strength, color
and youthful beauty. “Danderine” is
delightful on the halr; a refreshing,
stimulating tonic—not sticky or greasy |
Any drug store—Advertisement,
Quick to Learn,
“Latin, hey?” audibly ruminated
Uncle Pennywise. “You pick up what
you need in the business you go inter,
The young lawyer soon masters habeas
{ corpus and other phrases. The drug
clerk gets his Latin offen the shelf
bottles. The medical student assimi-
lates it in the lecture room. They tell
me there ain't any of that stufl in the
regular Latin books. As fer the leg-
islator, it don't take him no time to
learn what per diem means”
“CASCARETS” FOR LIVER
AND BOWELS—10c A BOX
Cures Blliousness, Constipation, Sick
Headache, Indigestion. Drug stores. Ady,
Knew Them All ‘
The little son of the house was very
quiet during the first part of the din-
ner, and every one forgot that he was
there, As dessert was being se ved,
however, the host told a story.
When he had finished and the langh-
ter had ceased his little sm ex-
claimed, delightedly?
“Now, father, tell one.”
the other
Cuticura Soothes Itching Scalp.
On retiring gently rub spots of dan
{ druff and itching with Cuticura Oint
| went. Next morning shampoo with
{ Cuticura Soap and hot water. Make
| them your everyday toilet preparations
{ and have a clear skin and soft, white
i hands -—Advertisement.
Shun Evir Companions,
i If thou wishest to get rid of thy evil]
| propensities, thou must keep far frow
| evil companions. Seneca.
sansa —
| “DANDELION BUTTER COLOR”
| A harmless vegetable butter color
{ used by millions for 50 years, Drug
{| stores and general stores sell bottles
| of “Dandelion” for 35 cents.—Adv.
Strictness of law Is sometimes ex.
| treme injustice,
: A Standard for 90 Years,
As a laxative and blood purifier there
| 8 nothing better than Brandreth Pills,
| In use throughout the world. —Adv,
uyood resolutions are apt to run down
at the heel,
A Standard External Remedy
of known value—safe and effective
it's “Allcock’s"—thes original and gen
uine porous plaster—Adv.
Land is about the only thing sailors
have to bank on,
The oocasional use of Roman Eye Balsam
at night will prevent and relieve tired eyes
and eye strain. 272 Pearl St, N.Y. Adv
Eat what you like, but don’t eat too
much of it,
MRS. YOUNG
ENTHUSIASTIC
Cannot Praise Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound Enough. Sick
Women Read This Letter
8. C~"Twas
ya: fot Ruch letter frou us)
in ga Recently