The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 23, 1924, Image 6

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    THE CENTRE REPORTER, CENTRE HALL, PA.
IN EVERY WAY
So Writes Mrs. Trombley of Sharon,
Lydia E. Pink-
Vermont. — ‘1 was weak
had a tired feeling and
bearing-down pains.
saw an advertise.
t in the news-
ii paperabout Lydia E.
Pixkbam’s egeta~
{ble Compound. and
it. It
these
every way. 1
so much Faith
in table
that I keep it on hand all of
the t and recommend it whenever I
have the ,’—Mrs. LEWIS
TROMBLEY, n, Vermont.
Glad to Help Others
“1 had pains in my back and sides for
many months, and my work would bave
to be left undone at those times. My
sister told me what good Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compoutsd was doin
her, so I tried it, and from the thi
bottle I was'vell and every one thought
I looked better. I am glad to help
others regain their health, and you may
use my testimonial.’”’ — MABEL HART-
RIANN, Greene Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.
You must believe that a medicine
that has helped other women will help
yom. You should try it.
So ——
What He Needed
When Farwer Basseit
send his son to coliege, and selected
physical training Systems, he had a
plain talk with the president.
“John don't need no setting-up ex-
ercises.
so I'd ruther you'd cut them out.
exercises that are a sure thing, go to
ft with Jon !"—Wallace's Farmer.
Wright's Indian Vegetable
only a purgative, They exert a tonic
on the digestion.
$73 Pearl St, N. XY. Adv
Not Tooth, but Bullet
When a workingumon
recently felt that one of
teeth had ached too-.long he went to
a dénfdst for help. What was
are not
action
Pills
his
not a tooth, but a hullet.
Austrian army during the World war
dropped out after
flesh wound
Roanoke, Va.—"1 had a severe at-
tack of the ‘flu’ from which I could
not seem to re-
cover. I was
without strength
or ambition, my
stomach went
back on me, and
what little food
I did cat soured.
I would have
"violent sick-
headaches + that
would last sev-
eral days, and
. : my life was just
miserable for two years. [1 tried
everything I knew of to help me
back to health. Failing, I grew de-
spondent. Finally a 1 told
me of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
Discovery, and after taking it, [ felt
St.
Tablets or
prec har
Neg i
well and strong.” —Mrs W.C
Clair, 102 9th St. N. W.
Hauid, at vour dealers.
200 YEARS
haarlem oil has been. a world-
wide remedy for kidney, liver and
bladder disorders, rheumatism,
Fambago and uric acid conditions.
HAARLEM OIL |
correctinternal troubles, stimulate vital
organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist
on the original genuine Goro MebaL.
PERFECTION~
Constantine's Persian Healing Pine Tar
Soap neutralizes the destructive effects
Lathers freely. Makes skin
smooth, clear, firm, elastic. Soothing,
refreshing, healing. At
all druggists.
Constantine’s
Persian Healing
PINE TAR SOAP
A O-YEAR SUCCESS
ital draans young,
» FREES
on may be yours. Use
“There is Hope” 's Paw T
MUNYON'S
PAW PAW TONIC
Paw Paw Pills
ALONG LIFE’S
TRAIL
By THOMAS A. CLARK
Dean of Men, University of illinois,
HG SHH
(@, 1934, Western Newspaper Union.)
MODERN INCONVENIENCES
HAVE just had a letter from Wat
son, a rural friend of mine who con-
emplates moving to town, and, know-
ing as he does that I am an old settler
A my community, he asks me to help
him find a suitable place in which to
ive. He wishes, he says, "a medium-
sized house with all the modern in-
onvenlences,” Perhaps it Is only a
slip of the pen for he is none too
erudite; possibly he was serious in
what he sald; in either case I under
stand him,
There is a good deal sald on occa
sion concerning the discomforts and
privations which our ploneer ancestors
suffered--the meagerness of heat and
light and means of communication with
the outside world with which they
had to put up, and the almost com
plete lack of modern machinery,
I am not at all sure that the hard-
of modern life are any less
fered,
has any chance
leisure day
house for uninter
rupted or night, It was
raining this afternoon; I could not go
I was alone, so I decided to do a
construction work in the base
ment I had only settled down to
busines when [I heard the telephone
jangiing. At first 1 decided to
but then It might be lm
1 rushed upstairs almost
ignore It,
8|O
the number. I am not at all
convinced that the man who Invented
the conferred an unmixed
humanity.
lights are wonderful,
Wrong
telephone
upon
Electric but
fles the other night while the
automobiles and oil heat-
their
outnumber
and
hich sometimes thelr
kitchen and laundry in a
or-saving device It would
mald would electrocute
first day she
asrdinary
self the were turns
{ belleve Watson was right when he
referred to the house filled with
inconveniences.”
BARGAIN
J RADE a thoroughly bad
ith Grover w
very much to get into his busi-
$
resume 1 showed ny and
of
CHZOTNENS
advantage
trifling
wus to teach
as 1 could master.
I taught
that
time
he me,
year
before
similar
will
what It
do
own
learn
orders, to
dithcenit things
word of praise for the doing.
was to
meant
mder unpleasant
the office. All
ao matter how much overtime it took.
everybody's slave and roust-
«ame from my own initiative.
All the time, however, | was learn.
conditions; |
sven when 1 knew 1 was right.
working daily to the point of exhaus
tion. 1 was getting scarcely enough pay
to buy the food thet I ate, and 1 was
learning what It means to be a sub-
ordinate,
The year came to an end finally, and
{ have always been glad thit IT Kept
my bargain, for 1 learned lessons that
have been invaluable to me during all
the years which have intervened. 1
know what it means to make a hard
bargain and keep it, to carry through
something that is difficult and unpleas-
ant when 1 have once hegun it, to stick
sven when a change might bring me
more money and an easier time and a
pleasanter environment, to pay with-
out whimpering the penalty of bad
judgment and hasty decision, and 1
know I am stronger for the lesson.
———
To Photograph Deer
A deer's sense of smell is wonderful,
and they get, the scent a half mile
away, and a moose over a mile with
the wind blowing directly toward It,
says Nature Magazine. Hence it Is
that the first thing that the photog.
sapher does is to see which way the
wind is, If the wind blows wrong, stay
in enmp, becanse you will see no ani
mala
il
NYA
|
|
HATH
GRANNY SQUIRREL’S
SUPPLY
«YT IS no use wishing,” sald Mrs
Young Squirrel, “we won't find
uny nuts to store away this year, We
will be lucky if we get enough to eat
before the snow comes. [ never knew
such a season: no nuts ot all and a
cold, hard winter it will be for us, I
know.”
Granny Squirrel, who had lived a
long time and learned many things,
heard Mrs, Young Squirrel's gramn-
blings. “Why don't you know the
good side Instead of the bad?" she
sald. “There you have been making
the bad as Important as you could and
never sald an word for good. Isn't It
“Bosh!” Said Mrs. Young Squirrel.
us easy to think good
ones, my dear?’
“Bosh I" sald Mrs. Young Squirrel
‘What good will thinking do? | know
there are few nuts to be found and we
are going hungry this winter. You see
if we don’t.”
“I shall pot think of any such thing
18 lack of supply,” sald Grunny Squir.
rel. “What | shall keep In my mind is
things as bad
ind that the right and
par
way |
nlways prevalls
can keep knowing the good
und in right
shall not suffer this winter,
of that”
enough the
sald Mrs. Young Squirrel, “and 1 do
So how
get them I don’t understand”
“You want to think lack, my dear,
“1f you didn’t you would
things right In
thinking about a
brings
Of course
By John Kendrick Bangs
Sol 2 2 8 fk 4
Thay
THE CHOICE
AME FORTUNE came to me
D one day
And in her
ing way
Offered for choice
wealth
Til give you Gold”
“or Heallh.'
Health I chose,
you see,
pleasing
to me
if 1 have Health all other pelt
1 can go out and win myself
Gold. sliver, jewels, all are mine
it Health with Labor 1 com-
bine
And choosing thus it
That
pleasant, smil-
two kinds of
guoth she
"Twas because,
The thought occurred
will befall
stead of one I'll have ‘em
ail
(D by McClure Newspaper Syndicate)
Soh RE Rh hhh RR Bedealelnlneleedeelond
ET rE I I I I ITT TT TY TTY yy yy vv yrs
you to tell me? sald
Squirrel ‘
“Good thoughts, a supply of kind
thoughts toward your neighbor, for
one thing” replied Granny. “When
Mrs. Red Squirrel comes chattering In
your tree and tries to make you angry
as au nice, kind, good creature and put
out of your thoughts the quarrelsome
neighbor you have
her.”
“Granny Squirrel Is crazy”?
Young Squirrel told her neighbor, Mrs.
Gray. "She sits there talking about
having all she needs when the ground
Is about bare of nuts, and seeing
Poor old
winter"
But Granny didn’t starve,
had a good
day, when
granny, she will starve this
supply of nuts,
Mrs. Young
rather thin
from well fed, happened to call, Gran
ny Squirrel treated her to nut
and tea,
“Where did you
time In the
Young Squirrel.
stored
It was
Squirrel
for
usked
get nuts
winter?
“You could not
there
this Mrs
whre
seuson for
any, because
a dreadful
“No.
nuts,”
my dear, 1 did not
answered Granny, "but
store
every day on a shelf near my home and
1 have all 1 can use and to spare
“You see, it 1s as | told you
know the good Is here
never know the lack of It
If we
we shall
Have
Pat O'Malley
This popular “movie” actor was born
in Dublin, Ireland, and came to this
country when a small boy. He was
His first
work was with a stock company. He
stands five feet eleven inches in height
“
Mrs. Young Squirrel! nibbled her
Wis she
as
to be,
eraLy Hus had thought
for she looked not only |
plump, but happy as well.
7, 1524 McClure Newspaper Syndicate)
Br yiLDRED
MARSHALL
EMMA
EW feminine names have a simpler
origin than Emma
names derived from
forefathers, Tradition assigns its origin
to the lspings of a child since Amme
was nurse In and
housekeeper in
transposed
intent
Germany
Spuin
to
sonee
quickly
from =n
Amme was
Emma, probably
a daughter of Charlemagne Was 80
romani
the effect that she Is =ald to
Eginhard the
story
to
lover
carried her
that his footprints might not betray
Emn ns popular in France, where
ft was the name
Capet, ried RI
¥ Her uridme
e nf Etheired the Une
this
of the sister of Hugh
hard the
Fear
jess of ter
was first the
ready, then of Knut. It
way that Emma became much in vogue
There
dnughters o
wns in
were almo
f the
who came over with
in Raxony. Emmes
among the
de Baladon,
William the Conqueror,
Prior, in his beautiful
“Nut Browne Maid,” which
posed to be the history of
herd, Lord Clifford, called his poem
“Henry and Emma” which
Emma romantic fame
the popularity
Dru
Wis wip
the shep
young
about
in Virginia, she had been richer than
she was as Mrs, Leonidas Grimes with
her establishment up the Hudson
Evéryone knew then that she bad no
money. How could they help know.
ing with the holes In the carpet cov.
ered up by the rugs, and the children's
mother turning the colonel's old
suits? But Carrie spent money with
sole pleasure in those days when
she had hardly any to spend
Then she married Leonidas Grimes,
doing business for a big cotton firm,
and from that moment Carrie began
to feel poor.
One day Aunt Eugenia received an
invitation from Carrie to luncheon,
Aunt Eugenia, who had had a bril-
Hiant career, was reduced now to divid
ing her time among several more or
less eager relatives, Everything was
oh nn lavish scale from Carrie's. note
of invitation, to the number of
courses served, Then, as the guests
sat about the finger bowls, the butler
passed on a heavy silver tray, a tight.
Iy tied and sealed box of candy.
“Do have some,” urged Carrie. “It
has to be opened some time, you
know!" And Aunt Eugenia mar
veled at this survival of childhood
experiences in the rich Mrs. Leonidas
tirimes,
Aunt Eugenia began to hear of the
Urimeses ns “entertaining royally.”
One day an elaborate missive booked
her for a week-end. On her arrival,
Aunt Eugenia thought that Carrie
seemed worried. Immediately she be-
gan, sitting there with her velvet
dicner gown ablaze with jewels, to
tell how poor she was feeling.
have to keep up our position” she
walled, "but, oh, it takes so much
money ! Imagine what keeping up
ten cars means.”
And everything those two days was
on the scale of “ten cars”—house,
grounds, entertainment, guests! Then
came the time for Aunt Eugenia's de-
parture. Carrie was on the terrace
with her as a chanffeur and second
man drove up. polished sand shining,
their liveries gleamigg in a flivver.
“You are one of the family, you
see, and gasoline is so expensive”
sighed Carrie,
Aunt Eugenia decided that Carrie
had asked her to the castle simply
because Ii wns a solace to see some
one who was really even poorer than
she herself, among all her riches,
felt. Aunt Eugenia thought of Car
rie's mother and father who, with
nothing te their names, had always
somehow managed to give other peo.
ple a great deal. Carrie vith her
plenty would never know the happj-
ness of generosity. The habit of feel.
ing poor would cheat her to the day
of het death, nnd then it would chent
her In that place where a bank sc
count mattered not at all
HAVE YOU THIS HABIT?
(® by Metropolitan Newspaper Service)
enough, bears n«
Emma, but
from Amaline, the progenitor of |
comes |
rather
Amy.
The bloodstone Is Emma's talismanic
gem. It has medicinal qualities and |
was much used by the anclent’'s to
stop hemorrhages. It Is sald to pre |
the faculties and the bodily
health of its wearer, bring considera-
tion and respect, and guard her from
is Emma's lucky day and 5 her
iucky number,
(D by Wheeler Syndicates, Ine)
siissnnisssill, Prreesmsnsissmninns
I A SR ——
“By H IRDING KING
PIERCED COINS
it; it will bring
is a
everywhere and its causes are obvi |
ous. A pierced coin suggests an ana-
let——has evidently been worn as one, |
pass a string or ribbon through that It
might be suspended about the neck. |
And an amulet protests against the |
evil eve, witches, evil spirits and ma-
lign Influences generally as everybody
knows, Therefore keep the plerced |
coin and you keep the advantages of |
its protective virtues. Or the coin |
may have been plerced and worn by
some one simply as a “lucky plece” A
lucky plece is a little different from
an amulet; an amulet wards off bad
luck, a lucky piece brings good luck
The pierced coin, then, is evidently an
good things to have about one.
In the power of the lucky plece we
gee the operation of that primitive
idea, contagious magic. The lucky piece
hans possessed its beneficent qualities
inherently or has ncquired them by
contagion and therefore from it we
ean “catch” the contagion of good luck.
The pierced coin superstition has ifs
counterparts among all savage peoples
today and its ancestry reaches back to
primitive times,
(© by McClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
sssenssinl Pansies,
not touch water
to it
Resinol relieves It within
few hours
Washington, D. C., Aug, 26:—*“1
am so grateful to you for your
splendid products and for what they
have accomplished for me that I
feel 1 must give you the details,
In attempting to
fmprove the appear-
ance of my chin, I
used a soap which
had been recommend-
ed for that purpose
but which proved to
be too harsh for
when 1 washed off the lath
skin came with it. 1 applied cold
eream, but the damage was too se-
vere to yield to so mild an agent.
My husband consulted our neigh-
borhood druggist and asked if it
would not be advisable to call in
our family doctor. The druggist
said: “You do not need a doctor in
this case, Get a jar of Resinol Oint-
ment and a eake of Resincl Soap
and have your wife use them ac-
cording to directions — they will
beat everything else a hundred
y So my Rod bought the
Res yroducts and hopefully
brought Dos home,
My skin was so tender and sore
that I could not touch water to it,
80 I cleansed it gently first with
ure olive oil and then applied the
Resinol. I used a soft handkerchief
that night for protection. In the
morning, 1 bathed it gently with
warm water and esinol Soap
rinsing off with tepid water, and i
could hardly believe that such a
miracle of healing could occur dur-
fng one night. The raw surface
had filmed over and now looked
only like a-bad case of sunburn. I
kept my face anointed with Resi-
nol all that day and by night the
improvement was so great that I
was able to go out,
This experience is now only a
memory for my face is softer, fairer
and smoother than ever. A jar of
lesinol is my best pal in the future
and I will never be without it.”
(Signed) Mrs. C. P. Tapley, 1028
Bth St, N. W.
of Prehistoric Man
The natives of the of New
Caledonia, lies In Pacific
several hundred n east of
Australia, have many physical resem
the Neanderthal race of
island
the
les
which
ocean
Washington from Prof
Fritz Sarasin, a French anthropologist,
The New Caledonlans are regarded
a8 among the lowest and most primi
ditional Professor Sarasin’s
findings. He states that in a few
respects they seem to be even more
primitive than the long-extinct Nean-
derthalers, notably in their chinless
ness and the simian structure of thelr
poses. In other respects they are less
primitive, but in general there Is a
striking resemblance. —
point to
Get Back Your Health!
Are you dragging around day after
day with a dull backache! Are you
tired and lame mornings—subject to
headaches, dizzy spells and sharp, stab-
bing pains? en there's surely some.
thing wrong. Probably it's kidney
weakness! Bont wait for more sen-
ous kidney trouble. Get back your
health and keep it. For quick relief get
Doan’s Pills, a stimulant diuretic to
the kidneys. They have helped thou-
sands and should help you, Ask your
neighbor!
A Virginia Case
W. M. Pugh, 910
Greenwood Street,
sharp pains which
seemed to be tears
ing my back in
bits. I had head.
g aches and was
often nervous, My
Kidneys were
overly active and
I had to get up
many times during the nigh
Doan’s Pills cured me and I haven't
been troubled since™
DOAN’S "a>
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foster Milburn Co., Mig. Chem., Buffalo, N. Y.
PR.HUMPHREYS’
Protect yourself from
colds, and the grip. Take Dr.
Humphreys’ famous ''77.” It
goes direct to the sick spot.
Keep''77’’ handy. Break u
the cold that’s coming -
the cold that hangs on. Ask
your druggist for TT" today,
ou
should read it. Tells about
at stores or sent
{our risk) or C.O.D.