The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 12, 1925, Image 6

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    »~
WEAK, RUN-DOWN
NERVOUS, DIZZY
Mrs. Lee Suffered From All
These Troubles, but Lydia E.
Pinkbam’s Vegetable Com-
pound Made Her Well
Terre Haute, Indiana. — *‘I was weak
and run-down and in such a nervous con-
dition that I could
hardly do my work.
I was tired all the
time and dizzy, had
no appetite and could
not sleep. I tried
different medicines
for a year but they
did not help me,
Then my husband
saw the ad. for Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound in
, the newspapers and
had me takeit. I regained my strength
end never felt better in my life. * It com-
pletely restored me to health. I had
Ea no suffering when. my baby
y was born and he is very strong and
healthy. 1 know that the Vegetable
Compound is the best medicine a woman
can take before and after childbirth for
health and strength. [would be willing
to answer letters from women asking
about the Vegetable Compound.’’ —
Mrs. Ww. J. Fer, Route E, Box 648,
Terre Haute, Indiana.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
und is a dependable medicine for all
ese troubles.
For sale by druggists everywhere.
Banish Pimples
By Using
uticura
Hypnotic Operation
An operation to remove a vari
vein was performed at the Dorpat Und
versity hospital, Berlin, after the pa
tient had been hypnotized. He [felt
neither pain nor Professor
Wannach performed the operation,
which is said be the first of
Kind where hypnotic sleep instead
an anesthetic wa
CORE
shock
to its
of
used.
DEMAND “BAYER” ASPIRIN
Has Been Proved Safe by Millions.
Warning!
‘Bayer” on package or on tablets you
are not getting
Aspirin proved safe by millions
prescribed by physicians for 23
Say “Bayer” when you buy
[mitations may prove dangerous.
years,
The Cause
What
ing
1 ‘
Bannan ure ou erving
for,
litite boy ?
Little
me !
Woman-—\Vhnat
for?
Little
toy —C-cause mamma whipped
did she whip you
oy —C-cause T was c-eryvin’
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
Hot water
Sure Relief
ELL-ANS
R54 AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
NEW EADIO TUBES $1.50 EACH
Fype 201A-190-—Cuarantesd Sent prepald
or Lt. OO € MN 3 RADIO LABORA
TOPIES, Box 1276. NEW HAVEN. CONN
WiLL YOU INVEST $20 UP to 60 or lars
of {ast growing mpany ? Wrigley's » *
BILL jon $1.06 for sample, ete ain
us and get doliar back, Agents wanted i
SCHOENBORN, 47 Rose St, Newark. N. J
FOR SALE-VENDING
TROLLED MACHINES,
Check Boy, $50. Liberty Bel
Vending. Yonkers and Central
WOSDERFUL SKIN
rejuvenator Goad
AND COIN-TON-
BEAUTIFIER AND
if ectema, burns uta,
pimples, blackheads, sores, insect skin
tightaner, removes wrinkles réular en
closed BOc pe wittle Order today Cutt
Lave Co., 247 Columbia Rd, Dorchester, Mass
Radio: One tube long-distance receive
inet build, geunine bakelite panel, wit
teries. tube, aerial, ground wire
and head phones $156.50 complete $5 00
deposit with order, balance COD We also
mir H-tube sein; prices on request Mr. Hor.
neck. Radio Dept. 1519 Jackson, Chicags. Il
cab
hats
insulators
Have you
RHEUMATISM
Lumbago or Gout?
Take RHEUMACI DF to remove theennse
and drive the pelasp? hg the system.
BREEUNACTOR ON THE |
FOUTS RETRAIN OF THE OUTSIDER
At All Druggists
Jas. Baily & Son, Wholesale Distributors
Baltimore, Md,
NEW DRY BILL
AGREED UPON
sate Prohibition Forces Unite
Upon Measure,
WATER TREATY SIGNED
Ingures Adequate Supply From Dela-
ware For Cities
Road
Reading in Senate,
in Three States.
Enabling Bill Passes Second
of
Pinchot
Harrisburg, Pa. — Differences
pinion between Governor
and the Anti-Suloon leagle over
of bill
and
pro-
administration
visions nn de-
’
sigred to control
dis-
tilleries in the state were adjusted at
a lengthy conference in the executive
office As au result of the agreement
the general assembly will asked
to has been termed the
“united dry DbIL" a measure that Is
supposed to have the indorsement of
all the anti-liquor agencies io the com-
monwenlith At the time of its pre-
sentation governor purposes ap-
Joint session of the
to tell the story of law en-
forcement In state,
While a number of
were represented at the
governor,
Mr
Anti-Saloon League,
brewerles
be
pass what
the
pearing hefore u
legislature
the
organizations
meeting with
sted only
Pinchot and the spokesman
Homer
represent.
the end
bill was
approval
the friction exi be.
Iw epi
if the ir
Pope, site
ing this
both
superintendent,
In
and a
the
organization
ground
with
sides gnve
putiined that met
leaders
Provides Systom of Permits,
The me
sure will provide for
and
breweries
A Sys
periodic inspec-
and distill
the administ rati on
flow of illiel al
$
same time
heer
»
tion of the the
the
it the
hopes «{ *§
i i eck
high-powered
state
Issue
a distillery
power to
nmenwealth,
the
will act ae
applicants
and
pass upon all for
or licenses
introduced by Senator
banks in that
banks
construction
and
-a HK),
passed
on ifs
senate. the meas
hy Senator Daix
Pinchot
exercised
the administra
over the sot
£50.
loan end
Were
senate in commitiin
ighway
committees on
had 1
the Zz the
HW) (HM) inte road i hl
appro
assed second
vhich Is sw
winsored
wan, of Bucks county,
the
he
that
favorahly by
vighwass, of which
There wit a report
the senate opponents of the state ad-
the
offer
which wonid
this
amount
tion contemplate
an amendment
aliotment
limited
for
for in
expenditure
' 'inchot's remaining
fice
Water Treaty Signed.
vy Involving the ulti
500.000 000 In
to insure an adequate
for New York
and other cliles in
and
13°
mate ox.
next
wnfer
Philadel.
New York,
Pennsylvania was
dawere River Treaty
members of the Penne
announced. The
meeting was held in the Lotus
New York, with the commis
from Pennsylvania, New Jer.
New York taking part
Operations of the treaty
eliminate future
in New Jersey. Dams and
other Improvements will permit the
regulation of the Delaware's flow, do-
ing nway with floods that have caused
logs of aroperty.
agreement each state
will be enabled to get about 1.000.000,
000 gallons of dally from the
Delaware for municipal purposes
The treaty Is the result of 18
months” work on the part of the eight
commissioners appointed by the gov.
ernors of the three states following
action by their legislatures in 1923
It wag unan‘mously agreed upon and
will filed with the secretary of
state of each state, accompanied by a
report recommending its adoption by
the several legisiatures and by con
gress
A bill repealing the anthracite coal
tax will be Introduced in the legisla.
ture by Senator Heaton, of Schuyl
kill county. This tux has been on the
statute books since the session of 1921,
It enlls for a levy of one and one
halt per cent of the price of coal at
the mines. Probably no tax law ever
passed erested more gpposition ont.
side the state than the anthracite Im-
post. In New England the protesting
went so fur that some large consume
ers hegan to use eonl imported from
Wales, The tax wns sttacked In the
Including the UU, 8. supreme
but it weathered the storm.
the
supply city.
New Jersey
by the
commission
bo
ents
"uh,
nnd
flso Is ex.
witer
considerable
Under the
wnter
he
fourt,
’
if ln titi
MR. FOX, MR. COON, MR.
DOG AND Jimmy SKUNK
nnd Mr,
was very
wis always looking into places
nosing about where they thought
had no business to be,
“Why does. not stay at home, 1
can't see,” suld Mr. Fox as they talked
It over one day. “He has plenty to do
hunting rats in the barn and watching
the house, Now why he should come
all the way Into our woods and poke
about Is more than I can tell,
“lI have a notion, Rucey, that
one should teach that inquisitive
Dog a lesson. If only
bim to poke about in
where he would get his nose bitten
or scratched, or something, he would
stay at home afterward, perhaps, and
mind his own affairs”
Just they Jimmy Skunk
meandering along, and Mr. Fox slapped
his sides and began to laugh. “I have
R. COON
Mr, Dog
Fox knew that
curious—he
and
he
he
some
Mr.
set
place
we could
some
then saw
as Mr. Coon could not
Mr. Fox ran off alone to see
Immy lived, and then he ran
to the farm so Mr. Dog could get
zht at him and chase him,
It all worked out as Mr. Fox
planned It untill he let Mr, Dog
him, and then Mr. Fox's plun did not
| work Just as he had expected, though
| he led Mr, Dog stralght to the door-
way of Jimmy Skunk’s home,
Jimmy was sitting outside in
sun, and when Mr. Fox eame bounding
along with Mr, Dog at his heels Jimmy
was frightened and angry, as well. He
didn’t care whether It was Mr. Fox
or Mr. Dog who disturbed him. Just
to make sure, he punished both as they
dashed past by sprinkling them with
his smelly fluid, which he carries for
protection,
Mr, Dog
be per
had
Hp
did not go very far. He
dropped his tall and ran for home,
Mr. up In
“I guess he won't call me a fraldy
cat any more,” he mused. “I am glad
I had sense enough not to try to teach
Mr. Dog any lessons, Mrs
wouldn't have the
with that
Coon the tree saw it all
Coon
let me ionse
odor on my
It was 8 long time after
Coon and Mr, Fox met again
anvthing of Mr. Dog around here lute
iy *™ inquired Mr. Fox.
Mr. Coon replied that he. hadn't
since the day he saw him chasing Mr
Fox through the woods,
i “(iuess be got a
{ sald Mr. Fox
fo run into
in
cont.”
that Mr
“Seen
that
won't care
and he
lesson
“He
day,”
for Home.
t, Races,” he sald
Dog to the | 13
is young and I dou! it he
one of Jinm
and see
ve will fine
Mr
He
aw
» will lead
Skunk.
ever
ome
Let's
lives
iy's familly
where Jimmy
i Mr. Dog.
nll right for
OC
and then
»
you, Mr, Fox
repli od Mr “You cnn run faster
than I and you know that
is a tree nearby 1 might
[ am going to run up the
there
a fraldy
unless there
get
first
ous rievbi
Bugni
free
come to "
“Oh,
Mr.
have some fun
yOu are
Fox “Come
with
along Prom Cy
Mr. Dog.”
The Aspleton Family
Mr. Lysander Johan Appleton
Mrs. Lysander Joba Appleton
Miss Daysey Mayme Appleton
Master Chauncey Devere Appleton
YSANDER JOHN AVPLETON has
always had a dim notion ti
is what happens every night
turns reaching
“There comes father,” Mrs. Lysander
John will “Now Chauncey De-
vere, you are his favorite, 80 you ask
him can have a new carpet for
the parlor. If he ref ick and
scream. Daysey Mas needn't
ask him outright for new curtains,
you ean tell about the kind
women have in their parlors, and how
ashamed ask any the
to the bankers’ convention
to call on you because the parlor cnr
tains are so shabby, and if you finally
marry a poor man it will be his fault.
if he refuses, I wi
ut him, and we will all go out together
spend the evening, and treat him
didn’t belong to the
requests, this might
ask for a new plano
of china”
. - >
it this
when he
the corner in home
Say
if we
Nees,
me, you
uther
yOu were to of
to
Mayme Appleton is
“going all to pleces™
she were a plece of fragile china, and
had thrown
Daysey
- * -
Mra, Lysander John Appleton and
Mayme were preparing for a
party. “We will lay covers for ten”
Siu baysey Magioe, That night when
the dinner wus ready, Lysander John
and Chauncey Devere falled to appear.
“We thought,” said a message that
came by special delivery, “that if you
are going to make up beds for ten,
we'd better sleep downtown,”
- - -
The religious instruction that has
been pounded the most unceasingly
into Chauncey Devere's head is that
when the preacher is there for a meal
he must bow Lils head as If accustomed
10 un blessing three times a day.
(® by George Matthew Adama)
Dds
| perfume your cost
| Dog? wught |
{ the dirt
“toh, 1
(L by
RETR le
Blanche Sweet
RUNNY RAR RAH
s na, Oh
This handsome “movie” star recent.
She is a favorite of
clever work,
i
i
A LINE O' CHEER
By John Kendrick Bangs.
HAL RAR RATAN NH ARRAN
A RICH INHERITANCE
8 LINGERE on
rose
Through
Yeats
Wold FRABPRIRARRERELRIRREY
HRP RN NOR RY
RAP
w
SHERRI
MARNE
drm
OLD FRIENDS
WE N Peg's
twenty
to spend In the city
been brought up, she telegraphed
of her
Port's,
train gave nfter
years, a couple hours
where
tlires
her at
for
oldest (riends 1 meet
that famous old caterers, fo
lees and frappe in
from the land of her birth she
often sighed. They had all
country on thelr receipt
on that day, and
Ann and Nan and Fan,
wondered If Peg's train had been
late, dor they had the big to
themselves except for a strang
younger than they. at
“I dare say that Peg
in getting about as she
suggested Nan.
“1 hope she hasn't bad a giddy turn
or anything of that sort,” foreboded
Nan, who considered herself a dl
invalid, who lived In a social
whirl, who never walked if she could
ride, and whe picked at her food.
“Perhaps she changed her
said Ann, who was neurasthenlc,
no tastes of her own,
she could ride, and
fa cook book and a
diatetics,
Just then the
exile
had so
her
whose
cone in
from the of
Peg’
they
and
& message hot
waited,
place
cer ¥ Cars
sanhother
isn't
used
as quick
to be,”
had
was
treatise
stranger from across
the room approached them: “Is It
are you by any chance-—can this be?
“Peg!” they all cried together, and
made room for her at the table,
Then, when all the conventional
questions ha” asked and an
swered, Nan began: “My dear, how
do you manage to look so—ag0 active?
“So blooming?’ put in Fan
“And so young?" ended Ann
Peg hesitated for a moment
she said, “I am and
{| blooming and young, as you say,
for that reason. My husband
walk ten miles in the country
Sunday.”
“We belleve in the habit of exer
cige,” went on Peg. warming to her
subject. “When there's skating, we're
been
active,
it's
® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate)
a
# WEA ARRAN
MONARCH
pr
breakfast better
Timbuktu No Longer
Difficult of Access
mes sning
was held to
and far
an expres
There was special
attached to Thwbukiu., It
be the
off paces,
sion dism
whom
once a
symbol of
There
igsing to
impossible
WHs even
uktu people
we
to the hristian
did not
guys a contributor
Belence Monitor
But we
Timbuktu; it
our doors: is
ished:
ane
ise our ideas
rey abont
io
van
mystery
must
has now been brought
inaceessibiiity has
there
Timbuktu
Litroen
is Do ionger any
about it, has its timetable
iny to
from Pa
Marseilles
ara In
down the
hag Comp:
irists ris
to Marseilles,
to Algiers, across the
caterpillar cars,
by
great
Niger
eVers
up
the 103 8 ory .
ihn pain n n
and
Hotels
ort have
boats,
with
heen set in
Boschee’ 5 S yrup
throat and un; infla: n.
u
heals
The
keeps
delicate mucus membrane of the
«Con-
SYRUP
Far thi
and
the
throat and lungs In a ngested
dition, BOSCHEE'S
gently and quickly heals
reason it has been
aver the
ight ¢
in a good
with
ng
BO PRA HE E'S EYRUP
iL.—Adv.
fifty- @ Fears,
night's rest, free
easy expectoration t » morn
You can buy
wherever mediel
nes are sold
He Explains.
10 0 v, why did yom
to
tirCks sent
Why not
impres.
Louisville
Shave With Cuticura Scap
No mug, no
ation even when shaved twice daily.
they
ries = «
how ilidered and tn
as ory done “This
look
if she
Lntry
doesn’t
We can
exercise and not pay the penalty.
HAVE YOU THIS HARIT?
Metropoiitan
me a soft
* 2
nation rd the hat
of
(Le Newspaper Servios )
)
Your Last
Name
, POPP
IS IT ELMER ?
HE first
came
“Lion.”
Thomas Hooker.
Hartford, Conn.
killed by the Indians
of Edward Elmer's grandsons, Rev
Daniel Elmer, of the three
graduates from Yale for the year 1713.
He settled in New Jersey in 1727.
Horace Elmer, one of his descend
wag a raval officer prominent io
of the Elmers, Edward
this country ia 1031 on
as one of the « ongregation
He settled
where he was
in 1676. One
fo
was one
The name was originally Aygimer,
members of the
baron of the ex
in England, John
chief
15805
was
in
family
chequer
Jane Gray.
Applegate—This is really
tion of Applegarth, meaning apple or
chard. It was the name borne by a
parish in Dumfries, Scotland, and was
derived as a surname from this place,
Bagley—This Is an Irish and Eng
lish name, and signified originally one
Hving at arising ground. Thus it Is
similar to the name Hill or Mount.
Noble—This is one of the many snr.
names that is derived from an adjec.
tive of personal description Un:
doubtediy it was applied to one who
was of noble appearance rather thes
because of nobility of rank.
Mulford-—This Is doubtless derived
from - Millford, meaning residence
near a mill: It Is sometimes spelled
Mullford and sometimes with one “1”.
The first of the name here was Wil
linn Mulford of Kent, England, who
settled in Salem, Mass, where he was
living in 1047.
(@ by MeClure Newspaper Syndicate.)
fn corrup-
f man is infinite in what
Jonson
YOUR
BAKING
comes out
RIGHT
CIR)
DAVIS
BAKING
POWDER
jen
don't have a cold afterwards ~take
HALE’S HONEY
of Horehound and Tar
Nothing better than this safe, depends.
ble home remedy for healing and sooth.
ing throat troubles and clearing up colds.
J0e ot ell druggists
Use Plies Toothache Drops
LEONARD
EAR OIL