The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 02, 1925, Image 6

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    in asso -
FOR INDIGEST ION
LLANS
Hot water
Sure Relief
SELL-ANS
25¢ AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
S.S.S. stops
Rheumatism
“MY Rheumatism is all gone. I feel
a wonderful glory again in the free
motion [ used to have when my days
were younger. I
can thank S. S. S.
for it all! Do not
close your eyes
and think that
health, free motion
and strength are
gone from you for-
ever! It is not so.
S. S. S. is waiting
to help you. When you increase the num-
of your red-blood-cells, the entire
system undergoes a
tremendous change.
Every. hing depends
on blood-strength.
Blood which is minus
sufficient red-cells
leads to a | ng list of
troubles. Riisumatism
Is one of them.” S.S.S. is the great
blood cleanser, blood-builder, system
streng.hener, and nerve invigorator.
S. S. S. is sold at al
drug stores in two sizes. e
larger size is more economical.
SS Tp Wri Best
Free Booklet
Send name and
address to 8. 8. 8
Co, 111 8. 8. 8
Bldg. Atlanta,
Ga., for special
booklet on Rheu-
matism & Blood.
A safe and soothing
Fmd for cuts,
burns, or skin trou.
bles. Protects, re-
lievesand heals. Take
internally for coughs
and sore throats.
PETROLEUM JELLY
Chesebrough Mfg. Co.,Cons’d.
Se.
Iu a recent census in India, 57 differ
ent lungunges were returned as mothe
er tongnes by the inhabitants
cutta alone
A —
Motherhood!
Roanoke, Va — children
had been born to us before | heard
Dr. Pierce's
rite
of Cal-
‘Several
experi
passing
expectancy
and
the
ence of
thru
with,
out,
with-
aid of
‘Favorite Pre-
scription.’ Had
I been told that
anything could
bave made the difference [ experi-
enced | would never have believed it.
While taking the ‘Favorite Prescrip-
tion I was able to attend to my
housework, rest at nig! and my
appetite was good all the time and |
had comparatively no suffering.”
Mrs. Lillian Duke, 920 Shenandoah
Ave All medicine dealers
NOTICE!
To Livestock Owners
If You Own Any Horses, Cattle, Poultry
or Hogs, by All Means Read This.
Bafeguard your stock against the
costly ravages of quick-spreading dis-
ease Nature has provided wonderful
health-giving roots and herbs which
have proved unfalling In thousands of
cages. These are combined In a time-
fried, reliable remedy, Porter's Pain
King--the standby of hundreds of
farmers in this community. They rec
ommend It highly for sores, colds and
distemper in horses and for soreness of
the udder, caked teats and bloat In
cattle,
With chickens becoming better
money-earners, there Is an increasin
use of Porter's Pain King by carefu
poultry ralsers everywhere, It is a
positive relief for gapes, roup and para
sitic growths. Sick hens are not good
layers.
#0 Porter's Pain King at the slight-
an sign of trouble, Just follow the
directions with each bottle It may
save you several hundred dollars. Your
Sealer guarantees satisfaction or money
ack.
CHERRY-GLYCERINE
COMPOUND
FOR
COUGHS. COLDS
‘BRONCHITIS
Fle egcl del Nar N,
J al a
JIAMES BAILY & SON
ES
*¥. N. U, DALT.MORE, NO, 13..1928
HOW TO KEEP
WELL
rf boc comm
DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN
Editor of "HEALTH"
WR BY Wesleru Newspaper Union.)
WHAT SCHOOLHOUSES
NEED
THE little red schoolhouse of our
grandpurents is goue. In its place
ure handsome brick, stone and frume
structures, contalning assembly rooms,
luboratories, classrooms, gymnasiums,
swimming pools und a dozen other lux.
uries unheurd of ustil recently, How
wuch is necessary and how much Is
unimportant? What equipment should
the simplest and cheaper schools have?
What is the very least thut the school
can provide for the child's health?
What are the features lu a school
hivuse which are indispensable?
1. Enough window spuce to admit
an abundance of light und fresh air
tur every pupil. These windows, so far
a8 possible, should be to the left and
the rear of each room, that the
light may come over the left shoulder
and so that there may be the least pos
sible amount of eyestrain. Each win
dow should have a
set at 70 degrees, so that the air may
be admitted and thrown up to the cell
Ing, without causing a direct draft
<. A heating picret, whether stove,
hot alr furnace, steam or hot water,
which will furnish enough heat to keep
each room at 68 degrees Fahrenheit.
A reliable thermometer should be
placed in each room.
80
3. A supply of pure drinking water
If from wells, these should be tubed
with the bucket and windlass or
dangerous. The farce pump Is sufer
provided the top of the well [8 sealed.
pupil. Common drinking
cups
ers, depots, hotels and all
places,
a schoolhouse than anywhere else,
in nearly all clilidren’s diseases in
tion Is by
harges,
OH. Clean wash
bowls, hot water and
children
Dirty
¢
infection
can keep thelr
6. Clean, sanitary, fiy-tight toliet ac
7. Frequent school inspection
yuicians, to detect the he
protect
from infection, make
physical «xaminations and
with teachers and school
orities gs to the health and well
"ing of the children
K. Seats permit
0 8 naturg
ginnings of
healthy
epidemics,
children
Necessary
advise the
syit}
which the child
do its work it and comfort.
ie atin
Has
tials?
le
your school these elzht essen
how handsowe the decorations.
PROTECTING SEA FOODS
NAN
aon
is the
}
carth.
most
The
wasteful
so-called
animal
animals”
day and
ey Wy
enough
$10p when they have
his life, but he also wastés more than
uses
When supposedly civilized
cane to the new world, he found It so
vast and rich that he thought It
was inexhaustible, so he proceeded to
lay it waste a8 no other animal would
have done. Buffaloes, which the early
explorers found In mlilions on the
western plains, were shot down wan
for their tongues and hides
magnificent white pine forests
which covered Michigan, Wisconsin
and Minnesota were slashed to bits
by “lumber kings.” who In n félv years
destroyed forests that would have sup-
plied the nation with lum! for cen
turies, if any sense or mo ion had
heen used Today, our reforestation
boards and commissions are trying to
repair a small part of the
done by a few men in a few years
Evidently, the products of the sea
are no safer than the resources of the
nnd While the oyster Is being
poisoned by sewage, crabs, another
equally delicious and healthful sea
food, are being destroyed by dredgers
“Only a few yeurs ago,” says the Rich-
mond Times-Despatch, “a boy with a
net and a piece of string could cateh
a bucketful of crabs from any of a
hundred wharves In Virginia”
The present-day fisherman has more
advanced methods. Swift and power
ful motorboats haul “drags” over the
sea bottom. For every crab caught by
the drag and lifted to the surface,
four are torn loose from their spawn.
ing places and set adrift. They wash
up on the beach dead and worthless.
Not only wasted as food but, what Is
worse, wasted as producers of more
food. '
There Is plenty of food In the world
for everybody. But much Is wasted
through man's greed or ignorance. No
farmer would buy a reaper that only
uthered one grain of wheat out of
every five and that destroyed his next
year's seed as well. Sea products are
necessary and valuable foods. They
should not be wasted to enrich the
few.
£0
tonly
The
When Tipping May Stop
Tipping can be absolutely stopped
when everybody Is perfectly satisfied
to be treated no better than anybody
else ~~ Hoxton Hobe,
l
SPARROW AND ROBIN
RS. CHIPPY SPARROW sat un-
der an overhanging ridge of the
house on u shutter. It was raining.
and Mrs, Chippy was not happy
“Never suw such wenther,” she grum-
bled. “A body can't get a bite to eut
while it lusts.”
Airs. Robin sat on the bough of a
tree close by under some leaves, but
piped her cheery Just the
she song
“Never Saw Such Weather,” Mrs.
Chippy Sparrow Grumbled.
same, “l don’t see how you can sing”
sald Mrs, Sparrow.
have
“You are going to
a wet nest If this lusts and, any
you can't anything to
vith the rain coming down like this”
*Oh., but It make everything
nice und clean” chirped Mrs. Robin.
“And then think of all the worms
ufter the rain Is over.”
grumbled Mrs. Sparrow
“That is just It, if It ever is over.”
way, get ent
will
we
get
“Over!
ASTOLD BY
Irvin S. Cobb
THE CURIOUS DARKY
N ATLANTA cotton broker had oe-
cusion to take n business trip into
interior He his golf
with intending to stop off
for a
’
Augustin
(reargiua bore
him,
way
clubs
upon his back match
the famous
He
links at
off the train
a sman
currying
an ancient
who
dropped at
town
and his
into
driver,
him
road
climbed hack
an old
local
sRge,
and
nesro
bude the was
man, take to the
The darky eyed the queer.looking
feather bag that the stranger
with the peculiar looking sticks in It
His got the better of
“Boss.” began “please
mout |
1
footed,
curiosity him
he
but
suh,
sCuse me AX you a ques
tion
“io
senger.
“What
stitatin’?”
(Copyright by the McNaught Syndicate, Inc)
sos Puree
QUESTIONS
FREE.
ahead and ask,” sald the pas
kind of a lodge is you In
aT
WR 4 5 Caller -- But
eg you said you
AK wouldn't charge
ay Br me anything for
Yoo New the little
| questions [I asked
you,
L.awyer — I
haven't, What
I've charged you
for is the an-
swer,
legal
wa,
Se —
Mrs. Sparrow,” said Mrs, Robin In a
cheery tone. “It
time, you know.”
ig no at all why It will
i
|
reason
| this snupped Mrs.
i
i
{
time,”
“Just look at the way It down
jon that roof and runs off through the
| spout, ‘nough to drown a body.”
I “But i drown nnyone, Mrs,
| Sparrow, and your best nest Is safe
{ behind that blind.” sald Mrs. Robin
“Well, suppose It was under the
water spout,” replled Mrs. Sparrow,
angry she could not
Mrs. Robin as unhappy as she was.
comes
won't
because muke
merrily
from
sun.”
sing
ime
tobhin
then
Mrs.
und Just
the
she sald
“Yes,
io
sun ci
begun
the
"Nee,
out
there is the
clouds
nice chilly breeze with
it to sald the
Mrs. “Here we all
with the raln and now we must shiver
I am what
and a
freeze us’ grumbling
Sparrow wet
Are
sure I will take cold. Oh
a world this
Hive In. 1 am
“Look,
“there
is for poor creatures to
most starved, too.
tobin
house
look,” Mrs.
the
throwing out
chirped
maid In
crumbs for us
the big
Oh,
is
how
kind every one 8."
“Huh” Mrs
wants the cat to catch us, I suppose, 1
' heard her say my wns a nuisance
the blind and let It tumble.
Now did you ever hear of such a cruel
thing?’
But Mrs. Robin thought about
bullding behind blinds she did
not say, for she was busy picking up
and Mrs. Sparrow flew
her and began to eat
grumbled Mrs
peck and peck at
swallo if i
them
snapped Sparrow,
nest
what
niests
i eruinbs #000
down beside
“Great big crumbs”
“Have to
them before |
Sparrow
can w them
d hreak
threw out crumbs I woul
\ s o“
ould be broken
up as they sh
what did 1
again” she
¥
gh
“There tell vou
went flying
i= @
an,
raining
back 1! shelter place “it
This handsome young
in the “movies” is an American by
birth, He went through the elemen
tary schools, and then entered Yale
| university. His athletic nature made
{ it inevitable that he should go into
sports, and so it was that he made the
Yale team for several years. It was
| while at Yale that he met the promi
| nent producer who induced him to
enter motion pictures.
leading man
hard work hings are al
ways
Mrs. Robir 3
tree, “If 1 stayed Je and
to her faunltfinding: might get
as dissatisfied as she Is ie chirped
‘1 don’t with this
to
VIrong
to another
listened
to he
Bee Ans
It Is a pretty nice place
{live In. 1 think
Mrs. Robin's way of
orld w fer
Sparrow's !
i
by Mod
seeing the
than Mrs
it was?
us
don’t you nk
pre
Newasps per Syndicats, )
HARRY HERRIOT
HARnE . eve 1
tle Low had the habit h
He would 1 ywhi his porridge
before his rothe: and sisters
finished
iis
Irry.
long
find
thet glwanvs rushed
or
at
s ¢ ts naff
school with 3 1 n f
unbrushed
away to
hair
his mo
"1
his
sther and father ha
srinte mottos bh these,
nt
ME
no
al
: Noy er
up appre
he
effect
{all Is
| pull
| left him
As on mi never
long train Journey be
glways was trying to get ead of the
engine. His eventually got
used to having Herriot pass them by
on the and came to
attribute oversights to that
| strained expression of his eyes, as If
to have had
dol
grew up. seemed
“Nhatever is
doing
bef
neg
Us
worth
worth well,” and
trigger
unregenerate,
re you take sight,
in he could bear a
AUSe,
ab
friends
unseeing,
street
his
could bring him to
His wife knew that
find him pacing up and
down the floor If inadvertently she
kept him walting for a minute,
his clilldren were quite accustomed to
hurrying through their meals.
his broker realized in the end
| willy-nlily, Harry Herriot would buy
| ahove par and sell below if the alter
native were patience with the market.
destination
she would
Then, one February. Herriot took a
8 viLDRED meaning;
MARSHALL
whence it Was derived; signifi
and lucky jewel
MAUDE
AUDE, signifying “mighty battle
maid.” was interchanged in for.
mer times with Mathilda, the first In-
stance of its double use being the
danghter of Henry I, who was known
by both names. But this is not its
etymological origin, since Maude was
primarily a man's name. But Maud,
Maald, and Mauld appear early us a
feminine name, also Mahald, and Ma
halt, The Twelfth century reveals a
woman named Mushald vel Mathilda,
about whom little is known.
Many poets have felt inspiration at
the name, “Maude Muller” Is known
to evervone; likewise this
from that musical lyric, “Maude”:
Maude with her exquisite face,
And wild voice pealing up to the sky.
And feet like sunny gems on an Eng-
lish green
Mande " the Hght of her youth and
her grace, .
Singing of Death and of Honor that
cannot dle
Til 1 well could weep for a time so
sordid and mean
And myself so languid and base.
Maude's tallsmanle jewel is mala:
chite, which is sald to warn its wearer
To be especially lucky it should be
engraved with an image of the sun,
which, by its dazzling light, drives out
all evil spirits that work in the dark.
ness Wednesday is her lucky day
and six her lucky number. Old super-
| stition has it that a bit of malachite
tied to a child's cradie will drive away
evil and insure sound and peaceful
sleep for the occupant,
(© by Wheeler Syndicets. Ine.)
i
i
sss Jpo——
J
A LINE O’ CHEER
—
By John Kendrick Bangs
wr
Ca
a a a a a
»
Ww
waa TTY
A PROMISE
————
UST for Today
J As on you run your way
Do all you can amid the rough
and rubble
Completely to forget
Your own regret,
And bear a bit of t'other fellows
trouble,
I promise you that you
If this course you plrghe
Will ind that bit of kindly self.
denial
Down the road
Will cut at least In half the
pressing load
Of your own trial
© by MeClure Newspaper Syndioate.
FR aw
|
i
i
i
i
i
i
WONTAR IRR
ir strength
f hurry t
irse Harry
sur went back
nperature, and
mruest with
through
he
again
est
dash throug pilne
some da away back
other and
put him
£8 were anged, and the
the walls began
His mind, how
that he
famillar mottoes
catch
ever, rested
not
speed.”
io
One
remember “More haste
That held him “True!” he
groaned. Here at last was the logical
answer to his hahit of harry.
HAVE YOU THIS HABIT?
tan Newspaper Service )
did
less
(© by metrog
(® by McClure Newspaper Syndicate. )
pe
Truth in Advertising
Dumb Dora (reading sign over ticket
office) Oh, John, It says, “Entire Bal
cony 30 Cents.” Let's get it, so we'll be
| all alone. De Pauw Yellow Crab.
She: How long have you realized
that you couldn't live without me?
He: Ever since the manager
raised you to $200 a week,
Men's Faces
their hands are —S8hakespeare
Help That Achy Back!
Are you dragging eround, day after
day, with a dull, unceasing backache?
Are you lame in the worning: bothered
with headaches, dizziness and
disorders’ Feel
discouraged? Then there's m
thing wrong, and likely
weakness. Don't neglect it
your health while you can. Use Doan's
Pills. Doan's have helped thousands
of ailing folks. They should help you
Ask your neighbor!
A Virginia Case
a oT ~
ne lexing-
Lo Coving-
ton, Va says: “1
suffered from
darting pains in
my back I had
nerve racking
headaches and my
: didn't act
al, I
? mins lin
: &Doan's rid my beck
of the pain and
kid-
regulated my
neys. 1 felt Detter in every way.”
DOAN’S "its
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foster Milburn Co. Mig. Chem. Buffalo, N. Y.
tired, irrit
its
(Ȣt back
DR. HUMPHREYS’
INFLUENIA
BEST for the
Complexion
The beauty of Glenn's is the beauty
it brings to the complexion — soft,
smooth, clear white skin, free of pim-
pies, blackheads or other blemishes.
Glenn’s i= sm
Cotton 23¢
Sulphur Soap
At Droggiem.
Insecta,
id sives, anSehing sacegh Tues S00
and $1.00, st your Sroggist or grocer,
Write for Pree Booklet, “It Kills Them™,
RR BEMICE 8 20: —— §
After One Dose .
* Your pills cermainly have done "Wonder
for me. | am thirty-eight years of age, been
married thirteen years am the mother
nine children,
3) ry aliering from headaches snd con.
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was 8 life saver’ to me. Since then | have
bad no more headaches, and my health is
good. 1 rec " them to whomever 1
meet.” Mos H. La Vigne, Jersey Cay, N. |.
For FREE SAMPLE write
P. Allen Co., 417 Canal Street, New York
Sonstipatian headaches
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aod
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