The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, April 30, 1925, Image 6

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    Dass it around
after every meal
Give the fomily
the benefit of its
aid to digestion.
Cleans tecth tad.
lecep it always
in the house. ,,
Costs litile- helps much”
fy
2 BV
Just Ahead
Rep. Murbpocu & Co.
stabiished B53
CHICAGO - BOSTON « PITY § DURCH MN YORK
Correct
What
for
Woman
animal
man?
Tencher
fondness
rupli!
if
You're
Hard
On Shoes
T
SOLES
ary for a Better Heol
“U.8.”” SPRING-STEP Moels
rit
license has heen previ
London,
Toget Alabastine results you
must use Alabastine, which
always comesin the 5-
package with the cross and
circle printed in red.
Alabastine is the best wall
coating for homes and
public buildings, Ask your
ealer for color chart or
write Miss Ruby Brandon,
the Alubastine Company,
Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Alabastine is a dry powder in
white and tints, ready for use by
mixing with cold or warm water.
Se uiqun vo Sv pclae
PP with an ordinary wa
bern, Suitcble for all sot
: ~Plasies,y wall board,
applied
itwen't rub oft
HOW TO KEEP
WELL
amps inn
DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN
Editor of "HEALTH"
DO0COOO00O0O00000000OO0000
(@. 1926, Westeru Newspaper Union.)
DIRT IN THE EYE
NE of the comunonest of human
O nceldents Is to get a speck of
dust or a tiny cinder in the eye, Often
the speck is too small to do un injury
to any other part of the body, too
small perhups even to be seen But
the covering of the nnd the
lining of the eyelids are so
nnd sensitive that a were speck
not only intense pain but
damage.
eyeball
may
cuatise ay
ulso do serious
Generally, some member of
volunteers to take It
succeeds;
oflice
Sometimes
shop Li
out for you. he
or a dirty toothpick, he not only falls
to remove the cinder. but also irritates
and infects the eye.
The way to take a ci
other foreign body out of
i$ to take a clean (thar Is, an
toothpick, twist a little clean
around end so that the point of
the toothpick Is covered. This
should rolled tight. If the
is under the upper Id, stand behind
the patient, tell him to throw
his head and then to look down
Grasp the eyelushes of the upper lid
firinly ard draw the lid gently
nder
the eve
vLused)
best
one
cotton
be
turn the edge of the ld over the
thumb-na:l or over u
plek, so us to fold the lid up and
eyeball, If the eye
turned up and down and from
side, the cinder
duli point on the
and be easily
up
pencil or
eX-
the
slow ly
Ose
will be
shining
taken
side to
HS 2
face
su-
can
toothpick
Hght
foree or
cinder
eyeball and become embedded
if the
readily, don’t try
will only ocamage the eyeball
on a thick compress mude
large, clean handkerchlef, wrung
over eyeball, with a
Don't
Ais wR
into
the
brushing movement.
rut the
may enslly be forced
eyeball
the
cinder come onl
out
doesn’t
to dig It
Put
cold
patient
compress in the
to the
scratches of
neglected
eve or, if
place and send
nearest docior
Cuts the
should
my
not
wounds of
or
not
destroy
be
the
the
this
necur sears from infected
the may
with
eve
interfere sight,
THE GORGAS MEMORIAL
INSTITUTE
zreat Iden has on personality
of the
think of
The Constitu-
us Jefferson, our
recalls Alexander
nnd John Brown
inseparable as are emanucipa-
Abraham Lincoln. Free sliver
us think of William Jennings
us sound money
McKinley; Teddy
strenuous life cannot
any more than
League of Nations and Woodrow Wil
SON.
Ere Nagy je
olution we
uy stem
in. abolition
Just
Him
and the
separated other
little at.
abstract, It
with a
or a reform has
iructiveness to us in the
8 only when it is associated
A cause
fallow men, not deus,
with
that it hus
Cutting the death
fromm 15 to 128 per thousand
narvelous achievement but It
average mun
Stamping
the health
been
One trouble
ment is
personality. rate
looks to
the like
mathematics out
human race
but It
the
plished,
has so far accom:
doesn’t Interest
the
years in half
unheard of
isticians
duration
a century Is
Increasing
of life fifteen
something
what it means,
in a Inboratory or making a new serum
to cure an old disense gets a few
bacteriologists excited, but it
interest the newspaper reader like a
home run by Babe Ruth, a new film
der or divorce trial,
Most efforts to interest the publie
in health bave been based on
rather than on men.
Thousands of men and women have
fifty yenrs, No one of them
equalled in personality and
ment the late surgeon general of the
United States army, Maj. Gen
Willlam «, Gorgas. A soldier from
enrly manhood, one in spirit almost
from birth, an Indian fighter on the
western plains and a disease fighter
everywhere, the man who cleaned up
Havana and drove out yellow fever,
who turned Panama from the pest hole
of the tropies to the healthiest spot
on earth, who mad. the Panama
eunnl a success when every one else
failed. who organized and directed the
medien! corps in the World war, he
is ensily the greatest man the health
movement has produced. So the or
ganization of the Gorgas Memorial in.
stitute, with Calvin Coolldge as its
head, Is not only a richly deserved
recognition of o great American but
it ls aso the most promising attempt
to vrgnnize the people for health pro-
tection that Bus so fur been proposed,
Tailored Coats Have Plain,
Unbroken Back Linc—
Plaits Featured.
It hardly seems right to talk about
sults this spring. Even tallored suits
of men's wear material are made up of
coats and frocks. They are more than
suits. They are ensembles, In several
types, two-piece or three-piece, the
outer being generally a coat,
but sometimes a cape.
A New York correspondent of the
Canadian Drygoodsman says: Almost
without exception, coats of the en-
sembles By long I mean
hem of the dress, three
anywhere In be-
are hip
little
unlined kasha coats of this variety in
navy, rose or some other high
with white kasha skirts or
frocks for sports. Occaslonally there
i8 a young giri's tailored sult of tweed
or men's wear with a short
aarment
are
the
length or
The few
long.
short coats
I have seen
woolen
All have feature In
the backs are straight and
close to the figure, In the great ma-
jority of cases it Is a plain unbroken
line, However, there Is one ex-
long coats one
back
with a beit just across the back like
Coats of this de
up In
overcoat,
scription are made
These suits of strictly tallored mate-
game goods. short
scant,
They are cut
Step room Is given
center front, or there are
Plalts are one of the outstand-
ports Ensemble Has Washable Tai
lored Dress; Coat Lining Striped.
fresses have a single Inverted plait
i! the center front running up to the
jepth of a low waistline and ending
in sn arrowhead, a group of narrow
in ten inches of the bottom of the
skirt, or the plaits are at the side. In
latfer case, side plaits, Inverted
plaits or box plaits are stitched to
within ten Inches of the bottom.
Kasha and Printed Silk
A combination of materials
sxtensively featured
that Is
jesigns, These are used both
iresses and for ensemble sults.
They Get Their Names
Every one knows what a blanket Is
how many know that it got its
same from Thomas Blanket, a famous
dothier, who made blankets in Eng
and about the year 15407
And did you know that shawls first
were made for floor coverings? Sala
8 the Sanskrit word for floor, and that
8 where we get the name shawl,
Jandanna is from the Indian word
we, the cloth is tied into knots when
lipped into the dye, and this Is what
clouded effect seen In the
Foulard
was originally made for
only, and the name is
We have all heard the masculihe ex.
pression “to go down Into his jeans”
when what is meant Is that he pro-
juces the money, Now, the word
hans a still closer connection
with money. It (8s the name for a
Jenoese coin, and In selling eloth, It
was customary to say, “So much for
ne Jean.” That is how the name came
to he applied to the familiar coarse
woolen fabric used for men's clothing.
Momie, or mummy, a plain weave of
faxen or linen yarn, was originally the
winding sheet or shroud of Egyptian
wummified dead.
Tweed, that familiar, rough, unfin.
shed fabric of cotton and wool, usual
iy made of yarns of two or more
shades, is so called because It was
wiginally the product of weavers on
the banks of the river Tweed In Scot.
mad,
Many women have wondered just
ahat panne velvet really meant. The
word “panue™ Is simply the French
in Black and White
i
A ip . i a TN
FE 5 L ly #
rt Yr Rk
— ~~ fa R — — f — R — Dd
black-plaided white flannel, is worn
with a little hat of white felt.
At the moment there Is no
one of its varied tones
delicate tint like the
blossom to that deep
seen In the afterglow of an Al
sunset. In between,
pumber of
in any
flush
any lovely shades,
are put together the ef
fect is even smarter and wore becom
One of the loveliest
ribbon
the
blue
with touches o
full wide skirt
for
ribbon on
flower placed to emphasize
waist line of the
lone
ong
is of layers, sha
fuchsia
silver
Another tulle
the deep
There is a oat of
narrow edge
tone.
lace and nn
petti
{ K in chif Taft
deep uchsia
wr the sash
feta ribbon
is used f«
In knitted
tion of
becoming mu
outerwear the combina
woven and knitted fabrics le
and more
abr
re
marked,
4
8 used being
plaid and striped flannels
silks
Jersey Is
ribbed apd leather
of In
soc
assuming a place
and In
becoming a rival
This Is a
texture that
some
of the
very
is fast
wWenves
knitted
a woven fabric,
The two-plece
Chanel is
knitted wear,
vat collar, and
carefully reproduced. Even the redin
gote is attractive when wade of a knit
and does not seem in the
least out of place
are Increasing In importance, especial
ly when accompanied by a
SURRests
carried out in
front fullness, cra
smartly
the
word for plush. And the name is ap
plied to a wide range of satin-faced vel-
vets or silks that show a high luster
which has been produced by pressure
Pique is French for “quilting.” Orig
quilting. When used to designate our
familiar corded cloth the name is real
I¥ a misnomer. Chenille is French for
“caterpillar,” so that when applied to
the well-known cloth with the fuzzy,
fluffy face, the name Is most appropri
ate. Chenille Is used sometimes for
dress goods, but more generally for
curtains and table throws,
For Blond Heads
A pink hat for a blond head has
been a safe rule to follow for years
A famous milliner has followed it in
designing a large capeline hat of crin
with a wide, downturned brim of »
rose cyclamen tint, The brim is
trimmed with ribbon of the same hue
and a great chou of this ribbon Is
posed at on. side of the crown,
Bejeweled Turbans
What is more appropriate than jew.
eled embroidery on a gold turban?
That effectively describes one of the
new spring hats. The foundation is of
exquisite gold embroidery covered
with a lattice work of paste or semi
precious stones. The shape is abso
Intely round and very close fitting.
Boudoir Pillows
As charming as they are colorful
are tiny boudoir pillows of taffets
bound with linen tape In different col
ors. The tape forms conventional and
symmetrical designs.
”
a —
ALONG
LIFE’S TRAIL
hat hh RE ER Eh
By THOMAS ARKLE CLARX
Dean of Men, University of Illinois.
Ee
(Gu. 1020, Weslern Newspap®s Ukiut.)
MAKING GOOD
r IS to be
course that
good, whatever that nay roean,
us a matter of
should make
taken
eversone
commonly understood, making good ls
synonymous with having a
rather than a job. A man
with a position is pretty generally
recognized as making good, while a
rs even with & good job is
upon as not quite having arrived
i
practically
poxition
looked
Making good Is, te most people,
14
i
¥
pretty nearly the sarmce as making
money It seems to consist in dispos
whntever stock in trade a man bap
pens to be dealing in--—legal
automobile tires, bonds
liglous
ture of any
can
inspirations, or facts or
The more &
rid of the mo
sort
get re
ati
“1 tell you, Mahoney has made good
the last ten years,
not long ago,
“In wiuy? I
times skeptical In these wa
* Gordon sald to me
what asked, I'm some-
tiers and
ke to be shown,
“Oh,
marrie]
“'s
house, h
Just
bulit a fine
Held's daughter
oll rich down in
he's
und he's
struck Texas
Of
and occasionally a
wife, If
asset
rich
fine house [s
comfort; a
and fond of a
for one a soft
well In Texas so long
gushes properly is not so tad;
knew Maloney and 1 was not
‘onvinced
Course a an
she Is docile
fellow, feather
nest,
may
and an oll
Muhoney had
forts. He wis lazy thouzh
lucky
the town In which he lived
To my mind, Sutton, living in a com-
Fa 33
rable
s ‘
of the st
He had
more
little house at
eel, ¥ made good
had distinct!
unl with
married a seasible wife
than |
happy
thut were a
money w had
henithy,
girls
bios
BEG
and
group
that made it possible
& little money
for
every month,
ody in town He was
BOryed When he
sireet the clouds
walked
help
and disappear
“To whom woul
in fre
nsked
i you
ible or wanted
“T'o
FUess
8 ndvic
Gordon
“Why, no: 1
tild be the most likely
Mahoney?”
£34 Oorge
man,"
answered
HL answered
you're right.” 1
» Rutt
utton is making good.”
MY HOPE CHEST
when | came home yesterday put
things into the old oak ches
that my uncle Thomas left to
chest that had contained his persona
effects when be went round the wore
a handred years ago
salior,
She was filling It with linen things
pillow cases, and embroidered towels
and all sorts of such paraphernalia.
“What's the idea? 1 asked
“It's my hope chest.”
“Some day I'm going to get married
and I'l need all these things. You
never know what you're going to need
after you get married.”
she answered
“It’s the truth,” 1 admitted without
argument, for | have enjoyed the bliss
ful state of matrimony for a consider
able number of yerrs
Elizabeth Is sixteen, and of course
is well informed concerning marita
needs and exigencies.
“Men
of course youre not
“I'm not so certain™
think--1'm sure—now
I make
don’t have ‘em.” she sald “s
interested.”
I replied. “i
I remember, 1
use of it yet
“Tell me about it."
“Mine wasn't just like yours but if
was very useful to me after 1 got mar
ried, and before, too.” 1 explained.
Mother and father worried a good
denl-—-mother at night and father in
the day time, so that in times of mis
fortune they ran a pretty continuous
performance, 1 look like father and
have mother's temperamental charac
teristics, so | began life with a rather
gloomy outlook into the future,
Grandfather was different; he was
an optimistic soul, and he used to tel
me a number of things which ultimate
iy 1 packed away In my mind and
called my hope chest,
“Things are never as bad as you
think,” he used to say. It Is true
Troubles anticipated have always
seemed worse than when [ met the
thing face to face,
“There's always a way out” he
used to say. “Usually there are two
If you can't climb over the fence, If
you keep your eyes open you can usu
ally find a loose board where you car
slip under” I've kept my eye out for
the loose board, and I've pretty nearly
always found it when I felt too tirec
to climb over the fence.
“you'll need a good many things
when you get married,” I sald tc
Elizabeth, “besides towels and table
cloths and pillow cases. You'll get or
better If you start another chest like
mine.”
Elizabeth smiled asd winked her
eye
(185, Western Newspaper talon)
so SI
Are you dragging around, day after
day, with a dull, unceasing backache?
Are you lame in the morning, bothered
with headaches, dizziness and urinary
disorders? Feel tired, irritable and dis
couraged? Then there's surely some.
thing wrong, and likely it's kidney
weakness. Don’t neglect it! Get back
your health while you can. Use Doan's
Pills, a stimulant diuretic to the kid-
neys. Doan's have helped thousands,
and should help you. Abk your
neighbor!
. 2 a
A Virginia Case
Mrs. Franc
Utterback,
N Alfred
Alexandria,
ERYS ‘I was trou-
bled with back-
ache and when
caught cold,
chused a dull ach
10 come in
book I was
noyed with
aches and
tired
DOAN'S "i
STIMULANT DIURETIC TO THE KIDNEYS
Foster-Milburn Co., Mig. Chen. Buflalo, N.Y.
Old Books
Best Sellers
ELL-ANS
Hot water
ELL-ANS
254 AND 75¢ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
Electric Ferrying
Iwo electrically driven ferries tha
cross Ban Fraud bay from Ould
have curried In
—a 000 persons daily
total of 10.000.000, during
isco
230 days
These craft are the Harward
Run Leundro juipped
the
in 1922
su \ }
propulsion by
cglapany
vho have knows
Healthy Mothers
Paters “1
™
icT
3
comparatively
ways had fine
give Dr. Pierce's Fav
tion credit for strengthen
aiso while. benefiting n
Helen Specht, 194 Liberty
Send Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, }
for trial pkg tablets
a
RUZ
id .
for the Perfection of Your Complexion
Tule pure snow.wbite cream removes all ¢iseolorethons
beemiskes ches, pimples, ote, end « sof shin
pro renee? meer 14 ee At drag or Sept saves or by mall
SLEL Send for tree Beroty Dookiet. Ageats waning
C. WN, BERRY CO. ars Whetvigan Ave. CHICAGO
——————— tr —— i . a
”
: ee ¥
HOW TO GET RiD OF CATARRH
No matter how long you have suffered
from this dreadful and annoymg come
plaint, a speedy and effective relief
from your suffering is now oflered to
you in CAMPHOROLE, whose wonder.
ful results are realized at the very first
trial The most stubborn case will
guickly yield to CAMPHOROLE,
1 would like every sufferer from Ca-
tarrh in this city to try my CAMPHO-
ROLE, says Dr. Brigadell. Go to your
druggist and get a 3ic jar of my CAM.
PHOROLE, and if it falls to give imme-
dinte relief and i= not better than any.
thing you have ever used, return the jar
to your druggist, who is authorized to
refund your money. Once you have tried
CAMPHOROLE, you'll then realize how
good it is, not only for Catarrh of nose
and throat, but also for Asthma and
Bronchitis
At I Beware
All of
Druggists Substiteter
Dr. Brigadeil’s Camphorele, Attantic City, N. J,
no
INSECT
ged fe]d: