The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, December 13, 1928, Image 6

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    SAME PRESCRIPTION
HE WROTE IN 1892
|
When Dr. Caldwell started to practice
medicine, back in 1875, the needs for a
laxative were not as great as today.
People lived normal lives, ate plain,
wholesome food, and got plenty of fresh
air. But even that early there were
drastic physics and purges for the relief
of constipation which Dr. Caldwell did
not believe were good for human beings.
The prescription for constipation that
he used early in hia practice, and which
he put in drug stores in 1892 under the
name of Dr. Caldwell’'s Syrup Pepsin,
is a liquid vegetable remedy, intended
for women, children and elderly people,
and they need just such a mild, safe
bowel stimulant,
This prescription has proven its worth
and is now the largest selling liquid
laxative. It has won the confidence of
eople who needed it to get relief from
De biliousness, flatulence, indi-
estion, loss of appetite and sleep, bad
ay dyspepsia, colds, fevers. At your
druggist, or write “Syrup Pepsin”
Dept. BB, Monticello, Illinois, for free
trial bottle.
vf
cold
Historic Gas Plant
the ] t artificial
With
Into New
natural g
more than years
burning. DBefore the Civil
tended the fir
the old
books
sets.” sl
on gate, to discourage break
in
gus
Orleans, fires In the historic
piant
93
as ckered out after
of continuous
War sia
es In the gas hou
carried
corporation ried
{tem of $53.000 of
the
ives, The
for still
Will Cold Worry
You This Winter?
Some men throw-off a cold within &
few hours of contracting it. Anyone
can do it with the aid of a simple com-
pound which comes in tabl and
is no always
have about your-
self when you catch cold: u ‘ape’s
Men an
Cold Compound.
on this amazing little
SWings place,
orm
trouble to tal
you. Don't
i women
everywhere rely
tablet. — Ady
Practical Proposition
When i
Aileen I p
of despair.
Her Father—Huoh!
practical and profitable job
ing and I'll let you have her.—
Transcript.
No man 1s a good fiancler
he likes that sort of thing.
Suitor
am from
umb the uttermost depths
away
Get
unless
never asked anyone for a job.
Lots of folks who think they have
“Indigestion” have only an acid condi:
tion which could be corrected in five
or ten minutes. An effective anti-acid
like Phillips Milk of Magnesia soon
restores digestion to normal,
Phillips does away with all that
sourness and gas right after meals, It
prevents the distress so apt to occur
two hours after eating, What a pleas
ant preparation to take! And how
good it is for the system! Unlike a
burning dose of soda-—which Is but
temporary rellef at best—Phillips
Milk of Magnesia neutralizes many
times its volume in acid.
Next time a hearty meal, or too rich
a diet has brought on the least dis
comfort, try—
[PHILLIPS
ur Milk
THE
LOVELY
LADY
Be SOuOTE Ccaoataosea0oss
(@by D. J. Walah.y ©
ADGE MEREDITH ecnlled
him up that morning on the
telephone,
“Come
of bridge, Guy,
Miss Angell. She's perfectly
lovely. You'll fall in love with her,
I know. ['m simply crazy ubout her,
Mother first met her at the Woman's
club in Delfield, and she hasn't rest
ed till she got her here to make us 8
little visit. You'll
“Sure, I'll come, Madge, And thank
you for the chance to meet the lovels
' Guy Holding ‘laughed
tonight for a
and meet our
over
game
guest,
come?"
as he
Then he went back to his desk
he was doing.
Madge
liked him
{Oo
should
anhout
think
cnme
He even forgot
he had to
a good deal and who
ideal of what a
woman he
likely
whom reason
being his
than
had ever met or was, perhaps,
meet.
He lunched
rather
be any
downtown
late to dinner,
entered his
and went
remem
bering as he mother's
His
was plump,
but a
often
met him in the hall
gray-haired and fad
for all that
He adored his
worshiped him. Her
to much,
satisfactory
mother
nice in
told her.
And she
hadn't
her son
after
ciate
Won us
Guy
mother,
amounted
was entirely
of the family
but for
was ter
Holding suf
account
nt
elderly,
took her slide
when It
all his
ribly Ingenuous,
to go-getting,
business acumen he
Mrs,
on that
dinner
but a
Guy's soup be
and
boy ish
Calia waited them
Calln was
mald,
upon
colored and
She sot
mil 1
he smiled
ih
like a i
out
CAress,
her of frank, brown
eves,
“Going out this evening, dear?
so. 1 am. Mi
His mother smiled
“I'd rather planned to take
see a play, but if don't m
till "
rather glad
of your
“That's asked
me.”
ge
in a pleased
yon
to you ina
night—
I've a whole
SOCKS mend *
tomorrow
“I'm
basketful
Mrs. Holding
“You best
her n
blew
got
to
said.
blew
nnd she
n. After that
of mothers!” Guy
kiss across the table
him
roast fowl w
terdny tasted
Guy w
the
one back aga!
armed up from yes
ever so delicious
alked down the moonlit street
denuded maples
at
nhout
under to the
., which was the ex
je thought
what
house
treme end seeing
Madge and wondered
be wearing. No t
it would be
Madge met hi
had on a |
little cox
trimmed with a
she would
matter what ft
sure to be the right thing
was
m at the door She
oa-colored rock
bands of skunk
her fre
few
to
coloring
to be overwhelme
he ald aside
Angell
“Now prepare
she bade him as
coat, “Miss
ly."
“So are you."
noting the
He laughed
that rose
color
Mrs. Meredith
room with the
deep winged chair by the fireside
a word there rose out of that
chair the beautiful woman
tiving
in a
At
winged
Guy
the
sat
in
who
was
guest
most
seen,
She was tall, slender, yet exquis
bone or muscle in her white arms and
shoulders, Her hair had the ashen
gleam of white gold, her face was na
Khe
wore a gown like a bit of dawn-rose
lavender and silver, and when
but he
just
Guy tried not to stare,
look his fill
Madge brought
her, And when
the card table
he was
at
out
Jefore the eveni
victim to
£ was over he had
that glamor which
And all night he lay
He was not himself next day, Tha
afterncon he got leave from his boss
and took Miss Angell for a ride in his
The folluwing day he sent her a
He had one
more glimpse of her as she took the
How was he going to live without
her? No, rather how could he keep
on seeing her, wooing her until he
could break down every barrier and
make ber his? He moved as one in
a dream, and when he ate his Lady's
Delight--the marvelous dessert which
it took both his mother and Calla to
achieve—as If It were sawdust he
could no longer conceal the state of
his feelings,
“What's gone wrong with Madge?”
Mrs. Holding asked. “She looks so
wan, Are you going over there as
much as usual, dear?”
“l haven't seen Madge In
weeks,” Guy replied unthinkingly.
“She was here today,” Mrs, Hold
ing ventured. “I thought maybe you'd
ask her and me to go somewhere to
night 7"
“Oh, all right.” Guy accepted the
proposal patiently. un
two
[ Between acts he tried to find out
from Madge something about Miss
Angell,
“She wrote the nleest bread-and-but-
ter letter! She has asked the to vis.
It her,” Madge said,
Madge was going to visit her! That
made Madge Interesting, and he
turned his attention to her.
Another week passed, He had sent
flowers to Miss Angell and had re-
celved a creamy-tinted note from her
~C00l and sweet as parfait, It wasn't
much, but—it Then
he did a bold thing, He went to sde
her-hut wits not at and
he came away uncomforted save for
a sight of the old pillared house and
the sharp-eyed who had an
wis something,
she home,
servant
swered his ring.
Now the awful desire for sympathy
him that his
got out on
and slippers and
room in the dead of
by the faint. golden-
told her all that was
so controlled
He
lounging
Into
There
tight
his heart,
Mrs. Holding up
the extra b about
ders, She hn een from
a peacefyl sleep old
frumpish with cold cream on her face
and her gray hair on
he sought
mother, of bed, put
his robe
went
night,
shaded
in
her
he
with
hed
her
in
shoul
]
and she looked
skewered curt
ers,
“I'm
dear,”
this,
she of
what had
to wait until you were ready to give
your ‘nee, Guy, you
you, don't you?
s0 glad yon me
known,
was going on, but I
suid,
course,
confidg
I tell
have never found me lving to
using the sligl t subterfuge
“en
he
You
You or
me
lieve what
ever, moth
“Then,
shall
is |
give
you
ergell
Bil
“She's not going
Guy leaped
“Oh, dear,
to marr) : woul ve done
lovers
when |
0 your father moet
al-
al-
qanewmber
go
She
You I've
ways known was
ways pretty as deture, bot
inherited all that m and took
that course at a beauty institute
ginee
she Oney
“Mother! hat are you saying?
“I'm
son, tha Bn J i
you, my dear
exactly
inoked
seeped In
“You
“Dear!
Steel Industry Born
in Old
aweson
ve YALE 00 03 Lie
The
Wore
Sid "HL ron is
industries us
their beginning s ar ns
concerned the banks of the Sau
giver in
“Yeo Comg ins
Iron Works”
to £5,000, there began the manufac
ture of iron in 1G42 in the low
meadows near where the city of Lynn
now to be
fron ore
furnished
power,
fron works continued operate
cessfully until the ate 1600's
When one “Thomas Hudson of Lyn’
sold his land cot
pany it was agreed that he would be
given the first casting it produced.
This was a small but heavy iron pot
poured directly from the furnace with
out first becoming pig fron. Thomas
Hudson treasured this and handed It
down to his descendants. Two hun
dred and fifty years later it was pre
sented by one of these descendants
to Lynn's public library, where, in-
closed In glass, all may view it.—De-
troit News,
on
gus Massachusett
with capital
stands there were
the water
first
suc
river, and
by
} America's
fo0, There
fo
to this fron works
Pointed Suggestion
An old farmer, who was attending
self as he read the subjects on the
program. “See here, parson,” he said
to his pastor, “you've had papers and
discussions all day on how to get peo-
ple to attend church. [I've never heard
a single address, at a farmers’ conven
tion, on how to get cattle to come to
the rack, We put all our time on the
vest kind of feed. 1 sort of have a
notion that if you put more time on
discussing what to put In the rack,
you wouldn't have to spend all that
time discussing how to get your folk
to attend church.,”-—Montreal Family
Herald,
Ancient Saperstitions
Coins worn as pendants or amulets
were common in the anclent world, be-
cause of their likeness to the moon;
and It is probable that medallions, and
hence medals, were originally circular
for the purpose of Introducing the
lunar element and thereby counteract.
ing the blighting effects of admiration
or envy. Spitting is mentioned by
many anclent authors as a protection
against the evil eye, and this explains
the custom of spitting on a colin,
which is still widely practiced.
|
Dame Fashion
Smiles
By Grace Jewett Austin
Dame Fashion happened 40 hear the
phrase the other day, “There Is a non
chanlant
That
seen a
before,
cont,’
word
times
wis n
few
of Course,
but never adopted
in her vocabulary
In such times, the
only
Father
Webster
word
strong a
the first
to call on
Noah
The
good
has =n
cent on
syllable
Grace J. Austin, : ’
defined
of feeling,
indifferent, ef
Dame axl
Mr Mal:
ow the
she
In warmth
interest ;
At first
mu
enthus
ireless,”
lon thought that
prop, the speak
WIong wi
looked
scores and of th
none “lacked
"10 Say “warmth.”
the user of
adopted the single
#8" and had
grace of the
never sen
inally she
word bad
neanine
meaning
decided
Just
“carele
8%
the
applied It
to the e: wrap-around
cont ;
with exactly
me closed on the cold and
when
flanninge
Hi
ying OH n
wore
! 8 become
For did
: rimmer
While if
aver
capering
anyone
“look and
fret
look in
we
might Cross
several
once
that Dame Fash
be
Ff lire 5}
OF Hite w He sins o
felt
sri ingg
on
becomin B
Those Frenchy dresses with
it the wrist, 3
worn a
were always
verily
sheep into thinkl
her lost
from fleece,
have a ‘cravat
ino, to take along on the }
w]
its woodsy
for my grande
knows that a man's
is made of well. wearin
travel continued.
will
hes
For
good ¢
mater
with to
over iildren
everybody
avat
(iE 1928, Wostern Newspaper Union.)
Stepped Plaits Used
in Schoolgirl Frock
Plaits appear In practically all
school frocks but chic distinctive
plaits are something else again. The
Woman's Home Companion fashion ex.
pert gets an inspiration for plaits in
step formation direct from Paris which
gives to a simple dress a distinctly
individual touch. You'll note, too, that
the neckline has decided merit. While
it ignores the usual collar so apt to
wrinkle under winter coats it is cut
high enough both back and front to
give ample protection. At the same
time it affords the chance for a smart
side closing. Especially appropriate
for this frock are the light.weight
woolens which have come to us this
season In a great variety of colors,
RES
Two Used Flour Bags
Will Make Bedspread
What kind of a bedspread is on your
little girl's bed—a plain tin
white
or a one,
with Mother Goose characters walking
it, which
pillow fights
, unintere 3
one, ensily
fascinnting checkerboard
about on
of
will
and
fund
hard
attractive spread shown here
made for a dollar or even les
little work in it, in
its efMectiveness,
can be
und has very
to
used flour bags, a
checked
yard and a hal
gingham and a few
embroidery the only mate
skeins
cotton are
rials required.
The flour
had from the baker
Pull out the
remove the
tO
bugs are
for a
uplece
then
wny
stitehl
The
the
chain
stamping,
Lest
1 } fa t
do this Is 10 soak
t
rd and let it stand
he bags out
in lukewarm
of
Flour Bag Bedspreads
Goose Characters.
these
work one
read may not be ma
#
me way for adults
Dry Skim Milk Is Found
Good Addition to Bread
- 1 i taken a har
PAN making
i
|
i
i
on His STOMACH
A HUNDRED years
ago Napoleon said:
“An army marches
on its stomach.”
Today it is also true
that a man works
on his stomach!
Your stomach must
be regular if you,
are to work al your.
highest efficiency. You can make
it so with PE-RU-NA—for
over half a century the World's
Greatest Stomach Remedy, PE-
RU-NA tones thestomach, and re-
moves that congested, _catarrhal
feeling which adds years to your
age and robs you of your vitality.
Your druggist has PE-RU-NA—buy a
bottle of this famous remedy and begin
tw enjoy its beneficial effects today!
MADE HHANFORD'S * 1
Balsam of Myrrh
1846
IT MUST BE GOOD
Try it for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, etc.
All dealers are sutborized to refund your mosey for the
frrst bottle if not suited.
a
Hig
Do Away With Fogs
made
Mr avi
beens
prouiem
f the t
was.
solution o© S69 TOS
no nearer than it ever
le with
sci
the
en
workers, th
of
nilk solids he defic
of the
nodern processes
ig defect.
A scholarly exposition of the new
of bread was in London
recently before the World's Dairy cone
gresg, by Dr. HL. E. Van Norman,
ternationally known dairy expert
Chicago.
“By supplementing of
wheat and other ingredients In
bread with those of milk, we are pro-
ducing a bread that perfectly meets
the nutritional requirements of the
body,” sald Prof. Van Norman. “Dry
skim milk is ideal for use in bakery
goods, not only adding to the nourish-
ing qualities but also improving their
every characteristic, such as color,
flavor and texture.” Many of the bet.
ter American bakeries, he sald, are
now baking this new type of bread.
“Science knows of no simpler,
cheaper or more effective way to
improve the quality of bread than to
introduce milk solids into its compo
sition. The proteins of the milk build
strong muscies, the milk sugar not
only supplies energy but also favors
the growth of helpful bacteria in the
intestinal tract, and the milk minerals
furnish material for strong bones and
teeth and aid in all bodily processes.
Children need these important ele-
ments to promote growth and parents
need them to help the system make
repairs. Bread made with nonfat milk
solids brings an abundance of food
essentials needed by the body.”
Figured Velvet Has
Great Vogue in Paris
Figured velvets remain in good fa.
vor In Paris. Some of them look as it
varicolored snow had fallen thickly
on them, Tiny dots of every rainbow
shade are sprinkled over a back-
ground of brown or blue.
The fact that figured fabrics are still
smart is just another surprise of fash-
fon. One would think, after a sum-
mer when every daughter of Eve ar
rayed herself in flowers and land
scapes, modernistic triangles and other
figures, that soft, plain surfaces would
be preferred. But figured velvet has
a great vogue.
make up
cies wheat elements lost In
type made
in
of
the elements
the
to Trailer of Moose
y
ides In the Canadian
from
big
the Mi
nine
uping
which
and
Lited ITOORe
3
thel presence
1 away.
rk but led
in the direction in
ippeared. All day
and gt night
gram repeated
+ thiré day,
nade no rema
} party
ia
we
than 8a
ng are
shrugged his shoulders,
two weeks, maybe two
Memory Test
thee.
about
the trip
first sues
her name,
tha mether
ear and said: “Think of
ear and the last part of your
name ‘hart’.” Nothing more was said
until the next day. To test Shirley
Jean's memory the mother took hold
of her ear and sald: “Who was the
lady that flew across the Atlantie?”
Jean responded, “Earache
elling her
or, Shirley Jean
fiver who made
Atlan Her
“What was
answering,
1
BOrOSS tic.
mother? In
touched her
your
Shirley
Don't think for a minute that mae
wants but little here below.
San
Grandmother Knew
there was nothing so good for conges-
gh pos + my mustard. But the
Sid fasiioned mustard plaster burned
blistered, J
Musterole gives the relief and help
that mustard plasters gave, without
the plaster and without the blister.
Gently rub itin. See how quickly the
pain disa
Try Mausterole for sore eros,
bronchitis, tonsillitis, croup,
neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache,
pleurisy, rheumatism,
lumbago, pains and aches of the back
or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises,
chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the
chest (it may prevent poeumonia)
& Tubes