The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 11, 1932, Image 3

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    Mercelized Wax
Keeps Skin Young
as direoted. Fine particles of aged
im ot and dee all defects such as pimples, liver
spots, tan and freckles disappear. Skin is then sof$
wd velvety. Your face looks [oa younger, Mer
brings out the hidden beauty of your a Te
wrinkles use one ounce Powdered Saxolite
in cae-balf pint witch hasel. At drug stores,
=
Fighting Pheasant
Ring-necked pheasant cocks are no-
toriously good fighters, routing do-
mestic roosters and even cats, bul
the *“fighten'est” one of record Is
in Pepnsylvania, according to Nor
man Wood, of ¥*Coatesville, in that
state. This particular pheasant was
holding sway in a part of a field In
which it Is believed there was a
brood of chicks, A bull, followed by
cows, entered the cock's domain. The
pheasant, resenting this Intrusion,
proceeded to prove his right to the
title of “game” bird. Repeatediy he
flew against the cattle which, over
come by surprise, gave ground until
the herd, followed by the astonished
bull, made a hurried though dignified
retreat.— Exchange.
Mothers... Watch
Children’s COLDS
JMMON head colds often © settle’
in throat and chest where they
may become dangerous. Don’t take a
chance — at the first sniffle rub on
Children's Musterole once every hour
Jor five hours.
Children’s Musterole is just good old
Musterole, you have known so long, in
milder form.
This famous blend of of of mustard,
camphor, menthol and other ingre jients
brings relief naturally. Mustero ole gets
action becauseitis ascientific*‘countere
frritant’’—not just a salve—it penes
trates and stimulates blood circulation,
helps to draw out infection and pain.
Keep full strength Musterole on hand,
for adults and the milder— Children's
Musterole for little tors. All druggists,
CHILDREN'S
Preserve Historic House
A group of prominent citizens, or-
ganized as the Philadelphia Society
for the Preservation of Landmarks,
has bought the old Powell mansion,
The house was used as a gathering
place for the men who assembled in
Philadelphia during the formation of
the Republic. Washington is said to
bave attended many of the balls held
there,
Absolutely Voluntary
“Are you Mrs. Bitting?”
«Miss Bitting!”
“Oh, pardon me! My fault™
“Nothing of the sort. I want you
to know it's nobody's fault but my
own.”
DO YOU SUFFER FROM
WOMAN'S WEAKNESS?
Cumberland,
Md. —-~ Abo it two
years ago my en-
tire system was
very much rune
down. I had no
ambition, felt all
tired out and very
pervous, hardly
able to do my
work, Suffering “ se
from woman's weakness no doubt
caused this breakdown,” said Mrs. Ethel
Shoemaker of 233 Paca St. “Mother
urged me to take Dr, Pierce's Favor-
ite Prescription. I had taken only
half a bottle when I noticed a great
change, but kept on taking it until 1
was not only the picture of health
but also was in perfect health.”
Dr. Pierce's Prescription
ho ——————— —
“Time to Duck
“Hasn't that fellow
book?”
“Yes, and if you aren't careful he'll
give you a copy."—Loulsville Courler
Journal.
EINE
COMPOUND
For Coughs due to Colds, Minor
Bronchial and Throat irritations
JAS. BAILY & SON, Baltimore, Md,
rca
written a
And On and On!
“Do you ever read In bed?
“Not now. [I often lie awake and
fisten to a lecture, though.”"—Path:
finder Magazine,
Taking Her Literally
Mary-—What are you writing?
Jane—A joke,
Mary-—Send him my love,
It has to be pretty Important when
f majority of the people get mad
about it at the same time and vote
that way.
City men who yearn for the farm
hanker to live there, not to work
ascured by using the remedy
eipsd thousands of sufferers,
ts and $1.00 ut druggists,
' Sim nple Beauty
Marks Rebuilt
Tomb of Lincoln
Worthy of the Great
President.
RESIDENT HOOVER
transformed Abraliam
tomb at Springfield, Ill
dedicated a
Lincoln
June 17, last
When the monument over the
where the body he Civil war
ident rests i
again piigri
It is a place of simp!
ting a national shrine.
For menths it
lle while skilled artists
d rebuild
city and
onstruction was le
spol
Pres
was given
ms to the grave {
was close
It beauty, simp!
The ree pos
yI¥¥) nr
ip
nsse mbiy
Much the Same Outside.
Outwardly the monument appears
of freshness, In a terrace
of the monument there is a bronze
The great transformation is In the
Interior of the monument, Under per-
Architects, the previously unused and
unfinished area at the base of the
LINCOLN'S TOMB
All the solemnity and decorum befitting the
last resting place of America’s beloved Presie
ident has been exemplified in the redesigning
program.
monument was opened and architec.
tural skill and art combined to fabri
cate a rotunda connecting galleries
and sarcophagus chamber,
One of the main features of the gal
leries Joining the rotunda and the sare
cophagus chamber are nine Lincoln
statuettes of bronze depleting Lincoin
at various stages of his earcer. These
fire the handiwork of Internationally
famous sculptors,
At each of the four corners of the
central unit of the montiment there Is
one of these statuettes, about three
feet In height, resting on a pedestal In
a niche, Diagonally across from each
of these fs a statuette In a similar
ulche.
director of the sta
* works and buildings.
sculptors, Daniel CC
To Qerey and Leonard Crunel
I ted b ¥ two mod
lorado 1 aft, Ad loliph Welamon
late igustus St. Gaude
one,
As a background for these sintueit
there are rich, warm-colore
marble,
Supreme Effect in Chamber,
Beautiful as are the rotunda ar
salieries, the supreme
ns each has
irtion of each Jet
brotize wreath,
ing of the cham!
gold leaf, and
h unda, is lighted
lights hidden by an ornan
nice,
There over the spot where Line
lies beneath many feet of
crete has been placed a new sarcopl
agus of solid marble of warm red
On it is the simple Inscription:
“Abraham Lincoln,
1800-1865."
Directly above what formerly was
the north door, but now transformed
into a window covered with a wrought.
fron grill,
this famous tribute to the emancipa-
tor:
“Now He Belongs to the Ages”
Across from the sarcophagus in a
crypt sealed with slabs of marble rest
the bodies of Mrs, Lincoln and three of
their sons, Edward Baker, Willlam
Wallace and Thomas,
Flags Form Honor Guard.
Arranged along the semicircular
wall of the sarcophagus chamber,
flanking the sarcophagus, there is an
array of nine flags,
In the place of honor, at the right
of the sarcophagus, stands the Stars
and Stripes. The official standard of
the seven states in which the Lincoln
family lived from the time of their ar
rival in America until the end of the
emancipator's eareer— Massachusetts,
New Jersey, Virginia, Pennsylvania,
Kentucky, Indiana, Niinols—occups
the next seven positions
Président Hoover personally In
stalled the flag of the President of the
United States,
body
Looking at Lincoln
February 12 means Lincoln, On that
day we of this nation and many In oth
er nations honor the name which eon.
notes struggle, achievement, patience
under an avalanche of rebuffs and the
saving grace of humor brightening a
persistent upward fight for a great
ideal. AN these things shout *“Lin-
coin” when February 12 comes around,
———— —
His Great Task
Lincoln rose out of the soll and stain
of life In a Middle West community
to nttain the greatest heights, He held
the nation together until it was final iv
Joined In such a way that It will not
separate again. Exchange,
EH —
Fi
’
WW nen the victary shall be covrlete
wowhen there o'all be either »
tlave nor a drunksed on the eafih-wbow
proud the tithe of that land which may truly
cli'm to be the birthplace and the cradle
of both these revolutions that shall have
ended in that victory Abraham Lincoln,
—
F INEST OF
LUND Gino BR,
he) MOL RWOSE
fine
Old
Saint
By
MARY GRAHAM BONNER
it I ean do
She's all by herself
scent thing to
her wi
1 need any-
lephoned and
lidan't know
. ght it ba
been a sl t nd, nd not having
heard from you I th it I'd eall up
to see what had happened! [I'll come
up and see if I may. I wish I had
knoe you before, 1 might
oe bhoen ab ng.
But I'll come up today and see what
[ ean do for yoru Good. by
You
d only
yOu
were I
le to bring
Ig you somethl
am so rel
ne,
his is what thes
let her get up and make then
led around teatime
get them just the “sim-
id have had herself
(she n't have had any herself,
not feeling strong enough to get ith)
when they came around lunch time,
They let her make coffee and sand
They
They let her
ch she wou
rrrts}
would
And as they left, at different times,
each sald approximately the same, It
was this:
“Now don't do too much, dear. 1
much better now.
Oh-don't bother to thank me. It was
a pleasure to do what I could.”
Yes, she felt sadly disillusioned.
Life seemed to her a very sordid
proposition,
She remembered when she was pass
ing a jewelry shop one day. She had
geen a sign in the window:
“We furnish the license free to any-
one buying a wedding ring from us”
Fancy their baving such a sign!
And there must have been people who
had responded, or they wouldn't have
such an advertisement,
She could fancy the mortification
and embarrassment of having one's
prospective husband suggest such an
economy.
Alas, though, something had gone
Now, Valentine's day was ap-
proaching, and once more she knew
flowers to wear,
while all her other friends had them.
It had been hard. 1liness, and noth.
ing now to buck her up. She was
It was worse, she
felt sure, than being lonely and old,
Her mind went back to the days
when she was sixteen, There was
jeoffrey Pratt. They had talked of
thelr future together--but they were
both very young and Geoffrey had
gone away that next year. Khe had
never seen him since; it was over ten
years, To think of being able to
gpenk of something as having hap-
pened ten years before. It made her
feel go old,
Suddenly her mind was aroused
from these thoughts by a ring at the
bell,
Was she dreaming? Could it be
“Why-Geoffrey T° she stammered.
“In It you?"
“Such a question,” he laughed,
And then-<but why pry into those
precious moments of hers?
He had come back! In real life,
too, and clad in the armor of romance.
And tomorrow-8t, Valentine's day
they werd to be married. He had had
a dreadful time getting back for that
special day!
All Hearts
Good Saint Valentine
OVERS A wealth
cheery Hitle red hearts
and rampant cupids are
flaunting thelr charms from
shop windows to lure even
the wary into the endearing
ways of St. Val
And just what
men and their
Jow to
beware!
entine,
young
There's
Wr ar
pintive
chance have
sweethearts!
no telling when one of
5 eUIingE waen 0 5
ch home
AE RB sug: Num, sue
ind & lose
that there is
‘hs at the loving
nother's day. That
of hono
ich of How fi Dar pan
lccket, But while
their hal
ines come
r and while
and go, the
dresses and cut
fashions in valent
heart of the maid Is generally as sus
as that of the hoop-skirted lady gen
erations ago.
“What are those things?
lacy confections,
like one of them?”
Like them!
they were the very essence of the old
time valentines,
gate was visible a graceful lady In bil.
shaded in delicate lavender,
years ago.
gay there is nothing new about them.
They are imitations of the hand
wrought and fanciful expresgions com-
mon years ago.
AAR A A A A
TY TY YY YY
Little Old Lace
By WILLIAM HERSCHELL
FN
J
2
“
AAAS A AA
STOP RHEUMATIC
PAINS WITH HEAT
OF RED PEPPERS
Relieves Almost Instantly
Cood old Nature has put into red
peppers a marvelous therapeutic heat
that gets right down to the source of
trouble and almost instantly relieves
the pains and aches of rheumatism,
stiff joints, lumbago and neuritis,
Thousands have found it the one safe-
guard sgainst chest colds, too. Now
this genuine red peppers’ heat is cone
tained in an ointment that you just rub
on. In less than 3 minutes you feel re-
liet come. It is called Rowies Red
Pepper Rub, Safe. Will not burn or
sting. Getasmall jar from yourdruggist,
* From Bad to Worse
President Shantz, of
versity,
“When
the law ti!
go from bad to w
struction,
“It's like the boys and
*Two Tucson boys we
home a pit
“Oh, gosh,
as he wiped his
of his hand, ‘we've
Arizon
at a Tucson tea:
racketeers begin to break
't stop. They must
‘
Otherwise, de
a uni-
gaid
ey can
Orge,
the mig
re carrying
her of m
{oo miu
of it. What'll we
aid the bigger boy. ‘There's
We must
Free
A
arugd
MIL
ah
wt
ia Pr
ot
STOP YOUR COLD
IN 6 HOURS WITH
Breaks a cold in 6 hours.™
Drives it awey in 12 hours.
Relieves
Headlche—Neural gia Pains
Now easy to get
rid of Gray
Keep Hair Naturally Dark
Now without using dangerous dyes
you can darken gray hair paturally,
quickly restore its original shade by
the world's finest, safe way which is
now keeping millions of heads young
looking. Benefits the hair as it dark-
ens it to the shade you want. As sim-
ple as brushing. Try it. Pay druggist
75¢ for a large bottle of WYETH'S
SAGE & SULPHUR and just follow
Query
*A bachelor has nobody to share
his troubles.”
“Why should a bachelor have any
troubles?" asked the married man.—
Louisville Courier-Journal,
——
Keepsake?
*You admit tearing a handful of
hair from your husband's head?”
“I wanted to put It in a locket.”
Learning without thought is all
right if one Is to be a walking en-
cyclopedia,
A man may need a slogan to keep
from eating too much.
Why do the British drink tea?
What does it do to them?
SHAMPOO —- Teal for ee
rath Ei sHair Belson Meken the
hie soft and fuily, 60 cents by mei or at
Sista te. Hiscox inces. Chemical W Werks, 1" ‘uichagos, N.X.
Ww. N. U, BALTIMORE, NO, 6-1933