The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 10, 1935, Image 7

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    GUARD AGAINST FLEAS
Fleas will breed In carpets, cracks
in the floor or any other suitab.e
place where the eggs may drop. It
takes only 17 days from the time an
egg Is lald to produce a flea In good
biting conditlen., The Insects are
renowned in scientific clrcles as the
carrier of many diseases. The dog
flea sometimes carries eggs of a
tapeworm, which when swallowed
causes worms In dogs. Occasionally
tapeworms in children are caused
by dog fleas accidentally getting into
the mouths of the children
To guard against flea Infestation
of dwellings animal pets should be
frequently dusted with any Insect
powder made from dried pyrethrum
flowers. This Is harmless to ani-
mals and human beings, If a house
becomes infested the rugs, cracks In
floor and other likely breeding places
should be sprayed thoroughly with
any of the liquid spray Insecticides.
“i
yi
SIMPLE SIMON
MET A PIEMAN
AND ORDERED THREE OR FOUR;
HE NOW EATS TUMS
WHEN HEARTBURN COMES . , .
DON'T SUFFER ANY MORE!
Stop SAYING “NO”
TO FAVORITE FOODS
Ir isn't only pie that disagrees with some
people. Many say that even milk fives them
a gassy stomach. The very best foods may
bring on acid indigestion, sour stomach, gas,
heartburn. Millions have found that Tums
quickly relieve acid indigestion. Munch 3 or 4
after meals or whenever smoking, hasty eating,
hut sight’s party, of some other cause
on indigestion. Tums contain no harsh
alkalies, which physicians have said may in-
crease the tendency toward acid indigestion.
Instead an antacid which neutralizes stomach
acid, but never over-alkalizes the stomach or
blood. You'll like their minty taste. Only 10c.
FOR THE TUMMY
FREE: This week-—at your druggist’ s— Beate
® titul 5 Color 1935-1936 Calendar There
mometer with jks purchase of a 100 roll of Tums
or a 25¢ box of MR All Vegetable Latative.)
PARKER'S |
; HAIR BALSAM
Basrtwt Eendrott
a
(74 Mineo Chem. Wis, P
: 1 shogus N.Y,
FLORESTON SHAMPOO = Ideal for use in
connectionwith Parker's Hair Baleam Makes the
Lair soft and fluffy. 80 cents by mail or at dru
gists, Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N, 2
-T,
Ville
MOSQUITOES
FLIES-SPIDERS
and
OTHER
INSECTS
BEST
8Y 10.000
us
REFUSE
SERN
Many Churches in London
Greater London now has a church
to every 1.810 persons,
Quick, Complete
Pleasant
ELIMINATION
Let's be frank. There's only one way for
your body to rid itself of the waste mat.
ters that cause acidity, gas, headaches,
bloated feelings and a dozen other dis.
comforts your intestines must function,
To make them move quickly, pleas
antly, completely, without griping.
Thousa of physicians recommend
Milnesia Wafers, (Dentists recommend
Milnesia wafers as an efficient remedy
for mouth acidity).
These mint flavored candy-like wafers
are pure milk of magnesia. Each wafer
is approximately al to a full adult
dose of liquid milk of magnesia. Chewed
thoroughly in accordance with the direc.
tionson the bottle or tin, then swallowed,
they correct acidity, bad breath, flatu.
lence, at their source and at the same
time enable quick, complete, pleas-
ant elimination,
Milnosia Wafers come in bottles of 20
and 48 wafers, at 35¢c and 60c respec-
tively, or in convenient tins containing
12 at 20c. Each wafer is approximatel
an adult dose of milk of ma esia. All
g stores carry using
delicious, effective wafers today.
SELECT PRODUCTS,
4402 23rd St, Long foiand orang
MILNESIA
y
sill
wl WAFERS
vl
When In NEW YORK Live
OTEL EDISON
NEWEST or "
FLOYD GIBBONS
Adventurers’ Club
“Ironing Day Blues”
By FLOYD GIBBONS
Famous Headline Hunter,
HAKE hands, fellow adventurers, with a new member—Mrs. Mary
Elizabeth Meyer, who, like a good many other adventurers,
doesn’t believe it is necessary to travel great distances and penetrate
vast wildernesses to find excitement.
As a matter of fact, all Mary has to do when she 18 In the mood for a lit-
tle excitement Is to walk upstairs and take a look at that closet door—the one
that let her in for a lot of grief one Tuesday morning not so many years ago.
One squint at that door and memory brings back to Mary all the excitement
her system happens to crave at the moment. There's a story back of that, lads
and lassles—a story I know you'll all want to hear. And here is Mary herself
to tell it to you,
Tuesday, all over the country is ironing day, and that, among other
things, is what Mary was doing when old man Adventure caught up
with her. She had piled up a good-sized stack of neatly ironed linen
by lunch time, and then stopped to put a few things on the stove for
the mid-day meal. While lunch was cooking, she had a minute or two
to spare, and picked up the stack of already ironed linen, to carry it
upstairs to the linen closet.
The load was a heavy one and Mary was tired. Her feet dragged as she
climbed the stairs to the second floor landing, and she had trouble lifting the
bundle up to the shelf, As she raised it over her head, she lost her balance,
Her hand, reaching out to steady herself, hit the closet door and slammed it
shut.
Mary Finds Herself Locked In.
Mary finished placing the bundle on the shelf and turned to go. She reached
for the door-knob—and her hand slid along a smooth surface. Funny about
things like that. You can live In a place for years, and then run across seme-
thing In it that you never noticed before. In all the time Mary had been in that
house, she had never discovered that there was no door-knob on the inside of
that closet.
How to get out. That was the question. She was locked In a closet whose
latch worked only from the outside, She pushed and hammered with all her
might, but the door was too strong for her. It began to look as If she'd be
there the rest of the afternoon, for none of her family was expected home before
night,
Mary took off her shoe and began pounding the lock with her heel,
but beside putting a few dents in the heel, she accomplished nothing.
Then her little dog, attracted by the noise, began barking outside the
door. For a few moments he continued his howling, and Mary could
hear him jumping against the door. Then he ran away, to continue
his racket in another part of the house. He did that several times,
and then, to Mary's nostrils, came the acrid smell of smoke,
All at once there came to her an appalling explanation of her little dog's
antics. The house must be afire, and the little fellow as trying to warn her
of her danger. Locked in that closet Mary would b® burned to a cinder before
anyone came to her rescue, and the thought almost threw her into a it of
hysterics,
Dog Tries Desperately to Help.
Her little dog was back at the door again.
and was sniffing at the floor near the lower part
Mary an idea,
He had stopped barking
That gave
She got down on her knees and ran her fingers along the bottom
of the door. There was a crack almost an inch wide bets een the door and the
floor. If she had something solid to fit into that crack,
Jimmy t
now,
of the closet door.
she might be able to
he lock.
Her heart pounding, and her hands cold as ice, she began searching
the closet for some hard object that might be pressed into service as an
emergency jimmy. It was pitch dark in that cupboard, and although
she was pretty certain that there was nothing but linen and bedding on
the shelves, she examined every inch of them with her groping fingers.
She was about to give up when she thought of the floor, and, getting
down on her knees again, she began feeling about.
Suddenly her roving band came in contact with something hard and cold.
was an old-fashioned bathtub seat—the kind that
over the tub. Mary fished it out, worked one end into the crack
under the door, and gave a heave at the other end
Quick Thinking Saves Mary From Cremation.
he bathtub seat held—but so did the door. Mary threw all her strength
into it and gave another heave. This time she was rew irded with a crackling
sound, as the wood split around the lock. In another second she had the door
open again,
The upper floor was filled with smoke. Mary dashed down the
stairs and halted in the kitchen. No-—the house wasn't afire. But the
food Mary had put on the stove was just about burned to a crisp. It
was that burning food that had produced the smoke and also excited
her little dog, to say nothing of the way it had excited Mary,
There's a yarn for you—an adventure that might have happened to any- |
body who has a home with a closet In it. There are hundreds of adventures
Juct like that, happening to people every day,
Br~WNU Service
It
had iron lugs which fitted
rim of the
Japan Serves Full Meal { the “Leyden jar”
Before Tea Is Offered |
In its early days the teabush was
called cha and In early English writ
ings is referred to variously as cha.
tcha and chaw and later is called tay
and tee. Oddly enough, states a wrirer
in Pathfinder Magazine, the tea shrub
belongs to the plant family known as
theaceae. From the name cha is als
derived chanoyu, the Japanese word
for a time honored institution, the tea
ceremony, rooted in the principles of
the Buddhist sect, Zen, and founded on
admiration of the beautiful In daily
life such as cooking, ete, This cere
mony takes place in the chaseki (tea
room) which Is usually about nine feer
square, or smaller, to suggest gentee!
poverty to the guest although no ex.
pense Is spared In the interior. Each
guest crawls Info the room through a
small door about three feet square and
finds an alcove filled with expensive
ornaments and a fireplace for steeping
tea sunk into the floor.
According to the rules of best Jap
anese etiquette a full meal is served
before the pouring and drinking of the
tea. This custom was founded under
This was a glass |
vessel, with Inside and outside coat |
ings of lead, by means of which a
charge of electricity from a frictional
machine could be accumulated and
later released by making a connection
between the two coatings
Chinese Wall, Engineering Feat
Tradition says more than a million |
men worked 12 years to build the great
wall in China that winds Its way west. |
ward from the sea, over hill and dale, |
mountain and valley, twisting and |
turning, with high defense towers at |
distances of 150 to 200 yards along |
the entire way-—a barrier against the |
warlike Tartar hordes that attacked |
again and again throughout the years, |
As a feat of huge engineering achieve
ment it stands unsurpassed, and it has |
stood more than 2.200 yéars, for it was |
built in the Third century B. C. Its |
top is paved with granite blocks, about |
12 by 4 by 3 inches, and could serve |
as 8 parade ground today. i
Organized Crime Old
Organized crime is not new. Fifty
years ago Chicago had several hun
dred pickpockets, few of whom ever
spent a day in Jail in a decade because
they were never caught with the loot,
having passed it to a confederate.
Each telephoned his attorney ‘every
hour. Fallure to do so meant he was
arrested, and his lawyer would im
mediately appear with a writ of habe.
as corpus and obtain his release, some.
times as often as three times a day.—
Collier's Weekly, .
dle of the Fifteenth century and still
The Leyden Jar
Various forms of machines were de.
electrification by means of friction. In
1709, Francis Hauksbee mounted a
that It could be rotated at high speed,
Friction was produced by holding the
palm of the hand on the spinning
globe. Such devices produced an elec
trie charge of considerable strength
which was, however, available only
when the machines were In operation.
About 1745, Ewald George von Kleist
and Pieter van Musschenbroek, work
ing independently, performed experi
ments which led to the Invention of
The Mexican Flag
The ensign of Mexico is a tricolor
of green, white and red, with the arms
of the country Imposed upon the white
section. The arma originated with the
legend that the Aztecs could not settle
until they found an eagle with a green
serpent in Its beak, standing on a cae
lus Vian situated on an island fm 4
e.
HALL, PA.
Unique Scratch
Pad for Kitchen
By GRANDMOTHER CLARK
It can’t be helped If there 's mon
key business afoot here, This little
fellow mukes It his business to keep
a record of your household wants on
the little pad be Is holding. This
memo fad banger measures about
8 by 10 inches when finished.
Package No. AT contains the
stamped and tinted unbleached mus
lin and the paper scratch pad, ready
to be outlined, also directions how to
make it up. Thread and binding are
not Included. Sent postpald for 15
cents,
Address Home Craft Co. Dept
Nipeteenth and St. Louls Ave,
Louls, Mo, Enclose stamped
dressed envelope for reply
writing for any Information.
A,
St.
ad
when
Sparrows Save Man's Life
Sparrows have saved the ute of a
man who long befriended them at
Galbrunn, Austria. Franze Oberhu-
ber, seventy-five years old,
ant and a bachelor, made It a8 habit
every morning during 20 years to
feed from his window SPATrTOWS
that came regularly
their meal Unie
dow was
food for them.
several
attention
the
unconscious
the
in
morning
and
the
was
win
closed there nd
of neighbors,
and found the old
in bed. He had
fallen seriously Ill during the night
and had nobody to help him,
house
his
Overlook Little Things
not the
you. Remember that If yon
have made big
big in life
made large enough to overlook little
things. John T. Moore.
Let littleness of pl
disturb
been to do
this
Lal
enough
zs , you have been
Storage Solves Problem
of Surplus for Gardeners
the average gardener
has a surplus problem. His garden
normally produces more vegetables
during the summer than be and his
family ean consume,
This surplus—of little value in the
summer-—-can be used during the
winter In preparing a variety of
tasty and wholesome dishes if the
extra vegetables are properly stored
in cellars, attics, or other suitable
places, Storing of vegetables
lightens the annual eanning
ots, late carrots, cel
ery, onions, parsnips, potatoes, sweet
pumpking, squash
in their
Each year
cabbage,
potatoes. salsify,
and turnips may
natural eondition
kinds, including
dried stored,
A half-acre according
horticulturists of United
Department of Agriculture,
properly cared
vegetables for
the average family.
Cellars containing a furtace
be stored
the limas, may
and
garden,
the
will,
year-around use
usu
ing root crops. but a room be
may
of the cellar and
trolled by means of
Outdoor may
low
outside windows
cellars be built
Cost,
Pleasures of Literature
oN —_——
RADIO ALARM FOR HOMES
A new Invention Ig 8 radio alarm
system for houses, that, when turned
Ooms at night creates a sensitive eleo
trienl zone around the exterior of the
dwelling, several feet deep When
an intrader Steps into this “field” =
circuit breaks, the alarm sounds,
and floodlights brightly Hinminate
the walls and yards, Users fearing
that thelr power lines might be cut
can connect the device to a storage
battery,
PLYMOU
[13704 Automosites
*4, 750% in Awards for
FUR Shippers
who prepare thelr pelts carefully and pare
ticipate in Bears Tth National Pur Show.
You don't even have 10 sell your furs
through Sears. FREE new Tips to Trappers
book tells how you may share in swsrds,
Also bow Sears act as Fou agent, getting
ou highest value we be
leve obtainable Jor [ou
furs. Mall coupon
RE A El,
J Mail to point
below nearest to yous
SEARS, ROEBUCK and CO,
Chicago—Philadel
Dallas— Kansas City—Sesttie
Floase mall me, without cost or obligation, fur
shipping tags and latest edition of “Tips te
Trappers.”
unless you possess a 1)
brary.
if rightly chosen.—John Morley.
A ——— ~~ 1 = =". a
10
is
A full
ounce can for 100
ounce can for 1§e
BY OUR
{ OH, MOTHER...
PVE BEEN
CHOSEN FOR THE
HEAR THE
ENDOF IT!
TRE DOCTOR !
COME ON~LET
J
WHAT ARE THEY
TRYING 0 DO..
GNE HER AN
EDUCATION
if WHY CAN'T
| EDITH BE W |
| THE PLAY 2 |
I TINK IT
ORs
HL vou WORK 25
i 0? LONG AS THE
COSTUMES — I
Sana KiD HAS A,
LE
2
<7
7 2 8
oF
MRS. BARCLAY
-
A Bi6 MISTAKE!
PON'T LET
HM BULLY
you J
CAUSING YOUR
TROUBLE.
of Postum free!
a
o week's supply
Street.