The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 27, 1938, Image 3

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    “Uncle Phil “
Says: =
Too Few Map Out
If a young man maps out a ca-
reer he generally achieves it.
An ounce of persuasion is better
than a pound of compulsion,
Money talks pretty conclusively
at times, but occasionally it gets
rattled.
Because He Fails to Marry
From a bachelor's viewpoint
marriage is a failure.
Contentment has one advantage
over wealth; people don't try to
borrow it from you.
often fatal to friendship.
Leaders That Follow
cause they follow the fashion.
forget, but it
than our enemies.
YOU SHOULD
KNOW
IF YOU TAKE ASPIRIN TO
RELIEVE HEADACHE OR
RHEUMATIC PAIN
DropaBayerTablet
in water—it starts
to disintegrate in
2 seconds— hence
is ready to “go to
7
:
This Quick Dissolving Property
Explains Fast Relief Thousands
Get with Bayer Aspirin
If you suffer with headaches or the
pains of rheumatism or neuritis,
keep the above picture about gen-
uine Bayer Aspirin in your mind.
Especially if quick relief is what
you want.
For the way a Bayer Tablet works
in the glass is the way it works when
you take it. It starts to dissolve al-
most at once — hence is ready to
“take hold” of the rheumatic pain
or headache with astonishing speed.
Relief often comes in a few minutes.
Always ask for
“BAYER Aspirin”
-~never ask for
“aspirin” alone.
c ny
Ps orsvasiens
2 FULL DOZEN 25¢
Revenue From Autos
It is estimated that 15 per cent
of all government tax revenue, lo-
cal, state and national, is contrib-
uted by car owners.
m elief for
Here Is azing
Conditions Due to Sluggish Bowels
If you think all laxatives
So mild, th
ing. invigorating. Dents
headaches, billous spel tired feeling when
associated with constipation.
Without Risk et & 25¢ box of NR from your
rugeist. Make the test — then
if not delighted, return the box to us. We will
refund the purchase
RAR ih
rice. That's fale,
Ba NR Tablets today.
Riel TI RE TTA
Were you ever alone
in a strange city?
olf you were
true value of this newspaper
Alone in a strange city. It is pretty dull.
Even the newspapers don’t seem to
print many of the things that interest
Do a ne oi, St:
eis ing lacking.
something is local news.
For—all good
along with that of far off places. That
is why a newspaper in a strange city
is so uninteresting. And that is why
this newspaper is 30 important to you.
NOW isagood timetoget to...
KNOW YOUR NEWSPAPER
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WAS HER FACE RED?
The woman church editor of a
Pacific Coast daily was having trou-
ble hearing over a poor phone con-
nection.
“Say it again,
"”
the spinster edi-
“Say that again, please,” she
more stifled the message.
Her embarrassment was intense
message finally came
“Beloved, let us love one
Perhaps Overstuffed
Tourists spending a few days in
pensive restaurant,
were seated, a large tray of olives
One of the men eyed them curi-
he said,
THAT'S SYSTEM
Jim—Why do you prefer to take
your vacation before the boss does?
Jenny—Because I always feel like
away.
Maybe, But—
“My sister Beatrice
lucky,” said little Mary.
“Why?"
“She went to a party last night
where they played a game in which
the man either had to kiss the girl
or pay a forfeit of a box of choco
lates.”
“Well, how was Beatrice lucky?”
“She came home with 13 boxes of
chocolates.’ —Stray Stories maga-
zine.
is awfully
Answer
out the title of the piece the orches-
Other duties claimed the waiter
To her confusion the waiter
Courtesy That Pays
Woman Next Door—Here is a
piece of cake for you, Donald.
Donald—Thank you.
Woman—I like to hear little boys
say Thank you!"
Fore and Aft
fore a glass.
THUS AND SO
“l learned to swim without aid
from any man.”
“What a pity!”
“Yes, you see I was married when
I first went to the beach.”
Then Cool
Willie (touching dinner guest's
suit)—Huh! This isn’t even warm.
Guest (uneasily)—What do you
mean?
Willie—Why, Pa told Ma you cer-
tainly wore hot clothes.—Exchange.
It Makes a Difference
Visitor—If your mother gave you
a large apple and a small one and
told you to divide with your brother,
which apple would you give him?
Johnnie—D’ye mean my big broth-
er or my little one?—Philadelphia.
Dish-Ring Invention of
The Irish Silversmiths
The dish-ring, often spoken of as
the potato-ring, was invented by the
Irish silversmiths in the last half of
the Eighteenth and early part of the
Nineteenth centuries. These dish-
rings were ornamental starsls for
circular wooden bowls, and their
use was to prevent the hot bowl
from injuring the polished mahog-
any table.
Tradition says they were used ex-
clusively for holding bowls filled
with potatoes, but it was the custom
to place them in the middle of the
table to remain during the entire
meal, where they served as a re-
ceptacle for holding the various
dishes. The bowls were usually
made of bog-oak and with or with-
out a silver rim.
Dish-rings originated in Ireland,
first coming into use in Irish homes.
No contemporary English examples
are known except the copies in Shef-
field plate, writes Alice R. Rollins in
the Los Angeles Times. The dish-
ring, if we include its general use,
corresponds to the dish-cross used
in England at the same period,
which consisted of adjustable
crossed bars. The mark for beauty,
however, must go to the creation of
the Irish silversmiths.
inches in height
They have the appear-
contracted waist. Most
the other, so that one ring was
The genuine
Queen of Two Nations
Eleanor of Aquitaine (d.
Dur-
ing the 250 years that the Planta-
considered a royal name and only
by royal consent could the highest
born nobles give it to their daugh-
ters. Edward I and Henry III of
that house both had wives named
Eleanor, the latter becoming a nun
after her husband's death.
Anything for Fetish
Anything will do to make a fetish
literally any-
thing—a collection of chicken bones,
bunch of grass, smeared over with
clay and daubed with the blood of a
sacrifice. These may be
only an inch or so long. The priest,
who usually makes such a fetish,
performs a ceremony and
sacrifice over it, and thus brings a
spirit into it, great or
fetishes
offers
small, ac-
cording as he is paid by the person
Whales Cannot Be Mounted
The whale is the only common
mammal not found in natural-his-
tory museums. Owing to a pecu-
liarity of the skin, says Collier's
Weekly, it cannot be mounted suc-
cessfully, like that of other animals,
and models of whales have to be
made for exhibition purposes.
Rabbits Are Vermin to Many
Almost everywhere in Europe, ex-
cept England, the rabbit is consid-
ered vermin and treated consistent-
ly as such.
Nobel Prize to Kipling
Rudyard Kipling received the No
bel prize for literature in 1907.
The Largest Lakes
Few Europeans realize the ime
mense size of the American Great
Lakes; but few Americans know
that Lake Ladoga, lying between
Finland and Russia, is the largest
body of fresh water in Europe, be-
ing 130 miles long and 80 miles
wide,
3