"other affairs, we shall try to be fair SNOW SHOE TIMES “world was shocked. ‘Shoe Times, under which it will ap- Published on Wednesday of ? Each Week at MOSHANNON,TP A. "CLARENCE LUCAS "EDITOR AND PUBLISHER "SUBSCRIPTION RATES. One Year, $1 00, if paid in advance.... Six MODLHS,..veerereesess RCE = 000 Three MONthS, ..ocveenersnernresrrrs? Single COPY «eee venerrrrrrtt ‘ Advertising Rates on Application. ‘Correspondence solicited, subject to the approval of the editor. & WEDNESDAY, MARCH 9, 1910. Snow Shoe and vicinity is to have a newspaper, The Snow Shoe Times comes to its readers, with this issue, for the first time. We hope, by the gupport of the enterprising aitizéns of Snow Shoe and Snow Shoe Townghip, to become a weekly vigitor to every home in this vicinity and many homes elsewhere. Our aim will be to pro- duce a neat, clean and interesting newspaper devoted to the interests of Snow Shoe and Snow Shoe Township. It will be our constnt endeavor to be fair and reasonable in all matters per- taining to the publication of The Times, and trust that our patrons will be equally fair with us. Any assist: ance that can be cheerfully given us, by any of our friends, will be thank- fully received and, greatly appreciated. On the other hand, if we know of any who make it their business to be con- tinually putting “stumbling blocks” in the way of any new enterprise, we will surely remember them. In politics, we shall try to remain neutral; but, let it be understood, that in case we see fit to enter that field, we will, in all cases endeavor to take the side of the masses and not the classes; and if we. should especially favor any one, it will be the producer and consumer, Or in other words, the one who most needs our support; but in this, as in — and reasonable, In religion, we hope to have the same spirit of fairness, and that no narrow-mindedness Or prejudice will at any time prompt us to utter anything not in accord with the principles of Christianity; and with the words of Lincoln, “With mal- ice toward none, with charity for all, with firmness in the right as God gives us to see the right, we hope to push forward. Any aid we can rea sonably give to the cause of Christi- anity, as we understand it, will be happily given. We want tg make The Times a-suc- cess and can only do so: by the co- gperation and support of every citizen. We earnestly solicit the patronage of all business hous®s and professional men—it is only from such sources that we can exist—and we will make every effort in our power to work mu- tually together. Our job office is equipped to do al- most a'l kinds of commercial printing and do it right. , Give us a trial order and be convinced. Do not be afraid, because we are small, that our work will not come up to the standard. We will guarantee our work to meet all the requirements for which the job is intended, or ask nothing for our time and trouble. Let us know your wants and if it is a job we are not prepared to do, will promptly let you know and, perhaps, could suggest a place to have it done. We cannot see why a weekly paper for Snow Shoe and vicinity would not be a boon to the town and township. Therefore, we make the effort to establish it and then it is up to you. : : THE EDITOR. Today is the anniversary of the great naval battle between the Moni- tor and the Merrimac. Forty-ight years have gone by since that memor- able affair. All students of history, as well as those who lived : during those troublesome times, will remnem- ber what a great sensation was caus-j ed by that engagement—tae who! The Snow Shoe Times comes before the public on the anniversary of that stunning affair, and might be compared with the little Monitor in many ways. It was once thought that the name Monitor might Le given to this paper, but other things considered, it received the name Snow pear until changed. ; The Times, like the Monitor, is small, is well protected with armor plate, can hit hard if cornered, may + about as unéxpectedly. We are also capable of becoming a “doughty little antagonist” when the occasion requir es. / in fact, we want to be a “man-of- yar,” but avoid all scraps as far as lieth in us, The weather is apparently making a change towards spring. This winter has truly been a remarkable one. The writer cannot remember when we had such fine winter weather and even the tion of such a record of ice and snow. For eleyen weeks we have had sled ing, and at no time did the thermome- ter register more than eight degrees below zero, in this locality, and yet has kept below the freezing point al- most all the time. We take this as a sign ‘that we will have a good summer and that 1910 will be a prosperous year: thrguehout. = — e———_ i: Recent Deaths Thomas Gleason, Sr. § il TERA Thomas Gleason, a long time resi- dent of this community, died at his home here on February 24. He was porn in Ireland and came to this country when a young man. He set tled in Moshannon about 35 years ago and has resided here ever since. He leaves to mourn his death, his wife, six sons—Patrick, of Chicago; Mike, Thomas, Jr., James and Edward, of Moshannon, and Morris of Karthaus; and four daughters—Kathryn, and Hannah, of Philadelphia; Julia, resid- ing near Gillintown and Margaret, of Peale. John Redding. John Redding of Reynoldsville, and’ son of Henry Redding, a coal operator of that place, once a resident of Snow Shoe, was operated on for appendicitis on February 22, and died in the opera- tion. The funeral was attended by many friends among them were Law- rence Redding of Munson, Annie Curry of Bellefonte, Mrs. Jos. Losh of Al toona and James Redding and wife of Clearfield. Interment was made in the cemetery at Reynoldsville. The services wert conducted by Father Lynch of that place. Mrs. W. T. Leathers. Death brought to a close the suffer- ing of Mrs. W. T. Leathers of How- ard, on Thursday last. = ‘She had been ill for some time and the end was ex- \pected as recovery seemed impossible. Mrs. Leathers was a member of the Methodist church and was known and admired by a large number of friends. Her husband preceded her to the grave seven or eight years ago. She is survived by the following children: James, Fred, George, Cookman, Jesse and Lucy, of Howard; Mrs. Howard Neff, of Curtin and Mrs. Charles Year- ick, of Jacksonville. ; D. M. Wolf. The news of the death of Professor D. M. Wolf was a shock to this com- munity as well as other parts of the county. Mr. Wpif's kind and gentle disposition had won the hearts of many friends and his death will be mourned by many. During his term as County Superintendent, he endeared himself to the people of this region and later on, to the students that at- tended his school at Spring Mills. Pneumonia was the disease that caus- ed his death. He was ill only about one week. He died shortly after 4 o'clock on the morning of February 28 at the residence of J. Welis Evans, where he had made his home for al- mest 50 years. According to F. Edward Hulme in “The Flags of the World, Their His- tory, Blazonry and Associations,” the crescent moon and star were adopted | by the Turks as their national em- blem on the capture of Constantino- ple by Mahomet II in 1453. The star | L and crescent, however, contends the New ‘York Times, antedate that per- jod, going back into the ancient time of Diana. They were symbol of Diana the Patroness of By- zantium, and were adopted by the Ot- tomans as a badge of triumph over their foes. The star within the moon crescent appears again as the badge of Richard I., John and Henry IIL of England. In this period of English his- older inhabitants have no recollec-| originally the: treat club.” tory the ancient emblem is supposed, to have signified the ascendency of Christianity over Mahomedanism, and be called something even’ worse than so emblematic of the Crusades. pal. ot Cour Cy Elbert Hubbard Better Self YR iA HERE is not so very much difference in the intelligence of people after all. possi The great man is not so great as folks think, and the dull man is not quite so stupid as he seems. : ~The difference in our estimates of men lies in the fact that one man is able to get his goods into the show win- ‘dow for goods. fine “The soul knows all things, and knowledge is only a re- : ‘membering,”’ says Emerson. This seems a very broad state- ment, yet the fact remains that the vast majority of men know a thousand times as much ag they are aware of. In the silefit depths of sub-consciousness lie myriads of truths, each awaiting the time when if owner shall call it forth. a RAR these : stored ip thoughts you must express them to others; and to €XDresy them we Your soul has to soar into this sub-conscious realm where you have cached these net results of experience. Thé great painter forgets all in the presence or nis canvas; the writer is oblivious to his surroundings; the Singer floats away on the wings of melody, and carries the audienc wih her; the orator pours out his soul for an hour, Ahd it seems to him as if Darely five minutes had passed, so wrapped and lost is he in his exalted theme. ~ When you reach the heights of sublimity, and are expressing your highest and fh Fou aré IM 4 partial trance condition. And all men who enter this condition surprise themselves by the quantity of knowledge and the extent of the insight They possess. And some, going a little deeper into this trance cot: dition than others, knowing nothing of the miraculous storing up of truth In cells of sub-consciousness, jump to the conclusion that their intelligence is be- ing guided by a spirit not their own. When an individual reaches this coen- clusion he begins to wither at the top, for he relies on the dead, and ceases to feed the well-springs of his sub-conscious self. : The mind is a dual affair—objeciivé and subjéctive. The objective mind sees all, hears all, reasons things out. The subjective mind stores up and only gives cut when the objective mind sleeps. And as few mén ever culti- vate the absorbed, reflective or semi-trance state, where the objective mind rests, they never really call on their sub-conscious treasury for its stores. They are always self-conscious. But what think you is necessary before a persen ccmes into possession of his sub-conscicus treasures? Well, I'll tell you: It is not ease, nor prosperity, nor requited love, nor worldIn€ecurity. “You sing well,” said the master, impatiently, to his best pupil, “but you will never sing divinely until you have given your all for love, and then been neglected and rejected, and scorned and beaten, and left for dead. Then, if you do not exactly die, you will come back, and when the world hears your voice it will mistake vou for an angel and fall at your feet.” > And the moral is, that as long as you are satisfied and comfortable, you use only the objective mind and live in the world of sense. But let love be torn from your grasp and flee as a shadow—living only as a memory in a haunting sense of loss; let death come and the sky shut down over less worth in the world; or stupid misunderstanding. and crushing defeat grind you into the dust—then you may arise, forgetting time and space and self, and take re- fuge in mansions not made with hands, and find a certain sad, sweet comfort in the contemplation of treasures stored up where moth and rust do not cor- rupt, and where thieves do not break through and steal. » 2 And thus looking out into the Eternal, you forget the present and enter in- to the Land of Sub-Consciousness, where yét dwell the gods of ancient and in- nocent days.—New York American. a a Ha, 0 Being a Good Neighbor Being a Good Neighbor NL By Giselle D’Unger . , | 7 enfin ye iy : ; oy a HE spirit of neighborliness is being manifested even by cor- . porations. The International Harvester Company is one of the large corporations whose endeavor to put that spirit into action is particularly worthy of notice. It is by no means the only organization of the kind that is carrying on what is commonly called “welfare” work, but it has its efforts in this direction well systematized and is constantly seeking to embody in its own operation practical and helpful ideas gathered from other sources. The International Harvester Company, representing, as it does, $120,000,000 of capital, which dispensed, in one year, $21,763,307.95 in pay-roll wages alone, and $16,783,000 in sales com- missions, has a large field in which to “exercise the virtue of “being a good neighbor” to its twenty-eight thousand employes. Mr. Cyrus H. McCormick has stated that “the employer who wants the people employed in his business to work under the very best possible conditions as to hours, wages and sur- roundings, and who feels happier when he knows this state of things is at- tained; the employe who takes satisfaction in his work, because of the im- proved environment and because he knows that, in providing it, the employer has no ax to grind—these two men can not, in the nature of things, remain at loggerheads, and, in their co-operation there can be no question but that the utmost advantage comes to both.”—The World To-Day. oe sfeole sfeatesfeaefesferfesfeferts fer esfenle fe feofefeiofolnd Q M arriage and the Birth Rate 9 By Lurana W. Sheldon Jl . RS. Margaret Deland is quoted as saying that ‘the coliege girl of the present talks about marriage and the birth rate in a way to make her mother blush,” and you say editorially some problem.” May I ask if, because her mother could not possibly appreciate her intelligent understanding of both matters named, the college girl must forever remain silent? Is she - mee to be SO considerate of her mother’s and grandmother’s opin- ions that site must cease to hold opinions of her own and so walk out of step in the “line of progress” in which you frankly admit she is? Furthermore, would it not have been to the credit of some of these mothers if they had blushed ore and been a little less ignorant—or possibly had a few less chil- dren? And why should the college girl of the present be found “a trouble- some problem?” Is she not demonstrating her entire fitness to take care of herself and so ridding men—or some man—of this especial burden? Certainly “marriage and the birth rate” are important matters for the college girl or any other girl to consider, and the fact that she calls a spade a spade only proves her earnestness and sincerity. Fortunately the habit of blushing over important topics of conversation is dying out among women, but the least advanced college girls of today would turn as red as roses if asked to marry and bear children as thoughtlessly as did their mothers. ' No Woman In This Case. She (protestingly). “That's just like you men. A man never gets into trouble without dragging some woman Saved a Nickel. “Have a drink? “Thanks, but I belong to an anti- “I'm going to have one.” “Then take this ten cents and I'll | woman in with him.” join you. You can get two drinks for | He. “Oh, I don’t know! How a quarter.”—Louisville. Courier-Jour- | about Jonah in the whale.”—Doston : A 2 Transcript. ed that the fact that she does so talk makes of her a ‘“‘trouble-. into trouble without dragging some: PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. Carl Dinger Dentist Philipsburg, Pa. Painless Extraction of Teeth a Specialty Dr. F. K. White Dentist SECOND FLOOR GRANT BLOCK PHLIIPSBURG, PA. THAIS BURIED GREAT SHOW SLOE Number of Victims Not Easily Ascer~ tained, but May Reach Fifty. RESCUE WORK VERY DIFFICULT Engines and Cars Buried Deep—Res- cuers Worked Many Hours Be- fore Reaching Them. Everett, Wash.—Sweeping down the steep mountain side on the west slope of the Cascades, an avalanche of snow overwhelmed two Great Northern trains, three locomotives, four huge electric motor engines and brought death to more than a score of persons, according to meager reports that have drifted in from Wellington, a station near the disaster. : Most of the dead are believed to have been passengers on an express train bound from Spokane to Seattle and which had been stalled in the mountains several days. The passengers were asleep when the slide came. The other train was a transcontinental fast carried no passengers. Twenty bodies were recovered and 20 injured were rescued. Some 25 are missing. The avalanche swept down the mountain side just before sunrise. It was half a mile long. The cars and locomotives were buried deep and it was six hours before rescuers could reach them. . Reports say the Great Northern powerhouse, which furnishes electric power to operate trains through the Cascade tunnel and the station and water tank were swept away by the avalanche. The railroad boarding house was wrecked. A number of the dead and injured are railroad men and residents of Wellington. Everett, Wash.—Latest estimates place the number of persons killed by the avalanche that crushed two Great Northern passenger trains at Welling: ton at 40. While only 23 persons are known to be dead nearly a score are thought to be buried in the wreckage Communication with Wellington is maintained only by men on snow- shoes. Twelve bodies had been re- moved from the 150-foot gorge into which the snowslide swept the train. Bunkhouse Is Hospital. The railroad bunkhouse at Welling- ton has been transformed into a hos- pital and 10 injured are being cared for there. Superintendent O’Neill of the Great Northern made his way to the wreck at the head of a party of doctors and hurses. The treacherous trip down the precipice was made on snowshoes. The nearest telegraph station, Scenic Hot Springs, is three miles be low Wellington, down a precipitous grade that is covered with a deep blanket of snow that may slide down the mountain at any moment, The Wellington telegraph operator arrived at Scenic Hot Springs today, almost insane from the scenes he had witnessed. The railroad - company is making strenuous efforts to reach Wellington from “both sides of the mountain range. Relief trains have been dis: patched from Everett with supplies and a wrecking crew. The road is blocked in several paces by smaller glides and the high temperature leads to the fear that more may occur to impede the relief work. WHEN BUYING NEW BLINDS. When buying window blinds it is a good plan to allow sufficient ma- terial for a deep hem both top and bottom wide enough to take the lath. On the top hem sew .a Slrip of tape through which to put the: nails or clips which fasten the blind to the roller, When soiled at the bottom, blinds. made in this fashion can quite easily be turned upside down, and so do not require to be cleaned as often as lit ‘made in the ordinary way.—Home: Chat. mail, which tt Gc hat lain BRE sats Bis is