Snow Shoe times. (Moshannon, Pa.) 1910-1912, March 16, 1910, Image 6

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    ry,
MOTHER COMING TO STAY WITH US FOR
K ? OUTRAGEOUS! 1 WONT STAND
LIKE )
YOUR LIVER MUST #
BE AUT OF ORDER
ORR 7 WAYS &
K NO ER (
1]
OU, LET ME TA
OUR GRIP. W
RE ALL DELIGHT:
ED HAVE YOU
1SIT US
\(THERE IS HOPE
¢ A)
(
Nov
5 A Wwe
RESOLVED: MUNYONS PAW-PAW
[Ecxve BLS Ror oy Conecr
15! GET] USL hn QUR HENS
IN-LAW. 10 PI NABOX 10¢
NKunyon’s Paw Paw Pills coax the liver
$nto activity by gentle methods. They do
mot scour, gripe or weaken. They are a
sonic to the stomach, liver and nerves;
fnvigorate instead of weaken. They en-
rich the blood and enable the stomach to
get ali the nourishment frem food that is
put into it. These pills contain no calo-
sel; they are soothing, healing and stim-
nlating. For sale by all druggists in 10c
and 25¢ sizes. If you need medical ad-
vice, write Munyon’s Doctors. They will
advise to the best of their ability abso-
Jutely free of Charge. MUNYON’S, 83d
and Jefferson Sts, Philadelphia, Pa. .
is the voord to ror
when you need a remedy
Couns CoLos
PATENTS fers. Personal services. Patents
advertised free. R. B.Owen, Washington, D.C.
x > E_—————
Capitalize your brains, Advice
A Greely in ivtusic.
Iilegible handwriting, which has
given rise to so many comedies, led to
a tragedy in the case of Bacher, a mu-
sleal enthusiast of the last century,
who devoted several years to the com-
position of a history of Viennese mu-
sic. His task finished, he submit-
ted the manuscript to the Austrian Im-
perial academy, which he had been led
to believe would defray the cost of its
publication. After three months his
manuscript was returned; despite their
Dest efforts the members had been un-
able to decipher it. Bacher then en-
#eavored to have his work copied;
But every professional copyist who un-
dertook the ask had to confess him-
self baffled. He thereupon attempted
dictating the work, only to find that
woven he could not decipher it; and,
heartbroken at the discovery that his
years of toil had proved fruitless, he
attempted suicide, and finished his
days in a lunatic asylum.
I ) rrr tere:
RA ayy
; 10
jd Age Limit Lengthening.
With Chief Justice Melville W. Ful-
ler of the supreme court of the United
States seventy-seven years old Fri
day, and Associate Justice John M.
Harlan seventy-seven next June, and
both vigorous in mind and body, the
age limit of man is surely lengthen-
ing.—New York Herald.
Japanese Railway Completed.
By the opening of the last section of
the Kyushu railway, the Grand Trunk
line of Japan has been completed
from Sapporo on the north to Kago-
shima on the south, a distance of 1,300
miles. The first part of this line to
be thrown open was the Toklo-Yoko-
hama section, which began to carry
- passengers and goods in 1872.
CHANGE THE VIBRATION
It Makes For Health,
A man tried leaving off meat, po-
tatoes, coffee, and etc., and adopted a
breakfast of fruit, Grape-Nuts with
ereani, some crisp toast and a cup of
Postum.
His health began to improve at
once for the reason that a meat eater
will reach a place once in a while
where his system seems to become
elogged and the machinery doesn’t
work smoothly,
A change of this kind puts aside
food of low nutritive value and takes
up food and drink of the highest
.yalue, already quickly digested and
eapable of being quickly changed into
good, rich blood and strong tissue.
A most valuable feature of Grape-
Nuts is the natural phosphate of pot-
ash grown in the grains from which:
it is made. This is the element which
transforms albumen in the body into
soft gray substance which fills brain
-and nerve centres.
A few days’ use of Grape-Nuts will
give one a degree of nervous strength
well worth the trial. :
Look in pkgs. for the little boek,
*The Road to Wellville.” ‘“Theras a |
Reason.”
, KNOWN BY HIS TIE.
Significance to Londoner of Headgear
and Neckwear.
When, some years ago, one of the
doorkeepers at a London theatre re-
tired from his draughty calling and
was pensioned off by the manage-
ment, it appeared that this old man,
in all the years of his service, had
never given a “pass-out’’ check to
any one of the thousands of men who
must have passed his doorway.
But he never made a mistake. No
one entitled to return was ever re-
fused, and no one could pass in at
the end of the interval who had not
passed out at the beginning of it.
The secret of the old man's success
was a curious one. He depended on
his memory entirely, but he had
trained his memory in a very curious
way. He did not remember the men
by their faces, their clothes, their
“hats, their boots, or by any peculiar-
ity of gait or appearance, Manifest-
ly such a feat would have been impos-
sible, for ordinary ‘pitties” are very
much alike in these details.
He took the one detail on which
men so differ, and remembered them
by that—he recognized them by their
neckties.
Gaze around you in the railway
carriage as you are reading this arti-
cle and ask yourself if there is any
‘one of your fellow passengers that
you could remember well enough to
recognize again in, say, an hour’s
time. bi
You will find there are very few
people you could be sure of, There
may be one old man with a large and
conspicuous white beard or a very
young man with a pair of spectacles
of unusual size; but nine out of ten
have the same sort of hat, the same
sort of clothes and the same sort of
figure. :
The Londoner, in fact, seems to be
standardized. He is built on a set-
tled pattern. He is modeled to a
type. His necktie is his sole bit of
variety.
Into this world of standardized hu-
man beings comes, let us say, a co-
lonial. Mighty London, with her vast
crowds swarming over four counties,
swallows him up. Yet, somehow, he
preserves his individuality. He is
conspicouous wherever he goes. He
feels that all London is staring at
him, and all London as far as it has
time, is staring at him. : ;
Cabmen persistently hail him; the
mapsellers in the Strand pester him
as he passes; those very acute people
—the ‘‘confidence” men—sight him
afar off. But it is not his nectktie
that distinguishes him, nor his face,
nor his clothes, nor his walk. The
conspicous feature of the newly ar-
rived colongal’s outfit is his hat,
London permits three sorts of hat
—the top hat, the bowler and in the
summer the straw. Any break from
this settled order is to make yourself
conspicuous.—Lendon Mirror.
Sans Peur et Sans Reproche.
What a hideous mischance is that
which places the headquarters of the
Richmond suffragettes in a building
which also shelters a dealer in an-
tiques. The result is a startling and
almost unthinkable collocation of
signs, for under the modest legend
“Headquarters Woman's Suffrage
League’ appears the flaming banner
of the man in trade, bearing the
words “Antiques for Sale Here in the
Rough.” ‘Pedestrians who happen
that way,” says our Richmond cor-
respondent, ‘have marvelled at the
signs.”” No doubt many of them,
yielding to unmannerly mirth, have:
also cackled and guffawed. A few
perhaps have thrown up their hands
and howled. Maybe one or two have
fallen into fits, expiring on the spot.
But the ladies need not repine. The
signs conviet them of nothing.
Against a small number of them, true
enough, the accusation of antiquity
may be justly accused of roughness;
but no enemy, however bilious and
immoral, has ever charged them with
being for sale. Never. They are
politicians without price—a unique
and hitherto unimagined species.
They are as adamant against Havana
cigars, railroad passes, certified
checks, bank notes and all the other
customary contamimators of fealty.
Not money, nor even love, can buy
them.—Baltimore Sun.
Warship Built Into House.
Timbers of the famous battleship
Wellington are being used as sup-
ports and rafters in the $200,000
residence of I. N. Phelps Stokes, at
Greenwich, Conn. Mr. Stokes, when
he bought the timbers in England,
was not indulging himself in things
historic, although such material in
the house will add greatly to its in-
terest, His idea was to get good,
strong wood, and the timbers from
the Wellington are of teak, which is
prized because of its great durability.
Most of the timbers will be used as
‘rafters in the great dining room.
In England there are several firms
that make a specialty of breaking up
old vessels to get teak and other val-
; uable .woods.—Popular Mechanics.
Sin beginneth pleasantly.— Bible,
Royal Gifts.
Sir Richard Burton was dispatched
on a mission to the King of Dahomey
in 1863. Queen Victoria sent her
fellow-monarch a crimson silk tent, a
rchly embossed silver pipe, two silver
waiters, a coat of mail and a pair of
guntlets.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days,
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
case ofJtching, Bind, Bleeding orProtruding
‘Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c
‘In proportion to its population, more
people earn ga livelihood in seafaring
in Norway than in any other country.
Britain comes next.
Constipation causes many serious dis-
eases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative,
three for cathartic.
Wise and Unwise Charity.
How often it is difficult to be wise-
ly charitable—to do good without mul-
tiplying the sources of evil. To give
alms is nothing unless you give
thought also. It is written, not “Bless-
is he that feedeth the poor,” but
“blessed is he that coisidereth the
poor.” A little thought and a little
kindness are often worth more than
a great deal of money.—Ruskin.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma.
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle.
; : 5 ;
Science Aiding Fruit Growers.
There are 13,000,000 bugs in the Cal-
ifornia state insectary waiting to go
forth and slay the enemies of the fruit
orchards. These bugs are the para-
sites of the many pests that destroy
fruit bearing trees, and they are sav
ing annually great sums for the farm-
ers. At the recent fruit: growers’
convention at Sacramento, Ccmmis-
sioner Jeffrey invited the members to
call at the insectary and take some
bugs home with them. Certainly the
ingenuities of science have rarely
been put to better use.—New York
American. ;
Killed in Mines.
In the harvest of death the St. Paul
mine, with 340 to 393 dead, ranks next
to the highest if not the most fatal of
recent disasters in our coal fields—
the highest of any in the West. At
Monongah, W. Va., 360 men were Kkill-
ed; at Harwick, Pa. 158; at Darr,
Pa., 238; at Marianna Pa., 162; at
Lick Branch, W. Va. 117. In the
year 1907 our American coal mines
exacted a death toil of 3,125 lives and
30,000 all told in the last two de-
cades. : ily
Lydia E. Pinkham'’s
Vegetable Compound
Chicago, I1l.—*I was troubled with
falling and inflammation, and the doc-
Jtors said I could not
get well unless I
jihad an operation.
I knew I could not
fistand the strain of
glone, so IL wrote to
to-daya well woman.” —Mrs. WILLIAM
AHRENS, 988 W. 21st St., Chicago, Ill.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotics or harm-
ful drugs, and to-day holds the record
for the largest number of actual cures
of female diseases of any similar medi-
cine in the country, and thousands of
voluntary testimonials are on file in
the Pinkham laberatory at Lynn,
Mass., from women who have been
cured from almost every form of
female complaints, inflammation, ul-
ceration, displacements, fibroid tumors,
irregularities, periodic pains, backache,
indigestion and nervous prostration.
Every such suffering woman owes it to
herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound a trial.
If you would like special advice
about your case write a confiden=-
tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, ‘at
Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free,
and always helpful.
Worms
“Cascarets are certainly fine, I gave a friend
one when the doctor was treating him for cancer
of the stomach. The next morning he passed
four piecesof a tape worm, He then got a box
and in three days he a tape-worm 45 feet
long. It was Mr. Matt Freck, of Millersburg,
Dauphin Co., Pa. Iam quite a worker for
rets. I use themmyselfand find them beneficial
for most any disease caused by impure blood."
Chas. E. Conden, Lewiston, Pa., (Mifflin Co.)
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good.
De Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe.
10c, 25¢, S8c. Never sold in bulk. The genu-
ine tablet strmped C C C. Guaranteed to
cure or you’ money back. 921
PUTNAM
‘ment lighted - with “yellow light and
Honored by
When a woman speaks of her
silent secret suffering she
trusts you. Millions have be-
stowed this mark of confi-
| dence on Dr. R. V. Pierce,
4 of Buffalo, N.Y. Every-
where there are women who
bear witness to the wonder-
working, curing-power of Dr.
it! Pierce's Favorite Prescription &N
41 —which saves the suffering sex 4&8
| from pain, and successfully
grapples with woman's weak-
nesses and stubborn ills.
IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG
IT MAKES SICK WOMEN WELL.
Women
No woman's appeal was ever misdirected or her con-
fidence misplaced when she wrote for advice, to
the WorLD’s Dispensary MEepicAL Association, Dr.
R. V. Pierce, President, Buffalo, N. Y.
"Dr. Pterce’s Pleasant Pellets induce mild natural bowel movement once a day.
J
Pink Eye, Epizootia
Shipping Fever
DISTEMPE & Catarrbal Fever
Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at amy Age prov 3
infected or “exposed.” Liquid, given on the tongue; acts on the Bic
Glands, expels the sonous germs from the y. Cures Distemper in Dogs
and Bheep and Cholera in Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy. Cures
La Grippe among human beings and is a fine Kidney remedy. bc. and
bottle; $5 and $10 a dozen. Cut this out. Keep it. Show to your dr
who 11 get it Jor you. Booklet, “Distemper, Causes and Cures.
.Bpecial ts wan
SPOHN MEDICAL CO,, :Shomista and, GOSHEN, IND., U.S.A.
Free
BEAUTIFUL ORNAMENTAL FENCE
24 inches high. 9e. for 30-inch, 11e. for 86-inch. 12e. for 42-inch and 14c. for 48-inch.
Gates areextra. A WONDERFUL BARGAIN. Nothing like it has ever before been
offered at any ways near these prices. lt is cheaper thana hoard or picket fence. Is
very strong and will last for years. Anybody can afford a fence at these prices. Made
of No: 12 steel wire, heavily galvanized. We want every one needing fence or gates to
have our Large Free Catalogue No. 20, which illhstrates and describes our full line
of Yard and Cemetery Fence, Gates, Arches, etc.,, and quotes the lowest prices ever
named for these articles. rite'us a postal card today for our Free Catalogue No. 20.
KITSELMAN BROTHERS, Box 435 MUNCIE, INDIANA.
A FLAVOR that is nsed the same as lemon
or ¥eajlla By dissolving granulated sugar in
waterand'adding Mapleine, adelicions syrup is
jas and a syrup better than maple. Mapleine
; k¢ sold by ers. Send 2c stamp for sample
and recipe Crescent’ Mig. Co.. Seattle.
Buncombe Talk.
What the president has assured us
is the very best tariff the Republican F
party ever made was enacted six or
months ago. If it made some reduc- s
tions in duties it did not reduce the Pain
amount of protection any of the tariff
beneficiaries had, and on several items
it not denied that it increased it.
The report just issued by the New
York Association for Improving the
Condition of the Poor, says: “Des-
titution is estimated as now being one
and a half times as great as in normal /
periods. The association is visiting
and aiding 4,200 families, as compared
with fewer than 3,000 in 1906 and the
early part of 1907. Charity workers
notice a general tendency to cut down
the quantity of food consumed by
each family. When the prices were |
highest, a week or so ago, very few
mothers of the poor were able to but-
ter their children’s bread for break-
mast.”’—Philadelphia Record.
AC
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For sore throat, sharp pain
in lungs, tightness across the
chest, hoarseness or cough,
lave the parts with Sloan’s
Liniment. You don’t need to
rub, just lay it on lightly. It
penetrates instantly to the seat
of the trouble, relieves conges-
tion and stops the pain.
Here’s the Proof.
Mr. A.W. Price, Fredonia, Kans.,
says: “We have used Sloan’s Lini-
‘ment for a year, and find it an excel-
lent thing for sore throat, chest pains,
colds, and hay fever attacks. A few
drops taken on sugar stops cough-
ing and sneezing instantly.”
Sloan's
Liniment
A
Where Britons Best Us.
And now the third parliament of
King Edward is in session. Our Eng-
{ish cousins have something to learn
from us in the matter of elections for
their national lawmakers, stretching
them out as they do through a period
of many weeks, while we elect our
representatives in one day. On the
other hand we have an important les-
son to learn from them. Their mem-
vers of the new house of commons are
already in session while the mandate
of the constituents is fresh in their
mind and that of the public. = When
we elect representatives in Novem-
ber they do not take their seats—ex-
cept in case of an extra session—until
December of the following year, This
means a lapse of more than 12 months,
during which period the situation
which gave rise to their election may
materially change.—New York Herald.
is zasier to use than porous
plasters, acts quicker and does
not clog up the pores of the skin.
It is an excellent an- ;
tiseptic remedy for
asthma, bronchitis,
and all inflammatory
diseases of the
throat and chest;
will break up the
deadly membrane in
an attack of croup,
Oldest Ginkgo Leaf in Captivity.
Thirty feet beneath the surface of
a newly built railroad in Spokane,
Wash., a ginkgo leaf was found last
spring, its age being estimated at
100,000 years. “It bears a message
of more certainty than those carved
in tablets of stone,” writes Fred Nie-
derhauser, in Harper’s Weekly. This
discovery tends to substitute the theo-
dy that the coast section has been
sLOAN'g |
SETAE
formed by successive unheavals of the| andwillkillanykind
great sea dyke which has now devel.| efmeuralgia or rheu-
oped into the system of the Rocky| Matic paws.
Mountains, So violent were the up-| All druggists keep
thrusts that in the process the beds Prices 25 50¢ ay
of the inland lakes or arms of the| 1). Rar] S. Sloan.
sea were turned into rock. The clay BOSTON, Aso
was changed to slate, the sandstone to
quartzite, the limestone to marble.”
Cents aRod
For 22-in. Hog Fence; 15 8-4¢ for
. 26-inch; 18 8-4¢ for 81-inch; 23¢
for 34-inch; 2be for a 47-inch
Fence 33¢. Sold on 30 days
trial. 80 rod spool ldeal Barb
‘Wire $1.88 Catalogue free.
KITSELMAN BROS.
Box 3g MUNCIE, IND.
Ants.
It was proved long ago that ants
have the power of seeing the (to hu-
man beings) invisible rays of the ultra-
violet portion of the spectrum. They
fear the light for their larvae, and
when allowed choice between differ-
ent degrees of light always carry them | -
to the darkest place accessible. When
given the choice between a compart-
143
P. N. U. 10, 1910,
Wi n
Ington, Di Sook Free: Hiern
PATENTS Ee: f Senne gt
DROPSY Iv, puscoresr;
one dark to human eyes, but under the
actinie ray, the ants unhesitatingly
choose the yellow light, showing that
to their eyes it is darker than the o
other, to man invisible, Vreo. Br. 2% “Liutimentaly su on Rae ideatutid
FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colofs than any other dye. One 10c. package colors all fibers. They d
‘can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Coors. TR ONEOE DR Ce De Ser Pinon
1linoise