Snow Shoe times. (Moshannon, Pa.) 1910-1912, March 23, 1910, Image 7

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[TS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS
ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE
YR0petis
ELXR- EHNA
(aueonvia fis inup ©
00 osu aos
“ONE SIZE ONLY, 50¢A BOTTLE
Relieves the PAIN
of a BURN
Instantly
and takes out all inflammation in one
day. The most serious Burns and Scalds |
instantly relieved and quickly healed by
Dr.Porter’s
Antiseptic
Healing Oil
A soothing antiseptic discovered by an
Old Railroad Surgeon. AllDruggists re-
fund money ifit fails to cure. 25¢, 50c & $1.
Paris Medicine Co. ” Beng, N. C.
My wife was severely burned from a red hot cook
stove. We applied DR: PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEAL-
aNG OIL, and in ten minutes her burns were relieved.
We used it as directed and in a few days the burns were
entirely healed. We can strongly recommend it to heal
-the worst burns and sores.
(Signed) J. W, Church, Notary Public.
Made by
EL
Maker of
Laxative Bromo Quinine
Weary of Womanhood.
“I wish I had been born a man; it
is the one regret of my life,” declared
Mrs. Lillian Duncanson, president of
the Political Equality league, before
the members of the literary round
‘table of the Chicago Culture club re-
cently. “I am tired of being a woman,
of being told to put on a pretty gown
and smile in order to influence some
alderman to see things in the light he
should see them -—as women see
them.’—Chicago Tribune.
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days,
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
caseofltching, Blind Eloedimg orProtruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c
The state of Jalisco has long been
known as one of the richest in the re-
public of Mexico in agriculture and
mining, &
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle.
For home consumption last year
England imported 2,167,280,000 eggs.
Mail
8
Trial Bottle Free By
EL
It you suffer from Epilepsy, Fits, Falling Sickness,
Spasms, or have children that do so, my New Dis-
covery will relieve them, and all you are asked to
Epilopticide Cure
It has cured thousands where eve g else
failed. Guaranteed by May Medical oratory
Under Pure Food and Drugs Act, June 80th, 1908
Guaranty No. 18971. Pleage write for Special Free
82 Bottle and give AGH and complete address
DR. W. H. MAY, 548 Pearl Strest, New York.
“I tried all kinds of blood remedies
which failed to do me any good, but I
have found the right thing at last. My
face was full of pimplesand black-heads.
After taking Cascarets they all left. I am
continuing the use of them and recom-
mending them to my friends. I feel fine
when I rise in the morning. Hope to
have a chance to recommend Cascarets,’’
Fred C. Witten, 76 Elm St., Newark, N. J.
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sickes, Weaken or Gripe.
10c, 25¢, SOc. Never sold in bulk. The genu-
ine tablet stamped C CC. Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. vt 922
] i :
3, £
]
DA
is the word to remember
when you need aremedy
Cougs Coos
dois to send fora Free Trial §2 Bottle of Dr. May's
Household Affairs
Vw vw vv w - VY
NN ad fs gh da. ad al OPPO
VVC VeV bh 4 hdd VV
& od od o
v vv VV v
Preserving Delicate Colors.
In muslin and lawns the delicate
washing. This is my way: Wash in
suds of rain water if obtainable, and
iif not, soften the water by putting
good soap in it. Do not rub soap on
the goods unless very soiled. Do the
work quickly, and do not allow the
material to lie long in the suds.
Rinse well, dip at once into cold
starch which has had bluing added;
spread on double sheet, cover with
another sheet, roll, let lie an hour;
iron on wrong side with hot iron.—
Boston Post.
Handkerchief or Glove Case,
Take a fancy paper napkin and
two plain white napkins, place be-
tween the two white napkins a piece
of sheet wadding the size of the nap-
kins, then place the napkins on the
fancy one and divide them in thirds,
laying the first third over the second
~and stitch a piece of ribbon around
that is left, and lay that over the sec-
centre of it. It will take about three
vards of ribbon to make a very pret-
ty case.—Boston Post.
Enlarging a Shirtwaist,
When a good shirtwaist is out-
grown it may be made larger by tak-
ing off the collar band, cutting the
waist in a straight line from top to
bottom and putting in one or more
rows of insertion, back and front.
If it is only too short-waisted, cut off
as for a pointed or square yoke, back
and front, and put in insertion, and
then put the body of the waist back
on. Cuffs may be made longer or
larger in the same way. And if the
collars want to be made higher, in-
gertion can be added to them.—Bos-
ton Post. :
smm——lh
Kitchen Hint.
Perhaps some Post reader may be
as short of room for her kettles as I
am. If so, she may be glad to know
how I am making use of every bit
that I have. I have a deep cupboard
of space between the door and
shelves. Have taken three equal
lengths of very narrow hardwood
moulding and screwed them across
the inside of the door, the second
strip fourteen inches below the first,
and the third, eighteen inches below
the second. In each strip, I have put
three little brass hooks at equal ‘dis-
‘tances apart, and on these I hang
medium-sized kettles and saucepans,
each in its own particular place. On
the lowest strip I hang, also my
eral other small utensils, Behind
each strip, in the space made by
the panels of the door, I slip two ket-
tle lids. I find this arrangement
gives me a good deal of room and is
very convenient also.—Mrs. A. T.
Hamlet, in the Boston Post.
Repairing China.
‘To repair a bit of fine china apply
‘to the edges of the broken pieces a
mixture composed of plaster of Paris
and dissolved gum tragacanth, fit the
several parts together, tie them firm-
ly, and leave the article undisturbed
until the cement has thoroughly
and hardened. :
Or the pieces of china may be ‘ce-
mented together with ‘a soft paste
made of plaster of Paris and a solu-
tion of gum arabic, tied in place with
a cord and then placed in a pan con-
taining cold milk, which should be
allowed to heat slowly until ‘it boils,
The pan must then be taken from the
fire, and after its contents have grad-
ually cooled the china article re-
moved and set away to dry.
Silver photograph frames, candle-
sticks, vases and desk ornaments may
be repaired with jeweler’s solder,
cleaned with whiting, and then kept
permanently bright by means of a
lacquer coating, :
‘White cement will hold together
pieces of broken glass provided the
article is not afterward washed in
hot water.—Baltimore Sun.
gis sptgel
FORT THE: ..
ila Drs XN ra, a
Potato Cakes.—Two cups mashed
yolk of one egg, form into cakes, put
into a buttered pan, brush over the
top with the white of the egg and
brown in a quick oven. : ;
~ Nut Hash.—Chop fine cold boiled
potatoes and any other vegetables
desired that happen to be on Land.
Put them into a buttered frying pan
{and heat quickly and thoroughly.
Salt to taste; then, just before serv-
ing, stir in lightly a large spoonful of
nut meal for each person to be served.
Pickled Oysters.—Open the oyster,
colors fade oftener in drying than in:
"oughly.
taste,
the whole thing, then take the third |
ond and place a bow of ribbon on the
in my kitchen, with five or six inches
river.
bread toaster, potato masher, and sev- |
tenance being repellant enough.
this way the loquacious woman, the
‘scandalmonger, was brought to her |
dried |
potatoes, a little pepper, salt, nutmeg, |
and take each one away from its
liquor; boil some vinegar, equal quan-
tities, with the liquor of the oysters;
put in some whole mace; drop the
oysters into the boiling liquor, and
lift them speedily from the fire; then |
bottle them. This method keeps the
oysters from shriveling.
Nut Mince Pies.—One cup of wal-
nut meat chopped fine, two cups of
chopped apples, one cup of raisins
and one and one-half cups of sugar
mixed with one teaspoonful each of
cinnamon and allspice, and one-half
teaspoonful each of cloves and salt,
one-half cup of vinegar and one-half
cup of water or fruit juice. Mix thor-
This quantity makes two
large pies. Gory
Potato Croquettes.—Take six boiled
potatoes, pass them through a sieve;
add to them three tablespoonfuls of
ham, grated or minced finely, a little
grated nutmeg, pepper and salt to
and , some chopped parsley;
work into this mixture the yolks of
three or four eggs, then fashion it
into the shape of balls, roll them in |
bread crumbs, and fry in hot lard,
and serve with fried parsley.
The Earthquake Wave.
Seismologists say that every great |
earthquake causes pulsations which
extend for thousands of miles in all
directions on the globe, and one emi-
nent authority has likened such pul-
‘| sations to the long low: swells that
sweep across the ocean. Not long
ago an attempt was made to meas-
ure the heighth and length of the
waves of an earthquake that occurred
in Greece, the pulsations of which |
were perceived by the aid of a spe-
cially constructed pendulum at Birm-
ingham in England. The pulsations, |
or waves, passed through the rocky |
crust of the earth with a velocity of
about two miles a second, and each
of the largest of them, according to
the investigator, must have been
about twenty-eight miles in length, |
but only half an inch in height!—
‘Harper's Weekly. :
The Father of Waters. :
According to John Fiske, it was in
the year 1519—one hundred and
twenty-one years before the Mayflow-
er reached Plymouth Rock—that the
Mississippi was seen by the eyes of a
white man. Says Fiske: ‘Proof was
already at hand that Florida was not
‘an island, for in 1519 Alvarez de Pin-
eda had followed that coast as far |
as the site of Tampico ‘in Mexico,
where he found Cortez and his men.
Pineda then turned back, and after a
while entered the mouth of the Miss-
issippi, which he called Rio de Santa
Bspiritu. He seems to have been the |
first European to sail upon this great
How far he ascended it is not
clear, but he spent six weeks upon its.
banks trading with the Indians.”
- For the Scandalmonger. :
‘The Orleans Museum has just been
enriched with a curious relic of the
past which some workmen in making
excavations in the city came across.
It is a stone representing a grinning
figure, showing the teeth, the coun-
senses. The stone, suspended by a
chain, was placed round her neck,
and so accoutred she was compelled.
to walk around the town in which
she lived. The stone is supposed to
date about the sixteenth century.—
London Globe, :
Spreading English Language.
“Let me tell you,” said Count Kiel-
mansegg, governor of lower Aus-
tralia, ‘that the English language,
which will be studied in the new re-
form grammar school in Vienna, is
the most important in the life of a
business man. Latin is all very well
for scientists; Spanish—you won't
get very far with that; French does
capitally for evening parties; but
everyone ought to know English. If
you want to travel—and every young
man should—you will see how im-
portant English is. It is a ‘world
language.’ ’—New York American.
Once Respectable.
“‘Bushranger,” once a respectable
term, has now sunk to the lowest
depths. In the early Australian news-
papers such advertisements as
“Wanted, a good bushranger,” were
quite common. The word then was
synonymous with ‘“bushman,” one
| skilled in knowledge and experience
of bush:life,
ranger” would be as ridiculous as an
‘honest burglar, for a bushranger ‘is
But now a ‘“‘good bush-
the superlatively bad man of the an-
tipodes—a bank robber, a despoiler
of gold escorts and mail coaches and
the terror of the countryside.
A Good Head For Business.
“I want a hatpin,” said little Mary,
of four years, as she gazed eagerly
at the cushion full of sparkling orna-
ments on the milliner’'s - showcase.
“How much is it?’ she asked after
making a very deliberate choice and
laying -her purchase money, a bright
penny, on the counter, ’
ing,” returned the kind-hearted Mrs.
Briggs, as Mary’s mother was one of
her regular customers. ' Imagine her
amusement as the little “hargain-
hunter” said most eagerly, “i'll take
two, then.””—The Delineator. :
Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N.
‘rented the house in
+ Paris, ‘where the great novelist died.
tion of the Murine Eye Remedies in
“On/*noth- | a
Itech cured in 30 minutes by “Woolford’s
* Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. Atidruggists.
weakest organ.
Each of the chief ore
gans of the body is a
\ link in the Chain of
Life. A chain is no
Jd stronger than its
weakest link, the body
no stronger than its
st or If there is weakness of stomach, liver or lungs, there is @
weak link in the chain of life which may snap at any time.
Often this so-called
¢‘ weakness ’’ is caused by lack of nutrition, the result of weakness or disease
- of the stomach and other organs of digestion and nutrition.
Diseases and
weaknesses of the stomach and its allied organs are cured by the use of Dr.
Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery.
When the weak or diseased stomach is
cured, diseases of other organs which seem remote from the stomach but which'
have their origin in a diseased condition of the stomach and ™
other organs of digestion and nutrition, are cured also.
The strong man has a strong stomach.
Take the above recommended **Discov-
ery’’ and you may have a strong stoma
ach and a strong body.
Given Away.—Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser,
new revised Edition, is sent free on receipt of stamps to pay
S Send. 21 one-cent stamps for the
book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the cloth-bound vol-
expense of mailing only.
&
ume. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
COLT DISTEMPER
Can be handled very easily. The sick are cured, and all others in
same stable, no matter how ‘exposed,” kept from having the
wm disease, by using SPOHN’S LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE. Give
Bh on the tongue or in feed. Acts on the blood and expels germs
of all forms of distemper. Bestremedy ever known for mares in
foal. One bottle guaranteed to cure one case. 50c and $1 a bottles
$5 and $10 dozen, of druggists and harness dealers, or sent express
paid by manufacturers. Cut shows how to poultice throats. Que
| free Booklet gives everything. Local agents wanted. Largest
ow gelling horse remedy in existence—twelve years.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind., U. 8. A.
A Boston firm of building wreckers
has brought out a circular saw that
will cut through nails and bolts as
well as through wood, enabling them
to cut into. regular sizes of second-
hand lumber that otherwise would be
valueless. . 4
Only One “Bromo Quinine,”
That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look
- for the signature of BE. W. Grove. Used the
World over to Cure a Celd in One Day. 25¢
Charles Saddlewauser, a farmer of
Mendon, Mich,, tripped on a stone in
his backyard and fell across a pump-
- kin in such a manner that his neck
was instantly broken. -
Many Children Are Sickly.
Mother Gra y
dren, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in
Children’s Home, New York, cure Fever-
ishness,” Headache, Stomach Troubles,
Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms.
Atall Druggists’; 25¢c. © Sample mailed FRE.
The society Amis de Balzac has
Rue Fortune,
It hopes to get enough money to buy
‘it and make a memorial storehouse.
Tiny Baby's Pitiful Case.
“Our baby when two months old
was suffering with terrible eczema
from head to foot, all over her body.
~The baby looked just like a skinned
rabbit. We were unable to put clothes
‘on her. At first it seemed to be a few
“mattered pimples.
They would break
the skin and peel off, leaving the un-
derneath skin red as though it were
scalds. Then a few more .pimples
‘would appear and spread all over the
“body, leaving the baby all raw with-
On top
out skin from head to foot.
of her head there appeared a heavy
scab a quarter of an inch thick. It
was awful to see so small a baby look
as she did. Imagine! The doctor
I "was afraid to put his hands to the
n A
child. We tried several doctors’ rem-
edies but all failed. Ta ;
“Then we decided to try Cuticura.
By using the Cuticura Ointment we
softened the scab and it came off. Un-
der this, where the real matter was, |
‘by washing with the Cuticura Soap
and applying the Cuticura Ointment,
a new skin soon appeared. We also
gave baby four drops of the Cuticura
Resolvent three times daily. After
three days you could see the baby
gaining a little skin which would peel
off and heal underneath. Now the
baby is four months old. She is a fine
picture of a fat little baby and all is
well. We only used one cake of Cuti-
cura Soap, two boxes of Cuticura
Ointment and one bottle of Cuticura
Resolvent.- If people would know
what Cuticura is there would be few
suffering with eczema. Mrs. Joseph
Kossmann, 7 St. John’s Place, Ridge-
wood Heights, L. I., N. Y., Apr. 30
and May 4, 1909.”
Though its pumps are operated by
steam in the usual manner, dan’ auto-
mobile fire engine in use in Berlin is
driven about by a gasoline motor.
- Free to Our Readers.
Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago,
for 48-page illustrated Eye Book Free.
Write all about Your Eye Trouble and
they will advise as to the Proper Applica-
our
cial Case. Your Druggist will tell you
t Murine Relieves Sore Eyes; Strength-
ens Weak E Doesn’t Smart, Soothes
Eye Pain, and sells for 50c. Try Tt in Your
Eyes and in Baby's Eyes, for Scaly Eyelids
and Granulation,
All ithrough Manchuria the country |
people live in villages and go out from
the villages to their work in:the. fields.
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small sugar-coated, :
- easy: to take as candy, re Tate and invig-
orate stomach, liver and bowels and cure
constipation. ; RI
. Bvery year shows a decrease in. the
.number of convictions. . for drunken-
ness in the British Isles.
“Any one who would take i the en-
tire waterfront of New York city
would travel a journey of 341 miles.
’s Sweet Powders for Chil-
Women Grow Taller Now.
The contention of a writer in Health
and Strength that with woman’s pro-
gress toward equal rights her physical
strength is also asserting itself, hag
caused much controversy in European
{ journals. “The average height of Eng
land’s girls,” says a writer in Figaro,
“was five feet three inches in 1895,
and today it is five feet five inches.
This would be pleasant news to me if
it were not also a fact that the sterner
sex ig growing shorter.” Marcel Pre-
vost, discussing the subject, believes
that sports have made the women tall
er, and says: ‘Be on your guard,
modern man, Your position was never
in greater danger than now. Check
the retrogression or stop the advance
of women while yet you are the larger
and stronger. Another inch and youw
will have become the weaker sex.”
It is reported from Pekin that Tuan-
Fang, viceroy of Chili, has been se-
verely censured for: causing photo-
graphs to be taken of the funeral of
the late Dowager Empress and for
other offenses against Feng-shul (the
spirits of the dead).
if}
PHYSICIAN
APPROVES
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Sabattus, Maine.—* You told me te
take Lydia E. am’s Vegetable
3 JCompound and
\ \|me and give you
: A permission to use
my name in your testimonials.”’—Mrs.
H. W.MiTcHELL, Box 3, Sabattus, Me.
Another Woman Helped.
Graniteville, Vt.— “I was passing
throughthe Change of Life and suffered
from nervousness and other annoying
symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound restored my health and
strength, and proved worth mountains
of gold tome. For the sake of other
suffering women I am willing you
should publish my letter.” — Mrs.
CHARLES BARCLAY, R.F.D., Granite-
yille, Vt. hii
' Women who are passing through
this critical period or who are suffer-
ing from any of those distressing ills
peculiar to their sex should not lose
sight of the fact that for thirty years
Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, which is made from roots and
erbs, has been the standard remedy
for female ills. In almost every com-
munity you will find women whe
have been restored to health by Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
| For 22-in. Hog Fence; 15 8=4¢ for 3
i ; + 26-inch; 18 8-4¢ for 31-inch; 22¢
for 34-inch; 25¢ for a 47-inch
Farm Fence. 60-inch Poultry
Fence 83¢c. Sold on 230 days
trial. 80 rod spool ldeal Barb
Wire $1.55 Catalogue free,
KITSELMAN BROS.
Box 3g. MUNCIE, IND.
AAAS BE
WOULD YOU MARRY IF SUITED?
Matrimonial paper containing hundreds of
advertisements marriageable peonle from ali
gections, rich, poor, young, old, Protestants,
Catholics, mailed, sealed, free. ;
C. X. GUNNELS, TOLEDO, OHIO
W ANTE] SECOND-HAND BAGS AND BUR-
! LAP; any kind, any quantity,
anywhere. Write 10r prices, RICHMONB
BAG CO., INC., Richmond, Va.
P. NU. 11, 1910.
PATENT
If afflicted
Watson E.Coleman, Wash-
ington, D.C. Books free. High-
est references. Best resuits.
marek Tompson’s Eye Water