Snow Shoe times. (Moshannon, Pa.) 1910-1912, April 13, 1910, Image 7

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    %
ood’s
Sarsepariila
For
All Spring Blood Diseases
and Ailments
Possesses medicinal merit Peculiar to Itself and has
an unequaled record of cures.
Take it this spring,
‘in usual liquid form or tablets known as Sarsatabs.
SOUR STOMAGH
“I used Cascarets and feel like a new
man. I have been a sufferer from dys-
pepsia and sour stomach for the last two
years. I have been taking medicine and
other drugs, but could find no relief only
for a short time. I will recommend
Cascarets to my friends as the only thing
for indigestion and sour stomach and to
keep the bowels in good condition.
They are very nice to eat.’
Harry Stuckley, Mauch Chunk, Pa,
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good,
Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe.
10c, 25c., 50c. Never sold in bulk. The gen-
wine tablet stamped C CC. Guaranteed to
cure or your money back. 926
Sore, Tender and
Aching FEET
instantly relieved and permanently cured
y
Dr.Porter’s
Antiseptic
Healing Oil
A soothing antiseptic discovered by an
Old Railroad Surgeon.: All Druggists re-
fund money ifit fails to cure. 25¢c, 50c & $1.
Paris Medicine Co.,
ouis, Mo.
Dear Sir: I am bathing my feet with DR. PORTER'S
ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL as I stand a greater part
of the day causing large lumps of callous to form. I tell
every one who suffers with any kind of skin trouble, how
Jonderigily DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC HEALING +
eals
Dryden, Maine.
(Signed) MRS. LAURA DUNTON.
Made by
Maker fro
Laxative Bromo Quinine
HONDURANS ALL WANT GUNS
Insist on Having Weapons, Although
Ignorant of Their Worth.
The carrying of revolvers is very
common upon all occasions, and the
assertion is made that fully three-
fourths of the men of Honduras have
revolvers of some kind or other,
writes an American consul. The peo-
ple who can afford them know and ap-
preciate the quality. in high grade
makes, but the great bulk of the de-
mand is for a gun costing about half
what these high grade weapons sell
for. At present this demand is large-
ly filled by cheap European imitations
of best American makes. Thus, one
of the revolvers most frequently seen
here is an outright imitation of the
Smith & Wesson. © It is made in
Spain, and contains the words, along
the top of the barrel: “This revolver
will shoot Smith & Wesson cart-
ridges.” It retails for the equivalent
of about $4.
The popular demand is for a 38-
caliber revolver, that can be retailed
for about $5.
15
They Fast.
Salmon require little or no food in
fresh water, and while they will take
most of the things swimming against
the current and swallow or nibble at
them, still they always spit or drop
them out of their mouths, seemingly
only making play at eating. One thing
more. Any differences in sea trout
come not from being of different
breeds—for all sea trout are of the
same class, only look different because
of the water they frequent or the food
they eat. And the same thing ap-
plies to brown trout. So there are
only two breeds of trout. —New York
| fortunate to have good wives.
Press.
When Living Was Cheap.
In the time of Henry VIII board and
lodging for servants, laborers who
lived with their employers, etc., were
valued at 4 cents a day. This was al-
lowed to those who elected to live un-
der their own roofs and feed them-
selves. The Earl of Northumber-
land allowed 5 cents a day. Harri-
son describes the astonishment of the
Spanish nobles who accompanied Phil-
ip to England, when they saw how the
working people lived. Though living
in mud houses, ‘these people,” ‘said
one of them, “fare commonly as well
as the King.”—Chicago Journal.
‘Free to Our Readers.
Wr.te Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago,
for 48-page illustrated Eye Book. Free,
Write all about Your Eye Trouble Fo
they will advise as to the Proper Applica-
tion of the Murine £y0 Romedies in Your
Special Case. Your ggist will: tell Ju:
that Murine Relieves Sore Eyes, Stre
ens Weak Eyes, Doesn't Smart, Soo es
Eye Pain, and sells for 50c. Try It in Your
Eyes and'in Baby's Eyes, for Scaly Eyelids
and Granulation.
Income and Marriage.
Some people can not afford to mar-
ry on $5,000 a year, because they lead
$6,000 lives. Again, there are many
men who are perfectly competent to
maintain homes on $1,000 a year or
even less, because they are good man-
agers and have good habits and are
the combination that tells the story
and not the separate individuals.—
Washington Star. :
Wasted a Fortune on Skin Trouble.
“I began to have an itching over
my whole body about seven years ago
and this settled in my limb, from the
knee to the toes. I went to see a
great many physicians,a matter which
cost me a fortune, and after I noticed
that-I did not get any relief that way,
I went for three years to the hospital.
But they were unable to help me
there. I used all the medicines that
I could see, but became worse and
worse. I had an inflammation which
made me almost crazy with pain.
When I showed my foot to my friends
they would get really frightened. I
did not know what to do. I was so
sick and had become so nervous that
I positively lost all hope.
“I had seen the advertisement of
the Cuticura Remedies a great many
times, but could not make up my mind
to buy them, for I had already used so
many medicines. Finally I did decide
to use the Cuticura Remedies, and I
tell you that I was never so pleased as
when I noticed that, after having used
two sets of Cuticura Soap, Cuticura
Ointment and Cuticura Pills, the en-
tire inflammation had gone. I was
completely cured. I should be only
too glad if people with similar disease
would come to me and find out the
truth. I would only recommend them
to use Cuticura. Mrs. Bertha Sachs,
1621 Second Ave., New York, N. Y.,
Aug. 20, 1909.”
“Mrs. Bertha Sachs is my sister-in-
law and I know well how she suffered
and was cured by the Cuticura Reme-
dies after many other treatments
failed. Morris Sachs, 321 E. 89th St.,
New York, N. Y., Secretary of Deutsch-
Ostrowoer Unt.-Verein, Kempner He-
brew Benevolent Society, ete.”
There were in Russia in 1908, 2,676
vodka breweries, 1 fiscal spirit distil-
lery and 43 sections of the same, 511
private distilleries, 26 reserve stores
and 27,402 shops for the sale of vod-
ka. The total amount of vodka sold
during the year was 232,813,382 gal-
lons, a consumption of 1.66 gallons per
capita.
Aids Nature
‘The great success of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis-
covery in curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, weak
lungs, and obstinate and lingering coughs, is based on
the recognition of the fundamental truth that ‘‘Golden
supplies Nature with body-build-
ing, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in con-
Medical Discovery’’
densed and concentrated form. With
supplies the necessary strength to the stomach to digest
food, build up the body and thereby throw off lingering
The ‘‘Discovery’’ re-establishes the
digestive and nutritive organs in sound heslth, purifies
and enriches the blood, and nourishes the nerves—in
obstinate coughs.
this help Nature
short establishes sound vigorous health,
If your dealer offers something ‘Just as good,’’
it is probably better FOR HIM---it pays better.
But you are thinking of the cure not the profit, so
there’s nothing ‘‘ just as
good’? for you. Say se.
Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain English; or, Med-
icine Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700
illustrations, newly revised up-to-date
‘Edition, paper-bound, sent for 21 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing
only. Cleth-bound, 3 stamps,
Address Dr. R. V, Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
?
‘green tops of celery.
i ture into six eggs, beat until the yolks
It is
‘Hungary.
rice boiled and dried and a' cupful of |
‘filled with hot water.
i EPICURE’S
CORNER ‘¢
' Tea Room Omelet.
For omelet jardiniere as it is served
in an uptown tea room, have ready a
tablespoonful each of minced chives,
an onion and half as much minced
Turn the mix-
are well broken and make like any
ordinary omelet. Garnish with sprigs
of parsley and white tips of. celery.—
New York Sun, Sei
wip] ————— A
ET fg
West Indian Omelet.
Drain the pulp froma can of to-
matoes, straining off as much of the
liquor as possible. Shred three or
four Spanish sweet peppers from a
can, season with salt and paprika
and heat over the fire until the mix-
ture bubbles. Make a plain omelet,
turn it on to to a hot omelet platter
and turn the tomato at each side.—
New York Sun.
: Raspberry Cream.
Soak a half box gelatine in cold |
water to cover for half an hour. Then
stand over boiling water until dis-
solved. Add a half cup sugar and a
pint of raspberry juice, strain, set in
a pan of cracked ice and stir until
thickened. Add a pint whipped
cream, and mix thoroughly. Pour in
a mould and set in a mixture of ice
and salt to harden. New York Tele-
gram.
Vassar Cakes.
These little bites, which, of .course,
are named after the great school, are
cornmeal hoecakes, served hot and
eaten with strained honey, brown
sugar or New Orleans molasses. But
the hoe has nothing to do with them.
A batter is made of cornmeal and cold
water, seasoned only with salt. The
batter must be so thin that it literally
pours from a tablespoon, one of which
is put at a time on a hot iron griddle
for the cake. The usual griddle holds
three or four cakes, and -as soon as
these cook they are thinly coated
with butter and served in hot plates.
The sugar, honey or molasses is put
on at the table.—Detroit News.
An Egg Dish,
A delicious egg dish comes from
Have ready a cupful of
paprika sauce. Put the rice into the
centre of a large, round chop plate,
flatten the top of the mound, cover
it with poached eggs and turn the
sauce over it.
together a rounding tablespoonful
each of butter and flour and add a
level teaspoonful of paprika. Stir in
a cupful of hot water seasoned with
beef extract or veal chicken stock if
it is on hand, season with salt and
cook until it thickens. Now York
Sun. ’ °
| Squash Fritters.
‘One: cupful flour, one-nalf cup sour
milk, one egg, one-fourth cup sifted
‘squash, one teaspoonful nutmeg, ‘one-
half teaspoon salt, one teaspoon soda;
beat the egg well, add the sour milk,
in which the soda has been dissolved;
then add the nutmeg, salt and squash
and last of all the flour; drop by
spoonfuls on to a well greased, hot
griddle, and fry a golden brown; one
must not have quite as hot a fire as
for the ordinary buckwheat griddle
cakes, else they will be done on the
outside and not in the middle, for it
will take a longer time for them to
cook through, the dough being of a
little different consistency from the
other kind.—Mrs. Clarence A. Noble,
in the Boston Post.
PERE
Brush pie crust with cream to in-
sure a rich, brown color.
Whip cream in a pitcher. It whips
more quickly than in an open bowl,
with less spatter.
Grass stains-should be washed with
cold soft water before the garment
is put in the tub, and they will disap-
pear.
A woman from California thinks
that half a dozen raisins dropped into
the breakrfast coffee pot are essen-
tial.
A very good bed-warmer for the
children on a cold night is a bottle
It will not
leak and will keep hot for hours.
Always put a cauliflower in plain
water, so as to draw out any insects.
If salt is placed in the water it kills
|
2
the insects and they are left in the
vegetable.
Small side dishes, once so numer-
ous, are now used for nothing save,
perhaps,
sauce.
tables are served with the meat
course.
Oysters for frying may be rolled in.
‘cornmeal and no egg is needed. When
For the sauce, cream
a thin apple or rhubarb!
‘Rarely more than two vege-
the fish man sends rather small oys-
ters, take two at a time, slightly over-
lapping each other, with bread or
crumbs, and fry in the usual way.
Cats, they say, need grass for their
physical wellbeing. As catsnip alone
does not suffice, it is well for anyone
who has a pet cat to plant some oats
in a flower pot. They grow easily
and with very little care if kept in a
warm place. :
When the leaves of begonias turn
brown and drop oif, says the Delinea-
tor, stir in well around the roots a
teaspoonful of sulphur. It will re-
store them quickly to a luxuriant
growth. Xspecially useful is this
treatment in winter, when the plants
Some of you have a a ha or cream
lace and net waists of which you are
getting tired. As they have the pro-
nounced separate-waist-and-skirt ap-
pearance that is never dressy, but if
you would have them dyed to exactly
match some colored suit you have,
it would give them a dressy look and
they would seem like new.to you.
Settling a Dispute,
Richard Le Gallienne, the poet,
said at a dinner:
“Literary disputes are interesting
if properly conducted. Too many of
them, however, are suggestive of the
Shakespearian dispute in Tin Can.
“Professor Bill Billus, of the Tin
Can Dancing Academy, delivered a
lecture in the Lone Hand saloon, and
in the course of his argument recited
‘The boy stood on the burning deck,’
a gem, he declared, from .Shake-
speare’s ‘Othello.’
“But an interrupter
strode forward.
‘“ ‘TI am a Boston gent,’ said the in-
terrupter, ‘and I certify that no
Shakespeare never wrote that piece.’
“ ‘Friend,’ said Professor Billus,
gently, ‘I can convince you: that he
done so.’
‘“ ‘Convince away,’
tonian, sceptically.
“So Professor Billus led off with
his right foot, and followed up the
argument with a brass cuspidor, fall-
ing, in the subsequent clinch, on top.
“ “Who writ the piece?’ he shouted,
as he pummelled his opponent stead-
ily.
‘“ ‘Shakespeare,’ the Bostonian an-
swered in smothered tones from be-
neath.
“ ‘Are you sure?’ asked the profes-
sor.
“ ‘Dead sure,” was the reply, ‘I seen
him do it.’ ”—Washington Star,
rose and
said the Bos-
How a Joke Bought a Horse.
Charles Mathews, the famous Eng-
lish actor, once indulged disastrously
in his well known taste for mimicry.
The ridicule on this occasion was at
the expense of Mr. Tattersall during
a sale of blooded stock conducted by
that well-known auctioneer.
“The first lot, gentlemen,” said
Mr. Tattersall, “is a bay filly by Smo-
lensko.”
“The first lot, gentlemen,” echoed
Mr. Mathews in the same tone of
voice, ‘is a bay filly by Smolensko.”
The auctioneer looked somewhat
annoyed, says the writer of “English
Comedians of the Past, » but pro-
ceeded: :
“Well, what" shall we begin with?”
“Well, what shall we ‘begin with?”’
replied the echo.
Still endeavoring to conceal his
vexation, Mr. Tattersall inquiringly
called out:
“One hundred guineas?” .
“One hundred guineas,”
Mathews.
“Thank you, sir,” cried Mr. Tatter-
sall, bringing down the hammer with
a bang, ‘‘the filly is yours; ’—Phila-
delphia Record.
echoed
In Daniel Boone’s Day,
“Tip’s tales about Daniel Boone
may seem pretty ‘tall’ to people here
in the ‘effete East,” ”’ writes ‘‘Missou-
rian,” old friend of Tip. ‘But to me,
whose maternal ancestor was com-
panion to Boone in Kentucky, and
most of whose ancestors were on the
frontier from 1760 on, these are sober
fact. My uncle had an old Kentucky
rifle, and, while during youth I was
able to hold twenty-five pounds in one
hand at arm’s length, I was not strong
enough to hold that gun steady and
hit a mark the size of a silver doiiar.
Speaking of ‘barking’ squirrels, that
was a common thing—after Boone
showed how. Snuffing the candle was
also common, and done at,night by |
aid of fires which lighted up things
until the light of the tallow candle
would just show the fire light. Cut-
ting the burnt wick just high enough
to ‘snuff the candle’ without at the
same time putting out its light was
the trick.”—New York Press.
Rather Touchy.
“Look here,” drawled Farmer Rye-
top, in the diner of the palace train,
‘“‘what do you mean by bringing me a
finger bowl with rose leaves in it?”
“Why, boss, dat is de latest style,”
assured the waiter.
“It is, eh? Well, I thought you
had cut out the regulation slices of
‘lemon hecause you were afraid I
would mistake it for lemonade. I
ain’t one of them comic-page farmers, |
boy.’==Chicago News,
~ 40 years ago.
1S of the NEEDEME
: :
TELS
AW PA
OU H
S ABSURD
HOUSE SECLEANING |
THE PLACE 13 ;
FIT EVES IN 3
GOING ON i
/ Ad
Ne
Mo) i
EVERYTHING LOOKS AS GOOD AS
NEW SINCE YOU CLEANED USE
RR
aw oV
RETR
RE . 18
T ERE] 5 / |
1rdBE J
a2
or]
i TS PRETTY HARD TO GET
ASSISTANCE FROM A MAN WHOSE. LIVER &
OR STOMACH LS QUT OF ORDER.
PAW-PAW LAXATIVE PILLS KEEP YOu
Munyon’s Paw Paw Pills coax the Swe fins
activity by gentle methods. They do not scour,
or weaken. They are a tonic to the stemaels,
and nerves; invigorate instead of weakea.
rich the blood and enable the stomach to get
nourishment from focd that is put into if. Ton
pills contain no calomel; they are soo
and stimulating. For sale by all druggists in
25c sizes. If you need mi advice, write Wem
yon’s Doctors. They will advise to ihe a
ability absolutely free of Charge. Aya
53d and Jefferson Sts., Phiadeabia Fan,
ee
Munyon'’s Cold Remedy cures ga cold i conn
Price 23c. Munyon’s Rheumatism Remedy
in a few hours oT cures in a few days. Pricedie.
Prince Rupert and his feliowatven
turers, with a charter granted bg
Charles II, were the pioneers of fhe
now famous Hudson Bay Company.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets first put ap
2 Ea They Xornlute aul inwignes fe
stomach, Liver and bowels caated,,
tiny granules. og
1%
Natural Versus Laboratory Milk.
Clear cut is the explanatios Pr
Louis Fischer, the eminent auilori€y
on feeding of children, gives om fhe
worse than useless practice of pasferre-
izing milk for the use of infamie, im
valids or healthy adults. In words
easily understood by the laymen The
shows that under the process the fogd
value is decreasel and toxing whisk
cause disease developed. “You eam
not make dirty milk clean by steaming
it,” says Dr. Fischer. Dr. Fischess
denunciation of pasteurizing sgwaEes
with the opinion of S. T. Taylor, pmes-
ident of the Borden Condensed Mili
Company, the pioneer among mill
companies in demanding cleam milk
for its customers. In his opiniom meus
teurizing opens the doors te dirty mil
produced under unsanitary condificms
and puts a premium on negligence.
The experience of Mr. Taylor's emmu-
pany plainly shows the decline af fle
pasteurization fad. The company
formerly produced pasteurized mail
It dismantled the plant 10 years age
because its customers no longer desir
ed milk so treated—New York Herald.
Music By Wireless. n
A recent test of wireless telephowy
was made to show its value for frame
mitting music. Several selecffome
were sung in a trasmitter at Park awe
nue and Fortieth street, New York, and
were listened to by a group of hess
paper men at the Metropolitan Tower.
At times the singing was very cless.
but frequently it was impossible
hear anything but a confused bimr af
| sound.—Philadelphia Record.
Peanut cake seems to be supplant
Ing cottonseed cake as the els,
food for Swedish cattle,
—
rr
Many a
Clever
Housewife
Has learned that te i
serve
Post |
Toasties |
Saves worry and labor, §
and pleases each mem- §
ber of the family as few §
other foods do. fl
The crisp, dainty, fluffy
bits are fully cooked— §
ready to serve from the §
package with cream or §
good milk. i
Give. the home-folks a §
treat. {
“The Memory Lingers™ {
Pkgs 10c. and 15c. 8
\ Pepi.
Ct men