News of Persons, SNOW SHOE visitors Tei x I fzxwng ihe dhe Mouvrizin Cit] Hote rows of C. cve.and, He BE. Bail, Homer Noll and af Tyrone, A. B. Curtis § Rwuicher, Cinte, 0., G. T. X aad ¥¥. F. Bouse and wife of Pitts. Sra. Waz. Hoover wf ihe 1. V. Coal Company, ap will a severe attack of gout last 3 2 eo Cr ow] hes ¥v] [ om ~ a x A By VY. A. Dax - the efficient engineer was laid weapk. Joseph Wade: and John Tchin tock wsmcimations for mine foreman at Du- Tepis. Hem. Quick and wife of Mile are wigiting their son William. BW_ Snyder spent several day «J town last week. BB. Rankin of Bellefonte, was a aalisr in town last week. B. MM. Irwin who has spent several weeks with his parents, departed for is mame in West Virginia. _ Mias Marie Reese of Indiana State Sorrel, visited: her father last week. Pea Misses Lou and Alice O’Brien dest wx last Monday for Williamsport, where they will attend Dickinson Sem- fmary. Miss Hunter closed her term of gchodl on last Wednesday and left for Ger Bome at Mill Hall. We under- stawd she will return in the near fu- “re znd Open a summer school. AMemars. Shaw and Lebkicher spent Bemalay with friends at Clarence. Frank Smith was at Milesburg over Ronda. sburg, s cut eee ee eee Mews From Our Neighbors PINE GLEN. Raymond Williamson and wife Sun- Asved with Mrs. Williamson's parents 44 tig place. Myde Hcover made a flying Se saztern part of the county last wool. : Fehr Bowes is a weekly visitor to Plemrfiold these days. Wonder why Re wisits the: little mountain city so aiff. ‘CFxion and Clementine Cramer of Weakannon, were Pine Glen visitors am Bunday. : 4 ¥. Daugherty is on the sick list at regent. His sons John and "vert af Clearfield, visited him a few days this week. . $y. Harry Hoover accompanied by fee mister Clementine, made a visit to Philipsburg on Thursday. #rz. R. B. Daugherty and children started for Clearfield on Friday. , MLB. Loy is laying concrete walks sat his home, which adds great'y to ds appearance. f3mr schools closed last week except he Laurel Run. Both teachers and sapis will appreciate vacations afer dle work of the term. The pcople who have been called gessiniists because they declared nice weather would not last always have $acir inning now. Snow follows much wars weather in March are surely as mimter follows summer. trip to ~ HOWARD. Xr. T. B. Budinger of Snow Shoe, Frais Mayes and wife of Lemont, Le- Hay Bechdel and family of Bellefonte, wad Miss Agatha Wensel, accompanied fw Mr. McNichols, were Sunday — at Howard. rz. J. W. Kurtz and two children, Are fa a few days at Williams- ort. Tha editor of the *= yaake the county seat a Rev. J. F. Duulap, D. D,, of 3Fwright colleze, ably filled the pul gid =f the Eva nge’ical charge on Sun day, April 3. Xuseph Diehl is possessor of the third auto, a fifty horse-power ma- shine, It is a heauty. James Potter and Frank Crawiord of HAellefonte, were trans ¥ers in our town looking after ware interests. Attorney Clement Dale, accompan- ied By Chas. E. Patton of Curwensville, zoavassed the town and vicinity. Mr. Patten wishing the nomination for gswgress in this district. aman DeArmeant is at home from Iahmstown, recuperating from an at- fark af pneumonia. Ir. McIntyre accompanied two pa- fiemts to Philadelphia for treatment durigz (he week. Hustler took time short call. president hard- acting busi-| the Methodist church. Usual pro- gram rendered, interesting to cne and all. Cyrus Tice has moved his family from Philadelphia and once more is a resident of our town. We hope Mr. Tice will fully recover from a pro- iracted illness... J.-H. D. Thompson, evangelis i Td about to leave for their n jo) wife, are 4 ‘homme in Oregon. Miss Margaret Wian is spending the week with Mrs. Joseph Weirick, >n Wednesday at 2:30 a. m., the Howard canning factory was burned, evidently of incendiary crigin. Hon. John A. Weed tard is walking ith the aid of a cane these days. Mrs. I. T. Alabgch and son Teddy Lock Haven, were guests 3 C. Lucas on Saturday. A number cf our town pe ended the funeral of Mr. Curt Wilson at Lock Haven. The people interzsted in Foreign Missions were given a treat by attend- ing the lectures delivered by Rev. J Allison Platts, assisted by Rev. Barry and C. C. Shuey cf Bellefonte. LEGISLATOR ALLEGES BRIBERY Accusation is Made at Hearing Against Employe of the House—Au- thor Contradicted. Columbus, Ohio — Representative Howard W. Pears of Allen county tes | tified before the house bribery inves tigating committee that Simon Cronin of Akron, telephone attendant in the house for 10 years, had offered him $100 to support the Elson Telephone merber bill, which passed the house a month ago, Cronin, when informed of Pears’ testimony, denied the charge. Representative Frank Woods of Me- dina county testified that Represen- tative Meyer Geloid of Lucas county, during a conversation, had given theo impression that efforts had been made to bribe him to suppoprt the bill. Representative Fred Morris of Cuya- hoga county, he testified, told him that $50 was offered him to vote against reconsideration of the Elson measure. Woods declared he advised these men if they couldn’t prove that the offers had been made to say noth- ing about the alleged offers. The testimony of Representative A. W. Elson of Tuscarawas county, au- thor of the measure, that no one had assisted him in its preparation was contradicted by his seatmate, Repre- sentative W. T. Smith of Marion coun- ty, who said Elson had told him Cyrus Huling, a Columbus attorney, had given him aid in drawing the bill. Huling for several years was active n independent telephone interests. FEMININE NEWS NOTES. Girls in Pittsburghigh schools must not wear high heels. ; The women students of Cornell beat the boys as scholars this year. Queen Alexandra oversees a dairy for her amusement, and it is not a money-making proposition. Miss Hazel A. Willmont, of Biook- lyn, sued Emil Niglutseh for $50, 000, alleging breach of promise. Mrs. Mary Kelleher. who was on trial at Cambridge, Mass., for the murder of six relatives, was acquitted. Women of the “No Vote. No Tax League,” of Cook County, Ill., organ- ized to resist the payment of personal tax. Myra Kelly (Mrs. Allan Macnaugh- ton), a noted writer of short stories of life in New York City, died in Eng- land. Mrs. Augusta E. Stetson said she did not intend to build a church in op- position to the First Church of Christ, Scientist, at New York City. Miss Ada M. Bradbury, of Brook- lyn, won her suit to recover from George V. Couture $100 she charged she had loaned him. Charging that her husband kept her in exile abroad, Mrs. Virginia Lee Baker sued at Trenton, N. J., for di- vorce from Henry Bainbridge Baker. Judge Rentoul decided at the City of London Court that an engagement ring was a conditional gift, and that ended the girl must return the ring. At Greenwich, Conn., Miss Nixola Greeley-Smith, a granddaughter of Horace Greeley and a newspaper wri- ter, was married to Andrew W. Ford, an editor of the New York Evening Telegram. Elsie Gewitsch, a behutitul girl of seventeen, niece of a French Senator and Austrian baton. was committed to Magdalen Home for Girls in New York City on her mother’s declaration that she was an incorrigible thief. An egg sold by a dealer as strictly fresh bore a feminine name, and the ultimate consumer, writing to the owner of the name, received the reply that the name was written three years ago. This rather takes the romance out of the egg, for the Pittsburg Des- patch. But the account, so far as we have seen, is silent on the vital point whether the egg was eaten and digested successfully after its three years’ sojourn in warehouses. If so, The public schools closed this week. it looks like a triumph for cold stor- Pemmencement exercises were held in age. ‘sults; - worl’, FOR CHAPPED HANDS. Prevention of Many of the Cold Wea- ther Skin Troubles. It is natural that persons with deli- cate, thin skins should suffer more or less discomfort in the winter, and when to a delicate skin is added a . poer general circulation the suffering may be serious. Much may be done to reduce this suffering to a minimum in the case of persons who are not obliged to expose themselves to the elements in all wea- ther, and even those who are much exposed may help their condition by observing a few simpie rules. The greatest annoyance in damp, cold countries, in England especially, is the chilblain. In most parts of America the very cold weather is also dry and this particular horror does not flourish. The hands and feet are the parts most generally affected by chil- blain, which is a sort of miniature frostbite, The intolerable itching which is associated with it is one of the most trying symptoms. It often leads to such vigorous scratching that the skin is broken and ulceration re- but with the warm and dry American domicile there need not be great fear of this particular form of skin trouble. Some persons always develop skin troubles in a prolonged spell of very cold weather, and all 'very delicate skins will suffer from harsh and bit- ing cold winds. Persons who are sub- ject to any form of eczema are espec- ially liable to an attack in cold wea- ther. There are many simple precautions which no one of ordinary intelligence should neglect. Take, for example, the simplest form of all cold weather skin bothers, chapped hands. Many persons will say, “My hands always chap dreadfully in cold weather,” and if cross-examined these same people seem to regard the chapping as an in- evitable condition from which there is no escape. Let such persons try the following simple treatment; Never wash the hands in very cold or very hot water. Use a simple, pure, super- fatted soap, dry very thoroughly and apply some emollient: the old-fashion- ed glycerine and rose water will often work as well as anything. In some cases it will be better not to use soap in any form and to substitute oatmeal. The hands should always be well cov- ered when in the open air. If to this is added proper exercise, in order that the circulation may be good, there will be no chapped hands. The same rules apply to the face and to the skin generally; thorough pro- tection by the clothing, care in bath- ing, with the use of an emollient all the time, and a good general circula- tion.—Youth’s Companion, ° Brother Dickey’s Philosophy. Folks what takes de worl’ ez dey finds it, sometimes takes mo’n dey kin tote away. De higher you gets in dis worl’ de furder off heaven loo%ks, yit de Ii’ chilluns don’t have ter tiptoe ter reach it. De millionaires got de po’ mens splittin’ rails fer um ter fence in de but wen dey got de worl’ fenced ter suit um, here comes Sa- tan an’ takes de fence fer kindlin’ wood. I hé&z sometimes said ter myse’f dat I'd git tired stayin’ in heaven a mil- lion years. I hez got so use ter ol Satan dat de excitement er runnin’ fum him is like secon’ natur’ ter me. —Atlanta Constitution. Ironical. “Since I have lived in New York,” said the Philadelphia woman, “I have done nothing but eat. In Philadelphia they don’t seem to pay half as much attention to eating as they do in New York. They have but one restaurant where you can go and dine and sit about talking. Here in New York you seem to have such a restaurant, Ital- ian table d’hotes, Greek restaurants, French restaurants and cakes at ev- ery corner. I never saw anything like it. You do nothing but eat in New York.” “Yes, we do one other thing, said the man who sat near her. “We drink a little.” “A little!” cried the woman who was with him.—New York Press. Eyewitness Stories. In his Royal Institution lecture Sir Hubert von Herkomer incidentally touched on the point that no two peo- ple seem to see alike, as illustrated by the familiar experience that twenty eyewitnesses of a street accident will give twenty widely varying accounts of its details. We had an instance of this recently in the case of the Tot- tenham outrage, and few failed to observe the extraordinary fact that, when the Druce coffin was opened, two reporters made hopelessly diver- gent statements as to the beard—the very thing most interesting.—Pall Mall Gazette. Two French army dogs have drawn light ambulances, the invention of a lieutenant, with a load of 160 pounds each, for some 375 miles, without a breakdown, showing how they can Bg used in war. ‘seeds of ap heroic YES! JOB PRINTING TOO. TR 5 Oat Send your next order for PRINTED . STATIONERY to the office of the TIMES [Spend a Pleasant | rie HidiHion) Hour 4 HH looking over the HENRY BOSCH COM- H PANY WALL PAP gamples at your own home—sitting comfortably in your easy chair! You can make a better selection that way than by ransacking the stores. 8 You see the whcle line—the very latest i desicns—the loveliest tints and richest B color effects, including imported patterns. Everything good in wall papers in the Bosch line. It’s economy, too—you get the lowest New York-Chicago prices. Will call with Beach Samples— any hour you name. Look them over to your hearts con- tent—not the least obligation to buy. It’s our wav of adver- tising the Bosch Wall Papers. CLARENCE LUCAS Selling Agent MOSHANNON, PA. Heroes. What a hero one can be without moving a finger! The world is not a field worthy of us, nor can we be sat- isfied with the plains of Troy. A glorious strife seems waging within us, yet so noiselessly that we’ but just catch the sound of the clarion ringing of victory, borne to us on the breeze. There are in each the ardor, which need only to be stirred in with the soil where they lie, by an inspired voice or pen to bear fruit of a divine flavor.—Thoreau. DYEING LACES. To color very delicate French lace, which is usually silk, it may be stretched with thumb-tacks upon a board, with clean white blotters be- neath it, and painted with gasoline and oil paint made very thin. This is done when laces are so ten- der that they weuld not stand dip- pit and wringing. A broad, new varnish brush is used for the painting of lace, and the pro- cess is a most delicate one, involv- ing great care—Washington Star. LET YOUR MIRROR BE THE JUDGE IF it decides you need a new suit, let it be made by the Inter- national. We are local headquarters for the great tailoring con- cern and will be pleased to show their beautiful styles and all wool fabrics and take your measure carefully. When the suit is delivered let the mirror judge again. It will give you but one answer — Your clothes are perfect. Order Your Spring Suit Now J. T. LUCAS Moshannon, - - Pa. H.S. Cramer BARBER and Shampooing Shop Open Day and Evening. Moshannon - = Pa. ICE CREAM PARLOR Open Every Saturday ~ Evening Mrs. Cassie Lucas Moshannon, Pa. OANA ANMA ANAS ASS ANNA ASA B.]. BOWERS, Principal OF THE SNOW SHOE SCHOOLS WILL OPEN A Summer Normal Term APRIL THE ELEVNTH Special attention will be given to those who are preparing to teach, as well as to special courses. Terms Moderate i In High School Room, Show Shoe, Pa. Cc Of Eight Weeks, Beginning Q