Snow Shoe times. (Moshannon, Pa.) 1910-1912, April 27, 1910, Image 6

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    Sarsaparilla
By virtue of its unequaled
blood-purifying, nerve-stength-
ening, stomach-toning, appe-
tite-restoring properties, is the
one Great Spring Medicine. |
Get it today in liquid form or in tab-
lets known as Sarsatabs. 100 doses $1.
How Far Can You See?
What is the farthest limit to which
the human vision can reach? Powers,
in his book, “The Eye and Sight,”
gives the ability to see the star Alcor,
situated at the tail of the Great Bear,
as the test. Indeed, the Arabs call it
the Test Star. It is most exceptional
to be able to see Jupiter's satellites
with the naked eye, though one or
two cases are recorded, the third sa-
tellite being the most distinct. Peru-
vians are said to be the longest-sight-
ed race on earth. Humbeclt records
a case where these Indians preceived
a human being 18 miles away, being
able to recognize that it was human
and clad in white. This is probably
the record for far sight.
For Red, Itching Eyelids, Cysts, Styes,
Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need
Care, Try Murine Eye Salve. Aseptic’
Tubes, Trial Size, 25¢. Ask Your Druggist
or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
Civilization by Clothes.
During the centennial celebration in
the City of Mexico next September, the
poorer classes of the population are to |
enjoy the advantages of a thorough !
* course in the etigquet of civilization.
By order of an all-wide and benevolent
government they are to be initiated in-
to the sacred mysteries of store cloth- |
es. For a whole month no peons are
to be permitted to appear in the loose |
cotton shirt and drawers and big straw
hat of their class.
Thus only are backward races lifted
to higher planes of prosperity and en-
lightened. - Passionate reformers will
testify on their consciences that never
until the plains Indian sheds his blank-
et and dons the blue overalls of com-
merce will he change his moral na-
ture, and free himself of original sin.
The African chief, in stove-pipe hat
and bandanna, becomes an object of
awe and dignity to his tribe and the
equal of the European trader in bad
rum and Birmingham iron idols, There
31s no hope of redemption for the pa-
gans on Greenland’s icy mountains and
India’s coral strand unless they learn
to wear respectable togs, like the truly
civilized nations of the world.—New
York World.
17
Purely an Experiment,
; COw ration for his twelve cows.
Keep the Pigs at Home.
There is a fortune in hogs for all
of us if the present prices hold until
Wwe can raise the valuable animals.
It should be borne in mind, however,
that in these later days it is not safe
to allow one’s pig to roam the streets.
Automobiles and thieves are thicker
than they were a century ago. The
back yard and the nearest vacant lot
ought to give the porker sufficient
room for comfort.—Providence Bul-
letin.
Cow Ratiouns.
A correspondent from Edgar Coun-
ty, Illinois, says that he has plenty
of clover hay, corn meal, wheat bran
and middlings, and wants a daily
A
good daily ration feeding three times
a day would be in quantity for each
cow, all the clover hay it will eat
up clean, and by weight equal parts
of middlings and bran mixed with
two pounds of corn meal, feeding a
pound of this to each cow in the pro-
portion of a pound for three pounds
of milk each gives. It is always best
to apportion concentrates in propor-
tion to the amount of milk, and there-
fore different cows require different
amounts of these concentrated feeds,
though each should have all the
clover hay it will eat.—Indiana
Farmer.
The Cows and Tuberculin Test.
In some of the extensive tests made
on cows with the tuberculin test, un-
| borns.
poultry family as egg producers.
“They have had no time to go to
poultry shows and have their toenails
der the new regulation and laws re-
They are the superiors of the
manicured, feathers powdered and
their combs bathed in vinegar to en-
hance their beauty. They lay eggs
every day whether they have pretty
prize ribbons fluttering from their
coops or not.”
With a few hens, each laying one
egg every day, it is not necessary for
city residents to study “back to the
farm” literature in their dreams of
how to return to the good old times
when “ham and” was a part of the
daily breakfast menu, in the opinion
of Mrs. Osborn. A small city lot and
little feed and care is all that is neces-
sary to produce enough eggs for each
family to break the Egg Trust, if the
new breed of chickens lives up to her
statements.
Feeding For Butter Making.
A good English dairy authority says
that to a small extent rich fatty foods
add to the butter fat content of the
milk, but enly by supplying material
which the cow is ready to make
cream of, as cows naturally giving
poor milk will lay this fat on their
backs, and it is probably useless to
try to make a bad cow give richer
milk. If it were not for this, it would
seem somewhat meaningless to de-
scribe certain foods as ‘butter-produc-
ers or less suitable for butter making
than for milk-producing, though the
foods are all useful for the latter
purpose also. Peas and rye, for in-
A Small Greenhouse.
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LER a1 PERE
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a p ded UA
KAISER HAS HARD
‘WORK TO MAN NAVY.
Growth of Germany as a Sea
Power Presents Problem Which
is Puzzling
With the marvelously rapid expan-
sion of Germany as an industrial na-
tion and with the development of its
agriculture, for since Bismarck adopt-
ed Protection in 1879 one-third of the
grassland of that year has been
turned into plowed land, it is not
| at all surprising that Germany should
_ begin to find some difficulty in ob-
taining men for the navy, which is
growing at such an alarming rate.
A curious feature of the case is that
the levy made for the German Navy
in 1907-1908 produced about 10,000,
of whom two-thirds came from the
States in the interior of the German
Empire; that is to say, from districts
which hitherto have not bred men for
the sea. :
Herr Koemerrer thinks that it is
now high time to call public attention
to this very unsatisfactory state of
affairs, and he has published a
pamphlet dealing with the important
question. He draws an interesting
comparison between the men of the
Fatherland and the seamen of the
coast of France, and he asks:
“Can the miners of Westphalia, the
peasants of Bavaria, and the artisans
of Nuremberg entertain the lawful
hope of ever beating in naval combat
the descendants of Tourville, of Jean
Bart or of Suffren? The sea does not
belong to every race; it belongs to
those who have known it, loved it and
lived on it; to the races which it has
cradled, which it nourishes, and
which it takes to its embrace at times.
Naval service is no simple civic obli-
gation; it is a calling and a destiny.”
‘Gladstone as Prime Minister.
In the course of a description’ of
the monuments of Westminster Ab-
bey before the London Geographical
Society, Lord Eversley pointed out
that he not only selected the Beasons-
field site in the sacred edifice but he
wrote the epitaph. It read: ‘Erected
by Parliament in memory of Lord
Beaconsfield, twice Prime Minister.”
He remembered at the time that in
one speech Lord Beaconsfield had
made he referred with great pride to
his having been twice Prime Minister.
When he showed the inscription to
Mr. Gladstone the latter said: “Twice
Prime Minister; that’s no great dis-
tinction.”
looked up the names of several who
had been twice Prime Minister, and
one had been Prime Minister three
He (Lord Eversley) had |
A Package Mailed Free on Request of
MUNYON'S
PAW-PAWPILLS
The best Stomach and
on FRED Liver Pills known and
REARS. o positive and speedy
; cure for Constipation,
Indigestion, Jaundice,
Biliousness, Sour Stom-
ach, Headache, and all
ailments arising from a
disordered stomach or
liver. They
MUNYON'S
TN Eel
Bs IE BSE sluggish
: My. cOntain in concen-
pe trated form all the
virtues and values of Munyon’s Paw-
Paw tonic and are made from the
juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. I un-
hesitatingly recommend these pills as
being the best laxative and cathartic
ever compounded. Send us postal or
letter, requesting a free package of
Munyon’s Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa-
tive Pills, and we will mail same free
of charge. MUNYON’'S HOMOEO-
PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., 53d
and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
Perils of a Great City.
The perils of a great city are once
more illustrated. A crowd in an ele-
vated train in New York on a recent
Sunday afternoon was suddenly con-
fronted by what appeared to be a
frothing maniac. He began firing at
random from a revolver, wounding one
man seriously and driving the train-
load of passengers through the win-
dows and doors as rapidly as they
could go. Several stalwart passen-
gers grappled with him, and with the
help of policemen landed him in a sta-
tion house. © When he was searched
a badge was found pinned on his vest.
He was one of New York's “Finest.”
He was simply a drunken policeman,
—Leslie’s. :
Rubber, :
Rubber is first known to history as
a plaything. Tt was during Columbus’
second voyage that Herrera observed
that the inhabitants of Haiti played a
game with balls “made of the gum of
a tree” Even as early as the begin-
ning of the seventeenth century, how-
ever, the Spaniards used rubber to
waterproof their cloaks, but the fact
attracted no attention in the old
world, and it was not until the eigh-
teenth century that the rubber indus-
try began. Early writers mention an
oil extracted from rubber, which wag
taken medicinally with cocoa.
A Joit to Romance.
“How about the young doctor? Has
he proposed?” : :
“Not yet. Papa ruined everything
last night.” :
“How was that?”
“Just as the doctor was pleading for
a peep at my eyes, papa came in and
asked him to take a look at my
' A Cape Colony (South Africa) doc- While most greenhouses are expensive to build and maintain, it is possible for
tor has recently been experimenting an amateur to have one at small expense, as an addition to the dwelling. Hotbed
with a new drug in the treatment of sashes cost from $3.25 to $3.50 each, and measure 3x6 feet. If steam or hot water
typhoid fever. It is an extract of the heating cannot be provided from the house, an oil stove will maintain a high enough
times. That was Lord Derby. By.
way of finishing the conversation with
Mr. Gladstone—it was during his sec-
throat.”’—Louisville Courier-Journal.
THE WALKING OF WESTON
plant called monsonia biflora, and con- | temperature,
tains, besides tannic and gallic acid, an |
active principle’ or principles which ,
Dr. M~berly has named entericin.
The results of the doctor’s experiments
seem to indicate that entericin may
be a useful remedy in typhoid, but his
cases have been too few to justify any
definite conclusions.
A Permanent Position.
“Mr. Smith,” spoke up the young
lawyer, “I come here as a representa-
tive of your neighbor, Tom Jones, with
the commission to collect a debt due
him.”
“I congratulate you,” answered Mr.
Smith, “on obtaining so permanent a,
job at such an early stage in your
career.”—Success Magazine,
‘POSTUM FOR MOTHERS
The Drink That Nourishes and Sup-
plies Food For Mother and Child,
“My husband has been unable to
drink coffee for several years, so we
were very glad to give Postum a trial
and when we understood that long
boiling would bring out the delicious
flavour, we have been highly pleased
with it.
“It is one of the finest things for
nursing mothers that I have ever
seen, It keeps up the mother’s
strength and increases the supply of
nourishment for the child if partaken
of freely. I drank it between meals
instead of water and found it most
beneficial.
“Our five-year-old boy has been
very delicate since birth and has de-
veloped slowly. He was white and
bloodless. I began to give him Post-
um freely and you would be surprised
at the change. When any person
remarks about the great improve-
ment, we never fail to tell them that
we attribute his gain in strength and
general health to the free use of
Postum and this has led many friends
to use it for themselves and chil-
dren
“I bave always cautioned friends
to whom I have spoken about Postum
to follow directions in making it,
for unless it is boiled fifteen or
twenty minutes, it is quite tasteless.
On the other hand, when properly
made, it is very delicious. I want to
thank you for the benefits we have
derived from the use of your
Postum.” as. 4
"Read “The Road to Wellville,”
found in pkgs. - “There’s a Reason.”
Ever read the above letter? ‘A new
one appears from time to time.. They
of some organ or structure of the
, that the tuberculin test is valuable.
. sians.
are genuine, true, and full of human
interest, ie gr i
quiring it, about twenty-five per cent.
of the cows reacted, and were thus
found to be affected.
The tuberculous cow presents a
vivid picture of disease long con-
cealed, slowly but surely desiroying
the tissue until the factor of safety
body has nearly been destroyed. Dur-
ing the early stages of the disease
the animal may appear to be healthy
in every respect, and it is with these
Tuberculin has been used by the
experiment station of the Bureau of
Animal Industry regularly and con-
tinuously during the last seventeen
Years.— Weekly Witness.
Wide-Awake Farmer,
Mr. Stephenson, writing in Hoard's
Dairyman, from Iowa, says: ‘I be-
lieve I am safe in saying that fifty
per cent. of the farmers to-day are
farming the same as they did twenty-
five years ago.”” And this too in a
State where wide-awake livestock
associations, farmers’ institutes, far-
mers’ clubs and granges have been
actively engaged in training the
young farmer in the way he should
£0.
Should this be a discouragement
for farmers to try to learn better
methods? We say no, decidedly.
Let us think of the other fifty per
cent. Are they not reaping the bene-
fits of the improvements from which
the statistics of Iowa have been
made. Who are getting the benefit
of increased products of that great
State? Not the fifty per cent. who
farm as they did a quarter century
ago.
. Hens Sure to Lay Every Day.
Mrs. John Osborn, of Clayton, St.
Louis County, has joined the ranks
of the foes of high prices as the wo-
man Egg Trust buster. After eight
years’ research, she says, she origin-
ated a breed of chickens guaranteed
to produce eggs every day in the year.
The only trouble with the new va-
riety is that the hens are so busy lay-
ing eggs they forget to set. They are
a mixture of Rhode Island Reds,
White Leghorns and Blue Andalu-
Mrs. Osborn grows enthusiastic as
she describes the new products of
the chicken world in this fashion:
“Talk about your egg machines, here
in Missouri, the realm: of the queen
of the barnyard, they sink into ob-
livion in comparison’ to ‘the new Os-
L
stance, are apt to make the butter
hard, and so we find them classed as
third-rate butter foods in Denmark,
though both of them are useful as
milk foods.
Butter making is so well under-
stood in Denmark that it is interest-
ing to see in what estimation differ-
ent foods are held for this purpose.
Rape cake, oats, and wheat bran are |
held in the highest estimation; cotton
cake, barley, and palm nut cake come
next, peas and rye ranking last. It
will be noticed that the best foods
are highly nitrogenous, excepting
rape cake, and not particularly rich
in fat, the second-class foods being
superior in this respect.
Richness of milk being, however,
dependent on the individual cow or
particular breed, the question may
well be asked whether it pays to use
these foods in any quantity for all
cows alike in a milk herd. Those that
give the richest milk should have a
larger proportion of non-nitrogenous
food, which may to some extent
cheapen the ration, as the albuminoid
ratio is enlarged. This later in the
same proportion for all the cows
in a herd has been perhaps too rigidly
adhered to, and one of our leading
dairy authorities advocates attention
being paid more to the actual require-
ments of the cows rather than strict
adherence to any prescribed diet.
Encouraging the Hens.
Mrs. James Creamer, of Springfield,
Ohio, supplied from her hennery a
good share of the “strictly fresh” that
the wealthy classes of Springfield ate
for their breakfasts this last winter.
When the hens struck, late in the
fall, Mrs. Creamer was well launched
in the egg business and’ simply had
to have eggs to supply her customers.
Some humorist told her that chickens
were fond of music and she decided
te experiment. With the kitchen
door open so her fowls could plainly
hear, she played the piano the major
portion of one day. To her surprise
the next day she got six more eggs
than had been her daily allotment
since the cold weather made its ap-
pearance. Sh ;
Mrs. Creamer then moved her piano
further out toward the eggfoundry
and went after the instrument like
a nailer. The hens, touched by the
efforts for their relief from the win-
ter’s ennui, pushed themselves a little
with results financially satisfactory te
all concerned.—Milwaukee Sentinel. °
Derby’s
quickly retorted: ‘“That’s an impossi-
bility, this is my last ministry.
man must be mad to think IT shall ever
be Prime Minister after this ministry
is over.”
was Prime Minister twice after that.
—London Evening Standard.
mar.
ond ministry—he said to the Prime
Minister: “I hope you will beat Lord
record.” Mr. Gladstone
A
Mr. Gladstone, however,
Why She Advertised:
The Bellville man who got a wife
through an advertisement and has
been ‘“‘against the power of the press’
ever since, will be interested in this
advertisement from a Missouri paper:
“Attractive woman, not a day over
thirty, would be pleased to correspond
with eligible man.
Not absolutely
necessary that he should be young.
Would prefer one with property, but
one with a good paying position
would be satisfactory. The young
lady is of medium height, has brown
hair and gray eyes; not fat, although
most decidedly she is not skinny. Her
friends say she is a fine-looking wo-
Object matrimony. ‘Reason for
this advertisement, the young woman
lives in a little dinky town, where the
best catches are the boys behind the
counters in the dry goods and cloth-
ing stores, and every one of them is
spoken for by the time he is out of
short ‘pants.’ ’—Atlanta Constitu-
tien.
Vegetable Oils Oxidize.
“All vegetable oils oxidize, linseed
oil particularly,” remarked the man
who made the suggestion. “Linseed
oil is used principally in polishing.
Some years ago I was interested in a
house in New Jersey that was almost
completed. The workmen were en-
gaged in polishing the floors and used
linseed oil and sawdust. A fire took
place. The insurance people said
they had heard that linseed oil and
sawdust at a ‘high enough tempera-
ture would cause combustion, but.
they were not sure. It was only a
theory. I took one of their investi-
gators with me and made a test. The
linseed oil was put into the sawdust
and in it we placed a thermometer.
As soon as the temperature went up
the sawdust blazed. — New ' York
Press.
When Women Vote.
Daughter — “Have you voted,
mamma?”
Mother—‘ No; your father and I
paired.”—St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
>
Always Stimulates
INTEREST IN WALKING
ALLENS FOOT-EASE
' Shake Into Your Shoes
Allen’s Foot-Ease, the antiseptic
powder for the feet. It relieves
painful, swollen, smarting, ner-
vous feet, and takes the sting out
_ of corns and bunions. It’s the
greatest comfort discovery of the
age. Allen’s Foot-Ease makes
tight or new shoes feel easy. It
is a certain cure for ingrowing
nails and hot, tired, aching feet.
TRY IT TO-DAY. Sold everywhere.
25 cts. Do not accept any substitute.
Sent by mail for 25 cts. in stamps.
it Cures while
gures white [FREE Rd AGS ASE
ALLEN S. OLMSTED, Le Roy, N. Y.
The FREE Book
Zz
acation
THE FIRST
STEP NOW — /
CET A COPY OF OUR NEW /
1910 EDITION
“NEW ENGLAND
VACATION RESORTS”
A Book of Vacation Facts
that will give you a clear conception
of where to go, where to stay, how
much it will cost and what to see in
Vacation Lanp
You cannot afford to be without it.
IT'S FREE FOR THE ASKING.
Other Publications descrip-
tive of and illustrating each section
willbeincludedfor the cost of mailing.
LET US KNOW YOUR WANTS TODAY.
ApprESS RURAL DEPT.,
NORTH STATION, BOSTON.
\ C. M. BURT, G.P.A, ,
Ly
ANTED--Embroiderers on linen and lawn shirt
waist patterns. Experienced. only
apply. Send small sampie Good paying and
continuous work. THE CORINNE MANUFACTUR-
ING COMPANY, 927a Gates Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.
Watson E. Coleman, Wash-
3) 128ton, D.C. . Books free. High
est references. Best results.
SECOND-HAND BAGS AND BUR-
WANTED LAP; any kind, any quantity,
anywhere. “Write for prices, RICHMOND
BAG CO., INC., Richmond, Va.
P.'N.«U. 17,1910
wavs Thompson's Eye Water