Snow Shoe times. (Moshannon, Pa.) 1910-1912, May 04, 1910, Image 7

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    Not Sist ee
Now and again you see two women passe
ing down the street who look like sisters.
You are astonished to learn that they are
mother and daughter, and you realize that 4
a woman at forty or forty-five ought to be
at her finest and fairest. Why isn’t it so?
The general health of woman is so in-
timately associated with the local health
of the essentially feminine organs that
there can be no red cheeks and round
When Johnnie went away to school
He rigidly conformed to rule.
At first he joined a college frat,
And lost an arm and leg at that.
And then he made the Delta Phis,
‘Who gouged out one of Johnnie's eyes.
A “rush” that launched the college year
. Deprived him of a useful ear. Delicately formed and gently reared, women
form where there is female weakness.
Women who have suffered from
this trouble have found prompt
relief and cure in the use of Dr. :
It gives vigor and vitality to the
It clears the complexion, brightens the
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
organs of womanhood.
eyes and reddens the checks.
No alcohol, or habit-forming drugs is contained in *‘Favorite Prescription.’’
Any sick woman may consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. Every letter is
held as sacredly confidential, and answered in a plain envelope.
: World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R.V. Pierce, Pres., Buffalo, N.Y.
Furs and Vanity.
“Fur trimmed overcoats are an all
the year round adjunct to a photo-
grapher’s property room,” said the
photographer. “Men’s vanity turns
to furs just as surely as women’s
does. They think they look better in
a picture with a fur collar snuggling
up around their faces. Most of them
do, too. For years we have kept fur
boas in stock throughout the summer
for women to be photographed in.
Now they have been joined by the fur
trimmed coat. A temperature of 100
in the shade won’t drive a man away
from that overcoat if he thinks it will
3 to his good looks.”’—New York
un.
A TERRIBLE EXPERIENCE.
So Weak From Kidney Trouble He
Could Hardly Stand.
John McKay Williams, Bedford
City, Va., says: “For two months 1
suffered from sharp pains across the
small of my back
and I. became so
weak I could hard-
ly stand. TI “Jost
flesh rapidly and
was becoming wor-
ried. I fortunately
decided to try
Doan’s, Kidney
Pills. I began tak-
ing them and De-
ymptom of the trou-
ble disappeared. I have had no re-
turn of it up to now.”
Remember the name-—Doan’s. For
sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Ln 18
Waterways and Cities.
From time immemorial, the im-
provement of harbors, building of
wharves, and provision, of the appur-
tenances, necessary to enable a port
to engage in deep- water traffic, have
been at the expense of a nation, a
province, a city, or other community.
Such expenditure has been incurred
in but few cases and at few places
by private corporations. In the con-
tinental countries of Europe even
down to the present day this practice
has undoubtedly been justifiable, inas-
much as the seaports have often been
the commercial metropolises, the en-
trepots for merchandise collected for
export or imported for distribution
throughout a nation having compara-
tively little interior commerce, de-
pending for its prosperity in the main
upon that moving by sea. This tradi-
tional practice obtain@ even in the
United States, where the domestic
traffic is by far the more important,
with the result that the national gov-
ernment is continually besieged to im-
prove one port that it may more suc:
cessfully compete with another, which
in turn makes demand upon the na-
tional treasury.—Atlantic Monthly.
At Last It Has Come.
A furniture dealer in Paris is show-
ing a novelty in the form of a bed,
which is an improvement on a similar |
one which attracted attention at the
last Paris exhibition. It is to all ap
pearances an ordinary bed, but the
weight of the body upon it sets clock-
work in motion, thus operating a mu-
sic box which gives forth soothing
melodies. The ‘lullabies which it
plays are supposed to induce sleep.
By means of a dial at the head of
the bed the person who occupies it
fixes an alarm for the next morning.
This produces, when the hour arrives,
discordant sounds, to which the per-
son in bed must pay heed, because
failure to rise within five minutes af-
ter the noise has begun, will cause
the bottom of the bed to fall out.—
New York Tribune.
| The Appetite
Calls fot more
Post
Toasties
Let .a saucer of this
delightful food served
with cream tell why’
“The Memory Lingers"”
Pkgs. 10c. and 15c¢.
'Postum Cereal Co., Ltd:
Sy gia £13
Sg
_—
* wi
| to be earned by people who work with
{their hands or heads.
| ments such. as: Mr. Rockefeller is, un-
{ derstood to propose, no matter how
| excellent’ the purpose of them may
| of earning the income of $400,000,000
lor $500,000,000 for indefinite genera-
| tions to come, no matter how careful-
| the labor and determine in large meas-
| ure the destinies of men.
| justified in being jealous of the re-
‘| tention of too much of it too long in.
| too few hands.—Life. rang
| ‘During 1909 Chile produced
| tons of copper, against 19,463 tons for
int ae J
A Law-Abiding Child. |
A health officer recently received
the following note from one of the res-
idents of his district: :
“Dear Sir: I beg to inform you that
my child, aged eight months, is suffer-
ing from measles as required by act of
parliament.”’—Tit-Bits.
This Will Interest Mothers.
Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children,
cure Feverishness, Headache, Bad Stomach,
Teething Disorders. Regulate the Bowelsand
Destroy Worms. They break up colds in 24
hours. Pleasantto take, and harmlessas milk.
Neverfail. AtDruggists,25¢. Sample Ea :
FREE. Address Allen S.Olmsted,LeRoy,N.Y.
Unhappy Americans.
We modern Americans are the most
unhappy people that have ever lived
on the face of the earth, because we
are the most prosperous people; we
are the freest people; we are the
most highly educated. Misery does
not make people dissatisfied as much
as prosperity. It is not those who
are the most miserable nor those who
lack the most of social or material
wealth whose dissatisfaction over their
condition breaks out into revolutions
for reform. Take the great revolutions
of modern history, the French revolu-
tion or the civil war for example, and
you will note that the respective coun-
tries in which these agitations devel-
oped were not ripe for revolution until
they had come to a certain degree of
prosperity, which developed the idea
of personal rights and liberties. The
main reason why, in my judgment,
there will be no revolution in Russia
for a long time to come is the fact
that the common people of that coun-
try are so miserable that they have
been, and will be, unable to develop
a dissatisfaction acute enough to break
into forcible resistance.—Albion W.
Small, in Leslie's.
Awful Burning Itch Cured in a Day.
“In the middle of the night of
March 30th I woke up with a burning
itch in my two hands and I felt as if
I could pullthemapart. In the morn-
ing the itching had gone to my chest
and during that day it spread all over
my body. I was red and raw from
the top of my head to the soles of my
feet and I was in continual agony
from the itching. I could neither lie
down nor sit up. I happened to see
about Cuticura Remedies and I
thought I would give them a trial. I
took a good bath with the Cuticura
Soap and used the Cuticura Ointment.
I put it on from my head down to my
feet and then went to bed. On the
first of April I felt like a new man.
The itching was almost gone. I con-
tinued with the Cuticura Soap and
Cuticura Ointment and during that
day the itching completely left me.
Frank Gridley, 325 East 43d Street,
New York City, Apr. 27, 1909.” Cu-
ticura Remedies are sold throughout
the world; Potter Drug & Chem.
Corp., Sole Props., Boston, Mass.
Disastrous. ;
His horse went dead and his mule
went lame and he lost six cows in a
poker game; then a hurricane came on
a summer’s day and blew the house
where he lived away, and the earth-
quake came when that was gone and
swallowed the land that the house was
on; then the tax collector came around
and charged him up with the hole in
the ground.—Upson (Ga.) Parrot.
For Red, Itching Eyelids, Cysts, Styes,
Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need
Care, Try Murine Eye Salve. Aseptic
Tubes, Trial Size, 25¢c. Ask Your Druggist
or Write Murine Eye Remedy Ce., Chicago.
‘Where the Money Comes From.
Every year the incomes of the con-
siderable accumulations of money have
Huge incomes
come out of the sum of the earnings
of all the working people. That is one
‘reason. why there 1s so much popular
interest in thé way they are spent, and
why no doubt there is reluctance to
grant perpetuity to enormous endow-
seem. It makes people tired to think
ly and wisely its expenditure is plan-
ned. Wealth is power, power to direct
People are
18,179
Address:
‘ma’am.
they got pure butter.
into the butter cellars there to look
‘for information.
‘two or three in the same block and
‘asking to see, smell and taste, Tip be-
gan. to think the butter merchants
‘were acting queerly, and about that |
time a young fellow came up in but-|
spying inspector.
1908. 5
He was so good, and glad to please,
+ That Johnnie made the team with ease.
Ho left a hand at Cleveland, O.—
A kneecap at St. Louis, Mo.;
‘His sternum cracked at Baltimore—
Interred his nose at Portland, Ore.;
At every contest, win or yield,
He left a portion on the field.
Thus gradually he was bereft
Till little of the boy was left.
‘We got his baggage home by rail—
The rest of Johnnie came by mail.
—Buffalo News.
a 4 IA
PITH AND
Music Teacher — “Why don’t you
pause there? Don’t you see that it’s
marked ‘rest?’’ ‘““Yes, teacher, but
I aren’t tired.’’—Life.
“What is a mud-guard, pa?” “I
believe it is intended for use on an
automobile, but it would seem to fill
a long felt want of a candidate for
office.”’—Judge.
“Does Mr. Smith live here?”
“No,
sir.” ‘““Does he live in this street?” |
“Yes, sir.” ‘Do you know his num-
ber?” “No, sir; but you'll see it on
his door.”’—Punch.
I love to see the hero strut
Throughout a play.
I'd like to be as noble, but
Not every day.
Crawford—‘“Don’t you miss the
theatre, living out here in this one-
horse town?’”’ Suburbs— “Why, man,
we see plays here that you never see
in New York!”’—Puck.
Nell—‘ ‘Has Maude, been observing
Lent?’ Belle—‘‘I should say she
has. Why, she has won enough at
bridge to pay for her whole Easter
outfit.”’—Philadelphia Record.
He—“A philosopher says: ‘The
only thing worth while in life is try-
ing to do something you can’t—and
doing it.” ’ She (sweetly)—‘Is that
why you play bridge?’’—Life.
Visitor—*‘I saw your husband in
the crowd down town to-day. In
fact, he was so close that I could have
touched him.” Hostess — ‘““That’s
strange. At home he is so clese that
nobody can touch him!”—Puck.
The dude’s a walking fashion plate,
With but a single charm;
Upon his watch chain it is found,
‘Where it can do no harm.
—Chicago News.
“What a conscientious woman Mrs.
D’Eaubags is!” ‘Well, I should say!
You know she made an assignment
for the benefit of her creditors last
week, and ste listed all the party
calls she owed as liabilities!”’—Cleve-
land Leader.
Little Girl—‘‘Mother, that’s such a
nasty little boy; whenever he passes
me he makes a face.” Mother—*‘ Very |
rude of him. I hope you don’t do it
back.” Little Girl—‘ ‘Oh, dear, no!
I simply turn up my nose and treat
him with despisery.”’—Punch.
The Rev. Dr. Putemtosleep—‘‘Dea-
con Goodleigh walked right out of
church in the middle of my sermon.
I wonder if I offended him.”” Mrs.
Goodleigh—“Don’t let that worry
you, doctor. He has been a somnam-
bulist for years.”’—Philadelphia Rec-
ord, :
Kind-Hearted Matron (giving him
a plate of beans) — ‘“You were the
youngest in a family of ten? No
wonder you didn’t turn out well,
Your mother had no time to look af-
ter you.” Goodman Gonrong—‘“No,
I wuz what they call the
submerged tenth.”’—Chicago Tribune.
As Dangerous as Nosing About Stills.
Some years ago a Chicago doctor
had a lot of walking cases of con-
sumptives, and wanted to make sure
So he sent Tip
After going into
ter and egg .garb and said, “Say,
friend, you was just back in the boss’
place looking for butter. Now I can
‘tell from your talk you’re from the
‘same place as I am, but this bunch
down here takes every stranger for a
you straight; coming down here and
asking questions about butter is about
as dangerous as nosing about stills
down in the mountains. It’s this way.
They're all selling fake butter, law
or no law, and if any of them get
‘| caught at it the Butterine Trust pays
‘And a man
all fines and expenses. :
who beats up a spy gets well paid for
it."—New York Press.
Let me give it to
used with truly beneficial effects,
with pleasant aromatic liquids,
agreeable and refreshing to the
acceptable to the system when
cleansing is desired.
on the front of every package, and
Elixir of Senna is fraudulent and
Is called for, is always resented by
false brands, nor imitation remedies.
gists everywhere; one size only.
to have in the house when needed.
will find, in all the seasons of their lives, as
maidens, wives or mothers, that the one simple,
wholesome remedy which acts gently and
pleasantly and naturally, and which may be
conditions, when the system needs a laxative.
is—Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna.
well known to be a simple combination of the
laxative and carminative principles of plants
Only those who buy the genuine Syrup of
Figs and Elixir of Senna can hope to get its
beneficial effects, and as a guarantee of the
excellence of the remedy, the full name of the
company—~Qalifornia Fig Syrup Co.—is printed
any preparation offered as Syrup of Figs and
declined. To those who know the quality of
this excellent laxative, the offer of any substi- .*
tute, when Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna
of patronage to some first-class drug establish-
ment, where they do not recommend, nor sell
ine article may be bought of all reliable drug-
price 50 cents per bottle. Get a bottle today {#3
under any
It is
which are
taste and
its gentle
Ss N\
ns
nl
Bd .
very
AE
Sonineett
. . Te
2%,
=e
“¥0
or
without it
» 8-2
if dhe
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Should be
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a transfer
The genu-
Regular <s:
you get this stove—see
that «the name-plate
~ teads New Perfection.”
‘You Can Have a Model Kitchen
as cool and white as a dairy. No smell, no smoke,
no heat, no dust. No old-fashioned contrivances. The
New Perféction
Cook-stove
is the latest practical, scientific cook-stove. It will cook the most
elaborate dinner without heating the kitchen. |
Boils, bakes, or roasts better than any range. Ready in a second.
with Cabinet Top, with collapsible
rests, towel rack, and every up-to-date
feature imaginable. You want it, be-
cause it will cook any dinner and not
heat the room. No heat, no smell,
no smoke, no coal to bring in, no ashes
to carry out. It does away with the
drudgery of cooking, and makes it a
pleasure. Women with the light touch
for pastry especially appreciate it, be-
cause they can immediately have a
quick fire, simply by turning a handle.
No half-hour preparation. It not only
is less trouble than coal, but it costs
less. Absolutely no smell, no smoke;
and it doesn’t heat the kitchen.
The nickel finish, with the turquoise
blue of the enameled chimneys, makes
the stove ornamental and attractive.
Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners; the 2
and 3-burner stoves can be had with
or without Cabinet,
Every dealer everywhere ; if not at yours,
write for Descriptive Circular to the nearest
agency of the
The Atlantic Refining Company
(Incorporated) :
A FLAVOR that is used the same as lemon
or vanilla. By dissolving sugar in
water and adding Mapleine, adelicious syrap is
made and a syrup better than maple. Mapleine
is sold by ers. Send 2¢ stamp for sample
Too Busy.
Mrs. Neighbors—Did you ever no-
tice that Mrs. Chatterton never tells
you a thing about herself?
Mrs. Homer—Yes; it keeps her busy
telling things about other people.—
Chicago News. I
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the gums, reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle,
ere 18
The Academy of Moral and Political
Science in France has offered a prize
of $400 for the best thesis on ‘The
right of suffrage; should it be extend-
ed to women; in what circumstances
and to what extent?”
W. L. DOUGLAS
$5, $4, $3.50, $3 & $2.50
Bors Shoes SH oO ES a 8’ Shoes -
0 & $2.00
‘W. L. Douglas
shoes are worn
by moremen than
any other make,
BECAUSE:
W. L. Douglas $5.00
and $4.00shoesequal, ¥
in style, fit and wear, §
other makes costing Jt
86.00 to $8.00. Re
_ W.L.Douglas $3.50,
$3.00 and %2.50 shoes
are the lowest price,
. quality Sunsidured,ih
. the world,
ey
Fast Color Eyelets. 2, \ EIN NS
The genuine have W, L. Douglas name and price
stamped on the bottom, "M'nke No Substitute.
Ask Foor dealer for W.L.Douglas shoes. If they
are not for sale in your town write for Mail Order Cat-
alog, giving full directions how to order by mail. Shoes
ordered direct from factory delivered to the wearer all
charges prepaid. W. L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
ATP RAT@ Watson E.Coleman, Wash.
if . : ington, D.C. Booksfree, High:'
Ch est references. Best resulta:
PATENTS
“| advertised free. R. B.Owen, Washington, D.C.
and recipe k. Crescent Mfg. Co., Seattls.
Send postal for
Free Package
F R E of Paxtine.
| Better and more economical
than liquid antiseptics
FOR ALL TOILET USES.
PAXTINE
RO lIRaF.\hiR A gi (8
Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white, §
germ-free teeth—antiseptically clean §
mouth and throat—purifies the breath §
Rf after smoking—dispels all disagreeable
perspiration and body odors—much ap-§
§ preciated by dainty women. A quick}
remedy for sore eyes and catarrh.
A little Paxtine powder dis-§
2) solved in a glass of hot water §
: nae: a delightful antiseptic so-§
lution, possessing extraord: ]
erin gorradsl and heal §
ji ing power, and absolutely harm §
49 less. Try a Sample. '50c.
Sl’ large box at druggists or by mail. §
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass. ]
P. N. U. 18, 1910.
Capitalize Jour brains. Advices’
and book W free. Special of
fers. Personal services, Patents
WANTED E355 ay “cin, “say “quantity.
‘anywhe:e. Write ior prices, RICHMOND
BAG CO, INC, Richmond. Va. :
DROPSY IE¥ Discovesrs
worst cases. Book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment
¥reec Dr. H. li. GREEN'S BOXS, Box: B, Atlanta, Ga’