News of Persons SNOW SHOE A&_ ¥. Smith was a recent visitor to ie fourishing town of Karthaus, op Hie river. . BH. 1B Ward of Williamsport, spent samme time at the home of M. D. Kel- Be, zecently. 7 B® Rudinger was a recent visitor fm the county seat. Whe. Lucas, the eye-glass man from Mashannon, was transacting business ir aur boro this week. MOSHANNON S——————— J. T. Lucas transacted business in Bellefonte and Howard this week. . Miss Mary Davis left this week for Bellefonte, where she expects to re- main for some time. Master Wesley Stringfellow of Kee- waydin, visited his friend Paul Cul- wer and relatives at this place during the week. Miss Edith Lucas visited her broth- ar, £. C., at Howard. Mrs. Harry Snyder and little daugh- fer of East Rutherford, N. J., are vis- fing her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Shannon, at this place. Mrs. James Flanigan of Clearfield, was a recent visitor at the home of Martin McGowan. Miss Maude Rankin, a teacher in #he Clearfield schools, was looking after her interests in this locality on Eaturday and expects to return to Rer home here for the summer. Mrs. Edward Shannon has been in #1 health for some time and at this writing is not much improved. Mr. Frank Polinky, popularly known as “Farmer Frank,” of German Set- Wlement, was in our village on busi- mess, on Saturday. Mrs. M. H. Rankin having spent the winter in Clearfield, has returned to Ber summer home at this place. News From Our Neighbors A sad death in Bellefonte last week was that of R. Boyd Nolan, which oc- ‘euxved at the hospital Monday night. A few days before his death the young sean kad his arm and shoulder crush- ad between two cars in the Belle-| fomte yards of the Pennsylvania Rail- saad company. At first it was not ——— thought that the injury was very seri-} eas and later gangrene set in, result- ing in his death. He was an excel- ent young man and had been employ- ed as a brakeman for about a year. He is survived by his wife, one daughter, his mother, four sisters and five brothers. The funeral took place an Thursday. ‘Last Sunday evening whi! e Malcolm’ Heinle was doing some repair work. %o the lines of the Bellefonte Electric Company his safety belt came loose and he fell from the tbp of a thirty- foot. pole to the ground. For some time ke was umconscious and was taken to the Pellefonte hospital, where an ex- amination showed that he was not ser- iously injured. He was able to re- furn to his home on Monday and is again able to be about. After the death of Wilbur F. Reed- er, one of Bellefonte’s most able law- yers, his large law library came into the possession of James A. B. Miller. @wing to financial reverses Mr. Miller was unable to meet payments and a gheriff’s execution was taken by Mrs. Agnes Shipley; of Unionville, and on Monday the large library was disposed af by Sheriff Hurley. The same was purchased by George T. Bisel & Co, af Philadelphia, for $1,095, although fie library was worth much more. Miss Sarah Rishel, a daughter of AY. Rishel, of near Bellefonte, fell from a horse the other day and broke Ber collar bone. Contractor Isaac Miller has com- arenced work on the foundation for fhe new A. M. E. church, which will Be erected on the site of the one burned. The new edifice will be lar- ger than the old one and will contain x pastar’s study. The plans were drawn by Robert Cole, of this place. | During a thunder storm last ‘Sun- | day night residents of Bellefonte were almost startled out of their senses by ane of the most terrific peals of thun- der ever heard. It occurred about T# o'clock, and while it seems that the #Eghtning did not strike ,any place there was something like an explosion in the atmosphere and the fire was flying everywhere. A great ‘many | telephones and other electric appli- ances were burned out. ~ . these differences are not At a public meeting of women ‘in the Petrikin hall last Monday ‘the Women’s club of Bellefonte was or- ganized. All Bellefonte women are welcome to join and assist.in the work that will be taken up. The Bellefonte Lodge of Elks gave a reception at their new club rooms day afternoon ‘amd evening. Music was furnished by Christy Smith’s or- chestra and a delightful lunch was served. A large number of the friends of the members of the order were present and inspected the new home of this popular club. Philip QGarbrick, Roland Spicer, Harry Aiken and Harry Hazel have gone to Franklin county where they will construct several miles of slate road for Contractor R. B. Taylor of this place. Dr. and Mrs. George F. Harris and Mrs. John Shugart have returned had been spending several weeks for his health. - Myrtle Ammerman, a domestic em- ployed at the home of Robert Miller, died suddenly Wednesday night. She had been in good health and owing to the circumstances in which she died an inquest was held Thursday after- noon. The~jury rendered a verdict that she same to her death through natural causes. She was aged about 36 years. Mr. and Mrs. M. I. Gardner were recent visitors to Washington, D. C. Rev. A. M. Schmidt and A. Lucken- baugh attended the meeting of the Wiest Susquehanna classes of the Re- formed church at Middleburg last week. , Clement Dale was in Pittsburg last week, where he argued an important case before the Superior court. a HOWARD. Mrs. J. Z. Long is visiting among friends and relatives. Mrs. Wister and daughter, Sarah, Lexpect to spend the summer in Chi- ‘cago and the Middle West. Dr. W. J. Kurtz is entertaining his { sister, formerly a missionary in In- dia, now in America for benefit of her health. J. T. Lucas, also Zanznier Edith, visited C. C. Lucas and family. Dr. Ball was called in consultation over the serious ccndition of Miss Nellie Hopkins. “Rev. Faust is during the week. Mrs. Gertie Irvin Ross spent a few days with her sister, Mrs. Mayes. Claire Leathers is carrying his arm in a sling, a horse having kicked him, breaking a bone. — attending classes ‘Meat in the Diet. How much meat is in = a normal diet? The answer to this question is impossible of universal application. In a matter of diet, as in almost ev- erything else, man is idiosyncratic. Some people naturally choose, nor- mally, more meat and some less. The same ‘is true of every other com- { ponent of the diet. Many people have a repugnance to certain articles of food, vegetable or animal. ‘Some peo- ple, normally, eat a larger percentage of meat than others. A stated amount, therefore, can only be a gen- eral one, applying to man as a whole and not to any particular individual When normal, man is left with the choice of the diet, and, where all forms of food are equally accessible, it is surprising to see what uniform- ity exists in the choice. While it is true that there are great differences in the dietaries of different nations, so much those of choice as of necessity. The true comparison, therefore, would be in the dietary of men in different na- tions of practically independent means who thus have an unrestricted financial opportunity to gratify their wants. Among this class of the com- munity a remarkable degree of uni- formity in the choice of diet is found. A well-to-do man who takes moderate exercise consumes about a quarter of a pound of protein, .35 of a pound of fat, and 1.1 pounds of starch and sugar per day. By “mod- erate exercise” I mean the man en- gaged in moderate labor. Persons of sedentary habits, of course, should eat much less, but unfortunately they do not all do so.—Dr. Harvey 'W. Wiley in Collier's. : In a turbine steamer the rhythmic | thumping of the pistons disappears, and instead the engines give out a thin soprano song that rises or falls in key swith the speed, sometimes suggesting | a continuous squeal. Trade between Canada and the Unit: ed ‘States made its highest record in more ‘than doubled in ‘the last ten | years. in the old Curtin mansion Wednes- from Atlantic City where the doctor | ‘parlor with his watch in his hand. ‘the calendar year just ended, and has | "RAISING A LEGAT, POINT. His Name? : A ‘case of interest te ‘hiewspaper men came up before Chief Justice Meredith last month, when J. B. Mac- Kenzie, a Toronto lawyer, entered an action against the Toronto World and George M. Lee, its Osgood Hall re- porter,to obtain an injunction against defendants restraining them from omitting his name from reports of cases in which he may be engaged as counsel or solicitor. Chief Justice Meredith took the stand that the World published the: report for the information and inter- est of its readers; long as it was in no particular incor- that this report | must necessarily be brief, but that so rect and contained no reflection in the nature of libel or improper state- ment of fact, the World had a right to publish what it pleased. In the present case the plaintiff did not claim that any incorrect state- ment had been made or anything in the nature of a libel published, but merely that the report was not full enough to suit him in that his name and connection with the case had been omitted from it. It really amounted to a complaint that the World had not given him the benefit of advertising in connection with the case, and this, his lordship claimed, Mr. MacKenzie could not compel the World to do. ously that a contract at so much a line be made to cover the situation. Mr. MacKenzie claimed, however, that the court had intérest right to deal with the matter, and that every- body should be placed upon the same footing or the reports excluded. He claimed that such an omission was an injury to his calling, in that solicitors from outside points would thus be hindered from sending him retainers. His lordship dismissed the application for injunction, but Mr. MacKenzie in- timated that the matter is not yet closed.— Printer and Publisher. The End of the World. The scenes of dissipation that have recently taken place among the Hun- garian peasantry serve to remind one He suggested humor- of the old truism that human nature. has not changed very greatly in a thousand years. The Magyar laborers were convinced that the end of the world was at hand, and took the ar- rival of the comet to be an augury of the near approach of the catastrophe. The parish priest, good, faithful man, warned them to prepare themselves by due penance and the proper relig- ious exercises; but the pleasure-lov- ing flock instead gave themselves over to rioting and feasting. They and their priest were soon disillu-, sioned when the appointed day passed without anything unusual occurring; but their fright had exactly the same effects as the universal belief that the end of the world would come in the year 1000. The chroniclers of those times tells us that people gave them- selves over to drunkenness and vice rather than to religious exercises; the contemplation of so awful a catastrophe was apparently too much for human nerves. At the same time it has been observed that whenever a sudden earthquake in tropical coun- tries has convinced people that the actual day eof judgment was ‘upon them, illicit unions have been hastily regularized and many a son has found a father who never before acknowl- edged him. Such, at least, has been English experience in the East In- dies, and the same was noticed in the great earthquake during the Venezue- lan revolution a century ago. = It ap- pears that men must be convinced that the disaster has actually arrived before they will lay bare the inner- most secrets of their hearts.—London Globe. Conscience Makes Cowards. A quiet, bashful sort of ‘a young fellow was making a call on a Capitol Hill girl one evening not so very long | ago, when her father came into the It was about 9.30 o’clock. At the me- ment the young man was standing on a chair straightening a picture over the piano. The girl had asked him to fix it. As he turned, the old gentleman, a gruff, stout fellow, said: “Young man, do you know what time it is?” The bashful youth got off the chair nervously. Vos, sir,” he replied. ‘I was just going.” He went into the hall without any delay and took his hat and coat. The girl’s father followed him. As the caller reached for the doorknob, the knew what time it was. “Yes, sir,” was the youth’s replr. “Good night!” And he left without waiting to put his coat on. After the deor had closed the: old gentleman turned to the girl. “What’s the matter with that fel- low?” he asked. “My watch ran down this afternoon and I wanted him to tell me the time, so that I could set it.””—Denver Pest. When a man ‘could lose meney cheerfully at cards it would be some- body else’s. | old gentleman again asked him if he | 1 Can a Man Compel Newspaper to Print ae — Through the colizinins of the TIMES, to come in and see us. We will take pleasure in showing you our 4c and 9c line of goods. We are constantly adding to the line as first opened up, and new goods replaced as some lines are sold out. You will find the department in our new annex, recently built. Also, just a word about Wall Papers We are now prepared to sell you a bolt of nice WALL PAPER for 3¢. Look in your mail order catalog and see if you can do better for goods in this line, delivered to your door. And we will allow the use of our telephone —to call the doctor, in addi- tion, when so unfortunate as to need one. Come, we can and will Save You Money J. T. LUCAS ‘Moshannon, Pa. - ————a PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. Carl Dinger Dentist Philipsburg, Pa. Painless Extraction ‘of Teeth a Specialty Dr. F. K. White Dentist ‘SECOND FLOOR GRANT BLOCK PHILIPSBURC, PA. R. J. YOUNG, M. D. Practising Physician SNOW SHOE Dr.J. W. CARTER DENTIST BELL TELEPHONE 9 TO 12 A. M. 1:30 TO 5 P. M. OFFICE HOURS { Masonic Temple ALTOONA, PA. GET YOUR PICTURES FRAMED A. F. Smith Snow Shoe, Pa. A Complete Line of Mouldings and Sheet Pictures . in Stock p end a Picasant | looking over the HENRY BOSCH COM- PANY WALL PAPER samples at your own home—sitting comfortably in your easy ehair! You can make a better selection that way than by ransacking the stores. You see the whole line—the vory latest designs—the loveliest tints ‘and richest color effects, including imported patterns. Everything good in wall papers in the Bok ee y., too—you get the lowest : New York. Chicago p rices. 2 Will eall with Bosch Samples— any hour you name. . Look them dve Sesto your heart's con- the least obligation to PT He our Fur Way of adver- Wall Papers. : CLARENCE LUCAS Selling Agent MOSHANNON, PA. - —— WM. H. LUCAS Eye Glasses MOSHANNON, PA. Will Fit You With the Right Thing CIVE ME A TRIAL PENNA. YES! H. S. Cramer BARBER and Shampooing Shop Open Day and Evening. Moshannon Pa. JOB PRINTING Send your next order for PRINTED STATIONERY to the office of the TIMES i vom meg = Te