Snow Shoe times. (Moshannon, Pa.) 1910-1912, June 01, 1910, Image 7

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    ~~
PATENT
Syrup of Figs
Wei! every package.
leading druggists
size. only, regular
TH,
RT — ry PR
| :
original and genuine
Senna, known throughout the
world as the best of family laxatives,
for men, women and children, always, ¥
has the full name of the California Fig |
. Syrup Co. printed on the front of
& It is for sale by all
and Elixir of
everywhere, one
ptice 50. cents
per bottle. The imitations some-
times offered are of inferior quality
and do not give satisfaction; 4
therefore, should be
declined.
Increased Cigaret Smoking.
“Are we becoming a cigaret na-
tion?” asks the United States Tobacco
Journal. This query is prompted by
the statistics of the cigar and cigaret
industries for the first three months
of the year. The figures show that
the output of cigarets in that period
exceeded by more than 50,000,000 the
output of cigars. The figures are, re-
spectively, 1,856,369,228 and 1,797,322,
811. In March alone there was a de-
crease of more than 5,000,000 in full-
sized cigars throughout the United
States and an increase of more than
109,000,000 in cigarets. It is unex-
plained whether this condition is a
result of the high prices of food, com-
pelling the cigar smoker to take to
cigarets, or is a burning protest
against the legislation in many states
against the paper rolls,
Rumors have been rife that the con-
stitution of young Japan is degenerat-
ing year after year, says the Eibun
Tsushinsha, but they are firmly’ de-
nied bv the authorities.
me
Cured by Lydia E. Pink-
ham’sVegetable Compound
Milwaukee, Wis, — “Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound has made
TER 7 me a well woman,
and XI would like to
tell thewholeworld
of it. I suffered
fromfemale trouble
and fearful painsin
my back. Ihadthe
best doctors and
they all decided
that I had a tumor
in addition to my
female trouble, and
advised an opera-
tion. Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound made
me 3 well woman and I have no more
backache. I hope I can Joi by
telling them what Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound has done for
me,” — Mrs. ExymA IMSE, 833 First S¢.,
Milwaukee, Wis. ]
~The above is only one of the thou-
sands of grateful letters which are
constantly being received by the
Pinkham Medicine Company of Lynn,
‘Mass., which prove beyond a doubt that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, . made from roots and herbs,
actually does cure these obstinate dis-
eases. of women after all other means
‘have failed, and that every such suf-
ering woman owes it to herself to at
least give Lydia E. Pirkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound a trial before submit-
ting to an operation, or giving up
‘hope of recovery. :
Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass. | C
invites all sick women to write
her for advice. She has guided
thousands to health and her
advice is free. :
|
BI.ATIRS PIILIsS.
CELEBRATED ENGLISH REMEDY for
‘GOUT AND RHEUMATISM., SAKE AND
RELIABLE, AT YOUR DRUGGRIST,
Watson E.Coleman, Wash
ington, D.C. Books free. Tighe
est referencess Best results,
PsN. U. 22,1910.
DROPSY [%7, pucoverr; |
worst cases, Book of testimonials and 10® Days’ treatment
Wree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S S0XS, Box B, "Atlanta, Ga,
Things Get Better.
In spite of all the confusions and
thwartings of life, the habits and resi-
liences and the counterstrokes of fate,
it is manifest that, in the long run,
human life becomes broader than it
was, gentler than it was, finer and
deeper. On the whole—and nowadays
almost 'steadily—things get . better.
This is a secular amelioration of life,
and it is brought about by good will
working through the efforts of men.—
H. G. Wells. :
Baby’s Scalp All Crusted Over.
“Our little daughter, when three
months old, began to break out on the
head, and we had the best doctors to
treat her, but they did not do her any
good. They said she hadeczema. Her
scalp was a solid scale all over. The
burning and itching was so severe
that she could not rest, day or night.
We had about given up all hopes
when we read of the Cuticura Reme-
dies. We at once got a cake of Cuti-
cura Soap, a box of Cuticura Oint-
ment and one bottle of Cuticura Re-
solvent, and followed directions care-
fully. After the first dose of the Cuti-
cura Resolvent, we used the, Cuticura,
Soap freely and applied the Cuticura
Ointment. Then she began to im-
prove rapidly and in two weeks the
scale came off her head and new hair
began to grow. In a very short time
she was well. She is now sixteen
years of age and a picture of health.
We used the Cuticura Remedies about.
five weeks, regularly, and then we
could not tell she had been affected
by the disease. We used no other
treatments after we found out what
the Cuticura Remedies would do for
her. J. Fish and Ella M. Fish, Mt.
Vernon, Ky., Oct. 12, 1909.”
Small German Savings Banks.
There are many small savings banks
in Germany which accept deposits of
10 pfennigs (23 cents), Thirty per
cent of the people in Prussia have
savings accounts. Travelers are struck
by the absence of beggars. The gov-
ernment permits no person to solicit
alms.—Indianapolis News. : :
. ie Set 22
People Talk About Good Things.
Sixteen years azo few p=ople knew of
such a preparation as a Powder for the
Feet. To-day after the genuine merits of
Allen's Foot-Ease have been told year after
year by grateful persone, it is indispen-
sable to millions, It iscleanly, wholesome,
healing and antiseptic and gives rest and
comfort to tired aching feet. :
It cures whils you walk. Over $0,000
testimonials, Imitations pay the dealer a
larger profit otherwise you would never be
offered ‘a substitute for Allen's Foot-Ease,
the orginal foot powder. Ask for Allen's
Foot-Ease, and see that you get it. He
- Rice production in the United States
grew from an average of less than’
100,000,000 pounds per annum a few
years ago to an average of 500,000,000
pounds per annum in recent years,
and reached over 600,000,000 pounds in
1308: “i :
For Red, Itching Eyelids, Cysts, Styes,.
Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need
are, Try Murine Eye Salve./ ‘Aseptic
Tubes, Trial Size, 25¢c. Ask Your Druggist.
or Write Murine Eye Remedy Cs., Chicago.
Europe's forest school—at Charlot
tenburg, Dresden, and Elberfeld, in
Germany, also at Borstal Wood, near:
London—are attracting the interest of.
physicians and teachers.
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and.
invigorate stomach, liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated;. tiny, granules, easy to take. :
Do not gripe. 3 Wh a
The Navy league of Germany has a’
membership of 1,031,329 and ite funds:
amount to $8,395,950. :
Breeders’ Gazette.
near to
j
AFD 00BEJ0T
: Rad LA
: T ° a
: Farm Topics $
is 08ST OL HE mum S300 0000 UP
SUCCESSFUIL PIG GROWER.
Our experience in saving the pigs
and getting them started right has
been for about fourteen years.
The first thing necessary to be a
successful hog raiser is to get ready
in a right way. I build my houses
so the sow can keep warm if the ther-
mometer stands at zero. I breed my
sows to farrow in February and in
August. In the fall I sow about three
patches of rye and when it gets up
good I let my pigs run on it until
about Christmas, then I take them
off for the spring litter. When the
pigs are about one month old I begin
to give them warm cream separator
milk, and by the time they are nine
or ten weeks old I. have them ready
to wean and push to a finish at seven
or eight months.—Warren J. Smith,
in the Indiana Farmer. :
SILAGE IN LIEU OF PASTURE.
" Referring to feeding corn silage
the year round, Hoard’s Dairyman
says that when land is too expensive
to pasture, that is, when silage from
an acre will feed three or four cows
while an acre of pasture will feed only |
one or two cows, the silo. becomes one
of the most economical as well as the
best methods of preparing succulent
feed for cows the year round. We
believe that a silo is one of the best
methods of supplementing short pas-
ture during the dry time in summer.
Silage is not equal to good June pas-
ture, but we do not know of a better
substitute.
that more milk can be produced per
acre by the use of the silo than from
an acre of grass.
This is just the thing a good many
dairy farmers have yet to fully
realize, that corn silage can always
be relied on for producing milk, and
especially is the thing to carry milk
production through dry seasons when
there is no grass pasturage.
FEEDING COWS FOR PROFIT.
A practical dairy farmer in Canada,
referring to his experience, in the
Farm and Dairy, lays down the fol-
lowing rules for dairy feeding at the
greatest profit:
First, build a summer silo and
grow more corn, using ensilage to
supplement pastures in summer.
Second, take fifteen acres of land
(on a hundred-acre farm) near the
buildings. Divide into three fields.
Follow a three-year rotation thereon.
First year: Corn, an early variety.
Feed in August and September.
Second year: Mixed grain, oats,
peas and barley (four bushels per
acre) seed down ten pounds red
clover, four pounds timothy per acre.
Cut quite green in July. Do not al-
low to lodge.
Third year: Clover cut in late
June and early August. ;
Do not hesitate to feed this fifteen
acres of crop in the summer, even if
things should look blue for the win-
ter forage supply. Let no considera-
tion prevent its utilization at the
proper time, not even an abundance
of grass. It will always pay to feed
such forage in summer.
~ MIXING CATTLE BREEDS.
There is a good deal of force in the
following, on the subject of crossing
breeds, by a correspondent of the
He says:
. The tendency of the American
farmer in the past has been to hybrid-
ize all his farm animals. ‘Even his
hens all became a mixture after a
year or two. BHEspecially has this
been the case with farmers in the
Eastern States. Those who had Jer-
sey cows have crossed and re-crossed
with Holstein-Fresian bulls until
they have got neither one nor the
other, and some of them come very
nothing. Some farmers
seemed to think they could outwit
the Almighty by crossing the Jersey
with the Holstein and so get the large
flow of the Holstein with the rich.
milk of the Jersey. The difference
between the two breeds is too great.
Nature was shocked and dumbfound-
ed. The result has been in many
cases the small yield of the Jersey
coupled with the poor quality of. the
Holstein. ; ‘
There is a vast difference between
a good Holstein and a poor one, both
in quality and quantity of milk. Jer-
seys also differ very much in regard
to quantity of milk. A herd of first
class Jersey cows is as good as a
gold mine to a farmer who knows
how to handle them for best results
and improve them by judicious se-
lection. The same can be said of
the Holstein. The breeder of Hol-
stein cattle is quite apt to condemn
the Jersey cow, and the breeder of
the Jersey is apt to condemn the Hol-
.stein. There are noble specimens in
each breed, and the breeders, the
men who handle the animals, are re-
sponsible for so many poor ones. It
is the result of carelessness, lack of
judgment, taste and discrimination.
The Shorthorns are rapidly coming
to the front and the milking strain
of this breed will doubtless supplant
many of the mongrel Jerseys and
Holsteins that now occupy the land.
There is no question but |
cannot.
‘from many superstitions, and his si-
. gale by all dealers.
Women’s Secrets
‘There is one man in the United States who has perhaps heard
more women’s secrets than any other man or woman in the
These secrets are not secrets of guilt or shame, but
country.
the secrets of suffering, and they have
R. V. Pierce in the hope and expectation of advice and help.
That few of these women have been disappointed in their ex-
pectations is proved by the fact that ninety-eight per cent. of
all women treated by Dr. Pierce have been absolutely and
altogether cured. Such a record would
cases treated were numbered by hundreds only. e
that record applies to the treatment of more than half-a- mil-
been confided to Dr.
be remarkable if the
But when
lion women, in a practice of over 40 years, it is phenomenal, ;
and entitles Dr. Pierce to the gratitude accorded him by women, as the first of
specialists in the treatment of women’s diseases. .
Every sick woman may consult Dr. Pierce by letter, absolutely without
charge. All replies are mailed, sealed
in perfectly plain envelopes, without
any printing or advertising whatever, upon them. Write without fear as with~
out fee, to World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Prest.,
Buffalo, N. Y.
DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE
PRESCRIPTION
Dfalzeos Toals Women Stromns,
Sick VW omen Wells
fi)
7s
i ad
& FH
RE
ntages in using the
No Heat Except
Where Needed
~ Dishes hot—food well
cooked—kitchen cool. No.
underdone food —no-
overheated kitchen in
summer. Everything hot
when wanted. Heat un-
der perfect control and.
concentrated.
The blue flame is all
heat—no smoke—no
odor—no dirt. These are
It has a Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food
hot. Drop shelves for the coffee pot or saucepans, and nickeled
towel racks.
It has long turquoise-blue
finish, with the bright blue of the
attractive and invites cleanliness.
enamel chimneys. The nickel
chimneys, makes the stove very
Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners;
the 2 and 3-burner stoves can be had with or without Cabinet.
CAUTIONARY NOTE: Be sure yeu set this stove—see that {he name-plate reads °° NEW PERFECTION
Every dealer everywhere; if not at yours, write for Descriptive Circular ;
to the nearest agency of the :
7
The Atlantic Refining Company
(Incorporate
d)
Man and Brute.
The leading distinction between dog
and man, after and perhaps before the
different duration of their lives, is
that one can speak and the other
The absence of the power
of speech confines the dog to the de-
velopment of his intellect. It hinders
him from many speculations, for
words are the beginning of metaphy
sics. At the same blow it saves him
lence has won for him a higher name
for virtue than his conduct justifies.—
Robert Louis Stevenson.
The Weak and Helpless.
Those men who try experiments on
the eyes of’ little orphan girls, some-
times blinding them for life, are cau-
tious persons. They are wise in se-
lecting friendless children, for no an
gry parent will call them into account.
The weak and helpless are the safest
victims. Hence orphans and dogs for
the vivisector’s table. Is there to be
no punishment for these medical de-
generates who can deliberately and in
cold blood inflict blindness ' upon
friendless children ?—Life.
A substance called paraphenylene-
diamine is now much used in hair
dyes instead of nitrate of silver. This
drug appears to change to a poisonous | f
substance called quinone di-idide upon
exposure to the air and oxidation.
Many cases of poisoning, the London
Lancet says, have resulted from hair
dyes containing the drug. Hh
‘IT WEARS YOU OUT.
Kidney Troubles Lower the Vitality
of the Whole Body.
Don’t ‘wait for serious illness; be-
gin using Doan’s Kidney Pills when
you first feel backache or notice urin-
ary disorders. W.
~'W. Gosden, 711% E.
“Marshall St., Rich-
mond, Va., says:
i “My doctor said 1.
A had inflammation of
the bladder. My
limbs swelled to
twice their real size
and it seemed as if
there were thousands
of needles sticking
2 eth into them. I had
been: bedfast for three months when 1
began using Doan’s Kidney BRills:
Soon I was in-better health than in
gant Bion or RE wnt hos
"Remember the name—Doan’s. For
50 cents a box
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
{is sold by
i and recipe
PR A FLAVOR that is used the same as lemom
or vanilla. dissolving granulated sugar in
gg Waterand adding Mapleine, adelicious syrup is
made and a syrup better than maple. Mapleine
ocers. Bend 2¢ stamp for sample
Crescent Mig, Co., Seattle.
7
Men Who Do Rough Work
This means you. Made of steel. Lighter:
than leather. Outwear the shoes. They
save you money. Easily attached. Any
cobbler can put them on or your shoe
dealer has shoes already fitted with them.
Send for booklet that tells all about them.
UNITED SHOE MACHINERY CO.
r= Send postal for
tm Free Package
LI Bi Ed Te #5 ww Of Paxtine. : :
Better and more economical
than liquid antiseptics
FOR ALI TOILET USES.
os
TH; BER i ard Re
Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white, |
germ-free testh—antiseptically clean §
mouth and throat—purifies the breath §
after smoking—dispels all disagreeable §
perspiration and body odors—muchap- §
preciated by dainty women. A quick §
remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. i
7 "A little Paxtine powder dis-§
solved in a glass of hot water §
=~ makes a delightful antiseptic so- §
IMA] lution, possessing extraordinary}
cleansing, germicidal and heal. §
#1 ing power, and absolutely harm. §
| less. Try a Sample. 50c. a
large box at druggists or by mail. §
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston; Mass. §
ih
"Women need on the average about
nine-tenths the nourishment requisite
for men. hr ; Lote ity