Bablet to Woman Librarian. A tablet to Miss Alice B. Kroeger, first librarian of the Drexel Institute, has been unveiled, reports the Phila- delphia Ledger. The tablet, which is of polished brass mounted on black Belgian marble, is placed on the pilaster at the entrance to the library. It bears the fellowing inscription: ; ALICE BERTHA ¥ROEGER, Librarian and Disector of the Library Scheol in the Drexel Institute of Art; Science and Industry, from its foundation in 1892. Died October 31, 1909. This tablet is dedicated to her Memory by the faculty of the Institute. Neck Shows the Age. The neck frequently shows the evi- dence of age before the face. Little tell-tale wrinkles in front and hol- lows back of the ears, long lines at the sides, a dark ring around the neck, the double (and sometimes triple) chin, are not beautiful to gaze upon, or welcome to those who pos- sess them. Yet all of these could be largely prevented. Tight collars and stocks are accountable for many of the lines at the side of a woman's neck. The carriage of the head, and even one’s position when sleeping, has et ee et Na A A eat a et eae ete PP Pee eet et eet Pt Pee Fricasseed Guinea Fowl.—Have a guinea fowl cut up the same as a chicken for fricasseeing. Cook one-fourth pound of sliced bacon in a saucepan with one-half cup of water until . c 3 2 5 8 a c= a ‘the water has evaporated. 3 EE SQ 2 : 2 Q ity — = (45) > 7] 5 = teaspoonfuls of salt; add much to do wi ith forming a double chin. The head should be carried erect when walking, says Woman’s Life. When reading or sewing the chin should never be chest, but the book or work should be held in a position that will allow the an to be held moderately high. Ibsen and Freedom. Ibsen seems to be regardzd by the anti-suffragists as their own peculiar property. When any one nowadays is announced to talk on Ibsen and wom- an it is sure to be about anti-suffrage, and so it was yesterday when Miss Eleanor Ford expounded, reports the New York Tribune, ‘Ibsen on the Freedom of Woman’s Will,” in a studio in the Carnegie Hail building. In a dreamy, dull green atmosphere, induced by lowered eurtains and closed windows, thirteen women and one shy young man listened to the lecture, which wasn’t so tranquil as it might have been, owing to the fact that a near-Caruso in the music studio next door had taken that time for brushing up his minor scales. Miss Ford said she didn’t know how many of her listeners were suf- fragists; she herself had reached the soul-plane where she knew there were no such things as suffrage and anti- suffrage, but not all women were on that plane, and some women were making a lot of trouble these days by trying to exercise their wills like men, “It is much more dangerous for a woman to exercise her will than for a man,” said Miss Ford earnestly. “Men. are so busy doing useful, mechanical things, building houses and bridges and keeping the world going, that they can’t do the harm women can.” Then Miss Ford talked about Elida, Ibsen’s “Lady of the Sea,” and ex- plained that Dr. Wondel’s calm, mas- culine way of proving to Elida that she didn’t want to leave him for the stranger was symbolic of the way the men of to-day are settling the woman suffrage question. : “All over America,” she said, “wise men are saying to women: ‘Very well, if you want the responsibility of the ballot, try it’ And when the women hear this they know they are afraid to try.” “OwW-OW-WOW-wow-wow,”’ remarggd the near-Caruso next door in a de- scending scale. And a suffragist in a rear seat lookéd as if it did her a lot] of good to hear ky sentiments thus expressed. Fashjon Notes. The new coat buttons are goBgebus, depending upon enamel, jewels and | \ \ | brilliant color effects for their beauty, Softnéss and fullness in attractive lines result from the shirring that ‘has again {invaded the realm of dress. . Belts are worn in a very high, round line, their great length making them take a quaint, short-waisted ef- fect. Square and oblonz ‘buckles, huge in size and covered with spangled or jeweled fabrics, are seen on many. of the new gowns. Among the new shapes in turbans -are the Rembrandt, the Henry III, | the Hussar, the De Stael, the Drum’ Major and the Napoleon. Bedroom slippers, crocheted of the tractive. The changeable cottons are especially attractive. Parasols will still have the very becoming Directoire handle, and are to be quite as elaborate as ever. The canopy top is to be popular. : Lingerie garments are narrower than formerly. Every possible pleat or gather is omitted and the lines closely follow those of the outer dress. Blouses of figured net of black and colors are made up over white silk linings. The net, of course, matches dropped on the] . the skirt with which the blouse is worn. ; , ~~ Try out the fat, ‘remove the pieces of bacon and put in the guinea meat, turning it care- fully until browned. Remove the meat, add four. tablegpoon- fuls of flour to the fat and gradually add one quart of stock or water; stir until boiling, add one slice of onion chopped, one-fourth of a clove of garlic, a little pepper and two level the meat and stew slowly one hour, Remove ‘the fat from the sauce and strain it over the meat. ~— The colored lace veils which have | 1 been worn to some extent the ‘past season, will continue in favor. The white lace ones, however, have had their day. There vogue for spiral effects.and cross bands, and especially does this idea seem exemplified in afternoon and evening gowns. Buttons will be used less ar trim- ming, but more than ever for fasten- ings. An innovation will be the trimmed buttonholes, fancy braid being used’ for this purpose. Anything Russian seems to be in style. of white linen, hand-embroidered, or of a fancy white pique, piped with a a color to match the gown. ~ An attractive hat is that made with a crown of embroidered muslin, while the brim is of some fine Italian straw. The sole trimming is a crush band or a few simple bows of black velvet. ribbon. Only For Baby’s Sake. “Prof. Frear, of the Pennsylvania State College,” said Herman B. Win- ter, of Philadelphia, who is at the Arlington, “not so very long ago dis- cussed in Harrisburg the eighty-three kinds of breakfast food that he re- cently tested for the Government. ‘“ ‘Most of them were very good,’ said Prof. Frear. ‘The taste test in most cases was pleasure rather than work. ‘To make work out of it would be to act like a little boy I knew in Bellefonte. : ‘“ ‘This little boy’s mother went the other day to a reception, leaving the baby in Jimmy’s care. With an in- jured look Jimmy said on her return: “Mamma, I wish yod wouldn’t make me mind the baby again. He was so bad that I had to eat two mince pies and half the fruit cake to amuse him.” ’> ’—Washington Herald. Neighborly Politeness. “The late James Whistler and Dr. Sir James Browne Crichton at one time dwelt next door to each other. Whistler had a very fine garden, and as the doctor was fond of flowers he permitted his neighbor to have a door into it. Sir Jamies’ servants gather- ing and destroying the flowers, Whist- ‘ler sent to inform him that he would nail up the door. caustically replied: I “Tell him he may do anything but paint it.” “And tell him,” rejoined Whigtler, ‘that ‘he may say what be will, I'll take anything from him. except To this Cricaton physm.’—New York Times. heavy mercerized cotton, are most at- | is at present in Paris a The new Russian collars are: / | fore me,’ “fashion, “Double Fruits. Nicholas. Double fruits may originate in either of two ways. Sometimes, when the fruits are very young, they ‘may become accidentally pressed to- gether so tightly that they crush together, as it were, and may then, as they become older, grow into one mass at this junction. This is a kind of grafting. This, however, is not the common origin of double struc- tures. All fruits, like buds andthe beginnings of leaves, originate in a mags of very soft cells which are easily affected by mechanical infiu- ences. If one of these soft young structures, which tends to grow as a unit, becomes injured at its very tip, which is the place of most active growth, the growth ceases at that point, but continues to grow without making an effort to reunite the two parts. The injury may be caused by the bite of an insect, or by some other externgl cause; or it may be gome one of the various influences we call “internal,” although there is probably no real difference between external injuries and internat infu- ences. In this way originate not only double fruits, but double leaves, That Settled It. ‘Superintendent of Insurance Wil- liam H. Hotchkiss said at a dinner in New York: : “There are not so many ‘people buying annuities from the insurance companies as there used to be. This, perhaps, speaks well for human na- ture. An annuity holder, you know, is apt to be selfish. “I heard the other day, though, of an annuity holder against whom the charge of selfishness could not be brought. “This man lived on and on. Year after year his annuity was paid. Fi- nally, when his age seemed about { 110, the company sent a special agent to his house to make sure that James Montrose in his proper person was | really getting the annuity. “The agent found James Montrose, an aged man, but hale, making a chicken coop in the back-yard. ‘“ ‘Are you Mr. James Flagg Mont- rose?’ he asked. “i Ves, sir, 1 am? the old man an- swered, ““‘Are you the Mr, Montrose who draws the annuity from ‘the Dash company?’ ** Ye, sir, I am, and my father be- said the old man.”—Detroit Free Press. si : One Centenarian. : Mrs. Elizabeth Jarrom, one ‘hun- dred years old, the mother of eleven children, is spending the end of her days in Leicester Workhouse. Born March 31, 1810, she looks no older than seventy-five; however, her birth record has been carefully looked into, showing her to be a centenarian. Though slightly lame, she is hale and hearty for her age, and fine days gets about with a stick airing in the workhouse grounds. She smokes constantly, and with clear memory talks interestingly of times and things long gone by. Married at the age of eighteen, she has six living children. Jer oldest living son is seventy-two, and has an age pension. Her young- est living child is sixty-two. Although this old lady has more than a hun- dred living great-grandchildren she has spent the last twelve years in a workhouse, a pitiful object of charity.’ England is a great place for ‘‘socie- ties” of all kind. Why not one for the old grandmothers over a hun- dred years old?—New York Press: Steel Barrels. ‘Not all barrels are made of wood; there are barrels made of metal. A steel barrel that comes from Ger- many, used in the importation of an- iline dye in powder form, is made with a flat band of the ‘metal, per- haps eight inches in width, around the middle, at the bulge of.the barrel, while the two ends of the barrel, tapering from the middle section to the heads, in. the ordinary barrel are made of corrugated steel with the £orFngations running lengthwise. The dye stuff is heavy, 600 or 700 pounds to the barrel; but the steel barrel remains rigid and carries its heavy load securely without racking or twisting.—New York Sun. Weak Legs of Ducks. We never heard of trying the greased trick on drakes. Now, duck legs are” weaker than goose legs, so the reason drakes were not used in the .0ld-time game may be because the legs of ducks would probably give sooner than the neck, and the whole duck would come away instead of the head. All this seems to teach the best way to catch ducks is by the neck. Small bones in. their little legs break easily. Never catch a duck by the legs like a chicken. Put your hand around her netk just below the head, and do not squeeze too hard, ‘but lift her about as you would a_cut glass wageer bottle, or, bmtter StH, CAs. From “Nature. and Scieiice: "in St. | Now is when the house-wife will go. all over the house, and dust the accu- mulations of the winter's coal burning. She will find that so many articles need replacing with new ones. We wish to let all know that we have just what will be needed for the purpose. To enumerate a few articles only: Cur- tain Rods, Curtain Fixtures, Picture Wire, Moulding Hooks, Clothes Bas- kets, Chair Seats, Hat and Coat Racks, Salt Boxes, China, Crockery, Glassware, Toilet Sets, Etc. The most important of all is, we have all these goods at the right price. We mark the price all in plain figures and have but one price to all customers. We find that it makes us too much trouble and very unsatis- factory to the public, to work price with the percentage off plan. See Qur Hlustrated Bulletin For Dever COME AND SEE ™F LUCAS. MOSHANNON, PA. J. Srp 3 Gold as a Commodity By Wiitiam Jamesbiz OME writers on political economy pretend to “show that we exchange the products of our labor for the products of the labor of others; that money is merely the ‘medium or means of effecting the exchange. This is in line with’ the specious argument which lays to gold the cause of the ‘increasing cost of living. In the concrete, money is commodity; it is “goods” quite as much as hats and shoes, as they well know. who are required te “deliver the goods” in exchange for their daily subsistence. Gold is money, and money is com- Si FRR | modity, governed by laws that govern all commodities. There is absolutely no evidence adduced to indicate an overproduction of gold. On'the contrary, if economic law is law, and that law says no quantity of money can be forced to circulate beyond the quantity required by the de-. mands of exchange, then, the fact that we are compelled to use other evi- dences of value, in the shape of bank checks, banknotes, United States notes and silver certificates to fill the demand for meney or circulation medium Of exchange, solely because there is not enough gold to answer the purpose, ought to set at rest the question of the gyerpraduetion of gold under present conditions. There is no denying the fact that extravagance and luxurious living are factors in the cause of high prices for life's necessaries. The denial is of the assumption that the production of gold is the cause. These conditions attend prosperity, and prosperity has attended our efforts during periods of decreas- ing gold production. What, then, was the cause of that prosperity, with its attending extravagance and luxury? The main, fundamental cause, in- a broad economic sense, of the present : condition of affairs in relation to the high cost of living will be found in our -| prosperity, and all those efforts which serve to continue this state of affairs and lead to a further increase of the quantity of the means of satisfying our wants will tend to multiply the means itself. This quantity of means—call them dollars—represents units of smaller and smaller value as the quantity imereases, if economic law is law, and in exchange for other commodities the price of the commodity rises in reflecting this depreciation. - If your supply of dollars increases and your quantities of other commodities decrease, you have your economic law working at both ends and the middle to the discom- fort of the vast army of toilers whose ‘waking thoughts and dreams cenire on the question of making both ends meet. +! Two Roads . By William Stoncbridge WO boys go through public school together, graduate from the same college, are admitted to the bar and open law of- fices a few blocks apart in the lower end of New York city. They start on an equal footing, socially, Fnsneinlly and po- litically. One commenced to make money quickly by exorbitant fees, “shady” methods and unprofessional conduct, with the result that he never held a client, and after thirty years of practice is now struggling along with a combination busi- ness in a little office, with no regular income—still fishing for the unwary. The other commenced by charging fees equal to about one-tenth. to ofie- quarter that of his former classmate, treated his clients honestly and cane siderately, refused “shady” cases or business, ang for years had been known to give his service gratis when necessary, with the result that clients crowd- ed his offiee and ever his residence, “He accumulated a large but homest fortune, and in his Pate years: was elevated to a kigh jndicia] position, honored and TEnces by id Irfende and Eis enemies. ak a Florence mek, —New York iy