LOOKINO BACKWARD. Can't yeu imagine in the day When Shakespeare wooed and weif. The dames of Stratford when they met, Their market baskets down would aet, 'And ere they went their separate ways, Such things as follow said: "Hove you heard!" "What?" "Anne Hathaway la very aoon to marry!" "Why, no, forsooth! Who ia he, pray?" "She - going to throw herself away On young Will Shakeapenre. ao they say, Unless nil plays miscarry." "What, that poor, foolish rhvmeeter lad! He never can aupport her." "Yes, doesn't it seem almost sad? Because we know she might have had One of true worth. It seems too had When betters came to court her." "They say some years the elder she." "And he's not worth his salt, As anyone with eyes can see." "Well, if young folks will foolish be At least they can't blame vou and me It's surely not our fault. 11 Yes, don't yon s'posc such things were said .When young Will Shakespeare wooed and wed? Kansas City Times, HEN LITTLE JAMES STOPPED THE SUN. Once there was a little boy named James Montmorency Stebbins. He had yellow ha-ir, a turned-up nose and freckles of assorted sizes, and he didn't like to go to school. He hated It so much that at last he made up his mind to go to the old gray witch who lived at the top of a volcano that overlooked the Stebbins' back yard. Thin witch was very old and very gray, and so wise that people used to come from miles around to aBk her what to do when they didn't know themselves. So one afternoon James put on his coat and hat and started to climb the volcano. There was a path up the side of the volcano that had been worn by tli feet of the people who came to ask the gray witch questions. So JameB followed it. And at first as he went along there were trees and flow ers on either side, but as he got farther up they grew less and less un til at last there was none left and their place was taken by burnt black stones and gray ashes. And there were no birds or butterflies or hoppy toads about, only a few brown liz ards, which whisked out of sight as soon as they saw James coming. Everything was so lonely and so still that he almost wished he hadn't come, but he kept bravely on and by and by he got to the top of the mountain. There, just under the rim, perched like a swallow's nest, was a little gray house. "That must be where the gray witch lives," thought James, so he went up and knocked at the door. And right away quick the door flew open, and there stood the gray witch on the threshold. She looked at the little boy over her spectacles. "Good morning, James Montmorency Stebbins," she said. "You've come to see me about school, haven't you?" Now that surprised James Mont morency Stebbins very much, for he had never told any one of his plan of going to see the gray witch and he wondered how she could possibly know. The gray witch chuckled when she saw how surprised he looked. "Make your request, make your re quest," she said, "and speak quickly, for I huven't any time to waste." - "If you please," said James, as fast as he could, "I'd like it never to be 9 o'clock in the morning any more." "Vou won't like it a bit," said the witch, "but you shall have it if you want Jt," and she went into the house and came back with a bow and arrow, which she gave to him. "Now, James Montmorency Steb bins," she said, "this is a magic ar row and If you shoot It at the sun to morrow morning early it will pin it tight on to the sky so that it won't be able to move forward. So then it can't ever get to be 9 o'clock." "And then I won't ever have to go to school," cried James in glee. But the gray witch only chuckled In reply and shut the door before James had time to say thank you. But he was very happy and he went down the mountain past the gray ashes and past the green trees till at last he came safe and sound to his own back yard, and all the time he thought to himself, "How delightfully delicious not to have to go to school again," and all that night he was so happy he could hardly sleep. The very first thing next morning he was up and dressed and he ran out into the back yard with his magic bow and arrow. The sun was just rising over the hills. James took his arrow, fitted it to the bow, aimed at the sun and pulled the string. Whizz went ihe arr OW lilt thrum-:. the clear air; up, up and up till It ,. , i . . .... lue ana pinned It fast onto the blue sky. Then James was delighted. Ho jumped up and down and clapped his hands. ' No more school for me." ho cried, with Joy. And he ran Into the house. "Ob. mother and father," he cried, "I don't have to go to school to-day. Let s have breakfast and then go off and upend the day In tho woods!" "Breakfast?" said his mother Why, James, it is much too early for breakfast. Go out Into the garden and play. I will call you when It Is ready " So James went back to the garden aud played for u long while. But his mothor didn't call him, so after a while he went to the door and said: "Mother, Isn't it must time for breakfast?" "Goodness gracious, no," his moth er suld. "Don't you see the suu is Just over the mortmains, it won't be lime for breakfast till It gats high up over tho pear tree." James went slowly back to the garden. He was thinking a thought "If it never gets any later than now it will always be just before break fast." It was a harrowing thought. By and by lie went back to the "Mother," he said, "I don't believe It's mnch use waiting breakfast till the sun gets over the pear tree, for It never will get any higher, because I've pinned It fast to the sky with my magic arrow, and it can't get away." "James Montmorency Stebbins," aid his mother, "whatever did you do that for?" And when James told her, she said: "That was very naughty of yon. Go and take it down at once." "But I can't," cried James. "I don't know how. It will have to stay that way for always." "In that case," said his mother, "we may as well sit down to break fast now, and after breakfast you can go right off to school." So James had to go to school in spite of all his trouble. And the sun stayed just where It was all that day, and all that night James could scarce ly sleep because his room was so light. And It kept on that way for a whole week. Because hi was so much in the sun James' freckles increased so that ho was mostly freckles, and he thought: "If this keeps on I shall soon be brown all over, and that won't be a bit nice." But the trees and plants had a much harder time than James, as the Bimllght continued day after day, and they began to droop, for they grew all the time, and had no time to rest. At the end of the week James said: "Tho gray witch was right. I don't like this a bit. I have to go to school just the same, and it's hot and horrid all the time. I'm going back up the mountain to ask the gray witch to help me again, for I've thought and thought, and I can't think how to get that arrow out again." So he climbed up the mountain and when he got to the top there was the gray witch standing at the door of her little gray hou3e, waiting for him. "I thought you wouldn't like it," she chuckled, as he came panting up. "Whenever I do anything for peo ple they come back the next week and want It all undone again T Je clare I don't see much use In being a witch. I think 1 will go out of busi ness. But first I will help you llx the sun." So she went Into her house and came out with a long coll of fine magic rope. She made one end of it into a lasso and gave It to James. "See if you can lasso the arrow with that," she said. . So James twirled the rope about his head and flung it up, up and up through the air till it reached the sun. And then it went right past it and never caught the arrow at all. "Try again," cried the witch; so James tried and the second time the loop fell right over the shaft of the arrow. Then James drew the lasso tight and pulled and the arrow came out of the sun with a jerk and the sun jumped forward to its proper place in the sky. And that was the last time James Montmorency Steb bins meddled with the sun. Wash ington Star. HARK COLORS IN MOLES. Particular Varieties Confined to Cer tain I i. -Ill Piebald and White. Molecatching first became a regu lar occupation about a century ago when English molecatchers were In troduced on the lands of the then Duke of Buccleuch. The handsomest varieties belong to the "Bllver gray" class. If these could be obtained In nnv nuantity tbeir skins would bring a high price in the fur market. Mr. Service, of Dumfries, lately lecturing before the Edinburgh Field Naturalists' Association, stated that he had never seen a really white mole, and he believed It to be a great rarity Nor had he ever seen -a pie bald variety. He had little doubt that variation of color in moles ran in certain families. Tho regularity with which a par ticular variety occurred repeatedly in the same field or on the same farm was well known to every molecatcher, wblie no abnormal coloration would perhaps occur In any other part of the parish. From the Londou Globe Use of Sugar in Bread Manufacture. Several of the sugar journals have lately pnblished articles dealing with the use of a small amount of sugar In bread manufacture. The Sugar Beet for January has a short note on the subject. Apart from the advan tage claimed in this note, bread sn prepared would, of course, have "O additional food value. The Sugar Beet says: "In Franco every possible idea i being brought to the front with the view of Increasing the home sugar consumption. At a recent meeting of the Sugar Chemists' Association at Bordeaux, a French chemist, Mons. F. Dupont, read u paper discussing (he possibilities of adding seven pet cent, of sugar to bread, and this with out materially altering the taste ol the latter product. An addition of five per cent, of sugar has no influ ence on the flavor. The chief advan tage of this sugar addition 1b that the bread has greater keeping quali ties. Bread which will ordinarily be sour In forty-eight hours, will under go very little alteration, even aftei several days, when a slight propor tion of sugar has been mixed with the dough. Agricultural News. The Fussy Woodsman. Did you ever find yourself in the woods with a "fusser;" that Is, a man who only sees the ulsagreeable side of everything, and published bis views early and often? For such a man the trail is frightful; the woods that occasionally slap him playfully across the cheek are anathema, the water is too wet, his rod or cast or something or other gets broken or lost, his shoe pinches one foot. About an hour before dark, just at the time when it is worth a king's ransom to be beside the favored waters, he wauts to get back to the boat, aud s you unwillingly wind up your line to prepare to depart your disgust Is too deep and sacred for commou words. Forest and Stream. Social Transformation in England. In England, the lower upper-class women are going down the social ladder: the upper lower-class women are rising. The former are taking to the stage, shopkeeplng and service, and the latter are moving rapidly for ward, and several are even replacing the first In "society." Chicago Women to Wcnr Snndal. Nearly 1000 Chicago women will wear sandals this summer, local shoe dealers predict. One firm already has laid In a stock of several hundred in adult sizes, as well as sizes for chil dren. The women of Chicago don't need the support of a physical cul ture club to give them courage to go sandaling. Chicago Daily News. Englishwomen (irow Bold. The Englishwoman of the past shrank from publicity; that of the present pursues It. The stage ap pears to be increasingly attractive,' and from the woman of Belgravia to tho girl of BermontUey there Is a rush to be engaged for It. There are man agers whe predict that in the near future there will bp no women in the audiences; they will all be before the ootlights. A Red Lip Season. Lips will be of a deep rich red this season. Hips, as a topic, have had their day, and despite all the dic tates of Paquin, women seem to be as hlpless or "hlpful" as they were before. The prophets could make only conjectures In regard to hips. It remained to be seen what the New York woman would do. But the writer has seen the lips, and unlike all the talk about hips, can say that the deep rich red is the latest fad. The majority of the women whose Hps looked as though done with pure crimson madder from the tube were beyond the klsslng-age. Brooklyn Life. done It, but, on the contrary, many men worked royally in our behalf. We must give man his due. He helped us to higher education for one thing, and when the time comes he wll' help us to secure the vote. Most men are not antagonistic, but neutral, In their attitude to woman's progress. 'Let them succeed If they can.' Is their creed, and we can hardly expect more. Many are working with splen did disinterestedness for us. Are not men our fathers and brothers and husbands? And is it natural for a man to grudge success to his own daughter?" ' NEWS OF PENNSYLVANIA $ at ift ia ata - A aa, k -,afc Sk ta A Ka a akav -.ak - sVafe A-A ... afc.' LOST ON MOUNTAIN. Ex-Empress Eugenie's Memoirs. The ex-Empress Eugenie is busily engaged writing her memoirs, the last page of which Bhe hopes to have finished this spring, which she hopes to spend as usual in the Riviera. The Empress observes the utmost secrecy An Animated Album. A novel and enjoyable device for a home entertainment, or for a church sociable, may be found in an ani mated reproduction of the photo graph album that was common thirty or forty years ago. Each person who Is to iake part In a proposed performance of this kind should, under the oversight of the committee entrusted with the gen eral management of the affair, choose for imitation, In dress, general ap pearance, speech and suppositional conduct, one of the types of character represented In such a collection, which would include interesting speci mens of humanity o? assorted ages, sizes, callings and circumstances, from n ministerial country grand father down to a loug-frocked city baby. Not only photographs representing single subjecis should be depleted, but plans should be made to have two or more individuals keep together, forming a living portraiture of an old man and his wife, side by side, a picture of two quaintly garbed chil dren going hand in hand, a family group of the last generation, or an Illustration of a case of four con temporaneous generations in one line. The selection made, each of the futuro performers should fit himself to carry out, in as llf like a manner as he can, the role that he has as sumed for the time being, and some one of a quick wit and lively tongue should be appointed master of cere monies for the occasion. This one should become as familiar as possible with the fictitious names and the dis guises of tho would-be-actors, and he Carlisle (Special). George W. Bear, a well-known young farmer re- i .i i ..... . . i iums, mi me vvainut Mottom itomi near Carlisle, returned after the seeming desertion of his family for two weeks. Bear left his, wife to drive to his father's home In Perry County, twelvo days ago. Thursday his horse drew his buggy up to his home and his wife recognized her husband seated In the vehicle. Bear was daz ed, as It afterwards was shown, from the effects of typhoid fever, with which he was quite 111. When he was revived he could hardly realize that ho had been wandering through the mountains for eleven days. All that he could remember was that he had been lost in the mountains with his team wedged between two trees. How he lived can only be surmised, although nttendlng physicians staled that on account of his Illness with typhoid fever he would eat little or nothing. Some passerby must have found Bear and sturted him on his road, as bis buggy contained a paper sack holding oats and bearing tho name of Frnnklln Cnuntv Brain I dealer. People throughout Cumberland County are at a loss lo understand how Bear could have been lost In this thickly settled section, but the testimony of the physicians Is posi tive evidence that his mind has been unbalanced for several weeks, and the fact that both horse and man have evidently done without food is additional corroboration. SAVE WOMAN'S MI L. IH.I AI I.TINO BANKER I I ! M.I I) IN MINKS. ft Sis 8i 1 1 O 'Peach Cobbler. And first the cojbler which our South ern cooks made in such perfection. For this purpose the richest and ripest fruit is selected, usually some variety of the yellow peach, because of Its superior richness. Butter a deep earthenware pudding dish at least three and one-half inches deep. Line the side with good pastry, then fill thw dish with peeled peaches torn In halves Instead of cutting. Leave in enough pits to impart flavor. Sweeten abundantly, then cover with a rich layer of crust, sealing down so that none of the julceB may escape. Bake In a hot oven about three-quarters of an hour, covering with paper If there Is any danger of It browning too rapidly. When nearly done draw to the oven door, dredge with powdered sugar, and set back to glaze. about her work, every word of which was written with her own hand, her secretary not even seeing the manu script. Her Majesty uses a penholder studded with diamonds with which the Peace of Paris was signed. The memolrB, which are not to be pub lished for twenty years after the death of the Empress, Bhould prove Interesting reading tor the next gen eration. London Bystander. Evolution of Hatpins. Hatpins grow longer and more fas cinating every minute. One of Freuch make is a rose-linted cameo, oval in shape, set in dull gold and oxidized silver in an Empire design. The mushroom shaped Japanese hat pins are pretty, looking something like a small hat with a turquoise crown and a sliver brim. One of the newest hatpins is decidedly startling. ' There is a large, colored, cut stone, and beneath this a reflector attached to spiral springs. With every move ment of the wearer's head the re flector vibrates, sending forLh flashes of light, and the effect Is quite dazzling. St. Petersburg Grows Cay. So strong is the spirit of gayety this season in St. Petersburg that there Is much talk or reviving that 1 dream of sumptuous glory, the boyard fete of 190", declared to be! the most magnificent court, spectacle J of modern times. Tho boyatds were : the old Russian nobles of the time of ! Ivan the Terrible, and for the le.e of 1903 costumes and Jewels war wor.i that were worth millions. A doz.u women spent a fortnight in Wing jewels on the costume of the Czarina, i who represented the flrsc wife of . Czur Alexis Micbuelovitch. The drat ' weighed over sixty pounds, and has 1 never been worn since. Tub Ar gonaut. In the last eight years the three great iron countries have produced 310,100,000 tons of pig iron, of which over half has come out of the United States. Modernized Wondei-lnnd. A pretij idea for a bazar.r is mod ernized Wonderland. All the figures wander about just as Alice found them, with Alice herself looking on, while a motor car keepB rushing In and out among the flgures and through a mysterious castle. One has only to give- this motor or the mock turtle or the Ash footman or other well known characters ten cents, and Immediately, with extreme amiability, he goes rushing off to the castle, aud brings back a beautiful large pink and white parcel which, ' when it is opeued, reveals precisely the thing that one has bean looking for. There may be also in the garden I an enormous Humpty Dumpty, who' obligingly smashes httnsulf every I time one gives him ten cents, aud dls- ' closes lu bis interior a box of clioco- ' lates. should also have ready a store of jokes, comments 'and anecdotes for use in the position. At the hour for opening the entertainment he should announce that the flgureB in the pho tographs in one of the old albums have come to life and been freed from restraint for s. short season, and then he should mingle with the guests, Introducing them one to an other In a telling way, and by his fact and vivacity forestall any tendency to stiffness. Part of the program for the even ing should be made up of contribu tions from the people present. For instance, a supposedly sentimental young woman, with long flowing curls, might warble a solo, or recite a ballad or a scrap of poetry; two men or two women might engage in a dlu logtie concerning farm or town mat ters or church or domestic doings; some pretended sclvol children might speak pieces in a bashful, awkward style, or sing some of the school songs of the period trader consideration, or some of the musicians in the assembly might be prepared to render some of the glee or choruses of that day, or to draw melody from the harp, the flute or the violin. For further amusement, some of the old games, such as "Stage-Coach," "Spin the Platter" or "Going to Jeru salem," might be played by the whole company, and a spelling match might furnish one of the attractions of the gathering. If tho refreshments are to be served on a long table, after the fashion of a New England tea party, they should consist of tea, fresh biscuits i.nd but ter, chipped beer, baked or boiled custards In tall cup, pickles, pre served quinces or preserved ginger, fruit cake and several other kinds of caks, custard pie and apple pie. if the refreshments are to be passed around among the guests, there may be a simple cullatlou, composed ol doughnuts, crullers, cookies, nuts and apples, or a more elaborate one, com prising creamed or fried oysters, chicken salad, sandwiches, cake and coffee. The party should break up with the slnglug of "Auld Lang Syne." Martha Burr Banks, in the Ladies' World. Mere Man Hun Helped. "Mere man" has u strung advocate in Dr. Elizabeth Sloan Chester, who maintains that he has helped rather than retarded womaa's progress. Man has been woman's friend this ! last docade, not her enemy," she de- ; Clares. "If he had wanted to keep us 1 from advauclug, from emancipation ' aud a fuller life, he could easily have Fearfully and Wonderfully Frugal. Fearful and wonderful are the ways or lrugai and industrious wom ankind. They will seize on the moat unlikely objects, bucIi us empty tins or frying pans, and with infinite to I and patience turn these dubious arti cles into precious ornaments of the home. English dispatches say tha: the women in that cou i ry have now attacked the men's hats, and no chim neypot, however new or treasured, is safe from their marauding hands. Male visitors are urrnld .o loave their headgear In the hall lest it should vanish rrom their sight, and there is no place, public or private, where a man can feel sate with his top hat. Elderl) women have even been seen to snatch prizes from beneath pews when seemingly engaged ill their de. vol ions, and the only thing that has been found effective ir cooling the unholy uvdor of tho sex Is retaliation upon the cloche and leathers of offenders. Scranton (Special). Owen Murray leaped from his car going at full speed Into the Lackawanna River to save a woman, Mary Boyle, who was carried away. A fourteen Inch water pipe burst while she was walk ing on the bank of the river and she was sucked down by hundreds of gallons of water. Murray saw her danger, grasped her skirts and he in turn was held fast by another man, who saw the ac cident, and a human chain was form ed by other bystanders. With much difficulty Murray and the woman were dragged from the flood. NAMES RAILROAD CLERKS. Harrlsburg (Special). The State Railroad Commission announced five appointments, although none of the appointees were assigned to positions. The five are: R. C. Haderman, at torney, Bedford, and James C. Wat son, attorney, Wllllamsport, who will probably be assjgned as asslsstant attorneys; Verda S. Johnson, assist ant station agent at Erie; Arthur R. Anwyll, stenographer, Harrlsburg; John G. Hopwood, Unlontown, who will probably be made a clerk. These are the first appointments to be anounced for some time, and the new mon will assume their work in a short time. BREACH OF PROMISE SLIT. West Chester (Special). Papers have been filed here In a breach of promise suit of Miss Annie Mary Philips, of East Nantmeal Township, against George L. Walters, of Phoenlxvllle, for $10,000. Miss Philips is a daughter of O. Milton Philips, well known in the northern part of tho county. Mr. Walters is a son of Major Louis R. Walters, former United States Treas urer at Philadelphia, and a chemist In the United States Department of Agriculture. The case has been scheduled to come up at the October term of court. NEW (J. A. R. COMMANDER. Erie (Special). Put rick Delacy, of Scranton, was elected commander of the Pennsylvania Department, O. A. R., defeating John L. Grim, of Phila delphia, by a vote of 21 to 133. J. W. Sayres, of Reading, was re-elected chaplain unanimously, this being the thirty-seventh time he has held this office. Albert M. Smith, of Beaver Springs, waB re-elected de partment medical director. Get 118,000 For Wife's Death. Meadvllle (Special). The Jury In the case of Professor Robert S. Breed, of Allegheny College, against the Meadvllle Truction Company, awarded the plulntlff $1&,000 dam ages for the death of his wife, who wus one of several persons killed in the trolley car accident on College Hill. December' 13, 1905. Pittsburg (Special ). William Montgomery, former cashier of the Allegheny National Bank, has finally concluded to open up and tell of the bank's troubles, and to assist Re ceiver Robert Lyons in winding up the affairs of the bank. He has been approached repeatedly by friends that suffer by the bank's crash, and Im portuned to disclose where the fundi went but heretofore he has main, talned a stolid Indifference to the supplications of his closest friends. Among these friends waa Secretary' of the Commonwealth Robert Mc Afee, who lost his fortune by Mont gomery's crime. n was not until Receiver Lyons got after the cashlei Thursday, however, that any Inform ation that would assist the receiver was obtained. Owns 4,000,000 Shures. The disclosures made to Lyon make Montgomery appear to have lost his reason entirely. He con fessed to owning upwards of 4,000,. 000 shares of mining stocks, the pres ent value of which nobody can esti mate. ' The mines In which Montgomery put the banka money ure scattered all along the Pacific Coast from Cen tral America to Alaska. Montgomery Beems to have had a mania for buy ing wildcat mining stocks at what ever price he could get them. He paid for some of the stocks ns low as one cent a share, and others ran Into hundreds of dollars. Re elver Lj-ons, In a desperate ef fort to get some Idea of Montgom ery's methods that would help him, or give him a lead that would enable him to extricate the bank s affairs from the apparently hopeless tangle, put all the former clerks on the car pet, but they were ignorant of any clow that would be of value to the receiver. Thursday Lyons went to the Jail and saw Montgomery, and the tale Montgomery told startled even the receiver. Represent Immense Losses. While some of these mining se curities may be of use in clearing up the affairs of the bank, It is said that many of them represent immense losses over the original prices. Mont gomery, it now appears, carried on this speculation over a number of years, and it has been ascertained that his defalcations date back two years, when the value of mining stocks began to Bhow a marked shrinkage. To make good his losses, Mont gomery found It necessary to seek assistance and as the bank of which he was managing head offered the best opportunity, the reason for his downfall Is apparent. Settle Many Notes. As far as tho work of settling up the bank's affairs have progressed, a large amount of collateral in the form of notes have been found. The people whose signatures were attach ed to them have been notified to set tle, and this has been done to such an extent that the bank has now on hand $600,000 in cash. Others are complying with the re ceiver's request almost daily. No statement has been made concern ing these borrowers, since the Gov ernment seldom goes into details In matters of this kind. Whether It will be necessary to sue on some of the collateral in the bank has not been made known. With the money on hand and what Is believed will be collected almost the entire amount due the dpositors can be paid without resorting to as sessment of the stockholders, al though such an assessment Is inevi table. Stockholders Will Lose. The depositors will receive their money, but the stockholders will lose every cent of their stock. The manner in which Montgomery talked of his transactions was a sur prise to all who have followed his course since he was put in jail. Now that he has begun to talk It Is ex pected that more will be forthcoming with the result that more of the funds heretofore undiscovered will be brought to light. BIG CARP TOWS ROWBOAT. JSe UGU5E txt HOME Indian Apple Jelly Pudding. Turn three pints of scalding railaT on to a pint of sifted Indian meal, stir in two heaping tablespoonfuls of sugar, two tcaspoonfuls ol either cin namon or ginger and a teaspoonful of salt. Add a dozen sweet apples, pared and sliced thin. Bake three hours in a moderate oven. The ap ples will form a nice, sweet Jelly. New York Telegram. Meat Croquettes. Put the meat through a cutter. Any kind will do. Put your onion through with the meat: mince a bunch of parsley and season with a little red pepper and salt. If they are not well seasoned they are not good. For a quart of meat I take a half cup of milk, put It on the stove, thicken with cornstarch and mix with the meat. When cool, form either Into cone shape or into round cakes. Dip Into bread crumbs, then an egg: have deep boiling fat, as for dough nuts. Boll until brown. A wire sieve Is good for frying. Sometimes I put mashed potatoea with the ment. If these are mado right they are splendid. Mrs. M. R., In The Bee Hive. Dressing Snlads. Most salads should be dressed just before serving, whether French dress ing or mayonnaise is used. Celery or lettuce wilts if left in oil and vinegar, Celery should not even be waahed long before serving, as It becomes rusty. Potato salad, how ever, is an exception to the rule. Potatoes take up large quantities of oil and need to be very well mixed with whatever dressing is used Sal ads made of greens should always be served crisp and cold. Canned or cold cooked left-over vegetables are well utilized In salads, but are best mixed with French dressing, and should be placed in the refrigerator an hour or so before serving. Meats for salads should be freed from skin and gristle, cut into small pieces, and allowed to stand with French dress ing before combining wltu veget''los. American Home Monthly. Wildcat Attacks Man, Canonsburg (Special). In a des perate fight with a large wildcat, which attacked him, John Brady, a farmer, was probably rutully injur ed. The animal was shot. ITEMS IN BRIEF. Hiram Betcher und his son-in-law, Wilson Blew, miners at the Rellancu Colliery, Mt. Carmol, were caught by u prt'iunliiru blast and seriously In jured. The former had his right eye blown out. Harry W. Rhodes has been elected president of the Media Title & Trust Company, to succeed the late George Drayton, who died at the age of 91 years. For years Mr. Rhodes was the secretary and treasurer of the com pany. He Is the youugeBt bank presi dent In the county. John Quoeney, a confessed perjur er, was sentenced at Wllkesbarre lo three and a halt years' imprisonment. His testimony, which he recently con ressed, was manufactured, resulted in a verdict of $19,000 against the Wllkes-Barre ft Wyoming Valley Traction Company, The Jury In the damage suit or Julia Anspach against the Reading, at tpottsville, gave her a verdict of $7,000. Shu claimed $20,000 for negligence, which resulted in the death of her husbuud, J. J. Anspach, at the New Ringgold crossing of the road. Autonla Linguae and T. D. Cassela were convicted at Clarion of selling liquor without a license and wer seutenced to pay a fine of $500 and the cobIs of the prosecution. A mau's hair turns gray about five years earlier than' a woman's. Sellnsgrove (Special). After hav ing been towed in a rowboat for half an hour by a big fish, two 12-year- old youths, Philip Fasbold and Wil liam Wolf, of Shamokln Dam, suc ceeded in landing a twenty-four-pound carp. The boys were fishing with hook and line in the Susquehanna River, near their home, four miles above here. Young Wolf had Just cast his hook when a fierce tug on the lino almost pulled him overboard. Both he und Fashold pulled with all their strength, but could not land the fish. Instead, their boat was carried up stream by Ihe monster carp. Finally Fashold got a sight of the fish as It rose to the surface and kill ed It with a bullet from his rifle. Horsewliipix-d Too Ardent Wooer. Pottsvllle (Special). Because Augustus White, aged 60 years, wai too persistent in thrusting his un desirable attentions upon Miss Hester Frantz, of St. Clair, aged 20 years, a pretty girl, she publicly horsewhip ped him. Captain A. . Standing Dead. Carlisle (Special). Captain A. J. Standing, widely known as an Indian educator, and one of the founders of the Carlisle Indian School, died or paralysis at his home, at Dickin son College, aged 60 years. Captain Standing was for a long time assist ant superintendent of the Carlisle Indian School. He was a native of England. Casserole. The term casserole applies to two very different modes of cooking. It all depends on whether one refers to the method of preparation and cook ing the food or the dish used in the process. Casserole is the old French name for a saucepan of heavy brown and white earthenware, well glazed inside and out and having a tight fitting cover. The Japanese also have a dlBh of heavy china which they use for the same purpose. It differs somewhat in form from the French dish, but the same principles applies to its use. In this dish the native cooks prepare the most delectable baked stews of sweetbreads, chicken, game, etc. At a recent dainty little French luncheon "rls de veaux petlts pois' was served in little individual sliver casseroles, the lids fastened on with a bow of ribbon corresponding with the color scheme. The general utility of these dishee appeals to the American housewife more than the fact that they are of French or Japanese origin, and they are gaining rapidly in popularity. A very different proposition, how ever, is the casserole mold a baked shape of boiled rice or potato, mashed, reasoned, and when shaped hollowed out and filled with a ragout or mince, the outside decorated, brushed over with egg and browned. Cassolettes are the same thing, only smaller cup-shaped cases are used for holding a meat preparation or a sweet filling. These are usually dipped and fried, but can be prepared by bak ing. These forms are familiar to most housewives under the sruise of 1 chicken In rice or potato mold. Bos ton Cooking School Magazine. Tinsmiths In New Zealand are among the best paid mechanics. They receive 2 10s. a week. That earthworm as well as squir rels may aid the forester Is the novel suggestion of an American naturalist. Dry maple seeds are drawn Into worm burrows, where they sprout, and it is believed that some of them mutt survive In favorably moist seasons. A restoration of the skull of a great horned dinosaur haB Jutt been lustalled for exhibition In Peabody Museum, Yale University. It it near ly nine feet long and about til feet broad, and Is said to be the largest skull of nuy prehistoric land animal, CgJVP now TO PREPAJtETHCn Chicken With Oysters. Boll a chicken until tender, crumb up your bread, pour over It the broth from the chicken, and season to taste. Add one quart of oysters to the bread crumbs, Btlr well aud fill the chicken with it, and put the rest around It in the pan. Place it in the oven to bake until crisp and brown. A Delicious Confection. Popcorn mixed with nuts makes a delicious confection. Take a cup of chopped pecans to about two quarts of freshly popped corn. Put two cups of sugar Into a kettle or frying pan, place over the fire, and when melted add two tableBpoonfuls of molasses, a large, lump of butter, and pour over the corn, stirring constantly. The syrup should be cooked until it begins to string, or congoal, when dropped into cold water. Potatoes Baked In Milk. Pare and cut In thin slices crosswise one dozen potatoes, slice two large onions, aud add about one-half cupful of finely chopped fresh parsley. Put the 'whola into a granite pudding dish and cover with milk, putting plecei of butter on top. Bake In a hot oven for one-half hour. Salt and pepper should he added when served, as the milk la apt to curdle If It is added before cooking. This recipe is also good If canned tomatoes are used Instead or milk. Almoud-Drop Cookies. Beat two eggs lightly; gradually beat In one cupful of sugsn';' then two ounces of chocolate melted over hot water, OM uud 6na-half cupfuls of blanched al monds chopped fine, aud a teaspoon ful of vanilla extract. 81ft together three limes oue cupful of flour, one level teaspoonful of baking powder aud half a tuaspoonfdl each or salt and cinnamon, and stir into the nut mixture. Drop by the teaspoonful onto a butjered baking shaot to make Bltie rounris of dough. Bake in a moderate oveu. This rtKipds makes about lures dozen little cakw.