' THE RAGE IN REAL ESTATS BMiodlph Aim""'"" Malcolm Tit fhuiMlit he'd Inveat In real ratals. rf iirm h wouldn't apeculate, H'd buv at the prevailing rate. Vnd then, no duuht, would haw to waft To sell nt what he'd estimatp Would bo a Rain conuninHiirate. hndolph AiiKiiatiis Malcolm Talt nut In the name a little late. ... II.. .....I ull llm ..n-......! I...IA At prlcea inilte Inordinate, And thought hi luiraulna really "Kf But at no very turinm ante Randolph Aliffliatus Malcolm l'ttlt In nnslneBa was unfortunate. Mr faltpd. uticl It Ih and to nt Uf Simi people were Importunate. An. I tliiniliilnh irnt It xiir lu ete (Which means in Knidixh "1111 tl pate") IH AUlll mil in- ' .Anr-i Millie, thv "aid he iniiHt "get on a Knit." ..-A.... .11.1 tlilu fii.tu It. ...a H-..L. Ili-n n.n .......a iiik' uiiiim 1 lilt . I.... ... M..1I l.lu ...... I .... ... RFWi'- i" r' li mn it-mi l-ninil-, .Ai'aff land will depreciate,. And tlila rnlMfnittiiif fell on Talt. it. vnnl t iA llina-n 1 I I .. I : . .. . . rir in .......M, i.m iiiaiiiiiii e Brown mnllid lit- wan. In rent estate! nr iiiiuiii niniiii iniiK euiiiniiiierHti1 ....a.... I... t ... .-men nun in rem prulie: Jones, Itnhlnaon, ati-ange to relnte, p-iiii in nii-iu iii-.-p in real erinie: Hlf lot they emiUI upprecliite. To hlp him they'll not hesitate. But they were poor In redl estute. ILiniMph Aiwuatua Mnlrnlm Tait rwiui- mi: nun fiiiw I III. lien UHIV. He rhnae n auh ldal fate, And friends were an conalilernle - " " ' l MII Ulllf piltlf, In ueutli lie Htlll owns real etuto!" Cn I'nil luirl ..a.i.... M.tiini.. .in U,ifiHlt.l. a . 1... n-..: H..V.. i.n iigc urn im man i'iiii inn. -U louche Hancock in the New Ymk Aaat HejiiziDali's Tramp. B, Grace Agnes w$m. We bad asked for a story and gath ered expectantly around grandma's tuair a tale or true love when vnn were a lassie In the days of auld lang lyne, as Kathlo nut It. Grandma smiled and looked dreamily into the tire. "It shall bo a story of the good days when Boston was many years younger mm u is today, she began. Grand ma, by the way, Is nearly 100 years om. "You must picture a laree. cilil-fimh lotwd farmhouse standing among great elr and maples and surrounded by Moan acres of field and pasture and woodland, only a mile from Harvard txxiege and not manv mom from Ron ton, where I passed my childhood and youtn until I married your grandfa raer. "At the time or my story I was about 17. Our family then Included two very ouaint people Simon Greggs. the hlr- u man, ana Miss Heohxibah Jonea I wuld not remember when Aunt Heph- zis naa not lived with us. She was mi 'old maid,' Bpare and angular and Uent, though always good to the chll- aren. we could never ealn thm faint tot clue of her age, nor any Idea of wnere sne una lived before she came to tie. mere was really nothing about Aunt Heplule to which one niltrlu nin romance unless it was this mystery, jet my sister Kate and I, who were just at the sentimental age. wove all maimer of romances around her and often held long consultations about her MDie lovers, until we came to be ve sne was the heroine of some ex irwrainary love affair which had end in aisaDDOintnient. "One day while we were at dinner ;wer remarked: 'I found a Strang asieep on the haymow -uu 4 went into the ham this morn ng. I saw him off the premises and Old him to keen awnv l.f auyuiing about these vagabonds.' "On Thursday afternoon, as Kate m l walked up the road to Squire iter's, two miles awav n nmn nam a oi some bushes beside the road. "e sure the 'tramn' had o....,-,. '.u ,ana a little frightened, but v uiu uu, U,., nKl lis thk k ..... - J -"l O 'I IIC i3i.il I- as he nnsHeri in u. uome. That evening while Kate ww I washed the h - r "'"'""i "W" ..u5 our anernoon adventure, as v vuuiuiiiea it. Kfo o.i.i.i....!.. Buuuuiiiv Kavt. r itart anil whimur " ioi,ni,..A : .-.ri'icu,y 10 me IL . Ule wlndow. There was hi hP B'eaU,,B tlthlly along by - .u,aiu icnce. it wag rather Mky out. hut thi- i.i.A J l7 1, .... - "" 1 uuceive r- ..uaiever ne could be seeking ty.,; ,,u,,se we raled to guess. if'Bie Was ahnn In ll . . ; B"ieoue, nut ""afieMieU rnnl UA mnll , . . . I-k.i,, a "u watcn r-.-ivyuieuiS. Ant Hephzie was In th rfi.. ' ay the milk Tk i., ' ' L t?"lwe 'r.amP PreBently appear. fltnr .wu m iuu i'-ti t7 ull"n' ,n a low, mum- funt Hcphzie turned and stared In I ..eni ror a moment, and thBn 0 were convuiuoH witk ia.ii. . Lni P"118 ana dbed IU con r-x liver Iho nulnnliikn A M ,. , w .UIIIUUU IAIIAU. "ow. git out! GU this Instant, or ' SIVA Vnil onnlhA ,1 .... I .1 p uon t dare show yer face on these "" agin,' she screamed. And M man !(, i-i.. ..a. ... 'to hurry reniarlt- Half an hour iutA cim, o m i. . ui le n, CDUekng to himself, as ha 'CO (HQ wV,en nnvtt.lna an...uJ ki... Unfl A. ' '-""'B .IIAAFCU UIUJ. . be said, as Miss Hephjilbab. OUt Of th. rfl. UM fcv. . - - iu 7u tier f a beau?' I Boau!' she exclaimed oontemptu- lL?' 1 never dId "d never want aeitner!' "Well. Well v...i.i. j oi " see a nw. n ... . I atZr f. e'd oeen tlfl'' aome kind -or wttn. , SOi t0 hl rt yon hAi. ji, . . :t fcd h. . uu,u runa nerer b nu be' wa" oln' '0 8ee K ClQ frlunri it .. . .. . an' Ym . """""'"an Aimiry 1.!- u kind o' welcoma "me.- ami ..A.,.t . hat m i nuui iinpnzio, U maB 'n't your beau, who was "Falhr inviterl him l ii nnri then (Uncovered thot ip u-aa nnt rpnllv hnil lookiDg. and certnlnly no tramp. t-renently Aunt Hephzlc appeared Crom the cellar, lint In tho tntdrtlo rf the floor she stopped, almost tlrcpplng the dish she was carrying. Then she col I a Daw) I to us to leave the room. It was a full nour Dnfore dinner was announced. I)l4t fllthne - raolil wn 'erml.t iiTnfil In Wait. Aunt Uonhilo Inlriiil.i.nil hoe Visitor aa Mr. Raniliel Ilroun whnm elie added, Bhe had known when a girl 'more than 40 years ago.' "Mr. Brown auoloelzod fur his strange behavior during the pawt inreo uuys. Me raid lie had lienn a sailor and told a thrllllnu; storv or Mm exile lu the frozen regions tif the north, where the whaling vessel ui which he sailed bud Iippii wr,.,-in,i Most of the crew perished, but two others wun hlnise f uid at last ann. eroded iu reaching Boston, lie had come at once to seek his former sweet heart, Miss Jones. After IraninlTiD- about ell day he had yielded to the temptation of sceklnir aholtne in fold er's barn, little thlnklnir Iim tto . near the object of his search. In the morning ne started out nguln and chanced to meet uomenm. uhr. in. formed him of Mi3S Hephzle's where abouts, and bo had returned that was how we girls hannened tn moot htm and then when he tried to obtain an Interview with her that worthy lady had sent him away drenched. Disap pointed, he hud gone to beg a night's lodging in Sauire ilaxter'M linen In tending to set out for the dorks In the morning, but the thought that Miss Hephnie might not h him had caused him to make one last attempt. 'Well, you can eiioss tho en ill no- that In a few weeks Aunt Hephzie muteu rrom Moplewood into a neat little farmhouse of her nwn foe as she said, It was the best use she could maite or the bright gold pieces that had been accumulating in hpr rhoat for so many years, and It did not mat ter whether her Samuel h nil nnv nr not. One thing puzzled us girls why uaa Mr. Hiown chosen to see his lady love for the first time throne)! that dairy window, and not properly through the door? We questioned old Simon, but he would nnlv Khnke hlo head and look wise." Boston Post. NEWS OF PENNSYLVANIA 2 nt lter.K.1 . yt fo, oeeniea a little ooa- ?ned h """"le. hut quickly re Un !' "'P08""-. nd looking 'Bi y ,n the face- ald y LUW matter, cam- . -ji Kd .?n,,v.w.heD4he 'tramp' towr rr.Va at n kitchen door .n A,k Ja nu Jonea. TREE CULTURE IN HOLLAND. Elm on Canal Banks and Linden French Monarch Guarded. There is Dorbaim no other populated country in the world which has so manv well wooded t nwna mi has Holland. Most of the streets and grachts or canals have avpniipa nf trees. Utrecht has two rows of trees on either side of Its nualnt cnnaU Its canal banks are constructed as if in two stories. The lower story, al most flush with the watpr lovel la lined with warehouses and vaults, while the upper' story has dwellings and shops. Both levels are planted wun trees. So many avenues of trees makn n Dutch town exceedingly pleasant, es pecially on n hot dav. The follatm tempera the glare of the sun nnd tin. vistas of green are refreshins to thf eye. inese abundant growths in thickly Dotmlatcd towns are hitrhiv useful as well as ornamental. It is recouni'.ed that from a hvelenln nnlnl of view they are valuable to the citi zens. In Holland these useful service are gratefully recognized and . the trees are carerully tended by tlw I municipalities. Tho cost nf thin per captia in the different towns va- ries Eomewnat. Iaat year, for exam ple, Utrecht devoted 21 cents (Dutch I to ita trees for each Inhabitant and The Hague 28 cents for each of its 259,000 citizens. It take 24 Dtitch cents to equal an American 'cent. About ten years ago tho annual cost of caring for tho trees of The Hagti'j was 10 cents (Dutch) per capita, but fclnce that time many new trees and shrubs have been planted throughout, the city and new parks have been laid out. It has been found that not every kind of tree will thrive In the streets of a town, for trees h avp mnnv on. emies both above and below ground. Gas escaping frqm pipes undergraund is the worst enemy of troea. Iiprauap quite small quantities of it are dead ly, for mis reason special precau tions are taken aeainst th Ipn If n cta of gas in Dutch towns. How electric ity escaping underground act mmn trees as yet has not been sufficiently stuuiea to be understood. Trees will not grow in very narrow streeta whoru the houses are high; neither will they ui rive it ine pavement does not let in moisture and nlr In sufficient mmn. titles. Tho best trees for Rtroet nluntincr . . :- m tioiiana nrt elms and lindens, but the elm is the hardier of the two and will grow where a linden will not. Trees of those kinds reach a ireat age, like the oid elms along the quiet grachts of Rr!i.m - fcuu ucau cities of the Zuyder Zee, which saw ot v an Tromp and De Ruy ter to the harbor bor which appears so tiny to modern eyes that one with difficulty Imagines "tho terror of th Vm-th a.." Ing there. Then there are the mag nlflcent' llndna nf n uniii.. . Utrecht, which appealed to the French monarch King Louis XIV. Those lin dens he commanded his soldiers to spare on nerll of hii. n., Hague Correspondence Chicago News. lllue I or Walking Gowns. In Paris, either for walking, for '.siting or for the races, women of tastt always return after a time to dark blue for their trotteur costumes, and with a smart hat and sunshade and well cut boots or shoes they al ways appear elegant. This fact was particularly notice- I nuie at Chantllly, writes tho Paris correspondent of tho Gentlowoman, anil it was amusinc to nito linw nvart' woman Introduced her personal taste In the selection of her cloche and om brello to relieve the severe classical cut of her gown. Comtesse d'llautponl wore fancy braiding matching bT hlun costume Riid a coarse straw bat of the snrne blue. Prlncesse Keiuinaml de I.u cinge was also In blur-, with a hat and feather to match: likewise Baronne Merlin, her blue hat being trimmed with buttercups. Comtesse do Saint Sauveur favored Sevres blue Tussore and a white alcretto in her black hat;' Prlncesse de La Tour d'Auvergne in blue serge had a black l,r and tcr of dark red feathers, and the marquise dc Noaillea war in navy blue Tussore, with revers of printed Indian Mr.sn on the jacket. Copying flic Knclisli Garden. Thero is one good result of all tills Invasion of English society by Ameri can women. One of the finest things In the land of Shakespeare and the suffragette Is the characteristic Eng lish garden, and the American women who have wandered across the Atlan tic m search of social excitement have adopted the Fnglish garden as their own. Mrs. John Jacob Astor has set her mind upon a typical garden for her Newport home, and Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney and Mrs. John R. Drexel are among others who have the same plan In view. The change will be welcome, esnpclnllv no i aiii drive out the hard Italian gardens with their out-of-piace statuary, and the Japanese gardens with their fool ish stone decorations. It is not strange that the garden as it grows In England has canrrht tho fnnev nf American women, for it Is just what nnd girls wear well shaped walklni? boots out of doors they would not only bo more graceful but would find more pleasure in walking which as an exercise bus much to commend It. Three suggestions will help any one who wishes to walk gracefully and with the alertness which is character istic of youth; the forward foot should point practically straight (the stronRest position in supporting weight); the back foot should push the body forward; the chest should be high and forward. Aa Inntr n. live we must hold ourselves up by muscular effort, and when we have learned the right wny it soon becomes a matter of habit. When a girl walks heavily she is always walking incorrectly and Is never graceful. Girls nro not alto gether to bl.ime for this, as they ere told from childhood to ' throw their shoulders bad:," which has a tend ency to put the weight In the heels, a strain on the back and to throw the head forward. Instead tho young should be told to throw the chest for ward and the head and shoulders will take their right position. Relaxation Is the Becond thing nee cssary for grace, as well as for the ' nerves. But relaxation doe? not j mean merely collapsing In a lacka- dalsical sort of way and being "wil- I lowy." it means having the power i to control the muscles letting those I rest which are not needed for the I Immediate work. Motion, of course, I Is at the joints, and the muscles mov' ! ing tnem may be made to act rythm icals by a little Practice Tho hnrl being constructed for movement re sponds quickly to the pendulum-like swing of the leg from the hip and the hnrmonlous yet very slight swing of the arm. A woman's irmi in mm because her should era nru nunativ tense. When the chest la netivn tho shoulders will drop In place, and the arms should hang at the sides. Wreck .Anil Itnln. York. The death of District At torney v, 1a. Amnion lias ilti Deiuna wreck ana ruin. The Staiidura Htiuu ing and Loan Association, of which he was secretary for 15 years went i inio tne nanus or a receiver. . ine Dauphin Court appointed the VorK Trust Company and accepted their I. I A ft . . a uuiiu oi 9-iu.iiuu, ior the pur post1 ot handling the funds. The books of the association are still in the hands or an expert accountant and while no olllclal statement has yet been .unti ed down, it i, believed the embezzle ment will exceed 150,(11)1). The asso ciation Is made up of about 150 shareholder. Many of these are poor peopl". and their ravings of many years win no doubt be swept away. Sonic of tliem will be com pelled .to sell t lu ir homes, for which they liav work-tl a lif-t ime to secure. lypliold Ilplilcinic. Doylestown Duo death ani two new cases are th" latest development:' in the typhoid lever epidemic at Dublin, near here. The epidemic broke out over a mouth ago and nineteen cases had been reported to the local health physician. Dr. K. S. Ulymlre. The two new cases make a total of twenty-one, all of wich, it is Buld, have resulted from an un sanitary well. Wife Gone, Kills Illniaelf. lidding Because his wife had son 4,i yfHr8' reBlflln i20 Robe drinw. Jco,,,m''l Btilclde b lalmt " lanrt,nn"m Hlch he had ob- tnat he waa uuflerlnr, with toothache Hll my wife I cannot live without tiny to a HlHtor iin ...a. - . Wo i. i .ii.i'-i, ui mat cmv. He had henn r.i, ,, i i : t.,,,. uun;ne' in Heading OI f.-iMal years. Dead 1'isl.rs I .1 1 ul t K Riier,. J,ari'is''"--s- Complaints frITI : persons i ntr -i... .11 .... 1 rihi " 'ieimii) , 1.1m .tionongahola Rivers, that in "",,, B ot dead fish are pol- llltlnLt the n-alnpu m . Msh (ommissioner Meehan to nsk tile lis 1 rnnimUul.iiin... ... w- . , 1 n ui it fNi Vir ginia anil Oh o to n rnnfri.,u t ,n cuss ways and means of compelling manufacturing establishments to stop draining poisonous substances wiii i h streams. Th- conference will be. held next month In l'ituburg, Cleveland and Wheeling. Iliirn Anil Crop llurn. West Chester.- The house nnd barn on the Goss farm, occupied by William BuUalew. near Mendenhall. were destroyed by (ire The fire was first discovered in the born nnd Its (jrigln Is unknown. Neighbors fought it with a buci.et brigade, bill were unable to stop its progress, und soon the house roof caught fire, be ing destroyed. All the family be longings and crops of the season were burned. The lo.-s is placed at JIO.OOO. Itound Ami Rolilie.l a vv',il"a","i;)ort -- ' :-'arJ Williams, or here, his wife and tluughter were ,.r Vlcuni8 f one of the boldest Hnn BJpKeWr PrP,!trated lu this sec rr h ,.Ih.rPe maHkp'l "fn with a rail- fto J ,,",,or,'l i" the door of Wil- hJ L !I"IS? W,,iIe tlle 'nembers of the family were sleeping, h, the ex- e cape"' Wl,,1-m r"aned 10 escape The man and his daughter B.'-e'1 and b0"nl- One man cov- mm witn revolvers, while the others searched the house, they found $207 that the veteran had sav e! from his meager pension. COMMERCIAL Weekly Revitw of Trade and Market Reports. f 'rV0,- 1)un & Vo 'a Weekly Review of Trade, says: n,,""l""l! ""om the principal cities tZ 1 'continuing the revival in ..mo "i PfoBPect Is that the vol ume In buslneao iavIII l..,r... 1 a rnM a? ' l;f","I,o''t'"n that maximum capacity will be reached and labor 1' ,a fniiim. In the iron and steel trade this condition. Indeed Th!!""...10 bp ,alr"ady "n sight, and that the wonderful expansion is no more mushroom growth is evidenced ny the advance orders for lsio Th railroads are enjoying such Increases n earnings and such assurances or good crops that they are buying frec 'y of sti.el rails and other supplies " iiradstreefs says: "Jobbing trade and manufacturing mliistry tend to expand as the vaca- ni.,Tas0n wanea and harvest pos sibilities grow Into certainties. From .....,,. , , markets, however, come . !L.'.;.'l".r'iU1"n " I'orts that, pur m 2 rrV?.k0 hol1 fonservatively and that retailers are still cautious buv pih. Currency shipments to the country are etilarging and monev Is Z, a',nly firm,-r- on'ething like a sobering process has been witnessed r "'it'Ur"les, 'arki'tB. which are h)wer all around. Perhaps the most n"lD!,'c""lrN reported thl, week come from a few of the lead- "ft luuuniries. "Business failures for the week ond ng with August ij were 183. ainst 219 last we-k. 8311 in the In 190h and 176 in 1905." Wholesale Markets. The Sensitive Girl. She bar a hard enough time, good ness knows, even among her family Q n it f rlana 1 M Aiii-iiuB, .ui Her leeungg am al I ways being hurt by some of them. as Q.-S SSM O 0 oo D n. 1 - O O 15 o 3 o vt Raspberry Jelly With Cream Ice Put half a pound or a pint of loaf sugar Into a stewpan with half a pint of cold water and the thinly pared rind if two lemons. Let the water come to a boil and then simmer for ten minutes. Stew until all the Juice has been drawn from them. Pbbs the juice through a fine hair sieve. Then measure and re-heat in the proportion of half an ounce to each pint of liquid. Taste to see if it requires any more sugar and strain it into a basin Put a cup of milk into a double boiler with eight tablospoon fuls of sugar and the thinly pared rind of a lemon. Stir on the stove until the sugar has dissolved and leave until cold Whip a cup of cream, stir it Into tho basin containing the cooked milk and freeze. Serve together with raspberry jelly I lies tfuviiig Tooth Drawn. York. Charles Sutton, 4S years old, after having had a small front tooth extracted at the office of Dr. N. C. Wallace at Dover, fell Into a faint and died a few minutes afterwards. Dr. Wallace stated that death was due to heart failure. Low Ilridce Kills Kingman. Easton. Harry Miller, aged 2S, of Warwick, N. Y., flagman on the Lehigh and Hudson Railroad, wus struck by an overhead brldgp nt ttocksburg, eight miles above here, and killed. A wife and four children survive. a garden means, with Its bursting giory everywnere, its trim box hedges. iir rnsp nmn pro ira awppr nnta nnn its honeysuckle, its flower beds, its snruDs and Its narrow white graveled walks. May Van Alen and her father, James J. Van Alen, together laid out an English garden in Newport half a aozen years ago, but insp van Alon tried in vain then to induce other young women to follow her example. New York Press. Out of Form Indeed. President Taft likn. if .... v- plays a fairly good ...,' ...i. . Chevy Chase caddy. "A farly g00i buu, ui least wuen lie s In form. "He was out of form on riov ,..,,, lie played here. He was just back irom una, ana 1 guess the voyage had upset him. After aome pretty bad work on tha flrat twn hi v. wvici, V said apologetically to his caddy a stranger from the east: ' In certainly out of form tn.. I're been on a sea voyage, yon am. i must have upset me.' "'Played before, hava mr ..m r - frA.D caddy." Washington Star. Her Figure Saved. Age begins to tell after sixty. One must dress to meet it. There is no reason for the figure to lose its IAM ...... 1 J IflL... . .uaiJUlUGBB UI I LB gUUU IlllCa. deplorable conditions are alwavs due 10 inaoicnce. i.uzy women win ten you they are due to sirknetis; hut the real reason lies in lack of endeavor and the will to keep one's self erect. The present-day women, who are be tween soventy and eighty years old, and were trained in a school of de portment that compelled them to walk, stand and sit correctly, are as straight and shapely as many of our younger woman. It win the Inter-no. i dlate generation that went to pieces. 1 Women of thit age should never, think of wearing any colors but whlto, black shades of violet and soft gray. Tbey should avoid anything with tones of blue, brown, red and green. They should cling to white for every hour that it is possible to wear it. . Stiff linens are not for them, nor heavy cotton, but soft muslin in all its forniB. Embroidery of every kind can be worn as well as lace, but a',-6 must never tamper with inferlor aualltv of either. I If her neck has the fullnvfts that aire often irivea she can welt arinnt ine present-aay collars or sort flno lingerie that roll back from the neck band and are fastened with a brooch at a slight point In the front. Tha old-fashioned wuv nf pntt-tn a blouse to a V in front and edging it with niching Is still one of the gen eral fashions. The empire sowns with long full skirts make the best models for clothes. Elbow sleeves are always pretty when a woman has a nice arm. As for headgear, that must remain a woman's own choice. The old fashioned bonnet Is quite out of style, but In its place there is a small hat of soft Nea noli tan straw or horsehair trimmed with flowers. 'A woman may add soft strings of satin to tie under tne chin, but as a rule thlB Is not done. New Jlaveh Register. ; . Ctillo aainr-nrta flf.oon f n . i . . . ' r r luuunu mi schools, giving Instruction to about !, SO paplls. To Walk Grarefnllv. The modern girl Ir at her worst when she walks. Her feat are dressed in low shoes with high heels and her stride Is out of all proportion to her height. Her right arm is swung vigorously back and forth. wnue tne lort one clutches a hand bag and holds It at the waist line with elbow aggressive. Hor chest Is depressed aud her head, with lta mar velous adornment, is thrust forward. The present fashion la shoos Is partly responsible for the awkward ness of our girls, declares a writer in Vogue. Shoes with high heels tic the foot down, preventing the beauti ful spHng of tha Instep arch. If auch shoes could be reserved (or the house But when she goe? into the business world it will seem to fairly bristle with thorns, to many will be the slights she will apparently receive. Most of the wounds of the sensi tive girl are self-afflicted, only un fortunately, she doeen't know it. When she gains this knowledge her suffering and her tears will mmn cease. It is wisdom that is a! OW In pnmtncr for you can't make the sensitive giri ueiieve tnat the slights directed h way are not Intended. She la .n ,o in her mind that her glevance is just that argument Is hopeless. Indeed, argument la honelcsi mm,. of the time with the sensitive girl. n you numoer such a one among your friends or in your famtiv trv change her way of looking at the world. Instead of arguing with her that her grievances are groundless. Try to got her to see that the world is too big and neonle ton hnav tn ,o occupied in thinking up ways to hurt nur reelings, and that In the main people are too kind to do such things anyway. The idea that people are continually shooting arrows her way comes frequently from an overdevel oped ego. She believes other people are ininKing as much about herself 83 she is. and their words and actions I she misconstrues as directed to her- j self, when the probability is they never had her In mind at all nor thought of such a construction being ' put upon their conduct. j This Is particularly true In business. uunueas people are entirely too rushed to mince words or to consider how people may take what they say. The sensitive girl Is extremely fool- ish to think every unkind word, every blur about poorly done work or slow. . ness is directed at her. Rest assu-ed if her work doesn't suit, she will hear 1 directly from her employer. He won't baat around the bush about It. And sho noedn't torture herself with the thought that he is whipping her over oiiieooay eiBe s snoulders. Common sense and a philosophical spirit are good cures for sensitive, nese. But these are the very qualifi cations the sensitive girl Is apt to lack. The best thing to help her is to mix with the world ant vih ..... . I AAA! Jl CU Jl I U to get a big, broad view nr nro ia-i.a In she will see how extremely small she and her affairs are. This will gradually give her a anno. .. . - - uijvi -aim r rational viewpoint and ho. ..a. sensitiveness will disappear. She will become much happier, much more ; companionable. The sensitive girl should endeavor to get thl view of life, for she Is making herself wretched over things which in the main do not exist, for most of the slights and wounds to her feelings are Imaginary, not real. And It is a pity to spoil life with imaginary ills New York Times. Landmark Burns. Bangor. While Mr. and Mrs. El mer Gross, farmers of near here, were asleep their home nearly burn ed down, both escaping in night clothes. The house was a landmark, built in 1813, and had thirteen furn ished rooms. Only a purse and a chair were saved. Dies From Kick. ; Pottsville. Terrifically kicked by a mule, Francis Schaelter died at I the Pottsvillei Hospital. Sohaeffer tried to brush flies oft the animal, and the mule misunderstood his in tentions. The incident occurred at Runners' Colliery. Painters Fall Forty Feet. Shamokin. William Keiaer, Potts ville, and John Hoover, liarrlshurg, while naintlne n linilil inir foil tftrli- feet to the ground, owing to the i scaffolding collapsing. Both wei badly If not fatally injured. Surgeon Sues Town. ' Pottsville. Because he was thrown over an embankment and seriouslv ; injured. Dr. J. C. IlidJIe, chief stir-; geon at the Miners' Hospital, Fotin-, tain Springs, brought suit in the I'm thonotary's office here against Ash land Borough. Dr. Piddle was rid-1 ing horseback at the time of the ac- ciueut. Woman Pensioner Dies. Altoona. The only woman pen sioner on tho Pennsylvania Railroad roils Mrs. Sarah Lang Hamilton. Is rhod mere' "Bed 72 She al craned the offices of Andrew Carnegie, A J. (assail, Robert Pitcairn and various other men who afterwards attained great prominence during her resi dence here. She entered the service August 1, 1862, as assistant to her mother. Mrs. Susan Lang, who at the time was the only woman employed r!;V . thS ,,allroad company. She re ?y 10 Jn tne servlce until February !. 1J07, when she reached the ase of seventy. h Woman Gored Iljr Hull. Lancaster. dorf, of Manor Township, narrowly escaped fatal injuries by being gored to death by an angry bull. She was (s iieru or came to pasture when the animal attacked her. She was knocked down and terriblv gored before her cries for assistance were heard bv her snn.ln.lnn lunnK l i.A - , UAI.UU UUU, 1 he man appuroH ft-i nn ...... M i vl l. It 1 1 VA Due- ceeded in driving off the animal. Mrs. Oberdorf had four ribs broken and was injured internally. j Tried To Wreck Kxpiv-ss Train, i White Haven. Two boys, givini; i their names as Abraham Sorim. of I -New York City, and Moey Garrett, of 1 Brooklyn, both aged 17, are charged with attempting to wreck the Lehigh Valley passenger train due at White j Haven at 2 o'clock I". M. A larg i stone was placed between the rail and guard rail on the bridge over ! the Lehigh River. Fortunately tin? engine kept the track and no serious damage resulted. The hovs were cap- tured and taken to Wilkes-fiarre. Falls Five Feet To Death. York. Lewis SelfTert, CO years old, fell but live feet while working on a building at the corner of High and Duke Streets, and yet the dis tance was sufficient to cause his in stant death. The man's skull was fractured at the base of the brain, both Jaws broken and he had sev eral fiartured ribs. Skull Fractured In ltuiuiitny. Bethlehem. When his horses be came frightened at an object in the street at iron Hill and dashed into a barbed-wire fence. Ellwood Rentb hnlmer. a hntehnr wo u ih,naih head first and besides receiving three fractured ribs has a probable frac ture of the skull. The horses were Beverelv intiirerl h .ho h..i,uj ...i.. and the wagon was broken Into four pieces. Dogs guarantined. Norristown. The State Live Stock Sanitary Board has declared a quar antine of 100 days against the dogs of .Norristown and part of Plymouth TowiiBhlp because of tho supposed prevalence of rabies, which supposi tion is not believed to be well found ed by many cltlzeus, especially dog owners. It practically cuts off the use of dogs during the fall hunting season. Smokes Himself To Death. Pottsville. Believing that he could with safety nmokn a dozen packages of cigarettes. Michael Scul ler, of 310 West Railroad Strwt, tried the experiment for several days. Tuesday he was found dead In bed. Tho deputy coroner, O. J. Carlin, who investigated found heart failure from excessive smoking the cause of death, Hank Clerk A Suicide. Pittsburg. M. L. Ottman, Jr., 30 years old, a clerk employed at the Metropolitan National Bank, commit ted suicide by shooting himself In the head in the directors' room of the Institution shortly before noon. The officials say his accounitg are straight and give ill health as the motive. Death Calls Aged Clergyman. Lancaster. Rev. Robert Gamble, of Brldgton, York County, a well known Presbyterian minister, died In the hospital at Columbia from a stroke of paralysis received a week ago. He was 80 years old. and for the past ten years had lived retired. Conple To Fight Murder Charge. York. William R. Brown and Mrs. Minnie Tracey, against whom the Grand Jury has found a true bill, charelnir them with mnrHui- hv .w.i J C-I - " 1 AAJ IA- sonlng Joshua Tracey, appeared be fore the Court here, plead not guilty to the charges and tbey will proceed to defend themselves at the coming October court. Killed ny Falling Klute. Easton. Aaron Shover, aged 65 vpara nf Wlnrl finn uid a... , v - A . . "'I u 1 l AJ m fAlllnv hlruk nf uluto In .1,0 - - r-l - wa VAA.U AAA HIU V .11 U I V" ney quarry. Pen Argyle. and killed He had been employed In the quarrj ever since It was opened thirty year. ago. A Reminder. "Your wife's mouth remlnda mm n a t ferry." 'Doesn't It you?" ' No. It reminds me of other things -empty coal scuttlm ih. n.n .,....- VfAAJV SVAllAl. fAfSAi,fjAy the Icebox, the lawn mnwr .r,,i things." Hons ton Post. Helen or "d Imagination. Science Com not k now I . .I.. I. a t. WAt Af imagination.- Bluer!, - - Miner Killed 11 Falling Cual. Mahanoy City. Caught under fall ing coal at Morea colliery, William Kamen was killed and Adam Zubock was fatally Injured. Quarrel F.nds In Wife's Suicide. Mahannv PltvAf.nr . ..a., m uuuiestlt quarrel, due to Jealousy over anoth er man's alleged attentions to her Mrs. John Witosky swallowed s quantity of Paris green here. Sbt died within a few hours. f rualkcd To Death I'mler Car. Attoona. After a careless employe nan reuiuveu a danger nag rrom a funk car In tha PuiinsvlvanU .u here, an engine was coupled to the car to re-movo u, ana uavia Stewart aged 5, who was working under neath, was crushed to death. , Drill Fractures Man's Skull. Bangor- Struck by a drill, which fell upon his head while In the hole of the Orand Central Slata Quarry, forty feet below. Jamas Broad suffer ed a fraotured skull. Ha will proba bly die. . Collapae Injures Four Men. PlHsburg. Four men were .seri. ously Injured and heavy danism .aunou wnun ine roor of ine t wenty eighth Street round house of a Pennsylvania Railroad collapsed. Practically all the valuable ru bles ot ancient and modern times have been found in the Mogok Val ley of Burma, where much of t tic work is still carried on by the na tives In the most primitive manner A French fisherman who dyed hh nets a color very nearly that of sea water with bluestone made much larger catches than any of his com rades, who used the familiar brow a nets, until his secret was discovered. ' .T. T. Morgan liaa miiiuA Ki .... Hon and he Is regularly at his dtk. Vn m "rk Wheat Spot weak . o. 1 red. new. 100c, nominal, ele vator and f. b afl 1 Northern Duluth. old. ll''? nominal, f. o. b. afloat; No. 2 hard l . er. new. 1.13, f. o. b. afloat. SOI e n "0,1 ,t,H8y: N'- 2 """J ,"f" nominal, elevator and sic 'levered; No. 1! mixed new 6.A-,,, f. o. b. afloat. "0 In Ml imrel' Mef' t.hi, ".rJbs" 4S'' - nominal; natural , ,5 to 32 lbs., 47WG0; clip ped white, 34 to 42 lbs.. B2(&i62Vi. Butter Strong; receipts. 8 015 c3'r' PPClnla 2S U 28 (official price, JSC); creamery extras. 27 creamery, thirds to firsts, 24i'27: process, firsts to specials, 23?t25. V.a. "llur. nrsta, Z1V4(B22. Cheese Higher; receipts, 3.754; state, full cream, specials. 15 16c 'fn .fm,alor larKe- colored or white fane) 14; state, full cream, com mon to good. U y, tic H; sklDJB fu1 to specials, 3 dj, 12. Eggs Steady, receipts, 12 02 state. Pennsylvania and nearby fancy hennery, white, 80fff.f2e.; do., fair to choice gathered whites, 26(fi30 do., hennery, brown, fancy, 29i 3o. . P,u'try Alive, steady; chickens. 17(!H9c; fowls. 1616; turkeys. 14 Dressed steady; broilers, I4fti 20c; fowls, 15V417. Philadelphia Wheat lc. lower jontrt grade. August, 1034tti 1 04 Vi C. Corn Steady; No. 2 yellow, for local trade. 79 H ft 80c. Oats Unchanged; old No 2 wait-. natural. 00b6i-51c; new No " white natural, 4 0. Butter Firm; extra Western creamery. 29c; do., nearby prints. IA . . . EggsFirm; Pennsylvania and I other nearby firsts, free cases, 26 at mark; do., current receipts in re turnable cases, 25c. at mark; West ern firsts, free cases, 26 at mark do., current receipts, free cases. 23 tr2 4 nt mark. Cheese Firm. U ttc higher; T-,,ork fu" creams, choice, laVi ("li'jc; do., fair to good, 14Vi4, Bnltimoro Wheat Sales of car goes on grade were made at 1.04 V, LS?-, d- 101 ,or No- 3 redi 1.00 14 for steamer No. 2 red- 93 "i for steamer No. 3 red and No 4 red So for stock rejected, and 89 ft for for stock rejected, and 8914 fot 'can t use" rejected. Small bag lots, by sample, as to quality aud condition, brought 95, 98, 99, 1 00 and 1.03 Vj per bti. One cargo of No. 2 red sold separately at 1.04 ft Bag lots by sample Bold at 95 4 ..!') in . Corn Receipts. 7.S31 bu.. West ern; shipments from elevators, 4. 95 7 bu.; Btoek in elevators, 70.1 IS bu. No receipts of Southern. Western opened steady; epot 75c; year, 61 (v( 6 1 ft ; Januuryl 60 . Outs Wo quote, new oats, per lu.: White. No. 2, 4 I ft (g 45c; do No. 3, 43ry44; do., No. 4, 41042 mixed, No. 2. 42 dt 42 ft. Butler Creamery separator, per pound, 27ft Ot 28c; Imitation per pound. 2 2 ft fu 4 ft c. ; prints, ft . pound, 27Ji 29c; do., 1-pound per pound, 27 29c; blocks. 2-pound per pound. 26-fj2Sc.; dairy print.-. Maryland, Pennsylvania and Vir ginia, per pound, 16 17c; Vir ginia and West Virginia, store-packed, per pound, 19&' 19ftc; Ohio, store packed, per pound, 19,r ISftc; nearby rolls per pound. 1 H ? ii-c; uuiq, roits. per pound 19'f 19ftc; West Virginia, rolls, per pound, 19 19 ft c. Cheese Jobbing prices, per lb large. 16ifi16ftc; pony, 1 7c. Eggs Market steady under light receipts. We quote, per dozen, loss oft: Maryland, Pennsylvania and nearby firsts, I4c.j Western flrsta. 24; West Virginia, firsts. 24. Live Poultry We quote, per lb.: Chickens Old hens, heavy. It. ft: do., Bm&U to medium, 15; do., old roosters, 10; do., spring, large, 1ft lbs. and over, 18ft; do., smaller,! 8. Ducks, 11 4' lSc; do., white Peking, 12. Live Stock. Chicago Cattle Market steadv steers, $5.504J7.80; cows. J.C0. 5.25; heifers, $3.50.4. 6; bulls. $3i 4.85; calves. $34( 8.75; Blockers an feeders. $3.75 (jj 5.1 5. lina-a Markat 1(1 .a 1 r - -- AAA A AAA.. UlUri , cnoice ueavy, s.l& 4j, 8 25 ; butchers $8,1048.25; light mixed. $7.75t' 8; choice light. $8j 8 20; packing. $7.604) 7. 80; pigs, $5.60j8; bulk ol sales, $7.65 47 8.10. Sheep Market 10 to 16c. higher, ' Kansas City Cattle Market steady to 10c. lower; choice export and dressed beef steers, $6,50 47.50 fair to good. $4.25 4ji6 40; Weaterr steers. $4,1046.85; Blockers anc feeders. $8.t)04r5; Southern steers $3 25 44.70; Southorn cows, $2.31' (i, 4; native cows. $2.25 & 6; natlvt hcirers, $3.20ff7; bulls, $2,90 6, 3.60; calves, $4 & 7.35. Hog Market steady to 6c. high er; Up, $7.95; bulk of sales, $7.ts( 4.t 7.U0; heavy. $7,804 7 90; pack ers and butchers, 7.80 f, 7.95; llgbt S7.60SJ T.tMft: pips. $5.26 4j. 7 85. Sheep Market stroag; lambs. $t 7.7Ta vtarllngs, $4.60 tf 6.J5.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers