The Clean .Chewing Tefaes Now York City. Unquestionably the Eton la the favorite coat o( the canon. Here In one that la Jaunty in the extreme and that Is combined .with a shapely and well fitting (Irdle. In the Illustration It Is made of Chiffon voile with the collar and cuffs "Bf silk and trimming of banding and little frills of Valenciennes lace, but Its usefulness is almost without limit. It can be made from any seasonable suiting, linen or silk, as well as wool, while again it makes a most satisfac tory r rparate wrap of taffeta, pongee and the like. The collar and cuffs can be of lace, of the material trimmed, of silk, or Indeed, can be treated In almost any way that fancy may dictate. The Eton Is made with fronts, side fronts and back. Hoth the fronts and back are laid in pleats that extend for full length, and the outermost pleats at the fronts serve effectually to conceal the scams joining them to the side-fronts. There is a flat collar at the neck, and the sleeves are moderately full, finished with shaped cuffs. The girdle is cut In five portions, the many scams allow ing perfect fit. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and one fourth yards twenty-one, three and one-half yards twenty-seven or two yards forty-four Inches wide, with one-fourth yard of silk for the collar and twelve and one-halt yards of braid to trim as Illustrated. Linen En.-broldery. A linen parasol to match, orna mented with ap embroidered mono gram in white, and embroidered linen shoes of the same color tre desirable accessories with such a frock, says the Philadelphia Telegraph. -Linen shoes embroidered in self color are for sale in a majority of the linen shades or can be made to order. An; other experimental fancy in footwear, though not so well calculated to win favor, is the shoe of white canvas or linen Btrlped In pin stripes of color and tied with ribbons matching the stripe. Monogram on the Pocket. The worked monogram on the pocket of the flannel outing coat is new touch adopted by the modish young man. t Handmade Laces. , Handmade laces of various kinds re seen combined -n curious but ar tistio effect with embroidery and other kinds of laces. Hrparnte Coat KfTvrt. The jaunty little separate coat of Color add pretty and faahtonffbto touch to the white llngnrle 8wn, The color ahould be repeated tn tbe hat. F.tnbroltlrry For Coat. Banda of embroidery upon coat and gowns of lace seem like an In stance of carrying coal to Newcastle, but such Is the furore fur embroidery that evon this extreme of elaboration Is not considered excessive. Iiiin-t's Kobe Style. One of the newest of princess robes Is arranged at the girdle In alternate plain and shirred sections. Quite a high degree of skill Ib required to carry out this Ideu successfully, but the result Is delightful. IlrenkfuKt .Jacket. The becoming breakfast jacket al ways finds a place and this one has much to commend ;t. The backs are sufficiently fitted to do away with any disagreeable sense of a negligee, and the fronts are loose enough to mean perfect comfort and relaxation. There Is a becoming big collar at the neck, and the sleeves can be cither In the fashionable three-quarter or full length as may bo liked. In ..ls Instance the material 's a pretty ba tiste trimmed with embroidered banding and little frills of white linen lawn, but there are so many appropriate ones that the' list is al most too long to bo given In fall. Many washable materials, lawn and similar fabrics, are. well liked, while China and India silks are exceed ingly fashionable for garments of the sort, and albatross, Henrietta and veiling all are correct. The Jacket Is niado with fronts, backs and side-backs, and Is closed by means of buttons and buttonholes worked In the hem. The fronts are gathered at their upper edges and are joined to the roll-over collar. Tha three-quarter sleeves are Bhlrred to form frills, and the full length sleeves are gathered and finished with straight cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is four yards twenty-seven, two and three-fourth yards thirty-six or two and one-elghta yard forty-four Inches wide, with three and one-fourth yards of band ing to trim as illustrated. Arm Garter Substitute. A substitute for the arm garter la an elastic band sewed to the upper edge of the long glove and finished with frills of lace. Chooso tho chow that's made clean then Rept clean from dirt and dust in a waxed wrapper inside n scaled bag that fits flat in your pocket. Not a scrap of scrap in crapcm The Clean Chewing Tobacco Made entirely of clean, long leaf soft to bito, easy to chew and always fresh. A" chew for you.s Three times the usual five cents' worth! Big Package 5c8 SOLD EVERYWHERE FEM1XIXK XI'.WS NOTES. Hottentot women cut oft a finger Joint when they remarry. A Russian woman may not enter a university unless she is married. The favorite hobby of Dr. Eliza beth Garrett Anderson, England'? most famous woman physician, la gardening. Miss Maud Wetmore and Miss Mar garet Busk won the lawn tennis trophies offered In women's handicap doubles at Newport. Of the 158,000 women who were employed In agriculture In England, 100,000 farmed their own land and 6700 were engaged as gardeners, flor- Ists and seedsmen. Mrs. Stanford White recefved $149, 0c0, payment of the insurance on her husband's life. Slxty-flvi thousand dollars more insurance that ho carried goes to others. It begins to look as If a represen tative team of English women would visit this country next year to plav In an international lawn tennis tour nament for a challenge cup. Mrs. Eugene Nichols, of East Hampton, Conn., stepped on a big rattlesnake in the yard of her hoire. The rattler tried to strike her, but Mrs. Nichols killed it with a stone. The Empress Charlotte, widow of the Emperor Maximllan of Mexico, who was shot as a usurper In 1S67, fell while walking at the castle ol Bouchout, and dislocated her elbow. That Mrs. Harry K. Thaw had be gun preparations for a divorce suit long before the shooting of White, and that those preparations have been kept up since, was asserted In Pittsburg. Gabrlele Reuter, the distinguished German authoress, was born In 1859, at Alexandria, Egypt, the eldest child of a German merchant, and passed much of her early life in that south ern country. The modern magician comes from tho laboratory. He speaks in the name of science, for there Is a scienc: of the immaterial a science of witch craft a science which has It profes sors und ioarned societies, its journals and magazines. The very ghosts that haunt the societies for psychical re search have taken on a scicntlc air; they walk no more in windy corridors, clanking spectral chains; in a practi cal, modern way they exhibit them selves to scientific congresses, de clares Everybody's Magazine. World over, psychic phenomena are being studied by trained scientists. Dismiss lng theories, they give themselves to the observation of scientifically estab lished facts. Their labors range from the transmission of psychic forces, to the time-old mysteries of enchantment and apparitions. Every man is more closely related to his Father above than to his par ents here; ' PROMINENT PEOPLE. President Roosevelt will review the Atlantic fleet on September 3 fit Oyster Bay, The death Is announced of Jacob Ellachar, chief rabbi of Palestine, at the age of ninety-two. Brigadier-General Plcquart hat been assigned to the staff of the Mili tary Governor of Paris. Representative Towne, of New York, the former Senator from Min nesota, has the best voice In the House. King Edward of England has a peculiar habit of passing his finger backward and forward under his chin when in meditation. Bishop Warren A. Chandler, of At lanta, Is about to start for the Orient, to be present at the Methodist con ferences In China, Korea and Japan. Thomas A. Edison has acquired the farm at Milan, Erie County, Ohio, or which he was born and reared, and ll going to transform It Into a fine coun try home. James P. Taliaferro, of Florida, 1 the only United States Senator from the South who Is rated as a million aire. He made his money In lumbei and banking. Dr. James W. C. Ely, dean of th medical profession In Providence, R. I., has completed plxty years In the practice of medicine. His fellow practitioners will commemorate that occasion. President Roosevelt decided to take a hand In the New York State camnaien. to nmlto a unneMi tnr ih organization In Pennsylvania and to run the Congressional ramnali-n in the close States. Lleiiteiiant-OanprAl Ttnrnn WrA nmn who died In Tnkln rwanHv wna nn. sidered by many military writers the Drain or. ine Japanese army in the War with Riiftnln na ha Tiros tfa nMol organizer. He was born In 1855. LENTIL CUTLETS. Soak one cupful dried lentils all night with a cupful dried lima beans. In the morning drain, add two quarts of water, a stalk of celery and hall an onion sliced. Cook until soft, re move the seasonings and rub through a puree sieve. Add one cupful stale bread crumbs, one beaien egg. the Juice of a half lemon and sea.-onings to taste. Melt a heaping tablespoon full of butter in a small saucepan, ad I to It a tablespoonful flour and pour on. when blended, a third of a cup ot milk. Let the mixture cook ur.ti! thick and smooth then add to tho len til mixture and set aside to cool Shape Into small cutlets, dip in beat en egg, then in fine cracker crumbs and fry a golden brown. Serve with a tnmato sauce. Few men care whether one limul ia posted on the good deeds of the oth er so Ions; as the reporters know all shout it. , 11 iS ill I I I kw&QWJ I PI w iHwr7 hi nM$0wu ft l 111 IIW'UMMaBllBLmgMM laaaaaaaaaaaaaaal 'I THE NATIONAL GAME. Harry Lumley is Brooklyn's only .300 batsman. George Stone, of St. Louis, leads the American League batsmen. Hal Chase and I.aport use short, heavy bats up to regulation diame ter. Doc White has done the most ef fective slab duty for the Chicago American team. Tannehlll is the only one of the Boston pitchers who has landed more games than he lost. Cy Seymour is now using a bat once used by Anson and presented to him by that veteran. The Buffalo Club has traded catch er Woods to Toronto for pitcher Cur rle and outfielder White. Police Prosecutor Austin, of Tole do, said recently: "The police court docket Is always small following a Sunday ball game." With his pitchers coming right Clark Griffith says he does not see how he can be beaten for the Amer ican League pennant. Pitcher Sklllen, of Dartsmoutb, Is said to have pledged himself to the Boston American Club If he decides to play professional ball. Falkenberg's height is six feet five and one-half Inches, which enables him to pitch the longest drop ball of any pitcher in the country. The Providence Club has secured first baseman Lachance from the Montreal Club; and a New England third baseman named Thornell. Morgan, who Is playing third base for the Boston Americans, graduated In law at Georgetown just three days before he donned a Boston uniform. Deshon, of Cornell, is the only col lege pitcher who uses the "spit ball." In size and general conformation the little Nlcaraguan Is not unlike Elmer Strlcklett, ot the Brooklyhs. There can be no excuse for the wo man who xpcud.4 on needless dress the dollar that should be laid up for a rainy day, or who by extravagance drives her husband into bankruptcy or despair; but tho number of such women is comparatively very small, says the New York Herald. Taking a broad view of tho matter, we must look at results. The naval armaments costing vat hiiius become obsolete In 'a few years, and the money spent on excessive Indulgence in drink pro duces only red nosed, incompetent men, while that devoted to dress gives us the tastefully dressed, lovely Am erican woman a thing of beauty and a joy forever. Princess Fehim was Margaret Mor gan, an American circus rider. Prince Fehim saw her ride, fell In love with her, and married her. He was ban ished by the Saltan and the Princess was expelled from Turkey. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Grain, Flour and Feed. Wheat No. 9 rod f Hi Kyo No. 'J 71 Tt Corn No t yellow, ear 61 fig No. y yellow, shelled w 6 Mixed ear fio 51 Oats No. S white 44 4.1 No. I white 43 44 Flour Winter patent 4 10 4 n Fancy straight winters 4 00 4 10 Hut No. 1 Timothy 15 00 15 M Clover No. 1 10 7.) 110 Feed No. 1 white nihl. ton ! no 2D0I Brown middlings 19 50 M 00 Bran, hulk , & 00 21 V) Siraw Wheat 7 50 7 Oat 7 V) 800 Dairy Product!. Butler Elgin creamery t M 21 Ohio creamery in l Fancy country roll Vi 20 Cheeee Ohio, new VI IS New York, new U 13 Poultry, Etc. Hen per lh I li Chickens lreel 1 H Etft;s-Pa. ana Ohio, fresh 19 l Fruits and Vegelablst. Potatoes Fancy white ier oil.... go Cahbaite per ton 13 00 IS on Onions per barrel oq a 2i BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent. f m jm Wheat-No. red j M Corn Mlxe-1 44 47 Ekks itf Xt Butter Ohio creamery 4t $j PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent I jot S Wheat No. a red m So Corn No. 'I ml jed aj M date No. S white DA 86 Butter Creamery n H fttt Pennsylvania firsts 15 a) NEW YORK. Flour Patents I i TO Wheat-No. red Corn No. M Oat No. il white i t Butter -Creamery t Hugs State and Pennsylvania.... U 14 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle. txtla, 1,4W tol.SOO lbs .... li ,l 00 ' rnme. l,tM lol,,uo 40 S 70 Uood, l.ajO to 1.30J lbs i li 6 50 Tidy. 1,10 10 Mix) lbs 5 10 b 1 Fair, 00 to l.luu lbs 4 JS 4 Common, 7eo 10 too lbs 400 47:, Common to good fat oxen x 7 4 90 Common to good fat bulls 2 50 4 1 Common to good lat cows X 00 4 00 Heifers, 7C0 tol, luilhs K 50 4 .ill Fresh cows and springers U 00 US J Sheep. 'rime wethers f 5 40 5 so Good mixed 6 9) 1 5 40 Fair mixed ewes and wethers.... 4 50 S 00 iullsauu common Hn 2 61) 4 00 Culls to choice lambs ft 50 1 9i Hogs. 1 rtmeheavy hns; I t so gj 1'nme medium weights . 7 05 711) best heavy Yorker 7 00 7 10 Sood light Yotkers 6 9U 7 00 Vg. as to quality 6 70 6 -u Common 10 s.k1 r-uh. ft 40 ft 46 '-ai(S 1 1 4 IX) 4 u Calves. Veal Calves 94 50 6 50 Ueavy and lhm calves a 00 4 id You can always tell a boj, even in a silk hat, by tho way lie roots for dirt.