v-7 r BUSINESS CRBDS. JUSTICE OP THE PEACE, Pension Attorney nnd Real Estate Afront. RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, ' ) Brookville, Pa. q, m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public, real mtt.nto saonf, putnnt socururi, rolk-ctlons m:ulu promptly. Onlcs In Syndicate building, Knynoldsvlllo, Ta. -j "y, 0. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Justice of tho pence, real estate axent, cnl 1 'Hons mode promptly. Olllco In Syndicate b. tiding, Koynoldsvlllo, Pa. gMITH M. McCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate agent. Col lections will receive prjmiit attention. Office In the Koynnlrtuvllle Hardware Oo. building, Main street Ueynoldsvllle, Pa. TJR. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover building Main street. Gentleness In operating. DR. L. L. MEANS, , " DENTIST, Office on second flooroftheFr." bank building, Main street. in. r. devere king, DENTIST, ' Office on second floor of the Syndicate build lng, Main street, Keynoldsvlllo, Pa. PRIESTER BROS., UNDERTAKERS. Black and white funeralcars. Main street. Beynoldsvllle, Pa. J, H. HUGHES, UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING The 0. 8. Burial League has been tested ftnd found all right. Cheapest form of In surance. Hecure a contract. Roar Publlo Fountain, Reynoldsvllle Pa. D, H, YOUNG, ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Fifth sts., Reynolds vllle, Pa. jnN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Burreyor and Draughtsman. Office In Syn dicate building, Main street. WINDSOR HOTEL, Philadelphia, Pa. Between 12th and 13th Bts on Filbert St. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter minal. Flvo minutes walk from the Penn'a B. R. Depot. European plan 11.00 per day and upward. American elan i.W.Dfir duy. DR. GREWER Medical and Surgical Institute, Rooms 1 and 8, PostofTice Buildinp, DUBOIS, PA. DR. E. GREWER, Consulting Physician and Surgeon, Dr. E. Grewer, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania and one of the leading spec ialists of this State, Is now permanently lo cated at the above address, where he treats all chronic diseases of Men, Women and Children. Be makes a specialty of all forms of Not tous diseases. Blood Poison, Secret Disease, Epileptic Fits. Convulsions, Hysteria, 8s, Titus Dance.. Wakefulness cured under guarantee. Lost Manhood Restored Weaknesses of Young Men Cured and All Private Diseases. Varicocele, Hydrocele andRupture prompt ly cured without pain and no detention from business. He cures the worst cases of Norvous Pros tration, Rhoumatlsro, Scrofula, Old Soros, Blood Poison and all diseases of the Skin, Ear, Nose, Throat, Heart, Lungs, Stomach, Liver, I Kidncysjind Bladder. Itching Pllos, Fistula, Stricture, Tumors, Canoe rs and Goiters cured without cutting. Special attention paid to the treatment of Nasal Catarrh. He will forfeit the sum of $5, 000 for any case of Fits or Epileptic Convulsions that he cannot cure. Consultation free in English and German and strictly confidential. Writs It you cannot call. Office hours: From D a. m. to 8.30 p. m. Ob Sundays t to 12 a. m. only. MISUNDERSTOOD. DeRlter Wouldn't you like to read this new book of mine? Kandor No, thank you. DeRlter It's Cleverley's latest nov el. I Just bought It Kandor Oh, let's have It I thought you meant you wrote It Catholic Standard and Times. WHAT BID SHE MEAN. The Single One I am a great lover of dogs. The Married One It seems strange If you have such a great liking for dogs that you never got married! Yonkers Statesman.. Flower Weddings. "Flower-name weddings" the fash ionable in Europe just now. At one recently, where tho brido'a name was Violet, the bridesmaids wore Parima violet-colored satin dresses, with vel vet capes of darker Bhade and hata to match. They carried bouquets of Panama violets. Plans of Mrs. 8artorls. Her youngest daughter having crossed the line into the domain of matrimony, Mrs. Nellie Grant Sartorls purposes to spend her winters here after In WnsWngton. Miss Rosemary Sartorls, who was marriod recently to Mr. Wooiston, of England, had been her mother's close companion. She spent little time abroad, contrary to tho custom of her sister, now Mrs. Fredorle Roosevelt Scovol. Mrs. Wooiston is not as brilliant as her Bister, but she has admirable home qualities. Mrs. Sartorls, who is al most an invalid, will live in an apart ment houso, and, if her health permits, she will make a short visit to Florida to see the bridal couple in March. President Grant's daughter is still de voting much of her time to editing her mother's, memoirs and the letters written by her father to members of his family in their absence from home. The New York Press. When to Give Her Hand, There nre few people who have not Buffered at one timo or another by tho offhand manner in which they wero Introduced to others. This kind of Introduction is likely to embarrass some people, just as the careful and gracious introduction is one of the essentials in putting strangers at ease. In Introducing people, the greatest care should bo taken to pronounce both names distinctly. If one name has escaped the introducer's memory It is safest and best to excuse one self and ask for the forgotten name. The most delicate sensibilities should not be wounded by such a slip of memory, for who is there who has not at some time or another quite forgotten a well-known name? says Woman's Llfo. The debatable question as to wheth er a woman should shake hands with a man who is being presented to her has been solved by making It only obligatory for the woman to offer her hand .to tho man when tho occasion Is informal and tho mnn is being intro duced to one person at a time. When he is meeting a group of people it makes it embarrasing and awkward to shake hand3 with all. Lawns and Furs. It blows hot or blows cold for women these days, in accordance with the size of their pocketbooks, and per haps with deference to the atmosphere of the particular cities In which they live. Take Washington as the exam ple. One day last week, in an avenue of the capital, Mrs. Victor Metcalf, wife of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor, walked along with Miss Chabot of Oakland, both garbed in embroidered white linen, with lace and ffifls. They wore white felt hats, with black and apple-green ostrich plumes. But in the same avenue at the same tima was Mrs. Hope Slater of Boston, whose summer meander lngs had included Russia and the North Cape. She had bought a great, loose sable coat, lined with the palest of blue and reaching below the knees. She had donned her costly garment, for it Is conceded November is the month in which to appear in new furs, end she Knew her business If the weather man did not know his. On the some promenade girls in orgando, with the lightest of silk wraps, linked arms with girls In new seal Jackets. A foreigner said: "Washington women dress in their newest and most striking possessions, utterly regard less of climate condition." New York Press. Portia's Legal Wisdom. Professor F. Edge Kavanagh, of the Muncipal Civil Service Board, was ablo to tell the members of the Portia Club at their meeting, recently in New York City, something many of them did not know about the heroine of Shakes peare's "Merchant of Venice," from whom the organization takes its nam 9. "The character of Portia has been criticised," said Professor Kavanagh, substantially, "on the ground that- it would have been Impossible for a woman of her class at that period and in that place to have displayed her knowledge. They forget that Venice was at the time the city of greatest culture In Italy, and that It was by no means contrary to the spirit of Italian life that a great lady should know something of the law. "Owing to the Italian custom of primogeniture, by which titles, and real and other estate descended to the daughters of a noble house, as well as to. the sons. It was usual to give these girls very much the same train- ing In legal matters that the boys re ceived. Italian mediaeval history is full of Instances of women who were called on to administer and execute large affairs. "When the palace schools developed Into the unlverlstles, the policy of giv ing girls the benefits of higher educa tion was continued and enlarged. It 1 quite In accordance with Italian precedent that at the present we find the University of Bologna not only opening its courses to women, but giving them a chance at the highest honors, and allowing them to lecturo." .Now It's Rust Color. For tailor-mades, and, Indeed, for many other sartorial purposes, a color which lends itself admirably to the requirements of the season is "rust" In cloth and velvet It presents a warm, rich effect, is newor than green and gray (of which we shall have a sur feit as the winter advances) and is less aggressively noticeable than claret. White cloth, ecru guipure, or velvet of a darker shade, not to speak of the Innumerable fancy galons and em broidery so lavishly used Just now, would easily and effectively trim a gown of that particular color. I saw a chic, though unpretentious, little costume in "rust" cloth, which embodied the very newest Idea in coats. It took tho form of a loose Jacket, trimmed with silk braid of exactly the sumo color as the cloth, worn open and not reaching lower than the hips, but slightly indicating the waist by menns of a leather belt caught at In tervals under the pleats of the Jacket. The skirt was of walking length, With some lozenge designs of silk braid above the hem, while the chemisette worn under the coat wns of Cluny lace, the small, tight-fitting waistcoat more like a high belt being of velvet, and somewhat darker than the rest of the costume. A characteristic of these new belts, worn over redlngotes or Jackets, is that they are" all adjusted loosely, the slenderness of the waist being merely suggested, and the belt in no case fitting tightly to the figure Phil adelphia Record. Perfumes of Queens. During her recent visit to Paris Margherita, the Queen Dowager of Italy, made extensive purchases of perfumes, and the papers reveal that her favorite essence is violet This has brought out a discussion of the perfumes used by the queens of Europe. It is alleged that the Czarina spends In Paris no less than 50,000 francs .an nually on perfumes, creoms, soaps and toilet waters. Violet Is her favorite also, nnd large quantities of it are put up in flasks especially for her. She is so fond of perfumes in gen eral, however, that her rooms are dnlly sprinkled with essences of elder, Jasmine, narcissus or tuberose. Some times tho atmosphere is so charged with scent as to be almost intolerable to other people entering the apart ments. For the preparation of the Czari na's toilet waters violets are especially plucked between 6 and 7 o'clock In the evening, because in her opinion that is the hour when the plants give forth the most exquisite odors. Queen Alexandra of England Is ad dicted to the ess-bouquet the formula for which as used by the English royal family Is said to be a secret handed down from father to son since 1829. The components are said to be musk, abergrls, rosewater, violet. Jasmine, orange flower and lavender. Queen Wilhelmina of the Nether lands has a less complicated taste. Eau do cologne is good enough for her. She uses half a litre a day of it. She uses considerable fancy soap, toilet creams and powder. She takes a warm bath of seven minutes dura tion daly, followed by a cold douche. She is very proud of her beautiful vomplextion and takes every pains to keep It unimpaired. New York Sun. Fashion Notes. Very luxurious are soma of the new fur and down filled waistcoats worn under cloth coats. A beautiful broad black ribbon, had huge bunches of red roses like a round bouquet all down the center. There are some girls who are bet ter suited by a plain line at the neck rather than frills and furbelows. For dusty roads, cloth coats lined with fur are liked better by experi enced autolsts than coats that have the fur outside. Tiny boleros that accompany many handsome black gowns for social func tions this winter are made bright with jet paillettes and spangles. Chinchilla is one of the most popu lar of furs, and Us combination with pink or blue cloth in evening wraps is one of the triumphs of the season. Bordered materials are having quite a vogue, the lovely printed chiffons showing pompadour designs having the greatest following up to this time. Leather belts have suede-covered or brass buckles, the latter smooth and shining or elaborately ornate accord ing to the Individual choice of the wearer. Plaid hone seem to take better among the men than among women, and orders are hard to fill in the men's department while the demand is com paratively slight at the women's hosiery counter. Red cloth coats are always popular for boys and girls, the usual trimming of .white pearl buttons being varied this year by making them of black vel vet A smart touch Is given some ol these bright coats for small folk by heavy white lace laid over the black velvet collar. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. Work cures worry. Sorrow Is the parent of many a Bong. The law Is best kept when it Is lost In love. To work for love is to learn to love your work. Cursed be the success that crushes aspiration. The doing of dally duty makes every day divine. The only way to discover truth is by doing truth. He who cheers others need not fear for himself. The problem of living can not be solved by talking. The right to rule Is acquired by rul ing ourselves aright. The man who laughs at his troubles soon laughs over them. Back of all public corruptions ars our private compromises. Human kindness is the greatest law of the heavenly kingdom. The man who lacks moral muscle always thinks he Is meek. Things are not heavenly unless they essentially are happy. The front door to delight lies through the garden of duty. Tho finest prospects In life are found at the summit of disagreeable duties. An unearned advantage Is a disgrace If there be no unrecompensed service. He only can walk in the high places who walks humbly before the most hl'gh. Our great losses are not the things taken from us, but the things we miss. ' It's not the engine with the loudest exhaust thut Is hauling the longest train. If you would hear the joy of Heav en you muBt go Into the saddest places of earth. It is an 111 time to boast of your speed when your lusts are running away with you. , No man has a poorer outlook on life than he who always Is on the lookout for himself. Many a man thinks he is religious because ho has a peculiar pleasure in regulating other folk. He who has learned to do deeds that are immortal no longer worries over the Immortality of his soul. Sen tence sermons, from the Chlcugo Tribune. AN EDUCATED SPARROW. Bird Whose Accomplishments Rival Those of a Magpie. Monsieur Mignaud, a French sclent' 1st, has recently compiled some inter esting information with reference to tho mimical accomplishment of a spar row in his collection of living birds. He captured the sparrow soon after it had been hatched, and fed it by hand until it could care for itself. Then he pinced it in a cage containing a chnmnch, a goldfinch and two can aries. After a time the Bparrow learned to warble like the finches and to trill like the canaries, the imitations be ing so perfect as to deceive the ear. In the spring M. Mignaud is accus tomed to keep a box of crickets near his blrd-cnges. Two days after the crickets had been placed near the cage containing the sparrow the latter began to imitate their cry interming ling It with Its songs. Even after the crickets had long been dead the spar row remembered its lesson and con tinued to repeat their cry. None of the other birds attempted to Imitate the crickets. Singularly enough, the sparrow nev er utters tho peculiar equalling cry of Its own species, having been removed from the nest too early, apparently, to have learned it Ought to Change Their Style, When a man goes out to speak to people he at least ought not to do them any harm by holding up falsa ideas of life and confusing young peo ple as tc the meaning ct success. The commencement speaker has much to answer for along this line. Boys and girls have been told so often about the success of big men and so little about the success of those who, though not born great, made the most of themselves and lived happy and use ful, thought not famous lives, they art apt to get the wrong idea about what success really means; and because they can't all bo president or governor, as they are falBcly told they can be, they are npt to think that they can't be anything. The value of education Is dwelt upon as a means to achieve wealth or fame or both. This is why there is so much error as regards the true value of education, which means fclmply that each individual should be trained or educated to use to the greatest advantage whatever powers ht has, be they large or small. But be ing told that education means that a boy will necessarily become a govern or. or a senator or occupy some other high place, many people have come to think of education only In this sense, and so when they see a man who haj been to college and been "educated and does no good in life, they say that education does not pay. The com mencement sky-scrapers ought to get down to their business and find what education really Is and then talk abou it and stop the meaningless jangle of words that often have more sound than sense. Monroe Journal. Method In It. "But why in the world did you want to clone, anyway?" "Weil. I was in hopes that her fam ily would never forgive us.' Chicago Record-Herald. SPORTIXO BREVITIES. Outlaw racing in Louisiana has now fairly started. Four Yankees Chnse. Elberfold, Keelor and Ycager batted over .300 last season. The conditions governing the mo tor boat race from Now York to Bermuda have been issued. W. M. Ford, of Wilmington, Del., won the national amateur clay pig eon shooting championship. Jockey Garner, who was discov ered by John A. Drake, Is riding better every day at the Crescent City. The New York Nationals have re fused to relinquish their claim to Keliey, the outfielder, and Corcoran, the Cincinnati shortstop. San Francisco fight promoters fear that the next Legislature In Cali fornia will pass laws that will pro hibit prize fighting In that State. Twenty-two Judges will distribute the ribbons at the Westminster Ken nel Club's show, at Mndlson Square Garden, New York City, in Febru ary. The Aero Club of America Is con. sldorlng the choice of a starting point for the 1907 contest for the Coupe Internationale des Aero nautes. The movement to obtain the resto- ration of football at Colombia by Inducing the board of trustees to take action favorable to the game Is not likely to meet with success. A fight for the heavyweight cham pionship of the world will be ar ranged between James J. Jeffries and Bill Squires, of Australia, with Rhyo- lite, Nev., as the battle-ground and $30,000 the purse. No further attempt will he made by the New England Breeders' Club to conduct a racing meeting In the Granite State unless there should be some favorable legislation in fu ture that would permit, betting. STUB ENDS OF NEWS. Germany has a treasury deficit ol a little less than $14,000,000. London has at last decided to con nect Its police stations by telephones. "Aeroplanes built to order" rends a sign outside a London motor fac tory. A bill has been Introduced in the Canadian Parliament to prevent strikes In all public utilities. The Moroccan Minister of War ordered Ralsuli's lieutenants near fTangler to stop "governing." ! Boston Is getting a thirty-five-foot channel, and Baltimore has had a survey for a similar channel. New York politicians who formed a syndicate to sell short American Ice securities lost upward of half a million. The Administration at Washing ton was not disturbed by stories thnt Japan seeks or desires war with America. General Crozler, Chief of Ord nance, declared tho life a twelve inch gun would be exhausted In an engagement lasting two hours. Watching from a window her young son playing football, Mrs. John Battersby, In Jersey City, N. J., saw the lad, aged ten, drop dying from heart disease. Estimates of the country's copper production for 1906 place the output at between 940,000,000 and 970,- 000,000 pounds. 1905 s production was 901,000,000 pounds. A movement was started In the South to appeal to the Postofllce Department for a fraud order against the New York Cotton Exchange to forbid It the use of the malls. Referee Leslie made his report in the matter of the failure of the Em pire Life Insurance Company, of New York, showing assets or isuuu to pay claims which will amount to 14.000.000. CLEANING HAIR BRUSIIE3. Valuable brushes, such as those with ivory or tortolseshell backs, may be thoroughly cleansed by using bran instead of soap and water. The tfusa Is dipped into bran, which must be rubbed Into the bristles as one would soap, and the particles may afterward be removed by tapping the brush bristles downward on the table. The process is somewhat lengthy, but it prevents the bristles from becoming softened, as they inevitably must be if wetted. When every trace of bran has been removed, the brush will be found to be perfectly clean, and may then be wiped with a soft silk hand kerchief. The Highest Priced Flour in America. It costs more to make anything best that's why yon pay half a cent a pound more for KING MIDAS Flour. This trifle extra pays for a lot of things: It pays for the best wheat the best milling and for constant testing to main tain the standard of quality. KING MIDAS Flour makes bread that stays fresh to the last crust there' no waste. KING MIDAS Floor possesses more solid nutriment than any other flour that means health and strength. , KING MIDAS Flour makes so many more loaves of bread to every barrel than ordinary flours that means These are but a few reasons why you should use KING MIDAS Flour Sold by Quality SHANC BROTHERS CO. Phlladolphlm rrr PROMINENT PEOPLE. Bishop Turinas was fined $10 at Nnncy, France, for striking a gen darme. Colonel Thomas Wontworth Hig glnson has Just celebrated his eighty third birthday anniversary. Senator Thomas C. Piatt, of New York, intends to resign soon after the end of the present Congress. Count WItto has said to friends that he believes a renewal of war between Russia and Japan is an Im possibility. The Austrian Emperor has more titles than any other monarch. He is a king nine times over and a duke eighteen times. The students and alumni of Co lnmbln are preparing a petition to Dr. Butler for the restoration of ' football at the university. Lord Knollys, King Edward's pri vate secretary for the past thirty six years, Is the only man from whom His Majesty has no secrets. Archbishop Ireland says the clergy are much to blame for the troubles in France and that monarchist Ideas have done dreadful harm to the church. Count Eugene Zlchy, who died at Budapest recently, left an estate valued at nearly $10,000,000. He has bequeathed a splendid collection of pictures nnd other works of art to the city of Budapest. Attorney-General Leroy F. You mnns died In Columbia, S. C, re cently. He was Attorney-General under Governor Wade Hampton, and was regarded as one of the most brilliant orators In the South. Rev. William F. Brand, pastor Of St. Mary's Protestant Episcopal Church, Bclnlr, Md., recently cele brated his ninety-second birthday. Ho has served the church continu ously since Us foundation flfty-flva years ago. RECIPES Lemon Ice Cream. Squeeze a lem on and strain the Juice upon as much fine sugar as It will absorb, pour s quarts of cream into it very slowly, stirring fast all tho time. Another simple but very good recipe Is: Heat a quart of milk hot, but do not let It boil. Add the yolks of 4 eggs, beaten with a coffee cup of sugar, and flavor with lemon or vanilla. Choco late cream can be made by adding some powdered chocolate and mix be fore freezing. Also peaches or straw berries can be used for a change. PicalllU. One peck green tomatoes and one dozen small onions. Place them in layers, sprinkle Bait between, one cup for this quantity, 1 1-2 cups dark brown sugar. Let stand twenty four hours, drain through a sieve, add 1-2 ounce whole cloves, 1-2 ounce allspice, tablespoon red pepper, 1-2 pint whole mustard seed. Place to matoes in a kettle with layers of spice between, cover with vinegar and boll two hours. Currant Jelly Measure the Juice and allow one pint of white sugar to one pint of the Juice. Let the juice simmer ten minutes before adding the sugar. Let it boil twenty minutes, remove the scum carefully as it forms. When ready pour the Jelly into glasses which have been rolled in hot water and are still standing in It When the Jelly is cold and firm pour melted parafflne over the top, cover with pa per and keep in a cool, dark, dry place. Be careful not to tip the glasses or In any way break through the edge of the jolly which seals the mass to the glass. Velvet Sponge Cake. The yolks of 6 eggs and 2 cups of sugar beaten to a cream. Add the whites of three eggs well beaten, then 2 1-8 cups of flour, with 1 heaping teaspoon of bak ing powder. Flavor with lemon or vanilla. Add 1 cup of boiling, water. Beat well and bake in a moderate oven. This makes a large cake and should be baked in a dripping pan. For a common size cake use half of tbta rar.lpw It Is not too much to say, aocorfllng to the New York American, of the Gould family today that the head of it, George Gould, has the respect ol tjiose who feel a certain hostility to the financial world, In which he is at all times a prominent figure. As for his siBter, and the sister of tfie Countess de Castellane, Miss Helen Gould, there is probably no woman In New York more thoroughly admired or more widely known. FL&3JR economy. it pays to use it Groan T-Dtrywheru
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers