it 1 business csrds. NEFF JUSTICR OF THE PEACE, 1 Tension Attorney find Real Estate Agent. JAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brookville, Pa. m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notnrv nnhllc. renl estate aitent. ontcnti necureri. rnllt'ctlnn miult) nrnnmtlv. OlHcfl (tn Syndicate building, Hoynoldavllie, Pa. -j C. SMITH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Justice of the neaco. real estate aeent. col- llectlon miide promptly. Ofllce In Syndicate uuuuinK, lioynniuHviuu, t a. gMITH M. McCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary mihllc nnd real estate agent. Col lections will iweive nrjmot attention. Ofllce In the KeynuldHVllle Hardware Oo. building, plain street uoyiioiatmue, fa. )R. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover building atu street, uenneness in operating. t)R. L. L- MEANS, I DENTIST, Office on second flooroftheFr ank building, Main street. DR. R. DeVEUE KING, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate build ng, Main street, Kuynoldsvtlle, fa. PRIESTER BROS., UNDERTAKERS. Bluck and white funoralcara. Main street, teynoldsvllle, Pa, J. H. HUGHES, UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING. The (7. S. Burlnl League has been tested and found all rlht. Cheapest form of In surance. Secure a contract. Near Publlo Fountain, KeynoldsvlUe Pa. D, H. YOUNG, ARCHITECT Corner Orant and Flftn its., Reynolds ille, Pa. JOHN C. HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Surveyor and Draughtsman. Office In Syn j dlcate building, Main street. IN DSOR HOTEL, Philadelphia, Fa, Between 12th and 13th Sts., on Filbert St. I Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter- Vnltinl flvnmlniltnawalk from lha Oan r. R. K. Depot. European plan 91.00 per day and rupwaru. Amenuau Dian fi.w Der aay, DR. GREWER redical and Surgical Institute, Roomi 7 and 8, Postofflce Building, DUBOIS, FA. 4.V DR. E. GREWER, Consulting Physician and Surgeon. Dr. E. Drawer, a graduite of the TJnlvorslty of Pennsylvania and one of the lending spec ialists of this State, Is now permanently lo cated at the ahovo address, whore he treats all chronic diseases of Mon, Women and Children. Ho makes a specialty of all forms of Ner vous diseases, Blood Poison, Secret Diseases, h:- With s li I VI Epileptic Fits. Convulsions, Hysteria, St. u Vitus Dance. Wakefulness cured nndet guarantee. M,r,1, WVdl i'M4tasivww XWOtWl WH Weaknesses of Young Men Cured and All Private Diseases. Varicocele, Hydrocolo andlinpture prompt ly cured without pain and no detention from business. He cures the worst cases of Nervous Pros tration, Rheumatism, Scrofula, Old Sores, Blood Poison and all diseases of theSkln, Ear, Nose, Throat, Heart, Lungs, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys and Bladder. Itching Piles, Fistula, Stricture, Tumors, Canoe ra 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 nd strictly confidential. Write If you cannot call. Office hours : From 9 a. m. to 8.39 p, Sundays 9 to 12 a. m. only. - Oa SET AT EASE. "They say my moey is tainted," moaned the expiring trust magnate. "Who aay bo?" "The people." "But your business partner and your lawyer say that it Is not" "Then I die happy." A FASHIONABLE FLOWER. "Thl8 flower is strictly up to date," aid the florist "What do you mean by that?" ask ed the prospective customer. "Wbry," he explained, "It was ob tained by grafting." Detroit Tcv Frew. HOW WOMEN DRESS. A picture In a Kansas City paper advertising union suits shows a wo man in a union suit, sitting in front of a mirror trying on a hat. Is that the way the women dress first the union suit and then the hat? Well, well, well! Kansas City Globe. GRACE OF WEIGHTS. It has been suggested, I see, that it would make for the greater dig nity and grace of future generations of Englishwomen if from an early age female children were made to constantly carry weights on their heads as they do in the East. There is nothing, so to say, to keep our women properly balanced. They hop, wriggle, shuffle, mismanage their arms and hips, poke forward their heads, and generally walk as if they were either deformed or dropping to pieces, London World. SHREWD FARM GIRL. The most enterprising farm girl in South Dakota is Mary Mauska, the thirteen-year-old daughter of a well known farmer living near Wheeler. The girl renders material aid to her father In carrying on his farm work. Her father Is busy with his fall work and to save him time the girl each day but Sunday hauls a load of wheat to market at Platte, the nearest rail road point to the farm. The girl Is shrewd for one so young and trans acts all the business of seeing that the purchaser of the grain does not cheat her on weights and gives her proper credit for the amount of grain delivered. GOOD-BYE, OLD MAID. The old maid Is dead. She was entirely man-made. She was a "sweet Alice" sort of girl. If she didn't marry well she de sponded. Despondency drove her to fidgets and ringlets. She was an old maid because she was of no use. All the educational advantages had been heaped upon her brothers. In England,' too, all the money would be given to the oldest brother. No wonder a girl grew cantanker ous when a suitable man did not pro pose, since there was only marriage for a high-bred girl. Philadelphia Record. DON'T NEGLECT APPEARANCES. Life for a woman must always be more or less a question of appear ance. No woman is so good or so beautiful or so intellectual that she can afford to be dowdy. No woman has the least right to render herself unattractive, particu larly to those with whom she is most closely associated. No woman can afford to fret or worry and nag If she wants to retain her beauty and power to please. The spirit of compromise in mar ried life saves many an unhappy moment. Nothing Is unimportant in a wom an's life from her nails and hands to her mind and character. New York Telegram. A REAL LADY. A day or two ago a number of women were discussing this interest ing topic, how to know a lady at the first glance, what are her attributes and so forth and so on. "You may tell her," said one, by her boots, gloves and handkerchiefs." Another thought her skirt-binding told the story, and a third declared that her language would betray her. "And it's words, not ideas, that con cern this particular test," the speaker added. It is undoubtedly true that while the nicety of- the small essen tials of a woman's toilette indicate a certain degree of refinement .of taste at least, they are not the un mistakable hall-mark of birth and breeding. Many would much more quickly give the preference to the intonation of the voice and the use of words as a surer sign. A fine detail in clothes is now possible to almost any observing person. An unmistakable coarse, not to say vulgar, looking woman Is often irreproachable in the matter of boots, gloves, skirt bind ings, et al. The charm of a well modulated voice, using good English, undented by slang or provincialisms thl3 is not often acquired without the height of culture. ANYTHING SO IT'S BECOMING. Fresh eccentricities in the realm of headgear are making their ap pearance every day, especially where so-called mushroom hats are con cerned. These, to give a bald inter pretation, in many cases can only be likened to inverted pudding basins, which as though with a view to ac centuating their peculiarities have the trimming entirely relegated to the back, the only exception being a band of velvet, which serves to de fine the line of demarcation Tiotween the crown and the brim. The hats are, as a rule, adorned with large bunches of ostrich feath ers, the tips of which curl over the top. Fruit and flowers are frequently combined in the new mlllinerial schemes, and not only are the grapes made of purple velvet, but they are often caried out in gold and silver tissue, many of them being supple mented with leaves in metallic tints. Charming white picture hats are trimmed with white grapes, frosted over with gold or silver dust, while crab-apples and black cherries are still to be seen, and in many in stances these are combined with roses or other flowers. Curious an omalies, such as black cherries with velvet chrysanthemums, are by no means considered too great an out rage upon nature, while the same liberties nave been taken in the case of the frequent combination of large tulips with double asters. Blue beaver or velvet hats, trimmed with mole-colored tulle and wings to match, are among the most attractive and becoming novelties, while ivory-white felt hats, adorned with cinnamon-colored tulle and feathers, represent another scheme which has been adopted enthusiasti cally by young and old alike. Two distinct shades of tulle are, besides, often employed to trim the same hat, as in the case of p. large picture model of gray panne, which was swathed with elephant-gray and rose colored tulle, the1 immense feather likewise employed for its adornment being carried out in the same two tones. Philadelphia Record. SWEET SIXTEEN. Her hair was of a beautiful old gold tint, her eyes a heavenly blue, her face a perfect oval and her com plexion a dream of plnk-and-whlte loveliness. She was of the age at which timid girlhood passes swiftly yet almost Imperceptibly into glorious woman hood. Standing with reluctnnt feet Where the brook and river meet she gave promise of a wondrous fu ture as the undisputed wearer of a crown of beauty and the recipient of the homage which the world willing ly pays to nature's own queens. In the company of two women fur ther along in years probably a mother and grandmother she en tered the car on the elevated rail way and sat down with them on one of the side seats. Tastefully gowned, modest in bear ing and graceful in every motion, she attracted Instant attention, but appeared unconscious of the scrutiny of those about her. She sat in si lence, listening to the conversation of her companions, but taking no part in it. Suddenly one of them turned and addressed a remark to her: "Mildred, what was it you were telling me about Harry Fladger Just before we started downtown?" With heightened color she smiled and opened her beautiful Hps. "Aw, forgit it, maw!" she said.- Chicago Tribune. Beltings with ribbon embroidery flowers are among tho new accessor ies. Wooden buttons Inset with steel are upon some of the imported street frocks. For very dressy functions the large square stole Is the thing over hand some gowns. There 1b nothing new in hats. They are less mad, perhaps, than a tew weeks ago. Fancy furs are, as a matter of course, purchased according to the taste of the wearer. The bolero consisting largely of horizontal tucks ls a becoming style for the slender figure. Can you Imagine a richer combina tion than dull, dark red roses and black grapes on a pale pink hat. Coats are of all orders. So diver sified are the styles that It is impos sible to reduce them to classifica tion. A line of hand embroidery running around the edge of an otherwise plain handkerchief gives it an un mistakably "nice" look. Soft bengaline silk Is one of the fashionable materials "for children's coats, as are also velvet and the less expensive corduroy and velveteen. Moleskin makes the best imitation seal. Dyed, the stiff hairs removed, and treated as a good furrier knows how, it is a splendid counterfeit. Buttons are one of the most im portant furbishes of the day; but tons of every kind and sort known in the category of the button-maker. Some remarkably beautiful trim mings for mourning gowns are in the form of bands and motifs of crepe heavily embroidered by hand in black. The plain finish that is decidedly becoming to many girls appears on some of the guimpe waists in a band of velvet around the neck edge of the blouse. Not content with the dashing ef fect of quills on the upper side of the hats, some milliners tilt the hats ex cessively and arrange a multitude of bows and a quill or two beneath the brim. Walking skirts are made to clear the ground by two good Inches. This is not a happy fashion for the renl winter trotteuse, tor the skirt gets as much mud from the back of oue't shoes as though, it were longer. AN IMPORTANT MATTER. Watering a flower bed causes the grass to come up as well as the flower seeds. Pick the young grass out as fast as it appears until the young flower plants shall have be come well rooted. The hoe may then be used. The first cultivation Is the most important. USEFUL LAWN TREES. The white-leaved and weeping lin dens are among the most useful lawa trees for our climate. They are hardy, and Injurious Insects and de structive diseases appear to pass them by; aud, while their growth Is quite rapid, the foliage of each is sin gularly beautiful and tenacious. DRAINAGE FOR WINDOW PLANTS Window plants that appear yellow, or do not have a healthful appear ance, are over-matured or affected with Insects. The pots should be ex amined in order to discover if the drainage is perfect. It Is not neces sary to have the earth wet, but sim ply moist, and to allow the earth to dry some will do no harm. The dust in the rooms will settle on the leaves of the plants, which makes it neces sary to give each plant a thorough washing once a week. GARDEN CHAIR. The drawing herewith shown rep resents a handy home-made chair and Is intended to be left outside in the yard whenever one wishes to sit down for a few minutes' rest. Take a board of Inch stuff twelve inches wide and fifty Inches long, saw off a piece thirteen inches long from one end and nail It on to the long piece sixteen inches from the bottom for a seat. The long piece should be at a slight angle, and the short piece horizontal. Take two pieces of burring Btrlps thirty Inches long and nail on the sides for legs. This chair will last ten years and will cost twenty cents or less. Do not paint' It or else It will often be found too wet to use or too hot for com fort. F. G. Herman, Leonla, N. J., in The Epilomist. CORN ROOT LOUSE. Time spent In killing Insect pests must usually be set down as so much time lost from the constructive work of improving the tilth of the soil, and attending to the other needs of the crops. Occasionally, however, an improved system of cultivation gets rid of our Insect enemies at the same time. This is conspicuously the case in the method recently proposed by Professor Forbes, of Illinois for de stroying the corn root loused The pest works havoc to both sweet and field corn. The small brown ant attends the louse and Is responsible for carrying it about the field. Professor Forbes found that by using a disk harrow one to three times early in the spring, before the corn is planted, from eighty to ninety-five per cent, of the ants and corn root lice are destroyed, and no fur ther treatment is required during the season. The peculiar virtues of this remedy are that it Is simple, ef fective and good for the corn, since the Boll is thereby put in a better state of cultivation. AN INEXPENSIVE HOTBED. Enough plant.) can be started In one small hotbed to stock a good sized garden with vegetables and flowers. , There are three , types of hotbed that are within the means of the or dinary amateur gardener. The first is the temporary bed, In which the ' manure is spread on the top of the ground to the required depth and a portable frame placed over it. The second differs only in having a shallow pit dug to hold the manure. The third type Is a permanent bed, the frame being made two and a half feet higher and built directly in a pit of that depth. In a bed of this kind the bottom should be tile drained, and it is a good plan to cover it also with a layer of cobble stones or planks. The outside should be well ban'ied up with manure, earth or coal ashes. The last type can be used not only as a hotbed in the early spring, but also when the manure and earth are cleaned out it can be used In the fact as a storage place for plants that are not quite hardy, such as tea roses, or for bulbs that are to be forced for winter bloom. Of the three forms above men tioned the first is the easiest and cheapest to make, and therefore the one best suited to most beginners, Garden Magailna, NEWSY GLEANINGS. The advance in copper metal con tinues. The street railway companies owe New York City $23,875,293.79. Marquette College, at Milwaukee, will receive $110,000 from graduates in Missouri. Many Chippewa Indians at the Grand Portage reservation in Minne sota are starving. The National Phi Delta Kappa 'will contest in the courts orders forbid ding it in any school. The United States now ranks third In the value of manufactures enter ing international commerce. General Jose Miguel Gomez de clared himself strongly opposed to an American protectorate for Cuba. The proposed convention of Chris tian Endeavor Societies in India will be unique among religious pilgrim ages. The Modern Language Association of America, In session at Yale, in dorsed the campaign of the simplified spelling board. A good sized bee farm is under way at South Manchester, Conn. Thi stock is expected to include 150 hives when complete. Secretary Taft recommends an ap propriation of $30,000 to pay for liquors destroyed by troops at the San Francisco, fire. The London Motor Omnibus Com pany reports a gross revenue ol $400,000 a year, and has paid a ten per cent, dividend. In his annual report General Mur ray, chief of artillery, complained that the coast and field artillery are both deplorably unprepared. The annual convention of the Na tional Trades Association, composed of manufacturers of the principal cities of the country, will be held in, Boston, beginning March 20. FAR EASTERN NOTES. The tin output of the Federated Malay States is decreasing. Public works decided upon at Vlad ivostok, Siberia, will cost $6,000,000 gold. The British Government has ap pointed a commercial agent at Vladi vostok. Osaka's waterworks were extended five years ago to supply 800,000 peo ple. The population is now more than 1,000,000. Formosa's foreign trade amounts to nearly $25,000,000 gold yearly, and 1b increasing at the rate of ten per cent, a year. The first Ice factory on the west coast of India has just been estab lished at Calicut, India, by a young Parsee merchant. Australia has a record wheat har vest this year. It will be 81,000,000 buBhels, against 58,000,000 last year, an Increase of 23,000,000. Space at the Japanese managed commercial exhibition at Mukden, Manchuria, is available to American manufacturers and exporters. The Federated Malay States and Johore, Burma, arr (exporting whole wheat and importing wheat from Cal ifornia, Oregon and Washington. Vladivostok is not acquainted with American tobacco, ' says Consul Greene, who advIseB that samples and price lists be sent by mall, via Japan. A Japanese shoe manufacturing concern has secured a contract for shoes for the British army in India. It is one of the largest shoe contracts ever placed. India exported $30,728,000 worth of hides and skins in 1905. The United States took forty-three per cent., in value of tho entire export, chiefly skins. Australia's exports of frozen meats to England are one-fourth larger this year, reaching 2,300,000 pounds. ONLY ONE FOR HIM. "What, wed my daughter, sir?" he cried; "why, she's my only child." The youngster would not be de Bled, however ho Just (smiled. "Oh, that's all right,-" ho said, un daunted; "you see, sir, one was all I wanted." THE PRICE. . "But," said the weary millionaire, "the plain people do not know what the rich have to put up with." "Huh!" snorted the plain man, "wa know you've got the money to put up with, while we haven't any to put uo." Philadelphia Ledger. ... i .'.The -Proof of th Ftoir islw&h Loaf KING MIDAS Flour proves every time. No bad luck " no poor-baking. You don't .have to be an expert tnstv lnavps of bread. I Use a regular recipe and your every batch will be a perfect success. Makes bread ft ; " i longer it tastes better and affords more teal nourishment it means more bread and better bread to every barrel. The extra half cent a pound enable j us to make KING MIDAS Flour the bt Cour that it is possible for anyone to make. Sold by Quality SZ-Uimt EltOTHERS . FEMININE NEWS NOTES. Lite fn Washington is not attrac tive to Mrs. Btlhu Root. Copper is now dear enough to make wedding presents of. Mrs. Phoebe Hearst wilt settle in Paris for the next two years. t university for women next autumn. Mrs. Fish is thriving on a diet of onions and fruit, in which she has Immense faith. Mrs. Russell Sage intimated that her first charities would be distrib uted in New York. A series of mass meetings to ad vance the principles of Socialism was begun in New York City, led by Mrs. J. G. Phelps Stokes. Mrs. Charlotte P. Gllman told the Equal Suffrage League that storks and ostilcbs are monogamous and far more moral than human beings. , Lady Yarmouth, Harry Thaw's Bis ter, Is living In England in almost nun-like seclusion, and her friends are grieved at her appearance of ill health. The beautiful Princess Nathalie nt i Montenegro, the young wife of Princft Mlrlco, is a skilful and intrepid sportswoman and a lover of the open air life. Varvara Smolianoff, who drives a cab in Moscow, is the only woman licensed driver In Russia. Her fath er, a cabman, lost his life in trying to save mat or. a ponce sergeant, and the authorities thereupon trans ferred his license to his dauehter. in whose cab many ladles like to ride.. The Queen-mother. Marie Crlstlna of Stlflln. WftR fnrfv-olffht ha nftiow day. She is a granddaughter of Na poleon b antagonist, the Archduke Charles, whose wife was a descen dant of George II.; and she is a half sister of the Princess Ludwlg of Ba varia, heiress of the line of the Stuarts. LABOR WORLD. The trade union membership of Austria is said to be 205,651. Tacoma (Wash.) longshoremen have made a demand for the closed shop. A Building Material Teamsters Union was organized recently in San Jose, Cal. The Coppersmiths' Union in New York City reports that its helpers are being organized. At a meeting recently held in Grass Valley the Nevada County Labor Council was organized. The San Francisco Labor Council has proposed a law to prevent convict-made goods entering California. Carpenters' Union, No. 22, of San Francisco, the largest union of the craft in the world, has 2825 members on Its roll. Two big express companies, the Adams and the American, have made increases affecting a large percentage of their employes. It is estimated that It may cost the Western trunk lines in the neighbor hood of $25,000,000 yearly to meet the demands of the wage-earners. President Roosevelt was active in bringing about a conference in which the strike of the Southern Pacific fire men Is left to a referendum vote. Labor organizations of San Fran cisco have erected a building of their own, which will house a majority ot the unions ot the city. The building cost $10,500. Strike benefits were paid to the amount ot $143,069.58 and death benefits of $29,375 by the Interna tional Association of Machinists in the past fiscal year. The telegraph operator responsible for the railroad wreck near Volland, Kan., in which forty-nine lives were lost, was eighteen years old and had the work of an experienced railroad man to do. AMENDED. "Mr. Hunter's married now," said the bride-toibe, preparing to send out her cards, "so we'll have to address his invitation to 'Mr. and Mrs. Hun ter.' " "Better not," her brother advised. "She's the boss, you you'd better send the invitation to 'Mrs. and Mr. Hua tjanuu' " -.Pht'fldolnhla Press. ' THERE WERE OTHERS. "That comet-player on the thVra floor has remarkable endurance," re marked the casual visitor. "He has," agreed the regular boarder. "But It's nothing compared to the other hoarders." Toledo Blade. 1 4 (but less flour) -Jy of bread ' a . .J that keeps sweet and fresh Qrocers Every where, CO., PhSlotWi'tla i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers