Imlusti-lnl Comlltiotn. The French Government 1ms In truEted to Mine. Laurence Medler, ot Paris, a mission to make an exhaust ive investigation Into the social ana Industrial conditions ot women and children In America. The purpose of her work, Mme. Fiedler says. Is to ralae the standard of women's wages in Fiance, as well as the social stand ard ot her country women In "":. department ot Industrial and com mercial work. Woman ns a Harvest Ilnml, For the first time In the nlsiry of a labor bureau in St. Joseph, Mo., a woman, 1 Bradley Floyd, of High land, Kan., applied for labor as a harvest hand. She contracted for a Job at shocking wheat at $3. CO a . day, and, accompanied by her hue iaud and others, started for the har vest flelda of Western Kansas. "We are paying for a little farm," she said, "ond by both ot us earning good wages and getting our board free this summer, we can shavo qui'.) a little oft the mortgage on the Dlaoe." Kansas City Joui uai. Mistress anil Mnid. "The root ot the domestic tr dies which make matter fo.4 conve satfou over bo many cups of tea Is that the mistress has never tried to do what Bhe expects her servant to do," says an observing housekeeper. "The mistress says to the maid, 'Do this,' and she does it, and then j-j goes on saying, 'Do something else,' until the girl takes her for a br.'-. whereas sne Is only stupid -- Ig norant. If she had only learned by toilful experience how mu:a trouble It takes to keep a household In run ning order she would be more .ireful about the needless labor she caused. New York Tribune. A Kargnln in "Orchids." A New York woman, who has a summer home 1l the Catskills, was delighted a few days ago when some of the native children brought her a flower which appeared to be a rare orchid. She promptly offered the children three cents apiece for each plant of the kind that they would bring her. Next day the group returned bear ing sixty plants of the desired va riety. The second day the force of small laborers, was augmented by every ctitld for miles around, bring in all three hundred orchids. The third day farmers who had been working in the neighborhood with their teams abandoned all other occupation for the gathering ot or chids, with the result that the b-. .-er liad to tak- 3600 of the plants, all ot the same variety, before she c-.ild call off the contract. She Is now studying "How to Tell Orchids From Potatoes." New York Tress. Good Manners. Unselfishness Is truly the founda tion of good manners, but not the su perstructure. Many conventlonr.: re strictions hare grown about social relations. Some can be explained by the demand of kindness and some cannot. Could a child infer from his desire to help others that he should not eat with his knife? -4 any of fenses against good taste Interfere in soma way with the rights ot others, but many others do not. Still, no set ot rules to produce a polished lady will achieve a result fit for the strain of life. The man ners of the French boarding school may adorn the ballroom, but are too likely to fall at the breakfast table or in me crowded car. The woman ' ot perfect manner-t must reinforce ( her unselfishness bv social riilpft anil "conventionality must be vitalized by the warm desire of others' pleasure. The best of life never "comes natur ally," whether in manners or morals. The secret of charming manners is the desire for them. When the moth er wishes them for her daughter as much as she wishes the other goods of the world her daughter will have them. New Haven Register. How She Won Success. "Steadiness anil perseverance are ever aiir of tholr roworri I studied shorthand at home, and ' kept at it until I could take dictation at a moderate rate ot speed and transcribe it accurately. When I accepted my first position I realized that the lack of business experience would prevent me from de manding much salary, and so I started in for a small amount, mak ing up my mind that I would learn "all about the business" and make myself as valuable as possible to my employer. I practiced wrltinc short hand whenever I could get anyone to read for me in the evening: copied from books and papers; reported lec- tures and sermons, etc., believing that the best way is to deserve promo'.Ioa and it will come. It we seek ad vancement our minds must expand, and this can only be done by r.squlr . lag knowledge. By acqjalntlng myself with all the details of the business, remembering bow matters were handled, and as sisting my employer in every wa- possible believing that if It was worth while to do a thing It was sure ly worth while to do it well my first position was a successful one, and I soon found that my employers con sidered me valuable to them and my salary was Increased accordingly. If one Is dissatisfied with a posi tion, I should say that the way to succeed Is not to go from one position to another, but to keep up with the requirements of the age and be ready to take advantage of it when rn op portunity offers. p. E. D., In the New York Journal. Various Types of Women. "It lakes all kinds of women to make up a world,"observed the Com muter. "How superficial is he who classes all women as 'Women,' Just as he says, 'cats' or 'geese' as If by virtue of their sex they all had the Banie traits, habits, characteristics and effect! There la more resem blance between men of a certain type and women than there is between two different types ot women. "See the Jolly girl over there the girl with the firm rounded chin and the sensible nose ond the wide-open way of laughing. Not a bit pretty, Is she? But so frankly good hu mored and unaffected that she'll keep those two men Interested all the way into town. Hasn't she the most delightful way of thrusting out her chin, and narrowing her eyes, and wrinkling up her face when she laughs? She has charm, that's what she has. If she weren't so sweet tempered and Jolly she would be homely. "On ahead there Is an awfully se rious girl. She has the knotty fore head of a profound thinker. Does she ever laugh, I wonder? I can Im agine an Icy smile blowing frigidly about her Hps upon proper occasions. I'll bet she converses in Sanskrit, and teaches slum children for diversion. "A distinctly third type of woman Is the girl opposite. Pretty, Isn't she? or would be if some one came along to wake her up. Too timid and Introspective. Much effort might Induce her to blossom into fun and happiness. But you can't Imagine her forgetting herself so completely as to make other people laugh, can yeu? like our Jolly friend there with the firm, rounded chin. "Now, what In common have any of them with the next woman that female of fifty summers and over, with dangle earrings and simpering mouth, and false hair, done up In style too youthful by forty years? Never, If those other girls live to a hundred years could they grow to bear even the faintest resemblance to that! "The fifth and last woman. Well, If you don't believe Bhe's different, watch her when she gets out. Those little shifting eyes and receding chin, and pugnacious nose, and tight-set Hps mean trouble. First time ever I saw her she was raising a row In a restaurant. She's the kind. Carries a chip on her shoulder has a tre mendouB sense of her own Impor tance, and is always watching out to see that nobody disputes It. "When the train stops the timid girl will sit still till the car's empty; the girl with the knobby forehead will quietly slip Into line and go out with the procession; the sentimental spinster will smirk all around wait ing for some man to give place to her; the Jolly girl will go out care fully shielded from the crush be tween her two friends, and still laughing. "But the pugnacious woman, with shifty eyes and aggressive nose, will be on her feet before the train stops, and push and bruise and beat and batter her way to the door, treading belligerently on toes, and dealing an gry scowls right and left as she goes. "And yet you say 'Women!' as it they were all alike," sighed the Com muter. "These are only five types. And there are just as many more millions types as there are women in the world." Philadelphia Bulletin. Waistcoats of embroidered linen are frequently worn with woolen street suits. There seems to be some falling off in the popularity ot colored stones for ornaments. Buckles of silver in varIng size appear on shoes, belt and arm bands on numerous costumes. "Tortolso shell" Is a new light golden or yellow brown, and Is one ot the favorites of the moment. Blues and browns worked solid and outlined wltn black are very ef fective tor crash porch cushions and table covers. Long coats are seen la many dif ferent materials, from Venetian to Irish lace, and English embroidery to plain linen. Sailor hats whose crowns are cov ered all over with fluttering coque feathers are very chic, the white feathers being especially smart when so used. Very pale tan shoes and stock! 33 are in better taste with a frock of the same color than are shoes of the color Introduced into the trimming ot the frock. Given wMto dimity, colored China silk f' lining, with lace motlts and edging for decoration, one could make one of the daintiest niatineas Imaginable. GO TO CANADA FOR TIMBER. LuihImt Men in a Scramblo For the Great Forests There. "America is turning to Canada for Its supply of timber. A scramble for the pine, cedar and fir forests there Is going on. Americans have in vaded the land and are buying In by the wholesale the richest of the Can adians' timber. In a very few years It will be all gone." That was the assertion of E. K. Carnes, In Kansas City recently. Mr. Carnes had Just returned from Vancouver, British Columbia, where he went on a pleasure trip. "Vancouver Is the only clearing house for Canadian land grants," Mr. Carnes said. "Twenty years ago It was nothing more than a logging camp a few cabins and a sawmill. To-day It Is a town of 70,000, and you hear land grants and sawmills discussed on the Btreets like you hear gambling spoken of at Monte Carlo. The town Is simply alive with lum bermen, and hardly a day passes that one doesn't hear ot sales of grants which run as high as $1,000,000. "Down Skagitt Valley, JiiBt east ot Vancouver, fir trees are growing from 1G0 to 200 feet In height, and some cedar trees are 100 feet In holght. Some of these trees are from six to fourteen feet in diameter at the base. This Is the kind of lumber that men are fighting for.' Sawmills are being erected in these forests, and tho 'lumber jacks' are working under electric lights at night, con verting these trees into boards. Fraser Illver, from Its mouth In Puget Sound, la navigable tor 200 miles, and thousands of log rafts come down It each day to the Van couver and Westminster mills. The English have heretofore been hand ling what little lumber was) taken from tho forests, but in the past few years tho Americans have been seek ing It. "As a rule, the Englishman comeB down to his office about 10 o'clock In the morning and begins business about 11. He Is now up ugaln.t an army of men from this country, who arise at 6 o'clock in the morning, are down town by 7.30 and by 8 are deep Into business. And it's this hust ling way that's giving America the Canadian timber." The Sinmlnrriizcd Staircase. A system of standards la the order of modern life, and In many direc tions standards are convenient It not, in so m (3 cases, Indispensable. We have, for instance, standard gages for railways and tramways, standard threads for various screws, stand ard sizes for boots, shoes, and gloves, standard qualities for articles ot food, Btandard weights and meas ures, coinage, and bo on. But there nre still some directions In which the need of a standard is not only In dicated but Is urgent. The desira bility, for example, of standardizing the steps ot all Btaircases is seen in tho fact that bo often a fall on tho staircase is due to the irregularity In tho height of the steps. A com mon cause of accident on the stair case is the kicking ot the edge of a stair when ascending. In descending, also, an Irregularity In one step may easily upset the equilibrium of a per son. To the aged and Infirm the de scent of un Irregularly stepped Btatrcase Is a Bource of terror. Yet how many Btaircases are constructed absolutely alike as re gards tho height ot the steps? We should say very few; and not only is thero little uniformity existing be tween some Btaircases, but the steps themselves In the same staircase are often Irregular. Staircases and the nteps In them should be standardized; there should be uniformity of height and breadth, and In regard to the latter there should be room enough on the step to accommodate the whole foot from toe to heel, so that there Is no undue call on the energies when ascending, as by going on tiptoe, so to speak, or any feeling of Insecurity when descending by reason of there only being room for the heel.. Seri ous falls on staircases are by no means rare and a common cr.use of such accidents is the fact that Btair cases are not standardized. Even in dark places the staircase, if stand ardized, would be more safely nego tiated than a well-illuminated but ir regular stairway. The perils of an ordinary ladder would be enormously increased if the rungs were placed at irregular intervals. Lancet. A Real Crow's Nest. The fame of the Crow's Roost on Timber Hill may soon be history, for the authorities of Labette County are considering the plan of giving a bounty of five cents on crows' heads, and it such a scheme is carried through the slaughter .will be great In the western part of the country. Hunters and sportsmen would be attracted In droves to that place, be cause the most conservative estimates place the number ot crows that night ly roost there at a figure not less than 200.000 or 300,000. Every evening about sunset the sky around that place is black with dense throngs ot crows that have' come for miles to roost in the hills. In every part ot Labette and Mont gomery counties these birds have been feeding on the crops ot the farmers, and when night comes they wish to visit the others and gossip over the day's events. The noise in the evening that they make can be heard for miles. When morning comes the birds fly away to their day light haunts again with more caw ing, also making the sky black with their numbers. It is a mystery how the farmers living in the vicinity can raise any crops. Topeka (Kan.) Journal. ' KfTect on Rural Districts. Bart roads constitute the f."eatest drawback to rural life, and for the lack ot good mads the farmers suffer moro than other classes. It is ob viously umiecesury, therefore, to dlsciiBs here the benefits to be de rived by them from Improved reads. Suffice it to say, that those localities where good roads have been built are becoming richer, more prosperous, and more thickly settled, while those which do not possess these advan tages In .transportation are either at a standstill or are becoming poorer and more sparsely settled. It these condtlons continue, fruitful farniB may be abandoned and rich lands go to waste. Life on a farm often be comes, as a result of "bottomless roads," Isolnted and barren ot social enjoyments, and pleasures, and coun try people In some communities suffer such great disadvantage that ambi tion Is checked, energy weakened and Industry paralyzed. Good roads, like good streets, make habitation along them most desira ble; they economize time nbd force in transportation of products, reduce wear nnd tear on horses, harness and vehicles, and enhance the market value ot real estate. They raise the value of farm landB nnd farm pro ducts and tend to beautify the coun try through which they pass; they fa cilitate rural mall delivery and are a potent aid to education, rellgloc and sociability. Charles Summer once said: "The road and the school master are the two most Important agents In advanoing civilization. The difference between good and bad roads is often equivalent to the dif ference between profit and loss. Good roads have a money value to farmers as well as a political and social value and leaving out convenience, com fort, social and refined influences which good roads always enhance, and looking at them only from the "almighty dollar" side, they are found to pay handsome dlvideuds each year. People generally are beginning to realize that road building is a pub lic matter and that the best interests of American agriculture and the American people as a whole demand the construction ot good roads and that money wisely expended for this purpose Is sure to return. The Improvement of country roads is chiefly an economical quest. jn, re lating principally to the waste of ef fort In hauling over good oneB, the Initial cost of Improving roads and the difference in the cost ot maintain ing good and bad ones. It is not nec essary to enlarge on this subject In order to convince the average reader that good roads reduce the resistance to traffic, and consequently the cost of transportation of product and goods to and from farniB and mar kets Is reduced to a minimum. The Initial cost ot a road depends upon the cost of materials, labor, machin ery, the width and depth to which the material Is to be spread on, and the method of construction. AH these things vary so much in the different States that it is Impossible to name the exact amount for which a mile of a certain kind of road can be built. The Introduction In recent years of Improved road-building machinery has enabled the authorities in some of the States to build Improved stone and gravel roads quite cheaply. First class single track stone roads nine feet wide have been built near Can andalgua, N. Y., for $900 to $1000 per mile. Many excellent gravel roads have been built in New 'ersey for $1000 to $1300 per mile. The material of which they constructed was placed in two layers, each being raked and thoroughly rolled, and the whole mass consolidated to a tnlck ness ot eight inches. In the same State macadam roads have been built for $2000! to $5000 per mile, vary ing in width from nine to twenty feet, and In thickness ot material from four to twelve Inches. Telford roads, fourteen feet wide and ten to twelve Inches thick, have been built In New Jersey for $400 to ,6000 per mile. Macadam roads have been built at Bridgeport, Conn., eighteen to twenty feet wide for $3000 to $5000 per mile. F. T. Nelson, In the New Orleans Picayune. A Motor Car Speedway. Some time ago we had occasion cordially to commend the project of creating on Long Island what was variously called an automobile speed way and an automobile parkway. Jt was, at any rate, to be an extensive roadway, meant and preserved for the exclusive use of automobile ve hicles, which should be at once a means of promoting the use and en joyment of such vehicles and also ot obviating the misuse ot the common roads for motor car racing. On both of these grounds we were inclined to welcome the construction of such a speedway or parkway, and the prog ress which is from time to time re ported on It emboldens us to hope that the project will not go the way of its predecessors of the same kind at Pennington, N. J., and elsewhere, but will In the near future be carried to fulfilment. New York Tribune. Macadam That is Elastic. The elastic macadam that seems to be proving so satisfactory as tried on 8wlss roads is made ot tar and gravel, the latter having a coarseness of one to two Inches. The liquid Is applied to the heated stones in a rotating drum until a considerable coating Is formed. The material Is then piled under cover and left for eight or ten weeks to undergo fermentation, the process filling the pores ot the gravel and lessening the dust from It, MILK CANS. How Small Dealers In London Appro prlate Cans. In the vast world of London and its suburbs tho number ot dealers In milk counts up to thousands, and with all these people In any consid erable way of- business, the question of the speclnl cans which are left dally with the householder becomes a very serious one Indeed, and as many housewives deal with one man at one part of the day and another at a later hour, the cans ot one dealer are com monly handed to another. In addition to this, thousands of cans are stolen, and after being ma nipulated In such a way as to partly erase the name stamped upon them, are sold to small and unscrupulous milk-sellers whose whole stock of cans, sometimes, will thus consist ot the property of other people. To ob viate this, most of the larger firms have secret private markr, not easily observable to the uninitiated, on their cans, and they employ a class of man which has arisen during the last few years In London, known as "reclaimers." These latter quietly mark tho portable cart o! a suspect and the cans hung around It, and when the suspect's back Is turned for a moment they examine his stock ot cans, very frequently finding some speeclmens belonging to their own employers. A reclaimer must be a stalwart fel low and a determined one, for the cans are seldom given up without a great deal ot wrangling, and often enough an appeal to the law In the Bhape ot a policeman. Most of the reclaimers are paid by results and commission, but some of the larger dairy companies have their own sal aried reclaimers, usually pensioned police officers. To show how needful such men are It may be mentioned that the chair man of a great dairy company esti mated tha; In 1903, before his firm employed regular reclaimers, It lost about 200 In respect ot Its special patent cans. "A diligent reclaimer even on commission can generally earn thirty shillings a week," said this gentleman. As a rule the cans are giving up after a talking match, a threat of prosecution usually fright ening the man In possession of' them, for In a great number of cases he Is using tnem without .he knowl edge of his master and selling some milk on hie own account. Tit Bits. To the Sixth Generation. It Is given to few men, as to M. T. Wullschleger of the Canton of Vaud, to celebrate the birth of a great-great-granddaughter, but vcn more remarkable experiences than this are on record. Dr. Plot, In his "Natural History of Staffordshire," quotes the case of Old Mary Cooper, of King's Brom ley, who lived to see the sixth gener ation of her descendants, and was In the position to say, "Rise up, daugh ter, and go to thy daughter, for thy daughter's granddaughter has a daughter;" while Horace Walpole lived to see seven desecents In one family, the progeny of Mrs. Godfrey, mistress of JameB II. It Is not long since the Dowager Duchess of Abercorn died, leaving more than 200 direct descendants, at least four of whom were great-great-grandchildren. About the same time Mrs. Sarah Ann Woolf, ot Utah, nursed her twenty-third great-great-grandchild, one of 303 living descendants; while It is said ot a Spaniard who returned from Ameri ca to his native land a few years ago, that he was accompanied by 280 ot his descendants. Including three groat-great-grandsons. Westminster Gazette. Jury Was Sceptical. Judge Fox, ot the Supreme Couri, killed a turkey in southeast Mis souri the day after the hunting sea son closed. When his attention was called to his violation of the law he went before the crand Jury and made a complaint, telling bow he had mada a wonderfully long shot and did not expect to kill the turkey, but Instruct ed the Jurors that it was their duty to Indict him, especially as It was his duty to know the law, and his over sight was therefore the more inex cusable. When ho afterward Inquired why he was not fined for the misdemeanor he was Informed that the jury did not believe he could have killed a turkey as far as he claimed to have shot. Linn Creek Review. To Dance Woodtlcks Out of Valley. A social tunctlon, probably the first event ot the kind in the history ot the world, will be given at Florence next Saturday evening. The affair ban been heralded throughout the valley by means of posters, which read as follows: "Woodtlck dance. To be given is Woodmen Hall, Florence, Saturday evening, June 22, 1907. This dance is for the purpose ot raising funds to burn brush and other necessary measures to rid the west side ot its yest, the woodtlck. Tickets, includ ing supper, $1.50." The theory Is generally accepted that the so-called spotted fever is caused by the bite of an Infected woodtlck. Hamilton Western News. Crazy. "Why did you dismiss that em ploye?" asked one railway official. "He became annoying," answered the other; "he Insisted on trying to figure out how much we could save by economizing on wreckages instead of on the payroll of signal opera tors." Washington Star. BUSINESS CARDS. JUSTICE OP THE PEACE, Petition Attorney and Iteiil'.fritate Agent. AYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brookville, Pa. rj, m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real estate agent, patent secured, col- building, Ituyuolilsrllle, pa. SMITH M. McCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real nutate agent. Col lections will receive pr.itn it attention. Office In the Keynoldsvllle Hardware Do, building, lain street Keynoldsvllle, Pa. )R. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover building Main street. Uentlnne.su In operating. JJtt. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST, Office on unwind floor of the Pint National bank building, Malu street. a deverk kino, DENTIST, ofllre nn second door of the Syndicate build Iiik, Main street, Keynoldsvllle, Pa. HENRY PRIESTER UN DERTAKER. . Black and white funeral cars. Halo street. KeyuoldivlUe, Pa. HUGHES A FLEMING. UNDERTAKING AND PICTURE FRAMING. The U. 8. Burial League has been tested and found all right. Cheapest furin o( in surance. Secure a contract. Near Publle fountain, Keynoldsvllle Pa. 1), H. YOUNG, ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Flfta sts., Reynolds rllle, Pa. JOHN C, HIRST, CIVIL AND MINING ENGINEER, Surveyor and Draughtsman. Offlcs In Bya dlcate building, Alain street. WINDSOR HOTEL, Philadelphia, Pa. Between 12th and 13th Sts on Filbert 8s. Three minutes walk from the Reading Ter minal. Five minutes walk from the I'enn'a K. K. Depot. European plan 11.00 per day anal upward. American plan fci 00 uer dav. I i Leech's i Planing Mill jj West Reynold9ville j Window Sash, Doors, i Frames. Flooring, j STAIR WORK Rough and Dressed Lumber, Em, Etc. 2 5 Contract and repair wnrkiglyea 3 Z prompt attention. 2 J Give ui your order. My prices 2 are reasonable. 3 i W. A. LEECH, Proprietor. 3 m ti FEMINIXE NEWS NOTES. Women are to have beards, says a Chicago professor. The great artist Whistler, the greatest of modern painters, was the son of a Wilmington, N. C, woman. Over 600 women are employed by the Russian Secret Service, and sev eral of them get salaries of more than f 10,000 a year, Mr. and Mrs. Frederic R. Coudert, returning from Europe, told of meet ing Anna Qould la Paris, and said she ' would not marry Prince de Sagan. Of the nineteen women Just elected to the Parliament of Finland, five are teachers, two are editors and a num ber are well-known philanthropic workers. Mrs. Collls P. Huntington, ot New York, has purchased the Paris house ot the late Baron Hirsch in the Ave nue Gabriel. The price is said to have been $600,000. The distinction of being the first woman minister in the world belongs to Rev. Antoinette Brown Blackwell, who has recently moved from New York City to Elizabeth, N. J. Mrs. John A. Logan has shipped from Washington, D. C, to Spring Held, 111., the splendid memorial col lection of souvenirs of General Logan and her son. Major Logan, thirty cases, as a gift to the State. Current gossip says that the Duke and Duchess of Marlborough are to make another effort to Imitate the birds who "in their little ucits agree," and that Consuelo Is willing to take back the Duke, on probation, as it were. Mrs. Honor Coleman, who occupios a little cottage at Cleeve, in the County ot Somerset, is generally con sidered the oldest woman in England. She is 107 years of age. Her mother was a centenarian, her grandmother died at 101 and her daughter is eighty. Crossing tne Delaware. ''Washington Crossing the Dela ware" has been painted more than once. Sully's magnificent painting, thrown on his hands by the Legisla ture of North Carolina is in the Bos ton Museum. The picture by Leutze Is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. George crossed the Delaware on De cember 8. He was retreating to Penn sylvania, wasn't he? Washington was a brave man. Why is he depicted standing erect in a small boat, great hunks of Ice on all sides, enough to swamp a ship, telescope in hand, look ing hungTily for the Pennsylvania shore? He Is not represented as a " general leading an army, but as a fu gitive from Justice. Fleeing from the wrath to come. I hate such pictures. Their historical effect Is bad. New York Press.