GOOD INDUSTRY FOR WOMEN. A new Industry has sprung up here whereby a woman can support her husband. Mrs. Steve Workover cord ed over fifteen tiers of wood and helped to cut eight tiers In one week. She has worked probably 100 days In the timber, splits and tiers the wood while her husband saws. She is In excellent health and enjoys the work exceedingly. Dlxonvllle Correspond ence the Roseburg Review. SHE TOOK DEGREES. Miss Mabel Sturtevant has Just been admitted to the bar at Jefferson City, Mo. Her record as a student is remarkable. She was graduated as the valedictorian from the high school. She won scholarships In the Baker University, in the Kansas City University and the curator's scholar ship in the University of Missouri. Since enrolling In 1905 she has taken both the law and the academic courses at the university. New York Sun. jf WHERE THE CHARM LAY. " The secret lay in her smile. She smiled Incessantly, For at least a quarter hour she stood chatlng to two Japs, one of whom appeared to be her husband, and the expressions of the men Indicated they were talk ing now and then of serious subjects. But always she smiled. The smile rippled from her lips right up her ecru countenance to the sloe black slits that served her for eyes, and every feature was in it. It was irre sistible, that smile. And 'tis no dis loyalty to American beauties to say that If such is the smile of every Jap anese woman It's easy to understand how a man can be happy in the Mika do's realm on a handful of rice a day, New York Press. Slutted Lnmb Select a forequarter of lamb, remove the fine bones, pink skin, tough membrane and as much of the fat as is possible. Cover the bones with water and steam the meat over them till very tender; strain the liquor and, when cold, remove the fat, seasoning the liquor with salt and pep per. Make a stuffing with two small slices of salt pork chopped fine, one quart of stale bread crumbs moistened with some of the liquor, season highly with mixed herbs, salt and pepper, then add two eggs and spread the mixture in a pan. Cook it In the oven fifteen minutes, stirring it frequently, but not let ting It brown. Pick the meat Into bits, removing all gristle and tough membrane, and moisten it with the liquor. If one doeB not own a meat press use a brick-loaf bread pan. Pack in a layer of the meat, then a layer of the stuffing, and con tinue in alternation until all the materials are used. Put a press on and set away to cool. This is a delicious tea dish or for evening entertainments. American Home Monthly. 4) ft v. O THE FABLE OF THE MUDDY FEET Occasionally there is a woman who is entirely too neat and particular to be the right kind of a mother for boys. There once lived a woman of this kind In South Atchison. When her boys came home from school she would scream at them, "How about your feet?" "Is there mud on your shoes?" "Go right around to the back door!" "What do you mean by tracking dirt In here?" etc., etc. The boys grew up, and found out on the way that there were places down town where no one found fault if the feet of those who entered were muddy or tracked in dust. Now that the boys have gone to the bad, their mother sobs and laments and won ders why "the Lord ever sent her sons like that." There lives near her, In South Atchison, a mother who lets her sons enjoy their home; she was glad to see them and didn't remind them that they might bring in mud when they came home. Them boys ferew up to love their home, and have never found out that there are places down town where a boy is welcome, and never will. The neat woman really shouldn't blame the difference on the Lord; it isn't "toting fair." Atchison Globe, BALLET DANCERS OF SOCIETY. Expense is no object In amusing society, and one woman who does it well says she is going over to London to take lessons in fancy dancing to perform at little parties. Lady Con stance Stewart-Richardson, whose fame as a sportswoman, and especial ly as a swimmer, is well known in England, has recently added fancy dancing to her list of accomplish ments. Lady Constance attended classes of a famous ballet dancer In Covent Garden, and, donning the usual costume, of the ballot, was in itiated into the mysteries of the pro fession. Although she has not taken many lessons she gives promise of becoming as expert a dancer as she is a swimmer. She is said to have a genius for the art, and it she cared to devote the time to it she might become one of the best exponents of Pallet dancing ever seen in England. Ballet dancing is no longer confined to the small class of professionals. An English peer's daughter recently went through a course of training and performed with great success at a private party, A young Scottish wo man of social position is now study ing the art in London for pure love of the thing." New York Press. f EVERY DAY A NEW ONE. Here is a pretty bit of optimistic philosophy, inspired by so ordinary n occurrence as the dally sunrlslng: "Did you know the sun rose every morning? There are many persons who do not know this important fact, or, if they do know, they do not act Accordingly. These persons carry yesterday's burdens around with them to-day. They would be better off If they carried only to-day's burdens and successes and failures. The fail ures of yesterday should not be for gotten, because they dishearten us for to-day. The successes of yester day should not be remembered, be cause they will weigh against the larger possible successes of to-day. The burdens of yesterday should have been burled yesterday. That is -one meaning of the sunrlslng. It shuts oft yesterday. The sun rises as fair and bright and new this morning as though it had not risen anew every morning of these 6000 years. It brings a new day with new oppor tunities, new duties and new possi bilities. Yesterday Is shut off from to-day by the curtain of the night and the sun rises in the morning to usher In the new day. There are men in this town who are gray with the bur dens of yesterday when they might be buoyant with the brightness of to-day's dawn. They have forgotten that the sun has risen." Pittsburg Press. RIGHT AND, WRONG WAY. It's a mighty different proposition to tell a woman, Just baldly so, that she can't have a new parlor rug, and to ask her to do without It so that a mortgage on the house may be paid off, or a few dollars added to the sum that is going into buying a partner ship. ' In the play, "The Thief," the hus band suddenly wakes up to the fact that his wife has been dressing like a millionairess on the salary of a book keeper, and he turns upon her fierce ly and demands to know where she got her clothes. A wise husband should always keep his eyes upon his wife, and when he sees that she is beginning to dress too expensively, to go out too much and entertain too elaborately, he should call a gentle halt. He should explain to her just what they can afford, and make her feel that she gets her full share of the perquisites of their joint life. If she is the right sort of a woman she will not want to run him in debt, and if she's the wrong sort of a wom an he should not let her run him in debt. No pity is due the man whose wife ruins him, except the pity we bestow upon any kind of a weakling. Doro thy Dlx, In the New York Journal. retryr toWear The lavish use of feathers on the new hats is unprecedented. The long coat is used not only with tailor-made, but with elaborate house gowns. A great many lace coats, long and svelte in fit, are being made for hand some dinner costumes. Collar and cuffs of filet lace are a most attractive finish to a fine lin gerie waist. . Now and then one sees a fancy wrap entirely covered with soutache braiding in self-color. Fancy waistcoats give a surprising ly dressy look and mark a suit as strictly a 1908 product. The real grasses, both ruches and pom poms, that are appearing on the new hats are really very pretty. Pond lilies, clovers and apple blos soms are among the flowers effective ly used on millinery this season. Sleeveless jackets of lace that form a part of thin gowns have long Btoles in front reaching nearly to the knees. Some of the loveliest combinations of delicate pink and lavender are noted on hats and in gowns for the coming season. Fashion makers do not give their attention to the easy remodeling of the fashions of a past season when they are designing for the new period. A vertical inset of lace insertion flanked on either side by a trailing embroidery spray forms a dainty dec oration for the short sleeves of a sheer blouse. Coats take all sorts of shapes, but all have short walsted fronts or backs and are fitted perfectly at the hips to fall in straight lines with the skirt under them. The flowered silk waistcoat and short sleeves that show beneath the wing or butterfly sleeves of the fancy; jacket are the prettiest feature of one spring bride's going away gown. Wimeh New York City. The coat that Is made in butterfly style, or with the sleeves that are cut In one with it, Is peculiarly becoming to young girls, while it is in the very height of pres ent styles. This one is shown in striped material and is, perhaps, es pecially effective when such material Is used, but it is quite correct for everything seasonable, the pongees and silks that will be so extensively worn throughout the warm season, as Well as for the wool suitings. The vest portions and the prettily shaped collar and cuffs allow of effective con trast and can be utilized in a variety of ways. In this Instance plain cloth is braided with soutache and trimmed With bits of velvet, but banding would be quite correct. The coat is made with fronts backs, the under-arm portions and sleeves. The sleeves are arranged under the pleats and joined to the nnder-arm portions and finished with roll-over cuffs. The vest portions are stitched to the fronts and the collar finishes the neck. The quantity of material required for the sixteen year size Is three and leven-elghth yards twenty-one, two and three-fourth yards twenty-seven, ir one and seven-eighth yards forty- four inches wide, with one-half yard fifty-two inches wide, or two and five- eighth yards of banding two Inches wide for vest, collar and cuffs. Shoulder Seam Important. The new shirtwaist is distinctive on account of the width of the shoulders. Do not imagine for ona moment that this effect may be ob tained by cutting the shoulder seam extra long that is to say, by running it down on the arm. It can't. The proper width must be given by the correct line of the shoulder seam, otherwise the sleeve can not be prop erly put In and will droop In an ugly way over the arm, giving an ill-fitting, thoroughly home-made appear ance to the shirtwaist, Read Bugs in Fashion. v That bead bags keep in fashion Is not to be wondered at since the flow er dress-borders upon skirts as well as other skirt trimmings in embossed rows give to the bead bag, in its soft ly blended variety of colors, Its rea son for banging from the belt or be ing carried gracefully. Both bag and bead-trimmed skirts are re vivals of old days. Tucked Shirt Waist. The waist that is trimmed with buttons is one of the novelties of the season and Is exceedingly effective. This one is tucked in a way to be so treated with exceptional success and Is exceedingly chic and smart, while it Is absolutely simple. In the illus tration white linen is trimmed with pearl buttons, but colored linens and white materials striped with color both are being extensively used this season, and the cotton voiles are much liked for shirt waists. Again, if button trimming is not liked, discs could be embroidered either with the same on contrasting color and give an exceedingly smart and altogether up-to-date effect with very little labor, the simple shirt waist that Is treated in this way being one of the notable features of the present season. The waist is made with fronts and back. It Is tucked to give exceedingly becoming lines to the figure and la finished with a neck-band and with a separate turn-over collar, but if liked a regulation stock can be worn in place of the latter. There are the usual shirt sleeves that are finished with over laps and straight cuffs. The quantity of material required for the medium size is three and one half yards twenty-one or twenty-four, three and three-eighth yards thirty- two, or two yards forty-four inches wide. IS DUN'S WEEKLY "SUMMARY Failures Growing Less Several o4 the Large Steel Plants Have Resumed Operations, New York. R. G. Dun & Compa ny's "Weekly Review of Trade" says: "Weather condtions have ex ercised much influence this week on retail trade In seasonable merchan dise and dealings at the leading com modity exchanges. Low temperature characterized the demand for light wearing apparel In a market that was already backward, and heavy rains started reports of damage to the crops, yet there was no evidence of serious Injury. "Manufacturing conditions show little change. In some Industries there Is still a disposition to wait for lower prices, although restricted de mand during the past six months must render replenishment of stocks almost Imperative. Financial senti ment Improves as restrictions are re moved from commercial credits, and sales of bonds provide funds for structural work. "Failures decrease in number, while liabilities in April were smaller than in any month since November, despite several large suspensions of a special ly active nature. "A few more steel plants have re sumed, decreasing the percentage of unemployed in this Industry, but new contracts are placed with great cau tion, and It is evident that all con sumers anticipate more attractive terms. "Confidence grows in the textile markets as stocks In the hands of dealers becnme depleted, and It Is known that the time must be near for replenishment. Export trade Is bet ter. "Shipments of shoes through Bos ton are now scarcely more than half the weekly figures of last year and the market Is quiet and uninterest ing." MARKETS, PITTSBURG. Wheat No. S red S M Rye No. 2 7! Corn No. 2 yellow, ear 66 No. i yellow, shelled 61 Mixed ear M Oats No. S white .11 No. 3 white !1) Flour Winter patent 4 95 Fancy straight winters 4 61 Hay No. 1 Timothy 11 W Cloer No. 1 HW Peed No. t white mid. ton H7 5) Brown middlings 86 0) Bran, bulk 51 Straw Wheat 8 5) Uat U jt) Dairy Products. Butter Elgin creamery I 81 Ohio creamery $1 Fancy country roll H Cheese Ohio, new 15 New York, new 18 Poultry, Etc. Hens per lb I 17 Chickens dressed H Eggs Pa. and Ohio, tresh 17 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... 70 Cabbage per ton .. 15 00 Onions per barrel 1 50 0! 71 67 85 87 51 51 60) 4 75 15 51 15 50 SHOO 47 0) 28 51 l'l M 10 0 J W H 18 75 18 0) i r, BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent I 5 11 9 SO Wheat No. 8 red 97 Corn Mixed 71 71 Egg 30 31 Butter Ohio creamery ii 40 PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent f 5 iJ S 7 Wheat No. red 97 Corn No. t mixed 7t 75 Oats No. 8 white... 1 45 Butter Creamery SI 8) Eggs Pennsylvania firsts 88 44 NEW YORK. ' Flour Patents I 4 60 4 70 w neat no. 8 red ii Corn No. 8 68 67 Oats No. a white 81 67 Butter -Creamery -. 41 81 Eggs State and Pennsylvania.... 88 40 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. Cattle, Extra, 1,480 t 1,800 lbs I 6 80 JTlme, 1,800 to 1,400 lbs 6 60 Good, 1,J0 to 1,808 lbs 6 40 Tidy, 4,040 to 1,150 lbs 6 15 Common, 700 to 800 lbs 5 i Oxen 4 50 Bulls 8 0) Cows 8 5) Heifers, 700 to 1 100 8 5) Fresh Cows and Springer 11 JJ Hogs, Prime hear? I 6 0) Prime medium weight 6 0) Best heary Torkers 6 00 Good light Torkers , 6 8) Jigs 5 4) Rough! 4 75 Stags 8 6) Sheep. ' Prim wethers, dipped. t 8 50 Good mixed 5 00 Fair mixed ewes and wethers 4 4) Culls and common 8 00 Lamb...,; 8 0J Calves, Val ealve 3 00 Heary and thin calves 1 CO 7 00 6 80 6 55 6 90 6 95 5 Ol 8 00 4 81 8 55 85 00 6 11 6 20 8 30 6 90 8 80 8 80 4 40 885 4 50 8 50 13 00 7 85 i 04 Thomas Edison, the Inventor, and Henry Phlpps, a New York million aire, have arranged to erect two en tire cities of concrete houses, one near New York and the other neat Philadelphia, announces Rural Life. The Intention Is to rent them to work ing people at a rental not to exceed $7.50 per month. The houses will be two-family structures, twenty-five and three stories high. They will b fireproof, and equipped with the latest sanitary plumbing fixtures. Mr. Edi son says the cost will be kept within $1,000. This will permit of a very low rent at a fair profit. Further more, Mr. Edison thinks It will dc away with the objection of landlord to children in their houses, Maine has dropped the agitation over the question, "Is woman legally a person?" on the plea that she is Dot a person In the eyes of the law. Maine politicians have been trying to keep two women, Mrs. French and Mrs. Barker, recently made overseen tf the poor in Portland, from serv ing. But the politicians have given Bp the fight, and the two women an without disastrous results, thus far, to the municipality. BUSINESS CHRD9, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Pension Attorney and Real'.Estate Agent. RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brookvillk, Pa. m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real estate agent, patents secured, col. lections made promptly. OtHoe In Syndicate Julldlug, lleynoldsvlllei Pa. SMITH M. MoCBEIGHT. ? ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate agent Col lections will rece re prompt attention. Offlo In the Reynoldsvllle Hardware Co. building, slain street Reynoldsvllle. Pa. QR. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover bulldlaf Malu street. Gentleness la operating. DR. L. Lk MEANS, DENTIST, Office on second floor of tbs First National bank building, Main street. DR. R- devere king, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate bulla Ing, SI ill n street, Keynoldsvtlle, Pa. HENRY PRIESTER UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeral car. Mainstre, Reynoldsrllle, Pa. D. H. YOUNG, ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Flfta its., Reynold Mile, Pa. THE NATIONAL GAME. The Boston American club has sold . pitcher Louis Malre to the Providence club. Manager Griffith, of the New York Americans, has eleven pitchers on his pay roll. "Mike" Donlln Is pounding them out for the New York Nationals in his well known style. Jack Klelnow, of the New York Americans, Is hitting the ball harder than any other catcher. The young Detroit pitcher, Malloy, made a very good impression in his first championship game. The St. Louis American club has turned the Austin recruit, lnflelder Gardner, over to the Hartford club. Otto Hess Is said to be slated to leave the Cleveland twirling staff to make room for aspiring youngsters. Shlpke, the Washington third base man, does clean cut work with his bands in gathering up ground balls. The New York Nationals' recruit pitcher, Malarkey, has very much the appearance and style of Dummy Tay lor. Charles Hemphill seems to have taken on a new lease of life. His work to date for the New York Amer icans Is the best in his career. The splendid work of third base man Harry Lord for the Boston Americans has pleased every good citizen of Maine, as Lord halls from that State. The St. Louis Americans will carry Yeager and Hartzell as utility infield ers and Schweitzer in the outfield. No less than eight or nine pitchers draw pay, Cy Young, of the Boston Ameri cans, has pitched 72 8 games in major league company. He has won 457 and lost 271, a grand average of .628. These figures do not Include tie games. Cy is out to make a rec ord for the thousand. 1 SPORTING BREVITIES. There Is no lack of good boy Jock eys to do the riding this season. Gotch lost $25 by falling to throw Henry Ordemann in fifteen minutes at Minneapolis. Swarthmore College defeated Le high University at lacrosse by a score of nine goals to fonr. Fred Herreshoff captured the low scored prize in the annual spring golf tournament at Lakewood. Harvard proved victor over the Middles. 7 to 1, in the first lacrosse match, played at Annapolis. It will be a shame to tell what the Western athletes will do with some of the Eastern cracks at the Olympic try-outs. The 165-mile cruising race on Lake Onatrlo from Hamilton to Chanment for cruising sailboats will be started on August 10. Hackenschmldt says he will go into strict training for wrestling matches, and will not enter the arena again unless he Is in good condition. Automobilists of the Pacific Coast tried hard to have the Vanderbllt cup contest run over a course in Califor nia last year, but without success. Sir Thomas Llpton's new racing cutter, the Shamrock IV., has arrived at Southampton from the Clyde for' her trials. Her first race will be on May 30. Tom Jenkins, once champion wrest ler or America, is excited by the chal lenge of the Frenchman, Cazeaux, who has challenged him to a mixed contest of Graeco-Roman and catch-as-catch-can wrestling. The game wardens in Pennsylvania are using every means In their power to protect trout. In a mountain stream near Hazleton a prominent resident of that city was fined 165 for having trout in his possession one-eighth of an inch under the legal size. Japanese Jokes. Guest Do you know that fellow of Sayama is telling all kinds of lies to defame your character? Host If he Is telling lies I don't care, but If he'd begin to tell truth I'll throttle him. Guest Oh. vou will, eh? Bananas are now ripened hy elec tricity. A flood of artificial ..ght la said to have the same effect as that of the sun.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers