V ? Elbow Sleeves. Elbow Blecves are still da rlgeur for the more elaborate blouses, unless supplanted by the short straight up per sleeves reaching half way to the elbow with a tight fitting under Bleeve of tucked tulle or lace which extends beyond the wrist and almost to the knuckles. Trousseau downs. "Trousseau gowns are lovelier than ever," says the fashion editor of the Woman's Companion, "but as they have Increased In beauty, ttey have lessened In number. Very few brides of to-day, no matter how fashionable they may be, order a trousseau con sisting of a great number of cos tumes. The .'eason lor this Is that fashions change so that it is neces sary every little while to have a new style gown if one Is to keep pace with the capricious modes. "The bridal princess gown Is a style which will be in fashion for a long time to come. One can wear It as long as the material lasts by mere ly changing the sleeves to meet tha requirements af the prevailing fash ion." Mnrringcnble Girls. The two beautiful daughters of an aged humorous writer who recently passed away were obedient to his commands never to marry while he lived. His aversion to matrimony was such that he caused them to de cline many fine offers. Conversing on his character the other day. the elder said, "Poor papa is dead at last; and now we will marry." "Well." said the younger. "I am for a rich husband, and John Barnwell shall be the man." "Wait, sister; let us not make a hasty choice; let us marry those whom the powers above have destined for us. for our marriages are registered in heaven's own book." "I'm sorry for that," replied the younger, "for papa is sure to tear out the leaf." New York Press. Working Women and the Ballot. "But if. both for their own sakes and for the good of the republic, wo men of property and women of edu cation should be enfranchised," writes .Tane Addams in the Woman's Home Companion, "far more Is the power of the ballot needed by the working woman, whose stake in the ountry is represented by her life, her health, her virtue and the safety and New Orleans Omelet. and fried in bacon fat or lard. When they are nearly tender enough half a small finely minced onion Is stirred in and cooked with them until they are quite tender. Then three or four well-beaten eggs, seasoned with salt and pepper, are tnrned over the potatoes and spread evenly. When the under side Is done, a plate is put over the pan, the omelet is turned out bottom upward and slipped into the pan for the other side to brown. American Home Monthly. 1 9 iappiness of her children. The bal lot is not demanded for her because she is good or wise, or because she will make no mistakes in Its use. Neither goodness nor wisdem is the role possession of one class, and free dom from mistakes is the privilege of none. Working women need the ballot .because they must possess some control over the conditions of their lives and those of their chil dren; and, in this twentieth century worlJ, the ballot box offer, the only channel through which they can give expression to such legitimate con trol." Are You Heady For Your Children? "Are the great majority of men and women ready for their children when these come to them?" asks Christine Terhune Kerrick, In the Woman's Home Companion. "Would you commit to the care of the average parents an important enterprise In which you were especially Interested, and to which they had given no more study than they have to parenthood, secure that right feeling and good will would Insure an ultimate happy result? "In spite of the apparent light heartedneBS with which the responsi bility Is usually assumed, It is not an easy thing to be a parent, to All this profession Into which men and wom en rush without a tithe of the thought and preparation they would bestow upon a calling of infinitely less Im portance. To take charge of the bod ily welfare of a little child is no such trifling matter that a needleBB girl with no knowledge of life forces, of hygiene, of dietetics or of ordinary sanitation should assume it as lightly as she would the care of a new doll. Wore perilous even than this are the Issues involved in the drill of a child In habits of obedience by a woman without self-discipline. In self-control by a woman who does not know her self. In knowledge by one who is her self an Infant in her perception of all that underlies life and death, mor tality and Immortality." An Autograph Cook Book. .. A gift suitable to any tlmo of the year, original, home made, one that will bring Joy to any housewife's heart. Is described In the .Roman's Home Companion.. Have you ever thought of making an autograph cook book? It only requires a little care and patience to have a cook book filled full of original recipes of dishes fit for a king. First make a list of your Intimate friends. Those Doted for taalr good cooking and housewifely virtues, of course, should head the list. Write to each of them a personal note, ask ing them to write out and send to you their favorite recipe. In each note enclose a stamped envelope with a sheet of paper of uniform size, for the written recipe. Then wait. Presently In will come wrole flocks of white envelopes, each enclosing the reclps which is the particular pride of the particular housewifa who do nates It. And before long what a col lection you will have! When all the names have been accounted for, you must get to work and bind the sheets into a book. Vellum makes -a good cover, and If a more serviceable one is desired, ooze leather, purchased at a leather shop, may be used. Red leather, lettered In gold or black, looks well, and the initials of the lucky recipient should be added in one corner. Just see wha. delight this gift will bring, and you will, I am sure, feel amply repaid. The Summer Fashion. - Grace Margaret Gould, the dress expert, says In Woman's Home Com panion: . ; . "There are two distinct types of dress this summer, both emphasizing the straight up-and-down effect. One Is the tailored coat suit showing in many Instances a cutaway coat, which gives the hlpless effect, and a skirt comparatively narrow at the bottom that is, it is made without the sud den flare that the tailored skirt used to have. "The other type of dress Is the cut-in-one gown, and great will be its fa vor throughout the summer. In the form of .the new princess jumper this cut-in-one dress is a most practical gown to own.' It can fasten in the front quite as easily as the back, and it Is a model equally good for silk or linen. "This style dress Is always cut out at the neck, and Is generally sleeve less, to show the gulmpe, or trimmed Just sufficiently over the shoulders to give a modified large armhole effect, Or It may be mad?, as aflhumber of the imported models are, so that it has much the effect of a polonaise cut out at the neck, but having a sleeve which Is cut in one with the bodice. "Now, of course, there are many variations of these two basic ideas in dress, but whatever the fashionable model this summer, it Is sure to be Two potatoes are peeled, sliced 3imple in design, lacking entirely an exaggeration In form. "Perhaps this idea is better shown in the sleeve than anywhere else, which has diminished in a pronounced way In size within the past six months, and now in most cases fol lows very closely the outline of the arm.1 When Toung Men Call. How often a girl says, "I don't ask my friends to the nouse because mv mother sits in the parlor and talks the whole evening. I go over to my girl friend's house and we have Jolly good times. Her mother lets us go ahead and have fun Just so we don't keep the house awake with our racket" The girl's mother can't understand why It is that her daughter won't stay at nome. sue reasons to herself that it is her duty to see her daughter's friends, to aDDrove or disannrova them; or else she thinks her daugh ter must be ashamed of her for not wanting her around. One feels like saying to all such mothers. Give your srlrls the rleht to entertain their friends In their own way. Rest assured, if the company they seek would not be such as yon approve, they would not invite them to the bouse. If your daughter calls you Into the parlor to Introduce her friends, which sha. should always do, stay and talk a few minutes: make your mental opinion of tho callers which you can tell to her afterward. If you give your oninion in the right way it will probably be regard- ea, out do not monopolize the even ing. Her friends may respect and like you, but they are not calling on you. Do not force her to have "iollv times" In ather houses. Do not keep all the men from calling by your continual and watchful presence. No one will reeret It mora than you when she is left without callers ana invitations, while the girls she goes with are ud to their eari In good times. New York Times. Food For Man and Beast. Lady (after tendering a shilling for fare) "And here are two buns you can have, my man." Cabby -Thank you kindly, lady. I suppose you- fion't 'appen to 'ave a wisp of 'ay for the 'nrae?" Cassell's Saturday Journal, A Montreal grUn merchant recent ly sent an Inquiry to London by the wireless systeU, and received an an swer la leu than two hours. THE ART OF GETTING V INTO THE NEWSPAPERS The Short Cut to Publicity Revealed iy One Who Knows Every Road and By-Path. The following clever and readable article on the subject uppermost in every newspaper man's mind, "adver tising," is by Victor Smith, the "On the Tip of the Tongue" man of the New York Press: Advertise, " Dear Tip What is the short cut to publicity? 1 have been striving In vain to get into the newspapers these seven years. What can 1 do? Hackensack. PUBLICITY. Btrlve your hardest NOT to get in. Steal a million.' Rob another fellow of his wife. Spring a sensational di vorce. Beat the bank at Monte Carlo. But tho best plan of all is to adver tise. 1 am In favor of the pay-as-you-enter propoBltlou. Commercial houses, theatres, circuses, etc., pay their way; why should not society and the pro fessions do likewise? The general press is under no obligation to you. Address the business office at so much a line, and you- can obtain all the publicity you require. Some newspapers are not profitable because they GIVE AWAY vast quantities of space in free advertising, or puffs, to the undeserving. The time is close at hand when everybody and every Institution will have to "pony up." The Klernnl Kquirnlent, Every commercial business exacts the eternal equivalent In the granting of favors. Of no other institution in the world is so much exacted free as of the newspaper. It Is a kind word here, a kind wqrd yonder, a puff here and a puff there. For the price of ONE cent a man expects, aye, even demands, space worth hundreds of dollars. But where Is our quid pro quo? Theclrculation is not increased. We are giving something for noth ing. Once l:i a while Tip's column has a paragraph about an interesting man. It Is good reading for all who take Tho Press; and the interesting man, being deeply Interested, buys 100 or BOO copies and scatters them broadcast to Interested people.- What does it amount to? Five hundred copies cost $3 nt retail; so there Is an outlay of $5 for $500 worth of advertising- Shucks! The business is too one-sided. It isn't fair. Complinirutnrit-e. Those not in the newspaper busi ness Imagine that the editor, mana ger, all the subs and every reporter and office boy, the compositors and even the scrubwomen go about loaded with railroad passes, theatre tickets, boxes at tho circus, police cards, steamboat compllmcntarles, telegraph and telephone franks, free use of the malls, race track badges, etc., and their friends on the outside are even Insistent upon obtaining these privil eges. . As a matter of fact, there are but few compllmentaries of this char acter flying about, and all are paid for by the eternal equivalent, the small matter of advertising. A Press man, for instance, sent to Chicago, may ride on a pass, but that pass has been paid for in advertising. Before the anti-pass law was enforced my life was saddened by my inability to meet the demands of friends for free transportation. Some had no deli cacy about asking for passes to San Francisco. .Now it Is easy to say: "You know the law; no more free passes." As It is Done, No gentleman of the staff Is sup posed to seek transportation from any railroad, steamboat or steamship company, from any submarine, air ship or automobile company, on bis own recognizement. It he wants to go to Carlsbad, or the heart of Africa, to the North Pole or to the antipodes, to Mars or to the bowels of the earth, be is supposed to mention it to the business manager, who, it he chooses, refers it to the highest authority. Of course there are department heads who control certain and sundry priv ileges of the pass evil, such as the drama editor, the music editor, the sporting editor, etc. If I want a free pass for a theatre 1 may ask the dra ma editor, and he may (If he feels in the vein) send me a "pasteboard," but it is a quid pro quo. If I want to go to the circus I must ask the circus editor. Do I want to go to the race track? The sporting editor is the man to snuggle up to. - Etc. " Newspapers Overburdened. The newspaper gives as a rule about twenty to one as its "equivalent." No other institution on earth could af ford to do this and live. The news paper is the maker of all men and all corporations, the supporter of all. the adviser of all. Mind you, 1 do not say CREATOR. Without its free pub licity most of the men in political nud commercial life to-day would be In their graves. We are really too gen erous. The chief trouble is we do not draw tight enough the little line between news and notoriety." The theatres get an awful lot of free ad vertising because a vast majority of tho people patronize the drama and demand good report of it. So of the opera. So of horse racing. Etc. Just an Illustration. The man who has a can of lard to sell falls to understand why he does; not get a column or two a day of , beautiful description for his ten-line agate ad., when a racing association, with the same slw ad., commands so great an amount of space. He over looks the fact that only a few' persons may be interested In a can of la,rd, while tens of thousands are deeply concerned in racing. The theatrical equivalent cannot be estimated. A hundred thousand people, 600,000, 1,000,000, may be anxiously waiting Tuesday morning for a critique on Mart Lankershlne's new play of "The Tschuern o' di Stearxwler." The ad vertisement of the drama may amount to $20, but that cuts no ice with the newspaper. 'It does Its duty by allot ting as much space to the perform ance as the critic thinks 4he play la entitled to. Baseball. Baseball gets 1000 times Its "equivalent." Why? Because it is an amusement for vast multitudes of readers. The advertising of the game amounts practically to nothing, that is, from a buBlness office view. "No money in It." But no paper could af ford to cut out Its baseball reports. The Press baseball articles are the best, and they cost us a great deal of money. Hunting and Fishing. No other paper in New York is so much read by fishermen and hunters as The Press. Here again the "equiv alent" is altogether on our side. We give 100 times aB much as we get out of it, but the Rod and Gun column la expected dally by a multitude of sportsmen, and to stop it would de stroy a prominent feature which pleases many who neither fish nor shoot. Wall Street. Wall Street receives an overabund ance of valuable space, you may say. The Stock Exchange forbids advertis ing. More's the pity. ' In a little while, however, nil this will be changed through the publicity now being thrust upon it. Thirty years ago a physician who advertised was frowned upon as a quack. To-day some of tho leading practitioners in troduce themselves to the public by means of printers' ink. Stock Ex change firms will have to advertise or go out of business. The day of the "high-horse" is past. I expect to see the time when all price quotations shall be paid for, and at big rates. Henry Clews made a great fortune in the Street. He i3 a firm believer In advertising, and his card has been in the papers for many years. He Is tho best known broker In the world. WHY HINDOOS WORSHIP SIVA. Romantio Legend Tells Haw the East Indian Deity Came, to Bless a Poor Unlucky Hunter Hindoos young and old solemnly observed the fast of the Sivarathrl, on a recent Sunday, and gladly en dured Its deprivations. For twenty four hours no religious Hindoo took a morsel of food nor slept a moment, but constantly prayed the god Siva to grant his wish and relieve his suf ferings or unhapplness. The Sivarathrl rests on a legend that comes from the misty past. A penniless hunter went out one morn ing, but when night fell only a puny bird had rewarded his long day's bunt. Weary and fearing ferocious beasts, the hunter took refuge in a bale tree for the night, and hung the "game" on a twig. It so happened that Siva, in the course of his accustomed nocturnal wanderings, seated himself under the bale tree. The wind was blowlug freshly, and leaves and the water they held from a shower fell on the god. This libation and the bird, pre sumably an offering, made Siva be lieve that some one In the tree was worshiping him at that late hour. Pleased, the god invited the person so devout to descend. The hunter climbed down and told of his Bor row and needs. Siva gave him many blessings and he lived happily to a ripe old age. So, now, be who fasts and, sleepless, worships Siva at night, will be blessed and enjoy eternal bliss. Simla (India) Correspondence of the New York World. A llemnrknble Cave. The President has signed a procla mation creating the Jewel Cave Na tional Monument within the Black Hills National Forest, South Dakota. This remarkable cave, thirteen miles west and south of Custer, the county seat of Custer County, in a limestone formation, is believed by geologists to be an extinct geyser channel. The national monument will embrace an area of 1280 acres. This cave, which was explored as late as 1900, has been found to consist of a series of chambers connected Dy narrow pas sages with numerous galleries, the walls of which are incrusted with a magnificent layer of calclte crystal. The opening of the cave is situated in Hell Canyon, the walls of which are high and precipitous. The surface of the country in which the cave Is lo cated consists of a high rolling lime stone plateau, about 6000 feet above sea level. The area Is almost entirely covered by a forest of bull pine, a considerable portion of which Is mer chantable, while tbe remainder con sists of a vigorous young growth. The Jewel Care National Monument will now be given permanent protection by virtue of the act of June 8, 190G, which provides that objects of scien tific interest may be declared national monuments, if such action is deemed necessary for their preservation and protection. Science. In London there is one clergyman to every 2600 persons. It was 230 years ago that the So ciety of Friends founded its church in Lynn, Mass. Printing presses are being Import ed by the officials in Lbassa, and a Tibetan newspaper Is to be issued. Over 7000 persons were assisted In some way by tbe Travelers' Aid Boclety of New York during 1907. Much of the tobacco grown In East ern Bengal' is marketed in Calcutta, whence it la shipped to Burma, where It is manufactured into cheroots. Experts have decided that the fa mous St. Paul's Cathedral, in London, is safe so long as thebulldings around it are not disturbed, and thus ends a long controversy. The Bishop of London, who made such a notable visit to this country in September, Is now planning to tour Russia next year and visit some chap laincies in that country. About the first ship subsidy ever known was that given by Ferdinand and Isabella of Spain to Columbus when he sailed west for the ludies and found America. Fishes have no eyelids and necessa rily sleep with their eyes open; they swallow their food whole, having no dental machinery. Frogs, toads and serpents never take food except that which they are certain is alive. i The narrowest building in the world, three stories high, on a plot twenty-six Inches wide, has been con structed on Centre street, Reno, Nev., by H. C. Gordon, a shoemaker, who leased the ground from a bank. He sleeps on the top floor, bas his nar row bench or tbe second, and bis show windows and -entrance on tbe first. When, in days gone by, one hon ored in the church died it was cus tomary to burn sweet smelling in cense in the deathroom as a token that the memory of the deceased was grateful to God and man. As early as the time of Homer it was custom ary to wash the bodies of the more Illustrious dead with rose water, and in Egypt the practice also obtained from an early date. WEAK FATHERS HAVE SONS. Wenk Mothers nave Daughters New Gorman Theory of Sex Determination, Dr. Romme, following up Profes sor Schenck's researches regarding Bex, bas reached the conclusion that a boy is born when the father is the weaker of the parents and a girl when the mother is tbe weaker. - He con tends that It is a law of nature that the child resembles the weaker par ent. He points out that in all countries 105 or 106 girls are born to 100 boys. This proportion is mathemati cally regular except only after a great war. Thus among barbarous races in Africa and Oceania, which are" Vonsfantiy warring, the births show an overwhelming preponder ance of boys. Dr. Romme contends that this proves bis law, as the best and strongest men are sent to fight and get killed while the weakest re main at home and survive. Again, when an old man marries a young woman their progeny are most often boys . nd vice versa. Dr. Romme asserts there are practically no instances where the strength of both parents is equal. Worry, a passing illness or mental depression, is enough to turn the scale ana cause the temporary, weakness of one or the other. He cites the case of the Kaiser, who had five sons in succession, and the Czar, who had four daughters. New York Sun. Want the Laws Published. At a recent meeting of the Connty Association at La Salle, 111., tbe sub ject of requiring the publication of the session laws of the State was ably discussed In an address by President Terry Simmons, of the Marseilles Plalndealer. Mr. Simmons advanced the passing of a resolution looking to the enactment of a publication of the laws in manner similar to that by toe State of Wisconsin, to submit that in dorsement to the Illinois Press Asso ciation for Its approval and favorable action, then have the combined ener gies and power of the press of the State directed toward securing the enactment of a publication law and to continue it In force. The resolu tion was adopted. A Subtle Difference. Mrs. Blank, wife or a prominent minister near Boston, had in ber em ploy a recently engaged colored cook as black as the proverbial ace of spades. One day Mrs. Blank said to her: "Matilda, I wish that you would have oatmeal quite often for break fast. My husband is very fond of It. He Is Scotch, and you know that the Scotch eat a great deal of oatmeal." "Oh, he's Scotch, is he?" said Ma tilda. "Well, now,' do you know, I was thlnkln' ail along dat he wasn't des like us." Woman's Home Com panion. . BUSINESS CARDS. nefFv' wwvnn JTJ8TICE OF Tint PEA OK, Pension Attorney and Real.Estate Arms. JJAYMOND E. BRQWN, attorney at law, Bbookvillb, Pa. rj. m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real estate agent, patent secured, lections made promptly. Utile In Bynal ull(Mng, Ueynoldsvllle, Pa. gMITH M. MoCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary p--'. '.estate agent. Ooli lections will r63.-d lhpt attention. OMea n the Keynolduvllle "Madwara Oo. bulldlaa, Ualn street Beynoldsvitla, Pa, Da B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist In tbe Hoover bulldlai Ualn street. Gentleness In operating. DR. I I MEANS, DENTIST; Office on second floor of tbe Flr bank building, Main street. DR. K. DeVEHE kino, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate) ballsl Ing, Main street, KeynoldsvUle, Pa. HENRY PRIEStER UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeral cars. Mala street, ReynoldsvUle, Pa. D. H, YOUNG, ' ARCHITECT Corner Grant and Flfta its., BayaolcBw vUle, Pa. MARKETS. PITT8BURO. Wheat No. I red .'. t 8 m Hye No. 2 Corn No 2 yellow, enr M St . No. 8 yellow, shelled 79 80 Mixed ear 77 7 Oats No. 8 white 57 M No. 8 white M til Plour Winter patent 6 IS 5 80 Fancy straight winters Bay No. 1 Timothy 18 OT 19 51 Clover No. 1 14 II SO Feed No. t white mid. ton WOO ism Brown middlings 00 7 m Bran, bulk 8H 87 011 Btraw Wheat ' IW Oat 861 DM Dairy Products. Batter Elgin creamery. f 88 Ohio creamery 80 81 Fancy country roll 17 is Cbeose Ohio, new 11 17 New York, new v 1 17 Poultry, Etc. Rons per lb S 7 II Chickens driwsed H H Eggs fa. and Ohio, fresh 17 18 Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoes Fancy whlto per bu.... M Cabboge per ton 11' I 8 Onions per barrel IW (09 BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent f n S SI Wheat No. 8 red 10 Corn MUsd 71 71 F.gga 17 W Butter Ohio creamery Si 84 PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent f 3 ') 75 Wheat-No. 8 red 1 Corn No. 2 mixed H Oats No. 8 white 54 Butter Creamory Kggs Pennsylvania firsts 17 18 NEW YORK. Flour Patents 4 m n Wheat No. 8 red 1 Corn-No. 8 JJ Oats No. 8 white Butter -Creamery 8J "5 Uggs Utate and Pennsylvania.... 17 a I , LIVE STOCK. Union StociTVards, Pittsburg. Cattle. Kxtra. MM to I.W) Ibi I 7 OT 7 I'rlme, 1,W to l.WJ lb SO 8 71 Good, 1,W to l.WJ lbs l' M Tidy. 1,000 to 1,150 lbs 6 GO S 00 Common, 700 to 8)) lbs 0 Oxen 4 85 " Bui:s 8 W 10 Cows 8 00 I 8 1 Heifers, 700 to L10). 100 S li Piesa Cows and Springers 11 (10 i Hogs. ., .1 Prlmehenvy , I 8 31 8 41 Prime medium weight i It) Beat heavy Yorknri 6 ti 6 44 Good light Yorkers 6 M 71 Pigs 6 8) 40 Honghs 4 7 a ) Stags S ) 4 01 Sheep. Prime wethers, slipped. ...I 4 BO 4 65 Good mixed 4 25 4 4 Kalr mixed ewos and wether 8 7i 4 19 Culls and common 0) til Lambs 7 00 1891 Calves. Veal calves 5 0) 7 Heavy and thin calve-. u0 IN BOILED INDIAN rTOESNO. Wis sifted Indian meal with threw prrrts of scalding hot milfc. If you have no milk, water may te substi tuted. Stir In three large tablespoon fu! (A sugar or molasses, . two of wheat flour, half a spoonful of ginger or. two tablespoonfuls of cinnamon, and one of salt Two or three eggs, a little melted buttr or chopped snet Improve the pudding, but these are not essential. Do not have the pudr rthrg tam, which should be well flour ed inside, much more than half full of tho batter, as It require consider able room In which to swell. It will be good when boiled three hours, but is better for six hours' boiling. It on be partly boiled the day before It ts to be served, but should not re main in the water unless boiling. Serve with butter and sugar or mol iwees. This is a good dessert to go with a boiled dinner. Washington ta?. Trial By. Newspaper. The publisher, a commercial fellow, was for economy. "Seems to me five columts a day Wight to be enough for that murder trial," he whined. But the editor, a man of Ideals, was sturdily for the belter part "Let Justice be ' done," bo cried, "though the price of print paper goes) up!"--"rom Tuck. ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers