HOPEFUL FLOWER MAIDS Queen Alexandra attended a Man sion House fete In London. One of the diminutive flower mnld ens was both pretty and plump, and, when her majesty stopped for an In stant to smile down upon her, what HiA nhA An tint nut nn her vm month for a kiss, which she received. "Molly!" gasped her astounded mother, after the distinguished visit or nnu passeu uu, nuw uuuiu yuu I Molly gave good reason. "I fought," said she, "it ud be interest In to tell my grandchlllern." Har per's Weekly. ; IP WOMEN WOULD REALIZE. It Is said that a bad tempered wo man can cause more actual unpleas antness tor the rest of humanity than all the other disagreeable features one finds In life, and the unlucky pos sessor of an uncontrollable temper should remedy tho fault as soon as possible. The woman who can control her self under the most trying circum stances Is the woman who holds the strongest power over her fallow crea - tares. No matter how beautiful and clev er and fascinating the bad tempered woman may be, her power Is Infinites imal compared with that of her ami able sister. And amiability Is not only power, It is mental progression and health, nnu UHiJniuetjs, uuu lung me lu une s self and .to one's friends and family. ' "Pittsburg Dispatch. A MODEL ARM. Anna Haverland, who died recent ly near Dresden, was a well known tragedienne, possessed of a fine, well proportioned figure, a handsome face, large eyes full of expression and a voice clear, sonorous and flexible. But It was her arm and its perfect shape that won for her historical and artistic interest, for It was the model for the Imposing figure of Germanla In the Niederwald, who holds In her right hand the German Imperial Crown, while her left leans on a sword. This monunvnt, sayB a Ger man correspondent, 1b the work of 05 ml Queen's Aspic Put three-quarters of a pint of aspic jelly Into a basin and add three tablespoonfuls of tomato catsup and a quarter of a pint of stiff mayonnaise sauce. Al low this mixture to set in a round mold. Slice some toma toes, an equal quantity of peeled cucumber and about half the quantity of sliced cold potatees which have been pre viously boiled. Dress with oil and vinegar and arrange around the cold aspic. Prof. Schilling, and It was a long time before be could find an arm worthy of becoming the model of that famous figure. One evening he was seated at the Court Theatre, where Anna Haverland was playing "Thus selda." Scarcely had the actress raised her arm with an Imperious gesture than Schilling, starting to his feet with a half suppressed ejacula tion, rushed from his box to the stage and as the curtain fell appeared be fore her with a beaming face. Hers was the long looked for arm that was to bear the German Crown and grace the statue of Germanla. Fortunate 'Anna! Beyond her little world she ,was unknown till the sculptor Immor talized her arm. It is almost as great a distinction as having no arms, like the Venus of Milo. But stay! Perhaps those lost arms are now on Germanla. Boston Herald. I THE NEW WOMAN IN CANADA. ' "Woman In the Dominion of Can ada," said Lady Laurier, wife of the Liberal leader, "occupies the middle ground between the ultra claims of the United States and the conserva tism of the mother countries. Al though they are admitted freely to hart in all the advantages of the higher education, there Is but one woman registered as a practicing lawyer In all of Canada. There are less than six medical practitioners, and the custom which prevails In some denominations In the United States and the older world of calling women to the pulpit never has been followed in the Dominion. The Civil Service is open to women, but so far they have applied only for subordi nate positions. Canada takes special pride in her successful women farm ers. Last year 15,000 women took complete charge of farms, and nearly all made them paying propositions. Fruit farms appeal strongly to Can adian women, and they are among the most successful growers of the world. There is an apple farm near Montreal owned by three girls under twenty, all still completing their ed ucation. Last year they picked and packed with their own hands 2200 barrels of apples. In the domain of religion, where women always shine, Canadians have not lagged. Two of the most successful and energetic or ders of the Catholic church were founded by French Canadian wom en. - Mile. D'Youvllle founded the Grey Nuns in 1747, and Mme. Game lin the Sisters of Providence. Mile. Mance was the foundress of the great Hospital Hotel Dleu of Montreal, and her sisters afterward assumed charge of the lepers of New Brunswick. "Canadian women still retain the primitive love of borne, and no mod ern tendency can shake their belief that the most valuable work lies along the lines of being a good wife and mother, and keeping the home stead In Immaculate order. Go through the rural districts and look through the open ,oor of cottages, 11. with their thatched roots and half acre patch of garden. There will be seen the genuine Canadian life, and the homes of the rich are only the apothests of the humble ones. The floor Is yellow with many scrubblngs, the stove Is bright as new tin, and the best bed stands in stiff solemnity In frilled curtains and covers. House- cleaning makes up the epochs of life, and every feast Christmas, Easter, the family birthdays and familiar fes tlvals are always preceded by a gen eral sweeping, dusting and scrubbing. It still Is fashionable In Canada, be you rich or poor, plain or aristocratic, to be known in your commuuity as a fine housekeeper." New York Press. WHAT ABOUT OUR GRANDMAS? Considerable pulpit energy Is being wasted In consideration of the femi nine style of dressing, and the hurt ling of charges that it is indecent. The special grievance seems to lie In the waist known as "peek-a-boo" and In the elbow sleeves favored In warm weather. These styles promote comfort, and therefore seem to con cern alone the persons adopting them. The habit of attending to one's own business is so excellent that its wider prevalence ought to be encour aged. If these articles of wear are offensive to the unco guid what pangs would have torn them had they come Into contact with the gowns of their sainted grandmothers! The grandmothers garbed them' selves In a manner exposing to the sunlight and the general view their shoulders, arms and chests. Over part of this exhibit they draped a scarf or a filmy pretext of lace. They also displayed their feet and ankles absolutely without a blush, ac cepting as a fact the theory that the existence of the feet and ankles had been known and would be tolerated. Thus arrayed the belles of tho six ties, reviving a fashion of a genera- tion before, paraded the streets in the afternoon. Perhaps they were railed at for their temerity, but If so, they paid no heed, and the reformers of the day accomplished no more than the re formers of the present are apt to do, this being a total of nothing. When men took to the shirtwaist the change was radical, but the men found It comfortable. The women had not the Impertinence to rebuke them. To let the tastes of the women find unhampered expression would be only fair play, so long as this does not interfere with public rights. The out cry against the gigantic hat Is on a different basis, for this hat Is a nuisance. Philadelphia Ledger. Plaids are much worn and form some of the smartest suits. Long sleeves are invariable with the new tailored shirt waists. . "Fruity brownish" tones Is a term used to describe the new reds. Embroidery figures on stockings for afternoon and evening wear only. A spreading hat of thick grey beav er Is trimmed with three velvet heart ed roses. Shoes with patent leather vamps and cloth tops will figure prominently this winter. Button boots as they are under stood are considered the smarter for street wear. A knot Of tulle matching that at the throat Is used to tie the flowers worn at the belt. The fichu effect is employed exten sively In the development of the back of the elaborate empire gowns. Various shades of brown and green hose are being shown for wear with heavy fall tan oxford ties. New fancy plaids include such combinations as browns and greens, deep peacock blues and slaty grays. Turbans range in size from medti um to very large. The box shapes with protruding crowns are most in favor. Braid, both plain and In fancy weaves, will be much used for trim ming. Touches of black satin, too. will be in favor. The dog collar of satin or narrow ribbon is worn over the collar of the lingerie waist and li a little newer than that of beads. : While all other Colors come and go, the navy blue suit of tailored fin ish remains as a standard, and the girl who wears It nearly always looks well dressed. Many shirt waist sleeves are but toned from shoulder to waist not al together for ornamental purposes, but largely because the buttons make the long sleevo much easier of ad justment North and South America have 11,- 063,000 Germans or German-speak ing people. New Tork City. Simula liiuo blouses such as this one are much worn by young girls, both with skirts to match and as separate blouses. All the pretty soft silks and satins, crepe de chine and chiffon and materials of the sort are much In vogue for the Odd waists and for the gowns cash- mere, challis, voile and the like are to be extensively worn this season. This model has the great advantage of allowing a choice of the chemisette edged with banding or of a plainer waist with the tucks extended to the collar and made of one material throughout. The sleeves are dis tinctly novel and graceful and can be made with the long deep cuffs match ing the blouse of one material extend ing over the wrists or can be cut oft in three-quarter lengths, all new styles being popular for blouses of the sort. They are laid In tucks at the Inside edges and fall in graceful folds at the other. The waist Is made with a fitted lin ing, and itself consists of the front and the backs. It la laid In fine tucks, and when the chemisette is used it is cut out on Indicated lines. The sleeves are In one piece each, but arranged over fitted linings, made with upper and under portions, and these linings are faced to form deep cuffs. The quantity of material required for the sixteen-year size Is three and three-quarter yards twenty-one or twenty-four, two and a half yards thirty-two or two and one-quarter yards forty-four inches wide with seven-eighth yard of all-over lace and one and seven-eighth yards of band ing to make as illustrated. The New Stylish Short Cont. While the more stylish new models in coats are seven-eighths length, still the square and cutaway coats that reach nearly to the knees are in good style. Dusky nine. The new color that Is a good deal talked about with the designers Is known as dusky blue. It comes in moussellno, in suede, in cloth and in plumes. Torchon Lace. Many sets of underltnen made for the brides and debutantes of the com ing season are trimmed with real tor chon lace. This Is a durable, service able lace that should never have gone out of fashion. Misses' Five Gored Sktrt. The skirts that close at the front. In what Is known as coat style, are among the latest developments of fashion and are exceedingly smart In effect. They suit young girls admir ably well, and this one will be found available for the future as well as for present needs. In the Illustration it is made of Berge stitched and closed with buttons and buttonholes, and serge is favorite for the present and incoming seasons, but linen, pop lluette and the like are charming so made, and new skirts of the sort are quite likely to be in demand, while also all the heavier skirting and suit ing materials will be found admir able. The skirt Is cut on the new lines, and gives the fashionable slender ef fect to the figure, yet it has width enough at the lower edge to mean comfort In walking. It can be made with habit back or Inverted pleats as liked. There are five gores and the front gore is finished with a hem at Its left edge and buttoned over onto the side gore. The upper edge is at tached to a belt. When inverted pleats are used they are stitched flat for several Inches below the belt. For the habit back the skirt is cut off at the back edges and simply seamed. The quantity of material required for the sixteen-year size Is six yards twenty-four, five and a quarter yards thirty-two or three and a half yard.! forty-four Inches wide. Sleeves Match Bodice. One of the departures in the fash ion this season is the matching of the sleeve to the bodice Instead of to the yoke. This does not mean that the sleeve is of the same material as the waist, for it Is usually a trans parent fabric, but it matches In color. CORNSTALK PAPER SAID TO BE ASSURED Government Experts Announce Suc cess of Their Experiments to That End. Experiments conducted by chemists of the Bureaus of Forestry and of Plant Industry In the new laborator ies at Washington have demonstrated, It Is said, that paper can be made from cornstalks, by much the same process as that used In treating wood pulp, at a cost, when machinery has been perfected, of a little over half the cost of making It from wood pulp. The scientists feel sure that It Is ab solutely practical, the newly discov ered process having been subjected to every test. Samples of the cornstalK paper made by Dr. H. S. Bristo jnd his assistants were shown re' tly. It Is made in five grades Jlfferent color and texture. Th st grade Is of dark gray color s' leavy tex ture, resembling pare! .jnt. It is almost as tough as sheepskin and commercially might be used for many purposes. Another grade Is of a lighter gray of the same character. There are two shades of yellow and one of white. The white paper Is made from the hard outside shell of the cornstalk, and the yellow from the Inside, or pith. The yellow paper has a large fibre, and In many respects Is like the paper manufactured from rags and linen, soft and pliable, and might be utilized by newspapers. In making paper from cornstalks the scientists have used the "soda cooked" process, which Is acknowl edged by paper manufacturers to be the best means of making paper from wood pulp. The cornstalk pulp Is cooked for from two to two and a half hours; It takes from twelve to fourteen hours to cook wood pulp. Dr. Bristol says he has already made paper from cornstalks almost as cheaply as it can be made from wood pulp. It has taken fifty years to develop the present methods of making paper from wood pulp. Dr. Bristol believes that when proper machinery Is built and the farmers realize that a good revenue may be derived from the sale of cornstalks, paper will be manufactured from the new material at half the cost of wood pulp paper. With wood at $8 a cord, paper Is made from wood pulp at a cost of $13 a ton. Cornstalks can be bought for $5 a ton and the paper made with the present primitive machinery for $14 a ton. WISE WORDS. The proof of the bluffer Is In mak ing good. In giving good advice save a little for yourself. It doesn't pay to mortgage your opportunities. We all know a Bure cure for the other fellow's ills. To be perfectly happy a woman must also be envied. Wise is the man who wants no more than he can get. To be successful you must be a comer before you are a goner. A man may be all right in his way if he only keeps out of the way of other people. Beauty Isn't even skin deep. Lots of it rubs off. Many a man tries to ride a hobby that throws him. "Sound advice" is often all sound and nothing else. Tou don't have to go to a rink to see a lot of cheap skates. Don't brood over your troubles. Tou will only hatch out more. The eleventh commandment might very well be,. "Mind your own busi ness." It seems as though Borne men's characters are never formed until they are reformed. An egg has no more sense than a matinee girl. They both get mashed on cheap actors. The people who are most firmly convinced that money is the root of all evil are those who haven't any. A girl casts her bread upon the water In the hope that it will come back to her In the form of wedding cake. From "Musings of the Green wood Lake Philosopher," in the New York Times. Salving the Gladiator. The Gladiator salvage has been a somewhat long and tedious operation, due mainly to the troublesome tides and unpropltlous weather. However, the ship Is "up" at the moment of writing, and should before long now be seen In Portsmouth harbor. No absolute decision about refitting her seems to have been arrived at. She is a type of vessel now quite ob solete, as cruisers go; but for that very reason likely to be useful in a variety of ways. Obsolete ships can be risked where better ones cannot be. Engineer. Defiant Mlssouriiin. The editor of the News wants It understood that this "paper is no longer a country newspaper. With in six months we bare been twice threatened with suits If we don't crayfish, and those fellows have sent us intelligence about what they were going to do to our counternance when they saw us. We haven't back ped dled yet, and are proceeding on the theory that the other fellows went blind. Holtsville News. The gold production of the United States, in round figures, is 2,500,000 ounces a year, and of silver 60,000, 000 ounces. .NBFF JUSTICE OF THB PEACE, Pecelon Attorney and ReaUEatate Ateat. RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brookvillk, Pa. fj, M. MoDONALD, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Rb&I estate agent, patents secured, eol toctlods mud promptly. Utile In Syndicate btilditm, lieynolusllLe, Pa. gjtfrrr! m. mccreight, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate at ens. Oob lections will receive prompt attention. Oflftoe B the Beynoldsville Hardware Uo. building, lain treat Reynoldsvllle, Pa. Da B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist In the Bpovar bulldlaf Ham street Gentleness In operating. DR. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST; Office on second floor of the First Hatloaat bank building, Mala street. DR. R- DEVERE KINO, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate built tig, Main street, Reynoldsvllle, Pa. JJENRY PRIESTER UNDERTAKER. Black and white foneralcan. Hala street, RoynoTdsttile.Pa. LABOR WORLD. The unemployed question Is becom ing acute in Great Brltnln, New Zea-i land and West Australia. Trouble is brewing at Bluff (New Zealand) Colliery, where the miners have been notified of a slash In hew ing rates. The Melbourne (Australia) Timber Stackers' Union has scored a victory the recent strike having been settled in Its favor. President Roosevelt gave a dinner at the White House for a number of personal friends closely identified with the labor movement. Boston (Mass.) Sheet Metal Work- ers' Union and the employers have reJ newed for another year the $3.60 eight-hour day agreement. In order to encourage thrift among Its employes the Northeastern Rail way Company, England, some years ago established a savings bank. In Colombia, South America, half the miners are women. In hydraulic mining they work up to their waists In water side by side with the men. The Federated Butchers' Union of Brisbane, Australia, has empowered Its executive to make application for a wages board to deal with the whole of the meat Industry. Eighty Japanese students are em ployed in the Glasgow (Scotland) shipbuilding yards, studying the trade. Their expenses are entirely defrayed by the Japanese Govern ment. As the result of a vigorous organ izing campaign conducted In New York and near-by cities, more than 6000 new members have joined the International Laborers and Hodcar riers' Union. The Federation of Labor, In con vention at Denver, rejected a recom mendation of a committee that ad vised that it was the duty of Organ ized labor to disobey injunctions and go to jail if necessary. SPORTING BREVITIES. ' v The Cincinnati baseball nine lost to Almendares, In Cuba, by a score of S to 1. Larchmont Yacht Club defeated Manhasset Y. C. five in trap shoot ing match. Kinstress, 2.0914, outtrotted Inva der, 2.10, in a brush on the Harlem River Speedway. The auto-aero committee of the Auto Club of France has offered a prize for aviation of $40,000. The competition will be held next' year. Michigan's once great scoring ma chine had a heavy tumble against the Michigan "Aggies." A 0 0 score was a long drop from 46 0 of 1907. The biggest score of the football season was made by Berwick Acad emy against Kennebunk H. 3., at South Berwick, Me. The tally was 770. De Palma, of the Italian Fiat team, mads the best time in practice for the automobile race In Savannah, cover ing the circuit at the rate of more than seventy miles an hour. Athletes of the Holy CroRs Lyceum finished first and second in the annual open handicap cross country run of the Mohawk Athletic Club, of New York, In which 142 runners competed. Norman Brooker and A. F. Wild ing, Australians, defeated Beals C. Wright and F. B. Alexander, Ameri cans, in the final round of the Victor ian lawn tennis tournament at Mel bourne. 4 Justo, with a three-year-old trot ting record of 2. 10, was purchased at the Old Glory sale in Madison Square Garden, New York, for $8500 by C. G. Gunther, of the Stony Ford Farm, N. Y. The New York Appellate Division unanimously upheld the decision of Justice Bischoff releasing Mllville Collins, who had been arrested for making a wager on a race at the Gravesend meeting. A SPLIT TABLE LEAF. A table that is just the right size for the number of guests to be en tertained Is much better than one that is too large. Often the sdJition of a leak makes the table out of pro portion. One Ingenious housekeeper has sim plified this problem by having one 'of her leaves split In half for occasions when only slightly more elbow room la desirable. New York Press. Tn Madagascar there Is a natural fortress with precipitous walls 1,000 feet high. The only means of access la a subterranean passage.