cmtDsj. E. NEFF mvoma Queen IIus Auto Crnzc. Queen Helena of Italy baa taken the keenest Interest In motoring ever since its earnest days. She and her husband possess Ave beautiful cars, and the Queen not only drives, but also has had lessons in the working of motor machinery, and could, at a pinch, effect repairs with her own very capable hands. Indianapolis News. Does Not Wear Algret".. Queen Alexandra has iRsued a pub lic statement to the effect that she does not wear dlgrets, and this, of course, Is intended as a rebuke to a cruel and horrible practice. The offi cial statement means something more i even than that. It means that no lady can venture Into the Queen's presence with these feathers upon her head, and It means thnt the algret Is stain pe J as unfashionable throughout every rank in society. Royalty hns Its undoubted disadvantages, but something may be written also upon the other side of the slate. The power to make cruelty unfashionable Is one to be envied, and every country would be the better for an Influence that is no less real because It has no coercive laws to back it. Argonaut. Inspiring nnd Otherwise. "Isn't It an inspiring book?" ex claimed the enthusiastic woman. ' "Oh, yes," admitted the' other, wearily. "Many things are inspiring. When I see a good play or read of heroic characters, or the organist plays something from Beethoven's mass In D, I feel that life Is grand. I am filled with zenl and eager for a chance to prove my noble, elevated point of view. "Then I am called up on the tele phone by some stranger who asks me If I will please go up to the top floor and ask Mrs. Blank to come to the telephone Mrs. Dlank being a per son I do not know and to whom I am Indebted for nothing and the broth erhood of man suddenly takes on a pale, cold, blue tinge that doesn't in terest me in the least. I wonder why It Is?" New York Press. With nnd Without', Curves. "What's the use," exclaimed the tall, handsome woman, mournfully, "of having a fine figure like mine! as j o M ees c 1 CD a S3 a C3 Doughnuts. To four cups pastry Hour (once sifted) add one and one-balf teaspoons salt, one and three-fourths tea spoons soda, one and three-fourths teaspoons cream of tartar and one-half teaspoon grated nutmeg. Work In one-half tablespoon butter, using the tips of the fingers; then add one cup sugar, one cup sour milk and one egg well beaten. Mix thoroughly, and toss on a board thickly dredged with flour. Knead slightly, and roll to one-fourth Inch in thick ness. Shape with a doughnut cutter, fry in deep fat until browned on both sides; drain on brown paper; dust with powdered sugar. "Now, there's Mrs. Blank, for in stance. She is so thin and lank that Ell comparisons fall. Of course she looks perfectly stunning In the new nipless gowns, while I well, It's sim ply impossible for me to be com pressed within one of them. I look a fright, to say nothing of the pun ishment to my vanity of having to try to hide all my symmetrical curves- and then not succeeding. When prin cess gowns of closest fit were all the rage, Mrs. Blank had Just as many turves as I have. Ob, no, my dear I don't know where she got them. I am not Mrs. Blank's dressmaker por her tailor. I only know she had them." New York Press. "Backbone" Superfluous, ' "The worst thing about having no backbone," said the woman who had been born without that supposedly In dispensable member, "is trying to get one. It Is a perfectly useless agony, too, because if nature hasn't given you a backbone, you can't get It by any other means. It you once recog nize this fact and submit to your lim itations you'll find that you can get on fairly well without a backbone, nd when you realize how often the thing that passes tor determination is a mere disregard for or inability to comprehend other people's rights and feelings, you can hear up under the contempt commonly meted out to the 'spineless.' "A backbone is not nearly so nec essary as people Imagine, and very often one gets on a great deal better without it. If you haven't any back bone, you won't be tempted to butt your head against irresistible forces IWe are most of us helpless victims In the hands of fate, and ordinarily we might as well let ourselves 'drift as try to mold circumstances to our will. The drifting may be a mistake, to be sure, but pulling against the current may be a mistake equally, and the first Is easier.' "It I can't decide, I do nothing, when that is possible, and let events shape themselves as they will, and If I must do something I do what I like best or dislike least, as the case may be. My own inclinations are the most reliable guides I have ever found, and I wish that I had earlier learned to rate them at their proper value. The powers that presided over my early education contrived to Inoculate me with the idea that inclinations exist, as Herbert Spencer says, 'not for our guidance, but solely to mislead us,' and it took me a long time to learn an that when I went against them I was certain to be wrong, and Bometlmes disastrously and fatally wrong. "Another thing I do Is to lean shamelessly on any one I have found capable of supporting my weight. That, of course, has to be done with discretion, because It Is painful to lean on the wrong person, but when you have found a Btaff that you can rely on It Is foolish not to use It. The strong like to exorcise their strength, and It must be pleasanter for your friends to give you the benefit of their superior wisdom than to sea you come to grief. "It is also possible to avoid cir cumstances that call for decision. If you can't make up your mind quickly you don't need to drive a motor cur or steer a boat. Leave that to other people, and let who will sneer at your Incorrmetence nnd lack of courage." New York Tribune. Partiality Toward Sons. The partiality which mothers are supposed to show to their sons and which some mothers certainly do Bhow may do little harm In the ear lier years of family life, when the father, perhaps, balances it by a spe cial fondness for hla daughters, and when the buoyancy of youth carries such injustice lightly. But on daugh ters of mature ago it often bears very heavily. The lot of the unmarried woman on whom falls the care, and even the maintenance of a widowed and aging mother Is a laborious and exacting on". Many such women there nre, as every one acquainted with our cities knows, working hard all day and singling to carry home evening cheer to one who makes less effort than she might to greet t'nem brightly. There Is a brother who comes on a flying visit now and then, bringing a gift none too generous, but seeming large because it is received all in one sum, and on him the moth er's appreciation and gratitude are lavished. When he Is gone, his ad vice proffered without much knowl edge of real conditions. Is quoted and urged with an Insistence discouraging to the Bister, and even the contrast between his light hearted merriment and her seriousness Is harped upon. There are sadder cases still where the money earned by a self-sacrificing daughter Is persistently shared with a reckless and improvident son, and bitterest of all it is to the perpetu ally returning prodigal that the warm est affection seems to go. Habits like these can hardly be corrected, perhaps, in age. But mothers in younger life should be on their guard against forming them. Con gregatlonallsU Bouillon lace is constantly em ployed by French dressmakers as a furbishing. The dealers are making no disDlav of fans so far, and there are predic tions tnat the fan is not to be stylish the coming ball season. The high collar has come in again on fur coats and Jackets, and is often made of a different fur from the gar ment on which it is used. Little novelty stocks, often copied from French models, are one of the most striking features of the season. They are charmingly made up of rib bon of almost any fur even pointed fox and black lynx. This is a day when bags, little or big, ostentatiously plain or elaborate ly decorated, are put to a huudred uses, from the shopping and automo bile bags down to the delicate little wrist and vanity bags. While no skirt at the present time can be called full, those designed for soft, thin materials are often made to fall in voluminous folds, but they have the top closely laid in tucks t.at produce the sheath fit. The shortened waist and straight, clinging lines of the skirt are features that strongly influence the winter modes, characterizing evening gowns, dressy coat suits for afternoon and other affairs of ceremony. In gowns having the high waist line, the top of the skirt is often tucked, but If the gown is of chiffon or anything of this nature the gath ered top permits the soft folds of the material to cling to the figure and fol low the outline becomingly. Each one of -the puffs arranged at the back of the Psyche knot is held in place by a large hairpin, and the pompadour is now held by a pin in stead of a comb. Some girls, too, have gone so far as to add one to each side of the knot. felMiERBT(yQMElj New York City. The lateBt blouses are made with Just such long, pretty sleeves as those and this model can be utilized both for the separate waist of net, thin silk, llngorie ma- terlal and the like and for tho entire gown, in the Illustration it Is made of fine lawn combined with banding of Valenciennes lace and with hand embroidery worked In the squares famed by the design. Cashmere vt.h bands of silk or satin would be pretty and effective for cold weather weKr. while net, lingerie materials and lace are charming for certain oc casions at all seasons. The waist is made with a fitted lining, which can be used or omitted, as liked, and consists of the front and the backs with the shaped yoke, The waist itself is tucked and Joined to the yoke and the trimming is ap plied on indicated lines. The sleeves atan ran hA irinitfl with nr withnnt thfl f fitted linings, and can be tucked, as , Illustrated, or gathered, as liked. The quantity of material required for the medium size is four and three fourth yards twenty-one or twenty four, three yards thirty-two, or two and three-eighth yards forty-four Inches wide, with ten yards of band ing and one and five-eighth yards of edging. ' Black Walking Skirt. A street toilette that Is becoming to a great many women, and that has style, though perhaps not as much as when all of one color. Is the black skirt in walking length, large hat of black, and a perfect-fitting coat of the new striped coverts. An Odd Hat. A decidedly odd bat Is one ot white, furry beaver, with a band around the crown and a long, f t bow at the side of chamois, W , A liovely Ooivn. A picturesque gown Is of crepe ds Chine in that shade of blue best de scribed as hynclnth, with a draped sash, also of crepe, in dull purple, and adorned with embroideries of purple and blue foliage and little sli ver bells threaded in and out of the leaves upon a slender gold ribbon.. , Wearing Green Tullo. There is going to be a good deal of tulle worn. Its new, heavy weave makes It available as a serviceable accessory. Bright blue will be more favored than light blue, but parrot and apple green are to be in the lead, llows of this will be worn at the neck on an evening bodice, in front of the hat nnd to tie (lowers. Rug Muff mi) Neck Scarf. Scarfs that fit closely up about the throat are among tho latest features of fashlonnblo dress, and such a one as this, combined with tho muff Illus trated, makes on exceedingly hand some as well as smart set. They can be made from any fur or fur cloth or from velvet or almost any fancy ma terial. The mull Is made with the founda tion nnd the over, or rug, portion, which are quite separate. The founda tion is made complete and the rug is lined throughout, then arranged over It and the two are tacked together. Tho neck scarf is simply lined and in terlined, while one end is slipped through a band arranged over the other by means of which it is drawn up closely about the throat. The quantity of material required to make the rug and the muff for either tho woman's or tho misses' size is one and seven-eighth yards twenty one, one yard forty-four or fifty Inches wide, with two and one-half yards for the lining for rug muff and scarf and making the foundation muff. Corduroy Stockings. The royal ribbed stockings In two- toned stripes, which are often called corduroy stockings, will be much in style. They are In spun silk and in lisle and silk. They are not inexpen sive, but the spun ones are so heavy that they would last forever and a day. Soft-Clinging Skirts. The tendency toward sott-cllnglng skirts now extends to below tho knees. : THE BOY AND LIFE : X ON THE FARM : The following very sensible article is from the New England Farmer, and we commend it to every father on the farm1 It you are a farmer and you want your son to be a farmer after you, teach him from his earliest boyhood to respect his father's calling. Instill into his mind the fact that the great men of all ages were sons of farmers. Teach him never to feel ashamed at tho senseless and threadbare Jokes of would-be humorists over old Hayseed and his lumbering old market wagon and his qualntness of speech when he visits the city and stares at the sights, and does not make halt so much of a fool of himself as the average city man when he comes to the country. Do not fill his life entirely with work. Recreation is as necessary to happiness and to a healthful devel opment of the spiritual and physical faculties as Is pure air, and there is untold wisdom in the old saw, "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." Encourage him when ho tries to do, even If ho falls. Failures which teach us how to avoid future disast ers are successes. Make him feel that you rest upon hit faithfulness and truth In whatever you Intrust to him. Do not blame him when he Is not at fault, even if things do not turn out as you have expected. Never dis parage his efforts. Continual dispar agement breaks his boy's spirit, and there is nothing more inspiring, noth ing more refreshing in this world than the broad, courageous, undis mayed hopefulness of a manly boy. Take him Into your confidence early. Let him know what you are going to plant In the'' ton-acre field, and how you propo30 to make the up land fields pay, Don't snub him. The man who snubs a boy Is unworthy to be the father of a son. Let him have the money he earns. You would have to pay the hired man for taking care of the calves and the cu'As; why not re munerate the boy? Do not disgust him with farming In the beglnlng by telling him that ha does not need anything but his board and clothes now, because, he will have "It all" when you are gone. Five dollars when a boy is ten years old is more than $5000 will be when you are dead and gono and he has the (arm. Do not devote all the land to corn and potatoes and "thlng3 that pay." The garden and the orchard are im portant factors in the life of the farm, and the flower bed ought to re ceive Just as much attention ,as the onion bed where you expect to raise the strongly flavored candidates for th3 first premium at your county fair next fall. Do not starve your family for the sake of taking the best of everything to market. A broad and generous soul cannot develop in a starved body. Live in Just as good a house as you can own, freo .'rom mortgage. Have a pleasant, BUnuy living room with tho books and papers and music. Encourage your boy to invite his friends there, and you yourself greet them cordially when they come. The lack of social privileges at home is one fertile cause of the temptation exerted by city life on the country young man. Sultan's Mangled Nome. American and English newspapers have a way of mangling the name of the Sultan of Turkey. Often he is called simply "Abdul" notUSng more. Sometimes it is "Abdul the Artful," "Abdul the Wary." The proper way to write the name, accord ing to the London Chronicle, Is "Abd-ul-Hamid," or, as some would trans literate it, "Abd-ul-'l-Haraid." This means "Servant (or slave) of the Praised One," i. e., God or Allah. The "ul" or "1" merely represents the Ara bic definite article, which in writing Is always Joined to the following word. "Abd" is a common first name with Mohammedans, as in Abd-ul-Kadzir, Abd-ul-Latif, Abd-ul-Azlz. "Abdul," with or without the Ha mld, makes nonsense, but no one seems to notice it. On this principle George du Mauricr might be called 'Georgedu" for short, and T. P. .O'Connor would lose his nationality under the Italian looking disguise ot "Thomaso." Kansas City Journal. Vainest of Efforts. Very rash was that young O. S. U. professor who openly announced tho other day that he had a strong aver sion to the popular "rat." "No worn 'an who wears a rat shall ever become my wife," were his exact words. As if he knew!' As if he were capable of understanding the mystery of a wom an's hair to begin with, and as If, in the second place, he knew who was going to set her cap at him. Why, some woman with very widely padded tresses may decide to marry that in nocent young professor, and in all probability he will be as helpless un der those circumstances as many an other young man has been. At any rate he probably will be convinced that his fiancee has a luxuriant crown of glory all her own. Ohio State Journal. leather Shoes For Horses. A French inventor has been trying to solve the horse shoeing problem. He has produced a horseshoe of leath er which is secured to the hoof by a mixture ot cement and asphalt. Suc cessful trials of the device are said to have been made in Paris. Horsemen will be skeptical. The iron shoe is not satisfactory, but has never been Improved upon. Boston Advertiser. JUSTICE OF TBI PEACE, Per.slon Attorney and ReaKKstate Ageae, RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Drookyillk, Pa. rj, m. Mcdonald, attorney-at-law, Real estate agent, patent secured, col lections mad promptly, utiles lo Syndicate valuing, Ueynoldsvllle, Pa. SMITtf M. MoCKElOUT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate agent. Oct lections will receive prompt attention. Office In the ReynoldHville Hardware Co. building, Main street lluynoldsvllle, Pa. QR. B. E. IIOOVEH, '.' DENTIST, Resident dentist. In the Hoover buildlnf Main street. Gentleness lo operating. 1)11. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST; Office on second floor of tlie First Natloaal bank bulldlnic, Main street. L)R. R, DkVEUEKINO, DENTIST, office on second floor of the Syndicate balls jig, Main street, Keynoldsvllle, Pa. HENRY PRIESTER UNDERTAKER, Black and white funeral can. Main street, tteynoldsvllle, Pa. NEWSY GLEANINGS. John T. Fay, mind reader, com mil ted suicide In Oakland, Cal Dr. Paul is to settle the disputes between Venezuela and France and Holland. Plans were made for America's , army of occupation to begin to evacu ate Cuba. Castro said he should put no obsta cle in the way of Venezuela making her peace with other nations. Five hundred guests attended the dinner of the Pan-American Scientllio Congress at Santiago de Chili. The American Roentgen Ray So ciety comploted plans for Its three days' convention In New York City. Advices from Caracas say that the people in all parts of the country wel come the policy of President Gomez. Patrick T. Alexander, an English experimenter, predicted that aero nauts would learn to fly without mo tors. It was announced nt Buffalo that tho foot and mouth disease quaran tine in New York State had been mod ified. Eleven men were killed In a riot at Tungan, twenty miles north of Amoy, following an endeavor to enforce the anti-opium edict. Venezuelans freed from political prisons at Maracalbo touched at Car acao on their way to Caracas and were enthusiastically received. The Central Federated Union In S'ew York City passed resolutions pro estlng against the sentencing of Gom pers, Mitchell and Morrison to Jail. Fears of a Balkan outbreak are subsiding In London,, The opinion la expressed in authoritative quarters that there will be no general election, SPORTING BREVITIES. Gerard Melster, a French swimmer, won from an Italian opponent and four others in a race in the Seine. G. Grelff won the holiday cup and R. M. Owen the monthly trophy at the New York Athletic Club shoot. George Standing defeated Peter Latham, of England, at racquets at the New York Racquet and Tennis Club. . A The Royal Swedish Yacht Club elected Prince Wllhelm of Sweden president at Its meeting held in Stock holm. Arnold Lawson's Imported bulldog champion, La Roche, died In Boston, Mr. Lawson purchased her in England in 1902. "Jack" Johnson defeated "Tommy" Burns for the heavyweight pugilistic championship of the world at Sydney, N. S. W. New steam yacht building at Mor ris Heights for M. C. D. Borden, N. Y. Y. C, will have a speed of thirty miles an hour. Calhoun Cragln was defeated In the indoor tennis tournament for the championship of the Seventh Regi ment, New York City. . F. A. Hodgman broke ninety-seven out of a possible 100 clay birds in the holiday shoot of the New York Ath letic Club at Travers Island. At Los Angeles, Cal., James J. Jef fries issued a statement declaring pos- . itively and emphatically that under ' no condition Would ho re-enter the prize ring. Great things are expected from Co valeskl, the crack left hander of the Philadelphia Nationals, who virtually beat McGraw's men out of the pen nant last season. Matthew Maloney, Trinity Athletic Club, New York City, won the Ama teur Athletic Union Marathon race, twenty-six and a quarter miles. In 2h. 3 Cm. 26 l-3s., a record. CODFISH A LA COCOTTE. Pick cold boiled cod Into bits, tak ing care to remove all bones; place a piece of butter the size of an egg over the fire in a clean saucepan; when it bubbles, add 2 tailesipoonfuls ot butter; mix thoroughly, then add 1 pint milk, 2 slices of onion minced fine and 1 sprig cf opped parsley. Cook, stirring constantly, until of the consistency of thick cream. Have ready a sufficient number of butter ed cooottes. (If these useful little Individual baking dishes are not at hand, usw a buttered ramekin). Fill the cocottes with alternate layers of fish, sauce and cracked crumbs, fin ishing off wtth crumbs. Dot wJtn butter and brown In a steady oven. Serve nithout re-dishing. Garnish, with slioed lemon and parsley. Boa ton Post.