.NEFF JTJSTICI OF THB PEACE, Pension Attorney and Real'.Estata Arm. RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brookvillb, Pa. m. Mcdonald, attorney-at-law, RbkI estate agent, patents secured, col lections made promptly. Office to BynaleaM gliding, Keyuoldsvllle, Pa. JfTf rT M. MoCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real eatate aian. Qpl lections will recede prompt attention. Omoa in the Reynoldsvllle Hardware Oo. building, Main street UeynoldSTllls, Pa. )R. B. B. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dentist In the Hoovsr bulldl Hal a street. Gentleness In operating. DR. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST; Office on second floor of tbs First Halloas! bank building, Main street. DR. R. DeVERE KINO, DENTI9T, Office on second floor of the Syndicate bull 'ng, Main street, Ueynoldsvllle, Fa. JJENRY PRIEST ER UNDERTAKER. Black and white funeral cars. Mala street. ReynnldsTtlle, Pa. WEEKLY TRADE 8UMMARY Underlying Conditions Firmly Main, talned by Reason of Re duced Stocks. Trade Is expanding slowly, but Steadily, wholesale and Jobbing lines toting some good oraers ior minium te delivery and rather more confi dence In placing orders for spring. Conservatism Is. however, noted In many places and there Is a feeling of disappointment in the progress of bus iness, uncertainty as to tarm cnanges is still widely mentioned as a bar to fulleBt activities, this being notable especially In iron and steel, where present demand Is below expecta tions, and in some lines of textiles. Reports from the railways are of an Increased merchandise traffic North west and Southwest, but this is to a certain "extent offset by restricted movement of grain to market. Expansion of a conservative char acter seems most evident In the cot ton goods line, domestic demand ex panding somewhat, while export busi ness is quieter. Gray goods are firmer, bleached fabrics are stronger and printed goods show further ad vances. The market for leather is steady and firm. There are many shoe buy ers In the Boston market, but as yet the disposition is to look over sam ples and styles rather than place or ders. Eastern manufacturers of heavy and medium footwear have suf ficient, business for the reast of the season and higher grades show a good volume of orders. Business failures In the United States for the week ending with Jan uary 21 were 307, against 319 last week, 408 In the like week of 190S, 252 In 1907, 27G In 190G and 228 in 1905. Canadian business failures for the same period numbered 40, as against 36 last week and 61 in this week last year. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat No. red I 85 Rye No. 'J Corn No. i yellow, ear 74 71 , No. yellow, shelled 07 S Mlied ear 04 tit Oats No. while 64 6 No. 8 white 61 Flour Winter patent 8 80 5 M Fancy straight winters Hay-No. 1 Timothy M SO 14 61 Clorer No. 1 11 ffl 11 71 Feed No. 1 white mid. ton 20 V) SO 00 Brown middlings 200) (7 01 Bran, bulk 2100 24 5) Straw Wheat 8 00 8 B0 Oat 800 8 01 Dairy Products. Butter EUln creamery I 84 85 Ohio onwmnrjr 24 an Fancy country roll 10 21 Cheese Ohio, new 14 15 - , New York, new 14 15 Poultry, Eio. Hens per lb I 14 15 Chickens dressed 18 20 Eggs Pa. and Ohio, fresh.. 81 85 Fruits and Vegetable. . Potatoes Fancy white per bu.... to Cabbage per ton St 01 88 01 Onions per barrel 140 130 BALTIMORE. Flour Winter Patent I 5 79 5 9; Wheat No. 2 red 1 U5 Corn Mixed 71 78 Eggs 84 88 Butter Ohio creamery 84 84 PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent I 5 60 5 75 Wheat No. 2 red 97 Corn No. 2 mixed 83 US Oats No. II white u 54 Butter Creamery 83 81 Eggs Pennsylvania firsts &I 84 NEW YORK. Flour Patents J 5 80 5 9) Wheat No. 8 red I'M Corn No. 8 90 - 90 Oats No. 9 white &4 M Butter-Creamery 88 84 Xggs State and Pennsylvania.... i 40 LIVE STOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. CATTLB Extra, 1450 to 1S00 pounds.. . 010 9 I 65 Prime, 1800 to 1400 pounds 0 45 14 6 &o 'Good, 1200 to 1K) pounds 6HO.4 6 85 Tidy, 1060 to 1150 pounds, 67c 00 Fair, 900 to 1100 pounds 475 9 6 05 Common, 700 to 900 pounds. 4 m 4 4 75 Bulls sot, 9 4 8, Cows 1600 155 00 BOOS Prime, hear? 6 61 6 56 Prime, medium weight u... 4)Q45 rem uwtj unters o 9J ,9 6 85 Light Yorkers. 6 00 ,4 0 55i(8 70 Bouxhs. 5 00 4 6 9J "ags. 4 25 j 4 7i SHEEP Prime wethers... 6 10 A 6 25 Good mixed 475 60 Fair mixed ewes and wethers 4 00 14 4 05 ttul od caawoz oo :Jfg Worry. Worry brings worries, and the sen sible girl .. hould learn to avoid tnem In her home, and perhaps her busi ness life. What good lies In wearing a long face and always tblnktng the worst will happen? "I'm so worried," Is the cry of many people; they for get that they must worry others as well as themselves. The way to achieve success Is to feel sure you mean to achieve It Home Notes. Votes for Women. A banner bearing the words, "Votes for Women" has recently been set up on the highest peak in the State ot Washington by the Misses Kangley, formerly of Colorado. By leaving rar adlse Valley, where they had been camping, early in the morning accom panied by only one guide they were able to reach the top of Mount Rai nier before night. . There in a dnvng snowstorm they set up the banner on alpenstocks, and after taking several photographs of it folded It up again and took It back to camp with them. The yintcnd to set up the same ban ner another year In the crater. New York Sun. Duties of Marriage. Father Vaughn has ,been talking to London society about Its shortcom ings. He expresses the belief that "the married state Is the best." Peo ple who ask others to marry thom, or accept a proffer of marriage, also in cline t othis opinion. Such Inclination accounts for their course. However, the counsel he gives is excellent. It Includes the rule that a husband shall be sweet and sympa thetic with his wife, permit her to talk all she wants to talk, protect ner and make love to her. He would have the wife keep her home in order and her temper, be neat and "smart," never nag and never keep the husband waiting. Marcel of the Wave. M. Marcel, the Frenchman who orig inated the famous and ubiquitous Mar cel wave, is said to have realized in the first ten years after he Invented the hair wave bearing his name, a million francs. Anyway, he is now but 55, and has made money enough to live at his leisure on his country estate. His mother was responsible for the Marcel wave. Her hair not suiting him, he experimented with It, and by accident hit on the wave. At that time be was a young hair dresser with a small shop on Mont martre. His mother's hair was beau tiful, and waved naturally everywnere but at the temples, where there was not the slightest indication of a wave. This annoyed him bo that one day he took the irons and persuaded her to allow him to use the hot irons on It. After much fussing he turned the irons the wrong way as he then thought and behold! the Marcel wave. New York Press. American Women Physicians. "I am surprised to find the Ameri can medical wcmen so far behind tne English woman physician," said Dr. Helen M. Shaw, of London, at the Hoffman House. "I do not wish to couvey the Impression that your med ical women are themselves behind, but rather that they are not regarded more seriously by the medical socie ties of the United States. "In England the medical profession has recognized the woman practition er, and she Is on a much higher stand ard In the public eye than she is in America. "The women physlcans of the Unit ed States are very bright, and they are, as a rule, thorough and capable. It is only a short time, of course, be fore they must be regarded more se riously, but it seems to me it Would be far better for the medical socie ties to give the women their just dues now than to wait until she forces ner way to the front through her own ge nius and makes the prejudiced ones who are fighting her look ridiculous." New York Telegram. A Diet to Grow Thin. Oranges will lend pleasant aid to the woman who wants to grow thin ner. She must take the juice of at least two at every meal, and these must not be sweet ones. She must also give up oil with her salad, and substitute lemon juice for vinegar. She cannot have cream or sugar in her coffee and the coffee Itself save at breakfast must give place to sugarless and mllkless weak tea. She can have all the acid fruit she wants, but If It be stewed no sugar must be add ed. Grapes, peaches, melons, prunes, and bananas are tabooed as they are flesh producers. No cereals for ner, no hot bread save dry toast, no pork In any form, no veal and no water with her meals and just as little away from them as she can endure, mineral watetr being taken by preference: Dr. Weir Mkchell advocates copious draughts of skim milk for the safe re duction of flesh. He states If it be taken plentifully at and between meals it will positively cause a pa tient to lose half a pound of flesh a day. Baths must be taken In cold wa ter, and a hard flesh brush must be plied vigorously. The Housekeeper. Killed With Kindness. I am an old woman and am much given to recalling the past. I em thinking ot the way they did In sick rooms sixty years ago. In case of ac cidents or serious sickness, sympa thetic friends went in droves and stood around the bed In grim wonder. I went once to see Cousin Hannah Jane, who was dying of a cancer. It was a hot August day and a circle of "Job's Comforters' stood around ner bed. She tried to talk to all. Some were deaf, some sympathetic, some in tears, and one of business like nature was urging her to make a will. Doctors and nurses of today do things in a business-like way. Sick persons are kept quiet, and callers have sense enough to make short stays. They do not talk much except In words of cheer. Tbey do not gape at Invalids, as they do at elephants at a show. They cheer and encourage them, and do not excite or frighten. People who use perfumery are not admitted. People who are strong with the fumes ot tobacco are not allowed to enter. Callers must agree with the opinions of physicians. An old man was once offended because he was de nied admission to his daughter's sick room. Why? "He had been out all night a-skunkln'," he said, in his own backwoods vernacular. Grandmother, in Indiana Farmer. Their Own Fault,. It Is possible for a woman to look well, even In practical motor clothes, but a study of scores of fair motor women forces one to admit ruefully that while the thing may be possible It Isn't probable. Few motorwomen have the trig neatness which gives the proper sporty air to a motor toilette, and even admitting that the quaint and the picturesque have their place in motor apparel, few women wear their quaintness and plcturesqueness con vincingly; few understand the clever manipulation of veil or hood, the pos sibilities in color and line. In the luxurious cars that roll round the city streets one sees delightful visions, but all things are possible for that sort of motoring big hats, grace fully draped; enveloping cloaks, flut tering scarfs and feathers that would be an unmitigated nuisance in more spirited versions of the popular sport. Few women seem able to get tnem selves up in motor costumes at ones practical and becoming, and yet, as one makes the rounds of the shops one sees a surprising number of at tractive coats and hats and bonnets and hoods intended for motor wear. Evidently the fault Is with the wearer, not with the designer. The woolen stuffs appropriate for the motor coat that will see all around service were never more attractive than they are this season, soft, warm, comfortable, yet light in weight and wonderfully effective in color and de sign. There are vague indefinite plaids in which many colors are so Cleverly blended that at a distance the fabric gives almost a monotone effect. Other plaids, more striking and defi nite, are still charmingly harmonious because of the skill with which their shades are chosen and combined. Among these are certain effective de signs suggesting Scotch tartan in their color schemes, but softened, sub dued, blended so beautifully that one color shades into another without sharp line of contrast. . There are very smart coats in these plaids, gay yet not garish, plainly made in man nish fashion and with collar facing of black or of some dark tone prominent In thfc plaid. In fabrics of like quality, fine, warm, soft, blanketlike, but surprisingly light, there are other designs of char acter somewhat audacious, yet by no means so loud as they sound In the description big, broken black checks In two tone, three tone, or even four tone coloring. New Haven Register. ' Fashion Notes. New veils are so very long as to be almost cumbersome. Touches of color smarten many cos tumes of neutral tint Venetian beads have considerable popularity for trimming. Ottoman and faille are both favor ites for street costumes. All corsages this season are ot the exact shade ot the robe. Two-faced cloths are much In vogue for long automobile coats. The Russian Cossack cap is one of the leading turban shapes. Some of the smartest shops are be ginning to show small hats. New turbans are roomy, coming down on the head to the ears. Net and lace are the most used waist materials of the season. The dlrectolre glove is laced up the sides instead of being buttoned. ' For the first season In many years, all white is overshadowed by colors, even for dancing frocks. A three-piece white fox set tur ban, stole and muff Is the daintiest thing in Paris fur fashions. A favorite hat will be the Merry Widow, somewhat reduced In size, but with increased ornamentation. New cloak gowns, which may be worn as an outdoor garment or as a Princess robe, come in broadcloth in black, navy blue, violet and smoke color. A simple, but most effective way to make the hair wave in the big ripples which continue to be fashionable, Is to dampen it, and tie it down with bands of baby ribbon. New York City. The blouse that Is made with long close sleeves Is the latest decree of fashion, and this one fulfills that requirement without be- Ing severe. There are pleats over the shoulders that give a becoming effect, and the sleeves are tucked and trimmed with buttons in an altogeth er attractive manner. In the illus tration cashmere Is embroidered and trimmed with buttons and combined with a yoke and collar of lace in matching color. The model suits all the materials that are thin enough to be tucked, however, and Is just as de sirable for the odd waist as it Is for the entire gown. Cashmere Is ex ceedingly fashionable and always la pretty, but there are a great many materials, both ot silk and ot wool, that are appropriate. The blouse Is made with a fitted lining, which can be used or omitted as liked, and consists of the front and backs. Wide tucks are laid over the shoulders In both front and backs, and the blouse Is faced to form the yoke, while the trimming is applied on Indicated lines. The sleeves are in one piece each, laid in downward turning tucks. The Pompadour Gone. The pompadour Is gone and with It has gone the "rat." Piirplo Is Popular. Purple Is a magnificent dye this season, and the creations In it that we see at the milliners are past beau tiful. Orchids, lilies, heliotrope the latter made of velvet and therefore well suited to winter wear violets and roses make some of the best and most .expensive hats. The all-color hat still prevails to a great extent, yet really many of the best hats are of black shapes with rich dark col ored trimmings. New Coiffure Shape. Coiffures are flat on top and wldi across the front. Circular Skirt. The circular skirt that 1 closed at the front with buttons and button holes la one of the latest develop ments of fashion. This one can be made either In walking or In round length, and Is so cut as to be perfectly smooth over the hips, and Is finished at the back in habit style. AH sultlni and all skirting materials that are adapted to so simple a style are ap propriate. In this case buttonholei are worked on the right front edge for Its entire length, and the skirt If closed by means of these buttonbolei and buttons, but, If preferred, the hems can be stitched to position to the depth of a placket and button! and buttonholes used above, or the closing can be made Invisibly. In such case the trimming can be simu lated buttonholes or braid or any thing that may be preferred. The skirt Is made In two pieces. It Is fitted by means of darts over the hips and the front edges ard finished with hems. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is five and a half yards of material twenty-four or twenty-seven, three and a half yards forty-four or two and three-quarter yards fifty-two Inches wide. Blouse of Novel Style. A new gingham or linen waist is cut straight up to the top ot the .neck, where It fits in somewhat the same way as a gored empire skirt fits the waist. To this is attached a 'turnover collar, which fastens in front with a cameo pin. The effect of the novelty Is odd, but it Is practical and washes well, while women of a special type, tall and lithe. It would suit admirably. Women Struggle Hopelessly Along, Suffering Backache, Dizzy Spells, Languor, Etc, Women have so much to go through In lite that It's a pity there Is so much suffering from back- nm i i acne ana other com- ) ciy mon curable kidney Jsw. profit by this worn- "uirLj an', example. Mrs. ni?siM Martin Douglass, 6 Cedar St., Kingston, N. Y., says: -I had a lame, aching back, nA11. 1 I ui..; epulis, ucwi. IV aches, and a feeling of languor. Part of the time I could not attend to my work and Irregularity ot the kidney secretions was annoying. Doan's Kid ney Pills brought me prompt relief Sold by all dealers. 60c. a boa. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Once An Infant, Always. In this country every Industry is an Infant Industry until it is dead. That Is the doctrine ot those who are ar guing for the continuance of duties on Iron and steel. Anybody who dis putes this doctrine Is not merely wrong he does not know what he la talking about. No matter If the testi mony comes from the greatest Ameri can manufacturer of iron and steel, if he favors free trade in those metals he Is an Ignoramus. By the same logic, John D. Rockefeller would prove himself a dunce and fit to be placed under a guardianship If he were to advocate the abolition of the duty on petroleum. Hartford Times. . 5 Banking Growth. It Is exactly 127 years since the first bank In the United States open ed its doors in Philadelphia. Today there are G.&'a national banks, with a paid-in capital of $921,000,000. New York Journal of Commerce. Breaks a Cold Promptly. The following formula la a never falling remedy for colds: One ounce of compound syrup of Sarsaparllla, one ounce Torls com pound and half pint of good whiskey; mix and shake thoroughly each time and use In doses of a tablespoonfnl every four hours. This will frequently care an acuta cold In twenty-four honrs. The In gredients can be gotten at any drug store. TAMING A RIVER The Erratic Susquehanna Has At Last Been Harnessed. Although with the exception of the St. Lawrence river it Is the largest stream flowing Into the north Atlan tic, the Susquehanna river has never been renowned for anything but scenery and trouble. Since the timber has been stripped from its mountainous drainage basin, embodying an area of 27,000 square miles, the floods of the Susquehanna have been extremely sudden, violent and destructive. Not Infrequently It attains the remarkable record of a flow at high water equal to 25 times Its volume at low water. Large as It Is, the erratic Susque hanna is navigable for only five miles above Its mouth. Beyond that point It Is so full of rocks and shoals and rapids that nothing but an occasional raft at high water has ever passed down. ' Such a particularly outrageous stream Is the Susquehanna, Bays the Technical World, that It Is difficult to find room upon It even to navigate a ferryboat comfortably. One of these quiet reaches Is McCall's ferry, where a part of Washington's army crossed on its way to do up Comwallls at Yorktown. The commander himself crossed at Conowlngo Ford, 14 miles below. At this historic spot some clever en gineers are demonstrating that the Susquehanna Is good for something after all, for they are building a hydro-electric power plant which la remarkable. Not the least Interesting feature Is the extraordinary care with which the situation was studied before the plans were formed. To be sure engineers are proverbially painstak ing, but In this case a new record for thoroughgoing accuracy was establish ed. It was the highest tribute that man could pay to the terrors of the Susquehanna. New York Sun. JOY WORK And the Other Kind. Did yon ever stand on a prominent corner at an early morning honr and watch the throngs of people on their way to work? Noting the number who were forcing themselves along because it meant their daily bread, and the others cheerfully and eagerly pursuing their way because of love of their work. It Is a fact that one's food has much to do with It. As an example: If an engine has poor oil, or a boll er is fired with poor coal, a bad result Is certain, isn't It? Treating your stomach right Is the keystone that sustains the arch of health's temple, and yon will find "Grape-Nuts" as a daily food la the most nourishing and beneficial you can use. We have thousands of testimonials, real genuine little heart throbs, from people who simply tried Grape-Nuta out of curiosity as a last resort with the result that prompted the tes timonial. If you have never tried Grape-Nuta It's worth while to give It a fair, im partial trial. Remember there are millions eating Grape-Nuts every day they know, and we know, if you will use Crape-Nuts every morning your work Is more likely to be joy work, because you can keep well, and with the brain well nourished work la a Joy. Read the "Road to Well Yllle" in every package "There's a Reason." MS S3 1
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers