COSTUMES FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW CROP CONDITIONS ARB GOOD LI aT ,. SUFFRAGISTS DOING WELL. Women of Belgium were Blow In jetting interested In the fight for equal suffrage, but now that they hare started they are taking steps that promise a quiet revolution in political affairs in the little kingdom. The first big victory has been the pas ta ge of a bill that not only permits Women to vote for the election of municipal officials, but requires that a certain proportion of the municipal officials shall be women. This is a gain more substantial than the noisy English suffragettes have won in their long and violent campaign. The Bel gian women have been careful to avoid all suggestion of strenuous methods, relying only on petition and the forceful presentation of ar gument. It seems the English suf fragist might profit by taking a leaf from the book of her Belgian sister, and that the American zealot also might go to Belgium for a good ex ample. New York Press. FAD IN FANCY WORK. Some sorts of embroidery require practice, no doubt, but there is one variety that can be done by the ver iest novice. It Is called darning on crash, and It ought to be popular, since crash is so much used now for curtains, cushion covers, table run r?rs, work bngs and a thousand and one articles of service or of ornament. Darning on crash is Just like darn ing stockings; you stick your needle In, and go back and forth, back and forth. As the threads of the craBh are so coarse, It is better to have your stitches run parallel with these, so that the embroidery will look more j or less nice a pan 01 me warp ana woof. The d'.ign, for a novice at least, should be stamped, and may be any thing one pleases conventionalized tulips across the end of a table run ner, or, better, one of those old Egyptian or Assyrian designs. Flow er patterns should be much conven tionalized. Nothing is so painful as an attempt to represent flowers on tome fabric especially a coarse fab ric. The embroidered flowers don't look like real flowers; they don't look SI Cheese Fondu. One cheese, two tablespoons butter, one egg (well beaten), one cup of soft bread crumbs, one-fourth of a teaspoon of Bait, one-eighth of a teaspoon of pepper. Put the cheese and butter Into the hot milk, add the egg, seasoning and bread crumbs. Spread on crackers or toast, and bake until the cheese is melted and the top slightly browned (about fifteen minutes). f 1 2. S like anything but embroidery. ' Much more truly artistic is a set design, which may suggest flowers, but does not attempt to reproduce them. New York Tribune. f WRAPS LIKE DOMINOS. a To see-a group of fashionable girls In their outer wraps one would think a domino party was in progress. Black, white and gray are the only hues now permitted for the modish evening wrap. Big roomy affairs, easy to slip on without damaging the tulle ball gown, Is what the up-to-date girl wants in an evening wrap. Grace of outline or dantlness of de tail is ruled out for comfort and room. The most popular evening wrap of the season is made of heavy cloth, frequently beaver, with a soft silk or satin interlining. Countess Alexandra von Bernstorf, daughter of the German Ambassador in Wash ington, wears an evening coat that looks like a military cape with sleeves and a hood. It Is of eider down, lined with blue and looks warm. . Mrs. Payne Whitney wears an evening wrap that resembles a man's bath robe, only that the cord around the waist is of gold and there Is gold etltchllng on the collar. New York Press. HER REAL SUSPENDERS. Might have known It. When, years ago, women began wearing mock suspenders in the form of cloth straps sewn to their shirt waists It was a foregone conclusion that soon or late they'd come to the real arti cle. And now It's come. Suspend ers, of silk of course, are Indispensa ble to the late summer wardrobe of the fashionable girl. They are not visible, as were the straps that pre ceded them, save through the liber ality of the peekaboo waist. They are worn under the waistband and, by an ingenious contrivance fastened to the waistband of the skirt. Natu rally, being of the eternal feminine, they come In a myriad designs, and all are dainty. They range the scale of colors and each hue comes In all Its prettier shades. Gold and silver buckles are attached to the feminine suspenders, each with a tiny diamond or ruby or sapphire set In the exact centre. Maybe before long the more daring women will wear them outside their waists. After the sheath skirt, - anything may happen. New York Press. GROWING OLD. ! Is there any excuse for women growing old? Of course, many of . the readers will answer la the afflrma. ' tire, calling the process ot frfiwing old a simple course of nature, as logi cal as the undlsjjntabls (act thai er arr dav is aucneeded by nlcbi. J - - - -jwTtr ad tbejr will also , &onlleM, I that there Is no use struggling against faith; that the wisest and most dig' nlfled thing to do is to bear the af diction bravely, resigning oseself to the fact that room must be made for the younger generation, so that its members "also are given a chance, The opinion is not entirely correct. Is it necessary to surrender with out struggle, without even the slight, est attempt to prolong the day of youth? If so, what are you doing to keep young? Do you Indulge in exercise so as to keep your figure lithe and your muscles active? What sort of literature do you In dulge in? How do you keep your mind occupied? Do you ever give way to moods, or allow yourself to feel glum and "blue," without ha v. lng the slightest reason for doing so? I am certain there is not one among my readers whose conscience feels absolutely clear about these questions. Now, what are we to do to pre serve youth, and to bar the ap proaches of old age? New Haven Register. WIVES TO BLAME. Biographers of famous men of let ters have lately been unearthing evi dence that tends to throw the blame of the shortcomings of certain gifted ones upon their wives. This has been repeatedly done in the instances of Byron and Shelley, and now we learn, through a three-volume collec tion of Wordsworth's letters many of them to and about Coleridge that the abortive genius of the latter poet was due not to opium but to an uncongenial wife. We are told that during those years when poster ity has pictured the poet mooning in his study or monologutng to his brothers of the pen, he was really "struggling" to adjust his impossible domestic relations and giving "the marvelous powers of his mind to the foredoomed task of developing in Mrs. Coleridge qualities of Intellect and of temperament which nature had denied her." The stultifying ef fect of this association accounts cup of hot milk, one cup of crumbled it is said for the fragmentary char acter of Coleridge's productions, this being proved by the wonder of work he accomplished during the "miracu lous year" of bis first association with the domestically harmonious Words worths, particularly with Dorothy Wordsworth, whose letters are by far the most charming in this collection. The mills of the gods keep grinding, and by and by somebody will be giv ing us Mrs. Coleridge's side of the matter, as was done In the case of Jennie Carlyle and another light will be flashed upon the question of blame. Home Magazine. ATTITUDE IN HOUSEWORK. Housework should be regarded as a means of making one a broader, healthier, nobler woman. Work of any kind, if approached in the right spirit and performed to the best of one's ability, gives enjoyment and culture, says Table Talk. The wrong attitude produces a cramped condition. By resisting and complaining one becomes narrow and inferior. How many say: "I hate housework," "I dislike cooking," "I despise washing dishes," "I detest sweeping and dusting." If house- ! work, cooking, dishwashing, sweep ing and dusting have to be done why grumble and complain? The work only seems more difficult, more hater ful and takes longer to do. Why not then do the necessary things cheer fully and thereforeeasllyandqulckly? As an aid to acquiring the right mental attitude bring science and art into household tasks and thus lift them above drudgery. ' Surround yourself with labor-saving devices. Try new ways of doing things. Be original. Because your mother or neighbor does a thing in a certain way It does not follow that there Is not an easier and better. There are continual advances in domestic science as well as in astronomy, elec tricity and philosophy. Combine beauty with use. A useful thing Is not of necessity homely, even if it is a bowl, a pot or a pan. Find out the essentials and non essentials. Let such things as can be slighted be slighted a little. Don't think that because it is Friday you must sweep the house from top to bottom whether it really needs it or not. Dont neglect the new book or the concert simply because you must put a tew extra tucks In Susie's new dress. To quote: "What's the use ot making discord In our family by working every minute when we can not be 'worked to death' and keep our tempera, too," Rio de Janeiro Is to have a gov ernment sootechnlcal and agronomi cal Institute dedicated to the study of stock; railing and agricultural expert- beats. . - New York City. Such a simple little dress as this one Is needed by every child. It can be made from lawn or batiste, from plain white or from prettily figured materials, from embroidered muslin If something Tery dainty is wanted, and It can be made from gingham and other Inex pensive wash fabrics for the hours of play and hard usage. Also it is quite correct for cashmere, albatross, chai ns and the other simple wool ma terials that many mothers use for the cold weather frocks of the girls who have reached the mature age of six. The dress Itself is tucked to form the yoke, and consequently making Is a very simple matter and the sleeves can be in full or elbow length, while the dress can be trimmed with band ing or left plain, as liked. The dress is cut with front and back portions and is finished at the neck with a straight standing collar. Whether the sleeves are cut to the wrists or the elbows they are gath ered Into bands. The quantity of material required for the medium size (four years) is three and one-fourth yards twenty four, two and one-fourth yards thirty-two or two and one-eighth yards forty-four Inches wide, with three yards of insertion, one and three eighth yards of edging to trim as Il lustrated. New Crepe Blouses. Fine white Chinese crepe is lead ing all materials for wash waists. One can pay almost any price for such a blouse, according to the quali ty of the crepe, the name ot the maker, and the weave of lace or em broidery used on It. Define the Figure. All coats are cut so as to more clearly define the figure, though the bos coat has by no means bsea given P. Wheat Pattern fashionable. Everybody who designs Is making use of the wheat pattern. Yellow Linen Suit. It you can find a pretty shade ot yellow in a linen, you will have a suit that is considered very smart this season. Four-Pleco Skirt. The skirt that provides slight flare at the lower edge is one ot the very latest to have appeared, and this model shows that feature at Its best. It is slightly high walsted and close fitting over the hips, and the pleated panels give long, becoming lines at the same time that they provide ad' dltlonal fulness. Pongee with trim' mlng of buttons kju finish of stitch ing is the material Illustrated. When made in round length the skirt is adapted to afternoon dress, when made in walking length for general morning and street wear. The skirt Is made in four gores with four additional panels. The side gores are lapped over onto the front and the back and the panels are Joined to their edges. The closing Is made invisibly. When walking length is desired both the gores and the panels are to be cut off on indicated lines. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is nine and one- half yards twenty-four or twenty- seven, five and three-fourth yards for- ty-four or fifty-two Inches wide, width of skirt at lower edge four and three-fourth yards, including pleats. i Jeweled Clasps For Stays. When all the usual luxuries are provided for women of extravagant taste, some original and totally un necessary excess will be seized upon by them. The new clasps tor corsets answer to this description admirably, for of all luxuries they are the most luxurious. Embroidered Gloves. Long gloves must be elaborately embroidered to meet the require ments of fashion. DUAL PURPOSE COW. . The difference between the dual purpose cow and the dairy cow Is Just the difference between a machine thai is made for Us purpose and one that is not. What would you think of a man who would go out to his field to cut grass with a sewing machine? Ex-Governor W. D. Hoard, ot Wisconsin. VALUE OF BIRDS. The all Important value of bird life Is graphically described by a bird lover, as follows: "Kill bird life, and then insect, ro dent, reptilian and other animal life will absorb the last vestige of support for man on this earth, and he in his turn will give way to starvation or the maws of more powerful than his own species." Indiana Farmer. CARE OF SHEEP. Great care should be taken to have everything about the sheep barns In proper shape for lambs. It is best that the feeding racks should be movable so that the floor can be kept even. If the manure is allowed to pile up and pack unevenly, the ewes are liable to get cast. Every ewe should be put In a place by herself until the lamb Is about eight days old. Care should be taken that there are no places where the lamb can creep away from its mother. A young lamb will soon become chilled it it gets away from Its dam, and often she will not own it when It Is put back. Farmers' Home Jour nal COW RATIONS. Hoard's Dairyman, referring to cow rations, says, feed cows weighing 1000 pounds thirty-five pounds ot silage per day and all the timothy and clo ver hay they will consume. Then make a mixture of 400 pounds of bran, 400 pounds of ground oats, 200 pounds of cottonseed meal and 100 pounds of oil meal. As a rule one pound of this combination would be about right for each three pounds of milk produced, but to feed fifteen to eighteen pounds of this mixture per day, the amount required for a cow giving sixty pounds ot milk would be an exceedingly large allowance of concentrates, and but few animals will handle this amount to advantage, When more than twelve pounds of grain are fed per day to an individual, care must be exercised, or there is danger of injuring the animal by over feeding. HANDLING HORSES. When handling a horse, self con trol is essential. Don't get out of patience and kick and fume If the animal does not do Just as you wish Try again for probably the dumb brute' did not quite understand what you expected It to do, and then give the horse the order; don't expect the animal to guess what you want done. It you have horses-keep a close watch on your teamster. If he ban dies the horses brutally, or with poor judgment, pay him off at once and get another man. It is easier to get another teamster than it is to get another team. Don't fail to keep an eye on mischievous boys, for they will tease and torment a horse Just for the fun of It. This may result in the horse developing the habit of kick ing, striking or biting. Some horses develop Into the habit of kicking while standing in the sta ble. It Is always dangerous to enter the stall of a kicker, so the sooner the animal is broken of the mean trait the safer becomes the lives of those who find ocaslon to have any thing to do with it. Tie the horse short, so as not to give any slack rope to allow Its backing up. Fill a bag with hay, straw or sawdust and sus pend It from the ceiling by a rope directly behind the horse's hocks. Now make It believe that you Intend to enter the stall. Up come the heels, striking the bag; K rebounds and strikes the horse. Again, pretend you Intend to enter. The same thing is repeated. The horse becomes afraid and quivers as it attempts to crowd into the forward corners of the stall. When only one horse Is kept in a stable It seldom kicks the sides of its stall. Turning the stall kicker into a box stall has frequently broken up tha habit, but when that convenience is not at hand, other measures are re sorted to. A club or two or three Inches in diameter, and about eigh teen Inches long, bo as not to make a bruise, will do the job. Fasten the club to .the leg at the hock joint by one of its ends, thus making a loose, swinging club. As the horse kicks the side of the stall the club strikes the leg sharply. The horse soon learns that when it keeps its feet quiet the club inflicts no pain. Halter pulling is very common among horses that are Improperly handled. Fortunately the remedy Is simple and effective, breaking up the habit In a very short time. Fasten a long rope to the baiter, slipping 'the loose end through the ring. Pass the unengaged end of the rope between the forelocks and then over the buck, bringing it over on the other side and fastening it to the rope, between the forelegs, In a slip knot. When the horse pulls on the halter the large noose tightens up on Its body, and it soou gives up the pulling. Another good way to fasten the rope Is to tie it to one of the hind legs. If the horse pulls, It simply pulls itself off Its feet. Amrlca Cultivator. . Indications of Activity Generally All Depending on Tariff Outcome, "Weather conditions continue flrreg ular, but a change for the better has occurred in staple crop conditions, and retail business Is slightly Improv ed, though disappointing and showing evidences of the repression hereto fore evident. Reorder business from jobbers and wholesalers has been rather quiet, but there Is, If any thing, a more assured optimism per meating the reports as to the outlook for next fall and winter's trade. Best reports are to retail trade come from the upper part of the great central valley and tits tributaries. Colder wet weather has Interfered with busi ness In parts of New England and the middle Atlantic States, and trade seoins slow to Improve in San Fran cisco and In parts of the Pacific North west. At wholesale, preparations for a good trade later on are found in a number of lines. The leather situation as a whole Is very strong. Reductions In prices of printed cot ton goods have induced the booking of large orders. Building is active, though lumber demand seems to drag. All these Indications of activity have to do with future trade, the expecta tion being that the removal of tariff uncertainty will give an impetus to general business. Retadl trade, though better than a year ago, has been on the whole disappointing, causes as signed for this being weather condi tions and the high prices asked for goods when compared with the re duced purchasing power of the gener r public. "Domestic wool has been strong and active this week. Western mar kets being excited and higher grades being advanced 1 cent. Shoe manu facturers have been forced to charge higher prices for their product, and this tends to retard buying, which is a little freer, but not up to expecta tions, either here or at Western man ufacturing centers. "Business failures in the United Sta tes for the week were 219, against 234 last week. 284 in the like week of 1908, 1C5 In 1907, 170 In 190G and 179 in 1905. Canadian failures for the week were 25, against 30 last week and 39 in same week last year. Bradstreets. MARKETS. PITTSBURG. Wheat No. I red I Bye No. 2 Cora Ho. 2 yellow, ear 88 81 No. allow, shelled 71 78 Mixed ear 88 69 Oat No. t white , 91 51 No. S white 59 51 Flour Winter patent 5 75 6 80 Fane? etraliht winters Bar-No. 1 Timothy 1409 14 M Clover No, 1 1800 12 SO Feed No. 1 white mid. ton MM 80 00 Brown middlings 2701 98 00 Bran, bulk 9700 88 00 Straw wheat 8 00 8 50 Hat 809 8 SJ Dairy Products. Butter Elgin creamery S 59 81 Ohio oreamery 24 80 Fancy country roll 19 Hi Cheese Ohio, new II 18 New York, new II U Poultry, Etc Hern per lb I 17 19 Chicken dressed 90 22 Bg ga Pa. and Ohio, Jresh. 21 2 J Fruits and Vegetable. Potatoes Fancy white per bu.. 1 00 1 OS Sabbage per ton .. 55 0 1 80 00 nlon per barrel id l p BALTIMORE. Vtn,. TXT. n a- B.,.nl M At Wheat No. 8 red 1 84 Corn Mixed 70 . 71 Bugs 87 2) Butter Ohio creamery tl 88 rniLftucLrniA. Flour Winter Patent I 1 93 (00 Wheat No. 8 red 18 Corn No. 9 mixed 78 7ti Oats No. 8 white 61 81 Butter Creamery 28 'A Egg Pennsylvania first i t& NEW YORK. Flour-Patent Jt l 0 Wheat-No. 9 red HI Corn No. 9 80 j Oats No. 9 Triltn 6 7 M Butter-Creamery 28 29 Egg State and Pennsylvania.... LIVE 8TOCK. Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg. C1TTLS Extra, 1450 to 1800 pounds 8 91 7 10 Prime, laoo to H'X) pounds 8 7 i J 85 Oood, 1200 to 1)0 pounds 6 65 4 8 no Tidy, 1060 to 1150 pound. 641 4 875 Fair, 900 to 1100 pounds 585 4 30 Common, 700 to 900 pound. 6 10 4 6 7- BUSINESS CARDS. JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, Pension Attorney and Real'.Estat Agaat, RAYMOND E. BROWN, attorney at law, Brooscvtllm, Pa. & m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real estate agent, patent secured, ool- ectlnns mud promptly. Office la IradleaM fciUdlng, KeynoldsTlUe, Pa. 5MIIH M. McCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public and real estate agent. Col lection will rece ve prompt attention. OSes la the Keynoldsrllle Hardware Oo. building, Main atreet Reyuoldsvllle, Pa. QR. B. E. HOOVER, DENTIST, Resident dsn 1 1st In the Hoover bnlldlaf Main atreet. Oentlenes In operating. OR. L. L. MEAtiS, ' DENTIST; Office on second Boor of tha Fin Halloa at sank building. Mala street. DR. R- DeVERE kino, DENTIST, Offlc on second Soar of the Syndic . ng. Main street, KeynoldavUIa, Pa. HENRY PRI ESTER UNDERTAKER. Black and whlta ttineralean. afaia8tow Re jnoldsvlll, Pa. . .