ERDM A WOMANS VIEWPOINT SUMMER BOARDERS. By Mrs. Lucy A. B. Cliaae. Nearly every farmer's wife has an ambition to earn, and I believe one of tbe most pleasant ways Is by taking ummer boarders If you can secure Congenial ones. My experience of two vmmers has been a delightful one. I believe part of the success Is due to making our boarders feel that they are pert of the family, unless their man ners signify a superior feeling. A landlady should know her place and not become too familiar, for familiar ity always breeds contempt. Our boarders were strangers prev ious to their coming Into our home. Therefore the place and Us surround ings were only pictured In the minds by our deHcrlptlons. We aimed to make everything plain, so there would be no disappointment on arriving. I try to arrange each day's menu to please my guests, and as far as pos ' eible have everything homemade, for such foods seem especially pleasing to lty people. Last year I kept cured hams until the latter part of August by putting them In a jar or tub In the cellar, and covering snugly to keep files out and bugs. Mould will form on the sur face, but If rubbed with a cloth or pa yer ouce a week It does not affect the flavor of the meat. Our home does not possess a dining m, but by having screens or losquito netting for the outside wln--. -sow casings the windows may be re moved on hot days, thus affording a eool place to eat. If there Is a baby In the home who Steeps or walks, the mother will find a pen made of slats fastened at top and bottom to long strips of wood an ex cellent place to keep him in while she ti doing her work, for such toddlers re most inquisitive little beings, and If allowed too much freedom might prove annoying to the boarders. On pleasant days the pen could be carried to the lawn. Whenever a horse is not being used always avail myself of the opportun ity to give my boarders a ride. New Tork Tribune. Won a Prize. , i Mlsg Zoe Hartman of Cornell Unt rsity has won the $50 prise for the 4-1 ,n essay on "Woman Suffrage Essen- " to a Democracy." The prize was ded by Miss Mary 3. Anthony, who . LU ji.ooo, the income of which was to iven annually for the best essay on y Ca subject submitted by pupils of the i diversities and colleges In the State New York. New York Sun. Suffrage Movement. Mrs. Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, V. D., Mayor of Aldeburgh, England, opened the fair recently held In Lon don by the Women's Social and Po litical Tjnlon. Mrs. Herta Ayrton, tho only woman member of the Institute of Electrical Engineers, opened It on the second day, Miss Beatrice Harrji den on the third, Mrs. Kendal, presi dent of the Actresses Franchise League, on the fourth, and Lady Con stance Lytton on the fifth. The fair la said to have been a great succesi both financially and as a means of gaining converts for the suffrage movement In Great Britain. New Tork Bun. Forty Years' Service. Miss Mary Evans, A. M., Lttt. D., a graduate of Mount Holyoke, resigned s president of Lake Erie College, Palnosvlile, Ohio, after a service of forty years. She will be succeeded by Miss Vivian Blanche Small, asso ciate piotessor In the Latin depart ment of Mount Holyoke. Miss Small was graduated from Mount Holyoke In 1896 and received the master's degree from the University of Chica go In 1905. For several years she has been assistant secretary of the National Alumnae Association and for two years head of Mead Hall, one of the dormitories at Mount Holyoke. New York Sun. Woman Conducts a Mouse Farm. A woman In western Massachusetts makes a living at the unusual occupa tion of mouse farming. Last year she cold 8000 mice and rats for expert ' mental purposes. They were bought by the laboratories for use in the study of tuberculosis and various diseases. lhe animals are artificially Infected, and the results studied by observations carefully recorded, Mice. are used In greatest numbers at $15 . to $25 per hundred. Rats sell for "about $25 per bandied. The animals are kept in cag es and the farm buildings. Bes1d.es rats and mice the live stock includes several hundred guinea pigs, and a number of rabbits. Some of the 'anf tnals arc of rare- breeds and are sold for pets. .They are fed' on .grain and vegetables, using several hundred dol lars worth of oats yearly and several tons of. carrots and other vegetables. Guinea pigs are used In large numbers In the laboratories for the manufacture of anti-toxin, antidotes for the poison which certain diseases create In the system. American Cultivator. How Annoying. How annoying' It Is when baby care lastly lets bits of bread and milk fall upon the tablecloth! How Irritating it la to see all one's oarsful Ironing re duced to nothing so soon! It is, trying, no doubt. But why not arrange baby's place te prevent accidents? That la easily done and without the assistance of a homely tin waiter, too. The least objectionable protector of tablecloth Is made of two oblongs of butcher's linen with an oilcloth Inter lining. They may be sewed up Just like' a pillowcase, If you prefer, or you might like U19 Improvised tray better if each piece of linen were hemmed. Then two may be sewn together Just inside the hem, with one end left open for the Insertion of the oilcloth. You will certainly like the arrangement, and baby will! rejoice if you allow him to, Instead of scolding him too often for faults that tiny hands cannot pre vent. Children's eating bibs are made of Turkish toweling. Some of them are woven iu the correct size and shape; but they may be made at home of the same quality, bought by the yard. They are cut the desired shape and bound round the edges and neck with a tape that loops over a button at the back of the neck. New Haven Regis ter. Marrying Abroad. The responsibility for the present humiliating slave-trade In which rich American girls are sold to the titled decadent of England and the Conti nent Is almost wholly the fault of the men of this country. This opinion Is offered only nfter years of observation and consideration of our social condi tions, and after a pathological study of American men. Their open astonish ment and chagrin at this phenomenon would be vastly amusing were it not so pathetic. Our men have a helpless inability to see themselves. Nor is the responsibility of the mother lost sight of, for the foreign suitor begins with her, as he does In Europe. She Is the outer citadel, which must first suocumb to his studied charm. This outer citadel Is carried with astonishing ease, as be quickly discov ers, and for three reasons. The moth er is easily dazsled; her social foun dations do not go down deep in the class to which she almost Invariably belongs; her husband has made every dollar 0 fthe" lure of' those millions, without which there would not be this problem to solve. Second, the women who see what a given man really is, who estimate him at all justly, who begin even to understand men's soolal standards either in this country or Eu rope, are rare indeed. The American mother is dearly out of her depth at the start, as unfit as a chdld to counsel her daughter. She Is not equipped for it It Is not her work. In the third place, that subtle relation ship of sex which European men of any age always have the art of estab lishing with a woman of whatever age, their attention, their qulok courtesy toward women, their habit of listening absorbedly when a woman speaks all this Is so absolutely new to the American mother than she becomes hypnotized by it and can no longer distinguish truth from falsity, or a mere national point of etiquette from a personal thoughtfulness and delicate tenderness of feeling. Anna A. Rogers In the Atlantic. Fashion Notes. Silk panels are plentiful. Draped waists are very popular. A new fad is the bathing parasol. The trend Is toward picturesque ef fects. The pointed waistline Is a novelty after the straight cross effects of tho empire out Travelling skirts are cut so that they escape the ground by a scant three- Inches. Some of tie petticoats worn with the hlgh-walated skirts are made with awldo-fltted belt. Hat styles demand! that the hair be flat at the front, wide at the sides and full at the back. Moss roses, with their attendant buds and foliage, are being much used, in hat trimming. Among the materials used for bath ing suits are mohair, fine serge, taf feta and silk serge. Some of the newest and smartest of skirt and coat costumes are being made without sleeves. Old-fashioned brooches, Including the goldtoue of our grandmothers' day, . with ita mosaic centre; are In the very height of fashion. Booties for little folks, made of linen and embroidered in either the satin' stitche or eyelet work, are as dalntjK as they are serviceable. ' - Silver and rhlneatone buttons trim the pale blue gown of - satin crepe which' is Included In the trousseau of the smart young society woman. .' Witjh-the returtt to shorter should er lints the scarf Is now worn over the shoulders and not thrown off onto the arms, as has been the fashion of late. , . Empire and princess effects demand tne softer and more sheer- mousse lines, batistes, muslins, the cotton voiles, crepes and others of similar texture. - ".. " Yellow is one of the smartest colors for the separate blouse. , Those of handkerchief linen and trimmed with lace dyed to match are especially fetching. An exquisite fancy of the moment is the kerchief of brilliants worn on tho bead. It la an accompaniment, of course, of the most elaborate of the evening costumes. New York City. The bodice that includes such a garniture as this one is one of the latest and prettiest that the season has brought forth. The garniture can be braided or embroid ered or made from fancy material, and It gives a distinctive touch with out Involving any great amount of la bor. This blouse is made of pongee, and Is braided, while the yoke and sleeves are of net In matching color, but the model suits the thinner mate rials as well as It does the heavier fabrics, and for the gulmpe portions either the net or a fancy all-over or tucking or something similar will be found appropriate. In .this case the blouse is worn with a high walsted skirt to give the modified Empire ef fect, but it extends to the waist line so that It can be utilized for the regu lation skirt as well. If It is to be joined to a skirt in prlncesse style the skirt can be arranged over It either at the natural or at the high waist line and Joined at the upper edge. ; The bodice Is made with front and backs, which are tucked and joined to the narrow yoke. The garniture is arranged over It The under sleeves are long and close fitting and. the lit tle cap sleeves are snug without being tight The quantity of material required for the medium size is' two and five eighth yards twenty-one or twenty fsur, one and seven-eighth-yards thirty-two or one and three-eighth yards forty-four inches wlde .wlth two yards eighteen for the yoke and sleeves. ' Wide Collar. wide collar of handkerchief lin en cut in points and embroidered in a neat design is a pretty decoration for a wool school dress. The collar Is made separate, and by Us frequent changing the little gown la kept look ing spick and span. Irish Crochet Imce. Real Irish crochet lace has been added to the list of real laces showing figures of color. No Clmnge In Sleeves. There will be little or no change In sleeves later. It is probable that corsages and bodices will be more square over the shoulders, and In that case sleeves will set lower on the arms that is, the shoulder seam will be longer. ' Foulard Flm-ness. A pretty bordered foulard seen re cently had a coarse ribbed surface with a pattern of small groups of tiny dots on an ivory ground, and a straight border of black on white, with touches of heron blue, rhodo dendron purple, Jade green and brownish purple, the effect being like that of a broad band of embroidery. ' Infant's Shawl Wrap. This convenient little wrap appro priately belongs in every Infant's out fit. It serves the purpose of both hat and shawl, and It can be slipped on at a moment's notice whenever the tem perature requires. It can be made from flannel or from cashmere or from wash silk lined with albatross or from any similar material, and It can be scalloped at Its edges or tin lshed with hems that are feather stitched or in almost any way that fancy may suggest. The long, point ed, narrow effect is both pretty and practical, but often a shorter wrap Is wanted, and this one can be made in either style Illustrated. The wrap Is made In one piece with casings and draw strings arranged to form the hood. ' The quantity of material required is, for the full length wrap, one and a half yards twenty-seven or one yard thirty-six Inches wide; for the shorter, wrap one yard twenty-seven or three-' quarter yard thirty Inches wide. Braiding Is the Rage. Broad flat silk military braid Is used as trimming to an unprecedent ed extent, narrow soutache represent ing a close rival, while in many- cases coats are bordered with broad bands of taffeta ribbon or with velvet Narrow Skirts. Some of the new skirts are so nar row that they look like bolster cases; and. Indeed, go under that nam abroad. PEARLS OF THOUGHT. A book worm is not necessarily a bore. Many a gay looking little slipper covers an aching sole. The moon, the maid, the man and nobody's thinking about mother-in-laws. The way to cure a feminine heart ache Is apply a new hnt quick to her bead. , Wisdom is the precocious young daughter of the grass widow, experi ence. June set to music would revive the old time favorite: "Come haste to the wedding." The rose of life hath many petals, but none so dewy, fresh and fragrant as a mother's love. How often do we weep over the comedies of deceit and smile at the tragedies of conscience! Don't become too worldly wise. Keep some of your Illusions and you will retain Just that much of youth. "Asters by the brookside make as ters In the brook" but cookbooks In the kitchen, don't always make a cook. That no matter how much of a start Art has, a girl always hands over her heart when the tight man comes along. That he hopes if he- does squeeze into heaven there won't be any of those amateur angel cakes passed around for refreshments. That the idiot who tries to rescue a fool when he falls In love is plung ing Into deep waters where even friendship needs a life preserver. When May weds December Cupid can count up the summer days in that household on the fingers of one hand and then use only his thumbs. Environment Is nothing. Consider the undaunted nasturtium. The hotter the sun and poorer the soil and scarc er the rain the more vivid and brll Han it glows. That a girl's sense of responsibility Is like her religion, a cushion she leans back against when she doesn't know any other argument to help her carry her point. He who Is ill bred enough always to tell the truth may not hold to much social prestige, but he will re tain his self-reBpect which is immeas urably greater than crown or favor. Real love never dies. The pathetic dead that mark the way are but frail hearts whleh could not endure eith er the Infinite pleasure of the infinite pain of a thing that endures forever. From "Eve's Epigrams" In the New York Telegram. HOW WIND PRODUCES WAVES. He Action Upon Desert Sand and Prairie Snow, There are wind waves In water, sand and snow. The great sea waves are produced at that part of a cyclone where the direction of the wind coin cides with the direction of advance of the depression. Along this line of advance the waves In their progress are accompanied by a strong wind bowling across their ridges so long as the atmospheric depression Is main tained. So the. waves are developed until they become steep. The average height In feet is about half the veloc ity of the wind in miles. A wind of fifty-two miles an hour gives waves of an average height of twenty-six feet, although Individual waves will attain a height of forty feet The prevailing wind In all longi tudes Is westerly, so wherever a wes terly wind springs up it finds a long westerly swell, the effect of a previ ous wind still running, and the princi pal effect of the newly born wind Is to increase the steepness of the already running long swell so as to form ma Jestlo storm waves, which sometimes attain a length of 1,200 feet from crest to crest The longest swells due to wind are almost invisible during storms, for they are masked by the shorter and steeper waves, but they emerge Into view after or beyond the storm. The action of the wind to drift dry sand in a procession of waves Is seen in the deserts. As the sand waves can not travel by gratitation their move ments are entirely controlled by the wind and they are therefore much sim pler and more regular In form and movement than ocean waves. In their greatest heights of several hundred feet the former becaraes more complex owing to the partial consolidation of the lower layers of sand by pressure, but they still have the characteristic wave features. In the Winnipeg prairies of Canada freshly fallen snow is drifted by wiud in a procession of regular waves pro gressing with a visible and ghostlike motion. . . They are similar to desert sand waves, but less than half as steep, the wave length being fifty times as great as the height' The flatness of the wind formed snow waves affords a valuable indication of the great dis tance to which hills shelter from the wind. Chicago Tribune. . ,.. Rather.Old. V "But it Is. a story" strictly up -to tie minute," said the .rising young author. ' ' - "H'mt I can't see Tlt(" . remarked the u.Kiiohor with a. shake of his head. . . "What do you take 'exception to?" "Wen, In the very first chapter" yon say the villain has a wiry pead." ' . "What of thatr r - "What of It? Why, if thetdry was strictly up to date he Would have a wireless beard.' Get wise'." Chicago Dally News. , American rubber boots and shoes are finding a good market in southern China. BUS1MCS9 CRFTDS. JUSTICE OF THB PEACT, Pecilon Attorney and Raal;Ktat Agent RAYMOND E. BIIOWN, attorney at law, Bbookvillb, Pa.. (, m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT- LAW, R.kI evata agent, patnt eecured, col tlin umdu promptly, utile la Syndicate lldlng, ituytiuldivlllH, Pa. SMITH M. MoCKElGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Notary public iinrl real MWta aient. OoU lent lorn will roue t prompt intention. Oflloe In the Itoyiioldnvlllo Hardware (Jo. building. Main itreet HeynoldiTllle, Pa. l)rt. B. E. HOOVES, ' DENTIST, Keeldent den tint. In tbe Hoover building Main etreet. Oentleneaa In operating. )n. L. L. MEANS, DENTIST; Office on second floor of 'A 4 Viral Hetloeal tank building, Main etreet. It. DlVEUEKINO, b?NT18T, office on aeoond floor of the Syndicate belli ag, Main etreet, Ueynoldavllle, Fa. iJENUY PIMESTER UNDERTAKER. Blank and white funeral ears. Mataitree ReynoldewSre, Pa. Where Oool Ocean Breezes Blow. "Tours to Summer Haunts" is tfa title of am interesting publication ls sued annually by tbe Intercolonial Railway of Canada. This year it ap pears in entirely changed form, .more extended as regards the reading mat ter, with the descriptive portions la tersperned with veiy excellent hadf tone illustrations, and rendered more valuable to the traveling public by reason of the neatly tabulated sched ules of special rates, and the hotel list showing rates and accommoda tion. That portion of Quebeo and the Maritime Provinces served by tie In tercolonial Railway is a glorious sum mer country; a country whioh lies by the sea and is fanned by cooling breezes from tbe ocean. It la a comv try whers tbe traveller will find much that is novel and much that will charm, for In no other part of Can ada In there such varley of tourist at tractions. Here are the mountains, fertile valleys, here the crystal brooks Joining with noble rivers, the home the salmon and the trout Here are forests full of big game, and every where the seashore with its sublime ooast scenery and its opportunities for battling and boating. It is to tell of all these that tbe book is published, and it is sufficient to say In thin review the story has been well told and that the subject baa been dose simple Justice without exaggeration. All that is of Interest Is fittingly described and the general Information Is of such a character as win appeal most strongly to the toar 1st. And It is all compiled in conetse and readable form in a book tawoV smnefy bound and ntoAly Ultatratsd. at wttl be mailed free to ail wfao write thus General Paos oncer DerarfesStit Moactoa, N. B, or to tbe Osaersi Esswwn Aaent Mr. It, W. Oisssssa, 308 WMtimgloa street, Boste. Mass. MARKETS. PITT8BURC ' "Hi, 1 : We-No. t red J Bye N0.1 rvr Da. 2 vellow. ear ft M If o. yellow, nelled m 81 Ml i4 ear 63 ite Oata Mo. t white 91 M Do. I white '1 ' M Hoar Winter patent 6 75 In Vanoy etralfbt winters Bay No. I Timothy ISM 1 64 CloTer No. 1 19.10 so fead No. 1 white mid. lon 7S0O Jini Brown middling 20 tfi) M Bran, bulk 27 OH MM Straw Wheal S0Om Oat 8M S 6) Dairy Products. Batter Klein ereemery $ 99 it Ohio creamery 1 4 Fancy country roll I 15 Cheiae Ohio, new II 1) Mew York. new. II J. Poultry, Etc. Hene per lb t 17 19 Chlekene dreeed m n Em Pa. and Ohio, treeh. X H Fruits and Vegetables. Potatoee Fancy white per bu.... 100 I Cabbane per ton 5S di Onion per barrel 1 i) I Jv BALTIMORE. Floor Winter Patent ..I J T 1 M Wheat-No. a red IK Corn Mixed ) 71 Km. 7 Batter Ohio creamery tl PHILADELPHIA. Floor Winter Patent I 9J Wheat No. S red I J Corn No. S mixed 75 J date No. S white el "j Batter Creamery i ! PennaylTanis Hrata. ....... u yes NEW YORK. Floor-Patente J Wheat No. S red 1" ',, Corn No. t : J "J Oata No. S white.. , . M Butter -Creamery ' f Kss State and PennaylTanla.. ' Ju .- i LIVE STOCK. f Wnlorf stock' Yards, Pittsburg. ( CATTLE I Extra. MM to 1600 poonde 0 TS 4 7.00 fnme, 1J0 to 1400 poanda. 5) 4 7J Uood, 1200 to 1300 poonde ...... M Tidy. 1060 to 1150 pounds........... 6 4 fair, WU to lliw pnunda . - 4 Common, 7U0 to 900 pound. a SS 4 423 Bukl... S0J .4 4W Wowe. ; 40J UUJ - BOOS -' f rime, heary 6 8 1!0 Prime, medium weight S 40 4 ' Beet heavy Tarkera 4 45 Llfht Vorkra 8j0 4 8 40 rige, 0 4 8SJ Roufha. 7 J 4 I to caa. a 23 4tt Prima -wwhera... , liood mlid.. Fair mixed ewe and weUiara..... Colle and common. Sarta lamb ... Veal earn heatfy to this eaira .. S M 4 a 7 llll)W .. 4U4l .. INIM .. 4 jj ,4 t r .. S M S I Open your eyes before you wed shut there afterwards.