KINDERGARTEN FOR LABRADOR. The "furthest north" for kindergar tens will be established next Bummer and a young Boston woman will be In charge. Miss Olive M. Lesley, who has been doing kindergarten work for almost ten years In Cambridge, will take ship shortly from Boston fof St. John's, and from there will pro teed on another vessel to Battle Har bor, the point where Commander Peary first got Into touch with civil ization on his return from the North Pole. From Battle Harbor Miss Les ley will proceed by land to St. An thony, and .there will establish, among the half-wild boys and girls of that section of Labrador, Just such a school as she has been conduct ing until recently among her little charges in Cambridge. New York Press. , LIGHT BAGGAGE. I have a friend who went to Alaska on a pleasure trip with me with no more luggage than a suitcase and bandbag, and she asserts .that she was perfectly comfortable. She had to do ' some planning beforehand, but the result was worth it all. She wore woven underwear that did not need the services of a laundress, and a tout walking costume which would stand any kind of weather. Her one concession to gentility was a black India silk frock and a few silk waists that would bear crushing. She was accompanied by her husband with even less luggage, for all of his be longings were packed into a suitcase. She is going to do the rest of her traveling in the same simple fashion, and she goes abroad each year. Betty Bradeen, In the Washington Herald. IS EVENING GOWNS. All of these extravagant models offer suggestions as to style, and they may be copied, with the substitution of different materials and colorings, Brown Hashed Potatoes. Wash and pare a sufficient number ot potatoes, then chop fine and crisp in ice water. Put some bacon drippings In an iron skillet, and when very hot turn the potatoes previously dried by pressing in a clean towel into it, add salt and pepper, cover closely and cook until soft. Then draw to a hotter part of the stove and brown. Serve In a hot dish. 2 li and trimmings, or by some slight change of design. Thin fabrics are again to be In Btyle, plain, painted and embroidered, and also brocaded silks and plain, lustrous silks and satins. The latter require more trimming, and, oddly enough, soutache braiding is seen on some extremely smart evening gowns. A band of braiding Just around the hem of the skirt and the entire Jacket, or band across the top of the waist, is a mass ot braiding. Again, this is on the elaborate order of model, bat with Just a little exercise of thought and taste the same effect may be secured by bands ot velvet or lace where Is the braiding. Harper's Bazar. DAYLIGHT DANCES SOCIETY FAD. Daylight dances are the latest fad In Washington society, and they are proving a welcome relief from the sombre sedateness of the Lenten sea son. As might be expected, Mrs, Nicholas Longworth is one ot the originators ot the idea, and the Countess von Moltke, formerly Cor nelia Thayer, is among her ardent supporters. The dances are entirely original entertainments. First and 'foremost, no men are present, and this Is explained by a hardly less in teresting feature that much of the dancing Is ot the Greek style made fashionable by Isadora Duncan, and bare feet and flowing draperies are the rnle rather than the exception. Moreover, the dancers are devotees of the health-and-open-alr cult They usually meet early in the morning, and all the windows are wide open, so as to make the exercise as health ful as possible. Real exercise it is, too, when the mornings are cold, for ..the dancers have to keep moving nim bly to save their toes from freezing. New York Press. , FINE LACE COLLECTION MADE. Mrs. Roosevelt has placed on exhi bition in the National Museum in Washington a beautiful lace fan which represents the highest develop ment in art in the golden days ot the Italian Renaissance. Although Mrs. Roosevelt only has lent her treasure, tt is likely It will remain as her con tribution to the lace exhibit which the patriotic women of America are col lecting for the Museum. Mrs. James A. Plnchot has given the largest and most valuable collection, and she has also undertaken the task of cata loguing the specimens. Another fine Sift which the lace exhibit has re ceived is from the will of Julia S. 'Bryant, daughter of the poet William Cullen Bryant This includes seven exquisite lace fans and twelve differ ent varieties of lace from Flemish 'and French weaves, all ot the seven tenth century. Mrs. Whltelaw Reid recently sent a fine specimen of early English ecclesiastical lace. Mrs. Levi Z. Letter, Mrs. James Harrlman, Mrs. Oliver Belmont and Helen Gould are ether well known women who hart contributions. New OFF WITH OLD, ON WITH NEW. The Girl He's Tired Of She was distressingly punctual at every appointment. She agreed meekly with everything he said. She pouted sulkily if he looked at other girls. She was Insanely Jealous of every woman who figured in his past, grudged him all other friends. She told him ail she did, thought, said, hoped and experienced, and ex pected equal and continuous outpour ings of the soul from him. If he stayed away, she called him to account. She wrote to him too copiously and too frequently. She leproached him because his ardor didn't equal hers. She never gave him the fun ot wondering if she really did care for him. She made her adoration a sure thing, thus robbing it ot all the ginger. She rattled the chains so obvious ly .that his one thought was to es cape while there was yet time. The One Who Interests Him ' She gives htm the excitement ot waiting once in a while. She frequently advances spicy opin ions of her own. She laughs at his flirtations with other girls. She listens sympathetically to his past love affairs, and loves to hear about his women friends. She preserves secret depths beyond his knowledge, and takes it for granted he can conduct himself prop erly without making her his mother confessor. Her letters are brief, Jolly, and Just so infrequent that he wants some more. She Is (apparently) dellclously ob livious to vhe degree of his ardor, t She keeps him guessing Just what is the real attitude ot her own mind toward him. She isn't indifferent, but neither is she a dead certainty. She never dictates, never binds, never restricts his liberty; yet in this very freedom he is her willing pris oner, and does not want to be re leased. Indianapolis News. Suit Jackets were never shorter. Hats generally will be rosedecked. Dangling earrings are in great fa vor. Crochet buttons are to be much worn. Pleated skirts with tunics are in the lead. ' Button shoes seem to be the order of the day. Turn-back collars and cuffs are to be worn again. There is a tendency to have girdles quite wide in front Buttons ot Dutch silver are fash loned into cuff links. Self-colored dots of various sizes will be seen on some ot the handsome woolen dress fabrics. The wide Gibson pleat continues to give the broad shoulder effect in shirt waists ot the tailor kind. . Large bows ot filmy net and lace, wired into sNape, are being worn as ornaments with the flat coiffure. Cuban heels, quite high, seem to predominate among shoes, and there are also many military heels quite as high. , Hip-length coats in Irish crochet or Princess lace are in evidence as the atre garments, worn as yet, of course, under the opera cloak or street wrap. Embroidered linen waists will con tinue in style. An exceedingly pretty model opens a little to the left ot the front, the entire front being rich in handwork. The nun's veiling shirt waist is very popular for the between seasons, being delightfully light In weight and at the same time warm enough for comfort without an interlining. While flowers of tulle and other transparent stuffs will be in favor this spring and summer for hat trim mings, those fashioned ot braid will be considered especially dressy. The tunie that is straight across the front is in general favor Just now. It Is not unlike last year's washer woman skirt in style, and is Indis tinctly related to the long and over used Moyen age style. made recent York Press. Smart Frills New York City. Net Is one ot the smartest ot all materials for blouses this season, and this one 1b made over a guimpe lining of thin silk, while it is trimmed with soutache and the frill is of silk. The same model would be pretty for silk or lawn, batiste or for any seasonable material, however, and can be made available for such by simply omitting the lining. The tucks provide Just becoming fulness and the frill gives a smart and dis tinctive touch, although this last can be omitted It a plainer waist Is wanted. The sleeves illustrated are new and fashionable, but they can be varied In a number of ways. The deep cuffs can be cut to form narrow bands, making them of three-quarter length or the puffs and the cuffs can be omitted and the tucked short sleeves only used. Marquisette in either cot ton or silk will be found charming for such a waist and net affords infinite variety, while the lining beneath can be made of thin silk or chiffon as liked. When used without the lining the waist would bedesirable for wash able material. The walBt consists of front and backs, which are tucked on indicated lines. The lining 1b a plain one, made with front and back portions, and can be fitted with darts or simply gath ered at the lower edge or with darts as liked. The trimming, which gives An Essential. An essential is that the false hair must not be brought down far over the forehead. This is all very well In Paris, where the French women have rather odd faces, and where there Is no hesitancy. Distinctive Notes. It is quite apparent that draperies ot all kinds, tunics, panniers, over skirts and fichus are the distinctive Botes of present styles. :o Fashion a yoke effect, is applied over the blouse and the collar is Joined to the neck edge. The sleeves are made In three separate portions and can either be arranged over the linings or Joined one to the other. The quantity of material required for the medium size Is four and five- eighth yards twenty-one or twenty- four, two and three-eighth yards thirty-two or two and a quarter yards forty-four inches wide, with one-quar ter yard ot silk or one yard of ribbon three and a half Inches wide tor the frills, soutache according to design. For the lining three and five-eighth yards twenty-one, two and a half yards thirty-two. Perfumed Hats. A new little luxury has been In vented for the benefit and delight of women. This Is the trimming ot the hat with perfumed flowers. Each ar tificial flower is scented with its own particular perfume, violets smelling like fresh violets and lilies like real lilies. The trick Is done by stitching tiny sachets containing the desired extract In the crown or in among the leaves of the hat, and to come into a roomful of women wearing these scented hats Is like stepping into a conservatory. Some women are go ing to the length of scenting their hats even when there are no flowers in the trimming. This outing suit of rose colored linen has small tucks panneled in the sides of the blouse and skirt. Black linen is used for the belt, collar and deep cuffs. A Jaunty tie is drawn through the slash In the blouse front, giving JuBt the required dash to the whole. A Rough Bird. The popular chantecler appears as an alleged ornament on round sailor hats. He is not, in this case, a smooth, well groomed bird, but a ruf-fled-up creation, with his feathers standing out in all directions. Popular Hat Shape. ' One of the popular hat shapes Is of black corded silk, slightly turned up at the side and trimmed with black and yellow plumes. THE DEGENERACY OF THE NEW S YORK INDIAN. I From Iht Monthly Bulletin of th 0 Slate Department of Health. J Tuberculosis is very prevalent among the Indians at all reservations and is responsible for one death in three, it not half the total deaths. It Is impossible to get the actual fig ures, for it seems to be nobody's bus iness to ascertain them. Alcoholism is a very potent factor. The white man's fire water has been very largely responsible for the rapid physical detrloratlon ot the Indians. Theoretically it is illegal to supply alcoholic liquor to an Indian; practi cally he has little or no difficulty in procuring all he desires. As might be expected, there Is a very great amount of Immoderate drinking. It seems to be a reasonable conclu sion that tuberculosis was practically non exlstant among American Indi ans before the advent ot the whites, and the fire water Introduced by the latter has certainly been an enormous contributing factor; all the more for the reason that the whites have, through many previous centuries, be come comparatively seasoned with regard to this stimulant, to which the Indian has not yet accustomed himself. The physiques of the present gen eration of Indian children are Imper fectly developed; the lymph nodes, both Internal and external, are affect ed; there are conjunctivitis, blephar itis and corneal ulceration; eczema, cold abscesses, pulmonary tuberculo sis, bone and Joint tuberculosis. The adult Indians of to-day have not the endurance and stamina of their an cestors. Exercise easily fatigues them. Farmers cannot get the same amount of work out of the Indians they employ that is put forth by white labor. Some of this may be due to laziness or is the result of the racial traditions and customs in ac cordance with which the male Indians hunted, fished and made war, and left their squaws to till the fields; but much is due to the degeneracy here noted. The Indian of to-day is emaciated, stooping, inferior to the white In physique; he does not now . present the full chested, virile, robust figure which characterized his ancestors be fore thoy came to enjoy the influ ence ot the white man's presence among them. VISE WORDS. The truth Is always the strongest argument. Sophocles. Write me as one who loves his fellow-men. Leigh Hunt. Man, thon pendulum betwixt a smile and tear! Byron. Why do we stay on earth unless to grow? Robert Browning. Men must work and women must weep. Charles Kingsley. Careworn man has, In all ages, sown vanity to reap despair. Goethe. When spring unlocks the flowers to paint the longing soil. Reginald Heber. s One thorn of experience Is worth a whole wilderness of warning. Lowell. Most men spend too much of their lives In making others miserable. La Bruyere. Learning Is ever In the freshness of Its youth, even for the old. Aeschylus. The best way to have a good mem ory Is to train it and trust it. Chris tian Register. Whatever makes men good Chris tians, makes them good citizens. Daniel Webster. Happy is the man that findeth wis dom and the man that getteth under standing. Bible. Our own anger does us more harm than the thing which makes us angry. Sir John Lubbock. . An aspiration is Joy forever, a pos session as solid as a landed estate. Robert Louis Stevenson. The man who sits down to wait for a golden opportunity never has a com fortable seat. Home News. It's a great comfort to a woman to feel that any minute her husband might learn to appreciate her. New York Press. What would not a blind man give to see the pleasant rivers and mead ows and flowers! Yet this we enjoy dally. Isaak Walton. Man Is the sun of the world; more than the real sun. The fire ot his wonderful 'heart is the only light and heat worth gauge or measure. Emerson. Romulus and Remus. Simeon Ford, at the recent hotel men's banquet, told more than his usual quantity ot timely stories. Apropos ot foreign travel Mr. Ford said: "The harsh raw winds of March will soon be on us, and happy will they be .then who are on the Riviera, in Egypt, or in Rome. "I met a man at the hotel the other day who had Just returned from Rome. "Well,' I said to him, 'how did you like the old town?' " 'A very artistic city, that's what Rome is,' he replied. " 'Tell me,' said I, 'what work of art struck you most in Rome?' ' " 'Well, sir,' said he, 'if you ask me, I must say that what struck me most was that gol-durned metal group of Romeo and Juliet deriving their nutriment from a she-wolf.' " Phila delphia Bulletin. FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW BRADSTREET'S TRADE REPORTS Wintry Weather Affects Jobbing De mand and Some Retail Business. Crop Outturn In Doubt. "Weather conditions and the unset tled outlook for prices of many com modities are causes assigned for the quieter tone of trade In many lines. Retail business, and to a certain ex tent re-order demand from Jobbers, was affected by the return early In the week of wintry weather. These In fluences were, however, largely tem porary, and were largely offset by the decided benefit to the crop outlook generally by the breaking of the drought. "Doubt as to ultimate crop outturn is still general as the mala reason for buying for fall and beyond falling to take definite form, but there is also recognition of the fact that uncertain ty as to the future prices of many commodities is a drag on trade. In a number of lines the evidences of ar rested demand or pressure to realize prior to new crops are visible In eas ing prices. The situation in the cot ton goods trade, where prices are still steady, however, has been a bar to active buying. Retailers are report ed Inclined to buy only for absolute wants, and present cost of production of goods renders the manufacturing line unprofitable at present prices. "In the iron trade demand ie ap parently not equal to supply of the cruder forms, and curtailment of pro duction, in evidence for some time in the cotton trade. Is now talked about as being actively pursued by furnace men. Liquidation of old supplies and lower prices for the new clip are in evidence in the wool trade. Collec tions are about fair. "Business failures in. the United States for the week ending with April 21, were 193 against "2C7 last week, 247 In the like week of 1909, 254 in 1908, 157 in 1907, 177 in 1906. Busl nese failures In Canada for the week number 15, which compares with 27 last week, and 36 In the correspond ing week of 1909." MARKETS.' PITT8BURC. . Wheat No. 1 red I Bye No. 2 Corn No. 2 yellow, ear 71 74 No. yellow, shelled 72 7S " Mixed ear 07 ,8 Oats No. S white M rtt No. 8 white SO si Floor Winter patent 6 25 6 80 Fancy straight winters Flay No. Timothy ' 20 SO 1 01 Clover No. 1 17 6) is BO Feed No. 1 white mid. ton 82 JO f8 im Brown middlings 270) 2S 00 Bran, hulk. 2S0I) 28 M Straw Wheat 90) 9 60 Oat Sod (60 Dairy Products. Butter Elgin creamery I 84 tt Ohio creamery 81 M Fancy oountry roll V6 28 Cheese Ohio, new 19 19 New York, new is 10 Poultry, Etc. Bens per lb t 17 It Chlokons dressed ) 23 Eggs Fa. and Ohio, fresh. 24 23 Fruits and Vegetable. Potatoes Fancy white per tin.... so 7) Cabbage per ton .. 18 oi 14 0) Onions per barrel 18) 8 89 BALTIMORE. . Flour Winter Patont f S SO S 70 Wheat No. 8 red 1 08 Corn Mixed 70 71 Eggs 11 as Butler Ohio creamery M 88 PHILADELPHIA. Flour Winter Patent t 110 B 75 Wheat-No. 8 red 1 Corn-No. 2 mixed . M 69 Oats-No. 8 white... Butter Creamery 28 27 Eggs Pennsylvania firsts 27 w NEW YORK. Flour-Patents 4 1. 80 Wheat-No. 8 red jr m Corn-No. 8 K Oats No. 8 white J Butter Creamery JL, Eggs State and Pennsylvania.... a LIVE 8TOCK. Union 8tock Yards, Pittsburg. ,, CATTLI Extra, 14.10 to 1S0O pound 8 40 f S S5 Prfm. lftiift a i ..VI am i.ih , 1 7"" ' M W ipi.HIU. ,w.' 9 ' . bood, 1200 to W0U pounds 705 sV ) Tidy, 10W to 1150 pounds, ' 75 4T i0 fair, wo to 1100 pounds 660 if 28 Common, 700 to 900 pounds. 6 50 2 Bulls...... ;. IM Cows , W ooSOuO BOOS I . Prime, heavy 9 TO 9 80 Prime, medium wxliht om II a i Best heavy Yorkers 9 90 Light Yorkers.. 9 18 9 91 8 ii 78 Houghs.'. M 8 60 4 too ' 7 81 0 T 78 BUSINESS CKRDfj. justice or thi feace, Pension Attorney and RealjJCsUts Agses. JJAYMOND E. BROWN, ' ATTORNEY AT LAW, " BttOOKYTLLB, TjL. m. Mcdonald, ATTORNEY-AT- LAW, Real eut agent, patents secured, ee Action miule promptly. Office la lyndlekfeft tiiUdlng, UeyuuIdsvtlU, Pa. jJMITH M. McCREIGHT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, lectloru m re,.- ve prjiupt attendee. Gnat) iu iu n-Tudiu,.iu naruwsrv vo. 011UIUXUO, tain street Kuynuldivllle, Pa. . QR. a. K. HOOVER, DENTIST, ' Resident dentist. In the Hoover bulldlaj Main street. Gentleness In Operating, QR. L, L. MEANS, DENTIST; - Office on second floor of fee First Hatlomei bank building, Main street. QR. R. DlVERE KING, DJOITIST, Office on second Boor of the Syndicate eeila ng, ilatn street, KeynoidsvlUe, P. FTENRY PRI ESTER UNDERTAKER. Block and white funereleere. Helm street, BejaoldsviUa, Pa.