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Show I For Evening Wear THE BEAVER COUNTY NEWS W. L. Elf MILFORD s Thla la a We .... irk. Alitor Manager. SAVED UTAH FROM AN A- - nwr old world, belong now to all A all. aftc--r the elaaa of 1110. Conaerve ai.o the the baeeuis'.it. eoal you hare Edwari u in a fair way to become ancle In all the klngdoina of Europe. Chicago policemen are much stralghter than they did A short-weigh- fined $100 t shooting formerly la not all profit. This la the season when the Mississippi levees must brace themselves for any emergency. Stovaine may yet be relegated for ase only on the patient's pockst while he pays the doctor's Mil. The poultry show Is a good thing, provided It doesnt keep the hen away from her dutlea too long. That man who was robbed of $100 Just oefore his wedding waa caught at a most Inopportune time. Five suspected crooks have been shot to death In Chicago this season. Prudent crooks will avoid being suspected. Incendiaries tried to burn down an angina house In a New York suburb. This was certainly iddlug Insult to Injury. Something apparently has dlsgrun tied the weather man this year. If one looks at the stylo of weather he hai been giving us since It began. Acetylene torches for use In dense fog have been aupplled to the Parisian police stations. It would seem that the London police would need them more. Edison believes that the time Is coming when laborers will live as capThis will balance things, as modern capitalists work aa hard as italists. laborers. The French submarine that dived under a sinking boat and held It up while the crew was rescued Is the first that really practical us has been made of. The governor of New York calls for Stringent automobile laws. They will have to have them If the metropolis Is to contlnus to lead In the population of world cities. some localities, It Is said, the farmera are becoming no careless with their motor cars that a town man Is almost afraid to drive bis horse out Into the country. In Chicago man In the business says the customer who asks for strictly fresh eggs gets charged more and that's all bo does get Queer no one ever thought of this before! bon-goes- UK TKKM "yellow peril has Ufn much used during the past few years. If you ask any occidental the question, Is there to the west in the awakening of China? the answer is oftentimes in the affirmative, for the simple reason that China has such a large jMipulation and such a vast territory. You will feel justified when you learn that China will soon have a constitutional government with a standing army of 540,000 men and a navy strong enough to guard her extensive coast line, in addition to other reforms such as the prohibition of opium smoking, the adoption of a new school system similar to the west, etc., etc. China is auakening and it is possible that she will become one of the great powers within a decade or two. The yellow peril ia apparent. Itut if you examine rarefully her geographical situation and her historical foreign policy you will arrive at the conclusion that the Occident has nothing to fear in the awakening of Chiaa. me here point out a few facta. For ages China remained apart from the rest of the world and had hut little intercourse with foreigners until the nineteenth century. Her people, being long under the influence of the doctrine of Confucius, have always lieen of a jteuccful nature. To the Chinese the thought of extending power over a foreign soil at the eN-nsof human blood would be considered aa a crime. She gave up her Siam and Korea, without much disdependencies, Hurrnah, pute with the other nations concerned, because the jieople did not think it just to call for new levies merely to attempt to keep those dependencies under her control. Such a policy naturally led the world to think that China was sleeping and her recent work toward the advancement of would then Ike country, which is absolutely necessary for to be of west. sort seem The greater part of her dominion a danger to the is still undevclojied, whore schools are to lie established, railroads built, mines opened, industry and commerce encouraged. She will have too much to accomplish in her own vast land long before she could ever attempt to wage wan with the world. On the other hand, the renaissance of China will lie of groat advantage to the west. Among the many present reforms may he mentioned the new school system, under which education is provided fur and maintained by government grants and local taxes, attendance being required by law, The now generation imbued with new though not strictly compelled. ideas when coming in contact with foreigners will show no jealousy, but will live like hrethron with them. The enactment of laws will entitle foreigners to enjoy the same privileges as the Chinese, though the right of extra territoriality should be abolished. Foreign trade, which has been limited to the treaty porta, will be extended, and the whole of China will ta accessible to all occidentals. Capitalists will have s groat opportunity d to invest their money in enterprises. China is rich in agricultural and mineral products. They will furnish not only an abundance for home consumption, but large quantities for export, if properly worked) with modem implements. Undoubtedly foreign romineree will be greatly increased, especially when the means of internal communication are improved by the construction of the proposed network of trunk and branch railroads jK-ri- coal firm baa been Even giving abort weight Kermlt Roosevelt shot three OPERATION In The best preparation for a woman who contemplates marrying a man ta reform him la to take In washing for If she likes that sort of n year. thing she can then set the day. The metropolis has received a bitter body blow. The wife of a prominent British public man has fled from the noise of liondon to seek real In such a very quiet, sleepy place ns she takes New York to be. How Chicago will chuckle and Boston beam! A prise for one of the best papers on "How Can Clean and Wholesome Milk be Purchased at Least Cost for the New York Market offered by the health board of New York city has been awarded to a man who has for several years been an Inmate of the State Hospital for the insane at Middletown. N. Y.. and the officials are, wondering where the laugh comes In. r watchful observer haa discovered that there ia "a straight and slender tail trailing behind the nucleus of Halley's comet. Thla Is aa it should be. No comet appeara In public without aueh an appendage, and aa the original Halley visitor was known to have one the latest discovery appears to be a guarantee of good A Vegetable Compound De Forest, tion four years ago I had pains backsehe, and a weakness. The doctor wanted me to have another operation. ltookLydia E. Pinkhsms Vegeta- ble Compound and I am entirely cured of my troublea." Avgusts Yesfekmakx, De ForAnother Operation Avoided.sufFor yean I New Orleans, La. Mrs- - est, Wisconsin. fered from severe female troubles. bed and Finally I was confined to mywas necesthe doctor said an operation Pinkhams VegE. I Lydia gave sary. etable Compound a trial first, and Mr. was saved from an operation. 1111 Kerlerec St, New Lilt Petkoux, Orleans, La. Thirty years of unparalleled successs confirms the power of Lydia E. Vegetable Compound to cure female diseases. The great volume of unsolicited testimony constantly pour-ingproves conclusively that Lydia E-- Pinkhami Vegetable Compound is a remarkable remedy for those distressing feminine ilia from which ao many women suffer. Fink-ham- Indo-Chin- a, 'A few days ago complaint waa made Stands Above Danger Zone that women's hatpins arc too long. It is true that they are ltarbarously long, but there are other phases of tlic question. I, who am a can sec the top of every woman's hat and am pleased at the wonderful creations of millinery art whenever I have the opjtorl unity to observe them closely in a crowded car. Yea, indeed, many women allow their hatpins to protrude a few inches farther than is necBy FRANK J. REBIK essary. However, I have them around my face rarh day and regret to say that I never had the luck of coming into contact with any, even though they danced and boblted before my chin con- tinally. I have no trouble in avoiding them, hut would not dodge one if I did see it coming my wav, even if the result would be a scar, for the larger the scar the less space Id have to shave. Hcsidcs, it is not even- man who can show sufficient scars to make the public suspect him of being a d veteran. This consideration, taken in connection with the regret, pity and sorrow a woman ordinarily expresses nfler having impaled a man, should lc enough to outweigh the pain and blood shed caused hy being pierced by a hatpin. I think it is high time that men paid more attention to and appreciated the beautiful and beautifying ejects of the hatpin, foliage, feathers. mil estate, ribbons and shrubbery on ladies' bats, despite the mere possibility of losing some bark from their fairs. six-foot- er, in If yon want special advice about to Mrs. IMnkham. your case write at Lynn. Mass. Her advice ifi free, and always helpful. Iron. By Julia Bottomley. new coiffures have proved the of numerous new decorations fitted to the arrangement of the hair In smooth masses. Large Jeweled pins of shell have proven the moat attractive for evening wear. After their adoption cornea the problem of keeping n hat on, or keeping It properly adjusted after It la on. Thla has brought the evening hat having n bridle under the chin or hair straight to the fore. For the bridle ia extremely becoming to youthful faces, and useful (n fastening the large picturesque and beautiful hats which are worn fdr evening. Hoods of chiffon are preferred to hats on all those occasions when the head needs simply to be protected when one ia on the way. "These are supported by a wire bonnet frame, such aa la used for making childrens bonnets. Thla la covered with chiffon stretched on plain, and forma a foundation for the shlrrlngs and rufflea which are ao lavishly and Huffily supported by It. And altogether this sen ible little affair for evening wear la aa light aa an equal bulk of down, and aa soft and protecting aa a caress. The new devices for fastening on hata help out Immensely where a hat must be worn. They have no other name than They fasten the hat more securely than plus, and are steel hair pins In reality, fastened In the head size of the hat by a patent pin. A barb or small diamond-shaped finish at the points pro vents them from slipping out As nothing In the world can so finish and give character to a costume as an elegant hat, this device for keeping hats In place In a boon to the wearers of picturesque millinery. Besides they save Jabbing the hat by the ordln ary pin point repeatedly, which din figures and ultimately wears out the fabric of which It Is made. There are Innumerable pretty little coiffure decorations, which are worn with the new coiffure, but there arc n long story In themselves. They are wonderful In helping out and adding to the finish of the toilette. SUITED FOR THE AFTERNOON front. TIE s. The upper edge of band oi satin at foot Is scalloped; a lace ap pllque is sewn at the point of each Visiting Dress That Would Make Up scallop. to Perfection In Satin and Hat of soft felt trimmed with Spotted Voile. some of the dlsatrous experiences of 1909 lapping over. Tbe storms which have prevailed there recently resulted In floods which have caused widea Eastern spread devastation. la reported to have been an especial sufferer, many persona being drowned, while Inaaea In crops and livestock are particularly heavy. The region affected la dependent chiefly on agriculture, and the people being poor the blow falla heavily. Rou-mell- Boston had an ley tidal wave. It baa popularly been supposed that any at tempt to bring added coldness to tha renter of Intellect waa Ilka carrying coala to Newcastle, but the weather man succeeded in he trick. 1 Ir. (iiis-tav- radio-activi- ty radio-activi- ty al No matter what hla rank or position may be, the lover of books is the richest and the happiest of the children of men. Langford. Great Home Eye Remedy, for all diaeaxrs of the eye, quick relief from using PETTIT'S EYE SALVE. All druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. The more expensive a thing is the easier it is to get along without it. The family that eats plenty of Quaker Oats is a healthy, rugged cause it does most and costs least. R1 it It Is Canton in the days of onr great- grandmothers will soon be unpacked from tbe paper wrappings In which they have lain so long. These finely embroidered squares, with their handsome knotted fringes sometimes half a yard long, are being used In Paris for the new swathed gowns and loose draperies. The once necessary Paisley shawl, or that of Indian make, beloved of Queen Victoria and so often given by her as a wedding gift, is not likely to share the popularity of the sllkpn square. Its make is much too thick and heavy and the coloring does not lend Itself to the present mode. The pitfalls of artistic dressing are many, and because one mode of a period Is useful It does not follow that others are really acceptable. lclnm, the eminent Frenchman, says no, and oilers to prove that radium is merely barium, if any one will give him about JlO.OHO to pay for the experiments. The net practical result of these, as he points out, would lie to convert one Imdv, railinm chloride, worth $J0,000 a gram into another, barium, worth less than i I'mt the scientific consepenny a gram. lie would considerable. quences M. Moissenne, member of the French Academy of Sciences and professor of anti-scientif- e, Shawls Coming Back. probable that the beautiful old crepe shawls of thick white, gold or rose silk which were shipped from box-pla- e chemistry at the faculty of science of Paris, is indignant with Dr. talmn for putting forward the hvxihcsis that radium and barium are one and the same body. He points out that Every now and then the news of we know the atomic weight of radium, ?.?, and its spectrum. To doubt the day rontalns tbe account of some the existence of radium is is M. Moissenne' conclusion person bring burned to death while who A his withholds third name, dors not go so far as physicist, amok log In bed. The moral of such accidents" and all like them In that to say with Dr. Inchon that radium does not exist, hut expresses his admidisaster la generally one of the prompt ration of the experiments of many other substances upon eat tblnga In the world to come to one which to the doctor have that is a gen-rInvited by proved appears when deliberately property of all matter and that matter is condensed energy. Poot-lSas- The most popular food in the world be- - faith. ? When Rubbers Become Neceasary And your shoes pinch, thske Into your the antiseptic hoes Allen's powder for tha feet. Cures tired, aching feet and takes the sting out of Corns end Bunions. Always use It for Breaking In New shoes and for dancing parties. Bold everywhere 2Gr. Simple mailed FREE, Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. feathers. battle-scarre- Does radium, after all, exist Pure iron Is only a laboratory prep ration. Cast Iron, the most generally useful variety, contains about five pel cent of impurities, and the curious thing is that it owes Its special valui to the presence of these. Pure iron can be nhaved with a pocket knife; impure iron can be made almost ai bard as steel. Materials required: Four yards satin This is elegantly carried out In satin and spotted voile. The tight-fittin- g 42 Inches wide, three yards voile, one yards lace, one dozen apprincess part la covered in and one-hal- f aatln arranged In folds; at the back pliques. is formed, and taken a wide - Tbe year begins in Europe with down- ward in both aides, c well-pai- TVis After an open, I't , whatever they are, and hla father has not bagged any. Seems to ns that cornea pretty near being nn exaggerated ease of lese majeste. ByLydiaE.Pinkhams l Decollete Gown Finish. One of the prettiest Ideas In a finish for the top of a decollete gown Is a narrow band of fur sewed to the edge of the bodice and outlining a full turker of tulle. The style will be generally becoming and Is appropriate for gowns developed from every kind of fabric, from chiffon to chiffon cloth, and may be adopted by either maid or matron with equally good results. A simple flat band of passementerie Is a dainty finish to the top of some of the girlish looking frocks in net. ntessaline or marquisette. to fool: this Joins the deep band of satin that Is sewn to the voile; the upper edge of which Is gathered to Piece lace forms the the princess. yoke, which has folds of satin taken )ver the shoulders at the sldea; these re caught down by roaette; n atrip the f innion Is carried acrosa Stock and Jabot. new stock and jabot combined Is made of soft silk and lace trimmed net. with jeta as a trimming. The stock comes In a variety of the new colors. Jet natlheads trim the lattice work of the front of the stock and Jet heads are used in decorating the sill in bnt ball which dangle over A j Make the Liver Do its Duty Nias tinea ia tea wbes the bw toaack and bowel, ora light. right fits CARTERS LITTLE UVER FILLS gndy but finely pel a lazy liver Is do its duty. Curs Coo-tipatio- n. Indiges- tion, Sick Hsadsche, snd Dietrsee after F.ii.,. Small Pifl. Small Dm, SawO Pries mint bear ngnalure: GENUINE Bronchial Troches natindy ntteve Son Thmit. Hoantnem end UnescelM for clearing the voice. Abes-luttiCough). foce from opiate. ee anything haimfiA Price. 25 centa, SO cent, and 9 1.T0 per bam Sample eent as squab JOHN I. BROWN SON, Bo. Mu Best for Children nt but nmii m Civet indent relief when little throats are irritated and sore. Contains no opiatri and is si pleasant to take as k is effective. Al Dnwilm. Ileum. 9gJaaKateamanaJtaas$ y j |