HOW THE AUTUMN GIRL WILL DRESS ni il K autumn girl, bless her, is not going to sweep up women have been doing No, her skirts for the street quite clear the ground, and she reserves for theater and house wear the hampering costume that trails. Hough goods are much liked by the autumn girl, friezes, cheviots and tweeds. They are shown ihis season in especially charming shades, and Flounces and Fringes Will Be Worn Indoors l ( __ nn MA'l* is taken oft of the i WW I s ' reet gown tliis year is ft WWJ put onto tlie house gown. ® 4 Sa '' sweeps ami swishes in a A fl very frivolous deed. And the frivolity is carried out in flounces and fringes. Not since ls:so have .ve had such a lot of flounces; in fact, there is a decided tendency to a return to ihe fashions of that day. The all-black gown is considered elegant and modish, but one should be very sure of its becomingness. The pli.mp woman need have no doubts about it. nor the very fair; but to the neutral-toned it is a trying costunr.'. A thin black gown is an excellent adjunct to one's wardrobe, and an economical one. With un lined yoke and sleeves, it is suitable for anv sort of evening wear; putin lining, and, 10, there is a gown that ■will do for church or afternoon visit ing. lCvening gowns of soft, thin wool are liked very much just at present, are preferred to the rustling silks that have had such a long day. Made simply with accordion plaited skirt and blouse they are not at all elab orate affairs, although with a deep collar of lace such a costume looks decidedly dressy. For the soft wool ens, albatross, nun's veiling, etc., a scarf of dress material should form White Hats To Reign Supreme This Fall SSn 111 I K hats lire tlif un- | I HPa tmiin's favorite, and bid 112 Vfi f a ' r to be more than a R A « passing fad. The black and white combination is^ still a mark of elegance, and some of the best hats are white trimmed very simple with black, a ! vv /> -Z ' KM . TrtKSs "jQa ' S wing oeing de rigeur, Crowns are low, brims wide. Wide is no name for it. Regular 1 cart wheels, the new headifcar ap pears. i nl\ the wheels look as though they had seen better days; a dent WOMAN'S CLUB PAPERS. One must first haven line fur a ab ject if hi- would come to any true knowledge of it. I lie proposition aottiub -'tuple, and is old enough iu nil eon i it urc, jet one > ees u tremen dous waste ■.f enerpy niiionp women «i in pi v became tlie.\ refuse to take thi# into con c • ration. 'I itmajority > 112 woniri ■ eciii ! ili i:l. that they ran obt n a know!: .112 a object bv nil i < V 1 \ inp out a i • of Irail ing and a»sinninff papers. "The In llui if 112 tin- I'lei ih Itraina on the Drama of the lit -toration" i- given to n lady win never heard of ( unpreve, •nd M'iioet uld not tell whet her lo lived at the time of Shakespeare or before Hy n (in ■ ii 112 mm ute-. ur ' which e»#r\.... \ biding th* wrtL«f, fi rgaM »■» M u ax U t* the. blending of brown and red, deep greens and leaf-yellows seem very appropriate for fall wear. Some green, it may be but a line, is noticed in almost all the fabrics. These gowns are quite tailfiry, ami, on many of them pipings of leather are used. Yesterday we saw a very effective Norfolk suit of rough brown and white trimmed with pipings of red leather. Not only is leather em ployed lor the narrow pipings, hut also for belts, collars and cults, l'or ourselves, we prefer a limited use of this material. The skirts are made up without I linings. Gored ones with the ilure below the knee are liked, but the plaited skirts are gaining in favor. 'Those who do not find the hip yoke unbecoming and it is very unbeeom j ing to a thin figure—may use the I smoothly fitted yoke and lower plaits. ! Basque jackets are being preferred | now to the shorter Ktons; the belted | Norfolk and the blouse. Buttons and pockets are much in I evidence, and add quite an air to the outing, or street, suit, whichever you please to call it. The shirt waist suit in light weight wool also forms part of the costume of the autumn girl. These suits are i verv trim and serviceable, and occupy for the winter the place the cotton i ones did in the summer. For these | costumes, cravat, belt and collar must [ be of the latest mode, and then a very i desirable effect is obtained at com j paratively small cost. Small cheeks and 'nconspicuous plaids are liked | for the wool shirt waist suit. ! the gir lie of the gown. Fringe trims I clinging stuffs very acceptably, and on a recent importation of pale gray i wool this trimming was noticed bor i dering fichu, elbow sleeves and over : skirt. here, a dip there, a marked feature of all. Velvet is the most fashionable, as well as the most expensive, material used fi.r these hats. A handsome black ostrich plume draped artistical ly about the sweeping brim of a big white velvet hat certainly is a crea tion that would tempt every daugh ter of Eve that beheld it. An emer ald pl'ime on a snowy hat is very chic, as green is still with 11s, and it is prophesied its vogue will not dimin ish for some time to coine. Hy 111«• way, if you are the owner of ostrich feathers, or of an ostrich feather, you may bless your stars. They arc very much in it now, and with (lie growing demand for them prices are soaring at a great rate. Ostrich feathers of every imaginable hue are being used by the milliner, purple, (• olden-brown, dark brown, pink, blue, as well as the emerald. The dyeing of ostrich feathers is a ditlleult business, and requires the work of a specialist; and nowadays In- must try all sorts of tricks with the plumes. Some are seen the quill white and the feathers black; some with .>ne side of the plume all white, the other all black; or shading may be employed, ranging from golden to dark brown, with here a dash of there a splash of white. All sorts if liberties are taken this year with 'lie ostrich's plumage. GLLKN OS.MONDE. read. With equal temerity they tackle the l'rcrnplmelite painter-, or Ike phiiiiMiphy of Schopenhauer. One doe* not in the least want to di>coiirape cluh-women Tlilfc is onl v a plea to thi in lo n lect subject is they can pet mar to, sub jcel * that ha\ e omc appeal to them uliji ct- that they can learn about at lir-t hand, and not be driven to that la i n sort of the laz\. an en eye I ipt i i Woman's Home t »mpani on. ii *I r »»f %Vt* I#* r till, lie (chuckling over a job of tea keltlt II 11 I ll i Ma'i.t.lln •\e there wan a p I II e< hanii ipnlM uhti 1 went into the law busine'.*. Ili Wife I don't KNI w about that, but i II |N ■ ! a foinl bat LEB.r WHEN you fot ilia i i iril —rhlcag I rltmur CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1902. ', y1 j r • t^ 1 §p§i^ BATH FOR THE DUCKS. It May He V'noil on a Kot Without Sew er Connect lon, mid li C lienp to Make. First, take an old barrel and knock out Ihe bottom. Dig a hole live feet deep and put the open end of the bar rel down. Then make the box to suit yourself, but mine is four by six feet and a foot high. Cut a one and one-half inch hole in the middle of the bottom and then get tjvo one and one half-inch flanges and two pieces of one and one half-inch pipe, one piece being 14 inches long and the other ten inches. Take 1 he longer piece and a flange and screw them together and then screw to the bottom of the box. Then put about a foot of earth on top of the barrel and set your box down in the ground so that the top is even with the surface of the ground. Screw a flange on the inside of the box over the hole, the same as the other, and screw the ten inch piece of pipe in so that you can un screw it to let out the the water in order to clean the box. Run the inlet jj| A c 112 ' J TUB BATHTUB IN PLACE. pipe marked "F" as near tot he hydrant or source of water supply as possible, so that a hose can be attached and the water allowed to run in for 15 to ~0 minutes each day, so fhat the box will be filled with clear water. I keep a few ducks, and they thor oughly enjoy their bath.—Frank Kipp, in Reliable Poultry Journal. THE FINDING OF HONEY. A Qnealion Tlint Ha* RnmKril Ih* Attention of Leiirnrtl JuriMti for n I.-111«I\ this continually in the flock and train the eye to kc the best i egg producei - while ,vet undeveloped. Save all such for your own use; never I part with them mile-.*, you have more than you runt. After they ure select ed keep them well under \ our own i eye and select from uII these the very ' best eifg producer* to lay the eggs from which you will grow your future | ntock, and gradually you will gain in **gg production. The be t hens are the ones that lay the largent number of egg* that are of fair si/e, good form •ml nicel) Mulshed. Such ejjf;* tell the best, u-usllv pr"dm # the h> I uiu! hav# the best tuliir iu the market >'mtil ers. HOWELL'S HUMOR. Fop»y Story ltclnl«»:l by Hint in Re proval of mi Ovf ra rdeut Admirer. William Dean Howell? has no consider ! able reputation a- a teller of humorous | ttories, but once in a while an excellent i jam is attributed to him. It was provoked | oy the action of a young author who had ! oeen a protege of Howell's and who when he "arrived" never lost an opportunity to I say something nice of Howells. (In one iccasion the younger author made an ad dress before a body of literal) men in which he virtually asset teil, t hat. every thing good and great in native literature owed its inspiration to Howells. The ad dress was printed far arid wide and com mented on at length, not always in a man j ner complimentary to ias author. Mr. | Howells' attention was naturally called to i the matter and he wrote his protege a let ter in which he involved a story of two men who, bathing at the seashore, were f"en struggling and heard crying for help. A crowd gathered to watch the efforts of the life guards, who could hear above the roar I of the ocean and the noise made by the crowd a voice bellowing: "Save the red haired man! Save him first! The red haired man, sure! Both men were saved and the guards, going after the excitable | fellow on the beach in the hope af a grat ! uity, asked: "Red-head chap relation o' yours, sir?"' "No- no relative at all," lie replied, "but he owes me sl9.' DECEIVED BY ITS LOOKS. Ilalf-Inflnted Ilalloon \Vn* Taken by a \t>uro Soldier for General Shatter. j Some army officers who were in Cuba I with (ien. Snafter's army of invasion told 1 the other day an anecdote at the expense of the commander of that expedition. The troops with all their paraphernalia of war I had landed and were awaiting the order to advance on Santiago. Stall officers were ■ busy carrying out the details for the ad ; vance and everywhere there was hurry and bustle. Siiafter was lying in a hammock 112 in front of his headquarters at Siboney, j while 1(J0 yards down the road the men of j the signal corps were inflating the war bal i loon preparatory to making the first as j cension. Without warning the ropes which | held it captive parted and the balloon, half- I inflated and looking for all the world like the body and legs of a gigantic fat man, ! started down the toad toward Santiago, j There was just enough gas in it to keep it upright wit hout cut irely clearing the ground j and it went bobbing along, up and down, I as though it were walking. A negro soldier j passing along at that moment saw the bal i loon and shouted at the of his voice: j "Hi, dar! Guess dat mus' oe de ole man goin' fur de front!" •••I'aint Itcnrt" Won, "1 can never marry you," said the beau tiful blonde. "Isut," pleaded the wealthy old man, "\\ on't you make my life happy for the shoi t years 1 will be here? I am troubled with a j weak and faint heart." "In that case I accept you." And yet they say faint heart never won ! fair lady. Nashville American. l.nu Kates to the- Northwest. I Commencing September 1 and continu- I ing until October 31, ISM 12, second-class one ■ | way colonist tickets will be sold by the I hi | cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul K'y from Chi cago to all points ill-Montana, Idaho, I tali, I California, \\ ashington, Oregon, British j Columbia and intermediate points at great jly reduced rates. Choice of routes to !St. l'aul or via Omaha. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul K'y i is the route of the I'nited States Govern i ment fast mail trains between Chicago, St. 1 | Paul and Minneapolis, and of the Pioneer j Limited, the famous train of the world, i All coupon ticket agents sell tickets via j Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul K'y. or ad dress K. A. Miller, General Passenger ■ Agent, Chicago. The Skin mid the Craft. "Truly," says the patient who is being skin-grafted, "surgical science is a wonder ful thing." "It is, ' says the friend who is helping out with tiie required skin. "First they ! skin me and then they graft you; but at'ie'r i you get well and they send in the bill you'll | find that you've been skinned for their j giaft."—Judge. ■ Two million Americans Buffer the tortur- Ins? pangs of dyspepsia. No need to. Burdock i blood Bitters cures. At any drug store. >"ot New. "This smokeless powder is something i now, isn't it'{" asked Mrs. Bickers, who was reading of mine military experiments. , 1 "Why, my dear." replied Mr. Bickers, "you have used smokeless powder for years." —Detroit Free Press. Stops the Comk •nd works off the cold. I.axative Broau Quinine Tablets. Price 25 cent*. • Forbes "Why will you be seen with • | Stryker? He is nothing but a dead beat, I and everyone knows it." Crimes—"That's i all right. But it is such a pleasure to be j with a man who is always ready to feed your vanity, even though you know he is ; doing t for the drink you arc going to give ( j h m."—Boston Transcript. Matrimony haw spoiled many friendships, i —Chicago Daily News. [ Riches either serve or govern the pos i 1 sessor.— Horace. Politeness is an easy virtue, costs little, j snd has great purchasing power.—Alcitt. ■ | Fretfulness of temper will generally char ' ! acterize those who are negligent of order. — , Blair. The greatest thiif this world has ever produced i- procrastination, and he is still at larg., 11. \V. Shaw. The indispensable in life is the thing you can always dispense with when you can't 1 get it. Baltimore News. ' The most delicate, the most sensible, of i all pleasure- eonst>t in promoting the plcas , ures of others. —Itrugerc. "You told me she had the complexion of a .••one. Why. she is as sallow as can be " "1 meant a yellow rose." London Answers. "lie thinks of having ins poems publish -1 ed in book form." "Well, that's the he»t , way ol putting them whi re they won't , bother anybody ." Philadelphia Bulletin. "I have 1» i n told that you propose In tvi'i i pretty girl J ii no •t. ' -aid sin "I ■ , ilo," he replied. "Oh, George!" -he *■ \ . | claimed, in great contusion, "this i* so sud den!" Indianapolis News I "Kvcry man," said 11« bald cynic, "ha» 'j Ins pi oe ' "He i« a 1 .ir," the eminent local i slati-in.in at w nun the remark seemed t I hu\e been aimed, was heard to natter, "I I haven't got mine yet Indianapolu News * A P.ol pineal M I loii. hi i- Attorney— I If ton leave your property to yew second I Wile, )our children will lertainlt try to : Ine.ik your will. !!:■ ii < In-nl tit n>ui» In.i' - :at I want thaw t« d.. I watf I • i"m,"w ' .v..; vz "» "Wall, yon sat it will Im my , dun to hp my »i!l ' hi it it tui II. • la j bleak net* N \ Wn» y. Don't let the little ones suffer from eczema or other torturing skin diseases. No need for it. I loan's Ointment cures. Can't harm the most delicate skin. At any drug store, 50 cents. A Cosey Home "They seem to he happy in their married life, with such perfect confidence in each other." "Yes; thex live in a flat, and there isn't room for doubt." — Philadelphia Bulletin. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infalli ble medicine for coughs and colds. N. YV. Samuel. Ocean (irove. N. J., Feb. 17,1900. The great secret of success in life is to be ready when your opportunity comes. — Disraeli. 50000000000000000000000000 i ST. JACOBS | OIL § POSITIVELY CURES § Rheumatism S Neuralgia S Backache o Headache Feelache All Bodily Aches o | AND I CONQUERS I' I PAIN. I $ o i #OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO YOU'LL BE SORRY I WHEN IT RAINS IF YOU DONT HAVE §" THE GENUINE «;y »1 / OILED CLOTmNO KEEP YOU DRY MADE FOR WET WORK. m BLACK. AND YELLOW SOLD BY ALL RELIABLE DEALERS . AN» BACKED BY OUR GUARANTEE. » A. d. TOWER CO. BOSTON. MASS. ftITY aPVaWTIGES 1 B B can be secured by all residents of k DBF the country or smaller cities if ■ I our catalogue is lcept fur reference. I Vi'c sell every variety of merchandise of I reliable quality at lower friers than any H 1 other house. We have been right here in I ! the same business for thirty-one years I 1 and have two million customers. If we ■ 1 save them money, why not you? Have you our latest, up-to-date cata- B logue, 1,000 pages full of attractive offer- ■ ingst' If not send 15 cents to partially ■ I || pay postage or expressuge the book B ■ itself is free. Montgomery Ward & Co. ■ 6 CHICAGO The house that tells the truth. M IwIHAZARPj II.IZA KI>I»O\VIIKK, 9 Iguwpowderl OR IRRITATIC)NS OF THE SKIN, RASHES, Heat Perspiration, Lameness, and Soreness incidental to Canoeing, Riding, Cycling, Tennis, or any Athletics, no other application so soothing, cooling, and refreshing as a bath with CUTICURA SOAP, followed by gentle anointings with CUTICURA, the Great Skin Cure. Millions of Women use CUTICURA SOAP for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, B and the stopping of falling hair, tor softening, whitening, and soothing red, ■ rough, and sore hands, for baby rashes and chafings, in the form of Laths *1 for annoying irritations and inflammations of women, or too free or offeu- I slve perspiration,in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses and many ■ sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves, as well as {Nk for all the purposes 01 the toilet, hath, arid nursery. CUTICURA SOAP HI combines delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICURA. the great H skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the most refreshing of H flower odours. Nothing can induce those who have once used these great H skin purifiers and beautifiers to use any others. Sold throughout the world. Hritt&li DewK: 112 NKNVIIKSY KC So HI. >7, Charterhouse I Sq., London, K. C. POTTIV All Natural FIUTOP food*. Palatable and / n bok'Mne. Your grocer should havo theui. y lj Llbby, Mcftelll A Llbby, Chicago V "How TO MAKE GOOD THINGS TO EAT" will W be *ent fre« if you auk u«. &