Fancy Feathers THOSE who make up feathers imo | forms that are to decorate niilli- | nery, look with interest upon each J wearer of plumage and each separate | feather. Many thousands of persons j spend their working hours sewing 1 pasting, wiring, branding and other- j wise manipulating the plumage of j birds (mostly domestic fowls) into ! new forms. Each feather is regarded j with an eye to its possibilities in the I evolution of something new by the j manufacturers. Even the tiny featli- j ers from the neck of the pigeon or | peacock are handled separately, in j making up the most expensive pieces, j Just lately, large butterflies made of j these, pasted to a foundation, covered ! on the outside and inside of the j wings with the tiny feathers have made us marvel at the work of the designers. You can imagine the sheen of the wings and the splendor ( of color. The bodies are of velvet j and the antennae of wired chenille or j gold cord. In Fig. 1 a fancy feather piece is j shown, in which the form is purely j artificial, that is, not made to copy any particular natural object, but an j arrangement of plumage from differ- j ent sources into an ornamental piece, j The designer must consider whether his work is to be worn at the front, j back or sides of a hat. The piece shown is made for the front. Beau tiful and wonderful color studies and PRETTY DRESS FOR A GIRL Simple Model That Calls for Either Serge, Fine Cloth or Cash mere. Serge, fine cloth or cashmere might be used for our simple model, which is made with a panel frcnt laid on sides in a wrapped seam, and trimmed with buttons sewn on in sets of three. One tuck is made on each shoulder, m 112 J7\ . :/M hJJIM St For Small Girl. ■(ltched to waist bark and fr nt, (!.<■ skirt Is gathered to waistband. whlc! connects it to tin* bodice Materials required: Four >ard» 4S inch. a wide, one button* Velvtt O.igt When jrou gather up the h tup* of your velvet altertii •• «n dm don't throw them away Mike th« nup lnt'» a soft bag that should li rurfi <1 *!th •he 4r«- •> It «•»»• t.i re or round, und whatever other < a>er«l jrosj *t»h •-an b« combined with it. A Mi* silk cord, or mllv* r or m >!d tl you . i>|i tl,« lilf-ta!ll< ft at* , IHU ib a't . I Tle- U thrown «*< r th« arm Heads. embroidery. HttN» | at. tie, of lap) try | <• lee d">» n kH o»m i < .« r IblaM '*»■ *• >'i l. but ik» »Hli« i : i'i it t,J .4 la a *!>'•» « »• » **•»• *h»- h * 1. u.my t«« t» .«h> tor II s> 91^ I graceful lines are brought out lu I many of these decorations now al most universal. To use them effectively, where they i are large or elaborate, one must ' choose a proper shape and color, and | remember that the hat and other trim ! ming stuffs are to be considered as a ! background for the feather. In the ex j imple shown the velvet shape and rib ! bon bows all in ono color and shade, S frame in the handsome piece mounted j.it the front. A small feather piece is not used in ! this way. The other trimming select j ed for the hat. leads up to it, and the j fancy feather is to be used as the fin ! ishing touch, simply part of a whole, j But milliners, and therefore manufac turers, are regarding with ever in creasing favor, those feather pieces that are almost if not quite a com plete trimming in themselves. Nearly all the wings worn on hats J are "made" wings, which term distin | guishes them from "natural" wings. | They are made so cleverly that it is j difficult to believe they are put to gether by the hand of man. A pair ; of such wings springing from a band |of feathers, is shown In Fig. 2. The | band and wings form a single piece : for which the velvet-draped turban makes an effective background. Such feather pieces make the work of th«» ; home milliner easy. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. NEW CRESS TIP FROM PARIS White or Craarn Colored Voile, Em broidered Heavily, Approved Thing in Lingerie Dress. The very latest news from Paris tells us that white or cream-colored voile, embroidered heavily, will be the approved thing in lingerie dresses for early Spring, seems to be looking a good ways ahead, but if you do your own embroidery you will want this time to get ready in. Really tlm possibilities are endless and fascinating. Either heavy em broidery (wallachlan, for instance) will be used, or beadwork with rub ber beads, or a combination of the two. Can't you Just see a wall-of troy di sl»;n. worked solid in white and out lined beads? Or, perhaps, the beads would be black, ami a black hat would be worn with the dress, or Alice blue, or old rose, or some other becoming and striking shade. How pretty this would he In a three-pic ee suit, with the embroidery consisting of a skirtband, side plaits on the waist and collars and revers on the rout! Then there aro other •lea* a Persian design worked out in varicolored b ads, for Instance, or a spray of heavy flowers, morning- S'ories or passion flowers, with cen t' rs and veins accentuated by means of beads in the proper colors. In this '•a • the embroidery Itself would bo equally attractive In Iff*, colors or In white, or » vt*n in blnek. Tin 11 tin r- arc* all the metal effect* How lov !y bronze would be on cream voile, or liver on ure white! Voile has the advantage of raveling easily. :nd SO It would be quite possible to draw u thread all the way along the n *»terlals and work from that. Even ! ai! w<. I; in: id b< ci 'iibln d with these other efforts. Ho. n't it Make ymi want to start rlaht IIWHV! |)o have u dri s* like th!s for next »;■- on I'ui going to! Lacs Flow«r Pins. 1 ' I" dsiiit* and i'h:irinlit)( pin. (or vi. ar on t-ollMr- and cuffs Is 'e t"'» • i roeheu-1 around an or d"«' ' : "'I »« • |«l) Th ■ flower Is ■». tl m In white, nil fiaiid out ti'Mv from th* jdn. " ' t vNiltt pin. It wr , »i..l It I |.i t » pr»e >. though not •pi •" to-*, j i|ip!|. iin 1 (it- hatpin •' '» •*" I 1 " fkplna Mould b 1 \mr «*r MI kar«-t> pin " "*• ' ■'*' '• PIUS, tliu) ijie ion »l Mtiat lu kUMt M| CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JANUARY 26, 1911 HE capon burns, the pig falls JH. from the spit, The cloak hath struck twelve upon the bell, My mistress made It one upon my cheek She ls hot because the meat ls cold, The meat Is cold because you came not home. What to Have for Supper. Three-Leaf Clover Rolls.—Make the dough into three very small biscuit and bake in buttered muffin pans when risen. Italian Potatoes.—Mix two cups of mashed potatoes with a teaspoonful of onion juice, one tablespoonful of chopped parsley, one egg yolk well beaten and the whites of four eggs beaten stiff, one-half a cup of grated cheese and salt and pepper to taste. Pile lightly in a baking dish and bake brown. Milk Toast.—Prepare the toast by drying well before toasting a golden brown. Dip the edges in hot water, butter well and pour over the follow ing white sauce: Melt three table spoonfuls of butter in a sauce pan, add three tablespoonfuls of flour, salt and pepper and two cups of milk. Cook until smooth, then add a hard cooked egg, chopped or put through the rlcer. Maple Custard.—Beat six eggs slightly, mix carefully with three cups of milk, a pinch of salt and half a cup of thick maple sirup. Put Into cups and set in a pan of water to cook. The custard is sufficiently cooked when a knife thrust lato the custard comes out clean. Orange Cake.—Cream three-fourths of a cup of butter, add one and a fourth cups of sugar gradually, then the yolks of six eggs well beaten, one-half a cup of cold water, two and a half cups of pastry flour well stirred with four teaspoonfuls of baking pow der. Beat ten minutes. Filling.—Cook together one egg, a cup of sugar, Juice and rind of half an orange, a teaspoonful of lemon juice and two tablespoonfuls of flour, a tablespoonful of butter, all cooked until smooth. Cabbage and Pepper Salad.—Cut crisp, tender cabbage in shreds, add a chopped green pepper and boiled dressing. A few nuts may be added to make it more elegant. I HE early savage with his soli* M£L tary bone, lived more simply than we live; but our banquet, with all its abuses, Is part of a higher living. —Helen Campbell. Pudding Sauces. A list of pudding sauces is not al ways available. Here are a few that •will be found easy to prepare and not expensive. Golden Sauce.—Hub one-half cup of butter to a cream, add a half cup of light brown sugar and beat until light and creamy. Heat the yolks of t*o eggs, and when ready to serve put the bowl or pan containing the sugar ovor boiling water and stir until It ls a liquid, then add the eggs, one-eighth teaspoon of mace, one-half cup of fruit Juice, and stir until it thickens. Serve at once and stir before each pouring. Fruit Sauce.—Blend one-half cup of butter and a cup of sugar, gradually work in one-half cup of Jelly. Hard Sauce. —Pour one tablespoon ful of boiling water over one-half cup of butter, stir until creamy, mix in one cup of granulated sugar. Flavor with nutmeg or lemon extract or mace. Serve on orange or lemon cups, or heap in a small dish. Orange Sauce. —Crate the rind of an orange and squeeze the Juice over It. In a saucepan mix one cup of sugar with a fourth of a cup of flour or half as much cornstarch. Pour In a pint of boiling water and cook ten minutes. This sauce will keep several days. The yolk of an egg may be added to the sauce Just before straining and the j stiff white added after Umuti or oth- I er fruits may be used to take the place 1 of part of the liquid. Molasses Sauce.- Scald a cup of mo- I !a*>es with uri ounce of butter and a 1 tabi>ai»-r owner then r«i|u»»t< Im| that (hi editor iir*i 111 Charge be j ut to hllli %v«lu the deltty occurred, { tiid tardily, tliu Information was giv- I ~n timi this i dltor tn.t "at home, very III." Mr lieer»t drummed on his desk *lili 110- tips of bla (Inner* several mo ' *'o» a load »b«» never touches « I I'opuUi M**uilne H fell* It may t»e t*> »ibu fur a m«i» t.i isvO'Ss -it aa •iu t 1 uii in* i»*i *UM makes lots u( tilt* »ui a tut bl« »t« ao*i«pfcef. FLAX IS PROFITABLE Wonderful Paying Proposition In Western Canadian Prairies. So much Is heard of the wheat, oata and barley grown in the prairie lands of western Canada, and so much has been told of the wealth to be mada out jt the raising of cattle on the succulent and rich grasses of those fertile plains, that a most Important product has been al most lost sight of, Flax. Recent press reports adviso us that on one of the last boats to clear from Fort William (at the head of Lake Superior) for Buffalo, there were 241,000 bushels of flax valued at $583,220, and on another boat leaving the aame day there were 288,000 bushels valued at {720,000. There has been a big demand for Ca nadian flax this season, and the lake movement has been very heavy. Flax Is always a sure crop, and gives to the farmer who is anxious for quick return after getting on his land, the chance he is looking for. There la opportunity for thousands yet, on the free homesteo.d3 of 160 acres, and many of these are available within short distance of the lines of railway that are already built or under con struction, either on the main line or branches. Besides these free grant lands there is an opportunity to pur chase from railway and land com panies at reasonable prices. The display of western Canada's grains in the straw as well as threshed grains and grasses recently made at St. Louis was an excellent demonstration of what the country can do. It proved splendid as an illustration of the resourcea of that vast prairie country, which during the past year has again proven its ability to pro duce excellent yields of wheat, oata and barley—and flax. Not only this, but the splendid herds of cattle are a source of large revenue. There Is a fund of information to be had by reading the Canadian government lit erature, copies of which may be had free by applying to your nearest Ca nadian government agent Malady Worth Having. "I can't understand my husband, doctor; I am afraid there is some thing terrible the matter with him." "What are the symptoms?" "Well, 1 often talk to him for half an hour at a time and when I get through he hasn't the least idea what I've been saying." "Don't worry any more about your husband. I wish I had his gift."— Stray Stories. AGAINST TEXTBOOK UNIFORMITY Illinois State Teachers Energetically Combat the Proposition. Chicago.—The Illinois State Teach ers Association In a resolution sets Itself strongly opposed to state uni formity of school books, expressing It as the determination of the association to exert all its influence to combat such a movement A Poultry Problem. "Which is correct," ask the sum mer boarder who wished to air his knowledge, "to speak of a sitting hen or a setting hen?" "I don't know," replied the farm er's wife, "and what's more, I don't care. But there's one thing I would like to know: when a hen cackles, has she been laying, or is she lying?" Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTOKIA, a Bafe and sure remedy for Infants und children and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought The Pronouns. « "Wo must economize," said the man of high financial authority. "Your grammar is at fault," replied the ordinary citizen. "Why do you insist on using the first instead of the second person plural?" The next time you foel that swallowing sensation, the dure sign of norc throat, gargle Ha minis Wizard Oil immediately with three parts water. It will save you duyn uud perhaps weeks of misery. The reason the bigot advertises his one idea so vlyjrously is that it Ls his whole stock In Intellectual trade. I*ll.en rrnen in « to 14 dati four «11 will refund money 1/ I'AZO IIHN'T fail* to cam unjr ca*o of Itching, HUad. UutvUiiig vt l*rwiru4iuj( tu 6u> Uilu)k. Don't muktt tiio mistake of claiming you never make one. Mrs. Wliismiw's tiootliluff Hjrrup. ■Tore til 14 l*U IttVlklM niftrli. h. g HI r '.lui'ffstn (U4Uib*UuU,M,.U7 I f4IU.CUI«« Wtlltl Ic. 'Art ft UJ lU*. F*rt « lunch is sometimes pretty ex pensive food. Vl « Weak Heart jiSj if Many people suffer from weak hearts. Tlicy may tiptri- |JV^^4M|^pTWITM4a A shortness ill breath on pain over the lit/Ay Irelings, oppressed breathing after meals or w ~ I e>es bNunit blurred! their heart is not sufficiently strong PIPWRWy ■y^WlfcX , i' f&if 1 ; |Wppjiß lo pump blood to the estreuiities, end they huve cold hands KIH liiljtl 'j 'it" J flnTlf I]'."V .J JIH W anil feel, or pour a|i|>etite Iwiaime ol weakened hlootl supply lo the stomach, A heart tonic end alterative should be taken BBHLtlJtsll>yrli 'liit«yi",ilL. j— IB T-B which has no bail after-elect. Such is l)r I'ierce'l (ioldeu ~ Medical I hscover/, v%luch contains no dangerous narcotic# ACTHiyi A c^^,uir *"C')Piy Our •Uuliul, M A y y y ryn O N«i»Ui m. Vi n4ur« uf Tha lagfadlf rits as attratad uajer eeth. ara Muse iw>t {taV/iAsofl/a teoaitaa- ■ ■ .I't b sSajTu smut..!)" lit i. M dresfte ia " aasaal u ( iraaluist.t .<•! t » t **i C a. at* i. Oussn s f«»«l t '•iilllngta Si Imkt tilatk chart » bark ■ fruuut Virgin!* ua), £'**"■'f' alasi! mm 'ii'i" >""»« MiSiliski Hot l%ltmtuw\ Willi ti I pis i ttlnail at >..«.• tint, prspatail ftl EC TCCT r U ! lit II T la a a><«utlflv laWelwry la a aa> that nu drugglel uwM Imitate i| Hul LuM—LM-1 jflisWlwlfclll Tins tome contains ao alcohol to shrink up the red hlood corpuaclcs ; hut, on ,I'^.,,'Vt',-.' the other hand, tl increases their uum>>er and the* becomt rouud and healthy, tin•«»«•«» *JJ- —ireieiTs««e Uiis > I'ricas W* ' ' Msdi, ,«a. ofsred b> the druggist »h. is lwakin| CT4 larger aiukt Nothing frulu?" Wh-u^faa« Vf« Itot 111 I tctct • i*«r!. •nu i t «lt, , Wiiu i.« 1 iii(4 U. iku»H. **> HIS VIEW. |H I ' J" Hoods Sarsaparilla gRgjA Cures all humors, catarrh and rheumatism, relieves that tired I feeling, restores the appetite, t cures paleness, nervousness, builds up the whole system. Cet it today in usual liquid form of *' VI! chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. p Jr Th e Army of Constipation |* Growing Smeller Every Day# CARTER'S UTTLE^KQkv "They call that a statue of Victory; responsible—they noU»gj,flMP™ It must have been a hot fight." only give relief— f*ABTFB& they permanently LOOK TO YOUR KIDNEYS. tio'n BIVER When Suffering From Backache, th° e mfor Headaches and Urinary Bilioni- =* Troubles. nes>, ladigettisa, Sick Headacbe, Sallow sUin. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE They are probably the true source Genuine mustbt „ Signature of your misery. To keep well, you " must keep your sZ? —""~ . Mm!! y ssssr: Local Agent Wanted Kidney pills, jin every town or county. Profitable and \fWW Thnv rnro Rlr-k fascinating work for spare time. ITLZ°.tu big commission VpvT //a HA cure them per- l on hikii c;itAi>i; mew auticle. Ash WO® P%l Mr manently. I k and fit 1 1 tur 'i"'l ii longnr ti. , J I * * y-# WL ; , | 110 you rt*all/M (hat my thorn hara baan th« standard for over 30 . v* i vaam; that I luaka and - all n»<»ra • < W), $3.50 and |4.ou M-a than any A \ othar iiirtii ifa.'turar In ti » Cnitad Atatag ? o M x: ' ;Sv It haa ma g 112// i „ _ Hk N V luJ nh'»"» a hotigahuld word *vt«ry» hora- A Aug'J -^9 CAUTION! TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE li yuui daalgr jruu auli W. I |»..*ig! u wilt- r r M ill nrdar i «tal »k W. L. lini I i.'. aiiurk Ht.. Il« t»«*U luu, \lmm. 7