For Early Spring Is HE two small hats shown hero ore designed on novel f-amea, made of shirring wire. The frames are covered with mull first and then with a light silk fibre braid in a fancy weave. The braid Is sewed to the shapes, beginning at the top of the crown, in the simplest manner. As the crowns and brims are separate, they are covered separately, the crowns set on and sewed to place after both are covered with braid. In Fig. 1 the braid is sewed row after row with silk thread matching it In color. It is sewed to both upper and under brim following the lines of the wire frame. This is one of the few shapes which can be successfully covered by the home milliner. As a rule, hats are difficult this spring and require the knowledge of the profes sional milliner to make them success fully. As the braid is very light in weight, a heavier braid requires that the facing be of another material, such aa chiffon or light weight silk or ribbon, which should, to get the best effect, be shirred on. Fig. 2 shows strips of ribbon and i braid alternated about the brim. The j WIDE CHOICE OF MATERIAL' Many Charming Textures in Which j This Costume for Spring Would J Be Effective. , There are many charming materials among those prepared for spring dresses that would make up success fully In this style. The skirt is slightly full at the waist and is trimmed effectively at the low er part by silk strapping and scallops formed of silk, which gives the effect v\^\\ h lis Itt.vMifr* imp t s \%! /ii't cf an added and wrappedover lower part; a sil.:-covered button is sewn in each scallop. The bolero is cut like a Magyar blouse, and Is trimmed to match the skirt. The undersllp is of crepe-de« chine, tucked for tho under-sleeves. Hat of fine straw trimmed with a handsome ostrich fi-atber. Materia!* require! for the dress: 5 yards 40 lnch» a wide. 2 yards silk 22 Inches wide. The Overdressed Woman. Ujr the way, Parisians are now de- j daring that 11 «> conservative woman Is the onlf really well dressed worn an; that those oo ru«h to tho front with tho !;.teht e< n rtriclty of hat. or coat, or sklr in order to attract at tention. are not only not imart lit Its fa. hlonable hi ci tatlon, but over an I Objection: i>lf -i .nt They have in vented •> term, a contemptuous one. too by *il' li io < I m-sk i ' .I:.1,- IP proval. riifcrtimati-ly, tho term It self In ol»>-< I|I)|IH')!« til ears, aid fci!« its ! . lit entirely lu trans- Itl'lull lit • «'* I: HI iw iiiiv.a Sj -*>*£( | . ribbon is a light weight, satin surface, in tho same color as tho braid. Short lengths are shirred over the upper and under brim, alternating with strips of the braid sewed row on row together. A length of ribbon, and a length of braid consisting of three rows sewed together in a strip a yard long is used as a drape about the hat. A big rosette made of loops of ribbon at the side, toward the back, finishes a smart and practical hat for general wear. In Fig. 1 a band of velvet ribbon or of crushed silk Is draped in a sash over the place where the crown sets on the brim. This shape admits of quite a variety of finishes. For youth ful wearers the single long Jaunty quill has a lot of dash and go. It is the best solution for the simplest and smartest efTccts, but not appropriate fo any one except young wearers. A t' ft of upstanding plumes or fancy feathers for older women, or loops of 1 ice or ribbon, or any of the mountains < 112 flowers which form a complete trimming ready to adjust, will help out the home milliner in making her I Easter headwear. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. ! NEW STYLES IN LINGERIE | Underwear Takes on More Attrao j tions Than Usual in Offerings for This Season. In the struggle for life this season, for at some time the lingerio has been reduced to a minimum, underwear has taken on more attractions than usual. The well-fitted models, the exquisite embroidery and the fine materials of which lingerie Is now made are con vincing to the woman who is search ing for bargains. For brides especially has the new lingerie decided attractions. The fine muslins without stiffening are as varied as the morning hours are from tho evening. They should be kept so, too, which point is worth remember ing. They are roost durable when lace is absent. In other words, if you are planning a sensible outfit to last more than one year, use embroidery. Even tho finest swiss and batiste em broidery outlasts lace. It can be used | a second time in many cases. Flounces should not be too full for the spring and summer. The straight skirt is slightly fuller, but does not flare. Its straight lines must not be interfered with by any underflounce. Corset covers of allover embroidery or wide flouncing are very sensible for the dressy kind. They should be cut with little fullness at the waist, for the same reason that bulk has been eliminated from the petticoat The fitted corset cover with the circu lar pepium Is the most satisfactory. Nightgowns made on empire lines are probably moving toward first place. The short upper portion is gathered Into a straight band of em broidery or beading. Flowing or puffed sleeves are quite short. As usual, the handmade lingerie has a value not to be gainsaid. The French importations will always be favored by tho woman with money to indulge her longings. The extremely plain lingerie with tape drawing strings nnd a plain scal loped edge is the kind that should ap peal to practical minds. They com bine daintiness with excellent wear ing qualities, and they are Inexpen sive. Demand a good-fitting model and a high quality of material, and your lingerie will always be In good stylo. A Novel Relish. Guests at an Informal luncheon v ere at first puzzled by a dainty look ing relish brought on with the meat. Not until tasted was the secret re- | vealcd, when they discovered that the crisp, brown little tubes, about two ; Inches In length, wero of celery. I arge, firm stalks were chosen, and after being cut were dipped In f'KK and cracker crumbs, fried In deep fat or santeed In butter, und were serv ed with a brown sauce In the orig inal Instnnce thin vegetable was served with fowl. It Is al ■> nice with fish i ream <| lu the chafing dish, with | oyrtf-rs, etc. The Spring Blouses. Wiih the Intlux of new waists of ' e«'r eottoi material, the veiled j Idousi hit i not b* ■ u forgotten. These, tit kit,.!>'< line , are made to have a | i«»w air niiil a - u»\ ttlon of warmer) I < v by a l -111 vi! 14 Kiel) of vml ml ! !«i«ti hatittn or lii tit us. >1 In place of A yoke and cuffs, with an Insertion In ! ! ill i» k.gi v# a spi IrkIII Ir, Hie uv. ly tie* UoiUeretl ihiffi n, tuar- I (in... i and ei i >•« are aS.u pre*.-:•<] CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY. APRIL 13, 1011, ■ B BAUTT Without virtue la llk<> a (lower without fra grunco. I.abor ronqut-rs everything. Cocktails. The cocktail Is a very popular be- Klnning; to u dinner, the object of which is to stimulate the appetite for the heavier dishes which are to lol io w. The gustatory nervos aro very sensitive, and If abused by too highly seasoned foods, lone the power to ap preciate tho more delicate and liower like flavors which it should be our pleasure to enjoy. Mint and Lemon Cocktail. —To one :juart of strong lemonade, made with four lemons, add one cup of tea in fusion, a few sprigs of fresh mint and i sprinkling of red pepper. Sweeten to taste, pour over crushed ice and serve with a lemou curl on top of the glass. Clam Cocktail.—For every cocktail required, take one teaspoonful of lem on Juice, one teaspoonful of vinegar, a quarter of a teaspoonful of walnut sauce, one-half a teaspoonful of mush room catsup, a pinch of salt, and a dash of tabasco sauce. Pour this mix ture over eight little neck clams and serve In a well-chilled glass. This cocktail is favored for luncheon and suppers. Pineapple Cocktail.—For each glass take a tablespoonful of pine apple and lemon or orange Juice and one-half it a tablespoon of grated orange peel. Sweeten to taste. Pour over a little chipped ice in tho bottom of the glass and add a little Iced water. Lemon Cocktail In Lemon Cups.— Prepare as many lemons as there aro quests to be served by cutting off the round end until they will stand firmly, and then cutting off the pointed end about a quarter of the way down. Empty the lemons and scrape well. Make a strong lemonade, and add an equal quantity of grape juice. Chill and fill the cups with the mixture. Place the lemon cups on a paper Solly on a small plate. Sauces for Oyster Cocktails —One teaspoonful each of horseradish and tomato catsup, salt, pepper and ta basco to taste and two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice. Mix well, chill and serve on oysters. Catsup, horseradish, walnut and mushroom catsup with lemon Juice makes a sauce well liked. H UK child who grows up with JSHL no memory of a kitchen In which It was privileged to "play cook" has lost part of the joy of life." Little Housekeepers. Tho mother who will not be both ered with a child "messing around in the kitchen," as she may call it, has only herself to thank when tho child, i young woman, refuses to Interest herself In cooking and household af fairs. It Is natural for a little girl to want to make things, and when cooking is being done to want to share in tho work. Of course, tho cook or oiother may not want to be bothered, but when she remembers that a child tvell started and Interested in work will make a difference in her whole life, she surely would not call It bother. Let them have their own small uten ills, use them and keep them In order. They will learn many more valuable lessons besides the knowledge they sain In cookery. Household Hints. Keep small cloths for wiping meat and washing fish. These may be burned after using, and thus save the laundering of them. Many careful housewives have these rags hemmed and marked, and so kept for its espe cial purpose, but time Is more valu able to most women, and rags are usu aJly plentiful. To remove mildew, soak tho nrtlcle In a weak solution of chloride of llmo for several hours. Rinse In cold water. When grating a new nutmeg begin at the opposite end from the stalk, as It will prove hollow. To remove the odor of onion from the breath, eat a banana Tho odor of flsi> or onion on hands may be removed by a little bar after using them for fish. A few drops of onion julco and a garulMh of a few pieces of lemon adds to beefsteak. When roasting sparerlbs baste them with sweet cider. The colder eggs are the more quick* ly they will bent up. ! . Mubtard In England. Mustard li grown In England to a I considerable >-xt> nt In the eastern i countries and the Ken district uud to : roine «*x»«-»it in th<» Midlands. It Is ordlnurll grown In hewvjr black soil, but It I* gem rally believed that the I crop draws a great deal of Ktrt*?jgth from ih« null Per that reii n. It it . not e lll flail" | • pular. Ihe jrl«-ld an ■ere Is variable, ranging fro u twenty u usually i unit', red a fair yield I'be 1 te. .1 : at", t I'm .• i . ' tows li 111 if t til twehu iii't i avarl | FRENCH BEAN COFFEE, A HEALTHFUL DRINK Th« healthlcnt ever; you can grow it In your own garden on n small patch 10 by 10, producing DO pounds or more. Ripens In Wisconsin 90 days. LVed In great quantities In France, Germany nnd all over Europe. Send 13 rents In sfnmps and wo will mall you a package giving full culture di rections as also our mammoth seed catalog free, or send 31 cents and get In addition to above 10,000 kernels unsurpassable vegetable and flower seeds—enough for bushels of vege and flowers. John A. Salter Peed Co., 182 S. Bth St., La Crosse, Wis. Keep Watch on the Tuberculosis. The Italian government, on account of the number of tuberculosis cases among the Italian emigrants sent back from America, has appointed boards of examiners in tlio seaports, whose duty it is to report the arrival of tubercu lous persons. Thes" are then kept un der observation in those places where they settle, to prevent further spread of the disease. The erection of new sanitoria and other tuberculosis insti tutions Is being urged in Italy, and the number of beds for consumptives has been considerably increased in dif ferent places. Parental Tactics. A worried parent is sometimes obliged to do something like this: ' "Pa, what is a transcendentallst?" "Have you chained up the dog as I told you?" "Xot yet, pa." "Well, do that, and when you come back I will tell you what a transcen dentallst is." While Bobby was gone his astute parent dug the needed information out of a dictionary. DISTEMPER In all its forms among all azes of hor?ea, as well as dogs, cured and otliers in same stable prevented from having the disease with KI'OIIN'S DISTEMPER CURE. Every bottle guaranteed. Over OOO.O'iO bottles wild last year $.50 and SSI.OO. Any good druggist, or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted. Spolin Medical Co., Speo. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind. Cheerful Anticipation. "Have you seen my 'Descent Into Hell?" asked a poet. "No." said Curran, warmly; "I should be delighted to see it.'' —From Clark's "Eminent Lawyers." SIIAKB INTO VOfll SHOTS Allen's Fool the Antiseptic pnw(|«r for Tired, aching, swollen, nervous fuet. (Jives rest nnd ! comfort. Makes wfilkinKadeiitfbt. Sold every where, I 2fic. Don't accept any substitute. For I- K&ifi luwple, address Allen 8. Olmsted, L,e Hoy, N. ¥. Seems to Be Wrong. Howell —Whatever is is right. Powell —But suppose a fellow soaks you with his left? Shortly after her marriage a woman packs her ideals away in moth bails and pays no more attention to them ; until she becomes a widow. Try murine Eye rtemedy for n«l, Watery Kyes and Granulated Eyelids. No Smarting—Just Eye Comfort. Mu rine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes New Size 25c. Murine Eye Remedy Liquid 25c and 50c. He Was a Judge. Geraldine —I am Just twenty two. Gerald —Verdict set aside. cntnii IN « TO 14 RAYS Tourwin p'tunil money if IVZO OINT- M I.NT Jan.- u> euro any «;a*o of Itching, Blind, Blued. u*' or rrotrudiiiif I*l lea In 010 14 da'*. 6Uo. Here's a tip, young man. Convince a girl that she shouldn't love you, and i she will. Whenever there is a tendency to eoneti- I pation. sick-headache or biliousness, take a 2up of Garfield Tea. All druggists. A woman who speaks but one lan- i guage usually talks enough for two. | "/can sais* money on Heine expanse* by going to Hot Springs fotr two weeks.'' j&W That is the statement of a man who, with hi 3 wife, renewed their health by a two* week health-vacation at HOI SPRINGS, Arkansas. It costs no more for a vacation Ml IjX there than staying at home! Good health —and as a consequence—fair complexion, is tW woman's just due. Shs can secure them at low co3t and easily at Hot Springs. Luxurious hotels, medium price hotels and highest class boarding houses have prices for La every purse. You can play golf, ride horseback, take in the scenic attractions, pay for 21 baths H iiS and live in style—the total cost of board, room and everything for two weeks will be no yjj more than average home expenses. Every year 150,000 persons take advantage of H H LOW ROUND-TRIP FARES ffl Fine golf course available for vhitors at $1 00 per day; $5.00 per week; $25.00 per season, Including club* US house privileges. Tennis, fashionable dancing parties, metropolitan theatres and churches, mountain trips, horseback riding over scenic mountain roads, fine Kentucky thoroughbred saddle horses nt $1.50 tor entire morning's ride, and a score of other pastimes to pleasantly while awny the time. Climate is perfect; mean M. annual tern pet attire 62 degrees. Luxurious hotels. medium price hotels, highest class boarding Vit* Springs owned and controlled by United States Government, which regulates prices of baths. For further «GL detailed information write to George R. Belciiug, Sec'y Burlness Men's league, Hot Springs, Ark. mji Best reached iu one uigbt's rida from St. Louis OQ the luxurious Mot 3priu£« Special of lb* \ Iron Mountain Route M I ar.i •scaliant ' " '* c " tc> ' * It Depend* on the Liver. "It life worth living?—that dependt upon the liver." Yes, and that again depends upon what you eat, and how you eat Henry Ward Fleecher once said: "A man with a bad liver cannot be a good Christian." Henry made some mis takes, but in this statement he was eminently correct. It Is only another version of a phrase frequently used by the editor of tho Care of the Body; "As a man eateth so Is he."—Los An geles Times. The vacant room at the top Is due to the fact that there Is no elevator service to help the lazy man. For Infants and Children* Kind You Have fBSSSBP Always Bought !{» /Vegetable Preparation For As- M slmilatingtheFoodandßeguJa- "Rao-pa M t jjtgl ling the Stomachs and Dowels of *>wdr» lilt) JL ■i.i^iißuiiijjtuaJ Signature / /Lp Sr Promotes Dig2stion,Cheerful- M W ?j nessandßest.Contalns neither rjf Opium .Morphine nor Mineral MIX if NOT NARC OTIC |LMLR fa K*ipt,fOlHDrSAMUELjm/rnt A Air &t| Pumpkin S—d • A l/V sltxS• \ Vfa ■ l>* SmH*+> I 1 m s ft lAv in JjJ • C(on/itdSugar I 11 I I\ 0 Wmttryrren flavor ' 11 Jrjwtiv 8* | a £c, A perfect Remedy for Conslipa- fiXT ISsH >U|| lion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, 0 ■ yr " v " Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- 1 n ness and Loss OF SLEEP. \|| PypjP Facsimile Signature of ||| Thirtv Ypar^ Tin; CENTAUR COMPANY, 11913 1W 1 Qui O j|| | N E WJVO R ~ EMCt Copy of Wrapper. TH« OO.P.KT. TO>« onr. 1 ONE THOUSAND 40 M IRRIGATED FARMS in Glorious CALIFORNIA Almost Given Away GREATEST OPPORTUNITY alnce Uncle Sam's free Innd dnys In the Mississippi Valley. We are different from any other irrigation organization. We have a record &j%fagjSM| ofirricating 400,000 acres in the Twin Falls Country, Idaho, V at a cost of upwards of ten million dollars. Wc shr.: ; as much or more in the Sacramento Valley, California, to make one of the finest rural communities In the world. You have a great advantage in buying an Irrigated farm now on our ten-year payment plan. With a small payment down, you can make the farm earn all the rest of the pay- ments. It is better than getting a Government farm for nothing, because we already have Invested In necessary improvements an amount equal to several times your first payment. Thousands of acres already sold. The most pro- v fitable dairy in the An country. Hogs, poultry, oranges, p.-—- pcochea, prunes, suear beets, sweet HL . (IOLLISTER & CO.. Dwtra potatoes, beans or any other special 345 Fourth Ave, Pittsburgh, Pa. ; crop will make you lot 9of money _, , . , „ „ | with Intellieent handline. Our Please send free Information about Sacramento Valley. ! promises are all backed by money and plenty ofit. We have dealt Name I with thousands of settler 9, and have kept faith with them all. We want Addr#»ji you. This is YOUR opportunity. li«elo*« 10« If jom oar b«oli la eol»r«, 1 Fill out the coupon and mail today. "HMHmMi-«o> OH NKVEB - Hoods Sarsaparilla Leads all other medicines in the cure of all spring ailrnentf, humors, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, paleness and nervousness. Take it. ! Get it to.lay in usual liquid form «• I chocolated tablets called Sarsatabe. Thompson's Eyo Wator 3