The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 05, 1893, Image 3

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    FOR THE FAIR SEX.
DRESSES FOR AUTUMN.
Mapy handsome dress models for au.
uma wear show the bodice laced,
hook#d, or buttoned down the back-—a
most becoming fashion on a graceful fig-
ure, and a commendable one for certain
gowns if one has a maid or a friend al-
ways available, but if chance services
have to be depended upon, this graceful
style must be sacrificed, for be the arms
ever so long and patience like Job's, one
will never succeed in buttoning the gown
Republie.
A MARKETING COSTUME,
A neat costume for marketing may be
composed of the following: A dress made
from some quiet wash-silk or
i
two narrow ruflles may ornament
skirt, while the waist may be cut low at
the neck. so that a shirt front can be
worn with it.
gloves, tan shoes and a silk umbrella.
If your marketing dress is made of flan-
nel or cloth have several rows of machine
stitching around the bottom as a finish.
—[New York World.
HOW TO LOOK COOL SUDDENLY.
shopping and receive a sudden summons
to the parior to meet some unexpected
guest, do not be dismayed at the crimson
face which meets your eve as you stand
before your dressing table mirror. Like-
wise do not seck a remedy in the bath
room. Many womea think the only way
to cool off is to bathe the face lavishly
in cool water. "This is a great
and with a thin skin will only intensi
the color, and the last estate of this wo
man shall be worse than the first. Dash
the water throat neck as freely
as vou choose, particularly at the back of
the neck, bat if the face is bathed at all
let it be done sparingly, then sponge it
with Florida water aod lastly aj ply a
generous
mistake,
ou and
coating of rice powder. You
ghastly, but let the powder re
you add the few névessary
touches to vour toilet, Then, just 1%
you are to descend to the parlor, dust off
i luous powder lightly, and you
will some vour guest fresh and ce
not only in
| Washing
rton Siar,
will lool
y tr } : 1
main while
18
pearance, but in reality
nl
scrubber
to house, but there
nd for trained
ris
ooking of ¢l
‘h as civilized being
a degree of i
an is demanded to wi
If not exactl
Hse Das accompiish
line the trained wi
me :
of the cho
the fact t
some period
nated
ern 18 to the scien
hat nearl
of his exi
‘hairpin’
tence been
as a of kind
other by one of his irate fellfws, save the
innati Enquirer. y
+, as well as the gentler
EONe or
For the benefit of
then Sex,
uses it so extensively, but which is gen
erally una of the means or manner
of its manufacture, we append a few sta
ware
tistics
snd very complicated machines,
i
i
i
i
i
come might resort to a device said to
have been used in England, where pater
familias finds it cheaper sometimes to
buy black gowns for his wife, doughters
and servants ostensibly for the death of
a distant relative rather than to return
certain dinners and balls for which they
are indebted to their acquaintances, --
[St. Louis Republic.
FASHION NOTES.
Leather bindings will supersede velvet
on the bottom of dress skirts,
Diamond ivy leaves and pearl berries
form long sprays for the front of an even
ing gown.
The Marie Antoinette
muslin trimmed with loce
orite with the young ladies, to wear as a
fichu of silk
is a great fav.
Felix has brought out new sleeves for
tirely of frills of three-inch lace from the
they are edged with Irish
The notched lapel collar, which so often
on tailor-made gowns, loses
much of its severity when applied upon
the short, full waist of a lately-designed
street costume,
lounging gown produce a graoeful bell
i
itself to
until
comes straightened as it feeds
the machine. It passes along
reaches two cutters, which point the end
at the same time they cut it the length
required. This piece of wire then slips
along an iron plate until it reaches a slot,
it
heightens the attractiveness of the gar
ment,
A collarette that is coming forward
in cotton gowns, and will be repeated in
wool later on, is a three-quarter circle,
shaped to fit smoothly around
shoulders, and folded to points in front.
It is effective in the stiff linen and heavy
cotton goods.
White braid is most used for the trim
ming of yachting costumes, though many
of the skirts are qui plain, the revers
of the coat being fad
Sin
d and the blouses,
or shirt fronts, giving scope for color.
Linens this year are worn
dressy occasions —at the races
parties, summer church weddings, et
Their trim tailor make does much toward
rendering them au fait for }
SUCH
ican LI
for quite
at garden
gray, puesand
shiocoiate colors are sii
i
fies . ® 3
linens, du
there is
The
iv disappearing,
the
1
'ofrry
gragusi
heir place is a bell
of frills lined
tii sleeves
with a
1
1, ana in
fos lack ar
POT £4 3
e in cream serge, stri
: ¥ d ark blue, he ®!
jacket is faced with dark
oinamented
te and
bh fine lines of
with
hes wide
recently
sited very full a:
nd yoke, the falling
: hem of the skirt Nine yards of
bon were used in the plaitic g.
fall almost
¥ i
enas
rit
Are We to Become Toelea?
That the civilized part of us is chang
ing our physical structure in answer to
fact to which the poor little toes in the
corners of our boots might tearfully tes
tify if we could consult them in the
spirit. This member, which eur
prehistoric lady ancestors doubtless
useful, when, while
f
grasping with the {oot an article of food,
shape. The hairpins are then put into a
heated in an oven with a temperature of
from 300 to 400 degrees. There are
but four American factories, The
Jargest are in Birmiogham and Water
bury, Conn., the others are in Philadel
phin and Brookiyn. Five hundred thou
sand dollars’ worth of hairpins are an
nuslly imported from England, France
and Germany. Judging by the immense
ninount of
appear that the headgear of a large por-
tion of our feminine population is some.
what extraneous.
MOURNING STATIONERY,
Mourning stationery shows greater
clinnges than dress. The deep, black-
edged paper and cards are no longer in
vounue
A lady who sets many fashions in New
York has recently ordered her monogram
stumped in bisek on plain white paper.
Many nse stationery with a narrow border
but do away with erest and monogram
while in mourning. I the address be
used it is of course stamped in black.
Black sealing wax 1s fashionable, and
this has benisbed crest and monogram
from the envelope.
During second mourning gray paper
has become popular, and gray sealing
wax matching the eovelope takes the
luce of black, When heliotrope is
reached in dress heliotrope wax may be
employed on envelopes,
Memorial cords, which have gone out
jn Eogland, are occasionally ordered,
but the custom is not general, Nor is it
considered obligatory to send even a
ard in upswer to a call or letter of con-
dolenre, Death relonses the afflicted
from all social obligations for a period of
not lers thun a year,
Should “complimentary mourning”
ever be introduced among us it j= possi:
the others, as the little finger of the
:
i
:
:
first joint of the little toe has been re
placed by a solid, inflexible bone. It is
to be sapposed that if we continue for a
few more mons to walk with our junior
toe doubled up like a leaf in a book we
at all. As the
off another toe we shall finally have in
pisee of the present artistically befringed
pediments a pair of solid pads, on which
will rest five useless commemorative nails,
like so many tombstones erected to those
departed members which went to join
the dodo rather then accept shoes that
did not fit. —[St. Louis Star Sayings,
The First Run on a Bank.
The first “run on a bank" of which we
have any record took place in London in
1667. lo that year some London bank
ers were unable to meet the unexpected
demands of their depositors for money
and closed their doors. The people sup-
posed they were to be swindled, a riot
ensued, and four bankers were dragged
from their offices and hanged in their
own doorways. The military had to be
called out before order wus restored,
Although this is the first recorded
sean” such affairs could not have been
of usual oecurrence, us the word ‘‘bank-
rupt” plainly shows. It is derived from
two Italian words which mean ‘‘broken
teneh.,” The money changers and
money lenders did business at counters
in the market places of Italian cities,
and a man would often rush into the
square, overturn the counters or benches
and steal the cash. Hence a *‘bank-
rapt,” or one whose bench is broken,
came to mean & man without cash, — [St
Louis Republie.
A Matter of Health,
Housekeepers faintly
realize the
numerous baking powders nowadays
found upon every hand, and which are
urged upon consumers with such per-
sistency by peddlers and many grocers
on account of the big profits made in
their sale. Most of these powders are
Growth of Finger Nalls,
A prominent uptown manicure who
has devoted many years to the study of
the subject states as the result of his
observations that the finger nails of the
human species grow more rapidly in
and that the
growth is slowest with the aged,
His observations, however
do not
alimentary organs and eause indiges-
tion, heartburn, diarrhoeal diseases,
ete. Sulphuric acid, eaustic potash,
burnt alum, all are used as gas-produoc-
ing agents in such
Most housekeepers are aware of
painfal effects produced when these
flesh. How much more acute must be
their action upon the delicate internal
Yet nnscerupulons man-
of their pow-
ders so made, by all kinds of alluring ad
All the low priced or so-called cheap
a gift or prize, belong to this
Jaking powders made from chem-
the most
4 Vices,
of soda are
of modern
They not only make
and
bonate among
culinary
the preparation
finer de licious
“ i = Td
more COORery
of
jut baking powders must
be composed of such pure and whole-
be tae
digestibility and wholesomeness
some ingredients or the ¥ must
booed entirely.
Dr. Edson,
of N«¢ Ww Y«
“Doctor of
the
der and the exemption fron
gers of
and canstiec chemicals
I by the
3
€x
article in the
indieates that
aking pow-
Hygiene,
advantages of 8 good
bad ones in whic
ATE used
of Roval Baking
sively,
hie
to i
All consumers
SAYS,
be Secure ise
and
mends this
he “Yeontains noth
id
Royal,”
but ore
1
1
refined to a chemical purit
§
nm Of iariag i
1 having been take:
eas.” Hen
seid g
Le Baki:
VA
i
It seen
manufacturer or deal
sale
cents
“
they do, a few
to be necessar
Cannibals of
«} flo
“0 CATHY
red
the dept =
wn at the sur!
wander
There is a
resembling ¢
monsters a
them are perfectly blind, whi
have enomonus gogeling eves
of sunlight ever pierces the dark, u
fathomed caves in which they dwe
Each species is gobbled by the species
next bigger, for there is no vegetible
life to feed on. —San Francisco Ex-
am ner.
————————
Sent Them About Their Business.
Ferdinand Hassler, the father of
the United States coast survey sys
tem, was once waited upon by a cum-
mittee of Congress sent to inquire
into the progress of the work. The
committee reached New York and
wended their way upstairs to the
room where Hassler was drilling his
classes and preparing them for work.
Hass'er. who allowed no intruders,
met them at the door and inquired
their business. They answered that
they had come to investigate. “What
part of the work do you wish to in-
spect?” inquired the Swiss mathema-
tician. Congress had no definite idea
on the point. “Then you had better
go and find out,” returned Hassler,
as he shut the door in the face of the
astonished committee. The commit.
tee looked at each other, and, on
Hassler was about right, and quietly
wended their way downstairs and
back to Washington.
Eating in Haste
At times white serving as constable and
deputy sheriff brought on dyspeptic trouble,
although | was natural
ty healthy. Eight
months ago 1 come
menced taking Hood's
“arvapariline, It has
cured my dyspeptic
trouble and set me
hack In my age about
ifteen years, | advised
others to take Hood's
Sarsaparilla and they
* now rejolos over the
Mr. Shamway, o..0 effect it has had
upon them. My wife had suffered from severs
headaches, general prostration and loss of ap
petite, Bho has taken two bottles and her head
Hood's*s#* Cures
is now free from pain and she Is enjoying ex.
cellent health and renewed
SnuMway, Webster, Mass.
Elood's Pills assist digestion. 3 conta.
childhood and age they grow faster In
summer than in winter. In one instance
a nail that required 152 days to renew in
wister renewed in summer in exactly
116 days. During both seasons the
patient upon whom this experiment was
made enjoyed normal health.
The method of testing this growth
was in each instance the sume. The nail
was pared close and slightly notched at
the quick, Both the right and the left
hand were studied, with the result that
firms that the growth of finger nails
he iit
the left. As the person was right-handed
it is presumed that the contrary is true
of left-handed individuals,
{ine pet uligrity of the growth of finger
nails stated is that
the period of renewal differs proportion.
with length the fi
Thus it rapid 1 middie fin.
gers than any other I
in addition to those
the are.
is more
he fingers on
nger the peri wd
It
#1
finger,
middle
f renewal is about equal sod slower
is even more slow in the
and slowest of all in the thumb,
the same fin
8, the person
curious phases of
itLie
of the
who discov.
Comparing
different |}
ered
states thant on an AvVerase
left hand fingers of a ri
BON
renew than th
Ory
these growth
the nails on the
two
f th
require elf Y
me OF the jel
one particular the growth
and hair and
same law, that ol
beard arc
in summer than it
Herald.
Chinese Cucumbers,
Neck
les River
Pies by the Ten Thousand,
One hardly real i ity of the
New Englander for pie told
that Boston has a pie bakery capable of
turning out 10,000 pies a day, and that
it is running at its {ull capacity he
ime. Most of the work is done by ma
chinery under the direction experts,
who know just what a should
and the product is of all sorts and sizes,
from the ordinary pumpkin pie to the
most delicious mince, and from a little
pie worth a nickel to a huge rectangular
affair that will feed a family. One of
the most interesting operations is the
baking. Itisarranged so that a big
wheel, at least 12 feet and 16 in
diameter, is suspended by its axle ina
big oven under which is a glowing fire,
Hung from the rims of this wheel at
until he I»
aii
of
ie be,
: ner
ong
fron platforms, upon which
placed. Such is the manner of suspen.
sion that they always remain horizontal
This wheel is revoived by power,
of these platforms is before the opening
as the wheel itself. Tae attendants cover
this platform with pies, snd the wheel is
turned until the next one
the eight have been supplied.
turn brings into view the first Jot put in,
and they are ready to take out,
are removed and the platform filled again,
The wheel turns and another baked lot
day, 1,000 an hour taking their course
over this pit of fire. —{ Picayune,
sian.
Shark and Dolphin Fight,
1 saw a fight between a fourteen foot
shark and a he dolphin. The sea was
incarnadined with blood. The equal
battle raged because each scavenger of
the sea had been predatorily feeding or
poaching on the other's moss-bunker
preserves. It takes four bushel baskets
of moss bunkers for one he dolphbin’s
breakfast. The fight raged fifteen
minutes. The shark bad to turn over
to use his mouth, I know some lawyers
who make profitable and golden use of
the mouth in debate and don't turn over
at all. When the shark was trying to
get in its fine work the dolphin evis-
Et the. Eo patte. Smead
t t, and the an nu
and wh and lea ig the bod "
its dead foe, as » New York ajar oes
when he gets an extra $250 allowance
for costs or counsel fees!—[Forest and
Stream,
|
|
i
When Nature
Needs assistance it may be best to render #
promptly, but ene should remember te use
even the most perfect remedies only when
nesded. The best and most simples and gentle
remedy ia the Byrup of Figs manufactured by
Discover your false iriends; your true
{
i
i
|
i
$100 Rewnrd, $100.
The readers of this Japer will be pleased” to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
science has been able in ail its
stages, and Hail's Catarrh
16 cure
that is catarrh,
i
Catarrh being
disease, fjrilres a const
treatment. Hall's Caturrh Cure Is taken in.
ternally, acting upon the blood and
8 surfaces of the #y thereby deo
i he foundati dissnse, and
a Con
re itional
directly
¥ sleet,
of the
y building
i ANG assisting netur in Golug ils
work {he proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that th fer One Hun
dred Dollars for any case th falls ure.
Bend for list of testimonials, lal res
J. Cnesey & Co, Tol
¥
3 Bold by Drugiists
10 «
do, O.
European railroads stoetel 142.685 miles,
Malaria cured and eradicated from the sys.
tern by Brown's Iron Bitters, wh ch enr ches
the wl, tones nerves, aids dicest
Acts like a charm on persons in general il
besith, giving new she rgy and sirenytis.
bln the on.
No sympathy is felt for the man who is:
fool twice,
in every
men whose
community
ene tier
Brown's Iron Bitters cures Dyspeosia, Ma's.
rin, Bill ws and General ty, Gives
wrength, aids Di ! :
Frvales appellee,
Mots weak WOrnen
FED
ry
ils
wis
HaMicted with sore eves Use Dir. lsans Thomo.
son's Eye-water. Droggists sell al dhe, per bottles
out of the
been in the
3 ' 3 ICV
ntgoto
t trout
; 3
it Lhe ica
sleep with
fe
Looking Better
in
every
ments that are causing rapid loss
of flesh and vital strength.
Scott's Emulsion will do more than
to stop a lingering Cough — it fortifies
the system 404157 coughs and colds.
Prepared by Bertt § Downe N Y. A
TT
Sy
AND RANGES
The Best for Either Heating or Oookin rz.
Exosl in Style, Comfort and Durability,
260 KINDS AND 81ZES. EVERY ONE
WARRANTED acamvsr DEFLCTS
ASK YOUR STOVE DEALER
To show you SHECPARD'S LATEST CATAL OGUE
if no dealer near you wr.ie to
ISAAC A. SHEPPARD & CO,
BALTIMORE, MD, .
LARGEST MANUFACTURERS IN THE 801 in
drargists,
AN IDEAL FAMILY MEDICINE
ndigoeiton, 3
a
Tre and Rely .
Ly
Sgrestion Bod
went by ail, Pox
follows Their hi
By Ke + 8 boxer), $8
RHR ‘Mica oe. Now York.
Xngleside -:- BR etreat.
For Diseases of Woman. Scientific Jrantment a
FuRran' lo apartmen
gd ov Avring ND Address The Hes
dent Physician, 1-72 Baxter Court, Xashvilie, Tenn,
PLAXTS 81.9% por 10M
» Pare
frawberry Ricndird Varie tea
Vigoro a. 0. W, BLACKNALL,
TSanch pat a
$75.00
Enrama, NC,
No. §8outh 11th 8, Richmond,
i
NO HARD TIMES
Like Sick Times.
Swamp-Root Cured Me,
Philadelphia, Pa. Sept. 1, 188,
Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N, ¥.
Gentlemen: —1 am happy to state that by the
use of Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Moot |
have been cured of
bindder and kid»
ney trouble, J
bad used many
oiler retpedies with-
out avail. If you
gre disposed WW Use
this etter #0 that
others way know of
your wonderful
Swamp. - Hoot you
are at liberty 0 40
peoommended to me Ly
. Pa. who
Kilmmer's
80. The remy
Mr. BE. B. Morgan, of Langd
been cured Lj Dir.
Swamp-Root Cured Me
recone nas 3%
of giving
PHOsneses BUCH
Wits
vr aad
IIs ime.
nd it affords me Lo]
OLhers I an
mie
merits
PARTE 14
tat
inde, but wh
ag yours, others should know Jt.
i A. Stagger, £21 Baoe Blreet.,
Size,
Trew
Faanue
At Druggists, 50 cent and £1.00
“invalids 3 Piemills
wr & Co, » HBinghao
Dr. Kitmer's U & 0 Anointment Cures Files,
Trial Box Free. At Druagisis 50 Cenis
$i0
row one
a
%
£6
Dr. Kili
A Da y Free!
eter
“ Not a gripe
in a barrel of
them”
®% % 9N UB WD
Peacely
«ww a WY
/
. — To YOU SLEEP ON AN
$ IMITATION
’ . E on ON A Te
oPilgrim Spring Bed 7%
/ TESTIMONIALS:
§ Per iection,
§ io a; r
/ Ae d
gin Xpensive.
HBO DDH DDD DODD
cata VIVODBBD
» y
i PAR ATION
ww
of om
«Nd
Unlike the Dufch Process
Ch No Alkalies
= §, Other Chemicals
SE Lin. She
W. BAKER & CO.'S
\BreakfastGocoa
- BTW wn
are used
prepara
which is absolutely
pure and soluble.
oreihanthree tives
ith uf Cocoa mixed
Arrowroot or
pomical, costing less than one cent
t is delicious, sourishing, and
PDICESTE -
Sold by Grocers everywhers.,
VW.BAKER & C0., Dorchester, Mass.
hh att hh didi AVAAVAMAALAR ARRAS
SWEBSTER'S
8
§ INTERNATIONAL
DICTIONARY
fogeransor of the
“{ nabridged.”
PEFVRRWVRWYYYY
Lo X
et ompoted
" $300,000 expended.
dh dh
A Grand ‘Eduester
Abreast of the Times
A Library in lseif
Invalnable in the
zr household, and to the
teacher, professional
man, oP eduocator.
Ask your Bookseller to show if to you.
. Prhiislied by
COMERRIAM CO Sranserimtn Mans TRA
LPF end for free prosproine containing specimen
} prison, iam: rations, testimonials, «io :
: CP Do not hay reprints of ancient editions, b
ow
A SARI
FT WITRTIR RR ww
TYLA w " W TAN
wire
THOMSON'S §
8 SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
¥o tools rvouired. Only a mer nosded to drive
sm cipal thom eaeily and gukkiy, aving ihe ohinoh
soso ately smooth, rig mo hoe to be made In
he leather woe bury for the Kiveis. Ther are :
tough and darable. Milos: pow in use
envthe, uniform of sesated, put Bp in boxes
Ask dealer for them, or send 00 in
wane for a box of JNO, assorted sizes. Man 7a by
JUDSON L. THOMSON MFG. CO.
WALTHAM, MASS,
MOCKING BIRDS 2.2
BARROY Sei
HORSES jim For on
DOCS & COWS. =
Priiadelplin,
a