The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, September 19, 1901, Image 6

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YALUE OF KEEPING AZCOUNTS |
‘The expenses and receipts from api-|
mals are unknown to some farmers, It]
is estimated that ft requires four acres
to keep a cow, and the value of the land |
as rent should be charged against her |
as so much expense which she must pay |
pefore her milk will give a profit. On|
dx other side, a cow will leave about |
ten dollars’ worth of manure on the |
four acres, which should be deducted |
fron: the rent charges. When strict ac-
counts are kept of all expenses the far-|
mer will then know which animals are
paying and which are not even self-sup
porting.
WHERE FOWLS
KEPT.
A great many Crops could be grown
to advantage on farms where large num-
bers of fowls are kept, and which create
a home demand for the articles produc-
ed. Seeds of sunflower, millet, rape
kale. Kaffir corn, popcorn, and even
sorghum, could utilized, the cattle
and sheep consuming the bulky portions
and the fowls the seeds. Where any ot
such foods become too woody for stock
they may be made to do service as bed-
ding. Cow peas are highly relished by
fowls, and so white clover, while
crimson clover will supply green food
late in the fall and very early in spring.
the same as rye. The regulation diet of
corn and wheat in winter 1s not con-
ducive to ogg production, but when the
fowls have a variety they will largely
increase the egg product. By selling
such crops in the form of eggs better
prices are obtained therefor, while rev-
enue from eggs and poultry will be ob
tained at a season of the year when the
farm will be producing nothing at all
Poultry will afford employment in win-
ter and with profit.
CROPS ARE
'
ne
is
compared
do not
they can
but few farm
number,
I here are f
with the whole who
plant a larger acreage than
attend to profitably. the consequence be
ing smaller crops in proportion to COs!
than should case. Instead of
forty bushels of corn per the far-
mer should secure cighty bushels. The
sinaller yield is more expensive than the
larger. while time expended
twenty acres is much greater on ten, the
manure also being distributed on too
large a surface to permit of any portion
of the crops receiving a sufficiency of
plant food. If ihe expense and labor be
stowed on 20 acres could le concentrated
on ten the yields would be doubled and
leave the farmer ten acres on which
to grow other crop. In
ei drought the farmer who puts his
work on the plat give ut
better cultivation save crop
while other farmers may not be so for-
tunate. Intensive culture leads Sy 4
tematic rotation of crops, and the lands
will be improved by a diversity of crops
All farmers have manure, but they de-
herefrom, ecature
Os er ty
be the
acre
the on
Sone periods
will
ns
Har
smasier
and
to
rive but little beneht ti
they endeavor to apply i
land.
ww Inuca
'O TAKE HONEY.
take {
care for looks or wish to sell
BEST TIME
fhe best time t
oO honey
it)
i
time to darken
$i
ett
fore the bees have had
which they will every ti
very long. The cappings will be snowy
white if are taken off as
as fully It 1s cl aned th
the dark sec i honey
we do not believe it.
left on the hive
swopped gathering, much of
carried down. The bees will fill the ¢
made vacant by brood hatching. Either
omb or extracted honey sells
etter after the weather begins to get
cool. and right here let us say that hon-
ev will sell better when separators are
used between the They com
pel the bees to keep within | and
build straight combs, no bulging out
I he farm bee keeper would find the busi
ness more pleasant snd profitable if he
had a few of the many inexpensive ap-
pliances to work with. There are ex-
ceptions, but generally speaking, the far-
mer knows little, care: little and both-
ers less with his bees than any other
part of his business. His mind and
hands are s0 fill of other more weighty)
matters that the bees are left to shift
for themselves.—The Lpitomst,
do ne if
SRO
sections
sealed it
OME
one contam bes
but
if the honey
; +} furs Sean
is after thie Dees nave
1"
It Wis
¢ usually
2
1 5)
‘sections
mils
(Bl
COWPEAS.
Acting on a suggestion received at 2a
meeting of the horticultural society, I
broke up an old sedge field of extremely
poor character and planted it in cowpeas |
in June, 1900. The field had not been
plowed in twenty years and was in bad
condition. | used one and one-half
bushels of peas per acre. A severe
drouth retarded the growth of the peas,
but subsequent rains produced a rank
growth. 1 turned them down in Sep-|
tember, i
I then applied the following mixture!
at the. rate of four hundred pounds per|
acre: S C rock, 1200 pounds: fine ground |
ash 100 pounds,
bushels of lime per acre and drilied two
the English mutton breeds, and through
tht transforfiation of rome Merino fam
ilies into a combination sheep. Ameri
cans cannot be said to be a mutton eat
ing people. But the steadliy increasing
of mutton consumed in this
country during the past few years, under
a steadily decreasing ability to buy, is
evidence that we are learning to eat
mutton,
Much can be done to encourage the
consumption of mutton by sending young
er animals to market, The difference
between lamb arg mutton is as great as
than between a spring chickenanda three
year-old rooster. The younger the ani
mals also the the shrinkage in
slaughtering. Fortunately, moreover,
Tess
for the producer. Careful experiments
prove that the of grain almost
constantly and regularly increases with
age. The very cheapest gain is made
while a lamb is yet with its mother. It
is a growth, moreover, which if lost
be regained by any amount of
later in life I'he first two
months of a lamb's life very largely
makes or mars for a profitable pro
ducer of mutton,
There is a limited period
of animals for growth. Every factor mn
the problem of producing mutton points
toward marketing, I'o para-
adage, he early
An eight
condition in
highest price per
A very narrow
period
Cost
feeding
0
§
i
. ' »
in the ile
earlier
it is
that
-old
CASON,
pound «
lamb
weeks
gets
lamb,
the prize.
if in and
commands t}
ver
{
attainable
limit of ume at this the
of the tide of A
lamb not meeting the requirements of the
period must
not
Opens,
1
ang
height prices passes,
i
market at that
mito a cheaper find
until another which calls
for a lamb three to five months old, but
a less price per pound.
pass on
class, to sale
Cason
Lambs sold at four months of age do
not as a rule bring as much as those
sold at two months old, If again the
age doubled trebled, the market
into ‘which they must go is such that in
pite of their gain in
ittle if any more
of former
continued until
sheep at its
price per head
The lesson is
is or
they will bring
ad
s
1
i
than at either
periods 1 may
mature
the
per x
the iT
1
lave
weight,
Vary
we
maximum and
does greatly
not that mutton should
be marketed in th of eight-weeks
old lamb; not
rightly
equipped
modations for
ot But this
general application that
marketed
raisers
respectung
ii aki
skill or stable
producing this
aching
the younger a
are
situated market
in
accom-
mutton,
sheep can be wien
under
grown
tit
conditions
H. P
the economical
the larger
Miller, in Orange Field farmer
Nos
will be the profit
THE MIDSUMMER APPLE
CROP.
Not a st the profit of
crop depends upon proper
treatment of the trees. More and more
are we beginning to realize that it is
fine, fancy fruit large
sound, bring
their jepression
have any
the
little the apple
f
mudsummer
the
s« which pay. The
'
appies
SEASONS
always
of
that
ace
witl take, and
stand trans
Ocean Such
grown, and
withtut defect
a few
es yields more profit
and
only
price,
are
pr sfitable
in
they the anes
[hey
foreigners
that
he
only
'
appies
tha fe 4 1
ig OT y will
ap-
: ‘ 1
we periecliy
maturiy
*
ree
they
or
bushels of
than
defective
X 4:
with
y api
:
another with twice as many
and
decides the
nes it he quality not the
yield that
quantity of the
profits
A good
through sumt
Just are
condition which need our particular
tention. the
apple
careiessness nt
many are spoiled
. '
ne ie or
$+ 3
chard. now the
trees
One should go through
Ory
con
A good deal de
performances of
Some have a record of pro
good apples in spite of the
Such consequently
than others,
should be made an effort to dis-
lodge so far as sible i
and under:ized fronts,
the trees will le t
maining apples grow larger and fairer
But in lcaving too many fruits on a tree
with a good record the danger of break
ing down the limbs is invited. This must
be carefully considered. Even though
we supply props later damage i< actually
done to the tree by straining 11. As a
be asked to carry
chard and make careful
dition of
3
peas
E +}
note Of the
cach tree
upon
cach tree,
ducing very
heavy crop
need
i here
the past
irees
Ott
le thintin
3 gunning
§
8 nyt .
defective
ved of t
the re-
bioao
HES
Ie ani } IARC
rule a tree should
more apples than its limbs can actually
support without preps. These latter can
then be put up to keep the tree from
straining when storms and winds ary
beating through the orchard.
Proper thinning out of fruits, espec-
ially the apples, one of the mos
delicate of quetions, for one must learn
how to do it from experience. One does
no damage to the crcp by overthinning
except as he limits the size of the crop
The trees do not suffer therefrom as
they may from overprdning. So in this
respect one can decide for himself just
how large a crop he wants, Allowances
must, of course, be made for the havoc
created by storms, These will thin out
the fruit later in spite of all precautions
It may then be necessary to leave a few
more apples on the trees than you ex-
pect to harvest. Another consideration
Tot
1%
specks or rotten centres, and later these
will have to be thinned out. The thin-
fair set of grass following,
tig, in New England Homestead,
YOUNG SHEEP DESIRABLE FOR
MUTTON.
The production of mutton is as yet
the sheep industry in this country. It
has not received as much study and at-
tention as most other branches of
be carried on by degrees, always looking
ty fruits. These should always be pul:
fed or knocked off. 8, W, Chambers, in
aa
Bound to Have an Education.
TION.
Florence Bassio, an Italian girl of ff.
lied recently for an edu
cation to the Juvenile Court of Chicago
three years has worked in a candy fac-
person made hin
It seems to be very easy to-build a fly
ing machine on satisfactory plans, Now
let somebody do it,
ce is two cents a pound in Dawson
City, according to Consul MceCook's re-
port. Coals will soon be $1,000 a ton|
the source of supply.
An American “College of Heraldry
suggests something out of a comic opera
But it is too humorous a thing for real
life,
commonwealth’s
wil
The Australian new
navy-—the first line of defense
$5,000,000 year to maintain,
practical independence of the wew
monwealth is proving a costly
at this early stage of existence.
The
com
luxury
ts
1 1 "»
states that (ac sda
cl sed
Hnives
A corres Pp indent
Sweden on Satur
the
are
h is sal pay day
on Sufdays here is
di
intensely practical
bed i yy Pie Las
Greenwood, lowa,
pion sneak
ing released from
prison and stole hus
rogues’
reports
thief, | wo
gallery.
A census Bureau bulletin says that the
average age oi Americans al
which was 31.1 years in 1800, was
in 1900 10 35.2
May a corresponding reduction
jor?’
fy i
gqeatn,
found
year
have increased to
insurance rates be lcvoked
Leslie's Weekly says the woman who
! herselt on
ence and boasts
} or scrub a floor
marrica
ides her domestic u
lier inabialaty
has
di
no
fee
tum
a dinner
enerally
would
Fhe annals of medicine are
records of the noblest and m
ested it rifvce or the sake
rgoulien
who Dave joined
‘ssensarked and :
MNarKca anda :
graves
lled by them
noble army of
as their legacy to
formulatin
sing
of
in
medical science
Much
being
of
sembly
s a mat
of
foreign
fact seven
districts
voters are in
registered vole of
four
six
per
per
the foreign!
very good Americans
Wood
Connec
William
in the
For thirty
ruff has
ticut woods,
long years
been a
all «
fidy of a young wi
ed Marry
menor
3
fecCitise
m account of the per
wan who bad promis
1
i
i
to him: The other day old
and
came
walk
over impelled
mil
to Winsted for
fond
which will survive even an unhappy J
affair, and m
man the inher
of t
mm fo the
lonely
pie
seven es from
'
camn
{here
an
are Ome
We
the case of a New England
fondn for pie 13
ited ess
one ne
mm
In
1ilinois,
the marshes of the Kanakee River
10.000 acres of
k 1: tani .
se been reclaimed and planted to su
gar beets mated
at 30000 tons, number of beets,
lected at
rent.
mn land
ha
swamp
1 he present crop
A
random,
1s esd
hs
showed fourteen per
sugar and eighty-five per cent
This,
swamp land
1
i
pur
and a similar experiment n
near Michigan Stale
will probably determire the future
of many of
atarsh mn the Western States,
the
line,
fae of
thovsands acres
The catle king of Australia i¢ Samuel]
McCaughey, an Irishman, who went to
Australia in 1856 with practically noth
ng. He did not succesd well at first
but started again with a emall Sock. and
from year to year has added to his hold
ngs, until now he has more sheep than
any other man in the world, He has
more acres of land than sheep, and his
possesgicns are in the Lest parts of Aus.
tralia. One of his farms on the Darl
ington Downs is thirty-six miles long
ind forty miles wide. Aliogether he,
swt more than a million acres and leas
=; about a million or so more,
When the Trans-Siberian Railroad
was projected it was claimed that it
would reduce the journey from Moscow |
10 Port Arthur to seven days. But it!
requires, in fact, nearly a month, The!
predicition was made that a speed of!
thirty-five miles an hour could be main |
tained ; the average made by the trains
sow running is about eight miles, The,
trouble is that the rails are too light |
I'he Russian Government has awakened |
to the failure, and has now decreed that |
Jie light rails are to be replaced by rails |
sf aandard weight. The cost of the!
‘oad as originally planned was to have!
seen about @75000000, The change of |
rails will add immensely to that sum,
i
We get so nsed nowadays to the won.
serful, not to say miraculous, things the
wientists do that we are likely to take |
sven their greatest achievements as
what might have been expected, and;
hus fail in some measure to appreciate
them, There is wireless telegraphy,
for example. The more we think about
t the more wonderful it appears. states
J+ writer in the Philadelphia Record
Messages are sent over or through
mountain ranges, and ships sixty miles
apart can communicate with each other,
in spite of the curving segment of the
earth, An even more amazing thing
in the method is the possibility of tun
ing the instruments so as to produce a
difference in the vibrations and thus
send simultaneous messages. This sug-
gests the thought that the electric waves
huve at least one quality in common with
the waves of light and sound, which we
know pass and repass, crossing each
other in every conceivable direction,
without the least interference,
THE HERMIT OF CAP:
MALEA,
Among the Grecian Goatherds.
About twenty-five years ago there was
a young sailor who, dint of herd
integrity of character, and hem
ness of will, reached at the age of twen-
of ambition—be-
would them be
sone 900
to
the girl of Ins
wailed tor
| swesthearts
nung to
OWners
by
work,
ty-six the summit his
coming master of
called a good-sized steamship,
'
register,
{Ons Upon this CesSS0n
had
Oy
choice, who
him sin a
parted sd
rare nis
ge
deep
stea
Fhames be explained
all the wonders
sing for
had
oft repeated
made
bright days be
tween he had been able to
ie
VOVAReS 3
vote to courtship. The ship was bound
p.
Mediterranean ports, the time
in autumn, and consequently
ide honeymoon
Cadiz
ghtful tour
wherein to
ent
ing Greek
way, and cut
dg
#t APPrecia
water s
qui
poy 1
SIHENQOUTrs 3UC-
wreckage,
Cape Malea at
tide, and
itself enab
battlements
he
was found
gazing
goat herda ¥
' 64
them back
He
me of
would live
their L108
id
un
of
deeply
wate hing Ww
thote
mething
with
And rude peasants
of his depth
woe, syn
without
helped
payment { : at
hut
any
they fam and
wept him sapped not
sels of food and drink as sufficed for has
stunted
And there, with his gare fixed during
all his waking hours, upon that inscrat.
able depth wherein all Lis bright liopes
had suddenly quenched, he lived
until quite recent years, “the Wd to
getting, by the world forgot,” a living
monument of and patient
complaining grick. 3y his humble
friends, whose language he never learn
el. he was regarded as 2a and
when one day they came upon his life-
Tess body fallen forward upon its knees
at the little unglazed window through
which he wont to look upon
the sea where his dear one lay, they felt
confirmed inv their opimon of the sanctity
of the hermit of Cope Malea Fb. I.
needs
been
wid
CONsancy an
saint,
Was out
Effect of Fasting.
Professor Masso of the University of
ienoa has recently compie ed a series of
of the
body during fasting and the rate of as-
of carbohydrates, The ex.
periments demonstrated the efficacy olf
Upon the administration of sugar the
temperature rose rapidly during fifteen
minutes and in one or two hours reached
ita maximum, After bread is given the
temgerattire will rise more slowly than
in the case of sugarfowing to the great.
er difficulty the animal lias in assimilat-
ing the food, Professor Masso says
with sugar he has succecded in restor:
ing the vitality of dogs in a serious state
—— Sh 5 I po
The faster a Wan sis in debt the
|
|
i
RUSSIAN LACE AND PEARLS.
A ball dress of unusual beauty is of
deep cream Russian applique lace em-
proidered with paste pearls and silver]
on a foundation of Russian the |
same tint I'he low bodice
with the jewelled and narrow |
straps of cerise velvet brighten the]
pointed belt, Another striking dinner |
gown of white net ringed with black and |
spangled with steel is striped with white
satin ribbons and lacings of steel; thi
is made
black and
net
lace,
somewhat a Empire, and in
jet is very effective,
FAILED AS CONDUCTORS.
The street railway company of Madi
son, Ind, which until recently employed |
women as conductors, has dispensed
their
of
passenger
their because
arou:ed
jority of
explained that
ed
with CIVICES
the
male
par
tially 1eAIOUSY the ma
1
the It 1s
1 ’
women were hirst empioy-
because they were che than men,
beloved
aper
and because it was the
p
l
traffic
the
y would
increase the over he line, On
y
tae instead of
Wi
contrary,
atiracung
conductors
officers say
Hiade passengers, ine nen
invariably showed a prefer
ence for lar man, and the
wme
pa
others became
SOMETHING NEA
he visit of the Duke and Duchess of
Cornwall and YX Austral
1
London perfumers to disull
for the
1 i
ia ds i104
certain Au
Wy al
rk
tralian flowers
B
A
benefit of
ritishers. Boronia the
wer said that
tu greet
an
so fragrant t 18
ed on
haps Gol
fragrant
are
£1
perfume wal the breeze
INCOMING den
other
which
Car
wattle
and rock
growing
exceedingly
All these
into perfumes and labelled by
fistinctive names.
great rnivals
follow the fashion,
the most popular of the day
eners ave perfumed =»
i the
Ww hie ODS
blossom,
Or hid *
Ca
mel! f
smelling flowers
made
digtin
the are sweel-
have been
their
ae
which
making that flower
Bath
" ;
hese perfumes
Of carnation ISoenls,
sO
hets SaIne
of
HOW 10
Hands ma
POSSESS NI
he
-
undertaken
should
possible, Lut i
young wile
whenever
ef a
press
thick, clumsy
the
protection i
needs pratecin
well from
that
exis
as kid
should be a
ian as
{he gloves
ger than 1s
»f
what are
Yu will
them that you will be
ng
be done,
Hy
vena
brat
worn 1o allow
freedom Mi NO
FE h
feel 30 helpless and clumsy
ACCOUNT purciase
1 :
known usemaids’ gloves,
in
constantly remaoyw
them when any delicate job has to
might
A
your
§ 4
o Goin
n 1
#0 as well be without
s alt +3
altogether, no
Mi washing
ther thin
ficver
1. ol
Nanus
' ¥
$ +}
si grineg ih
1% 4
wili not Cleanse
GENERAL KITCHENER'S
MOTHER
Kitchener’
interviewed
faberts
General mother
being
3
UY a representative of 1h
in simall town
where she has been living
1
of Brittany
Hose fume
wed that she
al h
discreet as the
issing
Is
(aener mself when
mallers
i public importance
truth in the r
Son §
None whatever
explaining that her news
General Kitchener was a fortnight
Lord Kitchener is not the man to
short in the muddie of his
difficult 1 may He
10 the end, provided that
any
wmor ;
retarn *”’ asked
© sad
1
ialest
task, however
be will remain
His post
gland does not remove him
likely, seeing that he has, more than
the confidence of Ins Government
With regard to Mrs. Kitchener
celf, a pretty picture is drawn of the
lady in her picturesque home, among
her “roses and geranium: “Lord
vtchener's stepmother,” we are told
“is a lady about sixty years old, very!
distinguished looking in ber black dress
and with the classic type of face so fre
qrent among elderly English ladies. Her
white, her long and thin
and her accent in speaking French is
the traditional one of the English.” Bu:
at the end of what was evidently a pleas
ant conversation, the French journalist
knew little more than at the beginning.
except that Lord Kitchener's bellt-mere
has as much confidence in her eminent
bean-his as his stanchest admirers,
MANAGEMENT
HAIR.
Hair oils of every kind and all pre.
Walch 1 un
ever,
her
face
THE OF THE
parations for the hair are unneccssary |
vo long as the scalp is in a healthy con- |
dition. Brush the hair daly with a stiff |
wral oil 10 permit, wash it once in two
weeks with clear cold water. A litte
white castile soup may be used occasion:
ally, but if it is mixed with ninety per
cent, alcobol it will be less injurious to
the head than when it is applied alone
with water.
The failing out of the hair is cansed
hy fever or a scvere derangement of the
“wealth, It is checked by improvement
in the health and by applying local rem-
cdies, An excellent lotion for the scalp
is made of two drachms of tincture of
cantharides, six diachms of rosemary
and eleven ounces of elderflower water.
Apply a lide once or twice a day after
brushing the scalp briskly with a «iff
hair brash vutil it is in a glow,
the hair is short it is an excellent plan
tf dip the head in cold water night and
worming. and, after thoroughly drying
the hair, brosh it quickly and well for
five minutes,
An excellent hair wash, when a hair
a
of torewaler, ome ounce of aromatic
spirits of ammonia, one and a half
drachms of tincture of cantharides and
! Shake and
the mixture well in a bottle, and
it to the scalp with an old tooth-
New York Tribune,
nx
HOW THE FALL WAISTS ARE
MADE
Separate waists of
vivella: and Scotch and French
will worn this autumn, The
olors most used will be bright and dark
tan, the light. dark and Freneh
blues, gray, pink, and dark and reseda
green. Buttons of steel, gilt and white
and smoked pear! will be used on the
new which are made with plain
backs, long shoulder seams and stitched
or tucked fromts with long-waisted and
slightly bloused effects, The Rntest
sleeve is a shape with a trifle
at the top than that of last
wristbands made large
the hands to shy
necktie finish” is new
waists, particukarly
Ladies’ Home
cashmere, alba
Lross,
flannel tae
red,
waists
bishop
more fulness
I he
enough 10
through
year. are
pernst
fen
the
on
more dres
J 4 /
Journal,
problem
1 artsst, an aut
ile ams u
ed to paint the port of women
Wee
fi the ages
0.
Years Belore {wen
which charms
ing forward with jeal
and i is
an expectancy
freshne
hope
At
full of puzzling pr
forty ti er 18
mises
and
stronger
interven
its expec-
formed,
nance are
but in
has lost
ncy and is lu » be indifferent
| he dy wom
irty and forty
bad experience of the world
and of youth. In those
years they were brightest and most
author
he ages
then
the
th
‘ f
{ween i hey
the
OVOUsne ss
If
Fhe society woman thought that it
give general
question mdividual
in regard 10 the
SUMe are most
was impossible to answers
Jmen
the as Ww
dGifter most attractive
charming at forty
have passed their prime at
Irty Or
upward the best
will show to
probably
oman every
the balance of
f ir of from cighteen
e Woman's Life
GAMES.”
ne K1fce
past, says
londowx [lady was considered
adylike when ferminme
weaknes ance
charms
hike
af the overcrowding
n nearly every osher profession at pres.
the recent appoint-
drown, a student
raining College at
he important position
Games and Gymmastics
of Durban,
o all concern
themseives with the doings of women.
were
SUPPO
Now
Brothers
their
sClhwols ws of
nierest t
who
h lady, who is only twenty-
the daughter
. . at
UWn 03
of
Cantonbury
entered the South-
or
age,
Br
She
0 1800 a two years
the work most congenial
ONSPICUOUs SUCCESS.
ving qualified in the
ts of physiology, hygiene
ambulance and medical
rope climbing.
and silver and
ck-nursing,
work, and gymnastics
openings for women
he South
be
owns m 1
remaiis to seen |
her appointment
1s worth $1,500 a
that the authorities of
having taken
training wm a
of their prn-
En-
engage a competent
Moore Smith's chor,
mguiries and investigation,
we have seen, and there is
that 1 prove a very
all concerned,
Wes
3 way
: to the fact
the Durban Pul
the
up subject « weal
practical way, deputed one
cipals, Miss Me
gland in ord
teacher. Miss
after carefui
has fallen as
‘
yore Smith, to
visit
er iO
ttle doubt
will
salistaclory ong
FASHION NOTES.
®aded materials are
TOgUS agai
I'he latest tag ornament: are made of
coins or jewels in pear or round shapes
A touch of scarlet introduced in hat or
gown trinaoings is a Parisian fancy fer
fall,
Lenumine
used for
coming into
1%
wrist
brocade
little
Persian
fa-hionable
antwgue
the
ver sei with coral
The dominant note of Parisian fash.
trimmed with chiffon or net
draperies or lace of every knowe pat-
tem, weave and unt
The awtomobile cockade 1s the latest
shirt waist models
The cockade consists of many loops of
chenille or narrow width ribbons,
The newest millinery ormamenss are
of gun metal, studded with cut steel or
rhinestones. Cut jet combired with
gold will also be used for hat decoration
in the antusgr.
The fine, ser French organdie in
lovely monochromes or in Marie An.
toinette devices ix decidedly one of the
marked favorites of fashion, and has
for the autumn season a prominent
place among her chosen materials.
Batiste in lace effects and embroider.
ed patterns figure largely in combina.
tion with foulards, crepe de Chine, and
the new delicately colored and rather