The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, August 19, 1915, Image 6

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    a
TAKE UP SMALL HAT
NEW YORK WOMEN ENTHUSIAS.
TICALLY ADOPT STYLE.
Lines of French Costume Still Form
a Mode! That Is Accepted as the
Mode—Is Really Conven-
ient Type.
in New
tiny hat
York are
with enthusi
they realize
last chance to
It, is un
The women
adopting the
asm, probably because
that it may be their
get the good out of it
usually unbecoming Unless there
exactly the right set of features
neath it, this tip-tilted hat with its
foolish little brim exceedingly
trying. It does not beauty
wear it; few fashious been
signed with that
100,
is
i
is
to
de-
view it
need a
have
asset in
than
This!
not |
more difficult
indisputable style
fetish of our women,
All beauty in
world today only receives the tribute |
of this remark |
be if
clothes!
needs that quality
mere beauty
asset the
loveliness.
is
the the |
how lovely she would |
how to
she knew wear her |
It would seem as though that well
known model France
over last spring, with st
and back and slghtly ¢
{8 to be the
autumn wear
of the
of
from that came
raight front |
irved sides
chosen
It is
houses over
of serge,
lines
one [or Mriy
featured by ma
best here, made
silk and combined with
satin. The
hips are quite straight, chemise
with the sides either belted or curved |
shoulder to
from
like
to outline the figure
They are usually
gowns, because they su st the
redingote :
ting out this
frock that carries out
fect an unbroken line
der to heel is better than
redingote
new
tunie th vazt §
$48 as i8 put-
summer The one-ple«
the
of
suit, which gives more m
a burden fl
These belted
makers of
fered in
women
they
ing
have
of the hou
of
to the
ten call
vain
last
were looked
Po
ft00 uncon
become
is
are
to be in
ion
type of gown that one car
They
do not confi
and cover
may give
figure for
standard
The m
many
gcarlet,
worked button
run
the
too much
ajorit
have
either
the
gown
back. This omiasior
or buttons
bon
nent
with
sides
A hostess
or slik
butt
a col
always has
or Cheruit,
that swung gracefully
figure and
with white satin ribt
wore
was lace
Copyright, 13
oer 9
FOR EARLY AUTUMN
A Useful Tailored Style Is the Design
Shown Mere: it May Be Carried Out
in Cloth, Serge, Gaberdine or Wool
len Cord. Desirable Fullness is Given
to the Sk y Two Flat Plaits That
Are Made Each Side Both Front
Back; They Are Stitched Nearly to
the Knees, Then Fal
Free. T Coat Has Sleeves Set In
to Ordinary Armholes. Hat of Dark
Blue Taffeta, With Clusters of Cher
ries the Brim
rtd
anc
Are Left to
ne
Under Raiged
Combinations, Stand High in
Public Favor.
There are many fancy
cially In taffeta, in checks,
plaids and embroidered taffetas
little bouquets in several shades,
design being a pompadour
glaring colors. Checked taffetas are |
in every possible combination, with |
white or black grounds, and all sizes |
silks, espe
stripes, |
with
tha
“Me
without
Fn A PSN NS NSN NSP NEN
POCKETS THAT ARE HANDY
Travelers Will Appreciate the Com. |
fort That is Afforded by These
Appliances,
When traveling, & couple of roomy
pockets that are quite safe yet easily
got at are a great boon, and if made
as shown on a sort of deep band, they
can be worn under the traveling coat
without showing, as it is usually loose,
or might even be put under the skirt,
and unless anything very bulky was
put in would not much disarrange the
set of the skirt
money, Jewelry,
and a few letters,
the band need not
hea more
about 6
inches
one of
-
or fi
deep, but |
ful when
ing, or
household
as will
from the small sketch at top, it is Just
a straight band of material, which
might match the skirt, and can he
lined or not, according to strength
needed; it is bound all round with
narrow ribbon and is buttoned in front
or might be fixed with press studs.
The envelope pockets are sewed on
and have buttoned-over flaps. The top
of the band could be fixed to skirt by
small safety pins or amall press studs
The hall of a stud sewed each side
skirt would be little seen.
——— rR
garden:
doing
Some men haven't any homes. And
other men are married to suffragettes,
-
hings laid in scallops at t
and half way up th
he skirt
nost ar
popul
when it be
ing
+ and «
and ft should
It is cool, and
ning is really charm
many types of fac
stand gray,
in
thought
shades
is
Cot Hut there
are olor that
annot
worn
1
only after careful
especially the
NAN CRIN NI NINS NSPS
Desirable in That They Are So Easily
Kept Clean and Mave Look
of Freshness.
|
i
|
i
i
|
COMISKEY IS PRAISED
Inventor of Means of Defense
That Shocked Old- Timers.
Owner of Chicago White Sox Taught
Pitchers and Second Basemen to
Be Ready to Cover First Base
--Tactics Now Used.
If we look back a few
Louis baseball scribe, we will
i
for everyday
easily kept
use, as they
clean and
can
fresh-looking
dainty cover, carried out in white spot
easily be slipped out when the muslin
Of course, the color of this
lining should be selected to suit the
tea or breakfast service the cozy is
used with.
A hemstitched frill of plain muslin
is carried quite across and loops of
cord are sewn In the center for lifting
purposes. The spotted muslin must
be cut deep enough to allow of the
edge being turned well under the in
side, where it may be tacked to the
cory or fastened by press studs.
a a
It takes a whole lot of crumbs of
comfort (0 make a square meal,
base unless possibly it is the pitching
There was a time in baseball
heavy hitter was the first player se.
lected. It did not matter much if he
if he could only do execution with a
stick “the best boy
and considered the best play-
bunch
hickory he was
wanted"
er in the
Al
all
McKinnon
sluggers
Orr,
were
Dave
Morrill
the old school
to hit ball Fielding
de a second consideration. A
thers,
Tohn
and
their ability the
was
first bascemal
ma
expected 10
thrown into
of
¢ h what
hi hands,
his his
{ virrt >
aovering
idea
first bare,
If the
the
ground around
sidered at all
directly
to
Was not co
was not into
the other fellow got the error
runs
ands
home
ways make
n i 0 make
& num * OF other
progressed
iding had
WINNIE Eames
skey ah
about
yw ed
vey +f
mber ©
a he
play deep
and
ready to «
plichers
Da Over
sYery
ght to
Foltz
throw {rom ¢
day » pee a
pitcher, be it { uthers
Hudsor
LAU
Key on the
taking the omis
bags. the
of Yankee R the second base
shinson
this day and age
work pulled off like
man I have at yet
to see the team
he old Browns had
right field
improved in skill
and Helding came to the front
WOrkKing
toward As the
FOLLOW UP ALL TIPS
is a mistake not to follow
Any ball player that
may be in to a club,” re
marked Hughey Jennings. “Had
taken advantage of a tip
Walter Johnson would have
been & member of our team
now. Before he joined the Wash-
ington team in 1907 we had sev
eral tips on him, but because he
was touted as having struck out
22 in a game we thought the
it
tip on a
sent
woo
wo
tip came from some enthusiast
who was exaggerating and we
allowed Johnson to slip through
our fagers. But since then
there is not a tip comes to the
Detroit club which is not run
down, regardless of how much
time and money it takes to do
#0. Good ball players are mighty
scarce these days and a club
cannot afford to overlook a
chance to pick up one.”
Pitchers Hold Up Red Sox,
The consistently good work which
Joe Wood is doing for the Boston Red
Sox makes that team’s chances look
brighter than they did earlier in the
campaign. Wood recently has pitched
several brillant games. This seems
to indicate that he has regained his
old form and now can be relied upon
to win a large majority of his games.
Foster, another of the Sox pitchers,
also is going well, and there are sev.
eral other pitchers—8hore and Gregg,
for i(nstance—~who are apt to come
through.
Player by Name of Cobb.
A Detroit writer, commenting on Ty
Cobb's chances to establish a new
base-stealing record, mentions that
Harry Stovey and “a player by the
name of Hamilton" made steal records
that Cobb hardly can beat. Wonder
it, ten or a dozen years from now, they
will be speaking of “a player by the
same of Cobb”?
MACK REBUILDING
but withal
building a |
chassis for a new machine His mate |
rial is costing him nothing, and
the elongated leader is out is the
Slowly
cheaply,
laboriously,
Mack is
and
Lonnie
all
ime |
he puts in training in the way it would |
shoot,
Hy this same simple method, Mack
most famous machine in
Ath
iter
bullt up the
be .
thie iat
two decades e lamented
lethics—only to see iL cough, spl ;
go headlong into the ditch |
1214 Mack, it
membered, paid practically nothing |
ae
"i
will be re
innis, Harry and
members of the far
COE |
Was practi
it for |
but
r.the |
four
' 5 td
00 000 infield One
JO infleld n
famed
netted hi
in Hake
Athletics
0
mmer days
exactly the
the day
iBOrs we
» of fame
x T4 ¥
ININE
NOTES,
y
lease on
.
fallen off
10 an alarming degree
i
"0 i
Bancroft of |
Yankees has
oone of th
Whil
Phill
short field
batting only
+ still ia playing a brilliant
. +»
defeats
been
of Mordecai Brown's
with the Whales have
Mont
is year
* » .
“Bobby” third
the San Francisco club
Atneric
- . *
baseman of |
has been sold
us
Jones,
In the American league just as soon
ing streak
Walter Johnson comes along .
» . »
will score a
Alexander and
Some club
run
a ball
Grover
day
against
- . -
Herzog has laid down a strict rule
glass of beer during the season
. » -
The pirates have a clever young
catcher named Murphy to help out
Gibson and Schang behind the bat,
* . »
Mathewson, under a tropical sun,
can pitch as well as ever. He'll win
many a game before the race ends in
October.
* » .
Eddie Collins is playing a wonderful
game and furnishing more than his
share of the aggressiveness for the
White Sox.
. - *
Since Cobb started swinging three
bats instead of two, nine out of ten
of those .198 hitters go to the plate
with three war clubs. :
. * .
Bresnahan figures that the Cubs
will win the pennant because they
will play nearly all of their games at
home after Labor day.
. * »
Tom Seaton is far from being the
terror of last season. His main fault
stems to be in fighting the umpires
and then losing absolute control.
. oo W :
Dave Fultz wants ball players to out
out “unnecessary arguments with um.
pires.” Have you ever seen a neces
sary argument with an umpire? Or
a winning one?
«sn
Eddie Murphy, purchased from Con.
nle Mack by President Charles A.
Comiskey, consideration unknown, is
one of the fastest players in the
world in beating out a buat
always
Lon
learn tickets are
most of them used
them a fair
example of this
New Yorken
a double
supplied, and
nie always show
A
recently
gives
good wa
when the
the
seen
wers playing Mackmen
Mack started a young collegiar
mound
bases
walloped
Yet
let
The Yanks
16 bails
and
youngster
hits on
and
0 f
ih
the kid out
i ae is
y
Philadelphian, 15
didn't take
Mack
he hin
and take his ine. The kid
ugh used his eturn
Worcester {
That
stick
tho
academy tha
same dav. h
looks to
He in a
rough
BEST BAD BASEBALL PLAYEF
OQutfieider Gus Willlams Holds His Jot
Through Inability to Capture
Flies in Outer Garden
formerly
and who
tha
Lae
bad ball
he's a game guy
the chances o
for life by liners that
day deserves a
Carnegie
Gus Williams.
other player in the history of the game
ever capitalized his inability to catch
fly balls into an asset that earned him
a major league salary
Williams’ muff of Hartzell's liner in
a game with the Yanks was a classic,
Gus didn't move. He turned bis eyes
heavenward and held out his hands,
like a blind man asking for alms,
The pill rammed Gus amidships and
bounded away with the resilience of
a tennis ball hurled against a con
crete statue. Awakening with a start,
Gus pursued the elusive sphere and
shot it to second, but Hartzell beat
the throw.
Stallings Is Optimistic.
Stallings hasn't weakened. He says
the Braves will cop.
—————————
BEVERAGES THAT ARE ENJOY.
ABLE ON THE HOT DAYS.
Here Bhould Make a Selec
tion Delightful for Her Guests and
Consequently of Natural Pleas
ure to Herself.
Recipes for cooling
this
eager
beverages are
when
her
welcome at Reason
hostess is tempt
guests
Claret Cup.
properly but a ve
pound if not. The foll
English recipe for this delectable sum
mer claret
and one to cool
Put granulated su
wine glass
ighily Add
rigesl ered
peel, i
io
¥
An ol good |
made, insipid com
owing is an oid
drink Stand a bottle of
of soda water on ice
a tablespoonful of
of brandy and blend thoro
three strips
bits cumber rind
- 5% oh To fal
A LaDiespooniui
the claret and soda
gether, jce
Mint Punch.
ing one quart of water and t=
and serve 1
nA a 8
iane a
of sugar 20 minutes
arate a dozen sprigs
with one ar
ing and
Then strain
waler
steep
and aaa
the of eight len
JUICE
strawber
Garnish
berries
india Punch.
anges i tw
water and
nish
Canton Punch-—{h
Cantor ines the
ng
Beri
handbag
frocks,
in the «
Chicken Broth With Rice.
Select 3 softmeated fowl (milk-
prepare
ter: the
bring to the b
Vin
and place in
fireless cooker for four hours or more,
or simmer gently
til tender, adding
ook
over a slow un
boiling water when
sufficient rice to
Season the broth with salt, pep
per and bay leaf
The pieces of chicken may be lifted,
drained, floured, seasoned and fried
Fragments of Cold Meat.
Fill an earthen dish with aiternate
instead of
the dish is covered with a
thick layer of boiled rice, which is
dotted with bits of butter and sprin
It is browned in the
decorated with triangles of toast
and sprige of parsley. This is a good
way to serve a curry of fish or chicken
To Clean Blankets,
To clean blankets or all wool gar
laundry soap. add four tablespoonfuls
of ammonia, put in the tub and half
fill the tub with cold water. Enter
the articles to be cleaned and lot soak
for hours. Then rinse in water con
taining four tablespoonfule of ammo
nia Do not wring. The articles will
be just like new and will not shrink
Potato Fritters.
Boil half a dozen potatoes, beat them
and mix with three well-beaten eggs, a
gill of milk, a little oiled butter. Mix
well together and drop into boiling
dripping. Fry a light brown, dish up
and sprinkle with sugar. Serve hot
Hard Sauce.
Cream well together one cupfal of
white suaar and two tablespoonfuls of
Butter. Add three drops of vanilla or
a little sherry wine. The beaten white
of an egg is often added to make it
very foamy. Berve ice cold.
sr