PRETTY CORSET COVER LATEST MODEL IS NOT AT ALL HARD TO MAKE. Flesh-Colored Crepe de Chine Recom- mended for the Garment illustrat. ed, Which Is One of the Best That Has Been Devised, corset covers in the almost transparent, The latest model in making that the girl who at least half a dozen, colored crepe de chine, in self color and trimmed with row cluny lace, but any thin material China and India silks. 20 Inches wide will make The latter width is for a stout figure, A very tall person might use a yard and an eighth for the length, but one yard will be enough for the average woman is doubled, laid flat, and 18 to one cover. and a with a narrow hem and trimmed baby ribbon inch or so run below through It one can DESIGNED FOR SUMMER WEAR Wrap That Has Won Especial Favor as a Garment to Be Worn Hot Weather. in The wrap with the irregular hem is In special favor It assumes and are lifted at the back. ing achieved in the garment Such wraps are lin very lightweight silks, or may be of chiffon The blazer stripes are popular and because of of gay colors, bright red into its own once more ft in beautiful shades that are without being garish. and which are very attractive when worn by the right person The beach coats be worn with the bathing suit quite as luxurious in their way as any of the wraps designed for regu lation use There is a delightful lack of trimming on these, but the fabrics are elegant in weaves and sat isfactory in colorings, this all be cutting of the ed the immensely the has One return Negligee That Will Give Satisfaction Is an Easy Task for the Amateur ~8imple Design. First make a straight, narrow alip of very pale blue pussy willow taffeta. with a tiny, bebe waist gathered into a belt just under the bust, and ribbon straps across the shoulders to hold up the little gathered waist. Attach a tunic of pale blue chiffon to this slip, about at the hips, and drop over it a second tunic from the high belt. Slash each tunic up at the front in a deep point and edge both tunics with lace insertion. The upper tunic will fall below the hip in front and almost to the knees at back: the lower tunic will hang at the back; but slope up to reveal the feet in front. Tie a sash of peach-pink satin ribbon against the lace-edged upper tunic where the apex of the slope comes in front. Now make a kimono-shaped coat of nettop lace with the border at the bottom. This is to fall six Inches below the satin belt over the upper tunic of blue chiffon. Edge the V-neck in the lace tunic or coat with lace insertion and trim the very shost sleeves In the same way. Several little bows of pink ribbon will make the lace tunic gay and charmingly in keeping with the akirt, When Traveling. Dust is inevitable with travel by train, and as it is not always possible to obtain the means of a face bath, and if left on long the dust will se. riously hurt the skin, the face should be cleansed at least twice a day with cold cream and a little of the wash FUTURIST SKIRT The critic that said the futurist and cubist schools of art would way affect our normal other thought coming. King, one of the most prominent of the younger set at Newport, where this picture was taken, has originated and is wearing this mu'ti. colored “futurist” skirt, It seems as if this novel design will take with her friends, from whom it will gradually spread into popular favor with the gentler sex. Miss King did not volunteer to make public the theme which the design was supposed to depict, but an artist who happened to pass remarked that i* was an inspiration for a cub- ist painting he was then planning. in no life, has an- Miss Violet NASA SSP the front of decorated the the cover may lightly Lastly, be hems are run through hooks and eyes or snappers The slipped over head brought t« the the the camisole Is and the from the elastic back Then and closed there in like fashion to the A simple cover of China silk at 36 Inches wide, could made in hour at Val edging to trim “= of 2 if desired, 20 cents, at five an a cost Another pretty model that the very thin gir! would like because it is such affair made preferably from chiffon, though anything as thin as net or China silk will answer. You take a length of wash ribbon an inch or so wide, the circumference of the of This sup ia the wearerto-be fabric the first with a heading tathers down The lower edge of the strip of several times, Each row of to the ribbon is sewed cured to a belt of ribbon two inches wide, This is just the very slender girl her empire frocks focts It sired natural fullness kind of cover should wear ww baby waist suggests only the much-de ANNAN A AANA NA carried along will. be found excellent, a teaspoonful of this in half a cupful of water sup plying quite a good face bath. Pour the diluted benzoin on a soft bit of rag and go over all the face with wiping movement, doing this after the skin has been first cleansed with cold cream. After the face has dried, pow der as usual, In place of the benzoin it is possible to employ orange-flower water or al cohol-or any good cologne or toilet water-—for taking off the grease after the cream cleansing, or even for the soil itself, but it is never wise to use too much of any of thele things ae they scorch the skin after awhile, C—O 5 AAO Cheap Dust Caps. There is no excuse for getting the hair dusty. For dust caps can be bought, in pretty prints in pink or violet and white, for 12 cents each. These are really preity caps, with an elastic to keep them snug at the back, and a standing ruchelike frill about the face. They are useful not only for sweeping and dusting, but for cooking. They keep any possible dust from the hair safely out of the way and they also keep the odors of cooking from entering the halr-where they would cling tenaciously. ; Buttonhole Hint. In making buttonholes in soft mus lin it is a very good idea to rub a lit tle paste, made of flour and water, on the wrong side. This will give a firm surface to work upon and obviates the possibility of cutting a buttonhole too large. Of course, the paste will not discolor the fabric. Jn g bg WEAVETS, Fans who have picked Bush of the Giants or surpriseqa to learn that Manager Herzog the greatest shortstop Ir His thi a better balanced Herzog, to me, “Herzog A man with an infiel laying on and his ag ball player the grandest short tank nx block bunt mean all kinds all-American honors as a him th given him this the honor.” Record Entities ~Long Service as Mainstay Continues With Feds. Eddie Plank deserves the greatest that ever lived For derful southpaw was the For 15 kind of baseball that letics to win a large flock of p and a number of ties the tit left-handed 15 years, 190] to 1814, the won Mack main- pitched helped the siav years he the Ath: world<champion ti in his sixteenth pitching league he baseball, he is the Federal old boss the of the his job in sensation Cast adrift by connected with a Eddie Plank. rolling up a huge winning percentage The most amazing part of Plank's work this year is the fact that he is pitching to batters who are new to him. He hasn't the benefit of the ex. perience gained in other years to ald him. He doesn’t know the strength and the weakness of the batters who face him, as he did in the American league. He must learn as he goes He must pit the old southpaw whip, absolutely unaided, against the Fed. eral league clouters. And he has done 80 successfully. Plank is one of the very few left. handers who has no eccentricities. He has been normal in his conduct, a gen tleman on the ball field and off, and all through the 168 years of his major league career he has graced the game by his presence. Tigers Sign Two Southerners. Pitchers Rube Marshall and George Cunningham of the Chattanooga team in the Southern league have been pur- chased by the Detroit Tigers. New Shortstop for Pirates. Harry Daubert, shortstop for the Charleston baseball team of the Ohio state league, has been purchased by the Pittsburgh Nationals, indians Sign Big Youngster. Manager Lee Fohl of the Indians has signed a 6-foot4 youngster named Gare rett from Mason City, la, who pitches with Lis right arm. Weaver of Chicago greatest of shortste i dinals consi ins of the Car NAAN ANA NAAN NOTES - Perhaps those umpires need fewer critics and more good . * » models Many searching | Bre, ma jor for league spectators » - * Pirates of Barney Dreyfuss appear to be almost as good as the Pirates of i Penzance i » . * George Stallings { Braves are a { they insists that team better ball than were last voar - Ad - One of the P Evers is playis by threatening ittaburgh « ig for public ritics says sympathy to quit » * » I care not fu sang Connie r the stars that shine Mack, whereupon he sold | another to Comiskey * * » lan Johnson, American league boss | saya ten cents is all Federal | league should ever have charged *. . » the Pete Compton, the terrible slugger of Connie Mack Sox, toward the White - - - Ty Cobb has stolen more bases this year than the entire Philadelphia Na tionals, who are leading the old league race * * » George Whitted is making Miracle ! Man Stallings frown every time he iooks at the hit column of the Phillies’ box score, » » - Federal league batters were com- pletely fooled by the “mud ball.” but of the league. - - » If Lee Fohl were In Germany he would be given an iron cross. He has managed the Cleveland team more than two months. . . » “What s the matter with the Cubs?” asks Roger Bresnahan. And Charley Herzog answers: “What ain't the mat- ter with the Reds?™ » - - Connie Mack promisad to put some pepper into his team-—and he did, al though his pepper seems more like paprika than cayenne, - - * a Most of the stars of the American league are golf players, but refrain from indulging in the game in the baseball playing season. . * * Grover Alexander does not worry over his defeats. Pat Moran says he never knew a pitcher to be so uncon- cerned about his defeats. * - - Hughie Jennings is hustling to keep his Tigers in front of the procession, but he will not be able to do it unless he gets some pitching help, . * » Hans Wagner and Heinle Zimmer man should worry about smali base: ball receipts, There has been a big drop in the price of sauerkraut, ARCHER WELL MAR Fastest and Most Deadly cf Throwers te Bases. Impossible for Great Catcher Straighten Right Arm, Which Is Shorter Than Lett—Hand Bat tered by Many Foul Tips. Jimmy Archer, the Cub catcher probably the most bunged-up bali play er in the big leagues James Archer | cooperage humble employee of shop, fell into a vat of arm neaily to the bone. of fate came the uncanny art, but impossible skill which the great Cub backstop unrivaled in class. Archer is the fastest, the most deadiy of throwers to the bases. He is the nonpareil of catching wiz ards His medium, By that freak the all has all height is First of all, his throwing arm is per manently bent and stiffened at the el DOW it impossible for the catcher to straighten {t, and it is is fully an inch shorter The than the left forearm 18 deeply ridged and the effects of the burns sustained in the acc { at the coop erage works The han self ha battered the various ily by and urk for the unv thurmn ones of the hattered on The cated several like Lastly, pound fractu wall in Brox ird once little finger has been times and its hir oints creak a rusty ge 3 ¢ the suffered hie kin elbow ré when ran concrete It hard to picture an 3 arm a little adapted to throwing ti 80 i swiftly And or accurately this missh battered yet the most eadly. the most } $ | circuit Comiskey Sets High Marks. Eddie Collins for $50,000, Jagkson for $30,000 in money and players Chappelle for $18.500, Schalk for $12. Felsch 2000 and Black burne for $11 500-—these are the high marks set by Comiskey in players stand as the record of all magnates ED for 81 recent Fred Clarke Quits Coaching. Fred Clarke of the Pirates does not has been criticized for it. His reply is that he is of more service to his team on the bench, where he can ad vise the young players, and he should know. 7 wn RUN-AND-HIT PLAY Not always is the baseball conversation of the firstday lady fan as replete with non- sense as the struggling cartoon ist pictures itl. At a major league game the other day one of the fair at. tendants ghot this at her es cort, following a play in which the runner, starting with the pitch, had raced from first to third on a short single to the outfield: “Why do they call that the hitand-run play?” she asked when her partner had quieted himself after the usual exertions in appreciation of a sensational play, during which exertions he shouted, “Some hit-an' run, kid-- great!” ‘ “Why, err, ‘cause it's a hit and then run play,” was his un- thinking reply. “But it's not,” she argued. “He ran first and then the other man hit it. | would understana it better If you called it the run-and-hit play.” How about it? NEW YORK Wheat red, $1.15 ¢ | {, prompt, and No, 2 hard, £1 1 Northern D Spot New 15 ¢ firm; York i f New iluth, 95% 1 Northern Manitoba, Corn—8pot firm; No. 2 yellow, 8% 4e prompt shipment Oats Spot steady: new, 42@43¢ nominal; old oats, 55@ Butter Firm; creamery, oxtras (92 {higher 24@26%e; score), 26% @27c; %@28c,; 22% @ 24 Eggs—F gathered 259 29c¢: extra 25% @2 24 @25¢ 22@23%c; hennery whites 4 creamery wh A BCOT HET, 21 firsts, seconds, resh OXLIas, firsts, Tc: firsts, seconds nearby fine to fancy, 33@35 nearby browns hennery Cheese-—-State, whole colored, specials, or 14c Live broilers rage fancy, 12% @13%e. Poul - Western chi 16@ 16% fowls Dressed chickens 17%¢ ol, asked for Cob corn at $4.20@ , closing prices Western do, S€@%ic 3 @ of ag lots of ax to quality, S5@987 Hay--No. 1 timothy, $20 $1850@19; No. 3 do, $1€6@17.50 clover mixed, $18.50@1%; No. 1 $18@ 18.50; No. 2 do, do, $16.50@17.50; clover, nominal, $18@18.50; do do, $17@17.50: No. 2 do, do, No. 3 do, do, $12@13 No. 1 straight rye, $11,509 2 do, $10.50@11; No. 1 tangled No. 2 $8@5.50 No. 1 0@8. No. 2 $7@7.50; $10G1050; No. 2 do, $8@ $101@ No. 4 new rve, No. 2 do, light choice No. 1 $14@ 16 Straw No £10.50 wheat, $7.5 1 oat do. do, Creamery, fancy, 26@26%e; do, good, 22@24; 2T@ 2%; do, blocks, 26@27; utter do, prints, West 18; Ohio rolls, 18; 18; storepacked, 19; Eggs—Maryland, Pennsylvania and West Virginia firsts, 23: Southern firsts, 22; recrated or rehandled eggs, % 1c higher Live Poultry-Chickens, old hens, 4 Ibs and over, 17¢; do, do, small to me- dinm, 15@ 16; do, old roosters, 10; do, spring, large, 18; do, do, small to me. dium, 17@18; do, do, white leghorn, 17: ducks, old, 11912; do, young Peking, 3 1be and over, 14615; do, do, puddle, do, do, 13@14: do, do, mus. covey, do, do, 13814; do, do, smaller, 12; pigeons, young, per pair, 15; do, old, do, 15; guinea fowl, old, each, 25, do, do, young, 1% Ibs and over, do, 30; do, do, do, smaller, do, 15@25. Live Stock 8T. LOUIS. —Hogs—Pigs and lights, $7.256@8; mived and butchers’, $7.70@ 8: good, heavy, $T@71.95. Cattle-~Native beef steers, $7509 10; yearling steers and heifers, $8.50 @10: cows, $6@S; stockers and feed. ors, $6@8.25; Texas and Indian steers, $5258.85; cows and heifers, $40 6.50; native calves, $6@ 11.60. Sheep—Lambs, $8@8.85; sheep and ewes, $5.50@7.80. A
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers