The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, July 21, 1932, Image 7

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A——
fm
T'S amazing
“carrying on”
fing! No matter
the way cottons are
this season—amaz-
what hour of the
clock it may be, morning, noon or
midnight, yes, midnight, for evening
cottons are front-page news just now
it's cottons which are holdirg the cen
ter of the stage.
The sensational debute of piques,
lacy cotton meshes and such, at the
most formal of night events and the
enchanting rol2 which emproidered
organdies and sheerest of, cotton nets
are so dramatically playing to night
ly audiences are not the only per
formances of cottons which are caus
ing the world of fashion to sit up and
take notiee, for sports are
staging every whit interesting a
program during the daytime hours.
cottons
as
They're smartest when they're tal
lored, that is what designers are say
ing of tte stunning cottons which are
darting hither and thither o'er tennis
court or trailing a lively ball o'er golf
ers’ green or holding a rendezvons with
the fashionable set out at the coun
try club. This feeling the chic
simplicity of tailored effects is re
flected in the preference which Is be
Ing expressed among college girls for
the shirtwalst frock has net a
frill or a furbelov about it. As sum.
mer advances these neat trig little
tallored cotton shirtwaist costumes
are appearing in increasing numbers
They are making
seersucker and the
meshes. Puttoning them primly op
to the neck, and making the
skirts youthfully slim and straight—
Just a few little godets, perhaps, set
in about the hemline or a skirt of fit
ted gores or maybe just enongh pleats
let in to give movement
Then again if you are keeping tab
for
which
them of pique, of
modish cotton
too,
freedom of
the doings of smart cottons
find your quest
on
will
you
realm of coats. Trey are the newest
thing out in the way of a summer
wrap, are these coats, either three
quarter or ful' length and made of
the swankiest mesh cottons, or cot
ton tweeds or the diagonal patterned
cottons which are 80 modish just now.
And they are making them of wide
wale pique too.
If you are casting about for some
thing stylish to wear that can go
sailing, golfing, to the tennis courts
or on to the club house porch, here
they are In this picture. Each is a
sheer durene mesh, washable and
simple in line This particalar weave
has a sort of honeycomb effect which
is very attractive, but If you are get
ting several sports cottons, and of
course you are, you might vary them
by making another of your frocks of
the very handsome durene diagonals
which tailors to perfection and looks
every Inch strictly up to the moment
in chic
One of the fetching
the model to
is that it
whic
things about
the right here pictured
has that shirtwaist look
we were talking about a mo
ment ago.
mode o* the
belt. You will like
up and it will fall
slim silhouette wh
fortunate, slender
and there are just
front to make one
The little
widened soft self-fabric
the skirt. Stand
into the narrow
ich is the pride of
youth. Sit down
enough pleats in
feel at ease
y jacket to the left
couldnt be buttons, revers,
durene mesh and Really a ward
robe without a bellhop jacket or two
does not qualify as being complete
this season.
bel
smar
all,
(© 1932 Western Newspaper Union.)
JACKET ENSEMBLE
Ideal for summer wear 1s this jacket
ensemble of soft yellow and beige
tones In cool pointed crepe.
Coat-Dress Is Featured
Now in Every Fashion
It's difficult to tell a coat from a
dress these days. The coat-dress ogo.
fon affects not only street dresses And
daytime coats, but practically every
other type of costume-—evening wraps,
evening dresses, beach costumes, bath.
robes,
The new coats are often buttoned
to the hem, like dresses; streel dresses
are cut to fly open when one is walk:
tng, and are provided with colored
slips to earry out the effect of n cont
over a dress
BLACK REMAINS IN
FAVOR WITH MILADY
Those who
fashions of
sit in judgment on the
the world are not the
flighty individuals they may seem to
be. No matter how many fanciful
ruffles and frills they Invent. ne mat
ter how many brilliant purples and
reds they produce, no matter how
unsettled in the matter of skirt lengths
and walstlines they seem to be. there
are always a few old faithfuls among
tteir ideas that are never deserted.
First among these is the all-black
dress. Strange as it may seem. while
it is the old reliable of every ward.
robe, It is many times the smartest
dress of the lot.
The summer version of the all-black
dress Is appearing In Paris in lighter
weight fabrics than usual
FLASHES FROM PARIS
Fringe reappears on evening
frocks.
Drum-shaped bellhop hat is fa-
vorite theme with chic Paris mil
liners,
Leading couturiers stress style
Importance of cottons
Capelines of large proportions
with shallow crowns top sum
mery frocks
Chantal sponsors dance frocks
nf tailored cotton pique.
Mousseline de sol, often called
silk organdie, is favored for sheer
frocks,
Velvet shoulder capes top print.
ed chiffon frocks,
Street Clothes Have a
Simpler Line This Year
Women, this “year, set great store
by their street clothes. There is the
demand for simple, wearable clothes
that draw & smart line between the
severely tallored line and the softer
line that marks the afternoon mode.
Neat suits with dressmake: touches,
simple frocks with effective detall
and a matching little jacket or cape
let, these are the favorites of well
dressed women,
Cotton Scarfs
Hand-blocked cotton scarfs to wear
with cotton sports clothes are a nov.
elty worth pursuing. They are most
effective,
TALES
CHIEFS
KEOKUK
‘By
Editha
L.
| Watson
Black Hawk slapped him across the
face with his clout, The Sauk and
Foxes severed thelr
union on his account,
and both tribes ridl.
culed and despised
him. He was an In.
triguer, false to In-
dian ethics, who left
nothing stand in the
way of hls ambition,
Yet he established
the Sauk and Fox
claim to what Is now
the state of Jowaj
Keokuk there Is a monument
city which was
the Capitol at
bronze bust of
Indian.
Keokuk well-named, for
word means “one who moves about
alert.” It is said that he was one
Washington
this very un-Indian
wns
for his unusual gift for intrigue,
unnatural to the race which
of speaking with but one tongue.
It was Keokuk's great ideal to be
come the leader of his people, the
Sauk, although he was not a member
ruling clan, He became
showed ability, and
14 keeper, or host,
rendered at the
wns
and tact, given full play, eaused his
become
center,
‘ping In the back-
xerted his wiles,
nst each other yet
igpected friend of
ing. he became the
auk assembly, and go
no! need to assert Rim.
me vital problem,
war, however
julred prestige.
; agreed that the
Rock river
8 Agree
"es
the
the country
utral stand on
at he
nding among
lost all
who keenly dis
ile In vital af
ke a stand. he
{lowers and went
tion TT is
It of Keokuk's
he tribes, who here
ined a lukewarm sort
beran before Black Hawk
. and after a
ries, the Niinols
filled his forces
ing strugs
Indian
or him,
—_
Kook
cially regain his leader.
ived so cleverly Into the
thelr
in
After the
to offi
war,
It was then, when
stout-hearted
the intel
fare
council,
ing
The Foxes, who
had protected him, joined the Sauk In
derision of this
no doubt that Keokuk
for
ere is
dearly his
deed which earned him
otherwise,
This,
his real aim. the result is still in his
of Keokuk's,
A speech
flattering and oily:
we
never tasted before: It is the wine
which the white men make, who
know how to make any thing: I will
take another glass, asx I have much to
say: we feel proud that we ean drink
such wine, . 1 talked to our young
men, who had the hearts of men: I
told them that the Great Spirit was
In our councils: they promised to live
in peace; those who listened to had
eounsels and followed our beothers,
have sald thelr ears are closed, they
will live in peace; I sent thelr words
to our great father, whose ears were
open, whose heart was made sad by
the conduct of our brothers; he has
gent to thelr wigwams; we thank him;
say to him that Keokuk thanks
hm. . . . 1 want to see him, I shall be
proud to take him by the hand, 1 have
heard much of him, his head Is gray,
[ must see him; tell him that as soon
as the snow is off of the prairie, I shall
come. What I have sald, T wish
spoken to him, before it's put on pa-
per. so that he shall hear It as I have
sald it: tell him that Keokuk spoke
ft: what our brother sald In council
today, let us forget; he told me to
gpenk ; 1 spoke his words”
Keokuk died In Kansas, at the age
of sixty-eight years, Thirty-five years
later, hiz remaine were taken to Keo-
kuk, Jown, and a monument erected
over them by the citizens,
(©. 1932, Western Newspaper Union
SOME USUAL TYPES
OF HEART FAILURE
Undue Physical Exertion
Among Them.
A certain rate and strength of the
heartbeat is required to pump the
blood through the blood vessels at a
rate sufficient to supply oxygen and
food to the tissues and to remove
wastes, A heart that for any reason
beats slowly or too feebly or
stops entirely fails to meet this ne-
cessity of life. ‘This is heart failure,
Slow and feeble heart beat may in
the normal person be brought on
temporarily by excess action of the
heart nerves. This will lead to wenk-
ness or actual fainting, but not to
death, because the condition Is usual-
ly very temporary,
More serious causes of heart fall-
ure are: Injury to the heart muscle
itself; Injury to the blood
that supply the heart muscle, or in
jury to the valves in the heart. In
this last condition the heartbeat may
be as strong or stronger than usual,
but the work done is largely wasted,
due to the Incompetency of
valves Valvular
usually due to bacteria
the and, by Injury,
the same kind of distortion
see In sear tissue In other
the body. If this occurs
people the heart may en
larged and more muscular, thus com
pensating for the leakage of the
valves, In older com
pensation does not take
same
Another ty
be caused In
cally
too
vessels
growing on
valves causing
as we
parts of
become
people guch
lace to the
degree.
pe of heart
the
untrained
treme and prol
In such ea
r become
“~
en ——— nO
this disease Is marked the heart re-
ceives Insufliclent nourishment and
the sensory nerves of the heart may
be jrritated to a producing
the excruciating discomfort called
“angina pectoris.”
The normal heart, however, 18 a
pretty tough piece of meat. A bul
let may pass through the walls with.
out stopping lis activities, The in
juries may be repaired by surgery
and the organ function almost as
well as before,
degree
Teddy Bear Sanctuary
Koalas, known colloquially as “na
tive bears,” real live teddy bears in
soft, plush-like fur, have lately be
come the object of special solicitude,
both official and privase, In Aus
tralia, For several generations no
occurred to
could
Australians that
gearce,
epidemic got
ever become But a
fatal
among them some years ago, killing
them by thousands.
is now forbidden, Even more prom
ising Is the setting aside of weii-su
highly
only these attractive marsupials but
and
chance for their lives,
animals
Platinum Mist
Platinum is
like water by
caused to evaporate
the wnia
Technology, precious
probably the world's
mist,
thin
vapor
condenses into
films upon &
It
Con them virtu
tiy :
§
imoeather than dew it
muentiy,
over fibers, converting then
” a — amine
Mercolized Wax
Keeps Skin Young
Cet an ounce and ues us directed. Fine partides of seed
skin peel off until all defects such as pimples, vey
spots, tan and freckles dissppesr. Biin is then soft
and velvety, Your face locks years younger. Mereclizsed
Was brings put the hidden besuty of your skin, Te
remove wrinkles uw one ounce Powdeped Farolite
fissclved in one ball pist witch bhasel. At drug stores,
“Company From America”
Appreciated in Orient
Anybody might claim to be widely
known and appreciated for whom a
native of Shanghal would bulld an
addition to his home, hopeful of a
visit some time, That's just the posi.
tion in which Dr. Samuel J. Braden-
burg of Clark university and Mrs.
Brandenburg find themselves,
When Dr. H. Blakeslee
reached Shanghal recently on his
sxion for he hunted
Was a stu
man
wing he
George
mi Unele Sam,
formerly
The
Doctor Blakeslee a
"Fou wht x g
Clark young
and sald Doctor and Mrs,
promised to visit
day, and he had the rooms
ready for their
from America” for whom
best 8 none the
Orient.—Warce
coming,
“company
the too good in
ter Telegram,
Sheep
ulturist
Russia Leads in
Should the Russian agri
to his sheep
first class breed
altention
be decidedly serious. Accord
investigators of the Depart-
Agriculture, Russia nas
sheep now apy other
in the world, but the greater
an type
mparatively inferior
the southern
prospective stock
ment of
than
Country
unimproved
rs In
i
higher than last
ion of the econo
Takes the Ticket
AN thie rie
regularly.
these
plementary
vitamin D,
* Firm flesh,
x,
»