The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, October 13, 1932, Image 3

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O FAR as “stepping out”
which is conspicuously
ing and eminently
who hesitates to top her “first”
frock, either of one of
smart or rough crepes,
a jaunty little fur cape. Later on the
style formula for the addition
of a wee muff or one not so diminu-
tive If you prefer.
~ These little fur are about
the smartest thing fashion has to offer
in the way of an early autumn wrap.
As winter comes on they will be worn
over the coat which
thus multiplies practicality by
two.
in that
new-look-
lost
fall
the
with
chic she is
made
x tong
wooiens
calls
Al DOR
capes
collarless cloth
their
It is not only that such varied types
of fur are employed in their styling,
but the fact that the of
these youthful-lonking capes
variously interpreted, adds greatly to
their intrigue. Perhaps #f were
called upon to cite fur as being
more generally in than
13
ionette
is so
one
one
another
for the making of the new capes the
honors would go to astrakan and its
near relations such as Persian lamb,
broadtail and galyak. Dyed lapin is
also a great favorite not only In brown
seal effects, but especially in gray for
gray furs answer the call of the hour.
Then too, the furs which are made up
into new and novel
their charm in that they are
blend into the
costume ensemble,
use
capes emphasize
toned to
color scheme of the
Consider the little
BLACK AND WHITE
IS STILL POPULAR
Black and white fashions were by
far the most striking and predominant
in the recent fall fashion show of
American designers.
For street, afternoon and evening
wear the dashing, crisp contrast of
black and white outshone even the
luscious new wine tones that have
the town on its ear,
Tallored street frocks of the new
lightweight woolens were almost unan-
imous in their choice of white accents.
Sometimes the white was the form of
the huge Buster Brown collar of chalky
white angelskin silk, with matching
flaring cuffs, sometimes reaching al-
most to the elbow,
Sometimes the white was applied In
galyak trimming. A black broadcloth
frock, severely simple, was made into
something to remember you by with
the addition of a little vest of white
galyak,
Fur Trimming Is Widely
Used on New Fall Suits
Fur trimmings are much In evi
dence. They are used In new ways,
not only on fall coats and suits, but
on dresses as well,
Strips of black astrakhan are in
crusted into wool frocks In the little
stripes and squares that were former.
ly made of satin. Many a collar on a
white silk blouse turns out to be
made of shaved lamb or breit
schwantz.
There is probably more of a variety
of furs used on clothes this year than
ever before, but there Is no blatant
parade of heavy fox bands and
voluminous collars. A few elaborate
evening wraps show silver fox trim
mings; there are some few fur neck.
laces of fox skins, but in general, the
use of fur in any Individual garment
inclines to be sparse.
Redfern shows some good practical
conts of gray tweeds trimmed with
collars of gray astrakhan and lines
them with white and gray squirrel,
Taffeta Is Planning
a Comeback for Fall
Taffeta promises to stage a style
“come back” this fall,
The heavy stiff silks which played
a prominent role In grapdmother's
wardrobe are already being used
for evening frocks and occasional aft.
ernoon dresses,
-
~— RE — — -
~~
mole cape to the left in the
in relation to color harmony. It tops
ural tone of the mole pelt
with the soft green achleving a color
value which at once appeals to dis
criminating taste.
This model
a cross between a cape and a jacket.
fronts of this
and fasten
buttons which
portance of a
hance the fall
The
The
with
emphasizes
Cross square
the Im-
touch of metal to en-
costume,
the
itfit which
right is
outil
pictured to the
keyed up to fashion's
First of all
assumes princess lines and that which
is highly significant Is the fact of it
being buttoned from to hem.
line. It has also a close-up-about-the
throat collar effect which Interprets an
fashion trend. The cape
of Persian lamb is the popular cir
cular type. Its accompanying barrel
muff completes the picture
young
wearing Is
very
notice that the cloth dress
neck
outstanding
which may be worn with any coat or
dress or suit s to develop
into a vogue of vast proportions.
Milliners, too, are doing their bit In
the glory of the new
that fare
r smartest hats
destined
ables In they
trim: g many of the
with fur fantasies
©. 1912
Newspaper Union,
Western
HIGH WAISTLINE
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
A high waistline which
the simplicity of the directoire sil
vet, with hat to match, op-to-the-min-
ute prestige The trend to
the newer
guishing touch is the wide ostrich
bands on the sleeves. Quantities of
ostrich will be used this fall and win-
ter in a trimming way. All signs point
to this, and there is a wide use of
ostrich bands and novelties in the mil
linery realm.
Revival Styles Still
Hold Chief Interest
It's still new to be old-fashioned.
Revivals of styles that were popular
in the early 1900's, and even before,
continue to be one of the preoccupa-
tions of the better Paris dressmakers
Especially among evening clothes,
twenty-year-old modes are among the
last-minute fads, Lace mitts, ruffled
shoulders and billowing skirts are dis-
tinctly 1032,
Buttons in Colors
Buttons are doing their share to
brighten the new wardrobe. All-black
dresses show buttons of bright red or
green and white dresses step out of
the all-white category when they are
adorned with blue or green or red but.
tons,
for All Purposes
Colorado Man Enthusiastic
Over Its Cheapness
and Efficiency.
“The trench silo can't be beat,” says
Walter Anderson, Arapahoe county
(Colorado) farmer living on the Wild-
mere farm. “I wouldn't know what to
do without it,” he adds,
In telling his
trench silo to A, IH.
agricultural
BON BAYS:
“I prefer to cut my corn when I put
it in the silo, because it is easier to get
it out later, but by putting it in whole
you would save the cutting.
If you will cover the silage the day
you are through filling, you will have
no moldy silage.
“In covering my trench silo 1 use
dirt only. I tried straw for a while,
but found that dirt is best. The way
I cover my silo is to just take two
horses and a slip—the team on the end
of a long cable on the other side of the
trench—-and one man drives the team
while the other works the slip. I put
on about four inches of dirt, which
comes off clean and nice.
“Straw Is not needed, but if the dirt
{8 very dry it will pay to wet it down
a little so it will pack In good shape.
If the side walls are very dry it will
pay to take a hose and wet them well,
You won't get any silage if
the walls are wet so as not to take
the moisture out of the corn.
uy always gideboards on
build
as I need to
This ex-
backed up with
room, If
who fill their trenches with whole corn
use a sharp spade to cut the
down the it would
good, tight pack. As
with a
county
Ander-
experiences
Tedmon,
extension agent,
cost of
spoiled
cut
the
these
{18e
sides of my trench and
boards up just as high
10 use,
some
tension, when
those
would
corn into holes,
help them get a
I would never spend a penns
It has
other
a trench silo.
#0 many advantages over the
£1
Trench silos 1
Agricultural
cheap and efficient
ing feed for
Colorado
live stock.
Lamb-Feeding Pointers
Proved to Have Merit
heavy should a lamb be at
Cine year
y. Indiana, made
nds at
Kurtz,
tawsde
*
bition to ob
an average of 100 pounds,
Kurtz and castrates at
¥ ha Tm >}
old, ly that time the |
weeks
will begin mt grain, he
fa creep 1
with alfalf;
fed
sheen
Chey
rows
ypped In harvesting and
Ewes get no grain until
about two weeks before lan ig time
Pastures Are Important
In these days of grair
pro-
ore and
low price 1
costs of
pasture acreage as
reducing A re
shed by Purdue uni
costs
rood pastures.in a balanced system of
¥ I '
made in southern Indiana
that the farms that
had one-half of the acreage in pasture
were better off
those
A study
considerably
that had only one-fourth
crops
Free copies of the bul.
letin, which is No, may be had by
writing to the university at Lafayette
Ind.~Prairie Farmer.
Cure Hay Before Baling
Hay that is baled from the windrow,
still go through a natural sweat and
in most cases will, when going through
pany. Every year a number of farm-
ers who are over-anxious to dispose of
their hay, send in freshly baled hay
and when they get the returns for it,
are disappointed.
Hay should be put In a stack or
mow until it has gone through the
sweat. After that it can be safely
baled and marketed and will be in
good condition.—Prairie Farmer.
Hogs Eat Rape and Rye
When Dave Skells, Codington coun-
ty, 8. D., needs emergency hog pas
ture in the future he will use rye and
rape. He had a three-acre lot where
drought killed a new seeding of al
falfa. Half of It was sowed to the
mixture June 1. Despite extremely
dry weather, there was so much feed
that 42 hogs could not keep it down.
Mr, Skells pastured 60 sheep on the
field two weeks. He says the one and
a half acres would have pastured 85
bogs ~Capper's Farmer,
Advance in Quality
of Breeding Stock
Steady Improvement Going
On in All States.
benefit from low
steady Improvement in
One apparent
prices is the
the quality of breeding stock on many
farms In the United States. Many
farmers were able to obtain good pure-
bred sires at
this accounts for much of the progress
reported by the department in its an-
nual summary of an activity known as
Better Stock” cam-
1
the “Better Sires
paign, which is conducted
tion with the states. There are
nearly 18,000 farmers enrolled in the
campalgn., Five states have more than
1,500 members each, and 16 have more
than 100 each. Farmers who use only
purebred sires of all kinds on their
farms are eligible for membership.
County-wide elimination of scrub
and grade
in co-opera-
now
sires—a goal considered
unattainable a few years ago—has
been partially reached by three coun-
ties in Kentucky and one
ginla, North Carolina, and Utah.
first four counties have eradicated all
nonpurebred bulls and the last two all
nonpurebred dairy
has a
grade boars, the report shows.
Kentucky
also county free of scrub and
Although economlie pressure is large.
ly responsible for the
inferfor and unprofitable farm animals
with those of type, local
pride has frequently been a large fac-
tor in bringing about
replacement of
improved
these changes.
Tests Showed Soybean
Oilmeal Valuable Food
Soybean oilmeal
splendid
an oll
with an average net
Fewer
8 saved through
Pigs Saved
CPOs y
{ greater th
th ¢
nate is
ff the
of 4
mber of pigs
Ereatest
of the corn belt
RR ved
line was
part
western
the
and in the far
western
states
In Ohio there are more than 2.000.
000 last sprin
about 7 per cent
hogs
Farmer.
Sanitation Pays
A survey of hog production meth-
ods on 80 farms in Sedgwick, Washing
ton and Yuma
shows the be
method of
there
counties,
its of the clean ground
raising hogs
their hog
YOArs are
who
least every
change
two
lots at
saving an
with
litter
litter, compared
fifth pigs per
simply clean their farrowing
but let the pigs run on old
ground. Farmers who neither change
lots nor clean the farrowing
Are saving an average of three and
nine-tenths pigs per litter, which is
considered too low to enable the grow
four and
saved by
one
those
who
houses,
Wallace's Farmer,
Around the Farm
Late fall and early winter are good
times in which to haul lime and spread
it on fields,
. . »
Manure ranks as the best general
purpose fertilizer and should be care
fully conserved.
» * -
In planting trees and shrubs tamp
goll about the roots to prevent the
forination of soil pockets
- » »
The best stage of oats for curing
as hay is to walt until the earliest
or top kernels of oats are showing
s'gns of ripening.
. » @»
The secret of growing mild onlons
is to plant them in rich, heavily ma-
nured soil. The more slowly an onion
grows, the stronger it in
> 4 »
Barley, oats, buckwheat and wheat
all lost money for the labor of grow-
ing them In New York state last year,
according to farm accounts,
* * 9
Damping off may be controlled In
spinach crops by dusting the seed
thoroughly with a few cents’ worth
of cuprous oxide or the red oxide of
copper,
Museum of Sounds
An or a
seum of sounds has
in Berlin under the
ministry of ports. Here
glgantic collection of
records representing
and characteristic
kinds. This includes
the Korean, the merry
Rumanian tailor, the
American cowboy and
call of night watchman
There are also records of the volees
of many
“audible museum” mu
there is a
phonographie
calle, music
noises of
the
song of
wall of
the
whoop of the
the lingering
the Spanish
distinguished persons,
MercolizedWax
Keeps Skin Young
Get an ounes und use ue directed. Vine particles of aged
til wll defects such ae gis phen, Boer
freckles disapponr. Hkin is then soft
our {aoe bonka yenrs younger. Merondised
ings out the hidden be y of
remove wrinkles use one
dissolved iu one hal! plot witeh hazel, At drug stores,
That Suspicious Five
Boy Your wi
she wants to see
Boss About
Office Boy—About 5, sir.
Bosg—H'me—~O'clock or dollars?
¢
Office
said
and
you about—
e called
wha
if you wish.
her beautiful.
doctors.
booklet!
Tus Bonoex Comraxy, Dept. WN,
“Baby's Welfare.”
Name
Address
itu