The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 05, 1933, Image 7

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    ——— oS A
By CHERIE
O FAR as color is concerned
things are happening in the realm
these days.
NICHOLAS
startling
of fashion
question,
creating as it were, a
things all their own.
Since doing the unusual is made to
count for chic in present-day costume
design, our leading style creators are
working most unexpected tones and
tints and vivid hues together—a ges
ture which is accomplishing wonders
in the way of achieving a newness for
winter fashions which is as refresh-
ing as it is fascinating.
The styles illustrated give some idea
of the interesting things that are be
ing done with color this season. There
is, for example, the charming dress
which the pretty blond, seated to the
left in the picture, has on. This un
usual gown for theater and restaurant
wear combines black crepe with ger
anium and purple aster velvet, the lat.
ter crossed demurely over the shoul
ders and brought very low at the back
of the bodice. Velvet trimming touches
on crepe or satin frocks are quite the
rage this season,
new order of@
A most gracious afternoon gown Is
shown to the right. Its color eombi
nation is regarded as a for
gpring. The body of the frock Is done
in pale blue velvet
velvet for the
ing of velvet In two or more
an outstanding fer
ing.
Centered In the
forecast
with dark brown
glee combin
colors Is
iture of eurrent styl
group is one of the
now-so-fashionable guimpe dresses
such as are front page news in style
reports. The frock which is of black
broadcloth is enlivened with a scarfed
blouse of dusty pink shark-skin satin.
French couturiers are expressing a
special fondness for black with pink
this season.
There is no lack this winter's
style parade of even more striking ex-
ponents of new-thought coloring such
as, for instance, a Paris model which
tops an evening gown of pale blue
crepe with draped section of
gay red embroidered In silver dots
Another party frock. the skirt
which is finely Pleated, is fashioned
of chiffon in tones of flesh, peach and
orange with a scarf of the bright
orange.
Sometimes It is
furnish contrast, again it is the
little or jacket, and the m
recent approach to color effect is
gained via the waist and skirt
differ ns in material
ives na
wine et for the skirt
pink velvet for the
A purple crepe dress tal
a brown velvet jacket
the Paris frock rple crepe
which is topped with a jacket in bright
fuchsia.
on
bodice
of
the
then
sleeves which
cape ost
which
in color as well
One creator evo two-plece of
with
bodice,
colored velv
walst-depth
tes onto itself
Then there is
of rough pu
aper Union
“PORK PIE” HATS
NOT FOP SNIFFLERS
Those saucy
which perched
heads of beauties of the
are back again.
Turned up all around and often
trimmed with tufts of fur, or feathers,
these little hats are worn well for
ward, leaving the starboard and aft
of the head exposed to the cruel winds
of winter, Those smart women, who
do not fear the cold, probably will
wear “pork pies” but for those who
sniffie there are other models.
There is one in particular which
covers quite a bit of scalp. It really
is a combination of two smaller skull
caps, such as women have been wear
ing. One fits over the front of the
head and the other overlaps and cov-
ers the back of the head.
One nice feature of winter is that
no woman will be forced to wear a
hat because her neighbor does. There
will be fashions for all
little “pork
daringiy
nats
the
90s
ple’
upon
naughty
Lace Gowns for Evening
Wear Are the Mode Again
There has not been much to say
about laces In evening frocks this
season, but now they come again.
Black and filmy describe the laces
that at present are seen.
Chanel, a die-hard when It comes
to Ince for evening, does win you over
with an oceasional heavy lace, but
there are other models from her that
are as frothy as those from Augusta.
bernard and Vionnet. Whether they
are ruffly or flowing, they are the
only real diaphanous dress type pre
sented this winter. More than that,
they have the feminine quality of pe
riod style 'nfluence.
Contrasting Tints Smart
for Dress Combinations
As this Is a year of vigorous con
trasts In almost everything, colors
go in for contrast, too. The smart
est 1032 dresses show combinations
of shades, frequently ones that have
never been used together before,
There are strange reds and blues in
exotic purplish shades, There are
yellows and browns, purples and
whites, oranges and browns. Any
mber of startling and amusing new
bines are being promoted,
Now is the time when children’s
clothes take on a woolly aspect. Wool
liest of the woolly are the rough-sur-
face coatings, the tweeds, the chin
chilias,
in the diagonal, writes Carolyn T. Rad.
nor-Lewis in Child Life Magazine.
er cont than the straight
shoulder type. Even their older sis
ters are all for the swagger coats, and
the fitted model with the higher waist.
casionally by a belt, are the exception
that proves the fashion rule. The oné
form decorative motifs; and the
yokes and raglan sleeves,
In the above picture the side de
tails, wide shoulders affected by the
raglan sleeve, stamp this a 1933 coat
which may be worn with or without
the belt. An unusual yoke gives a
ante for all fabrics, Separate one-plece
panties,
Jacket Blouse
A black crepe dress with a guimpe
of pleated white marquisette is charm-
ing for late afternoon and informal
dinner. A jacket with three-quarter
puff sleeves Is made to go over it and
button up the back, transforming ft
into a perfect daytime costume.
New Wheat Holds
Out High Promise
“Yogo” Hailed by Depart-
ment of Agriculture for
Many Reasons.
Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture —WNU Bervice.
A new winter wheat, “yogo,” has
been released by the Department of
Agriculture and the Montana agricul
tural experiment station for limited
trial in Montana under farm cond!
tions,
Yogo Is thought to be the best hard
the wheat breeders
It survives the
by
the department,
These three qualities, difficult
furnish the
basis for distributing yogo and for
At present there Is no seed avall-
Last year a lim.
was distributed to farm-
Montana for fall seeding, If
variety continues to show out
standing performance general distri
bution of seed will follow,
Yogo has
ited quantity
been developed and
tosted by the department
winter hardiness, smut re
and milling and baking qual
In 1032, it was one of 50 varie
ties tested for smut resistance. After
the seed had been inoculated with
smut it was grown at eight experiment
stations in the Great Plains area.
Yogo ranked eighth, averaging only 1.
per cent of tion, whereas karmot,
a hard red winter wheat grown exten
In Montana, averaged 476 per
for yield,
ities.
infec
the hardy character
wheat varie
Yogo combines
istics of all leading w or
ties, In it are Belk loglina, recognized In
its original Russia as
of the most red winter wheats
known: which If was a
cross of and whents
originating In Black sea region
and Buffum No. 17, a hardy selection
from Turkey developed In Wyoming
about 20 years ago
Yogo ig one of
that are being
hersire winter
improvement
ment in
experiment
home in
hardy
minturki,
Odesan
one
i184
turkey
the
many varieties
tested In the compre
whent breeding and
program of the depart
co-operation the state
Texas, Okla
oma, Kansas, Colorado, Nehraska,
Wryom! Minnesota, South Dakota,
North Dakota , and Montana,
new
with
stations In
3
Good Idea Is to Unite
Two Weak Bee Colonies
The uniting of bee
ter requires son
There
strong
little honey, and al
colonles for win
nent and care
may be fairly
of brood and
de it a queen
and a
r of these
less hive
lecreasing
two will result in a strong colony with
all that is needed for winte Queen
less eolot fa rile, should be
a good
to winter
united with colonies that have
queen is nsel
over a queen
To unite wo
move the cover
ess to iry
less calony.
1 Ty
more colon
or
of one hive, spre
eR, re
nd a
sheet 1 OWRD DE aving a few
small holes through It over
the frames the other hive
from the and set it di
rectly on newspaper. If a third
eolony is to be united with this, take
off the cover of the second hive and
get on the third hi The
away the newspaper
without fighting. If
y good, the
nee
hoard
then
hottom
the
ve as hefore,
bees will gnaw
and thns unite
the queens are equ
of killing the extra queen can be left
to the bees, but if one of the queens
{2 old or otherwise Inferior, she should
be hunted out and killed beforehand,
3 ob
Get Pig-Raising Pointers
The farmer whose spring pigs are
uneven, unthrifty, and undersized at
that time of year should visit the near
est farmer he can find in his commnu-
nity who is practicing sanitary man
agement for the prevention of dis
He should look
with his own. This comparison will
indicate to him that there ig a better
method of producing pork than the
one he Is using. He should talk with
the owner of these uniform, thrifty,
well.grown pigs and find out how he
can eliminate the hazards of diseases
and parasites, and how he can get
more pork from less feed —Hoard's
Dairyman.
Seed Wheat Smut
An application of copper carbonate
dust at the rate of two ounces to each
bushel of seed grain will prevent smut
Use a tight barrel or
metal dram for mixing, however, as
the dust is poisonous and will irritate
and animals,
Thin Forest for Fuel
Persons living near the Nebraska
national forest are getting fuel wood
from the thinnings of the older plant
ings of pine, where only barren sand
hills existed 30 years ago. They re
ceive the wood In exchange for the
cutting. The equivalent of $33.60
worth of work per ncre was done by
the applicants for wood on an S4-acre
tract In the winter of 1031-32. Forest
officers marked trees to be cut. The
cost of supervision and marketing was
Point for Horse
Raisers to Study
All Needs Met by Breeding
Associations.
By PROF. H W, HARPER, New York
State College of Agriculture. ~—~WNU Service,
A group of farmers, self-organized
to buy a breeding stallion adapted to
the horse needs of the community, and
who buy a stallion direct from a
breeder, Is a horse-breeding associa.
tion,
The horse breeding
similar to the old-time horse company,
but lacks the outside promoter who
has a horse to sell and who has to be
pald for his sales promotion activities,
The old horse company, which made
horse breeding too expensive in New
York state, was usually organized by
an agent who sold about twenty-five
farmers each 4 hundred-dollar share of
stock, and then sold the company a
horse,
It is unnecessary for farmers to poy
the added expense, the horse
breeding association 18 both cheap and
workable. When in need of a stallion,
the association may send a committee
of its members to horse-breeding sec
tions, where they not only buy a stal
lion at a fair price, but see good breed
ing establishments, learn to know the
better and make contacts
with prospective buyers. The cost of
a stallion the breeding associ
ation plan is usually about half the
cost In a horse company.
association 1s
when
breeders,
under
tepellent Washes That
Cause Injury to Trees
Many repellent washes, such as
whitewash, diluted 1 phur, soap
suds, « axle
paint, v other
stances,
wishes
preven
mice, Du ing
materials
Know
me-sul
tar,
and
recommended
for fruit trees to
rabbits and field
rs all of tl}
well, If
pround,
» and rabbits
r. serious in
to the trees where
above substances have
i tar,
arious
are
paints
-
sas
grease,
pub
as
1g
Oii8,
often
ORe
how.
ever,
and mi
jury may be done
washes of the
appl ed
Such
gas tar, nxle
and
may do serious
trunks and
To be
er should not use st
there are
with
of harm
If reg
desired,
been
ubstances as con] tar,
concentrated oils
combinations of such
injury to
CRIBS
paint,
Rrense,
materials
the tree
the trees to
the grow.
ihstances,
he
without da
even
die on the safe side,
ich si as
others which used
its
may
as good res: nger
or poisonous wash is
tewashk, soap suds, or
Hoente ann
ents appl
led
paint brush
1 yar
danger of these washes do
ing injury to
when or how ap
FULLEL Lt
tree
trunks no ma
~Exchange,
Jest Pi ig z Management
If at all the
inces for be out in clean
should be left
ue long
feed ava
mesons why this kind
ent is advisable: It
pigs becoming Infested
worms; it reduces the possible
losses from Anemia; and it helps to
pigs a rood start before win
weather no their being
central hog
lot feeding con
winter rutions are
ter
farrowing
pastures,
in these {
there is groen
There are t} 1
PE managen
prevents the
with
give the
tor ‘CeRitates
more closely coutized in
houses and under dry
ditions. As a rule,
more or leas deficient in nutritive val
ves. [It is not quite fair to young pigs
to put them on rations of this kind in
addition to their already having a
poor start~Hoard's Dairyman,
Move for “Better Stock”
The basic idea of the “Better Sires
—PBetter Stock™ campaign is that the
pure-bred sires will “grade up” and
improve the flocks and herds, Give
them time, and they will. But reports
from the more than 17.500 stock own.
of them want to hasten the improve
ment. They know they can do so by
acquiring purebred females,
The latest figures showing Improve.
ment of live stock, as reported to the
Department of Agriculture, reveal that
on these 17.500 farms where there are
no scrub or grade sires there are, on
an average, for every purebred sire
including cattle, horses, swine, sheep,
and goats-—gix pure-bred females, two
eross-bred females, nine grade females,
and less than half a scrub female,
Agricultural Hints
Apply mulch around perennial plants
and not directly on the tops of them.
- . -
Hoge do better on spuds which are
cooked, but other live stock obtain
more food value from the potatoes
which are fed raw.
. &
Addition of cottonseed meal to the
ration increased gains and improved
the finish of the lamba.
. = »
With 81,005,000 bushels of the 1031
corn crop still remaining on Hlinols
farms on November 1 this year, the
carryover of old corn is the largest
since 1020,
* 8 »
Pure breds or scrubs? A survey In
nearly every state of the Union shows
that registered animals mature earlier,
give a quicker turnover on invest
ment, make gains on less feed,
-
i
i
RS,
when, wn the
and accomplishing -
| level, the surest think I know is that
| whatever I've profited by,
| and whatever accomplishments I've
| seored, are close on to 99 per cent
due had at home
to counsels, to canu-
| tions and to courage wrought into
| me by my wife. I just don’t believe
motor cars this world has ever known approach-
1 sit and Goze vpon | ing like of it."—Wall Street Journal,
|
the shy Look Who's Here!
And go for j Joy rides
All along the horizon of trade
with the hg there are bright spots which mark
stars.
successful sales achievements dur-
AY (1
ing the days business has been
ealled drab, Chocolate Cascarets is
a brand new product that has made
HIGH TRIBUTE TO
HIS LIFE PARTNER
good. The nation's favorite flavor
THE CHEERFUL CHERUD
At night When people
ass our house
In laughter-treiling
capacity
to chats we've
| evening times
¢
has heen glven to an old standby.
Decision followed two years of test-
ing and a unanimous approval of
the merits of the new candidate
for favor among the laxatives,
Both the old Cas and the
Chocolate Ca are to sha
the “They
While — AAV.
WTR] 2
‘COMPOUND *
For Coughs due to Colds, Minor
Bronchial and Throat Irritations
JAS. BAILY & SON, Baltimore, Md.
LET US
TAN YOUR HIDE
FUR DRESSERS and TAXIDERMISTS
Send for Catalog
{ THE CROSBY FRISIAN FUR COMPANY
565 Lyell Avenue . Rochester, N.Y.
mreis
RCArets
Harriman’s Fine Testimony
to Worth of Wife.
famed slogan,
You
Sleep.”
h of
wom-
of a
A rare career ends in the deat
Mrs. Edward Henry Ha
#an of a
heart for life's human side
wife who
a] prin
KEG UELICE, to
rriumnan
force in high
finance,
elor of hir became |
American rallway
“control” In
trusts, 8 |
fortune |
COUNSs
ate in con-
whom
banks, In
to be commonp!
to top S100.000 O00
One heart and ming a
wrote n
i person i of
to my wife, Ma ry . W,
+ herohy
£ th
H. HAL
toot a ty
0
IMAN'S
A DAY SINGLE
$4 DOUBLE
These cre the NEW low rates
now in effect ot the HOTEL
VICTORIA, NEW YORK.
Agoin under the populor mon.
ogement of Roy Moulton, the
NEW HOTEL VICTORIA ossumes
first importance cs the perfect
heocdquorters for visitors to
New York.The word “WELCOME”
tckes on a new meaning here.
ICO0 ROOMS
All Eoch
room equipped with a PRIVATE
BATH, SH RADIO, CIRCULA-
TING ICE WATER, A “BEAUTY REST™
MATTRESS, FULL LENGTH MIRROR,
SPACIOUS CLOSET, WRITING DESK
and other modern fectures.
2 mir
RR termincls ond steamship pion
newly deccroted.
OWER
ON YOUR HANDKERCHIEF
vies to theatres
AND PILLOW
end shops.
IT'S NEW
quickly reached
Suites and Semple Rooms Aveilable
Japanese
Corn File
for quick
Varied Focilities for Meetings,
Banquets and Conventions
a.
TEL
A Soft, Clear Skin
gives beauty and freshness
to your complexion. Use this
skin-purifying, tollet, bath and
shampoo soap daily.
GLENN'S
SULPHUR SOAP | | < 51st STREET
AT 7th AVENUE, NEW YORK
ROY MOULTON
Executive Vice . President ond Monoging Dir.
Brown, 50¢
Enjoy the best in New York!
FINE ROOM 00 =s 00
WITH BATH SINGLE = DOUBLE
Delightful rooms, 100% location, delicious meals * * * Also
a de luxe 3-Day (2-night) Trip including Room, Bath, Meals
and Entertainment (famous motion picture theatre, sight-
seeing, Chrysler Tower, cabaret) at only $9.50 per person.
Hotel BRISTOL
129-135 West 48th Street New York City
1
HOTEL PLYMOUTH
49th Street, near , N.Y.
will give you 3 glorious days
in NEW YORK
INCLUDING
CAPACITY 700 ALL ROOMS WITH BATH AND RADIO
Select any 3 days, including Week Ends or Holidays
15t DAY ==Arrive say hour during the dey. Dinner in the
hotel. Admission to the world famous Roxy Theatre,
Night's lodging, large double room,
Breakfast ond lunch in the hotel. Royo! Sight
way Hollywood. Night's lodging, large double room,
3rd DAY sme Sreakiast and lunch In the hotel. Visit to
building tower, Check our any time before 9 P.M.
The days for enjoying the attractions
may changed to suit your convenience.
This tour will be continued indefinitely
Write Or Wire To J. J. SCHAFER, Mgr., For Reservations