Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, July 23, 1903, Image 6

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    THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PA. JULY
23, 1903,
MISS ELSIE WARD.
One of America’s Hrilllant and Rise
fing Young Sculptors,
Miss Elsie Ward, now a mems-
ber of the artigts’ colony of New York,
is one of the most clever young women
sculptors of America. Miss Ward,
won the $3,000 prize for the drinking
fountain at the St. Louis fair, is of
gouthern parentage, her ancestors of
Kentucky and Virginia birth, her moth
er a Talbot, of Bishop Talbot.
She was born on a farm néar Fayette,
Howard county, northern Missouri. On
that farm was a famous deposit of
clay, of which the children were al-
ways making “things,” dolls, dogs,
pigs and animals of all kinds, as well
as human beings.
She was still but a child when her
parents moved to Denver, where she
began attending public school. On
graduating from the North Denver
who is
who
sister
’
MISS ELSIE WARD
school
High
Private cle
I 8808,
Miss Wa
to come
ressed with
and advised her
acce]
the mu
the root
Mr. St
couragel
for a
ure «
contemp
classes
In her
where
the «
ber
if draw:
middle 1
the clothe
grain of the
should be
and be pulled slight
prevent stretching In the 1
els, napkins and pillow slips should be
hung the san het down
Before them there is an lmpor
tant part of the work to do, because it
is a preventive of more work later, and
that is the wringing of the cloth. In
stead of putting such articles through
the wringer by the corner or any edge
that happens to be most handy, keep
this rule in mind from start to finish,
“the way of the warp.” Lift the arti
cles from the water lengthwise rather
than widthwise. Take the ends,
the sides, In the hands, and lift the
plece up and down in the water until
thoroughly rinsed, then put the end
through the wringer evenly,
hanging them on the line take each
plece by the end and shake it well. This
will pay In the ironing end of the work
[he
hung down
ily ot he Hine to
Tow
ee way.
ih ns
hanging
Doubtless more than half of the labor |
of ironing might be dispensed with if
one would remember that proper
wringing, shaking and hanging, and
particularly eureful handling and fold.
fag when taken from the line, are, or
should be, a part of the smoothing or
froning process.
The Kitehen Mat.
Standing Is notoriously among the
hardest forms of exercise, ever so much
and before
more exhausting than walking, or even
running, all the harder if one stands
upon a dead, unyielding surface. Since
a cook needs must stand more than
half the time beyond any other worker
{ it behooves her to deaden the pressure
| tic mat is a help. A
{| leng
| strete
| and passing the table on the way,
| Heves that
not |
upon feet and spinal column. The elas
greater help is a
thickest matting
the sink the
th of the
hing from
cocoon
to range
It
should not be tacked down, neither left
at loose ends to curl and trip the un
wary. Have the cut ends clamped fast
with strips of tin beaten flat
and riveted through matting and all.
Thus the matting , with
no possibility of dirt accumulating un-
derneath. With a roof or back yard
available It ean be beaten like other
rugs. Upon ironing days one bit laid
upon another under the roner's feet
will save much in power and,
quently, In time. —Good Housekeeping.
double
always lies flat
CONse-
Sewing on Duttons,
There Is art even in such a prosale
matter as sewing on buttons. The or-
dinary operator makes a knot in the
cotton, passes the needle through
material from the under part and
cheerfully accomplishes her task. The
stronger the thread the more satisfled
she will be. But when the garment is
dealt with In the wash and froning
time comes around the knot upon
which the work had depended forms a
hard lump which cam re.
sist the heavy and sharp of the
fron. The latter cuts it off or certainly
imp irs its strength, and the is
left buttonless. The mora
from
putting
the
10 t possibly
sides
wearer
obviou
Putting Down
nttine dows
Oflecloth,
th Tt
Advice to College Girls.
Dinner Table Simplicity,
The Linen Nag
utal part of the |
Solled White Lace,
To whiten soiled white
t folded
water to a paste
paste the
When the
y It
baste the
Mix
in a bowl
lace and put
starch is per
from the lace careful
' Is not clean repeat the
ince
lace to 1 sl)
and
TE twice
starch
Spread
it in the sun
fectly dry rul
Iy If the |
prox OU
this on
Professor J. W. Jenks of Cornell be
women are well fitted by
nature to managers of large
hotels and suggests that schools of do-
mestic science extend thelr courses to
prepare educated women for the pro
fession.
Tyne One
According to the white factory Ine
spector, there are 17,000 girls in the
Pennsylvania mills between the ages
of thirteen and sixteen. Of this num.
ber approximately 4,000 work at night.
Don’t think the time is wasted which
you spend in acquiring a graceful gait,
for it exercises both a subtle and a
mighty charm.
The best school of good manners is
the family gathering, and the basis of
00d manners is courtesy.
A SKYSCRAPER.
This Maything Is Very Amusing and
in Ensily Made,
The
scraper
amusing known
is 1m
thie
toy a8 on sky-
terials thint are
boy It is
you follow
will
flying machine that will sur.
we of 1m:
vithin reach of every
if
here
and
forth
easily cor structed,
the
produce a
prise you
Fig. A
shape pletured,
Fig. 1
Fig. C
off
spool 80 tl
directions set
you
tin cut
two
into the
in it
thread spool,
the head cut
Drive the nails into the top of the
at Fig. A will fit on it loose
ly. Fig. D 18 a plece of wood cut into
the shape pictured, and Fig. B is placed
on it so that it can turn easily. Wrap
around the The string
holes
is an ordinary
Is a nall (2) with
A string
spool
“ANTES ETE
Acrobatic Bottle,
The Telegram Game
wn
fi Certain
the len
awards a
der
prize
A Good Detective,
one has Invented
prep in
when any tries to open
it the words “attempt to
denly appear. This must give the dis
honest one a shock similar to that re
by the mischievous small boy
who opened his big sister's letter for
fun He found himself confronted
by these words on a sheet of paper:
“You dishonest little boy! 1 knew
you would be mean enough to do this
and now you are found out!”
Rome
that
LB velope
is chemically such =»
way, that
one
open” sud
celved
Why Rats Ginaw,
Rats and squirrels have teeth which
grow all the time. In the of a
rt, the tooth pulp is perpetual and is
continually secreting material by
which It gains length. Therefore the
animal is obliged to gnaw all the time
to keep the tooth down to its proper
length, It Is commonly belleved that
rate keep gnawing out of pure mis
chief, but such Is not the case.
RR»
THE
No, 100,
I bought
and soon had *** *** Lens
One does
Shean {4
If the wes
will buy a *
Mary, the
commonly «
It will
trouble If y¢
of the prairi
There
Le]
is a
also **** *** copper kettles,
No, 19
Bing low
Q bird
And hone
There Is
No.
My prima
well known
Crossword
An
An art
One}
opening
1Dh~Diamond
X X
1085.A
walled Mame,
aes seen vutorans not refuse to take
up the sseesess
192. ~Double Acrostie,
. LAUNDRY LINES. cough 18 a Ne hack ana a pag navi
by changing the position. One very
lI thin chested girl wit
| that she could slop co
| ing the strings of
ing her lungs with
standing with
back. It was part of her physical
ture exereise, and it worked
fully well
To prevent the fringe of towels and
dotlles from breaking and wearing off
snap the artick when the fringe is
| damp
be,
PUZZLER
wieversed Syllables
chickens to *eeess | can
the shoulder thrown
ul
wonder.
Barment is badly scorched in
7 it In the brightest sunshine
a, and unless the fabric is
{ burned the stain will all come out,
Dry colored cam! and if
| possible for noth
, he | to bleach colored cot
it is |
sOfne
grained
Close
fine,
n SERN an
He ries Indoor
in a darkened room
ing Is more likely
| ton than strong light upon it while
wet
Old stains may be removed from |
| white goods by soaking the article in |
| a weak solution of chloride of lime, a |
tablespoonful of to eight quarts |
| of water,
pi d When washing sateen or any
nD old *ee4e%s in the atte; | spre with a satin finish put a little
| borax in the last rinsing water. This
will the material to be glossy
when ironed,
A Woman's Orchestra,
Mrs. Eleanor looper Ci
Brooklyn
inking
nds **%*ses him ryel
tern lt
SEEN =» Her on
daughter of the ***** was
Lh ee
ould open
whose ch
Hmdted
sesane {to cone
you a vast of
mu try to ***** * wild pony
use Hime
cotton ey d busi:
enthusiasin
clal failure
en's orchest
fg Cuuse
I's in
l~Missing Hhymes,
rd, in
she says, “that ofter
| When washing n curtains al | out their mem
| ways rinse them in alum water, which | g004 of fins
n 0 T A | does not spoil thelr color and renders | he work
i | them Allow two | bly with
ounces of alum to a gallon of water, | potnt.”
When it {8 necessary to wring clothes
| out of very hot water, instead of scald-
| ing the as may
lift the cloth from the w
fork into a vegetable or fruit pr
squeeze out the water
01 the
Si!
10KLT ‘
usin bership wi
wil performers
of women cou
that of
pares
is
noninflammable,
men beg
Is and finals each
flower
5: 1
name a
Mra. Caroline Scott's Work.
Mm Ca kford,
Pa. has
rea test
yet she
Making
To
known. happen, |
ater with
i
#8 and
hands, easily
praise fa
5 A prog
hn, 7.1
rits of wine
Rely. thn
nostic lover of ¢
kill
vO YOU y
) y Is from
The Use
Despi
watches, nul
are
ute gauge
of the
of Time Glasses.
now sold
in Quadrangle.
2 X 3 4 4 XX 3X
1s
The Woman's Century,
MOM
“
LL BL
Pearl
Chenied Handled Knives,
The Wenk
Popular Maxim,
-
jest thing in the world is t
The bard
nothing gracefully
A—————————
e charitable to the Ii
yf the
do
ving. The dead
are mselves.
Kind Lady DB
tle sister
Didn't |
choice?
Bobby
tle or
one,
LU
Youth
Key to the Pussler,
No, 181
Hour, 2. «
11-1.
Peep.
No, 152
No. 183
1. Casket
Rodent,
No.
No. 185
Cat-amount
phe.
star.
No.
.
o,
184,
No,
Frail,
No.
Buff, buffet,
Plek, picket
No. 180
Nigh-t
Rank
187.
il you
I said =
1 OF not
Soap.
-A Poet:
184, C
A Cat and Dog Puzzle: 1.
4. Dogma. 05,
7. Catalogue,
Numerical Enigma: A roll
ing stone gathers no moss,
Diamond: 1. F.
4. Tin,
188 «RuMx Puzzle: MIL millet
Poa
Like,
The Jas. Boss StifMened ( Watch Cases
are an improvement on so ha gold oases,
hey are stronger and won't bend or dent
Made of two layers of gold, with a iayer of
metal bi weer Jed together
WONT ) | The outside layer
BEND / han can be worn off
& oase In 25 years, the time for which n
OR DENT Jas. Boss Case 1s guaranteed.
we
Jas. Gold
Watch Cases
are recognized as the standard by all jewelers,
Ther are entioal with sold g
appearance and sige, but much |
Pont sorept any onde sald
good "asthe Boss, Look for td
trade snark. Send for booklet
The Keystone Watch Case Company, Philadelphia,
wer In
he
dre HURRY ING
GREAT SALE.
PEOPLE
TO OUR SHOE
gasp The last days, Oi | days more and t
ve rodents est MONEY SAVING
known will be at an end
Have you : gre
actually growing cach day. Most
days, but this is a f one telling another and they, i
turn, telling others of the great values to be obta'ned her
elling Shoes and Oxfords and Slippers as cheap, as if
we had bought them of a bankrupt concern, while, in fact,
they are our finest, best, regular shoes cut down to cost
and some much below cost. You shouldn't postpone you
visit any longer.
THE SALE WILL SOON END
Come and bring your family. You get two pairs of
shoes for about tiie ordinary price of one. We have given
fair warning, so if you miss this sale, the fault will not
be ours,
’
ve to 4 in
lefonte has ever
Chole,
1 ¥. 1
took Sm
her
Her :
this
at sai
sales mn
notice your attend
r i die out a few
ler apple
| her
have CASC
he conld have the it
and she chose the little |
1e,
Easy Word Squares: 1-1
Urge 4 Reel
3 Acme. 4.
gre 3.
= Unce,
Shelley.
Diagonal Acrostic:
2. Milton. 8. Locket.
Covert. 6. Navajo.
harade: Fort-night,
Cleero,
4
2 Dogfish, 3. Cat-astro-
Catkin. 4 Dog
KR. Dog wood,
2. Art. 8
MINGLE,
Bellefonte, Pa.
8 L.
Car, caret. Corn, cornet.
« Curtallments: Linen
r. Bard. Haven Raven