Centre Democrat. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1848-1989, December 11, 1913, Image 9

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Thursday, December 11th, 1913,
BS i i I i a EE
REVERSIBLE HAT.
Useful and Fetch-
ing Motor Headgear.
AR ;
SUH
TAUPE COLORED VELOURS HAT.
The motor maid will find the hat pic
tured, a reversible plece of headgear,
one of the most useful additions to her
winter wardrobe. The hat is of taupe
colored velours, and so flexible is the
brim that the waterproof side of the
creation may be turned inside out in
stormy weather.
belong to
| does not pay.
| the
| enough to be a scientific burglar would
| make an easier and better living with-
out risks in some honest line.
| the romance of crime, it exists only
in
.
No Scientists In Burglary,
“Scientific burglary absolutely does
not exist,” says M. Xavier Guichard,’
one of the foremost detective authori:
ties of Paris. And away at one sweep
of official truth vanishes the walking
wonder of housebreaking and safe
cracking against whose miraculous |
equipment it were vain to set up or-
dinary bolts and bars. Along with the
| sclentific burglar, too, we may place
{| in the gallery of the nonexistent the
{ social highwayman, the gentleman bur.
glar, the Arsene Lupins and all their
| class of gallant, indomitable offenders.
“What
Guichard
people do not realize,” M.
continues, “is that burglars
an inferior grade of human
ity and are very seldom intelligent.”
Plain facts of record have shown |
over and over that a career of crime |
Nor does it appeal to
intellect, A man with brains
As for
books, and the man who writes |
about it knows better than to seek It |
through experience.~New York World.
A Way to Woo Sleep.
The following method is described
as one which Is almost certain to woo
slumber with On going to
bed you assume a comfortable atti
tude In which every muscle Is relaxed,
but not the attitude in which you are
accustomed to though
something resembling it. Every move
ment, is strictly
SUCCESS:
go to sleep,
coughing, yawning,
repressed, especially the desire to turn
| over.
The eccentric movement of hat brims |
is one of the fads of the season, and
this “sport” chapeau has this fashion-
able feature. The picture
also illus- | twenty
trates the manner of dressing the hair |
over the ears under a modern hat.
Mrs, Garfield Pays Income Tax.
ed by members of the Daughters of
the American Revolution and kindred
socleties concerning working
the new income tax. These
expressed condemnation of the tax aft.
er they had heard that Mrs. James A
one
The same attitude Is maintained
without change, resisting
the longing to move or turn over.
As a rule, by the end of fifteen or
minutes of this persistent main- |
tenance of the same attitude you will
constantly
| find yourself growing very drowsy, and
| then, just as the desire to turn over |
| becomes absolutely uncontrollable, you |
Great indignation has been express- |
{ turn with the least possible effort and
of |
women |
Garfield, the widow of the martyred |
president, would
tion.
Mrs. Thomas H. Fenton, a
of the Philadelphia chapter
Daughters of the American
tion, said:
“When
be subject to taxa
member
of the
Revolu-
we consider how much Gar-
field had done for the country we must |
surely realize that it would
Just to exempt his widow from taxa-
tion.
their country worthy
consideration than this.”
Miss Laura Pancoast, a Colonial
Dame and also a member of the Phila-
delphia chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution, said:
“It Is an injustice to put a
the pension of women whose hus
bands devoted and lost their
Hves for the sake of their country.”
only be
of greater
are
tax on
finally
An Attractive Winter Gown,
Velvet one piece gowns are wonder-
fully popular this and the old
objection to this fabric as a dress ma
terial, its weight, has been eliminated
season,
IN PANSY VELVET.
In fact, all materials of the season are
light In weight, although displaying a
rather heavy surface.
The costume in the cut Is of pansy
velvet, and the pegtop skirt is slit at
the front to give freedom In walking
The opening Is artistically filled In
with a matching shade of charmeuse,
which also makes the wide bodice
revers and collar. The chemisette’ is
of cream colored shadow lace. A gold
buckle holds the girdle at the waist.
Newest In Boas.
The newest wrinkle In boas Is the
straight, flat strip of fox skin, finished
at both ends with four dangling paws
The pelt Is never dyed, but is worn in
the same state as when. it warmed the
original wearer, and above all others
the bright tawny cont of the so called
red fox Is favored. If you don't cere
for red fox get nn estrich boa two and
a half yards long.
Men who have given service to |
| younger
{| probably
| mon” category.
| the shopper.
| wouldn't know
| years old,
| see me about, Della?’ asked Mrs. Bur
{| rough’s father,
assume the position in which you ha- |
bitually go to sleep, and natural sleep |
| of
method, it is
and should be
This
falls
follows at
claimed, seldom
once
given a thorough trial, at least before |
| resorting to a drug
to bring sleep.
Queer Taxes Abroad.
There are some queer taxes Imposed
in some of the countries of the old
world.
In Servia vanity
cent tax on wigs,
and bustles
Bachelors are heavil
eral countries, but
where escape this impost
Is taxed, a 40 per
on rouge and on pads
ly taxed in
spinsters every-
sev
Matrimony is taxed in China, and the |
| older the
bridegroom is than the bride
levied on him. It
is the wise Chinese theory that
AL wid gets a young wife
necessarily a rich old mn
well able to stand a heavy tax
In Italy salt is taxed
taxed in France ese
an enormous res
very little felt
Germany taxes If you play
the plane you must pay a tax, and If
you sing you are taxed again,
the greater the tax
when
wu he Is
and one
Matches are
things yield
and the tax Is
ene,
male
usc
Semiprecious Metals.
It appears from recent geol
the
ogical
survey publications that “semi
tals are copper, lead and
and tin
are not in
sometimes
first
precious” metal
zinc. Where quicks
off on this classificat
formed Alu
sells higher than
tioned and for than
lead and zine. These are probably the
quasi precious metals
the metals
precious and common, we believe. Now
iron is alone in the *“com-
What Is the use any
way~if there are no privates
army what is the joy In being a cor-
poral, and why “semiprecious” if there
is going to be only iron besides ?—En-
gineering and Mining Journal.
Iver
ion we
mininm also
the
antimony
three men-
more
were
Woefully Mistaken.
“1 suppose,” said the new saleswom-
| for
| sane mannerisins,
ar.
| theatrical
get |
When we were |
classed as |
in an |
an, “that want a suit that will
you
| make you look attractive to your hus |
band 7"
“Attractive to my husband!” echoed
“I should say not. He
if 1 wore a sult ten
What I want Is something |
that will make my next door neighbor
| turn a pale pink green with envy." |
Buffalo Express.
Ingenuous Daughter.
“What Is it your husband wants to
“Why, father,” sald Della, “I think |
he wanted to borrow a couple of hun- |
dred dollars from you. He's so anx-
lous to get out of debt.” Lippincott's.
Corsica’s Forests,
The forests of Corsica, the little ls-
land upon which Napoleon Bonaparte
was born, are managed by the French
government. They produce lumber,
firewood and turpentine, and all parts
of the various trees are far more close
ly utilized than in America.
Too Wabbly.
It sometimes happens that when a
man arrives home at 2 a. m. and his
wife commands him to go straight up-
stalre to bed she is attempting the Im.
possible. ~Chicago News.
Up to Date.
Old Fashioned Individual-Well, Ht
tle man, building a castle? Up to Date
Infant—Nope. This Is a hotel; there's
no money in casties.—Harper's Magu-
sine.
What Money Can't Buy.
Money will buy a lot of things, but
it can’t buy the loyalty of a dog or
the friendship of a baby.~Cincinnati
| covered
Enquirer,
THE CENTRE DEMOCRAT, BELLEFONTE, PENNA,
a.
Linguistic Whimsicalities.
The following are a few linguistic
whimsicalities: The Germans call a
thimble a “finger hat,” which it cer-
tainly is, and a grasshopper a “hay
horse.” A glove with them Is a “hand
shoe,” showing evidently that they
wore shoes before gloves, Poultry is
“feather cattle,” whilst the names of
the well known substances oxygen and
bydrogen are in their language “sour
stuff” and “water stuff.” The French,
strange to say, have no verb “to stand,”
nor can a Frenchman speak of “kick
ing" any one. The nearest approach a
Frenchman makes to It in his polite
threaten to “give a blow
foot,” the the
ness is to
with his same to re-
{ elplent in either case, but it seems to
| want the directness, the energy, of our
“kick.” Neither has he any word for
“baby” or for “home” or “comfort.”
The terms ‘‘upstairs” and “down
stairs” algo unknown In French
The Hindus are sald to have no word
“friend.” The Italians have no
equivalent for “humility.” — London
Tatler.
are
Queer Resembiances,
That who together for
a very long period not only acquire the
but grow a strong
facial resemblance, Is an established
fact. tut it is little known that the
same condition often exists from
tres
gother
gether
persons live
mls
associated to-
long of
There Is usunily a strong desire on the
part of most
tres iN
s and servant being
for period years
rvants to ape their mis
added to the fact of
often extends to fa.
and this,
riess
ICUS
town In
instances of
live there,
a small
tate two unusunl
kind Two widows
| each of whom has been attended by a
woman servant for more than forty
years. In both cases the servants have
their that
often mistaken for them, and
their cases attracted attention
far and near. Their
telephone are so alike that friends of
the women have given up this method
communication.-~New York Sun,
become so like mistresses
they
ure
fiave
Words That Speak.
lang—"a sudden nolse like that from
a gun”
dictionary. But the explanation is be-
fogging futile, for a “bang” Is
well, what better describes it than that
simple word itself?
80
and
many of
most
to have sprung
with the lips a
thing described
definition of
the word “splash.” for example? Youn
hear all the abrupt, restless heaving of
the waters in that one word,
And need
told what “buzz” when a blue
bottle is leading a forlorn be
the wine
our expressiv ©
words seem similarly
from
sound mimicking
Why waste
to form
the
words on a
ga desire
ven a baby to be
means
pe against
whistle,” “gur
gle.” “eackle.” “icy”"—these are only a
:
few of our er eloquently descriptive
t
words London Answers
Not His Place to Laugh.
Hick Wood,
used to tell an
ny
of a
shared
amusing story
manager who
his bo ! provincial
| comedian
once
pant
cit
the man
fow leaned ove
narked, “lI
for next
LOT
want to
gage the Christmas
my product
“Io
hink he is funny?" Mr
| Wood askes
“Seren mi funny,” returned the
manager
“Then why don't you laugh?” asked
| Mr. Wood
“Laugh when he's got his eyes on
me?" replied the manager. “And ev
ery smile means that he'll ask another
fiver a week." London Telegraph
Not Guilty as Alleged.
The man accused of com
mitting an flashing =
mirror in the eves of passersby
mistaken.” he said to
any
was
had been
annoyance by
“You are quite
the eman “1
mirror What these
the reflection of my shining serge coat
I'm a married and the coat is
four years old"
And. turning
dazzling reflection his back and
elbows into the dazzled
eyes. And by the time the officer re
his way
big po haven't
people saw
man,
hastily, he threw
from
policeman’s
he wns well on
Cleveland Plain Dealer
Women In Coal Mines.
In the early part of the last century
women enjoyed the right to work
hauling through the midnight dark
ness of Jow roofed tunnels carts laden |
with ore welghing hundreds of pounds.
Have To.
“Young Blifer and Miss Wapple fell
out yesterday.”
“Do yon think they
again?”
“I'm sure Miss Wapple will. They
fell out of a motorboat.” — Birmingham
Age-Herald.
will make up
Greatness.
The truly strong and sound mind is
the mind that ean embrace equally
great things and small. | would have
a man great in great things and ele
gant in little things. —Johnson,
Our Coal Deposits,
The known coal areas of the United
Btates cover 310.000 square miles, and
there are 160.000 square miles believ.
ed to be underiald with marketable
conl.
The pleasure we best enjoy Is that
we have divided with others,
New |
voices over the |
is the definition given by the |
the |
in |
| the con! mines of Great Britain, swing
ing the sledge, or on hands and knees |
| [Cm
How to Make
Better Cough Syrup than
You Can Buy
A Family Supply, Saving $2
and Fully Guaranteed.
A full pint of cough syrup-
as vou could buy for $2.60—can easily
be made at home, You will find nothing
that takes hold of the ordinary cough |
more quickly, usually conquering it in-
i 24 hours. Excellent, too, for
spasmodie croup, whooping cough, bron-
chinl asthma and bronchitis,
Mix one pint of granulated sugar with
4 pint of warm water, and stir for 2
minut Put 24 ounces of Pinex (fifty
cents’ worth) in a pint bottle, then add
the Sugar Syrup. It keeps perfectly.
Take a teaspoonful every one, two or
three hours.
{ This is
relieve a
gide o
cough, Also stimulates the
appetite, which is usually upset by a
cough, The taste is pleasant.
The effect of pine and sugar syrup on
the inflamed membranes is well known.
Pinex is a most
rich in guaiacol and other nat
healing pine elements. Other prepara
tions will not work in this combination,
This Pinex and Sugar Sy wdy
has often been imitated, but the old sue-
cessful mixture has never been equaled.
It is now used in more homes than any
other cough remedy.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction,
or money promptly refunded, goes with
this preparation, Your druggist has
Pinex, or will get it for vou, If not,
send to The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind,
rup re
Verlaine and the Burglars.
seeing an old man about to
| {8 beggar,
give him a halfpenny,
as much |
just laxative enough to help |
valuable concentrated |
compound of Norway white pine extract, |
iral |
According to a contemporary, a Par- |
showed his con- |
tempt for the gift by taking a silver
| coin from his own pocket and bestow
ing it on the almsgiver,
the recipient fared better
| Verinine did
circumstances
than Paul
One night the
before he had
to sell every
Shortly
poverty
in his room,
been driven by
woke up to find a couple of burglars |
Let us hope |
under somewhat similar}
poet |
|
i
|
{
i
|
| stick of furniture and was reduced to
| sleeping on a sack
| 80 touched this evidence
| poverty that they him
apiece and took their departure
| fortunately,” had to
when he rein » story,
colus were ba
by
gave
London Tatler
He Curbed Cecil Rhodes.
thodes' masterfulness and
importan
as a rule, but ¢
the Transvaal
Johannesburg
taught him s
to me at once!”
“lI can’t
comes, n
| found you
know
was
you e in
discharged at «
man Ye .
ly, “I rd
in Cape Town for doing their duty. But
this =n't Cape ’ is a repub
3 L % 4 bh wi t
ve he
lie."
Ruse of an Autograph Fiend
Autograph hunting sometimes p
a profital
mian of th
Picard, ma
for some
coup v 8 acoon
which he
preciat. i
and seeks
hour
drew a number
ing Beranger and
sent ter pages,
were promptly converted into
Dickens also fell a victin
trouble to answer in French
ly Pleard was shown up in the press
by Jules Sandean and had to seek an
| other occupation.—London Chronicle
RASH COVERED
ANKLE AND FOOT
| Terrible Itching. Scratching Drew
Blood. Hands Affected. Impossible
to Put Them in Water, Cuticura
Soap and Ointment Effected Cure,
600 Schenck Ave, Brooklyn, N. Y. ==
"My trouble started by a terrible itching
around the ankle, My ankle and foot were
covered with a rash, The
fiching caused me to scratch
to such an extent that | drew
blood and the rash became
sores. My clothing irritated
the ecpema so that | was
forced to put a bandage
around my foot and ankle
I suffered this way for nearly
three years and by that time
both of my hands were affected. It was Ime
possible for me to put my hands In water
and 1 had to woar large canvas gloves when
doing any work,
“1 used several remedies, among them
being «ee, but with no effect. Therefore
I sont for a sample of Cuticura Soap and
wi
for cous
of sore
Lacordaire
which
Heine
written
Daniel G. Bett, Nov, 30, 1912,
For treating poor complexions, red, rough
hands, and dry, thin and falling hair, Outl
His visitors were |
of dire |
a franc |
“Un- |
admit |
“both the |
sense of
wosition, |
and took the |
Eventual |
ticura Soap will find It Dest for skin and scalp.
THE INDEX THE INDEX
FOR CHRISTMAS
There is nothing so appropriate for the Gift as |
A BOOK
Our stock of Books is complete in every detail.
Books for Boys and Girls from 15¢ to $1.
A big supply of the 50c Copyrights.
We have all the New Books published up to
December 1st. at the publishers net price.
When in doubt what to give, give a book.
When in doubt where to get it, look in THE
INDEX.
Everlasting Jewelry
at BLAIR'’S
Braceletts, Lavaliers, Brooches, Dia-
monds, Watches, Small Solid Ma-
hogany Bedroom Clocks, Tea Sets,
Table Service, Ete.
Both Phones. Our catalogue sent on request.
LYON & CO. LYON & CO.
Holiday Readiness in Every De-
ment.
Christmas
arly
SUgRest
chased at r store
Work
luding hand-
ART NEEDLE WORK.—~In our Art Needle Depart -
ment we have a arge variety f useful : s IK
made ishions, etd in white and ecru
Also a
req
centre pleces, Scarfs, C
complete line of CREATY
Doilles and
Stamped Goods, with all the ne
linites Centre Pleces in Renaissance and Clun)
Always
Vely
of Neckwear
Embroidered
NECKWEAR. Christmas display
ptable Gift Collar and C
and Stocks
Bows and Friliing
BC if Sets In
‘
and Nets. Collars in white and «ru
4
at
assortment « ills
TABLE LINENS~Table and Towels
Holiday prices
Linens, Napkins
special
HOSIERY We
Blue Ribbon
priced
agente for the famous Rivoli
Hose in black, white and colors,
are sole
Silk
Brands
pecially
KNIT GOODS.~Ladies'
ors Bridge Jackets
white and lavender and black, white il
dren's and Infant's Caps in all colors Ladle Auto Hoods
Mittens for all. We have added to this department
shopper a big line of Bed Room Slippers
3
Sweaters in all col-
combinations,
pink. Chil
and Childrens’
pretty
and
in solid colors and
blue, -
Gloves and
for the holiday
All the
Mesh Bags.
newest designs in Leather Bags, Pocket Books and
Sweaters, Silk and Linen
large line of Men's Neck-
A large line of Men's and Boys’
Handkerchiefs at all prices, also a
wear and Silk Hose.
LAVOGUE COATS AND SUITS REDUCED.~This month
we will make Clearance Sale prices of Coats and Suits. Every
garment in this department must be sold now, We never carry
any Coals or Suits over, and the greatly reduced prices always
help to keep our stock clean. Children’s Coats Included in this
clean-up sale,
CHRISTMAS FUR SALE. Our entire Fur Stock has been
remarked at greatly reduced prices. These prices will put the
selection of fine Fur Sets within the reach of the most conser.
vative buyer. Single Muffs and Children's Sets included. Come
early and make your selections, as the early buyer gets the first
choice,
LYON & CO.
Allegheny Street, Bellefonte, Penna.