The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, November 28, 1906, Image 6

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    T
III
The New Shirt Waist Flannels
Have Wide Stripes.
VALINES STILL USED BT MILLINERS
IWmnn rlnM WaLtii Trimmed With
Large BriiM Buttons Worn hr
IchooltclrU Tvro New Style la
MnlTn Purple and Se Green.
. The shirt waist flannels are In ag
gressively large stripes. Hnd plnlds and
the tartna colors and Uomnn stripes
will be favorites, while the simple
white flannpl with every variety of
tripe aud check Is good style. These
waists. Dainty ties of handkerchief
linen or a combination of lace and lin
en are arranged at the throat.
There Is a pointed, narrow toque
thnt Is very smart and becoming.
The elcmiut theater waist HliiHtrated
Is of white moussellue de sole, with
bolero and cravat of real Irish lace.
FOR THE JUVENILES.
The small girl's skirts are fitted as
carefully as her mother'. They art
gored and made to Hare. The plaited
skirt Is a favorite, the circular cut be
ing tabooed.
A smart little Jacket for a girl of
twelve Is built on the "pony" Hues, and
Mitm BEROK OOWM.
waists are made with tuckB or box
plaits, and sometimes a yoke Is added,
trimmed with buttons.
Roman plaid waists are affected by
the schoolgirl, and they are particular
ly youthful trimmed with large, round
brass buttons and worn with four-ln-band
silk . ties. These waists have
bloused fronts and are absolutely plain
with the exception of the buttons.
They fasten In front, of course.
Among the furs to be fashionable this
Winter are astrakhan, bear, chinchilla
and what Is known as sable in the less
xpenstve varieties, while sable, lynx
and mink will be worn by women
Whose pocketbooks can stand the
t train.
There are two new styles In muffs,
the half round model and the flat muff,
the latter being a trifle smaller than it
Was last season.
The new fashions shown In boas and
carfs have wide pointed ends that
Ktve them the appearance of being tied
In a bow when fastened. When hung
Straight around the throat they reach
to the bust line and gradually widen
from the base of the neck.
This pretty wee girl's gown Is of
blue serge. The braid la black and
ffrhlte and the tie black silk drawn
through a gold buckle.
A3 TO FURS.
Mallnes Is as extensively used as
fever, and it Is doubtful how milliners
(Would get on without this dainty fab
ric. A charming little ermine Jacket seen
recently Is built on the "pouy" lines.
THEATXB WAIST.
tt has close fitting three-quarter
length sleeves and a mannish turnover
collar. Over the fur coat is a shorter
Jacket of exquisite Irish lace of a de
licious creamy tint
Motor coats are made full In the
klrts, thus providing a covering for
the knees and making It possible to
dispense with a supplementary rug
these pleasant fall days.
Embroidered turnover linen collars
are worn with severely tailored shirt
SIMPLE SCHOOL HAT.
the Norfolk Btyles are as popular with
her as the sailor suit
Box coats, full or tliree-qunrter
lengths, are made of rougher material
than they were last year.
Buttons figure very largely upon
clothes that girls of all ages wear,
from the tiny tot with great fur but
tons on her coat to her debutaute sis
ter, whose suit has Its greatest beauty
spots In them.
Pretty school frocks are made with
the French waist. These bodices are
double breasted, with yokes of red
silk, and are finished with red soutache
braid and uarrow knife plaltlngs. The
skirts are side plaited, with a deep
hem stitched several times with red.
Scarlet rubberised satin is a conspic
uous shade among the best rain coats,
while bright blue, tan and brown are
more fashionable than black or navy
blue, rialds In silk and wool or all
silk with rubber foundations are made
up in a host of striking styles.
Among the new models is a "Roui
ney" frock in the new blue. The short
skirt has a few graduated tucks on the
bottom, differing In width and group
ing. The top Is gathered Into a wide
shaped girdle fashioned exactly after
the style seen In Romney pictures and
finished at the back with butterfly
ends.
Jaunty little bats with "tarn" crowns
have sea gulls' wings at the left side.
The bandeau Is covered with a narrow
ribbon crossing at the bnck and the
two ends falling In sailor fashion over
the hair.
The hat Illustrated Is a simple model
carried out In tan beaver, trimmed
with a huge brown velvet bow.
SOME HINT8 OF VALUE.
A new tulle collar has come to light.
It Is made of Ave fluffy rows of tulle
shaped very like the Mary Stuart col
lar. Every season brings at least one
popular color. This year there are two
A mw BODICK.
royal purple and tage green. Neither
color is universally becoming, but It la
to be feared that this will make little
difference. Only the wise woman
studies the effect of colors and clings
to those which suit ber coloring. The
reign of ,a particular color does not
trouble ber at all.
For abort walking skirt that demand
a distinct flare at the bottom silk pet
ticoats cut to provide this fullness are
In order, but often the cut of the outer
skirt, whether the model Is plaited In
soft material or gored In firmer stuff,
affords the desired flare, and little la
left to the petticoat.
No Frenchwoman would think of
buying a ready made petticoat and
wearing It Just as she finds it. The
cumbersome drawstring at the back
must be done away with, and a snug
fitting waistband takes Its place. The
skirt must be fitted smoothly over the
hips and abdomen. Just what shall be
done with the back fullness depends
upon the figure of the wearer. '
The bodice pictured Is a smart winter
model that carries with It some of the
bolero characteristics, but Is fitted Into
the waist line. The sleeves are very
pretty and odd. JUDIC CUOLLET.
Modern Woman
Two Folitical Parties, One In
Asia, the Oilier In America, Favor
Woman Suffrage The Orient Is
Waking Up :: :: :: :: ;: ::
I have Just been reading tliu pint
form of the Socialist party of the state
of New York. Among other measures
it advocates for all workers state In
surance against accident, sickness and
old age, public ownership of all means
of transportation and, Dually, equal
suffrage for both sexes. Last year the
platform of the American Socialists
contulued this same broad suffrage
plank. It was a genuine surprise to
me a few days after reading the Ameri
can Socialists' statement of doctrine to
see an announcement of the alms of the
reform party of Japan. It Is a party
rapidly growing in power. Jups never
do anything by halves when the light
once breaks In on them. The pro
gramme of the Japanese reform party
calls for Increase of pay and reduction
of labor hours for the working classes
and demands the abolishment of titular
distinctions at the very time when
American women are selling them
selves soul and body to get a handle to
their names. The Jap party of progress
proclaims opposition to all monopolies
and, like the American Socialist party,
demands universal male and female
suffrage. What do you think of that?
A woman's rights political party in
Japan, a party composed of men, too,
for the little women of Japan are only
beginning to awaken from their sleep
of 3,000 years! Even China now has
a dally paper published for women In
reking, aud It Is well sustained. Twice
the experiment litis been made In this
country of establishing a dally paper
In which women's Interests were large
ly considered, and In neither case was
It a go. Verily, will not the almond
eyed heathen female go into the king
dom ahead of the American woman,
with all her alleged enlightenment?
! t
' I have been Interested, not to say
amused, at an announcement of the
meeting of the national divorce con
gress at Washington. The delegates
hall from every state in the Union and
consist largely of Judges, lawyers and
divines. There is no mention of a soli
tary woman delegate In the batch. One
would conclude from this that women
have no concern with the subject; that
It Is only men who can be married and
divorced.
tt t
London has a new Idea quite ahead
of anything In America. It is a music
hall for women. A woman manages tt,
and her purpose is to furnish a place of
amusement where girls of any age
may go unehaperoned with perfect
safety. There will be nothing In the
vaudeville entertainments at this hall
to offend the most refined taste. Men
are not admitted.
tt tt
Take note. A rhlladelphla Journal
sent a reporter to Interview a mnn
more than a century old and ask hi in
how he had managed to keep alive and
sound so long. "By perseverance," re
plied the aged one. "I Jos' kep' on llv
ln'!" Thousands of other people, too,
would rouud the century mark In good
shape If they refused to knuckle under
to their troubles and ailments and Just
calmly willed to "keep on Hvln'."
t! t
Bless the Lord for a souse of humor
If you have It. If you have It not, culti
vate It straightway. It helps wonder
fully In this life.
t tt
Mrs. James Young writes, "There are
no selfish obligations in friendship, and
the moment they cuter Into the com
pact the whole fabric will fall to the
ground, no matter how long it took to
build it."
t K
Of all the women I have heard of I
think I envy most those who have be
come licensed guides In the Maine
woods. Among Uicin is Mrs. Jennie
Frecse, a mighty hunter, skilled In all
woodcraft A woman ought to live and
be well forever who leads the free life
In the woods. So many women now
go on long hunting and camping trips
that it has brought about the evolution
of the woman forest guide.
tt It .
In a recent address before the League
of American Municipalities in the Au
ditorium hotel, Chicago, Dr. Kdhnke
said: "If we give woman a vote in
municipal affairs we largely would be
saved from the nomination of candi
dates of bad morals. Women will not
vote for men of bad character, even If
they are handsome."
H It
The champion mountain climber of
the world now appears to be Mrs. Fan
ny Bullock-Workman of Massachusetts.
She has reached the peak of a moun
tain 23,150 feet blgh in the Nun Knn
range in the Himalayas. Her husband,
Dr. Workman, went with her nearly
to the top, but the last part of the
ascent aba made alone, with a guide
and a porter. The party suffered ter
ribly from cold.
tt tt
Talking of how much harder it la for
a girl than for a young man to obtain
paying employment, look here: Several
hundred students of Columbia uni
versity, Including a considerable num
ber of the Barnard college girls, sought
and obtained employment during the
last summer vacation that they might
aid In paying their college expenses.
The girl students' earnings averaged
$117.10 each, those of the young men
onW $113.13.
ELIZA ARCHABD CONNER.
1 HE HANDY WOMAN.
The Art of Rnllliipr an llmtirvlla to
Look Like New.
Ever nui Ice the difference between
the neat and handy woman's umbrella
aud that of the careless, haphazard
woman who flops along any old way.
After a rainstorm, when the neat wo
man's umbrella Is wet and dripping,
she opens It part way and puts It bun
dle end down In a convenient place to
dry. If she spread It nut fully the silk
would crack and spill s It got dry. If
thy point end were down the water
would run Into the ribs at the top of
the umbrella and rust them.
When the umbrella is quite dry the
neat woman opens It sllg'.itly and
shakes It vigorously to get all the wrin
kles out and leave the folds free. Next
she holds the umbrella horizontally In
front of liar, turning It slowly, getting
each fold In place. That done, she
holds It perpendicular, point upward,
and prepares to roll It. Leaving the
folds as she placed them, with ber left
hand she clasps it firmly at the top
Just where the silk begins. Her right
band grasps the lower ends of the
steel ribs and holds them in place. The
pleture shows you how to do It. Then,
with the fold on which the, strap Is
sewed next you, begin to turn the um
brella from left to right. Again the
picture shows you how this Is done.
As the rolling proceeds slide your left
band slowly down along the folds to
keep them In place. Remember to
BOIiIiINO) AN UMBRELLA.
keep your grasp on the lower ends of
the ribs as you turn the umbrella. Then
when your left hand has slldden down
till It reaches the right fasten the
strap neatly, and there you are!
Woman's Universal Instrument.
It Is a balrpln. It Is Indiscriminately
glove and shoo buttoner, letter opener,
mot loosener. In a pinch a key ring
can be made of It. Not every woman
knows, however, that nimble fingers
can take two hairpins and make of
them a "dandy" frame to hold a rare
plaque or plate against the wall. If a
city woman wanted such a small
frame she would say to herself, "I'll
get one at the ten cent store." But In
the country there Is no ten cent store,
and the woman's brain and nimble
fingers must serve her Instead.
Very well. Let her take two long
hairpins and pull them out straight.
With a pair of small pliers she can
bend each of the four ends Into the
form of a hook. Then she twists the
wires together In the middle, bending
the ends far apart. Careful manipula
tion will fix the four arms of the twist
ed plus at Just the rijrht distance apart,
with the booked ends all turned one
way. When the frame Is finished the
plate may be put Into it The books
will hold securely. After that tie a
ribbon loop to the hairpin frame at the
back, drive a tack into the wall and
suspend your plate from It.
Finally, hatpins have occasionally
been used by Justifiably angry young
FKAUINO A PLAQUE.
women to repel the advances of mash
ers. On a pinch a long balrpln might
be advantageously employed for the
same purpose.
Teeli Useful For Women.
The Japs excel all the rest of the
world In respect to manual training,
and we of the west bare much to learn
from them. There are several simple
mechanical tools every girl and woman
should be taught to use. For one
thing, every mother's iaughter should
have a penknife and, what la mora,
keep It sharp and in good order. It Is
a disgrace not to be able to sharpen
a pencil. A sharp penknife Is the best
Implement for ripping long and diffi
cult seams and for cutting pasteboard
r leather. Other tools every woman
shoald know the expert use of are a
hammer, a screwdriver, a pair of pliers
and a gimlet. Many a time a woman
finds the task of screwing a strong
clothes hook Into wood too much for
her. In such case if, as a starter, she
first bores a shallow hole luto-the wood
with a small gimlet the rest of the
work will be easy.
MARIAN JOHNSON.
WXU- C 11 Cfr. 117
Is of Cigars for 25c
Bp Here is a clear-Havana cigar Ull,.
Ife at 6c that we want vou to iudere side Uilllliiilli
i?, by side with regular Key West brands f
id thaf havt enlrl fnr vmtq af S-fnr.QRr nnrl
knillrK 1 Oc. stratcrht rO
H'" Ei & ,a . -
All-Havana Cigar, 5c
is a new and sensational value in the cigar
business. Where, outside of National
Cigar Stands, can you get a large, well
rolled, full-weight cigar, made entirely of
fine, imported Havana leaf, and thor
oughly seasoned, for 5c? That is what
we sell you in CUBA-ROMA.
National Cigar Stands save you the
unnecessary middlemen's profits made
on the ordinary Key
West brands.
10
The best dBars are now told In the 2,000 Drag Stores hvta 't
this National Cigar Standi Kmblem in the window. '
"7
'J
f
"7C1CAI STAMP! y-
SJTOKE & FEICHT DRUG CO
MAIN STREET.
The Highest Priced Flour
in America.
It costs more to make anything best that's why yon
pay half a cent a pound more for KING MIDAS Flour.
This trifle extra pays for a lot of things: It pays for the
best wheat the best milling and for constant testing to main
tain the standard of quality.
KINO MIDAS Flour makes bread that stays fresh to the last
crust there's no waste.
KINO MIDAS Flour possesses more solid nutriment than any
other flout that means health and strength.
KING MIDAS Flour makes so many more loaves of
bread to every barrel than opdinary flours
that means economy.
These are but a few reasons why you should use
KING MIDAS Flour it pays to use it
Sold by Quality Grocers Zetryvhtrt.
SHANE BROTHERS CO.
PMImlalphlm
Strongest in the World
THE great strength, liberality and promptness
with which it settles every insurance con
tract commends THE EQUITABLE LIFE
ASSURANCE SOCIETY to the most conservative
people A point worthy the consideration of men
and women who desire to earn a liberal income in
a profession in which practically no cnpital is re
quired except PUSH, PURPOSE and INTEG
RITY. The Pittsburg Agency of The Equitable
the largest Life Agency in the world invites
correspondence from those wishing to engage in
Life Insurance as a profession.
EDWARD A. WOODS, Manager
Equitable Floor, Frick Building, Pittsburg
JOB WORK
of all kinds promptly done at
THE STAR OFFICE-