The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, March 08, 1894, Image 7
Y ITATION. : SOW LEAD PIECILS af 2 s Lui: : : 2 3 3IECT PEiEsYivaN Rs — : ; a > 3 — : IN EPFPFRiT ‘seroany Fas [« Ora 2 : 2 5 N EFFECT Bikers, : : : ; : cunts : | Philsfeipt | fpvention Can Sopply So Sabiiftutes Vor Bac ; a ’ Paes Sormp “pelhiine $ Tine Table Weatwione or Tearel. ery iw sete fale avin sed #icalern inventioas i a manufactire of ead peri HES HE GOA a. hh J PAE geen M. t Theres Keg v re 2 if Fry | i 0 : v1 . J 232A MM -Truls hm i i. = s = wal r 5 & x = ad Ein nek i : So mer Nil TERI eto read and Leal 7 > ou Ta “iA or Rider ws ha re been Invented none » < : i. . . cid oR it : raewtin te «np tinne of ae TOGA tothe tat wnen Lhe . oe ® a i ii ; 5 £73 m1 for Frie 1 ve uv . to give the satisfaction tie burr, with its stiff t 3 j 3s : ; isi i i . : t : il Fp E it he. : » [ope 10 ¥ 45 og - mniiate pints . books, which is so extensively exported ' ‘ 2 1 i 1 : : he Xray aa) | orfate prints and coltivated for the cloth fnsb Arafing i y re. Its hs : pri Kane arid ip termuetiy ni TRRIMTGH TRAIN trade : FRAj 2% : a . wit 1: Canc i *% 4 1 3 * > + - i THE Faw Persons who have never seen a teazed : : i . : : FROM 7 x3 in al : £1 2 f thé lead AR20l 1u2 3.00 0A) uD ave | t a 2 sx beth 2 ve TRAIN 11 wnves agine a for cone, set all over . : cinnbl 2b rad Sisripi winiiitaer BY . grey a . iv oil Washington "ie tic barbs. ; ary ¢ . Hav s tat : 1 Ti 3 it ; = See Si E+ \ y BTAL 3 . 4 : Wilkeatuive £r-} “head, or thistle top of th naterials Sow off win 31 2 can ing Abo =n ; ; eh it Arriving 950 8 MM Train 4&4 ag : i ) . : : ror § . . § Palimsn parior = 1 pl pERS POR LITTLE GIRLA, i ipsacos, and so iden! is i rater The lead 1s 1d en at EY mma A Ce : free} giv Wilitamepnors t up their chiiiren and then say Don’t” B¥RUTS I. bas Tw h the Dae of sham d az:sd : Hh a > : 2 Sadie sii ! a rd Bd AATiik 3 srw I 13 very ? : : = aitumore, i for someiow the way it 18 done now iT tl mrpose mentioned, that iL oii HE pit Cray Le De. ai : LL a Tn : J § don't i = ] 2p ; Hows! por pretty nearly all wrony. ButMrs On even reflected Im its botanical =3 OIned. 3% WALD 108 RIN ; : : ® te rztent 51 i #0 i ; ¢ 1 Dipeacos fullonum, or* faller's teaze! ih : 54 i WE "ae trongh pas : ‘However familiar the teazel may be €8104 35, While 11° has no eliect Bi . iii hii Tig Ant in ed Fe armepst tis | of the brilliant we ne vr seirlxs wl , ons familiar with wooler rn brite a rm } ' MIM MAL I : § REVeT trmcind ar 2&1, ave Baty, bn F3 o, factar , 6 those who hiv. Ts a — . a ‘ , beegnse they can writen pasibie hand, | tries where it is extensively cultivatid.. ie Siged Iw; Afics Brahe horit 3 ; po a. 11} Basins : : ou . JOHN Wo fev competent to al with a anestion | the fact remains that the great Bers 1% tm "4 : ; 2 . FON that enrazcd a good deal of the time of | it of persons bave néver beard RET 18 Woo clear vadaed aw to cope with the experience and ™ Solomon. nrid be summed it oli up with i 2 article and wid be astonished t i Ane EU teneqg. 10.18 lhen | ce shi sinlirin : : TRAIN 18 i 8 reference toa rod. Mohammed, too, (1 .rn in what enormons quantities the; nine over 1 Ba¥e eoen 3 continnan. ey er. be : ; » | : i dnring his vears of wise reflection, said | @ * raised. i > Rete ol } ! 3Y ard gra : ny . si ht : LE 3 ' he regarding children: “The stick grew in| + France alone 6.6% acrés paradise. "The wise men usesit to direct excinsively de voted to the cenit his children” . { tion of the teavel.: French Mrs. Conner leaves; therefore, the turers nse apnoally mearly ¥ -* bringitig up of childrea in the proper | worth of prickly heads and manner to those who never had anv, and | during the same period up very sensibly she doesse_ and so do I, bat 609 tons, vaiaed at $2.50 : l : 1 hope it may be permitted me to teil how | it is considered that a teazel weighsnot fain the wo fo dress them. I once had a little boy | the less pi” 5 - ‘mort whe went to Sunday school, but returned | vast quantity exported cam be realized Come : within a yery short tine. When asked | in part. creases, ard ths why, he ‘repli=i, “There was & man: Inaddition to the French crop, which ~ €0mes iiragmiar v1 there, nnd the stopp’tendent said he was | is the most highly esteemed, teazels are en : going to undress th: chikiren, so [ jos | produced in enormous quantifies in What a Woodpile Indicates. left.” I dou’t ask toaddréess the mothers | Austria, England, Belginm, Poland y iti nor “undress” the children. I feel, like | and the Crimea. Until recently they erons good Mrs. Conner, that I am serving my | did no? grow satisfactorily in the Unit: one a country best when doing what I was set | ed States, but now they ars quite ex- brings vp : - Lox to do. Bo hare ‘they are—same of the | tensively grown in Oneida county, in associations. ne has po peed 'o Bs Br - 5 - TE Ie Tmini pew dresses. : this state, and possibly elsewhere, and told that the owner is the father of : ; : ne EE Es fn Thin e: Let us begin with Miss Five-vear-old. | it is said return a fair profit to the cui-- a dozen i : t f Sg ; ay Ban hes She steps tmt of her baby gowns and | tivator for the outlay of maney. neighbors jike . pinafores info a rich coat of mordore! The prickles of the teazel he daring ths cloth—rexi broadcloth, mind yon, with | emall knob at the end. and this moant the snow and } nisida but emoha a : : ee : Se i astraltban drimmings. She has biz puffed | .. and st with size the warmth ar} ~5s LET : — : By as oh Yunmn SUFFALD, RGL £378m 0 sleeves, inst ike mamma's, but her hat-- ha een &uis hag po need rill : : Ye . Mises ; . $3 PTAs i : : mamms couldn't have one like that, all | which, revoiving. claws thesarfac: of ination f ea the great oile of eg: / ; > ~ 3 : var Zr : Of aid uler TA iis ome big plaiting of brown voi- 7 with | the elath, ra : 1 : : x ng ti tars AP Ror : H : ix ShE.eranSs i : BIg moamug DIACK [HUMES 8OOVe IL | io.) contri Then her sister Mary—she has a lovely | equaling FE -secordion plaited no's veiling, with] Lineal ! ws rt hes i é large bishop sleeves, and a bertha just | _ Feventricity In Literary Taste. "az the Ring aol Sod craezing vit : MIN D. BOCKEFELLEN z Fal : = M PREVOST, tvenernl Manag: dike a grownup young lady, and that ar Carious whirus nre orcasionaily shave: chanuin an § ¢ ik CANT the Lelt are trimmed with seal velvet. | by readers at the Pr ! rrr a ] Sister Margaret has a4 Havana camel's | was a woman wi ari) hair, with a skirt clear down to her boot | day came for a volume of serra tops, and she is. only 14! The skirt isi did not mind whose sermons, ne plain; with a folded surah belt, whic: | the snbject, =o jong as the ¥ wera closes in the back under a big rosctie. gious discanrsesof same sort, Her waist is fall and has a simulated | g)a wonld come back. retarn t) ~ yoke made by rufiles of surah. and she: mons and take omt a sovel to has balloon sleeves, with a little raffle | her mind until the next Friday at the wrist. If Margaret were going | the sermons wonld sgain t out, she would pnt on & neat reefer jack- | Thers was another worn et of dark blue melton cloth and a Tam | pever r=adl anvtbisg *O'Bhanter of the same stoff as that in| novel, as she called if, not her dress, with a bow and band of blue gq «Ben-Hur ' or ene swith : velvet. : ; religions tenet to inounleat The other three sisters, Whogo 0 2 pri- | with a clergyman as 1*schis vate day sthool, havesuch pretty frocks. Kwinburne's * Heavenly Louise wears a light: bine challie, with | was read daily for vears Py sn ecoen- - : dark bine flowers, and this is made jost{ tric old genticrnan. He would draw ] Sade by Thuodervoks Ya thu : 5 Svar lui un 1s : : as plain as can be, and &he has 2 1ong | the book, keep it two weeks, return it Ean y ei Honaive 35 Amarics?. Gilisy Shiney Sr dil : I Beech iy coat, witha cape to it, made of cloth and | with bis plaro marked and call early In the museains of nearly all the large : > aE HE ! : Hye ¥en : L edged with fur and faced with brown | thy pext merning to take it out again silk, and she looks best in a flat hat bent | fg never took any other book from the to a point in front, witha lace friil. library, an. finally ‘died, leaving M 1a Eel r i6at overs } : 3 : For fas ie ’ reid 4 } WG Aal ! HE x : ; : CRN 8 Magazin ; ‘ : : : 1 : % i r Te TY “1H Rarrels, eolleges § n will sea what ane : 3 NAL IT Ser aes TOR nL L 1% eas : Gan i 38 Ly XY as sandy petrifacticns ruc) ranches of trees. Y- a nis .l 5 p hat thess gre the remains Ema has for her school attire a dress of drab vicuna wool, made with a sash belt and gathered waist. She, too, basa eape ulsterette of snuff brown cloth, bor- place marked as usual. There is or old man who will never read 8 book wriften by a woman. He reads goed books continnally. but will have noth monsters that grew in a faraway g bat if you will i i ing to do with a volame bearing a w man's name as its author. Boston Herald. a fact, that 13 These tame It te be si vy netrifact: One of the Falne Anecdotes. ¥ i tal » A volume could be niade of the good TER: thunder stories in which the venerable Henry fPRAKIng, the; W. Paine, who ended his long lifs bere, are composed of is the central Sgure. Mr. Paine ui. @nd are wade doubtedly knew more law than many of our judges. He himself bad decline? | a seat on the supreme bench of his native state of Maine and again when Gov ernor Bullock tendered him the succes. CORCEIFRT.2 pe ary size, 3 a" sted ! gion to Chief Justice Bigelow in Massa. Wore feet | : : inches in a to N | chusetts. Bot be was not arrogant of B3meter. others mot large 2h a .fa wt : | his learning. and it is only as illustrat ot large prEb Bp | ing his perennial Lumor that the story is told of him, bow, when seen reading : : ia lawbook on a stréet car, a friend 3 GOWNS FOR LARGE GIRLS, | said, ** What! Mr. Paine, yon reading dered with the same fur as her sister has | law?" ‘Bless your soul, no!’ was the : ; - ia front of t on her brown coat, and her hat is brown | reply; “this is not lav ; it is a volume : ot itin ier ve felt, with ribbons and plumes for trim- | of supreme. court decisions.” — Boston Couldn't Cali It a Cold House Be Meas ming. . | Commonwealth, The best perhaps of the no Angeline, the eldest, just turned 17 | — and just in long dresses, wears a thick | - ribbed velour du nord, showing a heavy | blue line above a gray, and this has a waved castle braid sewed three times round the skirt, and there is a very tak- | and sleeves, and ‘this makes of her dress one exactly suited to her age. Her ha- is of blue felt and silver gray feathers. The time has gone by when all tl: - girls of:a f.mily should be dressed «x actly alike. Each one is now supposid to have cnough individuality of her own to at least entitle her to the garments she | likes best—that is, those who write on the best way to bring up girls say so. OLIVE HARPER. Tata am OT Wate, alt ad nf 40 vears and upward. ing garnit.re of the same on the waist | Sse that Lave long teen The Advantage of Light Heads. ing the late Lord « “I comeof avery old family,’ boast “in which he was | ed Batkins us. the party sat around the : | fire at” the club lving about théir an | cestors. : “1 suppose they were in the ark with t Noah," sneered Smith, wha affects t despise those who claim a long line of e neestors, . - “They didn’t have to get into th ark.’ intirrupted Simpson, who dis likes PBetliins: *the family is so light | headed tie v flcated like corks Then Smith teached the button, and 1 mica by his presence of mind prevented a A Sad Predicamsnt ) I Mabel —1 i riot. — Philadelphia Call. in - Pouch marsion the other His Fatal Nerves. Flo—What Lappe ned: Father — Well, young man, 1 under Mabel —1 wanted t . then. that you love my daugh sir: I wish gnd had to — Procklen Eagle. ide the {au ter sleeve, bat | bad on my d+ h York state a : wand fun A viertown Clearfied Divison | Aid with the Bua wilway AY 3a ville and Berwiiw brig and Clearfie miiromd, and win Northwestern miiw Sleeping oar heiw es adviphia on reins No AGPALMER Superinteu: den