The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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HORTICULTURE
Good-Looking Hatpins.
scarcely so
enor-
PRUNING MATURE FRUIT TREE
I
Tools.
f
the pique coat fills every need, but
R’
I t
An Exaggerated Type of Open Head.
fellows!"
“O dear!" aighed Arabella.
"Is there any malli" cried a volce
from the kitchen.
Such a coat can
a
“The* they were breaking the com-
are useless; it does mean, how-
, that
re
2
ly, If 3
L U
I
■ A
ge
t
I
announced.
{
a”y
in.
•y
mascul
names.
,-2
1.f
aha
Gt
2sst
Au.“
i
The Artist
and the Law
know something of plant physiology.
He should know the effects produced
Hatpins still
though they are
There are many days in summer
when the small child needs an extra
wrap, something neither as heavy
nor as everyday as a sweater, reefer
‘ : is a ball about two inches in diameter
; made of coral, amber or amethyst.
‘ i Sometimes these balls are plain, of-
2
phone.
"Say, Agnes
upon soil conditions;
might be possible, it
gold or silver.
Another popular hatpin has a large
plaits fastened to a yoke; more sim-
ply it is gathered to A yoke, the full-
ness being confined to a few inches
at the back.
The coat is untrimmed, but a small
cape deep enough to cover the yoke
She Folded Her Arma Around His
Week.
patch is
One Should Know Something of Physi-
ology of Tree and Use Good
■ “
dull saw have
ue of pruning
the canes, whic
scaled and disco
part Canes so
lar of the east is also lace-edged, a ;
narrower width being used. - 1
p-
VAp,2
s 1
& e J
t, •
F, •
VERY NECESSARY PART OF THE
SUMMER WARDROBE.
Polished language is often used in
telling the unvarnished truth.
You can’t judge a man’s courage by
the size of his bluff
"I wonder," thought Miss Arabella
as she thoughtfully finished her break-
fast "I wonder if there will be a letter
from him this morning."
. And as though in answer to her
thought the clock struck nine and the
5 F* • -o,8
ama ■ 8
mands." eh, - . /
“Perhaps they were. Still, Allah
.wifi forgive our sins in the future as
N,
a.
1
and, w
would hardly be safe to lay down
definite rules for the pruning of any
0
*235
"Are you in Europer she wrote on
one.
"Don’t say T never think of yon,
she wrote on another.
“Guess who it’s from," she wrote on
a third.
"Now be a good boy,", she wrote on
a fourth.
THE CLOCK BTRIKES 1
She called a friend on the tele-
-
id
I
I
5
"What," said the voice in the kitch-
en, "did you do that for?"
"Because,” said Arabella, "it shone
right in the cosy corner and spoiled
everything." ,te, ch.
THE CLOCK STRIKES n
Sho seated herself at the desk and
found a package of picture poetcards.
These she began to addrese to various
or knit sack. For ordinary occasions
"Only a letter from grandpa," said
Arabella. "He says to expecta to ar-
rive here at seven o’clock tonight"
And running into her room she
gazed at the photo of a soulful youpg
gentleman and turned up her mo*
at the same. ,
"I you don’t want to write," she
exclaimed, "you needn’t! Tm sure I
don’t care!"
Adding— . ' 4 3
"I wonder why he doesn’t write!”
THE CLOCK STRIKES 10.
“Six wedding notices in the paper
this morning!" she announced.
-9
' '■ 1
t 3>
looks well with the muslin. The cape
may be made round or it can be cut
in points, tabs or other fancy shape
A pretty touch to added by briar-
stitching the edge where the lace is
joined to the cape. The turn-down co*-
1 g2
I
i
—d
• 32
’ 4
Abk “ ■
"but does not the Koran forbid the
making ‘of’pieturs of living men,
women and aniniala?
hou art beautiful,” he
she looked pleased;
fyihg to force the no-
aDor kqulte a while..
admitea"atk“
she had beenit
a pogition between the cherry and the
peach. The fruit buds are developed
la the axils of leaves on both shortened
mimammk
gammer pruning seems to depend upon
the abllity of the pruner to prune at
A time to bring about early maturity
In an irrigated section where soil condi-
tions uro easily controlled, the. same end
may, no doubt, he more easily attained
naughty old grandpa with his wagg
look and snow-white half. . 2
"Well if here isn’t little Arabella
he exclaimed, and in his naughty, wa
gish, grandfatherly way he whisper
"Arabella, how’s your fellow?
“Pooh, grandpa!" exclaimed Ar
bella, “I’ve more to do than think
th and unfruitfulness,
eaired results one must summer-
» shortly before the season of
chiffon is used fpr the little yoke, i "And besides I will keep the picture
which is edged with a shaped silk with my jewels," she went on. "The
evil eye can not reach through the
mull, bedecked with hand embroidery
and insets of real lace, worn over
white or colored silk slips. Quite as
effective, much cheaper and more
. easily laundered are the little coats
. of embroidered batiste or dotted mus-
lin. J.
mous as last season. A favorite style
.s
—
I
.e
k 2
retain their size,
with all serious attention proper to
the trying on of a new dress. C
"I wish,” she said, "that you’d made
—
V
Ai w . >
woman when she is dead, refuse to
look at her when she is young and
fair? I do not know all that is writ-
ten to the book, but this I know well;
the Nazarenes make pictures and the
Persians make pictures, and they do
Mt die. Then why should I not do
as I please? Thou shalt bo guilty of
breaking the commands, not I. And
why shouldst thou case? As a painter
of pictures thou breakest the com-
mands every day of thy life, Sidi Let-
conducive to tony growth are
hausted after a thme,if tto “gre
to not well worked and fertltte"
( ADry shampon.
The girl who "cm Mt to anyt
with her hair," and who dislikes
wash it too frequently, would to
to purchase, of any rellable drag
a package of onto powder. By mi
of this she may have a dry sham
which to pleasant and does not
jure the hair, while it cleanses it
uneu, . "Evn so," she retorted. "The Per
worn over any I slans are Moslem, too, are they not?
straight slip-coat They are most fan- I Syria, I s^b Persian aners make
whdtei8 Sreeertea“ moany"mb ! brass trays With • chisel”
China silk makes a good lining, as it "Then "he" were hveakini
can be washed. For very warm
Whereupon Arabella walked slowly
to her room, took a window curtain
from a drawer and draped it around tirel
her head like a bridal vsH will
Hourly Thoughts
Always and Ever of the
Same Person
_____________________2........
“Why should I not show my face
I to thee?" she went on. “Am I not
pretty? Sidi-Malik told me that thou
couldst picture all things that are in
heaven and earth, except those we do
not see—Allah the Most Gracious and
the djinns. I want thee to make a
picture of my father."
"Is not thy father dead?" he gasped.
"He is dead,’’ she answered gravely.
“Then ho# can I make a picture of
him? I never saw his face."
The thought of what the old ruffian
must have been like made him laugh.
But it ai entered into Dieilma’s cal-
culatlons. She added quietly.
"Then if) thou canst do no more
than paint picturesat living things I
would fate have thee make a lfkepess
‘of myself. Hidi-Mallk told me that he
saw the pait a caravan. Surely I
must be more sightly than a camel?"
. e,ccrr
vpca
May Be Made of Costly Materials
Elaborately Trimmed or the
More Easily Laundered
Dotted Muslin.
IN FINE CLOTH OR CASHMERE.
Home Dress for Girl from 18 to 18
Years —Small Yoke of Tucked
Chiffon a. Feature.
A Tto pruner needs a good raw,
od pair of light shears, a pair of
y shears, possibly a good heavy
i, and, of course, a good ladder,
common types of saws are found
Thus, one smart-looking white satin
hat, trimmed with white, roses and
faced with old blue panne velvet, had
four hatpins with round heads done
in old blue.
Often the heads are flat rather than
round, and sometimes the color
pricked out in raised gold. A smart
effect for young girls is to have the
white china painted in tartans, to
match plaids, worn in frocks or as
bat trimmings.
particular variety. Both the Winesap
end Missouri (Pippin) may be classed
as prolific varieties that require se
vera pruning. The Jonathan, at the
age of 11 or IS years, almost invari-
ably begins to grow spindling in the
top and requires frequent cutting back.
In the general growth and fruiting
habit ob the tree tne apricot occupies
Pear ’
“Perhaps not. I am not learned in
these things. Be that as it may, I
can not make thee a picture now; I
came away from Marakesh without
the tools of my craft. But when we
reach Figuig I shall be able to obtain
paints. I shall then ask Sidi-Malik
whether he deems it proper to let
thee sit.” \
“Why ask Sidi-Malik, sun of my
heart?" she exclaimed. “He knows
that picture making is not proper.
Did he not tell me himself that Naza-
rene picture makers draw the body
and not the garments?”
At this moment a shot rang in the
stillness. Djeilma got up abruptly. A
glance Told her that the attention of
her companion was engaged. With
a swift movement, she folded her
arms around his neck and kissed him
several times.—From E. P. Matour’s
“In the Wake of the Green Banner.”
(Scribner’s).
Ciothea Made of Fish Skins.
The skin of a fish does not suggest
itself as a suitable material for the
making of clothes, yet it is used for
this purpose by a tribe of Tartars in
Manchuria. They inhabit the. banks
of the Peony river and live by fishing
and hunting. During the last hundred
years they have become nearly ex-
tinct, owing to the invasion of their
domain by agricultural Chinese. They
are known as Fishskin Tartars. The
fish they use is the tamara, a species
of salmon. Both flesh and skin of
this fish are supposed to possess won-
derful heat giving properties.—Wash-
ington Post.
strap. The sleeve is tucked as far as > sides of a coffin, can it?”
the elbow; it then continues plain to
the wrist and is finished off with net
spurdike twigs and the stronger grcw-
ing new wood. These fruiting spurs.
! • " keep th within bounds. ; ten they are carved or overlaid with
• To be an intelligent pruner one must I BABY’S SMALL COAT (
- ........ j । round head of white china, painted
------------ in conventional designs in colors.
toun.”
“Thou art aot afraid that the evil
eye will gaze on this likeness of thine
and thereby cause thy death?”
with the exception of the panel. The ' “Why should I?” she retorted with a
bodice has four tucks made each side ( amile. "I have talismans. Look!”
of back and front, the center left-hand I She drew from her bosom, not with-
tuck is trimmed with buttons to cor-; out some secret intent he thought a
respond with those on skirt. Tucked handful of strange looking amulets.
They are made simply from any
i good coat pattern that reaches to the
! end of the frock. The bottom is cut
L (long enough to turn up in a three or
1 four-inch hem, that can be let out as
the child grows. Sometimes the full
ness at the back is arranged in side
to,
rui ■
it is logical for us to prune during
the dormant season.
Although it is said that pruning dur-
ing the summer season may encour-
age the formation of fruit buds on . .
tardy bearing varieties, it may have I when baby 1s to A, up. and
the opposite eirect, unless done at the , made to look its fu fest, nothin
proper time, and may cause lata ' takes the place 01 the lingerie coats
. over a lining.
--------- These lingerie coats may be elab-
Ee23b-,e2g2t5 orate affairs of handkerchief linen or
by proper manipulation of the irriga-
tion water.
, Ba Every pruner shula to furnished
with good tools; good tools encourage
him to do good wwork. ' This does not
necessarily mean that he must have
every tool on the market, many of
"Yes," cried the voice from the
kitchen. "June is always a busy
month."
Ustes. Oan't you
", 3
I• J
Alj
ha
.v r ‘
To give is edged with a row of Irish lace, or
any other washable cotton lace that
Cedar-green line cloth or cashmere I
is usd tor this useful dress. Thel-
skit nts plainly round the hips and 4 i
has a panel down center of front which
is trimmed at the top left side by but- ,
tons and cordis, the latter giving As l. ■
appearance of buttonholes. Three
tocks are made at the foot of skirt1
by pruning at different seasons of the
year, how to make a cut that will heal
most readily, and the influence of
pruning on the fruit bearing habit of
the tree, writes Prof. O. B.- Whipple of
the Colorado experiment station. It
is generally conceded that pruning
during the dormant season incites
wood growth, while pruning during the
growing season promotes fruitfulness;
and, since our trees tend to overbear,
to forgave in the past Couldst thou
not make a picture of me if I were
dead? Then where is the difference?
Why should a man, who can gaze on a
throughout the entire top. The swe <
and semi-sweet varieties are uprig
l growers and will need some head?
depend somewnat on the variety, hut !
the general plan should be to keep
the fruiting area of the tree, as n.se
the ground as possible; to shade the
trunk, to prevent sun-scald, and to en-
courage the growth of fruiting wood !
Bordeaux mixture, first removing a
rubbish from around the roots so tto
the fungicide may’ reach as low a
possible on the canes. This does mac
good, although it cannot to just
claimed as an unfailing remedy.
If your vines are only three or ton
years old and not badly affected, I
will pay you to spray them. Thi
preferably, should be dobe in the tal
after the old wood la removed. Aah
and more important, apply befot
grow th starts in the spring, and agali
after bloom, in the fall. With this et
out all canes badly infected.
If the field ia old—has been • berr
patch for seven or eight year*—Al
it up and put something else I* M
place. Do not plant raspberries 1
the same land again for eome yean
weather the undercoat could be of
mercerised gingham or even of col-
ored lawn. There is a surprising
amount of warmth in these cotton fab-
rics
bell rang. She ran to the door for
tto man ■ \ ;
frilling.
Materials required: Seven yards
cloth 48 inches wide, three-quarters-
yard silk, one dozen buttons, one-half
yard tucked chiffon.
duce healthy, ‘well-developed fruit.
The juices of the cane are so sapped
that ft often dies prematurely and, of
course, gives no sap to the growth of
the fruit
it is well to witch the vines. When
a hill is found to be affected, destroy
it by digging it out and-burning kt sa-
an the market The common saw with
teeth on both edges is a good, cheap
ope and will answer the purpose la
■may cases. > ” ' /
A discusion vt the amount of prun-
lag required by different varieties
could almost as well to introduced as
those on tto prumning of different kinds
of fruit trees. Yet tto growth to
the tree, and necessarily the pruning.
. ■
--
come over to-morrow night? No, lis-
ten. Grandpa’s coming to-pight, but
he goes awpy again to-morrow. Lsten.
Come to-morrow night and bring Jim
my—bring Charley, too, if you can
find him. Listen What time did you
get home last night? No, listen. I
got in at half past ten; he’s an aw-
fully nice fellow. Bay, listen At
eight o’clock to-morrow night. Listen.
Come early and we‘h try and got them
to take us out somewhere. Good-by."
THE CLOCK BTRIKEB 2
She looked at herself in the glass,
right view, front vew, left view and
of the apricot differ from those of
the cherry in that they develop 10
true terminal buds.
The manner of pruning cherries v
THE CLOCK BTRIKES 16
One corner of the room was t___,
tered by a acreen and adorned with a
sofa, a' canopy and a profusion of
cushions. These Arabella rearranged
and her amile was the smile of a
tender reminiscence. On a table la
the middle of th* room was a lamp,
and this she moved to the other end
of the apartment
"Ive moved the parlor lamp!" she
ous troubles tto nt^erry
meeta, and It often injures th
59 per cent before i is reallze
the disease Is and how far 1
struction has advanced. It i
।
back. She powdered her nose and
looked at the effect; she dusted the
powder off and looked at the effect.
She arched her eyebrows, threw her
head back, showed her teeth, nodded
her head and shook it. She advanced
her face until it nearly touched the
mirror and studied her mouth intently.
“I wonder,” she thought, “If this
stuff they put on their lips does come
off."
THE CLOCK STRIKES L .
"I would like to see some stockings,
please,” she said' to the salesgirl.
. “What kind?” asked the salesgirl.
“Silk,” said Arabella'; “silk open-
work.”
“Here are some very pretty ones,”
said the salesgirl.
“No,” said Arabella, “I want to see
1 the latest styles with clocks on* them."
THE CLOCK STRIKES 4
“I never made abetter fit,” said the
dressmaker. -
Arabella looked at her reflection
leaves it softly fluffy. Shake tto pow- v j
der onto the hair from the package, . J
or, better still, put it on with a powder A
puff, which will distribute it more «r- N
enly. It must get all through the
hair thoroughly. Then take a de**
brush and brush it all out again. Be
careful in brushing it that you do not 3
.brush it into the roots, as it might
dry them too much. Otherwise there 15
is no danger at all to occaaioMl use
of the powder.
„ - --,2
DISEASE OF RASPBERRY Bl
w ---
Anthrocnose le One to the Most I
— ous Troubles tto Grower Mm
Contend With. 8
______— _____
apc.
it a little tighter in the waist and a 35
little fuller—up here—" .
THE CLOCK STRIKES 5.
“Why are you so quiet?" cried the 9
voice from the kitchen. 1g
“I’m working,” said Arabella. 1-5
There was silence. g 5
“Yes, I am,” said Arabella.
“What are you doing?" asked the
voice in the kitchen.
“It’s Lawrence’s birthday to-mor- l
row, and I’m embroidering a bunch of
for-get-me-nots on the ends of a neck-
tie I bought for him to-day," said
Arabella.
THE CLOCK STRIKES 6. mS
She put on her hat and sauntered
slowly down the strpet perfectly ob- i
livious to tbe manly throng that was k"
hurrying home. She almost ran into
one hurrying person.
“Why, Bella!” said he; ilem
“Why, John!" she exclaimed, "who'd ' E
have thought of meeting xu? P g2
THE CLOCK STRIKES 7. 93
The bell rang. Arabella answered
the door. Old grandpa walked ip— 1‘
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Blackshear, Ed F. The Examiner-Review. (Navasota, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1909, newspaper, July 22, 1909; Navasota, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1399059/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Navasota Public Library.