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Show Baked by Machine Forty Pies a Minute Hundred Turned Out in a Over Fifty-si- Im x between In part of their course they pass the Fifty thousand six hundred pies which take of burners, sets hours, or forty every two of the oven. each twenty-fou- r minute, Is the astounding record of a p'ace are As the moulds pass upward they The feat Is accomPittsburg bake-a small lever by automatically plished with the aid of a machine. It opened at one end of the machine to permit will be advantageous to both the manwhich the pie dough to enter, after ufacturer and the consumer to the by automatically closed are former because It will lessen the num- they allow the dough to to lever another of ber of operatives and the expenses and form the crust. This operaconducting the business, and to the bake Is but the work of a second, as tion be can extend below a pretty latter because the pies bought Dont you remember the girl who tlons rarely are heated to the proper bolds her skirt tightly about her, as yoke depth. far blow their cost at the present day. the irons is perThe bright, scarlet coats, displaying Another claim Is that cleanliness Is temperature before the dough If lashed to the mast, bundling it moulds. the enter to mitted all up about her any which way, and green broadcloth collars, are still con- assumed In the manufacture and that The dough Itself Is contained In a half the time her boots or shoes are sidered the smartest for the smell the product is as wholesome as the A wear. large tank above the machine. not what they should be, and her pet- mans best "that mother used to make. of means and runs down by The kimono craze has extended to ticoat Is frayed or soiled. Two machines are used by Mr. Lou- feed pipe Is connected with the How many people can stand having wraps, and now the most gorgeous is, the inventor, in his process. In the a piston which their feet looked at? You have all evening creations fashioned along made a study of a row of feet In these lines are shown. Many of the early fall models in some electric car, begtntng at one end, and following right along the line, and millinery have high, wide brims, high you have noticed the rapidity with crowns and are trimmed with sweepwhich the women haul down their ing ostrich feathers that are shaded. One of the most notable whims this skirts and the men shift and wiggle season Is the mixture of materials of Perand try to sit on their feet. haps one In that whole car wilt i.l every varying texture, not so much as serenely satisfied and allow ycu to trimmings, but as a whole part of the look and admire, and to wish the design. Combs of ail sorts and sizes are wbole world would go and do like-w- l worn, and where a set of combs used . No woman la so beautiful and no to consist of a big comb and two side man so that they can combs, it now comprises five combs afford to be slip shod about anything. and a barrette. When shoes get down at the heel Black Lace Coats aro Coming. they1 should be repaired or disposed Black lace coats are to be very I don't care whether tney are of. otherwise perfectly good. Get good, smart next winter, and are also worn The Machine by Which the Piee are Filled and Receive a Top Dressing of The expensive shoes, made to fit, and of now with black chiffon gowns. Meringue. the best material. Never leave them chiffon and lace combine extremely off without at once putting them on well and often when it Is desired to first the crust Is formed and baked machinery that operates the whole trees, for that makes shoes keep their have a sharp contrast the fashion is and in the second the filling is put in affair enough dough Is forced down Now, the average person to wear a white lace coat with a black and covered by a tempting layer of the pipe with each stroke of the piston shape. doesnt tree shoes except now and skirt. A bolero of white lace on a meringue. The first machine is the to fill one of the moulds as it passes then, or when they are being cleaned, black dress, If a woman has a good more Interesting of the two. Instead under the pipe. By thd time another and, having one pair only, this la no enough figure to carry It off well. Is of pie tins molds like waffle irons are mould passes under the pipe another always smart nnd effective, but If the used to form the crust. They are stroke of the piston forces down good. Invest In skeleton trees at least, figure is nol all that may be desired, firmly attached to an endless chain enough dough to fill that mould, and which are $1 a pair, and keep every then It Is just as well to have the stretched out horizontally the full so on. in black also, thus eliminating As the crust Is baked an attendant slipper and shoe on them, whether lace length of the machine. In the lower traveling, visiting or at home. Al- the sharp contrast outlining the figways keep the shoes clean; If colored ure. kid use cleansing fluid; If brown or to the precise spot it started WONDERFUL SUN DIAL turn , Handkerchief In the Glove. white get proper materials and learn I believe it, said Tarklngfrom. The fashionable handkerchief of tobow to do It yourself, for In many ton. "Why, a magazine writer can houses it Is not done for you, and you day must be as small as possible and MECHANISM SHOWS TIME AT FIF- do the very same thing with his man the newest thing Is a tiny handkershould go prepared. uscrlpt If he Incloses a stamped en TEEN PLACES. Ive known many a girl to wear achief to be carried In the glove. It is velope. piece of the finest muslin a few the same shoes for weeks without inches square, trimmed with lace, and Aiming to Reproduce Famous TimeRussia 1905. treeing or cleansing, and yet she had small enough and soft enough to be buna over the mountain, good clothes and thought she looked at Glamis Castle, Scotland, A The haze piece tlail In the valley was still, well. Being neat and fresh Is as Im- kept in the glove. On It the name or Peter Hamilton of Baltimore Has A lone woman wept o'er a baby that is embroidered In the slept. portant as taking the trouble to re- monogram Far Outdone the Model He Selected. And the grain lay unwound at the rollL member the names of every human smallest letters and the wbole thing n A plow tn the furrow, Is so useless that the owner only just A forge that was smokeless and dead. being you meet, and always have a It While over all the stillness, a pall. hung smile and cordial bow to greet them escapes being without a handkerchief The romantic and picturesque sun And the base o'er the mountain, blood red. with. It not only brings you happi- at all. dial is coming to Its own once more. ness In endless ways, and helps yon Dial making is again an industry re- And over and over and over. A Chic Afternoon Hat. an untold amount In politics, business By village and farmhouse and hill. veled In by members of the arts and A haze, bloody red, all the landscape or social life, but It brightens many a crafts cycle, says the Los Angeles o erspread. sad heart and lightens the burden on And the valleys deserted and still. Times. The earth at the seedtime unbroken. many tired shoulders. Exchange. It was in days when interest In sun The field at the harvest ungieaned. And lone vigil kept by a woman who dials was lowest that Peter Hamilton wept, of Baltimore conceived and executed Wool Waists. With a babe at her bosom unweaned. the design for a dial unlike any other The wool waist gains In favor over down from the mountain a horseof which we have any knowledge and Then man heavy linens and chevolts for cool Dashed, which Is now one of the attractions weather. White Is more desirable, plumed and sworded and mailed: of the celebrated Druid Hill park in Nor heard but light colors are seen and plaids he the moan of the woman will be worn a great deal for Informal alone, that city. Nor aw. be the grain all unflalled: occasions. The lingerie waists will be This dial, beautiful from an archiTo arms! for the battle was bloodv: To arms! ' for the columns wers thinworn all winter, and soft silks have by tectural standpoint. Is also a mathened; no means lost popularity. Among the matical wonder, for It registers the And over the land rang his braxen command. wool waists batiste, flannel, mohair, time at fifteen places, each far disFor his horse wore the wings of the albatross and veiling are favorites. tant from one another. From its fifwind. All of these except flannel wash perteen faces can be read the hours at Then fatherless lads from Ihelr hovels Rio Janeiro, Sitka, Jeddo, Jerusalem, fectly, and flannel Is not Impossible, 'Vent shouldering ponderous guns. Fernando Po, Cape Cod, Baltimore, And old men and gray tottered weakly if the laundress be an expert. Ordiaway Pitcairn's Island, Honolulu, lxndon, To find the nide graves of their sons: narily It is better to have flannel dry New wool waists trimmed cleaned. Cape Town and San Francisco. The For country Is higher than kindred. And what la glory of aod with eyelet embroidery are Interestequatorial and polar planes, the latter Inwet by the the flood of Its yeomens red with the motto Sine umbra nihil,' mood 7 ing novelties. They are to be had In And war Is It not more than God? make up the fifteen faces of this pehalf a dozen fabrics, the softer maSo women with babes at their bosoms culiar dial. terials such as albatross being very Or sed out oer the furrows unfilled That he had constructed a wholly Through A dainty hat for afternoon wear Is pretty. the haze red like 'the blood that was resting shed with Tam original sun dial or which there Is no pale blue Neapolitan away struggle OShanter crown. The brim is faced duplicate is a fact which surprised Ahd eves that are swollen unwilled. Street Suit of Silk. and anguished Mr. Hamilton, for he believed while pllfted In silent appeal; Changeable silk will be largely used with tiny folds of black tulle and h' ,h d ,00r' by mercy duref for fall costumes and are wonderfully shaded blue wings and blue velvet constructing It that he was reproducing in essential points the famous know nauh bu effective. Among an early showing ribbon adorn the top. shirnarch dial at Glamis castle, In Scotland, was one, In greens and browns, the which Is undoubtedly the finest In the And over and over and over Revival of Caster. the different shades harmonizing beautiBy village and hamlet and hill The table caster Is being revived, world. fully. The design has a plain, full rd' ,M '' that There Is It as are a wee but over In for dials each lshH accessory all eight skirt, with four applied tucks at botflail In the the Rut I an this valley Individual famed ..ill not and cover, the large timepiece, each of Its tom. The Jacket Is of the collarless facets having from three bolero type with applied tucks In de- stand for the center of the table. twenty-fou- r " to four dials each. This dial Is cersign. It closes In surplice fasbioa sod These little casters contain bottles for Wl has two wide pieces of Persian em- pepper and salt and a vinegar crueL tainly three centuries old, as It apJWbFn?e.hrr New r"om "weaned. Other small ones have a tiny bottle pears In a print of the castle, behind York Times. broidery In delicate shades as revers. at which side of either it stand holwith a the stands, previous to the year Ths strapped pieces of silk around the How Tommy Reckoned. neck are fastened down In front with low dish for salt suspended between 1600. and was named In Earl Patricks Teacher-No- w. them. They sre very cunning and book of record of a date previous to Tommy, If I ve fancy buttons. Mosquetaire gloves are m.UnJVwlMPP fVnd y0n eat ,W0 hoW worn, therefore the sleeves are quite give an altogether modern air to a 1695. It was from a description of the you have left? short with a straight cuff of brown table. Glamis sun dial, which Is over twenty-Tommy (aged 61 Five. velvet. one feet high and handsomely Short Skirts ths Rule. lf eat two. you carved sre that Mr. Hamilton drew the the absolnts hVe Very short skirts y ,hree wouldn't you?1 Barley Mea Scones. rule and it matters little wbat the ma- plans for the dial which now stands Add a little salt to as much barIn No. Druid Hill he. Tommy-The la terial Never short skirt hers may park. ma'am: I'd have five-t- hree having seen ley meal as you require, and mix with to outside and two Inside. stay for some time at least and even a photograph of the Glamis dial. It sufficient hot milk to make a thick those who contemplate making up s Mr. Hamilton had only verbal descrippaste. Roll out thtn and cut Into gown would do well to take heed and tions to work upon and he concluded d pieces; bake In a very study Its ways. The short skirt hat that the many faces of tho Glamis dial Cut open and butter quick oven. many things tn Its favor. It Is very must speak the time at various points. while hot. light tn weight, for it Is abbreviated But the Glamis dial tells only Scotland to such an extent that flounces and time. Thus Mr. Hamiltons work Is Slide. Down Chimney Into Bou. ruffles are almost Impossible. It Is be not a copy tn any sense, but is oriel-ns- l dolr of French Woman Who with him. coming to the feet. It Is comfortable Saves Him from Soldiers Who It was tn 1673 that Mr. Hamilton and It takes little material. More than Are in Pursuit. all these, it la fashionable and the constructed his unique dial of sandfashion has spread until it now stone. It stood In his yard for s numThe husband rame In and told bis reaches Paris and Is popular In Vien- ber of yeara. In 1892 he presented Md high command In ?hrv One of the most popular fashions of na. where there was the greatest pro- It to the city of Baltimore. It was army. iun of char- this Mason Is the surplice waist. test against It. The Paris modistes first placed In one of the smaller pnrks blll,? wUh ,,,ttra(,rHnary The simple cost for general wear are chopping off the gowns right at and afterward removed to Druid Hill linguistic acquirements. He had Is the short cut, tan covert cloth. the ankles. The new short skirts are park, near the Eutaw place entrance. 1,1,0 ,h Hemstitched ruffles are very neat much shorter than the former ones As time bad begun to wear sway some the Commune a a soldier, had been and are seen In the most exclusive They are now made Instep high and of the Inscriptions, the park commis- given an Important point to defend on sion some of them are even less. recently spent 300 to cover the a things. They The fight was Ion and Ths wearing of a scarf In tulle, most decidedly show the feet, and this surface with bronxe plates and enterrible, and when grave them. This has been done undchiffon, lace or thin silk has become a calls for the prettiest of shoes, were killed or wounded der Mr. Hamilton's supervision and ealers veritable furore. nJ All the fashionable the dial now bids fair to stand for New Idea In Chemisettes. garments for a picturesque monument to Its street and evening wear reveal ths Chemisettes have been rushed to maker. death, yet tho prettiest of the simpler tendency. Black and whits taffeta blouses show evidence that the craze a chimney Into a Is being mads up Into sweet little bos Isnt over by any meant. Not private apartment Tarklngton's Boomsrang, that Thsre he found himself Booth Tarklngton has among his coats for baby's wear, q separate chemisettes are worn with Wh0 A new changeable velvet In three blouses, hut the yoke takes the form curios In his New York city apartment SveVvol madame! he cried Rh shades, called sesrsbee, will be among of an attached chemisette, the blouse a boomerang. A magazine editor said Nor soul, terrified at this stran the successful novelties. folding over It, and usunlly being fin- of ths odd weapon the other day "l Corset covers sre trimmed almost ished wlfh scallops, embroidered by do not believe that a native 'can handle a boomerang so the it will re- alike front and hack, but ths decora- - band wth upoa him. stood supuliv-- t dfirl(T stalna before her, AmON QWW A Pretty Frock. An original frock teen on young girl at the luncheon hour might easily be reproduced by any clever dressmaker. It was a white mull of heavy and Arm quality laid In side plaits around the hips, these being released Just below the hip line. It was of round length and was finished at the bottom with an almost knee-deer flounce of English embroidery done In scallops at the lower edge as well as the top and having run through the top two lines of half-incblack velvet ribbon two Inches apart, these gathered the ruffle and were tied at the left side In careless bows. The deep girdle, which merely rounded down a little at the front, was of finest white kid and closed with a silver buckle. The short Eton coat was entirely of the openwork embroidery, unlined and worn over a blouse of mull to match the skirt. The jacket, which otherwise would have hung straight, was also gathered or drawn In below the bust by a half-incblack velvet ribbon run through the openwork embroidery, and a butterfly bow of wider black velvet ribbon finished the front, where the narrow ribbon ends met. The sleeves large, single puffB of the embroidery had similar velvet lacings at the elbow that gathered the scalloped edges at the bottom Into A p all-ove- h . good-lookin- g rl half-clove- ' three-incruffles. Doth the sleeves and the Jacket were cut from wide embroidered flounclngs, and therefore had embroidered scallops as a finish at their edges. The Eton jacket did not extend over the shoulders, but the back and the front were held In place velvet ribby two straps of half-incbon going over each shoulder; one of these straps finished, or rather concealed. the others, some two Inches from the sleeve strips, held the body of the jacket In place. In the front, revers cut from the mull, the shape of a shawl cut diagonally through the center, were joined to the Jacket tops; these were hand embroidered and bad hemstitched edges. In the back, the stralght-scrostop showed scallops to match the lower edge. The stock and front of the mull underblouse were embroidered to match the revers on the jacket and the elbow sleeves of mull were finished by narrow embroidered bands. A white hat, trim med with black velvet ribbon and sprays of wistaria, topped the frock, one of the prettiest seen this summer la town. h how-ever- s broad-brimme- Here are a few pointers on coming fashions. Sleeves sre to continue short. Skirts are to either trail on the ground or be very short; no more will be seen the ankle-lengtgowns which are so unbecoming to the average figure. Skirts that just escape the ground seem to be a woman's Idea of a comfortable dress, when In real Ity it Is an ugly and dirty length. I say dirty because It gathers up more dust than you can Imagine, and of course can never be held up. Let me say a word on the subject of Have you holding up your gown. ever watched the various ways It can be donef Have you sat In any public place and seen a stream of women, fat and thin, tall and short, old and young, and -- after growing thoroughly discouraged at the way they walk and hold themselves begin to notice their different ways of doing h thlngsf Call to your mind the fat woman In a hurry to catch a train; her bonnet slightly askew, her flushed face, and that frightful shopptng bag, with leather handles, which she holds to getber, to hold In the bundles which are ooxlng out. The bag Itself Is one of those flat cloth ones which nine out of ten women love. With her other hand she clutches the skirt at the side, toward the front, and holds It high In the air, showing, usually a cloth boot with elastlo sides and a stout ankle.- - Her gown trails out In every direction and she moves like a frigate under full sail, aa the wind elowly creeps under and Inflates ths skirt, while she. sublimely uncon-eoloulifts the skirt higher In Just tnai one place, and aatla on to her moorlnra nf wWsSErt.i. j K stands at one and of the ready to remove it from". This worker arranges the bakl on a large pan within easv T Crt! another attendant, who feed, if the second machine. Thl J 4 somewhat similar to the srtlllt also has an endless chain to crusts in motion. It has reservoirs, one containing the and the other the meringue ratchet arrangement enough T 1 filling and meringue is released J the tanks as the pie passeg them successively. When pass onward under an overhead a,' which gives the top of ,he a rich brown tint. The pe i, pleted then, and as it passe ouu mi' under the baker it Is received another attendant and set aside ria for sale. Besides the three attendant tloned but three more are for the complete operation of thV. chines. One regulates the speed ! temperatures of the machine keeps them In working the dough and feed itto4 first machine, and the third feed j ' order-make- s filling and meringue to the second chine. By the methods used at present time in large bakeries It require about 100 employes to do j same work. The Inventor Is a practical fo, a Wo, with fifteen years experience in mi of the large plants of the country i has Invented several other device, of which have proved successful i got his Idea for the pie makicj chine by watching a street waffle at work. Seeing how easily the fles were made. Louis asked hlmset pie dough could not be used just well. That night when he wrt h0 he borrowed his wife's waffle In and began his experiment! p qulred years of study and labor bring the machinery to perfectloi i WOULDNT TEND THE DOORS. Railroad Wat Run Through Bam, There the Line Waa Drawn. Last spring while the survey for Northern Seaport railroad from Grange, Me., to Searsport, Me, being made some of the youth Stockton Springs, a small ton Waldo county, thought they tr. jolly some of the farmers. ?i equipped themselves with s and an old telescope and iu ed out. They reached Prospect and hui up a good old man and Inquire! they could purvey his ground i wag excited at once, and asked a berleas questions and wanted thu? tell him "for sure If the rosd a go over his land. The mock surveyors assured k they could tell him with cerur after a few moments work, and erected the tripod and apptm ly became absorbed in work of si lng off a line of stakes, the firs watching them with Interest short time they pretended to dlw er that the road would go rig through the barn, so the old ma told. - He considered a moment s then said slowly: But theres only one door In it Well, they replied, "couldnt jw knock off the planking on the otl side and put In another door? The man brightened up at once.:! replied: "Yes. 1 suppose I could, 111 tell you right now you'll bw t keep a man to shut them doors ifr the trains, for I cant be bothered ' the time with them. Sheriff Holts Afterthought The late Ralph T. Holt of Keen' N. H., who served many term Iff of the county, had a habit of wik the words By the way before 4 dressing a person or commencing conversation. One morning In the sixties, it opf lug a session of the court, the shert arose from his seat and In hi s1 dignified manner proceeded accoriM to the custom by repeating the folk AH F lng. "Hear. ye. Hear, ye. wit who have anything to do court of common pleas, come for and you shall be heard accordltl 11 law. At this point he snt down malned seated for nearly s then smldenly springing to hi and looking fixedly at the Judge, Cod exclaimed: "By the way, ! the state. three-cornere- General Plays Santa Claus and fConiideirea cen-turle- s. ul short-wtlMc- d wrtS Live had but an Instant to decide. 6 tramp of soldiers rang up th and a thundering knock at ths door summoned her to open.- him go Into the bed, and takln skirt of her dress, a Jacket, and other feminine garment. with these. And then followed o rerley between the soldier Fr,n,k and the Inside the door. "She was sot what did they want: what able thing that In these evil wer very bedrooms of women the course, be respected." Of hnd their way. and entered j the lady, scolding, fining. quick-witte- d .f ' ', The men looked In the cuphe wardrobe and under the bed: bed they did not look: and so" ' g apologies, with a military deported. The poor omfB to a chair, and afowly "lAxik, . t,w raised himself. ch said he, as he took from |