The Paden Herald (Paden, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 18 x 11 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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THE PADEN HERALD
,
HINTS FROM PARIS
A Worth model, for afternoon wear
nt the seaside, Is made of flesh pink
tussah; with very beautiful embroid-
eries in washing silks appearing on
the he*n of the skirt and on the revers
and collar of the short coatee, writes
a Paris correspondent. These em-
broideries are done In pastel tinted
silks, pale blues, pinks, yellows and
clever touches of dead white. The
coatee Is fastened with small Ivory
balls if opened over a blouse made
of cobweb muslin and real Valen-
ciennes lace. According to Worth, and
Doucet also, the pannier craze has died
out
Premet Is, as usual, making a spe-
cialty of dressy gowns intended for
afternoon wear. This dressmaker Is
very fond of combining taffeta, chiffon
and very fine metallic embroideries.
The skirts chez Premet are fuller and
rather shorter than those shown by
Worth or Doucet, and I notice that
Premet Is remaining faithful to the
full, gathered flounce which appeared
on so many evening gowns at the be-
ginning of the summer season.
A pretty Premet model was com-
posed of cornflower-blue taffeta, blue
chiffon and very fine metallic embroid-
eries, the latter showing delicate iri-
descent tints In a strong light. The
skirt was arranged in a series of gath-
ered flounces of graduated widths, but
there was a plain panel In front.
Then there was a quaint little flchu
bodice which crossed at the waist, and
which was almost covered with fine
embroidery. There was a narrow cein-
ture which cut the waist rather high
up, and then a shaped flounce formed
Charming Cape-Coatee and Corselet
Okirt of Rose Pink Tussore.
a sort of pannier-basque which Just
reached the hip line. The sleeves were
tigtit and exaggeratedly short, almost
like the sleeves of a dinner dress; very
long black kid gloves were to be worn
with the dress.
It is said that long, black kid gloves,
like those worn by Yvette Guilbert
when she made her debut, are again to
be fashionable for day as well as eve-
ning wear. This Is good news, for
these long, black gloves are as becom-
ing «s they are economical, and we all
have to consider ways and means in
these terrible days.
USEFUL RACK FOR LETTERS
With Contrivance Like This There Is
Little Danger of Any of the Mis-
sives Being Lost.
Letter racks are most useful, for as
soon as the letters arrive they can be
placed In It, thus there is no fear of
Letter Rack.
them getting astray, for each member
of the house will know where the let-
ters may be found at all times of the
day. —
The racks are easily made at home.
Take the lid of a wooden box or a flat
piece of wood and sandpaper It well;
the size should be about 18 inches by
14 Inches. An ordinary slate may also
be used, providing It has a narrow
wooden frame all around It.
Cover the board with felt or baize—
red, blue or green would do well; take
a piece just a little longer than the
wood and secure It to the back of the
board with drawing pins or small
tacks.
Then purchase some braid—the color
should match the baize or felt—and
arrange this lattice fashion on the
board as in the sketch.
Secure the braid to the edge of the
board by means of drawing pins or
tacks. Secure a ring to the back of
the board to hang it up with. The
letters are simply put under the braid
and the baize keeps them in place. It
Is better to have the wood or slat cov-
ered for this reason alone—the felt
keeps the letters from slipping down.
The rack will be found most useful
and can In most cases be made without
cost, for most of the materials required
will be found about the house.
HATS OF PINK AND BLUE
Touch of Purple Properly Applied
Gives Just the Right Appear-
ance to the Millinery.
Pale pink Is everywhere in millinery
as In frocks, and there are pale pink
hats In every Imaginable material from
felt to malines. Pale pink in combina-
tion with dark blue velvet, is popular.
Wide brimmed hats of flesh pink ba-
tiste are among the pink millinery usu-
ally trimmed in big soft bows of rib-
bon or nosegays or wreaths of tiny
flowers.
A crown of black or dark blue velvet
or dark blue silk, a very wide brim of
pale pink and a band of pink covering
two-thirds of the crown side, a stiffly
charming little bunch of small flowers
In pink and purple and citron posed
primly on the front of the crown nnd
extending a little way above it—there
Is a hat Indubitably modish and ex-
tremely pretty too, which Is more than
one can say for all things modish.
A touch of blue on a pink hat Is chic,
but the blue Is the French blue of
Louis XV and Louis XVI, and the com-
bination Is never the wlshy washy pink
and blue of the limp blonde's ideal.
Take a hat of fully plaited pink ma-
lines with an Inch or two of It extend-
ing beyond the wide brim and falling
to soften the frame of the face. Run
a blue ribbon around the crown,
through four heavy rings of violet
beads, and let a fine plaiting of the
malines soar high above the crown
from under this ribbon, and the result
Is a pink and blue hat unquestionably
sc pliistlcated.
STOP CALOMEL! TAKE
DODSON'S LIVER TONE
New Discovery! Takes Place of Dangerous Calomel—It Puts Your Liver To
Work Without Making You Sick—Eat Anything—It Can Not
Salivate—Don't Lose a Day's Work!
T discovered a vegetable compound that does
the work of dangerous, sickening calomel and I
want every reader of this paper to try a bottle
and if it doesn't straighten you up better and
quicker than salivating calomel just go back to
the store and get your money.
I guarantee* that one spoonful of Dodson's
Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work
and clean your thirty feet of bowels of the sour
bile and constipation poison which is clogging
your system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that one spoonful of this harmless
liquid liver medicine will relieve the headache, bil-
iousness, coated tongue, ague, malaria, sour stom-
ach or any other distress caused by a torpid liver
as quickly as a dose of vile, nauseating calomel,
besides it will not make you sick or keep you from
a day's work. I want to see a bottle of this won-
derful liver medicine in every home here.
Calomel is poison—it's mercury—it attacks the
bones, often causing rheumatism. Calomel is dan-
gerous. It sickens—while my Dodson's Liver
Tone is safe, pleasant and harmless. Eat any-
thing afterwards, because it can not salivate. Give
it to the children because it doesn't upset the stom-
ach or shock the liver. Take a spoonful tonight
and wake up feeling fine and ready for a full
day's work.
Get a bottle! Try it! If it doesn't do exactly
what I say, tell your dealer to hand your money
back. Every druggist and store keeper here knows
me and knows of my wonderful discovery of a
vegetable medicine that takes (the place of danger-
ous calomel.—Adv.
Electrical railways of the United
States represent a valuation of $730,-
000,000.
Disagreeable and Dangerous Trouble
is Diarrhoea, but a speedy and certain
cure is found in Mississippi Dianhuea
Cordial. Price 25c and 60c.—Adv.
War.
Officer—What are your duties, my
man?
Outpost—Ow; to mess around 'ere
till the relief comes.—London Opinion.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
To Remove Fly Paper.
When sticky fly paper gets on cloth-
ing, linoleum or oilcloth, pour kero-
sene on the spots and let soak at least
two minutes, then wash in warm soap-
suds and they will come off readily.
CHILD'S "BANK" EASILY MADE
Article of This Description Will Incul-
cate Habits of Thrift in the
Little Folks.
There was never a time when it was
so important that the little folks should
save as many of their pennies as pos-
sible, and we give a sketch of a "bank"
for this purpose that they can quite
well make for themselves from an old
cigar box. Some quiet fun and amuse-
Adruco Barbed Wire Liniment—
leaves no scar. For cuts and sores on
man or beast. Saves stock. Buy it,
always good. At druggists.—Adv.
The value of the British army horse
on an average Is between $200 and
$250.
c3r^? r.&t-
"Bank" for the Little Folks.
IMITATION IS 8INCERE8T FLATTERY
but like counterfeit money the Imita-
tion has not the worth of the original.
Insist on "La Creole" Hair Dressing—
it's the original. Darkens your hair in
the natural way, but contains no dye.
Price $1.00.—Adv.
Wealthy Russians are burled In
glass cofllns.
ment will also be derived In prepar-
ing the bank and in decorating It after
It has been completed.
First of all cut a slit In the lid of
the box for the coins to pass through.
Not too large, or else you will be able
to get the pennies out again, and then
they will soon be spent.
Next nail the lid securely down, and
then cut out pieces of white paper to
fit the sides and top of the box, and
paste them in their places. When the
paste Is quite dry you can draw ani-
mals or butterflies or anything else
you fancy, and then color them with
paints or chalks.
AnotJiei good way of decorating a
"bank" of this kind Is to save all the
old postage stamps, soak off the paper
and then gum them all over the box
until It is entirely covered; or, again,
a very pretty box can be prepared with
cigar bands used in the same manner.
To Fortify the System Against
Summer Heat
Many users of Grove's Tasteless Chill
! Tonic make it a practice to take this old
standard remedy regularly to fortify the
1 system against the depressing effect of
summer heat, as those who are strong
withstand the heat of summer better than
those who are weak. Price 50c.
i Most of us can realize what blamed
fools the other fellows are.
Adruco Fly-Bane for Flies,
I Warbles, Mosquitoes, Qnats, Lice,
Ticks and Vermin on Stock of all
kinds. Increase the Milk—try it.—Adv.
On his bending knees a man may
find baggy trousers.
White Flanned Suits for Women.
"Our brothers are so smart in their
white flannels, why can't we be?"
young girls asked, they say. So now
they are being shown in New York for
$25. There's something boyish about
the pocketed coats and skirts, some-
thing that suggests the comfortable
correctness of the Englishman's out-of-
doors clothes.
PREPAREDNESS.
Prepare for next washday by taking
home Red Cross Ball Blue. Ask any
good grocer. Red Cross Ball Blue im-
parts a clear white; makes you smile
when you see the basket of beautiful,
snowy white clothes. Red Cross, the
blue that's true blue.—Adv.
The Crime.
"You don't mean to say the sheriff
has done arrested the boys that made
up that lynchin' party?"
"He sho' did."
"Name o' goodness! What for?"
"Sheriff says he 'lows the law's got
to be respected tno' round here, an'
them boys used a tree In the cotehouse
grounds an' tramped all over the lawn
right where there was a plain sign
Kuyln' 'Keep Off the th-ass.'"—Town
topics.
Stella-Vitae
and Gained 28 Pounds
She
Took
Okla., one of the vaat number of women who hare been saved b9
a wonderful remedy: ' When I began using Stella-Vitae I weighed
out RS pounaj, ana couiu uaiu./ sit up to be weighed. Now I can work all day, feel better than I hav
In nine years, and have gained 28 pounds." Stella-Vitae ia m godsend to suffering womanhood. It
Mrs. Mattie Spain, of Mario, (
Btella-Vitae. say a in praising this
but 82 pounds, and could hardly ait up
a nine years, and have gained za pounds." arena-v itae ia a goosena to sunenng woman boou. it
gives strength and health to the female organa. acta aa a tonic on the nerves, restorea vigor and
brings the bloom of health to cheeks that are faded and pale. It is guaranteed. All dealers $1 a bottUb
THACHER MEDICINE CO., CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
Sold for 47 yean. For
Malaria,Chills &Fever.
Also i Fine General
Strengthening Tonic.
60c and (1.00 at all
Drug Stare a.
1\7 T_T A f Q Women as well as
▼ v X l. vr i ^ men are made miser-
T O able by kidney and
* bladder trouble. Thou-
ni A 1? sands recommend Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-
Hoot the great kidney remedy. At drug-
gists in fifty-cent and dollar sizes. You
may receive a sample size bottle by Par-
cel Post, also pamphlet telling about it. >
Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Blnghamton, '
N. Y., and enclose ten cents, also mention
this paper.
Oklahoma Directory
Films Developed
Film packs, any slse, 16c; Prints op tomnd including
3c: an<1 4c Lei
our Him experts give you better results, ■astmaa
Kodaks, Films, and all Kodak Supplies sent any
Shocking.
"He kissed me and promised not to
tell."
"And then?"
"It wasn't two minutes before he
repeated It."
BABIES AND GROWING CHILDREN
need a tonic to tone up the system and
regulate the liver. Mothers are con-
stantly using with wonderful success,
our "Plantation" Chill and Fever Ton-
ic. Pleasant to take—contains no Cal-
omel. Price 50c.—Ad*.
The classy woman Is the one who
can look well In cheap garments.
Send for catalog.
Westfall Drug Co., Kodak Dept.
209 W. Main Eaatman Agents Oklahoma City
A HINT TO WISE WOMEN.
Don't suffer torture when all female
troubles will vanish in thin air after using
!,Femenina." Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
In the mirror we see ourselves as
others ought to see us.
Storage Batteries
Made to order for any make of car. If yonr old
battery is Inoperative, prepay It to ua and ws
will Kive you a price on putting It In first-claaa
condition, or allow you S3 to (6 on a new one.
Prmnty Co., 427 W. Mail, Oklahoma City, Okla.
Lee-Huckins4—
' OKLAHOMA CITY
FIREPROOF
450 Rooms 300 Baths
Rates: $ I and upwards
GET A FARM in Island county, Washing-
ton. Wheat yields tiO to 117 bu. per acre*
Productive soil; climate Ideal. Write for
free booklet. T. F. Jeter, Cam an o, Wash.
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 32-1918.
Bumper Grain Crops
Good Markets—High Prices
Prtzoa Awarded to WestornOanada for
Wheat, Oats, Bar toy, Alfalfa and Grasses
The winnings of Western Canada at the Soil Product*
Exposition at Denver were easily made. The list
comprised Wheat, Oats, Barley and Grasses, the most
important being the prizes for Wheat and Oats and
sweep stake on Alfalfa.
No less important than the splendid-quality of Western
Canada's wheat and other grains, is the excellence of
the cattle fed and fattened on the grasses of that
country. A recent shipment of cattle to Chicago
topped the market in that city for quality and prices
Weitera Canada produced ia 1915 m-AH m aid wheat
aa all af Ike Usited Statu, *r .nr 300,0M,000 b.iheU.
Canada in proportion to population has a greater
exportable surplus of wheat this year than any
country in the world, and at present prices you
can figure out the revenue for the pro.
ducer. In Western Canada you will find
good markets, splendid schools, excep-
tional social conditions, perfect d«nate
and other great attractions. 1 her*
la aa war lax aa land and bo conscription.
Send for illustrated pamphlet and uk for reduced railway rate., information aa to beat locations, eta.
Address Superintendent Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or
0. A. COOK, 2012 Main Slroal, Hanaaa City, Ma.
Canadian Government Aft
fR*
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The Paden Herald (Paden, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1916, newspaper, August 4, 1916; Paden, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144923/m1/3/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Journalism%22: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.