The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 76, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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NORMAN DAILY TRANSCRIPT
*
TURN TO THE PANNIER1 broadcloth suit
FRENCH MODISTES TAKE UP THt
NEW STYLE.
Old Fashion Revived and In Pro-
nsunced Form —Hag Much to
Recommend It From the
Point of Beauty.
At the Newport fashion show as
well as at the openings in Paris, there
was an undoubted preference shown to
the pannier. Lucille has advocated It
for six montliB and will continue to do
bo, as her new and wonderfully lovely
costumes for Fforence Walton have
proved.
In these she makes the pannier of
tulle or gold lace, sometimes wired
to stand out, again bunched high In
masses of materials. She has also
returned to favor the afternoon
frock of colored silk with a tichu ot
organdie and high loopings of the
fabric over the skirt, a kind of Mo-
iartian costume which is quite fetch-
ing.
Paris has shown an even more pro-
nounced form of the pannier bor-
rowed from Marie Antoinette's day.
The skirt of the special frock that
has caused much comment has a
flounce of blue chiffon edged with
velvet ribbon, over which are panniers
of flowered yellow taffeta. This fab-
ric extends above the belt to form half
of the bodice, the other half being
built of chiffon with shoulder straps
of blue vaivet.
Panniers are not exactly the kind
of thing that one wears well in the
street, but for the evening they are
charming. Made of the soft taffeta
that will remain fashionable this
winter, or In tulle edged with bril-
liant metal embroidery, they present
a pleasing contrast to the type of eve-
ning frock that the designers have
given us for several Beasons.
If the fashion for combining lace
with satin or flowered silk is actually
taken up as It deserves to be. then
the pannier will be the most ex-
pressive way of handlifig theBe two
materials in Juxtaposition. Silk that
is embossed with large flowers of
CALOMEL SICKENS! IE SALIVATES!
DON'T SEA) BILIOUS, GONSEIPAEED
A Real Sport.
"Them city fellers is pretty slick,
but they can't fool me," said Hiram
Waybacker.
"They couldn't interest you ill any
of their skin games, eh?"
—— "I should say not! Two o' them of-
I Guarantee "Dodson's Liver Tone" Will Give You the Best Liver fered ter show me th' only Gorman
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had-Don't Lose a Day's Work!
under my personal guarantee that it
will clean your sluggish liver better
than nasty calomel; it won't make you
Bick and you can eat anything you
want without being salivated. Your
druggist guarantees that each spoonful
will start your liver, clean your bowels
Calomel makes you sick; you lose a
day's work. Calomel is quicksilver
and it salivates; calomel injures your
liver.
If you are bilious, feel lazy, sluggish
and all knocked out, if your bowels
are constipated and your head aches
or stomach is sour, just take a spoon-
ful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone
Instead of using sickening, salivating
calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone is real
liver medicine. You'll know it next
morning because you will wake up
feeling fine, your liver will be work-
ing. your headache and dizziness gone,
your stomach will be sweet and your
bowels regular. You will feel like
working. You'll be cheerful; full of
vigor and ambition.
"I told 'em ter git out th' shells
an' the pea, an' I'd make one guess
jest ter keep 'em from bein' lone-
some."
Wo-ce Yet.
"You're a lucky man," said Jones
to his bachelor friend Sweeney. "You
and straighten you up by morning or i . ,. . ,
you can have your money back. Chil- I j! ® t0„ buy shoes 'or a wife
dren gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone an,' ''J3,
because it is pleasant tasting and 1 t„ * °' 17 . Sweene>; "but 1 have
doesn't gripe or cramp or make them U> Shot'" f0r a Six."
sick.
. ... .. Cold Proposition,
I am selling millions of bottles of Hubb-Meet any Icebergs, coming
Dodson s Liver Tone to people who over on the steamer?
have found that this pleasant, vege- j Gotham—Well, yes; I was intro-
table. liver medicine takes the place duced to a girl from Boston,
of dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle
Your druggist or dealer sells you a on my sound, reliable guarantee. As!c i netter a son. hpart thnn .
50-cent bottle of Dodson's Livci fono i your druggist or storekeeper about mo. 1 |n ffo0 flat upstairs
MIGHTY POWER OF LOVE
Magic Washing Stick
Ttal«. i Bomrtbing neT to noii« wirf«—
something they bare wantet, ail their !l e«,
b"' """ oou'd net iK-tore It in k<- it port-
«lble to do the heavieHI, hnr<lr t wrmhln* la
leHH than one-half the time It tool, by old
methodh, and it eliminate, all rubhinc and muv
N ihin'. i'1, Ht "•••"Inn woe la needed.
Nothing but thin simple little preparation,
Ih te * harmless to the lineal laknci—
white, tolored or wooleu It make* the
aadlof hthH °' "" a f"1""11"- Pantlme-
U.htilfJa" wenpatlon You will be d
eloiht. ,h , c ea,i. potle#H, snon while
clothes that come out ot the riming waleri
«;l,?."«,WlVh,OUlJ",, "TOPl "" your l,nrt T1H
<M! " all—and remember,
without Injury to the moet delleate gooda,
aln ii°r "hl"'woo'*-n". blanket*. laee cui-
talus eic. Contains no aelds. no alkailea do
poisonous Ingredients to make Its u e dane
gerous. IS washings 25 cents
wher!l *" Dr"K?iHt" a'"1 Orocers every,
in I. J ',Vur" handle n, show him
this ad—he II get II for you Or send 2.V la
atamp. to . 0 MICMAMOS 60. Stllmaa. teiaa.-A.iv.
Naturally.
"What day was it we had that ter*
rible rainstorm?"
"I don't remember the date, but 11
was the day 1 first wore my Palm
lieach suit."
Most. particular women unc Red Crone
Ball Blue. American made. Sure to please.
At all good grocers. Adv.
When a woman lowers herself It
is probably to look up to a man.
Black chiffon broadcloth suit with cir-
cular skirt scalloped at the bottom
and plaited around the hips. The
jacket is short, coming to the waist,
and buttons down the front. High
collar opens at the neck. A large
butterfly bow is tied in the back.
The cuffs are high and plaited, com'
Ing to a point.
box or bag? Either one of the last
Great Truth in Words Which Emer-
son Is Put on Record as
Having Spoken.
It was Emerson who said, "An ae-
I oeptance of the sentiment of love
throughout Christendom for a season,
! would bring the felon and the outcast
I to our side In tears, with the devotion
! of his faculties to our service. Love
J would put a new face on this weary
| old world, in which we dwell as pa-
I gans and enemies too long, and it
would warm the heart to see how fast
j the vain diplomacy of statesmen, the
I impotence of armies and navies and
j lines of defense, would be superseded
by this unarmed child." Alas that
I the sentiment has not been accepted,
| but instead the world and the indi-
vidual have been laying their plans,
| and directing their action, by a calcu-
lation of chances which, of course
two places is the most convenient re- .7, L ,, „ ?)UrB°'
centacle for th„ Can be no bi«&er than the human
ceptacle for the purpose. The latter
can be made of white or tan linen or
rep. A very artistic patch bag seen
recently was made of white rep. It
was rectangular in shape and its open-
ing was concealed by means of a flap.
On the flap were cubist designs which
were quite appropriate for the type of
bag they adorned.
j mind that does the calculating. That
love has not been tried is proved
! by the collapse of commercial civill-
I zation, but the things of commerce
and of calculation perish, while the
j sentiment of love endures, because it
[ is of God, and being of God, is sure
j in the end to triumph.—Universalist
I Leader.
MAKING USE OF "SQUARES"
Hint for Those Who Have an Over*
supply of Those Always Useful
Little Articles.
"I have a number of these square
crash doilies which I had intended
for a luncheon set before I was mar-
ried," said Mrs. Bride-of-a-Month,
"but I have so many luncheon sets
now for wedding and shower gifts
that I know I'll never use them. It's
such a shame to see good work going
to waste, and I hate little doilies ly-
ing promiscuously around under vases
and such."
"I know just how you feel," inter-
rupted Mrs. Bride-of a-Year. "I had
a half dozen beautiful little squares
all embroidered in dull bkie on crash,
but 1 made use of them. First of all,
Very Thirsty.
In the good old days gone by when
a gardener was kept it used to be
the custom to keep a cask of lemon-
ade from which the outdoor servants
could help themselves. The garden-
er was noticed to go very frequently
to the cask, and his mistress took the
opportunity to speak to him on the
subject.
".Tohn," she said. "I think you get
thirsty very often."
"No. mum, I don't," replied John.
"Well, John, I see you very frequent-
ly at the lemonade barrel."
"Yes, mum, that's what keeps me
from gettin' thirsty."
sW t Content! 15 Flnld Drachma
iCM'liMfil
&
lOlfloO
VQ
ALCOHOL- 3 PER CENT.
A Vegetable Pre paralionlbr As-
similating the Food <i n J Regula-
,f uiii the Stomachs and Bowels of
Infants /'Chilitre*
Tromoles Digestion, Cheerful-
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
JhnpcofUUDr.SA.im PITCHER
Pumpkin Sod *
Ate Stnna \
DocJulU Salts * i
Ani** S**d * v
J'epatrmmi ^ \
/Ii -(arb<«\att Soda * /
worm ft
Clarified Sugar I
ninitryratn Ftawr*-f
A perlctl Remedy for OonsTipa-
lion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea,
Worms. Fevtrishness aiul
Loss of Sleep*
Facsimile Sigualiuv of
Children Cry Fop
What is CASTORIA
Cnntorin Is a harmless substitute fop Oasto? Oil, Two-
Boric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. Its
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Kareotio
substance. Its ape is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
nnd allays Fcverisliness. IV • more than thirty years it
has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation,
Flatulency, AViud Colic, all Teething Troubles and
I>iarrti<e:v. It regulates the Stomach and I towels,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural Sleep.
The Children's Panacea— The Mother's Friend.
genuine CASTORIA always
Bears the Signature of
metal will have its place among the . , ' , f. USe °, "!em' * 01 *"•
evening fabrics and no one wants mnrfl i ^ Jo^ed tin ( of thorn with rather
evening fabrics and no one wants more
than a yard or two of it on a gown. To
use it as a pannier or side drapery of
some kind will be displaying it to its
best advantage over tulle or tea-col-
ored lace.
(Copyright, 1915. by the McClure Newspa-
per Syndicate.)
Patch Bag.
Now just where do you keep your
patches? Do you let them lie in an
untidy fashion in a bureau drawer?
. Do you throw them into the sewing
basket with the rest of your sewing
materials or do you keep them in a
PRETTY AND EASY TO MAKE
Costume for Small Girl That Will
Give Very Little Trouble to
Her Mother.
With finely embroidered flouncings
one can turn out, as if by magic, the
adorable, tiny con-
fections that make
up a tiny girl's
wardrobe. The
edging does away
with the necessity
of a hem; it can
be tied over the
ehculders with rib-
bons and gath-
ered around the
neck so that there
are practically but
two kinds to be
rur — the under-
arm and a placket
at the back, and
the dress is made.
I npver ried, but 1 am sure It would
not be beyond one's powers to turn
out two such little frocks in an after-
noon, for they seem no more than
doll's clothes.
The cunning little design shown here
concedes a trifle more to elaboration,
for there are many tiny tucks run
through the material to hold it in at
a high waist line. They should not be
more than an inch and a half long, and
there are a few others half that length
distributed around the top of the dress
under the cord that marks the round-
ed neck.
Wee sleeves In the shape of a ruf-
fle edge of the embroidery are set
around the armholes and caught up
on the shoulders with bows of colored
wide cluny insertion to make a scarf
for my blue-and-white guest room
dressing table. Then I edged twi
more with the narrow cluny edging,
cut a round hole in the middle and
used them as candl«shades for the
glass candlesticks for the same dress-
ing table, and the sisth made half of
a cute little bag that every feminine
guest can use when she finds it hang-
ing on her dressing table. I could
have used several more pincushions
and tray covers and I did have an'
idea of making four more and joining
them together for a bcMdoir pillow. I
may do it yet."
ribbon or black velvet.
Dotted Swiss or plain sheer batiste
are both lovely fabrics for this quaint
and simple little garment.—Lillian
Young in Washington Star.
WELL AND IN
GOOD HEALTH
Since Taking Cardui. After Seven
Years of Suffering, Says
South Carolina Lady.
Crocheted Hatbands.
To match the delightful silk sport
coats that "everyone" is wearing,
there are being displayed narrow
crocheted hatbands in nil the bright
sports colors. Some of the purples,
greens, reds and yellow* show daring
enough borders to revive the old joke
of "listening to the b*nd on your
hat" However, they are most attrac-
tive. these crocheted bands, and offer
an excuse for the eager worker to ex-
ercise her originality and artistic
taste. Many of them are finished
with a fringe of twisted silk. Usually
the bands are about two Inches wld
and long enough to wind about th*
average size crown and tie In a kno,
and short ends at one side. Hatband,
neckti> and belt to match would make
a beautiful gift for the girl with eth
letic tastes.
Columbia, S. C.—Mrs. L. C. Hein-
mann, of 331 Washington St., of this
city, says: "I have received so much
benefit from Cardui, I feel like speak-
ing a good word for it to every lady I
come in contact with, that I think
needs it, hoping to help some one to
get well, as I did.
I had been sick in bed for a long
time with the change of life. The doc-
tor tended me all along, and finally one
morning when he came he said he be-
lieved I would have to go to the hos-
pital yet. I said No. I then read all of
the testimonials in the Ladies' Birth-
day Almanac and then I phoned for a
bottle of Cardui and commenced tak-
ing it. I began to improve from then
on. I took five bottles continuously,
then off and on for awhile, and I was
well . . . and have had good health
ever since, I am glad to say. I have
recommended it to a lot of my friends.
I was troubled for seven or eight
years before I took Cardui. I think it
is the best medicine on earth for fe-
male troubles ... If this testimonial
will help some one else you are at lib-
erty to use it if you like."
Begin taking Cardui today. It may
be the very medicine you need. Your
druggist sells It. Get a bottle from
him today.
The Centaur Co
MEW YD
Bxact Copy of Wrapper
In Use For Over 30 Years
The Kind You Have Always Bought
J m COM PANV,
Evidently Mr. Jimso Was to Get a
Plentiful Quantity of Fresh
Air That Night.
TO KNOW FROM EXPERIENCE! Working Up an Appetite.
| "I don't know why we came In
here," said Mrs. Bored, as she settled
herself down in a restaurant. "I'm
not a bit hungry."
"That's all right," said huhby. "Just
you sit here and wait."
"Wait! But Why? I'm not hun-
gry, as I said before."
"Never mind, dear. You will be by
the time the waiter brings us our
food."—Philadelphia Record.
Mr. Jimso was in the habit of at-
tending meetings which often de-
tained him after the usual hour of re-
tirement, One night he was exceed-
ingly late, and his wife, after fretting
herself into a temper, went to bed,
determined to give her husband a
lesson. When she had been upstairs
about ten minutes she heard a knock,
putting her head out of the win-
dow, she inquired:
"Is that you, Tom?"
"Yes, Kate; come and open the
door." was the answer.
"What has kept you out so late?"
asked his wife.
"We have been discussing the real
benefits of fresh air," answered he.
"Well," returned his better half,
"you can lecture tomorrow night from
experience," and down went the win
dow with a bang.
And Then Some.
"Would you call Henry Ford a selfr
made man?"
"Well, he's a self-starter, any-
how."
NEGLECT YOUR SCALP
And Lose Your Hair. Cuticura Pre-
vents It. Trial Free.
For Thrush
and Foot
Diseases
k Antiseptic,
Cleansing
and
Healing
Kind He Liked Best.
She—You like melon, do you not.
Mr. Bond?
He—Yes; especially the kind fre-
quently cut by large corporations.
Everything Now to Be Beaded.
The woman who wants to have new
furs for old will be able to acquire
the former by using her ermine, mole- ! „ As to a Voice-
skin or seal scarf and muff as the | "She says her voice is adapted to
foun3a#ion for elaborate embroideries ' a" sorts 0( music."
done in bead work. ,
In fact, this is the latest fashion ' gtraln-"
mandate from Paris. Everything is
to be beaded, from hats to shoes, and
even the choicest furs will not be
exempt from the bead craze. Of
course, it is not likely that beaded
furs will become general, but they are
interesting as indicating a new de-
parture In modish pelts.
Time Has Made a Difference.
"The last time I saw Sylvia Pank-
htirst before the war," writes a Lon-
don clubman, "she was in the arms of
a policeman, being carried off to the
Vine Street station, followed by scores
of militants shrieking that women
would never be slaves. I saw her a
few nights ago down near Poplar way,
where she was presiding over a two-
penny restaurant where splendid din-
ners of hot stew, potatoes and fruit
pudding with bread, butter and tea
were served to distressed East End-
ers. In addition the suffragettes have
organized pure milk depots for the
babies, and an employment bureau
for girls and women."
Art Discussion.
"I understand the War department
is sculpturing an army," remarked the
man who likes action.
"I wonder what kind of a model
he's using."
"I don't know, I hope it isn't pa-
tience on a monument."
Cuticura Soap shampoos cleanse
and purify the scalp of dandruff while j
the Ointment soothes and heals the
irritated scalp skin. Dandruff and |
Itching are hair destroyers. Get ac- !
quainted with these supercreamy emol-
lients for the skin and scalp.
Sample each free by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Sav• Your Stock
HANFORD'S
Balsam of Myrrh
A LINIMB NT
For Calls, Wire
Cuts, Lameness,
Strains, Bunches,
Thrush, Old Sores,
v
es,
it Rot, ^
All Dealers
W" WI ** 8YKACU8K, H. Y.
| A New Jersey barber is the inventor
i of a comb that can he attached to
"Well, It seems able to stand any | one blade of a pair of shears to save
time in cutting hair.
One Commandment Broken. .. .. ,
Bridget—The new neighbors want to I a" "OUnds, Foot ,
cut their grass, mum, and they sent Fistula, Bleeding, Etc., Etc.
over to ask the loan of your lawn- Made Sl'dCe 1846 A,k Anyb01'1'
mower. About It
Mistress—Lend them our lawnmow- Pries28c,SOcand $1.00
er to cut grass on the Sabbath! Cer-
tainly not! Tell them, Bridget, that
we haven't one.—Boston Transcript.
Whenever You^Need a General Tonic Constipation
The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless V tUllshpS FVirPUPf
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a , * UrCVer
General Tonic becauso it contains the ' rompt Keller—P *
well known tonic properties of QUININE CARTER'S LITTLE
and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives LIVER PII I S
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and * " - n-ver
Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents
Wise Fish.
Bill—I see the herring catch of Eng-
land last year exceeded by far that cf
any previous season.
Jill—They probably wanted to get 1 jnd'8est'°"-w^ ' *
if the wet before the submarine IX,0,™!,!'T.T.^ r'b"8^",hteye"-
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK,
Genuine must bear Signature
fail. Purely ve^eta
ble — act surely
but gently on
the liver.
Stop after
dinner dis-
tress-cure
indigestion,
Carter's
ITTIE
IVER
PILLS.
in out of the wet before the submarine
war started."
Always use Red Cross Ball Blue. Delights
the laundress. At all good grocers. Adv.
There's many a kick concealed in
l insulated electric wire.
W. N. U„ Oklahoma City, No. 37-1915,
" Y0Ur" " ".ak, RENOVINE." Mad. l y Van VlaetrManaflaid Oru
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Burke, J. J. The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 76, Ed. 1 Friday, September 17, 1915, newspaper, September 17, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc113051/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.