The State Journal. (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, August 24, 1906 Page: 3 of 13
thirteen pages : ill. ; page 16 x 11 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
NOTES ABOUT NEEDLEWORK.
I
«r r
ir
I
I
<
\
!
V I
How Many Dainty Dress Accessories
May Be Easily Made.
Linen bags, either in white or col-
ors, and embroidered in the owner's
own monogram, are one of the latest
whims of fashion, and a very sensible
one it is, for these bags not only give
a finishing touch to the linen cos
tume, but can be put in the tub al
most as often as the gown itself.
The possibilities of short lengths ol
ribbon and lace, bits of linen, lawr
or silk are simply wonderful, if they
happen to fall into skilled hands
while even the veriest amateur can
produce really charming results, sup
posing her taste is good, and all al
little or no cost beyond industry.
While you are planning the things
to take with yon 011 your summer trip
don't forget to make a laundry bag or
two. A gayly printed cretonne bag for
closet or room door (if you are pressec"
for space) is a boon, and what is even
more satisfactory is a big bag made
of white or unbleached muslin, it
which to send the clothes away. II
should be plainly marked with your
name written in indelible ink.
Those who make their afghans will
he delighted with the number of pret
ty stitches that are being used this
year. There is the biscuit stitch
which is raised, and on the right side
looks like a series of narrow buns
about half an inch wide and two
inches long. The reverse side, show
ing these biscuits hollow, is not so
attractive. Made in browns, from a
deep nut shade to a light tan, this
stitch may be worked into a really
beautiful coverlid. — Chicago Daily
News.
COULD NOT KEEP UP.
Broken Down, Like Many Another
Woman, with Exhausting Kid-
ney Troubles.
Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, N. J.,
says: "I had kidney trouble in its
most painful and severe form, and the
torture I went,
through now seems
to have been al-
most unbearable. 1
had back ache, pains
in the side and
loins, dizzy spells
a n d hot, feverish
headaches. There
were bearing-down
pains, and the kid-
ney secretions
passed too frequently, and with a
burning sensation. They showed sed-
iment. I became discouraged, weak,
languid and depressed, so sick and
weak that I could not keep up. Aa
doctors did not cure me I decided to
try Doan's Kidney Pills, and with
such success that my troubles were
all gone after using eight boxes, and
my strength, ambition and general
health is fine."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
A man never realizes the goodness
of his neighbors until he is sick.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color
more poods, brighter colors, with loss
work than others.
COLORING IN MILK.
Utah Food Commissioner Tells Hov
It May Be Detected.
There are several ways, according
to John Peterson, food commissioner
of t'tah, in which the presence of col
oring matter in milk may be detected
If an aniline dye has been added to
give a rich, creamy appearance to
thin, blue milk, a little vinegar mixed
with the milk, after first heating the
latter, will produce curds of a dis-
tinctly orange hue. If caramel has
been employed the curds will turn
brown with the addition of the vine
gar. Whenever milk or cream Is al
lowed to stand in a clear glass bottle
for 12 hours or more it will separate
into watery and creamy layers. If the
lower layer is yellow it is a proof ol
the presence of artificial coloring ol
some sort, and whenever milk 01
cream is kept in a warm place for 4?
hours, and still remains sweet, it is
pretty safe to assume that a preserv
stive has been used. In fact, the
keeping sweet of many an article of
food under conditions which should
make it spoil or ferment readily is a
sign that the tiling in questoin has
boe tampered with.
When a man combines business
wfth pleasure bus'ne.ss usually gets
the short end of it.
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar
made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your
dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111.
The man who boasts of the wonders
he is going to work never amounts
to much as an actual worker.
. Woman's Fondness for Finery.
Anthropologists will tell us that
women dress to catch beaux and Dai
win gives long pages to prove that the
pretty colors, stfipes, spots and forms
of animals originated in the superior
luck of individuals endowed by chance
with attractive variations. Selection
of mates went by beauty, and pretty
feathers made the pretty bird. But
as respects humankind that play *o[
evolution is obsolete. Among wild
animals and primitive races it may
still hold good, but everybody that
knows anything knows that nowadays
in cultured communities women dress
for other women, not for men. Men
are Incapable of comprehending and
appreciating the niceties and refine
nients of feminine dress. For whose
admiration, for example, is the bride's
trousseau created? It is evidently and
confessedly beyond the bridegroom's
powers and he ignores it—stupid thing
that he is. Dress, in short, is a fine
art which women pursue in and for
itself and the educated taste they
bring to bear upon it lifts it above ail
other decorative arts.—Baltimore Sun.
Ian Maclaren's Successor.
The Rev. Alexander Connell, who
succeeds to Ian Maclaren's pulpit at
Sefton Pari?, Liverpool, hAs been pas-
tor of Regent Square Presbyterian
church, London, since 1S03. He was
horn in the Scotch Highlands just 40
years ago.
His Interest Was Personal.
An eccentric member of the British
parliament who died recently endeav-
ored vainly during a quarter of a cen-
tury to get passed into law a bill for
preventing persons from standing out-
side windows while cleaning them.
During his last session the old fellow
complained to jl colleague that his ob-
ject in introducing the bill had been
quite misunderstood by the house for
these 25 years. "1 introduced the
bill," said he, "not for the sake of the
window cleaners, but for the sake of
the people below, on whom they might
fall. The idea of the bill was suggest-
ed to me by the fear that a window
cleaner might fall on myself."
GAS USED UNDER LIME KILNS.
innovation by Connecticut Company
Is a Success.
The New England Lime company,
jf Winstead, Conn . asserts that it is
the first to introduce gas as fuel for
lime burning. The method is pro-
nounced an entire success. The grow-
ing scarcity of wood fuel led to the
discovery of gas as a substitute for
wood, and the company no longer con-
siders the gas method an experiment.
The efficacy and reliability of gas
have been demonstrated beyond a
doubt. Had it been impossible to find
a substitute for wood, said a member
of the company, it would have meant
the restriction and perhaps the total
abandonment of the business, (las
tires are absolutely clean at all times
—no clinkers and no cinders—and the
lime produced is much whiter than
; that burned by wood. Gas also pro
duces a more intense heat, and conse
quently increases the capacity of the
I kilns. The daily output at the com-
j pany's kilns Is increased from SO bar-
I rels per kiln to 100 barrels, or a total
of 700 barrels daily.
DOCTOR CURED OF ECZEMA.
Maryland Physician Cures Himself—
Dr. Fisher Says: "Cuticura Rem-
edies Possess True Merit."
"My face was afflicted with eczema
in the year 1897. 1 used the Cuticura
Remedies, and was entirely cured. I
am a practicing physician, and very
often prescribe Cuticura Resolvent
and Cuticura Soap in cases of eczema,
and they have cured where other for-
mulas have failed. I am not in the
habit of endorsing patent medicines,
but when I find remedies possessing
true merit, such as the Cuticura Rem-
edies do, 1 am broad-minded enough
to proclaim their virtues to the world.
I have been practicing medicine for
sixteen years, and must say I find
your Remedies A No. 1. You are at
liberty to publish this letter. G. M.
Fisher, M. D., Big Pool, Md., May 24,
1905."
Chinese Ingenuity.
Many attempts have been made to
find an unfailing supply of pearls. The
Chinese, it is said, have solved in
their own way the problem of how to
make a mussel "lay" pearls. Five or
six small beads, made of mother-of
pearl and strung together by a thread,
are dropped at the proper season into
the open mouth of tue shell. Two
years later the mussel, when recov-
eredfi is made to disgorge the beads,
nqw covered with a pearly crust, in-
distinguishable from the naturally
made pearl.
Australia's War on Rabbits.
Australia is now going to make war
on her rabbit pest scientifically, hav-
ing raised $75,000 for experiments on
Broughton island, off Newcastle,
writes Consul Coding. Dr. Danysz, of
Paris, will be in charge, and it is pro-
posed to infect rabbits with such con-
tagious diseases that will spread
among their kind, but do no harm to
other animals or humanity.
Inventor's Fondness for Music.
Thomas A. Edison, the noted elec-
trician and inventor, Is extremely
food of music.
Good Colors for Houses.
It is not generally known not. even,
among painter* win certain tints and
colors wear much better than others on
houses, and the knowledge of just what
tints are best to use is, therefore, rather
hazy.
One writer 011 paints, in a recent hook,
says that experiments seem to show that
t hose colors which resist or turn back
t lie heat ray* of the sun. will protect a
house better than those which allow these
l'avs to pass through the lilm.
Thus red is a good color because it
turns back, or reflects the red rays, and
the red rays are the hot rays.
In general, therefore, the warm tnnri
are good and the cold tones arc poor, so
far as wear is concerned. In choosing
the color of paint for your house, select
reds, browns, grays and olives, which,
considering the various tones these tints
will produce, will give a wide range from
which to choose.
Avoid the harsh tints, such as cold
yellows (like lemon), cold greens (like
grass green, eti^), and the blues.
It must be understood that no virtue
is claimed for tints in themselves, irre-
spective of the materials used in the
paint. Any color will fade, and the paint
will scale off. if adulterated white lead
or canned paint is used, but if one w
careful to use the best white lead- some
well-known brand of a reliable manufac-
turer and genuine linseed oil. the warm
tints mentioned above will outwear the
same material tinted with the cold colors.
Gen. Mercier in England.
Gen. Mercier, who has fled from
Paris to England, where he hasn't
been enthusiastically received, once
delivered in the French senate an
elaborate speech on the feasibility of
Invading England.
Shells Make Gooo Paths.
Ground shells are being used for
paths in some of the London park?
with very satisfactory results, as they
do not make dust.
METALLIC
CARTRIDGES
How much does every
wood-chuck cost you?
Maybe a broken har-
vester or a horse's leg.
A box of U.M.C. car-
tridges is the cheap-
est insurance. Made
by cartridge special-
ists and shoot to kill.
U.M.C. cartridges ire
guaranteed, also standarJ
arms when U. M. C. car
tridgrs are used is speci
tied on labels.
THE UNION METAL
LIC CARTRIDGE
COMPANY
BRIDGEPORT, CONN
Atenry: jtl Broadway, N. V
60 Bus, Winter Wheat Per Acta
That's the \ ie'd of Sal/.er'a Keri rro&s Hvhrld WintftF
Win « Rend '-V in stamps for fro« sampfe of snu-p a*
«!.-<•' ntalovue of Winter VVhi'at*, K\ p. Mailer, C 'loron,
Tini'iliiv, '*ra- Htilh.s, Trpp i-tr for falf planting
I'lC Hex n.K LnCionr Wife
Perfect Food Man
The food which contains in itself every element necessary, in
right proportions, properly prepared by a physician and chcmist
which makes the perfect food for man, is
WHEAT FLAKE CELERY
Persons whose diet is composed of most wholesome foods are com-
Earatively free from disease and are active mentally and physically.
>r. Price's Food being made from the whole grain of the wheat, if
eaten daily, disposes to keep the bowels regular.
Palatable—Nutritious—Es «y ol Dcgostion and Ready to Eat
Can be served hot. Put In a hot oven for a tow minutes; or cook In boiling milk to a mush.
10c a package.
An much ■louiinlinn-iit
an 3 loaven of liroad
For Sale by
Grocers
My Signature
on every
package
84
c.e/
Dr. Price, the famous food expert, the creator of Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder, Delicious
Flavoring Extracts, Ice Cream Sugar and Jelly Desserts, has never been compelled,
notwithstanding strenuous Food taws, to change any of his products. They have always
conformed to their requirements. This is an absolute guarantee of their quality and purity
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Woosley, Tom B. The State Journal. (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, August 24, 1906, newspaper, August 24, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127889/m1/3/: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.