The Nowata Advertiser. (Nowata, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1908 Page: 2 of 8
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NEWS OF GLEN OAK
Weather is exueniely dry and hut.
Corn, especially the late planted is
badly firing.
Silas Upchurch made a business
trip to Bartlesville Monday.
Rev. Squire Jr. supplied his father's
place in the pulpit here Sunday.
Misses Mattie Berry and l!ea
Cleavenger of Bartlesville were visit-
ing friends here the latter part of the
week.
Mias Oh Freelmd of Nowata has
been the guest of Miss Ethel Fling
the last two weeks.
J. Conner's and wife (nee Bessie
Huckett) are visiting Mrs. Austin.
Miss Mildred Ryan of Wagoner, is
the guest uf Mrs. Austin.
Mr. Yevilly brought in some water-
melons and musk mellons baturday,
the first of the season.
The most popular greeting is: "Is
it warm enough for you”? Drink i»
pop on ice; amusement is pitching
horse-shoes, young gentleman is
Walter Vincent.
Wm. Upchurch and Miss May Lewis
Doc. Gage and Miss Edith Vincent,
Mr. and Mrs. VanMeterand Mrs. Belle
Rector called on Mr. and Mrs
Hatten, Sunday evening and were de-
lightfully entertained with music by
the graphaphnne,
h- " "
Why Jtmn Let Cot Well.
Everybody in Zanesville, 0 , knows
Mrs. Mary Lee, of rural route 8, She
writes: “My husband, James Lee,
firmly believes he ov e i his life to the
use of Dr. King’s New Discovery. His
lungs were so severlv affected that
consumption seemed inevitable, when
a friend recommended New Discovery
We tried it, and its use has restored
him to perfect health.” Dr. King’s
New Discovery is King of throat and
lung remedies. For cough? and colds
it has no equal. The first dose gives
relief, Try it! Sold under guaran-
tee at Galer’s City Drug Store. 50c.
and $100. Trial bottle free.
FARM FOR RENT
346 acres, seven miles South of
Nowata, 275 acres in cultivation, two
sets of buildings. Can give possess-
ion of one house and barn at once.
Terms: $400 cash per year. Write
or call on
A. C. Atkins
20t2p Nowata, Okla.
.cat-ice T l.at u.akp Up Well in
Olive-Green Face-Cloth.
This little costume would look very
smart in olive green face-eloth,
trimmed with black silk braid.
The skirt Is Dialled all round, the
front forms a box-plait, the other
FLOORS IN CORN CRIB.
How a Moat Durable and Serviceable
Foundation Can Be Provided.
In the fall of IDO* I built a crib and
granary with driveway between and
concreted the floors of both crib and
granary, writes a farmer in the Kan-
sas Farmer. They have been used for
storing two crops and If ,1 were to
build a dozen cribs and granaries 1
would use no other floor for several
reasons, viz.: It is rat proof, fully as
cheap or cheaper than lumber, eco-
nomical of space, as no JolstB are
necessary, and everlasting if properly
constructed.
My building Is on a rock foundation
put well Into the ground, and laid
In cement mortar, the sills being bed-
ded In cement mortar. Below the
Bpace Intended for the floor proper 1
tamped In fully a foot of cinders, bring-
ing these up to the bottom surface
of the floor; over this I tamped firmly
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/.Summer Necessities
• •
For rent—Five five room houses
The Garnett Company.
m
The Buck—Say, Jumpy, this Is leap
year.
The Frog itakine the broad jump) —
Huh! every yea! s leap year lor til —
| TEMPTATION.
plaits turning from it, the foot is fin-
ished with a row of the braid. i
The coat is semi-fitting, It Is slightly' j
rounded in front, and fastens Just be- j
low the bust with one big button; a
strip of braid covers the seam on
either side, the collar Is of velvet,
edged with braid; braid Is also used
to edge cutf, the sleeve Is long and
plain.
dainty Style for petticoat.
Model Recommended That Will Feel,
Wear and Launder Well.
A suggestion of style for a dainty
petticoat would be to cut the skirt
from the long cloth and finish the bot-
tom with a dust ruffle of the same ma-
terial. This would be overlaid by a
deep flounce almost knee length made
either entirely of embroidered deml-
flouncing or a wide edging sewed to a
ruffle of the goods, the joint concealed
by a group of tucks. A threaded bead-
ing or a bias strapping could head the
flounce.
This model would wear and launder
well, quite a consideration where a
business girl is concerned, for she has
none too much time for repairing, and
the average laundress Is seldom over
careful with one's clothing.
The second white petticoat could be
modeled like the first, but the deep
ruffle, for variety, could be of fine
lawn trimmed with insertion; lace
should come between groups of tucks
and the finish might be a lace ruffle.
This petticoat could be worn under
sheer frocks and if the deep ruffle
were made and finished quite inde-
pendently of the skirt, and only light-
ly attached, It could be removed and
washed at home when the skirt re-
quired laundering.
Shirt Waist Suits That Attract.
The really modish woman has dis-
carded the shirt waist and separate
skirt in favor of the shirt waist suit.
Nothing jauntier Is worn by modern
women than such a suit of linen or
duck. It is not the night-marlsh pony
jacket and sagging skirt, but a suit as
carefully cut and put together as
though made of finest broadcloth.
Linen etamine is having a run and it
comes in every shade. The waists
make concession to the craze for
trimmings and many are of the most
intricate patterns of Norwegian lace
work. Plaited skirts seem to have
the center of the stage, although they
are not so practical for wash goods.
These etamine or linen gowns look
simple and elegant, but one may get a
hall gown with a flowing train and no
end of decorations for half the price
of a strictly up-to-date and well con-
structed shirt waist suit. They make
a big bole in the pin money.
CROSS SECTION OF FLOOR.
Fig. 1.—Vertical Croee Section of One
Crib, the Other to Be Built in the
8ame Manner. 1. Rock Well. 2;
Clndere. 3. Concrete Floor. 4. An-
chor Rod Nut. 5. “L" SIM. 6. Gr.de
Line Outelde. 7. Grade Line of
prlveway. 8. Anchor Rod,
the floor from 3(4 to 4 inchee thick,
composed of one part Portland cement,
three parts coarse sand, and five parts
broken rock. If there is a better grain
floor In Lyon county 1 do not know
who owns It. I have a room floored
In the same way for our cream separa-
tor also one in our henhouse. They
are all right, and no mistake about it.
Here are the details of my plan for
concrete floors: A point of importance
Is to anchor the sills so firmly that
they can not be snrung away from the
concrete by the weight of grain against
the sides of the building. My plan was
as follows: To rod the sills togethei
with, say, one-half-lnch iron rods, the
concrete to surround the rods.
Perhaps the following illustrations
will serve to show what 1 mean:
By "L" sills I mean a two by four
or two by six laid flat in cement on
wall and one of
same dimensions
placed on edge of
the flat piece. Of
course the sill
must be frame and
well spiked before
being placed on
the wall. The stud-
■m ding may be
1 framed and when
I placed on the sill
21 it appears as In
> I Fig. 2; 1 being
the foot of stud,
2 the vertical por-
tion, and 3 the fiat
w portion of sill. The
anchor rod should pass through 3 and
the floor surface be flush with 3.
I
Said he: “I hope you're fancy free.”
She answered: "It is true.
At least—” (and then he said good
night) —
I "i’Bi free from fancying you.
Binder Twine, the very best
quality at the lowest possible
price
Haying Tools the Thing Now.
Our McCormick Mowers are
known to be the Best.
Forks Rakes Presses
t
Lawn Swings Porch Swings
Home Comforts and Necessities
The Big Store on the Corner
The Farmers Supply Co.
NOWATA, OKLA.
Directoire Model.
A. gown designed for the warmer
days is in white book muslin, stretched
in a close-fitting directoire skirt over a
single batiste foundation, its hem
trimmed with a very high hand of
white liberty satin headed by a gar-
land of terra cotta printed cotton palm
leaves, buttonhole stitched in black.
The coat is in white cotton, dotted
with small printed palm leaves, and
having a larger border of cutout and
applied leaves. White tulle forms the
blouse, terra cotta satin the folded
waistfc’oat with stiff rosettes of white
and terra cotta satin punctured in the
middle with a twist of pale blue. Pale
blue and terra cotta plumes are
bunched on the white straw directoire
bonnet that . accompanies this, its
strings in broad pale blue liberty satin
ribbon.—Vogue,
New Jumpers.
Speaking of pinafores and jumpers,
they do not seem to be losing any of
their vogue in spite of the fuct that
they have been in for so long a time.
There 1b, however, a decided leaning
toward sleeves that match the gown
rather than the yoke, or, in the matter
of formal costumes sleeves, if of the
yoke material, strapped heavily or
otherwise trimmed with the drees
fabric.
REPAIRS OF OPEN DITCHES.
John T. Stewart Says It Is Economy to
Make Them Frequently.
The argument is often used that a
ditch will not remain open, hut will
fill, only serving its purpose for a few
years without additional expense. This
statement is true with nearly all open
drainage, but the same statement will
apply to nearly all other farm im-
provements. Buildings require repair-
ing and repainting every few years,
lawns and shade trees require atten-
tion every season, fence posts rot and
wires break, farm machinery lasts a
certain period and then must be re-
placed by an entirely new article. Con-
sequently the repair of open ditches
is only In line with other improve-
ments. The more carefully they ard
looked after, the less time and expense
will be required in these repairs. Ex-
pensive ditches have been dug and left
to take care of themselves, roots from
water rushes and branches from wit-,
lows and cottonwood trees becoming
lodged in small silt deposits, take root
and grow, forming a thicket of grass
or bushes, catching all drift. As a re-
sult, the ditch fills In rapidly, and In
the course of time the expense of
cleaning is nearly as great as the first
construction. A little attention and a
few dollars each season would have
kept the channels In perfect condition.
In some localities ditches have been
examined where the bottom was at
or nearly the same elevation as the ad-
joining low lands. The only appear-
ance of a ditch was given by the old
spoil banks which had been left lying
along the edge. The farmer, counting
the depth of the ditch from the top
of these banks, wondered why It did
not drain the land, when it was in no
more condition for carrying water
than a granary without a roof would
be for keeping grain dry.
PAIN
fain to the he.d-p.ln anywhere, hal Its caw*
Pain is congestion, painl. blood pressuro-uothln*
else usually- At least, so says Dr. IShoop. and to
prove it he has created a little pink ble‘;
tablet—called Dr. Shoop's Headache Table>-
coaxes blood pressure away from pain
Its effectlscbanning. pleasingly delightful. Gently
though safely. It surely equalizes the blood circa.
**11 you have a hcadacho, it’s blood pressure.
II it’s painful periods with women, same cause.
It you are sleepless, restless, nervous, it i Wood
congestion—blood pressure. That suroly is a
certainty, for Dr. Shoop's Headache Tablets stop
It in 20 minutes, and the tablets simply distribute
the unnatural blood pressure.
Bruise your finger, and doesn't It get rod. ani
.well, and pain you? Of course it does. It s coa
geslion. blood prussure. You’ll find it whero pala
la—always. It’s simply Common Sense.
We sell at 25 cents, and cheerfully re comma*
Dr. Shoop's
Headache
Tablets
THE CITY DRUG STORE.
jig During the Dry, Hot Days Try the Cool, Moist
CIGAR
| THF. MONARCH
® For Sale by all Leading Dealers
l|j OGILVIE CIGAR CO. v Sole Distributors
Young Trees in Bearing.
Do not let your trees bear heavily
while young, as every fruit reduces
their vitality and heavy yields ruin
the form of the tree. Some boast of
the heavy yields of their two or three-
ypnr-old trees, but they do not realize
what u loss it means to them In the
future.
Tin Shop,
Tank Factory
and Sanitary Plumbing
Challenge Pumps ami Wind Mills,
Manufacturer of Steel Tanks, Crystal
Water Filters, and Oil Well Shooters
Supplies An up-to-date shop.
A. B. RANDALL
op 1 door east of Electric Thi
Telephone No. 171
11 Ht-4
Be Wise
And let the Advertiser do
your Job) Printing. No order
too large nor too small. Print
anything. Print to please
An advertisement in The Ad- ;
vertiser is just the thing to j
tone up your business. All |
the news all the time j
]THOMAS & CRITCHER
AGENTS FOR
! York Cleaning and Dye Works
1 French Dry Cleaning, Scouring and Gar-
i ment Dyeing.
Hat Renovators.
1 NOWATA,
OKLAHOMA
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Long, Frank B. The Nowata Advertiser. (Nowata, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, August 7, 1908, newspaper, August 7, 1908; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1320524/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.