Gate Valley Star (Gate, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1915 Page: 4 of 8
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GATE VALLEY STAR. GATE. OKLAHOMA
For Five Years
I was
Troubled
with a
Chronic
Disease.
Peruna
Cured me
Sound
and Well.
Mrs. Mangle Durbln, 209 Victory
St.. Little Hock, Ark., writes: "I was
troubled for Ave yearn with a chronic
disease. 1 tried everything I heard
of. but nothing did me any good.
Some doctors said my trouble was
catarrh of the bowels, and some said
consumption of the bowels. One
doctor snld he could cure me; I took
his medicine two months, but it did
me no good. A friend of mine ad-
vised me to try Peruna and I did so.
After 1 had taken two bottles I found
it was helping me. so 1 continued Its
use. and it has cured me sound and
well. 1 can recommend Peruna to
any one. and If any one wants to
know what Peruna did for me if they
will write to me 1 will answer
promptly."
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver it
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently butfirmly com'
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con-
•tipation, In-
digestion,
Sick
Headache,
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Dangerous Undertaking.
"Jan«, tell the cook she's burned
the steak."
"I'm afraid, John. She'll roast me."
SYRUP OF FIGS FOR
A GILD'S GOWKS
It is cruel to force nauseating,
harsh physic into a
sick child.
Look back at your childhood days.
Remember the "dose" mother insisted
on — castor oil, calomel, cathartics,
flow you hated them, how you fought
againRt taking them.
With our children It's different
Mothers who cling to the old form ot
physic simply don't realize what they
do. The children's revolt Is well-found
ed. Their tender little "insides" are
injured by them.
If your child's stomach, liver and
bowels need cleansing, give only deli
clous "California Syrup of Figs." Its
action Is positive, hut gentle. Millions
of mothers keep this harmless "truit
laxative" handy; they know children
love to take It; that it never fails to
clean the liver :.nd bowels and sweet
en the stomach, a id that a teaspoonfu)
given today saves a sick child tomor
row.
Ask at the store for a r 0-cent bottle
of "California Syrup of Figs," which
has full directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly
on each bottle. Adv.
It is what a woman doesn't say that
keeps a man guessing.
A Stitch inTime
CoMi. fiver, nnrt term dlscnsra ar*
prpttv ure to nv.rw>.rl< (he kMnejt sn<1
leave thein wenk In convalescence. In
rail. >( any lime when suspicion I.
arniiaed by a Innte. arhln* buck, rhen
ntnHc pain*. h-a«Uohea. .tl*iln« or riia
ordered urine the na- of lVmn's Kl.lney
1*11 'a la n stitch In time thut may avoid
avrloua kidney dlscaso.
No other medicine la so widely used, go
freely recommended or ao g. neraliv suc-
cessful
An Oklahoma Case
John Pack J1
W choctaw v ve,.
Oklahoma city.
Okla., anys: "l had
a bad cusm of lum-
bago and my kid-
n<ya acted Irregu-
larly. 1 cmildn i
a t o o p uitlwut
shooting pinna In
the an will of m.v
back. I didn't
sleep well, had d'.a
sy ape I la and rui
miserable. Pour
bojtea uf Dosn'a
Kidney Pills fU.-d
up In good
h- p Whenever I
J hav* taken Ihetn |
■inc« iu y have (Ivsn fin* result*"
Cat Dam's at Amy Stare, M« • R««
DQAN'S v.d.,V.T
FOSTUKMILBUKN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.
OKLAHOMA NEWS NOTES
Jan 28—Farmers' Union state meeting.
Ada.
Feb. 2-h—I.nean County Poultry Asso-
ciation, 'Juthrle
Feb. 11-14, V. M. C. A. state conven-
tion, Tulsa
Feb. 19-20, Central Oklahoma Educa-
tional AnHoclatlon. Oklahoma City.
Feb. 22-24, It reed ere* Show, Oklahoma
City.
Feb. 22-26 Oklahoma Breeders" Sale
Oklahoma City.
March 15—Hallway rat® cases, Okla-
homa City.
A|>r. 19-21 state trap shoot, McAlester.
April 26-30. ftoutnern commercial Con-
Kiess. Muskogee.
May 21-114—State Firemen's meeting.
Sapulpa.
Carters
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
A revival meeting is being con-
ducted in a pool hall at Tonkawa.
Sapulpa's new $40,000 sewer is com
pl*eteil and will be put in operation
at once.
By a vote of 907 to 613 Oklahoma
City voted against a $240,000 bond is-
sue for a water reservoir.
*
After months of effort on the pari
of the Commercial club, Sapulpa is
to have a modern hospital. The insti-
tution will be in operation within the
next two weeks.
E. C. McMlllion and C. VV. Daley ol
McAlester announced they would gc
to Belgium to get colonists to occupy
5,000 acres of Pittsburg county land.
They expect to get as many as thirty
families.
The Oklahoma State Dental Society
has reserved quarters at Oklahoma
City for the annual conventidn to be
held there March 15-iy. Dr. J. M.
Temples of Tulsa is president and Dr.
C. R. Lawrence of Enid is secretary
of the society.
The last link on the nearest route
from New York to San Francisco, ov-
erland, was completed with the formal
opening of the Bridgeport bridge,
when the people of the north end of
Caddo and southern part of Blaine
counties met and celebrated the
opening of the bridge to traffic.
There will be no further trouble,
probably, over the office of district
court clerk, and the office of county
court clerk reporter of Kiowa county.
The two offices have been merged in-
to one family by the marriage of
Daniel Diehl, district clerk, to Miss
Vera Railey, county court reporter.
Twenty-five striking boilermakers
who began a march through the city
streets ut Drumright were arrested by
the city's police, placed in jail and
later heavily fined. There was no dis-
order in Drumright and the police de-
clared they expected none. Tank
workers all over the Tulsa field are
on strike, demanding more money and
union recognition.
One hundred and fifty responses
have already been received by Secre
tarv W. B. Harrison of the Oklahoma
Bankers' atsociation, from letters sent
to Ht in.mhi.<ts of the orgaaisatioa
asking them to contribute to a "Bob
Moore Memorial Fund". Moore was
killed in attempting to capture the
Terlton bank robbers A portion of
the money contributed to the fund
will he used in the purchase of a
tombstone for the grave of the late
deputy. The balance will be given his
wife, who has four children to sup-
port.
The corporation commission has
cited the Santa Fe railroad in con-
tempt for failure to report un acci-
dent which occurred in Blackwell on
January !>. According to a Tonkawa
paper, a party of Tonkawa and Black
well young folk miraculously escaped
death when a switch engine and
train of cars crushed the automobile,
in which thev were riding, to kindling
wood. No report of the accident was
made to the commission by the rail-
way company; hence the citation
Neglect to report such, cases is pun-
ishable by a fine of not more than
1500.
The Community Boys' Work, Its
growth and development in Oklahoma
and the effects upon the various cities
where it has been Instituted, not only
in Oklahoma, but throughout the Unit-
oil States and Cannda, will be one of
the most Interesting and important
Bubjects before the State V M. C. A.
Convention in Tulsa, February 11, 12,
13, and 14.
Acting under the direction of Presi-
dent Frank Gault. the state board of
agriculture abolished eight positions
;n that department, including the six
deputy livestock inspector berths. At
the t.ame time the board accepted the
resignation of Secretary Ben Hennes-
sey. President tiault announcing that
the department will be operated tem-
porarily without a secretary. The fol
lowing were the employees ordered
dropped from the department pay roll
the vition to become effective Junu
ary 20. John Hendley, Pryor: A. E
Romberg, Shawnee; M F Ikard
Washington ccunty; J. L Briscoe
Marlow; T. J Ball. Catoosa, and K
A'yatt. Comanche, all deputy livestock
napectors; J K. Graham, Pryor, anr
Terral McClendon, Oklahoma City, de
jartusbt dsika
MEANS GREAT SAVING sumptuous evening wrap
PRETTY NECKWEAR THAT MAY
BE MADE AT HOME.
Somewhat Expensive to Buy Ready to
Wear, But Materials Are 'ihtap
and the Work Really Amounts
to Little.
Never before was there such a de-
mand for pretty neckwear; in fact,
the fancy, for it amounts to a craze
Going through a stock of neckwear a
few days ago I was astonished at the
simplicity of some models and could
not help thinking how much money
might be saved if the material were
bought and the pretty accessories be
made up at home, writes Helen Howe
j in the Washington Star True, one can
' buy inexpensive neckwear that Is very
| pretty; but alas! only intll it has
beer laundered. Then It is poor look-
ing and sleazy. The better qualities
of Meckwear are quite expensive. F^r
ex'.mple, a collar marked at $1.50 I
found was made of lace sold at 50
cents a yard at the counter The two
were exactly the same, both in tint
und quality. As one yard makes the
collar the saving is obvious. It could
be made In half an hour. too.
| The lace is folded In two and nine
j inches marked off at each end. There
it is mitered to form the corners. The
lace between the corners is plaited
or gathered to fit the collar on the
taist. A strip of lawn doubled will
j make the raw edges neat and give a
i firm hold for sewing in
I The organdie collars are very popu-
| lar indeed. A collar In a good qual-
j ity will cost 50 cents, the cheaper
} kinds a quarter, while half a yard of
j the material will make half a dozen
I collars In different sizes because the
I material is so very wide. For fiO cents
I a yard a very sheer organdie can be
, bought. The collars are made double.
The usual finish is a picot edge with
or without a row of hemstitching Just
inside. This can be sent to the hem-
stitchers to be done. In preparing the
collar for hemstitching the raw edges
are placed together and basted half
an inch from these edges. This Is the
guide for the hemstitcher. When re-
turned the raw edges are cut away
and the result is a picot edge. I. an
additional row of hemstitching is de-
sired it will be necessary to put in a
basting thread to show where. It is
not safe to give a verbal order.
Plain organdie collars are the rule,
though we see some embroidered,
others decorated with Insets of lace
and so on. I like those showing a
little embroidery in satin stitch ull
This sumptuous evening wrap of
black velvet is richly embroidered with
silver spangles. A fox collar enhances
its beauty.
around or upon the revers. These are
especially dainty.
Organdie lends itself well to collar
and cuf sets, and so does pique, which,
by the way, is one of the fashionable
fabrics again. Not the stiff, old-fash-
ioned kind, but a soft, though heavy,
weave. The large cord is preferred
to any other
The pique collar and cuff sets are
made with a machine stitch. The
material is always used double The
edges are stitched upon the wrong
side. Then the collar is turned right
side out, and a second stitching is
put around the edge.
Petticoats Are Wider.
Petticoats are gradually growing
wider at the foot, to keep pace with
widening skirts. The ripple skirt,
edged wish fur. is all the prettier for a
rullled silk petticoat beneath it. and
the new petticoats with plaited frills
are verv gay and coquettish afTairs.
Pussy willow taffeta, soft in texture
and charming in coloring, is better
than tnessaiine, which soon wears thin
and frays at the seams, and the frills
may be hemstitched or pieot-edged to
add a final touch of distinction Dan
clng petticoats of white or pale pink
pussy willow silk are flounced with
lace and accordeon plaited chiffon,
with trimming of small silk roses
COLLARS OF WHITE SATIN
Make a Charming Addition, Especially
to the Gown Made Up of Dark
Blue Serge.
Tnere is already much speculation
about the joining of soft silks and flar-
ing circular skirts for spring, but if
both remain in fashion after the
French openings, which are scheduled
for February as usual, no doubt the
designe's will find some good way out
of the difficulty. Much can be done
by borrowing from the ideas used in
evening gowns made of silk net, which
now have flaring five and sixyard
rklrts held out by a thick bullion cord.
A cable cord of velvet or silk can re
place this one on silk street skirts
The advance fashions in dark blue
show the usage of white satin in the
way of wrinkled stock collars and
wide turnover cuffs, in wide belts of
white kid with pear) buckles, and even
in white satin hems when the nature
of the frock allows one. This is a
good Idea for (he woman to Assimilate
if she is given to wearing dark blufl
It would brighten that serge frock she
has now and make it a bit differuut
from what it has been.
Fur Is Overdone.
It Is almost a relief to see a suit
without a vestige of fur trimming, for
'he use of fur threatens to be sadly
overdone Effectively used and In
:ood quality, fur trimming Is enorm
>usly successful upon street costumes,
but if one cannot have fur that is at
east good of Ita kind, one would be
*iser to do without, and the number
>f cheap fur-trimmed models showu Is
«m«atabl
DICTATES OF FASHION
The newest card case is of striped
silk.
There is a new brown or grieniBh
shade called rhubarb.
Pale green and tan are the favorite
shades for gaiters.
A yellow vest will add a note of
richness to the gray suit.
Ripple styles and capo effects pre-
dominate In both eveulng and after-
noon wraps
The new Japanese quilted wrappers
are cut with perfectly straight unfit-
ted back.
Square frames are seen in the new
handbags, and seme haudbago are mel-
on shaped.
There are no tight fitting coats; ail
the new coats are semllitting; tome
have clusters of plaits at the side
Evening slippers are gorgeous They
are made of all sorts of rich ma
terlals and trimmed with brilliants aud
pearls.
A gay conceit in handkerchiefs, not
exactly the thing one would recora
mend tor dress occasions, but Just the
thing to delight a kiddie, is a linen
handkerchief with a gay Panama
cnnal straying in colors across it*
southwest corner
Time it! Pape's Diapepsin ends
all Stomach misery in five
minutes.
Do som«* foodB you eat hit back—
taste good but work badly; ferment
into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sou* gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or
Mrs. fj^reptlc, Jot this down: Pape's
Diapepsin digests everything, leaving
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, so
certainly effective. No difference how
badly your stomach ia disordered you
will get happy relief in five minutes,
but what pleaseB you most is that it
strengthens and regulates your stom-
ach so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
You feel different as soon as "Pape's
Diapepsin" comes in contact with the
stomac h—distress just vanishes—your
stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belch-
ing, no eructations of undigested food.
Go now, make the best investment
you ever made by getting a large fifty-
cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any
store. You realize in five minutes how
needless it is to suffer from indiges-
tion, dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv.
CHILDREN IN THE SICKROOM
Writer Is of Opinion They Should Be
Kept From Visiting Their Af-
flicted Playmates.
Children can do their little play-
mates no conceivable good by visiting
or staying near them when they are
sick, and they run serious risk toth uf
contracting the disease themselves
and of spreading it to others of their
playmates, is the assertion of a writer
in Good Housekeeping Magazine. In
view of this I think we should really
hesitate about teaching this "vlsltin?
the sick and afflicted" form of altru-
ism to children before they are of an
age to be able to make any practical
application of it without involving
themselves and the community In se-
rious danger out of all proportion to
any possible compensating return. We
would not dream of teaching a child
of seven that he should rush Into a
burning building to empty the con-
tents of his toy bucket upon the
flames. Infinitely his roost useful
Eervice Is to spread the alarm, to
Bhout at the top qf his voice to the
nearest grownup that he can find, to
run and tell the policeman, or carry
the word to the nearest fire station or
firebox. So it should be with those
deadliest conflagrations which take
toll of humanity—fever and pestilence
The Token.
Country House Host (to arriving
guest)—H lo, Jack! Drove over with
Miss Cuddles, eh? Ripping sleighing,
but cold going, ain't it?
Jack lcheerfully)— Oh, didn't notice
it.
Host—All right, then. C'otne in and
thaw that earring out of your mus-
tache—Judge.
The First Case.
"Where do you suppose the expres
sion not in it' arose?"
"Probably with Adam and Eve."
All things may come to him who
waits, except the missing heir.
Return of the Train.
Trains are used on most of the ne /
evening gowns For a long time moat
evening gowns, especially on younger
women, have been tralnless Some, to
be sure, have had trains But non
most of the new ones haw them Witt
short skirts, all the way around, thr
train gives u rather odd appearance,
for It hiiogs separately, from the waist
over the very abort aklrL
THREE REASON8
Each With Two Lega and Ten Fingers.
A Boston woman who is a fond moth-
er writes an amusing article about her
experience feeding her boys.
Among other things she says:
"Three chubby, rosy-cheeked boys,
Bob, Jack, and Dick, respectively, are
three of our reasons for using and
recommending the food, Grape-Nuts,
for these youngsters have been fed on
Grape-Nuts since infancy, and often
between meals when other children
would have been given candy.
"I gave a package of Grape-Nuts to
a neighhor whose 3-year-old child was
a weazened little thing, ill half the
time. The little tot ate the Grape-Nuts
and cream greedily and the mother
continued the good work, and it was.
not long before a truly wonderful
change manifested itself In the child's
face and body. The results were re-
markable, even for Grape-Nuts.
"Both husband and 1 use Grape Nutai
every day and keep strong and well;
and have three of the finest, healthiest
boys you can find In a day's march."
Many mothers Instead of destroying
the children's stomachs with candy
and cake give the youngsters a hand-
ful of Grape-Nuts when they are beg-
ging for something in the way of
sweets. The result is soon shown In
greatly increased health, strength and
mental activity.
Name given by Poitura Co., Battle
Creek, Mich.
Look la pkga, for the famous little
book, "The Koad to Wallville."
K« r read the akeve UttsrV A Mil
a p«nr« frost time to tlase. They
are «*s«le«, true, ■*< fell •< kuu
tatWHt
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Haworth, E. I. Gate Valley Star (Gate, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1915, newspaper, January 28, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc167869/m1/4/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.