The Inola Register. (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1915 Page: 3 of 8
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INOLA. 0 K L A., REGISTER
"CMEI8" ACT
ON LKEMELS
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and freBb
with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with
Salts, Cathartlo Pills, CaBtor Oil or
Plrgatlve Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let
Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg-
ulate the stomach, remove the Bour
and fermenting fotfd and foul gases,
take the excess bile from the liver
and carry out of the system all the
constipated waste matter and poisons
In the bowels.
A Cascarct to night will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken
or cause any Inconvenience, and cost
only 10 cents a box from your store.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv.
The Prospect.
"You don't seem anxious to get
home to your dinner."
"I don't care for the menu I'll get."
"What Is it?"
"When my wife finds out I forgot
to mail her letter the first course will
be tongue served up with hard sauce."
"MY HEALTH
IS PERFECT"
So Says A North Carolina Lady In
Telling What She Owes To Cardui,
The Woman's Tonic.
Mt. Airy, N. C—Mrs. Ada Hull, of
this place, says: "About six years ago
I got In very bad health. I suffered
terrible pains In my abdomen and
back. I dreaded to see the sun rise
and I dreaded to see It set, for I Buf-
fered such agony. No one except my-
self will ever know how badly I suf-
fered. The doctor said I was suffering
as a result of the menopause.
As nothing gave me any relief, I
asked the doctor if I hadn't better try
Cardui. He said, 'It might help you,'
and told my husband to get me a bot-
tle. At this time I was so weak I
could not lift my head, and my voice
was so weak, people had to lean to-
wards the bod to hear what I said. I
looked so bad and had such a dark
color that I looked like a dead woman,
and my relatives thought I would
never get up again.
I took one bottle of Cardui and It
relieved the pain and suffering so
much that my husband got another
bottle, and that Improved me still
more. I began to strengthen and
gradually got well. I have now had
better health for six years, than I
ever had in all my life. I have taken
no medicine since, and my health lg
perfect.
Cardui Is the finest medicine a
woman could use."
Try It. At druggists.—Adv.
If some men had their lives to live
again they probably wouldn't leave so
many dollars for their heirs to scrap
over.
DE PALMA AGAIN WINS ROAD RACING TITLE
wk
6.
Ralph Do Palma, Champion Road Racer.
For the second time Ralph De Palma
tas been declared road racing cham-
pion of America, the honor having
been won by virtue of three firsts and
two fourths in live starts.
Runner-up of Da Palma ia Eddie
Pullen who made a gallant fight but
who lost thb honor because he had
only two firsts and one second In his
five starts.
The American Automobile associa-
tion never has attempted to decide
the road racing championship, so it
has reverted to Motor Age to make the
picking, a practice that has been car-
ried on for six years now and which
result Is accepted as official by the
motoring public in general.
This time De Palma did not have the
walkover he did in 1912, when be was
adjudged champion, but no one dis-
putes his claims, for his three firsts
Include the winning of the Vanderbilt
cup trophy for the second consecutive
time and his second victory in the
Elgin National. Resides this he was
fourth in the American CSrand Prix,
after leading for a long ways, and
fourth at Corona. Pullen won the
Grand Prix and Corona; was second
in the Elgin National, and failed to
finish in the Vanderbilt and Chicago
Automobile club cup race.
IN FANCY NEEDLEWORK meant f0r the debutante
NOTHING 18 PRETTIER THAN THE
CR088-STITCH.
bresnahan to manage cubs +++•>+
* ❖
Sturdy Backstop Given Three-Year
Ironclad Contract at Salary of
$18,000—OIDay Will Umpire.
Roger Bresnahan has been appoint-
ed manager of the Chicago National
League Uaseball club, following a
meeting between President Thomas of
the club; Charles P. Taft, owner of
the majority of the stock of the club,
and Bresnahan, who succeeds Henry
O'Day. Bresnahan signed a contract
for three years. Bresnahan formerly
was catcher for the New York Na-
tionals and last season was catcher
for the team he has just signed to
manage.
While the selection of Bresnahan to
the managership of the Cubs was not
unexpected, the length of the con-
tract came as a distinct surprise to
baseball men. When asked if the
stop eating meat if
kidneys or back hurt
Take a Glass of Salts to Clean Kid-
neys If Bladder Bothers You—
Meat Forms Uric Acid.
Eating meat regularly eventually
produces kidney trouble In some form
o* other, says a well-known authority,
because the uric acid in meat excites
the kidneys, they become overworked;
get sluggish; clog up and cause all
Borts of distress, particularly backache
and misery In the kidney region; rheu-
matic twinges, severe headaches, acid
stomach, constipation, torpid liver,
sleeplessness, bladder and urinary ir-
ritation.
The moment your back hurts or kid-
neys aren't acting right, or if bladder
bothers you, get about four ounces of
Jad Salts from any good pharmacy;
take a tablespoonful in a glass of
water before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts Is made from the
acid of grapes and lemon juice, com-
bined with lithia, and has been used
for generations to flush clogged kid-
neys and stimulate them to normal
activity; also to neutralize the acids in
the urine so it no longer irritates, thus
ending bladder disorders.
Jad Salts caunot injure anyone;
makes a delightful effervescent litbia-
water drink which millions of men and
women take now and then to keep the
kidneys and urinary organs clean, thus
avoiding serious kidney disease.—Adv.
5
Why is it that a deaf man can al-
ways hear an invitation to take a
drink?
Every woman's pride, beautiful, clear
White riotliea. fse Red Cross Ball Blue.
All grocers. Afa.
Many a man has been carried undet
by the sheer weight of his own dlf
Bit/.
Roger Bresnahan, New Cub Manager.
Bigning of Bresnahan to a three-year
| contract meant that all negotiations
tor the Bale of the club were at an end,
' Mr. Taft said:
"Negotiations ended several days
ago and we are simply going ahead
with the operation of the ball club.
The signing of a manager for three
fears has ao significance, to my way
#f thinking. It is not an unusual thing
In baseball."
The terms under which Roger Bres-
nahan signed to manage the Cubs, ac-
cording to newspapers quoting a "trust
worthy source," Include a salary of
16,000 as player and <12,000 as mana-
fer. or $18,000 a year. A clause pro-
viding that the new manager cannot
be dethroned without his consent until
!ho expiration of his term also was in-
cluded.
Stalllngs Signs Again.
George T. Stallings, who led the
Boston Nationals to the world's cham-
pionship this fall, will continue as
manager of the club for at least five
years. He has signed a contract ex-
tending four years beyond the coming
season, when hia previous agreement
will expire.
Jobs for O'Day.
Hank O'Day may not go back to um-
piring next year, after all. Hank has
received o^ers from more than one
club to look after its welfare and
Bay decide to accept one of thaaa.
thirty-five deaths ,
caused by baseball %
«8
Thirty-five deaths and 91S in- +
juries were caused by baseball 2
during 1914, according to fig-
ures made public by a sport .>
writer who kept a tabulation of *
the season's records. .>
Of the players who died from £
Injuries 20 were hit by pitched %
balls, five were struck by bats, J
four were in collisions, four «
overexerted themselves, one 2
was hurt sliding to a base, and ♦>
one was killed in a fight. J
Injuries to amateur playerB j
are classified as follows; X
Broken limbs, 314; concussion •
of the brain. 18; fractured |
skulls, 13; paralysis, 4; sprains, ♦
37; spiked, 26; fractures, 17; 4
dislocations, 7; torn ligaments, 2
f 10. |
J Players hurt in the major J
♦ leagues number 116, American #
+ league 69, National league 61, j
♦ Federal league 56 and college
J teams 8. J
11, ,f f ,|, ,|..|.+4..fr+
ring toss tennis is new
New System of Sport Hailed With De-
light and Finds Man^ Followers
in New York Suburbs.
Ring toss tennis is the latest varia-
tion of the favorite game of the courts
and nets to which racquet wielders
have turned their attention. The lawn
tennis players of the Bronxville Ath-
letic association, New York, have tried
out the new game on the courts at
Bronxville and Hugh Robertson, A.
Dudley Britton, Morris S. Clark. James
Robertson and David R. Todd have es-
tablished a set of rules which Beem to
fit the new game to perfection.
The Inspiration for the game came
to one of the players who recently re-
turned from Europe, having whiled
away his time on deck during the voy-
age with the usual ring toss. He got
a number of the six-inch rope rings
and started to play the game on the
regulation 'awn tennis court by scaling
them back and forth over the net. This
made the flight of the ring somewhat
too fast and the court was too large,
so the net was hung on Badminton
poles to a height of five feet six inches.
A new court was marked out 21 feet in
width and 48 feet in length, the net
crossing it at its center. For pur-
poses of serving, the middle of the net
was marked by a white band.
The server stands at the base line,
and because of the height of the net
tosses the ring Into the air so that it
fallf with a slow motion which makes
It possible for the receiving player to
catch it In his hand. Only one service
Is allowed. With the ring once in play,
the players—and it has been found
that doubles work much better than
singles—may not hold the rijig, but
must toss it back over the net with
the same arm motion as they receive
It. It is not permissible to raise the
hand or arm above the shoulder.
Decoration Particularly Effective With
White Linen Teacloth — Guest-
Room Towels 80 Treated Make
Acceptable Gifts.
Not every woman Is skilled In em-
broidery, but anyone who knows how
to use a needle at all can do the cross-
etltch, and, be It Bald, this Is one of
the most popular ways of decorating
linens thfs winter. Neither is the
Work at all trying to the eyes, as are
some of the more intricate stitches,
writes Helen Howe In the Washington
Star.
One of the most beautifjl pieces of
needlework displayed at an exclusive
fancy shop i a white linen teacloth
bordered with a conventional rose de-
sign worked out In a deep rose pink.
t"he cloth Ih edged with wido cluny
face and the whole Is wonderfully ef-
fective. The cost of the lace would de-
pend upoo the quantity, of course, or
perhaps the width, as fancy distated.
CrofB-stltch Is peculiarly adapted for
towel decoration 011 account of Its sim-
plicity. While we see some adorned
In punch work and satin stitch, it does
seem a waste of time to put so much
work on a towel. I think, too, even
jross-stltch can be overdone on towel
ends. The usual way Is to take a band
of embroidery across the entire end,
while, if the design is cut up. say, into
little figures or animals, using five,
perhaps the result will be better and
the labor less. Or a large Initial in
the cross-work, surrounded by a sim-
ple vine, will be equally effective and
also quickly done.
The towels come ready stamped for
working, and as fast-color cotton Is
Pleasure of the Dance Enhanced by
the Wearing of Dainty Frock
Like Thla.
Of orchid taffetas, this dainty dance
frock embodies new styles. The skirt,
although somewhat retaining the nar-
row silhouette, 1b considerably wider
than has been the wgue, and Is made
up of curiously pointed tunics which
are trimmed at Intervals with pink
rosebuds. The bodice Is exceedingly
I Took Cold
It Settled In
My Kidneys.
White Linen Teacloth.
UBed for working, the cost is very
little. As gifts these decorated guest-
room towels are sure to be liked. Bath
towels also come stamped for working,
but, to my thinking, a single initial
worked in cross-stitch should be quite
sufficient for this kind of towel. To
add more is only a waste of time.
The girl who is sending her photo-
graph as . a birthday or holiday gift
should inclose it in a frame of her own
handiwork. She will find linens for
covering the frames come ready
stamped for cross-stitch and in a va-
riety of colors. A soft old rose worked
In white threads makeB an artistic
setting for the black-and-white card,
but it is always a wise plan to find
out, If possible, the color scheme of
the room the picture will be placed In
and choose the frame that will be in
harmony there. Colors too light in
tone for the frame are not a success.
Lace for Edges.
The lower edges of nightgowns are
frequently finished with a full band of
lace edging. Sometimes there are
tucked hems, and sometimes there is
a ruffle of the white muslin with lace.
Suit and Blouse Worn.
In spite of the rivalry of the one-
piece frock and the topcoat, the suit
and blouse are still important items
of clothing.
simple, the orchid taffetas being veiled
with pink tulle and the decolletage
outlined with rosebuds. A girdle and
drapery are of pink tulle.
corsets show big change
Seem to Indicate a Return to the Old-
Fashioned Waist Line Popular
Seasons Ago.
The corset of the present year does
its best to re-establish the claims of
the old-fashioned wai3t line, low-bust-
ed and long-hipped.
Although the corset of the present
may be called low-busted, there is a
noticeable lengthening of the top por-
tions of this garment, so much so that
a few advanced models permit us to
dispense altogether with the bras-
siere.
Are we returning to the genteel,
"hour-glass," little vaist of our moth-
ers' day? This question Is answered
by all of these new models which
show an inward curve at the waist
line ominous to those who have al-
lowed their waiBts to ramble afar dur-
ing the last years of emancipation.
To Clean Serge.
White serge or flannel Buits may be
kept in very good condition if they are
cleaned at home every time they be-
gin to grow a little dingy. Ground
rice (rice flour) is one of the most
satisfactory cleaning mediums. Rub
the rice into the garments as well as
you can, and do not brush or shake
it for a day or two. Then take it in
the open air, put it on a hanger, fasten
it on a clothesline or other conven-
ient place and brush it thoroughly. It
Is well to protect the hair with a cap,
for even in the open air some of the
powder will find Its way into the hair.
Comforts to Match Hanglnga.
The latest Idea in bedroom furnish-
ings is to have the comforters match
the window hangings. It is a rather
expensive desire, if the comforters
must be made to order. If you your-
self make the comforters and the cur-
tains, you can carry out the idea with-
out extravagance.
belt Some of the evening coats are
made with a flaring cape section.
hamster fur the latest
Makes Up Into Most Attractive Gar-
ments That Are Bound to
Be Popular.
Have you 6een the new fur ham-
ster? It is decidedly effective and It
Is Inexpensive—two points that are
favorable to its success. Hamster
is an odd name. For some reason it
does not suggest fur. But doubtless 1 lored suits are made of embroidered
In a few months It will be as usual as ; leather. Very small beads and fine
fitch or kolinsky or chinchilla. The silks are used for the embroideries,
hamster is really a rodent from Rus- and {he colors chosen are so well har-
ala and Germany, a big rat eight or j nionized that even on close inspection
novel idea for buttons
Embroidered Leather Used With Pret-
ty Effect—Those of Ivory In
Great Demand.
Some of the new buttons for tai-
Opposltion From Amateurs.
Metropolitan district amateurs are
strenuously opposing a proposed
amendment to the A. A U. constitu-
tion whereby collegians will be al-
lowed to compete for any athletic
club In their district. The opposers
point out that should the entire Yale
track team be eligible to compete for
the wlpged foot, for instance, then
would be no competition but a walk-
over.
Bromley Signs Contract
T*fty Bromley, the young Oakland
pitcher who twirled a one-hit gaaa
against Portland recently, was Imme-
diately signed up to a two-year con-
tract, so good did ha look to Manager
Christian.
ten Inches long, plus un Inch-long tall.
It is a pretty little animal and it is
a pest, as It destroys grain crops, and
for thai reason it is a temptation to
the trappers.
The fur is brown, white, gray, with
a few patches of red and a blue tinge
to some of the gray.
As the skins are small, and each is
multicolored, the fur when It is made
up is brown, black and white, with
red and bluish patches. It is made
up in various wajs, sometimes so that
the white part forms a diagonal de-
it Is difficult to say how the button
has been made.
The leather, which was In reality
soft glove kid, was almost entirely
covered with embroidery. Here and
there little corners of plain leather
gave strength to the design and the
silks were In several shades of dark
brown and purples. The tiny beads
were Iridescent, and were so small
that they made a flat surface with the
silk embroideries. These buttons
were large and they decorated a coat
of the Louis XV order, which was fin
sign, sometimes with the furs spliced j ished off with a square sailor, made of
so that the brown and white meet
"on the bias"—in a way to suggest
quartered oak—and sometimes with
tM furs just ranged neatly side by
aide.
Hamster Is made up into decidedly
fltriktng coats for afternoon and eve-
ning wear. It Is often trimmed with
some black fur. One lovely coat Is
made with a long waisted section and
a short flaring skirt. There is a
black collar of seal and big seal but-
tons. Another coat shows a fringe of
monkey fur below the loose, wide
dark mink. The whole suit was su
premely elegant and yet simple In
detail.
For white Berge and cloth suits
Ivory buttons are in great demand.
Some of these are carved and inset
with silTer; others are quite plain.
Ivory buttons are rimmed in rose dia-
monds. but these are not suitable for
tailored suits. They would look well
If Introduced on an elaborate visiting
costume which consisted of a black
chiffon velvet skirt and a white char-
manse Louie XV coat
I Used
Peruna.
Am all
Right
Now,
I owe my
Health to
Peruna.
Mrs. Anna Llnder, Ft. F. D. 6, Das-
sel. Meeker Co., Minn., writes: "For
two years I suffered with that ter-
rible disease, chronic catarrh.
"Fortunately. I snw your- adver-
tisement In my paper. I got your
advice, and 1 took Peruna. Now I
am well and the mother of two
children. I owe it all to Peruna.
"I would not be without that great
tonic for twice lti cost, tor I am well
and strong now. I cannot speak in
too high terms of its value as a
medicine."
TAKE-
Tuffs Pills
The drat done often astonishes the Invalid,
giving elasticity ol mind, buoyancy of body,
GOOD DIGESTION,
regular bowel* and aolld flesb. Price, 25 da.
The Size.
Mother asked Davie one morning to
fetch a small cabbage from the grocer.
"What would you call a small cab-
bage?" Davie asked.
"Oh, about the size of Jackie's
head," answered the mother, referring
to the younger brother. A few seconds
later a voice camo from the doorway:
"Mamma, I'm taking Jackie with me
to measure by."
A Surprise.
Old Maid (who during a short trip
had to put her pug dog in board at a
neighbor's family)—Well, . children
have you always been kind to my
pet?
Chorus—Yes!
Little Carl (blurting out)—And he
can swim, now, too!—Fliegende Blaet-
ter.
"Pape's Diapepsin" cures sick,
sour stomachs in five minutes
—Time It!
"Really does" put bad stomachs in
order—"really does" overcome Indiges-
tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and
sourness in five minutes—that—just
that—makes Pape's Diapepsin the lar-
gest selling stoiuach regulator in the
world. If what you eat ferments into
stubborn lumps, you belch gas and
eructate sour, undigested food and
acid; head is dizzy.and aches; breath
foul; tongue coated; your insides filled
with bile and indigestible waste, re-
member the moment "Pape's Diapep-
sin" comes in contact with the stomach
all such distress vanishes. It's truly
astonishing—almost marvelous, and
the joy is its harmlessness.
A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia-
pepsin will give you a hundred dollars'
worth of satisfaction.
It's worth its weight in gold to men
and women who can't get their stom-
achs regulated. It belongs In your
home—should always be kept handy
in case of sick, sour, upset stomach
during the day or at night. It's the
quickest, surest and most harmless
stomach doctor in the world.—Adv.
Life is made up of surprises. Have
you ever noticed that the things that
don't seem possible happen so often?
For frostbites use Hanford's Bal-
01m. Adv.
Women scorn muddy crossings if
their hosiery will pass inspection.
The pneumonia germ rushes in
where the allies fear to tread.
Backache Warns You
Backache Is one of Nature's warnings
of kidney weakness. Kidney disease kills
thousands every year.
Don't neglect a bad back. If your back
is iarae—if it hurts to stoop or lift—if
there is irregularity of the accretions—
suspect your Kidneys. If you sutler head-
aches. dizziness and are tired, nervous and
worn-out, you have further proof.
Use Doan's Kidney Pills, a fine medicine
for bad backs and w.-ut* kidneys.
An Oklahoma Case
Mr*, la. L. Fresh -
our. tiristow, Oklau,
say 1: "I was sud-
denly seized with a
pain In the small of
my back and could
hardly stoop or get
up after sitting:. I
•began to suffer from
a heavy ache
through the small of
my back and my
kidneys didn't act
right. Seeing Doan's
Kidney Pills adver-
tised I used some
an>l three boxes en-
tirely rid me of the
ailments. Others of family have also
taken Doan's Kidney Pills with fins re-
sults."
Ga« IWi at Aar km. (Oa > Bat
DOAN'S VS1V
fOSTOMUURN CO, BUFFALO. H. T.
Pi. Iurt
W. N. U, Oklahoma City, No. 2-ltlfc,
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The Inola Register. (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 14, 1915, newspaper, January 14, 1915; Inola, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc179742/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.