The Tishomingo Leader and The Mannsville Herald (Tishomingo, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1914 Page: 5 of 6
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THE TISHOMINGO LEADER
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Spring Dress of
SINCE fashions for spring place much
emphasis on short eaay-flttlng
Jackets and on draped and overaktrt
effects flounces rucblngs end ell sorts
of furbelows In trimming the way of
the home dressmaker Is made easy
The bugbear ot fitting the form Is
done sway with Clothes are loosely
adjusted end may be successfully cut
from patterns end made at home
There Is an unlimited variety In
drapery to choose from add fashion-
able fabrics keep pace with designs in
the matter of variety
First among the materials for spring
taffeta lends Itself to the Bouncings
rucblngs and ruffles and draperiea that
ere features of new skirts end es-
pecially well to the short Jackets end
full wraps that will do service for out-
door wear during the coming summer
The taffeta gown shown here Is
made ot plain king’s blue taffeta with
overskirt of crossbar taffeta in blue
and white The fullness In the over-
skirt Is laid In Inverted box plaits to
a depth of six inches below the waist
The lower part of the overskirt Is
turned under and sewed to the under-
skirt The stiffness of the silk makes
It stand away from the figure In the
“minaret’ style which survives from
the passing season
The small Jacket Is cut with kimono
sleeves and laid In two deep plaits over
the shoulder It is shorter In the
back than In front and flares away
from the waist line There Is a turn-
over collar and cuffs with points
tnrned back to the sleeves
The set-on belt suggeets a short
basque It Is extended beyond the
waist or coat to the left side where
it fastens under the bust line with
hook and eyes
The underskirt fastens at the left
side with s little drapery arranged by
me&na of plaits let In to an overlap
AMONG the revivals of old and curi-
ous fashions that have made a de-
cided success the old-fashioned flat
ringlet la very much In evidence as
a striking example
The two coiffures pictured here
Illustrate the return to the high coif-
fure In simple arrangements and con-
servative style In the first picture
the hair is waved looeely rolled Into
a French tvrist at the back and fin-
ished with a puff or top of the head
In the second picture there Is aa
older style revived with the hair
waved In the largest and loosest of
undulation It Is pompadoured at
the front and combed up to the top of
(ho bead at the back The ends are
Taffeta for Ten Dollars
ping seam It Is a little leu than two
yards wide
A similar arrangement of the over-
drapery shows the overskirt hemmed
at the lower edge and falling free
Another pretty arrangement la made
by trimming the lower edge In points
and binding them with narrow blaa
strips of the silk The overdrapery Is
more graceful when It slopee dow
ward toward the back The break be-
tween the upper and lower skirt
also softened In many esses
ruffle about eight Inches wide set on
to the underskirt Just under the edge
of the overskirt
Tard-wlde taffeta cuta to better ad-
vantage and kangs easily for dresses
of this description In this width It is
easy to calculate the amount of goods
required For the underskirt one must
have twice Its length plus seven
Inches The seven-inch allowance
provides for a three-inch hem with a
half-inch turned In at the top The
average figure will require two yards
and a half at the' most The same
amount must be allowed for the bodice
making five yards o I the plain ma-
terial Of the crossbar a little leu than
three yards will make the overdress
the belt collar and cuffs Nothing
further Is required except the silk
thread (or stitching s yard of crino-
line for supporting the cuffs belt and
collar and the books and eyes These
findings and a paper pattern will cost
not over SO cents
Allowing a price of one dollar a
yard for the taffeta eight yards will
cost eight dollars The silk and find
Inga therefore amount to less than ten
dollar The materials for the white
voile blouse worn under the Jacket
will about use up an allowance of ten
dollars
5 Hi
arranged In a coll with an upstanding
puff at the center Small shell hair-
pins are used for coiffures of this
kind
Except for shell pins medium and
small In site hair ornaments Just
now are conspicuous by their absence
Tbe appearance of colored wigs for
fancy dress (ot green purple pink
and other Impossible colors of hair)
brought out shell combs set with col-
ored stones In colon to match Thee
proved so attractive that they are
being worn while the fancy colored
hair is simply a freak that serves aa
an advertising feature in the display
of present-day fash ion a
JULIA BOTTOMLEY
I lfs a Treat
to eat your meali when you
know there ii no danger of
BLOATING
HEARTBURN
BELCHING
HEADACHE
NAUSEA OR
INDIGESTION
and thii privilege is your
if you will only aniat the di
geitive organs by the use of
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
It helps Nature correct all
Stomach Liver & Dowel ills
BUSINESS ABOVE ALL THINGS
Farmer Willing to Let Wife Bob Her
Fill If He Cot Hie Price
for the “Coe"
The farmers met In the msrket
town and there was s calculating look
In the eyes of both as they faced each
other “About that there coo I was
talking to you of the other day“ be-
gan Farmer Dobbins “will you take
twelve pounds for her George T“ "No
no 01 couldn't part with 'er for that
—not by a long chalk” “But t'other
day you told me you might let 'er go
for that" "Something's 'appened to
the coo since then” “Mercy on us
George w bat's tbe matter? Coo dead?”
“Woraer n that" said George “You
see my old missus can't abear to part
with t’ old coo it 'ud break 'er 'eart
Sbe'd sob 'enelf into a fit over It"
“Well well I suppose that ends tbe
business?" “Well I'm not so sure o'
that Farmer Hayseed Look 'ere
Make it twelve pun' ten and let tbe
mUsue sob”— London Tlt-Blts
SHE OFTEN
PRATED TO DIE
But Friend Comet to Rescue Wilt Some
Sound Advice wkidi wu Followed
with Gratifying Results
Nettleton Ark— “My troubles date
back five years” says Mrs Mary
Bentley of this town “I was first
taken with awful pains in my right
side headache and backache The
pain from my side seemed to move
down my right limb and settled In
the right knee Then it would move
back and once a month 1 would al-
most die with pain
I was told I had tumor and would
have to undergo an operation at once
It Just seemed I could not submit to
It I often prayed to die It seemed
that nothing would give me tbe de-
sired relief until finally I was advised
by a friend to try Cardul and It Is
undoubtedly curing me I have only
used three and a half bottles and It
Is s pleasure to tell of the beneficial
results
I shall ever spread the good tidings
of what Cardul has done for me and
will do for other suffering ladles If
they will only try It"
You can depend on Cardul because
Cardul Is a gentle harmless vegetable
tonic that can do you nothing but
good
Prepared from herbal ingredients
Cardul has a specific effect on tbe wom-
anly constitution and puts strength
where it Is most needed
Try Cardul— Adv
In Control
'That man inslsta on attending his
own furnace"
“Yes He used to live In an apart-
ment and he took a tip from the Janl
tor It's the only sure way to be boss
of tbe establishment”
Not Worth Loafing
Hemmandbaw — I thought Bean
brough was going on & month's vaca
tlon
Shlmmerpate — He was but the boas
only wanted to give him two weeks
and he refused to take half a loaf
Golden Rule In Business
You get your money's worth every
time Hanford's Balsam Is guaran-
teed to cure ailments and Injuries that
can be reached by external application
or your money will be' refunded by the
dealer Getting a bottle now Is like
taking out Insurance Adv
Extreme of Wisdom
Utmost wisdom la not In self-denial
but In learning to find extreme pleas-
ure In very little things — Ruskln
Red Cross Ball Blue makes the laundress
happy makes clothes whiter than snow
All good grocers Adv
Increase your Insurance to tbellmlt
before you begin fighting the devil
with fire
Beoauee ot those
SERVICES BEYOND ALL PRICE
Country Owes Much Is Msn Whs
Safeguarded th Vast Commerce
Of tho Nation
A lightship must keep always In
ono particular placo Anchored to
tho bottom of tho sea sbo has her
steam always up but tho never tails
unless relieved by another ship so
that abo may put Into port for repair
And such a boat la used because a
warning must bo given at a placo
where It It Impossible to build a light-
house and where oven the clamor of
a gigantic bell buoy la not sufficient
to warn tho navigator No matter
bow fiercely th storm beats or bow
desperate may be the boat's plight
she must stay at her moorings Tbe
only movement sh Is allowed to
make under th regulations Is to sink
when at last ah can withstand th
gale no longer It would bring them
deserved recognition If the govern
nfent ever published a list of those
who have lost their lives In the line
of such perilous duty For about
18000000 a year these men and their
craft save from disaster tbe billions
of dollars' worth of shipping and com-
merce that come to American shores
—The Topular Magazine
Plea for th Hen
I should like to see the hen on a
plane at least with the turkey and
tbe goose
She Is their superior In every way
except that of alze and yet they have
long held tbe place of honor on the
Chrlstmaa and the Thanksgiving din-
ner table and they have had reams
and reams of poetry written' about
them
But the hen that most Important
of all feathered creatures who writes
poetry about her? Who even take
the trouble to know anything about
her early history In America? Who
owned the flrat hen when and where
did she land upon our shores? ‘
Why not make amends for our long
years of neglect by making her the
renter of the feast on the Fourth of
July? Hereafter let It be our Thanks-
giving turkey our Christmas goose
and our Fourth of July hen — Atlantic
Animal Idiosyncradet
Many are tbe idiosyncracles of ant
mala Some borsea are afraid of
dog some of a bit of paper some
of a bear some of a car I have
known two mules to shy at a big yel-
low cucumber on a fence and a cow
we formerly owned could not endure
to see any man's hat removed
The oldest trick recorded of a rid-
ing animal Is that of Balaam's ass
who tried t6 crush its rider's foot
against the wall Biting pawing and
bolting are also described in the Scrip-
tures A balky team figures In Esop
and Chauaer That the horses of
the Saracens used to shy is shown by
the traditional Inquiry “If they
thought King Richard was In that
bush?” This same balking or Jib-
bing in all Its varieties Is one of tbe
most aggravating of vice — From “A
Farmer's Note Book" by C E Phelps
Research
Mary aged five was watching her
mother dust the Encyclopaedia Britan-
nlca — where it stood a long phalanx of
volumes on the bottom shelf of the
bookcase
‘What” she asked “Is an encyclo-
paedia?" 'An encyclopaedia” replied the
mother "Is a lot of books that tell you
about everything you want to know”
The next day Mary whose recent
studies at Sunday school had dealt
with the Creation was discovered
seated upon the floor turning over the
leaves of that volume of the encyclo-
paedia which bearp the superscription
Ed w— Eva
"What are you doing?" asked the
grown-up Intruder
"I'm looking for a picture of God
making the world" replied Mary
Disfigurements
Don C Seitz of New York was
praising the newspaper advertisement
“But billboards” he said “bring
small returns and besides they dis-
figure the landscape
“In a recent play the stage manager
staged a meadow with chewing-gum
and cold-cure and cigarette ads on
every rock and tree and fence
" ‘Hold hold' said the star 'Ads
In our meadow scene! That's carry-
ing commercialism a bit too far’
“ ‘Commercialism nothing’ said the
stage manager ‘I'm a realist I am
and I want that meadow to look like
a genuine one’ “
A Justifiable Interest
“The women have no right to try
and Interfere with what congress does
with Its committees”
"But my dear you Insist that wom-
en's proper place Is to attend to the
affairs of the house"
Something Just as Good
Kind Lady — Are all of your relatives
dead?
Puttering Perry — No but some of
them are in West Virginia
8aved
Millie — So you loved and lost
you?
Willie — Oh no Indeed! She re-
turned all my presents! — Town Talk
ugly grizzly gray hair Use “LA
' V 1 !
yJ s L j £
LCOHOL-3 PtR CENT
rgrteUc Preparation for A-
aimiUitmg If Food and Regula-
ting (hr 5 to mat hi and Dowsls of
nTaiiiaur
Promotes DigtitionOwcrful-
nrsj and Rest Contains nnthtr
OptumMorjthtne nor Mineral
Not Nawc otic
Apr OrsixUiATXJM
Av W
Mg J—mrn
S 4k
AmS—4
MUmAwgrnhSgdm
fWW Smyrna
Wtmkrf tig £rr
i-
ft
!:?
iji
ir
'll
ii
A perfect Remedy for Constipa-
tion Sour StomachDiarrhoes
Worms Convulsions feverish-
ness and LOSS Or SLEEP
Tee Simile Signature of
aZij?zzzz
The Ceutalu Company
NEW YORK
ft
Guaranteed under the Foods
Exact Copy of Wrapper
SPOHN MEDICAL CO
Aged Should Eat Sparingly
A British scientist lays down A
regimen of hygiene for tbe treatment
of the aged It is pointed out that the
aged require less food of ail kinds
because they utilize less Overfeed-
ing or rather a normal adult's ration
overtaxes their digestive powers and
floods the blood with effete products
which the kidneys and other emunc-
tories cannot handle Drinking water
should be encouraged and baths
which should he taken regularly
should he neither hot nor cold of
abort duration and preferably In tbe
evening when they conduce to a good
night s sleep Fresh sir and exercise
are indispensable Clothing should
be light warm loose and of woolen
material The feet should be well pro-
tected PAINFUL ECZEMA ON HANDS
Bienville La — "I was troubled with
eciema in my hands for several years
Tbe skin would break and look like
It had been cut with a knife and my
hands were so sore I could hardly
bear to put them In water and could
hardly use them When 1 used them
the blood would run out They would
heal a little and then they would get
worse than ever again They were
very palnfuL Tho eczema got to
breaking out on my arms In pimples
which Itched and burned very badly
"I used different remedies also used
all kinds of facial creams and
on my hands snd arms and I did not
get any relief until I used Cuticura
Soap and Ointment I cured my
bands and eczema with Cutlcnra Soap
and Ointment" (Signed) Miss Fannie
Mostlller Oct 5 1912
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world Sample of each
tree with 32-p Skin Book Address post-
card "Cuticura Dept L Boston”— Adv
All Do It
“I understand he’s writing a play”
“Oh yes Everybody has to go
through that period of life” — Detroit
Free Press
To stop bleeding use Hanford’s Bab
sam Adv
Why sneer at the
overshoots the mark?
high aim that
n
LINES IN THE FACE
Make Women Look Old
and they show the effect of unnatural sufferings— of headaches back
aches dixrine hot flashes peine in lower limhe pains la groins
benngdowa sensations
These symptom indicate that Nature needs help Overwork wrong dr
leg lack of exercise and other causes hare been too much for nature and
outside aid must be called upon to restore health and strengtiL
Dr Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
Tbe Vegetable Remedy for Woman’s 111 that relieve nerrooe exhaustion
and irritability and removes other distressing symptoms due to disturbed condi-
tion of tbe delicate feminine organism
Tor over forty year It ha been used with more than satisfaction by
th young middle-aged and the elderly— -by wives mother and daughters You
will find it of great benefit Sold by Medicine Dealer in liquid or tZilet form or
Bond Dr R V Pserce Buffalo N Y50 one-ccnt stamps for trial box by mail
DI FTEBCTS P1KAS1NT PELLETS Relieve ceetttpe
Una regvlate tbe liver aa bowels Easy to take as candy
TT
CREOLE" HAIR DRESSING PRICE
Tor Infants snd Children
Tho Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears tho
Signature
of
TM IMFMI1 mW BWs
WORMS
"Wormj” that’ what’s th matter of ’em Stomach and la
testlnal worms Hearljr aa bad at tfirtrsiper Coa foa too marh
to feed ’em Look bad-ar bad Hoot pbjie 'em to death
Spohn’t Curs will nmors tbs worms Improve lbs appetite and
too m up all round aat don't “physic ” Acta on r lands asd Mood
Full directions with each buttls and sold br all druggists
Chemists
Cos ben lad U 1 A
Taking His Cue
A small street urchin from the city
who was spending some time In
fresh-air camp was the source of con-
siderable entertainment to members
of the family at a farm where be fre-
quently called for milk and apples
“Wbaddye- think about the' young-
ster anyhow?” the farmer asked his
wife one evening
“He’s a nice little fellow" the wife
replied “but I can't Just make him
ouL"
"How make him out?”
"Every time grampaw sneezes
TschV that boy alus laughs and yells
"Ka Kibble’ "—Judge
' s— -
But They Both Get It
Some people Jump at conclusions
others are more leisurely in making
their mistakes — The Pelican
Why Scratch?
"Hunt’s Cure" U guar-
anteed to stop and
permanently cure that
terrible itching It is
compounded for that
purpose snd your money
will be promptly refunded
WITHOUT QUESTION
If Hunt's Cure fails to cur
'!1 Itch Eczema Tetter Ring
U Worm or any other Skin
Disease JOc at your druggist's or by mail
direct if he hasn't h Manufactured only by
A B RICHARDS MEDICINE CO Sherman Teus
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED
by CittBf'i Blwttof Pills Low-
cried fresh rtiiADie piaftrrtd br
HHitn xron twBUM ttuy
rwtMt wbwe fear vsmIm foil
nrits for hookW nd trftlnonlsie
fkH BlttkiH Pills SI M
BlMkltf Pll 4 00
Vs any injortor bat Cvtur't bait
The fupprlortty of Cuur products to due to over it
yean of spccUirin in yaoetooo uf mtv ly
I oust Cwttsr’i If unui'tAlnsi Is order dtrvct
Tho Ctfttar Lstortlinr Bortoio ChU or Cfcicof 111
PERFECT HEALTH
Tott's PIN keep the lyiten In perfect order
The regulate the bowel and produce
A VIGOROUS BODY
Remedy tar sick headache coaitipattoa
MAKES SORE
EYES WELL
W N U Oklahoma City No 18-1914
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The Tishomingo Leader and The Mannsville Herald (Tishomingo, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, May 1, 1914, newspaper, May 1, 1914; Tishomingo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1918110/m1/5/: accessed March 12, 2026), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.