Mill Creek News (Mill Creek, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1914 Page: 7 of 8
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What the Bride Went Away In
)
A GEM of a dress is shown here
st in this copy of a French model
by one of the greatest of those de-
signers who have vindicated the art
and precedence of Paris This three-
piece dress made by Kurzman for
Miss Wilson makes almost no de-
parture from the original design
which inspired IL
Corbeau or raven's bill blue which
Is so dark as to be near black and
so clear that it is a fascinating shade
Is the color It seems to be suited
to the materials used which were
gabardine and charmeuse
The bodice is made of dark blue
chiffon over white Over the shoul-
ders are braided straps of gabardine
and the belt is made of gabardine
covered with 12 rows of narrow silk
braid The bodice opens over vestee
and collar of white organdy edged
with a rose and green-flowered rib-
bon border fastened in front by three
ribbon buttons The sleeves are long
and made over white chiffon ending
in a wide cuff of 16rows of narrow
black braid
The short skirt is made of gabar-
dine and has three circular flounces
starting at the sides These are fast-1
ened at the back with a strap of
gabardine attached to which are four
small black silk tassels The flounces
are attached to corbeau charmeuse
and about one inch of this shows be-
tween them The flounces and the
bottom of the skirt are edged with
black silk braid
The coat is a combination of the
gabardine and charmeuse The front
is of the charmeuse which extends
over the shoulders and upper part of
the back It is gathered in at the
collar
Carrying out the idea of combining
the two materials the three-quarter
sleeves of gabardine are topped with
charmeuse The edges are bound with
at silk braid There is a soft girdle
of gabardine ending in front with an
Oval chartneuse buckle
This quiet-looking but really elab-
orate costume is of that fashionable
type which has replaced the more se-
verely tailor-made It is a gown that
presupposes many things in the way
of luxurious traveling and may be
taken as a model of an afternoon or
visiting gown of cloth which will an-
swer many requirements
Casque and French Twist Coiffures
Ti HERE is such an unsettled state of
affairs in the matter of styles in
coiffures that no particular manner of
dressing the hair may be said to be
THE fashion But one sees with
greater frequency than any others
two styles One is "the casque" and
one is the "French twist" In the
latter the hair is usually placed high
on the head
In the group of coiffures pictured
here two modifications of the casque
coiffure and one of the French twist
are faithfully portrayed It is notice-
able that the side parting Is adopted
in all of them and that two of the
three are waved and the third is ab-
solutely plain
When the hair is fairly abundant
the unsaved coiffure Is liked for those
who are given to dancing the modern
and somewhat frolicsome dances It
Is etaler to keep the coiffure in or-
der it seems with the hair plain and
unsaved than with the adoption of a
more elaborate style To keep it
fluffy without too frequent washing
it may be treated to a bath of orris
powder This la a sort of dry-cleaning
process for the hair which leaves
It easy to manage It is not a thorough-going
cleansing process lilts a wa-
ter shampoo but may be used to mitke
the shampoo necessary at longer in-
tervals The powder Is rubbed into
the hair and scalp and then shaken
and afterward brushed out until no
trace of it is left
In passing It is to be noticed that
the tad for dancing has brought in
sa entirely sow oiffnrs which above
- - w
-
I
the hair brought back from the for
head and coiled at the back with the
coils either of twisted or braided hair
A sparse fringe about the face is curled
in ringleta and these are piuned to
the hair back of them There is no
small pompadour or other soft ar-
rangement about the face In this
style It leaves the forehead except
tor the small ringlets quite bare
To do the hair in the French twist
Is simple enough All the hair is
combed back to the crown of the
head and twisted Into a lengthwise
roll extending from the nape of the
neck to the top of the bead This
lengthwise coil Is pinned down with-
out pulling the hair tightly back so
as to leave it soft about the face The
ends are arranged on top of the bead
In puffs or coils or if the hair is
short they may be curled and pinned
down in a mass of pretty curls
In the casque coiffure the hair
either waved or straight and parted
or not parted is arranged like a cap
over the bead with the ends turned
under and pinned In so that they are
lost sight of The style therefore is
difficult for anyone with long hair
When the hair Is parted at one
side for this coiffure the ends are
brought to the opposite side tucked
under and pinned in The usual En-
ish at the line where the pinning In
Is done Is a long shell comb or a
Spanish comb The Spanish comb
used with the French twist is quite
the latest and smartest Item In hair
dressing style
JULIA ROTTOMLIEV
6WWIAMàifilmii-a&a
a Interli
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ortore
THE NEWS MILL CREEK OKLA
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by fun Dame—
Massimo encourage
substitution
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THE COCA-COLA Co An n GA
Child Acts Surgeon's Role
Sarah Shaffer thirteen years old of
Los Angeles Cal developed into a
little heroine when her five-year old
sister fell on the sidewalk while at
play and shattered her elbow Dr
Fdward G Wiley chief police sur-
geon explained patiently over the tele-
phone how the splint should be put
on and Sarah made such a good job
of it as to win the admiration of all
who saw the tiny patient when she ar-
rived at the receiving hospital with
her little amateur nurse The chil-
dren's father is at the county hospital
and their mother went to visit him
Maybelke fell and broke her arm Sae
rah called up the receiving hospital
but owing to the distance was advised
to call one of the district doctors She
could raise none and again called the
receiving hospital Dr Wiley told
Sarah what to do to relieve the baby's
pain while the ambulance raced out
to the Shaffer home and Sarah obeyed
instructions to the letter
THE RIGHT SOAP FOR BABY'S
SKIN
In the care of baby's skin and hair
:Iuticura Soap is the mother's fa-
vorite Not only is It unrivaled In
purity and refreshing fragrance but
Its gentle emollient properties are
usually sufficient to allay minor irri-
tations remove redness roughness
and chafing soothe sensitive condi-
tions and promote skin and bait
health generally Assisted by Cut'
cura Ointment it is most valuable In
the treatment of eczemas rashes and
Itching burning infantile eruptions
Cuticura Soap wears to a wafer often
outlasting several cakes of ordinary
soap and making its use most eco-
nomical Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world Sample of each
freewith 32-p Skin Book Address post-
card "Cuticura Dept L Boston"—Adv
Lacking in Self-Assertion
Abner Appledry—Jay Green ain't
got no more pride and independence
about him than a rabbit!
Ashton Allred—Say he ain't?
Abner Appledry—Nah! Whenever
he takes a ride on the cars be never
stamps up and down the aisles nor
stands out on the back platform to
show everybody that he knows his
rights but just sits still In his seat
like he was in church!—Puck
Surprised
"That ball game was most interest-
ing" said the man from abroad
"What feature of the occasion im-
pressed you most?:'
The crowd I don't recall having
seen such a large assemblage of peo-
ple with nobody dancing the tango"
No Wonder
used to go to the theater just aa
a tired business man would"
"NSby did you give it up"
"I found that it was the plays that
were making me tired"
Torn own DitrarlIST
Try Monne Mye Remedy for Med Weak Watory
Kra and Grensated Myelitis So bcoarsins—
just Eye Osmium Write for Book of the No
by 'awl )'Tee Marine Nye iteammly Co Llsicainh
- well Kept
"I wonder how It is that Goodfellow
keeps his frientis so long?"
He doesnl wear them out"
If you wiAk beautiful clear white
clothes use Red Cross Ball Blue At all
good grocers Adv
No Maudie dear a fellow doesnl
have to Indulge in Iced drinks to get
a skate on
For galls use Ilanford's Balsam
Adv
Tbe horseman wants a check rein
but the baseball fan prefers a rain
check
How To Give Quinine To Childreu
FE PRILINE a ilia tradwenark mato fiv011 toss
improved tituninic It is a Issieines Strusk
SOS to take and does sot dooturb One stomach
Childres itak it and mover know it is Quinlan
Also osPert7 adapted to adults who carioca
tan ordinary Quinlan Does nos waserpato sow
cages srvoriesess nor ringing is iis Mead -try
M this sett Sopa sort seed Quanis trr any put-Semi-
Ask tor esusr original Retirees IMP
saw PLakil-114E As blows is botto is smarm
You never can tel) Many a bare-
faced lie is told by a man with whimkers
nr4 Illihtvz- 5
WRONG KIND OF GARDENING
Forn1 That Patient Had Been Indulg-
I Ing In Was Not What Doctor
Would Have Recommended
"Now comes the season when the
wife goes to the country and the hus-
band in the words of the immortal
song shouts lIooray! Hooray!'"
Thus Jerome S Me Wade in an
after-dinner speech at Duluth began
his response to a toast on "The La-
dies" "When the ladies are with us we
are safe" he resumed "but when they
go off to country or shore leaving us
in town alone then our troubles be-
gin 'A man one summer day called on
a doctor
''Doc' be said 'I'm all run down'
'You look it too' said the doctor
sympathetically 'I'm not going t43
prescribe drugs for a man in your
condition No sir what I'm going to
prescribe for you is gardening'
"The patient started and his un-
healthy pallor tvrned to a dull brick
red
"'But doe' be said (gardening is
the cause of all my trouble'
"Humph what kind of gardening?'
"'Roof' the man replied"
Minding the Doctor
"It isn't strange that Bob Hilliard
should have won the heart and hand
of a girl with three millions for Bob
despite his years is the handsomest
and most elegant creature going"
The speaker a dramatic critic of
Chicago smiled and continued:
"The last time Bob acted here I met
him one morning promenading And
he was superb—top hat stick black
morning coat spats fitting without a
wrinkle and one of those cigarette
tubes that bad Just come out a tube
of gold and amber a foot long or
possibly 18 inches
"As we chatted and as he smoked
his Egyptian cigarette through this
extraordinary tube I said to him:
"Why on earth Bob do you use
such a long cigarette tube as that?'
"'My doctor has ordered me' he re-
plied 'to keep away from tobacco"
Valuable Information
A happy couple were on their way
to Scotland They had to change
trains at Carlisle and an obliging por-
ter while struggling with the lug-
gage noticed that the young lady's
hair was dotted with rice Ile ap-
proached the young man and pulling
a folded paper fromm his pocket said:
"A present for you sir with the
company's compliments"
"Indeed" said the traveler "what is
it?"
"A railway map sir"
"Oh thank you but what are these
marks in blue pencil?"
"That's the beauty of it sir those
marks show Just where the tunnels are
and their length"—London Tit-Bits
Modern Business Man
"How was the game Plimsonr
asked Withers ly
"Don't ask me" growled Plimson
"Just as I was starting for thepark a
man came in and insisted on talking
business to me the whole afternoon"
'That's tough He took up your
time and you got nothing"
"Oh I made $1000 confound the
luck
Hanford Balsam of Myrrh is itself
an antiseptic and the use of any other
remedy before applying it la unneces-
sary Adv
Right and Left Hands
If our right hand is not to know
what our left does it must not be be-
cause it would be ashamed if it did—
Ruskin
For proud fesh use Ilanforors Bal-
sam of Myrrh Adv
Not Literary
Jail Visitor—You say that a love for
books brought you here my man?
Prisoner—Tea mum pocket hooka
Only One "BROM() QUININE"
To tot tbo consist call tor tull same LAX A
TIVE PROMO VI:ISLES Look tot surname ot
11 W GROVE Cm a Cold in Otto Dior Serpa
ssib sad Wieder-So sod mocks of sold Sc
Swallowing his pride never yet tat
teed a inan hunger
ppA
If r
t 0)011eNC Ir
Sooeue et Moo ugty '11E07 Ivey halm
Z
'
--S -C--
WANTED TO KNOW THE FIGURE
Fortune Hunter's Mother Was Not
Dealing In Uncertainties If
She Could Help It
Miss Jeannette Gilder the brilliant
critic toyed with a pink and gold
mustache cup at the mustache cup
tea concluding the Bad Taste exhibi-
tion In New York
"The mustache cup" said Miss
Gilder "holds its own even better
than the hand-painted cuspidor But
after all there is spiritual as well as
material bad taste and a spiritual
bad taste exhibition Is now in order
"In the forefront of it I'd put the
fortune bunter Not all our fortune
hunters come from across the water
I beard of one the other day who be-
longs to the oldest family in Amer-
ica "But his family is very poor and
so he and his mother have decided
that he must marry for money They
were discussing recently the pair of
them a western girl
"'Her fortune is large but vague'
said the mother 'Besides she is
gauche Her feet are broad and fiat
She has a gold front tooth Her
French is execrable She—'
"'Oh I could make something out
of her' the young fortune hunter as-
serted confidently
"'Yes but bow much—that's the
question' said his mother"
t
RECOGNIZED WORK OF ARTIST
Negro Quick to Hand Out What
Might Be Called Important Piece
of Misinformation
-
Charles R Knight the artist whose
reproductions of dinosaurs and crea-
tures of long ago are known the world
over prefers however to be known
as a painter and sculptor of modern
animals He has worked from the liv-
ing model as much as possible and
this has taken him to the zoos in
many cities He was telling his ex-
periences at the zoo in Washington
"One afternoon an important look-
ing negro came along with his best
girl" he said They stopped for a
minute and looked at the sketch I
was making of a deer
" 'Irer know what he am doin' don't
yer?" asked the negro of his com-
panion " 'Mebbe' answered the woman
'Does yohr
''Shoh He's making a landscape
oh one er dem habitats Dere's mob
habitats in dis zoo than anywhere
else in der United States'"
Too Late
On an Atlantic City pier gazing
sadly out over the blue water a vet-
eran of the Civil war talked about
the late General Sickles
"A' good man" be said "a brave
man but a most theatrical one In
the black tragedy of his youth he was
kind to his wife but something
marred something vitiated his kind-
ness—I think it was theatricalism—
and the poor young woman died two
years after be took her back
"Once at an-army reunion I heard
Sickles rebuke a man who was run-
ning down wives and marriages
SIckles said with a queer smile a
significant smile perhaps:
'Ah Jim the trouble with the
average married man is that be
doesn't know what a jewel his wife is
till be comes to put her in a casket'"
Keep It in Your Stable
For external use on horses nothing
that we know of equals Hanford's Bal-
sam Many trainers use it as a leg
wash because it keeps the skin in fine
condition and should cure lameness
Adv
Lowest Bidder
"I have come to ask for the band
of your daughter" announced the
young man
"Have a chair" said her father
kindly presume you have made an
estimate of what it will cost to keep
my daughter in the style to which she
has been accustomed?"
I have sir"
"And your figures?"
"Ten thousand dollars a year"
"I'm sorry my boy" said the older
man "but I cannot afford to throw
away $2000 a year Another suitor
has flgured he cau do it for $8000"
For fresh cuts apply Hanford Bal-
sam Adv
It is better to be honest than rich
but there's no reason why a man
can't be both
-V
Us "LA CRILOLL" ttAIR DR WINS PRICE $100 re4all
ooA
MS WIWI'S
ADVICETOVIOLIBI
Take Lydia EPinkham'sltelp
etable Compound and be
Restored to Health
Kansas City Mo —" The doctors told
me I would never be a mother Every
r:i!::4--1ki mweoren tots° the pthaaitnt
Le
27)
fi-: - N: could not bear my
14 0 weight on one foot
t cir vls' I began taking Ly-
! 2 - dia E Pi nk ham'S
i: -le' V e ge fa b le Corn-
::!: :
iii:i:! -pound and had not
-
:i!!::1' 'aorilci finished the firstbot-
t(
--t
)tie when I felt
-- r! greatly relieved and
1T:474 --b I took it until it
111 - 's:111" -- 5'14:4 made me sound and
well and I now have two fine baby
girls I cannot praise Lydia E Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound too highly
for what it has done for me - I always
speak a word in favor of your medicine
to other women who suffer when I have
an opportunity" — Mrs H T Wpm
2225 Freemont Ave Kansas City Mo
IteadWhatAnotherWonsansayss
Cumming Ga—"I tell some suffer-
ing woman every day of Lydia E Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound and what it
has done for me I could not eat or
sleep had a bad stomach and was in
misery all the time I could not do my
housework or walk any distance without
suffering great pain I tried doctors'
medicines and different patent medi-
cines but failed to get relief My hus-
band brought home yourVegetable Com-
pound and in two weeks I could eat any-
thing could sleep like a healthy baby
and walk a long distance without feeling
tired I can highly recommend your
Vegetable Compound to women who
suffer as I did and you are at liberty to
use this letter"—Mrs CHARLIE BAG
LEY R 3 Cumming Ga
O A COOK
125 W eth etirt
Kansas City Mo
Canadian
Government Agent
AMagnilicent
pCropsn as
western cangelf!
WIT-
- AD parts of the Provinces of 4q1
21r-' '''': 1 hiettitebeSeekatchominsnd 7
07 Alberta have produced won "o
' derful yields of W beat Oats 1'
qe0) 4ihBedarlish yel:and Flaitt721WI:t1 graded
ism2ac: 1
ins may be emaidered fully as profit '
able an industry as grain raising Tbe
excellent grasses fun of nutrition are
the only food required either for beef
Of dairy Punmees In 1912 and again in
I1913 at Chicago Manitoba carried off 1
the Championship for beef steer Good
Fr schools markets convenient climate ex
cellent For the homesteader the man
vrho wishes to farm extensively Or the
1 j investor Canada offers the biggest op nortunity of any place on the o mines
Apply for descriptive literature anct
reduced railway rates to
Superintendent of
Immigration
Ottawa Canada or to I
Why Scratch?
AllTir "Htunt'sCuto re" ispguard-
permanently cure that
's terrible itching It la
I compounded for that
i1)4)1
iP4 purpose and your money
k' will be promptly rehmded
4 ildilATuHnt9sUT Cure QpEStTolcu001
Zt'' Itch Eczema Tetter Ring
d- Worm or any other Skin
Disease 50c at your druggisra or by mail
direct jibe hasn't it Manufactured onlyby
A a RICHARDS MEDICINE CO Shuman Texas
D1 AISY FLY KILLER ''" sarwl" "
traria sad kills all
- - - - Ike Neat elem stu
" :zt -n le nasaeatat enures:seat
vcr
vW0 wwr a ebenn L a t al I
w-"" II ad tat
' le :' metal esn'tenitteett
v 'e' lq evert wits net owl en
al-
k
s tapir aytkin
gt
Guaranteed ettertirea
All dodgers ere tent
expeurs paid tor !RAW
ILIIOLD SOILLILS lad &WWI) Ave- BP00111711 Il i
if you HAVE---moic:21p c
no acTeitio indkreottoo Hatoieleco Sick
iteodactso oll coo doers" se koalas Geste root
di fi
or I nd
Tuft's pills
Not whist yea need They tone op itbit weal
otenesch tool build up limo flagella ellortleb
W N U Oklahoma City No 26-1914
Don't Poison Balay
thought bedrru'clulwairrstrodbaett
OITI:AT TEARS AorGla
ir
I dlamnumeto makmelihs7
sleep and a FEW DROPS TOO MS? will produce the the produce
FROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING Many are thl children who
have been killed Or whcee health has been ruined for lite by trtregoric lauda-
num and moqthine each of which la a narcotic product of opium Druggists
are prohibited from wiling either of the narcotics named to children at ail or
to anybody without labelling them " poison" The definition of "narcotic"
is : "A medicine which relieves pais and prothwes sleep bid schsch is puiposs-
Otto dews produces stupor coma cootradsioste and death" The taste and
smell of medicines containing opium are disguised and sokt under the names
of " Drops" " COrdiall" Soothing Syrups" etc You should not permit any
medicine to be given to your children without 7ou or your physitnan know
of whet it is composed CASTORLA DoES INOT
CONTAIN NARCOTItN If it beam the signature
of Chas H Fletcher
Geaalae Casterla always bears the sIsmatare of ese'V)):11-4----n11e4e
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Mill Creek News (Mill Creek, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 25, 1914, newspaper, June 25, 1914; Mill Creek, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1918158/m1/7/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=90: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.