The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, June 26, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
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ORLANDO, OKLA. CLIPPER
\
Children’s clothes
should be fresh and
sweet—this means a
big wash—ne ver mind
-use RUB-NO-MORE
CARBO NAPTHA SOAP.
Washday then has no
terrors. No rubbing.
No worry— clothes
clean—germs killed-
mother happy.
RUB-NO-MORE
CARBO NAPTHA
SOAP used on your
linens and cloth
means a clean,
healthy, happy,
germlc-ss home—It
does not need hot
water.
Carbo Disinfects Naptha Cleans
RUB-NO-MORE RUB-NO-MORE
Carbo Naptha Soap Washing Powder
Five Cents—All Grocers
The Rub-No-More Co., Ft.Wayne, Ind.
The writer of vaudeville skits natur-
ally ought to feel skittish.
SLIPS FOR FURNITURE
ARE NOW MADE WITH AN
TO ARTISTIC EFFECT.
|rnr sor* or weak evo*, nse DIt'RKY'8OLD RE-
LIABLE EVE HATER. Don* hurt. Adv.
Men dislike details, but women want
the full particulars.
For galls use Hanford's Balsam.
Adv.
A dead letter may be one she gave
her husband to mail.
If you wish beautiful, clear, white
clothes, use Red CroBS Ball Blue. At all
good grocers. Adv.
Some people never seem to do much
talking, except when they have noth-
ing to say.
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 tine
condition and should cure lameness.
Adv.
The Plan of Opposites.
"What is the best way to get some
hard cash?”
"Get hold of some soft thing."
Only One ‘‘BROMO QUININE”
To get the genuine, call for full name, LAXA-
TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for signature of
E. W. GROVE. Cures a Cold in One Day. Stops
cough and headache, and works off cold. 25c.
It really doesn’t seem to require
very much physical exertion to run
In This They Differ From Those in
General Use In the Past—General
Directions for Making Them
Successfully.
Do you remember the slips that
mother used to make? Brown they
were, with little narrow red stripes
and sometimes alternating twills!
How ugly they were! And with every
year's doing-up they got uglier—with
their yoke all ironed out of shape
and their flounces askew and their but-
tons gaping In the back!
They were the kind mother used to
make, writes Ethel Davis Seal in the
Washington Star. She Is making a
different kind now, and with such
great success that she has passed the
secret on to me!
First of all, they virtually are made
on the furniture. A piece of the mate-
rial is pinned on the part of the chair
one has decided to start with, and
after it is carefully fitted, it Is cut the
shape, leaving plenty of allowance for
seams. In this way one should care-
fully do the whole chair, sewing the
various pieces together as one gets
them cut and trying on many times.
In order to Insure a perfect fit. Some-
times it is found easier to do all the
basting before any part Is removed;
for others, working with a preliminary
paper pattern may seem easier.
It is especially necessary to have
looseness in a slip cover; there must
be plenty of “give" to It. Otherwise,
when one sits on it, It Is apt to burst
open, which would be most discon-
certing, particularly If It happened to
be some one else's chair.
The strip which runs from the ex-
treme top of the chair back down to
MEANT FOR THE BRIDESMAID XhrOW Away
La Tosca Sticks Have Returned to
Favor With the PQmpadour Silks
and Quaint Draperies.
your complexion troubles with your
powder puff — no need of either
when you use pure, harmless
One of the prettiest touches of the ^^C'G’
modish toilet for the bridesmaid are, PotTlQd©
the dainty La Tosca sticks which have „T. 4 v BEAUTY POWDER”
returned to us with pompadour silks ,oc
, _. , At all dealers or by mail 50c.
and quaint draperies. They are usual- K
ly white, as the ones shown in the ZonQ Go.» Wichita* HanSuS*
drawing, and are decorated with ar- — “ _ T . uieh Albert*
rangements of silk and flowers. One Canadian barm Kargains j,anu,ono»8/
1 V. -Mi
It would take a magnifying glass to
discover that some people have any
visible means of support.
Muggins—“Is she pretty?” Bugglns
I —"No; ugly as sin. I taught her to
swim In three lessons.”
Nature pays her debts except per-
haps to the man who feels that the
world owes him a living.
Its Kind.
‘Her face is of a waxy pallor.”
‘Dear me! That’s a cereous mat-
Delicious - Nutritious
Plump and nut-like in flavor, thoroughly
cooked with choice pork. Prepared the
Libby way, nothing can be more appe-
tizing and satisfying, nor of greater food
value. Put up with or without tomato
sauce. An excellent dish served either
hot or cold.
Insist on Libby’s
Libby, McNeill
& Libby,
Chicago {££'
r
m
—Tv
the seat, across the seat and on down
to the required length, should be cut
lengthwise of the goods without piec
Ing. Before cutting, it should be
tucked well into the crease between
the seat and the back. The narrow
fronts of the arms are cut separately.
The arm’s Inner side Is cut length-
wise, and extends over the roll, under
which another seam occurs. The out-
side of the arm is cut In one with
the side of the seat. The back side of
the chair back Is cut In two length-
wise pieces, with the opening up the
middle. The back's “thickness” will
also need a small piece, extending to
the arm.
The fasteners are balls and sockets,
or buttons and buttonholes, or, In
gome instances, little bows. The balls
and sockets are used for the back
openings or for little tabs when seam
openings are used.
of the sticks shown has a plaiting of
pink silk girdled with a wreath of tiny
pink roses. A knot of the roses holds
a loop of blue silk cord on the other
stick. Something new in hosiery is
shown here. This may be obtained
In white with pink, blue or black
with white. The quaint hat is a plateau
shape of white Neapolitan trimmed
with broad pink ribbon and pink flow-
ers.
Maybe.
"I believe that fellow cheats him-
self.”
"What makes you think so?”
"He’s his own lawyer.”
The Up-to-Date Way.
"It Is affecting to see pretty Mrs.
Youngbride cry when she wants to
gain her point.”
“Indeed, it is quite a moving pio
ture show.”
Youth’s Silver Threads.
Gray hair Is now the fashion. I
have noticed many women on the
fashionable promenades with young,
fresh complexions and gray or white
hair.
But the great problem Is whether
the hair should be dressed high or
not.
This is the question both women
and hairdressers are asking, and this
query is now being decided in Paris,
whither the best hairdressing experts
have gone.
“The high hairdressing is very diffi-
cult to arrange,” I was told yesterday.
"It is almost impossible to dress the
hair oneself, and a frame and a quan-
tity of hair are necessary, also.
“Matrons have welcomed the high
pompadour coiffure, as the low hair-
dressing with the flat design over the
forehead is really not suitable for
them—it is not sufficiently dignified.
“All the hairdressing now shown
is high, but by this time next week it
may all be altered, If Paris decides
otherwise.”
Women are taking a pride in gray
hairs. There is practically little dye-
ing of the natural hair nowadays, and
gray hair is very fashionable.—Pitts-
burgh Dispatch.
Man's Job.
Mme. Joire, the Paris dressmaker,
I was talking about the complicated
I draperies of the new spring gowns.
“They’re very hard to put on and
take off.” she said. "Husbands curse
them. I know a husband who groaned
j one night after the theater.
“ 'Hooks and eyes like these must
j have been invented by the devil for
man’s undoing.’ ”
Yellow and Red.
Amber beads and amber buttons are
used on red gowns a great deal just
now, and though the combination doe,s
not sound particularly pleasing it Is
astonishingly attractive in reality. The
amber seems to bring out the warmth
of the red and It reflect® a sort of
^relike glow.
Little Ones’ Frocks.
The fashion for Bulgarian colorings
is as popular as ever, and Its conquest
is complete as regards some little
frocks for children suitable for the
spring.
Made of the crash, cut in the
Magyar shape, the hem and sleeves
bordered w-ith scarlet, the front em-
broidered In bright colors, and the
whole finished with a scarlet woolen
girdle and tassels, they are delightful
as play frocks and will wash well.
Little Dutch bonnets of the sams
material and matched in the same
tints are the prettiest adjuncts tc
these frocks.
Grandmother
Didn’t Know
A good cook? Certainly,
but she couldn’t have cooked
the Indian Corn, rolled and
toasted it to a crisp brown,
wafer thin flakes, as we do in
preparing
They are delicious with
cream or milk, or sprinkled
over fresh fruit or berries.
From the first cooking of
the corn until the sealed, air-
tight packages of delicately
toasted flakes are delivered
to you, Post Toasties are
never touched by human
hand.
Grandmother would have
liked
/
Post Toasties
—sold by Grocers.
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Lanter, W. L. The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, June 26, 1914, newspaper, June 26, 1914; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc910757/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.