The Pearsall Leader (Pearsall, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, July 17, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
i CXXVJMGHrp utoeof AOfr_
jut into the Wilderness
Rummies a Touch of
first time Madeleine
er Wings and hit the
i. For a Beginner she
1 the Spread. She made
Eagle look like an Eng-
arrived back in
began tq turn the
ip, just like a Club,
from the Metrop-
arrived on a* Spe-
Hats down over
more or less ob-
English Help and
ts they rode up
as a Pale Face at
st as the Parade
School, the tall
at the Hominy
.oud Crash,
there was a smell
many a Refined
ad learned to take-
of the Spoon were
land to come up
eek at the import*
aner followed by a
t had been a full-
ubt Father would
istomary 3 Carna-1
Hair Fern gracing j
ioard, the terrified j
m-Load of tropical
d them very Much j
td secreted a new
grved in a Goblet,
namite substituted
WM
■jjk #
iiiil s
iH..........
ALCOHOL AND HEALTH.
The records of the hospitals In our
own and other countries testify to
the lowered vitality of patients through
the use of alcohol by their parents.
The Henry Phipps Institute for Con-
sumptives in Philadelphia reports that
mortality in 1908 was 80 per cent
higher In patients with ^alcoholic pa-
rents than in those with non-alcohoHe
parents. Doctor Arrivi found tuber-
culosis in 10 per cent , of drinkers’
children and in only 1.8 per cent of
children of non-drinkers. Doctor Laiti-
nen found that children of drinking
parents are backward from the start,
and in proportion to the drinking of
the parents. From a large number of
cases examined it appears that 12 per
cent of the children of abstaining pa-
rents die in the first year, while 23
per cent of the children of moderate
drinking parents die the first year.
If both parents are alcoholics, one
child In five will become insane, one
child in three will be epileptic or
hysterical, one in seven will be born
deformed, only one in six will be nor-
ma); whereas^ if both parents are to-,
tal abstainers, nine out of ten will
be normal and win tend to have a
normal development, rising to one de-
gree higher and nobler than the' av-
erage of their parents.
a lot of those
tnd
* j , f / .
R the dance or the garden party
or for any other of summer's fes-
tivities the airiest and prettiest of
gowns may be made like this one of
sheer organdy pictured here. And
there is any number of transparent
s’.range Foods or semi-transparent materials from
the Table and a | which to make a choice suited JUS the
design. There are the plain and fig-
ured nets, voiles, swiss organdy, ba-
tiste, and the finer lawns, besides silk
muslin and chiffon. '
This is an American design, orig-
inal and simple. It is prettily giflish
and need not shrink from comparison
with the product of any French estab-
lishment. There is an underskirt and
waist of silk muslin. For this under-
pin the thin washable Chinese and
Japanese silks are desirable, for they
can be readily.cleaned. A baby waist,
with rather full sleeves, and a plain,
moderately full skirt, answers tills
purpose and Is to be made as a sepa-
rate garment. V ^
The outside skirt is also straight
and plain. It is trimmed , into
shallow scallops at the bottom and
these are finished with a narrow ruf-
fle of very fine point d’esprit or val
lace, for which fine plain net may be
substituted. ~ >
Over this skirt there is an over-
skirt, somewhat fuller than the under-
skirt, and cut at the bottom in the
same way, in shallow scallops, finished
with the lace edging. The overskirt
drops over a ruffle made of the organ-
s tried to give
nstown Flood,
epidemic and
who had re-
r Years came
began to hop
rried Women’s !
lging out Signs '
to give Warn-
?ine would not
*r Little Party.
:he Boobs just
Functions are
er Circles,
felt their Way
pre they Found j
.1 of Artlllerv
of Lake Erie, I
a full Bumper j
le-Snake.
ff a Two-Step
leighbors to sit f
J with a Piece \
nd get Wise to
ends pinned
ut Resin on
They did
the Maxixe
Ta-Tao and
:le Walk and i r
Rye Waltz, j
began carry-
a. m. Some i
rrying Home ;
ering if they
,t Daybreak
found
dering
outing
dy edged with lace. The ruffle fob(
lows the lines of the drapery in the
overskirt, which is caught up at each
side by a group of nine tiny tucks
placed over the hips. '
The neck is cut square in front and
there is a square turnover collar of
lace in the back and edging of lace
set in at the front. A strand of pearls
is worn, most appropriately, with this,
as a neck finish. Two smart acces-
sories -complete the costume. Tlgey
are a wide girdle of figured ribbon
and a cluster of little flowers, forget-
me-nots and June roses, fastened un-
der the overskirt at the left side. The
girdle- is finished at the back with a
flat bow. v
If it were not for the sleeves one
might say this gown lacks any dis-
tinctively original and picturesque
touch. But they are features of Im-
portance. The bodice, cut in kimono
fashion, with full short sleeves, de-
pends upon them for its smartness.
Set on to the short sleeve are shaped
ruffles ofv organdy headed by a full
very | puff of the same. The ruffles are cut
into long points in the manner of old-
fashioned “angel” ^ sleeves. They
seem appropriately named in the va-
pory material of this gown.
The unusually wide brim of the hat
worn with this gown is an innovation
in shapes. The hat is made of ma-
line with horsehair lace over it qn the
crown and upper brim. There is a
sash of ribbon about the crown. f with
flower medallions affixed to it.
SINS OF THE FATHERS.
The “clearing house for mental de-
fectives” of the New York Poet-Grad-
uate hospital not long ago issued a
statement to the effect that qf the
20.000. 000 school childrenTIn the United
States^ abou^75 per cent, or nearly
15.000. 000, are defective. The state-
ment explains that th^ word defective
is applied not only to those mentally
below par, but to the large number of
children ^ suffering from adenoids,
swollen tonsils and similar physical
defects.
-- In attempting to discover the “why”
for such an army of subnormal and
abnormal children, \he Chicago Trib-
une ventures the opinion that while in
part they are a product et the present
day economic and industrial condi-
tions, after all it is largely a case of
"the sins of the fathers being visit-
ed upon the children.’' That alcohol
is responsible for the larger part qf
these “sins’* for which the .offspring
mjist suffer is vouched for by physi-
cians and scientists whose ability to
pass upon the question cannot be
questioned.
Style Features in New Coiffures
THI8 MIGHTY INDIGNATION.
The present mighty indignation
against the booze business—electric,*
isn’t It? It’s flash—everywhere! The
forked kind, too, it is! No sheet light-
ning this! No mere spectacular glow
along a far horizon;fhut the zig-zhg,
rip-rap bolt that cuts asunder—the
kind that has THE PUNqH!
Whence came it* Well, whence that
liberal bolt in summer’s tempest-time?
A blinding streak on an instant made?
Not so! Rather is it the long, day by
day, week by week, concentration of
power from world-big dynamos AT
LAST breaking all bands asunder and
STRIKING!
Bo comes This Mighty Indignation.
Through years and years.
Through blood and tears.
Through wavering faith —
and faltering fears
‘THIS mighty indignation!
—Rev. Henry N. Cameron, Washing-
ton, Pa.
NO LEGAL SALOON.
You may have seen a legalized <
saloon, but you have never seen a
legal saloon. The liquor business has
never submitted to legal restraints
anywhere. If you regulate ft, it vio-
lates the regulations. If you segre-
gate it, it sneaks across the forbid-
den line. If you close the front door,
the back door is open. The regulated
saloon is a myth, and the Model Li-
cense league is a fraud.—Gov. Ben
W. Hooper of Tennessee.
KILL8 BY AMBUSH.
Dr. Bnchner, professor of medicine
in Munich university, has said, "Alco-
hol kills the largest number of victims
by ambush, as it were, in that it un-
dermines the power of resistance to
sickness, so that the apparently quite
temperate drinker succumbs to a lung
inflammation or an infectious disease
which the sound, normal body easily
overcomes.”
A COIFFURE that is popular with
r\ "Miss Manhattan” must possess
'rated certain style features which are
< heap, | worth inquiring into, since this young
• r for ; lady is very sophisticated and Keen
At : and discriminating, when it comes to
went the matter of making selections. One
davit, i of those new hairdreesings which have
■pared compelled her approval Is shown here
j and since imitation is sincerest flat-
1 the | tery the French twist, made of a mass
of waved hair, may consider itself flat-
purty | tered.
The most noticeable points in this
T ;u- style are the waving of all the hair [
j and the side part. There is a return
d the o waves and curls and the promise, |
1 to a ; already occasionally fulfilled, of puffs ]
it to in the coming styles in coiffures. Far
cure- more than half cf the prettiest effects !
how the hair parted at one or both |
said sides and massed oxx the top of the ;
o the head.
The hair is combed more away from
the face than it has been. This Is the
effect of hats which set lees far down
on the head than those that preceded
them.
It is not difficult to arrange the hair
in the manner pictured, but the wav-
. ing is not so easy. A side comb is
j worn with the long twist at the back,
and for dressy occasions a Spanish
comb makes an effective finish, thrust
in at the side near the top or at any
angle that te becoming to the wearer.*
It is quite the style to show the
* forehead bare at one or both sides.
In the side part, a8 pictured here, the
left forehead is bare and a lock of
hair falls down at the right side and
center. Little love wisps of hair about
the face are curled in tight ringlets.
The ears are almost uncovered, mark-
ing the last of the Innovations which
hairdressers are introducing.
JULIA BOTTOM LEY.
OBJECT OF BREWERS.
The president of the Master Brew-
ers’ association, which met lately in
Pittsburgh, said, in his annual address,
that “The object of this association
is not to get the people to drink more
beer, but to get more people to drink
beer."
CRIME ON INCREASE.
Coincident with the'officially report-
ed fearful spread of alcoholism In
France is the terrible increase of
crime, and the recommendations of
how it can best be combated; also
the increasing number of childless
families, of which there are 1,800,000
in that country, with 2,967,000 that
have but one child each.
C08T OF 8ALOON LICENSE.
For every $120 saloon license money
paid, one boy must learn to drink
liquor.
RF i yprcpsLanuu
DL M 4 L I 11 i i^ M »t l M if
mwlos m fen Itifnr—By tknl a
: «merowd«d profewrtos. Swr ymr
■ow mweiioKwnwdwiM ttm
Write tor catalog
we receive l
we cut flU.
m
Rubbing It In.
"Why does that lady grin so every
time she sees you?"
“She knows I’m only getting $10 a
week.”
“But why the grin?”
“I was engaged to her once and
broke it off, and she afterward mar-
ried a millionaire.” * *
H
ITCHING, BURNING ERUPTION
< i
Thomaariile, Ala.—“I suffered with
eczema da my hands and feet two or
three years. About eleven yean ago I
became troubled with an itching, burn-
ing eruption which came on my hands
and feet la little water blisters and in
about a day or two when 1 would let
the water out or weak it oat, using ray
bands, .then the plaoes would fester
and itch to beat the band. I could not
-do any work that was rough on xny
hands st ail’ It caused me great suf-
fering and inconvenience.
“I tried everything that I knew of
or was told and never was really re-
lieved until 1 began using Cutieura
Soap and Ointment, I would wash the
parts In water with the Cutieura Soap
and then when I dried them I would ap-
ply the Cutieura Ointment on the sur-
race in the daytime* and at night I
would get a soft piece of doth and
apply the Cutieura Ointment on my
hands and let it stay that way all
night. A' perfect cure was effected.
No one will ever know how glad I was
to get my hands and feet cured."
(Signed) Geo. C. Crook, Nor. 25, 1911.
Cutieura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
card “Cutieura, Dept 1% Boston.”—Adt.
£j§ll
A Poser.
Mathematical Professor—I have now
completely discussed the theory of
probability. Are there any questions?
Problematical Freshman—Yea sir.
Will you please compute the probabil-
ity of my passing this course?—Dart-
mouth Jack o’ Lantern.
m
m
m
r No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX
This is a prescription prepared es-
pecially for Malaria or Chills and
Fever. Five or six doses will break
any case, and if taken then aa a tonlo
the fever will not return.* 25c.—Ada
f&j
Idle Thoughts.
“Wny are you watching that .fly so
intently?"
“I was just wondering if men will
ever be able to tango up and down
the walls like that Wouldn't it be
fine?”—Pittsburgh Post.
A§N|
*. *
UJLBLE>rBia RIB-
Retrogression.
"I only ask you to care for me a
little.”
“I do. Every day I care for you leas
and lesa*
To Cleanse
Rusty Nail
Wounds .
.iMi
Ms
HANFORD’S
Balsam of
ForGa&tWW
Strains, Bum
Thrush. Old
Had* Since
*
i-v
AH Dealers
A
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hudson, C. H. & Woodward, Roy. The Pearsall Leader (Pearsall, Tex.), Vol. 20, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, July 17, 1914, newspaper, July 17, 1914; Pearsall, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth920661/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .