The Monmouth herald. (Monmouth, Or.) 1908-1969, March 24, 1927, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE HERALD, MONMOUTH, OREGON
SIMPLE SATIN HAT
COLOR-TRIM IDEA
NO LONGER Is milliners- reckoned
by seasons. Modern woman
acorns the calendar when It eomes to
buying a new hat. When the spirit
moves," and It move very often In
this day and age, she betakes her
self to the milliner of her choice, and
ssks to see the latest arrhnls in head
pear. It's at this time of year when
w Utter hints of leaving and sprins
promises to come, that the "ursre" to
discard the old for the new becomes
Insistent. Certain It is that millinery
displays are never more enticing than
during mldseason.
There's a vast range of Ideas to
choose from for one's "first hat" the
v v.a n, .eT
Hats for Immediate Wear.
ort which breathes of spring yet is
not untimely even if snow still whitens
the landscape. We are hearing much
of felt with straw ornamentation, also
belting ribbon, with straw combina
tions. These and other similar types
are In most excellent fashion for mid
season. Another mode of interest to
the woman of fashion who seeks smart
simplicity In her between-seasons
chapeau, is the close-fitting satin hat
Of stunning style are the satin
models In this picture. Clever lines
give to these hats "a dash and a go"
which no amount of "fuss and furbe
lows" could accomplish.
No, that is not a feather trim on
the satin shape at the top of the group.
It is a plume-like effect of black mon
key fur.
Close-fitting hats which come down
over the ears like an aviator's cap are
the newest of the new. The effective
ness of this type Is bespoken in the
Juvenile Coat
little satin cap to the left in the
picture.
Stitching done In silver thread, adds
a charming touch to the satin toque
to the right in the picture at the top
of the column.
Forecast for spring Is the return of
the African drape, and here you see
it In the embroidered satin model be
low to the left.
Stitching, this time In multi-color
and describing deep points, distin
guishes the last little hat In this group
which also Is of satin.
What's new . In children's coats?
The very latest le two and three
tone effects achieved by Inter-work-
,. r$ , a A
1 ' I mlkm wkd3k
NOW IN FAVOR;
WINS APPROVAL
tng the same fabric in several colors.
Not only for children but for grown
ups as well, a styling wherein color
complements color Is being linked up
with thoughts of coats and dresses foe
spring.
The charming little coat in this pic
ture, which, if you please, bears u
Taris lnbel. carries out the new color
trim Idea most attractively. For this
model, rose-colored wool elotirs Is in
set into a foundation of red wool
velours. In coats of twill or flan
nel, the tendency Is to exploit fabric
effects in an ornamental way. Tor In
stance, a coat of navy chanueen lias a
long tuxedo collar and cuffs of lighter
blue self-fabric, scalloped along the
edges.
Many and novel are the develop
mentstlong the line of thought of fab
ric effects for trimming. One cun
ning spring coat Is bordered all around,
also collared and cuffed with a band
ing composed of three strips of the
broadcloth, each of a different color.
There is a clever pocket also in this
tri-color compose.
Sometimes fabric Incrustations are
applied In the form of scalloped side
panels with a deep scalloped yoke to
match. A pretty navy coat Interprets
color contrast in that It is slashed
here and there so as to reveal a lining
of bright red.
When facings, bandings and insets
are not of a contrasted or blended
solid coloring then they are apt to be
of bright plaid, for gay plaidings are
forespoken as very popular for spring
Juvenile cloaking. Plaid taffeta used
From Parif.
as trimming is one of the populai
themes for spring. A coat of suede
like cloth with collar, cuffs and pocket
taffeta-lined is charming for the lit
tle tot.
In harmony with color exploitation
are smart ombre novelty woolen ma
terials. These are often made In
straightline with narrow belts of
leather and there Is apt to be a collar
and pocket of calfskin. Quite a sophis
ticated styling, to be sure, for youth
but then that Is as it should be for
stylists declare the general tendency
In coats is to duplicate grown-up fash
ions. JULIA BOTTOMLEY.
& 117. Waiuil Nawionocr IJnloa
the
KITCHEN
CABINET
(& 117, Wwnry Nvwapuper Union.)
Our rllnmte la a xrlj ot ur-
prls-, mitl nmoiiK ur many pms-noatti-a
of t tie wr:itlnr, th only
t runt worthy on that 1 know la
that, wlivit It la wriii It la a also
It la RrttiiK" to b cold. Italpb
Waldo Kmornon.
FOR BREAKFAST
As S." per rent of the housekeeper
tu the land tire muldless, it Is wise to
prepare as much
of it as possible
the night before,
so that a satisfy.
I n g breaktast
may be quickly
prepared.
An alarm clock
to insure the
nglit time of rising will give ample
time tc arrange the meal unhurriedly,
lie who goes mornings from a quiet,
comfortable and well-ordered home Is
twnv as capable a-t it business mnn
who leaves with 11 hasty breakfast,
peihnps prepared by himself, often
leaing home with the unpleasant
memory of a disordered home.
The uniform breakfast Is a most
convenient one, as it saves brain fng,
and you know just what you are to
prepare and they know Just what they
will have: however, the most of us
like to avoid monotony and like an oc
casional brt-iik in the daily round. The
usual fruit, cereal, bacim, eggs or
toast with a cooky or doughnut to fin
ish olT with, with the cup of coffee, is
so usually served that we all know
how to prepare such a breakfast, pro
vldlng e have the food.
A pleasing change Is secured by
serving a variety of cereals as well
as those which need no cooking. By
serving a variety the food is never mo
notonous, and the favorites nny be
served more often.
I'.roileil or baked pinckerel, codfish
halls, finnan baddle. smoked fish are
nil admissible for the first meul of
the day.
Of thfe meats, the f-ivorltes are ba
con, ham. chops, sausage, corn beef
hash, frb.7.ed beef nnd calf's brains.
Eggs are usually a favorite break
fast dish for the majority and are
served in such a variety of ways that
they need never become monotonous.
Omelets form an especially desir
able dish nnd they, too, re of an end
less variety. Scrambled, fried, poached
and cooked In the shell, cooked In
ramekins with cream, and eggs In
combination with rice nnd other foods
too numerous to mention, are oil de
sirable breakfast dishes.
Good Everyday Foods.
The use of leftovers is a daily prob
lem In most homes. How to serve
thpiii without nnnpurlnff
fjT'j to be leftovers Is not al-
wuja eaay.
Baked Codfish Puffs.
Put a cupful or two of
shredded codfish Into a
bowl, add boiling water
to cover and let stand
to cool, then drain and
add to a pint of mashed
potato, then add a cup
ful of white sauce, one
teaspoonful of onion Juice, two tea
spoonfuls of butter, salt If needed and
plenty of paprika. Beat until light,
then put into a baking dish, brush
with fat and bake twenty-five minutes
or until brown.
Ham Loaf. Put three cupfuls of
boiled rice and two cupfuls of cold
boiled ham through a meat chopper,
add one-half cupful of white sauce,
one-half cupful of bread, one table
spoonful of minced parsley, one ta
blespoonful of onion Juice, salt, pep
per to taste, one teaspoonful of Wor
cestershire sauce, and a well-beaten
egg. Mix all together and press Into
a brick-shaped pan. Bake thirty min
utes In a moderate oven. Serve with
a sauce or sliced cold.
Scolloped Onions With Peanuts.
Peel nnd cook six onions, chop two
thirds of a cupful of roasted peanuts.
Cook two tablespoonfuls each of fat
and flour, add seasonings and a cup
ful of milk. Put the onions, and pea
nuts in layers in a buttered baking
dish, cover with buttered crumbs.
Bake until brown.
Raisin and Apple Salad. Wash one
cupful of raisins, add one-fourth of a
cupful of apples and one cupful of
mayonnaise. Line a bowl with lettuce,
pile In the diced apples and raisins,
cover with the mayonnaise. Serve
with neufchatel cheese balls nnd gar
nish with cubes of tart red Jelly.
Eggs a la Suisse. Meat an omelet
pan, put In a tablespoonful of butter
and when melted add one-half cupful
of crenm. Slip In four eggs one at a
time and sprinkle with salt and pep
per, with a few grains of cayenne.
When the whites are nearly firm
sprlnxle with two tablespoonfuls of
grated cheese. Serve 1 on buttered
toast
Cauliflower With Cheese Saucer
Cook the cauliflower broken Into flow
erets in boiling salted water until ten
der. Prepare a white sauce with one
cupful of milk added to two table
spoonful each of flour and butter
cooked together, add salt and pepper
and a cupful of grated chfcese. Cover
the cauliflower with the suuee and
bake In a hot oven until well heated.
Grapenuta Pudding. Dissolve one
package of lemon Jello, add one cup
ful of steamed raisins, one-half cup
ful of sugar, one cupful of grapenuts,
six walnut meats cut fine. Mix all to
gether nd mold. Serve with whipped
cream.
LIFE'S
LITTLE
JESTS l
asa
DETERMINED
A man Intent on emigrating stopped
before 11 news agent's shop und read
a placard: "Situation In the Knst."
He strode eagerly Into the shop.
"Tve come for that situation you'r
advertising," he said.
"Pooh! That's on the state of af
fairs" began the new agent, but
the other interrupted:
"1 don't care whose estate It's on.
I'll takt. It." Tit Bits.
CHIC
Mrs. Bantam (In her new feath
ers) How do you like my new dressj
Mrs. Buff-Orplngton-yulte chic. .
A Cues
"Wonder why folka call monfy
'Tim lorn; Kreen'T" turl Draw.
Prrhapa bvcauaa without It
V all foe) hurt and blua.
They Suffered
"I nm collecting," she said, "for tho
suffering poor."
"Yes," said the mau, "Mint's all very
well, but are you sure they really suf
fer as much as some people seem to
think?"
"Oh, I'm -quite sure," she answered.
"I go to their bullies and talk to them
for hours."
Could Do That Much
"It's a shame you don't know any
thing about cooking," the young hus
band informed bis bride after the
honeymoon. "Everybody ought to
know how to cook. Why, I learned
how myself In the army."
"Oh, well, I can warm a few beans,
if that's what you mean."
Talk Softly
"Pa," said Clarence, "what's this
'double Jeopardy' I see mentioned so
often in the papers lately mean any
way?" "That, son, Is what a man Is up
against when he is getting orders
from both his wife anil his mother-in-law,"
whispered his dad.
A Regretful Observation
"Eminent politicians have often
double-crossed one another."
"I have regretfully observed the
fact," answered Senator Sorghum. "It
has sometimes appeared to me that a
statesman cherished nn opinion thut
bis best asset was his unreliability."
Washington Star.
SHOULDN'T BE AFRAID
"Is Maud afraid of a mouse?"
"What, that cat?"
Success in Canning
If you'd succeed,
In life's advance,
This motto heed:
Can all your can'ts.
Open the Way
"Let's see. Weren't Damon nnd
Pythias the most remarkable insep
arables of history?"
"Yes, but tradition whispers that
Mrs. Damon wasn't so crazy about
Mrs. Pythias."
So Inconsiderate
Voice Over Wire Madame, your
husband have been run over by a
truck.
"Good heavens I On the afternoon
of my bridge party 1" Collier's. '
Lexicography
"What's an appendix, Tommy?"
"An appendix is part of a diction
ary." "'Taint, either. It's what my Uncle
Robert had cut out of him."
"Well, I gness maybe he swallowed
his own words sometime."
Accidentally
"Green says he descended from ona
of the wealthiest houses in America."
"Yen! he was painting on the sec
ond story and the staging broke."
Law
I . $
Claims Everyone Can
Now Have Good Health
Los Angeles Business Man Suffering Months From
Constipation, Indigestion and KunDown Con
dition Regains Health ut'th Tanlac
Mr. Harry Franklin, a well-known
Lo Angeles manufacturer with ollicea
at U1S Broadway, says: "My exwri
ence proves thut nesrly everyone can
now have good health. After many
months of indigestion and t-oiiHt ija
tion, mouths that onded by my Ix-mg
iu a badly run-down condition, I re
gained good health, new strength auj
calm nerves , , . Thanks to l'lmlno.
"Imagine not Is-ing able to eat ith
out suffering from tormenting Pains
and thn burning sensation of indiges
tion. The poisons enused by sluggish
liver and constipation ravaging my
system, left me tired and druggy all
the t ime, wit li no energy for my work.
"Then I turned to l'aulac, deter
mined to give it a fair trial. From the
first bottlo it helned me. Within a
few weeks I found myself with mora
energy than I hud known in montlis
a fine apetite,' good digestion I feel
thut I could eut nails without harm
1 am so built up in every way.
?'l now enjoy robust health and
work nil day at top speed without tir
ing. Hut 1 have, not stopts'd taking;
Tanlac, for it is the one way to eon
tinned good health, to top strength
and energy. Mv wife, too, highly
praises Tunlac. She is inclined to be
.i-licato and has found thut Tunluo
Before marriage n woman frequent
ly thinks of u man. After mairluge
she frequently thinks for him.
Sure Relief
-N-.T
iHVZS 6 Bellans
.a:' Hot water
vmLZi Sure Relief
DELL-ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
25 and 75 Pk0'iSold Everywhere
There are some .TWJ.iKlO Kiiperunnu
nted ollleers nnd olllclals on the Jap
anese, pension roll, which amounts to
nbout $00,000,000 annually.
Maybe This Contain a
Hint for You!
Los Angeles, Calif. "It was my
food fortune to (ft one ot Dr.
Plercs's books saveral rears ago and
It has bean a
wonderful help to
me while bringing
up my family. Tb
plain advice given
is invaluable to
mothers.
"The use of Dr.
Pierce's Favorite
Prescription during
expectancy and af
terward was to ma
tha greatest help.
It gave me strength, spirit and nerve.
I have also used the 'Golden Medlca
Discovery' for a bad cough and bill
ousneis, and it has entirely rid mi
of these troubles." Mrs. Noemb
Reynler 150 N. Dltman 8L Dealers
Write Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. T.
for free medical advice.
Sniffles
UnpUasant and onnacaa.
ar. Talc m l.nrltn'a
vary uttia wnua, in
icluiiva manthol bland M
Will soothe the irritation
and bring quick rillef.
LUDENS
5
C MENTHOL
.J COUGH DBOPI
FACIAL ERUPTIONS
I unsightly and annoying im
proved by one application ot
esmo.
Inhal Ollra Tr and ra-
ltAf UHUUr, tore tnroai,
cold!, bronehltil. Check tnfltl
nia. Hub on ehent to remow
eomtMtlon. Beilmo wmraloia
and rlieumatUm.
k I 1 j BALL EDOIIL. Now York
Mi ASTHMA
'mrsstrti disfigure ywh
W m
I OOJfC Don't aiponmern i
ihain, UK MITCH ELI.
kyb Salve (ur iwwJj
nun, ADioimeij in,
at all drngtrlata.
HALL BUCKKL, Maw York 01(7
I WANT FARMS FOK CAHII IIUVKHM. Deal
with owners only. U. BLAUVBLT, Tempi
Court, Denver, Colo,
Miiko Big FroMt. With Chinchilla Habbltn,
Keal money makers. Write for facte. CON
RAD'S, 468 California Hldi., Denver, Colo.
W. N. U., San Francisco, No. 6-1927.
7
r
DR. STAFFORD'S """"
25?
b4 x if
Vh I
Vai i ' I
lilts preserved her health and strength
for many years. ICveryona should
lake, this wonderful tonic"
Tunluo bus helped thousands of
Cnliforuiuns. It is Nature's own rem
edy made from roots, barks and herb
awxirding to the famous Tunlao for
mula. The first 1m1 tie usually bring
wonderful relief from pain. Keep up
the treatment ami you grow stronger,
healthier, more robust.
IVm't negliM-t your health, don't
miffcr f roin pain tiecillcwdv, begin tak
ing this wonder tonic now. Ask your
druggist for Tan lao today I
Dog Star
Professor of Astronomy Did yoo
observe Slrlus, the Dor Star, closely
last lilKhtT
Movie Fun Yes, be was (treat In
"NoiiiiiiIk of the Norlh," wasn't h0r
Answers
Salts Fine for
Aching Kidneys
Whan Back Hurts Flush Your
Kidneys at You Clean
Your Bowala
Most folks forget that the kldneyn,
like the bowels, somet fines get slug
gish and clogged und need a flushing
occasionally, else we have backache)
nnd dull misery In the kidney region,
severe headaches, rheumatic twinges,
torpid liver, acid stomach, sleepless
ness and all sorts of bladder disorders.
You simply must keep your kldaey
active and clean and the moment yoo
feel an ache or puln In the kidney
region begin drinking lots of water.
Also get about four ounces of Ja4
Salts from any good drug store here,
take a tablespoonful In a glass of wa
ter before breakfast for a few days
and your kidneys will then act fine.
This famous salts Is made from tae
acid of grapes and lemon Juice, com
bined with llthia, and is intended to
flush clogged kidneys and help stimu
late them to activity. It also helps
neutralize the adds In the urine so
they no longer Irritate, thus boiplng
to relieve bladder disorders.
Jad Baits is inexpensive; makes a
delightful effervescent llthia water
drink which everybody should take
now and then to help keep their kid
neys clean.
A well-known local drtif.'Klst says he
sells lots of Jad Salts to folks who
believe in trying to correct kidney
trouble while It Is only trouble.
- Ambitious
"Yes, Gladys has gone to Europe."
"Why?"
"She wants to get Into tho swltn."
"Social or channel?" Lou!uvllle
Courier-Journal.
"DANDELION BUTTER COLOR"
A harmless vegetable butter color
used by millions for 60 years. Druir
stores and general stores sell bottle
of "Dandelion" for 35 ceuta. Adv.
Easy
Landlord (to lawyer) My tenant
threatens to kill me If I turn him out.
What nm I to do?
The Lawyer Well, I wouldn't turn
Mm out I
Don't n nieflarared.
Keep Cole's Carbollxalve In tha hou.
It stopa pain from burn or cut quickly
nnd heals without scars. At all (rood)
dniKKlKts, 80c and 60o, or 3. W. Cole Co.,
127 8. Euolld Ave., Oak Park, 111. Adv,
Education and Vocabulary
The average vocabulary of a busi
ness man or skilled mechanic Is
around 10,000 words, whereas a col
lege grndunte's vocabulary is about
twice as large.
A elnale does of Dr. Peery'e "Dnad Ithot"
will expel Wornio or Tapeworm. No euoond
dole required. 371! Pearl St., N, Y, Adr.
Answered
He (feeling his way) Do you think
one could nwtrry on $1,500 a year.
She One couldn't marry me. Bos
ton Transcript
Will stop tomorrow
fjokis break in 34 noun tor tne nuuions ;
who use Hill'ti Fever and headaches go
La Grippe yields in J days. This ti the quick,
the scientific way to end these dangers and
diicomfbrta. Don't trust lesser helpa, don't
wait Get back to normal at once
Be Sure Itsy$ Mce30c
CASCARA&INiNE
GctBcdlka 0M with porta
Golds