Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1934 Page: 3 of 8
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SHINER GAZETTE, SHINER, TEXAS
Wf&M.
iWSfSS;
'mfM
Last Word in Bridal Veilcraft
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
A S TO lovely and chic bridal array
for the late spring and the sum-
mer bride, fashion is positively lavish
in offering suggestions which are en-
tirely new and novel.
Pretty as a wedding dress may be, it
is, after all, the veiling of the bride,
together with the various little acces-
sory items of adornment, which make
or mar the picture, The wealth of
ideas offered in both veils and head-
dress and accompanying fantasies is
positively thrilling this season.
Time was when the bride-to-be
bought yards and yards of tulle, de-
pending on the magic touch of some
good fairy who would appear at the
last moment to adjust the veil to a
point of enchantment. Of course this
entailed endless worry and suspense
and more times than not ended in
keen disappointment.
However, in this present day of
efficiency all this uncertainty as to the
final touch to the veil has been done
away with and a new order of pro-
cedure takes its place. The modern
bride-to-be goes to the leading mil-
linery department or her favorite shop
and asks to be shown the latest and
most fetching in bridal adornment.
The visions of loveliness which the
salespeople wall bring forth are enough
to make the eyes of any prospective
bride dance with joy. Think of it-1—the
entire ensemble all thought out for you
down to the last orange blossom bud.
One of the first items of news which
will be imparted to the enquiring
bride-to-be is that streamline effects
are the last word in wedding veilcraft.
Which means that there is going to be
a symmetry, a very poetry of motion
about the billowy masses of tulle which
veil the springtime bride which '-'will
delight and satisfy all who behold.
You see the idea conveyed in the ex-
quisite lace-trimmed veil to the left
in the picture—a model which is now
showing in the better millinery estab-
lishments. Note that the veil is sup-
ported at the top of the close-fitting
cap of Chantilly lace in coronet or
tiara effect. Of course you have
noted the huge lace rosettes, one at.
each side, which seem to have flut-
tered down into position on the sweep-
ing wide veil. They bring a message
of real news in regard to bridal veil
styling for spring-summer, 1934.
And her flower muff! Flower muffs
are the correct thing for the modern
bride to carry. What’s more, the
bride’s attendants will be carrying
them, too, but in fresh springy colors
which no word describes so perfectly
as “delicious,”
Here’s something those seeking style
hints should know. It is about cun-
ning little flanged molded-to-shape face
veils which brides are wearing—ever
so flattering! Then, too, it is interest-
ing to note that bridesmaids’ hats are
sporting tremendously wide brims of
maline. These in a galaxy of spring-
time colorings are wonderfully pic-
turesque and becoming. In some in-
stances the bride’s attendants are car-
rying quaint colonial bouquets with
wide ruffles of maline encircling the
prim cluster of wee flowerets, the
maline matching the wide maline brim
of each hat.
And now this recital of lovely bridal
fantasies must be brought to an end
but not until we call' attention to the re-
splendent Spanish lace veil on the
bride pictured to the right. It is done
in true Spanish mantilla effect.
© by Western Newspaper Union.
You just can’t keep a good fashion
down. With spring dance frocks grow-
ing more feminine and alluring by the
minute, lace was certain to stage a
reappearance, after having been more
or less out of the picture for winter. '■
A black, frock, in one of the new j
cire or cord laces, is just about the
most satisfactory evening frock that
anyone can own. And a white lace
dress, worn with bright colored slip-
pers and accessories, is a fetching
youthful fashion.
This spring, however, there is un-
usual emphasis on colored laces.
French women are choosing navy blue
lace over satin or taffeta slips, in place
of black. Green lace, in lovely leafy
shades, makes enchanting evening
dresses. One very effective model is
made with a trained skirt, fitted
around the hips, and with soft fullness
at the hemline. The bodice is made
with a hip-length peplum, divided in
front and shirred at the back to match
the fullness in the back of the skirt
Definite Leaning Toward
Swagger Suits Observed
No one is going to put the American
girl in uniform this spring. . . . Suits
are as varied as the weather, which
gives room for practically a daily de-
sign.
There is a definite leaning toward
the swagger suit, no doubt due to all
this windblown talk which is effec-
tive ... if it does sound a little
chilly.
These swaggers come in practically
full length coats, frequently tied un-
der the neck, but in bows, not ascots.
The coats have the full sleeve, hang
loosely and are not made to be wrapped
around. Skirts have wide self-cloth
belts and often the button which marks
the belt closing is repeated on the
blouse.
Sequin Stoles Appear
Long straight stole scarfs of se-
quins or lame are draped about the
shoulders as an accompaniment to
•ocks of the same fabric.
A woman who keeps pace with the
times cannot get by without at least
one long-sleeved, floor-length dress
which sets her apart from the daytime
world of practical clothes, and stamps
her as a lady of the new leisure. This
gown of all-day crepe, the new rayon
woven of tubize yarn acetate and
tubize viscose yarn is in a new shade
called orange bisque. Its simple flow-
ing lines make it a dress of graceful
and becoming dignity. Outstanding
style points to remember include the
bolero effect and the deep armhole
sleeves, also the girdle-tie of self fabric.
Ride the Interurban
, [HOUSTON
front- to
GALVESTON
Frequent Service
MAN NOT REAL
TOOL INVENTOR
Devices Almost All Copied
From Nature.
When you look into a box of car-
penter’s tools and note the extraordi-
nary variety of instruments contained
therein, do you wonder how they all
came to be thought of and designed?
Necessity, as we know, is the moth-
er of invention; but, myself, I think
it more than likely that man, in
making tools to serve his needs, took
a leaf—and a very big leaf—out of
Mother Nature’s book. Man likes to
pride himself on his constructive
ability, but the question is—did he
really invent?
Let’s have a look at the world of
Nature and see how many of his
Ideas were “original.”
Picture to yourself a caveman—a
big, strapping, brawny, but not very
brainy specimen—looking at the
ground and wondering how he can
best make a hole big enough to hide
the carcass of a goat which he has
just pinched from a neighbor’s
abode.
What he wants, of course, is a
spade, but since no one had yet been
clever enough to invent a spade, he
has to do a bit of thinking. Next
minute he sees a mole digging its
way through the earth, and there, in
the mole’s paws, is the very model
which he must copy!
There is his idea for a spade. All
he needs now is a little constructive
ability to run up a useful tool for
digging.
We can safely presume that man
fashioned most of his other imple-
ments by studying, In a similar fash-
ion, the beasts of the field.
Few trades are older than the
carpenter’s, yet there were perfect
chisels in existence long before these
tools found a place on the carpen-
ter’s bench.
Four of the best chisels imaginable
were—and are—to be seen in the
jaws of the humble bunny or any
rodent. And—mark this—they are
much more serviceable chisels than
any of our man-made imitations, be-
cause they won’t wear out. The
more use they get the .sharper they
become.
If only our chisels did the same!
The world’s earliest men must
have got quite a lot of ideas as a re-
sult of studying the beaks of birds.
The long, slender, delicate bills of
the snipe and woodcock are perfect
examples of natural forceps, enabling
their owners to pick up tiny objects
from the soft mud in which they
feed.
Compare (these beaks with the
“modern” surgical forceps used in
our big hospitals today and—well,
cleanliness apart, there is not so very
much difference.
The broad bills of the ducks make
excellent spoons, while the crow can
boast of fine “pickaxes,” constructed
so as to stand any amount of wear
and tear.
7 Then the fish-eating birds, who
have given man a large number of
useful “tips.” The heron’s long beak
would naturally suggest the spear,
while the crooked beak of the mer-
ganser, a diving bird, provides a per-
fect model of a “hook.”
Again, suppose you wanted to
make a paddle for a canoe you had
built, '•what better source of inspira-
tion could you wish than the'webbed
feet of the gulls and ducks?
Or suppose you wanted to make a
pair of snowshoes, so that you would
be able to walk across snow without
sinking into it; you could, surely, get
a pretty good idea of what is wanted
from watching how the webbed feet
of some of the wading birds enable
them to walk over soft mud with per-
fect ease! 1
The valiant gentlemen of the Mid-
dle ages who invented and perfected
the suit of mail, no less than the
modern designers of the war-time
“tank,” doubtless prided themselves
on their cleverness.
But what about the crab and the
lobster, or—if you want a land ani-
mal as an illustration—what about
the armadillo, that strange-looking
South American mammal whose fat,
squat body is entirely encased In a
horn-like covering—a “suit of mail”
that defies almost anything but the
| business end of a pickax,
i One might find hundreds of such
“models” in Nature, without having
to go very far into the wild; but in
most cases man does not make an
exact copy of the natural thing, but
adapts it to his own individual re-
quirements.
There are exceptions, however. I
want to show you a couple of “mod-
els” which man has copied almost
exactly, without any modification to
speak of.
Shoemakers use a pair of special
pincers which are almost identical in
shape and design with the claws of
the lobster, while on many a carpen-
ter’s bench today you will see a pair
which, though larger, are shaped ex-
actly like the “pincers affixed to the
rear end of the common earwig.
Truly there is nothing new under
the sun!—Craven Hill, famous Eng-
lish scientist, in London Answers.
Romance a Help
“Romance and business won’t mix.”
“Romance never hurt my business
any.”
“What do you manufacture?”
“Hammocks.”
THIS GROSS TELLS YOU
It Means the REAL ARTICLE
GENUINE
ASPIRIN
Of Bayer
Manufacture
When you go to buy aspirin,
just remember this: Every
tablet of real aspirin of
Bayer manufacture is
stamped with this cross. No get Genuine
tablet without this cross is BayerAspirin.
GENUINE Bayer Aspirin.
Safe relief for headache, colds, sore throat,
pains of rheumatism and neuritis, etc.
Genuine Bayer Aspirin Does Not Harm the Heart
Remember this for your own
protection. Tell your friends
about it for their protection.
Demand and
Salt and Pepper, Please
Girl Castaway — Good heavens!
Cannibals!
Sailor—Now, don’t get in a stew.
Seekers of Trouble
Some people are so fond of ill luck
that they run half way to meet It.—
Exchange.
'Two things I wanted-
“...and it was all so simple when I found out my
trouble. My physician said I had no organic disease,
but I did have what is so commonly and truthfully
called a low percentage of hemo-glo-bin in the blood.
“The reasonableness of one of the S.S.S. ads caused
me to think that S.S.S. Tonic was just what I needed
for my let-down feeling, pimply skin and low resist-
ance. I wanted more strength and a clear skin.
“It didn’t take S.S.S. very long to get my blood
back up to normal—and as my strength and energy
returned my skin cleared up.”
If your condition suggests a tonic of this kind, try
S.S.S. It is not just a so-called tonic but a tonic spe-
cially designed to stimulate gastric secretions, and
also having the mineral elements so very, very neces-
sary in rebuilding the oxygen-carrying hemo-glo-bin
of the blood.
S.S.S. value has been proven by generations of use,
as well as by modern scientific appraisal. Sold by all
drug stores.. .in two convenient sizes.. .the larger is
more economical. © The S.S.S. Co.
I found
out my
trouble”
Price One Must Pay
Have your own way, but you can’t
have much else at it.
Sometimes Seems Longer
An hour of pain is as long as a
day of pleasure.
THE BASHING TYPE
We got a shock as we heard this
from a flip flapper in the old family
barber shoppe:
“Mi§s, how shall I bob your hair?”
“Bandit style.”
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription make#
weak women strong. No alcohol. Sold
by druggists in tablets or. liquid.—Adv.
Wasted Sympathy
How we hate to see another man
fooled, although he wants to be.
r------CUT ME OUT-——•
I and mall me, with 10c coin orstamps andyonr J
| name and address to LORD & AMES, Inc., 1
n 3SO N. Michigan Avenue, Chicago. 1 will bring 3
■ you a grenerous sample of Loray Face Pow- g
J der and Loratone, the marvelous all-purpose ■
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I $5.00 to $10,00 a week extra in your spare time, j
Women and Men! Self-threading needles!
Blind people thread them easily. New selr-
selling plan! Send ,20c for 10 needles!
T-S-G, 409 Trenton, Wilkinsburg;, Pa.
HUSKY, IIEAUTHY CHICKS
that live and grow. 5 varieties to choose
from. Try them and be convinced. Price
list on request. Dept L, METAGOKDA
COUNTY HATCHERY, Bay City, Texas.
OLD AGE PENSION INFORMATION
Send stamp.
JUDGE LEHMAN - - Humboldt, Kan.
Rheumatism, Neuritis, Swollen Joints,
Sprains and Backache quickly relieved.
Send 10c for sample Relievene. . Ilelievene
Co., 760 Campbell Ave., Detroit, Mich.
Agents Wanted. Make and sell article
every housewife uses. Big commission. Only
one agent assigned to a county. Details
quarter. Box I5I922, Winston-Salem, N. C.
LOWEST PRICE IN 8 YEARS
FREE
Latest confidential catalogue “PERSONAL
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VITAL PRODUCTS CO., HOBOKEN, N. J.
ASTHMA—Vollmer’s Vapor relieves while
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H. VOLLMER, - ELAT ROCK, MICH.
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A
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Scientific authorities were agreed that if a great deal
more were known about the blackleg organism, and the
disease which it causes, a better immunizing agent could
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of the calf vaccinated.
It was one thing, however, to know that such a prod-
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Hundreds of methods were devised. Lot after lot of
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The final result was Blacklecoi____the first 100%
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|HE SUPERIORITY
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comparing it with two well-
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Concentrated Bacterin. and
Cultural Aggressin (Filtrate).
Cultural Aggressin is made
by growing blackleg organisms in a broth-
like medium (bacteria food) and then filter-
ing the organisms out, leaving the filtrate,
which after further processing is called Cul-
tural Aggressin (or Filtrate) and used as a
vaccine
Concentrated Bacterin is made by much
the same process...up to a certain point!
Blackleg organisms are grown' in a broth-
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To repeat: The Cultural Aggressin k
• thrown away to make Concentrated Bacter-
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away to make Cultural Aggressin! (Note il-
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It seems silly doesn't it? But it isn't, or at
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Lane, Ella E.; Plageman, Cecile & Plageman, Annie Louise. Shiner Gazette (Shiner, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 19, 1934, newspaper, April 19, 1934; Shiner, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1148033/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Shiner Public Library.