The State Herald (Mexia, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1908 Page: 7 of 8
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See J. Sandford Smi
THE TIME TEST.
iat Is What ProveB True Merit.
^if\\
tnd,
...•h o£ tho imn.
i'udd live whole
Then stir In very
"Illy beaten whites of
.jkiwegga." Put into the omelet pan
two tablespoons butter, melt it, and
pour In the omelet, and turn out the
gas flame. Let it stand three minutes,
then put In the oven from eight to ten
minutes till the top begins to dry.
nutter a largo piece .of paper, put it
on a tin cover, and invert the omelet
pan on it, turning out the omelet. In
the pan heat another tablespoon but-
ter, slide the paper into the pan, ome-
let up, nnd put in the oven Ave or six
minutes more. Heat a largo Jar of
apricot jam or orange marmalade. Re-
move the omelet from the pan, fold
it, and, lifting it up very gently, All it
with the warm jam or marmalade.
Sprinkle the top wtth powdered sugar
and glaze on the grill.
TO KEEP ROOMS "PICKED UP."
Use of Scrap Baskets Will Save Much
Time and Labor.
Have a scrap basket In each room.
By so doing you will find that even the
children will drop scraps of paper and
waste matter into them. You will be
saved the countless steps to the kitch-
en stove, or wherever is the final
receptacle of your rubbish that you
are accustomed to make. You will
be relieved of the tiresome task of
bobbing up and down picking up the
little pieces of thread, scraps of paper,
bits of lint and dirt that are uncon-
sciously dropped upon the floor or
table for the want of a place to put
them. Then when you tidy up in tho
morning you can start right in with
-your sweeping and dusting without
Iflrst going through that awful "pick-
ing up" ordeal. Take one scrap bas-
ket and empty all others into It and
dispose of it all at once. Very simpl«
scrap baskets may be made by cutting
out pieces of cardboard and covering
with pretty wall paper or cheap denim
and tying together with ribbons.
FOR HOP YEAST CAKES.
Easy Way to Have Useful Material
Always on Hand.
Boil two handfuls hops in two quarts
water until reduced to three pints.
Strain the liquor and return to the
pot. Thicken with one cupful of wheat
flour mixed smooth with a little cold
water. Let boil three or four minutes,
then add six medium-sized potatoes,
.. , freshly boiled and mashed. Let the
V whole stand until lukewarm, tliSn
strain, add a cupful good yeast and
set where it will keep luke-warm.
When frothy, add a tablespoonful salt,
Btir in a little wheat flour and enough
Indian meal to enable you to roll
doi%h about an inch thick.
Cut into small round cakes, spread
on shallow platters and dry In a shady
airy place. Turn twice a day while
drying. When perfectly dry and hard,
put In a paper or cloth bag. tie tight-
ly, and hang In a cool, dry place.
When.you wish to use them for bread,
eoak in lukewarm water until soft.
One will be sufficient to make threft
or fopr .loaves of bread.
Tea Punch.
Put four tablespoonfuls Ceylon, Eng-
tish breakfast or green tea Into a bowl,
turn over It a quart of boiling water,
cover and let it infuse on the back of
the stove for ten minutes. Strain, add
two pounds of sugar, let dissolve and
boll for three minutes; then set aside
for several hours. Two hours before
serving the punch add the juice of
half a dozen lemons and three or-
anges, a can of shredded pineapple
and another of preserved strawberries
or cherries pitted. Add a pint of grape
Juice, two large bananas sliced; half
a dozen oranges, sliced, and a tea-
elpoonful each bitter almond, vanilla
and roBe water. Just before serving
add three quarts mineral water and
pour over a block of ice in the punch
bowl.
*, I
r •. I
Baked Veal Steak.
Order a slice of veal steak cut
three-fourths of an inch thick, Butter
a .dripping pan and sprinkle It with
salt-' and pepper and a bit of finely
chopped onion. Lay the steak on this.
Sprjnkle the top with salt, pepper,
chopped onion, and a few bits of but-
ter. pakp fot 30 minutes In a mod-
crate oven. Remove to a hot platter.
A (Id to the pan two level tablespoon-
fuTs pf butter. When melted add two
tablespoons of flour and' stir In grad-
'ually one cup and a quarter of boiling
water; Season with salt and pepper,
cook, three mlhjites, then strain it over
the veal. Garnish with parsley.
Yellow Fashionable.
An unusual number of yellow
dresses are shown among the exclu-
sive winter designs, a fact which Is ac-
counted for by the French love ol
things artistic. They say that yellow
•Is the color of artists, and certainly
It could not be used more effectively
on canvas or palette than it Is em-
ployed by the beBt dressmakers ot
Paris.
Vanilla Wafers.
One-third cup butter, one cup sugar,
one egg, 1% cups milk, two cups flour,
two teaspoons baking powder, one-
half teaspoon of salt, two teaspoons
vanilla. Cream the butter, add sugar
iind egg, well beaten, and milk and
vanilla. Add dry Ingredients to liquid.
Roll thin, cut and bake In hot oven.
ng.
not only Important to know
n>w to cook, but it Is equally Impor-
tant to know where to cook. Cook-
ing In a dirty kitchen can never pro-
duce good food. Tho Idea is simply
preposterous, yet kitchen walls are
loft for months—sometimes for years
without cleansing.
In tho first ptece tho kitchen wall
should have a light tint that tho mer-
est fleck of dirt can bo seen; that the
sheerest cobweb can be brushed
away; that tho tiniest water bug can
be discerned. It is all folly expecting
clean food in a kitchen with dirty
walls.
Never put a wall coating on a
kitchen wall that Is mixed with hot
water or that has glue in It, or sour
milk in it if mixed with cold water.
Glue walls made from horses' hoofs
colered up with cheap colorings do
not indicate good housekeeping. The
glue is constantly flecking off, fall-
ing into the food and the idea of food
flavored with glue made from horses'
hoofs is not appetizing.
Kitchen walls to be thoroughly sat-
isfactory should be alabastined the
same as every other wall in the
house. They should be coated regu-
larly in the spring and fall of each
year with a light tint.
The care of the pantry requires
constant attention. The walls should
be brushed over every year, the
dishes removed from the shelves
which should be thoroughly wiped
with hot water. If there are ant
holes or any other Insects In the pan-
tries a thick putty of the wall coat-
ing can be made and all the ant holes,
even small mice holes can be filled
with it which will protect the pantry
from the Incursions of disagreeable
Insects and mice.
ANOTHER NARROW-MINDED MAN.
De Quiz—What do you call good
winter weather?
De Whiz—Weather cold enough to
make a man's wife .think her own fire-
side a better place than a matinee.
Doan's Kidney Pills bring tho quick-
est of relief from backache and kid
ney troubles. Is that
relief lasting? Let
Mrs. James M. Long,
of 113 Augusta St.,
Staunton, Va., tell
you. On January 31st,
1903, Mrs. Long
wrote: "Doan's Kid-
ney Pills have cured
me" (of pain In the
back, urinary tron-
Dles, bearing down sensations, etc.)
On June 20th, 1907, four and one-half
years later, she said: "I haven't hod
kidney trouble since. I repeat my
testimony."
Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y.
GOT IT.
Cholly—Er—h'm
did you ever hear
your sister speak
of me, Willie?
Willie—Sure; I
heard sis say dat
your head was
shaped like a
lemon.
SHE COULD NOT WALK
For Months—Burning Humor on Ankles
—Opiates Alone Brought Sleep
—Eczema Yielded to Cuticura.
"I had eczema for over two years.
I had two physicians, but they only
gave me relief for a short time and I
cannot enumerate the ointments and
lotions I used to no purpose. My ank-
les were one mass of sores. The Itch-
ing and burning were so intense that
I could not sleep. I could not walk for
nearly four months. One day my hus-
band said I had better try the Cuticura
Remedies. After using them three
times I had the best night's rest in
months unless I took an opiate. I
used one set of Cuticura Soap. Oint-
ment, and Pills, and my ankles healed
In a short time. It is now a year since
I used Cuticura, and there has been no
return of the eczema. Mrs. David
Brown, Locke, Ark., Mav 18 and July
13, 1907."
Satan Terrified.
There Is as great genius displayed
In advertising as In the higher
branches of literature. No problem
daunts the modern advertising man.
In the window of a little bookstore in
Eighth avenue, New York, was re-
cently heaped a great pile of Bibles,
marked very low—never before were
Bibles offered at such a bargain; and
above them all, in big letters, was the
Inscription: "Satan trembles when ho
sees Bibles Bold as "low as these."—
Woman's Home Companion.
DR. SIMMONS AND
THE SOUTHWEST.
Dr. C. F. Simmons, whose advertise-
ment appears in another column of
this paper, has probably helped more
people to acquire homes of their own
in the most delightful and fertile sec-
tion of the country, where life Is really
a pleasure, than any other man now
living. Dr. Simmons is a Southerner
by birth, a broad-minded, kindly gen-
tleman, who Is never happier than
when helping others to help them-
selves. He would not misstate any-
thing for all the \yealth of the Rocke-
fellers, and any of our readers inter-
ested in land In the sunny Southwest
can enter into negotiations with him
with the fullest assurance of a square
deal at any and all times.
Women Not in Demand.
Mr. Arnold Shanklin, just returned
from Panama, says that men who go
to Panama seem to think a wife one
of the first necessities, but generally
they are provided with sweethearts,
who either come to them properly
| chaperoned or they go back to the
j states for them. The government
builds nice six-room houses for the
I married men. and there is a very
| pleasant social set being formed. He
! did not seem to agree with Miss
Helen Varick Poswell that old maids
j or bachelor girls are wanted there,
i the inference being that the right
| sort of men are either married or
I about to be when they go to Panama.
This Cold World of Business.
The messenger boys paused outside
the Army building, says the New York
Sun. One of them was selecting a
J cigarette from a box.
"Gimme one," said the smokeless
boy.
"Naw," said the other, "they cost
money."
"I'll owe you a cent," said the first
boy. "Come on, I'll pay you after."
"They cost more than a cent," said
j the boy with the cigarettes. "Nothiu'
| doin'. Your credit ain't no good,"
1 And they parted.
Not "Just as Good"—It's the Best
One box of Hunt's Cure is unfailing-
ly, unqualifiedly, and absolutely guar-
anteed to cure any form of Skin Dis-
ease. It Is particularly active ' in
promptly relieving and permanently
curing all forms of Itching known.
Eczema, Tetter, Ringworm and all
similar troubles are relieved by one
application; cur£d by one box. • •
Don't Delay
The season of coughs and colds Is
not yet past—they will be prevalent
for some months to come. Do not
neglect or experiment with them. Use
the safe and sure remedy—Simmons'
Cough Syrup, it heals the soreness
and stops the cough.
Tnylor'n Cherokee H«*ineil - of Sweet
Gum nnd Mullen i« Nature's great rem-
edy—Cures "Coughs, Golds, Croup arid Con-
sumption, nnd oil throat and lunu troubles.
At druggists, 25c, 30c and $1.00 per bottle.
The best shimmer Is the first to
Took Two to Beat Her.
TImklns—Your wife seems" to be | drown himself."—Italian,
quite a fluent talker.
Simkins—Ypu bet she Is. I never
knew her to be outtalked but once.
TImklns—Indeed!
Simkins—-Yes; and then it took two
other women to do it. <
OVER NINE MILLION (0,200,000)
SOLO THIN YEAH.
Sales Lewis' Single Binder cigars for
year 1907 more than
Sales for 1000 8,IHH>,000
Gain Tuo.uoo
Quality brings the business.
Making things appear to prove what
we want them to prove, Is one way;
having them prove what they do
prove Is another way.
The very wisest advice: take Garfield
Tea whenever a laxative is indicated!
Pleasant to the taste, simple, pure, mild,
potent and health-giving. Made of Herbs
—not drugs.
The young man who hesitates dur*
Ing leap year Is won.
Mm. WloiIow'H ftoothlnir Syrup.
For children teething, Bofteun tho gum*, reduce! In-
tlainmatlou, alloys pain. curen wind collu. vac a buttle.
As a man dresses so he is esteemed.
—Danish.
Men
An Unlucky Answer.
Wealthy Aunt—Oh, I know you are
all just waiting for my death.
Niece—Why, aunt, what an Idea!
It's a matter of perfect Indifference to
me.—Illustrated Magazine.
When Your Throat Feels Sore
get a 25c box of Brown's Bronchial
Troches. They give immediate relief.
Contain nothing injurious.
It may be a blessed fortune for
Socrates that Xantippe didn't keep a
diary to be published' 2,000 years after
her death.
Millions In Oats and Barley.
Nothing wilj iiay you better for 1008
than to m)w a plenty of big yielcbng oats
nnd barley with oats at 4()c to 50e a bu.
(Salzer's* new Emperor William Oats av-
eraged 50 bu. per acre more than any
other variety in 1907) would pay immense-
ly while Kalzer's Silver King Itarley which
Moved itself the biggest yielder at the
Wisconsin Agricultural Station during
1907 if you hud planted 50 acres would
have given you in 1907 just $3,500.00 on 50
acres. It is nn enormous yielder.
JU8T REND TH1H NOT1CK AND 10c
to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La
Crosse, Wis., and we will mail you the
only original seed catalog published in
Americn with samples of Emperor Wil-
liam Oats, Silver King Barley, Billion Dol-
lar Grass which produces 12 tons per acre.
Sainfoin the dry soil luxuriator, etc., etc.,
and if you send 14c we add a package of
new farm seeds never before seen by you.
The Bird Told Her.
Henry eyed the canary soler nly.
Then, threateningly, he pointed his
finger and said emphatically:
"Chirpy, I think a heap of you, but
some things uv just got to stop or—
well, It won't be good for you. There's
not. a single thing I've done lately but
what ma's found out. And It's always
the same—she says a little bird told
her when I wauter know how she's
heard about It.
"Now, Chirpy, you're the only little
bird around here now. I'm just goln'
to go straight through the pantry from
top to bottom, and If ma hears about
this from any little bird, Chirpy—
why you're goln' to deckerate the in-
side of the cat, that's all."
Makes Pain Go Away.
Are you one of the ones who pay in
toil
For your right of way through this
life?
If so you will find Hunt's Lightning
Oil
A friend which will aid fct the
strife.
To those who earn their own way
by their own labor, accidents occur
with painful frequency. Burns, bruises,
cuts and sprains are not strangers to
the man who wears corns on his
hands. A better remedy for these
troubles does not exist than Hunt's
Lightning Oil.
True life should be a perpetual
climbing upward. We should put our
faults under our feet, and make them
steps on which to lift ourselves daily
a little higher.—J. R. Miller.
INK "IlliOMO QUININE"
lTIVK BHOMI) QU1MNK. Look for
of B. W. UKOVE. L'wd tho World
ONI,* ONE "UROIHO I
That is I.AXA'I
tho ftltrnaturo of . -
over to Cure a Cold In Oue Day. 'Jbc.
STIFF, YES? "
WET AND DAMP CAUSE
COLD IN THE JOINTS
S-JACOBS OIL
TAKES OUT THE PAIN AT
ONCE,REMOVES THE STIFF-
NESS. PREVENTS ITS
RETURN, TOO. FINE FOR
CRUISES, SPRAINS AND
SORENESS.
Price 35c and 50c.
•• $210 Buys a Firm
Dru Chas. F. Simmons has Cut Up His 95,000 Acre Ranch Just South of
San Antonio and Will Sell You a Farm of From 10 Acres to
640 Acres, (Including Two Town Lots) for $210.
Payable $10 per Month Without Interest.
San Antonio, Texas, April 22, 1907.
Dr. C. F. Simmons, San Antonio, Texas:
Dear Sir—1 have just returned from a trip over your Atascosa County
property, and to say that I am surprised at what I saw, but fairly expresses
my feelings. 1 had expected%om«thing pretty eood, because^ 1^ have consid-
erable faith in your agents, whom I happen to kno
beyond my expectation.
now; but what 1 saw is far
1 drove hurriedly over probably twenty-five miles of ground, passing sev-
eral of your flowing wells and tanks, and I don't believe that there is an
acre of ground that is not fit for first-class cultivation.
Upon my return to Little Rock 1 shall take out several more shares
before they are gone, and will advise my friends all to take as many as they
can afford. , . ...
I have just written to my brother in Indiana, advising him to do this oa
my judgment.
1 certainly think your proposition is one of the most liberal propositions
I have ever seen offered, and I certainly think that the people of South Texas
will owe to you an everlasting debt of gratitude for the method you are
using to settle this veritable garden of Eden with new people.
I thank you for the courtesies extended me on my recent visit, and I
trust the time will not be long when the division will occur, and I certainly
shall return to Little Rock figuring on eventually coming back to Atascosa
County. Yours very truly, E. A. KINGSLEY,
City Engineer, Little Rock, Ark.
Write today for full particulars and photographs showing views on the ranch.
dr. chas. f. simmons,
215 Alamo Plaza, SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS.
Is It not sheer madness to live poor
to die rich?—Juvenal.
S.y ru
^Oixir#8enna
acts 6ently yet prompt-
sr
SHOES AT ALL
PRICES, FOR EVERY
MEMBER OFTHEFAMILY,
MEN, BOVS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
gcw> W. L. Dnuatan ma/tem and sella mora
man's $S.BU, $3.(JOandG3.BOahooc ^
than any other manufacturer In tho .
fer world, bocauaa thoy hold their
ahapa, fit hatter, woar longer, and
aro of creator vtelvo than any othar agr*.
ahooa m tho world to-day.
Fntt
Color .
JSxclusivcly•
I lilt
system effectually,
sts one in overcoming
ly outlie bowels, cleanses
ft\e
assis
habitual constipation
permanently. To got its
oenefieial effects buy
tke genuine.
W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price
C3T1A ITT* IO V. W. L iV-uglas name and price is stamped on bottom. TnUe Wo SnNtltwt®,
Fold hjr the hest alio# dealers ev^rywheto. biiuea mailed from 'a^tory to any part of the world. Illus-
trated Catalog free to any address. W. L. JIOIJGLAS, II rock ton. Mum.
RED CROSS FEVER &
HEADACHE POWDERS
I A sure and immediate relief for Headache, Neuralgia, Cold in the Head, Sleeplessness,
j Nervousness and all kinds of Pains in the Head. If your druggist does not keep them in
stock, send us 25c and we will mail you a box. or send us 2c postage stamp for a sampla
~ ' - JOHN SCHAAP & SONS DRUG C~ ~ " '
| Powder. Prepared only by
Fig Syrup Co.
SOLD BUEAOINO DRUCdSTS-504 p-BOTTli
sick headache
CARTER'S
CO., Ft. Smith, Ark.
COLT DISTEMPER
.Can be handled very ia?dty. The Riek are cured, and all others In
Munentalile, no niatter how "exposed." kept from having tho dlii-
atuse. by uhln# WOHNtt LIQUID DldTEMl'I-.K CURE. Give on
vtlie tongue, <t Ui feed. Aotn on the hlood and expel* germs of
ull foriiiH of d)nt«mper. fk**t remedy ever known for inareM In foaL
. One bottle guaranteed to cure one «*hkj. W)c an'' fl a bottle: fftand
Jr| J llOdoasen or druggmt!* and harncHH dealers, or Kent expretw paid by
ft / manufacturer**. Cut .shown bow to poultice throat*. Our free
; t Booklet given everything. I^oeal agent* wanted. Largest neWn#
s. horve remedy In existence—twelve yuan*.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. and B.(iorlolo?i«i., Goohen, Ind., U. S. A.
Positively cured by
these Little Pills.
They al«o relieve Din-
wnjlTTI F tresKfr°m Dyspepsia,In-
IIIPII digestion and Too Hearty
Kfl I £ |C Eating. A perfect rcm-
jajS mi | | A edy for Dizziness, No-u-
frl PILLOa sen« Drowsiness, Bad
Taste in the Month, Coat-
Tontie. Pain in the
I Side, TORPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Puivly Vegetable.
small pill. small dose. small price.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Clovis, New Mexico
IN THE PUBLIC EYE
The new and fast growing town of Clovli, N. M. !
Ill vision. K*olnt of Foiir .Hall muds.
Population if *4U() In Four Months.
I600.0U0 In Improvements spent In that time. 91.000.000
more contemplated. Hend Immediately beforeprices I
advance for inups and literature. Lots 9.SU and up.
K. J. CARIJN, Agent, F.l 1'uito, Texas.
MULE TEAM BORAX
Sterilizes Clothing. Is Antiseptic and prevents Odor from Perspiration.
All dealers. Sample. Booklet and i'arlor Card Game "Will/,'' 10c. Pacific Coast Borax Co., Chicago, 11L
investigate Hooper's Tetter Cure
T / i'A« aiiffan tfnTM T> . ! 0
CARTERS
ITTLE
IVER
PILLS.
If you suffer from Pain
fnl, Irregular, or Beauty
Flow, Indigestion, ex-
treme Nervousness, pains
in the baek,sharp shoot-
ing pains through each
side of lower bowels,
Chronic Constipation re-
suits of a displaced
womb, or suffer from the
many nervous affections
during change of life.
Write for our booklet ex-
plaining mode of home
treatment, a positive
cure for the above men-
tioned diseases.
SLPERBA CO.
GREGORY'S
CCCFIC are the kind yon eande*
wCCKIv pendon. CatalogueFIUB.''
J. J. H. Gregory i Son, Marbummd,
•4-M La Salle St.,
Chicaou, 111
T*n* Wt.
&KA1.V, Texas.
msrovKuv; pives
O B uuick relief and cures worst esmeik
Hook of testimonial* nnd 10 days'treatment KUKK
1>H. 11. 11. (iKKKN'8 SONH, Ik X II, ATLANTA, (JA
(Don t Scratch) Is sold by drugg-.ats
everywhere on a positive
guarantee to cure Dan.
druff ar.d all Scalp
Troubles, Tetter, Ecze-
ma, Itch, Ringworm,
Chapped, Sunburned
B ^ace arH* Hands, Pirn-
les. Itching Piles, Sore,
iweaty. Blistered Feet,
Cots, and all Irritations
of the Skin. .Does not
stain, grease or blister,
■wo Sizes, 50c and
1.00 bottles. Trial
ize 10c. Mailed direct,
_n receipt'of fjrice.
HOOPER iptylfe CO., tiillts, Tens.
If Interofted in poultry, write for our new booklet
20 Years with Poultry
"lllnstrated ftritnful of fart* and up to-date Ideas fof
the advanced poultry ralner KHFE!
UKO. II. I.KK CO., Omaha, Nebr.
PATENTS
WaUnn t. ( olftnin. Patent Atlnr-
Tie>. Wiifthillftton, DC. Advice
free. Terms low. Biiihetot ref.
, Mais,
nrnawrr qtaepm to work with and i
UtriHWUL aiRnun ,llirc.hef, clolbP8 ulcehU w> Ni DALLAS, NO. 7, 1908.
B 20
When you need a medicine for women's ills, we urge you earnestly to take Car-
dui. • Cardui is a woman's medicine. It is not for men, but only for such women as
suffer from the ills peculiar to women. Therefore, you should take
Wine of Cardui
if sick, because it has helped others who suffered as you do. Mrs. Bettie Arp, of
Menlo, Ga., writes: "I was troubled with female complaint for twelve months. The
doctors treated me, but did me little good, so l took Cardui, and it saved my life."
WRITE FOR FREE BOOK
■ 1 Rliu iva lUliLl uvva pr«p«id. La<W Advisory D«pt,Th« Chatunooo Modlcin. Co. Ch.tt.no.**. "fwio.
f I '
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Houx, N. P. The State Herald (Mexia, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1908, newspaper, February 13, 1908; Mexia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth302296/m1/7/: accessed April 27, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Gibbs Memorial Library.