The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 7, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 12, 1929 Page: 6 of 8
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THE CASS COUNTY SUN
For Colds ~
#£
How many people you know'end their colds with Bayer Aspirin!
And how often you've heard of its prompt relief of sore throat or
tonsilitis. No wonder millions take it for colds, neuralgia,
rheumatism; and the aches and pains that go with them. The won-
der is that anyone still worries through a winter without these
tablets I They relieve quickly, yet have no effect whatever on the
heart. Friends have told you Bayer Aspirin is marvelous; doctors
have declared it harmless. Every druggist has it, with proven direc-
tions. Why not put it to the test?
Aspirin 1b tho trade mark of Tlayor Manufacture
o£ Monoacetlcaclilestcr of Sallcyllcacld
Hen Mothered Kitten
The mistress of a Hinsdale (Mass.)
farm had a hen sitting. Going out to
Inquire as to the comfort of the ex-
pectant mother, she found the eggs
uncovered, and, in the nest a tiny kit-
ten. The hen took to the nest again
after feeding, and covered eggs, kitten
and all. She continued her care of
the kitten after the eggs were
hatched, says the Boston Globe.
The housewife smiles with satisfac-
tion as she looks at the basket of
clear, white clothes and thanks Red
Cross Ball Blue. At all grocers.—Adv.
( i. Matrimonial
i It used to be when a woman missed
her husband it meant she loved him,
now if she does it means she doesn't
love him and isn't very expert with a
gun.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
It was the cowboy who sang "Bury
Me Not on the Lone Prairee." Always
plant trees in u cemetery.
Photograph Whist
Photograph whist is a new parlor
game that has recently been Intro-
duced by collectors and holders of
old photographs. However, it can be
played by all those who have a well-
stocked family album, providing the
pictures can be removed without dam-
aging them. The old photographs are
shuffled and dealt out like cards to
four players who play one each time.
The homeliest picture takes the trick,
and the one taking the most tricks
wins the game. So now you can make
use of those hundreds of old family
photographs if you do not regard them
ns too sacred a treasure to use for
such a purpose.—Pathfinder Magazine.
Their Mistake
"Where's your new license?" de-
manded the officer, eyeing the 1928
plate.
"Why, officer, we're just on the way
to the courthouse now to get it," ex-
claimed the grass widow and widower
in the car, with one voice.
A DOCTOR'S ADVICE:
GO LIGHT ON
LAXATIVES!
Everyone needs a laxative AT TIMES.
But there's no seed for making It a
HABIT. If you have Hie habit, you
can be rid of it in thirty days. Or less!
And this is how:
The next time you go to take any
strong cathartic—don't. Instead, take
a little cascara. That's not a vicious
drug, but the bark of a tree. The laxa-
tive made with cascara couldn't harm
a child. It is, in fact, the one cathar-
tic many physicians will approve for
children. Gentle as it Is, cascarizing
Is Just as thorough in cleansing the
colon as the more powerful purges that
actually sap a person's strength.
Proof that there's no habit from cas-
cara begins the very day after taking.
They Work While You Sleep!
J:\SXSfs
'Mtrliitt
BEST
FOR 109 YEARS
Used Personally by
President Andrew Jackson,
for BOILS-SORES of all KINDS
BURNS-CARBUNCLES
CUTS B STINGS - SCALDS /
LUiO j OlINUd OvRLUoj
raiment
If your local Druggist hasn't it. sent postpaid for25t- W. F. 0 RAY CO., Nashville. Teniu
Qiticura
WW
... (,.....
Derived from Daily Use of the
Ciitkura
PREPARATIONS
The Soap, pure and fragrant, to cleanse
the skin; the Ointment, antiseptic and
healing, to remove pimples, rashes and
irritations', and finally the Talcum, smooth
and pure, to impart a pleasing fragrance
to the skin.
Soap 25c. Ointment 25c. >nd 50c. Talcum 25c.
Sample each free.
AJarai: "Cuticufa," Dept. B6. Maiden. Man.
Pf Cntlcnra Shaving Stick ado.
The KITCHEN
i CABINET
i
((Si. 192!). Western Newspaper Union.)
And Joy to him who o'er his task
Remembers toll is nature's plan;
Who working thinks and tiover
sinks
His Independence, Is a man.
—Muck ay.
Instead of being clogged,worse than
ever, the bowels are more* Inclined to
move OF TIIEIR OWN ACCOItD. You
may have to take cascara several times
to establish regularity. But the times
you need this gentle stimulus grow
further apart. And you NEVER find
you must Increase the amount.
Cascara's Ideal form is the candy
Cascaret that pleases any palate, and
you'll find them at the first drugstore
you ask.
SOMETHING ABOUT FOODS
Foods out of season are never en
tirely wholesome, and the wise mar-
keter will avoid tliem as
much us possible except
as an occasional spur tc
a poor appetite.
The various courses
of a meal should balance
one another, or if not
the meuls for the day,
A dinner to be success-
ful must please, satisfy and surprise
Serve spinach, onions and salads
with beef. With pork, sweet potatoes,
apple sauce. With veal, potatoes and
carrots. With lamb, watercress and
peas, or either.
Game needs light delicate vegeta-
bles like asparagus, peas, tart Jelly,
and sliced oranges with French dress-
ing for salad.
Fish of delicate flavor Is Improved
by lemon jelly or aspic.
With cod or halibut serve creamed
onions, curried rice or spinach.
Here Is a good dish for the chil-
dren's meals:
Jellied Eggs.—Place two tablespoon-
fuls of mills in a saucepan and add
two beaten eggs. Scramble with a
fork until the eggs are set. Season
with salt and serve.
Broiled Hamburger.—Put meat from
tho round twice through the meat
chopper. Season well with salt and
pepper and sprinkle over a bit oi
flour; press Into flat cakes. Broil on
a well-greased broiler.
Here Is a good cake for the
grown-ups:
Spice Cake.—Melt one tabiespoon-
ful of_jpliocolate over hot water, add
one-half cupful of dark brown sugar,
enough hot water to moisten. Stir
until smooth and keep warm until
used.
Put one cupful each of dates and
nuts through a chopper, measure
after chopping, three cupfuls of flour,
one teaspoonful of cinnamon, one-hall
teaspoonful of nutmeg and a pinch
of ginger. Rub enough of the flout
into the fruit to coat each piece.
Cream one-half cupful of butter, add
one and one-half cupfuls of brown
sugar, two well-beaten eggs, the
chocolate preparation and one cupful
of sour milk. Beat thoroughly and
add the flour sifted with the dry In-
gredients. Bake in a sheet, cover with
a vanilla Icing, or bake in layers with
a chocolate filling or In gem pans and
cover with fudge frosting.
Desserts for Children.
Desserts for the children should be
simple, easy of digestion and appeal-
ing to the taste.
Peach Tapioca
Drain a can oi
peaches from the
liquor In the can,
sprinkle the fruit
with one-third of a
cupful of powdered
sugar and let stand
one hour; soak one
cupful of tapioca in cold water to
cover; add enough boiling water to
tiie peach Juice to make three cup-
fuls; heat to the boiling point; add
the drained tapioca, two-thirds of a
cupful of sugar, and one-half tea-
spoonful of salt; cook over hot water
until the tapioca Is cienr. Line a pud-
ding dish with the peaches, turn In
the tapioca and bake slowly In a mod-
erate oven thirty-five minutes. Serve
hot or cold with cream.
Fig Blanc Mange.—Mix and Sift
three-fourths of a cupful of sugar
with two tablespoonfuls of cornstarch
and one-fourth teaspoonful of salt;
pour on slowly one quart of milk, stir-
ring constantly; cook in a double
holler ten minutes; add three egg
yolks and cook until the eggs are
cooked. Cut -one-half pound of well
washed figs Into small pieces, add one-
fourth cupful of sugar, two table-
spoonfuls of orange juice and one
tublespoonful of lemon Juice; cook
over hot wuter until the figs are ten-
der, add to the first mixture and fill
small molds. Cover with whipped
cream or serve with a meringue, using
the whites of the eggs.
Snow Puffa.—Cream one-half cUp-
tul of butter, add gradually one cupful
)f sugar, stirring constantly. Sift to-
gether two cupfuls uf flour, one-half
teaspoonful of suit and three teaspoon-
tuls of bnklng .powder. Add to the
first mixture alternately, with one-hnlf
:upful of milk. Beat thoroughly, then
fold In the slimy beaten whites of four
>ggs. Turn Into buttered cups and
iteam forty-five minutes. Serve with
i fruit sauce.
ra0I°6O
the incomparable,
Supw-Hetmdym
$147 (less Radiotrons)
Everywhere acknowledged
the finest achievement in radio.
Super-sensitive. Super-selec-
tive. Operates from A.C. house
current at very slight cost.
Ask the nearest RCA Radiola Dealer to
demonstrate the "60" for you and tell
you about the RCA Time Payment Plan,
IRC/% RAOIOIA
MADE BY THI MAKERS Of THE RADIOTRON
Homing Pigeon Still
Factor in Warfare
Judging from a remark of Capt.
John K. Shawvan, the army carrier
pigeon has a war advantage over ra-
dio, and so, despite modern scientific
communication developments, is still
doing business at the old stand.
"Wlicn nn army takes the field
against the enemy, quite naturally the
greatest possible effort Is made by
that enemy to destroy communica-
tions," Captain Shawvan said. "In
the heat of battle telephone lines be-
come destroyed, radio and visual oft-
en fall. Concentrated artillery and
machine gun fire make It humanly im-
possible for runners to get through
with their messages. It is In this
most Intense stage of combat and at
this vital time that tho homing pigeon
comes into his own ns the peerless
and unfailing messenger."
STOP THAT ITCHING
Use Blue^Star Soap, then apply
Blue Star Remedy for Eczema, itch,
tetter, ringworm, poison oak, dandruff,
children's sores, cracked hands, sore
feet and most forms of itching skin
diseases. It kills germs, stops itching,
usually restoring the skin to hepith.
Soap, 25c; Blue Star Remedy, $1.00.
Ask your druggist.—Adv.
Two Species
What Is described as a walking fish
from Africa has been brought to Bos-
ton on a visiting ship. Humorists may
now do their worst in comparing the
peripatetic fish from overseas with
the poor fish who already walk Bos-
ton streets.—Boston Transcript
Some people never do a charitable
act unless there Is some one around
to applaud.
Indies! Grout oh t Value Kver Created, 8 pe
Bilk Hot sacrifice at $1.49 reg. sizes, flesh,
green, poach, C. O. D. Postage Free—<Joan
Lingerie Co., 102 Division 8t. New York City,
An Inve*tnient—Established and successful
mfg. Corp ban limited number preferred
stock blocks of J100. $500. yielding 8
Reply, Station A, P. O. Box 164. Boston, Mass.
Maguire's Hemic Plant—Used S2 yearn fop
Dysentery, Diarrhoea, Colic, Flux, Cholera.
Morbus. 75c Parcel Post. Migulri Medi-
cine Co., 722 Chestnut, St. Louis, Mo.
California Dried Fruits and Nuts. Mall or*
dors solicited, Send for price list. MltS.
HAZEI. ARMSTRONG, GILROT, CALIF.
Half and Half Cottonseed, high germination*
heavy lint producer, early picking $3.76 100.
LEXINGTON HAY CO.. Lexington. Tenn.
PA PKK HA Mil Mi MANUAL. 71 lessons. Free.
Up-to-the-minute wall paper styles. Ask for
samples by name. Hall, hath, etc.
J. II, EAKNKK
Box 4018 - - - - - Philadelphia, Pa.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
ItcmoTPK Pand ru ff-H topi 1 (al r Fal I lag
Restores Color and
Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair
60c. and $1.00 at Druggists.
ntwcox Phem. Wkn. Patrhoynn. K. V.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO-Ideal for nse in
connection with Parker's Hair lialsam. Makes tb®
hair soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at drug*
cists. lliacox Chemical Works, Patcliogue, N. Y.
Agents; Men, Women, Hell Proxo Hot-Hot*
ties. Replaces Rubber bottle. No refills, 6 yr.
guar. Sample $2.50 C. O. D. Big profits. Gen-
eral Manufacturing, 1511 Guilford, Balto, Md.
FROST PROOF
Cabbage & Onion Plants
Leading Varietiet Now Ready
Postpaid 000-11; 1.000-11.75. Kxpress II per 1,000,
WOO (or H.H). Special prices on largo quantlUoa.
P. D. FOLWOOD
TIFTON OKOROIA
Help I
"Did I hear something drop?"
called mother. "Just a cough," replied
the kid in the other room.
One has to have a good deal of
fluence In order to have enemies.
More Popular
— if not from
this package
it is not the
ORIGINAL
ay Since 1893
SHRE
WHEAT «
The year 'round natural health food
A full ounce of health in every biscuit
Warm and serve with hot milk on cold days
CHILDR.CN WHO CAN PAINT WILL WANT TO SAVE THE 1
PAPSR INSISTS IN SMRKDDKD WHEAT PACKAGES • .,1
ounces
full-size
biscuits
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 54, No. 7, Ed. 1 Tuesday, February 12, 1929, newspaper, February 12, 1929; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341149/m1/6/: accessed June 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Atlanta Public Library.