The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 158, Ed. 1 Monday, September 8, 1913 Page: 3 of 4
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FROM THE PINEAPPLE
SUCCULENT FRUIT THE BASIS OP
MANY DELICIOUS DISHES.
May Be Utilized in Preparations for
Immediate Use or for Preserves
That Will Be Welcome in
the Winter.
The pineapple should be joyfully wel-
come, for it is cheap, has good keep-
ing qualities and a clean, delicious
flavor. Here are some good pineapple
dishes, as given by the Delineator:
Pineapple Omelet—Beat three eggs
thoroughly with a tablespoonful of
su^ar, adding at the lasf a pinch of
salt and a teaspoonful each ol lemon
and pineapple juice. Have the omelet
pan hot and well greased, sides and
bottom, with a teaspoonful of melted
butter or oil. Turn in the beaten
eggs, and as they cook, break the
omelet once in a while with a silver
fork. When still moist, sprinkle on
top half of the oatmeal, a cupful of
chopped or grated pineapple, canned
or fresh, fold over the other half,
sprinkle with sugar and serve immedi-
ately.
Pineapple Sirup.—Slice, peel and
dice enough pineapple to make about
three pounds. Place in preserving
kettle with a pound of sugar and a
quart of water and cook until very
soft. Mash and strain. Return to the
kettle, and to each pint of juice allow
a pound of sugar. Cook to a rich sir-
up and bottle while hot.
stoppers or sealing wax to make air-
K5M
Pork
and
Beans
Delicious - Nutritious
Plump and nut-like in flavor, thoroughly
cooked with choice pork. Prepared the
Libby way, nothing can be more appe<
tizing and satisfying, nor of greater food
value. Put up with or without tomato
sauce. An excellent dish served either
hot or cold.
Insist on Libby’s
Libby, McNeill
& Libby,
Chicago^
UNCLE IN A WORRYING MOOD
The Wretchedne&s
of Constipation
tight. This will be ready for use at i
any time for sauces or cooling drinks.
Pineapple Sauce for Ice Cream—
Put a cupful of fresh pineapple juice
in a saucepan with a cupful of granu-
lated sugar and cook, ten minutes.
Add the beaten yolks of two eggs, and
whip with an egg-beater over boiling
water until foamy. Take from the
fire, add the whipped whites of eggs
and serve hot with ice cream. If the
pineapple sirup is used, omit the
sugar.
Preserved Pineapple Uncooked—
If one has a good cold cellar or store-
room the fresh pineapple may be
grated and preserved uncooked. Allow
a pound of sugar to each pound ol
grated fruit and let stand in the re-
frigerator for twelve hours. Then pack
into sterilized jars, screw tight, and
as an additional precaution cover the
top with sterilized cotton batting and
tie down firmly. Keep in a cold, dark
place.
Pineapple Jelly—Pineapple jelly Is
worth while preparing for winter use.
To make it, pare ripe pines and grate
them and to each cupful of grated
pulp measure out a cupful of sugar.
Add half the sugar to the fruit and let
it stand in a covered earthen dish for
three hours. Then boil it, very slow-
ly, in a granite or porcelain saucepan
until the pulp Is soft. Do not use tin,
as the pineapple juice sometimes in-
jures the surface of this metal. Let
the pulp drip through a jelly bog over
night. The next day heat the rest of
the sugar on shallow platters in the
oven, and in the meantime boil for 15
minutes the juice which has dripped
through the jelly bag. Then add the
hot sugar, let it melt in the liquid,
hut do not let it boil any longer, and
pour it into glasses.
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
—act surely and
gently on the
Use patent J Cure
Biliousness,
Head
ache,
Dizzi-
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
EARLED. BEHRENDS
DALLAS
TEACHER OF VOICE
TENOR SOLOIST, DIRECTOR
INTERPRETATION “REPERTOIRE
Studio For Terms Write
Bush Temple 4400 A Sycamore St.
jBMgSS
Otherwise It Is Possible He Might
Not Have Made This Somewhat
Humorous Misreading.
The New York Tribune tells of a
quaint old negro who stepped up to
the window of the ticket office and
hurriedly demanded a ticketr-for Pig-
Foot Junction.
“Pleasure trip, uncle?’’ asked the
agent, pleasantly.
“No, suh; my nephew’s ve’y low,
suh. Hope de train won’ be long
coming.”
“About ten minutes, uncle,” the
clerk reassured him.
The old man went to the platform,
and studied the bulletin-board seri-
ously. Then he returned to the win-
dow. “Did you say my train would
be ’long in ten minutes, suh?” he
asked, anxiously.
“Yes, uncle.”
“I jest axed you, suh, ’cause I ain’t
got my rabbit foot ’bout me, and dat
dere board says, ‘All trains on time
’cept one,’ and I was jest figurin’ dat
one would be mine.”
"All the trains are on time. Some
one’s tampered with the bulletin-
board!” declared the clerk, excitedly,
and rushed to the platform.
He stared for a moment at the
board, then at the old negro. Slow-
ly his face relaxed into a broad grin.
The bulletin read:
“All trains on time—Sept. 1.”
Quickly relieves eye
__________ irritation, caused
EYE WATER W&K
JOHN L. THOMPSON SONS&LO.,Troy,N.Y.
DROPSY
TRHATBD. Give quick re-
lief, usually remove swel-
ling
entire relief in 15-15 days, trial treatment
ESpgS FREE. BB.GBESXSSOKS, Box A, Atlanta,G».
AGENTS-
double your
seller. Writ
SPECIALTY
COST NOTHING to learn how to
income by handling our fast
today. THE CHEROKEE
CO.. McALESTER. OKLA.
WE HAVE POSITIONS
Huckleberry Pudding.
A huckleberry pudding is made in
this way: Cream a cupful of butter
ruid the same amount of sugar. Then
add the yolks of three eggs, beating
in one at a time, and then the whites
whipped stiff. Add half a cupful of
milk and two cupfuls of flour, sifted
with half a teaspoonful of salt and
two teasponfuls of baking powder.
Wash and look over a cupful of
huckleberries and spread them on a
clean towel or board to dry. When
they are dry rub them with flour and
add them to the batter. Bake the pud-
ding in a round or square pudding
dish well buttered. Serve with hard
sauce flavored with nutmeg.
Beef Loaf.
Two pounds of raw beef put through
the grinder, five crackers ground, one
cup milk, butter size of egg if there is
no fat in beef, one egg and a little salt
and pepper. You can add an onion
chopped if you like the flavor; bake
Blowly two hours.
Rubber Chair Tips.
Rubber tips for the dining-room
chairs will save the hardwood floor*
from constant scratching. The tips
cost little and save both work and
the floors.
Texas Directory
COTTONBOOKS
and stationery for ginners, yards, oil mills,
compresses and merchants. Special foVms
ruled and printed to order. Security marking
ink is the best. Write for samples and prices.
A. D. ALDRIDGE COMPANY
409 SOUTH ERVAY DALLAS. TEXAS
Metropolitan Business College
1809-11 Commerce Street, Dallas, Texas
Let tis train you for business success. We
know how. Write for free catalogue.
Home for Tired Women.
Mrs. Nathaniel Thayer of Boston
has given a beautiful home at Lancas-
ter, Maes., for a summer vacation re-
sort for poor overworked women of
the city. She calls the place “Good-
rest,” and only eight or ten women
will be entertained at a time. These
women have been recommended to
Miss Nichols, who has charge of the
home, and they are kept just as long
as she sees fit.
Hard Sauce.
A good hard sauce for any pudding
Is made with half a cupful of butter,
beaten to a cream and thickened with
a cupful of powdered sugar. Whip
an egg white, light and stiff, season
It with a grain or two of salt, and a
good deal of nutmeg and fold it light-
ly Into the butter and sugar.
How to Wash Sateen.
When washing sateen a little borax
put Into the last rinsing water is very
good l* make the sateen glossy when
Ironed
Something Good for
Your Lazy Liver
The most perfect Constipation rem-
edy the world has ever known comes
from Hot Springs, Arkansas.
No matter what you have been tak-
ing to tone up your liver and drive
poisonous waste from the bowels, the
sooner you get a box of HOT
SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS, the
sooner your liver, bowels and stom-
ach will be in fine condition.
They are simply wonderful, splen-
did; they are gentle, sure, blissful.
Take them for sick headache, indiges-
tion, loss of appetite, etc. All drug-
gists have them at 25 cents a hex.
Free sample from Hot Springs Chem-
ical Co., Hot Springs, Ark.
Lots of men are willing to sell their
experience for ten cents on the dol-
lar.
DISTURBED AT HIS BUSINESS
Burglar's Neat Plea Might Have Been
Followed by Claim That He Was
Being Persecuted.
Gov. William C. McDonald of New
Mexico remarked at a recent banquet
that no matter how serious the pre-
dicament he may he in the average
American rarely ever forgets his sense
of humor.
Some time ago, the governor said, ^
burglar was caught in the act of add-
ing to his riches in one of the big
cities and arrested. On the following
morning he was haled before a magis-
trate.
“So your name is Jones,” said the
magistrate, asking the usual question,
“have you any occupation?”
"Yes, sir,” was the unruffled re-
sponse of the burglar, “I am a lock-
smith by trade, yer honor.”
‘A locksmith, eh?” repeated the
magistrate. "What were you doing
when the police entered the house?”
"Working at my trade, yer honor;
promptly answered the burglar. “I
was making a bolt for the door.”—Ex-
change.
Effecting a Compromise.
The president of a western college
was spending some time in a large
eastern city. In order to study condi-
tions in the city he occasionally took
his meals in the poorer restaurants.
One morning the waitress brought him
6ome breakfast food that was wormy.
He called her attention to the fact.
The waitress said she would go into
the kitchen and see what could be
done about it. In a few moments she
returned and said: "Since the break-
fast food is wprmy, you may have it
for five cents:”—Harper’s Magazine.
ECZEMA DISFIGURED FACE
Hampton Springs,Fla.—"I had had ec-
zema on my face and hands for about
three years. My face was badly dis-
figured. The eczema broke out in
pimples and itched so very badly I
■would scratch it all the time. It was
the most irritating disease I ever had.
It started on my face and hands and
it spread all over my body. I had
great large sores all over me, caused
from the eczema. It bothered me day
and night so that I could not rest
at all.
“I used three remedies for skin dis-
ease and they didn’t give relief at all.
I was almost terrified until a friend
recommended Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment to me. They helped me from
the time I started to use them. I only
used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and
two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and
was cured.” (Signed) Mrs. E. C. Park-
er, Dec 7, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.”—Adv.
. SO POORLY
Could Hardly Care for Clii!*'
dren — Finds Health in
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound.
System.
"Charlie is so systematic.”
"How now?”
"I asked him in my last letter if he
liked my eyes, and now he refers me
to his communication of February 24
Says he treated the subject exhaust-
ively in that communication.”
INVIGORATING TO THE PALE AND
SICKLY.
The Old Standard general strengthening tonic.
GROVE’S TASTHLKSS chill TONIC, drives out Ma-
laria, enriches the blood and builds up thosystem.
A sure Appetizer. For adults and children. 60 cts.
Happy is -the wife who believes that
her husband tells her all he knows.
Bovina Center, N.Y.—“ For six years
I have not had as good health as I have
now. I was very
Up young when my first
baby was bora and
my health was very-
bad after that. I
was not regular and
I had pain3 in my
back and was so
poorly that I could
hardly take care of
my two children. X
doctored with sev-
eral doctors but got
no better. They told me there was no
help without an operation. I have used
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound and it has helped me wonderfully.
I do most of my own work now and take
care of my children. I recommend your
remedies to all suffering women.”—
Mrs. Willard A. Graham, Care of
Elsworth Tuttle,Bovina Center,N.Y.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native roots and
herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful
drugs, and today holds the record of
being the most successful remedy we
know for woman’s ills. If you need suck
a medicine why don’t you try it ?
If you have the slightest doubS
that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta-
ble Compound will help you,write
to Lydia E.Pinkham MedicineCo.
(confidential) Lynn,Mass., for ad-
vice. Your letter will be opened,
read and answered by a woman,
and held in strict confidence.
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet preparation of merit
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
COo. and $1.00 at Druggists.
Caused Her Little Inconvenience
A New York letter tells of a west-
ern girl unused to the insidious cock-
tail, who was dining in a Broadway
lobster palace. The dinner apparently
Mias given in her honor. She gulped
down her cocktail manfully but with a
wry face. During the dinner ber
hostess noticed that her cheeks were
flushed, that her eyes sparkled and
her face beamed. The hostess felt a
little concerned about her, but why, it
was hard to say, as she was not in
the chicken class. Perhaps it was be-
cause of the loudness of her laugh and
conversation. Anyway, the hostess
leaned across the table to whisper to
her, “Why, Kate, do you feel that
cocktail?” “Oh, yes,” was the west-
erner’s reply, with beaming face, "I
feel it, but thash all right. It doesn’t
annoy me in the slightest.”
Taxing the Post.
-How did you send
your
Deacon
sermon ?
Parson—By parcel post
"But I thought there was a limit as
to length and weight of things you
could send by parcel post?”—Yonkers
Statesman.
Severe Rheumatism
Grove Hill, Ala.: Hunt’s Lightning
Oil cured my wife of a severe case of
Rheumatism and my friend of tooth-
ache. I surely believe it is good for
all you claim for it.—A. R. Stringer.
25 and 50c bottles. All dealers.—Adv.
His Experiences.
“Jaggs had a hard time in that res-
taurant the other day, I understand,
when he got loaded.”
"Quite hard. The proprietor ran
him out, and a cop ran him in.”
To Prevent Blood Poison!
apply at once the v
PORTER’S ANTIS
Ing:
elia
surgical dress!
at the same
wonderful, old reliable DR.
SEPTIC HEALING OIL, a
that relieves pain and heals
sing that relieves pain
time. 25c, 60c, $1.00.
Naturally.
“Did you read that vacuum pros-
pectus?”
"There’s nothing it it”
Most of us admire a fool as long as
h°, has money.
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ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT
AVegefable Preparation for As-
similating the Food and Regula-
ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
Ii^vvivts^Children
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful-
nessandRest.Contains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral
Not Mar c otic
Puipr <SOMDrSA}W£l/¥7WEft
Pumpkin Seed -
jilx Senna »
Pothelle Sa/it
A nisi See A *
fhyitrmint -
BiCarionate Scdn .
itorm Set A -
Ciori/itA Sugar
WinkrgrttH Flavor
A perfect Remedy for Constipa-
tion . Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
Worms (Convulsions .Feverish-
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
CASTORIA
3Por Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bough!
Bears the
Facsimile Signature of
—-.-...—i.... -- -
The Centaur Company,
NEW YORK,
. - .At 6 month s old.
3J3 Qsts - J3 Cents
^Guaranteed under the Foodaw
Exact Copy of Wrapper
Id
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
TMB OINTAUR OOMMNY, NBW YORK OITY.
ELECTRIC LIGHTS
FOR COUNTRY HOMES
Best Lights in the World. SAFE, Cheap and
Long Lived. For full particulars write
H00SIER STORAGE BATTERY CO., Evansville, Indians
I
FOR
MALARIA *££,*
TONIC
Hi,
. ' -
I
If not sold by your druggist, will be sent by Parcels Post
on receipt of price. Arthur Peter & Co., Louisville, Ky.
Death Lurks In A Weak Heart
M-'v
If Your* Is flutter)** or weak, uea RENOVINE," Made Uy Van Vleet-Mansfleld Drug Co.. Hemohle. Tenn! PrlolYfJoo
pg||H
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Vernor, J. E. The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 158, Ed. 1 Monday, September 8, 1913, newspaper, September 8, 1913; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth897955/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.