The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 2165, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1911 Page: 3 of 4
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SAVING TIME WITH THE WASH
By Thfa Scheme it Really Seem*
That a Person Can Do Two
Things at Once.
To the housewife who must do most
of her own work here is a saving of
time. Fold evenly and shake well a
sheet, which lay smoothly on the iron-
ing board. On this iron your daintily
embroidered waists and underwear.
After a waist is half ironed, move
sheet along and finish waist. A little
experience will show you how to run
iron on along the hems and edges
without extra effort. Turn sheet over,
already folded as above, and iron an-
other waist. Lo and behold, you have
two articles smoothly ironed. Never
eprinkle the sheets. The dampness
"from the other articles dampens them
sufficiently. On pillow cases iron all
your handkerchiefs and napkins, col-
lars, etc. You will be surprised at the
rapidity with which your basket emp-
ties and at the scheming you can do
to iron two things at once. Do not
iron long on the same sheet or pillow
case—you will find it yellowed and
worn thin. Only iron till it is nicely
smooth. All unstarched articles iron
much easier when just taken from the
line. Old ginghams, such as kitchen
aprons and old house dresses, iron
smoothly wThen just dry, and unsprin-
kled, even though starched. While
the woman is finishing the wash you
can be hustling the iron over thes?
things.
FIXING THE TOUGH CHICKEN
One of the Best Ways by Which
Venerable Bird May Be Made
Tender and Palatable.
When the “chicken” ordered by
telephone turns out to be a venerable
hen or rooster, do not despair. - There
are several ways of transforming it
into a respeotable family piece de re-
sistance. In fact, by the following
method such fowls have been made as
tender as spring chickens: Let the
bird, after drawing, seasoning and
stuffing, simmer until over half done.
Then place it in the ove2 with a piece
of pork laid over its breast. Pour the
liquor over and around the roast in
the pan. Finish the cooking in a very
hot oven, basting frequently with the
drippings. When ready to serve skim
oft any superfluous fat that may be in
the pan -before preparing the gravy.
The pork prevents the fowl from be-
coming dry, and if a small onion is
also added it will have a more savory
flavor. The simmering lessens its
toughness. In fact, slow simmering is
Just the thing for any tough meat, but
it should simmer, not boil. Boiling
will toughen the tenderest of meat.
USEFUL LAUNDRY BENCH
The bench should be strongly made
and the cross-piece should be about
five or six inches wide, upon which
the clothes may be laid while being
transferred from one tub to another.
Provide faucets for the tubs, as it is
easier to let the water run off than
to break one’s back lifting the tubs.
The wringer may be placed on th©
cross-bar.
Walnut Taffy.
Place over the fire in a kettle three
pounds of sugar and one pint of wa-
ter. When the sugar is dissolved then
the sirup comes to a boil add one-
half teaspoonful cream tartar and
cook to the crack degree. Spread in
a buttered pan a pound and a half of
shelled nuts, hickory or walnuts.
Pour the boiling candy over them and
when cool break into places.
Cocoa Pudding.
Put a quarter of a pound of stale
breadcrumbs into a saucepan with
half a pint of milk, stirring while it
boils until it becomes a thick paste;
add a cupful of sugar, a tablespoon-
ful of butter, a tablespoonful of pre-
pared cocoa and a little vanilla sea-
soning. Remove the mixture from the
fire. Stir in the yolks and whites ol
two eggs beaten separately. Put into
a buttered pudding dish and bake for
half an hour.
For Rusty Boilers.
If the boiler is rusty, the best meth:
od of cleaning it is to rub it with a
piece of coarse kitchen flannel dipped
in ashes. Should this method fail to
succeed, the experiment should be
tried of scouring the surface of the
boiler with a mixture of paraffine and
ashes.
Flavoring Cooking Meats.
A thick slice of onion laid on top of
a roast, when put into the oven, will
impart a fine flavor to the meat, alsc
to the gravy.—Suburban Life.
IMMEDIATE EFFECT OF GREAT KID-
NEY REMEDY IS SOON REALIZED
According to my experience I do not
consider there is anything to equal Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root for kidney affec-
tion. Twice it relieved me when I was
completely helpless.
The last time I was traveling in Texas,
when my kidneys became affected, and
for ten days I suffered excruciating pain,
accompanied with severe chills. Several
years previous, having been relieved of a
similar attack, I 'naturally sought relief
as before, from Swamp-Root.
After using four of the large size bot-
tles, I was completely restored and went
on my way rejoicing and praising Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root. This was three
years ago, and I have had no indication of
the return of the affliction.
Yours very truly,
J. c. s:
MITH, J:
Jackson-, Te
enn.
State of Tennessee
County of Madison
Subscribed and sworn to before me this
13th day of July, 1909.
P. C. STOVALL,
Notary Public.
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer & Co.
Binghamton, N. Y.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham-
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will
convince anyone. You will also receive
a booklet of valuable information, telling
all about the kidneys and bladder. When
writing, be sure and mention this paper.
For sale at all drug stores. Price fifty-
cents and one-dollar.
THE HOBBLE SWEETHEART.
“What’s the matter with him? Has
he got rheumatism?”
“No; the girl he Is engaged to wears
a hobble skirt, and he got that walk
from trying to keep step with
her.
CURED HER BABY OF ECZEMA
“I can’t tell In words how happy the
word ‘Cuticura’ sounds to me, for It
cured my haby of itching, torturing
eczema. It first came when she was
between three and four weeks old,
appearing on her head. I used every-
thing imaginable and had one' doc-
tor’s bill after another, but nothing
cured it. Then the eczema broke out
so badly behind her ear that I really
thought her ear would come off. For
months I doctored it hut to no avail.
Then It began at her nose and her
eyes were nothing but sores. I had to
keep her In a dark room for two
weeks. The doctor did no good, so I
stopped him coming.
“For about two weeks I had used
Cuticura Soap for her every day,
then I got a box of Cuticura Ointment
and began to use that. In a week
there was a marked improvement. In
all I used two cakes of Cuticura Soap
and one box of Cuticura Ointment and
my baby was cured of the sores. This
was" last November; now her hair is
growing out nicely and she has not a
scar on her. I can not praise Cuti-
cura enough, I can take my child any-
where and people are amazed to see
her without a sore. From the time
she was four weeks old until she was
three years she was never without the
terrible eruption, but now, thanks to
Cuticura, I have a well child.’’ (Sign-
ed) Mrs. H. E. Householder, 2004 Wil-
helm St., Baltimore, Md., May 10, 1910.
Simplicity of Expression.
A story was told on Martin Lomas-
ney at the Cape Cod commercial trav-
elers’ dinner by Representative Pope
of Leominster: “Last season Lomas-
ney was seen talking to someone in
one of the corridors, and as I passed
I heard these words: ‘Shall I write
him?’ ‘No,’ said Lomasney; ‘never
write a thing when you can talk, arid
never talk when you can nod your
head.”—Boston Record.
Don’t worry about your complexion-
take Garfield Tea, the blood purifier.-
USE FOR THE NEWSPAPER
Story That Contains a Moral It Might
Be Well to Keep in
Memory.
A little King Charles dog, a pet in
a family where he had been the play-
mate of a little boy, slipped through
an open door some time ago and dis-
appeared. Servants and the children
of the house searched everywhere,
asked questions at all places where
it was thought possible the dog might
be in hiding, but to no avail, and the
animal was finally given up for lost
and there was deep mourning in the
nursery. One day recently the wom-
an who owned the dog met a neigh-
bor at a florist’s shop, who had on a
leash a dog strangely like the lost
pet, and asked where he came from.
"Why, he ran into our house a few
days ago and we don’t know where he
belongs.” The dog knew his old mis-
tress and was quickly surrendered.
“You might have had him sooner, had
you advertised,” said one woman. “And
you could have found the owner soon-
er had you advertised,” said the other
—and the newspaper man who heard
the story added the moral.
Received
Highest
Award
World’s Pure
Food
Exposition
CALtJMIT
BAKING POWDER
The wonder of bak-
ing powders—Calumet.
Wonderful in its raising
" powers — its uniformity,
its never failing results, its
purity.
Wonderful in its economy.
It costs less than the high-price
trust brands, but it is worth as
much. It costs a trifle more than
the cheap and big can kinds—
it is worth more. But proves its
real economy in the baking.
Use CALUMET—the Modern
Baking Powder.
At all Grocers.
“1 Am Cured”
DISTEMPER
Pink Eye, Epizootic
Shipping Fever
& Catarrhal Fever
ed
IrTI E°lBC!noUBJ?erm8fromthe body. CuresblBt’emper In Dope and Sheepaiiii Chofera
£C/ poultry. Largestsellinpr live atock remedy. Cures La Grippe among human belnge
and is ailne Kidney remedy. 50c and II a bottle; 15 and 510 a dozen. Cuttbisout.
CausesandCiTres ^S^ecl'a^'8*'T h° wI1I|;etltforyou- Free Booklet, "Distempeiv.
SPOHN MEDICALcCHSlI,".'!. 60SHEN. IHD„ U. S. A.
Consider your personal
appearance
KNOWN THE
WORLD OVER
From Pain to Pleasure a Quick Transi-
tion.
I suggested Resinol and gave a
neighbor one of your sample boxes for
a child of a few months whose lower
limbs were broken out with a rash re-
sembling Eczema. The sample was
applied at once and changed the wail
of pain Into smiles. Two jars were
used with complete recovery in the
surprisingly short time of two days.
That tired mother’s looks and words
of gratitude were from the heart
Geo. E. Ames, D. D. S.f Boulder, Colo.
Readers
oF this paper de-
siring t o buy
anything adver-
tised In its columns should insift upon
having what they ask for, refusing all
subftitutes or imitations.
“The future looks bright to me,” writes Mrs. Helena
Gabriel, from Lisbon, Ohio, “now that I have found Cardui,
the woman’s tonic. I am cured of my many female ailments,
and have regained my good health, by using Cardui. It is
the only remedy I care to have in my house. I would not
be without it Cardui is building me up, and helps me
whenever I take it.”
Try Cardui. It will help you. It acts on the weak,
worn-out, womanly organs, and helps them back to health.
Cardui is a good tonic for women who are well,—to
prevent them from feeling sick.
CARDUI
C C 62
The Woman’s Tonic
In the past 50 years, Cardui has been found to relieve
pain and weakness, by its gentle, building, stimulating ef-
fect, upon the cause of the trouble. This famous medicine
has, every year, added several thousand more women, to
the list of those it has relieved or cured.
• Cardui has helped headache, backache, sideache, ina-
bility to walk, and other serious symptoms of womanly
complaint It will help you. Try it. Sold by all druggists.
And in the Meanwhile.
Lady—Can’t you find work?
Tramp—Yessum; but every one
wants a reference from my last em-
ployer.
Lady—And can’t you get one?
Tramp—No, mum. Yer see, he’s
been dead twenty-eight years.—Lon-
don Punch.
Caution.
“I have a remarkable history,” be-
gan the lady who looked like a possi-
ble client.
“To tell or sell?” inquired the law-
yer cautiously.—Washington Herald.
Bottomless tanks enable you to water
your cattle In Nature’s way at small cost.
Booklet “A” free. Alamo Iron Works,
San Antonio. Texas.
The man in the church with the
roving eyes looking over the bulbous
nose is pretty sure to be strong on
the doctrines. \
Garfield Tea has brought good health to
thousands I Unequaled lor constipation.
Let us make the best of our friends
while we have them, for how long we
shall keep them is uncertain.—Seneca.
Smokers like Lewis’ Single Binder cigar
for its rich mellow quality.
Too often sermons have too much
length and too little depth.—Judge.
Constipation is an avoidable misery—take
Garfield Tea, Nature’s Herb laxative.
All the world’s a stage, and life is
the greatest on earth.
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
Is the best of all medicines for the cure of diseases,
disorders and weaknesses peculiar to women. It is the
only preparation of its kind devised by a regularly gradu-
ated physician—an experienced and skilled specialist in
the diseases of women.
It is a safe medicine in any condition of the system.
THE ONE REMEDY which contains no alcohol
and no injurious habit-forming drugs and which
creates no craving for such stimulants.
THE ONE REMEDY so good that its makers
are not afraid to print its every ingredient on
each outside bottle - wrapper and attest to the
troth fulness of the some under oath.
It is sold by medicine dealers everywhere, and any dealer who hasn’t it can
get it. Don’t take a substitute of unknown composition for this medicine op
known composition. No counterfeit is as good as the genuine and the druggist
who says something else is “just as good as Dr. Pierce’s’’ is either mistaken
or is trying to deceive you for his own selfish benefit. Such a man is not to be
trusted. He is trifling with your most priceless possession—your health—
may be your life itself. See that you get what you ask for.
Thompson’s
Eye Wafer
GWeB quick relief to eje Irritations caused b, dust, sun or wind.
DEFIANCE STARCH
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 7-1911.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
iaea and beautifies the hale,
-tea a luxuriant growth.
Fails to HeBtore Gn
Sever Fails to HeBtore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Jures scalp diseases & hair tailing.
50c, and 3100 at Druggists
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
An undertaker knows at lot of “dead
ones” that he is unable to bury.
Tell the dealer you want a Lewis’ Single
Binder straight 5c cigar.
Many men enjoy a dry smoke. Why
not a dry drink?
rue Drotnernooa oi man does mean
better wages, but it also means bet-
ter work.
Take Garfield Tea! Made of Herbs, it is
pure, pleasant and health-giving.
Angelfood cakes seldom make boys
angelic.
DISTEMPER QUICKLY CURED
Any druggist will supply you with Frazier’s Distemper Cure
on a guarantee to give satisfaction or return your money. One
dose acts as a preventive. One bottle a Cure. Distemper, Coughs.
Colds, Influenza, Pink-Eye and CatarrhaJ Fever cured in 4 to 8
days. No bad after effects; leaves the Colt, Mare or Stallion In
good condition. Free Booklet on request. $1.00 bottle holds three
60 cent bottles, at druggists, or prepaid from
BINKLEY MEDICAL COMPANY, Dep’t A, NAPPANEE, INDb
vr ■
You Look Prematurely Old
Because of those ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Use LA CREOLE” HAIR DRESSING. PRICE. SI.OO. retail.
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Vernor, J. E. The Lampasas Daily Leader. (Lampasas, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 2165, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1911, newspaper, March 2, 1911; Lampasas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth910596/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Lampasas Public Library.