The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, February 4, 1916 Page: 2 of 8
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T ,H E' C R O S if to N RE VIEW
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M BABSON WORKS IN THE' OPEN
in
11181
, Rigorous and
clear skin; a nat-
oxlon find freeddin
ured only by clean,
: plioaphatod
what a grat-
ia plaeap
ands Of sickly,
women and
muddy complex-
e multitudes of
mdowns," "brain
sts we should see a
ic throng of rosy-
everywhere;
is had by drinking,
we, breakfast, a glass
water with a teaspoonful
9 phosphate ih it to wash
stomach, liver, kidneys and
of bowels the previous day's
file waste, sour fermentations
is, thus cleansing, sweeten*
freshening the entife alimen-
canal before putting,'more food
the stomach.
iiose subject to sick headache, b I-
. breath, rheumatism,
,, and particularly those who
a and
>. aro constipated Very often, am
jd to obtain a quarter pound of
iiestone phosphate from any drt g-
at the store which will c< st
trifle but is sufficient to demon-
, — tfio quick and Remarkable
change in both health and appearance
waiting those who, practice internal
sanitation. We "must: remember that
inside cleanliness is more important
than outside, because the skin does
orb impurities! to contaminate
the blood, while the pores in the thir*
jaagggaaaa vww ,| v* vm;
set of bowels do.—Adv,
m" ~~~
HHil
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■HUM
Hip
. Over 83,000 Australians have been
trained for active service since the
war began.
6REA0 WITHOUT SALT IS TASTELESS
A medicine chest without Magic Av->
nica Liniment is useless. Best of all
liniments for sprains, swellings,
bruises, rheumatism and neuralgia.
SPbree oizos, 25c, 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
j(_" . .. .,f ...... v ^ ^
A friend will always laugh at your
Jokes, be they goud or bad, but there
is a great deal in the way he dqes it
Ec-Zene Kills Eczema.
|E$j£na prove it. Accept no substitute. If
write to
your Druggist does not have it, i
JSc-Zene Co., St. Paul, Minn.—Adv,
—
New Tune Needed.
onald and a little girl friend were
not very successful selling Red Cross
stamps because they were late coihers
in a field already canvassed. They
(1 on a street corner for confer-
' once. ■ 1
lat do you say when you go to
flomeaa
say.l
'Do you want to buy any Red Cross
« «■,■ stamp." today?' and they say, 'No, not
. say, and; that is what
ay to me, too," replied the little
irl. "I guess we had better get .a
new■ tune."—Indianapolis News.
iDSHim
* jmn
Diapepsin" cures sick,
sour stomachs in five minutes
—Time It! ' • "
"Really does" put bad stomachs in
•d^r—"really does" overcome indiges-
on, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and
urtiesS in five minutes—that—-just
at—makes Pape's Diapepsin the Jar-
t selling stomach regulator in the
If what you eat ferments into
i lumps, you bei^h gag .and
sour, undigested food and
id is dizzy and ache&; breath
pngue coated; your insides filled
*" >; and indigestible waste, re*
the moment 'Tape's Diapep-
ea in contact with the stoihach
distress Vanishes. It's truly
ig—aI&o«i marvelous^yand
" a hamilessnes's,; j . ;*j
tyrcent case of Pape's D|a-
you a hundred dollars'
a weight in gold to men
io can't get their Stbm-
l belongs in your
' " > kept htedy
?set stomach
sht it's/the
.—Adv.
£1
) Belt, a
""li>wn^
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:
Roger Babson, the government statistician whose articles on economics ah4~international trade'are familiar to
thousands qf newspaper rfeaders, had something of a physical breakdown recently aihd his doctors, ordered the open-
air cure. So Mr. Babson has established his office on the veranda qf his home at Wellesley Hills#, Mass., and there
works with his stenographers, as shown in the photograph.
IliAvFlwiATI^ SAtONIKI HARBOR
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~' UNDERWOOOT«, . "
KCnaOTfiCSKHC
:3lX£3!3a3!£ai30C3C
The harbor of Saloniki, Greece, was visited recently by a severe gale. Though the allied battleships and transports
Buffered little, many of the smaller craft wore wrecked.
LEADS OPPONINT^ OF EMPEROR YUAN
MtSSTSRACE OVERMAN
g M if-
!||i!!
VMWMWMMWO { R
iCmMMm
Miss Overman, daughter of Senator
and Mrs. Lee S. Overman of North
Carolina, is one of this winter's most,
attractive debutantes in Washington
society.
GERMAN FLOATING MINE
ThiB is Tong King Chong, president of the Chinese Free Mason asso-
ciation of San Francisco and leader in America of the movement to pre-
vent Yuan Sliih Kai from becoming emperor of China.
WARSHIPS SEND UP CAPTIVE BALLOONS
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to maltc a biU ot tare with ease, •
And oiu; (Ivu'u ;;,lv.'.".yii sni'o to please.
Start "soup" aa "a lii-Khnn'r.
Next in order comes the flsh .
Then some dainty little Uish
, To take away the taute of flah
And pave the v/av for dinner.
■ " • , , -John Willy.
SAVORY SWEETBREADS.
Sweetbreads vary so in price in
different markets that thgy may ba
called an expen-
sive luxury in oha
place and an ordi-
nary priced dish
in others. Sweet-
breads get their
name from a fan-
cied resemblance
to the rising doiigfi
of bread. When choosing sweetbreads
see that they are fresh and large.
Their color should be clear, and If
they are not to be used immediately
they should be parboiled.
One of the best liked and perhaps
the commonest ways of serving this
dainty is in a cream sauce in rame-
kins or on toast Parboil, then cut
in bits, removing all of the connecting
tissue. To blanch, cook in a little
acidulated water, a tablespoonful of
vinegar to a pint of water is suffi-
cient. Then add them" to a hot,
rich white sauce, well seasoned, and
serve.
Sweetbread Salad.—Cut up a sweet-
bread that has .been cooked,' mix
with an equal quantity of celery cut
in dice, season well, add mayonnaise
and serve on lettuce.
■^-'Sweetbreads and Peas.—This com-
bination seems to be especially happy.
Parboil, two pairs of good sized sweet-
breads with one sliced onion, a bay
leaf and two or three cloves—saving,
the water to be used in making the
sauce. Remove the fiber and pick
the sweetbreads to pieces, mix with
a cupful of -fresh mushrooms that
have been cooked in three tableBpoon-
fuls oj^butter for ten minutes. ^ Add
a'can of peaa. drained of their liquor,
a cupful of rich milk, salt, pepper,
and a grating of nutmeg. Thicken
with a tablespoonful each of butter
and flour,, add the liquor strained, and
the sweetbread mixture. Serve in
timbale cases or on toast.
Sweetbread Sandwiches.—Cut some
cold boiled sweetbreads "in thin
slices, season with salt, * pepper
and finely chopped celery in may-
onnaise, spread over the sweetbreads,
then on top put a thinly cut slice
of buttered bread.
Among the war trophies exhibited
at London is {his German floating
mine which was taken apart so that
its inner workings are visible. The
wires -seen led from the contact pins
to the 220 pounds of "T. N. T." placed
in the lower section.
, Speakllnfl of Ms Effihes-
The "late "Justice brewer was with a
party of New York friends on a fishing
trip in the Adirondacks, and aropnd.
the campflre one evening the talk nat-
urally ran on big flsh, When i't came
hid turn the Jurist began, uncertain as
to how he was going to come out.
"We were fishing one time on the
Grand Babies, for—er—^for—'♦ I
| "Whales," somebody suggested. ■ £
"No," said the justice; "we, were
baiting with whales."—Pittsburgh
Chronicle-Telegraph,
MP
te Italians have been using ipapfive balloons
' theto up frqm warships,; to observe--the
SMS
SEASONABLE DISHES.
—s-When there are a few oysters left,
and not enough for a meal, put one
in each cake of sausage,
pat out until quite thin,
then coolt as usual. The
sausage will flavor the
oyster and the oyster fla-
vors the sausage.
Sausages With Chest-
nuts.—Roast chestnuts
and take the skina off;
fry—six small flat oval-
cakes of sausage meat,
when well browned take them out and
pour off nearly all of the fat, mix
it with a tablespoohful- of flour and
cook until brown. Add a pint of
strong beef stock or gravy, a glass of
grape jelly, some savory herbs, salt,
pepper and paprika to taste. Bring
to the boiling point, lay in the sau-
sages and the chestnuts and stew
very gently for an hour. Heap the
chestnuts in the center of a hot plat-
ter, arrange the sausage around them
and pour the strained gravy over all.
Serve very hot. Sausages served
With fried banana is another well
liked dish. Add"a glass of orange mar-
malade to your mincemeat if it seems
to lack something which you cannot
define.
Rip© olives, stoned " and chopped,
mixed with apple and celery, served
with mayonnaise dressing is another
good combination. -
Mock Chicken Salad.—Cook a pbund
of veal with a small piece of onion
and celery until tender in boiling wa-
ter. Chop the meat, add a cupful of
finely cur celery, half a dozen stuffed
olives cut in halves, marinate well in
French dressing to which is added a
little Worcestershire sauce. Mold in
ice cream cones,and serve on lettuce.
Garnish with olives at the base of
the cone.
8avory Cheese.—To a fourth of a
pound of Roquefort add a cream
cheese put through a ricer, add olive
oil or -cream to make it soft, season
with' a tablespoonful of grated onion,
a tablespoonful of finely chopped pars
leyland a red pepper put through a
sieve. A finely chopped; green pepper
may be substituted,~add~salt and cay-
enne, mix well, press into a small
mold lin^d with waxed paper. Serve
unmolded on a plate with toasted
crackers served with it.
Cinnamon.
It is a seeming paradox that the
best-flavored cinnamon - bark is pro*
duced on pobr, white, sandy soil. It
must, however, have, an abundance of
moisture, the choicest growing in a
temperature of 85 degrees, where .the
rainfall is about one' inch for every
degree of temperature,
ilse Voui* Own Judgment.
"Good advice," said Uncle Bben, "1*
sneratly so. mixed up wlf bad advice
it ae well take a dbftnc*
P
1 M * ... ' - ' -
mmL
STAGNATION.
PE RU MA
Catarrh means inflammatiptu
Inflaniaiation is the stagnation
of blood—the gorging of me
circulation with impure blood.
Of course you can't be weU under
this condition. It mean?, headaches,
indigestion, kidney trouble, coughs,
col<£, etc. .
creases the circulation, Invigorates the
system, removes the waste matter and
brightens you up.
" Over 44 Years
Of service to the public $&tlties it to a
place with you.
It Makes Good
The Perana Company I Columbus, Ohio
, You can get Peruna In tablet form
for convenience."
Woman began her career as a rib;
now she is the whole umbrella.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the ;
original little liver pills put up, 40 years y ^
ago. They regulate liver and bowels.—Adv.
The success of a nurse girl depends
on her attention to little things.
Stop That Ache !
Don't worry along with a bad
back. Get rid of it. IfS a sign you'
haven't taken care of yourself—
haven't had enough air, exercise
and sleep. Probably this has Jup-
set your kidneys. Get back to sensl-
ble habits, and give the kidneys;
help. Then, if it's kidney backache*
the dizziness, lameness and tired-
ness will disappear. Use Doan's
Kidney Pills—the best recommend-
ed- kidney remedy.
Asa Oklahoma Case.
Mrs. C. -Ford.' 423
Telle a iytorj/ /£? w Choctaw Ave.,
.rg-. - Oklahoma City,
Okla., says: "Kid-
ney trouble clung
to me for years,
bringing pains in
my back and sides.
I could hardly
stoop and I had
awful rheumatic
twinges In my
limbs. Doan's Kid-
ney Pills strength-
ened and regulated
_ my kidneys and rid
me of every sign of kidney complaint."
Gal Doom's at Any Store, SOc a Box
DOAM S WV'S
FOSTER-MULBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
Comtdpatioift
:ip«
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVE! PELS never
fail. Purely vegeta-
ble — act surels
but gently on
the liver.
Stop after
dinner dis-
tress—cure '
indigestion,
improve thecomplexion, brighten theeyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRIOR,
Genuine must bear Signature
CARTER'S
ITTLE
PILLS.
ftACI
LEG
. .. Use ony Sector, but CatterfaPvjioBti
The ouporlority of Cutter products Jo duo to over IB
fears of specializing In vaeelncs and serume only.
Inilit on Cutter's. If unobtatoablo, order direct.
Th Cutter Laboratory, Berkeley, Gal., or Chleaao; IIL.
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTEO
by Cutter's Blackleg Pills, Lovr-
prlcod, fresh, reliable; preferred by
Westerti stoolcmon, because ihej?
jroteot where ottier - vSeoifie* fall.
fVrlto for booklet and testimonials.
10-dese pkge. Blaekjeg Pills $1,01)
JO.dose Pkfle. Blaokloa Pills,.. 4.08
Use any Injector, but Cutter's best.
m
Mitchell'a Early Double Frollilc Cotton deflea
bool-weevll Insects, disease, frost and un-
favorable seasons with greatest, profit and
yields on rocord. Tho proof sent free, too lbs.
seed $5. Sugar Loaf Farm, YounnsvHfe, N. O.
Oklahoma Directory
Films Develbped
811m packs, any size, l&o: Prints tip to and t&oladtnc
u "
lOoaRoll
Any Size
m
XHxiH. So;
our fllm ©x]
Koda'
where, Iprepaii
Ot AWt CHiUb9!U]|f
I _
, aiwl all Kodak Sapjiiies Beat toyr':'
... . x. Hend us ytinr next roll and lot us
oonvlnco yotj wo are doing hotter Kodak finishing.
Brndtor catalog.
_ We8tfall Drug Co., Kodak Dept.
C06 W. Main Eaatman Agents Oklahoma City
Lee-Huckins4—-
If OKLAHOMA OITY
I FIREPROOF ■
J 450 Rooms 300 Baths
I Rates;
ARTISTS-
EMGRAVERS
PL WES FOR ALL S&IHtlNG PURPOSES
| QiftLAHOMA CITY.
W. N. U, Oklahomi City, No.
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Buck, James T. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 8, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, February 4, 1916, newspaper, February 4, 1916; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth242327/m1/2/: accessed April 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.