The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 12, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 23, 1915 Page: 3 of 8
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THE CASS COUNTY SUN
J
Ah, panning few are they who speak,
Wild stormy month! In prulne of
the#:
Yet though thy windi or* loud and
bleak
Thou urt a welcome montb to me.
GOOD THINGS FOR GUE8T9.
A delicious little hot dish to pre-
pare for a friend la:
Tomato Rarebit.
—Put a table-
spoonful of butter
Into a saucepan
and when bubbling
hot add a table-
spoonful of flour;
when smooth, add
a cupful of tomato
puree (strained tomato). Cook for a
few minutes until smooth, then add a
half cupful of grated cheese, and
when melted, a half cupful of milk,
mixed with a beaten egg. Season well
and serve on salted wafers.
Salted Sandwiches.—Blanch two
ounces of almonds and cut In shreds
lengthwise. Saute in a tablespoonful
of butter until brown. Mix two table-
spoonfuls of cucumber pickles
chopped, one tablespoonful of Worces-
tershire sauce and one of chutney,
with a few grains of salt. Add to the
almonds and cook three minutes, stir-
ring constantly. Mash a cream
cheese and season with salt and pa-
prika. Spread unsweetened crackers
with the cheese and nuts.
Pineapple Sponge.—Beat the yolks
of three eggs and add the grated rind
of one lemon with the jHice, a half cup-
ful of sugar and a few grains af salt.
Cook in a double boiler, stirring con-
stantly until the mixture begins to
thicken. Remove from the heat and
add two-thirds of a cupful of pineap-
ple and one and a half tablespoonfuls
of gelatin, which has been soaked fif-
teen minutes in three tablespoonfuls
of cold water. Set the pan In iced wa-
ter and when the mixture begins to
thicken add one-half cupful of heavy
cream beaten BtifT and the whites of
three eggs beaten stiff. Turn into a
fancy mold which has been dipped In
cold water and chill thoroughly. Oar-
nlsli with pineapple and candied cher-
ries.
I B 'pm cruol to you and too much
addicted to ftluttony, when I beat my
cook for Bonding tip a bad dinner. If
thfit appears to you too trifling a
cause, say for what cause you would
have a cook flossed.—Martial's Epi-
grams.
u
II
The followi
delight the < .
and rne whl<'
occaainnu '
SOME WHOLESOME SOUPS.
A dish of hot soup Is especially
gratifying on n cold night or for the
beginning of a meal.
One should have on
J hand a few canned
JWESwJJ soups which may be
y 2 quickly served when
the need arises. Such
soups are more expen-
sive than tho average
housewife feels she can
use often, but It !o wise
t'> such a reserve,
•t dish which will
, , veil as the palate
,iay bo ii"'1''
■L.pany:
Take fvn eaIitj of clams or two
quarts of fresh ones If you aru for-
tunate enough to procure them. Add
enough water to make four cupfuls
of liquid. Cook three tablespoonfuls
of butter until brown; add three and
a half tablespoonfuls of flour and stir
until smooth. Tour on gradually
the clam water and simmer 20 min-
utes. Season with salt and paprika,
and Just before serving add a cupful
of rich milk or thin cream.
Vegetable Soup.—Wash and scrape
a small carrot, cut it in quarters
lengthwise and then In thin slices.
Wash and pare and cut a turnip in
the same sized pieces. Prepare two
good-sized potatoes (there should be
a cupful and a half of diced pota-
toes) and a half cupful of celery.
Peel and slice one-half onion. Mix all
the vegetables except tho potatoes
and cook In four tablespoonfuls of not
fat, stirring constantly. Add tbu po-
tatoes; cover and cook two ttlnutes,
then add one quart of fresh bpillng
water and simmer an hour. Rent with
a spoon to make smooth and serve
with a bit of parsley buttor on top
of each soup dish. Season well be.
fore taking up.
Cream of Tomats Soup.—Cook a
half can of tomatoes with four oloves,
a slice of onion and two tablespoon-
fuls of chopped green pepper, which
has been cooked five mlnut®* 111 a
tablespoonful of butter and a tea-
spoonful of sugar. Reaaon with salt
and red pepper. Strain after cook-
ing 15 minutes and add a fourth of a
teaspoonful of soda, then pour ever
a quart of rich milk. Hind with Touf
tablespoonfuls each o." four and but-
ter, cooked together.
MEL SICK! IT WES!
DON'T SIM BILjOUS, CONSTIPATED
I Guarantee "Dodson's Liver Tone" Will Give You the Best Liver
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had—Don't Lose a Day's WorkI
Calomel makes you tick; you lose a
day's work. Calomel is quicksilver
and it salivates; calomel injures your
liver.
If you are blliouB, feel lazy, sluggish
and all knocked out, if your bowels
are constipated and your head aches
or stomach is sour, Just take a spoon-
ful of harmless Dodson'B Liver Tone
instead of using sickening, salivating
calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone is real
liver mcdicine. You'll know it next
morning because you will wake up
feeling fine, your liver will be work-
ing, your headache and dizziness gone,
your stomach will be sweet and your
bowels regular. You will feel like
working. You'll be cheerful; full of
vigor and ambition.
Your druggist or dealer sells you a
60-ceut bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone
The Optimist.
He was leaving the sweet young
thing at the front door, and he
reached into his vest for a cigar. He
found two crushed ones, of course.
"Too bad," she said.
Free to Our Header*
Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, for
ift-pnge illustrated Eve Book Free. Write all
about your Eye Trouble and they will ad vine
h.h to the Proper Application of the Murine
Eye Remedies in Your Special Cane. Your
Druggist will tell you that Murine Relieves
Sore Byes, Strengthens Weak Eyes. Doesn't
Smart, Soothes Eye Pain, and sells for 60c.
Try It in Your Eyea and in Baby's Eyes for
Sculy Eyelids and Granulation. Adv.
Leading Up to It.
Patience—I hear they now say that
the moon has much to do with bring-
ing on war.
Patrice—Well, a good many engage-
ments, we know, are traceable to the
moon.
DO NOT HESITATE
To Use Cutlcura on Skln-Torturcd
Babies. Trial Free.
A hot bath with Cutlcura Soap and
gentle application of Cutlcura Oint-
ment at once relieve, permit rest and
sleep and point to speedy healment
of eczemas, rashes, itchings and irri-
tations of infants and children even
in severe cases.
Sample each free by mall with Book.
Address postcard, Cutlcura, Dept. XY,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
It Pays to Pray, and Advertise.
"Do you believe in the efficacy of
prayer?" asked the new minister.
"You bet!" triumphantly replied Sam
Stinger, the enterprising real estate
dealer. "Why, at the prayer meeting
last Thursday night, I prayed loud and
long for blessings on our progressive
little city, incidentally mentioning a
few of the advantages it possesses for
profitable investments, and next morn-
ing I sold four lots in my new Sky
High addition to a stranger who had
happened to drop In at the services!"
—Kansas City Star.
AT
E
If cross, feverish, constipated,
give "California Syrup
of Figs"
A laxative today saves a sick child
tomorrow. Children simply will not
take the time from play to empty their
bowels, which become clogged up with
waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach
sour.
Look at the tongue, mother! If coat-
ed, or your child is listless, cross, fev-
erish, breath bad, restless, doesn't eat
heartily, full of cold or has sore throat
or any other children's ailment, give a
teaspoonful of "California Syrup of
Figs," then don't worry, because it is
perfectly harmless, and In a few hours
all this constipation poison, sour bile
and fermenting wnste will gently
move out of the bowels, and you have
a well, playful child again. A thor-
ough "inside cleansing" is ofttlmes all
that is necessary. It should be the
first treatment given in any sickness.
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups.
Ask at the store for a 60-cent bottle of
"California Syrup of Figs," which has
full directions for babies, children of
all ages and for grownups plainly
printed on the bottle. Adv.
under my personal guarantee that it
will clean your sluggish liver better
than nasty calomel; it won't make you
sick and you can eat anything you
want without being salivated. Your
druggist guarantees that each spoonful
will start your liver, clean your bowels
and straighten you up by morning or
you can havo your money back. Chil-
dren gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone
because it is pleasant tasting and
doesn't gripe or cramp or make them
Bick.
I am selling millions of oottles of
Dodson's Liver Tone to people who
have found that this pleasant, vege-
table. liver medicine takes the place
of dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle
on my sound, reliable guarantee. Ask
your druggist or storekeeper about m«.
Nothing Impossible.
"You say Mrs. Gaddersly is the so-
cial arbiter of thin town?"
"Yes, and all powerful. Why, that
woman could mako malaria a fashion-
able complaint."
THIGK, GLOSSY HAIR
FREE FROM DANDRUFF
Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make It
Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant—Try
the Moist Cloth.
Try as you will, after an application
of Danderine, you cannot find a singlb
trace of dandruff or falling hair and
your scalp will not Itch, but what will
please you most, will be after a few
weeks' use, when you see new hair,
fine and downy at first—yes—but real-
ly new hair—growing all over the
scalp.
A little Danderine immediately dou-
bles the beauty of your hair. No uiffer-
ence how dull, faded, brittle and
scraggy, just moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. The effect is im-
mediate and amazing—your hair will
be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an
appearance of abundance; an incom-
parable luster, softness and luxuri-
ance, the beauty and shimmer of true
hair health.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's
Danderine from any store and prove
that your hair is as pretty and soft
as any—that it has been neglected or
injured by careless treatment—that's
all. Adv.
Incompatible Tastes.
**You say this pugilist is a great
lover of poetry?"
"That's what I said."
"But isn't it rather unusual for a
man in his profession to care for the
finer things of life?"
"It is, and I suspect that's why he's
always getting trounced."
NO DOUBT THAT RESINOL
DOES HEAL SICK SKIN
When you know physicians have
prescribed reslnol for 20 years in the
treatment of eczema and other itching,
burning, unsightly skin eruptions, and
have written thousands of reports say-
ing: "It is my regular prescription
for Itching," "Reslnol has produced
brilliant results," "The result it gave
was marvelous in one of the worst
cases of eczema," etc., etc., doesn't it
make you feel that "this is the treat-
ment I can rely on for MY skin-
trouble?"
The moment resinol ointment
touches itching skins, tho Itching stops
and healing begins. With the aid of
reslnol soap, it almost always clears
away every trace of eczema, ring-
worm, pimples, or other tormenting
eruptions quickly, leaving the skin
clear and healthy. Sold by all drug-
gists.—Adv.
One -half of the world seems to think
that the other half is living on a bluff.
—Philadelphia Telegraph.
Coughs and Colds cannot hold out against
Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops. A single
dose gives relief—5c at all Druggists.
Many precious stones may be "re-
constructed," but not the emerald.
Ask anybody about It—Hanford's
Balsam. Adv.
The pawnbroker acts as timekeeper Many a man and woman marry and
for men who fight hard luck. . live happily ever after—separating.
Actors Fight Well.
The large number of actors now in
tbe field for Germany Is indicated by
a recent remark of the emperor while
on one of his flying trips to Berlin.
Bent on a visit to Staff Physician Dr.
von Illberg, bis majesty encountered
a well-known playwright and Gustar
Kadenburg, the actor. Summoning
them to him, he announced that many
others of their profession were at tbe
front, including two famous actors
who have received the Iron Crass. "I
am very well satisfied with them," tbe
kaiser declared. "They fight very
well, indeed."
Every Household Needs It.
For cuts, burns sprains and bruises,
Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh should
give quick relief. These may happen
any day in any home and the prudent
housewife will always keep a bottle
on hand. Adv.
Just Possible. •
The Bachelor—I wonder why poets
frequently refer to woman as a dream?
The Benedict—Probably because she
is so blamed contrary.
Hunters' Paradise.
Sportsman—Is the hunting good
here?
Guide—Yep. Better than the find-
in'.—Columbia Jester.
—Take CAPUDINE—
For HEADACHES and GRIPP. It's
Liquid—Prompt and Pleasant.—Adv.
He is an exceptional man who
knows more than he thinks he knows.
—Omaha World-Herald.
To cool a burn apply Hanford's Bal-
sam. Adv.
A model wife is ono who isn't pat-
terned after a model.
"QfitBS"
. Cured by Pe-ra-iUi
A cold If mum e«l frh.
Peruna Is ft reoogulxed sMOdftM
'.m^r egtftrrh ^
ColumbuB.O.
BUCK
LEG (0-doM iku. BlMkUf Hilt 4 0#
Use any Injector, but Cottar's but.
The superiority of Cottar products la due 10 o?M U
years of apantaUflnf In vaaalnaa and saruais uly.
Insist os Cutter's. It unobtainable, order dtrwt.
THE CUTTER LABORATORY. Berksls*. California
IB-
WHY WOT TRY POPHAM'S
ASTHMA MEDICINE
I Given Prompt and Po«ltlve Relief In Every '
Ca^e. bold by Drugfftats. Price $1.00.
Trial Package by
Mall 10c.
J WILLIAMS MFtl. CO., Props, Cleveland, 0. <
WINTERSMITH'S
CHILL TONIC
not only the old reliable remedy
FOR MALARIA ,b,uiS
general strengthenlnatonlcand appetizer.
Forchildren as well as adulta. Sold for 80
years. 60c and S1 bottles at drug store*.
ADVICE TO THE AGED
Are brings Infirmities, sucb a* sluggish
ho.vcls, weak kidneys and torpid liver.
dni
Tuffs
have a specific effect on these organs,
stimulating the bowels, gives natural actbm,
and imparts vlgOr to the whole aytsem.
PATENTS
Wataon E. Coleman*
Patent Lawyer,Washington,
1);C. Advice and books fr« a.
Bates reasonable. Highest references* Beataervlcea
W. N. U., DALLAS, NO. 12-1915.
Those of Middle Age Especially,
When you have found no remedy for the horrors that
oppress you during change of life, when through the long
hours of the day it seems as though your back would break,
when your head aches constantly, you are nervous, de-
pressed and suffer from those dreadful bearing down pains,
don't forget that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
is the safest and surest remedy, and has carried hundreds
of women safely through this critical period.
Read what these three women say: ^
From Mrs. Hornung, Buffalo, N. Y.
Buffalo, N. Y.—"I am -writing to let you know how much your
medicine has done for me. I failed terribly during the last winter
and summer and every one remarked about my appearance. I suf-
fered from a female trouble and always had pains in my back, no
appetite and at times was very weak.
■r "I w£9 a,fc "friend's house one day and she thought I needed
I^yciia L. I inkhara 3 v egctablo Compound. I took it and liavo gained
eight pounds, have a good appetite and am feeling better every day.
Everybody is asking me what I am doing and I recommcnd Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. You may publish this letter if you
wish and I hope others who have tho same complaint will see it and
get health from your medicine as I did."—Jlrs. A. IIobmuno. 91
Stanton St, Buffalo, N. Y.
Made Me Well and Stroncr.
YOUS
the r win, j. „n-.i
turning to water. I took different medicines which did not help me,
but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made me well and
strong, and I am recommending it to my friends.'*—Mrs. Feed
Cxiac'e, It. No. 2, Macedon, N.Y.
The Change of Life.
Belts ville. Ma—M By the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound I have successfully passed through a most trying time,
the Change of Life. I suffered with a woakness, and had to stay in
bed three days at a time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
restored me to perfect health, and I am praising it for the benefit of
other women who suffer as I did."—Mrs. W. S. Duvall, Route No. 1,
Beltsviilo, Md.
For 30 Tears Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound has been the standard remedy for fo-
tnalo ills. No one siek with woman's ailments
does justice to herself if she does not try this fa-
mous medicine made from roots and herbs, it
lias restored so many suffering women to health.
tter will be opened, read and answered
man and held in strict conlidence.
Jfour letter
by a woman
V , * nnsn
i strict conlidence.
Catarrhal Fever
8 to 6 doses often cure.
""««« • "«>«"• « « *•« two
SPOHN'B U tbe b«t preTentlve of all forma of Mtanpw
SPOUN MEDICAL CO,
Chemlata and BacterlolugUta, Goahen. IniL, U.S. A.
You Look Prematurely Old
•MMueeof trtOM ugly, grlxsly, *r«y hairs, uh LA ORIOLE" HAIR DRKMIRO. PRIOE, l.oo. retail.
LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED
by Cuttar'a Blaekta, Ptlla. Urn.
prlnd, freah. nUabu; prefamd b
Waaurn atockmon bMaua. tiny pro.
taat whara .Itiar v.Mlnaa fall.
Write for booklat and teattmonlaU.
10-tf.ie pk,a. Blaakla, PjMa l.00
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Banger, J. E. A. & Erwin, W. L. The Cass County Sun (Linden, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 12, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 23, 1915, newspaper, March 23, 1915; Linden, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth341530/m1/3/: accessed May 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Atlanta Public Library.