The Claude News (Claude, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1915 Page: 2 of 8
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en the French want to T
they don't dare say In
"Ah. you could make youffortuns in
Parte If you could only discover that
•NMthhii"
■3*3/5 illimin ^yjfaiih
Tor «*., bum. bruises, stiff neck,
•ore throat, sprains, tame back and
bunions, use Hhntord'a Balsam at
Myrrh. It la guaranteed. It later ex-
ternal use only. Always hare a bottle
OS hand, ready tor accidents. Adv.
■ I n I i i ■' I.
The password to the Tower ot Lon-
don is changed every three months.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
rpg.
1 ovei
of fathers a
I U the caution applied to the publlo announcement of Osstorja that
is been manufactured under the supervision of Chas. H. Fletcher for
iCastoria. Werespe _ gjj-
basing <
. j wrapw
peers on both sides of the bottle
&
over 80 yean—the genuine Castoria. >Verespeotfully call the attention
_ as and mothers when purchasing Castoria to see that the wrapper bears
hk signature in blaok. When the wrapper is removed the same signature ap-
on both aides of the bottle in red. Parents who have used Castoria for
little ones in the past years need no warning against counterfeits and
Imitations, but our present duty is to call the attention of the younger gener-
ation to the great danger of introducing Into their families spurious medicines.
It is to be regretted that there are people who are now engaged in the
nefariouis business of putting up and selling all sorts of substitutes, or what
•hould more properly be termed counterfeits, for medioinal preparations not
only for adults, but worse yet, for children's medicines. It therefore devolves
on the mother to scrutinize closely what she gives her child* Adults can do
that for themselves, but the child has to rely On
the mother's watchfulness.
deaulao Castoria always bears the signature
ALL WORTH REMKMMWNa V
CONSCIENTIOUS COOK.
Of
Enterprising White.
A writer gives a little sketch of
black and white in Natal, llo tells
how ho came across a white boy, some
fourteen years old. and a group of raw
natives playing a game. They were
shooting with an old muzzle-loading
shotgun at a bottle on tho top of a
case. When the youngster smashed
a bottle he received a "tickey" (a
threepenny bit) from the natives.
When a native hit it he received three-
pence from Ike boy.
"That seems a funny sort ot game,"
remarked the witness to the boy.
"Oh, the game's all right, sir,'' re-
plied the lad. "You see, 1 load the
g'ln."
Why They Didn't Go.
'How did it happen you didn't go
away during tho summer? I thought
you were having an extensive outlit
propared for you?"
"Thai was the trouble. I!y the time
I got the outfit paid for 1 didn't have
any money left."
The Menu.
"My friend is a woodman."
"Then why not order chops?
timore American.
-Dal
CUTICURA SOAP BATHS
Followed by a Little
Baby's Tender Skin.
They afford infants and children
great comfort, permit rest and sleep
and point to speedy healment of ec-
zemas, rashes, ltchings, dialings and
other sleep destroying Bkln troubles.
Nothing better at any price for the
nursery and toilet.
Sample each free by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XV,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
A man plays golf because he likes
to sport. A woman plays golf because
It Is a proper thing to ilo.
It Ib easy to get around anyone you
can manage to see through.
The Advantage.
want the bald facts
"We
case."
"Then we can't split hairs over it."
This Arm
l v v
. with
Richards'
Magic Washing Stick
do
as much
sfkis
H
7|
V,
/
This remarkable invention does
away with rubbing, scrubbing—
does away with wash boards and wear-
ing out of clothes—does the work of
hours in minutes.
Why?
Because it is a new discovery that makes clothes clean
without work and without harm. It is as different from
other so-called quick cleaning preparations as day is from
night. You do not WORK with it. You HANDLE it—
and your clothes are spotless and sweet smelling—all done
quickly, easily and inexpensively. Ask your dealer for it
today. 3 Sticks for 25c—less than 2c a washing.
Sold by all Drupgista and Grocers everywhere. If yours doesn't handle it, Bhow him thi
ad -he'll get it for you. Or send 25c in stamps to A. B. Richards Co., Sherman. 1 ex.
DISTRIBUTORS
Williamson-Halsell-Frazier Company
Oklahoma City, Guthrie, Elk City, Chickasha, Shawnee and Altus
10c Worth of
Will Clear $1.00 Worth of Land
Get rid of the stumps and grow
big crops on cleared land. Now
is the time to clean up your farm
while products bring high prices. Blasting ts
quickest, cheapest and easiest with Low r I('ez-
ing Du Pont Explosives. They work in cold
weather.
Write for Free Handbook of Exploaivea No. 69F.
and name of neareat dealer.
DU PONT POWDER COMPANY
WILMINGTON DELAWARE
Vegetable Soup at It Should Be Made
for the Beet Beeulta—Potato That
Will Be Attractive to the
Invalid.
Ointment for
Trial Free.
Vegetable Soup.—Take one large po-
tato or two small ones, one carrot and
one turnip of medium sVze, and one
email onion; wash, pare and slice
them, and let them boil for one hour in
one quart of water, adding parsley or
any herb preferred for flavoring, and
more water as It bolls away, so that
there will be a quart when done.
Thicken with a spoonful of flour or
cornstarch, dissolved in a little cold
water; or a spoonful of rice or any
coarse cereal may be added when the
vegetables are half cooked. Strain off
tho liquid, season to taste, and add a j
few spoonfuls of sweet cream. If a ;
dish a little more substantial 1s do- :
sired, tho vegetables may be rubbed
through the strainer also and mixed
with the liquid.
Bread Panada.—Toast slowly several
slices of stale light bread, until they
are a golden brown all through. Pile
them in a bowl, sprinkling each one
with a little sugar and a pinch of salt
' Jap explain* How Family Wee In-
abied to Uee OMie Flii Two or
Three Qeneratlene.
Among the Japanese economy la
held to be a high virtue. Two old ml-
■era of Tokyo were one day dincusslng
way* and meant of laving.
"I manbge to make a fan last about
twenty years," said one, "and this la
my system: I don't wastefully open
the whole fan and wave It carelessly.
I open only one lection at a time.
That is good for about a year. Then
I cpon the next, and so on until tbe
(an is eventually used up."
'Twenty years for a good fan!" ex-
claimed the other. "What sinful ex-
travagance! In my family we use a
fan for two or three generations, and
this ts how we do it: We open the
whole fan, but we don't wear It out
by waving it. Oh, no! We hold It
still. like this, under our nose, and
wave our face!"—Everybody's.
Warrior of Today.
George Wharton Pepper said at a
luncheon at the Plattsburg training
camp for officers:
"The methods of warfare have
changed enormously in the past year.
The sword, for example, is no longer
carried. The sword has quito disap-
peared from war.
"A story comes from the Argonne
shout a French chasseur who took a
then cover with boiling water, close German omcer 1)rjsoner. The chasseur,
The Idea.
"What do you think Is tho most
lucrative way of paving?"
"With gold bricks."
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look ten years younger if you
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray l:airs by
using "La Creole" Hair Dressing—Adv.
in the
tightly, set the bowl in a pan of boil-
ing water and let simmer gently until
tho bread iS like jelly. Serve warm,
with sugar and cream and a grating of
nutmeg.
Potato for an Invalid.—Where potato
is allowed, select such as will'boil yp
dry and mealy. Peel them nnd boil un-
til well done, then mash very thor-
oughly with a wire masher until per-
fectly free from lumps. Add rather
more salt than usual nnd several
spoonfuls of thick, sweet cream; then
beat until perfectly smooth and lieht,
and serve at onefc. Potato served in
this way is delicious and much more
easily digested by a weak stomach
then when eaten with butter.
Fruit Toast.—Fruit toasts are de-
licious and appetizing and may bo
mado either with fresh or canned
fruit. Dip the slices of toast In the hot
juice, removing them quickly to a hot
dish, then thicken tho juice slightly
with cornstarch, adding the pulp,
rubbed through a sieve or finely
chopped, and pour all over the toast.
Fruit Whip.—A nourishing way of
serving fruit, either fresh or canned,
is to press it through a sieve or wire
gravy strainer and then stir it into
whipped cream, regulating tho amount
of fruit as desired and nytng m
taste.
Egg Souffle Toast—Place a slice of
toast on a white enameled plate,
spread with fresh butter or very thick
sweet cream, heap on top the stiffly
whipped white of an egg. hollowing
out the top to form a nest. In this
place the yolk. Set in the oven to
cook the egg lightly.
a boy, a tyro, said to the officer:
"'Give up your sword.'"
"Hut the officer shook his head and
answered:
" I have no sword to give up. But
won't my vitriol spray, my oil projec-
tor or my gas cylinder do as well?'"
Just as He Had Said.
"You remember selling me some
halr-rostorer when I called the other
day to get shaved, you hoary-headed
old thief?" roared the indignant cus-
tomer. "You sold It under falsa pre-
tences,.sir. You said it would restore
my head to Hn original condition."
"Well, didn't It work?" asked the
barber
"Work? No. It's taken off wiuit lit-
tle hair I used to have, and I am as
bald as the pavement now."
"That's quite right, sir. No falre
pretence about that. I said iv would
reslore your head to its original condi-
tion. and you know, sir, most of us
are born bald."
¥5-'.
I Guarantee "Dodson'e Liver Tone" Will Give You the Best Uvlf
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had—Don't Lose a Day's Woit!
Calomel makes you tick; you loae a
day's work. Calomel la quicksilver
and It salivates; calomel Injures your
liver. . s
If you are bilious, (eel lazy, sluggish
and all knooked out, It your bowels
are constipated and your bead aches
or stomach Is sour, Just take a spoon-
ful of harmless DodBon's Liver Tone
Instead ot using sickening, salivating
calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone to real
liver medicine. You'll know It next
morning became you will wake up
feeling-fine, your liver will be work-
ing, your headache and dizziness gone,
your stomach will bo 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-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone
under my personal guarantee that It
will* clean your ilutglah liver better
than nasty calomel; it'woa't make you
sick and you can eat anything you
want without being salivated. Your
druggist guaranteea that each spoonful
will start your liver, clean your b6wela
and straighten you, up by morning or
you can have your money baok. Chil-
dren gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone
because It la pleasant tasting and
doesnt gripe or cramp or mako them
sick.
I am selling millions of bottles of -
Dodson's Liver Tone to people who
have found that this pleasant, vege-
table. liver medicine takes the pUce
of dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle
on my sound, reliable guarantee. Ask
your druggist or storekeeper about me.
W
NOT AS HE EXPRESSED THEM
Motto for a lawyer: "I will." Mot-
to for a fruit preserver: "I can."
Not Here.
She was looking for an apartment.
It must lie in a^ "^^'ass^ neigh
borhood,'' she fjf
ten larg
fTnisT^
'* niu.j;t have
othsand all
SoITcnTimprovements, and 1 won't pay
a cent over $-10 a month."
"1 know the very place you're look-
ing for," replied the agent, "but If you
want to ilnd out how to get there
you'll have to consult a clergyman.
The Haughty Help.
you miss the summer
board-
Oyster Pate.
One pint oysters, one tablespoonful
each butter and flour, one cupful
cream, cayenne, grated nutmeg, yolk
of one egg, chopped parsley. Line a
shallow baking dish with rich crust.
Make sauce of butter, flour, cream,
sauce, and when heated through whip
in the well-beaten egg yolk. At once
pour into the pastry crust (previously
baked) and heat in oven about eight
minutes. The crust can be molded
over inverted muffin cups or made in
the regular baking dish lined with
paste, and even covered with a second
crust is most attractive.
"Do
crs?"
"Kind o'," replied Farmer Corntos-
sel. "A summer boarder Is right com-
fortin' 10 have around from time t 1
time. He ain't nigh so bossy an fault
tlndin' as the hired men."
Other people may have good taste,
but, of course, yours is a little better.
Teamster's Words Would Have Re-
quired Adjustment Before Their
Use in the Pulpit.
A man was brought before a police
court charged with abusing his^team
and using loud and profane language
on the street. One of the witnesses
was a pious old darky, who was sub-
mitted to a short cross-examination.
"Did the defendant use improper
language while he was beating his
horses?" asked the lawyer.
"Well, lie talk mighty loud, suh."
"Did he indulge in profanity?"
The witness seemed puzzled. The
lawyer put the question in another
form:
"What I mean, I'licje Aba, is—did
he use words that would be proper for
your minister to use in a sermon?"
"Oh, yes suh," the old man replied
with a grin that revealed the full
width of his immense mouth: "but
dey'd have to be Vang id diff'runt."—
Everybody's Magazine
Tried Doth.
The Widow—If you married again 1
suppose you would want a woman of
intellect.
Tho Widower—Yes, but Just about
medium.
The Widow—Medium?
The Widower—Yes. My first wife
was a strong-minded woman and my
id was a weak-minded woman and
t as bad as t'other.—Judge.
sec
one's
off to
Getting*"Etferi.
"The cook asked for a wefei
got married, so I gave it to her.
"I don't think f would have done
that. You can't spare her very well
now."
"I know I can't, but it was tho only
way I saw to ever get even with her.'
Graduating by Post.
"Dad. what's a postgraduate?"
"A fellow who emerges from a cor-
respondence school, I imagine.
The rule in politics is that the side
that owns the steam roilor use it.
Sprained ankle? Rub on and rub in
Hanford's Balsam thoroughly. Adv.
Constantinople was founded in 330
A. D.
Spartan Women Suffered Untold Torturea
but who wants to be a Spartan? Take
"Femenina" for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
A Religion With Him.
"What is your father's religion?"
"Golf, 1 guess. It's the only thing
he does 011 Sundays."
Stretched Out.
"What is your dachshund's name?"
"I call him 'Art.'"
"An appropriate name. Art is lo|g."
Paw Still on the Job.
Llttlo Lemuel—What's a book-w^
paw?
Paw—It's a worm that would ral
digest a book by eating it than by r|
ing it.
No Compromise.
"Is Jiggers consistent in his
tarlanlsm?"
"I should say he Is." "Why
won't even eat cabbage, becausrj
so intimately associated with
beef,"
Sure Thing.
"Carrie is a long-headed girl."
"How so?"
"Uistnad of trusting to luck a|
rSt!5sWir(rfie""got"~eTigagtiT#-i>efiii'e
Ing down, and makes her fiance
down to seo her onco a week.'
Careful Diagnosis.
"Well, you did you succeed]
your lirst diagnosis? Did you
by my advice?"
The Young Doctor—I think
sir. I told tho patient that hei
suffering from a combination of |
stomach, heart, lung and brain troi
Old Practitioner—Good! No chl
of a mistake there.—Stray Storie^
Economical Cake.
The most surprising of cakes can
be produced without eggs or butter.
To a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of
Boda dissolved in a teaspoonful of
warm water add a cupful of sour milk,
three-quarters of a cupful of brown
sugar and a half a cupful of treacle.
Sec that the sugar is well dissolved,
and then add two cupfuls of brown
Hour, a good pinch of ginger and a
teaspoonful of cinnamon. Heat to
smoothness, and pour in while stir-
ring a quarter of a pound of floured
raisins—less can he used. Bake in a
slow oven for a good hour. This cake
is economical, and will keep a long
time, but it is better not to cut it
1 for a day or two.
Manhattan Puddincj.
Mix together the juice of three or-
anges, a lemon and a half cupful of
sugar: let sland several Hours. Whip
a cupful of heavy cream, add a half
cupful of powdered sugar and a cup-
ful of chopped nuts or candied fruit.
Hub a mold sparingly with olive oil,
pour in the fruit juices, spread with
the whipped cream mixture and cover
with paraffin paper, put on the lid and
bury in ice and salt for three hours.
Serve garnished with sections of or-
ange which have stood over night in
a thick sirup of sugar and water. j
THE TWO BlITTES IRRIGATION SYSTEM
in Southeastern Colorado is the only completed Carey Act project in the State
It is one of the most perfect in the United States. It was built for the farmew
under the superv.sion of the State of Colorado. The soil and climate are
specially adapted to alfalfa, wheat, com. oats, barley, and to dairying, poultry,
livestock, and irrigation guarantees the result. We want men who will work and ;
develop and make homes, no speculators. A new country with a world ol 1
promise for the industrious farmer or stockman with limited resources. Lands
for sale cheap and on easy terms. Do not wait until a railroad advances
prices bevond your reach, but write at once.
THE TWO BUTTES REALTY COMPANY
TWO BUTTES* COLORADO
Scrambled Eggs With Asparagus Top*.
Melt three ounces of butter In a
saucepan, nreak into it six fresh eggs:
season with a pinch of salt, half a
pinch of pepper and a third of a pinct
of grated nutmeg. Mix thorouglilj
without stopping for three minutes
using a spatula and having the par,
on a very hot jtove. Add a quartet
of a bunch of freshly boiled asparagui
tops.
Apple Float.
When making apple float, try bak-
ing the apples instead ot stewing them
The pulp is removed from the skim
and mixed with tue whites ot the *
which makes the float much la'.t-i
tban the old way. 1
i
Surgeon General Rupert Blue
of the U. S. Public Health
Service Says:
"I WANT TO WARN YOU AGAINST THE CRAZE PEOPLE
IN THIS COUNTRY HAVE FOR WHITE FLOUR. THE
WHITEST FLOUR IS NOT THE BEST; IT IS NOT THE
PUREST; IT IS ONLY THE DEAREST, AND WHEN YOU
BUY IT YOU BUY LOOKS AND NOT NOURISHMENT. IN
ORDER TO MAKE IT WHITE, SOME OF THE MOST NOUR-
ISHING AND ESSENTIAL COMPONENTS OF THE NATURAL
WHEAT HAVE BEEN TAKEN AWAY."
These "nourishing and essential components" are the priceless mineral phosphates of thj
grain, known as the tissue salts," indispensable for perfect health of body, brain and nerved
Everywhere food scientists and physicians are sounding a like note of warning, for a hosj
of ills is following the pernicious practise of casting out these elements in the milling ! J
and that, simply to make the flour look white and pretty Neurasthenia, anemia, Br.gh 8 ^easel
constipation, rickets, and a lowered resistance against disease in general, are some of these iIlsT
More and more thinking people are waking up to this evil. There's a way out
Grape-Nuts
M FOOD
made of whole wheat and barley, retains all the nutriment of the grains and those''eMenti«|
components'- the mineral elements. This splendid food was devised years ago to suppj
this very lack in ordinary food and fortify the system against the onslaughts of disease. It do«T
it wonderfully well.
Grape-Nuts comes ready to eat. convenient, economical and nourishing, and has become
household word in thousands of homes for its sterling food values and delicious havor.
There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts
—sold by Grocers everywhere
<•
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Bishop, Marvin E. The Claude News (Claude, Tex.), Vol. 14, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1915, newspaper, November 5, 1915; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth348459/m1/2/: accessed May 6, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Richard S. and Leah Morris Memorial Library.