The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, October 15, 1908, Image 3

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    FOR FEMININE EYES
^ -...
FROCK OF CLOTH OR RAJAH.
The sketch depicts a smart frock of peacock blue rajah, but the design
Would also be desirable for lightweight cloth. The gown was made In seml
prlncess style, with a panel In the middle of the front and back, and the skirl
and bodice Joined at the sides by a stitched Btrap belt.. Narrow bias bands ol
the material were used In trimming, and also embroidered buttons of the rajah.
The little plastron was of the rajah, embroidered In various tones of the same
color, and the yoke and undersleeves were of ecru tucked net, embroidered In
padded dots, In silk matching the gown material.
__?-jjo»vA#a
♦ SOUPS AND SALADS; ♦
♦ SOME GOOD REC'PES *
loMIIHIMMIIIHIIItttl
Mock Turtle Soup.
Boil a pickled beef tongue^tlll tender,
then cut in slices about one-fourth inch
thick. Make a gravy of two table
spoons of butter and two tablespoons
of flour, browned, adding enough beef
stock to make it the right consistency.
Then make small balls of the follow
ing: One-half cup boiled sweetbreads
chopped fine, one-fourth cup cracker
crumbs, one egg, and a pinch of salt.
Slowly cook the balls in the gravy
about 10 minutes, then add the sliced
tongue. This Is delicious and cannot
be told from the genuine turtle soup.
Veal Soup.
Take one and one-half pounds of
veal; cook as you would for any other
soup. Cut up good sized onion. When
•thoroughly cooked take out a bowl of
the breth and partly cool. Then Into
this bowl beat one egg; then turn back
Into other broth. Season to taste.
This will serve six people. You will
find this excellent soup. Few people
can detect It from chicken soup.
Make Dressing in Large Quantities.
Two tablespoons flour, one table
spoon mustard, paprika to taste, mix
flour, mustard, and paprika together
with milk until perfectly smooth. Pre
pare two cups of vinegar, one-half cup
sugar, butter size of walnut, salt.
Bring to a boll, then add the flour, et
cetera, stirring gently until it begins
to thicken. Remove quickly from the
Are, place In glass jar or covered dish
and put In cool place. This forms a
soft jelly. When ready to serve take
a sufficient quantity of the jelly and
beat In enough rich milk or cream to
make It smooth and thin enough to
Bpread over the salad. This can be
made up In quantities and kept Indef
initely.
Red Salad.
One pint of cold boiled potatoes, one
pint of pickled beets, one pint of un
cooked red cabbage. Cut potatoes and
beets Into dice, shred cabbage fine.
Dressing for above—One tablespoon
sugar, one teaspoon mustard, one
tablespoon salt, one tablespoon butter;
mix until smooth, add three eggs beat
en well, add one cup red vinegar in
which beets were pickled, one cup
cream. ,
HUMAN VIBRATIONS.
Frenchman Who Thinks He Has Pho
tographed the Emotions.
Dr. Baraduc. of Paris, has been lec
turing, says the Health Record, at the
Theosophical society’s rooms in London
on human vibration. He showed many
photographs of these alleged vibrations
by placing a sensitized film on one of
the nerve centers.
He usually places the film at night
and leaves it till morning. The vibra
tions of the subject throw the nitrate
of solver on the film into a corres
ponding form of vibration, which is
found registered on the film when de
veloped, just as the light reflected
from an object through the lens of a
camera registers the form of that ob
ject.
Dr. Baraduc had also many pictures
taken in the ordinary way by means
of the camera. In these various states
of emotion are shown. Sudden anger
appears as a sort of whirling shower
of sparks and vapor. A state of high
spiritual contemplation produces a
misty globe of light some way above
' the sitter's head.
In one picture the etheric double of
a woman kneeling In prayer Is shown.
According to the doctor the etheric
cosmic forces are continually streaming
into us and becoming individualized,
or streaming out, being distndlvldual
lzed, mingling again with the general
stream.
One photograph showed the vibration
of telepathic communication—some had
lines in ribbons of light, showing at
tachment. In one, taken us the doc
tor's wife passed away, the ltne or
bond which had always appeared be
tween them Is seen for the first time
broken.
Taller Anyhow.
Mr. Henpeck—All artists say that
five feet five inches is the divine height
for women.
Mrs. Henpeck—I am five feet eight
inches.
Mr. Henpeck—Tou are more than di
vine.
M-M-+4 + ♦ + ♦♦♦♦♦♦-♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ »-»♦++
♦ FIVE RECIPES FOR -ft
♦ PIES AND CAKES *
luMHUMiMHIlIHlUt!
Breakfast Turneake.
Three cups of flour, three teaspoon
fuls baking powder, one heaping tea
spoonful of butter, one cup of milk.
Roll out about an inch thick and
spread on hot griddle. Cover with a
basin and turn in 10 minutes. Cover
again and bake 10 minutes more.
Gold Cake.
Take the yolks of eight eggs left
from an angel food, one coffee cup of
sugar, one-half a cup of butter, cream
butter and sugar and beaten yolks,
one-half cup of sweet milk, one-half
teaspoon soda In milk, and one
teaspoon cream tartar, or you can use
one heaping teaspoon of baking pow
der In two cups level full of flour sift
ed four times. One teaspoon of va
nilla, frost, and if you wish a beautiful
cake, put freshly grated cocoanut on
top of the frosting.
Graham Fruit Roll.
To one and a half cups sifted gra
ham flour add three cups sifted white
flour, mixed with two cups sweet milk,
one teaspoon soda, and two of cream
of tartar, roll the dough into two ob
long Bheets about a quarter of an inch
thick, put the layers of fruit between
and over them, using one cup of rais
ins chopped and one cup of dried cur
rants, roll closely, pinching the ends
firmly together to secure the fruit.
Bake in moderate oven one hour.
Currant Cake.
Cream well together one large table
spoon of lard and one of butter. Add
one cup of light brown sugar, yolks of
three eggs, one teaspoon each of cloves,
cinnamon, nutmeg, ginger; add two
cupfuls of currants that have soaked
for a few minutes in water, then add
three cups of flour that has been sifted.
Add last one heaping cup of sour or
butter milk, with one small teaspoon
of soda dissolved in a little hot water;
then beat your whites of eggs till stiff
and add last. Frosting—Scald one
goblet of milk and add the whites of
two eggs, one tablespoon of cornstarch,
half cup of sugar; flavor to taste.
Hint for Huokleberry Pie.
When baking huckleberry pie If a
teaspoon of vinegar is added it greatly
improves the flavor.
STOCKINGS MUST MATCH.
Word has long since come from Paris
to the effect that the stockings must be
of silk and match the gown. That Is a
discouraging bit of news, for the price
of silk stockings In this country Is not
what It Is In Paris. Of course we have that
mercerized variety, which wears far bet
ter and looks "almost as well," but she
of the slender Income who wishes to be
strictly “a la mode" must economize
most rigidly on food and such trifles If
she wishes to obey the latest dictate from
the center of fashion!
But they must also match the gown.
This will necessitate having not “one to
wash and one to wear," but one pair for
every gown, possibly one for every day
In the week.
She can avoid this difficulty of course,
by having all her dresses cf the same
color, but In time that would undoubted
ly grow monotonous.
HINTS FOR'SALADS.
To keep the salad oil cruet clear and
sweet, add a tablespoonful of salt to u
quart of oil. The oil will not taste of the
salt, as the latter will not dissolve, but
will sink to and settle at the bottom of
the cruet.
In mixing salads the oil should be added
first and thoroughly spread before adding
the other Ingredients and mixing.
Salads which are moist and ceding
particularly cucumber—should have an
extra pinch of pepper added to counter
act the chilling effect on the eater's stoia- |
aeh. i
Cold string bean salad should have a
double dose of vinegar, as beans possess
In great degree the nutritious and health
ful food salts which develop to perfection
In acid.
Whenever It is possible pure lemon juice
should be substituted for vinegar as be
ing far more wholesome than the latter.
Endives—the pale, cool, succulently cur
ly chicory—salad should be scalded and
then chilled to make It more digestible for
elderly tolk, children or weak digestloned
Invalids.
Nicaragua Is the largest state In Cen
tral America. Its area Is 51,66* staart
miles.
Would Gladly Pay.
From the Cleveland Leader.
The English Winston Churchill's rep
utation for wit Is well known, and on
one occasion he made a'neat little joke
at the expense of a self-opinionated
army officer. The Incident occurred
during a dinner In South Africa,,and
Mr. Churchill and the officer were seat
ed plde by side. Throughout the meaL
the latter wa? airing his views, until af
last Churchill could stand it no long
er. “Do you know," he said quietly,
“I met a man today who would gladly
forfeit 50 pounds for the pleasure oj
being able to kick you!”
“To kick me, sir!” exclaimed the as
tonished soldier. "I must ask you ta
tell mo his name at once!”
“Oh,” replied Winston, “I am not
quite sure that I ought to do that.”
"But I Insist on knowing,” demanded
the other, angrily.
! “Well, then, I suppose I must tell you.
It was a poor young fellow In-the hos
pital who had lost both his legs by the
bursting of a shell."
DifFersnt Viewpoints.
The Optimist—Yes, I cast my bread
upon the water and
The Pessimist—Had It come back te
you damp and moldy, I suppose?
Deeply Interested.
She—I understand Jlgson has a finan
cial Interest in the concern he Is with.
He—Yes, they owe him six months*,
salary. I
Couldn’t Keep His Head Above Water.
Saintly—Pharaoh received a check on.
the Bank of the Red Sea.
Funnlmann—Yes, and the bank must
have busted, because Immediately after
poor Pharaoh went under. ,
Nothing at Ail.
Blnks—Jenkins declares that where
he was this summer the mercury
dropped to xero one night.
Winks—That’s nothing.
Blnks—What’s nothing?
Winks—Zero.
The Kind You Have Always Bought* and which has been
in use for over 30 years* has borne the signature of
_ — and has been made under his per
m 8onal supervision since its infancy.
/-eoccAZ&l Allow no one to deceive you in this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Jnst-as-good” are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Gastorla is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narco tie
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea—Tlie Mother’s Friend.
GENUINE GASTORIA ALWAYS
jSE Jt.jjfcjS
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years
THE CENTAUR COMPART, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods krlgkler god lister colors Ikoi aoy olker dye. One I Oc package colors aH liken. Iker dye In cald water ketler tkaa any olker dyt. too caa dya
gay garment wltboot ripping apart. Write lor Ins koaklei—How to Dye, Bieock and MU Calais. MOJ'i'ROE BKVC CO., Qaincy. Illinois
TraocMmk
1SCHOOL
1 SHOES
Bkm -rz-m—
FOR BOYS
and GIRLS
“SPECIAL MERIT” III
k SEAMLESS l\\\
SCHOOL SHOES l\\] -
SCHOOL SHOES without seams-think of ^\\\
It—seamless school shoes! They are \\\\
U strong and sturdy, have seamless uppers, tough 11 ill
soles and double leather toes. By far the most \ \ V
durable and lasting shoes obtainable. I \
“Special Merit” Seamless School Shoes "twor \\\ I
1 like iron." They wear just twice as long as All
ordinary shoes with seams. Ill
I Made in all styles and sizes, for ©very day and nil
Sunday wear-^for boys and girls. illli
write to us. Look for the Mayer
Trade Mark on the sole.
FRER—li yon will send ns the name of •
dealer who doaa not handle Special Merit
School Shoes, we will send you free, post*
paid, a beautiful picture of George or Martha
Washington, size 15x21. State which picture
you want.
Comfort She.. .n4 Yum. Ciuhloa J#
Shou. -S3
B] F. Mayer Boot £/Shoe Co.
fl »OLWAUltEE,WISCONSIN^^gj
Donald Knew.
Margaret, aged 10, was a beginner In his
tory. "Mama,” she asked, "what does 'be
head' mean?"
"To cut off a man's head, dear."
There was, a moment of silent study;
then another question.
"What does 'defeat' mean, mama?"
Little Donald, aged 4, was Interested.
"I know, mama," was his logical con
clusion. “ ‘Defeat’ means to cut a man's
feet off.”
The average elevator In a large, of
fice building travels about 20 miles an
hour.
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by
those Little Pills.
They also relieve Die
tress from Dyspepsia, la.
digestion ana Too Hearty
Bating. A perfect rwon.
edy lor Dizziness. Nausea,
Drowsiness. Bad Taste
in the Month. Coated
Tongue, Psln In the Side,
■TORPID UtVER. They
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE
Genuine Must Bear
Fan-Si mile Signature
BEFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from un
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odor?,
which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do. A
germicidal, disin
fecting and deodor
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex
cellence and econ
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh.. At
drug and toilet
storeb 50 cents, or
fey mail postpaid.
1 Large Trial Sample
WITH'‘MSAIT* AN 0 BIASTT" BOOK B*I»T TBSt
THE PAXTON TOILET 1*0^ Bwtiw,Muy
They're Next.
Old Gobsa Golds clutched his head with
both hands desperately.
"Automobile, yacht, diamond necklace
automobile, yacht, diamond necklace—
they are the only words I ever hear. I'm
sick of them."
His fair young bride gave him a glance
of scorn.
"Well, get them for me," she said, "and
I'll ask for entirely different things here
after."
The Largest Giver.
I want to tell you of an inquiry of my
little 6-year-old Helen. She attends Sun
day school regularly. Returning home
one Sunday, she said:
"Mama, every Sunday the man reads
how much money each class gives and
then he tells how much Total gives, and
Total gives more than any one. lie must
be a rich man. Who Is Total, mama?"
If It’s Tour *'ye Use P»ttlt’e Kye Salve.
for inflammation, stys, itching lids, ey«
aches, defects of vision and sensitive to
strong lights. All druggists or Howard
Bros. _
A Greek Revival.
Prom the Cleveland Plain Dealer.
"I went to see the revival of one of
the plays by an old Greek author who
lived such a dreadfully long time ago.”
"Did you enjoy it?”
"Ever so much. It was awfully
quaint, and the gowns and sandals
were very becoming. And I am sure
I never heard such stately language.”
“Who was the author?”
"Erysipelas, I think."
Hoped the Day Would End Right.
"A bad beginning makes a good end
ing."
"Well, I hope you are right; my
wife’s mother came to visit us this
morning.”
I an,CAn’c "iwweaj" ovnar iuvihuuhv. »<•»
LaWaUII 3 Ivied, diaeected, “boiled down 1;'Jo lUmp or I
booklet free MlKK t. DAVIS, I0W Broadway, Oakland, Cal
PATFNTQ
rAicmo
any bank in Sioox City. H> O. GAR DIN £R,
Patent Attorney. 4th and fierce, S.oux City. la.
Which One?
Chicago Tribune: "What Is the name
of this line?” asked the stranger on
the front platform, steadying him
self as the car bumped along the
tracks, lurching from side to side.
“Out here," answered the motor
man of the suburban trolley car, tak
ing a chew of tobacco, "they call It
the dairy line.”
"Why do they call It that?”
“Because If you bring a bucket ol
sour cream aboard It'll be butter when
you get to the end of the run.”
128 acres rich, smooth, level land, 3,COO
bearing apple trees, 380 per acre. Near
Rogers, Benton county. Ark., William
Pearce, owner.
A Budding Philologist.
Bobble, aged 6, saw a cow grazing In his
mother’s flower garden, and shouted,
"ScatI scat!”
The cow didn’t seem to be much Intimi
dated, and calmly ate on. Three-year-old
Mary, dancing with excitement, ex
claimed:
"Tell him to ‘scow,’ Wobble, tell him to
‘scow’ 1”
Agents—Wanted to handle line of post
cards. Splendid money making proposi
tion, BOO cards free for samples. Tna Hill
son Co., 110 Broad st., Boston.
8o Many Spoons.
Nina—Tes, dear, on this old settee my
great-grandfather courted my great
grandmother, my grandfather courted my
grandmother and my father courted my
mother.
Fred—Great Cupid 1 Did you say It was
a settee?
Nina—Why, certainly. What did you
think it was?
Fred—I thought perhaps It was a spoon
chest.
Not for Her.
Miss Sambo—No, 'ndeed, I wouldn't
go to no theater.
Mr. Johnson—Why not?
Miss Sambo—A gemman frlen’ done
tol’ me dat play was one er de kin' dat
’ud make yoh hair curl, an I has trou
ble sufficient dat way now.
GIRL WAS DELIRIOUS
With Fearful Eeiema—Palm, Heat,
and Tingling Were Excruciating—
Cntlcnra Acted Like Magic.
“An eruption broke out on my daugh
ter’s chest. I took her to a doctor,
and he pronounced it to be eczema of a
very bad form. He treated her, but
the disease spread to her back, and
then the whole of her head was affect
ed, and all her hair had to be cut off.
The pain she suffered was excruciat
ing, and with that and the heat and
tingling her life was almost unbearable.
Occasionally she was delirious and she
did not have a proper hour’s sleep for
many nights. The second doctor we
tried afforded her just as little relief as
the first. Then I purchased Cutlcura
Soap, Ointment and Pills, and before
the Ointment was three-quarters fin
ished every trace of the disease was
gone. It really seemed like magic. Mrs.
T. W. Hyde, Brentwood, Essex, Eng
land. Mar. 8. 1907."
The Vicar’s Decision.
From the Philadelphia Enquirer.
An old vicar had a groom who had
been detected stealing his master's oats.
The vicar had not decided what course
to take, and meantime the groom had
gone to the curate to ask him to plead
for him, and the sympathetic young fel
low hastened to the rectory to appeal to
the vicar. The old vicar heard his
curate out, but looked obdurate; so,
as a last resort, the curate quoted
scripture as a plea for leniency1, and
raid we were taught, when a man took
our coat, to let him take the cloak as
well.
“That’s true,” said the vicar dryly;
“and, as the fellow has taken my oats,
I am going to give him the sack.”
Eddie Wanted a Fan.
Eddie, not quite three, wanted to ask his
mother for a fan one very warm day. To
think of the word “fan” was too much
for his little brain, so with his little hands
he went through the motion of fanning
himself sind said,
“Mumsy, tin Eddie have one of them
things to brush the warm off with?”
The voice of a man has been known
to carry three miles through a 20-foot
trumpet.
After suffering for seven gears,
this woman was restored to health
by Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable
Compound. Bead her letter. *
Mrs. Sallie French, of Paucaunla,
Ind. Ter., writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“I had female troubles for seven
years—was all run-down, and so ner
vous I could not do anythin*. The
doctors treated me for different troubles
but did me no good. While in this con
dition I wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for ad
vice and took Lydia G. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound, and I am now strong
snd well.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, nas been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency,indiges
tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ?
Don’t hesitate to write to Mrs.
Pinkham if there is anything
about your sickness you do no!
understand. She will treat yon®
letterinconfldenceandad vise yon
free. No woman ever regretted
writing her, and because of her
vast experience she has helped
thousands. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Truth and
Quality
appeal to the Well-Informed in every
walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and creditable standing. Accor
ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs
and El xir of Senna is the only remedy of
I known value, but one of many reason*
wny IV vac ui pnwuot iiuu lauuijr
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
sweetens and relieves the internal organs
on which it acts without any debilitating
after effects and without having to increase
the quantity from time to time.
It acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as it is free from all objection
able substances. To get its beneficial
effects always purchase the genuine—
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug
gists.
DYSPEPSIA
"Baris, takas roar wonderful "OantnU* ...
•bra* monthi and sat*, entirely cured of atoaaaob
3^^4c2?^CV.f?toknd%^ao°i52i,T,i*
l ha.*T?A*k#n ■**»•«>»• other so-called remediee
but without avail aud I find that Caaearete relieve
snore in a day than all the others 1 hare
would in a year.
Janet Me Guns
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, DoGeeG,
Pevor Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. Me, ffeTile. Neva*
sold in bulk. The rruntne tablet etemped CO0.
Guaranteed to cure or year money back.
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.T. gge
ANNUAL SALE, TEN MiLUON iuSEs
SIOUX CITY P’T’G CO.. 1.2M—MW