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About The commoner. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1901-1923 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1904)
JI'WilllMWW jgpH SEPTEMBER 10. MM. The Commoner. 9 We want you to know Tubul&r Cream Separators as hcy arc. The low can, enclosed gears and ease of turning are shown in this illustration -from life. Tubu lars have neitlier oil cupsr tubes, nor holes they oil themselves. They have bowls without compli cated inside parts they hold the world's record for clean skimming, durability, capacity, easy turning and easy washing. They save half the work greatly increase the amount and Quality of but terare wholly unlike all other separators. Catalog H- 228 1 will interestrana benefit you. Write for it. of distilled water. Mix all these to gether, shaking well. Apply to the freckles at night, and wash the face in soft, tepid water the next morning. The Sharpies Co. Chicago, lil. P. M. Sharpies West Chester, Pa. on several minutes before wiping. Freckle Lotion. Aliim and lemon juice, of each one ounce; rose-water, one pint. Rain-water containing a few dro-& of attar of roses will answer instead "of Vose-water,"' Bathe the face-' and- hands three or -four times daily. ' ' 'Another. Sweet cream, one- ounce; new milk, eight ounces; juice of lemon, brandy, or eau de cologne, one ounce, alum one ounce; sugar, one drachm. Boil and skim; use as above. Sun-burn. Two drachms of tinc ture of benzoin, two -ounces of rain water; mix and- shake well. Apply to face and 'hands several itimes daily. Borax and Camphor Lotion. Pow dered borax, half an ounce; pure gly cerine, one ounce; camphor water, two pints; shake well together. Use morning and evening to remove sun burn, tan, and to cleanse and beauti fy the skin. ... Almond Paste. Reduce blanched almonds to' smooth paste by , pound ing in a marble mortar, adding' gradu ally, toward the end, a little rose water, or orange-flower water, with a few drops of attar of roses or nerOli, or a little eau de cologne, or other perfumed liked. Apply at night. Another. Boil a cupful of string beans until soft, crush arid apply as a poultice, oetween folds of thin mus lin; this mays be used several days he an occasion, and will effectually bleach the face, but is temporary. A tablespoonful each of lemon juice, vinegar and alcohol; buy of your druggist, in a small bottle a few drops each of oil of rose, oil of laven der, oil of cedar; get, also, an ounce By Anointing with Oil Cancer of Lip and Mouth Cured. , Grand Meadows, Minn., Mny 31, 100J. Dr. D. M. Bye Co., Indianapolis, Ind. GrNTLKMEN: I wrote yousomq time ngo that my mouth was well, and npw It s filled with new teeth. Should I deed more help would call on you, ns I-have full confidence In your treat ment for such diseases". I feel grateful for the cure. The balmy oil is n great blcsalng In many wnys. Am quite well for one of my age, 89, "itu thanks, . Mftfi. U,. M.-WILSIE. There Is absolutely no need of the knife or aiming plaster, no need of palri of disfigure ment, The(!nifth!hntnn'nil Hiiro fnr nnnnnrs Is toothing and balmy, flafefanil-BU.re. Write for the free bookj.to the Originator's Qfflce. Dr. D. mo. " .-"v, .45.7 " -... -y . Some Timely Precipes Chili SauceLarge, ripe tomatoes. 20; good sized onions, G; large green peppers, 3; salt, 3 tablespoonfuls; brown sugar, G tablespoonsfuls; cin namon (ground), 3 tablespoonfuls; ginger (ground) 2 small tcaspoonfuls; cloves (ground), one and one-half tea spoonfuls; good, sharp vinegar, G cup fuls. Mash the tomatoes,' chop or slice the onions and peppers, mix all in a porcelain kettle or perfectly new tin pan and boil until tender, or soft. When cool, rub the mixture through a colander and cook to a, proper con sistency (like catsup), and bottle and cork tightly. Keep in a cool place. To Preserve Pears with Ginger. Cut eight pounds of pears into small pieces; pare a quarter of a pound of green ginger and cut into small bits; cut six lemons the same way and use the rinds of two; mix the pears, lemons and ginger and add eight pounds of sugar and a cupful of cold water; boil two hours, or until the fruit is clear; keep the preserves in stone jars. This recipe is vouched by one who has used it for several years. For canning Plums. Take one or two gallon jars (in size), suitable for the amount of plums you have, and set on back of the stove where it is not so hot as tc crack the jar; put in the plums and cover them with boiling water; put on the lid and steep them until the skin slips off; then peel and place in sauce-kettle, adding two cups of sugar to each quart of plums. Set on the stove in porcelain kettle, let come to a boil and then can- as other fruit. Be sure that they are airtight. . Plum Jelly t- Put plums well ripened) in colander and pour boiling wa,ter over, them; then place the plums in a preserving kettle with just enough water to cover, and boil until the plums are soft and the juice extracted; pour off the liquid, strain carefully and put op the juice to boil. Allow one pound of sugar to a pint of juice, and put the sugar to heat in shallow pans, setting the pan to heat until the juice has boiled twenty minutes, then add the sugar, stir un til it is dissolved, take at once from the fire and . pour into bowls or glasses, tempered by rolling in hot water to prevent cracking. which it is undertaken. In order not lo become disgusted with' tho work try taking it leisurely. Do only as much as you can do well at one time, laying the worst pieces away for a timo when you can Bit down lo your sowing machine and take time toj'sot in" patches, or piece on new mater ial, ripping and turning it in order to get the best work for the least labor, it is well, when ironing, to lay aside everything that in tho least needs attention, and keep it in a basket or other receptacle cjose at band, where, whenever there occurs a moment of waiting in tho discharge of other duties, the garments Hood ing hid a few stitches may be taken up, finished and put away properly without any particular effort. Pur sue this plan steadily and you will find the mending pile growing smaller every week, and your disposition of it more pleasurable. i"Pa'mKikt Ttin wnrld'hnown )io(iihol() remedy t tit rnU, bnrM. i oruiMfli-crumpn, uiarrocpa ami an naweioonpiaini good drawn butter and pour over tho cauililowcr aftor it has been druluod and dished. Sift the choose thickly over the top' and brown by holding a red hot shovel so close to tho choose that it slngos and blazon, or Ket It . under a gas flnmo for a moment to brown. Cold Slaw Trim all loose leaves from a firm head of cabbage, .quarter and cut out the hard core;- slice very finely, or run through a chopping machine, place in a large sauce-pan, pour boiling water (with a little salt in it) over it and leave on the stove while making the following dressing: Two eggs well beaten, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one of mustard, two of butter, one cupful of cream, and a dash of pepper. Drain all water from the cabbage and return to the pan on the stove, pour over it this mixture thoroughly mixing it with a fork, then add half a cupful of vinegar, remove from the fire and set, closely covered, in a cool place. The scalding cooks tho drPRKinc. and in this way it pene trates the cabbage, which is not the case with ordinary cold slaw. The Mending Basket Next to the weekly wash and the ironing, there are few things that try women's souls more completely than the weekly mending. The old rule that one likes to do what one does well is no less .applicable to the mending basket than to other things, and the ignorance of the best methods e niiw-tiiio' fiiftAetoeahta duty ife' re- sponslble formiich of the'dislike with A Slfln of Tho Times Everywhere, and on every printed page, we may see commented upon the unlllial conduct, aggressiveness and disobedience of the children of to-day. In a recent issue, I spoke of it as a "sign of the times," long foretold, and, perhaps, without present remedy. "We arc living in an age of surprises, many new questions are confronting us, nnd everywhere, we find that the "old things are passing away," giving place to the not always kindly-received new. In nothing, perhaps, is this change more; marked than in the changed re lationship of the parent to the child. In Good Housekeeping ror September, Julian Hawthorne has an excellent artielp along these lines, which I wish I might give to you entire, but its length will admit of only a short quo tation, The article, entitled "The Ab dication of the Father," ends as fol lows "We may,. find t,hc prophesy of the solution of this question in the reply of, .Jesus Christ to His famijy when they bade Him come with them. 'These,' He said, indicating the people who followed him, 'are My mother and My brethren.' No utterance of His was more radical and revolutionary than this. Even after two thousand years, it is still too hard for us; but it means nothing Jess than the com plete marriage of the public with the private interests of mankind. It im plies the genuine service of the many to the one, and the loyal devotion of the one to the many. It demands, therefore, the actual disowning of the private family tie as possessing any more than merely a representative warrant. . . . "For us today, this is still a far journey into what seems a strange country. But the goal is there, and we are inevitably hound for it. The many disorders of our present condition, sad enough in them selves as they . are, are but the in dications that .we are girding our selves for the road. We are casting off the swaddling clothes of the past and robing ourselves in the garments o'f the future. We are uncovering old sores and deformities to the free air and cordial sunshine that shall heal them. The marriages tnat end in di vorce were never marriages. , The children and parents who dishonor one another never ownetr any Interior bond of kinship. In blind way? we seek to remedy abuses; and the dis orders thus engendered are at least preferable to acquiescence, and the rebel against the imperrect family of today, whom we hastily condemn as criminal, may, in the sequel, be the helpless, unhappy ayataf of the true family of tomorrow, which shall image the kingdom of God." Tomato Jelly Salad Take tho contents of a qunr can of fine tomutoes, or Its equivalent of fresh onos, and add one small sliced onion, six cloves, half a cupful of fine ly chopped celery, and boll all together for half afi hour; strain, acason to taste with pepper and salt (or, instead of tho popper, a dash of paprika may bo used), then add one-third of a box of gelatin previously dissolved in a lit tle of tho boiling liquid; pout Into small cups and set away to cool. When ready to use, turn out of tho cups onto a bed of lettuce leaves and serve with (hick mayonnaise pouicd around. U-Vm Book and Trial Free Cures All Uric Acid Diseases-- Kidnoys, Bladder, Rheumatism. Free TrentmoRt Prova the Cure ; "Free II limtrntrd Hook Telia All About It Bend for Tlirin Both Todny. To Kcadcni of the Commoner: -If you or any one you know of 14 suflcrlng from a disease ol tjho kidneys', the bladder or any form of rheu matism you nrc urgently Invited to Hcnd name nnd ad(lrci3 to get n tree trial treatment of n wondcriul non-alcoholic discovery by the cclc- Kidney Disease; Bladder Trouble :Rheum&isrn . ; i Cauliflower One large cauliflower, four table spoonfuls of grated cheese, one ciip of diawn butter, pepper and' salt. Boil the cauliflower. -aintil tender-rabout twenty minutes; have ready a cup orhuldert4iiniyrjkcafreetcBtontatonce' brated Fmich-Amcrlcnn specialist, Dr. Kdwin Turnock, by which you can cureyouruelf of any Uric Acid disease in ashorttlmcin your own home and save the necessity or an operation and tho expense of doctors and drugglfcts, Bend for It If you have JJright's disease, diabetes, dropsy, gravel, weak backbone In the bladder, enlarged prostate, frequent dculro to urinate, pains In the back, legs, fUIch and over the kid neys, swelling or theleet nnd ankle, retention of urine, wettlnir the bed. or such rheumatic af fections re chronic, muscular or lullummatory rheumatism. sciatica, rheumntlc neuralgia. lumbago, gout etc. Jt will promptly rcmoye eycry trace of uric acid polwon and Its complica tions, stop all aches, pains and Hwclliugs, strengthen the kidneys and the bladder so that they will become normal again, and ho revital ize and build up the entire constitution as to make you feel an healthy and strong as In your It did this for legions or others, among them such weJl-kuown-pcrsonsaB Mrs. Martha Coker. .Tyler, Tex.: G G. Hector, Marshall, N. (V. Mm. mock j;evean, AoanK, conn.: Arcniuniu jiucmo Mt. Forest, Ont., Can ; Mrs. C. II. Hwcetlond, Webster City, Iowa; Ph. J. Drown, Kcllspell, Mont., and it will surely do It for you, Write to the Turnock Medical Co., 2123 Hush Temple, Chicago, III., and since every tree treatmont !a accompanied by a G8pagc llhutratcd book go ing fully into all the details, It behooves yon to send your name and address promptly lor these free oflerings. Do bo today sure, for you cannot justly. f&y you are incurable until you have tried this really remarkable treatment, and an neither money nor even -stamps are asked for.y.oU m -