The Lenapah Post (Lenapah, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, February 1, 1918 Page: 5 of 6
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LENAPAH POST
Stop
That
Cold At Once
CASCARA-L? QUININE
Th. old ftmfly retard,— (a tablet
form—«ai'. iurt, i»>r to take. No
opiataa—oo unpleasant afire effect*.
Cure* colds In 14 hour* Grip in •
dart. Money back if it rails. Get the
- genuine bon with
Rod Top and Mr.
Hill '• picture on it
M Tablets far 2Sc.
At Any Drug Stare
For Constipation
Carter’s Little
Liver Pills
will set you right
over night.
Purely Vegetable
Small PM. Small Dorr, Small Prico
Carter’s Iron Pills
Will restore color to the faces of
those who Isck Iron in the blood,
as most pale-fsced people do.
REGISTRATION OF GERMAN ALIEN ENEMIES.
Th* date of rerffttration far th
commence at € a m. on
oenaively therejifter betw
Including the 9th day of
THE PLACE
In the cities' of Lawton,
City, the chief of
the registration In
Ok ahorna City, by
western
areas I . .flmi
as BHKietant registrars and conduct the
lion for the Western District of Oklahoma will
February 4th, 1919, and continue on each day euo-
*en the hours of 6 a. m. and 9 p. m.. up to and
February, 1919. at 8 o'clock, p. m.
OF REGISTRATION.
Lawton, El Reno. Knid. Guthrie, Hhawnee and Oklahoma
police wf'l act as chief registrar of his city and
the office of the police department. The postn
>rna City, by reason of Oklahoma City being the largest office in the
n district, will act as chief registrar for all other towns and non-urhan
the district, and the postmasters of their respective towns will act
■ conduct
postmaster at
r reaper
registration for their communl
act
»Uy
the
cant
SUGGESTIONS AND INSTRUCTIONS TO REGISTRANTS.
ulred to furnish four unmounted photograph- of
____ t T ? inches^in size, on> thin paper. with light
Each registrant is requires to rurnisn four unmount
himself, not larger than i by S inches in size, on thin paper,_______
background. All four photographs should be signed by the registrant acrosa
face of the photographs, so as not to obscure the features. If the appli-
l is able to write.
le to write.
bb ___ __ _ ___
_ trant or his represei
Ind'cated to be filled out by the registration
Three blanp forms of registration affidavit must be completely filled out
his representative (with '*
by the registrant
the registrant and the placing of tinge
produced by the registrant personally
the exception of the blanka
officer and the description of
s on the blank) and must be
sjf»ned and sworn to by the
registration officer, who will
supervise the fixing of the fins
If the
r prints on the blank) an
to the registration officer and be
gist rant in the presence of and before the
fill In the description of the registrant and
ation omcer, wno will fill In the description of the registrant and
ise the fixing of the finger prints and the attaching of the photographs
registrant cannot write, he must make his mark In the signature
space and affix his left thumb print In the space provided opposite the
signature space.
The finger printing is a method of Identification and follows the practice
observed In the military and naval services of the United States
The registrant Is hereby Informed that he must again present himself
before the registration officer who took his oath after ten davs. but before
fifteen days from the last day fixed for registration in his registration dis-
trict to obtain a registration card. ui»on which he must alvn his name,
or make his mark, and place his left thumb print in the presence of the
registration officer.
Helping the Heat and Mk Supply
<8p«clal Information Service. U. 8. Department of Agriculture.)
COTTAGE CHEESE MEAT’S WAR HELPMATE.
OKLAHOMA STATE NEWS
t m h i m ♦ i mm i ********* twHtm ihiii mtf
Ko, sir, the
around you.
world wasn’t bailt
Adruco Bnrbed Wire
Liniment
heals without
a scar.—Adv.
Only the rich can afford to eat
things out of season, and then It’s not
worth while.
AVOID A DOCTOR’S BILL
AM roadhouses seized by the sheriff
Jf Oklahoma county in the future will
be used as peat houses.
The city of Blackwell has atrepi*
demic of Hmall pox, in a mild form.
There are forty known cases at pres-
ent.
A call for 3,000 volunteers In Okla-
homa to be placed In the reserve ship-
building corps has been issued by
Edward N. Hurley, chairman of the
United States shipping board.
John Valentine Viytek, alias John
Vengtek, alias John Volmer Bugtek,
an Austrian and supposed spy. arrest-
ed more than a month ago by the
sheriff of Garfield county Is held in
the Comanche county jail awaiting
transportation to Fori Douglas, Utah,
an Internment camp for enemy aliens,
to be interned for the rest of the war.
Governor Williams commissioned
three new members of the state coun-
cil of defense, bringing the total mem-
bership to nineteen. R. H. Wilson,
Methodist and Presbyterian church-
es at Collinsville are beginning one of
the biggest revival meetings ever at-
tempted In Collinsville. ___
J. T. Godard, Valley Britton, Ike
Britton and A. L. Durand have been
arrested charged with violation of the
law that prohibits growth of the Rus-
sian thistle. The men are farmers
near Frederick.
Four hundred and ninety-eight men
have enlisted in the regular army
through the recruiting stations in Ok-
lahoma so far this month, according
to Capt. Marucus Covell, recruiting of-
ficer in Oklahoma for the army.
on the first of the month by taking state superintendent of education; C.
/ VQy K
r4
Calomel Users! Listen To Me!
I Guarantee Dodson’s Liver Tone
Your druggist gives back your money if it doesn’t
liven your liver and bowels and straighten
you up without making you sick.
Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. It’s
horrible! Take a dose of the dangerous
drug tonight anti tomorrow you may
lose a day’s work.
Calomel Is mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel, when It comes Into contact
with sonr bile, crashes intuit, breaking
It up. This is when you feel that awful
nausea ami cramping. If you are slug-
gish and “all knocked out," if your
liver la torpid nod bowels constipated
or you have headache, dizziness, coaf-
ed tongue. If bm-uth Is bad or stomach
sour. Just try a spoonful of harmless
Dodson’s Liver Tone tonight. ~ ■
Here's my guurantee—Go to any
drug store and get a hot tie of Dodson’s
Liver Tone for a few cents. Take -.a
Rio Janeiro, Brazil, is suffering from
n lack of structural steel. Old iron
and steel nre selling at high prices.
spoonful an doesn't straighten
you right np uud make you feel fine
Had vigorous I want you to go buck to
the store and get your motley. Dod-
son’s Liver Tone is destroying the sale
of Calomel because It Is real liver
medicine; entirely vegetal.le. therefore
it cannot salivate or make you aiok.
• I guurantee that one spoonful of
Dodson’s Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bolt els of that sour bile and -constl-
I«de4 waste which Is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's
Liver Tone will keep your entire fina-
lly feeling fine for months. Give It to
your children. It is harmless; doesn’t
gripe and they like its pleasant taste.
Pile,
gfflMffl8Wra*U£
rir»tapplication relief. I
Cured in 8 to 14 Days
Uonuf if l'tzu U19TMRNT falls
< or Protrudiutf Pliaa.
Of Course.
He-—“Thpy are Koin^ to toast tlie j
foothnlI players tomorrow.** She—“On i
the gridironV—Boston Transcript.
Soldiers Soothe
^Skin Troubles
with Cuticura
Soap 25c. Ointment 25c 4 50c
A Parcel Post Business in Cottage Cheese May Be Made Profitable.
rSTATEHOUSE BREVITIES I
now n bottle of Mansfield Cough Bnl
sain for that hacking, hollow cough.
Price 25c and 50c.—Adv.
There Is no excuse for rough no-
tions on the pnrt of nny man. Every
stone may be polished.
For Pimply Facet.
To remove pimples and blockheads
smear them with Cuticura Ointment.
Wash off In five minutes with Cuticura
Soap and hot water. For free samples,
address “Cuticura. Dept. X, Boston.”
At druggists and by mall. Soap 25,
Ointment 25 and 50.—Adv.
Quite So.
First Russian Lender—Did you hear
that the Finns nre nbout to declnre
their independence?
Second Ditto—Here’s a pretty kettle
of fish I
B. Ames of Oklahoma City, who has
been active In Liberty l-oan drives
and L. E. Phillips of Rartlesvllle, who
was state director of the Red Cross
campaign.
A renewal of the state's fight to ob-
tain lower gasoline prices Is to begin
at once as a result of the failure of the
federal government to fix prices, ac-
cording to Attorney General Freeling.
A final effort will be made to deter-
mine what course the federal govern-
ment intends to pursue and then the
rate case now before the state corpor-
ation commission will be pressed.
Nineteen more high schools of Okla-
homa have been accredited by the
University of Oklahoma and their
graduates admitted to the freshman
classes of the university without ex-
amination. The new-ly accredited
l schools are: Centralla. Chelsea, Cow-
eta. Crescent, Sacred Heart Academy
at El Reno. Foyil. Frederick, Hammnn,
Helena, Heavener, Hillsdale, Mill
J Creek. New Wilson, Porter, Presto,
I Tyrone, Putnam City and Woodward.
The Indian bill carrying appropria-
Costly Dressing.
Mrs. Washington Terrace consented
to he interviewed.
“What? Dress on six hundred a
yenr?”
She nindc n wry grimace as she tlons aggregating $11,000,000 and con-
waived the question aside. tainlng new provisions governing ad-
“Why, I couldn’t dress my snlnds ministration of Indian affairs was
on six hundreds a year.” she said.— passed by the house last week. Chief
New Puek. among the Items afTectlng Oklahoma
- are those fixing the Chickasaw and
The Guymon Commercial Club has
protested to the corporation commis-
sion againBt the proposed advance in
light and water rates, and the town
council has also passed and forwarded
a similar protest. ] _
The first draft In Oklahoma cost Pound for Pound Cottage Cheese Con-
HOME CHEESE IS
M9S1JELICI0US
Follow Directions Given and See
if It Isn’t Relished.
S00D SUBSTITUTE FOR MEAT
larger quantity for the market. Is de-
scribed in Farmers’ Bulletin 850 of the
United States department of agricul-
ture. This Is the way to make cot-
tuge cheese In small umouuts, perhaps
utilizing only a few cups of skim milk
—whnt Is left after the cream for the
coffee has been removed.
First of all, start with good, clean
skim milk and clean utensils. Cure-
ful attention then to the details of
making will Insure a good product.
One gallon of skim milk will make
about one and one-half pounds of
choose. If the milk is sweet It should
only $1.57 for each man accepted for
service, according to the official re-
port of Provost Marshal General
Crow-der to the secretary of w-ar, the
lowest cost In the country.
A suggestion to W. G. McAdoo, di-
rector-general of the railroads, that
the Frisco be empowered to clean ou!
its freight rooms at Tulsa and set the
contents on hte right-of-way, was
made in a telegram sent to Washing-
ton by W. D. Humphrey, state corpor-
ation commissioner.
tains 25 Per Cent More Protein
Than Medium-Fat Side of
Beef—Easy to Make.
Given n choice between a nice. Juicy
piece of beef and n dish of cottuge
cheese, and the chances are you would
tuke beef. We are such a meat-loving
people. But pound for pound, cottage
cheese contains 25 per cent more pro-
tein—the body-building suhstuucc for
which we eat meat lurgely—than u
medlum-fut side of beef. And the
Governor Williams was advised by cheese costs about half as much. It
Attorney General S. P. Freeling that llas ,ess energy value than beef, hut
he has power to revoke certificates tt Is nevertheless capable of taking
granted to notaries. The governor re- meat’s place In the dieL
quested the opinion in view of charges This Cheese Easy to Make,
exacted recently by notaries for taking Because cottage cheese is a most
Spartan Woman Suffered Untold Torturae
hut who wants to be a 8partao? Take .
. “Femenina** for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
Going by Contraries.
“Listen to the rising winds"
“Aha ! Tlmt rn«:uis fulling weather.*’
Adruco Liquid
Screw Worm Killer
kills the worm
and heals the wound.—Adv.
I Hurt think because a man Is nn ex-
cellent inutheinatlclnn that he always
counts with the fair sex.
lkAraatt/SsJEsffi
iM.wpihttiHl brio* d ren< Uud than fi
&li otb«-r hi.wH l nuiblet
Dr. David Roberta*
JX OTONIC. Trice 54c
Ice I
II overuajiaa
paraljBlb and Mcppugc . f Ui« iH.weia
thn» avoiding dr. which is
dancrrt.ua In Ttaelf.
Head the Practical Home Vetmiurin
*r»4 for free booklet ilsrtlM In (•••
_ If nu dealer in your town, wrtu*
•r. 0**14 Roberts’ 1*1 Co 180 Oraad Amuw. Waakivha Wta.
Do YOU want
Gothes that Dazzle?
THI8 18 THE AGE OF YOUTH.
Yon will look ten years younger if you
be placed In a pnn and allowed to re- <*a.r*celJ, your ogly. grizzly, gray hairs by
main in a clean, warm place at a tem- U8*n8 La Creole" K«ur Dressing.;—Adv.
acknowledgment of the oath of men paiut„,(le au„ nutritious product and i
because it cun be made easily on u
Personality of Your Hall.
The aspect of the hall should afford
Choctaw per capita payment at $200,
the Seminole per capita payment at
a cheerful yef reserved introduction to ! O00 an<' Riving the state the right to
purchase several thousand acres of
Indian land in the Kiamichi moun-
tains for use as a game preserve.
A blanket ordinance making It a
violation of the city laws for any per-
son to fail to comply with all war
measures and orders of the federal
the rest of the house.
A hall has many definite functions
to perform. It should not only serve
ns an attractive waiting room but
shnnld also give ready access to the
main room of the house. Homes
should never be so Imdly planned that
some rooms are accessible only through
others.
Halts should always be somewhnt
formal, for they are Intended for the
use of strangers and uequalntnuees us
well as friends and relatives. Just how j and cities to be visited by national
formal one’s home entrance should be war speakers in the week of March
depends largely upon whether the 10 to 16 was announced. Roscoe Mit
structure Is In the city or country. | chell. John D Berry. Everett Colby
The interests and manner of living of and Dr R. L. Wilbur, all men of na-
on their questionnaires.
A week before he was to be ex-
ecuted Governor Williams granted
Qulllie McConnell a reprieve until
March 1 for a review of the case. Mc-
Connell pleaded guilty to the murd
of Sheriff George Arnold of Lincoln
county, while the latter was trying to
arrest him for the robbery of a store
at Chandler. August 25. 1916. On his
plea or guilty. Judge Charles B. Wil-
son, Jr., sentenced McConnell to
small scale with little equipment In
any kitchen and because It is un eco-
nomical and convenient menus of util-
izing skim milk—a good food much
neglected—In the human diet, food
and dairy specialists of the United
States department of ugrlculture ure
urging Its wider use to save meat.
Haphazard methods used in making
this cheese, together with the lack of
simple and easily available directions,
death: It Is the contention of McCon- probably are resjHinsible, the special*
nell s attorneys now that upon McCon- lsts say, for the comparatively small
Bell’s plea of guilty, the case should
have been submitted to a jury to fix
the punishment.
After a search of the state statutes
over a period of eight years, C. J.
Ralston, official guide at the capitof,
has determined that the mistletoe is
the state flower. The coreopsis is
the occupants nlso have much to do
with this.
government, effective for the duraMon j stressed in the fresco work at
of the war. was approved at a meat-1 state house, being used as an
ing of the city council of Frederick. | ment on almost every floor of the
The schedule of Oklahoma towns building, an<l capitol visitors had ar-
■ rived al the conclusion that the core-
opsis wa» the state flower. Ralston
says mistletoe was fixed as the state
flower by the legislature In 1910, and
no change had ever been made, al-
though often advocated.
Resolutions were adoplej by the
County Clerks' Association in Okla-
homa City which will result in sev-
eral demands being made on the next
legislature for increase in the help
and salaries allowed county clerks.
An increase of 25 per cent in deputy
hire in the offices of the county clerks
will be asked. The resolution also
called for a petition to be placed be-
fore the legislature for a mandatory
census in 1919, which census would
quantities made and used at present.
Uncertainty of results and defects In
the finished products nlso have been
causes for discouragement In making.
By following the directions given here
It Is believed a better and more uni-
form product may be obtained.
For making the cheese In sinull
the quantities for bonig use a very simple
orna- process and ordinary household equip-
tionnl fame who have visited the war
front and know exact conditions over
there, nre leading speakers in the
party. The team which will tour the
west side will start at Oklahoma City
March 10 and Include Guthrie, Still-
water, Cushing. El Reno. Enid. Alva,
Woodward.! Clinton. Elk City, Ana-
dnrko, Hobart. Lawton. Chlckasha,
Snyder, Mnnguin and Frederick. The
east side team will begin at Tulsa
and visit Bartlesville, Muskogee, Sa-
pulpa, Miami. McAlester, Tahlequah,
'TYomen
whose sensitive
nerves often yield
to coffee’s harmful
stimulation, appre
date the change
resulting from a
ten days' trial of
_ INSTANT ^
PostuM
INSTEAD COFFEE
Such a delicious
drink makes the
change easy and
better nerves make
it a permanent one
"There's a Reason
Diirunt, Ada, Shawnee, Atoka. Tlsho- be the basis for estnblisbinK the a\l-
niingo, Hugo, Sallisaw, Poteau. Henry- (nnes of all county officers and depu
tie* .with the aro’-nvni of ttiu board* l
of county commissioners.
A proposed combination of Ice deal-*
etta. Vinita, HoldenvUle, Sulphur, Ma
dill. Wagoner and Ardmore.
Reports from 34 field deputies of
Hubert I>. Bolen, internal revenue col-
lator says that everywhere farmers
are flocking to them and are kept *n
line waiting to give in their returns.
ers In Oklahoma City as outlined at
a conference of Governor Williams,
Attorney General S. P. Freeling and
dealers bumped into the state anti;
More titan ,5,000 individual Income tax j trust law, which the governor said he
returns have been received by the j believes would prevent any such mo-|
T HOW COTTAGE CHEESE
$ TAKES MEAT'S PLACE
We eat meat chiefly to get
protein, a hotly-building sub-
stance, and energy to perforap
hotly work. Cottage cheese cun
supply these body necessities al-
most as well as meat and more
cheaply. For supplying protein
one pound of cottage cheese
equals—
1.27 pounds sirloin steak.
1.09 pounds round steak.
1.87 pounds chuck rib beef.
I.&.' pounds fowl.
1.4$ pounds fresh ham.
1.44 pounds smoked ham.
l.fiS pounds loin pork chop.
1.81 pounds hind leg of lamb.
1.37 pounds breast of veul.
On the basis of energy sup- * »
plied, one pound of cottage \ \
cheese equals—
81-3 ounces sirloin steak.
11*4 ounces round steak.
11V4 ounces chuck rib beef.
10\ ounces fowl.
6V9 ounces fresh ham.
fi ounces smoked ham.
6 ounces loin pork chop
71-3 ounces hind leg- of lamb.
12*4 ounces breast of veal.
AVOID “SQUAB CHICKENS;”
THREE-POUND FOWLS BEST
Housewives can help the meat
situullon by buying three-pound
broilers and friers and refusing
to use *’squub chickens” weigh-
ing a pound, oue-half or less.
Dressed-poultry specialists of
the United States department of
agriculture urge this as a con-
servation measure. Serving un- J J
dor-developed or “squab chick*
! I ens” In hotels, restuurants und
homes Is regarded as a waste,
for If kept four weeks longer,
including two weeks of crate
fleshing, such fowls would weigh
about three pounds. Moreover,
under proper feeding, a chicken
makes the extra flesh largely
from such by-products not ordi-
narily used for human food,
such as buttermilk, skim milk
uud low-grude grains.
Although tomorrow may never omne,
the morning after the night before In-
variably arrives.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that fn nidus old remedy
for lafunts and children, und see that It
Bears the
Signature of l
In Use for Over HO Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
mu t in mu t ii, mm mat it
v
‘No, Aobert, the slarbqiml of :i steami-
er is out reserved for the star hoard-
ers. * • *
SELF DEFENSE
Defeat Backache and Kidney
Trouble With Anuric
Many people In this section have suffer-
ed from rheumatism and kidney trouble
and have found that Anuric was the most
successful remedy to overcome these
It's SO easy!
A single trial package of
Red Cross Ball Blue
will convince yon that never be-
fore have you known true happi-
ness at the end of the day.
White?—why it gi\us your
clothes ft whiteness that even the
fleeciest clouds cannot rival.
Don’t Watt, Don’t Doubt—
Got it—Use ft—and KNOW
5 Cents. Al GOOD Grocery Storm
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 5--1918.
WHAT NEIGHBORS SAY
Tyler, Texas.—“I am 53 years old,
and for the lMSt
three years I have
been afflicted with
kidney trouble, no
relief from the
aciy medicines I took.
M At last I took one
small package of
Dr. Pierce's Anuric
Tablets and the
very first dose help-
ed me, and I cou-
••L
I
Wl++**+**++++++*++**+*$ ‘Tr.X ar^lhoTwho have
perature of about 70 degrees Fnhren- suffered, but who are now well because
heit until It clabbers. The clabbered "“‘Xo ubt? « , . . -------------
“'!‘n.Kl'"Ul<1...h:,VeC.I7‘ “’ ?mr. fl:‘VOr’ wonderful new discovery of Dr. Pierces I JSgo ,”7™) glTd u!' tel
ttfy.”—DAVID VILCHBZ, 414 B. So-
cial SL
If you wish to know your condition.
Ordinarily this will tuke about thirty
hours, but when It Is desirable to
husten the process a small quantity
of clean-flavored sour milk may be
mixed with the sweet milk.
As soon as the milk has thickened
or firmly clabbered It should be cut
called **An-u-ric’* (double strength). You
should promptly heed these ^arnlnKTs.
some of which are dizzy spells, backache.
Irregularity of the urine or the painful,
twinges of rheumatism, sciatica or lum- ^ S1‘n<l n sample of your water to Dr.
bago. To delay may make possible the Pierce** Invalid** Hotel, I’.ufTnlo, N.
dangerous forma of kidney disease, such
as stone tn the bladder. If - you warn
quick relief buy Anuric now (60c n pa<-k-
Y.. and describe your symptoms. It
win he examined without any expense
Into places two Inches square, after Vend Vr.t0.T0.1,'’ a"«\ Pr- Pierce or his staff of
which the curd should be stirred thor-
internal revenue collector through thelr.opoly of the buying, iselling and de-
field deputies. This week the returns
have been coming at the rate of more
than 200 a day. Collector Bolen esti-
mates that there will be about 100,000
people In the state subject to the In-
come tax and from 30,000 to 40.000
more subject to excess profit taxes.
County agents throughout Oklahoma
are being advtsed by W. D. Bentley,
assistant director of extension at A.
A- M. college, to urge farmers, cream-
ery managers, and Ice dealers In their
territory to take advantage of any
ment will suffice, but If It Is desired
to inurket the product and to Insure
good, uniform quality. It will be neces-
sary to follow somewhat more elabor-
ate methods. The process of ranking
a small amount, ns well ns methods
livery of Ice was being suggested.
Governor Williams lost Interest in the
plait when ht. found that the tom-
panjes Intended to increase the price
of Ice to the consumer,' even though
the) claimed a big sa^ng in cost
woald be effected. \ i
used when It Is desired to produce
It cost the state of Oklahoma about
14 Vents each to obtain employment
35,166 men and women during
Calls for help by employers
md.1o to the tcur offices exceeded the
number of applications for work dur-
fOB 3
i9fr.
further periods of cold weather, by | Ing the pear 6,625. There were 37,438
putting up Ice. Along with numerous
other varieties of famine, there is a
strong possibility, according to ' the
United States food administration,
that there may be difficulty In buying
calls fer help and 29,813 applications
for wi rk at the four offlca3. .Of the
applications for work, £8,145 were
referred to places dealring help and
the applications actually accepted.
Separate Pullets and Hens.
It Is n good lden to keep the pullets
separate from the old hens, as the two
should be fed differently for best re-
sults. The surplus cockerels should
also be excluded from the pullets if
good results ure to he attained.
oughly with u spoon. Place the pan of
broken curd In a vessel of hot water
so ns to raise the temperature to 100
degrees Fahrenheit. Cook at that tem-
perature for ubout thirty minutes, dur-
ing which time stir gently with a spoon
for one minute nt five-minute Intervals,
Only Home Utensils Needed.
At the conclusion of the heating
pour the curd and whey Into a small
cheesecloth bag (n clean salt hug will
do nicely) and hang the bug on a
frult-straluer rnrk to drain, or the
curd nin.v he poured Into a colander
or a strainer over which a piece of
cheesecloth has been laid. After five
or ten minutes, work the curd toward
the center with a spoon. Baising und
lowering the ends of the cloth helps to
make the whey drain faster. To com-
plete the draining tie the ends of the
hag together und hung It up. Since
there Is some danger that the curd
will become too dry, druining should
stop when the whey ceuscs to flow in
a steady stream.
The curd is then emptied from the
hag nnd worked with a spoon or n but-
ter paddle until It becomes fine in
grain, smooth and of the consistency
of mashed potatoes. Sour or sweet
crenm nmy be added to Increase the
smoothness nnd pnlatubillty nnd Im-
prove the flavor. Then the cheese Is
salted according to taste, about one
teaspoonful to a pound of curd.
Because of the ease with which the
cheese can be made it is desirable to
make It often so that It may be eaten
fresh, although if it Is kept cold It
will not spoil for several days. If the
Cheese Is not to be eaten promptly
It should be stored in an earthenware
or glass vessel rather than In one of
tin or wood, and kept in a cold place.
This will prove that "Anuric" eltmtnntes >-«ssisfing physicians will Inform yoq
uric acid aa hot water metis sugar. , truthfully.—Adv,
mm
le memspi'rciE
t:; 3C- f „ AX. ■ A)
— that’s what thousands of farmers
say, who have gone from the U. S. to
_ _ . , , . , homesteads or buy land in Western
tuids. Canadas invitation to every industrious worker to settle in
Manitoba, Saskatchewan or Alberta is especially attractive. She wants
farmers to make money and happy, prosperous homes for themseives
by helping her raise immense wheat crops to feed the world.
You Gan Get a Homestead of 160 Acres Free
or other lands at very low prices. Where you can bay good farm
land at $15 to $30 per acre that will raise 20 to 45 bushels of $2
wheat to the acre -it's easy to become prosperous. Canadian farmers
also grow wonderful crops of Oats, Barley and Flax. Mixed Farm-
ing is fully as profitable an industry as grain raising. The excellent
grasses, full of nutrition, are the only food required either
for beef or dairy purposes. Good schools and churches;
markets convenient; climate excellenL Write for literature
and particulars as to reduced railway rates to SupL of Im-
migration, Ottawa, Canada, or to
O. A. COOK
2CI2 Main St., Kansan City, Mo.
Canadian Government Agent
ice next summer, ice dealers through-! not Including 8,000 harvest, cotton
out the country are breaking the news and orcomuorn harvest worker* mini-
gently that Ice is going to be higher.', bered 26,166.
Weaning Young Pigs.
If the youug pigs have been taught
to eat, aud skim milk is available, they
may he weaned when six weeks old,
but tills Is not advisable If they ap-
pear to be thriving with the sow.
In addition to being nn economical
food, milk Is easily digested and re*
quires no cooking or other preparation
for the table. There ure innumerable
ways to use milk In cookery—pud-
dings. blancmange, “Junket," soups,
chowder—nnd In all these ways It Is
both appetizing and nourishing.
Dried peas and beans, dried and
canned fish and meat, and some kinds
of cheese keep well, and can be used
in place of more expensive fresh meat j
in an emergency.
—Under orders of the l\ 8. Food
Administration every flour mill In
the country Uuw manufacture* oxdy
‘frnr flour”—made from more of iha
wheat. War flour is creamy white,
wholesome and nutritious. When
you All your flower bin demand -
jf
HELIOTROPE
War Flour
“Alway« Reliable”
£
Ask Your Grocer
Oklahoma City Mill 4k EW. Cm
— Best for whol.___
ore.my biscuits, delicious pie
or eke. Heliotrope War Flour la
’ and oven Waled. Dm it
raraty linking purpo«e.
I
CAtfl
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Garrett, Alva R. The Lenapah Post (Lenapah, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, February 1, 1918, newspaper, February 1, 1918; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1320206/m1/5/: accessed May 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.