The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 188, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 31, 1910 Page: 3 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE ARROW. TAHLEQUAH. OKLAHOMA.
layer cake patter
\l>
■ I
I
9
MAY BE PUT TOGETHER WITH OR
WITHOUT BUTTER.
Recipe for Either Variety Desired—
Caramel and Cream Cocoanut
Filling—Maple Nut Makes a
Splendid Cake.
The batter for layer rakes may be
made either with or without butter, a
sponge cake mixture being often pre-
ferred. Here Is a good recipe for
each variety:
Cream one cupful of butter with a
cupful and a half of sugar; add a
pinch of salt and a teaspoonful of
flavoring. Sift two cups and a half
of flour with two teaspoonfuls of ba
king powder and whip the whites of
five eggs to a stiff froth. To the but-
ter mixture add alternately the
whites, flour and half-cupful of cold
water, beating steadily for flve mln
utes. Bake In layer pans In a hot
oven.
To two wellbeaten eggs add two
cupfuls of powdered sugar and whin
steadily for 15 minutes Add alter-
nately two cupfuls of flour and one
cupful of milk, beating long and hard
Stir In a pinch of salt and one tea-
spoonful each of baking powder and
flavoring and bake at once.
A good caramel filling Is made hv
boiling together three cupfuls of dark
brown sugar, one cupful of water and
one tablespoonful of butter until,
when tested In cold water, a little can
be rolled In a soft ball. Set aside un-
til a little more than blood warm
Stir slowly until as thick as custard:
then spread quickly between the
cooled cake layers.
For a cream cocoanut filling -icaid
a half pint of milk in a double boiler
Beat together a half cupful of sugar,
two level teaspoonfuls of cornstarch,
a pinch of salt and one egg. Add to
this the scalded milk, return to the
boiler, stir and cook until thick; then
cook fo- five minutes longer. Take
off, add one heaping cupful of fresh
ly grated cocoanut and a teaspoonful
of vanilla ani use at once.
A delicious maple nut filling calls
for one pound of maple sugar broken
fine and dissilved In one cupful of
thin cream. Boil until It can be rolled
to a soft dough In cold water; then
add one cupful of chopped nuts and
a few drops of vanilla Stir to a soft
cream and spread Instantly, as It
quickly thickens.
Trim off the stem ends from a
pound of dates and chop fine. Add a
cupful of water and two tablespoon
fuls of sugar and cook slowly until
a. thick as a drop batter. Take off,
add a teaspoonful of vanilla and use
when cold. Seeded raisins or dates
may be used In the same way.
A good chocolate filling needs five
tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate
mixed with sufficient cream to moist-
en. Add one cupful of granulated
sugar and one beaten egg and stir
over the fire until thick. Flavor with
a teaspoonful of vanilla.
tmrnnurr
WELL KIDNEY8 KEEP THE BODY
WELL.
When the kidneys do their duty, the
■load Is filtered clear of uric acid and
other waste. Weak
kidneys do not fil-
ter off all the bad
matter. This Is the
cause of rheumatic
pains, backache and
urinary disorders.
Doan's Kidney Pills
cure weak kidneys.
Rev. A b r a ra
Weaver, (1 e o r g e -
town, Tex., former
editor Baptist Her-
ald, says: "At a
Baptist conference
at Jackson, Tex., 1
fell from a platform
and hurt my back
1 was soon over the
injury, but the kid-
neys were badly dis-
>rdered, passages painful and oftei
iloody. Doan's Kidney Pills cured
his irouble completely"
Remember the name—Doan's. Sold
by all dealers. Foster-Mllburn Co.,
buffalo, N. Y. 50 cents a box.
Marriage.
A game of chance in which the
:hances are about even. The man
leads at first, but after leaving the
altar he usually follows breathlessly
In his wife's trail. The rules are very
confusing. If a masked player holds
you up some night at the end of a
long gun, it Is called "robbery" and
entitles you to telephone the police;
but if your wife holds yon up for a
much larger amount the next morn-
ing at the end of a long hug, it is
termed "diplomacy" and counts in her
favor. In this, as in other games of
life, wives are usually allowed more
privileges than other outlaws.—Judge.
NO HEALTHY SKIN LEFT
Fish Cake.
One pound of cooked whiteflsh, one
tablespoonful of bread crumbs, four
eggs and two extra yolks, four heap-
ing tablespoonfuls of butter, one cup-
ful of sour cream, one cupful of wa-
ter, salt, pepper, one teaspoonful of
made mustard, one finely chopped
onion, one tablespoonful of flour. Mix
together the bread crumbs, butter and
two beaten yolks of eggs.
Cook them over the fire till they are
like paste, then add the onion, turn
the mixture Into a basin. When it
has cooled add the remaining eggs
and after well beating, then half of the
flour, mustard, and finely chopped fish.
Mix all thoroughly together, and shape
It into a round cake. Brush it with
beaten egg. Roll it in bread crumbs,
and bake it, basting it frequently with
water and finally with the cream, to
which has been added the rest of the
flour.
My little son, a boy of flve, broke
out with an itching rash. Three doc-
tors prescribed for him, but he kept
getting worse until we could not dress
him any more. They finally advised
me to try a certain medical college,
but its treatment did no good. At
the time I was induced to try Cuti-
cura he was so bad that I had to cut
his hair off and put the Cuticura Oint-
ment on him on bandages, as it was
impossible to touch him with the bare
hand. There was not one square inch
of skin on his whole body that was
not affected. He was one mass of
sores. The bandages used to stick to
his skin and in removing them it used
to take the skin off with them, and
the screams from the poor child were
heartbreaking. I began to think that
he would never get well, but after the
second application of Cuticura Oint-
ment I began to see signs of improve-
ment, and with the third and fourth
applications the sores commenced to
dry up. His skin peeled off twenty
times, but it finally yielded to the
treatment. Now I can say that he is
entirely cured, and a stronger and
healthier boy you never saw than he
is to-day, twelve years or more since
the cure was effected. Robert Wattam,
1148 Forty-eighth St., Chicago, 111.,
Oct. 9, 1909."
Undesirable Acquisition.
A scientist who lost his pet dog
put a little notice in the paper head-
ed, "Warning," which charitably de-
scribed the animal as having
"strayed," and added:
'It is of no value, not even to the
owner; but, having been experimented
upon for scientific purposes\with
many virulent poisons, a lick from its
tongue—and it is very affectionate—
would probably prove fatal."
The dog came back next day.
Lewi«' Ring!* Binrter ptr ight 3c cigar
is made to satisfy the smoker.
Var.ity is due to a leak in one 8 wis-
dom tank.
PAVI8' rAlSKUXKR
tin* nn MibMitutc Ni> olhrr n-miMl/ Is st Hfrcllvf
for rhruinatUm. lnmha*< . or
coldol any Pat up in 25c. a&c an.l bOc bottles.
Give truth a square deal and it will
not be crushed to earth.
noon «oi'«KKFi:rr.B*.
P*e the best. That's why thrv buy Red
Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers 5 cents.
The best people on earth are your
wife's folks—so she thinks.
PII.W «TKK!> I* l TO 14 HAY*.
PA7.0 OINTMKNTIctronraiitiMvl lo cur t;T nia
iif itching llllnrt. Bleeding .ir Frutrudlus t'llo. In
6lolitfaj,ur uiui'Pj refunded. Wo.
An empty human heart is an abyss
earth's depths cannot match.—Annie
C. Lynch.
Pettit's Eye Salve First Sold in 1807
100 years ago. Kales increase yearly, wonder-
ful remedy; cured millions weak eves. All
druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. x.
You may have noticed that a woman
never finds a play uninteresting if the
'enrtirg lady wears a different gown in
each act.
The Pity of It.
"I expect that marriage will end
their love affair."
"Yes. it ends most love affairs."—
Houston Post.
Distemper
In nil its forms, among all ages of horses
and dogs, curcil and others in the same
stable prevented from having the disease
with Spohn's Distemper Cure. Kvery bot-
tle guaranteed. Over 500,0110 bottles sold
last year. $.50 and #1.00. Good druguists,
or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted.
Write for free book. Spolm Med. ( o.,
Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
Satisfactory|to Her.
"Woman," observed the epigram-
matic boarder, "is a puzzle without an
answer."
"Huh!" snorted old Grumpley. "I
never saw a woman without one yet.
—Stray Stories.
Nut and Celery Salad.
Take equal quantities of pecan nut
meats and celery finely chopped and
Just before serving add this dressing-
Three well beaten eggs, quarter of a
cupful of water, beating it imo the
eggs. Put into a saucepan and stir
constantly until the consistency of
thick cream. Remove from the fire
and adf, one heaping tablespoonful of
butter, one teaspoonful of granulated
sugar, a pinch of mustard and a dash
of red pepper. Just before pouring
add one tablespoonful of whipped
cream.
The extraordinary popularity of fine
white goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a matter of great im-
portance. Defiance Starch, being free
from all injurious chemicals, is the
only one which is safe to use on fine
fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffen-
er makes half the usual quantity of
Starch necessary, with the result of
perfect finish, equal to that when the
goods were new.
Potato Balls.
Boll some potatoes till tender.
Strain and mash smoothly. Add on«
tablespoonful of finely chopped pars-
ley. Bind together with olio beaten
egg and toss in fine bread crumbs.
Put a few ballp. at a time in a frying
basket, and fry in smoking hot fat
till a golden color, but they must be
well basted during the process.
Goaded.
Saving became a passion with the
man and the woman. No privation
was too gr«%t, if so be by it they
might add to their accumulations.
And they labored jointly. The wom-
an's sacrifice was in every respect
equal to that of the man.
But when they had amassed $10,000
the man, because he had the power,
took the money and purchased with
it, not the automobile which he had
led his faithful wife to expect, but a
home.
"Brute!" she cried, and when next
a mob of suffragettes came that way
she joined them. Who could blame
her?—Puck.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOR1A, a safe and sure remedy for
infantB and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature
In Use For Over .'{<> Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought.
The Innocent Victim.
"I believe," said the blunt individual
"in speaking my mind and calling a
spade a spade."
"Yes." replied Miss Cayenne. "Many
are that way. The tendency is what
corrupts the vocabularies of so many
parrots."
How's This?
W offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any
ease of Catarrh tlmt cannot be cured by Halls
Catarrh Cure. p , chexey A CO.. Toledo, O
We. the undersigned, have Known F. J. Cheney
•or the last 15 years, and believe him PJr'^y hon-
orablo In all business transactions and financially
able to carry out any ohllpntlonf made by nia nrin.
Waldino. Kinnan A Maryiv.
Wholesale PruKKlM*. Toledo. O.
Hull's Catarrh Cure la taken internally.
Ill-netiv ui>on the blood and mucous surfaces of tne
ftystcra. T«Htlmonlals sent free, l'rlce <5 cent*
t>ott|o. Sold by all DruKPtat*.
Take ilall'a Family Fills tor constipation.
Looking Aheaad.
Josephine, aged ten, has a decided
lisp. She also is very fond of attend-
ing the matinee. The other day she
was giving a spirited story of the play
to Marion, who was aged nine.
"My mamma says it isn't good for
little girls to go to the theater," said
Marion with an air of self-righteous-
ness. "I'm not ever going till I'm 18."
"Humph," retorted Josephine with-
out any hesitation, "th'pose you die
when you're theventeen, then you'll
be thtung!"—Woman's Companion.
Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch were us^d. In order to get. the
desired stiffness, it is usually neces-
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also afreets the wear
ing quality of the goods. This trou-
ble can be entirely overcome by using
Defiance Starch, as it can be applied
much more thinly because of its great-
er strength than other makes.
Somewhat Disappointing.
He was a doctor and was patiently
waiting for his first patient. Thought
he: "If the mountain will not come
to Mohammed, Mohammed must go
to the mountain. And as patients will
not seek me out I must needs seek
them out." Ho strolled through the
cheap market and presently saw a
man buy six nice cucumbers. "Here's
a chance!" said he, and followed him
home. Patiently he waited for four
loi^; and lonely hours and about mid-
night the front door quickly opened,
and the man dashed down the steps.
He seized him by the arm and cried
earnestly: "Do you want a doctor?"
"No!" replied the- man roughly.
"Want more cucumbers!"
Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound? We ran
furnish positive proof that it has made many remarkable
cures after all other means had failed.
Women who are suffering with some form cf female
illness should consider this.
As such evidence read these two unsolicited testimonial
letters. We guarantee they are genuine and honest state-
ments of facts.
C'ressoti Fa.—" Five years apro I had a l a<l fall, an«l luirt
nivself inwardly. 1 was under a doctor's care for nine weeks,
a lid when 1 stopped 1 pmv wo rse ajrai". J J"' ,7.1
Lvdia U. Pinklinin's Vegetable Compound, took it as directed,
and now i am a stout, hearty woman."—Mrs. 1.11a E. Aikey,
C rosston, l*u.
Baird, "Vv'asli. — "A year ajjo T was side wifli kidney and
liladder fre uMes and female weakness. Tlie doctors gave nio
un All t liev could do was to just let me p< as easily as possible.
1 \vas advised by friends to take Lydia E. Plnkliam s Vegetable
Compound and l$lood Purifier. I nm completely cured[ofmy
ills, and 1 am nearly sixty years old.'—Mrs. Harah Leigliton,
I>uird, Wash.
Evidence like the above is abundant showing that the
derangements of the female organism which breed all kinds
of miserable feelings and which ordinary practice does not
cure, are the very disorders that give way to Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
Women who, are afflicted with similar troubles, after
reading two such letters as the above, should be encouraged
to try this wonderfully helpful remedy.
For 30 vears Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound lias been the standard remedy for
female ills. No sick woman does justice to
herself who will not try this famous medicine.
Made exclusively from roots and herbs, ana
lias thousands of curcs to its credit.
BLMgf* Mrs. Pinkham Invites all sick women
to write her for advice. She lias
guided thousands to health free of charge.
Address Mrs. Pinkliam, Lynn, Mass.
LYDIA
After The
"I am much pleased, to be able to write and thank
you for what Cardui has done for me," writes Mrs. Sarah
J. Gilliland, of Siler City, N. C.
"Last February, I had the Grippe, which left me in
bad shape. Before that, I had been bothered with female
trouble, for ten years, and nothing seemed to cure it
"At last, 1 began to take Cardui. I have taken only
three bottles, but it has done me more good than all the
doctors or than any other medicine 1 ever took."
CC 42
The Woman's Tonic
For the after-effects of any serious illness, like the
Grip, Cardui is the best tonic you can use.
It builds strength, steadies the nerves, improves the
appetite, regulates irregularities and helps bring back the
natural glow of health.
Cardui is your best friend, if you only knew it.
Think of the thousands of ladies whom Cardui has
helped! What could possibly prevent it from helping you?
Remember you cannot get the benefit of the Cardui
ingredients in any other medicine, for they are not for sale
in any drug store except in the Cardui bottle. Try Cardui.
Write to: Ladies* Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chattanooga. Tenn.,
for Special Instructions, and 64-page book, "Home Treatment for Women, sent tree.
:> • - -•••;'warn.
Combination Wood and Wire Fence and Corn Cribs
~ ********* r[.he most practical and economical fence made for yard, lawn,
garden, orchard or stock. Sold in 75 and 80-foot rolls and
painted with the celebrated "Monitor" paint. Easy to erect
and more durable than ordinary fences. Made in heights of
three to six feet of selected straight grained yellow pino
pickets. See your lumber dealer or write
THE HODGE FENCE & LUMBER CO., Ltd., Lake Ckarlsa. La.
innnnf
c
iiiiiiii
HODGE
FENCE
-
:-U4m
h
PATENT
Book ami Advice FKBK. *«« «,
Prnwirk A Unrrnre, WaMlintfloTl,
li.C. Kst . 4'J jrr . Bent reference*
PATENT
▼our IdeaR. 64-nage book and
a<lvlce KKKK. Kslahllshodlh80.
KlUKrr ld*l o. Boi k, W ahltinglva, U.U
Iron HelD.
When ironing rub soap on Iron to
keep it from sticking to clotbes.
Cocauso of tho3o ugly, grizzly, eray haira, Use "LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER, PRICE, Sf.OO, retail.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Tahlequah Arrow. (Tahlequah, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 188, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 31, 1910, newspaper, March 31, 1910; Tahlequah, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc136696/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.