The Gate Valley Star (Gate, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 16, 1922 Page: 5 of 8
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Ill 11III III II Ill mil imilPI IP ' T
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THE VALLEY STAR. C.ATE. OKLAHOMA
'
jm
YOUNG GIRLS WEED CARE
Mothers, watch your Daughters' Health
Health Is Happiness
From the time a girl reaches the
age of twelve until womanhood is es-
tablished, she needs all the care a
thoughtful mother can give.
The condition that the girl is then
passing through is so critical, and may
have such far-reaching effects upon
her future happiness and health, that
it is almost criminal for a mother or
guardian to withhold counsel or ad-
vice.
Many a woman has suffered years
of prolonged pain and misery through
having been the victim of thought-
lessness or ignorance on the part of
those who should have guided her
through the dangers and difficulties
that beset this period.
Mothers should teach their girls
what danger comes from standing
around with cold or wet feet, from
lifting heavy articles, and from over-
working. Do not let them over-study.
If they complain of headache, pains
in the back and lower limbs, they
need a mother's thoughtful care and
•ympathy.
A Household Word in Mother's House
writes Mrs. Lynd, about Lydift E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
"My mother gave me Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
when I was 14 years old for troubles
girls often have and for loss of
weight. Then after I married I took
the Vegetable Compound before
each child was born and always when
I felt the least run down. Both my
Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments
Peculiar to Women" will be sent you free upon request. Write
to the Lydia E. Pink bum Medicine Co., Lynn, Massachusetts.
This book contains valuable information.
sister and sister-in-law take it and
have only the highest praise for it It
has been a household word in my
mother's house for years." — Mrs.
Katheryn Lynd, 2431 Gladys Ave.,
Chicago, I1L
A Little Book Helped Her to Decide
Milwaukee, Wis. — "My daughter
took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound as she was so weak and
did not feel like going to school. She
was like that for a whole year before
taking your Vegetable Compound. I
found a little book of yours in our
mail-box and decided to give her your
medicine. She is now strong and well
and attends school every day. We
recommend your Vegetable Com-
pound to all mothers with weak
daughters. You may use this letter
a9 a testimonial."—Mr s. E. Kluczny,
917 20th Ave., Milwaukee. Wis.
"I was always feeling tired and
sleepy, was losing in weight and
would faint at times. I had other
troubles too, that made me feel bad-
ly. I read your little books and heard
friends talk about the good Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound had
done them, so I have taken it too.
The results are most satisfactory, for
1 have gained in weight and my bad
symptoms are gone. I recommend
s THE
KITCNEN
CABINET
Copyright, 1922, Western Newspaper Union.
your Vegetable Compound to all my
friends and you may make whatever
use you like of this letter."—Gloria
Ramirez, 1116 9th Ave., Tampa,
Florida.
❖
FAULTLESS
❖ STARCHir
FOR SHIRT5 COLLARS CUFFS AND FINE LINEN
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
BemoTenD*narntt-8top«H lrF lllnc
Restores Color and
Baaoty to Gray and Faded Halt
JOc. and $1.00 at nrusrlstfc
HjjCOX Chem. Wks. Patchogue.M.
HINDERCORNS
Corns, Cal-
romfort to tlia
leet, makes walking * ▼. 15a. by mail or at Drag*
flits. Hisoox Chemical Works, Fatchora*, N. X. ,
DONT
DESPAIR
If you are troubled with pains or
aches; feel tired; have headache,
indigestion, insomnia; painful pas-
sage of urine, you will find relief in
COLD MEDAL
The world's standard remedy for kidney,
liver, bladder and uric acid troubles and
National Remedy of Holland since 1696.
Three sizes, all druggists.
Look for (he name Gold Medal on every box
and accept no imitation
Workers and Dirty Windows.
English tests showed that factory
hands gained from 5 to 15 per cent In
efficiency after the factory windows
had been cleaned.—Scientific Ameri-
can.
MOTHER! CLEAN
CHILD'S BOWELS WITH
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP
"The love we give Is the only love
we keep. The greatest and noblest
men and women are those whose lives
and actions are founded upon tender
sympathies and who never fall to
show kindness to the helpless who
come within the sphere of their Influ-
ence, whether a human oelng or an
animal."
CAKE VARIATIONS; ONE BASE
Cream one-third to one-half cupful
of fat, add gradually one cupful of
sugar, two eggs, two cup-
fuls of flour sifted with
two and one-half tea-
spoonfuls of baking pow-
der and one-half tea-
spoonful of suit, adding
one-hulf cupful of milk
alternately with' the dry
ingredients and flavoring
to taste.
For chocolate cake add
one square of chocolate
and two tablespoonfuls less of flour
with a half teaspoonful of cinnamon
and vanilla for flavoring.
Spanish Bun—Use one-half cupful ot
currants or raisins and cover the top
with butter while hot and sprinkle
thickly with cinnamon and powdered
sugar well mixed.
Spice Cake—Add one-haif teaspoonful
of cloves, one teaspoonful each of
cloves, one teaspoonful each of cin-
namon and nutmeg, with one-half cup-
ful of raisins If desired.
Nut Cake—Add one-thnd of a cup-
ful of chopped nuts, floured.
Italian Cake—Use strong coffee In-
stead of the milk, and one-half cup-
ful each of nuts chopped and raisins
floured.
Marble Cake—Add one tablespoonful
of cocoa and a teaspoonful of cin-
namon to half the batter, putting it
by spoonfuls with the other uncolored
batter into the cake tin.
Citron Cake—Use the yolks of four
eggs Instead of two whole eggs and
one-fourth of a cupful of sliced citron.
Molasses Cake.—Take one-half cup-
ful of brown sugar, one-half cupful of
New Orleans molasses, one-third of a
cupful of cold water, one egg, one-
teaspoonful of soda, two tablespoon-
fuls of butter and flour to make a bat-
ter that drops like a veil from the
spoon. Bake In layers and use the
following for filling: Take one-third
of a cupful brown sugar, boll to a
sirup with three tablespoonful!- of
water, pour this when thick over the
beaten white of an egg, whip until
cool; add one-half cupful of chopped
raisins.
Asklfour Dealer or
Decorator about the
AlABASTINE OPALINE
PROCESS
Beautiful walls! Harmonies never before imagined 1A
blending of tints and tones, a magic interweaving of
colors which will transform your walls into a rich
fabric unsurpassed in its charm and cheerfulness—and
at a cost well within your means.
ANY good decorator can do the work—nearly all stores dealing in
** paints can supply the material—anyone can now afford to have
Tiffanized walls formerly the exclusive privilege of the very wealthy.
SR
Could Afford the Newest.
Mrs. Casey (with newspaper)—It
says here that Mrs. Van Astor wore
gome laoe at the ball last night that
was 209 years old.
Mrs. O'Brien—Two hundred years
old! Think of It now, an' thlm with
all that money.—Boston Transcript.
Even a sick child loves the "fruity"
taste of "California Fig Syrup." If the
little tongue is coated, or if your child
Is listless, cross, feverish, full of cold,
or has colic, give a teaspoonful to
cleanse the liver and bowels. In a few
hours you can see for yourself how
thoroughly it works all the constipa-
tion poison, sour bile and waste out of
the bowels, and you have a well, play-
ful child again.
Millions of mothers keep "California
Fig Syrup" handy. They know a tea-
spoonful today saves a sick child to-
morrow. Ask your druggist for genu-
| lne "California Fig Syrup" which has
1 directions for babies and children of
all ages printed on bottle. Mother I
You must say "California" or you may
get an imitation tig syrup.—Advertise-
ment.
Just say to your grocer Red Cross
Ball Bine when buying bluing. You
will be more than repaid by the re-
sults. Once tried always used.—Ad-
vertisement.
Nothing New.
"Children think themselves wiser
than their parents."
"It's an evidence of heredity. Pa-
rents did the same thing when they
were chfldren."
According to Her Cookbook.
Mrs. Youngbride—Mercy! That pie
is burning and I can't take it out for
ten minutes yet!
Cuticura Soap for the Complexion,
Nothing better than Cuticura Soap
daily and Ointment now and then as
needed to make the complexion clear,
scalp clean and hands soft and white.
Add to this the fascinating, fragrant
Cuticura Talcum, and you have the
Cuticura Toilet Trio.—Advertisement,
If a man bakes them, he calls them
flapjacks. It Is the flap that lends In
terest to the work.
SPIRIN
WARNING 1 Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are
not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians
over 22 years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache Rheumatism
Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis
Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain
Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper directions.
Bendy "Bayer" bow of 12 tablet*—AIbo bottles of 24 and 100—Druggist*,
to T"mark of BtTtf Uiaofaetoi* of UoaoMeUeactdwtsr of SallcrllcacM
Instead of Kalsomine or Wall Paper
All that is necessary is just Alabastine, the same nationally accepted wall tint which for forty years
has been used in homes, apartments, offices and public buildings of all kinds the same sanitary,
durable, economical and artistic wall coating sold by the best stores and used by the best decorators.
With Alabastine, regularly applied you get the exact color to match your rugs and. draperies. Through
the Alabastine-Opaline-Process you obtain a combination of colors most pleasing and satisfactory.
Before decorating ask to see samples of the Alabastine-Opaline-Process.
The Alabastine Company
Grand Rapida, Michigan
Irish Blarney.
A lady reader reports the following
neat compliment paid to her by her
Irish gardener. Having called him in-
to the house to give him some instruc-
tions, she saw him looking at a photo-
graph on the center table. "Yes, It's
mine," she said, "but I fear it flatters
me a little."
"Schure," replied the gallant Pat-
rick, "it would have to flatter ye a
great denl to look as well as ye do in
my eyes, mum."—Boston Transcript.
Says Uncle Eben.
"De tendency of de world," said
Uncle Eben, "is to Improve. But same
as in Aunt Jinny's housekeeping de
Improvement can't go on wlfout de
whole place seemln' kind o' tore up
once in a while."
I wish I had my neighbor's child for
Just six weeks or so;
I'd like to try to teach him all the
things he ought to know,
To guide his little footsteps In the way
that he should go.
I cannot try my theories out upon my
own dear three,
For deeply I regret to state that they
are "on to me";
They know I'm never quite so fierce
as I Intend to be!
—Marian Van Bureii Cleveland.
DELICIOUS PINEAPPLE WAYS
Prepare the usual coitage pudding
baking In a sheet; the mixture Is a
simple, plain cake
recipe. Cut in
squares while hot
and serve with:
Pineapple
Sauce. — Mix to-
gether one - half
cupful sugar and
one tablespoonful
of flour; when well blended pour
over this one cupful of boiling hot
pineapple juice and cook long enough
to cook the starch in the flour; add a
pinch of salt and a generous table-
spoonful of butter; serve poured over
each square of pudding.
Pineapple Pie.—Prepare the usual
rich pastry shell and fill with the fol-
lowing: Take one and one-half cup-
fuls of milk, scalded; a pinch df salt,
one-half cupful of sugar, two table-
spoonfuls of cornstarch well mixed
with the sugar, two eggs lightly
beaten, one cupful of crushed or grat-
ed pineapple and one-half teaspoon-
ful of vanilla. The crust may be
baked and filled with the cooked fill-
ing of both be cooked at the same
time. Cover with a meringue and
brown.
Richelieu Sauce.—Boil one cupful of
sugar with one cupful of water five
minutes. Add a teaspoonful of corn-
starch moistened with a bit of water;
cook until the starch is well cooked.
Remove from the heat, add one-half
cupful of grated pineapple and a table-
spoonful of muraschino. Mix well and
stir In two tablespoonfuls of chopped
maraschino cherries.
Peach and Apricot Lollypops.—R<.
move two tablespoonfuls of water
from a cupful of boiling water and
add to one and three-fourths cupfuls
of sugar; add one-half teaspoonful of
cream of tartar and cook slowly with
out stirring until the sirup becomes
a golden brown. Set the pan Into
cold water at once to stop the boiling
and then place In a pan of hot water
to stand while dipping. Prepare the
dried fruits by pulling them flat, then
place In a colander and dip quickly
Into boiling water, then into cold. Dry
with a towel and place a wooden meat
skewer In each. Dip in the sirup, drain
and place on well buttered plates un-
til cold. Wrap each In waxed paper.
DYED HER BABY'S COAT,
A SKIRT AND CURTAINS
WITH "DIAMOND DYES"
Each package of "Diamond Dyes" con-
tains directions so simple any woman can
dye or tint her old, worn, ftided things
new. Even if she has never dyed before,
she can put a new, rich color into shabby
skirts, dresses, waists, coats, stockings,
sweaters, coverings, draperies, hangings,
everything. Buy Diamond Dyes—no other
kind—then perfect home dyeing is guar-
anteed. Just tell your druggist whether
the material you wish to dye is wool or
silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or
mixed goods. Diamond Dyes never streak,
spot, fade or run.—advertisement.
Warranted Loquacity.
"That little fellow does not seem to
be very talkative," commented the pic-
ture enlarger.
"Well, no; not as a gener'l rule," re-
plied Gap Johnson of ltumpus Rkl^e,
Ark. "But he can talk all right when
he's got anything to say. F'r Instance,
he slipped and set down In a kittle of
liot water tuther day, and fairly
pizoned the surrounding atmosphere
with Ills remarks."—Kansas City Star.
Important to Mother*
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
A Conflict.
"Will you promise me never to gam-
ble?"
"But aren't we to be married?"—
Judge.
Public Health.
With a $2,000,000 foundation fund
from the Rockefeller interests, Har-
vard university will establish a school
of public health providing both in-
struction and research in this great
field.
SWAMP-ROOT FOR
KIDNEY AILMENTS
There is only one medicine that really
stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for
curable ailments of the kidneys, liver and
bladder.
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root stands the
highest for the reason that it has proven
to be just the -emedy needed in thousands
upon thousands of distressing cases.
Swamp-Root makes friends quickly be-
cause its mild and immediate effect is soon
realized in most cases. It ia a gentle,
healing vegetable compound.
Start treatment at once. Sold at all
drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medi-
um and large.
However, if you wish first to test this
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—AdvertisemenL
-J.
Unrequited Love.
He loves a girl.
Day and night he thinks of her. Ills
mind dwells eve!' upon her beuuty. He
bites his nails.
Her presence is always with him.
He thinks of her the first thing in
the morning; he dreams of her in the
night, wlieu the loon screams across
the lake.
With all the devotion of his soul he
loves her, but she does not make him
happy.
For he Is a miser, and she is the
womun on the silver dollar.—Rich-
mond Times-Dispatch.
If a man doesn't repeat the cute
things his baby says It Is a sure thing
that he hasn't any baby.
CORNS
Lift Off with Fingers
The Best Way.
"What is the best way to spend
less?" "Make some other person
spend more."—Judge.
Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little
"Freezone" on an aching corn, instantly
that corn stops hurting, then shortly
you lift it right off with fingers. Truly!
Your druggist sells a tiny bottl. of
"Freezone" ror a few cents, sufficient to
remove every hard corn, soft corn, or
corn between the toes, and the calluses,
without soreness or irritation.
Taste is a matter of
tobacco quality
Wc state it as our honest
belief that the tobaccos used
in Chesterfield are of finer
quality (and hence of better
taste) than in any other
cigarette at the price.
Liggett & Mytn Tobacco Co.
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended
]h
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Stevens, Arthur J. The Gate Valley Star (Gate, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 16, 1922, newspaper, March 16, 1922; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc168462/m1/5/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.