Ellis County Capital (Arnett, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, November 12, 1920 Page: 3 of 8
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ELLIS COUNTY CAPITAL ARNETT OKLAHOMA
Miy
i :
it
? -
The children love
Wrlfilcy's— and it's
cood for them
1
Mads under condltloisof
absolute cleanliness and
brought to them In Wridcy’s
ceded sanitary package
- Satisfies the craving for
sweets aids digestion sweet-
ens breath allays thirst and
helps keep teeth dean
Costs little benefits much v
i Still 5C
Everywhere
HE FLAVOR
Skin Sufferers Do Not
Want Mere Temporary Relief
there is no remedy that gives more
satisfactory results than SSS the
fine old blood remedy that oee
Of course if you are content to
have only temporary relief from
' it
only t
the terrifying itching and burning
of fiery flaming skin diseases then
you ere satisfied to remain a slave
to ointments lotions and other lo-
cal remedies applied to the surface
of the skin'
Beal genuine relief from eczema
tetter scaly eruptions or any other
form of skin irritations cannot be
expected until you free your blood
of the germs which cause these
disorders And for this purpose
down to the source of every
disorder and routs out the germs
which cause the trouble
SSS is sold by all druggists
Begin taking it today and if you
will write a complete history of
your case our medical director will
rive you expert advice without
charge Address Chief Medical Ad-'
viser 155 Swift Laboratory Atlan-
ta Ga
In proportion to its size a bee is the waiter often puts' the carte be
80 times as strong as a horse fore the donkey
The hardest day’s work is done by
the shirk
'Champion prize fighters are stun-
ning men
Be of good courage that is the main
thing — Tliorenu
A man’s most bitter enemy is the
friend ulio can no longer work him
‘ Another Royal Suggestion
COOKIES and DROP CAKES
— -
From the New Royal Cook Book
TTHEN the child-
YV ren romp In hun-
gry here are some
wholesome delights that
will satisfy the most
ravenous appetite
Cookies
K cup shortening
H 1
S eggs
k teaspoon grated nutmeg
I teaspoon vanilla sztract
or grated rind o t X
lemon
4 cups flour '
1 teaspoons Royal
- v Baking Powder '
Cream shortening and su-
gar together add milk to
beaten eggs and beat
again add slowly to
creamed shortening and
sugar: add nutmeg and
flavoring add 3 cups flour
sifted with baking pow-
der add enough more
flour to make stiff dough
Roll out very thin on
floured board cut with
cookie cutter sprinkle
with sugar or put a rai-
sin or a plecerof English
walnut in the center of
each Bake about 13 min-
utes in hot oven
Cocoa Drop Cakes
4 tablespoons shortening
' 1 cup sugar
1 egg
cup milk
cups flour
I teaspoons Royal
Baking Powder
Vt cup cocoa
L teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
Cream shortening: add
sugar and well-beaten
egg beat well and add
milk slowly alft flour
baking powder salt and
cocoa Into mixture stir
until smooth add vanilla
Put one tablespoon of
batter Into each greased
muffin - tin snd bake in
moderate oven about 30
minutes Cover with boil-
ed ldng
BAKING
POWDER
Absolutely Pure
Made from Cream of Tartar
derived from gripes
COOK BOOK FREE
The new Royal Cook Booh
containing 400 dallghtfal rr
elpee will be tent to yon '
free If yon will lead year
ism sad address
KOT1X BAKU'S POWDER OO
Ul lUtea Street New Yek Ottr
aiiiiiiiiiiuiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiimiiiiiiiiiiiniiar
The Kitchen
I Cabinet
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© 1030 Weetern Newspaper Union)
Success is the art of making your
mistakes when no one Is looking—
Ufa
Ths workshops of Ilfs require fuel
to maintain’ them— Lusk
SEASONABLE GOOD THINGS
A good cake Is an acceptable addi-
tion to any dinner
Good Plain Chocolate
Cake — Beat one-fourtb
of a cupful - of butter
also one egg gradually
beat the two - together
Add three squares of
melted chocolate then
add alternately one cup-'
ful of milk half a cupful
of hot water and two
cupfuls of sifted flour
' sifted again with one
teaspoonful of cinnamon half a tea-
spoonful of salt and three teaspoon-
fuls of baking powder Bake In a
sheet or layers Cover With white or
chocolate frosting -
Maple Sirup Cake — Beat half a cup-
ful of butter to a cream add half a
cupful of sugar two well-beaten eggs
and a cupful of maple sirup Sift to-
gether two and - one-half cupfuls of
flour two teaspoonfuls of baking pow
der half a teaspoonful of ginger and
three-fourths of a teaspoonful of soda
Add to the first mixture alternately
with one-half cupful of hot water
Bake In two layers or a sheet Finish
with caramel frosting
Pear Bavarian Cream — Drain the
sirup from a can of pears Soften one-
third of a package of gelatin In one-
fourth of a cupful of cold water then
add to one cupful of the pear 'Juice
heated ’Add the Juice of one lemon
and one-third of a cupful Of sugar
Turn half of this mixture Into an oval
charlotte mold holding one quart and
let chill on Ice Set the rest of the
mixture aside on ice to harden Cut
thin slices from half pears and use
these to line the mold Do not put
these In place nntll the Jelly becomes
firm Press the rest of the pears
through a sieve ' Soften one-third of a
package of gelatin In cold water and
let It dissolve In a dish of hot water
Add the pear pulp the Juice of a
lemon and grated rlad If desired
one-third of 'a cupful of sugar stir
the mixture over Ice water until It be-
gins to set then fold In one cupful of
cream beaten very light When the
mixture holds Its shape jise It In fill-
ing the mold When serving unmold
and garnish with cubes of bright col-
ored Jelly and whipped cream
To Prepare Junket — Heat until
lukewarm one pint of milk Dissolve
one-half of a Junket tablet' In half a
tablespoon of cold water Add sugar
and flavoring to the milk then stir In
the tablespoonful of Junket water Let
stand In a warm room until firm Chill
before serving
The Kitchen
Cabinet -
— But words are things
And a small drop of ink
Falling like dew upon a thought
Produces that which makes thousands
perhaps millions think
—Byron
CANNING WITHOUT COOKING
Any fruit except perhaps pineapple
which Is hard to mash to a smooth
- pulp may be kept
Indefinitely when
mixed with equal
parts of sugar
The fruit must be
thoroughly blend-
ed If berries ev-
ery one crushed
-nr the mixture
will be bure to ferment
To Can Rhubarb — Wash the rhu-
barb cut Into small pieces and pack
Into a sterilized Jar Fill the Jar to
overflowing with cold water Seal as
usual Some advocate the repeating
of the process for two mornings then
the third day seal and set away leav-
ing 24 hours between each change of
water
Tomatoes should be firm ripe bnt
not overripe Scald peel and pack in
Jars Be sure that 'the hard green
center - is all removed Pack when
thoroughly cold add a teaspoonful of
salt and the same of sugar to a quart
Cover with cold water seal and let
stand upside down for two days Then
set away
Grape jelly without cooking Is de-
licious Press the juice from the ripe
fruit and add aif equal quantity of
sugar stir and let stand until the
sugar IB thoroughly dissolved and then
pour nto the glasses and set In the
sun for a day or two SeaI as usual
The flavor of this jelly is much su-
perior to that which is cooked '
Beet Relish — The beets for this rec-
ipe are cooked then chopped add an
equal quantity of chopped cabbage
half as much celery and on cupful of
fresh grated horseradish one cupful
of sugar one teaspoonful of cayenne
and cover with fresh snappy vinegar
Can and seal
Oil Pickles — Slice without peeling
cucumbers one Inch In diamqter add
to two quarts of the sliced cucumbers
four thlnly-sllced onions or a dozen
small ones will make a betteFlooklng
mixture Cover with strong salt wa-
ter and let stand overnight Drain
and add one enpful of olive oil mus-
tard seed celery seed and enough vin-
egar to Just cover Seal and keep la
a cool place
(A 1)30 Western Newepsper Union )
I am confident that one of the chief
Sources of social unrest Is the envy
not of the food the rich eat the
clothes they wear or the character of
the roofs over their heads but the
free and ample hour In which they
can do what they like— Luther Oullck
80METHING TO DRINK
-
More Insistent than the call for food
Is the demand for drink The sense
r of hunger may depart
but thirst Is seldom dl-
mlnlshed The thought
of food In Illness is often
distasteful but the de-
sire for fluids Is Intensi-
fied While water Is the
natural beverage an In
'finite vnriety of other
drinks may be prepared
for those who are well
or 111 - In Illness besides
quenching the thirst they reduce the
temperature of the fever patient
They also may serve as a form In
which noiylsliment may be given when
solid food cannot be taken Other
drinks relieve nausea stimulate the
heart excite the gastric Juices con-
trol the bowels and prove soothing to
a congested state of the alimentary
canal All drinks should be subject to
the advice of the attending physician
for even harmless grape Juice may be
fatal In cases recovering from typhoid
Like everything else prepared for
the Invalid’s table all beverages
should be made and served with all
possible daintiness A smeary thick
glass of lukewarm lemonade or other
drink which should be Cold would nau
seate a person who was not 111 A
pretty shaped tumbler or sherbet cup
standing on a pretty plate protected
by a dainty dolly will appeal to the
eye before Its delicious coolness Is
tasted--
When beverages are carried to the
sick room they should always be cov-
ered and never left uncovered In the
sick room
Very hot beverages stimulate the
digestive fluids while very cold ones
retard but lower the temperature In
fever
' Various other fruits and fruit Juices
may be used with orange or lemon or
alone such as pineapple currant ber-
ries and grapes Most fruit Juices are
more acceptable when chilled either
near the Ice or having chipped Ice
added Orange Juice alone strained
and served well chilled Is an agree-
able and mildly laxative drink very
popular with most people It Is given
a tablespoonful between feedings to
young babies with very good results
The acid beverages are those most
liked by fever - patients and In hot
weather by almost every one
Irish moss lemonade Is much used
In throat and lung Inflammation so Is
flax seed simmered for an hour and
strained Into the acid drink
There never wa an emergency that
did not have a remedy- Unfortunately
It Is not always possible to And the
“first aid to the vounded” just when
needed so It la well for all to be pre-
pared for life’s emergencies by culti-
vating a calm mien and a faith In
ultimate- results — Lloyd
FOODSIN SEASON
A most delicious serving of Ice
cretin Is the following:
Cantaloupe Cup
—Chill the mel-
ons on ice cut In
halves removing
all seeds Fill
with Ice cream
decorate with
browned almonds
and serve
Russel Cream— Heat a quart of
milk until lukewarm add one cupful
of sugar and one junket tablet crushed
and mixed with a tablespoonful of cold
water add one cupful of double crenm
and let stand in a warm room until
the mlxturg sets then freeze and serve
In halves of muskmelon Sprinkle
with cinnamon just before serving
Filling for Pumpkin Pie— Cook the
pumpkin until dry To one and one-
half cupfuls of pumpkin sifted add
half a teaspoonful each of salt mace
one teaspoonful of ginger a few drops
of lemon extract and three-fourths of
a cupful of honey one egg and the
yolk of another well beaten one cup-
ful of sweet milk one cupful of cream
Mix thoroughly turn Into a large
pastry-lined plate and hake 45 min-
utes Serve when cool with grated
cheese over the top or with whipped
cream sprinkled with grated cheese
Peach Betty — Use the soft crumbs
from the center of a stale loaf of
bread Mix three cupfuls of the
crumbs with one-half cupful of but-
ter melted Put a layer of the
crumbs Into a buttered baking dish
and arrange over them a layer of
sliced peaches apples will do sprink-
ling each layer with sugar spices
grated orange or lemon peel Bake
one hour ' Cover the dish during the
flrst half of the baking then remove
to brown Serve hot with cream and
sugar
Quinces Baked en Casserole — Wash!
core and pare the quinces then ar-
range them In a casserole fill the cen-
ters with sugar add three tablespoon-
fuls of water for each quince cover
and bake until tender ' Serve with
the slrnp from the dish and cream
with sugar It will often require two
hours to cook quinces until tender
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neither Opium Morptoen
Mineral Not Narcotic
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Ahdpful®cme4y?
(ApationimdDiarrtoet
end Feverishness and
Loss or Sleep
iWndthetefro-gl°ftny
IteSinuleslinrf!0
For Infants and Children
v
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
Signature
of
Exact Copy of Wrapper
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
ASTORIA
THE eCNTAUft COMPANY NEW YORK CITY
PNPAIfl PA POSITIVELY ftCMOVCO by Dr Bottt’s
LU LMIr I LV fotekl Ointment Your drunlA
rntMLCO
Lots of folks judge a disinfectant
by Its smell
To Have a Clear Sweet Skin
Touch pimples redness roughness
or itching If any with Cutlcura Oint-
ment then bathe with Cutlcura Soap
and hot water Rinse dry gently and
dust on a little Cutlcura Talcum to
leave a fascinating fragrance on skin
Everywhere 25c each — Adv -
Might Be Either
“A fortune teller once told me that
some day I would stand in a high
place with public officials on either
hand and deliver a furewll address
to a crowd of people who would lis-
ten With close attention and many evi-
dences of sorrow to everything I said”
“Well?”
“It looks as If I were destined for
public life”
"Maybe so but you have accurately
described a public hanging”— Bir-
mingham Age-Herald
Deep-Seated Coughs
develop aerioue complication If neglected
Uee an old and time-tried remedy that
haa given satisfaction for more than fifty year
Her Turn '
A wife should be a helpmeet” re-
marked the nonr-phllosopher
“That’s my View exactly” replied
Mr dipping “Only the other day I
reminded Mrs Clipping flint I washed
our flivver the Inst time but she didn’t
take the bint”— Birmingham Age-IIerald
Proof Positive
“This watch Is not n new one”
"Brand new sir Has never been
out of the shop”
“Can’t I see for roj self It Is a second-hand
affair?”
Perhaps a widow finds it easy to
get married again because 'she doesn’t
expect perfection in n ntlin
If you ennnot drive an ox drive a
donkey
When anger rises judgment takes n
back sent
MACHINE WORK
Of all kinds WELDING AND AUTO 14
pairing Manufacturers of Acetylene genera
tors torch end welding equipment
BROOKS MACHINE CO
m W Lewis St Wichita
One Eloquent Word
An old negro brother seated far
back In a crowded experience meeting
stood up gained the attention of tb
leader nnd said :
“Kin I say jes’ one word?”
“You can” 6ald the leader "Go
ahead”
Then With all his might he shouted
“Hallelujah 1” — Atlanta Constitution
Not Bad
Amelia was four and full of Initia-
tive The other day she removed three
gold fish from their bowl and laid them
out carefully on Ihe library table A
little later when her mother ‘found
them there dead she exclaimed : “My
Amelin but you are bad!” “No”
Amelia said calmnly “I am not bad I
am cute” -v
Correct
A few days ago the public library
gave an examination to the young
women who wished to enter a library
class Among the questions concern-
ing current events was “who Is Bab
Ruth?”— One of the girls exclaimed
“Well at least I know the answer to
that one” nnd write “Babe Ruth la
a race horse” — Indianapolis News
Was the longevity of the anelenta
due to the scarcity of medical college
giaduatcs? Certainly not I
Men wants hut little here below
zero
Stiff hats cover a multitude of soft
heads
When Coffee
Postum Cereal
Coffee drinkers who switch
from their accustomed table
drink almost always turn to
Postum because of its deli-
cious coffee-like flavor
There’s no harm to health in
Postum Much as it tastes like
coffee there is no coffee in it
Boil Postum a full fifteen min-
utes and you develop that rich
flavor you so much like
4
There’s a Reason
for
Made by
Postum Cereal Company Inc
Battle CreekJnich
I
t
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i
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Seward, L. I. Ellis County Capital (Arnett, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, November 12, 1920, newspaper, November 12, 1920; Arnett, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1713722/m1/3/: accessed March 1, 2021), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.