The Taloga Times. (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 9, 1912 Page: 7 of 8
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9 Jilt
FINE CHICKEN SALAD
SUSJICT THAT WILL MAKfl WOM-
AN DROP tVgftYTHINO ILIL
|' Nsw Combination 'Makes Moat Talk*
tlvf Woman Dumb Until She Tattoo
■f _ It—Here la On* That la
Worth Trying.
Womon will turn eagerly from a
magnlflcent diaplay of spring mlllln-
orjr, from a bargain eountor Wled
with real bargain*, or I cava a discus-
sion on Browning unfinished to com-
pare notes and tell their experiences
with chicken salad. Befone a new
chicken salad combination jibe most
ttlkatlve woman becomes dumb until
It Is served and then her tongue runs
(aster than ever.
Far bo It from me to essay to give a
recipe for a perfect salad, still 1
courageously offer the following and
ear that It suits many: Dice enough
chicken meat to All a pint cup, do not
see the meat Hinder for cutting the
meat, It makes it too Una; use thb
kitchen aclsaora and have the dlcoa
of uniform else, when cut sprinkle
with the Juice of a lemon or with not
too sharp vinegar, set aside while you
prepare aa mucb celery aa you have
chicken; the celery must be cut finer
than the chicken and ahould be aalted
lighted and then mixed In with the
cold meat Stand these in the refrig-
erator to chill. Make a mayonnaise
dreaalng or a boiled salad dressing and
soften U with whipped cream, as a
chicken aalad must be mild and the
taste of the chicken predominate.
The chicken and celery may be
mixed with the mayonnaise and served
on lettuce but a newer, prettier way
Is to sprinkle olive oil or salad oil over
the mixture In the proportion of half
aa much oil as you have used vtnegar,
and heap the mixture In individual
.salad dishes with cress or lettuce be-
neath and then put In a heaping ta-
blespoon of the stilt, rich looking
dressing. A brilliant pimento or two
or any other embellishment may be
added. Onion Is never used in chicken
salad but sometimes the tiny spring
onions are used as a garnish. Hard-
boiled eggs have gone out of fashion
. for trimming salsds and for this let
■' ue be truly thankful!—Henrietta O.
Qrauel, Domestic Science Lecturer.
5 lolled Mutton.
A second appearance of this some-
what Insipid dish may be more appe-
| \ ) Using than the first. Cut tl)o meat
which should be perfectly cold. Into
y. rather thick slices and lay these In
" the caper sauce which went around
with them yesterday, or when the meat
waa hot. Heat slowly to a boil and
send to table together In a hot platter.
The sauce Imparts rlchneaa to the
meat
Or—Lay the sliced meat In a mix-
ture of lemon Juice and salad oil—"a
marinade," as the French call It—and
leave them there for an hour. Then
roll In line crumbs. Set In ice for
another hour and fry lightly. Drain
off every drop of fat before serving.
The meat should be salted and pep-
pered on both sides before It Is marl
Excellent Sunn.
Take one cupful of light bread
sponge, add one cupful warm water,
one-half cupful augar, one-half cupful
of lard. Mix aa for bread and let
stand till evening, then roll out to a
thicknese of three-fourths of an Inch
and cut with a biscuit cutter; place
In pans and let atand till morning, then
Cucumber Salad.
Those who are fond of gelatine
will like a cucumber aalad made by
placing thin slices of cucumber and
a email quantity of chopped celery In
a clear white Jelly, earring on let-
tuce leavea and garnlahing with brok
en note. Mayonnaise or a French
dreaslng la good with this.
Heat three cups of milk In a double
boiler. Cook one-half cup of rice In
«s cup boiling water five minutes.
Add to hot milk and oook until rloe la
trader, then add one-half teaapooa
tablespoons sugar and stir this Into
hot rice Just aa you take It from the
fire. When wed mixed, turn Into nerv-
ing dish, sprinkle two tablespoons
sugar over top and dot with one heap-
ing tableapoon of butter cut Into small
pteoea. Allow about one and oee-quar-
tor houra to oook.
How to Keep Yeur Thread.
The following plan is a moot satt
factory one for keeping the various
spools of thread which aecsmalate la
• sowing msMm dresser from get-
ting late on almsst bopsisos mm si
cstaagtemeet. tats a Mall beard,
wfclah exactly Ms the battens of IN
drawer, drive at intervals ef ese and
tarhee two wire asUs. Open
|m Ifen# SftilC |l|fl|
Ml tt*r will iMMta m
IN CRITICAL CONDITION.
Spokane, Weak, Woman IMuns Ter-
rible buffering.
Mrs. J. A, Rehqpnmaker, OT a. Pino
St. Spokane*1 Wash., aays: "I grew
so weak I could scstooiy do my houra
work and was often confined- to bed.
There waa * bearing-
down pain - through
my hlpe and my head
ached aa If It. would
■put I knew by the
kidney secretions that
my kidneys were In n
terrible eondlUog but
' though I doctored, t
gradually grew worse,
until In critical condition. It waa then
I began using Doan's Kidney PUls and
waa entirely cured. I have not had a
sign of kidney trouble alnce."
"When Your Back la Lama, Remem-
ber the Name—DOAN'S." 60c all stores
ftoster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. T.
evidence Put In Too Late.
A prlsotpr waa being tried in an
Sngllsh court for murder; evidence
agalnat him purely circumstantial;
part of it a hat found near the scene
of the crime—an ordinary, round,
black hat but sworn to as the. pris-
oner's. Counsel for the defense, of
course, made much of the common-
ness of the hat "Ton, gentlemen, no
doubt each of you poasess such a hat
of the moat ordinary make and ahape.
Beware how you condemn a fellow-
creature to a shameful death on auch
a piece of evidence," and so on. So
the man waa acquitted. Just aa he
waa leaving the dock, with the moat
touching humility and almpUcity, ha
said: "If you please, my lord, My I
'ave my 'atr
Mleelng the Po<nt
Repreeentative (tucker of Colorado,
apropos of a tariff argument about
sugar, said to a Waablngton corre-
spondent: "Oh, well, tboee men don't
see my point. Theg miss It aa badly
as the old lady missed her eon's.
" "Mother,' a young man aald. look-
ing ap from the Bulletin, 'would you
believe that It takea 5.000 elepbanta
a year to make our piano keya and
billiard bailer
" 'Make our piano keya and billiard
bulla!' cried the old lady. *Well, I
alwaya understood elephants were in-
telligent creatures, but I never knbw
before that they'd been trained to
make piano keys and billiard balie.'"
BABY'S TERRIBLE SUFfERINQ
"When my baby was ate montha old.
his body waa completely covered with
largo sores that aeemed to Itch and
bum, and cause terrible suffering.
The eruption began In pimples which
would open and run, making large
sores. Hla hair came out and finger
nails fell off, and the sores were over
the entire body, causing little or no
sleep for baby or myself. Great scabs
would come off when I removed his
shirt
"We tried a great many remedies,
but nothing would help him. till a
friend Induced me to try the Cutlcura
Soap and Ointment I uaed the Cutl-
cura Soap and Ointment but a short
time before I could see that he was
Improving, and In six weeks' time ho
waa eatlnply cured. Ho had suffered
about six weeks before we tried the
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment although
we had tried several other things, and
doctors, too. I think the Cutlcura Rem-
edies will do all that Is claimed for
them, and a great deal More."
(Signed) Mrs. Noble Tubman, Dodaon,
Mont, Jan. 28, 1911. Although Cut!-
cum Soap and Ointment are aold by
druggists and dcalera everywhere, I
earn pie of each, with 11-page book,
will be mailed free on application to
"Cutlcura," Dept L, Boaton.
A «ad Handicap.
"Bad case of the follow on the
fourth floor!"
"What'a thatt"
"He plays the cornet for hla own
amuaament, but he got ao hard up
lately that bo had to pawn the In-
strument"
"Weur
"Now ho can't borrow a dollar In
the entire building becauee everybody
la afraid hell get ths blamsd tooter
out of pawn." -
Very Olltoftiit
"Is it true tkst your daughter In-
tends to ntady for ths stager
"No, ahe hasn't any aiifc
What ah* Intends to do Is to
LIKE THE WOLF MID LAMB
Inoffensive Creaturee Meet Unjustly
Chsrged With Sudden Attack
of Sleodthirstlnara
A man who waa caught la the not
of skinning s neighbor's sheep, cov-
ered hla embarrassment by declaring
that no aheep could bite him and lire.
The logic of this 1a equaled by that
of the Tankee soldier who once had a
narrow eecape from an enraged gan-
der. The men of a certain Maine regi-
ment, which waa In the enemy'a coun-
try In lies, considered the order "no
foraging" an additional and uncalled-
for hardship. One afternoon about
dusk, a soldier was seen beating «
rapid retreat from the rear of a farm-
house near by, closely pursued by a
gander with wings outapread, whoae
feet aeemed scarcely to touch the
ground, and from' whoae beak laaued a
succession of angry screama. The
fugitive waa not reaaaured by the
cries of the gandefe owner: "Hold
on, man, hold on! He won't hurt
you!". "Call off your gander! Cnll
him off!" ehouted the fleeing soldier.
Neither man A or gander atdpped until
Inalde the camp linen, when the aol-.
flier's friends relieved him of his
fierce pursuer with the aid of the butt
of a muaket "Did that gander think
ke could chase mo like that and llvet"
the soldlef exclaimed, as he surveyed
the outstretched bl(d; but ho said
nothing of the baited hook, with cod-
line attached, which might have
thrown light on the unfortunate gan-
der'a atrange actions.
Ths Ruling Paaeien.
Little WlUie waa an embryo eloo-
triclan. Anything relating to hla
favorite atddy poaseaaed abaorbing In-
terest for him. One day hla mothei
appeafad In a new gray gown, the
Jacket of which waa trimmed in flat
black buttons showing an outer circle
of the light dreas material. Willie
atudled the gown critically for a mo-
ment then the light of atrong ap-
proval dawned in hla eyee.
'Oh, mamma," he cried, "what a
pretty newdreaei It's all trimmed In
puah buttons."—J udge.
No More Pear of Puneturee.
Pack's Va-nabber, a
rubber Una aa* heal I
kolas la aalo, aotorayla or Meyl« Urea, baa
bean aaad la Wleblla, Saaaaa, for M yeare.
Beeldent aesnta wanted la every county aaC
eltjr In the Called etatee. A euroey-maker aad
•atlafaeUoa siren to the Been. Write at
oaee lor parttealara to Chaa. Payne, Oeaeral
Aseat, Box Ml. Wichita. Kana.
Her Cigarette.
"I never smoke except In my own
room."
"I often smoke when rm out but
It's always for the first time!"
Even a woman aever learns
sneexe gracefully.
■very woman la sorry for soma oth-
woman becauee of what her hue-
band told her about the other won-
t's husband.
Really.
Howell—He has a prosperous look.
Powell—Tee, you eoold tell at a
glance that he waa a atngle man.
The Paxton Toilet Co. of Boaton.
Mass.. will send a large trial box of
Paxtine Antiseptic, a delightful cleans-
ing and germicidal toilet preparation,
to any womsa. requoot
Not Telling All of It
"Doee you flance Mow your age,
Lottter
•Weil, partly."
Coated too rue, vertlfo, eoastlpatloa are
all faltered by Garfield lie.
A kitten Is almost as frisky and
senseless aa a flirt
i
■
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOES
Vstr W.J. Daoihs Shoes. Y.
_ istjrlfcfit
nndwoar than any othar nuns. WL
DousUs numa aad pries tMapsd on
the bottom guarantees flu nlas And
protects tho wmht ngnlnst high.
andipfsriorahoas. Insist aiiMMgi
andlntonocshoaa. Inawaponnav
lejsufaa W. L. Douglas slsoaa. a!
■mm
--
(■
\p
UPTON'S TEA
ALLEIt FHT-EASL
StulwliioYow
Miter arav'i
CSCi ttllMfllkil
CUMrtfl. Bold 1
vfcM Tftal fld
AtUN a. ouaaTM. ut my. m. y. J
l tela* tor hwM,riekly
■ ^tRSBEV
TOR TRADE SSMISM
Hiiis, lawtotof abort
100—slila food eoRdlUot. Will uekMflS
r «Imt property—dncHbi fully «h l Tom
c a ufiufc.4i wmm L
'villi s
•oat I
Tke Farmer's Sea's
A lUi
W. N. U, Wichita, n6.
PUTNAM
Iji^asadib^ra^^Mi.i
FADELESS DYES
Naturally.
"That child actor haa a part which
flts like a'glove."
"Tee—sort st kid glove."
When the bachelor la
leap year girl, he can
haw a flab oat of water feeia.
*
Ifa sundstfal what large oatategnao
"Far Etstt Lktla
Vaseline
"VaMfct" ti A® pwt HHBIN^
IftoWSa PkQfKtKRB WVyWlMN MMONMMB il §HT Hi
Wm lit IIMUMI fc MH tlin
" ' « ' V- ti
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Dasher, Arthur J. The Taloga Times. (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 9, 1912, newspaper, May 9, 1912; Taloga, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc270310/m1/7/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.