The Tyrone Observer (Tyrone, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 2, 1922 Page: 3 of 10
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THE OBSERVER, TYRONE, OKLAHOMA
WOMEN OFJDDLE AGE
ATrying Period Through Which Every
Woman Must Pass
Practical Suggestions Given by the Women Whose
Letters Follow
Phi!a., Pa.—"When I was going
through the Change of Life I was
weak, nervous, dizzy and had head-
aches. I was troubled in thin way for
two years and was hardly able to do
my work. My friends advised me to
ta!ke Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable
Compound, and I am very sorry that
I did not take it sooner. But I have
got good results from it and am now
able to do my housework most of the
time. I recommend your medicine
to those who have similar troubles.
I do not like publicity, but if it will
help other women 1 will be glad for
you to use my letter."—Mrs. Fan-
nie Kosenstein, 882 N. Holly St.,
Phila., Pa.
Detroit, Michigan-"During the
Change of Life I had a lot of stomach
trouble and was bothered a great deal
with hot flashes. Sometimes I was
notable to do any work at all. I rear!
about Lydia E. rinkham's Vegetable
Compound in your little books and
took it with very good results. 1 keep
house and am able now to do all my
own work. I recommend your medi-
cine and am willing for you to pub-
lish my testimonial. "-Mrs. J. S.
Livernoib, 2051 Junction Avenue,
Detroit, Mich.
The critical time of a woman's Ufa
usually comes between the years of
45 ana 50, and is often beset with an-
noying symptoms such as nervous-
ness, Irritability, melancholia. Heat
Tf1E
KITCHEN
CABINET
flashes or waves of heat appear to
pass over the body, cause the face to
Le very rod and often bring on head-
ache, dizziness and a sense of suffo-
cation.
Another annoying symptom which
comes at this time Is an inability to
recall names, dates or other small
facts. This is liable to make a woman
lose confidence in herself. She be-
comes nervous, avoids meeting
strangers and direads to go out alone.
Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is especially adapted to
help women at this time. It exer-
cises a restorative influence, tones
and strengthens the system, and as-
sists nature in the long weeks and
months covering this period. Let it
help carry you through this time of
life. It is a splendid medicine for the
middle-aged woman. It is prepared
from medicinal roots and herbs and
contains no harmful drugs or nar-
cotics.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Private Text-Book upon "Ailments
Peculiar to Women" will be wnt you free upon request. Write
to the Lydia E. IMnkliam Medicine Co., Lyuu, Massachusetts.
This book contain* valuable information.
Disordered Stomach
Take a good dose of Carter's little Liver Pills
—tnen take 2 or 3 for a few nights after.
You will relish your meals without fesr of trouble to
follow. Millions of all ages take them for Biliousness,
Dizziness, Sick Headache. Upset Stomach snd for Sallow,
Pimply, Blotchy Skin. They end the misery of Coml'pallon.
2££PiM; Small Dm.; S..11 Price
Save Money
xl On Overallss
Long wear considered, KEY Overalls
and Work Pants are the cheapest work gar-
menu yon can bur. Beat quality materials
and workmanship throughout. Cut for com-
fort Satisfaction guaranteed or your money
back. If your dealer Is out of your site, writs
THE McKRY MFO. CO.
s City. Mo.
Protecting Native Birds.
Great efforts are being made In the
United States to protect the native
birds, Plainly because of their useful-
ness ns Insert destroyers. One expert
Rays that In the state of Massachusetts
birds destroy 21.000 bushels of Insects
every day, and in Nebraska 170 can
loads.
2'n1
Shoe Polishes
Jfmeri
KOWLS, CHICKS, KOOK, TWENTY VAKI-
KT1KS, farm raised, quality guaranteed,
sale now on Price list free. Write now. save
money. ED AKARD, Box 18. Columbia. Mo
Waterworks Near Completion.
The London waterworks system will
shortly possess the largest reservoir in
the world. It has been under con-
rtruction for ten years, and when
completed will have a capacity of
6,500.000.000 gallons.
Concealing Iniquity.
"Paw, why does Santy CI a us wear
a beard?" "Because he has so tuany
Christmas neckties, son."
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 reamin that it haw proven
to be just the remedy 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 is a gen-
tle, hewing vegetable compound.
Start treatment at once. Sold at all
drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium
and large.
However, if you wish first to test this
(treat preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Advertisement.
Work Without Proper Aim.
I respect the man who knows dis-
tinctly what he wishes. The greater
part of ail the mischief In the world
arises from the fact that men do not
sufficiently understand their own alms.
They have undertaken to build a
tower, and spend no inore labor on the
foundation than would be necessary
to build a hut.—Goethe.
During Hot Weather.
"It's a cold world."
"That's a dend Issue, at present."
Louisville Courier-Journal.
SAY "BAYER" when you buy. Insist I
Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets, you are
not getting the genuine Bayer product prescribed by
physicians over 23 years and proved safe by millions for
Colds Headache
Toothache Rheumatism
Neuritis
Neuralgia
Lumbago
Pain, Pain
Accept only "Bayer" package which contains proper dirixtions.
Ilandv "Barer" boxes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of U and 100—Druggist*.
Ast-trta la U trade Bart of Bsjnr Maaataetava a* " tftttmtiWW ti lallatUaasM
1-;; 1'iiI.T I
W'lwn he haa more than he can ai>etul.
It lan't hard to give or lend.
Who gives but what hr'll never mlaa.
VN Ui never know what glvin« la.
—Edgar UueaL
MORE DESSERTS
There U no more welcome dessert
than a beautiful cake. Served with a
dish of fresh or canned
fruit, it is better than
too rich pastries.
Green Mountain Cake.
—Break two eggs Into a
measuring cup, till with
tour cream. add one ami
orte-qunrter cupfula of
flour, oue cupful « f sugar. ,
a little «ult. one-quarter !
tea*| <Mtiiful of stsla. one
teas|HMinful of baking ■
powder and flavor to taste. Boat well ,
aiid hake In layers. I'ut together with 1
boiled Icing colored with green and j
stirred thick with chopped walnuts.
Reserve sufficient white icing to dec-
orate the top, putting It on with the
handle of a teas|>oon In thick swirls.
Sprinkle uuts on top of each Utile
mountain peak and touch lightly with
the green icing.
Pistachio Roll.—Bake a layer of
sponge cake us for Jelly roll, spreading
it thinner than for the regular Jelly
roll. While warm spread with marsh-
mallow tilling tinted green. Wrap and
turn the lapped edges down or wrap
In paper and tie. When serving, lay
on a platter and cover with whipped
cream. Pip the tines of a fork In
g£eeu coloring fluid and streak the
cream. Serve \ylth a sauce uiade from
canned raspberries.
Apple de Luxe.—Chop finely three-
fourth* of a cupful of chopped raisins
and nuts. Wish and core four tart
apples of uniform sire and shape. Put
Into u baking dish, cover with cold
water and bake slowly. Do not let
them lose their shape. Fill the
centers with the chopped mixture and
when the apples are cool cover with a
powdered sugar frosting flavored with
vanilla. When firm nnd cold coat with
chocolate and we have apples Alle-
grettl.
Stuffed Pineapple.—Select a perfect-
ly shaped pineapple, scrub well, cut
off the top nnd reserve. Remove the
center nnd chop fine, straining off the
Juice. Add the chopped pulp to a
vanilla blancmange and fill into the
cavity. Place on Ice nnd serve cold
with a thin custnrd sauce, using the
Juice of the pineapple for flavoring.
Replace the top and bring to the table
to serve.
Orange Mold.—Take one and one-
half tablespoonfuls of gelatin. one-
third of a cupful of water to soften
the gelatin, then add one-tlilrd of a
cupful of boiling water, the Juice of
a lemon and one cupful of sugar. Add
the Juice and pulp of an ornnge—one
cupful; when partly firm l>eat with an
egg beater until frothy, then add the
stiffly-beaten whites of three eggs;
bent until stiff. Pour Into a wet mold
to set. Serve with small cakes cov-
ered with orange Icing.
DYED HER DRAPERIES,
SKIRT AND A SWEATER
WITH "DIAMOND DYES"
Each package of "Diamond Dyes" eon
tains direction* M simple that any woman
] can dye or tint faded, shabby skirts
dresses, waista, coats, sweater*, stuck
ing«, hangings, draperies, everything like
new. ltiiy "Di iii"« d Dyes"—no other
kind-then perfec t home d\eine i cuaran
I teed, even if you have never aye*1 oeforc.
Tell your druciii«t whether the material
rou wi«h to dye ia wool or *ilk. or whether
It is linen, cotton, or mixed good* Dia
moad Dyes never streak, spot, f.de, or
run. So easv to use Advertisement.
Radio Equipment of Airplane.
There ha> been installed ihi one of
the huge <>« llath biplanes engaged in
(he Paris-London aerial service a com
blued radl. telephone ami telegraph
equipment of ,'C> watts antenna output,
with a sending range of alNiiit 1*0
miles at WHI meters' wave leugth. The
complete radio equipment, uceording to
Itariloelectrlclte, weighs only 1 'J">
pounds. An air-propeller driven gen
erator for six volts ami a six-volt stor-
age luittery supply tbe necessary cur-
rent. A three-bulh amplifier Is used
for receiving on ull wave lengths be-
tween .'too meter* and 1,000 meters.—
Scientific American.
Children's handkerchiefs often look
ho|>elcss when they route to the hum
dry. Wash with good soap, rinse In
water blued with Red Croar Ball Blue, i
—Advertisement.
COAL OF VEGETABLE ORIGIN
Abundant Proof That Huge Forests,
in Former Epochs of the Earth,
Became Petrified.
Although In most Instnncfp there
are comparatively few traces of Its
vegetable origin left, coal owe* Its ex-
istence to the vast masses of vegeta-
ble matter deposited through the lux*
urliint growth of plants in former
epochs of the eurth's history, and
since slowly converted hito u jietrltted
state.
Coal fields today present abundant
indications of the existence of huge
ancient forests, usually in the form
of coal formed from the roots of trees.
Several such forests have been uncov-
ered, one of which In Nova Scotia Is
a good example. Remains of trees
have been found there, six to eight
feet In height nnd four feet In diam-
eter. In a colliery In England, In a
space of about one-quarter of an acre,
there have been found the fossilized
stumps of 73 trees, with roots at-
tached, and broken-off trunks lying
about, one of them 30 feet long, and
■nil of thein turned Into coal.
Tbe garden still Is green
And green the trees around.
But the winds are roaring overhead
And branches strew the around.
And today on the garden pool
Floated an autumn leaf;
How rush the aeasons, rush the years.
And, oh, how life Is brief!
—Richard Watson Glider.
WHAT TO HAVE FOR DESSERT
The word dessert does not apply to
the dish but the taking nway of the
unnecessary food
and table equip-
ment, preparing
for the fi n a I
cou rse. This
stresses the im-
portance of the
setting which
should be given
the last dish of the meal commonly
called dessert. The dignity and at-
tractiveness of the dish Is enhanced
by the manner in which it 18 arranged
for and Introduced. Everything from
previous courses should be removed,
leaving the whole stage to the dessert.
This is the reason time and skill is
put upon a dish which will both appeal
to the eye as well as the palate.
Dessert making is, In many dishes,
artistic fancywork. The beauty of
such creations Is that one has a great
field for original work. While few
combinations of Ingredients are diffi-
cult to find, there are always appear-
ing new wnys of serving and garnish-
ing the old favorites.
When prepnrlng a Bavarian cream,
line the mold with slices of Jelly or
chocolate roll, then pour In the cream.
When cold unmold and decorate the
top with spoonfuls of Ihe filling In the
roll. This makes a dessert that Is
more substantial than the usual molded
cream.
Pumpkin Pie de Luxe.—Prepnre the
pumpkin pie as usual; the following Is
a good recipe: Take one cupful of
finely-sifted, well-cooked sweet pump-
kin, add two cupfuls of rich milk, two
eggs, one-qnarter to a third of a cup-
ful of sugar, according to the taste
and depending upon the sweetness of
the pumpkin; a little salt, ginger and
a few drops of letnon extract. Bake
!n a slow oven In a rich pastry shell.
When ready to serve top with whipped
cream, lightly sweetened and serve
with grated cheese either sprinkled
over the cream or passed with the des-
sert.
Didn't Have That Twin.
Two Irishmen who were old friends
met In the street one day.
"Sure, I met u man last week, nnd,
hedad, I'd have sworn It wus yourself,"
sjild one.
"And wasn't It?" replied the other.
"Pivll n bit," replied the first. "But
lie was your very image, harrln' he
was u trifle gray. I suppose, now, ye
haven't a twin brother a few years
older than yourself?"
A million men
have turned to
One Eleven
Cigarettes
—a firm verdict for
superior quality.
15 lor 10c
cigarettes
BIRD IS FAST ON ITS FEET! PLAN TO CONTROL WEATHER
A Foreign City.
A friend who spent several months
In the East, says the thing that Im-
pressed him most about New Tork Is
that It Is a foreign city.
The municipal signs are printed In
English, Italian and Yiddish. You hear
more foreign lnnguage than English In
the subway, and everywhere foreign
language newspapers are seen. In large
sections of the city j;ou do not see an
American, or hear English spoken.
Well, Well.
"Here's the biggest ever." "W'hat's
that?" "A movie film advertises a
cast of 100,000."—Louisville Courier-
Journal.
California Roadrunner Famous for Its
Custom of 8printing in Front of
Trotting Horses.
A bird known ns the California road-
runner has en rued his common name
from his delight in sprinting along
roadways, especially when pursued by
horsemen or moderately slow-going
vehicles. In the picturesque old days
of California It was no uncommon
sight to see this bird running a half-
mile or so in front of fust-trotting
horses.
Another common name, chaparral-
cock, is given In allusion to his living
in the chaparral of the semi-deserts.
The bird belongs wholly to the
West. Formerly he ranged from the
plains of Kansas to the cliapparal-
covered hills of the Pacific coast and
from central California to Mexico, but
he is rapidly becoming rare. He Is
built like a heron, except for bis short
legs, but, unlike that water-loving
bird, chooses deserts for his home. He
has wlnas, but scarcely has the power
to fly, though he Is one of the fleetest
of runners.
Not the Influence.
"Is that man who puts on so many
airs under the influence of liquor?"
"No," replied Miss Cayenne, "He's
a bootlegger. Ills proud ostentation
Is due to tbe affluence of liquor.
Human Radio.
Neighbor—Why do you look ao tired
ar.d sleepy, Milllcent?
Little Milllcent—Oh, that new baby
at our house—he broadcasts the whole
night long.—Farm Life,
The man who does his best Is a
success, whether the world thinks so
or not.
Other birds fight in flocks, but the
eugle fights in battles alone.
Beware of little expenses,
leak will sink a great ship.
A small
Scheme Has Been the Dream of Many
Scientists, but Nothing Practical
Has Been Evolved.
Three or fmir^ears ago a Sheffield
(Eng.) workingmun claimed to be put-
ting the finishing touches to an Instru-
ment to enable him "to focus beams of
ether oscillation" und so control the
weather. Unfortunately, the Instru-
ment could not huve been se perfect
us he thought, for nothing further has
been heard of it. Before that a Leeds
scientist had come to the conclusion
that It wus "within the sco| e of hu-
man possibility to preveiif disastrous
cyclones, hurricanes and storms, and
even to improve permanently the
weather of the British Isles." Th
Idea was the production of an instru-
ment enabling the operator to collect
or dissemble the molecules which form
the atmosphere, securing the degree
of density desired and so arranging
the best weather required for any dis-
trict or seasonul occupation. More
than twelve years ago Sir Oliver Lodge
demonstrated thut fog could be dis-
pelled by electricity, though the
process wus too costly for adoption
generally.
Her Chief Sensation.
"What were your thoughts while
you were flying through the air on the
wings of the tornado?"
"One of 'em," replied economical old
Mrs. Frett, "was about the wasteful
way my daughter-in-law always cuts
the bread, und the fact that It didn't
look like I'd ever have another chance
to tell her about It."—Kunsas City
Star.
Man is not an organism—he Is
Intelligence served by organs.
We wonder what Eve fussed about
before Adam learned to smoke.
mst
It's a main highway
Postum eomet In two
forms: Instant Postum (in
tins) prepared instantly in
tbe cup by the addition of
boiling water. Postum
Cereal (in packages), for
those who prefer to make
the drink while the meal
is being prepared; made
by boiling fully 20 minutes.
The two forms are equally
dslicious; and tbe cost is
only about %c per cup.
THE way to satisfaction, comfort and health
through Postum, has become a world-wide way.
This famous table beverage which has stood the test of
twenty-five years, fills every requirement of taste for a
hot and invigorating mealtime drink. Unlike coffee or
tea, Postum contains nothing that can irritate nerves or
disturb digestion. Even the children may safely enjoy it.
Wouldn't it be well for you to avoid the harm which
so many have found in coffee and tea, and protect
health while pleasing taste, with wholesome, satisfying
Postum?
Order from your grocer today 1
PoStum for health
"There's a Reason"
Made by Postum Cereal Co., Inc., Battle Creek, Mich.
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Mast, C. W. The Tyrone Observer (Tyrone, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 22, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 2, 1922, newspaper, November 2, 1922; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc275717/m1/3/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.