Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1911 Page: 5 of 12
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4 r f
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iVIiO
BY THE TRUST
f {/f '
w J^KlNGPowOtf0^'
iou'll bo de-
lighted with the re-
sults of Calumet Baking
Powder. No disappoints —
no flat, heavy, soggy biscuits,
cake, or pastry.
Just the lightest, daintiest, most
uniformly raised and most deli-
cious food you ever ate.
R«o«lv«d highest -award World')
Pure Food Expc3lt!on(
Chicago, 1907
IMPLEMENT FOR BAG-TYING
WHAT SHE SAID.
Specially Constructed Tool Shown In
Illustration Will Be Found
Handy In Closing Sacks.
The operation of closing bags with
a wire tie by means of a specially
constructed tool Is shown In the ac-
companying illustrations, says the
| Popular Mechanics. The wire tie lp
looped at both ends. and. when passed
The Wire Tie, After Being Passed
Around the Bag and the Loops
Placed Over the Hooks, Is Twisted
by Pulling Out the Sliding Handle.
around the neck of the bag. these
loops are placed over the two hooks
at the end of the tool. The sliding
handle is then pulled, this action re-
volving the central rod bearing the
hooks and twisting the ends of the
wire together. Due to the formation
of the loops at the end of the wire,
which are left separated when the ty-
ing Is completed, the latter Is easily
untwisted when the bag Is to be
opened.
MAKE GOOD CIDER VINEGAh
DEVICE FOR HOLDING BASKET
Particularly Convenient >n Picking
Apples and Pears, Because It Will
Stay Where Placed.
For the picking of fruits, especially
apples and pears, many devices hav<>
been used, and new ones are tried
every year. Doubtless the pivot han-
dled hatf-bushel basket is the most
popular receptacle for fruit picked
among the branches on the inside of
the tree. One difficulty with the bas-
ket is that it is awkward to handle
The Lover—Den you say dat my suit
Is in vain?
The Lass—Not exactly, but I did
say if you little, bow-legged, pie-faced
mut didn't quit folleriii' me around
I'd bounce a brick on yer forehead!
An Exacting Situation.
"Doctor," said the nervous man, "is ;
there any way of teaching a person
to talk in his sleep?"
"I never heard of any," replied the
physician. "How could such an ao
complishment be of benefit?"
"It's either that or insomnia for mv
My wife is one of the best suffragette
Bpeakers before the public. She al
ways rehearses her orations nt home, j
and I've got ?o say 'bear! hear!' or
•that's the stuff!' at least once every,
ten mluutvs."—Washington Star.
Charity organizations
multitM'e of ginnviii.
uucover
Basket Holding Device.
when hung on the usual double wire
hook. To obviate this difficulty the de-
vice Illustrated herewith has been
found effective, says the Orange Judd
Farmer. Both ends of a stout manila
cord of any convenient length are fast-
ened to a book. The cord is then
passed around the basket handle and
the hook thrown over a limb and
caught around the now vertical cord,
as shown The hook, while secure,
can be instantly released, either trom
the limb or the basket, and yet it will
"stay put" as long as desired.
Apples Should Be About Ripe. But Not
Mellow, and When Pressed Strained
Into Clean Barrels.
(By H. F. r.RINSTEAD, Missouri.)
It Is not enough to simply grind tho
apples Into cider, then roll under the
shade of a tree or Into the cellar and
patiently wait till the vinegar Is made.
To make good vinegar the apples
should be about ripe, but not mellow,
and when ground and pressed tha
cider should be strained Into clean
barrels.
While apples should be clean, It is
not best to wash them before grind-
ing, and no water should be used In
the cider.
It Is well known that the changing
from sweet cider to vinegar begins as
soon as the Juice leaves the apple and
continues through the various stages
from six to eighteen months, the time
depending on conditions < and treat-
ment.
If the cider Is kept In a warm cellar
or other convenient place and a cako
of yeast dissolved in water Is added
for every five gallons, it will hasten
the fermentation so that It may ba
completed within two or three
months.
Not until then should vinegar
"mother" be added, but when It loses
the bitter taste and begins to get sour
it should be racked off and the barrel
washed out, or it should be put Into
a clean barrel and some old vinegar
and mother put In.
The bung should be left out all of
the time till the vinegar is made, and
a piece of cloth tacked over the hole
to keep out the flies and dirt
When conditions are ideal, the bar-
rels left in a place where the tempera-
ture Is high for the tirst three months,
NOPE PHILOSOPHY
New Association Gaining Many
Members.
FAITH'S CURATIVE POWER
NOTED HEALTH EXPERT
GIVES REASON FOR BIG
SUCCESS IN MEDICINE
Modern Cider Press.
or as long as the weather Is warm,
yeast is added to hasten fermentation,
old vinegar and "mother" used as a
starter, good vinegar may be made in
six months.
But, if the barrels are stored In a
cool cellar and no attention paid to
them, it will take from a year and a
half to two years to produce mer-.
chantable vinegar.
The vinegar making may be hast-
ened by the addition in the last stages
of making of water sweetened with
molasses, preferably sorghum.
When the vinegar is made, the bar-
rels should be filled if not quite full
and the bung driven In.
Tremendous success has attended tha
Organization of the new Munyon "Hope
Cult." Professor Munyon claims that ha
has secured more converts than he even
anticipated, and says that Ills "Hope
Cult" is growing In leaps and bounds. It
Is said thai the total membership of tha
association throughout the Unlled Status
is now well over the half million mark.
In a statement for publication Prof.
Munyon said:
"I want to talk to every sick, ailing and
despondent person In this city. I want
to preach my new creed to them. I
want to tell them about my new philoso-
phy of health, which Is the fruit of a
lifetime of study and experience in deal-
ing with sick folk.
"I want to expound the Great Truth
that 1 have learned that there Is more
curative power in an ounce of Hope than
In pounds of Dope. That sick people
should not take medicine except as a
medium through which the great cura-
tive power of Hope may be made effec-
tive. Medicines are necessary in the
present state of the world's progress be-
cause they give a patient physical sup-
port and strength and renewed vigor
with which to brace up the will power.
One knows, from the action of the proper
medicines, that lie or she is feeling bet-
ter by this inspired hope and faith,
which complete the cure.
"I think that probably a million per-
sons at least In the United States have
declared themselves cured by my medi-
cines, and I know that these people have
had the best remedies medical science
had to offer. I have always contended
that If there Is any virtue In medicine
my followers should have the best, but
I verily believe that more than one-half
of those who have been lifted to health
from the bondage of chronic Illness,
through taking my medicines, have been
really cuied by the knowledge that they
had the utmost In medical lore at their
command, and the Hope this Inspired.
"I am not In any sense a practicing
physician. I employ at my laboratories
in Philadelphia a large staff of expert
physicians and chemists, and I have
many other physicians in various cities
of the United States detailed to give frep
advice to the sick and afflicted. My
headquarters are at Munyon's labora-
tories. E3d and Jefferson Sts.. Phtla., Pa.,
nnd I have there a staff of duly register-
ed physicians and consulting experts,
and to all who desire It I offer the best
of medical advice absolutely free of
Charge."
Write today, addressing Prof. J. M.
Munyon personally and your letter will
have a special care.
Early Standards of Mendacity.
Eve meditated.
"I think that story Adam told me
;s a lie out of the whole leaf," she an-
nounced.
Impenetrable Hedges.
The hedges which we ordinarily sea
bordering country estates are planted
for their ornamental and beautiiylng
effect and not as a substitute tor
fencing material, but In the extrema
southwestern part of the United States
there are many hedges which serva
primarily this latter purpose Vartoua
Secies of cacti. Such as the prickly
pear, are used by ranchmen to enclose
cattle ranges In those arid regions,
and these hedges are practically im-
penetrable Wild animr.ls are thus ef-
fectually prevented from attacking the
herds and flocks, and a supply of fodi
der may always be obtained by burn-
ing off the spines from the tender
young shoots of the cactus.
Well arranged time is the surest
mark of a well arranged mind.—Pit-
man.
GUARANTEED
TO BE PURE.
Prices for Capons.
In many eastern markets the' prices
paid for dressed capons range from
20 to 30 cents a pound The highest
prices usually prevail from January
to May, and the larger the birds the
more they bring a pound For this
reason the larger breeds, such as the
Brahma, Cochin, Langshan, Plymouth
Kock or Wyandotte—are the most
suitable
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1911, newspaper, October 20, 1911; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc87808/m1/5/: accessed November 10, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.