Texhoma Argus. (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1913 Page: 4 of 9
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THE TEXHOMA A£GUS
Joe L. Buckley, Pub.
TEXHOMA : : : OKLA.
PICKED UP FROM EVERYWHERE
interesting |tem« Gathered From All
Parts of the World Condensed
Into Small Space for the Ben-
efit of Our Readers.
ONLY DOUBTFUL CITIZEN.
Washington.
The annual breakfast of the Wom-
en's Democratic club was recently
held in Washington. Mrs. Woodrow
Wilson, Mrs. Champ Clark and Mrs.
Thomas R. Marshall were the guests
of honor. There was also present a
large representation of the ladies of
Progressive and Republican parties.
• • •
Conferences between President Wil-
son and members of the House com-
mittee on ways and means have re-
sulted in a unanimous decision to
place wool on the free list. What the
Senate will do is still a matter of
conjecture.
• • •
Astounding revelations of an "orgy
of petty graft" by judges, public of-
ficials and shippers in Colorado is re-
vealed in the report of the Interstate
Commerce commission just made
public.
* * •
President Wilson has set aside two
hours of each week for heart-to-heart
talks with the Washington newspaper
correspondents.
• •'
President Wilson has been asked by
Beatrice Harraden, the author, to in-
tervene in behalf of Miss Zelie Emer-
son, a Detroit, Mich., girl, now held
in an English jail for participation in
suffragette window smashing raids in
London.
*
Walter H. l'age of Garden City,
N. Y„ editor of the World's Work and
member of the tirm of Doubleday,
l'age & Co., publishers, has accepted
the appointment of ambassador to
Great Britain.
« * •
Postmaster General Burleson has or-
dered annulled the parcels post regu-
lation which requires double postage
collected from the addressee when or-
dinary postage stamps have been af-
fixed to parcels.
lit
Domestic Items.
A tornado swept a path three-quar-
ters of u mile wide from Sturgeon,
Mo., to Larrabee. One man was
killed and two women fatally Injured.
Fifty barns and numerous other
buildings were wrecked. A loaded
Chicago & Alton freight train was
blown from the right of way.
* • *
While attempting to get his power
boat off a sandbar in the Missouri
river at Omaha, Joedy Pospisil was
swallowed up in a quicksand and
drowned.
• • •
J. Pierpont Morgan, the leading
American financier is dead at the
Grand Hotel In Rome, Italy, after an
• illness lasting sqferal weeks. Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Satterlee, son-in-law
and daughter of Mr. Morgan, were at
the bedside when the end came. The
body will be taken to New York for
Interment.
• • •
Frank Gotch, the world's champion
wrestler, defeated George Lurich of
Russia before a record breaking
crowd in Convention Hall at Kansas
City in straight falls. Gotch won the
first fall in 18 minutes and 10 sec-
onds, and the second in 5 minutes
aud 35 seconds.
"Everybody is telling exactly what
you will do If you are elected to of-
fice." '
"Yes."
"Well, what will you dor*
"I don't know yet."
BABY IN MISERY WITH RASH
Monroe, Wis.—"When my baby was
six weeks old there came a rash on
bis face which finally spread until it
got nearly all over his body. It form-
ed a crust on his head, hair fell out
and the itch was terrible. When he
would scratch, the crust, the water
would ooze out in big drops. On face
and body it was in a dry form and
would scale off. He was in great mis-
ery and ^at nights I would lie awake
holding his hands so that he could not
scratch and disfigure himself. I tried
simple remedies at first, then got
medicine, but it did no good.
"Finally a friend suggested Cuticura
Remedies, so I sent for a sample to
see what they would do, when to my
surprise after a few applications I
could see an improvement, and he
fould rest better. I bought a box of
uticura Ointment and a cake of Cutl-
cura Soap and before I had them half
used my baby was cured. His head is
now covered with a luxuriant growth
of hair and his complexion is ad-
mired by everybody and has no dis-
figurements." (Signed) Mrs. Annie
Saunders, Sept. 29, 1911.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32-p. Skin Rook. Address
post-card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."
Adv.
His Reason.
"Why does the museum freak com-
plain that he is a dead oue?"
"Because he is a living skeleton."
POINTS ON PANCAKES
A boiler shop by any other name,
would be just as noisy.
On the
''firing line"
If you would maintain your place in
the "front rank" you must keep strong
and robust. Sickness soon relegates
you to the rear. Try
HOSTETTER'S
Stomach Bitters
when the appetite lags —when the
digestion is bad—when the liver and
bowels are inactive. It will surely
help you.
MUCH APPRECIATED DISH ADAPT-
ED TO EVERY POCKETBOOK.
Batter Should Be Mixed Two' Hours
Before Being Used and Should Be
Beaten For at Least Ten
Minutes.
There is no reason why pancakes
should not be served very frequently,
since they form a much appreciated
dish which can be adapted to every
kind of housekeeping pocketbook.
The batter for making pancakes can
be mixed in a few minutes, but it is
well to mix it about two hours before
It Is used, so that any lumps of un-
wetted flour may disappear before the
batter is cooked.
If pancakes are to be light mere
mixing will not do. The batter must
be thoroughly beaten for ten minutes.
The frying pan ought to be made of
Iron or black steel. The fire must not
be too fierce, or the under surface will
burn before the pancake is set, yet a
fair amount of heat is required that
the pancakes may cook quickly with-
out getting stodgy.
Plain Pancakes.—Sift one cupful of
flour into a basin, add quarter tea-
spoonful of salt, one unbeaten egg and
half a cupful of milk. Mix till smooth,
then begin to beat. Beat with a wood-
en spoon for a few minutes, then
gradually add another half capful of
milk and continue beating till a good
many air bubbles rise to the top. Set
the basin aside until the pancakes
are to be cooked. Fry the pancakes
quickly in a hot buttered frying pan,
sprinkle wih sugar and lemon juice,
roll up, and serve on a h,bt dish.
Rich Pancakes.—Cream two heap-
ing tablespoonfuls of butter and work
it into one cupful of flour and quar-
ter teaspoonful of salt. Add two well-
beaten eggs and sufficient milk to
form a stiff batter. TJse a little butter
when frying them. Do not roll them,
but spread each one with raspberry
jam which has been warmed. Serve
them iu a pile with granulated sugar
sprinkled over the top.
Orange Pancakes.—Half a pint of
milk, four ounces of sifted flour, half a
teaspoonful of salt and two eggs, omit-
ting the white of one; make the pan-
cakes thin. As each one is finished
it must be kept hot, either in the oven
or over hot water. Have ready two
or three oranges, cut in small square
pieces, without skin or pith. When
all the pancakes are fried, place upon
each one a tablespoonful of the or-
ange, sprinkle with sugar and roll up.
These pancakes may be served with
strawberries, raspberries or stoned
cherries.
Italian Pancakes.—Beat well togeth-
er two eggs, one ounce of flour, one
tablespoonful of sugar, half a cupful
of sugar, half a cupful of warm inilk;
then add a few drops of lemon extract
and two ounces of melted butter. Di-
vide the mixture quickly into buttered
saucers, bake In a hot oven for twen-
ty minutes. Serve piled up sprinkled
with sugar.
Chocolate Pancakes.—Beat together
the yolks of four eggs, one tablespoon-
ful of sugar, two ounces of flour, a
pinch of salt and two tablesponfuls
of milk; when light add two table-
spoonfuls of cream. Just before us-
ing mix in the stiffly beaten whites of
two eggs. Cook, browning on one
side only; then slip onto a hot plate,
sprinkle thickly with grated choco-
late, place them on a buttered tin
and bake in a moderate oven for fif-
teen minutes.
THE DEAREST.
BABY
Mrs. Wilkes' Fondest Hopes
Realized—Health, Hap-
piness and Baby.
Plattaburg, Miss.—"Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound has proved
very beneficial to me, for now I am well
and have a sweet, healthy baby, and
our home is happy.
"I was an invalid from nervous pros*
tration, indigestion and female troubles.
"I think I suffered every pain a wo-
man could before I began taking Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and
I think it saved this baby's life, as I
lost my first one.
"My health has been very good ever
since, and I praise your medicine to all
my friends." — Mrs. Verna W1LKE3,
R. F. D. No. 1, Flattsburg, Miss.
The darkest days of husband and wifa
are when they come to look forward to
a childless and lonely old age.
Many a wife has found herself inca-
pable of motherhood owing to some
derangement of the feminine system,
often curable by the proper remedies.
In many homes once childless there
are now children because of the fact
that Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable
Compound makes women normal.
If you want special advice write to
Lydia E. Pinkliam Medicine Co. (confi-
dential) Ljrnu, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman aud held in strict confidence.
Quickly relieves
weifc. InflamedOJM.
i Sold evorj whuramo.
j Kooklat free.
JOHN L.TUOJU>HON HONS * CO-.Trojr.N.S.
<Nran
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS.
If you feel 'OUT OF sorts"RUN doWN'or'UOT THE BLUES'
SUFFER from kidney. bladder, nervous diseases.
chronic weaknesses,ulcers,skin eruptions.piles,
write for my FREE book. the most instructivs
medical book evf.r written,it tells all about thesa
diseases and the rf.makkaiile cures effected br
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. N.I. N.2. N.3.
TH ERAPION frVoVS;
U lt'i the remedy for your own ailment. Don't send a cent.
Absolutely FREE. No'followup'circulars. Dr LeCLKRC
JtlD.co.HAVfcRsrock Rd, Hamfstead, London,Emi.
J
Wichita Directory
JAMESC. SMITH HIDE CO.
PELTS Uincc TALLOW
FURS n I U C 9 WOOL
WE SOLICIT YOUR SHIPMENTS
904 E, Douglas Ave., Wichita, Kan,
jja ELEVATORS
p---' %iit for Everyone. Belting,
>, >o Pulleys, Shafting, Hangers,
' Scales, and Engines. Write us
if interested.
I P. H. PELKEY CONSTRUCTION CO.. 11S
NORTH EMPORIA AVE., WICHITA. KANS.
Btanquet of Veal.
Remove the bone from a brisket of
veal, chop Into Bmall pieces and fry.
Brown a chopped onion and a little
flour in a saucepan and add the fried
veal with a little water, some green
onions, parsley, thyme, cloves and
garlic. Add half a cup green peas, and
when all Is thoroughly cooked add the
yolka of two eggs beaten In water.
OTTO WEISS
CHICK FEED !
"Saves all the little ones." Mfcd. In Wichita.
FOR SALE BY ALL CON-
SCIENTIOUS DEALERS.
Send Direct to Wichita for Your
Edison Blue Amberol Records
Edison's New Blue Amberol Records
run over four minutes, are the best
and clearest records made, cost only
50 cents, are practically indestruct-
ible, and can safely be sent by
PARCEL POST 3 for 6c; 6 for ioc.
we prepay
THE EBERHARDT-HAYS MUSIC CO.
Cor. Doug, and Em p. Ave*., Wichita
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Buckley, Joe L. Texhoma Argus. (Texhoma, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1913, newspaper, April 10, 1913; Texhoma, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth351950/m1/4/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Communications+-+Newspapers%22: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.