Newspapers / Polk County News and … / May 31, 1923, edition 1 / Page 3
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. L Lift Oft with Fingers fk "K-< ;y ! 'V > ;;[?( a bit ! Prop a little ii .in aching corn, instant- I ?s hurting. then short- j : right off with fingers. J | V svlls :i tiny bottle of a few cents, sufficient | \, ry hard corn. soft corn, j ,vti the toes. and t ho eal- : .?owvness or irritation.' never saw SUCH j AN IMPROVEMENT i I Sajs Lady Who Took Cardui Alter Having Become So Weak I She Couldn't Stancf? Had Pains All Over. 1 Mapv. Miss. ? Mrs. J. M. Hall, of this piaa\ writes that she was "getting weukor ail the time" when Cardui, the woman's tonic, was first brought to her gt:en:i"n. After she had taken Oarcftii awhile, site writes that she *'never did Pee s'.irh an improvement.'4 . "I suffered all the time and had pains all' over." says Mrs. Hall. "I was so weak I eoul 1 1 not stand. My skin was cold anil tlnbhy. I did not have any ,\l- r. I had always been a very active wor.ar? ysed to outdoor exercise, walking ..nd going where I pleased, fir.-! t" sret down, not able to get my St-'f a drink, was indeed a hardship. "Xitthinsr seemed to help me, till I began <?n Cardui. The first bottle Sffiiifi >tr?'ngthen me, and I sent for r.v?? ntnre. By the time I had taken :vr>-\ I was on my feet, going around, Jot.-- n.y work, gaining in health and strer.-Th. "I took two nu>re bottles, and I am well and strong. Can work my garden. 1 hswn'r had any ruore sickness." Cap: -.:i acts gently and in a natural n.annt-r, helping to relieve the symp torr.s '?!" many forms of female trouble, and to .build up the system to health. Cardui is for sale at all druggists. THE WOMANS TONIC BABIES LOVE M&VflNSIOVft SYRUP The laiaata' ud ChiMna's Rtfilil* Pleasant to jflve ? pleasant to take. Guaranteed purely veg etable and absolutely harmless. It quickly overcomes colic, diarrhoea, flatulency and other like disorders. The open published formula appear? on every label . AtAUDmffkb tfjHTERSNrnfs " (hillTohic SOLD 80 YEARS A FINE GENERAL TONIC Their Appearance. " r"ursp, Tennyson J. Daft is a he certainlv does not look Hk? i ?],<?" ?Nv' AU the poets I have ever seen ! in the face large catfishes V;r' ' " much hair and horn-rimmed ?'?<> hig for them." ? Kansas plii - i ' r. tin 1: ? Has Other Uses. ?n has quit golf. -Well, I saw him changing a d- rd.iy and he still speaks the Xew York Sun. Sure Relief FOR INDIGESTION 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief AND 75<t PACKAGES EVERYWHERE asm (?, 1923, Western Newspaper Union.) Prank-hearted hostess of the field and wood, Gypsy whose roof is every spread ing tree, June is the pearl of our New Eng land year. ? James Russell Lowell. "WAYS AND MEANS" It Is necessary, (or efficiency, lor the cook to have an accurate sense of the amount of food to prepare foi her table, with out being nl# gardly. Appetites vary and this faculty Is a most Important one to cultivate. If prop erly planned any meal may be stretched to Include a cliunce guest, without any one being defrauded. There is a fallacy called economy, which consists of "using everything tip'.; of course that is most desirable and to be commended, but when the leftover to be used of ingredients worth three cents must be combined with foods costing live"or six times that it is not economy, unless the com bination is especially well-liked. A few slices of bread to save when used with milk, for pudding, with raisins, e^'gs and spices if the family likes it, is worth while; if not, put those waste slices into the sour milk over night to make into the griddle cakes for breakfast. Or spread the slices with butter and sprinkle gen erously with chopped rhubarb which you are supposed to have in your gar den, sprinkle generously with sugar and bake until the rhubarb is soft and the Juices absorbed by the bread. Such a idessert is wholesome, well-liked and economical. The ordinary ready-to-cat breakfast foods are not economical, especially in a good-sized family. For such let them buy a few pounds of wheat at the mill or from some farmer ? If you are not one ? soak it over night ? a cupful or two ? and cook on the back of the range during the day when a fire is in use. Serve with top milk; this is a hearty meal in itself and will make bone and muscle for the grow ing boys and girls. Perishable foods should be served ip small quantities, so that there will be no leftovers. It is impossible to avoid leftovers and they must be ac cepted as a necessary evil, served as appetizingly as possible; but avoid hav ing them. The mission of the dog ? I say it with all reverence ? is the same as the mission of Christianity, namely. t?a toach mankind that the universe is ruled by love. ? Henry C. Merwin. WHAT TO EAT A French pancake makes a pleasant chTinge from the ordinary griddle cake. Cook them as usual and spread with jam, roll up, sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve hot. Filling for Raisin Pie. ? Take one cupful of water, one-half cupful of sugar, one teaspoonful of butter, one-eighth of a teaspoonful of salt, one and one-half cupfuls of seedless raisins, one ta blespoonful of flour mixed with a little water. Cook the raisins in the water for fifteen minutes, add the sugar and flour paste and cook six minutes longer, take from the heat and add the butter and salt. Cool slightly before putting into the baked shell. I Mock Chicken Salad. ? To one cupful of diced cooked veal add one-half cup ful of diced celery and the same of cooked carrots. Add a tablespoonful of gelatin to one cupful of veal stock, one-half cupful of vinegar and one half cupful of water. Dissolve the gel atin In a little cold water before add ing to the above. Put into a mold when beginning to set, add the meat and vegetables. Mix well and put on ice to oool. Serve on lettuce with 1 mayonnaise dressing. j Baked Squash. ? Wash and cut in half a good sized snupsh, remove the i seeds and steam until tender, then re ' move from the shell, mash fine, sea son with two tables^ oonfuls each of grated cheese, onion, one tablespoon ful of minced parsley, one teaspoonful ' of salt, one-half cupful of %bread ' crumbs and a few dashes of pepper. Mix well and pour into a well-greased baking dish. Bake for twenty minutes. Celery Cocktail. ? ^ike one cupful of minced celery, one tablespoonful of minced chives, three tablespoonfuls of minced green peppers, twelve olives j chopped fine, salt, pepper and mayon | naise to moisten. Fill halves of green i peppers with the ingredients and chill for an hour. Bran Muffins. ? Take one-fourth of a cupful of brown sugar, one-fourth of a cupful of lard, three-fourths of a cup ' ful of milk, one tablespoonful of black molasses, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one and one-half cupfuls of bran, one cupful of flour and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Cream the sugar and'lard and mix in the order given. Bake in tins in a quick oven. This recipe makes one dozen muffins. The young, tender carrots will cook without scraping, the skin peeling off easily when cooked. Serve with but ter, a dash of cayerm* and nutmeg and a bit of lemon juice. Summer Capes Being Shown; Misses' Wraps for Spring <??SX*Xs)?????(5X?Xs)?????(j)????????(2X2)?XsXsXS)??(sXs)?X9??<SX2XsX2)?????<5) INSISTENTLY displayed in the new showings of summer wraps, are capes long and capes short, capes to match the dress and capes to har monize with almost any costume, capes for day and i ipes for evening. Fash Ion has evidently turned to the cape as the most logical of wraps for the warmer months and it brings a re freshing note into tailored and sports garb, besides playing its usual part In dressier apparel. Cape-and-dress I combinations vie with skirt-and-coat follow directions to make a gar ment that will prove something , to be proud of as a wrap and as an ac complishment. Now is the time when the out fitting jf the younger girls and chfldren, for their summer . vucation, must be completed and mothers are busy replenishing their wardrobes. If the quest is for practical coats the model pictured here may be taken as a criterion. It reveals the preferences of the mode in garments of its sturdy dr -skirt-and-jacquette suit, and they have the appeal of novelty as well as smart style to recommend them. One thinks of capes as about the I simplest of garments, but the in ; genuity of designers has been put to ! the test to give tbeni innumerable i and unexpected touches. They are I endlessly varied and interesting, es pecially those that complete tailored ' costumes. The liking for color con , trasts and for matching up frocks and the linings of wraps to be worn with them, contribate to the fine style of I the dress-and-cape costume. t A chic cape that will serve for all j round wear in summer, Is shown in ! the Illustration. It is made of a heavy, character. Note that it is made of fc rough-surfaced wool material, in a cross bar pattern (and cross oars are everywhere in evidence) achieved in the weave of the cloth or by decorative features. If one is looking for something new nnd peculiar to this particular spring, it may be found In the wrnp-around and side-tie models. Plain broadcloth or heavy twill* stitched in narrow tucks that form a cross bar pattern, are fastened at the side with ties, made either of the material of the coat or of wide ribbon. Some of these coats have high, turnover collars of summer furs. Sleeves are wide and occasionally a cape across the back, or CAPE FOR ALL-ROUND SUMMER WEAR PRACTICAL COAT FOR SPRING illk crepe in black, and lined with ?eru crepe de chine. This model is put in two sections, the lower one (slightly fuller than the upper one which forms a deep yoke and is adorned with two scant ruffles of wide satin ribbon. The collar and revers extending to the bottom of the cape are faced with ribbon. \ Capes are among the few outer garments that the average home dress maker can undertake to, make with success, for hergelf. . Provided with patterns such as are furnished by pattern companies, she lias only to sleeves that suggest a cape, provide a graceful variation in the styles. All over, chain-stitch embroidery, in con trasting colors, on plain material, is featured, and Egyptian motifs, in col ors cleverly used, reveal kings and servitors, urns, scarabs, and camels sketched in silk stitchery. Capes must not be overlooked. They are represented b -j very attractive models in plain cloths and in knitted fiber silk with collars of an^or? w?Thl. Like coats, they are full length. The furore for the Jacquette which shows no signs of diminishing, has resulted in wraps of heavy, printed crepe, and other silks, some of them much longer than the regulation jacquette and of a dressier type than the usual summer wrap for misses. (?, 1923, WeaUrn Newspaper Union.) MOTHER Fletcher's Castoria is a pleasant, harmless Substi tute for Castor Oil,. Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups, especially prepared for Infants 1 month old to Children all ages. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Prove" directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. Reasonable Request. In one of the* mining regions there is a district attorney who is "there" on native oratory, but considerably lacking in education. While prosecut ing a big case at one time, lie finished up his argument in flowery style,' and then, leaning across the rail he made this plea : "All I asts of you, gentlemen of the jury, now that you are about to retire, is to mete out justice as she deserves to be met !" Cuticura Soap for the Complexion. Nothing better than Cuticura Soap daily and Ointment now and then as needed to make the complexion clear, scalp clean and hands soft and white. 'Add to this the fascinating, fragrant Outicura Talcum, and you have the Cuticura Toilet Trio. ? Advertisement. Slightly Misquoted. "Mother!" Bessie rushed breathless ly into the parlor, where mother was entertaining. "Mother! I learned such a pretty poem in school today." "What is it, dear?" asked her ipoth er, in spite of her embarrassment. "Well, it goes like this: 'The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want; He maketh me to lie down in green plaster ? ' " The rest was lost in the burst of laughter that followed. Juvenile untruths are defensive. Not till later come those that enter into plots. YOU CAN'T CUT CUT A Bog Spavin or Thoronghpla but you can clean them off promptly with and you work the horse same time. Does not blister or remove the hair. $2.50 per bottle, delivered. Will tell you more if you write. Book 4 A free. F. YOUNG, lac., 310 Tenple St., Spriagfield, Mu>. HURT? For burning or aenly Hd?, and to re!i?To inflamma tion and soi-enes*. use Mitchell Eye Saive. according to direc tions. Soothing, healing. * HALL A RUOKEL 14T Wavtrly Placs N?w Tork World War Medals. A bill is to be introduced at the next session of the New York state legis-* lature to award World war service medals to officers of draft boards. There is a feeling In the "military es tablishment," however, that the awarding of war decorations "has gone about as far as possible' without, through making such dispositions so general, lessening their significance." Economy is the road to wealth? and it's a hard road to travel. I Now is the time to pay close attention and see that your bakings are pure, wholesome and nutritious. Good flour is all flour with the nutritive value of wheat. Mix it with good baking pow 1 der and you have a nutritious, wholesome, palatable baking. No ready mixed substitute wSl take its place. For wholesome, nourishing food you should use straight flour and a pure baking powder? Uiere never was, is not, and never will be anything that will take the place of good straight baking powder and plain flour. * If you are using self -rising I flour or any other kind of a . substitute for good baking powder or plain flour you had better stop, and consider whether you are practicing red economy, or saving money. You are taking a chance of losing the full nutritious health-build ing value of a good, plain flour. For best results use ? Calumet Baking Powder and | a good plain flour.
Polk County News and The Tryon Bee (Tryon, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 31, 1923, edition 1
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