Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Natrona County Tribune from Casper, Wyoming • 2

Location:
Casper, Wyoming
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Some Pretty Breakfast Caps LEGISLATORS ELECTED By JULIA BOTTOMLEY. LIST OF MEMBERS OF WYOMING HOUSE AND SENATE. IASPEB wroimra NATRONA COUNTY TRIBUNE 'l-Vl cx Official Canvass Shows That Republicans Have Eight Majority on Joint Ballot. iiPi Id XI Figures published by the federal bureau of education give evidence that the reward of geniui engaged In the educational field are considerably below those attainable In other of the learned professions and In many Industrial avocations. The highest paid head of a state-aided Institution of learning Is the president of the University of California, who receives a year and house.

The president cf Cornell university and the University of Illinois, each receive a year and houso, and the president of the University of Minnesota. $10,000 a year without house. Other presidents 'salaries run down as low $2,400. The best paid full professor enjoys an income of $6,000 a year, and the least paid tutor struggles along on an allowance of $50. When It Is considered that there are lawyers In the country earning from $50,000 to $100,000 a year, that some medical mtn command almost as large earnings, and that many engineers, presidents of manufacturing concerns and others engaged in.

Industrial pursuits are equally well rewarded, one may we)l marvel that so many men of superlative Intelligence devote their lives to pedagogy. JCi rbf mm snxv Western Newspaper Union News Service. Cheyenne, Wyo. The State Canvassing Board has completed its official canvass cf the votes on all state officers, presidential electors and members of the Legislature. The official canvass shows that tho Twelfth Legislature will be made up as follows, the bold-over senators being Indicated by a Member of Wyoming Senate.

Albany 'Henry Maynard Laramie: 'Jacob Kerner Laramie. Big Horn tleorre H. MeCiellan Nowood; 8, SkuVRard carbon H. Taylor (K. En.

campiiwit; 'Frank Hadsell Rawlins. Converse W. Irvine Rons. Crook 'A. K.

Hoyt Sundance. Fremont R. 11. Hall (D. Lander; Dr.

J. W. (D). Lander. Johnson 'Alfred M.

itrook Greub. J-aramle 'Blrney H. Sage Cheyenne; 'J Rons Carpenter Chey-enne; DuRald MeCalium Wheat, land; Thomas c. Powers (Kl, Torrlng-ton' Edw. W.

Ktone K. Cheyenne. Natrona Patrlcn Bulllvan Cas. per. Park George T.

Beck Cody. Sheridan 'John B. Kendrlck Sheridan; C. H. Halley (IX), Bherldan; Nels Pearson (LU.

Sheridan. Sweetwater 'Edward H. Murray Rock Springs; August Martello (R. Rock Springs. 1 IMnta 'James Chrlsman Opal- 'W.

A. Ryde Auburn; 3. B. Bradbury EvanBton. Weston 'I.

C. Newcastle. Member of House of Representatives. Albany Otto Burns Red Butte; Leslie C. John (LX), Rock Mrs.

Anna B. Miller Iaramle; Joseph R. Bulllvan Laramie. Big Horn E. J.

Sullivan (R. Basin; A. Thorley Otto; Herman B. uates K. Worland.

Carbon R. O. McGrew Fort Steele; W. E. Tllton Saratoga; Frank C.

Hunter Elk Charles H. Anderson Hanna. Converse William Booker (R), Glen, rock; Henry T. Gray (R), Lusk; G. M.

Wlnkelman (RV Manvllle. Crook S. D. Perry (D), Sundance; Miss Nettie Truax D), Sundance; William J. Wood (D), Sundance, Fremont C.

C. Belknap Cora; W. W. Sproul lender; H. Wendt Lander; E.

H. Wilson Hudson. Johnson Albert I Brock (D), Buffalo; R. L. Van Winkle barnum.

Laramie Mrnian Black Chey. enne; Stephen H. Sibley (R), Burns; James F. Kelly Cheyenne; R. A.

Hopklnr (R), Cheyenne; Jacob Sher man (R. Cheyenne; Charles R. Mason (Rl, Wheatland; A. E. Campbell Glendo; Charles Hlrslg Cheyenne; Robert G.

Shingle Cheyenne; F. Yoder (R), 'i'orrlngton. Natrona Robert Grieve (R), Casper; Stephen Tobln Casper. Park Martin L. Pratt (R.l, Powell; George Ktndler Garland.

Sheridan 8. Caple (D. Sheridan; C. L. Decker (IX), Sheridan- T.

C. Ui-ers (D), Sheridan; H. V. Henslnger Bherioan; Dan Keleher Sheridan: W. S.

Met (D. Sheridan; J. H. Valleau Sheridan. Sweetwater E.

H. Matson Superior; August Evers (D.h Green River; William McAllister Rock Springs; George Young, Jr. Rock Springs. i Uinta N. C.

Allred (R), Afton; T. J. Brough Lyman; J. Eynon Jackson; E. E.

Fisher 'R. Diamond-vllle- Thomas W. White Thayne; Thomas R. Wilson Alta; Frank P. Cranney Smoot, Weston Jefferson Davis (D Upton; Frederick Schmidt Newcastle.

i Saratoga Gets New Minister. Saratoga. The Presbyterian church at this place has called as its pastor the Rev. M. F.

Newport, formerly of Pine Bluffs. Government Officials Object-RIverton. It is reported here that orders have been issued by the Indian Department at Washington that will put a stop to dude camps and headquarters on the Indian reserve in the future. Prison for Wife Deserter. Sundance.

Ben Bunch of this place Is the first Wyoming man to receive a penitentiary sentence for desertion of his wife. He has been sentenced to eighteen months' imprisonment a law passed two years ago. Company Avoids Bankrputcy. Cheyenne. The purchasers of of the bonds of the North Platta Valley Irrigation Company achieved a victory in the United States District Court when Judge J.

A. Riner appointed C. C. Carlisle of Cheyenne receiver for the company, with authority to continue Its operations. Jenkins Given 8tay by Court.

Cheyenne. A stay of execution has been granted by the State Supreme Court in the case of J. Warren Jenkins, convicted wife-slayer, sentenced to pe banged December 2udt Jenkins' attorneys have asked for a new trial and It will probably be several months before the higher court decides the appeal. Indians Quit Slaying Wives. Lander.

At the present term of District Court several petitions filed by Shoshone and Arapahoe Indians, seeking for divorce, will be heard. For ages the Indians have been in the habit of slaying their squaws when they failed to get along with them, but have been emulating the ways of their white brothers and seek relief In the divorce courts. The Indian women are also taking advantage of this avenue of escape from lazy, brutal and good-for-nothing husbands. Wife of Denver Man Sentenced. Cheyenne.

Judge J. A. Rinor sentenced Mrs. Marie Evans, qonvicted for violating the Mann slave act, to one year and one day In the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan. Mrs.

Evans Is the wife of C. H. Evans, a Denver saloonkeeper. Broke Cord In Her Neck. Casper.

While combing her hair Mrs. John Duncan turned her head suddenly arid broke one of the cords In her neck. Confident Cavalry Will Return. Cheyenne. Confidence that the Ninth cavalry Is to be returned to Fort Russell instead of assigned to an eastern post is strengthened receipt of letters from members of tho Ninth reporting that It Is the regiment's belief that it is to be re-stationed at the Cheyenne post.

Dies While Reading Bible. Cheyenne. The dead body of Charles Pett, colored, was found beside his bed, one hand still clasping fin open Bible. NOBLE, that is more than wealth: Do right, that Is more than place: Then In the spirit there is health. And gladness In the face.

A FEW COMPANY DESSERTS. When one is to entertain, a little extra work and expense will often transform an otherwise common dish into a creation of some distinction. As cookery is both an art and a science, one has a vast field for developing individuality. At this season of the year, when IcheErfnutB are In their prime, it seems good to try some of the recipes in which we use them. Mousse Marron.

Cook together a half cup of sugar and a fourth of a cup of water five minutes, pour over the beaten whites of two eggs, dissolve a teaspoonful of gelatine in one and a half tablespoonfuls of boiling water and add to the first mixture. Set this in a pan of Ice water and Btlr until cold. Add one and a halt cups of cooked chestnuts; fold in the whip from a pint of cream and a half teaspoonful of Maple Parfalt. Beat four eggs slightly and pour a cup of hot maple Sirup slowly over it. Cook very carefully until the mixture thickens; cool and add a pint of cream, beaten stiff.

Mol4 and pack In ice and salt and let stand three hours. Use tour parts ice and one part salt. Orange Delicious. Boll together a cup of water and two cups of sugar eight minutes, then add two cups of orange juice. Scald a cup of cream, add the yolks of two eggs and cook over hot water until the mixture thlckenB.

Cool' and add to the first mixture with a cup of heavy cream. Freeze, and when nearly frozen, add a fourth of a cup of shredded Candied orange peel. Line a melon mold with orange ice, fill with the orange dell-clous and let stand two hours packed In lea and salt Orange Pekoe Ice Cream. Scald a pint of milk with three tablespoonfuls of orange pekoe tea, let stand five minutes. Beat the yolks of four eggs, add a cup and a half of sugar and add to the first mixture; when thick, strain, and add a fourth of a teaspoonful of salt, the grated rind of an orange and a pint of cream.

Freeze and serve, garnished with candled or ange peel. HE inner side of every cloud Is ever brleht nnr nhlninv I therefore turn my clouds about. And always wear them inside out, To show the silver lining. ROAST GOOSE. This Is the time of year when our turn In longing toward the toothsome roast goose.

A goose, because of Its fat, should be thoroughly scrubbed in hot soap suds and thoroughly rinsed, then remove the Inside contents, wash In cold water and wipe. Stuff, truss, sprinkle with salt and pepper and cook, breast down, in the roasting pan. If roasted breast up, cover the breast with strips of Lacon, which will keep it from becoming too dry. Stuffing for Goose. Two cups of hot 'mashed potato, a cup and a fourth of bread crumbs, a fourth of a cup of chopped salt pork, a finely-chopped onion, a third of a cup of butter, a well-beaten egg, a teaspoonful and a half of salt and a teaspoonful of sage, Mix all together and stuff the Chestnut Stuffing.

Cook half a ta-blespoonful of finely chopped shallot with three tablespoonfuls of butter; add a fourth of a pound of sausage meat, and cook two minutes, then add twelve muifcrooms, finely chopped, a cup of chestnut puree (which Is chestnuts cooked until tender and put through a sieve), a half of a table-spoonful of chopped parsley, and salt and pepper to taste. Heat to the boiling point and add a third of a cup of bread crumbs and twenty-four whole chestnuts. Cool the mixture before stuffing the goose. i Norwegian Goose Stuffing. Pare and quarter good-flavored apples, soak and Btone a half, pound of prunes; season the goose well internally with salt and stuff with the apples and prunes.

The proportion of apple to prunes is two to one in quantity. One often reads that this stuffing -is not to be served, but the real Norwegian considers this stuffing most delicious, and as It seasons the goose so well, the gravy is always flavored with the stuffing. Making Leaf Pictures. The necessary outfit consists simply of a small printing-frame such as photographers use and a quantity of commercial blue-print paper. The leaves, or ferns, which are to be the subjects of the lesson are pressed in a book for a few days after gathering; when thoroughly dry, each specimen is placed in the printing-frame, covered with a piece of blue-print paper, yellow side down, and the back of the frame latched in place.

The whole Is then exposed to strong sunlight until i Profession of Motherhood. "It is a difficult profession this profession of motherhood. In the animal kingdom, as the offspring grow older, the parents withdraw their ministrations, but In the human family the older the children grow, the more diplomacy and enthusiasm is needed by the ruling spirits; When the boys begin to get unruly and the girls begin to get silly as the husband gets less ready to make an effort and more willing to sit quietly by the lire In the eve-oinft-HllBn It Is that many a family ALL the good you can. By all the means you can. In aJl the ways you can.

In all the places you can, At all the times you can, To all the people you can. As long as ever you can. Wesley. SMALL CHRISTMAS CAKES. These small cakes, which may be made, many of them several days or even weeks before Christmas, are such an addition to the holiday table as well as most acceptable in the gift baskets and boxes which we enjoy sending to our friends: Nut Maccaroons.

Beat the white of an egg until light, then add gradually while beating constantly a cup of brown sugar. Fold in a cup of pecan nuts, a fourth of a teaspoon of salt and drop from a spoon on an unbuffered sheet. Bake In a moderate oven until delicately browned. Delicious little cakes of the small round crackers may be made by putting a marshmallow with a nut on top on each cracker, and baking In a hot oven until the marshmallow Is melted and brown. Kornettes.

Add three-fourths of a tablespoonful of butter to three-fourths of a cup of finely chopped popped popcorn. Beat a white of egg until stiff, add a half cup of sugar, a fourth of a teaspoon of salt, a half teaspoonful of vanilla. Combine the mixtures and drop from a teaspoon on a well-buttered -baking sheet Shape in circular form with a knife dipped in cold water. Sprinkle with chopped almonds and place a candled cherry in the center of each. Bake In a slow oven until delicately browned.

Neuremburghs. Beat the whites of two eggs until stiff, add a half cup of powdered sugar, gradually; continue the beating, then add the yolks of the eggs well beaten, three-fourths of a cup of flour, a half teaspoonful of salt, a third of a teaspoonful of cinnamon, a tablespoonful of orange peel finely cut, the grated rind of half a lemon, an eighth of a teaspoonful of cloves. Blanch three-fourths of a cup of almonds and brown in the oven until well browned. Fold Into the mixture and drop by spoonfuls on a sheet dredged with cornstarch and powdered sugar In equal proportions. Bake in a moderate oVen.

OW little It costs, if we give It a thought. To happy some heart each day. Just one kind word, or a tender smile, As we go on our dally way. PORK, A WINTER MEAT. During the cold winter months our bodies need more fuel to keep us warm, and pork, then, has its innings.

Little pigs from four to six weeks old are the piece de resistance for many epicures. Pork, containing such a large per cent, of fat. Is a valuable food for body heat, though It Is hard of digestion. Pork Chops. Pork chops, when well cooked, are a most popular meat, but dried and tasteless, as they are more than often served, most unsatisfactory.

Place the chops In the frying pan with Just enough water to cover the bottom of the pan; parboil uncovered until the water has evaporated, then the chops will quickly brown. Season and serve a juicy chop well done without being cooked to a crisp. Cored, unpeeled apples fried in the remaining fat, sprinkled with a little sugar to give them a color, make a nice garnish for the platter of pork chops. Barbecued Ham. Soak thin slices of ham an hour in lukewarm water; drain, wipe and cook in a hot frying pan, until slightly browned.

Remove to the platter and add to the fat In the pan three tablespoonfuls of vinegar mixed with a teaspoonful of mustard, half a teaspoon of sugar and a few dashes of When thoroughly hot pour over the ham and serve. Forgetfulness. "What party are you interested In?" asked the man who thinks of nothing but politics. "That's what I have been telephoning my wife to find out," replied Mr. Meekton.

"The only thing I can remember about it Is that it's a bridge party." inspection shows the shadows to be deeply bronzed; the print is then removed and washed In several changes of fresh water, when the exact Image of the leaf, with all its delicate tracery of veins, will be found shown In white upon a blue ground. Home Progress Magazine. Not as It Sounds. "That man deceived me. He told me he was an underwriter." "So he Is.

He gets work as a sub stitute newspaper hack." drifts apart. But the mother can have no holiday. She must always be on tap. The only difference is that as the children grow older, she must pretend that It is they and not she who are managing affairs. Home Progress Magazine.

Profanation. "And have you a nice nurse?" "Yes; but she's awful wicked." "How?" "She tells us Bible stories on week days!" EL There are almost two sides to the Simple little facts of life. There Is this matter of drinking water at one's meals. It has been regarded as a miserable habit The school textbooks teach it that way. and they give very Impressive reasons for It It used to be taught drink at your meals, If you feel like it; drink all you want; It Is good tor you; helps digestion.

Then came the opposite doctrine, never drink at your meals, and not for an hour afterward, and that Idea has prevailed and Is a part of our wise school knowledge these days. Now comes Professor Hawk of the University of Illinois who has been studying the subject for seven years, and bis conclusion Is that water-drlnklng at meals helps digestion, principally by utilizing the protein food, which is regarded as the most Important function of digestion, says the Ohio Jour-cay. Then, fluids help digest the fats and throttle the bacleria that range along the alimentary canal and keep stirring up all sorts of tumults. So the latest Information Is not to let anybody scare you about drinking water at your meals. Just drink what you want and forget about It Scientists say that the average man eats 60 per cent, more food than be uses.

This Is a violation of economic law. Hence dyspepsia and kindred ills. The best digestive tonic In the world Is hunger, actual, gnawing Let the average dyspeptic try It for a while and see bow It works. The only animal In the world that eats when he la not hungry Is a hog of one kind or another. A Japanese steamship company Issues with each ticket sold a coupon representing a certain seat In a lifeboat and requests the passenger to acquaint himself with the location of the particular boat to which he Is al loted.

Is there any harm In accept ing a suggestion from the Orient? A new benefactor of mankind has arisen In California. He has discover ed a concoction which robs roosters of their ability to crow. A sharp ax administered with vigor Just where the tail feathers merge Into the comb Is also effective. The supreme court of Iowa has decided that tips belong to the person who receives them, not to any boss or syndicate that grabs the privileges. It would have been a better decision to brand them as bribery and Hie gal- A Brooklyn motor cyclist dying from cancer bas been pronounced a victim of the Jouncing of the machine.

But why blame the cycle for Brook' iyn's uneven pavements! Baldy, a New York monkey, examines his food to see whether it Is Inhabited by germs. Science bas robbed the monkey of his gastronomlcal pleasures. i Japanese school children are taught to write with both bands. Just think what Journalists they'd have made before typewriters were invented. A railroad company is asked to pay $200,000 for the death of a chimpanzee.

Must have been the missing link the biologists are looking for. A machine has been Invented by which the blind can bear light Now, if they only fix up another so that the deaf can see sound; all will be happy. i A pitcher for champagne has been invented by an Englishman. But few of ua drink champagne by the pitcher. A Belgian bank official Is accused of being Phort about $5,000,000.

It must be he Is an American in disguise. An Oregon man wants Philadelphia detectives to find a wife blm. Hut who ever heard of a Philadelphia detective finding anything? Chinese officeholders are wearing silk hats. Nest thing they'll be handing out campaign cigars and levying graft One of the penalties of being a great ball player is buying gasoline for a gift automobile. plaited ruffles may be bought, and range from twenty-five to fifty cents a yard already to sew on.

A band of soft messaline ribbons in light blue, extends about the cap with a small fiat rosette at each side. This Is made by gathering a quarter of a yard of ribbon along one edge. A liti tie bunch of pink rosebuds Is perched under the rosette, Just where the ruffle Joins the crown. It requires ono and a half yards of ribbon for this little cap, such as may be bought for fifteen or twenty cents a yard. Three quarters of a yard of platting Is a little more than Is needed but is the allowance for one ruffle.

One and a third yards will easily make two ruffles. i Pig. 2 shows a less expensive cap made of a coarse dotted net. It Is in the same way and edged with a ruffle of net having a finish, of narrow lace. Under this ruffle a plaiting Is sewed, finished with a hemstitched hem.

Pink and blue satin ribbon one inch wide 1b made into little bows and mounted at each side. Such a little cap costs only fifty cents. A lovely cap of spangled chiffon is pictured in Fig. 4 and this cap Is also very cheap in price. The chiffon la light blue with little crystal dots over the surface.

A plain, thin net crown lines the chiffon, to protect it They are bound with a thin, narrow satin ribbon in pale blue, through which the elastic cord is run. The ruffle is made of the same chiffon edged with a border of the ribbon. A little bunch of pink moss roses and leaves is sewed to the left side. This cap Is made in pink or light green or lavender or In all white. It requires almost no time to make and is one of the prettiest of all.

If one has time to make the plaited ruffles, the expense Is lessened. But even buying it ready made It only requires three yards to make the single edging for four caps. An average of seventy-five cents each will cover the cost, when several caps are planned to be made at one tlm. Evening caps are more expensive. One is shown in Fig.

4 made of stiver lace. The ruffle Is a satin ribbon. Is blue, covered with the silver and there Is a hand made wreath of little ribbon rose buds made of narrow pink satin ribbon set about the top of the ruffle. Pretty flowered ribbons and those of rich brocade make beautiful opera caps. Nearly always tiny made flowers, or small millinery flowers like the forget-me-not, are used In trimming them.

Rich laces are draped In full puffs for crowns and lace edgings fall about the face and over the neck In caps that are worn with evening dress. But, however grand, the opera cap Is not quite so sweet as the little breakfast cap nor nearly so use ful. For breakfast is a dally happening, and anything that makes the young day cheerful Is a Christmas gift worth having. ures of Santa Claus, holly, bells, or Just plain red cloth. Woman's Home Companion.

OLD TIME CHRISTMAS PIE According to a Newspaper of 1770, It Was 8o Large Two Men Were Needed to Carry It. A great story Is being told about the big plum puddings that are carried out to India by the king and queen. But, however big, they will be nothing to the ChrlBtmas pies they used to make In the olden time. Just read this from a newspaper of 1770: "On Monday last was brought from llawlck to Berwick, to be shipped to London for Sir Henry Orey, a ChriBtmas pie, the contents whereof are as follows: Two bushels of flour, twenty pounds of butler, four geese, two turkeys, two rabbits, four wild ducks, two wcdcocks, six snipes, four partridges, two neat's tongues, two curlews, seven blackbirds and six pigeons. It Is nine feet In circumference, weighs about 170 pounds and will take two men to present It to tabid; it is neatly fitted with a caso and four small wheels, to facilitate its use to every guest that inclines to partake of its contents." These, as our contemporary truly observes, were the days of strtmg heads and stout stomachs.

Useless Presents. Aunt Ves, Johnny, Santa Claus brought you a baby brother. Johnny Great Scot! Another present that ain't any use! Christmas Spirit. Too many of us take mean things oa faith and demand proof of good things. A woman under the mistletoe can look mighty unconscious If the right man Is in enht When Christmas gifts bear with i (hem kindly thoughts or careful work on the part of their donor and a recog nition of good tasto in those to whom them are given, the recipients are sure to be pleased.

And, whether the purse be fat or lean, good management and cleverness make It possible to embody these ideas in all gifts. Those which are the handiwork of the giver are whose which make the strongest appeal to our hearts and bring home the sweet, gracious spirit of Christmas. What taxes us most each year Is the matter of deciding on what to give. After this has been settled upon and our list made out, the rest is easy and the work a pleasure. There are Innumerable pretty things for women and girls.

All of them love articles made to decorate their homes, and those made for their personal adornment; so the choice is not so hard. It does require some thing to And out gifts for men. But we won't go far wrong if we stick to things which add to their comfort. And they like, too, those things which add to the attrac tiveness of their rooms, i About the prettiest and easiest gift to make is the bewitching breakfast, cap. Everybody, that 1b anybody, has a little frivolous and dainty cap for morning wear these days.

They are a delight to the eye and anybody may own one. Some people call them boudoir caps and. furthermore, there are caps made of nicer materials which are worn In the evening and are called opera caps. They are all simply made. It Isn't a bad idea to decide on a gift of this kind and make them up for all one's girl or women friends.

Each one may have some little Individual touch to make it different from the others. By planning to make several caps at one sitting there is a saving In material and time. These caps are very Inexpensive. They are made of plain or dotted net all-over lace, thin silk, mull, batiste, embroidery and chiffon and edged with narrow plaltings of net or lace. A square of the fabric used makes the crown, that Is a piece of goods 18 Inches wide and of the same length Is all that is required for the crown.

The corners are? trimmed away making the pieces somewhat circular. A narrow binding Is sewed about the edge of this piece and an elastic cord run In. It is long enough to reach about the bead with a little stretching. A single or a double fall of plotted net or lace la sewed about the edge, one row being slightly wider than the others and falling a half inch below it A single ruffle Is often edged with narrow ribbon. The cap shown In Fig.

1 has a crown of sheer eyelet embroidery with a double ruffle falling about the face. The upper ruffle Is edged with a narrow Valenciennes insertion. These CHRISTMAS BALL A NOVELTY Will Prove Something New and Enter taining for the Children on Christmas This Is a novel receptacle holding twenty or mere small gifts for the entertainment of children on Christmas morning. When the children are seated on the floor, thiB ball Is set in motion by a grown-up; the. child to whom It Is rolled takes out a gift, and sends the.

ball spinning to another, and so on until the gifts are exhausted. The framework Is made as follows: Buy two pairs of ten-tnch wooden embroidery-hoops, and put them inside each other until you have the skeleton of a globe with eight curved ribs. Where the hoops intersect, top and bottom, fasten securely, with raffia. The circles are now vertical, and a cross circle Is needed to stay them; this is to be made of coarse rattan (or reed), and must be fastened to the bulging part of each rib; do not Join the rattan ends together, as an opening must be left between two of the ribs to allow the children to reach in for the gifts. If you should cut tho rind of an orange into eight from bud end to stem end, you would have the shape of the sections for the Inner covering of the framework; cut from stout cotton eight of these pieces, allowing amply for seams.

Sew four pieces together, and fit to half the framework, letting seams come between ribs, not on them; now sew the fifth piece to the Joined four, sew the sixth piece to the Joined five, and so on until framework is covered. Do not entirely close the last seam, sewing it only one-third way up from bottom and one-half way down from top, leaving an open third. Make the outer covering the same way, using white Christmas doth having stamped on It fig- solved ond. for all by Calumet. For daily use In millions of kitchens hai proved that Calumet is highest not only in quality but In Uavtning power as wellun-failing in results pure to the extreme and wonderfully economical In use.

Askyoui grocer. And try Calumet next bake day, RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS IhWi Pure Fm IxpalltlM, Chkua. Ilk Part You don't (oee money when jxm tap cheap or big-can baling powJer. Don't tt milled. Buy Calumet.

It's mom economical more wholuom gtoct tett tttultt. Calumet fat superior to sour milk; and soda. COULDN'T BE WORSE. Percy I haven't aw-been quite mj self of late, you know. Kitty Indeed? I hadn't notice any improvement.

Don't be misled. Ask for Red Cross Bag Bine. Makes beautiful white clothes. At all good grocers. Adv.

An old toper says that none are so blind as those who refuse an eye' opener. Loss of Power nd vital force follow Ion of flesh or 2 emaciation. These com from Impov 3 erUhed blood. 'EE Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery enlivens a torpid liver enriches the blood stops the waste of strength and tissue and builds up healthy flesh ta the proper body weight.

As an appe. tiling-, restorative tonic, it sets to work all the DrocesMe of dlmstioa and nutrition, rouses every organ Into natural action, and bringi back health ft and strength. Can anything else be "Just aa good'' to tafcet Your Liver Is Clogged Up That's Why You're Tired Out of Sort Have No Appebte CARTER'S LITTLE. LIVER PILLS will put you right In a few days. They do.

their CureCon-J stipation. Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headachi SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE Genuine must bear Signature 5 i ln ma itti I 'v-ar nii ill i lyivtK i.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Natrona County Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
6,574
Years Available:
1897-1916