Bemidji Daily Pioneer Newspaper, April 11, 1913, Page 3

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e i b An EVeryday Cake Hereis a simple and inexpensive cake that can be varied in many: ways with different irosungs and icings. It looks a little nlcer baked in a tube pan, but will be equally as good baked in a square loaf. K C Gold Cake » - By Mrs. Janet McKenzie Hill, Editor of the Boston Cooking Schgol Magazme butter; ¥ cup sugar; yolks of 4 eggs geatm ht :?cup yr, less 2 level tab ls 2 level teas KC Bukmg Prrwder cup milk; awd rind of'1 orange. tow e Sift flour and baking - powder. together three times; cream butter and -sugar, beat yolks of eggs, add these to creamed mixture, and lastly add the moisture and flour alter- nately, beating, batter until smooth.” Gold Cake can only be made successfully by beat- ing yolks of eggs, very, very creamy and light lemon colored, using a ro!ary bcnt.r The rotary beater is dxe only o beater that will do justice to g the yolks of eggs. The beat- ing kills all egg taste and {84 improves the texture of the # cake. & Cocoanut Frosting Beat the whites of 2 eggs dry; gradually Yeat in half a cup of sifted confectioner's sugar and continue the beating until the frost- ing is smooth, thick and glossy; then beat in grated cocoanut, fresh or prepared, and spread upon the cake. This frosting is made thick by beating rather than by sugar. Save this recipe. You will want to use it frequently. Or better, send us the colored certificate packed in each 25-cent can of K C Baking Powder and we will mail you ‘“The Cook’s Book™ containing this and 89 other baking recipes equally good—all by Mrs. Hill, Jagues Mifg. Co., Chicago. . Subseribe For The Pioneer .| viciously tight corests; showing laps. tiful colors. It's the hardest test there is for a a , (on the front hall and stairs), and eve: ’here Kyanize . w1ll stand up, look well and Wear fo a tong time flows so freely and dries so quickly, that you can putit on yourself without It dries with a hard, lustrous, sanitary surface that is easy to keep clean—and is as tough and dur- able as a varnish can be made. it on your stairways, floors, linoleums, all inside woodwork and furniture. Clear and seven pemanent and beau- j Your money back if Kyanize doesn’t do all we claim for it GIVEN - HARDWARE CO. Use . YOUR MONEY BACK IF YOU WANT IT 316-318 Minnesota Ave. BEMIDJI, MINN. Phone 57 (Copyright.) Pasing of Tears. Taking them altogether, the char- acters in present-day fiction show more self-restraint in one direction than their ancestors in the pages of Dickens and Thackeray. It would seem there is a fashion in tears, as in everything else. How fast and furious fell the tears in the days of poke bon- nest and hoop skirts! A tear—a scream—more tears—fainting flts— burnt feathers, and the unlacing of as the mind touches upon these points of emotion- al expression common to Early and Mid-Victorian days and then glances over the stressed moments in the life of today, one is almost forced to be- lieve that we have all become stoics, —Wilkinson Sherren, in T. P’s Week- ly, London. Monument to Great Organist. Out of honor to the memory of Felix | Alexandre’ Guilmant, acknowledged to be the greatest organist of his day, a monument is to be erected in Paris. The American committee will raise $5,000 by subscription as the coniribu- tion from this country. He first came to America for a series of concerts on the great organ in Festival hall at the world’s fair, Chicago. This was fol- lowed by a brief tour. Again he re- surned for a tour in 1898, and for a third time for an engagement of forty recitals on the organ at the St. Louis exposition. At the conclusion he played twenty-four concerts in a single month before returning to Paris. His organ pieces number up into’' the hup- dreds. Preserving Light of Firefly. Probably as far back as 1733 it was known that the luminous parts of fire- flies, glowworms, etc., could be dried and preserved out of contact with the air for considerable periods without losing their light-giving power. In late years it has been possible to prove this permanence of the light- giving power for ‘at least. eighteen months. Kastle and McDermitt were able, upon opening tubes containing the luminous organs of the common firefly-preserved in hydrogen or a vac- uum, to obtain quite a brilliant light by simply moistening with water. The light was increased when hydrogen peroxide replaced the -water. How- ever, scientists have yet to discover the firefly’s secret of producing light without heat. NOBODY GAN TELL THAT YOU DARKENED YOUR GRAY, FADED HAIR WITH SAGE TEA MIXED WITH SULPHUR MAKES HAIR SOFT, LUSTROUS AND CURES DANDRUFF, ‘L'he use of Sage and Sulphur for re- storing faded, gray hair to its natural color dates back to grandmother’s time. She kept her hair bedutifully darkened, glossy and abundant, with a brew of Sage Tea. and Sulphur. Whenever her. ] air fell out or took on that dull tn.ded or streaked appear- ance this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date, - Nowadays skilled chem- ists do this better than ‘ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready -to-use product—called “Wyeth’s Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy”—you will get a large bottle for ab&ut fifty cents. Some druggists make their own, which is usually toa sticky, /so insist upon getting “Wyeth’s” which can be depended upon to restore natural color and . beauty to the hair and is splendid for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and falling hair. 4 A well-known downtown drug says his customers insist on Wyeth Sage and Sulphur; because, they uy. it darkens so naturally and’ evmly that nobody can tell it has been ap- plied—it’s 80 easy. to use too. . You sirmply dampon a sponge or sott b and draw it through yur halr, taklng one strand at a time. Do this'at night and by morning the gray hair disappears: after another application or two, it is restored to its natural color #nd looks glossy, soft and abun- dant.—Adv. % Copyright 1913 "The House of Kuppenheimer Men's Suits $10.00 $35.00 THE . SATISFACTION STORE YOU would be mighty tickled to | find just the suit you want, tailored a little better than you expected; from fabrics a little better than you anticipated; priced alittlelowerthan youhadhoped for. It sounds like “big talk” we know to claim that you'll find these things here, BUT IT'S A FACT. There’s a combination of good sound reasons why we are now able to offer such special values worthy of claims. wanted our big value. these -exceptional The manufacturer business and gave us big value---we want your business so we are giving you You will find this value apparent in the wear, the style and the fit of the suit you buy here now. GILL BROTE ERS - Bemidii, anesota Come in and see for yourself ~ THE SATISFACTION STORE Boys' Clothes That bring you back again for more. We find that folks are mighty glad to get clothes that wear the boy well and they don’t forget where: to get them, once they find out. ; $2.50 . $500 $7.50 } h [R— i

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