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About Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.) 1902-1911 | View This Issue
Montana Sunlight (Whitehall, Mont.), 10 Oct. 1902, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053178/1902-10-10/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
VOLUME 1. WHITEHALL, MONTANA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1902 NUMBER 35, McKay & Carmichael Co ALL SUMMER GOODS AT ACTUAL COST. Dimi, “Chains worth {0c a yd., all for 5c a yaig » Ladies’ Wrappers, 60¢,.75c and $I, ~~. double. \ , / Sworth ‘Ladies’ Percale Waists, large line for 40c. Ladies’ White Waists at less than you can buy the matefial. Men's and Boys’ Clothing at Actual Cost, Weare going out of the clothing business. % Men’s Suits for $5.00. Pants $1.50. Snaps in Shoes. Ladies’ Oxford Ties at 85c. Ladies’ Kid Shoes, $1 10. Messes’ Shoes, $1 00. Men’s Shoes, $1 50. Grocery Department. In this department we have too many bargains to enumerate. Come and get our prices. Coal Oil, 20c per gal. $2 50 per case. Cuse Oil, Local Correspondence BOULDER. October 8, ’02. Mrs. W. V. Meyers expects to leave soon for an extended tour of the eastern states. L. Q. Skelton and family left last week for a months visit with relatives in Ohio. ‘St. Thomas Guild met last Saturday. with Mrs. Stranahan. The Fortnightly: club will be- ‘gin meetings again this month. The traveling photographers, who have been occupying the old Berkin Gallery have moved on to Basin. Mrs. John Berkin, has gone to Smith River for a brief. visit. T. A. Wicks and family, Mrs. F. M. Hope, Rev. and Mrs. Me- Clelland, and Mrs. D. G. Warner expect. to attend the Presbyterian Synod at Helena this week, Dr. Denbow is erecting a new office and residence near the N. P. depot. F. Bernatz and family are plan- ning to go to California about the middle of Nov. to reside per- manently. Much regret is felt at the de- parture of H. B. Hundly and family for Clancy. They have been © residents of Boulder for several years and were popular people. W. B. Tyndall and family visit- ed last week at the home of John Flaherty. Under the excellent supervision ad “lof Prof. Terwilliger the Jeffer- McKay & Carmichael Co MYSTIC TIELODGE, No. 17, A. FL & A.M, Meets on the SECOND and DOraeH T Es- DAY evenings of each mon tM van ne a members are = ‘cordielly in- . A. Nexpaam, W. M. $ '¥. Ranson. Sec. ACACIA cA CHAPTER, No. 21, oO, Ea. Meets on FIRST and THIRD TUESDAY each month at Masonic Hall. Visiting members are invited to trend. M . W. M. Dax Mok ewzre, Sec. — VALLEY LODGE, No. 60, 1.9. 0.F. ‘ia the First and Third Mon- day Nights of Each Month. tino, es N. OR oe mW. Mocaun. Pin’ Fin. Beg. THE \REBECCA LODGE, No. 29, 1. 0.0. F. Meets the Second and Fourth Mon- days of. Each Month. Visiting members mbers cordially invi invited. L. R. Dobyns, Physician and Surgeon Office and caitabee tn: the two-story frame house on north side of Front street, near the WHITEHALL, MONT. J. W. DAVIS. L. BP. RD. Davis & Packard, Physicians and Surgeons, Cases requiring note care given special attention. Hospital, Office and Residence on First street. Whitehall, Mont.’ E. W. BURDICK, Dentist. Whitehall . - - Mont. 2\ Offices Over J. V. T._ael IKE E. O. PACE Attorney-At-Law Whitehall Mont. FRANK SHOWERS, Attorney-At-Law and Notary Public. OFFICE OVER J. Y. T. STORE. The Page Woven Wire Naclig For prices nd terme ena “ng ae ome Cedar Pete G. B. FRANKS. Franks & Stahle’s ; JULIUSBTANLE $ 1 is theiplace to visit if you wish to procure the ‘Choices Steaks, Fish, Fresh Oysters. FISH AND GAME TN SEASON, OUR SPECIALTY, Home-rendered LARD Fresh and Salt Meats. ene Market model for nentness. Franks & Stable) Opposite N. P. depot. 4 a eenane ee Paul & Hail, LIVERY Feed and Sale Stable. FIRST-CLASS PATRONS TURNOUTS CAN BE FINE BUGGY WELL AND AND 8ADDLE PROMPTLY HORSES ‘AT FITTED OUT AT BED ROCK THEIR RATES STABLES At All Hours. Whitehall, Mont. eee HOUSE Wes. McCall, Prop. Meals 35 Cents, : Lodgings 50 Cents. * This house is newly opened, and no effort is spared to make its guests comfortable and welcome. * Accommodations fot Transients. Room and Board by Day or Week. 26 Rooms, large, bright and newly fitted up. ~ uP SPECIAL RATES to patrons by week or month. * - WHITEHALL, MONT. ~~ ~ NOTICE rt en eee surety the a eCopt eS * Sernee Hereeoes | oe Nore son County High School has be- come a very successful institution and many pupils from other towns are in Boulder in attendance, A daughter was born last Wednesday to the wife of Ed, O’ Rouke. Mr.and Mrs. Marshand daughter, of Whitehall, spent Saturday in Boulder. John McDonald an old timer of this vicinity will be tried this (Wednesday) after noon at two oclock for bis sanity. The Democratic Central Com- mittee will meet this (Wednesday) afternoon to appoint some one to fill the vacancy on ‘the leislative ticket occasioned by the resigna- tion of Mr. Long. The political situation is warm- ing up, but as yet none of the yoters of this locality have ap- peared with their right hands in slings. Word has been received that Miss Uretta Ryan who has been very ill at Counsil Bluffs Ia., is slightly improved. Court Proceedings. The district court convened Mon- day, October 7, at 10 a. m., with Hon. M. H. Parker, judge presid- ing, and the féllowing proceedings were had: The bonds of the county com- missioners were approved. The probate proceedings had in vacation were read, and Saturday, October 8, was set as the time for the approval thereof, In the two cases of John Hop- kins ys. The Butte Copper Mining company, the court sustained the defendant’s motion to dismiss the actions. In the case of Lows Sponheim vs. Dennis Driscoll, the court de- nied the plaintiff’s motion to re-tax serve notice of the motion upon the opposing party, and denied de- fendant’s motion to strike from the_files and dismiss the plain- tiff’s statement on motion for a new trial. In the matter of the estate of Jennie L. ceased, the hearing of the settle- ment of the final account ‘and ob- jections thereto came on for con- {eideration, and after the: introdue- tion of evidence on behalf of both parties, the patter was submitted to the court for decision. Contest ant’s counsel .and counsel for the administration SM each in which to prepare briefs upon the matter. \ . - “The casevof the State of Monta- na, ‘vs. John’ Gilbert was contin- \ued for the term. sears case of the State of Montac costs, because of the failure to| McKeown Smith, de-: na vs. R.N.: Rand was continued for the term. The case of Wade vs. Kinkead came on for hearing upon plaintitf’s motion to set aside the judgment and default, which was obtained at the July term of court. Counsel for the respective parties argued the matter to the court, and the same was taken under adyisement by the court. Charles Olsen Ansok was made a citizen.of the United States. He is a native of Norway. a een ne enamine one Double Wedding. A double wedding took place on Wednesday October Ist, at the residence of Mr. and Mrs, R. A. Johnson of Johnson, Broadwater égunty, in ‘which the contracting parties were Miss Florence John- son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Johnson and Mr. Roy Noble of Sheridan, Miss Annie Earle of Springville, Wisconsin, a niece of Mr, and Mrs, R. A. Johnson and Mr. John Barker of Johnson. The rooms were appropriately decorated and the brides wore dainty white dimity and white roses, and cartied pink. and white carnations, ° “Rey. C.D. Danner preformed the ceremony. The two couples entered the room to the wedding march played by Miss Lena Van Scoy of Helena. Miss Alice Hil- ton and Chas. Duncan stood up with Miss Johnson and Mr. Noble. Miss Clara Barker and Mr. .Ollie Earl with Miss Annie Ea and Mr. Barker. After the ceremony rot bridaT party and guests repaired to the dining room and partook of a deliscious luncheon over which the Misses Sophia Barker and Mary Doughty presided. The four happy people left Wednesday evening for Helena, where they will spend several days. Mr. and Mrs. Noble will reside in. Sheridan and Mr. and Mrs. Barker will make .their home at Johnson. The two couples received many handsome presents in silver and china. : Mr. Roy Noble was formerly a resident of Whitehall attending the high school-here—and-is welt and favorably known. He is a nephew of a prominent towns- men, R. W. Noble, and his friends couple a life of felicity and pros- perity. POISON IVY. flow te Detoct Various Species of This Dangerous Miant. There are five species of the rbus, or sumac. Of these but two are pol- sonous—the Rhus venenata and the Rbus toxicodetidron. The first named is really a dangerous enemy of man- kind, says the Philadelphia. Record, | and frequents swamps and lowlands along streams. Its common names are poison sumac, poison dogwood and pol- son elder, and {it is a sturdy shrub from five to twenty-five fect iu height. Its five pairs of oval leaficts are arrange:! opposite each other on a tapering stem, which ends in a terminal! leaflet. The poison sumac has gray backed stems and grayish white berries. The other poisonous species (Rhus toxicodendron) scarcely resembles the one just described, as its habit of growth is more like an iyy, hence its popular name of poison ivy. ‘While it is frequently met as a climber, it also assumes a bushy or treelike form, which has suggested two separate names for it—Khus radicans when a vine and Rbus toxicvdendron for the bushy form. In California it is this last named and fs known as poison oak. The favorite haunts cf the ivy are on fenceposts, on trecs and stone walls, to which its brown, bairy stems cling like a parasite, thus being a menace to every barefoot boy and ignpragit pe- destrian. The leaves are grouped in threes,-and you will always find them with tii Wifégularly toothed edge and one.side of the leaf wider and fuller than the ‘opposite side and having deeper lobes. Its berries are whitish gray. The symptoms of !vy polsoning care a burning and itching condition of the skin. The face sometimes becomes £0 swollen as to be almost unrecogniz- able, and, .while.the patient suffers .ex-.4 treme discomfort, the disense usually subsides in cight or ten days. ‘How to Make Cocumber Salad, ‘Ome large or two small cucumbers, One-half t ful of pepper and have 15. emote salt, a tablespoonful of French vine- gar and three tablespoonfuls of salad oll. Peel and slice the cucumbers into very thin slices. Put them in a bowl. of chopped ice to become crisp. Then ‘ten minufes before serving drain off the and ice, sprinkle with the sea- here join in wishing the young) am. carame) Jiquid_in.the molds. isto. tards. | water soning and pour over all the vinegar RRS SOME TIMELY ADVICE) Now to Avold Danger During @ Thunderstorm, When a severe thunderstorm is rag- ing, the safest place is In the open, close to the earth. If the body is erect, it acts as an excellengi conductor for the lightning to Gnd [ts way to the earth. For this reason it Is danger. ‘ous to take refuge under a tree, says the Buffalo Courier. Doubtless most of the persons who perished while under trees would -be alive today bad they remained in the open. . It is also tnjudicious to huddle under thrashing machines, sheds or in the grand stands of race ‘tracks cr county tairs, especially under or neay the flug- staffs which usually adorn such struc tures. Avold standing in doorways, near chimneys and fireplaces, close to cattle or near the ends of a wire clothes line during a thunderstorm, On the other hand, there is not much sense in going to bed or trying w fnsulate oneself in feather beds. Small articles of steel or Iron, as a knife, kettle or key, do not attract ightnuing, as it is popularly believed, . If-one has been struck by lightning, the first thing to/do Is to go to work to restore consciousness, as lightning oftener brings about suepended ant- mation than somatic death. The con- dition of a persop struck by lightning is much the same as that of a person rescued from drowning. Try to stim- ulate respiration and circulation, Io not cense in the effort to restore ani- mation in leas than an bour, as you value the life of the sufferer, How to Mend Umbrellas, Sometimes au umbrella that begins to show tiny cracks and pin boles may be mended at home. Open the umbrel- la and hold It up to the light. Mend the holes on the inside with black silk courtplaster cut slightly larger than the holes. Sun umbrellas and parasols are more effectively mended in this way than umbrellas, which sometimes reqoire a repetition of the mending after belng thoroughly wet. Now to Prepare a Manuscript. In preparing manuscripts use plain white paper and good black ik. Don't use paper that is flimsy or transparent or so spongy that the ink is iikely to blur or sheets that are Sf different sizes or that bave been torn out of a notebook and left with thé rough edges unptrinmned, The two sizes of sheets that pre most genePally naed are coin- mercial note and letter paper. If you hare to send out band written copy. never write it iu pale ink or in lead pencil or in backband, which as a rule is extremely difficult to make out, says a writer in the Ladies’ Home Journal, Cultivate a round, clear, good sized, al- most vertical band and forin the habit of leaving a wide space between the lines. Write, of course, on only one side of the paper, and if you tind near the end that you are golng to run a few lines over what you thought would be the last sheet don't squeeze the final lines together at the bottom of the page or write them on the back of it in order tq-save anothér ‘theet, +n both handwritten and _ typewritten copy leave a margin of at least an inch at both sides of the sheet as well as at the top and bottom, How to Make Pineapple Salad. For a pineapple salad the pines should be ripe and tender enough to admit of shredding thoroughly. fut the shredded fruit into a deep glass dish and pour over it a half pint of powdered sugar mixed with a table spoonful each of brandy and curacao, This should be done at least three hours before the salad is needed, as the sugar must be quite dissolved. How to Make Washing Fteld. A good washing fluid is made by mix- ing five pounds of salsoda, one pound of borax, half a pound of fresh, un- slaked time and four ounces of liquid ammonia. Pour one gallon of boiling water upon the soda and borax. Let this cool, then add the ammonia, Pour one gallon of bot water over the lime and let it stand until entirely settled. then enrefully pour off the clear fluid and turn jit upon the dissolved borax and soda. Add eight gullons of cold water. Six tablespoonfuls of this fluid: may be added to a tubful of clothes. How to Make a Wall Dampproof. If you are troubled with a damp | house wall, brush if well over after | first removing thé “paper with the fol- | lowing mixture: A quarter of n pound of shellac dissolved in one quart of.) naphtha. Give the wall two or three | coatings, letting it stay several! bours between the applications. Then re paper, and you will huve no further trouble. How to Maké Caramel Padding. Put half a cupful of sugar tr, 4 sauce pan; stir with a wooden spoun uftil It melts and turns amber color; beat tour eggs; add to them half a cupful of sugar, one cup of milk and one tea- spoonfal of vanilla extract; put one teaspoonful of the caramel into smal! molds, then fill with the egg mixture; stand the molds in a pan of hot water; put in a quick oven and “bake twenty minutes ov until firm in the center. be served as the sauce with the cus- How to Wash Tollet Brushes. Wash your toilet brushes in hot soda Water, but be careful it does not touch the backs. Rinse well in cold water and fu the open air if possible. The quicker they are dried the stiffer the bristles will be. How to Clean Willow Furniture. _ Willow furniture may be cleaned with salt and water, applied with a stiff pallbrush, | % ee ISI HOW TO GROW PLUMP, Some Pointers For Those Who Would Increase Theil? Weight. If you want to be fat aud of a merry countenanee, says the Philadelphia Inquirer, read the suggestions of a wise man as they are given here: ln the morn, he says, you should dsmk a cup of chocolate or cocoa. lying in bed before you rise for the day, Then for breakfast cat eggs, a cutlet or chops and plenty of fruit. With your dinner be careful to take plenty of vegetables, cauliflower, mac- aronl, asparagus, potatoes by prefer. ence, and try ys avoid pickles and any form of acid. ‘Kat well of some des sert that contains plenty ef sugar, eggs and milk, All mauper of foods that have stareh and sugar are necessarily fattening if they can be digested. If this diet is followed, there is promise of many ad- ditional pounds for the subject. Milk bas great value, and if the stomach can stand it two quarts a day muy be taken with advantage, Lime water mixed with It makes it more easy of assimilation to wiost people. The best way is to drink milk slowly, Tak- en hot just before going to bed, it pro- motes restful sleep and so greatly helps the thin one to “lay on” tesh. Cold baths are very thinning in thelr tendency and should be avoided by the would be plump person, Of course, violent or long sustained exercise will keep one slender in spite of all precau- tions. Never try to eat more than you have ap appetite for, as “merely loading the stamach does not ean that the food will ever be turned into good, useful tissue, And constant worry is to be avoided, for irritation of the nerves would ren- der useless cven the most carefully se- lected diet. 7 How to Clean Embossed Leather. Embossed leather can he gleaned with turpentine applied ig soft cloth. This removes the stain#’ but | slightly stiffens the leather, which | must be made pliable again by rubbing briskly with crude oll. Use a very lit- tle oil and go over the piece with one | of the clean cloths upon which no oil has been put, as care must be taken to get all the surface grease of to pre-| fully remove all scum and poyr into a vent soiling the clothes. ; Now to Make Iced Chocolate, Chocolate is so generally served hot that the coo! summer drink is far less | juice. Stir over the fre util the sugar familiar than it should be. When care- fully made and served, it {s delicious as | up strain through a jelly bag into ster can be safely | ilized botties and seul ut once, well as wholesome recommended for d te children and elderly people.” Put one ounce of un- swoetened chocolate into a saucepan and pour on it gradually one pint of| to see a sort of brown rust creeping bolling water, stirring all the time. Put | over the white pulp If the slices bave the saucepan on the Gre and stir until | the chocolate Is all dissolved. Then add a pint of granulated sugar and stir until it begins to boil, Cook for three minutes louger without stirring and then strain and cool, Add one teaspoonful of ranilla extract, bottle | and store in a cool place. When need- ed, put two tablespoonfuls of crushed | ice In a tumbler and add two table. | spoonfuls of the chocolate sirup, three tablespoonfuls of whipped cream, one gill of milk and half a gill of carbonic or apoliinaris water. Stir thoroughly ; before drinking. : liow to Make Celery Vinegar. Colery vipegar is useful for flavoring | and may be made of pieces of celery covered with some pure cider vinegar or the cclery_sceds wag be used. If the seeds are to be used, cover one ounce of celery seed with one quart of pure cider vinegar. and let it stand two weeks, shaking it every day, It will then be ready for use. How to Cook Watercress, It is possible to cook watercress os | spinach Is prepared, says the New York Evening Post. The cress should be picked over and the coarse part of the stems removed with the wilted df Uis- colored leaves, Throw into a saucepan filled with boiling water and boil for | fifteen or twenty minutes or until ten- der, addiug a little salt to the watcr toward the latter part of the cooking. Remove to a colander, press out the water with the back of a large wooden spoon, return to the saucepan and tose in lightly with a fork a teaspoonful of butter. Arrange iv 2 mound and serve with sliced bard botled eggs. Now to Clean Windows. | To clean windows, dissolve a little | in water, dip into It a cleio- soda sponge and with: it wash over the glass. Wipe and polish with clean, dry cloths, Old cloths should be saved for” window cloaning. for the softer they ‘are the better. Soft paper makes an excellent substitute for cloths for win- dow cleuning. How to Perfume Your Hair. To perfume the hair, get a plece of water lily incense, which you can buy at any Japanese or Turkish store. Light it, and as the ftinies’ arise sliake the hair over it until the Incense has all burned out, This fragrance will last’a long time in the hair and is only a suggestion of perfume. Heavily perfumed locks are_jp, bad taste, says the New York If Cheap cologne or perfuine is bad. for the hair, A little dash of violet toilet water will not burt the hair and will give it a golden cast in the sunlight. How to Keep Ice From Meller. The latest device to keep the Ice from melting almost as soon as it Is placed jn the refrigerator is a thick, flat pad, which fs placed under, not, over, the block of ice, The stuff of which the pad is_made costs 75 cents per square foot, How to Select Nutmens, To select nutmegs prick them witha pin. If they are good, (he off wiil In- stantly epread around (he puncturs, HOT V/EATHER SWEETS, flow to Make Fralt Souffies With Either Cream or Water, No ice is more delicious than the souffle. Made with fruit juive aud wa- ter, it Is temptingly refreshing op a hot day and lacks the somewhat overrich quality of ice cream. The more elab- orate soufiie, mixed with cream, Is equally toothsome, but slightly richer and heavier. The rule for each Is the Kame, Whatever the finver chosen. Fruits of all sorts can be used and are all excellent, says the Kunsas City Star, but the pineapple has a peculiar piquancy when made after the simple manner with water only, and such Juicy fruits as the orange, strawberry, raspberry. and. peach are peculiarly “well adapted to the purpose, l’ineapple, being somewhat difficult ‘to manage with gelatin, is Wes casitly made into the cream souftie than ure other fruits, although ft is possible to achieve suc cess if great care is talon. Yo make pineapple water souffle peel ripe, juicy pineapples, remove the eyes and cut into bits, Then sprinkle with sugar and let stand for several bours. Strain through a fruit press, and to every pint of the juice add one of wa» ter, six eggs well besten and one pound of sugar, less the quantity pre: viously used, Place the whole in a custard boller and cook until it takes the consistency of Dolled custard, stir- ring of the while. When removed from the fire, stand the vessel in one of cold water, and beat the custard briskly until! cold. . Pour into the freez- er cun, freeze after the usual manner and serve with eream slightly sweet- ened and flavored with pineapple juice, To make soufties of other favora fob low the same gefieral rule, substituting the Juice of whatever fruit may be se- lected for that of the plueapple, In addition to the more familiar favors, | currant, cherry, plum and what is | Sar n as harlequin, or a mixture of two or more favors, wiil be found de | cious. How te Make Mulberry Shrub. Squeeze the julce from the mulber- ries through thin wuslin or cheesecloth iuto a stone jar or crock, and let it stand until fermentation ceases, Care- fresh, clean vessel and let it stand twenty-four hours jonger and then pour off again. To a pound of granu- lated sugar allow thirteen ounces of is dissolved, and when the sirup bollé pahaniillieisiibiiigiie niin Tlow te Peel Apples, In peelifig apples it ts disagreeable to stand very long. Tbis brown color- ing Is a pigment of the actual nature of rust caused by the presence of iron in the fruit and the oxidation of that fron by the air. The acid tu the pulp | helps In this oxidation considerably. By setting each quarter or silee as It | is peeled In a basin of cold water no | alr contact js possible, and the brown- ess is avoided. [But the water draws | Out the acids, and there Is a sacrifice ' of flavor to color If this plan ls used ond the apples soaked too long. Any discolored slices will turn white again if rubbed with a piece of lemon, How to Polish a Rusty Stove. A stove that has been allowed to grt rusty will often not take the blacking well when It Is again cleaned. First rub it well all over with an oid rag or plece of newspaper which has been dipped In a little paratiin. Add a few drops of turpentine to your ordinary mixed blacklead and black and shine | as usual. How to Repair a. Mackintosh, To wend a muackintosh procure a small tin of indla rubber cenient or dissolve some strips of pure lucia ruv- ber In naphtha or sulphide of carbou to form a stiff paste. Apply a litue of the cement on the surface of a strip of the same muterial of which the mackintosh is made, which can be purebased by the yurd or In remnants from the waterproofer’s; also apply a little cement to each side of the torn part, and when it begius to feel tacky bring the edges together and place the patch nicely over, and keep in pusiiion , by putting a weight over It wutll gaite hard, which will be jn a few cays. How to Clean Hasty Flatirons, Beoswax and salt will make your rusty datirons as elean and «mooth os glass. Tie a lump of wax laa rag and keep it for that purpose. Wher the frous are bot, rub them first with) the wax rag, then scour with a paper of , Cloth sprinkled with salt. How to Brenthe Correct!y. To breathe correctly keep the chest up, out, forward, as if pulled up by a button. Keep the chin, the lips, the chest, on a ine. Hold the shoulders ou a line with the hips. Breathe opward and outward, as if about to fly. draw ing the alr with slow. deep breaths and letting it out gently. This con sclous deep breathing repeated ten. or twenty times at Intervals during the day tends to expand the ghest petnia nently, to give it classic poise and style - Repeated forty times, it is snid to be a cure for worry. : Soe ers vielen How to Clean Brass Trays. To clean brass trays sprinkle with silver sand, squeeze the Juice of a lemon all over, rub with the pulp until all stains ure removed. Wasb off sand without tonching tray with cold water; then stand In the sun to dry. How to Wash Mitk Jum. The proper way to wash milk and crenin jugs is always.to wasb them In cold tvuter first. If they are, put strtlght Into Botting water, It has thé effect of enusing the milk to sink Inte the ware.