The County Democrat. (Tecumseh, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, July 13, 1917 Page: 3 of 8
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I
THE COUNTY DEMOCRAT. TECUMSEH. OKLA.
MUSCLES TIED IN
KNOT HE DECLARES
Couldn’t Use Right Arm on Ac-
count of Rheumatism, Says
J. F. Holley.
PREVENTING EROSION OF FARM LANDS
WAS ALMOST HELPLESS
il. B. Woodward Couldn’t Ralao Hand
to Hla Hoad for T jvo Long Yeara
—la Lika a New Man Since
Taking Tanlac.
*”11118 la the first medicine I have
aver taken that really does what they
aay It will," said J. F. Holley, a well-
known Lexington, Ky.. man.
"I hadn't felt like a well man for
ten weeks and my whole system
seemed to be rundown and debilitated.
X couldn't sleep at night and my diges-
tion wa» so bad I couldn’t eat. At-
tacks of headache were frequent and
my nervous system seemed to be dis-
ordered. My worst trouble was rheu-
matism. My muscles seemea to be tied
In knots. I couldn’t use my tight arm
and I was just about helpless. Some-
body persuaded me to try Tanlac and
I got a bottle of that medicine.
"Tanlac certainly Is making a new
man out of me. I can now eat and
sleep like I haven’t been able to do for
yekrs. My rheumatism Is all gone and
I feel strong and built up In every way.
I am a well man and I certainly thank
my friend who suggested my using
Tanlac.”
J. B. Woodward, another Lexington
man who resides at 256 Rand Avenue,
said: "I suffered from stomach trou-
ble, rheumatism and neuralgia for
years, and before I took Tnnlac I
couldn't raise my left hand to my head.
It had been that way for fully two
years.”
“I have used Tanlac two or three
weeks and am like a new man. My
family and friends see the difference
and It Is the actual truth. I take great
pleasure In recommending this medi-
cine Tanlac.”
There Is a Tanlac dealer In your
town.—Adv.
r-*-. f
0f lit
®jNli
------—-il
prance
sirs «
1 <Coaduc.ee! by t
Christ Ian Tc
he National Woman * I
mparaiMv* Union.)
_ - _g- Sr —" -1
CHEAP IMPLEMENT FOR THROWING.UP TERRACE.
Serious Moments.
"Did your boy Josh Show any en-
thusiasm on registration day?”
“No,” replied Farmer Corntossel.
"Josh had too much business on his
mind to enjoy the luxury of gettln’ out
an* hollerin’.”—Washington Evening
Star.
ON FIRST SYMPTOMS
use "Renovlne” and be cured. Do not
wait until the heart organ Is beyond
repair. “Renovlne” is the heart and
nerve tonic. Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
DOG FANCIERS FACING RUIN
Dealers in England See Disaster In
High Taxes Placed on Animals
to Conserve Food Supply.
Dog fanciers In England, especially
the women, say that the new dog
taxes are going to kill the business
they have been carefully building up
for years. They do Hot object to the
suggested Increase on old licenses, but
they fear the big tax on new dogs Is
going to frighten away all their cus-
tomers.
There are many BHtlsh women with
■mall Incomes living In the country
vfcjo have Invested most of their money
In dogs as a business. They were
willing to mark time till the end of
the war, looking forward to a revival
in their business afterward. Trade Is
of course slack just now, but with no
money coming In at all they will be
unable to retain their kennels.
One fancier spoke bitterly of the
sensational stories told In certain-quar-
ters about pampered dogs and the Im-
possible amount of food they were ac-
cused of eating.
(Prepared by the United Jlulet Depart-
ment of Agriculture.)
All types of terraces are constructed
originally In the tut me way. The work
of construction should begin Invariably
with the highest terrace in the field
und each terrace should be completed
before work Is started on the one next
below. The lute fall and early winter
Is the best time to lay out and build
terraces. If one has not time to ter-
race his whole field well It Is better to
construct well the first few terraces
near the upper side of the field than
to terrace the whole field j>oorly, for a
break In a terrace near the upper side
of the field Is followed by breaks In
all below.
The terrace embankment can be
built up wholly with an ordinary turn-
ing plow. A large 16-Inch plow with
an extra large wing attached to the
moldboard for elevating the dirt. Is an
effective Implement for throwing up a
high terrace hank. For broad terraces
furrows are thrown toward the center
line from each aide for a strip 15 to 20
feet In width. Then, commencing at
the center again, the strip Is plowed In
the same manner as before. This pro-
jedure Is repeated until the terrace
nas reached the desired height. Many
farmers allow the loose earth to he
settled by a ruin between plowing*
bo that the dirt will turn better. How-
ever, It Is sufer to build the terrace to
the desired height at the start for. If
a heavy rain, sufficient to overtop the
terrace, comes between plowlngs,
much of the original work Is undone
and considerable damage occurs from
erosion. A disk plow can be used suc-
cessfully to throw up loose dirt, and
the ordinary road gruder Is employed
often and Is adapted especially to
such work.
The most commonly used und cheap-
est Implement for throwing up a ter-
race is a wooden, V-shaped drag.
After the first three or four furrows
have been plowed on each side of the
center line of the terrace, the drag Is
used to push the loose earth toward
the center and thus build the terrace
higher. The plowing Is resumed and
the drag used agnin, and tilts is done
repeatedly until the terrace hns at-
tained the desired width. If the ter-
race Is not built sufficiently high the
first time, the work Is started again
at the center and the plowing and
dragging are repeated. The longer
side of the drag Is hinged so that for
the firs! few furrows the hinged por-
tion Is allowed to swing loose. As the
terrace Increases In width, and it is
desired to move the loose earth a
greater distance, the removable brace
“DEAD MAN’S HILL."
1 have seen a picture Inexpressibly
sad of “Dead Man’s Hill In France”!
with Its .’KJO.utM) graves and as many !
wooden crosses. Fur as eye cun reach
are the figures of black shrouded worn- j
en: they hetid themselves above the j
graves; they 1'ft themselves with out-
stretched bauds toward the unrelent-1
lng heavens. But for them there Is u
pitiful compensation; They have the!
trinkets of the Legion of Honor and
the memories of heroism that will I
never die. Powder-blackened und dla-1
emboweled, their soon were hurled
Into long trenches. lint above them
float the trl-color of France and the
Hug of the futherlund and they will
UGH! CKLltl MAKES YOU SICK!
CLEAN LIVER AND BOWELS MY WAT
Just Once! Try “Dodion’s Liver Tone” When Bilious, Consti-
pated, Headachy—Don’t Lose a Day’s Work.
Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel [ back guarantee that each spoonful
open furrow; this holds the drag In the
proper position. The piece to which
the hitch 1* mude should be set at a
vertical angle with the shorter side,
and also ut a horizontal angle. The
former tends to keep the short side
parallel with the bottom of the furrow-
anti the latter keeps the point pressing i|Ve forever,
slightly against the edge of the furrow I see today another deed man’s hill
and prevents a tendency of the drag I —a hill that rises tu my own luad, and
to Jump out. : from this proud. Imperial city. The
Graded terraces commonly are built picture of this hill Is Infinitely sad.
with a plow and drag scraper. A Women crowd It with their forms and
strip Is plowed, as heretofore j cover It with their lamentations and
described, and loose earth on the up- ! for them there Is no com|>ensntion, no
j>er half of the strip Is scraped up and flag to drape above the picture, no
deposited on the lower half. By this cross of honor to press Into the baby’s
fine and cheerful; make your work a
pleasure; be vigorous and full of am-
bition. But taka no natty, danger
ous calomel, because it makes you
elck and you may lose a day’s work.
Calomel la mercury or quicksilver,
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calcmel crashes Into sour bile like
dynamite, breaking It up. That'*
when you feel that awful nausea and
cramping.
Listen to me! If you want to enjoy
the nicest,' gentlest liver and bowel
cleansing you ever experienced lust
take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's
Liver Tone. Tour druggist or dealer
sella you e 50 cent bottle of Dodson’s
Liver Tone under my personal money-
will clean your sluggish liver better
than a dose of nasty calomel end that
It won’t make you sick.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver
medicine. You'll know It next morn-
ing. because you will wake up test-
ing fine, your liver will be working,
your headache and dlxzlnese gone,
your stomach will be sweet and your
bowel* regular.
Dodson's Liver Tone Is entirely
vegetable, therefore harmless and
cannot aallvate. Give It to your chil-
dren. M'lllona of people are uetng
Dodson's Liver Tone Instead of dan-
gerous calomel now. Tour druggist
will tell you that the sale of calomel
Is almost stopped entirely here.—Ad*.
method a channel Is constructed for
the flow of the water, and the earth
used to build up the embankment.
Maintenance and Cultivation.
A newly built terrace Is susceptible
hand, no memory but one of Infamy
and shame. They weep und through
their tears no rainbow ever shines, for
their dead hn\e died In vuin.
Who speaks for these women, for |
U/|HTERSMlrH's
P GillTonic
Bold for 47 years. For Malaria, Chllla and Fever. Ale*
a Fine Oeneral Strengthening Tonic. 80c sad 81.00 et all Drs* tins
to failure until It becomes thorough- these who mourn the unnumbered slain
ly settled. For this reason It Is not
advisable to cultivate the terrace the
first year. It should be sown to some
sort of cover crop. Breaks In ter-
races In the first year tend to dlscoor-
of alcohol, who have followed their
sons to the drunkard's grave und
their daughters to the stake of man’s
alcohol-fed lust? Who speaks for
them? By the blood of the innocent
Disagreeable Feature.
"She has fine eyes and a pretty
mouth, but I don't like her nose.”
“Neither do I—It’s Into everything.”
age a novice In the use of terraces, but and by the flag of the free, we speak
unless the embankment Is built to an for them! And we will speuk, until,
abnormally large size breaks occur py the grace of God—the God of Wash-
often in newly made terraces. After tngtonrand Lincoln, and Lee—until by
the terrace has been established i>er- the grace of the Lord God of Hosts
manently, the soil should he thrown ttnd the votes of the American people
toward the center at each plowing of we have consummated a saloonless
the field, at least once a year. This j nutlon. a sober people and a stainless
will Increase the breadth and main-! flag!—Daniel A. Poling.
tain the height of the terrace and the _
field eventually will assume an ap-
pearance of a succession of prominent
waves, all of which may be cultivated
easily.
In cultivating a terrace ns much of
the soil as possible should be thrown
FIGURES AND FIGURES.
The number of bushels of grain con-
sumed annually In the manufacture of
ulcoholic beverages bus been variously
stated by the press, but the figure most
Is set In position Hnd the hinged por-
tion Is brought Into use. The short I so as to facilitate 'the work of cultl-
slde of the drag Is made to follow- the ' vatlon.
r,r.r:: rarr
parallel with the terraces. At first. th,e attention of the newspa-
usunlly one row Is planted on the top, l,ers the fuct thut, they uf "u y
hut as the terrace grows broader sev-1 th« ‘rifling amount of approximately
end rows are planted. These rows In- ! 135,000,000 bushels,
variably produce a greater yield than ! T ,u“ interesting point In the easels
do those on the land between the ter- ‘hat the Inflated figure. (UK),000,000,
races. Where large machinery Is used, originated with the liquor interests
and it Is difficult to follow the terrace 8onie D-"1,8 “B° “U(l httS been usod to
line, the rows may be run at an angle Impress the men engaged It agrieul-
across the terraces, where the land Is ture with the Immensity of the market
not very steep. To do this, the ter- For grains afforded by the liquor busl-
races must be broad and must be ness and the culamlty thut would
thrown up at least once a year to necessarily result to the furmers from
maintain their height. prohibition.
Where the rows between two ad- Not a word of protest was ever ut-
Jneent terraces are to be laid out par- tered by the liquor Interests concern-
allel with the terraces, the same num- lug the use of this figure until the war
her of rows should be run parallel prohibition question loomed large,
with each terrace. Owing to the varl- ] Then It was mude to shrink In nston-
atlon In distance between terraces it lshing fashion. The figure now named
then will be necessary to fill In with by the liquor Interests is approximate-
short rows, generally known as “point ly the same as that which appears in
rows.” These rows are run In pairs; W. C. T. U. literature, notably in
«> ' ’
:: Girls! Use Lemons! I;
| Make a Bleaching, ;>
Beautifying Cream;:
HOUSE CLEANING IN
BARN IS ESSENTIAL
produced a wonderful crop In spite of
I’rof. John Nlcholl's booklet, “Does It
Pay?”—The Union Signal.
SALOON REVENUE NOT NEEDED.
After the saloons were driven out
I drought. Both the spike-tooth and the Qf Kansus City, Kan., the state’s larg-
| spring-tooth harrow also have been j esj C|tyt for tjle first time in 20 years
used with splendid results. The bene-1 that municipality made no debt for
Using Cast-Off Gloves.
A use for all sorts of cast-off gloves
has been found In London In connec-
tion with relief work In England. The
old leather, after proper sterilization,
la applied on heavy cambric or buck-
ram and made Into sleeveless wind-
proof Jackets, which are much In de-
mand for men both In the trenches and
the navy.
Considerate.
"Have you a eulendar for 1914?"
asked the gentleman.
"I don’t know, sir,” replied the sales-
person. “We might have such a thing
among the odds and ends In the base-
ment. But If you wish to make a gift
to someone, surely n ealendur for
1917—”
“This Is for a lady, who Is-—er—a
bit sensitive about her age, you see.
And I thought—well, it would be more
delicate, In a manner of speaking.”—
Judge.
It's never too late to mend.
_
Always fresh and crisp ?
Post Toasties
are real corn flakes!
says ^
Just as Important for Farmer to
Have Periodical Bout With
Dirt as for Housewife.
(By GEORGE H. GLOVER. Colorado
Agricultural College, Fprt ColUns,
Colo.)
Every housekeeper, who deserves
the name, has a general houseclean-
ing at least twice a year. The car-
pets come up and the curtains down,
and everything from the roof to the
floor In the furnace room Is either
dusted, scrubbed, varnished or paint-
ed. With the farmer’s wife, spring
and fall hdusecleanlng Is looked upon
as a duty that Is almost sacred and
is kept inviolute.
But who ever heard of a farmer
having even an annual barn clean-
ing? True the manure Is hauled out.
usually In the springtime, in order to
make It possible to get the horses in
and out the door, but that is all.
If farmers would make it a regular
job to clean the premises once or
twice every year, Infectious diseases
among farm animals could he con-
trolled, and the mortality of C to 10
fit to the alfalfa comes In a variety
of ways, but In the majority of the
cases the greatest benefit Is the de-
struction of weeds, and especially of
blue grass. Alfalfa, with Its long tap
root, can withstand nlmost any kind
of harrowing or disking, hut the or-
dinary grass or weed may easily be
damaged hy this kind of treatment.
The Iowa experiment station at
current expenses. And this without
saloon revenue, as Us mayor at that
time, U. P Gayer, has recorded In a
signed s “Ut.
. The fir i • the saloons were effec-
tively s' >. ed tii Kansas City, If Is
record* former attorney general
Jof Kan .at the cost of public pros-
ecutions, ill eh the public had to bear,
fell off $25,000. Another saving of
Ames recently received reports from $25,000 was made by a reduction of
nearly a thousand alfalfa growers, con-: the polloe force. How much was
eernlng the effect of cultivation on gaved the merchants in the better col-
lection of accounts, and how much wus
saved the people In other ways, can-
I^r TOnt from calf scouraThog j has not beeh cultivated,
blackleg, contagious abortion and
other diseases might be reduced to the
minimum.
yield. The 234 men who reported disk-
ing secured nn average yield of 3.9
tons; the 44 who reported harrowing notbe'rttlniiared.
secured nn average yield of 3.8 tons, I __
whiie the 653 who gave no cultivation LIQUOR LIES ANSWERED,
to their nlfalfn, reported an average xhrough the ra|gUse of statistics,
yield of 3.4 tons. through cribbing brief statements of
A few yenrs ago certain people oh- fact from ()ffl(.,ul report8 and adroit y
Jected to the cultivation of nlfalfn on strlpplng them from their qualifying
the ground that the crowns would he olausPS> the desperate saloon Interest
split thereby, and become dangerously 8tl„ ,8 trylng to f<mi the Illltion into
diseased, thus eventually weakening bellevlnK thut prohibition is hurmful
the stand. Investigations made a year to Kansag where the people voiuntar-
or so ago by the agronomy department „y have Just mUled the most stringent
of the Iowa experiment station Indl- bone.dry law in existence to keep liq-
cate that there is absolutely nothing uor from Beeplng across the stute bor-
to this fenr. that the cultivated alfalfa (k.r froni the outside.—Capper’s Week-
Is just as healthy In every way as that iv
ii-Fi ! nil Li* t.,. t Lw. .A. 1 t* v ' .
Enough to Eat.
Barber—“How do you like our new
oatmeal soap?” Victim—“Seeing nour-
ishing, but I've had my breakfast.”
Important to Motttora
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOR IA, that famous old remedy
for Infants and children, and see that It
Bear* the
Signature of |
In Uae for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Cat.ton*.
What a Financier Means.
Hlx—He's a pretty clever financier,
Isn't he?
Dlx—Financier nothing. Why. ha
never beak anybody out of anything la
hla life.
A HINT TO WISE WOMEN.
Don't Suffer torture when all female
troubles will vanish in thin air after using
“Femeniaa.” Price 50c audjioo—Adv.
Don’t wnlt for grout opportunities.
A long continuous wulk will get yon
over more ground than a short run.
True patriotism Is not always loud-
mouthed.
The juice of two fresh lemons strain-
ed Into a bottle containing three
ounces of orchard white makes a
whole qnurter pint of the most remark-
able lemon skin beaotliler at about the
cost one must pay for a small Jar of
the ordinary cold creams. Care should
be taken to strain the lemon juice
through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp
gets In, then this lotion will keep fresh
for months. Every woman knows that
lemon Juice Is used to bleach and re-
move such blemishes ns freckles, sal-
lowness and tan and Is the Ideal skin
eoftener, smoothener and be°utlfler.
Just try ltl Get three ounces of
orchard white at any pharmacy and
two lemons from the grocer and make
up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra-
grant lemon lotion and massage It
dally Into the face, neck, arms and
hands. It naturally should help to
soften, freehen, bleach and bring out
the roses and beauty of any skin. It
Is slmpl] marvelous to amoothen
rough, red hands. Adv.
BLACK *cumrs |LMRit* ful»
LOSSES SORELY PREVENTED
by CUTl
Low-prl
flrvsh. tel
prtfwr
r-prlcbd,
biaj «
•sad by ’
■ Stock*
because f
awn. u
| pratsvt Whtrt ptl*r ^
LEG
■ VMMM____
Writ* lor booklet aad testJaiaalste._
10-dosp pkc.Blac*faf Mils, SI.00
804pm Ms. BlPCttPC nut. $4.00
Um aay Injector, but Cuttar*8 staple* and U-_____
The superiority of Cutter product* Is due tourer IS
years ol specialising la VACCINPP AMD KXRi'MS
ONLY. Insist on CUTTBA S. 21 unobtainable.
*nTc»tt«rta«n>i»t. betwr, fat, ir ti ^
WHO IS
TO
BLAME
Women ae well as men
are made miserable by
kidney and bladder trou-
ble. Thousanda recom-
mend Dr. Kilmer's
Swamp-Root, the great
kidney medicine. At druggists In nfty-
cent and dollar Btsea. Tou may receive a
■ample size bottle by Parcel Poet, also
pamphlet telling about It. Addreaa Dr.
Kilmer St Co., Binghamton. N. Y., and
enclose ten cents, alno mention this paper.
Like Greeting Like.
“The dog days are coming.”
“Yes, that Is what everybody
growling ubout.”
IMITATION IS 8INCEREST FLATTERY
but like counterfeit money the imita-
tion lias not the worth of the original.
Insist on “La Creole” Hair Dressing—
It’s the original. Darkens your hair In
the natural way, but contains no dye.
Price $1.00.—Adv.
Many of us feel most keenly the
emptiness of things here below about
dinner time.
Cold storage eggs usually have a
warm storage flavor.
DAISY FLY KILLER S5MS3B
Dll flieP. Meet,«leaa,
ornamental, eontenlM^
cheep. l.aate oil eeaao*.
■ ad# of metal, eoalaplU
fir tip e*et; mil’. Ml mC
or Injure anythin*. Oa**-
tnteed effective S«U ky
dealers, er • sent by ex-
press prepaid (or $1 Ml
MAM OLD MMUt, IN M MU AVI.. BMONiVN, M. V.
~V5
WANT1D- Limited n am bur of men and women t
prepare for moving picture work at professions
studied, under supervision of experienced directors.
Nominal InvedUnent to
neoens&ry. l)«n
to cover personal expenses
________,nd for players, playwrights, photog-
raphers, seer 1c artists, directors and executives far
greater than supply, llllglble beg ini
oianent erup._.------------- r JHpHH
advancement. Details free. niMdew, Calaradi Pprtaga, Cota
uenL. Details free, ffltudew, Calarada Pprtaga, Celt
rOMACH SUFFERERS II
A stomach specialist advises this .3)^
Kliubarbtsn, ■■ —----
Aqua Purs--<Ee/!—%/Jr
r Tsblespoonful after weals.P It makee a
whole pint; Druggists prepare U—Try 1U,
l It should be prepared for 11-00..
PARKER’S
HAIM BJ-SAM
A toilet preparation of Uftrtt,
Helps to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Beauty toGray or Faded Hair.
dOc. and fLOffat Druggists.
W. N. U.. Oklahoma City, No. 28-1917,
EASY CURE FOR SOREHEAD
RIGHT CULTIVATION
WILL HELP ALFALFA
Benefit to Crops Comes in Va-
riety of Ways, but Greatest
Is Destruction of Weeds.
Practical alfalfa growers have long
known that alfalfa In the effrn belt
greatly appreciates cultivation. Many
i pioneer grower has delighted to tell
the story of how he disked his nlfalfa
antll the neighbors thought he hnd
.•ompletely ruined it. and then how the
Held greened up In a few days and
Disease Is Highly Infectious and
Spreads Rapidly—Individual
Treatment Required.
Yellow spots on comb und wattles
is a skin disease, commonly called
“sorehead.” It Is highly Infectious and
spreads rapidly. However, It is easily
_
SAVE GRAIN FOR BREAD.
Ob March 8 the Berliner TageWatt
asserted that the suspension of all j
beef brewing In northern Germany .
was Imminent, “due to' the desire to
save maizq for breud and malt to take
the pluce of coffee.”
DECREASE IN NUMBER.
The report of the cemtnlssioner of
cured, but requires individual treat- Internal revenue for the last fiscal
inent. By Immersing the head twice y**ar (ending Jfine, 1916) shows d**-
dally In the following solution an ef- crease in the number of liquor deal-
fectlve cure may be brought about In era as follows: Rectifiers, 29; retall-
a week’s time: Forty per cent alco-
hol, 15 per cent glycerin. 5 per cent
boraelc acid and 3 per cent water. An-
other satisfactory method of treating
this disease is by the use of'tincture
of Iodine. This Is applied by touching
the spots with a little of the solution
twice daily. Lysol applied In a sim-
ilar manner, also works well.
ers, 5,751; wholesalers, 178; brewers,
32. , /
THERE’S A REASON.
One of' The largest breweries In
Colorado has_ been turned Into a malt-
ed milk factory,’ und Its ihvders suy
they . have greatly Increased their
vrpfits. . ,
The increased price of wheat has
raised the price of good old home-
baked bread per loaf so slightly
as to be scarcely perceptible.
HELIOTROPE
THE ALWAYS EH Alin
RELIABLE I LUUIC
No waste — no poor batches with
this quality — good to the last
crumb. Ask your grocer for
HELIOTROPE
0
Oklahoma City Mill A Elevator Co.
OKLAHOMA CITY
4
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The County Democrat. (Tecumseh, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, July 13, 1917, newspaper, July 13, 1917; Tecumseh, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1077814/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.