Okeene Eagle. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 22, 1913 Page: 3 of 8
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HOT SPBINOS
LIVER BUTTONS
END CONSTIPAHON
It job really want to get rid of
constipation, bad stomach, stuffed up
bowels and all ailments arising from
a disordered liver, get a box of bliss-
ful. satisfying HOT 8FRIN08 LIVER
BUTTONS to-day.
They never fall; take them as di-
rected for a week and notice the feel-
ing of happiness that comes from
ability to eat well, sleep well, work
well.
Notice the skin clear up, the
blotches go, the eyes grow blighter
and the appetite return.
Don’t take Calomel—all you need Is
HOT SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS
and all drhgglsts hereabouts sell
them for 25 cents a box. Free sarn-
ie from Hot Springs Chemical Co.,
ot Springs, Ark.
H
Generous Reformer.
Miss Augusta De Peyster Is a
charming young lady of Knicker-
bocker descent who does noble mis-
sionary work among New York’s float-
ing sailor population.
Miss De Pedster’s work Is unique in
that she believes in helping the sailor,
no matter how prodigal or dissipated
or nonconforming he may be. She
also believes In a very generous, very
liberal type of charity.
Often her views are expressed in
epigrams, as:
"Don't scold a reprobate, for men
are like eggs—left In hot water they
harden.”
Or again:
"As long as virtue Is Its own re-
ward, It Is apt to be spasmodic.”
KEEP WATER IN SOIL
Excellent Method Given to Ascer-
tain Capacity.
BONEMEAL GOOD FOR SWINE) /jV GIRLHOOD
Womanhood
Lang-Necked Bottles Arranged With
Bottoms Off and Cheeee Cloth
Over Mouth Will Tell How
Much Moisture Is Retained.
(By K. J. CIIOSBT.)
.To ascertain the capacity of aoile
to take in rainfall, break the bottoms
off live long-necked bottles, tie a
piece of cheesecloth or thin muslin
over the mouth of each and arrange
them In n rack with a glass tumbler
under each one. Pill the bottles to
about the same height with different
kinda of soil and Arm the soils by
lifting the rack and Jarring It down
moderately three or four times. To
break the bottom off of a bottlw file
a groove in the bottle parallel with
the bottom. Heat a pokor red-hot
and lay It in the groove. As soon as
a small crack starts from the groove
draw the poker around the bottle and
the crack will follow.
* When all le In readiness, take
watch or clock in hand, and with a
Very Good Results Secured at Missou-
ri Station—Result of Test at
Nebraaka Station.
All kinda of bonemeal are used In
the manufacture of fertilizers, but
not all kinds are suitable for feed for
swine. Bonemeal from a glue factory
which has gone through the process
In which acid waa used Is not suitable
feed. But any bonemeal, especially
green bone, that la ground finely
enough, may be fed. Steamed bone-
meal is good.
At the Missouri station bonemeal
was fed with very good results. About
an ounce of meed was fed to each bog
per day.
At the Nebraaka station four lots of
pigs were fed to determine the value
of wheat short, tankage and steamed
ground bone as supplemental to corn-
meal. The hogs were pastured on
alfalfa, and for this reason the lot fed
on corn alone made about as satis-
factory gain as any, although the lot
which waa fed bonemeal In addition to
the corn bad the strongest bone.
Shorts strengthen the bone some,
and tankage with corn produced
much stronger bone than corn alone.
Where mixed rations were given, or
skim milk or good pasture, all of
which supply ash material, It Is doubt-
ful that bonemeal is of much value
other than for the purpose of strength-
ening the bones.
Amlat Natura
mow and then,
with a gentlo
cathartic Dr.
How’s Pleas-
and Pellets tons
up and invigor-
ate liver and
bowels. Be sure
you get what
you ask for.
The women who have used
Dr. Fierce9* Favorite
Prescription will tell you
that it freed them from pain—
helped them over painful periods in
their life—and saved them many a day
of anguish and misery. This tonic, in
liquid form, was devised over 40 years
ago for the womanly system, by R.V.
Pierce, M. D., and has been sold ever
since by dealers in medicine to the
benefit of many thousand women.
Now—If you prefer—you earn obtain Dm,
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription tablets at
your druggist at $1 per box. aiso la 50e
aloe or send 50 one cent stamp* to Dm,
R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. for trial box.
JUDGE CURED, HEART TROUBLE.
Judge Miller,
well and hearty
I took about 6 boxes ot Dodds Kid-
ney Pills for Heart Trouble from
which I bad suffered for 6 years. I
had dizzy spells, my eyes puffed,
my breath was
short and I had
chills and back-
ache. I took the
pllla about a year
ago and have had
no return of the
palpitations. Am
now 63 yeary'old,
able to do lots of
manual labor, am
and weigh about
200 pounds. I feel very grateful that
I found Dodda Kidney Pllla and you
may publish this letter If you wish. I
sm serving my third term ss Probate
Judge of Gray Co. Yours truly.
-PHILIP MILLER, Cimarron, Kan.
Correspond with Judge Miller about
this wonderful remedy.
Dodda Kidney Pills, 60c. per box at
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co
Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household
Hints, also music of National Anthem
(English and Qerman words) and re-
cipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free.
Adv.
Not a Bad Case.
that la your avuncular
"So
tlon.”
“He was, but
got, cured him.”
the new doctor we
FOB WEAKNESS AND LOSS 07 APPB-
Tho Old Standard general atraegthenlng ton
GROVH S TA8TBLHSS chill TOMIO drive* ont k_
lari* and bullda up the •yitem. A true tonlo and
auro Appetiser. lor adult* and children. M cents
If only houest men took a hand in
the political game it would be some-
thing like solitaire.
p Si
UAL
sMjt
HUBBY WAS LEFT GUESSING
PANELS ARE BOLTED ON GATE
Apparatus to Test Capacity of 8oils
to Take In Rainfall.
glass of water held as near as possi-
ble to the soil pour water Into one
of bottles just rapidly enough to
keep the surface of the soil covered
and note how long before it begins
dropping Into the tumbler below.
Make a record of the time. Do like-
wise with each of the other bottled
and compare results. Note which
soil takes in water most rapidly. We
all know what happens to nonporous
soils when a heavy shower of rain
cornea
To ascertain which soil would store
up the greatest amount of moisture,
weigh each bottle before and after
filling It with dry soil, and again after
the water has entirely ceased drip-
ping from 1L The difference, between
the weight of the dry soil and that
of the wet soil is the weight of water
stored. During the time that the bot-
tles are dripping, they should be cov-
ered to prevent evaporation of water
from the surface of the soils.
Excellent Method le Described and
Illustrated by Nebraska Farmer—
Solid Post Needed.
I want to add a feature to the Elm-
quist gate. Instead of nailing the
panels I bolt them through the frame
with one bolt at each place as Bhown.
The brace Is an old wagon tire bent
in the form of a hook at the lower
end and bolted at the top. Block*
are nailed to the bottom board and
And at This Date He Still le Wonder-
ing Just Who Was the Unklseed .
Female.
Mr. Brown Issued forth from Fair-
bank Terrace and wended his way to-
wards the village in. An insurance
agent named* Dawson was holding
forth.
"Do you know Fairbanks Terracef"
Several nodded assent, and Mr.
Brown became more deeply inter-
ested.
“Well, believe me, gents. I’ve kissed
every woman In that terrace except
one.”
Mr. Brown’s face assumed a purple
hue, and hurriedly quailing his ale, he
quitted the barroom. Bushing home,
he burst in at the door.
"Mary,” ho shouted, “do you know
that insurance chap Dawsou?” Mary
nodded assent. "Well,” he continued,
“I’ve just heard him say he’s kissed
every woman In this terrace except
one.”
Mary was silent for a moment, and
then with a look of womanly curios-
ity said:
*‘I wonder which one that Is.”
Will Get Rid of Felon.
To cure a felon take common salt,
as used for salting pork or beef, dry
in the oven, pound fine, mix with
equal parts of spirits of turpentine,
put in a cloth and wrap around the
affected part. As it gets dry put on
more. Twenty-four hours of this
treatment will kill the felon.
Hunts Hares With Auto.
Sport in a new form now appeals to
a New Zealand farmer. Driving In a
motor car with two powerful head-
lights, he bags nightly between six
and a dozen hares, the animals being
so fascinated by the glare of the
lamps that they become stationary
targets.
In. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Chlldraa
teething, nofteaa the guma, reduces Inflemme-
tkm.albajra palu/suree wind eolteJOs a botUeJSs
Many a man merely stubs his toe
when he tries to put hla best foot for-
ward.
Mealtime
is Near
y
Are you smiling? Look*
ing forward with pleasure
and a keen appetite—or
is your stomach so bad
you ‘ ‘just don’t care”?
Then yon should try
Hosteller’s
Stomach Differs
It assists digestion and
makes you “forget” all
about stomach ills.
MAKE WOUNDS HEAL QUICKLY
When Large Cut Must Be Made Paint
the Wood With White Lead and
Cover With Zlne.
To make large wounds heal quickly,
first see that the trees are In a vigor-
ous growing condition. When a large
cut must be made paint the wood with
white lead, then cover the most of It
with a piece of zinc. The healing
tissue, called the "callus,” will start
from the edges of the wound. In the
course of time this callus will fold
over sufficiently to cover the wound.
Its spread may be hastened by slit-
ting the callus with the point of a
sharp knife once each year. Early
In the summer is the best time to do
this, as the callus tissue Is most ac-
tive at that time.
Gate With Bolted Panels.
the hook plaeed In front of the one
that will make the gate hang level,
write G. F. Sandrltter in the Farmer's
Mall and Breeze. The gate may be
raised or lowered at will to let out
pigs or to swing It over snow. In
raising or lowering the gate the up-
rights remain perpendicular, the
panels turning between them. In
this as in other gates the main thing
is to get a good, solid gate post In
the ground from which the gate Is to
swing.
"Sudden Willy."
A late professor was wont to relate
a rather characteristic Btory of the
boyhood of the present German em-
peror.
The professor was conversing with
Empress Frederick concerning her son,
when her majesty remarked deprecat-
lngly respecting her eldest born:
“Mein Willy 1st so ploUUch.” (“My.
Willy. Is so sudden.”)
Could anything have summed up the
kaiser, as a boy and man, better than
this colloquial confidence of his Impe-
rial motherT
Scientific Point Cleared Up.
A German astronomer has published
r series of tables which seem to show
a connection between the appearance
of sun spots and the wabbling motion
of the earth on Its axis, due, perhaps,
to a variation In the sun’s magnetism.
DAISY FLY KILLER « STSIV
*i-
•u
*Ua. Neat, clean or
> , ranvulau I
Lk.Ii all
•••••• Made of
metal, cau't .|>ll I or tl|i
over, will not soil or
I tiju ra a ujr I b 1 ng.
Wusrantead etloctltn
' All dealer* or«*aut
MiprMa («|d for ft! HD
■ASOLO (OKSSC, AM OaAalk A**.. Braeklya, M. ¥.
Effect of 8a!tlng Curd.
Salt is added to curd mainly to fla-
vor the cheese, in addition, however,
it aids In removing the whey, hardens
and contracts the curd, checks the for-
mation of lactic acid, and also checks
undesirable forms of ferment. Unsalt-
ed cheese cures more rapidly, but Is
apt to develop n bitter flavor.
Silage for Cattle.
Nebraska farmers living In a re-
gion where the land sells for $120 and
upward an acre are finding greatly in-
creased profits from the use of silage
In fattenfng their cattle, one success-
ful farmer having been engaged in
feeding 150 tons of silage from 24
acres of land, putting all his stock
In prime condition. Cattle fed this
way are marketed In fine shape, and
feed bills are greatly lessened. The
reports of Increased profits are In-
spiring other neighboring stockmen
to do the same thing, and many farm-
ers are now raislng^thclr own feeders
in tl|ls way. It is-probable that In
the end the lncreaso In silos will do
more than anything else to bring
the beef crop up to tho normal stand-
ard. o
A pessimist Is a man who thinks
that when he gets to heaven K will be
a waste of time for him to look around
for his earthly neighbors.
8hredded Corn Fodder.
Shredded corn fodder, is one of the
things that has not been fully appre-
ciated on the farm. It is good for
bedding the stock, it is convenient to
have in the hen house as a litter, and
It Is -really worth coueiderablo as a
feed.
Regularity In feeding brings uni-
formity in results.
The growing pigs require protein
and not much corn.
Be sure there are no narrow doors
for the ewes to crowd through.
It Is well to chango the sheep occa-
slonaly Into the different pastures.
Do not expect too much from your
young sows, especially If they are
bred too young.
It Is poor economy to sell poor
cattle when they can be made fat
before marketing.
Under all conditions young anl*
mals make the largest gains In pro-
portion to food consumed.
Cattle five feet In girth will welghfrom
650 to 750 pounds. Add 25 pounds for
each Inch over up to six feet After
that add 40 pounds per Inch.
Check the growth and you in-
crease the amount of food needed
to produce a given result.
To make tho largest and best
horses out of your colts keep them
growing from first to labt.
The man who dubbed the hog as
a “mortgage lifter” was posted; he
know something of the possibilities
of the animal.
All training of animals must be
done In youth when habits and in-
stinctive proclivities have not become
permanently fixed.
The amount of food consumed
and the time It has taken to con-
sume it, must be taken into con-
sideration in calculating the profit.
Do not think because a sheep has
a heavy coat of wool he will be able
to endure cold rains and sleep.with-
out a warm shelter.
The truth is the farmers of the
middle west are raising belter mut-
ton than ever before and people are
learning that It is about the best and
cheapest moat they can buy.
In counting the profits from your
dock, do not fail to count (he value
of the fat lambs killed during the
twelve months for the family use and
the b4gh valu* of all the manure.
HER "BEST FRIEND"
A Woman Thue Speaks of Postum.
Added Injury.
He-^-Tlils steak is burnt.
She—That’s right—roast it I
Red Cross Ball Blue, all blue, best bluing
value in the world, makes the laundress
smile. Adv.
Get the blunt man to come right to
the polnL
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief—Permanent Cura
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS i
fail. Purely vegeta- d
ble — act surely
but gently
the liver.
Stop after
dinner dia-
tress—cure!_
indigestion,* _
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
SPECIAL TO WOMEN
Do you realize tho fact that thouaanda
of women are now using
We usually consider our best frlenda
those who treat us best.
Some persons think coffee a real
friend, but watch it carefully awhile
and observe that It Is one of the
meanest of all enemies, for It stabs
one while professing friendship.
Coffee contains a poisonous drug—
caffeine—which Injures the delicate
nervous system and frequently sets
up disease In one or more organs of
the body, If its use is persisted In.
"I had heart palpitation and nerv-
ousness for four years and the doctor
told me the trouble was caused by
coffee. He adviBed mo to leave It off,
but I thought I could not,” writes a
Wis. lady.
“On the advice of a friend I tried k
Postum and It so satisfied me I did not ■
care for coffee after a few days’ trial j
of Postum.
"As weeks went by and I continued
to use Postum my weight increased
from 98 to 118 pounds, and the heart
trouble left me. I have used It a year
now and am stronger than I ever wai.
I can hustlo up stairs without any
heart palpitation, and I am free from
nervousness.
"My children are very fond of Post-
um and it agrees with them. My sister
liked It when she drank It at my house;
now she has Postum at home and has
become very fond of It. You may ubo
my name If you wish, as I am not
ashamed of praising my best friend—
Postum.” Name given by Pustum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
Postum now comeB in new concen-
trated form called InHtant Postum. It
is regular Postum, so processed at the
factory that only tho soluble portions
are retained. I
A spoonful of Iustant Postum with j
hot water, and sugar and cream to
taste, produce instantly a delicious j
beverage.
Wrltp for tho little book, "The Koad
to Wellville.”
"There’s a Reason’’ for Postum.—
I
A Soluble Antiseptic Powder
as a remedy for mucous membrane af-
fections, such as sore tnroat, nasal or
pelvic catarrh. Inflammation or ulcera-
tion, caused by female Ills? Women
who have been cured say "it is worth
its weight in gold.” Dissolve in water
and apply locally. Fbr ten years the
Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. has
recommended Paxtlne In their private
correspondence with'women.
For all hygienic and toilet uses it baa
no equal. Only 50c a large box at Drug-
gists or sent postpaid on receipt of
price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston,
Mass. ______
Saskatchewan
ttgl
m
K
Sri
m
Your
Opportunity
In Oh* Provlnoe of
Saskatchewan,^
Western Caned*
ltd yon deel ra to |<t a
free Homesteader 1(10
A (It 104 of that Well
known Wheat lanilt
Tho area I .becoming more Hunted
but no Iona valnuhlu.
NKW DIMKICTH
have recently boon opened up for
settlement, and Into thoao rail-
roads are now being built. Tho
day will soon coma when tbera
will bo no
land Wt’*
A Swift Currant, Saskatchewan,
furnier writes: “I cuuie on uif
homestead, Mureh IMS. with about
tl.UUO worth of hurst-, and machin-
ery, wod Just CIA In cash. Today I
hare MUO acres of wlieut. UOu acres
of oata, and U) seres of flax." Not
had for six yeura. but only an lu
stance of what may b« done In
Western Canada In Maultoba,
Nnskuichnwan or A Iberia.
Send at onee for Literature,
Maps, Uullway Hates, etc., to
Q. A. COOK.
131 ». Ml STRUT, USUI CITY. M
Omul I an Government Agent, or
addles* SuDorlnlolideut or
1 tola,tgrot,ou, OUawa,t«oO.
w. N. u., Oklahoma City, No. 21-1S1S.
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Chapman, H. C. Okeene Eagle. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 24, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 22, 1913, newspaper, May 22, 1913; Okeene, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1169636/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.