The Wewoka Herald (Wewoka, Indian Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1905 Page: 2 of 10
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MM29
You eanont leave the
love.
lusts you
Complete External and
Internal Treatment
Consisting of warm baths with
to cleanse the skin of
crusts and scales, and
soften the thickened cuti-
cle; CUTIOJRA Oint-
ment to instantly allay
itching, irritation, and
inflammation and soothe
and heal; and CUTI-
CURA Pills to cool and
cleanse the blood.
A Single Set, costing but One Do(t*f,
Is often sufficient to cure the most tortur-
ing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood
humors, eczemas, rashes, itchings, and
irritations, with loss of hair, from infancy
to age, when all else fails.
Rolil throughout lh« world, Cutieur Snap. Olnt-
lt>mt, A0<*.v Kwolvent, 40c. ( in form of Chorulat* Coated
Pill", tffic. per visl of fini Depot*: Ixjndoo, 17 Charter-
boiiM 8q,| Pari«, 5 Ituc df la I'nit; Bofto«, 157 Colanihui
&\t. Potter Drue ft Chens. Corp., Sole I'rop .
f~ s-nd for A How to Cure Torturing, Dilflfunnf
Biuiioi j from infancy to Age."
THE DAISY FLY KILLER &
Homo In dining-room, sleeping-room and placrn where
are trouble-
some. Clean, neat,
will not foil or tn-
jtire anything.
Try them once,
you will never Ih>
without thern. If
not Kept by deal-
ers. sent prepaid
for 20f. Harold
Hnmerv, HO DeKalb
Ave;., llr okl} ,S. Y.
WHERE
FOR THAT I
SUMMER TRIP
BE SURE IT 15
VIA
We may be able to assist you in
deciding. There are any number of
desirable trips-'Cheap too which
you can make this summer to the
Mountains of Colorado, the Lakes of
Michigan and Wisconsin or to the
Portland Exposition. Let us send
you rates and particulars. Fixe.
' ADORE**
GEORGE MORTON
I. P. and T. A., M. K. & T. Ry.. ST. LOUIS. M.
FOR FIST TIME T Kt "THE MTT FITEH."
Skimmilk for the Calf.
Skimmilk is a profitable feed for
dairy calves if it is fed properly. This
means if it is fed warm and while
still sweet. One dairyman says that
it is worth 25 per cent more than cold
milk if it is fed while the animal heat
is still in it. The great trouble in
feeding skimmilk is to feed a small
enough amount, as a large amount
causes digestive troubles with the
calves, which troubles are accentuated
when the milk is fed after it has be-
gun to sour. Sometimes a farmer will
lose a number of calves with scours
before he learns that it is not the sep-
arated skimmilk that has made the
trouble, but the overfeeding of the
milk.
Overfeeding of any food will result
in trouble, but on some feeds cows
and calves find it impossible to over-
feed. One of these is hay. Milk in
any form may be used in too great an
abundance. The calf owner usually
figures that the cream having been
taken out of the milk it is therefore
very poor stuff, and he therefore tries
to double up on the amount. This is
the first and great error. The milk in
being skimmed has not been deprived
if very much of its nutriment, and
the amount given should certainly not
be increased. If anything, it should
be decreased in quantity, as it is not
as digestible with the butter fat taken
out as it was with the butter fat in.
Oilmeal is sometimes added in very
small quantities to take the place of
the cream, but it is not a certainty
established that this oil takes the
place of the natural butter fat in aid-
ing the digestive processes.
Profit in Protein.
Protein is the most expensive ele-
ment of food we can use for dairy
cows, and for this reason there is a
strong tendency to feed very little
protein and a good deal of the starchy
matter. But it is qut e conclusively
proved that if the protein is properly
compounded with the other elements
of tie food it will render the whole
ration cheaper than if the protein had
not been used. This is because in the
usual ration, out of proportion as it
is, the waste of the fat-forming ma-
terials is great. At the Storrs Ex
periment Station recently tests have
been made to see if a ration could be
increased in protein and decreased in
cost. This was proved to be possible.
The protein was increased, and enough
fat-forming material taken off to more
than equal the value of the protein
put in. The result was a slight in
crease in the milk production at a
slightly lessened cost.
The principle is an important one,
and it. is one to which the .Farmers'
Review has frequently called atten
tion. Every keeper of cows can well
afford to get down to the study of the
components of feeds, by which he will
be able to save money on his feeds,
while not decreasing the production of
milk from his herd. The animals, too
are left in better condition than they
would be if fed what is known as a
'wide" ration.
/'iso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as
n cough euro.—J. W. O'Brikn. 322 Third Ave.
N., Minneapolis, Minn.. Jan. 6, 1900.
Every right thing loved enlarges
the life.
nr. HutWI Kennedy's Favorite Jtemejly.the
Or "at KMnov m«I UrcirCnre. World Faraoun. WrlTnnr.
Kennedy'# Bon , Kondout, I.. Y., for free sample boUlfc
Even dark-lawyers must be legal
lights.
KIDNEY TROUBLES
Increasing Among Women, Bat
Sufferers Need Not Despair
THE BEST ADVICE IS FREE
Of all the diseases known, with which
the female organism is afflicted, kidney
disease is the most fatal, and statistics
show that this disease is on the incre&sa
among women.
Mm. vTIhiiIow-k Pootblnsr Syrnp.
For children teething, softens the giipin, reduces
fcunmuluu, allays p iln .cures wind colic. A>ca Duma
Cinders and pretty girls are hard to
remove from a man's eyes.
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
quantity and superior quality of De-
fiance Starch is fast taking place of
ull other brands. Others say they can-
not sell any other starch.
But few men are able to hear the
whispered call cf duty.
DON'T FOKGF.T
A large S-ox. package Red Cross Ball nine, only
5 cents. The Russ Company, South Bend, Ind.
mm
Mr J Em m a Sawyer,
Actors never get beyond liking the
game of "spat out."
Storekeepers report that the extra
quantity, toother with the superior
quality of Defiance Starch makes it
next to Impossible to sell any other
brand.
A new umbrella is all the
useful when it is used up.
more
Some men arc poor because they
are honest, and some arc honest be-
cause they are rich and can afford to
be.
It Keeps Them Off.
They are pretty bad this year—no
mistake—and they bite viciously. We
refer to Mosquitoes, but a little Hunt's
Lightning Oil applied to the irritated
places takes the sting away. It keeps
them off if used in time.
It is usually the man who doesn't
know the secret of success who is
willing to impart it to others.
Unless early and correct treatment is
applied the patient seWom survives
when once the disease is fastened upon
her. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound is the most efficient treat-
ment for kidney troubles of women,
and is the only medicine especially
prepared for this purpose. _
When a woman is troubled with pain
or weight in loins, backache, frequent,
painful or scalding urination, swelling
of limbs or feet, swelling under the
eyes, an uneasy, tired feeling in the
region of the kidneys or notices a brick-
dust sediment in the urine, she should
lose no time in commencing treatment
, with Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
! Compound, ns it may be the means of
saving her life. _ ,
Kor proof, reftd what Lydia E. Pink*
| ham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs.
Sawyer. ,
" I cannot express the terrible suffering 1
' bad to endure. A derangement of the female
organs developed nervous prostration ami a
serious kidney trouble. The doctor attended
me for a year, but 1 kept getting worse, until
1 -r ii i .1. .... f.«U^.ur on/1 1 mnHn ti n
I was unable to do anything, and I made lip
my mind I could not live. I
Never censure people because they
happen to be rich. They may be just
as respectable as you are.
. finally decided
to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound as a last resort, and I am to-day a well
woman. I cannot praise it too highly, and I
tell every suffering woman about, my case.
Mrs. Emma Sawyer, Conyers, Ga.
Mrs. Pinkham gives free advice to
women ; address in confidence, Lynn,
Mass.
W. N. U. Oklahoma City—No. 30, 1905
fell mmY TILL CURED * dwu5i3?wltm rams or p*0*ukirt mch cwed
& mihor''*" Qak 5t. KAH5A.5 CITY. MO. (pea^h orrict at3t Louis)
Byrup
druggtfltt.
time
Buy a Thermometer.
Every butter-maker needs a ther-
mometer. The butter maker in a
creamery would not think of try-
ing to do business without a
thermometer. The butter-maker on
the farm can well afford to have sev-
eral thermometers, as several may be
purchased for a dollar. The insertion
of a thermometer in the cream will
.often show why the butter does not
come. It will make it possible to
churn at a temperature that will make
the butter gather in twenty minutes
or so. It will also make it possible to
know when the temperature is low
enough to permit of the making of a
good butter.
Let Common Sense Decide
Do you honestly believe, that, coffee sold loose (in bulk), exposed
to dust, germs and insects, passing
through many hands (some of
them Dot over-clean), ''blended,"
you don't know how or by whom,
is lit for your use 1 Of course you
don't. But
Kit / LION COFFEE
Is another story. The green
berries, selected by Iteen
judges at the plantation, are
skilllully roasted at our fac-
tories, where precautions yoa
would not dream of arc taken
to secure perfect cleanliness,
flavor,strength and uniformity.
From the time the coffee leaves
the factory no hand touches it till
it is opened in your kitchen.
Tills has mafic LION COFFEE the LEADER OF ALI. PACKAGE COFFEES.
Millions of American Homes welcome LION Mi** EE daily.
There is no stronger proof of merit, than continued and mcreaa-
ing popularity. "Quality survives all opposition.
(Sold only in 1 lb. packages. Lion-head on every package.)
(Save your Lion-heads for valuable premiums.)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE
WOOLBON WICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
/ '\a ry
. \ A~v /
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Phelps, E. G. The Wewoka Herald (Wewoka, Indian Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, August 4, 1905, newspaper, August 4, 1905; Wewoka, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc123025/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.