Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 2, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 12, 1905 Page: 4 of 8
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Contents of Flsh't Stomach.
A femalo pike, thirty-two Inches In
length, which wag caught on Barton
Broad, Norfolk, England, some time
ago, when opened was found to con-
tain two roaches, measuring seven
inches, and four Inches respectively;
two pieces of wire, each eight inches
long; two steel spanners, two keys,
which were tied together; a portion
of a saw, a fragment of iron, and
Tjlece of a spanner.
There Is None.
"There may be a better remedy for
cuts, burns, sprains, etc., than Hunt's
Lightning Oil, but if so I have failed
to find it. Used as directed it. is cer-
tainly very fine for catarrh, also.
"R. V. MORRIS,
"ScottBvllle, Ark."
Banded for Good Purpose.
Paris possesses a curious socl:# or-
ganization with an odd purpose. It Is
a band of properous tradesmen, who
agree to trade with one another to
the utmost extent possible, and when
necessary to help one another wltl
loans without interest. The cliqu<
calls itself "The Tranquil Fathers."
SIZE
EXACT
noTLS
Special Offer
The name and address of your
shoo dealer and 15c to cover
costof mailing,etc., willsecure
one of the handsome rolled
gold pins illustrated above.
Enameled in colors and will
wear for years. These pins
were secured by thousands of
World's Fair visitors.
Only a few hundred left.
Write Quick.
tfoBmns. Johnson $f?AND
SHOE CO. ST. JiOUia
MANUFACTURERS OF
"STAR BRAND SHOES"
rue HA ICV Ci V 1/ II I CD destroys *11 tlieflle* and
InLliAlol IL! MLLCn afford# comfort to
ttonip In dining room, sleeping-room and places where
Hies are trouble-
some, ('lean.neat,
will not soli or In-
jure anything.
Try them once,
you will never be
without them. If
not kept by deal-
ers, sent prepaid
for 20c. lUrold
Kmm-rs, UlUMiulb
A>e., Brooklyn,*. Ye
The Windmill and the Milk Trough.
Nearly every farmer we visit has a
windmill, but not one in twenty makes
the most use of it. For instance, the
windmill usually is located near the
barn and the water tank is in soma
convenient place near the windmill.
Hundreds of gallons of cool fresh
water are pumped each day, but not a
gallon of It goes through the milk
trough when, as a matter of fact, it
all could just as well flow through the
milk trough as to go where it does.
Most farmers have a well near the
house and a hand pump in it, from
which the water for house use is
pumped by baud, and if they have a
milk trough the good wife is required
to fill It night and morning and the
whole long, warm summer day the
water in the trough is of the same
temperature as the air outside. The
result is that instead of having good,
sweet cream and milk and good, solid
butter, they have sour cream and milk
and strong butter.
If you want to have the full benefit
of your windmill and with it good
milk, cream and butter, build your
milk house near the well at the house,
make a wooden tank about six or
eight feet long, twenty-six to thirty
inches deep, and about eighteen to
twenty inches wide. Set it inside of
the milk house and move the wind-
mill from the barn to the house. With
the aid of iron pipes carry the water
from the milk trough to the tank at
the barn and you will have conferred
a great favor not only upon your wife,
but upon all concerned. The milk
trough should be provided with an
overflow pipe that will always keep It
full, but never let it overflow. With
this arrangement all the water that
Is pumped for stock passes through
the milk trough and the milk and but-
ter is always kept at the proper tem-
perature. We used the Cooley milk
cans and a swinging churn and made
the windmill do the churning. Foi
the money expended, there was noth-
ing on the farm that yielded so great
a return as the windmill aad milk
trough. The milk house should be
made tight and a place fixed for a
stove, so the milk can be kept there
in both summer and winter. The
farmer who will once try this method
of keeping his milk and butter will
wonder how he ever got along without
It. A. M. Caldwell.
FOR WOMEN
troubled with ills peculiar to
their sex, used as a doucbo i* marvelously toe-
cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs,
stops discharges, heals inflammation and local
soreness, curesleucorihceaand nasalcatarih.
Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure
irotcr, and is far more cleansing, healing, germicidal
(nd economical than liquid antiseptics for alt
TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL (JSES
For sale at druggists, 50 cents a box.
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Prce.
Tm IB. Paxton Company Boston. Mas*.
SHEER-CUT SHEARS ™*Vd%d TolX
Shear Co., 184 La Salle Street, Chicago.
Best terms. Credit given. Write at once.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 32, 1905
Toledo, St. Louis & Western R. R. Co.,
"Clover Leaf Route."
St. Louis to all Points East
Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York
R. J. McKAY, D. P. A.. S . Louis.
cms wiiuf III eise raits
L Cough Syrup, rant** (iood. I
lu ttuic. bold by druggist**
Weeding Them Out
"General NeUon A Miles," said an
Inventor, "used to be continually be-
sieged by cranks with pneumatic
rapid fire guns, subterranean riries,
dirigible war balloons, and ail such
mi^'ial inventions. The general
would weed these cranks out with ad-
mirable speed.
"I sat in his office with him one
day when a servant brought in a card-
" 'Oh. send him in,' raid General
Miles. 'His business won't take more
than a minute or two.'
"So, in came a wild-eyed, long-
haired man, twisting his soft hat ner-
vously in both hands.
"'Genera',' he said, 'I have here
and he took out a small parcel—'a
bullet-proof coat. If the government
would adopt this—'
" 'Put it on. Put It on,' said Gen-
eral Miles, and he rang the bell. The
servant appeared as the Inventor was
getting Into the coat.
" 'Jones,' said the general, 'tell the
captain of the guard to order one of
his men to load his rifle with ball
cartridges and—'
1 'Excuse me, general, I forgot
something,' interrupted the Inventor,
and with a haunted look he disap-
peared."
Sound as a Dollar.
Monticello, Minn., Aug. 7th.—Mr. J.
W. Moore of this place stands as a liv-
ing proof of the fact that Bright's Dis-
ease, even in the last stages, may be
perfectly and permanently cured by
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Mr. Moore says: "In 1898 three J
reputable physicians after a careful ;
examiuatlon told me that I would ilia
with Uright's Disease inside of a year.
My feet and ankles and legs wer«
badly swollen; I could hardly stand
on my feet and had given up all hope&
of getting cured when a traveling
salesman told me that he himself had
been cured of Bright's Disease two
years before.
"He said he had taken to his bed
and expected to die with it, but that
he had been ci^ed by a remedy called
Dodd's Kidney xMlls.
"I commenced taking them at once
and I am thankful to say that they
saved my life. After a short treat-
ment I was completely restored to
good health and 1 am now as sound aa
a dollar."
It is related that an Atchison wed-
ling tour had to be cut short so that
.he groom could come back home ant.
jarn money with which to buy him-
self some underclothes.—Atchison
31obe.
Temperature and Dairying.
A low temperature is necessary
to obtain the best results in dairy-
ing. The cold is needed for the
keeping of both butter and cream.
In the far south conditions are
not good for the keeping of but-
ter and cream and for this rea-
son dairying finds it difficult to get
a foothold. Only by artificial refrig-
eration can the best results be ob-
tained. Ice gives a temperature 32
degrees above zero, and this is not
enough to keep butter for long pe-
riods of time. Because of the diffi-
culty of getting temperatures far be-
low the freezing point butter making
on the farm is for a long time to come
sure to depend on a market that will
take the product about as fast as
made. Fortunately it is not difficult to
obtain such a market.
Dangerous Garbage.
Reports from various parts of
the country have from time to
time told of strange diseases ap-
pearing among the pigs. When
such a report comes to hand we al-
ways feel that the chances are that
the "disease" is some very simple
trouble, the cause for which could be
easily removed. In one town in the
state of New York where such a "mys-
terious" disease appeared an investi-
gation showed that the hogs had been
receiving daily considerable quanti-
ties of washing powder, that had
come la the garbage gathered from
hotels.
Tons of Cheshire Cheese.
In Cheshire, England, and the ad-
Joining counties more than 25,000 tons
of Cheshire cheese are made annually.
To treat Pimples and Blackhead?,
Red, Rough, Oily Complexions,
gently smear the face with Cuti-
cura Ointment, the great Skin
Cure, but do not rub. Wash off
the Ointment in five minutes with
Cuticura Soap and hot water, and
bathe freely for some minutes.
Repeat morning and evening. At
other times use Cuticura Soap for
bathing the face as often as agree-
able. No other Skin Soap so pure,
so sweet, so speedily effective.
Cuticura Soap combine delicate medicinal and emol-
lient properties derived from Cuticura, the flreat 8kin
Cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the
nrnst refreshing of flower odors. Two Soaps in one at one
rnce - namely, a Medicinal and Toilet Snap for 25c.
Potter Drug ti Chem. Corp., Sole Props., Bostou.
BjTMailed rree,"How to Preserve, Purify, and Beautify.
I Thompson'# Eyo Watii
<1J ANTED.—For the U. 8. Army, able-bodied
\V unmarried men, between agea of 21 and
i6; citizens of United States, of food character
and temperate habita, who can speak, read and
write English. For information apply to R
iruiting Officer, PostolBce building, Oklahoma
City, Oltia . or Tulsa, Ind. Ter.. Enid, bhaw
aa* or Guthrie Ohla
When Answering Advertisement!
Kindly Mention This Paper.
W.N.U.—Oklahoma City—No. 32,1903
By
Jounces/
_W?R* HAWy., .
Prove It
the Oven Fire
Put the wonderful KC Bak-
ing Powder to the test. Get a
can on approval. Your money
will be returned if you don't
agree that all we claim is true.
You'll be delighted with the de-
licious, wholesome things that
Kf\ BAKING
\J> POWDER
will bring to life in your oven.
K C it worth twice the money charged
for inferior powders that are made to look
like K C, but which leave in the food
harmful substances to undermine your
health. And the cost is no more.
25 ounces for 25 cents.
JAQUES MFG. CO.
Chicago
Rend a postal for
'•Book of PreMiita."
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Herbert, H. S. & Green, J. W. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 2, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 12, 1905, newspaper, August 12, 1905; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc142207/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.