The Hinton Record (Hinton, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 15, 1921 Page: 5 of 12
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THE HINTON RECORD
Stare KeDietf
for itiRessTion
6 Delmno
Hot water
Sure Relief
254 end 754 Packages Everywhere
Habit
Nujol will give you the
healthiest habit in the
world
Without forcing or irrita-
ting Nujol softens the food
waste The many tiny mus-
cles in the intestines can
then easily remove it regu-
larly Absolutely harmless
—try it
TbtUcdtmUtAt4
tfTmtimgsmOU
SQUEEZED
TO DEATH
When the body begins to stiffen
and movement becomes painful it
is usually an indication that the
kidneys are out of order Keep
these organs healthy by taking
GOLDMEDJL
Thi world’s standard rsmsdy for Udnsy
Hvar bladder and nrie add troubles
' Pamons sines 1696 Taka regularly and
fcssp In good health In tbrss sixes an
druggists Qnarantssd as rsprasantsd
Lsok for ths asms Gold Msdal m sveey ks
and accept as halfHca
Money back without qucmtlon
If HUNT'S GUARANTEED
SKIN DI8EASB REMEDIES
(Hunt’s Salve and Soap) Call in
the treatment of Itch Besom a
Ringworm Tetter or other Itch
ing ekl n dieeeesTrr this trat
ment at our risk Sold by all reliable druggists
A B Richards Medicine Co Sherman Texas
Use the Fireplace
A fireplace that is really used to add
to the comfort and good cheer of the
family on cool evenings Is a never-
falling source of joy One that falls
to draw — a too common fault In latter
day buildings — can often be enlarged
or otherwise changed at small ex-
pense and made useful The custom
of having a house full of fire-places
which never have a fire In them Is
one that is as absurd as It is com-
mon For true blue use Red Cross Ball
Blue Snowy-white clothes will be
sure to result Try it and you will al-
ways use It All good grocers have It
—Advertisement
T will” Is the motto of Chicago “I
can” ‘Is the motto of the fruit pre-
server ‘
Contemptuousness of pleas for the
principle of liberty Is not a good sign
FOR YOUR BLOOD
Keep Tow Blood Pure Throw Off As
Poisons and the Flu Won’t Get Tou
San Angelo Tex— -“Dr Pieroe’s pro-
prietary remedies have been entirely sat-
isfactory to me in the truest sense of the
word and I consider them as being very
bigb-olaaa remedies and the safest that I
know of on the market During the last
soore of yearn when myself and family ’
base needed a tonic especially after the
LaOrippe we have used Dr Fierce’s
Golden Medical Discovery with satis-
factory results also Dr Pieroe’s Pleasant
Pellets My thanks to Dr Pieros
prompts me to write my truthful senti-
ments”— O R Wilson 803 Koberlia St
Obtain now from your neighborhood
druggist Dr Pierce’s family remedies—
tablets or liquid Write Dr Pieros Pros
Invalids’ Hotel in Buffalo N Y for fros
tnedioal advioe
BIRDS ARE HELP
TO AGRICULTURE
PeskyEnglish Sparrow Is Usually
Nuisance and Often In-
jurious to Crops
CROVS JO BLACKBIRDS BAD
Owls Have Long Been Persecuted but
Never Has Persecution Been More
Unjust— Feed on Rate Mice
and Othsr Mammals
(Pnptnd by th Unit-4 stxtee Department
of Agriettltur)
The sparrow Is a beneficial bird
says the biological survey United
States Department of Agriculture
and should not be regarded as a pest
The single exception to the depart-
ment's Indorsement Is the pesky Eng-
lish sparrow of that species “usually
a nuteaned and often Injurious” and
says the department in a booklet
Farm Help From the Birds “it must
be remembered that the Introduced
English sparrow Is but one member
of the large family of sparrows and
Its habits are by no means character-
istic of the native species”
Few Birds Classed as Injurious
They are essentially seed eaters the
sparrows but they consume also a
fair proportion of insects the 'depart-
ment finds and In general must be re-
garded as beneficial Separating the
sheep from the goats in the feathered
kingdom of common knowledge to the
farmer the department places among
the bad birds the jays crows ravens
and blackbirds a corporal’s guard with
the army of good birds of aid to the
farmer placed In the other classifica-
tion Even the bad denizens of the air
have some good In them says the de-
partment and the damage they do the
farmer Is largely because of overpop-
ulation In the feathered ranks Of
that class the department says:
“It would seem a good policy to ac-
cord them the same treatment long
given the common crow The crow Is
not specially persecuted neither Is It
The 8creech Owl Is Beneficial Bird
to the Farmer
protected About the best that can be
said of birds of this family is that on
the average they do about as much
good as harm”
Owls Perform Useful Service
“Owls as a group have long been
persecuted by man but never has per-
secution been more unjust” says the
biological Burvey More than 60 vari-
eties of owls feed on a great variety
of rodents and have useful habits the
booklet continues In Washington D
O the survey recently determined
what 675 barn owls had for dinner
Here Is the menu by variety and num-
ber of dishes consumed : Meadow
mice 1110 house mice 452 house
rats 134 other small mammals 8 per
owl
CHECK OFF NEEDED REPAIRS
Good Plan to Make Note of Defects
When Machinery le Being Put
I Away for Winter
When the farm machinery Is being
put away for the winter the owner
can profitably check off the repairs
that will be necessary before each ma-
chine can go out again next season
A flve-cent pad of paper nailed to the
door of the Implement shed Is sug-
gested by the agricultural engineers at
the Missouri College of Agriculture as
a' mighty handy means of Jotting
down what Is needed on each machine
Then on a rainy day or In the slack
season the work can be done System
on farms may not yield as big profits
as It does In factories but It pays
nevertheless
8alt Essential for 8hetp
Salt tends to keep the sheep In good
state of health and they are better
able to ward off attacks of disease or
Internal parasites Furthermore sheep
fed plenty of salt ahear a better qual-
ity and heavier fleece than do thosi
receiving no salt
DURABILITY OF WOOD
CUT IN COLD MONTHS
Method of Handling Logs Has
Greatest Infltkence
Fungi and Insects Are Conspicuous by
Tholr Absence In Winter 8ason—
There le No Difference In
Moisture Content "
(Pnvrnf by th- Unit-4 St-t-a Department
of Aericultur-)
Many of the theories advanced re-
garding the durability of wood at-
tribute too much Importance to the
time of cutting say specialists of the
forest products laboratory forest serv-
ice United States Department of Ag-
riculture As a matter fact the time
of cutting has very little effect upon
the durability or other properties If
the timber Is properly cut The method
Durability of Wood la Not Affected by
the Time of Cutting
of handling logs at different times of
the year however does Influence their
durability
Timber cut In late fall and winter
seasons more slowly and with less
checking than during the warmer
months and when proper storage or
handling Is Impracticable winter cut-
ting Is best Fungi and Insects do not
attack wood out of doors In coid
weather and by the time warm weath-
er arrives the wood Is partly sea-
soned and somewhat less susceptible to
attack It Is for these reasons that
winter cutting is advantageous and
not on account of a smaller amount of
moisture or sap In the wood In winter
as the popular belief has It There Is
practically no difference In moisture
content of green wood In winter and
summer
HELPS GROWING WHEAT CROP
Ohio Experiment Station Favors Win-
ter Application of Manure—
Fortuity Is Added
" i
Winter application of manure will
aid the growing wheat crop according
to the Ohio experiment station
Wooster Spreading manure over the
wheat ground at the rate of four to
six tons per acre affords winter pro-
tection and at the same time adds fer-
tility that wlU later aid the wheat
While no experiments have been
conducted in the topdressing of wheat
the residual effect of manure on wheat
shows that the yield may be Increased
from six to eight bushels per acre
If manure is not available nitrate
of soda Is sometimes applied In the
spring but this should be used In con-
nection with or following the fall use
of acid phosphate to get the best re-
sults When add phosphate or steamed
bonemeal has been used at seeding
nitrate of soda which Is a coarse salt
may be easily sown by hand The
most favorable time Is In April Just
M the spring growth of wheat Is be-
ginning SWINE PRODUCTION IN SOUTH
Gaining Considerable Popularity ax
8ource of Feeders for Corn-Belt
8ection
The Southern states particularly Mis-
sissippi have gained considerable popu-
larity as a source of feeder hogs for
the corn-belt states reports the United
States Department of Agriculture
Well-bred boars are now being used
extensively In the hog-produdng cen-
ters of the South and satisfactory
feeding shoats ere now being produced
In large numbers In some areas cheap
pork Is made by the use of sweet-
potato cannery wastes these materials
having valuable fattening properties
In large peanut-growing districts good
gains are put on at a comparatively
low cost
Plow Under 8traw
Don’t burn straw or trash Plow It
under If It’s full of weed seed or
Insects pests pile It up In a square-
sided flat-topped compost stack and
when It Is properly fermented spread
It on the garden or truck patch
O (TeDOO Ho (HXlOlJt
Oft tolliUofkiull
£! fllf I)
G CoXittcsMiSNuitft) ANlMu
01 iO
I!- tfjkiJ
Eats Then Goes Out to Eat
“Living under abnormal conditions
because your wife is trying to reduce
on some sort of an infernal diet Is
not what It might be cracked up to
be” complained Mr Detroiter to a
neighbor the other evening “Well I
seldom eat much but when I do eat
I like to eat like a human being so
every morning and every evening I
am compelled to eat two meals — one
Inhuman and one human At home I
breakfast on nuts fruits and berries
and dine on fruits berries and
nuts But the minute I am out
of the house I steal away to a lunch
room for my wheatcakes and coffee
or a beefsteak with savory trimmings
and a pot of tea” — Detroit News
No More Credit
T understand you prefer charges
against this man” said the judge
“No your honor” returned the gro-
cer I prefer cash and that’s what
I had him brought here for”
Cinders In the Eye
' Roll soft paper up like a lamp-
lighter wet tip to remove or use
medicine dropper to draw It out Rub
the other eye
Real Rest Depends Largely Upon
the Depth of Your Sleep
A warning to “light” or “poor” sleepers
The deeper and sounder you sleep the better
yon feel Five hours sound refreshing sleep does
you more actual good than ten hours restless
- disturbed sleep
This is because the final conversion of food
into vital tissue and nerve cells goes on more
rapidly when the physical and mental forces are
' at rest
You can’t get sound refreshing sleep if your
nerves are agitated with tea or coffee Both these
drinks contain caffeine which is sometimes very
irritating to the brain and nervous system
If you want to know the joy vigor and
stamina that comes to the person who gets sound
healthful sleep why not atop taking tea or coffee
for a while and drink delicious invigorating
Postum instead
Thousands of people everywhere have found
' that this was the only thing they needed in order
to bring about these very happy results
Order Postum from your grocer today
Drink this delightful cereal beverage of coffee-like
flavor for a week Perhaps like thousands of
others you’ll never be willing to go Wk to tea '
or coffee
Postum cornse in two forms Instant Postum (In tins)
inada instantly in ths cup by ths addition of boiling watsr
Postum Carnal (in packages of largsr bulk for tboss who
prsfsr to make ths drink while ths msal is being prepared!
mads by bailing for 20 minutes
Postum for Health
“There’s Reason
osphate
( iJUki) o
STUNG FOR THE LAST TIME
Never Again Says This Marine When
He Thinks of That Four-Dollar
Taxi Bill'
“What’s all your hurry?” asked (me
marine of another who was hurrying
down the street in Washington
“Oh nothing in particular” said the
gyrne “only the other night I takes
my girl to the movies”
“Yes yes go on!”
“She was wearing a brand new pair
of shoes and when she gets Inside the
theater her feet starts to ache and
she takes her shoes off”
“Ah ha ! The plot thickens 1”
“Well when she gets her shoes oft
she can’t get ’em on again and after
the show It cost me four bucks to get
her home in a taxi”
“Stung 1” said the interested friend
“What are yon going to do about It?”
“I’m going down to the five-and-ten-cent
store to buy her a shoe-horn
Safety first 1” — The Leatherneck
A Surmise
“Why Isn’t there more building?”
“Looks to me like the capitalists are
on a strike"
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Wettengel, H. P. & Turner, Earl. The Hinton Record (Hinton, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 11, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 15, 1921, newspaper, December 15, 1921; Hinton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1752232/m1/5/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.