The Maramec News (Maramec, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1912 Page: 3 of 13
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WOMAN SICK
TWELVE YEARS
Want* Other Women to Know
How She Wat Finally
Restored to Health.
Louisiana, Ma:—"I think a woman
Batnrally dislike* to make her trouble*
known to the public,
but complete restor-
ation tohealth meant
so much to me that
I cannot keep from
telling mine for the
sak,e of other suffer-
ing women.
"I had been sick
•bout twelve years,
and had eleven doc-
tors. I had drag-
ging down pains,
pains at monthly periods, bilious spells,
and was getting worse all the time. I
would hardly get over one spell when I
would be sick again. No tongue can tell
what I suffered from cramps, and at
times I could hardly walk. The doctors
said I might die at one of those times,
but I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound and got better right away.
Tour valuable medicine is worth more
than mountains of gold to suffering wo*
men."—Mrs. Bertha Muff, 603 N. 4th
Street, Louisiana, Ma
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, made from native roots and herbs,
contains no narcotic or harmful drugs,
and to-day holds the record of being the
most successful remedy for female ills we
know of, and thousands of voluntary
testimonials on file in the Pinkhara
laboratory at Lynn, Mass., seem to prove
this fact
If jor want special advice write ti
Ljdla £. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confi-
dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will
be opened, read and answered by a
woman and held In strict confidence.
GARDEN
OANMA'S OFFERING
TO THE SETTLER
m
THE AMERICAN RUSH TO
WESTERN CANADA
IS INCREASING
Free Homestead*
In the new Districts of
Manitoba, Saskatche-
wan and Alberts there
•re thousands of Kree
Homesteads left, which
to the man making entry
In I years time will be
worth from R3U to R25 per
acre. These lands are
well adapted to grain
and cattle raising.
BXCX1XKXT EAILWlY ftClUTIU
In many esses the railways In
Canada have been ballt in ad-
▼ance of settlement, and In a
short time there will not be a
settler who need be snore than
ten or twelve miles from s line
of railway. Ball way Rates are
recnlated by Government Com-
mission.
Social Conditions
The American Settler Is at home
In Western Canada. He Is not a
stranger In a strange land, hay-
ing nearly a million of his own
srosperoos write to sny of the
Canadian Government Agents
and send for literature, rates,etc.,
to Csastflaa A«v raa at Afratar wMr*M
Sept. sI iMlgretlMS Ottawa, Um4«
c AUDI AN GOVERNMENT AfiENT,
1121 1. Ml STREET, KAMSAS CITY, M,
LIVE STOCK AND
MISCELLANEOUS
Electrotypes
IN GREAT VARIETY
FORj SALE cAT THE
LOWEST PRICES BY
VUrCIN NEWSPAPER UNION
Kansas City, Missouri
ADVANTAGES OF GOOD SILO
HAY DOOR EASY TO HANDLE
One 8hown In Illustration May Be
operated by Boy Pulling at
One of Ropes.
We built a barn laat fall, 60 by 48
feet, using two by sixes for studding
on each side of the opening left for
!'
Latest In Hay Doors.
the hay door, writes Ernest Slier of
Wells, Kan., in the Farmers' Mail and
Breeze. We made the door of cypress
flooring and it is cut to fit the gable
of the roof. The track and rollers are
known as the "Big Four" kind, the
track being twice the length of the
opening left so the door will slide
down out of the way. Two rollers
are used on each side of the door. The
door is raised and lowered by means
of a rope passed over a well pulley on
either side with a sand bucket attach-
ed to the lower end. The sand buckets
work up and down inside the barn, the
ropes passing through holes cut in the
mow floor. Such a door looks neat
when up or down and a boy can easily
handle It by pulling at one of the ropes
from the mow floor.
8lze of Receptacle Should Be Adapted
to Number of Head of Animals
to Avoid 8polllng.
(By PROF. W. M. EATON. Connecticut
Experiment Station.)
One of the greatest advantages of
the silo is that it can be made to tide
over the time when there is a serious
diminution of green pasture feed dur-
ing July and August The question
of the size of a silo becomes very im-
portant During the warmest part of
the year silage spoils very rapidly
where it comes in contact with air.
Spoiled silage is a dangerous sub-
stance to feed. Besides tainting the
milk and upsetting the digestion of
the cow, it often becomes poisonous.
To avoid this, it is necessary to feed
off each day from one and a half to
two inches. If this is done the silage
does not have time to change or fer-
ment much. A silo 18 feet in diameter
will feed 42 animals; 16 feet in di-
ameter 33 animals, and 12 feet will
feed 20 animals. If the herd is large
enough, two alios of different di-
ameters are a great economic con-
venience. For the winter feed use the
large diameter, and for summer the
small one. Another advantage is in
filling. One will be settling while the
other is being filled and one-third
more silage can be put In both. The
tall, narrow silo Is better than the
broad low one. The loss is much less.
Taking all things into consideration,
it is evident that a round, wooden-
stave silo is the best. And a wooden
silo, if taken care of as it always
should be, can be made to last as long
as a wooden building. Certain proc.
esses can be applies to the wood, such
METAL POST IS SUBSTANTIAL
Invention of New York Man Provides
Firmer Hold In Hole—Wires
Caught In Notched Bolts.
The Scientific American in describ-
ing a fence post designed by Porter
K. Bushnell of Medina, N. Y., says:
As illustrated herewith, Mr. Bushnell's
fence post is constructed of metal in
the form of an angular channel flaring
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 43-1912.
Fence Post of Simple Design..
at the bottom to form feet that will
provide a firmer hold in the post hole
The wires of the fenoe are caught
I in notched bolts which pass through
the corner of the fence post and
through blocks of triangular form fit-
ted against the rear side of the post
F01EY WDNEYPniS
Ate Bleb—I la Curative QusHtWs
FOR RAO KAO HE, RHEUMATISM,
KIDNEYS AMR RLADDER
PATENTSr, rates. aMitem****
A.K.Waddsrt>urn,r cut .,Washington,D.O*
' —■=—=■== I
For the Csr.
"She worries every time he takes
the car out"
"Yes, I don't blame her. They had
to save a long time to get that ear."
Out of Fashion.
"I see where flnffy skirts saved a
girl from drowning in the Chicago
liver recently. The old styles were
the best styles after all."
"Huh, she probably tried to drown
herself because she had to wear the
flufflles."
H
Steamboat Memories.
. London Opinion, commenting on
the recent celebration of the centen-
ary of the steamboat, remarks that
it is interesting to note that the Brit-
ish admlrality of that period rejected
the invention with the declaration
that "a paddle wheel steamboat could
be of no use in navigation," and that
a Dr. Lardner, a pundit of that day,
who proved "that no steam vessel
could ever cross the Atlantic, lived
long enough to bolt to America in a
steamer along with another man's
wife!"
Rose Matilda's 8printer.
"Ah's got a sprinter f m dat oV win-
der sill in mah finge' Mis' Greene,"
announced Rose Matilda, who tifcd
been scrubbing window sills, exhibit*
ing the injured member. "Is yo' got a
pin or some sech sharp t'lng yo' cayn
git it out wl'f? Ah don' jes' wan' to
leave It In, 'ca'lfc dem sprinters aln'
to be trifle wlf. Oh, dem's de t'ing'll
do de business," as Mrs. Greene at-
tacked the splinter with a pair of
tweezers and triumphantly drew It
out "T'ank yo' Mis' Greene. Dem
teasers is de bee' t'lng to exkrack
sprinters wl'f."
8tave Silo.
as soaking it in some wood preserva-
tive or applying asphaltum and creo-
sote substances to the bottom of the
staves for a few feet, kee*plng the
other outside areas well painted.
These are factors which would deter-
mine the lasting qualities of a silo.
The size of the silo should be
adapted to the size of the herd. A
tall silo with a rather narrow di-
ameter Is preferable. Silage is pre-
served best with the least loss in a
round wooden-stave silo. The kind of
corn to silo is that which will produce
the most nutriment per acre, whether
it be flint or dent, it is an economic
advantage to have corn mature for
siloing. The middle of the growing
season is July 20, from which date the
planting and .harvesting of any va-
riety can be determined. The prac-
tical applications of these suggestions
ought to Increase the value per acre
of sllagc from 40 to 50 per cent
Garden
Farm Notes
Keep weeds from going to seed.
Plant salsify (vegetable oyster) for
next spring.
Don't try to save money by buy-
ing cheap seed.
Farm tests are worth more than
all the theories.
A Million
Persona
Breakfast every morn-
ing on
Post
Toasties
Suppose jou try the
food with cream and
sugar, as part of break-
fast or supper.
You may be sure it
will be a delicious part
"The Memory Lingers
Postum Cereal Company, Ltd.
Battls Creek, Mich.
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The Maramec News (Maramec, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1912, newspaper, October 24, 1912; Maramec, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc179719/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.