The Inola Register. (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 19, 1911 Page: 7 of 8
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World's Available Supply Has
Been Greatly Reduced.
TVro Immense Crop* Have Been Ab-
sorbed Within the Seaion After
They Were Produced—Good
Prices Will Continue.
Within the pact few years the United
States lias product d two cotton crops
of ll.60u.000 bales, with only a Hing e
comparatively small crop Intervening
fet the present season is likely to eud
with the world's supply of aval able
cotton reduced to smaller projort ons
than should be deemed Fafe. Itotli of
the b'g crops mentioned have been
practically all absorbtd within the
•eason alter they were produced, thus
making It evident that to properly
meet the world's demand for cotton a
yearly crop of more than 13,000,000
balea is necessary.
With the whole Orient being rapidly
developed, and other rarts of the
world making strady progress, the de-
mand for cotton goods Is certain to
Increare rapidly, so that even the
crops now deemed large will prove In
•ufllclent for requirements. This state
of things has long been fore tern and
efforts have been made by Great Hrlt-
ain and other Kuroptan countries to
encourage the cultivation of cotton I®
their dependencies. Such efforts have
beer attrnded with only moderate suc-
cess, and this country continues, and
Is likely to continue, the main pro-
ducer o* the world's supply of cotton.
While the caraclty of the United
States as a producer of cotton has not
ret reached Its limit, the fact should
not be overlooked that the steady
progress of the destructive boll weevil
has placed some restriction on our
ability to expand our cotton produc-
tion. Certainly the prospects for the
Bear future do not favor expension al
thorgh there Is every reason to hope
that in due course some means will be
found of extirpating the weevil pest
or of neutralizing its ravages.
With such an out'ook as to supply
•nd demand, there is no reason why
the south should not realize good
prices for its cotton for ytars to come
Oar cotton is all sure to be wanted,
and provided only we do not endeavor
to market a whole year's supply In a
few months and we place no unreason
•ble restrictions upon speculation,
(trices should never drop below a
profitable basis.
Ons Machine Will Turn Out Quito
Large Number Each Day of
Any 8ize Required.
For the core a five-Inch length of
stove pipe is used This Is cut 20
Inches long, or two Inches longer than
the tile la to be mode. A circle Is
cut from a board to fit Into the bot-
tom of this pipe, where It Is fasten
ed, says the Orange Judd Farmer. In
the renter of same a bolt is p'aced
which acts as a pin. going through the
molding board or pallet and thus in-
suring setting the core in correct po-
sition. The top Is finished with a
block to fit in'o same, as shown, with
a ring and bolt to draw out core from
the completed tile.
The outside form Is made of heavy
sheet Iron and is eight inches in dlam
eter and 18 inches h'gh, which makes
the walls of tile 1^ Inches thick. This
requires a piece of sheet Iron 18 l y
26V4 Inches in size, which yqu should
have the tinner bend into a circle or
cylinder form, with the ec*ges over-
lapping each other one Inch Kxactly
one inch from each edge of the sheet
Core and Form for Tile.
HARNESS CLAMP VERY HANDY
Mender Will Be Found Useful on Farm
Where Odd Repairs Are Needed
— Ho* It Is Made.
The accompanying drawing repre
Scots a very handy harness mender,
nseful on the farm when odd repairs
have to be done, and any one who
can use a saw and I amtuer can make
It In a few minutes. It u made of
nail two strips of wood, as shown In
Illustration, and to these attach hooks
and eyelets, so when the form Is to-
gether with the sheet Iron lapped one
inch the hooks are in position to go
Into eyelets.
This Is placed over the core and
held at the proper distance from same
by little blocks nailed to pallet on
the outside of form or by small nails
driven Into pallet. The mortar la
placed in machine and thoroughly
tamped down. The best mix for this
' work is one part cement to three
' parts of coarse sand used with as lit-
j tie water as possible. Just enough to
I wet the concrete
i One machine will make a number
I of tile each day. as it can be removed
from the tile as soon as molded by
drawing the core first and then un-
hooking and removing outside form.
The average cost of five inch tile 18
Inches long made as above Is 8\4
cents each; six Inch tile ten cents
each, with sand at 75 cents per cubic
yard, cement f2 per barrel and labor
at |2 a day of ten hours This same
machine may be constructed in larger
or smaller size, as requirements de-
mand.
Harness Clamp.
Inmber of the dimensions Indicated In
the drawing The clamp is t'ghtened
by the worker sitting upon the seat,
which should extend at least two feet
from the claims. The drawing shows
tbs device with a shorter seat than
U>at. It would doubtless be better to
have the scat extended to thrice the
length shown from tbe left of the
clamps, and to have the base ex'ended
In s similar manner, so that the de
*lce will not tip over too easily The
Joint at the upper right hand corner
may be hinged with heavy wire run
through holes and twisted together un
derneath. or real strap binges of Iron
may be attarhrd
Feeding Hogs.
As s rule It will net pay to hold the
pig crop for prices to rise unless they
•re making good gains all of the time
they are being held Where few feed
ers win out In playing the market
lame, many lose out
There Is little eentiment connected
with feeding a bunch of hogs and
low of ua would be in the business
were It not for the profits which It
•hould afford
With cheap corn and other grains
any man who could buy a few pigs
•nd finish thom for market could
make a little profit, but II requires
skill snd shllity to g-ow pig* and fHt.
ton ti em on 60 cent corn snd tnske
• reasonable profit
Poultry Pays Well.
To rend shout the care of fowls in
detHll makes It seem quite s lot of
work, but when once you get started
•nd give your poultry the ssme csre
you do other stock there Is nothing
en tbe farm that will pay a* we;l for
tbo money Invested.
Close Pasturing.
Close, late pasturing of autumn-
sown wheat fields reduces the yield.
The Oklahoma experiment station rec-
ommends that stock be taken out of
the wheat fle'd bv March 1 or March
15. at the latest. If reasonable returns
cr" to be expected. The quality of
grain deteriorates perceptibly with
late pasturage. Pasturing wheat when
the ground is very wet will have •
tendency to lower the yield of grain,
and at the same time injure the tex-
ture of the soil. Under favorable sea-
son conditions wheat frequently makes
a very heavy growth and In these
cases It Is advantageous to pasture.
Handling Sheep.
Sheep are timid, nervous creatures.
and all excitement and roughness
should be svolded In handling them.
A BAROMETER OF THE GROWTH
OF THE AGRICULTURAL
DISTRICTS.
The traveler passing through a
country Is impressed favorably or oth
erwiFe by the appearance of the towns
along the line of railways. An they
appear prosperous and of healthy
growth he at once assures himself
that there is either a local Industrial
factor to cause it, or a splendidly
developed agricultural area from
which Is drawn the resources that
contribute or make for the growth
that is so readily apparent. On the
other hand. If evidence of Impover
Ished streets, badly up| earing resi-
dences and business places and leth-
argic citizens, there is an absence of
local Industry and surrounding agri-
cultural prosperity There is no line
of railway, whether main or branch.
throughout western Canada, that
through the towns or cities that are
built along the ribs of steel do not
convey the most favorable Impression.
The cause is not always apparent, but
the facts are there and easily seen.
In most cares the growth and the sta-
bility of these towns are caused by
the excellent agricultural districts
that are tributary; In some cases,
manufacturing enterprises have
sprung up, caused by the agricultural
demands and needs. The Winnipeg
Free Press and the Kdmonton Hulle-
tin have recently sent corps of cor-
respondents through the provinces to
secure data concerning the growth of
the two or three hundred towns that
have come Into existence during the
past two or three years. The partic-
ulars make Interesting reading, and as
one reads of the station house, the
blacksmith shop, the boarding house
and the store of April, being dwarfee
In August by a hundred or more dwell
ings, by large hotels, by splendid
stores, and a half dozen Implement
warehouses, not fo, getting the two or
three churches rud the excellent pub-
lic school buildings, it causes one to
stop and think if they ever heard of
such marvelous changes. Certainly
not often. These are facts, though. as
related of western Canada. Then.
too, there are now cities—-yes. cities
of from ten to fifteen thousand people
—where five or six years ago there
was but the bare prairie and the lone
section post. The changes In the Ca-
nadian West during the past eight
or ten years have been marvelous,
and It Is no idle tale to say that the
development In number and growth of
the cities, towns and villages there
In the past decade has eclipsed any-
thing In the history of the building of
• new country. Agriculture has been
the basis, and it is agriculture of the
kind that Is lasting The ease with
which an excellent productive farm,
capable of yielding a splendid living
and large profit to the operator, is
such that it has encouraged thousands - S'gnature of
to follow that pursuit, and also other
thousands on the limited snd expen- 1 se r'or °ver
five farms throughout the Central
Western States as well as some of the
Coast States, to enlarge their field of
enterprise The climate Is excellent.
•nd just the climate that is desirable
for the healthy growth of man and
the products of the field. All varie-
ties of the smaller and better paying
grains are raised, and generally with
every assurance of good fields. With
government supervision of railway
rates, splendid markets are centain,
and the highest prices realized. The
Dominion Government, that has been
carrying on a propaganda of securing
settlers for the vacant lands, Issues
literature descriptive of those avail-
able in the provinces, atid on request
of your nearest Canadian government
agent, copies will be forwarded free.
Conditions Are Only Different, No
Matter What Sentimental
Writers May Assert.
The "popular" writer who bewaDs
what he assumes to be the fact that
the "old fashioned" mother Is no more
is liable to defeat bis own purpose if
that be Inculcating in children the
highest possible regard for their pa-
rents. Ii |s a danger which even the
quantitative theory of literature or
space rates cannot Justify.
The mother of the past, of course,
was different from the mother of tho
present, as different on the whole as
the conditions of life thin and now,
but since her daughter U the mother
of the present there must be some
points of similarity. All the pood In
our mothers and grandmothers cer-
tainly could not have vanished. It
will be paying scant tribute to those
dear, good women who have laid down
their precepts and examples and
passed on to say so. And. of course,
this writer does not mean to do that,
yet he come.-t very n<.ir doing what he
does not Intend.
I he fallacy of the whole sentimen-
tal notion that because things and
people- are not like thev used to be
they are not as good, lies In the pat-
ent [act that they cannot le a ike. ajid
if they were it would simply be* be-
cause of the present generation being
so much inferior to the past that it
was unable to do no more than stand
still.
If you find any sub-'
stance in your baky '
ing injurious tok
health made,
from tak-
ing powder/
in this can/
there
$1000
,In it for .you
Calumet has been backed for years by an offer
of $1,000 for any substance injurious to health
found in the baking prepared with it.
Does not this and the fact that it complies with
all pure food laws, both State and National,
prove that Calumet u absolutely pure?
With the purity question settled—then Calumet
is undoubtedly the best Baking Powder. It
contains more leavening power; it is more uni-
form— every can is the same. It assures
better results—and is moderate in price.
Received Highest Award World's Pure Food Exposition
CALUMET
BAKING POWDER
ieh> tke Cm-T
Tililsg
Hand Beat3 M2chine.
Cigars are still made by hand, no
machine having yet been invented that
will roll them so nicely and evenly
as do deft human fing.rs Tbe cheap-
est cigars—the three-for five variety—
are made of French, Kentucky. Alge-
rian or Hungarian leaves. At the other
extreme are the cigars smoked by the
-■ - 7"T czar of Russia, which are of the eholc-
T .°re ° AFHI: beinK dw rf^ I est and b. st matured Havana, and
which cost $1.50 each.
Live Real Estate Agents Wanted
'""or Finest Irrigated land proposition
in California. Full Government re-
ports on soil and water system. Lib-
eral Commissions. References Re-
quired. Write at on re for particulars
to Irrigated I.and Company of Cali-
fornia, B01 Crocker National Bank
Building, San Francisco.
Old Houses.
Old houres have a far larger com-
mercial value than their owners al-
ways remember. Milton's well-known
observation in his "Areopagitica," "Al-
most as we 11 kill a man as a good book,"
applies not a little to a good old
building, which Is not only a book but
a unique manuscript that has no fel-
low.—Address by Thomas Hardy.
WNEY's
w# Um 7"W hi**: U—
pay t-.| o srke. , rira9.
Write for ref. rtotiNkoil
••-iljt price 1.at.
M. fAREL A SONS,
lS*t ISVlt IJL, IT.
Ulrr«, i< 4—,
OLD SORES CURED
' icem«flrrv>ffi1'*Tia ■ ireea.« ari«-o«« i ire m. In-
dolent rif-er«.M«*rmri*| I'leer*. White St>rli
In*.Milk e* •■rSorea. •tl«Mas r*«.
feiurr. B/seiiMK. J.p.ALLKN.Ltepi Al.st.Pmul Minn.
Ask to sec the Leather Covered
Pocket Edition
KNOWN THE
WORLD OVER
I ' wmthw to neswrv tffW
I <*.«■* sue
real
FdrmNotes
The young hen Is usually the best
layer.
The hog responds readily to good
treatment.
Itrood sows ought to have a feed of
roots occasionally.
The first shoeing of a colt Is tbe
most Important of all.
Filth In the poultry yards and
houses Invites disease.
Pure air without draft Is the solu
tion of health In the ben house
The hens that must fight lice and
mites are usually poor producers.
Never cut a limb from a fruit tree
unless you know just why you do it.
An orchard neglected for one year
virtually puts it back three years.
The heifers should freshen early, at
two to two and one-half years of age.
The breeding ewes and store sheep
remain as long as possible In the pas
lures.
The breeder of fancy sheep finds
It almost impossible to sell a ram thin
in flesh.
As e'ery one knows, the best time
train an animal Is while ho Is
young
Training the row to be a good
milker should begin with tho rearing
of ths calf.
I)o not neglect to give each horse •
chance to drink the last thing at night,
even If the weather Is cool.
Jerk the nervous and skittish horso
every time he shies, thereby showing
yourself to be a bigger fool than tho
horse
For the first two or three weeks tho
r.slf should be fed at least three times
a day on warm milk taken direct
from the cow
A Surprise.
"I'm going to give my wife
surprise this Christmas '
"That so? What are you going to
give her?"
"The money."
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CAS TORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
3t) Years.
The Kind You Have Always BoughL
Ore Way to Look at It.
Jinks—Do you know, I was re-
fused three times before I found a
girl who would have me?
lllinkB—I see. Just like a patent
medicine: "Well shaken btfore taken."
—Judge.
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS
FREE.
> rf c ur
_ - - r — —— - j, XJFWtl
Flower nml XI lttn Post Card*; l,eaut f.i'
color* _ind lovelieot design,. Art Pe st Card
Club, 731 Jack*ou St., Tope La, Kan.
Send 2c stamp for five nampl
sery l>e*t (;•>]«{ Etnboased, (i.
Housework Tiresome?
"For five years," writes Mrs. L Fulenchek, Houston,
Texas, I suffered with pains all over, especially in my
back and side, and was so weak I could hardly do my
housework. A friend told me of Cardui. Since taking
I feel so much better! Now I can do all my housework,
and am not bothered with pains at all."
Cardui has proven e3pecially beneficial In cases of
womanly ailments, with p-;n as a prominent symptom,
whether the pains come from too much work, walking,
standing, stooping, or just as a symptom of weakness.
CARDUI
Ck4
The Woman's Tonic
Cardui is a strength-building medicine. You need It,
if your system is out of order, if you are weak, or if you
suffer from any of the pains, to which women are liable.
Fifty years of success have produced absolute confi-
dence in Cardui, on the part of those who have used it
During this^ time, Cardui has benefited over a million
women. Why not you? Your troubles are probably just
the kind that Cardui will benefit
All druggists keep Cardui in stock, all the time:
Get a bottle and by it today.
TAKE
Exempt.
K nicker—Consistency
Docker—Pity nobody
is a Jewel,
smuggles It
Lofty Ambition.
"What is your ambition?"
"Merely to make more money than
my wife can spend "—Detroit Free
Press
The Farmer's Son's
Great Opportuaily
Vk.«tiA...s.
To finish the moment; to find the
Journey's end in each step of the
I road; to live the greatest number of
good hours is wisdom.—Emerson.
ONI.T ONE "PROMO OPtMNF
■P-It I. I.AXATIVB 11IIOM,, yOlMSg fn,
1 t... ticratnr, <• ,*. W t.H,.vY L lb. V*ot2I
ovrr tu l urv a IwlU iD otu< Laj. SU.
and
The Difference.
Ted—Did he sober down
mnrry ?
Ned—No; he marrlid and sobered
dejwn.—Smart Set.
Heavy words in meeting will not
m«ke up for short weight in market.
Pettlt's Eye Salve For Over 100 Year*
heN-n u«ed ' r ft n.re trd nnd inHnmed
er «, rrwnVCB fit— or nv-r eho r' e«
All droggi«t or Howard Brrn..Ruffal .X X.
I am of the opinion that the most
honorable calling in to serve the pub-
lic. and to be useful to many.— Mon-
taigne.
Oil
The danger frrm «hcht cut- , r w. un ti
I* ulw.tyn till....| ( ,i..,n:ng The iinmrdi
ate api>Iicati< n of llmiilin Wizard
lu.il.ca blood pt i>nning import! V.
The greatest glory of a free born
people is to transfer that freedom to
their children. Harvard
Oe>*r white rfotTie* re a tign that the
1 hoUM-keeper une* Red t>oi Kali Ulue.
Lar^e 2 o*. package, S cenU.
Wommv's Ills
Many women uffcr needlessly from girlhood to woman*
hood and from motherhood to old age—with backache,
dizziness or headache. She becomea broken-down, sleep-
less, nervous, irritable and feela tired from morning to
night. When pains and aches rack the womanly system it
frequent intervals, ask your neighbor about
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
Tltlt Prescription hsa, tor ortr to years, beem
curlnt delicate, weak, pain-wracked women,
by the hundreds ot thousands and this too la
the privacy ot their homes without their hav
lot to submit to Indelicate Questloolnts mat
offensively repugnant examinations.
Bre invited to consult in confidence by letter/ree. Address
^orld • Di i n,sry Mcdic.il Aw'n. R.V. Pierce. M. D.. Prc't, Ruffalo N Y
u .VS'-1 Famtiv Doctos Boos, The People'. Common Sent*
Medical Adv..er, newly rev,«d up-to-date edition-1000 im
flam I sthik ho,l« ol delicate quc.tion. which every woman, .injle or married
ought to know about. Sent /rr* to any addre,. on receipt of 31 one-cent
^stamp. to cover co*t of wrapping and mailing tuly. in French dotb binding.
im —
'Sltfrr th« o'<J furm to
~ Intent,*B> lidbov to
prepare for j„ur Tutor*
....... 7 awuni you ID
Maoitoba.NalnitclMSSl
'r Altona, wtwra yo«
•*an Kfo rr F ff Iltiiar-
!< trad or boy Umi aires-
pricrs.
Now'stbeTlme
—not a year from now,
when 1ar J aillbe bitfb*
er Ti * r« ttT•* vrurwJ
- the «hnttOjint cr *pa «ei
W best, < Mt ho ti Harlejr,
as as cattle raUtna. are
<*ar«!iy a airadjr ad \ a roe In
price. Governtto-n' return* *h. w
that tha mimhi r of aettlrra
V eatern € ans«la from
the I. H. wn% ttO tier rent
larrer In IttlO than the
prei iona vear.
Many farmer* hasra ptsld
for thrlr land out of the
prtwt-etU of one rrop.
fiea* lit niiotrutia of IM
a and pre-emption* of
«H> an acre.
iPnmI e«-h«M l*.
r..r..r,.,jaUwuy farliltlea,
low freight rat**; Wood, wa-
•nd lumber eaailr ob-
tained. *
*«.r pamphlet "f.aat Bert West.**
partlc* )ui aa to auitable loratioa
and k.e -ttl« rs- rate, apply to
of Imruianttlon, ottawa.
Can., or to Canadian Govt Ajenw
flHHS AGfWT
^ U'j t* Street laausOy.Ba
I'ae ad lre«« nearest jo*. JT
! ««' ^crea at
Thompson's Eya Valor
Oklahoma City. No. 3-1911.
W. N. U.
Plnnder goon dies if you take It out
of circulation
Rmoker* find I.ewin' Sincle Binder he
eigar better quality than niont 10c cigara.
An unplanned duty done Is better
• v.. - .« * a ><■ n.itmw—Tinker.
1 — — , — ■ " • w., uKiinomi uny, No. 3—191
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
sr,0e ■""" •" ,k~
If every year we would root out one
>ice we should sooner become per-
fect men.—Thomas a Kempls.
Mr*. W Inoiow'a Soothing Hyraw.
for children te^ihimr a«ften« t he guni v r*>Tuceo In-
Laauat*uou.aUaM p*in cure* wiadouue. fccaiaHU*
The beat way to lift men la to meet
them on the level
fa,"'*«'•' better than
, aiucn an< M Cum. mommot OHUO OO., O.ilmoy. itI,
•nr tlw to. Ym eaa
Every Man Should Fence His Yard
hls garjen orcnard or Itoct lt injurei a cerUin
privacy and keepa out uiidcnirablea. The b.at fenceto uaa
tor thu purpow and the moit economical ia tbe fame*
Hodge Pence, a combination of wood and wire. InaiM tm
your lumber dealer allowing it to you or write
THE HODGE FENCE a LUMBER CO, LtA
• lake CkviM,U.
HODGE
FZNCE
You Look Prematurely Old
DRaaaiaa. emet, ai.00, iwaik
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The Inola Register. (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 19, 1911, newspaper, January 19, 1911; Inola, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc180321/m1/7/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.