Harrison Gazette. (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1906 Page: 4 of 8
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EX-MAYOR CRUMBO
RECOMMENDS PE-RU-NA.
"My Endorsement of Pe-ru-na
is Based On Its Merits."
—Ed. Crumbo.
CITC pemmueini> cur< (J. No Hixur nervousness after
■ lid II dar's use of Dr. Kline's Ureal Serve Iteslor-
er Send for FKEE t'J.OO trial bottle and treatise
I)lt- li. 11. KLINE. Ltd ,#31 Arch Street, Philadelphia. Pa.
The Best Guaranty of Merit
Is Open Publicity.
Every bottle of Dr. Pierce's world-
famed medicines leaving the great labo-
ratory at Buffalo, N. Y., has printed
upon its wrapper all the ingredients
entering into its composition. This fact
alone places Dr. Pierce's Family Medi-
cines in a class all by themselves. They
cannot be classed with patent or secret
medicines because they are neither. This
is why so many unprejudiced physicians
prescribe them and recommend them to
their patients. They know what they
are coc-posed of, and that the ingredients
are those endorsed by the most eminent
medical authorities.
The further fact that neither Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, tho
great stomach tonic, liver invigorator,
heart regulator and blood purifier, nor his
"Favorite Prescription" for weak, over-
worked, broken-down, nervous women,
coutaius any alcohol, also entitles them
to a place all by themselves.
Many years "ago. Dr. Pierce discovered
that chemically pure glycerine, of proper
strength, is a better solvent and preserv-
ative of the medicinal principles resid-
ing in our indigenous, or native, medi-
cinal plants than is alcohol: and, further-
more, that it possesses valuable medicinal
pro{>erties of its own, being demulcent,
nutritive, antiseptic, and a most efficient
antiferment.
Neither of the above medicines con-
tains alcohol, or any harmful, habit-
forming drug, as will be seen from a
glance at the formula printed on each
Dottle wrapper. They are safe to use and
potent to cure.
Not only do physicians prescribe the
above, non-secret "nedicines largely, but
the most intelligent people employ them
—people who would not think of using
the ordinary patent, or secret medicines.
Every ingredient entering into the com-
position of Dr. Pierce's medicines has
the strongest kind of an endorsement
from leading medical writers of the
several schools of practice. No other
medicines put up for like purposes has
any such profesttional endorsement.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets euro con-
stipation. Constipation is the cause of
many diseases. Cure the cause and you
cure the disease. One "Pellet" is a gentle
laxative, and two a mild cathartic Drug-
gists sell them, and nothing is "just as
good." Easy to take as candy.
The best preparation for the future
is the present well seen to, the last |
duty well done—George Macdonald.
H
]^D. CRUMBO, Ex-Mayor of New
u Albany, Ind., writes from 511 E.
Oak street:
"My endorsement of Peruna is
based on its merits.
44 If a man is sick he looks anxiously
for something which will cure him,
and Peruna will do the work.
441 know that it will cure catarrh of
the head or stomach, indigestion, head-
ache and any weary or sick feeling.
44 It is bound to help anyone, if used
according to directions.
"I also know dozens of men who
speak in the highest terms of Peruna
and have yet to hear of anyone being-
disappointed in it."
Mr. Crumbo, in a later letter, dated
Aug\ '•J"), 1904, says:
" My health is good, at present, but if
I should have to take any more medi-
cine I will fall back on Peruna."
HIGH GRADE INVESTMENT.
We offer to a limited number of aubacrlberi
treasury stock of amull denomination on a
guaranteed profit plan. This will mean to
you not only safe principal, but sure divi-
dends out of the earnings . Get these facts,
full particulars and details by return mall.
A postal will bring them. Stake your
money make you money. STot It per cent.,
but larne profits.
Reference—Hfbernia Bauk & Trust Co.,
New Orleans.
Third National Bank, St. Louis, Mo.
Address American Rick Packing Co., SOB
South Commercial Street, St. Louis, Mo.
It matters but l'ttle what you think
of a man, provided that yo do not
think aloud.
A favorite way of saying mean
things about a husband is to sigh and
look res'gned when his name is men-
tioned, and say nothng.
Turnips for Dairy Use.
As ordinarily fed, turnips injure the
flavor of both milk and butter. This
has been demonstrated over and over
ap,ain at our experiment stations. The
strong turnipy flavor that comes into
the butter is the product of a volatile
oil, which can be driven off by heat-
ing the milk to 160 degrees Fahrenheit
for a short time. This is the tempera
ture at which pasturization is usually
dene. There have been a great many
men who have claimed that turnips
could be fed cows without injury to
the milk. Among these dairymen was
the late Mr. Hyatt of Wisconsin, who
for many years was known as the
"Turnip King." He claimed that tur-
nips would not affect the milk if they
were fed immediately after milking in
the morning and in the evening. In
thia way the food had twelve hours in
which to allow the volatile oil to dis-
appear. The difference between vola-
tile oil and other kind of oils is that
the volatile oil passes through the di-
gestive process unaffected and ap-
• aars in the milk, while other oils un-
dergo a chemical transformation We
find that the injury to milk and butter
does not apply to turnips only; that
the same results are attained by feed-
ing cabbages and rape, which is of the
t-.bbage family. If a man is going to
feed turnips and like succulent things
he should experiment with them grad-
ually that he may find out for himself
just what effect they will have upon
his milk products. A great many farm-
ers could feed turnips to their cows
for the reason that the butter is used
almost, entirely in their own families,
and the turnip flavor is not strong
enough to be objected to. It is ouly in
general martets that the turnipy
flavor of butter is severely criticised.
Slow Churning.
In the winter season the people have
a great deal of trouble in churning in
a reasonable time. One reason for
this Is the thinness of the cream in
the winter under the careless methods
in which milk is set in the farm house.
The cream rises very slowly, and
when skimmed, contains a very large
proportion of milk; such cream churns
with great difficulty. The remedy for
this is to make the cream thicker by
being more careful in skimming. The
two reasons for slow churning is that
the churns are filled too full of cream.
The ordinary barrel churn is used on
the farm; if it is filled nearly full the
milk does not receive the pounding
that it should. The barrel churn
should be only one-third full, then
when it revolves the cream falls from
one end of the barrel to the other and
receives a shock at each end. It is
this shock that causes the butter gran-
ules to separate from the casein and
the other parts of the milk. The next
great reason for slow churning is the
unknown temperature at which the
churning is performed. If the farmer's
wife who does the churning will always
have a thermometer at hand, to make
sure that the temperature of the cream
I is about 65 degrees she will avoid this
1 trouble of too low temperature. Some
people make the mistake of pouring
in cold water as soon as the butter
begins to break. This sometimes re-
tards the gathering of the butter.
Improving Dairy Herds.
We in our work at the sta-
tion raise heifers from our best
cows, and likewise from time to
time make purchases. We get more
blanks than we do prizes in our breed-
ing, and to keep up our herd occasion-
ally purchase. This is the general
practice of dairy farmers in this state.
Most of them raise their own ani-
mals, but buy back and forth more or
less. In other words, they aim to im-
prove their herds by good breeding,
that Is to say, the better class of them
do, and likewise sell and buy, barter
and exchange. How to improve our
dairy herds cannot all be stated in a
word, but the process, epitomized to
the last degree, may be expressed in
the following words: Breed, weed,
feed, weigh, test, observe, use judg-
ment, study relationship of conforma-
tion to performance.—J. L. Hills, Di-
rector Vermont Experiment Station.
Silage from Mixed Crops.
Corn and sorghutn both contain an
excess of carbohydrates, and are de-
ficient in protein. To correct this dif-
ficulty and balance the nutrients, cow
pe&s and other leguminous crops were
urown with them. The peas were
planted In the rows with the corn and
sorghum, and while a casual inspec-
tion of the crop would indicate that a
•aige per cent of peas was obtained, a
careful separation of the peas from
ibe corn or sorghum shows that in no
instance was there more than 15 1 per
cent of pt«s in the crop, and in some
-.r.stances only 5 to 6 per cent; so
«roall a percentage as to have no
material Influence on the composition
and feeding value of the silage. Cora
iud sorghum can be combined so that
he resulting silage will consist of
about equal percentages or each crop.
Tennessee Jtatlan.
msmtiAN*
Experience in Threshing.
My experience in threshing has not
been varied. It has been the same
thing over and over again and that
has been very expensive to the
farmers in this part of the state,
in as much as the machines do
not save the grain. I have lived
in this ring seven years. We have
had five different machines in that
time and there has been no choice
We have employed two-men machines
and they did no better work than the
old hand feed which we used two
years. The machines thresh the grain
all right, but do not separate it from
the straw, and enough oats go into
the straw stack to doubly pay the
threshing bill. Such work does not
pay very well. Some of the farmers
say the oats are in the stack, they are
light, and so forth, but I would rathei
have" them all taken out of the straw.
Then I can do as I choose with them.
I would prefer feeding them rather
than have them wasted in the straw
and rot In the chaff, which they gen-
erally do.
Ail the inventors in the country are
wracking their brains to get a three-
kernel drop to a planter. There are
but very few threshing machines ex-
hibited at fairs, and where there are
they attract very little attention, for
the fact that they fail to present the
vital point to the farmers, that of
saving or separating the grain from
the straw. Perhaps there are ma-
chines th^t will do that. Then that
same machlte will blow lots of the
oats into the stack. Any old cylinder
and concave will do the shelling all
right, but it is the taking care of the
oats and getting them out of the separ-
ator before the fan blows them into
the stack to be wasted. I would likt-
to hear from others on this- subject.—
J. C. Mahoney, Kane Co., 111.
The American Sheep.
The American sheep is coming to
be more and more a matter of interest
to the American farmer. It is doubt-
ful if In this generation we shall
again see the small Interest In sheep
that has been shown during the past
fifteen years. This lack of interest
was due to the fact that the sheep
with which the farmer found himself
fifteen years ago was largely a wool-
producing sheep, and wool was then
declining at a rapid rate. The de-
mand for mutton was much less then
than now. In the fifteen years there
has been a great change in the char-
acter of American sheep. They are
more largely suited for the production
of mutton than they were then, and,
moreover, the price of wool is again
high enough to encourage the sheep
owner to produce it.
The city people are demanding a
sheep of higher quality than formerly
and can hardly be satisfied with a
sheep that has been brought up on
weeds and brush. The sheep that Is
well fed from birth to the block is
the only one that produces meat that
brings a good price in the city mar-
kets. The sheep that have been
grown on poor feed and then fattened
quickly sell for a smaller price on the
city market, as their meat is known to
be not of the best quality. The Amer-
ican sheep may be a pasture cleaner,
but it must have good grass also if if
is to be profitable.
Women in Our Hospitals
Appalling Increases in the Number of Operations
Performed Each Year—How Women May
Avoid Them.
f
by MusKrUsK
AliceBer
To Keep Down Weeds.
fn keeping down wetds I find It
best to cultivate as long js possible,
and sometimes when iftd **eeJs are
very persistent we sow cow peas In
the corn fields, as these cow pe.i« are
low growing and improve the soil some
by adding nitrogen to it. We have
been troubled some with the morning
glory cr bind weed. We find that a
thorough cultivation keeps it down,
but another means is to turn in sheep
which will keep it eaten to the root
his results in the root dying. We
have very few weeds in our small
grain flel Is. but frequently have a
good many in our hay meadows. If
they are so abundant in thi hay as to
reduce Its value we pick them out of
the swarth after the cutting .• pull
tnem out of the field sometimes before
we cut the hay. The latter process is
prtferred. The most troublesome
weeds in this locality are cockle bur,
Bour dock, thistle and plantain. The
state law regarding weeds is in this
locality a dead letter.—Joseph Ik
Fulkerson, Jersey Co.. III.
Fecundity of Swine-
The fecundity of swine is
one of the principal factors
that makes them valuable as meat
producing animals. The fact that a
healthy sow will produce from six to
twelve pigs at one farrowing makes
her one of the chief money-makers o(
the farm. The other fact that she will
bear two litters a year If allowed
to do so makes her still more ralita
ble. from the standpoint of posslbil!
ties.
Going through the hospitals In our
large cities one is surprised to find such
a large proportion of the patients lying
on those snow-white beds women
and girls, who are either awaiting
or recovering from serious operations.
Why should this be the case ? Sim-
ply because they have neglected them-
selves. Female troubles are certainly
on the increase among the women of
this country—they creep upon them
unawares, but every one of those
patients in the hospital beds had plenty
of warning in that bearing-down feel-
ing, pain atleftorrightof the abdomen,
nervous exhaustion, pain in the small
of the back, dizziness, flatulency, dis-
placements of the organs or irregular-
ities. All of these symptoms are indi-
cations of an unhealthy condition of
the female organs, and if not heeded
the penalty has to be paid by a danger-
ous operation. When these symptoms
manifest themselves, do notdrag along
until you are obliged to go to the hos-
pital and submit to an operation—
but remember that Lydia E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound has saved
thousands of women from surgical
operations.
When women are troubled with ir-
regular, suppressed or painful periods,
weakness, displacement or ulceration
of the organs, that bearing-down feel-
ing, inflammation, backache, bloating
(or flatulency), general debility, indi-
gestion, and nervous prostration, or are
beset with such symptoms as dizziness,
lassitude, excitability, irritability, ner-
vousness, sleeplessness, melancholy,
'all-gone" and "want-to-be-left-
The following letters cannot fail to
bring hope to despairing women.
Miss Ruby Mushrush, of East
Chicago, lnd., writes:
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
441 have been a great sufferer with irregular
periods and female trouble, and about three
months ago the doctor, after using the X-Ray
on me, said I had an abcess and would have
to have an operation. My mother wanted
me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound as a last resort, and it not only
saved me from an operation but made me en-
tirely well"
Mrs. Alice Berryhlll, of 313 Boyce
Street, Chattanooga, Tenn., writes:
Dear Mrr. Pinkham:—
"Three years ago life looked dark to me.
I had ulceration and inflammation of the
female organs and was in a serious condition.
" My health was completely broken down
and the doctor told me that if I was not op-
erated upon I wou/d die witbin six; months.
I told him I would have- no operation but
would try Lydia E. l'itikham's Vegetable
Compound. He tried to influence me against
it but I sent for the medicine that same day
and began to use it faithfuiry. Within five
days I felt relief but was not entirely cured
until I used it for 6ome time.
44 Your medicine is certainly fine. I have
induced several friends and neighbors to take
it and I know more than a dozen who had
female troubles and who to-day are as well
and strong as I am from using your Vege-
table Compound."
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound at once removes such troubles.
Refuse to buy any other medicine, for
you need the best.
Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of
Lydia E. Pinkham. invites all sick wo-
men to write her for advice, Her advice
alone " feelings they should remember i and medicine have restored thousands
there is one tried and true remedy. j to health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Succeeds Where Others Fall.
OUR NEW CATALOGUE IS A MARVEL OF ART
Our Cotton Gin Machinery is all that
the Catalogue claims for it.—Write
us for Catalogue—and tell us what
Machinery you are in need of.
CONTINENTAL GIN COMPANY, DALLAS, TEXAS
Although the dignified man may not
know much, he has to be very care-
ful of what little he does know.
If dying rich is a disgrace, why
doesn't somebody prove it?
Cures Cancer, Blood Poison and Rheu-
matism.
If you have blood poison producing
eruptions, pimples, ulcers. swollen
glands, bumps and risings, burning,
itching skin, copper-colored spots or
rash on the skin, mucous patches in
mouth or throat, falling hair, bone
pains, old rheumatism or foul ca-
tarrh, take Botanic Blood Balm (B.
B. B.) It kills the poison in the blood;
soon all sores, eruptions heal, hard
swellings subside, aches and pains
stop and a perfect cure Is made of
the worst cases of Blood Poison.
For can< er, tumors, swpllings. eating
sores, ugly ulcers, persistent pimples
of all kinds, tak? B. B. B. It destroys
the cancer poison in the blood, heals
cancer of all kinds, cures the worst
humors or suppurating swellings.
Thousands cured by B. B. B. after all
else fails. B. B. B. composed of pure
botanic ingredients. Improves the di-
gestion, makes the blood pure and
rich, stops the awful itching and all
sharp, shooting pains. Thoroughly
tested for thirty years. Druggists, ti
per large bottle, with complete- direc-
tions for home cure. Sample free and
prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co..
Atlanta. Ga. Describe trouble and free
medical advice also sent In sealed let-
ter.
Every woman believes In heredity
to this extent: That her children in-
herited their disagreeable traits from
their father.
The World's Standard
DE LAVAL
CREAM
SEPARATORS
700,000 la Use.
Ten Timet
All Olhen Combined.
Save SIO - per Cow
Every Tear of On
overall Gravity
S-'ttin? Syatem*
and SS - per Cow
over all
Imitating Separators
for mrw IMS Citil^M
THE DE um SEPARATOR CO.
Canal k Randolph Bta. I 74 Cortlandt Street
CHICAGO I NEW YORK
(iv:.H s.nnn nmsrHUH «\p un t mikxi irs.
Not "Just as Good"—It's the Best.
One box of Hunt's Cure is unfailing-
ly. unqualifiedly and absolutely guar-
anteed to cure any form of skin dis-
ease. It is particu'arly active In
promptly relieving and permanently
curing all forms of Pchlng known.
Ecztma, Tetter. Rlugworm and all
similar troubles are relieved by one
application; cured by one box.
Don't Get Wet!
TOWER'S SLICKERS
will keep you dry as
nothing else will, because
they are the product of
the best materials and
leventy years' experi-
ence in manufacturing.
A. J. TOWER CO.
Boston, U.S.A.
. 10WUCAIA9UaOOL.Ul
<
/
All of us are willing to pay for
s#>ats at the theater to listen to the
troubles of people who would bore us
to death in real l fe.
W.N.U.. Oklahoma City, No. 15. 1906.
Wiirrrr ron uwitib «mn asm: abl*-bo4la4
aamarrlad m«o. twtvaan .« . of J1 and SS. flllml
<*•' L'nltod Shala*. of *oo.l character and teiuparaM
L.hit*. who caa .pea* r .d u.d wnu Kogh.h Fa*
Information -rp:; <0 Karmiuag OIImw, Port.
Olfi«* Hnil'intf Oklahoma, Uaihria. IthawaMk
Xa.d. O. t, or T.lw. L *.
I^PilC lAU««i > n.noRRm,
iilhoiuh u..iiin:i<>n,
Jf Successfully Prosecutes Claim*.
I Ut« Pnntiprl FiimT.' r s PMaloa Bui—.
Vlirsiaovlisar. Ua Qi ilira iintmma. uj nrna
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Stewart, A. H. Harrison Gazette. (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 36, Ed. 1 Friday, April 13, 1906, newspaper, April 13, 1906; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc184276/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.