McCurtain Gazette. (Idabel, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 99, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 28, 1912 Page: 2 of 4
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Tbs IIcCcrteh Gazette
V i OLD PiMUImc
' OKLAHOMA
ID ABEL
WATER IN THE COUNTRY
Th government hat issued a bulle-
tin giving Information about tbo thing
(hat bid and wiggle In tb water that
cornea up In "the old oaken bucket"
It la for tbe Inatructlon of (armpeople
who In many Instances have been
careless aboqt the Juxtaposition of pig-
sties and wells sags the Toledo Blade
There 1 not much that la new In tbe
pamphlet the deception of clear and
sparkling water having long ago been
made familiar to tbe farmer but the
warning mag be of service In stimu-
lating changes and putting In Improve
ments contemplated but allowed to
' slip bg There are people however
to whom most of the material In this
pamphlet Is Important-news These
are the campers from ths cities Tbeg
come from places where someone else
guards them from germs and dirt and
' theg are notorlouslg careless about
their source of water supplg Theg
mistake clearness for cleanliness
Theg judge purltg bg tb looks of
things So long as tb water Is spark-
ling and cool that Is evidence in tb
eges of mang of them that the water is
germ-free and life-giving How far
tbeg are mistaken Is to be measured
bg the great number of tgphold and
malarial fever cases which campers
develop after theg get back to town
So much has been said about our
urban population growing faster than
our rural in tbe last decade that the
fact la quite well understood bg now
and get our urban population In the
smaller centers did not make dtscour-
aglnglg Leavg Increases so to speak
as compared with communities from
600000 to 1000000 Inhabitants sags
the Omaha Bee Their percentage of
Increase was 83 per cent The com-
munities of 1000000 and more gained
onlg 323 per cent and get that is far
begond the rural growth of the entire
population of the countrg whose In-
crease was onlg 31 per cent Tbe log-
ic of this drift toward the congested
centers must make us the more mind-
ful of the complex social problems that
there arise to stare us sternlg in the
facs Theg must be met Theg can-
not be evaded Falling as we thus
far have to divert the streams of In-
ternal and external migration into tb
larger open spaces of the countrg w
shall have to treat them where theg
are
Humor and pathos are often com-
bined in Incidents of settlement work
A Philadelphia worker tells of a fam-
ily living In tjie slums whom she per-
suaded to use Ice Theg objected that
theg could not afford the expense
but she was Insistent and theg bought
some Then theg realized that theg
had no Ice chest to keep It In and
theg rented one for a small fee But
this expense was so great a drain on
the family’s resources that Ice could
not be bought to fill IL The chest
was proudly displayed on a table In
the center of the living room as a
prized ornament Eventually free Ice
waa obtained for the happy household
The rats have come out victorious
from the crusade started to make them
goats for files and mosquitoes If this
confusion of natural history can be al-
lowed All tbe weight of tropical tes-
timony Is to the effect that the Insects
and not the rodents are the original
disease-germ carriers Still there Is
no cause In this exoneration to cher-
ish the maligned rat In our midst
King George descended Into a coal
mine the other dag and loosened a
black diamond bg wielding a pick
with his own hands It Is evident
that he Is going to win the favor of
the plain peepul even if it shall be-
come necessary for him to curry a
horse In order to accomplish his pur-
pose The Inventive farmers out west who
use vacuum cleaners to collect grass-
hoppers and then pack the latter away
for poultry feed In winter evoke a
wish from a contemporary that some
genius would devise a means for uti-
lizing professional politicians They
-might be made valuable for fertilizers
Wireless telegraphy may be a bet-
ter subject for children’s strfrles than
Aladdin’s lamp but the child will con-
tinue' to want to read about things he
an never expect to see Just so with
The gruff business man whose favo-
ette hammock literature Is a roman-
tic love etory
A woman In Paris got $1600 dam-
ages tor a broken tooth caused by an
automobile collision It seems a large
amount for one tooth but It will serve
the useful purpose of making autom
bile speeders more cautious about
showing tbelr teeth at the law
i Now an aviator has bad the exped-
ience of being "held up" If the’’ per
formanc could take place In midair
It might have Its bad tendencies revo-
lutionised '
QtoM
“
WILBUR PNESPIT
AN
ARTIFICIAL TMDf
There was an artificial man—
His hair was not his own -
One eg was glass on ear was wax
His nos was carved from bone
His leg were manufactured ones
His teeth were deftly made
file riba of rubber also were
Within bis form arrayed
He wooed a maid of paint and puff
Whose face and form were art
And found she had when theg were wed
An artificial heart
However they did not Indulge
In petty stresa and strife
They hired their fussing done and led
An artificial life
They read by artificial light
At artificial rice
Drank artificial water cooled
By artificial Ice
An artificial organ played
Them artificial tunes
A phonograph would sooth their babe
With artificial croons
Alas! At last there cam a day
To harrow up the soul
The artificial man could not
Buy artificial coaL
And with no artificial heat
To warm their chilly breath
They Imitated other folks
In artificial death
The Fat and Thin Men Reune
The fat man stood on the corner hi
ears hidden hg a huge fur collar bis
hands stuck deep In the pockets of his
heavy overcoat and a big cigar smold-
ering luxuriously between hts lips
The thin man his nose red with cold
his eges watering bis hat pulled down
until It flattened his ears his collar
turned up In an unsuccessful attempt
to conceal his Adam's apple his
trousers flapping about his legs
fidgeted to tbe corner also and waited
for £ car
"Why hello!" exclaimed the fat
man “Happy New Year to ye! Gosh!
You look cold But worse 'n that you
look as If you was dyln for a smoke
Ain’t ye?"
The thin man snapped his eyelids to
rid them of the frost but answered
nothing
“Ho ho?” laughed the fat man his
cigar rolling to tbe corner of his
mouth In order to allow the laughter
to roll out “Good resolution eh?
Smokin' 'a a bad habit huh? Runs up
expenses an' affects the heart an
gets a man to thlnkln’ he can’t do
anything without one o the vile weeds
stuck In his mouth I know all about
It Know Just bow you feel”
The thin man looked nervously down
the street for the car but It wasn't In
sight The fat man continued:
“Bet you’re Just dyln right now for
a smoke Huh? How you'd enjoy a
real nice big soft oily cigar! Been
a real good man now for two whole
days — an' there's no livin’ with you at
home 8urel When you get up from
the table you stick your fingers In
your vest pocket abseht-mlnded-IIke
reachln’ for one o the enemies of
health! Thee you recollect about your
halo an wings an growl around a
while Ho ho ha ha!"
The fat man shook all over with Joy
while the thin man trembled all over
and gave on the Impression he re-
ceives when he sees a dog shiver In
the wind You could fairly see the
thin man’s skin wrinkle The fat man
went on:
"I’ll bet that right now you are
thlnkln o’- bow fine it d be to bite the
end off a grea’ big cigar an’ light It
an’ feel th’ warm smoke curl up over
your nose an’ smell th perfume of
It! Huh! Oh how you would enjoy
that! Like So pull on it like this”—
The fat men took a long puff then
exhaled a perfect cloud of smoke
through which came hla further re-
marks "An’ you miss th company of It
You don't know what to do without a
cigar to chew on when you think an’
kind o puff slow-llke while you digest
your meals an to hold ’tween your
fingers while you read th’ paper an
to— Oh! Ouch! What’s th’ matter
with you anyhow?" -
J5qt the thin man having smashed
the fat man’s cigar Into his fur collar
with one hand and applied a vicious
short jab with tbe other was hasten-
ing on to ths next corner to resume
waiting for th car
MUST BEGIN PLANNING EARLY
i
The City Beautiful Is a Matter of
Wa Thought Extending for
Many Years
In the awakening to the Imperative
seed of a different and better method
of city making America is following
the precedent of other nations Con-
tinental European cities decades ago
and English and 8outh American cit-
ies mora recently changed radically
their municipal regulations and their
methods of building cities The splen-
did results of their activity are now
apparent to every citizen and visitor
In tha cities of Germauy especially
the resulti are large and convincing
Transportation and highway systems
water fronts harbors and docks In-
dustrial and commercial development
publlo recreation better home par-
ticularly for families of small means
—such great municipal subjects as
these have been handled with skill
and experience supported by law and
public authority
There are many misconceptions cur-
rent about town and city planning but
none la further from tbe fact than the
notion that comprehensive plans are
only for large cities The reverse 1
nearer the truth In big cities the
conditions are comparatively fixed
and unyielding Comprehensive plan-
ning especially with our present lim-
ited city charters and the hampering
lawa of our states can have only nar-
rowly limited Influence In larger
places — relieving only the worst civlo
conditions ameliorating merely the
most acute forms of congestion cor-
recting but the gravest mistakes of
tbe past Wide many-sided Imagina-
tive planning so far aa large Ameri-
can cities are concerned must be con-
fined for the present mainly to tbe ex-
tension of those cities and to the bet-
terment of what are really separate
communities on the outskirts
But with small cities with a popula-
tion ranging from 3500 to 100000 the
case Is different Comprehensive plan-
ning or replanning may be to them of
far-reaching and permanent service
There Is scarcely anything In the
mailer places that may not be
changed In small cities for example
railroad approaches may be set right
grade crossing eliminated water
fronts redeemed for commerce or rec-
reation or both open spaces acquired
even In built-up sections
A satisfactory street plan can be
carried out and adequate highway
established publlo buildings can be
grouped In at least an orderly Way
and a park system made up of well
distributed and well balanced publlo
grounds can be outlined for gradual
and systematic development All of
these Civic elements Indispensable
sooner or later to a progressive com-
munity may be had in the smaU city
with relative ease and at slight cost
INFLUENCE OF TROLLEY CARS
Have In Large Measure Annihilated
Distance and Mad Comfortable
Living Easier
In days of old cities were developed
somewhat compactly for business wai
transacted In the Immediate presence
of the principals Then came In tb
telephone making possible easy and
quick communication between distant
points This Influence alone tended
to the spread of city areas so far as
business districts were concerned but
It bas remained for tbe trolley car tc
practically annihilate distance so fai
as residence Is concerned This has
resulted In figuratively bringing ths
country Into the city for one maj
come to tbe center of Los Angeles
from many points without the munici-
pal boundaries as quickly as he may
reach the same point from some parti
of the city proper One may even
come as quickly from Santa Ana ot
many of the beaches Thua has the
trolley car made a great change In
the growth of the land both In city
and country — Lot Angelea Times
Sand for Children’s Playground
The writer would much like to see
towns villages and tbe smaller cen-
ters ot population furnish aand-pllei
for tbe children A few loads of sand
wonld cost but little and mean much
to a considerable number ot children
The local schoolyard might easily be
used for vacation playing and th
and pile built there The school
trustees would even be Justified la
furnishing the sand from the genera
fund It la the duty of publlo offi-
cials to fee that tha children get all
the freedom and enjoyment possible
and the free range of tbe school
grounds together wttb n ample pile
of sand wilt do much for the Uttl
one
Proportionate Park Areas
The city of London has reserved a
little more than 10 per cent of It
area for park purposes or 7644 acre!
1 out of a total of 74000 acres contain-
ed In the county These figures do
- not Include a number of parka within
t easy reach of the metropolis some of
- them very large in size 1 Richmond
eontaln 2469 acres and Epplng For-
est 6663 acres and both are Immedi-
ately contiguous to tbe city making a
’ total of more than 15000 acres re-
served for the pleasure of London’
millions Few Important cities are
to wall provided with publlo parka
PEE WEE OFFICIATES
How an “Abnormal” Chiu’s Fu-
neral Resurrected Love
By ORA M M’DERMOTT
The wind whisked through tb fox-
tails on tbe unpretentious bill snd set
them to conciliatory bowing Above
on tbe crest of tha Jo browed moun-
tain It taunted tb plnea Into deep
throated grumbles aa they strained
their shaggy tops toward tha cloud-
strewn kky The world slumbered In
n blue end gold hate but Pee Wee
wes at oute with th scheme of
things '
In this little health resort where a
shuttered hotel and natural ’ hot
springs sufficed to satisfy all ex-
penditure of energy which tha sum-
mer visitor felt Inclined toward
making there waa a minimum of em-
ployment for a small girl's activities
Maternal edict had boxed up her
dolls at home and only a green flan-
nel rooster had managed to be smug-
gled with her Into this pocket of the
world
But there la a certain lack of tem-
perament In a green flannel rooster
aa Pee Wee had been forced to ac-
knowledge after certain moods had
revealed him entirely Inadequate To-
day he waa banished under mother's
bureau where he lay catching tha
dust in hla green glass eyea while
Pee Wee took her restless little spirit
forth to bunt adventure and let tbe
wind blow through the curia that
crowded hotly upon her shoulder
Mother wae aaleep It waa usually
so Of course thla waa due to moth-
er's being delicate but It made life
often lonesome for Pee Wee whose
leeping hours were short and fleet
8he bad sat at the foot of the bed
and told excited tales about the red
dragon and the blue princess today
until mother bad pleaded with her to
"Please run away— somewhere” In
the black mist of gloom which had
wept down upon her at thla deprecia-
tion of her fiction's charm she' had
rushed out to tbe porch for consols-
"Pleat Cornel"
tton An old man drowsed In tbe
carpet-seated rocking chair snoring
with exasperating finality Hong the
Chinese cook was scrubbing the din-
ing room floor and his weird singing
floated out through the window from
which -flowered curtains fluttered
gaily But neither peace nor Industry
was welcome to Pee Wee so she
turned from their vicinity and ram-
bled around toward the dust barrel
where she w-as accustomed to find
dead mice that Hong shook out from
mouse traps
To understand her reasons for this
ghoulish predilection one muBt take
her age Into consideration She was
Just old enough to be feeling the birth-
pangs of personality and too young to
resent them Burying something was
beginning to be an emotional Indul-
gence already Having as yet no past
sin nor dead affections to bury she
found satisfaction In objective funer-
als where tbe role of corpse was play-
ed by anything ranging from a stick
of kindling to a gold fish At present
dead mice were In favor and just be-
yond tbe barbed wire fence she bad
an artistic graveyard tbe extension of
which waa one ot her dear desires
So Pee Wee rummaged through the
dust barrel There were three mice
In its depths but one waa too tiny
and the other rather untidy looking
Finally ahe decided on the third a
plump brown fellow who deserved a
respectable funeral and promised to
make a good-sized grave She knew
where poison berries grew and with
their luscious rednesi for decoration
ahe would have a masterpiece ot a
funeral
Yet stay what fun wras a funeral
without participants? The only other
small girl In the establishment had
left yesterday There would be no
one but her self to enjoy the artistio
mourufulnesa of it all That would be
a waste pf talent But the mouse
would not keep until tomorrow and
perhaps she might never again find
one so satisfactorily deceased As-
suredly some mortuary accomplice
must be found at once
Perhaps some one was upon the
hill Optimistically she wsded
through the foxtails holding her
mouse firmly hy Its tatL Her skirts
ballooned with the' wind and she
breathed deep After all how good
It was to walk In short dresses When
she reached tbs 'top of a knoll ths
glimpse of a blue skirt arrested her
attention
"Hoe-boo you la hlue-oo" she Shoal-
ed and raced toward It waving the
mouae la the air
“Mercy child" erled the wearer of
the bine skirt “throw away that
naaty mouae"
"No— oo” breathed Pee Wee To
going to bury IL You come help me"
"Bury Itt Why bow disgusting"
tbe girl exclaimed "You're not nor-
mal child"
It mattered not to Pee Wee that
he waa unacquainted with her nega-
tive quality 8ha accepted Its ab-1
aence notwithstanding
"No but Pm lonesome" ahe walled
“Please come You needn't do any-
thing but watch me"
“I'm lonesome too" aald the girl
with a catch In her voice and lead-
ing her head upon one band she began!
to tear at some foxtails with tha other
“Well come on then" ' Pee Wee'
urged with logical conviction But
the girl shook her head and allentl
bent lower -
The alienee grated on Pee Wee’s'
restless little nerves She could not
choose between pleading and raging!
so ab decided on neither Hurt snd
disappointed she finally turned and'
rushed blindly up the hill again where
she flung herself down by the eldeof a
rock snd shed a few acrid tears Aft-
er more refused to come she lay kick-
ing her heela in fierce meditation on
the whyness ot rocks and wlnda and
mica and mothers
“What’a the trouble - kiddle?" a
man’ voice asked auddenly
Pee Wee aat up one curl In her
mouth
"I’m lonesome" she explained
"So am I" be announced gravely
"I want some one to help me bury
thla"— and the mouse wai produced
"O-ho" he aald "I see Well will I
do?" ’
Pee Wee rose at once and took him
trustfully by tha hand while a smile
fought Its way serosa her damp face
"Hm-hm You be minister" she
said coyly
“Well But— er— what religion did
the mouse profess before he passed
Into the Great Beyond?”
She stared at him uncomprehend-
ingly “I mean where has hla soul gone?"
he elucidated
Pee Wee speculated A great
orange butterfly lunged by striving
against the wind With Inspiration
Pee Wee waved her fingers toward It
"That’s hla souL It hasn't gone any
place yet He died just today you
know” she beamed
“I see” he remarked aeriouBly
During tbla time Pee Wee was lead-
ing him toward tbe girl In blue With
feminine barbarism Bhe wished to ex-
hibit her capture Perhaps even tbe
girl in blue might be moved to Join
them and Increase the pageantry of
the occasion Before theman had
seen the girl they were upon her and
Pee Wee asked patronizingly
“Would you like to bn at my funer-
al now? I’ll let you be chief mourner
If you want”
The girl looked up and tbe man
looked down Her eyea were red
from crying and his had weary cir-
cles under them
“Oh" they both apoke at once and
she stiffened
“I thought — I mean I have been
chief mourner" be aald confusedly
“No you’re minister” said Pee
Wee “Come on with the funeral”
"I— I don't think — I mean It’s too
late for a funeral!” said the girl turn-
ing away listlessly
Suddenly the man dropped Pee
Wee’s hand and bent over the girl
talking fast and to Pee Wee unin-
telligibly “It Isn't — It Isn't” he insisted Then
they ignored Pee Wee entirely
“Are you going to have a funeral or
aren't you?" Pee Wee demanded
crossly after a period of strain
The man turned to her
“No we're going to have a resur-
rection ’’ and he helped the girl to
her feet
Pee Wee was deeply cut at hla
treachery But somehow this time a
steely pride supported her She set
her chin and shook out her curls
“All right” she said “all right"
When she had put a few steps be-
tween herself and them she said
again: "All right But you can't
have my mouse In your resurrection"
Then she dropped It Into a crevice
of two rocks and went back to the
hotel to beg a cookie of the China-
man leaving the lover to their resur-
rection and tbe foxtails to tbe wind
Bite About th Baby
Nervousness may not be catalogued
as a disease but If It Is not It cer-
tainly should be
Tbe mother who Is nervous will al-
ways have a nervous baby and unless
that baby Is treated In the proper
manner the nerves will develop most
troublesome habits to say the least
Take for Instance the case of a
young mother who cannot sleep welt
her child will not sleep either he wilt
not grow as much as he should nor
In tbe way he should His food wilt
not agree with him In the first place’
and unless this trouble Is corrected
early In hla life chronto Indigestion
will -certainly be hla Inheritance
Tbe lack of sleep and poor assimila-
tion of tha food he takes will produce
all aorta of ailments undermire the
health and arrest the natural devel-
opment If the mother does not nurse the
baby— and it Is better for the nervoua
anaemlo mother not to attempt It—
then tha selection of n proper food la
a great problem Cow's milk modified
with barley water Is the best substi-
tute for healthy breast milk but
sometimes tbe little stranger cannot
taka the cow's milk Then tha beat
thing to do la to consult the doctot
and let him suggest whatever he may
think la visa to uso Instead
Whenever You
Use Your DacK
Does a Sharp
Fain Hit too?
It’s a sign of
alck kidneys ea
peclally If th
kidney notion Is
disordered too
passages scanty
or too frequent
or off-color
Do not neglect
any little kidney
111 or the slight
troubles run into
dropsy gravel
atone or Bright's
disease
TTse Doan’s Kidney Pills This
good remedy cures bad kidneys
A TYPICAL CASE—
L O Warner ins N Utrtld At- Poet11L
“ “nad
Idabo Ban: “Kldnuf oumplalni oftn ©on On
me to bed for weeks I pa eas’d kidney atones
and the pain waa terrible Morphine wae nif
only relief until 1 used ttoan'e Kidney PHli
After taking this remedy the atone dissolved
bow frww from
idoey trouble"
Get Doan’s at say Drag Store 50c Box
Doan’s “1-1 Zr
TEXT TAKEN TOO LITERALLY
Ttn-Ysar-Old Julia Gets Into Bad
Graces of Mother by Giving Tramp '
- a Half-Dollar'
"Bo not forgetful to entertain
strangers for thereby some have en-
tertained angels unawares"
The foregoing quotation la from
chapter xllt verse 2 Book ot Hebrews
and It la Introduced solely because It
constitutes a vital part of thla story
Julia la ten years old and ahe goes to
Sunday school It appears that on a
recent occasion the Sunday achdol
teacher had considerable to say about
thla matter of "entertaining angel
unawares” Anyway It made a deep
Impression with Julia
A few day after the lesson Julia’s
mother left her In charge ot the bouse
for n few hours When the mother re-
turned she went to a particular cup
In the cupboard to extract therefrom
one-half dollar In this cup la kept
the family pin money and Julia’s
mother knew that ahe bad put 60
cents there before she had gone out
But the half dollar waa gone There
waa an expression of anxiety on
Julia’s faea and mother scented mis-
chief '
“Did yon take that money?” asked
the mother somewhat severely
Julia broke Into tears ”1 gave It to
a man that came to tbe back door"
sobbed the little girl - -
“Gave It to a man!” exclaimed th
mother “What for?"
“I thought he might be God" tear-
fully replied Julia— Kanaaa City Star
Obliging
A young man who had never testi-
fied before was called before the court
aa a witness In a certain case He
was somewhat flustered over the at-
tention that waa being paid him and
mumbled hla words so that tbe young
woman atenograijier could not hear
them distinctly He was told to speak
plainly and to turn toward the stenog-
rapher “Speak to the stenographer" aald
the prosecutor
At that the yonng man arose and
with a deep bow to the lady aald
"How do you do?"— Satire
Minor Bookkeeping Item
A small item was overlooked In the
bookkeeping department of the United
States navy It waa the charge for
guns Installed on the battleships Flor-
ida and Utah The Item was for the
trifling sum of $1800000
6ervlng Humanity
Few callings are more highly es-
teemed than that of the trained nurse
Miss Ellen Emerson the granddaugh-
ter of Ralph Waldo Emerson la a
nurse In the Massachusetts general
hospital at Boston
If you would get up la the world
you might patronize a roof garden
RIGHT HOME
Doctor Recommends Postum from Per-
- sonal Test
— No one Is better able to realize th
Injurious action of caffeine— the drug
In coffee— on tie heart than tbe doc-
tor Tea Is just as harmful aa coffee
because It too contains the drug caf-
feine When the doctor himself has been
relieved by simply leaving off coffee
and using Postum be can refer with
full conviction to his own case
A Mo physician prescribes Postum
for many of hla patients because he
was benefited by it He says:
"I wish to add my testimony In re-
gard to that excellent preparation—
Postum I have had functional or
nervous heart trouble for over 16
years and a part of the time waa un-
abl to attend to my business
"I was a moderate user of coffee and
did not think drinking It hurt me But
on stopping It and UBlng Postum In-
stead my heart ha got all right and
1 ascribe It to th change from coffee
to Postum
"1 am prescribing It now In cases of
atekneas especially when coffee does
not agree or affects the heart nerves
or stomach '
"When made right It has a much bet-
ter flavor than coffee and la a vital
ustalner of tbe system 1 shall con-
tinue to recommend it to our people
: and I have my own case to refer to
Nam given by Poatum Co Battle
Creek Mich Read the little book
“The Road to Weljvllle" ' In pkga
"There’s s reason"
Ever m4 (he eheve bttrrl A new
M eeerare Inn tin te tin They
nsnalM tm ul fall 1 Sanaa
J Alv
The high price of mt
past few year has
Uenlarly dairymen to
tlon to making good vi
n woeful lack of this kl
on ths market
- Most dairymen will
trouble to fatten calvea
to market Just at sot
post the age limit an
entirely unsatisfactory
sellar and ths custom)
WsU fatted calvea
110 to 160 pound alw
Prices so matter whai
of th cattle market mi
’ pis eat a great deal of
consume much more If
what they want but th
th market la for thi
stringy unfinished and
Ufaetory
Many calvea era aold
eld at $ 'to 4 cent pa
if fed until they weigh
' wonld bring double th
dairymen have not yet 1
feed calvea In order i
veaL
Th European farms
money out of th right
youngster la carefully j
day ha la born being cb
tails He la fed liberal
'CHEAPEST HA'
Second Crop Clover li
- Feed for Cowi
J ’ Sheep
! Beeond crop clover li
Winter forage for cows
Clover when cured witho
' aged by rain la tha chea
hay for cows In milk ai
young lamb Owing to
of tbe hay crop througbot
(he young clover and fo
Weeds growing In the w
should be cut and cured t
rains set In Second c
worth too mnch as feed t
for manure Save the
pad plow under tbe etui
end lime for corn in ths
' food Tor poultry when bu
poultry men eay that no
except it may be alfalfa
second-crop red clover o
free from rain and steepi
water during the night foi
-next day Uae the water
clover wae steeped In for
bran and corn chop whl
Over makes one of th
foods for laying hena dur
ter month
In the grain-growing 4
second crop Is niually c
If the first crop Is cut ei
stubble dressed with 200
plaster to the acre a good
may b grown If tbe aeas
hble Beea are n great
(ribntlng the clover pollen
Seed la harvested the stubb
for corn
NEED OF MOISTE
CORN WHILE
Excellent Time Is Whe
0
H
Ordinarily corn ent at
time does not need any w
to make good atlage -1
times however when It li
to add water to the corn la
Ho The corn In the all
time of filling should fee
nut moist water should be
Under any ot tha folios
tlona water should be adl
corn when filling tba all
when the corn la too rlp
leaves and part of tha atalki
out to such an extent that
iyot pack well Second
corn la severely- froien be!
reached the proper degree
Ity liberating tha molatur
Ing the leaves and sterna d
whan refilling tba alio lata
rltb shocked corn It la al
ary to add water
There are two ways to a
drat put a boas In tha alio
ughly saturate the dry po
eclally around tbe walla
i here the blower cutter la
a Inch itream of water
Irwer when It la at work '
dd a aufPolent amount of
lanre good results
Tan-B
FORAGE IN
Too Ripe or Sevt
Frozen
—
i i
&nwr?- -H
rrcirr— i'f jiu
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Old, W. J. McCurtain Gazette. (Idabel, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 99, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 28, 1912, newspaper, September 28, 1912; Idabel, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2323752/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.