The Logan County News. (Crescent, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1914 Page: 7 of 8
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THE LOOAN COUNTY HEWS
EXCELLENT SOIL FOR THE CELERY CROP
Highly Efficacious in Tubercu-
losis.
.
Only a chance to rest) ™ faitm in garlic i
your hands and back Belief Among Physicians That It Is
is worth five cents.
BUT there's no chance
about RUB-NO-MORE
WASHING POWDER. It
wouldn't increase in
sales every week un-
less it made house-
work much easier.
Excellent 8pocimers of Bunched Celery.
, Celery plants may be set out early |
(a July In the north and in the mild- '
er climates planting la carried on up '
to the first of August. It is not as
difficult to raise celery as people be- i
lieve, although the crop requires more
attention than thn average garden ,
plants. Celery plants can be bought j
at from fifty to sixty cents per 100, j
but one always takes a chance in buy- j
Ing thein. Of course the best way is j
to raise your own plants from seed.
The planting of the seed should he
done very early in the spring, and
after the plants have obtained a good
growth the real cultivation begins.
Ground that has borne a crop of
peas makes a good celery soil, pro-
CABBAGE PLANT PEST
MEASURES SHOULD BE TAKEN
TO CHECK ITS RAVAGES.
vtded the crop was thoroughly fertll-
lzed and cultivated. • The furrows
should be about three feet apart for
the self-blanching celery and about
five feet for those kinds thnt are to
be blanched by banking with earth.
If boards are to be used the rows
need not b« more than four feet apart.
The furrows should be made at least
a foot deep and about three inches of
well-rotted manufe placed in the bot-
tom. Scrapings from the barnyard
with a little soil mixed in makes a
good fertilizer for celery. The fer-
tilizer should be worked in and well
smoothed, and the plants set In a per-
fectly straight line about six inches
apart in the row.
CARE OF THE YOUNG CHICKS
Youngsters Are Better Off Without
Food Until 48 Hours Old—Use
Simplest of Rations.
\ mover for cl<
It cleans your
•' sinks, toilet
RUB-NO MORE
Washing Powder
HI'B- NO - MORE
W ASHING POWDER
is a sudless dirt re-
mover for clothes.
dishes,
lets and
t-U'ans and sweetens
your milk crocks. It
kills germs* It does
nof need hot water.
Rl B-NO-MORE
Carbo Naptha Soap
Five Cents—All Grocers
Physicians on this side of the
lantic are experimenting with garlic
as a possible cure for the dreaded tu
berculosis
A Dublin doctor has been working
on the theory for some years past
with considerable success and has
published a book upon it. and although
it is too soon yet to tell of results in
this country, It is being tried at the
Metropolitan hospital in New York
It is said that there is little tuber-
culosis in Italy* where garlic chewing
is a national habit, and that in this
country it Is the Italian children who
have given up chewing garlic w ho suc-
cumb to the "great white plague."
tlarllc contains a chemical substance
called allyl sulphide in the percent-
age of two drops to a teaspoonful of
Juice, which is much stronger than
the amount of the same chemical
I found In onions or shallots. It is this
And feel your thirst slip
away You'll finish refreshed,
cooled, satisfied.
I'rmand the jrtiuinr h? fun n
Mikiuunra cut image auhafitui
COCA-COLA
atlanta, ga.
drug which, it Is claimed, destroys the
The Rub-No-More Co., Ft.Wayne, Ind. tubercular bacilli.
Garllo Juice Ih mild to net very quick-
DAISY FLY KILLER fr'" *u I 1.V upon tuberculoid of the throat.
which heretofore has been ulmost lm-
t ossible to treat, anil application of
the lulco to lupus (tuberculosis of the
skin I bus excellent result* unless the
(Unease Is of long standing.
anything.
Ounnulteril rlTectlv*.
All d«ol*ra <"
HAHOLD 80MER8. 160 Deft.lb Av
(By H U KEMP8TEH. Missouri Experl-
— meat Station.)
, ' During the ilrst two days of the
Caterpillars Riddle Outer Leaves and chjcii'8 life It should rest and be kept
Then Burrow Into the Heads, De- I wlirm it )a better without having
vouring Substance and Spoil- | food until It la 48 hours old. Then the
Ing Plant for Table Use. 1 following mixture should be fed In
I dry litter and also in a shallow tray:
The white cabbage butterfly which j Three parts finely cracked wheat, 3
came to us from Europe about fifty j parts finely cracked coru, 1 part steel
years ago, Is now one of our common- j cut oats Keep some of tills in the
est butterflies, and may be seen flit- | litter all the time.
ting about everywhere from early
spring until late fall, it Is one of
the worst pests that the cabbage
grower has to contend with unless
measures are taken to prevent its
ravages, and happily this is a matter
of no great difficulty. The butterfly
lays her eggs on the leaves of the
food-plant; the caterpillars are vel-
vety green and alinoBt exactly the
color of the leaves upon which they
are feeding; when at rest they lie at
length upon the midrib and are not
easily seen. There are two broods In
the year, the latter being much the
mora numerous, and sometimes a
third brood, if the autumn should be
White Cabbage Butterflies.
fine and warm The caterpillars rid-
dle the outer leaves and then burrow
Into the heads, devouring the sub-
stance and spoiling the plant for table
use by their excrement. Besides cab-
bages and cauliflowers they also at-
tack mignonette and nasturtiums.
Pyrethrum powder Is thoroughly ef-
fective. One pound should be mixed
with four pounds of cheap flour and
kept in an air tight Jar or canister for
24 hours so the poison may be thor-
oughly Incorporated with the flour.
The plants Infested should be dusted
with the mixture with a small bel-
lows or In a cheesecloth bag tapped
lightly with a Blender rod. This pow-
der will kill Insects but Is harmless
to human beings. Pyrethrum pow-
der—two ounces—dissolved In three
gallons of luke-warm water UBed aa a
spray, will kill all the caterpillars It
reaches at once. Paris green and
other virulent poisons should never
. be applied to cabbages and vegetables
of any kind that are Intended for table
use.
SCIENCE OF BUTTER MAKING
Man or Woman Who Gue «ea at Things
Generally Comes Out at the
Little End o' the Horn.
We know now that butter making Is
an exact science, and the man or worn-
tui who guesseB at things in the dairy
•work generally comes out at the little
end of the horn.
If the butter does not come quickly
or froths too much, write to your state
experiment station, giving the facts,
end get the correct information regard-
ing the trouble.
The dairy house should be well ven-
tilated, near the top, and should be
absolutely dust proof.
If the dairy house cannot be made
dust proof, then all the milk, cream
and butter should be kept covered to
prevent dirt being blown in.
Chicks should have access to a clean
drinking fountain which should be so
constructed that they cannot get them-
selves wet. It is also desirable to glvo
them access to sour skim milk or but-
ter milk. Twice daily the chicks
should receive rolled oats or the fol-
lowing mixture: Three parts bread
crumbs, 3 parts corn bread, 1 part
boiled egg. This mixture may be fed
dry or It may be moistened with sour
milk. A very small amount of char-
coal and finely cut green food should
also be fed
Continue the mixture of wheat, corn
and oats until the chicks are four
weeks old, changing gradually from
the finer to more coarsely ground feed.
Keep the following mixture iu a box
where chicks may run to it at all
times: Thirty parts wheat bran, 30
parts corn meal, 30 parts wheat mid-
dlings, 10 parts beef scrap, sifted tine
and 1 part bone meal.
Keep fln * charcoal and grit where
chicks may have free access to it-
Feed four times daily Continue the
green feed and give the chicks milk.
It may be advisable to feed a wet mash
once a day at 4 p. m. Feed only what
the chicks will eat up clean before
going to roost. Change gradually from
chick food to cracked corn and wheat.
Chickens that are not yarded should
be fed corn and wheat in litter as a
scratch food and should also have ac-
cess to a dry mash in a hopper where
they can help themselves.
Raise chickens with the simplest ra-
tions possible. Clean food, consisting
of cracked and ground grain; animal
food, such as sour milk, buttermilk,
commercial meat scrap and bone
meal; clean water, plenty of shade,
comfortable and dry quarters, freedom
from lice and access to clean, fresh
earth, are essentials for successful
brooding.
BLINDNESS IS BOY'S FATE
Appalling Effect of Careless Action
Will Be the Permanent Loss of
Child's Eyesight.
Gashed across the face by a pair
of scissors which a playmate thought-
lessly wielded in a reckless manner,
three-year-old Thomas Inglesbry will
lose the sight of both eyes. The in-
jured boy is in a critical condition in
the Polyclinic hospital, and physicians
say that, even though an operation to
! remove the terribly lacerated optics
I be necessary, he will be blinded for
: life.
With several companions who were
| spending last evening in his home,
i young Inglesbry was cutting strips
from a newspaper to solve a picture
puzzle. One of his playmates, uncon-
| scious of Inglesbry's presence, threw
| out the hand in which he was holding
the scissorB. The sharp point struck
the lglesbry boy's right eye and swept
across the bridge of his nose, penetrat-
ing the other eye. Both eyeballs were
almost gouged from their sockets.
The wounded child's screams of agony
attracted his parents, and they hur-
ried him to the hospital.—Philadelphia
inquirer.
It Was New to Him.
It was in a city restaurant that a
little short woman and her tall hus-
band entered and sat at a table
"Will you have fried oysters?"
HAD THE CAP AND MESSAGE
Monkey's Fun With Messenger Boy
Was Altogether One Sided, for a
Period, at Least.
A clerk on the fifth floor of the hall
of records at New York saw a dark ob-
ject flit by a window and opened the
window to investigate As he poked
his head out he saw a fairly large
sized monkey chattering and scolding
from the next window sill. Down be-
low a crowd had gathered, attracted
by the unusual sight, and among the
Quite Useless.
"Hlobson has a large collection of
cups."
Does he drink out of them?"
"Certainly not They are trophies "
"There are some queer people iti
this world. I once knew a man who
had a collection of stamps he valued
at $10,000. and there wasn't one in the
lot that would carry a letter.''
ir.
tail Fr
•dy Co . Chicago.
Many a man who f<
born leader only succt
bad example.
Is that he Is a
ds in setting a
asked the man, glancing over the bill ; most Interested was a hatleBs mes
of fare." senger boy His interest was explained
"YeB," answered the little short ( by the fact that the monkey held his
woman, as she tried In vain to touch j hat in its paws and seemed about to >
her toes to the floor. "And John, 1 tear it up, number plate, and all. T\>'1 (>>>*« It/ill Itluc. much hotter, gnea
and deliver your j farther than liquid blue, (let from any
want a hassock."
John nodded, and. as he handed hiB
order to the waiter, he said, "And
bring a hassock for the lady."
"One hassock?" repeated the waiter,
with more than ordinary Interest.
Then he lingered around the table,
brushing the tablecloth, and rearrang
Ing the articles on It, while his face
got very red. Finally he came around
to John's side and whispered;
"Say, mister, I haven't been here
long and I'm not on to all these
things Will the lady have the has-
sock boiled or fried!"
ITCHING. BURNING ECZEMA
R. F. D. No. 1, Box 15, Corapeake,
N. C.—"My baby began with the ecze-
ma itching and burning. It broke out
all over his head and face, legs and
arms with little pimples. I did not
' sleep any In about four months. He
cried and Itched all night and day for
four months until his head and face
were matter all over. He was disfig-
ured badly. His clothing would bo
difficult to remove at times.
"I tried two treatments with no suc-
cess at all and I had almost decided
there was no cure for It. I was told
by a friend that Cuticura Soap and
Ointment would cure It. I washed the
child with the Cuticura Soap and
warm water two or three times a day,
then anointed him all over with the
Cuticura Ointment. He took a great
change and slept night and day. I
used Cuticura Soap and Ointment six
months and he was cured complete-
ly." (Signed) Mrs. Arma Lee, Mar.
24, 1914.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
card "Culicura, Dept. h, Boston."—Adv.
SOME TIMELY GARDEN HINTS
Get After the Detestable Weed, Bur-
dock—Go Over Grape Vine* and
Pinch Off Weak Branches.
This Is the month in which to kill
that deteBtable weed, burdock. It
flowers once every two years, and If
the plant is cut oft below ground after
the flowering stalk appears, It will
trouble you no more.
Weeds going to seed right alons
now. Get very busy with the scythe,
the mower, the hoe and everything
else that will put them out of busi-
ness.
Go over the grape vines and pinch
off the weak and spindling fruit-
bunches, and thus give the strong
ones a chance to mature.
Know what makes the beautiful,
shiny blackberries quickly turn rusty
black or brown after they are picked*
Letting them lie unprotected In the
hot sun.
Go over the peach trees and pinch
off every other fruit bud. It Is not
easy to bring oneself to do this, but
more fruit will be the result.
The bunches of cobwebs on tha
trees come before you know It. They
are the work of the fall web worm,
and the torch Is the remedy.
The last cultivation should be given
the orchard this month
Mosquitoes bad? Take a look
around to see If there is not a pool
of stagnant water or a rain barrel
near the house. The pests breed In
such places.
Lime upland acid soils to benefit a!'
falfa and clover.
The Mammoth Microbe.
"The microbe craze Is a good thing,"
said Dr. Egbert It. Hewittson, the well-
known hlstologist, at a dinner at At-
lantic City.
"Yes, the microbe craze is a good
thing. It has cleaned up the world.
It has put a lot of diseases on the run.
But, at the same time, It has Its hu-
morous side.
"I frequently urge my little son to
have nothing to do with dogs or cats,
because they are full of microbes.
This morning, however, I came upon
him on the beach playing with a stray
mongrel. But just as I came up he
quitted the mongrel hurriedly.
" 'Papa.' he said, 'it's true about
dogs having microbes. A big black
microbe just Jumped out of that dog'B
coat and lighted on my hand.' "
"lluii along, sonny,
message," said a stout man, who was
among the watchers. "I'll stay till the j
monkey Is caught and keep your cap j
for you."
"Dat's all right," said the messenger. !
"but de message Is In me cap."
The monkey ran from window to
window trying to evade the volunteers j
who rapidly organized a pursuit and
finally captured it. Its collar bore the
name of William H. Benjamin of 56 !
I'ine street. Over the telephone Mr. j
Benjamin said he bought the animal j
from a South American sailor recently. !
and it had escaped by unfastening its ;
chain In hiB office before he could take j
it to hiB home at Morristown, N. J. Mr. j
Benjamin called at the hall of records j
later and got his monkey.
«ro.n
Adv
Those who win success by practise
haven't time to do much preaching.
To remove poreness use llanford's
Balsam. Adv.
Some men will do more for a cheap
cigar than they will for a dollar.
Fanny Fanned Out.
"So Jack is engaged, 1b he?
is Fanny the bride-to-be?"
"No, she's the tried-to-be."
The Haughty Dog.
"My new dog Ignores me."
"If you had a pedigree as long as
his you'd be exclusive, too."
De man who kin sidestep Trouble
ever' day In de week an' go ter church
an' shout hallelula on Sunday la bo
clost ter heaven dat It's a wonder he
don't Bay "Goodby, all," an' step In.
The Pilgrim.
Alfred Noyes, the exponent of "pay-
ing poetry," told a good story at
Princeton.
"One morning," he said, "my work
was interrupted by a Westerner. He
rushed in on me enthusiastically, He
bruised my hand with the power of
his cordial clasp. He made me Bit
down and write my name 50 times on
a sheet of foolscap that he drew from
his pocket—he wanted to distribute,
he explained, my autograph among all
his friends. He even urged me to
write a poem for him—to dash a poem
off while he looked on. This falling,
he would not go till I had read him
a half dozen selections from my
works."
Mr. Noyes sighed.
"And all the time," he ended, "the
duffer called me Boyes."
The Hen.
Mrs Charlotte Perkins Gilman, the
brilliant suffragist, said, at a luncheon
at the Colony club iu New York, In
answer to an "anti:"
"So you accuse us, sir, of overconft-
dence in the success of the suffragist
movement. Well, sir, I'd ask you to
remember this;
"The hen Is no great hand to swag-
ger and strut, but at least she's never
been known to cackle before she's laid
the egg."
Enough for Her.
"So you have broken the engage-
ment?"
"Yes; I thought we were soulmates,
but we were not."
"How's that?"
"He began to talk about cooking and
dlsh-washlng." — Ixiulsville Courier-
Journal.
A Stitcli in Time
Colds, fevers, congestion and germ dls-
an* pretty nuns to overwork the kid
nevH and leuve tlieiu wi'ftk. In coil' rlen-
til fact at any time when suspicion
le aroused t>y a lame, aching Imek, rheu-
matic pains, headache, dl/.y.lmwH or
disordered urine, the use of Doan's
Kldnev Pills in a stilish In time that
may avoid serious kidney disease.
Doan's Kidney Plllscominandoonfldenee,
for no other remedy Ih ho widely used,
M freely recommended or so generally
successful.
An Oklahoma Caae
J D. Hunt, car
builder. Atoka.
Okla., >■: "1
Hp. nt hundreds or
dolln r« trytnK
K'-t cured of kid
ney dlaense. Nut
wasn't helped J
hit. The back-
uchen 1 had wen
nwful and 1 suf
fercd from terrl
hie, aharp pains Ir
my itlrieN. I hod
to get up ofler
nlKht to puss tlw
kidney secret!
On a doctor's ad-
vice, I used Doan'i
Kidney Pills and Ave boxes completely
cured me."
Get Doan's at Any f tare. 50c a Boa
DOAN'S "pWW
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
Only One "BROMO QUININE"
To get the genuine, call for full name, LAXA-
TIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for signature of
E W. GROVE. Curea a Cold in One Day. Stops
cough and headache, and works off cold. 2Sc.
Days of Grace.
"Say have you forgotten that you
owe me a hundred francs?"
"No, not yet; give me time."
Whenever You Need a fleneral Toole
Take Grove's
Tho Old Standard Grove's Tasteless
chill Tonic is equally valuable as a
General Tonic because it contains the
well known tonic properties of QUININE
and IKON. It acts on the Liver, Drives
out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and
Builds up the Whole System 50 cents.
As a man grows older his bump of
conceit gradually becomes a dent.
Surely In Hard Strait*.
A Chicago man who has a son at
Cornell took occasion while on the
way home from New York to stop off
for the purpose of seeing how the
boy was getting along It happened
to be Just after the Cornell football
team, which had undergone many hu-
miliations that season, had been beat-
en by Colgate. "How are things go-
ing with the football team?" the fa-
ther asked, pretending to be seeking
Information. "The Cornell football
team!" the young man exclaimed with
all the disgust that he could put Into
his tones; "it has been beaten by
everything except the Colonial
Dames!"
Afraid of Making Good.
"I'm afraid," said the lawyer, "that |
we will have to resort to the Insanity
plea."
"Don't do that," said the prisoner. "I
served on a Jury once. If I have to Us
ten to another lot of expert arguments
on insanity I'll go crazy sure."
Women Receive Medals.
The Soeiete des Artistes Prancals
awarded medals to 12 women at Its
salon recently, none of them being
Americans. The fact that there were
12 women among fio honored with : A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Sherman,
medals speaks very well for the work
of the women artists of France.
Why Scratch?
"Hunt'sCure" isguar-
anteed to stop and
permanently cure that
terrible itching. It is
compounded for that
purpose and your money
will be promptly refunded
WITHOUT QUESTION
if Hunt's Cure fails to cure
Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm or any other Skin
Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail
direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by
eias
FREE TO ILL SUFFERERS
Making Soap.
Liquid soap Is converted Into Bolid.
either In cake or powdered form, by
a recently patented centrifugal ma
chine.
A pesslmlBt Is a man who doesn't be-
lieve that cloudB have silver lllnlugs.
If you feci
•vrr*H from
<-|ir<ini<' wkarjfj
write for F RSI
Of HOSTS' * HI'W DOWN' 'OCT tbu HLDI
BI.ADDRR, NKRVOl'8 DIHitAHBS,
'RRI, HR IN IRUITIUNH, ru.m
KKMHI.
tlifw dlrMwn and wondrrfijl cuum nlTertod by
NEW. F*EN CH_NE MEOY No.1No2Mo.3
and uuCi'to foi
_ yourself If ttis
tLe remedy for tops own ellmeut Absolutely FREE.
No 'follow up' circular*. No obligation*. Dr. I,r«'ijuu«
Mrd Co " " • —
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY
THERAPION
W. N. U., Oklahoma City, No. 28-1914
Uniform#.
can't judge a man
by
"You
clothes."
"Only In a general way. For in-
stance, a statesman wears a high hat
with a frock coat, while a ward poli-
tician wears one with a cutaway coat."
Making a Distinction.
"Truth Is stranger than Action."
"I dou't know," replied Miss Cay-
enne, "whether It Is stranger or only
scarcer."
Many a man who has a way of his
own has a wife who outweighs him.
"TTTFIFN the food reaebe* tha «t«narh It la ralrfaetad to m peculiar^
VV churning movement by thamaacular walls or tha stomach —(Saa^
Dr. Flerce'a Medical Adviser, page 46). In tha liver, kidneys and
skin, the blood is purified of its waste materials—these organs act
as human filters, leaving the blood core and ciear—unless livac,
digestive tract and kidneys are clogged.
Pr. Pierce's Golden
Medical Discovery
is a stomach, liver and kidney tonic—by assisting
the stomach to assimilate, the liver to filter, the
kidneys to act—the poisons are removed, the red blood
corpuscles are increased and one feels light, fresh and active
instead of logy, dull and heavy. The "Discovery" stimu-
lates the stomach. Increases action of heart and arter-
ies and is a most satisfactory alterative in blood-taint of any character.
The refreshing influence of this extract of native medicinal plants has
been favorably known for over forty years. Everywhere some neighbor
can tell you of the good it has done.
SolJby aOmmdicine dealer* in liquid or tablet formi or —nJSO anm-cmt
mtampm to Dr. V. M. PIBRCB. Bo/Mo, N.Y., a trial box mill be mailed yoa.
You Look Prematurely Old
Iniiim of thoM ugly, grizzly, gray hair*. Um "U ORIOLI" HAIR ORCMIRS. PRIOR, SI.OO, retail.
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Frishman, Joseph. The Logan County News. (Crescent, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1914, newspaper, July 10, 1914; Crescent, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc235317/m1/7/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.