Luther Register. (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Luther Register and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THK
UTTHFR
RROISTFR
CONCRETE BLOCK
FOR NEW GARAGE
Convenient, Economical, Firesafe
and Suitable for All Classes
of Structures.
The amount of money Invested In
even the lowest priced uutoiuoblle Jus
tilles u substantial garage that will
give tlie required protection against
weather, theft and lire.
With n garage on the home grounds
the owner lias Ids car always within
reach and where lie can use Ida spare
time In keeping it dean and In good
running order, lie also lias a place
to keep oil, spure tires and other cur
supplies. With Die cur near the
house there will lie less danger from
tin*, tampering and pilfering as It is
always under the owner’s eye.
Suitable and Practical.
Wherever possible the material used
In the walls and roof of tin* garage
should lie the same as that of the
house. Concrete block nre suit aide
and practical for all classes of garages
from the small building, such as is
shown In the Illustration, to the types
with separate rooms for several cars,
such as are built for the accommoda-
tion of car owners living In apartment
houses. The block may he llnlshed In
stucco to harmonize with the house
by the addition In cement mix of color
to produce the desired tint.
An essential feature of garage de-
sign Is wide eaves or overhang, which
TROLLEY CAR CANNOT I Sanitary Houses
CHANGE ITS COURSE Needed for Hogs
Dangerous Practice to Follo.v
Street Cars Too Closely—
Keep Twelve Feet Away.
(By ERWIN OHKEH, PraaMent Orwr Col-
It'Ke of Automotive HnKlniierti.it- ChleKRO.)
Accidents In which automobiles llg-
ure with trolley cars are not the most
uncommon on the list and there are
several little points that If followed by
the uuto driver will lessen such acci-
dents. One of the principal things to
keep In mind Is that a trolley car
runN on trucka and consequently can-
not chunge its course, so that It Is up 1
to the motor cur pilot to w'utch out
for trolleys, rather than for the motor- 1
mail to watch out for uutomohiles.
Kvery day we see uutomohiles
closely following street cars on the j
rails. This Is a very dangerous prao j
tlce, for the uuto driver has no meuns
of knowing what Instant the motor-
man may Jam on his brakes, mid In
such a case It Is utmost impossible to
uvold a collision. Then there Is the
Cholera, White Scours,
Pneumonia and Worms
Preventable.
If bog raising Is to be made profit-
ible, the animals must be kept
lieu 11 by. To Insure tills, sunltury quar-
ters and equipment ure necessary.
Cholera, white scours, pneumonia
and worms ure some of the ulHIctlons
from which hogs sufTer, that are il-
I rectly traceable to Insanitary quar-
ters and surroundings. These dis-
j Puses annually cost the hog ruisers of
this country ulmost unbelievable sums
t»f money. All of them ure largely
preventable If the unimuls ure pro-
| vlded with clean, wuriu und other-
wise comfortable quarters.
Surfaces Easily Cleaned.
From the very nature of concrete,
structures built of It do not absorb
llth or Invite disease germs and ver-
min to make their homes In and about
them. Concrete surfaces are easily
cleaned and kept clean. Concrete
mil.) driver who fulls, to take Into floors and walls may he kept In sanl
consideration the fact that trolley »„ry condition by
Winter Rye Grown in
All Parts of Country
Its Production Increased in
Last Few Years.
(Prepared by
POPULARITY OF MULE FOR
FARM WORK INCREASING
(Prepared by
the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
cars ure likely to turn ofT at corners
where trncks Intersect, and thus at
times the motorist finds himself
Jammed between the trolley and the
curb. Also the driver often fulls to
figure that when u street car turns
iccaslonally scrim
blng down with water to which anti-
septic or germicidal solutions may be
idded If desired. Concrete is rat proof,
rot proof, rust proof, wind proof, free
from all the usual maintenance re-
julred on other types of construction.
away from him on a curve the rear (t makes the expense-proof permanent
end Is hound to swing out several feet Improvement
beyond the trncks.
To he safe u driver should alwnys
stop Ids auto at least twelve feet be-
hind a standing street car, and In no
case should he take dangerous
chances crowding In between a trolley
and the curb. Also drivers should
never utlempt to pass n street cur
moving In the snme direction, on the
left side, but this Is a practice that
Is common In muny cities.
Concrete Block Garage.
serve as u protection to the owner
from rain or dripping water when
locking the doors during wet weather.
A door ut the side will be found con-
venient for use when the car Is not
to be taken out.
Uuruges ure often heated from the
house plant, although there are many
small Inexpensive garage heaters
which give perfect satisfaction. A
flue for separate heating In one of the
floor plans muy be easily Included In
the building.
Special care should he given to the
selection of the hardware for support-
ing and operating the large movable
doors. Doors that stick and hind lire
u nuisance and an extra $10 spent on
good hardware will more than repay
the owner In comfort and convenience.
Allow for Working Space.
A garage should he built to allow
for plenty of working space about the
car, and even though the owner’s car
he of the smaller type, It Is good econ
oin.v to build a garage to accommodate
a large cur, thus anticipating future
needs.
Built of concrete block, finished In
stucco, a garage Is practically perma-
nent. Expense from repairs, painting,
and insurance is reduced to a mini-
mum and the car owner Is assured
BEWARE OF THE “ROAD LIFT”
Prudence in City or Elsewhere Says
That It 8hall Neither Be Offered
or Accepted.
The lift on the road Is an old net of
kindness. Decent people In settled or-
derly places offered it becuu.se they
were amiable and wanted to help an-
other person along the way; but pru-
dence In a city, or elsewhere for that
matter, nays that It shall neither he
offered nor accepted nowadays.
A good deal of crime Is on wheels,
says the Chicago Tribune. Crim-
inals are scouting the street and the
country roads. The people they pick
up nre virtually helpless. Contrari-
wise, the man In a car who yields to h
request for a ride may And a gun at
Ills head In short order. The good Sa-
maritan may go to the hospital In a
barrel. It Is the ugly necessity of city
life to regard a stranger as a poten-
tial enemy. It need not result In dis-
courtesy, but It says keep your guard
up. Credulity often leads to an empty
poeketbook and n black eye, or, In
the case of u woman, to worse.
The skylight hoghouse shown In the
Illustration, so called because of the
rows of skylight sash on the roof,
which admit light and sunshine, was
originated by the Iowa experiment
station, it Is generally located so that
the long way of the house runs north
and south. Morning sun coming
through the windows on .the east side
the United Htetea Department
Winter ry^uiiTimfd/eat of all cm j ,M“‘«
reals. It cun be grown in ail parts of c,,n Ul
the country, says the United States
Department of Agriculture, hut is most
profitable in the northern and eust-
em states. Its production in the
United Slates has increased rapidly
during the past few yeurs, due chiefly
to u heavy foreign demand, high-
priced lahur, low yields of wheat, unJ
the development of Improved varieties
of rye. It is grown lurgely us a
cash grain crop in the western half of
the country, hut Is used also for pas-
ture, us a green-iuunure or nurse crop
und to smother weeds.
The ordinury time for sowing winter
rye in the northern part of North Da-
kota und Minnesota Is about Septem-
ber 1, with luter dates In sections
south of this. Many furmers will find
It profitable to sow winter rye yet this
fall, using grain stubble, corn ground,
fall-plowed land, or summer fallow, If
climatic conditions permit, the depart-
ment believes. Sowing on grain stub
hie Is often the most profitable be-
cause of the cheaper cost of produi*-
tlon. The grain should he sown with
a drill at the rute of four to six pecks
per ucre.
In the Important rye-producing
western states the average acre value
of the rye crop Is gomewhut less than
that of wheat While the yields of
rye usually are higher than those of
wheat, the price is much less, being
lurgely determined by the foreign
markets which use most of our crop.
At low prices rye cannot be grown fur
grain at n profit except under good
management and In favored localities,
the Department of Agriculture says.
While rye makes good hay, green ma-
nure, pasture, or a nurse crop for le-
gumes, It Is not a suitable concern
The ability of the uiule to endure
hardship and perforin sterling service
under adverse conditions has estab-
him as a real asset In Ameri-
can agriculture, says the United States
Department of Agriculture, and his Im-
portance und popularity ns a work
anlmul Is attested by his rapidly in-
creasing use. In 1910, the number of
mules on farms and nineties was
4,299.709. The number on Junuary
1, 1920, wus 0,432,391, an increase dur-
ing. Euch of these clusses again Is
graded according to conformation,
soundness, quality, condition, and ac-
tion, and Classified as choice, good,
medium, common, or Inferior.
Form and Appearance.
The general form and appeurarce of
the mule should resemble closely thnt
of a horse, and in Judging mules the
lame general points of perfection are
to he looked for. The nearer the mule
approaches the Ideal desired In a draft
horse the more vuluahle he Is from a
Mule Is Able to Perform Sterling Service on Farm.
Ing the dect.de of nearly 30 per cent.
Nearly three-fifths of all the mules In
use In the United States are found In
the nine Cotton Belt States. These
states, Texas, Georgia, Oklahoma, Ar-
kansas, Mississippi, Alabama, North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Louisi-
ana, hud u total of 3.172,797, mules In
1920 ns compared with 2.8T»5.258 horses.
Texas and Okluhomn were the only
trnted feed for live stock unless mixed l!,,|t states bavin* more horses
than mules.
Useful for Utility Purposes.
with other grains. It is too heavy and
sticky and Is not very palatable feed-
ing tests show. When fed In mixtures
rye has n feeding value lower than
corn, but nearly equal to tliut of
barley.
While the mule Is essentially a draft
animal. It Is used widely for utility
purposes, especially In the South.
I Mnlos vary In height from 12 hands to
j 17>4 hands and in weight from «00
I pounds to 1.U00 pounds. They are dl-
! vlded Into five generul market classes
market standpoint, department spe-
cialists state. The form of the mule
should be compact, wltu a deep body,
broad chest, full Hanks, short back,
and well-sprung ribs, similar to the
pair shown In the Illustration. The
loins should be broad, short, and thick-
ly muscled; the croup long und level;
the hips long, level, und muscular;
the thighs thick, long, and well mus-
cled ; and the hind legs well set, with
Lroad, clean-cut hocks and fiat, dense
hone. The mule should stand on good
feet that are well shaped. While style
and action may not be so Important in
a mule as they are In the lighter breeds
of horses, these qualities add mate
rlully to Its value. A smart, alert mule
with a long, free stride ut the walk
und a snappy, balunced trot is highly
CH ESI BR OUCH MANUFACTURING CO.
(OnBolUatwd)
•tal« 8(tsm Naw Yar%
Vaseline
R*gusp*toa
Yellow of White
FfTROLIUM JIIUT
Keeping Extra Team in
Slack Seasons Is Costly j Dlaft- f«™. sugar, cotton, ana u.ln-1 desired.
Did you ever stop to figure out Just * -----
INSPECTION OF MILK IS DISCUSSED
sons, or to have them eating off ihe , ♦--—_
farm when they were Idle during the
winter months. The cost of keeping
a horse one year In 1921 averaged
about $100, necording to figures made
up by the Department of Agriculture.
Feed and bedding made up about 00
per cent of this figure, not forgetting
to figure what the pasture was worth
that the horses used.
Work Includes More Than
Detection of Adulteration.
(Prepared by the United States Department
of Agriculture.)
“The work of milk inspection bus
TUBE REPAIR KIT ESSENTIAL
One of the Most Important Acces-
sories for Every Motorist to
Carry In His Machine.
Probably one of the most Important
accessories for every motorist to have
thul bU cur bus maximum protection. In his cur Is a tube repair kit. It Is
STICKING OF CONE CLUTCH
Usually the »*sult of Worn Facing-
New Leather 8hould Remedy
the Trouble.
The sticking of a cone clutch may
be due to u tendency of the clutch
member to fit too snugly In the cone
part of the flywheel. This Is usually
the result of worn facing of the clutch
member, caused, In turn, by burning
the facing through a habit of slipping
the clutch. A new leather facing
should remedy the trouble and a
handy temporary solution Is to wedge
broken pieces of a hack-saw blade be-
tween the facing and the clutch mem-
ber at several points on Its circumfer-
ence. This will often smooth out a
rough and sticking cone clutch.
Skylight Hoghouse.
| of the roof supplies direct sunlight
i to the west row of pens. In the
! afternoon the west row of windows
I enables flooding the east row of pens
i with sunlight. In this way every
I portion of tin* floor Is reached at some
j time during the day by direct sunlight.
| The little pigs as well us the older
| ones enjoy the warm spring sun and
It helps to make them active and keep
them *heultl»y. The well-lighted hog-
i house presents a more pleasant, cheer-
ful aspect also for those who must
take care of the animals. Likewise
there is no greater enemy of disenau
germs than plenty of sunlight. As the
In the roof In-
hroadened in recent years und now
...... . , , , . . . Includes more than the detection of
With this In mind, It s not only ........ , ,
- , f adulteration, though many people In
easier to see thnt a farmer can estl ... .. , . „ ....
. .. . , , , , . their ordinary use of language do not
mate pretty closely whether it Is worth .. : . „ ,
3 . . recognize this fact, and continue to
something to keep an extra team that
AUTOMOBILE
c*A GOSSIP M
A tire with low air pressure cre-
ates friction and causes the car to
slow up.
• • ♦
A rigid shaft will hind liflteSS the
alignment Is perfect and provision Is
mads to prevent Thune deflection.
DEATH ALMOST WON IN
This photograph, caught of an engine and an automobile while both were
going ut high speed, shows that the auto driver who tries to heat the train
to a crossing generally ends up In u hospital or undertaker’s. Death was
prevented from taking Its usual toll when the motorist saw his error Just In
time. He swung his ear up a steep bunk, almost overturning It, and was able
by a few feet to avoid u crush.
very much like life Insurance, In thnt
It Is no good at all until needed. When
It Is needed It Is Indispensable. This
fact Is particularly true when tires
are punctured many miles from any I windows are located
repair station. Considering the kit’s 8te,ui of In the walls, the sides of the
small cost tire men say It Is the building are kept low. This results In
cheapest Insurance possible against less overhead space, which Insures a
country road delays and expense. | warmer as well as a less costly build-
- | Ing. In some cases, skylight hog-
houses nre built with the long way
running east and west; then windows
are placed on the south slope of the
roof. The top row furnishes light for
the north pens, and the bottom row,
the pens along the south wall.
Favored In Many Sections.
The popularity of the half monitor
roof type of hoghouse Is not confined
to any particular part of the United
States. Everywhere there t.re hog |
raisers who favor It. It Is always lo-
cated so that the long way runs east
and west with windows on the south
side. The top row of windows lights
the north pens while the lower row
supplies sunshine to the pens along
the south wall. The tipper row of
windows Is placed at such n height
that the sun will shine on the floor
of the north row of pens at farrowing
time. As this time will not he the
same for all hog raisers and since the
sun’s rays have ii different slam at
different seasons and latitudes, the
builder should figure out the height Hi
which to place these windows.
Poison Ivy Eradicated
With Waste Motor Oil
A scientist connected with one of the
mid- Western universities says that
poison |vy may he eradicated by satur-
ating the ground at the base of the
plants with waste motor-nil from the
crank-ease. Where 3 farmer wishes
to kill out this pest on a large scale
arrangements could hi made, no doubt,
with automobile service stations for
saving the drainings from curs which
have their oil supplies replenished.
Waste lubricant of this sort has little
commercial value and can he obtained
without great cost In considerable
quantity If arrangements are made for
saving It.
is Idle most of the time, or to raise
colts and dispose of the older horses
every year or two. There are a good
many progressive farmers who have
found thnt It pays to raise n couple of
colts each year, to make the mare pay
a little of her cost buck. Then they
are In position to sell off an extra
horse or two If they find there Is no
real need lor keeping him during the
slack season.
Hogs Take First Place
Among Ohio Live Stock
Hogs and sheep have changed
places In the farming scheme of Ohio
since 1800. Then, the census showed
more than 3,000,000 sheep and 2,000,-
000 hogs. Now it shows something
over 3,000,000 hogs and 2,000,000 sheep.
All other forms of live stock lave
Increased during the same 00-year
period, although since 1900 horses and
mules show a net decrease. The equine
population ol Ohio In 1920 Is reported
In the census ns 842,318. Poultry
shows the greatest Increases In num-
bers, from 8,000,000 to 13,000,000 be-
tween 1880 and 1800, and then stead-
ily about 2,000,000 each decade to the
present total of 20t282,0T)7.
THIS RACE
1
Easy Way to Clean Tire.
A simple way to clean ofT a tire, re-
moving stones from the tread design
«m well, Is to jack up the car, place
a pun filled with water or gusotlne be-
neath the wheel, then turn It slowly
while scrubbing off.
King of 8peed«r«.
('apt. Vincent Curzon, member of
parliament, holds the demon speed
record of England, lie has been con-
victed 10 times for exceeding the
•peed limit.
Babbitt metal Is usually reamed dry.
though there lire times when kero-
sene will prove beneficial.
• • •
It Is necessary to depress the clutch
pedul when applying dressing or clean-
ing the friction surfaces.
• • •
A faulty spark plug can be deter-
mined by abort circuiting It with a
screwdriver. If the engine alowa down
during thla lest It la u live plug. If
It doe. not alow down ilia cylinder la
not bring.
Cabbage and Turnips Do
Well in Pit Storage
If the cellar space Is limited, cab-
bage und turnips cun be well-cured for
by pit storing. Select n high s|»ot
where the water drains off quickly.
Dig a trench three feet wide und two
feet deep. Floor with hoards. Put In
the vegetables und then lay on a light
covering of struw. Put hourds over
this, providing n sqinll opening ut the
top for ventilation. Cover with eight
to twelve Inches of dirt. Apples may
he kept In the same way. There Is
seldom uny loss from such u pit
More Alfalfa, Less Corn,
Slogan of Many Farmers
“More alfnlfn und less corn" Is the
slogan of tunny farmers right now.
Help Is getting scarcer, corn Is beset
with numerous Ills, and soils ure be-
coming more difficult to bundle. Al-
falfa builds up soil. Instead of wear-
ing it out, und in all dairy districts an
acre of alfalfa is worth three times ns
much ns an acre of corn. Ten tons ol
corn silage contains about 280 pounds
digestible protein, while an acre of ul
fulfil milking four tons of hn.v would
contain 832 pounds of protein. One
acre of alfalfa making four tons U
worth right now about $100.
ucre of corn making 50 bushels It
worth now shout $35.
Alfalfa Rules Adapted
to Different Sections
A discussion of the \nrlous methods
to he followed In growing alfnlfa will
he found In Furmers’ Hulletln No. 12S3
Not only arc there given these general
rules as to how to grow ulfalfa but the
methods best adapted to various sec-
tions of the country ure described In
this bulletin.
Farmers who contemplate growing
alfalfa or who may have tried und
fulled, may well rand this hulleJn
which may he secured by writing the
Department of Agriculture. Washing
ton, D. C.
Exercise Caution When
Handling a Live Goose
In handling u goose It should nevei
be held fuclng you. or It will strike
hard blows with Its wings and scratch
with Its feet. It should be taken by
the neck, und when lifting from tht
ground the buck of the body should
he toward the person holding it. und
the body partly supported by seizin;
the first joint of the wing with ont
hand. In that position It cunnot strike
and will remalh quiet
speak of ’pure milk as milk thut Is
not Watered and contains no preservo
tlve,” say Ernest Kelly and C. S.
Ljccto, Joint authors of Department
Circular 270, Inspection or Milk
; Supplies, Just Issued by the United
I States Department of Agriculture,
j “The bacterial content of the milk
! must always he token Into considera-
tion when designating milk ns pure.
The chemical, bacteriological nnrl san-
itary aspects should not be confused.
Each Is essential in studying (lie
purity of milk.”
Circular 270 tteats of Inspection In
the city as well as on the farm.
It gives the qualifications for milk In-
spectors and discusses milk ordi-
nances. The score-card system of
Inspection of dairy farms and milk
plants Is described, and samples of
score curds for euch are reprinted.
The circular also takes up laboratory
control, giving n list of equipment and
the procedure for analyzing sumples
of milk.
"Milk Inspection fins reached the
point In Its development where three
distinct features are now pructicnlly
essential," says the circular. These
features nre: Dairy Inspection, dairy
Instruction, and laboratory con-
trol.” , , . “As recontamination after
pasteurization may prove serious, the
milk-control olfieluls should make fre-
I ‘inent and methodical examination of
j apparatus, bottles and cans with which
the milk comes In contact after pas
teurlzution. Laboratory control of
this phase of the work Is essential
Those who handle milk or milk con
tniners on farms where milk Is sold
for use in its raw state or In pas-
teurizing plants should he subject to
frequent medical Inspection.” The cir-
cular may he obtained, while the sup
pl.v lasts, upon application to the
United States Department cf Agrlcul
ture. Washington, D. C.
Since Gowns Are Longer.
“Has the flapper disappeared?”
“Not entirely,” replied Miss Cay-
enne, "but her ankles are not so con-
spicuous.”
MOTHER! GIVE SICK CHILD
“CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP”
Best Depth for Plowing
Will Vary With Seasons
Commenting on nn article regarding
deep versus shallow plowing which
aprienred In a recent Issue of Season-
able Hints From the Dominion Exper-
imental Farms, Ottawa, Canada, Prof.
Alvin Kezer, chief agronomist, Colora-
do Agricultural college, said:
“The truth of the matter Is that
there is no one depth, shallow or deep,
that is the best depth to plow. The
best <l?pth will vary with the time the
plowing is done, the soli, crop to t>e
grown, the length of the season where
the crop Is to be put In or where the
plowing is done. I can Illustrate this
last point by quoting the Canadian ex
perlence again. They found that any-
thing over the four-inch plowing In the
Peace Itiver country delays the wheat
crop so that It Is often attacked by
frost, while the shallow plowing ena-
bles the harvest to get out of the way
before frost. There Is no one right
depth, deep or shadow.”
Disease of Sweet Com
Is Discovered in Ohio
A disease of sweet corn, which
muses stunted growth followed by
wilting and death of affected plants,
has been reported to the Ohio experi-
ment station by several growers.
Station pathologists state that In
this affection, known as Stewart’s dis-
ease, the Interiors of the stems If cut
Just above the ground are found to he
discolored and the sap to he thick and
()n* I sticky, due to the presence of the bac-
i terla which cause the disease.
The disease Is curried on the seed
and In the remains of diseased plants
In the soil or in manure.
To prevent the spread of the disease
affected plants are pulled up and
burned and corn is not grown on the
ground for at least four years. Though
field corn Is not noticeably affected It
Is not ndvlsnhle to grow it upon land
where diseased sweet corn has been
grown, as It may serve to keep the In-
fection in the soil.
Grease or Lard Aids to
Prevent Tools Rusting
No matter If tools are kept out of
the wet. even the dampness of the
nlr will cause them to rust. A paste
made of tnllow or lard and graphite,
with a little camphor gum will pre-
vent rust when applied and afterwards
nibbed dry. Mix two parts grease to
one of graphite. Add about one-fourth
ns much camphor gum ns there is of
the graphite. Get the tools quite ilea
and dry, apply the paste and allow It
to remain on all metal pnrts for 24
hours or longer, then rub dry. Tools
treated In this way will not rust for
several months, though exposed to
damp nlr. Treat In this way every two
or three months, not only tools, but any
steel or Iron surface.
Mineral Mixture Helps
Laying Hens or Chicks
A mixture of salt, lime, and bone
meal added to soy-bean meal or other
vegetable protein nearly doubled Its
value In the feed for laying hens or
growing chicks. In recent tests ut the
Ohio experiment station.
These minerals, though making up
only 4 per cent of the mash and cost-
ing less than 4 cents n year per hen,
proved as necessary as any other part
of the feed.
Grains and seeds are deficient In
protein and minerals. Tluse are sup-
plied by the addition of meat scrap,
skim milk or other animal supplement
to the feed of grain and mash. Soy
bean meal, peanut meal, cottonseed
meal, and the like supply protein but
nre deficient In minerals.
When the mineral mixture was add
ed to soy-henn me .1 ut the rate of four
pounds per hundred Its value was
doubled, making It almost equal to
meat scrap or milk for egg produc-
tion and growth.
The station mineral mixture Is made
Up of 00 parts of bone meal, 20 of
limestone and 20 of common salt.
Harmless Laxative for a Bilious^
Constipated Baby or Child.
Constipated, bil-
ious, feverish, or
sick, colic Babies
and Children love
to take genuine
“California Fig
Syrup.” No other
laxative regulates^
the tender little
bowels so nicely.
It sweetens the
stomach and
starts the liver and bowels acting with-
out griping. Contains no narcotics or
soothing drugs. Say “California” to
your druggist and avoid counterfeits!
Insist upon genuine “California Fig
Syrup” which contains directions.—
Advertisement.
Thorough.
Belle—Are his kisses warm or cold?-
Nellie—Oil, gee; they’re regular
paint removers.
Children’s handkerchiefs often look
hopeless when they come to the laun-
dry. Wash with good soap, rinse in
water blued with Bed Cross Ball Blue.
—Advertisement.
There is more self-love than love in
Jealousy.
Lots of men, like had mucilage, stick
to nothing.
CORNS
Stop their pain
in one minute!
For quick lasting relief from corns,
Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads stop the pain
in one minute by removing the cause
—friction and pressure.
Zino-pads are thin, safe, antiseptic,
healing, waterproof and cannot pro-
duce infection or any bad after-effects.
Three sizes—for corns, callouses and
bunions. Cost but a trifle. Get a box to-
day at your druggist's or shoe dealer's.
Dl Scholls
Zino-pads
Pul ont on - the pain it ffont
Confine Capons Closely
When Fattening in Fall
Capons ure usually kepi until the,
are iihout ten Months old. For n time
k’lve them u good growing riitlon. l.t.r
in* the lust month or six weeks before
marketing. Incense the corn unlll they
lire in a full fultenlng feed. Ureen
feed such ub cut clover ur vegetables
pays after the summer pacturnge I.
gone. Free runge Is desirable during
the growing period but when futtenlug
for market keep them confined closely
Cnpons will stHnd more crowding than
other chickens and two or three snuarc
feet of floor space per fowl Is enough
During the last two or three week,
many poultrymen shut them up m
crn.es and feed them heavily. eVer,
possible ounce of g„m „l this period
adds to appearance and pruflt.
QUICIT
RELIEF
WITH
iOLEYJ
HONEHAI
Established 1875
Smoo twits orlmc Wins but G
REFUSE
.Stop
.COUGHS
.COLDS
AND
lCROUP
SUBSTITUTES
Girls! Girls!!
SaveYourHair
With Cuticura
s.., Ac. IWm 25 ul 50c. Tclcaw 25c.
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Keyes, Chester A. Luther Register. (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1923, newspaper, October 26, 1923; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc925141/m1/2/?q=no+child+left+behind: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.