Capitol Hill News (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 31, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 3, 1911 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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non
N
$3.50 RECIPE CURES
WEAK KIDNEYS, FREE
RELIEVES URINARY AND KIDNEY
TROUBLES, BACKACHE, STRAIN-
ING, SWELLING, ETC.
Steps Pain
in the Bladder, Kidneys
and Back.
H
DAIRY
H
|=
soiling fog Co** | SATISFACTORY METHOD OF
PROPAGATING WOODY PLANTS
Wouldn’t it be nlee within a week or so
to begin to say goodbye forever to the
ecaldlng, dribbling, straining, or too fre-
quent passage of urine; the forehead and
the back-of-the-head aches; the stitches
and pains in the back; the growing mus-
cle weakness; spots before the eyes; yel-
low skin; sluggish bowels; swollen eye-
lids or ankles; leg cramps; unnatural
short breath; sleeplessness and the de-
spondency?
I have a recipe for these troubles that
you can depend on, and If you want to
make a QUICK RECOVERY, you ought
to write and get a-**op.v of It. Many a
doctor would charge you 53.50 Just for
writing this prescription, but 1 have It
and will be glad to send It to you entire-
ly free. Just drop me a line like this:
Hr. A. E. Robinson, K-2G4 Luck Building,
Detroit, Mich., and I will send it by re-
turn mall In a plain envelope. As you will
see when you get It, this recipe contains
only pure, harmless remedies, but it has
great healing and paln-conquerlng power.
It will quickly show its power once you
use it, so I think you had better see what
It is without delay. I will send you a
copy free—you can use It and cure your-
self at home.
CLEANER FOR SMALL CORNERS
Shown In Illustration Will Be
Found Handy in Getting at Places
Broom Won’t Reach.
Use for a corner cleaner an old
whisk broom, or a large one, If de-
sired. O ) it down to the form shown
In the r 1 Do not make the points
Not a Singer.
‘ Johnny,” the teacher said, "here is
a hook. Now. stand up straight and
sing like a little man.”
The song was ‘ Nearer, My Ood."
No sooner had the school commenced
to sing than a little girl waved her
hand frantically. Stopping the sing-
ing, the teacher inquired the cause.
"Please, teacher, I think Johnny
will get nearer if he whistles.”
l>r. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar-coated,
easy to take as candy, regulate and invig-
orate stomach, liver and bowels and cure
constipation.
From many a woman’s point of view
a bird on her hat is worth a back
yard full of poultry.
A Corner Cleaner.
too long, or they will not be stlfT
enough to drag out the dirt. This will
be found handy In cleaning stairs, eor-
aers and other places which cannot
be reached by a common broom.
Tried at New Jersey Experiment St*
tlon, Where Three Animate Kept
on Feed From One Acre.
The Jersey experiment station prac-
tices soiling altogether for their cows.
They sow rye, which comes on first P
the spring. With the rye hairy vetet
is seeded and the two make a i^lendld
feed, besides the vetch enriches the
land. The next crop is wheat, which
also has votch seeded with It. Fol-
lowing the wheat are oats and Canada
field peas, and again the peas not only
help to balance up the oats, but at the
same time improve the land, being a
legume. Following the cutting of the
rye, cowpeas and soy beans, fodder
corn, etc., are planted. These can be
harvested in time to sow the ground
down to the same crops for next year,
and later on the silo is opened. Pro-
fessor Mlnkler stated that he had been
able to keep three cows during the
summer on the feed grown on one acre
of ground. Could this method not be
practicable on many farms? Suppose
an acre or two is ^fenced off in the
cow pasture and seeded to oats and
Canada field peas in March, this crop
cut off and fed in June, the first of
July the ground sown to cowpeas and
these harvested In September, and the
ground seeded to rye and hairy
vetch In this way the land would not
become exhausted very rapidly. The
roots and stubble would almost or
quite furnish the humus content, the
legumes the nitrogen, and by adding
a little potash and phosphorus one
should grow crops for years on the
same ground
layering May Be Considered Connecting I^ink Between
Natural and Artificial Generation- Many
Varieties Increase Naturally.
Clear white clothes are a*sign that the
housekeeper uses Red ('loss Rail Blue,
i^arge 2 oz. package, 5 cents..
Lit.tle wits are often
De la Roche.
great talkers.
KEEP TRACK OF CHURN DAYS
Facts
About
Motherhood
The experience of Motherhood is a
trying one to most women and marks
distinctly an epoch in their lives. Not
y-^rsone woman in a hun-
^‘^[fjJdred *s PrePare^ or
understands how to
improperly care for her-
| self. Of course near.
Collie Dogs Used on Treadmill Disap-
pear on Monday and Thursday—
Animals Gofc Wise.
Clark Rogers, a farmer, for more
than a year has used his two big
collie dogs in his treadmill to run the
dairy churn. Churning days were
Monday and Thursday. The dogs be-
came tired of the job and made it a
point to disappear from the farm on
those days. Rogers was obliged to
change the date of his churning three
different times, as it only took about
three weeks for the dogs to learn the
daces when they were expected to per-
form, when they would disappear He
finally went back to Mondays and
Thursdays and now takes the precau-
OPERATING CHURN BY FOOT
One Shown in Illustration Is Patterned
After Grindstone—Plunger Con-
nection Attached.
Hundreds of churns of all kinds
have been Invented In past years, but
(By D J. CROSBY.)
Layering may be considered the
connecting link between natural and
irtificlal propogatlon. Many plants,
luch as black raspberries, grapes and
jthers. increase naturally In this way
but man has lent his aid In so many
ways to this process of propagation
’.hat It may be considered to a certain
extent artificial.
A layer is a branch so placed In
contact with the earth as to Induce It
to throw out roots and shoots, thus
producing one or more Independent
plants, the branch meanwhile remain-
,ng attached to the parent plant.
Layering frequently proves a satisfac-
tory method of multiplying woody
hints which do not readily lake root
■om cuttings. There are several
lethods of layering
Tip Layering.—The tip of a branch
■ cane is bent down to the ground
and cause them to thrdw out roots.
Each may then be removed from the
original root and treated as an l.ide-
pendent plant. A plant Is often cut
back to the ground to make It send up
a large number of shoots to be layer-
ed In this way.
ol Dyspep*fc
Si\
Foot-Operated Churn.
the Idea shown in the Illustration Is
somewhat unique because patterned
after the foot-worked grindstone. A
wooden wheel takes the place of the
grindstone, and to this is attached the
plunger connection. The churn Is at-
tached to the under part of the frame
by a belt.
Vine Laying.
and slightly covered with soil when
It will throw out roots and develop a
new plant. Many plants may be prop-
agated In this way.
Vine Layering.—A vine Is stretched
along the ground and buried through
out Its entire length In a shallow
trench, or It may be covered In certain
places, leaving the remaining portions
exposed. Roots will be put forth at
Intervals and branches thrown up.
Later the vine may be cut between
these, leaving a number of independ-
Mound Layering.
Layering.
ent plants. The grape can be easily
propagated In Ibis way.
Mound Layering.—Plants which stool
sending up a large number of stems or
shoots from a single root, are often
layered by mounding up the earth so
as To cover the bases of those stems
ROOTS SERVE
TWO PURPOSES
They Not Only Drink U p Dissolved
Foods, bn t Also Serve to Hold
Plant in Fixed Position-
Strong in a Way.
(By H. H. SHEPARD.)
Roots serve two purposes for the
plant. They not only drink up dis-
solved foods, but also serve to hold
the plant In a fixed position.
The older and larger the plant
grows the more roots it needs to se-
curely hold It In place and to fully
satisfy Us drinking needs
All of tho roots of a plant help
to hold It In place, but the youngest
and finest roots do the drinking
These young, fine roots ure called
feeding roots. They grow out in all
directions in the moist soil In search
of food for the plant.
At the end of each tiny feeding root
Is a little cap resembling the linger
of a glove. The function of this little
root cap Is to protect the tender root-
let as It pushes Its way through hard
bits of soil.
Although young and apparently
tender, those feeding roots are very
strong In a way.
Through the power of expansive
growth, they aro able ot push slowly
through the very hard soil, and even
penetrate some rocks, bursting them
into pieces.
With large planta, such as trees
they penetrate very deep down Into
the ground where the soil Is always
moist, but always as hard as rock.
What to Plant.
As to what to plant, that depends
upon climate and soil and whether the
garden Is for all the year round or
merely for summer and autumn, says
Frances Duncan in the Century. If
the place be lived In during the win-
ter, then a hedgellke thorn, with Its
gay scarlet berries, a few evergreens
marking Important points, and edgings
of dwarf evergreens or box will give
no small amount of cheer and empha
size the fact that the garden ts uot
dead, but sleeping.
jf pop lyii
dyspepsia
4
DIDN'T CARE TO BE DONE.
ly every woman now-
' adays lias medical
)treatment at tho
'time of child-birth,
)but many approach
HgMHKSI______ 'tho experience with
an organism unfitted for the trial of
strength, anti when the strain is oyer
her system has received a shock from
which it is hard to recover. Follow,
ing right upon this comes the. nervous
strain of caring for the child, and a
distinct change in the mother results.
There is nothing more charming than
a happy and healthy mother of chil-
dren, and indeed child-birth under right
conditions need bo no hazard to health
or beauty. The unexplainable thing is
that, with all tho evidence of shattered
nerves and broken health resulting
from an unprepared condition, women
will persist in going blindly to the trial.
It isn't as though the experience
came upon them unawares. They have
ample time in which to prepare, but
they, for the most part, trust to chance
and pay the penalty.
In many homes once childless there
are now children because of the fact
that Lvdia E. l’ink ham’s Vegetable
Compound makes women normal,
healthy, and strong.
Any woman who would like
special advice in regard to tliis
matter is cordially invited to
write to Mrs. Pinkliam at l.ynn,
Mass. Her letter will be held in
strict confidence.
44 Bu. to the Acre
Kept Track of Churning Days.
tlon to chain up the dogs on Sunday
and Wednesday afternoons. In order
to Insure their presence on churning
days.
» u hoavr yield, bill that's what John Kennedy of
ledmuntoil! Albertn. Western l-unada. K"l froiu 40
« of’Spring \V In*u
froui oun
tda, K<>t 1
tinl'.MU. Repor
mrdistrlets mthat prov-
nco s(lowed other exce 1-
lentresults—such as 4,-
I two bushels of wheat
from 120 acres, or 33 !-.'
(»u. per aero. 25.80 and 40
bushel yields were num-
erous. As hi h as 1(43
bushels of oats to the
acre were! hreshed from
Alberta tie Ids In 1U1U.
The Silver Gup
Spokane
enl to I he
mient for
itsexhildt ot k<ulus.grasses and
veyfe'aulcH. 1 »epor< s of eire!loti 1
vleids for 101H come iiis(, mini
Saskatchewan and Manitoba in
\Ve-.lern < 'anad.t.
Free home*Ieatla of 1 HO
ere*, and H«! jiniing l»re-
iiipt Iona of 104) hiti'M nil
It ner Hi re) are to be hail
i (tie choice*t <11*1 ticl*.
eliooln com enleiit, eli-
excellent, soil tlio
very l»e*t. rallw ay* « lone a t
hand, h n II d I n it Inn lu-r
cheap, fneleasy Ingot and
reasonable I n price, \*l or
easily procured, mixed
farm'll if a sin < rs*.
W ■ lie as to h, • i |, i j re f<, r set
tlement, low railway
rates. d<*-*- pi ve (Must rated
"hast Res | \> . • I sen! fred
application in id ot (n r in
tlon to Si p t of heii'H
Ottawa, (’si n. oriothe Cm
Government A
a t the recent
(•air w«n u wiuJi
A Iberia t iovt
•It ot ilUlllk.l
.1*111 free on
nfornm-
atlon.
nudi n
yeni. ha.)
CAV.P'tl fOYWMPiT MWT
V 125 Yi. hhU.1 Street Kjns.s (rti. M;
(I ’so address nearest yo>
Dairy Tests.
George H. McFadden of Bryn Mawr,
Pa., won the second prize of $50 in the
home dairy test of Ayrshlres. For the
year ending March 31, 1910, his five
cow8 gave 47,136 pounds of milk,
2168.10 pounds of fat and were credit-
ed with 85,178 points. In the same
test five cows belonging to the Friends'
asylum, Frankfort, Pa„ fifth prize of
$20 was given, the record being 46,136
pounds of milk, 1617.16 pounds of fat
and 74,435 points. In the test which
ended September 30, Asley farm,
Media, Pa., won third prize of $40
for five cows giving 46,957 pounds of
milk, 1885.23 pounds of fat and 79.948
points. The Friends' asylum won
fourth prize of $30 for 44.260 pounds
of milk, 1980.92 pounds of fat and 78,-
926 points.
MAKING INVESTMENT IN FEED
Man With New Viewpoint May Make
200 Per Cent. Per Annum
Interest.
To look upon the buying of mlllfeea
as an investment rather than an ex-
pense may change a dairyman from a
miser into a business man. For, while
the short-sighted individual may feed
one dollar’s worth of concentrates per
month to a good cow and realize there- j
for $1.50, the man with the new view
point may, by increasing to $4 per
month, get a return of $5. He has gone
the same number of times to the grain- |
bin and silo, milked the same number
of times, and cleaned the stable the
same number of times, ye*t the simple
investment of $3 has at the end of one
month earned 50 cents interest. If he
turns this $3 over again and again as
a business merchant does, at the end
of six months the investment has been
doubled. In other words, It has made
200 per cent, per annum Interest.
CORNSTALK BROODER SHELTER
Produce Good Stock.
As to whether to produce pure-bred
cows or grade cows you must decide
for yourself. There Is more profit in
pure bred cows, but you can begin tho
production of grades with less capital
and for the Inexperienced there Is per-
haps less opportunity for loss. But a
purebred bull and a good one you
must have. The only way to econo-
mize in buying a hull Is to get the very
best one you can possibly afford From
the breeder's viewpoint the hull Is
half the herd; $150 is little enough to
pay for a bull calf and $400 Invested In
a bull will bring you greater returns
If you have only ten cows than will the
same amount Invested 111 a team of
horses to work on your farm or to
drive to your milk wagon.
Care After Freshening.
For a short time after freshening a
good cow w»’! give a goc t mess of
milk with just ordinary care, hut if
ihe is to continue the good work it
will take a careful choreman and a
good feeder to look after her.
i)
Any simple framework with cross- j Orange Judd Farmer
pieces will serve on which to lay corn- | wood, th
stalks to make such a shelter as and
shown in the illustration, says the
He docs everything in his
power—
Powell—Then I’m glad that I'm nop
In his power.
SCRATCHED till blood ran
When my boy was about three
months old his head broke out with a
rash which was very Itchy and ran a
watery fluid. We tried everything we
could but he got worse all the time,
till it spread to his arms, legs and
then to his entire body. He got so
bad that he came near dying. The
rash would (itch so that he would
scratch till the blood ran, and a thlu
yellowish stuff would be all over his
pillow In the morning. I had to put
mittens on his hands to prevent him
tearing his skin. He was so weak
and run down that he took fainting
spells us If he were dying. He was
almost a skeleton and his little hands
were thin like claws.
“Ho was bad about eight months
when we tried Cutlcura Remedies. I
had not laid him down In his cradle
In the daytime for a long while. I
washed him with Cutlcura Soap and
put on one application of Cutlcura
Ointment and he was so soothed that
he could sleep. You don't know how
glad I was ho felt better. It took one
box of Ctilicura Ointmept and pretty
near one cake of Cutlcura Soap to
cure him. I think our boy would have
died but for the Cutlcura Remedies
and I shall always remain a firm
friend of them. There has been no
return of tho trouble. I shall be glad
to have you publish this true state-
ment of his .ure.” (Signed) Mrs. M.
C. Maitland, Jasper, Ontario, May 27,
1910. __
No Girls.
“You didn't slay long at Wombat’s
country place.”
“No, he promised to show me Ihe
beauties of his neighborhood aful then
tried to point out u lot of scenery.”
TODBIVKOBT f.'.V. L'V,'. . ..system
Takn tho Old Standard UlloVHl’H TASTHLKSH
C! I ILL TONIC. You know what you aro taking
'1 in* formula Is plainly printed on evorf bottle.
Ml,.,wm* It l* Himply Quinta" and Inin In a tame-
less form. Tim Quinine drives out the malaria
less form. The Quil
hnd the iron builds up the HyBteiu.
dealers for 3U years. 1’rlce 60 cei
The roof is ol
Ides provided with lntei.>a]
external crosspieces to hold the
stalks In place Anyone can make It
FIT POULTRY
FOR MARKETING
Remedy for Constipation.
•; Ihe cow Is constipated give one
peiund of epsom salts, one handful of
fine table salt and half an ounce or
ground ginger, mixed In two quarts of
water, well sweetened with molasses.
After H ts dissolved, give 111 one dose;
It may he mixed with the wheat bran
If mixed In the bran it should be well
sweetened or the cow will, not eat It.
Minimize Bacteria Content.
Anything that tends to eliminate
dust previous to, or during milking,
will minimize the bacteria content of
the milk.
No Best Grade.
No one grade of dairy product*
*>«.$! «ui»cd for all conditions
See that the drinking places are
clean and safe.
Jersey cows are noted the world
over for their rich milk
Give the regular ration lu the stable
until th** pastures are full.
Cheese curd may sometimes be Im-
proved by washing In order to remove
defects.
Probably the most common form of
contamination of milk Is by means of
bacteria.
If a small number of calves are fed
and It Is possible to grind cob meal,
there is no finer feed
Tests show that a cement floor is
colder than a board floor where other
conditions are the same.
The on« thing paramount In the
mind of the dairyman is the question
of economical production
Milk as it leaves the udder of a
healthy cow Is practically pure, free
from germs and foreign matter.
It appears that the only way to have
good cows Is to raise them yourself,
and weed out some of the poorest
The i foisteins as id Ayrshlres a
great milk producing breeds, the l!.r
steins possibly leading Just a littlo U
quantity.
The cow that shows a profit at b»
Mid of the year gives more r. ! I*
faction then a phenomenal pi.*di e
who does her work ^t a lm*
Comparative Rate of Decomposi-
tion in Drawn and Undrawn
Fowls Is Shown by Cir-
cular of Government*
The results of the Investigations in
to the comparative rate of decomposi-
tion of drawn and undrawn market
poultry made by the United States de-
partment of agriculture during the sea- which has been either wholly or part
ly eviscerated; (2) “full drawn" poul
try. completely eviscerated with head
drawn, all being drv picked, and the
evisceration was conducted with suffl
cient care to render washing unneces
sr\Fy.
The routine of dressing, packing and
shipping and general handling in
these experiments is far above the av
erage in fact if all market poultry
should be handled so well, the prob
lem of decay would become insignifi
cant.
The Investigations which are de
scribed in detail in the pamphlet deni
onstrate (1) undrawn poultry decom
poses more slowly than does poultry
«elf-poKsession implies* the c apart ty
for self-restraint, self-compulsion, and
self-direction.—W. H. Thomson.
Mr-4 Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Chtldrea
teething, Hoften« the gums, reduce* inflaramn
tlon. allay* pain, cure* wind <>olic. 25c a bottle.
Men have more temptations than
women because they know where to
look for them.
no Y Ol It CLOTHES LOOK YELLOW T
If so, use Red Cross Hull Blue. It will make
them white as snow. 2 os. package 5 cent*.
A man is seldom arrested for strik
ing an attitude.
son 1909-1910 have Just been published
in Chemistry Circular 70. The condi-
tions of the experiment were strictly
commercial, as the fowls were killed
and dressed by the regular employees
of a poultry packing house, were ship-
ped in the usual one-dozen-to the-box
package in a car-lot of dressed poultry,
were received by a wholesaler and
handled with his stork, and went to
the retailer when he purchased fowls
from the same car-lot. remaining in
his fhop for the period which the mar
ket happened to require lor their sale.
The shipments extended over a pe-
riod of six months, from January to
June, inclusive, and the haul was
about 1,700 miles requiring on the
average of 7l/z days The birds were
mature liens, large and fnirly fat, and
the method of killing was by bleeding
through the mouth and puncturing the
brain through the skull just below the
eye. The carcasses were dressed ac
cording to methods known respective
ly as full drawn," "wire drawn.”
Boston drawn,” aud some are un
and feet removed decoin pones th€
most rapidly; (3) "Boston drawn" and
"wire drawn" stand midway between
the undrawn and "full drawn" in speed
of decomposition the "wire drawn.’
which is moat like the undrawn being
usually the better; and (4) that these
deductions apply to dry picket!, dry
chilled, dry packed, unwashed fowls,
which have been marketed with what
would 1)0 called promptness
The effect of different methods of
dressing in case of delayed marketing
is now under investigation.
Arabian Horse.
The Arabian horse is a horse of the
highest courage, In stature about 14
hands 2 Inches, a horse of length
power and substance combined with
the elastic and tin* sinuous movement
of the serpent. He is a perfect ani-
mal. be is not exaggerated In some
large parts, meager and diminished In
oth< rt.
ARE YOU FREE
-FROM —
Headaches, Cold«, Indigestion,
Pains, Constipation, Sour Stomach,
Dizziness? If you are not, the most
effective, prompt and pleasant
method of getting rid of them is to
take, now and then, a desert poon-
ful of the ever refreshing and truly
beneficial laxative remedy—Syrup
of Figs and Elixir of Senna. It is
well known throughout the world
as the best of family laxative reme-
dies, because it acts so gently and
itrengthens naturally without irri-
tating the system in any way.
To get its beneficial effects it is
always necessary to buy the genu-
ne, manufactured by the California
■Mg Syrup Co., bearing the name
of the Company, plainly printed on
the front of every package.
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Wilson, A. L. Capitol Hill News (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 31, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 3, 1911, newspaper, May 3, 1911; Capitol Hill, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc937238/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.