The Copan Leader. (Copan, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1914 Page: 3 of 4
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COPAN, OKLA., LEADER
ADVANTAGES OF SWISS BREED OF CATTLE
NEED PROPER SETTING CORN CAN BE GROWN
ARRANGEMENT OF ARTISTIC ON CANADIAN PRAIRIES
PIECES OF CHINA.
Excellent Specimen of Swiss Type—16 Month*1 Old Bull.
There are many ends for which the
Swiss cattle are bred In Switzerland.
The firBt objects In all cattle breeding
are the products of milk and of meat,
but the animals can also be used for
work. In general that which Is most
wanted 1b to obtain an average live-
weight, this weight being a little j
higher and subject to variation In the i
Simental breed than that of Schwyz. j
The heights and inclinations of more
or less Importance, the diversity In
the composition and the fertility of
the soil, and in the management and
care given to the cattle. Influence a
great deal the live-weight and size of
the cattle coming from different re-
gions and establishments. Thus in
some districts they prefer raising cat-
tle of an average weight or of great
weight, while In other regions only
cattle of lighter weight are bred. In
the regions where the Schwyz cattle
are bred, there Is a greater difference
on account of the great number of dif-
ferent methods In the way of raising
and managing the cattle. Yet the
ends aimed at are the same in the two
breeds with one difference only; that
those animals which are of lighter
weight and less well managed have
much less meat and precocity. In every
case, what is striven after, Is to obtain
healthy and strong cattle. In sum-
mer the greater part of the cattle
breeders of the Mlttelland send their
cattle up to the Alpine pasturages, and
moreover there Is a great deal of ex-
changing between the cattle breeders
of the Alps and those of the plains.
With regard to the animal's faculty
to work, it must be said that since
the culture of wheat has. these last
twenty-five or thirty yea-rs. greatly di-
minished, In the plains as well as in
the alpine regions, very few oxen of
the Schwyz breed are seen. Instead
of these they use cows and heifers
for agricultural work. On the confines
of the two regions where these cattle
are reared, we sometimes meet with
oxen of the Simental breed, which are
very precocious and which become
very heavy. This does not hinder the
Schwyz breed furnishing animals apt
to labor. Their black, strong and
hard hoofs, their quick temperament.
which gives at the same time a high
opinion of health and strength of re-
sistance and of the animal’s faculties.
The head is nearly always small
and refined. Long noses are often met
with; broad foreheads, Bmall turned-
up horns and a large mouth are the
general signs. The neck is of an
average length, well covered with
hair and having small rumples. You
sometimes meet with animals having
very narrow chests which 1b a con-
sequence of bad management, but
generally that part of the body Is well
built. The back is long and rather
broad and well developed, the whole j
trunk In all Its development In length
Swiss Yearling.
shows the good qualities of a milk-
cow. The limbs are generally well
made and strong, seldom coarse. Most
of these animals have strong thighs
with good muscles, having short shins,
the knees, pasterns and hoofs are
very strong. The bodies of the cows
reared on the declivities of the moun-
tains have sometimes a tendency to
throw their bodies backwards, but this
tendency Is remedied with age.
GOOD PASTURES
FOR THE SHEEP
Two-Yeai^Old Swiss Heifer.
greatly help them In their work even
along the smooth roads. Their faculty
to fatten Is good and the quality of
their meat excellent The live-weight
of these animals of the heavy type is
satisfactory and might be higher In
some districts. If account was kept of
their faculty of fattening.
In former times, the descriptions of
the cattle, show that then white spots
In the hair were rather frequently met
with. TUI about the middle of the
last century the animals with a spot
In the middle of the forehead were
not excluded from cattle shows, but
since then they are getting under-
valued and at the present time they
are not admitted at the competitions,
as no animal obtains a prize with
spots, unless they are found on the
Inferior part of the belly. Those cows
that have a spot higher up than the
belly or on any other part of the body,
are excluded. Cattle bpving reddish
colored hair are not readily received.
Yet It most be remarked that the
animals which are exposed to bad
weather In the alpine districts get a
dirty reddish color, but which disap-
pears on changing the animal's way
of living. With regard to the form of
the body of those animals which are
reared and cared for rationally, they
show an elegance and purity of form
Hauling Manure Often.
The practice of allowing manure to
accumulate In the barnyard cannot be
too severely condemned. Manure Is a
favorite breeding place for flies, and
the Importance of the prompt and
proper disposal of manure In summer
time should be strongly emphasized.
The Ideal way to dispose of stable
manure Is to haul It, at least once a
week, directly to the fields. In this
way the maximum amount of fertiliz-
ing value will bo obtained from the
manure and at the same time the tty
Ewes Should Be Treated Well
After Weaning to Reach
Normal Condition.
If one will use common sense in giv-
ing his sheep good pasture and will
raise plenty of pasture, the cost of pas-
turing sheep will be very low. The
late summer and fall Is very trying on
the breeding ewes, and unless the
sheep owner maintains the flock In a
vigorous condition the profits are sure
to be cut down to a great extent
It la very good to have an abund-
ance of green pasture and forage crops
for the ewes to maintain and regain
their strength and flesh which they
have lost during the suckling of their
lambs They should be treated well
after weaning, so that they will reach
their normal condition by mating
time. Anyone will find It a serious
thing to have their ewes run down and
j In poor condition at the time of
I mating.
Take note that the ewes that pro-
duce the best lambs at weaning time
are usually the best breeders, and
should be treated with the best care
and management When a ewe shows
a large, heavy lamb at weaning time
she Is usually very thin and run down
i Some owners would dispose of her and
| think that she was too weak for a
breeding ewe because she was so thin
| at weaning time. Right there they
' make a very bad mistake. After wean-
| lng the ewes can be kept in a vlgor-
| ous, flesh-forming condition If put on
j good pastures and a small amount of
grain Is fed.
Important Point Is Preservation of
Color Scheme In Its Entirety—
How Woman Evolved Really
Clever Idea.
China and artistic pieces of pottery
are so Inexpensive and their collection
Is a source of so much interest and 1
real enjoyment that their care and ar-
rangement are a matter of more than
passing Interest In the home. Good
china or pottery Imitations require a j
suitable setting for best effects. Valu-
able specimens should be single or
placed In groups. Mugs and plates
on the plate rail should be separated, ]
each collection as a single decoration. j
The construction of the plate rack
Bhould conform to the general style of i
the room, and the articles placed upon
It should be of one color, or consist of j
a collection of pieces which will not j
give to the room the general air of a
curio shop.
One woman desirous of having
dainty plates upon her plate rack, but ,
who was unable to get the kind she
wished, made several of oriental de- ;
sign by cutting patterns from a paper
that is used to give a stained glass ap-
pearance to windows. The paper was
cut into many beautiful patterns and
pasted around the edge and acrose the
center of Inexpensive china plates, but
In perfect harmony with the color
scheme of her dining room.
The washing of valuable china needs
to be carried out very cautiously and
carefully. A big wooden bowl, filled
with warm soapsuds, to which a lew
drops of household ammonia have
been added, should be prepared, and
each piece of china washed separately
In this, using a square of old flannel
for plain pieces and a soft brush for
elaborately ornamental articles. Rinse
in another wooden bowl of clear, warm
water and dry with linen cloths. Wash
the pretty, new table china yourself
in the dining room. Have a pan of hot
water, some soap, a mop and towels
In the dining room after the meal ie
over, and there wash the china. Put
them in their places immediately
afterward and you will not find the
work a tax. To prevent fine china
plates breaking, put a thickness of
blotting paper between them. This
may be bought In large sheets and cut
into rounds which are large enough to
prevent one plate from marring the
decoration of another.
Porcelain ware can be mended with
ordinary putty mixed with oil. Work
a small particle Into the worn place,
set It aside for several days and food
can be cooked in the veesel without
danger of a putty taste. A good
cement for broken china is made by
stirring plaster of paris into a thick
solution of gum arable until it becomes
a viscous paste.
Manitoba Is now commencing to
produce considerable corn, chiefly for
feeding purposes. In some cases,
where the crop can be matured Into
the dough stage, silos could be used
and would be a profitable Investment.
According to the Farm and Ranch Re-
view, a correspondent visited a field
of corn In southern Manitoba on Sep-
tember 28. The corn then was un-
touched by frost and It stood on an
average eight and nine feet In height.
The corn had developed Into the
dough stage, and the crop would easily
exceed 20 tons to the acre. At many
experimental farms, the same favor-
able showing of the corn crop has
manifested Itself. At the Brandon ex-
perimental farm this year several va-
rieties, all very good yielders, matured
Into good silo corn.
Considering the success with which
corn can be produced, and the advan-
tages to be gained by so producing it,
should not it receive the serious at-
tention of the western agriculturist?
Corn is successfully grown In the
northern part of Minnesota in simi-
lar soil and under the same climatic
condition, and there does not appear
to be any reason why like results
Bbould not be secured In western Can-
ada. It Is the opinion of many Ameri-
can farmers of experience that the
corn belt is extending northward. The
prairie provinces must gradually take
up with mixed farming. More stock
on the farms must be raised, and In
consequence farming must to some
extent be diverted from grain growing
to other necessary crops. If crops
suitable for wintering cattle and espe-
cially dairy stock are to be grown,
why should not corn be one of these
crops? In Ontario and In the United
States we find it forms the main bulky
foou for wintering beef and dairy cat-
tle. They would not be without this
profitable plant. In fact, since Its in-
troduction almost twice as much stock
can be retained on the same amount
of land, besides considering its great
value for keeping the land clean.
Some may say that many crops that
can be grown in Ontario and the
States cannot be grown here, but not
so with corn, even now we find scat-
tered fields of corn In Alberta and
Saskatchewan—Advertisement.
Cream Cakes.
One cup boiling water poured over
half cup of butter and while still hot
add one cup sifted flour. Let cool, then
add three unbeaten eggs. Beat ten
minutes, then add soda soze of pea.
Drop on large baking tin by large
spoonfuls. Be sure to leave space be-
tween for them to rise and spread a
little. This recipe will make 12 nice
large puffs or cakes.
Cream Filling for Cakes—One pint
of milk; dissolve two tablespoons of
cornstarch In a little milk and add to
the boiling milk. Let cool for a few
moments, remove from the fire and
then put In two well-beaten eggs while
the mixture is still hot. Some cook the
eggs in the filling, but it is not neces-
sary if the eggs are put Into the cream
while hot. Fill cakes when cold.
Uric Acid is Slow Poison
Unseen In Its approach, hard to de-
tect in Its early stages, and cruelly
painful In its later forms, uric acid
poisoning Is a disease too often fatal.
Bright's disease is one of the final
stages of uric acid poisoning. It klllB
In our country every year more men (
and women than any other ailment
except two—consumption and pneu-
monia. Bright's disease and uric acid
poisoning usually start In some kidney
weakness that would not be hard to
cure, If discovered early, so it is well
to know tho early signs of kidney dis-
ease and uric poisoning.
When uric acid Is formed too fast
and the kidneys are weakened by a
cold, or fever, by overwork, or by over-
indulgences, the acid collects, the blood
gets Impure and heavy, there Is head-
ache, dizziness, heart palpitation, and
a dull, heavy-headed, drowsy feellDg
with disturbances of the urine.
Real torture begins when the uric
acid forms into gravel or stone In the
kidney, or crystallizes Into jagged bits
In the muscles, joints or on the nerve
tubings. Then follow the awful pains
of neuralgia, rheumatism, gout, sciat-
ica, neuritis, lumbago or kidney colic.
11 don't know what ails me.”
It Is but a further step to dropsy or
Bright's disease.
Be warned by backache, by sediment
in the kidney secretions, by pai n f u I,scant
or too frequent passages. Cure the weak-
ened kidneys. Use Doan’s Kidney Fills
—a medicine made just for weak kid-
neys, that lias been proved good in years
of use. in thousands of cases—the rem-
edy that is recommended by grateful
users from coast to coast.
SCREAMED ALOUD
In Agony With Awful Kidney AUmenta
Mn Clara Braach. 200 N. 11th 8t.. Isling-
ton, Mo., aaya “.My whole ayatem was filled
with uric acid potaon. I had terrible, sharp,
shooting pains in my head and sometimes K
waa so dizsy, 1 staggered and nearly fell.
The poisoning affected my whole body and
my hands, arms, limbs and ankles were swol-
len and sore. The pains got so bad I
screamed and I thought I would die. I wag
nervous and languid and at times I had
blinding spells Remedies and physicians'
prescriptions did me no good. In 1911 I
heard of Doan s Kidney Pills and had long
procured for me. After I had taken them a
few days, the soreness and pain began !•
ease up and I felt a little stronger In al-
most no time, I was up and around. In good
health. Doan's Kidney Pills purified my
whole system and there Is no doubt that they
saved my life. Since I was cured, I have had nm
further trouble."
•When Your Back is Lame—Remember the Name"
DOAN’S KIDNEY PILLS
Sold by all Dealers.. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mtlbum Co. Buffalo, It Y. Proprietor*
Buckle.
Henry Thomas Buckle, author of the
"History of Civilization In England,'
was born at Lee, England, In 1821, and
died at Damascus, Syria, in 1862, hav-
ing Just passed his fortieth year.
Buckle was one of the sincerest lovers
of truth that the world has ever
known, and It may be said, with per-
fect accuracy, that he died for truth,
having literally worn himself out
searching for the ways and means of
advancing Its spread among men.
No keener brain or purer soul than
Buckle's was ever clothed In human
form.
Gifted Princess Sophia.
Princess Sophia, wife of the ruler of i
the new state of Albania, is said to be
a highly gifted woman. She Is the
mother of two children and quite a
musician. She plays the harp, mando-
lin and guitar, singing to her own ac-
companiments. She writes poems and
paints and has collected about her in
Potsdam a charming circle of artists.
She grew up in the country, in Rouma-
nla, and can ride any kind of a horse.
Her husband, Prince William of Wied,
is a great student, an athlete, and also
Is said to be a man of great intellectual
force.
HORSE SALE DISTEMPER
You know what you sell or buy through tho sales has about
one chance in fifty to escape SALE, STABLE DISTEMPER.
■'SPOHN'S” Is your true protection, your only safeguard, for
as sure as you treat all your horses with It, you will soon
be rid of the disease. It acts as a sure preventive no mat-
ter how they are "exposed." 60 cents and 11 a bottle; S5
and |10 dozen bottles, at all good druggists, horse goods
houses, or delivered by the manufacturers.
SP0HN MEDICAL CO., Chemist* and Bacteriologists, GOSHEN, IND.. U. S. A.
SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR
DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR
Look Years Younger! Try Grandma's
Recipe of Sage and Sulphur
and Nobody Will Know.
Water for St Petersburg.
The city council of St. Petersburg Is
considering a measure appropriating
$25,000,000 for a supply of pure water,
I to be drawn from Lake Ladoga, 40
On reaching the Ladoga
pumping station the water will be
driven into reservoirs and filters,
whence it will flow through the pipes
unaided to the capital and there dis-
tributed. The capacity of* the works,
which will be ready in 1920, is calcu-
lated for a population of 4,500,000.
DOES ALL OF
HEROWN WORK
And is Glad to Do So, as She Was
Denied this Privilege
For Two Years.
Richmond, Ky.—Mrs. N. V. Willis, of
this place, says: "I suffered for over
three years with womanly trouble, and
tried many different treatments, but
none of them seemed to do me any
good. I had almost given up to die, dollars, so to discover a thieving ear
Almost everyone knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compound-
ed, brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, Itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years !
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to make it at home, which is
mussy and troublesome.
Nowadays we simply ask at any
drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sul-
phur Hair Remedy." You will get a
large bottle for about 50 cents. Every- :
body uses this old, famous recipe, be-
cause no one can possibly tell that
you darkened your hair, as It does It {
so naturally and evenly. You dampen j
a sponge or soft brush with it and 1
draw this through your hair, taking ,
one small strand at a time; by morn- j
lng the gray hair disappears, and
after another application or two, your
hair becomes beautifully dark, thick
and glossy and you look years younger.
—Adv.
—
The Thieving Ear of Corn.
Twelve ears of corn will plant an
acre. If one of the planted ears hap-
pens to be "no good" there is a j
twelfth of an acre missing An acre
of corn may be worth thirty to forty
She Quieted Him.
"Didn't your husband storm when
you showed him your milliner's bill?”
"I should say he did.”
"Well, what did you do?"
“Oh, I showed him the dressmaker’s
bill and then he was speechless."
Too Late.
She—What's your opinion of mar-
riage ?
He—Sorry, but I have a wife al-
ready.
W. L.DOUGLAS
SHOES
MnstHStHfato
Wien't iiiMt iii
Misses, Boys,Children/
$1.50 SI.75S2S2 SOf
7»i
largatt maaar oil
tod $4.50 shoaa\
In tha world.
f 1,006,27^'
DouIm them la 19IS owar lilt.
Thto Is tb« reason we live you tha
same values ler 13 00. $3 50, M OO
and *4.60 noiwlchi'andtni ibe
enormoua increan In ibe eoet of
learner. Our tiaodarda nave
not been lowered and tbe prtoe
to you remains ibe mine.
Aak your dealer to mow you
tbe kind of w L. Dougin aboea be
\e selling for 93 00, »3 So. M 0 J and
M-SO. You will iben be convinced
ibai W L.Douglas aboee are abso-
lutely ae good Mother makea told at
hl*h?r prtoea. Tbe only diflereooa
1 le ibe price
TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE.
feaalM witkeat W L. retain'
■tamped — the bottom. If W.X boogtaa
abo«« are aot for mis In your vicinity, order
direct bom factory. 8boss for every member
tbe family at all
rite ter illustrated
to order by melt.
prlcee, poeuae free,
catalog abowlng here
order by mall. W L. DOUOLA8,
110 Spark Blurt, lreektcw, **
Red Cross Ball Blue makes the laundress
happy, makes clothes whiter than snow.
All good grocers. Adv.
Some people can’t stand prosperity.
Fortunately, they don't have to try
very long.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain
the kettle. Adv.
Soda Fountain
Soda Fountain: We have made upready for
prompt shipment 6, 8, 10, 12 and 20 ft. front
system, pump service outfits, new and slightly
used, at a big saving in price on easy monthly
payments. Thelirosman Co., Inc., Dallas,Tex.
4CAA l.,a Ranch with TO acre farm. Clears
wwwU AClc Ito.uoo 00 a year. Can be bought fev
i.WjO.UO with cattle. Part cash, balance time. Writ#
EEHS I.ANU COMPANY, BRADY, TEX.
175.
Ml
And many a toothless person in-
dulges in bitting sarcasm.
Pettits Eve Salve
RELIEVES
SORE EYES
Nature Never Intended
Woman to be Sickly
Rub Milk Into Oilcloth.
To ruin oilcloth clean It with hot
water or soapsuds, and leave it half-
wiped, and It will look very bright
while wet, but very dingy and dirty
when dry, and will soon crack and
peel off. But if you wleh to preserve
it. and have It look new and nice, wash
It with soft flannel and lukewarm
water, and wipe perfectly dry. If you
want the oilcloth to look extra nice,
after It Is dry, drop a few spoonfuls of
milk over it and rub with a dry cloth.
Cause of Rickets.
Worms, malnutrition, Inadequate
feeding and lack of lime salts In the
feed are common causes of rickets In
pigs. Stop feeding corn and substi-
tute slop of middlings, ground
screened oats, flaxseed meal and milk
| and add one ounce of lime water to
the quart of slop or give a dram of
precipitated phosphate of lime In feed
twice dally.
If worms are seen in the droppings
give sulphate of Iron in the slop for
five mornings In succession at the
rate of one dram for each 100 pounds
of pigs and If necessary repeat the
treatment In a couple of weeks
Fish With Mashed Potatoes.
Butter a baking dish.. Line the bot-
tom and sides thickly with well sea-
soned mashed potato, preferably beat-
en light with an egg. To flake flBh add
half Its quantity of bread crumbs and
enough white sauce to make It quite
moist and beat well. 8eason highly
Fill the space left In the potato with
this mixture and bake In a hot oven.
Fold a napkin neatly around the bak-
ing dish and serve.
Weak Germs Won’t Hatch.
Simply because an egg Is fertile Is
no guaranty that it will hatch out a
chick. Weak germs cannot hatch,
and this weakness, due to the hen's
poor condition, may cause the chick
to die In the shell. A hen may be In
good condition today and In a bad
1 state tomorrow.
question, which Is an alHmportant
one, will be at least partially solved.
Treatment for Foot Rot
An old sheepman writes the Shep-
herd's Journal as follows; A good
powder for foot rot In sheep consists
of six ounces burnt alum, three ounces
veidlgrts. two ounces blue vitriol, two
ounces of green vitriol, and one-half
ounce sublimate. Theso should bs
powdered thoroughly and dusted into
the crevices after the decayed pon
tions have been pared away.
To Evade Dust.
When sweeping carpet many women
are annoyed by dust fitim sweeping.
Why not try this method? Buy a
sponge large enough to cover mouth
and nostrils. Snip off bits from the In-
side until a hollow Is formed to fit the
face. Tie to each side tapes long
enough to fasten behind the head.
Now, when you are ready to sweep,
wet the sponge, wringing it nearly
dry. and tie It In place. This will also
be found an excellent Idea when clean-
ing the range.
Boiled Pudding.
To three teacupfuls of sifted pump-
kin add three teacupfuls of Indian
meal. Add a pint of boiling milk,
two and a half teacupfuls of sugar, or
two teacupfuls of nice molasses. Sea-
son with the grated rind of a lemon
and a very little ginger. Put the mix-
ture Into a pudding bag, tie up, leaving
room to swell, drop Into boiling water
and cook three hours. Serve with rich,
sweetened cream.
when a friend of mine begged me to
try Oardui, the woman's tonic. I got
a bottle, and began to feel a great deal
better after the first few doBes. I
then got four bottles, and after tak-
ing these I was cured.
I don't know what a female pain Is
now, do all of my work, eat anything
I want, and feel like a 16 year old girl.
I never expect to be without Cardul ,
In my house as long as I live, as I
firmly believe It saved my life, and I
will praise It to all of my suffering
lady friends.”
Cardui is a purely vegetable remedy, I
containing no harmful mineral prod-
ucts. Its ingredients act in a helping,
building way, on the womanly consti-
tution.
ly troubles for over half a century,
during which time It has proven of
more than ordinary value as a tonic
for weak women.
You can rely on Cardul. It will do
for you what it has done for thou-
sands of others. Begin taking it
today.
N. B.— IFr* hr Ladies' Advisory Dept.. Chstts-
hattanooga, T
is worth from two and a half to three
and a half dollars. One can pick out
the ears of poor germination at slight
cost, if he will test his corn before
he becomes rushed with spring work.
And while about It reject the ears
that although germinating do not send
up strong, vigorous stalks. Lusty, vigt
orous young things grow surest into
proflb whether they be pigs, lambs,
colts or cornstalks.—Breeder's Ga-
zette.
As a matter of fact It is
her right and her doty to
enjoy perfect health and
strength—to be just as
strong and healthy as man—
perhaps more so—in view ol
the fact that it is she who brings into the wurld the offspring:
Event woman can be strong and healthy. Don’t resign
yourself to a delicate life.
If you suffer from headaches, backaches, nervousness,
low spirits, lack of ambition, or have lost all hope of being
well again—it’s more than an even chance that you wifl
speediiy regain your health if you will try
Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
(In Tablet or Liquid Form)
This famous remedy is tbe result of years of patient
research by a physician who has made women’s peculiar
ailments a life study.
II!
King George in France.
During the visit of King George and
Queen Mary to Paris his majesty will
be present at the annual spring review _
. , ,, , of the Paris garrison on April 22. The
It has been relieving woman- . . . ,,
. ... 6 review will be held, as In previous
years, at Vincennes. The review is
generally held In March, but out of
compliment to King Geogre it has been
delayed this year.
Bluer Its introduction—more than forty years ago—thou-
sand* of women In every part of the globe have (ratified
totta wonderful merit*. Yon, too, will find It beneficial.
Try It now. Your dealer in medicines will supply you or
you can vend 60 one-cent stamps for a trial box. Addreaa
R. V. Pierce. M. D-. Buffalo, N. Y.
Dr. PUrce'i Hsuat Pellet* nnlata atonaach, Uver.
request. Adv.
Hard Luck.
Two New Yorkers of some experi-
ence in travel other than by the rapid
transit lines of the metropolis were
telling hard-luck stories.
“About the worst I ever got up
against.” said one, "was buying from
a Connecticut Yankee what was repre-
sented to be a pullet, and by gravy
The Reason.
Cause and Effect—"It must be great
to be a man! One dress suit lasts for
years and years, and a woman must
have a new gown for every party.”
“That's why one dress Buit lasts a man
for years and years."—Judge.
RINGWORM SPREAD ON HAND
turned out to be a hen so old she
couldn't lay fresh eggs."
“Hard lines, hard lines!" sighed the
other, who had a red nose. “But think
of me being marooned for a whole
month in a Kansas town which was so
teetotally temperance that even the
cows had gone dry at the last elec-
tion!” «
R. F. D. No. 2, Box 67, Ellijay, Ga.—
"My son's ringworm began on the
back of his hand. A fiery red spot
came about as large as a dime and It
would Itch 60 badly he would scratch
I'll till it bled. It began to spread till
Or Any Other Kind.
“I shouldn’t think that prisoner
could be particularly successful In
uttering forged notes.”
"Why not?"
“He stutters so."
Superior Beef T*«.
Chop lean, Juicy beef quite fine,
i Put into a glass fruit Jar and put on
the cover. Set in a kettle of water
with a cloth under It Cover closely,
and boll Blowly at least four hours,
the longer the better, up to seven or
eight hour* No water must be per-
mitted to get Into the can, as what
you aim for Is the pure extract of
beef, full strength. Season to taste,
verv lightly. Strain before serving.
Climate Knockers.
Some people blame the climate for
their ill health, whereas the real trou-
ble Is that they shut themselves up in
their houses and won’t give the cli-
mate a chance.—Charleston News and
Courier.
it went all over his hand. He would
Just scream every time I went to wash
it The nail came off on the middle
finger,
"I used - and It got worse
all the time. The trouble lasted two
or three months. Then I sent and got
some Cuticura Soap and Ointment and
began to use them. I would wash
his hand with the Cuticura Soap and
dry It good and apply the Cuticura
Ointment Relief was found In two
or three days and the ringworm was
cured In two weeks after using Cuti-
cura Soap and Ointment” (Signed)
Josie Barks. Jan. 4. 1913.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
card "Cuticura, Dept L, Boston."—Adv.
Our Idea of a poor excuse of a man
Is one who solicits dirty linen for hie
wife to wash and Iron.
Rheumatism, Sprains
Backache, Neuralgia
“Yes, daughter, that’s good «tuff. The pain In
my back is all gone—I never saw anything work
aa quickly aa Sloan's Liniment” Thousands of
grateful people voice the same opinion. Here’s
the proof.
Reliavad Pain in Back,
"I vu troubled with a very bad pain In mr
back for some time. I went to a doctor but be
did not do me anf good, so l
purchased a bottle of Sloan's
Liniment, and now l am a well
woman. I always keep a bob
tie of Sloan * Liniment in the
bouse." — Sul .VatiUa l otton.
J*4 Mrnlm kva, Brooklyn, ,Y. Y.
Sciatic Rheumatism.
"We have used Sloan’s UtH-
tnent for over ail years and
found it the beat we ever used.
When my wife had sciatic
rheumatism the only thing tha t
did her anygood was Sloans
Liniment, we cannot praise It
lughly enough." —air. Pangs.
Do* Moinmo. Iowa.
Sprained Ankle Relieved.
"1 waa m for a long time with a erverely sprained ankle. I got a bottle of Sloan's
Liniment and now 1 am able to be about and ran walk a great deal. I write this be-
cause 1 think you de-verve a lot of credit for putting such a fine Liniment on tbe
aatket and Hihall alwaym take time to recommend Dr. Sloan's Liniment."—Mrs.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
At ail Deal«rt—25c., 50c. and 5100. SWi lotrmdro book oa bono, cattla. k»»
and poakryMotfrM,
Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, lac.
Boston, Mas*.
You Look Prematurely Old
Becausec* thoee ugly, grizzly, gray halra. Uae “LA CRgOLI” HAIR DREMINO. PRtCf, SI.OO, retail.
. •v'Tr
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Atkisson, J. F. The Copan Leader. (Copan, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, April 10, 1914, newspaper, April 10, 1914; Copan, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc950847/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.