The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1917 Page: 3 of 10
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THE FAIRFIELD RECORDER
$
^ THIS ORUSCIST KNOWS -
WEIGHED ^POUNDS BESTKIDNEY“
' “ ' ' wamp Koot »ud today 1 believe*
of tne beat medicine* on the'
________, _jid my patrons are very much
and She
—
fill
SILAGE IS INDISPENSABLE FOR CATTLE
Takes Tanlac
Weighs One Hundred
and Six.,
jot iud today 1 believ
te beat medicines on
mucn
rain its
and apeak very favorably regarding it.
| Kilmer's Swam
{it is one
| market; and my patrons are very n
Now 1 pleased with the' results,obtained Iron
1 ’ -----k very favorably regardin
... „ B It.
ta* been very successful in
of kidney, liver and bladder
SUFFERED FOR 25 YEARS
Swamp-Root has
the treatment of
troubles according t« the reports received
and I have no hesitancy in recommending
it for I have great faith in ita merits.
Very Wtily yours,
QWL DRUG BTORE,
By R. F. Boies,
ffcdalia.
I Oct. 3, 191#.
Missouri.
•are
•o I
walk
•ays Words Cannot Express the Grati-
tude She Owee “Master
Medicine.”
Letter to
Dr. Kilmer If Co.
Binghamton, N. Y.
own
bout
jom-
«W8-
“Words of praise can't express the I Binghamton,
gratitude I feel to Tanlac, for It has bottle. It ’will
,y be
men
Ham-
1
peri
feel-
ness,
Mnk-
stan-
not only relieved me of troubles that
kept me la misery /or twenty-five
years, but has built me up until I am
thirty pounds heavier than I was when
I started taking It," said Mrs. J. C.
rdus, of 4220 Clifton street Eh
, Texas, a few days ago.
‘*1 have suffered since I was about
ten years old," she continued, "with
catarrhal trouble of the stomach and
of recent yeara with rheumatism and
it seemed my troubles were stendlly
growing worse. My food would sour
on my stomach and the gas pressing
against my heart affected my breath-
ing. I fell off until I only weighed
seventy-six pounds and was so weak
and nervous I got but little sleep at
nights. I was constipated and suffered
terribly from headaches. The rheuma-
tism affected my lower limbs mostly
and I had such pains through my back
■fid right side I aimpry eouia not look
after my household duties.
"It surely was surprising to me the
way Tanlac took hold of my troubles.
I began Improving right from the start.
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yos
Send ten cents U> I)r. Kilmer A Co.,
jsuh—*— N. *Y, for a sample sips
'ill oonvince anyone. You
will also receive a booklet of in-
formation,'telling about the kidney* and
bladder. When writing, be sure and men-
tion this paper. * Large and medium sire
bottles for sale at all drug stores.—Adv.
The Only Way.
Food Administrator Hoover said in
Washington, during the filibuster
against the food control bill:
"We must control food, or flour will
rise to $20 a barrel and meat to fifty
-cents a pound.
“Why, look at prices niready!
“I said to a haggard family man the
other day:
“ ‘See here, Jones, you’ll ruin your
health if you work all dny on yoyr
books In the city and then go out and
do rfffeht work on other men’s books nil
the evening. My boy. you're burning
the candle nt both ends.’
“1 got to, Mr. Hoover,’ snid Jones.
T! 0 Hi* only Way SO l Li tt x t: i,,.11, iiuu«
meet.' "—Philadelphia Bulletin.
] CALOMEL'5 MERCURY, IT SICKENS!
• STOP USING SALIVATING DRUG
Don’t Lose a Day’s Work! If Your Liver Is Sluggish or Bowel*
Constipated Take “bodson’s Liver Tone.”—It’s Fine!
You’re bilious I *Your liver is slug-
gish! You feel lazy, dlzky and all
knocked out. Your head la dull, your
CHAMPION PAIR OF KANSAS BRED SHORTHORN STEERS.
any
year*
IDt Of
by
NO MALARIA—NO CHILL8.
___D_______Jp®___m .______________________ "Plantation'' Chill Tonic is guaranteed
My strength came back to me day by j to driv8 «way Chills and Fever or your
day and I soon overcame the trouble moPClr refunded. Price 50c. Adv.
from constipation and the headaches.
Silage Is JUst as Indispensable to successful beef-cattle raising as it Is
to successful dairying. In fact, during these times of high-priced feedstuff*
It is highly essential. As with sheep and horses, silage alone is too wide a
ration. Cattle receiving silage exclusively will not do well. Cottonseed meal,
linseed oil meal, clover alfalfa or pea hay should be fed with it. Fattening
steers will eat 20 to 25 pounds per head dally. Wintering yearlings will do
likewise.. Calves may be fed all the silage they will clean up twice a day.
Grain and legume hay should, In all cases, be fed In udditlon. Bulls also
thrive on silage. From 10 to 15 pounds per head dHlly plus hay and some
grain are sufficient to beep them In good condition. Pregnant beef cows will
cal SG lo 40 pounds of silage per bead dally plus some hay.
ctlcal
■ftuafi,
on m*
rt, VI.
Jhat’s
■place
here
one
hatr
|awav
send
ionic
sIms
Gen-
well
and
1 out
sage
(ranee
ne-
tt go
gen-
vwell
h merit
The pains In my back and side have
left me and I don’t even feel the rheu-
matism In jny lo^rer limbs any more.
I now weigh one hundred
A« Mitey Wlae Understood It.
They were talking about aviation.
“As I understand It,” said Mr. Mlfey
W'la^ ''ritw-jnan»ttiane. ja.a_41.vlni: ma-
pounds, and many of my friends have c*,*ne from which one falls, the
spoken of my great Improvement and
asked what on earth I had been tak-
ing. Of course, I simply tell them ‘Tan-
lac’ for I think It the most remarkable
medicine ever made.”
There Is a Tanlac dealer In your
town. Adv.
plane is
anfl—"
one from which two fall
Thrift and stinginess are as similar
as they are different,
"I get you," chirped the quick think-
er. “The hy-drop-plane Is one from
which they all fall out."—Indianapolis
News.
Call a man a diplomat Instead of a
liar and he will be pleased; yet It may
amount to the same thing.
"
V^hat Is Castoria
ASTORIA ia a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric,
Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant It contains neither
Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guar-
antee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief
of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverish-
ness arising tnmvfrom. and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels,
aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sieep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend.
The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in nse for over
80 years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under
AM one to deceive you in thi#.
trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and ° ^xpcrimenta *****
Children—Experience against Experiment
Genuine Cantoris always bears the signature of 1
Cor-
Aleut’s
(you ?*
Open-Air Exercise
Carter’s Little Liver Pills
are two splendid things
For Constipation
II you can’t get ail the exercise you should have, its all
MINI
SbuRDom
SanU Price
the more important that you have the
other tried-and-true remedy for a tor-
pid liver and bowels which don’t act
Take one pill every night; more only
when you’re sure Its
Genuine
bear*
■is natura
=
CHALKY, COLORLESS COMPLEXIONS NEED
CARTER’S IRON PILLS
PROTECT YOUNG PIGS
FROM CHOLERA GERM
When Vitality Has Been Permit-
ted to Run Down Animals Are
Susceptible to Disease.
te to
ntaln
cb ut
|*t!mu>
ame”
plane
An Irish Comeback.
An Irishman employed in a large
factory had taken a day off without
permission and seemed likely to lose
his Job In consequence. When asked
by his foreman the next day why he
hurt not turned up the day before, he
replied:
“1 was so ill, sir, that I could not
come to work to save me life."
“How was it. then, I'at. that I saw
you pans the factory on your bicycle
One method of dodging popularity
is to give your neighbors advice.
Dr. Feery-* "Dead Shot" I* powerful but
**fe On* do** 1* enough to expel Worm* 01
Ttpetort*. No castor oil nece***ry. Adv.
during the’ morning?" asked the fore-
man.
Pat was slightly taken aback, then
regaining his presence of mind, he re-
plied :
“Bure, air, that must hare been when
I was going for the doctor."—Pitta-
burgh Chronicle-Telegraph.
DON'T GAMBLE
that your heart’s all right. Make
Bure. Take “Renovlne”—a heart aqd
nerve tonic. Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
" Occasionally there Is a man wise
enough to IhJnk poetry without writ-
ing it.
Sloth makes, fill things ritf
all ea
*ki in*
His Powers of Persuasion.
Lord Plrle, chairman of Harland A
Wolff, the great Belfast shipbuilding
firm, is credited with remarkable pow-
ers of persuasion ns a business man.
It la told of him that when visiting
Liverpool a Inrg? shipowner was ob-
served to have a more serious face
than usual.
"What Is wrong?" one of his col-
lesgues asked
"Well, the fact la,” he replied,
“Plrle h*.i wf» over nrir and has
persuaded roe to buy a 10.000-ton ship,
and I am wondering what on earth to
do with It!”
Trotect young Rwine from cholera by
so arranging the breeding pens and
hog houses that good drainage, sun-
light, and fresh nir will be Insured, is
the advice of Dr. C. W. Hobbs, field
veterinarian and superintendent of
the seriim laboratory at the Kansas
State Agricultural college. '
“The young pigs are susceptible to
pneumonia and othef diseases,” said
Doctor Hobbs. “If allowed to nest
In a draft, they may contract disease.
Their vitality will at any rate be low-
ered, making them more susceptible to
cholera. Overfeeding either the moth-
er or the young pigs, especially with
fat producing food, will also render
the plga more susceptible to disease.
“Do not allow communication be-
tween your hog lot and the Jots be-
longing to neighbors, as cholera germs
may be carried easily on person’s
shoes. Wagons that have been used to
carry infected or dead hogs will infect
corn and other feed and in this way
may be brought to one’s farm. Fre-
quent cleaning and burning of litter In
the hog pens will prevent any latent
infection.
“Hog pens, feeding troughs, and
buildings should be protected by regu-
lar use of a three pew cent solution of
cresol compound D. 8. P. Hogs should
be sprayed weekly with a four«and
one-half per cent solution of cresol
U. S P.
“Do not put new stock—either hogs
or cattle—with hogs already on the
farm. Newly purchased hogs should
be put Into separate inclosures well
separated '-om the herd already on
the farm uud kept under observation
for three weeks. This Is necessary, as
stock ears, unloading chutes, sad pezs
are likely to be Infected with hog chol-
“Bum up all carcasses of dead cat-
tle, horses, hogs, sheep, or dogs on the
day they die. Do not allow chickens
or hogs to have access to a dead car-
cass.
“Ponds should be drained and thor-
oughly covered with lime. Where this
cannot be done they should be fenced
hogtlght. Infected ponds and wal-
lows become a source of Infection on
the farm for years and little or noth-
ing can be done until they are drained.
When wallows exist near the drink-
ing troughs they should he plowed up
and filled In after they have been drain-
ed and covered with air-Malted lime.
The use of the sanitary hog wallow
riliiiiunieS ifii* ooUrve of Infection.”
uomic principle does not obtain In
time of peace. Argentina 1ms long
since made it a felony to slaughter
heifer calves. If we kill ail the calves
it is only a question of time before we
will have no cows. Is It not a “penny
wise and pound foolish" policy to kill
the future cow In order to gqt the
dirty dollar in our hand right on the
spot? The farmer get*or
two for-the calf, and 16 cents a'gallon
for his milk in 30 days and this knocks
him off his economic perch. Keeping
the calf until’ It becomes a cow means
an investment with slow returns, but
with mighty satisfactory returns con-
sidering the present prices of good
milk cows.
So now, behold the Inevitable
drought and famine from cutting off
the stream at Its source. Yes, the
fact cannot be denied that we have
killed so many calves that both our
milk supply and otir meat supply is on
the blink and a good milk cow'is al-
most worth her weight In gold.
Here is the proposition: In the
long l*un, Is a cow’s milk too valuable
to feed to a cow’s calf?
tongue la coated; breath bad; stomach
•our and bowels constipated. But don’t
take salivating calomel. It makes you
sick, you may lose a day’s work.
Calomel la mercury or quicksilver
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel crashes Into sour bile like
dynamite, breaking it up. Tbat’v when
you feel that awful nausea and cratpp-
ing.
If you want to enJoy the nicest, gen-
tlest liver and bowel cleansing you
sluggish liver better than a doe* ef
nasty calomel and that it won’t mains
you sick.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver
medicine. Youjll know it, next aiorh-
lng because, you will wake up feeling
fine, yoiir fiver will be working, yaasf
headache and dizziness gone, roar
stomach will be sweet and your bowata
regular. You will feel like working;
you'll be cheerful; full of vigor sag
ambition.
Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely
vegetable, therefore harmless nan nan*
ever experienced JUst take a spoonful not salivate. Give It to your children!
of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Your Millions of people are using Dodeoa**
druggist or dealer sells you a 50-cent I Liver Tone instead of dangerous «s$-
bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone under | omel now,. Your druggist will tell yon
my personal money-back guarantee i that the sale of calomel Is alniMl
that each spoonful will clean your I stopped entirely here.—Adv.
PTERSMITHs
P (hillTonic
Sold for 47 yean. Far
Malaria, Chilk &Feret.
Alio .a Fine General
Strengthening Tank.
50* and $1.00 M ag
Drug Star**.
Overalls that last
that’s the kind made of
StireTs
Indiio Qofh
too Cloth
Ataidud for ts eo*r twenty-for ytar*
For Men and
Miss Stifel Indigo
Kid Glove FinutcCitoth
For Women
Remember, It’s thq CLOTH in your overalls
1
'I
. . —n Four 1
the wear—Stifel Indigo has a 75
Cloth made* Look tor tha BOOT trade mark—it’* your guarantee of the genuine.
J* L* STIFEL & SONS
Indigo Dyers and Printer*
WHEELING. W. VA.
*
York... 260-261 Chufth St ta> Fraadra
aclphi«...10n Chcatnut ft.
.11 BctUxi U. ft. joKpfc. Mo.
Sum* Bsnk RUc.
ft. Ixmi.—.928 VIctMiSUldf.
........ ..04k ***~iw»v m*r
.221 W. jadcm Wr<L
.CocftCol* BUf.
*<- r»ui_____fn no*.
Toronto —10 SMbrer *‘*y
Witi.jp*,. . 400 Huoaoad BMt.
Moot**]... Room SOS t«l BI4u
Vancouver-S06 UerxmmUe BU*.
GRAZING ABILITY Of -
HOGS NOT REALIZED
Woke the Next Man.
‘‘Did you wake up No. 44?”
“No„sir. Couldn’t-wake him. But
t did the nearest I could."
“What was that?”
“I waked ud No. 45, sir!”—Comic
Ctolu.
Men Who Understand Importance
of Ample Growth and Ten-
der Foliage Make Profits.
(By C. W. HICKMAN, Animal Husban-
dry Department, University of Idaho.)
HEADACHES
This <it»i reusing Aittnent Rbonlff be
relieved at once and save strain on
Nervous System. GAPUDINK gives
quick relief. It’s a liquid—Pleasant to
take.—Adv.
Didn’t Need It.
The young bride hud clearly formed
Ideas on Industrial questions.
“1 will give yon something to eat,”
UNE Orgmlttedl EyeW*,
~]/Ci"I!?OHI * "’’* *”r •*’“* "• ™l-
'miinved by Murine. Try W in I she Informed the tramp, “If you will
EyeCsJU '^"Oh.Vshan’t need that,” the tramp
KILLING OF HEIFER
CALVES DISAPPROVED
Country is Paying Price of Fool-
ish Practice and Should
Profit by Lesson.
(By - OEORGF H. GLOVER, Colorado
Agricultural Collage. Fort Collins.)
“Men are hut children of
growth.'" firm cott* were
three years ngo. Again comparing hu
mutt nnd real cattle we are reminded
of the effect of war upon the stand
ards of tha tamm race, physically,
numerically «ou vu»«rwVs«- (fewnii t>-
war oh he'.feY calves: aad the Userttsblc
beef and milk shortage.
Recent legislation making It unlaw-
ful to slaughter female cuttle has
caused us to sit up and take notice.
If It I* had economy to slaughter
calves, nnd thus endanger the food
supply. In time of war. The question
arises whether or no the name eeo*
Perhaps the high price of grain will
awake farmers to the full apprecia-
tion of the grazing ability of hogs.
There never was so great an Incentive
to save grain and use green forage.
It la generally understood now that
profitable hog-feeding in summer in-
volves the use of pasture of some kind,
but there is more difference in hog
pastures than many people suppose.
However a few men realize the im-
portance of ample growth and tender
palatable forage In n hog pasture, and
they profit by the knowledge.
Very often the only hog-tight field
on a grain farm Is the small grass
pasture near the barn that serves for
all kinds of stock. Horses and sheep
keep the grass too short for cattle
or hogs. Instances have probably
come to notice when hogs on shch a
pasture last year did not return mar-
ket price far the grain they ate. Other
fanners nearby whose hogs ran in al-
falfa, clover and rape figured that
they got much more than market price
for the grain fed, and in some In-
stances twice as much. This means
that their hogs In good pasture prob-
ably made twice as much pork from
each hundred pounds of grain as was
made by the hogs on short grass. *
The hog will eat ah abundance of
Important thing to bear In pilnd Is
that the better the forage the more
the hog will eat of It, and then the
more grain there is left for other pur-
poses. Good succulent pasture crops
like alfalfa, clover or rape often make
400 to A00 pounds of pork per acre be-
side# what can lie accounted for
through the gndn fed.
Apsrtan Women Suffered Untold Torture*
But who wants to be a Spartan? Take
"Femenlna” for all female disorders.
Price 50c and $1.00.—Adv.
TWO VARIETIES OF HEROES
One Who Admits He Is of Make-Be-
lieve Claes, Telle of Life in
the Trenchet.
EXCELLENT CROPS FOR HOGS
)f n larger Le(,umei, Arc Rith in *hd
hut CH.WS swine Thrive on Plant*—Grazing
Cowpea* and Beaie.
The legumes are excellent crop# for
hog#. Being rich In protein huge rel-
icgtuad 1Jhtais aa-1 will ihfiv« «a
them. |
The practice of grazing soy beans
and cow p»n« Is a good one provided
a supplementary grain feed la given.
Often this ia not the cssu. It must
be remembered that shy bean ami
flBWfwn plants arc ver;t rich and if
fed alone would be rather expensive,
j considering the value of the protein.
There are real heroes nnd make-be-
lieve heroes; and they are not always
easily distinguishable. I do not hide
from myself thnt I belong to the make
believes. And yet. It Is remarkable
that I did not find the second week
at the front sa terrible ns the first. It
Is not so had there as it seems, says
a writer In the Atlantic.
When once you*get accustomed to
the Idea that you may be dead In s
day, or in an, hour, or In a minute, and
when you are clear ns to your future,
yoq? mood Is relieved from constant
depression. Involuntarily you become
kind and helpful to those about you.
yon do not get vexed over trlfleR, you
are ready to make all sorts of sacri-
fices.
Of course. If, In the midst of stich
n condition, a grenade suddenly drops
Into your trench, if you see three or
four of your comrudes getting killed,
your misery returns, no matter how
good an outward appearance you may
keep up. At least for a while.
But then again the thought romes
that getting wounded means rest nnd
safety, and good care. And death?
that Is atlll lesa terrible. One boast
Working Under Difficulty.
'Burglar—1 hate to work a Job alone.
If I get pinched I can't turn stateNi
evidence on nobody and git off.
| Lemons Beautify!
Make Quarter Pint
of Lotion, Cheap
of reaching one’s destination along the t,le <*Ay tinkering her up,
shortest road I Is ttwt death evt
one’s final deatlnatlon?—Atlantic.
What Kind of Riches?
“ ‘Biches take unto themselvea
wings and fly away,’ ” quoted the
teacher. “What, kind of rlchea Is
meant ?"
And Johnny Jones said: "I reckon
they must be ostriches.”
Here Is told how to prepare an hxa#»
pensive lemon lotion which can be use*
to bring back to any skin the sweet
freshness, softness, whiteness an*
beaut^. /
The Juice of two fresh leroonii strain
ed Into a bottle containing three ounces
of orchard white rnukes a whole quar-
ter pint of the most remarkable lemon
skin beautifler at about the cost wo#
must pay for a small Jar of the aHB-’
nary cold creams. Core should be tak-
en to strain the lemon Juice through •
fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets Is,
then this lotion will keep fresh for
months. Kirerjr wound knows that less-
on Juice Is used to bleach and remove
such blemishes ns freckles. saltoeMqff
and tan, and Is the Ideal skin softetsoq
smoothener and beautlfier.
Just try It! Get three ounce* of
orchard white at any pharmacy ao4
two lemons from the grocer and mako
up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra-
grant lemon lotion and tnaaaage It
dally into the face, neck, arms asC
hands, and see for yourself. Ada.
is
Pleasures of an Enthusiast.
“Does the price of gasoline bother
you?”
"Not much,” replied Mr. Chagglaa.
"I only run the motor a few mllea.
Then I get ont and spend the rest of
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH. /
Yon wti| test -ssrs ys=si« X jmm
darken yoar ugly, grizzly, gray bain hr
using "La Creole” Hair Dressing —AAa
>
J
1.
%
Today’s pun—Many a
weather forecaster has heea
weather beaten. *
~■*»
Easily Done.
*Td like to get a little runabout.”
“Then why don't you ask Miss
Flighty to marry you?"
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
I’m helping to
white bread by *
save
by eating
tYkure
Post Toasties
WHAT ARE
YOU
00 in a t
1
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE |
D<**AhreS in water for <:WW iqqpnl
pelvic catarrh, ulceration end Wlwwr-|
metinn. SiswsamiM by Lfdm £,1
1 hftojL *1 1
A healing wooder j™,
•*** eye*. Eombmm
/ mcu{ fswidUy
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Kirgan, Lee. The Fairfield Recorder (Fairfield, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1917, newspaper, October 12, 1917; Fairfield, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1110417/m1/3/: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Fairfield Library.