The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, June 2, 1911 Page: 2 of 10
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What Thsy Bld About IL
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BAKINGPOWP
NOT IN THEIR CLA88.
conceal
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PRES. BARRETT SPEAKS PLAIN
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Chills and Fever
HAG
Thedford’s
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Feeding for Wool Growth
CCA2
Retailing Milk.
NO HYPODERMICS
A
Horse Collars.
Feeding Cattle.
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SYRUPorflGS
Elixir°fSenna
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WHY SHE DID
SEND HER PICTURE
pui
ner
smd
-pleJ
the
CRIMINAL NEGLECT
OF SKIN AND HAIR
Matters Especial Moment to
the Progressive Agriculturist
It is
with
The biggest work in the world is be-
ing done in the little red schoolhouse.
HOW IS
YOUR
LIVER?
th
ei
th
Farmers5* Educational
Til and Co-Operative
Union of America
912 Fmm Avmm, Hoaatea
1717 Riebardaoa A»», Dallas
TtJ
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Mich
irs «n
golden sui
The famous Italian looked
mMSMMI
Issues Warning to Farmers and Bank-
ers Against Entering Wedge
of Foreign Ownership.
were playing ch
Ing. tree In tbg,
Elysian Fields.
I feed grain when I first go Into
the barn in the morning, then give the
hay and milk them and separate the
milk, says a writer in an exchange.
Then I turn the cows out to drink,
and when they come In I give them
■' a. all feed of bay. At nlgbt I do
so *n the morning, except the cattle
cause a great deal of distress and suffering. Miss Edna
Rutherford, of Douglassville, Tex., says: “Some years ago,
I was caught in the rain, and was taken with dumb chills
and fever. I suffered more than I can tell. I tried all the
medicines that I thought would do me any good, and had
four different doctors, but they did not help me. At last, I
tried Thedford’s Black-Draught, and I improved wonder-
fully. Now, I feel better than I have in many months. It
is a wonderful medicine.”
“Hi, fellers! Jest look what sez it
don’t mind playing wit us If we ain’t
rough!”
are not watered. I feed two quarts
best mixed feed, one quart corn meal
and one quart cottonseed twice a day
with all the water they will drink, and
good bedding.
application to the Potter
Chem. Corp., Boston, Mass.
Black-Draught
has been uniformly successful, during more than 70 years,
when used to relieve chills and fever, in any form. Fever
is nearly always caused by some form of poisons in your
blood. Thedford’s Black-Draught strikes at the root of the
trouble by cleansing and purifying the blood, and restoring
the system to its normal condition and efficiency. Enthu-
siastic friends have written, from all over the country, tell-
ing of their experience with this reliable, vegetable liver
medicine. They speak with the authority of actual expe-
rience. Why not try it for yourself? Sold everywhere.
Price 25c. Always ask for Thedford’s.
IF YOU HAVE
Malaria or Piles, sd^Meadache^Costtvo
Bowels, Dumb Ague, Sour Stomach and
Belching; if your food does not assimilate and
you have no appetite,
tuft’s Pills-;
Like the Other Chicks.
Charles T. Rose, equally well known
in Masonic work and banking circles
of Cleveland, Is a great chicken fan
cler, Rhode Island Reds being his
fr.vorlte breed. Walking through his
incubator house he discovered that
Helen, the three year-old daughter,
had followed him.
“Come here, little chickabiddy,” he
called to her. And when she ran
up to him to be tossed up and down,
she asked: “Papa, which was my in
cubator?”
gjgj
gg— .........."IT1.
pq
f^The
Cleanses the System
effectually; Dispels
colds and Headaches;
due to constipation.
Best for men, women
and children: young
and old.
To get its Beneficial
effects, always note the
name of the Company
OufOBNiAfiG Syrup (p.
plainly printed on the
front of every package
at the Genuine
WHISKEY HABIT CURED
Indorsed by pulpit and prcai, physician* and laymen, and by over TEN THOUSAND CURED
MEN AND WOMEN, ae being the most rational, moet thorough and moat permanent treat-
ment known to medical science. __NOT a nyosclne" or go d"
the famous!*original NEAL | NO HYPODERMICS |
moves and destroys all desire, craving, appetite or NEC-
ESSITY for alcoholic stimulants, rejuvenstlng, clesnslng snd purifying ths system and
assisting Naturs in rsstoring ths patient to a normal condition of mind and body. The
Neal requires the shortest time to cure of any treatment.
MnPPUTNr COCAINE, tobacco and
miZCMT Mill M ALL DRUG ADDICTIONS
In the refined, well appointed and private Houston and Dallas Nssl Institutes aro sueoaso-
fully cured In from two to lour weeks, depending upon the condition of the patient and the
nature of the drug used. Not a heroic treatment—not a dangerous or severs treatment.
Competent physicians in charge; thoroughly eaperlenced, kind and eympathetio nureoM ’
homelike surroundings, beet of attention and service day and night, and a perfect, aaUafofl
«»fy need be paid. Write for ‘Neal Way" Booklet No. I on Alcoholism; Ned. |
Way Booklet No 1 on Drug Addiction, sent In plain, seeled envelope. All correspondence
Strictly confidential. ABSOLUTE PRIVACY ASSURED PATIENTS BO URBIRINO.
Both Institutes open day and night ReaorvatloM for rooms should be made by latter, phone
or wire. Trains met upon notification. 1
NEAL INSTITUTES
: I
BAKING
POWDER
That Makes the Baking Batter
Failurea are almoat Impoasible with
Calumet.
We know that it will give you better
results.
We know that the baking will be purer
—more wholesome.
We know that it will be more evenly
raised.
And we know that Calumet Is more
economical, both in its use and cost.
We know these things because we 1
have put the quality into it—are have J
seen it tried out in every way. It is 1
used nowin millions of homes and ita 9
sales are growing daily. It is the fl
modern baking powder. w
Have you tried it? *
Calumet is highest In quality— W
moderate in price. W
Received Hishest Award— W
» Pure Food Exposition. Ilf
Wash and oil the horse collars oc-
casionally. Two minutss of work at
tha end of the day ia sufficient »o
keep the surface of a collar clean,
soft and pliable. A damp sponge and
a cake of barneaa soap kept In tha
currycomb box are the only equip’
meat tssdsd.
ARE YOU TROUBLED WITH
SICK HEADACHE
BILIOUSNESS CRAMPS
INDIGESTION
DYSPEPSIA MALARIA
TRY
Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters
For 58 years it has
given satisfaction in such
cases and you’ll find it just
the medicine you need.
■ - **
Certainly.
Teacher—What happened when the
army fell into the ambush?
Little Willie—Why, they were all
scratched up.
Producers who peddle the milk at
retail seem about the most prosperous
dairymen just now. They have man-
aged to keep up the prices in many ot
the towns and the cost of production
has been working a little lower. A
farm milk route Is a hard grind, but
it is a wonderful help in keeping tbs
bills paid.
!gbt
d u»-'
"Remmy,” he aaldj “did ^ouj- notfea
the price somebody has just paid for
that‘Mill’ of yours?”
“I heard about it”
"Well?” V' 1
“Well, I’m glad I had enough money
when I painted that picture to buy a
good quality of canvas. It’s your
move, Mike.”
And the game went on.—Cleveland
Plain Dealer. , 0
tacit
on
spinners, thus avoiding
upon the southern cotton farmer.
if this were just one Instance, It
need not occasion concern.
But it has come to my attention
that similar negotiations are on foot
in other portions of the cotton belt.
What is more significant, I am
also informed that foreign spinners
generally are contemplating the ad-
visability of buying large tracts in
the southern states, and produce
their own staple.
Of course, in each one of thrse
cases the most scientific methods
will be employed, as much cotton will
be raised to the acre as the specialist
can extort, rotation and fertilization
will be used to retain the richness
of the soil, and the latest improved
farm machinery will be on the pro-
gram.
We cannot censure foreign spinners
for projecting this movement,
simply a business proposition
them.
It should also be a business propo-
sition with the south to take cog-
nizance of a movement that may
throw the balance of power in our so-
called “monopoly” of cotton into the
hands of foreigners.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment do so
touch for poor complexions, red,
rough hands, and dry, thin and fall-
ing hair, and cost so little that it is
almost criminal not to use them.
Think of the suffering entailed by
neglected skin troubles—mental be-
cause of disfiguration—physical be-
cause of pain. Think of the pleasure
of a clear skin, soft white hands and
good hair. These blessings are often
only a matter of a little thoughtful,
timely cpre, viz.:—warm baths with
Cuticura Soap, assisted when neces-
sary by gentle anointings with Cuti-
cura Ointment. The latest Cuticura
book, an invaluable guide to skin and
hair health, will be mailed free, on
Drug
Religion is our attempt to discover
the meaning of life.
We never think of the value of the
gift If we love the giver.
, A soft snap is frequently more of a
glue pot than an elevator.
A good feeder is known by the con-
dition of the stock he keeps.
Wastes are the parents of want,
therefore save the roughage.
It begins to look as though the
"square deal” is getting rounded off at
the corners. ,
Plain living and high thinking is all
right if the plain and high are not
too far apart.
Faith plans for a busy day tomor-
row ; work gets up and does the chores
before breakfast.
Queer but true, what you consider
your neighbor’s weakness be thinks
is his strongest point
Faith is the farmer’s sheet anchor,
without which he would not now be
fall plowing for the next year’s crop.
Modesty is a virtue, but too much
of it may be a vice. It is not right for
one to conceal his light under a
bushel.
Clean money never harms the Inno-
cent nor takes advantage of the fol-
lies and frailties of the weak and un-
fortunate.
To the Officers and Members of the
Farmers’ Union:
From the first moment that I was
entrusted with the presidency of this
great organization, it has always been
by effort to avoid the note of the
alarmist or the sensationalist
But the time is come to speak
plainly regarding a matter that is of
the first Importance not only to the
farmers of the south, but as well to
the business and the people of the
south generally.
It has not escaped the attention of
the more thoughtful that an English
syndicate recently acquired a large
acreage of fine cotton lands in one of
the central southern states.
The tacit purpose is to produce
cotton on these lands for English
dependence
Feeding for wool growth is an Im-
portant consideration, and throughout
the winter months should be taken
into account in compounding both the
roughage and grain ration. To pro-
duce a uniform length of fiber the
ration should contain a high per-
centage of nitrogenous ingredients.
There is no better roughage for feed-
ing sheep for wool growth than bright
clover hay. bean pods and corn stover.
Oats or barley, wheat, bran and oil
cake should constitute the base of
the grain ration. Judicious and liberal
feeding Is essential in economic wool
production.
problem that
is going to grow in a geometrical
ratio, the aid of. the southern business
man is needed.
The banker, the merchant and the
capitalist will find it to his ultimate
interest to co-operate to the end of
enabling the farmer to own his own
acres, and further, to take scientific
agriculture to him In the most prac-
tical form. He should likewise en-
courage the farmer to co-operate with
his fellows.
In this matter, as in every other
that goes to bedrock, we are all in
the same boat.
Providence has given ub what
amounts to a world monopoly, or con-
trol of cotton production.
To hold the control we must meet
world-wide conditions in the proper
way.
It Is equally to the interest of the
richest and the poorest mat. in the
south to see that the farmer owns his
acres and that he uses upon them the
most modern and intensive methods.
We shall take this issue up at the
next national convention. In the
meantime every class of business men
in the south should be analyzing the
situation and its grave meaning.
CHAS. S. BARRETT.
Union City, Ga.
The reason was because her face
Iras so disfigured by a skin eruption
that she couldn’t have It taken. Just
make a note of this fact if you know
anyone who suffers from disfiguring
skin eruptions. Resinol ointment
cures eruptive skin diseases. It re-
stores the skin to normal health and
clears the complexion. “I take pleas-
ure in testifying to the most excellent
results from the use of Resinol, both ~
ointment and soap,” writes Miss Opal g
Lilley, Camp Creek, W. Va. “I had j
been troubled for four or five years I
with a very disfiguring eruption on > ■
my face, and Resinol has helped it I B
so much.” Resinol ointment should g
be used for all skin eruptions, ec-
zema, erythema, herpes, barber’s A
itch, psoriasis, etc. It stops itching S
Instantly. Resinol promptly allays j ■
Irritation and Is the best dressing for K
burns, scalds, bolls, felons, carbun-
cles, etc. It is a comforting, healing
preparation, which can be used freely j
on the tenderest skin. Resinol oint-
ment is put up in opal jars in two
sizes, price fifty cents and one dollar.
At all druggists. Resinol Chemical
Co., Baltimore, Md.
TCTONT'V Is a deceptive disease-*
thousands have it and
TROUBLE don t know “• If you
want good results you
can make no mistake by using Dr. Kil-
mer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney rem-
edy. At druggists in fifty cent and dol-
lar sizes. Sample bottle by mail free,
also pamphlet telling you how to find out
If you have kidney trouble.
Address, Dr. Kilmer A Co., Binghamton, N. Y.
.............. 'in : M..H ? ■ ——
And such is the inevitable conclu-
sion of the policy under debate by
English and continental spinners.
Tbe meaning of such a development
Is plain.
Hundreds upon thousands of south-
ern farmers would be compelled to
compete upon the open market with
a product raised by the buyers upon
our own soil and by the moat im-
proved methods.
The demand for native-grown cot-
ton would dwindle as these foreign-
owned farms came into their full
productiveness.
Prices might, probably would, be
controlled by mill interests as abso-
lutely as they used to be controlled
by cotton exchange operators before
the days of the Farmers’ union.
The penalty would not be confined
to the farmer.
It would be visited in a greater or
less degree upon every business in
tbe southern states, since southern
business and cotton are, as yet, in-
separable financial factors.
The stream of gold now coming
into the south each year from
Europe would be lessened. Cotten,
which Is now one of tbe country’s
greatest reliances for preserving the
international balance on the right
side, would lose much of Its vitality
in that direction.
Conditions “under a general Invasion
of foreign land-buyers would be disas-
trous. The absentee landlordism that
is making life such a struggle In
England, and more of a struggle in
Ireland, might be reproduced on a
proportionate scale in this country.
The one way is for southern farm-
ers to acquire their own acres and,
what is of equal importance, to use
upon them the most scientific of cul-
tural methods. It Is a case of fight-
ing the devil with fire.
We may as well face the truth now
as later. And the truth Is that cot-
ton-growing in the south will not
reach a genuine business basis until
every farmer makes every acre re-
turn its maximum, until he reduces
the rosf of production to a minimum
and raises his own food products.
You may ask hov this is to be done
when hundreds of thousands of farm-
ers do not own their own farms, or
are under obligations to landlords.
We can, first, help ourselves. We
can do that by sacrificing, pinching
and scraping, until all of us get out
of debt and accumulate enough to
make first payments upon farms.
We can, next, reinforce this policy
by utilizing scientific methods, and
all the help we can get from the
Farmers’ union lecturers and govern-
ment agents and state and federal
agricultural departments and experi-
ment stations. Hand in hand with this
should go scientific marketing and
distribution under co-operative au-
spices.
In this battle with
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Hodges, Walter. The Nocona News (Nocona, Tex.), Vol. 6, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, June 2, 1911, newspaper, June 2, 1911; Nocona, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1265167/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Friends of the Nocona Public Library.