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About Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.) 1911-1920 | View This Issue
Geyser Judith Basin Times (Geyser, Mont.), 14 Jan. 1916, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053135/1916-01-14/ed-1/seq-3/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
Talk about light, fluffy, tempting and wholesome Jelly Rolls, Ca kes, Biscuits and other good things! Myl but certainly beats the band for sure results — for purity, economy and wholesome ba k in gs.1 Tell your mother to try, Calumet Baking Pow- der on the monei-back guarantee.' Received flialieit Awards No. Cod B.I1 INA Slip ei Aura Cu. Cheap and big canBakir.gPowciersdo not saveyou money. Calumet does -it's Pure suid fax superior to sour milk and soda. The first time a girl is enghged she Imagines herself as important as a heroine in a novel. farr•IMASQUE-BALL 4 31 Then write us and we will send repre- sentative with costumes. We have the lar g est stock of &marks, and mama/ - ball wardrobe and accessories. Per eenta g e heals if desired. CARNIVAL COSTUME CO., MItevaakeo, WI.. - - Start a Cafeteria We desi g n and build Cafeterias complete and supply everythin g necessary for thismoneymakin g businehs. Wnte us for information, prices and locations KOEHLER a HINRICHS COMPANY 255.285 East 3rd St. SI. Paul. heasesets PATENTS Watson E.Caleman,Wash Ington,1).0. li.xits free. est rsderencea Beet nouns Fargo Directory Shotwell Floral Co. Growers and shippers of cut flowery, plants. etc. Write for catalo g . Fonefal OD short notice. Phone day or Mi ght Far g o. N. D. Hotel Powers One block south of Gt. Northern depot on Broadway. New and Fireproof. Rooms Si; with bath 51.50. Caf•tairla and Cats THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Established in 1878 Fordo. /ler& Dakota United States Depositary. Capital. Surplus and Profits: $536.002.03. The oldest bank in North Dakota. Churning Cream Wanted Highest cash prices primptly paid. FARGO ICE CREAM & DAIRY CO.. Fardo Manchester Biscuit Co., Manufacturers of BIG SIOUX AND M. B. C. BRANDS BISCUITS, CRACKERS AND CAKES FARGO. NORTH DAKOTA The Waldorf Hotel ACIx AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN RATES: 111.00 AND UP. 240 MODERN ROOMS HELLER dt BOYD, Props's, FARGO, N. D. Ship your HIDES, FURS and WOOL to Baer & Rosen. Fargo K. D. If we get the g oods, you g et the money.11ave yourbank look us up LIGHTING PLANTS Gasoline and Electric for Farm Homes and Public Build- in g s. Write for catalo g and m ica America. Gas Mackin* Cs. 17 Eighth St. S.. Pareo.N. D. Drs. Bailey Kachelmacher SPECIALISTS ,V;fetilit721 Results Given Herewith of interesting Testa Made at the Ohio Ex- periment Station. In tests at the Ohio station two . lots of 12 Delaine ewes each, with their October or November lambs from a Southdown ram, as nearly alike as possible with regard to age, weight, conformation and breeding, were fed for 62 days, beginning De- cember 1, as follows: Lot 1, corn and oil meal 4:1, alfalfa and silage; lot 2, corn, oats, bran and oil meal 6:2:2:1, alfalfa and silage. The nutritive ratio of the two rations WRB approximately the same. The hay and silage were fed ad libitum and approximately the same amount of grain was fed, it be- ing all that they would consume. The lambs were fed alike, receiving corn and alfalfa. The ewes of lot 1 made .an average daily gain per head of 0.095 pounds; those of lot 2, 0.129 pounds; the lambs of _lot 1. 0.441 pounds, and lot 2, 0,411 pounds. The cost of feed per pound of gain made by the lambs was 7.1 and 7.5 cents respectively. No appreciable differ- ences in degree of finish from the two rations were noted. Both lots pro- duced prime hothouse lambs. Two lots of 11 ewes each, with their lambs, were fed for 96 days, begin- ning December 24, the same ration as in the above experiment, except that during the last five weeks clover hay was substituted for the alfalfa. As these lambs were not Intended for hot- house lambs they were not forced so rapidly as those in the first experi- ment. The average daily gain per head of the ewes of lot 1 was 0.013. of lot 2, 0.031 pounds; for the lambs of lot 1, 0.377 pounds of lot 2, 0.333 pounds. The cost of feed per pound of gain made by the lambs was for lot 1, 8.7 cents, and for lot 2, 10.1 cents. Fleece of Good Quality Cannot Be Se- cured From Half -Starved Animal —Give Succulent Food. If the sheep are neglected and al- lowed to run down in flesh when the winter sets in the fleece will be in- jured in both weight and quality. A fleece of good quality cannot be grown on a poor half-starved sheep. If the ewes are allowed to get poor during the winter the chances are that the lambs will be weak and will per- ish for lack of nourishment and from cold, while the lambs from a well - eared for ewe will be much abler to stand the cold if they should happen to be dropped when the weather is cold. The dams will have more milk for their young, too, if they are well cared for. Sheep need some succulent food (lur- ing the winter. They should have some rough feed such as corn stover or clover hay, and, above all, they should have a ration rich in both pro- tein and mineral matter. Pasture Grasses and Forage Crops Make Healthy. Vigorous Hogs— Some Grain is Necessary. Many now realize the fact that the growing of pasture grasses and forage crops that make healthy, vigorous hogs of good quality is the basic factor In successful pork production. They are raising hogs at a big profit. Of course those who are successful realize the fact that a certain amount of grain feed is needed to grow hogs with a greater profit, but they use this grain only as a supplement to the feeds harvested by the hogs in the pastures and fields. Cost of Mutton. A pound of mutton can he produced at less cost than any other kind of meat. Glass of hot water each morn- ing helps us look and feel clean, sweet, fresh. Happy, bright, alert—vigorous and vivacious—a good clear skin; a nat- ural, rosy complexion and freedom from illness are assured only by clean, healthy blood. 11 only every woman and likewise every man could realize the wonders of drinking phoephated hot water each morning, what a grat- ifying change would take place. Instead of the thousands of sickly, anaemic -looking men, women and girls with pasty or muddy complex- ions; instead of the multitudes of \nerve wrecks,\ \rundowns \brain fags\ and pessimists we should see a virile, optimistic throng of rosy- cheeked people everywhere. An inside bath is had by drinking. each morning before breakfast, a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and ten yards of bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour fermentations and poisons, thus cleansing, sweeten- ing and freshening the entire alimen- tary canal before putting more food into the stomach. Those subject to sick headache, bil- iousness, nasty breath, rheumatism. colds; and particularly those who have a pallid, sallow complexion and who are constipated very often, are urged to obtain a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from any drug- gist or at the store which will cost but a trifle but is sufficient to demon- strate the quick and remarkable Change in both health and appearance awaiting those who practice internal sanitation. We must remember that inside cleanliness is more Important than outside, because the skin does not absorb impurities to contaminate the blood, while Ile pores in the thir- ty feet of bowels do —Adv. Seeing That Jury Paid No Heed to Prosecutor's Remarks, Why Shculd the Defendant? -- Claris Adams, deputy prosecuting attorney of Marion county, tells of the misgivings he had as he met for the first time after the trial a man whom it had been hie official duty to try to send to the penitentiary, The crime charged was of the sort that gave the attorney abundant opportunity to score the defendant, and Adams ac- cordingly •Thnimed him up right.\ The defendant was lawless, murder- ous. bloodthirsty, as devoid of pity as the pirates of the Spanish main, and altogether lacking in every redeeming quality, according to the speech that was made, but despite these distress- ing facts the jury acquitted him The next day Adams met the defend- ant, now discharged and restored to full rights of citizenship. The latter approached Adams with a smile anil extended his hand. \Young man, I'm for you.\ he said. \I am glad to hear you say that,\ responded Adams with a sigh of re- lief. \I thought you might take to heart 80111e of the things I said about you.\ \No.\ came the cheerful reply, \the jury did not pay any attention to !hem, so 1 don't see why 1 should.\—Indian- spoils News. The man who knows enough to at- tend to his own business knows enough. Children's jtaste is ofttimes more accurate, in electing the right kind of food to fit the body, than that of adults. Nature works more accurately through the children. A Brooklyn lady says: \Our little boy had long been troubled with weak digestion. We could never persuade him to take more than one taste of any kind of cereal food, lie was a weak little chap and we were puzzled to know what to feed him on. \One lucky day we tried Grape -Nets. Well, you never saw a child eat with such a relish, and it did me good to see him. From that day on it seemed as though we could almost see him grow. He would eat Grape -Nuts for breakfast and supper, and I think he would have liked the food for dinner. \The difference in his appearance Is something wonderful. \My husband had never fancied cereal foods of any kind, but he be- came very fond of Grape -Nuts and has been much improved in health since using it. \We are now a healthy family and naturally believe in Grape -Nuts \A friend has two children who were formerly afflicted with rickets I was satisfied that the disease was caused by lack of proper nourishment The children showed it. So I urged her to use Grape -Nuts as an experiment and the result was almost magical. \They continued the food and to- day both children are as well and strong as any children in this city, and, of course, my friend Is a firm be- liever in Grape -Nuts, for she has the evidence before her eyes every clay\ Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Ever rend the above letterf neve awe seppenr• from lime to time. ner are igenulne. Cr.., •ad fall of human Interest. No Good Results Can Be Secured From: Half-Starved, Stunted Animal— Keep Them Growing. (By N. A. BRONSON .. .) Everybody has a way of doing things and this is my way of taking care of the calves. I have ten good cows which I raised myself, and I found out that to raise good cows you must begin at the be- ginning. No good results will come from a half-starved, stunted calf. I let the calf suck the cow the first two days. It is better for it and the mother, too, and the calf Is more apt to get all the milk than I would be, thus getting it out of the cow's hag and into the calf's stomach; where it should be, with less trouble and better results. At the end of this time I milk the cow and feed the calf; tie the calf where it cannot see its mother, and if the weather is cold I wrap some- thing around it when the barn doors are open. Never allow a calf to shiver if you want it to keep well. For the first two weeks I teed new milk as soon as milked, and then I begin to mix in separated milk by de - Being Groomed for Head of Dairy Herd. grees, adding at first a third, then a halt and when a month old I give all separated and take care to have it warn). Buckwheat shorts and bran are good, but never put them in the milk. Have a small box nailed in a conven- ient place on the manger or side of the wall and fill with dry feed. The calf will soon learn to help itself. When six weeks old put clover hay within reach; this will aid the diges- tion and increase growth. If eggs are plenty break one or two in the milk, and you will be surprised at its sleekness. TESTS OF MILK PRODUCTION — -- Cost of Feed Must Be Considered in Determining Value of Cow—Fat Content Is Factor. You cannot tell by the test alone the value of a cow. It depends as much on the amount of milk she gives as on the test of the milk. A cow that gives 10,000 pounds of three per cent milk produces 300 pounds of butterfat and a cow that produces 6,000 pounds of five per cent milk gives no more; one will produce as many pounds of butter in a year as the other, and in- asmuch as the fat content of milk is a fair indication of the other milk solids present, then the 10,000 pounds of three per cent milk is worth more for food than the 6,000 of five per cent milk. Therefore one cow is as valuable as the other from a business stand- point, provided it did not cost any more to keep one cow than another. This third factor must therefore be considered in determining the value of any cow—the cost of production. Kansas Station Conducts Test on Pro- duction of Butterfat During Sum. mer and Winter. An experiment conducted at the Kansas experiment station shows that silage reduces the coat cf producing butterfat from 30 cents to 21 cents. The herds in this case were of suffi- cient size to give reliable data and eliminate the difference that might 00. cur between two cows. The lot which were fed silage gave seven pounds more milk in the sum- mer and 95.i more in winter per month than the herd which were fed dry feed. The butterfat was also in- creased by .46 in summer and 4.6 in winter. The difference in the cost of feed was even greater. The silage -fed cows saved 60 cent, per month in the cost of food. These Three Women Tell How They Escaped the Dreadful Ordeal of Surgical Operations. Hospitals are great and necessary institutions, but they should be the last resort for women who suffer with ills peculiar to their sex. Many letters on file in the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., prove that a great number of women after they have been recommended to submit to an operation have been made well by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Here are three such letters. All sick women should read them. „Marinette, Wis.—\I went to the doctor andl he told me I must have an operation for a female trouble, and I hated to have it done as I had been married only a short time. I would have terrible pains and my hands and feet were cold all the time. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound and was cured, and I feel better in every, way. I give you permission to publish my name • because I am so thankful that I feel well again.\ —Mrs. FRED BEHNKE, Marinette, WIS. Detroit, Mich.—\ When I first took Lydia' E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I was so run down with female troubles that I could not do anything, and our doctor said I would have to undergo an operation. I could hardly walk without help so when I read about the Vegetable Compound and what It had done for others I thought I would try it.. I got a bottle of Lydia K Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and a package of Lydia K Pinkham's Sanative Wash and used them according to directions. They helped me and today lam able to do all my work and lam well.\ —Mrs. Taos. DWYER, 989 Milwaukee Ave., East, Detroit, Mich. Bellevue, Pa.—\ I suffered more than tongue can tell with terrible bearing down pains and inflammation. I tried several doctors and they all told me the same story; that I never could get well without an operation and I just dreaded the thought of that. I also tried a good many other medicines that were recommended to me and none of them helped me until a friend advised me to give Lydia K Pink - ham's Vegetable Compound a triaL The first bottle helped, I kept taking it and now I don't know what it is to be sick any more and I am picking up in weight. I am 20 years old and weigh 145 pounds. It will be the greatest pleasure to me if 4 can have the oppor- tunity to recommend it to any other suffering woman.\—Miss Imam FROSLICBER, 1923 Manhattan St., North Side, Bellevue, Pa. If you would like special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkhans Med. Co. (oonfidential),Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. What Happened. \So our friend speculated once too often?\ \Yes.\ replied fMr. Dustin Stax. \He started a big game of freezeout and got caught In his own frost.\ HEADACHE AND NEURALGIA lloyt's Headache and Neuralgia Cologne now heads the list as a successful remedy for the relief of headache, nervousness, in- somnia, car sickness, etc. The dangerous tablet has had its day. Iftiyt's Headache and Neuralgia Cologne la a harmlesa, refreshing, fragrant prepa- ration, marvelous in its action, reliev- ing nervousnesa, sleeplessness, exhaustion and all head and nerve ailments by ex- ternal use and inhaling. It is not a nerve food, but • nerve soother. By giving the nerves • rest they furnish their own food and tone, and all nerve pains disappear. For children's colds and catarrh it is just the remedy, harmless and efficient and so pleasant to use. For men a pleasant remedy to relieve and clear the head \the morning after the night before.\ This is not an expensive preparations at 50 cents a bottle, because it brings the relief. It has. many imitators at less price, hut if they do not bring the ileaired results they are not direr) at any price. Get lfoyt's and you will be satisfied. For sale at all drug stores. Different From Her Ma. Ile—Why is it that there's never a match in the house? She (curtly) -1 can't make matches. lie—That's strange; your mother could.- -St. Louis Globe Democrat. Henry McDonald of Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Bays: \I have used Hanford's Bal- sam for two years in my stables. It has proven satisfactory in every in- stance. I consider it the best remedy for harness galls and sore shoulders that I have used for the past 27 years In my experience in the livery and hoarding stable business.\ Adv. Economy of Language. Passenger bentering cart—Fine morning, conductor. Conductor—Fare. For any inflammation use Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh. One good applica- tion at first is better than several light ones. Adv. Most men would be content with their lot --if it were a lot of money. Many a fellow who says he wouldn't stand for a certain thing promptly proceeds to fall for it. The Quinine That Does Not Affect Head Because of Its tonic and laxative effect. LAXA- TIVE BROM° QUININE is better than ordinary quinine and can be taken by anyone. 2SC. Nature leaves a lot of work for the dressmaker to finish. But silence would improve some peo- ple's conversation. Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief—Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely bit—actvegeta- surely. rARTER but gently on the liver. _ Stop after dinner dis- tress -cure Ii indigestion, improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature B LACK LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED pr b ri. C do tt f ir s. s h, gl . a li s li n t w o re; P p l ,e lls .d Low w - Wretern Madmen, because tiles pretest raw* siker weetleee fall. Write for booklet and tertImonlals. 111.deee eke,. Illaikleg Pills 11.811 fir.olooe ek e *. gladde r Pills 4.00 Use UV inferior. but Cutter's beet. ru r rieri li: (( : .r T r * du rtg:t° r \ ii yeaof isl e( Cutter vasa:d.:s ley. leslid OrCattac's. If unobtainable. order Sind. See Cent Laboratory, goirkolar r , Cal., er Masao, Is. Tumors and Lupus suoeessful treated without k nIfe or pain. All work guaranteed. Come, or write for freelllustrafedBook Dr.WILLLAMS SANATORIUM I Uahrtraity A•., Minn ea psis, Yin. HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Delp. to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty toGrayor FadedHair 00c.. and $1.00 at Druggist& Most Eminent Medical Authorities Endorse It A New Remedy for Kidney, Bladder and all Uric Acid Troubles Dr. Eberle and Dr. Braithwaite as well as Dr. Simon—all distinguished Authors—agree that whatever may be the disease, the urine seldom fails in furnishing us with a clue to the princi- ples upon which It Is to be treated, and accurate knowledge concerning Else nature of disease can thus be ob- tained. If backache, scalding urine or frequent urination bother or distress you, or if uric acid in the blood has caused rheumatism, gout or sciatica or you suspect kidney or bladder trouble Just write Dr. Pierce at the Surgical institute, Buffalo, N. Y.; send a sample of urine and describe symp- toms. You will receive free medical advice after Dr. Pierce's chemist has examined the urine—this will be care- fully done without charge, and you will be under no obligation. Dr. Pierce during many years of experimentation has discovered a new remedy which is thirty-seven times more powerful than labia in removing uric acid from the system. If you are suffering from backache or the pains of rheumatism, go to your best druggist and ask for a 50 cent box of \A eerie\ put up by Doctor Pierce, or send 10c for a large trial pck'g. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- scription for weak women and Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery for the blood have been favorably known for the past forty years and more. They are standard remedies to-day—as well as Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets for the liver and bowels. You can have a sample of any one of these remedies by writing Dr. Pierce, and sending 10c for trial pack- age.