The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, April 11, 1912, Image 6

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FORM OF THE POLAND-CHINA
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You'll be do-
lighted with the re
salts of Calumet Baking
Powder. No disappoints
no flat, heavy, soggy biscuits.
cake, or pastry.
Just the lightest, daintiest, most
uniformly raised and most deli
clous food you ever ate.
RmJ4 MtlMrtmmr) WarM'a
run r eipmium,
MWHl IIUC.
THEIR TROUBLES.
o..
Smith My wlfo can cook, but she
insists on playing tho piano.
Jones Well, my wlfo can piny the
piano, but she Insists on cooking.
Demand for New Alloy.
, Although tho early expectations ot
the wholesalo substitution of alum
inum for steel and Iron have not ma
terialized, the demand for the now al
loy has grown enormously. From a
production In the United States of
less than 100,000 pounds In 1883, In
1893 the output had grown to 350,000
pounds, 1903 to 7,500,000 pounds and
today it Is in excess of 50,000,000
pounda.
8upply Cleaned Up.
"Goln' flshln" next summer?" asked
the man who tells tall stories.
"No," replied Mr. Qrowcher. "If
you caught all the fish you said you
caught last summer, there won't be
any use of going Ashing next sum
mer
it would savo people a lot of trouble
If they could bo born with their wis
dom tectb already cut.
A Tempting
Treat
Post
Toasties
with cream
Crisp, fluffy bits of white
Indian Corn; cooked, rolled
into flakes and toasted to a
golden brown.
Ready to ,8erve direct
from the package.
Delightful flavourl
Thoroughly wholesome!
"The Memory Lingers"
Soli by Grocers
Veetasa Certftl Company. UaMt4
8tUCrMk,Hlck
TY
LIVE
STOCK
BARN FOR SWINE AND SHEEP
Illustrations 8how How Missouri
Farmer Changed Small Building In
to Commodious Structure.
Tho nccompanyfng Illustrations
show how a Missouri farmer solved
tho problem of changing n small barn
Into a commodious structure for feed
ing sheep and hogs. Whllo thero 1b
nothing very complicated or out of
tho ordinary In this building It will
perhaps help some ono who contem
plates a chango in his live stock, says
tho IIomcBtead. In this particular In
stance It has been decided to change
from steers to hogs and sheep and to
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jiflg! i wr. mint;
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I f-CED
inini mi 1:1 ii trti4HmFWtll,ir
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Combined Hog and Sheep Barn.
do so required a building In which to
feed them. The old barn formerly
used for storing hay a part of ttto
season and for a cattlo shelter tho re
maining tlmo bad tho two sheds add
ed on citber sldo as shon'n In tho ex
terior vlow and tho floor plan. Tho
old building was divided into corn
cr4bs, feed room, grain room, etc. Tho
sheds were arranged as shown on tbo
floor plan, ono side for hogs and tho
other side for sheep, tbo loft holding
the rough feed for the sheep. In
building the barn and Installing tho
interior partitions, racks, troughs,
etc., everything was so constructed
that In case a second chango was
made necessary by tho over fluctuat
ing prlco of live stock the Interior ar
rangement could be rearranged at a
minimum cost.
DEVICE FOR THROWING HORSE
Excellent Plan Is to Place 8urclngle
Around Body of Animal Just
Behind the Forelegs.
-An excellent method of throwing a
fractious horso is to put a surcrnglo
around the body Just behind the fore
legs, with three rings on It, one on
each side and one under tho body.
Put n strap around tbo front legs Just
above hoof, with a ring in each. Then
take a rope 15 or 20 feet long, run
.through ring on left side, down
'through ring on left foot, back
through ring on belly, down through
ring on right foot, back to ring on
right side, and tie. Then take bold
Device for Throwing a Horse.
of rope behind horse. Let one man
start to lead blm, and It will be no
trouble to take bis feet out from un
der' r -
Finest Bacon and Hams.
The finest bacon and hams raised
.n England come from hogs fed
principally upon skim milk and bar
ley meal. It is claimed by the Eng
lish producers that American bogs
are practically all fed on corn, which,
although a perfectly wholesome food,
tends to' make the hog fat and a lit
tle mellow, whereas feeding by the
British method glvos a meat beauti
fully white and as solid as meat need
te.
Us of Blood Meal for Calves.
A little blood meal, commencing
with a teaspoon and gradually In
creasing to a tcblespoonful at each
feeding, is said to bavo beneficial
results with calves that are not doing
vory well, but as this meal contains
about 60 per cent, of digestible pro
tein it would hardly seem to bo a
proper complement to sklmmllk for
continuous feeding.
Baby Beef.
A new style of baby beef has been
set in some portions of the east, par
ticularly in Pennsylvania, and fat lit
tle animals, weighing from four to
eight hundred pounds, are now prime
favorlteB in the big markets.
W&ss Trn"Vil MMlaBBBKBk.
Si W y I - Ira ' ' .
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Good Sow Should Possess Shoulders1
of Great Depth and Fair Width,
With Ribs Well Sprung.
A good rolnnd-Chlna sow, snys
breeder, should havo shoulders of
grcnt depth and fair width, tho ribs
well sprung to glvo room for tho vital
organs, and for this same reason tho
breast bone should bo sot low down,
nnd bo wide, filling out tho sunken
places Just back of tho front legs, or
shoulders so notlcenblo In scrubs.
Tho lilpo should come forwnrd and
connect to tho backbone nenr enough
to the shoulders, so that tho connect
ing point Is n little, short of midway
of tho entire dlstonee from tho shoul
der, to tho rear of the hnm, thereby
making a strong back with good,
stout coupling, and giving n great top
nnd fore length to tho hnm.
This shnpo of limns and back will
glvo deep, full sides with great length
of lower lino when well let down In
tho flanks, enabling tho bow to carry
n good-sized litter without getting so
stuffy nnd clumsy.
FEED FOR VIGOROUS GROWTHl
Healthy Shoats Need Bone and Meat
Meal Together With Freshly
Burned Wood Ashes. .
Bono nnd meat meal, nnd dry, cloan,
freshly burnt ashes from hardwood
are necessary for vigorous, healthy
growth In little pigs. Ono tablespoon
fill of bono mcnl nnd two spoonfuls
of meat mcnl should bo given nt each
feed. Ashes help digestion, cleans tho
stomach nnd is useful In other ways.
Tho ashes should bo freshly burnt,
well sifted and dry. lluriit corn cobs
may bo given instead of ashes. No
ono feed, however good it may bo,
should bo constantly fed. Tho hog is
a grass animal nnd will do well on
grass nnd clover pasture in summer,
and fine cut clover hay, well scalded
nnd mixed with wheat bran, wheat
middlings and a small quantity of
flaxseed meal during tho winter feed
ing months. Have the pens clean and
dry. Glvo a warm bed of leaves.
Havo a largo yard or small grass pas
ture for the begs to exerciso in dur
ing the winter. Hogs can stand cold,
dry weather when taking exercise, but
thoy must havo dry, warm, well-bedded
pens to sleep In. Wet bedding and
frozen slop are certain to produce dis
ease. HOG CHUTE MADE ON WHEELS
Pair of Discarded Cultivator Wheels
or Almost Any Other Kind Will
Make Excellent Device.
Tbo Illustration given herewith ex
plains itself. Shorten tho long legs
of the hog loader, put a piece of gas
pipe through tho lower end and place
a press drill wheel on tho outside ot
Hog Chute on Wheels.
each post, says a writer in tbo Farm
crs' Mail and Breeze. Cultivator
wheels or almost any other kind ly
lng about tbo place will do as well.
This makes it easy to move the chute
from place to place.
Indigestion In Sheep.
Indigestion is a very common all
ment among sheep during the wlntet,
months, and attacks are frequent, s-'
peclally while the flock is confined to
dry feed. The ailment may be char
acterized as a failure of the natural
changes which feed undergoes in the
alimentary canal. Sheep confined to
a dry, narrow ration, without any form
of succulent food, aro more apt to
Buffer attacks ot indigestion than
when on pasture. Ordinarily the ail
ment is not serious, but if permitted
to run Its course takes a more acute
stage and frequently results fatally.
Make a 'separate pen for your
brood sows and don't have too much
straw.
A man who will keep his sheep in
a muddy lot has small conception of
his duty.
Whitewashing stables makes them
lighter, cleaner and much more
healthful and sanitary.
When a farmer has bad silage for
his ewes one winter he hardly knows
how to keep them without it.
When horses are first put in a
etrango barn they will frequently not
eat well for perhaps a week.
Noon is a good time to supply the
stock with some green stuff, such as
cabbages or roots of any kind.
A sheep is the most nervous animal
on tho farm and get into low condi-
tlon quickly and recovers slowly.
Sllago keeps tho sappy appearance
of the sheeps' bodies and a luster in
the wool that dry feed will seldom do.
Don't feed carrots too liberally to
tbo horses; they are a laxative. Cut
in slices so they can be easily chewed
up.
A pig five months old requires one
pound of digestible nitrogenous feed
to five pounds of digestible carboby
drates.
tP
I LIVE $0K
FOR HUBBY TO PONDER OVER
Innocent Answer of Quiet Little Wife
Got Him Started on Train
of Thought.
Tho husband and wlfo were on their
Nny to tho theater when tho husband
began kicking hecnuso his wlfo took
such a long time dressing.
"What delayed you this tlmo?" ho
growled.
"Seeing tho children to bed," she
responded, quietly.
"What's tho nurso for?" snapped tho
man.
"Tho nurso Is for our convenience
jours nnd mine, especially mine," sho
answered. "Ilut the boy cnrtaluly taken
after you, Ho .nuked tho Riimo kind ot
a fool intention Just as I was Kissing
him good night."
"Fool question, eh? Well, what wns
It?"
"I asked him If ho had snld his pray
ers. And he said no. And I asked
htm If he didn't want flod to take care
ot him during tho night. Ila nnswer
cd: 'What's the nurse for?'"
Kor tho remainder of tho way tho
man pondered on this nnswer.
Something the Matter, Anyhow.
Little Harold liven In llroud ltlpplo.
His mother got him ready for bed
one. cold night, nnd to bo Hiiro ho
would bo warm enough during tho
night sho took extra precautions, re
lates the Indianapolis News. After
hlio had put on his little fuzzy paja
niaH sho tucked him eaicfully In bo
tween tho wool blankets. Then to
tnnko doubly sure sho got n hot water
huttlo for him and tho youngster
was apparently as snug bb could be.
with only his llttlo noso sticking out
from beneath the covers.
When his mother had Unbilled tho
tucklng-ln Job sho turned down the
light. Soon tho entlro family was in
bed. Hut Harold Is liko most young
sters. He loves his mother, nnd wish
es lots of attention. So In his child
mltid ho figured out n. way to got her
to his bed.
"Mnmma," ho walled, "I'm cold!"
"Nonsense son!" replied tho moth
er, but sho never made a move to go
to his rescue
Tho llttlo boy tried tho opposite.
"Well, I'm too hot. then!" ho yelled.
True Till Death.
Ills companions bent over him with
pitiful cnrncstncHH, nnd stared bo
nccchlngly Into ills waxen features.
Again camo the flutter of tho eyelids,
but this time his will mastered ap
proaching death. His lips wenkly strug
gled to execute his kiBt command, nnd
tho friends bent closer to henr tho fal
tering whisper. "I am gone? Yes
cr I know. Go to Mllly. Tell her
er I died with her nnmo on my
lips; that I or havo loved her her
alone or always. And Ilcssle tell
er toll Hcsslo tho aumo thing."
London Weekly Telegraph.
To Take a Different Route.
"Slstcrn and brethren," exhorted
Undo Abraham, a recent promotion
from tho plow to the pulpit, "on do
ono sldo cr dis hero moetln' houso Is
a .road lending to destruction, on do
udder is a road gwino to hell and
damnation. Which you gwino pur
soo? Dar Is the Internal question:
Which Is you gwino pursoo?"
"Law, Urcr Abraham," spoko up Sis
ter Eliza from tho back pew, "I speck
I'm er gwino homo troo do woods!"
Llpplncott's.
The Ideal
Mother When ho went to kiss you,
why didn't you call mo7
Daughter Why, ma, 1 never im
agined that you wanted blm to kiss
you.
Alimony Is the cement that is some
times used to mend a broken heart.
Why Should a Chicken
Lay a Soft-Shelled Egg?
Because, Willie, the chicken don't know how to create a hard-shelled egg unless
it has some food with lime in it
So chicken-raisers often provide limestone gravel, broken oyster shells or some
other form of lime.
Let the chicken wander free and it finds its own food and behaves sensibly.
Shut it up and feed stuff lacking lime and the eggs are soft-shelled.
Let's step from chickens to human beings.
Why is a child "backward" and why does a man or woman have nervous pros
tration or brain-fag? There may be a variety of reasons but one thing is certain.
If the food is deficient in Phosphate of Potash the gray matter in the nerve cen
tres and brain cannot be rebuilt each day to make good the cells broken down by the
activities of yesterday.
Phosphate of Potash is the most important element Nature demands'-to unite
albumin and water to make gray matter.
Grape-NuU food is heavy in Phosphate of Potash in a digestible form.
A chicken can't always select its own food, but a thoughtful man can select suit
able food for his children, wife and himself.
"There's a Reason" for
Grape-Nuts
Postum Cereal
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Al.C0IIOl.-3 PEIt CENT
AYcgt'tablc Preparation Tor As
similnl tag lite Food and licgula
ling Hie Stomachs and Bowels or
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Promotes Digcsfion,Cliccrful
nessnntllfcst Contains neither
Ouiutn.Morptiinc nor Mineral
Not Nawc otic
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WmktyrriH f'hor
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A perfcel Remedy for Constipa
tion . Sour Stomach.Dittrrhuca,
Worms .Convulsions .Fevcrish
ncss and LOSS OF SLEEP
Facsimile Signature of
The ClntaIi'ii Company.
NEW YORK. .
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Exact Copy of Wrapper
For
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DISTEMPER
THERE ARE OTHERS.
"Gruot buys more than he can pay
for."
"Yes; ho has radium tastes and a
brass Income."
Very Improper.
Howell Why Is It that Harvard
doesn't want to play Carllslo again?
Powell I bellevo tho Cambridge
boys caught tho Indiana doing some
thing redhanded.
Lightweight.
"He basn't much head."
"That's a fact; if ho woro standing
upon It you could say that be bad no
visible means of support."
Company, Limited, Battle Creek, Michigan ' ,h
CASTQRIA
For Infants tint? Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CASTORIA
Pink Eye. Eplxootlo
Shlpplnd Fever
t Catarrhal Fever
AW
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Ftiroriirciaiiilpnultlt tircrnntlrn.notnattar how Imrvm at nnrnirtt r Infrotol
nr"rimt.' I Ifitild.imcn on Uii tuiitnii-i tutu nn ttm IIIihmI 11ml (lUiiilti atpHu th
IHil.ttniiuiui-nnii from lit ImhIjt. CMriiillftti'in(-r In I'" NnilHtitinnill'tinlrreln
'mi'.trjr. jrirrlfrlllni llioilwk remnljr. I'urra I llrlpi ninmiir liumiui twine,
nil lnftnticMrinejr remnly- Mn mul II a tmttlfft fft ami 910 ilotrn. i'ul tblnnul
Ki-rplt. Mmw loourilnnfKlt.wlin wlllKodtforToil. Ireo Huoklot, -llluixI
CaiiM'i ami Uiirw." Hptx-lal AunU wanted. '
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., .S'o.V.?. GOSHEN, IND U. S. A.
Misunderstood 'Gator.
Tho winter titfernoon wus llko June,'
and, taking tea under n palm on thof
lawn of tho lloyal Polnclann at FalmJ
Ucncli, a sportsman said:
"This morning I photographed an1
nlllgator. My boy, to got him, strip
ped and waded Into tho wate. up to
IiIb chin. The boy felt about with
his feet In tho mud till ho found a big1
'gator. Then he ducked down, grab
bed the 'gator by tho nose and drag
ged him slowly ashoro to tho waiting
lens."
"Ilut," said a girl in white, "wasn't
It dangerous?"
"Not a bit."
"Hut I thought alligators ate yfeul"
"No, no," said the sportsman. "You
are confusing tho alligator with the
crocodile Tho Indian crocodlla eats
men and women, but tho Florida alli
gator Is as harmless, lltorally as
harmless, as a cow."
1 i
Medical Genius. " '
An old doctor, seolng a young one
who was going along tho street with
half n dozon shabby-looking men and
women, called him asldo and asked :i
"Who aro all those people, and whero
are you going with them?"
"I will tell you In confidence," was
the reply, "that I'vo hlrod them to,
como and sit in my reception room. I
expect a rich patient this morning,
and I want to mako an Impression oa
him." Judgo's Library.
The man who arguoa with his wlf
is ono kind of an Idiot
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