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The Neosho Times from Neosho, Missouri • Page 8

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The Neosho Timesi
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Neosho, Missouri
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8
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PAGE EIGHT THE NEOSHO TIMES. JUNE ITEMS. of our neighborhood. Mrs. D.

W. Turner visited John Broady, Ernest Brown and Mathenus Benton spent Sunday at Eureka Springs. Harry White has gone to Oklahoma to stay during: wheat harvest. A large crowd attended church at the Chapel Sunday night. Mrs.

Barnes will have charge of the services next Sunday night. James Gamage of Webb City was down last week looking after business matters. Earl Cope and Bob Chancellor left last week for Kansas where they will work in the wheat harvest. Milton Brown who has been hei-e harvesting his strawberry crop left Thursday night for his home at Dunnegan, Mo. A large crowd witnessed the game of ball which was played between June and Erie Sunday afternoon on the June diamond.

The score was 17 to 7 in favor of June. June boys have been victorious in every game of ball that they have played this season. The Fanners' Club held its monthly meeting at Meeks' school house last Thursday night. A large crowd was present and most of the evening was spent matters, after which a short program was rendered which was enjoyed by all. The following list of persons were taken in as new members: Mrs.

Myers, Mrs. Lockwood, Misses Eulalia and Rena Manz, Dollie, Lora and Flora Brown and Mildred Pearman. A birthday dinner was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D.

B. Fileds Sunday, July 1st, in honor of Mr. Fields' sixty-sixth birthday. An enjoyable day was spent by the many friends and relatives who came with well filled baskets and joined in making this a pleasant day. A birthday party was given at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Chas. Brown; Wednesday afternoon, June 27th, in honor of their daughter, Bernice's, seventh birthday. The afternoon was spent in playing games. Ice cream and cake was served for refreshments.

Those present were Sherman, Frankie, Mary and Geneva Pool; Lucy, Helen, Horace, Clinton, Derwood, Nellie, Clifford and Chancy Brown; Dorothy Harmon and Mary Benton. All present were cousins to Bernice and departed at a late hour many more happy birthdays. her Monett, over Sunday. Dr. Dave Mitchell and wife of Neosho spent the 4th ents, Mr.

and Mrs. Jno. Mitchell. Mr. and Mrs.

Floyd Harris of Jolly, spent Sunday with relatives in our neighborhood. Mrs. S. E. Brown of Neosho was up to see her brother, Uncle Jimmie Legrand, last week.

He is no better. many Card of Thanks. We wish to thank our friends, also Rev. Allen Shuey, for the kindness shown us during the sickness and death of our Hear mother. Mr.

and Mrs. J. A. Shuey. Hr.

and Mrs. Dora Shuey. Albert Derflinger. Alvie Derflinger. LEISURE A LABOR FACTOR of English Workmen Don't Seem to Take Kindly to Scientific Management The British workman, like the British employer, has a special psychology, and neither German methods nor American methods wholly go down with him, Will Irwln writes In the Saturday.

Evening Post. Your Briton of any class does not like to work so much as the German or the American. He sets I think leisure. He wants time for a little sport and a little talk in his club or his bur. It may be this radical tendency, it may be an inheritance of the restrlctlon-on-output system, but J.

E. Lynd, the chief electrician of the K. C. S. Ry.

was in Neosho Monday looking over the ground preparatory to the installation of crossing bells at two of the more important crossing in town. These bells will be of the most modern and efficient pattern and will make sufficient racket to warn the noisiest FARMRR FEED EXPERTS. Crop Improtuatnt A farmer who has devoted his life time to the study of feeding has more success through his common sense methods than any scientific analysis can-supply. If could have on all of- the Ingredients (most by-products of cereal manufacture), which according to the markejjtot the time would be more ABERDEEN-ANGUS CATTLE THE AVRKA6R REFORMER. Crop ImDttwatnt The average, reformer having BO little at stake himself, plunges about like a bull in, a china shop, regardless of the results of fcls ardor.

An musing incident is told of the Secretary of Commerce. The Flrgt Record of Them From the "Land manufacturers put up a howl that Scotland the Home of the Black Skins. economical, he could, through his experience, be very succesaful in mixing his feeds. But the difficulty with the average man is to maintain an economical ration from the products of his own farm. He may be an expert, if he chooses to study out a new ration every time market changes, but he generally of Brown Heath and Shaggy Wood." the; English laborer seems often in- mak a of automobiles against crossing the railroad when there is a train within the danger zone.

These bells are to be installed before the first August and as it is about a three weeks' job it is likely that the work will commence very soon. different to high wages, while interested in keeping the employer from loading him with too much work. The munition factories In this period of national stress-have been importing American efficiency exports schooled in one or another system of scientific management. I find that the British trades unionists learned their trade jvlth general suspicion, believing their "premium bonus systems" are only ex- for "speeding in some they are, In fact. American speeding up seems a kind of bogey with British worklngmen.

Again and again It' bnslness of mixing feeds do it for him. a finely formed polled race of cattle unless they could get tin-plate to make up, no canning of fruits and i vegetables could be done, so without Hornless cattle looltln over the field it is said that existed la the earll- an order was made th at steel 'was to t'st age to be diverted by the manufacturers can the bo- from other projects and put at the vine. When man di8posal of the oan was a savage and a Ifc ooked a11 dn the face of it, hunter, but yet an Du when the manufacturers of har- artlst, existed ve machinery demanded steel they contracted for, anfl found labor leaders told me, as a matter of common axiomatic knowledge, thatthe No doubt the majority of users of as depicted on the walls of the cav- tliat there was not steel for aprons, mixed feeds begin to buy it because homes of the oldest of men. lfc navln been diverted t'o cans, a of a shortage of forage and grain In the period when Britain was con- nurr y-up call modifying the order crops on the farm. i tlnuous with the continent and was the was Issue so that our harvesting If such a man will keep books he land's end of Europe the polled cattle mac hines could be made In time for find that as a usual thing the strayed throughout Its nooks and cor- the 8 ro wln crop, of mixed stock feed is a mere mat- ners.

Fossil and semi-fossil 1 Thla illustrates how many plans ter of arithmetic whether he could found In Scotland, establish the fact of are tenorantly made robbing Peter buy the ingredients cheaper than he the prehistoric existence of wild polled to pay Paul Every enthusiast could buy them In a so-called "bal- cattle In those very districts occupied who has a 8t reform which is anced" ration. by the ancestors of the present Aber- always hitting some other business deen-Angus breed. King Kenneth Mac- lnstead his own, never MUST TASTE GOOD. Alpine of Scotland, when promulgating aroun to see what the effect will be crop improTemc.it the laws at Perthshire, specifically before plunges. The manufac- this UV A.

4,1 f.At*7AAlA Cf ration must, of all things, mentions "black homyr cattle, which ers of feed and the most success- Tt 0 a COV Wl11 eat ll ls toe flr st historical roforoaco to the fftfidero in thu country have a 5 and ars6 8 aa to we have. Ti to demand that that delicate was told nind Ig estlon and sickness. It Memorial stones erected by the na- dairy not was told twice In my must contain a variety-of foods so Rnnhi be wrecked by hasty legislation. BRADLEY IS SEATED ON APPELATE BENCH MARRIAGE LICENSES. A.

B. Cooper, Neoslio. Christine Lesan, Neosho. W. Armstrong, Fair-view.

Mrs. Ethel Miller, Fairview. Harry B. Fulton, Dewar, Okla. Gertrude Hansen, Dewar, Okla.

W. R. Kelly, Tulsa, Kathryn Pilgreen, Tulsa, James N. Hargis, Galena, Kas. Mary Susan Ann Hatcher, Granby.

W. C. Lewis, Granby, Rt. 3. Esther Hayworth, Neosho, Rt.

2: Jesse R. Payne, Polk. "1 Grace Tastes, I Lewis P. Irelan, Joplin. Bessie B.

Warden, Neosho. Ben Hood, Granby. Nellie Grimes, Granby. James Casebolt, Albert Munday, Joplin. Ralph Rickman, Webb City.

I Esther Hoffman, Carl Junction. Frank K. Prophet, Seneca. Verna D. Buzzard, Seneca.

L. H. Barlow, Oklahoma City. Susanah Busch, Oklahoma City, Robert R. Arbuckle Litha Sisk, Joplin.

I Lewis N. Livingston, Joplin. Edith E. McPeak, Joplin. M.

L. Patricks, Joplin. Ada Arthur, Joplin. Clarence Suit, Granby. Sina Garrets, Granby.

Robert S. Divers, Joplin. Evelyn Tuttle, Joplin. Chas. W.

Freeman, Oronogo. Mabel Neff, Oronogo. Robert Scott, Carl Junction. Josie Hostetter, Carl Junction. Elmer C.

C. Biggerstaff, Goodman. Elizabeth J. Gilstrap, Goodman. RITCHEY, ROUTE 1.

Jefferson City, June Missouri supreme court today Argus Cox as 'judge of the Springfield court of appeals and declared John H. Bradley entitled to the place. Bradley was the Democratic nominee at the last election. Through a cleric.il error the name of Arch Johnson was printed on the ballot in one county as the Democratic nominee and 1,311 votes were cast for him. Cox, the Republican nominee, was elected by 1,043 votes on the face of the returns.

The supreme court held that Bradley was entitled to the votes cast for Johnson. Judge Blair, who wrote the opinion, said that a large number of voters could not be disfranchised by a clerical error. Judges Graves, Williams and Farris concurred in the opinion, and Judges Walker, Woodson and Bond dissented. This is the first time a similar pointjhas been decided in the Missouri supreme court. Ml lOCj hearing from' the platforms of labor that the cow will not tire of it meetings: "An Englishman Inspected an lean factory near New York, superintendent showed him the with great pride, and boasted oi tremendous output.

"Tour operatives are all men, I said the Memorial stones erected by the native Scots In commemoration of their of Invading Norsemen, and now tlon. and he took him out him the food a graveyard!" nfr Tt or get repulse of Invading Norsemen, and now Revolutionary reforms are seldom rfai nrnfo. enough foun nt Aldbar and Melgle In For- efficacious. Anything which disturbs Ir rnrnJ nniTJT tel t1 n0t farshlre, and Burghead In Morayshlre, he food equilibrium be and kin amounts certainly depict the "hornless cattle of na ndled gradually. Experience has ana Kinas oi mineral substances nee- the country." Kenneth's laws applied' snown that the most efficient way to to lire, health anAJttilk-secre- to theTeglon that became the early hand le cereal products-is to remove be highly digestible.

sea the Aberdeen-Angus breed, and the human food first and feed the only about fifty to there is documentary evidence to show residue to stock. Any other system digestible and the work that In 1523 the black homyl cattle sheer extravagance. the first of polled animals of WRONG FEEDING METHODS. the breed is that of the prize-winning crop impromnrat "black humble," exhibited In 1811 from I There is an old story about a ship well known Aberdeenshire source, captain who had a medicine chest. A sxtv IN LANGUAGF rtP PI aw smta weit mown Aoerueensnire source, meaicine Chest.

A in L.MUUUHUC: ur tLtU I KJUTY It is most significant and probably the lnfluence of which on the breed sailor was sick and he found that No. the best argument for mixed feeds is stm feltt These concentrated facts 47 la his book was the indicated rem- eenuine Force in Advice Handed Out when it is considered that a laree prove thnt the Aberdeen-Angus Is the ed y. but alas! the bottle of No. 47 In WOrdS That Mlnht nlrlnat In Dnti-ntn i- Innnt. WflS ATTintV On Vl A tnnlr Words That Might Be Said to Sizzle.

number of the most prominent and In Britain at least was empty, so he took equal parts ot skilled men la America have dis- and accounts for its extraordinary No 40, which was strychnine, and carded their own mixed feeds and re tence IQ transmitting its color O. 7, which was carbolic acid, and tlve of the company, UTYU iuiiou ieeas ana LI. Rothschild, representa- rations they have found a and hornless character, ic Merchants' Heat and Light satisfactory brand of feed which will a very earl i COUld not resist his Heprmrl mnVn fhov rinrt In 0 make a less cost.and th L. had fa lrs In history tells, Scotland where Darou is an enthusiast on the govern- UeetinB ADVERTISED LETTERS, JULY 4. Alice Barnes, Mr.

Frank Deurult, Mr. Wm. Carver, Miss Grace Hudson, T. F. Jones, John W.

Jones, Mr. C. D. Manley, Josh Moore, Mrs. Anna Mabury, Mr.

Gladden Painler, C. G. Phelps, Miss Nora Powell, Mrs. S. E.

Rodgers, Mrs. W. F. Starin, Mr. H.

R. Stevens, Mr. Jim Shepherd, Mrs. James Short, Paethelia Smith, Neal Smith. J.

J. THOM, P. M. member of the lower house who was them for the greatly discouraged over the defeat In breeders disposed of their surplus perfect health. stock, and it was easily snapped up by agricultural schools and ex- En 1Ish graziers.

Englishmen al- statlons use and have used ways great beef ea that their choicest meats came from the Scottish side of the border, and It was same reason. You can verify this by and are pose. to youpur your nerve voltage. You have sufficient Installation In your system to carry the load. Do not let one burnt- FIVE POUNDS OF MILK ON ONE out fuse Incapacitate your system.

If miLrv ON ONE necessary run your human dynamo at added them together and made No. 47 the sailor died. The application of this old story is that many a feeder will think that if a little of cottonseed or oilseed meal ie good, a whole lot will be better. And, like the man who put the green spectacles on the horse and fed him after he got him POUND OF GRAIN. Crop Improvement W.

W. Ferguson and family visited in Joplin Sunday. Master-Boyden Brown was a passenger to-Neosho Sunday night. Lloyd Ni'mmo, and Miss Esther Douthitt were secretly married about six weeks ago and the fact did not become generally known until last week. Since the wedding, Esther, together with her sister, Miss Ina, have been visiting in Oklahoma, but we understand they are home and the young couple will go to housekeeping on the Adams place near Ritchey.

young couple is well and favorably known in our neighborhood and all join in wishing them a store of happiness. NO ALCOHOLIC INSANITY IN RUSSIA. A Russian journal, Russkly published at Petrograd, in a recent article on the diseased mental conditions resulting from the war, claims that In the present campaign, the amount of psychoses (mental disturbances) is comparatively small, about one per thousand, while In previous wars the rate was two or three per thousand. "The main cause of the decreased rate is the total absence of alcoholism," says the Russian paper. "In the present campaign there has not occurred a single case of alcoholic Insanity." OWTiCW I I KX V.J-k tun capacity.

Keep your finger on C. H. Packard, of Delavan, Wiscon- the best males to the best females; your distribution system, and with the sin a progressive and practical dairy- rules being laid down for breeding support of an honest public, you will man, was not satisfied with his ration both for beef and the dairy, which be able to develop a nitrogen light of home-grown feed. Although he proves the breed to have been orlgl- convlctlon oa ur fellow members, mixed his ration with brains and it nally what we term a dual-purpose one. When a for what-is seemed theoretically correct, he The breeds of Aberdeenshire are right in principle he eventually wins." thought he would try out his own fully described and Innumerable de- The member listened attentively and mixture in comparison -with, a first j- scrlptlons are given of the fine specl- Ured: The iGoodrich economy class dairy feed.

Much to his surprise mens killed in the City of Aberdeen. tftlk) all he ound tnat he could gaye fibout The butchers or fleshers there had five Ibs. of grain per cow nearly 5 cents per cow. his own grain at prices much below mention is made of "the Williamsons the-hoTse died. It is human nature to experiment authentic record In feeds, and the poor cow has to suf- was made of the breed's progress in fer for an overdose or an underdose Aberdeenshire, Angusshlre, Klncar- i before the proper ration is eatab- dineshire and RIornyshlre.

la Aber- llshed. deenshlre we find the breed described as having been "Improved" by putting News. Mails by Airplane. He figured high class, and among them particular A regular airplane service between the wholesale market and of St. John's Wells and Kobert Walker of Wester were breed" New York and Chicago is proposed, mixed feed at retail.

It is estimated that the flight of 720 Also when his ration was figured ac- ers, though the Williamsons'were "the miles could be made in from six to cording to Armsby or Energy method largest dealers ip Scotland, their only ten Hours, with an average time of his mixed feed proved to be the right rival being, as we are told, Charles seven hours and a load of from 500 combination to make a balanced ration I McCombie of Tillyfour. wlth hls EXPENSIVE PASTURE. Crop Improrement DIFFICULT TO MIX FEEDS A More Scientific Result Can Be Produced By Machinery. Crop IraproTement As no two lots run alike, it is very difficult to mix straight by-products of oats, barley, rye, corn, cotton-seed, flaxseed, by measure, because it is purely guessing. Only a few years ago intentional fraud or carelessness was the rule.

Before the feed laws were passed, each manufacturer adulterated all the trade would aland show-in 1829. Mr. Watson also showed leaving each city at 6 p. and alighting at three regular stations, where i oa oemca.j extra machines, fuel, and equipment When st to consider that an i the only Angus steers exnlbited one parts would be maintained'. Eventual- acre of Pasture will feed a cow, but a bred by himself the other Mr ly an emergency alighting station that that sam acre will raise ten tons Jonnstone Mr Every car of feed sold to the consumer is not analyzed, and the farmer cannot become a feed expert because he has no laboratory.

Not one car out of five hundred is officially inspected. In the old days country exhibit of the black polls at Perth miners were throwing feeds together also exhlb- would be established every 22 miles, of 8lla during the time the cow is I Ited at Kelso in 1832 Aberdeen ln each equipped with powerful guiding feeding on It, it would seem that a 1838 5 Dundee, 1843; In. guiding lights. At present the fastest railway Brass cafeteria would be the most ex- trip between New York and Chicago Pensive way to feed your stock, takes more than twenty hours. 1852.

4 -m A. an Qt "They talk of 'personal There is no such thing. You can't reconstruct your house, or do hosts of otlmr important things, without get- tins permission. And you can't get permission to do anything inimical -public to drink liquor. There were only two persons earth who ever had absolute personal before Eve came alontf; and Robinson Crusoe before he met Friday." -o o- O- CLASSIFIED COLUMN.

-O Seneca, one sorrel and white spotted Shetland pony with white stripe down each hip, with heavy mane and tail. Liberal reward for return or information leading to same. GEO. H. PURYEAR, Seneca, Mo.

36-2t FOR SALE. Quite a little sickness among the' 33-4t 10 and 20-acre Tracts Fruit Land. Close in; terms easy. See J. M.

Z. WITHROW, Neosho. For acres one mile south of Neosho; new 6-room house, good barn 24-24, 2 cisterns, hen house, etc. Fruit consists of apples, peaches, cherries, plums, grapes, raspberries, blackberries, and strawberries, A nice location. One-half cash, balance on easy terms.

No trade. Why He Hurried. Aaron, seeing Beerbaum with a new overcoat, asks, "vere did you get It?" "I was MORE FEED, MORE MILK. Crop Iraprorement "a decided dairy avenue," said Beerbaum, "when I ran against a big car and tore my old thegreate rofl when fed Ex- Crop Improrement Service.) I Being at this time well established as a national it was felt that a trip abroad would extend its fame, and its first foreign exhibition was at the Paris International Exhibition of 1850, where It was shown in considerable strength. This was the show at which Charlotte and Hanton, shown one.

"Phalx," replied the other, "thot must bo wan of thlm full 1 scenes we hear about." C. A. SHULL, Hla Proper Place. "I'm surprised to hear you say that you don't enjoy motoring with Mr. Twobble." "It's because I see so little of him, you know," said Mrs.

Twobble. "But If he's with "That's Just it. He isn't with me. Most ot the time he's under the Birmingham Age-Herald. A City Chauffeur.

What a become of your chauffeur?" "Oh, he was with the regiment down Texas and crawled tinder an army mule to see why it wouldn't go." to thfl dropplnga sess the following characteristic soft, but not necessarily loose. Usu- Perfect homogenlety of race, ally all that is needed is to increase beau richness and regularity of coat. Just then the owner came out Ordinarily, silage will correct the by Mr McComble made such aa Jm of the Chicago club and gave me fifty tendency to costlveness When it is pre8slon on the ses that they dollars to buy myself a new one." not sufficiently effective for this pur- wrote the followin Aaron pulled on his, own coat and, Pose, add enough old process oil mnni MThe specimens of this breed pos- selzlng his hat, started for the door. "Where're you going?" asked Beerbaum. "Out to see if that automobile is still Herald.

High Life. Two sons of the old sod were watch- Ing a picture of high life. The scene showed the interior of a clubhouse. A number of men were drinking rather freely and all showed signs of intoxication. "An' phot do ye call thot?" asked form, softness of skin, mellowness In handling; the whole united to a muscular system sufficiently developed.

They presented, besides, a considerable mass of flesh, supported by a comparatively small volume of bone. We are aware, besides, that the breed Joins sobriety to a great aptitude to and rye by-products are more eco- fa tten, and that It supplies the but- the allowance of concentrates. There are always two sides to every vuestion. if the government insists on more bran in flour, bossy will have to turn to still more artificial bran. Wheat bran is a dear feed.

Barley nomlcal. cher's stall with beef of much esteemed quality; that it produces milk in sat- Poverty holds a mortgage on the 'sftwtory quantity, is of sweet temper, feeder who can see nothing but the and Is also endowed with prolific qualjr price. Some feeds are as cheap at as other at $25 per ton. When you buy for cows It usually costs more thau grain by-pro'd- ucts, although if costn half aa much per ton. Ccup oinroTMiHiK 1 It Is a fair assumption thnt any farmer who against mixed does not know what a Dutrone, writing 22 years later, after the crowning event of 1878, soys: "I well remember the stately masses of the polled caftle, drawn up in a black and Imposing array, even and level, as If the chisel of the sculptor had been piled over their grandly fleshed frames." (Third of a series of articles on the with no knowledge of feed and were ruining valuable cows and making the farmer poorer.

In those days the feed tables were -wrong, the feeds didn't fit the tables; the digestible analysis method was Incorrect; feed standards for animals were not agreed upon nor complete; the animals didn't fit the standards; the buyer didn't know what was in the feeds he bought to mix; and there was an unavoidable variation in the concentration of the feed. These conditions have been largely overcome through the joint action of the government and state experiment stations and the mixed feed manufacturers who have every facility for maintaining a uniform product By using these scientifically prepared feeds, many a herd has doubled its and profits. There are some painters who can buy lead, oil and dryer and mix and match their own color uniformly but the best painters of today hare learned that mill-made brands are much 'better than anything they can mix with a The same is true in fertilizers to a great extent. In mixed feeds there can be no economy in home mixing because the mixing factories, being' near the large markets, can utilize by-products to the very best advantage. Home mixing cannot be accomplished at one-tenth of a cent per besides the result is never twice allko and cannot be without.the help of a laboratory.

Crop A practical test shows that eight tons of a first class dairy feed will replace 13 1-3 tons of farm grain, making a proportionate saving of about 20 ton and It also puts three purebred cattle iaduatry, containing mes 8S mutch fertilizer back buying a fraudulent foe.l. state laws are very 'stringent on tills point and If any mao has any doubt as to the. value of a reed, all he to do In to write hla'State Experiment Station and got the truth. mixed feed i nc ts and figures of striking linpor-! farm a8 ls tn oi tance and value to every farmer, and icoum Bo11 stock raiser. raln thls farn er For free Illustrated literature, history, show records and fist of American Aberdeen-Angus Breeders' Association.

members, address Gbaa, Gray, Record Union-Stock Fartis, Chicago.) Crop There no sense la hauling two loads of cheap feed one laaxl.of high-grade feed will do the work and coats but three-fourths as much as the two loads..

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About The Neosho Times Archive

Pages Available:
30,845
Years Available:
1870-1953