The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1897 Page: 1 of 4
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The Chandler News.
YOLUME VI.
chandler, oklahoma, friday, jan. 1,1897.
NUMBER 15
Hail Road Time Table, Guthrie, 0. T
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe R. R.
NORTH, EAST, AND WEST.
6:45 a m I 6:W h tn . U-4.1 a m
5:08 p ni « 50 u m I 10:^0 p m
7:W am I Local Freight.
j Local Fre.KbV
south, KOUTBEAST. and southwest-
FARM AM) GARDEN.
MATTERS OF INTEREST TO
AGRICULTURISTS.
Konie Up-to-date HluU About Cnltlva-
ttoti ot th« Boll and Yields Thereof
—Horticulture, Viticulture and Florl-
culture.
• Arrive "j Uave I Arrive j Arrive
No. I Guthrie i Guthrie | Ft W th 1 O 1 v el
4ar I 12:w> pm. I 1--'pui j : lft p " j j f'
403 10:68 p m. II OS p m 8.10 a ni ' 9: > P m
4?s 112.16 p m. I LOQ inn | Local Freight.
00 hours to Los Aujfoles,
Free chair car* on all
trains Pnlmao PMioa
8ic« pers to Kansas City
and Chicago without
change. Also to Ft. Worth
and Galveston Connects
at Newton with Vestibule
limited having chair cars,
Puiman palace compart-
ment sleepers and dluing
cars through lo Los An-
fploB nod San Diego also
with train carrying chair
curs. Pullman and Tour-
1st sleepers to El Paso,
Los Angeles, nnd Sau
Fransisco. Through railroad and steamship
tlcktes sold to ail points. Passengers boosed
to all points in the continent of Europe: also
from any port or inland point in Europe through
to any poiut in the United Statec Prepaid
tickets paid for here will be delivered to pas-
seugers at their residence In Europe. For full
particulars, call on or address, (leo. T. Nichol-
son, < . P A.. Chicago: W. J. mack, A. O. P,
A.. Topeka. Kans ; L. Jt, Delaney, Agent.
Uuthrlo, Oklahoma
I r M
Wanted- An Idea
Who can think
of some simple
thing to patent?
.„u{ Ideas; ther may bring you wealth.
6HN WEDDERBURN & CO., Patent Attor-
Railroad Time Table. Shawnee, Okla.
CHOCTAW, OKLAHOMA, &, GULF R. R
Tne short line from and to all points in
the Indian L Oklahoma Territories,
Through tickets sold at short line rates Vj
11 points.
Depart Arrive
Except Except
Sunday. Dally. Dally. Sunday.
146pm Wister 282pm 106pra
2 12pm Fanshawe 2 12pm 12 26pm
2 32pm Red Oak 1 62pm 1 i OOj m
3 0lpm Wilburton 1 2*:<pm 11 fi0j>
3 46pm Hartshorne 12 46pm
4 09pm Anderson 12 20pm
4 26pm Ar South Lv 12 05pm
I gOpm L Mc Aisle All 4ftpm
5 30pm Calvin 10 36nm J'imm
612pm Holdenville 10 02pm 3 17i m
6 32pm Wewoka 9 42pm 2 28.ua
7 20pm Earleboro 8 61pm : OUaui
7 40pm A Shawnee L 8 34pm 12 16am
7 46pm L •' A 8 29pm 100pm
8 14pm McLoud 8 01pm 12 30pm
8 41pm Choctaw C lty 7 56pm 12 01pm
3 30pm 9 10pm Okla. City 1 ^—
516pm 8 10am " "
6 6()pm 8 46am Yukon
0 20pm 9 16am El Reno
9 35am Fort Reno
2 35pm
:! 13pm
3 58pm
4 57pm
« iripm
7 10pm
7 33pm
H 15am
0 85am
1 50am
2 33am
2 10am
8 00 pm
2 45pm
a 30pm
3 oopm
o lOf m
9 07 pm
8 30am
6 40am
pm
For rates and Oth
Hknry Wood,
Gen. Manager.
iSam 1 \ 30pm
7 65pm 11 25pm
7 2npm 10 WM'Ui
ft 50pm lu 20pm
__ 9 60am 9ft'Jui<
'nformation apply to
J. F. Hoi-DFS,
Traffic Manager,
South McAlester, I. T.
Who can think
of some simple
thing to patent?
protect your Ideas: they may bring you wealth.
Write JOHN WKDDKKUURN
Wanted—An Idea
ivs, Washington, D. C .for inrir #i,nm.
id ilst of two hundred Inveutlona wanted.
johnembry
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
CO. ATTORNEY OP LINCOLN CO.
Office ot Court House,
CHANDLER, • OKLAHOMA
emery a. foster,
attokney-at-law
Ofiice, Corner Mftnvcl Avenue and
Tenth Street.
CHANDLER, • OKLAHOMA
DR. L A.KELSEY
dentist,
Office on Manvel Avenue, Between nth
unci luth Streets. Office Hours
0:00 to 12:00 & 1:00 to 5:00.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
C AI iV 1N ANI) FUN K
BARBERS-
Second Door North or Manvel House.
Onlv First-Class Shop In Town.
'12 Shaves lor $1.00.
CHANDLER, - OKLAHOMA
H.L. COHEN
i:
merchan'
tailor ..
Men's Fine Furnishing- Goods
and Hats. A Full Line of Fine
I'Vencli and Domestic Piece Goods
Now on II;1 nil. Call and Examine.
GUTHRIE,
OKLAHOMA
ULLBTIN 119, of
Cornell University
experiment station,
speaking of the
texture * of soil,
says:
Every good far-
mer knows that a
hard and lumpy
soil will not grow
good crops, no mat-
ter how much plant
food it may contain. A clay soil which
has been producing good crops for any
number of years may be so seriously
Injured by one injudicious plowing in
n wet time as to ruin it for the growing
of crops for two or three years. The
injury lies in the modification of its
physical texture, not in the lessening
of its fertility. A sandy soil may also
be seriously impaired for the growing
of any crop if the humus
or decaying organic matter is
allowed to burn out of it.
It then becomes leachy, it quickly loses
its moisture, and becomes excessively
hot in bright sunny weather. Similar
remarks may be applied to all soils.
That is, the texture or physical condi-
tion of the soil is nearly always more
important than its mere richness in
plant food. A finely divided, mellow,
friable soil is more productive than a
hard and lumpy one of the same chem-
ical composition because: It holds and
retains more moisture; holds more air;
presents greater surface to the roots;
promotes nitrification; hastens the de-
composiion of mineral elements; has
lens variable extremes of temperature;
allows a better root-hold to the plant.
In all these ways, and others, the mel
lowness of the soil renders the plant
food more available and affords a con-
genial and comfortable place in which
the plant may grow.
The reader will now see the folly of
applying commercial or concentrated
fertilizers to lands of poor texture. He
will see that If potash, for example,
were applied to the hard lumps of clay
it could not be expected to aid in the
growth of plants, because plants cannot
grow on such soil. If the. same quantity
were applied to proper soil, however,
the greater part of it would be pre-
sented to the roots of plants at once,
and Its effects would no doubt be ap-
parent In the season's crop. The read-
er will readily understand that it is
useless to apply commercial fertilizers
to lands which are not in proper phys-
ical condition for the very best growth
of crops.
Farmers do not appreciate the im
portance of humus as an ameliator of
land. In farm lands, it is msually sup
plied in the form of green crops, stub
ble or sward, and barn manures. Whei
humus is absent, sandy soils become
too loose and leachy and hot, and clay
soils bake and become lumpy.
The writer has much of this hard
unproductive land. What is to be done
with it? To cover it with commercial
fertilizer would be of little benefit. It
must first be put in fit condition for the
growing of crops. A crop of clover
plowed under would quickly improv
it, but the land is newly planted to or-
chard and he does not care to seed it
down. The next recourse is stable ma-
nure. Of this enough can be had to
cover the hardest spots. For the rest,
catch or cover crops must be used. Fol-
lowing beans or potatoes, he can sow
rye and plow it under very early in the
spring. Now and then he can use a
fall crop of sowed corn or oats or some-
thing of the kind. After a time, he
may be able to get the land in such a
condition of tilth as to secure an occa-
sional stand of crimson clover. This
practice, continued judiciously for a
few years, ought to radically change
the character of the land; but all this
will be of little avail unless the plow-
ing and cultivation—which are now so
inadequate—can be donp in a timely
and intelligent way. All this will take
time and patience. He wishes that
there were some short-cut and lazy way
of improving this land by making some
application of fertilizer to it, but there
Is not. The most he can do is to slowly
bring It into such condition that it will
pay to put concentrated fertilizers on
it. In short, the first step in the enrich-
ment of unproductive land is to im-
prove its physical condition by means
of careful and thorough tillage, by the
| addition of humus, and perhaps by un-
derdrainage. It must first be put in
such condition that plants can grow in
it. After that, the addition of chem-
ical fertilizers may pay by giving addi-
tional or redundant growth.
L. H. Bailey.
good variety is more valuable than a
grafted tree.
Clean Up and Plow the Garden: We
again repeat the statement thai the
garden cleaned up and plowiW in the
fall is in better conditlou for planting
in the spring, and it is rarely infested
with cut worms. Indeed, during the
pant twenty-five years we have not
failed to plow the garden in the fall and
we have rarely had a plant cut off by a
cut worm. We also never fail to turn
over in the fall land on which we ex-
pect to plant the spring small
tree or shrub seeds or root grafts. W Ith
this care little if any damage Is done
by cut worms. But it has happene
that not quite enough plowing was
done in the fall. In every case the part
planted in the spring plowing suffered
from cut worms, and plum seedlings
were totally destroyed.
Why so Few Plums: Several have
asked why the native plums bore so
shyly this season, as they blossomed
very full and we had a mild winter and
no frost. The reason is very simple.
While the blossoms were expanded we
had continuous moist or valny weather
in most neighborhoods, which was not
favorable for pollination. In some
neighborhoods the sun shone more and
plums were quite plentiful. But on
sol Is where the trees suffered severely
last summer from drouth the blossoms
last spring of the native plums were
not perfect. On the college grounds our
trees on hardpan, within six feet of the
surface, blossomed very full, but not
one blossom in a hundred was perfect.
In our work In crossing It was difficult
to find a blossom with a perfect pistH
and not one of our crossed blossoms
developed a plum. But on more favor-
able soil the blossoms were perfect and
fruited well where a few hours of sun-
shine came at the right time. Many
corn fields also show the effects of
moist weather. When the period came
for filling out the ears several days of
moist weather prevented the flying of
pollen Hence in some neighbornoods
the corn Is not filled out on most of the
ears, while In others where the weather
favored the ears are perfect.
Plant lug Apple Seeds.
Having planted more or less each
year for the laBt forty-two years, and
tried spring and fall with varied suc-
cess the fall planting did the best,
writes P. M. Gideon in the Cultivator.
sow the seed in the drill and cover
not more than one inch deep, and so
planted, scarcely a seed will fail to
germinate the next spring. The seeds
to do their best should be planted not
less than one inch apart, and if to be
grown as orchard trees without graft-
ing they should take one winter in
nursery to test their hardiness and
then reject all that fail to make a hardy
growth and a perfect terminal bud.
Take up and set in orchard at one year
old for at that age the tap root can be
bad entire and easily planted. In
growing a healthy tree the most impoi t-
ant part is the tap root. Small fibrous
side roots are better cut off, doing more
injury than good. I grow and fruit
thousands of seedlings, and in a pro-
miscuous lot not more than one In fifty
will he a fairly good apple. 'I o maKe
seedlings a success requires experience
and careful culling. My best success
was 1.200 culled from 10,000, and even
then some poor ones.
llc« Faralynls.
This is also called the "nameless bee-
disease and has attracted much atten-
tion . last few years, not only in
Ca>' 1 lla, but In several states, says
a . r In American Bee Journal. In
\ disease the imago, or immature
bees, are the ones that die. The dead
or enfeebled bees are carried by other
bees outside, and thus the ground In
front of the hives has constantly a
mound of dead bees. Usually the col-
ony does not wholly succumb, but It is
so weakened that It produces little or
no honey. Generally the colony recov-
ers after a time, usually after the bees
have replaced the queen with a young
one. The disease has worked consider-
able havoc in some parts of this state
the present season; I think in some
ases the loss has been as much from
the "new bee-disease," already de-
scribed, as from the "bee-paralysis." 1
am much Inclined to the opinion that
partial starvation may cause weak ma-
ture bees as well as enfeebled larvae,
and so it is quite possible that, in some
cases, the "nameless bee-disease" may
have been credited with harm due to
Insufficient stores. From my own ob-
servation, and from what I can learn
from others. I think this last disease
comes from some constitutional weak-
ness of the queen, which shows itself
in debility of her progeny, the worker-
bees. I have known, in several cases
the disease to soon disappear after the
queen was superseded; and in other
cases, where the bees replaced their
queen with a young, healthy one, the
disease soon vanished. It is quite pos-
sible that those who claim to havo
cured the evil by some treatment, as
giving the bees salt, or salt water, gave
their treatment just after the bees had
superseded their queen. Others who
were unsuccessful with the same reme-
dies, were less fortunate In the date of
application. The best advice which
can be given, in case the old beeB die
off too rapidly, is to see that the bees
have abundance of food, and In case
that fails to bring relief, try re-queen
lng of all affected colonies.
F.W.Kash,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office on Manvel Avenue, Between 7th
and 8th Streets.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
D. N PRAZIER.
J. S. NEWBY.
FRAZIER & NEWBY,
Attorneys at Law
CHANDLER.
OKLAHOMA
^HANDLER SHAWNEE
I , M AH. AND STACK LINK
It. S. BLAIR, MANAGER.
Lv. Chandler it A.M. Ar. Shawnee 5 P.M.
Lv. Shawnee 9 A M. Ar. Chandl t6P.M
«rConnects with traiu- on. Choctaw
I'Hhroud social ' arc *tvn to . x
jn-uss OBico in l">=t office, Chandler
Horticultural >'otc .
Prof. J. L. Budd, writing in the Iowa
State Register, gives some important
suggestions, which we republish, as fol-
lows:
Cherry on Own Roots: Careful ob-
servation will show that the cherry
trees that are sprouting in garden and
orchard are mostly on their own roots.
Our cherry trees are either budded on
Mahaleb stocks or crown grafted on
Mazzard seedlings. The mahaleb root
never sprouts. So if sprouts appear it
allows that the tree bail been planted
Nitrogen is the most < o.itly constitu-
ent of commercial fertilizers; and, in
many instances, the increased cost of I
the fertilizer due to the nitrogen it
contains will balance or even exceed
the increase in the proceeds from the
crop, due to the nitrogen. Fortunately,
we are not obliged to rely entirely
upon commercial fertilizers for our
pply of nitrogen to enrich our soils.
Recent investigations have proved
that the class of plants called "legum-
inous plants," to which the clovers,
peas, beans, etc., belong, have the
power of deriving from the air a part
of the nitrogen required in their
growth. For this reason they are
sometimes called "nitrogen-gatherers."
This fact helps to explain why clover
is so valuable in restoring and enrich-
ing poor soils. The clover plant Is rich
in nitrogenous matters and, when the
crop is plowed under, they decay in
the soil and add to its supply of nitro-
gen for the next crop.
Ground and Cooked Feed the Best.—
All animals are provided with a means
of crushing or grinding or putrifying
their food, preparatory for the action of
the digestive fluids. The digestive sys-
tem of the chicken is provided with a
strong muscular organ, containing
more or less gravel, by which the food
is ground up. The cow has four stom-
achs, in the first of which the food is
macerated and then returned to the
mouth for final mastication. The hog
gulps his food down and depends on the
length of his alimentary canal to secure
proper digestion. Throughout the whole
animal economy, whatever may be the
method of taking and digesting food,
thorouth mechanical division. Grind-
ing an! cracking feed therefore assists
natura has provided largely for Its
natures efforts.
Money Farming.
The honey trade in this country hai>
grown to great proportions, for honey
has ceased to be a great luxury. Bay
the New York Tribune. "It forms part
of the grocer's stock in the smalles
hamlet, and bakers and candy makers
and patent medicine men use it by the
hogshead. There are several firms in
this city who regard an order of $1,000,
$1,600 or $2,000 worth just as a dry
goods merchant looks on an order for
fifty yards of muslin. New York, Bos-
ton and Chicago are the centers of
the trade in this country, and London
rules the world. The supply is steady,
for if there is a shortage in one part
of the country or the world, another
part is sure to' make it up. There is no
use In attempting to make an estimate
of the value of the crop, but it will go
well into the millions. It is known
that there are 30,000 bee-keepers in the
United States, and many who are un-
known. Honey comes from all parts of
the country, but California and the
northern states supply the greater part
The southern states do not furnish as
much as would be expected, partly be-
cause people are not paying attention
to the work, and partly because bees
are not cared for as well as at the
north. The honey which the southern
states do send is different from that
of the other states; the product of Flor-
ida ig considered the best, hut that la
only as a cheaper grade.
NEWS IN BRIEF.
It is now said that the Vanderbllts
havo settled 81.1,0110,000 on the Duchess
of Mnrlborouifh.
Itev. M. It. llill « as paralyzed in his
pulpit while preaching a sermon at
llentonville, Ark.
A. Yountf of Isadora, Mo., was ar-
rested on the charge of perjuring him-
self to secure a pension.
Cardinal Satolll will receive the red
hat at a meeting of the Catholic Con-
sistory at Rome on December 3.
The official vote of Minnesota shows
that McKinley received just a tritle
over 53,000 plurality over Mr. Bryan.
Helen Kellar, the deaf, dumb and
blind girl who recently entered Har-
l Annex, has taken to riding a bl-
' 1). W. Hughes of Mexico, Mo., has
invented a machine by which, he says,
be determined the gender of hen
fruit.
neral Horace Porter is said to
have been slated by Hanna for grand
marshal «>f the McKinley inauguration
re monies.
If Republican elect the United States
Senators in Kentucky and North Caro-
lina they need but one vote to pass a
tariff bill.
The memorial organ presented by
Mrs. Ktuinons Blaine to the First Pres-
byterian church at. Richfield Springs,
N. V., was dedicated.
Thanksgiving and the cold wave cut
down the production of lead and zinc
in the Missouri mining district, but
prices advanced agreeably.
('apt it in .1. M. Webster of the army is
suffering from a curious malady and
ascribes it to injuries received from X
y treat ment to locate a bullet.
burglars broke into tho house of
Henry Suddarth at Old Monroe, Mo.,
and took his gold watch and : «> In
cash from under the pillow on which
he was sleeping.
A review of the British financial situ-
ation shows money rates to be etisier
and the foreign demand for gold con-
siderably curtailed. There is a good
demand for American railway and
other stock i and securities for the in-
vestment account.
Senators and Congressmen are drop-
ping into Washington, and as their
number grows, more persistent be-
comes the chatter of politics and spec-
ulation on what Congress will do this
winter with the all absorbing financial
question and hundreds of other ques-
tions that will present, themselves.
Horace L. Stearns, a wealthy old
lawyer of Perryville. Ohio, was shot
dead by Klias Keyster, whom he had
beaten in a law suit.
The festivities at Blenheim castle, in
honor of the visit of the Prince and
Princess of Wales to the Duke and
Duchess of Marlborough, arc said to
have cost 100,00(1
At Altus, (ircreouuty, Okla.. Claude
Kimball and William Dallas, young
business men. quarreled over a small
account. Dallas drew a knife and
Kimball shot him dead.
lluahUh Chr.vst. a farmer, aged 00,
committed suicide near Sedalin. Mo.,
by shooting. Ill health was the cause,
lie was once a Republican leader in
l'ettis county.
A second attempt was made to as-
sassinate 1!. T. linioks, an Kniflish-
man known as "Lord Brooke." living
near Tonkawa, Okla. lie and his wife
again repelled the outlaws.
Fire caused by a defective stove pipe
destroyed Luther (ireeninan's farm-
house. near Perry, N. V. and caused
the death of (ireeninan and wife and
three children, of whom the eldest
A. D. WRIGHT'S DRUG STORE
•<BQQK AND NEW9 DEPOTS
DrugS) ^vl ocilolne ,
Paints, Oils indQUsS, School Sup-1^*-
piles, Fancy and Toilet Articles.
_A. ITull Lino of Wall F'etP®**
PIVMCIUPTIONB CAREFULLY COMPOU D*B>
SOUTH MANVEL AVE., CHANDLER, O. T
o. ■. kte. pkiiiiinti
, HOYT, OASMIBft.
v. i, mskyditn, aatt, omwm
The * Llncolr) f County * BanK.,
—.—-iSSBHOAPITAL. •fO.OOO.OO.l*^ -
OOE9 OINeHAL BflNKINO BUSINESS
6MCIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO COLLECTIONS
BT00KH0LDBR8I
F. B. Hoyt, O. K* , V. I. MeryditK,
.... Oklahoma
W, E. M rydicb,
ChaQdler, •
nppi
Begoniafi —Keep your begonias free
from dust. When sweeping, eover
with an apron or sheet. If you wish to
sponge their leaves, do so In the morn-
ing, that they may have a chance to j th
dry off before night. Drops of water to
remaining on Rex begonias will rot a 1 be
hole In the leaves, which makes the
OnlonH from Horn!.
It may not be generally known that
onions may be grown from seed sown
in September or October, provided
there is sufficient moisture to germin-
ate the seed and get them well started
before cold weather. The young plants
will stand the winter, says Texas Farm
and Ranch, with a slight protection of
long manure scattered upon them In
the early part of December. One culti-
vation in the -'all will be all the work
needed. The seed should be drilled In
immediately before or Just after a rain,
otherwise the seed may fail of germina-
tion, and they will need a deeper cov-
ering of soil to prevent drying out.
Oninn seed 'hus planted will, with fa-
vorable conditions, produce a fine crop
of bulbs in the spring and come into
use earlier than sets planted In the
spring. Let it be understood that large
bulbs can only be produced when fer-
tilizers are freely applied. The drop-
pings of the hen yard and wood ashes
make an excellent fertilizer for onions.
Keep Plants Apart.—It Is good for
plants to keep as much apart as pos-
sible. If the seed fell straight to the
ground, and the young plants all grew
up together around the parent one,
they would starve each other out. I-or
plants are' like people, and when
crowded iOO closely together, fall to
fighting among themselves. Their
struggles are '.*ery bitter ones, though
we do not see or hear them. The plants
that are strongest in these silent bat-
tles end by getting the light and air,
and water and food they need from
the soil, while the poor weaklings are
left to starve and die. To prevent too
much of this wasteful crowding and
aid Dame Nature has in-
ler little scheme.—
(lovernor Stone <>f Missoui
cepted the resignation of .1. S. Oross-
hart as a member of the board < f man-
air.-1-s of Asvlum No. 3 at Nevada, and
d Charles I!. Creasy of Odessa
fill the vacancy.
A shake-up in the White
li,.,. force was caused by the
of four officers asleep.
Private Secretary Thurbei
the report that Mr. Cl-velai
side at, Princeton, N. .1.
Postmaster Armour of
Tenn.. soon will 1 - removed because,
the discovery of a 813,000 shortage t
his accounts.
The commission that marked il
boundary Inst ween the I'nited Stab
and Mexico west of the Rio (Irande hi
made its final report.
hat i
Senato
or man
Corbett-lit/.
Hanna have not mad
ment -eg-arding offices
George Fitzpatriek <
slapped a child and was killed 1
child's father.
A permit for ti
mons li^lit before the ( rei
York Athletic club has been i
Louisiana has a food famin
Milwaukee exposition 1
abandoned.
Eleven thousand dockers
strike at Hamburg.
William Waldorf Astor li
the Children's Aid Society
York $.">0,000.
tn firmed
-z-fust-cuss weekly newspapers—g
i — xlfor $1.00 cf\sht>
i THE KANSAS CITY JOURNAL,
THE GUTHRIE STATE CAPITAL,
AND THE CHANDLER NEWS
ti Will nil be sent to anr address in lincoln county one
i year for one dollar. This combination will give jou
* afl the news The Journal can be relied upon to keep
1 vou posted on Reneral news; the Capital will give you
I more Oklahoma news than any other paper published;
1 while the Chanm.kr Nkws is the leading county paper
SOME OTHER CLUBBING RATES:
I CnANDl.HK News and semi-weekly Globe-Democrat.
ii •• and Chicago Inler-Octan
« " and Washington Post..
i, and St. Louis Republic.........
|i ii and Cosmopolitan
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ii " and Arena
if ii and Mnnsey or Peterson 1:su
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i Send all subscriptions to The News, Chandler, Oklahoma,
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HOYT ABSTRACT CO.
BONDED ABSTRACTERS.
tyrllE ONLY COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACT
HOOKS IN LINCOLN CO.
E VV. HOYT, S«cretary ond Maoajj".
Olfice in Lincoln County BanK-
S AMUEL
JOBBEIl AND RETAIL DEALER IN
drugs, medicines, paints, oils,
GLASS,
PUTTY, BOOKS, STATIONERY, AND A FULL
LINE OF DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES.
„ \ Xv*. sirxcl 1 1 t 11 0-
Oklahomi
C'or. M®
C l-i eiraci lest",
est hotel in I*c
111., hi
Anna
singer,
heart in
f the I'annalee-
rh at Omaha was
I'armalce.
B. Clarke, a <
vent blind and die
consequence.
i<> Lope/. C'olomo,
i Mutunzaa was
Havana,
nil We.vle
1 of a broken
an insurgent
captured and
deep enough so that roola eome from i [ook unsightly. -E
the scion which throws up sprouts
Mazzard root may sprout, but as usual-
ly planted it rarely does. If it does
Bprout, tbc leaf Is so peculiar that it can
be detected at once. The point we wish
to make is that every Utile sprout of a
valuable variety, if set in nursery row,
wlil make a valuable tree Within the ggy birds from the East Indies,
past week we have seen valuable
sprouts in farmers' gardens who were
talking about buying more cherry tree®.
I 0 not forget that the oprout from a
In one consignment recently a feath-
er dealer in London received 6,000
birds of paradise, 3GO.OOO birds of vari-
ous kinds from the East Indies, and
400,000 humming birds. In three
months another dealer imported 356,-
Llght is essential to the health of
the hens, therefore have good win-
dows.
struggling
vented mauy
E*-
Milk for Poultry.—Milk is one of
very ljest foods that can be given I
u, fowls. In one sense It is the very
best as it a complete food; but its I
great bulk Is agnlint It for It would I
be impossible for poultry to drink ;
enough milk alone to satisfy their ap-
netitf It muit, therefore, be used iu |
connection with other fooi. While ,
awee, whole milk is to be preferred,
Hour ;ind skimuicu milk are also ral-
uable. The objection to milk as a sub-
stitute for meHt is its undue propor-
tion of water. It is calculated that It
will require seven pounds of skimmetl
milk t° equal one jjound of lean meat
,,,,- flesh forming qunl.tlf* !"*■
C L o T H I IN G
SUBSCRIBE
For The
LOT III N<
M EN'S
When in need of
FURNISHING (iOOD:
HATS OR(
or order by mail from
C. U I I r/J'ON,
10 & in : !•:. Douglas Ave
ey Refunded.
Poor Printing Pays
Poor Profits
HYH Work that is done in a slovenly manner or ilone
f! upon a poor quality of paper is dear at any price,
li, "Cheap Joliu" printing: i regarded as an tmex to
a "Clieap John" business. While o„r work.is not
fr-f high in price, it is «uperior m quality. V. e h& e
I the advantage of experience and equipment. Exper-
f Ictioe means time; time means money. (.MI «m.i
M tat money by taking your printing to TUB M.ws.
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Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 15, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1897, newspaper, January 1, 1897; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115322/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.