The Kiel Record (Kiel, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 21, 1915 Page: 2 of 4
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THE KJEi; Rl.CO'"
Jl'HE KIEL RECOkD
I O. Purcell, Editor
.'ublished every 'j'litir^tlav at our
iffio hi Kiel, Kingfisher County,
'• tklahouia
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
>ne year, in advance $1.00
jingle copy fie
thursday, of t i uk jl, i<)15
Don' forget Halloween
rjghi 3 Og.ober ,'Uct
Wf>rry kills more people
icause mort
than work — bf
,/eople tackle it.
Ye-, Kiel hat
.bail team, 'ind
Wiil so mi eon
something.
Bas
trood •
kindh si
With C'o-ratz. i
Jind U talk g
^vi.'l no be so very
Jore 1'h: w
i7e i think oi
M ex
p ac .
c
. it
I) -
i to early
Avoid Speakinq !li
you can't say anything pood of i
'■y looking out ot lie \viiidc*w
Since Eve'r. Yt>-.
A wouiiii ca
woman nn•
a I Jar "
Surgical Forecast.
Burgeons having suprlle,! one mar,
With a steel backbone, re-ep ; t!0n.
orete may oome next
The '.'atlcan.
Tlio expenses of inalnta
Vatican arc rovided f ic lr
or, at uij> rule, lij tin i ■
' How to Make Fat Ones.
Ann Carlson's advice "If you want
a baby girl to grow a bis, buxom
woman, Just ti .mi hei n-,t Pi:|ry, or
Dolly.' ICa-i /i.i (Mtv . tar.
Uncls Eberi.
-After a man ha i g< t s
nuentlal as to mal; evr
i" laugh -it hi? ji itet,"
Ellen "he has ginernllv c
tas'c [oh tcllln' 'em''
an' In-
■ ready
Undo
•js' his
President Wilson evident
y does not think 61 >s very
/>ld but then, maybe,
wi.l not l>e so lonesome
^ftewards.
The roads the past week
wt-re in a bad condition
/nuddy and almost impossi
ble for auto travel But the
punshine and warm days
will soon get them in shape
igain. — providing it don't
rain some more.
The stringent law passec
by the last legislature a
gainst wife desertion is hav
jng the desired effect. That
class of people evidently are
in fear of the punishment—
for there is not half so many
<?ases in this state now.
It certainly don't look like
hard times in this country
when you take a glance at
the receipts in the five big
games of the World's Cham
pionship Baseball series re-
cently held in Philadelphia
and Boston:—
Attendance, - 143,351
Receipts, - $320,301.50
No Wonder Ho Was Glum.
"What makes your husband look
so glum, .lr Nurich?" "I'm not sure
exactly, but tho doctor says ho's suf-
Coring from a reduced plurality."—
Buffalo Express.
To Keep Books in Shspe.
During conrinued damp weather
books often become musty and even
moldy. This can be previ nted by plac-
ing a few drops of oi' o lavei 1< r and
Canada balsam In th, back co-nr ol
each bookshelf.
Diplomatic.
Mm. Owens- 'Mercy, John, there
Isn't a tli11iK In the house lit to eat"
Owons—"I know It, Kate; that's why
1 brought him home to dinner. I want
him to boo how frugally wo live, lie's
my principal creditor Boston Tran-
script.
TREATING hCiiS WiTH SERUM!"*
Prcdjcss Immunity of Sufficient Du-
ration to Allow Ample Time for
Cleaning Up the Yards.
<n>- J. D. OINfJERY, Missouri Kxperl-
ment Station.)
Tlio veterinary department of the
,Missouri agricultural experiment sta-
tion has boan recouimondiug aim us-
ing the serum alone treatment. The
question Is often heard, "Why the
serum alono treatment?" The serum
alone treat ii" nt properly administered
has for Its object tho control and
eventually the absoluto dedication of
hog oholcra. It makes It possiblo in
a large measure to do away with vao-
' 'nation with its attending cost and
trouble. The serum alono treatment
Is a safe method to hbo anu is slm-
ph It can be handled with good ro-
sulta by tho careful inoxperioncod
man. There are none of tho bad after
results such ns sometimes follow oth
er treatments.
Snrum alono can neither start nov
out >rcaks of cholera nor bring the in-
fection on your noninfected farm
h"n administered undej piopor con-
ditions it produces an immunity of
sufficient duration to allow ample
time for cleaning up and disinfecting
the yards and In ibis way destroying
the infection before the hogs outgrow
tho immunity. Under ordinary condi-
tions this is of far greater Importance
than simply protecting hogs irom tho 1
cholera for u varying period of time -
and not makiug any attempt to avoid '
harboring tho germs.' Tho germs,
whether in the litter about tho pens
or in tho virus of tho double treat-
ment, will cause the disease to de-
velop if cholera is to be controlled
It is necessary to destroy the gerrnB.
Tho use of the serum alono Is to pro-
tect the hogs until he germs can bo
destroyed by cleaning up, burning and
disinfecting.
-und Machine Shop
"We Fix Every thins?'*
%<
W handle A No. 1
Gasoline and Oils
Guaranteed to bs> the Bent
4 HTOM0BILE A OCFSSORIES
We Have A Cornp'u Jl-'ne of
Undertaking Goods
h
*
Worth Remembering.
if you want to get a man's keenest
attention, talk to him about something
to eat or drink. If It is one of tho dear
sisterH you are conversing with you
will have to get yout observations
istrongly concentrated upon babies or
surgical operations.
• Optimistic Thought.
Shame las ti long r thai poverty*
HOPPER FOR POULTRY
Irfea Is Finding Place on Many
Farms With Small Flocks.
Piof 115
Kiel, Oklahoma
The Irony of Life.
One of tho saddest pliri. ■ of nil hu-
ma:. e xperience is the way a man,
just about the time he succeeds
getting bis brain developed to the
• !;".e he might accomplish
Fomething with It. iinds that he
to devote all his attention to his
teeth, stomach and legs to keep going
a" Ohio State Journal,
The Record man, (that's me)
has tried to see as many of
the people in and around
Kiel as possible, but owing
to his short time here and
the press of business it has
not been his pleasure to
meet all and herein extends
an invitation to nil to come
in and get acquainted and
get you-.-name on the it !
of Honor (th.it s t h suhsei iptif >:i
People One 'Runs Across."
' don t like people .1 rui;' across-
women, especially. I should be
nervous ghost by this timo if 1 had
stopped to llko people. Fancy all one's
chance encounters, turning into pulls
on one's affection- -like the ropes the
i'llllputinns tied round Gulliver. If
1 had been Gulliver, I should havo
fono mad I'd rather be tied with
one stout steel cable than with a mil-
Hon threads."—Scribner's Magazine
Reduces the Labor of Care and Feed-
ing and Also Supplies Fowls With
Nocesaary Ingredients of Well-
Balanced Ration.
Tho hopper feeding of poultry of nil ?
classes is becoming customary among
the largo poultrymen and is finding a
plnce on many farms and In small
/locks.
Tho main idea In to reduco the la<
bor of caro and feeding and at ths
'same timo supply the fowls with the
necessary ingredients of a balanced
ration. Mixtures of ground grains and
feeds ero most frequently used In rhe
hoppers. The fowls seem not Ilk >'y
<o overfeed of such mixtures and when
whole grains aro fed in litter and t.Uf.
flclent exorcise Induced In this manner
good results nro had both In egg pro'
tluctlon and body devolopimnt ol
young fowls. Growing chicks on free
range do splondidiy when hopper t. d
and the time and labor of caring 01
them Is reduced to a minimum
A dry mash much used is composed
of tho following: Bran. 100 pounds
Good Stock Building Matarial
and Coal
LONG-BELL
KINGFISHER, OKLA
When in Kingfisher
GO TO THE
ELECTRIC THEATRE
For Class Motion Piciurcs
Adm.ssion 5 and so cents
Making a Hit
An advertisement of a recent Halo
ran thus: "The choice collection of
bric-a-brac offered for sale is so un-
usual that It may safely be said each
piece In it Is calculated to create
satlon among people of artistic
sense. Immediately on entering the
renin the visitor's eye will be struck
1'. a i arvi d walking stick of great,
w.iqlit and beauty "—Christian Uetjis-
ter
To Kill a Cat.
The most merciful way of destroy-
His Ears All Right.
Johnny i> !itti" sontl ■ m boj
ing in Texn with hl^ triuu hi
who Is a II111• deaf. One day \
he was ployi i, she called to ii:m
eral times, bu: he didn't answer,
naliy she said: 'Johnny, don't
hear me?" and Johnny says, " 'Ot
heah you: my ears alnl lame."
liv-
elier,
■hilo
sov-
Fl-
you
se 1
lllg i t
an old
that ti
I its nos
reform
'cat ■ i
an I n
dozi
or II
agali
is to chloroform them Draw-
sock e\ r the cat's head, so
' toe is brought not quite to
on
'11 be:
off
Pour
to the
A lint
tin
to I
wico
and ti
••• ■■'! < uifvl of chlo-
sock close to the
t. as soon as the
• frightened it will
iore soak the end
cat will not wake
Sells all
Standarr
Makes of
On Terms
Kingfisher
c>
Violin Makers.
In the French school of violin mak-
ing the art was not practiced generally
until the oighteenth century, Tho
f rench were rather more skillful tw
Imitators of the Italians than as orlgl
natori- and the most famous ot these
early French makers was Nicole , Lu-
pot, who copied Stradlvarius •
exclusively. The German school never I
got vory far In its success, Jacob !
Btalner standing at the head of the I
makers of that countrj'
the
"V.
No L.
"You used t
inger "Plain."
1 you 11 a? ted
p'ain pe , le."
irtly candidate.
won.' 11 iro
'-« that 1 ei 11 Id
Deiths From Cancer.
There is absolutely no reason
re should not fac« th< cancer
er> without either apprehensioi
tarilc. ( imeer Is a . i riom dt-
'Ut even at its most modern
t ranks only seventh amon
auses of death, clai::> .■
Self-Feeding Hopper.
pro.nd oats 100 pounds; cornmcal,
CO pounds; alfalfa meal, 10 pound
To tins should be added 15 or 20
■ 'Otinds of good beef scrap unless |n-
I i-l in on the range Is plentiful
r>ir year around fc
per
herewith
nan-
bildre
•ictlm
io pie
sumi
end o
ilia r:
the hop.
, wUl found of valuo it
• ni 'Kefl and will save much
shows the de-
>f a dP'.feed hop-
wholly satisfne-
state poultry ex-
The dimensions
i per for mature
luced for young
Substitutes In V/heat Flour.
There are some thirty substitutes
that can be mixed with wheat flour In
making bread. Many of these are
more nutritious than wheat flour-
some of them are cheaper than wheat
flour; and of these two or three aro
commercially obtainable almost any-
where.
" hen in Kinglisher
SEE
S |
' "'ft Busy Photographer
He makes
H'o:!? Grade Photos
''•■e ! mkI of « ork
T PLEASES
your Films for
Sa i f;«c; -op
and <(
TR
1
Send
Chancc for Grr i
i New York phy ,i
have disc"- ered a Jiisin
of mercury tablet. X.
his hand ai inventing
loaded gun.—Detroit Fr
' Fame.
''laims to
- bichloride
he may try
harmless uu-
Press.
Enormous Beer Cc.'sumption
Something Mke ' \\ mi!,;, >. ba'rels
f lie.-! are brewed tin United
liugdoni every yiar. Of these, fewer
■an oil' thousand are exported
OF Mi KIHDS
Also
' ^lephonc Supplies
SEE
M.
KIF-L, OKLA.
Xi
an unzain
' peace'
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Purcell, I. O. The Kiel Record (Kiel, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 1, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 21, 1915, newspaper, October 21, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc103040/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.