The Hennessey Clipper (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1913 Page: 9 of 10
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TERMS OF PEACE
Way of Semt Minister*.
Bishop \V. p McDowell. Mwhortlst,
| .ays some ministers are like some
| horres—they'll work all right In the
j lead but will balk when placed else-
i nhero.
CANADIAN exhi3its AT LIVE
61OCK AND LAND SHOWS CEN-
TER OF ATTRACTION.
The hats were doffed to Canads
during the two weeks of the Land
y Show .mi 1 tho week of the Lhr« stock
f Show at Chicago. Willing to display
its goods, anxious to let the people of
the central states know what could
e pro.,on Canadian farm lands,
and ttie quality of the article, Hon.
Dr. Roche, minister of the Interior
of Canada, directed that sufficient
space be secured at the United
States Land Show, recently held, to
rve some adequate Idea of the fleld
resources of western Canada. Those
n charge had splendid location, and
Installed one of the most attractive
prain and grass exhibits ever seen
anywhere. Thousands, anxious to get
back to the land." saw the exhibit,
saw wheat that weighed 68 pounds tc
the measured bushel, oats that went
48 and barley (hat tipped the .cni?i
at 55 pounds. The clover, the alfalfa
e wild pea vine and vetch, the ry«
grass, the red-top and many other suo
culent and nutritious varieties of wild
grasses demanded and deserved from
prominence and quality (lie at
tentlcn they received. The grain in
the straw, bright In color, and carry
Ing heads that gave evidence of th«
truth of (he statements of Mr. W. J
, \\hite of Ottawa, and bts attendant*
/ that the Wheat would average 28 to
n 85 bushels and over per acre, the oats
65 to 105 bushels, the flax 12 to 28
bushels, were strongly In evidencs,
■irid arranged with artistic taste on
the walls. The vegetable exhibit was
a surprise to the visitors Potatoes,
turnips—cabbage. In fact, ail of 11
proved that not only in grains wai
western Canada prominent, but it
vegetables it could succesfully con
pete with the world.
One of the unique and successful
features of the . exhibit was the suo
cessful and systematic dally distribu
tion of bread made from Canadian
flour. It was a treat to those who gol
It. Canadian butter. Canadian cheem
and Canadian honey helped to com-
plete an exhibit that revealed In «
splendid way the great resources ol
a country in which so many Amer
leans have made their home.
A feature of the exhibit was th«
placards, announcing the several re
cent successes of Canadian fnrn
produce and live stock in strong com
petition with exhibits from othei
countries. There was posted th<
I eager \\ heeler championship prlzt
for Marquis wheat grown at Rosthern
In 1911, heating the world. Then I
Holmes of Cardston entered the com
petit I ve field at Lethbrldge Dry Farm-
ing Congress, and won the wheat
championship of 1912, beating Mr
Wheeler with the same variety 01
wheat. Hill & Sons of Lloydmlnster
Saskatchewan, in 1911 won the Colo
rado sih r trophy for best oats grown
competed for In a big competition ai
Columbus, Ohio, in 1911. The product
of British Columbia at the New Yorl
Land Show in 1911 carried ofr th«
world's championship for potato.-a
and incidentally won a $1,noo silvei
trophy, and then, but a few yeats ago,
the same province carried off th«
world's prize for apples at the Horti-
cultural Show in London, England.
But that was not all These Cana
dians, who had the temerity to stats
that corn was not the only feed for
finishing high-grade beef cattle, en- 1
tered lor the lat steer championship
at the Live Stock Show in Chicago a
poll.-,1 Angus—"Olencarnock Victor."
Nearly 300 entries were in the field
"Glencarnock Victor" didn't know a
kernel of corn from a Brazilian wal-
nut There were Iowa, Illinois. Ne-
braska, Kansas, Minnesota, Wiscon-
sin and their corn-fed article, deter-
mined to win, bound to beat this black
animal from the north, and his "noth-
ing but prairie grass, oats and barley
feed," as his owner proudly stated, but
they didn't. Canada and McGregor a
Sons, with their "Glencarnock Victor,"
won, and today the swelldom of Amer
lea is eating of •*, steaks and roast!
—the champion steer of the world.
But once more the herd of cattle
that won the Sweepstakes at the
fame show was bred and owned by
the owners of "Glencarnock Victor."
fed only on prairie grass, oats and
barley, near Brandon, Manitoba Tho
royal reception given to Mr. Mo-
Gregor on his return to his home
town was well deserved.
Omission must not be made of the
wonderful and beautiful display of
apples made by British Columbia, oo-
cupying a full hail section of the
great i.and Show. This was in per-
sonal charge of Mr. VV. E. Scott, dep-
uty minister of agriculture for that
province, wHo was not only a host to
those who visited the exhibit, but
was also an encyclopedia of informa-
tion regarding the resources of that
country. With 200.0O0 Americans go
r,iS to western Canada this year, it is
plMEing to know that so many from
this side of the line can participate in
tie honors coming to that new ccui>
Sty — Advertisement.
ealkan delegates announce
territory they demand
from turkey
A! LOiIOC!! PEACE CONFERENCE
Indemnity Proposals Not Yet Ad-
vanced—Demand Aegean Islands,
Crete and Part of Mainland—
Albania in Powers' Hands.
London, Dec. 24 After several days
of preliminary skirmishing in accord-
ance with the cherished traditions of
oriental diplomacy, Turkish delegates
today faced the real attack of tho
allies at the fifth meeting of the
peace conference which has as an ob-
ject the settling of the war between
the Balkan allies and Turkey.
The victorious allies laid their most
important cards 011 the table. Theso
were in the form of territorial condi-
tions which they had agreed to impose
on the Ottoman empire.
The demands as set forth were:
First—The cession by Turkey of all
the territory west of a line starting
from a point east of Rodesto, on the
sea of Marmora, to a point in the bay
of Malatra, on the Black sea, and ex-
cluding the peninsula of Galliopli, Al-
bania's status to be decided by the
powers.
Second—The cession of the Aegean
islands occupied by the Greek forces
in the present war and by the Italians
In the recent war.
Third -The cession to Greece of all
Turkish rights in the island of Crete.
The allies did not reveal today the
financial propo"Si>!.s which they will
make to Turkey, reserving them for a
future meeting.
Before the allies presented their
specifications today, the Turks an-
nounced that their government was
prepared to proceed with the negotia-
tions, leaving the qeustion of revictual-
ing Adrianople for discussion between
Turkey and Bulgaria. They abandoned
their previous requests to provision
Scutari and Janina.
The formal conference lasted only
a quarter of an hour. The Turks
listened to the proclamation of the fate
of their European empire without for- 1
mal comment, and asked for an ad-
journment until Saturday to consider I
the allies' demands, in the informal
conservation with the delegates which [
consumed an hour, they asserted that I
It wolud be impossible for them to ac- '
cept such terms, but that statement is !
Inevitable in meetings of his char-
actor and was expected today.
causes anxiety among those who are
sickly and run down, whose blood is
impoverished, and vitality low; but
don't remain in that condition
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
will build you up, strengthen the
entire system and prevent Stomach
Ills, Colds and Grippe. Try a bottle
•nd be convinced. Start today.
I Calumet I'ndi "Bad Luck"
R mei"b*r whi'n you wore a ymmirster,
wli.it 11 trial but.ing ,i.i\ w.ia? 11 Moth-
er w is liH-KV. rythlnjc w.m flm-iy- hot
If she had bad luck" l.er cukes hi d her
pies 1111,1 |„.r bread w, re failure*. He?
i" .-esa tn ImMiij seemed to depend al-
most altogether on "link."
••>e.Vo,a!'ii'ySi fht'.re'f no lloh tiling as
n« ? ,i "' At,le"31' '"•« In th<- kitch-
ens , f tl.e up-to-date ,-ooks. S mply (>•-
cause 1 .linnet 1 taking Powd.-r has
■mashed that ,,1,1 time Idea. It has made
e.i. .',K sure o. success. It lias luade In-
exp, nerii.-,! cooks al>lu to ti.,,, p.-rfect-
f\IU .day aftwr day It is saving hun-
ai'-iis of dollars worth of time and 111 1-
1,-ii.lis by doing away with costly failures
* a!"met Making Powder Is tile purest
I'.t .nig powucr 111.id,■ and guaranteed not
only to be pure, but to stay pure in the
can and In tile baking. I'alumet has
t*l,e t. en , 111, tally Ju.'ged the best bilk-
ing peii.l. ,- mode Ivlrig the i Ighest
av-.nils at til,- World's fare l'oo.l i \i o-
?iii-«ls J". ( hlca*° <130;> and In I'arls
uyij;. Adv.
HARD LUCK.
rm
on) Gam
(51 F
m rati
i • riL' - ^ -
in
|gffff
?A4 •- ,r_
^ HB
f-
'Father,
I'm Glad
You Smoke
Duke's Mixture"
Before we tell you aliout the boy and bis air rifle, we
want you to bear about Liggett A' Myers Duke's Mixture
—the tolwiceo that thousands of men lind ' just right" for
rolling—or tucking into a pipe.
j) R3i
TO US ■ananannia
Selling Agents America. Society ofliquitv.
| For this market write tor quotations.
Coyne Brothers
•60 W. SOUTH WATEH STR.. CHICAGO
1 r : *i b(ilCuu«oflvriin Tut., n,. ..I 1 Iri
%'W
Mrs. Jackson—Doctor, will my hus-
band pull through?
Or. Emdee—Oh! yea; I think bo.
Mrs. Jackson—Then I-ll miss that
bargain sale of mourning goods at
Slasheni's tomorrow!
Neat Knock.
Hobey linker, the football star, was
lunching in his native Philadelphia.
A young girl, over her queer alliga-
\ ~ tor l,,ar salad, mentioned the name
HAD mLL THE REQUISITES j of a Princeton sophomore who had
— I Played rather badly on his class team.
"He is an awfully nice boy," she
said "What was it he played 011 the
eleven, Mr. Baker- halfback, quarter-
back, fullback?"
The handsome and herculean "Ho-
bey" smiled.
I think ho played drawback." he |
said.
ilCougn Syrup. Twi^ OgihI. L'l
in time. Bold br Dnujr>«t*.
mjz
6eemirtgly Extraordinary Essentials
Are Needed for the Practice of
the Law in Florida.
W ill Irwin, the author, was holding
forth upon the superiority of Califor-
nia over Florida as a winter resort.
Florida, he said, "is too relaxing.
This is due to the fetid air of the
swamps
"There's a story about a young man
who was being examined for admis-
sion to the Florida bar. The exami-
nation ran thus:
^outig man are you malaria
proof?'
"'Yes, sir.'
"'Can you ride?'
" 'Yes, sir.'
" 'Do you own a horse?'
" 'Yes, sir.'
" 'Is he a good swamp swimmer?'
" 'Yes, sir.'
i hen, young man, I welcome you
to the practice of law In this dis
trict.' "
Vessel Sinks; Fourteen Die.
•Mobile, Ala., Flee. 24.— The Iirltlsh
schooner Ge-irgiana, with 10 passen-
gers and a crew of four, foundered off
Lucea, Jamaica, in trying to make that
port during the November gulf storm
and all on board were lost, according
to dispatches received here today. The
British schooner Cartagena, has not
been heard from since November 17,
and it is believed that vessel with her
crew of seven also has gone down.
Acquit French Novelist.
! Paris, Dec. 24.—Mme. Bloch, a nov-
elist, who 011 July 31 last shot and
killed Mrs. Minnie Bridgeman, (the
wife of James Brldgman, an employe
of the Paris branch of an American
life insurance company, was acquitted
In tho assize court here today of the
charge of homicide.
Too Much Mail for Cars.
Dodge City, Kan., Dec. 24.—There
will be a lot of disappointed persons
who fail to receive Christmas presents
Christmas morning if postal conditions
aie the same other places as in Dodge.
Six hundred sacks of Chrismas mail
are piled on the Santa Fe platform
here. It is mail from the west trans-
ferred here, that is not jammed into
the mail coaches. The postal depart-
ment runs full mail cars as far as
Dodge, east bound. Here the mail is
transferred to the combination mail
and baggage cars which cost the de-
partment less, which can carry less
mall.
No Longer Interested.
Theodore Lane, who resided at the
home of his parents, TIM llolton
•venue, had a toothache the other
morning. It was a bad toothache, too.
and Theodore let the neighborhood
know all about it. But when bis
father got home that evening (this is ;
according to his father) the boy was
calm and seemed at peace.
"Has your tooth stopped aching
Teddy?" asked Theodore, Sr.
"1 don't know,-' answered the
youngster.
"Don't know? Why, what do you'
mean ?"
"It's out."—Cleveland Plain Dealer
RINGWORM CN CHILD'S FACE
Stratford, Iowa,—"Three years ago
this winter my seven-year-old son had
ringworm on the face. First it was In |
small red spots which had a rough
crust on the top. When they started
they looked like little red dots and
then they got bigger, about the size j
of a bird's egg. They had a white '
rough ring around them, and grew
continually worse and soon spread
over his face and legs. The child suf- 1
fered terrible itching and burning, so ,
that he could not sleep nights. He !
scratched them and they looked fear- '
ful. He was cross when he had them.
We used several bottles of liniment,
but nothing helped.
I saw where a child had a rash on
the face and was cured by Cuticura
Soap and Ointment and I decided to
tiFe (hem. I used Cuticura Soap and
Ointment about one month, and they
cured my child completely." (Signed)
Mrs. Barbara Prim, Jan. 30, 1912. ■
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world •Sample of each
free, with 32 p. Skin Book. Address
postcard "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."
Adv.
GT/s -
v„ , MM r
rdi£@~ fn
This favorite tobacco is fine oI,l Virginia and North
Carolina bright leaf that lias been thoroughly aged,
stemmed—and then (vr.niulatcd. It has the true tobacco
I taste, for the very simple reason that it is pure tobacco.
Pay what you will—it is impossible to get a purer or more
likeable smoke than Duke's .Mixture, it is now ii Liggett .J" Al yen
leader, and is unsurpassed in quality.
In every 5c sack there isono and a halt ouuees of splendid
tobacco.
How t!ie Coy Got I lis Air Rifle
In every sack of the IAyg*tt V Myert Duke's Mixture w r now
rack a Free Present Coupon. These Coupons aro good for all
kinds of useful articles - something to please every member of
^ the family. There aro skates, sleds, halls and bats, cameras, um-
brellas, watches, fountain pens, pipes,
opera glasses, etc., etc.
As a special offer, Jan-
uary anil February only, we
zvill send you our new illus-
trated catalogue of presents,
FREE. Just send us your namu
and address 011 a postal.
Gmpons from Puke't Mixture tnav be
assort,'it v:th tats iron HORSE SHOK,
J. T„ TINSLF.Y'S NATURAL LEAK.
GRANGER TWIST, r, s l,,m
I-OUR ROSES (l(tr-tin double i ■■upon),
I'll K PLUG CUT, PIEDMONT
CIGARETILS, CLIX CIGARETTES,
and other tans or coupons issued by us.
Address—Premium Dept.
Sl louis. Mo. ^1 —
Free View at the Lake.
"Finest and viewfulest place. Baths
and toilets on modernist principles.
The hotel not being adapted for health
resort of ills, is only preserved for
tho sojourn of passengers, tourists
and sportsmen.
Ileputed excellent cooking. Noble,
real, well-lain wines, different beers.
1 he magnificent outlook is grandious.
Daily six trains to all parts of the
globe. Free view at the lively lake."
—From a foreign hotel guide.
Help comes to those who are willing
to pay for it.
This Is a Bird of a Story.
The pigeons of the Stock Exchange
are very much disturbed these days
while workmen are removing a coat
of gloom from the famous frieze near
; their residence. Much of their time
j they spend flying to the windows of
| J. P. Morgan's office across the street.
Yesterday at noon James J. Hill and
A. Barton Hepburn noticed them.
"Pigeons are active today," said Mr
Hepburn.
I "Pigeons!" said Hill. "They're not
pigeons, they're ravens bringing Mor-
gan his dinner."—New York World.
22 Lost In Sight of Land.
St. Johns, N. F., Dec. 24.—Twenty-
two of the twenty-seven members of
the Furness line steamer, Florence,
from Halifax, N. S„ for St. Johns, lost
their lives in the wreck of the ves-
sel on the lodges west of St. Shotts j
in a northease gale last Friday. Five
exhausted survivors, who reached land
in a boat, brought the news to Trep-
a: sey. The steamer carried no passen-
gers.
Important to Motnern
Kxamine carefully every bottle of
(■ASTOKIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that. It
Bears the
Signature of C&gyC.
In Pse For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
No Better.
Slllimus There is honor among
thieves.
Cynicus—Nonsense! Thieves are
Just as bad as other people.—Life.
She Believed Him.
She—Do you love rne more than
ever, dear?
He—Oh, yes, more than never dar-
ling.
Fears Woman With Horns.
Peclaiing that he was bi lug pur-
tued by a woman with horai and '11111
his lllo was in danB -r, br Jo.eyn
John O.'irside, aged ,.o year., of
Philadelphia, was committed to' ths
Montgomery county Jail H* ao *r
rt sled by a h 1 h 1 u,! cer whlit tail-
ing and acting strangely tn from
the Philadelphia A Mmihu K«iiv.«j
Station
GREEKS BOMBARD A VILLAGE
Constantinople, Dec. 24.—It Is re-
ported from the island of Chios, off
the 7'urklsh Asiatic coast, that the
( reeks have bombarded the village
of P-tos, where tile Ottoman wounded
are in the hospital. It is stated also
that 'lie Creeks forced the Mussulman
Islanders to sign an address to the Ot
toman arrison advising its surrender
and notifying them of tho defeat of
the Turkish fleet by the Creeks. The
commander of the garrison in reply to
the address said he would resist sur
render to tbe utmost.
TO DKIVE Ol'T M \ t.A Rt \
CIlll.l. TONIC, , ; . n,,« Wliat JOU sr.
Tb. formal. I. pl.ialf-priot.tf'taffi
•howtntf tt laBlinply (Quinine and Iron In a laatalvn
form and thi must effectual forn£ ,T,n
people and children, ju centa. Ad*. frown
It's the easiest thing In the world to
go from bad to worse.
Merely an Amateur.
| A man who lives much at hotels
had some odd experiences during the
| strikes of the waiters in New York
! and Boston.
On the morning after the strike was
called in New York he ordered boiled
eggs in a New York hotel. The man-
agers had hired all applicants for Jobs
at waiting, and the one who took this
boiled egg order was a tough person.
He brought the eggs, came over and
leaned 011 the back of the patron's
chair and said:
Say, cul, kin I shuck them eggs fer
yez?"
In Boston the waiter at breakfast
was a big-, burly person who seemed
unfamiliar with the work The man
at breakfast ventured a mild protest.
"Aw, fergit it!" said the waiter. I
ain't no waiter. I came up here to
be a strike breaker in the truckman's
strike."—Saturday Evening Post.
What Worried Her.
"You say your wife threw a plate
at you?"
"Yes; it was a fine china plate. It
broke against my head."
"Didn't she appear sorry after she
threw it?"
"Yes, she appeared very 6orry."
"Ah, indeed. And what did she
say ?"
"She said she waa a fool not to con-
trol her temper."
"Good. And what else did she
say ?"
She said she didn't believe she
could match that plate again If she
hunted the town through."—Photo
BIta.
Mrs. Winslow'n Ponthtng Hyrup for Cti|I,tren
teeihi.,^., softens tin- gums, reduces Inflamoia.
tloo.allayHpnl,,.eiires -i„dcolle.gSea|„,tt|„.M,
It takes a smart man to conceal his
ignorance.
LI-AVIS' SINGLE BINDER is the best
market', "liv 5° °n the
Looked Like a Strike.
Crimson beak — Are you against
strikes?
Yeast—I certainly am. But how
much were you going to ask me for?
The light that lies In a woman's
eyes may tell the truth.
FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS
Arc Richest in Curative Qualities
>or backache, rheumatism
kidneys and bladder
To cure cortlvenes. th« medicine must ho
more than a purgative; It must contain tonic,
alterative anil cathartic properties
Tuft's Pills
iHt h?.SK th<l8ea 1?ua,,,,es. ipecdlly restore
Z mu JSZ'y? the,r na,,,^a, Peristaltic motion.
** entiai to regularity.
DEFIANCE Gold Wafer Starch
makes laundry work a Dleasuro. Iti oz. pluc.
S«"tnfle"^rn for Perfection A.fety-
IVrmiin.ni "1T?'"r". onmisalon
f * «|Q I? „P0B ,,0o'V Rrf Khimm-Bailey WfK.
Co" fi,!' , r"n,i" Ht. Jo—ph. MImodH.
There's full weight
Guaranteed In every package
UPTON'S
THE PBICE OF
BEEF
IS..""'" and SO
■/^
Kor roars tho ProTinM
i IIx-rt;i (Western
mi anadii) was ti,.. Big
It a ix'hi ngCountrj Many
of these ranch' h U.iUy
n re lujinenuograln th-ida
,• „ . an'1 l''« cattle have
MVen plnce to the cultivation of
Ml. at. rw.ts hurley and flan; the
t lian^e h.1 n made mniiv th<>tiHnnda
«-r Americans, Mettled on thea*
plains wealthy, hut It hn In-
creased the price of live atoc*.
There Is splendid opoortun
Dow to get a
Free Homestead
of IflO acres (and another as a p-e-
un.PnrJ ,n ,,HA n<MV,r dlstrlcia
and produce either cattleor grain.
I he crops are always the
climate Is ej eel lent, schools and
• n n re lies are convenient, marketa
splendid. In either Manitoba, Sas-
katchewan or Alherta.
hend for literature, the lateat
Information, railway ratea.eta.to
Q. A. COOK.
. 125 W. 61h STREET. KANSAS CITY. ML
lor addresa Superintendent of
J IniinlcrHtloii, <>ttana.U«Mia.
IONEYk
loll JOu h
P*J mrkf
Writ* for rrfer.
'rrkl/ prlrr II...
B. HAHKI, A MOW,
ISVIM.R, KT.
"ralrr. In f or., Illdra
o«l. Kklabll.brd ISMi.
TEA
COLLEGE 1NN0UNCEMENT
Uarling & raker Chiropractic College Chartere*—
Now open to receive Studentn. htan<lard aa4
iCO,,ri,e' <'olleK** home fully aal
neatly equipped, and owned by the aHHociatioa.
lertnH reasonable. Write for catalogue mm
phone Market 4.114 OfMee. School and Sanl't^
lurn, bob South Emporia. Wichita, Kaneae
JAMES C.SMITH HIDE CO.
HIDES T'wo«I
WE SOLICIT TOUR SHIPMENTS
904 E. [«.ugl.i tWichita, Kak
ned and operated by A ,T.A 8.F.
kru from r o to «16A pev
p. nioutil. Wrlta for catalogw^
s>nl> F« Telegraph 8cho<
—— - 600 Kanu, *««., Topeks ku
Bold In airtight tin, only PATENTSS
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 62-1912.
■•oaua* ml Uto*. udi, crUzty, grmy ^ U- "LA
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The Hennessey Clipper (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 34, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1913, newspaper, January 2, 1913; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc105846/m1/9/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.