Norman Daily Independent. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 82, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 8, 1909 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
T
WE ARE p. |p'ncc
AFTER DUS'MGSS
FOR RURAL READERS
If., '
Hero nrc c few stnpW * yor n< < 1
tuO iiUiUCi Uu j ivy tittlilk
>t!'cfr
I \ pt- : ! ; mors,
Gai deners.
otkmen ond
Ciall a^d sec our stock. breeding the drafter.
80 pound*.£4 AA
sugar « I iVv
10c package
Corn starch
4c
100 lb sack|
n • • i
100 lb sacki
bran - Si -30
shorts ■ • • $1.40
100 lb sack jj JQ
Field Seed:
Alfalfa, Millet, Cane, Rape
Chick, Feed to Crushed
Oyster Shell for Chickens.
chop!
Everything Sold Guaranteed
FURRAY GROGERY COMPANY.
HAPPENINGS AT THE UNI
What The Students And Faculty of Norman's
Splendid School Arc Doing.
The Psi Lambda fraternity an-
nounce as pledges Ircl Busby atul
Walter Mcict
All tin cuts and material for the
Sooner are in and the first part has
been sent to press.
A new fraternity has been orgaui/
cd under the name Rho I'psilon Bet «
For particulars see Frank Long.
Miss Klizabcth Bell, who has been
teaching in Lindsay, has returned 10
Norman, accompanied by Miss Betty
Martin of Muskogee
Professor Jerome K Dowd enter-
tained the class in Journalism of the
University of Oklahoma at a s>\
o'clock dinner Tuesday night.
The parts in the Junior faculty
burlesque have been worked into or
der and the program arranged The
burlesque will be held in the opera
house on the evening of April 24th.
Miss lioldic Dollarhide. who taught
the winter term ot school in district
69, closed the term last Friday and
has enrolled in the I'niversity for
the remainder of this semester.
On the night ot the intcrscholastic
track and field meet to be held at the
State l*niveiMt\ April 24. the Junior
class is to stage a burlesque on the
faculty. Parts have been assigned and
work is progressing nicely And the
"roasts" on the faculty are to be the
best ever. This will be the first fac
ulty burlesque had since the one £i\
en tour years ago. and judging from
the hit which the last otic made, tin -
one will be of the greatest interest
not only to the students but to main
who visit the Univer-ity tor the track
meet Attendance on the part of th
faculty will be compulsory.
The Home of
(din hers
Y ni< us
Swu is
Ch)l
and
see
the
n e w
line.
MSS3
§
•xWST!pf
Standing- of Suit Closed.
Candidates.
Cont iiuc.i fr. a) K • it Tui
Ann* Kahoe 76401, _ .. ... .... .
Madge M*ve$ .. 5n7*S . ;!.0 ctTcc: that 0 ic 1. -n. 1
In* InhitOi 4S715 . Dccupj 1 113 .it thi
.Vice Brlttait Jackson 465:5 Brady hotel, own*
Pmc l.indny *3000 national democratic committeeman
l ine W ebster '5®9$|* close frien
Agnes Uidujf IJI 0
l.ucile Mi Kttir'ck i :o m
ing nnm! cr
Nidiit Lnvtktt >S°9S
Anna McCall 11S15 , ;
I testa Donnelly Q4j°
Shawnee
Be alnce t.ill . .
Remember— Each )e*rs sn l-fct il r* r~i f 4 O ti
lion turned in counts 1000 votes * U • • L* 11
e*ch 5 year subscription 10,000
votes. Also every dollars purchase ,,,, ( _.
at the fottMrtl| merchants counts
j5 votes 1 .
N >l*n & Mattir,
Birbour & Sons,
II P AMen,
M1 s 1 :?ie Snvth,
S K. MeC*ll \ Company,
P. A. Maloy. ; For b«d>ci* Dr m.\ a t ! . . r .-
Meyer, Meyer Morris
1'alaee of Bargains. , .
I'm Confectionery. Millinery bale.
West Side Bakery. All this wcik .it M - 1.
SEK RULES OF CON TESI Smith's. Hats at 5 .
ON A NO I HER PAGE
_____________ If you buy a Barry Shoe one t.rr.e.
B:g reduction* on men *, women's th*t settles \our footwear i th s
*nd rni**es' tan oxfords FRIDAY se*son So:v.eti:ne* they wear two tea-
and SATURDAY at Holiand'a j son*—always -ne NU'a -
Great Demand For Pure Bred Stock.
Use of Qrtde Stallion*.
A large New York Arm Is filling an
order fur tifty fancy draft horses at
the price of $500 each. The animals
aro to be supplied for a brewer who
always works the pick of the fancy
drafters on Ills brewery trucks. The
price paid tills year Is probably high
water mark fur big horses In lots of
tlfty head. Exceptional single drafters
and occasional fancy pairs have
brought higher prices In the market,
but It Is believed that uo brewer ever
paid $2ii,000 for lifty horses In one lot.
Tills order serves to emphasize the
fact that while Inferior horses are do
Willing in value high grade drafters
are constantly going from one new rec-
ord to another and are today selling on
a par with well bred trotters aud race
horses. Predictions that the market
would be oversupplied and that prices
would soou take a big drop have been
frequently made In the last few years,
yet the supply has never caught up
with the demand, and the expected
break In prices has not materialized.
Everywhere the progeny of the
grade stallion is In evidence—the work
of the man who chases the specter of
a low fee through the graveyard of In-
feriority, says the Breeder's Gazette.
Chicago. The returns of the various
state officials charged with licensing
stallions I11 Wisconsin, Minnesota and
Pennsylvania show that grade stal-
lions are I11 the overwhelming majori-
ty. We know that there are 110 more
stallions Imported than the demand
calls for. T the majority of the farm-
ers. then, unist be charged this sui-
cidal preference for the grade.
There is no cohesion among the
farmers in the effort to get the best.
In the old countries spring stallion
shows are ubiquitous. Stallions offer-
en
f,t a half hour a J gi
„* the serine w "U.
troughs and tied to hitching posts
where other horses have been tied that
had the disease.
AN KXOLISH SIKK.
cd for service in stated regions are
brought together and paraded for the
inspection of the breeders Compari-
son uiay be made and selections Intel-
ligently governed. This horse may be
chosen as mate for one or more mares;
that for others, according to suitability
of conformation. Here, as a general
rule, the farmer makes bis choice 011
account < f price or color or weight—
sometimes because the stallion is own-
ed by his brother or his brother-in-law,
his uncle or his cousin. Few seem to
..are to give the mating of their mares
the consideration which It merits.
Exercising the Drafter.
Draft horses should rarely be led or
driven faster than a walk In taking
their exercise, and they will require
much less of It than the roadster or
the running horse. A moderate Jog
will benefit them.
ELECTRIC SEPARATOR.
limple Apparatus Quickly Separate,
the Cream From the Milk.
it is now possible to separate creaui
from milk by the employment of elec-
tricity. The process consists In pass
ing an electric current through the
milk to be treated, the passage of the
current causing the separation of the
cream from the milk.
The apparatus necessary Is shown in
the Illustration, the invention of a
•Kansas City man. The milk Is poured
Into the funnel at the top and drops
HORSES IN SPRING.
Getting Them In Proper Condition For
the Heavy Work.
By G. H GLOVER. D. V. S.
The tir>t work In tbe spring is the
hardest tf the year, and the borses are
the least prepared to do heavy work.
A sudden change of food is always
dangerous, but to start a colt in on
grain, with heavy work, that has never
had either is almost sure to be dis-
astrous A young horse especially can-
not stand heavy pulling all day on soft
ground unless his shoulders are well
hardened by regular work in the col-
lar.
Here are a few suggestions which
\\. 1 be well worth remember^ When
a h rse is t.red he i> much more suV
during heavy spring work. There i*
wht t ". .1. .l.o'.c is in feeding a:«
W. ter \ r ;. r> > w^en v first
THE VETERINARY.
The best preventive of garget Is
clean, careful milking mid n viperous
rubbing and kneading of tbe affected
part of the udder ot the Urst sign of
trouble. Three or four days of such
Treatment will usually ward off the
disease.
To Cur# Cold* In Horse*.
The following remedy is given by ft
veterinarian for coughs and colds in
horses: Tincture aconite root, one
ounce; fluid extract belladonna, one
ounce: acetanllld. two ounces; suffi-
cient water to make one quart; mix
Give a tablespoonful every bour or two
or three times a day. as needed.
For Growths on Knees.
A cow with a soft bunch growing on
ttie knee may be treated as follows:
Mix one ounce of lard and two drams
of binlodide of mercury and npply it
as a strong blister to the swelling re-
peatedly until It disappears. Some-
times simple pressure with bandages,
applied an Increasing length of time
dally for some weeks, will do it.
Indigestion In Pigs.
In cases of acute indigestion In pigs
eruptions occur and a staggering gnit
is not 1 cd (' msllpntiou and colic of-
ten accompany these symptoms. If
the feed I it f tillt eli rig • it and pro-
vide "1cm quarters a id n well bal
nnecd. «nsi: digested ra'I'in
fruits. f'«!s and the trimmings from
fruit tree' .re useful. Also give the
swine access to salt and charcoal.
Prevention For Scours.
A successful Iowa hog raiser says he
puts a pall of coal ashes, a couple of
handfnls of salt and a little air slaked
lime, all well 9tlrred together, in a
trough where the. hogs can help them-
selves. It helps to make good bone in
the growing pigs, keeps the stomach
sweet and prevents scours.
A Tonic For Cattle.
When cattle are healthy they need
no blood cleanser to keep them so;
when they are out of balance a correc-
tive Is Indicated. The following Is a
tonic and diuretic and may be used
for a week or two; then It should be
discontinued unless you have an ex-
ceptional case. It may be again used
after a week or two of Interruption:
Powdered nitrate of potassium, one-
half pound; powdered gentian, one
pound: powdered anise, one pound;
powdered Jamaica ginger, one-quarter
pound; ollmeal. four pounds; mix.
Two or three tablespoonfuls In feed
twice a day.
Ice Cream Sodas
Used to cost 10c now the}' only cost
car.VM SEPARATED r.T ELECTRICITY,
through the tube on to the inclined
chutes, arranged one above the other.
Current is supplied from adjacent
storage batteries On its passage down
the chutes the milk will alternately he
subjected to positive aud negative cur-
rent, causing the rapid separation of
the particles of cream
The milk and ereaw will finally drop
Into the receptacle at the bottom, the
.ream collecting upon the surface,
where it can be readily removed by-
skimming The inventor claims that
the alternating current is preferable,
effecting a quicker separation of the
cream than can be obtained by cur-
rents passing in one direction.
Prepotency of the Sire.
About the most reliable basis of cal
culation as to the power of transmis-
sion, or, as it is called, prepotency of
tbe bull. Is the dairy character of the
grandmothers aud great-grandmothers
on both sides of his pedigree He is
the stored up result of what lies back
of him. The quality of his ancestors
will have more effe< t on his offspring
than the performance of his mother.
She gives to him of what she inherited
n. re than of w hat she does She may
be rich in inherited qualities and yet
for siime reas. ii be herself only an or-
dinary performer —Baron S hrewe
Genuine Cream Cheese.
Genuine cn-am choose - made from
a rich cream thicker.od by souring or
from sweet cream thi kened with ren-
net. Tl..> s p : : 1 1 th and all wed
eral time* lur.: the d: .iuiug which
requires ..••• f -r dn< It is then
j cd on .! b :<! co' i-red with :i
h. -■ k 1 i • - • a-.il t'.'.rnel
aid See
^ Our line of goods for^--
LADIES AND GENTS SUITS.
We clean [iress hiiJ rrtpnir Ladies nnd tjents ^urmeuts
We are sole agents for the CHAS. A STEVENS & BROS.,
of Chicago,
They sell everything that woman wears.
GIVE US A TKIAL.
NEW YORK TAILOING CO.
He G. GREE7VMAN, MGR.
■
■ f§ @3 ^ne Way To Get Up In The World gj gj j
■
■ THERE IS ONLY one way to get up in the world. You must J
■ ■
■ build your own ladder and climb it The height that you got de "
■ pends on the length of your ladder and your aim in life The J
■ closer tbe rounds the easier to climb. The better the material ■
■ used the safer the ascension Place the bottom end on the roc<i of J
J hope, aud the top end on your aim in life. Use the Peoples co- ■
■ operative Real Estate Association for your bottom roun 1 Taea J
J your first steq will be made in safety. ■
^PMuch depends on your first step.£* 2
m
The Peoples Co-operative Real Estate Asso- J
" ciation handles all kinds of Real and person- ■
■ ■
S al Proyerty, and makes Farm Loans. 2
r ■
: Their plan of handling real;
■ ■
Restate has proved to be the best.-
PROVIDING You know where to go to get
them. Go to the
Norman Candy Kitchen
and you will find the place.
Fresh fruits and home
made candies every day
NICK GAVRELOS, Prop.
Don't Forget To Call*
BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBI
PIBIBBIBQUBBBBB
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Danner, V. E. Norman Daily Independent. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 82, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 8, 1909, newspaper, April 8, 1909; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc106764/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.