The Times--Record (Blackwell, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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Only One Bay More
The St. Louis Medical Institute’s Examin-
ing Specialist, DR. SMITH, can be consulted
free of charge at the
Maine Hotel, Blackwell,
On Saturday:
February 18th
Not a-Dollar
Need be paid
to Begin
Treatment
Hundreds go to see Dr. Smith and all are satisfied By his original and su-
perior methods of examination he will diagnose vour disease, locating vour
*le questionPa n’ Mental and Physical weakness, without asking you a sin
Chronic Sufferers
^n°ipM\1«n«0«i^r|M«aV^,l»y8 •reCd»nKerou».*lnbr*Ce ,lliS "" °PP<>r'Uni,y «“J consul, .hi, erai-
a Sutelnstitutlon Chartered by the Slate of Misso.iii, for the treat-
ment all forms of Chronic diseases. We have a paid up captital stock of $25,000.00.
Diseases We Cure il5aae* of the Stomach. Kidney, Liver, Bladder and
,,. i-. c • 1 kindred organs, Spleen, Spinal atfeciions, certain forms of
JJl"1 Dije^e. Special attention given to all diseases of the Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat, also to all
forms of Blood diseases, Scrofula, Catarrh Tonsilitis, Sore Throat, Consumption, Bronchitis Asth-
rsrss*— ........
Diseases of Women Ea,"fuJ' plofuse„»n,d >rre«ul?r Me»»es. Ovarian trouble,
.. a,* r .1 1 ,v Nerveousness, Backache, Headache. Loss of Memory
balling of the Womb, Dragging Down Pains, Whites, Sterility. Inflammations. Ulcerations and Dis-
five cCre gufi°ante«edy “Dd PBrIIlanenlly cured No cxperiineming, no guess work, but a safe, posi-
Diseases of Men We cure Seminal Weakness, Lost Manhood, Impotence, Lost
p -I p. • , q , 0WJ?1 ■ Night Lossoa, Spermatorrhea, Insomia, Pain in the Back
,R. 'J Desires, Seminal Emissions, Lame Back. Nervous Debility, Headuche. unlitness to marry Loss
of beman, Vericocle, Hydrocele. Stricture crned without the use of the knife
1 ermnnent Heailqimrters St. Louis Medical Institute Temple Bide
St. Louis. SM
, Call and see him at 7I0TEL MAINE, Blackwell, Okla.
For
Three
Months
On account of special arrangements with the
publishers of the Kansas City Star we art-
enabled to offer during January, February
and March, only, the Times-Record and the
Weekly Star for $1.00 per year to all new
cash subscribers, and all old subscribers who
will pay one year in advance on this paper.
For the same time and under same condi-
tions, we offer the Times-Record and daily
and Sunday Kansas City Star and Times-
Record for $5.20
If you want
the Star
now is the
right time
to Subscribe
old way. They will appear to be a*
a very great way apart at first, but
later the leaves will meet and touch,
and you will find difficulty in walking
between the rows without knocking
off leasee. The cultivation should be
shallow and level from first to last
The fact that cabbage can be made
to grow most anywhere docs rot
justify any one in refusing to meet
the requirements of this crop. They
reed very line and rich soil, an o!d
hog lot being the ben adapted to
their growth.
We have seen the garden used as
the limn png ground for the coal
ashes and cinders. If the practice
were confined to one Corner it would
not he,obad I tarn your heets theie
Thty sill thrive In coal ashes and
cinders belter Ilian any other, hut
hang the old rusty hoe up in that
cornet to be hmdv You cannot
keep a sitarp one and use it in cin-
ders
It pays to mulch green peas in a
dry time. It requires a tery little
time and material. Work the mulch
in close to the row. Too rich ground
will cause them to grow too bushy
with a tendency to fall down and rot
or dry out.
Radishes, on the contrary, will
thrive best in rich and coarse fer-
tilizer. Beans do not require a rich
seed bed. Turnips do best after a
green mulch has been turned under.
Scatter your wood ashes on your
onion ground and the newer the
ground the better utiless all the oth-
er conditions are favorable.
Use a good sprinkling of wood
ashes in your propagating bed for
cabbage plants.
Tomatoes should be started in very
light, rich, loose soil, and when you
transplant, set deep. If you wish to
force them do so after transplanting
by using a salt barrel. Bore a hole
in the .bottom, fill with coaise man-
ure, set up high enough to set a
bucket under. Pour in water. Use
one pint to each plant. Irr setting
plant fill hole half full of dirt, pour
in the liquid, (ill again with dry dirt
You can force any plant in that way
quicker and with less labor than any
other. These rules I have found to
be practicable, inexpensive and easy
to follow. They ire not complete to
a science, but they beat Peter Tum-
bledown's plans ”
New Model Listers
TMie Listers
Our line of spring implements are commencing to arrive,
ami setting them up ready for the trade is now the order
of the day with us. Our RIG FOUR in com tools is a
winning combination, and in it you will recognize quality
at the first glance. Especially is the Ohio famous-where-
ever the soil is cultivated, and its friends are legion.
I)<» not fail to notice the dust-proof bearings on these
cultivators. Start the year right by using good, common
judgment in selecting your implements, for the man
is judged as much by tools he uses as by the company he
keeps. Our stock of American Fencing was never larger
and we can make you the l)est possible inducements if
quality and prices are what it takes to do the business.
Tin Shof in Connection
A FEW POINTS ON GARDENING
In writing to the editor of Al-
bright’s Farm and Ranch, M. G.
Davis, an experienced gardener of
Winfield, Ivans , among other things
says:
“Being about the time of year to
begin planning for the comlug spring
gardening and other small cultiva-
tion, we think it well to brush up our
memories a little on the small things,
for when the time comes fer the
really busy big work, we are apt to
overlook or forget a few of the es-
sentials that go to constitute a good
beginning in providing early vegeta-
bles. First you will observe that
the man who makes the most of
this kind of work and keeps things in
that line in a tasty manner, not only
accomplishes the mo6t that way, but
usually has the best managed farm.
While he is fall plowing for the large
field crops he should give the garden
a good dressing of fertilizer and then
plow it under, leaving it in the best
possible condition for the seed to
germinate quickly in early spring
lime
We usually sow the early and late
cabbage at the same time- The
large and late ones need more time
to grow than the small early
varieties and to make sure of at least
one good crop, we sow twice and
plant twice. We have the best suc-
cess with the late In planting the
larger varieties, such as the Large
Flathead Dutch, or Marble Head
Mammoth, although the Sure Head
variety is nearly as good. We row
both ways, setting at least three and
a half fset each way. By doing so
and giving good cultivation they will
grow very large and you will be sur-
prised at the Improvement over the
DEAD BY THOUSANDS
Unable to get at anything to eat,
with no place to stay but out in the
wind and the cold and the snow, too
timid to beg for food from the farm-
ers, and too proud beside, the family
of Mr. Bob White, after being as
weak as weak could be from an un-
satisfied hunger, has come to a point
of starvation and has lain down to
die by the thousands and thousands
in the state of Nebraska this winter.
Apparently protected by the laws of
the state, but unprotected from the
famine which follows a siege of deep
snow, the little creatures have dimin-
ished so rapidly in the northern por-
tion of the state that It will take an-
other five years of absolute protec-
tion from the government to replace
those that have died.
Their feathers dampened by the
wet crystals that blow against them,
the pretty creatures have been forc-
ed to huddle helplessly together be-
neath a tree where, chilled by the
wintry winds, they form easy targets
for the passing youth or the unsports-
manlike hunter. And, instead of be-
ing fed by the farmers, whose best
friend is the quail, these birds are in
many cases slain by the people whose
groves were filled with them last fall.
Cats, too, sneaking upon a whole
family, arc easily able to catch as
many as they like, merely persistent-
ly pursuing the covey as it flits from
drift to drift.
Rural roads are dotted with the
birds that have died from starvation
and hunters bring in thirty to fifty as
results of an afternoon's shoot.
Not in five years had Nebraska
woods been so well filled with these
valuable feathered creatures, and not
in another five—perhaps never again
—will they be so will filled. The
thickets that teemed with the quail
are now strewn with little dead ones,
because of the winter’s severity.—K.
C. Journal.
The Ponca City Gas& Oil Company
after being idle for the past four or
five months, are again preparing to
drill and this time have the assur-
ance of help from the business men
of that city. , K
Tern Zimmerer, ot Nardin and R.
Fulton of Braman, arc in Guthrie
this week attending the masonic
grand lodge as representatives from
their respective towns.
Public Sale
Having leased my farm to my sons, I
will retire from the business, and will
sell at public sale 31 miles west of
Blackwell and 51 east of Nardin on
north road
Tuesday, Feb. 21, 1905,
Sale commencing at 10 o’clock.
6 HEAD HORSES—Consisting of 1
bay mare 4-years-old, in foal.l bay
gelding 5-years old, 1 brown mare 9-
vears-old, 1 roan mare 10-vears-old, in
foal, 1 roan mare 3-years-old, 1 cat-
tle pony,l mule coming 1-vear-old
40 HEAD CATTLE—Consisting of
cows, heifers, steers, and heifer
calves, 1 full blood Hereford bull, 2
years-old.
12 HEAD SHOATS 12
FARM IMPLEMENTS-1 carriage,
1 Richmond Champion drill, 1 sweep
rake, 1 hay rake, 1 Champion mower,
l clean sweep hay loader, 1 Osborne
binder, 1 Cassaday sulky plow, new, 1
Hummer gang plow, 1 John Deere
disc gang plow, 1 disc corn sled, 1
lister and drill combined, 1 4 section
harrow, 2 Tower cultivators.
Term* A credit of 8 months time
will be given on bankable note with-
out interest if paid when due, if not
paid when due to draw 10 per cent
from date; it pet cent discount for
cash; all sums of $10 00 and under,
cash in hand No property to be re-
moved until settled for.
J. W. POUNDSTONE, Owner.
A1 Savage, Auctioneer
ffm Sherr, Clerk.
Free Lunch at Noon
“Tiling Stiff Clay Lands'’ is the
title of one of the special articles in
this week’s Farmer and Stockman
which it will pay ary farmer to read
because of its Information about the
nature of clay soils, even if not in-
terested In drainage. George M.
Tucker, the well known Missouri
expert, is the author, and he de-
scribes the natural processes where-
by the drains produce results In the
stillest and finest grained soils after
some time has elasptd. He shows
that it is by a natural displacement;
that drains which at first do not
work will, after a few years, estab-
lish a network of little natural tubes
or canals through a stiff clay soil and
greatly increase its productiveness.
The Farmer and Stockman has sev*
eral of these valuable special arti-
cles by experts each week, any one
of which Is well worth a year's sub-
scription price to any wide awake
farmer. The Times Record takes
subscriptions for The Farmer and
Stockman and feels that it is doing a
real service to the farmers of Kay
county in so doing. Subscribe today,
you will not regret it.
T. Ed. Fulton, chairman of the re-
publican county central committee,
was in the city from bis Kildare
township farm last Friday and while
here sold his last year's wheat crop
to Blackwell buyers. No question
about Blackwell being the best wheat
market in Kay county.
SHERLOCK HOLKI8 AGAIN.
A New Series of Detective Stories in
the Kansas City Star
Conan Doyle's uetective stories wltb
the marvelous Sherlock Holmes as their
hero, have achioved the greatest suc-
cess of recent years Appreciating this fact
the publisher of Collier's Weekly, New
York, induced Mr. Doyle to write a final
series of the great detective's adveneures.
Repeated refusals were followed by in-
creased inducements, and finally Mr.
Doyle agreed to write thirteen stories for
»45,ooo, or about 6o cents a word. The
en'tire correspondence was by cable.
The amount paid by Collier's is the larg-
est ever paid for such work and does not
include the right to publish the stories in
book form. By special arrangement
with Collier's these famous stories are
being printed in The Kansas City Star,
one story each week, beginnning in the
daily edition, gaturday, February u, and
in the Weekly, Wednesday, February 15.
None of the present popular features of
The Star will be cut down or omitted to
make room for this remarkable set of
stories Practically the contents of a
>1.50 book will be added to the contents
of The Star, in three months, without
any increase of the subscription price, 10
cents a week for the Daily Star (morning,
evening and Sunday, 13 complete papers
a week), and 25 cents a year for The
Weekly Star
Last Thursday night about S o'clock
an alarm was turned In from the Ho-
tel Maine and the tire company
promptly responded, but the fire was
caused from an oil stove In one of the
sleeping rooms
STANDARD OIL.
Thirty-two years ago the Standard
Oil Co. was an Ohio corporation with
a million dollars capital, having a
daily capacity for refining 1,500 bar-
rels of crude oil. The Standard Oil
company of today Is a New Jersey
corporation, which controls DO per
cent of the eastern oil production.
It makes 21,500,000 barrels out of the
24,000,000 barrels of petroleum pro-
ducts made in this country. Its re-
ceipts are enormous. For five years
its annual dividends have averaged
about $45,000,000 or nearly 50 per cent
on its capitalization—a sum which,
capitalized at 5 per cent, would be
*!KM),000,000.
Ninety per cent of this prosperity
remains each year close to the
tabernacle among the few men who
make up the Standard Oil family.
The oil business does not rteed this
money; It has to be invested.
What is to be the future of an
organization practically controlling
the oil industry in all its branches,
and deriving from It $45,000,000 r,f
annual profit, which it invests, as It
is being invested each year, In ob-
taining the ownership or control of
railroad systems: in grasping the
mineral wealth of the country—its
Iron, steel and copper—In gathering
in telegraph and telephone lines, and
acquiring the gas and electric light
franchises of the great cities: In or-
ganizing and directing banks and
trust companies? Where is it all to
end?—George W. Alger in McClure’s.
---— » » » - —
The repairs for the e’ectric light
plant arrived Friday, and that even
lng the lights were again turned on,
to the satisfaction of Mr. Waite and
the citizens as well.
I 1*
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Randall, J. W. & McDowell, T. H. W. The Times--Record (Blackwell, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1905, newspaper, February 16, 1905; Blackwell, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1137788/m1/3/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.