The Times--Record (Blackwell, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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:
I
I
I
I
Fine Home Grown Seed Corn.
We were fortunate enough to secure several hundred
bushels of fine home grown seed com, which we have
had butted, tipped and graded, making as fine seed
as you care to see. This com has stood the dry
weather and has proved good. You can make no
mistake by buying and planting this com.
At this time we have yellow, red and white com. May
we not show you this com?
RIGHT IN YOUR HOME
NO COST, NO TROUBLE TO YOU.
Phone us, Write us
or Tell us,
We will do the rest.
Graded Kaffir Corn 75C Per bushel.
THE VELIE
CHANNEL REACH
The Langley Loose Ground Lister
Hard ground listing has been practiced for many years. In dry
sections ot the country, with this method of planting corn, the ground
is not previously plowed and there remains, therefore, a hard ridge
of unstirred soil between the cern rows. While superior results were
obtained from listing, as compared to surface planting in these sec-
tions, there were several serious faulta to be overcome. Weeds would
spring up in the spaces between the corn rows; heavy rains would
run off the hard ridges and wash out and drown the small stalks of
corn. Tha work of cultivation was much more laborious, both to man
and team, as the hard, unstirred spaces had to be broken up.
Another method that was tried out with partial success consisted
in first plowing the ground and then using a two-row planter with
special furrow openers attached to the shanks. This was only a
makeshift, however, because in extreme conditions an ordinary
planter was not heavy enough to stand the increased strain, and the
furrow openers did not have the proper support or range of ad-
justment.
To successfully list by this method, which was called “loose-groand
listing." required a machine designed particularly for the work to be
done. To meet the demand for machines of the desired features, we
are now selling the Langley Loose-Ground Lister, a complete des-
cription of which will be had by asking for our special catalog.
VEUE WROUGHT 'RON VEHICLES
IN UNION
THERE 15
REN6TH
The Sharpies Tubular Cream Separatqp
Is a RIGHT NOW machine, the kind
that skims clean, works easy, and
lasts a long time*.
May we not TELL you why you should |
buy one and then bring one out for
you to try FREE.
Ask for special catalog.
The best is none too good in the selection of materials en-
tering into the construction of
Velie Wrought Iron Vehicles.
The reach is constructed from selected hickory and channel-
lined the entire length, making it without any doubt the
Strongest Reach Construction
ever placed on any vehicle; it prevents breakage, keeps the gear
lined up and wheels ‘‘track’'.
On.lirr ia ltBMk.red
Loa* After
Price it Forgone*.
T.k. time to come in end we will tell you eU .bout them.
Are You Playing Baseball Yet?
If so, may we not show you our new and complete
line? Balls 5c up; Gloves 25c up; Bats 8c up.
L
rhe
yiel
ber
•rs
,^i
V 1
P : II
- 8
201 203
205
SO. MAIN
STREET
FRANK J.GOOLP
HARDWARE & IMPLEMENT CO.,
THE full LINE OF JOHN DEERE HARNESS. VEHICLES & FARM TOOLS
WE
WANT
YOUR.
BUSINESS’
PHONE 177
BLACKWELL
WE SELi
|£
mm
fflOlS VC0TLS8I
Cf’eob A Meat; Maker
of jtne threshed alfa fa straw
Murph v
Murphy, one of the most pr.igrc*elv* make expense-,
farmers of the ne ir state—a mao
Jefferson Cilv, March 6.—Corncob t«fl*cnce is bto com®un:ty and one
pipes continue to br a* read«n to » o looks to tbe catting of costs in j
Missouri and 'morey to f»e town* trie production of cheap crops, >
which mace a spec a tv of maccfac* a' ara--7i *r ? Murphy farm s wei.
taring j-'d shipping them. T*v.y xept. and has substantia. up-to-date
se-umr ndiirtry sttlea i-tven fac- 1 rnproTeacect-
The soil is a black silt loam in the ?
bottoms; on the up.and*, of a ted er
mine-tipe. The same soi. is foundi
over tee western naif of Oklahoma
Mr. Murpbv has 250 acres in alia-
fa, has given bis method* for grow-j
ing as feliows;
He pio«- eirlv. deep and thorougb-
Stocs
readily eats
raid Mr.
Mr Mjrpbv ha- been growing ai-
fa fa for 15 year-and in the ne gb
borhooi of r'j-- for the last 10 year*.
He i- cons tiered an authority on al-
falfa grow og—Farm k Ranch.
work get* us down A. M TenEyck, I
the Kansa- autnorlty on care -.nd
1 handling of farm crop?, has this to
; -ay about it;
‘ “A good nai, sited, wtier it is Reed-
ed, :- a profitable inv-stment on any
tone* 1-450 41*
figure* t>T J. C
m s-s.orer A
v eor of s?at *
]9l6 according to
Hi er. iaoor com*
Edmor-toc -upet-
• bo is preparing
tne stat *tic* for the 1911 rear book,
ei t-ects t r e f jure, to be -1 i -larger.
Accepting the tota value of the
lSl&procuctioo at what it so* stands
the ga'n o*er the 19 J9 output is 12.- lir- *rior to sow-.ng
OiO. A"d 1999 w a- the prev oc- ban- the surface- Sowing ;•
ner rear.
fee pulverizes
oone in tbe
l spring time, because moisture con
In cob pipes alone tbe production I dlt’ons are more favorable than in
of 1910 amounted to 28.455 5*4 all jfail He prefer* April 1 to tfee 15th.
made from M -«ouri corncob* it Hc seed* *>3 ha»d at th« rate of 20
took 94 ordinary s:zed freight cars Pound* per acre, growing hi* own
to faau this quantity to market. *-ed.
Mr Murphy renovates bis altalfa
Fourteen ordinary cob pipes we gh a
pound, and figured thus the many
million pipe* weighed l,8&r,2>4 pound
When 20 thousand pounds of pipes
are p:;ed into a car it make* a very
bulky load. Many of tbe pipe fac-
tories turned out wooden pipe* also.
The production amounted to 397,752.
And there also were 1,350,500 extra
stems 190.944 p pe cleaners and 50,-
000 pit* turned out.
The pipe industry of Minsouri
Is in Washington, Franklin j
county, about 53 miles out of St.
Louis. It contains 3 of the 7 factor-
ies of the state. Union, in tbe same
county. Owensville in Gasconade
county. Bowling Green in Pike coun-
tv and Holstein in Warren count,
each have such an establishment.
There is Invested in this industry
in M ssouri §239.943 of which $'r7.98«
Is in grounds and building* and §44,-
394 In machinery and toois. To pro-
duce pipe- worth §440.418 it required
rv.w .material and supplie* worth
$199,240 For rent, taxes and nsur-
surance there wa* paid out §3 132;
for wages aud salaries §123 655 and
for miscelaneous purposes §44 394
The wages were divided between 2S3
men and 38 women employees
Io seven years the pipe factories
if Missouri have turnedsut 1.7469 459
pipes chiefly of corncobs Pipes are
used the world over, being as fam -
liar on tbe streets of the cit es of
Korea, and Swedes Australia.
Germany. South Africa. New Zea-
aaad,England and Ireland as they are
In St Louis, Kansas City and Chico-
f° _
fieid each cutting, whenever pos-
sible at least one time in tbe middle
tbe season For this be use* a reno-
vator, or a common disc, to stir
thoroughly tbe surface of the ground
I have found he said tbat pastur-
ing continuously for more than three
years wil, kill alfalfa. I pasture a 1
mi a falfa, but not all of it anv one
year, and allow no pasturing whiie
crop is making hay.
Killing Smut in Seed Grain
The discovery «as made in July,
1907. at the Kansas Agricultural col-
I lege, that the grain smut of sorgum
and Kaffir corn couid be prevented
absolutes by soaking the seed for t wo
hour* in a solution of 1 qt of formal
de'nyde to 50 gals, of water. Thiswi 1
not iojure the v tally of the seed in
the least fnis treatment, says the
Co’lege Industrialist, has been re.
peated y tested and found effective
The rea-on for using double strength
solution in the case of tbe grain smut
of sorgum and kaffir corn is because
tbs sorgum smut is enclosed entirely
witbin tbe bard seed coat of the grain
which, although unaltered is extern-
al appearasce, s fil ed with the black
smut dust the sp.res or reproducing
bodies of the smut parasite.) The
smut sporesof oats, on tbeother hand
become* scattered from tbe smutted
heads in tbe held and are caught in
the chaff of unsmutted heads. In
threshing also, the smut is mixed
, w.th and rubbed over tbe grain.
ith the
possible j
'arm. When hay is fed cn tbe farm
' the plan shou a be to -tore it in a
( convenient place so that ;t may be
,conveyed lo the live-tock w
least amount of labor If
I the hay shou'd be stored and tbe stock
fed under the same r. o!. to avoid ex-
pense of handling i a second time
and the lo-s from the shedding of the
leave-and heads.
By carefully stackine hay and cov-
ering tbe stacks well it is possible to
preserve the hav in large stacks with
comparatively little os- However
haring time is a hard-working busy
t.me with the farmer and he may oe j
care ess and neglect to stack the hay
America’s Greatest Weekly
THE
Toledo Blade
TOLEDO OHIO
The Best Known Newspaper
in the United States.
Circulation 240.000.
Popular in Every State.
Whiskey Advertising.
The seventj KXih year o; its existence finds
the Toledo B’.ade more popular than at any
period of its remarkable career. Itisnowread
eaeb week by more than a million people. Its
field is not circumscribed by State l oundaries
bat involves the length and breadth of the
United States, giving it an unaueattonabie right
of claiming to be the greatest national weekly
new spa per in the country.
The Weekly B’.ade isdistinctly a family news-
paper The one object of its publishers has
always been to make it fit for the American
well or cover the bat properly. Rain* home, for the fireside, and of interest to every
He pastures a few acres with hog- 1 One pint of commercial formaldeby-
at all time* of the year,-and has de to 50 gallons, allowing 1 gallon of
found that one acre will support 2fi | the mixture to every bushel of the
hogs. He does not recommend alfal- seed it. is tbe strength recommended
fa for cattle and sheep, but says | for oats. The oats ar spread out thln-
that t is un-urpassed for horses, j ly on a cleat, floor and spring.ed with
j a water pot or a -prayer.
Caution; Do not spread seed to be
m aits and hogs.
On the Murphv farm the first alfa-
fa cutting is secured about the first
of June, and is fol.owed by three
more cuttings the whole averaging
about four tons per year On local
market alfalfa hav sells on tbe ave-
rage at $10 per ton
All damaged hay is fed on the
sprinkled upon a floor upon which
smutted grain has !a n. After treat-
ment, it the grain has to be stored,
tee to it that it is stored in a clean or
disinfected place.
Keep the formaldehyde awav from
'children. It is not explosive of in-
piace. Only bright hay i* sold in the | ^'aB,IDa*5 e. and ;* perfect y safe for
hale. Balling costs t£ per too: is | to handle. Tfce f ames of the
done by contract. The man who
rtemuifi tiuaon r»mi
On Turkey creek bottom, near Foee,
Okie., la tbo 960-ocre farm of E. J.j
owns the baler doe* everyth ng ex-
cept the cutting and raking Mr
Murphy figures that one half tbe
crop pavs a.i the expenses to market
Ho harvests when b oom* are well
set oa He prefers mature -hav for
h>rses. as it is not so wish v. About
every other year he grows a crop for
seed, getting from 3 to 7 bushels per
acre
He threshes with a clover bulier
and get §11 per bosbe*. for his seed
on the ready market
I And seed crop mare profitable
than hav when a good crop la secur-
ed. I most have three bushels to
gas which escape from the livuid so-
lution are extremely rritating to tbe
eyes and throan. a-d tbe stronger so-
lutions are corrosive to the skin In-
ternally, formaldehyde is poisonous
—Mail and Breexe.
§ Nsy Shod Kays For Itsolf.
Before «e know t tbe time «i.l be
here to brtog oat the mower from so-
lder tbe «bed, grind *be sickle nod
start rouod and r-mnd the alfalfa
natch Hav making ia hardly a sea-
sonable topic yet hat it is neasonab e
to talk and act abont the build ng of
a hay shed during these iaat few daya
of leisnre before the rusk of spring
will come sometimes when they are
not wanted and ieast expected and
j stacks blow over and wet in, so on
! the average -tacking -utdoor* is ex-
pensive and wasteful
On the average farm where the bay
is largely fed to iive.tock the bay
shed becomes a hav saver and a
profitable investment Some farm-
er? who have bnilt sheds estimate
that the saying of hay and labor wi'l
\ pay for a -bed in two years. From
experiment station reports and from
tbe experiences ot farmers the writer
concludes that the ordii ary 'oss oc
; bay stored In shed wil; be an the av-
erage ten per cent le-s tean on bay
-tacked out doors
A shed large enough to store 70
tons of alfalfa will cn-t about $420.
The value of 10 per c*-nt of 70 tons of
alfalfa valued at *10 per ton is $70.
If the bay is stacked t must a* a rule
be handled twice in feeding it whiie
If storai in the sbed or barn one
handling may get it to ihe livestock.
The extra handling of tbe bay wiiii
cost at least 35 cent* per ton or $-5. !
Again many leave* are shattered hj
the extra handling w*-ch mav easily 1
reduce the feeding va ue of the hay
50 cents per ton making another loss
of §35 or the shed would save §140 a
year At this rate tb- original cost
01 the shed wj!| have been paid for
in three years and a v d sbed ought
to last for 15 or 90 yt - Mail and
Breeze.
member of the family. To fulfill thisrurposeit
is kept elean and « holesome. Ttenewso/the
world is handled in acompre hensive manner,
and the vmrious departments of The Blade are
edited with painstaking care. The Household
page is a delight to the women and children;
current affairs are treated editorially without
prejudice; the serial stories are selected with
the idea of pleasing the greatest number of
fiction loTers: the Question Bureau is a scrap-
1 book of information; tbe Farmstead columns
are conducted with the purpose of giving the
; patron* a medium for the exchange of ideas
1 and information on farm topics. So depart
ment is neglected, but every feature 1- taken
care of with the idea of making The Blade
worth many time* the price of subscription—
i one dollar a year.
SamrJe copies mailed free. Address
THE BLADE.
Toledo, Ohio.
Sunday, arrives - - 11:20 a r|
550 Freight to Wellington, daily ex-
cept Sunday, departs 9:45 a 1.
HUTCHINSON a SOUTHERN DISTRICT
Fiom Hutcbinscn,
507 Passenger from Hutchinson,
daily ex. Sunday arrives 2x0 p
541 Freight from Anthony, daily ex-
cept Sunday arrives 9:00 a
To Hutchinson
508 Passenger to Hutchinson, daily
except Sunday, departs 2:30 pi
542 Freight to Anthony, daily ex-
cept Sunday, departs - 10:30 a i.i
To Ponca City.
533 Mixed, daily except Sunday
departs - • 6:^5 a 1
537 Mixed, daily except Sunday
departs - - 4 3«P'
From Ponca City
534 Mixed, daily except Sundav
arrives
538 Mixed, daily except Sunday
arrives - 8.13 p
Nos. 507 and 508 carries throegchi
cars to and from Kansas City. Tb*
trains run solid to and from Newton.
No. 501 connect-at Wellington for 1
Sontbern Kansas points east and
Wichita and at Newton for Cbicaj
Kansas City and all poiatseastandf
Pacific Coast Mexico, Utah and Coi
rado points. No 508 connects at Harp
for au southern Kansas points west*
Pecos Valley points west in Texas si
New Mexico. No 337 connects at Poe
City with both north and south trains.
Texas Main line.
For descriptive literature and furlk
^formation, call on local agent.
H F. SINCLAIR Agent
1
coi
fre
ne
ac’
wh
an
ert
fe<
in(
otl
to
er
Si
M
Ct
k
re
at
ct
Pi
s
d
th
la
al
st
tl
ti
nr
A
d fck
'San i a Te
^ r
Frisco Time Table.
- * * * *• vm* tahli
Efiectite March it, 1905.
EAST BOUND TRAINS,
■ CSXXWXLL BEAXCB
South Bound.
5x3 Teaka-va pas* gr daily
arrives and departs at
No fcS Arrives Blackwell...
Ne. 6c, Arrives Blackwell.
Local Freight...............
licit
5*1
WEST BOUND TRAINS.
------- 9 as P
* S49 Freight frets Welitegtoa; daily
except Sunday. arrive* 5
4S • a
Fcr the stomach and bowel disorder* 53$ Teokawa Freight daily mi cep t
of bebieo McGEK S BABY ELIXIR i* * Soeday deports - • 9 35 a »
remedy el geeetoe awnt It acu quickly. 1 North Boned |
Soe Arrive* at Blaekweil....
K*. tot rae* ikrceg* ia Vereaa Tea. aa4 I
•er lay* ever at KaiO
Ke 6et aeke* reeeeetSea B««..aei
Kaeaas City aak will arrive im Kawaea CSey* -*!
.vr;
..41
** P«re skoieKa* >:4 7 easast to taka
pr«a 15c and jsc per bottle. Sold by W.
G * “
3*4 K C.
doily
54* Teokawa Freight daily
1 wwk fie* re
*eekh*B for MewkWk aa
■•-•*• aed rveere* ie> K*.m .| 1
r i cun 9.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.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.
McDowell, T. H. W. The Times--Record (Blackwell, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 6, 1911, newspaper, April 6, 1911; Blackwell, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1137830/m1/2/?q=coaster: accessed June 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.