The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1896 Page: 4 of 4
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Experts have recently demonstrated
that the annual saving in substituting
•lectricity for steam on the Pennsyl-
vania Railroad would amount to many
Billions. It is certainly within range
of early probability that the railroads
sannot then afford to use their present
Iteam traction.
Plants, seeds and bulbs are imported
into the United States from Europe to
Ihe valuo of more than 81,000,000 an-
Inally.
In Belgium, about 125 factories oper-
ated each season, ami a total of 35 re*
Ineries turn off annually 3,500,000 owta.
sugar.
The railway clearing house is one ol
Ihe largest offices in Great Britain. It
las a staff of 1000 clerks aud 450out-of
loor of.icera.
flow to Grow 40c. Wheat.
Hal/vr's Kali Seed Catalogue tella
fou. It's worth thousands to the
H'ideawake farmer. Send 4-cent stamp
for catalogue and free samples of
frains and grasses for fall sowing.
John A. Salzer Seed Co., LaCrosse,
Wis.
Counting clerk hire, mileage and in-
cidentals, a member of Congress now
receives a total sum of about 812,050
for his two years' services.
A brick concern in Kppinp, N. II.,
recently received an order for 40,000,000
from a Boston flrin, the contract to be
finished in three years.
There are probably more thieves in
China than in any other country in
the world. No exception is made.
flair* Catarrh Cure
la a constitutional cure. Price, 75c.
A 10,000 spindle mill is to be erected
In Oaffney, 8. C., to spin fine yarns for
fancy goods. This will be the flrst at-
tempt of a Southern mill at the finer
farna.
Broadway was first called by the
Dutch who settled New York "Broad
Wagon Way," and the term was finally
Ihortened by the word "wagon" being
left out
Persona!*
ANT ONE who kna been benefited by the uaa
•f Dr. Wllliaina' Pink Pille, Will rocoivo infor-
mation of mach value sod Intereat by writing to
"Pink Pilla," P. O. Do* IBM, Philadelphia, Pa.
There's one single paper pulp mill in
New York State that uses up 70 car-
loads of logs and ahortwooddaily. Its
Annual supply ia 30,000,000 ft of waste
lumber.
In Scotland tho proportion between
fishermen and tho rest of the popula-
tion ia one in every 70, in Iroland one
In every 210, in England and Wales
one In every 012.
For the ten raynths ending April 30
last, the total production of cigarettes
for home consumption was 2,338,147,-
100, or an increase of 017,804,480 over
the fiscal year 1894-'95.
The playing of golf on Sundays is
practiced to such an extent that in a
oertain parish in England, it is said,
the hour of service has been changed
to suit the convenience of players.
Mrs. Katlierine G. Reed, who has
Just died at Sistersville, W. Va., was a
a widow in straightened circumstances
five years ago,her only possession being
a farm, looked upon as worthless. But
oil was found on it, and when she died
alie waa worth upwarda of 91,000,000.
There ia only one $10,000 United
Statea note in existence and that has
not been issued,being kept at the trea-
sury as a specimen. There are three
•5 ,000 greenbacks, only one of which,
however is in circulation. One thou*
■and dollar notes are numerous.
DAIRY AND POULTRY.
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
Excluding warships, Cleveland, 0.,is
the second shipbuilding center in the
world, the Clyde, below Glasgow,alone
surpassing it Cleveland's lake com-
merce is 10,000,000 tons. New York'f
ecean commerce only 12,000,000 tons.
The first United States coins bore
the likeness of Martha Washington.
The General was greatly annoyed and
had the die altered, fearing that his
political opponents would construe tho
image on the coin as indicating a de-
sire for royal honors.
There are still many immense cattle
ranches in Texas, although in some
parts of the State they have been con-
tracted by increased settlement The
largest is one of 3,000,000 acres, the
property of the Capital Freehold Land
and Investment Company.
A German cavalry captain named
Baron Von Ehrhardt and First Lieu-
eoant Von Kampti, of the garrison at
IHisseldort, have been dismissed from
because they refused to accept a chal-
lenge to Af ht a duel with pistols which
was atnt to them by a notorious scoun-
drel. Both officers published the facts
aa an advertisement in a Dusseldorf
newspaper.
Inw Sur<« f ill
Depart lAcnt
Kinta >a to
and Poultry.
fir
era Opai
of Lit
Thle
Few
late circular from
the department of
agriculture gives
the following on
filled cheeBe:
It may be well
this themselves, that is one of the
commonest mistakes in rearing chick-
ens; after they are five weeks old you
can leave out the oat meal and feed
three or four times a day. When ten
weeks old, at noon scatter wheat and
cracked corn in litter such as leaves
and cut straw, so they will have to
work for it, but not too much corn as it
makes them too fat. Green food must
be supplied. If the chicks are cooped
up on fresh grass this problem Is solved
and they will help themselves to what
they need. If, however, they are con-
fined in a small yard, finely cut grass,
lettuce, or onion tops will make a good
substitute. Fresh cool water must be
kept accessible so a drink can betaken
( when wanted. Sell the cockerells
to state in passing , when they weigh two or two and a half
that fill'''* cheese
differs from the
genuine, obi fash-
ioned article In
but one essential
particular, so far as its composition
is concerned. Instead of the natural
fat of milk, or cream, which is extrac-
ted for butter making, thero as neutral
lard, made from the leaf fat of the hog.
This article, claimed to be exception-
ally pure and good of its kind, is
used at the rate of two or three pounds
io every 100 pounds of skim milk. 'I he
cheese resulting carries about 30 per
cent of (lard) fat, which is rather less
than the average of (butter) fat in good
whole milk cheese. The casein and
other components of the two are prac-
tically the same in kind and propor-
tions. From this statement of com-
position one can judge for himself
whether this filled or lard cheese Is a
legitimate article of food, whether It
Is wholesome, and whether he desires
to use it in the diet of himself and
family, it iH made of comparatively
cheap materials, costing from one-half
to two-thirda as much as good, full
cream, factory cheese, and It a market
price, wholesale or retail, should cor-
respond. At its best, this is cheap, in-
ferior cheeso; it is almost devoid of
flavor, oily or greasy when warm, and
never attains the dry, crumbly consis-
tency of r well cured cheese. It is sold
when only a month or two from Ihe
press in imitation of mild, Immature
cheese. It la claimed that It does not
keep well, especially if subjected to
temperature above 00 degrees. No one
acquainted with first class full cream
cheese would ever accept the filled pro-
duct as a substitute, but it may be suc-
cessfully passed as a genuine article
of second grnde. There Is plenty of
good cheese still made In the United
States, and It can be secured If buyers
will but make a little effort to find It.
The states of New York and Wisconsin
together produce two-thirds of all the
cheese made In the country, and tho
reputation of the factories of these
stales for high quality, full cream
cheese has been long established. The
product of these factories of the stand-
ard or Cheddar form of large cheese
stands second to none in the markets
of Great Britain as well as in America.
The two states named, as well as oth-
ers, absolutely prohibit the manufac-
ture and sale of filled cheese within
their borders and the marking of skim
cheese to imitate full cream goods.
These laws are well enforced."
More
Medicinal value, more skill, care, expense, more
wonderful cures aud more curative power la
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
Than Io any other. Be Hire to pet only Hood's.
Mood's Pilla cora g -
nnillii HaliUCurort K L In
Ur I Urn ZZ','.T'Z' scr;
1171. Thousands
FRKK Taiiu
. V'llncy, Mich.
PENSIONS, PATENTS. CLAIMS.
>4 rUiou. ail/. aim*.
lpal Ex
, U adju-l
OUflh S;r |
In time
S UMPTION
Contluuoua Income from Poultry.
P. A. Homann, of Effingham county,
111., read the following paper before a
farmers' institute in that county:
Eggs are all tho year round crop,
differing greatly in this respect from
hay, corn and vegetables, which are all
harvest time crops; and If not marketed
at once, expensive buildings have to be
prepared to store them In,and not a few
crops such as potatoes, cabbage and
fruit, shrink in value by decaying
while stored. Not bo with our poultry
product, which has an all the year
ready market, and with eggs as the
basis of a poultry business a steady all
the year round income can be com-
manded. It is the winter eggs that pay
the greater profit and bring up the
average price for the year. If the
greater part of the eggs are received for
spring and summer, when prices are
brought down by a large supply, the
average will be lower, but if fowla lay
In December, January and February
when eggs are 20 to 30 cents a dozen
the average price for the whole year
will bo satisfactory. The whole story of
getting eggs in winter can be resolved
into three simple rules. First, hatch
the chicken early; second, keep them
growing so the pullet will come to lay-
ing maturity in October or by Novem-
ber; third, keep them laying by good
food and care. When I say hatch the
chickens early I do not mean too early,
because if hatched too early and go to
laying in August and September they
will usually moult in December just as
the weather is becoming very cold, and
good-by eggs from then till spring.
For the heavier varieties, such as
Brahma and Cochins, the middle of
March is none too early. Plymouth-
rock and Wyandot tea we would hatch
the flrst half of April If possible. If not,
April will do. The Spanish, Mlnorcas,
Leghorns and Hamburgs should
hatched in May for best results. Set
three or more hens at a time and once
a week dust them well with Insect pow-
der, and when the chicks hatch give
them to two or more mothers. 1 gave
as our flrst rule for getting a good profit
from poultry to hatch your chickens
early. Equally Important is the sec-
ond, keep them growing so they will
rorae to laying maturity by November
flrst. The l'ood and care has much to
do with the chicken growing.
Now for the flrst 24 hours do not feed
the chicks, for they need no food dur-
ing this time, nature has provided for
that by absorbtlon of egg-yolk into
their little abdomens, and it is neces-
sary this absorbed egg-yolk be digested.
Much damage is done and many chicks'
lives are lost by disregarding this rule;
somo people in their haste to get the
chicks growing hurry food into their
crops before the system has toned up to
take care of it, aud tho consecence is
the bowels are congested and the chick
goes over to the majority. Feed often
but little at a time, every 2 hours say
five times a da?', until the chicks are
five weeks old, and see that no food is
left standing in the sun to sour after
Ihey have eaten. Remove it all, noth-
ing causes more bowel looseness, and
dyaentery, than sour food. The best
food for the flrst five weeks is composed
of one-third oat meal, one third corn
meal and one-tbird wheat bran; add a
pinch qf salt, moisten with sweet milk
or water, warm It in cold weather and
twice a week add some bone meal.
Keep coarse sand by the coop at all
times, don't think tha chick can find
pounds each, and don't forget to dust
the pullets well with insect powder, for
you do not want to raise chicken lice,
but If you are not careful you will.
Now with this food and proper care
they will begin to lay along in Septem-
ber and October. Then sell off your old
fowls, clean the houses and whitewash
them and the pullets moved in, and
then on feed for eggs as follows: For
four days in tho week feed early In the
morning a warm mash composed of one
part shorts, one part bran, one part
corn meal, and add cooked potatoes or
turnips and apple parings. Feed on
boardH or in troughs, only enough to
supply part of their hunger; give water
all round, then scatter wheat or oats
In the litter and let the aim be to keep
the hens busy every moment from
morning until night scratching for
wheat and oats, which should be buried
In the litter. Let the noon ration be
green rye or a cabbage hung in the
pens just high enough to compel the
hens to Jump to peck It. About 3 p. m.
feed the whole grain, full feed, oats or
whent, and in the very coldest weather
a little corn. Keep grit or granulated
bones so they can get at it all the win-
ter, and charcoal, tie n't forget to give
them some. Clean pen, fresh wnter,
pure nlr and a system of feeding such
as ia here outlined will bring money
to the farmer every month In the year,
try It*
Says "Hark Comstock" In Rider and
Driver: "I have not had as good chance
to study the results of crossing the
hackney on trotting mares, but see no
reason why they should not bo success-
ful where the latter are large enough,
for the hackney is not so likely as the
French coacher to contribute slzo to
tho combination. Like our old-style
Morgans and Black Hawks of fifty
years ago, the handsomest specimens
are apt to be undersized. Somo of the
attempts to breed up the size of old-
style Black Hawks were accompanied
by partial success, and their beauty and
action in a degree preserved, but gener-
ally as the size went up the proud
style and fairly sparkling beauty of
the strain lost their finest gloss. A
moat amazingly beautiful horse was
Vermont Black Hawk, 'the bantam
cock of the Green Mountains,' and he
bred so true to his own likeness that
breeding becamo a certainty. Two-
thirds of his get were black, and any
two of them were mates, and such
mates! But the strain held to Its small
slzo with great tenacity, or else lost
something of its beauty. This depar
ture of beauty with increased size in
dicated that the characteristic style of
the strain was derived from some
source that was inherently small,
do not know where the hackney breed
secured Its 'strut and swell and great-
est pomp,' but it seems to me that in
too many cases the criticism that 'its
little una are Its prettiest uns' points
to like conclusions. The hackney
strains back to thoroughbred founda-
tions, but along with many crosses un
accounted for."
The wool of the English breeds
thus referred to by the Journal of the
Royal Agricultural Society of England.
"Lastly, there is the pure Down, a
wool which Is still unequaled for
hosiery purposes, and which will al-
ways find a market of its own, some-
times quite independent of the general
course of prices. Of this wool 1 should
like to say-keep to the old-fashioned
style; keep it as short and as fine as
possible; let no suspicion of a long
wool strain get into it; and if I am not
mistaken, pure Down wool will take a
respectable place In the future as re-
gards comparative prices. With such
ends in view, breeders of Southdowns
may well abstain from trying to imi-
tate in length of staple and
superfluous covering of the face with
coarse wool any other breeds of sheep,
and be content to lot the Southdown re-
main what its best friends have always
tried to make it—I. e., a producer of
quality before quantity.
Sheep Less Numerous.—Tho east-
ern farmers seem to be going out of
the sheep business. They are, as a
rule, very small holders, and when
their small herds seem to be a losing
proposition they do not hesitate long
before letting them go. It is the sum
<if these small holdings that make up
the great aggregate, and when the
farmers begin selling their small flocks
the number of sheep in the country
speedily decreases. There is no branch
of the live stock business that can be
so readily adapted to changed condi-
tions as the sheep business. Since
1893 the number of sheep in the United
States has been constantly decreasing
until now the total number is less than
at any time during tho past twenty
years. Meanwhile the range of prices
has been very low. It will not be long
before there will be a change and sheep
will be in demand again at good prices.
—Ex.
Kheep Hualinnd' 1-
In the opinion of scmp of ,he ^3t
authorities on the nunbers of live
stock in the country the recently pu -
lished official estimate cf the number o
sheep in the country ii largely In ex-
cess of the actual number, and th h
notwithstanding the fact that the num-
ber is less than for a great number o
years. The official figure Is given at
£8 000,000. Thla is a fact pregnant
with meaning for evsry farmer. No
country has made permanent progress
In agricultural prosperity without
sheep. Even on the high priced lands
f England and France it Is fount
profitable to keep large flocks, indeed
more profitable than the keeping of
any other kind of live stock. Great
Britain has today over 30.000,000 sheep
on her small area, whilst France has
er 20,000,000. These two countries,
with an area together of lpfiH than one-
tenth of the United States have one-
third more sheep and better ones. 1 he
consumption of good mutton Is increas-
ing rapidly all over the country, and
this increased consumption Is here to
stay and grow. Wool also must In-
crease in value. The clip in Australia
Will be very largely decreased this year
she has lost over 9.000,000 sheep
from drouth, and this will undoubtedly
affect the markets, as Australia pro-
duces more wool than any other coun-
try. Buy a few sheep and buy them
gcod ones, and put a good buck with
them. The lambs alone will pay well
on the outlay If the sheep are prop-
erly cared for, and the wool and mut-
ton will add to the profit.—Southern
Planter.
Sralln* Prlcea for Cowl.
The North Carolina experiment sta-
tion has evolved'an idea that is wor-
thy of adoption. It is that cowi
should be bought and sold at a price
based upon their milk production.
Many a northener has thought that
far, but how to apply In fixing a scale
of prices tallying with the idea has
been farther than they have gone
This is what the tar state professors
havo undertaken, however, and the
scale formulated is as follows: Pay
for the cow $12 for each gallon of
three and a half per cent milk thai
she gives a day. To this add or sub-
tract a dollar for every fourth of one
per cent fat which it tests above or
below three and a half per cent.
Suppose the cow gives two gallons
a day of three and a half per cent
milk. She would be worth $24. If it
tested three and three-fourths, sh<?
would be worth one dollar more for
each gallon, or two dollars more,
she tested four per cent, she would be
worth two dollars more for each gal-
lon, or four dollars more, making her
value $28. If she gave three gallons
a day of three per cent milk she would
be worth $36, less the deduction for
being below standard. The deduction
would be two dollars per gallon, or
$6, and subtracting this from $36 would
fix her value at $30, or $2 more than
the cow giving two gallons of four per
cent milk. This rule recognizes th>
correct Idea, but whether it Is just
right is more than we can say. It cer-
tainly is in the right line, for the value
of the cow depends upon the amount of
butter-fat furnished.—Waverly Repub-
lican.
Dei-lino of Brltlah Farming.
The British Board of Agriculture has
just issued Its official figures for 1895,
which tell an interesting and signifi-
cant story. Incidentally it. appears that
the extent of woodlands In Great Brit-
ain is 2,726,000 acres, of which 132,000
acres have been planted in the last
fifteen years. During the last year
thero has been a gain of about 30,000
acres. The most striking figures relate
to the shrinkage in the amount of land
under the plow, which was increased
by the unpropitions character of the
autumn seed time of 1894 and earl)'
spring of 1805. More than 510,000
acres less of wheat were grown arvl 57,-
000 acres less of minor grain crops, rye,
beans and peas. One-fifth part of the
surface withdrawn from these cropd or
from wheat wan devoted to barley ahd
oats; but the corn land of 1895 was less
by nearly 455,000 acres than that of
1894. while weather conditions, check-
ing the preparation of the customary
area for turnips and other green crops,
caused a further reduction of 112,000
acres under this cultivation. The sur-
face under potatoes, small fruit, lu-
cerne and flax was larger by 45,000
acres, and the acreage left under bare
fallow was extended by nearly 100,000
acres.
The net reduction of arable land was
197,000 acres, ami the net addition to
the permanent pasture a little over
145,000 acres. The actual loss of arable
area in the last two decades is 2,137,-
000 acres. The reduction of wheat
growing alone accounts for most of this
loss. Under this head there was a total
diminution of more than 1,900,000 acres
between 1875 and 1895. More than a
third of the decline in the arable area,
and more than half of this reduction
in wheat acreage, occurred in the last
five years of the twenty.
Bofelieim'ft dry goods storo, in Nash-
ville was burned out, causing a loss of
$500,000.
The Board of Aldermen of Boston
passed an order the other day appro-
priating 8301,100 for the ventilation
and sanitation of school houses.
Deacon Jones, "I trust you always
ways observe the Sabbath?" Slackbider
"Well, I used to; but of late years I
find it more entertaining to observe
the way other people observe the Sab-
bath than to observe it myself.
Mrs. Wriggles, "The rain is spatter-
tering right through this umbrella all
The hottest day of the year at Chlca- over my new hat." Mr. Wriggles, *'J
go was Monday. At the signal service |<no\v it. I got badly fooled on that
office the mercury rose to 92 degrees umbrella, but I picked out the best
above. I looking handle in the rack "
j "Talking sboat chickens," said the
low rural citizen who habitually cxnger-
ie7a i ates, "Ivegot the most remarkable hen
in the country." "A good layer?"
"That's her strong point. Why, sir,"
he said, getting exciteu as he talked,
"that fowl, sir, lays hen's eggs as big
as hailstones."
a veil of Si ia I
clnnl safeguard. l?OhU-ltei's Ftoi
both ^protection and « itiih dy.
lid Inlialiiln or aojourns in n m n«
•country, abo>il<l omit to p roe arc
K agent, whirl) in nlao tho finest known lvme.iy
for dyapopain, cjuallpatkoii, k.dm y truuMe and
uutiani.
The gross earnings of 121
show an increase of 0 percc
roads show an increase of
1 or the fourth week of June
Whe
nlnriul fe*
!ecl >d I v
Ti.il. no «
efferent
<h nut.
tify
roads for
ut, and 73
11 perceut
Piso's cure for Consumption is our only
medicine for coughs and tolda.— Mrs, C.
Beltz, 43'.) 8th ave., Denver, Col., Nov. 8, '95
Out of 220,000 farms in Denmark
only 1,900 arc over 2' 0 acres in extent,
and most of them are worked by their
owners. By their great technical
knowledge of their business and the
gradual chunge from growing jrain to
breeding cattle and dairy farming the
Danish farmers have suffered less from
trans-Atlantic co npetition than those
of any other European country.
IT the Ha by la Cutting Teeth,
Be a tire and use that old and well-tried remedy, 1
\VissL'iw's SoOTUINO Svuir fur Children Teething.
If you are but slightly acquainted
with the science of numismatics, you
can easily tell where the United States
coins were made by the "mint marks,'
which they bear. Coins minted at
Charlotte, N. C.,bear the letter C,those
made at Dahlonga, Ga., the letter D
those at New Orleans the letter O,those
at Carson City, C, and those at San
Francisco the letter S.
The German reichatag has enacted a
law prohibiting speculation in options.
A railway i.s to be made across the
fields of Waterloo.
Poor
| Pi 1 garlic,
3j there is no need tor you
jjj to contemplate a wig
& when you can enjoy the
pleasure of sitting again
& under your own "thatclt<"
You can begin to get
U your hair back as soon
9 as you begin to use
Ayer's
Hair Vigor.
-WICHITA.—VOL. 9. NO 31,
flpiteman'* Cnmphn
Cures Chapped Hand* ai
Chilblain*, l'lle*, Ac. C. *
i with Glycerine. |
p, Tender or Sore Feet, j
k Co.. New Haven, Ct. ]
nil i. Evan*, th.; wife of Captain K.
ii. Fwans, the military attache of the
United States legation at Berlin, made
a bicycle trip to Herringsdorf and back
a distance of 400 miles, this week.
FITS Ktop|M-d fr««e and permanently cured. N<-
flts after flrst day'* uso of l r. li llne'sOrt-.u .Nerve
Ueetorer. Free fit roil bottle and treat !*••.
Send to Du. Ku.nk, £)l Arch 81., Philadelphia, 1'Si
A contogious disease of the eyes, the
origin aud characteristics of which are
puzzling the physicians, is spreading
In upper Sileaia. At Beuth it became
necessary to close the high school and
and a number of other schools have
been closed throughout the province.
The vict ims of this disease are rendered
totally blind.
The births exceed the deaths
throughout the world by over 1,500,-
000 a year—an average of three a min-
ute.
It is said to be possible to draw
platinum wires so fine that two of
them twisted could be inserted in the
hollow of a human hair.
In India there is a species of butter-
fly in which the male has the left wing
vellow aud the right wing red. The
colors on the female are vice versa.
Butter.—llutter ia a condensed pro-
duct. Nothing can be made or grown
on the farm which brings as much per
pounfl. Farms remote from the market
and communities far from railroads,
can rend butter from the farm or
creamery with the least possible ex-
pense. The dairyman can condense
tons of fodder and crops grown on the
farm Into dairy products and Bend
them «*■ market in compact and port-
able form.—Ex.
Eggs from Russia. —Russian hens are
progressive. They laid 11,000,000 eggs
"for export In 1H7<>. 235,000,000 in 1885,
a«d 1,250,000,000 last year. The eggs
are cold In Russia at from 0 to 10 cents
a dozen. They are exported to Hun-
gary. than aold to Germany as Hun-
garian eggs, and finally tu England an
German eggs.—Ex
Watering the Cows.—in watering see
that each cow has a liberal supply, and
if she does not drink enough, look after
her and ascertain the reason. If the
cow does not drink freely the supply *
milk will soon begin to fall. As for
her winter rations of food, one can not
do better than to feed her night and
morning fifteen pounds of ensilage and
three of shorts, with five of clover
hay at noon.—Ex.
Pure Water.—An abundant supply of
pure water within reach of the hogs
at all times is indispensable, but the
water can be ia the yard to which
the hogs have access. Shade is also
essential in the summer, and nothing
excels a tree for this purpose. But in
the absence of trees a building of
some kind should be provided and a
floor is Just as essential as a roof. I
consider a bed among fine dust highly
Injurious to swine, for, unlike other
animals, the hog, when he sleeps, lies
with his nostrils close to the ground
or floor, and it becomes all important
that in breathing there is no dust that
can be Inhaled. - Ex.
Gladness Comes
With a better understanding of the
transient nature of the many phys-
ical ills, which vanish before proper ef-
forts -gentle efforts—pleasant efforts—
rightly directed. There is comfort in
the knowledge, that so many forms of
sickncss arc not due to any actual dis-
ease, but simply to a constipated condi-
tion of the system, which the pleasant
family laxative. Syrup of Figs, prompt-
ly removes. That is why it is the only
remedy with millions of families, and is
everywhere esteemed so highly by all
who value good health. Its beneficial
effects are due to the t. that itis the
one remedy which pTfunotcs internal
cleanliness without debilitating the
organs on which it acts. It is therefore
all important, in order to get its bene-
ficial effects, to note when you pur-
chase, that you have the genuine arti-
cle, which is manufactured by thc.Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup Co. only and sold by
all reputable druggists.
If in the enjoyment of good health,
and the system is regular, laxatives or
other remedies are then not needed. If
afflicted with any actual disease, one
may be commended to the most skillful
physicians, but if in need of n laxative,
one should have the best, aud with the
well-informed everywhere, Syrup <>f
Figs stands highest and is most largely
used and gives most general satisfaction.
Income from Dairying.—Dairying
brings in a constant income. The man
who sells cropa of any kind haR to
wait until he can market his product
ouce a year. There ia little satisfaction
In this. It la unbuslnesa-like to go
without cash fifty-one weeks and then
have a lot of money come in at one
time. The dairyman has an income
nearly or quite fifty-two weeks fa the
year,—Ex.
KENNEDY'S
MEDICAL DISCOVERY.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF R0XEU3Y. MASS.,
Has discovered in one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, ftom tlu'eworst Scrofula
down to a common Pimple.
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He lias now in his
possession over two hundred certificates
of its value, all v. i vr iwenty miles of
Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from
the first bottle, and i perfect cure is war-
ranted when the right quantity Is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
Shooting pains! like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week a'ter takisg it. I'ead the label.
l( the stomach is foul cr bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first.
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you ca.i get. and enough of it
Dose, one tablespoonful in water a/ bed-
tuue. Soli by all Druggists.
wTryrroraMaaa!8i^>ra^raa«nnilll^llll
" Cut Down Expenses."
A woman knows what a bargain
really is. She knows better than a man.
" BATTLE AX " is selected every time
by wives who buy tobacco for their hus-
bands. They select it because it is an honest
bargain. It is the biggest in size, the
smallest in price, and the best in quality,
i The 5 cent piece is almost as large as the
3 10 cent piece of other high grade brands.
jgrnrcg
* 'The Quality of Experience"!
Pay* $100—you have a Columbia-
result of 19 years' experience. J
Pay less—you have experiment, at your «
expense—the result of competing *
♦
doubtfulness. ♦
More
Columbias eacii successive year. «
*
Catalogue of Truth, free at Columbia agencics
—by mail for two 2-cent stamps.
- t
Pope Mfg. Co ♦, Hartford, Conn.
t
*
«
*
*
«
4
EDUCATIONAL.
DRUGS.
THE UNIVERSITY CF NOTRE DAME,
A complete stock of dhugb for eale cheap.
roico Ilnoo.oo.
Uoud reason for telling.
nlpmrtitii. Th" I0*t
IA < alalasnra rrtit Fi
. nuuiuibLV, c. . i
ACADEMY OF THE SACRED HEART
M I JOMKI'll. tlO.
Our Native Herb
^AGENTS.^
We
a null I
to all
id make
Wjmhlugfn
Academy Sacred Haart
n r. nnrfitfs of hones! people,
Koo.1 agent*, or who are affllct-
wo will seu<l free "The
fkly l*osl" newspaper. 1 rear.
* j THE AL0NZ0 0. BLISS CO..
a! • r-'' For'fur- I ®«a<ral WeiUra •
Til £ ei'i'fcHiuii 1110-1411 lela llmt, KauuGtti, I*
* laitph. Ma, rrtadpal OBm, Wasklaftaa, D. f,
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, August 28, 1896, newspaper, August 28, 1896; Chandler, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115304/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.