The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, June 18, 1897 Page: 3 of 8
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A St. Louis girl baby born during
the great wind storm last summer has
been Christened "Cyclonic." A child
with such a windy name ought to haye
ao trouble with the colic.
In the garden it is important to keep
the ground well occupied. As soon as
one crop is matured, clean off the
ground and plant another.
A Kansas City woman, who is going
abroad this summer, will visit the tomb
of Adam if she can find it. She wants
to place a flower on the graye of a mna
who followed the advice of his wife.
A good deal of "process butter" is
being sold in Eastern cities. This is
poor butter churned over in sweet
milk, and doctored in a variety of ways
so as to take some of the badness out
of it.
A Stout liarkhone
Is as essential to physical health as to political
consistency. For weakness of the back, rheu-
matism, and disorders of the kidneys, the tonic
and dietetic action of Hostetters Stomach Hitters
is the one thing needful. The stomach is the
mainstay of every other organ, and by in vigor
ating the digestion with this preparation, the
spinal column, and all its dependencies, are syni
pathetically strengthened. The dyspeptic and
bilious will llnd it a pure vegetable stimulant and
tonic.
If the soil isn't as rich as it should
be, watering the plants with weak li-
quid manure will help materially to
secure a more vigorous growth.
Piso's Cure fur Consumption is the best
of all cough cures.—George W. hot/.
Fabucher, La., August 20, 1895.
Good machinery properly used will
materially lessen the cost of putting
up the hay crop, and a less cost of pro-
duction means a better profit.
Ilall's Catarrh Cure
Is a constitutioual cure. Price, 75c.
WHITE TOPAZ.
Strawberries are becoming cheap
enough in Kansas City to supplant
rhubarb.
Butter may look nice, have the cor
rect grain and salted to taste, still if
it lacks flavor or has a bad flavor it
sells at reduced price, if at all. It is
the fine flavor in butter that all seek
after.
The editor of this paper advises his
readers that a free package of Peruviana,
the best kidney and liver cure on earth, will
be delivered FREE to any sufferer, if writ-
ten for promptly. Pf.ki viana Remedy Co.,
2Sti 5th St., Cincinnati. Ohio.
A New York judge has wisely decid-
ed that the wife and not the husband
should control the servants.
a
PITS l'ermanentlyUunMi. No fits or nervousness after
first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer.
Send for FREE S'J.OO trial bottle and treatise.
R. H. Kline. Ltd.,931 Arch St., Philadelphia, F
Grapes thrive best in well-cultivated
and well-drained land.
No-To-Bsc for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak
neu stroug, blood pure. 50c. II, All druggists.
Raise all the feed you can for your
cows at home on your own ground. In
that way you can get good money for
the crops themselves.
| $22.iS
For What?
A First Class Ticket from at
most all points in Knn*us. Okla-
* homa and lndiau Territory to
v California.
When?
At the time of the Christian En
(flavor Convention in July.
By What Route?
The Santa Fe.
j The same rate will also apply to
Intermediate points, and in the
' reverse direction.
Open to Everybody.
Beautiful Stones to H Seen at th<
Diamond Palace.
Every day in the week and every
hour in the day one can see crowds
around the show windows of THE
CHICAGO DIAMOND PALACE. The
cause of it all is the now widely known
White Topaz. The White Topaz, or
carbonated diamonds, have come to be
recognized as the nearest thing on
earth to genuine diamonds, so near in-
deed is it that the proprietors of the
DIAMOND PALACE do not hesitate to
place real diamonds in their windows
amidst their display of White Topaz,
and allow the public to pick them out
at the selling price of the Topaz.
The latter stones have all the lovely,1
brilliancy of the diamonds, sparkling
steadily and with wonderful fire. The
thousands of these stones in the win-
dows forms one of the most gorgeous
displays and has proven an attraction
which is one of the features of Chi-
cago.
In order to find out the advertising
medium best suited to their business,
this enterprising concern offers to send
a genuine White Topaz to all those
who will cut out and send them their j
advertisement, which appears else-
where in this paper, .together with 25c
in stamps.
THE DIAMOND PALACE, like all
successful institutions, has many imi-
tators, who endeavor to sell cheap
lhinestones and other pastes claiming
they are topaz. We caution the pub-
lic to be careful, as THE DIAMOND
PALACE, American Express building,
Cliicago, are the sole importers of these
stones.
At a High school commencement in
a Missouri town the other day the
three leading essays bore these highly
original titles: "Beyond the Alps Lies
Italy," "Night Brings Out the Stirs''
and "Napoleon and the Sun of Auster-
litz."
the
New land is best adapted to
growth of berries.
If it is necessary to water the plants,
soak the ground well around the roots. |
.
One good soaking* a week is better than
a sprinkling every day.
The unique spectacle of four genera-
tions of the same family being togeth-
er in a church, each in a special capac-
ity, is reported from Tockholes, Eng- i
land. The vicar performed the cere- !
mony of christening a child named
Henry Catterall, the child's father was
officiating as organist. his grandfather
joined in the musical service as choris-
ter and his great-grandfather occupied
a seat in the church warden's pew.
In setting out a tree, save some of
the top soil especially to put around the
roots.
COMPETITION.
Senator O. II. Piatt Makes Somo Novel
Points for Hallways.
By Senator O. H. Piatt: Competition
in railroad transportation differs from
every other kind of competition in the
world. I do not say that it is not to be
judged by the same legal rule, but I
say in essence and in character it is
different from competition in any oth-
er business. In the first place, it is j
not competition in trade. The railroad |
buys nothing of the producer; it sells
nothing to the consumer. It simply I
carries—it distributes; that is all. Con-
tracts in restraint of trade may oper- j
ate the same with reference to con- j
tracts between common carriers as
between merchants; but the two kinds
of business differ in character. It dif-
fers from every other business, because 1
whatever the result of the competition 1
and the rivalry the railroad stays. Ri-
cardo is a grea' advocate of the doc-
trine that competition is the life of |
trade; but he writes from a banker's
standpoint. In banking, capital is cir-
culatory. If competition drives it out
of the banking business it may go into
the manufacturing business. But the
railroad stays, whatever the result of
| competition.
If "competition and the survival of
the fittest" means the physical removal
1 of the weakest, the pretended law Is
; inapplicable, for you cannot remove
i the railroad. When its iron rails are
' laid down from point to point, there
t it stays; and however many companies
may be bankrupted by competition,
there stands another company ready to
take its place and to be bankrupted in
| turn. It is not so on the highways,
i It is not so on the water-ways. If two
rival coach proprietors disagree and
one is bankrupted, the coaches can go
elsewhere and run on other roads. If
rival steamboat lines disagree and by
competition one is bankrupted, the
boats can get elsewhere. The world is
full of free highways, but the railroad
is not a free highway.
The poor are taxed and the rich are
little burdened.
The youngest school teacher in Indi
ana, if not in the United States, is a
12-ytfar-old boy who is very likely to
spoiled by the big girls in his school.
All trees that have roots or tops
bruised or mangled should be discard-
ed.
The
Sr. J.oris, Mo.. June 11 —This city
sweltered yesterday under a tempera-
ture which the government's ther-
mometer called S7 degrees, but which
every wilted citizen stands ready to
declare was considerably hotter. For
the last two weeks the weather has
been abnormally cool, and a sudden
chance to a street temperature of over
80 degrees, has caused discomfort.
Samuel Steakey, a laborer, was pros-
trated by the heat while he was work-
ing, and was taken to the hospital.
His condition is serious.
Try to Dodge Investtffatlou.
Washington, June It.—The mem-
bers of the committee on contingent
expenses of the Senate have agree!I to
report adversely the Tillman resolu-
tion for an investigation of the alleged
speculations in sugar. It is not known
when the report will be made to the
Senate. The report, it is understood,
wjll go fully into the merits of the
question, showing such investigations
as that proposed to be generally bar-
ren of results.
Women always hate a rival more
than an unfaithful lover.
A man named Hash has been ap-
pointed steward in the Virginia peni-
tentiary. There is something about
his uame which suggests that he is thu
right man in the right place.
No fruit repays judicious pruning and
trimmiug better than the pear.
When a day or base ball game starts
out wrong, it is hard to recover.
SITSIMKR CAKE OF BLANKETS.
Blankets which have boeu used all win-
ter, no matter how white, are never cleau,
and should be washed before put! ing away.
Many housekeepers satisiy themselves by
shaking and airing their blankets rather
than risk spoiling them in washing. But
this is a mistake, for if tho work is prop-
erly done no shrinking will take place, and
the fleecy soft appearance may he retained,
as well the color, for years. Tho necessary
thing in washing blankets is to have plenty
of soft water and good pure snap. Inferior
soap is really the cause of the damage
done woolen goods in washing. It hardens
the fibre and yellows the fabric. When
ready to begin the work shake the blan-
kets free of dust, lill a tub half full of hot
water. Dissolve a third <>t a cake of Ivory
Soap in it Put one blanket in at a time.
Dip up and down and wash gently with
the hands. Never rub soap on blankets,
or wash them on the washboard After
the blankets are clean, rinse in warm water
until free of suds Add a little blueing to
the last water. Shake and squeeze; tnen
hang on the line until dry. l ake down,
fold, lay under a weight for a day or two,
and pack securely in a box and coyer.
blankets thus washed v ill retain their
original freshness as well as wear three
times as long as if put away soiled year
, after year. Eliza It Pakkeu.
Baron Krupp, the great ironmaster
of Germany, carries evidences of hia
trade with him when he goes calling.
His cards are made of iron, rolled so
thin that they arc said to be a gre^'
success for social use. / -
Chautauqua Assembly, Island Park
Winfield, Kansas, June 15 to 25, 1897.
One fare for round trip from points in
Kansas and Oklahoma located not more
than 250 miles from Winfield. Tickets
on sale June 15 to 20 inclusive. Agent
Santa Fi Route will be glad to supply
additional particulars on application.
Send for descriptive hooks and
detailed information to any agent
of the Santa Fe Route, or to the
undersigned.
W. J. BLACK, G. P, A,, #. T. 4 S, F. Ry. *
Room 144, 9th & Jackson Sts , Topeka, Kan. M
Hayes estate at Fremont, O.,
has been compelled to pay damages in
the sum of $7,500 to a Mrs. Smith, who
was injured in a runaway caused by a
mastiff belonging to the Hayes family.
A St. Louis man named Darwin stole
some sausages from a butcher shop the
other day, but the butcher caught him
and obtained the missing links. Dar-
win is now ruminating on the descent
of man down in a dingy cell under the
Four Courts.
So far as can be done, make the
change of pastures with the stock after
a good rain. The fresh grass will be
cleaner and will taste sweeter.
Try letting cucumber vines run on
low trellises of woven wire fencing,
inclined at a slight angle, that may
be raised or lowered if desired, to al-
low cultivation and the application of
fertilizers and moisture. This will
make gathering more convenient and
double and lengthen the yield.
line on hard-milking
kicker can be trained out of
fe is to short and too
on a hard-milking
Fatnl Benzine Explosion.
Pueblo, Col., June 14.—Mrs. John
Cameron, wife of the superintendent
of the Valley coal mines, and a prom-
inent society lady of this city, was
fatally burned by the explosion of a
can of ben/.ine with which she was
cleaning furniture. Her son, 18 years
of age, was badly burned in trying to
save her.
Philadelphia took nearly 100 years to
build that Washington monument.
The people there think it was done
with expedition and promptitude.
Mrs Win*low' ^tiling Syrup
For rhiMr.'n «.• •thinit. ;oft.-n<tho miun.n.'.l'i' ".'tnlUm-
uti III. inlays I>ain. uur.w wl"J colle- coot* a bottle.
We draw the
cows. A
it or tied; but li
precious to waste
cow.
One Fare for Kound Trip l'lus IS'- .00.
Travel is a joy to those who know
how to get the most out of it. Luxur-
ious Pullmans, comfortable chair cars,
modern aud day coaches, regular and
appetizing meais at diuing-rooms or ill
dining-cars, in connection with short-
1 est distance and time between given
points, makes traveling a pleasure at
any season ot the year 1 his is what
you pay for and get when your ticket,
reads via Santa Fe Route. National
ICducatioual Association, Milwaukee,
Wis., July 6 to 6, 1807.
This is a good month to plant late
cucumbers to pickles, set out late ce.-
ery plants for winter use, and to plant
sweet cora for use in the early falL
Educate Yoor Bowels With CascarBts.
Candy Cathartic, oure constipation forever.
lOo. If C. C. C. tail, druggists refund money.
Yellow Journalism In Atlanta.
Atlanta, (la., June 14.—Terrell
Hudson, colored, sentenced to hang at
Decatur to-day for murder, has
been respited two weeks by Governor
Atkinson. Katherine Germaine, an
opera singer, has arranged to witness
It and write her impressions for t.hc
Atlanta Journal.
Look out for a man who says he is a
cynic; he is sure to be the most trust-
ing creature on earth.
ItecAn.se She Wouldn't Elope.
| Pipestone, Minn., June 14.—F. N.
Blivin, of Pipestone, killed himself
i after fatally wounding a daughter of
Frank Weigel, a German farmer living , faal{ a blo(jk frQm A T
in Moody county, 8. D. Rlivins asked
\ the girl to elope with him Upon her
re^t'sa^, the tragedy followed.
Of the 5,554 suicides committed in
Denmark in the years 1845 to H95,
four-fifths were by men, and the favor-
ite months were May and June Three
out of four preferred hanging
One fare for round trip is all you will
have to pay from any A. T. & S. F.
station in Kansas to the Musical Festi-
val and Chautauqua Assembly, Forest
Park, Ottawa. Kansas. From points
in Kansas within 150 miles and from
Kansas City and St. Joseph tickets on
sale June 10 to 25. From points in
state beyond this distance, tickets will
be sold June 12 to 17. The park is only
A S. F. statioa
in Ottawa. Folder and particulars on
Application.
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Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 40, Ed. 1 Friday, June 18, 1897, newspaper, June 18, 1897; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115341/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.