The Edmond Sun--Democrat. (Edmond, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 11, 1895 Page: 4 of 4
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J
SPLINTER WOUNDS.
On bhlpa of War Tlicy Are n (;n ;it Sonne
of Uaiicrr In I hp Men.
The recent war between Jspan and
China has taught the ofll • rs of the
American navy nt least on.' new thing
in the construction of vessels. Thero
will be scarcely any woodwork in the
Oregon, that is rapidly nearing comple-
tion at the 1'niou iron works. This is
due to the fact that there were more
people killed and injured in the naval
battles In the Orient by flying wooden
splinters than by the bullets or explod-
ing shells. Most of the cruisers anil bat-
tleships that took part In the war were
constructed with steel hull ;, and all of
them were more or less protected with
heavy armor plates. The Interior fit-
ting! and furnishings of the quarters
and the deck coverings, however, were
of wood. When a shot pierced a hull of
a vessel and tore through the wood in
the interior of the ship splinters were
sent flying in all directions. In most
cases the shot passed through the ves-
sel without injuring any of the crew,
but the shower of wooden splinters
filled the sick bay and kept the sall-
roakcr sewing up the dead in canvas
Backs for burial. On the battleship Ore-
gon practically no wood will be used.
All the bulk-beads and partitions divid-
ing the rooms In the officers' quarters
ore to be of Iron. No wood will be used
on the decks, but Instead linoleum will
be cemented to the iron deck to prevent
slipping. All the doors will be of iron,
and all those leading to the decks will
be made water-tight.
I'nnUliini; Children,
Moral suasion may do very well for
older children, but I never could ap-
preciate Its powers during babyhood.
I read tbe «xpei lei e n entlj . | a
mother who was a strong believer In
the "Come away, baby; there's a dar-
ling, now do." theory, until her own
little one began to creep about. Like
other babies, he investigated every-
thing within reach, being •• p< (dally at-
tracted by the books which ho could
reach and pull to the floor. For awhile,
the mother patiently replaced the
books and carried baby away. Just as
often he went hack again, until pa-
tience ceased to bo a virtue. Then
theory gave way to something more
practical the mischievous little hands
wero punished and the books were
left in peace.—Womankind.
Mr. IIIrkV Accustomed Awakening.
"How do you manage to wake up so
early every morning" Inquired Hoggs
of his friend Biggs, who goes to work at
ii.
"Alarm cloc k." replied Higgs.
"1 have one, too, but I never hear it
go off."
"I never here mine, either," doclnrcd '
ttlggs.
"Then how in the world do you wako
up?"
"My wife wakes me up every morn-
ing, saying: "For goodness sake, get up
and stop the alarm on that clock! It
will arouse the neighborhood. By the
time I am awake It has stopped."
Foreign consuls in China report an
Increase in the use of injections of mor-
phine as a cure of the opium habit.
IF Aim AMI <; A H DEN.
MATTLRS Oh INTEREST TO
AGRICULTURISTS.
ioine rp-to-Dnle Hint* About. Cultiva-
tion of the Noll uml Yield* Tlieri-of
Horticulture, Viticulture and Flori-
culture.
WRITER In Stock-
man and Farmer,
in describing the
methods of growing
buckwheat, says:
"It is a question
if buckwheat will
pay on all kinds of
soil, and the scorch-
t'auae nf New ttuiis and llllghta. □
A writer In the Rural New Yorker, re-
ferring to his Interviews with Profes-
sor Bailey, of Ithaca, N. Y., says: Now,
the first thing I asked Professor Bailey
was a point that has bothered me for
a long time. "Why do we hear of so j
many new bugs and blights nowadays? I
Every year seems to bring half a dozen (
new ones. Why didn't they show up in j
old tlnieH?" I'll guarantee that many I
readers have asked themselves that !
question. In fact so many new bugs, !
blights and bulletins have appeared
upon the scene that some farmers have •
A FILTER INSIDE YOU
HOW YOUR BLOOD IS KEPT PURE.
Health < <.
dually gone
dentists hav
o give them."
y that the
> things in
work.
Professor Bailey's e
was simple and inter
. J . , ,| I «tratlon, he took the potato beetle-
, ) il>K kuiih of .luly anil | which wv U know. Sixty or moir ><-m a
August are very ( „K0. that wns f,Mllul on] h| t)ll
„ „ harcl ,he ""I1 ! "orky Mountain.,
It wll flourish best in moist weather, wild plain? not hi
The soil here is clayey, with occasional j oslty to wientlflc i
gravelly patches, and on the creek hot - ; number because li
toms black loam, but always a clay sub- j When people begn
soil at various depths. Land for buck- in Colorado, this bi.B
wheat should be of medium richness; if j fondness for the potato \
too rich, will go mostly to straw and | the wild mountain plants
lodge so as to be difficult to cut, besides J the potato fields. The iuc
Sanation of this
living on certain
ig but a great curl-
not fllllng properly. I meant an Increat
"The ground should be plowed In the i spread from one
fore pnrt of June and harrowed after over tho country,
showers until the 4th of July. No dan ' creased food Kiipp
ger of getting too mellow or line. Drill I tunity that spread
In about one bushel to the acre ol tin bad never been
Bilver gray or old-fashioned black hull ■ there would proba
If you sow tho Japanese variety you will any potato bugs
need a little more seed, ns tho kernel J doubt, th- re are dc
Is larger and does not stool so much, now comparative!
food was limited,
to raise potatoes
developed a great
It left
went to
of food
le of insect, and it
field to another all
It was simply nn in-
ly and better oppor-
the bug. If potatoes
grown In Colorado,
bly never have been
In your fleld. No
izens of other Insects
y harmless simply
To make some provision for your physi-
cal health at this season, because ucold
or cough, an attack of pneumonia or ty-
phoid fever may now make you on in-
valid all winter. First of all be sure that
your blood is pure, for health depends
upon pure blooil. A few hot ties • >f Hood's
Sarsaparilla will boa paying investment
now. It will give you pure, rich blood
and invigorate your whole system.
s
SarsapanlSa
Is the One True Blood Purifier.
Hood's Pill*:",'. "V r
\ World's lair! Ilit i ll I M* AWAkl)? " \
imperial;
PERANUM j
fTryitwhen the digestionf
jis WEAK and no TOADi
i seems to nourish. Try it?
rf,en seems impossible to <
?keep FOODS stomach!.?
{ 5oM by DRI'(1(1IST5 EVrRYWMCRI'I J
. John Carl«- .Sin .. New V ork. "
lour KUImyi li i|> Your lllnoil 1'nre
If Tiny Are Well. A Few I >u ts
About lliein, mill How In Mulio
Them Well Wlieu Tliey
Are Sick.
Your blood 1b what nourishes your
body.
New blood Is made every minute.
It goes to the lungs, gets fresh air. and
then passes through the body. In pass-
ing, it deposits new flesh, fat, bones,
etc., and takes up woru out matter.
This worn out matter goes to the kid-
neys. The kidneys filter it out of the
Hood and throw it out of the body.
That is, when they arc well, they do.
Wheu your kidneys ure well, they
act, as perfect filters, to keep your
blood pure. When they ure sick, iliey
act imperfectly. They leave the bad
matter In. Sometimes they take out
the good.
There Is nothing more poisonous than
bad blood.
A proof of this Is rheumatism. It Is
simply a blood-poisoning caused by the
bad matter left in tbe blood by sick
kidneys.
Hrlgbt's disease is the kidneys work-
ing the oth'-r way taking the ^uod
food out of the blood.
Both kinds of kidney sickness arc
dangerous.
Both can bo cured by Dr. Hobb's
Sparagus Kidney l'ills.
One of the most wonderful facts of
our body is this natural fill.in.-ido
us. Our kidneys are very Important
organs. We don't take enough t ire of
them. We are s! k oftener than there
; is any need for. It Is simply because
we take no heed to our kidney.-.
I Sick kidneys show their effects in
many different diseases.
Rheumatism and Brlght's disease
are very common. Anaemia. Neural-
gia, Pain in the Back, Dizzlne Blad-
der Troubles, Gravel, Diabetes. Sleep-
I lessness, Nervousness.
These are only a few symptoms, or
so-called "di.-eases." Back of them all
1 are the sick kidneys.
Once the filters can be made to work,
all these symptoms will disapp ar.
Dr. Ilobb's Sparagus Kldti' y Pills
are made principally from the roots of
the asparagus plant, which has a spe-
cial curative action on tbe kidneys. It
! gives them new life and sir«ngth, it
helps them to do their work as it ought
to be done. It cures their sickness, it
| cleans and renews the filter.
When the kidneys are well you will
feel a great difference at once. Yout
complexion will clear, and your whole
body will ge^ renewed life and fresh-
LOTS OF FUN. After a man has liod thirteen chil-
Hot it Wnnn't i/aite What th« iioyt j <^ren he seldom, stays at home from his
Kxprrtod. ! business to celebrate because the
"That's all right about them British- youngest has just cut a tooth,
ers," said a long-legged western man to , x „ , ;—~—"—-—
a group of reporters, one of whom had| ® as PcoPle 1,ke to h(,,ir secrets,
told a story of how an Englishman had > y . ® the admiration for
been fooled by some Americans on a friends who have never told them
train iu tbe far west by a cry of train any-
robbers.
"Yes, but they don't like the robber
Highest of all in Leavening Power,—Latest U. S. Gov't Report
, business a little bit," asserted the re-
porter.
"I reckon not," admitted the west-
erner, doggedly. "Leastways, after what
I seen and felt I should say there was
one, anyways, that didn't like it over
■ iy."
"What did you do? Scare him out of
a year's growth?"
"Well, no," was the hesitating an-
swer, "1 reckon it wuzn't quite as much
as that."
"Tell us about it," put in the impa-
tient listener.
"It was this a-way," said the western-. >
er, in a tone of semi-sadness. "There I
was about a dozen of us fellers goln'
through Texas in a sleepin' car, and j
the only stranger In the lot was a strap- ;
pin' big Englishman, with a voice on !
him like a bass drum. We got him out '
in the smoker, and it wasn't mor'n [
eighteen minutes till we was loadin'
him up to the neck with stories of train
robbers and that sort of thing. At first,'
he kinder quieted down a bit, because
we didn't tell no kind of yarns but blood,
< iirdlers, but it wasn't long till he had
his second wind, and purty soon he.
was braggin' what he'd do if robbers,
happened to stop any train ho was ou.
"That's Jlsf where we wanted him at,
nnd it wasn't long till we had the Job
^e have noticed that when a man is
approached about advertising, he says i
he will "think about it," or "'see you
again."
ABSOLUTE!# PURE
Suitiiii nn<l Turkey's llulanre.
„.,MUU The 8"l,an ,8 not quite such a fool as
ibe dock and «*.■ .u„ down the river outward our newspapers take him to be I re-
umIm ,,ECV: member Fuad Pasha—the last of Turk-
'"fallible atoiimrhic. ish statesmen- observing to me manv
noalottnr a Stomach Uitt<*ra. If not expert t<> . -r. .
auffer without aid. Ti** Hitter* is tho siaum h y®ar® aE°: Turkey is a chariot to
"''"Ch """ fn'a' E,lrol'™' P""™ ««
hibi'ji, biiliouaneaa. dy - harnessed. When one tries to pull one
•a nnd inactivity ot the way, I flick up the others, who at once
pull the other way. Thus the equili-
luipletely remcuie*
No prayer ever hurts a prayer meet-
ing by being too short.
brium of the chariot is secured.'
As a reckless talker the girl of the
period rivals the parrot.
Unbridled, malicious tongues do as
much harm as unloaded guns.
Too many lawyers
their fees than for their
lab
i bend low—let tall men
Let all m
bend low.
lie saw two beggarsstoal— he so
to beg or steal.
DOING THINGS QUIETLY.
Ilrokcn Neck Sin rcMfully Set.
A few days ago Miss Abbie McCully,
a New York girl, fell out of a hammock
ugbt and broke her neck. The pieces of
shattered vertebrae were deftly re-
i moved and the fracture bandaged. The
I girl is recovering but will always have
a stiff neck.
That lasts till night-that last still
night.
The people should
ember when
i.vcn When the Olil Man Will Kllllug a
Hear He Didn't Want Any Nolje.
From tho San Francisco Call:
"Bear" said Mr. Ottlnger. "Bear?
why, I helped kill a 1,146-pound grizzly eating, that Death keeps his white
Just a week ago at Wawaona. Old Jim horse ready with the harness on in
Duncan, the slayer of ninety-four bears, this weather.
and I, went out on horseback about ten
miles from town after grouse. Wo f«ll r «|irnt in 1'arker'a <Jln«er
ii , .. Ionic I* ni'll Inv■•.-t. It suliduci t>:iln and
walked five or six miles in the hottest I'i-ihk*betteri.. it.. «mi i„.nnr
put up with the conductor and the rest ! weather, and after getting six grouse i
>r more for
dients.
The sycophant finds himself entire-
ly at home in fashionable society.
A "fine Italiad hand" is seen in some
late international engagement.
Women who never went near Worth
are loudest deploring his loss.
The s<
tdal
ndency of the ob-
not interest the astronomer,
foolish fellow who thinks
• cure a distinction.
The Bible makes it
wants everybody who
it out and get right.
clear that God
v. :ig to find
Who
.•er puts up the robe of Christ
l begiven a chance to'do some*
r Christ.
of tho gang to stop the train and skeer
that Britisher plumb to death and back
ag'ln. It was about 11 o'clock at night,.
I reckon, in a mighty lonesome place,
when the train came to a stop and we
and a hundred mosquitoes we thought j To have money often
of turning back. But I was so thirsty j the devil for a master,
that I said: 'Wait here, in the clearing, rf,a
Jim, till I go down the canon to get J dereori'a*' '"*ik
a drink.' I went down about 200 feet y< u have peaccand
tiling foi
Tho longer and stronger the arms of
the wicked, tbo more it will hurt when
fans to have they nre broken.
should ime llln-
iirrly a good exchange
think that to-morrow
i as much as yesterday
to take c
•orkmun toe
This Is th.
igus
lit ard n shot outside. That was a slim | and had to lay sprawling over some
for mo, and I Jumped up and yelled | rocks to get a drink. I only took one Wo alway
' libbers.' So did tbe other fellows, cx- ; swallow when two gunshot* rang out. , never brings us us u
oept two that somehow wasn't around. Startled at the sound 1 rose up and ran 1 takes uw-iv
The next minute a big chap with hit as well as my weight would let me, back —
face masked stepped in where wo wac to the clearing. Puffing and blowing 1 A Inan "ton l,us.v'
and stuck bis gun right at us. I th:o e l j leaned up against a tree and witnessed Illis health is like a \
"|i my hands nnd so ilid tho others, and the strangest sight I ever saw A bis to sharpen ins tools.
we begged the Britisher not to kill any- j pile of fur lay in a heap on the ground, | . , ;
body, but do I ke we done. He was : and the old hunter was just about to . A com,trv "-metory has the fi.liow-
meeker n a lamb, and put his paws up | stoop over It to jab his Bowie-knifo |lng not,c'' "vl'r lh'' "tei "0nly the
llko a baby. lnto ,t when (hQ bund,e roge u „ke n dead who live in the parish are buried
nl ™°lh<-r n,asked man took tho i najsh and let out a blow that sent Jim's , hero."
)lace of tho flist one, while he went musket spinning flftv feet in the air &u i i—i—•
handed* WUh that the,'° was the most exciting RlV
Handed out, all but tho Britisher. I flght I over saw
!hls8n-l'nt0h?,1 a; "Th(' ""nr "P "gain and Dun-
hi Br ?Ler li? IT S", ,<,WC' ■ ca" 1,uri!l)- But Bruin
JS a_g°' .l1"1 hia clothes at th. neck and
Some people never find out that the
Bible is good for anything except a
center-table ornament.
The man who never gives God any
: money will not help the cause much
j by shouting in church.
When Jesus said, Suffer the fttle
children to come," hedidn't mean only
those that were dressed in white.
God is caring for us as tenderly when
pointing out the pit into which we
may fall as when taking us out of it.
Kcrv.- Kef-
_ kirvi Ii , i
up, T wns fe'iic;uc . .
s Is (he effect of Dr. Ilobb's Spar- tbe two masked men went down in a . " , , , k . ,
Kiiin, l'ills on kidney., pile, and on the next lick I Jlned 'em I , "'d a«L' ,b . , l
. ....... | leaned against the tree, too weary from I nnd thrc
NVilliamsport, I'n., Nov. 22, it OH.
Man is the balance wheel of worn
Gosh! Docto, I'm tired of swall
p. K Hne'aGrent
nger afar off, but the
turns a deaf ear to
of tho re-vltallzed kidneys on the im-
pure blood.
With a course of Dr. Ilobb's Spara
gus Kidney Pills you will get new life.
They will cure you when other medi-
cines. which do not reach tho real seat
of disease, cannot help you.
Dr. Hobb's Sparagus Kidney Pills are
meals a da
three
with another feller on top of me, and
the dern Britisher sat flat down on the ! "h''tZtZ.T
accumulation and called for the rest of 1
the gang. Leastwise that was what I
my run and too surprised to go up and
see Duncan slip
around and his feet got tangled in his
up.
If the" Unity la t iitini^ **'>etii
goin' down B® *uro and use that old and well-trlod remedy, MM.
WiMtum's Soothinu syri p for Children Teething.
afterwards heard he said, fer I didn't f.e" #KhtlnB witU the
. l)PAr iltnn* l.lif t lia hnoe'i. ..' ■ > n A.. 4
know anything fer two hours, and we
had to git a doctor for tho first two ho
bear atop; but the bear's tliroat wns cut
from ear to ear. The old man extrl
for sale by nil druggists, price r.Oc. per bit. I thought a mule kicked me anil i ca'flihlms!'" and sliding on the carcass
box, or will l„ sent prepaid to any ad- they told me afterwards they thought ? t0 mo thr0"B> his nose: "Wall,
dress on r#>i plnt nf nrlco ' | f,,v ti>1 „nri', „ ....
elpt of price.
An Interesting booklet, explaining
about the kidneys and their power for
good and evil, pent free on request.
Address Hobb's Medicine Co., Chicago,
or San Francisco.
lightnin' had struck the train.'
"How did he get onto your scheme?"
inquired the reporter.
"Derned if we could ever find out.
I guess he didn't git on; Jlst kinder sus-
my time hasn't come yet. Young
I give you credit for a great deal of
coolness for a greenhorn. I'm glad you
didn t open your mouth In this fracas,
many of these fellows think thoy
•■Cord Gr
Botanical name, Spartlva c.ynosu throughout the entire west. It Is tho
roldes. Steins upright, stout, becoming most common of the slough grasses,
hard and woody, three to seven feet and is of considerable value as a
high, from very large, sealy, perennial hay grass. If allowed to stand
root-stocks; leaves two or three feet too long It becomes woody and
long. Involute, pointed, tough amUrlgld, yields a poor quality of hay, but
rough on tho margins; spikes five to when cut in proper season it is
twenty, usually from one and one-half readily eaten by stock The stems
to three inches long, upright at first, contain a considerable, amount of sue-
but becoming somewhat spreading nt ars, and hence aro quite palatable
maturity; spikelets nearly half an inch though hard and lough.
long, one-fiowered, flattened, sessile
and crowded closely together in two
rows; glumes awn-pointed with ml
nute bristles along the back.
This grass Is common in low places
A Cheeky T.lttlo I^tuib.
picloned and took the chances. He had I have t0 talk when I m a b'ar.1
it|rlit* of Mini. a" advantage, fer we couldn't shoot
A United States district Judge in hira- antl he didn't give us time to do
rkansas instructed a jury that every- j an-v sluggln'."
here except within his own house tho , How did it flually come out?"
"Paw, is there any difference W- Whenever ll.xl's help is needed tho
tween a cold and a influeiizv'."' Christian should believe that <iod is
"if the doctor calls it a cold, the bill ''' " Ih lp.
is about $4. If lie rails it influenza Camphor foe wllli Olynerine.
it's about 8S. The difference is f..;
dollars, my son "—t hicapo Kccord. I Mrs. Mulchy—Sure, Mike must have
If Troubled With Fore Kye* | studied medicine since he wint into
Halve will positively the army-be writes home that he is a
surgent.
Jackson's Indian Iv
euro them. -Tic at all drug stores!
Soino poeple aro confident Iladi
will have to bo enlarged.
Say, .lack: waiting for the moon to
The Rev. Dr. Meredith, a well-known I "J" tho side
clergyman, tries to cultivate friendly vessel), (.rout Scott: 'I i
; relations with the younger members of
I think I swallowed the moon, too.
law requires a man to run away and do j ''0h- flno- When we got to tho next ; his flock. In a recent talk to his Sun- j A swallow may not make
his best to escape from an assailant be- biP town we Pa>d for a banquet in his j day-school he urged tho children to 1 but u fl '
honor, and before davllpht w« ha.i I hi« «v 0 I but og makes a spring.
fore killing him. The judge further i honor, and before daylight we had speak to him whenever they met
said that when assaulted on his own cleaned him out of about $3,500 In a
premises, but outside of his lions
man must show his sense of danger by
efforts to escape before Ills plea that bo
killed his assailant to save himself from
great bodily harm can bo accepted.
This Instruction was handed down
quiet little game of draw upstairs."
Washington Star.
A specimen
dried in the air analyzed as follows:
\\ ater ti.4a; ash 3.81; ether extract 1.13;
crude fibre 36.03; crude protem 4.95; ex-
tract free or nitrogen 47.63. Total ni-
trogen .79; albuminoid nitrogen .58.
a dry season it is better to drill quit-- j p|«
deep, eo the roots will be of uniform This ins
depth and will hold the moisture. It , trees en
will bo easier to harvest the crop if the
land roller Is used once nfter sowing.
When two-thirds of tbe grains nre
brown it Is tlmo to cut, which can be
done best with side-rake reaper, though
the binder can be used, leaving out the
twine, or can be cut with grain cradle.
"After cutting, roll the bundles care-
fully nnd press the tops together, cone
Deludeil or DUIioneat.
It Is common observation that men
ay have much ability and much
from ancient times when weapons of knowledge of certain kinds, with the
assault consisted of knives, bludgeons, j faculty of ready expression which Is so
■words, etc., which an active man had useful to politicians and public men,
some chance of escaping. But It is not without having the power of clear and
applicable to these days of revolvers logical reasoning. They may have per-
and Winchesters, whose bullets no man versltles of Intellect and defects of ! vine" speechless with amazemenV
can dodge or outrun, and the United moral sense, which make them less 1 - r
States Supreme court has sent it to the \ capable of reaching sound conclusions | «ioo Howard, *ioo.
The readers of this paper will be
ased to learn that there Is at least
dreaded disease that sclenc
The next day a dirty-faced urchin,
nmoklng a cigarette and having a gen-'
erally disreputable appearance, accosted !
him In the street with:
"Hullo, doctor!"
The clergyman stopped and cordially
Inquired:
"And who are you. sir?"
"I'm one of your little lambs," replied
the boy, nffably. "Fine day."
And tilting his hat on'his head he
swnggered off, leaving the worthy dl-
Tho richer the ground the less seed : because their food supply limits tho! ''h" k garret. The man than the "plain people," who need only Th
needed. You can sow broadcast, but In | Increase. A borer that works on nn 10 eight years' imprisonment m understand a subject to be about I p,eas
affords another Illustration '? ' "''tained from right In their Judgment of It. fanatics i !!een"able to core in i,. ,
. . - 'str""°n Hie Supremo court an order for new l:ke II,™,. of Missouri, are generally | !E?
instruction. 11ns n-w Instruction de- sincere, but irrational. In brains that the "nlv Positive :-ure n-.w known to
< lares that Wi..'rever a man may lie, If are strong but not wholly sound delu- t'1" fraternity.
ho has a rlrht to be there nnd tf h. , i . i > i . i ' ■ . n constitutional disease
" '; ,, ,. , flf :3 0,1 takp9 a (,eeper hold thiin in thO-s« ; Stltutlonal treatment. Hall's Catarrh
not himself pio\oked tho assault, the, that ar. weaker but more nearly nor- i rure is taken internally, acting directly
law justifies him in standing his ground nial. Are these able and experienced 1 l,P°n blood and mucous surf a res of
and killing his assailant provided the men who formed the nucleus m tho ; thereby destroying the
provable circumstances are such as to Washington silver convention and —«lv.lnK the
formerly worked on i.
decs entirely. It liked apple better,
and as orchards beenme more and more
numerous, this insect left the oak for
the apple, and became a dangerous
pest. That is the way It goes. New
methods of culture, new crops and new-
farm areas give these insects and plant
diseases a new lease of life, and newer
and cash r means of transportation en-
able them to be carried about more
Teacher—Johnnie what is a stratum?
•lohnnie—A stratum is a hen.
Teacher—Didn't I tell you that a
stratum was a layer of anything?
Johnnie—Yassuin. Nain t a hen a
layer of eggs?—National Journal.
Whenever the sons of God come to-
gether the devil comes in the shoes of
a hypocrite.
When we come close to a giant he
often turns out to be only
man on stilts.
"Hanson's
Warranted to cuu
dniKiflft for It. I'l l
The ~
Id condemns a man for nd-
hering stubbornly to his opinion, and
'aurrh being • begins to doubt his slnceritv
'quire
chai
Cupid he
and fashior
is it.
the shivers among rich
bio people.
satisfy a jury t
grounds for be
had reaso
hie
for tho fiasco In which it Bt'tutlon
wero patient strength by building up the i
P$h'
Tie Best
Proof ■ndwlMk.VNI> S'|" 1 F" ls ,v r • w.'ti r
iliohanl^t.t ni. The
hi w rOStllr.L SI.I' KhK la a ri't t rlillnu . 4t. ft-ul
a.ver* th«eniire aii'i i'.i-w.iu-nt uultatlous Don i
nnr a ro.it if tho •• I i.h It „ ' nil,.oV
■UhlMie If-.-. ^.;i I ■ ,\V1 |t-
shaped and sel firmly on the ground. : readily. This Is a reasonable exuluuu
In about a week or more of dry weather ! tlon.
it will do to thresh It is h.titled from j
the field directly to the separator, and
if dry will thresh very easily. Cat.
must be taken not to have many spikes
in the concaves, as the grain cuts very
easily. Most threshermen have a spe-
cial concave having about a dozen
spikes fer buckwheat. The yield !
per acre is anywhere from 8 to |
40 bushels, according to conditions, j
It cau hardly be classed as a
paying crop every season. The j
hot suns' blight and early frosts i
often kill or injure it; one season the •
grasshoppers destroyed the crop, and
heavy rains are a source of waste. A
bushel of dry buckwheat will make |
from 20 to 27 pounds of Hour. After a j
crop of buckwheat the ground is in ,
good condition for the succeeding crop,
ns It will be mellow and generally free I
from weeds.
gi ouiids foi be. lev lug and acted on the result. .1 still deluded on tho subiect of L ?'ork' rho proprietors havf
belief that I he killing was nee.- ,ny , ! .oJIJ, I? falth ,n ,ts ™ratlve powers i
ti) protect Miusili' from irreat t iiiv coinage and its effects. The only offer One Hundred Dollars for
. B 1 ■> alternative supposition is that they are I t,iat 11 fa,,s to cure. Bend f<
A SPECIALTY'
onehari
f run mo |.i icouii'li'r kaniOKU',1nn-
• j' J "ii iir. ftT toeoinelirro wo «i loon.
Iriict lopnr rallron.t fui. junlhotel vnnj
11 J1 ii ln *e taken iner-
, . - 1 mill linve ai iii-t uuJ
«eli' * In ill.,trill. Sore'I lirimt,
tui|>l>'4 ( r « olori il simiN, t i, , ., ,
ouV"iil|« iih" " i,,r' r'j'Sr" - '<' t i 11 ir
out. It Is tin* Secoiiiiut-y Itl.ooii I'oiniiV
J*S"«"te«U,e..re. n. t lt.o m-V, „t,
nat« 0*Mia and riiallen«e 11... for
i*e.if wo full ti
cury, I...It.|,. .i,,t i«h,u
Ti '
nat«« <
ilonal muimiujr. Absiihit,. J'"'*
ui mi in , ,,
807 Slaconkc Teiu|ik>, C'UItAliO, ILL.
i ut out and Hen ti tbU mlterilaniueni.
Spend
a penny
For a postal, write on it
your name, send it to
us for our prices on
Clothing, Furnishings,
and Hats, and
Von Will Save Dollars.
HERMAN A HESS.
Wichita. - Kansas
ROOFING
! . I *i. .
Th. iuill I ill Ij.UI u, til ('.mm ,. Uri.D,,
«'• l>e'aware t , Kan.u i a,. Mo.
Tent in | Im Dulry.
Soniii lather curious resuiia natt
1,1 obtained from n number of recent
tesu of dairy herds In thi: Elgin dis-
trict. rhere hnvo lieen u number of
i reninerles near Elgin which for yoars
have bought milk by the quart and
have had a llabcoek to.t near them.
X\ Itliin a week or two a teat has been
Introduced into one of these nnd the
milk from nearh one hundred patrons
hns been tested with It. Some large
herds where there Is no doubt that the
milk has been taken care of and pure,
test only three and one.tenth or three
and two-tenths of one per cent butter
(at In the milk. A few exceptional
herds test as high as four and two-
tenths butter fal in the milk. It is thus
very plainly demonstrated that these
I 'nrmers have been buying their cows
..anrating for the quantity of milk that they give
A San Luis Oblgpo beau grower gives rather thna Jlui quality. Some cows
an exehange his Idea of bean harvest- notably the Jerseyh, give very r!\h
the beans after j erenm and very poor skim milk The
...... shed their leaves. Instead of Holstelna run rallier to the other ei
leaving them six or eight days exposed treme. that is. very rich skim milk and
.0 the weather, they stioubl be thresh- rather indifferent cream The cm,
ed the second or third day. This is elusion be drawn that
usually done by selecting a piece of 1 the cows with the rich •
smooth, sandy ground and wetting the , better for 'he ereamer\
surface, then putting on a light litter
The Motor '
The autoinc
en found w
eli ma
whe
for i
; they aro I
not honest, and are seeking to derive
some advantage for themselves from a
«i i«-«. policy that would surely be disastrous
already ; to the country.
t in hot
id a.-Hlsthiff nature in doinjr
' " " t much
that they
list of
Toledo. O.
testimonials.
F. J. CHENEY & <
Rold by druRslstH: 75c
Hull's Family Pills, l
etlnii'
fer greatly from exhaustion from
The flr.-t journey in India on a p ■
um carriage has just been made
English army officer. The vehlclt
slsts of a four-wheel. I dog cart,
accomodation for four persons and two
portmanteaux. It travels at a speed of
from fifteen to twenty, miles an hour,
and the cost of pe'ro'eum consumed i9
le per hour. There is no smoke, heat
or smell, and the carriage runs smooth-
ly and without oscillation. Steering
apparatus Is provided and the brake
A inan i
thing to c
1 ' EXCHANGE.
at. gist held a bottle
I find that nonsense nt times la | nose, nnd he was
an singularly refreshing.—Talleyrand.
n. Hardin must think that Kentucky
th platform la a merry-go-round.—Toledo
nt to a drug sto
e a headache.
of ha
o for Kome-
Tho drug-
tshc
•arly overp<
by its pungency. As soon ns he re-
covered he began to rail at tho drug,
gist. "Hut did it not help your head-
Love makes the world so round,but It the apothecary. "Help
♦ ill not make the eligible young men my headacho!" gasped the man: "I
«o round.—Puck. ! havn't any headache; it's my wife that
As a last resort In her desire for no- h°s the headache."—Ex.
torlety Zella Nlcolaus night pose ns a 1 I ~—
Holmes victim.—Washington Post When a man stops s,n„kln?, and bo-
It might be as well to remark paren- g'°S h" 'eeU m'Khty shecPi"h'
I nrequited affection, as a rule, is a
misfortune rather than a fault.
^ ou ean lead a man anywhere by
the nose of his self esteem.
A woman's smile is a good thing to
wear armor against.
The ordinary man never knows he ia
ordinary, just as the great man never
his | knows he is great.
'1%
mf
W/lk
KNOWLEDGE
Brings comfort and improvement nnd
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet*
ter than others antl enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world's best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas-
ant to the ta>te, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative: effectually cleansing the system*
dispelling colds, headaches and levers
and permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profes.-ion, bccaiiM- it acta on the Kid-
neys. Liver and Bowels without weak-
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-
gists in 50c and £1 bottles, but it is man-
ufactured by tho California Fig Syrup
Co. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute if ollercd.
*THE KINQ CURE OVER ALL FOR
power Allows of stoppage Within tbe thetically that beer and the bicycle do A man with a future isn't as inter-
distance of a yard. There was great
excitement among the natives. The
Indian coolie has hardly yet become ac-
customed to the sight of a bicycle, but
when the dog cart was seen dashing
along without any signs of motive
power, and the occupants were ittinq
quiet,> lit thrir c;i.e. he w« convinced
not mix.—Philadelphia Press,
Don't criticise a woman unless you
are sure that you will never want to
marry her.—New York Evening Sun.
RELIGION AND REFORM.
I esting as a woman wiflh a past.
I If you ask a boy how his boil 1s, no
j will take off the bandage and show
you.
of straw and driving from thre
ten horses abreast over the ground. | Graded
describing a circle all the time. After
the horses have thoroughly packed the
ground the straw Is raked off and the
floor is leveled with a large mall, then
swept with a broom nnd allowed to
stand a couple of days, when It Is ready
for use. and Is nearly as bard as a
wood floor. This floor is usually about
fifty feet in diameter, although many
nre much larger. The beans aro then
hauled to the floor to the depth c? about
three feet, and the horses put on the
same as when building the floor. Tbe
vines have to be turned a couple oi I APP,e
earn would bo
business, and
rows with the rich skim milk
do best for the milk supply.
' ourse, run between
these two extremes.
But the Importance of a farmer
testing every cow he buys cannot be too
strongly urged. It is not quantity but
quality that Is needed for the creamery
A moderate sized cow is better than a
large one and the farmer gets more
butter fat from n ton of hay, as a rule
fed Into a small cow, than he does from
a ton of hay fed Into a large cow. Milk
Reporter.
Some peoplo imagine that ns soon ns
John G. Woolley Is prominently men- | they get married, they must kiss in
- line from the evil oue, antl might tloned as the probable candidate of tho j publie.
any moment go up in a flash and a prohibition party for president In 1896. I
St. Louis Uloln General llooth held a Salvation Army I( "™ n expects to amount to nny-
eervice In the King's Gardens, Copen- "m,fr' he mu8t aooomt,llsh 14 in P"e
j hagon, nt which thero was an attend- I °' llar<* luc'il
i Pennsylvania ance °' 6.000 people. |
low threaten! II,. An S6-ye r-old missionary In Texar men nro beginning to re-
Of Pennsylvania, making his report of a recent month'
atiug up the cows' i work, laments that owing to bad weath- |
er he was able to preach only 31 times.
t SCIATICA is
cloud
Democrat.
Milk I u in in i>
A milk famine
northern porllou
Grasshoppers are
food ami Texas Hit
i time on their hands.
eating
un lownsnip aie unable to get j and girls found help and situations jv U8eless
thrqugh the Anchorage Mission of '
Chicago, where 2,000 lodgings were | No woman should give
Drain Food. -Apples are
times and shaken up, then tramped now recommended by many physicians
•gain, when they will \w clean. The 8 brain food, because mey contain a
beans are screened by throwing them Quantity of phosphoric acid and are
up against the wind. They are usu- digested. When eaten at night
ally put in sacks of eighty pounds each, little time previous to retiring
And sell by the pound, the price rang- ,he>' ",e "all> to excite the action of
ing from one and one-half to four cents ,,vei aD(l sleep.
according to kind'and quality. The
— -MMMMWImt]
half the supply they ought to have
this time of tho year. A milk and
cream dealer drove thirty miles and,
outside of those with whom he has con<
traets, he could uot get a pint of cream.
At Lenoxftlle the ortaniery is onij
doing one-tenth of the business It ha*
capacity for. becnuae It can't get th
milk. A few of the farmers have al
ready gone to feeding grain, and thai
helps the milk supply some. An agri-
culturist named .Morgan, in the Welsh
s dried currants.
to grief;
let her her keep her hair frizzed, and
Jewesses of St. Louis have formed the everything may come around all right.
Sisterhood of Personal Service, a charlt. ■
able organization which will care for Nearly all women recite these days,
poor of their own denomination They will simply have to quit it; the
"You can take tliat soap
right back and change
it for Clairette Soap.
I would not use any
other kind."
Every woman who has
and educate their children.
The government of Belgium, alarmed !
>y the ravages of tho liquor traffic, !
as ordered that In all school-rooms a
knows it is without an equal. Sold everywhere. Made only by
The N. K. Fairbank Company,
St. Louis.
southwest portion of San Luis Oblsno n"'1' ,s " ' nth!
j county Is devoted almost entirely to
| this .TOP, um! the M. 1,1 r„u, (ron, ten I . ..'ut L HuhurToMir,
I O foit> sacks per acre, and good bean Whose p itui ,\. ,.,i
land readily Hells for ^
i nth
to $300 per
settlement, has twelve cows which Pr'n^®d placard shall he displayed de-
ought to give nearly ten quarts apiece tailing the injurious effects of alcohol. '
to a milking, nnd he milks all or them A missionary preacher records the i
In one ten quart pall, and that holdj fact that a young woman school teacher,
all the milk. with a salary of $1,000 a year, is living !
ilk. i t kV.lr~.ii aT on hftIf of il and *ivin* the other half !
lim ' ' " ' the support of a missionary iu
Lliiu .smith, a good-looking young China.
woman, who. when arraign I in Brook-
lyn, tho o.'her day. gave her name as
In Iftdll <
Rnd In China pieces of silk.
The old Obt
gold
°j::: it m currenor, z
I Ilinped llks kuivfs uuo mining tools.
lentoi
by ,1 ilatlre Lu
Jail for
Iu 1S12 all Christian teachlug was
prohibited In ludla. Now the govern-,
persisted In bugging and kissing all the
tall men whom she met on the strests.
8h# ment. in appreciation of missions, gives
large sums and valuable lands for thd
erection of hospitals and the forward-
I- mr. "11 til. Ml re.8. , , ,
Tbev objected and her arrest followed, g of edu<,a,lon 30(1 nilsslons.
i are shy enough as it is.
dr. J. c. ayer's
Highest Awards
Cherry Pectoral
At the World's Fair.
'l'lio remedy
for coughs
nnd colds.
PARKER'S
H AIR UA I.SAM
laxurtant arowth.
. j.iiia to fipstor* Orur
.Hair to l<s YnuUtful^ Color.
ml SI "
tf
Fiensioi^
^8^ccoasfiil|v Pi
IjralulMt
llv Proseoutos CIjiIma.
ISa.l.iiitlic l mg vkiiiia, at t j tiuo«.
MINERAL 1 • • ' ■ ' r Iiii'Mt Inc fnlil or • llTfr or«, lo«l
a<tiir.■ * >i. n. i i m, r , ii, • ...itillusion,Cons.
PATENTS '
v v.. wiiiiiTA-voi.. a, ^o. 41.
| hmi AiiHWiiinj; \1l\tTilH0111n1i1 I'lrasn
I 31 rntlon Tlili faper.
fUn.l tor "I'M tar*
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Edmond Sun--Democrat. (Edmond, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, October 11, 1895, newspaper, October 11, 1895; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc141942/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.