The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, August 24, 1894 Page: 3 of 4
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A DETROIT W ILDER,
HE TELLS A REMARKABLE STORY
OF HIS LIFE
(1MB TI, DtlBDtl Atlllr IOKTT
^ SAKS AGO.
L..I t'ln1! Btperltntc Worth? HeHoo.
Attention.
(From tbo Detroit Evening \>ws )
Awry Gratiot Avenue, far from
• he din mid turmoil of the business
-entre, there are many attractive
tomes. The intersecting: streets are
*Ide. clean ami shaded by larjre leaf
Covered trees, and the people you meet
Ire typical of industry, economy and
finest toil. There arc manv prettv
residences but none more inviting- in
•ts neatness and homedikc comfort
<h«n that of Mr. |.evi Klsey. the well-
known builder and contractor, at 74
Mowin street just off Gratiot. Mr. K1
*ey is an old resident of Detroit, hav-
ing moved here about forty years ago.
He has erected hundreds of houses in
different parts of tjie city, and points
with pride to such buildings'as the
Newberry A MeMullan and ( arapaw
bine Us in which he displayed his abili
My as a superintendent. •
"I have seen Detroit grow from a vil
fngr to a city." he observed yesterday in
conversation with the wj-it :r. ' and I
Ion 1 thinU there &"<c mam towns in
\merica to day equtvl to it in point of
beauty. Uknow almost everybody in the
it)* and nil incident which recentlv
happened in my life has interested ail
my friends.
•"It is now about eight years ay®
since I w as stricUcn down with mf
tirst case of illness One cold, bluster
ing day I was down town and through
my natural carelessness at that time
I permitted myself to get chilled right
through. When I arrived home thai
evening I felt a serious pain in ray left
leg 1 bathed it that night* but by
morning I found it had grown worse.
In fart it was so serious that I sent foi
my family physician, and he informed
me that I was suffering from varicose
vein* Mj leg- swelled up to double
its natural size and the pain increased
in volume. T he agony was simply rw
ful. I was laid up and never left my
bed for eight weeks. At times 1 felt
as though I would grow fra/itie with
pain My lep wrfs bandaged and was
propped up in the bed at an angle of °.<!
degrees in order to keep the blood
from flowing to my extremities.
I had several doctors attending mr
but I belie\ v. my own judgment
helped me better than theirs. After a
siege of two months I could movf
around, still I was on the sicU list end
had to doctor myself for years. I wai
never really cured and suffered any
amount of anguish.
"About two years ago I noticed an
article in the Kvening News about ni\
friend Mr. Northrup. the Woodward*
\venue merchant. In an interview
with him he stated that he had ut-ei*
Dr. \\ illiamt I'inU Pills for Pale Peo*
pie and that they cured him. I knew
him ver\ well, having built his house
on Woodward Ave . and I thought I
would follow his suggestion. I must
confess I did so with marvelous sue
• ess h rom the time I began to take
the Pink Pills I felt myself grow ing to
be a new.man. They acted on me like
a magical stimulant. The pain de-
parted and I soon was us strong and
•healthy as ert-r. Before trying the
Pink Pills I hnd used any amount of
other medicines without any notice-
able benefit. Hut the Pills cured ine
•and I was m\ If again
W hen h person finds himself re
lieved and enjoying health he is
apt to expose himself again to another
attaek of illness. Some three months
ago I stopped taking the Pink Pills,
and from the day 1 did so I noticed a
chat re in my condition. A short time
s * i renewed mj habit < f taking
thtm with the Mtmo beneficial results
which met me formerlv. I am again
nearly as strong as ever, although I
am a man about .*•< years of age. I
tell you. sir. the Pink Pills are a most
Wonderful medicine and if they do as
well in other cases as they did in mine
they arc the best in the world. 1 freely
recommend them to any sufferer."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain in
a condensed form, all the elements
necessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing specific
for such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
partial paralysis. St. Vitus' dance, sei
atiea. neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous
headache, the after effects of la
grippe, palpitation of the heart pale
aivl sallow complexion, all forms of
weakness either in male or female
Pink Pills are sold b\ all dealers, or
will be sent post paid on receipt ol
price. (.V> cents a box. or six boxes for
they are never sold in bulk or
by the 100) h\ addressing" Dr. Will-
iams' Medicine Co . Scjiencetady. N \
Little Kt lie I--Johnny took mv ha
nana.
Mother Johnny, what do v oil mean.'
Little Johnny It was all in the
game, mamma 1 said, "Let's play
Hroadwav."' and she said. "All right
and then she got a table for a banana
stand, and then I was a policeman and
walked past, Oood News.
Hkrptiral.
Well, said the man who tried to
he philosophical, "there's always room
at the fop you know.'
"I've heard so. Hut if the weather
Weens up I'm looking for the thermom-
eter to furnish proof to the contra'- \
Detrnit Kree Press.
I'"«| pniinl
Kobbie, did ton ask (Jod to ma I
n* a bet ter bo\
Robbie I will next month.
"Why not now?"
What s the us" when the water
us' right for sw immin
had your picture,
•eli'.' Have to pay
l;ri(f(fs I MM'
Th«* Spooler th
anything'.' .
Griggs The editor wanted me to
pay f'O, but I refused. Then he want
ed me to take lftO copies, but I would
not do that.
Briggs What did you do''
Griggs I lent him *1 -New York
Herald.
lUlf iifrt It lie.
lie I love you. I know that I am
uot all that I ought to be
^he Y cs. everybody has told me
that—N Y World
IN THE MOONLIGHT.
A n-nmhutl Coari-Mnrtlat Condemns tn
Heath, Hut lt Victim Eccnpti.
A tent on a knoll--a sentinel
inarching to and fro - a flag with its
staff stuck in tho oarth. That was
corps headquarters. Tho general
xvas wit a in, too busy except to try a
spy.
W ho is it0" he demanded, as ha
looked up with a frown
"Captured as a spy, sir."
"W ho are you:'"'
••George Johnson." .
"'•If what place?"
"Charlotte county, sir.'
"W hat are you doing here?"
"t >n my whv homo.* I have been
over to Amelia court house "
"You are a d d spy! You have
been trica and convicted! Major
Jordan, soj to it that he is shot
within fifteen minutes? Wo can't
bother to hang him'"
"Yea, sir. About faro! Forward,
march! You men stick clo o to him
till I can detail a firing party!"
Tho man* was white-fa ed, but
dutnk Ho casts his eyes around
him, liUe one who wonders if he is
not dreaming Tenfs, cannon, mus-
kets. sabres the monster of war
jingling his spurs around a hundred
baleful campfires. Pity? No! Mer-
cy? No' Not even au investigation
to prove the truth or falsity of his
statements. Ilad ho been discov*
e nd in camp ho might oven have
been sent to Washington and given a
fair trial, but wo had cut loose from
the camp. No trial, n"o jury, no do-
lay One single mail had adjudged
him guilty and said that he musk die.
"1*all in! Forward, march! Halt!"
It was the firing party coming up
six inon and a sergeant who had
b'en taKcn from their cainpfires and
their nippers. As the sun wont
down the moon showed herself and
one could almost count the loaves on
the braneiies above.
•vorward. march! Column right!
<'olnrun left!"'
"That way!" said tho major, as he
pointed to tho west and turned on
his heel.
Two of us led ihe man In advance
We halted at a spot not 20) feet
from headquat tei s. The six men
wore brought into line, and we step-
ped back and loft the prisoner alone.
Not a word of protest, not a word of
entreaty, not a denial. Whit®-facod,
hollow-eyed and dumb terror show-
ing in every lino of his face, the
ma* 11 i'l not ap|f«i to e\. n l catlie.
••Order arms! Load! Curry arms!"
I he men bent fop.ard as though
looking at the soldiers, scarcely ten
feet away, but I saw that his look
went i-ver and beyond 111• 141
"Sure work, now! Aim*
I ho next order would have senl
the tillcts crashing into his breast,
hut it •was not given. Just as tlx*
word trembled 011 tho sergeant's lips
the Miu'i threw up his hands and fell
at full length on his back
"Dead'1' ipieried the sergeant.
"Y9a, dead," replle 1 1 ho surgeon,
who had been summoned.
• W hat killed him?"
"Ter or. • (Jet spades and lui y
him "'
Three spades throe soldiers
one g" avo a dea l man covered in.
never to be heard of again by friend
or foe! In a week* no inau can
point out his grave.
"Six bullets saved and a spy
under ground!" laughed the diggers
as thoy returned to their camp-fires.
Who knowsJ Who will over know'1
The drumhead court mart ial buries
its v ietims and forgets that the}
over lived.
Mnkltu n I'tiHti re.
Tho \oung gent from Bo.ton had
gone West to grow up with tho coun-
try. and as an incidental to that
growth he had taken a position n
waiter in a Gulch restaurant, say-
ihe Fret Press, Yet tho dignity and
culture of the place of his nativitv
hedged him about, and, as far as h< ,
could, he insisted upon • the proper
recognition of it. One day a terror
of the plains came in to feed, and he
spotted tho Bostoniau
Say, waiter." he began.
•I beg your pardon.' interrupted
the Hubster, "I am not a waiter, sir
I a n a functionary of-
'Hio terror yanked a gun out of bis
bell in a manner that ended the sen
tenco abruptly.
•Oh, you#aro,v he said, with fine
sarcasm; "well, if you ain't back
here in two minutes with a feed fer
mo and ray paid .or. you'll bo a dc
functionary. Now git,' and the cul* .
lure of Boston got
A Cause of \|;re i«l>ln !M l:ulle«.
Yillage Hotcl-Krepe so you
think It's queer so man; ladies fall
sick iu ti'# small pla'o. do you '
stranger Yes •
Yiltago Hotel Kcoper -Then you
haven't seen the new doctor lie's
the handsomest man in >• von coun-
ties. < hicago Mccord
\ Cottatrs an I I Hilln« 1 \i -.
Practical Aunt Do \ ou think you
are qualified to become the wife of a
poor man®
8w^et Girl Oh. yes, It's all flxcd>«
\\ n are to 'ive in a cot tage, and I
know how to mako cot/age puddiii"
l.ife
Mo Spokn IIip 1 ml li
I rlend What dId he -ay to >ou
whe^i ho proposed Mi-s Box -lie
said life without 1110 meant nothing
Friend lie was sincere in tiiat
That's just what his possessions
amount to^ -llarlem l.ile
* Tli« I ump IIIr«l.
Some people call Hie stormy p.-tn
the "lamp bird " If is mo oily that
tho tishernien of M Kilda stick a
wick in tho mouth of a dead apeel,
men, light it, and it burns for au
hour.
N ol fnr 1 lie W or III
Fond Mother Now, there's a bah
for.you! Bashful Bachelor, ^nath
embarrassed -Oh, good I.ord. real!
1 can't accept. W hat in the world
\n In llrxtlon I ti« lie II.,.I
asked tho long-haired young man
"I don't know for sure," ropl ■ : i
• •k i'i
•
\ lltfll.l v W It III III R.
'
my feet at la-.;.
i ItrlllH — Wfl • i a . .mi don'I
let him see tbein or you won't keep
him long.
FARM DEPARTMENT.
USEFUL INFORMATION FOR
AMERICAN FARMERS.
S«l*ntlS«i Mflhodi of Managing th«
Modern Fnrin and OanUn -l.lv*
Stork. Ton I try, M lry, Apiary and
Orrharil
I'llli H<>'• Milk Trade.
Chicago's milk trade is considered
one of the small items in the city's
commerce and yet it is one of those
small things that go to show the great-
ness of the city, says a writer in Chi-
cago Kvening Post, Only a mighty
metropolis with au immense popula-
tion could consume .*>0,000,000 gallons
of milk annually. Vet this U the
quantity which is delivered here from
the surrounding country. The value
of this milk is not less than* $4,.'>00,o00
at wholesale. It costs the consumers
not less than SI2,000,000 The daily
receipts by rail average in,500 cans of
eight gallons each, or 108.000 gallons,
The supply is never less than 12,000
cans per day. It is never more than
10,000 cans, but the average for the
year round is as already stated. The
aggregate receipts for 1 sm t ,verc in the
neighborhood of 6,000,000 cans, from
the transportation of which the rail-
roade bringing them into the city de-
rived a revenue of about $1.000,000.
This milk was shipped by 3,200 dairy
fanners who owned from eighteen to
twenty-five milch cows each. It re-
quires/our milch cows to make up an
eight-gallon can of milk per day On
arrival in <• hicago this milk was re-
ceived by 1,1 r 0 milk dealers, who utcd
3,380 wagons in its distribution to
consumers in the city. The supply of
milk is largest din Ing the months of
.1 une and July. It is smallest duriug No-
vember. December,January and Febru-
ary. I ntil quite reeently milk shipments
to Chicago were not made from points
more than tifty miles from the city.
It was claimed that they could not be
with profit, but last year the Chicago,
Milwaukee A- St. Paul look a new de-
parture and extended its milk ter-
ritory to sevent\ - nine miles from the
doubtless are those that keep breed-
ing sheep, for we fail to see that se.lt
can possibly do any harm lo stock
unless it be to pregnant ewes, and In-
deed it would be ver\ salty hay that
would bring about abortion in
the sheep pens.. On general princi-
ples it may be asserted that perfectly
cured hay needs no condiment or
Stnmp Hurled In Snow.
Prof. Sheldon writing the London '
Live Htcck Journal Almanac,describes
what he calls the Derbyshire "Dune-
stone" sheep. In part he says 1
have a lucid rccollect*on of a great
snow which fell, a gc, d many years
ago, when 1 was a laci at home on my
father's farm, at Lo,v Fields, in the
miw*
preservative other than its ow n tine ] southern part of Peak county. It fell
aroma and that which -sun and wind , in the night and the sheep sheltered
gave it; but how small a proportion theuiselTOS, as usual, under the vari
of the hay crop annually harvested ous new walls, of which my father
can be considered perfectly cured, built miles dnring his occupation of
hence needing no adjunct to render the farm. Driven by a furious wind,
it more palatable, \luch of it would the snow gathered in big drifts under
mold in the mow or stack unless lib- the walls which run right across the
crally salted, having been cut extra current of the gale, and scores of sheep
early or in weather that did not al- were buried under four or live feet of
low of thorough drying in the Held, 1 the white blanket of winter. To find
where all the buried sheep were was
no little task, for they had the run of
the latter being the eomiuon rea-
son for salting ' hay in Orcat
Britain, where, however, salt is not a dozen or fifteen lields. Some of them,
as a rule given to stock "straight"' on
the pastures or among the feed daily,
as is the custom here. In that coun-
try, too, where hay is seldom put up
so perfectly as here on account of ex-
cessive moisture, it is a common prac-
tice to use an aromatic powder to
sprinkle upon the hay. layer by layer,
as it is trampled into the stack or mow.
indeed, were not«releaEed for nearly a
week from their prison of snow, and
it was a relief to see how very little
harm thejP had taken: thev had
been warm enough, anyway, and
though no food could be got
at, they took no great harm
for w ant of it. breathing we might
think would be difficult, but their
JSuch "spice." as it is called, comei warm breath found it* way to the
high, and as a rule could be coin- walls close under which they lay, and
pounded very cheaply did the owner 1 these provided manv avenues for air,
know the ingredients, but which he whilst in other cases tiny chimneys
buys at 1,000 per cent profit in the were formed .to the surface of the
shape of condiment The tine stuell of I snow All*available hands were soon
the stuff is due to « little powdered j at work with long rods rake handles
fenugreek, which may be purchased at I they were, ehicfc'y—poking down
siuaH cost from any large city drug | through every square foot of snow,
house. It is the eh it? f ingredient of until the end of a rod would prod
value in a bay spice, as it* imparts a something sotter than the fro/.en
pleasant odor, cloaking the mustiness
due to mold or old age. To give the
spice bulk corn meal and other cheap
and Hnely ground feeds ure added and
the condiment further medicated by
au admixture of such drugs as pulver-
ized gentian anil ginger root, and per-
haps a certain percentage of Hilt peter.
In storing hay, whether a condiment
is used or not—and we consider
ground; then would the men go to
work with spades to dig away the
snow, and the sheep was ' pulled out
by the scruff of the neck." Before all
the sheep had been found. 011 that and
an adjoining farm, the frozen snow
would carry a light youth like me,
and the prodding could be done w ith
better effect and less discomfort. But
it had to be done with care all the
one entirely superfluous in most time, or a sheep's eye might have been
cases the chief a point .should [ missing, or a rib broken, or a life lost,
be to see that the hay properly I The animals werehelpleea enough, n4
spread out aud trampled Much of apparently content, when bared of
hup-—
r« l l.TIJV liof SLS III A T A N« III: MAI: 1 '-TON M JV*S
TK«'M FAKMKKR HKVILW
city. New York draws its milk sup-
plies from a district that extends
miles from the city, but the system
pursued in handling it is quite dif-
ficult and much more expensive than
that followed here. There refrigera
tor cars are used in summer for its
transportation. It is taken into the
eity by night. Here no refrigerator
ears a e used and the milk arrives in
the city about 10;30 in the forenoon
An abundant supply to meet all the
city's demands can usually be ob
tained. There have been occasions
when, owing to some exceptional and
unforeseen eircu instances, supplies
have run*short but this has been but
for a very short time Still the citj*
milkdealers have active competitors
in the creameries t hat are quite num-
eious throughout the entire territory
from which the city draws its milk
supplies, and the presence of these
creameries has rendered careful nurs-
ing necessary to develop the milk
trade of the city and bring to it the
proportions it has assumed. This
nursing has been done by the rail-
roads eifgaged in the traflir a.id
those that have done the 1111st
nursing have secured by far
the largest milk Vuthc. Anion;' the
railroads making a specialty of the
milk traftlc the « hicago A North
western stands pre-eminent It U
.nown as the pioin r lino in the milk
business The first can of milk trans
ported by rail was over that road
The Urst shipment amounted to two
cans t cr day, or si.\t wfour quarts, and
4 tc revenue received was 0 cents
1 bat was nearly forty years ago The
. ompany has from time to t?m« . given
i-pccial attention to the transportation
of m Ik. arranging special time cards
and eonstru- ing special cars for its
4ransportation. aud bason its trac' s
< hicago seven depots used for milk
mil it exclusively ^uch careful at
tent ion has been given to this 11 a it 1 c
that, at the present time thatVom
pany is transporting more milk to < hi
eago than is transported by all the
other roads termini'"" be; • To
carrv this immense rallie four I
milk trains arrivc in Chicago daily fi
the vat ious divisioi s running through
northern Illinois r.nd southern Wi
cousin. The shij nieuts over the
Northwestern last ,\car amount *d to
about .,000,000 inns, or 100,001,000
quarts, an I the revenue ivoived
f. 1 transporting I hem to about ~ 00,-
the spoiled hay result from the now
fasl. onabic ^ iy«>f dt uping 1 '■ ie hay
in maidtn.itli heap- 1 -t ttir mow ust
as the fork brought it up from the
wagon, often these "forkfuls' are so
heavy that the men 111 the mow can
not or do not care to tackle them, and
so they are left like islands l.cre and
there, the rest of the hay being packed
in around them. The result is that in
a hay mow bo filled there arc numer-
ous air channels left at the walls,
around each beam and island," and
here the mold will be found to congre-
gate. and in Iowa man . a ham burned
from spontaneous combust ion in clover
hay might have stood to-day hud the
green stufT been proper-1;. trampled
and kept from free circulation of air.
The new implements for mowing and
stacking hay are (great time and labor
savers, but the farmer should see to it
most carefully that in theJiurry to
tinisli the harvest.the young fellows
h ows in which it was wont to be so
thorough I . spread and trampled. The
old way Insured good wecthay with-
out condiment- the new way is apt
to give other result- so in the lan-
guage of Will < arlcion. "You'd better
out
lilt 10 01 I \ t;m 1 m 1 he so called
bonanza wheat farm of tin north
west and the big farms of the 1 ali
fernia vallc; fn< a out of tran-u-nt
ccmlit < ns that 1 o 1 n erpievail the
( a)ifornia fai ms out of the old '-pan
ish land grants ar ti.** Minnesota
and Dakota fam out of the congres-
sional grants to railroads. The his-
tory of thr north v\ t tern big farms is
that the land «a purcha ed from
the railroad coin panes with deprcci
ated stoe < l iginally about
jTIIERE "arc~ any houscx
keepers not using ROYAL
BAKING POWDER, its
great .qualities warrant them in
making a trial of it.
The ROYAL BAKING POWDER
takes the pku < I soda and cream of
tartar, is more convenient, more eco-
nomical, and makes the biscuit, cake,
pudding and dumpling lighter, sweeter,
more delicious and wholesome.
Those.who take pride in making the
finest food say that it is quite indispen-
sable therefor.
At rA:o\r, rowot u ro . io« wai i. st . Nrw-von*. f
and
thonged t
be w
Ther
big farm u
ate profit <
m tin
in average
ere p
crop it bai
It require
a factery
I be
The lofluc
ervai
piw:t s been a w \ed question a d o*u
not \ct be coi h'dered settled. T ie
pr eticv of sahlng hay will, " c :• v,
smne, continue to have its advocat
while there w II ou the other hand re
main thetqual > stiou^ aim. of mei
t lint condemn 1 he practice The lattei
the food sup
population •
family.
■1 :'iicu it* 1
hmullev
nf
aspc of
[ikes bui
tal it ie
be globe to be con
it on and to ine < ast
With giowl It ol
ome bette pr .-es foi
Ihetendenc inrge
snow but they soon recovered the
use of their limbs, and of their appe-
tites sooner still!
InHiirne* of (•'Ira! 1'armil.
Henry S. Uussell says: I am a thor-
ough believer ni th# power of the first
parent to mark all the succeeding pr<>
geny I believe that the sire of the
mare's first foal has an influence upon
every one of her progeny, fading out,
perhaps, as it goes on. It is not nec-
essary to refer to my own experiences,
except in one celebrated case At the
beginniog of thli eentury, the Duke
of Richmond, I think it was, or some
celebrated statesman, took a very tine
thoroughbred mire to the Zoological
gardens in London, and had her
crossed with a wild striped as a
quagga fr^m the Capo of Good 11 ope;
and she had a foal in due course of
' me, bearing the stripes of the
ijuagga She was afterwaro >ut to a
thoroughbred horse, and she throw ti
foal from the thoroughbred horse
strongly marked w ith the atiipcs of
the quagga They continued to breed
her; and she had seven or eight foals
before she got through every one of
which bore the marks of fiat first im-
press. fainter and fainter toward the
last I hav refused, in several in
stances to have a mare c >vered by a
horse that once belonged tome whose
form I widir I to sec in the colts, be
cause the in.ire had been pre.\ 1011-ly
covered by notorious scrubs, and I had
no ide 1 that the subsequent, cover
could prevail over that influence ! be-
lieve that about all brcdi i- know
that to be a fact
An exchange savs. We have fre-
quently .cinarked upon the *w pr f
at w hich California apricots are sold
from fruit stands upon our streets,
l ive cents forado/.en has been the
price for several weeks here This
hows that the producer in California
can ly gets pay for picking, foi the
railroad charges Oiumis ion men and
Tlif IciuiiM'Uoni of SlmiK:.
Teacher -.lohnnie, didn't I hear yon I
talking awhile ago with some other
boys about Gee Wash'.'
.lohnnie Yes'in.
"Well. I wish you fvouhl tell ine who
Gee Wash is.
(Surprised) "Don t you know who
he is?"
T think I never heard of him be-
fore."
"Gosh: w'h G. Washington the the
papa of bis country; tirst in
"Oh ah yes: but 1 thought at lirst
it was a Chinese [aundryinan. IK-
troit Free Press.
(.••oil Urmuiilii I or Mimic.
Do you think you will be acquit
ted'." asked a prominent man who was
indicted for bribery *
"Yes, I think so
"lias your lawyer given you grounds
to think so?"
"No." responded the hopeful client,
"but I have given him grounds to t h ink
so. I've deeded him nil my real estate
as his fee rammaity Times
lVli) Up \Th llrl|tlf «.
"Yes. he fell over backward, ami
sank like a stone." * .
"Hut I thought be was all expert
swimmer."
"He was; but my wife brought some
of her buiseuits along for lunch, and
he
Oh: Hrooklyn Life.
To ripRiitr llir Njklf 111
lOITeetually yet gently when costive
or bilious, or u hen the Idood is impure
or sluggish, to permanently cure ha-
bitual constipation, to awaken the
kidneys and liver to a health ly activity,
w ithout irritating or weakening them,
to dispel headache®, colds or fevers
use Syrup of rigs.
N'r cul I < <• 4 ton fort.
lie if yon say "No I shall kill my-
self. I cannot live without yon.
she Oly very well, then. I w ill not
lie You will not" Oh. rapture"
She If you object to "No." I'll say
\evri \ r Ift.i m.i ^ Travel,'.
a
llmi' Hip Hmiif Itrmilt.
Willie l ather, what is reason?
His father Heason. nu boy. i.s what
enables a man to determine what is
right.
\ iill < 11;i 1 i n I ii I "in
His fathi i Intuition is that which
tells a woman she is right whether
she is or not. Yoiriic. *
Monrv • winter Whust l«" llmhcli.
That's I he way farmers who no wed sal
zer s new Wm hl s.Kair wheat report It'
yielded all the way from 40 to TO bushels
tic over this wheat that they clnim l«H)
which pa. - tremendous profits The John
A Si, /ei s,., ,i ro , I.a Cross.- Wi- scud
•tliei, fall rata .vur and samples of wheat
and ryr for 4 its Hostage
Morrill Thlnu*.
Kthel- Carrie was just as selfish as
she eould b ii t summrr
May I ii what u a \ '.'
Kil.el WI. t he i e wa^ onl.v one
man at the hotel and she stayed en-
gaged to him the whole season.
Amlil,lo)n and Sorrow*.
Mrs. .luncbug invited several of he*
friends to come to her house on u cer-
tain day, as she was going to celebrate
her '.' .th birthda\ \t the dinner ta-
ble Mrs. ,1 said:
"This day Is also the anniversary of
sorrow to me my father's death."
"Indeed'.' and how long has your
father been dead?" ask<yl,onc of the
guests.
"Twenty-eight years," replied Mrs.
.luncbug Tammany Times.
Too Honoraliln l or Mini. .
•Now Tommy," said mamma, "I
want you to be honorable iu dividing
this cake with May.
"Yes mamma." asiil'Tommy, "but
w hat does honorable mean?"
"It means that if one piece is larger
than the other, you must give your
sister the larger one."
"I don't care to divide the cake
then." said Tommy, "let May do it."
Philadelphia I'ross.
Irate Individual What, did you
mean b\ telling Smith that I had been
in jail'.'
< aim Individual I did not tell Smith
you had been in jail. I simply said
you ought to be mi jail.
Irate Individual (calming down)- I
beg your pardon I must have misuii
derstood liiin Alex Sweet in Texas
si f tings.
0 4,roiin«l for Huapieion.
Spudkins I suspect an intention on
the boss's part to get rid of me.
Snaggs Did anything he said to you
give ground for the suspicion'.'
Spmlkius Yoh. Il«' said ho would
not need meafter next week. — I'itts
burg ( hroniclc-TKlcgraph.
HiIII of tli«! Shiiic MIihI.
Mrs. Longwnod I don't care: once
was the time when you thought the
world of me You used to say that
nothing could improve ine.
Mr. I.q/igwood- Well. I still say that
nothing could improve you. You arc
incorrigible. Huston Transcript
■ Itnot 'IV
iim iiiiicii'iin-.
Hriggs I saw- spooner and bis bride
on the train the other day.
• o iggs Were they in the pfcrlorcar'i
Hriggs No: they wrre oil the way
home from their honeymoon. New
York World
•' IIm r
vV i runt •■■I
IruvuiNb foi i
i niaglr Corn Knlv*
ii jour
I oiiii Olid*.
be man dat talks big 'bout what
hr has done said Crude Kben. "ma\
be lyin and may not be. Hut dc
chanees a in bout lchcu to one agin de
man da* talks l ig liout what he's
jrw ine ter do " Washington Star.
Mull*
•oust it lit i.
% lllir A rnini{*io4Mil.
vflll
for
i the fa
'
mise w hen
e none of ie
promot n >
when so
chool begins
ever know ai
Gent (to liis wife Augusta. . ou go
first spar* moments.
(limai* mil < ro|i all Itigh*.
til. aiP.ioa I 'If ami 1 a-'i . ..f
the finest farming land in the w old.
wait ng for von or anybody with
i little rash and lot-- of
gumption t Iimate and crops are
lust right. latins will cost inorr
u< \t \ ar I ban tin- To find out i f
this is tin ■ ounti \ yon want. asU «, I
Nicholson <■. I* A Santa ! • Itoute,
Topeka Ka fo- frer cop\ of Oklaho
ma folder new edition jn^t out, hand
some I y illustrated.
IIlull I'rilM'.
M, Livcrmore How do v.m like
our small steaks Mr. I reebaggci '
Tree I >a ggi ■ !* \ rr\ much, indred:
von know I've just bad one of them
n.ad. into a • atch.ng glove N N
World.
' Davis Inter-
national Cream
| Separator,
I land or Power.
Kvery farmer
that has r
I should h i
one It si
half the lal
'makes o.
j third more I
ter. Se.
1 Butter bring
one-third mor
money. Sem
for circulars
Davis & Rankin Buug. & MFC. Co.
Agents W'antkii. Chicago, 111.
da i
• but i
of fei
id bipper 1 hr
il that. has hcen
devoted to fruit growing on tho coa t
is producing more than the consumei
ure able t pay for these dull times.
In prosper- us tunes when all classes ol
people are einp <>ved at fair wages tin
(lemarid f« r fruit is many tirao-> greatei
than at pr. sent, and ti e fruit grower*
are fairly well remunerated Hut it
would stem that there is a possibility
\".l\ Dor.s your Goiinm Nop,(I .iStralQlit
t'eoDle'ft Partu Fane.r?
ARt YOU THINKINCOF ST ART INC ONE ?
r-pr
eli i
TIIK A i
vil I hav<
villi the
I ly if all rowers devote their at
tention to the same variet ie > as they are
too much inclined to do In some cc
Hons prures may occupy nine-tenths
of the rarchcs; in others it in apricots
an I ti othci raisin grapes 1 al fo.-
ii a'is must learn to mi.\ fie fruit
rowin; *• our far'n®rs do their farm
crops and not e> pect to uiake or break
. a one variety
PIERCE CURE.
nn It \ I'lrmi i
month* tnjr wife it
. rlptl'-n m.vI i ..mi
• ..II that e . lull.
priiliU' tin* m^'li. in.
C
'" W. N. U. Winflold, Vol. 7—Z1.
y VVhrn Answering Advertisements Kind
/' tffjlr |v Mention This Paper.
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French, W. H. The Chandler Publicist. (Chandler, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, August 24, 1894, newspaper, August 24, 1894; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc147149/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.