Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 292, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 12, 1916 Page: 4 of 4
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OP GA PUL FANG, FOP GAPULPANG, GY GAPULPANG
SAPULPA HERALD
CLEAN IN NEW*, EDITORIAL AN© ADVERTISING
'Miracle11 Wheat No Belter 1 han
Many Other Vartieties- -Turkey
Red Better For Semi-Arid Okla.
out DOBBIN DOOMED: TRACTOR TAKING HIS PLACE
WASHINGTON’, Auk 12.—The “Mir-
S ade" or Stoner wheal, the history
Vof which ha* recently been given ln
P, If. 8. Department of Agriculture Bill
“'j'letln No. 3",7, ia bei n g advertised
PV Id southwestern Oklahoma a* "th*
fc* greatest drought-resisting varletv of
[I wheat that ha* ever Been produced ."
f ' After a trial of three year* in this*
Bisection. two year* of whlrh were
't wet. It* performance ia *poken of
•^a* “provinK beyond a doubl that It
Wiw the wheat for the semlarid sec-
I lion* of the *outhwe*t."
*•*
E Three (treat advantages liave been
,' aaaerted for till* wheat by various
•promoters at different time*: ill
yjthat it would outyield any other var-
jjf;tety anywhere: (2) that it aent up
V more sterna from one need th*n any
II .other variety of wheat: and (3)
t , that 20 pound* of »eed per a< re pro-
1 duced the maximum yield*, while
^ other varieties required 12<* pound*
These aaaertlon* were investigat
ad by the U. 8. Department of Ag-
riculture and a number of tests
have shown that the Stoner wheat
la nol *o good as some of the wheat
now grown in eastern half of the
I lulled States, but is somewhat bet-
controlled by Standard Oil. front
which practically nothing but oil is
shipped.
He exposed the project at Wey-
mouth, Mass., where a single cor-
poration got $200,000 for a 35 foot
channel to its wharf while the gov-
ernment aiorage plant for high ex-
plosives, a few tulles away, ha* only
a 12-foot channel.
Krear has demanded that the in-
terests receiving the benefit of river
and harbor improvements he called
upon to pay at least s proportionate
share of the cost, but congress has
ignored the demand.
In the latest report of the chief of
engineer* on the Ijike St. Clair
dredging operations appears this
significant Item:
"lx>cal co-operation—NON’K."
Iv *:>«
' . * V
g&S-r '♦S*
, •• VT/ v { ' .£>
s*3P
%V
m
V -g *
■HEIEF0H[ OF
, partment say, lo take up the grow
tug of thla wheat In preference to
j Turkey wheat, on the basis of any
testa so far made. Thla socalled .Mir-
acle wheal has not shown itself to
he resll.v a droutht-resistatu sort. It
will probably prove disappointing in
comparison with Turkey wheat in a
V
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■am.
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,*T
■' V- -
‘I Ob :
J ■XUA
Ob U3UDtK'MClC,
■igALToe. ikpio.1:
■TRACTOR, IN TCJ-’T, PULLtNO
THRLC IA Iti. PLOVy im OKOCTNP
fit.0j4.fi -s'a rt -ottp ■*
majority of the crop years. In an
*i»
I *
•Nut ol the Expensive Project
•euttts Some Special Trust
Or litres) and Not
Popple
' unusually wet year It may give good
t yields, and the present exploitation
of the variety Is doubtless due to the
unusual conditions of 1914 and 1915.
In milling value the wheat I not
In the same claa with hard red
winter wheuta of the Turkey type
It belongs to the soft red or seml-
hard winter wheat class, which
wheats generally produce flour of
less strength or lower gluten con
tent than the hard wheats. It ia
also reported by miller* as giving a
lower yield of flour.
j WASHINGTON. Aug 12. IHi the
J people love the steel trust? h>o they
. | dig Into their pockets to help Uie
• steel truat prosper?
\ Yes. dear Heart—«s a mother buys
• , play things for her babe!
' x For Instance, the deeper water-
' way dug at public expense through
’Detroit river and l-ake St. Clair
Here are the figures on It:
Cost to the people (to June 30,
',1915) $1,511> ,361.
Profit to steel trust (estimated,
\ per yeart $S,4«0,0<H).
Why do we hand this nice five
I million a year (o the steel trust at
, the coat of a million and a halt or
more to ouraelvea?
You can aearrli the i«>rk barrel for
the answer’
It's In there!
All the traffic from the upiwr
lakes to Lake Krle passes through
8L Clair river to l-ake St. Clair,
and Detroit river
Cass Dismissed
The case of assault with Intent to
kill pieferred by Mr. Hayhurst of
IVpew against J K. Halley of the
same place was dismissed In Jus-
tice Crawford's court yesterday after
noon Halley had accused Hayhurst's
brother of throwing eggs at him.
:: Clear, Peachy Skin
i: Awaits Anyone Who f
Drinks Hot Water i:
< | tap* an Inside bath, before break-; >
;; feet helpa we leak and feel
clean, sweet, Neah.
ft... X>oGM! is M-enied. ')>
•h*ii>|axU n’.wi .t* he has
u eat «.\o slc.7, ivmi after working
a- t*y . u*:.n* iti hi* stall instead of
p ■ . j-.. 14 Jtc water or running the
r: ■ *nt n.tor
'* n v*»xy- t! at is uniting ol>! IX>L
husmeja ia the farm
tr. -r. Tvv:-tj l',ct,sur.d tracior*
w rv -»<•«• on Am"icm farms -;-.t
p- ,r Tawhtrigton agricultural «tL
r , > -irwhet th* t soon pr;xcticaiiy all
f. -exrt writ) i-o doue by the bu.v
ti:' ■ :-.ichinj thnt never grows .
fain tractor doc* the work ’l
C > .,c-,- . A«ny horses -and <*“w '*
U •».» .• .xhwut half the co*
p. i-ij,. pltrws, hauls or does "*•
•ri.i "v It rjn* the *..w mill, •
,..,iLug» and fills the *tto It or'.*
t -.r works '-he buy halm
. p« of ..she* -.toiies ami, *
It.; •work !n the rt-ld. jii ps
t »-*'-• it s>-p«nite* ’.he cream or
t. ’s •*.» Sutter.
7. • ’ -parfcnwnt ef Agrtc, . re
har irwutrut -e*>v*- of Ua-wir*.
Here are some interesting things it
has found out:
Tour head of horses, at an actual
cost of fifty cents an hour, will turn,
with the ordinary gang plow, four
acres a day. With an eight-foot disk
1 *rrow, fifteen acres can be covered.
With the same four-horse team,
thtrty acres can he harrowed and,
with an eight-foot binder, fifteen
acre: can he harveated in ten hours.
Trader ve. Horse.
On the other hand, it has been
demonstrated that a good light trac-
tor (the Buckeye Junior, Anderson,
Indiana), costs, for gasoline and
lubricating oil, an average of $1.66 a
day. Counting up-keep, depreciation,
etc., this tractor costs $3.75 a day,
am! in that day. at a two-mile speed,
plows five and six-tenths acres with a
fourtcen-ini h “two-bottom gang,”
and with three bottoms, eight and
five-tenths acres. With two di*k
r-arrows ar.d a draff tn tandem, th.*
ra*-lor will cover .’ineteen and three-
' lentil* acre# tn urn hours. In a day.
ithiny-fivs acre* cat h* harrowed
with three sections ei peg, or in pull-
ing an eight-foot biaoer twenty acres
of whedt ran be rut down.
The tractor, department otfir «L
say, does not mean an incr -Heel
investment for th# farmer It is
merely a question of selling a f.w
horses to make the substitution. !i
does more horse-work on a harre, of
distillate, or gasoline, than six to
ten horses will do on an equal ex-
penditure for hay or oats.
“It has been shown th:it *'•
American farmer uses more power
■than is used in all branches of mat. <-
facturing in the country,” said G. h.
Ixiuderbark, of Anderson, tractor ex-
pert, who has been conferring with
war department officials on a tractor
for military use. “Tractors are be-
coming an absolute necessity for
farmers. The light tractor is
the solution of the farm power
question. If any farmer doubts that
he can do more work and get fir-it-
er results and bigger profits, at *
less co*t, with an effective light
tractor, I will be glad to show hau
just bow he can do it.” _ ,
Where St Clair river empties into
'' |.ake 81. Clair are the St. Clair
flats, a stretch or sandbank* and
shallow channels. Where the Detroit
1 river empties Into l-ake Brie is the
Limekiln crossing wher* a ehannfil
has been cut at government expense
\ through the rock of the river bottom.
The I’nlted State* agreed to keep
this waterway navigable ai * depth j
, ef twenty feet
Most vessels that go through the
rhannels carrying ore are owned by
: subsidiaries of the United States
i, »teel corporation.
Recently the l-ake Carrier’s as
social ion, the vessel owner* union
' announced that their ships this year
would carry 5,340.000 additional tons
’ of ore because of the deepening
I of the Channel, adding $1. « ton
to their profits.
1 There the ore-carrying situation is
1 dominated by the steel trust, ami
’ every dollar expended mi Improve-
ments in waterways on the lakes
1 redounds directly to the profit of this
corporation.
' *. Thia ia simply one Inevitable phase
,1 of the “pork” method of making
• river and harbor appropriations, ex-
! t ,sised on the floor of the houae by
■ Representative James A. Kroar of
, Wisconsin
I Drear showed that at least half
of the current $43,000,000 river and
harbor bill la “pork” pure and sim-
ple.
He exposed tile approprial inn f<(?
Curtis bay, near Baltimore, a port
ter than other*. On the whole It is
of average value
It is not advisable fur the far-
mers of the seml-srld southwest,
the cereal specialists of the De-
Sparkling and vlvaciou* merry,
bright, alert a good clear skin and
a natural, rosy, healthy complexion
are assured only by pure blood. If
every man and women could be In-
duced to adopt the moraing inside
hath what a gratifying change
would take place. Instead of the
thousands of sickly, anaemic looking
uten. women and girls, with pasty or
muddy complexions; instead of the
multitudes of “nerve wreck*. ' ’ rim
downs.” “hralu fags,” and pessimists
we should see a virile, optimistic
throng of rosy cheeked people ev-
ery where.
An Inside hath is had by drinking
each morning before breakfast, a
glass of real hot water with a tea-
spoonful of limestone phosphate in
it to wash from the stomach, liver
kidney* and ten yard* of bowel* the
previous day's indigestible waste,
sour fermentations and poisons thus
cleansing, sweetening and freshening
the entire alimentary caual before
tmtting more food into the stomach.
Those subject to sick headache,
biliousness, nasty breath, rheuma-
tism. colds; and particularly those
who have a pallid, sallow complexion
and who are constipated very often,
are urged to obtain a quarter pound
of limestone phosphate at the drug
store which will cost hut a trifle
but is sufficient to demonstrate the
quick change in both health and ap
pcarance. awaiting those who prac-
tice Internal sanitation. We must re-
miueber that Inside cleanline.-s is
more Important than outside, because
the skiu dots not absorb Impurities
to contaminate the blood while the
pore* In the thirty feet of bowel* do.
Adv.
You’ll Want To
Know
What is going on at home while you
are away on your vacation. Keep
posted by reading the news in the
SAPULPA
HERALD
It will be mailed to you each evening,
no matter where you are, for 1 Oc per
week. Better than a letter.
Don’t Fail to Get It
Phone 185
Phone 265
A Thief
will steal and offew
evade conviction
A Liar
iniftHtMtcM facia, but
•seldom cucapcN de-
fection
We Still Offer §500
To the party producing evidence wnbwfawfiafin^
charges, recently made against our labor record.
We Still Offer YOU
The Mont Kconomical PriceH in
GKOCKHIES AND MEATS
Pay Cash For What You Buy
Forty per cent of thoae who buy on credit never
pay their bills in fall and seven per cent never
pay at all-
Who Make* Up (he Loaa?
Ice Cold Melons—Good Milk
and Cream
King’s Kash Koncern
Phone 281
Cristian Church
Doctrine Meeting
Has a Near Scrap
CANTON, Aug. 12.—No action to
change the creed of the church was
taken here today hy the National
Doctrinal congress of the Christian
church, following a spirited debate
on the subject by Rev. S. 8. Lap-
pin of Cincinnati, and the Rev.Cha*
Morrison o( Chicago.
The question at issue was wheth-
er persons who had received baptism
In churche* which do not practice
immersion should be admitted to the
Christian church without receiving
that ceremony. I-appin termed the
unimmersed “plugged nickels” and
‘corn thieves.’ while Morrison as-
serted that churches that would not re-
ceive the nninimersed from other
churches were sinful. They railed
each other “falsifiers.”
were embraced in the old central
district where he was formerly as-
sistant United States Attorney.
A peculiar feature of this cam-
paign arose in the faet that James
Dennis Flynn who was the republican
nominee two years ago. recleved a
large vote from persons who thought
they were voting for Dennis T.
Flynn who represented old Oklahoma
in congress several year* ago.
The contest for Win. H. Murray's
place in congress now lies between
Tho* D. McKeown and James W.
Gresham and will lie watched wlU
considerable interest by the voter*
of the Fourth District
Official Figures
Make Sure Place
For J. E. Gresham
According to the official tabula-
tion of the election returns mad*
at Oklahoma City Monday. James
E. Gresham of Wewoka, ia the nom-
inee of the Fourth District. While
only about forty percent of the re-
publicans went to the polls, the vote
on congressman was Gresham. 2780;
Flynn. 2354: Stearns. 2030. Gresham
brought out an unusually strong vote
in Hughes and Coal counties which
Aufomobille Lured
Paris H. S Girts
With Married Mur
OKLAHOMA CITY. Au*. t2. —
Llewlyn Denton, aged 18 and Dewey
Maxwell, 17. Paris, Tex., high school
girls are being held in jail today
in default of one thousand dollar
bonds as witnesses against JoM
Floyd Clark and Walter Friday, two
married men of Brinkman. The men
are charged with violation of the
Mann act. They were arrested at
Mangum to which place they had
gone in Clark's auteniohlle July 28.
They were traced by a Harris offi-
cer and Llewllyn’s mother. The men
were arraigned at I-awton and Clark
was released on five thousand dol-
lar bond Friday I* still held unable
to make a three thousand dollar
bond.
Dance at 1-ee hall every Wednes-
day and Saturday night Lot* of
fans. •$
“IFI WERE YOU”
Were I a Sapulpe Business Msn. with a proposition
worthy of the attention of the public, and I was anx-
ious to Increase my business and the profit arising
from It, I would advertise.
At first I’d use space in keeping with my capital
and increase the expenditure as advertising increased
try bueineea.
I’d choose a medium which interested the people
anong whom It circulate*, and which enjoyed the com
plete confidence of tta readers and thus eliminate any
lost motion.
I’d make success doubly sure by advertising tn a
publication patronlred by other worthy dealers reaMx-
ln< that I'd be aecure In following the tested judgment
of those who bare succeeded.
I’d be elmple In my •tatementa-^glvlng a full and
complete description of my proposition—telling th*
tri'h at all times—straight-forward tn my builneaa.
I’d be sure that when investigation was made of
my proposition that It would show up my deacriptton.
thereby gaining the confidence of the party with whom
I waa endeavoring to do bualneos, which materially af-
fects the consummation of my deal.
SAPULPA HERALD
The Paper With a Prineiple
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Todd, O. S. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 292, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 12, 1916, newspaper, August 12, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1523213/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.