The Osage County News (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, September 18, 1936 Page: 13 of 20

This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Osage Journal and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.

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HUY IT Ifi PAWHUSKAAND SAYS
THE OSAGE COUNTY NEWS FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1936.
PAWHUSKA MERCHANTS OFFER SAVINGS
The Dor I* Truo
Sir Walter 'Scott «nc** said of
dog, “Hr Imtli a share of man's intelli-
gence. hut no share of man’s false-
hood. You may bribe a soldier to slajr
■ man with hl* sword, or a witness to
take life by false accusation, but yon
cannot make a dog tear his benefac-
tor."
County’s and your fair
—Pawhuska Merchants Are Displaying Beautiful Ranges, Radiant Heaters, Floor
September 21, 22, 23 and 24,1936
This Institution Is Anxious and Always Willing to Cooperate With Fostering Worthy
Causes and Urges you to ATTEND Your County Fair, September 21-22-23 and 24th
STETSON HATS
JUSTIN BOOTS
Is gritty, and not mealy or
435 Osage
Phone 183
proper care and judgment, the
manure on pasture will result
Osage County's Outfitters for Men
Extend a Cordial Invitation to You, —
One and All to Our Fair
With
use of-----
In more and better summer feed and
leave an Improved sod.
McDonald’s
THE MEN’S STORE
\If A Man Wears It, We Have It
Furnaces, Circulating Heaters, and Automatic Hot Water Tanks— See Them!
Farm Notes
The sow should receive no food for'
24 hours after farrowing hut should
be given plenty of lukewarm water.
• • •
Grain should be ground only to a
medium degree of fineness for stock, so
that it
floury.
Where Codling Moth Lives
Punky wood and split branches are |
favored hibernating places for the cod- >
ling moth. All dead branches and stubs
should l»e removed in pruning, and the (
ends of broken branches cut off
smoothly so they will heal over. Limbs ■
removed In the regular pruning should
be cut off close to the point of origin, i
Stubs heal very slowly or not at ail. j
and usually develop into excellent
places for codling moths to hibernate.
Pruning cuts more than 2 inches in
diameter should be protected by wood- ■
preserving paint to facilitate healing1
and prevent rotting.—Missouri Farmer.'
American Pipeline Co
DISTRIBUTORS OF NATURAL GAS
(The Modern Fuel)
Chas. Manney, Mgr.
Now you can git q-rrk
ton A Minor Pde Oint-
ment. A private formula
prwcrprion from world-
famous rectal clinic where
more then 47,000 men and
women have been suc-
cessfully treated in past
59 years. Money - back
guarantee for your satis-
THE ARISTOCRACY
By DOUGLAS MALLOCH
5P£t'Al
FINISH
VISION
TO DEMONSTRATE his
X-rnv vision, the DDR Ki ci
at
»
Charlton’s Grocery
Phone 880
Parking Space
13th & Lynn
it’s time to think
♦♦♦♦♦I»»♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
about FUEL for winter!
WHETHER IT’S FOR COOKING OR HEATING
Natural Gas
‘! Their Mother's Time
11 to earn a living for herself and < >
< > the family you leave. Her time ' '
Welcome to Osage
During Last January
I never see a hand of grime,
A brow of summer sweat, but I'm
A bit ashamed no look of toil
Have mine, of contact with the soil.
My little greatness is less great,
A thousand times, than his estate
Who makes a habitable earth
For many men of lesser worth.
title
was
Here’s something you can always depend upon: The
meats offered here are always fresh— always top
quality. We select our meats with unusual care to as-
sure your getting the choicest cuts, the best flavored,
savory meats—always at reasonable prices.
OUR STOCKS ARE ALWAYS COMPLETE
FRUITS VEGETABLES MEATS GROCERIES
Here they are—Rosie and Phil —You'd laugh until your
sides hurt at the many funny shapes and tangles these two
get themselves into in their Comic Adagio act with the
Santa Fe Trailways—Southern Kansas Stage Lines Nite
Club Revue at the Osage County Fair, Sept.-21, 22, 23, 2k.
.. is the most economical fuel to use. There is
no waste to Gas —Just the strike of a match,
the turn of a dial—and you have instant heat,
and when you are through, just switch off the
gas and there is no after-flame or heat —Gas
can easily be regulated to produce any desired
degree of heat—and keep it uniform.
Oil Supply in Doubt
Geologist* have learned many thing-
about oil. but they cannot deterinln
the exact extent of the world'll nu’nra
oil supply. it In frequently predicted
that thia supply will last only a few
years longer. But »et deadlines are
paaaed and the natural oil continues
to flow.
I
X-RAY
A GOOD SOURCE TO EXCUSE A
BAD ACT
frw rf|fraa .i^a
cur •
Olff
I am entitled to my ease.
My lighter task, by serving these
Who serve mankind, for then we all
Are workers, be we great or small.
I thus become, the best I can,
The equal of this other man
To whom I look, who looks to me—
Both then the aristocracy.
® Dourlaa Malloch.—WNU Service.
Cows of Today
Good investment
Current models in milk ,eows are
quite >s much of*an Improvement over
their ancestors of 1925 vintage as the
sleek, streamlined cars of today are
over the cumbersome automobiles of
a few years back.
Setting the standard for advance-
ments in the milk-cow “models" have
been the dairy herd improvement as-
sociations. These are organized and
sponsored by the extension service of
the agricultural college as a means of
furthering better breeding, feeding and
management of farm dairy herds. At
the present time there are 58 of these
associations in which 20,000 cows are
being tested for milk hnd butterfat pro-
duction and otherwise handled under
approved methods.
Value of these methods In putting
dairy herds on a more efficient and
more profitable basis is evident from a
review of past records. It Is pointed
out. In 1925 dairy herd Improvement
association cows in Illinois averaged
only 282 pounds of butterfat. In 1934
member cows averaged 324.9 pounds.
On the basis of 11134 prices the late-
model cow cleared $64 above feed costs.
On this same basis the 1925 cow would
have cleared $52, or $12 less.
If dairy herd improvement associ-
ation farmers had obtained no better
production In 1934 than they did In
1925. the total net return above feed
costs In 1934 would have been $240,000
less for the 20,000 member cows of
the state.
Most members are confident that
their herds are continuing to Improve
in efficiency. It Is expected that the
amount of butterfat produced for each
pound of feed will be maintained be-
cause of better cows and more care-
ful feeding and herd management.
Farmers have been able to develop
this higher production efficiency among
their herds mainly through testing,
culling, feeding of better rations and
improved breeding programs advocated
by their improvement associations.
Those who intend to "keep up with the
models In milk cows" will And It to
their advantage to be members of
their local associations during the com-
ing year. Through these Improvement
associations they will be able to dis-
tinguish the star boarders from the
paying producers and cull out the poor
cows. In addition they will have ac-
cess to the latest Information on ra-
tions. Also accurate herd records will
help them locate proved herd sires.
The Kurds are a people of Iranian
race who occupy Kurdistan, partly In
Asiatic Turkey and partly In Persia.
They are a brave, freedom loving peo-
ple. not Inclined to Industry. The
nomad Kurds live in tents of black
skins, while the settled communities
nse low houses with flat wooden roofs
The Kurdish women have more free
dom than moat Oriental women. The
girls are married, upon payment of a
lower, at ten or twelve yeara of age
The men shave their heads and face*
leaving only a mustache, though old
men wear full beards. Tn religion thej
are mostly Mohammedans.
S* X O. CASH. Dairy apecUIUt. Oellefe of
Naming the Mazarin Bible
The Mazarin Bible, by which
the Gutenberg Bible of 1450
known, was so named on account of
the first copy being found In the II
hrary of Cardinal Mazarin of France.
It includes the 14 books of the Apoc
rypha, Including the Wisdom of Sol
nmnn. and Eccleslastlcus, or the WIs
dots of Slrach.
RY THIS TRICK
By P0NMV HAMAH
Coevriehi H fabko Ledger, lae.
Weight of Game Birds
The quail is about half the weight
of the Hungarian partridge, while the
foreigner in turn Is just half the
weight of the ruffed grouse, which
tips the beam at 26 or 28 ounces. The
average prairie chicken scales at two
pounds and the pheasant as high
three.
< > The greatest gift any man can
’' leave his children is their mother's
! I time. A Jefferson Standard Fam-
< > ily Income Plan will relieve your
‘ 1 wife of the necessity of having
We Believe in Buying and Selling Osage County
Poultry, Dairy and Produce
] [ will be free to give your children
J I the cart they need during the
> > year* they will need it most.
] I Let ut explain to you a plan
< > that will givt thia needed pro-
'' ttetion.
The man who makes my shoes for
me.
My clothes, the roof above my head,
The very comfort of my bed,
The food my body nourishet li-
ves, even for my very breath
Upon some other I depend,
My noblest neighbor, nearest friend.
i ability
— X-ray vision, the magician takes a
pack of cards from its case. He lays
them on the table and asks some one
to insert a card from the pack. The
card must be put in face down.
Picking up the case, the magician
holds it to his forehead and promptly
names the value of the card, lie may
repeat the trick if be desires.
Be careful, in performing tills trick,
to specify that the card must be put
in the case while the latter is on the
table. Why? Because you have previ-
ously cut a small hole in the lower cor-
ner of the card case.
When you pick up the card case,
you can see the index corner of the
card within. That is why you are
able to name it.
WNU Service.
Use of the Various
Manures on the Garden
There Is no need for the average
farmer to buy commercial fertilizers
for his vegetable garden because the i
best general vegetable crop fertilizer |
Is barnyard manure. And above ail ,
places, the vegetable garden, consid- j
ering its value to the farm family, Is |
where It should he applied first.
Ten to twenty loads of manure to •
the acre each year are not too much.
Fresh manure immediately before .
planting potatoes encourages potato
scab, as does lime.
Sheep and poultry manures are
much more concentrated than cow or
horse manure, and should be used in
much smaller quantities. Poultry ma-
nure, if entirely free from litter, should
be used sparingly because It is apt to
bum the plants. Poultry manure is
valuable for garden purposes, but a
ton per acre broadcast would be equal
in plant food content to five or six
tons of horse manure which contained
litter. Sheep manure, free from litter,
is not as rich as poultry manure, but
contains more plant food than horse
manure. Cow manure is available for
many farm gardens and is of high
value but contains more water and less
plant food than any of the other an-
imal manures.
Where the space devoted to the gar-
den is not limited, green manures may
be substituted in part. One-fourth or
more of the land may be planted to
cowpeas or soybeans each year and
turned under In the fall. In smaller j
gardens the cowpeas or soybeans may
be sown following the early vegeta-
bles.—Missouri Farmer.
Lucile W. Mason
Local Representative
JEFFERSON STANDARD
LIFE INSIBANCE COMPANY
Julian Price. Prttidtnt
Greensboro, North Carolina
It Cost Less Than 15c Per Day to Heat a
Five Room House in Pawhuska
It Cost Less Than 2c a Day to Cook
Three Meals - - with Gas.
A WOMAN in Port Monmouth, N.
J., quoted God and the Bible as the
justification for keeping her two boys
out of school.
Defying the truant officer, she
claimed to have kept her boys at
home because some of the subjects
taught in the public schools are evil.
With the aid of a book published in
1868 she herself taught them the three
r's, which filled her requirements for
her children.
One of the sinful subjects taught
in the schools is drawing, this woman
says. To prove it, she quotes from
the Bible: “Thou shall not make unto
thyself any graven image.”
And because "the pages of history
are splattered with blood and God for-
bids taking human life." history also
is an evil subject and the teaching of
it justifies her in keeping her boys
out of school.
One's mental comment, of course, Is
that the woman is not in her right
mind. But hers is not the first in-
stance where something good has been
misconstrued to excuse a bad act, a
literal meaning held up to screen a
breach of the true spirit of tilings.
If cne tried hard enough state-
| ments could doubtless he found in the
| Bible to excuse other crimes; that
I is, the words could lie twisted so as
I to seem to excuse them. But nobody
I would be deceived. Nor is anyone
; ever deceived when people try to twist
' each other’s words so that they may
! seem to mean something that they do
1 not mean.
© Bell Syndicate .—WNU Service.
THROUGH A
Womans Eyes
By JEAN NEWTON
■ Ji --
Big Improvement Over1 the
Milk Producers of
Yeara Ago.
Eve's EplGrAfns
Hubby
u&uftlly jC-n
gj ent 5
ft Good. Z
understftndrnGy
but the. (___
little (Jociftn
Gats cnora
out o[ ft
Good
rj isuncLar stfi ndi
QUICK RELIEF!,
DWG STOW ,

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The Osage County News (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 51, Ed. 1 Friday, September 18, 1936, newspaper, September 18, 1936; Pawhuska, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1597733/m1/13/ocr/: accessed November 7, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.

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