The Times-Record (Blackwell, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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THURSDAY, MAY IB. 1MB
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10-2t>-lw, b good for thirty
barrels.
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CROP ROTATION IS FAVORERDAILY
DELIVERY
Office Phone 54
RES. PHONE 321
| Correct English
farmers from
sections where it is very prevalent.
ji Qf the fifteen granges in Kay coun-
« il . I .1 X . •
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0000000000900
OKLAHOMA CROP NOTES
1°THE WOMEN’S RELIEF CO KPa
A. T. & S. F. TIME TABLE
Lev.
in the 2,100 foot pay.
each
Miss Sibyl Baum was in town
a few
had
at $800,000,000.FRESHENING TIME IMPORTANT
BUY ONLY BEST DAIRY
COWSNo charge — juat rncloae stamp for reviy
NEW
Order from Your Newsdealer TODAYAddrcit
.10.45 a.
0
9
Peine
Club.
dirt
pro
0
0
from the
variation
9
0
»
Produc-
Suc-
intemational
and is now
the Lincoln
Kentucky. It
o
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9
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H. A. Sartin
George Adams
Velma Carpenter
Iona Pricharn
Lorene BalzerJOHN WESLEY HILL WILL LECT-1
URE IN BLACKWELL .MAY 21 I
and
i'O*t
Field Operation
operation was featured this
should be the first to receive attention
in planning control measure*, accord-
lug tv Farmers’ I
The profit Co be made from a dairy
herd depends largely upon the selec-
tion of good dairy cows to start with.
It requires from 50 to 75 [ter cent of
the feed a cow is capable of consum-
ing to maintain her body, It is there-
fore much cheaper to produce, say. <0
gallon* of milk with ten rows than
with IS cowa.
By Dr. A. R. Lewis, State
Health Commissioner
o
o
ab.so-
ca.se
to her home at Gotebo. She had spent
seeral months visiting her aunt in
Illinois and stopped off here for a visit
with relatives and friends. Miss Sibyl
is a graduate of B. H. S., and is es-
pecially interested in the High .School
functions this week.
brain
in a
from
Whan Paata Art Found In Locality, Ac-
tion Should Be Taken by Whole,
Community to Prevent Spread
—Some Good Rule*.
It Mott Common Moans of
Sprea^nfl Faraiitet.
over
I’io-
im-
for
are
die from I
necessary [
Blackwell,
By J. A. Whitehurst, President
Board of Agriculture.
Selection of Most Profitable
ere at Start Determines
cess of Herd.BEET NEMATOOES
SPREAD BY DIRT
has b-en therccegni. ed exponent
of the West. It is diat-isetljr a
magazine fo. the home—else whole
Has Considerable to Do With Amount
of Profit Cow Return*—Fall
Is Favored.
Phyalcftn* say that women is wtiuea
tear* gather quickly have (ha
■tyat beaotiful eye*. They are bright,
tender and attractive. Women with(Fr•pared by th* L'nited Stetsa Department
of Agrieul'ure.»
The time of the year that a cow
freshens has considerable to do with
the profit she returns. An analysis of
the figures obtained from many cow-
testing associations shows that In must
sectinns the cows that freshen dur-
ing Hie fall and early winter produce
the most milk ami butter fat
bring in the greatest profit over
of feed
Dept. GO-4
460-4th St., San Francisco, Cal.
CORRECT ENGLISH
PUB. CO*
Evanston, Illinois
other of
St. Joseph
7/ your dtai* r dots not hand It SUN SEI
strut 2it for a rampif copy. Suhcnpi'.o1
prict: i2.>0 ptr year; I KO yewr,
THREE your,. Xf
More than 100
♦he county were entertainer! by
neer Grange at a Pomona all-day meet
ing here in the 1. 0. 0. F. hall, Tues-
day with dinner, lecture hour and con-
ferring of fifth degree on fifteen ap-
plicants.
METHOD IN ANESTHESIA
IS LIFE SAVER
HOW TO USE IT .-4
A Monthly Magazine
52.50 the Yw
bend l(k for Samp’t Copy
V. Girls’ Quartette —
VI. Reading---- Gladys Klopolsky
VII. Violin Solo Julius Seeliger
VIII. Pantomine by Sophomores
IX. Saxaphone Solo _ Elemer
X. Junior High Giris1’ Glee
High School auditorium.Meets on the sect mo ent foarth
Thursday* in the month at 2 p. flU i>
I. 0. 0. F. hall.
MRS. KATE DAVISSON,
Field
week by the making of six new loca-
tions; two each by the Comar Oil
company, and the Amerada Petro-
leum corporation, and one by Mar-
land and the Southwestern Petroleum
company.
Following is a resume of field op-
eration: Comar Oil company’s No. 1,
Carmiachj^H, northeast of 3-24-1W,
underreaming 8 *4 casing at 2,100
feet; Ruzek’s W I stoutheast of
3- 24-Ivq, (tinning ca.sitng at 2,475
feet; No. 2A, See, northwest of 15-24-
lw, has -«t casing at 2,109 feet and
is being drilled at 2,201 feet. No. 3
See; No. 4 is being drilled at 75(1 feet;
No. 7 is shut down for orders at 2,068
fet; No. 8 is being drilled at 1,988 feet
No. 9 is a new location, 650 feet south
of No. 7, No. 10 is a location, 510 fc*vt
south of No 6
Amerada Petroleum co ifporat ion’s
No. 2 twin, Smith, northeast of 15-
24-lw, is being drilled at 2,185 feet;
No. 6 is a new location; No. 7 is also
a location and twin to No. 4—Tonkawa
News
Gives Degrees To
Member^
the! •pitais •gdeh as> Lakeside Hos^te'|
sev Cleveland, Ohio, Cook County Hospital
Chicage, and the Mayo clinic.
“By the new method the sensory
nerve impulse going into the brain
The |«it$en4 is not
The school board has employed the
I following teaching force in the Nardin
I school for the 1922-23 term: Maude
Kincannon. superintendent, Helen
West, principal; C. C. McMullen, 7th
and 8th grades; Bessie Musselman, 4th in two the mortality froc major sur-
5th and 6th grades and Marie Morri- gieal operations, he declared. “This
son, primary.—Nardin Independent. is rather a startling statement but
letiu advises,
cruinnunlty affair, and (be following
measures arc being adopted by some of
the farm bureaus:
The mtgar company o]>eratlo( In the
district Is requested to refuae con-
tracts for beeta grown on soil that
Is known (o be Infested with the supar-
beet nematodes.
When Infested soil happens to be
planted the owner and the sugar com
pany are to make arrangements for
handling the beets from the Infested
areas separately and not allow the in-
fested beets to go through the dumps
while other beets are being handled
The practice of throwing dump
along public highway* should be
hlblted. by law If ne<e*sary.
Copies of the bulletin may be
free by making a request to the Unifed
States Department of Agriculture,
Washington, D. C.
ened to the 2,600-foot sand. Its
depth is 2,185 feet. Marland Oil
and Refining coompany’s No. 1 school
land, northeast of 16-24-Iw, ig good
for 350 barrels; No. 2 1, 450 barrels.
South western Petroleum company’s
No. 1, east Murray, southwest of 10-
24-Iw, is good for 680 barrels. White
Eagle Oil and Refining company’s No.
1, Novotny, south half of the south-
tion, thus eliminating the flood of
nervous impulses which ordinarily re-
sult from fear and dread and from the
irritation and pain accompanying an
operation.
Some former methods of anaethe-
tia does not block these impulses and
the higher nerve centers in the
are exhausted and the patient
large percent of cases suffer®
shock.
“By the new method shock is
lutely prevented, not a single
occurring in a series of hundreds of
operations performed at the South-
western Osteopathic Sanitarium. The
advantages'of the.se methods are very
obvious and easily proven by results
but its universal acceptance has been
delayed because it did not bear the
trade mark, ‘Made in Germany.’
“The medical profession Ims been
very adverse to accepting any new
system of methods unless they come
from high recongnized authority in the
medical profession. That is the reason
osteopathy was refused recognition
when Dr. Still endeavored in the begin
i.ing to inform his medical brethren’
of his discoery. Likewise a new
method as anaesthesia which does
not come from high medical authority
ofGermany must win out slowly and
surely on its merits. The hospitals of
America and Atnwri.-an ■iirgeons are
in advance of anything Europe t*
able to produce and we should not
continue to look to Uictn foj evqry
advantage in the healing art.
“This metho^ of anesthesia 'has
:nany other advantages besides the
prevention of shocks. The patient’s
nervous system is disturbed very little
in any way and the blood pressure
and pulse rates taken from a series of
;> large number of institutions shows a
very' insignificant variation
normal as compared to the
treew'd on pafie^tsl uai^er Straight
ether, chloroform, gas or
the older anaesthetic:
Telegram.
Champlin Oil and Refinery com-1
patty’s No. 1, Morris southwest of 15-
24-1 w, is sbeing plugged back to 2,000 |
feet where it is expected to produce*
fifty barrels,
down for orders after being drilled to
a depth of 2,678 feet with consider-
able water in the hole. With pro-
Potnona Grange
Fifteen
Twoce
surgical
said Dr.
Okla., at the Central States Osteo-
pathic Association Convention here
today. Proper selection and admin- j
istration of the anaesthetic will cut
as many people
operations as is
H. C. Wallace of
ty, despite the threatening weather,
representatives came from six, Center,
Sumpter, Weston, Good Will, Lilyvale
and Pioneer. An elaborate dinner
was served cafeteria style and the pro-
gram followed. In the absence of
Mrs. E. Seaton, lecturer, of Blackwell,
the lecturer for the Pioneer Grange,
Mrs. L. C. Shelton, presided, together
with A. E. Walker, president of Pio-
neer.
A drill of thirteen of Sumpter
Grange gave the degree work to the
following: Mr. and Mi’s. J. W. Schen-
eider, Miss Hdlen iSchneider, Miss
Freda Spore, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bush
Miss Edith Bush, R. H. Thompson, Mr.
and Mrs Fred Anson, Mr and Mrs. J.
S. Clark. J. T. Michael, L. Stewart, of
Pioneer Grange and Erank Adams,
Miss Marie Pittman and W. R. Clift,
of Center Grange.
On the program, the numbers were:
Violin Solo—Andrew Koma
Whistling and Voocal Solo—Joe
en
Reading—.Mrs.
Reading—Mrs.
Reading—Miss
Reading—Miss
Reading—Miss
Vocal Solo—Mrs. Fred Ansan.
Short Talks from members of
Grange represented.
C. J. Chase, of Good Will grange,
No. 13 told of the work done by the
i Eddy organization. A. R. l^ong, of
Center, spoke on the need of an en-
lightenad attitude toward education.
He urged that the common school
curriculum be made as complete as
possible to benefit those who have no
I chance for higher education. Con-
solidated schools, he said, is still an
open question and urged *that pro-
| visions be made for monthly reports
to the granges from the success of the
I venture in consolidated districts.
H. B. Skien of Lilyvale grange,
pointed out the importance of inter-
est by the people in the county and,
government officers and a closer sup-
ervision of their actions. Wl R.
Clift made a short address on rural
schools and L. C. Shelton, county
agent, on activities for the county
; fair this year. Opportunities for the
farmer, in his opinion, may be found
in corn and livestock this year.
Mrs. Nell Gordon, representing
Sumpter grange, suggested that once
a month one of the granges in the
county visit another on^. W. C.
Sifferd said a few words in behalf
of Weston and Arliss Walker for Pio-
neer grange—Newkirk Republican-
New s-Tournal.
No. 609 arrives at 10:45 a. m-
No. 609 makes connection at 9taea
with train for Tulsa, arriving at
5:45 p. m.
: No. 606 arrives at
I $40—Local east
64.3—Local west _
G R. SCHOFIELD. Agrat,
A L. SQUIRE
Attorney at Law
General Practice in all Court*
Office—National .Block
comer Main and Blackwell
BLACKWELL. OKLAHOMA
Program Friday Morning, May 12
9:00 a. m. inter class program, Jun-
duction at that location the area will i ior - Sophmore - Freshman chapel
be extended three-quarterN of a mile progrm was given Friday, May 12th,
south. The Southwestern Petroleum • at 9:00 a. m.
company’s No. 8, East Murray, south- ' I. Girls’ Glee Club—
west of 10-24-lw, is the next well due. IL Violin Solo _ Lucille Hudiburg
.i__ ,i e a Tuesday’ the, III. Reading Valda Crow
casing was being pulled pzeparatory IV. Violin Solo Alice Brainerd
to drilling in the top of the pay
formation at 2,180 feet. |
Daily field production by wells fol-
lows: Comar Oil company’s No. 1,
See, northwest of 15-24-1, 1,310 bar-
rels; No. 2, seven barrels. Amerada
Petroleum corporation, No. 1, 3 and
i. Smith, the northeast of 15-24-lw,
are placing 1,600 barrels in the tank;
No. 2 twin has been mudded off deep- days since our last issue on her way
STATE BOARD OF HEALTH
NEWS
practically every’ county in the state.
This line of rural education is probably
' better organized in Oklahoma than in
i any other state in the Union.
At the present time Oklahoma has
over 30,000 boys and girls enrolled in
club work and carrying over 41,000
club projects. The enrollment by
clubs is as follows: Com 6,603, Cot-
J ton 1,789, Irish Potatoes 860, Sweet
Potatoes 1,043, Peanut 2,193, Grain
Sorghum 1,950, Fruit 646, Bee 207,
I Small grain 785, Pig Breeding 4,817,
, Calf Breeding 263, Sheep 144, Poultry
j 10,944, Feed Preparation 1,445, Can-
1 ning 3,100, Sewing 4,000 and Darying
275.
The Cooperative Crop Reporting Ser
vice reports the condition of winter
wheat on May 1st at 75 per cent of nor
mal and a probable abandonment of
i 24 per cent. The Bureau of Crop Es-
timates has just recently issued revis-1
ed figures on the acreage sown to I
wheat in the fall of 1921, show ing that
3,728,000 acres were seeded instead of
3,550,000 as estimated last December
Deducting the abandonment from the
revised acreage and applying the pro-
bable yield of 11 bushels per acre, it
I would appear that this year’s produc-
tion would range around 32,000,000
bushels. This production figure var-
ies slightly from the report released
the Board of Agriculture two weeks
ago as our fignie was based on the
December estimate of the acreage
sown.
What Do YOU Want to e
Know About the Far West?
No.58—Mixed from Tonkawa 8:0$ am
No. 65—Mixed to Ponca City 8:36 am
No. 66—Mixed from Ponca City
----------------------11:40 am
No. 53—Mixed from Welling-
ton 10:60am
> Vo.52—Mixed to Wellington 8:10 am
I Vo. 62 Mixed to Anthony 11:00 am
| No. 61 - Mixed from Anthony 7 30 ana
No. 55—Mixed to Tonkawa 12 20 pm
No. 56—Mixed from Tonkawa 1:50 pm
Passengers run daily Mixed daily
except Sunday
X. E. WALCHER, Agent
There ia no more dependable,
unbiased, frank and interest-
ing source of information
than
Sunset
JLZ THE PACIFIC MONTHLY
Tht Wett’i Great National Mataiine
0000000090000
, ■. urn it >• i«*M*f*i
There is a move on foot by the Mil-
lers, Grain Dealers, Rail Roads, A. and
M. college and the State Board of Ag-
riculture to enter an extensive cam-
paign for better and purer seed wheat.
It has been deterined by the hoard of
Agriculture that the farmer is losing
from 3 to 5 bushels per acre in produc
tion on account of inferior seed.
, Farmers and grain dealers also sus-
I tain a serious loss on account of lack
' of unimform grading. During the
i last year or two it has not been unus-
ual for w’heat grading as No. 1 and 2
i by Federal Inspectors in Oklahoma to
be classified as No. 3 to 5 at Terminal
markets. The Board of Agriculture
J is now enlisting the aid of the Federal
I Department of Agriculture for a more
uniform grading system.
One vf the Many Widely Varying a rerent report to this office bv
Type* of Sugar Beet* Found in ., D
. Mr. B. A. Pratt, who has charge of
Commercial Field*. ., ,, , .
i the Boys and Girls Club Work, it has
taken (<> prevent their spread, the bul- I come to our attention that this work is
I; -.!:: Thi* should be made « I accomplishing wonderful results in
spreading (he sugar-beet nema.ode and shwld have tWQ w three ubJe .
-A B % I .X* t B 44 ..-J F 4 XiQb. x. I t xx ■ . 0 I . . ■ |
...... j fuls of petroleum put in them, it will
Bulletin 1248 The not water for washing pur-
Sugar Beet Nematode in (he Western i poses, but will eliminate mosquitoes.
Slate*, prepared by Gerald Thorne and | There are three kinds of parasites
L. A. Giddings and now ready for dis- i cause malarial fever, they feed on
trlbutlm. by rbe UollM L, bkxK| ce|ls The in
(Iient of Agriculture. 1 . - , .. , , .
Prevent Scattering Soli. the fema,e mosquito and by her, are
Since the removal of dirt from the injected into the blood of the person
dumps seems to be the only practical she bites.
method of disposing of the thousands Three things are necessary for the
of ton* of soil annually screened from i ad of Malaria:
rhe beets, savs the bulletin, precau- , .
. , , , 1 Persons with malaria parasites
lions must be taken to prevent scat- ,
ferlng the soil containing nematode*. *n their blood.
Wagon boxes should be tight enough 2 Mosquitoes to bite such persons,
to prevent soil Jarring out along (he 3 Healthy persons into whom the
roads and in the fields. Dump dirt mosquito may inject the malarial par-
should ba disposal of in hole*. asjte bitin ’
awatnps, or waste corners where there ,
is the least danger of its being scat - , P*‘rson« ^oul<‘ **• protected by
itre(j ; having the house well screened as the
The practice of growing beets year misquito carrying malaria almost in-
after year on the same tiehl gives the ; variably bites during the night. Mal-
neinatodes an excellent opportunity *’1’j arja| per.wns should be treated by a
becoming established if they are once ... ... A. .. ,
. . 1 . .. .x . .... 1 physician until the parasites have
Introduced. A definite system of crop ! r f
relation b said to be advisable with been removed from the blood.
not more than two years of heels in j The greater part of Oklahoma is
succession. The fertility of the soil free froni malaria, but there are some
will thus be maintained, and much of sec|jons where it is very prevalent,
rhe danger from Inse t pests and plant
diseases will he avoided at the same
time.-
Make It Community Affair.
When nematode* are found hi a
locality, action should Immediately be
Free County Fair Board Attend* to statistics compiled from operations
Important Matter* done at the Southwestern Osteopathic
Sanitarium, Blackwell, Okla., amply
The executive board of the Kay ( bear out the statement. Similar ntat-
County Free Fair Association held a :«tics were also cited from other hos-
meeting Thursday afternoon in
office of the secretary and made
era! changes. One of the most
portant was’ setting aside funds
Ixilding the five district fairs that
to be held ;n connection with the coun- are {blocked.
ty fair this fall. The board was fore- aware of the happenings in connec-
ed to reduce the allowance for each tion with the operation and the pre
district this year on account of having parations shortiy prior to the opera-
added one district fair, and because of
not having been allowed as much mon
ey for county fair purposes, as upon
former years, due to the reduced valu-
ation in taxable property.
The amount set aside for each of thp
district fairs in the county was $300.
This it was explained, is quite a re-
duction in allowance, but when it is
considered that one more fair has been
added to the list and the reduction in
amount of funds from taxation is
borne in mind, it will be seen that the
same proportion is being appropriated
♦o the various districts. Then again
the board is trying to work out the
finances of the coming fairs, in a way
not to have it be a burden on the com
munities holding them.
The secretary was innttj-ucted to
Dioceed with the catalog and have it
ready for printing at an early date.
The next meeting of the board will
be held in the office of the secretary
at 2 p. m., June 3rd, at which time the
final passing on the catalog will be
made and the contract let for print-
ing.—Daily Tribun£.
Owing to the excessive rainfall this
spring it is an assured fact that there
will be an unusually large number of
mosquitoes this summer. It is well
worth while to make preparation to
escape malaria and its attendant dis-
comforts this summer.
Care should be taken to prevent
! stagnant water from standing in bar-
rels, buckets, tin cans and small pools
Any low places that cannot be drained
should have crude oil scattered on
Dirt from the beet dump* apparent-1 them.
ly is the most common iuamus of Barrels used to catch soft water
No.52—Passenger to Welling-
ton. Connects for Kansas City
and east, also Independence
and Chanute and north Tex-
as points 5:4$ an
No.5l—Passenger from Well-
ington. Connects from Kansas
City anf Southern Kansas
points ---------9:$$pm
Xo. 5(1—Passenger to Hutchinson
Connects with through trains
for California and Colorado 84$ am
No. 49—Passenger from Hutch-
inson -----------------2:4$ pm
No.63—Passenger to Ponca City
Connect* south and north 6:36 am
Xo 50—Passenger from Ponca
City. Connects from north
and south 8:36 am
No,49- Passenger to Ponca City
Connects north and south 4:3$ pm
No. 64—Passenger from Ponca
City Connects north and ’ x
, south--------------------846pmOklahoma crops in 1919 were valued I No.57-Mixed to Tonkawa __74$ am
The following letter received by-
Postmaster McDowell, and handed
by him to the Tribune, is self ex-
planatory and needs no comment:
Dear Sir:
Dr. John Wesly Hill, representing
the Federal Govement will arrive in
Oklahoma, May 15, and will <ti
a series of lectures on the foollowing
subjects;
“The Peril of the Red Flag.”
“Law Enforcement.”
“Duty of American Citizenship dur-,
ing Reconstruction.’’
Dr. Hj»1 is one of the greatest lectui*
era and most forceful speakers in the
United States; he i® an
character and educator
President Emeritus of
Memorial University of
is only by chaqce that we are able to
send him to you. He will be in Black-
well for a meeting at the M.E. church
at 11:00 a. m.. May 21, 1922. Every
citizen in your town should hear him
as it is seldom that they have an
opportunity to hear so distinguished
a speaker. Ploase get busy with your
Commercial club, civic organizations
and newspapers in order to secure
, for Dr. Hill a large representative
1 audience. W* would he glad to have
THE WEEK S I.EVEI.OPMENT '
J n this matter.Thanking you in advance for your
earnest efforts, I remain,
Yours very truly,
Millard F. Meadows,
Federal Prohibition Director.
The well had been shut' — Daily Tribune. ' 1, ,
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McDowell, T. H. W. The Times-Record (Blackwell, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1922, newspaper, May 18, 1922; Blackwell, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1609623/m1/3/: accessed May 22, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.