Oklahoma Daily Live Stock News. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 72, Ed. 1 Monday, July 6, 1914 Page: 2 of 4
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JULY 8 1914
MONDAY AFTERNOON
OKLAHOMA DAILY LIVE STOCK NEWS
The Daily LiveStock News
Published by the
OKLAHOMA LITE STOCK VEITS
(Incorporated)
MAIN OFFICE— Exchange Building
Stock Yards Phone Walnut 6390
‘ City Office 317 Baltimore Building
Phone Walnut 4443
A G DAWSON Pres
W R MARTINEAU Ed-Mgr
BION F COLE Adv Mgr
Eastern Representative— Alfred B
Lukens Room 607 Tribune Building
New York N Y
Entered as Second-Class Matter Oc-
tober I 1910 at the Postotfice at
Oklahoma City Okla under act of
March 4 1879
' The Live Stock News 6tands fairly
and Impartially for shippers buyers
and sellers giving the complete sales
and live stock transactions each week
day and dally reports from other prin-
cipal markets
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION:
Daily one year
Daily six months
Daily three months
Daily one month
Weekly -one year
$400
225
125
60
125
CUPID IN A" STOCKING BOX
Girl Maker of Hosiery Spring Joke
That Loads Her and a Yeung
Southerner to Altar
Reading Pa— Engaged and married
within a week was the speed record
established by Dan King of Miami
Fla and Miss Ruth Salen daughter
of Mr and Mrs Howard Salen The
romance began when Mr King found
the name of Mias Salen In a box of
stockings received at the department
store In which he Is employed at
Miami Fla He wrote to Miss Salen
and correspondence followed result-
ing In friendship Mr King came to
Reading a week ago and met Miss
Salen for the first time It was love
at first sight and the marriage re-
sulted Miss Salen was employed at
the Nolde A Horst stocking factory
and she put her name In a box of
stockings as a Joke
Fastest Growing Company At the Stock Yards
GOOD LUCK IN JAP TALESMAN
Address all communications to THE
LIVE STOCK NEWS Stock Yards
Station Oklahoma City Okla
MONDAY JILT 8 1914
U M
v FRISCO TIME TABLE 4
4 OKLAHOMA CITY j
j 4 4 j j 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4
EFFECTIVE SUNDAY MAY 24
Inbound
No Ar
413 — Governor from Musko
gee and Joplin 7:45 am
9 — Meteor from St Louis 8:40am
111— Meteor from Kansag
City 11:26 am
4U8— Eastern Express from
Lawton 10:10 am
10— Limited from Quanah 3:00pm
407 — Limited from St Louis 4:59 pm
No - Outbound Lv
408 — Limited for St Louis 10:35am
9 — Express for Lawton and
Quanah 9:10 am
10 — Meteor for St Louis 6 : 06 pm
407— Expres fir Lawton 6:00pm
414— Governoi " r Muskogee
’and Joplin 12:01 pm
112— Meteor for Kansas City 6:60 pm
ONE DRY-FARMING NECESSITY
8ubsurface Packer la New Implement
Meeting -Conditions Following
Spring Plowing
The only really uew tool for soil
management Invented within several
T"1 I decades seems to he the subsurface
packer All other new types of tool
are modifications of former inven-
tions but the subsurface packer when
H W Campbell devised It about 1S93
was something really new In principle
In “Dry Farming in Washington”
' a new bulletin by Thom and Holtz
I subsurface packing (s urged as a ne-
cesslty for dry farming “immediately
following all spring plowing’ Says
this bulletin: “A subsurface packer
- meets the need of Just such condl
tions iu that It packs the lower or
subsurface of the furrow slice against
- the firm soil beneath and at the same
time It does not pack or fine the sur-
face two or three Inches but leaves
It loose open and granular a condi-
tion that assures a very elficlent
mulch” It has been a source of won-
der to the writer that subsurface pack-
- lng has been so generally neglected
by the people of the dry-farmiug re-
gions says a writer In Farm and Fire-
side But perhaps the explanation Is
to be found In the following facts
' Btated In this bulletin: "When sub-
surface packing is delayed even for a
day or two after plowing or until the
soil has become dried out the ubc of
the packer beoomes a decided disad
vantage Dry soli cannot be packed
-7 and packing pulverizes the
dry surface of dry soil thereby In
creasing the liability to blowing
"Many farmers have become prej-
udiced against the packer very large-
ly for the reason that they have failed
to use the packer Immediately after
plowing but delayed until the soil has
become too dry” Campbell's old rule
' Is to pack all which has been plowed
before going In for dinner or supper
The authors of this bulletin show the
packer In an Illustration which seems
to be the pretty exact reproduction
of the first machine built by Camp-
bell It spring plowing everywhere
were given this treatment it would be
a great safeguard against drought
“Fortune’s Spsctsoles” Believed
Poeeeee Taflemanlo Virtue by
the Japan
to
New York — Travelers In Japan
often see curious stone rings support-
ed on a pillar to whloh have been glv-
Overstocking Pastures
What causes pastures to run out
more than anything else Is to place
twice as many animals in the area as
there Is herbage for them’ Orow soil-
ing erops to supplement the pastures
and reseed fertilize roll and till the
grazing lands each spring to keep
them In the best possible condition
Notes of the Dairy Lot
Too much emphaBls cannot be put
upon regularity'ln the dairy work Ir-
- regular hours greatly Interfere with
the milk production and a long delay
In milking must be painful For best
results there should be regular feed-
ing hours
Early Plowing Benefits -
One of the greatest advantages from
very early plowing Is that It gives the
many seeds time to come up to be
killed by frosts or better still to be
killed by disk and barrow ' t -'
Curious Ring of Stone Believed to
to Bring Luck
en the name "Fortune's Spectacles’’
These curious devices are believed by
some to have a tallsmanie virtue in
that if one crawls through the ring
he will be able to accomplish all he
undertakes The size of the rings
Is such that no great dexterity 1b re-
quired to perform the feat — Popular
Mechanics
TRYING TO STEAL A PRISON
Bold Robbers Move Pleasantvills
Lock-Up 30 Feet — “Cop” Locks
Self Out
Atlantia City— A new brand of thief
Is worrying the three policemen
of Pleasantvllle a suburb of this re-
sort The ‘‘two by four” Jail there
will hold seven persons If they sit
close together One night the lock-
up was moved but no particular at-
tention waa paid to it But on an-
other night It moved again at least 30
feet from its assigned spot Then
the investigation began
Now the cops are trailing the mis-
creants who tried to steal the Jail
To add to the troubles of the force
Patrolman Krewson lost his keys and
when he made an arreBt and attempt-
ed to place the prisoner In the bas-
tile he found hlmBelf locked out
MAN GRIPS THE MULE’S FOOT
Former Football 8tar Performs an Un-
usual Feat With 8treunoua
Animal
Trenton N J — Patrolman John A
Sllversteln a football star when In
the high school here accomplished the
unusual feat here recently of holding
a mule's foot The brawny patrolman
tried to get the mule ofi the car
tracks when the animal let fly her
heels at him
Sllversteln grabbed one foot and
held on with such a grip that the ani-
mal was powerless to yank it away
from him He waa dragged a few feet
to a lamppost and then managed to
bold light until others grabbed the
mule by the head
Burglar Was a Chimpanzee
Paris — A policeman who was look-
ing after a house In the Rue de Berrl
during the absence of the tenant dis-
covered that a window pane had been
smashed At the same time he no-
ticed a shadow in one of the rooms
Thinking a burglar had entered the
building he sent his dog to capture
the supposed man An extraordinary
noise was then beard from the room
and It was soon discovered that the
"burglar’’ was really an escaped chim-
panzee The animal had done $500
worth of damage
4? Clook Long Idle Starts Up
Waycross Oa — Moving a clock
about a mile to Waycross caused It to
start running after It had refused to
operate for seven years - Everything
possible had been done during the
seven-year period to make the clock
one of the ornamental variety get
busy but when it was placed In the
new houBe recently to which its own-
ers were moving It started running
tnd has been giving no trouble since
Met After 52 Years
Laporte Ind — While seated In a res-
taurant James Terry learned that a
stranger with whom he was talking
was John Blakely of Grand Rapids
Mich' whori) ha had nursed back to
health during the Civil war The men
had not seen each other In 62 years
i
I-
The Oklahoma Stock Yards Serum Co
Manufsetunrs f
ANTI HOG-CHOLERA SERUM
A Safe Sure Preventative of Cholera
- r'-r' y ' See a
Real Anti-Hog Cholera Serum Plant
’ Write Today— - - "
for our free booklet showlngjeach department Operated under gov-
ernment Inspection U S Veterinary License No 10
We Guarantee
that every lot of Serum has been made and tested as required by the
government - A record of this is open for inspection at any time
Made Right-
If Used Right
-All Right
WICHITA & OKLAHOMA SERUM CO
Plant— Wichita Kans
Phone: Market 386
Branch — Oklahoma City Okla
Phone: Walnut 6886
SIWASH INDIAN LIFE
Pacific Coast Natives From
Washington to Alaska
Tribe’s Chief Occupation Is Fishing
and Hunting — Squaws Maks Much
“Pin” Money Weaving Reed
Rugs Which They Sell
Minneapolis Minn — The Stwaah In-
dian la the native of the Pacific coast
from Washington to the southern part
of Alaska He Is found mostly now-
adays on reservations either estab-
lished by the United States or by Brit-
ish government These reservations
invariably are located on salt water
where the fishing Is good and where
the Indians can pursue their crafts as
they did before the days of the white
man Fishing and hunting — but most-
ly fishing — form the chief occupations
of the Indiana now as they did In the
days of long ago The Bquaws make
considerable “pin’’ money weaving
reed ruga baskets and ornaments
which they dye with aniline dyes In-
stead of dyes made from berries and
roots These baskets and rugs are
Bold to the tourists who throng the
coast during the summer In Seattle
Vancouver B C and Victoria B C
these Indians are to be seen during
the summer months squatting about
the sidewalks with their wares spread
out before them and a motley dirty lot
of little ones running about The
“chiefs” are to be found on the streets
also ottering bows and arrows and
sundry other weapons which bring Joy
to the boyish heart
It has been the custom for the In-
dians to rocord the hiBtory of their
chiefs and their tribe on ‘‘totem poles’’
These poles are nothing more than
logs crudely cut into grotesque figures
hideously painted Real paint Is used
now instead of the coloring matter se-
cured from roots berries and trees
as In the old days These totem poles
record Important events of the chief
or the tribe Many of them are very
Interesting and very long Sometimes
they measure fifty or seventy-five feet
In length
In the early days the Slwash In-
dians as well as the other tribes of the
Pacific coast were very warlike They
generally fought their battles In huge
war canoes or "dugouts” Most of the
time of the Slwash is spent on the wa-
ter and to this scientists ascribe the
CROPS FOR A DRY PASTURE
Expert of Washington State College
Recommends Kale Peas Corn
Alfalfa and Clovers
In response to many Inquiries Prot
O B Nystrom dairyman at the Wash-
ington state college has prepared the
following statement: Each summer
a large number of pastures dry up or
at least begin to fall- In order to
keep up the milk flow something to
help the pastures along not only
Bhows in the milk pall but lengthens
the life of the pasture
Crops that may be used for this pur-
pose are thousand-headed kale peas
and oats vetch and oats peas and
barley alfalfa corn and clovers
Those may be used either as soiling
crops or as silage Any of the root
crops may also be used to advantage
If they are large enough for this pur-
pose so early In the season-
The thoughtful dairyman prepares
for this shortage of pasture by sowing
these soiling crops each spring at in-
tervals of from three to four weeks
and hns them ready for the cows when
needed - But if these special soiling
crops are not sown suy green food
that will be relished by the animals Is
valuable to keep their digestion lh
good shape and stimulate the milk
flow
The summer silo Is probably the
best solution of this problem of cum-
mer feed for it enables the dairyman
to harvest bis crop at the proper time
and then feed it out when needed in
just as good a condition as when put
tuto the silo -
Concerning fodder corn for soiling
Professor Henry says: “On larms
lacking summer silage feeding corn
forago in the green stage should be-
come general' for the reason that dur-
ing the late summer sf d early fall the
pastures are often scant and animals
forced to subsist on them suffer from
lack of sufficient food and cannot da
their best An acre of ripened corn
fed in early fall to dairy cows which
are otherwise on poor food may so ad-
vance their condition bb to return
double the value it would yield were It
held over until winter and fed at a
time when there is ofteu a plethora
of the same material"
Old Kassam a Typical Indian Vlllaga
' ' in Alaska '
phynical peculiarities of the race—
namely short ahd rqunt with bow lcg(
end : huge well-developed shoulder l
tad arms
Benefit of the Best Light
We should be ss generous with
man as we are with a picture which
we always give the benefit of the beBt
possible light— Ralph W Emerson
TURTLE BLOCKS THE TRACK
Almost Severs Iron Bar Used to Die-
lodge Him— Later le 8erved to
Men In Form of Stew
New York — On the way from Pat
erson N J to Edgewater Conduc-
tor Dunning stopped his car with a
Jolt Passengers and crew hurried out
to find a ten-pound turtle blocking the
track
- 'The turtle almost bit In two an iron
switch bar used to dislodge him
Eventually the men got him Into the
car At the trolley men’s supper tur-
tle stew was ou the menu
Pony 8tung to Death by Beet
Moorpark Cal— Stung to death by
bees was the fate of a flue riding pony
belonging to Ray McFadden a rancher
here McFadden had ridden some dis-
tance to bis apiary and dismounting
tied the pony under an oak tree while
he proceeded to extract honey from
his hives Hearing a disturbance he
looked and saw the pony literally cov-
ered with the angry Insects and In a
short time the animal died
444444f4 fr'4 4 4 44 4 4 4 4 44 444 4 4 4 4
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Sulzberger & Sons Company
Chicago
Oklahoma City
New York
Kansas City
A BARGAIN EVERY D AY
SHIPPERS’ LETTERHEADS ENVELOPES ETC
WRITE OR CALL
DAILY LIVE STOCK NEWS
made a gain of
:©EMT
v - -
in 6 months over like period of 1913
We need all your live stock
If you need stock cattle sheep or hogs
you can get them here
Oklahoma
National Stock Yards Company
TH0S E WILSON
President
I W 8 HUTCHINGS
T lee President
T C SCBOGGS
Traveling Bepresentatlie
'
V
i r
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Martineau, W. R. Oklahoma Daily Live Stock News. (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 72, Ed. 1 Monday, July 6, 1914, newspaper, July 6, 1914; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1930111/m1/2/: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.