Oklahoma Daily Live Stock News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 298, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 3, 1922 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
i i
ff J V
I 5
t'
0
‘ ”1 ' (
' NU
’ ’jit’ -
'X1 ’V
t
V’ f h
!
u V
i
f
i V V
J’
1
v
r
n
M
As
u
t
1f
L
- nf
f i v '
1 S ij
iJ J
i icuriE
i
Uf “Root$" Around San
: Katie the lowlands
Habitable
V
tZZZJB FOR TERRS
Or Chart K R Campbell’ DIhcv-
arlM hud Scientific Work With
' "t ht IntoroiU NturllU
0 All Over World
Loo Angi-le— Malaria the fltoeaet
(hot compete with tuberculosis and
cancer In Ua heavy toll ot life ba
fobnd Ito Nemeola alnco science pro-
tecta and shelter the bat a the nat-
ural enemy of the malarial mosquito
The result of Dr Charles A H
I ‘ CampbeH's discoveries and scientific
' work with bats ond mosquitoes has In
terested naturalists all over the world
f Tbs flrat hat roost wa built In San
Aatoalo for the purpose ot ridding
the city of lb? pestilential malarial
f mosquito
’ Tor years Pr Campbell experiment-
ed on bats to discover why they were
- ’ Immune from the disease that wrought
such havoc with human beings
t i Rate Abhor Jus
' It took a great many years for Dr
Campbell to be sure of the cause for
the difference In tho susceptibility of
the lint and that of other maramul
' W D Ilornaduy writes In the Los An-
1 geles Times The great difference In
thd nnntomy of the bnt was found to
be In Its relatively much larger spleen
It ls to this orgnn thut Dr Campbell
attribute tho hblllty of the bat to
thrive an the mosquito and consume
large numbers of them without being
affected
In his experiments with bats Dr
Campbell litis come across several pe-
culiar chnrncterlstlcs of the animal
for Instance bats abhor Jas A
phonograph n Jars reqord and a small
hoy stationed oil tho top of a bunting
lodge Infested with bats so startled
the anliniils In tho curly morning hours
al they lAq tinted to roost that they
flew some two inllcs away entered an-
Other lodge mill never returned to the
one In which they had been living for
two years Tho explanation of this le
that the ear of Ilia tint Is so delicate
that dlsHiidiint or strident noises are
to them tho most li rllutlng ot ull sen-
sation! ' Tho remarkable nlue of bats as a
health service was demonstrated In
San Antonio when the mnlnrla Infected
swamp notion around Lnko Mitchell
1 where tlieiu was nbundnnt grazing for
cattle was experimented on It hue
been said that formerly It was Im-
possible (o build fences around thlR
land bordering the lake strong enough
to hold the cattle
The myriads of mosquitoes were not
only dangerous on account of tlictr
'i germ-carrying propensities hut their
bite wa too painful even for boasts
having shoe-leather hides (o endurn
Dr Campbell erected a hat roost on
a rise In the neighborhood of the lake
and In a year the place was cleared of
mosquitoes and thousands of hnts had
taken their places The grazing land
Is now covered with fine healthy cat-
tle and the farm land Is Irrigated from
the waters of tho lake Matnrla Is al-
most unknown among the people duell-
ing In that locality
It requires ten to fourteen days for
tho malaria parasite to develop In
tho blood of the mosquito after the
Insect ha been Infected With a myri-
ad of hats flying about each night In
f 1 search of mosquitoes ns fond there Is
tittle chance of a mosquito living ten
days after It Is old enough In fly
- abroad at night
Many Bat Roosts In 8sn Antonio'
v After the success of this campaign
against malaria hat hoists wcio cstub
llthed In the southwest outskirts of
' flan Antonin This was so sucxessful
In ridding tliut portion of tho city of
mosquitoes that the state erected an-
other nt the Southwestern Imlunn
asylum lb Hun Antonio Anotlxr was
erected ot the West Texas Military
academy In Aluuio Heights Hammer
homes and furma are now taking up
the Idea
J Rome of the bat roosts erecied
under Dr Campball's supervision nro
' of mammoth slzo Often they i iso to n
’ height qf thirty to fifty feet and nro
t fifteen to twenty feet squure Tho
largest of them accommoduto fiom
6000000 to 8000000 bats It Is esti
mated Ig'tll early evening as they
toko their departure for tho mosquito-
hunttng ground! they have the npJ
pesrence of a dark cloud Bate do not
range ovor k wldo territory In their
foraging expeditions It Is asserted
Ordinarily they cannot be counted on
to cover a radius of moro than throe
tulles' add often they coniine their
flights to a mite or lea from their
tasting place
Oat 750 000 000
Raw York— "Tho Wolve of Wall
v
A Itrset" have fobbed their victims of
i I7MMX0000 line the close of the war
Ihmush ffaudutent stock promotions
“I i backetshopa declared District At
trrT Bftntoa lb a statement discuss-
If i tha work ot bis office for tho last
LBomia
c RarfShUts 1100 Past
v" M-Cc!iora Goraldlns Drey Lof-
‘ efided In in nlrplano nt th
-1
"""art flying ground and
"I feat In a para-
1 1 'vt woman to hava
"S fakt la Itatjk
t I V I
' s“a
i-k
tout on Ship
1 Como From “Mowhero”
Now Bedford Mass— A 80
f&ot schooner - battered and
mastless was discovered ashore
on West Island in the outer hur-
bor here recently On board
the hulk wai Osmund Erickson
who said his address was the
sea When found he was eat-
ing a handful of grass
Erickson who was suffering
from starvation was unable to
tell where tho vessel came from
According to police hla memory
waa Impaired by the privations'
he had undergone
The schooner the name of
which could not ho determined
carried a crudely arranged mast
to replace two that had appar-
ently bran carried away by a
storm This most was about six
feet high and pieces of 'old
clothing had been used for sails
The hull had been mended In
several places with bits of zinc
and tin
FIND NEW ANIMAL FOSSILS
Specimens Discovered In Arixon
Threw Light on American Life
In Pliocene Agef
Washington —Animal fossils throw-
ing a new light on tho little known
unlmal life of America in the 1'lloccnc
age hnvo been added to the collection
of the Kmlthxonlan institution by the
Held explorations conducted In Arizona
la the past year and described In a
repmt by tho Institution Among tin
most Interesting specimens discovered
the report said nro a new species of
nmstodnn u Inigo and sinnll species
ot camel uml two or three species of
horses T W (ililley member of the
Kmllhsoalun staff who conducted the
explorations says the collection of fos
slls "lepresentR practically a new fauna
of the Pliocene age ’containing ubout
Ml veilebriito species”
Dealing with the astrnphyslcnl field
vvoik of the Institution the report snld
the ohseivallons of the sun now being
made nt lls station on Mount Monte
rinnn Chile are being telegraphed do I
ly to Iluenos Aires upd "employed rdg
Him ly hv tin Argentine weather bu
lean for went her forecasting purposes'
" Idle the Smithsonian Institution"
the ropoit snld “Is not yet in a posi-
tion to champion tho use of statistics
of solar vurlntlon for weather fore-
casts the grent interest which Its
'studies of solur variability have
n roused here and abroad seems clearly
to warrant the eon tinned maintenance
of Its two stations until a satisfactory
basis for n test of the solar variability
ns a vventhor forecasting element ha
been laid”
KERENSKY TO TELL SECRETS
Memoirs 8y H Sought to 8vc th
Czar but Wa Frutrtd by
Great Britain
London England — Startling revela-
Hons respecting the dethronement and
death of former Emperor Nicholas are
promised by Alexander Kerensky one-
time head of (lie Russian republic
who has beea quietly writing lilt
memoirs In u London flat Kerensky'
plan was to spirit the emperor out of
Russlu to n neutral European country
or to tho Uuttcd States but this he
contends was frustrated by dreut
Ilrltaln
The book of the former Rpsslan dic-
tator will begin with the Inception of
the vvur und cover the Anal collapse
of the empire It will explain not
only tho causo of tlio Romanov over-
I throw but the fullure ot Kerensky's
own government
The writer declares that If tho al-
lies had been willing to let Russia re-
main passive for a period they could
liavo kept her as a valuable ully Thu
book will point out that the entente
Insisted on Russln's displaying energy
on the front whllo In the throes of a
revolution nt homo v
His own overthrow Kerensky attrib-
utes to simultaneous pressuro from
the two extreme parties the raynllsts
on tho right ami tho llolslievlfal on
the left In addition to the hostility
of tho nhrty
BATTLE IN RUMANIAN TRAINS
Crowds Jamming Coach Often
Come to Blow) 8erlous
Accidents Frequent v
Gnlntz Rumania — Borne railroad
trains In Runinnln nro so Jammed thnt
conductors nre powerless to collect
fares lienee tho Impression Is con-
veyed tlmt one tmiy travel for nothing
which serves only to bring larger num-
bers to tho already overcrowded
conches
Ilka most Other war-affected coun-
tries Itumnnla lias not enough pas-
senger caliches to toko caro of the
throngs who wnnt to travel The Got-
mans and Austrians confiscated most
of the rolling stock Passengers todny
are forced to ride on The roofs bump-
ers running boards and oven on the
undertrucks of the coaches Fist
fights to say nothing of neddents
fatal and otherwise ure of frequent
occurrence n f
Woman Chief of Felloe ‘ v
Uartlnsburg W Va-f ho new city
council has appointed I woman chief
of police or city sergeant a the office
Is offldaly deslgnatsd hero Bbe Is
Miss Hattie Sapp Ripubllcan and
wall known buslnia woauua Bha au
few ao '
-‘i ’I' 'lyk i L
vruilTX2G
LJIU
ii
H
Animal Undaunted by Pail ct
Milk In Face Rune From ’
Bovine Horns
DOUBT DAD'S WORD
Had 1 Been Told Thflt Black Bears
Wars Harmless but Thls Night'
Exptrlsnct Make Them Besotb
cal cn the Subject
Clean N- Y— Joe Duclier who le
four years old urivnys bn been afraid
of the black bears that come out of
the woods of the mountains near here
and nobody over bus been able to con-
vince 1dm that they are harmless Ills
father has told him that the blink
hears come out only to look for things
to cut or for exercise and thnt they
never were Interested In little boys
Lust nlglil however Joe toddled out
Into the barn with hie older bi oilier
Fred who Is eleven und for several
years lias boasted of not being afraid
of bears black or any other color Joe
walked behind Ills brother And when
they got to the barn he sat down on
a pile of hny'Just Ipslile the doorway
whlh! Ills brother (iegnn milking the
cow ' ’ " 1
"Fred" said Joe "It Is awful dutk
outside Are you ufrnld of bourn!"
"Don't be silly" Said Fred “There
nFeb't liny hours around bore except
bluff bears und they wouldn't hurl
anybody"
"Jlut lliey might" persisted Joe
“Anil you're not afraid of them ore
you! All right then I won't be nfriild
either" '
5 t '
M ’ Black Bruin Appcarc
Fred went on milking by the light
of the lonlein until tlie'pnll was ubout
full All at oneo he honed Joe cry oul
with a little Btllled sobbing scream lie
turned and suw tlmt u big black bear
Imd come through the doorway und
was reaching out u hairy paw fur the
little boy ‘ t '
Fred jumped up and ran to his
brother umd the boar forgetting to put
dowp the pull of milk us ho ran liut
before he reached Idm the hem's paw
had reached Joe's shoulder und the
claws had gone Into tho sweater til
the shoulder The bear looked around
just then and pulled nwny bis phw
touring most of Joe's sweater with It
Joe began to cry for the elnws bad
cut Into Ills llesli about the shoulder
and neck Fred didn't know vvhnt else
to do in bo threw the pell of milk
into the bear's face The bear put Ids
paws up to Ills eyes trying to brush
liwny tho liillk ns lie bucked nwny
Tho bear inadvertently backed Info
the eow which until this time bad
been standing still wondering why the
milking had stopped Hut when she
' The Bear Looked Around
eaw theiear she bellowed and lowered
her head Tliera was n flurry and a
flight and while the cow and the bem
were mixed up In the barn the boye
run buck to tho house
Tliera ura two boys now who nre
afraid of beurs even the harmless
bluek bears
FOLKS ATTACKED BY HAWKS
Man and Wlfa Puriutd for Two Milo
‘ j by Pair of Vlelout Bird In
Michigan
rinttle Creek Mich— A bottle with
chicken liliulm which lasted for two
hours uml llnully forced them after
being slightly wounded to seek safety
In flight wns the thrilling experience
of Mr uml Mrs John Fleming
Two linwks Ixtrumu so InCcnsud when
Fleming explored a nest and killed
young hawks Hint they followed the
rot railing collide for two mites '
'a It'll light storied vlien Fleming
rCljmjiib
Dub Hie tree te their nest
it Jmwk swooped down Upon
him with shrill crlsa beating him with
c:3foS
to dg ciii:e&
Worried Over Rapid Increase of
Yellow Population f
IS OR PUSH CGTRDL
Already Has Ona ftaea Problem 4n
Preponderance f Negraaa Which
Make Up Fully 95 For Cent of th
Population— Much of Country Unde-
veloped and That Under Cultiva-
tion I Largely In tho Hands of Nw
gro Peasant Proprietors '
Stringent restriction of Chinese Im
migration to Jumuleu announced be-
cause or the rapid lncrauiK) of its yel-
low populution draws attention to this
most important of the West Indian
units of the llritlsh empire which may
be taking advantage of our own experi-
ences with orientals in Hawaii This
hit of British teirltoiy near our own
shores is the subject of the following
bulletin from Ibe Washington D C-
headquarters of the Nutlonul Geo-
graphic society
"Jamaica already has one race prob-
lem" suys the bulletin “for this might
almost be tailed un African Isluud
with u thin veneer of British govern-
ment so grout Is the preponderance of
negroes 111 the populution Of the dp-
proxlinutely 868000 luliubltunts fully
1)5 per ceut are Iducks ur muluttucs
and the numbers of the durk-sklnncd
races ure still further Increased by
the presence of about 20000 Eust In-
dians Burely 2 per cent of the pop-
ulation consisted of whites In 1011
nml nt that time tho Chinese were
less thuu 1 per cent
Isis of Fountains
“Jumuleu like Hawaii lies Just ‘In
the edge of the tropics and imture
seems to huve Intended It to be n fairy
Island - Heavily wooded mountains
occupy much of the Interior und
uinung them countless streams tum-
ble ‘XuymucA' the native Indian
mime of tho Islnnd which has been
Euroieuulzed means ‘Isle of Foun-
tains’ "I’alflis of several sorts Including eo-
eonuts bamboo bnimnns und a wide
variety of other tropical trees clothe
hillsides end valleys flume of tlio
views from the Jilgii central Ifllls over
rough foot bills valleys and plaius
unjJ out to the deepest of blue sens
ura Imrdly to be surpassed elsevvbeie
In the World ' '
"But there ere other aspects to Ja-
mnlcu than beautiful scenery Muck
of the country Is undeveloped and tlmt
In cultivation In the Interior Is hugely
In the bunds of negro peasant proprie-
tors who tend tlielr few fruit trees
their yarn gardens und their publics
of tlio ‘root that made Jnnmku fa-
mous’— ginger Many guunt ililiimeys
stand In the plains to mark the sites
of sugar filuulntlon manor houses of
the Inland's palmier days Along the
cousin! gw amps swarms of mosquitoes
attack workmen and wnyfnreis
"Kingston the capital ts almost ns
much n black man's town as I’oit-au-I’rlncc
The two white persons to ev-
ery hundred negroes who nominally
are n part of the city's population
liva In spcilul suburbs und miuinge
simps und the larger enterprises ami
the sheets me given up almost entire-
ly tn negroes Even the policemen
mid nmiiv of the judges are black
“Jamaica's history has In nmny
ways been like that of Haiti but It
has stopped short of the Hhttlnn ell-
mux Columbus discovered the Island
and called it flantn Gloria For a con
tury nml a half It vvus Spanish then
It fell tn a British expedition sent out
by Cromwell l’ort Royal Its chief
port beenme the rendesvoue of Brl-
Isb huccnneers under the leadership
of tho notorious Sir Henry Morgan
The town peopled hugely by the 'men
and women wlm lived on pirate gold
and gilded by tlielr cnslly spent loot
gained the reputation of being ‘the
richest and wickedest city' of Us day
But like flodoin and Gomnrrali It wns
struck down A severe enrthqnnke oc-
curred In 1(102 mid Port Roynl Us
very stones steeped In Iniquity slipped
Into the sea
Becoming Island of Bananas
“Under Spanish exploitation the In-
dian Inhabitants of Jumnlca vveie
killed or died Tlifc Spaniards brought
tn sumo negro slaves to repluce them
and In the l-lglithenth century British
plantation ovvneis Imported more than
800000 Afi leans building up a large
sugar und rum production When sin
very vvus ubollsbed In 1834 many of
the white landlords left the Islnnd and
numerous lurgo estates and mills
were abandoned - In lute yenrs Ja-
maica has become u more und more
Important factor In supplying Imnmius
to both British and Ameilcuti tables
Its advantage over the Central Amer-
Irnn btinium vomUries lies cldelly In
the fact that It is two Hays nearer the
markets I '
"The British Imve given some mens-
Ufo of self government to the Ja-
maicans but Imve retained Ann I eon
trol A governor Is appointed by the
British king and presides over n leg
Isliitlve council qf which IS tnemhcis
are appointed and 14 elected Eleetoi'
bourds In the 15 parishes ntlmlnstei
locul affairs" '
Woman Makta Quilt of 80000 Pieces
A quilt contntnlnil 80000 pieces of
doth and untold millions of stitches
has been cnmpttted by Miss Ells
W)ey of Birmingham Id- Miss Wiley
was the only Worker Afi the quilt la
(tain on it folr vra! ytr
3VV ' I--
The Wat lee'efl more th Uvlrj
skeletal tha thtafl of flah nf
blood and It had scarcely nourt
strength tv trail tlw light yainshack '
cart which trundled behind lb Whs
the animal 'began to trot very slowly
after a good deal of practical persua-
sion on the part of tho driver a young
hopeful standing In the road couid not
let the opportunity pass qf planting
hlnisett ‘ directly In front ofth oo-
coming steed
The driver shouted but tb boy re-
fused to move
"Why can't flrou get out of the
rondT cried the driver "Do jrou
want to be run overT t 1
Without moving tna lad glanced
contemptuously at the floraev and
shouted with withering acorn:
"That bony thing run over met It
couldn't I It might tumble ever met"
I
t Bewer Byatem 1500 Yearn Old
In the palacv of the Cretan king
of Knossoa (about 1600 B C) were
bathrooms and a dralnage system that
astonished the excavators When we
remember that even London and Paris
had no sewage system In the days of
Queen EUsabetb we certainly ihould
not expect such n thing In a forgotten
civilization of thirty-five hundred
years ago Yet experts' tell us the
drain of this ancient palace were
superior to anything known afterward
In history until the middle of the
Nineteenth century— Joseph McCabe
In "The Evolution of Civilization'' -
Buyer and Sellers
You'rrc'
j 1 i y t t
Find it Here
QIVB VS YOUR order for atoekara
feeder and butcher cattle We
make n apeelalty ot buying cattle
on order T B bounders Co 15
Exchange Building
HODGDEN'S
HEREFORDS
Bean Andrew
Bean Boq Cap
tain Mischief
Head of Herd
2-year-old Bulls
Yearling Bulls
100 Calves
Shetland Ponies
at reduced prices
W P HODGDEN
IU B Enid Okla
BTOCKYARDS STOCKER CO (Inc)
Stock hogs exclusively Can till or
ders for any number vaccinated plga
804 Exchange Bldg Phone M 884
-- on all light
Summer Suits
— The extreme heat— -and ’the
extremely low prices on all our
cool featherweight summer
suits are making fast work of
our large stocks
—If you haven't been in let us for nn
remind you that even witi as v oOO Suits
Llllill U Jf J LA lIlAftelf V V
large a selection as
started out with there
e ji
to loose' if you wish to make
sure of your size in the fabric $4000 Suit?
find pattern you prefer
All Three
Grand ‘
x and t
Robinson
4 f 'v’-W
vzz
6 rl FranWbi
(The Origin! Kansas Germ Free Vaccine XIadr
by the Originator)
and
r 'r -Save the CbItbb fron Ciacklei x ' '
i ’ ij v —
Permanent Immunization" with one dose ami one
handling 'of calf The -one that protects JSVE1JY-
CALF EVERY-TIME '
Formerly sold the nation over at 40c now 2fc Dij
This Trada
Our Special Syringe $3
The Kansas Blackleg Serca Co
Room 211 Live Stock Exchange
r Oklahoma City ' ‘ "
v U i k
BALES OFFICES! Amarillo Texas Dearer Cel Wichita Ian-
Mat Xaasaa City Mo Pert Worth Texas Oklahemfi CHy 0kla
Rapid CRy B D El Paso Texas Phoenix' Arhmaai Saata
Rarla Calif j Marfa Texas Calgary Caa Sad Aateale Texaj
man Francisco CaUt 1 v t 'f' 1
NOTICE
1 1
To Property Owners
— Paving and ' Grading ' Taxes
are now due and payable at
the City Clerk’s office and if
not paid on or before Septem-
ber 1st same will become de-
linquent and bear penalty of 18
percent per annum 1
C F SEMMELBECK -
(SEAL) ' - - - City Clerk
$1500 Suits
$1750 Suits
$1800 Suits
$2000 Suits
v V VII WM
this sale( $3000 Suits
is no time v $3250 Suits
— i- $3500 Suits
$4500 Suits
- Piece Wool Suits I
cizi a
’ 1 h p
l
‘tiH-r'Ut
j ' V' ' ' i
v
Free Booklet on reque
a ' H 3
'
now $1123
now 41315
now ‘$1350
now $1500
”0W aia fe
now aia vs
now $2250
now r $2440 '
now M $2325
100
now
now ImTS (
i f ' v i ' l U
4 0FF3
V
1
— iie Jiotue oi ‘ ’ '
Kupps
good f
x"
1
CT
i I
A
- ' i t
: t
W t-i
01 f
'u
J A
A ' f
Mi A
Kh
1
l-fc
V
V
I
I
t i
1
' ‘ l'v v'rv
1 v i
V 4
i
tf h
rM
j “1 s if fe
VV ft
i 1 i
fr W
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View four places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Oklahoma Daily Live Stock News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 298, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 3, 1922, newspaper, August 3, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1933074/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.