The Capitol Hill News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, August 23, 1935 Page: 3 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 25 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
I
- By ELMO SCOTT WATSON
:i E WAS BORN year 0 yea ago—on Sep-
ternber I 1785
' : At the age of seventeen he was' an
' "
"exhorter
- By the time he was a year older he
was a regularly ordained preacher (at
4 the munificent salary of $80 a year—
"which nine times out of ten I got
0 only in part") and for the next 70
years be rode up and down the land
- -carrying the Word to the remotest
settlernents' r
During that time he preached more than 15000
sermons and baptised more than 12000 persons
And those are only the highlights in the career
of Peter Cartwright backwoods Methe41ist
preacher circuit rider and one of the most pie
0 turesque figures in the history of the American
frontier Because he spoke the language of the
pioneering folk could hold his own as a man
among men in the rough-and-tumble of debate
0 of physical encounter but more particularly
because of his eccentricities the legends of him
: "were almost numberless They were as twilit
far at the firesidesof an older generation as the
tales of the ('Id were to the people of Spain in
the olden times Not Mr Travers or Davy
Crockett nor hardly even President Lincoln was
the subject of more anecdotes than this ouch -
beloved itinerant preacher"
A native of Amherst county Virginia Cart-
wright when six years old was taken by his
parents :o Kentucky They settled first in Lin-
celn county near the present site of Lancaster
then moved to a place south of Rushville in
Logan county' within a mile of the Kentucky-
Tennessee boundary line Cartwright describes
this section as such a haunt for refugees from
justice that it was called "Rogues' Harbor"
Oiled with "murderers horse thieves highway
robbers and counterfeiters" Certainly it was
v!rgin soil for the labors of the future preacher
and it gave him valuable experience for the role
which he was to play in the future in the fron-
tier country of the Misissippl Valley
In 1801 young Cartwright was converted and
united with the Ebenezer Methodist Episcopal
church Ile displayed such ' talent and fervor
In speaking that the following year he received
from the Society of Ebenezer permission to ex-ercise
his gifts as an exhorter so long as his
exhorting conformed to its doctrines In 1803
be became a regular traveling preacher or circuit
rider on the Red River circuit Within nine
years be was a presiding elder in Kentucky and
In Illinois to which he removed in 1823 Ile held
that office for half a century during which time
the membership of the church within his juris-
diction grew from 72000 to 1750000
One of his contemporaries has left us this
vivid word picture of the camous circuit rider
Telling of attending services in a little church
In Illinois he says:
"Our attention was arrested by a strange ap
parifion striding bp the aisle All seemed whis-
pering to their neighbors 'There be goes!' and
all eyes were riveted upon a man of medium
height thickset with enormous bone and muscle
and although his iron-gray hair and wrinkled
brow told of the advance of years his step was
Still vigorous and firm Ills face was bronzed
by exposure to the weather he carried a white -
Quaker hat in his hand arid his upper garment
was a furniture-calico dressing gown without
wadding The truant breeze seemed to seize
this garment by its skirt and lifting it to a level
with his armpits disclosed to the gazing congre-
gation a full view of the cepperas-colored panta-
loons and shirt of the divine—for he was a di-
vine and one worth a day's journey to see
"Ile had then been a backwoods preacher for
nearly 40 years ranging the country from the
Lakes to the Gulf and from the Alleghenies to
the Mississippi Ile was inured to every form
of hardship and had looked calmly at peril of
every kind—the tomahawk of the Indian the
spring of the panther the hug of the bear the
sweep ef the tornado the rush of swollen tor-
rents and the fearful chasm of the earthquake
Ile had lain in the canebrake and made his bed
upon the snow of the prairie and an the oozy
solVef the swamp and bad wandered hunger-
bitten among the solitudes of the mountains lie
bad been in jeopardy among robbers and in dan-
ger from desperadoes who glad sworn to take his
life Ile had preached in the cabin of the slave
and the mansion of the master to the Indians
and to the men of the border lie had taken
his life in his hands and had ridden in the path
of whizzing bullets that he miltht proclaim peace
Ile had stood on the outskirts of civilization and
' welcomed the first comers to the woods and
prairies
"Many a son of Anak had been leveled irf the
dust by his siedgelike fist and when the blind
fury of Lis assailants urged him headlong into
personal conflict with him his agility strength
and resolution gave them cause for bitter re-
pentance "Such was the man that now stood before us
In the desk the famous presiding eider of Illi-
nois—the renowned Peter Cartwright"
Truly a churchman militant was this same
renowned Peter Cartwright One story told of
ecvmp
aPbowv oAv ta0a4i Liernowt-oav
him Is he handled a band of rowdies who had
boasted that they would break up a revival meet-
ing which he was holding In a little Illinois
church They gathered In the back of the church
and began causing a disturbance while Cart-
wright was praying He continued praying but
opened one eye to locate the 'troublemakers Sud-
denly he sprang over the pulpit strode down the
aisle and seized the two ringleaders Bearing
them down to the floor he sat astride of them
and began pounding their heads on the floor
boys If I can't beat
I rellgion Into you beat
the devil out of you!" ex-
claimed the sturdy circuit rider punctuating Ids
remarks with the thumps of the rowdies' heads
upon the floor
s- Because of such picturesque feats as this b It
was only natural the legends should cluster
around the name of Peter Cartwright some of
them having a slight basis of fact and some no
such basis at all Of the latter class was the
yarn of Cartwright's encounter with Ilke Fink
the renowned "King of the Mississippi Flatboat
Men" and the terror of that river and of the
Ohio It was Fink's custom to challenge a new
acquaintance to a knock-down-and-drag-out en-
counter to see if the newcomer was worthy of
his friendship According to the story Cart-
wright was so challenged promptly accepted ant
gave Fink a sound thrashing thereby winning
Oho ei)twit Riciciv 5tatut 5c1tAnOfto
bis enduring friendship Cartwright himself is
authority for the statement that although be
had heard a great deal about Mike during his
travels throughout the Mississippi valley he had
never met the flatboat man so naturally no such
encounter ever took place
Another such story has to do with Andrew
Jacksen It relates how Jackson attended a
meeting at which Cartwright was preaching
Seeing "Old Hickory" enter the church one of
the elders whispered to the circuit rider: "Broth
er Cartwright you must be careful how you
preach tonight General Jackson has just come
In" Thereupon Cartwright replied in a loud
voice 'What do you suppose I care for General
Jackson? If he don't repent his sins he will
go to hell like any other man" This produced
great consternation in the minds of the congre-
gation for they believed that the fiery-tempered
Jackson wquld cane the preacher at the first op-
portunity Instead Jackson is said to have met
him the next morning greeted him cordially and
said: "Sir you are a preacher after my own
heart If I had a regiment of such men as you
I'd conquer the earth"
It stkens a shame to spoil such a good story
but here is what Cartwright has to say about it:
"There is no truth In that story It is true I
had a preaching place in the neighborhood of the
Hermitage (Jackson's home near Nashville
Tenn) The General occasionally t erne to our
meetings and I had been invited to the Hermi-
tage We were always on friendly terms"
Cartwright is also said to have been the orig-
inal of the story told by Edward Eggleston in
his book "The Circuit Rider" of the preacher
who worked a turbulent audience up to a pitch
of fury by his fearless denunciation of their i
wickedness and then just as they were making
a rush toward him he blew out the candles on
the pulpit—the only light in the church—and
escaped unharmed while the members of the
crowd milling around in the darkness were
clawing scratching and belaboring each other
In their frenzy
Religion in those days was frequently a strenu-
ous affair as Cartwright himself has testified
"A new exercise broke out among us called
the jerks" he says "which was overwhelming
In its effects upon the bodies and minds of the
people Whether saints or sinners they would
be taken under a warm song or sermon and
seized with a convulsive jerking all over which
they could not avoid I have seen more than
WO persons jerking at one time To obtain re
lief they would rise up and dance - Some would
run but could not get away
"To see these proud young gentlemen and
- young ladies dressed in their silks jewelry and
prunella from top to toe take the jerks would
often excite my risibilitles The first jerk or so
Ion would see their line bonnets caps and combs
1111dhacti4t Ctcutt Picteiti
(3)grru cpw 0 fd W cux
I
ilmEmS
fly: and so sudden would be the jerking of the
head that their long loose hair would crack al-
most as loud as a wagoners whip"
From this It may be Inferred that this' ex-
pounder of the "old-time religion" didn't ap-
prove of "ladles of fashion" This Impression
is strengthened by his statement that "they
would faint if they had to walk 100 yards In
the sun without a parasol they were braced and
stayed to such an extent that they could not
step more than six or eight Inches at a time
Should they by any accident happen to lose their
moorings and fall they ae Imprisoned with so
many unmentionables that they could not get up
again"
Just as he disapproved of such vainglorious
folk in the larger settlements of the Middle West
so did he have his own methods of rebuking the
supercilious attitude of big city dwellers toward
country folk On his first visit to New York
be went to the famed Astor House A haughty
clerk regarding the roughly-clad frontiersman
as a "regular hayseed" assigned him to a room
away up under the roof In a little while a bell
from that room summoned the servant who had
shown the circuit rider to his quarters
No sooner had the servant returned from his
trip up several flights of stairs (for there were
no elevators in those days) than he was called
back This was repeated several times until
finally the servant reported to the clerk that the
guest In that room "must be Crazy" Asked to
explain he replied: "The first time he called me
up there he wanted to know how we were get-
ting along down here The next time he was
bothered by the bell on the city hall and want-
ed to knew where the fire was This last time
'he said he wanted an ex" -
"An as?" asked the clerk incredulously
"Yes sir an ax"
"What in creation does he want with an ax"
"I don't know sir but he Insisted that he must
have one"
So the clerk climbed up to the distant room
and demanded an explanation of the unusual re-
quest "Why you see" said Cartwright cheerfully
"back in my state when a man has a distance
to go In a strange country he blazes his way
with an ax so that be may know how to get
back I want to leave my room and I want to
blaze my way so that I can find It again"
"Who are you anyway?" asked the astonished
clerk
"My name Is Peter Cartwright" replied the old
man humbly and Immediately he was given a
better room for the fame of the great circuit
rider had penetrated even to the benighted In-
habitants of Manhattan
Cartwright was not only one of the most noted
circuit riders this country has ever known but
he was also a prominent figure in politics in the
period before the Civil war When the Metho-
dist church divided on the slavery question in
1S41 (a schism which lasted for SO years) Cart-
wright stood firmly upon his principles declar-
ing "God will show my deluded brethren the
error of their way and bring them back to the
way of righteousness" However lie was not in
favor of trying to solve the slavery problem by
force for he said: "I believe the most successful
way to ameliorate the condition of the slaves
and Christianize them and finally secure their
freedom is to treat their owners kindly and not
meddle politically with slavery"
In 1S-IG Cartwright was the Democratic candi-
date for congress from an Illinois district but
he lost in the electlen to a young lawyer named
Abraham Lincoln Thirteen years later he was
an ardent supporter of the candidacy of Lin-
coln's famous debate opponent Stephen A Doug-
las for the Democratic nomination for President
and made impassioned speeches in Douglas' be-
half Dy 1803 when the Civil war was at its height
Cartwright's views on slavery had undergone a
change In that year a Methodist conference
was held at Springfield Ill and it was to be
opened with a prayer meeting to ask for success
for the Union army and a speedy peace The
venerable "Uncle Peter" Cartwright was chosen
to offer up the first prayer "0 Lord if slavery
be the cause of this cruel war remove it" he
cried A loud chorus of amens followed Then
Cartwright cried out "0 Lord remove it any-
way!" and a louder chorus of "amens!" than
ever before went up from the throng gathered
there
Cartwright lived to see his prayer answered
De died at his home near Pleasant Plains
on September 25 1S72t at the age of eighty-eight
leaving behind him a record which has few
equals In the annals of the church in America
C Waatern Newspaper Unioa
)(110 rli7170
'to klo
"Irn
L1
USE LAYING FEED
FOR SUMMER EGGS
Safe Et Way to ITI:e Prat
Poultry Man Says
fly Le (Al Todd vuuto man Pug-
duo Univ4TIty—W SiIVinO
If the healthy docks of layirg bons
receives a taianeed laying ration
through the Filtffilier shoodd
return a profit To discontinue the
feeding of a laying mash would caust?
most of the flock oio go tout Of produc-
tion and then into a inolt The feed-
ing of a laying ration Cu also make
It easier anti more pract:eal to select
the poor producers
Since most farm flocks did not lay
wally eggs last fall or early winter
It is possible that the same flouts will
give a slightly heavier production this
summer if they are properly fed and
have good care Records from farm
flock owners co-operating with the Pur-
due poultry extension division show
that it is possible to make a good profit
from summer egg production Provitiot
the flocks get a balanced ration' and
the pone producozs are eliminated
When the flock Is properly fed it is
Pot dillicult to select the poor layer&
They are the first to go tout of pro-
duction during the sunnner 'and Nyll
goon be moultiog If some of the birds
are to be kept over for othe second
year it is wise to make those selec-
tions during the summer
Usually the same ration itch was
fed during the winter Is also used to
keep up summer production The one
exception is that the birds will con
sume less grain during the warm
weather One should not forget to pro-
vide oyster shells and plenty of clean
fresh water '
Pullets Need Green Crop
When Released on Range
Wherever possible a succulent green
crop should he available for the pullets
when they are released on the range
and the pasture preserved and utilized
to the best advantage throughout the
summer The ideal system would be
to confine the birds In a fairly small
section at a time and move them peri-
odically throughout the summer keep-
ing the crop cut or grazed by live stock
In advance so that only fresh new
growth would be available to the pul-
lets In practice a similar result can
be achieved by running a two-year crop
rotation so that the land is free of
poultry every other year Within the
area allotted for the year's use the
house may be moved to a new position
several times during the summer If
this Is not feasible then the feed hop-
pers should be moved say 15 or 20
feet every few (lays so as to induce
the birds to spread over the entire
field Instead of congregating on one
spot
Give Hens Wet Mash
If the poultry flock has a late-summer
laying stump feed a wet mash If
shImmilk Is available use It In the reg-
ular laying mash or use semi-solid but-
termilk at the rate of two pounds to
the hundred of mash The hens should
have only what they will clean up In
20 minutes It Is best to feed the wet
crumbly mash late In the afternoon
just before the night feeding of grain
At the New York State college two
pounds of tobacco dust is added to
each 100 pounds of tnash as an aid to
control intestinal worms and coedit!
osis Tobacco dust should be gnat
anteed to contain 1 per cent of nleo
tine sulphate IVIten the mash is beina
fed no change should he made In 001
regular routine of flock management
Have Sufficient Nests
A sufficient number of nests In the
laying :house is necessary to prevent
crowding on the nests which may re-
sult in broken or soiled eggs says 11
C Henderson poultry extension spe-
cialist of the Pennsylvania State col
lege In a recent survey conducted in
one of the Pennsylvania counties it
was found that most of the producers
were providing too few nests for their
birds Forty-four per cent of pro-
ducers were using 10 to 12 nests for
100 birds '29 per cent were using VI
to 15 nests nnd 12 per cent were using
over 20 nests
With the Poultrymen
Culling liens should begin early
It takes from eight to eleven months
to properly develop and finish a captin
Since young turkeys grow faster than
young chickens their feeds should be
higher in protein
as
Limberneck is caused by the birds
eating decoyed animal or vegetable
material which is highly poisonous to
them -
IP
More harm is done to chins by high
brooder temperatures than by low teni-
peraturesp according to a noted poul-
try authority
Egg producers ' whose product Is
trucked Into New York are ordered t)
pay on Impost of seven cents a crate
to the teamsters' union
The Dlnilmon was the first cotin
try in the world to Introduce eg2
gradIng In any form This was (1()tft
In 192i for export purposes only at
that time
THIS EASY-TO-MAKE
DESIGN IS POPULAR
PATTERN 2327
ililt
Ordinarily It Is much more
cult for the heavier figure to pre-
sent the same graciously feminine
al)Pearance as her slim sister
achieves! Ilut not when our stylist
sets out to design a thoroughly fem-
inine but neatly tailored afternool
frock! Witness the result First
see bow trim the neck and skirt de-
tails are Then how simply feminine
softness Is gathered Into the 'yoke
Now note the extremely simple cut
of the yoke and cape and the grace
tut flattering fall of the cape Itself
If capeshaven't come to your rescue
before you can make no better start
than here and now! Sheer cotton
or silk—as you like!
Pattern 2327 is available In sizes
10 18 20 34 nG 3S 40 42 41 and
4( Size 30 takes :17a yards nt) Inch
fabric illustrIted step-by-step sew-
ing instructions included
SEND FIFTEEN CENTS (15c) in
coins or stamps (coins preferred) for
this pattern Write plainly natne
address s and style number Ifl
SURE TO STATE SIZE
Address orders to the Sewing Cir-
cle Pattern Department 243 West
Seventeenth Street New York City
EMPTY HONOR
"You are knoWn as a political
boss in your borne town"
"It's Just a title" answered Sena-
tor Sorghum "Intended to make you
feel Important while you're working
bard for Iittb personal reward and
taking all the blame for what goes
wrong"
Conscience -
'Don't you think a member of the
legislature ought to get more payr
"No" answered Farmer Corntos-
sel -It you give 111111 more money
he might think he's got to try to
earn It by making more speeches"
hot or COW?
Artist—Dearest I would like to do
you In oils
She-012 do you take toe for a
sardlue?-1)etrolt News
Take Your Fall
"There's not much wasted on
bananas Is there?"
"No even the skins make good
slippers!"—Answers Magazine
1
Lk I ti 111ZU3 HEW L pc& Vein INVIC USIllir
Lases to tile Ullit ULM livus Lii clitusimilLa IA -te11111 lee ueueral eccasionany came to our and Christianize them and finally secure their
the Mississippi Ile Wag inured to every form meetings and I bad been invited to the Ilerml- over s0 nests -
freedom is to treat their owners kiddly and not
-
of hardship and had looked calmly at peril of tage we were always on friendly terms"
spring or the panther the hug of the bear the inal of the story told by Edward Eleston
meddle politically with slavery"
With the Poultrymen
--- ' '1 i' t'i"
every kind—the tomahawk of the Indian the Cartwright is also said to bave been the wig- In IS-al Cartwright was the Democratic condi- i I
gg in
ho worked it
date for congress from an Illinois district but Culling hens should begin early
sweep ef the tornado the rush of swollen tor- his book "The Circuit Rider" of the preacher
he lost in the electlen to a young lawyer named - 1
- - ii( k e '
rents and the fearful chasm of the earthquake wrked a turbulent audience up to a p itc h -
Abraham Lincoln Thirteen years later he wag It takes from eight to Pleven months ' ' '' 1 i '1'
Ile had lain in the canebrake and made his bed of fury by his fearless denunciation of their 1' an ardent supporter of the candidacy of Lin- to properly develop and finish a capen --: 11 cl
upon the snow of the prairie and on the oozy wickedness and then just as they were making '
coin s famous debate opponent Stephen A Doug- 4 ' t t
soil of the s wamp and had wandered hunger- a rush toward him he blew out the candles on '
famous
for the Democratic a0MinatiOn for President nice young turkeys grow faster than ' ' ''' ' i:" I t lik
bitten nmong the solitudes of the mountains Ile the pulpit—the only light in the church—and 4'": : P r
and made Impassioned speeches In Douglas' be- young chickens their feeds should be ' ts -41 J- 4 'i lk ':' '
had been in jeopardy among robbers and in don- escaped unharmed while the members of the 1 1 x
crowd milling around in the darkness were half higher in protein t I I 0 8
ger from desperadoes who t ad sworn to take his
a 4
Dy 1803 when the Civil war was at Its height
life Ile had preached in the cabin of the slave clawirip scratching and belaboring each other Cartwright's views on slavery had undergone a Liniherneck is caused by the birds --:2 '44 l'' "-5 1 -
(-and the mansion of the master to the Indians in their frenzy
d animal or vegetable ' 1- 414 It
lit 'cilk2
and to the men of the border Ile had taken Religion in those days was frequently a strenu change In that year a Methodist conference eating decaye
- 5 I ' t
was held at Springfield Ill and it was to be material which is highly poisonous to ' '1- '( i '
his life in his hands and had ridden in the path eus affair as Cartwright himself has testified
opened with a prayer meeting to ask for success Ilicln v 0 el 1 !' -
s
of whizzing bullets that he mieht proclaim peace "A new exercise broke out among us called for the Union army and a speedy peace The 0
More harm is done to chicks by high VA VellkseV??s' :' '''':'
' 't it' "
A ti I e -
Ile had stood on the outskirts of civilization and the jerks" he says "which was overwhelming
venerable "Uncle l'eter" Cartwright was chosen
welcomed the first comers to the woods and in its effects upon the bodies and minds of the w A
to offer up the first prayer "O Lord if slavery brooder temperatures than by low tote ‘F:e ittv 1:7-4'-'- : - --'-'
wratures according to a noted Poul- 44r1 1-' 'e'":'-'-!-::'''''i:
prairies people Whether saints or sinners they would be the cause of this cruel war remove it" he I
"Many a son of Anak had been leveled lif the be taken under a warm song or sermon and cried A loud chorus of amens followed Then try authority - ' 0 1 -- ' - ' '"--s-- '
dust by his sledgelike fist and when the blind mezed with a convulsive Jerking all over which Cartwright cried out "0 Lord remove it any- ' - I' ''' "-'" '''' (
fury or his assailants urged him headlong into they could not avoid I have seen more than way!" rind a louder chorus of "amens!" than Egg producers ' whose product is
- s
personal conflict with him his agility strength 600 persons jerking at one time To obtain re-
i
' 4"' :' AFTER :- -
ever before went up from the throng gathered trucked into New York are ordered t) v s
and resolution gave them cause for hitter re- lie? they would rise up and dance - Some would there
pay an impost of seven cents a crate '''' '-'
run' but could not get away EVCRY1
pentance see his sw A
to the teamsters' union ‘'7t:t :: i
"Such was the man that now stood before us "To see these proud young gentlemen Cartwright lived to prayer anered
and
Ile died at his home near Pleasant Plain Ill
s -"'" ' 4 '' ' E L'I'''
In the desk the famous presiding elder of Ell- - young ladies dressed In their silks jewelry and on Sember 25 1872 at the age of eighty-eight The Dominion was the first coml ' ' " ''' '
'4 ' M :
A 4
nois—the renowned Peter Cartwright" prunella from top to to pte
take the jerks would
leaving behind him a record which has few try in the world to introduce egs ''''' -' ) : -fi '
Truly a churchman militant was this same often excite my risibilities Tbe first jerk or so
als In the annals of the church in America grading in tiny form This was done ' f - ‘ 7!-
renowned Peter Cartwright One story told of you would see their fine bonnets caps and comb' equ
C Wastera Newspaper Unioe in 192S for export purposes only Al - ' — 5 ' '
' that time
- '
' '
k
1
tt goes
TT WATSON him Is he handled a band of rowdies who had (::-Iglf:701e -4 41::('N''':'''
150 yearl ago—on ter- boasted that they wou
ld break up a revival meet- 'I i -A
A--v t k4--4
0 '-' - 1 t '1 4 ' kc ?
Ing which he WaS holding In a little Illinois J 1 yt I ''' ' 7- '-4 I 1
t Ifr "
:
)f seventeen he was an church They gathered In the back of the church ' ' -'7---- - 4'''
- '
00 ---t c '‘ 1
and began causing a disturbance while Cart - '-''-''-':' '1 -:' : -t' v
------1-'--4
he was a year older he wright was praying He continued pra but t
ying --1 0
rrf-c 't:-- A i i
------- ---" - -- a - 4A--
y ordained preacher (at - opened one e ke ud
ye to locate the 'troublemars S- ----P-!:----1-A1
-- - '-!-1------"
a41m--111p
salary of $S0 a year— denly he sprang over the pulpit strode down the --------36 -it-t4111 - 1z-lit: 0-
k
!man rstli IsP 41 Y --i 0 !Qin nntl ent7”i ha flt rinv1ni Prtwo:ve
Pt'
t) 3 ot "r:ut fr13 ifrlilrli THIS EASY-TO-NIAKE
11C)1 1
0
-
toioN
A to 031
- - A 1146"1""r171 di kl: Iji 4:: Ilik's 1 "1::' DESIGN IS POPULAR
f
- - 1 r -
PATTERN 2321
air v t A sv
i i I 4! or
Ihil bilL t)
I
— silha 4''''
-
"- -
if
id 0 )
liky 1 4 1
t: ':-- '' ' - - -- 1 USE LAYI6 FEED t
t - '11 c
FOR SUIIMEIt EGGS
of - I t
-
---'
yr -o: ---: 7 o : " C' S ' -' ""'' 1: - : 1- !' ' -
- f - 3 S
':' ! f 3 ::: s x' i i 7 t :i Z4dt 1 " ' ' - IC - - '' ''-' ' - ' '"
T ''k3 tl
e-': c4-A ay o i he 1I
ISafeEt ‘'- t "'-'' P—'1-
o
r-t- V?
4 - -- - ' ' r ? v & Ill 1 - e t - '50 set 05 -:: - i
') 5 4 ! 1 v i r q :3 x 0 ! 3 4 3 31Ir3:-'4 s 't ‘ 7
Poultry flan )a3s
ír-oiA Ai'lio r"-
' 1 '- i 111 A --- i s ' -l' k 4 ' - A -q- -
- P l'ifr ' ' - - -- - -- A' " - -' r - fk ---------- 7' i a 4110"7 : 4 4
1 ) j
t -4:1 '' : k' '-- p il 1''' -4 ' ' '''' is t t
- t -- 't4 vvv -) ---:-- - 'tt F o i- k
ny 18a 1-ki 8tn euteoonuta Pur-
0:-i :s' iii'1' 4''"-' 7 ''::': --4?-- : :-'! -i ' -''' ''!-- '' z - - '' !!-: Z -- ' -' ' ' 'T
: e'10' 4 - ' L A ' r'vi' ' ' '' r 4 ' : due t'ttiv rlt y — ‘-' N I SirVinO s'Irs!1- 6 ? 4
- 33r ' '1X 't' 3 ' t : k 441'4p 41:0 !'' ''' Vytek0 0 1-41 ' - ' 4 "I' t" - : 'Z 7 04-4‘ ' r''' -)1- '
''' ? - '- ' ''''k ‘c " ' ' ''' ‘ ' - ' 1 w ' $ S2' 9 t - k If the healthy flock:3 of Ltylrg howl -1 !d-
o s : N - el : V ' ''''' ' ' 4' ' -'4"'" s ''' '' : : :: '' s i" ': ' :1 i i f 1 f ""- to-1 -P:':1- - ?! tA - aSa :: a ' § :4' 01 '! -Z i ‘ta' t' 4 I a ? a :' recttves a tillkneeti laying ratik)u '''-r 7 t1 "7' -4' r'
' -0 1
' --41 i-P 11 r"11i - ' : ' ' 'I' "I 'N i ' 't 'o ' it N--4'' - hrough the er t
saintli hey should : -0-
z- L1' r!4
1:k':3 '' ' - ' ' t '1 sflt '! :: gf ''' f'' ' 1 tj ''4 '''-' '''''' ''' '' "e - 5" t-1 P itiefli CI
CJI-AVIvivilLD t - I t ' S'Ct - lit:!
Of' 44 : (!7'1- Pt :-1' 'il ‘I'''t'' $ N ' ' : ii'' 'I ! t4 1 Nk'f' A 3 '''?' ' ?'NL A 't1 I return a profit To discontinue the l 1
'$i'" -' : 1)- t : kkil''142'i irt '' V"i''4':4 -A -1( ' - '01- - l' tit '''' ' ''''" '- : 4
t-4-: '1 ' - il -z - 4: ' - : r J 4 : -- :i - -1 1: er T ‘z 'iz:- 1t7ci feediug of a Inying mash would causo : A (-N
N t ':': ' r st: r c- - 0 -- - i k: """ :' ?It t----: -"---k -:-0V4r-ir'-t--1 ''' - ii ''
111t of the flock in go vtit of proil '
uc-
3 t A 4 1 : t3 ' A 'f: ' '- : V 403:'' 1 3 Vic LA ' - 4 c-:' - i io' - 0101ec-: 4- -‘1 fr- L4T":3-1 1 l' '
4 i:!i :: :e r I 1- : i 11 1 -5 A - A --5--- 5 1 ers':-: N ! - :ei I aiii ag p01- -: : tigni anti tht-!ti ititt) a tuott The feed- ' ' i'
kl0 :: : - ' ::' f ': 7 !) s$ t ' '''- I' t t -i :'77'1!" ''' $ ' ' ' - '7 ' ' - -"48 kJ ett-1 k Lcz5-44 :-'---i :
c
II
i If k: i''' ii '' "' 1 i gi: -o t t""- - 1'1 ! ' - 'V !' '"' :k t -1k'''' '" k 1 ":-- s7 t'''-' -'IL-StN"' 'i 4 s 'e ing of a laying ration will also ittike ti
1 -ik - !--7 -1 r - r t- Y ''' -ii-:vc - : e ' -5 '1 A't'4' "- - 't g''' '44 i-N-N'-' ' t 4 C
r
(J !'-! : :- s - ' ::' : :' ' '' I 7 7' ' ra ''' i f: : -4 61-i'N0 wit'A- ''' 'LI ' V S- (1 it eaSier anti more pr( et:4' al to soloct ' -i"
::: : : i I i v :1- : 1 Iv ' - 'i f 'f: V- :VP 0V 4 te ILN 1 k 1' irl Z the poor producers -' " --k- '1
Le - ' I 't : 4 :- i''''' ' e:" 1-:' ::- ' -' " ' - ' ' : 4 - ' I '' - ! ( t Tk r i -4 z - sv-A - A A ' -1- fr
-L' : 1 t :-- e s!-k':4 ' :"- -- 4- :)- - :-:::: p --:— -e---- Nel Since most farm lituks did not lay
4
)5 t 4 " :-' to'N-1---1-yv- '11 t' N a ea a '': If '''' i ft '''''-'''5'cliV'"'':' i' '' ' " ''' '' :''''' : ' "''s '''' 4:'41:: :' at- ' '''''' ' ?' ' ' '' " ' ' : : : '1 ''''''Sa'' 7 1 ' '1'Ii'!14 wally eggs hist fall or early Winter
1:0s‘ t '-- ? --- ''-:- :': :: :" :' '::-: :: ': -':-:' : ' - ''"'"i i ' '"i -r''''':1)''''-t" "i':t i:itrilvi' ' -1 ''') ' 7 '11s
a LI N:
13!i '! 33'' 4 1 '' it': : ' 3‘ : ' ' 't: '3' ' ' : ' : : ' "' ': '''' ' : ' ' 7 ' -'' ' ' ' '' "4 : 14' i'''' '''"''' C-4CC''' -- '1 ' S' '' ' ' it iS possible that the sante tioclis will -
':: ' rt 1 -::T
7 ' ":4 t ' ' ' t " ' ': ' '' '' : SE 4 ' ' : s'' :' s:?22 2 ' :' ' ' ':7' :' 'f ' ' - ' '4:::4: !' ' : ' '4 'J:t"° iqi e!''' t ''''' rt' ' '''-'I Ove a siii4htly heavic‘r production tiiii : 1 I'' ti''
''' i 0': '''' I
::''' --'1 "1 - : : ---- - : F t I c
4 4Flp ---- !: summer if they are properly fed anti : ) -r --- to
: tt
‘ : 7 4:?4 ":N ' f - :': '' - '' ' '"' ' ' :'': ' '-' "' ' I--- ' - 11 1s:1 (I' ti''''''"'N-: e hve a goo e ite is A
d ar eor: from fano i ')N 7
f4rq 1 okt4-- : :e ' ': - ' -' : : : ' : : : 4- ''' ' 1 -S :) :tysi4"'y :"::' A ":i''''$' :33 :-: k Nt33 zz y N
i‘' -
litti'k oNners co-opetziting with the l'ut - ir I
- t7-'f'- "- -N-1s (4-
Ccvmp listaiNIci aPtarrio Om grt mL4crfj LI k)) '1 - - - :''- :-'----'' - k t
"fr i 1 k Ak
- A : k-kkk due poultry I‘XtPlislon division show
that It Is possible to make 8 good profit
r 1 lp
i -1- Idililli
0 t- N' 1 1Cf r
--401 from summer egg pouetiont twovitle4 x o - 71
distr-e' '''- ? 1' ' A - 'ir - C V- r
By ELMO AnnTy WATAiu thlm ie Is —11—A - a s 1 I s'Ni I I I
"4- 1A:0' '
'
?it
' I - 1-411(-
1 i
tt
- 0
f :-- re
( X t ''- -?N - s r'
T't
117 ' ':iitis -71'1'4'
? d k' ) V r1" i
41
"-r - i t r
s1‘ ?
re
IN: 4 ' ) f7n
:? ' -0- '
"r:: ir:''' ' alA i: I 5 4''''' cl -7J
' 1 r'
'I 4 7
Ji'1 N
1 I 11'
i I ' (47 11
r tr-
ria i ' -1'::::"
I' --a- 1 - 1---7--' LI -
' Vs: r4i - 1 c ''''-':71
--1 l-
1
:: )' w ( i
1) 7
z- ' ' -r 1 i'''
' t - )4 ' c
t
' t"' k '1IN
:
I - '
I
-
::
1
4?' lr -t -
) d g) )
::
alteCfw4411 j) 2327
0?r'
rt( '''q
AA Ilkt'A
i :i :
' '
YK11 11
$S 11r '': "r'1 ': t ” -
!"::' '1!:::4''' '' )' '4 7 KIriL:::1:1 '
1741 '''::j r zx: -
??' t-:J g t A -
to ii::i: '!cAi-:-14-:!: -
ti
ii"?' i'f:''':1: 11'"'4-''': 4—
- d)
t
' pos-fri !i-::::?: 771177-7- :7577F:: i:
4084::4x?:i‘ ' 'r''''4 '''t '-i ?
-'- -- --'(916414ir iA-''"---sex'
:-4i'iA :- 'v--t 1 lz '
:v:::::-::'-7"::7-7t7'-77-7:7'77:77:7'!'l 773 --6-14 4H::::'q::
'' '''
:::: :'-:'-!:':::' '::::::"':::i ? :':::' :'::" :::::'' !' ::: : ?:':-:'-Itr' t
i
744-yr::441 14-w-e-47pe -
k -
wt
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
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.
Wilson, Amos L. The Capitol Hill News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 34, Ed. 1 Friday, August 23, 1935, newspaper, August 23, 1935; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2290275/m1/3/: accessed July 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.