The Hobart Republican. (Hobart, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
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REPUBLICAN
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THURSDAY, MAY IH, 1911.
Diax wax President
anyway.
for a long time
IJowi Hobart want the <oane of
lecture* that in being arranged by the
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Agricultural board lor the farmers of with unselfish dc-ds and practical help.
MOTHER'S DAT.
The Reload Sunday in May baa been
sat aside for the international observ-
ance of Mother * Day. The churches
of Hobart will observe this day on .Sun-
day morning.
The purpose of this day ia to honor
and uplift motherhood. The badge it a
white carnation, mother's own favorite
flower, or the national colors. Kvery
tender sentiment that lead* to noble ac-
tion should be nurtured carefully in a
nation accused of commercialism.
Each boy and girl should be admon-
ished to make this day so full of joy and
love for mother that she can never for-
get it, and to make it so overflowing
TIE JOM FIELDS HEETWI
Kiowa county. If ao get busy.
General Francisco Madero regrets to
*SP°rtf with smiles all over his tanned
face, that he wns unable to hold his
men back in compliance witl the terms
of the armistice.
For a country to b* prosperous and
it* people happy and centented, the
government must protect all the people,
and must let all the people have a voice
in ita government through the election
of its officers.
If Hobart does not make an efort to
necure thia course of lectures for the
benefit of the farmers of this county,
then Lone Wolf, Gotebo or Mountain
View will get it. Can you afford to sit
idly by and let the opportunity pass.
An imigrant who recently landed in
New York with fifteen children astonish-
ed the inspectors by exhibiting a pocket
roll of 126,600. Not even mV. Loob is
able to comprehend how a man with
fifteen children could accumulate that
■inch aionoy.
LotJ Hobart make the farmers of this
county feel that they are interested in
their welfare by securing for them the
free lecture course for July 10 and 11.
The state board must have the informa-
tion that we desire this course of
lectures by the % J day of, May.
When Senator Owen in a speech be-
fore the Oklahoma Legislature last
January, attacked Governor Harmon of
Ohio, the democrats of the state beoamo
very indignant, and the legislature
immediately introduced and p, Hsed
revolution asking the Governor to come
to Oklahoma and address them. This
was a personal slap at the Senator. In
this same speech the Senator spoke in
the highest terms of Governor Wilson
of New Jersey, and today almost every
country weekly in the state are making
complimentary mention of Wilson
Show mo one paper in the state that is
mentioning Harmon for President. Why
such a change of sentiment among our
democratic brethren.
fuloess that other mothers, bereft, ill or
unfortunate, may have a share in the
abundant joy.
Instill into the minds of the boys and
girls of the land that, on this day at
least, motherhood sits enthroned, and
the wise and the brave and the good of
all lands bow before her throne to do
her reverence and to acknowledge their
obligations.
On no day should the nation's flag float
out more triumphantly than on Mother's
Day, when mother comes into her own.
Let us strive faithfully to direct the
beautiful sentiments and ideals of the
day into wholesome and practical chan-
nels.
Lead boys and girls to realize that
mother's honor and happiness will be in
proportion to their own achivements and
worth, beginning with the record for the
day and ending with the chivalrous re-
spect and gentle consideration for all
womankind.
Extend the ideals of Mother's Day to
include all the ideals of the world.
We failed in the Farmer's Short
Course, let us not fail in this.
Get every man in your community to
attend the two days lecture course to
be held in Kiowa county on July 10 and
1L
Immediately after the battle Madero
formed his Cabinet. Now comes more
war. The fact just the beginning of
the war, unless Diaz resignu outright
and Madero is made President.
Good Crowd Listened to Address of
Noted Agriculturist.
A good audience of farmers and busi-
ness men, and not a few ladies, greeted
John Fields, the well-known agricultur-
ist and editor of the Oklahoma Farm
Journal, at the school house auditorium
Friday afternoon.
Mr. Fields, who came to Oklahoma fif-
teen years ago as assistant chemist at
the A. A M. college at Stillwater, has
given Oklahoma agriculture and farm
mtureats a special study and has the
reputation of being an authority on all
matters pertaining to Oklahoma agri-
culture.
He opened his address with a word for
the consolidated school, and if every
farmer could have heard him and have
followed up his argument with a study
of the proposition, there can be nodoubt
that the consolidated school would be
generally adopted throughout the ooun
try district*.
He thee took advantage of the weath
er conditions to swat the old fallacy that
rain follows the plow. He advooated
applying "dry farming" methods to crop
culture.
Kalllr corn, milo maize and Bermuda
grass received some attention, as did
cow peas and the other legumes. He
advocates more kaflir corn and less corn
for southwestern Oklahoma and gener-
ous plantings of cow peas,alfalfa and Ber-
muda for hog pasture.
He was questioned in regard to the
effect Kaffir corn had on soil and gave
results of chemical analysis to show that
it exhausted soil elements much less
than corn, but that it draw heavily on
subsoil moisture in dry years to the det-
riment of the crop following.
His address was a good one, and it is
hoped a profitable one.—Gotebo Ga-
zette.
Why Delay Further ?
Now is the time to select your cultivator
while the assortment is still unbroken.
14" Different Styles to Select From *\^
We can suit you in style
and price. Give us a call.
Flies Flies.
Now is the time to kill the flies. Flies
are distributors of Hlth. Filthiness
causes disease. Stop the spread of
disease by the killing of flies.
In a conversation with Mr. Harter
the manager of the Globe Clothing
store he said that he had never seen
flies so bad at this time of the year.
Kill flies.
Clean up the streets and alleys.
There will then be less for the flies to
thrive on.
Hobart's streets are the best kept of
any city in the state, but still we can
add to their cleanliness.
All goods guaranteed to give satisfaction
or your money back.
It Pays to Trade at This 5tore
A boost for the farmers of Kiowa
county is a boost for Hobart. Hobart
can not prosper without the farmers of
Kiowa county prosper. Our interests
are mutual. Let the merchants of Ho-
bart learn the truth. The sooner they
realize this the better they are off.
Talk to the farmers about matters
vital to themselves. Do not be so
selfish. All the time reaching out for
something for self and never giving any-
thing in return. Hobart merchants are
known for their liberality but they
want to keep this constantly before the
people. There are some things that
they can not advestise to much. Among
these are the fact that we want tho
farmers to prosper, and that we are
willing to aid them when we can.
We predict that it will not belong be-
fore it will be possible for a person here
in Hobart to talk to New York, without
having to wait very long.
We have an idea that by giving the
company a few days notice that you
would like to talk to Chicago, Cin-
cinnati or most any of the eastern
cities, even to Washington or Mew York
that you could do that now.
Just the other day a conversation was
carried on between persons from New
York to Denver over the phone. Thiis
within itself is not so amazing at this
day and age. But what would you
have thought of a man 25 or 50 yean
ago, who would have stated that within
a few years you could talk from Denver
to New York, this is now a reality and
it will not be long before they will be
talking from New Vork to San Francis,
co. Great is electricity, and great
the telephone.
Rummons
ATTORNEY AT LAW
Practice in all state Courts. '
Office: Over Dixie Store
John Miller, breeder of Single Comb
White Orpington chickens, the great
winter egg producers. Eggs for sale,
price reasonable at 310 Randlette street,
Hobart, Okla. 2-llwtf
Do not dig up more snakes than you
can kill unless you really prefer to be
bitten.
——""ill, <i,ii/ii,liimvii. 1
It's a Waste to Buy Soap
You can make, right at home, better soap
—positively better soap—than you can buy at
any price, and make it so cheap you'll have
difficulty in figuring its cost.
Soap-making is a pleasure in those homes
where they use
Lewis' Lye
The Standard for Half a Century
And Lewis' Lye, in preference to any other lye, is used in
every home where it is known.
Now, with Lewis' Lye, a perfumed powder, it takes
only a few minutes' time, without any boiling, to make
absolutely pure hard soap, or soft soap, from fat and grease.
Such soap can be used for every work purpose through-
out the home. The purity of its ingredients is assured;
the danger of soap-poisoning is eliminated; econom" is
promoted; and its cleaning qualities are superior to those
of commercial soaps.
Home-made Lewis' Lye soap cuts the work of wash-
day right in half, cleans the clothes to a snowy whiteness
and contains nothing that could ever injure the finest fabrics.
Countless Uses on the Farm and in the Home
Lewis Lye makes hard water soft as though by magic.
As a hog conditioner (one-fourth can to each barrel of feed)
It has the highest endorsements. A spoonful added to a
bucket of water makes the perfect cleanser,
disinfectant and antiseptic. The ideal spray for
fruits and vines.
HUNTS
LIGHTNING OIL
FOR
ACHES and
PAINS
Mfg'd by A. B. Richards Medicine
Co., Sherman, Texas
SoW and Guaranteed
by All Grocers, 10c
The Quaker is <
Every Cam
Your grocer will be glad to sell you Lewis' Lye.
He knows it's the guaranteed always uniform, greater-
strength lye, made from pure materials. He know Lewis'
Lye is the original commercial lye (1854) and even
today, the only lye marketed by manufacturing chemist,.
No Premiums—No Schemes—Just the
Best Lye in the World
PENNSYLVANIA SALT MANUFACTURING 00.
M.mufacturint Chemists
PHILADELPHIA
J •••••••••••••••••«.,
. MUSHROOM CORNS I
• Moat Painful of All Foot Ailment. J
How to Cure Them. •
•••••...J
The Mushroom corn fa ao called from
its pitted cone top, resembling a tiny
mushroom It burrowa deep Into the
too and gets more inflamed than other
coma. For the quick relief and cure or
these and all corns and callouaea the
following la the most effective remedy
, known to acl-
ence: Dissolve
2 tablespoonfula
of Calocide com-
pound in a ba-
ata of hot water. Soak the feet in thia
for full fifteen minutes, gently mas-
saging the sore parts. (Uss time will
not give desired results.) All sore
ness instantly disappears and the corn
or callous ran be easily peeled off. It
may be necessary to repeat this for a
number of nights for a complete cure,
but If adhered to it will surely succeed
A little olive oil rubbed on the part
la ery beneficial. This Calocide is a
very remarkable preparation for all
foot ailments and Is no longer confined
to doctors' use. Any druggist has It
In stock or will quickly get it from his
wholesale house. A twenty-five cent
package is usually sufficient to put the
worst feet in fine condition. Bad smell
tng feet and tender feet need only a
Tew treatments, likewise with inflamed
bunions Tbis item will be welcomed
by persons who have tried Ineffectual
powders and tablets.
J. E. SMITH, PRESIDENT
UNION MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANT
ENID, OKLAHOMA
Operating Under the Gilmer Law. We Insure Crops Against
Loss by Hail
ADMITTED ASSETS, APRIL 26, 1911
Cash... $ 15,000.00) Guaranty and
f®c,u"tleS. 5,000.00) Reserve Funds
1911 Premiums 108,475.52
Total Admitted Assets (4-26-'ll> $128,475.52~
Chartered for 50 years. License runs until Feb. 28,1912. Licensed 1909
by Hon. J. T. McComb, Insurance Commissioner; Licensed 1910 by Hon
Milas Lassater, Insurance Commisstoner; Licensed 1911 by Hon Perrv
A. Ballard, Insurance Commissioner. Adjustments made promptly
Losses paid in full according: to contract. We save the farmers from
10c to 22c per acre on their Hail Insurance. INSURE WITH i«n
OTHER BEFORK INVESTIGATING CAREFULLY. " N°
OLOEST, STRONGEST AND LARGEST HAIL COMPANY IN THE STATE
DOCTOR KING
Nerve, Blood and Skin Specialist
Nervous Diseases, Varicocele, Blood
Poison, Sirlcture, Hydrocele, Kidney and
Bladder and Prostatic Troubles. Lupus,
Skin Cancers. Special and Private Diseases,
Rheumatism. Catarrh, and Chronic Diseases
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED.
nil pr CURED WITHOUT SEVERE OPERATIVE FKTI„ .
r,LD PROCEDURE—WRITE FOR I0IK. FISTULA
H.rful.r Graduate la Medicine. Daly and Ledallv Ouallflerf .If.,,
WRITE f FREE
DR. KING Fort Worth, Texa's.
Won't Turn Loose
"I insist on saying that Hunt's Light-
ning Oil takes hold qnicker and lets go
slower of aches, pains and sore places
than any other liniment I ever saw. It
just won't turn loot>e till you're well.''
I never have a little ache but what I
slosh it on
And ere I get the bottle corked that
little ache is gone."
C. W. Jackson. M rble Hill. Mo.
NOTICE, FARMERS.
We want to extend to the farmers of
Kiowa county an invitation to contrib-
ute any item of news or matters of in-
terest with reference to crops or any
special crop, its effect upon the land,the
benefits to be derived; in fact, any mat-
ter you think will be of interest to the
farmers of Kiowa county.
What is of benefit to one farmer is of
benefit to another, and when you think
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The Hobart Republican. (Hobart, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 18, 1911, newspaper, May 18, 1911; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc236074/m1/4/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.