The Hooker Advance. (Hooker, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1912 Page: 6 of 8
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THE HOOKER ADVANCE
Advance Pub. Co. (Inc.)
AN AWFUL HANDICAP.
HOOKER.
OKLA.
The a Ily ear-around
best girl of alL
girl Is the
Dame Fashion decrees women must
continue to hobble.
Football schedules are blossoming
shyly on the sporting page
Football this year will have to com
Pete with some mighty gamey politics
Next year somebody will perhaps in-
vent a-straw hat that will not blow
off.
One could learn to love an aero-
plane because it so seldom kicks up
the dust.
The man who stole a kltchcn range
was evidently determined upon going
a hot pace.
KAFIR CORN AND MILO MARKET
Demand for These Cereals Will Be Constant, and
Ever-Increasing—Some Facts and Figures About
Their Inspection and Grading.
I ARRESTING FLIGHT OF TIME
"V * •
| Serman Scientists Advise the Eating
of Egg Shells by Those Who
Approach Old Age.
' Two Germans, deep thinkers—Pro-
: fessors Emmerich and Loewe—s;ata
J that egg shells eaten increase the
power of resistance against "the with-
ering blight of time," add weight to
■ the body, activity to the brain and
strength to the heart; that they de-
stroy injurious bacilli, prevent inflam-
| mation and disease and lend courage
Chicago. Kansas City and Wichita feeds sold for horses and cattle. They an(j energy. This reminds me, Philip
fcave had for several months regular are marketed under the same restric-- Hale writes in the Boston Herald, of
sales on their boards of trade for kafir|uons of the pure food laws in regard ; :he preparation advertised in London
and milo, and the sale of these grains to registration and maintenance of a thirty or more years ago as removing
j is handled the same as the sale of uniform formula as are the poultry superfluous hair, being an excellent
corn, wheat, oats and barley. j feeds. Many of the manufacturers of • substitute for table butter, none genu-
j For eight months, July 1, 1911, to these feeds would use kaflrcorn large- [ne unless stamped on the blade.
February 29, 1912, there were in- ly in their mixtures if the supply was Eustace Miles, the English court ten-
' epected at Chicago by the Illinois state sufficient, but they do not dare to un- j Qj8 piayer and vegetarian, says he had
, grain inspectors |>3l cars of kafircorn dertake its use now. When the sup- an 0id nurBe who used to eat egg
and 37 cars of milo. jpl>' of kafircorn is largely increased 1 shells and crunch them joyfully be-
! The Illinois State Railroad and' an immense quantity will be absorbed between the teeth that happened to-
Bf H. M. COTTRELL. Agricultural Coramiuioctr Rack laiand Lines, ia Southwest Trail f
Warehouse commission have estab-
lished the following grades for kaflr
and milo:
Kafircorn.
The man who hieached sparrows
and sold them as canaries forgot to
bleach their voices.
Students of Rugby "have risen In re-
volt against the silk hat. Verily, this
Is an age of treason.
WHY DOESN'T HE TELL WHAT
HE KNOWS CONCERNING THE
ARCHBOLD CHARGES?
The only answer to be made to the '
query as to why man don't go to
church la that they do.
Some Kansas City women are ad-
dicted to cigars That town needs Assuming the Standard Oil Man Told , few things to justify such a theory., ejghths retj> SOund dry and clean.
more smoke inspectors.
American slang is steadily gaining
tround over academic English. The
former seems sure to arrive.
Notwithstanding the large size o?
It a good many people are sneezing
at this year's goldenrod crop.
The fashions of Japanese women
who have not adopted western notions
have not changed in 2.000 years.
We are informed that the price of
sauerkraut is going up, but there is no
law compelling any one to eat it.
The Queen of Spain has a solid sil-
ver telephone, but Its line becomes
busy as readily as those of the plainer
icrt.
the Truth, All Others Concerned
Are Involved in What Was a Na-
tional Disgrace.
Where is Cortelyou and what has
he to say regarding the Archbold
charges? Alone of the living partici-
pants in that famous deal, he has
kept silenL Yet it was to him that
Mr. Bliss reported, and to him that
Roosevelt "appealed"' in his letters
and telegram. He knows and should
tell whether1 Archbold has concocted
this story in order to cast discredit
upon Roosevelt and the Progressive
campaign or is reciting facts. His
apparent unwillingness to say any-
thing on this case is certainly an
alarming phase of the situation. It
can be construed in either way, for
N'o. 3 red kafircorn—Shall be seven-
| eighths red, not dry, clean or sound
i enough for Xo. 2.
Among these Is the death of Mr.
j Bliss and the fact that his books as
treasurer of the committee were de-
' 6troyed by him; so that any accusa-
: tion whatever could be made and no
proof of his falsity could be pro-
duced.^Of course this argument will
' apply as well to the other side of the
I case. Naturally the Standard Oil peo-
I pie are furious at Roosevelt for his
! prosecution of the trust and would
do almost anything to checkmate his
ambition to be president again, but
I that they would devise such a plot is
hard to believe. If we inject Mr.
i Penrose into the affair, we may say ,
, that bis $3,000,000 story about the n,ixed kaflrcorn, badly damaged, damp,. extra mo'sture to reach the gram, ex-
Progressive "campaign this year Is so
j dry and well cleaned. i ed and kept apparently "bone" dry
Xo. 2 kafircorn—Shall be mixed through the winter in a dry and well-
kafircorn, sound, dry and clean. i protected bin will often, in warm, wet
Xo. 3 kafircorn—Shall * be mixed weather in the spring, become so hot
• kafircorn, not dry, clean or sound that one can hardly bear his hand in
; enough for Xo. 2. |«t. This heating often occurs in a dry
1 Xo. 4 kafircorn—Shall include all bin where there is no opportunity for
absurd that it Is difficult to credit any
of his charges. On the other hand,
Roosevelt's relations with Harriman
Much Is now being paid against the
•laughter of calves, but not on" word
has had reference to the sawdust
type.
or against Roosevelt. Cortelyou s i durj th,s ai were such as t0
loyalty to his old friend and patron
may make him reluctant to expose
Washington has started an antl-
fcissing crusade, but it will have no
eff"ot on the office holder's lo%e for
his job.
tbat friend. On the other hand, he
is now president of the New York
Gas company, brought to Xew York
by Frank Vanderlip, president of the
Xational City bank, and if he were
minded to dispute Archbold, his new
alliances might give him pause. Yet
In the very nature of things he must
A new British ocean liner if to have
a flat for millionaires, who will pre-
sumably be required to prove their
property.
make it probable that he welcomed
contributions. We know that he
asked Harriman to help in the Xew
York state campaign of that year.
And It was no worse to ask Harriman
than it was to ask Archbold. More-
I over the distinction between state and
national campaign funds is mythical.
The burden of proof is decidedly on
, . , . , , J the colonel. He ought at once to
speak and give his version of the dis- , produce 8omp f L<?t hJm lestjf
pute. Without his testimony or with himBelfi and espf.rialIj. ,et him pro.
t even the affa.r may not be settled. duf.e Mr Cortelvou Then we sha]1
Indeed, it bids fair never to be set-1 stijj
tied. One item remains for Mr. Arch-
musty or very dirty.
Milomaize
X"o. 1 milomaize—Shall be mixed and mi!^ shipped from a dry country
milomaize of choice quality, sound, dry into a moist country will heat
and well cleaned. j in the ear, when the car reaches a
Xo. 2 milomaize—Shall be mixed point where the weather is damp and
milomaize, sound, drv and clean. jwarm.
Xo. 3 milomaize—Shall be mixed' When kafir begins t0 heat' U must
Cross Bath, surrounded by a throng
of admirers, and one of these admir
era, intoxicated with admiration, toob
a glasa of the water in which the
beauty stood, and holding it aloft,
drank her health, draining the water
to the last drop.
"Beau Nash, who stood near by.
cept that contained in the air in the i shouted:
building. Thoroughly dried kafircorn " 1 no* tk® punch, but I woul£
I had the toast!'"
milomaize, not dry, clean or sound
enough for Xo. 3.
Xo. 4 milomaize—Shall
be moved at once and air allowed to
Why He Sorrowed.
"And then Nero had Rome set afire
in every quarter."
"Alas, how terrible!" murmured lit-
tle Moritz, with an expression of such.
; play around the grains. This will stop deep anguish that his teacher asked
The Waukegan woman who mad*
clothing for her chicken Is probably
preparing to go Into the dressed poul-
try market
have an unsolved question but
. ,. . , „ , , . .the burden may not seem so heavy
bold to produce and that Is Mr. Bliss s against the PX.pr^sidPnt
receipt. That certainly ought to be 1
Writer In Xew York says: "What
becomes of all the old, worn out
horses''" Evidently he never has eat-
en goulash.
The shingle and the slipper are
doomed by the Invention of a spank-
ing machine by a professor In the
middle west.
Perhaps men are to cultivate side
whiskers Just to show that they can
produce a fashion as homely as the
bobble skirt.
The oldest book atrent In Xew York
recently died at the age of 101 year**.
It is well to note that his death was
a natural one.
"People could live on half the food
they eat now," says a physician Also
perhaps we could get along with half
as many doctors.
j the heating for several days, and ,
include all when the grain begins to heat again, !
mixed milomaize. badly damaged, ;the a,rating proces8 must be repeat-
damp, musty, or very dirty. jp(1 Jn gmal, bing ,he heating can be j
Of the 331 cars of karcorn inspected kept In check by shoveling the grain
, at Chicago during the eight mouths [over as often as it begins to get warm, j
ending February 29, 1912, 277 cars, it i the custom in elevators to take '
nearly £4 per cent, graded Xo. 3. The kafircorn when it begins to heat and I
buyers want Xo. 2. and the reason j move it from one bin to another, the
that so much of the kafircorn was Xo. j t;rain getting sufficient air in this
was on account of dirt and the grain movement to kep it cool for^some ,
being musty. The inspectors complain time.. If the tendency to heat is very t
particularly about musty kafir through strong, the kafircorn is passed through j
the winter. a blast of cold air as it is changed I
The three largest buyers of kafir ia;froni one bin to another.
Chicago are the Albert Dickerson Co., A firm whose trade demands kaflr- i
dwards & Loomis Co., and the Quaker corn that has never been heated has ,
t Oats Co.. Somers, Jones & Co„ grain' houses at Denver, in eastern Kansas ,
commission mrchants, are the largest and in central Oklahoma. At the Kan j
handlers of kafircorn on the Chicago sas and Oklahoma houses a constant
Board of Trade. There are over 702 watch has to be kept over the kafir-
manufacturers of poultry feeds in the corn in the spring to keep it from
I'nited States that use kafircorn large- heating, and in some seasons it has tc
I ly in their mixed poultry feeds. Dur- be aerated frequently. At Denvei
ing the past winter kafircorn has been there has never been the slightest
sold at Chicago in carload lots at $1 trouble from heating in any season
to $1.40 per 100 pounds—56 to 78.4 or year. The extreme dryness of th«
cents a bushel. air and the cool climate seem to pre
The demand for kafircorn is increas- all trouble in this respect,
ing rapidly throughout the United It seems that it would be a practi ]
States. cal plan for millers and grain dealer* 1
Kafircorn and milo, outside of the!«n western Kanshs. eastern Coloradc |
clearly. Later there was demand for company would sell for 151.000 what f territory where it is growing, is at an<l Xew Mexico and the Panhandles
more and when Archbold hesitated, its Knglish rivals demanded $55,000 present used chiefly in mixed poultry of Oklahoma and Texas to erect mod-
Mr. Bliss feared the Standard people for feeds, and the poultry feed market is ern concrete elevators and store large i
were "making a mistake "—which The American company was pre- taking this grain as fast as it is of- quantities of kafir and milo where it
freely translated, meant that unless , pared to manufacture the rails, pay fered. During the Bpring and summer could be held until needed for imme
they came down again they would freight and handing to the Atlantic months, the buyers have difficulty ir ; dlate consumption in the rain belt, i
feel the pressure of governmental dis- j seaboard, pay freight and handling by ' securing a sufficient supply to meet One of the largest handlers of kafir ,
why it affected him so much.
"Why," said Moritz, "just think of
'he poor Insurance companies!"—
Fliegende Blaetter.
somewhere in tbe Standard's files,
and if It is Vot found tbe failure to
find it will be cited as a point in Mr.
Roosevelt's favor. Thus far the col-
onel's denials have lacked substance
and verisimilitude. In the old days
he was lavish with documents and
other material with which to over-
whelm his critics. Xow he indulges
in lurid adjectives. The case looks ,
dark for him.
Groping.
"What Is Miss Hammerah trying te
play on the piano?"
" 'In the Shadow.' "
"I thought she Beemed to be ha^
Ing some difficulty in finding the light
keys."
EXPOSES THE TARIFF FRAUD
American Company's Offer of Steel
Rails to Manchester. England. Is
Illuminating.
Recently the city of Manchester,
England, wanted steel rails for its
roads. The contract was not a large
one. but when it was advertised the
But. assuming that Archbold told ; bidding for it was sharp and bitter,
the truth. It looks almost as dark for | Manchester is in the iron and «teel
all others concerned. Mr. Archbold j district of England, and In a position
acknowledges or claims that he gave | to command the lowest price on the
the money with the distinct under [ domestic product.
.standing that Roosevelt should know j When the bids were opened, how-
of It, which means that the president j ever, It was found that an American
of the United States was thereby to | concern, the Lorain Steel company of
be put under obligations to the i Johnstown, Pa . had made the lowest
Standard Oil company. Quid pro quo, I offer In round figures, the Lorain
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle o*
CASTORLA, a safe and sure remedy lot
infants and children, aud see that It
Bears the
Signature of I
In Lse For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Caston*
Precaution.
Chimmle—Hey, Maggie, hold dla
bag o* peanuts fer me fer a minute—
here comes a poor relation o' mine: —
Life.
TO DBITE OrT MALARIA
^ A JiO BUILD I P TI1E 8TCTKM
rnTi? Stan<, nl OKUVM* 7 A ST ML *3
C111LL 1VMU Tub knuir >bit yoo art* lakint
Th« furmola M plainly pr1r.!«-<l on #T«>rT !>,«.«.
ihuwlD* It la limply goiDIn* and Inm 10 a laat •<«#
form, and ilia m."M rltrr lual fur a., tut *ru«
people and chl Idreo, 60 cccta. A Jr.
Uplifting.
"Walt till I hobble my horse."
"Well, please don t do it on
skirt of the lawn."
t he
Panama has elected three vice-pres-
idents The republic may be small,
but what it lacks In si7«*. it plainly Is
going to make up In jobs
An Impertinent paragraphs asks:
"How much would you be worth If you
Jost all your money?" But how ran we
lose wjiat we haven't got?
favor In other words, blackmail, sea to England, and again pay freight
And in this blackmailing were In- and handling to Manchester, and still
volved the president and his adjutants make a profit on Its sale at nearly
In the anti-trust hunt on the one hand ten per cent, under the British price
and Mr. Archbold and his ramifying And yet. in tbe face of such a show-
associates on the other. I ing as this, the stand pat Republican
Dear Mr. Bliss" was involved, too. still maintains that the present tarifT
In a sense, for he later expressed to . on steel rails Is absolutely essential
Mr Archbold his deep regret at th* ' to the prosperity of the Industry In
president's actions, bewailing his own this country The steel business is
failure to Influence him Mr. rortel- still to him an infant Industry. er -n
you Is Involved too. for he must have > though It can go into the heart of
Contemporary opines that "some
men can got a reputation for wisdom
In an hour's speech " And some men
can lose It tn some fool remark.
Baby tn Pennsylvania Is said to
have eight ft'ig rs on each hand
When that feller grows Op we'd hate
to play against him In a poker game
known what was going on, at any
rate during the campaign There
were thus two parties to the trans-
action. the bribe-givers and the bribe-
takers. All the brige-givers seem per-
i fectly at ease in their consciences at
Britain and win contracts in compett-
; tion with hard-headed, close-calculat-
ing manufacturers of the tight little
Isle.
As It is with steel, so It Is with a
cumber of other products of our man-
St Paul pol'remen have
tfered to use their clubs o
mashers It Is hoped the
policemen are provided wl
beavy clubs
been or-
i street
Ft Paul
tb good.
A pr
beauty from
New York wc
Is Is d<:
'allfornla
o<nen never,
the high cost
their action, regarding It as simply a ufacturing plants and with much of
phase of politico-commercial life. How
their acts will appear to posterity
and to the world at large may be an- he has been swindled by the
other matter The only justification
for them lies In the fact that they
were approached by the other side
In the beginning That, of course. Is
nraal. but not Invariable Then. too.
tbey had courage enough to refuse
to be bled still more, although warned
our raw- material. Some day the Amer-
ican cltiien will wake to the fact that
tariff
mongers who have fattened on hla
toil and then the day of reckoning
will come.
Who put the odor In Theodore
Greenville N'ews.
Standard OH—Columbia State.
their trade. One manufacturer of j corn in Chicago told me that he could
poultry feeds told me that he tritd to, sell six months ahead on contract for
start In the summer season with a | regular and large shipments of kafir
supply of 400 or r,00 tons. It is esti-.and milo stored in modern bins in the
mated that the three largest Chicago j dry western country, where the alti-
users of kafircorn for poultry feeds, tude is sufficiently high to keep the
use an average of 20,000.000 pounds air cool and dry. Large storage
of kafircorn per month. j centers for kafir and milo can be es-
The demand for kafircorn by the tablished profitably at Amarillo, Lib
manufacturers of poultry feeds will Tal. Phillipsburg. Norton and other
be constant. The national and stat western points.
pure food laws require that every Kaflr that is thoroughly dried before
mixture of feeds offered for sale must threshing and thoroughly cleaned be-
have a statement on each bag of every fore storing does not heat nor mould
material used in the mixture and the nearly so quickly as that which is
exact quantity of each material, and mixed with trash and dirt. These al>-
that this formula must be maintained sorb the raiosture that makes the
from rtonth to month and from year grain heat quickly in the spring. The
to year. Each feed mixture is regis bulk of these grains that Is receive*]
tere l separately i9 every state wfler- at the grain markets grade Xo. 3 on
H is offered for sale Nearly all of the ac count of the di t. Nearly all of the '
mixed poultry feeds contain a good kaflr and milo w>uld grade No. 2 if
proportion of kaflrcorn. The regis- i the farmers would clean it with ni
tration fees are high, one manufac ' fanning mill as soon as threshed Thi<
Hirer reporting that his license fees cleaning would increase the price im j
for poultry feeds alone in states east prove the keping qualities and sav> I
of the Mississippi amounts to fS.OOO. the freight charges on the valuseles^
There are millions of tons of mixed trasb.
Mr*. Wloalow'a Sooth in* Sjrup for OUWrrs
teelblne.Bofwnsthepums, rv.lui-e*
When a man does get even with
another he Is never satisfied until he
gets a little more so.
The mti«fving qunlitv in LEWIS' SingW
Binder is found in no other 5c cijjar 4
Might may overcome right, but It
can never destroy It.
Doesn't Remove the Odium.
Secretary Fisher's order that the <
Ched
ce git
it because of the counte-
to Haliinger and of the
jf subordinates in tbe land
tared queatlon the actions
r. Attorney General Wick
ick-dated opinion, more-
r>unt>
Cb*se strenuous tiroes
i questions The
getttcg r.erroet
f ed w*:th 'h<
log terminal
It will hard!
reversal of tbe Alaskan
which has become identi-
isor in offic* is a gratify-
lon of a painful episode
y relieve tbe Taft admin-
Yes
Mratlon, however, from the discredit , Harper s Weekly
Correct
tics say I am In It only to
my own Interests. If *hat |
purpoae I would fall—T. R. I
that will b* the reason why.— I
Bn
Brunt
Raising Turkeys.
U-t for sonio localities, because of th«
fact that it does not require mi wld«
a range as a bron«e. I think you wll
tiud either of these varieties prtifii
able and there is no question but thai
the turkey-growing industry in heln:
i. eg lee ted in Oklahoma. Turkeys oc
the farm destroy large numbers 01
harmful insects and other foods re
r.ulred are not expensive Therefore
the profits ordinarily are Urge wberv
carefully handled H A Bittenbend
approaches tbe Mammoth er. Dept. of Animal Husbandry. Ok la
In sis* and is considered bet- homa A. ft M College. Stillwater.
"Will you plea
variety of turkey
on the farm? V
have jour advice.
Ok la.
ally speaking
advise me which
s most profitable
ild be pleased to
Mrs. B. R. Osage
Mammoth
re hare. Tbey are large
vigorous if properly hand I* I
e Holland turkey has be-n
to such au extent that it
A confession
of faith'*
If you ham trouble villi
jour Stomach, Liver or Bowels,
leel run-down and in need of
a Ionic, we urge a trial ol
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
Your faith In this medicine
will not he misplaced. It
will surely help jso. Be
coniinced today, All Drug-
gists and Dealers.
in this branch of the feed trade. meet, and she said she ate the shells
Kafircorn and milo are worth 90 because they "shaved the hair off In-
per cent as much as the same weight j side of the throat." The discovery
of corn for feeding work horses, beef of the German scientist is peculiarly
Xo. 1 white kafircorn—Shall be pure 'and dairy cattle, hogs and sheep. The welcome to dwellers by the ocean,
I that they would suffer for It. Bnt It white, of choice quality, sound, dry and limited supply on the markets and th€ | for it Is a well-known fact that If youi
J all shows the horrfcle plight of poli- well cleaned. | strong demand for these grains for do not break egg shells the witches
tics fc this country and is a disgrace Xo. 2. white kafircorn—Shall be sev- poultry feeds has kept the price at or will put out to sea in them to wreck
j to the nation. How the London en-eighths white, sound, dry and clean, above that of corn. This has made it , vessels, and if you burn the shells
dailies and weeklies will exult at Xo. 3 white kafircorn—Shall be sev- impossible for stockmen to buy these ! the hens will-cease to lay. Further-
these revelations: How especially en-eighths white not dry, clean or | grains for the regular feeding and ) more, as eggs are now absurdly high
will the .Saturday Review rejoice at sound enough for Xo. 2. | fattening of livestock. A number of —even case eggs—In the neighbor-
: a justification of almost every fimg xo. 4 white kafircorn—Shall be sev- grain men stated that whenever th*1 hood It seems a pity to waste any
, it has made at American corruption- en-eighths white, badly damaged,;supply of kafircorn and milo became | part of them.
; Can anything be said In reply? \ ery damp, musty or very dirty. iso large that it assumed an important !
I nni/c rini/ cad nnnocv/ci T litt,e 1>Ve cau onlv construct a dia" Xo. 1 red kafircorn shall be pure red, ■ place in the markets, that it would be | The First Toaat.
LOOKS DARK FOR ROOSEVtLT bolical plot by Archbold. Penrose et of ch0jce QUaiity, sound, dry and well absorbed just the same as corn. oats. WUbod Mizner, the well-knowc/
al.. to ruin Mr. Roosevelt and the cieanea barley and other feeds, selling at a I vlveur, explained, on a Xew York roof
Progressive cause. There are very \0 o red jjafircom—shall be seven- price compared with the price paid garden, the origin of the word "toast"
for other grains proportionate to its —toasting a lady.
feed value. j "You will remember," he began*
When the germinating season i that in olden times it was the custom
comes in the spring, there is a strong | to serve punch with toasted that I*
Xo. 4 red kafircorn—Shall be seven- tendency in kafircorn and milo to start j to say, roasted apples floating In It.
eighths red, badly damaged, damp, :the growing process sufficiently to de- j These apples were called the toast,
musty or very dirty. Ivelop heat enough to injure the grain. > The toast—remember that.
Xo. 1 kafircorn—Shall be mixed Kafircorn harvested in a dry fall, j "Well, it happened at Bath one day
kafircorn, of choice quality, sound thoroughly cured before being thresh- i that a celebrated beauty stood In th*
f
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Hiebert, A. L. The Hooker Advance. (Hooker, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 37, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1912, newspaper, October 18, 1912; Hooker, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc272426/m1/6/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.