The Hooker Advance (Hooker, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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THE HOOKER ADVANCE
Advance Pub. Co. (Inc.)
HOOKER. i
s : ok la.
Europe is — untappj as if It bad
Just lost tbe baseball pennant.
Straw hats still linger, but chiefly
In the guise of next year's hens' nests.
in some ways an oyster Is like an
egg. You never can tell till you open
It
Farm Queries
Answered
Perplexing Problem*
Expertly Explained
Department Head* of A. & M. Col-
lege. Stillwater, OkJa_ Reply to
Inquiries Made by Farmers
As Is well known, a handsome wo-
man can be attractive In almost any
style.
Best Grass Pastures.
| What is the best kind of grass to so-w
. next spring for permanent pasture for
horses and cattle? What is the best see-i
I to sow for hog pasture?—Ch&s. Hawk.
Ottawa County. Ok lahoma.
If bobble skirts are made an)
tighter, the wearers will not even bl
able to bobble.
a man out west is trying to regain
■ fortune by newspaper work. No
wonder he lost it.
The cost of dying has gone up 33 1-3
per cent., and some reel that they
cannot afford the expense
Elijah may have been the first avi-
ator, but there wa3 no promoter there
to collect the gate receipts.
It is hinted that the Mona Lisa was
■tolen by an artist He certainly was
an artist at getting away with it
We hare reason to believe that the
new "ankieview" skirt will cause
mere men to sit up and take notice.
The corset may go, as fashion dic-
tators say, but we may rest assured
that something worse will be substi-
tuted.
Professor Brooks' comet Is thus far
obscured by clouds, but the presump
tion is that It is keeping its adver-
tised date.
Another unsuccessful attempt has
been made to e*Im tbe English chan-
nel. But why try to swim when it is
so easy to fly across?
There is a form of butter in India
called "ghee." We will hazard the
opinion that some of our own cold
storage kind beata It
Fruit pests are being killed by eleo
trlcity in Spokane valley. The mod
era agriculturist earns his bread by
the bum of his motor.
By Professor J. A. Wilson
Director A. A. M. Agricultural Experiment
Station, Stillwater, Okla.
A better kind of grass for this cli-
mate to be used in a permanent pas-
ture than the orchard grass which you
have been experimenting with is the
Hardy Bermuda. It is better for the
reason that it is sure to form a per-
manent sod. It will stay green
throughout the long, dry summer and
is comparatively nutritious, having a
high per cent of protein that is di-
gestible.
As to the best kind of seed to sow j
for hog pasture, in your section of j
the state alfalfa would be the most
valuable crop for hogs, although red
clover is said to do quite well in that ]
section of Oklahoma. If you simply |
want to sow some legume in order to
prepare the land for alfalfa you will .
be more successful if you will use |
the sweet clover instead of red clover j
for the reason that the former has
been found to develop the same bac-
teria in the soil which alfalfa requires.
Soil inoculation is most successfully
done by applying a thin dressing of
soil from clay lands that have already
produced legumes successfully; but
in your case, if it is difficult to se-
cure such land, i believe the sweet
clover will serve you very well. It |
is also quite a rank grower and you j
would not have the difficulty that you
are now experiencing from the crab
grass from your experience in trying
to grow red clover.
Cotton Seed Meal.
W# are sending you a sample of cot-
tonseed product called Cold Pressed cake,
we are desirous to know whether or not
this feed will make a good feed for
horses, and whether it would be safe to
feed it to hogs?—C. C. Leach, Hughes
' County, Oklahoma.
Wiggle Tails In Cisterns.
Is there any way whereby cistern wa-
ter can be filtered and ir.ade fit for
drinking after wiggle-tails have formed
in it, and is there any way to prevent
them getting into it?
By Professor C. K. francis
Department of Chemistry, A. A M. Col-
lege. Stillwater, Okla.
i presume that these wiggle-tails
are mosquito larvae. They may be
killed by pouring kerosene oil into
the cistern, a small quantity will be
sufficient It is necessary only to cov-
er the water. After ten hours or over
night skim off the oil together with
the dead larvae, which will be found
beneath the oiL If enough oil remains
in the water to gi*e it a taste you
need not be alarmed as it will do no
harm and will soon disappear.
i would suggest that you put wire
screening over all air holes about tbe
cistern and tie a piece of cloth over
the outlet This will prevent any
mosquitoes from entering to deposit
their eggs which soon develop into
larvae (wiggle-tails), in the water.
WISH AT LAST CAME TRUE
Value of Peanuts to Hogs.
Will you give me the difference be-
tween the feeding value of a bushel of
ranuts and a bushel of corn for hogs?
have sixty head of good hogs but no
corn, but have ten acres of very fine pea-
nuts, and it has been a question in my
mind whether to se!i my peanuts and
buy corn, or feed my peanuts to the hogs.
Any information you can give me will be
highly appreciated.—W. Colbert, Carter
County, Oklahoma.
Hay fever may be a sign of brains
but a good many people are willing tc
forego the brains if. by doing so. they
can get rid of the fever.
By Professor C. K. Francis
Department of Chemistry, A. & M. Col-
lege, Stillwater Okla.
An expert tells us that birds spread
disease. This probably will be seized
upon by tbe ladies as a pretext tc
wear dead birds on their Bats.
a New York policeman who res-
cued a girl from drowing was reward-
ed with a kiss and a bug. Here is a
suggestion for Andrew Carnegie.
The trouble between Germany and
England reminds us of a quarrel be-
tween two prominent pugilists. All
the fighting is done in the newspapers.
The census gives Nevada only sev-
en-tenths of a man to the square mile.
There are In Nevada a good many
square miles that don't deserve even
that much.
Highwaymen, after robbing a Chi-
cago man, rook away all his clothing
and left him shivering in the street.
It may become necessary to have emp-
ty barrels left around at convenient
places.
A Chicago man is suing for divorce
because his wife has been throwing
things at him for nineteen years.
Probably be is tired of paying for
having th> dents taken out of the
celling.
Cotton seed meal or cake may con-1
stitute part of the ration for horses, i
: but must be fed with care. I would
suggest that a couple of handfuls may
be given at the start and gradually
increased to a quart per day. It us-
ually acts something like linseed meal,
giving tone. Occasionally cotton seed
< cake and hulls have been fed to
: horses in large quantities without any
! injurious effects, but in such cases the
j animals were in charge of persons
who had long experience in the care
I and feeding of the animals.
| This Station has underway an ex-
periment with hogs that are being fed
on cotton seed meal. The animals
have been given the following mix-
i ture dry since early last winter with-
| out injurious effect:
2 pounds corn meal and 4 ounces
cotton seed meal (per hundred
weight.)
I am of the opinion that cotton seed
meal is not a dangerous food if the
seed from which it is made is ripe,
sweet, and in good condition. Often
it is piled in the open, gets wet, fer-
ments and it stands to reason that it
may become contaminated and unfit
for feeding. Experience has shown
that the young pigs are more subject
to unfavorable results from feeding
on cotton seed meal than the older or
mature animals.
By Professor W. A. Llnklater
Department of Animal Husbandry, A. A.
M. College, Stillwater, Okla.
In case that you decide to feed the
peanuts to the hogs, I would advise
you to let them harvest them them-
selves. We have no definite informa-
tion as to the comparative value for
hog feeding of peanuts and corn. Hog
feeding experiments at the Experi-
ment Station, of Georgia, would indi-
cate that an acre of Spanish peanuts
were equivalent to from ten to twelve
hundred pounds of'corn for pork pro-
duction, but we have no record a6 to
what the yield of this crop of peanuts
was. The pork made from the pea-
nuts was of rather soft, oily quality,
and it has consequently been reconv
mended that hogs fed peanuts be fin-
ished on corn to harden up the flesh.
It would probably be economy to feed
a small ration of corn while the hogs
are on the peanuts.
Soil Not Adapted to Alfalfa.
I have a bottom farm, the soil of which
I wish to have tested for acidity or any-
other mineral that is destructive to plant
life. I also wish to know if this land
will do to plant alfalfa on. The soil is
of a black color, but in places it is gray-
ish and tight and when dry Is very hard.
The black soil, however. 1b loose and the
wild grass growing on it is fine, it grows
cotton too, but will not produce corn,,
nor does it stand the drouth.— L. Burks,
Coal County, Oklahoma.
These velours bats for men are
lovely things. So are china eggs.
A Boston girl, who proclaimed her
right to choose a husband for herself,
has received one hundred proposals of
marriage Declarations of Indepen-
dence are now In order.
We are told that the yelling of a
parrot In New York saved twenty-flve
lives In a burning building It alBO
saved tbe feathers of the parrot, whlcb
was a question of far more concern
to said parrot
A man In Pennsylvania hanged him-
self because bis crop of tobacco was
too large to store In his barn Hounded
to deatb by too much prosperity, be
fell a victim to tbe Inconsistency of
human wishes.
Isn't tt about time to Invoke tbe
clause of tbe constitution prohibiting
cruel and unusual forms of punish
roent? A New York magistrate told
the wife of a man brought before
him on a serious charge to take him
home and tell blm what she thought of
him
Thus far tbe air la not darkened by
aviators making transcontinental
jaunts
A fireman baa beater Weston's
valkfnc record from roast to roast,
b :i Weeton still holds the record 'of
so year-old pedestrians with gray bus
•aches
We are told that the summer hat
keen too hot for ousters We a!s<
have reason to believe that some sec
ttons cf tf were too bot for human be
Second Growth Cane As Pasture.
Would you please inform me as to the
safety, or advisability of using the seo-
ond growth or crop of cane as pasture?
The sorghum cane was mowed about
three weeks ago. A nice second growth
is rumlng on Will it be safe to turn
milch cows on this"—W. F. Jackson.
Okmulgee County, Oklahoma.
By Professor J. A. Wilson
Director A. & M. Agricultural Experiment
Station, Stillwater, Okla.
Permit me to suggest a good way
to determine whether a particular field
you wish grazed has any danger lurk-
ing in it. If yoi^ will take a compar-
atively valueless animal and allow it
| to graze for a time, you will be able
to determine very directly whether or
I not prusslc acid or any other poison
I has developed In the cane. A call
wonld be sufficient for tbe trial or a
i yearling if the calf will not graze and
I if there appears to be no danger, you
| ought to let your herd get gradually
( used to it probably giving them a lit-
| tie dry fodder at night after they be-
gin grazing on this feed. Having once
started them on this kind of feed they
should be permitted to graze steadily
thereon without intermissions.
At our Sub-stations at the Murray
School Farm at Tishomingo, Oklaho-
ma. we grazed a very valuable herd of
Jersey cows throughout the latter part
of tbe season last year with very bene
ficlal results and no injurious effects
whatever.
Beginning of Christian Era.
By Professor C. K. Francis
Department of Chemistry, A. 4 M. Col-
lege, Stillwater, Okla.
If you will Bend me, charges pre-
paid, about one pound of the soil men
tioned I shall be pleased to test it for
acidity free of charge.
Probably the reason that the corn
does not stand drouth on the land
you have described is because the
heavy subsoil is impervious to water,
in other words, you have no supply
of water which may be brought to the
surface by capillary attraction. If
such is the case I should not advise
you to go to the expense and trouble
of putting this land into alfalfa.
Is This Land Suited to Alfalfa?
We are sending for analysis specimens
of soil at different depths on our farm,
and wish to know if this class of soil
will grow alfalfa profitably. The soil be-
l^-ath the alfalfa is s.. very hard and
uompact Mow four feet. Parts of this
land have been planted in alfalfa ever
since the rains of 1908, but the crop has
not prospered. The average depth to
water is about 22 to 28 feet this dry sea-
son.
A small creek flows the year round on
this place, the water outcrops from a
water line 2') .o 30 feet deep. Would
you call this a sub-irrigated land0 We
have a 500 acre farm on the Washita
and the water-line is about 20 feet, but
this land will grow alfalfa, whether It
rains or not as the sub-soil is most'y
?and from the fourth font on.—T. J.
Stewart Lumber Co., Oklahoma City.
By Professor C. K. Francis
Department of Chemistry, A. &. M. Col-
lege, Stillwater, Okla.
I judge from the information con-
tained in your letter that your trouble
is not with chemical composition but
rather with the physical condition of
the soil. You state that the soil be-
neath the alfalfa is hard and compact
below four feet This would prevent
the water from rising by capillary at-
traction and being used by the roots
of the plant. In my opinion it would
be difficult for you to produce a pay-
ing crop of alfalfa on such soil ex-
cept when the season is comparatively
wet. You mentioned an example il-
lustrating the point in mind, where
your 500 acre farm on the Washita has
a subsoil of a sand nature and the
water line about 20 feet down. Here
the moisture is available for plant
use.
I should not consider a water line
20 to 30 feet below the surface sub-
irrigation.
Her View cf It
The childish daughter of the house
had been sent into the parlor to en-
tertain the unexpected guest. The
woman inquired, by way of making
conversation, where was the child's
brother "He's gone to the school of
ministers to be pastorited," she wai
respectfuully informed.
i the Roman empir
Spanish Hen
' Tbe eggs of tbe
fng ftui to the |m
produced.
lords Record.
ttntah hen. welgt
r.i. are tbe larger
.eats' poems was fo
oat pocket wbea bis
shore.
ter, a copy of
nd open In bis
)dy was washed
a thorn in tbe bash Is worth two is
be sofa cushion.—Judge.
Banks to Pay Assessments.
1 Guthrie. Ok!a —With the under- I
standii g that Governor Cruce will en-
force an honest administration of the
bank deposit guaranty fund, it was
agreed by the hankers of Guthrie, rep.
\ resenting the Oklahoma State, Logan j
County and Guthrie Savings banks,
that they will immediately pay the
guarantee fund assessments that they !
owe. This' decision followed a confer- ,
ence with their attorneys.
The total payment of the three
banks amounts to something like $15. i
000, or 1. per cent of the average daily I
deposits last March. The banks have ;
protested payment on the grounds that j
a detailed statement of the fund has
been refused them and that a special
assessment for the fund could be ,
made only to recuperate the fund when |
banks failed. The special 1 per cent j
assessment was made last spring.
The Bank of Indian Territory got au
injunction against intrference by the
j state after an attempt was made by !
I the banking board, with the assistance ;
. of Adjutant General Frank Canton, to j
close that concern for failure to pay
the guaranty assessment Later, how-
ever, the Bank of Indian Territory j
compromised with the state, being ai- !
lowed some credits on the payment.
The Guthrie banks, it develops, have ;
stood alone in protesting the guaranty '
fund payment and against its uses to :
; bolster up weak banks.
Ptomaine Poisoning Claims Three.
Lawton, Okla.—Following the death
of their mother a few days ago from
ptomaine poisoning caused by eating
infected sardines, two children of S.
W. McAlexander of Lawton, have died
from the same cause. They were a
boy and a girl, 11 and 9 years old re- i
spectively. The father and a son are 1
the only members of the family left !
alive. The family was returning home
in a motor car from Mississippi. The
sardines were purchased at St. Joseph, ;
Texas. All who ate the fish became :
ill, Mrs. McAlexander dying shortly 1
afterwards.
Arbuthnot Witheredge Had Long
Wanted to Be Alone With
Genevieve Grandilot
"Well," said Arbuthnot Witheredge,
"i am in luck to find you alone, this
evening."
"o." replied Genevieve Grandilot
"do you consider it lucky to be alone
with me?"
"Why shouldn't i?"
"1—i don't know. i have never
thought about it before."
•'Haven't you ever wished that jou
and i might be all alone together?"
"Why should i wish that?"
"i don't know. i wish you had
wished it."
"Have you ever wished it?"
"a great many times."
"Why?"
"Can you ask me why?"
"Perhaps i could—could guess."
"Would you care if i should tell you
why?"
"i—1 don't know. Do you think i
ought to let you tell me why?"
"i wish you would. i am going to
tell you. It is because i—"
"Because you what?"
"i wonder if you will hate me after
i have told you? Rather than have
you decide that we can no longer be
friends, I would carry the secret to
my grave."
"O, please don't do anything like
that. i am sure i shall not hate you.
i could never hate you, no matter
what happened."
"Do you mean that Miss Grandilot
—Genevieve?"
"Of course. Why shouldn't i?"
"i shall risk all, then, and tell you.
i have wanted to be alone with you
because—because i love you—because
i have wanted to ask you to be mine!"
Then the beautiful girl's mother
stole away from her place behind the
curtain and tiptoed up tbe back stairs.
Federal Official Consults Osages.
Pawhuska, Okla.—Assistant Secre-
tary of the Interior Adams, is here on
a tour of the Oklahoma oil fields. Mr.
Adams was supervisor of the Indians
i oil and gas interests and is here to
Rather data concerning the leasing of :
the balance of the Osage lands. Objec-
! tion to leasing the land amounting to J
, something like 700,000 acres, has been j
j made by the large oil companies on
the ground that the increased produc-
tion would keep the price down. The i
secretary is conferring with the Osages
to get their wishes in the matter.
Woman Flies in Oklahoma.
Muskogee, Okla.—Miss Katherine j
HulU daughter of Captain Dick Hull, |
of this city, is the first Oklahoma wo- j
man to make a flight in an aeroplane. 1
Miss Hull, who is yet in her teens, '
was a passenger with Aviator Bonney
in a Wright aeroplane and made the
flight as a representative of the Times-
Democrat. The machine went up about
1,800 feet and twice circled the fair
grounds. Two pther women made
flights following Miss Hull. One was
Miss Olive Adair and the other Mrs
Goodvkoontz of Williams, Ariz.
Aerial Scout Work.
As an example of what German
military airmen are already able to
do. the performance of Lieutenant
Mackenthun recently is cited. In a
space of 35 minutes Lieutenant Mack-
enthun, who was acting for the Red
force, rose and flew along the enemy's
front and was back on the ground at
his headguarters ready to report. To
obtain the same results would have
taken a strong force of cavalry four
hours.
When the World Was Made.
When Lottie returned from her first
▼isit to Sunday school she was asked
what she had learned.
"God made the world in six davg,
and was arrested on the seventh day,"
was her version of the lesson impart-
ed.—Lippincott's.
The Plain Facts.
"Did you see the prisoner strike this
man in the melee?"
"No, I seen him swat him on the
nose."
Man
l -due
y a man's deficiency in dollars
to his deficiency in sense.
Brck Output Exceeds Capital Stock.
Okiahoma City. Okla.—The figure,
1626,297, represents the number of dol-
lars of capital stock of the twenty-nine
plants which last year made the brick
used in Oklahoma's vast building oper-
ations Every dollar of this capital
6tock will have to be multiplied by one
and a fraction to secure the value of !
the manufactured product of that year
alone, the amount being in exact num-
bers $713,446. It is seldom that an in-
dustry turns out a yearly output of
more than the value of its capital
stcck.
WHEN A
TONIC IS
NEEDED
Exquisite Elegy Tribute to Friend
The early death of Keats robbed
Shelley of a dear friend, but led to the
writing of tbe exquisite elegy
"Adoaais." and It is rather touching to
Must Be End to Suspense.
Oklahoma City, Okla.—That a court
and prosecuting attorney cannot con !
tinue a prosecution beyond the second
term of court without the consent of
the defendant and without good cause,
is the holding of Presiding Judge Fur- J
man in the criminal court of appeals '
in granting #the application of "Dan" '
McLeod for alleged violation of the ■
prohibition laws. McLeod filed a mo- '
tion w ith Judge Graham to dismiss the
prosecution, alleging that the rase had j
been continued through four terms of
the court upon motion of the county i
attorney and over the objection of the
deferdant without sufficient cause be
ing shown. The motion waj overruled
and McLeod appealed and won.
Former Tribal Judge Dead.
Muskogee, Okla. — Napoleon B.
Moore, former judge of tbe tribal su-
preme court of the Creeks, an officer
in the Confederate army and promt- |
ner.t in drafting treaties for the Creek I
Indians, died In a sanitarium at Battle j
f'repk. Mich, at the age of 84. At the I
time of bis death he was defacto ireaa
urer of the tribal eovernment
Would Revive Debating.
oklahoma City, Okla.—a revival of!
tbe nld fashioned literary societies
and d« ir.c flubs is reported to State j
9aperiatra<!eat wilton by tbe heads i
nf the sit normal «< b«>m* and two not- 1
evrnty rr*t r forv schools The let- i
ters state that rlobs and socleOae have i
t>wi formed In each of tie school«
Grea* interest Is be ng a enifested ia
this lire of work Th-rr a e no frater-
n"le* in most of these tnstltnUoM to |
attention of students from
We strongly urge you
to try
Hostetter's
Stomach Bitters
first of all. It will give
the greatest satisfaction.
IT IS FOR POOR APPETITE
INDIGESTION
BILIOUSNESS MALARIA
GENERAL WEAKNESS
A trial will convince you.
TAKE-
Tilt's Pills
The flr*t Jo*c often a«toni«he the Invalid,
riving elasticity of mind, buoyancy of body.
GOOD DIGESTION,
regular talk] Dcth. Price, 23 eta.
Rhode Island First to Have Navy.
Rhode Island was the first state to
create a navy of Its own, and captured
the first prize, a British frigate, off
Newport. Seeing Its success, the con-
tinental congress chose Rhode Island
to execute plans for a colonial navy,
and Esek Hopkins, the first command-
er-in-chief, and three-fourths of all
the officers were from this state. In
the later war of 1812 it was another
Rhode Islander, Commodore Perry,
who fought the Immortal battle on
Lake Erie when he "met the enemy
and they are ours!"—National Maga-
zine.
Terrible Suffering:
Eczema All Over Baby's Body.
"When my baby was four months old
his face broke out with eczema and at
sixteen months of age his face, hands and
arms were in a dreadful state. The
eczema spread all over his body. We had
to put a mask or cloth over his face and
tie up his hands. Finally we gave him
Hood's Sarsapari 11a and in a few months
he was entirely cured. Today he is a
healthy boy." Mrs. Inez Lewis, Baring,
Maine.
Hood's Sarsaparilla cures blood diseases
and builds up the system.
Get it today in usual liquid form o*
chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs.
Dr. Pierce's Pellets, smaTl, sugar-coated, !
easy to take as candy, regulate and invigor- j
ate stomach, liver and bowels. Do not gripe.
It's all right to help others, but It [
doesn't pay to be too busy to stop and j
help yourself.
Relieves
Backache
Instantly
Sloan's Liniment is a great
remedy for backache. It
penetrates and relieves
the pain instantly—no rub-
bing necessary—just lay
it on lightly.
Here's Proof.
•'I tad my back hurt in the Boer War
and in San Francisco two years a^o I
was hit by a street car in the same piace.
I tried all kinds of dope without suc-
cess. Two weeks ago I saw your lini-
ment in a drug store and got a bottle to
try. The first application caused instant
relief, and now except for a litue stiff-
ness, 1 am almost well."
FLETCHER NORMAN.
Whittier, Calif.
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
is the best remedy for
rheumatism, neuralgia,
sore throat and sprains.
Miss E. RtM of Brooklyn, N.Y.,
writes: "Sloan's Liniment is the best
for rheumatism. I have used six bot-
tles of it and it is grind."
Sold by all Dealers.
Price, 25c., 50c., and $1.00.
Sloan's
Hnr e ,
Cattle,
sent free.
Address
Orlari S.Sloan
The Farmer's Son's
Great Opportunity
Whr wait for the old farm to becom<
~ your inti.-rilance fiepi 11 n( w to
prepare for juur future
- prosperity and indepen-
dence. A great oppor-
tunity anil IS you in
Manitoba .^askatrhowan
or Alberta, where you
Jcaasecure a Kre.
1st. id or bey Undat rea-
sonable pnevs
WM
Now'stheTime
—not a year from now
when land will tx- h.h
'er. The produ secured
from tbe ahniitlant crop, of
W h« t, OmIh uud Hurley,
as well as cattle ralsm*. a're
cnnsin* a uteady advance in
price. MOTeraiiicnt returns show
-hat tt.e number in aettlt-n
!'i If"''"! from
the U. S. iva« «o iter cent
larirer In lulo than the
pn tiom year.
Many farmers have if
for their lamt out of the
proceed* of one crop.
t ree llome.teaUs of 160
ac-ea and pre-eDi(itlon« of
' ®° «*t #X«fi i, acre.
Mne rlliuate. (t<x«i school*,
excellent railway facilities,
low freight rales; wood, wa-
talned lun,ber ot>-
Kor pamphlet "Laat Best West."
particulars as to sellable l.x-auon
and low settlers* rate, apply to
flip* of Immipnilton, Ottawa
Can., or to Canadian Govt A*enu
W H. ROGERS
125 W. Ninth St, Kansas City. Mo
wr'te to tt, B,-ent n rert Tou
Broom Corn Shippers
or Broom Corn Associations
Correspond w itb u*. We want Broom Corn.
Authorized Se im? Ajrenrs f. r The American
Society of Equity on this market.
COYNE BROTHERS
ISO South Water Street CHICAGO
How's the crop in row district*
W. N. U.. WICHITA. NO. 42-1911.
I
dttrtft •
liters r>
irork.
ROBIN HOOD
AMMUNITION
Not Made
By aTrust
Come—join the merry throng of pleased
gunners who have quit seeking for the one
best ammunition beeausethey've found it.
If jrou are • judge of ammunition. Robin Hoisl will be «
ftvelitioa to yon. Irr<te*d of a biff nplasia that wasIf*
Wf it* fctc* oo "kirk** cor imrkr'en powders bans pn -
r*K*rljr Ail aVmff tbe ba.-rrl a ad pre Use lead a Itnaro-
wis vekw it jr aa it Irons tbe ron.
IVons i.* y.-urwlf that k. ft. aborts farther, pti there
qtttrkrr and hits harder. Grt our Sbot Sirib or metallic
CArtndfrrA frrxa your d-tw and make a note of tva-jlt*.
Scad far our interesting booklet.
ROBIN IIOOO AMMUNITION CO
Srd fc.TKK.KT. SWanton. VT.
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Hiebert, A. L. The Hooker Advance (Hooker, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 27, 1911, newspaper, October 27, 1911; Hooker, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc272453/m1/2/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.