The People's Press. (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1905 Page: 3 of 12
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red num. anl My ib*f io proportion u
'he b«NB i<luprti I ho ladiana and (Ift
buffalo reUr*."
U*i December I mn Mr. W. F,
Marl#, of Clifton K|»rm«*. N. »bo
1» pinMrtii of ibe No* York Aaaocia
lion of Ikwkeeper#' gorletle* Mr
Mark*, like nwi attrreaaful keek««p-
er». Is an t-nitiuaiaafle friend of tola
tlay worker*. Ho call# •lUmtloa to
Ihe fact that tbo bee thrive* la every
Mate of our t'oloa, and the total num-
ber of colonies Is near three-quarters
of a million. The last consus places
the number of colonics In New York
at 23.738. Tho association has secu-ed
legislation for tho protection of bees,
snd of honey on the market. When
one per cent of any adulterant baa
been used with honey, tbo product can
not bo sold on tbe markot under tbo
namo of "honey."
Ily tbe way, we often hear the asser-
tion that a counterfeit comb honey
cud bo manufactured. The falsity of
the statement is evidenced by the
standing reward of $1,000 offered by
the National Beekeepers' Association
for a pound of such honey. It Is one
of the idle stories that should die,
there not being a single Instance of a
claim for tho reward.
Extracted honey Is sold largely to
manufacturers of cakes, and Us price
is affected by the trust that controls
the manufacture of the cakes.
Mr. Marks reminds us that the
honey bee is the only insect of value
whose product is finished. It fur-
nished the only sugar in very early
times. Its product to-day is not ej-
celled in delicacy by any manufac-
tured sweet. It is a friend of the hu-
man race, and needs our protection.
The industry grows in importance, and
public-spirited men like Mr. Marks
are doing a public service in watching
over its interests.—Alva Agee in Na-
tional Stockman and Farmer.
—
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CO.. tAMAS CITY. MO. M.ooo
alurk, MenUuo tbi* paprr.
Tb«*ie is a jtwral itttpreaaion thai
certala youns and pretty Atchison
girl Is minis something yellow on ber
hair
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to MMeua# ll«e rhrtojf In Ibe
•bane *4 ibe genn# o| iltoa—i." Kv
efjf beoMby prf»« baa fl««
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MllitiiHaf of hk*i«|. Tbe nnntbef <4 mi
in Ibe average
•Hal U la aim
TW bibb, of lb# bult M lb# «•«#
haft#'* tWams 9mm
K« given to* If IVere # tWa
ml Sledtral Ad maw, of vhfefc
•o great
ritfuhbv
71 noto in uoerial Mam pa, for IhM
Ioud page book In mm eowrft. or ti
aftaotpabv Ibe cb>U»buon4. Add IS—
l»r. fT V. hart*. Hutfalo. S. Y.
n Getting It
Homa grooars aay th«y don't ha*p
Defiance Starch. Tbla la beeauaa Ibey
bava a atock on band of otb#r branda
containing only II oa In a P«flM«».
which thay won't be able to aell Aral,
becauM Deflanca conlalna 1ft oa. for
the aaroa money.
Do you want 16 oa Inatead of IS oa.
for aama money? Then buy Defiance
8larch. Requlraa no oooklng.
Tho decllno of literature Indicates
the decllno of the nation. Tho two
keep pace In tbelr downward ten-
dency.—Goethe.
IMO Boat Crayon ftftcts.
>boti. soil Wk-w andnewljl make a lasW Ba«l ( nijntu
W. L. DOUGLAS
ST. *3 *8 &»3.22 SHOESL.V
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twr Whrr<'t aalt«r, H .U liMilai ikwaar* wllhia jraar rraca.
rerTKn mAX otiikk makkx AT AXr rxirg.
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' Mt. /_ fmrritl, Aut. I'mtkttr .Vtfwwl A«aA. U4u*m*p-In. tmd.
Boys wear W. L Doartas $2.50 sad $2.00 ahaaa baeansa thiy fit
tot tar, hold thair ahapa. aad wear loayt-r thaa othar makaa.
V.L00U6LAS tiJOQ SHOES CANNOT BE EQUALLEO AT ANT WUCE.
IT. L ttomfflf «wi Car^m-t Cn/UHm In »lip* i»wi, f'nroaa
Co/I M romjuitrrU to t* Ik* Jim ft! p.iitnl Irmlkfr prat/mfttL
raari-omb rtm.et* wi i.i. k«t wcar na«a#v
W. I. Poavlaa baa Ilia larecat aboa mail onW lmaln**a in iba wor|<t.
No ir>,nl>le 10 v^t a fit by mail. »••. extra prtp*y <1»litrrr. It ron rtra ra
funlH-r infocinaOoa, er»/« /or llliutralrt f.Spring MryUs.
W.L.DOUCLAS, BROCKTON, MA88ACHU$ETTS
^Vv
^\ . i ' Do 14 I I
mnki'* :
m ori1 MS As
t J.DO
th.in any off•
n) ;i n iiTbr f ut
in t\r>rld
S• 0.LC0 .
Anation's literature is always the
biography of its humanity.—Robert
Lord Lytton.
Every woman who marries faces
tho question of the kind of a house
she will make, and decides it.
Preparing the Orchard Area.
In preparing a piece of soil for the
setting of orchard trees of any kind
we would advise to plow the whole
irea to the depth the trees are to be
jet. This makes the whole surface uni-
form and the soil uniforn. to the depth
:he tree roots are to be placed. Such
i preparation will not encourage the
forming of pools of water about the
roots at the trees.
The country road needs to be beautl-
led with trees as well as the village
itreet.
milton Dollar Ornaa.
YTlien the John A. Salzer Seed Co., of
La Croaae^ Wis., introduced this remark*
able gr.'iss three )'ears ago, little did they
dream it would be the most talked of grasa
in America, the biggest, quick, hay pro*
ducer on earth, but this has come to pass.
Much valuable information free about
band Instruments; write for the new cata-
logue to-day. JENKINS' MUSIC HOUSE,
KANSAS CITY, M0.
Literature is the fruit of thinking
souls.—Carlyle.
TOMSSlim
FITQ permanently eared. Wo floor nerroa
rl I 9 time dur'a uno of Dr. Kline's Oreat Nei
ttMBsaaariSffiasiffliaaaas
Agricultural Editors wrote about it,
Agr. College Trofcssors lectured about it,
Agr. Institute Orators talked about it,
while in the farm home by the quiet fire-
side, in the corner grocery, in tnc village
post-office, at the creamery, at the depot,
in fact wherever farmers gathered, Salzer's
Billion Dollar Grass, that marvelous grass.
flood for 5 to 14 tons hay per acre and
ots of pasture besides, is always a theme
worthy of the farmer's voice.
Then comes Bromus Inermis, than which
there is no better grass or better perma-
nent hay producer on earth. Grows wher-
ever soil is found. Then the farmer talks
about Salzer's Teosinte, which produces
100 stocks from one kernel of seed, 11 ft.
high, in 100 days, rich in nutrition and
greedily eaten by cattle, hogs, etc., and is
good for 80 tons of green food per acre.
,r. * • T.— it. • f00d for
n at
both
About every pretension there is an
air of avoiding to pretend.
DON'T FORGET
1-07.. packatro Red Cross Ball Blue, only
The Russ Company, South Bent!, Ind.
A large
ft cents.
About a big display of temper there
always is a flavor of being ill-used.
Victoria Rape, the luxuriant
hogs and sheep, which can be grown at
25c a ton, and Speltz at 20c a bu
"Do You ftch"
'The cup of human misery is never
quite full until some form of itching
skin disease is added. Then it over-
flows. Hunt's Cure is a specific for
any itching trouble ever known. One
application relieves. One box is guar-
anteed to cure any one case."
great food' for sheep, hogs and cattle, also
their share in the discussion.
come in for
JUST BEND 10c IN STAMPS
and this notice to John A. Filzer Seed
Co., La Crosse, Wis., for their big catalog
[w: N. ig
The popular notion of an easy job
is doing just as you feel like.
vO., Ld V/IUBBC, »» lo«» H-'I tllCL
ana many fann seed samples.
All Up4o-Date Housekeepera
use Defiance Cold Water Starch, be-
cause it is better, and 4 oz. more of it
tor same money.
low In price. Io per pkt.
and up, postpaid. Finest
a ted catalogue eyer
printed sent FREE. Engrav-
»tags of every variety. A great
i lot of extra pkjrs. of seeds, new
I sorts, presented free with every
t order. Some sorts onions only 60o
per lb. Other seed equally low. 40
[ years a seed grower and dealer and
. customers satisfied. - No old
, seed. Send yours and neighbor's n&rnes
for big illustrated free catalogue
IB. H. SHUMWAY. RockfonL'Ills.
W. N. U.—Oklahoma City—No. 9,
BEGGS' CHERRYCOUGH
SYRUP cures coughs and colds.
Wt ft
•ntes a
n*
I
iv |»r* .
(Mm pi:
>rned out a
pnty. With
pfnr hm proaa
i in «wftt4»rn
i live column
in ploaaing
n to plnaae.
pr-:
Notes
Ins n#»'.v tner-
i<< family and
•i'in Shfi'idan.
th»' res? of his
•n Hi? lias a
ti r-he market,
raw his share
e.
t and family
oheirdanghter
>and.
> and daughter
{siting Boyd's
atlier has be^n
5i e time with
' Uheurnatisin
* purchased a
nephew are
|e Vinson farm
j-kins.
id Don New-
ileasant even-
inson'sTues-
?or of Miss Ida.
igh i.nd Mab
jTiT • ^eiiselvi
be "tiled to
jt Verginia to
is mother who
* mcwuire naa jusv
had the department of agricul-
ture change the quarantine line
to correspond to your law. allow-
ing no Texas cattle to come into
the Osage reservation or any
part of Oklahoma without being
dipped."
This sets at rest the contra
versy between Sec. Hitchcock
and tbe Oklahoma legislature-
i firunt, who died three years ago.
Since then Mrs. Van Brunt has
i faithfully ministered to his wants.
He had been very feeble for a
, long time.
The funeral services was
, preached at the home by C. A.
Strickland. The remains were
laid to rest in the Paradise Cem-
I etery.
For gasoline Stoves see W. S.
Smith.
Largest assortment of bulk
garden seeds in town at Har-
baugh's Feed Store.
Hill and Thomrs seel Pratt*'
ffefauck and Poultry Food.
(and t)OX Stipper at uit-c '
Center school house east of P*rk
land tonight. The proceeds will
go toward buying an organ fwr
the school. The entertainment
will be a two hour's play, entitled
^Married Life.'"
Buy Patriot shoes of Stansbnry
and Robb and get a knif*.
tr, , . 11. JTliie returned sat-
i urday from Lidcoln, Neb., where
I he went on business.
1 An oyster supper will beeiven
I at the I. X. L. schooi house to-
j nigbt.
I There was preaching at the I.
X. L, school house Sunday after
noon.
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Strickland, C. A. The People's Press. (Perkins, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 2, 1905, newspaper, March 2, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc305249/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.