The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, May 11, 1917 Page: 3 of 8
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ORLANDO CLIPPER
BREEDING STOCK
Cremiux No. 14891
Pure Bred License
No. 56.
Cremiux is a Fare Bre.i F.ench
Draft stallion, ubont 18 bands high. 13
•yearn old, weight about 1800 pounds
color dark bay, black main and tar
sired by Captain No. 6805, dam Lain.a
Vo. 8488, registered in the National
Krench Draft Horse Association
and recognized b? the State Board of
Registry.
Cremiux will make the season of
1917 at my farm on the old Cawoo
place, 7 mil-s aort 'west of Orlando, 7
„outh anti one west of Lucien.
TERMS: $10.00 to insure a living
, olt. Mares must be returned regular •
ly every 21 days for retrial When
mares are sold or trailed the service
tee must lie settled or the mare brou t
and proven not to be in foal. Service
lee is due when colt stands If not
,ftid in 30 days interest will be charg-
..,1 from date .»f foaling- Care will be
taken to prevent accidents but I will
not be responsible should any occ-
|{ K. PARKER, Owner and Keeper
-Watch for our special sale in
next week’s issue. Orlando Lum-
ber & Coal Co.
Surely there must be something
very enticing about the iap of
Winter to induce Vliss Spring to
remain there so long.
A light shower of rain last
right and cool again today.
browing in Personal Symmetry.
Keen, sharp thinking will add more
tr. your purse than It will to your good
character. Shrewdness may capture
advantages,' hut It will lyirdly insure
friends. The symmetrical man puts a
little feeling into Ids thinking. His
heart is big enough to appreciate and
respect another’s sensitiveness. Be-
cause he is big lie can afford to let tilt
other fellow think his own way with-
out feeling hurt with every intended
or unintended slight. Ills knowledge
has taught him the problems of the
world, and, because his life lias more
than one side, he is able to sympa-
thize with the other fellow, and even
help him without loss to his own dig-
nity. And us he exercises concern for
his fellows-he grows in personal sym-
metry.
1 1S. E. BLAKE** i
^ (Successor to C. C. Mueller)
| Dealer In
«
General Merchandise
o — Consisting of — <»
> Dry goods, dress goods,hats,caps, •
" boots, shoes, notions, staple and }
fancy groceries and provisions.
1
Always
a complete stock for you to make vonr
selections from.
Come in and let us take your
measure for that new
RURAL DALE STOCK FARM
The following animals will make
‘the season of 1317 at my barn. Thaw*
,re pure bred animals and ih*e»««» W
the livestock Registry Hoard of °*u-
homa.
MOROCCO, Pure Bred License
No. 717-
Morocco is a black grey Percheron.
U years old and a great sire-
JAGUAR, Pure Bred Licence No
71tj.
Jaguar is a Perchoron registered m
,he Percheron Soeiette. of America
a„d France. The'best bio >.l of the
great Percheron breed of horses courses
through these horses veins Ask to
see the papers.
COLR.OW, Pure Bred license No.
751. ..
Col row is a black jack, -t vf arb ° ’
white points, and tbe best and surest
breeder we have ever had oil our farm.
TERMS: £10.00 to insure a living
toal from either horse or jack. Parties
disposing of mare- must return them
au.t prove them not to be in toa <*>
nay service fee when sold. * >c
careful to avoid accidents but will not
be responsible should any occur. N
SUNDAY SERVICE.
R.M. JOHNSON, Owner.
• Orlando, Oklahoma.
A Bit of Forestry.
“Do you know how to tell p» hard-
wood tree from a softwood tree?” said
an old, experienced forester. “I’ll tell
you how to do it, and you will find the
rule holds good, not only here among
our fuMilinr pines and walnuts, but
in the antipodes, among the strangest
Lahyaus, baobabs and what-nots. Soft-
wood trees have needle leaves, slim,
narrow—almost uniform in breadth. If
you don't believe me, go out, consult
the pine, the spruce or the fir. Hard-
wood trees have broad leaves of vari-
ous shapes—witness the oak, the
ebony, the walnut, the mahogany, and
so on.”—Mail.
t vvt want your produce for |
| WC which we will pay “the I
| highest market’price in trade or
| • CASH
* • m * ure now restocking the store with nmv and up-to-
\f E <Jate goods in every department and will aim at'all
times to have.(nst what you’want. -We also hope by just
deaiiug, courteous treatment and efficiency in service to
merit a fait share of your patronage.
-/Cu face t face Come in and get
Our’desite is to servo you.
\\r |A want to me
W lei acquainted.
AT MUELLER'S OLD STAND
Pleasure Vehicles in Chile.
Native ponies are sometimes used
to draw pleasure vehicles in the Val-
paraiso district of Chile, but no Shet-
land ponies are to be seen there. The
vehicles employed in driving the na-
tive animals are usually of the type
of inclosed basket cart. They are de-
signed to be used with a horse weigh-
ing from 500 to 600 pounds. These
carts and other types of two-wheeled
pleasure vehicles are imported princi-
pally from England. Carts made lo-
cally to he drawn by ponies or small
I ,.rs. s are utility vehicles for distribu-
tion of milk, vegetables, etc.
Watch for out-
next week’s is-ue.
her & Coal Co
special cale in
Orlano Lum
<|nite a number of cases of
measles are reported in town this
week.
Mrs K. L- Hunt is reported to
he afflicted with appendicitis.
Tuesday of this week C. <L PI'i
liter finished a fine joh of painting
their town residence.
Watch for nr special sale in
next week’s issue. Orlando Lum-
I ,er At (’oal Co
■Aristotle wus of the cpiftiou
th ¥t men had no innate jdeas. but
accquireti them by experience,
pint >, on the other hand, was of
the opinion that men were born
with latent ideas that experience
awakened Tty* is the gist of the
two philosophies.
School .Anatomy.
The' l VinWi y’vale <• g:'t i-** sonic tAain-
plos <>f humor intkchool. The study of
Iinatpmy sern^Jo cause, w ^fusion. as
witness tiicsc examples from examina-
tion' 'piii'< Vs :’1 “Cli’cuinfidi: is a beet
Dial goes all over the body." "Cause
of narrow <jp st* i,s lgosi. fen)g,le folks
tic in their waists.” “You should not
v.ork either "beflfle of"lifter eating.”
"We should. no» .drink hot water and
Ili,.n cold, because it cnjgks the Tar-
m, bn I la* toV-tli." "1 he teelh should
l„. washed alter every meal to remove
Iiv articles, that m:|.v he ;lij. tbgm.’
'Ihiimtl shoulders are eft used by lean-
UkT t'll l’llt* sfitllitub.
Death of Doafh
Tli ■ time may not be far off when
to lose a friend by death will be hard-
|V more than to have him cross the
ocean; when our own passing will he
merely the happy setting sail tor a
new country. It may be that m Hie
great war, which la Himished an
orgy such as the world me net it »•
fore seen, death as we have known it
in all Its agony of parting and un-
certainty, has at least been glutted <>
ilie full, has reached its climax mu
must hereafter diminish. Oil people
of the world, all tilings have died. It
may be that now at last death Itself
Is dying!—Atlantic Monthly.
•dest Goldfish.
people,seem to. be Ig-
Desert Always Alive.
The desert dead? Not so— ihv cm m-
(lower bears ’the color of the' ‘rose,
l,|)e side-winder stirs beside'the sandy
iru<-k ; the road-runnels. in pairs, scut-
tle ahead of my boi se. seemingly tak-
ing pride in winning a rare again-t
him. The sky is sometimes black with
wild ducks who have left the shore m
■ nine uudriiikable lake, And color.
.urely. is a part of life. Nm '"h"
will vile same hues assail the eye.
, fhe greasewbod and the sagebrush
will look different, and the color of
I ilie skirt at dawn and dusk never
seems tbe same two days together.
For the l,i
A good iiiiur . . j
norant of tic s idow-loving nature of
the goldfish . d they expose the poor
little shrinking captives in glaring
crystal bowls, 'with not even a shred
of moss to h do. in. Ttiis only pioves
that people who undertake the respon-
sibility of < ;:r*:.g for live pets do not
take the trtavt'de 10 study their habits
and quite .Itioviglitlessly subject them
to torture. A water plant, a pile of
coral or any 'Hth shelter is all that Is
needed, but something in eommon rte-
i cncy should be provided.
Me*. ,n» Tillers of the Son.
The Mexicans of the lower rlas)
naturally belong to the soil. Thn
statement is pretty well proved by tb<
fact that rnbst of them who enter tbe
country as immigrants quickly find
their way to the farm and plantations
That they tire efficient laborers in the
fields is'shown by the great inroads
that they have already made in re
placing the negro and oilu r types oi
farm helpers. In thousands of in-
stances they have udvaneed from th»
position of wage earners to that or
land renters, and gradually the more
energetic and enterprising are obtain .
ing land of their own. As a tenant
class, the Mexicans are pronounced
the superior of the people of most oth
er races,and,nationalities. In- the cot
ton-growing bell of Texas many plant
ers have done away entirely with their
negro and American tenants and arc (fi
bow renting to Mexicans exclusively.
The Answer.
Three little boys were playing on
the beach. One had piled and patted
and cajoled the sand Into a resem-
blance to a racing car. another had
constructed with fair s*ieeess*a touring
car. But what the third little fel-
low had made was without form ano
void. “What is your car?” he was
asked. He looked rather uncertain
until the question continued; “Yours
looks like two or three together.”
•ThnFs what it Mi,” be said loftily;
"mine’s a collision
A Few Years Hence.
«I was pursued by a strange crea-
ture a while ago,” said the Kansio
City motorist, who was touring the
Ozarks. “About ten miles from here,
as I was 'passing through a strip of
timber. I rounded a bend and van lib
down. Tin ear knockedi.him spra'
I ling, and had hardly t>»ss"l over lib •
before he sprang up and ran : f" •
me on his htnd legs tor nearly lu l n
mile, yelling terribly, in what somel-.:
somewhat like a human voice.” "Mils-
have been h pedestrian.” returned tin
proprietor of the garage at Mount
Pizgy. “They are generally though
(o be extinct, but it is said that then
;ire a few of em living yet away bite!
fn the hills.”—Kansas City Star.
Optimistic Thought.
Excellence ;s Dever granted tc bm*
hut as the reward oi labor.
, \* o b
1 . C. ".<• ”
. dl>,
I
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Lanter, W. L. The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, May 11, 1917, newspaper, May 11, 1917; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc910415/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.