The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, June 2, 1916 Page: 2 of 8
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I
WESTERN CANADA
Accompanying Industries Also
Prove Highly Profitable.
Tli cheese Industry throughout
Western Canada today Is In a highly
flourishing condition and 1b bound in
a very short time to become much
more Important. The war has created
a great demand for that article, and
Ith use abroad has given It a lot of
useful advertising. The article known
as Canadian cheese Is now sought not
only by the soldier In the trenches,
but by the ordinary civilian consumer,
who, having used It, Is quick to ap-
preciate Its value. This means that
niter the war there will he a demand
created for It that would not other
wise have been. Up to the present
the war needs have limited the local
supply, but with the increased effort
that Is now being put forth It is hoped
that this will bo met. As a matter of
course the prices are high, and the
fnrmers who contribute to the cheese
factories are making money.
The cheese season is now fully open
and there is every prospect of an ex-
cellent year because the high price
which obtained Inst year will undoubt-
edly be maintained this season. West-
ern Canada has all the natural re-
sources for the making of cheese, the
feed and the cool nights, two things
essential, and in time it is bound to
become ono of the finest cheese coun-
tries of the continent.
The lower foothills of Alberta, used
only at the present time as ranges or
for no purpose, will in time produce
cheese in great quantities, and doubt-
less will soon equal the famous up-
lands of Denmark.
The cool nights mean the better
keeping of milk and cream and
cheese, and that Is a great thing for
the Industry, especially when com-
bined with possibilities of cattle feed
such as exist on the long slopes from
the Rockies eastward.
The hog market, which may be
classed ns an adjunct of farming, is
an exceedingly good one, and the low
cost at which the feed can bo pro-
duced, coupled with the high prices
realized, make this industry very prof-
itable.
One of the first thoughts that occur
to the mind of the average prospective
settler is the likelihood of suitable
markets. In this connection the fol-
lowing table will be illuminating. It
is supplied by the P. Burns company,
packers and exporters, of Calgary, and
shows the average monthly price paid
for hogs for the six years 1910 to 1915
Inclusive. When one considers the low
initial cost of the land and the small
overhead cost of maintenance and
feed, these prices challenge compari-
son.
be converted into good hog flesh. The
uncertainty of results which attends
grain farming even under most favor-
able conditions is removed when the
settler goes in for raising hogs, beef
and dairy products. With Western
Canada’s cheap lands, heavy crops, and
climate free from diseases of stock,
the stock farmer is as sure of success
as anyone can bo.—Advertisement.
CHECK AUSTRIANS ADVANCE
VICIOUS INFANTRY ASSAULTS
ARE REPULSED
Turks and
Turks'
Tribesmen Put to
Camp at Bayoud
Destroyed
Flight
la
MAY YET DYE SILK IN LEAF
Experiments Have Almost Convinced
Scientists That Such a Thing Is
Within Range of Possibility.
Silk is the secretion of two glands of
the silkworm lying alongside the di-
gestive canal. These glands, which
consist of numerous coiled tubes, ter-
minate in a spinning-wart. From a
common orifice in the spinning-wart
the secretion, of the consistency of
honey, issues forth, promptly harden-
ing into a thread on exposure to the
air. Usually the silk is colorless on
leaving the body of the silkworm, but
sometimes it is straw yellow or green-
ish. Why? The answer has been a
matter of long dispute. Some claim
that the larva itself produces the
color; others ascribe it to impurities
acquired upon secretion; still others
are of the opinion that the green color
of the leaves of the mulberry tree Is
tho cause. Two French scientists, Lev-
rat and Conte, determined to settle the
dispute. They fed silkworms on mul-
berry leaves which had been saturated
with nonpoisonous aniline red and ani-
line blue. With what result? Not
only were the Bilkworms turned red or
blue but their secreted silk assumed
tho respective colors. Who knows but
Borne day we may be dyeing silk in the
leaf instead of in the vat?
EASTERN POET VISITS OXFORD
Japanese Man of Letters Moralizes
Over the Changes That Have
Been Wrought by Time.
January.
7% 8
8
7%
$6.71
Fob.....
7% 8%
8%
8
6.96
March. .
7% 8
8 Ms
7 Vi
7.16
Anril ...
7% 8V*
8%
7 Vi
8.06
May ... •
7 Vi 9
8%
7
8.26
June. ...
7 8%
8
6.85
8.30
July ... •
7V4 8V2
8
8
8.12
August .
.8 8 8%
8%
8 Vi
7.93
Kept. . .
.8 9% 9
7%
8.86
Oct. . ..
.8 8Vi 8Vi
0
9.02
Nov. ...
.1% 9 8 Vi
7
6Vi
8.36
Dec. ...
.7% 8Vi 8Vi
7 Vi
6V4
8.70 Vi
A farmer of Monarch, Alberta,
claims the distinction of being the first
in the province to sell a carload of
hogs at the high price of eleven cents
a pound, live weight. Tho sale was
made a short time ago at Calgary, and
at that time was a record, although
prices have sinco gone as high as
$11.12 y,j per hundredweight. With
such prices available for hogs the
farmer lias a market for everything
ills farm produces, as there is prac-
tically no farm product which cannot
Yone Noguchi, Japanese poet, wan-
dering through Oxford and Stratford
on a literary pilgrimage, strikes even
himself as incongruous, an odd inter-
section of time and fate in space. He
is led to wonder, writing his impres-
sions of these two shrines in Black-
wood's, “whether Addison, staring
down at him out of a frame at Cor-
pus Christi, ever thought that a Jap-
anese poet would come some day in
the long future and dine before his
picture." On the other hand, had Ad-
dison foreseen such a visit, tho thing
most astonishing about it to him
would have been that the antipodean
visitor should in all things appear to
be the cultured European man of let-
ters. To Noguchi Oxford is no new
and strange land, as would be the
Louvre to Utamaro. Avon holds for
him the same reflexes that it does
for Alfred Noyes. Although he was
born in Japan, ho is, to all intents
and purposes, rooted in European art.
llis guide at Oxford was Robert
Bridges, and the two were as brother
poets.
England Strict About Lights.
Unusual cases were tried at Birming-
ham, England, recently, in which pas-
sengers were summoned under the
lighting restrictions order for failing
to keep the blinds of railway carriage
windows lowered when traveling. The
defendants were passengers by subur-
ban trains, and railway detectives
stated that the blinds were only par-
tially drawn. In Imposing fines of
10s. In each case, the magistrate said
that every passenger in a railway car-
riage was equally responsible for see-
ing that the blinds wore drawn, wheth-
er sitting near the window or not, and
in future all would be liable to heavy
penalties.
Avoid Idleness.
It Is astonishing that anyone can
squander away In absolute idleness one
einglo moment of that small portion of
time which is allotted to us in- the
world—Lord Chesterfield.
London.—The Italians in southern
Tyrol now are tenaciously holding
back the Austrians from further in-
roads into their positions. In the Led-
ro valley, southwest of Trent, and in
Lagarnia valley, south of the city, the
Austrians, after heavy artillery prepa-
ration, threw vicious attacks against
the Italian lines, but all were repulsed
with heavy casualties, according to
Rome.
Five attacks were made on Zegna-
toria, the same number as were made
and again all of them were stopped
with sanguinary losses.
Italian Gains.
In the Adamello zone, west of Trent,
where previous gains have been made
by the Italians, King Victor Emanu-.
el’s men have occupied additional ter-
ritory in the Sarce river region and
in the Monfalcone region near the
head of the Gulf of Triest have re-
captured trenches taken from them by
the Austrians.
Another ineffectual attempt has been
made by the Germans against the
French positions in the Avocourt wood
and on hill 304, northwest of Verdun.
Paris reports that a strong attack
here was put down by the French guns
and that the Germans appear to have
suffered severe losses.
On the remainder of the front in
France and Belgium, aside from an
unsuccessful German infantry attack
against the Belgians north of Steen-
straete, there have been only bom-
bardments.
British Victorious In Egypt.
The British in Egypt have carried
out a successful maneuver against
the Turks and tribesmen at Bayoud
and Mageibra, putting them to flight
and destroying the camp at Bayoud.
Austrian aeroplanes have dropped
bombs on Avlona, Albania, the only
seaport on the eastern Adriatic re-
maining in the hands of the entente
allies. That Avlona probably is well
fortified against an infantry attack is
indicated by the statement of the
Austro-Hungarian admiralty that the
raiding air craft were heavily shelled.
Three German steamers have been
sunk in the Baltic sea by the entente
allied submarines—two by the Rus-
sians and one by the British.
A British fishing smack arrived at
Ixiwestoft reports having been shelled
by a German submarine, one member
of the crew being killed and two In-
jured.
Feel
Comfortable
After Eating
Or----
Is There
NAUSEA
HEARTBURN
indigestion
dyspepsia
By All Means-TRY
-4
UOSTETTER'S
n Stomach Bitters
Every Woman Wants
ANTISEPTIC POWDER
FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE
Dissolved in water for douches stop*
pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam-
mation. Recommended by Lydia fc~
Pinkham Med. Co. for ten years.
A healing wonder for nasal catarrh,
■ sore throat and sore eyea. Economical.
| Hu cstrsonfinsry cleanring and germicidal
I Sample Free. 50c. all Jniggnli. or ixelpaid br
V piau The PulqoToUeiCompany^BoetP^^i^g^^
Persian
gation.
farming depends on irri-
To Drive Out Malaria
And Build Up The System
Take the Old Standard GROVE’S
TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know
what you are taking, as the formula is
printed on every label, showing it is
Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form. 1 ne
Quinine drives out malaria, the Iron
builds up the system. 50 cents.
Russian is spoken by 75,000,000 per-
sons.
SAVE A DOCTOR’S BILL
by keeping Mississippi Diarrhoea Cor-
dial handy for all stomach complaints.
Price 25c and 50c—Adv.
California
bition.
this fall votes on prohl-
C0MMITTEE BREAKS DEADLOCK
All
Money to Be Spent In Building
Small, Speedy Warships.
Washington.—The house committee
broke a five-day deadlock and com-
pleted the naval appropriation bill
without approving the five year build-
ing program advocated by President
Wilson and Secretary Daniels.
The bill authorizes the construction
in 1917 of five battle cruisers as
against two dreadnaughts and two
battle cruisers recommended by Sec-
retary Daniels, four scout cruisers, ten
destroyers, twenty submarines, three
to be 800-ton boats, compared with
five fleet and twenty-five coast de-
fense suhmersibles recommended; one
hospital ship, one oil fuel ship and one
ammunition ship. The gunboat rec-
ommended was stricken out and the
fuel and ammunition ships were added
from Secretary Daniels’ program for
the second year.
The total amount carried by the bill
Is $240,000,000.
Vlakes Hard W ork Harder
A bad back makes a day's work
twice as hard. Backache usually
comes from weak kidneys, and if
headaches, dizziness or urinary dis-
orders are added, don’t wait get
help before the kidney disease
takes a grip—before dropsy, gravel
or Bright’s disease sets in. Doan's
Kidney Pills have brought new life
and new strength to thousands of
working men and woipen. Used
and recommended the world over.
An Oklahoma Case
W. D. C a r te r .
W*.T*.S^Cor d e 1 l.^kla.,
' t ftS^years from kidney
^trouble. My back
'ached and was
lame and often the
attacks were so bad
that I couldn't bend
?,’over to lace my
ii(fffishoes. Mornings, I
was as stiff as a
L—board. My kidneys
acted too freely,
too. Doan’s Kidney Pills restored me
to good health and for a year, I have
been free from kidney complaint.
Gat Doan’* at Any Store, SOc a Be*
DOAN’S K,,,”AVr
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
GALLSTONE
_B
Avoid operations. Positive remedy FUFF
(No (HI)—Results sure Write for our f IXIL.Ej
big Book of Truth and Facts r..-1 lay.
UollaioDc Remedy C*.,Dept.C-W.Z INS,Deirbora St.,Ctucag*
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Lanter, W. L. The Orlando Clipper (Orlando, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, June 2, 1916, newspaper, June 2, 1916; Orlando, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc910677/m1/2/: accessed May 10, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.