The Chandler News-Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, January 31, 1913 Page: 4 of 8
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FI) l U
THE CHANDLER NEWB-PUBLIClsT
Friday, Jauuary 31, 1013.
Chandler News-Publicist
CONSOLIDATION OF
Chandler News ..... Established 1891
Chandler Publicist .............Established 1895
Sac and Fox Warrior ...........Established 1892
Chandler Democrat.............Established 1898
Lincoln County Telegram .........Established 1897
Inland Printing Co............Established 1903
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
Eentered according to Act of Congress,
office at Chandler, Okla , as second-class
at the Post-
mail matter.
17LAM a BOTKIN.................
Proprietors
P. L. FLAM........................
. . Manager
Editor
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
On© Dollar Per Year.....Strictly
In Advance
Look at the printed lube! on your paper. The date
thereon shows when the subscription expires Forward
your money in ample time for renewal, if you desire
unbroken Hies, as we can not always furnish back num-
bers.
Subscribers desiring the address of their paper
changed will please state In their communication both
the old and new addresses.
WANTED—A GOAT OK TWO GOATS.
It is apparent that, in order to appease the
growing popular demand for a reformation of
all the state departments that the official family
at Oklahoma City has determined that it must
have a goat or perhaps two goats would be bet-
ter. Although serious charges have been made
against the governor in connection with the
printing of the code, charges fully as against
the state printer for his part in the printing
of the Red Book, no action has been taken
against the governor. But the state printer has
been twice arrested and once acquitted on the
charge of forgery and the state auditor is now
under arrest on a charge of forgery.
Serious charges have been made against the
attorney general for padding expense accounts,
and he has not been arrested, nor has a charge
of impeachment been preferred against him.
Serious charges have been made against the
board of affairs, but not a member of that board
has been arrested for any offense of any kind,
not even disturbing the peace.
Serious charges have been preferred against
the members of the board of education and not
a member of the board is out under bond.
Serious charges have been preferred against
the state mine inspector, and he is about the
most ubiquitous official of the state as well as
about the most arrogant.
Serious charges have been preferred against
the state game warden, and he is still as free
as the birds he is supposed to protect.
From all of which it is apparent as was said
before, that there must lie a goat or two goats,
and that the state printer and the state auditor
.are the chosen victims.
.........— ' But the trial and impeachment proceedings
The future of Chandler, to a great extent, against these officials is going to wake up more
depends upon its next mayor and aldermen. snakes than all the rest of the official family
_::_ |can put to sleep. It is going to start something
His Excellency, Governor Cruce, seems to be'which will go a long way toward purifying the
having considerable trouble in handling his j state government of the parasitical influences
legislature. 0 'which have infested it for years. It will go a
_::- long way toward waking up the conscience of
The anti-bootlegger ordinance will be ipre- the people. It will go a long way toward secur-
sented again to the city council at the nextiing honest and faithful service in this state,
meeting of that body and, this time, there will And these are things which all the people, re-
». _ ____ 1 . • _ J . f .... At i .. I onMrllnna r>/xl it too ADI «•/> o«rl lien tVy/> tVlIll irQ
be some kind of action taken.
I gardless of politics, desire, and are the things
I they pay for. We only hope that the impeach-
'Tis time for the taxpayers and citizens of ment trials will give the defendants a chance
Chandler to begin looking up the best available j to introduce all of the proof which they have
timber for candidates for mayor and for alder-1 in their possession. Then the people will know
men. Let’s have the very best. what has happened and how it happened—
—--- n I Tulsa World.
Let Chandler for once have a good, live mayor | -::-
and a working city council and it will be but a There are one or two—perhaps three—worn-
very short time until we have a wide-awake | en in Chandler who would have us believe that,
commercial club working hand in hand with in point of piety, they are second only to Him
the city administration, who died that all we sinners might live. When
-::- these women walk abroad their faces bear a 1-
Attorney General Charles West declares that am-holier-than-thou expression. They never
Governor Cruce has, for over a year, been aware, fail to attend church, Sunday school and prayer
meeting. Oh! but they are Christlike and pious.
of the penitentiary graft and also of the dis-
crepancies of Secretary of State Board of Af-
fairs Ben Riley. If this be true, why has the
governor kept silent?
Mr. Banker and Mr. Merchant we must get
together with the farmer, and figure out with tue. The tale spreads
him, somehow, a system of co-operative protec-
tion which will gradually help him to help him-
self into a position where he becomes a producer
of his own livestock. The problem of a better
character of credits and securities and an in-
creased volume of deposits and business, is in-
separably bound up with the question of furth-
ering some sort of a plan to finance our farmers
and effect an increase in farm production—the
source of the wealth that makes progress and
prosperity for all.
TO HE WARLIKE AT CHANDLER.
All the war organizations in the state, ex-
cepting the Confederates, are to meet together
at Chandler during May, including the Grand
Army of the Republic, the Women's Relief Corps,
the Ladies of the G. A. R., the Sons of Veterans,
the United Spanish-American War Veterans, the
Women’s Auxiliary, and the Veterans of the
Snake Rebellion, including the National Guard-
men who hunted Crazy Snake, the revolutionary
Indian during 1910.—Wichita Eagle.
But just let some other woman, friend or foe,
waver just a mite from the straight and nar-
row path, then the tongues of these women get
busy—they work overtime—hints of scandal,
whispers of domestic trouble and lack of vir-
becoming worse and
worse as the juicy morsel is transferred from
one tongue to the other, until the inevitable end
is accomplished. Another good woman’s repu-
tation, a woman a hundred times the superior
of the scandal-monger, is ruined. Then this
parasite on society tucks prayer-book under her
arm, hikes to church and joins in singing “Je-
sus Wash My Sins Away.”
PI G S
IS
PIGS
The A. & M. College, Hog, Poultry and
Agricultural Demonstration Train
COMING TO CHANDLER
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12
MAKING MONEY ON EIGHT
ACRES.
(four four-hundred-egg incubators;
| incubator-cellar, twelve by twenty
I feet. All of which is paid for, too,
and our chickens. All from eight
{and one-fourth acres of land!”
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FOR SALE. 4.
The News-Publicist has a
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-J- livery. Call at office or 'phone .J.
•F iiSH. q.
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I11 the current issue of Farm and
Fireside a man living in Colorado
tells the encouraging story of how
he and his wife are making money
on eight acres. Following is an ex-
tract: ^
“My wife and 1 are making a liv i .j,
ing and laying up a nice little sum
each year from eight and one-fourtl. Scholarship in the Capitol City
acres of land. Business College, Guthrie, for
•In 1905 1 was working in a fur- 1^. Kale. ('an make immediate de-
niture store in Oakland, California
But my health broke, and I quit my
i position January 1, 1905. We came
to Colorado. We arrived here Janu-
ary 10, 1905, with just $129, all we
had in the world, and I not able to
work at all. We did not know what
to do, but we concluded to buy a
i small tract of land. We borrowed
$50 of ray father (who lives in Kan-
sas) to pay down on the land. We
i used the $129 to build up a shack
to live in.
“In the meantime we went in
debt about $00 for the material with
which to build a chicken-house. We
took seventy-twb hens March 7, 1905
on the shares, we giving one half
I the eggs. That was our start in
^ | the chicken business.
‘‘That summer we raised seventy-
five pullets, which started laying in
\ December and laid all winter. In
1908 we went into chickens on a
J little larger scale. In the summer
of 1909 we raised three hundred
nice White Leghorn pullets.
“We think we have made, or rath-
jer are making, a success of the
chicken business. We have our land
almost paid for—$170 back yet.
Have a nice little four-room house;
dred hens In
houses for nine
house);
hundred
brooder !
chicks; I
It is right at this time of the year, before
planting lime, that the Lincoln county farmer
should hold a heart to heart talk with his fam-
ily and decide to diversify. Determine that this
year they will have a better prepared seed bed.
That there will be a better and more thorough
cultivation of crops. That enough of various
kinds of garden truck will be raised to keep the
larder filled all winter. That more attention
will be paid to stock breeding and seed selec-
tion. Let the whole family join in a determina-
tion that the coming season is to be a record-
breaker.
three hen-houses, each twelve by
The A. & M. College Hog and Poultry train will visit Chan- ,feet (wfi run one hun--
dler Wednesday, February 12, at 10:00 a. m„ and local poultry
breeders and hog men are much interested in the project.
An invitation is being sent out to the different country
schools asking them to come in a body to the train, and a request
that the local schools be at the train is being made.
The following announcement is taken from the advertising
matter of the train:
LECTURES.
President J. H. Connell, of the college, will be with the train
at a number of stops.
L. L. Lewis, Veterinary Medicine.
B. C. Pittuck, College Extension.
W. A. Linklater, Animal Husbandry.
O. 0. Churchill, Farm Crops.
Jas. A. Wilson, Experiment Station.
John W. Wilkinson, Roys and Girls Agricultural Clubs.
A. C. Hartenbower, Farm Crops.
C. H. McElroy, Veterinary Medicine.
H. A. Bittenbender, Poultry.
Irma Mathews, Women’s Auxiliaries, Hoard of Agriculture.
Henrietta Kelshorn, Hoys and Girls Agriculture Clubs.
SUBJECTS.
Four or more of the following subjects will be discussed at
each stop, and it is desired that the committees where stops are
to be made indicate their preferences according to the division
of the programme':
General Lectures—Improving the Market Quality of Poultry
Products.
Care and Management of Breeding Flock.
Losses Resulting From the Sale of Unclassed Eggs.
For Men—Pork Production Under Oklahoma Conditions.
Best Breeds of Hogs for Oklahoma Farmers.
The Sow and Her Pigs.
The Hog Wanted By the Packers.
Can We Assure the Success of the Hog Crop?
Injecting Hogs With Cholera Serum (practical demonstra-
tion.)
Selecting Seed and Growing Profitable Crops of Kafir Corn.
Peanuts, Alfaffa, Corn, Cowpeas.
For Women—Domestic Science: lectures and demonstrations.
For Boys and Girls—Testing Farm Seeds for Vigor and Ger-
mination.
How Prize Crops Were Grown.
How State Prizes for 1912 Were Won.
She Hair
is God’s gift to men and women to
be an ornament and finish to their
physical beauty. It is man’s duty to
Care For The Hair
If it is healthy to keep it so by car-
ing for it in a hygenic manner. If
the hair is diseased treat it by giv-
ing it the proper nourishment. Our
NYAL’S HIKSUTONE ANTISEP-
TIC HAIR TONIC will keep it in
good condition.
Wright’s Drug Store
Phone 18
Let’s have a ‘‘get-together-meeting.’’
PROGRAM IS RAFFLING.
None Profess to Know What Wilson
Will Keeoinmend To Extra Ses-
sion.
Washington, Jau. 26.—Although
the scope of the legislation to be
taken up at the approaching extra
aeeBion of congress has not yet been
outlined, congressional committees
are rapidly pushing their prelimin-
ary work to a point where recom-
mendations can be made to Presi-
dent-elect Wilson and plans laid be-
fore him for the early work of his
administration. Work on tariff bills
noon will be started, the hearings
reaching an end this week.
The “money trust” end of the
house banking and curreucy com-
mittee is already working on a re-
port, while the "currenry” branch
of the samp committee will push
its investigation this week into otb
er branches of the currency ques-
tion iu the efTort to secure reform
New Order Raffling.
Senate and house leaders do not
yet know what legislation, If any,
in addition to the work of tariff re-
vision, will be taken up at the ex-
tra session. Several who have talk-
ed with Governor Wilson express the
confident belief that the currency
question and the question of liberat-
ing the Philippines will be Included
In the new president's scheme of ac-
tion for his first congressional ses-
sion.
It Is the general opinion in demo
cratic circles In Washington that
President Wilson will at least not
acre, which is much in excess of the
average yield of crops in Oklahoma.
From a row 90 feet in length two
bushels wore gathered, which is it
the rate as stated above. If an en-
“coafuse” congress against acting on
everything but the tariff
An effort is under way by some
democratic senators to postpone ac-
tion on (he currency until the next
regular session and It is expectod tire farm of 160 acres should be
that a movement will be promoted planted to peanuts in Oklahoma and
to secure an extension of the pres- cultivated as carefully as the Btoly
ent Aldrich-Vreeland emergency cur-,brothers did, then the yield from t.he
rency law for at least a year, so that quarter section would he slightly
an emergency measure will still be more than $50,000, or several times
at hand in case of industrial or ft- the value of the land. While it is
nancial disturbances. Under this | not practicable to plant an entire
plan no attempt would be made to j farm in peanuts or any other single
legislate on currency queutlons until crop, every Oklahoma farmer should
next winter. (have a patch of peanuts this year.
R«|mhlirnnii to ( »ucnx. j Those who have plantod peanuts
, , , .« At,* I have been generally successful, and
The full extent of the fight be- . , m ,
.. ... . . ,, nearly all of them will plant increaa
tween the republican and democratic
factions in the senate over President
led acreage this spring. The plants
are hardy and the hay is succulent.
A 1IERO IN A LIGHTHOUSE
Taft’s appointments is expected to . , ,
, ... . . ... Livestock does well on peanuts and
develop this week. A republlran ^^ ^ a(.r0B
caucus, the firet of the session, prob-
, . .. _ :of them this year to assure the fat-
ably will he held early in the week 1 . a
, . ... toning of many hogs and to have
and the majority of republicans now
. . .... . many nuts to sell. The peanut mar-
Insist there will be no concessions to , v
.. , . . ket is always active in Oklahoma
the democrats, but that the demand
will again be made for confirmation
of all of the appointments now be-
fore the senate. The house will de-j For years J. S. Donahue. So. Ha-
vote Its time this week to the con- ven. Mich., a civil war captain, as a
slderatlon of appropriation hills and lighthouse keeper, averted awful
hv the end of the week It Is expeeted wrecks, but a queer fact Is. he might
that several big supply measures will have been a wreck, himself. If El-
be ready for the consideration of the e< trle Ritters had not prevented,
senate. “They cured me of kidney troubles
____ 1 and chills,” he writes, "after I had
taken other so called cures for years,
without benefit and they also im-
The Blely brothers, at Sentinel, proved my s!ght.” For dyspepsia.
Okla., are the champion peanut Indigestion, al! stomach, liver and
growers of the state. Their 1913 kldnev troubles, they’re wthout
crop averaged them $1115.00 per Wright’s.
RAINKI) PEANUTS—MARE MONEY.
“Your Opportunity”
The Oklahoma Inaugural and Bonster
SPECIAL TRAIN
WASHINGTON, D. C.
The People's Choice Route
Will leave Chandler at 1:10 p. m. February 27th, via
Frisco Lines, moving to St. Louis, thence B. & O. Lines,
reaching Washington, D. D. 7.30 a. m., March 3rd, morn-
ing of the Inaugural Ceremonies. Train will be consoli-
dated at Tulsa, consisting of the Finest Pulman Sleepers
and Baggage Cars. Exhibits of the various resources of
the State will be carried. Stops will be made at St.
Louis, Louisville, Cincinnati, Columbus, Newark, Zanes-
ville, Wheeling and Pittsbuig. Train will be met by the
Chambers of Commerce of all Cities, and Automobile
tours arranged. If you are interested in OKLAHOMA
you cannot afford to miss this opportunity. If you have
agricultural exhibits, advise the State Boa d of Agricul-
ture. Address Chas. B. Caldwell of the Oklahoma De-
velopment Commission, about mineral exhibits.
The lowest rates ever offered from this State have
been authorized. Tickets for individual use will cost
$42.20 from Chandler. For parties of twenty-five or more
rate
a par-
ty, write C. O. Jackson, D. P. A., Frisco Lints, Oklahoma
City, for full particulars. You should not delay making
your arrangements. “Do It Now.”
Hon. J. ROBERT GILLAM,
Manager, Inaugural Train,
Ardmore, Oklahoma.
C. O. JACKSON, D. P. A.
Frisco Lines,
Oklahoma City, Okla.
t2 21)
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.‘.MO V
Organizing a Local Agricultural Club.
Special Feature for Hoys and Girls—The winners of the
Statewide Poultry and Hog Contests will be invited to accompany : 4* on one ticket, going and returning in a party, the
the train and tel the boys and girls how they raised their poultry * be m8g from chandler. If you desire to join
and hogs and fitted them for the contest. 1
EQUIPMENT.
The working equipment of the train will be made up of one
horse car, one flat car, one baggage car, and four passenger cars.
The horse car will contain exhibits of breeds and market
classes of hogs, hog products, and an educational exhibit of the
diseased tissues and vital organs of hogs affected with hog
cholera, etc. Prize winning hogs from the liest farms in the state
will be on exhibition in this car.
The flat car will be fenced with hog-proof fencing and will be
used for lecturers and demonstration purposes.
The baggage car will be equipped with exhibits of poultry,----
poultry equipment and poultry products. Many of the most sue- 4* 4* 4* 4- 4* 4* 4- 4v**4,4"4,4,4*4-4-4>4"4i4'4'4-4-4.4-4-4.4.
cessful breeders in the state will have exhibits in this car.
The first passenger car will contain exhibits from the college
by departments-—farm crops, insect pests grouped according to
farm crops infested and seasons of activity; model silos, silage
made of corn and kafir corn, model hot-beds and cold frames,
models of varieties of fruits, methods of budding and grafting,
carpentry and forage work, prize winning exhibits in Boys and
Girls Agricultural Club work, etc.
The second passenger car will be arranged for Domestic
Science lectures and demonstrations.
The third and fourth passenger cars will be for lecture pur-
poses during inclement weather, or for the special lectures and
demonstrations for the boys and girls.
All cars will lie made comfortable, no matter how cold the
weather may be.
‘ THINGS TO BE REMEMBERED.
Lecture demonstrations will begin immediately upon arrival
of the train, and at the train.
Where morning stops are made all work will be given at the
train.
The special lectures and demonstrations for women will he
given at the train, and immediately after the first lecture from the
platform car.
Exhibit cars will be open for inspection at all times during
daylight hours wherever the train may be.
The first lecture will relate to the poultry industry, the second
to the hog industry, and the third to farm crops. There lectures
will he followed by special demonstrations with poultry and hogs.
Immediately after the first lecture from the platform the
boys and girls will be taken in charge by the supervisor of Boys
and Girls Agricultural Clubs.
ZSheFirstState "Bank
our
Next Week We Will be in
new location and Will be Very
glad to haVe you call and see
FIRST STJlTE IV NK
CH^SIVLVR. OKLA.
JMa\e OUR RANK YOUR RANK
'Deposits Guaranteed
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Nichols, L. B. The Chandler News-Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, January 31, 1913, newspaper, January 31, 1913; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912723/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.