The Chandler News-Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, July 4, 1913 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Chandler News and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
FOUR
THE <IHANTO.BR NBWB-PTMjnigT
Friday, July 4, l#»3.
Chandler News-Publicist
CONSOLIDATION OF
Chandler News.........................»K*tablI shed lfc91
Chandler Publicist......................Establlihed 1k;*5
Sac and Fox Warrior
ndlei
County
Inland Printing
and
ndler Democrat
Lincoln County Telegram.
, , Katal»lished
..Established 1K92
..Established lM»:t
..Established 1 h!*7
. . Established ISO::
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY.
Entered according to Act of Congress. at the Poatofflci
Chandler, Okla.,
!onK
econd*cla»H mall matter.
11.01 A IIOTKIN
I*. L. 11.01
L. II. MI IIOI.S
. Proprl'
. tlnii
to the fanners for the display of their best
agricultural products, and before he could per-
fect his plans everybody had joined hands and
organized a county fair association. In this
way he drew closer attention to his business,
and helped Okfuskee county. He is constantly
using his newspaper space for purposes of this
kind.
“The home newspaper can be made the most
I valuable asset of a community,” says Banker
Niles. "It can be used to stimulate every line
of business, but it can do nothing unless it is
given generous support. There are business
men who .still hold the mistaken view that the
home newspaper is a kind of charitable institu-
tion, and that they should buy advertising space
merely to ‘help the editor along.’ The fact is
that if a merchant has something that the pub-
lic needs, a properly conducted newspaper can
find—even create—a market for him, but no
newspaper legitimately should be expected to
produce a demand for worthless merchandise.
“Neglect of its newspapers is the greatest
blunder a community could make. It may be
true that the home newspaper looks shabby, un-
attractive and unconvincing. Give it support,
and it will become persuasive and substantial.
The mediocre editor will soon be supplanted by
a more capable man, and in proportion to the
' patronage given, both editor and his newspaper
| will grow in usefulness and influence. The pub-
___ (lie should give patronage and the editor should
The legislature has'quit and will officially | K've service. Too many newspapers are con-
i l RSERI PTH)N RATES
One l>«»llai Err N rnr ------ Ntrletly
lu Silvan,-,-
printed label on your paper.
h*-n the subscription expire*,
time for renewal, if you <
always furnish back
Look at the
thereon shown
your money in ample
broker tiles, as w • can
Subscribers ileslrlny
will phase state in their communication
n* w addresses.
not alwii.
the address of their paper eh
both th
The date
ForwH nl
eslre uil*
old and
<MNfqs(MLAgEL
Pull Together next Monday night.
Back to the two-cent rate again—hurrah!
adjourn tomorrow.
j ducted for purely political purposes. In many
| instances this is because the community has
woiti.ii-wim> Mi mi .u
SI HVEI IS l*KOI1>SKD.
A Study of Hie Preventable bbeam
That Afflict the Human Race. Itj
the Religious Rambler.
The biggest of all schemes lor so-
cial betterment an yet proposed—and
one which makes t/ie reader grasp at
Its magnitude -was suggested to the
American Medical association at its
recent meeting lu Minneapolis. This
was nothing less than a medical sur-
vey of the entire habitable globe with
a view to ascertaining what are the
definite needs and what feasible ac-
tion may be prop sed with respect
to the stamping cut of preventable
diseases
As yellow fever was eliminated
from Cuba and Pa lama, so western
science could in reat part eitlher
eradicate or repress the epidemics
which are decimiating the human
race, such as cholei 1, bubonic plague,
pneumonia plague, smallpox, typhus
fever, beri-beri, 11 laria and dysen-
tery, not to mention tuberculosis,
syphilis and cancer.
The man who is sponsor for this
new propaganda, Dr. W. 11 Forsythe
of Louisville, has s* en extended med-
ical services in Korea. He declares
that "it is impossible to grasp, in the
wildest flight of imagination, what a
world-wide campaign against pre-
ventable diseases would mean to hu-
manity in the li\es saved, in the
homes spared from desolation, in the
preventing of unnecessary suffering,
in conserving to mankind wealth be-
yond computation and human effi-
ass sSmbssi 2 zxzmasnhJs- —
name.
jfor its editor but for every business enterprise
in the community, as well as for the community
.«2?_ „“d„ Eft:! f.1"
fessional men of Chandler signed the guarantee j
for a Chautauqua next year.
The News-Publicist is issued a day earlier
ness, not politics, is the stuff that makes com-
munities grow and prosper.’’
than usual, this week, in order that the office\hqw SHALL AMERICANS ADJUST THEM-
SELVES TO FOREIGN COMPETITION?
force might help the eagle scream.
There's talk of the U. S. annexing Southern
California as part recompense for American loss
in Mexico. If there’s to be any annexing let's go
all the way.
Walt. Ferguson is to have a mint bed and
serve juleps at the Panama exposition. We
know of a fellow who would like the job of
official taster.
President Wilson says he will permit nothing .........
to interfere with tariff legislation. And yet that i yj',.' Ylnderwood'"flippantly
would be About the best thing that could happen. ),lls"tle
—St. Louis Globe-Democrat,
We are to have “a competitive tariff,” accord-
ing to Messrs. Wilson and Underwood. That
is to say, a tariff so framed as to permit foreign-
ers to compete successfully with domestic pro-
ducers for the possession of the American mar-
ket. With that purpose distinctly in view and
openly avowed, the tariff rates are to be lowered
below the protective point.
What must the people of the United States do
to adjust themselves to competition with Europe
and the rest of the world? President Wilson and
say we must get a
on us and enable ourselves to compete
with foreign goods. If it has occurred to them
, , , , .... , that it would take fifty years to do that, they
Just to help pay running expenses of the state, have not mentioned it but it has occurred to I that this world is not iicmmiipnily
County^Treasurer J. J.Gayman.|this week, mail- |hose who do any thinking about the matter
n-riyithat when we are prepared to compete with
foreign goods, we must charge off 40 per cent,
of our investment in plants, in machinery, in
tenement houses, and everything that has cost
money in this country, that enters into our do-
mestic and business life, must be sealed down
at least 40 per cent, in value.
Our teachers in public schools must have their land Europe are scattered pretty much
* lover all of Asia and Africa These
! woirtd be made the local centers of
ed to the state department a check of
$13,000.00. This is the second big donation from
Lincoln county within six months.
The grasshopper appropriation measure in-
troduced in the senate by Edmundson and Bar-
rett and in the house by Charles and Hoyt,
passed, has been signed by the governor and the
work of eradication of the hoppers, under di-
rection of the state board of agriculture, is now
being carried on.
telling
The New World Neighborlines*.
The plan, which at first seems like
an Utopian dream, but which stu-
dents of world conditions are pro-
nouncing thoroughly practicable, is a
logical extension of the present prac-
tices of civilization Thi social sense,
which concerns itself with suffering
and need everywhere, is dominating
our time. This is the era of world
neighborliness. Congo atrocities,
Peru rubber slavery, Chinese opium,
Turkish massacres all are made the
business of civilization in Europe and
America.
Because every year is now increas-
ing the interflow of trade and travel
between all parts of the world, the
powerful element of self-preservation
is brought into the question. Every
small town has, indirectly, commerce
with practically every section of the
earth. The ten cent stores display
wares made by Chinese peasants. Eor
a few dollars one may buy rugs made
in Armenia and Persia. The germ-
carrying possibilities of all imported
articles may not be overlooked. Im-
migration likewise is bringing to one
level the welfare of all mankind.
Even the man of the street is coming
to perceive with the social economist
I that this world is not permanently a
| good place for any of us untM it is a’
good place for all of us.
Ilow flu* Plan Would Work.
The idea of a world medical survey
is after all not so radical or novel as
it seems, for the idea is inherent in
the medical missionary propaganda
with which church people have been
familiar for more than a generation.
The medical missionaries of America
hindered The Religious Rambler
himself has been thronged in China
by a crowd of children with small-
pox, whose disease had reached the
peeling stage. He once went aboarjl
a little Chinese houseboat for a
week's journey up the Grand canal,
only to And that his boatman's chil-
dren were in the eruptive stage of
virulent smallpox. Such experiences
are too common to he mentioned in
parts of the east, ffi some regions
Chinese mothers do not count their
children until they have had the
smallpox, when they enumerate the
survivors.
Saving the Rabies' Eyes.
The scheme in its bigness rather
baffles comprehension, yet it becomes
more practical when looked at in de-
tail. Thus most of the babies of
Egypt and Arabia and pretty much
all of Asia, for that matter—have
sore eyes. These result, in tens of
thousands of cases, in total blindness
and in other tens of thousands of
cases in suffering and disfigurement,
all of which is preventable. If boracic
acid solution could be distributed to
the mothers of Asia with instructions
how to use it the results would be
an increase jn human comfort, hap-
piness and efficiency simply beyond
measure. The amateur philanthro-
pist who would undertake to supply
Arabia with boracic acid and to teach
the habit of its use would range as
one of the great benefactors of hu-
manity.
Jt never occurs to the western
reader that most babies in the world
are born without the help of doctors.
The ignorance which attends cjiild-
bearing and chnld-rearing in Asia and
Africa is colossal. Add to this the
fact that in Moslem lands male phy-
sicians are not permitted to attend
women and it is seen what possibili-
ties of suffering are involved.
A V indication <>!' Civilization.
The project involves the use of the
daily newspaper press in Asia as it
has been used in America for popu-
lar education along lines of health
and hygiene. This is the day of the
rapidly extnding dominion of the
daily paper in Asia. A more oppor-
tune time for the proposed propa-
ganda could scarcely be chosen.
As famine relief in China has im-
measurably enhanced American pres-
tige, so this plan for the ainalioration
of suffering would vindicate Chris-
tian civilization in the eyes of the
ancient peoples. It wobld prove the
reality of the west’s professions of
the Christian religion and of human
brotherhood.
salaries reduced.
People must have thier rents reduced.
The stores where they buy their goods must
have their rents reduced.
All the employees working in all the stores
The secretary of the Pull Together flub of I fcI11KIWJVVO ,
Chandler has issued a call for a meeting of the mU8t have their rents reduced,
club at the district court room next Monday j
night, July 7, at 8 o’clock sharp. As several
very important matters are to he considered it
is desired that every member attend this meet-
ing. An invitation to be present has been ex-
tended to the three members of the board of
county commissioners and to the trustees of
Chandler and McKinley townships.
The rain which visited this vicinity last Tues-
day morning developed into a near cloudburst
in Oklahoma county. In Oklahoma City base-
ments, streets and in some instances the first
floor of buildings were flooded. The Deep Fork
drainage district, in Oklahoma county and so far
as completed in Lincoln county, handled the im-
mense flood without being worked to capacity.
It demonstrates that the ditch, when completed,
will handle any rainfall liable to visit this part
of the state. The Deep Fork bottoms, ahead of
the dredges, were flooded and some crops seri-
ously damaged.
THE COUNTRY NEWSPAPER'S VALUE.
“The closing down of all our country news-
papers would be a public calamity, and yet in
most communities no enterprise is so poorly
patronized as the home newspaper,” says Alva
J. Niles, president of the Citizens’ State Bank
of Okemah, Oklahoma, and once adjutant gen-
eral of Oklahoma. He is a successful business
man, and widely known throughout the state.
Few men so clearly understand the value of
liberal and intelligent advertising in the home
newspaper as does Banker Niles. It might l>e
supposed that a business that deals in money—
something that everybody needs—would find
All the employees working in all the stores
must nave their wages reduced.
The railroads throughout the country must
all charge off a large percentage of their invest-
ments.
Wages all along the line, from the president
down, must be reduced.
The government officials, our ministers of the
Gospel even, the expenses of running our
churches, our places of amusement, and every-
thing, in fact, that enters into our life must be
reduced.
Materials in amount and in prices, the values
of our farms, the stock on the farms, all must
be reduced at least 40 per cent, to enable the
United States to compete with foreign countries.
A mill, fully and completely equipped in the
United States, we will say costs a million dol-
lars; 5 per cent, interest on that investment is
$50,000. That same mill, equipped absolutely
as the American mill is put up, in England would
most not to exceed $000,000. Five per cent, in-
terest on $000,000 is $80,000. The, American
mill is handicapped about $20,000 interest
charges to begin with, and so on down the whole
line to the smallest tenement house we have.
Nevertheless, we are to have ‘‘a competitive
tariff.” That much is certain. How is that
condition to be met? How are American labor
and industry to prepare for it? Can the neces-
sary preparation for competition with foreign
cheap labor be brought about without serious
consequences, such as labor strikes, mob vio-
lence, property loss and depreciation, and a long
and costly period of readjustment?
These are questions which the American peo-
ple should be asking themselves. Until they are
carefully considered and satisfactorily answered
/\AAAAA/VAAAA^J^W\AAAA/V/'AAAAA/\AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA < !
Practical Baking Lessons
CAKES
1 often hear housekeepers attribute their success or
failure in cake baking to luck. Others have the idea
that cake bakers are born, and that unless one is nat-
urally adapted to it, she cannot succeed. In reality any-
one can bake the nicest of cakes if she will follow closely
the few simple rules which are given below in full detail.
The Right Materials
He beau n until smooth and glossy. If the
t»c materials
PUKED HEALTH
DEPARTMENT
By I)r. J. C. Mahr, State
Commissioner of Health
make the best food.
A soft Winter wheat pastry flour is ns
necessary for cakes as for biscuits. In fact,
it should always be used with baking
powder, as it absorli* moisture more
readily than hard Spring wheat bread
flour, which contains much slow dissolving
gluten. If bread flour is used for cake, one
ihuet use at least one-third more moisture
than is called for by the recipe, for all
cake recipes are written for pastry flour.
A great deal of the uncertainty of cake
baking is eliminated by using a double-
raise baking powder such as K C. The
batter need not be hurried into the oven,
nor need one be careful about slamming
the oven door, or jarring the stove. K C
is really a blend of two baking powders,
one of which commences to raise as soon
as moisture is added; the other is inactive
until heat is applied, so that the raising is
sustained against all danger of falling until
the cake is baked. ^
Cane sugar is always t o be preferred for
cakes, because licet sugar is hard to dis-
solve and is likely to sink to the bottom
or stick around the edges of the pan,
making an imperfect cake.
If impossible to get granulated cane
sugar, then as the next best thing, buy bar
sugar. This is very fine and easily creamed.
Measure Everything
It will save time and many steps if you
will get everything required by the recipe
on your mixing table before starting.
Everything should be measured correctly.
If the recipe calls for sifted flour, sift it
once before measuring. Measure flour by
filling the cup with a spoon. If you dip
the cup into the flour, it will pack and t here
is danger of over measuring. Measure the
baking powder carefully, using level,
rounding or heaping tcaspoo'hjMs, accord-
ing to the recipe. Sift the flour and baking
powder together tim e times in order to get
them thoroughly mixed, so that the cake
will raise evenly; also to loosen up the flour.
Mixing
The flour and baking powder having
! been measured and sifted, measure out the
sugar and butter and cream together. If
the butter is cold and firm, warm the
sugar slightly in the oven. After creaming
the butter and sugar, separate the yolks
from the whites of the eggs and with a
!enough to stand up, putting them in last.
A little salt added to the whites of eggs
helps in the beating. If yolks of eggs are
not used, add the moisture and flour
alternately to creamed butter and sugar
and add t he whites last. Where much more
sugar than butter is used, as in Orange
Cake, half of the sugar may be beaten into
the yolks of the eggs.
Baking
One of the most important things about
baking cakes is to have,a moderate oven
at the Btart; in fact, in using a gas, oil or
gasoline stove, it is not necessary to light
the stove until the cake has been put in.
Then there should be a vejjy’low flame at
first. After the cake has doubled in bulk,
increase the heat and bake until a brown
crust is formed and the center will respond
to the touch. Never allow a crust to form
over cake before the batter has doubled.
I n a wood or coal range, have a very light
fire in the fire box. After the cake is in the
oven, replenish the fire and by the time it
has burned up the batter will have
doubled and is ready for the hot oven to
finish it. It is impossible to specify the
length of time to bake cakes, for the larger
and thicker the layer, the longer it takes
to bake.
Orange Caki
}i cup butter Grated rind of 1 orange
1 cup siinur cup milk or water
\li cups sifted pastry flou
tcuspoonfuls K C Baking
2 level teas]
Powder
You'll Re A Man.
el tcuspoonfuls K t Baking r
Yolks of 2 eggs, beaten light
Whites of 2 eggs, boaten dry.
This makes two small layers.
Filling for Orange Cake
The unbeaten white of 1 egg, add to this
}i cup orange pulp and juice, with the* rotary
egg beater gradually beat in l'$ cups pow-
dered sugar, beating it in slowly. When
stiff enough to hold its shape spread upon
the cake. Long beating makes this icing
spongy and white.
Cream Cake
ii cup butter
Y
1 cup sugar
n light
1*4 cups sifted pastry flour
K C Baking Powder
oiks of two eggs beate:
two C|
sifted ;
2 level tcuspoonfuls K U B;
cup eold water
Whites of two eggs bei
Flavoring to
•aten dry
suit.
Cream Filling
rotary egg beater, cream the yolks until ]. cup Bifu>d flour H teaspoonful salt
-------i----i---i------------ * j.i I . “ 1 egg beaten light
1 ounce chocolate
j ttie proposed investigation. The med-
jieal missionaries themselves would be
agents in the gathering of statistics
and In promoting the survey. Just
as the missionaries have had a pro-
tent part in the London School of
Medicine for the study of tropical dis-
eases and in the Mukden conference
upon the pneumonic plague, so they
would represent the frontier of west-
ern medical science in this suggested
undertaking.
Two Johns Hopkins graduates,
man and wife, who are Southern
Presbyterian medical missionaries in
mid-China, put the case concretely in
these words "We are advising
friends at Johns Hopkins to send out
scientific doctors for the study of
diseases in China Our mission work
1n caring for the cases that throng
us by thousands leaves u$ no time
for scientific research. Our mission
would offer the facilities, but what
we desire is men who would come j
out not as missionaries, but as ex-
pert investigators In the interest of
world-wide medical science. There
are no such cllincs accessible to the
profession anywhere as may be found
in Asia, with the pitiable plentitude
of disease and the common recur-
rence of extraordinary cases."
Surveys by Continent*.
Should the American Medical as-
sociation. after a year's private dis-
cussion of the subject, appoint such
a commission as was suggested to
the Minneapolis convention, the funds
for the needed investigation would be
provided by the association itself, by
private philanthropists or even by
the national government. It is
pointed out that the international
work in making a standardized map
of the. world is an analagous case
The practicability of this huge task
is illustrated by the fact that the
missionary bodies made a missionary
survey of the world for the Edinburg
conference three years ago. The aim
would be to discover what are the
all together.
or milk and stir it in thoroughly; then a
little flour, stirring it in thoroughly; then
more moisture anq more flour alternately.
If you can keep your head when all j BtirrinK each.time until all the flour and
about you * moisture are in the batter, when it should
Are losing theirs and blaming it
on you;
If you can trust yourself when all
meij doubt you
But make allowance. for
doubting too;
If you can wa^t and not be tired by
iold
light lemon colored and very creamy. Add 1 cup hot ini
this to the butter and sugar, and blend H cup sugar 1 ouui
all together. Now add a little of the water 1 teaspoonful vanilla i
Mix flour and salt with a very little c«
milk: stir into the hot milk and cook ten
minutes, add the chocolate and stir until it
is melted and evenly blended with the flour
mixture; then beat in the egg mixed with
the bugar, aud lastly the vanilla.
Copyright 191t by Jaqueo Mfg. Co.
In the next leaaon other recipes for Cakes and Icings will be given.
waiting.
Or being lied about don’t deal in
sonal funds. It is but a part of the
their general good health campaign he is
waging in his county. The small boy
is leading the assault on the cats. All
Stillwater is interested and improved
sanitary conditions are already no-
ticed.
lies,
r being hated don’t give way to
hating,
And yet don’t look too good, nor
talk too wise. >
you can dream—aud not make
make dreams your master;
If you can think—and not make ! in your good town.
About twenty-five per cent, of the
school children have defective eye-
sight. ^
XT
Lef every day he a "clean-up” day
thoughts your aim;
alley, the manure
Battle the filthy
pile, the weeds,
If you can meet with Triumph and! cess pools and unsanitary buildings
Disaster
| of all kinds.
And treat those two imposters just 1 ganization in
If every women’s or-
Oklahoma would de-
the same;
If you can bear to hear the truth
you’ve spoken
Twisted by knaves to make a *rap
for fools,
Or watch the things you gave your (
life to, broken,
vote a week to municipal sanitation
the men would continue the work and
j our towns would be clean, the amount
of sickness reduced and property in-
I creased in value. Try it.
Protect yoi^r children from explo-
Ami stoop ami build them ap with sive6 July Fo;rth. There is much to
sw&srji irss, i z EH
space in his home newspapers, and uses it in
various ways for the upbiulding of his com-
munity which means the upbuilding of his bank.
For example, Okfuskee county, Niles' home
county, had no county fair. Banker Niles ad-
vertised that his bank would pay cash premiums
have had an opportunity to convince themselves,
one way or the other, whether they are prepared
for the economic revolution which* the Under-
wood bill contemplates. Submit the Underwood
bill to the referendum of the ballot box.—A »i< r-
iran Economist. ,
PLANTING CROPS IXlit SIIAIS.
The Importance of building and
Oiling a silo this year can scarcely
most sections of the southwest.
the land should be in good tilth;
should be fertile and
But | will not be ready before early in the
lit.' 1 #.I1 _.V I _Y- ____ __ ,, .
be taking the whole earth As a med-
ical clinic.
Tq the persons who have but to
telephone for the doctor when any-
thing goes wrong, It is well-nigh in-
credible that the majority of the hu-
man race has absolutely no access
to the assistance of modem medical
science Approximately two out of
every three sufferers in this world jy
wornout tools;
You’ll be a Man, my son!
— KIPLING.
Swat the fly:
less jewel.
For baby is a g£ice~
the "sane Fourth" agitation. It
means a saving of life, limb and mon-
ey. Better curtail the pleasures of
the child for a day than have him
go through life crippled or blind—
a constant reminder of"parential ne-
glect.
It is costing Oklahoma an aver-
age of $2 47 per year to care for each
Of the inmates of her public insti-
tutions. such as schools for the deaf,
dumb, blind, feeble minded, reform-^
atories, prisons and insane asylums.
(Approximately 1,380 out of the 3,-
| 200 inmates of these institutions are
| public charges as the result of pre-
ventable diseases, drug and liquor
habit. Figure up the total expense
for yourself and then answer the
question: Would it not be cheaper
to tax payers to spend more money
to prevent the causes of insanity, im-
pairment of senses and crime, than
ito asume the burden of keeping the
victims confined or under treatment?
Get away from the old idea that
Last week 1 promised to give the
number of deaths occuring among
children in Oklahoma under five
years of age for the month of May,
1JH3 The official reqprds sho.w:
deaths under one year of age, 134;
deaths between one and two years,
32; between two and five, 4 0; total
under five years of age, 206. Seven-
teen per cent, of the deaths under
one year of age were due to congeni-
tal defects. Twenty per cent, of all
deaths under two years of age Were
caused by stomach and bowel trou-
ble. Pneumonia was the cdfitribu-
tary cause in ten out of fffteen deaths
from measles Eight deaths were
due to whooping cough. Two deaths
from drowning, three from burns,
and one from drinking lye. People
are not afraid to expose their chil- _ _ __
(Iren to whooping cough and other j children should be exposed early in
preventable disease, yet marvel at an ____ _ ______ _o
accident which results fatally. Mora] statistics show" tiat
Shield the child from all preventable are tfM( 0ften fatal,
diseases.
More than 500 alledged remedies
for tuberculosis are now in use and
it is estimated that the public pays
into the coffers of manufacturers the
sum of $15,000,000 yearly This
life to whooping cough and measles.
these diseases
There is no
| necessity for a child suffering from
I any diseases that can be prevented
THE NEWSPAPER MAN.
be overestimated While It Is too heavy yield under ordinary condi-
early to predict whit the corn, oatsjtions. The greatest difficult} thHt
and hay crops will he it is safe to I
say that succulent feed will be need*'
ed next winter. There are places]
one is likely to have when n crop
is planted this late in the season is
moisture enough to germinate the
fall which Is generally a favorable have nobody to diagnose their cases
capable of a (time for disposing of it in this way. nobody to prescribe for them and
----.... ___ | nobody to operate when operatior
< HRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICES. Iare necussar>
where green crops may be grazed all'seeds
the winter but a small percent of I start,
the feeders can live there, heme the put up any time thi
general recommendation to build and early in the fall whe
fill a silo.
It is not ^yet too late to plant the
•llage crops Corn, sorghum or kafir
may be planted in June for thi* pur-j when it is ready to
pose with reasonable expectation in the silo. Planted i
and give the plants a good
The silo may be ordered and
summer or
work with
crops ia not pressing the manager
All that is necessary will be to have
he silo ready to receive the crop
ut and put In
June, the crop
Over Hoffman Bank 11 ;
Subject: God.
Golden text: Isai&b 40:1 J-
Responsive Reading: Psai
1-13.
Sunday Kchool 10 a. to.
Wednesday evening nicetii
Reading
afte
Dom
rept
The Ignorance of the
commonest principles of the trans-
| mi salon of disease Is simply abysmal
j Thus the Moslem pilgrims are still
drinking from the Zem Zei
I Mecca and carrying the wa
to their friends, although
I Zem w ell has been pronoui
most prolific center of poll
the world.
The idea of isolating any
' is unknown to most people
lepers walk the streets in C
(By’F. A Mitchell.)
On occasion of a prize offer by the
amount of money would furnish bos- j business men of the town of Daven-
pital treatment, with scientific care. | port, for an essay on "What is most
for 100,000 tubercular patients year- important to a city” the prize was
(won by Farmer Mitchell His subject
• — . ! was "The Newspaper Man” and is
is produced herewith:
i In point of importance
The birth
about 2,500
rate in Oklahoma
per month.
wel!
the
Declaring that public health au-
thorities are convinced that the com-
mon house cat is a carrier of disease
in I germs second to the fly, Dr. J. B.
"•‘(Murphy, county tuperi&tendgSt Of
’in health for Payne county, Oklahoma,
he j,published a notice of reward of twen-
in ty-flve cents for every dead cat de-
livered to his office In Stillwater
;es Twenty-five cats were brought In the
en |jirst day. Dr Murphy is paying the
i- expense of the crusade out of his per-
in the
world’s great drama, the newspaper
man is almost equal to the farmer.
The farmer supplies food and cloth-
ing for the world’s teeming millions.
The editor educates them.
The farmer is dependant upon the
newspaper man. He must know of
the demands for his products before
producing them In turn lie must
know where the, markets are. and
the best methods of transportation of
oducts. While the farmer keeps
upon the plow -he also
keeps his eyes upon the world by
m6ans of the newspaper. It is a won-
derful encyclopedia of current events.
The farmer without a newspaper is
mossback; he is a back number;
he is more than out of date; he never
has made a date to meet the throb-
bing Ji**art of the work'.. The farmer
cannot afford to be without several
newspapers in his home. He will
make money by taking time to read
them.
The newspapers of today are the
most important of all factors in the
development of mankind. They are
manned by the brainiest men of the
world.
Every man a specialist in his line.
This is an age of specialists. It is
hard to get a man big enough to be a
specialist worthy of leadership of
many followers. When such a one
does appear, he is soon drawn into
the ranks of the newspaper men.
Our high ranking ministers are
as helpful with their articles from
the press, as their sermons behind
the pulpit.
How could we know the decision
of our judges but for the press?
Paper and ink, type and .presses
are all inert until the newspaper man
touches them with his magic wand
of persistent genius when they spring
into active life and distribute to the
world the life giving stream of moral
intellectual and material advance-
ment. We lift our hats to the news-
paper and give our dollar to ye editor.
WHY IS C HANDLER FIRM?
Because It* Citizens Have learned
The Truth.
After reading this generous and
encouraging report from Mr. Pinson,
those who have the misfortune to suf-
fer, as he did, will naturally long
to get similar relief. But to get the
same good as Mr. Pinson had, you
should get the same remedy. There
are of course, other kidney pills but
there are no other kidney pills the
6ame as Doan's. That is why Chan-
dler people demand the genuine.
B Pinson, W. Thirteenth St.,
Chandler, Okla., says: ‘‘Doan's Kid-
ney Pills did a great deal for ine and
I willingly recommend them to any-
one who needs a kidney medicine.
My kidneys were irregular in action.
I had pains through my back After
1 used Doan’s Kidney Pills, the pains
left me and my kidneys became nor-
mal.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo.
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—
and take no other.
WAR1TA—After July 1st Grant
county will not pay a bounty for
wolf scalps. As none of the ad-
joining counties pays such a bounty,
the commissioners became suspicious
that they were -paying bounties on
wolves not natives of this county and
have annulled the bounty.
bis pro
<hls hands
Corn 01$ Sorts, Other Remedies Won't Coro
Thf worst raw* no matt* r «•( how lohfi standing,
&r« (.urtil by the wonderful, old reliable Dr-
Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. It relieves
Pain awl lleaU at the same time, 2&c, 60c, $L0G.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Nichols, L. B. The Chandler News-Publicist (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, July 4, 1913, newspaper, July 4, 1913; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc913612/m1/4/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.