The Week's Review (Apache, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 23, 1915 Page: 1 of 8
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% 1
THE WEED'S REVIEW
k.
■A:
MOVED-
The Continual Growth o( Our
INSURANCE BUSINESS
Has made it ttecetsary lor us to arrange lor larger office space
and we have therefore made arrangement, and
on the Brick Building first door south of the Apache State B
Building, where we are now occupying the entire ground floor.
We extend a cordial invitation for a visit in our new oific
and when in wed of INSURANCE remember we represent
22 of the leading Insurance Companies of America and can
IUPPa/lom Claims Promptly Settled Through Our Office.
The Cache Valley Realty Co.
CARL GRAUSLUND, Mgr.
Phone 89, Insurance Building, Apache, Oklahoma.
high school notes
tiwm for -nine time. We hope to hear
of Iter recovery at all early itale.
Mr-. K S' Shafer visited from
Mmid.iv till Wednesday with home
at
The third week of school tind- en-
rollment of thirty-one in the high............
.chord and all tin* elates working f,.!k.-. returning t«» her daughter
nicely under the -upeni-ion <>t Mr., F.l Uni" Wednesday evening.
T.di— olive HoeiiderfTer was ill la-t i
lvi-. »Mi-- Standiford and Mi-> Hall.
The Freshman cla-s tlii.- year eoii-
-i-t- «f nine girls and four hoy- who
-eem to lie entering into their year-
work with a great deal of entlius-
II in-m , striving to <lo their be-t
that they may he Sophomere- bv
this time next year.
The Sophomere class has a total
week with throat and lung trouble,
but licUi r at present.
Don’t torget our Youtqj People’s,
meitiim Friday niuht, Sept. -4th, at j
the Car he Creek Mission. Flo—ie M
Mahan, leader.
Mrs. Mae IMattoon and three eliil-
(>. E. WHITE,
President
.1 W. 1’IFKATT,
Asst-Cashler
Last Sunday F. E. Royer volun-
teered to enter the ministry. He will
have charge of the Apaehe eirent of
the Christian church for the pres-
ent The church is glad to send Bro.
Royer out as a student preacher. He
served our congregation first as a
Deaeon then as an Elder, and Chair-
man of our official Board and after
he has been tried and proten his
ability the congregation will he glad ^
to ordain him to the ministry. 1 Bis
make three preachers, the products
of this congregation.* Bro. Marion
Franklin left Sunday afternoon for
Kimberlain Heights Tenn., and Bro.
Blaukenhaker will go in a tew weeks.
Preaching at the Christian Church
Sunday A. M. at 11 o’clock. Special
music.
Preaching at 8 P M. at Boone.
Subject: “The Gospel.”
ARCHIE R. POE, Pastor.
There was a watermelon social at
Hugh White’s Tuesday night. There
were seventy melons, large and small
and six automible and one hay-rack
load of persons present to eat the
melons A grand time was had and
no one came away hungry.
Tuesday morning was cold for the
time of year and Wednesday morning
it wal raining—and it rained, rained
all day. The weather man will overdo
the liquid refreshment if he keeps
up the present gait.
ALONG NOUTE ONE
Mrs. Warner, Cor.
(Received too late for last week.)
Chris Oladback moved his family
near Lone Wolf last week where Mr.
Gladbaek has obtained employment.
School opende iMonday morning
with Mr. Hinson at the desk and with
an enrollment of thirty pupils. There
are several more to enter later on.
In the electrical stem of Tuesday
night, Chas. Loflin lost a fine steer,
struck by lightning.
W. G. Warner was a business visit-
or at Lone Wolf Tuesday and Wed-
nesday.
^ Simon Laughlin Is in Belleville,
Ark. on business this week.
A little more rain is needed to put
the ground in better shape for plow
ing. t
Just ask some of the boys where
the finest melon patches are.
Abe Levite left Monday lor Nor-
man where he will attend the coining
term of school in the University.
"1C •-o,M...,„v-,v . .. ......... - , I (.ren Vclvin, Peiisel and Leo, left
enrollment of five pupils, one boy and • Saturday for a visit
four ,.ir|. .ha -tv they -re do '' VT / ......V mother
Caesar Moderrf History, and other *»*■' Mr'- on .
1''' -objects. John Gilbreath finished Ins thresh-
The'Junior class consists of four me hi-t week, this makes all the tar-
•orls' and six hoys who feel very Lets through with lhe,r wheat, an t
iwl of the fact that they will heLyerv one well pleased with l >> * •
£ vear <pro,,d,»g they I it Wi», a ,re,,t deal higher than .he
master their Geometry). average last year
The Senior class was organized r„s J,.*sc came down from KM*e
Monday with Goldina Porch as class I Wednesday evening. His wife is
president, Oscar llrabe, secretary. in ))ie hospital, mid lie -tatc-
The total enrollment of the ehtss i* ^h,. j- not improving an>, an i
three and they prove to be u willing L0() wei(k to undergo another op-
“trio” The Seniors will he missed 1 priltl(,n We extend our sympathy,
next year; we will not have their ^ John oilbfeath and mother,
smiling faces to look upon, for they |jrs „t Kansas visited at the
will have grown out of our reach. p.)U, brhacek home Monday evening.
The High School students assem- ...... njft<||l< Texas, is
beled, as usual, in room twenty-five, • - ^ ^ nie,e, Mrs. Paul
Friday morning fort Impel exer. is .1 ^ ^ ^ flinuly at present.
The song service was conducted I McDaniels,
£,««.,lifer. Mr. Devin led the Or* K*jr, 1Ch“;
devotional exerei.es, after »hieb Hand N"«h ,h"k
delivered a el.h-n.Ud „.0»« ^ »' ' M„.
(ln,sS on “Success,” which was great- wiHiatn Snodgras- left r Mu
,, Related by-11 rr.ee,,.. _ . |loa„, Tne-day where he w,II .«,end
Apache State Bank
Money Banked Gives You Confidence,
and Free You From Fear.
COMING!
Jennings Show Company
i Dramatical and Musical
HERE ALL NEXT WEEK UNDER CANVAS
Entire
Change
Program
Each Night
Admission:
Adults, 25c
Children under
12 Years, 15c
Quite a number of Apaehe citizens
rent to Lawton Wednesday morning
to assist in celebrating the fall fes-
tivnl. Hope they had a good time it
it did rain all day.
J. E. Lomberger, of Beloit, Kan
arrived in this city Monday night for
a month’s visit with home fols. Al-
ter his visit here he will go to ( ah-
fomia for an extended vilit with
relatives there.
SPECIALS
a
No 2 Strawberries
44 2 Gooseberries
44 2 Blackberries
44 2 Raspberries
16-oz. can R. B. M. Bkg. Powder - 1 Oc
Watch this space every week
Caddo County Mercantile Co. |
j. S, PILKENT ON, M»wg«i!
First National Bank
w. T. CLAlKf
Pm.
Of Apache
J. H. BOHAHT,
Cashier
A. C. IK)LF,
Am’i. ( ash’r
Ample capital, long experience in banking with a
desire to »erve out customers combine to make this
bank a most desriable place to establish your ac-
count and credit
Farm Loan* Solicited.
After assembly period, Mr. Devin
was invited to remain and visit the
,lasses, and to the ill luck ot the
English 111 class, he chose to hear
them recite. For various reasons the
pupils failed to prepare their lesson
„nd it was anything hut a bnlliar
class that Mr. Devin listened to that
morning. It was with a s.gh of
relict that the members ot the elf
and Miss Hall heard the class bell
and returned to their rooms, fer-
vently hoping that the English
class instead of the English II
would be thouetim* next rime, to
ever we are always .dadtohave M
Devin with us at any time be may
see fit to come and we will prom*
to try and have our lessons bette
prepared the n«t time he visits ns.
Glee Club Organized.
Tuesday evening there was a meet
ing of the High School pupil' ■ jj**
purpose of organizing the 1915-18
Glee Club. Those who are to take
rarts are: Soprano—-Fern Rundle,
Marguerite Bender, doldiua Porch,
Gwendolyn Boor. Alto-Fern John*
a ton, Bernice Wells, Katherine Ho-
gan. Tenor-William Levite, James
Dunlap, Charles Smith. Bass
Owen Amphlett, Dan Simmons, Knox
Dunlap, Allen Wass /‘“nist-Mis
Hall. Leader—Miss Stundifer. The
Glee Club is not to be an organiza-
tion for long faces and no smiles, m
rather we are going to have many
happy times together. There will a
go be ft male quartet and a Female
Quartet who will make the people ot
Apache happy with their happy songs
‘"Vartet Ball Team Organiied.
The girls have organized their
basket ball team with Fern Johnston
ns captain and Miss Hall as coach.
The line-up has not yet been arrang-
ed, but will be giveu at a later da •
There is no reason why the gm*
basket ball should not be a success
this year, for there is plenty of ma-
terial in the school and the gir *
should feel lucky that they secured
the able help of Miss HhII in this
work.
Foot Ball Team.
The boys have organized their foot
hall team and are practicing often to
be able to compete with strong teams
during the season. The line-up is a-
follows James Dunlap, e. ; Owen Atn-
phlett, qb.; Paul Buckles ,lhb.; Knox
Donlup, rhb; Dan Simmons, fb.;Orl« v
Fite, rg.; Art Myers, lg. ; Gene Quirk,
rt.; Chester Childers, It.; 0s,pftr
Hrabe, re.; Allan Wnss, le. S^ibs.:
Earl Poe, Wm Levite, Holland Poe-
Owen Amphlett, captain, Wright Bo-
gun coach. It has been several years
since the boys have had a winning
foot ball team, but the prospects are
better this year than ever before.
| iitrmm V ......
the M-hool for the blind this Winter.
Mr-. Anyle I.undesdalea nd child-
ren returned to their home at Okla-
homa City Saturday, after a visite
with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Armstrong.
Mr. John Gilbreath is marketing
logs at Apache this week
Mrs Iva Perkins and two small
children and Sister Mrs Hattie Ham>
Bit of Amarilla . Texas, armed
Monday noon for a visit with their
sister Mr*. Geo. Hockderffer but re-
ceived a message late that n g
saying that their Mother, Mrs. Has-
kins had siidentlv died. They le
Tuesdav morning to attendt the fun
pral. Mrs. Haskins was expected to
arrive within a few days for a vvut
with her daughter, Mrs. Hockderffer
and family But God’s Plan ,S
for the best. The bereaved relative*
in their time of sorrow have the
W.rtM.xynipnthy.ttb.
munity.
Standard Dramas Vaudeville Music
i Band Concert Each Evening at 7:30 o’clock
At Canvas Theatre, Apache, Okla
A Good, Clean, Moral Show for Everybody.
BROXTON
Atoka, Okla. Sept. 21.-Edward
Hembrey, Earl Everidge, Indians and
Dloyd Aikin, charged with assaulting
Pat Hearne station agent at Antlers,
Okla, last week, are now under ar-
rest. Hearne is dying in a hospital
at Paris, Texas, from injuries re-
ceived in un encounter with three ban-
dits.
After the bandits rendered Hearne
unconscious, they placed bis body on
the trucks, robbed the station of
$21 and fled. Hearne recovered con
sciousness shortly .before the arriva
of a train
ROUTE THREE
MamYnie Keeler, Cor.
J. B. Parker, wife and daughter
Bade a business tnp to Carnegie
Saturday, of the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McDaniels and
daughters, Kd.vthe anS Bertha, were
visitors at the Keeler home Sunday-
Mrs. Allen Richardson has beer
suffering » great deal with rheuiua
Gertrude Diekey, Tor.
Chas. Fielden is home from a visit
of several weeks with relatives in
Illinois.
Mr*. Swnon, *!>» h"“ Wl'n TJT*
itin? ,1 lb- bnm. nt b« p»rcn ». Mr
Mr*. Urnror-k. rrKw l» b
Horn, in Manbnttnn,
Saturday.
Frank Weidenmaier has been
ihe sick list recently.
Elder Coate* will preach nt Mt.
Zion next Sunday morning and night.
Everyone cordially invited.
Mr. Garner went to Temple, Tex.,
last Friday to he operated on for
concussion of the brain caused by
an injury.
Mr®. Dougherty made a business
trip to Granite Wednesday.
The farmers who «re going to sow
wheat are anxious for more rain, as
the ground in this section of thte
country i® getting too hard to plow
well.
CADDO COUNTY’S FIRST BALE
W. C. Morris, who live® ten miles
southwest of Apache brought the
first hale of cotton to Apache last
Saturday and sold it to .7. J. Flood,
manager of the Fulkerson gin for]
H3.30 per hundred, in the seed, nis
o«d weighed 1,000 pounds and he
received $30 premium given by the
merchant* “f Apache.
This was not nnlv the flr*t hale
to he sold in Apache hut was the first
hale marketed in Caddo countv. But
this was to he expected. The farmers
residing within the trade territory of
Apache are alwny* foremost with
their crop® and when the several d.f
ferent crop*1' ere taken ns whole, they
nlwAve land w'th both feet.
In a week or two it is expected
that some of the other towns in th«
countv will receive their first hale
and by that tune Apaehe street will
he crowded with wagon loads of cot-
HORSES STILL BIG FACTOR
Cleveland, Sept. 21.—The 23,000,-
000 horses that are estimated by the
government t<> he actively at work in
the United States are declared atilt
« poj/rful factor in the industrial
life of the country by delegates to
the convention of the t’Hrriuge Build-
ers’ National Association which op-
ened here today.
The convention is the forty-third
held by the organidation which
claims to be the oldest trade associa-
tion in the United States.
San Francisco, Sept. 21. A series
of charred oaken ribs projecting ou
of the mud flat on San Francisco
bay, was all that remuined Tuesday
of the frigate Independence, the vun-
ted "oldest ship in the United States
navy,” which wus burned last night
for the copper in her staunch hull.
The ship recently was sold by the
navy department for $3,515.
The Games that destroyed the In-
dependence, brought to an en£ a
navy career begun in 1812. Once the
old frigate was America's first flag
jship and carried seventy-four gun*
on its three decks. Later it was re-
tired from actuul service and wa*
stationed at Mare Island as a Xficeiv-
ing ship. Three years ago it was
placed out of actual commission.
NOTICE
All members of Apache Circle No.
30 are requested to meet nt 2 JO p.
m. Oct. 5, 1915. A full attendance is
n‘"e“‘MKS. K. M POWELL,
NOTICE
Owing to poor collections, we are
forced to sell goods for cash after
October the first, 1915.
C. L. BALLEW.
horses and mules fob sale
1 bay. for immediate sale one team
la, mule., »ei*bt 2200
team bi( .0* bar...,
^„„d.;ou« team 5 year boms
weitrbt 2200 pounda; one eatr g
nomine 3 year old mare mule ttoa
am at onee if yo» ""d ““S'
above stock.
JOHN A. COPPOCk.
We Have—
Ash Grove Cement
Bois D Arc and Oak Post
B. P. S. Paint
Carbo Steel Posts
Good Lumber, etc.
T. H. ROGERS LBR.
H. W. BENJAMIN. M*r.
Phone 2
ton.
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Lawter, J. W. The Week's Review (Apache, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 23, 1915, newspaper, September 23, 1915; Apache, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc951581/m1/1/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Advertising%22: accessed June 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.