The Geary Bulletin. (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1910 Page: 1 of 10
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i- - The Bulletin From Now Until January 1st, ism, ior to
The Geary bulletin.
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VtL 12. M
(CARY, BLAINE CIUITY, KLAHMA, TIUWIAY, SEPTEMBER 1,1111.
LL HOUSE
Burglar* Gel la Work.
CLEANINfi
Means much more than cleaning woodwork and scrubbing
floors. It means papering, painting and kaleomining in
almost every room in the house. It's a work that used to
almost turn the house upside down, but we relieve you of
all that worry now. You simply select »
WALL PAPERS
from our immense stock and if you wish, leave the work
We have made arrangements with the best paperhang-
t ers in town to take care of our costomers’ orders without
delay and in the most satisfactory manner.
If you have any papering to do our immense stock
will be a revelation to you in variety and price.
PRICES RANGE FROM
5c TO *1.00 PER ROLL
ROGERS’ DRUG STORE
THE REXALL STORE
. Monday morning when C. H.
| Weiser went to open the office of
\ the S. & S. Lumber Co., he soon
! discovered that the safe had
i been opened by burglars. They
I* had evidently been looking
11 around and had the lay of the
11 land for they had gone into the
|| yard and obtained an ax. The
; door to the office had evidently
.(been unlocked and then relock-
| ed. The combination of the safe
, had not been set and they took
! the ax and broke the lock on the
inside door and the locks on the
I inside boxes. But there was not
II much money or valuables in the
safe, about *20 which they se-
I cured.
! They also entered Dr. Miller's
dental office and secured about
*70 worth of dental gold. They
II entered the door with key and
I went through all the boxes and
II drawers in the office and took
| the gold crown from a set of
'teeth.
Somebody, it is supposed to be
the same parties, held up a far-
mer who was in town Saturday
* night and secured *55 from him.
| On the same night a stranger
Obituary.
Joseph Edward Roblyer, son
of Joseph Roblyer and Mattie
Roblyer, was born in Centralia,
Kansas, June 7, 1885, and died
Sunday, August 28, 1910 at 9:30
p. m., aged 25 years, 2 months
and 21 days
The funeral was held Tuesday
morning, August 30. The ser-
vices were held at the Ruckman
home nine miles northeast of
of Geary. Rev. W. M. Hutchi-
son officiating. From there the
body was taken and interred in
the Geary cemetery.
The whole community will
miss Ed Roblyer, he was a good,
generous honest neighbor, known
and loved by all. Always ac-
commodating and kind thought-
ful of others even in extreme
suffering. His friends and rela-
tives have the heartfelt sym-
pathy ef the whole community
in their bereae vern^n t
It may be hard for us to un-
derstand why a young life so full
of promise should be cut off, but
“Some time when all life's les-
sons have been learned,
“And sun and stars forevermore
have set
Drills!
local happenings
Mrs. Jo* Moor** has returned
from Sulphur.
of extra wagon beds.
Harold Paul wi
City last Friday.
in Oklahoma
was trying to get into J. A. The things which our weak judg-
Chitvfrood’s house, but he was ment here have spurned |
discovered and left. , The things o'er which we gneve
i Burglars have been at work f with lashes wet
in towns west of Geary during Will flash upon us out lifes dark
tho post week, i ni{ht
i They visited at Sayre and be- As stars shine most in deeper
: sides a lot of dental gold they i tints of blue,
got *50 of R. A. Troxei's money.! And we shall see how all God’s
plans are right
And how, what seemed reproof,
was love most true.
If it is a Drill you
want, we have them
Tiger S Vanbrunt are two of
the Best drills made. For dura-
bility, lightness of draft and per-
fect seeding they can’t be excell-
ed. The universal feed on the
Tiger.
The loose ring feature of this feed
la one of the best of the many food
features of the Tiger. It secures the
force feed, principle and admits of
more exact regulation of feed than
any other device known. It has all
the advantages of the double ran feed
with none of Its drawbacks. It excells
all other feeds for special work sock
as sowing com, pens, beans, rice as
well as small grain and grass seed.
It is guaranteed to sow say of the
seed miiw1 uniformly without crack-
ing, and this cannot be said of say
other feed on the market.
Gall and
convinced.
this
Hirtlejr k. Jo.t reived . tot «-« £»~
Hunter’s cream Flour, O’Con-
nor, the Feed man.
E. F. Law and W. H. Reynolds
went to Calumet Tuesday.
Dr. McLain Regers was hew
from Clinton last Saturday.
See Weber Hdw. Co., for gar
oline stoves and Refrigerators. ;
Mrs. H. H. Mendenhall is visits
ing her parents at Mutual,- Okla.
Robes, nets- whips, everything
for the hots* at C. L. Marriott s
See Hartley’* new line of bug-
gies and harness. They are first
class. ______
Mr- and Mrs. Frank Gault
have returned from Manitou,
Colorado.____
G- A. Lehman, of Canadian
township, transacted business in
Hydro Monday.
Shelby will buy your poultry
sr.d produce and pay the highest
cash price for it.
Mr. and Mrs. P. Y. Tonkirson
helped swell the crowd at Bridge-
port last week.
W. R. Deering had the first
load of new corn on the Geary
market last Monday.
parties Monday night answering
the description of suspicious
characters seen hero Sunday.
They had on them one maitotd
gold certificate which they pro-
cured here.
C. E. Kenney and Jo4. McDon-
ald went to Bridgeport with the
old soldiers last week.
Pumps, windmills, tanks or
anything in tin-work or plumb-
ing. See King at the City shop.
WEBER H*rdwm
and Imp.
Take your poultry, butter and
eggs to Shelby. He will pay the
highest market price. .
John G. Kirkhuff is building 88
: feet of porch on his house. It
extends on three sides.
--f
Mrs. W. H. Hall and children
returned last week from their
outing in the mountains of Colo-
rado. ___
John Minor has been enjoying
a visit from his father, and re-
turned Friday to his home at
Alva.
Peter Baumgartner, pf Orville,
Ohio, who has been visiting at
the homes of G. A. Lehman and
A F. Loganbill for several days,
left last Saturday for his home.
We are under many obliga-
trons to Mr. and Mrs. Otto
Pallas, for a fine large, juicy
beef roast, which they sent to
the Bulletin family Saturday. It
was a 9 months old steer raised
on their Hereford farm east of
Geary. They are good people of
whom anybody may be proud to
call friends.
OUR MOTTO—1
See Shelby for prices before
you sell your poultry and produce.
Miss Bessie Roberts is a new
clerk in Hughes Bros, dry goods
store.
The family of Rev. Manley ar-
rived from Kansas Monday and
E. V. Shawver and wife are are now comfortably located in
moving into the Hendricks prop-
erty on the south side of town.
Attend Hartley’s sale of plows.
Emerson, Foot-lift Sulky and
Gang plows. Get the low price.
J. M. Squires was in Geary last
Saturday. He still has his arm
in a sling but it is improving
nicely.
the Sol Strong property.
Miss Madeline Claaen left last
Thursday for Ward, Neb., after
visiting her uncle, C. L. Clasen
and family for several weeks.
•
Joe Smith has returned from
hi« visit to Kansas friends, and
is again at his post of duty with
the Davidson & Case Lumber Co.
James Crothers is building a
new house on his farm six miles
east and 1J miles south of Geary,
and when completed it will be
one of the best and largest farm
houses in the neighborhood. It
is 29 feet from the ground to the
gables, containing eight rooms,
pantry and bath room. The
rooms are 14x16 feet. Charley
Childers is doing the work.
Hartley will make special pri-
new sewing machines.
ces on
Attorneys Woolman and Foosc
were here attending court this
week.
O. T. Stribling, of Greenfield,
visited his son, Frank, here last
Saturday.
Judge M. H. Morrison, of El
Reno, was in Geary last Satur-
day, the guest of W. W. Morrison
and wife. The Judge also favor-
Col. Fred Groff went to Sayre
Tuesday, where he is conducting
a merchandise sale.
W- H. Brady and wife return-
ed from Sayre Saturday, where
they have been visiting.
Jos. W. Marriott was in Okla-
homa City Tuesday on business
pertaining to the Weber Hard
ware company.
day to visit Okl
friends a few days.
Mrs. Clarence Wonis is
from Lawton visiting bsr _
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Hard.
• 1 ' 1
Mr and Mrs. l2oyd Bright and
little Fay, of Calumet, visited J.
J. Morrison and family last
Saturday-
Mrs. G. L. DuVoise is expected
here from Kansas City the last
of this week to visit her sister,
Mrs. Mary Melntire, and family.
Miss Berma Bland left Monde ”
--------- -- — --------— for Kansas City, where she will ed the Bulletin office with
From *15 up for a short time gpen<j a couple of weeks ‘ before pleasant call, which we enjoyed
resuming her school work here-
Attorney Frank Thomas is here
from Watonga this week attend-
ing county court.
Mrs. Belle Crawford left Tues-
day for Pittsburg. Pa., where she
will visit relatives.
only.
Misses Marguerite Bender and
Reba Lovell left Monday evening
for a visit with friends at Cana-
dian, Tex.
_
■
Get one of Hartley’s pumping
engines if you wsnt something
that will pump water.
L. L. McQueen dropped into
the Bulletin office Monday and
inform' i us thst a 13-pound girl
arrived at their home last Wed-
nesday.
Prof, and Mrs. J. F. Sharp
and little daughter, Johnnie, vis-
ited at the home of Judge A W.
Johnson the latter part of last
week.
very much, as we have known
him and his good traits for a
good many years. Mr. and Mrs.
Morrison had been visiting their
daughter, Mrs. Bright, near
Calumet, for several Pays.
T. D. Hinds, a negro of Okfuf-
J. A. Ballew and family
turned Monday to Sayre sftsra
visit of several days with
parents and many other
friends.
Mr. and Mrs Peters returned
Monday from the Texas Gulf
coast country. They ire better
satisfied than ever that there Is
no place like Geary.
R. C. Huntingdon, of El Reno,
was in Geary Tuesday on busi-
ness with J. O. Morehead. He
has purchased some of Mr.
Morehead’s Mexican land.
W. S. Gamble left Monday for ----- .,
a month’s trip to Idaho and Mon- kee county, has en ere sui
Una and the northwest. He isj ^ the district court alleging
looking after some land in the the election judges wou no
___ Flathead reservation, which has1 allow him to vote in a recent
Rev Melvin Wright, pastor of J«8t been thrown open to settle- primary election, because he
— -.......could not read certain sections of
the Free Methodist church at ment-
| this place and Elder J. L. Brown p £
Markley returned last
constitution. The Demo-
mm asm wsm i§§r
appointed several lawyers
f the case.
Several other p€opl* alsowent ter drcumitances for crops' than
*-!-» who« name, wc did ^ there sndthnt the com it a com-
Mrs. T S. Chestnutt, of Okla-
homa City, returned to her home
Sunday, after a visit here with
mother and sister, Mrs Mary
Melntire and Mrs. Sadie Stroup.
County Treasurer and Mrs.
John L. Freuch were in Geary
between trains Tuesday on their
way from Weatherford to Wa-
tonga.
District Clerk E. J. Warner
was here from Watonga part of
this week assisting Clerk Bailey
in opening his new set of county
court records.
J. J. Cuff was in Geary the
first of the week on his way home
from New York and other east-
ern markets where he had been
purchasing fall and winter goods.
A couple of Indian boys start-
ed up Blaine avenue with their!
horses on a run when one horse j P-M. Mackey returned Mon-
stumbled and got badly tangled day from Oklahoma City. Mrs.
up with the rider. The boy was Mackey and J. I. Daniels went
taken to Dr. Browning’s office,1 to St l»uia to lay in their fall
but on examination was found stock for their new department
not to be hurt • ery bad. store.
Mrs. Roscoe Squires visited her
parents, Mr- and Mrs. Kenney,
near Calumet, this week. Roscoe
went with her Saturday night
and returned Monday morning.
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Roff, Charles H. The Geary Bulletin. (Geary, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1910, newspaper, September 1, 1910; Geary, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1075880/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.