The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 19, 1920 Page: 1 of 8
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VOL. 19
LONE WOLF, KIOWA COUNTY. OKLAHOMA. THURSDAY AUG. 19. 1920.
NUMBER 37
A BIO SUGCESS
i
L
BOUNTY AFFAIRS
—• iiiraiioU from th«* llobAU DaUWb
Business Management ot Farmers
to Operative Association Mak
iog Muncy (or Stockholders
From the very start the home
Organization has been aggress-
ive and alert, working in
harmony all along the line. The
association was not
IN DISTRICT COURT
George W. Dodd, convicted of
manslaughter, and George H.
Boinick, found guilty of the
theft of K. E. Conner's automo-
bile, formally received their sen-
tence* at the hand* of Judge
Edwards, in' the district court
was not perfected | Saturday morning, after motion*
until late in the season hut lost fur ro w trials in both the cases
Our Banking Facilities
Offer every convenience for
the transaction of business
and personal banking.
i :
L4t us have your
Co-operation |
sv
— I
I
JOHN VV. HIGGINS, §
Cashier
ORIENT STATE BANK
no time in establishing head
quarters and opening business,
and in the short space of
one month has
wonders.
Manager McBride has been
called here, yonder and every-
where in order to care for the
interests of the association. In
his absence C. H. Fry. secretary-
treasurer, with the assistance of
his daughter, Miss Aimee, has
looked after the office business.
They have all been busy as bees,
and we are sure the stockholders
appreciate their efforts.
Necessarily there has been
( more or less confusion in start-
| ing this business on a safe and
permanent basis but along downjings in the case have been thru
had been overruled by the court.
The former received a sentence
of 12 years and the latter the
accomplished minimum tern fur stealing an
automobile 5 years, Attorneys
for the defendants immediately
nave notice of appeal, and bond
was fixed pending the comple-
tion of the case made.
Dodd’s bond was placed at
$6,000 and within a half hour
after receiving his sentence his
ftiends, qualifying for more than
$40,000 secured his freedom. Bos-
nick’s bond was fixed at $2,500,
and his attorney, Geo. ge Martin
of Gotebo, says the question of
bond rests entirely with Bosnicks
father in Massachusetts as deal
J. C. JACOBS,
President
L. H. HIGGINS
. •
WE HAVE THE FAMOUS
MOLINE TRACTORS AND PLOWS
A FEW DISC HARROWS, CHEAP
L. H. HIGGINS
Howdv!!
I am the
"Little
Trained Nurse"
I am going to tell
you where tobuy
all of your
Drue Sforefliinfe
You 'will see me
every Week
EVERYTHING IN DRUGS, als<f COLD DRINKS
LIVE AND LET LIVE DRUG 8T0RE LONE WOLF
c
IIY MEAT MARKET
aid ICE PUNT
the road there will be easy sail-
ing. The obstacles now in the
way will have been brushed
aside.
The association is now getting
its just ‘hare of empty cars and
the farmers are getting the
benefits of this co-operative
movement, even at this stage of
the game. Greater rewards will
follow as more favorable condi-
tions come about, and the associ-
ation is given proper recognition
in the business world.
At the end of the first thirty
days the manager informs us 15
car loads of wheat had been
shipped, saving to the farmers
profits to the amount of $5,000
This is indeed encouraging and
shuuld cause the farmers to sit
steady in the boat.
Special Rates to Soldiers
Special rates have been grant-
ed by the railroads from all
points in Oklahoma and Texas to
all veterans of the 90th Division
attending the Second Annual
Reunion of the 90th 1 division
which is to be held in Oklahoma
City, September 25, 26 and 27.
These dates nuyk Ihe tiist three
days of the Oklahoma State Fair
and in addition to this attraction
Mayor Walton has promised to
make it * ‘the best entertainment
ever given anyone and that the
city will be turned over to the
former soldiers during their en-
tire stay in the city.”
him.
MANAGEkS oik; \nize
As a result of a meeting in
Hobart yesterday of Farmers
Qo-Operati ve associations over
the county, a permanent organi-
zation of manage! s was formed
to be known as the Manager*
Co-Operative Association of Kio-
wa County, with O W. Talley us
pre& lent and L. E. Charlton,
secryary.
rf* purpose of the forming of
this organization is to bring the
vatious managers closer together
and to act in a more genuinely
co-operative way than could be
possible with each association
acting independently of the oth-
ers. This is illustrated by the
action taken at the meeting,
wlion the managers of the com-
bined association decided to or-
der five car loads of pure Kanred
wheat seed for distribution.
The organization will meet
once each month in Hobart, on
each second Tuesday, and will
discuss matters pertinent to their
business.
Ten representatives of the
Commercial Club lunched at the
Nash hotel today at 12:15 and
decided to assume responsibility
for the Kiowa County Free Fair
which is to be given at a cost of
$2500.
Payiriots Who Argue by Epithet
Law Notes, published for the
legal profession, reads a lesson
to those who apply such epithets
as bolshevist, anarchist, socialist,
pro-German to any and every-
thing they disapprove of, as big
business is continually guilty of
doing. Law NoteB warns the
the
Kiowa Bill, accompanied by
members of the Caddo, Coman-
che and Apache Indian tribes,
have gone to Columbus, Ohio,
for a conference with an attor-
ney, relative to tribal matters.
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! ORIENT STATE BANK
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® J. C. Jacobs, Pres. John W. Higgins, Cashier _
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WHO PAYS THE FIDDLFR ?
You do, if you fail to provide the proper protection for
your home, your business property or your farm with ad-
equate Fire Inauranee.
Has it ever occurred to you that the policy you placed
.vears ago only half protects your property to-dav?
Materials and labor are advancing and your old policy
would no more than half replace your property in tha
event it should burn to-night.
Think this over. Come in and talk it over with ui.
Learn the Art of Life.
T.lfe Is so full of Itt-aut if ill stories
thut It Is Inconceivable that there
should be any need of fiction or any
other form of art. Life Itself Is an
art and requires artists to live It.
There are few of these und that may
account for written art.
People who can live on the piano of
their agreements and avoid the plane
of their antipathies make life an art.
There was cobbler friend of ours,
poor, honest, witty, a philosopher and
withal handsome. He had n wonder-
fully Rifted, beautiful sister and she
married a force.ful “plute,” who was
devoted to her and whom she loved
as truly us she loved her brother, the
shoemaker. The shoemaker was a
leader in a radical reform movement;
the plute was the leader of the oppo-
sition. The shoemaker disdained any
sort of financial l«elp from his broth-
er in-law, hut being an old bachelor,
lived In the plute's house, sharing a
happy family life. There was never a
discordant word uttered, because these
three tacitly avoided topics on which
they did not agree. They knew the
art of life.—Chicago News.
Grateful Carlo.
In Kentucky three men were shot
to death in a light about a dog which
one of them hud killed. Some men
never live long enough to learn thut
when u dog becomes personal prop-
erty the tie of pride and affection
makes the animal u serious proposi-
tion to be trilled with, and that many
men were bom to love dogs. This re-
minds us that In the happy days of
boyhood our most faithful and de-
voted friend was an old pointer named
Carlo. Never did we eat a lunch
out of doors without sharing it with
the devoted Carlo, und that noble
and loving dog Invariably manifested
his gratitude by shaking himself vig-
orously and letting us In u reciprocal
wuy have ubout 50 per cent of his
most active fleas.—New Orleans
States.
Socialist State Paper
The long promised Oklahoma
Leader, a socialist daily comes
out from Oklahoma City this
week. Lon Poling asks the
New* to state that he will take
subscriptions to the Leader in
this community, beginning Sat-
urday.
Character is getting to ba old-
fashioned, with efficiency absorb-
ing the attention of every one.
The two combined stand for ail
that is best in the world. Effici-
ency by itself becomes a damn-
able thing because it ceasea to
be human,—Dr. A. £- Cbi ds. |
Free Trade Course! offered
throughout year in Auto Mechan-
ics, Storage Batteries, Engineer-
ing and Welding. Splendid Auto
and Tractor equipment, Big
Machine Shop. Courses also
offered in Mining, Chemistry
and Oil Geology. Dormitory and
Dining Room accommodations.
For Catalogue address Mead S.
Johnson, State School of Mines,
Wilburton, Oklahoma.
Millinery! See those new
leather hats, and those phish
hats, also a fine stock of velvet
hats. Same Main street build-
ing. See me for dress-making,
Mrs, Higgins,
mm
Frank W. Mason, living five
miles southeast of town, has just
finished threshing his wheat
crop, which averaged over 42
; bushels an acre. On 15 acres Mr.
We are now in our new quarter and
better prepared to give you service
than ever before. Don’t forget that
we sell
t
I The lies! of
| FRESII MEATS
I Patronize home industry and be happy
| Schmidt Bros. Proprietors
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interests who are cryingj Mason thrMhed 638 buahela of
wolf when there is no wolf, that high Krade wheat.
“after hearing these terms nns- _______
applied and perverted to every Slati8tic8 and the dai|y paper9
selfish purpoee. the irreat mass (e|| u8 bul(,lary i8 becomini( a
of citizens will become distrusted p00rer way raj8e ready monev.
and finally turn a deaf ear to The tota| net regult 4g8 bur(f|ar.
warnings which deserve to be
heeded.”
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This law journal finds that the
most dangerous enemy of the
movement for better American-
ism is the man who seeks to take
advantage of it to advance some a profiteer.—Ex.
commercial interest.—Cappers
Weekly.
les in various parts of the coun-
try netted an average of scarce-
ly $75 each, and every one of
these burglars was sent to the
penitentiary. The only safe and
really remunerative way to rob
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Constant Saving
Is a Constant March
To Independence
00000000000$
Swing into the saving column to-day.
March right into the First National
Bank and save your deposit in that
direction.
Sometime in the future, when you need
it badly, it is at your disposal.
Let this Bank act as custodian of ycur
funds.
Save the pennies and someone
else will take care of the dollars
for you.—Suggestion from the
New Frankiin Biography.
Price and Percentage.
Increase of price when measured In
percentage is very often incorrectly
given. When the price doubles the In-
crease Is 100 per cent, hut many peo-
ple describe it Is an Increase of 50 per
cent.
I First National, Bank
OF LONE WOLF
E S, M. Alexander, Cash. R. G. Lovejoy, Asst. Cash.
E. C. Teape, Pres.
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Hornbeck, W. W. The Kiowa County News. (Lone Wolf, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 19, 1920, newspaper, August 19, 1920; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1173578/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.