Bartlesville Daily Enterprise. (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 13, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 17, 1912 Page: 5 of 6
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WANTS
j. Advertisements nnder these
(headings cash, Three lines, three
(evenings, twenty-five cents; six
lines, three evenings, fifty cenU.
HELP WANTED
| WANTED—Offire boy at Enterprise
Oil' ice. Apply, to (ofoniao. I?
I WANTED—Pafeitlou as delivery boy
I 6r work in Blor<\ Threo years ex-
| perlence. Addrese W. G. care of En-
terprise. i 18*
W A N'T KD-^w o rk of any hind by mid-
dle aged woman. PUone 2U8-J. IS*
WANTED—Uood Kirl for general
housework. Call at 920 Keeler ave-
rt uo. Phone 371 -J. 15
A Colossal Schsme.
The prrat highway of the commerce
•f ths future will be the Pacific ocean.
Mighty capitalism throughout the
J * orid are putting their heads together
to ereet the most colossal system for
wireless telegraphy In the world. The
aystem contemplates the linking to-
gether of all points along the western
coast of America from Bering ben to
tUe Straits of Magellan, and •panning
the isles of the ocean, to link with this
cbaiu the whole easterly shore of
Asia, running ou down to the Straits
Settlements. The contemplated sys-
tem will cost In the aggregate many
million* of dollars.
WANTED—Night cook at the Famous
cafe. Must tnake pastery. 15
WANTED—Girl for housework in
family of two. Call.at No. 221
Seminole avenue. 15*
WANTED—A uite .of furnlahod room?
with some use of piano, in modern
howe with, prtvftte family, central lo-
cation preferred. Phone 204 after 1
p. ra. in*
WANTED—Experienced roustabout:
with reference. House, «as and wat-
er free. $85 per month. Bert's Em-
ployment Agency. 15
WANTED—Six good rigbuilders, one
oil country teamster and one good
roustabout, ififtiiiro. at Bert's Km-
ployifteiiL puruag, M7 Johnstone ave«
line'' ■ *'■ W' 13
WAITED—-Boarders and roomers at
Cherokee avenue. 14*
AVANTED—To rent four or five room
modern housu, Wqn|d W&JW ar
Rurk'a Pppter Adv. Co. Box 2S2. 13'
FOR SALE.
FOR SALE—Whole car I a [ixl' 6t ca "b-
liAgo. One hundred pounds. $2.00
Bartlesville Produce- Co.. phone S44
If
FOR SAIjI&tI k'QOil. matcii . sorrel
horse team, .8 or 9 years old, weigh1
900 lbs., with buggy and harness
Bert's Employment Agency. If
FOlfsAMiJ— 2 lojf on Third^reet or
car Hue?. jtfmL Prlw
$11 <& each t^dclfrt^ows oi
ItorAs. B*rn^.Jpmi>%njpit' .iAjHincy.
I lr
FOIf SALE— 2 chair barber shop
Wftl sell ch«ap.. Call -100 Keller o'
Photic S-'-H. It*
FOtS^SALfc—1 six foot dinner, I kit#h
eil table, l kitchen cabinet, I sprini
cot',''1! large shade new. Inquire a'
theiFislier house. Dewey, Okla.. 14'
port SALE-A good barn, size 10x2
trith loft. 1316 Armstrong or phon<
■ ■ ■* v-_ ■■ 14s
.
Forf SALE OR TRAllfr-ICO :acre#,8f
acres in Cultivavton, Via lane* it
grass, small ihtprovemeuts, nine mile<
front Ness City, Ness county. Kansas
Price only $30,0(1 jjer acre. Will take
up to one-hatf in trade for Bartles
ville residence property worth th*
money, carry balance on the land
Inquire of E. 8. Cousino, Dewey, Okla
' ltf'
FOR RKNT.
FOR RENT—Nicely furnished room?
in- modem hotlse. Phone 10. 18t.f.
FOB RENT—A large room and close<
use of bath and parlor, and hreak
fast- privilege. Phone 671-J. 15"
FOft RENT-Three room house clos<
in* nicely furnished for 1 i hi house
keeping, moderfli. Phone 321 or N?
Mrs,; Drum,, £:'
FOR RENT—Light .housekeepinf
rooms inv.roo4ern house. Phone 389
422;Johnstone avenue. I5'
TWO furnished rooms for lifcht hous
keeping. Call 512 Jennings ave. 18
FOR RENT—After Sept. 20 a foil
roOm house. Phone 190. 14
FOR; 11ENT- -Upper south flat it
Saltan. aparthieuts after October J
Write R. S„jCiqg.,cUy i ^
FOli RENT—Two furnished rooms fo'
light housekeeping Inquire 10f
Cherokee avenue. or Phone 357-R. 14'
FOR RENT—TWO furnished room'
for light .housekeeping. Moderr
Phone 558-J-«r call at I IS, Creek. 13
FOR RENT—Two unfurnished room-
112 West 9th street. 13* '
FOR. RENT—Nicely furnished sleep
in# rooms. Phone 4595-J. Mrs. C. L
Kelleni. gt<
FOHf RENT—Large, cool outsid
rooms. Elite Rooms, Mrs. Rose H11
burn, proprietor. Phone 2S2-R. 3tt
LOftt"—Red cow with white spots ir
t'atte. Return to Ira Clendenning
Smedtertown. $10.00 reward, lnquirt
Wolcbtl's sTore, Smcltertown. 18-
Autorrobile Econorr.y.
About the only thing iu owning an
automobile is that the old tires raaj
be taken Into the bouse for the batn
to chew on.—Galveston News.
lmpatier.ee.
Some people beccme discouraged
jr-cause Opportunity doesn't responu
Aviator Has Close Call.
A Spanish aviator nearly lost bis
Uf§ by colliding with a swarm of lo-
custs. He was flying at a height of
sixty feet, when he ran into the
swarm, which sn blindeif him that
1 he lost control of the machine nd
J fell to the around. It was regarded
j as remarkable that he esqLped with-
! out injuries.
Justifiable.
"Why, It ts a nasty old photo. It's
not like me. 1 am better looking than
that," said a woman at Lambeth wbo,
•wheu charged with disorderly conduct,
handed the magistrate her photograph
to look at. "Look at that," she said,
Indignantly, "and see If you wouldn't
swear if you were took ltk« that."
Where He Belonged.
At the dinner table on board an
ocean liner one man was much an-
noyed by the vulgar manner In which
his next neighbor fed. He tried to
take no oollo« of the man, but after
■watching ltlm pick a bone in an ex-
tremely primitive fashion, he could
not control his feelings any longer,
and turning to the offender, he said:
"Don't you really think you would be
more comfortable If you took that
bone out on the mat?"—Youth's Com-
panion.
Home Life of the Birds.
Unlike most birds, the grebes do not
brood their eggs continually. It Is only
M, night and on cloudy days that you
Will ilncf them at home. As soon as the
ftun hife risen and 'warmed the chilly
morning air the oldHlrd leaves her
nest and, collecting decaying vege-
tation from the shore or bottom of the
lake, she covers the eggs with a thick
Iftjrer and leaves the sweltering mass
of streaming muck.-, to hatch them
while sh& spends the day iu idleness
o* play.
Beauty of Woodwork.
There is a frlondly atmosphere in
ifiiB presence of much woodwork—not
painted wood, but wood finished to
jhow the beauty of its natural growth
—that is entirely lost, in an expanse
of smooth, hard paint. Its mellow
lights and soft shade* form a far more
restful background than any papered
surface, and its strength and durabil-
ity make a wood finish Ideal for a
h&Use,!bat tf .to suggest the feeling of
l erm«HFnee*it<! stability that belong#
toUl^tm# howe.—-Suburban IJf«.
Eight Who Deserve Slaps.
Eight men who deserve to. be slap-
,*>'d on the f«ce;# He who despises a
man of power; he who enters a house
'uninvited and unweloomert; he who
jives orders in s' house not hi* own:
^-frltoTakej a' seat abover hi# posi-
tion ; he who speaks to oae who does
not listen to him; h vwbo.intrudes on
• be conversation of others; he who
neeks favors from 'he ungenerous, and
I* Avho expects love from his ene-
mies.—From a Persian Saying.
Hunters Born, Nat Mads.
A "hunter ti Born, not made. fTn-
Jess a man has the love of the chase
bred in his blood he's not going to get
any bhis ribbons pinned on him for
sportsmanship, Bom* men take to th«
trail as naturally as a duck beats It
to kli? puddle after cracking the egg
shell. Then there are others who nev-
er seem to learn the game—they
think they like to hunt but when you
get them into the tall and unluna-
bered, thay prove to be misfits who
are eternally doing the wrong thing
at the inopportune time.—National
Sportsman.
House Plans Important.
The care of food in (he home and
•II oth^r forms of household work are
greatly facilitated by riglit planning
and then the use of suitable materials
for the construction ar.ri furnishing or
> the home. An adequate and conve-
nient water suppl\ and otlter conve-
niences are essential, not only top
comfort and. for ^vlng labor, tint also
front the standpoint of home; hygiene.
How Character Is Formed.
Clmracters are achieved—not re-
ceived. They grow out of the sub-
stance of a man's soul. They are riot
put on as a beggar might put on a
stolen foat. They nistnre like frnlt
from the vital fluids of the tree. Tbl*
Is a sign of the^r gumilneRfsi; they
glow with uw. A falgtf limb wvars
out, wastes with liKf. a natural limb
glows stronger and better with U*«,
Character Is an achievement.
Preserving Wood.
Instead ot treating wood to pre-
serve It from rot. an iuventor of Bu-
dapest arrives at the same result by
a reversal of the operation, for he
treats the earth to surround the posts
in such a manner as to destroy all
germ and insect life. This process
serves as a substitute where it Is
difficult to secure the treated lumber.
It is called "peristerllixatlon."
KAISER &, LINDLEY
; WALL PAPER and
| Interior Decorating
: No. 509 Dewe Ave. Phone 285
Japan's National Drink.
Sake is the national alcoholic drinlc
of Japan. It is brewed from t i• < , ,'ind,
according to the latent available fig-
ures the annual production is about
810,000,000 gallons. Heer is In coming
popular, however, and there are sev-
eral large breweries, the total annual
•Utput being over 7,000,000 gallons.
Cleaning Waste Pipes.
Waste pipes may bo cleaned of soar
and slime by placing a handful o(
common salt in the bottom of the
basin over night. The salt will grad-
ually melt and the first flush of water
i|) the morning will clear the pipe.
The Wine of Good Humor.
iHonest good humor is the nil and
wine of a merry mfitting, and there
Is no jovial (ompanionshtp equal to
that where the Jokes are ratli> r small
and the laughter abundant.—Washing-
ton Irving.
Hard Times. ' S
'Well," said Hlnklev affably to the
old countryman to whom he was giv-
ing a lift over the highway, "how's
farming around here?" "Bad." said
the countryman, "powerful bad. What
with the furm hands turnln' shuffers,
and the • farmers turnln' garragirs,
farnitn' sort of went out o' faslil'n
Hftrper'e Weekly.
Still Unexplored.
All the opportunities for adventure
are not over, though the north and
south poles have both been conquered.
In Africa there are 20,000,000 square
Wiles of land as yet unexplored. In
Lfheria a tract of 20,000 square miles
which is unknown.
His Motner.
The poet Goethe owed much of his
greatness to bis mother, a woman
well made to hear Muh a sou, a per-
feet mother, and, better still, his iu-
tlniHte friend an<t confidant. Uruugbt
up la strictly horgeois and limited cir-
cles. wit), very little education, such
was her natural Intelligence and ivm-
palhy that she afterwards became the
friend of princes, poets, and philoso-
phers, and her house a rendezvous for
the great miuds of her day
A Natural Death.
I Judge- "You say t:,e man died a
natural death?" Witness—"Yes, your
honor." Judge— "But I thought he
was shot?" Witness-"So he was,
jedge. But he was practicing on tlio
trombone ut the time."—Yonkers
| Statesman.
SMOKE A CUBAN BALED
If you are particular, try a high*
priced brand Do I qell them? Y<w
Frank Buller.206 Kecler Av*
Was a Dandy Story.
"He invented a'dandy story to tell
Ills wife when he got home afti*r mid-
night." "Good one, was it?" "A
peach; It would satisfy any wqman."
"Did It satisfy bei ; it would 've,
but he couldn't tell it."
Up-to-Date Burglars.
Burglars who 'forced tin entrance
Into a Jeweler's offlec in \>w York a
lew days ago carried with them an
electrically driven dtili for boring into
'.Ue safe, which they proceeded to ^se
successfully aftee ^connecting }t. y, ith
ati electric light socket.
Flirting With Fame.
. "Why do you iusi - ou nibbling
around that ho,ok?" said the wise
ti si i. "You know tlie danger." "Yes."
replied tl\etlittle fellow; ".but we all
bav« a certain appetite for glory. I
a;u. willing to. take a (luuic.- J'or the
calte of being deecribed to Unit mjyi's
friends as the big fish that gpt away."
Some Women.
Some women can't hear the odor of
gasoline until they gel an auto.—
Judge.
«/
OJdejt Inhabited
Kllketjn^i ctreKluf^ otte of the Eldest1
■ Irihabitid ,grumes'Jn ifwj -world, 'nmuy
of ;th^i r©Bms. b(^g:niiiitJi..as they
were 800 years ago.
'ti? Negroes Talk German.
j'ln 'the large German colonies In
Brazil-there are many eoal-black ne-
grcHNHvho can talk nothing but Ger-
man.
Clocks the Late Mikado's Hobby.
Small clocks were, tin- hobby of Alut-
sithito, the late emperor of .liymn. He
took the greatest interest iu entail
titne-pieces of every, kind and collect-
ed iso many of them that every room
is his palace heard their tiny tick-
ing.
Share jour good times if you can.
It takes only a little while to reud a
Story to a child, It takes only a little
effort to draw the less popular girl
luto your own gay circle. You will
be surprised to see what good fun
evcti (|t:lt< elderly people can bo tin*
der ihe stlmi^itlon of -being wanted
by the crowd."
The House tarty.
Post— "Why did > on dismiss your
glorious Cotik?" Parker—"It was the
only way to get our guest# to go
home."—Llpplncott's.
Losing Their Freedom. ..
All male British" subjects are hot*
free men, but a lot of them get niar>
ried.
So Appropriate.
Green peas are said to promote
frivolity. No doubt that Is why they
:re served with the silly and ine-
'ipoxtsible lamb.—Boston Transcript.
Erosion Lowes.
In'thirty-five yearH England has lost
acres by erosion, but litis has
been more than made up by the new
land which has formed during that
time.
Oh, That, Accent,
''How. do you know vlie is an Arnett
Icfift?" "I ltearcl her talking preach."
—Judg€.
<1. 1. <
Egyptian Telephone Operators.
y. Telephoue operators in Egypt are
I required to speaks English, French,
Italian, Greek arid .Arabic.
The Difference.
■ When a man falls ou a bit of orai.ge
ptel, the first thing he docs Is to look
back to see what if was; but the first
jibing a wotnan doc^is to'look around
to see if anyone aaW her.-*-The Tatler.
Aerial Malls in Italy.
Italy is experimenting with aerial
mails, an aviator recently carrying a
sack of letters 101 miles in 88 min-
utes.
Only a Burden.
"You liave no magnificent ruins
stteli as we have^jn JEnrope." "N'o,"
replied Mr. Cumrox "I thought of
putting up a 1$>v, but I gave it up.
They're mighty artistic looking, but
they're too hard to keep In repair."
n
\ Tender Bread Cruit.
Bread may be brushed over' with
nlelted ■ butter three minutes before
removing from the oven if a tender
crust is desired— National Magazine.
Bartlesville Abstract
Company
Bonded and Incorporated
A Share of Your Busi-
ness Solicited
HULING & EASTERLY
Managers
Also Realty, Insurance,
Loans and Bonds
Phone 464 3f5 Johnstone Ave.
$1.00 Ideal Hair brushes. ."Oc, at
■•Campbell's Red Cross drug store.
Poor Mother Earth,
A bargain in a golf rig lias decided
one girl to go in'for the ancient same
at a resort famous for (har sport.
(Published in th,; nartlesviUc Dally
Enterprise Sept. 11, 12, 13, 14, 1<>, 17.
118, 19, 20 and 21, 1!I12,1
ro rovnurroits
' Scaled proposals will be recelvQd
by tin,. City Clerk of the city of Dewey
up to eight (Si o'clock p. ni. of Tues-
day the - Ith day'of September, 11112.
as follows;
■ For the construction of a complete
^satiitiiry sewer s>sttsm, including dis-
posal plant lyr the iivcrtrporated town
Dewey, Oklahoma, in accordance
with the plans ami specification* now
.on file, with the tiity; Clork. i
Speclfica'ions, instmctionfli to bid -
dors, blank proposals; and'a complete
^et of, detailed ixlana and nrofiks are
on file; with the'CltyClbrk. Duplicate
eppies may be had from tfrePOfflce ol
the engineers, King & Company.
,Aify desiring A set, of sijjcification^
tn- personal ;ii^ in isuhmUti^g a bid
ot>t*ln the same Tty aifplicatlon to
the engineer and a payment of fivi
L($T..00) dollars to cover cost of prints,
Each bill iiViist i^Aiplnied bj$
a certifleij check of one thousand
(ij;000.(>0) dollars.
r^he city rose.ryfa .th^right to reject
any or all of any or any part, of any
bid received.
L. V. FORD, Mayor.
FnXts'K I.IXDSEY, City Clark
'King & Company, Engineers,
Coffeyville. Kan«r>"
Brown Shoe Go.'s
Star-5 Shoes
For Men, Women
Roys and Girls
Boys' and ^Misses'
$1.50 to $2.50
W. WOLCOTT
Second and Johnston* ,
Strset Rules lit Paris.
It. is a misdemeanor to throw a
piece of waste pap«r upon a Paris
street. If a policeman sees you drop
a piece of paper he walks up to you,
pats you oa the shoulder, begs your
pardon for. «4(ii*%ain« you,-tells ?°u
you have violated tlif law apd asks
you to i>U'k up what jfouhaw; thrown
dawn.
Saving Old Trays.
When a japannett trfty betomes elfi
ind chipped, give it two coats of
white paint, and one of enamel, the
oottom as well'aa the top. Stand it
on the edge to dry after each coat. It
*ilk be found aa good as new, as well
, as „Yery. pretty. The. enamel is easily
rwwwsd..
Msilteiir Attention.
"It has often baen said, with truth,
*at only two classes ol people receive
truly expert medical attendance—the
Tery rich an£.ttae verjr paor," writes
Walter .Pritchard fiat on in Muuse^'s
for October. "The very rich can af-
ford specialists ana trained nurses
The very poor are taken to million-
dollar hospitals, where the best is giv-
en to them, and then, perhaps, to con
valescent country homes. The rest of i
us are at the mercy of the general
practitioner and amateur nursing."
John Alden explained.
"I am an Instructed delegate." he
•aid. Not understanding politics,
Prlscilla manoeuvred a stampede.
Iu Intoxication a mau sees two flow-
ers where only one grew before; in
!ov« he sees a whole conservatory.
Alwaya Some Remedy.
Dr. Woods Hutchiiisori says th*f
poverty is a disease. Well, there is
the gold cure.—Judge.
Tins Sport for Girls.
The most exciting thing to a girl
about a flirtation la she might get In
} earnest any minute. I
- ?>- a
PARADE
Moore, Mellbony &
Thurnuo
AGENTS
National Surety Co.
America's Leading Surety
Company
Assets over $6,000,000
We bond more people than
any other surnt^ cumpany in
thfe woHd. "
Wo execute oil and g lease
bonds here.
Our representative fit Musko
jpee will always hefftad.tp (oolr
up department matters for.you
Sutton's Typewriter
Has for sale
Two eoyd Reffjingtuti
Typewriters, $25 each
One good Remington
Typewriter, $30
One Oliver Typewriter
$10
Typewriting,
Notary Public
Publicity Agency
Advertising Distributed
OFFICES
Fightway Hotel lobby
PHVSIl 'I A.VH A \ l> euiulXONS.^
~1
nR. T. O. WILSON
<T lKopractor
Hkon# 186 Office Rooms: '1
H t Empire Bldg;. 115% West
TWrd St The Slclence that lo-
«stes anu removes the Cayse jt
Disease.
r
OSTFOP'VTR.
tlNETTS! RPKVf BARTOM
Graduate
:t14 ii w. v'v^ ov 3r Bar;1
llle P^iml^ure Co
BM*. ' 1'HfVVf. i)9#
t
ok! B. L. 8HOBK,
Dentist.
R<V'fn a. Maeonir Bnlldlna
Phone 37R. |
4 . I
nn. n. . BLACHLV
DEXTIST
Slniuns-Foster Building Office I'hun*
819-J. Resident Phone Hl.R.
DM. V. H. roi.MXi,
DKVTIST.
Office. SInioiisJpostcr Bldg.
Phones: OfPitee 403; residence,
303-R.
' dlSS TKKKSA MASKIt #
ItefriicfloHist for tlH" late Dr, 0.
\r. j(a$&
| Glasses fitted at' 1S2a Main street
P'ABSO.V, KANSAS.
>1. B. HVYKS
Mecliuno Therapisf.
Treates Chronic Diseases. Rooms
223 aqd 2J4 sccond floor of the
Lannotn building.
I Dentistry a specialty. Phone U>.
DR. p. B, EASIiKY,
| Veterinarian.
: Office- FIRST and DELAWARE.
I Bax'tlfeg'fnie; t kl*!i6raa:"
^■r- k-ii-iUlSlJ. jJL J"
I, l'hone M«m« R s.-, btverf.f
UH. L. .*v 1MKILU
j t>rs<luatft of Jiantiaa City Vetera
| inary College. Successor to Dr.
i Theo Wllkle, Calls answered
| promptly at u houra. : : s :
LAWTBR8
«IAB. O. IVL14M.
'" LAWYBR. 41
Practice before all Courts and
Department 'W InteiW. Roome
S2, 48, 24 ' "American National
Bank Bulldlni Phone, Ntf. 871,
►B.Uttlr
J. K. Charlton BL C. PamU
CUAKLTOS A FAUBKUU
Attorneys at Law.
Postoffiee Bldg. Tketf Hf,
taw Ottrei df
VUAHHY, O HK\RA M. OWEN
1-2-H. I^Ml l>e<) Johnstone Hlrtg.
Bartles 1tl«. Okla.
■ .4 ■""" ;.
> (2^ F * Mr} J. fV t% •, k
Attorney and Coanaellor ^« ^ew.t
Practice to state and federal t
«o rte. ^utte-TJTlO and SI |
Kins Bid*', Na! JW'ISst'.Third T
Street, Bartlesville, Okl^tjom^
til
With the Ringling Circus which will be in Bartlesville, Monday, September 2$
,\V'e Loan Money on Any Kiodw
of Valuable Articles. !See
our line Line of Suit
Case*, Trunks
and Hand
Bums
. . , PHJK . .
OLD RKIJA1JI.K l/ \V CO,
121 West Second Street.
W, L, M1LLKK, - Proprtelwr I
F. F. POMEROY
The leadiif ?
Blacksmith ' '
All kinds of carnage work
and painting,
Genera! blacksmithing and
Woodwork.
Horseshoeing and kubber,
Tire Work a Specialty.
PIwm 416 307 Short Ave.
Bartlesville Interorbar.
Railway.
' •
"•rill Time CarC *)
DttWjflV,
Urat car lea aa st -Ha
l.aat Car leaves aj ... v, '
BARTLE8VTLL8.
first car ieavee a* « a. in
Laai Car leaves at ... IS:|C v. aa
Can leave at 1J 30 and X o'clock
rtr yower bouse only. Cars leavt
starting points on the hou^ vid halt
^our, making a aalf hour «erTt««i
'rom ?ach pla^e. First car for 3n el
'orOjwn Is.wei S.'int". Pe lepot at •
* ev^ry half ho ir until 11 1*
• ui Leave SmeUsrtown fftee.
mlnutss to and after hoar
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Leach, J. S. Bartlesville Daily Enterprise. (Bartlesville, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 13, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 17, 1912, newspaper, September 17, 1912; Bartlesville, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc140971/m1/5/: accessed November 6, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.