Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 1909 Page: 1 of 12
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UARNEY MNTERPRISE.
CANEY ENTERPRISE
Published Every Friday.
H. S. HERBERT.
Editor
Entered July 10, 1903 at Carney,
Oklahoma,as second class matter,un
der act of Congress March 3, 1903.
Death In Corn Stalks.
Almost every fall reports are num-
erous of the death of cattle shortly
after they have been turned into the
corn fields. While death in some of
these cases may be due to the work-
ing of an active poison which is not
as yet fully understood in a majority
of cases a postmortem examination of
the affected animals would show that
death resulted from impaction of the
stomach and bowels. To guard
against this continuence the caUle
SUBSCRIPTIC^ RATES.
one year $1 6 months 50 | should be provided with an abundance
3'months~25c
of salt while they should have easy
access to all the water they can drink
and even be driven to the supply to
make sure they get it. This will fur-
, make sure mey gci n. x ma
Call up J. W. Jewett by phone n.gh lhe system sufficient liquid to
_ J . .. a ? L i fn/IHpr*
when you want stove.wood
Does the New Year look bright to
you?
One hundred and forty-seven mil
Hons of dollars was paid out for live
stock at Kansas City in 1908
handle the' digested com fodder",
which is at best dry and absorbs much
moisture. Care in this matter of
providing an abundance of salt and
water will often prevent serious loss.
—Prague Patriot.
_ The second session of Oklahoma's
Sparks is six years old and it had | legislature convened at Guthrie at
its first fire last week. Loss $3,500. noon on Tuesday. The officers of
Sooner or later the wood business L^e upper and lower houses, are :
blocks ot towns will be burned. President pro tem of the Senate
It would be a mighty fine thing if Clint Graham
everybody could start in the New Speaker of the House -Ben Wil
Year with all accounts settled. How- son. ^
ever some can't and others won't. Speaker of the House pro tem
It is now believed in Washington Ben Harrison.
the special session of Congress to re
vise the tariff will be called almost
immediately after the inauguration
of Mr. Taft as president
A Detroit jurist has decided that
the engagement r.ng is the personal tor a constitutional auicuu
property of the man until the we - t- them the right t0 vote.
din? ceremony is performed lhen «=
the girl owns the ring and everything I A Ne. York dispatch say,: Mary
Minority Leader in Senate Harry
Beeler.
Minority Leader in House E. M.
Clark.
Women in force are attending the
session of the state legislature work-
ing for a constitutional amendment
else.
With the going out of the year 1908
sees the finish to leap year and it will
be four long years before its return
paper mills throughout the east and
northeast will be forced to close on
aiciu it of a shortage of water sup-
ply. Many have already been forced
oe luui 1—6 j— - - | . down Another advanced
The old tuaids, many of them, will {or within a few
marked at 39 cents and buyer. | of wood plllp, to.
creased consumption and now a short-
age of water has been the cause of
publishers
great concern among
throughout the country.
The people who expect their news
De
vill be scarce.
We are drawing a full breath now
md taking it easy. A fellow bac
east has been making some awful pre-
dictions. He said the world would
be destroyed in December. If it was . .
we haven't heard of it, though they paper to constantly boost the town
did have quite a shake-up over in should deal with the paper in a spirit
Italy the other day. of reciprocity and assist in whatever
Broomcorn brokers have cornered way possible that it may measure, up
,, , • Tiiinm* and to the requirements of a newspaper,
fd™ has^offered $130 a^onj There is manifested in most p,ace.
for 1,000 tons bought a, S8250. As .do
high as $150 is offered at Pans for 'ocal PaPer wnen .
6 . -riH then ignore it unless it can oe
first-class brush, and there is l.Uie .
for sale. Broom factories hav".ed^ rfg Jy fesent ,Mh
raised the price of the lowestgrades _Brownwood (Tex.) Bul-
50c a dozen, and a oorrssponding in-
crease by retailers is expected.— II- 'letin-
Business men desiring the services
of a stenographer or bookkeeper can
get first class help by applying to the
Capital City Business College Em-
ployment Bureau, Guthrie, Okla.
This school maintains one of the most
complete Employment Bureaus to be
found anywhere; it is prepared to
furnish graduates fresh from the
school that are thor^ugh'y trained in
the most modern business methods,
or furnish, experienced help in almost
any line of business that could be
named. It maintains this employ-
ment bureau so that it may place its
graduates as soon as their course is
finished, and should, they not be
placed in pos'tions paying sufficient
salary to justify their remaining
there, then it may secure -for them
better paying positions after they
have had some experience.
The graduates of the Capital City
Business College are not like those of
the ordinary commercial school. In
our stenographic department, very
thorough work is done, after the stu-
dent has passed satisfactory exam-
inations in all the shorthand, type-
writing, and literary work, he is
placed in the Model Office, where he
is given special office drill eight hours
a day from two to four weeks. Stu-
dents of the Bookkeeping and Bus-
iness Training department, after fin-
ng the regular work outlined, are
put in an Expert Department in
charge of a man of much business
experience, who gives them from two
to four weeks' special office training
for clerical work. The combined
courses graduate of Bookkeeping and
Shorthand has the advantage of the
training in both the expert and model
office departments, and when he is
turned out from our school, he will
do better work than the ordinary bus-
iness college graduate after he has
had one year's experience. There
is no school in the U. S, that has a^
high requirements for graduation a
the Capital City Business College.
There is none that gives so much
training in modern office appliances.
The services of the Employment
Rureau are free to both student and
employer.
ruts
OUR DEPOSITS ARE PRO-
TECTED BY THE GURANTY
FUND OF THE STATE OF OK-
LAHOMA.
TIME IS 5LIPPING AWAY
«r™r>YoU CANT OPEN A
BANK ACCOUNT
YESTERDAY.
TOMORROW
NEVER COMES
|lJ0 ^
The president of the largest
shoe house in the world saved part
of his money when he clerked in
a store. The man he worked for
liked this and took him into part-
nership. About forty years ago
he had saved Ten Thousand Dol-
lars. To-day he is worth nearly
Ten Millions. Make your own
moral.
WAi^E UP,
At least long enough to start a
bank account. It wont matter so
much if you go to sleep then, for
in our care your money never
sleepS—it works day and night.
Call at any time—better right
now, though, while you're think-
n3 about it — ni let us explain
our methods,
CARNEY STATE BANK
CARNEY, OKLAHOMA.
Nobody knows of the holes to
mend, nobody knows of the buttons
lost; nobody knows of the babes to
tend, nobody knows of the socks to
darn ; nobody knows of the patching
done ; nobody knows-here, we'll end
j this yam nobody knows—but Mother
linois Exchange. This beats cotton.
Broomcorn can be raised here in Ok-
lahoma and grows as prolific as in
any state.
Rev. Billy Sunday has refused an
offer of $40,000 from a lyceum bureau
for next seasons lectures of the chau-
tauquas
i .j i i' 11 i ttttt i t**'"*1''*4'***1***
O- A. McCOWN>
-DEALER 1N--
General Merchandise.
> Agent for Carhart Overhalls and ;
Work Suits.
The only place in town where j
you can buy the Bell Brand of
celebrated Shoes.
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, January 8, 1909, newspaper, January 8, 1909; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc142403/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.