The Herald-Sentinel. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 14, 1916 Page: 7 of 10
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THE CORDELL HERALD-SENTINEL
defeat at the hand of tho Clinton I Tlio lumber for thu Christian
team ma game played in the j church arrived last week ami it-
Dixie Opera House last Friday j's intended to begin work on the
m f '«"& in'2ht- 88 to 35 was the final chur<.-h at once.
Mli -core, hardly sufficient to make1, Urd l,iv.vs,,s- , S?«8«SC ,nills'1
dgp ; <lloi f . . . 1 , | buicner knives, laid stamis and
- el for a good heai-tv gloat on MiehigltI1 8alt if bou(/t at H.
tne part of the winner but never- Gernort's will make |u>g killing
theless enough to file the game time a pleasure.
Sixty Year? i'n 5
)0B MEwOi
mm
MafJe frcin srsam of tartar
derived from grapes.
NO ALUM
Presbyterian Church.
Wind and cold failded to spoil
a good Sabbath for us-last week.
Both morning and night there
were good congregations, and
the services were bright and
cheerful, Preaching concerning
A Presbyterian's View of Salva-
tion at the morning service, the
Pastor pointed ovt that this was
taken directly from the Word of
God.
At night a good crowd listened
attentively to a discourse upon
"The Most Important Question
in the World To-day". The
preacher, taking his text from
the well know question of Pilate
"What shall I do with Jesus,
which is called Christ? pointed
out that this same question is
running on through all ages and
that each individual man, woman
boy andjgirl has eventually to
answer it. Other questions
change, or are finally answered
and forgotten but this one rings
on and on through all the ages
till the end of time.
The month of December is set
asside by the General Assembly
• of our Church as the time for
offerings for the Ministerial Re
lief Fund. Early this yea r an
Elder of the Church promised
that he would give to this fund
in order to strenghthen the en-
dowment fund from which the
work of this Board is mostly
carried on, the sum $68,000 if the
entire Church would during the
year 1916 contribute $136,000 to
the same fund. A very special
appeal is being made at this time
to endeavor to raise this sum of
money, and with this end in view
the Pastor will next 'Sabbath
preach a sermon upon this sub-
ject at the morning service and
the offerings all day will be de-
voted to the cause.
At night the subject will be
'■The real secret of a consecrated
Life". Do you want to learn
this secret? Then do not fail to:
hear this sermon. It \tells of |
preparation to face life's trials,
dangers and temptations in the
way that He faced them who
lived the sinless life on earth.
A hearty welcome awaits
everybody who worships with us
at any time
W. T. Pearman, Pastor
away in the won column.(Just a
little too much speed on the part
of the enemy and a mistaken
idea that they were forwards,
indulged in by Cortell's guards,
were the contributing causes.
Tne preliminary bout between
Clinton's second team and Cor-
dell's second string Dlayers also
went to the invaders by a score
of 15 to 13. Both were excep-
tionally fast exhibitions close
enough from the start to the
final whistle to rivet the atten-
tion of the audience.
To Start Construction.
Work on the new Christian
church will be started in the very
The Epworth League is grow-
ing in attendance aud interest. It
meets every Sunday night at 6 MO
and you -are missing something i
when you stay away.
Fine Colorado potatoes at $2.
a hu. Best guaranteed flour .$4^75
a hundred at Gernert's. In fact
we sell good fresh groceries as
cheap as you can buy them any-
where.
Jim Cook says if shoes are go-
ing to double in price I '11 buy
some now and forthwith bought
himself three pairs. You had
better invest some of your high
price cotton and wheat in a lib-
eral amount of the supplies you
will need for a year.
Dr. Leverton has recently add-
ed a fine male pig to his herd of
-"V ivvu ill vuw *61 Jr V vi II Hill- man IV 1IJ^ JI LI v I Ul
near future according td the com- "ui'ocs. This pig lias some of the
mittee in charge of building ,llHt ean he found auy-
Durinir the mim. nf vv:,,MC' his sirt* being the world's
During the course of construc-
tion the services of the church
will be held in the Harrel build-
ing on the northeast corner of
the courthouse square.
A Carloa' of
WAGONS
We unloaded a car load
df the justly celebrated
PETER SCHUTTLER
and
MITCHELL WAGONS
There is no wagon on the market that will com-
pare with either of these two makes when it
comes to easy running and durability. They
have stood the test for years and at no time fal-
tered in their excellence. Buy one of these
wagons and you are assured in having the best.
They can be seen at our sales room .' . .'
Methodist Church
We are planning for special
services at the Methodist Church
Sunday Morning and Sunday
night. This is the first Sunday
before Christmas Sunday and we
want every one present if possi-
ble. The subject of the Morn-
ing sermon is "The Holy City"
Subject at Night, "The Land
to Which He C^me."
Special music has been provi-
ded for both services. The song
"The Dream of Paradise" will be
sung at the morning hour and at
night "The Palms".
Come to these services and you
Will be better preparkd to enjoy
Christmas. We are making
special effort-to get the people
out and are counting on a great
crowd. Come!
C. T. Davis, Pastor.
Cordell Team Defeated
In one of the hardest fought
battles tf the season the Cordell
feirh*lK l kuket Ml ire act
Cloud Chief.
From ihe Bulletin.
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Walters
have a new boy borne Dec. 2nd.
Kuttertop bread in sanitary pa-
per for sale at H. Gernert's.
C. S. Evans attend^ the Short-
horn sale at Mt. View Tuesday.
Lantern* that the wind can't
blow out at Gernert's.
Ben Richardson went to Okla-
homa City to work in a garage."
Buy oyster shell to make your
chickens lay, from II. Gernert.
Get some Dennison decorations
ut Gernert's to help make the
home look Christmassy.
Mr. O. Graves and Mrs. Delia
Jones were married the day be-
fore Thanksgiving.
R. P. Maddox has just about
completed the improvements on
his residence in the east part of
town.
There will be preaching at the
Methodist Church morning ami
night of the fourth Sunday.
grand champion at the Frisco
fair, and his dam shows breeding
from champions and grand cham-
pions as far back as«you can look.
This pig should develop into a
1000 pound hog and we feel sure
that he will add class to his herd
HERRING & YOUNG
BETTER TO 'EVEN THINGS UP"
THAN EVEN THEM DOWN.
'' v ■ -
Wp ONLY BOY1
' ^ ^Writer Recalls Old Tin „
Stood In Rw Room t
VpN. *1
FfmeWiiei' ui« oM tin
stood In the corner of the aiulng
Ji Is fttm til use to Fi'i'i. frjctl
the cairn''1? T« jt we ir>. •*? i
encounter it so frequently as i
The lcechest has taken Its place,
^he china closet and the pant*?;,
hinde It obsolete for the m«Wt
.J.'WHIW-saai^.iiitMS&V. llllB—lliaiHII|IIMMB||||im II,,
$1.50 MMTIiLY MAGAZINES
And Our Paper-All One Year
Remembrr Mother
You may have in-
tended to visit at the
old home during the
but find that circum-
stances have mane oth-
er arrangements and
the visit must be put off.
Why not send a photo-
graph. How much of
the;disappointment that
would wipe out and the
heartache relieve.
Molen Never Fails
but makes a photogr
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all, Try us.
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Photographers in your town
HOME LIFE
Get The Most For Your Money
# .fu,'8 v"^ ®^vanta&e 'hi® remarkable offer now, you make a cash saving
mJl w . " ,yea7.1UhTpt,0n t0 our paper "nd t0 ,hese four 'Plendid
magazines—a total value of $2.60 for only $1.50.
0ff*r °Pen ,0 013 "nd ncw ,ubscriber ' I' you are already a «ub-
sctiber to any of these magazines, your subscription will be extended one vol
troiu date of expiration. '
°?er ,als° ,includes ? FREE dre« Pattern. When you receive your first
py of Today s select any drejs pattern you desire, send your order to Today's
Mn&azme, fcivinfc them the size and number of the pattern and they will t«nd it
Advice Given Youth Who H-.d Re.
eclved Small Legacy Is Well w'orth
Heeding by the Man Who
Would Win Succcss.
—— j Minuv SI WUBIMCIC 1UJ lilt? U1UWV
In an article in the American Maga- Hut It was a wonderful invention
zlne ii writer says: [day—and the enid food you could __
"When mi old uncle of mine died 1 out of it when nobody wns looking
and left me n little bequest of five j the nest food in the world,
hundred and forty-live dollars, my Hpit 'he Dayton (O.) News.
impulse was to 'even It oft;' and If ft ] A flimsy sort of thing so fhr
hadn't been for an old friend of my i woodwork wus concerned; ch<
father's I think I would have succeed- i 'nr lumber stained with a ch
ed in neatly paring It down to zero. , nlsh—that Is about all it amot_
"'What were you thinking of doing j with sheets of tin punched full
with that money?' he asked casually holes like a nutmeg grater. It i
one day. namentiil, nil right, with all
"'Well,' I replied, 'I think I'll just shortcomings, for the boles
take that forty-five dollars and go for "" —"—
a Utile lake trip, aud then I'll have
five hundred dollars to put in the
bauk.'
"'Why five Hundred dollars?' he
said. 'Why not five hundred and l'orty-
flve dollars?'
"'Oh,' I replied, 'you might ns well
have an even amount.'
"'Do you suppose you could spare
me five dollars?' he asked suddeuly.
'"Why, yes,' I replied, n little sur-
prised that he should a.sk to borrow
money of me; but I handed it to liliu. •"""■■j «uuu u™81h
'"AH right, then,' he said; 'here'.i !UPP'« « uoe I hat was in evlde
five dollars'—handing me back thai j !ll"nR nbout "'Is time of the yj
same btll. 'If you'll just ptat this with 0nals certainly liked apple snnce.,
that five hundred and forty-live dot
punched after a pattern, and if
u pleasing effect because you I
what It contulned. Why, there
the sugar bowl on the top shelf;
li I ways put the sugar bowl as to
possible, Just so a chap would
to get a clmlr to stand on wh>
Wanted to investigate. , -
If the nuts discovered the safe,1
legs had to be placed In a little
tptncle with kerosene in them, f
could aot get. through the Hrnall h<
In the tin, but tlie gnats pasi
through readily and found delight
I dJSrJfr h?S any^eWSpapCT heen able to offer magazines of such hifcl, '
$1.50 Sifit! Yaur Order Befora You Forget It « | ^
•«■= ThB Magazines Will Slop Pfonpllf Whu Till Is Uji -2-=™
J®
Christmas Candies and Nuts
As the holiday season is rapidly approaching it
behooves one to to cast about to see where is the
best place to get the filling for those numerous stock-
ings and socks that will hung up Christmas Eve. It
is going to require several pounds of candy an num-
erous sacks of nuts to go around, and investigation
as to quality and price is the proper thing to do at
this time. We invite you to come to our store, be-
lieving we can come nearer meeting your demands
and needs than auy otner firm in town. We handle
a spceial line of guaranteed candies and have no hes-
itancy in guaranteeing perfect satisfaction.
Special Prices Made on Quantity
Schools, Churches and lodges supplied at a reduction. Christmas Trees Epuipt
I HERRING & YOUNG.
hirs you'll have five hundred and fifty
dollars, and that's a nice even amount.
Now, If you'll put that lu the bank,
in three months It will liuve earned
five dollars and fifty cents more, and
surely in the meantime you can scrnpe
together forty-four dollars and fifty
cents, and then you'll have an even
six hundred dollars Instead of five
hundred.'
'"Well, what could I do with six
hundred dollars?' I asked, not very
much impressed, as the difference
didn't seem worth the trouble.
"'One thing you could do,' replied
the old gentleman, 'would be to ask
your banker to buy a thousund-dollar
bond for you, or, rather, to lend you
the extra four hundred dollars, keep-
ing the bond as security, and then it
wouldn't be long before you would
have a thousand dollars, which, for
"even amounts" Is a little better than
five hundred.'
"Then with a pencil and paper he
showed me carefully just how long It
would tnke.
" 'Of course you don't have to do it
If you don't want to; hut I have no-
ticed,' he werft on thoughtfully, 'that
this business of having a little by you
is pretty much u matter of the way
your - mind works. Some people al-
ways want to even things off in money
matters, others wnnt to even them up.
And once youiget started at It, think-
ing up isn't much harder than think-
ing down. For instance, if I showed
you thirteen cents, you might say, "I
can spend three cents for popcorn,
and then I'll have a dime;" or you
could su.v, "If I put two cents with
that I'll have fifteen cents."'
'It's the downhill people, the
people who follow the path of least
resistance, the people who slice off n
little instead of building up a little,
who never get anywhere In life.'"
Leather From Ortrich Skins.
Ostrich skins form the subject of
a late news item from Cope Town,
South Africa. The truth seems to be
that there lias been no business man
enterprising enough to push this side
line of the ostrich feather business
during the last couple of years, when
skins have been procurable at a nomi-
nal sum. It can be produced In vari-
ous colors and thicknesses, and just
after tanning it is about twice the
thickness of a goatskin, Is very tough,
with a strong fiber, which, unlike ordi-
nary leather, is not interwoven but
lies in separate layers, which can be
pulled off by hund so as to get the
thickness required. There is no rea-
son, says the dispatch, why ludles'
leather goods, slippers, and other ar-
ticles should not be extensively manu-
factured out of ostrich hide.
boy didn't cur® anything ab
gnats when he wanted apple san«
Mother was somewhat artistic to
tastes. She scalloped red or pink
sue paper and placed It upon
shelves, so the edges would drop do
and present a pleasing, wavy pfet
when the safe was opened, bat m
papers were used upon the shelve
folded neatly and pressed down I
There wa« a sort of •tend
mosphere surrounding the old tin m
It was the most used and the K
useful piece of furniture about I
home. The children , sought It irl
nobody else was present, and half b
rowed themselves In Its generous e
lties. And now—just think—
haven't seen an old tin sate foe a f
eration.
Woman Wirt Its* Ope
The fact that a large
women in the war zone are l
valuable service as wireless t.
has emphasized the fact that
telegraphy Is a vocation to which 1
en can easily adapt themselve*.
Kathleen Parkin of San Rafa
recently received a first-grade i__
erator's license from the Ui^ted L
government. She is only fifteen J
old and In her third year of hl
school. Miss Graaella Pi
Florida Is the first woman
universal operator. She is In
of the radio set of the Clyde 1
hawlti When the navy dei___.
recently Issued its countrywide^
for wireless operators who
avniluble in time of war n large i
ber of women answered, |iunong (
social leaders in several eitlee. ~
less operating was i . _
branch of the work of the
preparedness camp during
summer, and u number of <_
operators are available as a I
One Spout of the Melting Pet
"I have Just c-ome from Hawaii," I
lid, "where there are as many Japn<
nese as all the other races together."
"Yes," replied Count Okuma, "and
when they come back to Japan they
■re so thoroughly Americanized that
they can't talk to me in their own
language."
"It la singular," continued the pre-
mier, "how the pest is linked with
the present. Many years ago a poor
Japanese fisherman was shipwrecked
and was rescued by an American
ship. He learned English and be-
came Commodore Perry's interpreter.
A son bf that shipwrecked fisherman
is now a professor In the Imperial
university. Thus, old Japan and new
Japan come together in his person."—
Christian Herald.
Aluminum on Skis Lengtnen* Jump.
An increase of several yards ia the
jump of ski-runners is a rather sur-
prising result of the process of metal-
lizing objects by means of a spray. In
Switzerland a coating of aluminum of
the thickness of thin cardboard is be-
ing applied to the ski blades by this
method, and this not only adds greatly
to the durability of the bearing surface
but it also very materially lessens fric-
tion, and tends farther to prevent cak-
ing of snow on the blades. It Is the di-
minished friction that lengdwas the
Nantucket in the Lii
Nantucket, scene of --
latest submarine exploits, has *
ik front place In many previoa
Ift'glnning life as a whaling ,
the Quaker island built up a i
nearly 150 vessels by the i
eighteenth century. In 1786, l~™
the British took or sunk 134 of j
ships. To add to Nantucket1* I
tdnes, tallow oil began to
whale oil for the making of c
nnd In 1812 the whaling fleet ag.
fered destruction during this
war. The famous old Puritan
village owed its whaling ind.
the accident of Christopher
having been blown out to sea, a
provided with an opportunity
ling the sperm whale afar from i
The industry perished 50 yearn
giving place to the hotel and the |
Ing house—London Chronicle.
Cut Trets by Exploding I
Instead of an ax and taw
move the tops of trees that <
used as masts In logging oj..
dynamite is used to shoot off t
After the branches have been i
a rigger climbs the trees,
of Irons, to the point where tti
sary to cut off the top. ~
trunk is usually about 12 U
■meter. The rigger ties a i
dynamite cartridge#, fastens!
end like sausages, around the \
this point, inserts a blaMtag c
about 20 feet of fuse In oae <
sticks, lights the end of the 1
descends before the explosion (
place. The tree top jumps Into
with the explosion and the
left ready for attaching the riu.
dragging in and loading the
Engineering Record.
The Cans Fashion.
In nearly all the pictures c
fashions, and they are quite I
these days as the women's, I
cane In evidence, as if th
necessary adjunct of the re'n
Ion. It is not an unpleasant 1
of a man's appareL As a m
style it is attractive, and as a <
tlon to his satisfaction U li i_
There is a drawback, to-wit, <
order tor a man to carry a i
eearfaUy be must drew i
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Gunsenhouser, M. H. The Herald-Sentinel. (Cordell, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 14, 1916, newspaper, December 14, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc169572/m1/7/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.