The Inola News (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1921 Page: 1 of 4
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THE INOLA NEWS
VOL. 1.
INOLA, OKLAHOMA, JUNE ,24 1921.
NO. 10
FARMERS
STATE BANK
DIRECTORS
G. D. Davis. J. 0. Geiscr,
J. W. Flemming, N. F. Woolard-
§ INOLA OKLAj
P e§
BULL CREEK BUBBLES'
GREGORY ITEMS.
S. G. Nees and wife, of Inola,
drove out to the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Griggs Saturday aad spent
Mr. Inola Editor:
Please make room in yonr inter-
esting paper for a few little items
from Bnll creek, a stream un- the day picking berries.
known to fame which has gently j
wended it's way from the hiils S<-m Johnson and Jess Kitch
to tliL' sea for hundreds of yeats. drove t > Claremore on a Fordson
Bull creek is a quiet, sluggish bringing home a new pulling rig.
stream that meanders from the
CATTLE
Do much better when given the right kind of salt.
We have best block salt for cattle at 65 cents. Pay highest market
price for grain all the year 'round.
JNOLA FARM ELEVATOR <S
foot of the majestic "Scalybark
Mountain" to plaeid Veri^ris,
moving slowly and making ver>
little noise "but it gets there, just
EE | the same."
=E So much may be said of the ill-
s'habitants of the valley thereof.
55 A quiet, unassuming people, they
~~~ ivc their lives in their own way.
No noise, no bustle, no hip hur-
rahs-they keep ever jogging,
jogging slowly-and get there,
just the same.
This placid, romantic streair, the
beautiful with the ugly name, and
the queit, peaceful, iubustmus,
law-a-diding dwellers in the val-
ey thereof may go down uuwept,
unhonoredand unsung to a quiet
where the 'Rude fore-fathers of
this hamlet lie"—but th« good that
men do live after them. (A conso-
ling thought-perhaps)
We till the soil and attend our
flocks and herds. We sow and
reap and toil and spin. We enjoy
the fruit of our labors, lay by our
mite for a rainy day and when the
Jay is done we "Wrap the man-
tle at our couch about us and lie
down to pleasant dreams."
Our boys go-when called upon
to land beyond the sea* ai d risk
their lives that all the human race
may be free, and "When its over
Win Scribntr has returned from
'utoosa where he spent several
Jays visiting liis cousin Geo Snook
Ott Stone auJ family spent a few
dnys at the Gardenear home.
Jess Kitch and family and Sam
Johnsoi^and family were in Inola
Saturday.
Mr L.-id Mrs Brown and son, of
Claremore, spent Sunday at the
Harve Adams home.
Misse Fay and Wretha Phelps,
Anna Walters and Liilie Robert-
son visited Mrs. Adams and Mrs.
W. T. F, Williams Suuday.
The Boys' and Girls' Agricultur-
al Club will meet at the home of
Mrs Harve Adams next Thursday,
June 30, at 2 o'clock. All members
and visitors welcome.
FEED THE BRUTE!
Not long p."o a Choteau woman
whos husband is hale, hearty and
jood natured but persists in sip
ping coffee fr m a saucer, feeding
himself with a knife and otherwise
humiliating her in society, wrote
to Laura Jean Libby asking how
to manage him ar d here is her an-
swer: "Feed the brute on well
cooked food and forgive I inj.,
Now that advice was good in part,
only. Dont ever forgive him. That
might set him to thinking and thus
make him unhappy. Have a heart!
Don't forgive 'ira, i'ecd the brute!
That's the idea. Stuff him with
rich puddings, strawberry short
cakes, lobster salad and chicken
pie. "Feed the brute" and if he
gorges himseif to death collect his
life insurance and live happy ever
after.
hoped, however, that their suc-
cessors will keep the good work
going on. W. E. Sanders was the
only commisiouer re-elected. Two
good men got lost in the shuffle.
Homer, the six—months—old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Buck Billing-
son, died at the Barker home in
the South part of town Saturday
and was laid to rest i:i Highland
Cemetery,Rev. Chidv. ick conduct-
ihg the funtrni. The Billingsor.s
came here from the oil fields but
a short time ago to vi-it her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. L.'.rker and the
iittle one tool: sick with the result
stated.They express their ppprc-
ciation of the nttentic n shown
them by the good people of Inola
during this misfortune.
While they were working on an
engine Mr. Kersh accidntally
Harve Adams in the face with a 12
pound hammer, bruising h|m up
some and breaking one tooth,
A patron of the Inola post officc
who is served by one of the rural
rotes handed in the following clip-
ping and requested that it be re-
printed in this paper. "There is a
feller here among us who deserves
sincercst praise. There is no other
citizen mor punctous in his ways, j
As silent as a crow-bar as sober as
l jedge - and he fills our blame re-
J quirements with a skill that's feath
T edge I know that you will won-!
I der and 1 give you leave to guess |
'ut the job that holds my hero-ere 1
A Muskogee minister says he
has not paid enough attention to
short skirts or the girls who wear
them to give them any thought Bet
a gallon of gimlets the fellow is
near lighted and absent Blinded.
Mrs. H. W. Payne had as Sun-
day guests her grandfather, Rev.
S G.Brow u, her unele and aunt Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Myres, and her
cousin Sam Brown, all of Locust
Grove.
"Keep on pushing-ever upward:
Work with a smile and not with a
„.. . . frown
OV"'^ "!"**•' It takes a live fish to eo npstream
swords into plow share,, ti:.,r Lay But , one can f|o, dow„
one s into prun.ng hooks .nd take: -Correspondent,
up the thread of life where they
left off when the war came on. ., ,
a„,i i,„„ II i No less than seven new thresh-
And they laise girls down here
Mrs. Earl Kendrick, who has
hss been in a Muskogee hospital
for some time, came home Sun-
hasten to confess. As I think still day much improved in health,
more about it I'm compelled to
state the fact: There is no men 0 P. Kersch and wife motored
more respcncible and none that's to Muskogee and returned Sun-
better backed. I'd like to overtake day. Mrs. Kersh had an operation
him and praise him to his face, but performed on her arm some
its mighty hard to catch him at . time since and went down to have
any certain piece. Tnere is noth- the phsician look it over, which
ing startling in his manners or his he did. and nade a very favorable
dress—but fie drives our rural report.
mail route-nothing more, nor less-
too, don't forget that! While these |ing tnacl:ircs liave bcen Purchased john Dirickson, of Claremore,
^ girls like short skirts, peek-a-boo ! * 7 .""iand W "• Rogers, of ^lsea,
"1M3 waists, fancy stockings, ice cream U u ankratz, the But-, county commissoners ifrom the
chocolates and chewing gum and W T*' .U,C 8n< Mr" First and Third districts whose
read the village gossip and con- ^ ™ach,nf! terms of office expire July 4.
T -ti . i x. made by the International peop e
t.nued story,,, TI.. Inola News, ,rom the HarJw,re £„J;p.
■! i m ■ i yv e ■ a y i ■ ■ ■ w
I BUGS BUGS! BUGS!
0
Miss Hattie Rogers, daughter c f
Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Rogers, is at-
tending summer school at Tahle
quah.
Various kinds of small vermin cause lots of worry to the
careful housewife.
Bedbugs, roaches, spiders, worms, flies, rats, mice—all
are a nuisance and detrimental to health aad should be
exterminated at once. Tell your bug trobles to us and we
will furnish something to Fix 'em—SURE.
WOOLARD,
g
PHARMACY,
I . 4 ... A. . - . , nuui me mum ru
IHH."hi"TT Port" * t« X sold
tesch them to sew, cook, milk ,m,„ Red r(vcr ..
wash and iron (all girls should c- i * t
know these things) and can per- t0r t0 T.°® Sn"Ie.V)n;a 'aref
,„pml1imB(har,' " tun per r one and 15-25 Walls tractor to
form upon the piano, the washing Fred Sear, nn(J fl 32 jnch ,
machine or cream separator w.th ghel, Red Rjyer s ja, c
equal dexterity-might manipulate Deiterlie
a plow, harrow or hay rake were
were anxious to get the bridge
west of town Completed during
their tenure in office but the re-
cent floods carried out part of the
work and made it impossible. It is
H. C. Cornelsen and family re-
urned t j t:i?ir h jm i at Fairview
after a pleasant visit with his par-
ents, Mr. ar.d Mrs C. Carnelsen
in this city.
it necessary. In fact their mothers
t..inVh.m k—L.'iuZtl J. W. Freissen has the distinc-
Mh,i j., xJu ' u «on °f i'*""
if they may. or self-sustaining o d T ,-. k .
maids if they must (perish the on the InoI« market. This w^heat
thougl t! grew on his farm just south from
' a . . , . town. The berry wa.f'good but it
In these days of shifting fort- 4 • i < * 1 • •
, . . K, containitl some chcet winch cut
unes and varying emotions there thetestUotfU lo 55. This wheat
is no te.ling what the fates have was sold to (hc ,no|a Fam E!evft. I
in store for me but at present I am tor but we fjl;cd ,0 knrn ( x. |
J. E. Hathaway
Furniture and Undertakers' Supplies
Watchmaker and Jeweler
• . . Inola, Okla.
jnst a happy and care-free
—School Girl.
act price. Mr. Frieisen has quite
sn acreage and it is threshing out
well.
When in Inola Eat at
The Inola Cafe
(Oilmen's Headquarters)
^ Good food, good service and courteous treatment.
We appreciate your patronage and will strive to please.
A. B. OMSTEAD, Proprietor.
we hope will please our readers
including theSunday School lesson
w 1 ich it wculd not hurt you to
read wheth youattend the classes
or not.
Farmers of this community have
been very busy in their harvest for r> ■ 4 j - 1 j
.. . . ' , ... 1 Owing to condition beyond our
he past two weeks and .n sp,te of co„tro| en„n,lmont
the unl.vor.bl. weather wh.rh |,,eSI,3d.,v, „MI,e Sheltering IWs
prevailed the wheat and ca!< r( 1 ., . , . ...
, does not this week, it will
all in the shock and threshmc wi ■ . 1 .
w «it come on ia[er however. In its
soonbecn. The wheat crop .stood slcaJ ,r„ i#| reIresh.
but theo.tsnrol.ijh .the larse sere- ( aIlJ m,„cr „.Mch
age, however, will increase the to-
tal production and the quality of
the wheat is thought to be pettir
than common. Corn is somewhat
late but is making a fine growth.
Perhaps one reason why the
summer girl has to be kept full ul
icecream, is that unless she is as-
j sistcd to keepcool her compaction
might melt.—Quinton Times.
John D. Rockefellow, the Stand-
ard Oil King, recently made the
statement that the most beautiful
set of women he had ever seen Fred Tinla r and family, of Bro-
were in Columbus, Ohio. Being a ken Arrow, spent the week end
little daffy old John probuLlv with his part nts, Mr. and Mrs. G.
thought he vfes passing through W. Tinker, in Inola. His sister,
Colur.ibM'when he went through Miss Ida Ti.iker, went back uith
Inol*' them for an extended visit.
LAWSON
For bargains in Farm Lands and Town Property. My business is
to get the buyer and seller together
If yon wart a farm loanl can get the money quickly.
I also represent the Old Reliable Hartford Fire Insurance Co.
If you want to Buy, Sell, Rent, Borrow, Trade or Insure see me.
EZRA A. LAWSON.
- aiein 1— ■ un 1 tm 1 ti 11 ■ 1 ■ i 1 p si — 1 e c ^ insegnir•
ll|lllllllllll!lllll!ll!IIIIHIIll!!lllllllillHllillllllllillllllllllinii:lllllllll{llllllllllllllljll!
! MONEY 1
For Sale t r Trade at n bargain. EEs
Gasoline power drilling rig com- EE
plete suitable for w ells up to 600 S
ft deep Value cf tools takes the =
entire outfit ready to run.—H. K. EE
Kusch, Inola, Oklahoma. 8-9p =E
Yes, we loan r-oney on farm lands. If in the market call us
at phone El, Claremore,or writ? us and we will send a man
ready to do business. P. O. Box 151, Claremore, Oklahoma.
g LEE CHAS. A. gg
1 SETTLE & SETTLE, g
Iiiiiiii:iiiii;ii!u<:niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiii!!iu
«imr. — a 1—aw——u—^
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The Inola News (Inola, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1921, newspaper, June 24, 1921; Inola, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc180883/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.