The Claremore Progress (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 23, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
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THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1921 '
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I.OCAL NEWS
THE C L A it ti M 0 a £ PROGRESS
:
******* ★★w**************^
Bob Lee was on the sick list. Mon-
day.
Jack Reed spent Saturday in tho
city on business.
Mildred Coker was reported on the
sick list Tuesday.
J. W. Bishop transacted business
in Sapulpa Tuesday.
Mrs. Maggie E. Lipe was reported
on the sick list Tuesday.
H. K. Kusch, of Inola, was a Clare-
more business visitor Tuesday.
Miss Beulah Gadberry is visiting re-
latives and friends in Chandler.
Ed Parker, of Tulsa, is spending a
few days in the city with friends.
Tux Chambers has returned from a
fishing t*ip to points in Missouri.
Mrs. Paul W. Fry is spending a few
days in Chelsea with her parents.
K. D. Bernard went to Kansas City,
Mo, on a business trip Monday night.
w. P. Johnston transacted business
in Wagoner Monday.
Tillman Woods transacted business
in Wagoner Monday.
C. L. Gailbreath, of Talala, spent
Tuesday in the city on business.
Tom Dean spent Sunday in Chel-
sea visiting with relatives and friends I
' . Mr- and M . Will Pierce spent the
day Sunday in Tulsa taking in the
sights.
Mrs Burr Sharp, of Chelsea, is in
the city on a visit to relatives and
friends.
w. F. Rosen, of Jefferson City, Mo.
business'"^ 8 ^ ^ the city on'
Thelma Redding left Monday for a
several days visit with friends in
Wagoner.
Mr. and Mrs. George Walkley spent
Monday in Nowata visiting relatives
and friends.
Miss Vesta Brown, of Chelsea,
spent Monday Claremore visiting
girl friends.
Lucas L. Merritt, of Talala, was
among the out 0f town visitors in the
city Monday.
J. F. Scoggins, of Cassville, Mo is I
in the city on a visit to the C.'b i
erixey family.
TJ' P' ®tfshyhead ^ent the day
Tuesday in the city of Tulsa on pro-1
feseional business.
Will Burgess and Walter Pendleton
attended the Masonic lodge meeting
in Chelsea last week.
Mr and Mrs. John R. Spurrier
spent last week i„ Pawhuska visiting
Mrs. Spurier's parents.
George W. Eaton, of Inola, spent
Tuesday in Claremore visiting friends
and transacting business.
Dick Shelton and Arthur Settle
spent Tuesday in Tulsa looking after!
some business matters.
J™ Cameron, who has been visit-1
ng at Wichita Falls and other points!
in Texas returned home Tuesday 1
Mrs. C. B. Stewart, of Chelsea
spent Monday in the city visiting
friends and doing some shopping.
Guy Anderson was among the Clare
more people to spend the day Sun
who was operated on at the Sand
j Springs hospital Saturday was re-
| ported us some improved Tuesday
morning. Drs. Glass, 0f Tulsa, and
I Bushyhead, of Claremore, performed
the operation.
The most wonderful waterfalls in
Parana, Brazil, are those of Igussu
oi Santa Maria.
, and Settle spent the
day Wednesday in Nowata on busi-
ness.
I>r. Paul Gardner spent Thursday
evening m the city of Tulsa on busi-
ness.
Norman Callaway, of tiie Quality
Bakery, spent Friday in Inola on busi-
ness.
Gunter Sanders, of Tulsa, spent
Tuesday in Claremore visiting with
friends.
G. A. Rogers has returned from
points in Arkansas where he hss some
sawmills.
T. M. Brookshire spent Wednesday
afternoon in Tulsa on busing, and
visiting friends.
Fred Shaw, of Tulsa, is .-.pending a
few days in the city taking £ ccurse
of Radium baths.
Dr. A. A. Swift attended the Tulsa
district Osteopathic conference at
Tulsa Thursday evening.
Mrs. C. S. Bohn, of Marshall, Mo.,
is in the city on a visit to her brother
Dr. A. A. Swift and family. j
Herschell Patton and Erston Foster
.are visiting their grandfather, who
lives on the Watt Naves farm
Homer Draper transacted business
m the city of Tulsa Friday.
John Thompson, of Mounds, spent
Friday in the city 0n business. .
Kenneth Moore spent Friday in Tul :
sa on business and visiting friends I
Buford Burd, 0f Okmulgee is in the
city on a visit to relatives and friends. I
Remember the story hour at the
Public Library, at 9:30 Saturday
morning. y !
ha5' dealer of Inola,
transacted business in the city Fri-
S C. Canary, a Tulsa oil man, visit-
mir1"' c-
Mrs. James M, Scott spent the day
today m the city 0f Tulsa on t> visit
to relatives.
Morris Jacobson, of the Osage Ci-
far Co., of Tulsa, spent Wednesday
in the city dn business.
W. H Seed, of Danville, 111., spent
Wednesday m the city with friends 1
and transacting business.
Bert Krauter, William Willis and
Fjrank Coller motored to Kaw City
PAGE THREE
the u. s. usco tread
Here is the U. S. Usco Tread with .
long-established standard of5*2
motorists v!-, have an eve in
S
U S f a i r.*r« 1 k > other tires in the
n
•^ -conomy wh'ch i . no. exceeded bv
«.i/ tlffi IJI its .
Fresh, live U. S. Tina
come direct to the deiler
Irom his neighboring JFao.
lory Branch."
day in Tulsa taking in the sights.
Mrs. Harve Mayberry returned Sun
day night from a visit to relative^
and friends in-Tulsa.
J. C. Reed left Monday for points
ip Arkansas on business and a visit
with relatives and friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Shanks and
children, of Tulsa, are in the city on
a visit to relatives and friends.
Miss Bessie Richards and brother,
Robert, of Tulsa, spent Sunday in the
city with their sister, Mrs Rose
Coker.
Mrs. John Mayjjerry spent Monday
■n the city of Sand Springs and while
there visited Mrs. J. H. Mayberry,
Who is in the hospital at that place.
The condition of Mrs. L. D. Odom,
IAS
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Sold Quickly
S cp Your Grocer
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"iwiwiCU 1.0 i
Thursday on a business trip
Dr. Glass, of Tulsa, spent Tuesday
night in the city on business. He is a
prominent surgeon of Tulsa.
Buford Carden and wife spent
Thursday afternoon in Tulsa, Mr
Carden having business at that ;,lace
Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson, of j
lorrence, Calif., are in the city on a |
visit to Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Streeter. j
The porch of the Sequoyah Hotel is
being repaired. The eciling has rust-
ed out and new metal is being added
Dr. Greenburg, of Nowata, p-13Sed
through the city Friday morning on
his way home from a visit to Musko-
gee.
Joe Anderson left Thursduy even-
ing for St. Louis, Mo., on a buying
trip for the Walker Department
Store.
Mrs. John T. Brown and Miss Lucy
Clark, of Chelsea, spent Thursday in
the city shopping and visiting with
friends.
The Willard Service Station is ad-
ding a modern front to their estab-
lishment. It will be a credit to the
business.
Mrs. T. P. Foster and little son,
Homer, arrived from Muskogee
Thursday for a visit with her uncle.
Miles Patton, and ot^er relatives.
L. J. Newlonk cashier of the First
National Bank of Weleetka, spent
Wednesday in the city visiting with
friends and taking a Radium bath.
Mrs. James F. Collins and daugh-
ters, Wilma and Melva, left Thurs-
day afternoon for a several days vis-
i it to relatives and friends In Tulsa.
The North Wholesale Company has
added a substantial awning to their
wholesale house, and they have also
had the name of their business placed
on the walls so that they may be seen
from the Frisco. Claremore keeps on
improving. Let the good work go on
Randolph Settle, of Catoosa, spent
Saturday in the city on business.
S. B. North has purchased a new
Buick car from the A. D. Motor Co.
Abe Levy, 0f Kansas City, Mo., is in
the city on business and visiting with
friends.
W. J. Davis got the dollar in the
toaf of bread at J. C. Lipe's store
Thursday.
Hiram Steprens, city marshal, of
Chelsea, spent Thursday in Clare-
more on business.
Mrs. Tom Dean left Saturday morn-
ing for a two week's visit with rela-
tives at points in Texas.
Mrs. Ora Deer, of Tulsa, is spend-
ing the week-end i|i the city with her
sister, Mrs. George Coker.
The front of the Quality Bakery is
being remodeled. The base (rave away
and a new one is being put in.
Which one of your
ne^hboas gets
best mfe
his tires ?
esses. s 3E
. ^ a" comes to this—buv a U Tiv ,
m this country and vrm ?' • e an3^vhere
Jotdnvl. ^ ^ ™ ^terlS
"oX^t^ks/^^i^ondnued^nea^'job S "Tf
Tire deiler S
pletely sized line of °" " fU"' com"
strai8ht qua,,ty
.^uyingChanCe Md Certata'y «
s; Tires he sees in stock are
dealer' fmm")?' They come direct to the
Branch. hls « gM ring Factory
°f ,heS0 Branches estab-
maintained by the U. S. Tire
stoftf IZ "T'eia moving
stock or new, fresh tires built on th?
certainty of quality first every time
Jf'A fira* experience
with U. S. qualitv
Standard T.rel "
R. R. HEATH—Claremore
fc. F. \ OUNG—Oolag;ah, Okla r -
T. B. MILLARD, Foyil dwe. CoXy"oklf.'TT~T!'h'a- °kla-
c. A. ROSS—Service Garage, Inola
Harold Boyd transacted business in
Tulsa Tuesday afternoon.
Charles Carmen transacted busines*
in Tulsa Monday afternoon.
A. H. Lightner, whq resides at Os-
sowatomie, Kan., is in the city on a
visit to his son, EJd, and wife,
Ed Gregg, of the Motor Supply &
Battery Co,, is having a show window
installed for the display of his wares.
Benny Mayfield, who has been
transacting business in Muskogee for
the past week, returned home Thurs-
day evening.
Constable G. O. Brown, of Chelsea,
brought Froy Hanson to the county
jail here Thursday, charged with
robbing a garage at Chelsea.
• Misses Nannie and Lola Lipe and
Mary Bess and Flavius Barrett mo-
tored to Muskogee Saturday morning
to spend the week-end with relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Robinson spent
the day Wednesday with Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Sanders at their farm near
Sageeyah.
Miss Nancy Bqker, of Clarksville.
Texas who ha, bee„ here or, a two
months visit to her sister, Mrs. R. H.
Canterbury, returned homo Thurs-
day.
Little Ira Palmer, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. J. W. Palmer, who has been
very sick at her home on East S«v-
enth street, wa3 reported «ome better
r rtday morning.
Moat of the harvesting is done and
now the time for threshing i8 getting
near and if this weather continues it
will not take the farmers long to get
their grain threshed.
Miss Winnifred Jennings left Fri-
day for Flagstaff, Ariz., to attend
summer normal school. She was ac-
companied by Miss Jarvis. They
were to meet Miss Hope Sutton in
Kansas City. She too, is going to
Flagstaff for summer normal work.
Probably ninety-five per cent of the
home gardens fail to raise a second
crop of Irish potatoes. This is due
largely to the lack of proper soil con-1
ditions at planning time. Since this!
s true we should use every precau-
tion in order to successfully keep our
spring crop of Irish potatoes.
The principal reasons why our
spring crop of Irish potatoes rot are:
First we leave them in the ground
until the plants are all dead, dried up
and in windy sections, blowed away
second, we expose them to the sun as
as they are dug out of the ground,
and third, we do not store them prop-
erly. K v !
The spring crop 0f Irish potatoes
should be harvested early, that is to
say, when the plants begin to mature
as indicated hy the plants beginning
to turn yellow in the different por-
tions of the patch. Do not expose
the potatoes to the sun at harvest
time, ln other words, early in the
morning or late in the afternoon is
the best time of the day to harvest
the spring potatoes. However, if the
patch is rather large and it appears
necessary t0 4.g during the heat of
the day, pjck the p0tatoes up as soon
as they are plowed out of the ground
Do not permit them to be exposed to
t e sun. Handle the potatoes care-
fully in QT^r to prevent bruising !
them.
a
Mrs. Walter King, was called, Mon-
aj, to Lamar, Mo., by the serious ill-
ness at her brother.
N. B. Dannenburg, 0f Chelsea, vis-i
.w,th fnends in the city Mondav
evening.
W. T. Dickson, of Catoosa, transact-
ed business in the city Saturday.
AN ORGANIZATION OP 300.000
PEOPLE AT YOUR COMMAND
service* of J*?'000 P Ple « at your
n'£ht and day-all the time. You
are one of the 110,000,000 patrons of the
United1 StaLTpST Office* D
interest,ng ™• —X
« now d's,I"ibuting to all
Sp-asrs-jrisss!
First National Bank
The Bank U^ith the Personal Service
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Kates, W. C. The Claremore Progress (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 23, 1921, newspaper, June 23, 1921; Claremore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc182361/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.