Randlett Enterprise. (Randlett, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1911 Page: 1 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
RAN DUETT
ln (i A
NTBRPRIS
I!
i
wwg-LL?-m
RAND LETT OKLAHOMA FRIDAY AUG 25 1911
No U
Farmers SL Mcrcha
TO OUR PATROLS:—
Tkv-couew reason ia nearieag and fratn the present prs
peers it will be to iMMiMr erea We kindly request all to bring
in vur psae bM and Uav ttieia posted u to date and get
rady fa trefallrhyfiiuess
'We rejiHOiritli you in seeing these favorable conditions
and liovc to eoe -illl our old custia-cte and many new ones at
oar BANK this eaaeou
P I
JPromising ytu the same efficient service and courteous
treatment ae in the past we are
Vours For Business
Farmers & Merchants Bank
RANDLETT OKLAHOMA
urn
HANNIFIN
OLCTT OKLAHOMA
O IL
Undertaking
— 1 i illh 1
Embalming
rkSaDMlrMI Uarar lfi Call Aaawtred Protnuily
U4t AMeaeeat Wk
PUHNITUR R
We Cm ffuiakh tM Matt Baaant Mm ar the Hanalait Havel
a sal and Bee Us
We wil8hQw You
1CH
Alexander - Lumber - Co
Far Lumbar Lath Shingles Posts
Cl Cement Lima Doer and
Window paint Oil Varnishes
Interior finish
Crop Prospects
At present the crop pros-
pect is very discouraging the
extreme heat of the last lew
days damaging both cotton
and fesd stuffs to a great ex
tent ' '
Still it should be reraem-
nered that at this time last
year cotton was as unpromis-
ing as it is as present Last
year St this date cotton was
shedding both leaves and
squarew and the bolls which
had already set which were
not numerous were cracking
open
However upon the twenty-
fifth of August a fine rain
fell stimulating the cotton
and causing it to put on the
fruit which matured into the
quarter and half bale to the
acre crops of this section
And moreover one of the
most prominent southern pa-
pers in one of its articles
says that since no part of the
cotton producing states have
a prospect for over half a
crop the season will open
with the price somewhere
about twelve cents ascending
as the season advances
S S ORGANIZED
1 1
l
The Methodist Episcopal
and Presbyterian congrega-
tions organized their Sunday
school last Sunday and
the following officers and
! teachers were ejected: Su
perintendent Mr Fender
Assistant Superintendent Mr
Cassady:Secret:i'y-T-easiitrjasr Adelaide Ok!ai Ati'ust 16
a - r A3 1--
-iss uuey Jerome urganist
Miss Hallie Ffflider Librarian
Miss Florence York Teach
MISSOURI VALLEY
The hot dry weather still con-
tinues Mrs L T Rea left Monday
for Chandler Okla w liars sue
will Visit friends and relatives
Me and Mr Andrew Clack
started oxerland for Simon Okla
Khere they will visit Mr Black's
parrots
Mrs Fred Berry and little son
VTilbert left Sunday for Oklaho
ma City where Mrs Berry wan
called by the serious illness of her
istsr Mrs I (? Moors
W 1 Newell ami family who
have been Tisiting )o Simon for
the past three wsski returned
home Saturday
Mr and Mrs Tom Thurman
gare a party on Monday uight in
honor of their Sua Clayton's
eleventh birthday" A number of
games were played sad light re
freshments served At twelve
o'clock the little guests departed
II wishing Master Clayton many
happy birthdays
I - J
Jim nnd Miss (roldie Harper
spent Sunday with Lee Brooks
aad wife a
John Kerr and family spent
Sunday with Joe Kerr and family
Miss Lula JoaSs spent Sunday
with Edna Warn pin
Waltsi Bridges and family
Mack Bridges and family left
overland last Wednesday on a
trip to Eastern Oklahoma
Mary Jane Deefcar was born
ear Cartilage -Mo Seoteralter
185 snd died at hsr home
I Phone 1 1
Randlctt Okla
T
t
l M —' '"" " "'
i i mmsssajjjamsissmjmBm
N W CARTER
Livery Feed and Sale Stable
Auto t and : Rigs : at : all : Hours
-Ur UCMl —
Mad Hack tava Randlett at 8:io a m and 1:10 P m
Arrlvea Randlett at 1 2i I O m and 6:00 t nt
All Express nnd Baggage Carefully handled
ltfll age 83 year 10 mouths and
la days She iti married to
- JuhaC Miller near Kind Okla
era ui Die-ias Mrs ' J w Tu this uutow
Jas Crowley of the primary I were burs tw children J Ranks
class Mrs Dr McCallura Saw 5 tears aid loU are 3 VPfcFal
" - ff J —
J
BANDLETT CHURCHES
Even As You and I
Where ignorance ia bliss 'tis
m rHiiroli Smith— R17
um' - ' 111 r
filar services the second and fourth i
Suadtvsat It a U and 7:30 ' Some people are mere bubbles
m Sunday schoel every buuday
Mt 1 M
O V Hooper Pasier
Money to Loan
If you are wanting a farm
loan write or see Powers
Land Si Loan Co Law ton Okla
Some people are hypochondriacs
as to their value in the world
which in reality is below par
SUNDAY SCHOOL
Convention to Bs Held
Walter's This Month
at
M R Church— Regular services
the second and fourth Sundays at
11 a m aud 7:30 r M Sunday
school eTNT Sunday nt 10 a if
Lwlv Jurr r'aator
Christian Church —Regular ser-
vices the first and third Sundays
t U 4 a 7:30 Sunday
wUeol everv Sunday at 10 a U
If U Scott Pastor
Baptist Church -Retular servi-
ces the lirst and third Sundays at
11 a m and 7:30 p Sunday
dil every Sundar at 10 a M
H Veuuble Pastor
Catholic Church— Hold regular
meetings at Stringer Hall on the
fust Tuesday after the fourth Sun-
dar tmeach month
Rev Father Va
riMwf tOllnn ciiurch-Rfg-ulav
aerrices the second and
4'uprtb fciuuiiavK at 11 a m and
S:to p in siinnay sooooi
BSQVy Sundoy at 10 a n All
i be rvits Mil b hld in
iVir M L" church
C Hiauner Miuitr
laA sfHtei-'ria
only they remain in the air too
long
The people on the toboggan of
joy do note realise it until they
strike bottom
Some people who are crasy to he
married may be only temporarily
insane
The 10th annual convention
of the Sunday schools of Com
anche county will be held at
the Presbsterian church in
Walter's Okla on Monday
land Tuesday August 28-29
1811 beginning Monday at
2:30 p m and closing with
the evening session on Tues-
day From the State Asso-
ciation officers we will have
with us the following:
Back to the Farm Problem
Of all the farm problems that
confront humanity none has re-
ceived more attention perhaps
than that involving the wisdom of
the movement or agitation to en-
courage men of the city to go baclc
to the land for a living It is a
question that will not be put down
It bobs up every day and with es-
pecial frequency in the agricultur-
al college where boys and girls are
making ont the programs for the
future It is hard to answer too
because no two men are likely to
go to a task in the same way One-
city man might make good and
another in the next field fail mis-
erablv It is a big big problem
"Some of the most successful
countrymen I know were city folk
and many of the most disastrous
failures were also city folks" savs
Prof Liberty H Bailey of Cornell
in Country Life in America "If
my reader knows farming and is
country -minded he mav go on a
farm with assurance if he is not
too old and if he has sufficient
capital He probably will find it
a mest satisfying business if he
secures a good location He must
expect many discouragements for
the things that can happen on a
farm are beyond nil imagination
particularly if the place is left
more or less in the hands of a hired
man or a tenant Wells will go
dry pigs will lie down and give
up the ghost ejrgs will refiisc to
hatch sheep will get themselves
killed by dogs plows will go to
smash: horses will acquire the
btaVrfS or run nails into their feet:
trees will mfesr thcnip1vp with i
San Jose scale the cellar will freeze the hiKh eost ofliving wSome
and the roof will leak: sickness j people lay the cause at the
will invade tiie hired man's iimi!v i door of the "trusts" which
afd ru end of tcols and things will
take themselves into parts un-
known or vanish into thin air and
the perplexity of it is that the
book- and periodicals do not give
reetripes tor all these torntents and
troubles My city enthusiast will I
Guy C Robertson Pres
P B Carnahan Vice-Prcs
Bert A Hudson Cashier
R E Shepherd
Assistant Cashier
HE GOT THE JOB
A touny man havinfr applied to a wholeftftl
housn for a position taanntlv round himsalf befors
tho manager fur examination "Have ou a bank
account'' was hi first question "I have" w the
replv -'Let lue set your bank hook" us the next
request After glaii'uiny over it and noting the long
list of rffular tboujrh small deposit he said:
"Younif man you are enirajrHCl and I want to com-
pliment you on your taring abi lit I always ln-
sit upon employinir only men who havo the good
sanse to save their aionoy" Wo InTireevarj young
man in this comrauuitj to opes an account at this
bank
THE BANK OF RANDLETT
I
I
j E MABEE
AUCTIONEER
Guarantee Satisfaction
RANDLIiTT OKLAHOMA
Buver and seller of all kinds of Live Stock The
Highest Prices Paid for Good Sound Stock
Reference: Every one who knows rne
J
High Coat Of Living
Geueral Secretary C II
In hitchini their wegons to a j Nichols Oklahoma City
star most people look through the
wront end of the telescope
Some people think heaven is
situated somewhere near earth
Others locate it down in the rath-
skeller Some people may take a plunKC
in the pool of love but look long
and longingly in the well of matrimony
When people quarrel one word
brings on another until they ac
quire a vocabulary that they are
ashamed of — Sophie Loeb
An ordinary ease of diarrhoea ean
ei a rule be cured by Chamberlain'
colli Cholera and Diarrhoea Reme-
dy Thl remedy hat nn superior for
bowel complaint For sals by all
dealers
Cuts ssd amiss stay be heated In
about one-third the time required by
the usual treatment by apply Inir
t'hsmherlittns Liniment U ll an an-
tiseptic aud osuiea auoh injuries to
html without maturation Thl lini-
BSnl also PS) loves lOfeBSII of the
uiusi'luo aud rhuutnetle pains U'or
ek by all dwilou
Teacher Training Super-
intendent Mrs Francis Mil-
ler Oklahoma City
Home Visitation Superin-
tendent Mrs G K Dowsl
Blackwell
Chairman State Executive
Committee D S Wolfinger
of Hobart
Mr Nichols attended the
international convention at
San Francisco last June
People interested in Sun
dav school work should not
miss this convention
an minor w inn oiliest or a
family of eleren ebildre Her
father mother four sisters and
sii brothers survive her and ail
reside Texhoma Okls except two
eisters and a brother One sister
Mrs Minsie Miller and a brother
Walter Decker who lives at Cov-
iog toi Okls came for the funer-
al another sister Mrs Grace
Miller who lives at Bristow
Okla also cane
Mrs Miller was stricken with
paralysis early Sunday morning
but was eoDsolous and talked un-
til three o'clock in the afleruoon
when she passed away She was
converted st the age of sixteen
and joined the Baptist church
elhe was prepared to meet her God
aad eiproswid her williuguest to
die Mrs Miller was a good wife
and mother and by her kind waya
aad gentle disposition she won
friends and retained them where
ever she lived They lived near
Enid Okla until four years ago
when the pABtire oponed they
came here and have lived here
einee then She was a good neigh-
bor aud nut oaly will she bs
missed by ber hmily but by her
eighburs as null "but our loss is
hsr gain Tne funoral services
were held at the houe Moo dsy
Aug 14 by Kev Pa ugh The
remains were laid to rest in 1 O
O f oometery at Walters Okla
The remains were followed to
their last resting plane by a large
urn Iter of friends aud relative
The fautily has tho heartfelt sym-
pathy of the entire community in
Much talk is heard at pre
sent as well as in the past of
to some extent is true hut the
primary reason is always
supply and demand
Of all food products wheat
and its by-praduot alone re
main practically unchanged
'Prut rmiunn fir this it tduifc
reply that tire unexpected happens 1 i i ii i
Z ii i i Canada and the great wheat
!n town as wed ns in the country 1 t-
I know it bnt I want him also to st:ltes of th
understand that it happens in j have one of the g'test
country as well rs in town anderoP8 on record Now since
that he must lay by a capital stock ! tlje population tot alsd in-
of patience good temper and ready creased the supply equals
money j the demand and so the un-
GEORGE DIXON
Proprietor of
Randlett Barber Sbsp
Invites you to call end flT
him a trial Oocd vnrk aad
quick service hi emtio
I care nothing where the far-
mer ia boru---whether in city or in
the country or on the sea-- if only
he is really a farmer To be really
a farmer is to be farm-minded and
to know the business and the way
to learn to be a farmer is to prac-
tice it and while practicing it to
changed price
Those sections of the
country producing potatoes
have hud an almost total fail-
ure with few exceptions
thereby causing a shortage
in the supply consequently
DON'T FORGET
to have your Watch and
Clock kept in repair and
that orders for your
— J EWELR Y-
will he appreciated All
work guaranteed
J C NELSON
I Jeweler
i J At City i)rii itote
: tore I
call to his aid all irood advice in ! uc i'11
ithe price ascended Mow
'ooks and otherwise He should nowever ine new irrigated
learn the business from a good J Crop from Colorado and Cali
fanner or if he has the time and fornin is coming on so we may
money to spend he may teach j look for a nearer adjustment
himself but he is likely then to j to the usual order of prices
uave a verv long course ot study Because of the
and a very incompetent teacher
The more schooling he has--par
ticularly in an agricultural insti-
tution—the sooner and the more
fuiidunentilh should he learn and
the better should be his results
but he must really learn how
corn pros-
peets all over the United
j State:) bogs were rushed to
a farm by admiring it and by nail-
ing about it Nothing is easier
than to figure s profit on a paper
farm one has only to choose a pro-
duct that yields heavily and sells
for a high price then estimate the
cost of cheap laud and the thing
is done
market so that now i fat
marketable hug is a curiousi
ty The people must have
meat and the supply is not
tevertheless One can never run : there so hogs and meat raised
In price
And so we may go on
th rough the list from sugar
to tobacco and find that the
high prices isnotdue soruuch
to tho trusts Mel to the last
two drouthy years whice have
plagued the country and the
consepueUfi sjfrQtt supply so
if we want lower prices we
must
farm
&ttf it now N'ow lbs time to bur
a bottln of Chamberlain'! colic
cholera sat diarrhoea mredj It ia
almost certain to be BraueU before the
summer i oyer This remedy baa no
Huperior For nale by 1! druggists
Corn Bindsrs
Our prices for the Mc-
Cormic and Decring Bind
era are $140 cash $145
two tall payments
Randlett IJdw & Imp Co
bIRTii RECORD
and Mrs NsJ)
wiXe Saturday
A wrll-knowu lhi MoiBOS woman
tiftur sullHrinj miserably for ivio days
from bowel complitint WHS cured by
one lose of Chamberlain's oculoi
cho'cra and dlStrllOSS MaiSdy Kor
nula by all rni'i t-
Bora to Mr
Brunner aud
a gu l
At the home of K A Bow-
man six miles wrst there
was born ouSntul'dny a line
ufirJ
JJ Biokmnn and wife are
produce mure on the j the prond pat i iIp ni a daugh
tor which iirnvt'd Sundny
Each school should have
iimtn statu nnntv'hi their sad bereavemeat
and township officers pastors
and school superintendents
arc delegates ox-offlcio
State and county work is
supported by voluntary offer-
ing of Sunday schools aud
individuals
Hi Hi Thompson Pres
Lawton
Mabel E Page Sec Troas
I UlXCwVB Avv Ul"U&
A Kin Whs Left Home
set the world to talking hut I'aul Ma-
ihulka of Huffalo N Y says h al-
ays KNJBPI AT MOM: the Kin of
all lalaUVSOr KlnK' New Ufa
I'llls-and Uiat thoy aro a hleittng to
all hit family Curs onosttpition
htnilurhe imlit!iHiin dyippsla
Only MS at Owl Ql'Ug More
Head the Knttirpritue
The men who advertise arc
men who do the business
the
Seemed to Uive Him n Now
Stomach
Thirty Ver Legeiher
Attack Like Tiara
I Thirty years of amieiioB--thlk
i uie oiooupmo ofU uw the wit of gcwl tkiilf
tho white sorpusolaa stock dlwaiieL-'
germs like tigers Hut often germ 1 so thera's r
nultlpl so fast tits Httle Hghter at fllWiw(rk il( m¥im l( r1Ww
ov rccinie Thun SM wimple boils I au n1 vu i— a
"I iuffsred fttMMly eber esttag siia saltrhmitu and aoms tmilrpl BVf MeHr Ktna'ti new Wiwriri
sail noiueulelne or trratineut I triad 1 led trength and rMU fad Till ' Mr n i'( iu biomitb
mmiiii'ii Mian nir ? """" ranii'i iviivti-ie umwre'io ) a ) lMI r uai
h m youngrieteri nanur or i m i regulate ttouioh livnr an kktesys tintia rMrtu
Min iano vie uniQi tiim urs eau m nv poiapm frois the bltieti
few doses of Uoatnberlala s Htomaou I ' t nev aiuwe Inmi blood pttrltar"
"W MlverwitwgawtairciriBf wriwaa i tfaiunu ot I ncy l al ble tliMm and luog indlulnc on
relief and th st-ond b 'Wis isattad t I bare ever found" 'the ssaho earth Coraustlad hr lagrlppa
Hits awe new Hinuch eJB(l vrfMy liSh red blood MlMttg Mfves anil fever astlliaa eWU aalOS or MM
uood heaJUi" t'ui MiN hi all dual-1 build up you)' hnultb Try thorn SOo lung I'i Iih 5ui m Trial buttle
tM MeVaMLaMUgBMSai a k I 1 Itru Itr
umr outwit
i n 01 i immu yeil 1'in t
pry it nn 1tiy rmnlllfa have utieat
It tony yests It'H the most iofellt-
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Randlett Enterprise. (Randlett, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, August 25, 1911, newspaper, August 25, 1911; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1917403/m1/1/: accessed May 11, 2026), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.