The Eldorado Courier (Eldorado, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, January 17, 1913 Page: 8 of 8
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CORRESPONDENCE
latcrestMg linos Picked ip by Oar Associate Editor*.
HLEAkANT Mill. QkrANINO*
K#v, J. T. Arm#trutt« preached
here Sunday inoriiinjf and even*
The e«i»ifr«ifrtiiun w<u
an ncciHJiit uf lit* t»a«l
WMthvr.
"Hie lirii quarterly conference
•»f the ynr fur IhU charge will
hff lit*Id lure next Swtur«la\ nml
in April.
J. K. lJ«iik>n hi»d the it>wfur<
turn* lu lute it rfwil vuurtu ln»r*«
Uat week. The animal ran int<
m aire fence mul cut n leg ult.
T. I*.
Fifty >«»r* fn>m no*
Juliitni uf lulay will I*
and bjri i! K\,
A GIHL'h WILD Mill
night ridl
To warifVeople of * (earful tot-
• fire h the Csuk'Ht * your '
„ . „i ... r'il rod* horscba.-k at mlttaU^
Sunday with Rev. C. r. Mitchell of the day in uur ticiiiM^rhtA'd »aved m<>v. \ .m: ?{«.,
in charge. |thi» wt-ek. IWv t'liiit«»u 1,1
Wilmolti.
Moving «*em*'« U« the urder
Wk#B il it H.e he a «*«iB»< the
tr»«*. our M U oa th« hen -
WkHi'i
ha Welder
A man found d» ?ul n>Qiiiaitwl
*uieid« Imumm* he wa* hi* own
vntiMifathi-r, ll*» left the fuik»w> j
inv letter, it i» claimed:
I married a widu.» with nl
jmmnupdaughter, M> father'
\i*itr«| uur houne very often, fell)
in luve with iny atefMJauifhterj
mi d married her. So mv father
lieeatne my wn-inlaw. my atep*
Uaught r my mother became
*he wu* my father'# wife. Syme
i* #•«? oft*v time afterward my wife had a
Mint KatIter) ti Muataine whuI Hollis luut moved to the .Metiuir*
hw» been on the nick lint (<* aLlace. Jo Duncan Mtm» to thinkjw Jn' CUf. lunfi troubI<; or-in-law. and my unele. for he
week ha* improved au/flclently Jt it cheaper to live on hi* owni h> #jm ce!J< wWch - tt„, ti,,, brother of my *ttp-
to return to school at Eldorado. | land and if moving lack heme. h#vt en(Jcd ta con;umpfion orpBetl. mother. My father'* wife, my
|*4ved by Dr. X'nu's New Di*co - *on. He wa* mv father'* broth-
earing
Mimes Meliwa and Victoria and Cleave MeCuire of Duke in'
Stewart und Me.^r*. Marvin and moving on the t'halln farm. We
Luther Armstrong and Sam ure hoping the empty houxuf*
Ixickmiller uf Bethel attended will all aoon be filled.
church here Sunday und were] The attendance at Sunduy
moni<*. *:li cured mc of a drcau-
•te|»«iiiugtiter. had a 4tn; he wan'
fuj coujjh and lun« disease." write*(°5 l'' v*brother, and in the
W H. Patterson. Wdlsn^ton. Tex., '•'♦ ♦•"""'.e mv jrrandrhiid. for be|
"after four in our lamliy had died «a» ««on ^ daughter.
... |with consumption, and I nairfed 8"
kounds." Nothing so sure anu
M> wife was my grandmother;
because she wa* my mother's |
mother. I was my husband and'
afe for all throat and lunif troub* , . .
Tr:a' K»*tndehild at the same tune.
ai d a.- the husband of a person's
Price 50c ar.J 51.00.
j Isotfle free. Guar.|rteed by Th",
grandmother is h * grandfather]
1 am my own grandfather. - Ex
change.
entertained at dinner by Misses school was light Sunday on at
Doha and Clara Palmer. count of the bad weather.
J, W. Smith has moved to the] Mr. and Mrs. Alexander and
blanton farm. Unele Johnnie, family were guests of Mr*. B. K.',es-
Fraser and Mr. Montgomery I Leveret t Sunday
have moved to the Trusslerl The school at Lea Summit is (Corner Dru* Store. Adv.
farm. progressing nicely with Prof.
T. M. Whaley and wife en- Ballard the teacher. I'hil.
joyed dinner Sunday with J. C. j
Cunningham and wife in the. FRIGHTFUL POLAR WINDS
Purvis immunity. L ^ tom ,h#
Mrs. T. L. Whaley of Antioch .
was guest uf her parents here n°"* P1" h"voc w"h ,hc skl"! popular Year Book ever printed. ( . , ,
Sunday niirht |causing red, rough, or sore cnapped ite value has been more than Unofficial figures obtained from
Some of the male members of hands and lips that need Buck-,evcr proven by remarkable ful- the office of Secretary Ben Hen-
the church met at the church th s Ien's Arnica SaIve to hcaI them- fillments of its storm, weather; neisey of the state board of agri-
It makes the skin soft and smooth 1 an(i earthquake forecasts this culture show that with the single
Unrivalej for cold-sores, also burns I year> Professor Hicks justly j exception of cotton, all of the lead-
boils. sores, ulcers, cuts, bruises | merits the confidence and sup- ing farm products of Oklahoma
and piles. Only 25 cts. at The j port of all the people. Don't during th» . ear 1912, equalled and
Corner Drug Store. Adv. ! fail to send 35c for his 1913 Al- j in many cases excelled the highest
; manac. or only one dollar for his j record established in pr^cedin;;
NEW HARDWARE STORE
I wish to announce t» the puLhr. as well all of
my friends and cuaiomeva, tbt I U!"•« opened a
Lirtiui »rw tioik of heavy am .hell ^/dware. mcluding
Stove, and Range-. Diamond Mge Cmlary-.U* very
^;^^iiX,Hi^l^riTn.?V««l.».in latt a lull
and complete aaaortnient ol all kjnd* o( dependable
haniwair -in my old slancl lotimrly occupied by th«-
Summers Hardware Co. and invstr anyone m need of
haidwwe lo call and «ee me. I um no new imb Heie,
Itaving been feared inthi, country. I «mdaily recet^nj
Shipments of gooda.-nd - lap.dly as it can be unpackerl
It will be put on the shelves. . m thoae wh-> contem-
iiUtebuvinghardwrt.etocull snd .ee me and get my
prices I am here to .eli gpods-oot keep the„,...and m
order to do so nnd re-establish a flourishing trade 1 will
make attractive puces.
Jewell Phillips
Summers Old Stand
Eldorado. Oklahoma
MSMMMBaaaMaaaa
H
Rev. Irl R. Hicks 1913 Almanac
The Fi«-v. Irl R. Hicks Almanac
j for 11*18 is now ready. It is the
I most splendid number of this
banner year FOR
OKLAHOMA
:ropij
ASKING
« FaiWile
FREF. FOR I'HE
A i«*ul »»nl *'» '
Copy'vi rto
Oklahosia Farraer-Slockman
The GttKAT WEI.KLY FARM
PAt'KIl of tit<* St»uUiw«»Hl.
(IKLAHOMA FASMKII-STOCKMAS
(ikiahor.wCity. CUn.
Nowadays when* Johnny is
bad at school, the teacher takes
week and are giving the church
a coat of paint.
The Courier did real well in get-
ting out a paper and moving the
same week. By the way, the way
we people in the country get out-
information about what is going
on in town is by reading the
paper, and the last issue of your
paper disclosed the fact that El- , , .
dorado has one dry goods store, | her book and pves hun a
one drug store,
shop, one garage, one tailor
shop, three real estate men. one
transfer man, two banks, one
hardware store, one grocery
store, three doctors, three attor-
neys at law, a depot and a post-
office. The Courier deserves
more advertising than this.
Sunday School Scholar.
Inhrinv Nnw and lohnn* Then ! sPlendid Magazine and Almanac j years. Taken from an agricultural
Johnny Now and lohany Hen. Me yeal. The best one dollar! ^andpoint. ,he year is considered
SAYE SAYINGS.
Ervin Moore, who has been
sick for two weeks is some bet-
ter at this writing.
The school at Saye has been
dismissed for a week on account
of sickness in the community
but has reopened.
J. E. Patton has been sick for
the past week but is able to be
out again.
The County Farmers Union
which was to have met here next
Saturday, January 18, has been
postponed until the 3rd Saturday
one blacksmith black-mark'' Next £*y Johny
is worse than ever. Fifty years
'ago when Johnny was bad at
school the teacher took down a
dogwood sprout and made about
two dozen black marks around
Johnny's bare legs, and Johnny
never repeated the offense.
Fifty years ago Johnny got up
at daylight, started the fires,
fed th#horses, milked a dozen
long-horned cows that barely
gave enough milk to go in the
coffee, chopped and brought iq
enough wood to last mother all
day, ate a hearty breakfast and
walked three miles to school.
Today Johnny doesn't get up
at all unless forced to do so,
eats little or ho breakfast, sneaks
to the buggy house and smoke a
cigarette, and if the school house
is over three blocks away he
takes a street car.
The Johnny of fifty years ago
is now a hale, hearty man.
investment possible in any home|to haVe been one of the best in the
or business. r Send to Word andj history of the stak.
Works Publishing Co., 3401 j corn cr0pt estimated at 76,-
Franklin Ave.. St. Louis, Mo. |ooo,oOO bushels, leads all other
•■■■•> [products for <he year and estab-
lishes a new record. The whea'
crop, of approximately 19,000,000
bushels, is close to the highest re-
cord that has been made in th«
his^ry of the state.
The velue of affir corn has in-
creased almost twice as much dur
ing 1912 a5 it was in 1911. The
estimated value of the crop in 191
DID YOU EVER TRY TO
"CORNER"A HEN
. .$1.00 PER PLATE.
was paid at a banquet at Henry
Clay, in New Orleans in 1842.
Mighty costly for those with stom-
ach trouble or indigestion. Today
people everywhere use Dr. King's
New Life Pills for these troubles
as well as liver, kidney and bowel
disorders. Easy, safe, sure.
Only 25 cts. at The Corner Drus'
Store. Adv.
J. T. BLACK
City Transfer
Prompt and t ITicient service
Satisfaction Guaranteed
I'l ONK1I
Dr. R. h. HYDE
Physician ami Surgeon
Office at Eldorado Drug Co.
i
W. C. Austin,
Attorney-at-Law,
OtticeOver The First State E?.i k
ELDORADO. OKLAHOMA
It-is lucky the hen is not attach-
ed to the land, and that she can not
be induced absolutely to quit- lay-
ing in the winter. Think what the
egg trust would do to us if such
were the case'.
The monopoly would secure thc'was $3,947, 342, while the va1^;
'and so that a limited number of this year, it is said, will exceeJ
FOR THE NEW YEAR
begin right by having your car-
riage put into good condition and
making a good resolution to keep
it so by bringing it toj. H. Smith.
A good, sound vehicle to ride in
is of more vital importance than
many people think, until the final
test comes when their regrets wil'
not save a broken limb. Make a
good resolution now to have your
carriage repaired at
J. II. SMITH
The Main Blacksmith -
and Repair Shop
hens could run, and when the out-
put of eggs in December and Jan-
uary had been absolutely throttled
the price of eggs would amount to
a dollar apiece. Then none but
the very rich could have eggs.
It seem* hard to pay fifty cents
ia dozen for eggs in winter, but
think what comfort the egfe is,
even at four or five cents apiece.
It is cheaper than sirloin at thirty-
two cents a pound, and is getting to
be cheaper than the bacon which
the beef trust sends us in glass
jars and nice paste board boxes.
In fact, the four and five cent egg
is about the only way we can keep
nourished these days of high-
priced meat.
$7,500,000. This increase is due
to an increase in the acreage as
well as an increase in the price.
Approximately 300,000 acres of
alfalfa, were grown during the las:
year, which has a money value
close to $5,000,000. The milo
maize crop is estimated at $2,500,-
000.
No estimate could be obtained
on the value of the broomcorn
crop which promises to become
one of the leading industries in the
state. This, i is explained, is due
to the constant fluctuation in the
price of that product.
The report shows that the grow-
ing condition of wheat for the
month of December is 82.9, com-
NOTICe.
No. 912.
In the District Court of the Twenty-
fifth Judicial District, sitting within
and for Jackson County. Oklahoma.
D. E. Pearce, Plaintiff.
The hen is our savior. She in- pared with the same month in 1911
sists 0n not being cornered. Just [it is 105.5 per cent. The crop in
try to catch a hen and see how
hard it is. The beef trust runs
her up into a bit of the back yard,
and first thing we kn«w she has
run between the old man's legs and
Love county, where the growing
condition is reported to be 101 per
cent is the best, according to thi
report.
The percentages of 1912 cropj
j is out cackling again in the open- j still in the hands of the farmer,
ing- [are corn, 59.5; wheat, 24.5; oats.
Sometimes we cuss her for j 37.6; and cotton 9.6. Conditions
.scratching up the garden, but jus' j0f livestock and poultry give cattl-
I think how fine it is that she can't 959. hogs 93 9. sheep 95 7> an_,
IT KEEPS DOWN Bi(; REPAIR BILLS
to brinsr your car here to be
looked over before big repairs
become necessary. "A stitch
in time saves nine "you know.
It is wiser and cheaper to pay
us to care for vour car before
anything serious happens to it
rhan to be compelled to pay
far a new auto after the other
one is smashed.
ELDORADO GAKRAGE
C. A. REM«R. hwrt-:
b* attached to 'he sol' like a raP.-
! oad!
f The basis of monopoly is th"
j fixity to the soil. Given any pro-
Idoct where a certain location 0*1
certain ground is essential and
you can bet your last hat 'he trust
• will get it. But riv^ti a her. wit
'a disposition to ro«m at lar?e in.
the dewy morning or in the frosty
j afternoon, and 'hen to beaevoient
ly seek out * soapbox and lay sn-
]other egg beside th* old doorknob '
poultry, 95.4.
Livestock <
■ and is ?iven t?
R. A. Cawley, Stella Cawley, H. D.
Barr, J. E. Elbert, administrator of tho
estate of W. R. Belcher, deceased,
Emma Belcher, A. J. Fires, S. J.
Castleman, J. C. Marshal and the Altus
-State Bank, Defendants.
SERVICE BY PUBLICATION.
The defendants, R. A. Cawley, Stel-
la CawleyJJ. E. Elbert, administrator of
the estate of W. R. Belcher, deceased,
Emma Belcher, A. J. Fires, and J. C. i
Marshal wilj take notice that the plain-1
tiff,above named, did on[the 30th day of I
November, 1912, file his petition in thel
District Court in and for Jacksonl
County, Oklahoma, against the above,
named defendants, in which it was t
sought to recover of and from the de-
fendants, R. A. Cawley. and Stella
Cawley, and H. D. Barr, the sum of
$110.00 with the sum of $34.05 accrued
interest, to the 6th day of November,
1912. and accruing interest there-
after at the rate of 10 percent per an-
num until paid, and for the sum ot
$14.40 attorney's fees as provided for
in said note and mortgage; and also for
a judgment foreclosing the real estate
mortgage lein executed and acknowl-
edged by R. A. Cawley and Stella
Cawley on the 17th day of January,
1911 to secure the payment of the debt
above described on the following des-
cribed real estate situated 1n
Jackson County. Oklahoma, to-wit: I
The Southwest Quarter 1-4, of the
Southwest Quarter 1-4, of Section 18 |
in Township One 1, South of Range 22 j
West of the Indian Meridian.
You are further directed to answer
the petition of plaintiff herein on or be-
fore the 28th day of February. 1913. or
saM petition will be takin as true and
judgment rendered in said action in |
favor of this plaintiff for the amount
of the indebtedness above describe*!. J
and all c^nts. and a decree foreclosing
said mortgage lien to satisfy said in-
j debtedness. and said property will I:
C. A. Hatch
Attorney-at-Law
Office over First National Bank.
Eldorado. Okli
I. E HARBISON
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Practice in all courts
Office over Corner Drug Store
Eldorado. Oklahoma
DR. DEWITT C. BUCK
I»HV«1c:ia.X ani> sivkukon
Res. Phone No. 23.
Office Phone No. 107.
Eldorado, - • Oklahoma
DR. H. R. TAYLOR
Physiriaa and Sarfeea
Office with Dr. Buck.
ui»H)i:nce i*iiom: no, it.
l>IIO.%K NO. IS.
Spend (he Holi-
days at Home!
Holiday Fai\s will be in effect
December 21, 22, 23--Good re-
turning until January I9th, 1913,
to points in
ALABAMA. FLORIDA. GEOR-
GIA. KENTUCKY. MISSIS-
SIPPI, NORTH CAROLINA,
SOUTH CAROLINA. TENNES-
SEE. VIRGINIA. DISTRICT OF
COLUMBIA.
Tickets to local ^ints .in Okla-
homa. Texas and Ix>uisiana will
be put on sale Dec-mber 23.
2\ 31 an ! Jaiiiia:j M. granting
i':n»«i return limit "f January Gth.
88.2 per cen'; hogs 83.8, and potil- j ordered sold »«■ pay such judgment.
♦ry 99j6.
Cotton Gin Report.
Davis 2252
Reeves 1734
Union 1507
Ten or twelve loads of cottrn
were ginned t^dav.
, f»ood cotton i« bringing 11 l-2:*a/e you money on
,»ri the trot can"» cra^.r «itli Uatx. Boihe cttoo range? |Mf*r rou mav <]e*ire.
hat profou* TS- Price frote !«1 i l-y 10 cent* THe Count*
you and ••■ch of jrou will h> forever
haned . i ■ r asserting may further
iclaitr - : rest in or to said real
estate MAUDE kim BELL.
I Seal i Ct»-rti of District Court. Jack
son County. Oklahoma.
W C. Au*ti« and C. A. Hatch.
Attorney* for Plain lift.
If you want any periodical of
publication call on u* He can
most am
FRISCO LINES will take ptn
THERE AND BACK in per
•jifi l>. Ithe m arest Frisco
Agent help yxi pian your trip in
• Mad. For 'urther in forma tioo,
tlx- i jam d.
C O. jackson, D P. Ai
Oklahoma City. Okla.
M F. RUSSELL Act
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The Eldorado Courier (Eldorado, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 27, Ed. 1 Friday, January 17, 1913, newspaper, January 17, 1913; Eldorado, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc402842/m1/8/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.