Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1911 Page: 1 of 12
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CARNEY ENTERPRISE.
NO. 1.
3. S. HERBERT. - - EDITOR
Entered July 10, 1903 at Carney
Oklahoma,as second class matter ,un
deractof Congress March 3, 15H«
SUBSCRIPTION* ATES.
„„ il 6 MONTHS SO
3 MONTHS 25C
To Whom It May Concern.
Chandler, Okla., 7-19-11.
Believing that many honest per-
sons may be misled by circular let-
ters being sent out, by the Brewers
from Kansas City and elsewhere, we
deem it necessary to advise that un-
der the law a person can have in his
own home at one time, one barrel of
beer and one gallon of whiskey or
wine, and he may have in his place
of business not to exceed one quart
of intoxicating liquor at one time.
This does not mean that he can or-
r. 1 t eohnnl land will begin at der or receive each day a barrel of
I f A mist 29 and continue beer and one gallon whiskey or one
Hobart Augus 29• and Uon of wine, for the reason that
through U8US Saks in Lin. the liquors herein named car. only be
ending Novembe - Chand- used in his own immediate family;
coin County will be held at Lh ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
ler November L. Lwav or otherwise furnished
The Arkansas man w ® m"n L oth'ers. This 0ffiCe will vigcr-
girl he had never met un i ousiy prosecute any person who vio
posed to her to win a w g Ltes any of the provisions of this
to the conclusion that marriage is no late* any
joke. But, then, many who we in a e shawhan Distillery Company
less coldblooded and more leisurely I
of Kansas City, is now sending out
a circular letter to the customers in
this state saying:
had "worked like a aog . „THEREISNOLAW NOW HAS
An exchange has figured that if THERE EVER BEEN A LAW
__ ♦nip., the twenty-four pattt n qthp VOTT IN
way have come to a like conclusion.
You've heard people say that they
had "worked like a dog" all day
were literally true, the twenty-four WHICH COULD STOP YOU IN
hours would be spent thus: One ^^ pR0M ORDERING
hour digging out a rat, two hours WHISKEy aND beer. y0U ARE
waiting for a cat to come down from ^ aMERICAN CITIZEN AND
a tree, one hour gnawing a bone- HAVE A PERFECT RIGHT TO
half an hour begging to get into the order aN£> recieve SHIP-
house, and the balance of the time MENTS 0F BEER AND WHIS-
sleeping on a mat in the doorway. rey
After this the Era will make the ACCORDing TO THE NEW
regular charge of 5c per 1LAW WHICH WENT INTO EE
nouncements of all ente Y0UR STATE ON JUNE
"fftSSZSS■■'-11.1911. vou can only re-
thmiis sold, It is customary at CIEVE ONE GALLON OF WHIS-
other places to make such charges AND' ONE CASK OF BEER
Se Era feels.thjt no apology^ 1^ ,,
necessary for making e nQ admission Thig statement is grossly false
^hareed will be gladly announced and misleading, and will only tend to
}Sree —Davenport New Era. get those who may heed to it into
This rule is being adopted by trouble, and when you get into trouble
many papers in the state, and it is with lhe state these rascally brewing
but fair to make this chargc where a cornpanies will desert you and leave
charge is made for admission. The yQU t0 fight the battle alone.
Enterprise heretofore has been liber- The law does not permit you to
1 in giving space that should have recieve one gallon of whiskey and
been charged for. . | one cask of beer daily in your ^ fam-
I^T^Iidimtof Car- ily or place of business, and the
While you :„„rnvp hrpminir romoinv that advises
While you are ^ improve brewing company that advises you
ney strive to na Carney. that it does so alio, you, tells that
under your effort . ^ which it knows to be absolutely false
spend your ^ ' t„ and and is only sent you for the purpose
hand toward build g g do 0f getting your money. no matter
more per- what the result may be.
th?\!vm8when you leave here, As to you, I warn you that it you
sistently—when y hged ^ and act accordingly
ftooUabor-there will be a poig. that you will get ail kinds of trouble
SS regret among our good people on your hand. J am. ^
at the loss of such a man. Wilberforoe Jones.
If a man would work at some em- County Attorney,
ployment half as bard as he ..11'
" ... - office at a
If a man will tell you what is his
idea of heaven, you can tell pretty
well what kind of a fellow he is.
The man of greed will describe it as
a city of gold and pearly gates. The
lazy man will emphasize the 'heory
that that there is no work there.
The musician will dwell on the choir
invisible. The coward will tell you
that theives cannot break in and
steal. The real man will laugh and ^
give vent to the hope that it will be |
a place where no undue emphasis on
his lineage, his pedigree or his bal-
ance at the bank will be laid. This
would be a relief after a life spent in
this scrambling, back biting world.
About as good away to study hu-
man nature is when you are driving
on the public road. If a man is wil-
ling to observe the laws and the court-
esies of the road, he will duly give
his share of it when meeting
another, and show he is wiling to do
the gentlemanly thing about it But
when you meet one who takes every
advantage of those he meets, and
holds the road for his own selfish self
often to the great discomfort of those
he meets, or will not allow them to
pass, we are almost sure to think of
pork in connection with such drivers
of teams.
The farmer who owns a farm is the
particular person who is fixed. Banks
may fail and factories close, work-
men strike and mines suspend, mer-
chants fail and towns burn, times
may be pan c y ani even crops may
be short—but the farmer who owns
his acres will get along. He will live
in comfort and quiet, with plenty to
I eat, drink and wear. He is the most
independent man on earth. Yet
there are lots of them who do not ap
preciate their situation.
The Postal Saving Bank is for the
benefit of a certain elements who do
not save their money, who want am-
ple security, no taxation and are con-
tent with 2 per cent interest. The
Postal Bank will prove a great boom
to the people and many a young man
will start a savings account who nev-
er seriously considered the matter
when he could draw out his money
from time to time in the ordinary
bank. The Postal makes you save
whether you want to or not,
13rd Psalm Revised.
1. My wife is my boss. I shall
not deny.
2. She maketh me to lie down
benind the bed when swell company
comes, and she leadeth me behind
her up Main street.
3. She restoreth my pocketbook
alter she has spent all of its contents
for hobble skirts and theatre tickets,
and she leadeth me up the main isle
at church for her new hat's sake.
4. Yea, though I walk more than
half the night through dark room?
with a crying baby. I will get no
rest, for she is behind me,her broom-
stick and her hat-pin they do every-
thing else but comfort me,
5. She prepareth a cold snack
for me, and then maketh a beeline
for an Aid Society supper. She
annointeth my head with the rolling
pin occasionally My arms run-
neth over with the bundles before
she is half done with her shopping.
6. Surely her dressmaker's and
millinery bills shall follow me all the
days of her life, and I will dwell in
the house of my wife forever.—Ex.
Get The Habit.
Young man it will pay you to
get the habit. We mean the saving
habit. The banking habit will
help you. If you are starting out
in life with only your two hands
to help you, the dollar or. deposit
will be the best friend you will
have on the side. Start an ac-
count at the bank. Don t check
unless the need is urgent. Adl
to it rather than draw it out. You
will acquire a standing among the
men who do things. You will in
time have a fund to do something
with yourself. Get the habit.
Start now. The opening of a bank
account may be the turning point
in vour career. Come and start
with us, no matter how small. Ask
the successful man if this advice
is good. He knows. See if he
doesn't tell you the same thing.
J. W. AUSTEN, Cashier.
CARNEY STATE BANK.
"The Bank That Always Treats
You Right."
trying tc get a public office at a
low salary he could make a fair
living.
An Alanta man has been ordered
by the court to kiss his wife at least
once a day. Serves him right.
«
WE LEAD IN QUALITY |
&
I Of Goods, Completeness of Stock j
\ and Uniformity of prices. |
S McCOWN'S Store. \
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1911, newspaper, July 28, 1911; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc87796/m1/1/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.