Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1914 Page: 3 of 8
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CARNEY, O K L A.. E NTERPRISE
CARNEY ENTERPRISE
Publishedevery Friday,
BY H. S. HERBERT.
At One Dollar a Year.
Subscriber&TeceivingJthisjapar
with a blue X mark over this *P*r-
graph will know that their subsc"p-
tionhas expired, and a renewal is
soicited.J
LOCAL NEWS NOTES.
Oh!, for a cool spell of weather
alter this heated spell.
H. E. Straughen and wife were
Carney visitors last Friday.
Miss Alma Buck was the guest of
Miss Irene Stump Sunday.
Mrs. Ed Rhodes of Fallis, was a
Carney visitor Monday.
Senator C, L. Edmonson, candi
date for state senator, was shaking
hands with friends here last Friday
J. R. Shoop left the first of the
week for Perry, Okla. tone gone
for some time.
Mr. and Mrs L T. Wo^ley came
down from Cleveland Sunday morn
ing for a short stay.
J. D. Roberts and wife and Miss
Orvetta Dowty motored over to Try-
on Tuesday morning
Paul Bellatti and wife came down
from Drumright the first of the
week to visit home folks,
Miss Nellie Pendergraft spent
the 4th with her brother Guy anc
wife at Cleveland.
The people of Fallis celebrated
in the afternoon on the 4th and
reports from there were that all
had a good time.
Miss Emma Pickett ,came up
from Oklahoma City Tuesday,
where she is attending a music
school to visit home folks.
While assisting in the fireworks
at Tryon on the 4th Frank Prichard
manager of the Southland Lumber
Co. at this place, got his lef>
hand badly burned
Muskogee has more whiskey
peddlers in jail than has any other
city in the state, but Tulsa has
more of them at large, says
McAlester News-Capital.
Eld. A. G. McCown delivered the
lermon at a union service at Prague
last Sunday night. The ser-
vices were held in the Airdome
and all the different churches of
the town were represented.
Attention is called to the ad-
vertisement of S. U. Silverthorn,
Tryon, Okla , dealer in all kinds of
farm machinery, buggies, wngons,
etc. Mr. Silverthorn is an old
business man of Tryon and he al-
ways carries a large stock, so if
you want anything in his line he
would be pleased to have you to call,
see what he keeps and learn his
prices.
Tryon's Big Celebration.
Our neighboring town of lryon
was the scene of one of the largest
gatherings on the 4th that has been
witnessed at that place in a long
time, and it was a very pleasant
gathering. It was estinated that
near fifteen hundred people enjoy-
ed the day at that place.
The parade from the town to the
grove was splendidly managed and
very favorably ccmmen ted on
The song, "America," by Tryon
Sunday schools, reading the Declar
ation of Independence^ by Man
ord Cox, then came the contest of
the Sunday schools, Valley Queen
:arrying off all the prizes, having
the largest delegation, the bes1
songs and the best drill
After dinner Hon. J. C. Prin^ey
and Hon. Streeter Speak man deliver-
ed appropriate addresses, after
which the ball game, Tryon vs
Oklahoma City, in which Tryon
won by the score of 2 to 1, Rain
put a stop to the other exercises on
the grounds.
The fire works at night was
witnessed by a large number and
for nearly an hour there was a .fine
display
Tryon people never do things
on a small scale and in this cele
bratioi kept place with their former
efforts.
Pupllc Speaking.
Hor,. Reuben M. Roddie, of
Ada, Otcla.. Democratic candidate
for Congress, will speak in Carney
at 10 :30 o'clock A M. Saturday.
At Tryon at 2:30 p- m. and at
Agra at 8 ;30 ati nght.
Everybody is cordially invit;d
to be present.
; Valuable Book Fre«
T<> lie readers of this paper Dr. Chas.
L. Bprlc«\ the eminent Catarrh Special-
nt.. of 006 Waldheim Bldg.. Kansas
l ily. Mo., will sead his book ' Catarrh
ttui its Dangers." The doctor will be,
■iiea-icd to tell you about bis aure, and
Vit be can do for you if you write
ii a brief history of your case adv.
Farmers, Take Notice*
I have just received a car
shipment *I the well known
VELIE & JOHN DEERE
BUGGIES,
Direct from the factory.
There are no better on the
market; also,
DEERINC & M'CORMICK
Corn Binders and
Mowers.
I have a good proposition
on
Farm Wagons.
3all and see me before
i you buy. I have the goods,
and my terms and prices
are right.
Yours For Business,
S♦ U. Silverthorn,
Tryon, Okla.
HAD MORE THAN THEIR SHARE
Class of Englishmen Who Rivaled In
the Number of Their Wlve
"Bluebeard#" of History.
100 TON SILO egr? CABLGir>
cf the most lasting material viu c;ji j 'ace on ye u
farm. It is of Clazed Tile blocks iua.defrom t • '
special dies. It carries the Kalainaaoo Galvani;.
Steel Door Frame r.r.d Red Cedar Doors ('h kr-
you should demand no matter whet J"'1'
fcuild.) It is provided vsith galvanised , >eer *'•
hoops, extending clear around the eiio, imbt..dtd i
in the silo walls. And we Lave tn
Early Year Money Saying Proposition
whereby the elimination of all storage charges, the
charges for handling, as well as the cost of moving
the material from the kiln to the cars, then the
cars to your home station, makes a saving to the
buyer, and this saving can be extended into the
cost of handling and installing the same. Early
buying costs you lets, enables us to serve you bet-
ter, and you caa have our catalogue for the asking
of
GUY PALMER, Representative, Carney.
Phone 551, on Line 48.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
The following political announce-
ments, subject to the Democratic
primary, August 4, have been au-
thorized :
FOR JUDGE 10th JUDICIAL DIST.
Chas. B. Wilson, Jr.
FOR STATE SENATOR.
C. L. Edmonson,
North Choctaw Township.
Milt Taulbee,
of Davenport.
FOR COUNTY TREASURER.
S A. Key, of Chandler
H. E, Straughen-
of Otoe Township.
FOR SHERIFF.
Chas. Spencer,
of Chandler.
R. R. (Bob) Harris,
Chandler Township.
Mr. W. R. Baumbach of Wa-
dena, Minnesota, a very intimate
friend of Mr. and Mrs. J. W.
Austen, arrived in town Friday noon
and spent the Fourth and Sunday
visiting Mr. and Mrs Austen. He
left for home Monday afternoon.
Wadena is the old home of the Aus-
ten's.
There are comparatively few
families now adays who don't sub-
scrtbe for their local paper. Most
of those who don't borrow it. A
newspaper borrow^ sponges on
his neighbo'r who subscribes and
pays for his paper.
Reports from all over the state
says Judge Rober son is making
the biggest gains of any other
candidate for governor.
Mrs. A. J. Scroggins came from
the eastern part of the state Sunday
to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs,
R. F. Dodd.
If some of you wo Tien had all
the hair off your head that isn't
growing there, you would look like
a humming bird in a rain storm.
It was formerly no uncommon
thing, when journeying Ihrough the
Essex marshes, to meet with fathers
of families to whom the epithet
"Bluebeard" might, without any im-
propriety, he applied, remarks Lon-
don Tit-Bits. To have married half
a dozen wives was no unusual expe-
rience with these men, many of
whom, indeed, had gone through the
marriage ceremony with thrice that
number. Even that total had on oc-
casion been exceeded, as in the case
of a native of Candy island, who had
espoused twenty-five different wom-
en, while his son, who was but |
thirty-five, had already been wedded
fourteen times.
Yet for the most part these exces-
sively connubial men were very re-
spectable fellows, whose sole mistake
was in choosing wives from the
neighboring uplands inBtead of woo-
ing those who had become acclima-
tized from having been born and
bred among the marshes. Conse-
quently the newly wedded brides,
who had been accustomed to fresh
and bracing air, on taking up their
abode among the fQgs and mists of
FOR COURT CLERK
Darwin Filtsch,
Chandler.
FOR COUNTY ASSESSOR
J. W. (Wilbur) Green
FOR COUNTY CLERK
J. Bart Foster,
Chandler
FOR CO. SUPERINTENDENT
OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTIONS
Prof, R,G, Creekmore,
Stroud, Okla,
Prof, Paris Perswell,
Sparks, Okla,
FOR COMMISSIONER, (1st Dist.-
I
R. A Morrow,
Stroud, Okla.
Second District.
W. R. Burford,
Wellston.
the unhealthy tlats, soon succumbed
to ague or fever, which generally car-
ried them off within the year, leav
ing their husbands to console them-
selves with fresh partners, who in
their turn r&pidly gave place to suc-
cessors.
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, July 10, 1914, newspaper, July 10, 1914; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc87947/m1/3/: accessed April 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.