Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1915 Page: 2 of 12
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1
CARNEY. OKLA., ENTERPRISE
THRILLS DAILY
IW GIRL FLIER
ONLY TWTNTY YEARS OLD BUT
SHE LEADS ALL
OTHERS.
The premier attraction of the Okln
hoiua State l'«Ir, September 2R to
October is lluth Law, the peer of
nil air pilot# before tho public today.
Her performance# consist of senna
t Ion a I flights In which alio performs
didoes in the air that make atronii
won nervous anil she Is only 20,
l*>o\>a anil stralRht drops of BOO
feet arc old with her and this year
•he allied a now stunt. She takes
NOTES DECLARE ORDERS IN
COUNCIL ARE JUSTIFIED BY
MODERN WARFARE AND
INTERNATIONAL LAW.
SAME POLICY WILL BE
CONTINUED IN THE FUTURE
.a''
RUTH LAW
In )«U t * feat Not Imitated
*v any et**r f\ r.
up a male assistant *itN a jvarachnte
and at a height of 1.000 feet drops
htw ttwm it \\ r.cM hi plane i !te
ac*j%iire<s a *t>eed of seventy nv.'.es an
hour N ?ore attcwp: ns this feat. to
secure > *ic eat momentum to keep
ker Nalanc*
Ths >s or.e o< the free features U;at
«U1 cr«*t yon at the Math Anaaal
Is* It alone - *c;th .vc nj to ><-♦.
P t< > *«.- Co" H*I d.
Tn tV> .a^d of owNwtwmtx *e*: are
oaut:c?.esi aj:<. st r.^rrt) rmit-.tiai
a p\\1 char.oe a is! there
ltv*a r,f t>*t i"y i in e-
thir.* (K tie atoeey oat.
N . > . " * v i . " , J, • jL t
**•* causal as* t; ts*t * *£>o<*•**■
V^Se* i* hes; ma.1* to tr.e s*t
tst .« tiw; <\«r m
*"V< as «*' as ae>v ? .* crAer to
new*;*. . os vjyr*V<s TVjow.
Tv< a •* '?. ."
> js>.v v. r a.-.-or as
w?. a* «wta TW Irtsfc wt«l> *t 1TM
eurcteii a os a !>.Jitxrka>Je V.ti
TV > «• .? ?> . ai r.-« ,V t VtKva jci
a hax.\*<- $«v fcvipf
iwil At. > - -if e a 5iut
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ar - Kt-r<v. t ■ ? v^wa. fc^.-
Nr*
Continuous Voyage Doctrine and Cele
brated Cases of the Civil War
Cited.—Claim German Atrocities
Justify Any Retalitory
Conduct.
Washington.—Great Britain's re
piles to tho latest American represen
tatlona against Interferences with neu-
tral commerce reject entirely the con
tcntion that the orders In council are
illegal and justify the British course
as being wholly within international j
law.
"Unsustainable either in point ot
law or upon principles of international
equity" Is the British reply to the
American protest agamst the blockade
of neutral porta, with an invitation tc
submit to International arbitration
any cases in which the United States
is dissatisfied with the action of Brit
tsh prise courts.
Groat Britain's reply ts embodied it
two notes, one supplemental. With
the notes was made public also the
correspondence over the American
steamer Neches. soiled by the 1'rltisb
while en route from Rotterdam to the
United States with goods of German
origin. All the correspondence aggro
gates 7.000 words
Changed conditions of warfare, the
British note contends, require a new
application of the principles of inter
national law. The advent of the sub-
marine, the airship and the alleged
atrocities b> German troops In Bel-
gium are cued as justification for the
exercise of extreme measures. The
blockade is just.~ed on the coat en
tion that the universally recognued
fundamental principle of a blockade
is that a belligerent is entitled to cut
oft "by effective means the sea-borne
commerce of his enemy
Weds In a Plaster Suit.
Miss Mary Elizabeth Seraner came
all the way to 8aline county from
Fayetteville, O.. to become the bride
of Francis de Sales Schneider, a
young farmer near Saline', and even
then came near losing out for a delay
at least, but she was equal to the
occasion and is now Schijeider s
bride, says a Saline (Kan.) dispatch
to the Kansas City Journal.
The promised delay in the nuptial
affairs of this young couple was
caused by Schneider getting into a
runaway accident and sustaining a
broken leg, fractured ribs and bruises
all over his body, and his sweetheart
found him bound In plaster of parls
casts so tight he could not move.
The situation was discussed, the
young lady hooked up the favorite
horse to a buggy and came to Saline,
secured the marriage license, engaged
the preacher and returned to the
farm.
Averse to Slang.
Just to show how much averse to
slang he was, a small boy in a Chicago
school explained to the teacher one
day that he had been walking with a
friend, but neglected to take off hla
hat when they mot a lady both knew.
His friend had nudged him, and whis-
pered:
"Take off your lid, you simp!"
"What he should have said," ex-
plained the boy, was 'Remove your
hat, you nut!'"
The general sentiment is summed
up in the words of a small boy, who
ventured this:
"Anyway, it's only roughnecks who
use slang nowadays."
But the average man would rather
have people lie about him than tell all
the truth.
On the Right Track.
"While you were captive of the can-
nibals, captain, why didn't you teach
'em not to eat people up?"
"Well, I did have er try, youngster,
but the best I c'u'd do was ter larn 'em
not ter eat wlv their knives!"—Puck.
Don't judge of a man's politeness
till you see him In his own home.
Poltey To Be Continued.
The note re.tera'es that Great Brit
ain w -.11 continue to apply the orders
complained of although not without
even effort to avoid embarrassment
to neutrals and observes that the
wenoan statist.vis i-ow :v.*t *ny Uvs-s
•.a trade w.-.h Germany and Austria
has N^en --.ore than overbalanced by
t>.e increase of ot>er -.ndustr-.al activ-
ities due to the war.
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5 emu -at tt M-Mrat 'ijv'-tt *. ■
The Meat
For Summer
isn't beef, pork or mutton, but the true life-
giving meat of wheat.
Warm weather calls for lighter diet, and a
true grain food best answers every purpose of
comfort and activity, not only for the business
man but for everybody.
Grape-Nuts
with cream or good milk for brtnkfast ten day , then
take note. Such ft breakfast puts one in fine fettle and
'There's a Reason"
Grape-Nut# i a whent ant! barley pure food un-
like other cereal# in that it affords the valuable
phosphates of the guiuin netmnniy foi the daily re-
building of brain, nerve and must le tissue.
Economy, loo, plays a | att; ami (."•tape'-Nut* M
convenient ready to ral dnctl front the kage.
l y (•roears K very where.
4
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Herbert, H. S. Carney Enterprise. (Carney, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 3, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1915, newspaper, August 13, 1915; Carney, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc88004/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.