Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cimarron Valley Clipper 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:
r*
If i 081 Want
Voting People
Parcuis Read
and
NOTES
MFADOWBROOK
R
E
$
"VTOU can get
them by ad-
vertising in this
paper. It reaches
the best class of
people in this
community.
Use this paper if
you want some
of their business.
Use This Paper
What It Cost Not
To College.
To
FARM
Cimarron Valley Clipper
SUBSCR I H I' I ON l’ER YEAR $1.00.
C. F. Wantlell, Manager.
Filtered uh wecondclaHfl matter at the
poutofflceat Coyle.
Again We Say
Subscribe
for THIS
PAPERj
7 lie price of cotton is held up
by scarcity; that of wool by veto
It looks as if the standpatter
has undergone a revision down-
ward.
A wise man doesn’t
broil; his w-fe’s will until
dead.
try to
she is
Som
it pays
not hill
With
prohib.l
will h
p it h.
. Wed
kite o
Taft v
article
people are good because
while Olliers aretgoi* I foi
poker and bull
d, th) I’anain i
the proverbial n
figh's
Can,i
Kveilasting sorrow. No one
ever went to business college
with honest intent and serious
purpose who did not consider it
money, time and labor well ex-
pended. Thousands who have
not gone regret the fact that they
did not. You can go if you
really hunger and thirst for an
education.
Nowhere else will you, meet
such choice companions. The
earth's noblest young people are
in colleges, sril at no other time
of life can you make such strong
and lasting friends. Girls and
boys from our most cultivated
homes assemble annually at Our
college.* If you do not go to
college these choice friendships
are lost to you forever.
L)o not postpone your go:ng to
college. Youth is the time for
preparation, just as spring is the
seed time. The farmer who does
not plant his Seed in spring time
has no harvest, If you haven’t
the money to go to college, bor-
I row it, and pay it back out of
salary earnt d after graduation
You can Jo this; many of our
most successful men attended
college on borrowed money.
Business education is an asiet
worth thousands. It is an equip
meat for life’s woik. It gives
the power to earn. It destroys'
poverty and enthrons prosperity
It can not be lost or stolen.
You cannot aff >rd, dear young
reader, not to attend the Capital
City Business College of Gnthrie,
Ok la. It is positively Oklahoma’s
best scho d of Bookkeeping and
Shorthand.
Rem mbeV the words of Chan
cllor Ken‘, when lie said: “T he
parent who sends his son into the
world uned icated, defrauds the
community of a useful citizen
and bequeaths to it
Y\ rite for free catalogue.
*•
I*
4
Oats make the best
tor horses In summer.
Choice Oklahoma Farms to sell on easy terms.
Insurance of all kinds written in standard Co’s.
THE®.LOWER
Real Estate, Loans and
Insurance
I owest and best terms on farm loans. A Ken-
exchange bureau in connection. See me if
yeu have anything to trade.
gram ration j
t
r
5
|
4
•£ 4 4-=%'g x-4 .a msi a44 -a,'4^4•> —
Cows differ somewhat In the amount
of rougbago they Will take.
In the caro of chickens women
prove their superiority over men.
In preparing birds for. the show
room women are moro handy than |
men. •
Watch out for worms in the hock;
they will cause lots of trouble and
loss.
. q . . a
.fi.Q»e - y • a-o - ® •* • £>•
r
Let Me Have four Order
Feeding sour or sloppy food Is one
way of Inviting bowel trouble'In the
young chick.
Opinions vary somewhat as yet as
to the comparative feeding value of
pea vine silage.
The farmer who keeps better poul-
try, or the best, Is on the right road
to a paying business.
Asparagus shoots should not be cut
too late, as late cutting will Injure the
vitality of the roots.
The proper way to apply manure Is
to remove It from the stable directly
to the field and spread It.
Impatience with the heifer that Is
freshening for the first time Is one
sure way of spoiling the cow.
Do not attempt to raise fall pigs
1 without having first prepared a per-
I feci system of housing for the winter.
at least Senator LaEol
n't claim that President
toed ait)- of h's ni lg izin ■
nuisance.
ll is
No d nibt Ad nir d Io
much clearer id-a of the dingers
tiiat are likely to b;se‘.the J ip i
nese invader.
C ingreasm in C li ter is seven
sixteenth I iditn II- whipped
1 ir men recently, which make
Indian efficiency difficult to esti
mate in figures
There are s ud t > be Son Chin i-
men in American colleges. II i.v
on earth cm we keep this a se-
cret frail Sin 1*7 aicisco?
“Dr. Miles’ Nervine
Completely Cured
Our Little Boy of
Fits.”
A family can suffer no greater
affliction than to have a child sub-
ject to fits or epilepsy. Many a
father or mother would give their
all to restore such a child to health.
■'1 am heartily glad to tell you of
our little buy who was completely
cured of fits. He commenced hav-
ing them at 10 years of and had
them fur f<*ur >ears. I tried three
doctors and one specialist but all of
them sa I he cuuld nut be cured,
but Dr. Miles' Restorative Nervine
and Dr. Miles’ Nerve and Liver Pills
made a comptrte cure. He is now
hale, hearty and pay. It has been
three years since he had the last spell.
I shall l’
praise wherever I
ive Dr. Miles’ medicines
ibertv to use this fetter as you see
You are at
“V hi nov r know wh it a Dcin,
ocr it nr an Insurgent will d >.”
Bat you always know what a
st tiulp itter, a clothing store* Jam
my or t wooden Indian will dqp.
Any doubt that Champ Cfaik
is an aspirant for the president)
is now dispelled through his ac
ti<hi m starting an Anania? club
with President Tall as a charter
member. For what i> the prefli
dency without an Ananial club?
fit and anyone writing to me I will
gladly answer it they enclose stamp
tor reply.”
F. M. HOGUE, Windfall, Ind.
Dr. Miles’ Nervine
is just what it is represented to be,
a medicine compounded especially
fur nervous diseases, such as fits,
spasms, St. Y'itus’ dance, convul-
sions and epilepsy. T hese diseases
frequently lead to insanity or cause
weak minds. Dr. Miles’ Nervine
has proven most effective in reliev-
ing these dreaded maladies.
Sold by all druggists. If tha first bottle
Ulster benefit your money is returned.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
Tomatoes should be given the last
working with cultivator and then
bedded just before the vines fall over.
If dusty hay is* fed, sprinkle with
water and it will save the horse much
annoyance; but better not feed it at
all. i
- *
The greatest forage ' crop In the
world is corn, and the silo is the most
economical device for use In dish-
ing It up.
Free range for hogs does not mean j
that they should be allowed to run in
the highways and through the neigh- !
bors’ fences.
Stall manure applied to the ground
frerji is much better than manure
that has been weathered by standing |
in the barnyard.
All vegetables which require warm
soli, as okra, beans, tomatoes and
egg plant, should have warm manure
and never muck.
Farmers everywhere are looking for
sbme economical way of maintaining i
the soil fertility or Improving It. j
Dairying is (lie answer.
Fence rorners full of dead weeds
make a fine hibernating place for all
kinds of bugs hich will get busy with
your crop next spring.
The alfalfa farmer is not cutting as“
heavy a crop this year as ordinarily,
but be Is just as many laps ahead of
tho all-grain farmer as ever.
The man who Is sincerely interested
in his dairy work is pretty sure to
bo a prosperous dairyman and in his
ease tho dairy business booms.
Stall manure, mixed with ground
phosphate and applied on the ground
J fresh, is vastly better as a fertilizer
than manure in any other form.
Tho cream from the milkings must
not be kept so long that It will de-
velon a sharp acid, for that would
impart an unpleasant flavor to tire but-
ter.
Yoi\ would think the manufacturer
a fool who would feed cotton into his
mill and expect silk goods to be woven
from it, and yet the -hen. is simply a
machine.
■* c
for those trees, etc., you intend planting this
fall and I will GUARANTEE you the finest
of stock, delivered in A. No. 1 condition. I
have a good, reliable tirin behind me,
...The Mb Hope Nurseries...
Of Lawrence, Kansas.
whose forty two years experience and unex-
celled facilities enables me to do it. Their
reputation for square and honest dealing and •
the furnishing of STRICTLY first-class.
TRUE TO.NAME stock is unequaled. Order
EARLY and have stock reserved while the
cream of it is to be had. No payment is link-
ed until delivery of stock is made.
?
t
t
<*
I
I
\
£. I*. GREEN, Gen. A^ent,
Coyle, Okla.
^ t5
/
AT
Prize Offers from Leading Manufacturers
Book on patents. “Mints to inventors.” “Inventions needed.”
•‘Why some inventors fail.” Send rough sketch or model for
search of Patent Office records. Our Mr. Greeley was formerly.
Acting Commissioner of Patents, and as‘such had full charge.of
the U. S. Patent Office.
©i
GREELEY & MclNTIRE
Washington, ‘D. C,
!
.1, H. KNIfiNT jF. .1. Boutin, M. D.
Veterinary Surgeon,
N >w loc ited in C >yle, Gala
| Docs a general practice of Vctin
i .>rj'. Medicine, Stngery and
■ Dentistry. Phone ‘26
i____________ __
DR. (i. VV. WYATT
DENTIST,
- r- pr ;
'e/; g
i
D|| EC get immediate relief from
rlLLj Dr. Shoop’s Magic Ointment
Dll immcdia,c rcilel from
IT ILL-* Dr. Shoop’s Magic Ointment
k*4JLl.
U
Will be at Dr Ueutlii’g ofilce, Coyle
Okla., first Mon lay In each mouth and
remain one week. Get nu appoint mil t
oariy ia il>u week ,
Physician & Surgeon
Particular attention to obstetrics.
Glass os lilted correel ly at lowest prices,
Teeth • extracted. All cells attended
prunplly. Over 25 years In practice.
House phone 15, Ofilce phone 24
COYLE, OKLA.
C. M. COMPTON
Physician and Surgeon
Calls'answered promptly day
or night, Ollicc rooms Peoples
Slate Bank Buil ling.
.1 Mlii'V Phone No. 61.
Hello Central!
(me me
Coyle
I waul lu tall, to tin jolllcsl and light
Audi, ncer in the work! »
V(!|.
!l. R. CHRISTOPHER COL. J. J. CAMPBELL
LAWYER
Try tlie plan of flushing the ewes
from now until breeding season, then
follow with good pasture, and yo*i will I
see from results lhal tho plan makes , ,ce ,
most profits. L
IO YEARS EXPERIENCE
3rd door east of poatofFi.’o
COYLE, OK I, A
lie cried my sale last year, the net
l,: "leeds e vi ling nr, ev peel a (ions by
|t:i|li;!2 i hat's I he way lie does busi-
i ' -H, No InexpeiT. neeil auctioneers in
mine, tlianli you. I want the best.
11I< Reis result*. Make dales at Ptop
•' t*ti ttauk, Olinftron Valiev Batik,
nr Clipper ofllee.
I lo x it.
Coyle, OkU.,
Phone fid
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.
Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 21, 1911, newspaper, September 21, 1911; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc910672/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.