Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 10, 1915 Page: 1 of 4
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VALLEY CLIPPER
Vol.14, No. 4 • .
COYLE, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, JUNE '0, /p/5
S inscription^ 1.00 .
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Just A Moment Please
If you could hire a man to work for you
for one cent per day, one that would stay
on the job 365 days in the year, work nights
and Sunday s if you'needed him, board him-
self arid be up and ready to go to work as
soon as you were, every morning. You
would.hire him, wouldn't you? Well the
Sampson .Windmill will do all this. Come
in and let us figure with you on one.
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I — Introductory
Byrne Hardware Co,
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Coyle,
Ok la.
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Ordinance No. 35
AN ORDINANCE EXTENDING THE
TOWN LIMITS OF HIE TOWN
OF COYLE, LOGAN COUNTY
OKLAHOMA.
Re it ouiulued by tlie Mayor and Board
of True:ess of tbe Town of Coyle, Lof.au
County, Ollabomar
Section One. Whereas, iu the judg-
ment of the Board of Trustees of the
town of Coyle, Logan Cotnly, Oklahoma
It will redound to the benefit of the said
town of Coyle to extend the corporate
limits of said tow u so as to include with -
in said corporate limits s strip of
land adjoining said town of Coyle on the
south and west and hounded as follows
Notice
For some reason the Clipper's
ready prints failed to reach us
this week and for that reason
we are running “all home” this
week. From what we can learn
the shipment was made at the
usual time, but was lost by the
express- company. This is an
unusuol circumstance and one
that we are unable ' 1 Ive at
tf e
Sec’y Bryan Resigns
„ . . , Secretary of State W. J. fciry-
Beginning at a point at the iutersec n • , ,
tinn of L ncoln Street add Iowa Avenue,1 resltflieii hom President Wil-
thence south 1320 ft. to the center of son s cabinet the first of the
Sec tic n 18, Tuwnehip 17 North of Range | week. This was caused by the
One Eist, thence east on the half section • firm note sent today .by the
line Of said Section 18 to the southeast president to the German- vov
corner of the noitheast quarter of Sec
tioD IS, Township 1North *of Range
Cue, ihnai, tucuce noi iu uu (tie section
line 1320 feet; and that the west limits
of snid town of Coyle be extended so as
to include within the corporate limits nf war and feared the president s
said town of Coyle Out Lots No One, i , ,, , .
Two and Three and also Block %Ooi! “°te mlght bnn« 0U a C0DfllCt
Lewis First Addition aud Block Two. j Ot arms between tbe two coun-
S^ctian Two. That the said corporate hies, he resigned in order to
limits of said town of Coy,e be and life comply with the dictates of Itis
same are hereby extended to include iu 1 conscience. Tile president and
addition to the present towu of Coyle. | M,. E ^
the tracts or paicels of land set out ft. ; .
section one of this ordinance, and that warinest personal friends and
tbe limits of the Said to XU of uoyle as j b01*1 bolr.l the same opinions in
extended, be and they , are hereby cr [ regard to our European relations
dained as follows; —the only difference is as to the
Beginning at the northeast corner of j system employed. There is
the nonhead quaitei of Section 18,1 .... ...
Township 17 North of Range One East, : f1"1 £reat ‘10Pes that tile Amer-
theuce south to the southeast corner of , k'an and German goverements
said quarter section, tl ence west to the j Will COUie to a satisfactory- un-
southweit corner of said quarter section, j derstauding and that there will
Utence north to the southeast corner of be no trouble between the two
Out Lot No. 3. thence west 330 feet,
thence Dcuth 700 ft., thence west 60 ft.,
thenoe north 703 ft to the north line of
said Section 18, thence east 140 ft. to the
southwest c..rner of Out Lot No, 1,
thence urn th 468 ft. to the northwest
corner of Uni Lot No. 7, thenre i ast 250
tt. to the west lice ot the s .ulhen 1 I
Through the Press Service of Agri-
culture aud Commerce, the. master
minds of this nation will be invited
to the public forum and asked to de-
liver a message to civilization" Men
who achieve seldom talk, and men
who talk seldom achieve There is
no such thing as a noisy thinker, and
brevity is always a close oompanion
to truth.
It will be a great privilege to stand
by the side of men w ho- can roll in
place the cornerstone.of industry; to
associate with men who' can look
at the world and see to the bottom
of it; to commune with men who can
hear the roar of civilization a few
centuries away.
Too often we listen to the rabble
element of our day that cries out
against every man who achieves,
"Crucify him" Mankind never, has
and probably never will produce a
generation that-appreciates the genius
of its day There never will be a
crown without a cross,' progress with-
out sacrifice or an achievement with-
out a challenge
This is an age of service, and that
man Is greatest who serves the larg
est number The present generation
has done more to improve the con-
dition of mankind than any civiliza-
tion since human motives began their
upward flight The Greeks gave human
life inspiration, but while her orators
were speaking with the tongues of
angels, her farmers were plowing
with forked sticks; while her phil-
osophers were emancipating human
thought from bondage, her traffic
moved on two-wheeled carts driven. I
and ofttimeB drawn, by slaves; while!
her artists w ere painting divine I
dreams on canvas, -the streets of
proud Athens were lighted by fire- j
brands dipped In tallow.
The genius of past gges sought to" I
arouse the Intellect and stir the soul
but the master minds of today are,
Beeklng to serve Civilization has as j
signed to America the greatest task !
of the greatest age, and the greatest ;
men that ever trod the greatest planet I
are solving it. Their achievements
have astounded the whole world and
we challenge every age , and nation
to name men or products that can
approach In creative genius or mas-
terful skill In organization, the mar-
velous achievements of the tretnend I
ous men of tbe present day. Edison |
can press a button and turn a light |
on multiplied millions of homes; Vail
can take down the receiver and talk
with fifty millions of people; lie-"
Cormlck s reaper can harvest ' the
world's crop, and Fulton's steam eu-
gine moves the .commerce of land
and sea. j
The greatest thing a human being
can do Is to serve his fellow" men;
Christ did it; Kings decree it, and
wise men teach it It Is- the glory of
this practical age that Edison could
find no higher calling than to become
the janitor to civilization; Vail the f
messenger to mankind; McCormick
the hired hand to agriculture, and j
Fulton the teamster to. Industry, and j
blessed 1b the age that has such
masters for its servants.
have
DE LAVAL
CREAM SEPARATORS
a perfect oiling system
THE DB LAVAL SYSTEM
of automatic oiling provides
for a constant and liberal
supply of clean oil to every
wearing surface of the ma-
chine at all times, and it’s
the only system that does.
YOU NEEDN'T BE AFRAID
that if the hired man or some
one else runs the machine a
few times your machine may
be put out of business for the
lack of a few drops of oil,
because every part is sup-
plied with clean. SI from the
oil reservoir, automatically
and constantly.
THERE IS NOTHING THAT
will wear out a separator
quicker than lack of proper
lubrication, and because this"
cannot happen with a De
Laval it means a much longer
wearing machine.
WE SELL DE LAVAL. SEPARATOR OIL
T~L
TOO MUCH STRESS CAN-
tint he laid upon this subject
of separator oiling. It is very;,
important. We have a larga
chart which shows the D»
Laval oiling system much bait
ter than the email cut above.
Any time you come in we will
be glad to show it to you.
NO OTHER OIL SO GOOIA
BYRNE HARDWARE CO.
COYLE, OKLAHOMA ‘
Memorial Services
The Coyle lodge I.-O. O. F
will hold their memorial ser-
vices at 3 o’clock next Sunday
at the Christian church. Dr.
Pittinger, pastor of the.first M,
E. church, of Guthrie and a
member of the order, will deliv
er the address. All members of
tiie order and the public in j-eu-
eral are cordially invited to at-
tend these services. Dr. Fet-
ernment. It would have been j Unger is a speaker of consider-
tb« duty of Mr. Bryan m'Lavt1 ' ' - - 1 1
signed and transmitted the note,
and as he is absolutely against
of at the houses. Let everybody
come.
Mr. Sol Listerman, who has
been sick the past month, is get-
ting along well. His sutb John,
is working the roads in his place
wliers it is needed real bad.
Mr. and MYs. Judge were at
Stillwater Saturday.
Clareuce Ventris stayed with
Lawrence Todd Sunday night.
Clarkson Items
aLL
this
L.iit^, and to bear him, onj Wm. Keete’s spent Sunday
occassion wil be time welliGeo. Yietigsfs.
spent.
We have two bundled yards pique
which we art selling at 9c per ya'd.
This is extra good quality which far
merly cold for 18c per yard.
. At Houghton's.
Beware of Ointments for
Catarrh tiiat Contain Mercury
as mercury will surely destroy the sense
of stanell and complei* ly derange the
wkole system wlun entering It through
the mucous surfaces. Such articles should
.....| never be used t-xcept on proscriptions
qilaitt i ul Stc» 1 u 4, thOudu norl It to llio j from reputable phys'ci.-iny as the damage
ixnnhxxoAt ,f .I,, i. ir r.k i they will do is ten fold to the good you
poittn.eit c oihu ot the south half of the <an possibly derive from them .....
countries
Goldie Gripe of near Ripley is
here visiting relatives.
Lenora Keefe spent Sunday
with Cassie Carrier,
R. E. Sylvester" and family
spent Sunday at C. S. Hender
sou’s Sr.
Lou Harraman made a busi-
ness trip to Stillwater Monday
returning Tuesday
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by
Hall’s
F. J
Cheney & Co., Toledo, O, contains no
mercury, and Is taken Internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous sur-
faces of the system. In buying Hall's
Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genu-
ine. It Is taken internally and made In
Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Tes-
timonials free
Sold by Druggists. Price 75c per bottle
Taku«Hal) s lanuly rills for constipation
Coyle Gospel Team
Services
Holds
southeast qmuli.r uf section 7,Township
17 Nultlt, Range One Erst, thence east
to Hie northeast corner of ihe south half
of the southeast quarter of Section 7
Township l’j North, Range One East
Thence south to the place of beginning
Section Tluet Be it further ordained
t iAi the M a) or of said town of Coyle he
aud is hereby authorized and directed to
cause the .auiicxt .1 plat, which Is cel tilled
to as a true and accurate plat of said
town Of Coyle, including the additional j Last Sunday the Coy le Gospel
-territory taken in under this ordinance, Ln „ , ,• . «•, ,,
• ... , ,, ’ Team held services at Mt. Ver-
together with a copy of tLis ordinance
duly certified to, to be filed and recorded j n6>n Chinch eight miles nortll-
in the office of the Register of Deeds of east of Coyle The afternoon
the County of Logan, State of Oklahoma j meeting was attended by a large
as the official plat of the towu Coyle, n - crowd and everyone reports a
portion of which said towo of Coyle was dmeeti In 6plte of the
formerly kuowu as 1 »wa City nr.d hcie . . r
after to be known and designated offic night tlieie w eie about
tally as tbe town of Coyle. ] sixty-five present aud a good
Section B’our. That this ordinance
shall take effect and be in fotce from and
after ils due passage, approval and pub-
A Good Game
The Joall game here Sunday
between Mulhall and Coyle is
reported as interesting notwith j evening,
standing the final score Stood 5 morning,
to 4 in tavor of the visiting team. | Fred Reck spent Sunday
Up to the ninth inning every-1 acrogB the river. •
thing seemed to favor the home I „ „ ,,
team aud the score stood two to ?US fNesl,“e C"me home bat'
four id their favor. At tflis;Urday for a few days visit.
point two error? on Coyle's part! ^van Shoemaker is iu this vi
dost fur them the game. The>ciuity again,
errors were nothing uncommon; George Gaskin is on the sick
amj of a nature liable to occur j list-
en any team but came at a crit ! Mr. and Mrs. Ogg went to
ical time, . I Perkins Monday.
Charley Ilarratnau and family
spent Sunday with her mother,
Mrs. Nessling.
H. T. Nehr moved his family
to Cleveland Friday of last
week.
Mr. aud Mrs. Win* Morrill
went to Guthrie Monday morn
ing, returning that evening.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Carrier
aud Mr. and Mr. J. Dannerspent
Monday at Ed Westfalls’.
Married: On Friday of last
week , Geo. Wagoner and Goldie
Moreill at Stillwater.
On Monday of this week, Bon-
nie Spalding and Miss Willie
"I lie Clipper uow bar a scho.aiship or I
the Capital City Business Co li u-e fjrea'e
at a liberal itiscouut, Anyone wishing to
attend this popular business school
should pick uy thiH scholarship at once
as It will not he on the market long
judgin'.1 from'our former experiences
with them Even If you are not quite
ready to attend eriiool, it will he a pay-
ing investment to hoy now and nteki a
substantial saving on the purchase price,
Hcalioo.
Passed thisSdavTf Juue, 1915.
Approved tnis 8 day of Jure, 1915.
Roy Tkal,
Attest Mayor.
J. Vi. Ecktuan, Clerk.
(SEAL)
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Work shirts, overalls and jumpers—
T. iM. X, aud Fltz RlgYlt brands.
Stocktou Grocary,
meeting prevailed. As a result
of the meeting one man was led
to accept Jesus Christ as his
personal Savior It was very
dark and rainy coming, home
and nearly all the boys got wet,
but there is not one who regrets
having been there.
See Clarence Wendell, Jr. or call at
the Clipper office for the Saturday Even-
ing Post, Sunday St. Louis Globe Demo-
rr.it, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and Okla
toman.
District 37.
We* a re having lots of rain
and wt-tgds are growing fast.
Nova Casey, Opal Parks and
Miut Chandlers visited* at Mr.
Bentley's Sunday.
The Gospel Team from Coyle
was at Mt. Vernon Sunday. A
large crowd (Jwas out to hear
them in the afternoon but it
rained in the evening.
Mi. and Mrs Harvey Graham
visited with Mr. Downey's Sun-
day #
There was a large crowd at
the baptising Sunday at Mr
Walter’s pond.
•
Quite a number of the pleas-
ant \ a.lley girls and boy attend*
ed Children’s Day at Marena.
There will be prayer meeting
at the Pleasant Valley school
house on Thursday night instead
Gracie Flynt and Myrtle Todd |
visited Sunday at Mr. Sig Bent j
ley’s,
There will be a Gospel Team i
meeting at Mt Vernon church
at 3 o'clock in the afternoon and
at 7 o’clock iu tlie evening Sun-
day, June 6.
Martha Lacy was a Saturday
night visitor at the George Pol
iug home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hamilton
visited Sunday at Mr. Guy Wil
! son’s.
Mattie Downey visited at Min
tie Chandler's Sunday.
Mrs. Lou Ventris is visiting
her daughter. Mrs. Ray Batcher,
in Caddo County.
Charlie Listermau visiter! at
Lawrence Todd’s Sunday.
Johnny Flynt returned home
Saturday after a few.weeks vis
it in tlie country.
Mr. Cottrill is. visiting this
week with his daugliteis.
Mrs. Edna" Webber is visiting
her mother, Mrs. Lowe, near
Coyle.
On the Bridge
I stood on the.bridge at mid-
night, and looked at tii£ sizzling
town, where the pleasure seek
iug people were holding tiie
sidewalks down. The moon
rose over tlie city and shone on
the dames and gents, but the
glare of tlie lights electric made
it look like twenty cents. 'The
windows ot homes were dark-
ened, for no one was staying
there; tiie children as wrell
as g r o w n up? wert* all iu
the Great White Glare. Desert
ed were all tlie firesides aban-
doned tlie old time game; alas
that old home circle is naught
blit .111 empty nann ! The 1 itber
is out chug-chugging, the moth
er is at her club, the kids see
the moving pictures, and go to
hotels for grub. How often, oh
how often, iu the days that
seemed good to me, have 1
Some Marvelous Exhibits
at the Panama-Pacific
International Exposition
Exhibits in Agricultural Palace at tbs
Panama Pacific International Expo-
sition Show Caterpillar Gaining
Favor Over Lug wheeler Trac-
tors In Farm Machinery.
An observer In the Agriculture Pal-
■ace at the Panama Pacific Interna-
tiona^ Exposition at San Francisco
cannot help noticing in the display of
agricultural power machinery, the al-
most complete supersedence of the
new design of power tractor, known as
the caterpillar, over tlie cumbersome,
unstable, high s/heeled engine of a
few years ago. There are few of the
old models on exhibition, while the
caterpillar principle has Deen applied
to almost every type of engine for ag-
ricultural purposes.
The caterpillar proper Is a heavy
sheet metal chain, v.arying in width
from ten Inches to two feet according
to the weight of the engine, which
passes around two heavy sprocket
wheels like a belt These wheels re-
volving, pass the chain about them,
the lower part moving backward, with
"the weight of the engine resting on
the broad surface of the chain be
tween the two sprockets.
An engine of this‘type can be op-
erated on ground soft enough to mire
an ordinary farm wagon.
Morrill at Guthrie. Were you! looked at the children playing
surprised? Not much. There
are still more "bells to ring,” so
just listen.
(Latt week's items)
Dot and Opal Parks visited at
Nova Casey’s Sunday.
There will be Sunday school
at the Hopewell arbor Sunday
afternoon.
Mrs. Anna Bentley left Satur
day for Kansas to visit her son,
Leo Ford.
Pearl Snyder was a Sunday
guest at Atbal Allison's.
at home where they ought to be!
How often, oh how often in
those days ot the proper stamp,
have 1 gazed on the parents
reading at home by the evening
lamp! But the world has gone
to thunder, forgotten that elder
day; aud I took up the bridge
and broke it and *tbrew tbe
chunds away.—Walt Mason.
Duplicate of the Roosevelt African
* Shotgun.
A duplicate of the shotgun which
Col. Theodore Roosevelt took with him
on his African trip, a gun constructed
expressly for him by an American
armorer,,].) on display at the manufac-
turer's exhibit in the Manufacturer's
Palace at the Panama-Pacifio Interna-
tional Exposition, San Francisco. The
gun cost its illustrious owner $360,
and its beautiful design, graceful
lines and wonderful inlay work would
justify the expenditure to any lover
of fine pieces. The stock is elabo-
rately hand carved, the barrels and
lock are hand engraved, and the lock
is inlaid with a hunting scene in gold.
The barrels are of the finest Krupp
steel. Before starting on the trip the
ex-president wrote to the makers; “I
really think it is the most beautiful
gun I have ever seen. I am almost
ashamed to take it to Africa and sub-
ject it to the rough treatment It will
receive."
The left barrel is choked and the
right open. It is cored to shoot either
buckshot or a single ball.
ln a gro^p in this Palace are dis-
plays by four of the world’s greatest
manufacturers of sporting arms, which
form an exhibit which attracts hun-
dreds of sportsmen. Each display la
in charge of a firearms’ expert.
Sweel potato plants for sale at 70c per
hundred, 90c for 500 or tl 50 per thous .
and, at Green House h mile south rftd *
H mile west of Coyle. 1
Phone 55 J. A. Dingus, 4
There wil! be services at the Methodist ,
church on next Sunday morniDg aud
evening, conducted by Rev. McCalllster,
former pastor here, Hereafter Rev. F.
A.|Dunning, will have charge of eervlceg
during cbe absence of the regu ar pastor
who will be away during the summer
months. Rev. Dunning Is pastor of |the
church at Ripley, and will continue to
serve at that place two Sundays each
month, while the othei two Sundays he
will be at Coyle.
/
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Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 4, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 10, 1915, newspaper, June 10, 1915; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911074/m1/1/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.