Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 5, 1920 Page: 1 of 4
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:
*V- -
• ; »_ •' •
>* •-
WKV':”-
/* ft
S._
r-c
/
/
CIMARRON
Vol. 2), No. 9
CLIPPER
* A
The Winners
w
mi
mm
•**
&
BALL GAME
Okla. City vs. Coyle
at Coyle
Sunday Afternoon
Aug 8
Admission 35c—for both
Ladies and Gentltmen
Oates
Crescent
Coyle
Marshall
Langston
Orlando
Lovell
Guthrie
Mullydl
Ngyina
of Community
Fairs
September 1 and 2
" • 3 ” 4
i'C<> 1 1 1 ioo,l. Rev. Clark is preaching good,
13 ”14
16 ”16
17 ” 18
Entry blanks can be secured at either
bank in Coyle or «t the Clipper office.
Revival Notes
The revival at the Methodist church
is getting under way. The intrest is
good. Rev. Clark is preaching good,
c . . * ......mms jHwwr, nas cnarge ol the
senator from Oklahoma. 3lnging- Special music is a part of each
____ evening service.
~ . , „ ~ I This meeting is for the good of the
rerris and c>wank Win .town and everyone is invited to come
In the primary election Tuesday a,nt* t8*£e part‘ Eet’s ,ay asi<^e every*
Scott Ferris if? easily winner over T P that would hinder and pull to-
Gire for the Democratic nomination for eether fora good meeting.
U. S. Senate. Judge Swank is a good Afternoon service at 8:00 P. M.
j winner for the Democratic nomination Evening service at 8:00 oneoia.i .
. for Congress from tbi3 district. Both Come thou with us and we will do the HERO IN PAJAMAS
| Ferris and SWank carried Logan county. good- Pastor.
Following is thg republican ticket
on all
Discount
Low Shoes
ft
This is an opportunity for a
nice saving on low siioes. Re-
in ember tliis includes men's and
women’s low shoes in stock
and the low shoe season is only
fairly commenced. Buy your
needs now before the stock is
broken.
j STOCKTON’S I
i
in Logan county.
County Treasure, Bond.
County Attorney, Dinwiddle.
Sheriff, Roljertsou.
Coii' .y Judge, Boies
Assessor, Humphrey.
Commissioner 8rd Disc., Reed.
' ” 2nd ” Sloan
1st ” Hirsehi.
Judge F. B Swank
of Norman.
The Joe Thompson II who will bring
.he Fifth Congressio
the. Democratic fold.
i Our line of Hamilton-Brown shoes is
complete for men, women and children,
_Stockton’s.
Ball Game Sunday
The Coyle ball team has matched a
game with Oklahoma City here for
tne joe Thompson JI who will bring ~ oity here for
the Fifth Congressional District back to , The City boys are 3aid to be
the. Democratic fold. ■ last p.ayers but our boys are going to
__raake the effort of their lives
Oklahoma Industrial Re-
view
W hat the country now needs, on the
farm and in the largo industrial plan ts
is not trained, educated or overorganizetf
lador, but crude labor which eschews
the collar and can do a days work in
re urn for a liberal days pay.-Rocky
Mountain News
Ponca City -Ponca well sets record for
output; average of 1000 barrels daily
made for almost a year.
Miama—Account car shortage and
scarcity labor, number zinc ore produc-
ing companies close mines for reveral
w»eks.
Dilworth- Installing $22,000 sewer
sys.em.
Soldier of Denikin’s Army, Decorated
for Bravery, Attired in Altogether
Unconventional Uniform.
The highest decoration for valor
that could be given a soldier In Deni-
kin’s army was pipned to the breast
of a soldier whose uniform ran a close
second to that of Kipling’s hero, Gun-
ga Din, says a communication from
Ekatertnochtf, South Russia, to the
Stars and Stripes.
The medal was pinned to the sol-
on earth. From records covering a
long period. CheiTiipunJI.^a village at
an elevation of about 4,500 feet in the
Khasl hills In India, lias established
a rainfall average* of 420 inches a year,
with a maximum of !i(K5 Inches in the
questionable’ record for 1861. Short
period observations show rtnu Mount
Waialeale, the central peak of the
Island of Kauai, with a height of 5.080
feet, has a yearly average of 476
Inches
unheeded by the mass of pleasure
trippers, who patter by with feet
tingling with the torch of the tango,
ears atlngle with the jingle of the jazz,
and hearts aflame with riotous pas-
sion.”
Record Energy.
Darwin lias made many records, Its
most picturesque recent exploit being
. the deportation of unpopular officials
while estimates for nearby in- frum the Northern territory, but hlth-
fop (lin trnf i .in vc* . .t’ 10l A .....l * 1
calities for the wet years of 1914 and
19io, when no fecovds were kept, make
It appear that the rainfall then must
have exceeded GOO inches. Other parts
dier’s jacket, which was the upper part i ^ TW’ lhe
of a pair of pajamas, and the rest of K„k„i 5 000 ’ uge.",eDt of VeBtey 8 Meat work8 Proi“-
Well Drill For Sale
as new. If you are in the market for a ! °°me °Ut , see
well drill do not pass this opportunity I L‘ncoura*e ,the b°Va
m it is a good chance to get a good one jgame3 in the future
tt a bargain price.
Wm. Brandon
See our line of tennis shoes. i jelly rolls,
Stockton’s I '
iThisVhould be^dandy" goocTgame S ^ogee-High School installing fl.no
| all should try and see it. On account P .tmg 3hop and llntyPe machine.
I of the heaw evnonon ------, ... Lindsay-Work begun on state highway
ading south of Stephens county line.
Buffalo-Material assembled to build
I will sell my Stillwater power well! °f the heavy expense in securing this , ~7----' --su.. u., 3la[e mgnwi
drill, gasoline engine and complete up-1 Un admit,an« of J5e for both d £ 30Uth of Stephens county line,
to-date equipment, practically as goob L, es anci Kentlemen will be charged. Buffalo-Material assembled to
as new. If you are in the market for a It/0me out and see Coyle win and also new depot here for B. N. W. Road.
securing good Garfield-New $40,000 building under
construction here to be used as distrib-
— uting center for Ford automobiles.
Saturday we wil! receive fresh from Purcell-Purcell Bank and Trust Cr>
I I,e amry, oughnuts, cookies’ cakes, increase capitol from $25,000 to $50,000
Boise City-Appropriation of $8,600
for county high school ‘buildidg and
and
cinnamon rolls.
Rhoads
'pen
f A.-* Wr* »•. * O.W.WWW.W
5
lUStRCSS I
* ---O" “V.WWI UUtl
— $1,800 for free fair approved.
We now have (lie Sanitary Meat Market |
open for bitsiness and can supply you with 4
the best meats at the following prices: J
* f
Round Stedk - 25c Loin Steak 25c 2
Tea Bone Steak 25c Best Roast 20c J
Boiling Meats 17 1-2C Pork 25c J
Pure hog lard 30c $
I Fredrick-Many improvments planned
for this city.
Lexington- Freefair to be held some-
time in September.
Pweell-Cotton and corn crops pro-
mises to be excellent.
Oklahoma City— Penitentiary twine
netted state $138,000 last month.
Fay-New high school building near-
ing completion.
Miama—Electrifying Northeastern
Oklahoma Railroad.
Sand Springs-Contract let for new
stone church for Christian congregation.
Baptist plan to build new edefice in
* ear future.
of a pair of pajamas, and the rest of
ills outfit was only a pair of British
military trousers. He was barefooted
and hatless.
The clothing worn by this man typl-
nes the conditfops that exist In the
army fighting the bolaiieviki in that
country. They do not have a service
of supply and they do not have a reg-
ulation uniform.
General Bradoff, who decorated the
pajama-jacketed hero, wore the
tonic of a Briyfsh Tommie, and the
guard of troops who furnished the
background for the decoration cere-
monies, wore parts of udifonns from
a dozen different armies. With the
exception of a group of Cossack cav-
a'r)f, tile. decorated soldier was the
Wstest-dresscd man of the lot.
The hwo, on his own initiative, led
a detachment of scoots in capturing a
town from the bofchevlkl. He was
wounded in carrying out this exploit,
taken to a hospital and given a suit
of pajamas. When l»e left he took the
pajama Jacket to regdace hlB wornout
Russian tunic, and he had uot been
able to replace it.
erto no one lias accused the whurf-
men in this tropical outpost of Aus-
tralia’s north of establishing working
records. Recently, however, the man-
Kukui, 5,000 feet high, on the island of
. Maui, has had a seven-year average of
369 inches, with a maximum of 562
I Inches in 1914. At least a dszen other
spots, above 1,000 feet of elevation, are
reported to have exceeded 350 inches
in each of the years 1914 and 1918.
Queen Pleasure's Carnival.
All the Protestant churches acknowl-
edge the continual diminution of their
congregations and are earnestly en-
deavoring to discover why the great
majority abstain from public worship,
i*ys a Sydney, N. S. W., dispatch to
the London Times. Several novel
schemes have been propounded to
make services more attractive, but the
clergy flinch from any startling Inno-
vations. Recently Rev. O. Black at a
meeting of the Baptist union deelhred
that “Queen Pleasure holds high carni-
val,” and continued : f‘The churches arc
I
Ice $1 per hundred
We have made arrangements for ice and
are selling it at a cent a* pound. We will
try to hold the price down to this figure
during the summer. Let us have your or-
der for meat atid ice and we will guarantee
service and satisfaction.
See us if you have live stock of any kind
to sell.
*
Sanitary Meat Market
G. J. JENNINGS, Prop.
\
bond-
let:
Come tolls
WOULD MAKE EASIETt READING
Boston Man Han Idea for Printing
Boftks That Is Interesting but
Revolutionary.
• -
Why not print all books In such a
way that every page Is a rlglft-hand
page-' asks D. I. Winslow of BcVtou,
who claims a patent for his conception
of how to do $t He holds that if (»e
has to read pages on one side of a book
only, this will be lieild more easily, the
eyes will not wandeq there will he no
necessity for cliangfttg the position of
head and neck when passing from one
page to another, fl’hus reading, espe-
cially of big, heavy volumes, will be
less fatiguing no< only to the eyes,
head and net%, b(jt also to the anus
and hands.
Mr. Winslow’s kt$eu Is to print a book
so that you read Istralght aheud front
right-hand page to right-hand page,
these being nuu Jbered eorteecutlvely;
then, when you have read through to !
the last right-lm (id page, you turn the j
book upside dow A and continue reading I
as before, what :ln ordinary books are
left-hatuT pages now being right-hand
pages. This, off icourse, Involves print-
ing all lcft-hanfl pages upside down
and numbering them consecutively
from the back off the hook. This wpuld
easily he arrang «d by the printer in
laying out the U rms, though to get the
pagination of fa large book correct
would require s< >mo nice calculation on
the printer’s paf t.
— . ■ « . -------
Hawaii Cll ilma Wettest Spot.
-.-JfrwalA.PfXJ Mmi th^wettgfiJBOtt
ised tlie wharf laborers loading a meat
steamer payment for 17 shifts In order
to get the vessel away promptly. Ac-
cording to a correspondent of one of
the Southern newspapers, the wharf
lumpers performed the work in 15
shifts and received flUl each.—New
Australasian.
Our Eyeglassea
The suggestion for the use of lenses
for the cure of eye defects was made
by Roger Bacon, the great scic 1st otj
the thirteenth cen'ury. Doctor Lung-
don Down made this interesting state-
ment, but added that the making of
the spectaclesnvas carried out by cer-
tain Italians. The scientific physicians
of those days, however, advised their
patients uot to have them because they
did uot know the true theory upon
which they were based.
••*•*•»*••••••** 1 «•••§•#Mi
| See Us Before You Sell
1 Your Live StocK
We can handle your hogs at market price
at any time you bring them in. Will look
your cattle over any time you have One or
more to sell and pay you all the market
will afford.
We are making the following prices on
meats:
Round and Chuck Steak . 2oc
Loin and T Bone - - 25c
Boiling meats - _ 16c
We have a nice line of cured meats that
are fresh at 35c to 50c. Dry salt 25c.
Pure hog lard $12.50 for 50 lb. can.
Ice qoc by the hundred.
Fresh fish at 20c. •
Cheese-that are always fresh 45c.
Our lunch meats are the Red W Brand and
are fresh every week.
m
Gibson Bros*
1
___ Subscription ft.50
*
per
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.
Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 9, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 5, 1920, newspaper, August 5, 1920; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912260/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.