Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 14, 1920 Page: 4 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.
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DO VOl) USE GENUINE f
Ford Parts I
4
Wo carry a complete line of them anil
overhaul motors hy the l ord Branch y.--
tem. All work guarao i e< <J.
We also carry a complete line of accessor-
A
ies and ignition parts, L you iiave trouble J
Tonight
r Tomorrow Alright
Get a
25c.
Box.,
getting ignition pari
and see us.
for your car come
Persrns
tms
tr>.
feon
*>|V. . . .«< : ■ J"* •’,* (/f%
UPPER,
CIMARRON VALLEY t
CLARRNCE F. WANDELI Editor and PublUUt.
Established 1900. Published Every fhursaay Subscription 1 ‘>0
nieren at the Postoffice at Coyle. Onlahoma. as Second Class Mail
• —
*
Local
4-t
4* 1
*
News
41
*
New crop evaporated apples 4itid ap-
rirot? ju3t received Rhoads
.ir and dr - I’lias. ii. Baker are here
Vour
Dnu»i
It GERHART, Druggist
04*1* *>44* 4* 4*
See our line ol tennis shoes
Stockton’s
Mrs. Bal.ci parents, Mr. and
Frand; Buffington, and family.
Mr?.
seems to be on the road to rapid recov
ery, to the great satisfaction of the fam-
ly and many friends here.
We have plenty of cotton sacking and
duck. Better get ready for cotton pick-
ing will soot) be here. Stockton's
Mr and Mrs. J. F. McMahan arrived
yesterday from Caddo, Texas, where
they have been for the past several
month and will remain here tor the
present atdea t They still have their
household goods on the farm all ready
for housekeeping any time they tnke a
notion to come back here, so we consid-
er these good people residents of Logan
county even if they do reside in some
other locality part ol the time
Full line of work shirts and overalls.
Stockton's
WHALE BIT Off TOO MUCH
Attempt to Mak. a Moat or Fet-ln*
Cable Proved End of tper.
live Creature.
5A- m I*» 18—MB HMMBBaaMMBaaillllMB^
J. E. Kennedy was here the first ol
the week circulating among Coyle
friends.
When you want Golden Gate coffee
we have it at 60c pound. Rhoads,
Mrs. Jenn|e McLure returned
first of the|week from a visit with
atives in Kansas.
7 Pounds fine cane sugar $1.00.
Rhoads.
The direct descendant of the whala
that swallowed Jonah flapped hi* huge
tail through the tranquil waters of the
Pacific, off Mexico. He was hungry—
hungry for a new sensation. All the
thrills In that neck of the ocean ware
on Ifitld. where the Mexicans were con-
quering Mexico Idly he shot a column
Tim- of water through his nose Into the air.
I What with [lie submarines out of the
tl p ' sen, life had lost all zest for a whale.
re| j Another shipment of Rio coffee now Tlle submarine Idea flashed through
I iu transit and loo], for it any day at 20c h,s hrnln nnd tlckled hls MubergrU.
I pound. Rhoads. " hat a Jolly lark, to be sure I He
i would dive below and scare the sau
cer nnd octopus Into a fit. Down he
We Rave received the invoice and will
non ho here, our Santos 1'eaberry cof-
fee at ilOc pound. Rhoads.
The registration books are now open
and if there are any who have not reg-
1 is u*n (I they should do so at once. C.
i H Ecktnan is registrar for north
I arron.
Cold Wave Comin£
Heating stoves of all inscription, small stoves to heat one room and
big 1 loves to heat or 4 rooms, burn coal or wood Or a real >il heater.
We can furnish you plain or nickel trim and they
are built to stand hard firing and will last for years.
r! he Dependable burns soft coal or wood. Hot Blast
heater consumes gases of coal, prevents smoke and
soot, burns hard coal or slack coal, holds fire all
night successfully.
Beauty Oak burns coal or most any fuel nicely
without soot, has the hot blast rings that will make
30 per eent more heat than other makes of heaters
from the same amount of coai.
Beerless, a good wood heater, swing top fofr large,
knoty sticks, keeps fire good and will give entire
satisfaction.
Also R lompf. to stock of all kind of ranges. They are good bakers
and we will give you money hack guarantee on any stove on the floor.
Call and see this beautiful line of stoves, make your selection now. We
tv ill set them up in ;hc city free of charge,
Murphy Hardware
The Home of Quality and Service
■ -MamiAjnaanwwy/
I
CRAFTY BRE'R FOX
Trappers Give Him Credit for
Deep Cunning.
A. M. Doolin' an old soldier who for-
------ I merly lived here, died at his home near
Judge Patridge, of Gurhne, will ipeak M ri 1 yesterday morning after a short
here next Saturday m the interest of illness. Interment will be made at
the republican candidate (or congress ( stn.iul today
It is reported that a baby boy wa.:
born to Mrs. Guy Howe near Cushing
the first of the week.
Wilson’s sugar cured Breakfast Bacon
at 45c a pound is a splendid meat
Bhords.
at
A shipment of peanut blitter ju d r
reived, the quality is excellent and the I
price is only 25 pound. Rhoads.
Mote Springs, Miss Betiie Weldon,
Dr. Wade and Mrs. 0. S. Reed we
among those from here who heard
Harding speak Saturday.
The C. A. & N. U. fair will tie hold
Friday and Saturday. These fairs have
1 cen splendid the past few years and
yeai v II hi no except ion. All
..hould attend.
A si. , cent of new crop fancy head
rice at 2 pounds for 25c. Rhoads.
Peanut butter kisses and fresh sail,
peanuts at 30c pound are line eating.
Rhoads.
Two of John Dobson' children
been having a siege with diphtheria the M, „
past week but are reported getting a nig T
nicely.
Mri. J. I'. Martin returned Sunday
from an extended visit in Colorado and
various parts in Oklahoma. Mr. and
Mr?. Jim Weidon accompanied her home
Iiave from Waukita, reti riling to their home
went.
Now, the All-American Cable com-
pany, which took over the Mexican
Tpi‘".»vnnh company, has gome ♦alu-
, 1. r wound copper wires ly-
ing on lie- bottom of the ocean off
Mi .an I . iiilluiids. They met the
giizi* of our hero.
lie seized tile long tiling In hls
mouth. It stuck. History has never
1 1 n .h d any whale who ever attempt-
’d in eat a Pacific cable and got away
with it. Our hero was no exception.
He struggled, and finally wound him-
se'f up in several thousand dollars'
| worth of interrupted messages. When
the calile repair ships hove to and
grappled for the cable to find out what
ib I Interrupted* communication be-
lli in Vera Crass nnd Valparaiso,
Chile, they dragged to the surface a
very dead whale, wound up In sev-
eral hundred feet of hopelessly com-
plicated cable.
Chief Engineer James Mowat, who !
j went ashore, and lives in New York,
; says tills Is the first whale he ever
; heard of Hint tried to eat a cable. And
other members of the crew of his ship
vouch for tlie story.
Of All Wild Animals, the Bushy-Tailed
Raecal Is the Hardest to Trap,
but Is Altogether Undeserv-
ing of Mercy,
life is the fox—eunnifig, vicious,
bloodthirsty—It kills for the love of
killing. The warm blood of It* vic-
tims is Its fountain of youth. Every
fr* shot or caught In a trap means
1 Just so many more grouse, pheasants
I and rabbits—to say nothing about the
| valu# of the fur. Fewer foxes, more
! sport, more game, more fun.”
riiE NEW WEST MAGAZINE
“Buiidfnt Th« Wf8t”
Established l'GO—For the development
»ing, oil, anj
Of intcriwt to the Weatcr*
established 1 .0—For the development
”V“in-du,.trie'1 *~riculiure. mining, oil. an4
ketions. Of interest 10 the Webtcm
.rmrr and wightoeer. Printed on higlft
- _.-aU . ...
25 Doz. men’s ami boys’ cotton flan- j
--— (113I Kloves received this week. Wo sell
Chocolate covered peanuts at 40c ' t „e 10 oz. cotton liannel glove at 25c
pound. It's a roasted peanut covered pair and r 15 oz. at 35c pair; leather I
with sweet chocolate. Rhoa i Q «. BRITISH POSSESSION
The quilt oi Mrs. Baxter s was raffled Dr..? ■-.. i 10' ;nd cinug! , ti.len, , Island of Bermuda Colonized Eight
off here Suturduv. No 53 drew . .. Year) Bsfore the Mayflower,
nice piece of needle work and Leona northwest. Mi il.den lm-ihuti quite Sailed From England.
Byrne wus the lucky holder ill the pi wr 1 months but now,
. T! • '-'-nil of Bermuda was dtscov
^—-7——————— - — - ------------, .-ed In 1513 by a Spaniard, Juan <1e
aClfebftA'iAAA r. , t. . , * j ]’.r! mudez. Nearly 100 years later an
W9 “ *9* * c V 1 v * ^ K? © 4p .Jjj) • * 1;• i -ill vi - I with Virginia colonists
. 1- wr-: shipwrecked on the Island, which
* luid been known as the Isle of Devils
U because of the terrific storms on Its
>; j r.sist. nnd had been shunned. Ad-
, ndrnl Sir George Somers, leading the
J 1 Virginians, died. Vila body was taken
tl Pack to England, where the colonists
'y j told the wonders of the Island. The
1 Virginia company determined to eolo-
, I , , I . In . .1 . .. ,. ,. I .. 1 1,0
In the opinion of trappers, the fox
Is the most cumjlng arid resourceful of
all the wild animals. He often fools |
the most expert trapper und the truest 1
and fastest of dogs. Some trappers '
who are very successful In catching
many other fur bearers state that they
do not believe It possible to fake Rey-
nard in a steel trap. This, of course,
Is not the case—in fact, he Is as easy
to catch In a steel trap as the mink,
provided the trapper thoroughly un-
derstands his business. All that is
necessary Is a careful study of the ani-
mal’s nature and habits.
The fox lives on small game, birds, j
eggs and poultry. He makes hls deu j
In sandy hillsides, and in It the female j
rears from three to seven puppies, '
which are born In the early spring. !
February Is the season Reynard goes j
wooing, and he travels far and wide
in search of sweethearts, faithful to
none, for Ids love is more fleeting than
(lie footprints he leaves In the drifting '
snow. The fox's sense of smell la
Purple Ore Now in Demand,
Purple ore is an unknown quantity
! to the uninitiated. To the Initiated It
Is a heavy purplish powder used chief-
ly as ballast by ships leaving French
ports. So little worth was attached
to the ore five months ago that It sold
in Bordeaux for 12.50 francs a ton.
Since then it has been put to new uses,
and, with the rise In demand, there
has been a corresponding rise In price.
Purple ore has a rich Iron content, and
that fact has been sufficient to prompt
English manufacturers to devise new
uses for the powder. Its sudden leap
into the limelight will perhaps stimu-
late Interest In the residue of other
minerals, the possibilities of which
may haTe been overlooked in the rapid
inarch of all branches of engineering
Ittr.i
Investor, far
grade rappr u-it.h cop
Year. $2; copy, 2tlc
fc*rs for 26c. Sent* no
•ine,
Utah
Per half-tona illustration*
Sample, 10c. 3 back nur»
or «><- ^eno now. The New Went Mag*
1211 Walker Rank Bldp - - -
mple.
The
Ip . Salt Lake City,
Srftt.......1
Utah. 1004 White B)dg , Seattle. Wash. l|
Go’dbere Bid*.. Detroit, Mich. Address nea»
aat office, or place y<«*r suhsoHptiou throuflft
MslNjMr.
J. R. CHARHONEAU
AUCTIONEER
Will cry all kinds of farm and live
stock sales and guarantee satisfaction.
W hy patronize “mail order" auctioneers
when you can get a man at home? Get
at Clipper office or either bank.
That Travelers May Read
Borrowing a book from the public
library In one city and returning It
to the library in the next town where
he makes a stop may be arranged for
the benefit of the traveling man.
The National Council of Traveling
Men’s associations has appointed a
committee to see what can be done
ccm off on all
Mattresses
For the next 10 clays we
will give a discount oT iO
percent on all mattresses.
Aiso have a nice line of
Rugs in lar£e sizes and a
nice assortment af * small
Velvet and Axminister
rugs.
If you need anything in
Trunks, Ba&s or bait Cas-
es-come in and let »is show
J you our line.
11. P. Her
g-*' t
highly developed, and by it he detects ; a, th„ „ce and h„ a>kea the
tlie danger of the trap. The scent left , Al„orlPall Llbrary association to ap-
l.v human hands nnd the scent left on |ot a rtmUar committee to confer.
°,"ier nn1lma,» oau*M in 11 The library association, accepting
are quickly detected. the Invitation, has Just constituted Its
A sucwcesfful f01 trapper must he I own commUtee. ,Tohn Adams Lowe,
a keen observer of details,” writes C. i ,lce llbrBrlaD of ,be Brooklyn public
A. Holmes, a special game protector, , llbrary u ehalrman.
In a recent Issue of the New York | __
state conservation bulletin, In de
scribing different methods of hunting )
and trapping foxes, “He must realize j
that he Is pitting hls wits against one '
of the most cunning of animals that |
nlze the islands, und had its charter
m vc-.,i ,,i Include Islands with ill MOO
; leagues e< Virginia As a result, 50
, , , -;s .cere flerit out In 1612, eight
veal > before the Mayflower .ailed, j vantage of the better traveling by fol-
I Inter the Virginians sold their rights ! lowing In my tracks as far as he
to a Bermuda company, which mi sub- j cared to go In my direction. That 1.
verted the Inhabitants that they formed j (be Why fox—be Is not blindly
| s narllaiuent and fought fof their
rights Three branches of govern-
* ment were devised, ltegulatlons were
\ most severe, and penalties were of the
, most extffeme nature
Bird Flumag. Bill.
Bird lovers in this country will tre
pleased to learn that a bill has passed
its second reading Id the British bouse
, . ,,, . o* commons forbidding the Imports-
roams the silent places of the hIlls and ,, o{ blnJ lunl Xbe „
valleys Recently I made an experi-
mental set which resulted In the tak-
ing of one of the oldest, largest and
wisest foxes In this vicinity. I no-
ticed that the fox In question did not
seem to take alarm at rny trail over
an old woods road, and as the snow
was quite deep, would even take ad-
s'
»,v
>
\Ph<
one
I Us for
Waller Johnson
Auctioneer
Live Stock and General
Farm Sales
Phone 25 on L. CoV'.OU.i
k S. Dobbin D
Practice of Cenerai Medicine and
Surgery. Office up stairs over Hougton
Bid«- Phone 63
^ F. Henthorn
Auctioneer
1 cry sales of all kinds—satisfaction
heartily supported by the press, but is ond'fTrYcalts ^X^aTtvC' '‘Ve 3t°tk
meetlug with some opposition freu. I'honc Clipper office for dal
certain member* of parilamaul.
dates.
I. P. Henthorn Fur. Co.
FEINTING
Ouf plain ii cctHplit* tw i>4r>tiuiti
>o\i need In the Un. ol p.iuti.ig and
we can a»«ute you firrt grade woik
on HmsidMuuII stock. A*k ns.
afraid of man, but trusts to hls wit*
to keep him out of trouble He knew
that the trail was made by a man
walking, and he also knew that the
danger lay not In the trail, but In the
•man himself.
"After I had traveled this old road
several times, and had noticed Mr
Fox was in the habit of following me
nearly every night, 1 picked out a
hush that stood close by the trap t<>
j serve as a mark for locating the trap.
I and here I set two Jump traps In one.'
! of nay own footprints, with u ’sheet of
i Mean payer beneath the traps aq- I
J other sheet on top, and an inch of
- j snow lightly brushed ovtr tU t fas
' ''tj tened the chains to clogs burled Iji the
4 snow at the side of the trail and went
i un about my buslne**
'"The next morning Reynard wa*
! waiting for m. a trap m, each front
foot I would not have captured thl*
' (ox had I not mad* this eiperluiental
' s«t in tt* trail, and it only goes to
! tnew the valu* cf ebatrvstloc tc the
( «p*nenc*d trapper
"Rimy .porttman should rmlia*
' Uhat oa* of th* worst »a»mi*s of wild
We Do -V
BILL HEAD
PRINTING
on
BOND
BOND <
60NU
We will use it
feu your Job of
KUB'i.X. WADU1. D.
Physician nnd Surgeon
C.vi.s orswered promptiv dav
Office across street
from v lipi er office.
Plume, Bc.-idence bs,
Office 68
COL. MCVIGKER & SON
'\UC I lONEEK
r^lLb7.^onft”l/-ce untd al
ransuiryou801-^.,iav'-'
Telephone 73
' all at our expanse.
Waukomis, Ok*
' A. F. and. a. M,
1 The retfuiar Comuni’
cations of tbe Cimarror
Lodk'e No, 181 are
flrbt and
belt! on tltr
fbird Monday aiurb*
of each month*,it the Rppietr
Hall.
Ruel Oephart*
W. M.
Clms. Eckman,
Sec.
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Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 14, 1920, newspaper, October 14, 1920; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912366/m1/4/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.