The Foss Enterprise. (Foss, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1913 Page: 3 of 4
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'IB
m
£
REDUCED PRICES
ON
CONCRESS Riggs&VVilley
SPECTACLES AMD DYE GLASSES
For the next thirty days 1 will make al jj v
special reduced pric9 on Spectacles and If
Eye Glasses. I make a specialty of fitting
glasses. Call and see me at the Diamond
hotel or People's drug store.
C DERBACH
the registered optome-
trist, foss, oklahoma!
5 1
f I
e
in
Iv
-
at
I
R. I. Time Table
WEST BOUND.
No. 41 0:40 a- m-
No. 725 11:45 a. m.
No. 43 11:45 p. m.
EAST BOCND.
44 2:35 a. m.
No. 42.! 2:55 p.m.
No. 726 .• 5:38 p. m.
Subscribe for ihispap r.
Don't forget the big sale, adv
Have your sale bills printed at
The Enterprise office.
Chas. M. Hoover was in Cor-
dell Tuesday.
Old papers f >r e at the En-
terprise Offie
Make it a npint to attend th«
sale at Herring & Young's, adv
Rufe LftRue was in Elk City
Tuesday on business.
Buy it in the big sale at Her-
ring «fc Young's adv
ths to come are when you will
need what Herring & Young are
advertising in this paper.—adv.
Mrs. E. E. Darnell of Colony,
after visiting her pnrents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Prown, since
... ,. .1 Friday, went to Willow Monday
You will if you fail to attend ^ ^ ^ ^ Mrfl w M.
Herring & Young s big
has been employed in Sayre for
several weeks, has returned
home.
Old papers for sale at the En-
terprise office.
Don't fail!
sale,
adv
Mrs. C. W. Wright and child- j
ren left Friday for Rnymond,'
Mo., where they will join Mr.
Wright.
Hundreds of unusual bargains
in the big sale at Herring &
Young's, It starts tomorrow.
Baldwin. Mrs. Brown aceem-
panied her, returning Wednes-
day.
Right at the beginning of the
saason you can buy clothing at
trreatly reduced prices. At Her-
ring & Young's. anv
Audley Smith, who is in the
mercantile business at Pauls
I Villey, was here Friday looking
Mrs. Ro rk Smithey of Ham- ^ hjs resillence pr„perty. He
mon is visiting her parents, Mr. j. ^.g wJfe on the aftPrnoon
and Mrs. A. W. Riggs. I tPAin Mrs Smith was returning
from Amarillo, Texas, where her
father died a week ago.
Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Murphy re-
I.ike every ether world's fair and i
great exposition, the International ,
, Dry-Farming ''ongresa at Tulsa. Ok-;
lahoma. October 22 to November 1.
will have its boulevard of amusement* I
ami conceptions. In this instance It
will be known as the "Irving Trail, j
bringing to mind the historical "Tour
of the Plains" by Washington Irving
! In 1832.
Washington Irving passed through
the present townslte of Tulsa on this
tour and camped on the I*ost City hills
overlooking the Arkansas river and
valley.
On the Irving Trail will be assem-
bled the greatest nr-'vegation of 'ii.;h
class shows ai.d wholesome amuse-
tuenst ever seen In Oklahoma. The at-
tractions will line both sides of the
trail, and at night the boulevard fun
and frolic will be a blaze of eloctrlc
I illumination.
Among the feature attractions on
the avenue will be one of the great-
est rarnival companies In America; a
wonderful connrtas of cowboys, cow-
girls and Indians participating in the
Bports and pastimes of frontier lire In
the west, end a typical Osage Indian
village, containing in primitive s ur
roundlngs hundreds of mon. women
and children of tills richest tri#- of
Indians on earth.
Flashing uniforms and martial mu-
sic will also be marked features of
the CongteSs and Exposition. One of
the best concert bands in the coun
try will furnish daily muilc. Tin
United States government is sendinc
the artillery band of forty pieces from
Fort Sill, Oklahoma, one of the finest
military bands in the Bervice, to Tut
6a for tho entire ten days.. A big do
tachment of United States troops from
Fort Logan H. Hoots, Arkansas, will
act as military escort to visiting gov-
ernors, senators, congressmen and
foreign dignitaries and will be seen it
daily majwi'ivers on the exposition
grounds.
PAY HIGHEST MARKET ]
PRICE
— At All Times—
For Fat and Stock Hogs
Business phone 06. Resi- }
dence phone 9
Foss, Okla.
Herring & Young's entire shoe
stock his been marked down at d
put in the big sale which starts
tomorrow. a^v
C. O. PAYNE
wants to do your painting
and paper hanging.
Get his prices.
He orders p?per.
See his samples.
W. T. Velvin
Barber Shop
Clothes
Cleaned and
Pressed
Foss,
Okla.
. ' , . hotn-i City, where Mrs.
Harvey Gear left. Thursday for un(jCTWent nn operati,
>itt burg. Texas, in response to . ,ind her m„n,
. ....nminfiinni ♦ Vi fipr i •
• •1 • — ■ • emeiitijii lut- mibroi v
turned Monday night from Okl - Hpte"ever gathered together at any place
_ _ . / tl.t«l.^mn Trt/lntf Tlduq nun crivr
I). F. Vincent is in Leedey and
Hammon this week on a business
mission.
Have your sale bills printed at
The Enterprise office.
Pittsburg.
a message announcing the seri-
ous illness of his mother.
We don't want to see you leave,
but if you will go, have your sale
bills printed at The Enterprise
offce.
M. Heflin left Sunday for Port
Arthur, Texas, where be expects
Murphy
nn two
ny friends
will be glad to know that she is
recovering rapidly. Mrs. Cha.~.
Murphy returned with them and
went to her home in Port Tues-
day.
J. L. Galloway and daughter
Louise returned Monday night,
the latter from a visit with rela-
tives at Geary and Watonga, and
To properly arrange details for the
handling of huge ciowds is a big jot
In any convention city. On the first
day of October, however, the citizen#
of Tulsa had completed plans to fully
entertain the largest number of peo
J—
to secure a position and, if 8UC-!1\fri Galloway from Guthrie,
cessful, will move his family | wiiere he attended the national
there. [postmasters' convention. There
—- . were delegates from seventeen
There will be more opportum-1 Bentf ani .jesse says
ties to secure bargains at Hernng, a beUer Um0 hud have
& Young's sale than has ever been j ibl the ra9. would
offered. I '
have had it.
Big reduction in price on a
thousand articles at Herring ^
Young's. adv j you nee(j 0i<} papers run in j
—-• J to The Enterprise office We have j
Roy Combs of near Canute was j slashing prices to beat the band.
in Foss Wednesday attending to
business.
Old papers for sale at the En-
terprise office.
Bargains in women's ready-to
wear goods in Herring & Young's
sale. adv
Albert Poor and family are
now located in their Clinton
home, moving Saturday.
Don't fail to attend the sale at
Herring & Young's. Your friends
will be there,
Chas. Dipple, who has been
seriously ill for two woelts, is in
Cordell receiving treatment.
The one big sale of the year
starts at Herring Jfc Young's,
Foss, tomorrow.
Miss Willie Belle Baker, who
Come and get an armful and see
how cheap they are.
HEAR DEATH
BY SMOTHERING
Unusual I argains a
& Young's beginning tom
Buy winter goods for the whole
family. . adv
j doing
Herring Bct Hojk;mj With Aid of Cardui,
morrow. I On*
Effects Her Deliverance.
in Oklahoma. Today Tulsa can give
every assurance of adequate and com
fortable accommodation for her thouB
ands of visitors during the Interna
tional Dry-Farming Congress, Octo
ter 22 to November 1.
Every hotel, every rooming house
and every restaurant In the city has
been busy preparing to take care ol
the enormous inllux of strangers and
facilities have been increased tc
handle with ease, a dally attendance
of over 10,000 people.
Bureaus of Information will be open
day and night near the railroad Bta
tions and visitors will be furnished
with fyll information as to the loca-
tion, prices and equipment of hoteln,
rooming houses* restaurants and pri-
vate homes. Hundreds, of private
families are preparing to serve meals
to their guests at moderate prices and
every business man In the city ha?
j agreed that there shall be no increase
I in the price of accommodations or ne-
cessities during the Congress and Ex-
position.
How to grow next year's crops on
this fall's rain.
This is the big secret which will br
told to the world at the International
Dry-Farming Congress In Tulsa be
ginning October 27. Many men say it
can't be done, but there will be hun-
dreds of other men at the Tulsa Con-
gress who have actually succeeded in
doing it and who will be glad to tell
Swan C- Burnette
Jas. L. Austin
Lav/ Partners
Cordell, Okla.
Rooms 8. O'mth'V 10, Austin
Building.
Mrs. E. A. Anderson of Okla
homa City came out Wednesday
to make a vi^it with her daugh-
ters. Mrs, Lindstromin Foss, and
Mrs. John Hatchett, on route 1.
You are invited to
Low
COLONIST
Fares
To
CALIFORNIA
North Pacific
Coast
Mexico
New Mexico
.Arizona
And All Points
WEST
Tickets on Sale
September 25
To
Oct. 10, Inclusive
fifteen days.
A. E. and G. C. Darnell and
their families of Arapaho were
guests Sunday of Ed Graves and
family, south of town. Mr. and
Mrs. S. M. Darnell were also vis-
itors at the Grayes home.
Right now and for several mon
One man from South Africa will tell
how he grew seventeen buahels of
wheat and twenty-five bushels of corn
per acre In 1912 on one-half an inch of
Drarer N C —Mrs. Helen Dalton, ol rainfall between planting time and
this place, says: "I suifered tor years,; harvest. Another from Stratton. Neb.
i witn pains in my left side, and would will furnish proof that he raised 32
i often almost smother to death. I bushels of 62-pound wheat this year i
Medicines patched me up for awhile on four and a quarter inches of rain
but then I would get worse apain. Final-! between January 1 and AuguBt 30. a |
Iv, my husband decided he wanted me tcr thjrd frQm peyton> Colorado, will be1
I try Cardin, the weman s tome so he thpr(, to elV(, th(, d(.tall3 o( how
i M meemore Rood than all the medi- rataed 2.000 bushel.of who,! on to' i
cinesl had taken acres of ground with but four Inch'f-(
attend the! i induccd'many of my friends to of rain from the day he planted the
- - • • " " — "— u"'— wheat to the day he cut It.
These, men, and many others, will
... - . .... ...Bist that they get good crops In bar!
„dv to compare with Cardui. I believe it u year8 |)rjucj]miiy by knowing how tc
' a good medicine for all womanly trou-v ho](J tJjp moi8(ure of an enljn. >Par jr,
^es> ' _ , . . ' tbe soil for use when needed by th'
For over 50 years Cardm has been re- f cro For flve fu]1 days ;h(,„
SloSup to^S"fandn"s,?eU:i1'h8 « will what they tov..
ueaK won e J it a fair trial, how they did it and how much net
It shoSd surely help'you, as it has a prottt they made, and they will poin*
million others. a 60lld ten acre8 8°0tl cr°P Eani
Get a bottle of Cardui to-day. | P,t!B
Any farmer In the southwest whos
Writ* to: Chattanoocn Medicine Co.. L(die^ crops were cut by drouth III ID Li will
*ourh«!wn*n5'64 W«'book,( be well repaid for a trip to Tulsa be-
Tre«m«nt tor Women," in piunwr pp«i. wo. tween October 27 and October 31. I
1913
Write to
1 UU l r* III vmcu I.yj uuiviri | llivt 1IIUUV.VU "V ■ .
big sale ot Herring A Young's.,
It starts tomorrow and continues has been, and never will be, a medicine Jn
,10 mmmrn with Cardui. I believe It la ,
FAY THOMPSON, D. P. A
Oklahoma City, Okla.
Enquire of
G. H. DALE, Ticket Agent
Rock Island Lines
Foss, Okla.
Why not know what in goi'u?
in around you by subset-thing f
nnd vending The Enterprise t
yoti do. by reading your neigh-
bor's paper, don't > u think it
wotilil he mole convenient to have
ono of your own?
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The Foss Enterprise. (Foss, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, October 17, 1913, newspaper, October 17, 1913; Foss, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth350074/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.