The Weekly Examiner. (Bartlesville, Indian Terr.), Vol. 12, No. 22, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 4, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
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Harlow's Great Semi-Annual Clearance Sale
AUGUST 1 TO 11
We are through stock taking, and in this sale we are going to cut out the profit, not on a few summer dress goods only, but
in every department you will find wonderful special values. You who patronized our January sale, know that we back our
statements with the goods. Sale on for ten days, August 1 to 11. Below we give a partial list of inducements for a visit from you,
during this sale. -
Ladles' Wraps
For early Fall Wear, just what you
need from now till November 1st.
Silk Redingotes
Black, Blue and Wine, Shirred
Waist, regular price Si 8.00. Sale
price *12.98
Black Silk Coats
(3-4 Lengths.)
Beautifully trimmed, with or without
Collars, accordeon and knife plait-
ed, also plain box
Regular Price Sale Price
820.00 $12.75
15.00 10.75
12.50 8.75
Black Silk Short Box Coats
Regular Price Sale Price
$10.00 $7.75
9.00 6.75
6.50 4.75
Black Silk "Boleros"
Regular Price Sale Price
$10.00 $7.25
8.00 5.75
Pony Jacket Suits
Colors, Navy, Alice Blue Gray and
Black. Regular prices $15.00 to
$27.50. They go at 1-3 oft
Summer Dress (Joods
One lot of Shepherd Wool Mixture,
regular pric 59c. Sale price. .43c
One lot Fancy Mohairs, brown, tan,
wine, green and navy,regular price
65c. Sale price 48c
One lot Creme White Voile, regular
price 65c. Sale price 43c
One lot Wool Batistes, regular price
59c. Sale price 43c
One lot Foulard Silks, regular price
48c. Sale price 33c
One lot Tussah Silks,regular price 65
and 75c. Sale price 42c
One lot Arnold Silks, regular price
59c. Sale price 39c
One lot Satin liberty, regular price
40c. Sale pricc 29c
One lot Embroidered Silk Swiss,
regular price 40c. Sale price 29c
One lot Silk Novelties, regular price
35c. Sale price 22c
One lot "Ezo" Silk, plain and dotted,
regular price 35c. Sale price 22c
One lot Henley Serge, regular price
25c. Sale price 17c
One lot wool Wool Finish Batiste,
regular price 25c. Sale price.. 17c
One lot Mercerized Zephyrs, regular
price 25c. Sale price 17c
One lot Pixie Grenadines, regular
price 25c. Sale price 17c
One lot Dotted Swiss Muslin,regular
price 20c. Sale price 12j^c
One lot Silk Muslins, solid colors,
regular price 18c. Sale pricel2yzc
One lot "German" Linen, solid
colors, regular price 18c. Sale
price 12j^c
One lot Standard Prints, solid colors,
regular price 6 and 7c. Sale
price 4j£c
All cf our Ready-to-Wear Dress
Skirts, $2.50 to $15.00 go at 20 per
cent discount in this sale.
All of our Silk Petticoats go at 20
per cent discount in this sale.
One lot of New York Petticoats,
sateen, accordeon plaited, regular
$3.00 value. Sale price $2.10
Wash "Bolero" Jackets
In "Baby Irish" Linen, Pique and
Batiste, from $1.69 to $5.48, go at
%, off regular price.
We carry a complete line of Ladies'
High Grade Underwear. It all
goes in this sale at 20 per cent
discount.
A beautiful line of hand made linen
Battenberg Centers. The original
prices on this lot will look like
bargains to an intelligent buyer,
but we will let them go in this sale
at 20 per cent discount. Regular
prices $2.50 to $4.00.
Millinery Department
All our trimmed and street hats go
at cost. We have a few beautiful
pattern hats left.
FANS—Regular 5c to $5.00, all go
at ]/i off.
One lot of Sea Island Percales in
white, navy, brown, wine and scar-
let, regular 15c. Sale price lOj^c
Shoes for Everybody
All our men's, women's and chil-
dren's Tan Shoes and Oxfords go
at cost.
All Canvass Shoes go at cost.
20 per cent discount on all Women's
Patents, Gun Metal Calf and Vici
Kid Oxfords.
20 per cent discount on all Men's
Shoes.
Men's Hats
Stetsons and all other brands go at
cost. We are going to discontinue
this department.
20 per cent discount on Men's
Underwear and Furnishing.
yi off on all Boy's 2-piece Suits, in
light weight woolens and wash
goods.
Men's genuine Priestly Cravenette
Coats, regular $18. Sale pricc$12.
House Furnishings
Lace Curtains, regular 50c lo $10.00.
Sale price 20 per cent off.
I'ortiers, regular $2.48 to $25.00. Sale
price 20 per cent off.
9x12 Paris Velvet Rug, regular $60
kind. Sale price $45.00
9x12 Wilton Velvet, regular $42.50
kind. Sale price $33.00
9x12 Axminister, regular $30. kind.
Sale price $23.00
9x12 Radnor Velvet, regular $25.00
kind. Saleprice $21.00
9x12 Boston Body Brussels, regular
$30 kind. Sale price $24.00
9x12 Ingrain Art Square, regular
$7.50 kind. Sale price $6.25
Inlaid Linoleum,regular $1.50 per sq
yard. Sale price $1.15
Printed Lineoleum, regular 65c per
sq. yard. Sale price 53c
Are You Going Away on a Trip?
20 per cent discount on all Trunks,
Suitcases, Umbrellas and Parasols.
Comforts
you will need them later
Our $1.50 $1.19
Our $1.25 98
Our $1.00 79
C. V. HARLOW
MASONIC
BUILDING
103-105 East Third Street, Bartlesville, Indian Territory.
TO RESTORE NATIVES' HAIR
People of Entire Island of Madagascar
Going Bald and Shipload of
Tonic Is Sent.
New York.—A horrid thing has hap-
pened in Madagascar. Several millions
of people are becoming bald, accord-
ing to Capt Peter Wilberforce, who
has just arrived in New York and
sailed away again with 50 gross of bot-
tles of hair tonic of a popular brand.
The inventor of this hair wash does
not pretend it will remedy all bald-
ness. There are some cases, as in
woolly-headed or in kinky-haired peo-
ple, to which it is not intended to ap-
ply. But the natives of Madagascar
think it is all right, because a Mala-
gasy, by the name of Antambahoaka,
who was completely bald, got a bottle
of this hair wash from a Cape Town
doctor and grew a resplendent hirsute
adornment which was straight and
silky. Before that it haa been short
and kinky.
According to Capt. Wilberforce, who
denies that he is related to the Wil-
berforce of anti-slavery fame, the
trouble in Madagascar is the result of
fever.
Dr. C. B. Jenkins, of Cape Town,
happened to touch at Madagascar in a
steamer, and having a bottle of the
American hair wash offered it in
jocular spirit to Antambahoaka of the
Betsimiserakas tribe. At that time the
fever had taken away all his wool. The
American hair wash not only grew his
hair again, but, in a miraculous fash-
ion, grew it straight. Today—as the
advertisement probably will read in a
few weeks—Antambahoaka walks the
streets of the Malagasy capital with a
cane and high collar, the cynosure of
the eyes of all Malagasy maids, to
whom straight hair is a thing of joy
forever.
One bottle of American hair wash is
not enough, however, to check the dis-
ease, says Capt. Wilberforce, and there
are millions in the hair wash business
for tho pioneers of an American in-
vasion of the far east
to recover the feet, so that the body
in its entirety may be given proper
burial.
When the relatives went to the un-
dertaker's place to arrange for the
funeral they were horrified to learn
that the body was footless. Burke
went to the Baldwin locomotive works
to obtain the missing feet, but the su-
perintendent told him that the feet
had evidently been hopelessly crushed,
as hey had not been found.
The relatives of the dead man im-
mediately became indignant at the
treatment accorded them at the loco-
motive works. They agreed to post-
pone the funeral indefinitely until the
feet are recovered and placed in the
coffin.
SUE FOR DEAD MAN'S FEET
Members Smashed to Pieces in Loco-
motive Works, But Relatives
Want Them Anyhow.
Philadelphia. — Relatives of An-
thony Labowskl, who was killed at
the Baldwin locomotive works recent-
ly have delayed burial of his body
pending an action against the Bald-
win works for the recovery of Lab
owBkl'a feet, which were severed In the
accident that cost the man his life.
With this object in view the dead
pan's family has retained former
Judge Maxwell Stevenson as counsel,
who will Institute legal proceedings
FRANCE HAS BIG DEFICIT.
Military Preparations in Moroccan
Crisis Is Responsible—To
Increase Taxes.
Paris.—Finance Minister Poincare
has Introduced the budget in the cham-
ber of deputies showing considerable
deficit in consequence of the extraordi-
nary military preparations during the
Moroccan crisis, amounting to $50,000,-
000, and also $30,000,000 owing to in-
creased expenditure resulting from in-
ternal reforms.
Definite proposals have not yet been
formulated, but the minister suggests
that in order to meet the first indi-
cated deficit a loan would be necessary,
and that as to the other Item, a rear-
rangement of taxation would be neces-
sary, comprising an increase of 30 per
cent, in the succession duty, an aug-
mentation of the duties on spirituous
liquors and the transfer of real seate
and the suppression of fraud in the
manufacture of alcohol.
CATTLE EXPERT FOR SOUTH
Dr. Salmon Hired in Hope That He
Will Restore Foreign Market
of Uruguay.
Washington.—Dr. D. E. Salmon, for-
mer chief of the bureau of animal in-
dustry, has been advised by the Uru-
guayan government of the acceptance
of his offer to organize a bureau of
animal industry for that government
at a salary of $6,000 annually In gold
and all of his living expenses.
One of the first things Dr. Salmon
will do In Uruguay will be to draft a
number of United States cattle ex-
perts as assistants.
When he took charge of the animal
Industry bureau for the United States
there was a quarantine In Europe
against American cattle on account of
Toxas fever. He established an effec-
tive quarantine and the result was
that American cattle were shipped to
Europe and marketed on the hoof.
MAKE RICH COPPER STRIKES
Americans Locate Promising Pros-
pects in Southeastern
Mexico.
Mexico City.—Americans in large
numbers are "invading the unexplored
mineral regions in far southeastern
Mexico. A short time ago two Amer-
ican mining engineers, who said that
they represented E. H. Harriman, of
New York, and associates, made a rich
copper discovery in the southern part
of the state of Chiapas. Since then
they have located a number of other
promising copper prospects in that re-
gion. The news of these discoveries
quickly spread among the mining men
in other parts of the country, and a
big influx of prospectors and Investors
to the scene of the new finds has taken
place.
A tew days ago a party of 15 Amer-
ican mining engineers and a large
number of assistants arrived in the
locality of the Chiapas copper discov-
eries. They are now making a system-
atic search for the mineral. These en-
gineers represent a powerful syndicate
of American capitalists who propose to
develop the mines on a large scale.
A. E. Craver wants to buy 1000
acres of goodland in the Cherokee
nation, where restrictions have been
removed. Also have purchaser for!
two nice residences in Bartlesville. |
List your property with the man who
can sell it. Rooms 4 and 5, Citizens
Bank and Trust buildingr.
Leave orders for cleaning, pressing
and repairing of men's suits with
Therien. Phone 252.
Summer Tourist Kates.
June I to September 30 we have on sale
summer tourist tickets to Cincinnati, Lou-
isville mid Memphis, at low rate of fare and
one-flfth, plus $2.50 for the round trip. Fi-
nal return limit October 81. G. R. McKln-
ley. agent Santa Keand Katy.
EX AM IN Eli—A DOLLAR A YEAR.]
□PPINCOTT'S
MONTHLY MAGAZINE
A FAMILY LIBRARY
The Best in Current Literature
12 COMPLETE NOVELS YEARLY
MANY SHORT STORIES AND
PAPERS ON TIMELY TOPICS
$.?.50 per year ; 25 cts. a copy
NO CONTINUED STORIES
EVERY NUMBER COMPLETE IN ITSELF
NEW YORK
CLIPPER
IS THE OREATEBT
THEATRICAL I SHOW PAPER
IN THE WORLD.
$4.00 Per Year. Single Copy, 10 Cts.
ISSUED WEEKLY.
Sample Copy Free.
FRANK QUEEN PUB. CO. (Ltd),
PUBLISHERS,
47 W. 2STU ST., NlW YOM.
CHINESE MASONS IN MEXICO
Lodge of One Hundred Mongolians
Admitted to Fellow-
ship.
El Pa*so, Tex.—Monterey, Mexico,
has a lodge of Chinese Masons that is
recognized by the Grand Masonic
lodge of the Mexican state of Nueva
Leon. The order from the grand
lodge extending to the Chinese the
hand of fellowship has just been
made. It is understood the Chinese
lodge has a membership of 100, most
of whom were made Masons in the
Celestial empire. Mexican Masons
who have been instrumental in having
the Chinese lodge recognized assert
that their investigations of the matter
have shown beyond doubt that the
Chinese Masonry is as ancient as the
traditional inception of the rite in the
Temple of King Solomon.
Frog Skin a Freight Puzzle.
A most unusual question in classify-
ing frog skins as freight was lately
asked of the freight agents of several
rallrDads in Louisiana by their rural
agent*. The question is whether a
frog skin shall be classed with wild
animal hides, bird skins, Ash, or in a
class by Itself, for which double rates
shall te charged. Dealers have had
the skins shipped under each of these
headings, but so large has become the
industry of sendiug them east for man-
ufacture Into coven >r tvuketbooks
that more uniform1' m.Mided.
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I EXAMINER—A DOLLAR A YEAR.
TWO NECESSARIES
— FOR SUMMER COMFORT —-
CENTURY ECONOMY
Refrigerators Gas Ranges
These are two articles that no well regulated
can dispense with. Do not buy until you have
our line of "summer comfort promoters."
household
examined
Remember our
Hammocks, Swings and Settees
Our line of Lawn and Poarch Furnishings is varied and ex-
tensive, and what's more you cannot find fault with prices.
BERENTZ & MUZZY.
PHONE 43.
PAY UN PI NIGHT
UndertaKeri and Funeral Directors-Only Licensed Embalmer in the City
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The Weekly Examiner. (Bartlesville, Indian Terr.), Vol. 12, No. 22, Ed. 1 Saturday, August 4, 1906, newspaper, August 4, 1906; Bartlesville, Indian Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc162504/m1/3/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.