Claremore Progress. And Rogers County Democrat (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1915 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program 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:
historical 80CHTT T,
Claremore Progress.
AND ROGERS COUNTY DEMOCRAT
VOL XXII
CLAREMORE. OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1016
No. 51
k
EVERYBODY should have a good banking home which la Just us neces-
sary to a business man as a home for the family. It pays to establish
and maintain a permanent financial relation with a substantial institution
that appreciates your business. It takes time to do this, and if you
have recently come to Claremore, it in important that you make a selec-
tion as soon as possible. When you hand a man your check you will
have a Just sense of pride in saying:
This check is on the
National Bank of Claremore
E. 0. BaylegB, President
W. F. Hays, Vice President
,G. D. Davis, Cashier
G. 0. BaylesB, Asst. Cashier
KANSAS WOMAN INSISTS SHE IS ,
INDIAN PRINCESS
Neodesha, Kan., Jan. 25.—Mrs.
Pearl Perrin, of Los Angeles, who de-
nies the claims of Mrs. Richard Croker
that she is the Princess Sequoyah, de-
scendant of the highest chief of the
Cherokee Indian, wug a former resi-
dent of Neodesha and she often con-
tended while here that she was an In
dian Princess and it is generally be-
lieved by her friends that she can sub-
stantiate her claims. Mrs. Perrin
waa formerly Mias Pfcarl McClellan, of
Claremore, Okla., and moved to this
city with her parent* fifteen years
age. She eloped with and married
Ed Land, of a well known family, but
was later divorced from Land and se-
cured the custody of their one child.
She Afterwards married Arthur Per-
rin, a Frisco conductor, and lived with
him at Seattle, where he was killed
in an engine explosion several years
ago. Mrs. Perrin recently moved to
Los Angeles from Seattle. She is a
very attractive woman and possesses
sufficient Indian features to be notic-
able.
DISSOLVED INJUNCTION AND
STORE AGAIN OPEN
Last weak the Owl Drag Store, own-
ed by "Porky" Fullbright, was closed
on an injunctien obtained by County
Atty. Wm. M. Hall, the grounds for
the injunction being tha sale of intoxi-
cants at that place.
Saturday a hearing for a modifica-
tion of the injunction held in chambers
by District Judge Campbell at Nowa-
ta and tite store was allowed to open,
pawling good behavior and under the
Sfanaaaf Ac sheriff's office.
. FnUMgfeand Mr. Smart were
.^.-sebtod in the eaaa by Ex-District
Jndg* T. L. 9lop* *Mf *, A.
CM wae :B ^Jen-
nings. Mr. Chun* has W pe*sUir
store located in tUs draff store. Wm.
M. Hall represented tha state.
The final bearing data has not yet
been set.
RAN OFF EMBARKMENT AT
STATE SCHOOL
Had it not have been for the pres-
ence of mind of G. H. Davis, Tues-
day evening, when his car, contain-
ing his wife, 8. M. Barrett and Miss
Lulu Reed, ran off of the embank-
ment directly in front of the school,
a nasty accident would have been the
result, while as it was no one was
hurt nor was the car damaged in the
least.
As is his custom, Mr. Davis went
over to the E. U. P. S. Tuesday even-
ing to get his wife, who is a member
ofthe faculty of this institution. He
drove his Ford up to the sidewalk in
front of the school where Mrs. Davis,
Mr. Barrett and Miss Reed1 got in. In
endeavoring to turn the car around on
the brow of the hill, as he had done
several hundred times before, Mr. Da-
vis says the steering gear got caught
and the car headed for the embank-
ment and went over before he could
stop it.
It was then that Mr.-Davis' pres-
ence of mind, when he saw that the
; car was going to shoot down the hill,
! saved the party, for instead of ap-
plying the breakes and running the
| chance of turning the car over in the
| snow, he applied more gas and slowly
turning the car, climbed the hill
1 again to safety. It was a narrow es-
cape for the whole party as the
ground was covered with snow and
j was very slippery.
SOCIALIST BILLS GIVEN DEATH
BLOW
pmriSY WEBSTER DIES AT REED
HOME
Some tima ago there came to our
city a young «t n by the name of
Dewey Webster, who was a sufferer
from the great White Plague, and he
came to Cinnamon to ajwnd his last
daya on earth surrounded by the lov-
ing care of the C. G. Reed family,
living in he old Claremore Hospital,
Mrs. Reed being his seeond cousin.
At six o'clock Sunday morning the
Grim Reaper claim*! him. The body
was prepared for shipment by the J.
ft. Moore Undertaking Co., and Sun-
day afternoon was shipped to his home
in Chicago, 111., for burial, aftor im-
pressive services conducted at the
hem by Rev. E. D. Cameron. Mr.
Bead accompanied the body to Chica-
go.
G. BAY LESS, THE COLONEL
\E. G. Bayless is in receipt of his
reappointment as Colonel on the gov-
ernor's staff. Mr. Bayless fulfilled
the atrenuoua duties and carried the
dignity accompanying, the title of be-
ing a Colonel of the staff, with such
befitting gravity and demeanor during
the Crnce administration that he was
reappointed by our new governor, R.
L. Williams, for nother term.
Tall, stout and stately, the Colonel,
with the manners of a Chesterfield, is
physically, in addition to being men-
tolly, capable of fulfilling the poeotion
both with credit to himself and to our
Several pet measures fostered by
socialist members of the legislature
were killed by an adverse report of
the committee pn constitutional
amendments late Tuaaday, and action
of the committee was sustained by the
ko«W> an overwhelming Vote. -
measures disposed ot unfavorably
war*: Repealing the veto power of
the g v(sroor; taking away the power
of the legislator* to repeal or amend
any act passed by th* iniative or
referendum, denying the supreme
court the right to 'declare unconstitu-
, tional any act adopted by the people;
i reducing the mileage of members of
the legislature to actual cost of trans-
portation, and providing for amend-
ment to the constitution by a majority
vote of those expressing themselves
on any question.
The committee of the whole Toes-
day advanced,to the third reading the
bill by Hunter of Choctow providing
for a landlord's lien on crops for sup-
plies advanced to tenants. The bill
developed the hardest fight in com-
mittee of the present session.
LIST OF LETTERS
Remaining uncalled for at tf^is office
for the week ending January 25,1814:
Miss Anna Arney, Mrs. Johnie
Rark, Mrs. J. E- Dill, Miss Effie Dor-
don, Miss Marie Guiatte, Mrs. Gracie
Lander, Mrs. Sarah Medloek, Mrs. H.
H. McKnight, Mrs. Mary Naver 8,
Miss Pixie Oliver, John Bertiline, C.
C. Brown, Ben Gerhart, J. Henry
Hall, Arthur Peck A1 Wade.
These letters will be sent to the
dead letter office February 8, 1915, if
not delivered before. In calling for
the above please say "advertised,"
giving date of list.
-A. L. Kates, P. M.
Progress is in receipt of a renewal
stf subscription from J. L. Green, of
Foyil, who dropped into the office Sat-
urday for quite an interesting visit.
Not only do we welcome our subscri-
bes to drop into the office to renew
titfir subscriptions bat also to main
. far awhile for a look around to see
bow ear paper is published. We in-
vito one and oil interested to drop in.
HAD EIGHTY CENTS ON DEPOSIT
FOR NINETEEN YEARS
Monday Chas. F. jGodhey, cashier
of the First National Bank, received a
letter from Newt Hacklar, an old resi-
dent of this city, asking him to look
up his account and see if he did not
have a small amount on deposit hero.
Mr. God bey did so and found to Mr.
Hackler's credit the sum of eighty
cents which had been reposing in the
First National for the post nineteen
years for safe hooping. A man that
can keep eighty cents nineteen yeors
should get rieh for wo find it hard to
hasp eighty cents nineteen days.
WUch This Space!
WK ABE not witiafted un-
law you arc. We have
pvenrrhinp witii whhh to
build tour ho w, barn,
a tori e—lit fart, avervthinff
tn <lw huiMiaft mi U rial lit*.
8KB lift
T.
it.
H. ROGERS
LtJMBU CO.
QUE8T CLUB MET
The Quest Club mot with Mioo Al-
ma ■eadeahaB Monday afternoon.
The roll call books of today was lad
by Mrs. Godboy.
Ike lesson for the afternoon waa
Motel Drama. Mrs. Pottea gave
aa iatereetiag taft of "The Drama of
Today," Mrs. Boyd oa -Good Weoosa
Hald the Stage" aad Mrs. Esaard
-Oar Colonial View of tha Drsasa."
3Ui irfL
JOHN COCHRAN'S BODY FOUND
IN RIVER
The body of John Cochran, living
near Chelsea, was found In the Ver-
digris river due east of the old Clem
Rogers place, late Saturday evening
by a party of movers who were ford-
ing the river. The wash of.the river,
occasioned by the wagon's passing
through, lifted one of the drowned
man's feet to the surface and the par-
ty noticed it. Afraid to raise the body
from the river before the county at-
torney had taken in the situation, the
movers did not touch it but notified
the county attorney's office here of the
discovery.
Sunday morning, as there had been
a hint of foul play, us Mr. Cochran
was to have secured some money from
his Indian lands, on the day he was
drowned, Tuesday, January 19th,
County Attorney Wm. M. Hall, ac-
companied by Dr. M.'H. Gordon
county physician, went to the place
the body had been found and removing
the man's body from the river recog-
nised him as John Cochran, and held
a post mortem examination over it,
which revealed the fact that the lungs
were filled with water and the verdict
of the examination was that he had
come to his death by drowning. The
post mortem revealed the fact that
the body was pretty well cut up but
these cuts were undoubtedly sustained
when the body came into contact with
the rocks of the river bottom as it
had drifted some twenty feet from the
place of the drowning.
County Attorney Wm. M. Hall
reconciled the fact that tracks had
been seen pn the bank near the place
where the buggy had been found by
Cicero Strange, by a few investiga-
tions, which revealed the fact that a
man had crossed there just a little
while before the raise of the river and
had walked up the bank, Mr. Hall
further explains the fact that the hor-
ses got loose from the buggy in a most
natural way in spite of the fact that
noNi piece of either harness or buggy
was damaged in the least by an is-
vestigation of the double (tree which
Mr. Cochrsn was using on the buggy
at the time of the tragedy. The
double-tree was a home made one and
its ends where the tugs fit on were
very small while the holes in the tugs
where they fastened to the buggy were
very large as a result of which condi-
tions, in turning around in the stream,
in an endeavor to get out of the water,
the hones must have given the buggy
1 fa jerk which thww4t up «n their heels
and the tugs came loose, letting the
horses loose and leaving the buggy at
the edge of the stream.
In conversation with Mr. Hall, fol-
lowing his visit to the scene of the
tragedy, he gave us a very plausible
account of the way the accident must
have happened, which resulted in Mr.
Cochran's death. He said that when
the horses got into swimming water
they must have whirled around and
made for the shore which they had
just left, and that in sq turing they
had evidently pulled the buggy off a
jump off close to the place where they
were found, When the buggy drop-
ped off into deep water either Mr.
Cochran must have tried to keep out
of the water by climbing to the top
of the seat, which was not fastened,
and fell off, carrying him into the riv-
er, or else the buggy must have tipped
and pitched him into the icy river, and
as he was loaded down with clothing,
having on an overcoat and boots in ad-
dition to his lighter clothes, he was
unable to swim in the seven feet of
water and was drowned.
Mr. Cochran was last seen in this
city by several parties late Tuesday
evening and later at Foyil by Boss
Ward, who tried to get a trade out of
him and who says that Cochran acted
queer at the time. When he left
Foyil, which he had reached by train,
from this city, he was driving his team
which he had secured from the livery
stable where he had left them when he
boarded the train for this city Tues-
day morning and he was headed north
toward his home near Chelsea. Noth-
ing more was seen of him until the
movers discovered his body in the riv-
er near the ford due east of the Clem
Rogers place Saturday afternoon,
however, the horses were found by
Cicero Strange in one of his wheat
fields Wednesday morning and inves-
tigations later revealed the buggy by
the ford, but Mr. Cochran was no-
where to be found. During the bal-
ance of the week parties had been
busily engaged blaating the river be-
low the scone of the tragedy to make
it giro op its dead but it was not
thought that the body would be found
so dose to the scone of the drowning
as grantor allowances hod been made
by the scorchers for tha drift of the
cumnt.
The body of the deceased was taken
to the Cochran home Sunday morning
followiag the post mortem and burial
de Sunday afternoon from thnt
Pay Hite,
Mr. Cochran leaves a wtfs
aad four children, a mother aad sever-
al brothers to mown his less. Pro-
gnss extends sympathy in this their
Wo hoc to acknowledge the receipt
of a raaewal of subscription from
John H. Carder, maaoger aad owner
of the Naw State Green House, of this
J. Who win be the next one to
low Mr. Carder's example? We
REPRESENTATIVE BALL'S VISIT
HOME
Representative A. E. Ball spent
Sunday in P\e city visiting with his
family und friends, and, for the pur*
pose of explaining Rogers county's
position at Oklahoma City to some of
our citizens, a meeting was called at
ihc office of Howard & Holtxendorff,
at which meeting Mr. Ball explained
what he had been doing and what he
intends doing in the future in an en-
deavor to get some legislation passed
beneficial to our county, at Oklahoma
City,
Relative to the bill number 282 by
Representative Safhs, which provides
for the merger and consolidation of
the Western University Preparatory
School at Tonkawa and the Eastern
University Preparatory School here
removing to Norman, to be known as
the preparatory department of the
slate university, Mr. Ball said that
there was not the remotest possibility
of its passage, as it had to come be-
fore the Educational Committee,, of
which he is a member, and he said
thut he would watch out for it and
"nip it in the bud" before it got any
further. Ho went on further to say
that everything looks bright for the
Eastern Preparatory School down
there and that the citizens need have
no worry on that score.
In the talk that Mr. Ball gave the
men assembled at Howard & Holtzen-
dorif's office, he said that he was go-
ing to try and pass a bill providing
"or the state's paying their witnesses
Cor their services and their car fare to
and from the town from which they
come and the county seat. He cited
one incident which had made him de-
termined to try and get this bill pass-
ed. He said that while he was coun-
ty assessor in this county an old man
had come into his office one afternoon
with tears trickling down his face and
asked him if there was not some way
by which he could collect his expenses
for coming to the city to court. In-
terested, Mr. Ball asked the man con-
cerning the circumstance. He waa In-
formed by the old man that he had
been summoned to appear in the courts
here and not having any ready money
and not being able to borrow any in
his home town he had been forced to
mortgage the only ceiw that he had to
rai.se the money, supposing that he
would be paid for his services down
here, but upon being informed that he
would not be paid for his services, as
the defendants was not convicted, he
broke down and ir.iod, for be %aa a
very old man and had no way to make
the money with which to lift that
.nortgnge off the cow. Such a bill is
a good one and we wish Mr. Ball suc-
cess in his endeavors to get it passed.
Mr. Ball went on further to ex-
plain some of the other bills, which
he is going to favor and try to get
passed, one of which is a new road
law, q lengthy one, all of the clauses
of which we will not endpavor to give,
but will state only the most impor-
tant. The bill is a proposed substitute
highway committee bill and with the
good clauses of the road laws of Mis-
souri, Iowa and a number of other
states in it, it is a most estimable bill,
just what we have been needing.
The bill provides, mong its many de-
sirable features, for the abolishment
of the office of Stute .Highway Com-
missioner and the establishment of a
Highway Commission, to be composed
of the governor, as chief, and the chief
engineers from both the state univer-
sity and the A. & M. School at Still-
water, to be used in the event that
outside of the state help, be offered
toward the building of roads in this
state. This commission is to work
without any additional salary.
It further provides that a County
Highway Commission be created, con-
sisting of the county surveyor, at no
additional salary, as its head, who is
to work in co-operation with the board
of county commissioners in the letting
of contracts for road work and build-
ing of bridges in the county. It pro-
vides for the voting of one-fourth mill
by the township and that in the
event that the county sees fit to vote
one-fourth mill for road work, the
state will donate a like amount; it
provides for a cash poll tax of $2.00,
with no age limit; and it further pro-
vides for the issuance of licenses on
autoes of fifty cents per horse power
in lieu of all other taxes.
For the expending of the money
thus derived, the bill provides that
ninety per cent of the amount thus
raised remain in the county to be
spent on the roads in the county from
which it is raised and ten per cent of
it to go to the Secretary of State to be
used for the purchasing of the tags
for the autoes.
The desirable feature about the pas-
sage of this law is the fact that at
last, should it be passed, Rogers coun-
ty will got something for the money
paid in taxes on the automobiles of
the county, which is mora than the
county has got in the past, as the mon-
ey has all gone to pay the expenses
of the State Highway Commissioner's
office which has sccompiished practic-
ally nothing but spending the people's
money, as is plainly shown by the fol-
lowing conversation.
Last week Colonel Sydney Suggs,
incumbent at the office of State High-
way Commissioner since the creation
of the office four yean ago, kn
abolish his office, appeared before one
of the committees at Oklahoma City to
defend his position.
Pensonally we have nothing against
the Colonel and think him a jolly good
fellow well met. He is a friends to
the newspaper men of the state and
they are friends to him and he is
known the state over, not only as the
State Highway Commissioner, but as
"Sidney of the Accordion," and his
faculty with this instrument has caus-
ed no end of pleasure to "the press
bunch" in times gone by at the press
associations. But Mr. Suggs, upon
his own statement before the commit-
tee at Oklahoma City last week, only
gave voice to what we have all known,
that the office of State Highway Com-
missioner has been nothing but a bur-
den to the tax payers and has really
accomplished nothing.
When Mr. Suggs had been quizzed
pretty thoroughly by the committee,
Representative Ball asked the chair-
man of the committee if he might
ask Mr. Suggs a few questions, which
privilege was accorded him and the
following conversation, which will be
revelation to some, took place:
"Mi1. Suggs, how long has the of-
fice of State Highway Commissioner
been created?" asked Mr. Ball. To
which Mr. Suggs replied "four years."
"What," said Mr. Ball, "has it cost
the tax payers of the state to main-
tain this office per year since its crea-
tion?"
"I would say approximately $8,000.
per year," Mr. SuggB replied.
acar LOA'D OPF LO U R& FEED
Priced as Follows:
Mill Run, 100 II). lot.. 91.4.1 500 lb. lot 91.35
Slioi't-K, 100 III. lor- *l.«JO 5001b. lot 91.50
Worthmore Flour—Best Quality-
Satisfaction Guaranteed
50 lb. lot $1.80 100 lb. lot . .$3.50 500 lb. lot.. .93.40
The above prices are Cash on Delivery
E. BLAKLEY GROCERY CO.
Phone 498
COUNTY TEACHERS'
ASSOCIATION
tion," finished Bull, who was informed ROGERS
by Mr. Suggs that all of that informa-
tion was included in his reports.
Mr. Suggs was then asked to file a To Be Held at Eastern University
report with the committee and was Preparatory and Vocational
dismissed from the witness stand. School
Colonel Sydney, smoothe in the ways
of politics, immediately made friends Claremore, Oklahoma, Saturday,
with Mr. Ball, wanting to know his January 30, 1915, commencing at 9
name and residence and declared that a. m., at which time the following
he was extremely pleased to meet the program will be rendered:
man from Rogers county in spite of Invocation, Rev. E. D. Cameron,
which blarney Mr. Ball says that he Music, State School Band.
is "after the Colonel's goat," and that Address, Sup't. E. E. Oberholtzer,
he is going to get it with the aid of of Tulsa.
the others. Music, Boys' Glee Club.
Mr. Ball said that he favored the Music.
repeal of the present libel law as it Round Table Discussion: "What
is an unjust one, giving the editor the Have I Accomplished During the Past
worst end of it every time and that Year?"
"Let's see," continued Ball, "it has ! his support can be relied upon to help Luncheon, Domestic Science De-
cost the tax payers $8,000.00 per year to get a new one passed, and went on partment, State School.
to maintain the office and it has been ! further to outline his plans for the Music, Girls' Glee Cltft).
created four years. Then the total rest of the session, but we will not Address, Sup't. Tom W. Smith, of
cost of this office since its creation have space to touch on them but will Vinita.
has been $32,000.00. All right, now suffice to say that Representative A. Music.
tell us what road has been built in E. Ball, about whom it was said that Discussion, "Why Should We Teach
the state under supervision of your he would be a failure as our represen- Economy to the Pupils in the
office in these four years?" Well, tative, is "making good" and is a "live Schools?" F. E. Lemons and Perry
Okfuskee county built 28 miles of | wire" down at our state capital, and if T. Phillips.
road under our supervision and then | the people of the state do not hear
we supervised the building of other , from him it will be because the speak- Note to Rogers County Teachers—
roads," Mr. Suggs replied. er of\he house will fail to recognize (The law requires that you attend
"What was the cost of that 28 miles
of road to the county which you say
was built under the sperviaion of your
office in Okfuskee county? resumed
Ball. To which Colonel Suggs re-
plied, "$25,000.00."
"All right," continued Mr. Ball,
"tell us what other road was built in
the state under your supervision."
him.
TWO DIVORCE CASES FILED
fifty per cent of all county associa-
tions. You are especially requested
to attend this meeting.) J. C.
Dougherty, County Superintendent.
The records at the court clerk's |
office show two divorce cases to have
been filed within the past two weeks,
nomely May Bair vs. Geo. W. Bair,
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank our many friends
on an adultry charge, Mrs. Bair set- through the columns of the Progress
Sydney, beginning to get uneasy under ' ting forth in her petition that on or for their kindness and services during
the ceaseless fire of Mr. Ball's ques- about the 15th day of September, the sickness and death of our beloved
tions, squirmed a little and said that, Geo. W. Bair. the defendant, commit- cousin, Dewey D. B. Webster; also
eleven miles had been built in another I ted adultry with one Ethel Hall and the Rebekah, Circle and W. O. W.
part of the state. J at. various and divers times and pla- lodges, SauthMetljodist Sunday School
"What did that piece of road cost' ces, unknown to her since, as a result and Epworth League and the 1916
of which unlawful act sne prays that Class of the E. U. Pi S. for the
the county and state?" questioned
Ball. "It cost the county $7,000.00
and the state $4,000.00, or $11,000.00
all tpld," replied Suggs.
"Let's see," mused Ball, "in the four
years that you have been in office,
since the creation of the office of State
Highway Commissioner, thirty-nine
miles of road have been built in the
state under the supervision of your
office at a cost of 32,000 dollars to the
counties in which it was built and a
cost of $36,000.00 to the state which
includes the $32,000.00 for the main-
tainance of your office and the four
thousand dollars that you said the j
the court grant her an absolute de- beautiful floral offerings.
cree of divorce and the custody of
their four children.
The other case on record is that
of Grace Baker vs. John M. Baker
on an abandonment charge.
HAVE YOU NOTICED IT?
F. W. Johnson
A. L. Sward
C. G. Reed and family
MEASURED 55 ONE HUNDRETH&
INCH
The precipitation of the snow fall
Have you noticed "Grandpa" Par- Tuesday measures 55 one hundreths
sley smiling today? Well, he has inch according to Dr. Krause's meas-
just reason to smile, for he received urements, who first reduced it to wat-
word Sunday that the title had been er and took the water measurement
conferred upon him on the 22nd, when j according to the measurements of
a bouncing boy, named Keith Edwin,' moisture.
state spent on that piece of road which ' arrived at the home of his daughter,
makes that 39 miles of road having Mrs. Bert S. Berry, of Mayfield, Ken- J. C. Reed, who was recently op-
cost the state $68,000.00. That will tucky, nee Miss Pauline Parsley, of era ted on at St. Louis, Mo., we are
do, Mr. Suggss, we think*that we can this city. ! pleased to note, is rapidly recovering
beat that, but I want to make a motion — 1 his strength and health and accord-
that you furnish this committee with Robert Dale, of Foyil, spent Friday ing to the doctors who performed the
an itemized statement of the expenses in the city on business and visiting operation he will be in better health
and work of your office since its crea- with friends. I than he has enjoyed in years.
Ask to Sse
those
$1.95
SKIRTS
values up to
$7.50
End of Season
Bargain Event!
1 Lot Shirt
Waists
50c values
36c
1 Lot
$1.00 Waists
now 69c
Our Final Reduction Sale of Ladies' Winter Coats
and Suits and Men's Overcoats and Clothing is
now in progress. If you have not received one
of our large circulars, issued last week, write or
call and we will be pleased to hand you one!
Ladies' New Style Fall and Winter Suits Now -
Ladies' New Style $22.50 and $25.00 Coats Now
'Ladies'New Style $15.00 Coats Now - - -
Ladies' New Style $10.00 Coats Now ... -
I Lot Ladies' Suits, Values Up to $25.00 Choice -
I Lot Ladies' Coats. Values Up to $7.50 Choice •
You can make some Big Savings by
Looking over our Gdd Lot Shoe Tables
Every department has some Odd Lots
to close out cheaply this time of the year
i-
2 Price
$12.50
$7.50
$5.00
$5.00
$1.95
I
WALKER DEPT. STORE CO.
"The Store That Saves You Money"
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.
Kates, W. C. Claremore Progress. And Rogers County Democrat (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 51, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 28, 1915, newspaper, January 28, 1915; Claremore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc181536/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.