Hobart Weekly Chief (Hobart, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1905 Page: 4 of 8
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Bargains / Bargains! Bargains I
Our Fall Line of Bargains is Now On.
This beautiful ladies' sew-
ing rocker for the next twenty
days at
Heighth of chair 40 inches. This is a
nicely finished all oak chair. It is certain.
ly a winner. You can't afford to miss this
as it is just the chair for your wife or moth<
er to sit in to sew or rest.
Hi
s M
E
Ji
SOMETHING ELSE!
Dining Table, from . $S.OOto$2S.OO
Dining Chairs from . . • •
Sideboards from ....
Buffets from
Chiffoniers from ...
Center Tables from ....
Dressers from
Iron Beds from
Folding Beds from . . •
Kitchen Safes from ...
Combination Baby Gocarts
and Buggies
Gocarts from
Also everything in the way of window shades, lace
curtains, portiers, curtain poles, fixtures and trim-
mtngs, etc., that you may desire
.SO to
12.00 to
20.00 to
8.00 to
.7 5 to
6.00 to
2.25 to
I2.00 to
3.00 to
7.00 to
2 50 to
5.50
50.00
55.00
20.00
15.00
40.00
50.00
50.00
7.00
25.00
7.00
r
Our stock of Linoleums, Car•
pets and Rugs is the most com
plete in Kiowa county. All are
the very latest pattern.
Linoleums from 50 to 75c per yd.
Carpets from 16 to SOc per yd.
Rugs from $6 to $50.
Also a piece floor border,
something new.
Bed Room Suits ranging from
$12 to $50. It will pay you to
call and see these suits before
you buy. They are all well made,
drawer work on dressers perfect
in every detail. Mirrors are all
of the very best French plate
glass.
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An immense stock to select from, in fact the largest complete furniture tine in Southwest
(Oklahoma. We want you to call and see us.
The Pioneer Furniture
Firm of Hobart.
R. J. LOVETT FURNITURE CO.,
HOBART WEEKLY CHIEF
The Chief Piintieg Co.
PIIU.ISHI'WS.
J. W. MANSELL. Editor.
C. H. SHERBURNE. Business Manager.
B.itereeJ th* Hobart, OkUhuma. pofttoBc*
tor -.racaaiiMlon through th% a* s*o«jni
JUki Matur
Published Thursday Afternoon
Of Each Weeik.
Subscription,
$1. Per Y ir.
ADVERTISING RATBh
l..> 5 uonu th« iinf*
DUpUy rAtt'M gtvme on application
J^iowa and Jilabama Com-
pared
Nr. R W. Benton. Xotasulga.
Ala., is here visiting Mr. J. H.
Land who lives three miles north
of town. H« says that he is
simply carried a\*ay with the
prospects horn and expects at
some future time to move to
[Oklahoma He say9 that the
larmers here, as a whole are
in much better condition than in
his country He attributes this
to the fact that, we have better
land and use a great deal of farm
machinery while in his country
I ttiey have poor timbered land
| and can't use machinery. He
says that they never plant a
thing without using a commer-
cial fertiliser which is ruining the
country as fast a# it can. He
says that his own fertiliser bill
this year is over two hundred
CK> CKaOaOOOCOOOQOOOOOOCHSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO OOO<SO<IO<HMHSOOO
s HOTCHKISS "mX? 1
In Rear of
F. & M.
National
Bank.
Yours for
Business.
WHO makes a specialty of selling EARM
LANDS and CITY PROPERTY. The
buyers are now coming and the season is on.
If you wish to sell, list your propertv with a
man who has had twenty years experience in
the business, and who has been in business in
Hobart since the opening of Kiown County to
settlement in 1901. And remember I am now
selling property every time when the prioe is
right, us the buyers all come to see me when
they want bargains in Kiowa County property.
I have talked since the opening of this county
to settlement, that we have the best County of
land and settled with ihe best class of people ot
any county in the United States, and am' still
staying with it, but there are a few people who
want to go on or change around, to you we say-
come and see us, and let's talk it over. I am
still doing business at the same old stand.
C. C. Hotchkiss,
Soooooooooooo
Hobart. Okla.
loooooooaoooa
dollars. He thinks that the far-
mers of his country could make
more money by renting their
farms and coming here and rent-
ing one than by working their
own farms. He says that the
negro labor is getting poorer j
every year and that he likes the
conditions that exist here along
these linos. He says that twen-
ty-five acres is as much an a man
can possibly work there while
one man can work from fifty to
one hundred acres here. Mr.
Land has sixty acres himself this
year, forty-five of which are in
cotton and will produce over half
a bale per acre this yea-.
Fairview
Threshing small grain, for this
season, was ended in thi9 section
last week.
8. E. Copeland went to Dun-
can, I. T . last week, to attend
to some business interests.
Mrs. Mary Landers, of Kansas
City, Mo., arrived last week to
visit the family of James A. Law,
she being a sister of Mrs Law.
The Fairview sch«>l board has
employed Mr. A. B. 8helton's
daughter to teach the ensuing
term of school, beginning the
first Monday in September.
Mr. W. R Bailey of N. E. 12-
8-20 made a business trip to
Frederick, Comanche county
last week. While there he visit-
ed the "big pasture.*'
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Witcher
and daughter, of Bell, Grayson
county. Texas, are visiting the
family of Thomas Foster. They
are parents of Mrs. Foster.
Mrs. E. T. Childers and family
went to Cherryrale, Kansas, last
Friday, to spend a couple of
months visiting home folks and
parents.
9. B. Huff of N E. 29-7-20,
started to Wheeler and Hemphill
counties Texas, last week, to
look at the country and make
t purchase of more land
The regular meeting dates of
Law Union No 25# are the sec-
ond and third Monday evenings
of each month. The members
should be governed accordingly,
and be on hand.
Mr. Milton Marshall went to
McPherson, Kan., last week, to
be absent ten days or more, vis-
iting relatives and closing up
business matters so that he and
family may looate permanently
in this vicinity.
A delightful mountain party
was had a week ago Sunday, in
honor of Mother Challacombe.
A bountiful supply of good things
to eat was taken along and after
olambering up and down the
rugged sides of the mountain a
spread was made beneath the
shade of mountain trees and ev-
eryone partook freely and heart-
ily of the elegant and substantial
repast.. Late in the day thev all
returned home.
Mrs. R. A. Challacombe,
mother of "our boys," John and
Fred Challacombe, returned to
her Kansas home last week. II
seems pretty hard for the boys
to resume a bachellors life again
but it is necessary for them to
continue this method of living
until some two consents to be-
come their wives. Now girls,
there is a charge to get first class
husbands.
Do You Want to Buy a Drill?
Do You Want to Save Money?
THEN LET US F.GURE WITH YOU
The King Cutter Drill will make you a
double seed bed Will work more successfully
in trashy ground, and takes hard ground better
than the disc drill.
We can save you some money, our drills
will do the work—other drills can do no more.
See us before —
A. E. RICKLY & COMPANY
ft
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Mansell, J. W. Hobart Weekly Chief (Hobart, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1905, newspaper, August 31, 1905; Hobart, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc270091/m1/4/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.