Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 197, Ed. 1 Friday, August 18, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
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9BI0K ABB A DAILY EXFftBfl OHI6K All A OKLAHOMA.
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Now Is the Time to be
thinking of a Fall Suit
Our New Lines are Here. Make Your Selection
Early. You ean have your suit come when you
want it. vVe are showing all the latest.
AT '
J. S. GARNER Manager
"The Little Store With a Big Conscience'
i ft""
ADDITIONAL LOCAL
Om ar Early of Amber was a Chick-
asha visitor yesterday.
Mrs. Koy MeCulloch of Waurika is
visiting relutives in the city.
Mrs. M. Adams of Ft. Worth Texas
is the guest of her sister Mrs. J. A.
Bateman.
Sheriff Baiiey returned today from
a trip to Lindsay Pauls Valley Shaw-
nee Oklahoma City and El Reno.
L. C. Murray of Tulsa is spending
a couple of weeks in Chickasha visit-
ing his sister Mrs.C. E. Plott.
Jamio Mallory of Shawnee is a guest
.at the' homo of Mr. and Mrs. B. H.
Gadd.
Mrs. W.'H. Matthews of El Paso
Texas is visiting her sister Mr. Kj.
A. Richards. She will be here several
weeks.
Miss Ethel Hill of Granite spent last
flight with Miss Susie True on her
way to Dallas where she will spend
the winter. Miss Hill was an O. C.
W. student last year.
Mrs. L. H. Jarvis of Houston is ex-
pected to arrive in Chickasha today
to visit Mrs. T. It Trawick. Mrs. Jar.
vis who was formerly Miss Veva S.eof-
fern of this city is en route home
from an outing in Colorado.
ELECTRIC
SHOP GETS
CONTRACT
J. L. Brenneman manager of the
i Electric Shop has received the con
tract for electric fixtures for both the
junior and senior high schools. The
senior high school although it has
been wired and drop lights installed
has had no fixtures or switches. In
part of the rooms indirect lighting
will be used and in part the direct.
TEXASBANK
IS CLOSED
Py. United; rres9.- - " v ..
Longview Tex. Aug. IS. Examiner
John Wightman under direction of
Banking Commissioner Patterson
closed the doors of the People's bank
at 10 o'clock this morning. A small
run this morning caused the closing
of the institution.
Tlio amount of the shortage could
not be obtained today but it is under-
stood to be large.
"".'IHESBBKHKISvE
THE FOHKST
Eveijr Ingredient PurcjxX&odable
en
::b' -a wo
lis h
Mi a.
1
Vws is the source Vrr.r-i-ADi cMiurnAi Mniinurc
of 5.5.5. itvLWDit rimtiuw i iiii uriLj
If you were as careful o; the medicines you take
iclc as vou are anxious about the disease it is taken for
wonderful difference in your future health would result;
In a vegetable product like J S.S. there is no violent after ef
tmjt ie i. fiitnl in mtnpn! mmlirinps but A natural an ef
ficient means of reaching the blood and purifying it so j
Remember any mineral Is i violent material to cast Inld your
Delicate interior uemana genuine jr-
S. S. S. at your druggist it is pure- THE MINK IS THE KfiUfii
ly vcrrtable and the Standard SOUOCE OVVIOLEJJT jr t
tlood Remedy. MiNEHAL DKUGs
ler9rii...
. Swilt SpecJIic Co. Atlanta Ca. ifsi.MKamia-ri.-.l
WESTERN ASSOCIATION
STANDING.
Von. Lost. let.
McAlester -- It!
Tulsa 1
Oklahoma City 15
Denison 14
Muskogee 14
Fort Smith Vi
Paris --.-. 12
Sherman 11
II
It
Vi
13
14
15
13
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.5"jli
.oia
.ISl
.411
.414
.407
Results Yesterday.
At Tulsa 7 Oklahoma City 5.
At Fort Smith fi Denison 4.
Af Paris 8 Sherman 6.
At Muskogee 6 McAlester 2.
Games Today!
Muskogoe at Oklahoma City.
Sherman at Denison.
Paris at Fort Smith.
McAlester at Tulsa.
NATIONAL LEAGUE '
STANDING.
"Won. Lost. Tct.
Brooklyn . .G3 C9 .618
Boston 59 40 '.5!)6'
Philadelphia 61 42 .;!)2
New York 42 51 .432
Pittsburgh 40 ri6 .451
Chicago 48 60 .444
St. Louis 48 63 .432
Cincinnati 43 ..69 . .384
1
Results Yesterday.
At Pittsburgh 1 Brooklyn 3
At Chicago 1 New York 0.
No other games scheduled.
Games Today.
Boston at' St. Louis.
Brooklyn at. Pittsburgh.
New York at Chicago.
Philadelphia at Cincinnati.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
STANDING.
4
"
.
t 4f 4 -
Won. Lost k'rx.
Boston 65 46 .586
Cleveland 62 50 5."i4
Chicago G3 51 .553
Detroit 62 53 .539
St. Louis 61 53 .533
New York - 39 . 52 .532
Washington .52 58 - .473
Philadelphia 23 84 .215
Results Yesterday.
At Philadelphia 4-2 St. Louis 3-3.
At Washington 6-4 Detroit 11-8.
At Now York 5 Cleveland 4;
At Boston 0 Chicago 7.
Games Today.
'Chicago at Boston.
St. Louis at Philadelphia.
Detroit at Washington.
Cleveland at New York.
n
n
FINAL e
4 -.. M
ANGE
CLEAR
On Men's and Boys' Suits Low Shoes Straw
Hats and Sport Shirts.
We positively will not carry these goods
over till next season so out they go
regardless of values
-
A final wind-up of all summer apparel for men. Stocks
are broken in sizes but the prices we are making will pre-
vent us from packing anything away. Our buyers are in
the east and new fall goods are arriving. This is the week
to buy your clothes to finish this summer and begin next.
Men's Summer Suits $6.20 $6.50 $7.70 .$8.50 $11.20
Formerly sold for $7.50 $10 $12.50 $15 and $17.50.
MEN'S STRAW AND PANAMA HATS AT COST
j
riflnarcii Sport Shirts 85c. Arrow Sport Shirts $1.20
Men'.s Low Shoes for less than you ever bought them.
i rSB j j
Wajailj.'.Mtnt.n.bi. .-In.-1 hr I i..ni -ALU- At-'t uilUidKMM
CHICKASHA MAY NOW BE
PLACED 0N0ZARK TRAIL
(Continued from race One.)
Dean Dean Jewelry company; Frank
Iloopes Carhart' Motor company; W.
IT. Vesper Ruiek Motor company; H.
A. Douglas Oklahonia City Tent and
Awning company; T. J Martin Okla-
homa City Stockyards National bank;
L. E. Smith Daily Oklahoman.
A communication from Floyd
Thompson who is chairman of the
committee Hays:
"We take it for granted that your
people know fully "tli'e "advantages of
heins .a tranwcontinental highway.
From the standpoint of money alone
the cost of putting in the road ia re-
paid many tiniest but in the wide ac-
quaintanceship with people all over
the United States the value of being
situated on the road can not be esti-
mated. "We people of Oklahoma City ";:.
to help you to be located on the Ozark
trail. On the occasion of our visit we
should like to meet every citizen of
the town and all the farmers In the
surrounding country. We are as mmh
interested in seeing you get this road
as you aro and we wish only the
chance to tell you personally how we
can help you."
HARLOW THINKS
COLLEGE WILL BE
POWERFUL FORCE
(Continued from Tage One.)
young women those arts which they
must use when they take up their plac-
es as liomo-buiiders a place .practi-
cally all of tli em ultimately must take
in the economic and social organiza-
tion. . '
"The school illustrating this tenden-
cy is the Oklahoma College fof .Wo-
men at Chickushn. It gives eight
years' work accepting girls who have
completed the eighth grade and giant-
ing degrees of bachelor of sceuo.
bachelor of arts and bachelor of mu-
sic. In addition diplomas are given
in domestic science domestic art com-
mercial art and physical education
and state certificates are granted for
teaching; these subjects."
After telling in detail of the. work
in home economics and music at tho
Oklahoma College for Women the ar
ticle continues: '
"Tho principle upon which the col-
lego curriculum Is basod is correct.
Women are often very successful in
business In tho school room. But wo-
man's place the place for which she
was created and the place practically
all of them take sooner or later Is
that of head of a home. The higher
education that does not make the edu-
cated woman better fitted to manage
a home than her less educated sister Is
eminently a failure.
"Tho . success t of tji pklahoina
school during the past two years au-
gurs well for this tendency iu the
southwest. During tho past season
411 girls were enrolled with entrance
cards for more than two hundred oth-
ers returned ou account of lack of
dormitory accommodations. That the
influence was not merely local is In-
dicated ' by the fact that forty-nine
counties in Oklahoma and five other
states were represented in tlie student
body.
"A distressing sight is that of a re- '
flnect woman whose mind has been
trained iu all the lines of science lit-
erature and art but who In her own
sphere the home is a failure. A wel-
come development would bo the
growth of the new tendency to tu ex-
tent that no girl would be granted a
degree or a diploma of any kind from
any public or stato school until she
was able to go Into the kitchen and
prepare then to tho diniug room and
serve a square meal'
- Have you read tho classified ads?
Try it. They are interesting. It .
'Ml B K
i 1 I m
law J-ik i J mJ
Absolutely Removes
Indifestinn. f)m
" i'sxi..i::
proves it 25c at all dracrjjists.
OLD KNIGHT
OF THE GRIP
t in
Tour ratronasre
cm
Hastens to Tell His Friends of Some
Interesting Facts.
In order to convince the readers of
this paper that me.i ?ni women from
all stations 1n life are now praising
a wonaeriul meuicai uiscovery cnueu
"Hay's Specific" we reproduce here-
with a good letter from W. F. Porter
representing a laige Harvesting Ma-
Chine company. In part he says:
Gentlemen: In May 1 called at your
office for a dollar bottie of your Hay's
Specific and I did it because I had
talked with your Mr. C. E. Weldon
having known him for fifteen years
and I thoroughly told him the condi
tion I was in.
I had no .itrengtb. had indigestion
and bad heart in iact. I was not able
to carry my grip from the depot to the
hotel. And I am duty bound to any
traveling -man of any sufferer from in-
digestion or run down k.vstem to sta'e
one-half of this dollar boitle straight !
ened me up so much that I could eat j
anything I wanted va!k a mile suid
carry my grip. And being a Harvest- j
lug Machine man I went to the bar-j
vest field and stayed all day.
This great svstem tonic has
placed on sale in Chickasha
Brownson.
'1
oiicite
QUALITY
SEHYXCE
PRICE
I j
And Courteous Treatment
has been f j
by H. J '
V Atv MrrfP "fP
O I
CARPENTER PAYS $
"What's the damage for spewing
when the accident occurred?" aked
J. V. Carpenter driver of the damaged
tud(.'baker car in ti e recent auto ac-
cident as te accosted Mayor Cm f man
on. the street today.
"Five dollars" replied his hoi
a check settled the bill 1
PHONE 17
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Lampe, William T. Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 197, Ed. 1 Friday, August 18, 1916, newspaper, August 18, 1916; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc729675/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.