The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 19, 1912 Page: 4 of 4
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Fall Opening Sale at the
NEW YORK STORE
THE LESSON OF EXPERIENCE.
CLOTHING.
We carry the largest stock of Clothing in
this vicinity.
Men's regular $5.00 Pants for $3.75
Men's regular $4.00 Pants for $3.50
SERGES—All Colors—All Wool.
$1.00 grade Serge at this sale for 69c
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Men's regular $3.50 Pants for $2.98
Men's regular $2.50 Pants for $1.98
MEN'S FINE Sl ITS.
$25.00 Suits at this sale for $18.00
$18 Blue Serge Suits at this sale for.$14.50
$15 Blue Seige Suits at this sale for.$12.50
MEN'S SOX.
50c Onyx Sox at this sale for 39c
35c Onyx Sox at this sale for 23c
25c Onyx Sox at this sale for 19c
All 10c Hosiery at this sale for 8c
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SHOES—For Men. Women and Children.
We handle the best Shoes in town for the
money.
Regular $5.00 quality at this sale for. .$3.75
Y Regular $4.00 quality at this sale for. .$3.35
w Regular $3.50 quality at this sale for. .$2.98
Regular $2.50 quality at this sale for. .$1.98
Regular $1.50 quality at this sale for. .$1.23
FINE PRESS GOODS.
$1.50 per yard Messaline, all colors, at this
sale for 98c
Changeable Silk, $1.50 quality, at this sale
for 98c
75c quality silk at this sale for 48c
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DRESS GINGHAMS.
All 12V^c quality Dress Ginghams at this
sale per yard only 9c
CORSETS.
$2.50 grade C. B. Corsets at this sale. .$1.98
$2.00 quality Corsets at this sale for. .$1.25
$1.50 quality Corsets at this sale for.. .98c
HOSIERY.
50c Silk Hose at this sale for 39c
35c Silk Hose at this sale for 23c
25c quality Hose at this sale for 19c
NOTIONS.
Ladies' 10c grade Handkerchiefs at this
sale, 3 for 10c
10c Elastic, all colors, at this sale for. .-. .7c
25c quality Elastic at this sale for 19c
5c package Sharp Needles at this sale for.3c
5c paper Pins, best quality, at this sale. .3c
Democrats have as much at stake ,
in business legislation as Republicans !
have. They are producers of raw ma- i
teriBl and they own manufacturies. j
They are not going to ruin them-1
selves.—Philadelphia Record.
No, not if they know it. The trou- j
ble with the average Democrat is he j
blindly follows Free-Tiade leader- I
ship without knowing where it is go- j
ing to land him. He has been taught'
to believe that at one and the same
j time you can import more goods and
! keep right on making more goods at
! home. In 1894 he found out that
! this plan wouldn't work; that as the
I result of lower Tariff that let in for-!
I eign goods to supply the American
j market, American mills had to shut-
| down and American labor was out of
| a job. His own mill was among i
those which had to shut down, but
lie allowed his Free-Trade leaders to
I convince him that it was the curren-1
ey and nob a reduced Tariff that
| compelled him to shut down. He has
I been believing that ever since 1894,1
I and he is now about to try the same
I thing over again. Experience is a
I ijood teacher when you rightly read
I the lesson of experience, but not oth-
DOMESTICS.
Yard wide bleachcd Domestic, regular I21/2C ^
quality, at this sale for 6?ic
Yard wide Sheeting, regular 7c quality,
during this sale per yard 4Vfcc
6c and 7c Calico during this sale for. .4V2c
10-quarter Sheeting, 30c grade 23c
All 10c Lawn at this sale for 6c
Probably there are some men who
can reconcile themselves to being old -
when they think of how they used
to try to act funny when they were
young.—Ex.
Our idea is that money is a curse
Possibly it is better to be an or-
phan than the child of a man who
uses his home as a grouching ground.'
The floodgates of prosperity seem
to have opened up during Mr. Taft's
administration.—Ex.
| We Make Im-
f provement Loans
We have hundreds of other items which we will include in this Great
Fall Opening Sale at prices that will be a big inducement for you to buy.
^ The high quality of goods offered and the exceptionally low prices
quoted should bring crowds ot buyers to this store, and we would sug-
♦$ gest that you be one of the first arrivals. See whether vou buy or not.
NEW YORK STORE
HENRY" COPPLE, Proprietor.
<$ -$*$**$*&<$♦ '1' 1 'ft 'ft«$>«$ ♦$ «$ +!♦ 1 prove the one you have.
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See JIM THOMAS if you
want to buy a farm or
need ready cash to im-
T-~
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i jsh
rv
Another Crop Story.
Eli Sheets, one of the progressive farmers of
the county who lives near Sawyer, was in the
city Saturday and was telling of his crop of al-
falfa. He has one acre in this hay, and this is
the second year for the crop. "This
make
The Hugo Concert band gave a delightful con-
cert on the corner of Jackson street and Broad-
way last Friday evening. Quite a large crowd
congregated on the corner to listen to them usic.
Why not be WELL DRESSED
in clothes that fit
and fit with style? Fit alone is like soup with-
out salt. Many brands of clothes fit in a way,
but none of them with just that style ginger
that STEIN-BLOCH know how to color the
picture with. It was this skill that caught the
eye of the English and opened London's gates
to Stein-Bloch Clothes.
SUIN-Bloch
L ■ i I; r
?C7^v.i
'J "You needn 9
show me any
more.thti Stein-
Bloch fill me at
I want to bo
fitttd.'
We have STIilN-BLOCH Clothes for Fall
Try on a Fall Weight Suit to-day
Reasonably priced, $25.00 to $35.00
Other well known Clothes $10.00 to
$20.00 the suit.
Hanan and Walk-Over Shoes, Manhattan
Shirts, Star Brand Shoes.
The Store of Quality- Prices reasonable
THE GRAND LEADER
IKE HEILIGMAN, Proprietor
THE STORE THAT'S ADVERTISING HUGO
Our idea of a good girl is one who
knows she's got to wash the dishes
she is no humor to ta'k literature at
OLIVER TYPEWRITER
Buy a standard machine and add prestige to
your business I can sell 3'ou an Oliver for R
down and fi per rnontb. and notes draw no
i nterest.
W. E. Schooler
Office in Overstreet Building
woman
wore tight shoes now has a daughter
who tightens all the way up.—Ex.
acre w
more than any two acres of cotton in the
county," said Mr. Sheets. "I have had three cut-
tings this summer; the first cutting netted me
58 bales, which I sold for 75 cents a bale as fast! The old fashioned
as I could bale it. In the other two cuttings 1
have harvested enough to make more than 150
bales from the one acre this year. Is there any
two acres of cotton in the county that can come
up to this for making money? I could have got-
ten another cutting but the army worms beat
me to the last crop. If farmers would raise al-
falfa instead of so much cotton, they would have
more ready money all through the summer, for
"the hay always finds a ready sale at good prices.
There is a demand for labor in
this country, and a demand for labor
means high wages.—Ex.
Would Hear Democracy's Big Ones.
Oklahoma voters will have an opportunity to j
hear some of Democracy's big speakers if the:
! National Democratic Speakers' Eureau grants re-
who! quests which have gone to tint headquarters.
Among the celebrities desired during the cam-
paign or either Wilson or Marshal, William Jen-
nings Bryan, Ollie James, Senator Culberson of
Texas and Champ Clark.
O
It is hard work for Candidate Wil-
son to tell the unvarnished truth, and
explain his immigration writings at
the same time.—Ex.
NEW FIRM IN TOWN
0. K.GR0CERY COMPANY-lncorporated
Owing to incorporating and addition-
al capital the store heretofore known
as the "Davis Grocery" will be known
as the "O. K. Grocery Co."
The policy of the store will be strictly cash and the
best goods for the lowest price.
We want to say to those who pay cash
find it vnur interest to trade with us.
that
you
will
0. K. Grocery Company
Successors to the Davis Grocery
Fruit Growers.
There was a meeting of the Fruit and Truck
Growers association held in Justice Cake's office
last Saturday afternoon. There was quite a
number present. About the only business trans-
Remember the all-day singing at Rock Hill acted at the meeting was the appointment of
next Sunday. Everybody, and especially all committees to promote the work ot the organiza-
singers, are invited to attend and a good time is
assured.
R. G. Lewis of Oklahoma City, arrived in the
city this week and has accepted a position with
The Cash Drug Store as prescription clerk.
Cotton receipts in the city to date have been
very light, but the price has been very good,
ranging from 11.25 to 12.50.
A tailor's Singer sewing machine for sale at
this office. In good condition and will be sold
cheap for cash or on terms.
Remember to bring some kind of exhibit for
the Choctaw county fair, which begins October
22.
We thank Mr. O P. Miller for some fine late
roasting ears, which he brought to- U3 Monday.
W. L. Grant, a prominent timber dealer of near
Soper, was in the city on business Monday.
tion. There will be another meeting uext Satur-
day at 2 p. m. at the same place, and every man
who owns a fruit tree or raises anytruck for sale
should attend.
O I 'V
New Ferry Over River.
Paris people have put in a ne'v ferry across the
river at Arthur City. This will be welcome news
to the automobile owners of the city, as hereto-
fore there has been no way to get out of this
county in a car, except to cros the big sand beds
of the river. The new ferry j; about half a mile
below the old one, and the load does not go
through the deep sand.
The Erie theatre under th3 management of
Mr. Johnson is fast becoming the principal place!
of amusement of Hugo. Pet pie who go there doi
not have to sit through lon^ lists of advertising!
slides but are given several reels each night of
the very best motion pictu-es that come to the!
city. The house is making every effort to please
its patrons, who are showing their appreciation
by the continuously incre; .^ing attendance. This1
Typewriter paper, any grade from the best to house shows exclusively the Thanhouscr pic-
the cheapest, for sale at this office.
Attorney G. Earl Shaffer attended
business in Idabel Monday.
to legal
tures, the same as are useJ by the biggest shows
in all the large cities.
Just the hat that will
please you most, f i t
your head better, look
nicer, and of the most
enticing quality you ev-
er saw.
THE
MANHATTAN
Jim Thomas, the big real estate man
purchased and automobile.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred All; on have returned to
their home in Corsicana after an extended visit
last week' Mr and Mrs. Clint He try.
J. N. Daily, of Cody, was in the city Monday
and called at this office.
Editor Lewter continues to improve
local hospital.
at the
Clarence Byrns visited in Cooper, Texn:;, last
week.
Sometimes a bride cries over hor
first pie even if she doesn't have to
eat it.—Ex.
Our idea of
P. P. Doss and wje vLited Texas points this! wur 1,10,1,01 R capable manaspr "
week. j 8 wo"ian w'"> can keep her husband
from getting ma(j at thc Weath*r and
Prof. Phelps of Hamden was in the city Satur-
day.
Mr. Stanifer of Sawyer was in the city Satur-
day.
C. C, Ervin of Soper w§e in the city Saturday.
tnking it out on her.—Ex
One reason why a girl is so much
aniarter than her sweetheart is be-
cause she can wrap him around her
little finger while he iB holding her
hand.—Ex.
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Curd, Jesse G. The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 21, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 19, 1912, newspaper, September 19, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc97666/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.