The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1915 Page: 3 of 4
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'-'J
I want to tell you what wonderful benefit I hivA ™
«,ved from the «e of Thedford's B ct-D ghrwrl£
Mrs. Sylvan* Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky
s&BSSSr^vsi
THEDFORD'S
"Draught
in my home." For constipation, indigestion, headache, dizzl- -
ness, malaria, chills and fever, biliousness, and all Similar S
alrnents, Thedford's Black-Draught has proved itself a safe, S
reliable, gentle and valuable remedy. S
If you suffer from any of these complaints, try Black- 2
of ItIl8lmedicine of known merit Seventy-five •
years of splendid success proves its value. Good for •
young and old. For sale everywhere. Price 25 cents. 9
On another page in The News to-
j 'lay will be seen the big ad of the
j Fifteen Club. Read the ad. It means j
j that somebody is going to get an I
Overland automobile absolutely!
fret. These fifteen merchants have
associated themselves together to'
Rive their customers this handsome
Christmas present, because they ap-
preciate your trade. The pr,c<s in
none of these stores will be different
from the regular cash selling price
the year around, but they are offer-
in? the premium as an inducement to
get their customers to pay cash when
hey buy. The cash basis is the only
j basis on which to trade. If every-
, body would pay cash all the time the
I merchants could then afford to make
; these attractive premiums offers all
the time. When you pay cash there
| no bill collectors chasing you around
on the 1st, and you really begin to
j enjoy living. When you buy goods
from any member of the Fifteen Club
call for your tickets—one ticket with
each 50 cent cash purchase. If you
are indebted to any of the members
of the club, pay the account, if it was
made before Oct. 1, and you will be
titled to one ticket with each 50 cents
"CaIa II" A f?orse." On tropic isles no doubt the
UBTS-II for Corns. rteathen ^Plain oi skies too blue |pald
CIIDC © i a and fair; they'd move UP north and Many other ,owns have recently
OUHC 8S sunrise ! ' Start t0 'he fresh and crisp .put on these premiums, but almost
A,"lr'' oi- A"J 'mid the bleak Al- ! ™*mbl.yLth® ears «iven «way have
— Alaska air. And 'mid the bleak Al- 1 lnvar'ably the cars given away
Any Corn, With "Qeta-It" on It, ItU uska mountains the natives say they ,lepn much cheaper ones than
Absolut® "Goner!" wou|d ST've a dime, if they could go F,ftee" <"lub is offering its cu
pleasure to have corn* just to see
-/
, uativ«0 ay iney
would give a dime, if they could go r,,Lwn U,UD ,s offering its custom-1
where sparkling fountains are squirt- ! e'8' The retail Price of the Overland
ing in a sunny clime. il-ar' bought from Swint & Fitzpatrick
,of '« $825. and if you trade
CHECKS FOR VETERANS FOB- ! the members of the Fifteen Club
WARDED TO WASHINGTON. I ,and do not want the car if you should
| By United Press. be so fortunate as to get it, the club
WASHINGTON, Oct. 4—The Pen- ; Swint & f''tzpatrick guarantees
! sion Office today mailed to Washing- t0 g'Ve you 'n cash for it. Or
ton addresses hundreds of pension 1 ' °U CHn find a sale for jt wherever
checks for Civil War Veterans who V°U ch008e' and can Possibly get more
are attending the G. A. R. encamp- m°"ey for U
i ment here. The checks are usually Trade with the members of the Fif-
sent to the veterans at their homes ,tee" Club' They are among the very
; but the Pension Office thought some . merchants Hugo, men of in-
of the old warriors might be in need tc*rrity and standing, both personally
of money and the payment was made "nd j.'' a business waV. and their
in Washington. standing as men is a guarantee of the
— fairness of the drawing.
(GROWERS ASSOCIATION. Ask the merchants about this car.
Word has been received here that ,Asl< s5wmt & Fitzpatrick about the
I 'imiK.6th1er,nino,f £°'MJor~ the Valliant potato growers associa- ' nd ,car" Ask members of the
Irritating ^wlvei.^ kniyM* tl0n wi" have some 2000 bushels of 1 Fl^teen Club about the Fifteen Club
potatos ready for the market "I buy at the Allowing stores,
p*lnleMiy._lu«, ...11. wltJ- ..Get/: in November. The association is com- 1 !" y0U can Ket a ticket with each
floo*. too. if. i posed of farmers that rajse sweet . 50 cents in trade or on old account:
J tatos and the association is receiving Crescent Dru^ Co., Drugs.
! financial help from the banks of Val
! liant.
•HJeU-It" Put# Tour rM| In Clotrr.
J?™™™ 09 with "Getii.lt" It lart
J^nv „ .°^orn ,rorn «he true flesh
th,'n niakes It como "cIobd
fhl* enUs. corn for keeps,
ftkes the use of ta* -
.MiiidARifi, Irritating
wijsors.and raztjra really
Uet rid of those corns quickly surelv
PalnJeesiy^just easily,—wltT 'Get.-*
warts and bunions, too it*a
the loth century way 11 9
' Gets-It" is sold by all druffKlata.
BLASiyzeus:
GOOD WEATHER.
Jjst think of all the handsome vveath-
Central Drug Store, Drugs.
Davis Cash Grocery, Groceries
Henry-Allison Co., Confections.
Rodgers-Wade Furniture Co., Fur-
niture.
D. L. Swint, Harness and Saddles.
Blakeney Hardware Co., Hardware.
Hugo Steam Laundry.
Wayne Evans. Clothing and Shoes.
Sam Frelich. Dry Goods and Cloth-
SOME FINE PEARS.
- UH uie nanasome weath-' Dr. C. H Swearimren IB«t nl^ht
lienor' Wd Sin°,e Weather was de ! K«ve The News force a few of the fin
1 The Evening New
O. O. WALKER DEAD. ! Job Printing.
j The Grand Leader, Dry Goods and
O. O. Walker. . prominent fanner I c ,
and a member of the Frogville dis l Store. Ladies Furnishings,
trict school board, died Sunday at his! Hobson & Stubbs, Groceries
11 — - ' Ray W. Gumm, Jeweler.
. 1 wince a uay
that a wild and wooly, and how we
groan and paw the air! "This cli-
I mate purely is the limit," thus are
lour vain repinings voiced; "the fog's
thick a man could skim it. the rain
is always damp and moist. In winter
I when we need hot weather, they send
I all kinds of snow and sleet; in sum-
Imer, when wc pray together for snow,
I they send us sizzling heat." The
[weather bureau couldn't hand us a
*w3t "<"*«>"■ .r Fo,i
U,- -| „„,m ,.mChoct.w
farmer from the Messer neighbor-
hood, was in Hugo Saturday on bus!-
ness.
THE BIGGEST PREMIUM YET 1)
jg-o
.Munua^ UL nis
home near Frogville of congestions.
He was ill about one week.
The interment occurred at Grant I
yesterday,
I " ' 1 1 1 '
t Locals and Personals
* .
f ,
"Low Fares to the Fairs"
via
Rock Island Lines
PANAMA PACIFIC INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITION
SAN FRANCISCO
PANAMA CALIFORNIA EXPOSITION
SAN DIEGO
Convenient
Train service
Write for Handsome Booklet
and Full Information
FAY THOMPSON
Division Passenger Agent Rock Island Lines
Oklahoma City, Okla.
TIms Handsome $825 Overland Automobile To Be Given Away By The
Fifteen Club of Hugo
^™'toa21th!!Sristm,e'pS ">lt|ther ve to their
,hw —"■««ss tcsr*, xs ™-trades
How the Car Will Be Given Awav
drawn TEN l2£ >SS SiTS, 'K
entitled STotft^^ S^d^'tre^faT^ 1 f.mUy wiU be
anteea you $600 in cash for it r a"d d° not want jt- th« fifteen Club guar-
ssatt jss r jfst" •« °<«-—
1915, and paid before November 1, 1915 y account, made prior to Oct. 1.
resula/cSh^rice! and*?™^imp'ly°giS Jou thechan" b"y them wiU be at the
your patronage. 8 e y u the cha"ces on this car in appreciation of
tfit ^'you^eed' t^1jrooriPUrCH^ke lo°k at the list of
get tickets for this beautiful car vnn^t 0u neec! the £°°ds a d by trading where vou
will only be given with ca h Durehasef ^ get an $825 ««tomobile free^ Tickets
October 1, 1915. Purchases, and positively not on goods charged to you after
tbe'raUM Cub. made before Oetober
Pay cash and call for tkkets Ym °" these account«-
get tickets on old accounts. ' ' ho,d the luckv "umber. Buy for cash and
Members of the 15 Club
CRESCENT DRUG CO.. Drugs.
CSNTRAfc DRI G STORE, Drug^
DAWS CASH GROCERY, Groceries.
HENRY-ALLISON CO., Confections
rSST F™Nn™E CO., Furniture.
D. L. S\Y INT, Harness and Saddles
BLAKENEY HARDWARE CO., Hardware
HUGO STEAM LAUNDRY.
™^VANS' Clothing and Shoes.
Dry Goods and C1°thing.
HERALD' ^ Snd Back ^inscriptions.
tup LEADER, Dry Goods and Clothing
iiIJdc J ST0RE' Ladies Furnishings.
HOBSON & STUBBS. Groceries
RAY W. -GUMM, Jewelrv.
Attorney Guy Short of Idabel was;
tho C„ I-...
w. W. Moran of Boswell
in the city Sunday.
j Hugo business visitor yesterday.
Oliver Robertson of Forney, one of
the young progressive farmers of the
county, was in Hugo Saturdy.
I. J. Bilbrey was in the city Satur-
day from his farm near Cloudy, in
Pushmataha county.
Misses Sallie and Bess Russell
came in Friday night to spend Sat-
urday and Sunday with home folks.
Read Hub Babb'g ad in today's pa-
per.
S. E. Rhodes of the Messer com-
munity was in Hugo Saturday.
Georgia McKay and Eunice Foshee
of Boswell were in Hugo yesterday.
Cotton sold on the streets here Sat-
urday for 12 to 12 1-2 cents a pound.
J. Hutching, a prominent farmer
east of the city, was trading in Hugo
Saturday.
A good mule was sold on the streets
Saturday for $50.00. Many good bar-
gains can be had here on Saturdav by
the farmers.
Lige Jacobs, a good Indian farmer
JLT GEant- Was a Hu*° ^sitor
eity's™^"" BO"'" "*1 „W' L"tkj «' Mo.. „
'— i"rd^,y h*"di«h
J. J. Barrett went west Sunday to1 Progressive young farmers of the
'"""■I—• i « •. A, S. Well*, m^nut tor:£Z.r' ' " H"K
Mr. ^ 1 rasuccissruL aaiD.
Sunday with relatives in Boswell. j A.J. Willis, a progressive farmer Sa1t,Urd*y. "as mad. or-
! from east of the city waa in ! ^ ^ ^ near Rufe the
Westbrook, farmer of near j Saturday ' town northeastern part of th^ county. The
" " * 1 dePut-v sheriff of Ft Towson and a
jt i* in
W. W.
Messer, was in Hugo Monday
o *i r- • ' W T Hopper, who is teaching thp
S. M. Farris was in Soper yester- school at Ervin. east of the city was
day afternoon. "Heavy" seems to be I "n Hugo Saturday and paid this nff.V*
interested in Sunday School work. |a pleasant visit.
* * v- iv"owu aim a
constable from Valliant rode out to
the house and ordered the man who
came to the door to throw up hi?
hands. The man, supposing the offi-
fers were robbers, made a dash back
Justice J. P. Warren of Ft. Towson John Rogers was in f,,lm r I?t0 1116 h.OUS€ and was sh°t twie^
spent Sunday with his brother in the Creek Saturday condition is not serious. The map
city I : is said to be a Mr. Brown.
i W W. Wilson was un fmm r ^ ! Sh.ots were «^d at the officers by
Joe R. Hammond, accompanied by J Towson Saturday. or j parties in the house. At press time
Miss Ruth Stanford, spent Sunday in I . We c°uld learn no more particulars.
Ardmore where they viewed "the! John Beggs of Grant was in I ^ ^ ™6n Were not *rr<*ted, the
wreck of the recent explosion. They Saturday. Hugo, odds against the officers being toe
report 8 portion of the city badly - ' ?reat ■
torn up
No. Six-Sixty:Six
Five or ..x dp*. wi„ bre.k
ft.ken then «• . ,onic the F,«r^™
* i i j 5 on the ,,vcr belter than
(.1'iincl and doc* aol (ripe or tickcc. 2Sc
Joe Nelson, a progressive farmer J
from near Messer, was in Hugo Mon-
day.
Herbert, the little son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. A. Oakes. is very ill, suffer-
ing from fever, and is also afflicted
with blood poinsoning of the knee.
Clarence Byrns of Ft Smith spent.
Sunday with his parents and friends I
m Hujro
Grant Webb, one of the good farm- i
erg living *-«t of the city, was in the I
city Saturday for the first time in
two weeks. He has been confined to j
his room for several days.
EI) L. REED
J. H. COFFMAN
Choice Farm Loans Wanted
Low Rates-Long Time
REED & COFFMAN
HuS°- - • Oklahoma
V
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Curd, Jesse G. The Choctaw Herald. (Hugo, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 8, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 7, 1915, newspaper, October 7, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc97815/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.