Newspaper Page Text
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*§SL ^ TO MAKi MAKE
life ivi H York Store
v
■THE —-
our World!
b and all buyers believe
f the position we
F OF BARGAINS
i we trust to fill our store, It draws
tie up and sales increase. They are ■e
LRGAINS ARE
I together!to secure the great bargains -
MW ~" W w " York Store.
aSSZKES T %tZ22ZS£T stock in order to make a
-
WE’LL “ ■ ’ rr STIiiKE YOU BIGHT !
We have knocked prices down, now we want to
KNOCK'THE IDEA INTO YOUR HEAD
that you wi« sever get a chan nee to buy Dry Goals, Clothing, Carpets, Shoes
and Hate as we arc how offerv ng. We are doing big things in business and
we sum ft up by saying :
Prices Are Paralyzed
AND THE PUBLIC IS PLEASED!
Prices marked below will leave everpthing behind—A CLEAN WALK-
AWAY %
Read! Read! Read !
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1 Case of Handsome Calicos slaughtered at 5 cents a yard. Other houses
am selling the same at 7 cents a yard. At NE\V YORK STORE.
1 Case of beautifnl styles Calicoes at 4 cents a yard, same selling in other
bouses ouses at at 6 6 cents cents a a yard. yi At NEW YORK STORE.
2 lots of Plaid and Striped Ginghams will ‘'“>»*>^* be closed out at 5 cents a yard.
Considered cheap „t 8 cento. Come and «.
0EK 8T0Rt .
2 lots of 10 cents Dress Jinghams will be closed out at YORK 8 cents STORE. a yard.
At NEW
1 lot of Fine Zephyr 12cents? Stripe Ginghams, new styles. Will be sold at 8#
cents reduced front At NEW YORK STORE.
AlLour 8 and 10 cents Challies will be closed oat at 5 cents a yard.
At NEW YORK STORE.
1 lot of French Challies, rich designs, 40 inches wide, will be sold at 1.0 eta
Marked down from 15c. At NEW YORK STORE.
1 lot of Handsome 86 inch wide Dress Batiste, will be closed out at 8c. a
yard. Reduced from 15c. At NEW YORK STORE.
r»* c TtNEw ay£$5£ r
s 6 ®.— well worth 10c. >
At NEW YORK STORE.
1 case verv fine Sheer India Linen Lawn at 10c.; reduced from 15c.
At NEW YORK STORE.
Handsome line of Laces and Lace Flouncing. If yon want Swiss Emb’d
Skirting and Hamburg Edgings at prices that will paralyze i^ORK competition, STORE,
call at once as we want room. At NEW
2 lots Figured Batiste, perfectly fast colors, new styles, only 5c. a yard,
reduced from 8c. This is your chance to get a handsome dress cheap. STORE.
At NEW YORK
All our English Sateens will be closed out at 12%c.; reduced from 15c. an
18c. At NEW YORK STORE-
8 lots of French Sateens, latest styles, will be closed out at 25c. a yard;
reduced from 30c. and 85c. a yard. At NEW YORK STORE.
2 lots of new styles English Sateens, that we sold at 10c. a yard, will be
closed out at 6c. Call and get you a few dresses as they will not last long
at the above price. At NEW YORK STORE.
2500 yards Sea Island, edge slightly damaged, will be closed out at 2c.
a vard.' At NEW YORK STORE.
Shoes 1 Shoes l Shoes!
MUST BE SOLI) TO MAKE BOOM.
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imeif you are in need of anything in the Shoe line as.the stock
I out in order to make room. Come at once and make your
i can get the best value for your money and have your
largest stock in Griffin. ^ ’T
THE TER1FF1C UNDER CUT!
Balmoral Boys Button Shoes Shoes, size from 12 to 2, $1,25, reduced from $ 1,50. Boys
from size 12 to 2 at $1.25, reduced ^om |1^50^
gT0KF
La-diee Opera Slippers wtil be closed out la order to make room.
1 lot Ladies Opera .Slippers at 45c.; reduced from 75c.
1 lot 1 Ladies lot LadieuOpera Opera Shippers Slippers at 65c.; 75c.; reduced reduced from from 90c. $1.00.
1 lot Ladies Opera pera Slippers I s at $1.00; reduced NEW YORK from $1.2^. STORE.
At
A fuH * line of Gents’ Fine Shoes from $1.25 to $5.50. NEW YORK STORE.
At
Beautiful line of Ladies Opera Heel and Toe 12 Button Kid for $1.00 ;re-
duced from $1.50. At NEW YORK STOR1 RE.
If yon want a Brogan Shoe call and see our $1.25 NEW Brogan. YORK STORE,
At
jssse *"•* *-*■ sh °“ ' r<m ' ,i -°° *° ’a?w?ork iRgr.
STRAW GOODS. ■-
11 ,at 15c.; reduced from 25c. All our 75c.
1, at 50c. At NEW YORK STORE.
, in Black .and White, at 15c. worth 25c.
m
lV MORNING. JULY 14.1889
The Steady Boom at Guthrie and
. Oklahoma City.
.,. , ■ .
More Enterprise Than In Many
of the Eastern Cities.
____________
In Lew Than Ninety Day. Oklahoma Haa
Been Transformed From ao Uninhab¬
ited Wilderness to a Thriving Territory
Teeming With Industry—Solkoofe and
Churches Building.
Oklahoma country, gives a glowing ac¬
count people of the enterprise and He progress o(
the of that section. says: ;
“It is wonderful to contemplate how
the lands lately ceded by the Creeks
and Seminoles have filled up with an
enterprising, pushing, law-abiding daw
of settlers.
“Bat ninety days since these bund*
were an uninhabited wilderness, and
now towns and, villages
all over Oklahoma an
lands are air
stenders and
and churches _
dements Are of advam being
tlio ^ — —
are prospering. Thousands of settlers
for are which building upon yet they and improving have title. Umd
as no
III™ *lIIvl wlllcl PFcYlui) IuHMvuvwU vHswu^Q
the common consent and co-operation at
But recently an-uninhabited land is now
teeming with an industrial population,
and there afforded, is no outlawry in times or past. refuge for
outlaws as
“The city of Guthrie now<"
population of 15,000, and with
and eleetic-lights, an elec trio-mo tor
I street railway element will soon of be business in operation.
tion saw at more work in Guthrie than opera¬ wit*
one
extent as Guthrie
The Cherokee Strip,
“Will the Cherokee commission spo-
eeed in the proposed effort to negotiate
for the lands of the Cherokee strip?”
“Chief Mayes and his cattle coadjutors' ar.
in the power of the syndicates,
now occupying these fertile lands under
assumed leases. The present plan is to
interrupt to or prevent the Cherokee negotiations council and
net convene
until a few days before the assembling
of congress, whether in October or
November, if an extra regular session time,. be called, Then
or in December, the
it will be too late to make regulations
and report to congress for its action, as
required by the law creating the com¬
mission.
“This will be done simply for the pur¬
pose further of delay, to the allow Cherokee the cattlemen outlet Ond to
likewise occupy to make show of compliance
a
with the law. Cattlemen have offered
$3 an acre for the land so as to belittle
cannot the government treat with limit the of Indians $1.25. They
nor ac¬
quire, a title, no other party but the gov¬
ernment having teat right. But tee
offer of $8 per acre is made so as to cre¬
ate a sentiment among the Cherokees
teat $1.25 per acre is net an adequate
price. This is but a trick or device to
commission.” prevent successful negotiations by the
THE CH EROKE E STRIP.
A Stock Raising Company Offer* 63,600,-
OitO for a Ten Team' Lease.
Kansas Cm, July 18.—TheTimes
mints tee statement that tee Cherokee
Cattle association, the present lessees of
the Cherokee the strip, Cherokee will make council a proposi¬
tion to next to ex¬
tend its lease for ten years beyond its
termination. The present lease has five
more years aii to run, The company offers
to pay in $5, GOO,000 far the use of
the rate strip of $400,000 for the ten years, paying for tee at first tee
$720,600 per annum
five years, and per annum for
tee second be five years. The total would
almost as much as the government
offers to pay land._~ the Indians for an outright
sale of the
NEED S ATTENT ION,
Germany Insulting Veasels Flying the
American Flog.
San Fbancisco, July 18.—“Although
America has settled tee Samoan difficul¬
ties with Germany, ” said a prominent
shipping man, “she will noon be made
to realize that she has many troubles in
the South Pacific islands to settle with
Germany before her commercial men
will enjoy the same privileges as other
nations among these isls
not f the only place where :
'* •' ‘ coercing the
l are
the American flag,
are in tee hands
of the Germans. The exciting
at Samoa have caused onr
to pay little heed to the <
American trading vesselkplyi
will here and be the Marshall islands, But it
not long before some action will
have to be taken if America desires to
shipping do something interest. toward protecting her
A Missiulppt Lynching.
astsaff&zjssA Memphis, July 18.—A mob a* 150
r«=iftfte , sa<HS
i 3 S‘ll£ 2 S° p '- Th .-
mitted to make a statement He made
teg for several hours in order that others
A 1
SECRETARY SCHEME.
Several Dlvltloa* of Wm- Department
Washin .— Owing to the
absence from
Proctor, the otdee for
several divisions of 13 m
will not be officially promulgated z
the last of the week. The purpose
scope of Uie order are pretty well un
■toed by tee officials and oierks
will be ai (. M
is oonsid , m S
of then! appear to think that
clertoa owe m-
. object . of ptfi the order ■ .. is three-fold
8 i
to bring up the work in at
3e, some
preserve such volunteer important and original
records of the army as master
rolls, hospital registers, etc.
Sur-
iy was
teemedi-
al records
rMtmiud
ssffiysrta’s
!5ffi
lit is understood teat
titih zttiimblo i
tee medical lical history history at of every officer and
As'teia^dalogue WUOS6 W0r(J D02FH6
easier i catalogue well grew, grew, the the thorough, searches
were as as more
“ and subjected tee filTco original lo oonstant records ...... were ** no longer •
This 1ndex-catalc«ne will be com¬
pleted Already by in tee its end incomplete of the current condition, year. it
has enabled the clerks not only to bring
up of to date work arrearewhen^it which was WMb^nn! six mouths
more in
but to answer satisfactorily about 75
per eion cent, bureau, of against tee inquiries about from tee pen-
50 per oms
under the p^tiroformeri^in vogue.
system to tee records of"tee.i .volunteer
be practicable to ascertete'in a tittle of
the time now required urea the tne military military his nis-
tory of any offioer < ,or soldier
whose name is ‘m te.oXaiK
muster value roll, and will
in tee investigation and speedy
adjudication, also for back not only bounty, for pensions, service, but
pay, etc.
It will also prevent the destruction of
other oonstant original handling records of muster the rolls volunteer and
of
army, which should * be carefully pre¬
served as long as the government shall
CHEAP GAS TALK.
Wonderful Things Proposed By a BrltUll
Syndicate at Chicago.
Ohioaoo, July 18.—A morning is paper
says: A London syndicate in Chica¬
go, dr at least some of its representa¬
tives are. They know how to make
cheap gas over in the old world. They
can make it at eight cents per 1,000 cubic
feet in the holder. It surprises them
that Americans keep bn "paying from $1
to $2 for what they might have at twen¬
ty-five cents. This syndicate, therefore,
proposes chance to give cheap the Amerioan people a
to try gas.
The syndicate proposes to organize a'
oompany with a capital of $20,000,000,
and to put in plants tor making cheap
gw all over the United States, following
tee line of least resistance and largest
profits. proposition If the local capitalists accept
the made by tee syndicate
the work will begin at once, as plenty
of capital is said to be behind tee En¬
glishmen. Their tax
but names are withheld tee
present, Ses*e®tti they are well km known to
said to be strivetoMflts aboro wnpreteit. The syndi¬
cate will plant in east¬
ern oities, big and small, and into west¬
ern towns and cities wherever tee con¬
sumption of gas is large enough to war-
Thus tiie aid tronfif"
it the English $20,000,000 syndicate '
ize, is intended to be :
trust nor a gas company, 1
of gas manufacturing, am
_
"operating ad-
vanoas to gag oompaniea un-
Fir»t HI* Wife Than Himself.
"■sraBf W troable with , 1 • Thnrs- i head.
. his f
dren ago and over she left
swollen aR the steeams,
redo at this point is
i the city, has 3
Nxw Yonx, July 18.-
Tfifi WiBW EGYPT
Freely Discussed iu tJi» English
House of Commons.
The Number of invaders Estl**
mated at 6,000.
BrHKh Tfoopi at SlaluOnle^d fn' «iypL
*ka Gorman** Lou at the Captnro Of
To “* a Admitted, to Have ^eou Bu»J.
ArutrullHua* Peculiar Way of Showing
Their Loyalty—Foreign.
was freely discussed. The governmo
has asked for an estimate of the force of
tee invaders, and Mr. Edward Stan¬
hope, the war secretary, stated that
their number was about 6/"
they bad with them
fores, under tee aa
.....
jumi,' had penetrated into Egypt, thirty
three miles north of Wady Ha! fa. There
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— * • — • • — JnJmb.
,
.AT I
British troops from Malta have been
ordered to Egypt. . - “ <■:»,,<, 1
Millet** “Angalat”
Pabis. July 18.—It is now thought
Wely other that the art Corcoran repository art in gallory, America or
borne
will yet secure Millet’s “Angelas,”-
in view of the probability teat the
French chamber will refuse to confirm
........
ding would not have risen beyond its
actual value, except for the Millet craze,
confirm tee purchase only in America
can toy, a fanoy price for tee work be looked
* » ■
Bound to Show Their Loyalty.
Australia London, July brings 18, - letters, Every bearing mail frosi be¬
now
sides tee regular Australian postage
stamp another of two or three times the
size, features with the queen’s fanuHar
Kf engraved thereon. This
all, JH
at nor does it serve any other useful
purpose than to emphasize the protests
of a lot ^ of fanatical Loyalists in AuS-
'leoame is
substituting
stamps animals emus, for the kangaroos features of and their other beloved local
queen. queen’s face They stamped bub bound their to have letters the
on at
any oost, and appear to have provided
stamps for this purpose.
Should Have Stuck to Factor.
London, July 13.—Dr. Bareygi, of
Milan, Italy, is in London on a visit.
He is a pupil of Pasteur, and caused
,some oonstemation among physicians
all over Europe less than a month ago
by treating five of which cases of resulted hydrophobia,
every This for one time shook fatally. to
a gave a severe
the faith in Pasteur’s system, which haa
become almost universal. J}ts Bar©rffi
these now explains he that followed in his treatment method of
oases a new
which he learned in Spain. He ac¬
|speatem8take knowledges very in abandoning frankly that the he mode a
Pasteur
Extra Session of the Peruvian Congress.
Lika, July 13.—Congress was con¬
vened in extea session on the 4th inst.
The oongressidhal committees, having
is unanimously known reported in favor of what
as the “Grace bondholders
contract,” and the contract having piss¬
ed to the voting stage, tee the lower lower house
aion, of congress approved Thursday, of tee first without two articles dissert- ...
b^r majoritie^of 50 and 51 respective^.
oles of tiiecwntraet will also be prompt¬
ly approved.
The Capture of the Tonga.
London, July state 13.—Later advices from
ZansRwr that five German
day'i war render. :^?r.<SS.lSSI’S The place, which is , r ele¬
on an
vation and defensible, was carried by
marines after a stubborn resistance by
tee natives, who held possession admitted up to 3
p. in. The German loss is to
have tained been and heavy, tee number but secrecy cannot be is main¬
ascer¬
tained. '
Lutheran* In BumIo.
St. Petebsbuiso, July 18.— As the re¬
sult of recent action of the authorities
against of tee the empire, Lutheran church religions in various
parts that body
U totally suppressed in Russia.
Berlin Bakers Strike.
bakers Beblin, Berlin July have 18.—The journeymen
of organized a gen¬
eral strike, and 2,000 of them ore now
out
_
Polish Fasti me*. ,
Lsavenwobth, Kan., July 13.—A
wholesale row oocurred at East Leaven¬
worth, Mo., on Wednesday, Polish
miners fought having with knives a factional and hatchets fight They until
five of them were dangerously w<
The fray was stopped bv a
sheriff irnd a posse who w
with Winchester rifies and
were imprisoned in freight <
wounded._
toiy around Loe Glivoe, San Lois
Obispo county, during has tee been shaken by
Sunday earthquakes there six distinct last few shock! days.
were
rpltn a no aai*ei*ocf severest flliAalr buul& AA/wiTt*o/1 oixjiuTeu *4 »t Q o o a^aIaaIt ciock
tee The long people continued are be-
mm
NEWI ■■■PPPSPM' fFCUNDU Np. :> % :
*
The UljHul Nats to to «• lie Seekln* Sorldns Am>o*Mlon »
»o the Unltad Slat**.
zette .^KPTON, gives prominence July 13.—Tire Pall iutemow .Mali Ga¬
to an
witli Rev. Dr. Hawley, a Catholic Now-
foundlander, now here, who warns Eng¬
land of the danger of that colony seek*
ing annexation to tee United States as
S^S-swsssafts
and, tljci'efore, the natural te
to aimcxatiou. Resides tee,
on U‘lly iminv«wd_
ed wft:
’'ftwt 6 -' h.*
sssst^
jittie Important island MM of Newfoundland. ¥ -■ •«»'
Tliero was i
tee hoi
irt:
colony c
bSzSZ. l.buti
m
.
THE HO MESTEAD STRIKE. w
PiTTSBimo, Jttly 13.-
qniet at Homestead -Fr
rival of the 11:40 train
bringing a posse of 1!
to guard the Homes
About 1,000 men,
refused guarded to tbe.gatos permit to the be ....
them to iuj
the others to the lc
pulled out the strikers l
treaties, it they conld fi not
tives were
only fifteen remained _ .. who
wm®
to police duty. /
iKsb
to minneap ous I MEN MAD
Bccanse the City iretor AMemed All
Wheat Foam! In the Klerator*.
Minneapolis, Mind.', July 13. -”
is grinsliifig of teeth jn ' ‘ *
grain elevator men in
Vi. *u DIMS mal
in accordauf^ with custom, 1
elevator receipts < . ______________
men are tmable to -... _____
tee wheat belongs after the reoeipt bas
liassed ont of tiidir hands, They are
Lave di to°do an^ hST* 40
no sposition
COK E, PRODUC ERS.
ThoH. C. Frick Cok» Com,,aay Now t h.
Larsmt in the World.
Pirrar.TiRo, July 18.-The H.
Frick Coke company, tee 1 largest ih
region, Bas gobbled up ail thi
of the Oonnellsville Coke and
........IH 1 "the
the LsSett' largest coke
the world, they pro owiT
as now
coke land. ovauypnd The property over 25,000 purchteed acres <
c
of 10.0UQ coal land and 1
ovens.
Cikc
an old!
river, has t
already tni-ed
Kb fM^®%r fisherman. W
Dtate Pin ’weli^wf
mouths. forty The pannAs. weight of the phenomSi
was -
Censored.
Branch railroad last Friday, the
ner’s jury rendered a i
dent was r
day.
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For Jsnnary.
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