The Peoples Press (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 38, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 20, 1912 Page: 4 of 4
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CLASSIFIED WANTS
WANTED TO BUY—Piano boxes
Engie Transfer and Storage Co.
Phone 45. 262-tf
WANTED-—Washing and ironing S2 4
South Gresham. Phone Red 394.
36-8
WANTED—Your dental work at 25
per cent discount, good until March
30th. Dr. Harry A. Meyer, 212
South Rock Island. 36-9
WANTED—Young man to do clerical
work. Apply in own handwriting,
stating experience and giving refer-
ences. P. O. Box SSI. 38-tf
WANTED—Fresh milk cow.
Red 76 4.
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, 120
North Admire. 20-tf
FOR RENT—Five room bungalow,
modern, 1107 South Rock Island.
? 15.00. Call at 210 West Rogers.
38-3*
MODERN ROOMS FURNISHED for
housekeeping $>> and $10. Phone
825, 107 East Clark. 22-tf
FOR SALE—Day old chicks. Mrs.
Ida Neville, Riverside addition.
37-6*
FOR SALE—Cheap, 120 egg incuba-
tor and brooder. Phone Black 4 85.
38-3*
FOR SALE-
Befl.
-Bicycle. 205 East Rus-
37-4*
FOR SALE CHEAP—For cash, 120
egg Safety Hatch Incubator. Phone
855. 36-6
FOR SALE—One quarter block close
in, good house and barn, well and
cistern, will sell all together at a
bargain. "Will divide to suit purchas-
er. Reasonable terms on part. Call
at 508 East Russell. 32-tf
For First Class Work Go to the
El Reno Shoe Repair Co.
Rear Arnold & Wilson Shoe Store
'205 East Russell
A Trial Will Convince You That
We Do the Best Work
TKXTII
: STRIKERS GET
THEIR CHILDREN BACK.
Lawrence, Mass., March 20.—Chil- I
dren of Lawrence textile workers who
were sent to New York, Philadelphia
and other places to be cared for dur-
ing the strike, will be brought back
here for a general welcoming dem-i
onstration, Sunday, March 31. The
anxiety of some of the parents to J
have their little ones returned led to
the fixing of the date at a meeting
of the striking committee Tuesday
n'tht. By the end of the month, it
is believed, normal conditions will be
restored in most of the mills.
The best and lowest salaried sales-
man in town—a Press want ad.
Phone,
38-4*
WANTED—Emmett Reid to call at
the Press office Thursday and re-
ceive five tickets to the El Reno
theater. 3s-l
FIRST CLASS DRESSMAKING—
Work guaranteed. 311 North Bar-1
ker. phone Red IN. 37-3* ;
UNION p.ARKKK SHOP—At Rtck A.
Brooks pool hall. Respect to all.
J. B. Shrum. Prop. 36-3*
THOROUGHBRED S C RHODE IS-
land Reds. Select tested eggs for
hatching. $1.00 for setting of 15.
$c .0 per hundred. Mr? Joe Gi?t.
1S> El Reno avenue, phone 814. El
Rtr.e, Ok la. 32-24
FOR RENT—Nine room modern
house. 620 North Choctaw, phone
Black 4 7'. 37-3*
FOR RENT—Four room house, also
two rooms furnished. Rates reas-
onable. Phone Black 151. 35-tf
FOR RENT—Five room brick house
in Fair addition. Inquire McLean
& Rhode. 36-6*
FOR RENT—Farm. Cash or cotton.
Phone 752. 36-tf
NOVELTY TONIGHT
A PROBLEM IN REDUCTION—Yitagrnpli comedy, featuring Mi-.- Helen
Gardner, leading lady in "Vunlt> l air."
OBJECT MATRIMONY—Lilbin Comedy.
INDIAN BLOOD—Pathe Indian Drama
A ,H"ST VERDICT—Lubln Drama
IN THREE FULL REELS. BETTER THAN "CINDERELLA"
Attend Matinee and Avoid the Rush at Niglit
Coming Tomorrow
THE TWO ORPHANS
Prices 5 and 10 cents
u
If
EL RENO THEATRE TONIGHT
KESTERSON BROS.
Ballad Singing, Walz, Clog and Buck Dancing
Artistic Paper Tearing
New Pictures Every Day
COMING THURSDAY
A BIG DOUBLE BILL
The Wesleys
PRESENTING THE COMEDY SKETCH
"THE GIRL FROM HACKERDAN"
An Original and Screaming Comedy Novelty, Introducing High Class Sing-
ing "The Girl With tlie Big Laugh"
Extra—SPECIAL—Extra
Thursday Night Only
"THE DESERTERS"
IN TWO REELS
A $50,000 PRODUCTION, RIGGER, BETTER. MORE INTERESTING
MORE SENSATIONAL THAN "WAR ON THE PLAINS"
COMING SUNDAY
TANHOUSER'S TWO REELS
NICHOLAS NiCKLEBY
5 and 10c
By Chas. Dikens
PRICES
I
:
BONEBRAKE
SELLS HARDWARE
PAINTS, VARNISHES, VARNO-LAC, FLOOR WAX
♦"> <S
I AND ALABASTINE S
'•_> A
Want Ads 1 Cent A Word
Press want ads give you the great-
est possible value, because the price
is small and the results are big.
5 and 10
♦' - *■ r ♦ ♦ ♦-•••
MEN'S SUITS ^ m
Thoroughly Cleaned T
And Pressed ®
UNIQUE
Dry Cleaning Works
Phone 132 216 S. Rock Island
E. P. Barker Realty Co.
Wo try to please. Call and s#e
Booms O and 7 Lnmhe Hldg.
THOS. BENSON
Funeral Director and Embalmer.
Lady Assistant. Picture Framing.
PRIVATE AMBULANCE
Phone 120 El Reno,
105 N. Bickford Oklahoma
OIHce Phone 504 Residence 420
DR. A. D. HATCHER
GENERAL 'RACTICE
Office over Citizens Nat'l Bank
Office at
THE CORNER CIGAR STORE
420 West Wade
Loyal Order of Moose
OXFORD LUNCH ROOM
Gene Hoadley, I'rop.
A Good Place to Eat
SANITARY HAIR DRESSING
PARLORS
We positively guarantee to grow
hair on hald heads. A trial will
convince you of the efficiency of
our treatments. Phone 778, Room
5, 119 5^ North Bickford
HEALTH OFFlcj
KVq
There Are No t
Meningitis
FOUR TRAIN ROBBERS GET
$60,000, IT IS BELIEVED.
All Get Away Into Dense Woods—
Bloodhounds Will he Used to
Hunt Them Down.
Corinth, Miss., March 20.—Mobile
and Ohio passenger train No. 4,
| northbound, was held up and the ex-
press safe dynamited and robbed
seven miles south of Corinth last
night by four men, heavily armed
and masked. After accomplishing
the robbery the quartet took to the
| dense underbrush of the Tuscumbia
river bottoms. Bloodhounds have
been telegraphed for and a posse has
been organized to take up the pur-
suit.
While definite information is not
available, it is said the safe contain-
ed considerable money and valuables.
One report has it that $ C>0,0 0 0 in cur-
rency was among the contents.
No attempt will be made to pene-
trate the dense wooded river bottoms
where the men are believed to be in
hiding until the arrival of a detail
of railroad officers and bloodhounds
from Jackson, Tenn., who are com-
ing aboard a special train.
H
Notice to the p
circulated today t
several cases of
gitis in this
weeks and
have kept sam^a
ti ue. '1 he deal
ing is the first ci
gitis that has
dian county this
time there is no
demic, but to tal
we advise the cit
immediately loo
and buildings to
rubbish is burne
to see that there j
of manure or otlj
allowed to accuij
that all toilets ar<
condition.
The city has o
amount of disinfe
distributed anion
jof charge by call
I office, and such
effective in destr
I originate in filth.
The undersigni
warned the peop]
January to clean
i the citizens com
| quest. Another
made immediatel
| were notified wb
as ordered then
Cerebro-spinal
ates in filth, th<
the city is made
an epidemic. CI
and see that eve
home or place o
sanitary conditioi
Unless there
ment of the drea
and other public,
closed.
We reiterate 1|
has been taken
ol' the disease, a]
is not a develi
meningitis in thi
authorities have
on hand ready
gency, and we pi
we will be on h
guard against c|
antine in case i
elsewhere. (Si
Dr. G. W. Tayli
Supt. Health.
P. 1'. Duff >
Health of City *
Dr. R. F. Kool
INCOME TAN III
'3
Republicans l.inc
on Vote—Faj
Ladies
buck" 16
Kelsos.
white or champagne "Nil-
button boots for $4.00 at
THINK WILEY WOULD Do
FOR VICE PRESIDENT.
Washington, March 20.—Dr. Har-
vey W. Wiley, until recently the gov-
ernment's pure food chemist, has
been brought out as a Democratic
vice presidential possibility by the
Woodrow Wilson headquarters.
Wilson and Wiley is the ticket pro-
posed by Representative Burleson of
Texas, chairman of the house Demo-
cratic caucus, according to the an-
nouncement at the Wilson offices.
"It represents pure Democracy and
pure food," is the quotation attri-
buted to Mr. Burleson.
Washington. >1
ocratic excise bi
everybody's incon
or more a year, p
terday afternoon
Democrats voted
carried eighty Ri
them. Forty-eig
the opposition.
The bill now
where its fate is i
tors declared th;
sis they found ti
| would tax all. eli!
' they would supi
I senators are exp
Democratic Lead
the hope that ti
tors and the prot
might put the bi
lican leaders are
to check the re
from the house.
The excise bil
intended to prot
$20,000,000 to $
make up the lost
also expected to
to general pensh
seems sure to b(
Democratic Lei
his majority inta
t
aga
ure was passed <
The cheapest way to sell anything
—the want ad way.
age of the bi fA-
vote was cast aga
STEEI
New York,
plete report uP
Steel corporation
decrease of $36,'
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Hensley, T. F. The Peoples Press (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 38, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 20, 1912, newspaper, March 20, 1912; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc123500/m1/4/: accessed March 24, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.