The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 77, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 28, 1922 Page: 3 of 4
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' ~
SOCIETY
Mr. and Mm. E. I). Foster, of Chick-
asha. were the dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. F. N. Howell last evening
• •
Bon P. Paulen. who is visiting hi*
sister, Mrs. F. N. Howell, i Lieute-
ant-Governerolect of Kansas. He wll'
visit here several days before re
turning to hU home In Fiedonla.
In honor of her son Kelly, an.
daughter Gena Ito.sn, Mrs. Everet
Murphy entertained with a hlrthd i.
party Saturday afternoon. The hom
was decorated in rod and white. Th
afternoon was spent In games afte
■which a two course luncheon was
served. Miss Genu Shafer, Mrs. Job
Spangler and Mrs. Hugh Corwin a^
elsted in eatertainicg the fourteo
children.
• ■+ •
Miss Huth Hamilton will arriv"
homo tomorrow from Chickasha
where she attends O. C. W.
<• + ■
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carson, havo
as their guest Mrs Hoy Oliver oi
Wichita. Kansas, formerly of El Reno
♦
Tri-Hl Club meets tomoiTOw ever
ing with Mrs. Raymond Higgins.
Mrs. C. O. Blake and daugh'er
Miss Marian and little grarddaugti
ter, Betty EHeu Blnke, returne'
Sunday night from Topeka, Kansa
where they spent several days wit
Mr. and Mrs. riryan Blake.
Glen Ricker
days in Tulsa.
is spending sever."
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Humphr y lv, •
as their dinner guosts bat evening
Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Bep.com, of C'l
cago, 111., Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Wi• '
dron, of Chicago and Mr. Myro
Humphrey of Chickasha
Miss Blanche Upshaw of Oklahotn
City was the guest yeste 'day of Mr
and Mrs. John DeLana.
-i- A
Miss Beatrice Guerrier of McAie
ter, left for her home .this mirnif
after being the guest for several dav
visit with her sister, Mrs. W. 0
Smith.
4.
Mr. ai\d Mrs. Bardwell Blake an
children, of Chickasha are th
guests of Mrs. J. A. LaB yer and M
and Mrs. C. O. Blake over Thank
giving.
* ^ *
Jack Nicholson, who attends O. I*
tit Norman will arrive home tomor-
row- evening to spend the Thanksgh
itig vacation villi his parent*. Dr.
and Mrs. A. L. Nicholson. Mr. Do'
Iieard, of Minneapolis, Minn., w!ir
v:as Jack's room-mate at the Unive
sity of Minnesota last year, will a-
riv<? Thnr=d"iv to spend Thanksgivir
vacation here.
♦ +• «,
The Athenaeum Cub met ye--ter
day afte-roon at the home of Mr
H. K. Ricker. After roll call, whir'
was answered by current events. Mis-
Erina Kellv took charge of the pri
gram "Renresentatlve Ane-i'a-
Poets" (women.) Those discussed
were Edna St. Vincent Miliar, Ma v
Carolyn Davis, Florence Wilkinson
and Grace Hazard Conkling. Ills*'
Blanche Upshaw of Oklahoma City
was an additional guest. The till1'
will meet next December 11th.
Honoring her sister. Miss Beatrice
Guerrier of McAlester, Okla.. Mrs. T
H. Beacom, of Chicago, who is visit
ing here and Crs. Clarence King, •>
recent bride, Mrs. W. C. Smith en
tertained with an informal brid^
party yesterday afternoon. Th
rooms were prettily deconited witl
lavender and white chrysatUhomum
and in the game of auction Mr
Ernest Ewing received the favor fo
high score. Each of the honcee
were presented with a handsome to1*
on of remembranco. A delicious
lench wag served twelve ladies
Pan-Hellenic he'd a meeting at the
homo of Miss Edna Kelly last ever
ing. In the business meeting a re
port of the PanrHellenic benefit te-
was given. It was decided to hav
one meeting a month devoted to
P'Ogrnm and the other a sorinl me'*
Ing. In a routes' Miss Sanim'e I
Hughe* -e eived Mia fa-"r A da1'
lunch was scp'ed Tile nex' me
'r.cr w || he 111 two weeks with Mis
Roee Leske.
The Young Lidli
Ca'hollc Cliur h «
tertained tast even',
vi". Hr'e-' liar,sen
s SodaHy ..i'
.is pleasantly
i<r at the hom
The c oning
f'
tipent In games and danelnr
v hlc ha del'g'.itiul lulK ■' « <s
Eighteen young ladlt were pi
for the occasion.
af
The Repeated
Ceremony
By JOHN PALMER
(£>• 19X1, Western Newspaper Union.)
Perhaps old Isaac Fletcher blamed
himself secretly for what had hap-
pened, but he would never have ad-
mitted It.
Khoda was his only child, his pride,
his happiness. That was at the root
of his objection to young Seaton.
There was nothing the matter with
the young man—nothing at all. Only
Fletcher had put his foot down and
said she should not marry him.
He wanted to keep her at home to
make his life attractive and his home
comfortable. They bad pleaded with
him In vain. When once old Isaac got
a notion Into his head It stayed there.
"If you marry th® fellow, you're no
longer daughter of mine," said Isaac
Fletcher.
Then Rhoda disappeared.
Isaac found out where they were
living. He hardened his heart. If the
girt chose to disobey him, she must
take the consequences. Young 8eaton
was earning a good salary with a large
corporation. And In his selfishness old
Isaac reflected that he would have lost
Rhoda anyway. v
Months went by, a year, a whole
year—and on the anniversary of
Rhoda's leaving him she stood outside
his door with something In her arms.
Old Isaac had all the crude melo-
dramatic sense of selfish persons. He
was a sentimentalist. He had the
mind of a movie fan. Many people
have, because many people are "movie
fans."
Old Isaac went Into the hall and saw
Rhoda standing under the hall light.
It was snowing outside. The bundle
In her arms was a baby.
"Father!" she said, with a strangled
sob. "Will you turn your child and
her child out Into the streets this
night?"
Deep within him old Isaac felt an
Immense thrill of satisfaction.
"You can come In," he said grudg-
ingly.
In the parlor she uncovered the In-
fant's face. "See, little Thomas has
your eyes," she said.
Old Isaac felt something In him go
out to the helpless mite.
"So he's turned you out, hey?" he
rasped. Sudden suspicion flashed Into
his eyes. "So! Sol" he barked. "He's
put this shame on yon and my name I
He shall make an honest woman of
you!"
' The old, old "movie" stunt, the an-
cient gag that lias come down from the
beginnings of the world. Old Isaac
believed In It.
"He shall make an honest woman of
you, or I'll send him to the red hell
where he belongs!"
That was an original Improvement
of the stock situation. Old Isaac
plumed himself on his dramatic sense.
"You'll stay here," he said sternly.
"And you'll be man and wife within
■ twelve hours of he shall learn what it
means to sully the Fletcher honor."
He put on his hat. Rhoda clung to
him. "Father, what are you going to
do? There must be no violence I"
"Oh, he shall have his chance to
atone for the wrong he's done you!"
said the old man grimly. Old Isaac |
prided himself on being grim. "I'm
going to have a talk with him, man to
man."
He went out Into the snow. Inside
the parlor Rhoda sat with the child
In her arms, smiling happily.
An hour passed. There was the click
of a key In the lock, voices In the hall.
Two men entered—three men. One
was Isaac, one was young Seaton, look-
ing haggard and wan. The third was
the rarson.
Old Isaac turned to Seaton. "Look
at her!" he said In a voice of awful
solemnity, (Isaac prided himself on
his capacity for being solemn). "There
sits the child whose life you have
ruined. Are yon prepared to make
an honest woman of her by marrying
her, as you have sworn?"
"I am," said Seaton.
The parson, a mild-mannered man
fifty, looked at young Seaton. It al-
most seemed as If the least wink
passed between them.
"Then—proceed with the repar-
ation 1" said old Isaac.
Ithoda and young Seaton stood up
side by side before the parson, and
within the shortest reasonable time
were firmly linked together In the
bonds of holy matrimony.
Rhoda fiting herself at her father's
feet. "Forgive and bless us!" she fal-
tered.
In a voice choked with emotion old
Isaac blessed and forgave her. He
shook hands with his son-in-law. "The
past Is dead and burled from this
night on." he said huskily. "We have
all been to blame. Let us forget and
forgive."
"George, darling, It did seem a hor-
rid trlclt to play on dear father," said
Rhoda. on their way homeward. "Only
I did so want him to see little Thomas,
and he'd never have forgiven us."
"Only thing to do," said George.
"Some sport, that parson!" Say, dar-
ling, when I stood up with you before
him I was feeling just as I did when
w e stood up together a year ago before
the Justice of the peace who married
us."
=5—:
"CASCARET8" 10c FOR BOWELS
IF CONSTIPATED
Clean your bowels! Feel flue!
When you feel Blek, dizzy, upset
whan your head is dull or aching, or
your stomach U sour or gassy, just ;
take one or two CascaretB to relieve
constipation. No griping--nicest
cathartic-laxative on earth for grown
ups and children. 10c a box. Tas'e
like candy.
New Weapoi c War.
An "Invisible force" whereby the
Onited States would be rendered Im-
pregnable against attack by land, sea
or air. Is claimed by an Inventor who
Is at Washington to lay his discovery
before the secretary of war. My means
of his discovery, tbe Inventor sn\«, an
"Invisible force" could be unleashed
against a foreign tee, annihilating
whole armies or navies by I In- press
lim' of a button. It Is based on a
natural law which he described as
"penetrablpty. the first law of univer-
sal looveinent."
CLASSIFIED
SALESMEN
IF SICK TODAY!
TAKE NO CALOMEL
"Dodson's Liver Tone" Straightens You Up Better Than
Salivating, Dangerous Calomel and Doesn't Upset
You—Don't Lose a Day's Work Read Guarantee
DYED A SWEATER
AND SKIRT WITH
DIAMOND DYES
WANTED—Salesman with <ar. Sat-
sfactory compensation to the right
man. Write Clyde L. Rubber Co.,
600 N. Emerick St.. South Ben J
Indiana. -7p
FOR RENT
FOR RENT—Furnished rooms, close
in, reasonable rates, hot and cold
water. Phono 2fia. 28p
'URNI8HE1J rooms for light house
eeplng. close to mills. 1121 Son''
rock Mland Phone SIW-R Rttt
FOR RENT—Five room house very
close In. Inquire at 319 South
Rock Island or phone 5!i#R. 27p
FOR RENT—Furnished roofs for
light housekeeping at 401 North
Barker. 29p
FOR RENT—Five room house. Some
household furniture for sale. Phono
290. 27-29c
I discovered a vegetable compotim'
that does the work of angerouf
sickening calomel and 1 want ever\
reaer of this paper to buy a bottb
for a few cents and If It doesnt straig.i
ten you up bettor and quicker thau
salivating calomel juwt go back to
the store and get your money back.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson's Liver Tone will put you
sluggish liver to work and clean
your thirty feet of bowels of the.
sour bile and constipation poison
which Is clogging your sytem and
making you feel miserable.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
this harmless liquid liver medicine
,vill relieve tin headache. bilious-
ness. coated tongue, ague, malarl",
sour stomach or any other distres3
caused by a torpid liver as quickly
as a dose of vile, nauseating calomel
besides It will not make you sick or
keep you from a day's work.
Calomel Is poison—it's mercury-
It attacks the bones often causing
rheumatism. Calomel is dangerous
It sickens while my Dodson's Liver
Tone Is safe, pleasant and harmless.
Eat anything afterwards, because it
cannot salivate. Give It to the child-
ren becauso It doesn't upset the sto-
mach or shock the liver. Take a
spoonful tonight and wake up feeling
fine and ready for a day's work.
Every "Diamond Dyes" package
tells how to dye or tint any worn,
faded garment or drapery a new rich
color that will not streak, spot, fade
or run. Perfect home dyeing is
guaranteed with Diamond Dyes ever,
if you have never dyed before. Just
tell your druggist whether the ma-
terial you wish to dye Is wool or
silk, or whether It la linen, cotton,
or mixed goods. For fifty-one yea"
millions of women have been usin 5
"Diamond Dyes" to add years of wear
to their old. shabby waists, skirts,
dresses, coats, sweaters, stocking:,
draperies, hangings, everything!
rlcka J5.00 on ground,
livered $5.00.
ricks de-
30p
MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED—Couplo to share furnish
ed five room modern home. Belle
Gunn, 511 So. Foster. Phone 1031J.
29p
« PERCENT MONEY—Under Bank-
ers Reserve System; 6 percent loans
may be secured on city or form prop-
rty. to buy. build. Improve, or pay
indebtedness. Bankers Reserve De-
posit Company. 1648 California St.
Denver, Colo. tf
YOUNG lady, worth *50,000, pretty,
will marry. Klsle, Club, Cimarron
Kans. J37p
FOR SALE
FOR SALE—5 roon- modem bouse;
a bargain 515 S. Roberts. 27p
WOOD FOR SALE—County farm
See Winfrey north of farm, sawed
WANTED To hear from owner of
good farm for sale; state cash price,
full particulars. D F Bush, Minae
spoils, Minn. dS9i>
FURS
We want all the furs and hides you
*et. «o matter bow few or how
mauy. Sell your furs at home snd
know what you are getting.
HENRY GLASS
Phoae 38S.
101 S Roberts
READ THE WANT A7IS
Christmas Cards
LOST—9ilvor mesh bag containing
small change and key. Howard. He j
turn to Louise Pinch or Democrat of
flee. d-2e
Th« Most beautiful lin# of
CHRH8TMAS CARDS ever
shown in El Reno for your
BARNARD'S
COLDS—SORE THROAT
Never let a cold or sore throat go
unchecked. To do so may cause a
development of pneumonia. Use
I HO-MUS-TINE at the flrRt sign of
n cold or sore throat. Apply hot wot
towels to the chest to open pores,
dry chest and apply PHO-MUS-TINE.
It breaks up phlegm, rub on throat,
swollow lump of PHO-MUS-TINE
size of pea, take a good laxative and
you will be all right when morning
comes. PHO-MUS-TINE Is sold In
1 oz. 25c and 3 oz. 50c jars on money-
back guarantoe at City Drug Store.
THOS. JENSEN
103 1-2 NORTH BICKFORD
—REAL ESTATE
—INSURANCE
FARM LOANS
Phone 377.
How'« This?
YTt Otter On* Hundr.d Dollars lUrtrt
for any call of Catarrh that caanet k«
cured by Hall's Catarrh Medlulna.
Call's Catarrh Medicine baa bean takes
by catarrh aufterera (or tha last thlrtf-
nve veara. and has becoma known aa the
live years, and has become I
■aoat reliable remedy tor Catarrh, HaH**
Catarrh Medicine acts thru the Blood on
the Mucous surfacos. expelling the Poi-
son from the Blood and healing the 41*
«a>ed portions.
After you have taken Hall's Catarrh
Medicine for a short tlmr you will «ee k
rrent improvement In your K*n«nM
henlih Start taking Hall's Catarrh MenA-
,'lne nt onre and get rl6 of catarrh. Sen*
for frr*
V .1 CHFNKY * fO.. Toledo Ohl
ri'ttfe !;•« 7R"
A « i B «r w X
No Alum
No Bitter Taste
Large
Can—
12 oz.
The Mlzpnh Class of SI. John's M
E. ChU'ch met Friday, November
34th in Ihelr regular soclnf md bu-
iiif-sn meeting, refreshment* hcing
served hy hoste- -cs Mrs namey and
Mrt- Morgan. Additional guesti
11 'eg the choir, pastor and Snndn*
School superintendent
A Literary Light.
"Have you ever met Scrlbson, the
flctionlst ?"'
"I believe I once attended some kind
of affnlr where he was the guest of
honor," replied Mr, Orumpson, "but he
tnlfeed go sensibly on a number of sub-
jects you never would have guessed
be wns an author."
W T—V ^
Baltmf,
Powder
Wonderful Results!
"I've had perfectly wonder-
ful results with my cakes
since I began using Dr. Price's
Phosphate Baking Powder,"
says one enthusiastic house-
wife.
"The whole fo . 'ly has com-
plimented me but I give the
credit to Dr. Price's—and do
you know that it makes a big
saving also? All I pay for a
12-ounce can is 25c."
You, too, will praise Dr. Price's
if you give it a trial.
Your grocer has it. Ask him
for a can. It is the most re-
markable baking powder
value on the market.
PHOSPHATE
BAKING POWDER
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Maher, T. W. The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 77, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 28, 1922, newspaper, November 28, 1922; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc153561/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.