The El Reno American. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1911 Page: 4 of 10
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MflR FOUR
TIIK Eh KEN< AMERICAN. FRIDAY, MAMTH 17, 1011.
Br
W" %j.
it
*
LI-
THE EL KENO AMERICAN j
Successor to
El Reno Daily American
IhibllHlieri evorj Friday at
IIS NORTH BICKFOHD AVENUE
El. RKSO, OKIjAHOMA.
O. G. MOW IS ft GO., Publisher*.
BRIEF STORIES OF NEW STATE
HAPPENINGS
Subscription Price
On© Dollar Per Year
Entered as second-class matter
December 30. 1910, at the pout office
At El Reno, Oklahoma, under the act
or March 3. 1879.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
I hereby announce myself as a can-
didate for the ofllce of Commissioner
of Finance for the city of El Reno.
If elected, 1 pledge myself to de-
vote my entire time and attention
to the faithful discharge of the du-
ties of said office.
JOHN V. KOOGLE,
By S. C ISSORS
Assisted bv 1'. A STKPOT
The city of Clinton has ordered
a carload of shade trees and will
turn them ovtr to the residents at
actual coft.
(At Okmulgee the other day a man
filed suit for divorce and then went
straightway and announced as a
candidate for chief of nollce Pretty
busy day for that man.
jtf&NOUNCEM ENT FOH MAVOlt
I desire to announce my candidacy
for mayor under the provisions of the
charter recently adopted by the peo-
ple of El Reno. I shall appreciate
the vote and Influence of every doct-
or In the city, and promise, f elect-
ed, to devote my entire time and at-
tention to the duties of the office and
will strive to give the city an ho cat,
economical aud business-like admin-
istration.
SIDNEY CLL'TE.
I hereby announce myself as a
nonpartisan candidate for mayor of
EI R no and desire to submit a brief
outline of my views on tho questions
at issue.
I believe In the enforcement of all
our laws and fair aud impartial
treatment to all public and private
Interests.
J am in favor of remodeling and
enlarging our water system com-
jnensurat« with the requirements
And growth of the city and procure
good pure well water of which we
think can be had in abundance.
I believe In encouraging and fos-
tering all our home enterprises and
interests that have proven to be of
permanent benefit to our city by the
payment and distri'huti n of their
earnings among the people, thereby
Assisting in the upbuilding of oic
community. I stand for our home
Interests (first and last) and for a
rigid, economical and common-sense
business-like administration of af-
fAirs. Very respectfully, J. E. Jones.
Yukon makes a pretty good show-
ing in the last, census. According
to the census of 1907 that city ha.l
a population of K30. The 1910 ce i-
sus shows a total of 1,018.
iCllnton is to have a new VTetho
dlst church to cost $15,000. Al-
ready $10,000 has 'been raised and
a tract of ground 100x10 feet has
been secured for the new buildi •£•
The 110,000 waterworks and light
bonds of Arapaho city have been ap-
proved and signed by Attorney Gen-
eral West. M. C. Mayor and Fred
(lallion are in Oklahoma City now
for the bonds. The bonds are sold,
and the contract let to instal the
plant. What will -Arapaho do next?
P. V. DUFFY FOH MAYOli
To the Voters of El Reno:
•I hereby announce as a candidate
for the office of Commissioner of
Public Affairs and Ex-Ofllcio Mayor
for the City of (El Reno, under the
commission form of government, the
•lection to be held April 4th. 1911
I appeal to the citizens of El Reno
for their support and if elected will
<fo> everything in my power to hon-
estly and faithfully serve the people,
And be their servant at all times.
I will greatly appreciate every vote
Accorded me.
P. P. DUFFY.
iLawloi has a hare n skirt.—twr, of
them, in fact. None of the ladies
of that city have been able to muster
up enough nerve to try the promen-
ade in the new creation, but several
are contemplating making the break.
The shop keeper who has them in
stock experiences some difficulty in
getting them properly displayed, his
models not being built along the
* right lines.
■At the dedication of the Haworth
Hall of the Chilocco government
sdiool Sunday, there were mor" than
six hundred visitors. The stone in
the building was quarried in Ok^i-
homa. The cost of the new addl
tion was $20,000. It takes thj
place of the building destroyed b.v
lire November 2S, 1907.
You often hear of persons being
thrown Into jail, but not often do
you hear of a man being thrown o n
of jail. Yet that very thing, it is
said occurred at the county hastily
late yesterday afternoon. Attorney
Van Hoy claims he had an appoint-
ment yesterday with a client who Is
behind the bars. Van Hoy was ad-
mitted by a turnkey to the jail and
escorted to the prisoner's cell. Like
Mary's lamb, the Jailor patiently lin-
gered near. Tho attorney asked
that he be accorded the customarv
privilege of privately interviewing
his client. The official demurred.
Van Hoy became insistent and de-
manded his const'tuticnal rights in
the matter. The turnkey grew ches-
ty. Van Hoy also swelled up and
said things. The Jailor without cer-
emony laid violent hands u|>on th*.4
lawyer and ejected him from the
Jail. And Van Hoy is sore, over
what he terms a high-handed out-
rage. --Bartlesville Examiner.
Although of a peaceable disposi-
tion, a man in a neighboring town
has issued the following proclama-
tion through the medium of the col-
umns of a newspaper: "Neighbors,
I am a man of peace; I want no trou-
ble; I want to make no trouble for
others. 1 have a wife and children,
and they need me. 1 also have a
house and garden. I am about *o
put some seed in my garden. 1
have bought a gun and some shells
and, while I am not a crack shot, 1
think I can hit chickens. It is my
purpose to try, if any come around
where my blue grass is struggling
and my onions are showing their bald
heads."
Mrs. Pearl Miller and mother,
Mrs. Moores left last Thursday for
El Reno where they will occupy the
handsome surburban residence re-
cently purchased In that city.
Mrs. Miller has had charge of the
telephone exchange here for mo-e
than two years and has shared in
the Joys an d«orrows of the people
and by her kindness has endeared
herself to the community. They
will be greatly missed in the church
ad social life of our city. The best
wishes of their friends, for their
happiness and prosperity, goes with
them to their new home.—'Calumet
Chieftain.
Fop CouimisNioiier of Street* and
Alleys
I desire to announce that I am a
candidate for the office of Commis-
sioner of Streets and Alleys, as pre-
acribed In the new charter of the
city of El Reno, under the comm'
aion form of government, i*nis has
Been nij .. « ,or two years
and If elected will do my best to ful-
fill the duties of the office, dcvot'n„
my whole time to the work.
DAVIS QUOIN.
The newspaper fraternity was well
represented in the session of the
state legislature just ended, ten ed-
itors having been members of th. '
body They were: Representative
E. M. Keer of the Muskogee Times-
Democrat; U. S. Brown, of the now
defunct Piedmont News; E. E. Jayne
of the Wewoka Democrat; J. B.
Campbell of the Waukomis Hornet;
H. O. Devereaux of the Lenora Lead-
er; Roy Williams of the Lawton
Constitution-Democrat; J. W. Steen
of the Checotah .Enquirer; W. IV
Anthony of the Marlow Review, and
Senators Will. R. Dutton of the For-
aker Tribune and F. W. Anderson of
the Waurika News.
JiAST CUSTODIAN OF HISTORIC
SM< ItKT
f
■T
WIIO FAIL IV) OHKKItVh:
It is singular that a person can
live 30, 4 0 or 50 years and not learn
that a respectable newspaper will not
publish a communication, the writer
of which is unknown to the publish
er. And yet they turn up every day
And we have no doubt such people
get very angry at an editor because
of their own ignorance.
And sometimes the editor gets an-
gry at them, because Home of these
communications are very good, and
he wants to publish them, but is pre-
vented by the rule. Every day or so
one of these anonymous letters comes
floating in and into the wastebasket,
never to be heard of more. The
other day we received a beautiful
little |K>em, and we wondered why
the writer's name was not written
down in some corner some place or
OB tfoe opposite s'de. Was he or she
too modest, or what was the matter?
Couldn't ho confide in the editor?
Or. If he thought it not worthy, why
did he Bend it In?
•Rut there Is room for comparison.
He and others like him never learn-
ed the newspaper regulation upon
this subject. They haven't observed:
which is a sort of sin in any man or
woman, In a republic where they
should keep their eyes open.—Oh'o
ft ate Journal.
I haw noticed in some of the
obituary notices of General Eckert
the statement "that he was the only
surviving man who Knew all of the
facts In one of the greatest secrets
of the Civil War the disposition
made of the body of John Wilkes
Booth, the assassin of Abraham Lin-
coln.
Personally knowing the positio"
occupied by General E<-V««i at the
time of the murd®« of the president,
1 can bel'«*e that the statement is
It is possible that he, and per-
haps other trusted officers may have
been so concealed in the apartment
In which a secreted the remains of
Booth, that they could watch every
move made by us without being ob-
served themselves, and could i er-
sonally report to Secretary of War
Stanton that his orders had been car-
led out to the very letter.
Hut to my knowledge, the only
persons present on that gruesome oc-
casion were the four - nlisted men.
Mr. K M Stebblns, military stor
keeper of the arsenal, and myself,
then an assistant army surgeon sta-
tioned at the arsenal as medical of-
ficer.
I pledged my word as an > filt er
and a gentleman that 1 would reveal
nothing which occurred < ti the night
of April 27. 186:., until such time as
all necessity for secrecy had p.i^ed. |
In the years which have passed
since that awful April night, the pub-
lic has been given various accounts
in the newspapers, magazines and
books as to what was done with the
remains of the actor-assassin, which
varied in detail with the imagina- of Mexic<
tion of the relator. Many of the lutlonary
the old penitentiary were razed to
the ground over forty years ago.—
Dr. George L. Porte, on "How
Booth's Body Was Hidden," In Ap 11
Columbian.
GREAT KVKXT IS MOVING OK
ARMY
gation of the United States to save
property and wanton sacrifices of
life Is paramount. Knowledge of the
character of the Mexican people car-
ries with it the unavoidable con-
viction that with the death of Diaz,
or his incapacity from disease or
senility, the dissolution of his re-
gime wiill, unless preventive force
be used, be attended by results
which will be calamitous to life and
property. That is the obvious ex-
planation cf the projection of a
United States ?rmy toward Mexico.
Mr. Taft's address to the South-
ern Commercial Congress at Atlan-
ta, took the form of a review of the
work of the short session of con
gress. In contradistinction to a
prevalent Impression, the president
ever optimistic, finds much to com-
mend in the work of the session,
and his recital of those achievements
ignored or forgotten by the popular
mind, will do much to furnish a cor-
rect perspective of the concluding
session of the Sixty-first congerss.
Yet, with all his optlsm, the pres-
ident confesses to two great disap-
pointments—the failure to estab-
lish the new tariff board, mitigat-
ed by an appropriation which en-
ables the present board, enlarged 'o
five members, to continue its inves-
tigation, and the failure of the sen
ate to act on reciprocity with Can
c'a. This agreement, Mr. Taft soys,
offers an opportunity that possibly
may never recur. 'Canada, he re-
mind's us, 1b at the parting of the
ways. The failure of the agreement
will mean a recasting of the policy
cf the Dominion perhaps along the
lines of the British imperialist tar-
iff reformers. The president anew
avowed his firm faith that the agree-
ment would work to mutual bene-
fit, declaring his conviction that six
months of experience would so con-
vince every one of the advantages
of reciprocity with our northern
neighbors as to remove it utterly
from the sphere of political discus-
sion.
W.VSIiNGTON—The n o.- . striking
event of tie administration of Pres
i(!* nt William 11. Taft, a mark in
American history attracting world
wide attention. Is the movement of
a third of the standinf army of th
United States toward Mexico with
a view to the protection of American
and other foreign vested interests
In the latter Republic.
The advanced age of the Mexican
president, Porfiro Diaz, with dis-
quieting rumors as to the state of
his health is admonition of a momen-
tous event which has not been un-
anticipated by the leaders of en-
lightened nations. Diaz came into
the supreme office on the crest of a
revolution, it was one of several
revolutions which followed the ex-
pulsion of he French and the trag-
ic cud o; Mavmillian. I)ia/. n< initi-
ally the president of a republic, has
ruled like a monarch and with an
Iron hand curbed the restless Lat-
ins and the blind forces of Ignorance
inseparable from the character of a
population of mixed races, in which
the element of the aboriginal sav-
age coursed ni <t copious in the
blood of that tropical conglomerate
of humanity.
But it is realized that Diaz is
near ng the inevitable conclusion of
his work and worth in the affairs
The very fact that revo-
movement8 have starte I
'Chairman Tawney of the house
appropriations committee announces
that the total appropriations made
oi '.lie last sessi n of congress ag-
gregated $ 1,025.4X9.002 less than
$1,000,000 in excess of the esti-
mates of the president. He pre
diets a surplus of revenues i><x
year of not less than $26,500,000.
'He reverts to his argument for .
sungle committee on appropriations
instead of the present system
der which appropriations are mad-?
by eight separate committees. In
support of this he says that during
the first regular session of the last
con:?rer,s the general appropriations
committee, of which he was chair
man and which reports more *.han
half the appropriations made, report
ed about $17,000,000 less than the
estimates, while the other commit
tees reported appropriations of
about $28,000,000 in excess of the
estimates. Had there been but one
committee in that session, he avers
there could have been saved 6$2\-
000,000.
The division of *'ic impropriations
o ac-iig, several committees for differ-
ents naturally induces each commit-
tee to grab all It can for its depart-
ment. Another of the evils of that
system, as Chairman Tawney points
out ,is the practice of making ap-
propriations immediately available,
so that many are in fact designed
to meet deficiencies in the preced-
ing year. His solution would bo
to have a general appropriations
committee upon which all depart-
ments would be represented, so that
each would check the other, while
the concentration of responsibility
would tend to prevent the compara-
tive recklessness with which ■
ditures are now v ted. Without
some such contral /ation of re-n
sihility the efforts to secure econo-
my in the operation of the depart-
ments must be largely in vain.
long as the appropriations can be ob-
tained the departments will not hes-
itate to ask for them or to spend
them.
SOCIETY
By MISS JE88IE BLACKBURN
IX UK NT
Society has closed its doors,
'Tis Lent.
O'er holy books it bends,
'Tis Lent.
Given up is blithe Romance,
Bridge whist, theatre, and dance,
Even Cupid anr his lance—
'Tis Lent.
Though Ms garbed in ashen hues
'Tis Lent.
Chic nr distes it interviews,
Tis Lent.
And hould a friend with whom you
sit
Say, "I've heard a scandalous bit
Lend your ear, I'll whisper it—"
'Tis Lent.
—'Harvey Peake.
e e e
Mrs. J. T Riley is spending a few
days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
W. Burrows in Oklahoma City
e e •
Miss Ella Johnson of Chickasha, is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. John-
son on South Williams.
e e e
iMr. and Mrs. Dan Shields or
South Evans, are entertaining Mrs
R. S. Farmer of Geary.
• • •
Mrs. 'C. A. Bannister has returned
from a~ week's visit with her parents
in Enid.
e e e
Miss Jessie Blackburn was the
week-end guest of her sister, Mrs.
H. B. Granlee In Chickasha.
e e e
Miss Agnes Fitzgerald is reported
as being much better after an illness
of a week.
e e e
iMrs. Frank E. Rickey was host-
ess to the Friday Bridge club this
week.
e e e
Mrs. Barney Stewart of Oklahoma
City is visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. LaBryer on South Barker
e e e
Mrs. G. H. Miller of Kingfisher
is the guest of her son. George H.
Miller of this city.
• • •
Ms. S. Woodward is the gue.^t this
week cf her mother, Mrs. M. A.
Munn of Chickasha.
e e e
Mrs. Fred Goeman and daughter,
Miss Mabel, are the guests of friends-
in Guthrie this week.
e e •
Mrs. Homer Lowe and Mrs. A.
Brady witnessed the production of
"The Chocolate Soldier," in Okla-
homa City Saturday night.
e e e
Mrs. Iva Buford, who has been the
guest of Mr. and Mrs. .1. O. Eskridge
on South Hoff. returned to her home
in Oklahoma City Monday.
e e e
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Rickard pass-
ed through the city Friday enroute
from Guthrie to their home in Pocas-
sett.
e e e
Mrs. G. W. Brown has returned
from a viisit with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Saekride of Enid.
e e •
Mix. Clarence Smith of Portage.
Wisconsin, is the guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Hal Townsend on South Ma-
comb.
e e e
A. L. Yost, general car foreman,
of El Reno, was called to Rock Is-
land. Illinois Friday by the serious
illness of his wife.—•Chickasha Ex-
press.
Miss Josephine Curtis left Sun-
day for Southern Texas, where she
will make her future home.
e e •
Mrs. Henry Taylor left Wednes-
day morning for MctAlester where she
will be the guest of her parents, M.
and Mrs. C. M. Folk.
e • •
Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Duke left Wed-
nesday morning for Dallas, Texas,
where they were called by the ser-
ious illness of a relative.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Bradford and
Miss Georgia Bradford of Anadarko
are in the city for a visit of a few
days with J. T. Bradford and family,
e e •
Mrs. G. N. Searcy of Winfield,
Kansas, who has been visiting her
sister, Mrs. I. C. Musgrove, 500
South Hoff, for the past month, re-
turned to home Tuesday morning,
e e •
The Crestomatheans met Monday
afternoon at the library with Mrs.
Higgins as leader. It was anti-tu-
bereulosis day. Mrs. Walter Martin
read an Interesting and instruct!^
paper on ".Haw Can We Care for
Tubercular Children of Oklahoma?"
The attendance was good.
• • •
The Fraternal Order of Eagles
will give another one of their dances
Friday night. (Music will be fur-
nished by the Mutter six-piece or-
chestra.
e e e
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Humphrey,
iMr. and Mrs. J. J. Reese and grand-
daughter, M'iss Temple and Karl
Humphrey of El Reno, were the din-
ner guests of Mr and Mrs. L. E
Pettigrew Sunday, the. occasion be-
ing Mr. Pettigrew's birthday.
Chickasha Express.
e • •
The leading features of the pro-
gram rendered by the Hawthorn
club Monday afternoon was the re-
view of an article by Percy M.
den, member of parliament, on the
subject of housing the poor in En-
gland; roll call: Side lights on En-
gland of Dickens' novels; discuss
of Dickens as actor and reader and
Him" by Mamie'Dickens.
• • •
Oil! "SHE'S HOPELESS"
Backward, turn barkward.
Oh! time in your flight,
The Society JSditress Is "hopeless
In cranium she's light.
Her orthography is poor,
Her genders will mix
\nd her English is surely
At seven and six.
Make her to see
Our parties so grand;
The colors she must enlarge on
O she hasn't any mind.
Two course luncheons
She must spread to four
And then we will wonder
She made i' no more.
Ye3, "Hopeless" she is,
The palms she don't sef>
And llllles and ferns.
Oil! where can they be?
She's really no genius,
For then she could guess
We want things the grandest
And will stand for none less.
—Odna May Ingrum.
Imaginary stories of Booth's burial in various parts of the republic a.id
mention my presence and, with par- that the Insurrectionary disturbances
tiallty and resignation, my death. ; have been handled by the Diaz gov-
With the single exception of a com- , eminent with an absence of the
munlcatlon to a Washington, D. C., wonted sternness of Diaz has alarm-
paper some years ago I have never ed the powers of the world who are
read a fairly good description of the concerned in the commercial stabili-
first hiding of Booth's body. That ty of a country marvelously endow
account was probably inspired by in- ed in the riches of nasure.
formation from the War Department. | What with the Monroe doctrine
Even with that information no one and the immediate proximity of this 000 items, establishing a guard at
could locate the precise locality, for ' republic to Mexico, it has been as-! the door to keep away every man
the building and enclosing wall ofjSumed that of all nations the obll-[ seeking for special favor?
t is said in behalf of Oscar W
Underwood, the new chairman of the
ways and means committee, that he
Is the one democrat in congress, who
ced in a room with a library of
government reports a complete and
workable tari'f bill.
The advance notice of the demo-
cratic tariff revision circus to j?gin
four aeeks from today at Washing-
'on. has it that no wholesi'e revls
i in, calculated to cause bnino- s de-
p-e*s on. will be undert.\«cr. The
dctiK.iar^ merely propose to go ov"
dcilSc.«Uely 100,000 Items in -he
present schedule that seem to them
on a cursory examination to need
revision. They hope to get through
early In the fall.
Why not lock the accomplished
Mr. Underwood up for the next
month with no company but the 1Q0,-
DERMATOLOGY treatment for falling
— "air, dlinclriift and eruptions.
Superfluous hair removed. Blemishes corrected and
eliminated. Manicuring. Skin Bleaching.
MRS. LUCIIE MILLER, Scalp and Face Specialist
Phone 5K2. Office 105^ N. Bickford
LYRIC THEATRE
INDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Will Open
Friday, March 17th
Special St-Patrick'sDay Program
U O 2 COME
Mrs. James Weatherford (nee
Mary Ousler) spent Thursday In El
Reno, the guest of Mrs. John De
Lana.—Oklahoma City Times.
• • •
The fact that a young lady who
recently reeclved a number of blow*
on the skull from a violent burglar
is said to owe her life to the posses-
sion of a fine head of hair, will, it
is thought, lead to many ladies sleep-
ing with their hair on.
• • •
Ms. F. H. Clark entertained at a
Kensington party Saturday after-
noon complimentary to her guest.
Miss Cusejt of Vinita, - Oklahoma
The rooms were beautifully decorat-
ed in green, the color being carried
out In the courses of the luncheon
which was served at five o'clock.
The guests were only intimate
friends of the honoree.
• • •
Miss Florence La Bryer very
pleasantily entertained the Matinee
girls Wednesday afternoon compli-
mentary to her guest, Miss Jennie
Cu3ey of Vinita. The game ""Flags,"
was played and prizes were award-
ed after the game. A dainty three-
course luncheon was served. Addi-
tional guests were: Mesdames Ed
LeVan, Arthur West, F. H. Clark,
Barney Stewart of Oklahoma City,
and Misses Edna Arrington and Jes-
sie Waring.
• • •
The Atheneaum club met Monday
afternoon for the study of wit and
humor. The members responded to
roll call with humorous selections
Mrs. Warren read a letter from Rob-
ert J. Burdette, Jr., who is an old
newspaper man at Norman, which
was followed by an interesting paper
on Mark Twain by Mrs. Hyatt. Mrs.
D. B. Burke read a paper on "Hu-
mors of the West and South;" Mrs.
G. W. Taylor gave a reading on
John Kendric Bangs and Mrs. H. L.
Fogg entertained the members with
"Diary of a Goose Girl."
• • •
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
Some helpful notes for the house-
wife from the Alma Signal: "Pota-
toes will bake more quickly if there
is a fire in the stove. To keep let-
tuce fresh and crisp, place it in the
ice chest and don't eat it. To tell
when a pie is done, hold it upside
down over the sink. If baked suffi-
ciently U will fall out of the pan.
Mutter will last longer if sprayed
with kerosene before serving. To
keep the dust from flying, don't dis-
turb it with broom or cloth."
• • •
Tre Beethoven club met Tuesday
afternoon at the home of Mrs. E. A.
Sharpe on South Barker. The fol-
lowing program was rendered:
( a ) Rosa Marie
(b) Thou Art My Rest—Collan
Miss LaBryer.
Duet Tanz, Suit Op. 41—X—Schar-
Wenka.
Mrs. LeRoy Jones, Mrs. Homer Low
Opera—t.Martha
Roll Call Current Events
Synopsis of .Martha—iFloto
Mrs. Langley
Overture from Martha—Floto
Miss Cornelia Llbby
Quartet—Village Wedding—Floto
Mrs A. Gerrer, Mrs. C. Llewellyn,
Mrs. E. Blake and Miss LaBryer.
• • •
The following program will be
rendered at the St. Patrick enter-
tainment given by the Catholic la-
dies of the Altar Society at the K.
of C. hall Thursday night:
Duett—Selected—Miss Nell Devine.
Mrs. Flanigan.
Reading Miss Truitt.
Vocal Solo—Klllarney—'Mrs. Gerrer.
Whistling Solo—Selected—-Miss Ju-
lia Howell.
Vocal Solo—Miss Mulkaren.
Vocal Duett—"Kelly Has Gone to
Kingdom. 'Come"—'Hope Emrick,
Irene O'Connor.
Address—iRev. Fr. McManus of
Duncan.
Short talks to be anade by Fr. Get-
zinger of Kingfisher, Fr. Fuvoe of
Yukon and Fr. Stillemans of El
Reno.
An admission fee of 25 cents will
be charged, with no additional
charge for refreshments.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
A Medicine That Does Not Cost Any-
thing Unless It Cures.
The active medicinal ingredients of
Rexjill Orderlies, which are odorless,
tasteless and colorless, is au entirely
new discovery. Combined with other
extremely valuable Ingredients, it
forms a perfect bowel regulator, intes-
tinal invitforatort aud strengthener.
Rexall Orderlies are eaten like candy
and are notable for their agreoableness
to the palate and gentleness of action.
They do not cause griping or any dls-
agreeable effect or Inconvenience.
l iilike other preparations for a like
purpose, they do not create a habit,
but Instead they overcome the cause of
habit acquired through the use of ordi-
nary laxatives, cathartics and harsh
physic, and permanently remove tin
cause of constipation or Irregular bow-
el action.
We will refund your money without
argument if they do not do as we say
they will. Two sizes. 28c. and 10c. Sold
only at our store-The Rexall Store
J.ines Drug C o, opposite Postofflcs
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The El Reno American. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 12, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1911, newspaper, March 17, 1911; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc164750/m1/4/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.