El Reno Daily American. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 179, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 8, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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Eli RENO DAIT.Y AMEIt CAN. SATl llUAY, IKIIIUARY 8, 1008.
El Reno Business Directory
Sliowiug City Government and the Leading Business
I*stitutions, Professions and Trades in the City, with Street
and Phone Numbers.
and that- therefore, it would have to
i be abandoned. No explanation of
i His Majesty's attitude was given, but
it is assumed tha'c the 'trustees con-
vinced him that the restoration
would be a waste of money and a
perversion of the intent of the be-
quest.
El Reno Commercial
Club
Visitor* Always Welcome
Ro.ms over 111 N. Hock Island, i
Bonabrake Blk.
C. A. VAN NESS, P. A. SMITH,
Pres. Sec y.
City Government
Mayor—B. W. Riley.
Oily Clerk—L. G. Adams.
Cftr Treasurer—W. T. Malane.
Glty Attorney—Lucius Babcock.
Police Judge—J. A. Nichols.
Chief of Police—Wm. McCartney.
Chief Fire Dept.—Wm. Ktte l er
Asst. Chief—R. W. Bell.
Street Com.—Geo. Windsor.
City Engineer—R. N. Whittlesey.
COUNCILMEN
First Ward:
Geo. W. Lambe
W. B. Roberts.
Second Ward:
T. J. Abbott
L. J. Stoneman.
Third Ward:
J. W. Freeborn.
J. M. Carter.
Fourth Ward:
Otto A. Shuttee,
Fremont Smith.
Dentists
Dr. A. O. Cromer
Office 108H South Bickford, over E)
Heno Merc. Co.
A. L. Nicholson
DENTIST
I looms 4 and 5, over EI Reno Merc
Co., 108 H South Bickford
Elliott Dental Parlors
I)R. R. K. BLACK, Prop.
Office 110H South Bickford
Dr. B. B. Shirk
DENTIST
Office Cor. Bickford Are., and Wood-
son St., over West's Dept.
Store.
your stoc iir)gs weox
on nc
'<g*
Job Printing
ti Reno American
113 N. Bickford. Phone 17.
Everything in Printing
Physicians
Laundry
Jones9 New Laundry
ESTES & BODINE, Props.
HON. Choctaw Ave. Phone 58
Attorneys
Dr. Thomas Lane
Residence, 421 South Bock
Phone 592. Babcock & Trevathan
OMo- over Citizens Nat'l Bank, Cor.
Woodson & Bock Island
Phone 872.
Rooms 1-2-3, Lambe Bldg.
Bickford Ave. Phone 848.
Dr. Ralph Koons Maurer & Smith
Kl McGrath ™ Reno
Reno Merc. Co. I none wo. j —
Residence Phone 450.
•'I In view of ;he disorders in which
Irish agiluitors are engaged, interest
11 attaches to the announcement that
•; the King expects to pay another visit
• ■ J to Ireland the coming summer. The
I lr:sh Turf Club has arranged for a
jmeulhig at Leopardstown oil July 11,
•• at which the pr.zes will he cups pre-
..'s nted by his Majesty.
There is a good deal of speculation
as to whether the Royal visit will be
n}&de the occasion Of an agitation
• ■ | for home rule. That the home rul-
!.i ers are in desperate frame of mind Is
;; evidenced by itheir cattle-driving and
•' I other lawlessness and there would
• • be no reason for surprise if they at-
$' teni| ted '-J1 Slime striking way to
I bri'..g their cause to the notice of the
King. The King, personally, is pop-
J|ular in Ireland, tout the cause of
home rule is a greait deal dearer to
structure he purchased uxtc tht
A .'nt Monuments Ant The frimc
Minister has not yet given a«
It is pointed ouil by advocate, of
the Hall's preservation that lu # bsmt-
I lea no such historic strunture would
be allowed to fall into the hand* ut
the building wrecker and compari-
sons are drawn betwees wbat is
ermed the public-spiriteduufW! ot
VmerleaiiB and the sordkdnes? <l rhe
average Englishman.
One of the most liberal ft)*-«tu*stefc
ever maide to Irish education H Of;.,
tallied in the will of Basil Mrt'i*.*. t
Belfast, a very wealthy railway and
j general contractor who has }us«t died.
His sister 'is 'to have a life interest Id
his estate, an<l at her death #1 is tc
go to Magee Presbyterian College at
I Londonderry. His personal [r«p«rty
has been appraised at $300,0*0 au<S
it is believed that the valms of lite
realty holdings will bring the estate-
, up to fully a irfilliou dollars. The*
will provides specifically how much of
the money shall be used In the erec-
tion of new buildings, endowment of
chairs, etc.
Is t^ere fc9^tl?i9$ rrjore u9plea.5a.9t tl?&9 :
:: to wear a stockipg witl? a l?ole 19 tlpe toe' :
:: You will 90t l?fcve to l?fcve l?oles i9 tl?e toes 1
:: \t)d ^ou will save all tl?at ckri?!^ trouble |
if ^ou bu^ T0Pg)Y stockings. ::
We will sell ^ou tl?ese for 10c to ::
5 0 c a pair. ••
Tl?e clpildrep too are Ipard 09 stockii^-s. |
017, tl?e weari9^-out power of little feet. ;;
CylDCT stocki9^s for little folks are stroijg |
09 tl?e toe, l?eel a9d k9ee. a9d will cost ^ou ::
2.5c a pair. J
Our li9e of l?ose is 109$ but tl?e prices J
are sl?ort. Cordially, |
Irish hearts.
The English poacher has become
modernized. Instead of lurking
stealthfully through the woods,avoid-
ing the keepers as he sets his snares
for game, he now goes poaching in a
motor car. At least, that was the
method of 'three men who were
haulciJ into court the other day at
Morpeth. The testimony showed that
they started from Newcastle 'in a mo-
tor car and drove around Morpeth,
Weldon Bridge, Long Farmlington
and Felton, shooting game from the
car as it stood in the road. Occa-
sionally members of the party would
leave the car and range the fields
and woods for game, but always
keeping close to their base and means
of retreait. The prosecutor alleged
that motor car poaching had been go-
ing "a for some time, and the priso-
ners were heavily fined as a warn-
ing to others.
llles Cured «U Holm' by New Alwory-
tion Method.
If you suffer from bleeding, Itctoing
blind or protruding pile«, send mc
your address and I will tell you how
to cure yourself at hom* by the new
absorption treatment; and will also-'
send some of tnia home treatment
free for trial, with references from
your own locality i' requested Im-
mediate relief and permanent cure
assured. Send no msney, trat tell
others of this offer. Writ© today
to Mrs. M. Summers, Box P, Boutli
Bend, Ind.
Farmers' Union.
Dr. R. E. Runkle
EYK, EAR, NOSE & THROAT
•Hoe 120 X South Bickford. Pho
225
Office Hours—0 to 11 a m; 1 to r
p. m.
DRS. HATCHETT & CLARK
PHYSICIANS AWD SDRGE01S
also proprietors of El Reno Sanitaria®
Office Over Canon's Shoe Stare
Undertaking
MR.
4 MKi J. B. KERRICK,
hineral Directors
and tmbalmers..
E! Reno, OKia., 208 S.R. I. Ave.
It is not yet assured that historic
Crosby Hall will be saved as one of
the monuments of London. Public
j subset'ptio>ne having failed to raise
I the necessary amount for Its pur-
chase, and the London County Coun-
, eli having refused to make ail appro-
" I priatlon, an appeal has been made to
government asking that 'the
All union men are requested t®
meet at the assembly hafl in the
court house, Saturday, Febrnary 15.
at 1 o'clock p im. sharp. Dustofcess o5
importance.
By order of committee.
J. H. BOLTON,
2-15-08. Sec-Tress
\Y. E. FRYBERGER
Notice.
The New York Cleaning House I#
open for business. Thanking the
people for past favors, would be
pleased to have them come tn. Work
will be done as 1n the past, up-to-date
ED COLEMAN. Prop. 165-tf
LONDON NEWS AND GOSSIP ||
t Special Correspondence |
Dr. Harvey A. Dever,
l'hyslcian. Surgeon* Osteopath
Office over West's Dept. Store, Corner
Bickford and Woodson. Phone "n""
I0i00 to 12:00 a m ,2>00 to b-.M p
Residence 723 S. Miles, Phone 4<
CALLS ANSWtKEU PROMPTLY
\ Bra. Capshaw & Ake
Chiropractic Infirmary
Special Attention to Office W*rk
Calls Promptly Answered. L *T At-
tendant in Office,
lim 8. Koek Lsland. 414
Voice Culture
EL RENO SCHOOL OF
VOICE CULTURE
AND PIANO PLAYING
MR. CHAS. M. BLISS, Voice
Culture, Directing and Harmony,
i MRS. CHAS. M. BLISS, Piano
| and Harmony.
1114 SOUTH BARKER
Reasonable Prices, First Class Work
It comes put up In collapseatole
t«ba with a noxzle, easy to apply to
the soreness an inflammation,tor any
torm of Piles; It soothes and heals,
relieves the pain, itching and burn-
Img. Man Zan Pile Remedy. Price
M cents. Guarantee.
Sold by Dr. C. L. Wellman. Druggist
Kest and Sleep
Kew escape the m series of winter
a bad cold, a distressing cough.
Many remedies are recommended.
nit the quickest and best of all is
Simmons Cough Syrup. Soothing
and healWng to the lungs and 'bron-
chial passages, it stops the cough at
once and gives you welcome rest and
peaceful sleep.
MHIIIIH"1'11'"*""""
i-.n i i 11 u i n 1111'
H. C. BRADFORD, President
R. S. TRUI.OCK, Vice President
t,. A. Wtl.SON. Cashier
J. O. CHAMNESS, Asst. Cashier
FIRST NATIONAL HANK
Capital, Surplus and Prolits $70,000
UNITED STATUS DEPOSITORY
At.soH.te Safety for our I.eposilo,, at all Tiniea !• our Firat Consideration, Bring
UK Your liusinesi.
4-H-H 'l I I I I M
l"l lilt H
t I I I I I I I I f-
Citizens National Bank
Capital, $50,00(). Surplus and Profits. $25,000
UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY
.. - .u,™ i T At , IsON < <> HI.AKK CHAS. KNliLK
DIRKCTORS}" T otTO A. SHt'TTHK HKNRY HCIIAFER H. t.AHSKN
AMERICAN WANT ADS GET RESULTS,
London, Feb. 8.—When the cabi-
net meets in Downing street these
days there is a strong police guard.
No, it isn't bomb-throwing anarch-
ists or carbine-using republicans they
fear. Merely woman suffragists.
Probably never before was there a
propaganda conducted by women as
the English suffragettes are conduct-
ing theirs. They glory in b^ing ar-
rested, and if the police would only
use their clubs their happiness would
be complete. It Is martyrs the cause
wamts.
Light on the English woman's
viewpoint is disclosed by a recent in-
terview with Mrs. Cobden Sander-
son, one of the most brilliant women
engaged in the suffrage movement.
She had returned from a visit to the
United States, where she lectured in
the leading eastern cities and at a
number of colleges for women. Com-
paring the suffrage movement in the
United Staltes with that in England,
her chief criticism of the former was
that it seemed no opposition to wo-
man's suffrage could be aroused,
therefore there could Ibe no dupli-
cation of the English rioting with its
resultant "martyrs." She recalled
that when the late Susan B. Anthony
smashed a ballot box for the purpose
of being arresited 'and refused to pay
her fine for the purpose of going to
jail, no judge could be found who
would send her there. "And she had
to be satisfied," lamented Mrs. San-
derson, "with whatever satisfaction
was to be derived from breaking the
law with impunity. The courts would
not make a martyr of her."
The men of the United States,"
continued Mrs. Sanderson, "may be
indifferent to the question of wo-
man's suffrage, but they are not hos-
tile. The only opposition conies from
the rich women—the only idle classes
to be found in America. These hor-
rid women sign petitions against wo-
man's suffrage, and so far they have
been successful in the eastern states.
"When you. make a speech advo-
cating suffrage you have everything
your own way. No one can be found
to start an opposition, or even to ask
a question. The women are too tim-
id, and it would be considered ex-
ceedingly bad form for a man to In-
terrupt or dispute a woman. If peo-
ple do not approve, they stay away
from suffrage meetings, or, attend-
ing, keep their opinions to them-
selves. Such scenes as we have in
London, therefore, would be impos-
sible ilk America. The result is lack
of interest in the question."
DseI
When the agitation for higher li-
cense and stricter regulations govern-
ing the sale of liquor are added to
the suffrage agitation, it will be re-
alized that life for the British M. P.
•is not one lonig sweet dream. If he
dodges a suffragist, he is very likely
to run into a lurking prohibitionist,
or what in England corresponds to
a prohibitionist in America. If he
succeeded in eluding tooth, the
chances are that he will be seized un-
awares by one of the crusaders
who would suppress ithe publication
of Sunday newspapers.
Opposition to Sunday newspapers
is the latest addition to British "re-
form" movements. There is an or-
ganized body of Sabbatarian Btal-
warts who believe that the grealtest
crime for which the British people
will have to answer is the publica-
tion of Sunday newspapers, and they
have joined the other forces which
are (besieging Parliament.
• • •
The Highgate ponds on Parliament
Hill have become ithe favorite resort
of those persons who are weary of
life and seek its ending. There have
been seven suicidal drownings in
these ponds 'In as many weeks and
London Is much wrought up over it.
Public sentiment reached a crisis
when a woman adopted this means
of shufflling off the coll and her body
was recovered before a crowd of sev-
eral thousand persons, largely made
up of women and children. Then the
London County Council woke up and
has stationed guards about the ponds.
Their Instructions are to use moral
suasion, but not to shirk force if the
would-be suicide is obdurate.
« « •
King Edward has said no, and the
Holyrood Chapel will not be re-
stored. It will be recalled tliait the
late Earl of Leven and Melville left
in his will a bequest of $200,000 for
the purpose of restoring this historic
edifice, provided its restoration was
practicable. The will provided thait
after expert advice had been secured
and plans prepared, the King's con-
sent must be had before carrying
them out. The trustees under the
will were opposed to the restoration
and at a meeting of Scottish Hoyal
Burghs held to Edinburgh the other
day, they announced that the King
had declined to sanction ithe project
Is assured you when you buy one of Dr.
Pierce's Family Medicines — for all the in-
gredients entering into them are printed on
the bottle - wrappers and attested under
oath as being complete and correct. They
are gathered from Nature's laboratory,
being selected from the most valuable na-
tive, medicinal roots found growing in our
American forests. "While potent to oura
they are perfectly harmless even to tha
most delicate women and children.
Not a drop of alcohol enters into
Dr. Pierce's leading medicines. A
much better agent is used both for
extracting and preserving the me-
dicinal principles, viz.—pure triple-
refined glycerine of proper strength.
This agent possesses medicinal
properties of its own, being a most
valuable anti-septic and anti-fer-
ment, nutritive and soothing de-
mulcent.
Glycerine plays an important
part in Dr. Pierce's Golden Med-
ical Discovery in the cure of indi-
gestion, dyspepsia and weak stom-
ach, attended by sour risings,
"heartburn," foul breath, cat ted
tongue, poor appetite, gnawing
feeling in stomach, biliousness and
kindred derangements of the stom-
ach, liver and bowels.
For all diseases of the mucous
membranes, the "Golden Medical
Discovery " is a specific. Catarrh,
whether of the nasal passages or of
the stomach, bowels or pelvic or-
gans is cured by it. In Chronic
Catarrh of the Nasal passages, it is
well, while taking the "Golden
Medical Discovery " for the neces-
sary constitutional treatment, to
cleanse the passages freely two or
three times a day with Dr. Sage's
Catarrh Remedy. This thorough
course of treatment generally cures
even in the worst cases.
In coughs and hoarseness caus-
ed by bronchial, throat and lung
affections, except consumption in
Its advanced stages, the " Golden
Medical Discovery" is a most effici-
ent remedy, especially in those ob-
stinate, hang-on-coughs caused by
irritation and congestion of the
bronchial mucous membranes. The
" Discovery" is not so good for
acute coughs arising from sndden
colds, nor must it be expected to
cure consumption in its advanced
stages—no medicine will do that—
but for all the obstinate ha g-on„
or chronic coughs, •which, if neg-
lected, or badly treated, lead «p ta
consumption, It Is the best med-
icine that can be taken.
It's an Insult to your Intelli-
gence for a dealer to endeavor to"
palm off upon you some nostram
of unknouTi composition in place o<
Dr. Pierce's world-famed medicines'
which are ov known composition.
Most dealers recommend Doctor
Pierce's medicines because rl'ay'
know what they are made of aticf
that the ingredients employer? afte
among the most valuable that a
medicine for like purposes can be
made of. The same is true of
leading physicians who do rot hes-
itate to recommend them, since
they know exactly what they con-
tain and that their ingredients are-
the very best known to medical,
science for the cure of the several
diseases for which these medicines*
are recommended.
With tricky dealers It Is dif-
ferent.
Something else that pays them a
little greater profit will be urged
upon you as "just as good," or even,
better. You can hardly afford to-
accept a substitute of unknown rom-
position and without any particular
record of cures in place of Doctor
Pierce's medicines which are or-
known composition and have &
record of forty years of cures behind
them. You know what yen want,
and it is the dealer's business t*>
supply that want. Insist uptn itL
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El Reno Daily American. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 179, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 8, 1908, newspaper, February 8, 1908; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc165616/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.