The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 34, No. 23, Ed. 1 Monday, October 6, 1924 Page: 2 of 4
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IK ONLY OBNGMTj
IViily Burnley
-MY—
T. \Y. XIAIIKR
J K MAHKR
T. W MAHER
KIUTOK
On r«r ( n city)............ 14
Hrr« wont us (in »•»«>'.........tl »K»
fit* tbuvr «h 1c* only *h«n paid
It ndvaiue other* i-c a price of l"
(Nil per week prevail'
n
v," t
V
t
. THE EL RENO DAILY DKMftdUT
If Stomach is Upset, Sour, Gassy,
Just take ‘'Pape’s Diapepsin”
lit 1 i\c Minutes all the ImligY.stbjii, Matulenci*, I lean-
hum and Acidity will l*e t.out
m
DO YOU KNOW?
Youthful Oklahoma |w*se«l her H'h
birthday oa November l»2l
Population t»», is5 Rank Slat.
Oklahoma Itaa Increased her pupil-
lutlou «9 4 per ceut dnring the pa*
U| year*. Of the total, 80.7 |ter t ent
h rural.
TlM elevation of the Stale range*
(TOW 400 feet In the aoulhweste: n
MMt to s.000 feet in the northweat
on portion.
The average growing aeanon
to length from 16# day* In the
part of the State to ISO
In the aouthern part.
t average* from 411 Imho*
ip the aootheaatern part to SO Inrhea
It the northweat portion.
Ohloboma haa wood, roai amt tint*
prol |i* for fuel.
All itnple cropa of the North and
Booth ore grown In Oklahoma, and
the 8Ute haa the advantage of riot*
proximity to both northern and Month
era market*.
. Twenty Uiohnand acre* In truck
crope wan Oklahoma's record hint
W|t> la* tuiaeialde another uonnut your family -luatld rat something
a In n a le* tablet* of Ihtpe's Ida 1
|e*p*m mil correct your out of order
jtomath ami your digestion
Itanulc-*' leaaant! KffectiveJ
Oet a OWrent put Wage from any
ilrut! Mure, Una If you or nue of
lit it up't-U tin* 'Itiinatli with gaaea,
soar fermentation*. arldit or tausca
distress you ran. like millions of
other*, gel prompt stomach relief
ami turrettiom
ANNOUNCEMENT*
FRANK TAYLOR
Announces hla candidacy for the
office of Court Clerk of Cunadlait
C'ouuty, and will apprgclate your tup
port pi the coming election.
(Clerk District and County Court*)
Oklahoma ha* a higher acre In*
pome, considering the Investment tn
• ippd, than any of the Htnte* that
In production.
Phrm labor Is lower in Oklahoma
than any stale north of It. and high-
l er than ary state south of it.
I1*. Only ten state* are mortgaged to
j. n eauller per cent of the land value
0*fhOA Oklahoma.
Oklahoma has one of the finest
( Agricultural Collges in the United
B
Thirty states fiave higher taxes'
,pp term lands (Includes state, county
pad Jtajal taxes), than dees Oklnho-
Oklahoma practices diversification
There is seldom a year that the total
Of any one crop represents as much
M SO per cent of the total value cf
all crops.
According to the last Census. Okla-
home outstripped 31 other states In
4ha value of livestock products.
Oklahoma ranks 18th in the vu’ue
of farm property, having Increased
the Value over 80 per cent since 1910.
Oklahoma leads In the production
of crude oil.
Of the seventy-seven counties In
Oklahoma, thirty-eight produce nil or
gas or both. Three hundred town-
ahtps produce oil and gas. In 1921.
there were 30,000 producing wells
tn 1122 there were 35.437.
Oklahoma minerals are known the
world over and the state has within
Its own borders enough material to
lard surface Its every road and high-
fROUP
j® Spasmod
WW relieved t
VlJSIJS
IT Million Jar a UaoJ
Spasmodic Croup Is frequently
relieved by one application of-
Oaer I
CARL MIRVBIDT
Democrat
Announces his candidacy for Coun
ty Commissioner. District No. I. Can
adlnn County. Your support will bo
appreciated.
T. C* IHACKLCTT
Announces his can .acy for re
election as 8herlft of Canudlan coun
ty and will appreciate your support
JIM A* RINEHART
Democratic candidate for County
Judge of Canadian county, will ap
preclote the aupport of the voters at
general. Election November 4th.
Nflioatl Battery Service
At Rother’s Garage
C. E. TOBIAS, Prop.
We GIVE COMMUNITY
DAY TICKETS
I
IR9SVVMM
■YES EXAMINED *
GLASSES FITTED
Brakes Lanier Duplicated oe
short notice.
RRYPTOK GLASSES
For near view and dlitsnce
HENRY BEHNE
f JEWELER-OPTOMETRIST
B *Q0 SOUTH KOCH IS LA XD
ORBS
J
!
fWMnWSSBWNMSBKBBBi
A Strengthening.
Invigorating Tonic
for Women ^Children
COOKED 61 YEARS
ON OLD PET STOVE
Still Glesms Despite 67,000
Meals Prepared on It
Grove's
Tasteless
Chill Tonle
' 60c.
1P. B. PEIS
PHYSICIAN
Office In Hatchett iiuildlug
221 it 8. Rock Island
Office 2OS Phones Res. 298
THOS. JENSEN
Million Jar a Vao4 Yqgrto
-REAL ESTATE
—FARM LOANS
-INSURANCE
— Rhone 177
»r«l From lie he! face rag* theas
• khr, of steam ns g mother's tears
•« IW In Joy ever the cotolug of chil-
dren late the heme, or Rosed In ear-
roe over the lea* meal |*et*r*4 for
I heir depart are from the ul4 ihrv'Iold
lute the hig. wide world, loiter
Hdashed those teen of gratitude,
shkh left »i«ti that had te he nihhed
<4f. after the same ecewmorned head*
had prepared the feasts fof the golden
wedding and at ill more recently far
the sixtieth and sixty Erst wedding au
al versa riel
Tht* little women dare aid regard M
as remarkable that she and her stove
have probably set a retard fur all
America. Mhe llkea to cook. the stove
just suit* her. and her husband and
family have enjoyed her cooking
through all theee yearn. XYhat moiv
could aay houaealle ask 7
f'urthermwre, hrr family ha* thrived
oa her cooking. If the fact that she
aad her huehead still survive after
nearly silly-one year* and sli months
of married Ufe Is not suMclent proof
of her culiuary ability, then there are
the live stalwart son* and daughters,
all still living, and a progeny of eighty
grandchildren and great grandchildren
day. regaiu.ee* of when the real of the
camp Sits.
Vim Stoneu.;*n *aid the handrvd* of
children aader her medical supervision
sere ctoaa'y. alt h*-ugh water a as
scarce oa awu* Ivm.mi.oua.
la Popular
EatoavUla Wash. A nuge tepee
built la early |th«ae*r da * *w fannas
lake still »t*ui> out iu turfed eondi-
lion. The te|M*e. V"t'. . ted of hem
lock poles aad *trii - «f «k»r hark, la
approximately 3»» feet h. aud due*
up the slde> give g - ;i* l® the
huge fire la the <« ■ i II .n 'red* of
tourists dally gatlnr t the fa
luotis v*ounc11 fire.
The o’.der generation get a l»t of
credit f*»r the day* when tl > v I d t>»
get up at live o'clock to do the rl.ore'
but the modern youth i»l!> out that
early for * game of lentil*
Kills ColdH'Otn*/
GiunuilfftlKflitfiaSHuiiN
Why fctr.s onto a II.ad v'oid for «
«r,l »-L«a l»r llait* It v IV-
»cr.i>Uou i. tf* • -*W* - to kt.w * it
$ L'.urs—or it * -t* v,*u lUii.g.
Htr. V sets *t l*<r »•!. ia*’ *** *
tit n.vJ -ni u >■ <>c(
Hare to. w- 'k V:» *j>.« ta l! *
«*ty at
ROASTS. STEAK OR SAUSAGE
\ou know >v»ur meat U goud aul
>ou know it it tender wh«« ><*»
oulti it ftv>iu
Phone 17f.
HALEY S MARKET
100 N. Bickford
r
Schools in Loccinf
District in Motion
Kugene, Ore.—Ilia* Althea stone-
man, n summer student at the 1’ulver
ally of < tregon here. Is n school nurse
The M'lmolhousee In her district are In
motion from logging taiup to logging
camp in the |.lne forests about Ibnd
In «*entrnl Oregon.
When the timlier In the radius of a
camp Is cut und the fathers of the
children go oa to s new site, the
schoolhouses are hoisted on flat car*
und taken along. Moving day for the
•ctmol usually Is on Saturday or 8ur-
Pies—Cakes—Biscuits—Muffins
everything in which you use
C& LUMET
Quinton, N. J.—('ooklng a single
meal for the family In a gas or elec-
trically et)Up|>ed kitchen seem* like •
big task to most housewives these hoi
days, hut Mr*. Herbert Sheets, who
ha* lived In tbl* Salem county village
long enough to have conked <»7,0o0
n; In all on the mime stove still like*
to cook.
Winter and summer, inornlug, noon
und night, for (11 year*, Mr*. Sheets
has prepared the food for her futnlly
on the mime stove that her husband
bought for her ns bis bride when they
were married on Washington's birth-
day. IBM.
“I have always liked to cook," said
Mrs. Sheet*, whose bark la bent from
so much Rtooplng to atir n pot or to
ace how bread or plea were browning
In the oven.
UI gel a little apent and tired some-
tlmcB,” she continued, and then ex-
plained half apologetically that she
now buya her bread, and occasionally
cakes, from the village bnker. Until
recently she did all her own baking In
addition to preparing the regular three
meals a day. For <11 summer* she
and her *tove have tackled with bright
face* the Job of nlmoat endless cun-
ning nnd preserving.
Prefers Plain Cooking.
“Just plain, ordinary cooking la
what I do," she went on, when naked
what she likes to cook the most. "I
have never bothered much with fancy
dishes—Just those substantial things
for my husbnnd und our boys and
girls.
"No. I never counted up to aee how
many meals I’ve cooked on this stove.
It's the only stove we’ve ever hod, and
I don’t have to tell you It's a good one
when I any that we've used it every
day since we were married. It has t
good oven. I dry all of my wood In
there, and It’s still line for baking.
Once, some years ago, we had a new
top put on the stove. That’s about the
only thing about the stove that has
evet^needed fixing since we got It."
The stove which bus cooked the food
and provided much of the heat tn win-
ter for Mr. nnd Mrs. Sheets during
tlielr long married Ufe was cast In a
Philadelphia foundry by a firm now
extinct. It Is of the old-fashioned de-
*lgn of the Sixties, with ample firebox,
large oven and four lids. It burns
either coal or wood. As wood has
been most abundant In the communi-
ties where the family had lived, that
has been the principal fuel; so, In
addition to the cooking, the kindling
of fires has been no small part of Mrs.
Sheets’ kitchen tasks.
Kept Brightly Polished-
So brightly polished does Mrs.
Sheets keep her stove that It does not
look old even now. its surface re-
flected her face ns she stooped to take
from the oven, to show to visitors the
other day, a bread pan which was
also one of her wedding gifts. This
pan, too, has lasted through nil the
years.
Upon this stove’s polished surfnre j
dropped the tears of disappointment
TOE WORLDS GREATEST
BWMG POWSfR
Looks different—tastes better—be-
cause of its greater leavening power
14LES *•/» times those or any other brand
rjrjrs:.*r
5
| Typewriting
PAPER
r* wjsrjr.*•/*.w&ww# m Wj&jsrjgr*
!
£
S
i
500 Sheets—$1
I
i
This is a good bond
paper and is packed in
neat boxes which saves
half the waste of buying
it in loose form.
I
s
s
i
El Reno Daily
&
£
$
3
%
Democrat
S
%
k
of the bride who scorched her‘first rjJWjrjrjrjrjrjTJ^^ iT.^
WHAT’S THE USE
By L F.Van Zelm
© WMIftl Ilia
Hurrah!!!
COME ON,0aBY(
LET’S STEP 4
•D
7
7 . 13
■ ((j1f /If.fa
jHSv.ii
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piipps
OJP
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Maher, T. W. The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 34, No. 23, Ed. 1 Monday, October 6, 1924, newspaper, October 6, 1924; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc908975/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.