The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 39, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 13, 1928 Page: 2 of 4
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TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1128.
THE EL RENO DAILY DEMOCRAT
r w MAHER. - - - - — EDITOR .
i. W. - urr« MRR i
J. R. MAHER.----Bt S~
One month -------------------- j
Three months -----------— ^ q„
One rear -------------------- 1~_J.
By_ Melt In County ^ ^
Six months-----------------, 50
One yeer ---------------------
Outside of County J(w
Six months ------------3.50
One year
Advertising
Classified, one day, P«r word -- •
CUselfled. three days, per w d ^
Display, column Inch ..........
Ao'n, will hm.uu-r M>
‘vs the Sl»rlusfl«W Republican. To
assist employees to become ehUens
the companies will conduct noon-limir
classes at the mills and otbenv.se of-
rtfi aid and encouragement, lids e*
feetlve example of Americanization
work Is presumably meuut to solve u
local problem peculiar to the New
Bedford situation, where work has
been slnck and there has been a sur-
plus of applicant* for Jobs. It would
be possible only where employers of
labor were in a position to adopt a
hPdily selective policy. Americaniza-
tion can be sufficiently encouraged
without coercion.
7^Sb>nal system was educated
ilPd the individual who had l™™*1
bow to work In bis youth was unedu-
cated Is now being exploded.
Who Really Paul
Once upon a time there were three
competing mousetrap wakcrs all do
W about the same among of bus!
St X!"V'b., - *cua». r.ull.0
d» n^uheur...
decided to spend one cent P«f ^
advertise. Ho did not raise his price
to the dealer, and the dealer did not
raise Tils Price to the huh^- fc 11
The advertising trap maker Kepi
up the advertising for » c®JJle h"
when It was found that his
business had grown to such volume
that he could h<dld better machinery
«o instead of turning out a trap for
fifteen cents, by quantity production
!,e ciuld make a better trap for ten
cents. This he was ahle to sell t
the dealer for fifteen cents, and the
dealer sold It to the consumer for
‘To?.1“tSo'SSff-r the advertising?
Not 5. consumer, who now got a
better trap for les- money. Not the
dealer, because he now made a better
perceutagc of profit, gave hl» cu*
tomers better value, and made
qUNelthorU*dldV the manufacturer pay
for the advertising, because he now
Lid ho many more that where he
used to make five cents profit per
trap and sold a thousand a <««y. J®
now made three cents per trap un 1
sold three thousand a day.
He was selling three times as many
traps. Yet the supply of mice had
not Increased like that.
By looking closer It Is discovered
that the other two mousetrap men
had gone out of business
The men who really paid for this
manufacturer’s advertising were the
two who had not advertised, aud who
paid with their business, if the non-
advertisers only realized It. while they
are talking about the needless ex-
pense of advertising, they are really
paying the advertisers bills.—Th
Neoga, Illinois, News.
key with the Editor.
Unclaimed Property
Three times a year sales of un-
claimed lost property found In the
cdis of the underground railways in
I/mdoii, England, are held with the
purchasing privilege withheld from all
but the company’s employee*, observe*
the South Rend Tribune. Under a
fixed scale of price umbrellas may be
bought for 121 cent* each; walking
slicks, 4 to K cents; gloves, 0 cents h
pair; boukrg 0 cent* each, ami brief
CilKPs, 120 cents each. Why are these
articles not claimed by the origin*
owners? Surely many of the umbrel-
las. walking stick* and brief cases
art- worth many times the sums they
bring at the auction*. The same con-
dition prevails In America. I'ooplo
aro always losing umbrella*, bundles
or othor bulky articles, and most or
them are lost under conditions which
would Insure their return if the «rig
Inal owner made reasonable attempts
to get them back. In 1027 patrons
lost In (he underground railways of
Loudon and failed to claim 112,000 um-
brella* and BOO walking sticks. Those
same people probably laugh heart v
when they bear the story about the
mnu who lost the base drum.
Two large fabric concerns In New
Bedford have taken the unusual step
of announcing that only persons who
are American citizen* or who l»a\e
taken out their first citizenship pa-
Osier was nil wrong when he sug-
gested that efficiency ended at sixty,
writes Dr. Henry O. Chapin In the
Forum. To prove the point, here are
the names of a few of the old men
who are of primary Importance In the
modern world: lllndenburg, eighty,
Clemenceau, eighty-six; Earl Balfour,
elghty-nlne; Ellhu Root, eighty two,
Justice Holmes, elghty-elx; Oranueey
M Depew. ninety-three; George F.
Baker, eighty-seven; August Heck-
gher, past seventy; Dr. W. W.^ Keen,
approaching ninety; Thomas A. Edi-
son, eighty. It is therefore untrue that
there is a deadline at fifty, sixty, sev-
enty. or even eighty, as far ns intel-
lectual possibilities and usefulness ure
concerned, since this Is entirely un
Individual matter.
There are almost us many formal
definitions of the ■“«»
as there are days In a school year
“Human beings.” said an moment
committee of expert- a few years • ««•
“cannot become themselves without
an effort of mind and will. tl,e
discipline by which that effort Is stim-
ulated and guided Is education. In
short, public education Is primarily
intended as an organized aid to the
development of human beings, not
exclusively as Individuals, but as to •
arable member* of a society. This Is (
education for citizenship.
This must be a difficult period to.
the newcomer trying to learn the
English language, while half the PJP
motion Is trying to tulk like t
in me "™- D'”k
Crows.”
The annual cost for paper for gov-
ernmental purpose- Is $2,200,000 am
,wo Heins nre HOW"
paper and 45,000.000 invelopes. Ibats
more than a scrap of paper.
Sports serve to make us a hardy
race. The spectators don’t have rush
ions ns they do at home.
Physicians say Insane are happier
than the *ane. Don’t have to worry
over doctor hills.
That Baby You’ve
Longed For
Mrs. Burton Advises Women °"
Motherhood and Companionship
“For several years 1 wim den ed
the blessing of motherho^ wHtes
Mrs. Margaret Burton of MM•
Rocret of my happiness, and I win
gladly reveal it to any married wo-
man who will write me * Mrs. Burton
offers her advice entirely withou
charge. She has nothing to sell. Let-
ters should be addressed to Mrs. Mar
garet Burton. 2636 Massachusetts,
Kansas City. Mo. Correspondence will
be strictly confidential.
Eastern hosiery manufacturers are ,
Kaid t« be worried about tbe future
because so many women went stock- i
ingless last summer. There Is a for |
tune in It for the man who can out- 1
guess the whims of fashion.
'N°S\CcWRmMARRH
- Apply Cream In Nostrils
\ Open Up Air Passage*.
t.....*..*-*-.*-'*-1* , l , k 1 *" * /" ,
Ah' What relief! Your clogged
nostrils open right un, the air passage*
of you. head are clear and yen cmx
breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffl-
dimhartre. huaxlache, dry-
always
delicious
When we get down to a question of j
real education there are only two
things we can accomplish, says Secre-
tary Davis in Current History. One
U to tench people to think nhmi
the problems they will meet and have
to face in life. The other la to train m^, and. he^d
them how to do the things they will Xllen, inflamed ^
;"ve ,0 do in life, the useful arts «*, instant relief. Ely s C ream
that will make them of some value to
society. . - - 'ri'e once-accepted
theory that the product of o»r Ken’,
ine Imuoou*7 discharge, headache, dry- !
dcm—no struggling for breath at night,
* -a
bottle ol Ely’. Crem ^
£*2S KUSP&i 1” i«
the swollen, inflamed muo^mmhrane,
sufferer ha* been seeking. Ha JUM
splendid.
Pancakes.
What’s Doing
Vol. 1.
March 13. 1928.
No. 4.
Published in the be- j
lief that you will find
here something of In-
terest and entertain-
ment. »
LONG BELL
C. W. Bergthold
Editor — Manager
Said a Chinaman
tramping through tho
snow who looked back
ami discovered a bear
sniffing at hi* tracks—
“Hullo! You like* my
Hacks—I makeo some
more.”
Testimonial for a
business college. —
•Blxty-ftve percent of
our feminine graduates
marry their employers
the first year.”
To make your lawns
and flowers grow ujc
Agriculture Lime. We
have It in any quanti-
ties.
home possession than
the man who got it
easier.
From Long-Hell tim-
ber we make our own
lumber and stamp our
name on It—If W l«n t
good lumber who.
would you say. Is re
sponsible.
If you ever doubt
the value of our House
Plan Books Just look
around town. . • nearly
every new home is a
treat to the eye.
-fe. •**
a
FOR ONE THING.MILD’,
AND WHAT’S Mm-THLYSATISfY/
The home of Null
Gardner on North Ma-
comb Is fast nearing
completion, and Nu
ha* made a wonderful
change in the appear-
ance of that location.
“How come. Brud-
der,” .3 :*d the negro
preacher, “dat when I
talks about stealing
watermelons yo snap
yo fingers? “Notliiu’
•tall; 1 Jes happen to
member whar I lef my
knife.”
Visitor to Farmer:—
Do your hens Pfty y°u
tnjch? , ,
Farmer: Can’t says
they do. You see l
bought the bens for my
wife—I Pay for I)16
feed, she Hells me tho
ejsRs, anil JaUo the
hirod man eat8 them.
Did you ever notice
the fellow who hud to
save and slave to own
hi* homo. ..he seems
to get more out ot
"Right, always leads
onward and upward,
end wrong always leads
down and out. . . tho
more I see and study,
the more pride I feel
In the Integrity of the
trade-mark.’’—Author’s
I page, In Prairie Farm-
er.
•All-A b o a r d!’ cries
the conductor. . That's
old sti.tf—tor a change
why don't he shout
‘‘Every body get A
Board!”
LONG-BELL
Phone 608
220 West Woodson
MILD enough for anyone’s taste,
miliUr in fart than most cigarettes
and yet, they do what you’ve always
wanted u cigarette to do—
THEY SATISFY!
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
LiCGFTT A Mms Tobacco Co.
THE FEATHERHEADS
f While tbe city and «t*ie ofhcials search for Wi*.
I vj# tre lo (inter behind ux? coc j ^
By Oiborne
A) PtrH*
Rescue?
I QEAO Tv4tS l-Yoovt 6c3T
veu! SMA0T Fttul \\ ^WEU.WHAOtf^
WANT ME lO DO?
THE VJH^r WORKS ON 1 \ BdMP HIM OfF?,
'4 VouR NICKS HOVdy LlJ
L»* v-« rj % /
"Wj§\
'Hl/iM.
AVI-WELCCWlI-in' /1ESS NfrtWEftV.
NAME of MlGlrHV iff I bUDCV/’AN'MOCE
MV^TlC QAJAy / t CLUTCH IN' UPWACOJ
MAHADJMA !J/kJA'*Hd lHEM FINS
^ \ rir®
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Maher, T. W. The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 39, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 13, 1928, newspaper, March 13, 1928; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc909934/m1/2/: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.