The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 22, 1921 Page: 3 of 4
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EL RENO DAILY DEMOCRAT
^ T? Trr3 "Tr1 w REDUCING BUfWl,Uft,
k(L J) (L II IH II II ®bot nobody loves 9 fat map is a
■ 4 ^ saying approved of tradition, fh^ro-
Mrs. Maynard lloss and Mrs Delia,
Iloss, lunclicou for Mrs. J W. Ailuma
of I'iue bluff, Ark.
t t t t
T. B. A. club, Airs Leu Uliode.
Mt t
The Delia Phi club 'will meet Mon-
day evening with Mrs. John H
Compton. The member itro iilann
ing a novelty dance for sonte even-
ing soon.
* t t t
The Matinee club will meet Tues-
day afternoon with Mrs. P. P. Duffy
T T t t
The Happy Owls met lust evening
with Mr. and Mrs. J. O Chamness,
who had as special guests lier sistei,
Mrs. Fred Dinkier of Ft. Cobb who
is heje for the week end, and Mr.
Marshall McDougal. Cards ano
dancing passed tho time pleasantly,
after which a dainty lunch was serv
ed. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Campbell
will be the next hosts.
t t t t
Tho junior class of the high school
will give a cafeteria supper Tuesday
evening from 6 until 8 o'clock at the
high school. Everyone is invited to
attend.
t T t T
Miss bernice Cobb entertained wittt
an informal dance last evening for
the basketball boys. Tho out of town
Ruests besides the Norman boys were
John Blanton, Hartford and Branson,
all of Okla. City Forty boys and
girls enjoyed the evening.
t t t t
Mr. and Mrs. E. C Hosmer of
Oklahoma City and Mr. and Mrs. \V.
C. Smith were the dinner guests last
evening of Mr. and Mrs Hal Town-
send.
t t t t
Mrs. John DeLana and children
went to Oklahoma City yesterday to
spend the week end with her par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. M. S Cooter
t t t t
Miss Helen Butts entertained tin!
J. J. girls Thursday evening. Auc-
tion was played and tho favor won
by Miss bernice Cobb, after which
a dainty repast was served. Miss.
Cobb will entertain the club next
week.
t f t
Thirty-five couples wore in attend
ance last evening at tho Country club
dance. A dainty supper was served
during the evening. Mrs. J It Smil-
ey of Montgomery, Ala , and Mrs.
Harry Cressman of Cincinnati were
out of town guests.
Mr. and Mrs. Neal Waldo had as
their dinner guests list evening Mr
and Mrs. Maynard Ross, Mr. and Mrs.
Lloyd Matthews, Miss Huncy Sams
and Miss Adah Thompson. The par
ty attended the Country club dance
in the evening.
Mrs. Howard brown of Weiser, Ida
lio, is Ihe guest of her parents, Mr
and Mrs. J. II. Compton.
Monty back without question
If HUNT'S Salvo fails in the
treatment ot ITCH, ECZBMA.
RINGWORM, TETTER cr
other Itching ekiri diseases.
Try a 75 cent box at our ribk.
MILLER'S DRUG STORE
JONES DRUG COMPANY
fore, when recently, as the result of an
exhaustive survey, It*was scientifically
determined that every ninth man in
Chicago Is far too fnf for comfort and
health, presumption was tljat there
would speedily be organized a fat
man's reduction club in the Windy
city. But instead wo have the experi-
ment of a 00 days' dieting and exor-
cise reduction test for Chicago wom-
en. The explanation is that there are
really more heavyweight women than
men in Chicago, but gallantry forbade
making that a feature of the survey,
#ays Cincinnati Commercial Tribune.
Among the peculiarities of human
habit, custom, practice or what not,
all functions have their foundations
in food. If wo receive we eat If we
entertain visiting delegations we feed
them. Likewise distinguished digni-
taries and ail sorts and conditions of
conventions and conferences, We eat
and get fat; then we eat to get lean.
Instance—tho Fat Women's Reduc-
tion club of Chicago is depending
principally on dieting for taking off
the surplus whiich was accumulated
by too much diet. But the process is
Interesting and the outcome a mat-
ter of anxious observation by tho fair
of all the country. What with the
beer supply shut off and the free lunch
made obsolete, the fat men should be
able to simulate feminine sacrifice.
Remember: The next best thing-
If you haven't a Brunswick, is Bruns-
' wick Records on the phonograph you
| have. Only 85 cents up, at Beline's.
18t
The period of talk will doubtless bo
succeeded by quiet action. Words do
yery well for programs, and for the
frames of action, but fulfillment comes
In deeds. We have always been moro
or less a Wordy people. We have in-
dulged as a people, a penchant for or-
ators. But we have discovered that
It Is mostly the silent men who do
things, says Dearborn Independent.
The old story about using so much
steam In the whistle that there Is
cone left for tho wheels, Is more than
humor—it is philosophy. It is mighty
easy to re-create tho world in a speech
or reorganize society on paper. Men
who actually put into practical oper-
ation the new thing, who prove its
worth and get It established, may not
go down In the list of world-producers,
but they are the real statesmen.
ifhe contention of Ko-Ko In "The
Mikado" that when a man is officially
pronounced dead, ho Is dead to all
Intents and purposes, has been sol-
emnly confirmed by the action of the
war authorities in notifying a Mas-
sachusetts lieutenant, In spite of his
repeated denials of the report of hla
death, that his body is now on tho
way home. Whether ho could be
court-martialed for Insubordination
In persisting In being alive, remarks
Baltimore American, Is now a ques-
tion.
An enlisted man In the navy re-
ceived second honors In a prize con-
test for the best essay on "Leader-
ship," in a contest op?n to all from
commander down to "gob." This
recognition of right and merit, Irre-
spective of rank, is one reason why
tho American army and navy are bet-
ter than the best on the- other side,
where certain honors are shut out
from the grasp of a man, however ca-
pable of earning them, because of his
position In tho social scale.
Men are unwise who retire from
active affairs tp take their ease.
IJase is frequently but a short cut to
tho grave. Qno who is calloused to
harness and by interest in his task
persuaded to forget the advancing
years finds when ho quits tho strifo
fhat strength has gone from him. The
T> ¥T* T? TtT C I Btrn,n which he endured and enjoyed
XV AUsO comes to settle an accumulated score.
at Cost
We must move Ihe first.
The United States doling doubled
in value in Greece following the over-
throw of Venizelos. As tho future
_. .. , . plans of that leader seem to be some-
Our entiie stock ot gioceriesj wj,at |n ^0Ubt maybe we could get
will be sold at a price that will bim to come over here and be over-
move them NOW. Sale starts thrown again.
SATURDAY MORNING
Get your groceries at far he-
low present prices during the
sale at the
Golden Rule Grocery
5o8 N. Choctaw Phone 111
A more or less eminent pugilist ad-
vises aspiring boxers not to let any-
body hit them If they can help It and
a good many boxers seem to achieve
this result by doing all Uielr fighting
with a typewriter.
PRESTO WELDING
& MACHINE WORKS
Aulogenlua W> Minor. Cutting,
Brazing, Carbon burning s ^ri >1
Cylinders filled; cylinders ind
rrank-caspe wchled, a! o all
kinds of blacksmith work.
(las and gasolino englnt
pumps, radiators, iim^nei m
tors rind starters «,\.?r!n u I. 1,
magnets recharged. Automobile*
repaired. Ante franv sir,light-
ened or welded. Sque.iky .1 itorn-
bile wheels resat and made good
as new.
Auto springs mado new or
welded.
All kinds of machine, . .irrii'-V"
and woodwork. Commercial bod-
ies built, cabinet maker H
No work too Irtrge. too small
or Intricate for specialist!.
—Locates at—-
ELilKKO t'AIIIIIM.i: IVIIKKS
A. J. POHCELET, Mgr.
312 W. Wodson rhono~125
The League of Nations has been pre-
1 sented with a bill of over $15,000 for
\ clears smoked or carried off at the
I Spa conference. At (his rate, the
pipe of peace Is going to be some-
, what expensive.
Thomas Edison has been given a
distinguished service medul by the
Navy department, but ho never will
get one from the fellow In the flat
across the hall for getting up the pho-
nogruph.
Jazz is reported to be fifty years
old. The late Doctor Osier would
bavo had a great many with him if
ho had suggested that it should have
been chloroformed when It was forty.
To thosa adventurers who are re-
membered In special prayers because
they go do^rn to the sea in ships must
now bo those who dare the
trochleas tipper spaces in airplanes.
Mrs. Emma Estill ot Edmond is
the guest of her mother, Mrs. 11. A.
Coley.
Judge—And for tho levity you have
shown during your trial I shall give
yftu an additional fine of $10. How
does that suit you?
Prisoner—That's what I would call
extra fine.
INVENTORY TIME
We have:
Blank Books a
Ledgers
Journals
Cash Books
Loose Leaf System
Carbon Paper all sizes
BARNARD'S
110 East Woodson
c
HEADACHE
Caused by eye jtratn
can be relieved with
we (It and
make.
HENRY BEHN a
OPTOMETRISi
100 Rrtvfh Rock Ultnd ♦ vun««
Keep the weevils out of your wheat
with carbon. Get it at Pattersons
Drug Co. Phone 1G8. lltfc
Have your clothes cleaned, pressed
repaired and dyed at tho Model Clean
ers, 115 South Bickford, phone 12&
Service our Motto. We call for, and
deliver. 22c
Liquid Smoke for curing meats.—
Patterson Drug, Phone 168. tf
There Is more Catarrh in this section
>i the country than all other diseases
jut together, and for years it was sup-
posed to be Incurable. Doctors prescribed
ocal remedies, and by constantly failing
to cure with local treatment, pronounced
it ln vu able. Catarrh is a local disease,
-?reatly Influenced by constitutional con-
ditions and therefore requires constitu-
tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Medi-
cine, manufactured by F. J, Cheney &.
Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a constitutional
remedy. Is taken Internally anil acts
thru the Blood on the- Mucous Surfaces
jf the System. One Hundred Dollars re-
ward Is offered for any case that Hall's'
Catarrh Medicine fails to cure. 'Send for
irculars and testimonials.
P. J. CHENEY CO., Toledo, Ohio.
Sold by Druggists, 76c.
Hall's Familv Pills for oonstlpation
From five to twenty-five
miles per hour in nine
seconds flat — that is
standard performance of
the new series,five passen-
ger "Glenbrook" model.
Take just one ride in this
car and you will imme-
diately appreciate the
difference between "old
school mechanics" and
strictly modern science.
Gl*nhrook"fi-i®"FivePaxtengcrTourinjCar $1770f.o.b. Detroit
A rdmora "ti-iii" Four Pa*ncug, r Sport Model CJ'JOf.o.b. Detroit
Lenox "ti-.'tJ" lioaditcr Two Famnger . .. 177 )f.o.b. Detroit
Coup* "0 i •" Four,ravenger 8691/.0.6. Detroit
iStt/urt "0-4*" Five Passenger . ... . . jjO45f.o.b. Detroit
• All •nodewJU In inhibited at Auto-
mobile Shows throughout the country
PA1GK DKTKOIT MOTOR CAR CO . DKTROIT
Manufacturer, of Pu Motor Carj and Motor True let
MARTIN'S GARAGE
y. M. Paxton, Mgr.
THE MOST BEAUTIFUL C AIV. I Ti AMERICA
No "Waste
in a package
Post
Toasties
^7he substantial texture
of Post Toasties prevents
crumbling in the package
and their firm substance
• adds to their attractiveness
Vhey retain their crisp-
ness and rich flavor after
milk or cream is added
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE!
Hade by Postum Cereal Company. Inc.
V- Battle Creek, Michigan.
a Step aft a Time
They can V come down the bannister
Did prices go up in a day? They did not. They
can't come down in a day. Prices went up gradually
from 1914 to 1919. Prices went up a step at a time.
They can't come by the bannister. THEY MUST COME
DOWN THE SAME WAY THEY WENT UP.
The reason we were able to finance the war so well
was because business was good—people bought and
sold. The only way we can PAY for the war is by buy-
ing and selling—trading. And, moreover, prices ARE
down—for many commodities they are already down to
lower level than they should be—tilings are selling for
less than they cost to make. That is an impossible sit-
uation. If you won't buy the things the other fellow
makes, III: can't buy the things YOU make. That is rea-
sonable, is it not? And if he doesn't buy the things you
make—the shutters will soon be on YOUR place of bus-
iness. Those who are insistently determined to wait un-
til things "crash" before they buy are not doing human-
ity a service, for nobody can sell things long at a loss.
The prices of overcoats, shoes, furniture, tires and so
forth, are based on the cost of raw materials, labor,
freight, etc., and profit to those who make, handle and
sell them.
Your livelihood and prosperity are bound up in the
livelihood and prosperity of other men—you can't deny
that point. I here is nothing fundamentally wrong with
Ihe country—we have bountiful crops, ample money,
capable heads and hands. Business is a gigantic organi-
zation kept alive and active by trade coursing through
its veins. When trade slops circulating—business dies.
Your particular trade can't flourish in splendid isolation.
The articles you make you can't sell to men "out of a
job."
True thrift is always wise, but a stubborn refusal
nil the part of some of the American public to buy the
things they need NOW is simply slowing down the
wheels of commerce that feed and clothe and house
us ALL.
If you are on a buying strike—"forget it." Go out
and buy today the things you need, for the prices ARl:
down. If they are down further tomorrow or the next
day or next month, you may not then be in a position
to buy.
Stubbornness means ultimate disaster, and no one
of u< will escape the penalties.
—El Reno Daily Democrat
fr
J!
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Maher, T. W. The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 242, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 22, 1921, newspaper, January 22, 1921; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc91183/m1/3/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.