El Reno Evening Bell. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 10, 1902 Page: 2 of 4
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CL RENO EVENING BELL
Successor to
EL RENO SUPPER.BELL.
E. J. Simpson, Editor & Prop.
Daily, per annum, mailed.. .ftl.00
“ six months, “ ... fl.50
“ one " “ ... 60
4 “ week, delivered.. 10
“ 1 month delivered.. 25
Weekly, per annum........ 75
“ six months......... 60
Kickl The Bell warts you to
kick If you don’t get the Bell.
DEMOCRATIC
TICKET
For Congress—
BI..L CROSS.
Reprasoi tative 14th district—
WM. A. MAXWELL.
■ heritl—
JOHN C. OZMUN.
County Attorney—
JOHN J. CARNEY.“
Superintendent of Schools—,
W. C. BICKFORD.
Treasurer—
C. M. BUCKLES.
Register of Ileeds —
CHAS. M. STANDARD.
Probate Jucgo—
J- I. PHELPS.
County Clerk—
EARL BEEBE.
Assessor—
G. D. HILL.
Coroner—
S. J. DYER.
Commissioner 1st district—
WM. SCHWARBERG.
Commissioner 2nd district—
H. H. LEEPER.
Commissioner 3rd district—
WM. H. JOHNSON.
Cross will carry this county b.\
300. This is no idle guess, but
the statement is based on a ver.\
careful cunvnss of each township.
Now is the golden time to fix
the roads leading into El Iteno n
great deal of the trade north ot
the river now goes to Okarche, be-
cause the roads leading into El
Keno are in such horrible th ipc.
The Fort road west of the city is
a stinker.
GRAIN AND STOCKS.
Dec wheat closed today... 60 i -l
Dec wheat closed yesterday O‘Ji-70
Dec corn closed today. 481-1
Dec corn closed yesterday 48l
Wheat opened............ 70
Wheat, high.............. 70i-i
Wheat, low.............. 6!ffi
Corn opened.............. 48i
Corn, high............... 4!>i
Corn, low................ 484
Stocks Strong.
PROFESSIONAL NURSING. BASS WITH SENSE OF HUMOR.
4 Little Advice for the Voanc W oiuaa
Who C ouleinplatea Follow-
la* That talllai.
Odd Eiprrlfarr af a \rw York Angliv
Who Had SrrapleM AkkIuiI
l ufalr FUliing.
Whenever the subject of occupation
for women is under consideration that
of trained nursing is apt to present
itself, and the commercial mind is
strongly attracted by the possibility
of fitting one’s self for the lucrative
position through two or three years*
course of training, during which time
one is provided with board, lodging
und washing, ami, in many schools, tin
allowance of from $5 to $13 per month,
with no pecuniary outlay on one’s own
part, says Collier’s Weekly.
The outlook is attractive also to the
sentimental maiden, who pictures her-
self nn “administering angel,” flitting
about in her becoming blue gown uud
snowy cap and apron, bathing the
fevered brows of suffering heroes.
And thus many women aspire to he-
roine trained nurses who never realize
what qualifications tire required to
make an ideal nurse, for it must be
borne in mind that n< amount of train-
ing will make every woman a nurse.
The first consideration is fitness for
the calling. The following illustra-
tion, borrowed by Emerson from the
orient, is applicable: “Take a thorn
bush and sprinkle it for a whole year
with water; it will yield nothing but
thorns. Take a date tree, leuve it
without culture, und it will produce
dates.'*
rl he would-be nurse needs an abun-
dance of good health ami natural vital-
ity; else how can she remain cheerful
despite the physical and mental strain
and depression that come inevitably
with the loss of sleep and long hours
spent with natures made irritable by
suffering? She should be a woman of
resolute character and high standards;
with firm faith in God, enduring char*
ity for her neighbor, confidence in
herself, a broad knowledge of human
nature, a lively sense of responsibility,
An angler, who tried to catch large-
mouthed black ba-ss in (ircenwood lake
one morning, went away thoroughly
disgusted w ith the act Ions of the open-
face fish, lie was casting with frogs
and scorned to use anything but a
single sprout hook, parsed through tbs
lips of the bait, relates the .New York
Sun.
At the fifth cast he booked and boat-
ed a two-pound ba>s and thought he
was certainly out upon a lucky morn-
ing. A moment lanr there was a
swirl on the surface of the water and
he recognized the fact that a big fel-
low had hit the bait.
lie bunded out two or three yards
of line to the fish before the guide
brought the boat to a rest and after
that waited a few' seconds before
striking the fish. Apparently he had
the big fellow fast und began strip-
ping the line in, for like most of tl e
anglers who frequent this lake, he
does not cast from the reel, or u -e the
reel in getting the fish in.
He practices stripping the line be-
tween his fingers ami the reel may l e
lying under the seat on tin* bottom of
the boat, for it is of no use on the rod.
In this instance it was fast upon the
reel-sent of the roil below the angler's
right hand, and he was towing the big
bass in with his left.
The bass came within five or six feet
of the boat and showed his proportions
to the elated angler. The guide was
ready with a landing net when the
hass opened his mouth and spat out
the Iwiit. The frog was found to be
badly mangled across tl e back, but
the fish hail not been within an inch
of getting the hook into his mouth.
This was a disappointment to the
angler, but he was not discouraged un-
til he found that nil the bass that
struck his bait acted in precisely the
same manner. He had ten strikes-with*
MONTE CARLO
A famous resort, where thousands are fleeced of their money every day; but the Monte Carlo
we are running gives you the most for your money as is possible to do in safe merchandising.
Those Sewell garments we have from f Li,50 to $35; colors black, mode, light castor. Our 27-
inch and 45-inch Cloaks are creations of the tailoring art. We have them from to to $16,50.
Blacks, modes, light castors and reds.
esewton AnnG, of Detroit, the famous Furrier, makes up all our FURS, a guarantee of
QUALITY and perfect workmanship.
Separate Skirt- Well, you ought to see our line, It is varied. Every style known to the
ailoring trade is here displayed. It won’t cost you but the effort of coining to see for yourself.
The ladies and children should not buy a suit of UNDERWEAR until they look at our BIG line.
Union suits, all sizes for the children, at 25c a suit. Ladies’Union suits 50c to f.'i, Two-piece
suits of all kinds.
Didn’t last night make you shiver? Don't do it any more, when you can buy a good BLANKET
f,«r 50c and up to $12.50 per pair. Remember this, the largest portion of our blankets are 114 size.
We are anxious to see YOU, yes, YOU! We want to figure with you on anything you want to buy
for this fall and winter. Our doors swing wide open to receive all comers.
The Crowe Mercantile Company.
much sympathy, taot, patience and j In 90 minutes and caught only the first
El RENO TIME CARDS.
CHOCTAW.
TRAINS wkst.
No. 1.—Leaves 8:00 a. m.
No. 3.—Leaves 8:10 p. m.
No. 7.—Leaves 7:80 a. ni.
TRAINS KAHT
No. 2.—Leaves 1:50 a. m.
No. 4.—Leaves 1:10 p. m.
No. 8.—Leaves 9:26 p. in.
W. O. Shaikh,
Agent.
ROCK ISLAND.
TRAINS SOUTH.
Texas Vestibulod Express IS:20a ni
Texas Fast Express .............12: 6p ill
No 86........................................ 9:22 p m
Lawton Express......................7:45 a ni
Local Freight..........................6:10 pm
TRAINS NORTH.
Chicago Vestibuled Express 4:00am
KOA Eastern Express...
No 86.......................................
Arrives from Lawton ... .... »:30 p m
Local Freight............9:00 a in
83N B. Nos 85 and 86 and local
freights daily except Sunday.
common sense. She must possess
pleasing personality and an intelli-
gent,. re lined and cultured mind.
i lle woman endowed with the above
qualifications, who selects a training
school attached to a large hospital,
which will furnish her for the period
of two or three years with practical
and theoretical training in medicine,
surgical, gy nccologieul and obstetrical
nursing, will tind, after her grntliia
tion, that the held of trained nursuig
is not yet too crowded to make room
for her.
HINTS FOR TIIE HOUSEWIFE.
A Ffw If chin of I ii form n I ion l*crfniu«
IniC to M n 11 c ro In the Cull ou r>
Dr i»n r t me ut.
Use for barf hash t lie tough skirt part
af the roast, thoroughly freed from
fat and gristle. Chop and mix one cup
of meat with two cups of chopped po-
tatoes. In an iron spider put two
tablespoons of butter and half a cup
of stock, or u spoonful of gravy added
to enough hot water to half till the
cup. Let it boil up, then add the meat
and potato well seasoned with pepper
and suit. Stir occasionally with a
fork. Let the water evaporate from
the hash, leaving it dry but not pasty.
A way to fiavor a salad with gaiVo
in the most delicate manner is to let a
clove of garlic remain for 24 hours in
a quart bottle of salad oil before the
lutter is used. This gives just the in-
definable tang that much improves the
salud without in the least overdoing
the gurlic fiavor.
If the end of a beafsteak has been
blackened during the broiling process,
and you wish to convert it intoaniince
or stew, simply wash it by pouring
boiling water over it, says the Jloston
Budget.
A delicious tomato salad is made
with reinforcements of onions and cu-
cumbers. Scald, peel and slice thin
four solid tomatoes. Put one-half of
the pieces in the bottom of a salad
bowl and sprinkle them with chopped
onion, salt, pepper and a layer of cu-
cumbers. Add the rest of the toma-
toes and scuson them in the same man-
ner. Stand the bowl on the ice for
an hour. Then drain off all the liquid
and sprinkle with oil and vineg ir.
A cold fried egg chopped and sea-
soned makes a good sandwich. Chil-
dren like nn oyster sundwich made bv
putting cold stewed oysters between
buttered crackers.
Headache affects adults more than
young or old, nervous and delicate
more than robust, females more than
males, higher classes of society more
than lower, sensitive persons inure j
than obtuse, and those who think ■
much. They are dependent on various
fish.
He is known n* one of tl.e most
skilled anglers and one of the best
tempered of the regular visitors to the
lake, but this experience, though r.< t
new to him, made him use warm words
about the merry bnss of expansive
mw and teasing habits.
Tf he had used a lung shank frog
hook with a lip hook attached to the
top of the shank he would probably
have caught all the bass that struck
nt the bait, but be is opposed to all
kinds of combination hooks and says
that he would rather lose a hundred
bass than break his resolution to
stick to the single hook for all kind#
of fishing.
ONLY A CLASSIC.
The Yount* Man V. lio Vi'ni llpokliilf
I-'nl lalitc netl Him ('liuni on the
Knturc of “Don Huixote.”
JOB WORK WANTED.
Prompt Si.ruice.
SritiLfacti n GdarnnEecd
V. H. M’DONflLD,
Carpenter and Builder.
Old Phone 227 708 N. Evans
A Gar Goad
Of cheap and medium priced
Chamber Suites, odd Dress-
ers, Chiffoniers and Side
boards just received.
or
O. K PERRY.
110 So. Bickford Ave.
Furniture and Undertaking. Embalming a specialty. Calls
answered promptly day and night. Both Phones 68.
The Gilbert farm
3 miles from El
Keno.....I
160 acres fine land
Elegant g r a z i n g
ind magnificent
lake .
M
m
m
w
ii
il
MILLINERY OPENING
Tuesday, Sept. 30
PARIS HATS
FRENCH MILLINERY
You are invited to sec the prettiest things we have
ever brought on.......
DRESS GOODS-THE VERY LA IE VI' KOK
FALL AND WINTER. El' \MINES, BASKET
Z1BOLINE8, NEW WAISTINGS
The finest place in ||§
the territory. As
The conversation turned to summer
reading the other day at a little porch
p^Lof • relau’s ,,ie a dairy farm it can-
Baltimore Snu.
“That reminds me,” the girl in the i
hammock said, “of a conversation J
overlieurd on the York Hoad enr oiu
afternoon la. „ week. ! was sitting
just behind two broad-shouldered
young men. who, judging from their
conversation, were chums and class-
mates either at the (ity college or the
Johns Hopkins. They had been sep-
arated for some weeks, evidently, and
they were so glad to be together again
that they forgot that they were in a
public conveyance, mid discussed their
affairs loud enough for everybody in
the car to hear them.
“From talking over vacation experi-
ences they passed on to what they had
been reading. They talked at let of
‘shop’ about their college work, their
readings in the Latin classics, and
then one of them said that he had been
doing a lot of other old stuff. Among
other books he said he had read ‘Don
Quixote.*
“ ‘Don Quixote?' his chum asked.
•What’s that?*
“ ‘Oh, it’s the story of a man who
was straight on every other subject
but chivalry, and he was plum daffy
on that. The style of the hook is
rather heavy, hut I have been doing so
much of that sort of st tiff this summer
that 1 didn’t mind that. The story
tells how the old fellow hunted tip a
lot of old armor, mid got another fel-
low’ to act as his ’squire, and the two
sallied forth in search of adventures.
The Don saw some windmills in the
distance, and declared they were
giants, and started off to fight them.’’
“‘I saj\’ the chum interrupted; ‘is it
true?’
“ *True!’ the man who had rend‘Don
not be surpassed.
ft
Complete line Gents’ Furnishings.
Harry S. Gundry & Co.
For
further par-
ticulars call at the
Bell
office
entities. „s derangement of the circulnt- 1 ?cUsHo.’'
TIir Jockey Horse Shoeing Shoi
On Choctaw Avenue.
A 11. H'll and G D. Rogers
Scientific and careful horse-
ahoers and wheelwrights.
All work guaranteed.
PRICES ARE REASONABLE
ing system, of the digestive organs, of
the nervous system, etc.
rinm Kfilutl.
Into a glass salad bowl put one-half
pint each of green gages, stoned and
eut in half, bananas, peeled and cut in
slices, and any other fresh fruit that
is at hand. Sprinkle well with pow-
dered sugar, cover and let stand one
hour, then add one wincglasaful of
sirup of preserved cherries, one of
8-85 p til ,emon J"**. and the green gage ker-
7:27 a tu ' "*’*• bla,u,hed and cut in half. Cow r
' again and let stand until required.
Serve with whipped cream and sponge
Angers. The cream und fingers should
not be put on the salad, but should he
served separately.—flood Housekeep-
ing.
Hi. Private Opinion.
"Ah," exclaimed the sentimental
maid, as she sat on the moonlit balcony
in blissful proximity to the man after
her ow n heurt, “how I love the beauti-
ful stars!”
"Yes, of course,” rejoined the mas-
culine portion of the company, whose
thoughts were wandering, "and the
chorus girls air "t to worse, either."—
Chicago Daily News.
POR SALEThe Rock Island Meat Market.
Hemember the ’Phone- No. 204.
NO. 218 SOUTH K. I. (tUeNUe.
BARGAIN
J. A. HATOHBTT
_ ... , . ’T’ . H. O. HHIITTRR,
Res. cor. Woodson st. A Barker ave. Res. brick house 507 S. Darker avs
Phone No 67. Phone No. 205.
DR3. HATCHETT St SHUTTLE
Office cor. Rock Island ave , and Russell str et, over shoe store.
Office Phone No. 66.
Onlij
8 Miles
from
El Reno
An Elegant Farm for
Sale at a BARGAIN.
Enquire at Bell Office.'
111k InopfB*f in ('rrmnllon.
Cremation is one of the oldest forms
of disposal of the dead, yet it is t
form that lapsed from use for cen-
turies. It appears to be in process of
restoration. True, it has made but
little head against the custom of bur-
ial, yet there is an inurea- e every ye^r
in such proportion that we may look |
for a wide adoption of it within the
next quarter century. There are in I
this country but 2«» crematories, yet j
this is against but two 18 years ago. J
and the number of cremations is 2,500
or more a year. When statistics were
have so ceased to be an occasion of
comment that an impression may have j
been created which is contrary to tlm i
fact of growth, but the truth that
about 14,000 incinerations have oc- j
curred in the United States, which, !/\t;
added to the large number in Europe,
certainly indicates an increase.
I)li(rMi«ln v (■Hlt'ly.
Clara—Do you sufl er f rom insomnia?
Alice—Yes; it’s awfully mean to be
kept awake half the night by another
girl having a beaux on the porch next Q&U tiliS
door.—Detroit Free Tress.
JOHN G. WICK.
Just come into Wick’s in blacksmith line;
Our work is the best and very tine
Here at John Wick’s you find every day
No better work in the city we say.
Go unto Wick’s for a job that’s O. K.
Wicks’ is the place for best plow repair;
In here is fine work and prices are fair.
Come unto us if your buggy is sick;
Keep track of the doctor, his name is Wick.
SHOP ON S. CHOCTAW NO. 806.
The Most Direct Route
From either North and South,
to the famous health re-
sort and springs of
POR SALE
SCHOOL LAND LEASE. ONE
THE BEST QUARTEK
SECTIONS' IN IMS COUNTY.
L1
[i
m
Ts Via The
Thi* ■ifnatare l> on every box of the jenam.
Laxative Bromo-Quinine
the ramady that aaraa a aak] la aao day
J. HENSLEY, M. D.
Homeopathic Physician and Surgeon.
Over 30 years in active practice.
Chronic diseases a specialty.
Office and residence. 410 S. Rock Isl-
and avenue. Phone 111.
EL RENO . . . o. T.
• •
Office.
Descriptive literature concerning
this delightful resort fur-
nished upon application to
Passenger Traffic Departmen
FRISCO SYSTEM
St. Louis.
You Know What You Are Tak ng
When you take Grove’s Taste-
less chill Tonic because the form-
ula is plainly printed on every
bottle showing that it is simply
Iron and Uuiriinc in a tasteless
orm. No cure, no pay. 50e.
y
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Simpson, E. J. El Reno Evening Bell. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, October 10, 1902, newspaper, October 10, 1902; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc912711/m1/2/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.