The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 205, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 17, 1921 Page: 3 of 4
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' • * "
—
Helen Allen
Editor
Society
Phone
491-R
inninnnaDD^iifflifmwuiumumunsiunanwnnninTuaittmiuBiiiiwuuHMiuuuanuni?
A favorite recipe for chocolate
cake a little different, but easy to
make:
CHOCOLATE CAKE.
1-2 cup of chocolate.
2;3 cup of water.
1 teaspoon of soda.
Put in a pan and let dissolve. Then
set aside to cool.
Cream together 1-2 cup of butter.
2 cups sugar.
Yolks of 2 eggs.
Pinch of salt.
Add 1 cup of clabber milk.
3 level cups of flour.
Then add the chocolate.
Lastly, add the stiffly beaten
whites of the two eggs.
Bake in a moderate oven.
CAROMEL ICING.
2 cups of brown sugar.
1-2 cup sweet milk.
Boll together until it makes a soft
ball in cold water.
Remove from fire and add 1 tea-
spoon of vanilla and 1 tablespoon of
butter. Beat until the right consist-
ency to spread.
ness the ceremony. The bride's fath
er, Mr. J. C. Fowler of Meiia, Texas,
was here for the wedding.
• • • *
The attractive home of Mrs. Earl
Morris was beautifully decorated in
Xmas ideas and potted poinsettas
today when she entertained the teacn
ers of Central school at a 1 o'clock
luncheon of beautiful appointments
Centering each small table were sil-
ver candlesticks containing red can-
dles which cast a pretty light over
cut m
BATTERY PRICES
Price reductions ranging from 15
to 33 percent, and bringing storage
battery prices to the lowest point in
years are announced by the Prest-
O-Lite Company, through The Serv-
ice Repair Shop, their local repre
sentatives in El Reno, Okla.
Millions of dollars will be saved
to the motorists of America throug..
this price revision, for the amount
of money spent on storage batteries
Is now second only to tires in the
automobile accessory field.
This is the third reduction tht.
Prest-O-Lite Company has mad*
In your flight! Let's travel slower a ' ,N THE DISTRICT COURT
while for tonight! We are so weary STATE OF OKLAHOMA,
of automobiles, tooting and skidding 1 Canadian County,
and grazing our heels. Give us a I VERD1E COCHRAN, Plaintiff,
horse and a buggy once more, such as
we used In those dear days of yore,
says the San Francisco Chronicle.
Let's amble onward with never a fear
that there wiiy be something to get
out of gear! No punctured tires or
THOS. COCHRAN, Defendant.
No. 6014.
State of Oklahoma to Thos. Cochran
Defendant:
Said defendant Thos Cochran will
place for your winter home.
very reasonable. It will be to your ]
Interest to call and see us.—Kerfoot
Hotel. tf
FOR RENT -
rooms, modern,
land.
spark plugs tu watch; never a throttle i take notice that he has been sued In
the rooms. Xmas suggestions were J within a year, and is the greatest re-
carried out in the delicious 5 course , auction ever made in the history of
luncheon served and the places were the company. A 6-volt battery for
marked wtlh clever place cards sug-. Fords and other light cars, for in-
gestive of the holiday season. As-1 stance, can now be bought (in ex
sisting Mrs. Morris was her motherj change for an old battery) for $19.90
Mrs. J. Q. Gardner and Mrs. Ethanj This identical battery would have
Ashley. Guests were Misses Etta cost $36,00 a year ago and $24.00 in
Dale, Anna Fltigerald, Ethel Cautley,
Nina Maye Britt, Hawthorne, Hilda
Dean, Alma Hoffman, Sara Scott,
Ruth Hayes, Dunn, Hope Wallace,
Fails, Luella Thorpe and Mrs. Ed
Goad.
• • • •
Mrs. Hagen and daughters Henry-
etta and Bernice formerly of El
Reno but for the past few years of
Okla. City, passed through here on
Thursday evening on their way to
Los Angeles, where they will make
their home.
Little Miss Inez Vaughn who has
been confined to her home with a
light attack of diptheria, Is much im-
proved today. About 20 of her little
schoolmates gave her a little shower
yesterday which she enjoyed and ap
predated.
• r • t
Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Loy Jr. and son
Bobby and Mr. R. L. Loy Sr. are
spending today in Okla City.
Mrs. Charlie Todd and daughtei
Thelma of Calumet are the week end
guests of Mrs. Todd's mother Mrs
Jas. Longmier.
• • • •
Mrs. J. L. Ainsworth and son John
are spending the week end in Chick-
asha.
• • • •
The Oriole club will meet tonight
with Miss Helen Flannigan.
• • • •
Mrs. Paul Liebmann and baby
have gone to Purcell to Bpend the
holidays with her parents. Mr. Lieb
mann will join them the later part
of this week.
• • • •
Mr. R. L. Loy Sr. of Stillwater Is
the guest of his son R. L. Loy Jr. and
family for several days.
El Reno chapter of the D. A. R.
held their regular meeting yesterday
at the Carnegie library. The lesson
on "The Judicial Branch of the Con-
stitution" was ably led by Mrs. C. R
Miller. After a pleasant afternoon,
adjournment was taken until the
regular January meeting.
The American Cafe will start Mon
day, Dec. 12, servi g meals for 35
osntg.
He
A Christmas seal extends greeting
of health.
Buy tuberculosis Christmas seals.
READ THE WANT ADS
HJEADACHJ3 Cause*
ky ths strain can be
talisvai with glassnf
v« It ujai u
HENRY BEHNE
OPTOMETRIST
201 South Eoclr Island Avenue
1917.
A 12-volt battery for Dodge and
Franklin can now be bought for
$32.30 (trade-in-price), against $41.30
yesterday, and $53.10 a year ago, et-
fecting a saving of $21.80 in one
short year to the car owner. Pro
portionate prices hold on all other
types.
Prest-O-Lite's announcement creat
ed more than a little excitement
along automobile row. Over a period
of years this company has usually
taken the lead in price revision, but
nothing like the present drastic cuts
were expected.
"Furthermore I have the assurance
from my company," said Mr. Levi
Richardson, manager of the local
Prest-O-Lite station at El Reno, "that
quality will not be lowered with the
new prices. In fact, Prest-O-Lite
batteries are better today than ever
before. That is proven by the way
they are holding up in service right
here in the city. There have been
various 'special' batteries offeree
during the past few months at cut
prices, but this is a bona fide reduc-
tion of the entire line of one of th
best known standard battery manu
facturers. I should say that it is a
big step toward normal in the bat
tery business."
to lei out a notch; not any danger of
our pitlent steed breaking the limit
of law as to speed. We needn't listen
for fear of a smash; we needn't worry
there may come a crash. But with our
sweetheart right there by our side,
over the smooth country highway we'd
glide. Hang up the ribbons and use
either arm, hugging our girlie with no
thought of harm. Give us a horse and
n buggy, I say, such as we used In our
grand-daddy's day. We are too fond
of this hustle and rush; we are too
prone to get caught in a crush. Let's
travel slower^—we can't live but once;
what Is the dense of these fool auto
stunts? Too many Joyriders out rais-
ing hob, anxious to give the grave-dig-
ger a Job! Backward, turn backward
—let's travel more slow, for why In
Sam Hill are we hurrying so?
A gas expert recently predicted that
In 20 years American cities will be
smokeless nnd sootless. The cost of
smoke and soot In modern cities Is not
fully realized. The Mellon institute
reports that from 600 to 2,000 tons of
soot to the square mile fall In Pitts-
burgh every year. It Is estimated that
the smoke nuisance costs Chicago $50,-
000,000 annually. The damage smoke
does to household furnishings, cur-
tains, draperies, wall paper and paint
is lamented by housewives. It Is not
generally realized that soot and smoke
do great damage to stone structures,
says the Chicago Tribune. The most
serious damage suffered from smoke,
however, is that done to the health and
spirit of the people. The gas and elec-
tric age Is here. Why wait 20 years to
make cities smokeless when they
should be made so now?
the above named Court for divorce
upon the grounds of non-support and
cruelty and must answer the petition
filed therein by said plaintiff on oi
before the 12th day of January, A. D.
1922, or said petition will be taken as
true, and a judgment for said plain-
tiff in said action for divorce will be
rendered accordingly.
Dated this 1st day of December.
1921.
VERDIE COCHRAN,
J. N. ROBERSON,
Attorney for Plaintiff
Attest:
FRANK TAYLOR,
District Clerk.
Parents Bring Your Children
to
DR. ELIZABETH HARVEY
CHIROPRACTOR
Those afflicted from birth—
those afflicted from infantil
paralysis and spinal meningitis
Special attention given to such
cases.—Examination Free
Office over El Reno State Bk
Phone 461
FOR RENT
Nine room modern rooming house,
lose in; possession at once. You'll
have to act quick. 21c
WATTSON-HATCH CO.
hone 171. Box 813
BOARD AND ROOM
BOARD and room for two girls or
omen; reasonable price. Phono
1344-R. 19p
Mrs. J. B. Sullivan of Okla. City i
spent yesterday with her sister Mrs
E. E. Sharpe.
A pretty wedding which took place
this afternoon at the Episcopal
church was that of Miss Clara Fowl ;
er, daughter of Mr. and Uri. J. C j
Fowler, to Mr. P. E. Welsh of Kan )
sas City. The impressive ring cere-
mony was used. Rev. Gardner offi-
ciating. The bride looked charming !
in her spring frock of brown tafeta j
with accessories to match, and she'
carried a beautiful shower bouquet ot J
Lilies of the Valley and roses of Ki-
larney. The happy couple left im-
mediately for Kansas City where
they will make their home. Mr
Welsh is employed by the Santa Fql
railroad in Kansas City. Only im-j
mediate friends were present to wit
SANTA CI.AUS is
of the opinion that
electrical gifts are
real sensible offer-
ings. Whether it is
a reading lamp for
father or a vacuum cleaner
for mother it is a sensible
expression of affection.
Electrical Fixtures, Electric Sewing
Machines, Electric Washing Machines,
-4 and Pressure Cookers make ideal
| Christmas gifts for the home. Electric
Percolators, trills, Toasters, and the
ilJ^| numerous electric appliances on dis-
'* ■ plav in our shop are practical and sea-
sonable gifts.
griff's Electric Shop
ELECTRICAL SUPPLIE
PHONE 450 113 E.WOODSON ST.
The name his father gave him was
burned away in the battle flre. We*
are christening him anew from the
font of immortality, says Leslie's
Weekly. He who fell In the dark val-
ley Is borne through the portaiu of his
home amid the weeping of mnny moth-
ers, the saluting of comrades, the
booming of cannon—beloved because
he was lost, renowned because he Is
unknown. His unwritten story Is now
a deathless legend. President and
pickaninny, ambassadors and famed
heroes, bend above his grave In kin-
dred gratitude. He may have been the
darling of genius. He may have been
the humblest of tollers. But, however
he may have lived, he died as an Amer
lean, and he died well.
NEW TIN SHOP
All Kinds of Tin, Sheet Iron
and Furnace Work
C. M. BRIGGS
Time $1.00 per hour and
Material
510 West Jackson Street
Phone 1286J
J)
m
&CNO, OK^
HUMREN0
(SUPER MILLED)
FLOUR
FOR EVERY BAKING
PURPOSE
IT'S MADE THAT WAY
El Reno Mill & Elevator Company
The board of trustees of the Obi#
State university has authorized the es-
tablishment within the college of agri-
culture of the plant Institute of the
Ohio State university. All members of
the staff of the college Interested H
plant studies may be members, and aU
graduate students doing their major
work with plants are associate mem-
bers. The Institute will conduct a
seminary, review the work of Its
graduate students and encourage re-
search. The departments of the col-
lege chiefly concerned are: Botany,
horticulture, farm crops, agricultural
chemistry, and soils.
—Orders Executed in—
10 Bales and Upward
COTTON
Ask for FREE Booklet
'How to Trade in Cotton'
and Daily Cotton Letter.
J. D. SUGARMAN&CO.
Sugarman Bldg.
19 Beaver St. New York
Light housekeeping
221 North Rock Is-
17p
FOK SALE
THE INGERSOLL GROVES
FLORIDA'S
FINEST ORANGE GROVE
. DEVELOPMENT
Fifteen thousand acres among the
beautiful hills of Lake county, di-
vided Into ten acre units; plants, car
d for and delivered in five years.
Developed according to an ideal oi
Charlos II. Ingersoll, of watch fame,
and shared with those who plan for
the future and will use their present
earnings and thrift to own a produc-
ing grove and home when ready to
nine south. Send for descriptive
booklet which tells a truthful,
thought-compelling story and shows
how you can see at no expense to
yourself. W. II II. Hecht, 204 Wain
wright Bldg., St. Louis, Mo. 17p
FOR SALE—Drop head sewing ma-
chine. good as new, $10.00. Phone
993-R. 17p
FOR SALE—At a bargain, Dodge
touring car. See Raymond Higgins.
Phone 93. 18-17c
FOR SALE $100 mahogany Victrola
with 40 records, $50. Phone WM53.
17p
Democrat Want Ads Bring Results.
FOR SALE Orass bed, new twin
beds, oak dresser with French plate
mirror. Phone WM53. 17p
CHICHESTER S PILLS
W THIS DIAMOND llltAM,. A
FOR SALE
Two building sites on West S'de,
bargain; one building site in Fair Ad-
dition, $200. 21c
WATTSON-HATCH CO.
Phone 171. Box 818
PERSONAL
LADIES, when Irregular or suppress-
ed use Triumph Pills; safe and de
oendable in all proper eases, not
Medical Institute. Milwaukee, Wis.
•iold at drug stores; do not experi-
ment. Write for "Relief" and par-
irnlars. it's free Address National
Medical Institute. Milwaukee Wis
!>iaSSoni iikanu rn.i *,
yean k nown as Dest, S fc*t. AUiyskHIn
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS IVERYWHLKE
READ and USE the WANT ADS
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With LOCAL APPLICATIONS, ai tiny
cannot reach th* seat of the disease.
Catarrh is a local Jiieast. jreatly In-
fluenced by constitutional conditions, and
In ordei to cure it you must take an
internal remedy. Ha'l's Catarrh Medi-
cine is taken internally and acts thru
the blood n the mucous surfaces of the
system Hall's Catarrh Medicine was
prescribed by cne of the best physicians
In this country for years. It is com-
posed of some of the best tonics known,
. ■ ■ 111 l. 111 a U I'M Si.il.* "f '•-! ♦! bf'bt '!"< .3
purifiers. The perfect^ combination of
GET
papm
MARRIED
published,
Host
free
Correspondent, Toledo, Ohio.
matrimonial
for stainr?
17i>'
Count de Poret and Camllle la Farfc*
fought a duel with swords and pistols
in Paris, and the cable says the count, ,
in tears, gave up the combat because : Injr^t.
of n wound in his arm. French duels results in catarrhal conditions Send for
j .. testimonials, free ,
are quite as unhazardous as they were v ( rupwy •> re ^r >Toledo. O.
when Mark Twain described them, the | p<ii« r.v -onMloo'lon.
apparent Idea of the principals being
not to destroy Ufe, but to make It
eternal.
There are more than 18,000,000 for-
eign-born persons In the United States,
and among them are hundreds of
thousands who understand democracy
and love It better than do many fami-
lies that, after having lived here for
fenerations, have now gone to seed.
A good many people will get back
their normal measure of content only
when they reacquire the knowledge
that In this climate a man cannot live
the lazy life of the South sea lslandsr
with any degree of comfort.
CLASSIFIED
wants
In one of those question aC^ answer
columns occurs the Inquiry: "What
makes the sky bluer Being obliged
to look down on the earth would seem
to be a pretty good guess.
The pickle packers say that it Is a
national duty for every Inhabitant of
the United States to eat at least one
pickle every other week. Pickles for
patriots I
POSITIONS WANTED
WANTED—Washing. Mrs. M. E.
Jackson, 403 E. London. lst-tfc
LIVE agents wanted to bundle city
'rade for the genuine Watkins Pro
lucts. A real opportunity; write to-
'lay for fr> e sample and particulars
J. It. Watkins Co., I)ep' 71, Winona.
Minn. 24p
AGENTS WANTED One man or
woman in every town to take orders
for stylish tailor made skirts, spare
or full time; new proposition; big
commissions; we deliver and collect.
Act now. Write quick. Fabrics
Mfg. Co., 32 Cusack Bldg., Dayton,
Ohio. 17p
I MALE HELD WANTED
MEN wanted to qualify for firemen,
lirakemen, experience unnecessary;
transportation furnished. Write W.
| IS.*, s I.ou 2lp
MEN wanted for detective work, ex-
perience unnecessary Write J. Ga-
nor, former government detective,
Si. Louis. 24p
WANTED -Patch work ot all kinds
roofs repaired, paperlianging, paint
ing; priced right. Phone 1395-R.
m-wf to 24tn
FOR RENT
FOR RENT Furnished light house
keeping rooms. Havilan Apartment
SALEMEN
SALESMAN, main or side line, with
car preferred, calling on dealers; low
price 8.000 mtle tire, price sella
them, quality gets repeat orders, big
commission off< : '1 Harrison Tiro
Factories, Hammond, lnd. 17p
WANTED Sab-man on commission
15-tfc | to establish new dealers for tested
— j first ' lass propostion sold on lon^
light housekeeping I credit. W M. C Box Sim, Water-
oo Iowa. 17P
FOR RENT
rooms, one front sleeping room,
Smith's tin shop Inquire tin shop.
30t fc
WANTED
Russia would brook no Interferences
In Its Internal affairs, but food Is not
construed us an Internal affair.
J
: The Industrial medium now most
needed Is one that can make ghosts
walk.
1 TOR RENT Furnished light house- | MEN and women guaranteed $75.00
I keeping apartment. 521 N. Choc weekly for three raincoat orders
I taw. Phone 1377 J. xxx daily; commission; spare time; sanl-
pics furnished; experience unneces-
FOR RENT—Large well ventilated sary We dolly r and collect. B.
steam heated rooms, einglo or en Field Mfg. Co Mt Vernon, N, \.
Buite; bath on each floor. Just the
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Maher, T. W. The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 205, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 17, 1921, newspaper, December 17, 1921; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc91452/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.