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C HICK A S H A DAILY E XPRESS, CHICKASHA 0 K L A H 0 ' ; A C'LL '1 C.-F! 1 " - ( " - f in. VJ ft r t r to-V ca i L .......i lu-e-J Yea don't think that a a , r ftinpc rnnnr nsrr es down the street with out any. And Kood clothes are as noticeable as the absence of not any. Clothes bought here eont no more than clothes made for a store f 1 1 J mmy-ar.d every suit is guaranteed to be just as it I should or you do not cave to take it. Monroe-Vance . Tailoring Co. Gleaning and Pressing m H Under New Management I The Speake Cafe The Cleanest and I?est Flace in Town for Gocd Things to Eat MEA1.S . . . Roy Largent, Prop. HO Chickasha Ave. 4 FhunelOOS. 119 N. 3rd St. unp.i ETai"! Wall Paper, Paints, Oils and Glass. Fine Varnishes, Brushes, Etc. Estimates furnished on all kinds of work. Big Reduction on all Wall Paper WF, (II VK TRADING STAMPS 15c A fine assortment of high gi&Je Pictures just re ceived. Only 15c Dunlaps 421 Chickasha Ave. W. R. PARAHORE CONTRACTOR Pninting and Papethanging l'hon705 25c 1 ! ;JA' - -v.- O-f-' T,ii!i ' '" ;ff& 1 ' "T IWhatFtny f hildren Need More Food- -How to Make Them Heartily. Eat More food, better blood, those are t.h. two things t tt u t pule, delicate chil dren iift'il most. "But they won't nt," ays the an x i'mt mother. Vi s they will If you give them our delicious tonic, Vinol. It's the. greatest thing we ever saw to (rente an appetite. It make the blornl rich, too -builds up weak chil di"n land grown folks a well! and makes them strong and rosy. Mrs. V. O. Strothcr of Raleigh, N. C. says: "My little girl, Hazel, has been taking Vinol to build tier up after a pev. xe spell of dlckness. It ha.-t done r'i much ffi'nl by restoring her appe tite and building up her utreiiKth that I think Vinol in the finest tonic ever 1 rcp.red and I am telling everyone iibout It." Children like to take Vinol. the taste 1.4 so pleasant, it ii not a ?.troiii medicine and there is not one harm ful thing In it. We will (Uve I'sek ur money if Vinol disappoint you. Pu'are !nn; Swire, thickaHha, Ok In. Tramp Not Wholly Loit A tramp nuailng a tide on a train Jumped tiff as it paaaed a burning ho tel, roused the eleepltitf lodgers and, t! reiiua work done, regtlited bin place on the bumper before the train left the yard. A jn?tty full volume of comment on American human, na ture In contained in the brief report of the Incident. Mother Goose Ceogreg3tiooal Cfcorch, Tuesday Evening. Earcb 19 CHARACTERS Vollier Coosp Mrs. A. S. (iruy Siv Youns .Maids of free I.e!i,i Walfnrd. Vera llulcom'i, It ;'- lloiid. Krancen Hopkins, Mollie tli ay, Imki '.uthrie 1,'ttle Hoy Itiue Spencer Uarefoot Ol 1 Man in Leather I!,, Peep X, Mufiet tiirl wi;h Curl Peter and Wife Old Woman in Shoe Simple Simon NewMiauer Man N( wspaiK-r I'.oy Clyde Holcomb Jack ami Jill Milo Wilbur, C.ermule Wiseman Tenuity Tucker Robert Hopkins Jolly Miller Cilbert Hrock Tot fy, the Welshman Roy Itzen Tom, the Pijier's Son Leslie llollingswonh otii Mother Huhliard Isabel Waiford Maiden All Forlorn Viola Sinister Old Woman Who Went to Market Jessie tirown Maid and Hoy , Hora Mcllae, Wade Guthrie J..ck Sinat and Wife Harold Strkim, Lorcta Brown K'ne dYta Joe Brutier Little Hachelor William McDat'.iels .Tacky Homer lcorge Waiford Mother of l'.ahy Dunlins Ruby MeDauiels Mii-trcss Mary Sadie Ryan ' Souk or N'ickles Inez Tidwell Old Woman iu I'.aket Hniel S'rohm Three Fiddlers Johnny (.reKS. Wade (intlirie, Clyde Holcomb House that Jack Built Klla Jiyan, Itlauche Rishel, Uuhy Hill, Nellie ltemiett. May Ilnmer, .Mamie Klsner, Johnny tires;;:. La verre ltrown, Lucile HolliiiKS worth., Harry Holcnmb. MUSICAL Pii.no Solo March of the Flower Cirls Piano Solo- King Cole March, from Solo-Over Field and Meadow Cherus Shepherd Song Chorus Speed Away Chorus Forward Chorus-Columbia Aci uiiipanihl Harding in Brooklyn Eagls AT THE; PLAY HOUSES ORPHEUM THEATER. "Ttio ltitlint; Passion." a powerful th i' ma. ".Songs of Our Childhood Days," :i (,rat piclure for the children. "KluMve Koblier," comedy. "Kmperor's I.unch," a picture show ing an incident In the Vf( of NaiH)leon The biHKest and le-' siiow in town PRICES 10 AND 15 CENTS. KOZY THEATRE. "The Story of Psyche," a K'lod l'athe pk t lire. "Leaves of liomance," one of thoie Ktlir.on films. Ilhislrated song, "When lo We tin Kiom Here." I.eroy daily. AdinlMtiou : I!et (show in town for the money. Shopping Up to Data. "Xo, none of these hats suggest my personality at all. You see, I'm a great racegoer, adore drama, read classics In tbe original, sympathise with the womau'g movement, travel a good ileal, and am Intensely temperamental. The bat 1 want must convey ail this." and Missions I .aw son Hopkins Jopephlne Johnson , Mary Lee Johnson I'rati'Ts Kry Raymond and Myrtle List lela Hopkins ""yd Cilkey Peatty Julien NUMBERS Boyd flilkey ti-c House that Jack Built Josephine Johnson Junior Choir - Junior Choir Junior Choir Junior Choir Ethel C. Cray Will Meet a Saving ol $53,090,099 a Year for Consumers Washington, March 18. Tariff re vision will continue to occupy both bouses of congress this week. When ; tins house passes the excise Income ; tax bill on Tuesday and submits u woolen schedule revision to the Demo c:atic caucus possibly by the end of the week, the revision program there wll! have been ended. j The Democratic revision measures I art- piling up in the senate. The l'l- I nance committee's adverse report on the house iron and steel bill will be made this week. Chairman Penrose j and his Republican colleagues will rr.fke an elaborate statement of their , atlltude on the revision hills. The finance committee will hear Chairman Emery of the tariff board on Tuesday on the house chemical h'rriff bill, hearings on which prob ably will occupy the week. Hearings on the house free sugar bill will fol low the chemical bill. 1 Meantime the Democrats and pro gressive Republicans are no nearer an understanding, though some of them express confidence that the talked of common ground might be reached on sr. me tariff legislation. (By Clyde H. Tavenner.) Washington, March 18. Will !' be possib'e to transfer the $.".:?,fMi,tHi0 su gar tax from the breakfast table to the shoulders of the wealthy? Are the people sufficiently in control to ac rcmplish this end? These questions are being asked everywhere. The status of tao situa tion is this: The Democratic house, in keeping with its premise to reduce the cost of living, will at this session pass a bill reepealing $r:i,uM,Ono annual tax on sugar, reducing the price of this com modity to the consumer nearly two cents a iKiund. Then another bill will b passed taxing incomes in excess of The bills will ge to a Republican sei:ate. If the progressive Republi cans vote with the Democrats, both bills will pass the upper body. The fate of the two measures will then rest with the president. If Mr. Tsft accepts the advice of those about him,, who were described by the late Senator Doliiver as being "men who ki.ow exactly what they want," he will veto the bill. Protectionists oppose an income tax for two reasons: 1. They are rich as a class and like other human have no desire to pay more than necessary. 2. Protectionists know that if this coun try gets into the habit of raising reve nue by taxing wealth instead of the j things the people must have in order i o live, the tariff will be reduced on j those commodities in which they now i have mouojjoiiea. It the ;arift trusts, j si ch as the steel trust, the sue'ar ! trust and the woolen trust, are not al-1 lowed to dictate what the people iiui.-t pay for their products, the enorm us dividends they are now drawing liown Ol stock that is watered until it is soggy, will be interfered with. There- ! lire protectionists fear an Income lax j as they would a plague. i The greatest Importance of the Dem- I octatic program providing for the sub- stitute of a tax on incomes above $.",-! UOO for the tax on sugar, is that it ' breaks away from the tradition that! tiie government's expenses must be paid wholly with funds derived from j tax on tilings ttie people eat, wear, or use, to be collected through cus toms houses and internal revenue sf tices. This tradition is responsible for wi nlth not bearing its just proportion o the burden of federal taxation in this country. It Is the same tradition which lias been responsible for so r.any tariff outrages through so many years. Regardlless of whether the bill is vetoed by President Taft, theretis little question that the lemocrats will have opened the way for its enactment when some other man is president of the I'll i ted States. When Walls Are Damp. The walls of cupboards an1 are often damp on wet or sultry days without apparent reason when other sections of the kitchen wall will be comparatively dry. The best device for any wall that Is inclined to "damp" Is to niRke it Impervious to moisture by applying a varnish of one part shellac' and two parts naphtha. Bring tome clean wnite rigs to tht Express office at once. Highest cash prlca piid. dtf. Th Store of Quality BUYS HOLMES GROCERY STORE T. 5. Duffey of Walters, Okla., took jiossesoion of the A. A. Holmes gro very store today. Mr. Duffey li'is pnr cl.ased the stock of goods a:'d wiii Oe tho manager and owner of the con cern. He is an experienced grocer and expects to conduct a clean, up-to-date and conservative business. Mr. Duffey expects to move his fatn ilv to Chickasha next month. He h:is stu-ra! children, who will enfr the I ublUi schools here. WOMEN AVIATOR HAS CLOSE CALL Sbreveport. La.. Maixh IS. Miss .Mutiido Muisj-ani, si.tit r of the late Jc hn 11. Moissant, narrowly escaped !'ir brother's fate here Sunday, when in alighting after an exhibition fliulii her monoplane strut k tin' ground at too steep an agle. Miss Moissant fell a few feet just before the body of the ni; chine crashed down. She was pull ed from the wreckage, unhurt. The iron wire supporters at the top held the heavy inoior off the ground and but for this she would prrbably l.r.ve been crushed to death.. The front vreels of the monoplane were broken, the right wing crumbled into a mass oi wroK;ige aid ipos, ol Hie wires i yere ''ripped. Tile rpMC h-.p Mi-JS Moissant stepper! for wrecked flyer uninjured. :u the REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Compiled by the Grady Ctunt Abstract Company, 103 North Third Street. Oren S. Penney to Annie L. Penney, 3-7-12. $4.i"): W 1-2 SIC: r.sn; SW SW N K : 2" SW N'W XV; XW SW XW; 2."i XK XW SK: W 1-2 W 1-2 SK; A. H. Truelilood ami wife to P-n F. Ih'ket and Hugh linker, 15-14-1 2, ; X 1 .: x k ::4 w 12 xw xw, ;::,-iu-7, William P. Ungues and wife to John I, Dawson, II tl-12, J'i.iinii ; lot ; 2;, n of lot 2, block pit. Chickasha. . f ' ' i ' ' r 1 r u ' A Q ' ' : ' ' ':" J f S-Z-i. , i .. .'V'...., in .vi I j,. ... , i, ...I ,i 73 1 iff 7!? Have You Bought an Electric Flat Iron? It will save you many footsteps and many weary minutes at lha ironing board. It is inexpensive to buy and op erate. It is simple, convenient, and perfectly safe. It is not a luxury, but a convenience anda labor-saver, as prac tical as a frying-pan and as useful as a carving knife. All the best Flat Irons have the heat ing element guaranteed from burn-out from TWO TO FIVE YEARS. Chlckoslia Light, 317 Chickasha Ave. Ingenious Old Sea Clock. The most popular lurni of old sea clock was the smidgl. ss, which, great- I ly resembled tbe p. eeent day egg I boiler. Many of tht-ie glasses wera timed to run 24 hours, and prior to tbe ship leaving land the ;;lass was set ex actly at noon. If U was carefully watched and turned as soon as th sand ran down the fckipper could reckon, the days with fair accuracy. ART EXHIBIT AND LECTURE AT THE CIRLS' COLLEGE. There will be an exhibition of the F.lson prints In the tiirl' college halls March 21-22. This collection com prises splendid copies of the great works of art in architecture, sculp ture and painting. Hours. Tlmsilay, March 21.it, .'1 p. m. to p. m. Friday, March 22nd, 4 p. m. to 5: HO p m. Friday, 8 p. m., lecture, "The Im portance of Art." Miss Ada Kohiti- I sou, Oklahoma Cilv. 1 Tickets admitting lo the Ihren en ti'i'tainment : Adulls, 2"i cents; chil then, iu cents. Read question isn't a question, if you buy at the Eayle 170 I. Jj 1 I i fi 1 11 M I If you're undecid ed, uncertain, make it a point to see our line. Its9 an Easy Solution n lOSSfVI ISP " S , 4- Thft Store of Quality y M Heat fiiiul Phone 100. (First published March fl, 1!H2.) NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR PARDON. Chickasha, Okla., Maar. a, 1!)12. .. Notice is hereby given thaf or plication for pardon has been applied for for M. Davis, convicted of the crime of larceny 011 December ICi'n, 15! !, before trie Justice elon 11 ot Kiimi Springs, tiraily Counly, Oklahoma, and all objections thereto should be for warded to Lee Cruce, Croverncr. W. li. RICH AHDSO.N, 3 3 30d Att irney. O. R. C. DANCE AT EL RENO. The annua! dano. of the Order ct Railway Conductors will he beid a !;! Reiw, on Monday night, March celebrating St. Patrick's day. Hum phrey's Chickasha orchestra wiii fur nisU the music, A special train will lei've Chickasha at. 7:25 l. m., reinm ing after the dance. Tickets for fN dance are on sale at I'l-own-nVj a'vt tlui Hub 'loth!ug s'oee. .The Uy.. heprt to have all their Che Iu friends w'.'.h t.hem. uu,