The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 89, Ed. 1 Monday, July 14, 1919 Page: 2 of 4
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1 he Daily Transcript, Nurmaii, Uklahoia*
The Daily Transcript
J. 0. FOX, Editor
published every afternoon except Sunday
hy the Transcript-Enterprise Publishing Co.
J O. FOX - - President
J. J. BURKE - Secretary-Treas.
R. H PARHAM j, - Business Mgr.
EYESORES
Closing Hours
Entrred as second class matter January
if. 1914, at the post-office at Norman, < >kla
Intna, under act of congress of March 3
Office, 215 East Main Street. Telephone
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By mail, one year $3.5i
cv mail, six months 2.IX
By carrier, one week ... .11
wan t ads
FOR SALE: Buick-Six in Root
running order. See Frank Star-
zer at Mcltire's garage. 8!l-3t
WANTED: A cook at Mrs. Elsie
E Walker's, 715 Asp avenue
phons 117. 80-3t*
FOUND—Horse, bridle and sad-
die at the home of -las. M. LittU
Owner can have same by callin ■
at 715 East Gray street, and pay-
in- for this notice and the expense
of caring for horse. 88-2i
FOR SALE: Library table
quarter-sawed oak. good as new,
worth $35.00, yours for $15.00. t'.v
iron bedsteads, both for $15.00.
Must be so'.d Saturday mornin
for these prices • v v ,* **: •
day. 216 North Peters. 8/-1
FOR SALE A threshing machine
separator, Cadillac truck at ;i
bargain, Ford truck at a bargain,
and .i Wisconsin tractor. See J.
P. Dellinger at Orenbaun's hurd
ware. 87 3t.
FOR SALE: Fine Jersey heifer
calf, registered. See G. W. Giles,
30;i East Comanche, or phone 1!)H.
88-3t
There are several firms in this
locality that have been allowed to
run down to such a degree as to
become eyesores; allow l to be
,'rown up to weeds a n n brambles
md the houses and outbuildings
illowed to get into such a dilapi-
lated condition as to give a bad
mpression to the stranger. The
vriter his in mind one very glar-
ng instance, within a mile of the
•ity, right up against the interur-
van and Santa Fe and adjoining
■ne of the main automobile roads.
To have such
mtskirts of tow
veeds, with old dilapidated house
ind outbuildings, especially when
ompared with the fine, well kept
farms surrounding it, gives a
black eye to our boasted progres-
iveness. It is a fine farm and
i-us one of the best kept places in
this vicinity under its former
owner, and the present owner
ought not to allow it to remain in
its present condition.
j body and soul together. We see no
treason why the public should ex-
Saturday A ijfhl1 pect tile merchant to keep open
his place of business, after the
day3 work is done.
The weekly bulletin of the Nor-
man Retailers' association has the
following very pertinent mention
of a matter of- importance, and in
the interest of the clerks we hope
the merchants will get together
and endeavor to remedy the evil.
During this hot weather, and the
coming six weeks or two months,
the stores should close as early on
Saturday night as they do on
other nights. In Oklahoma City
there is a move on to close most
NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that I,
the undersigned. W. D. January,
who on the 25th day of Macrh,
1916, was convicted in the Dis-
trict Court of Cleveland County,
Oklahoma, of the murder of
Milton Keck, in said Cleveland
County, Oklahoma, on the 31st
day of March, 191G, sentencedby
said District Court to serve his
natural lifetime in the State
a place just on the I of tht' ston>s at noon on Saturday. Penitentiary of the State of Okla-
wn overgrown with 'el'laPs that would not be possi- j ]lom8i wjn on {j,e isj (jay 0f'
LIFE IS GiVE AND
TAKE PROPOSITION
Man, Under LVIodern Conditions, Can Live
EnlireSy Unto Himself.
4
EACH DEPENDENT OK OTHERS
Citizen Wsio Does J^Jol Aki Sn Building Up Community
Can SVot Expect To Have Prosperity Himself
Y
ble here, but the clerks and pro ; Augustt 1919> and after 4 weeks,
P".et0™ .a"e ^rtain|y entitledi t0 publication of this notice, make ! &•
the very best consideration that
can be given them. The bulletin
says:
It seems as tho the public do
B. Kimberlin
application to the Governor of the; Stylish and Durable Clothing
FOR SALE: Buick Six—good run-
ing order. See Frank Starzer at
Mclntire's Garage. 8713t
LADIES: Take notice—I will be
permanetnly located in Norman
by the 17th of July, fullj^prepared
t«' !Y ,;ir all makes of Sewing ma-
chines, instruct ;ind guarantee
same Widows not having the
means, -.vil! repair machine- free
Phone 155, Louis K. Walker. 88-2*
FOR SALE: Two Ford trucks;
stake bodies and cabs. Minteer
Motor company. A'-o aseni.- fev
Lee Puncture Proof tires. 86-tf
LOST: Jade and Gold Bracelet—
Tiffany's—between AdminisLra
ti on building and Sooner Shop.
Mrs. E. DeGolyer, Phone 239 8o-3t
I OR SALK -Five horsepower
Senaca in good condition, run
about 3000 miles. See Claud Pick-
ard. 81-tf*
WANTED—A cook at the Pierson
Hotel. 81-tf.
Lusitania Facts
London, July 14.—The Board of
Trade announces that the evidence
Riven secretly at the inquiry into
the sinking of the Lusitania will
be published.
Inquiry into the sinking of the
Lusitania opened in London on
June 15, 1915, at a public hearing.
The first day's session was inter-
rupted in order to permit the
court to take evidence in secret!
regarding certain instructions sent
by wireless to Captain Turner of
t he Lusitania by the admirality. \
This was the only secret testi-
mony taken at the public inquiry,!
'Yhich ended June 17, but a private '
session was held on June 18, at;
which Solicitor General Smith rep- j
resented the Board of Trade and
Butler Aspinall appeared for the j
Cunard company. Captain Turn-
er attended the meeting. What
transpired at this sitting has nev-;
«r been made public.
Pleasant Parly: Abundantly
supplied with "eats" a jolly party
of Normanites went to the Lex-
ington neighborhood on Friday
evening and had a picnic, after-
wards enjoying the delights of the
• M'imming pool. They were Mi wes
lydia Briggs, Grace Bumgarner,
Virginia Smith, Alpha Allen, Lily
Alien, Ola Madden, Ella Smalley
and Messrs. (Hen Morris, Jim Cor-
bett, Bobbie Burns, Carl Alexan-
der and Ernst Helms,
Chamberlain's Colic and Diarrhoea
Remedy.
This medicine always wins the
good opinion if not the praise of
those who use it. Try it when you
have need of such a remedy. Adv.
seems
not do their Saturday evening j ft.om
shopping until very late, not until I
they have taken in the picture j
shows, which is after 10. It seems {
to us that is an imposition not
State of Oklahoma and the par-
don authorities of the State of Ok-
lahoma for a pardon or parole
said conviction and sen-
tence.
Witness my hand this 30th day
of June, 1919.
and Furnishings
For Men and Young Men
EAST MAIN STREET
only on the merchant, but the W. D. January, Defendant.
clerks who are entitled to some \ ' By Williams & Luttrell, Attor-
consideration. If we had a certain neys for said W. D. January.
hour to close on Saturday night,'
business would be as good as usu-; lo-oet j
al, for it takes a certain amount •
of the necessities of life to keen
Vicars & Beaird
FLOUR. FEED AND MEAL
We pay highest prices for poultry
Courteous treatment and
prompt Service. Try us.
320 E. Main. Phone 194
Subscribe for the Transcript.
Visit our Pathe Conservatory.
Hear the
PATI-IE PHONOGRAPH
An instrument which duplicates
the voices and music of the best
artists.
Summer Motoring
1 )on t rely on a cold patch. Vulcanize your
own inner tubes in five minutes with a Shaler Vul-
eanizer. Patches a-nd clamps cost only $1.50 and
work can he done in five minutes.
Common Sense Auto Polish will brioj
gloss on your car and won't catch <lti>t.
out the
Minteer Motor Company
Subscribe for the Tra
! Moistaii
1 lore plac:;
& Meyer
the Round Oak
em of heating be
.our order for lienl
home. Get the il-
I lustrated Moistair hook on home
■ warming.
j and it may save vou much time
Min: er Hardware
Conip:
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
Car Tops u Specialty
•anscript.
G.
Polk
125
« an ■niBBBBIBRBBEBn -j
1
R?r
ar<79.inc
M. R. Carpenter, L. C. Claunch
and E. C. Walls of the McIntosh
school district near Lexington,
were here on Saturday conferring
with County Supt. Clark.
Postmaster and Mrs. Swank,
Mr. and Mrs. John Little and Mrs.
J M. Ventress made an overland
trip to Paoli, Okla., Sunday and
visited relatives. - They say that
the tJirn and cotton looks well all
down the line, but rain is needed
—much more so there than in thi
locality.
Spe
WEDNESDAY
Be sure and notice Rucker's windows for
Special Bargains for This Day
Prom 10 o clock a. m. unti
will sell any customer six yards o
wide for
10 a. m. to 4 p. nr. only.
4 p. in. Wednesday we
bleached muslin 36 in.
$1.00
For
visit the
United Sales Co.
ccopynfffit.)
mere was a time in the world when
i man could do pretty much as ba
pleased. What one man did was of
little concern to anyone else, for it had
little effect on anyone else. Those
days are gone, however, and they
never will return. Today, no man can
live entirely unto himself. Life is a
complicated affair under modern con-
ditions. No one man in any commun-
ity is entirely independent of all others
in that community.
Organized society, in the form of
governments, national, state and local,
have recognized the new conditions |
and have decreed that every man must i
obserfe certain rules in his relations |
with his fellow men. He must not do
certain things that would endanger the \
health of other people in his conitnun- [
Ity. He must not do such things as j
would disturb the peace and quiet of j
his neighborhood. He must remember i
that he owes a duty to his community.
Not Question of Right.
A man may say that he has the right
to spend his money where he pleases; |
that no one can stop him if he wants
to buy his groceries, his clothes and
his furniture in some city miles away
from where he earns the money to pay
for them. He is right. There is no
law to prevent him from doing so, un-
less it is the law of self-preservation.
The man who has the right to send his i
money away to some distant city in- I
stead of spending it at home, also has
the right to send his children to that
city to be educated in the schools, J
which his money helps to support, but ,
he doesn't exercise that right. He w« ... . , ....
sends his children to the local schools, [ Electric ' Motors ' °r r
The Green Frog
Confectionery
For Sodas and Sweets
A .foil line of fresh chocolates
V our patronage solicited and
appreciated
Powell & Madden, Props.
FOR OLD AND NEW
Call in and See
Morgan's Second
Hand Store ^
West Main Street ^
J. A. Mclntire
BAGGAGE TRANSFER
Livery and Garage
Phone 565
West Main Street
When Looking for
UP-TO-TH F-MINU f E
CLOTHING
Come to
Cliff Turner
Clothier
Fleharty & Co.
PLUMBING AND HEATING
All Work Guaranteed
Norman, Okla.
Dodge cars for sale.
Standard Motor
Company
J. L. FOREE, Mgr.
Men's
quality at
Union Suits in P>. V. D. style, regular
$1.00
. 69c
Men's Knit Union Suits, short sleeve*
length, special at
and knee
69c
and
A splendid lot o
$2.00, Wednesda
f men's shirts, valued at $1.25, $1.50
iv at $1.00
Shoe Specials
White Due
Kodak Films developed FREE
Prints 2c to 4c each
Fine photos at one half price
Go to
Brodie's Studio
E. C. Green
For First Class Work
Star Shoe Shop
110 N. Peters
Smith's Book
Store
EVERYTHING TO READ
Edison Phonographs, Victor
Talking Machines and records
REED & FOSTER
Drugs, Wall Paper, Oils, Glass!
Fancy and Toilet Articles
the maintenance of which is made pos- ;
sible by the men who spend their j
money at home.
, „ ,, _ , Li. in any community today is a I
V Tractors' c 31 give-and-take proposition. A man can
\lso good secondhand Reo and not t,,ke evPrythtnK nml give nothi"K '
and get away with it for any great
length of time. He can not take his
living from a community and give
nothing back to help the other fellow
make a living. If he cuts off the other
fellow's living, he is bound eventually
to cut off his own, for unless the other
fellow has money to buy his labor or
his goods he cannot make a living
himself.
You may say that what you buy
doesn't amount to much and the money
that you send away to the mail order
houses In other cities can not hnve any
Over Reed & Fosters drug store 8reut elTect uPon the general business
| conditions in your town. Maybe it
doesn't amount to much and maybe it
won't havi any great effect upon the
community's prosperity In Itself, but
what will be the result if every person
In the community, Or half of them, or
a tenth of them, take the same view
of the matter. Your business, in it-
i self, may not amount to much, but
tnken together with the business of a
hundred others in the community. It
amounts to a great deal. It amounts
to the difference between a prosper-
ous community and a "dead" one. It
j amounts to the difference, in the end,
between good times and bad times for
{ yourself and your own family. If you
lived on a desert Isle, it would make
no difference where you sent your
money, because it would make no dif-
ference whether you had any money at
all or not. But you are not living upon
a desert Isle. You are living In a
| modern community. To do everything |
Ivlmnetonka i-^br. Co. \ possible to build up that community Is ;
Phone 51. C. W. Vaughn, Mgr. j not only a duty which you owe to the j
We have got it, We will | community, but—more Important still
get it, or it is not made. j —it Is a duty which you owe to your-
! self.
, Starters
(icnerators. Machine (work,
forge work and Actylcne We'd-
ing
Norman Machine and
Electric Works
113 So. Peters
For your Hardware, Wagon3,
Buggies, Harness F.-Z fit collar .
New Improved Chevrolet tour-
ing Cars
Nolan & Martin
Automobile Accessories
When you want accessories why
run all over town. We have the
most complete line of accessories
and parts in Norman. We solicit
your business.
Phone 28
Holtzschue Motor
Car Co.
4
For Everything in Styles
Come to
The Leader
MERCANTILE COMPANY
The
First National Bank
Oklahoma
you
Norman,
The Bank where
Feel at Home
We Want Your Business
Women s vvnite i nick rumps,
street wear or house comfort.
Special
Baby Louis heel, for
$2.95
Wr--. Boise Fulkerson and chil-
dren returned home on Saturday
from Denver, where they were vis-
i? fig Mr. and Mrs. M. B. Fulker-
son for a week.
Fred Grover, son of Mr. and
Boise Fulkerson, is quite sick at
his home, 214 East Gray, and his
friends trust he will soon fully re-
cover.
■D.'Viey Gibson returned to Camp
Baird, New Mexico, on Monday to
Continue his servicp in tho
Women's White Canvas Oxfords, military heel, welt
sewed, white ivory heel and sole.
Special price
$4.95
Men's White Oxford, Neolin sole. Just the shoe to
finish out the hot summer months.
Barker Lumber Co.
, Everything in building material.
Phone 241
We Repair All Makes of Cars
Good line of Used cars for sale.!
O. B. Blakney
Manager
When you want a vulcaniznig job
done that will stay vulcanized let
us do it. All we ask is one trial.,
We handle REAL Tires
Klein Tire Co-
230 E. Main
$2.95
Taxes Will Increase.
You have children to educate. You
want your community to have good
schools so that your children may have
the same advantages that the children
In the big city huve. If you live on a
farm you need good roads over which
to haul your products to market. You
may say that you pay your share of
the taxes out of which the school-
houses are built and the ronds con-
structed. Maybe you do pay your share,
In proportion to the value of your
world's goods, but where is the other
fellow to get the monfty to pay his
share of the taxes If, after you pay 1
your taxes, you send the remainder of \
your money to some other community 1
to help build their schools and con- j
struct their roads. The merchants of j
1\/T -p Ficrhpr & any P y a very consider- !
in. r. r lscner ex oon Bble pnrt of lhe taxeg collected ln that
community. Go to the tax books and |
you will find this to be the case. When i
the business of the merchant falls off I
and he carries smuller stocks and has j
less money ln the bank, he pays small- '
er taxes, and as the amount he pays !
ln taxes decreases, the amount you ■
pay must Increase If the schools uro
to be maintained and tho roads kept
up. It may be a man's own business If
he wants to send bis money to help
build up the big cllles where the mall
order houses flourish, but It's poor
business for himself as well as for
everybody else In the community In
which he lives.
Oldest and Largest in Cleveland
County
Great Reduction in Millinery f
We arc offering all trimmed hats
■it greatly reduced prices—all
good, up-to-date goods
124 1-2 East Main Street
M. Z. Anderson
BERREY'S
THE BEST DRY GOODS AND
GROCERIES AT LOWEST
PRICES
Berry's
Sanitary Engineers
Plumbing and Steam Fitting
Estimates furnished on steam
and power plants.
Pneumatic water and acetylene
plants for rural homes.
Truby Photos
ARE THE BEST
Oklahoma Gas &
Electric Co.
LIGHT, HEAT and POWER
Telephone 501
McCALL'S
NORMAN'S GREATEST
STORE
nr and renairing of
your automobile
Or for a good used car come to
Minteer Motor Co.
Norman Music Co.
PIANOS, PLAYER-PIANOS
Direct Factory Representatives
Waltham Piano Company
Manufacturers, Milwaukee, Wis.
O. C. Banks
LIVERY AND BAGGAGE
101 East Main Phone 181
i
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The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 7, No. 89, Ed. 1 Monday, July 14, 1919, newspaper, July 14, 1919; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc114096/m1/2/: accessed May 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.