The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 215, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 5, 1916 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Try it yourself—
if you want personal and positive infor-
mation as to how delightful Prince Albert
really is, smoked in a jimmy pipe or rolled into
the best makin's cigarette you ever set-fiie-to!
For, Prince Albert has a wonderful message
of pipe-peace and makin's peace for every
man. It will revolutionize your smoke ideas
and ideals. The patented process fixes
that—and cuts out bite and parch 1
Copyilifht
0« (he rrora* tide of tkii tidf r#J tin
T«n will read: " Prucew Patented July
30tb. 1907." whirk ha. made three sen
woke pipe* where one tmoknl before I
the national joy smoke
is so friendly to your tongue and t-iste that
it is mighty easy to get acquainted with.
You'll like every pipeful or cigarette better
than the last because it is so cool and
fragrant and long-buming. You'll just sit
back and ponder why you have kept away
from such joy'us smokings for so long a time I
Men, we tell you Prince Albert is all we claim
for it. You'll understand just how different
our patented process makes Prince Albert
quick as you smoke it!
Buy Prince Albert everywhere tobacco it toldt in
toppy red bagt, 5c; tidy red tine. 10c; handeom«
pound and half pound tin humidore and in pound
cryttal- ulaee humidore with *ponge-rnai.itvner top
thai heep the tobacco in euch prime condition.
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C.
THE WAY OF THE WOULD
EVENING CHAT
By Ruth Cameron
eeeeee+eeeeeeeee*
The Daily Transcript
J. J. BURKE, Editor and Owner
THEODORE ROOSEVELT
RESOLUTIONS OF SYMPATHY
Oyster Day, April 3—Rapid changes) Resolutions of sympathy
are expected to take place in the po- spect, adopted by Norman Lodge No.
Entered as second-class matter litical situation in the coming fort- .'i8, A. F. & A. M.
and
'"Unary 17, 1914, at the Poitoffice at night. These developments probably Whereas, Death has again entered
1 "Ufati. Oklahoma, under the Act of will reveal other Republican leaders our lodge and removed from our midst
•larch 3, 1879. following in Senator Root's footsteps Brother James R. Holland.
in making peace with Colonel Roose-
tfail Subscriptions, year $2.60 ve|t
Mail Subscriptions, 6 month. ... 1.261 u' is feit that because Senator Koo„,
Mail Subscriptions, 1 month .25 j who stands out as the dominant lead-
By Carrier, per annum 2.00 ,.r 0f the Republican party, has seen
7 !Irir5'•J>er wec^ -,zr—j— fit to shake the hand of the colonel and
Issued Daily except Thursdays and
GIRLS* GLEE CLUB
Sundays.
We recognize that the Supreme
Grand Master of the universe in his
infinite wisdom doeth all things well,
and we bov# in humble submission to
His will. While we mourn the loss of
our beloved brother, we know thatl c, . e~77~- v i
call matters square, others in the par- there must be justice in the Master's j e- ?tC . nncesa a le"
tv who rank below Mr. Root in leader- call and console the craft with the as- :'en" °\ aP,an'T!n. son? wi*! , f PJ'f"
ship will fall in behind him and do the urance that Masons who have done ;s£nf 1 1? University pl.r;s,, ^.e
same thing-. It is predicted that the t he will of the Grand Master -f^i_ ' Olub, under the direction oi Metta a..
coming week will be a busy one at j lowing the teachings upon
Sagmore Hill, and the prospect of G. |Trestl ~
irs. Walter Ferguson:
The more one sues of politics and
public life, the more one is apt to
feci that the whole thing is a hope-
less inuodle and can never be improv-
ed. Where the men do the work alone,' DOES IT PAY?
lit seeiiiS that crookedness is the rule Does it pay, in a material way i!
and net the exception, and where the mean, in dollars and cents and mate-
I women have been allowed to join in, rial advantage, to be honest and
• and g*ve their assistance things are square?
| not a whit better. However, there is How often one hears people answer
1 usually made a distinction without a that in the negative, with the cheap!
difference. Where ever the women are cynicism which thinks it's clever to
(allowed the vote, more seems to be ex- see no good in human nature I
jpected of public service, and whenever We all know that it pays in some-'
;a woman chances to show signs of | tiling bigger and more real than even
graft there is made a terrible bulla- dollars and cents. But take the mate-
baloo. Recently the city of Chicago rial side of the proposition. Dm not
has been rent asunder by a public so sure that it doesn't pay in the long
scandal wherein a woman official was run. Are you0 •
accused as chief culprit. The thin/ i We were speaking the other day of
made a tremendous stir, not so much 1 buying a piece of furniture. Someone
we verily believe, because of the mentioned having seen some good-
wrong supposed to have been done but looking pieces at a certain store
because a woman had perpetrated it. "yes,'r aid the buyer doubtfully"
\s a matter of fact the public press "but I think I'll go to X—'s. We may
; so used to recording grafting stunts have to pay a little more, but they're
pulled off by the men, that the thing, so square, they stand back of anything
has become poor reading; it is no un- thev sell. I'd feel safer there "
common thing for a man to try to pull Did it pay that shop to stand back
down a big bunch of money while he is 0f what it sold or not'
in public service and it is generally Judging from that and similar tes-
i nuerstood that that is the way 111 timony that I have heard, I should
vhich a good many of the politicians say it did.
get by with their big expense ac- And I think it pays individuals just
''lints. The fact that the majority u( „s surely to have their names stand
them, both in big and little political for square dealing
'laces have an inside track which they I once had dealings with a woman
cover to get extra change does not who handled a real estate busines<
seem to stir up the public wrath very with an intelligence office on the sid/
much. It is just looked upon as the ] applied to her for a maid, telling her
usual thing and unless the theft be-i just the number in the family and
comes too apparent, or a man happen- what I could pay. The three'maids
to have an enemy in power who wants rt,e sent me had all been told by her
to ruin him, he goes merrily on his that I would pay more and that'there
way looked up to and respected as an v.t.s a smaller number in the family.
stute politician and a well beloved |t was plainly her policy to do any-
nublic servant, and no one hinders thing to get the business.
him. When however, a woman shows Later I was asked by a friend what
symptoms of becoming on a narrow o,.ent she had best emiilov in buying a
scale what the man is on a big one, ho'ise. 1 thought of this woman, but
,ve have lectures galore and numerous remembering my experience with her
learned papers on women as a detn- Hid not feei that I could recommend
ment to politics. her. I did not feel that she would let
And politics is not the only phase of dependable. So my friend went else-
life where more is expected of women where an,| what the woman gained by i
than of men. It is that way in every- placing a maid was as nothing to what ———
thing. A man commits a murder and the sale of the house mv friend ulti-
the thing does not startle; a woman j mately bought would have netted her. CPTTlPTlt 1/1/VYp1^
commits a like crime and the world A woman told me this experience vWIWIU * I U1 I\
holds its breath. A man deserts his once: "I've just had something hap-\ ral!, . , ,
wife and children, and it calls for only , nc„, to me that has made me feel that Get U done by exPerienced work-
si comment; a woman deserts her hus-i it's worth while to try to be square. mc"'
band and children and the hands of the There was a time when I was on the Buttress wall and caps, steps, pier
community are raised in horror. A verge of doubting it. I've always paid caP3. columns, coping of all kinds
man elopes with a chorus girl and the mv bills and been ultra-scrupulous walks. basement floors, window sill,
matter is passed over lightly; a wo- about obligations of any sort, and ai,d cap, door sills, retaining walls
man elopes with the bare back circus sometimes when I've seen people who e,c- Coping for cemetary lots a spec
rider and the earth groans over the didn't, and found how well they got 'alt>'
affair. A man can have sixteen llligit-' along, I wondered . But yesterday Figure with me before you let your
imate children by a negro woman and [ had a letter from a woman, telling I contract.
me that she had suggested my name
to a friend of hers as one who might
like to join in a co-operative house- I
keeping plan. It is just the kind ofi
thing I've always wanted to do and,
it would help me out this winter, but
whul pleased me most was what she
said in the letter. Here it ig: 4I told
Mi. . R that I couldn't promise
The Home Plate
"But insist upon"
Purity
&f>e fee Cream. Supreme
\
Copyrighted 19'5, The B.S.Co lnc.,N.Y.
NORMAN CREAMERS COMPANY
LINERS
t only calls for smiles behind the
hands; a woman elopes with a negro
man and the nations gasps in horror
and groans in despair, over fallen
womanhood. Why does the nation ex-
more of its women than it does of
its men, more goodness, more faith-
f lness. more charitableness, more
'ing-s"ffering, more uprightness and
more faith ?
by fol Club, under the ti
the teachings upon life's I LeK1?r. atAth®,on Wednesday
. Hoard while traveling upon "cmng Apnl 5. This will he one of
O. P. pilgrimages up the winding road, iiis broad level of time, building up aM' 0 eac|mg musical events of the sea-
• ' ' 1 spiritual character, a temple not made Pon- an<l wel1 staged. lhe eos"
to the colonel's home would not be sur- spiritua
prising. Today the colonel remained with hands, eternal and ennobling,
since his return this lodge below to the supreme lodge
i. |above, where they may enjoy eternal
Recent visitors have come away felicity amid the splendor and glory of
AL JENNINGS, EVANGELIST
A1 J. Jennings, formerly an outlaw,
hut now an evangelist, will go on the
road in a few weeks with a complete
nuu!?several iVigagemen\shto holTre-' I" !ieclV,si?n' J1 w,a/ thp fi!9t day he have been transferred by death from
vivals. One or two meetings will be tL Woalm!neJLaS
held in the summer months and real p , Indies.
tour will not begin until September l. L Roce"t visitors have come away | Jelicity anno tne spie
Giles Farris, formerly state printer; from SaK mor? convinced that the Temple on High.
•in Oklahoma, will go with Jennings as many the interpretations placed Resolved, lhat we deeply
general manaeer and advance airent nf uPon the Root-Bacon-Lodge-Roosevelt the loss of our departed brother, and
the "crew" He has 'ilso "beaten back" 'unc^eon al'e erroneous. The theory extend to his family and relatives our
like Jennings, having been impeached th,at the motive of the meeting was sincere sympathy, and would direct
when he was state printer I interest in .Justice Hughes s nomma- them to Him who alone can console in
Ed McConnell of Duncan, Okla., will!tion 'a Fcout.e'l unlikely. The feel- these sad hours of bereavement,
conduct the music for the Jennings;'!]? ,h<7e ls that ,l 18 Preposterous to Resolved, That our charter be drap-
team. McConnell has been doing that ihlnlf f?.r "moment that any concern
line of work for a number of years l{?r(J,ustlc® Hughes was manifested at
and is experienced. He has signed a I th?t ,unche?n an.d lhat Co,onel ?00,s,e-
contract to conduct the music at the'Vrelt. 18 ,n0' .f01n? to support Mr.
Jennings meetings for one year.: Hughes but is going^to lend hif.sup-
There will be a number of others with •the campaign for preparedness,
Jennings before the start is made in!- mi" °tner words, is Roosevelt-
September ism. The colonel is hi* own candidate,
Jennings is said to give the prefer1,3 £ew that prevails here, and
ence to those who, like himself, have'Just'ce Hughes is too much of the Wel-
come back from wild careers, far frpm' fon r'l1,'.'., ,has been called a whis-
the class of work in which they Willi „ Wilson. , , ...
now engage. He must be convinced, .Roosevelt's growing strength and the suit in stock that you want we will
however, that thev are sincere in tlW cS,n{,T°" ca(UB^ the burying of make it for you. We have the Famous
professions of religion. Jennings still tlie hatchet at the Root-Roosevelt Universal Tailoring line and guaran-
• — -• jeuner is believed to be im- tee to fit and please^ or mone^ refund-
J. 0. Shead
Hatch One Button Union Suit#
• n Th< L'rHr iim Clothinr Co.
—Mrs. H. H. Stephens arrived to-
thiit you'd get along together, but one flay from Vernon, Texas, called by the
thing I could promise, and that was serious illness of her father, Mr. J. S. fh_ Tl. , , .onfl K9.. .
that you would be absolutely scrupu- Adair, who is very sick with chronic son, the Tians.-r Man, phone 52.3 or&
lojo about all financial obligations.' liver troubles complicated with other PARM FOR RENT:
STRAY PONY: If you've noticed «i
stray pony in your neighborhood,
notify Wm. Clifton, phone 277.
IFOR. RENT: Eight-room modern
i house in University part of town.
' Phone 23.
| HELP WANTED: Women ar4H girls
. wanting work, call at once. Norman
Steam Laundry. 3t
FOR QUICK SERVICE, good team«
and careful drivers, see J. L. Ham*
Tli s thing couldn't have come my way ailments. He has been ailing for
if . he hadn't known I was square. It couple of weeks, and it is feared he
makes me feel that after all people cannot recover.
do notice and care."
mourn
ed for a period of thirty days, a cony
of these resolutions sent his family
and a copy spread on our minutes, a
page of which shall be set aside for
that purpose. Fraternally,
ROBERT L. MORTER,
LEWIS S. SALTER,
EVON M. BARBER, Jr.
Committee.
—Suits, Suits, Suits! If we haven't
tnines will be gorgeously Japanese
Admission by student ticket. Single
admission, fifty cents.
—We have just received our new
line of underwear for spring—'lhe
Hatch One Button Union Suit. No
buttons to come off, no buttons to
press against the body. The Ephraim
Clothing Uo.
—Mrs. W. H. McCall, one of Nor-
man's oldest and best respected ladies,
is very low at her home near the M.
E. Church, South, and her children
have been sent for.
—Miss Alta Whitwell, daughter of
Rev. and Mrs. E. O. Whitwell, who
graduated as nurse from the Univer-
sity Hospital in Oklahoma City a
ouple of weeks ago, left today for
It is a pleasant feeling, isn't it, the
kind that makes your heart grow
warmer within you and the sunshine
look brighter.
Things like this do not very oftei.
come to the surface, but I think there
f re more of them under the surface
than most of us realize.
Courage, comrade, you who are
bravely trying to keep your bills paid
and all your dealings s^uar£—yo^
cannot fail to win respect and that re-
snect may even now be bearing fruit
that shall be valuable to you.—(Pro-
tected by The Adams Newspaper Ser-
vice.)
QUAKER MEDITATIONS
From the Philadelphia Record.
Love that feeds on beauty alone
will soon starve to death.
The money th^t is the root of all
°vil belongs to other people.
The people with more money than
•>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ «❖♦♦♦♦♦
9 «
♦ PROF. E. L. HOWARD <
♦ .Teacher of Music and Dealer in *
♦ Pianos and Organs G
♦ No. 412 East Comanche ♦
Phone 414 Norman, Okla. •
♦
160 acre farm, '
miles east of Noble; 100 acres of
pasture, 60 acres of farm land. Ren
price $100.00 for 1916. J. W. Linton
Owner.
WHITE PLYMOt l'H ROCK ROOST-
ERS fer S'.OO each. Call phone 214,
or at Turn E. Smith's Hereford ranch.
—During his stay here Uncle Tom
Antrim is the ?rue:st of Geo. Bowen and
ether old friends, who are showing
him a good time.
LOANS
Plenty of money to loan on good real estate ar.d to
Our monthly payment on $1,000.00 is only
$15.30 PER MONTH
We also have straight and private money at ; v r*'..
107 *\ast Main Street
VINCENT & WEIR
claims.Okinhntirt ritv'no i,;, v™„ petite de ieuner is believi
end will remain here when he is not! prePs.infr Republicans all over the ed. The Ephrr im Clothing Company
on the road. There are many here who I °°J)ntry with the inevitableness of the
still -toubt his sincerity and he intends I??1?"'1.8 T\ar,t.In thf coming campaign.
to remain, he says, until he has con- U ,a ?'80 believed to be an efficacious
vinced all those who douot. At a re-
Knid, Okla., where she will be head brains naturally have more dollars
nurse in one of that city s hospitals. than sense.
She is regarded as one of the most ef-
ficient nurses graduated from the Uni-
versity institution.
r^nt lecture here the church was filled
to hear Jennings and thousands who
could not get in were turned Tiway.
—J. M. Hockenberry made a visit
to the vicinity of Walker thiR morn-
method of scaring off the followers of
Just'ce Hughes. The opinion is ex-
pressed that the colonel is beating
Mr. Haghes to the nomination.
—Dr. Katherine Harris was down
from Oklahoma City this morning on
a professional visit. She still retains j
a good practice here.
THE APPLE ANOMALY
Announcements
ity supt
| intendent of the schools of Cleveland
| county, was in Oklahoma City, Mon-
day, on business before the state de-
t Although the European war has partment of education.—Oklahoman.
greatly reduced the export of Ameri-
can apples, the reduction for last year —Judge Rutherford Brett, of the
Icing a full million barrels, this big supreme court commission, has been
falling off in the demand for Ameri- ,|Ujte m ttt his home in this city for a
an apples hasn t reduced their price week or two past with a complication
No, indeed, of ailments, but is reported on the
FOR COUNTY JUDGE to American consumers.
I am a candidate for renomination n"d notwithstanding the fact that i oac| to recovery,
for the office of County Judge, sub- : here is a condition of affairs which
ject to the decision of the Democrats i might be expected to work out that
voters at the primary in August. 1!I16
B. F. WOLF.
FOR STATE SENATOR
I am a candidate for the nomination
for State Senator of this district
^Cleveland, McClain and Garvin coun
ties) subject to the decision of the
Democratic voters at the August
191fi. primaries. JEP KNIGHT.
Wynnewood, Okla., March 7,
r> * f. • i —Mr. Milton Frederick Meyer, him-
way. But where prices are concerned self a basel>all player of 110 re.
in this country, the European war te an(j wearer of the coveted base-
works only in the direction of main- ..0;. is nn oklahoma City visitor
taming or increasing them, or, at (.oday. He expects to see Tyrus Cobb
least, the war is given credit for ao cavoVt in the cpenter Karden.J
WATCHFUL WAITING
—Rev. and Mrs. F. M. Alexander
left today for Carbondale, 111., called
On a certain street in this good old by news °f the death of Mrs. 0. J.
ioi« itown dwells a perfectly lovely young Rude, Mrs. Alexanders sister. They
! ladv. On another street lives an in- expect to be absent^ two^ or three
rlnatrimiH vminir mnn nf eTcellent weeks. Hie pulpit of the Presbyterian
! Character, while in still another sec- <.'hu,'®h bowever.be supplied dur-
' tior there abides a consecrated minis- "1^,? Alexanders absence. Friends
?0ft Nf>W 1 ftr R^inlfC ter of the gospel, who is ever ready 'be ,™uPje w!" earnestly sympa-
4UU lltw WUUKS,to do all the good he can and make ,hise with them in their hour of sor-
happy all the people he can. Let us row-
watch, wait and listen and see if some-
thing happens soon in which all three —Mr. and Mrs. Herman Schulze ar-
tako part. None of our business. ; rived from Big Stone City, Minn., this [
morning, and after a few days visit
—Rev. and Mrs. M. L. Butler had with Mrs. E. O. Schulze, Herman's
as their week-end guests, Mrs. E. C. mother, will go to Camden, Ark.,
Popular Novels and Detective
Stories; Boy's Books and Love
Stories.
Many new titles by famous
authors.
Carter's Nickel Store
Lael of Wynnewood, Mrs. RalDh Elli- where they expect to reside perma-
son of Okm iltree. and Miss Genevieve rently. Mr Schulze has been in the
Turnhnm of Fort Smith, Ark. Mrs. mercantile businen, but will- engage
Ellison, who is a daughter of Rev and fai n ing t Camden, where he and
Mrs. Butler( will remain several days, his father have quite a body of land.
DEATH
In Spoiled Milk
Much sickness—many of the
fatal ills such as typhoid, lurk in
milk and other food in hot
weather.
Food spoils quickly under
heat. A good refrigerator,
therefore, is not only an econom-
ical investment as a food pre-
server—it is an absolute neces-
sity as a health safe-guard.
You've been putting off buy-
A Refrigerator
Saves
ing a refrigerator because you
though the price too high.
But listen!
An Automatic refrigerator
pays for itself within a season
or two.
Just cast up the cost of food
that spoiled for you last year
and see if you can afford not to
own a refrigerator—a good one.
I. M. Jackson
Many \ girl has an idea she can't
' e rs nrettv as a picture unless she
'«• painted.
It s 't *}-p fellow who shoots off his
no Y thrt keeps the ammunition fac-
tories busy.
Size doesn't always count. A puny
I little dentist can take the nerve out
, of his biggest patient.
Will—"Scribbler calls himself a
mar of letters." Wag—"That's right
II held his I. O. U."
Don't give way to despair. If some-1
one takes the shine off you, there are —-
plenty of bootblacks.
You never can tell. The fellow who
wears the loudest clothes doesn't al-
ways make the most noise in the
world.
Tommy—"Pop, every State has its
capital, hasn't it?" Tommy's Pap—
""Yes, my son; except sometimes the
j state of matrimony.
I "Alas! there are no birds in last
j year's nests," sighed the poet. "Well.
• thank goodness, there are no last
year's hats," replied the poet's wife. I
TCTRN^DO AND HAIL
Season is Here
Insure growing crops against hail and all property against
tornado with
A- McDanie
PHONE 23
I —Charlie Carter, of Carter's Nickel
j .Store, is here from Shawnee seeing
how Roy is getting along. He is
much pleased with the xeellent busi-
ness done by the store, which is get-
I ting a steadily increasing patronage
on its real merits. It certainly has a
fine stock of desirable goods in notions
and novelties, and one at which you
should take a look.
! —L. J. Edwards and Dr. J. W.
Scroggs left on the 9:50 train this
morning for Purcell to meet the citi-
zens of that town and talk to them
about civic improvement. Mr. Will H.
Clark of Oklahoma City also went
down. The Purcell folks are very en-
thnsiastic and declare they'll make the
Norman parks look like "thirty cents"
in comparison with theirs before they
get through.
Si
TEAM AND AUTO LIVERY
O. C. BANKS, Proprietor
Best of service at reasonable rates either with
teams or automobile.
Phone 481 No. 114 N. Crawford
PLANTS, VINES, SHRUBS,
BULBS and ROSES
YOU WILL FIND A GOOD VARIETY ADAPTED TO
THIS LOCALITY AT
Levy Green House
567 WEST MAIN—PHONE 178
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Burke, J. J. The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 215, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 5, 1916, newspaper, April 5, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc113187/m1/4/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Communications+-+Newspapers%22: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.