The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 264, Ed. 1 Monday, June 4, 1917 Page: 3 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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE NORMAN DAILY TRANSCRIPT
CLOTHING
4^
L0UI5<J05EPIi
VANCE
AUTHORO/'THELONC
WOLF," "THC BRASS
BOWL,"ETC.
COPYHICMT or LOUIS JOSEPH VAMCf
7
LUCY CARTERET ADMITS THAT SHE IS LYDIA CRAVENS
AND THAT HER FATHER DOESN'T KNOW SHE IS GO-
ING TO AMERICA TO LIVE WITH HIM
A well-bred young Englishwoman, nervous and suspicious, finds
when she boards the steamer Alsatla, bound from Liverpool to New
York, that her stateroom mate Is Mrs. Amelia Beggarstaff, a fascinat-
ing, wealthy American widow of sixty years. The girl Introduces her-
self as Lucy Carteret and explains that she Is going to make her home
with her father in America. Something about the girl's behavior puz-
zles the widow, and she is much surprised to find that Lucy owns a
magniflcerit necklace which had bgen stolen from a museum collection
some time previously, and Informs her friend, Mr. Quoin, a private
detective. Lucy, dressing in the dark In her stateroom, hears a mys-
terious conversation between men Just outside her window and recog-
nizes one of them.
CHAPTER 111—Continued.
Two minutes iater the stewardess,
hastening to answer a series of Impa-
tient rings from B75, found that state-
room bright with light and tenanted
by a pale but animated young woman
frantically struggling into a haphazard
selection of garments, with the evi-
dent intention of making immediate
appearance In public.
"Wlnant, do you think you could
find me a passenger list?"
"Oh, surely, miss."
"I want very much to see one.
Please fetch it at once."
Gravely Wlnant shrugged and went
her way, shrewdly guessing close to
the cause of the passenger's excite-
ment. "Some sweet'art, likely," she
reflected with the Indulgent pity of a
self-supporting married woman not
obliged to live continuously with her
husband. "Found out some'ow 'e's
on board, w'lch she wasn't expectln'."
So Instead of summoning the ship's
doctor to pass upon the advisability of
allowing the convalescent to go on
deck, Wlnant serenely carried out her
Instructions, returning to find Miss
Carteret all dressed save for hooks
and shoebuttons.
"You've been in since I went to sleep
this afternoon, Wlnant?" the girl de-
manded as Wlnant entered.
"Yes, miss, tidyin' up a bit."
"You didn't notice a brooch any-
where—on top this chest of drawers?"
"A cameo brooch? Yes, miss, I did,
and left It w'ere I saw It."
"Really? But it^ not there now.
What can have become of It? Oh, Is
that the passenger list?"
In her excitement, almost snatching
from Wlnant's grasp the printed list
of first-cabin passengers, the girl
promptly forgot the missing brooch.
"You're sure, miss," the stewardess
pursued, first examining the chest and
then kneeling to paw the carpet be-
neath It, "you're sure you didn't by
any chawnse knock It off while dress-
In'?"
"What?" the girl murmured abstract-
edly, her gaze racing down the dense
columns of small type.
"The brooch, miss—"
"Oh, bother that! It's surely some-
where about. I'll find It later. Oh,
Wlnant I" she broke off with a cry of
delight. "It Is true I I knew I couldn't
be mistaken! He Is on the ship I"
Iler trembling forefinger Indicated
midway down the column headed "C"
the entry, "Craven, Thaddeus—New
York."
"The gentleman as you're engyged
to, miss?" Winant hazarded Imperson-
ally; and having noted the name
stepped behind the girl to hook up her
frock.
"Engaged to? Oh, no, Wlnant I"
The girl laughed. "How absurd! Why,
he's my father!"
"Mr. Craven, miss? But I thought
as 'ow your nime was Carteret, miss."
"Oh!" the girl gasped In transient
dismay. Then she laughed. "To be
sure, that Is the name I sailed under.
But my real name's Lydla Craven—not
Lucy Carteret at all. You see, I didn't
want—well—somebody In England—to
know I was sailing."
"Your father, miss?" W'lnant hazard-
ed dispassionately, kneeling again to
attend to the girl's shoes.
"No; someone else. I—I didn't
know my father was in England, you
see," Craven's daughter faltered In a
first faint chill of doubt. "He—he
must have made a hurried trip on busi-
ness—he's a very busy man—and didn't
have time to notify me. But that," her
spirits dictated on the rebound, "only
makes It more strange and wonder-
ful—that we should meet this way!
He will be surprised."
"I warrant!" Wlnant commented
■vifth an ambiguity lost upon Lydla,
who accepted the response as one of
simple concurrence, whereas the wom-
an at her feet was hiding an Ironic
smile.
In point of fact, this Tad Craven of
Mrs. Beggarstaff's acquaintance was a
conspicuous figure among transatlan-
tic travelers, one who crossed fre-
quently, and, lacking any other title to
notoriety, would have made himself
remembered by his lavish tips. More-
over, Wlnant read American as well as
English newspapers, and knew a vast
deal more about Craven than that man
would have cared to credit—who,
when all's said, wasn't lightly to be
termed a man of retiring disposition.
Thus the discovery that he had a
daughter (and why not a wife living,
as well?) was one tremendously titil-
lating; for trade in gossip about nota-
bilities goes on as briskly between
decks on fashionable Atlantic steam-
ships as below stairs In fashionable
homes on either side of the water.
But Craven's daughter, forgetful of
the serving woman, sat with eyes se-
rene In a face radiant with the glow
of happiness In her heart. Never
doubt troubled her ardent anticipa-
tions. That ominous note which had
been sounded in the brief conversation
outside her window was now forgot-
ten—at worst could not have shaken
her faith In his loving kindness. That
was something always to be counted
upon, something that had never
failed her. And If his attitude of late
might have seemed Inconsistent with
truly sympathetic affection, Lydla
knew better: her father had not so
much opposed her wishes as he had
underestimated the sincerity of her
mutiny against the rule of Agnes Hicks-
Lorrimer.
How could It be otherwise, with a
gap of five long years In their associa-
tion, five years of separation, change
and growth?
His thought aroused appreciation of
the great changes time had wrought:
so great that It wasn't difficult to fancy
Craven falling to recognize his daugh-
ter, whose memory with him must be
that of a hobbledehoy of fifteen, long-
legged and awkward, with perpetually
freckled snub nose, mouth too wide,
and eyes too large for her thin face,
and her hair in plaits—two wrist-thick
cables of It falling below her waist,
carroty red, and bound with broad but-
terfly bows of stiff blue ribbon.
Mrs. Hicks-Lorrlmer's Idea, that of
the butterfly bows—the final touch of
ignominy! T ydla dated her hatred of
the woman from the hour when she
had been compelled to submit to those
unspeakable decorations.
But today—Lydla smiled tenderly.
No; Craven wouldn't know his girl—
not until she told him—unless, to be
sure, she had grown somewhat to re-
semble her mother, who had been a fa-
mous beauty—or so Mrs. Grummle of
the Bloomsbury lodgings had asser-
vated—and so Craven himself, under
pressure of persistent questioning, had
once admitted.
Wlnant, rising from her knees, dis-
pelled reverie. "Is that all, Miss Cra-
not going to tell me you've found out
your father Is on board?"
"How in the name of wonder did you
guess?"
"I didn't guess—I knew," the Dragon
retorted, sententiously. "I know every-
thing, including my own mind : my mid-
dle nnine is Omniscience. Remember
that, next time you tto keep Amelia
Beggarstuff in the dark. You're Lydla
Craven, and your father's Thaddeus
Craven—Tad Craven to me and—"
"You know him? You know my fa-
ther, Mrs. Beggarstaff? You dearl"
With a grim smile, the Dowager
Dragon submitted to a spontaneous em-
brace, then gently fended off the agi-
tated girl. "There!" she growled with
an attempt at acerbity not wholly suc-
cessful. "Save your kisses for your
dad I I dare say you've played the
deuce with my complexion, and as for
my wig," (this while readjusting that
disarranged adornment) "If you can't
keep your own hair on for Joy, you
might at least be good enough to let
mine roost where It belongs!"
"But—I don't care!" Lydla retorted
with gay defiance. "You know my fa-
ther, and I've a perfect right to kiss
you for that, If I want to. Tell me how
long you have known him, and how
long you've known I was his daughter,
and what made you begin to suspect,
and—"
"In pity's name!" the Dowager Dra-
gon interrupted, covering her ears.
"One question at a time. Be still, and
I'll tell you."
But here, to her open relief, the
stewardess knocked and entered, with
the effect of rendering Lydla oblivious
to all else.
"Yes, Wlnant? You've found him?
Where?"
"One of the stewards tells me, miss,
'e's Just seen Mr. Craven abaft the
deck'ouse on the main deck, astern."
"Thank you so much, Wlnant. Good-
by, Mrs. Beggarstaff!"
Snatching up wrap and scarf, Lydla
was off In a breath.
Those she left behind eyed one an-
other oddly—the Dowager Dragon with
a twinkling look of Inquiry: the stew-
ardess with discreetly tightened Upj
and half-lowered lids that, hinting at
mysteries unutterable, were a plain
provocation to any competent cate-
chlst
And the face of Mrs. Beggarstaff
grew bright with the light of battle.
CHAPTER IV.
Lydla stepped over the high sill of
a doorway to open air upon the main
deck abaft the superstructure and
gained the shadow of the deckhouse
wherein the rudder engine clanked and
groaned. When she came to the open
space between the deckhouse and the
taffrall the moon slipped from behind
a cloud, drenching the ship with ghost-
HOME
TOWN
HELPS
SOME BIRDS ARE NEGLECTED
Familiar Robin and Friendly Chicka-
dee Almost Forgotten by the Bird-
house Builder*.
In the last five years we have heard
and read a good deal about blrdhouse
building. Bluebird, wn-n and martin
ought now to be well provided for by
all bird lovers. Other birds have also
been mentioned along with the box
nesting idea, as the flicker and the
crested fly catcher, though these fel-
lows undoubtedly much prefer natural
holes in trees, which the woodpeckel
generally makes for himself aud th4
fly-catcher selects with great care.
There are exceptions, of course; flick-
ers have been known to select holei
previously excavated and even those
made by man, and we have had the
crested fly-eatcher take up quar-
ters In a deserted bluebird box of hol-
low-limb appearance thut was nulled to
the trunk of a tree.
Some birds, however, have been al-
most forgotten and one of these is our
old, familiar, friendly robin, while an-
other is less familiar, but not less
friendly, the cheery chickadee.
Robins ge*\erally build their nests in
vines, on densely-follaged tree limbs,
often In more exposed places, some-
(times on porch pillar top or roof beam.
Hut If they are offered a rather open
and roofed box set on a pole and
M1TIFY
GROUND
6y L.C.Carbztt
cArrange trees, shrubs and herbaceous plants about the yard
so that they will improve appearance of place::Take Nature
as safest guide for really graceful arrangement— s
Lydla smiled brilliantly. "That's
right," she affirmed with decision. "Let
me be Miss Craven from now on. Do
you think you could find my father for
me, Wlnant?"
"Oh, surely, miss." Wlnant preserved
a straight face. "Would you wish me
to send 'Im to you 'ere?"
"Oh, no. I merely want to know
where to look for him. But to send
him here to find me—why—don't you
see?—that would spoil it all!"
"Quite so, miss. I won't be a min-
ute."
To Lydla, waiting with eyes shin-
ing and lips tremulous with anticipa-
tion, entered unexpectedly her Dowager
Dragon; and entering, for the first and
only time In their association betrayed
no signs of some slight embarrassment
and bewilderment.
"Heaven help our home!" Mrs. Beg-
garstaff cried, thunderstruck. "Where
are you going, child?"
"On deck, probably," Lydla Informed
her with a twinkle of mischief.
"But—my blessed income—"
"Dear Mrs. Beggarstaff," Lydla In-
terposed Impulsively, "I must tell you,
something has happened—something so
wonderful and delightful that I verily
believe It would have got me out of bed
had I been at the point of death!"
Poh!" exclaimed the Dowager
Dragon Impatiently. Surprise faded In
her eyes, and was replaced by some-
thing strangely like disappointment.
With a quick movement she closed the
door and sat down on her bed. "Non-
sense!" she added with unaccountable
irritation, looking the excited young
woman up and down. "My dear, you'M
A House for the Chickadee.
shielded from cats they are very apt tc
set up housekeeping therein. The ideal
robin box is merely a floor with cleats,
two opposite sides and a gabled roof,
two sides, therefore, being open, and
this set on a pole from ten to twenty
feet in air will tempt the birds most
purely. Dimensions Inside should be
about 10 by 10 by 6 Inches.
DIRTY STREETS AND GERMS
Diseases of the Respiratory Organi
Are Directly Attributable to Un-
washed Pavements.
Read any metropolitan paper on Sun-
day and note the tabulated causes of
deaths during the preceding week. Dis-
eases of the respiratory organs lead
all the rest. To a city engineer the sig-
nificance of this fact should be ap-
parent. Grip, colds In general, pneu-
monia, tuberculosis and all the respira-
tory diseases have their origin In
germs. These germs, for the most
part, come from expectorated matter
that falls upon streets, there to dry
and be blown about with the dust that
every gust of wind or motorcar sends
upon Its deadly Journey, says a writer
In Engineering and Contracting.
To apply water effectively in clean-
Lydla Stood Rooted in Incredulous Em-
barrassment.
ly radiance, and she stopped short. In
no other public part of the vessel could
one—or two—have found greater i
privacy.
Two, at least, seemed to have i
thought of thuu In that fan-shaped ,
space behind the deckhouse, close by i
the singing meter of the log, Craven
stood with Mrs. Merrilees in his arms. ,nS Pavements, it is essential that the
Wholly unaware thut they were not ' surface be smooth and well crowned,
alone, these two clung to each other, | Thls condition is not perfectly fulfilled
lips sealing lips In the ecstasy of a long i In 10 Per c*nt of the streets In Amer-
and passionate embrace, moveless save *ca' a 8n^e guess, aud It is not even
as they yielded to the motion of the | approximately fulfilled in 30 per cent
ship. I ot the streets. In brief, more than
Lydla stood rooted in Incredulous ! two-thirds of the streets In American j
embarrassment. In that pitiless wash cities noed resurfacing If a marked re-1
ductlon in respiratory diseases is to be i
effected. This does not mean, of course
A ■ 'X HE first essential In the
* 1^ adornment of a home area
Is the formation of a suit-
able plan. In making this !
plan the principal things
to be considered are the
size of thQ area, the
amount which the owner
feels able to expend for
the purpose, the climatic
conditions, the soil, the exposure, the
peculiarities of the site, and the style
of treatment, whether formal or uat-
ural.
Small places, consisting of an acre
or less, situated among others of like
dimensions, can only be appropriately
Improved in u formal style. On the
other hand, large suburban places or
country seats should, In order to main-
tain unity and harmony with their
surroundings, be treated In the natural
style. It is impossible to develop a
forest, a park, or even a grove on an
area less than an acre in extent; and
It Is equally Impossible to maintain
fountains, terraces, sheared trees,
hedges and carpet bedding over an
area of several acres. Hence the two
general styles of landscape gardening
have been developed. One of these
may be adopted, or both may be com-
bined to suit the circumstances.
Before a tree or shrub is placed In
Its permanent location an outline map
of the area to be treated should be
made. This map should locate all ex-
isting structures, indicating the direc-
tion In which most pleasing outlooks
are to be had, and also the contour of
the ground to be beautified. The aim
should be to hide by means of trees
and shrubbery all objectionable build-
ings or portions of the place and also
to shut from view all unsightly ob-
jects maintained by neighbors; to lo-
cate the trees and shrubs so as to al-
low an uninterrupted line of vision
where the outlook is pleasing; and to
locate the plantings on large estates
as to afford the greatest protection
from winds and undesirable surround-
ings consistent with good landscape
effect.
A variety of trees and shrubs should
be used. The plan to be adopted and
the selection of varieties must always
depend more or less on local condl-
IWG*
The Same Yard Shown In Fig. 1, Showing the Pleasing Effect After.
perfect lawn is one of the rarest pos-
sessions of either public or private es-
tablishments. A good lawn demands
great skill and Judgment In Its mak-
ing as well as In Its maintenance. The
difficulties of lawn-making become
more accentuated as the heavy clays
and clay loams of the North and West
are replaced by the light, sandy soils
of the South. The superb Kentucky
bluegrass, which produces such per-
fect lawns in regions with heavy soils
and abundant rainfall, must be sup-
plemented by white clover as the soils
become light and sandy, and finally, as
southern latitudes are reached, both
these must be replaced by Bermuda
grass or by St. Augustine grass.
In the South, however, lawns can
only be successfully made from turf or
from rootstocks. The grasses which
succeed in the North and are there
comparatively easily grown from seed
are uot successful in the South.
Grasses which develop underground
sterns nre most successful under south-
ern conditions.
In general trees should stand either
as single specimens In isolated posl-
n
Fig. 1. The Back Yard of a Residence which Is Merely a Dumping Ground
for Rubbish—A Condition Which Often Exists.
of naked moonlight she could not fall
tlons. Where trees and shrubs are
needed neither as screens nor wind-
breaks, their disposition should be
such as will afford a pleasing effect
and at the same time preserve as large
an area of unbroken greensward as
practicable. All walks and drives on
small lots should be direct. The plant-
ing of trees and shrubs or the placing
of fountains and flagpoles in the
course of a walk which will cause the
traveler to deviate unduly from his
natural course Is a common but ob-
small
to recognize the woman. She was Mrs. j <''re«ea. This does .not mean, ot course, j nrMls walks an(1 drives should he
Merrilees hej-ond question, gowned pre- I eve^y c"y's 'n rlt' any sur'1 j straight unless there be good
ciseiy as she had been that first night overhauling, but It does mean that the ,)ecnusc the cont()ur of ,he 8urfu
out, forever to be a figure of radiant BVer«Be clty needs "• and it needs it
loveliness in the galleries of Lydia's | l)a<lly'
memory.
But that the other, her lover, could ; Protecting Tree Wounds.
be Thaddeus Craven—impossible! A j No covering of a tree wound will In
passing likeness to his sturdy but anywise hasten the healing process
graceful figure—deceiving eyes too j or help form a callus. Its sole office
than herself!
Things happen immediately
which Lydia did not bargain for,
and the unfolding of a mystery
is vastly disconcerting to sev-
eral persons. The veil is lifted
in the next installment.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Part of It All Right.
"Wouldn't you like to have her sing-
ing beside you In the wilderness?"
"Well, I'm In favor of the wilderness,
but I wouldn't care to be there."—
J udge.
| Is pleasing. While each of these
! plants possesses an Intrinsic decorative
| value, this value Is enhanced In pro-
H green-
MUCH IN LITTLE
eager to recognize a beloved parent: it is one of protection from decay, In-
could be nothing more than that. Im- j sects, etc., while the stub Is gradually
possible that he, her father, could be j being covered by new growth. Dress
the lover of a woman but little older i ings should be reapplied whenever the ! portion to the perfection of th«
| wrod becomes exposed to keep out In- sward in which It Is set. Green grass
j fection until entirely calloused ove* , |H not only useful as a covering for the
for if decay or other germs, or in- earth, but it Is of Itself beautiful. A
Beets once get a lodgment, even If the
wound entirely heals over, the lnfec- i
tlon may work until the tree dies or '
becomes hollow. The callus Is formed j
by the cambium tissue or Inner bark
that lies between bark and wood. The
old wood Itself takes no part In the
healing process, but on the contrary
dies and is therefore a menace to the
life of the tree. So cut branches as to
leave no stub and then use white lead,
red lead, oil, grafting wax, creosote,
tar, asphalt or any material which
completely covers and excludes air and
water.
tlons or In Irregular groups rather
than In long rows. Under certain con-
ditions long avenues of trees regularly
disposed on either side of a prominent
drive or vista may contribute a very
pleasing and Imposing effect to a large
place. The general rule for trees also
applies to shrubs, except that their use
should be chiefly in groups or lielts
rather than as specimen plants, al-
though specimen plants are of value I
In formal plantations. Few shrubs
possess a sufficiently graceful and |
characteristic habit of growth to make i
. them pleasing objects when grown
ason, | sing]y upon the lawn, but where u
number of specimens of varying habit j
are brought together in a single group, j
the differences are emphasized by con-
trast and the variety produces a pleas- j
lug effect, particularly If the rate and
habit of growth as well as the color !
peculiarly Its own, and when used I and character of the foliage be some- utmost r
with suitable suroundlngs the effect | what different. Pleasing results in mal pla<
I Jectlonable arrangement.
for making them curved.
| With trees, shrubs, vines, and herba-
j ceous bedding plants, pleasing con-
trasts can be produced. Each plant
or group of plants has an expression
groups of shrubs do nr
large numbers of the sa
j mass, but from a harmonlou:
ment of different genera, species,
varieties. In order to secure
greatest plea nre from shrubs
groups, each group should reprtj
from
variety In
arrange- | way
ies, and
he
In
ent
some Idea either of spirit or of res\4
and always of beauty. These effects
come from the habit of growth of th<^
plants used. Tall-growing, graceful,
reedlike plants produce an effect o|
grace and beauty, while plants of a
more sturdy habit may Indicate
strength and resistance. The latter
aro well suited for windbreaks or
shelter belts, while the former lend
themselves to the formation of screens
or masks, either for walks or drives
or for fences or unsightly buildings,
Knch group or plantation made upon
the groands should have an excuse fof
Its existence and a reason for occupy*
Ing the particular spot It does. '
If there are unsightly renr views,
plantations in groups or belts should
be provided, In order to hide such ob-
jects. If a portion of the grounds is
to be used for a garden or a stable,
then the planting should be so made
as to effectively shut these areas from
view.
Pleasing effects In shrubbery planta-
tions come also from massing sorts
so as to produce a floral display each
month of the year. A group which
blooms In May or June, and which
presents no additional feature other
than a mass of foliage from June until
autumn, has little merit from a deco-
rative point of view. Variety is the se-
cret of pleasing effects In shrubbery
groups. Glaring contrasts In habit of
growth or In color of flowers or foliage
are as objectionable In planting groups
as In tapestries, but reasonable and
harmonious contrasts only add beauty
and variety to the landscape. Not
only do the flowers and foliage of
spring and summer contribute to these
results, but autumn colors ndd a most
desirable and valuable contribution to
the season's panorama.
In grouping shrubs, those with an
upright habit and robust growth
should occupy either a rear or a cen-
tral location In order that they may
form the general barriers against
which all lower-growing sorts may be
arranged in regular gradation to the
border line, which later should be
given up to the decumbent and effemN
nate sorts. In order that the eye may
be carried from the greensward to the
top of the group without receiving of-
fense from bare stalks between the
turf and the foliage of the group itself.
Avoid bare trunks In evergreens and
bare stalks In the group.
Low-growing dense-foil aged plants
nre as essential to a successful groun
or border as are the tall-growing sorts.
Nature herself Is one of the safost
guides. Her groups nre always made
up of a variety of light-loving and
shade enduring plants growing to-
I gether, each one assisting the other to
secure the environment best suited to
its highest development.
Modern landscape horticulture Is at
best only a poor reproduction of the
model set by nature herself, but in
making the counterfeit every possible
advantage should be taken of the nat-
ural odaptatlons of plants In order to
secure the most pleasing effects from
the material at command. In all
planting It should be the aim to con-
ceal the hand of the gardener to the
ible extent. In small for-
wlth straight walks and
hedges, the gardener's shears must be
used frequently, but the aim should al-
to produce harmony and sym-
metry without materially altering thi
natural habit of the plants. Formal
hedges are an exception, but specimen
trees and shrubs need not be.
The springs of Palestine, though
for the most part short-lived, are re-
morkable for their abundance and
beauty, especially those which fall
into the Jordan and Its lakes through-
out Its course.
China's new mines are exporting
about five tons of tungsten each
month to Japan at about $400 a ton.
The Pacific ocean Is said to be more
favorable for long-distance wireless
transmission than the Atlantic.
The balm of Gllead tree grows In
some parts of Arabia and Africa and
is seldom more thau 15 feet high. The
balsam is chiefly obtained from in-
cisions In the bark, but also from the
green and ripe berries.
One of the world's greatest railroad
tunnels, more than three*miles long,
recently was completed through moun-
tains on the border of Asia Minor and
Syria.
Some kinds of antelope can make a
leap of 86 feet In length and 10 feet
In height.
Principles of Big Business.
First Surgeon—"Do you think $1,000
is too much to ehargo for taking out
Bulger's appendix?" Second Surgeon—
"No. But why don't you wait? He's
making money so fast that you can
get $r>,000 out of him in six months,"—
Life.
Two Viewpoints.
Full Blown Uose—What a pity, dear,
you are engaged so young. You will
never have the fun of refusing a man.
Bud—No, but I've had the fun of ao
cepting one. _
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Burke, J. J. The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 264, Ed. 1 Monday, June 4, 1917, newspaper, June 4, 1917; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc113481/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.