Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 88, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1920 Page: 3 of 8
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>KLAHOMA LEADER
THREE
JgJjf The Magic Carpet
tbriej
By NELL BRINKLEY
CopJ Itflfefc
£>£anc/u,cXlvct)
T - \ <x
£
-^2
How Yellow Hog Taught I hattj
Chipmunk Good Manners.
Every one of the wood folk loved
little Chatty Chipmunk very dearly.
but there was one thing about him
they didn't like, and that was his
very bad manners.
lie would meet his friends, and be-
fore he would bid them the time of
day he'd begin asking them about
things that didn't concern him in
the least.
Just for Instance: One day he met
Bunny Rabbit, and without the least
regard for Bunny Rabbit's feelings,
Chatty Chipmunk up and asked him
why he had such a short tail.
Of course. Bunny Rabbit couldn't
exactly tell why his tall was so
short; but. dear me! every one on
the place knew it was a tender spot ,
with Bunny Rabbit, and no one else j
but Chatty Chipmunk would havej
dared ask such a silly question. I
"Never you mind," said Red Squir-
rel, trying to smooth Bunny Rabbit's
feelings; "he'll meet some one some
day that will take those things out
of him."
"I call it very bad manners!" ex-
claimed Johnny Field Mouse. "Why,1
only the other day he asked me why
I didn't go and live with my cousins
during the winter! Think of such
a foolish question!"
"Pooh! That's nothing." laughed
Billy Beaver. "He asked me one
day why the toes on my hind feet j
were webbed. Think of that!"
"My!" exclaimed Bunny Rabbit.
"Such a fellow! Well, I'll certainly
be ready to shake the f el low's paw
that teaches him a few manners.''
And. stroking the offending tail,
Bunny Rabbit bade his friends good-
by and hopped to his house under
the brush pile.
One day not long after that, as
Chatty Chipmunk was sitting on the
top of the stone fence cracking a
nut, a strange yellow dog trotted
down the road. Just as he got oppo-
site to Chatty Chipmunk he leaned
against a tree trunk and began
rubbing his side against the rough
bark.
Chatty Chipmunk stopped eating
his nut to watch him. Finally,
when he could keep still no longer,
he asked the dog what in the world
he was doing that for.
"To clean my teeth,"' replied Yel-
l0"But°gyou don't curry your teeth' glltHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIinilllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIItlllllltmilllllllllllllllllllinillllllllllllllUnillllltlllll^ £$ JQ
on your side, do you?" asked Chatty 2 - —
Chipmunk.
"Hardly," replied Yellow Dog. 2
"Cant you see I am trying to =
scratch my side?" 2
"But what else are you doing?' =
asked chatty Chipmunk. 2
"Doing something that it would 2
pay you to learn,
Dog.
"What's that?" asked Chatty Chip-
munk innocently.
"Minding your own business."
snapped Y'ellow Dog. and with an
angry growl he trotted on down the
road.
YOUR HEALTH
Copyright. 1S20. by New pai*r Feature Service. Inc.
How Your Food Is
Digested and Put Into Use
By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D., F. A. C. S.
Commissioner of Health, New York City.
Your body is 1 food.*' Yeast, then should prove of
tunnelled by a \alue in aiding the tissue changca
canal about twen- <>f the body and In benefiting the
ty-six feot long complexion. The product of any
doubles back reputable manufacturer can be taken
upon Itself so t-afely. The yeast should be fresh,
i.uiny times that ■ • • •
It occupies no ' READER. Q—What do you advise
more than per-1 for constant nose bleeding?
haps a square
foot of space. The A—Keep your none well greased
freightage car-, with white precipitate ointment.
ried by this canal • * •
is unparalleled by a. B C. q—is i«. harmful to eat
that of any other I more than three m^als a day?
transportation system in the world. J
Strangely enough, however, the A—Three meals are plenty, and
goods put aboard nt th« beginning sometimes too much for the average
have lost their Identity at the end adult who gets little exercise. Four
LtU. COPELAND
M
Up and up she's going on wings swifter than the
aeroplane; up and up and the genii of the magic carpet
Is sitting with his magic giving the word of command.
For everything's possible in magic. Perhaps the startled
young lady has been thinking of meeting her lover some-
where away from all the world only to find herself being
whirled into the far unknown—of course it's probably all
a dream, and when she wakes she'll find herself in a big
chair in front of the library fire, but nevertheless it's bee
worth while, for all that.
NELL BRINKLEY.
HOLDING A HUSBAND
Adele Garrison's New Phase of
Revelations of a Wife
SELECT DIET
ij BY LORETTO C. LYNCH.
2 An Acknowledged Expert in all Mat-
2 ! ters Pertaining to Household
2 Management.
snapped Yellow ^|||||||||ll|||||||||||||||l||||||||||||ltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllilllllllllll!ililllllllllllillllllllHllllllllilllllllllllllll!IIIIHIi^ I have had a visitor, a boy of 12
What Mrs. 1,likens* ('heerlness Did 1 tersely, characteristically wasting no j Dear boy, too. The kind of a boy
for .Madge. words, "and he will be here almost who can do little things for you and
For a wonder, Mandy had built the | at once. Now, what is the matter, whiBtle and fly kites and be gener-
Mother Graham ha, j"'* f^^VTthnt
Influenza," I said, secretly quaking Ami this boy a diet Is sA limited that
for fear she might think we ought |« ^ard^work to cook for hint
to take her to a hospital if she were
LYRICS OF LIFE
by DOUOliAS MALLOCH
Copyright, 1920. by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate.
fire in Mother Graham's bedroom
with "neatness and dispatch." It
was blazing merrily when I went in
, , , ... .. | to inspect it. After turning down
Chatty Chipmunk could hard y th ah'eets and running a hot water
wait until he saw Red Squirrel to | hnftlp
. II ... V. • Vr.llnnf Haii. Vi-wl raid
tell him what Yellow Dog had said, be no possibility of a chill for her,
and had asked him what Yellow Dog | j went hack to the sitting room,
had meant. j where 8he Bat, still shivering,
Just what, he said, laughed Red 1 thgnirh her heavy bathrobe was uiuvu *tUuov ^.vu. — —.
Squirrel. "If you'd keep your eyes j d d h d she was who all had it last winter. So, of ,you prepare them, the boy is polite
„ j .. ■ ii.it ,tnn '.IK., ... , .... ii.,i . nit nil In f i rm in n 1 «s I eflinn 1 in H(1
open and your mouth shut you'd be j huddled
better off."
Chatty Chipmunk never replied,
but hurried off home, and that was
the last time any one ever had to
complain about his asking foolish
questions, lie had been given his
first lesson in good manners.
the fire.
"Come, mother," I touched her
shoulder, and she looked up at me
pitifully.
"Do you suppose I'm going to be
ill, Margaret?" she asked, and there
was distinct fright in her eyes.
"Not seriously, at any rate." I ,
evaded. "I think you are over-tired, course will do anything
and have caught a bad cold. But
| we'll have you all right shortly.
And you'll feel a great deal better
bed Just lean on me. I have
rything ready for you."
I guess I don't have to be ear-
Throughout the United States the j ried yet." she said with a flash of
i we
| 1 Anc
1— Nov. 25 —l£
annual day of Thanksgiving will be
celebrated today in the traditional
American manner.
Paraguay keeps a holiday today in
honor of the anniversary of the adop-
tion of the constitution of the repub-
New York observes today as evac-
uation day, the anniversary of the
evacuation of the city by British
troops "In 1783.
The annual convention of the Tex-
as State Teachers' association will
open at Fort Worth today and con-
tinue until the end of the week.
Sick? Not a bit of it. But the
them that there might | suffering from so infectious a dis- P°°"' h«y ^nb„ee!'1?,er™if*??
ease, but determined not to mince , used to eating jus, a few of the
matters. "Of course. Dr. Paige will more expensive foods. And no mat-
know, but her symptoms are very ter how tasty may be some of the
much like those of the rest of us, cheaper dishes nor how attractively
who all had it last winter. So. of you prepare them, the boy is polite
course, you must not come near. But j but quite firm in his refusal to so
if Mandy could cook us things—" much as try them.
"Don't worry, child." She laid a ! And the boy is worth writing about
capable, thin-veined hand on my j because they are so many more of
shoulder. "That's what we're here him. And the boy and girl of his
for. to help each other. And every- | kind is. grown up, the boarder who j
body in the town has had influenza, picks the boarding house charging a
so nobody's afraid of it. Mandy. of fair board and then grumbles be-
course will do anything you wish, cause so many things are served
and so will I." 'that are "uneatable."
"Margaret!" My mother-in-law's j And the boy grown is the unhappy j
high-pitched voice called me per- ' traveler, who because he cannot get
emptorily. the few foods he knew at home. de-
Mrs. Lukens smiled cheerily. j cries the land of milk and honey. J
"Send Mandy over for anything Sometimes, this boy, grown, expects
you want." she admonished, vanish- j steaks and chops from his wife daily (
the spirit she had shown a few rain- ing down the hall, leaving behind her | when ho provides only a beef stew I
utes earlier. So I stepped back to an assurance of aid and good-will income. He is the boy in the army
let her try the walk alone keeping that strengthened mo to meet what- ' and navy who feels abused when he
near enough, however, to catch her ever might be befor^ me. |receives wholesome meals well]
if she should have over-estimated ! Copsrisht. 152(1, by Newspaper Feature I planned, from a dietetic standpoint
Service. Inc.
THE HOUSEHOLD
QUIZ
HY MRS. ALICU O ITCH ELL KIRK
Home Economics Expert
and Lecturer
her strength.
My mnther-in-law, however, is
one of the pluckiest women I ever |
have known. I was certain that she j
would not ask my assistance unless
she were compelled to do so. And
I was right in my surmise. Her in-
domitable spirit carried her through
the room, across the hall, and into
her own room, where she sank '
panting but triumphant upon the bed j New Questions.
"There! You see!" she said child-j l.—Which are in better taste, well food supply to advantage will make
Ishly, and I smiled down at her in- designed cupboards in the dining ' an effort to introduce at least one
.diligently. I room, or cheap cupboards? [new dish a week into the diet. Muk"
With impressive ceremony ground | Madge nt the Helm. j 2.—What are the two most popu- halt the recipe. Sometimes a small
Is to be broken in Detroit today for] "i see that you're determined to j [ar and seasonable nuts in Novem- ?«rvinsjs jnore cflnd uclve to lining
wbat is designed to be the largest | have sour own way," I said, gayly.
and costliest Masonic temple in the ; "But now I'm going to have mine.
and properly prepared because only
I now and then do they give him of the
few foods to which he has limited
himself.
One of the first bits of advice
is, do not let this sort of thing
happen. No child likes new foods
always the first time these are pre-
sented to him. And the same is true
: of grown-ups. But the housewife
ho would use the world's available
THE STAR
There is a star that hangs upon the east
That shines a litle clearer than the rest,
Each night diminished not, nor yet Increased—
A changeless jewel on the azure breast
Of eventide. Each twilight it returns
And with celestial tenderness it burns.
The struggle had been hard the whole day through;
All day the sky had glittered with the sun;
And then came night, and then came deeper blue,
The winds were still, songs hushed, the day was done—
And then the star, my perfect star, came out
Aijd ended disappointment, ended doubt.
The struggle had been hard the whole day long.
The rivalry of competition, all
The ceaseless battle of the right and wrong;
I saw bad men arise and good men fall
And marvelled much that things are as they are—
And then came night, and then again the star.
I do not know her name, that lovely light.
Astronomers may call her wl.ai the > Vill.
To me the world's a sky, and life is night;
But there's a star, one star unchanging still
That shines for all, for age, for eager youth,
One star undimmed—and I have named her Truth.
fl
world. Just cuddle down under these cov-
I era and let me take your shoes and
A complete remodeling of the Zion- stockings off. There!" I adjusted
ist organization of America is ex-! the hot water bag comfortably
pected to be effected at the annual
convention which opens in Buffalo
today.
The American society in London is
to dedicate its annual Thanksgiving
day dinner today to the entertain-
ment of a representative gathering of
distinguished women.
against her spine. "I'll get another
for your feet directly, and we'll soon
get you warm."
"I—I don't believe I'll ever get
arm again." she said, with chatter-
SHEBOYGAN PUTS BACK
GERMAN GUN OPPOSING
ing teeth, and I saw that she was j crullers and doughnuts?
suffering a reaction from the burst 1
of spirit which had carried her
across the hall.
"Oh yes you will!" I said, al-
though my heart was heavy with
foreboding. Illness in Mother Gra-
ham always alarms me greatly, be
her? than a larger portion.
3.—What are three fine cold There are some housewives who
weather hot desserts and sauces for think that a meal without potatoes
each? is really not a meal. Yet these
4.—Is the cheapest food always the same women are often surprised to
most economical? ^find that their families welcome
5.—What kind of oranges make the steamed rice with carefully prepared
best candied orange peel° tomato sauce when perchance they Qnprpfarv 9a v*
ti.—What prevents baked potatoes are dining out. Ollldll b oC - ! Clcll y ddyb
from becoming soggy? My little visitor did not come for
7.—What is the difference between |me \o discipline in the way of what
VANISHED SUM
YET MYSTERY
DECISION UPHOLDING
LEVER LAW REQUIRES
FIRMS TO SHOW BOOKS
Can't Say Where
$100,000 Is.
He
Answers to Yesterday's Questions.
1.—The Quickest way of measur-
ing a solid fat is to fill the meas-
uring cup with water less the
amount of fat desired to use. Add
fat until the water reaches the top.
of the route.
This transportation system is your
intestinal tract, and nature has di-
vided It Into two parts; the large
Intestine and the small Intestine.
In the small intestine takes place
nearly the Wfeolt of the dlfMtira
and absorption of food. Men have
lived without the stomach. Some
joker has said "the stomach Is not a
vital Organ] it is merely a victual
organ" but man cannot live without
the small intestine.
When the gastric digestion has
been completed, and the semi-fluid
mass, called "chyme," leaves the
stomach, It passes through the py-
loric valve into the first division of
the small intestine. This is called
the "duodenum." It is about ten
inches long, and shaped like the let-
ter
The next part of the small Intes-
tine is the "jejunum," about 12 or 13
feet in length.
What Chyle In
While there Is some specialized
work for each of these divisions to
do, their boundary limits are estab-
lished In rather an arbitrary way.
The whole of the small Intestine has
a mucous membrane lining much
like that of the stomach. Project-
ing from this membrane are Innum-
erable minute projections called
"villi" that give a velvety appearance
' to the tissue.
The purpose of this Interesting
modification of the lining of the
small intestine is to Increase the
amount of surface which may absorb
the useful elements from our food,
and thus make it possible for the
blood vessels to take up from this
prepared or digested—food every-
thing that may be of value to the
body.
In connection with the Intestines
we must consider the gland called
the "pancreas." In animals this is
known as the "sweetbread." In man
it is a structure six inches long, one
inch and a half wide, half an Inch
thick and weighs about three ounces.
Tills gland lies in the concavity of
tho C-shaped duodenum. It secretes
daily about ten minces of a substance
ailed the pancreatic fluid, and. with
the bile, it becomes intermixed with
the chyme, which has Just entered
tho duodenum through the pyloric
valve. The resultant combination—
of the chyme, pancreatic Juices and
bile—Is called "chyle," a highly nu-
tritive, milky fluid.
The chyle is ready for absorption
through the villi of which we spoke
a moment ago. It is taken up by
the "lacteals." little vessels in the
villi made for this purpose. They are
called "lacteals" because when filled
with chyle they have the color of
milk.
The bile helps to digest the fata
The pancreatic Juice converts into
sugar the starches that 'w$re un-
changed or untouched by the saliva.
The Intestinal walls themselves pro-
duce dally about ten ounces of se
cretion. The admixture of food with
these various fluids prepares
speedily for absorption, and. before
reaching the end of the small intes-
tine, everything of value has been
ti let n up by the body.
Consider Your Food
Of course, things do not always
run along happily. Something may
delay or unduly stimulate the secre-
tion of the several juices, and by
producing the wrong proportion of
intestinal ingredients may upset the
process of digestion.
The wrong sort of food Is always
menace to your health. Under-
ipe fruit or over-ripe fruit may pro-
duce intestinal disturbance. When-
er fruit or vegetables are eaten
uncooked they should be selected
with great care. Of course, some
systems will digest anything short
of carpet tacks. On the other hand,
delicate persons, especially delicate
children, must exercise caution, es-T
peciallv in eating fruit and vegeta-
bles. To begin with, the fruits eaten |
must be clean. Food exposures are i
a menace to health. In the great j
cities, especially, you must take care ,
to cleanse thoroughly all articles;
that are eaten without cooking. No-,
body knows what infected hands ;
have grasped and contaminated such ■
or even five are not too many for
the growing child. A great deal de-
pends upon the person, in the case
of adults, and one should be able
to tell by experimenting Just what
amount of food is best for one.
X. Q—Kindly let me know what
to do for swollen finger joints. I
have been troubled with them for
several years, and they seem to be
growing worse.
I cannot advise in cases like
yours unless I know something of
the history of the patient, ('ou ult
your family doctor to find If there
is some underlying cause for your
trouble.
Dr. Copeland will answer for read-
ers of this paper questions on medi-
cal, hygienic and sanitation subjects
that are of general interest. \\ here
the suject of a letter is such t* ut it
canuot be published in this column,
Dr. Copeland will, when the qurftion
is a proper one, write you person illy,
if a self-addressed, stamped envelope
is enclosed. Address all inqu.riff to
Dr. R. 3. Copeland, in car* this
office.
LAWTON LIGHT COMPANY
SEEKS ANOTHER RAISE
Lawton citizens aro waglfcg a
hard fight against a temporary jrvler
granting the Comanche Ligfct &
Power company an increase in *atcs.
A recent order by the commifcaion
granting an Increase to 62 cents Is
declared unjust and outrageouu by
luiwton's representatives, and a re-
hearing on the order has been asked.
With the application still pending,
the Light & Power company ap-
peared before the commission
Wednesday, and asked for another
increase, requesting a temp- rary
order in its favor pending de<.;eion
on the application for rehear lag.
Recent raise in fuel gas is offe.ed
as the basis for the latest request.
llllllllinilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIHII'lll
I TIIIN(iS YOU'LL .;
| LOVE TO MAKE I
mi mini mil
Velvet andCroc he ted
What could be more exquisite than
this velvet and crocheted cushion,
especially when the velvet is black
and the crocheted cushion of bright
worsteds! Crochet the two worsted
squares and join them with a small
scalloped edging, after you have
stuffed it with soft feathers or cot-
ton Face the square of velvet with
bright-colored silk (the velvet
square must be three inches larger
on all sides than the worsted ones).
Make an eyelet in each corner of
the velvet and fold it over the
crocheted part, so that its four
corners peep out of the velvet. Lace
a gold cord or ribbon through the
eyelets. A bunch of worsted flowers
and a tassel at each end adds to the
attractiveness of this cushion.
FLORA.
Copyright. 1920. by Public Ledger Co.
25. John
secretary
of diarrhoea, showing
COMMAND OF COUNCIL
2.-A fruit cake will surely fall j would
eat. Fruit, too. and eg
cause of nor weaa neari. < center and become heavy' . . anf. Jii, ,e n0 him.
she has been In better ie . when too much fat has been used. . fnr iithou-h he would t ike milk i Doughty, who dropped out of sight
It. ln* for'althou~h,ie wou'11 UiKe mM In December, 1019, simultaneously
was good for him to eat. And, of
course, courtesy dictated that I try „ ..
to please him. But he ate only I OKI LAM). Ore., No
steak chops, potatoes, white bread. 1 Doughty, former pi r. at
mm and t few rich the "vanished millionaire,' Am-| and records of the defendants in an , ,, . .. .
HcRHpr'tR There was no green vege-1 "rose Small of Toronto. Canada, to- ; investigation to determine if there from the use of badly handled, germ
or^ faTany vlgetabTe, 'lay maintained silence as to wI at ,„s been any profiteering In coal laden foods.
table, or In rati myw he! had become of Small alid of $100- A rservation was made in tbe or-
)00 in bonds which disappeared with c isfon to the effec t that the court ance—-even that ot pleasure
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Nov. 25.
The Lever act was upheld today by
Federal Judge Van Valkenburgh.
His decision was rendered on the
motion of attorneys representing
eighteen Kansas City coal companies
aimed to prevent the federal grand I foodstutis
"'v "oing into the private books Many cases
itinal disturbance, have com
other than peas and
i right, worry and mental disturb
it of pleasurable ex
an effect upon intes
No-D-Lay Cleaners
IT Smith 11 nil.ion Walnut 54*7
Men's Suits Cleaned
and Pressed $1.25
Ladies' Suits Cleaned
and Pressed §1.50
We specialize on Purs,
Leather ' oats and
riush Coats.
cake rich in pre-
; inn the last year than at any tlmo J( shou)d be
, I since I have known her . pared fruits, rather than in fats.
5' 3.-Oarnlshing foods is making a
In cocoa or a rich dessert.
Yet had he not been
he been trained for
arB~ feel sure that through starvation he
could have bee
SHEBOYGAN, Wis., Nov. 25
(By U. P.)—By the dawn's early
light. Sheboygan citizens today saw i d Btook|ngs, put another hot I.
that the municipal cannon, formerly , h„rKfeet, piled covers ?order ,or ad?ei1 dec?rBtM> 0 *
property of Mr. Hohenzollern, still j nn her. prepared a dose of her heart i "j5' ™ „ 0r "Jf?!
reposed in the city park. drops and gave It to her As I fin- ^ . I garnish th go](icn apple sauce
Socialists who have a majority In : SJnWering It. a light knock ad!'8 ap„p™r ?cf clous baked appb
the council, recently passed an ordl- ,oun,ied on the door , Tbp -i• erate cost of operation
1 rniulna :infi Other
nance ordering the cannon removed i v- of a vacuum cleaner per hour at a
from the park and locked up in the: , ' . , 7-cent rate, is about one cent and a
city tool house, rannons are all 1 "Who Is that?" my mother-in-law | ,mai: fraction
on a guest had wl,h Small and the $HjO,OOi>, was ap- jn ..ffect the declsioi
few- weeks I prehended at Oregon ( ity neal here, eighteen deiendants to
J, starvation he "nd brought to Portland last night hooks.
will Instruct the grand jury as to ' itement
the general principles on which It is tlnal secretion and d'8?„'"r )h':
to proceed In the investigation. calm and happy mind Is one, of the
Ision requires the very great factors of good digestion,
produce their
right in their place, the socialists j demanded.
induced to taste
the lus-
nice, fat
raisins and other delicious fruits.
And when he became hungry
enough I feel sure he would have
eaten a slice of boiled mutton, with
5. Kumquats are small oranges jen(]Gr carrots and boiled onions.
Regarding a report th" Doughty
confessed to having stolen the boudu
detectives said
"That Is all silly rot.'
When Doughty was asked what his
defense would be. he replied, dra-
matically, "It is all in the lap of the
?rods.
.nswer:
; to Health Questions
said, but their places are' In' tool; r«ucy it is Mrs. Lukens." I an- and are delicious preserved in honey A"n{, ' |bl'y if we put „ very little
ere they 1 wered ' °r served raw in salads. ! bright red jam on the thinly sliced
water should be
freezer when the
sheds and not in parks where they
"encourage militarism."
While th "itiylens paraded'"the ! aversion having any stranger near 1 ice cream Is frozen, as its use has
her when she is ill. been merely to act as brine to as-
"I won't," I promised, as I opened the freezing process.
and then broke In the tool shed and .^u^areVunraftw0*'" , 7;TT,Bananas ar<? known as "f00d ' "<
piaced the rusty relic back in the j ^ j ^ue^sed! Mrs Ltike'ns was j (Copyright. Thomiieon K«tur.
ParK- (standing in the hall, and one look at Service.)
her calm, kind face made my heart a
\V. Sylvester, prominent I hit lighter at the prospect of facing
"Well, don't let her in here!" she: 6_The salt
meeting' commanded, and I remembered her fjrawn from th
last night 4,000
effigy of Alderman Hinze, Socialist
anti-cannon leader, about the streets
brown bread, he would have hail a
change from brown bread as well as
a simple, attractive dessert.
Though she has entered upon he
0th year, the Dowager Queen ■ had become of him,
Margherita, mother of King Victor
Emmanuel of Italy, is said to retain Since the world war, many girls
in a remarkable degree the beauty of Brazil are turning from the thir-
Oxford university for the first time of form and figure which years ago teen and fourteen year old marriage
So far there is no trace of Small,
for whom a search has been in prog-
ress on two continents ever since
his disappearance nearly a year ago.
Doughty was quoted as having said mission!
he last saw Small in a theater in J'nabl
Canada the night of his disappear- from $20,000 to $35,000, all were re-
ance, but that he did not know what , manded to jail.
Those bound over are Orville and
Merle Phillips. Fred Poffenbarger.
7 MEN, 1 WOMAN HELD A. ll. I.. Q I have been told that
FOR S3.500.000 LOOT ',!sUcR"if1 "oTh^ r'th:
best yeast to take?
col NCIL HM'FFS, la.. Nov. 25
Seven men and one woman, charged x Scientists hold that yeast is
with complicity in the $.'1,500,000 v(.ry rich in vltamines. those little
Burlington mail robbery here No- understood elements which are be-
vember 15, were bound over to the |jfVed to give to foods their life-
federal griuid Jury by U. S. Com- building properties. For want of a
Byers today. better descriptive expression I have
to furnish bonds ranging ;at times called them "the soul of the
NOTICE
The Supreme
Cleaners and
Dyers is the
only U N I O N
house in Okla-
homa City.
Cull
Mo pie 4fi36.
SOI \V. 5t!i St.
i do your work on a guarantee.
IV. S. PIGI-ER, Manager.
Fred, Jr., and Clyde;
nd Mrs. T. A.
lubwoman of Alexandria. La., is a j the care of a sick person In a land in its history of 900 years has Just gained for her the reputation of be and are entering schools to fit thein-
indidate for the mayoraltv nomin- i .strange to me. conferred degrees 011 its women ing one of the most attractive wo-j selves for business and the profes-
i "I telephoned Jim Paige.1 ahe said, 'graduates. men of European royalty. \siona.
atlon of her city.
1 Sr., bis sc
! II. A. Heed and Mr.
I Daley.
! No trace of Keith Collins, alleged
"master mind" of the conspiracy Las
ibeen found. t
UNION MEN
PATItOXIZK
SOONER LUNCH
222 IVest Grand
E r 11 c s 1 A.
Chamberlain
Attorney-at-Law
118*4 N. Broadway. Maple 4722
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Newdick, Edwin. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 88, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 25, 1920, newspaper, November 25, 1920; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc149242/m1/3/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.