Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 283, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1916 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald 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:
•MILADY'S SOCIAL CALEMOAR •
**•••••••••
Tuesday *
Mrs. Fhas. McAllister host-
ess to Crotatem club.
Royal Neighbors meet in
Payne ball.
Wednesday
Sections of Raptist Mission-
ary society meet for business
sewlons.
South M. K. Missionary so-
ciety meet in church parlors.
Thursday
Mr. Robison Advancing
Mrs. J. A. Kobison of Kt Louis
• is visiting at the home of parents,
• Mr and Mrs. S. W Roller, while her
• i husband is attending Y. M. C. A.
• school at Silver flay, N. Y. He is
• now the social and membership sec-
• retary of Uy. Y. M. C. A. at Saint
• Louis. He will be remember, d as
• ; former assistant secretary for a num
• : ber of years In Sapulpa
f
Vn
Mdfco
Mrs. Ray Alwood hostess to
ling Auction club.
Friday
Priscilla frochet club Rives
A picnic for families at city park.
A Knights and Indies of 3c-
||jj rarity meet in Pam#* hall
\
TKIR EARS TO
To Enforce a Law
III Sapiltpa Order Police Proseculbr ol Cleveland
TilO " Out Finds Bachelors are the
to'he Ore
vs me)
;iub
t’reatem club which was to
yesterdaj afternoon with
s. Clas. McAllister, has disband-
fw the summer and will not
until the latter part of Sep-
r*
fiss Hazel Wood will entertain
pay night at the home of Mrs.
Be Richey on South Water St
a house dance in honor of
Ruth and Margaret Mct'aughn
4'iskogpc who are visiting Miss
Put and Mies Charlotte Conley
••• ••• •••
|ra. A. W. Proctor is spending
day in Tulsa today.
••• •••
C. Hayden and wife have moved
he Wilson home in the Watchorn
••• ••• •••
lias Klfie McConlon and Mrs. FIo-
f Hasbore spent yesterday after-
D in Tulsa.
MR Ml
|r*. K. L. Barber and children
»e In the morning for Okmulgee
•pend the week.
*«•
lisses Archie and Carthell But
I have gone to Tablcquah to spend
week with relatives.
••• ••• •••
atson Wise left last night for n
veeks trip through Alaska, Wash
on, Wyoming and California.
••• ««•
SUFF QUESTION
Woman Suffrage Association
Emergency Convention in
Atlantic City on Sep
tember 6 th
By United Press.
ATLANTIC CITY. Aug. 2. Pollti-
clans here gut their ears close to
the ground In anticipation of the em-
ergency-called convention of the Na-
tional American Woman Suffrage X.-
sociation which opens here Septem
her <>th. This was shown by letters
and telegrams pouring in on suffrage
leaders here today. With the lead-
ers of the women's forces determined
to follow up the victories gained
at the democratic republican nation-
al conventions, the action to be tak-
en by the delegates here promised to
hold as much Interest for the polit-
ical wiseacres as the Maine elec-
tion*. Moreover, this interest is be-
ing stimulated by the air of tnys
tcry which hovers over the suffrage
convention, as comparatively little
uews has leaked out to d^te con-
cerning either the program or the
plans of the leaders. Nor will the
women at the head of the tm>w~
, ment relieve the auxlety of the
is* Xearma and brother. X Jones, | "a,cbful PoUtual waiters with any
advance information on the subject
“We have called ihe convention
Floyd Kldridge one of the old
time time Citizens of .Sapulpa, has
a remedy of his own that beats the
sheriffs office as at present con-
ducted. or even the city adininistra
tkm under our present "moist" con-
dition
Mr. Kldridge is owner of a little
barn on North First street. G. <
Co* and Will Pennington rented the
buHding some time ago. It was not
long until complaints began to go
up from the peaceful neighbors
around as to the character of the
business going on there and Mr. Kl-
dridge without calling on the slow .
going enforcement officer we have,
calb-d on the tenants for the posse-
sion of the property Monday and got
it.
Peace again reigns in that neigh-
borhood and the little joint is no
more.
Dance at the l*c hall tonight. It
here from Tulsa guest* at the
I. Rchwnrtz and L .1 Cummings
P s.
r. and Mrs. Roland J. Kanck leave
he morning for Ohio, New York
Michigan to be gone about a
IQ
••• ••• • «.
is* Kstlicll Wharton arrived home
night from Denver and Colo
Springs where she visited for
past month
|i. Todd, ti.e attorney, a'loiu-
d by Mrs. Todd, start today by
for Koshkonong, Mb., to be
it two weeks.
KansasCityGJ.fi,
Encampment to be
The Last Meeting
Outs Who Cot Into
Jolts
Ninety percent of criminals
are bachelors.
One-half of married men who
become crooks have children.
Women who lake up crime
are single or separated from
their families.
Women crooks wont tell the
truth.
If a married man gets into
trouble, he generally commits
a real crime, not a misdemean-
or.
The wav lo lessen crime is
to advoeaie early marriages.
so that every phase of ev.rv subject mar,'h Wi,h ,h**
which concerns our cause o..r m,i. of ,od,4> thoroughly motorized tb«
old men who w.ur the bronze but-
By United Press.
KANSAS CITY. Aug. 2 Twenty
thousand veterun* of the Brand Army
of the Republic will mobilize here
August 29 for the fiftieth national
encampment. The fact that tills will
be the golden jubilee reunion, that it
may be the lust great encampment
and that it will be the first |n this
section of the country in many years
a,ay scud the crowd of visitors to
125,000. While the young blood of the
country is mobilizing on the Me*
iran border the 'boys of »;i" who,_ _______ _____, ...
fought to save ihe nniou will gathe: claims to be married and says if
here for what promises to be the
filial review.
When the crey-haired and stoop.il
veterans pas* in review, few arc ex-
M. Noble returned this morn-
from Manitau, Colo., where be
Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Johnson
Mrs. C. M. Noble.
• •• ••• «.•
I* M. Woodall and daughters
this afternoon from Little
to* visit Mrs. Woodall's sister.
_ Ferd Kaufman.
it.
• “* at the l>ee hall tonight. Jt
R. U. Thompson. Mrs. Frank
Smith and daughter. Miss
and son Frank, Jr, leave to-
>w for Colorado to spend the
li of August.
K*
' t toS
Fere
j^lisse* Helen and Hazel Pat-
of Derry, Pa., who have been
ug Mr. and Mrs. Ross Kakin,
yesterday for Bartlesville to
the week with friends.
••• •H III
and Mrs. Joseph Bruner and
iters, oJsephine and Lena, leave
evening for Chicago where thoj
ipend the next month enjoying
»ke breezes and In visiting re!-
M. Koonce, a truckman for the
>. loaded his goods for Afton.
•*w location yesterday. Ills fane
ill follow in a few days. He
the same position with the
there, and very much cheap-
use rent.
••• ••• •••
Sold Sapulpa Homs
ry Clay King disposed of his
place In Forest Park last
ig. Mr. Uengst being the buyer.
which coneerns our cause, our pol-
icies ami our organization n.av prop
erly be considered," said Mrs. Car
rie Chapman Catt, president ol the
National American Woman Suffrage
Association, when inti rvlewed her#
loday. "But what action are you
going to take?" demanded the inter-
viewer. "Tha^ will be for ihe con-
ventlon lo decide,'' was the smiling
reply. "You may slate, however, that
no voice will be silenced and no
opinion suppressed." Further tbir.
that Mrs. Catt would say nothing
Sixty *.-\en state suffrage organiza-
tions. covering every slate in the
Union. are affiliated with the nation
al suffrage association and will be
represented at the convention, which
will extend from September sixth
through the tenth. Altogether, more
than a thousand of the- most rep-
resentative women of the country
will be in attendance. Although the
official praglam ha.s not yet been
made public, it is known that a
three-sided debate between the sup-
porter* of state action, federal ac-
tion anj those who believe In both,
will be one of the big features of
tbe convention. In the south the feel-
ing is said to be strong against tbe
national suffrage amendment. In
other sections of the country, how
ever, notably in those states where
amendments to the state constitu-
tions take years of work and are
retarded as practically impossi.VI ■
tlie sentiment is reported to be
equally strong- for the abandonment
of state campaigns and a concen-
tration of the National's machinery
for a drive on congress. Both o',
these factions will be well repr-
sented at the convention, as well as
those sufftagists who believe in a
continuation of the policy of com-
bined federal and state action, whleh
has wou 12 states for suffrage and
converted millions of voters to be-
lieve in it all over the nation
Cut Austrians In Two
PKTKOGRAD.* Aug. 2.—The Rus-
sian wedge is separating the A us
iri&na from Uie Germane In a thrust
farther ^ forward. The enveloping
movement south of Kovel is progress-
ing rapidly.
tons Will not feel that It is a dis
grace to pus in review in automo-
biles Kansas Ci'y will furnish the
motor cars.
MBS. GLORGE SHIELDS
10 SETTLE WITH H. B.
Readers of the Herald will re-
member tHe Incident of the death
of George 8hi< ids while at work in
Ae juris of the Union Pacific ai
Kansas City last March
Through the efforts of Sizer A
Todd, attorneys of this city, a set-
tl< ment for damages has been reach-
'd and will he consummated at
Kansas City tomorrow. Mrs. Shields,
now ht re, and Mr. Sizer, now at
Monett, will go up for the purpe
of meeting the railway officials.
The settlement U understood to be
entirely satisfactory to Mr. Shields
her husband hears of her predica-
ment be will forsake her forever.
She also claims to be the mother of
several small children, dependent
on her tare- all of w hich, nine times
out of ten, is untrue. If a married
man with children finds bis wa.y be-
hind the bars it is usually money
troubles which have placed him
there But if any particular class of
ihe human family Is a menace to the
rest, unmarried men are the guilty
ones The way to lessen crime is to
advocate early marirages. What a
man needs to keep him out of tron
hie is a good home environment.
If mothers realized this they would
cease opposing early marriages.”
Dance tonight at
25c. Indies Free.
hall. A dm
it
Dan e tonight at
25c. Ladle- fre-
Lee hall
Stenographers Wanted
The Beesoq Commercial College
has more calls for stenographer*
than it can fill. Unroll in this school
and be prepared to accept some of
these zood positions. 3t
Repulse Attacks
By United Press.
BKRLIN, Aug. 2. The war office
reports the re pulse of all Allied at-
tacks on the Flanders front except
od ihe road between M.iricourt and
Fleury where big guns completely
demolished the German trenches that
were occupied.
The Effect of War in France N
Has Been Beneficial Except to
1 hose Now Under German Rule
l BY HBNRY WOOD)
(United Press 3taf'Correspondentl
PARIS. Aug. 2.--Thanks largely to
the historical "woolen sock bank"
of the thrifty French, Franc* today
is financially and economically sup
porting the war without any serious
strain on her national life while new
elements tbe war has injected into
industrial and economic life as cure
France industrial expansion without
precedent when peace comes.
At the close of the war in lS7u,
when Germany imposed an indeinu-
ity of one billion dollars, it was the
vauie “swollen sock bank" that
saved rranco. To date, the war has
C<st France some $8,000,000,000, 72
percent for military expense.
To meet this gigantic financial
burden the people have loaned the
government nearly $3,000,000,000.
They have also paid nearly $1,500,
000,000 In war taxes, making a to-
tal of $4,500,000,000, over half the cost
of the war to date.
The French government ha* left
with its people all the ready capltsl
necessary for the full resumption
of her industrial, commercial and
Bv tTnited Press.
OLKVKLAND, Aug. 2. After an
Investigation of 400 criminal case*.
James Lind, Clevelan 1 chief of po-
lice prosecutor, has found out that
nin#- tenths of all crooks are unmar-
ried Two-thirds of the men Jailed
were between# the ages of 21 and
3o, according to his figures, available
here today.
“It seems that conditions in un
married life tend to make men crim-
inal* or that iiersons with criminal
instinct* are inclined not to marry,"
concluded Lind after hi* invent l*
tions.
“In 4**0 rase* which passed through
my office there was no definite ec-
onomic condition that would result
In crime. Only sliout half of tffe
married prisoners had children and
many of the married one* separated
from tiielr families As a rule wom-
en who take up crime are also single
or at least separated from their hu*
bands or families. TIL* is hard to
prove 0e .mo women prisoners are
not inclined to tell the truth. When
a woman lands in jail she generally
agricultural activities the moment the
war cuds.
By not imposing on her people the
financial burdens of the war fardel
than their earning capacity will bear,
France is able financially to eontln
ue the war now costing her over
$18,000,000 a due, for an Indefinite
Period, without crippling either her
financial, economic or Industrial iif?
The influx of female labor into ail |
branches of French industrial life
since ihe war began, the suppres-
>lon of absinthe and thu restriction
generally of alcoholic consumption,
and above all the great lesson of
Industrial elficiency and maximum
production which the war lias taught
Frauoe, hold out for her roseate
prospect* of the future that prom-
ise to compenaate the losa in every-
thing but human life the war lias
entailed on her.
Of the three greai element* e’en
tiftm-d above that in two short years
ha e revolutionized French Industrial
life. th«> greatest perhaps is indus-
trial efflcVucv and maximum pro-
ductiveness. Previous to the wa", I
industrial efficiency was almost un
know n outside the United States and
Germany. But today France is in-
dustrially efficient. It was the neces-
sity of saving the nation bv inure I
ible increases in the production of
munition* and military supplies that
taught France the lesson.
France’s outpui of powder today i*
44 time* greater than before tin
war. her output of rifles 237 times
greater, mu hlne juns 98 times greai-
er, cannon 25 times greater, 75
•sheila 54 times greater, heavy artil
lery 23 time* greater.
This increase in productiveness,
due in part to an increased number
of factories, Is due principally to
perfected efficiency.
Munitions, however, tell only half]
the story. All supplies necessary for !
equipping and maintaining million* i
of men iu the field tell the other
half.
The chemical industry in France,
which before the war was monono
llzed by Germany, has tripled in
southern France, in the vicinity of
Limoges and Dijon, doubled, while
in Ihe vicinity of Lyons it has tak-
en the form of new lines, entire.y
unknown in France before the war
When peace comes tills leason of j
efficiency w Hi be applied to every I
industry in France with aw Increase j
in the national productiveness anil j
A LITTLE CHAT
<>n ll»«* Telephone
Directory
There ia ouc man in Sapulpa whom telephone oper-
ators universally dislike, lie’s the man who so prides
himself on his memory that he aeldom uses the Tele-
phone Directory for anything but a paperweight. He will
cull out for ' I5t>" with all the assurance of a trainman
calling stations, w hen he really wants "546.’’ Then he’ll
blame the operator, the telephone compam and the
weather when he finds that the subscriber he really
...ibd for i* not the one he wanted to talk with.
The memory ha* a way of playing queer pranks
with number* sometime*. Besides, telephone numbers
frequently arc changed. So it’a a pretty good rule lo
consult the Telephone Directory m>rore making a call
B takes only a few seconds and often may prevent
needless annoyance, lsoth to yourself and to tbe person
called by mistake. Why not make it a rule to consult
the Directory on every call you make?
N.Xl week we are going to tell you about "the beat
informed girl in itaputpa."
\
Pioneer Telephone and
Telegraph Co.
wealth calculated to startle the
world.
Other lessons of efficiency and
maximum producivencas have been
taught to tin- Ur> nvh by the Germans
at heavy «o-t. The French Iron fields
of the Basin of iir.cry, held by il;e
Germans since tb« beginning of hos-
tilities. produced for the French in
1913, 15,1)00,000 tons of iron and
steel. The German* since they got
possession of them, have made them
produce 21,000,000. When France gits
them back she propose* to make
them produce a* much for her as
they did for the Germans.
You’ll Want To
Know
What is going on at home while you
are away on your vacation. Keep
posted by reading the news in the
SAPULPA
HERALD
/
It will be mailed to you each evening,
no matter where you are, for 1 Oc per
week. Better than a letter.
Don’t Fail to Get It
/
Phone 185
Phone 265
r
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.
Todd, O. S. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 283, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1916, newspaper, August 2, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1519157/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.