Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 119, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 21, 1928 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
PAGE TWO
SAPULPA HERALD
SATURDAY. IAN. 21. 1928
SAPULPA HERALD
Established In 1314
Entered as second-class mall matter, September 3. 1914, at the
postuffice at Sapulpa, Oklahoma, under the Act
ot March 3, 1879
JOHN VV. YOUNO............................Bdltor and Publ“her
M. T. Hubbard................................Advertising Manager
Mrs. Kaye Hence Dunlap...................C^ler »pd Hookkeeper
DELIVERED 11Y CARRIER ANYWHERE IN SAPULPA AND
KIEFER
_ „ . ......................15 cents
Three Months (muust be paid In advance)......................
SI* Months (must be paid In advance)........................
One Year (must be paid in advance)...........................
ALL MAIL SUBSRCIPTIONS PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
Three Months (must be paid in advance).....................** 5°
81* Months ..................................................*'i°°
COD IS TRUSTWORTHY—I know that the Lord will
■qBy mairtain the cause of the afflicted, and the right of the
poor—Psalm 140:12.
PRAYER—This poor man cried and the Lord heard him
and delivered him from all his trouble.
—-o-o-
HEFLIN OUT OF ORDER
A man may discuss his politics before an august body and
assembly but he is not slated to take up an attack on his religion.
At least such is the general course taken by one of reasonably nor-
mal intelligence. The business of mixing politics and religion has
been tabooed for a long while, in fact over a century and a hath
It is pretty much like the mixing of oil and water, striking a match
to the mixture and expecting the water to offset the flame. It does
not work. . , , .
Wher Senator Heflin of Alabama met with the democrats in
the senate he lambasted A1 Smith of New \ ork, in an anti-Cath-
olic speech before the body. Senator Robinson of Arkansas took
up the cause and a religious debate ensued. ....... u f
Whatever poiticls one progresses, the unbridled license f let
lin took can not fit in with. Whether one is for Smith, or whether
one is not for Smith, that is not the question. Heflin, apparently
has reached far to bring out a point by which he may disfigure the
favorable outcome in the presidential campaign of Tammany Hall s
chieftain. , ...
The Smith issue presents a number of complications that will
tend to stifle votes and at the same time make many, from the
Catholic as well as the Ku Klux Klan perspective.
Heflin's attack will not fail to sink deep into the people who
have not weighed the justness of the attack, and who let the
creed of the New Yorker overshadow his ability. Whether Al
Smith ia the candidate or not. should not make his religion the
focal point of judgment since presidential affairs do not fight
out the battles of the churches.
Party politics may exclude A1 Smith for more reasons than
one, and whatever be the case, let these reasons be founded on
a fundamental and sound basis, one wherein reason and thought
figure rather than one where personal grudge and prejudice stand
out. Heflin had his motive and may have accomplished what he
wanted to accomplish, even though he must face the music of
criticism. He has established Smith before the people as a C ath-
olic in public condemnation.
Heflin's stand before the senate met opposition and it has
set even his own state against him. In saying that Robnison s de-
fense could not be voiced in Alabama without the risk of the hint
of “tar and feathers" being noised about, an Alabama newspaper
stated that Alabama was being slandered. Perhaps Heflin was too
hasty, to say the least he was undiplomatic ar.d brought witlvn
the senate an issue of altogether foreign propensities. 1 he south-
ern senator has made himself anything but popular even among
those who are not seeing Smith as a light in the approaching
presidential election, and among the Smith advocates the senator
is a complete “washout."
Heflin’s opposition to Smith if kept within the bounds of po-
litical issues.would have more ground for consideration. His atti-
tude, however, hot as it has been, admitting that he has accom-
plished something o his plan of opposition has put Heflin on the
list of sliding forces, and his charge taken on the face of thin;?
seems altogether out of order.
STOUFER TO BE
FIRST WITNESS
AT HILL’S TRIAL
ARCHITECT PLANNED HOUSE
IN WHICH MOTHER OF
SLAYER LIVED
OTTAWA. 111.. Jan. 21— (IP>— Er-
mu L. Stouter, an architect, was
lo be the first witness at tadav s
session of the trial of Harry HIM.
(than :i with the murder f nta
mother, Mrs. Eliza A. Hill, an c
centric recluse.
Stcu er planned ;he bis house In
which Mi Hill lived and be wai
to expliin t ie plans. Mrs Hill was
found buried in the easement <f
the house. Sho • ad been shot to
death.
"Youn: Hill, a good fellow „bmt
t wn” was accused of tnurdtrlng
his mother t conceal several large
• k •, which lie had drawn on her
account. ,
I’etir Bm h is the pr sedition s
star witc.sa. He is tr. te.l thf
In-y that Harry ordered him to
clean up th ba-o no nt. In whi h
Vi| H Hill’s < civ was later b und, out
iold ini not to bother these “iresh
ly laid bricks In the aorner."
Mis. Hill body was mind beneath
the bri ks a f w days later.
USE PALM VINE
TO CAPTURE APES
, TURNS OF IMAGINATION
The discovery of the skeleton seated before an unfinished
chess game in an adobe cabin 20 miles below Lee s Terry, Ari-
zona, was a shock to members of the Pathe-Bray (. olorado river
expedition. Believed to be the remains of a man from the early
coal mining period, it was assumed that he had been murdered.
The story runs like fiction, but the story of truth is stranger
than faction. Imagination can fancy most any condition, can conjure
up a strange quarrel and lnik it with the circumstantial murder
evidence.
At this point man’s imagination comes in for its share of con
sideration. After viewing a situation, it becomes either more grue
some or more beautiful. The more the case is studied, the larger
the extremes grow. It might have been just as logical for the man
to sit at the adobe chair after a hard day. and while tinkering
with the horses on chess board die of heart failure. I wists of
imagination are capable of coloring the man s death from other
angles.
Imagination is the color of life. Sometimes for the best, some-
times for the worst. It puts the pens under ambition and it tem-
pers gloom. The Arizona case only shows that whether the situa-
tion as found in the adobe was really a tragedy, some natural
mishap or otherwise, the imagination goes far in its attempt to
solve a circumstantial problem and has a fifty-fifty chance to go
wrong.
NEW ORLEANS. Li.. Jan. 21
(IP) Tin similarity between mar
and upe in some re»p*cts have been
claimed fur nerations. but it re-
mained f -r 'the crew c '■ the nuh g
any-laden vissfl »th!:'.i arrived ir.
this port recently to add record of
anotlK r resemblance and :ncidenta.l>
to rive those people wt.r do n i
agree \'h Mr. Vo! t ad an aide
argument. _ ,
The vessel the West N .10
brelight three young apes .or the
zoo at Audubon park. The y-un
.tern w re named K)ko, I. ..-zettc and
Pdcr They are d< rib d as ot
If Chimpanzee family and are said
to come from ex client ap ancee-
Olfleers of the West N’oho said
wine had been substituted .or bul-
lets iu trapping mother apes and
thu-r securing liieli ytung for do-
mist' ation. A pan <>t Palm wine
sufflc'ently endowed with a ki k tc
niakt a m ther ape forget husband,
home and chlllren, is plfed in a
ula where mother apes are known
to roam, sa* the West Noho’s crew.
The m ther ape, apparently wit.
a nose . ,r itnat drink, soon dis
cvn., the treat. Once the die awry
is made tile mother ape will ini ) b?
until she is intoxicated. Then the
persons in qufst of the young apes
at proa h t he int xlcated mother and
kidnap the you maters.
Tlie young apes in the zoo hive
not yet complained ab ut the trick
the ship’s crew played'on Mum In
bringing them from .1 palm wine
country to a place where aridity
bears the government stamp of ap-
proval.
MOTORCYCLE AND
CAR COLLIDES; 2
YOUTHS ARE HURT|
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 21.—(IP) I
Two youths were In a local hos-
pital tolav, reported critically in
J„nd last night when the motor-
cycle they were riding collided with
a car driven by Miss Lulu Fnench,
23, sligh'ly hurt.
The youths are Orvil Jones. -0.
rirnlgte and Al Roland, city. Slight
hope was expressed for the recov
cry of Jones.
CARS COLLIDE
Two cars c Hided at the lntersec
tie,, of Main and Lee streets last
night at 8:80. Mrs. J. G. Taylor,
driver of one of Me cars, stated
that she was driving West on L.c,
and Alex Nn eh. the other drive:
was driving down Main when thi
collision happened. The Taylor ca.r
received dami.ies to the riflu run
ning board, and Naifeh's car had
the left fender bent.
mentioned during the Jar),son Day-
dinner conference of party leaders
here last week.
DEMOCRATS NOT
TO HOLD NEWER
VOTING SYSTEM
OLD PLAN OF TWO THIRD?
RULE IN VOTING MAY
BE RETAINED
By Paul R. Mallon
(Unit#*) Prow* Stuff «'onf»iMiitili'nt t
WASHINGTON. Jan. 21 Talk u.
abrogating th,- twe'hrds rule In
fav,.r of .t majority syrtitn .if n uni
nation damerre.t eandidatis lias i>, „
droppe I by democrat; - I idcrs and
plans are going f near.I t > li.milu.lt-
the candidate in June under th-
o Id-system.
Friends f Gov Al Smith have
passed the word am au varior 1< ad-
era that SmI.b would no: de r
abrogation of the rule; : i ■; if h
Is to be nominated I:e war to e
nominated under the old rule.
Two-Third P an fay Go
A movement may be instituted a-
the Houst n convention, hnwevtr t
dn p the rut’ until the IV '2 n: mil
convention. Senator rat Harrison,
of Mi-*., and others are working
on su.-h a proposal, the t'nlted Hr <
learned today.
He and other Influential leader*
believe that while every convent: m
!s emp wired to adopt Its own rules,
id ptlon of a resolution In Houston
recommending acton on the matter
,n 1<*S2 would have ihe effect ot
elitninatlr - pet's malltles from the
iasuo, because noft't would be ser-
ved on candidates before the 1932
pre-cooYcntlon campaign that they
mum submit to a different meth -<!
of selection.
T’o two-thirds rule talk which
aused nch an tiprqpr In Hie 1921
M idis, n Squar* Garden deadlock m
(ween Smith and Mead o *ns little
CHICHESTER S PILLS
W THE IHAMOXI* hRIMk A
L<m1Iv«! .Vvk} »url»rudrU| I f A\
<'Ul wfc«**-f« r * IHan».>w4 Hr«n4/A\
i--,,, riu i > Uv4 *nd taolu b.cuuk\Vy
t * «r»ie*i w*th Flue Rit’bon.
i BO Biker b«T of jamr Y
yen t) no* u H Alwxyt Ueliv It
SOLO B\ DRUfiOrSTS tVEJvVHHfilF
60T RIDJDF POISON
Kentackiaa Find* BUck-Dranght
a Great Aid In Relieving
Constipation, and Soon
Feels 0. K.
Catlettaburg, Ky—Mr. Miles Hop-
tons, of 1218 Center Street, thia
city, says:
"There was a time when my health
was not so good. I suffered a great
deal from gas pains. My system
was saturated with poiaon which
was not properly eliminated. From
time to time I had severe head-
aches. and 1 felt sluggish and dull.
"I knew of Black-Draught as a
medicine for constipation, so I
thought I would try it For a while
I took a small dose every night un-
til my system was rid of the ac-
cumulated poison.
"I gained in weight and my gene-
ral health was good. That expe-
rience made me realize the merits
of Black-Draught I kept it in my
home and when I begin to feel life-
less and dull, I take a dose, after
which I feel O. K. again.
"People generally do not realize
the risk they take in allowing con-
atipation to run on. I try to keep
my system cleansed, and I find
Black-Dsaught a great aid in doing
! this."
For sale everywhere. 25c. Get a
package today. SC-18.1
The value
of reputation
THE VALUE OF A MAN IS WHAT HE
DOES, THE WORTH HE S H O W S THE
WORLD. HE MAY BE EVER SO GOOD IN-
SIDE. IF HE DOESN’T PROVE IT. HE’S
WORTHLESS.
THE VALUE OF A WATCH, A SKILLET
AN AUTOMOBILE, IS WHAT IT DOES,
THE WORTH IT SHOWS ITS USER.IT MAY
BE OF HIGHEST SERVING POWER. IF IT
CAN’T PROVE IT, IT’S USELESS. THE
REPUTATION OF ANY PRODUCT IS THE
KNOWN PROOF OF ITS WORTH. THE
VALUE OF THAT KNOWN P R O O F IS
THAT YOU CAN RECOGNIZE IT.
WHEN YOU BUY AN ADVERTISED
WATCH OR SKILLET. YOU BUY VALUE
WITH A REPUTABLE MANUFACTUR-
ER’S NAME BEHIND IT. YOU DON’T
HAVE TO WAIT TILL YOU USE IT TO
KNOW IT. THE QUALITIES WHICH MADE
IT ADVERT1SABLE HAVE PROVED THE
WORTH FOR YOU. YOU NEED ONLY ASK
FOR THE PRODUCT BY NAME. FASTEN-
ED SECURELY TO THAT. NAME ARE
QUALITY. SERVICE, SATISFACTION.
Read the advertisements. They
familarize you with established
reputations
■ •
cr
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.
Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 119, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 21, 1928, newspaper, January 21, 1928; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1520824/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.