Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 163, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 13, 1924 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.
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SAPULPA HERALD
■APULPA'S GREATEST NEWSPAPER
Sspulpa. Creek County, Oklahoaa*
EoterM »■ ’second-clans mall matter, September t. 1*14. »t U»e
poatoftice at Sapulpe, Oklahoma, under the act
of March S. 1879.
JOHN W TOUNO............■" '..........W"
■ EDITORIAL department
John H. Booker............................................ Editor
advertising department
M T. Hubbard............................................ Manager
Mr. ray# Reece"Dunlap........... r and »«■>
" CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
I’hone IkS
DELIVERED BY CARRIER ANYWHERE IN 8APCLPA ANO
KIEFER
One Week................................*................U r*D**
Three Months (Muet be paid in adrance)....................* •
8 la Month! (Muat be paid in adrance)........................j * ",
One Year (Must be paid In advance)..................
ALL MAIL SUBSCRIPTION PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
BY MAIL ANYWHERE IN U. 8
.......MOO
«* Mo,,lh, ......................................... $160
advertising service
Murray Cat Syndicate
M/er-Both Ad Service
TELEGRAPH NEWS SERVICE
The Herald receives, dally, the telegraph new. report of C
United Preas AeeocUtlon, the largeet afternoon service tu the
world. In addition the Herald maintain# the beet city and county
■ewe gathering etaffe of any paper twice Me elae tn the sUte.
TELEPHONES
Bnelneaa. Advertlalng, 8oclety and Subscript!™................II*
General News. and Editorial Department ......................114
nothing Sound and thought arc in no wuc em
flashes seem, to the beat of common belief, to be retain
whereas sound travels in waves.
Thought ‘ < fcinery. supplies and
■ well a. to American maculae: irerr
.npulses. oj au>amume^ trucka and others
interested In goed roads to parti
cipate la the exposition.
SO. AMERICA IN
ROAD MOVEMENT
__ [
B BUNGS AlKES. March 12.—The
most Important step looking towards
the promolion of the good roads Jl)„n
movement In Argentina and South
tb
hen
Air*
CRAZED SLAYER SOUGHT
LINDEN. N. Y . March 12.—A posse
ru searching the country around Ida
i'ju dtn today tor a murderer, evidently a
-an inauiac. who blew three residents of
mu this riliajte Last night. Mr und Mrs.
Tbotr.a Whalley both 55 years old.
were shot dead, and Mra. Mabel Morse
was beaten lt> death with the handle
' of an ax The murders w ere com-
mitted ten miles south of Ilalaria.
The bo>li*were found In a bed room
and covered with a blt.cket soaked In
-Hi The l» d had be* r set afire, but
■ the crime was discovered before the
: flames spread.
CORN SUPPLY LESS
OKLAHOMA CITY, Marrh 12
state's available corn supply ia less
at the present time than it hue been
since 1»21, according to a report made
put»li< here today by C H. Robinson,
federal agricultural statistician. Ap-
proximately 22.MHbusBela of
wheat. Ihe smallest amount nines
ISIS, has been shipped since the close
>1 last year's harvest, while one third
of th*- Kate's oats and barley produc-
tion is still on hand, the report shoded.
results.
WITHHOLD NOT THOU THY TENDER MERC-
IES FROM ME. O LORD: Let thy lovingkindntas and
thy truth continually preserve me—Psalm 40:1 1.
__ Q, Q -- ■ I ■■ 0
WANTED. A POCKET
Being a dirt farmer. Senator Magr us Johnson of Minnesota
calls a spade a spade. Hu diplomacy is candid, in fact, it is blunt.
When he has an idea he says it in plain unmistakable terms, and
no one could possibly distort it to some other meaning. Judge
of Mr. Johnson s political method by the following remark*
"Your manufacturer has hi* hand in the pocket of the who c
saler," says Mr. Johnson, "and the wholesaler has his hand in the
pocket of the retailer, and the retailer's is in the pocket of the
farmer Where ia the pocket the farmer can get into? It aint
there y ♦
Now. that is not only frank, but. in general, true. Has not
everybody got hu hand in somebody else's pocket? The con-
sumer ia the only fellow who can t f.nd a pocket to put his han
The one-crop farmer has been in th»* predicament this year
which the Minnesota Senator describes He has been the com
mon laborer, who must accept whatever pay he can get or remain
The principal cause of the wheat farmer's trouble has been
the lack of a foreign market for grain. I he next cause has been
the manufacturer's hand in the farmers pocket. Ihe manuf.t<-
turer had sufficient power to induce congress to favor him with i
tariff concessions, and the farmer, with other coiumers, has pa.
tribute to a few big-interest group* Tbe man whose pocket u
picked is the consumer.
INNOVATION O.N THE RADIO
Dr. Robert H Gault of Northwestern University. Dr. H B-
English of Antioch university, and Dr. Gardner Murphy of ( oium-
bia university tested thought-transference by radio. Their experi- ,
ence was a failure A sarcastic person would declare that the
three savants should have krown that it would be impossible to
flash a serious thought through the sound-billows of jaw. which
rattle the nocturnal air.
The attempt to demonstrate telepathy as a fact by radio
could have no conclusive significance. Had it been successful it
would have proved what is already admitted. I he failure means
Weather Prophets
QUAINT—ATTRACTIVE—RELIABLE
Advertised fer $1.00—Ocr Price for a CO r*
Limited Time, with the Coupon............*.......V
COUPON
This
Coupon
and
HDc
Good for
One
$1
Weather I
House
Prophet
Made in America—Better Than Imported Kind
—Wher the weather is to be fine the Iwo children will be out:
when stormy weather is approaching the witch will come out
from 8 to 24 hours ahead of rain or snow. It is surprising.y
reliable on local weather condition* Made on strictly scientific
principle:;. We have secured a special price on a quantity and as
long as they last wi'l sell them for exactly what it costs us to retail
them—only 69c if you brirg this coupon Every villege, city pnd
farm home shou.d have one. Come and get yours at once or mail
your order. Mail orders 8c extra for packing and postage. An
ideal gift.
CITY DRUG STORE
Phone 52 or 1152 We Deliver Free;
For a limited time—by special arrange-
ment with the manufacturer, all dealers in
this city and vicinity are offering a full
size cake of CREMEOlL Soap to every pur-
chaser of three cakes at 25c. The manu-
facturer knows how fast this delightful
toilet soap makes friends and wants’50,000
new acquaintances in this city. Pages
would be needed to tell about CREMEOlL
—the Cream of Olive Oil Soaps, but you must
actually use the soap to fully appreciate how
good, how pure, how genuinely efficient and
soothing a toilet soap can be. It's the ideal
soap for Everybody, Everywhere, Everyday.
There’s a Dealer Near
You < Go In* or Phone
Your Or&er 2
Remember—simply buy three cakes of
CREMEOlL for 25c and you get an extra
cake FREE. And what soap! Olive Oil
and other choice ingredients, perfectly
blended and highly refined. Rich creamy
lather that cleanses thoroughly, yet with
the gentleness tender skins appreciate.
4
This offer is time-limited—for one week
only. So act at once! Phone your order
today or go to any grocer or druggist—look
for the special CREMEOlL sign in his win-
dow. Thousands will take advantage of
this liberal offer—thousands of new and
lasting friends will be made for CREMEOlL.
Be one of them!
AT ALL STORES WHERE
SOAPS ARE SOLD
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 163, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 13, 1924, newspaper, March 13, 1924; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1522450/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.