Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 216, Ed. 1 Monday, May 14, 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.
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MONDAY. MAY 14. 1926
herald
To Appear Hire
HIGHEST HONORS FO
NEW WOMAN’S
MASONIC CI-UB
IS ORGANIZED
SAPULPA HERALD
ihjliI matter.
Act of March 3. 1*7*
Editor and Publisher
Advertising Manager
Cashier and Bookkeeper
JOHN W. YOUNG
M. T. Hubbard
Mra. Faye Reece Dunlap
DELIVERED BY CARRIER
10 cents
SI 0C
hs <muM be paid in advance*
• must be paid in advance*
must be paid in advance*
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS PAY
be paid in advance)
Three Months <tnu t
Six Months
Redpath-Horner Chautauqua shows
brings this interesting woman here
as one of the features of a week of
programs. The Chautauqua opens
June 2.
. A. U. W. WILL
HONOR TEACHERS
Th" town members of the Ameri-
can Association of University Women
will be ho .teaser, to the t eachers at
a May breakfast at the Country Club
at 9 o'clock Saturday morning. Thi.
tin ’>• the li" m'eun*? cf the chan-
ter blare th • vacation rece • A num-
ber of teachers alio are in.mxr ot
the . hr.pur are not re-ad.nU o. t'.i -
city, and they spend tiieir rummer,
in other places.
The town member- who v. en ■ r-
t un Saturday are Mrs J W. Klii'.i -
It-with. Mi-s Ethel K- . Mi Mar-
ur. • K>4i!y. Mr Hueh Mu-Kay. Mrs.
Charles E Mi." !v’t. Mr Charles
Po: !::n. Mr.*. B 1 Harr, on Mrs 1»-
,;;>n Mutt hew Mr . Eugene Smith.
Mr J R H rr.-. Mrs Davd Wu-
on Mrs Guv Berry. Mr* M B
Fitrl iph Mr H E Thornton. Mis
Her.ryt tiu Beard. Mr-. O.en Co.1'.
Mr T I ESalcemore, Mrs. Claud
Ma’t'i Mt— Elizabeth M«*nn Mr
Brooke Tnnlt and Mrs A K Rost
traiung success
acy on th^ top shelf. It s that little
he thing across no matter what it
us realize what it takes, statistics
the majority of those who have
the man who knows his business
biT* better and who car. perform his duty with a touch
of exactness who scales the walls to a satisfactory **cce*^
T career imbuing that word with what is inf.n-
ite ,n' achievement. The fact is we all have career,, drab, colorless
or hectic as they are There is a real career m being a good and
efficient mother The woman in politic, ha, her career The news-
paper man and woman, the merchant, ministers and d°c*°M A
them have some kind of a career, whether it be variedly good
°,b,Wr are good only insofar as we do good. Success depends
largely on how we live not only with our individual[business u
with the people with whom we come in contact daily. Success
£ old fe”rr *ay is not the zenith of happiness It carries it,
woes with , h. i.m.ss. If one hope, to enjoy more
i, successfully wealthy one errs. Personal success
the term wt-Ith. There aie none of us
when it is available, but gaining it does
success in iu biggest sense
The most desirable
is an old admonition that all of
the sudden oil millionaires have
today* poor tomorrow. 1—.—- —
and then a repeat of it all .That
That i* just plain accidental
The successful man
hit bad luck and good, not
with the same «'
help And to - —-----
piest and apparently the
munity and figure up hi* Umbiliti.
lory of ycurself. It s
Sapulpa still v
brand new mayor. *
to the Oklahoma 1
lips 35, both of Tulsa.
A touch of care will out accu
bit of extra exertion that put?
is. Despite the fact that all of
show that success does not come to
entered into big business It is t..
just a little
more —
People talk of
FULP ATTENDING
LODGE MEETING
. MARRIAGE LICENCES
M L TV emu il anti Mi* Tr •
Hayc-. 20. both of thi-. city. M- <
Sammons 26 oi A' :' n* Text. • nti
Mi. Fav Wiia r 2) oi Da’lir*. T. -
mu IzsHr : of Topeka r—
■1 Ml
Eonesteel. South Dal '.. nil-
Adam. 22 anc Mi * Edna Lavertv ’3
Irth of Tuba. Eurl S. IIuii II o.
Clayromo. Mo. u. ’’ Ora, f
I,. ■ . . MrC’.u
am! Mi V. In Pickett 16 u.i' vi.
Whin Joint-Ease
Gets In—
JOINT AGONY OETR OUT
II you want to take the jmln and
misery out of rheumatic joints or re-
duce the swelling—or limber up those
creaky joints—then you want Joint -
Ease—its for the Joints only—that’s
why it succeeds when ordinary rem-
edies fail 60 cents a tube at Shan-
non Pharmacy and all pharmicisU.
—Adv.
„ A Fulp. of this city, a mem-
h r of the non** ooarc. of ’he I O.
r. F lodge left today for Shawnee
• hero he will attend the s?s ion of
the grand chamber of the I. O. O. F
The ohar.-ber convened
t.. eanizauon.
u dav and will stay In ses-.ion until
Fr cley of this week Very important
business matters, pertaining to the
lodee will be discussed during the ses-
s : n Fulp will go to Choctaw, from
Shawnee and attend the board meeting
because one
often excludes
who turn down money
not insure hapiness and
canr.otes ideal happiness,
is not attained without a big effort. That
us will have to remember. Even
IC} llu,v their trials and tribulations. Rich
lavish surroundings yesterday, gone today,
is neither a success nor a career.
1 luck or misfortune.
is the one who lives everyday, who meets
t with the same smile or throught. but
ie disposition He is a real friend, whose aims are to
assist rather than to halt and distutb. F nd the har*
t successful man in your com-
es and his assets and take inven-
a help in self improvement.
_ o-o — ■ ■ — ■—
rails a complete city administration. With a
ho gave his first public speech in that capacity
roosters Saturday morning, and with a new
is waiting to organize his force. Sapulpa is on
egime The selection of another official, that
will knit the city governmert together nio
then the work may begin. Those who ^ave
<-nn,r>lain again but the new officials will
Board of Director.
In l.unrheon Meeting.
Th»* Board of Directors of the
Women's Chamber of Commerce held
a luncheon meeting at twelve thirty
today in the banquet room of the Y
W C A building on East Lee avenue
the first m eting of the board with
the new members in attendance. A
business discussion was held between
courses and.following the luncheon
In addition to the sixteen board
member * seated lor the luncheon hour
Lafe Speer, recently elected city major
was present as a special guest
Teh reports of differen committees
wf-re heard and announcement made
that as a new work the Women's
Chamber of Oomemrce will take up
I cooperative work with the city hospi-
tal making surgical dressings and do-
I ing anything else to help in the
I hospital work
I Tentative plan
were discussed l
a community scholo oi music whu
has been successfully inaugurated in
number of
_____ eastern cities By this
plan children who arc unable to pay
for mu cal training will be given an
opportunity to study music A nor-
mal charge of 25 cents will be made
but children unable to i»ay thi.* fee
a ill be welcome to study without
charge
The club also discussed playground
work for the children during the sum-
mer and planned to give our special
Sapulpa booster souvenirs to the
j Prr byterian visitors who are expected
here Saturday. Mav 26th The Presby-
terians who attend the general assem-
bly at Tulsa beginning May 24th, wil1
lie brought to Sapulpa on thus date
end the Women's Chamber of Com
merer will act as reception commit-
tee for the visitors.
Mr- O. R .Shaffer gave a report
jf the dandelion campaign sixuuored
I 111 the schools by the Women s Cham-
I her of Commerce Mrs Shalfer pre-
I s<*nted the prizes thi* morning, first
jjnze one of Whites Apple Blossom
I Pictures went to Forrtst Park school.
-ond prize A Bab*. Stuart picture
I to the Liberty school and third prize
I rhe Lone Wo’l. to Garfield school
\t the Forest Park school Mrs Shal-
I ters presentation of the prize was
allowed by a program presented by
hildren of the school
The club will judge the school
I . rounds on June 15th and name prize
1 winners
presidential candidates for both major part.es w... or m-FP™
at a mass meeting of • non-part,sans. ’ a m.n.stenal group ha, an-
nounced. Some denominational pastors have been .nformed of
the proposed assembly. Just ar.oihrr touch of resentment to the
“steam rollered affair in the capital city some time ago probably.
'Spotless Tammany" they ,ay but still one hear, rumors
of a slush fund that put the New Yorker across in Iowa. As the
political activities blaze along with Hoover and brnith high in
the limelight, ore wonders what has become of such figures as
DIFFERENCE OF TWO NEGRO GIRLS
IS HEARD BY POLICE COURT CROWD
turbing the peace Cox the father
il Cora, was dismissed from th*
charge of assault and battery The
other girls were dismissed
The ragro addition of Sapulpa was
well represented this morning when
jxjhre court convened at 9 o'clock
Negroes lined the waU in front of
the jiollce station an hour before
court opened and when the hour of
court approached there was not even .
standing room in the court room The
jnirpose of the negro assembly was
the result of a fight in the addition
Saturday afternoon at 4 30 between i
two negro girls Daisy Morris and
Cora Robinson, met at the negro
Baptist church Saturday afternoon
and Daisy accused Cora of telling
lies about her husband Cora denied
any knowledge of the affair and is
alleged to have drawn a knife on
Dally Daisy picked up a stick and
struck at Cora, and was stuck in the
palm of the right hand by the
packet knife in Cora s possession
When the negro girls appeared in
caurt this morning Cora had a black
eye to shnv t’t- ^<r.rt and other
bruise* can *-a from being hit by
TOtfes. C m • H*«d that three other
gB1a Cachetuv Sorter. Viola Hawfc-
lat And Dorm Clark, took part in
tW fight. Coras father. Beeeriy Ooa.
wMB is a eommtartoned deputy sher-
iff. separated the two gw* after the
fight started, and Is alleged to hare
.I.pfw** and kicked Dorene Clark,
when she refueed to mind
IT. O. Moffltt. mgro attorney from
TUba represented all the negro girl*
biff Oora Robinson Judge Earl Pow-
«£ reprimanded the girls very ae-
vdTaty lor their action*, and fined
Daley Morris tM and Can Bokhwon
M on the charge of fighting and ffto-
COPY
POLITICAL DOPE
ACTIVITIES HEBE AND THERE
OVER THE COUNTRY
AIRPORT MARKERS
WILL BE ERECTED
S< nator Cole Blea.se of South Car-
olina la expected to attempt to hav*
;he South Carolina democratic con
vention adopt a resolution whk
would place the state degclatlon U
the national convention on recorc
dgainst any presidential candidate
v.ho favored repeal or modification
of the prohibition amendment.
The New York state republican
committee, say they will not changt
their policy of having the New York
delegation to Kansas City unpledged
despite the speech of Secretary of
the Treasury Mellon advocating Her-
bert Hoover as a republican presi-
dential nominee
Prank O. Low den was called to
testify before the senate campaigr
investigation committee Joday
Georgia democrats after a confer-
ence decided to conduct an aftiv*
campaign in southern state* to hsvi
uninstructed delegation* vot- lot
Senator Walter Oeorge of Oeorgia
at the democratic national conven-
tion.
Maikers giving the direction of the
new airport of the city of S»|>*ilpa
are to be erected at once. One of
these will be in the form oi an ar-
row. located on tojj of the Clayton
building on Dewey avenue, having on
it Sapulpa written In large white let-
ters. which can easily be seen and
detected bv fliers The air port and
landing field have been finished af-
ter a months work, and ready for a
try out On the city barn located on
the field, the name 8n|>u)pa will b-
written on the roof, so as to Inform
the fliers of the designation also a
ring on the field, formed of chat
which will be eight feet wide This
ring is known as the bull s ey*. and
is the final mark of location of »h"
field The Junior Chamber of Com-
merce of this city will have chare*
of the building of the arrow on to-
of the Clayton building
pulpa Herald
Phone 185-135
c(a«if/edv
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 216, Ed. 1 Monday, May 14, 1928, newspaper, May 14, 1928; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1523002/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.