Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 13, 1947 Page: 6 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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rAcr six
*>rui pa hfrm.d s*piii pa on ahoma
SATURDAY, srrTTmBrP. 13 ]*h7
uCHUfiCH
IflnnounctnifnTS
READING & WRITING
by RJnn Mc/sDwu
NORTH RIDGEWAY
BAPTIST CHURCH
Comer Jones a»d Ridgeway
Deyo Jeter, Pastor
Sunday school 9:45.
Morning worship at 11 o'clock.
Sermon by Rev. Herbert Zackery.
As'oclatlonal Missionary.
Training union. 6:45.
Evening worship at 8
Sermon by pastor.
tional will be led by Mrs. A. H.
(Chapman and Mrs. Delmar Sharp
will discuss the topic, "Why The
Guild?” Hostesses are: Mmes. Guy
jr.. Pr.it:. Jim Berry. Mor-
gan, West. Jack LawTence, Unger.
Blake and Rollman. A nursery
will be provided during this hour.
Chancel choir will meet for re-
hearsal on Wednesday evening at
7 o'clock.
Recreational night for the young
held on Thursday
Junior G. A. will meet Monday
afternoon at 4 o'ciock In the annex. I people will be
Intermediate G. A. will meet in the j evening,
annex Monday evening at 6 o’clock Dates to be remembered—Rally
The Y W A. will meet Monday Day. Sept. 28th. World-Wide Corn-
evening at 7 in the annex. munion Sunday. Oct 5th, Modera-
The Berta K Spooner circle will ttor’s Dinner in Oklahoma City,
meet Wednesday afternoon at 2 Oct. 10th.
o’clock in the home of Mrs. Wade
Casey, 409 North Third; the Louise
Hill circle will meet at the same
hour with Mis H M. Oliver, 214
South Walnut.
Sunday school teachers and offi-
cers meeting Wednesday evening at j
i
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCI1
Corner Lde and Elm
Billy Janies Hargis, minister
Office Phone 1203
9:30—Bible school. All classes
meet in church, with exception of
7:15. Bible "study will follow at 8 men's class — Auditorium of Y W.
o'clock.
Choir practice Thursday night at
7:30
The orphan's home representative
Is to be here Sunday morning with
his truck. All who didn't get to
make an offering of canned stuffs,
etc., may do so Sunday morning.
C. A
10:40: Morning worship
Message: "How to Study the
Bible'." Special, ladies trio. At the
console—Prelude. Ceiga's "Clouds"; I
Bartley's Postlude in D Major.
Christian Endeavor at 7.
All young people are urged to,
attend this new and different type
of Youth worship. Classes for all
ages.
8:00 p: m: evening service.
Stirring gospel mt.-sage by Rev
Hargis.
Tuesday: Christian board of
m Hazel Asher, education August-September joint
meeting at 7:30
lun
Z-Kann at PhiK Pb fa lO-J'R
Pastor
FIRST CHI RCH OF GOD
Corner Lee and Walnut
H A. Woolman. Pastor
Howard Bray, S S Supt
Sunday school, 9 45
Preaching, 11 am.
Y P M. 6 p
leader
Wednesday at 7:30 p. m Pastor ^^ne^^sSna^ circles at
The following questions. Did you *rmbeUA Norment circle
ever break yourself of a bad habit? p^rs mid-week Bible lecture.
Can you exercise self-control Irom g
grouchy spells? Do you catch your-
self quarreling about petty things? ™:ovhlp suPper at
Are you cheirful and free when ‘~<lon t miss It!
things go wrong? Do you keep your
head in an emergency? Lo you re-
main calm under criticism? Can
you stand being opposed without j
saying things you regret later? Are
you a successful peacemaker? Do
you make and keep friends easily?
Do you think for yourself?
nt of the most successful plots of all times is this: A group
of people, strangers to each other, are brought together by chance. They
ire held together through some unforeseen accident, until the person-
ality of each is revealed—not as it seemed on
the surface but as it really is.
This formula was followed by Boccaccio in
the "Decameron,” by Chaucer, in his famous
"Canterbury Tales,” and, in more modern
times, in Thornton Vilder’s "The Bridge of
San Luis Rev.” Now John Steinbeck gives it
a different twist, in his new novel, "The
Wayward Bus,” which the Book-of-the-Month
Club has selected lor March.
The bus of the story is a short-run one in
California, carrying passengers from the big
Greyhound buses between Rebel Corners and
San Juan de la Cruz. The driver and owner
of the bus is Juan Chocoy, an Americanized Mexican, who also has a
little gas and lunch station at Rebel Corners, and who is married to a
woman older than he and afraid of losing him.
* * »
The other passengers include Juan’s ado-
lescent and devoted helper; Norma, a wait-
ress, in love with Clark Gable; Mr. and Mrs.
Pritchard on a holiday with their contemp-
tuous and neurotic daughter; a salesman of
gadgets; an old man determined in advance
that the trip will end in catastrophe. But the
dominating influence on the bus is Camille,
a modestly dressed young woman who—
through no fault of her own—has an irresistible lure for
|PHN STEINBECK
m
is because
rT
will ever be quite the same.
Camille, however indirectly, that Mr. and Mrs
Pritchard indulge in their first public quarrel
—they have always been known as such a
happy couple. It is because of her, too, per-
haps that Juan lets the wheels skid in the
mud and leaves the stranded bus with the
intention of not returning. The story ends
with the bus safely on its way again, but
th: reader knows that none of its passenger:.
THE IN DENOMINATIONAL
GRACE TABERNACLE
Corner Water and Cleveland
Rev. Ralph James, pastor
Sunday school, 9:45.
Devotional services, 11.
Evangelistic services. 7:45
Tuesday prayer meeting and Bible
study at 7:45.
Young people, Thursday at 7:45.
The church with a friendly wel-
come Public Is Invited.
FIRST CHI RCH
OF THE NAZARENE
Corner Park and Lincoln
J. E. Heasley, Pastor
Frcj Swan, S. S. Supt.
Sunday school, 9:45.
Morning worship. 11:00
N. Y P S. and Juniors at 6:30
Evening worship, 7:45.
W F. M. S. Tuesday at 7:30.
Wednesday: Prayer meeting. 7:30.
Thursday Y. W. F. M. C. a: 7:30.
Our revival meeting will close
tomorrow and we Invite you to at-
tend these services Come to Sunday
school.
North Hodge at 7:30. |
Saturday: Youth rally will meet
at Drumnght at 7:30 p. m
THF LINDEN STREET
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Meeting temporarily at 216 S Oak. i
M Rolla Grimm, minister
Fascism on Rise
All Over Britain
Americans Can
Have Babies, if
They Want ’Em
By DOROTHY Wl.ILIAMS
United Press Start Correspondent
WASHINGTON. Sept. 13 (U.P> —
Americans are just as capable of
having babies as they ever were, ac-
cording to Dr. Pascal K Whelpton,
, population expert. But. for one rc'a-
I son or another, they sometimes
1 avoid having them.
Whelpton. a former agricultural [
1 economist turned family-trend au- ■
1 thoritv, says the planning accounts
for the fact that American fam-
ilies generally are smaller than they
' were in grandma*» child-bearing
day.
In percentage-heavy statistical
language. Whelpton. one of five
children who is now the father of
three, explained some of his con-
! elusions to the representatives cf
1 55 countries attending the in’.er-
1 national statistical institute'.
He spoke from a background of
13 years of work with the Scrlpps j
Foundation for research in popu- !
lation problems at Miami Univer- j
sity. Oxford, O.
And he’s admittedly willing to be
the first to say that teh old fash- j
J loned family whioh required 10
I plates at the dinner table Is being I
replaced by a cozier group.
Even the steady rise in birthrate
since 1933—during fiscal 19+7 about 1
4,000.000 American babies were
j born to bread all birthrate records
] and threaten the estimated highs
l of the middle last century'—doesn't
I change the smaller family outlook
! in his opinion.
But hes not concerned about the
possibility' of race suicide. He's
lound a steady increase in recent
years of families with one, two or
three children.
From his graphs and figures, he
also concludes Mat in the next few
! years more wonWn will be having I
their third or more babies. He
I doesn't think this means a return
of family-sizes of grandmother's j
time, but It is checking the trend 1
| toward smaller families, he believes. I
Once again consulting his tables. |
I lie concludes that more couples had
mere babies las: year because the j
end of the war and Improved eco-
nomic conditions had allowed them
to marry and start families.
Y1GKET
.L. FUGATE
A SOONER CONFESSION
“Grandpa, who was a ‘boomer'? It talks about ihein here i.i
history book, but it doesn't tell exactly who they were."
-What's that, son? What history book? What does it say about
boomers?" The old man dropped his new paper to the tloor.
••Well, Grandpa, this is a United Slates history book, and it doesn >
say too much about Ok!ahonia-at least not here It's telling about cat-
tle.” The boy opened his book to read:
of
"When the rest of them comes
a-dashin' up, I Just rides out and
says: Gentlemen, I guess I had the
fastest horse.' If they didn't believe
ihat. 1 could uv show d em with my
Winchester.
"If 1 remembei rightly, Payne
crew was the first to be called
'boomers.' But a boomer was really
a sort of speculator, and most of
them came after Payne. The rest
were Just settlers, or squatters.
| your hisiory book calls them, ’"he
I speculators were the men who
| wanted to lay out a town-site, and
ell the iois. Some were employed
TIBBEN9
ASSEMBLY OF GOD CHURCH
4 Miles East of Sapulpa
on Tlobens Road
Ben McCormick, Pastor
Harlan VanMeter, SS. Supt.
Sunday school. 9:45
Morning worship at 11.
Evening service, 7:30.
PENTECOSTAL
HOLINESS CHURCH
501 South Park
Rev Billie Rice, pastor
Lucy Gilliland, S. S. Supt.
Sunday school, 9:45.
Pleaching, 11 am.
Evening service, 7:30.
Prayer meeting Thursday, 7:30.
Oome and worship with us.
Robert Lane, superintendent
Bible school. 9:30
Morning worship 10:40.
Sermon “The Church Must Walk
the Earth.'
C Y. P. at 6.
Evening worship. 8:00.
Sermon: "Salvation by the Law."
Prayer meeting, Wednesday at 8
CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIST
Reading room, Wed. and Sat., 2-5
p m., and all services are held tem-
porarily in city library auditorium. 1
Sunday school, for children, 9:45 ,
Sunday morning service, 11.
Wednesday testimony meeting, 8
The subject of the Lcsson-Ser-!
mon for Sunday. Sept. 14. in all!
Christian Science churches through- I
FREE HOLINESS CHURCH
Comer Jones and Division
L. Moore. Pastor
By ROBERT MUSEL
United Press Staff CorresDondent
LONDON. Sept. 13. UP)—Many
Britons In and out of Parliament
today expressed frank concern at
a resurgence of British fascism al-
most as open and violent as in 1938
when Sir Oswald Mosley led his
Blackshirts through London's Poly-
got east end.
Anywhere up to 4,000 fascist and
hecklers have been gathering Sun-
days in the Bethany Green dis-
trict of the East End. Advocae>
of anti-Semitism by speakers Is
as virulent as anything ever in-
vented by the late Josef Goehbels.
In the last few weeks communists
have been challenging the fascist
speakers and fiat fights are fre-
quent.
Police have Intervened for the
first time to close a meeting held
Anticipate Air
Service Better
“ The
kings ' to get
herds to graze over had much to
do with the formation of Oklahoma
territory and the opening of it for
settlement. Originally It was pars
of Indian Territory, and was sold oy
the Seminole Indians with the ex-
press condition that none but In-
dians and freedmen should settle
here. But the cattle kings, in defi-
ance of the government, went in
and Inclosed immense tracts. Many
were driven out. only to come In
again. Their expulsion, with that
of small proprietors and squatters,
called "boomers," led to the demand
that Oklahoma be opened to set-
tlement.' And that's all it says
about boomers."
“Nonsense! Son, that book Is—Is
_ u_R—'" The old man began to
sputter. "In the first place. It lumps
boomers and cattlemen In the tame
pot, and— Why let me tell you?"
He excitedly puffed his pipe to a
fury of smoke.
The boy grinned slyly at his father,
who winked In reply, and both set-
tled to listen. In the expressive ter-
minology of the boy, "grandpa was
off!"
“I was one of them squatters
they're talking about, and I don t
like to have ’em belittled. That
opening took place In '89, and why?
Not because of the cattlemen! They
would have had free grazing in In-
dian Territory 'till this day If It
hadn't been for the boomers and
squatters.
“As I said, the opening was In
U9, but people had been fighting
and dying for that land since 1880
Some called us lazy, but you couldn t
all people lazy who came down
Indian Territory, planted, built
of the dad-
eagerness of the "cattle
more land tar didnt do
that just once, we uid L time after
ume.
"It was in April, 1880. that David I
Payne—and don't you forget that
name, either—first went into In-
daln Territory with a colony. Sure.
It wasn't exactly legal. But the I
cattlemen weren't there legal, either. |
Do you think the cattlemen were ,
bothered? No slree! It was us
rahe crops. Here d come the troop |
by the railroads. Thtre was lots of
it done, and that's what made Okla-
homa. 1 guess—all sorts of prop -
from every part of the country."
The old man was showing ,-;gns \
getting over his indignation.
‘Grandpa, what were thing, like
at first?" asked the U>;..
"Son. they were hard. I went to
| Guthrie in a few days. There were
' no wells, and water was selling lor
ten rents a drink, or a dollar a
bucket. I saw people standing in a
circle around under the railroad
water tower with their mouths open
trying to catch the water a- d
..eeped through the boards and drip
ped.
"Sandwiches sold for twenty-fi r
cents — they were like bricks
poor fanners who were trying t .
er,. and we d have lo pick up and j A"V ni'
go back to Kansas.
"1 wasn't there from '80. but I was
ihere lor two years before the open-
ing and I know what It was to eat
your heart out. You'd have a good man' lold me a story about u tram;
crop coming on, a pretty good house, I that shows how mixed up thing
and then up and have to leave It all were. This tramp had stolen a ruii
After two years, wed spent all our
money, we'd lost or wore out most
of our belonging.- what the sol-
diers hadn't broken up. About all
that was left was our Winchesters.
"And then when a lot of Johnny-
come-latelys began to show up with
their fancy horses and clothes, we
were Just about ready to use those
Winchesters. We'd spent our money
sending men to Washington to get
the land opened up. We'd starved
and fought to find the best places
Our stock was down to nothing.
Then we were going to have to race
a lot of land speculators with fancy
horses.
"You hear about Sooners, too
Well. I was one of them, and t don't staked out before the opening I
mind telling any body ! Your daddy ! sold my rights to three of them, and
cost you from tl to 85. A cup
coffee cost you a quarter, and y
had to stir it with a .>pike
“A (eliow called 'Fatty, the Had
on a Santa Fe freight In Kan ••
the day belore the run. According
to the story, he got off at a little
station In the Territory and laid
down and went to sleep Next thins
he knew, a man was shaking him
“'Say. mister, do you stake the,
claim?'
“The tramp las sort of sleepy
and confused, but he said ‘Ye The
upshot of the whole thing wa- that
the man gave the tramp 83«) toi
his claim Anyhow, that was Harr; ,
story.”
"Did you keep your claim,
grandpa?" the boy asked.
"Well, I kept one," the old man
grinned. "I had four claims all
was Just a little shaver then. I knew
where the land I wanted was; so I
was there ahead of time. I drove
my stakes and hid in the bushes
Then I lathered my horse up good
and then were run out by j with soap.
By (’HARLEM CORDDRY
United Press Aviation Writer
DETROIT. Sept. 13. iU.Rj—Airline
and government representatives
I look for marked Improvement in
II pliability of air service thLs fall
I and winter as compared with last.
Bad weather will take Its toll In
cancelled and delayed schedule.-,, but
to a considerably reduced extent _
thanks to Installation of Instrument | CHICAGO, Sept. 13. (UP*—David
landing systems at some 50 major, sarnoff, president of Radio Cor-
I filed on the other. I figgered a
man who worked two years to get
into the Territory ought to gel some
pay for his trouble."
Copyright. 1947
Francis L. Fugate
Sarnoff Predicts'
Television Era
EMMANUEL MISSIONARY
BAPTIST CHI RCT1
1246 East McKinley
V.', O. Snider, pastor
Herbert Snider, SS Supt.
Sunday school. 10 am
Preaching. 11 ».in .
Evening services 7:30.
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30
You are cordially Invited to at-
tend each service.
out the world will be "Substance.
The Golden Text will be': "The , under the aegis of the "League of
invisible things of him from the I ex-Servicemen." Hitherto the po-
creation of the world are clearly I Hce. ui.der Britain's tradltlnnol
Service.- Thursday evening, Sat- seen, being understood by the things tolerance, have mainly concentrated
uraa:. evening. Sunday morning that are made, even his eternal:00 squelching hecklers. But this
and evening.
Services start at 8 p. m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Corner of Lee and Walnut
J. W. Webb, Minister
Bible study at 10.
Preaching at 10:50.
Subject: Salvation In Type”
Communion at 11:45.
Young peoples meeting at 6:30.
Evangelistic service at 7:30
Subject: "Doctrines vs. Doctrine."
The public is cordially invited to
a tend these services.
SOI 1 11 IIEIGH1S
BAPTIST CHURCH
C. M McPhail, Pastor
F. S Burgess. S.S. Supt.
Sunday school 9:45.
Morning worship, 11.
Training union at 7.
Evening worship at 8.
Circle 2 will meet Wednesday at
2 p. m. a: Mrs. Merton Bennett's.
powers and Godhead." (Roman-, tune theV had to call reinforcements
1:20 i A Bible reference explaining including mounted police when a
the subject is taken from I Peter free-for-all involving 2.000 people
1:24.25: ' For all flesh is as grass, I threatened.
and all the glory of man as the Six persons—five men and a wo-
fiower of gras?. The grass wither- 1 mar.—were arrested,
eth. and the flower thereof falleth i What worries officials most is
away; But the word of the Lord en-
dureth for ever."
A reference from "Science and
Health with Key to the Scriptures"
by Mary Baker Eddv is: "The crude
'«“«■ •>“>" ■»»"»« “iS .Chi? mSS 8“" M Cl“l»'
I in
how fascist got started again so
stronglv and so swiftly after a war
Intended to stamp it out. Sir Os-
walds British Union of FaacLsts has
been dissolved but its elements are
now apparently gravitating toward
cities.
W. T. (Dusty) Rhoades, chief of
(lie air transport association's air
navigating unit, making a cross-
country survey of airport facili-
ties. demonstrated at nearby Wil-
low Run how landings can be ma<*e
under low cloud ceilings that
1 might otherwise cause schedule
( cancellation.
Activated by radio beams from :
' ground installations, the automatic |
! pilot of the ATA's flying laboratory j
| flew the plane wrlthln 10 feet of the j
! runway when Rhoades took over for I
j the touchdown.
Rhoades, a renowned transport
|poration-of America, predicted to-
' day that within the near future
j television would be able to span the
globe.
| At present, television tranxmis-
| slons are limited to a radius of a
j few miles.
Sarnoff, addressing the United
Nations educational scientific
and cultural organization, also
described "ultrafax," a new sys-
tem of radio communication cap-
able of transmitting I.OUO.OOO
words a minute.
In an address entitled "Freedom
to Listen and Freedom to Look,”
pilot, said he had more confidence “^tnoff reiterated his proposal that
the United Nations set up a world-
wide radio network as a “voice of
peace."
He predicted that International
an
practice.
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Corner Water and Thompson
Thomas U Talley. Minister
Glen Stimmel, Supt.
Sunday school. 9:45 a. m.
Morning worship, 11 o clock.
Sermon: "Christ and
Man.-
Solo, 'Come Ye Blessed,'
Dr. James F Routsong.
Organ numbers. Prelude,
<Bach> Offertory. To A
FIRST FREE MILL
BAPTIST CHURCH
Corner James and Ridgeway
Rev W. E. Warner, Pastor
J. Pounds, S3 Supt.
Sunday school 10 a. m. A class for
every age.
Morning worship at 11.
Holy bread must be shared. A
Christ like person will share the
' Bread of Christ with others.
| FWBL 7 p. m. Meet with th^re
Modern young Christians. Thou shalt love
the Lord thy God with all thine
' Scott, heart.
| Evening worship 8. Special slng-
Air," t°«-
Lily," I Tuesday 2 p. m. Missionary meet-
the' camera of divine Minds,
when the mental picture Is spiritual
and eternal. Mortals must look be-
yond lading, finite forms, if they
would gain the true sense of things.
Where shell the gaze rest but In the
unsearchaole realm of Mind?"
<p 264 i
i Hodson i, Po-tlude Marche Trio- m8- Are you a mission worker?
'S Kark-Elerti,
mphale.
Dodd.
Evening worship at 7:30
Sermon: "Straw House's
Quickly."
Youth fellowship at 6:30.
The Epworth Methodist church
will have a booth at the Tulsa
state fair—look them up If you get
hungry. Profits on your meal will
help build a new church m Red
Fork.
There will be a meeting of the
Mv-thodist committee, Tuesday, at
7:30 p. m in the home of Mrs. S.
W Moore. 414 South Oak
We are happy to receive Into the
fellowship of our church, Mr and
Edna : Wednesday 8 p. m. prayer meet-
ing. FYe'd F*ound» In charge. He will
i be expecting you. Welcome is our
Burn motto.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Elrr and Thompson
Rev. Charles Black, Pastor
Sunday:
Si&iday school, 9:45 a. m.
Morning worship, 10:50 a. m.
Message Robert S. Kerr.
Training Union, at 7.
Evening service 8:00 p. m.
Sermon: "God's Answer by Fire,’
by the pastor.
Baptismal servlcd.
Youth fellowship vwill meet In the
Mrs. Leonard A. Fears, jr.. and Mr. home of Mr and Mrs. Fred Man-
Bill Gore. ning.
Inspirational services have been Monday; Royal Ambassadors at
planned for both morning and eve- 4 P m. Scout meeting at 7:30 p. m.
nlng worship We will appreciate Grace Carson circle of the W. M
your presence.
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Lee and Oak
Roy C. Smith, Minister
Aubrey Fleming. S S. Supt.
Church school 9:30 a. m.
Morning worship 10:45.
Sermon: "Fatalism Or Faith?”
Music for the morning service
will Include: "Berceuse," by God-
dard; "Chanson Triste,” by Ravel;
U. will meet in the home of Mrs.
Lee Ford.
Tuesday: Y W. A. will meet In
the home of Mrs. J. H. Sommer-
frucht at 8 T. E L. class will meet
in the home of Mrs. J M Bosonetto
at 8.
Wednesday: W. M. U. will meet
In circles at 2 p. m. as follows: Rasa
Lee Mills, Mrs. W J. Lane; Mary
Webb, Mrs P J. Mason; Earl Hes-
ter, Mr., G. C. Cornelison; Lottie
"Toccatina," by Lardelli; and "More Moon will meet at the church at
U>vt' To Three, O Christ," by Reed. 11 a. in. for covered dish luncheon.
Eventide fellowship meets at 6:30 Teachers’ and Officers' meeting
pm on Sunday at 7:15. Prayer meeting at 8:15.
The Boy Scouts will meet on Thursday: Choir practice at 7:30.
Monday evening at 7 o'clock. Friday: intermediate and Junior
The Ouild will meet on Wednes- O. A. at 4 p. m Adult I department
day afternoon at 1 o'clock for a training union social in the home
covered dish luncheon The devo- of Mr and Mrs Clay Bishop. 813
•sion Is to study the works of Sir Os-
wald himself.
One known factor Is that some
of the more prominent fasci-ts,
those detained during the war as
potential menares. are back at ihe
old stand again. Admiral Sir
Barry DomviUe, K. B E.. C. B.. C.
M. G„ for example, has just pub-
lished a book “From Admiral to
Cabin Boy" in which he altrlbutes
Britain's troubles lo” Judina- —
Jews and Masons. "Judmas." he
declares, controls everything in-
cluding the newspapers and
forced the war on Hitler fwhom he
compares favorably wilh Napo-
leon l.
The Sunday newspapers, The
People, (circulation: 4.500.000> call-
ed the admiral's book, which -ells
for 82 50, to the attention of Home
Secretary Chuter Ede
Ede. who Ls responsible for Inter-
nal affairs, ls under pressure by
members of parliament and by
newspapers to take some action be-
fore fascism gels any stronger.
Woodrow Wvatt, M P reported that
at a Bethanal Green meeting he
_ I heard a speaker unmolested by po-
Robert S. Kerr, former governor recommend taking whole
of Oklahoma, will preach at mom- Jewish families In Palestine and
WESLEY METHODIST CHURCH
Ridgeway and Moman
W D Forrest, Minister
Ernest Crabtree. SS Supt.
Sunday school at 9:30.
Morning service at 11.
Subject: 1 America's Challenge.”
Youth Fellowship at 7 p. m
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30
p. m.
WSCS Friday 2 p. m.
in the automatic device than in
himself.
On the first leg of the trip, from
WaIhlngton to W'illow Run, Rhoades
accompanied In the co-piiot's seat television would play an Important
by Jim Kinnev of the civil aeronau- P*rl 01 enabling the world's peo-
tics administration, ".shot” similar Pies to understand each others
landing at Buffalo, N Y.. and Erie, problems and points of view.
Pa. Because an obstruction has not "I can foresee the day when we
yet been removed from the end of shall look around the earth, from
a runway at Cleveland, the instru- city to city and nat.on to nation,
ment landing system there thus far as easily as we now listen to global
ls Inoperative broadcasts." Sarnoff said.
Before beginning the westward “Already Ihe scientifir
Vocational Guidance Needed
B; CARRY CLEVELAND MYERS, Pk.D tional preference among typi al
. ,,t.D.ri • . „ .u. high school students and compared
AMERICA is still the land of op- htlr findin Wlth tho>e frum B
portumty, but the rank and file of gimjUr gtud b Dr Geor(,e CounU,
youth asp.re to jobs they will never c Q Unive;.gjt Uenty
have. Nor will the average parent .-rli-r
of the United States have her am- J
bition realized for the vocation of Preference Was Medicine
her son or daughter. These are not Last year the first preference was
pleasant facts to contemplate, medicine, with banking and law
About 1,200,000 youths graduated tied for second place. In 1926 bank-
from our high schools last June. jn(j was pUt first, with medicine und
While most of them wish to enter jaw second and third. After that the
professional or semiprofessional rankings of choices were remark-
callings, probably fewer than eight ably the same after twenty years,
out of a hundred ever will. The rankings from the bottom up-
Dr. Henry D. Kitson of Columbia ward were: ditch digger, hod car-
University, an outstanding authori- rjeri janitor, coal miner, truck driv-
ty on vocational j^iidance, says that barber,
each year about 65 per cent of high
school graduates seek professional
In general, the white-collar jobs
are the ones which the boys and
girls uf America hope to enter, if
they can. Yet a few who will become
ditch diggers or hod carriers might
or semiprofessional positions while
only about 7t* per cent eff the op-
portunities are in this classification.
Therefore, about 90 per cent of have become gviod doctors or law
these young people seem to be yers and gomo V\%o will become doc-
doomed to frustration and disap- tors, lawyers and bankers might
point ment. have become better ditch diggers
Professional Jobs !"r hod carriers, if they had had
. _ proper vocational guidance.
In 1940. the U. S. Census Bureau
listed 37,400,000 males as employed, Wealth and Fame
of whom only 1,900.000 were classi- In recent years modeling ha»
fied as professional or semipro- looked like the easiest road for girls
Kerr to Preach
Here Tomorrow
ing services at the Plrst Baptist
church tomorrow at 11 o’clock. Kerr
has long been active in Baptist
work having taught Sunday school
qlasws. serving as state brotherhood
president, president of the Baptist
general convention of Oklahoma and
eh many boards and committees.
Rev. Charles H. Black, pastor of
the local church, will speak tomor-
row morning at Ada, Kerr's home
town, at Homecoming services there.
He will return to hi* pulpit here to-
morrow night and will speak on the
subject: 'God's Answer By Fire."
C ALLS FOR CODE
TO CURB SCOOTERS
PORTLAND. Ore. (U.P) — Motor
scooters have become ruch a traffic
menace here that officials were
considering the adoption of some
type of scooter safety code.
Circuit Judge Donald E. Long
pointed out the need for a code
when one scooter driver wa* hos-
pitalized after smashing into the
sides of two cars. Another was jail-
ed for driving a rcooter while drunk
Others w re warned against driv-
ing a scooter without a drivers
license.
shoot them against a wall and do
the same to Jewish families here.”
The 3,000.000 circulation Dally Ex-
press said Erie's tolerance of the
fascists was "Democracy gone
crazy.”
"One of the difficulties of deal-
ing with the matter.” Ede said, "la
that of defining fascism in terms
w hich do not include other schools
of political thought.”
He added he may have to ask for
additional powers If he ls to deal
with fascism.
Other members of parliament In-
cluding Tom Drlberg, Labor, and
Brigadier Christopher Peto, Con-
servative, have also asked Fkle what
are his intentions. Peto was particu-
larly excited about "the League of
Christian Reformers” which treas-
ures a $2,000 bust of Hitler and ha*
declared the late Fuehrer to be "The
Divine Instrument."
There again Fklp said no law was
being broken.
Jews in the ICast End are getting
used to seeing the old prewar fascist,
sign, a lightning flash, chalked on
Jewish houses and in street* of the
Jewish district again. Some reports
said Jewish war veterans are form-
ing a rough and ready group to deal
with fascist provocation themselves.
tour, ATA and CA.\ representa-
tives had Inspected and found
ready for use this winter the land-
ing systems at Raleigh. N. C.,
Charleston, S. Jacksonville,
Fla.. Atlanta. Ga. Memphis, Tenn,
Jackson. Miss.. New Oorleans.
Hou>ton. Brownsville, San Antonio
' Ft. Worth anc' Dallas. Tex.. Okla-
homa City and Tulsa, Okla.,
Wichita and Kansas City, Kan..
SI. Louis, Indianapolis. Cincinnati
airport at Covington. Ky., Dayton,
O* and Reading, Pa.
!, A runway obstruction had yet to
be removed at Columbus, O.. the
landing system was not yet opera-
| tive at Pittsburgh and an unllghted
water tower at Philadelphia "might
be considered hazardous on low ap-
J proaches.”
Rhoades and his aides were con-
| vlnced that bad-weather approaches
to airports will be made in
greater safety this winter while at
the same Hme it will be possible to
authorize operations under consid-
erably lower cloud ceilings than last
year. At some airport* in flatter
| parts of the country, landings will
1 be possible under ceilings as low as
300 feet The general rule will be
| a 100-foot reduction under present
I authorized minimum ceilings at In-
dividual airports.
princi-
ple* and means for world-wide
television are known, no techni-
cal problem is Involved that mon-
ey cannot solve.”
Sarnoff said that globe-circuling
television had "broad possibilities
in portraying the way of life of
one nation to another."
"Therefore," he said. " Freedom
to Look' Is an Important as Free-
dom to Listen,’ for the combination
of these will be the radio of the
future.' '
fessional. Only 21,000 were archi-
tects, 150,000 doctors, as against
4,500,000 clerks, 5,500,000 crafts-
men, 1,600,000 chauffers and truck
drivers.
to wealth and fpne. But a leading
agency in New f ork City, which in-
terviews about 300 applicant* a w eek
and gets about five times as many
letters asking for an interview, ac-
Of the 12,000,000 women and cepts o%y one girl a week on the
girls employed, 1,500,000 had pro- average. Most models make no mme
fessional or semiprofessional jobs.'than $150 a week and must supply
Some 3,000,000 were clerks, 2,000,- an extensive wardrobe. The aver-
000 domestics, 400,000 waitresses, age job for the model lasts only t« >'
361.000 trained nurses, 800,000 years. In 1940, in the whole United
school teachers, 19,000 writers, and States only about 11,000 men and
4.000 lawyers. 4 7,000 women were listed by the
Last year Maethel E. Deeg and Census Bureau as actors.
Donald G. Paterson of Minnesota It is apparent that the home and
University reported, in “Occupa- school have a big job on hand in edu-
tionx.” an investigation of occuoa- rational and vocational guidance.
WEED KILLER TAKES ALL
BALTIMORE, (U.Ri—The caretak-
ers who keep the floor of Baltimore
Stadium a lush green carpet were
upset when they found weeds had
moved in on the blue grass.
A weeds expert came along who
_ offered a solution which killed
much i weeds and nourished the bluegrass
The stadium people hired him
speedily, and he sprayed his solu-
tion all over the field except one
corner.
Then he collected his fee and
left. A few days later, sure enough,
all the weeds were dead or dying,
but, the bluegrass. too, was as
brown as an army blanket, except
the corner the expert missed.
Grumbling caretakers resodded
the field, except the spot the solu-
tion had spared. They decided to
let that grow—weeds and all.
C ARD OF THANKS
We wish to thank all. of our
friends and neighbors who were so, p. N
t kind and helpful during the Illness i ACTS AS SPOTTER
and at the death of our wife and|Op SHRIMP RUSTLERS
mother. Marv Alin Yahne. We al-
so wish to thank all for the beau-
jfiful flowers. Wp especially thank
i Rev Huddleston for his comforting
I words; the singers for their fine
songs: the Harrison Funeral home
for their thoughtfulness and also
the pallbearers and the ladles who
prepared the lunch.
Signed) W H. Yahne. Minnie
I Powell and family, Charlie Claud,
| Willie, Roy and Clifford Stephens
and families.
The year 1617 is mentioned as
the date of the first Introduction of
the plow Into Virginia.
SAVANNAH. Oa, 0J.R) — The
Oeorgla Oame and Fish commission
is going after shrimp “rustlers'" off
the coast here with an airplane and
four -peedy patrol boats equipped
with two-way radius.
The plane was pressed Into serv-
| Ice after two state-owned cabin
j cruisers lout too many chases with
' unlicensed fishermen.
Now the plane patrols coastal
itlshlng waters from sun-up to sun-
jdowu. reporting violators to waiting
patrol boat*, which move in before
the rustler's vessel can make a get-
away.
ANNOUNCING!
The Continuation of Our
REVIVAL
With
Evang. Cham Livingston
Inspirational Singing!
Powerful Preaching!
Service Each Eve. 7:45
ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Maple and Thompson
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Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 11, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 13, 1947, newspaper, September 13, 1947; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1527500/m1/6/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.