Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 57, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1935 Page: 4 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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Students Cool Toward Football
Despite ail the fanfare and enthusiasm current during the present
foott>Hll season, the 1935 undergraduate is less interested in gridiron
letults than the "old grad” or total outsider. This generation of
rolleg. student amply illustrates the tiendsof recent years which
have been marked by a decline of interest among students in inter-
collegiate sports and an increasing concern about educational and
cultuial activities. Most recent indication of this was a poll of
freshmen at Columbia university. New York City, where 260 of the
,‘tr.O first-year men voted in favor of a I’hi Heta Kappa key rather
than a varsity letter. Intercollegiate football today, conducted on
the large s*ale that it is, has become an enormous enterprise quito
out of the hands of the student bodv
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CHANDLER’S LEAD NEEDY CHILDREN
IN KENTUCKY WIDE
REPEAL OF STATES lii YEAR
OlD FEOHIMriON -mini
ASSURED IN VOTE
SHOE BUYING IS
CONTINUED HERE
Frcty-eight lieedv Washington
IjOUTSVILXE. Ky. Nov, 7 tLP)—
Lieut Gov. A B (Happy > Chandlei
crooning candidate tor governor en-
doised by the r*cw deal. today held
a wide lead over Judge King Swr>|ie
republican, indicating heavy support
for the HooM'veh administration
Returns from 1395 of Kentucky’s1
4.319 precincts gave Chandler a maj-!
onty of 44 573 votes with a total of j
202.053 against 157.43U for Swope
Republicans had counted upon aj
split In democratic ranks losoffceri
the support cf Chandler by the na-
tional administration Gov Ruby
La ff oo tv denioeratlv national com-
mitteeman, and Thomas g Rhea, de-
leatcd by Chandler m a run-off prl-
mary. had a*ked Kentucky voters to
dc:<at the democratic candidate
Democratic headquarters here pre-
dicted Chandler's final majority would
reach nearly 100 oOO. more than 20.0C0
more votes than Laffoons majority
over the republican nominee four
wars ago
Postmaster General James A Far-
ley, chairman of the democratic na-
tional committee, ottered congratula-
tions by telephone • He said
"That was a fine jcb and I am de-
lighted I congratulate Happy and
evetvbodv who helped him make such I
a great rac‘\"
Despite a strenuous light by the
Anti-Saloon Lragir and o’hrr dr\
forces, repeal . tat* ifl.yea j
ok! prohibition amendment seemed]
avjred Returns Irom 771 prerinet
gave 75.82k lor rejwal and 62.775
against
V Urs also .tried with the new deal
in Instructing the legislature to enact
oki age pensions Kctnns from 737
precincts gave UO.UO for and 13.601
against
4101 F MAI til lilts M TEIINOON
The golf teams of the junior college
and the high school will haute our
their odds in a match at the city
eourre todav when both teams play
eighteen nole- fer the championship
Ku. ehv stated this ncrnuig lhai
the feature match* s would be bci*etn
Ge >rge flL.isjn of the Juiiio ceil's*’
and Wayne n-um oi tiie hign school
team. Gleason a vs state champion
at the junior tournament in Tul*s
last yeai Drum has been particularly
good *rd a elevt mutch i. expected
The otlier feature match will or
Charle- Glen on. high school studrii;
igainsi John Johnson of the junioi
college
FAIR AND WYKMEIt WEATHER
OKLAHOMA CITY Nov 7 (LPt~
Morkrateh warm and lair weather
will contlnu' tonight and Friday in
Oklahoma, the fedeial weather bu-
reau forecast unlay
Temperatures generally over the
country were higher last night Ok-
lahoma City’s high was 48 degrees
and the low 43 There was a trace
of rain here.
Dallas had .26 inches of rain, the
most that fell near Oklahoma Fort
Fmith, Ark. and Springfield, Me, had
light shown? The official lorecast
was fair tonight and Friday.
RETORTS I IKE STOLEN
Harvey Pruitt reported to the police
ftatton ycdciday that a tire liad
bet" stolen from tint truck bed of th*
car he had parkin »t the coinei
Water and Lee.
school children lined up at the shoe
store this morning to be fitted for
shoes—the last grout) from the various
.schools, which began their march on
Monday. Mis Mildred Laney. stated
this morning.
A wellaie chairman is srlected from
each school’s purent-teacher associa-
tion and Mrs Laney Is tile chairman
of the organization composed of th*.*c
welfare chairmen, and upon agree-
ment from Aitcheson. the Chamber
cf Commerce president, working thru
tfiis "clty^wldi welfare council, the
shctlng of these underprivileged was
commenced.
The entire total to the present Is
199 pairs of shoes purchased, with
thirteen expected from Forest Park
today, two from Garfield, and the
nine still in bed from re-rent ton-
silectcmies. which makes the amount
of 221 shoes The money spent
today amounting to $5975 brings
that total to $249 75. not counting
these vet to come.
Several cf the local merchants pre-
sented the children with stockings
tops and animal erasers
©rV.EvFbaB**
Many a good football player warms
the bench until somo break gives
him a rhance to shine. John Hand-
iahan of Dartmouth is one who is
thrilling his coach with his brilliant
punts and placements now that he
has his break in the first string full-
back slot, tilling in for an injured
veeular
Old papers tor **ie at Herald office.
SAPUnea HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA
Stands Vigil Over Dad s Body
Artice Greer and dog
For 24 horns after hir father had been'stricken' with a heart attack
in a lonely hollow near Union Hill, Tenn., Artice Greer, 6, and his
dog kept a lonely vigil over the body.* ”1 didn’t sleep much during
the night,” the boy told searchers who were sent out when Greer
failed to return from a honey-gathering expedition into the hills.*
Students To Pick
Harvest Queen Soon
A contest Is being conducted for a |
harvest queen at the Liberty school j
previous to the carnival and Harvest,
Homecoming on November 15 Con-
testants are Lucille Thomas of the
third grade and Bertie Marie Overton
of the fourth with the latter leading
this morning by 640 votes over 250
for Lucille Ten votes are given for
a penny.
In connection with this homecom-
ing, there will also be a baby con-
test with a nurse from the hospital
judging the mast perfect baby up to
eighteen months of age, also a quilt
Judging contest, and an old tiddler’s
contest with a cake going to tne
. etsen receiving first prize
Arrangements arc b* ing completed
for ’lie Armistice day progi un in the
school on Monday at 10 45. when the
day’s history will be reviewed as
“Aimistier Events leading to Peace.”
n pageant given by costumed senool
children featuring the idea o! peace •
peitaining to Thanksiming. Fore-1
father's day and Christmas
MAHANOY CITY. Pa LP> — Mrs
Anna Wier of Beaver Brook reached
her 84th birthday this fall and decided
it was "high time' she voted Asked
why she started to vote at her late
age. she replied: "I’m voting to pro-
test the high taxes."
In
Thursday, November 7, 1935.
SAPULPA HAS 54 ITALIAN TROOPS
* w m m * ■ « i a r A _ - — - . .. —. . *
D ent opt rations are continuing. The
vt.'tion corjis has catried out con-
ACTIVE LAWYERS ROUT ETHIOPIANS
t
tion flights
A recent survey of the attorney,
! calendar m this city shows that iherc
are fifty-four active lawyers now I
j and about half that amount have
1 had titles in the city and county;
administrative bexhes.
Fateh have had their own specific |
I “laigest" cases but most agree that
the most outstanding notorious case
was the Kelly Reed trials beginning
in the fall of 1912. when several
city lawyers served on the p~osecution
and defense. an1 remember it well
The case concerned the slaying of a
twelve-.vear-old child in Kiefer and
with only circumstantial evidence to
work on he was acquitted after the
third trial
A later case probably more familiar |
to most of the lawyers is the Burt'
Frince case in 1925 Prince was
turned loose on acquittal aftev a
hung jury first for killing A. Day
and Infer was murdered.
J. J Mars is perhaps the oldest ■
active attorney, coming to this city j
in April of 1904 He lias seen the'
courthouse in the 400 block on West
Eewey In Its prime grow from a
seething place full of oil men when
the Glenpool field and others near
here were opening up. and the big
United States court trials held there
The Hereford buildutg housed the court
first and headquarters were moved
to tlv' Beiryhill building and later
ROME Nov. 7. (LP)—Italian native
trcoos have defeated a strong group
of Ethiopians in a pitched fight be-
tween Hauzien and Makaie, an Ital-
ian communique said today.
The Italian losses were two Italian
rlficers wounded, two native non-
c (.mmissloned officers killc 1 and 10
native troops wounded, the communi-
que said, and the Ethiopian losses:
were "considerable."
Tne It ilian advance on the north-;
ern front was said to have resumed j
at dawn today all along the line I
after brtn;; held up two days by oad.
weather
TO STATE TRAINING SCHOOL
Gen. Fmilio D< Bono, commander j
to the present courthouse, built in j
1912
The honor of youngest lawyer goes ,
to Rex Anspaugh. who only recently j
came ho this city from Topeka Kans
and is a graduate of Washburn col
lege
In chief in East A-rica, sent the com-
munique. No. 39 of the war.
"Th* native army corps during1
patrolling operations overcame the
resistance of a strong group of Ethio-
pian*- who were hidden on Ml. Gundi j
in the Gheralta region." he reported '
The casualty announcement follow* d ;
Gen. De Bono saicl the extreme ]
right wing ->f the Italian column, ad-j
vancmg toward the Takkaze liver
valley to the west, had taken the |
•'lumortant" Sela Clacha area, west,
cf Aksum.
Submisst vns <of Ethiopians) arc
continuing.’’ the communique said, ’in
all regions of western Tigre province.
’On the Somaliland 'southern1
lb rbert Roland. 16. Buster Goss.
’4. and Lawson Fhilyaw. 13. were
taken to *he state training school at
Faul> Valley tilts afternoon by deputy
Curt Uiumky following hearing held
niternoon before county
judge George D Willhite on delin-
quency charges
Paul Fennlngton, 14. also given
hearing on delinquency charges, was
released.
The font boys were apprehended by
city clficiais several days ago and
questioned In connection with the
burglary of Sidney Smith's room in
the Eoliss building They were turned
to the county judge and questioned
yesterday.
!■ RISC'O PROPERTY STOLEN
M iterials valued at $350 were stolen
Tuc'day from a Frisco tool box along-
side of the railroad one and one-
’'alf mile northeast o.' the Kellyville
depot.
Among the t.ings taken were a full
tan', of areivlene. a full tank of oxy-
gen, a welding torch ami ether valu-
able articles. The tanks, ■ one-half
mile northeast of the lool-box were
mis tne about the same time.
The report was madi this morning
at ‘he police starion.
LAND <1.1 It SUPPER PLANNED
Members of the high school Band
Mother's club wilt meet tomorrow
night in the high school cafeteria lor
the annual supper
The high jehool band will present
r. musical progiam during the supper
tir.*. Is being held to raise money to
pay on the drums purenased for tlw ■
giris drum corps.
MAIL TRAIN ROKBEI)
GARRETSVTLLE, O. Nov 7 <LP>-
Five bandits held up a mall train
here today, held a c-owd of |verson*
at bay on the station platform with
machine guns while looting the mail
car. ajid escaped with five bags be-
lieved to contain the payroll of,a
large steel mill. I
LEOMINSTF1R. Mats. <LP) —Alex-
ander Latave. deputy tax collector i
went several miles to hunt raccoons,
without success. Reaching home two J
nf the animals were discovered treed i
in his back yard. He shot them
both.
CWswon 1
NOW SHOWING
‘After The Dance’
with NANCY CARROLL and
GEORGE MURPHY
Parana uni New s!
Two-Reel Comedy!
Coming - Friday and Saturday
ZANE GREY’S
*®*GI OBRIENS
nmea
m THUNDER
MOUNTAIN
Whtre the BIG Pirturrs PiaV
TODAY and TOMORROW
SPENCER TRACY
anil VIRGINIA BRUCE iji
a good mystery-romance
‘1 he Murder Man’
Also Comedy and Pepper Pot!
*-——®
STARTS SATl Kl)\y P RE VUE
STARS
[ K Ui1 ,f - ,_
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lint «H> i*U‘*_
»)* -
IVE BEEN ROLLIN' MY OWN WITH
PRINCE ALBERT FOR 12 YEARS, SO LISTEN-
I feel so pleased with Frince Albert for all the enjoyment it has given me
that I want others to know that Prince Albert rolls easy, rolls right, and
smokes better. Prince Albert stays put. It hums slowly—much cooler.
It’s mild, yet has real two-fisted flavor, too. I’m ‘sold’ on the big red
tin that holds enough tobacco for 70 cigarettes. So my advice is just to
try this Prince Albert proposition if you’d like to hook into something rare.
4^
“You're right," say men of
SAPULPA
And now to bring home to every smoker
how good P. A. is for rolling and so help
to make it unanimous, we are making a
sweeping special otTer. It's a real you-
must-be-pleasod plan. Read the details be-
low. Decide to try P. A. for your “makin’s”
smoking.
What to Expect
Jiffy-quick rolling... beautifully firm cig-
arettes ... marvelous taste and fragrance
... that’s what you can expect when you
start rolling !’ A.
You'll be delighted to find you're rolling
the smoothest cigarettes you ever made.
Men everywhere are praiaing Prince
Albert. Kmest Hill says: "I'm a fVince
Albert roll-my -own smoker from 'wav
hack. P. A. s easy to roll and it stays rolled
right.’’ Joe McMacken says: "There's a
rich flavor to cigarettes rolled from Prince
Albert that just fits my taste.”
And we are confident you’ll feel
the same way, once you start
rolling ’em with IVince Albert.
Stays Put — Doesn't Blow
All Over the Lot!
IT'S BEEN
|prince Albert]
FOR ME FOR
I 20 YEARS. I GET |
ENOUGH FOR
170 CIGARETTES |
FROM THE
BIG RED TIN
JUST LET ME
MENTION
THAT P.A.
SHAPES UP
j NICE-MAKES |
A DANDY
CIGARETTE
IN A JIFFY
Ernest Hill, whu rulla ■ n«t, firm am,ike in 7.5
eecouda, aud never tire* of Frince Albert a flavor
In rolling Prince Albert you will
note the special "crimp cut ” that
makes Prince Albert lie right In the
paper—and assures you a tine, firm, casy-
to-rall cigarette. And, thanks again to the
"crimp cut,” Prince Albert burns slower
and gives a cooler smoke.
May we add that P. A. comes in a big
2-ounce economy tin. So just step up and
ask for Prince Albert, and shake hands
with smokin’ at its best! 1*. A.’s Uie real
joy smoke in a pipe too.
Moro is a “cut," ma<l« fnrni our incturs of Jos
McMacken (U •ccund-i) nh /vving him in action I
AN OFFER THAT SHOWS WE MEAN BUSINESS
Roll yourself 30 awell cigarettes from Prince Albert. If you don’t find them the
finest, tastiest roll-your-own cigarettes you ever smoked, return the tin with
the rest of the tobacco in it, and we will refund full purchase price, plus
postage. (Signed! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
REASONS WHY PRINCE
ALBERT CAN MAKE THIS
MONEY-BACK OFFER:
1 Choicest, top-quality tobacco is usvd
in i’nnce Albert.
2 Prince Albert is "rrimii cut" for easy
rolling? •nd slow, i’uoi burning
^ Mild, mellow iMured Ly
“Utorfmoving |>roc«M.
^ P*4*V»nJ ri«;M — in fiw. N«» huthrr rtu
wa»ie.Tobacco Wcei* m prime ivmiitiou.
g Two ounce* in ever) lin,
"Yom Must Be Pleated"
fine roll-your-own
■ cigarettes in every
2-ounce tin of Prince Albert
THE EASY-TO-ROLL
JOY SMOKE
a l awMM i*. u.
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 57, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 7, 1935, newspaper, November 7, 1935; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1527965/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.