Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 54, Ed. 1 Monday, November 4, 1946 Page: 8 of 10
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aAfULPA HERALD SAFIIIJPA, ORLAHUMA
MONDAY. NOVEMBER 4. l‘J46
LAFF - A - DAY
2**
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fi^n
K^>
4-
... ............... " V*
Copt I94f> Kinjt 1 return $ynJ>nf<\ In. World ri|hr* revrx^d ^
“We haven't made much headway on the story of the
lost kingdom, but Professor Hathaway has stumbled on
the recipe for a rare old wine!"
20 Years Ago
Mrs. c M Campbell and her -i>-
ler Mrs. Anna Linder left toda\ or
Tampa Fla to visit their parent
Miss Louise Schwab has returned
irom Okemah where she was lire
house auest of Mrs Watson rf
Bettes
Mrs Lillian Salmans >1 Huntmp-
ton Park Calif, who has heen a
auest in the home of Mrs L J
Burt foi several days, left today for
Wiehita to visi: m her son s home
Miss Edith Huffer spent Sunday
visiting in Stillwater
Mr and Mrs C K Wagner of
East MtKmley avenue are parents
Of an eight and one half pound son
Clinton King Jr born at their
home Saturday morning
Mr and Mrs William Link were
guests of Mr and Mrs C A Brown
We machine drums mstail
high qualify lining, rebuild
hydraulic cylinders. DON 1
TAKE CHANCES — hav
your brakes checked now
standard
MOTOR SUPPLY
122 East Lee
22 Years of Dependable >ervi<e
6 1
OWN YOUR OWN
HOUSE!
I hrec room prefabricated
house; aluminum
dows.
win*
FOB FACTORY TULSA
$869-50
Small Down Payment
Balance Pay Like Rent
House on Display at
PINE STREET
LUMBER CO.
3021 Sand Springs Rd-
2-6111 2-4294
§
MMHilWinilHIIIlllilliliniliilinillUn
Minnmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijii.il
YOU'RE TELLING.
ME!
By WILLIAM RITT
1-Central Press Writer-1
f-ADOK DUMKOPF thinks
snails must be the most inde-
pendent creatures in the world.
Even aft»r finding suitable
mates, they continue to main-
tain separate households.
I j j
We’ll be bitting the moon
with rockets within 15 months,
we rtad. Grandpappy Jenkins
thir.ks the earth should pick on
something its own sue.
t | i
New York s itote liquor author-
ity is puzzling over whether an
orange blossom is an alcoholic
beverage There are those who
think it s |ust a waste of good
gin.
! 1 t
The barghest. according to
Fa t igt iphs, was a legendary
bear-like monster with enor-
mous claws aid teeth. Sounds
suspiciously like a possible fugi-
tive from a political cartoon.
! ! 1
A new cosmetic promises to
gne the girls "sweet, angelic"
faces. Just the thing to wear to
chut ■ itirc but bow ».;/ it
look in a night clubf
1 1 1
The housing shortage H so
acute in England, the man at the
next desk says he hears that
even the ghosts haunting tt e
abandoned castles are complain
ing of overcrowding.
j j i
t be
f ire the Age of Man the m*
Lad shone steadily for five bil-
lion year' Sounds like H pretty
iu al p.
is rather.
I nt a halloween party and dance
in Tulsa Saturday night
Mr. and Mrs Harry Bush mid
| their house guests Mrs R L. Me
i Elhuney and Mrs. Roy Penn of
I bpringticld. w all' Mr .> Madeline
| Shaw and Ed McElhnne.v of Tulsa
I formed a party at convention hail
Inst evening where tin t witnessed
the presentation of the ligla opera
j "Rose Mans
Mrs C A Snyder and son Frank
|ioturned this morning from Colum-
I bin. Mo. where they spent the
Week end with Raze) Snydei.
| student at Stephens -ollege
Mrs O V Smith left this norn-
j ing for Chiekasha to be with her
daughter. Doris Smith, student at
Oklahorila Women's college there
who is ill.
Mr and Mrs Elmer Dennis spent
I tiip week end in Enid wilh the for-
mer's parents. Mr and Mrs K E
Dennis.
Mrs Charles Kuepper and Mrs
h L U|<dike will entertain their
Sunday school classes of Kirs'
' Methodist church with a joint party
| tomorrow night at Sapulpn coun-
try club Chaperones will be Rev
and Mrs Z W Ounckel. Mr and
i Mrs R C Kilinairri Jr and the
class teachers
A part, of the hallowe'en season
which occured last night was given
by Mrs Bertha Newton who nter-
I tallied her mush pupils n uer
home. 525 South Oklahoma iuests
were Margaret and Julia Kieil Veil
Coehen. Car! Bray. Janet Bovaird.
Virginia P pkin. Ali< < Kaye Clark.
Bunnie Leachmun. Jane Foster.
Bill. Sidwell. Olen Ru hards Rich-
ard Henri Ounckel. Clarence md
Leona Denham. Juanita Bray*
Margin n end Frances Bracken.
Okla Thrasher. Mildred Rusgowski
and one guesi Betty Sidwell Mrs
William Sidwell and Mrs O W
Miller assisted th. hostess
John T Ooss of Springfield is the
weekend house guest of Dr and
Mr.- C L M Callum
Mr and Mrs C E Davis liavt'
returned to their home, y 14 East
Lee avenue, after .» delightful trip
during the past two weeks o Phoe-
nix. San D.ego. L s Angeles and
other interesting points
Young Married Women's _uild of
First Methodist church will meet
Friday afternoon in the home of
Mrs Fred Heist r with Mr- Cuff id
Harris assisting
Mr and Mr- Ralph H..tke spent
the weekend in BltVKW.ll a- gue.-ts
cl the latter - cuter, Mrs Ed Lents.
Mr.- Carl Noble will leave Thurs-
day morning for a vi
lives 111 Oklahoma Ci
Mr and Mi's Ploys
202'j East Lee a veil
the birth of a bob
7'“ pounds
Mr and Mrs. Dt
will leave Thursday
home n; Wichita K
A joint meeting
Teacher a-sociatioiis in the ::t\ wa
held last evening In the high -choc
building with Prof J T Murphy
principal of Jeffe---on school, pre
Shakespeare-Bacon Feud Revived
New Edivence Sought to Prove Case Against the Stratford Man
1
ARTIE SHAW AND “AMBER” WED
One of the great literary eontru-
Vrrales m history concerns the poem-
uinl plays ot William Hhukeapi-art
Foi more than a century the Buroi
Society hits fote;ht t-> prove Lhut
Miakespeare of Stratford did not
write use plays but wus erroueouaH
eredlted with them through a eoti-
luslon of names Several other
group- have their own eandldates as
the urtual author Kvery si hool hoy
learns the cs ■ lot SUakc.-peafr o.
Stratford in Ids studies Here la the
leaser known ease against him
By ROBERT VH SKI.
United Pres- Stsfl Cm respondent
LON DON. Nov 2 iU P "He wa
a country lad of twenty-odd year.-
when hi left the dirty little town
he lived in mid went to the olg
civ As lar .i - records show he did
not even have the meager educa-
I ticzi available in the free schools
of his time.
Most lads his age from the same
kind of isolated village would have
had a vocabulary of not more than
Mo words, including many provin-
cialisms net even understandable In
| neighboring counties and certainly
gibberish in the metropolis.
"Yet within two years of reaching
the big town he Is suppostj to have
written one of the most learned
and witty plays kiawn to the Eng-
lish language, dealing intimately
with aristocratic court life and
manners m Navarre, showing a
grasp of foreign languages—and
using a vocabulary 50 times thai ol
the ordinary Englishman.
And then.' said Roderick L
Eagle, "you have only one cl the
reasons the Bacon Society and sev-
eral other literary groups refuse to
believe that William Shakespeare'
oi Stra t ford -0 n - A vc li wrote Live's
l abours Lost' and the other great
classics attributed to him.
"They believe.' Eagle said, “Hint
there lias beta a monumental case
of misukeii Identity William
r'hak'ospi are pf Stratford was a mi-
nor Hitcr .uid play broker and be-
oaiise of Lite coincidence of names
became confused with the William
Slink. --Peare whose name appears
on the plays ."
Depending on what society you
lisle to, William Shakespeare was
a until de plume which hid the real
identity tt Sir Frauen Bacon, or the
Far! fit Oxford or the Earl of Hut-
laud. or the Karl of Derby, because
by Hit standard, of tlmi era it was
beneath the dignity of the aris-
tocracy to »rite plays.
The Bacon SGciey is by far the
strongest of these groups and lor
generation- inn- been compiling evi-
dence to -upport its eoutf ntlcn that
only Sir Francis Bacon, admittedly
th- intellectual marvel of his age.
could have had the learning, vo.ub-
Ulan and literary gifts trom win h
the Shakes-Pcare p< cuts and plays
were created.
I went to si e Eagle, a slim, alert
insurance executive and trained m-
w-tie.nor. because the Bacon So-
ciety has bieu reporting a boom in
interest and member-nip even dur-
ing the war.
Eagle once a Shakespearean pro-
duce! and actor, has been actively
engaged in research on tin question
since I bin In ltciH he a roused
worldwide interest by persuading
the.dean of We tmiii,ter to seal li
for the grave of Edmund Spensi r.
buried in "Poets Corner ol the
Abbey in laiifi
"If there was a Shakespeare his
name would have appealed in one
of the manuscripts which contem-
poraries said were thrown into
Spenser s loinb by the leading lit -
eraty tigure.s of that tinn Ea If
said "UiUortunately. the tcm'i could
net be located "
Now Eagle i planning to ask
Lcrd Verulatn lor permission to .x-
cavate the ruin- oi (iorn.imb.irv
Park, where Bacon lived He think-
it possible there may be clues to
tile authirship of tiie poems and
play s hi the underground chambers
and riilars
Eagle wa.- pleased because of re-
cent admissions oy James Agate.
Britain' feirmost dramatl. critic.’
and Ivor Brown, editor ol the news-
paper. “The Observer," that the
‘•vide .ice against Shakespeare ol
Stratford was increasingly impres-
sive.
They'll ami' over wholly to out
•side." he predicted, ".is doe- every
man ol logic who reads the fact-
Bacon mas have included such emi-
nint figures as Disraeli. Chari
Dickens. Oliver Wendell n dm.
Walt Whitman. George Moore
Mark Twain. Ralph Waldo Kmc-
sen. Schlegel and many trained le-
gal niinits. for example. Lord Pen-
/ar e. Sir George Linen wood and
Judge Webb "
ARTIE SHAW, liaml leader, and Katlil. ■ n Winsor Hcrwig, above,
author of “Forever Amber." were married in Juarez. Mexico, shortly
after each had obtained a divorce. Shaw, who gave his age ax .'ll!,
previously was married to Movie Actress I .ana Turner, the late Je-
rome Kern's daughter Betty, and more recently to Ava Gardner,
nlm actress. The present Mrs. Shaw. 2R, wins divui'od fiom Robert
John Hcrwig, former California football star. (International) J
d Mitchell of
girl weighing
I vet H Hvler
for their new
Pare
home rf Mr- Stewart Lamb Mi-
J H Pacaud was program leader
Mrs. Lloyd J Anderson conlerred
charming courtesy upon a visitor
yesterday afternoon when she en-
tertained at a bridge tea In cour-
tesy to Mrs Einil My. rs i f Moun
Sterling. Ill who is visiting her
-filer Mrs H H MeDannold Th.
guest.- were Mr- Myers Mrs M -
Danr. i.d. Mr Logan Seneker. Mr
Sam Butle: Mr.- Grady Ellen. M
Ben Kirtland. M Gene Smith.
Mr- Oil- L Corey. Mrs Felix I
D .iron Mr- Clyde Hurst Mrs H it-
's Park- Mr- R.e. Turnoull. M
Tom Walla e, Mr# Ralph Thorn-
ton and Mrs A M Allan
Appreciation cf the efforts of
friend.- who helped them to become
winners in the Panatna-Cuban con-
'• ' ’ • • Ml If, M
Jane Penning ton and Miss Nettie
Couznis. winners of the winter trip
to the southern lands Both young
ladle.- came to the Herald office to-
day to express then thanks.
Othman Says
Mr and Mr J C Langford oi
. ncunced the birth of a -on whom
they nave : umed
Ra\ m
und Clyde
Mr and Mrs W
Til tii
-.- cl Lou-
lsiana Mo and
John
Hobson of
Alva. Mo. hai. r
etume
d to their
home after spend!:
ig the
wet< here
a* guest., of their
aunt.
Mr- Mag-
gie Jchn&ou and t
W b Ha
. ... Mr.-
Mr.- Lcia L. ,-:w
x>d at
U'lide * t it1
demonstration of
N >ll
clrcuune
permanent waving
gi vi-
n at the
1
ta la*t
night
Women- Civic I
uo at
a meeting
held yt-teida. a!
terno i
>n in the
Leg ien hut on t.
ist U
•e avenue.
made interesting pi
aiu to
r the mm-
ter work cf tne or,
tarnzat
Id: . FT -
By I Iti Id It It K ( OTHMAN
United I’tvs.- staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON. Nov 4 'UP
Pre “m Tucker - attempts to ien
a factory from his Unde Samuel n
build a Martian motor ear is onl;
! e • ' ' at the meeing weri Mr- Glenn
F...:.ey Mr E A H... Mr Sam
Harris and M: Dave Hiller
O L ila HiiLiiii mi ionary society
‘ th Mctioci..*: cnuich held it
weekly zneetintf la>r e-.ennv :
Don't neglert your eye*!
dr j. w.
FREDERICK
OPTOMETRIST
Coiflplfte Ocular Kiamlnatlon
OUksri Maflr to f it lour Eye*
5 North Main—In Potter Muflr Co.
MON., NOV. 4
ALL STATIONS
Go to the Polls Tomorrow
and Cast Your Ballot for
Ralph (Brick) Kirchner
Candidate for
State Senator
on the Republican Ticket
Ralph Kirchner is a business man who
has maintained a payroll in Creek
County for the past 26 years. When
Kalph Kirchner comes out on the job. the
boys meet him with a hearty smile and
a “Hi! Yah! Brick!”
When you cast your ballot for that kind
of a man you will not make a mistake.
VOTE FOR
RALPH (BRICK > KIRCHNER
Thi# Space Paid for bv Friends
Doors Open 12:45
Continuous Show 1-11 p. m.
TODAY and TUESDAY
Most Wonderful Musical
of the Year!
<3t EASY
iUntS* 1°
WED
V
Si
,t CmiI Ktllawaf
Ranurti
A
\*
News and Cartoon
Of Interest to YOU!
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
'•illlllllllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllll'
j#
ROY J. TURNER
Democrat for
GOVERNOR
★
Cross Roads
of
Destiny"
9 fo 9 30 P M.
The Record of the Pact
A Look into the heturt
•
Different
Thought Provoking
Convincing
•
"Forward
Oklahoma "
9.30 to 10 P.M,
★ *
ONE FULL HOUR of
Terrific Entertainment
30-Piece Orchestra
Full Chorus
Vocalist
Organ
Corps of Skilled
Narrators
★
Don’t Miss It!
MONDAY, NOV. 4
DEMOCRATIC STATE
CENTRAL COMMITTEE
one indication that the millenium is
banging an atomic fist on our doors
Even now there is on sale .he
lertrified hairbrush i$15i with 20.-
oot) brick little lingers to massage
oni --alp- the non-skid satin ov-
erlct wiiti build-in furnace to ker;;)
up warm, and the mechanical azor
brush II our whickers a- with
tee'liei from a goose
The manufacturer of this azor
. \-imply that it is '‘evolutionary .
-hive- That I have got fo ..ee.
Whether I ever get to ide in .he
Plutonic coupe of Prof Tucker
M*em- pioblam. atkal at the mo-
men Tic has landlord trouble He's
got it bad.
Tin kei thought he'd rented from
'la government the biggest factory
in the world ■ in Chicago natutaly>
" make sedans whose gears never
grind because tliev haven’t any
t'.me then housing administrator
Wilson W\att to say he couldn't
have this greatest of all assembly
plants .one building alone covers
. #3 acre • bciausc the Lustron Corp .
needed it to build houses ol enamel- i
“d steel, like bathtubs inside and
out.
The Reconstruction Finance'
C'orp. said it wouldn’t lend the
lustron people 50-odd millions to
get '. rted Everything s lliib-diib
is v i.cl iilo.,ks like President Tru-
1 m.in has still another problem
waitin* his return from the Mis-
j souri voting IsHitli In tlie course of
uny following the auto makers
, around. I have learned something
.bout their vehicle Boy1
Only resemblance between the
OWEN-BROWN
MOTOR SERVICE
NOW OPEN
at 508 EAST DEWEY
Speci.tli/iny in Motor I unc-
Llp. complete Motor Ovei-
h.Tn! everything pertain-
ing to tfie motor of your car
PHONE 1138
Tucker car und any now on Jir
streets is the fact that it has four
wheels •
The back end of the buggy !ia.
an engine tucked inside tin's en-
gine runs a pump Tile pump force
a Hind through pipes to turvmev
which I understand are like fane,
water wheels, on each of the real
w heels.
Step on the gas .the goo flow-1
through the pipes under pressure !
and away you go An entiiusia.s
ays the sensation is something like
having your car pushed by a silent
Angel. 1 Hunk I'd like that If the
Lustron people get the nod and be-
gin making houses, the luture sttl
minds Angelic In a uuii.ua: wav
An enamel steel house, like a was!
bn-in. never needs paint. Ter-
mintes? They'd break tlieu teeth
-Some of the other purveyors m
trick houses don't seem to lie get-
ting any place Andy Higguc ill
is trying for a government loan to
make bugalows of solidified form
encase# in metal pants.
Buckminster Fuller, who intended
to build round aluminum houses on
CRITEItIWN
TODAY and TUESDAY
BARBARA STANWYCK ^
VAN HEFLIN
Lizabefh SCOTT
nia i for foundations m a Kansas
an plane factory, is having money
troubles, too.
All, well We ve already gut elec-
tric irons that make their own
Hum for pressing pants, pants that
rion t need pressing, glass-lined plav
ill! for babies, and 14 different
kinds of ever lasting fountain pens
must ot which will fry eggs under
w a ter
We also have a maker of a foun-
tain pen. who advertises that his
product 1- amazing. All it does i-
write on paper! 'His exclamation
pom When it gets dry he adds,
u u fill i' with plain, old ink. In-
i rediblc Di Watson
Twenty University of oklahoti
t
-serve on th< board of n ntrlbu >r
!' tne Okla:i"iua St it. Hal J ,ui. ;i
George Crawford’s
TAXI
Phone 1792
vrtifs Hr
Doors Open .it 12:15
Continuous Show 1 to 11 pin.
TODAY and TUESDAY
GARY COOPER
INGRID B7RGMAN
—in—
“SARATOGA
TRUNK”
'osKiEt
Yem ro
- HAi
WALLIS’
Pf«4w(li*n
r g
flflvr#;
li
News! Community Sing
Screen Snapshots! Cartoon!
us Bargain Time
For The
f OKLAHOMAN & TIMES
NOW AND SAVt’( Jfjt ^
mi
•*- \ 11
\X/*S
world nonts
pl.y “# VJCK 1
a, 1.V.O, , „ .coornr' - W47
------- — ^ ^
, C--' '" <«'
. cortoct e*"™’
-o b>47-to-1
.nd .ot.ro.' '
//i"
.1. o —*• — \
OWLJ.HOMAN P»'h *"t*'___*>>00
... .*•> •"*'
.*>1 00
or*.
TIMtS 0«lt »•'
Zc^tTrTa.IVr^TLY TO;
hometown
■ w
4of OT iuW'V'O" - \l
TlMti AHO
junoay
V
oiuanomaM
ONLY
r TIMIS
ONLY
TO HELP KEEPd CWIN SCHOOL!
^ vs, it costs $ I si! 2 1 a yea i to Lei'p a convict in
the state penitentiary at McAloster. Those fimires
are from the State Hoard of Public Affairs, which
lias supervision of state prisons.
!.- it asking too much for the slate to provide
M- a .'ear to help keep a child in school? That, in
brier, is the provision of Suite (juestion 315—one of
the four Hotter Schools amendment.- on the Novem-
ber 5th ballot. It is well to r< niemltor that thG con-
stitutes
An increase Of Only About SI.50 For
Each Enrolled Pupil
This year's state appropriations for schools
total $2o.7ti'.', Ins, or an average of about $ tn.Gu each
for 510,331 enrolled pupils.
Thn Better School# amendment* al*. provide for In-
crenicd local mppnrt, in an effort to pin., our «. Ii.h.I# ..n a
Toiin'l finan. tal baxia. The inieiulments will appear ax Stale
Questions;
Authorizing !•« ol dittrictx to vote an
... additional i ailllf valoran 11.\ t>,r
J• 4— a maximum « i . inxtead oi t
10.
oi c $*• formula f"r determining total
state axxixtance.
... Authorizing |... nl governing Imnrd* In
316— levy i-xtra 1 null tor xitrx and biul.l.
ing# for separate school*.
Providing free tcxtimoks on * multiple
318- nlopOon plan, with local acluiol .iu-
thoritles »e|e< ting from approved state
list.
for Belter Schools
Vole 0 Yes
State Questions 314-315-316'318
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Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 54, Ed. 1 Monday, November 4, 1946, newspaper, November 4, 1946; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1528324/m1/8/?rotate=90: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.