Payne County News (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, February 28, 1941 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO
PAYNE COUNTY NEWS, STILLWATER. OKLAHOMA
FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 28, 1941
Payne county News
< Payne County Edition of The Stillwater News)
%—--— —__‘ --------
An independent Democratic newspaper of general circulation in Still-
Water and Payne county. Published Friday of each week and entered as
second class mail matter at Stillwater postoffice.
COUNTY
AGENT'S NOTES
By WORD CROMWELL
Payne County Ageat
OKLRHOmilOsSOOIITIDII
E. E. JOHNSON, General Manager
IRVIN HURST. Editor
Payne County Pigs (io To Prison
IT IS NOT SO UNCOMMON TO
I • read of men and hoys going to
1 prison; but when a pig goes to
- prison, that ought to be news. It
happened this way Jim Whitmore,
one of our most outstanding hog
breeders of Payne county, sold two
Duroc males to the Granite reform-
atory; and they go as head sires
that
the
to l)eef about now. I he army years ago to study music and
name like Guiseppe Benton-
ducers Just another effort to nelli, has decided that Joe ^^pXen in XS;°Not
1V1IVU L11V 11UUI IX* AUIHI 0VI . , • i J 1 I ' u»y\’,vuv. a<i
vice to the justice department (.’ok J’.111'' ,n hand and «ave ^‘ed.<qsllu<y>>'n 52'983/?00:
C’ nwn t'rlrlaoe'him this lesson: 1935 39,004,000. Sheep in Okla-
and the G-men looked Biidges your gun clean. When homn 1041 305.000; 1935- 365,-
oyer again. Thev turned in a .|J ? . .. . .. uoo. in united state* in 19-11 55-
rpnnrt hp wm.- vorv red — a Carrying a gun ill the crook ol " 1444
your arm, keep a grip on the
of
all
for
PROCLAMATION
■ord-
lor the swine held of that institut-
ion. Granity Reformatory is said
bo held at Stillwater fairgrounds,
Saturday, March 1. Competition is
Products Week.”
Signed: M. J BRADLEY.
Commissioner-Mayor.
Postal revenues for the fiscal
year ending June 30. 1940. reach-
ed an all-time record of $766,948.-
Livestock in Oklahoma on Jan. I
T IS TRUE ENOUGH FIGURES
nre not very Interesting reading
shoe
Mrs
been postponed
March 10,
Notices will
I farmers.
growers have something else ton, who went to Italy several p
to lieef about now. I he army years ago to study music and *
is placing large meat orders canie back with a spaghetti ?how eYer held in Pa-v:ie ount> t0
* ho hold nt Q f i 11 C
of the week, has
until the week
but what Bermuda will furnish
more pasture per acre than any
other lype of pasture. The pasture
should be benefited by planting
The Hawaiian islands were orig-
inally named the Sandwich islands
'by Captain James Cook
# #
G I V.E THE
war credit for
compllshment:
Let’s Chat
Awhile
(Continued From Page 11
be mailed Io
gun.
The G-man might have add-
ed: Don’t trust an empty
jfun. It’s the “empty” gun
which so often kills.
Stillwater doesnt have a G-
man office, but it has some
accommodating policemen who
will give similar lessons
boys here.
Farmers
Every
extra in
planting
windbreaks,
posts, soil conservation, or for other
reasons.
The trees must be planted on
cultivatable soil, planted in rows
so that they can be cultivated, and
must be cultivated during the grow-
ing season for protection. Most
farmers recommend the planting of
these trees seven to eight feet apart
in each direction. Farmers who
wish to buy trees from the state
forestry board should order at once
because the demand is great and
the supply will soon ho exhausted.
Remember that $15 additional
may be earned in your Farm Pro-
gram on the’planting of trees
earned at the rate of $7.50 an acre
when planted and cared for acct
ing to instructions.
with South American pro-
Should Order Trees Now
farmer may earn $15
1941 Farm Program by
trees; that is, trees for
wind erosion, fence
WHEREAS it is believed that the
people of Oklahoma are not cog-
nizant of the value of foodstuffs
grown, and processed within the
borders of this sovereign state and
WHEREAS because of the lack
of recognition of the quality and
amount of the food stuffs produced
in the state of Oklahoma, the Ju-
nior Chamber of Commerce of
Stillwater is cooperating with the
slate organization of Junior Cham-
ber of Commerce in a statewide
movement to inform the people of
those foodstuffs and the benefits
to be derived by them from the
use of Oklahoma grown foods and
WHEREAS the promotion and
dissemination of Oklahoma Grown
Food Products will raise the per
capita income of the State of Ok-
lahoma
NOW THEREFORE, I. M J.
Bradley. Mayor of the incorporated
city of Stillwater, Oklahoma, do
hereby state and proclaim the
week beginning February 24. 1941,
and ending March 3, 1941. to be set
aside and designated as "Oklahoma
Food
MINISTERS SHOULD Ap-
preciate the testimonial
of no less a scientist than Dr.
Alexis Carrel on the powers
of prayer.
Writing in the Reader’s Di-
gest. Doctor Carrel observes:
i “How does prayer fortify
'ug with so much dynamic pow-
er? To answer this question
(admittedly outside the juris-
diction of science) I must
point out that all prayers
have one thing in common.
/‘The triumphant hosannas
of a great oratorio, or theooc.
880,000; 1935 52,245,000. Horses
and nudes have declined in number
in Oklahoma and the United States.
Marriage Licenses
Jack C. Colvin. 25, Morrison, and
Jessielois Burdick. 23. Ponca
City.
Willis Y. Richerson, 21. Elk City,
and Myrtle King. 24. Cushing.
Henry Rink, 25, Stillwater, and
Edith Pratt, 25. Stillwater.
pretty dull in the civics and
citizenship class.
* * *
OUR PRE AC HER HAS
organized a new denomina-
tion: The Seventh Day Ab-
sences. Also, he has instituted
a campaign to wipe out the
order. Other preachers prob-
ably will be glad to help.
# * *
AMERICAN LIVESTOCK
Woman Recovers
Her Missing* Shoe
Mystery of the lost woman's
was solved Saturday when
C. A. Pearson. 135 Main street,
claimed it on behalf of Mrs. Clar-
ence Davis, Oklahoma City.
With her husband. Mrs. Davis
came to Stillwater last Saturday
night for a dance. They were guests
at Mrs. Pearsons. Mrs. Davis
changed to dancing pumps, and
when leaving dropped a shoe.
The shoe was found by Archie
Wallace, 301 Lewis street, who re-
ported it to The News. Miss Pat
Hine before her marriage, Mrs. Da-
vis formerly worked in, the agri-
cultural adjustment administration
office hero.
Sheep Men Meet Friday
nROSPECTS ARE GOOD FRIDAY
• for one of the largest groups of
sheep men ever to assemble in one
meeting in Payne county. The
meeting is to be the regular Payne
County Sheep Men's Day, and
I meeting with them will be the
sheep mon from northern and
northeast Oklahoma. The meeting
is to be held nt the animal hus-
bandry building at A. and M. col-
I lege.
one else.
I Lay your gun down flat on
the ground while crawling
ja‘l through or over a fence.
Don’t shoot across a high-;
w*. gUII(g iw w nn'ii in mi classes, inch
Denton sounds better after only will we have the largest num-
i bar of exhibits, bet the exhibits are
have tainted American labor
organizations — both the
American Federation of Labor
and the Congress of Indus! ri...
Organizations— and the dis-' - •
ease goes farther than just- ''a'.’ or towarH a house: and
one man |C’on 1 ri8*< a ^stance shot un-
Westbrook Pegler has ex-'1'1 8,1 numbers of the party
posed the hold of racketeers ;|ie accounted tor, back ol the
and grafters on the lucrative
jobs in the AFL. and the CIO
lias been a left-wing organi-
sation from the start. .With
the nation facing severe tests,
a government which has cod-
dled labor had better help the
constructive elements shake
off their pinkish leaders. De-
portation of Bridges will elim-
inate one red, but if the en-
tire organization is given a
different slant there won’t be
any vacancies for other
Bridges to fill.
ping at random. Keep the bar-, * • *
rel pointed toward the ground. ' °" Tr,P|,‘ A Postponed
Bridges isn't going to uproot . * u"l“«d. a D new ,9alure"'t Sf.TpS
the evil. Bridges is a mani- a <al • *, .' P<lss a gun granii the sign-up for 1941 Farm
festation of the strains which through the window to some Prognun. which had been called for
ra;„ra,i AWO,loKnv one else. ,he latter part of the week, has
report he was very red ;— a
fact evident from his daily , , t j
conduct—whereupon the de- sl.,1c1'1(1 Prexenl *’ ll,ini <U°P-
portation hearing was called.
But the deportation of
IT’S INTERESTING TO
note that Stillwater hatchery-
men ignore that old adage.
“Don’t count your chickens
before they hatch.” With a
total egg capacity of 109,000
the hatcheries figure on con-
verting 79 percent of those
eggs into chirping chicks and
market their product in ad-
vance.
* * •*
. HERE’S A BRIGHT SUG-
gestion from a banker friend:
Buy gasoline when the mer-
cury’s low; it contracts, you
know, and you get more for
your money.
themselves to the Infinite for permanent pasture. The fa-t
that the government will pay $4.50
an acre for sodding land to Ber-
muda Should be convinced
Bermuda is a good bet.
Soil-building allowance in
Farm Program may be earned at
the rate of $4.50 per acre where
Bermuda is sodded on cultivatable
land and put out in a good manner,
putting one sod to each 15 square
feet; 75 percent of the sodding
lesson 'w“hicirprobabi7soundsArtliened and repaired.” ,must be growing when field is m-
- 1 ' What Doctor Carrel says is s'’”c'fd' „ „ f ,
important to ministers, ol ,hHve al (his t|me th|s shouk, be a
Course, but his findings are good tome to sod Bermuda. Most
of even more importance to every farmer has a few acres that
the laymen. The scientist is could set aside for planting Ber-
just {Jutting new emphasis on niudn; and _,here *8nt an>’ doubl
the scriptural promise, “ask
and ye shall receive.”
*
EUROPEAN Lespedeza on the same plot where
one good ac- you put the B.e™ud.a 80d’
Joseph Ben-' JunIor L
ivestoek Show Saturday
’ PROSPECTS ARE GOOD FOR
the largest junior livestock
strengthen the sinews of ________
friendship wit'u our skeptical a||_ jje dropped the Guiseppe
neighbors to the south. part some time back, and h,t
I ixTnvn m*vcmrr> i' now 1,e’s trimmed the stir- .
IINDEK ( ON SI DLR AP>1. E .u..^ “Us” from his last name I
. .. . . piuft ii» num ma ikiuic. i Ult. HUl very interesting reading
, plodding', the justice of‘'IIx)t that be a lesson to other to many people; yet, these figures
jiartment finally has got Oklahomans who may get might be of interest to some of the
around io setting a hearing jn for(,i,rn ideas livestock men of the county. The
on deportation of Harry * * following shows the number of live-
R.-irlnna 9,. ennd 1-dun- stock in Oklahoma on Jan. 1. 1941,
budges the west coast labor W|1EN j i-YEAR-OLD B1L-(compand with the number of live-
leader. Bridges, a native ol “V ■ Blair cot dut his shot- 'n 1935, also, the number of
Australia, is accused of being! o.() |\udin„. in livestock in the United states fig-
a Communist, a charge he de- . , . . • ?> ures compiled by K. D. Blood, agri-
• ’ * (Oklahoma City, his mother|cuitUrai statistician.
Ppi-kinc nfisent him down to the office CaItle in Oklahoma in 1941-2,-
. . 1 ‘ ' 'i ■ ' f •< of the federal bureau of in- 359,000; 1935 2,638,000. in United
labor, once gave him a wlnte- .• f• f s nointers iStatPS ln 1941 71,660.000; 1935
wash. I hen congress trans- . f'*> ' , ,,,, ,, 68.529,000. Hogs in Oklahoma in
ferred the immigration ser- ;A real sure-enough G-man, 1941 990.000; 1935 800.000. in
humble supplication of an
Iroquois hunter begging for,to have one of the outstanding
luck in the chase, demonstrate l,uroc herds °f 8Jate'
. . „ . j. the same t hit h; that human' „ , „ .
Ster for any Service needed , • . t ’ ment their Bermuda Modding Pays XI.M Acre
in an emergency <■ • s ‘ 1 al,kn 1 . 11 Bermuda is considered by many
* * finite energy by addressing |fnrmprs nB ot1P of the best grasses
HIGH SCHOOL STUD-
ents at Sag Harbor, N. Y., got 80uun ° a enorS'v-
a taste Friday of life under a V\ aen we pray, we link
dictatorship. E. R a y m 0 n d pelves with the inoxhaust-
Schneible, the principal, or- 1 )le hiotive power that spins
ganized a gestapo and put the llie universe. We ask that a
students through the paces. Parl 01 1118 P°weJ be appor-
It was pretty much a lark, of honed to our needs. Even in
course, but Schneible is to be a8k,n?,°ur human deficiencies
commended for dramatizing a ar^ h’lled and we arise stren-
RURAL
SCHOOL NEWS
By 4TDA NEWCOMER
County Superintendent
March
a program
executive
CAMERA
LAST TIMES TODAY
Ray WMtl’7• Emmett Lynn ■ Martha O'Driseall
isn't any
Leh make!
And as a
liberalized
legislature
job of col-
people.
He started of by lopping state
salaries and putting teeth in a law
LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS
old-age
the state
assistance would
to cooperate with
An auto speeder always discov
ers his mistake by accident.—Ana
darko News.
and
a unified board of
state education in-
limitation
by both
for action
ability tt
trar.sporta
For
to call
a mat-
says it
it that
-the ci-
are prohibited
it is. from asking for such help. Hard
He‘put to it under this tax limitation
to collect enough for their own
uses, the cities and counties said
to the schools:
"We can’t ask the state for help.
previously esti-
that about $1,000,000 is be-
ing wasted each year because of
overlapping and unwisely extended
school bus lines due to competition
I for students.
burden on a good part of the
state's taxable property, the valu-
ations on which, it will be remem-
bered. already had been reduced.
Also passed under Governor Mar-
land was the state’s first old-age
pension law.
Recourse to Sales Tax
During all this time the only
new tax enacted was a one-cent
sales tax under Governor Murray
for relief. Governor Marland add-
ed a cent to this for hts pensioners.
Then came the law limiting the
ad valorem tax for local purposes
to 15 mills. This really started the
trouble about the schools,
while the schools are free
upon the state for aid—as
ter of fact the constitution
is the state's job to see to
the schools are maintained-
ties and counties
married to Mattie M. DeJarnette
at Severy, Kan., Feb. 6. 1888. They
lived in Louisburg, Kan., one year,
then came to Oklahoma in April,
1889. They bought a farm three
miles north of Ripley, which he
still owned at the time of his death.
Weir retired from the farm 33
years ago and moved to Stillwater.
Survivors include his wife, at the
home address, two sons, Clifton
Weir, Stillwater, and J. C. Weir,
Ripley, and two daughters, Mrs.
Gala Hix, Cushing, and Mary
Blanche Hann, Joliet, Ill. Three
grandsons, one grand daughter and
one brother also survive. Clifton
Weir is owner of the A. and M.
cab service.
Funeral services were helu at
day afternoon with Rev. O. Edgar
Wright in charge. Burial follow-
ed in Fairland cemetery.
OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb. 24.
(Special) Plans to put the state
on a cash basis by July 1, virtually
completed, were discussed by Gov-
joint ses-
over the
MRS. MABEL FRIEND, PRI-
mary leather at Markham,
graduated her primary class of six
pupils at the school assembly pro-
gram Thursday. The class poem
was a nursery rhyme by each
member.
Each pupil gave his own "Will”
Louis Ausbrook read the class his-
tory. As a part of the proginm,
the pupils gave a demonstration of
the abilities in reading ami arith-
metic. They also sang their ABC’s.
Those passing to the firse grade
were: Mary Ruth Rowden. Chris-
tine Lewis, Shirley Sheldon, Louis
Ausbrook, Yvonne Stoops and Ella
Marie Joyner.
School superintendents and
principals will discuss means of im-
proving and enlarging the national
youth administration program at
a statewide NYA conference in
Guthrie Tuesday night.
Mrs. Beatrice Jones, former
county teacher, was a visitor in
the office Saturday. Mrs. Jones
teaches remedial reading in the
Depew school system.
Nineteen schools report hot
lunches for all pupils every day.
These schools have well equipped
kitchens and WPA cooks to pre-
pare and serve the lunches.
Mrs. Newcomer gave the state
tests at Schlegel Monday.
Goodnight school had to post-
pone its Americanism program be-
cause of bad roads. It will be giv-
en. as soon as weather permits.
Mrs. Vida Newcomer and Mrs.
Faye Dawson attended the funeral
of Sid Laughlin Sunday in Cush-
ing. Mr. Laughlin has been director
of the Norfolk school board for
many years.
fe’NOWI
Each year members of the El
Modjii, a group of creative artists
chosen from the college of fine
arts at the University of Oklahoma,
combine their talents to produce
the fine-arts festival.
program."
the work
It is not
are
care 01
not interested,
to appropriate
go home."
Praised
his confidence
in the legislature declaring
_sii
warned that the members should
not get excited about flurries of
personal interests.
"We are getting
well on writing a
said. "I'm proud of
ready accomplished,
personal thing. When it is done you
can take a great deal of personal
credit. If 1 make any suggestions,
they are not in complaint but to
be helpful. When little things hap-
pen it ’ ”
tited."
Tlie
permit
the federal government if the limit
is raised to $4t) a month. Phillips
has made it clear that the state is
[ not able, at this time, to increase
its share of the assistance, but if
the federal government decides to
pay all or more than half of the
grant the state could go along.
Won’t Close Institutions '
The proposed cei
r- nts w ould have power to con-
trol state institutions and to pre-
sent duplication, the governor said
which requires—but which hadn’t
1 been much followed—the sale of
: delinquent tax property. This
1 brought in added revenue from
1 sales, and resulted in putting much
1 property back on the tax rolls.
He sought also to save money by
• consolidating state departments.
I He cut state appropriations for
Now Deal agencies. And he stop-
| ped the waiving of tax delinquency
: penalties.
I Then he went to work on the
| school problem. The bill just
I passed has the effect not only ol of William and Mary Weir. He was
' relieving the state of the cost ol
' this school support, but. what is
. held more important, of forcing
| local units to do their own collect-
' ing and spending, forcing back on
them the job of governing them-
selves,
| That's on the government-back-
‘ to-the-people side of it.
Pay-as-You-Go Plan
On the economy angle the legis-
I lature has passed and there awaits
1 action by the people at a special
election March 11, a constitutional
amendment making any state
| warrant illegal if it cannot be paid
from cash on hand. In other words,
this amendment would put the
state on a strictly pay-as-you-go
basis, relieve legislators of the onus
i or refusing pleas for more spend-
ing from the folks at home.
There is also in the wind a move
to wipe out certain tax exemptions
applied to fraternal orders, and put
back on the rolls a lot of good tax-
able property. One large office
ernor Phillips before a
sion of the legislature
week-end.
The iron-clad deficit
amendment, approved
houses, has been ready
for several days, pending a Vote of
the people March 11. The gover-
nor indicated that a cash reserve
fund of $3,000,000 should be built
up to make state financing flexible
when it goes on the cash basis.
The governor announced he plans
to submit three amendments, the
debt-limitation clause, a liberalized
old-age pension amendment
one setting up
control for all
stitutions.
"The most
’ starring |
BOB CROSBY I
end hl»
DIXIEUNO IANO ’
wHh. /
JEAN ROGERS (
important amend-
ment is to keep us from getting
into debt.” the governor said. “1
waflt to show you how we can
write a safe program.
A S3,000,000 Operating Fund
"1 don't think it will be possible
for the amendment to operate un
less we build a revolving fund or
cushion the general revenue fund
with at least $3,000,000 by July 1.
It can be done and will he done. 1
want you to see how practical it
is to get the state on a cash hasis
in 1941.
"If this amendment passes and
wo write a rule for the tax com-
mission to put all income tax into
a fund to be available July 1, we
will have $3,000,000 to start with
and not have to rob any fiscal
year of funds. You can do it in
different ways. You can levy spe-
cial taxes. That you will have to
decide.
“If the amendments are adopted
we will have the vote of the peo-
ple to validate the last funded debt
in Oklahoma. In a year or two, it
we get an extravagant bunch in,
they will have to clear up their
own mess.
"I don’t think you owe the duty
to your people to go home and talk
for these. I think the people
interested enough to take
them. If they are
all we can do is
what we have and
Legislature
Phillips arrested
Services for Pioneer Are
Held Here Wednesday.
A Payne county ’89er, William H.
Weir, died at Stillwater hospital
Sunday, Feb. 23, 1941, after a brief
illness. Ho was 79 years old, and
had been in failing health for sev-
eral months. He lived at 524 West
street for years before his death.
Weir was born in Fillmore
county. Minn., Sept. 17, 1861, son
Direct Government
By People Seen On
Way Back in State
(Continued From Pace 1)
township governmental machinery.
Then came Gov. E. W. Marland,
who, his opponents claimed, tried
to "out New Deal the New Deal.”
At any rate he continued the pro-
gram of easing the visual burden
of the taxpayer. He didn't, how-
ever, have so much to say about
slicing the costs of running the
state government. And it should
be noted that this was just at the
time that the states, in their turn,
began to look to Washington for
financial help—and got it.
Governor Marland put through building in Oklahoma City, for ex-
first a homestead tax exemption ample, it is pointed out, was ex-
law, easing or eliminating the tax empted from taxation merely be-
cause it was taken over by a fra-
ternal order.
PREVIEW SAXJV
SUNDAY. MONDAY. TUESDAY
If you've got
rhythm..Bob's \ rf’*” '
got the bond.. b
FRIDAY—SATURDAY
A ttew Hand Rides
the Range!
“We do not expect to close any
institutions, but. to put them to
functioning to meet the needs of
the people,” he said.
"I expect to present to this leg-
islature an educational plan which
will authorize and finance nine
months of school and raise the sal-
aries of classroom teachers,' rnn-
lips announced. “Somenocy should
bo in the education department
with the energy
write
tion.”
The
mated
JEWELER
Main Phone 8'
along pretty
he Y’ou can. We’ll spend what we can
collect locally, or most of it. You
go to the legislature for yours."
And the school did.
result the legislature
its school aid law. The
in effect took over the
lecting and spending the money for
ause to get ex- the local school districts.
During this time there had de-
veloped another practice which fits
into this picture. Out of sympathy
for the "poor taxpayer” the state
had quite regularly waived penal-
ties for tax delinquency.
State Salaries Cut
Then came Governor Phillips, in
1939. inheriting a $18,000,000 defi-
cit—illegal under the Oklahoma
Constitution—and bringing some
ideas about spending and about
mtral board of keeping government close to the
i power
YOUt 0H> WATCH IS WORTH MONEY
Rodecapes Are
Moving To Texas
Mr. and Mrs. Rody Rodecape,
1516 West Fourth avenue, will
leave Stillwater Saturday to make
their home at Victoria, Texas.
Mr. Rodecape has accepted ap-
pointment as representative for
the Folger Coffee Co. in the Vic-
toria region.
He has been a salesman for the
Schuler Fruit Co., in Stillwater,
for the last three years, and will
be succeeded by Walt Hufstutler,
122 Orchard Lane.
Rodecape attended A. and M. col-
lege. and for several years he was
manager of the local Farmers co-
operative. For two years he rep-
resented a who.esale house at
Chickasha.
Mr. and Mrs. Rodecape are well-
known in Stillwater social circles.
They are members of the Sigma
Nu alumni dinner club, the Tri-
Deck bridge club, and the Stillwa-
ter Dancing club, among others.
Mrs. Rodecape’s son, Freedy
Bud Salmans, will accompany the
couple to their new home, where
he will enroll in junior high school.
Rodecape will go to Kansas City
Saturday, to spend three days at
the Folger plant. While he is there,
Mrs. Rodecape and Freddy Bud will
visit Mrs. Rodecape’s patents, Mr.
and Mrs. O. E. Cooley, at Wichita.
Patriotic Trick
Mint sherbet balls atop seeded
red and white cherries make a de-
licious, refreshing start for a Feb-
ruary party meal. A patriotic
opener is made by combining
cubes of jellied grapejuice or balls
of grape sherbet with cubed pine-
apple and seeded red cherries 01
strawberiies.
AGGIE
—Last Day—
"LITTLE BIT OF HEAVEN”
Friday - Saturday
SHOWS CONTINUOUS
FROM 10 O'CLOCK A.M.
^HE SCREEN’S ROARING
CAVALCADE OF THRILLS!
PREVUE jS",'’"
SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY
MECCA
—Last Day—
"THE MAD DOCTOR”
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E FRED MicRDRRAY
PATRICIA MORISON
F > BETTY BREWER
^ALBERT DEKKER
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Hurst, Irvin. Payne County News (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, February 28, 1941, newspaper, February 28, 1941; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1588395/m1/2/: accessed June 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.