Payne County News (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1935 Page: 5 of 8
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SOAP “.z I9c
e Deliver CITY Phone 3
GROCERY & MKT.THE PAYNE COUNTY NEWS, FRIDAY. JANUARY 25,1985
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY—JANUARY 25-2S
—IN DEATH—
SixO
TOMATOES
ZSc(XASSIFIED ADS
25c
Oyster Shell
75c
SUGAR
Shannon’s Special $0 Oft
Dairy Feed, 21%pro. ^.Ov
RAISINS
I5c
Bran
100 lbs.ASK ABOUT OUR PATRONAGE DIVIDEND PLAN
Prunes
2 lbs 15cFARMER’S
3 lbs. ... 39c
2 lbs. ... 25c
Feed & Produce Department
15 lb. peck 21c
Crackers
Salty Flake
2 lb. box
pound __ 8c
49c4 lbs 23c
4 lbs.25c
5 large bars 21c
19c2'i lbs 25c
2 lbs 19c
Flour
OATSPkg.
BRING US YOUR EGGS
Aver
Seedless
2 lbs.
Mexican style
3 large cans
California
3 cans
39c
95c
Guaranteed
48 lbs.
100 lb.
bag
APPLE SAUCE
No. 2 Country Club
WHOLE FIGS
No. 2>/2 FancyTHIS WEEK
IN WASHINGTON
APPLES
Winesap, peck
SOAP FLAKES
5 lb. box
Cooking
lbs.
lb. Bu. basket
much power for the executive, and it
has selfish moitves on congress that it
must do its own work and not merely
pass the buck to the president.
As one pakerplaying senator put
it: “It's still the New Deal, but it’s
on longer Dealer's Choke. If we're
going to play with deuces wild, we’ve
got to say so in the house rules.’’
The $4,000,000,000 which the presi- I
ment asks for public works will
doubtless be granted by congress, but |
with many more restrictions upon 1
how and for what it may be spent I
than in the case of previous blanket I
appropriations, It probably wont be I
appropriated before March, and in
I any event won’t be available until
July 1, the beginning of the next I
llscal year, so its effects are not
likely to be noticeable much before '
next fall.John Sheehan
Funeral services for John Sheehan,
84. whose death occurred in Still-
water, January 21, were held at 9
o’clock Wednesday morning from the
Catholic church. Burial was made in
Fairlawn cemetery under direction
of Vincent Funeral Home.
Born in Iowa, February 5, 1850,
Sheehan came to Oklahoma shortly
after the opening, and was engaged
in public work virtually all his life.
He never married.
He is survived by a brother, Wil-
liam Sheehan, of Kansas City, Mo.,
and three cousing, Dennis and Rich-
ard Harrington, of Stillwater, and
Patrick Harrington of Montana.WE HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF HARDWARE
FOR THE FARMER:
Home Stl?.ngs’ Nai,s> Staples, Milk Pails,
Water Piuls, Snaps, Rope, all sizes, Hoes, Rakes, Spades.
Forks, and a large assortment of guaranteed Kelly’s Plumb
and Simmons Axes.
— The Feed and Farm Produce Dept. Welcomes You —
We Pay Cash for Eggs, Hides, Chickens, other fam Produce!
SOAP
Giant bar
7 bars
Oflz* Buckwheat Flour
-«vv Pure, 5 lb. bag ODC
OATS, Crystal
Wedding, large pkg. ^DC
Apples:
V- r . •
CRACKERS
Soda or Graliam 1 Qn
2 pounds IOC
COFFEE
2REm? « PRUNES 1 9^ APPLE JELLY
No. 2V£ Syrup pack ±4 V Pure, 2 lbs.
9Qp APPLE
^<7 V Pure, gallon___
KADOTA FIGS
Ex. fancy dry, lb A4 vC
1920. i (Publittad in The Payne County N.wg
She is survived by four children, I order for‘and ’notice of hearing
Ernest Hamilton, Cushing; Annie I petition for authority to G
Tesh, Coffeyville, Kansas; Elisa Ran- ; 1N £^LK8TATS
dolph, Orlando, and Carl Hamilton, of | niE coK “ PAYNE^r011
Stillwater. Thirteen grandchildren and . state of Oklahoma
five great grandchildren also survive, iIn the Matter •>( the Estate
G. W. OVERHOLT, decked. 1,74
State of Oklahoma. County of Payne. M •
H5’rw* °?rholt\ appointed, quail-
r w « * un.g •?m'ni«r»trix of the eatate of
G. W. Overholt, tteceaMd, having filed her pe-
tition for authority to execute mortgage cov-
ering tlie following described real estate and
premiae*, to-wit:
The Northwest one-fourth (NWU);
Section Eight (8); Town whip Eighteen
<18N); Range Three East i3E)
I. M.. Payne County. Oklahoma;
“■<» ‘-eal estate belonging to and being a
part of the estate.
It is ordered that said petition be and is
°n th* 7th d*y °f F’b-
ruary, 1935, nine ,m> Bt wh1(,h tjrae a||
persona interested in said estate are required
to appear. ehow cause, if any there be. why
an order ahould not be granted for the au-
thority of the administratrix to negotiate ex-
ecute and deliver a good and sufficient mort-
gage covering said real estate not to exceed
the sum of 14,500.00, for the purpose of |>ay-
ing off an existing mortgage which now con-
stitutes and is a lien against said real estate
and premises.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a copy of
this order be published for two successive
weeks in some newspaper of general circula-
tion in the County of Payne, and State of
Oklahoma.
Dated at Stillwater this the ’3rd day of
January, 1935.
, 1 Seal I RALPH SIMCOE.
L. G. LEWIS, County Judge.
Attorney for Estate.'Published In The Payne County News,
Jan 25, Feb. 1, 1935)
NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT, OF DE-
TERMINATION OF HEIRS. LEGATEES
AND DEVISEES. AND OF DIS-
TRIBUTION OF ESTATE
IN THE COUNTY COURT OF PAYNE
COUNTY. STATE OF OKLAHOMA.
In the matter of the estate of
MARION CECIL CARDIN, deceased.
Whereas. Ethel Masters (formerly Cardin),
administratrix of the estate of Marion Cecil
Cardin, deceased, having on the 21st day of
January. 1935. rendered her final account in
thia court, and also filed her petition for de-
termination of the heirs, legatees and devisees
of said decedent, and for distribution of the
estate remaining in her hands, and the estate
being now ready for final settlement and dis-
tribution. notice in therefore given that on the
11th day of February, 1935. at 9 o'clock a.m.,
tire wune -being a day of the regular term, to-
wit. of the January term. 1935. final aettle-
ment and distribution of the said estate, and
determination of the heirs, legatees and devi-
sees of said decedent, will be had and made,
unless, for good and substantial cause, the
1 ^“ra*._bS, |xwtpon<Id to * certain by the
any objections to the’ settlement of said ac-
count and distribution of said eMate are re-
quired to present them on or before that day,
“ ----- 'I persons interested in said
•’state an an heir-at-law, legatee or devisee.
. <ngy then and there assert such interest, or
may content the claim of any other person
asserting any interest therein as an heir-at-
law, legatee or devisee.
Witnene my hand and the seal of said court
thin 21st day of January, 1935.
(Beal) RALPH B. SIMCOE.
BROWN MOORE, County Judge.
Attorney.
(Published in The Payne County News,
Jan. 25. Feb. 1, 1935)
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
In the Matter of the Estate of
ELIZA M. JARDOT. Deceased.
All peraons having claims against Elisa M.
Jardot. deceased, are required to present the
■wme with the necessary vouchers, before the
undersigned administrator at the office of
Freeman E. Miller, attorney at law, room 203
Hoke building. City of Stillwater, in Payne
County. Oklahoma, within four months of the
date hereof, or the same will be forever
barred.
Dated thia 22nd day of January. 1935.
LEO M. JARDOT.
FREEMAN E. MILLER. Administrator.
Attorney.Shorts.X1.55
PEANUTS, Fresh 1PZ1
Salted, lb. 1OC
10 ibs---------- 49c25 lb. cloth bag a-
C.4H. Cane — $1.29
CHILI SAUCE
Large bottle
RELISH, Sweet
Snappy, large jar _
EGG NOODLES
Pure, 1 lb. pkg.
APPLE BUTTER
i--------
MILK MAKER Ift 1 r
20% Protein
FULL PAIL H Ofh
Dairy Feed, 100 lbs. A«Ov
CALF MEAL, A&M Qf*
or Shannon’s, 25 Ibs.ODC
SHANNON’S Oft
A&M Egg Mash ZiZU
SHANNON’S High |Q rr
Protein Egg Mash ^»3D
Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes..
MILL RUN ““ 1.50GROUND OATS |Q QP
100 lbs Z.ZD
WHOLE OATS ftP3 bushel bag ju«vD
Dairy Com Meal QQ
Not yellow
Cotton Seed Meal |Q PP
or Cake, 100 lbs. _ ^«DD
1 PEARS, Bartlett Q-f _
A" V No. 2i/2 whole, spicedAC
SMOKED SALT “Old Hickory’’ 7^7 C
Fine granulated
10 ibs.
Rice, choice, whole grain
Sugar, light brown_____
Soap, Crystal White____
Raisins, large puffed
Prunes, large size
Apples $1.19
FOR SALE Nice range wood cook «f<w«.
gray enamel. 809 Washington. (IS-lt)
H)R SALE- Light wagon; nearly new mt of
w^n«fh^T’ u “““> "nd H mil*
weat of Bigler Hatchery, or phone 9524 F.2.
IQn Choc. Malted Milk
-Lc/V Krafts, 2 lb. can____Dt/C
Farmers’ Scratch 1 P
100 lbs At>
WHEAT $1 ftp
ioo ibs A.y&
kafir io 1 p100 lbs 45.A&
CORN CHOPS ftft
No. 1 Yellow
Pure White Compound
Home Made Chili_____
WE WANT YOUR CREAM—CHICKENS—EGGS’
COOKSEY’S
Phone 915 Service—Quality—Quantity 824 Main
Kansas City 10 lbs. Me
IvlCal kiln mrnmk
98 Ik, $2.79
i Mrs. Carolina Wilhelmina Hamilton
I --
1 Funeral services for Mrs. Caroline
Wilhelmina Hamilton, 86, whose death
occurred January 16 in Stillwater,
were held at 4 o’clock Thursday after-
I noon, January 17, from the First
’ Christian church, with the Rev. L. L.
Roach, pastor, officiating. Burial was
in Fairlawn cemetery under direction , ~ a,, „ .---------—■■■ ,.|
of Vincent Funeral home. I .ndL.»rii^elt m For? drw"r»-!
Bearers were J. A. McNeff, Charles w,kx1 hmitJ. w.ter h£ T^u“g
McNeff, Willard Rude, Ralph Hall, g«>d lawn mower, other’ artktaa
Amos Avery and Dr. C. W. Chiles. . uTit*)Tnin,,fer’ s,‘turdaj'- Jan- 2*. 2 p m. I
Carolina Wilhelmina Johnson was----------- ----------
bom in Sweden, April 30, 1848. She 1 WANTED
came to the United States when she. .’•00o>waUh iroid filled or toiid- any
was 26, and was married to C. J. Ham- of or roW Ueth HJ«he.t ‘ ca«h
ilton November 17, 1874, at Moline,! imm^^i^*- w“,Um *
Ill. Mr. Hamilton died January 23,1 ---
1920.
OA FI1 China or Aluminum
xV JL 1^5 lArge box, Griffins
Coffee 1 lb. pkg. „19C!
3 55c
Washington, D. C., Jan. 22.—Con-
gress must do ite own job of making
laws. It cannot delegate that task to
the president or to anyone else. That
is the net substance of the decision
of the supreme court of the United
States in the “hot oil” case.
Eight of the nine justices agreed
that there was no legal authority
for executive control of “hot oil.”
The ninth, Justice Cardozo, agreed
with his colleagues on the principle
that the executive could not make
rules having the effect of law unless
congress prescribed the nature of
those rules and set limits upon ex-
ecutive power. Justice Cardozo, how-
ever, held that congress had granted
sufficient authority to the president
in the matter of forbidding transpor-
tation across state lines of oil pro-
duced in excess of quotas set by the
respective states.
This first setback to the authority
of the president under the New Deal
was followed by the argument over
the repudiation of the gold contract
in the case of liberty bonds of private
corporations. The administration is
anxiously awaiting the supreme
court’s decision, in view of questions
from the bench by Chief Justice
Hughes and several associate jus-
tices, pointedly inquiring where con-
gress found authority for repudiat-
ing a contract.
The Gold Contracts
If the supreme court holds that
congress may not, under the consti-
tution, abrogate a contract written
into a government bond, in which
payment is gold dollars “of the pres-
ent weight and fineness” is specified,
then every dollai of a 11,000 liberty
bond is entitled to collect tl 690 in
the nreuent J ii’ tl to a day certain hy th«
tne present value of dollars. The Coanty Court, and any and all peinona having
right of congress to fix the value of----- — •
money is not questioned, but having aulPBd
depreciated the gold dollar, can gov- and any and all
ernment then compel holders of gold
obligations to accept less gold than
their contracts call for.
The supreme court's decision is not
expected for two or thhree weeks. In
the meantime, all sorts of schemes
to circumvent it, should it uphold the
sanctity of the government’s bond
contracts, are being discussed at
both ends of Pennsylvania avenue.
Back in Place
Whatever the decision in the gold
case, the court’s positive stand on
the question of the right of congress
to delegate its lawmaking powers
has stirred official Washington as
nothing else has since the inaugura-
tion of President Roosevelt. It has
put the more radical members of the
administration on warning that they
must pay more attention to the con-
situation and not try to grab off too
W95 Idaho Russet’;
SpUUS peck
EGG MAKER $Q ftp
20% protein
EARLY RISER 1 A
EGG MASH Z.AU
Corn, No. 2
.......2 for... 25c I
Peas, No. 2
....... 2 for... 25c 1
Cocoa, Our Mother’s
------2 lbs.... 19c I
Veal Loaf
M---
Pork Added 11/^1
pound 1J.CI
Baby Beef Roast
pound ... ll'/zc
Steak, family style ..
pound 13c
Chili, fresh, home made
----pound 12^c
MARSHMALLOWS
5 lb. tin box_______I J/C
60-70 PRUNES
21/2 lb. bag_________mOC
PEAS T’™ 19c
Grapefruit, Texas
Seedless, 6 for La/C
X R YEAST Q
Fleischmann’s OC
GOLD DUST r
Scouring Powder____ DC
SOUP 15c
RIB BEEF BOIL rj
Pound______________ / C
PICNIC HAMS 1 Q
Shankless, lb._______JLOC
BACON SQUARES 1 ri
Pound_____________1/C
LEAN BACON
Sliced, lb.__________^OC
Flour “$1.59
(PiqgUjWiqqlij•ARMER
COOPERATIVE EXCHANGE 1
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Allen, Willis F. Payne County News (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, January 25, 1935, newspaper, January 25, 1935; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1588465/m1/5/: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.