Oklahoma State Register (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 16, 1923 Page: 3 of 8
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in Better Homes
Young women find an ideal school
in Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechani-
cal College. Here they receive training
which enables them to become capable
home makers. At the same time this
training fits them for any career to which
they may incline.
Oklahoma A. andM.College provides
a regular four-year course leading to B.
S. degree. Young women are offered a
varied field of study in home economics,
education, science, literature, fine arts
and physical education. >
You can live cheaply at A. and M.
The College cafeteria serves meals at
cost. (About 20 cents each.)
Correspondence courses are offered in
all departments.
Fall term opens September 10th. -
Write for catalog and bulletins giving
complete information.
COME TO
MOB WHIPPING MI ST GO,
SAYS WALTON ORDER
Story •! Brutal Beating. Told By
Nathan Hantman Brings
Action.
Martial law was proclaimed in the
city of Tulsa Monday by Governor
Walton. The edict becoming effective
at 6 o'clock Tuesday morning when
national guard troops took over hte
sheriff's office and the city police de-
partment.
The order followed the visit to the
governor's office of Nathan Hantman,
brutally whipped near Sand Springs
Friday night after he had been seized
near Tulsa police headquarters by
several unidentified men and rushed
cut of the city in an automobile.
Troops ordered to Tulsa by Adju-
tant General B. H. Markham were
companies A and I), one hundred and
seventy-ninth Infantry, Oklahoma
City and Company E of Okmulgee. The
Oklahoma City units are commanded
by Captains C. 0. Lee and E. R. Fowls.
Captain Jim Sweeney will have
charge charge of the Okmulgee con- I
tingent.
All civilians must leave the streets
by 11 o'clock at night and may not
again appear until 6 a. ni. without a
specific permit from military authori-
ties. it was stated.
The order will not affect the Courts
or other departments of government
with the exception of the police and
sheriff's office, it was stated by Aid-
rich Blake, executive counselor, who
made the order public just as the
office was closing late Monday fol-
lowing telephone instructions from
Governor Walton and a brief confer-
ence with Adjutant General Mark-
ham
Markham left Monday night for
Tulsa. He will take charge
ally, and direct all operations of the
troops from headquarters at Tulsa.
I
At this moment in California and
elsewhere oil is pouring out in quan- ,
titles unprecedented. But does that '
ly united take good care that the extra
supply of oil shall not mean a cheaper
price for gasoline.
What do you think would happen
to the farmers and the price of wheat
if wheat began suddenly boiling up
out the earth?
Go to the Standard Oil company, Mr.
Farmer, learn something, and be wise.
LABOR SCORES AGAIN IN
CORPORATION COMMISSION
Oklahoma City, Aug. 16.—On Aug-
ust 3, E. W. Vance was appointed to
the staff of the Corporation Commis-
sion at a salary of 12750.00 per year
and made chief of the motor transpor-
tation department.
Vance Is well known in Oklahoma
labor and political circles, having
been for many years legislative rep-
resentative of certain of the railway
brotherhoods and holder of various
political positions between legislative
sessions. He was employed by the
Corporation Commission in making
traffic studies in connection with the
famous two-cent passenger fare liti-
gation. and was connected with the
Oklahoma City health department
during the Walton administration.
Captain Clark Owsley, brother of Al-
vin Owsley, national commander of
the American Legion, is attorney for
the motor bus department of the com-
mission, and C. C. Stafford, a former
Santa Fe accounting employe, is
clerk. The Governor has authorized a
$10,000 deficiency for this department.
The first certificate of convenience
and necessity, issued by the cornmis-
1 sion undr the law passed by the legis-
lature and rules adopted by the com-
mission, was issued under date of
August 1 to Ward Way, Inc. author-
izing service between Muskogee and
Muskogee and Boyton and
Muskogee and Eufaula. This certi-
ficate was issued over the protest of
the M. K. and T., the Midland Valley
and the Kansas, Oklahoma & Gulf
railroads.
person-| Tulsa.
i
knock down the price of gasoline? Not
enough to notice.
Standard Oil steps in and buys 36
million barrels at a time. That stead-
ies things. And intelligent men close-
| NOSE CLOGGED FROM
A COLD OR CATARRH
• Apply Cream in Nostrils To
• Open Up Air Passages.
Ah! What relief! Your clogged I
nostrils open right up, the air passages
of your head are elear and you can
breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffl-
ing, mucous discharge, headache, dry-
ness—no struggling for breath at night,
your cold or catarrn ia gone.
Don't stay stuffed-up! Get a small
bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your
druggist now. Apply a little of this
fragrant, antiseptic cream in your nos-
trils, let it penetrate through every air
passage of the head; soothe and heal
the swollen, inflamed mucous membrane,
giving you instant relief. Ely’s Cream
Balm is just what every eold and catarrh
sufferer haa been seeking. It’s just
splendid.
BH CHEST COLDS
WITH RED Hid
Ease your tight, aching chest Stop
the pain. Break up the congestion.
Feel a bad cold loosen up in just a
short time.
"Red Pepper Rub” is the cold rem-
edy that brings quickest relief. It can-
not hurt you and it certainly seems to
end the tightness and drive the con-
gestion ana soreness right out
Nothing has such concentrated, pene-
trating heat as red peppers, and when
heat penetrates right down into colds,
congestion, aching muscles and sore,
stiff joints relief comes at once.
The moment you apply Red Pepper
Rub you feel the tingling heat In three
minutes the congested spot is wanned
through and through. When you are
suffering from a cold, rheumatism,
backache, stiff neck or sore muscles,
just get a jar of Rowles Red Pepper
OKLAHOMA STATE REGISTER
PAGE THREE
uiByniaiaiaumuu;!inu;uii:i:gnmanT~:nn::n:nn:nni:
LITTLE PERI VS LETTER,
PLENTY OF
The Best Face Powder
IN EVERY FORM
pa wben
lie com
lie took
so
KEEPING WRINKLES AWAY.
HOW A RIP-ROARING
RADICAL WAS TAMED
By JOHN OAKWOOD
0
v
FOURS and SIXES
PRICES NOT ADVANCED
Models range from $915 to $2190, f. o. b. factory
GERLACH BROS. MOTOR CO.
PHONE 237
113 WEST HARRISON AVE
(im>
NASH
TRY SULPHUR ON
AN ECZEMA SKIN
like it
studio
Now
"He bought that house and joined
the listed landlord class. Some years
later when it was reported that a
band of strikers were advancing to
shut all the factories, Otto rushed
into my office at the head of an ex
cited group of men from the shop
yelling:
" Get us a lot of shotguns and we'll
keep those fellows out of here! Those
fools expect a man to work and save
and then walk in here and take what
he has got without paying for it!*
“And that,” Farquhar concludes, "I
think, is always the way to develop a
conservative.”
Loose powders or compact: plain white,
light tints, or deep rouge: imported kinds.
Rice powders, starch powders and zinc
powders Some lightly perfumed, some
heavily perfumed Everything in face
powders in every form for every lady who
uses this important toilet adjunct
sufe powder is made with three parts
cornstarch to one part boric powder
and if desired, a few drops of perfume
end a little earmine can be added.
( hiropodist says that unless the feet
are comfortable, they are the cause of
numerous worried lines that appear
in the forhead and around the eyes
and mouth and he advises sprinkling
, a little boric powder in the shoes and
stockings every morning as this
makes the walking easier and the
> shoes more comfortable on the feet.
The Advice of Honest Men Who Know, and Willingness to Be Con
tent With Reasonable Return, Declared Only Safe
Road to Assured Income.
GROWING RECOGNITION
OF ADVERTISING’S USE
Also Known as The Postoffice Drug Store
OFFICIAL SCHOOL BOOK DEPOSITORY
Phone 61. 206 West Oklahoma Avenue.
THE ONLY “SURE THING”
IN THE INVESTMENT FIELD
Advertising first established its place
as an economic factor as a sales aid.
but as understanding and use of it
have increased, its possibilities in oth-
er fields have developed until today
we find it employed in many forms
of service hitherto unthought of. Ad-
vertising has long been hampered la
its use by precedent, tradition, con-
ventions, and prejudices, which, un-
der analysis and experience, find lit-
tle to warrant their existence. Gradu-
ally the falsity of their claims la be-
ing proved.
We were told for many years that
It was undignified for a bank or fidu-
ciary institution to advertise, and this
edict, born of some superstition of the
past, was accepted without question
until finally it was Intelligently chal-
lenged and it was discovered under
analysis that there was no sufficient
reason for its support. The Inevitable
conclusion of logic la that, whatever
is of genuine use to human beings,
whether it be goods or services, can,
with truth and dignity, be advertis d
and sold, and that it is just as proper
to merchandise forms of service as
various kinds of commodities.
In the logical development of this
new understanding of the power of
advertising during the last decade,
we have seen many of our banking
fiduciary and investment Institutions
sctively employing the sales value of
advertising tn the marketing of their
services. In this intelligent use of
publicity they are not only Increasing
their own immediate business return,
but they are also helping to spread a*
better understanding of financial serv-
ice and economic fact and theory up-
on which solid business relations can
bo built.—Francis H. Sisson, Journal
of the American Bankers Associa-
tion.
Costs Little and Overcomes
Trouble Almost Over
Night
a bit, so
an' begin
Percy, pa sed. 1
The best tory of the taming of a
radical 1 have ever read is told by A.
B. Farquhar in his book "The First
Million the Hardest." it throws more
light on the meaning of capitalism
and the futility o’ socialism than a li-
brary full of books on sociology, eco-
nomics aud politics. Hero it is as
Farquhar tells it:
“The beet antidote for acute eco-
nomic insanity Is ownership of prop-
erty. My favorite example is Otto
Stelninger. He was one of my first
employees and was a rip-roaring an-
archist. He Insisted that all wealth
came from the workers and therefore
should go back to the workers. He
was particularly bitter against his
landlord and hardly a week went by
that be did not announce that he had
definitely decided that he would like
to shoot the landlord the next time
ho came around for the rent Finally
1 asked him smilingly after one of
these outbursts:
Buy, Don’t Shoot
“ 'Why don't you buy your own
house instea,. of shooting your land-
lord? Then you would not have to
pay any rent. If you do shoot him you
may get into trouble.*
"He did not think much of the idea
apparently but in a day or two bo
asked me how he could buy the bouse.
1 answered: 'That house can be
bought for $800 You are getting good
wages. I will buy that house for you,
take $4 a week out of your wages,
and in less than four years you will
have it paid for.*
"He went off again. The next time
he came back it was with his wife.
He said: 'We are going to buy that
house but since we have no children
you can take $10 Instead of $4 a week
out of my pay envelope.*
"1 bought t~e house and then Otto’s
chief concern wan to get tt paid tor,
which he did in a little more than a
year. There was another house next
door to him. In a short while after
he bad paid for his first house, hs
sidled up to me and said:
"•I can buy that house next door
for a thousand dollars. Now that wi
have no rent to pay ws are going
along good. What would yon think
about mo buying that?*
the best tiling for you
going to talk to you a
1 was offul shocked when
should always lie used for washing the ;
face, as hard water makes wrinkles
and spoils tile complexion. Few are
conscious of tlie part played in the
heautv of tiie face In the muse les of
the mouth and a well known physi- '
< Ian says that there is nothing t lore
productive of wrinkles than the habit
of chewing gum. as the incessant
action of the jaws throws the mouth
out of shape, and must sooner or later,
bring out the wrinkles on the face,
and lie says that the plumpest cheek
, will soon wrinkle under the force* of
this ugly gum chewing habit. A skin
specialist says that the* powders on
the market are more responsible than
I anything else for the wrinkles that
<*< me long before their time and the
safest and best way is to prepare the
deet editur.
The othir day. 1 tedd mu that I had
bin ovir to Wilsons placin' with
Johnnie* when I hud reel) bin playin'
cow Io with Hank Potts, an' ma found
it out. so she told
home- that evenin'
Pa didn't
me into his
ture to
mile as
to give
serve it
but feist 1 am
little bit.
your mother told me that you had told
a lye. becauz 1 thot 1 learnt you bettir
ttian that. Don't you no that you
shouldn't tell a lye? My, when I was
a littb* boy. I nevir told lyes becauz 1
t.owed what my father would dew
to me if 1 did. My sun. you must
nevir tell a lye agane
Jest then the door bell rung and as
ma was buaie, pa sed. now Percy, you
go an' anser the door an' if its the
you
tell him I'm not a home* Dew you un-
dirstand? Yes, 1 sed, an' went to the
door. Sure enuff it was the ferniture
installment collecter, so I told him
that pa wasn't at home 1 went back
into the studie whare pa was, an' he
give me a
me two
I sed. on
Fit* Ditt H'kttlt and Nath Stlf-mauntinf Carritr, Standard Equipment
They VC Come! The NEW Four-Door Coupes.
Our first shipment of these outstanding new Nash
models is here. Only a few are allotted us. Buyers
will take them quickly. So come in at once. See
the important new Nash developments in engi-
neering refinement, body craftsmanship, and luxu-
rious equipment. More than ever this model stands
out as the market’s greatest value of its class. And—
note this— despite all the expensive improvements
and added attractions Nash has not raised the price.
New I our-1 )oor (jiupe
.Si x Cylinders
$2090
perlence to undertake to make invest
menta of their money without guld
ance by thoae who know. Many com
panlea are conatantly being organized [
to promote unsound scheme*, referred '
to aa "wildcat** There are alwaye
solicitors ready to relieve people of
their aavlnga by the promiae of big ,
rsturna. The lure of great wealth la
alwaye a temptation by which thou-
sands of thrifty people are deprived
of hard earned aavlnga every year | ferniture installment collecter,
Widows and orphans who have in-
herited money are frequently sought
and made the targets of these fake-
stock salesmen. Misery and suffering
are the usual results.
Greed Defeats Safety
Many people with small means alao
lose money because they insist on a
high rate of Interest on their Invest-
ments. Safety of principal should be
considered above large returns In in-
terest or dividends Small Investors
should never buy high rate, specula
tive investments. In which there Is a
great risk, but should stick to those
which pay a fair rate and which are
known to be aafe.
To know whether an Investment ia
worth buying the Investor should go
to a banker, or a successful business 1
man in whom he has confidence, get :
his opinion and act In accordance with
It. In all probability thia will mean
the difference between auccessful in
vestment and total lose of hia money.
The banker deals with Investments
every day and desires to give all the
help and information he can. and tha
business man haa learned by expert
once the need of caution and careful
judgment They believe one should
have a clear understanding of an In
vestment before It Is purchased They
know the need for avoiding stock pro-
motion schemes and get-rlch-qulck
propositions which in many cases
have brought poverty and suffering. I
While many states have passed laws
aimed to protect the public against
promoters of fake Investments, thou-
sands of people annually fall victims
to their wiles, because they fail to
seek advice of those experienced fa
making Investments.
Good advice and temperate expec-
tations mark the only road to safe
investment and an assured income.
There is no other certain way.
me.
well tell you that I .ftn going
you a lickin' becauz you de-1
an' its
Crow's feet and wrinkles perhaps
disfigure a face quicker than any-
thing else, and when the age lines be- I owder at home and an excellent and
gin to appear, extra care must be
given the face. When washing and
drying the face, always rub up and
back, never down. The lines of the
face naturally tend downward and to
take a rough towel and wipe the face ,
by rubbiug downward will not only
accentuate all wrinkles, but will soon
result in leaving the muscles relaxed, I
and a good skin food that will build ,
up a loose skin will kill wrinkles, for, |
as a general thing they are only the
result of flabbiness. Rain water I
got down the razer strap to
lickin' You bettir give
lickins insted of one, pa.
account of me lyin' twice,
lyed when I told the ferniture in-
stallment man that you wasn't at
Lome when you was. I’a looked kinda
funnie an' hung the razer strap up an'
didn't give me no lickin. 1 wonder
what maid him change his mind
quick?
Yours troothfully,
LITTLE PERCY.
Any breaking out of the skin, even
fiery, itching eczema, can be quickly
overcome by applying Mentho-Sulphur,
declares a noted skin specialist. Be-
cause of its germ destroying properties,
this sulphur preparation instantly brings
ease from skin irritation, soothes and
heals the eczema right up and leaves
the skin clear and smooth.
It seldom fails to relieve the torment
without delay. Sufferers from skin
trouble should obtain a small jar of
Rowles Mentho-Sulphur from any
good druggist and use it like cold
cream.
The consturch powder for the face,
and this powder for the feet are es-
pecially good to use if perspiration is
excessive as they check the perspira-
tion ami destroy the odor
Another habit that makes wrinkles
ia that of dosing the mouth tightly
v hen not speaking Tills tendency
should he resisted and the muscles re-
laxed as soon as it is noticed that the
mouth is tightly closed.
A. M. H.
"Success in life depends upon the investments made of
talents and time," says an article on investing prepared by the
Committee on Public Education of the American Bankers As-
sociation. "Future return will be gain or loss, according to
these investments. That is a law of life which controls in-
vestment of money, just as it controls investment of talents.”
The article, which is particularly timely in these days when
so many are being robbed by fake investments, continues:
In the business sense, the word in-
vestment relates to the use of money
in acquiring ownership of property.
Ownership may represent entire poe-
sesslon of property as of a home;
partial ownership as holding stock in
a corporation; or conditional owner-
ship aa in the case of buying a mort-
gage or a bond. When a person makes
an investment in bonds, he is really
loaning his money to the government
or corporation issuing them. He will
receive the interest which they earn
as long as he owns them, or until
they are paid off.
Ownership of great corporations Is
vested in individuals who have Invest-
ed money in their stock or bonds.
Many people regard the ownership of
the United States Steel Corporation,
for example, as differing from the
ownership of, say, a small workshop.
Yet investors tn shares of Steel Cor-
poration stock are entitled to the same
rights, under the law. as the owner of
the workshop, in the corporation, the
owners bold certificates of stock as
evidence of their investment, whereas
the owner of the little workshop holds
a deed as title to his land.
Capitalistic Laws Protect Investors
Because the laws stand for the
equal protection of all investors, It is
possible and profitable to make good
Investments. It gives an Incentive to
work hard and to invest The person
who wishes to Invest must first work
and accumulate funds with which to
do so.
Bonds are always secured by mort-
gages on the lands, buildings or other
property of the corporation for which
the money haa been used. When a
bond matures the money must be re-
paid to the owner of the bond.
All Investors are a part of a great
financial system which gathers up and
puts to work the wealth of the coun-
try for the mutual benefit, prosperity,
and well being of all. In America, it la
possible for any one who la willing to
pay the price of self denial and bard
work, to be aa Investor Good Invest-
ments made ia early life by saving
such small sums as may be possible,
lay the foundation for providing the
comforts of later years, when It la
harder to earn a livelihood and when
poverty often becomes the condition
of those who have not practiced
thrift in youth.
It is not wise for those without ox-
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 16, 1923, newspaper, August 16, 1923; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1598885/m1/3/: accessed July 13, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.