The Osage County News (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1940 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Osage Journal and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE HEART OF THE OSAGE NATION
THE OSAGE COUNTY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1940.
MAKE PAWHUSKA YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
/.Phillips
12.00 PER TEAR
PUBLISHED ON EVERT FRIDAY
i. Bu»l-
ciatiou
Number 49
Friday, October 18, 1919
Volume 28
quitters if
visit has brought
has
use
“Seven of the largest oil companies
in Rumania were seized by the gov-
ernment. They were all operated on
British or American capital. The
government said it was not confis-
cating the properties and intended
only to control them.”—News item.
Wanna bet?
Q.—I have as much courage as
the next fellow and I would never
fail my country in a pinch. The
draft is all right, but what bothers
me is that I do not look good except
in a blue suit. Will there be any
branch of the service where clothing
colors are optional? Duke.
A.—You know how the Democrats
are. A way will be found to make
you happy. Maybe you can wear
army pants and a dinner jacket.
Q — 1 am a young man 21 years
old with no dependents. 1 am sure
to be drafted. But I have been
studying those pictures of army
tents and I do not see any wall plugs
for my radio. Must I buy one of
those portables? Joe.
A.—It can be arranged to put you
in a company which has a crooner
for a top sergeant.
Total .....................$212.00
This does not include a $16 saber,
which has now been made optional.
And it includes only one suit of
blouse-and-slacks, whereas three or
four actually are required.
The Quartermaster corps of the
army estimates that $250 would be
required to purchase a “modest out-
lay” for a young officer.
$ 60.00
. 58.00
. 8.50
. 3.00
. 10.50
. 10.50
. 18.50
. 18.00
. 25.00
happy. But she has to be happy on
exactly the same terms that are
available to you. She has to have
love, and a chance for service, and
books and appetite and deep sleep.
And often these are all sacrificed
before she has discovered how per-
ishable is fame, how brief is youth,
how little money can buy! While
you are climbing up the scale to
the forties and fifties, she is descend-
ing to depths that you never knew.
Face-lifting and cocktails and mem-
ories of past splendors don't help
her; nobody remembers and nobody
cares.
Develop what you have. The chil-
dren, the back yard, the possible
picnic and camping sites within
reach, the libraries, the swimming
beaches. Develop hobbies, activi-
ties, interests. They don't spring
into being full-grown. But you will
be pleasantly surprised to see how
fascinating they can become.
Develop Jim, too. As you grow
to be a contented middle-aged and
someday old woman, take him along
with you. Make the fifties happy
years, snd the sixties even better.
The woman who does that will soon
find herself in a position to pity the
very stars and glamour girls and
celebrities that she is envying today.
And most important of all, develop
yourself. Try to achieve that peace
of mind which can only follow from
• a life well lived, because as eagerly
■ as you are now looking ahead to
________1 new thrills, in your old age you will
Too often look back upon the pleasures that
natural course of marriage and
motherhood, and they find glory and
money rather poor pickings in the
end.
And the merely rich women! The
glamour girls who have done nothing
to earn their luxury and power, their
yachts and Palm Beach mansions,
their furs and jewels—what a sad
mess THEY make of it!
Within a few years of the time
when you went around all morning
wishing you were in Gloria Millions
place, Gloria is haggardly facing a
second divorce, supporting a flatter-
ing circle of titled European hang-
ers-on, and telling the whole world
that she will fight for the custody
of her child.
Whereas you. if you’ve played
your cards wisely, are the adored
mother of two brown tall Indians
of children who are dancing about
because it's Saturday, and Morn is
taking Jim and Mary and the Sim-
mons children off to the beach for
the day.
Or you're absorbed in your gar-
den; there's no heartache cure like
a garden. You’ve decided to have
supper out-of-doors. You’re trying
for a prize contest on the air. Your
Persian aristocrat has produced
three delicious kittens. The baby
next door has been loaned to you
for his noon Pabulum and his after-
noon nap. Jim is, thank goodness,
going to be free for a three-day
week-end next Friday. Mary is in
1 first year French and it’s perfectly
• amazing how your old grammar and
you can help her. You’ve got to
, consider both sides of moving to
r that possible farm. Chickens and
! fruit and quiet and space against
the commuting trip for Jim—.
All Possess Materials for Happiness.
In short, you've mastered content.
You’ve learned that to each one of
us women in this life is meted out
the materials for happiness; it is
only our wisdom or stupidity in han-
dling them that makes the differ-
Q.—I reached my twenty-fifth
birthday last week without ever go-
ing anywhere on my feet when I
could do it in the old man’s auto.
As I understand it, the draft army
may have to walk. I talked this
over with my folks and my mother
persuaded dad that he should let
me take his auto to camp. But he
refuses to pay for the gasoline any
more. Can I have him arrested for
obstructing the draft? Dutiful Son.
A.—You can settle this some way.
How about asking mother to pay for
the gas?
Q.—I am 32 years old and have
been married six years to a woman
who never stops
talking. We have
five children all of
whom take after
their mother. Her
father and moth-
er live with us,
and an aunt who
has dropped in
for a two months’
her dog with her. Isn't there
some way this draft can be speeded
up? And if so, why must I first be
examined to see if I come up to
specifications? This is an emergen-
cy, both from my standpoint and
the government’s. Charlie.
A.—Protect yourself in the clinches
and be patient. We wish you luck.
YOU CAN’T WIN
A man will have to be this fall
A creature of great craft;
For women, opportunists all,
Have Leap Year and the Draft!
—Nan Emanuel.
RATS AND WAR
Rats in America are getting a
break as a result of the war in
Europe. For the war has interfered
with shipment of red squill from the
Mediterranean area, and red squill
is the most effective rat poison ever
discovered.
It is a bulb, like an onion. You
buy it in powdered or liquid form,
and mix it with raw meat. Rata go
for it, but they only go once. De-
partment of agriculture recom-
mends red squill, but supplies are
being interrupted by war.
Q.—I am for an adequate defense.
I believe conscription necessary. I
love my country
and am willing to
fight for it. But
I have always
lived home and
put everything up
to my parents in
any emergency.
As I am not used
to taking on responsibilities myself,
could I send my father? J. K. K.
A.—You think of the darnedest
things.
* * •
Q.—I have been working nights
for the last four years and sleeping
days. This has completely changed
my habits. I can't keep awake any
more by daylight. Unless this war
is to be fought after dark what good
will I be in the army? Anxious.
A.—You will be assigned to scout
work in dark glasses.
TO RENT—Cedarhurst. Wooded
surroundings, six rooms, one and
one-half baths. Franklin 1 IM.—New
York Times.
Well, even the forest primeval
doesn’t make it any easier to
half a bathroom, does it?
DRAFT QUESTIONS
AND ANSWERS
q._A bugle drives me nuts. Can
1 get exemption on account of I am
allergic to brass musical instru-
ments? Otto.
A.—No, but it may be possible to
put you in some division where you
can sit up all night and not have to
be called at daybreak.
GENERAL
HUGH ».
JOHNSON
BALKAN MESS
Diplomatic dispatches from the
Balkans indicate that Russia is not
having a very good time in her deal-
ings with the Axis.
The Russians are worried over the
troops rushed by Hitler and Musso-
lini across her southern border in
Rumania. The Axis has taken over
the Rumanian military system com-
pletely and even plans to conscript |
Rumanian troops. ■
This came as a surprise to Mos-
cow, which asked Berlin about it. ,
This was the answer:
1. Nazi troops are needed in Ru- |
mania, first to protect the oil fields,
since oil is all-important to Ger-
many. I
2. Italian and German troops may
want to invade Turkey later in the
year, and they want 60,000 men who
could be rushed immediately, from
Rumania to Istanbul and the Straits.
The Nazis also explained that they
were not taking any chances with
Stalin’s troops, because after Hitler
had agreed to Russia having Bes-
sarabia, Russia also seized Buko-
vina without even consulting anyone.
Therefore, the Germans say they
will station their own troops near
the Russian boundary to see that
this does not happen again.
The Nazis also explained that the
Bulgarian and Hungarian armies
still were itching for more territory,
so Nazi troops have come in to pro-
tect the sovereignty of these small
Balkan countries.
THE OSAGE COUNTY NEWS
CHAS. E. PRENTICE. Owner end Publisher
people appreciate that kind of spirit.
And, why shouldn’t we support the home team 100 per
cent? It has teen a good many years since Pawhuska has
bi^en on the bottom. We’ve usually been right in there at the
top, and we must expect to have some of the teams outstrip
us, sooner or later. We think the boys did a grand job Friday
night. They played the game as we like to see them play it—
fairly and squarely. And after all, it’s not ‘whether you ve
won or lost, but how you’ve played the game."
So, Huskies, stay right in there fighting. The old town
is back of you 100 per cent, and will be right on down through
the season. You and you’re fine coaches are doing a grand
job/ and we’re proud of you, whether you’re winning or losing.
You’re a dandy bunch of lads, with the right kind of stuff,
and with a little more experience, you’ll stack right up along
with the very best teams in this section.
BLESSED IGNORANCE
One sort of knowledge
Good to lack
Is what is said
Behind your back.
—Richard Armour.
ARMY UNIFORMS
Young men who want to be of-
ficers in the new army are finding
that the greatest obstacle is the cost
of getting dressed. The army does
not provide uniforms for its officers,
and the cost at a tailor shop is
enough to send them back home as
conscientious objectors.
For an officer called in from Re-
serve, here is the list of minimum
requirements. It does not include
the "special evening dress," which
would add another $105 to the total.
Olive drab blouse (coat) with
“pink” slacks.............I
Overcoat ....................
Garrison cap................
i Campaign cap...............
. Sam Browne belt............
Puttees......................
Field boots ..................
Six shirts at $3.00............
Breeches ...................
Washington, D. C.
’CONSCRIPT’ DOCTORS
National Guardsmen and the new
draft army are going to have plenty
of medical and dental service.
Army plans call for a corps of 12,000
doctori and 2.287 dentists by July 1,
1941, Who will be summoned from
the Medical and Dental Reserve as
the expansion of the army pro-
gresses.
At present the army has 1,196
physicians on active duty and ex-
pects th add another 2,700 from the
mobilized National Guard. The re-
maining 8,400 will tjp secured from
the Reserve Corps, the draft and I
volunteers. Dental vacancies will
be fille-i the same way.
The 7,000 nurses needed for the
Nursin? Corps w'll be obtained chief-
ly through Red Cross registers. The
nurse:; have warrant officer status
and receive $60 a month, plus board,
room and laundry. They cannot
marry while in the service.
Animal medicine a'so will not be j
ncglc ted, with 1,143 veterinarians :
to be added to horse-drawn units.
Ths army is strict about its med-
ical and dental qualifications accept-
ing only graduates of Class A col-1
leges. Under a bill introduced by i
Rep. John McCormack of Massachu-
setts, the army would be required ,
to give commissions to graduates of
Class B schools, but this is being
opposed vigorously.
There are only two such schools in
the U. S.: The Middlesex college
at Middlesex, Mass., and the Chi-
cago Medical school. Their gradu-
ates can practice only in Massa-
chusetts and Illinois and the army
refuses to admit them as physicians.
It applies the same rule to chiro-
practors, osteopaths, naturopaths,
neuropaths, and podiatrists.
The over-all medical ratio of the
army is: For every 20,000 men a
1,000-bed hospital; with each 1,000-
bed unit manned by 73 doctors, 120
nurses and 500 non-commissioned
officers.
SECRET OF HAPPINESS
Glory and lame appear Io make
some women intensely happy, but
Kathleen Norris points out that this
happiness is short-lived. She believes
that a woman ran find genuine, lasting
content only in her own soul. Miss
Norris advises women to live a normal
life and develop natural interests; then
they’ll be far happier than the lone-
some heiress who is surrounded by a
lot o/ parasitic playmates.
Q.—I hate Hitler. I despise dicta-
tors. I am a 100 per cent Ameri-
can. The Western
hemisphere must
be protected.
Roosevelt is my
hero. We must
show the world
nobody can at-
tack us. But I
tried sleeping on
a cot once and I can't do it. Where
does this leave me when the draft
call comes? Muggsy.
A.—Don’t let it get you down.
Modern war is so terrific nobody
can sleep anyhow anywhere.
Printed by The Osage County New,. 712-715 KiheXah. Pawhuska, Oklahoma,
□ess office 712-715 Kihekah. Pawhuska. Oklahoma.
.. ,„„z ■« the nest office st Pawhuska, Oklahoma as oee-
As The News has stated on previous occasions, we should
praise cur state highway commission instead of co”d“g
them. Oklahoma has a large highway mileage, Osage coun y
is a large county, and it is hard to give every section of the
state what they want, and possibly what they are en .
Osage county, when this highway has teen completed, will be
admirably taken care of, and we should be grateful.
Cameras snapping in her face uAvreier she goes are not reality. She love, them,
«/ course, und when they stop she suffers agonies of ^‘"nlentwhefe
beautiful, rich, successful a woman is, sooner or later she has to find content uhere
YOU find it. In her own soul.
By KATHLEEN NORRIS
E A contented woman. So
few women are content!
This advice is not for the
thirties. Not for the forties.
These years are full of hope and
changes and potentialities and
excitements. The most thor-
oughly disappointed and bored
and disillusioned wife of 34 may
still feel that a complete change i
of circumstances may take j
place any day. <
Jim might get a promotion
with a big raise. Or some un-
suspected uncle might leave
them a tidy fortune. Or they
might have to move to Rio, on
10 days notice. Or the talent scouts
might seize upon the baby, who is
10 times as fascinating as any baby
star on the screen.
Life holds thrills. A new hat—a
new hair-do, is a thrill. Just meet-
ing a courteous newT man is a thrill.
To have someone suggest a delight-
ful job opens up new trains of
thought. A hundred a month,
and a summer vacation free, for
just being hostess at a big mountain
hotel.
A New Cycle Begins.
All this ends at about 45. No
use fooling about it, it comes to an
end. No more men are going to
fall in love with you. No new hat is
going to do for you what that $1.98
hat did 20 years ago. Jim isn’t go-
ing to be raised, promoted, sent to
an exciting post. He’s there, stout
and middle-aged and comfortable
and quite satisfied to go on living.
The children have passed the ab-
sorbing and dependent stages; they
need teeth bands and corrective
shoes and plenty of school help, but
there is little in that to satisfy the
woman who has been dreaming all
her life of achievements, of fame,
wealth, glory, success.
If you are one of those women,
harness your dreams. Or better
still, wake up and try to appreciate
one important fact.
This is the fact. No matter how
young, beautiful, rich, successful a
woman is, sooner or later she has
to find content exactly where you
can find it. In her own soul.
What Price Fame.
Of course she likes the excitement____ ______
of success, the flattery of her public, ence. The successful writer,
the brief, brief hours in which her actress, heiress of course MAY be
fame eclipses that of the next ex- ]
quisitely pretty and captivating (
woman. But those things last only (
hours or days, or months at most, j
and then the gnawing inner hunger i
for reality begins to fret her. Holly-
wood sets are not reality; cameras
snapping in her face wherever she
goes are not reality. She loves
them, of course, and when they stop,
when she i» only yesterday’s favor-
ite, she suffers agonies of jealousy.
And she knows all along that they
are not real. |
She puts on a $40 apron and cooks
in a picture-book kitchen. She
adopts a baby, and is photographed
with it. And all the time she is
blindly reaching out tor what you
have; a man who needs her, a kitch-1
en in which she is queen; a small
person to come stumbling to Moth-
er.
At 40 she has nothing left. The
booking agencies in New York, the
casting offices of Hollywood are
filled with unemployed, wistful worn-
en who were stars a few years ago.
Their sugar-frosting dream is over.
The bubble has burst. And then,
unless they have something very
real with which to go on; family
ties, the right to love and service,
they are dreary derelicts for life.
The lives of very few elderly
actresses are lifted out of tragedy.
Content Is Secret of Happiness.
Even highly successful profession-
al women don’t go on to happy mid-
dle life unless they’ve discovered
the secret of content. T—
young fame distracts them from the have been yours.
The political practice about these
modern polls is like Shylock with
Portia, to praise them when their
forecast is favorable and curse them |
otherwise. I can escape that
charge. I have long regarded all
these "sampling” polls as a public
evil capable of vicious abuse. They
won't tell their exact method. They
resist investigation that would re-
veal more than their “general prin-
ciples." These are not enough to
determine whether in the science of
mathematics they stand even on a
sound formula of probabilities.
They refer to their record of ac-
curacy. Sometimes it has been re-
markable, but since they do not
claim accuracy within 3 or 4 per
cent and many an election has
turned on less than that, it is not
very convincing—especially since
they are very coy in reporting the
actual number (not the percentage)
of “undecided” answers by location.
That clouds their whole result.
tea
There is a survey in this country
based on a different method than
“sampling.” It is called the Dunn
Survey. It has been conducted for
years by a scholarly, retiring zort of
fellow. It is not a poll taken by
part-time agents on a theoretically
selected sampling. It is scientific
analysis of several factors. There
has been no attempts to commer-
cialize or publicize it. It has been
far more timely, or at least it has
forecast results far sooner, than
other polls.
It is too early for thia column to
repeat its 1938 stunt "Landon may
carry four states, he is only sure of
two," but 1 don’t think we are going
to hear any more of the Gallup poll
after this election than of the Liter-
ary Digest poll after 1938. Thia, of
course, is my own opinion.
If it becomes appropriate to eat
these words, I shall do it aa grace-
fully as possible, but 1 didn’t have
any literary indigestion last time
and I don’t expect to suffer gallup-
ing consumption in 1940.
Kathleen Norris Says
Any Woman Can Learn the Secret
(Bell Syndicate—WNU Service.)
e An Opportunity Just Ahead For Pawhuska
Mk' you tavrft thought ah® h. but a real 1
tunitv is just around the earner for '
business people. If the llulah I run. which the fair.a k
e rrmem has <l«klvl to build on the Caney nvei up near ue ,
little community of Hulah. in northeastern Osage county.
this dam will flood ®ne ot the best land in the
county, and it will possibly ruin, what now appeals « j
promising small oil field, yet there is nothing molet at can
l„ done about tins, and the Ixtrt thing, apparently is to make
toe best of What appears to many to be a bad Hung fo, the
eiunty. by taking advantage of the opportuntt.es th.s now®
governmental project will bring to out coun ,
ing after the business that it cannot help but bring to us.
True other towns are bound to look at it in the same lig ,
but it is’ up to Pawhuska to make things so attractive he
tnat a bulk of this business will come to us by reason of our
Xdl'i and the advantages we have to often
Chamber of Commerce has hit upon the ng g ...
movement to get the town solidly behind a project of s g
all our people on this project. They have visited all civic club
and organizations, in an endeavor to do this job. They cal e
a meeting last night of committees from these various bodies
and discussed plans to make Pawhuska the center of opera-
tions. and outlined the initial steps to be taken by the city as
a whole.
The dam recently built over in the Salt Plains section of
t-ie state employed several hundred men for a long peuod of
Ume More than three and one-half millions of dollars are to
i.. spent on this project, and it is estimated it will take upwards
Of two rears to complete the project. Thus it can be seen that
; real payroll awaits us, if we can divert it into our city and
it Can be brought here by concerted effort on the part of all
<■ ganizations and the city as a whole.
• Highway 99 Soon To Be surfaced
Highway 99, north f rom the intersection of 99 and federal
highway 60,’is to be surfaced shortly, according to reports The
.News has received. It is stated that the first ten miles which
will take you to where the Hurd road enters 99, will be le
early in December, and that the balance will be contracted
some time before the middle of next year. There has been
$120,000.00 set up for this end of the road and $120,000 for
t. e ten miles up on the Kansas end of the road.
This highway will be constructed with a rock base like the
r,ad built recently between Pawhuska and Hominy, and will
give us an outlet to the north and northeast for all time, as
Kansas has completed its end of the road south and north out
of Sedan. Those wanting to go to Kansas City, and other st
tarns north from Pawhuska will find this will be a great ad-
v image as highway 99 is one of the most direct routes in this
section of the state and has comparatively light traffic as com-
pared with other trunk lines.
Washington, D. C.
PUBLIC OPINION POLLS
This is a piece about these dop?-
ster polls that tell you all about elec-
tions before they happen. 1 don t
believe in them. Their accuracy
depends too much on their timing,
the way they are conducted and the
wording of the questions. They can
have great effect to sway voters.
The conduct of them is a private en-1
terprisc for profit. There is no as- j
surance of bipartisan or neutral>
control of their conduct. As cam-
paigns reach climaxes there are few
Americans whose sympathies are
not aroused. It is human nature
for the wish to be father to both con-
viction and conduct—among poorly
paid enumerators also.
These polls do not register secret
ballot. They do not even register ,
a sample "yes” or "no.” They are
frequently built up on a series of
more or less technical questions,
sometimes so framed as to persuade '
a particular answer which the enu-
merator interprets. In view of their
great influence, it seems to me that
all polls require both investigation
and regulation in the public interest.
They certainly do not deserve to be
swallowed whole.
I don’t dispute their possible value
(1) as some indication of shifts and
trends in public thinking, and (2) as
an even better indication when actu-
al choice closely approaches, and
the simple question is “Do you favor
X or Y?”
But the folly of making conclu-
sions on these polls is apparent.
Most people don’t have time to study
them. A flat statement such as Dr.
Gallup recently made that his study
showed 499 electoral votes for Roose-
velt with 42 states and 32 votes for
Willkie with 6 states, sounds almost
as impressive as the 1936 election
returns when Mr. Roosevelt carried
46 states.
But, however inaccurate, except
as to trend, an examination of this
and other polls shows a surprising
reversal of popular opinion. In 1936,
Mr. Roosevelt carried 27.4 million
voters to Mr. Landon’s 16.6 millions
—almost 66 per cent or a majority
of 10.8 millions. The poll of Amer-
ican Forecasts Inc.—a competitor of
Dr. Gallup’s—predicts 23.7 millions
for Mr. Roosevelt and 21.2 millions
for Mr. Willkie—a 53 per cent ma-
jority, or only 2.5 million majority.
Both poll conductors insist on a 3
per cent to 4 per cent margin of
error as experienced in their own
performances. Both also report
very large “undecided" groups and
Dr. Gallup says: "Supplementary
surveys show that as many as 27
per cent of Mr. Roosevelt's current
supporters are not definitely sure ,
that they will vote for him." Con-
sider the states shown on the Gal-
lup poll with less than a 4 per cent'
majority (Dr. Gallup’s claimed mar-!
gin of error) for Mr. Roosevelt—all
of which are shown on the Dunn
Survey as safely for Willkie. Con-
sider also that the American Opinion
Forecast Inc. poll is 2 per cent less
favorable to Mr. Roosevelt than Dr.
Gallup's. Consider both of these.
1 come to no such conclusions. I
don’t trust these polls either way.
This is going to be a very close elec-
tion. The Democrats are dumb if
they are lulled by this sweet news.
The Republicans are quitters if
they become defeatists because of
any such cheap stuff.
• • *
The political practice
• Real Sportsmanship Shown
Last Friday night, when the Ponca City football club came
ti Pawhuska with some three or four hundred visitors, and
walloped the local Huskies 35 to 0, did you see the load fans
leaving the stadium? Not by a long shot! Pawhuska fans
are real sports and they stuck it out right on down to the
end, for the Huskies were in there doing their best, and our
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The Osage County News (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 49, Ed. 1 Friday, October 18, 1940, newspaper, October 18, 1940; Pawhuska, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1599365/m1/2/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Journalism%22: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.