The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 26, 1921 Page: 2 of 8
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THE NORMAN TRANSCRIPT—NORMAN, OKLAHOMA
•
norman transcript
Published by Transcript Kntorprue Pub. Co
Norman, Oklahoma.
Kmered as second class matter at the poat-
Oflics, 215 East Main Street. Phou* No. 3
ullice, Norman. Oklahoma, January 2,
-i. .er Act of Congress
Tuesday. Thursdays and Sunday Mornings
Member Oklahoma Press Association. Ad
. i i•,up cscn'ativc Okl.ihuBtfi Adver*
VHEN YOU FIGURE THIS
RELATION PUZZLE THE
OLD MULE'S YOURS
itl let the baliy 1'hic eyes ami pink
be d' -nated. For the brunette of
.Inrker shade* reserve the Dale vel-
lows ami the ;n>i>le Kreens. Ruffles
fi.r the slim, tolda for the plump, ui.l
Miioothnesg for the portly Each he-
. .inns to a la-s apart, and each has
her own particular clianiv But a
community dress for the three is not
to he fouiid.
Time u.i9 when all maidens could
robe themselves in the vonne of the
1 moment, such as the colonial per-
! iod. For who would not appear
addition & streets
dp to city fathers
corporated: Main Cloued Till
Sunday; Ea*t Boyd Named.
** + * + + *
RuUlE ONE ITEMS
F. C. EZZELL
MTH
the M. E. church enjoyed a picnic at
I i hop Springs Friday evening.
Miss Gladys Marrs called on Sa-
lome and Dolly Smith Sunday.
Mr. Haley was a dinner guest of
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Baker Thursday.
_ Mr. J. W. Uzzell and son, Clarence, 4\|r antj Mrs. 1 red Ezzell and lit-
Johnson Addition Near Campus In- Were business visitors at Air. loni>t|,. daughter, Juanita, were Sunday ! .. . u \y \ Kticker were
~ ^ McDaniels. Mr. S. Murphy and Mr. dinner guests ot Mr. and Mrs. J. W oklahoma City visitors Wednesday.
Ezzell Sunday. j
Mrs. O. X. Bymsater called on Mrs.
C. J. Webster was here last week
visiting his family, and attendim- t
some affairs of the (hoate Oil Lp.,
Oklahoma City. His son, Clay,
ut back to New V ork with
lihn last Tuesday and expects
remain there several weeks.
Tom Mayfield made a business
trip to Oklahoma City Wednesday.
Mrs S K. Hadsell and mother,
Mrs J. B. Williams, were Oklahoma
City visitors Wednesday.
J. M. Acree made a business trip
to Purcell Wednesday.
Schultze Friday.
H. |i. Berry made a trip to Wash-
Incorporation of the Johnson addi- jngton last week.
tion in the southwest part of Nor- The Camp l ire Girls enjoyed a
man, decision to open Fast Main picnic in the catalpa ^rove on Dr.
Wednesday evening.
nmg Classen lioule- Mrs. G. VV. Belize spent Wednes-
vard and renaming Fast Boyd are day afternoon with Mrs. J. W. F/.-
i fistreet Sunday -through the paving on Boyd's place.
•Cse-n,!\h?^toU™ Orf^ 'In str*'shte«ing Uas.en Bou!e- ^rs. G. W.
bright blanket, .\\c> stra ii> | principal accompjishmenls of the zefl.
hair and soft leather ....
Speaking of mix-up families.
When Mr> Catherine I)eMarco and
Louis Glgner were married— *
The bride became the Mster-in-law
of her son-in-law. John Garner.
The bridsgront became the step-
father of bis sister-in-law, Mrs. (i K-
ned's daughter.
John Gagner, brother of Louis,
married the new Mrv Garner's dau-
ghter Jennie some time a^o, there-
fore his new sister-in-law i- also,
his mother-in-law.
Another daughter of Mrs. DcMnr-
co tiagner married another brother
of hollis Gainer, who by hi. mar-
riage to their mother became their
stepfather.
Signs of the Times
Matnee parties, garden fetes and
outings are beginning to bring into
a pleasing proranence the first evi-
dences of the summer girl and. iusi
as important, the summer matron.
And immediately problems arise for
thoughtful. The proper solu-
mcau* harmony, Admiration and
(intent The wrong way <>f adding
.its of ratfw. i
noccasirs! ./riifortuiiate indeed the
brown maid wHe> did not show some
beauty in mieh; array! But the bus-
ings of a ''dress for all" were not
omplete. H'or are the draw-backs
f ''a dress .for each" that visits the
present ace. Where it is necessary
0 use discrlminati' n there is accom-
panying reward of individuality. And
while in the "dark ages" of long a bp
ill allies looked alike ten rods away
today one may say "There's Mur-
'ean. I saw her hat go by," or "I
ee that Mrs Kirk has returned, it
was h.r jacket I saw in that car,
1 ant sure." Efficiency of the twen-
tieth century, apparel talk, or per-
sonality styles, call it what you wi'.l,
it is well with womankind. If only
she will not let apparel talk get too
lottd . nor permit the personality
styles to advocate the wrong char-
acteristics!
i'y commissioners in meeting Tues- Mrs. II. M. Hefley called on Mrs.
day night iit the city hall. bred Ezzell Monday afternoon.
Ten acres between Chautauqua on Mr. Charlie Gordon removed soiiu
the west, Elm on the east and Brooks 'ore of his cattle from the pens on
on the north nad Parsons on the Dr. Boyd s farm, Monday.
-..nth has been platted and admitt- Misses Atinamae h.zzell anil btt.i
ed as the Johnson addition. It is I'arr enjoyed a picnic supper 011 the
adjacent to the west side of the uni- H, O. Mi"er tarm V 'dm-s ay,
versity campus beginning at Brooks ..Mrs;Aj' Gordon% Mr- Sam \m
street, which runs along tile front of Charlie ■ ■■
the Armory, and extending hack to buster ^and baby,
Parsons, the next street parallel
Brooks 011 the south.
Two blocks of 48 lots each were
formed here. The petition was sign-
id by Mr. and Mrs F. B. Johnson.
Main Closed till Sunday.
To open the intersection of Main
and Porter which has just recently
been paved would have forfeited the
Mrs. James, Mrs.
Fred Reed and Mrs. F. C. Ezzell
and litle daughter met with Mrs. ( .
M. Reed ,'Tuesday afternoon. Tin-
afternoon was spent in . tacking a
comfort for the Ladies' Aid.
Mr and Mrs. Fred Uzzell and little
daughter called 011 Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Baker Monday morning.
Miss Salome Smith and Harold
Hefley. of this neighborhood, art
/\I1U
^tlie
V
ciuil
FAITH
A man; is always losing his il-
lusions, but not his faith. It is the
nature of faith to grow and increase,
for faith is a higher knowledge—an
advance copy of what soon will he
current knowledge. Illusions arc lost
been.isc tiiey are outside the man,
but faith is inside, a personal, unde
taxable ' " *l
possession. Faith is a sixth
6f'th«,factors of tie puzzle means ---- „i,iWh 'apprehends Invisible
, sly rulitfUe, a disturbance among so- .|iM vf( (<J |)(. ]jrop(iht on
elemeny, and afc uueasv statp, crfu ^ t,K. piamv Faith is pro-
\ -■-.mind. The cause of up pause tor Vfecan4^ it is positive*, unfaith
^^hUink' .i* this vtywMitar time - -
Sfei<>f fashion wj^ch say
maid or mulron a particular ti0lus., hip faitli cannot take root ex-
and lor t-avh occasion a i)ar- r,..)t jn the soil of truth, A man may
Miculai* TOsFume^*" Thtf vflRe «>r -iHe*hav© mahv iMuwons:- He'fatf nuve. ori-
taith.—Henry Ford in Deur-
.paUK'lilar titne is ^ 'Negative and therefore un^roduc-
iliion wjbich says in j-uitbi is its own guaranty, for
ate and' SWWmg: "lyr•*\vhifc;'!a' man may have wrong illu-
five year maintenance guarantee for among those who are to receive di-
which it is bonded, City Manager plomas from the University high
Ciater explained, so it \vill not be op- school this year.
ened until Sunday. The full specified Misses Annamae Ezzell, Marguer
28 days of hardening will then have ite Van Dyke and Lucy Farmer spent
expired and the company wil be held Friday night with Miss Etta "arr.
tor upkeep until the guarantee runs The high school boys and girls ot
J. \Y. Ezzell Tuesday afternoon
Little John and Buster Ezzell spent
Saturday afternoon with the little
Ambuster boys.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Ezzell and son.
1 larence, and little son, Ted, called on
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ezzell Friday af-
ternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Hex Marrs and little
son spent the week-end with Mr. and
Mrs. Titn Marrs.
Mace and Charlie Ezzell and Chris-
topher N'elnis and his triend, enjoyed
fishing trip Saturday.
Mr. Clarence Ezzell, Miss Bonna
latagne and Mr. and Mrs. bred Ez-
ell nad little "daughter were among
hose who Attended thej tentertaiii-
nent given at Corn school house 1*ri-
lay night.
Miss Esther Gill, who has been
isiting Miss Stella Scott at 54- Uni-
versity Blvd., left Wednesday for
Wayne.
Mrs. E. F. Shinn went to Lexington
Wednesday to visit her daughter,
M>s. J. D. Peters, and son, Earl
Shinn.
Mrs. C. W. Vaughn and Mrs. T. H.
Vaughn were shopping in Oklahoma
C ity Wednesday.
other demand would not be so try-
ing, but the combination means hours born Independent,
of shopping, searching and finding.
it one be forunante enough to live
where shops are plentiful and well-
stocked.
"A flutter of briuht feather-; in
the. spring-green branches overhead,
« a wave of wind-tossed flower tints
amid the grasses below, and between
the two a maiden on a rustic bench."
Exceut for the conventional rhythm
of Tennyson or some other equally
f.-nciful and daintily chivalric poet,
the above word picture might slip
into any modern book of verse, se-
cure a title such as "Waiting/' or
perhaps "The Rendezvous" and «o
d >wn in history as an example of
v rsification from the twentieth ceti-
t'-rv. But we couldn'trhyme this
p ture. It wa> spring, and flowers
and birds, and a maiden, but it
v uldn't rhyme The reason for the
hitch in the rhyme schene was a p'«-
quantly tipped nose and—Fates be
kind—an equally tipped poke bon-
out.
This consideration of the commis-
sioners made them turn down the pe-
tition of East Main street property
owners to throw it open to traffic
sooner.
In the southern part of the Clas-
sen Miller addition at the curved in-
tersection of Boyd and Classen
boulevard, ^he boulevard was
straightened out and the curved
part given back to G/' W. Mil-
ler. The straight} part, heretofore
known as Park Place, was renamed
Classen. The street, extention of j
West A iiiGh.h*d heretofore been j
now the east section of that thor- |
oughfare in name as well as in ac-
tuality.
Miss Ellen Bowles kind brother. Ed
Bowles went to Perry Tuesday,
where Miss Bowles will take part in
the commencement exercises of the
St. Joseph Academy at that place.
Robert Taylor returned Monday
from a business trip to Kansas City.
Mrs I. M. Jackson and sister Mrs.
Roy Cook were Oklahoma City vis-
itors Wednesday.
W ANT A T> S
Mrs. Wm. Barr, who has been
teaching in the public school at But-
ler, returned home last week. ,
Miss Yetta Alden, who has been
teaching in the public school in Guth-
rie, returned home for the summer
Saturday.
Mrs. G. VV. Wiley and Mrs. T. M.
Foster spent the afternoon with
friends in Oklahoma City Wednes-
day.
50 flood cigarettes
for 10c from
one sac* of
GENUINE
"BULL"
DUPHAM
gx TOBACCO
Cornell Hud;!
Company
H. NELSON COKNELL
Certified
Public Accountant
Manager
INCOME TAX SERVICE
AUDITS — SYSTEMS
Office With Clyde Pickard
Real Estate Company
106 North Peters Phone 22
Come and See
the "Best Yet"
Oil Stove
as a lady said to us the other
day:
"I do wish I had Been this
store before I bought the ----
stove. 1 call sec now that the
'Itest Vet' is more economical
and easier to operate than
mine."
There's no obligation ill call-
ing and carefully inspecting
our stoves.
Hopper Hardware
and tin shop
120 West Main Phone 665
FOR RENT—Five room bungalow,
furnished, tall 1078. 63-3t*
I.OST—Theta Sigma Phi pin with
initials D. A. on back. Phone 368.
63-2t*
TWO or three unfurnished
for rent. Call (>43.
rooms
63-3t*
With tiny-flowered organdies, flop-
py. be-ribboned hats and ruffles and
puffinsrf JmiumeraHle appearing in
the smart shop windows each dav
and far back in tlie corner alluring
bottles of scents and -atin boxes of
cosmetic mysteries, milady goes a-
shopping for her summer time at-
tire. And the long, grav boxes de-
livered in the late afternoon display
choice bits of things delectable. But
how often doe- tin fair on< say the
Titian beauty, decide upon shell pink
for her fluffy organdy wn and cast
aside the beautiful urays. browns
and greens? And the -;i>ort< girl-
slender and lithe, tailored and gay —
she is the center of the staue iust
now. Again the but—. If she be
more than plump, more than faintly
flushed, or ungainly, sad is the at-
tempt at chic nonchalance. Or con-
sider the ultra-smart knitted capes,
foldy and wrappv, once too often for
them to rest on the brad shoulders
WANTED—Salesman with car to
call on dealers with a low priced
fOM) mile tire. $100.00 a week with
extra commission*. Fhe I. L. Smith
< ( . South llend, Indiana. 63-11*
FOR RENT—A modem twelve room
house within a hall block of the ;
University 'campus. Suitable for a I
hoarding or rooming house. Very
rea.sonable. I'hone 108O. 63?3t*
FOiR RENT—Completely furnished
six room house, modern. 420 \V.
Main, phone 621-J. 63-t4
LOST—A pale red boar pig weight
about 60 lbs. VV. J. Monroe, 220
N. Muskogee. 63-2t*
ALFALFA HAY for sale—$11.00 per
ton delivered anywhere in town.
L. C, Giles, <>3-2t
ALFALFA HAY for sale—$11.00 per
ton delivered anywhere in town.
L. C. Giles. 63-2t
WANTED—Position as cook or for
general housework. Address Mrs.
of some portly matron of many sun - < g uilve,.t 33; \Vest Wheeler, Okla-
mers past,
complish it
To the
Slimness alone can ac-
blue-eyed, sunny-haired
homa C ity, Okla.
03-11*
MICKIE SAYS
Wil l TRADi:—1917 M Dodge or
Model 34 Velie for equity in Nor-
man rental or acreage. Call E. Bur-;
kett, New Castle, Okla.
-CU* ALLOWS AS UONW ut
Vo AS, <iOOC> M&tVjQCt) &=>
NttfT Ptuai -x\\x36 ,
' VOUWi UG> WiiV\ VNWetD \OKU
VOUCVi ©OlAt
GOVAK> ivi pssrfews,-
wvva owns, ut. uc N
U6RDeo\veCi
A <WOOMKi)
UAgp gM'.W T
FURNISHED ROOM
gentleman employed.
\\ est Main.
FOR
381.
0_'-3t* r
for rent, to
Call at 317
O-'-it*
RENT—Apartment,
wovuts
i^E 10
PAS 0?
ni r.
mpiSS
I'hone
OJ-3t* '
DINING ROOM and kitchen to let
to competent woman tor summer
.term. Fine location. Call -39.
o.'-.'t*
OWNER will sell new eleven room
house furnished or unfurnished, two
hlock> of university. A barnain.
Call -'39. • hJ-.'t* f
EOR SALE—Registered bi^ hone
I'oland China pigs. L. C. Hall,
I'hoii. 31)4. 62-3t*
BRING your shoe repairing to Aug-
ust Miller, Pioneer Electric Shoe
Shop, one blo< k v. est of Santa Fc
trai k , on Main street.
61-3t
FOUR ROOM HOUSE—Not n' d-
ern new and well built $300 and
lent i . tnents will handle. Phone
61 tf
TO IC -T SI.
Eufaula.
.ptng room.
120 Kast
Cl It*
N"l" -One siN-room modern
ii.nit V"gu t 1 .t $W) per
til s■Minteer Hardware 1 o,
information. oO-tf
If town building
itrvhnHv
was like scandal.
OtiR.b it I*lA',t'.
Send the Kiddies Summer
Clothes to Bowers
With the Kiddies all out of school
for tlie summer vacation this week,
Norman mothers are thinking' about
the clothes the Kiddies are to wear
during the warm summer days. In
many cases the Kiddies have clot lies
they wore last summer that will still
give a lot of service il repaired, altered,
cleaned and pressed.
Why not call 3-0-5 or 2-8-1 early Friday morn-
ing, tell the Bovvers establishments just what you
want done nad have the clothes all ready for the
kiddies to slip into Saturday mofning as they get
Up to go out and start their summer's play—know-
ing that Monday morning will not find them going
to school again.
Of course you could do this work yourself—but
no one knows better tlian you do yourself how
busy you are these hot days and how hard it is to
find time to repair and alter the Kiddies clothes,
to say nothing of cleaning and pressing litem, the
Bowers' twenty employes are ready and wa'ting
to relieve you of this work.
( all 3-6-5 or 2-8-1 right now, 'fore you forget
it, so one oi the five Bowers detiverly cars can call
early Friday morning.
Jack Bowers Cleaning Company
118 Wes' Mail 41,> So"th Websfr
rhotie 2-8 1 Just Call 3-0-5
iMen, you can buy
oxfords here for as
little as $2.95
Why pay the high prices for low
shoes that some merchants are
asking when you can 'buy the high
quality, well-known
Bostonian, Just Wright,
Bion F. Reynolds
at our store Friday and Saturday
at only $2.95, $3.45," $4.95 and $5.45.
They are broken lines, but sizes
are here in some one of these
brands from 4 to 9. Leathers are
black, brown and tan.
Save money on your low shoes
Friday and Saturday.
E. B. Kimberlin
125 East Main
n
1
Norman is the beauty spot of Oklahoma. It is your home and our home,
Let us wurk for our hotne by patronizing home industries.
Whv send <mr money to (Iklahoma City or any other city to go to a nation
wide corporation when we can buy as good or better products here just as
cheap. Let's get together and pull for Norman. Buy Norman made bread.
22 Ounce Loaf 13c, Two Loaves For 25c
15 Ounce Loaf 9c, Three Loaves For 25c
With a money back guarantee.
We as citi/.tits of Norman ask you to stay with tts and we will stay with
you I>\ gi\ in'. \ou your full money's worth of the best quality bread and pas-
tries at all times.
The West Side Bakery The Modern Bakery
W A. SULIilVA'1. Propriety C SHOPT Vn pripfor
- i
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The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 26, 1921, newspaper, May 26, 1921; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc165336/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.