The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 1, 1921 Page: 2 of 12
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THE NORMAN TRANSCRIPT—NORMAN, OKLAHOMA
THE NORMAN TRANSCRIPT
Published by Transcript-Enterprise Publishing Company
Norman, Oklahoma.
Entered as second class matter at the I'ost Office,
Norman, Oklahoma, January 2, 1914, under act of Lon-
i
Published Tuesdays. Thursdays and Sunday Morning
Member Oklahoma Press Association. Advertising
representative: Oklahoma Advertisnig Bureau, Norman,
Oklahoma.
Set out that shade tree before it is too late.
WELCOME, MISS MAY.
CITY PARKS
III ((ki.ilionm City tltey are considering the prop-
osition of \ <> 1 i 11bonds for the purpose of build-
ing three or lour more park*. Oklahoma City has
many beautiful parks with street car accommo-
dations, and yet feels the need of more parks.
Parks are a great asset to any town or city, and
Norman should come alive to this great need.
It has already been pointed out that Norman
needs a tourist park conveniently located. If a
tourist park is a good thing for other cities why
is it not a good thing for Norman? Jn speaking of
a tourist park for Oklahoma C'itv the Oklahoman
mi Friday among other things said:
"A number of cities have tourist camps and have
found that they are well worth while. In the first
place, such camps attract tourists who might not
otherwise visit the city. In the second place, they
render the stay of tourists here more pleasant,
which makes tlietn stronger boosters for the city.
These boosters will induce other tourists to come
this way. As an advertising proposition for the
city, it appears that a tourist camp would pay for
itse.f."
The world is getting better. Mere is a con-
crete example: Last year over a hundred moving
WEEKLY SERMON
Hotv "the SALT
t IS MORAL FIBER OF PEOPLE BREAKING?
•j*
...; A great wave of crime is sweeping and the admonition of the Lord,
, over the country, says the Richmond "Not by might, nor by power, but by
(Va '
LADGHALITTLE
Jesse Girtrude Sterne
Miss May, we have waited for you a long time.
Come right in now and make yourself at home.
But listen!
Don't have anything to do with Jack Frost—
he's killed our potatoes, our fruit and our corn,
and is the most unpopular bird in Cleveland
county. So, in order to protect your good reputa-
tion of the past, we urge you to avoid this chap s
society while you are with us.
And say— \
Miss May, the chiidren all love you and the old
folks think you can bring more happiness into a
home than all the lest of the family of Months jjjclllrL, manai,t.rs j„ annual convention were -.
put together 1 hey think you simply radiate sun-, ^ i,alnl,|lll„. Last wirk in th(. annHal
shine, warmth and good i iei .. convention in Oklahoma City only forty-seven
Now for goodness sa e i on c isappoin e . u arrcgjc,| for gambling, shooting craps being
We are depending on you. ; the spccj(ic chary^
After all the farmer is about the most optimis-
tic fellow in the country, for who could have lost
as he did last fall and then turn around and do
the same thing over again?
GIVE CHILDREN HAPPY MEMORIES
In the evening of our days
When the first far stars above
Glimmer dimmer, through the haze,
'I'llan the dewy ey es of love,
Shall We 'riidl.trnfuHy revert
• ilVita. v;uM*lu*l Wij a;iil plays',.., .
Of our youth, with- hearts thai hurt,—
In the evening-of our days? 1
James Whitcomb Riley.
It begins to look like Norman is going to get
into the better city contest.
... H v a, i Dispatch. It is not confined my Spirit, sa it h the Lord of hosts,
.o our great centers of population, very generally disregarded for the
LOST ITS SAVOUR ' lor there is hardly a state or com- new weapon of political pc wer, re-
Text: "Salt is good; but if the salt j munity that has not been brought presented by the big stick of le.'isla-
liave lost its savour, men cast it out.' fact. to face with lawlessness. The tive enactments trying to foife them
Luke 14:35-35. (great number of crimes seems to in- to conform to established standards
Salt is a necessity to the lite ol man (jjcate a t>reajci,l^r down of the na- of conduct repugnant to their dear-
consuntly'increasim?.'6 tittle' by little don's moral fiber, rather than mere est conceptions of civil and individual
the world is beginning to discover sporadic instances of disregard for liberty.
the truth of the Master's word, when the law. It presents a study for Creating Artificial Crime
He said "Salt is Good." j students of criminology and experts Under the whip and spur 01 these
Of coursf when salt lose* its posi- in social psychology as to the under- vicious enactments men's ideas of the
lying causes. j beneficience of law is undergoing
Many, of course attribute it to a change, and there is a growing
psychological influences growing out spirit of resentment at meddlesome
of the war—a transient influence interference with their accustomed
that will pass as th- war recedes, habits of living that not only is
Others pro ess to see in it the inevit- manifesting itself in a contempt for qq pQRTH AND GREET THE
able result forecast years ago by the whole body of laws which create
matter. It is getting to In a question ' students ol government of the evils artificial crimes, but for the obliga-
today whether the church is season- attendant upon the extension of tions of moral taw as jpell, since those
mg tlie worid. or the world stasouing j sumptuary legislation and the in- whose duty it is to stress the latter
the church. I creasing restraint upon individuality, as the expression of a yielding to the
through exposure 'io unfrieii(ilyS<i"l""! ' Adrift From Moorings nimhiiuy m the \lniiglity -pirn have
enees. Te Christian life cannot >taiid President Harding in an address Joined in substituting loi that appial
too much o; this, any more than salt : delivered to the layman of the Mar- tilt- tleshy arm of lorce. Need theie
can. Sometimes :i bad book, a bad j jon presbytery, put hi.- finger 011 he any cause for wonder at the
friend, or a compromise with sin de-|y|ie of the underlying causes respon- b;eaking down of the nations 11101 al
priv s the Christian of the Presence sil,lc for the assumed breaking down fiber, when the governor of a state a
and power of the Spirit-fill. U lite lf .fH.;r( • mora, fi,ur wlicn lu. Housed minister of the gospel, *
Salt also loses its savor «>v 'ack |
>f contact. t Our religion '
final
with a man with whom he
tive quality of saltness, it is then
good for nothing. There are certain
filings which take the seasoning out of
salt just as there are certain things
which take the positive qualities for
«jood out of the Christian's experi-
ences. The Christian life cannot stand
tnrough contamination
earthly
Old Dad Hubbard
Went to his cubbard
To get a drink of "wine".
When he pot thwe
i 1 is cubbard was bare
Except a little "shine."
Weary Willie Says:
Their s a lot 1-1 re wrong with the
ouch than w th the fellow he's
nocking.
To some folks a fliver
1 s 1110s; a curse.
It swells the head
And shrinks the nurse.
SPRING
itself best when it seeks contact both
with God and our fellow man
BASEBALL SEASON OPENS
its
1 r: 1 t 1
Tomorrow the city league baseball opens
season at the city park.
And—
From now on for several months the common
topic of conversation will he ''baseball."
The Transcript desires to encourage clean
baseball in every way possible, for ibis is a pas-
time, when properl\ managed, that -.tirs the best
in a boy surging to the front until he says :'T11
I .win." It teaches a boy something of science, and
ihiVifi nn 'mpfesses upon his mind the necessity of bciuf.
most, ii] , , ,. . i' l 1 1..., ■ , .1,'.
y tmcom/zTa
BRICKBATS
"Padded Urickbats" will do for a
beginn r to list in the • kindergarien
•irtment of our college town, but
this is no cross roads setlement. and
111 rust be treated according to advanc-
,aid: "Sometimes I think the world the example of law defianee by
has gone adrift from its moorings threatening to take a shotgun loaded
religiously, and I know it will help with buckshot and have
if we have a revival of religious ticmcnt
How few go forth to meet and
leet the Spring! She is here and
settled with all her children before
we art aware. It is long after her
arrival that she gets as fa as the
victories and the offices, and by that
time most of the Iirst exc tement of
it coming is past.
1 low lew go forth to meet and
greet the Spring! Hut you cannot
make that observation in the tone
of one who says, "How few look up
tto set the stars!" Men are indif-
ferent to the stars when blinded by
The writer
tried "Padded Brick-
faith. I want a government that is is eugaged in a controversy?
tt£fj ZrZ? rMJS get S back fftJSffS
teWB a contact with omnipotent $ All would go forth to Bre.t her If
Have we that contact with God?! as we of America have buil.led by 'hevy ' iidar° 'niarks-Vr
Him, the relationship of ay l'ial 110 calendar marks lor
\1- the world must be buil.led upon rec- Sprinn is i ckle in the keeping of her
oanition of the same God. "Let us dates- sin- comes; out fo: the most
riK|,t with caution," -ay- the great Wash- part men are busy 111 the cities, and
great movement for human up- ington, "indulge the supposition that though spring has power to change
ik- morality can be maintained without lie earth, sue cannot work many
Whatever may be conceded wonders with city pavements.
of refined education if there were pring holidays! If
uliar structure, rea- some new calendar should arrive and
contact
And, if so, how are we showing our1 recognizing
reliance upon the strength
mighty's purpose to dispose the
hearts as the inspiration
the
lift, in which the church-.
ing a leading part, reliance upon li- religion.
the influence
minds of pe
eg'thought—modern methods must be i vjnc jlcip seems to form but a negli-
„ ,, , t>^ i I gible part of the effort. The value v
! of vitai iaith in C.od in indivi Hial ' son and experience both forbid us to mess the earth with a new and pop-
• ' / r r; ^ ,i,/i . UllpH^Sl's ti Kill Ills 111111(1 tlU* necessity ol UClllJJ
fV* ca! * ° -1 L ' L . * ncmnatv, not .oiiJy on the diamond field but in the ■
o sixteen. It is in the that period, for the most <ljn tn<ir(. ()f lift_and f]ll.
the i
and found tlirv w<^i'e | bear'.- as the "inspiration to right- expect that national
m^ -,,w«?5TZ..W^«l'^methhiR i eous i uduct seems to luve been; pr vail in exclusion ..1
bad to be done'to wake them up " minimized by the leaders in ibis prmciphs. And with..lit
\ so'fl uippk is uil right lor a baby movement for a new world order. God religion is but a mockery,
but people with teeth t —— r
faith
to chew
I node other kinds
medicine.
;ives men and women a chance reed other kinds of medicijic
to i ;et awav from business and from the duties and sonal matter—it is one that concerns
. . . . . . 11. i ! 1 rtvif IU'lliP! JIS tO
Stop'a moment anil think.
ished morns and Alavs. svvtciti mcmuiivo ,, . , e , ,
1SIICU ilium, an i CI. out parallel anionic the sports of the day.
remain than the fragrance and beauty oi those 1 3
MYTHICAL TREES OF HOLY LAND
to sixteen, it in uie ma, l-ci-u. .u. .« sti„ n)„rc scrious
part, that the man or woman-to-be is made or S(|u.ln. |t
.marred. It is therefore essential that these years
, , ... : to IJl I kl VJIII UU.SIIICSS (Hill IllJIII llic Ulllies anu ownai Iimuv. •. -•••- - ,
be lived under the proper condi^ons. I responsibilities ... the home long qiongd tp ehjoy! - .c,vlc "r",c: "s 40 Trees of Palestine are reviewed at w.th the .scred bit o. ground.
Recall your \ an- , a a|lllu>t if 1H?t altogether with-i me h "Vonnersville, Iud., «•- «• l.y lames R:calt .« tne Henty uu.nsand ,,e,ue vis. ed
No sweeter memories , 1 . r . * .x. rucitl ,, ' ... American l orestry mapa/me, who I aiestine annually, iiiteen thousand
urind Wche.rr:? •JbSrtS of the ^ tol,. by * these were Ruisian pilgrim.. Th.
'weeks, and said many nice things, 11 tourists. TiI,uik . peep into the Russian government assisted the pil-
* clphniv thp'sunshine of adult davs is not so . Au,ocrac>' alul ,nub rule 111 ust Slve way to con-, .uld we all w,,„ ,0 ,1in the pews, Cirden of Gethse. the.- is -ten grins to reach the Holy Land, and
, , -p. i t t.tutio.ial government in America. i dreaming about what good people we , t|u. golden gate in the Ka-t wall of when they readied it no shrine real
golden as that of childhood. I he musk of the rose b 0 I..- .In. l:.-x Dodridge ! ,,,llE.,lcm. a him ' u! fee. or so ur traditional .scaped them; the sin-
is sot half SO sweet, lhe twitter of birds at dawn roiarir np A mkrip a m t pr rriM opened fire and told allI that www above tha bottom of the vatVy in erity of their devotion was pathetic
dues u. .1 hold Mich wonderful music. Each new INFLUENCE OF AMERICAN. LEGION ^ summer^ never wide! once fl wed Wady Sitty and impressive, rhey were given to
day is not another glorious adventure. ^ —— lends "md^wmtiT 'never begins. j M;.ryam. The gnarled, vene.able expressing meir devout leelings ny
And home!—what a wonderful piace is a child's, There is need for the re-creation of a devout, | The people woke up, and made a olive trees in the m ddlc of th° par- jkiysii:4 the objects i.which awaken
home ! A place of refuge from baby sorrows; a
place where one can play in the swinjj under the
old elm; a place where mother kisses your hurt ^ __o. , iiuuaM f
finger and with love-magic drives away the pain, j js only at the threshold of a great career of infill-1 500 joined church and many of^Jhem j ,v111
: enus, anu wiiiui uevei u^nn. i ••• - , •< ^ - Unu wnen me sun on cue i.
There is need for the re-creation of a devout,! The people woke Up. and made a i olive trees in the m dale ot th^ par- ,kiysln:-4 the objects i wlucn awaken ^cyan to 8tir tjl(. lragrill
1 whole soul, militant Americanism today no less; rush for the altar. Such a revival was I den still clinging to a hoary remnant these ieelings. lhe so-called tomb ot ground lhea aUcs would
than When the republic was threatened by an !I,evtr,betwUrf1 fL i^omhoust to 1 e«f«bled life, enlist attention. Christ in the Church of the Holy bep grect the Spri s {
i 'im \ i *i • l, , spread like wild tire ro n iioum fh s G:. den of Gethsemane can be ucnre s lorn into cavities by the , . . ..„ur
•armed assessor lhe American Legion whtch house, all over tow., an more Han noth. K>8><, ot lhe,e pious lips. 1 hey k.s, u T
I lo yj u*J ui mi u i n v.ui v.ui v vi l/i luiiu | www . ^
Give your children happy memories that their | ence, provides a rallying, point for the forces ' j reachcr^Vi ^iiiK pWiri'1 l/r^ckba^s U
the writer
whole lives may carry the sweetest joys of the constructive patriotism. This was made clear by
springtime of life. This you can do in the largest Senator Luther Harrison in a speech before a
degree only when you own a home of your own. meeting of the Fletcher Udell Pledger American
Build or buy now. Legion post No. 88 at the Sooner confectionery
° Thursday night. Senator Harrison's speech rang
Main street should be no dumping ground for. witli the spirit of patriotism. He pointed out that
shacks. I it i^ no longer a question as to who our ances-
o | tors are—the important thing to consider today i
CAN BE IMPROVED I Americanism.
The work the American Legion has undertaken j ^
Flower gardens, playgrounds, shade trees, paved js calculated to perform a service for America and
streets and cement sidewalks are some of the humanity comparable to that which won for us
many things that go to make Norman a desirable imperishable glory on the battle field of demo-
place in which to live. Any effort on the part ol eracy.
Norman citizens to extend or improve these in any And—
manner would be a step in the right direction. '|'he influence of the American Legion will be
° felt and appreciated more and more as time goes
A man in Oklahoma I ity last week received a |)V
pious
the American For- the seven stations on the \ la L)ul-
stry magazine, because the exact urosu« through which Qirist walked
The Old Red Rooster" would be | locality of the real garden was nev- u the way to Calvary; they purch-
morality can u.a and moveable festival oi Spring
religious movable according i-o the whim uf
i!ie welcome maid! Some years, the
holidays would fall in April, in late
and backward years n May; but ev-
ery year, in honor of the earth's
aixusal, a holiday long enough to
liberate the pe ople lor a pilgrimage
to wood and meadow.
Hie smell of the earth is at 110
time ol the year so sweet as in
Spring. Hie ta.stc uf the air and the
feel 01 the wind 011 the lace are lux-
unes that last in their perfection tor
only a little while.
there would be scouts sent out
110111 the cities to report when the
il sent up anemones and violets,
nd when the suu on the 1110 st earth
began to stir tile fragrance of the
d go out to
Spring levtr
joy would
be an annual delight. Dearborn in-
dependent.
here still, if we would have praised
his fine feathers, and told him how
beautiful lie crowed.
, i, tl .. . Miotguti and dagger
to convince t'.ie "Red Rooster that it
was time to let him know, and where-
to crow, to let the people know, how
•' ■ • row.
A dilapidated, ancient sidewalk •-
: i one who passes over
It is dangerous to life and liink
and says in a silent way, "I don t
.are for Norman—I havi 110 pride,
,ind want to be let alone
There is nothing personal in these
remarks—it is Norman as a who'ie
, !,);• : aik is ii".ended lor. We
know no other gospel to preach.
THE CIVIC COMMITTEE.
•corded, and these frail trunks ased pilgrim stocks and went afoot
common about Jerusalem may claim
an antiqu ty of one or two hundred
years Nothing short of a stupid
credulity would ever credit them
• ith ei 1: eon • r nineteen uuidrcd
ve. i s. yet some ; 11: ■ book declare
they have sprung from successive
letter thai had bene wamlrenig over the coun-
try lor two year;—-lu*t, 111 other words. I his Speaking of non-progressive citizens, the Okla-
speaks well for the delivering ijnalities of the new : [lt,|,ia |<ailwa\ company will he branded as such
Postmaster General Hays. j unless it improves its road, especially between
o Norman and Oklahoma City. Monday a car ran
It is certainly funny how everybody else wants ,f tin- track and passengers to and Irom Norman
the other fellow to come down lirsl—in prices. had ti' be transferred. I hi> road is not only rough
but dangerous. It is very common for the trolley p|easel| wjth all that pi
-J
Everybody except a grouch loves a booster.
CHILDREN IN OKLAHOMA UNDERFED
; to get off the wire from one lo a half dozen times
I betw een here and Oklahoma City.
SPIRITUAL FOOD
Surely, i iiavi Uelinvt'il ami f|uictcil
myself, as a child that is whined of
his mother: my soul is t veil as a
M'aned child.— Ps. exxxi 1.
Quiet. l ord, my forward heart,
Make me teachable and mild,
1 i in pie. free from art,
Vlake me as a weaned child;
isiiusl and envy free,
;eth Thee.
Newton.
Jericlio and the Jordan. On the
way to Jerieiio they kissed the
w.iere lhe wayfarer was 'held up' by
liiicies, they kissed the rums at Jeri-
cho; they kissed the Jordan Rive,
and uie Dead Sea; and these oid
olive trees in the Garden oi Gethse-
Krowths extending hack to the time mane have endured a guodly appur
of Christ. The olive tree, like the t.ouittont oi Russian osculalion.
apple tree, has not the renovating1 hanged tiief-y eats gsrf,
t rowth of the banyan tree, or the .
persistency of the ho tree and trees "'<= <" "Inch -Mf llill!^d
of warm 'latitudes. The . ;. den is n «slf 13 example oi how ridic
control of Franciscan monks, who UIUUS ''re t'u
p >int out the place of the Agony,
Used Adam's Plea
A Lincinnatti man on trial for tlie
murder ol his wii< enfesses lie had
pot ior tv\o years padded the payrolls
-I the concern by winch he \sas em-
piojed and that his wile who held
tile job while lie served ill the navy
iaugiii iiim how to do it. 1 hat was
Adams alibi. But Adam didn't
sho<>t live to keep her lrom expos-
ing him.
A trouble hunter finally steps into
one oi the traps that he has set.
A i\ i A D S
In examining school children in the Oklahoma
towns where community institutes are being held,
Miss Nell Turner, nurse sent out by the I niver- ,
PREACHER TO EDIT PAPER
Dr. \\ . H. \\ ray Boyle, pastor of a
burch in Denver, in a sermon last Sunday
in the
sity of Oklahoma extension division, states that power of the press for good or evil, criticised mod-
more youngsters arc suffering from nial-nurtition,
or under feeding than from any other ailment.
The peculiar thing about this statement is the
fact that in the majority of these cases the child-
ren are the sons and daughters of well-to-do par-
ents, while the children, the m\ estigation shows, of Doyle 11 become editor
poorer parentage invariably are better nourished one day. So on May the
in newspaper methods of displaying sensational
ev cuts.
lhe publishers of the Denver Post, recognized
all over the United States as one of the most sen-
sational publications in existence, invited Dr.
chief of that paper for
th, the minister will de-
MICKIE SAYS
> (&03W, WUEMO&, UCND IS ~TUV
/-<\vac rea. 6.U. aooo &o&scra0e 3|
("VO COtAE -<0 TU' Cfr -TWS\«.
\ VivPCR. 'VI PROVAPTVX .
( SUP OS. feu- "tw CO\Vl VS
Vcovavw1 -to os, vsottu
W<®WER. 'U A
, 'KI Aiuc*WO«.
.'here the disciples sl'.-pt, and tlie
place where Judas gave the kiss of
betrayal.
Whether the ancestors of these de-
crepid trees w *re contemporaneous
with Christ or not, they are very old;
tfny are bible trees, they have seen
many generations of devoted
pilgrims come t • this walled in. sane,
titied ground, and whether or not
this garden may be the real or tradi
t onal spot, it is in the real valley of
ilie Agony and sufficiently near for
devotional impression. These trees
have been solemnized not only by
years, but by the kiss of devout lips,
as have 1-een most things connected
and traditions
enteil to tiie credulity of pilgrims
. .siting the city of the ^Veat King.
oo much tradition and so little his-
toric fact—there s Jhe traditioanl
piace where the tree grew from
which the cross was made, the tra-
tiit onal place oi crucifixion, the tra-
dit onal Garden of Wethsniane, the
traditional tomb oi Christ, in short ( 1 'U{<,MI-K—IIoum ln.'d Hoods,.type-
the well-nigh traditional everything1
UOC1 OH'S NOTICE
Oliiee hour- lor Dr. Gordon, chir-
opractor, whose oliices are in the Lib-
erty theatre building, will be irom
p. in.' to 10 p. m. beginning M011-
'i.iy. . iay -, and continuing to Thurs-
day, May 14, uhiic he takes a post
graduate coarse at lahoma City.
aave the geographical features ol the
city's .^ite and sua round ngs. The
iceblest and most modern of all tne :
traditions offered by tradition mong-1
crs, is that giving, as the tiec 011 j
a'liich Judas hanged himself, a re- j
cent
years.
L . huuuil,
, i writer. ojO University lilvd. 5^-4t*
1 UK SAl.l-.—tJrange cane seed, $1.5(1
per hundred. J. H. Zink, phor.e
K-iil. 52-ot*'
i \\ 0 light housekeeping rooms for
relit. 1'iersou llutel, phone JO.
52-Jt*
gruwtli of peihaps a few score | ——
i UK b.Al.h—Sweet potato plants, 4li
because they get only plain, substantial food, and terminc new > values, dictate how the news
in quantity sufficient only to satisfy a heaithy, should be displayed, direct assignments of re-
growing appetite. porters and otherwise have complete control of
According to an unofficial statement, many of the facilities of publishing a big daily paper,
the well-to-do people arc in a haste for money and 1 be preacher has a bi^; job on his hands. Too
pleasure and therefore do not take time to prop- l>ii for one man in one day. As no preacher can
erly prepare the foods in the home, relying almost convert an entire community in one sermon, so no
entirely upon the store and the bakery. I litis newspaper can change the demand for certain
children get more sweets than is good ior their news in one issue of the paper—it takes years of
physical growth and development.
Some fellow, somewhere, was mean enough to
say that the mothers of thi si chiidren ill many in-
stance- v-re r< -p''nsibh. Ill -a\ Miat 'i r \
women In-long to mop i bibs than ,i dink- has
mv (-ilii uts ■ id 'I■.i vb• 'e i|k mi<iti■ i - ' it-
tending the rub meetings the children o.. in 11n
ctipboaul .oid fill theii -1■ -ma- l.s vi'bout
^ti iclii 'lis.
honest toil to bring about the reformation desired.
I'nder present conditions, if we should unfor-
tunately lie compe led to re->urt to arms today in
our controversies with Japan, the price of food
oils in the I'nited Stales would n" soaring, ju-t a>
the price of dyestiills readied rareified heights
aitei tii-ruiaiiv was blockaded. Diat is the penal-
ty of placing too much dependence on another
1'his may be true in some cases, and it so tilt country and not taking precautions to be self-suf
child is onh to bi firient 111 basic indusrfiet
TtAOlt?
"AWEWISe"
AND
TO THE OLD FRIEND
Forget me not
As the years roll on,
You niy friend
In da\s gone by.
New friends 1 have,
Rut there are none
To take your place,
^e they lowly or high.
Forget me not.
Nor the many hours
Spent together
1 n joy and sorrow.
Smooth be your path
And strewn with flowers.
Prayer and hope that
Sometime in tomorrow—
Our paths may cross again.
Jessie Gertrude Sterne.
Norman, Ok la.
t und guilty oi incompetency, and
I others will meet the same fate.
But the engineer who builds a
i bridge does not say that gravitat n
' is on tiial. liis design and tne
! strength of his materials are, how-
I ever. Advertising in the proper me-
diums, with the proper copy, with
the proper offer, will biing results.
Failure of one of these elements is
not to the discredit ot advertis ng,
but of tlie advertiser.—Advertising
Age.
cents hundred, $2.50 per thousand.
Also tomato, pepper and egg plants.
Tobermau & Toberman, Florists,
just olt the Boulevard, phone
52-3t
LOS 1 -A bunch of keys in black
leather case, my name on tag. Re-
ward lor return, n. L. Aiuiurow.
52-3t
IOR SALF—House two story six
. rooms, reception hall, bath', base-
ment. uood location. A bargain.
5lU .\ionnctt, phone 0J8-R. 5J-0t*
ADVERTISING
METHODS
ON TRIAL
"Advertising," says a newspaper j
advert a nient, "is on trial. Advertisu
ing must provi it* c*ftit it nc>
Properly / shaking, advertising is
not on trial. Some methods of ad- i
verf'*i"£r have aWadv rr'fld ^nH
FROM BOTH SIDES
Anyhow, what's a poor fellow to
do in running a paper—he e's a
good sister complaining that we nev-
er have anything in tin paper about
the churches and that we put in our
tune trying to slur the churches, and
heies an< ti er remonstrating with us
because there's nothing in the paper
but three'-column account* of the re-
viva! meet ngs. -News Journal, Wil-
mington, Ohio.
The law oi supply and demand
work* in ; n\v -1«- • i« 11 s wo. V\ h !e
25,Out) husky men are hunting i bs in
t hicayo. a 6-year-old b y is mak ig
s in tiie movies
D i< 1. > S M A K1X G and remodeling.
Prices reasonable, satisfaction guar-
anteed. Frances Locke, 11(> West
Tonhawa, phone 10o9-R. 52-.U*
l Ol< KEN J—One modern five room
flat. L. Orenbaun, Last Main.
52-lt^
K)R SALE—A
lif.w, at a bargai
piano, practically
Call 875. 62-3t*
\\ A.NTKD—l o rent, four unfurnislied
rot 111s or small house. Phone 165
iirucc Lnveiia. 52-lt*
WAX 1'ED -Twin
Phone o()7.
baby
carriage.
50-Jj^
lll.i.l' W A XT ED—Housework in a
mall family at good wages, tali
60V Chautauqua St. or phone 537.
50-3t*
FOR RENT—Rooms, furnished or
upOKnished Phone S4
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The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 52, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 1, 1921, newspaper, May 1, 1921; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc168353/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.