Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 177, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1916 Page: 2 of 12
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TT70
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 25 1916.
GREEN TOMATOES
CAN BE STUFFED
Also Sauted and Escallopcd
Teacher Declares
CHEAP FOOD-GOOD DISHES
Domestic Science Instructor
Submits Recipes
.lust as blessings have a h.ilnt ol
snoopmu aiouml the premises in dn
Rime foods hillierto considered n s 1 1 1 1
only for ending the miseries of the dot;
which makes a fnactire of rni lamum:
liis wnniis under one's window tan b.'
transformed into bunes'-tn Kmidnes '.
eatables it has developed from expert
ments in the domestic scietue depart -merit
of the bib schoid
Few Have Taken Chance.
Tor instance there's the hnmhli
green tomato subjected to nit 1111:-
scorn and contumely throughout the
at;es. true a few couranrons house-
wives have gambled awav their time on
the chance that someihinn migbt he
prodmed from them-hut on the whole
such experiments have heen diseotirait
Ing except for the indigestion .special
ists
Now. however il is announced th.it
not only ca:i ureen tomato pic which
causes the apple pie to retire to its
corner uhashed and confused he pro-
duced hut that a doen other palatalilc
dishes can he made from them (ireen
tomatoes are perhaps the cheapest veg-
etables on the market today
Recipes Given.
telow are a lew of the recipes
worked out by Miss l.eno Oshorne su-
pervisor of domestic seieme at tin'
liijib sthool and the k"'s 11 her
classes :
Stuffed Kreen tomatoes: Scoop out
most of the inside ol the Initial" bill
with ininced ham or cooked rice Hake
either with a roast or in a pan with a
small rttantily of water.
I.sralloped green tomatoes: ( hop to-
matoes to epial one pint. Add Uo
nips of hread crtimhs one run slightly
beaten one teaspoonful of sail two
tahlespoonslul of Ktated cheese and two
tahlespoonslul of hacoil fat. I'otir in
a buttered baking dish and cook slow ly
twenty minute Cost is 5 cents
and the quantity is sufficient for six
people.
Saute Rreen tomatoes : Slice tomatoes
Walk Upstairs
Save $5 to $7.50
Oklahoma's Only Exclusive Sec-
ond Floor $15 Clothes Shop for
Men and Young Men.
New Fall Suits
and Overcoats
They Are Guaranteed 9 20. no and
Vi.iO Qualifies
But Our Price Is Only
I he reasons are- YV K don't have
thai Kldli uroutid lloor rent
VK don't have to add on piolns
for cut price sales. VK don't
have any losses on credit ac-
counts. VK don't sell fine fix-
tures. T. SW.I. (LOTHI-S
that are actually worth 120.00 to
$22. SO for 13 always. I nine up
We'll show you.
Second Floor Over Westfall's
Drug Store Stairway inside Stoie
H
OOOO f CLOTHC1
UNTER-WOLSON
''ITV'
PAUL WINSLOW
Will Soon Be In
Noonday Luncheon
Ppelal Atten-
tion" U Com-
mute Meet I lift
Tn l.l. i Itesrrvml
LEE
HUCKINS
one-quarter of an inch thick. Salt roll
in bread crumbs or corn meal and
cook slowly in bacon or ham fat until
well-browned and tender. lirated
cheese sprinkled over each slice as it
is removed from the skillet may add
to the flavor.
Man Cruel td Her
Girl Tells Judge
Ruth Perry related a stoiy of cruel
treatment at the hands of K. ('. Kellar
to Judtfe Spiller in the citv court tin;
morning. She said that Kellar came to
her room in a rooming house at Jt
W est ( irand avenue and kicked in the
door. When she went to the tele-
phone to call the police she said he
slapped her down and kicked her. Tl"'
case was continued mini tomorrow
morning in order that Keller might con-
sult counsel.
SADIE BLACK TO
! BE A WITMESS IN
COPELAND TRIAL
It onllnueit I ram rue One )
. lunon related to the bullet that killed
LU.u k.
t opcland's w in- and huh- daughter
'wire on hand when Court opened.
Questions Circular.
Attorney Stuhbs began an attempt
when Hail tonic the stand to question
j tin- correctness of the i ocular dis
trihuted in Marshall in advance of
; Clack's lectures stating' that the speak
I er was an ex priest.
"Do you know that Itlack was an ex
i priest ?" be asked
I "No" replied Hall
I "Iio you not know as a fait that this
was not truer"
"I did not" said Hall.
In answer to ipiestioning the witness
'said Mark claimed to be a M.isnn ami
! wore a Masonic emblem at Marshall;
j that he asserted himself to be a minis
1 ler of the (htistian ilmreli and hail
also told Af having had at one time
: a connection w ith the Methodist church
Asks About Scuffle.
Attorney MuMis went hack again to
the suiflle between Mack C opeland
and John Rogers and asked:
"Now didn't the scuttle begin when
Hlack tried to draw his tnstol and Rog-
ers grappled him '"
Hall stuck to Ins previous testimony
that Ulack tried to get up as Rogers
laid hands on him.
The detense repeatedly rmestiniied
the witness as to whether t'oneland
laid his hands on Itlaek. Hall id tins
was his belief hut could not sav defin-
itely. Mr. Stuhbs then read front the testi-
mony ol the examining trial in Mar-
shall ipieslions and answers indicating
thai Hall then testified that ( opeland
made at Black and seized him. Hall
said that he meant that at some tune
during the fracas this mav have oe
currcd
At this point the defense turned the
witness user to the state for redirect
examination
Rogers Seiied Black.
Hall ijimVcly finished his testimony.
Jueslioned hy Attorney Marsene John-
son he said that nobody hut H1.uk was
seated when the shooting began. He
testified that the last words before the
scuffle were uttered hy Roger who
then icic( lllack'n arms.
John W. Ilerndon an undertaker of
Marshall the next witness for the state
testified that lll.irk was shot from the
front bill lliat theie were no powder
burns on his clothing as he examined
it at his morgue.
Saw Powder Bums.
Hall previously had testified that he
had seen powder burns on ltlack's
clothing at the morgue.
Ilerndon said he found the bullet
thai killed Ulack in his clothing at the
hack. It had a conical nose rather than
a flat nose lie turned it over to the
shei iff.
tin redirect examination Herndoii
said his examination of Hhuk's cloth-
ing was siiprrtNi.il He said he would
not attempt to idcntilv the bullet that
killed lllaik.
POVERTYljTfo"
I LIQUOR DRUGS
I ASSERTS MAYOR
! (tMtllmiesI Fram Fate fine.)
nol dabble in politics-that its purpose
was not only to punish crime but to
prevent il as nearly as possible.
Putpose Also Social.
He explained that the law-enforcement
t unit it ti of the organization had
a relation to the counliy similar to that
of Mayor ( Iverhoise r m Oklahoma
I it ; hut that its puipose is social as
well as to a certain extent g vern-
mrnlal "Mv father was a fast horse man"
said Mr. Ko.u h. in his spee h 'T'nr-
i Innately ior me he 'wrm broke ' W hen
1 1 was a lad my mother no doubt oltcii
I wondered where 1 would end. She
little guessed that I would wind up as
a minister of the gospel.
"lint a great deal of rtedit for sui h
success as 1 may have attained is due
t' the fail that she often took me to
the woodshed and laid on a well-seasoned
hitkory stiik whenever I vio-
lated a parental law ( icntleuien the
ground upon which I stood while that
punishment was administered became
as firmly pinked as cement -from my
dancing upon it
Indotses Mayor.
"I do not believe-this thing called
'moral suasion' ran be successfully sub-
stituted for the good old-fashioned
'licking.' I believe that stem measures
lr : :
VISIT TO U-53 STIRS SOCIETY
y$yt -
j Miss Margaret Capetton (left) and Miss Margaret Fahnestock.
I The social neutrality ol which the national capital has boasted is tottering
because o: thrse young women who are prominent in the social circles of Wash-
ington and Newport. The oitYnse cominittced by them was nothing more nor
iles than their ;it to the U 5.1 when the dcrinaii submarine docked at Newport
for a breathing spell. Miss ('apcrtoii is a daughter of Rear Admiral laperton.
Weather Just
Suits Germans
AlongSomme
Two Days of Pcrsiste.it Rains
Prevent British Making .
New Attacks
BY FREDERICK PALMER
(Copyright bv the Associated Press
PMfi )
BRITISH FRONT IN KKANCK
Oct J5 1 he linlish arc saying that if
the (.ermans had ordered the weather
it Could riot have suited their purposes
belter than during these last two days
of persistent ram. Artillery preparation
necessary for an attack is impossible
without visibility and as one gunner
said the visibility is so low the tanks
will have to use fog horns to prevent
a collision if they go waiideiiug across
tlie uncharted shell craters.
Hut about l.etiansloy where the Ilrit-
ish attacked Monday over a narrow
front and took about a thousand yard
of trenches the bloodiest ami fiercest
kind of fighting has been proceediig
all d.iv (Tuesday). I he utler discom-
fort and the mud and the wet seem
only lo make both sides more hitter.
Against the Hritisli here are the vet
eran dernian regiments which took
hurts aim and I louaiimont at Vrr
dun -now as savaire in defense as thev
we e in attack last spring. The trenches
in this region have names appropri-
ate for the weather and the season
such as "misty trench." "hazy trench"
and "stormy" "rhmdv" "windy" "spec-
trum" and "orion" trench The Germans
have been making no attacks except
counter attaiks aiming lo drive the
British out when thev gam ground in
anv one of these trenches
Absolutely-Pure
Contains No Alum
CLUB WOMEN ASK FOR A
NIGHT SCHOOL FOR ALL
(Pais Resolutions Aaklng for Admission
of Cititens With
! Foreigneri.
I '
Resolutions suggesting that if a night
school for foreigners he established in
Oklahoma City it should be thrown open
a well to citizens was adopted this
morning hy the educational committee
of the Federation of Women's rliihs.
The session was held in the Carnegie
library at Id o'clock.
It has been . suggested that a school
for foreigners only be opened. It was
the opinion of lite committee that the
city and hoard of education owed alio
a duty to those rituejis of Oklahoma
City who desire to attend night school
hut cannot afford to pay for it.
While the status of the hoard of edu-
cation as regards funds for the pro
fu sed school has not heen made pub-
lic the federal government has offered
lo furnish books and other supplies for
the immigrants attending any night
schools which may be established here.
A free night school was conducted it
this city in 101.1 but was discontinued
because of lack of money.
Domestics and cooks wfll find exct!-
lent positions b advertising In tha
Want Ads during the present month.
Wanted Twelve Girls
For United States Army
SAN FRANCISCO t al Oct J5.
United Stales army ofticers here
have advertised for women to aid
in obtaining enlistments for the
arniv. it became known today The
advertisement inserted bv Lieuten-
ant I olnnel John Carditcr. retired
who is in charge of the recruiting
station bete called for "twelve girls
for the I'nitcd Slates nrrn v."
The advertisement specified that
thev "must be aMr.utive. intelligent
tid industrious " He held out the
inducement that here was a chance
to "make money and do your coun-
try a service" and concluded with
the warning that "no fritters need
apply"
Colonel Gardner's plan is to rent
a i uptown store and install an ex-
':ihit that will demonstrate the life
of a soldier from camp cooking to
infantry drill. The women recruit-
ers will work out of that station
and will be paid $1 for every re-
cruit thev obtain.
to discourage dime are better than
stern remedies alter crime has been
eommilled. Therefore gentlemen I in-
dorse heartily the law enforcement
policies of Maor Overholser. As near
Iv as is- in his power he has made
Oklahoma City one ol the chaniNt
cities morally and physically in
America."
Members of the association state that
during the afternoon scsmoii today and
probably at various turns tomorrow
the question nf iiuieasing its member-
ship will be discussed.
Oklahoma Citv. thev point out is a
refuge for more stoFn horses than any I
other place m the state because of the
(act that its sie offers excellent facil (
ilies for hiding. I bus thev say it.
bears the unnpie position i havitn;
more stolen horses and fewer aitna1
hoist ihicw than any clhci nlace in
Oklahoma.
NAVY OPENsTliTs FOR j
TWENTY-FOUR NEW SHIPS
MAGNOLIA READY TO
HANDLE HEALDT0N OIL
Corporation Commissioner fieorge A
Henshaw this morniiiR received assur-
ances tiom officials of the Magnolia
Pipe Line company that from now on
the company woii'd carry all oil of-
fered it if the lleahltoii filed up to
J'.HI barrels a day At present the
pipe line is carrying approximately
Joium barrels daily.
The loinpatiy is now doubling its car-
rying facilities from the Healdtou field
to the (lull port and within the next
month or six w eeks it i an take twice
the amount of oil from the llcaldlon
field thai it is nmy taking.
According to Mr. Henshaw at leat
.)); thud ..I the production of the
lUabl'iii field al present is going mi
storage the prodm ers believing the j
pine ol ml will advance within a short.
OKLAHOMA ft TEXAS TIRE CO.
Jby Time -J". FREE Road
Service On
Any Make tire
Any Place
CALL
Vri-
! Proposals for Constiuetion of Latgest
Single Order All Within Limit
Set by Depaitment.
WASI1INT.TON'"" Oct Js When
bids for four new battleOups and twen
ty destroyers the largest single order
ever placed bv the navy -were opened
today it was disclosed that the govern-
ment faces the soaring prices of struc-
tural materials in perfecting the nasv
building program Mthotinh the depart
uirtit hail allowed J.Umunni m i r f..r
each battleship than it did l ist vear and
placed a limit of $II.."imHki for hull and
machinery alone the bidding tan with
a i lose margin
Based on Market Ptlce.
All bids of the Fore River Slntihndd
ing company controlled bv llethlehetu
Steel were submitted with the expirs-
stipulation that they weie based on
cm rent pines for mateiial and labor
The company proposed that the govern-
ment pav any increase or profit by anv
decrease and let the federal trade com
mission determine the tigure.
I he Cramp company submitted it '
figures at all hut proposed to build tin
ships al cost and lake a constitutor's
pi of it of 111 permit I he details of the
bids or to whom the c eitiails will b'
awaided cannot be deteimined null' '
the figures have hcYu studird tlionnigh
Iv bv the navv constructors.
All Within Limit.
I he opinion of t lit- navy cotislnii tors
based on a hurried examination ot t Iv
bids is thai all aie sulducntlv withn
the limit of cost to permit all the ship
being hinll bv private builders ain'
there will he no necessity of tonsttuc
lion ill government yards unless as :
quest ion of policy it should he though
desirable
paintingIorsesTs
not crime in itself
Since no specific law prohibits paon
ing horses as long as it is imt it
human treatment no ihargr can I
fild against I.. II and .1 1) RoKer
who are being held in the county j t
suspected of stealing one horse an '
trying to fell anothrr they were tari" n
for
The owner of the horse supposed '
have been stolen had not been locate
at noon and the county attorney's of
fice had not filed any t barges again
the nun
TOVERY EXECUTION
PUT OFF BY COURT
Will .Towery negro sentenced to be
ehctrocuted on November ti was
granted a stay of execution pending de-
termination of his appeal hy the crim-
inal court of appeals this morning.
Toweiy was convicted in the district
court nf Mcintosh county for killing
Charles Vanghan a white man.
Yaiigh.in asked the negro to get in his
automobile and ride. Thevgro sa:
in the rear of the car and wht'n a lonely
snot was readied on the road it is
i barged he hii Vanghan in the back
of the head killing him. and then rob
bing him
Another negro who was with Towery
at the time entered a plea of guilty and
is been scntenc-vl to die with Towery.
Hts attorney will make an eftort to se-
em e executive clemency.
Vital Statistics
Marriage Licenses.
Wlltlimi 1 1 Mi I MiniiM M yearn nld.
iiml iMnilyn Hiik IS rr e III Imth (
thin ill) I
Mheit II l.hslls. ;h yrsrs old IVrry.'
mil li s.i K lltilfitmn. 2T em old Kit-j
inninl. I
Johnson Viuiiir 30 vonrn i.lil nf tlilnl
.11) and Ivlell White IS ear old Ant - I
inortv
411
Births.
Mr. unit Mis A i. Atierimtliy
West Slith Mieet hoy
Mr iiml Mis ii. K Jung t.'.M Wi-nt
In I M III'. I I
Mr Hint Mm. A. I Workman 1 721
lat Twelfth Mrent alrl
l iiml Mm. -A (I. Huge. 2M Kiist
Ktrttt "Meet. hny.
Mr iiml Mm. iiforg McKay local bus-
mini hny
Mr Hint Mrs (V C. Cnln Inral hospital
"V
Mi nVl Mrs l-wls Aiilnrman IJM
i'st llimul HVlMlllis Bill.
M nml Mr. l(f M.Klty f'.Ui finiith
lihinsiiii nvmie liny.
Mr ami Mm tl IV Itnrrhtli-lil 1JIT
v"t Twenly-flr.t MreM girl.
I
liti T'll'rni li enm old brother
r V T Taliaferro nf 4Vl .l illect
-iiinhiv at vl Now Mislrn Kimeial
..-I v lies nml Interment will be behl al
vis
U A llrtiwn l!i senrn old. at local tins
ii..
ttullillng Permits.
I I i nil..-. i ....n ilii KikI Koiirtniilli
lu et. line sl.ii y rt-imo lunn il m 1 0"C
Bfllfl f THAR'S two critters you can't
II III f yo automobile and yo'
J
r rv
THAR'S two critters you can't
fool yo9 automobile and yo'
pipe. If you want 'em to work
smooth you've got to burn the
right stuff in 'em. f
G
Nature Makes VELVET
Right for Your Pipe
And nobody can make to-
bacco any "lighter" than Old
Mother Nature
Nothing can take the
place of the two years'
natural ageing that gives
VELVET its mellow
smoothness. Nothing else
could make VELVET so mild
and cool and smooth without
robbing it of its natural flavor
and body.
10c Tins
5c MataUiiMd Bags
One Pouofi Glass Humidors
1
in yf.
1
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Stafford, R. E. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 28, No. 177, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 25, 1916, newspaper, October 25, 1916; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc170166/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.