The Okarche Times. (Okarche, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 28, Ed. 2 Friday, October 27, 1922 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Okarche Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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a
THE OKARCHE T Z if E S
i
GAVE HER LIFE FOR UBERTY
CMbm Woman Deserving of Pltei In
the Immortal Roll of tho
World’s Martyrs
Miss Alice Lee one of the first
Chinese women to become a femi
nist and a pioneer in the movement
to have women’s feet unbound is
the daughter of the Chinese minis-
ter of education and is one of the
many orientals enrolled at Colum-
bia college She graduated from
the American school in China and
became - interested in newspaper
work
“In Tientsin while I was doing
this work I met Miss Chu King an
older woman and together we
founded a magazine for women the
name of which in English would be
the Woman’s World Miss King
was the business manager of this
magazine and furnished the funds
and I was the editor While it was
ostensibly a magazine devoted to
women’s interests this cloaked a
deeper purpose for it was really an
organ of the revolution Miss King
was not only engaged in the man-
agement of this paper but was ac-
tively engaged in working with the
revolutionaries in Hong Chow At
last our activities were discovered
by the government
“I was in Tientsin at the time
and Miss King was in Hong Chow
Of course we were frightened but
we stood fast by our principles One
terrible morning word reached me
that my friend Miss King had
been arrested the night before and
thrown into prison Even before I
received this information she was
dead for without trial - they took
her out and beheaded her She was
the first woman martyr to shed her
blood for her country and for the
republic”
TALCUM IN ITS ROUGH STATE
Material ae It Comes From the Mine
Net at All Like the Popular
f Fragrant Powder
ALL IN THE “MELTING POT
Amazing Diversity of Students in
Schools and Colleges of Large
Cities of America
Tho co-ed had come to Chicago
from a Western town to take a busi-
ness course When the Woman saw
her the other day she was eager to
tell her about an incident that hap-
pened in one of her classes
The jolly Scotch s professor was
trying to teach accounting to a class
of about seventy-five students Dur-
ing the stages of adjustment at the
beginning of the term he found it
necessary to call out the names on
the class roll and he struggled
bravely through Zlowszewskis Yor-
gensens Wunderlichs Wangs Du-
rieuxs Yoshidas Heinrichs De
Jaquimos Cortez etc When he fin-
ished the roll he pulled out a hand-
kerchief mopped his heated brow
took a deep breath and announced:
“I feel as though I’d just returned
from an extended tour of Europe”
Which reminds the Woman of
the class that she haff enrolled in at
the same university several years
ago It was a small class and con-
sisted of the following members:
Two Americans three Germans
one Polish girl a Swedish gentle-
man two Australian sisters a Chi-
nese girl and an English girl all
being taught French by a Rumani-
an professor — Chicago Journal
BACK-FENCE CONVERSATION
I
The highly perfumed powder that
is shaken from a dainty container
taken from milady’s dressing table
bears little resemblance to talcum
as it comes from the mine Then
it is decidedly rough stuff not un-
like stone but possessing a “slip-
pery” character unlike any other
clayey or mineral substance Tale
is composed of silica magnesia and
water — in ' other words hydro-sil-
icate of magnesia
A talc mine is unlike a coal mine
no gases being formed It is there-
fore possible for the miners to use
pen lights if they so desire while
working The talc is taken from the
mine in good-sized pieces being
broken up with dynamite blast It
is then placed in powerful grinding
machines and reduced to the fine-
ness desired Much talc is used in
the manufacture of newsprint pa-
per It is also used in the manu-
facture of roofing papers and for
many other purposes
A-
First Wifi
Does your husband
give you your housekeeping money
or do you have to ask him for it?
Second Wife — Both my -dear
CHIMPANZEE WAS ANGRY
The bailiff of a Paris civil court
had the task of seizing a young Afri-
can chimpanzee for an unpaid bill
for food a&3 clothes
EXECUTE THEM8ELVE3
A self-exploding gun for the ex-
termination of pocket gophers is
now being used by a number of
farmers who are bothered with these
pests The gun illustrated and de-
scribed in the Popular Mechanics
Magazine looks like a miniature
Cannon It is mounted on an
aluminum frame with three ground
pikes so arranged that the barrel
esn be pointed directly into the
gopher’s runway It ehoota a stand-
ard 410 shotgun shell In setting
the dirt is first scraped away from
the hole The gun is then spiked
Into the ground with the barrel
pointing down into the burrow A
small piece of cork or cob is placed
over the end of the trigger wire The
lightest pressure on the trigger-
' wire cork releases the hammer and
bang I the full charge of the shot
hits the gopher in the face The
gopher virtually commits suicide
RELICS OF THE LONG PAST
Some picturesque reminders of
the past were recently discovered
accidentally by a salvage vessel off
the coast of Sweden The salvage
ship to help s fisherman who had
lost his grapnel sent down a diver
nit the diver found the grapnel
caught in an ancient gun Another
old gun !iy on the bottom near at
hand and v hen the two had been
taken as-hore and examined they
were found to be of rhe Seventeenth
ceuturv T'ie more guns two an-cV--
1 otr relics of long lost
Swedish iuwoi-vi-h iir ware later an
Zizi Bambogla the chimpanzee
is highly trained and is a dandy lie
wears a neat blue suit red slippers
and a red fez when he is showing
himself off to the public AVhcn the
bailiff called at the Ivry railroad
station with the writ Zizi Bambogla
was robed only in Jus red slippers
and he got so excited at the formal-
ity of sealing up his cage that he
took them both off and threw them
at the court official
The bailiff had intended entrust-
ing Zizi to the Paris Zoological gar-
dens but on the promise of the
showman that' the bills would be
paid promptly the chimpanzee was
left in his cage at the station in the
care of his trainer
SEASICKNESS EXPERIMENT
With the object of finding a cure
for seasickness an instrument has
been devised at the instance of a
French biological society for use in
the study of the effects of rhythmic
oscillations upon animals The ap-
partus which is descriled and illus-
trated in the Popular Mechanics
Mugazine is composed of a board
at each end of which is fastened a
cago A one-half-horsepower motor
oscillates this board with move-
ments corresponding to the pitching
and rolling of a vessel at sea Of
dogs subjected to the test at least
30 per cent showed all the symptoms
of seasickness Experimental pre-
ventives are being tested and it is
believed that ultimately a cure for
seasickness will bo discovered
WILL NOT SPLIT Wood
wsged
French cabinet makers have a
simple method of preventing large
or small nails when driven close
to the edge from splitting the wood
writes Ed oou E Sliatto in Popular
Meehan re Magazine The nails
have their points 11 tinted by tapping
the ends lightly with a hammer
while resting (lie heads on a piece
of iron Treited in this manner
the nail when driven pushes the
w)d filler lieforp it preventing
splitting whereas the sharp-pointed
nail pu-lies the fiber of the wood to
the sides causing a tendency to
PUt v -
JTALB typical of the dean of America’s most
cesafiil novelists It goes back to a period when
ateamhoering on the-Miseiwippi was picturesqus
iiU of romance ! -
The hero is from die North and the other prominent
characters all southern The atmosphere is entirely of
die old South excepting for a tinge here and there
which reveals the carpetbaggers? regime and tfra (in-
fluences of the early days c
Unctious with humor and character drawing presenting
both the foibles and die lovable qualities of its people
the stray is also salty with a quaint philosophy -Plots
and incidents are dramatic ana th4nig in die extreme
truly representative of a time when chivalry and hot
blood were still in the ascendancy s4 men and women
loved and hated with all the fervor of - natures
This Charming Story Will Be Printed Serially hi
The Okarche Tithes In November
y
DIDN'T MEAN TO GO BROKE
Hsw Rural Visiter ta Naw York Laid
Hla Plana to Faal tha
City “Slickers”
Ha was a visitor from a small
town in New Hampshire and after
he reached the homeof a friend in
New York and was shown to his
room he took stock of his finances
His friend had lingered to talk over
old times The stranger pulled a
card from his pocket looked t a
penciled memorandum and then pro-
duced a roll of bills from his trou-
sers pocket
Again the card was consulted and
a compact' bundle of bills was
brought from the watch pocket of
the trousers The inside pocket of
the waistcoat — the wearer called it
a vest — yielded a wad and so did a
card case carried in a breast pocket
“What is the plot?”v asked the
New Yorker
“In case a pickpocket frisks me”
said the Granite state men “1 don't
intend to lose all I have I started
with about $500 and I scattered it
in various pockets I might lose one
or two of the bundles but I am not
likely to lose all of them”
‘‘But the card ?”
“Oh the memorandum? Why I
might forget where all the money
was so I made a memorandum that
each pocket should have a specified
stun When I check them up and
find all of them my mind is relieved”
PLANES FOR PAS4SNGERS
TIME tabtb:
CUuik CidUiaiAficlSe B?
OKAROHS
TRAINS GOING SOUTH -
So 23 Passenger 12: 22 pnn
No' 81 “ 6:C3am
No' 11 “ 11:10 pm
No 21(85) “ 5: 56pm
(21 runs from -Wichita to WaprikS
No 81 Local Frt 111: 45 am
TRAINS GOING WORTH
No 12 Passenger 4: 24 am
No 24 “ 4:45 pm
No 82 ” 8: 10 pm
No 22(86) “ 8: 60 am
(22 rnns from Waurika to Wichita)-
No 82 Local Frt 9: 00 am
Note — 21 and 22 will not ran
on Sundays
No 11 and 12 will stop to pick
up or discharge passengers to or
from McFarland- Kansas and Ft
Worth Texas and points beyond
No 82 stops to pick up passen-
gers for Topeka Kana and points
beyond and No 81 will stop to dis-
charge passengers from Topeka and
points beyond -
Tho Oltsrclra Tim33
E Q LAIN Pubushm
Entered In the Poatofflee at Okareha in IBM
lassooml-otesa matter under net of Oongrenw 1
f Mnrehl I87S
’ 91 A YEAR
FOREIGN S1SO
NEW COOZE RECORD
An Italian designer has under
taken to build a machine capable of
carrying 100 passengers for a 000-
mile flight' without stopping It
will have 16 engines of 800-norse-power
each a width of nearly 180
feet and a carrying surface of 10-
500 square feet Another Italian
firm is building a hydroplane to
travel about 1800 pailea without
stopping for the Portuguese airmen
who will attempt to repeat their
transatlantic flight — Popular Me-
chanics Magazine
The record of Kentucky’s famous
squirrel whisky has been surpassed i
Joseph Malta a baker after drink 1
ing a half pint of the stuff how gen-
erally sold in New York instead of
climbing a tree kissed three sixtv
year-old women whom he had nc pi :
6een before and jumped off a l ' '
liaim-lpirg pier though he eor! u'i
suin’ lie was rescued and pv 1
restcu — Ciiuiiinati Times-Star
WORLD TO SPEAK ENGLISH
The English language in a modi
fled form will ultimately become
the universal tongue according to
one French professor
O TEMPORAI
Time which softens all our sor-
r v s ir't also be credited with
pi'uiuui:& llie bard-boiled egg—
'if
Advertising Rates ''
Local end Readers So par line in an
SnMliii tho coat of a Rondlns - not)
oount tho words one sent oneh
BaateeaeCnidslM-teMopermo
Ontda of Thanks 60c
Loot or Found notices no
Taken Up or Rat ray Notices mo
No Hnatins or Trespnanag aoUoee 60a
Boelety reeoluvlonaof ordlna-ylensthlt
naee at Oieolar Ado
Sinyie Column per inch tso for toiueb-
eeor less rrotonrrod poal Ilona tse per
laak each Issue
OnA) carter peso ed one week MJS
One-half pes ed ene week 1800
One pase ed one week 11 00
If ada are tersely price nets or a sore
work extra ehatse wUl be made
A prise of too per inoh win be made to
advertisers furnishing n complete electro
or stereo of their ed bat no nllownnee
made for outs or deysneln any ad
Ohttaeriea
OUtuarioa Bivins a brief Ufa turnery of
tho deceased wUl be published free bat
sermon or discourses nod poetry If
wanted published should bo paid for nt the
rate of one cent per word
Iteddeee eoelote Mlaato
Notices tor or Proceedings of lefsf
Society meetings la Oka robe will be pub-
lished fra If this omen does tbolr neats
eery Job printing: otherwise we chars for
publishing pries one eent per word
Beast IMaaers Bto
AU Entertainments Batata Dinners eto
where these la n charts for admission or-
eervtoe tho promoters ere expected to
pay for advertlaint notice
Teddlade "Shsesrs” Rta
Announcements of weddings and social
gatherings will be published free hat lists
of presents if wanted published most ho
paid for at the rate of to tor eaoW descrip-
tion of present end donor
fklMtf Badra Copies
Extra Copies of Tho Time may bo had
as many as wanted at the rate of 4c each
If ordered on or before Wednesday ketero
the peter is printed After tho paper is
mailed and we have any left tho prise Is
6e ter one copy fear eopiee 15c or seven
eoptee far 16c
ID
EVIDENTLY HAD ‘GOOD THING
Few Barbers of Today Roach the
Financial Heights Attained by
One Gibbon Immortalised
If you have friends or relatives ou-
ting you give us their names ieoi-
denoe and other particulars about 40
Bud if you go anywhere for pleasuvob
vial ting or business lpt us know it
We wish to publish all tho personal
Items of news we oan and will appre-
ciate tho favor where they are handeS
M Marcel has managed tcTse
cure a place on the roll of famous
barbers by conceiving the ided that
he could put a permanent wave iR
women’s hair and inventing the
tools to achieve this result
Though within 10 years of per-l
fecting this invention he is said to'
have become a millionaire IE Mar-)
cd never lived in a such a state'
as another famous member of the
craft — the barber of ' Emperor
Julian ‘
“Soon after his entrance into the
palace of Constantinople” writes
Gibbon “Julian had occasion for
the services of a barber An officer
magnificently dressed immediately
presented himself ‘It is barber
exclaimed the prince with affected
surprise ‘that I want aWd not
receiver general of the finances He
questioned the man concerning the
profits of his employment and was
informed that besides a large sal
ary and some valuable perquisites
he enjoyed a daily allowance for -20
servants and as many horses”
V 1
A
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The Okarche Times. (Okarche, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 28, Ed. 2 Friday, October 27, 1922, newspaper, October 27, 1922; Okarche, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1746503/m1/4/?q=%22Business%2C+Economics+and+Finance+-+Journalism%22: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.