The Vian Press (Vian, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, July 13, 1923 Page: 3 of 8
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- - - ' a 4
VI AN VZZZ3 VIAN OXLAHSUA ! i H
- 4 -
4' 1
T?aEaoj&ioin2c
LAST YAKXTOCXTICUt
STYLE IN r'OnNIKG FRCCKSi
YRAP3 ARE EITiPLE CUT CHIC
L ‘
oaeeaaaOoooooooaaeeeaaa'
w4 ORNINEfrort" to a eoaapre-
hsnsiv mum tliat Includes
our M frtoud tto house drew aad
toaajr protty tub frock and apron
drmia mad of sundry cottons aad
coarao Doom I th llarap of gar-
aioato far tho rammer wardrobe
(boat attllty frocka appear to bo ateal
tip gaining In Importance "Mac we
moat make utility things why ao
make them prdttyf appear to bo
tho aloyaa of manufacturers
Waco houao dreeeea and aproa frocka
hare developed Into auch attractive sf-
tetri they havt wtdeaed the ietd of
- i i
'ki-fSte
L I ext-ex
S5£
raJ$iRL
“irxxrvfwar1
iytUlt:
Two Pretty Mornirtg Oreaaaa
their mefulneaa and compelled a new
title— they are now the morning frock
In which women upend their busy fore
noon lndoora or out To the usual fab
rlcs — as gingham percale nnd chum
bray— ratine crepe cretonne printed
cotton linen and Imitation linen have
been added They all make tub frocka
that have a real style vulue but the
two pretty morning dresses pictured
are examples done in gingham and
chambray the dress at the left a
cheerful strong pink with white cross
bars and trimming of ready-made edg-
ing made of white lawn The plain
Handsome Cap
chambray at the right hnppens to b
n light green in color but Is shown In
blue lavender light brown nnd other
colors with white swtss embroidery
for cuilars and cuffs and flut pearl
buttons making a decorative fastening
Black sateen or cotton moire frocks
wltb adornments of line embroidery In
bright colors on the patch pockets nnd
bodices are smart ns well ns prnotlcnt
Linen and Its Imitations In nil the popu-
lar shades are nttructlvely combined
with flowered eretonne nnd ptutn chain-
bray to artfully united with checked
gingham
a
meata of aa meting aiodo aal
atoo acblevea distinction It to atire to
get Ita plctaro am da by the enter
prising fashion reporter at Ita laltlal
appearance It baa won a victory aad
muat bo broadcaat to waiting throng
of wra plena women Fashion boa pro
aoaacod aaco for all (tkto aeaaoa) that
wrap for day of evening moat bo at ah
pi aad they meat atoo b graceful
and becoming If they are going to aell
Many lovely evening wrap are made
of heavy crepe and there are euperb
model an always In brocade
thto company ar capo In which rich
tf'4 ' i'
VV:
a
Spanish lace Is draped over satin or
other foundation One can pin her
faith to either crepe or brocade nnd
be repaid by long and satisfactory
service in either case but crepe Is
more popular because In the sedate
colors It serves other than evening
wear A handsome cape of brown and
gold brocade with deep tape fringe
shown In the picture bangs in straight
lines from neck to ankles and has an
Interesting new collar
When the clever designer confronts
the edicts of the mode compelling sim-
plicity he is put on his mettle and Is
and Stylish Coat
apt to contrive a masterpiece like
that shown In the coot at the right
of the picture It to long and grace-
ful and wraps about the figure its
collar Is covered with rows of nap
row cording jmt im with beautiful
Accuracy ' that reveals craftsmanship
above criticism and the same sort of
decoration finishes the sleeve
Anats a Its Cs?!txl Cn:iTu“J-
Ancsster ef M U:
cm Phtedchlci
Washington— "Whether the aeweot
Arab etato to have Ita Indepea deuce
recognlaed be railed by Ita W enter
title of Tranajordaala or by Ita Rest-
ora name Kerak It eeetna hopolooaty
- “
out of touch with things Amortean"
says a bulletin from tho Washington
headquarters of the National Gem
graphic society In regard to tho land
Immediately east of the River Jordan
over which Emir Abdullah rules
"perhaps It will bring the newly In
dependent but very old country
closer" continue tho bulletin "to
roalls that Its capital now Amman
waa one Philadelphia— tho great
great-great-graadfather of the hnlf
dosen or more Philadelphia great nnd
small that ar to be found In our
postal guides :
Ancestor of Modern ‘ Philadelphia
"But It waa only a mere matter of
twenty-odd centuries ago that the city
took the name of Philadelphia from Ita
new Ion) Ptolemy Phlladelphua It
bad existed as Rahbath Amman chief
city of the Ammonites almost from
the days of Lot from whom the Am
monltes ar said to have sprung It
waa after a victorious battle with
these same people of Amman that
Jephthah according to the Biblical
i story returned to the fatal meeting
I with his daughter
i "When Trsnsjordsnls to described
as stretching from the Jordan and the
Bead Sea toward the Interior of Ara-
bia one Is likely to call up the picture
of a hopeless desert But much of the
region Is steppe Innd a high plain sup-
porting some flocks and even capable
of tillage Nnmudlsm has long held
the region In Its grip however and It
la as a sort of 'chief of nomads' that
Abdullah Ibn Hussein finds t neces-
sary to rule He holds his 'court' not
I In a palace but In a group of tents
1 which he moves with the seasons
Center of Culture
"This land now given over largely
to nomads Is capable of development
along stable lines as Is shown by Its
past Importance After Alexander's
Eastern conquests the cities to the
east of the Jordan 'became Hellenlsed
and the seats of prosperity and cul-
ture In the Second century before
Christ Ptolemy Phllodelphus built In
the city which was given his name an
extensive acropolis which In the Am-
man of today Is only a mass of fallen
columns and ruined walls '
"Rome’s sway over Philadelphia Is
shown In Amman by tbe ruins of a
Disturbing the Rest of Pocahontas
' Edward Page Gaston of Chicago with Canon Gedge the blind rector of St
Georp s church at Gravesend England turning over the first soil In the search
for the bones of Pocahontas who was burled in the churchyard In 1018
SLAYS GIANT GRIZZLY
NOTORIOUS CATTLE THIEF
b-
Oklahoma Hunter Kills Bear That
Ruled Range for Years
Oklahoma City Okla— "Old One
Tbe" king of the griisltee killed
yearlings on tbe cattle ranges of
northwest Wyoming for twenty years
From now on however Ms stuffed pelt
will stand lifelike in the natural his-
tory museum At the University of Okla
horns at Norman and silently assert
his claim to the title "biggest of all
bears"
The greatest of them all "Old One
Toe" measures 84 feet from nose-tip
to toll-tip nnd weighed between 1200
and 1800 pounds The bear which lost
the other four toes on his right hind
foot In n trap In 1002 fell before the
automatic rifle of Arch A Campbell
contractor of this city who spends’
hi annual vacation hunting t!g game
hugo amphitheater which seated T£9
spectator In tho sioopy East or Ml
of today goat brows awawg ths for
datlons of temples nnd pMI bE4-
togs Arabian code shops lens agst&JI
onco-proud walla and tht Eastern
specie of tho villas lomgov aits on
overturned marbl pttlarl Emir Ah
dutlah la showing som Interest la ths
ancient structures of hla capital how
over and to having the fairly weH-prw
served amphitheater cleared of debris
"Amman la not Innccoralblo flvq
hours by automobile over reasonably
good roads through the stealing valley
of the Jordan suffice for the trip from
Jerusalem to tho capital The Jordan
forms the boundary lln and across It
Is an (foa bridge Aman to only aboat
thirty mils from the river and aa tho
crow flies Is hardly more than sixty
miles from Jerusalem Ilia Itedjas
railway connecting Damascus and Me-
dina runs through tho town"
Beventy-flv years ago the foreign
commerce of New York and of New
Orleans was practically the suns
for
France Issues Orders Intended to
Extirpate Practice In Af-
rican Possessions
Paris— Albert Sarraut Frenrtt min-
ister of 'colqnles 1 who was one of
France’s representatives at the Wash
Ington naval armament limitation and
pacific conference has Just signed two
decrees Intended to extirpate the
practice of cannibalism In the French
African possessions The death penal-
ty Is Imposed on any one killing or
trying to kill human beings for the
purpose of eating their flesh Impris-
onment of from one to ten years and
a line of from 100 to 1000 fruncs are
to be the punishment for complicity In
such crimes or for eating human flesh
Cannlbullsm survives M Sarraut soya
principally under the form of ritual
rites or acta of sorcery
Discussing this subject In Le Jour-
nal M Fernand Hauser writes: "
"Doctor Curenu formerly a colonial
governor assured us some years ago
In a work on the primitive peoples of
equatorial Africa that cannibalism as
V
and catching rainbow trout In ths
vicinity of Dubois Wyo i
HI conquest of "Old One Toe” was
unplanned up to the moment that
Campbell stumbled on the tyrant of the
cattle range ravenously devouring the
carcass of a calf From the first en-
counter to tho kill was twenty-four
hour -!
"Old One Toe” made wary by hi
(etto with a ateel trap and grown gray
in the two decade h had outmaneu-
vered cattle men was a foe worthy of
any hunter Campbell trailed him all
day after the first shot before he waa
able to come up with him for the final
battle which wa of short duration ’
Campbell’ progress out of th woods
wo a triumphal march aa all the cat-
tle men wnnted to e the carcase of
til boar which had caused them heavy
losses 1
Spot oath Isn't alwaya spotless
Louis p Von der Held of Chicago
who Just arrived home from the Rhino
aad has taken up the work he left
good many months ago to help Unci
Sam He to n machinist Von der
Hold married a Gorman Red Cross
nurse whll In tho service Ho to the
last American aoldler to arrive home
from overseas service -
Japan has a virtual monopoly of the
coral Industry
Cannilbalo
practiced there (and It Is practiced
even In regions rich In food resources
of all sorts vegetable and animal) Is
not due to privation or famine 'It to
simply a mntter of taste' he said 'a
predilection for a certain kind of meat'
Cannibalism Called Instinct
"Cannibalism to then according to
Doctor Curenu an Instinct It to a
custom The man who Indulges In It
Is not necessarily ferocious ‘He may
be a man who Is gentle gay cheerful
and friendly In his ordinary relations
—at least with those about him
"Doctor Curenu added that he had
several times seen evidences that cer-
tain tribes make prisoners of war or
bay slaves to hold them In reserve
and then kill them nnd ent them In ac-
cordance with their needs
"Pere Mnrtron who also ' made a
close-range study of this African ne-
groes declared on the contrary that
the cannibals did not hunt men to sat-
isfy hunger’ They eat he said only
th bodies of enemies killed In war
and more rarely the bodies of those
on whom they wish to wreak a terrible
vengeance
"However that may be Pere Mae
tron nnd Doctor Curenu both stated
that canntbnllsm Is dying out Coming
Into Intercourse with mors civilised
tribes the canntbsts feel a sense of
shame and soon refuse to admit thnt
human flesh to eaten by them
' Report for Many Year :
"These are reports dating beck some
years M J Brevis chief administra-
tor of colonies director of political
and administrative affairs In the gov-
ernment of French West Africa says
In his Tslamlsme contra Naturlsme an
Sondan Francals'— a penetrating essay
on native psychology which he baa
published— that many blacks still prac-
tice cannibalism less from any real
need than from an attachment to an-
cient rites which divorced from their
primitive significance appear unintel-
ligible to us and which they them-
selves can no longer explain
" ‘We are dealing here' he declare
with human sacrifices Intended to dis-
arm hostile spirits or to produce a
sort of physical and moral transsub-
stanlatlon from the person sacrificed
—to the person who eats the latter
thus assimilating the former's strength
and qualities' "
But whatever may be tbe reasons
which have kept cannibalism alive the
French government Is new determined
to make an end of It
Works English Mints 75 Years
London— Claiming to be the oldest
working miner In Great Britain Peter
Stork has completed 75 years of work
at Holytown Lanarkshire where he
has been employed since he wae nine
years old Stark bale and heariy at
eighty-four atlll works In the tallies
Spurned Love Causes
Boyi to Turn Pirate
Ten boys led by a youth fif-
teen years old captured by ths
police of Chicago In a “pirate’’
cava along th lake front admit-
ted they had committed four rs-
cant robberiaa netting them
nearly (10000 In money and '
merchandise part of which waa
recovered
Th leader of th hand turned -"pirate"
he aald after hla "best
girl threw him down"
Other In ths gang also admit-
ted unfortunate "love affairs”
Life Quant lavas 711 wlmmsra
New York— Alfred Read a Uff
guard at Long Beach recently r
cetved the congreaalonal medal o
honor for Ufa guarding Ha haa res-
cued 782 persona from drowning dip
lug his career
nsraiBr
ilSO
IzZx C n!2i
i tradton after ‘X-kT
flap
afisss
"stoked at £
rssrzr'ss
Mors dsws In r A
tttM&tm years' I was tki sra
M tSattostor waa frank oaoaY In tuJ
wSnlfkr
how andlhad begun Its usorad 1 totl
K reratoriy until f was woQ laaasaw
tesadthq Vegetable Compound tost’—
whouTaavo th oreorteiute — Umu
Jovsnll Lament
Lenor Is an only child and shw
often rebels at her lonsesome play-
times Recently our neighbors were
receiving congratulations on their
second -pair of twins and whew
Lenore heard tho news she ex-
claimed: "I don’t think It’s fair that sotnv'
children keep coming in bunches and
I'm only a one chllder"
Whtn Money Talks
If you are angry count ten before -you
speak If your wife to ungr count
out ten and let thnt speak for you-—
Boston Trnnserlpt -
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
DEUrANO
Hot water
Suralf
EIULDArJf
23( AND 754 BCKAC3
QR3BN MOUNTAIN
A0T H CliJA
V ' V) COMPOUND
C ll JT sulekly nIIstm ths ihtmr
AYrr fag psroijriBt Cm4 tm
MV a fun SB nult of loon
- osporloooo Is ImtBHl W
tbroot and lone dleooeee b
Dr J 1 Ootid YbUTUU
BOX Trootlso oa AotbmuMs
COtMM tfOOU
A opoo roqnont ltd and SiM
oarsfauts 3 H 3PILD OQ EurxaT VT
Ho Your Foot Hurt?
When shoe pinch or coma and bunions
tche get a package of Allen's Foot-
Earn the antiseptic healing powder to
be shaken into ths shoes It 'takes Gw
iting out of corns bunions and callouses
and gives instant relief to Smarting Ach-
ing Swollen feet At night when your
feet ache nnd burn from walking or
dancing sprinkle some Allan’s Foot
Esrno in the foot-bath and you will solve
vour foot troubles Over 1500000 pounds
of powder for th feet were used by our
Army and Navy during the war Sold
sverywhera-
D( sk
ROl drnvriaM ordifoat ftooo
imom stooM ssr
: 0 Jl
JftimHilTijri
nuTonic°
r!i!zr£
Fof ovar 50
yaeraithaabaen
the household
remedy for nil
formn of C3
i- "
It is n Ral&U
Tcz!V
k MnoJ lvooww w L
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Moore, Gould. The Vian Press (Vian, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, July 13, 1923, newspaper, July 13, 1923; Vian, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1758787/m1/3/?q=virtual+music+rare+book: accessed June 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.