The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 213, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 12, 1930 Page: 4 of 6
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PAGE TWO
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The Oklahoma Daily
VVM a MhImI VatMaMa
“Mara Tku
Establishes 1!1S
Student Newspaper'
OklakMi'i First Cetlrre Dalle
Fukiiikcd daily except Mondays from September to May both
In'luslre and daily except Sundays and Mondays during June
and July
Entered at the Norman postoSlce as second class matter under
the aotjof congress March ? 1879
Editorial Office ! Press Building TeU Station Sll on MW
Easiness Office 1"! Press Bonding Tel Slationl5 onJMM
IUAKUS TA EDITOR
r‘"’ KIMBALL BUSINESS MANAGER
Inei
HEAR and THEIR
By Raymond Parr
IRON! J L: I’m going with a girl who I
think is very hot How can 1 find out to
Portuguese Woman Tramps To Rome
£
PEASANT MAKES THREE-MONTH TRIP
Ballard
Kaymand Parr
Herbert Kiting
' Helen Ilughes
l-eroy 1 aempson
Managing Editar
— Assistant FOilor
Night Editor
Ollle Bello Collins
Soeiety Editor
Special Writer
Advertising Manager
A Lone Log Cabin’s Brood
rjlHE hojre site of Chicago's first settler is again
- vacant The last 150 years have played odd
sure
That should be easy W hy not ask her
Ville Real de Tras Montes Portu-
gal July 11 (AP— Maria Marcelina
! De Matos an o'd peasant woman of
Use the word distinct in a sentence
De stink around de garbage Wbiks is ter
rible
juris village has just returned from
a hazardous Journey on foot to
Rome undertaken in fulfillment of
a religious vow
She had pledged herself to make
- i ' a pilgrimage on foot to see the Pop?
Bill Moore who will write this column in the : dying con were restored to
winter term sends in the summer s worst pun
Why arc you taking that aspirin?
Cosmetics
pranks with this bit of river bar I: First they oc-
cupied it with a log cabin then they almost for-j
got it for half a century It was full fifty years-
after the first -house was built before the settle--xnent
ventured timidly into being with- the name
Chicago The next 1 00 years raised a city of 200
square miles about the little patch of ground and
finally stripped it bare again
Perhaps some day romance will yet’ garland
Jth'e location of Chicago’s first house But at
present fancy has quite a handicap to overcome
iThe scent of soap — and laundry soap at that —
still clings too pungently to the place Back in
Chicago’s infancy as a metropolis a soap fac-
tory was built there and for sixty-odd years city
and soap prospered together Then came a day
recently when soap ceased to be historic The
company now waxed great built itself an unhal-
lowed home remote The old squatty brick walls
were torn down
No other legend now marks the spot than that
familiar one “For Sale or For Lease" But di-
rectly behind it stands' the stately loftiness of the
Tribune Tower across the street rises the Wrig-
ley building and adjacent soar their skyscraper
ncighbois The first settler not only picked out
the site of the world's fourth city but made a
bull’s eye- in present-day Chicago Where he laid
his hearthstone some time a new skyscraper will
go up In the order of the new buildings put up
there it will probably be no more distant kin
than great-grandson to the first log cabin — The
Christian Science Monitor
Headline in Duncan Banner:
WIFE SAYS HUSBAND
BEAT HER SUNDAY
And what a sensitive place
TO SUMMER SCHOOL
Oh summer school with days so hot
At first u’e could not stand you
But now in verse a song of praise
We are about to hand you
dying
health She reached the Eternal
! City footsore and weary but tri-
lumphant to have attained her goal
j Prom her native village the penni-
!less wanderer set out for Oporto
! Portugal whence she crossed over to
Santiago De Composlella Spain
Ahead of her lay the scarred slopes
of the Pyrenees which proved the
most difficult part of the journey
But her religious faith never for-
sook her
Mother Marcelina spent three
months on th? road enduring with
nor a passport to identity her when
she started on her adventurous jour-
ney A small bundle of clothes hang!
lng from the end of a stick
her only possessions
When after a long day's bib
she became exhausted she tou’4
knock at the door of a cottage
ging for shelter and a meal She
stated on her return that thruout
the long journey across four coun
tries she was treated with kina-ness
All went well until she reaches
the Italian frontier where her pass-
port was demanded As she carried
none' the tirleess old lady tramps
back to Nice where she provided
herself with the necessary document
When this unusual pilgrim finally
reached the Vatican City freshd£
Acuities awaited her The Swiss
guards refused to believe her tab
but her sincerity ari physical co
dition touched the hearts of the
We thought that all who went to school
In summer were big sisssys
But here we find in every class
Seme sweet and pretty missies
i equanimty the physical suffering :
! which such a long march entailed pcntificial guards who led her into
! She had not a nickel In her pocket the Holly Father's presence
Altho we never cared for girls —
(Fo? never could we rate ’em )
There are so many here we hope
We'll soon be able to date ’em
Co-eds co-eds everywhere —
But not a one to neck
This bashfulness which clings to us
Sure handicaps by heck!
MY! MY! WATCH
THE FIREMEN CO
ON VOLLEY BALL
f
“Ris:
every morning" a magistrate advised a
man in court “with the fixt determination to
make your wife realize that you are the master
of the house and see what happens’’ We know
yhat will happen He’ll have to get his own
breakfast — The Humorist
We read that radio loudspeakers are being
employed on farms instead of scarecrows Some
programs we might mention ought to be espec-
ially effective — Florence ( Ala ) Herald
But when winter comes if from the girls
You ll find us never parted
We’ll owe it all to summer school
Whose women got us started
"
In all seriousness summer schol has really been
a pleasant surprize to us Wc'vc enjoyed it more
than any term we have attended since last win-
ter Probably one reason for this is the fact that
we have not had time to worry about all the
studying that we have not been doing
We’re taking a class in political parties
under H V Thornton but from the looks
of our grade in there we have not learned
much about politicking
FCING the serious problem
of lack of exercise due to
£he scarcity of fires in the city
Norman firemen have taken up
croquet and volley ball
Work has almost teen com-
pleted on a combination court
back of the city hall and sever-
al practice games have been
played by the speedy firemen
The croquet court has been
dragged and lights installed on
the court so that night games
can be played
Chief Claude Summers lias
bought his followers a set of
Rules of Volley Ball and the
chief is coaching the croquet
players Altho the city police sta-
tion is in connection with the
fire department policemen have
not taken up the sport
Careful '
Laundry Sen-ice
Suits Cleaned
and Pressed
50c
PHONE
641
NuWay Laundry
and Linen Supply
If the London conference had come a little la-
ter in the season the British would undoubted-
ly have -insisted on-a clause limiting Bobby
jJones — Nashville Banner
We have always wanted to take a course in
astronomy ( Howevet wc were once told that the
course required a lot of math and we always be-
come embarrassed when we get to foolin' around
figures
“Built to Last” is the slogan of the fan rest-
ing on our desk Will U Duitt says that this is
about the only slogan he can think' of that could
be used in bragging on his girl
-
Why do you call him camel?
He took me riding and I walked a mile
Many War Veterans
Treated In Hospital
Oklahoma 'City July 11 (AP) —
Thirty disabled World war veterans
are being treated in 'the University
hospital here at clinical rates of $2
per day the lowest cost of' similar
treatment in any hospital in the
United States says C B Dollar-
hide state sen-ice officer of the
American Legion
The unusually low price was ob-
tained through a ‘ contract between
the state and the Legion Dr Wann
Langston superintendent tof the
institution is himself a World war
veteran
Skilled physicians and surgeons
are connected with the hospital staff
THETRAVELER
A Portable Radio
For your vacation this summer
Can- be carried easily takes up
little room yet is a powerful all-
electric six tube set
Complete with tubes
50
Height 16 in Weight 17 lb
Carrying Case for Small Addi-
tional cost
Hang it all! The project for digging a tunnel
under the English Channel has been killed again In addition the veterans have been
and those poor girls will still have to swim — placed ln wards where excellent
equipment for treatment is avail-
Detroit News
I able
A SKIRT SPEAKS
FQ
C?
By Inez Ballard
LOST— Log log slide rule with
name F E Penn on side Finder
phone 1726-J453 College ave It
The man that lnyented the elec-
tric fan certainly wins my undying
admiration and devotion The only
catch is that when I bring my desk
and a typewriter just in front of a
fan pull up a chair and start in on
the daily grind of putting out a
newspaper the paper blows out of
the typewriter and after I've spent
hours chasing a bunch of paper all
over the office it's time to go home
and eat lunch
But that's all right I keep cool
doing it and that's the main thing
in these days
' It's sorta of a game ln this office
this putting out a puper You in-
sert a page of copy paper in the
Eventually you get the story writ-
ten and gather up all the pages
Then the linotype operator chews
all the keys off the machine trying
to fit the story together
I've been working on an invention
by which this paragraph at a time
can be eliminated This is the way
it works First you station a willing
helper behind the typewriter next
Insert the paper in the machine and
dash off a paragraph before the fan
turns around (There's some word
for that but I cant remember it
oscillate I believe) Then the writer
leans back and takes it easy for a
minute or so while the helper sits
typewriter get a paragraph written
before the fan turns around then
when the paper blows out you let
It go Then you put ln another sheet
get another paragraph written and
let it join its playmates on
floor
on the typewriter clutching the pa
per The procedure is followed for an
hour or so and by that time the
system works perfectly
There are several little things I
have to work out on my invention
but as a whole it’s not so bad I
thought for a time I would paste the
paper on the roller but that didn't
work out so well because the first
time I tried it one of the boys had
to come in and take the roller off
before we could get the story
Someone vetoed the plan but as I
always say “Live and Learn" The
next thing I tried was putting a
string to the bottom of the paper
then tying the string to the desk It
kept the paper in the machine but
after all you can’t write for hours
on the same line
Someone Just came in with a mar-
velous idea They suggest that
story is Lorn to bits the typewriter move my typewriter back into the
is a wreck and the helper prooably j ether office where I won't be both-
the has gotten a foot caught in the fan I end by their fan So if you will ex-
Outside of these minor details the cusc me I guess IH be going
LOST— Phi Delta Theta pin jewel-
ed with opal Reward Phone
710-W 215
TYPING— Thesis work a specialty
Also take shorthand dictation
Phone 335 or 1406-W
LOST— Pair of shell-rimmed glasses
in dark blue case Finder return
to Mary Belle Hynds TO7 Lahoma
Phone 359-J
FOR RENT— Rooms for women one
block from campus 316 White
street Phone 120 tf
TYPING — Also will do research
work for thesis Call 1190-J
FOR RENT — 3-room apartments 1
block from campus Private bath
729 Asp Phone Floyd 120 195tf
Phone 977
G W Milligan &
Son
RADIO
Next Door to Postojfice
Dr J D Huff
Osteopathic Physician
211 First Natl Bank'Bldg
Ncripan— Phone 253
Now arid Then
Dr J O Hasder professor of
mathematics and astronomy
at the university gave an en-
lightening ' lecture last nigh
on “Wonders of Space" as a
student ticket number in the
outdoor auditorium
Doctor Hassler's lecture was
illustrated with pictures of tM
various planets and was we
received by a large audience
Hasslerb the only local man
to appear on the summer iy
ceum numbers
Hassler's
Each year Doctor
lectures on astronomy attra
large audiences and the u "
versity is ' fortunate in ha
an interesting and well-vers
authority on this subject
its faculty
R V DOWNING Cashier
City
National Bank
K
1C
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Tant, Charles. The Oklahoma Daily (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 213, Ed. 1 Saturday, July 12, 1930, newspaper, July 12, 1930; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1794946/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.