Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 35, No. 284, Ed. 2 Monday, April 6, 1925 Page: 5 of 14
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- i'
AL SMITH GETS
MODISH MITZI—Goldy Locks, Goldy Locks, Let Down Your Bobbed Hair!
By Jay V. Jay
FIRE DESTROYS
26251,3
G. O. P. BACKING
LARGE SULPHUR
€
IN LEGISLATURE
CHURCH EDIFICE
1
ED
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A
)
the back and pin the chignon tight about the head.
This gives a very unusual neckline.
LEGIONAIRES TO
It was built several years ago.
of opposite I
PLAN FUND DRIVE
The refusal of the senate at both
=== State Officers Wil’ Discuss
1 Child Welfare Endowment.
। day. will be laid to rent.
Here’s What
Was In The
*
Penke fortunes fall and the
house
e returns and AGial
realizes he is in love with her.
Tommy Brandom
Answer :
My dear girl, you imve only your-
This, in the language of trade, was i asked, half whispering lest he should
arouse her.
Thousands of other silly girls are in
at the luncheon, It
and capable of accomplishing it
(I'olhlraj Adrertisement)
Re
ST NTE
SERVICE
N 3
eager smile. Flora Lee
He |
into the eyes of Hunter O’Neill.
In the Busi-
ness World
SUPERIOR TRAIN
Sapulpa nt a receiver a sale. The Enid
torts to control congress and to di-
The New Alton Limited
toward the River boulevare.
that
he
secretaly
What was the use
wanted to know why he was such a
•3
WOMAN PURCHASES
PAPER AT NEWKIRK R
A
The Midnight Special
Still another way to vary one’s coiffure is to enlist
the sympathies of the same chignon. part the hair in
Leaves St. Louis 8:55 A. M., Ar. Chicago 4:30 P. M.
Leaves St. Lexis 12:05 P. M., Ar. Chicago 8:00 P. M.
’ grass Marley, contralto; Mrs. Kathryn
Stovall, pianist: Miss Alma Finch. vio-
linist, and the American legion quar-
elected last fall,
by republicans
Cuticura Heals
Itching Eruptions
Over Face and Neck
Encouraging Expansion
With Strict Economy
Leaves St Louis 9:00 P. M.. Ar. Chicago 7:00 A. M.
Leaves St. Louis 11:30 P. M., Ar. Chicago 6:45 A. M.
H
I
—Democratic nominee
for Commissioner
of Public Safety
own
con- I
the septic tank
from the city.
F’oriunately the hairdresser is not without resource
and many "transformations." She has rolled some of
Mitzi’s hair into a coronet effect over the top of her
head. The sides are held down close to the head.
She has done it with outside assistance, as one might
call the chignon.
Frank Hiffington, John Reed and Ed-
die Albright will furnish music.
TONKAWA, April 5.--(Special)-Co
incident with the discovery of liquid
gold in the oil fields around Tonkawa
Don’t even believe a man when he
tells you that he lves you unless he
backs it up with a bona fide proposal
Approximately 200 officers are ex-
pected, it was estimated by Hatcher
(art-
total
ords
lerk.
106,-
ding
ities
1 to
Al! sleeping car train with club lounging car. observation
compartment Car, clothes pressing. midnight luncheon and
other new features.
Lv. St. Louis 11:59 P.M., Ar. Chicago7:45' A. M.
o)
V
had the legislative body of his
party and that Coolidge had to
up to $2,000 without a medical exami-
nation, are some of the laws Governo**
Trapp signed Saturday.
catch the stern of a coal barge . . .
Heigho!! . . . Just a few weeks’ rest
. . . He’d been driving pretty hard
. . . pretty hard . . .
Thunders growled in his ear and he
An Alton Train Ready When
You Are
he’d make her understand.
Attempting to soothe himself with
bits of philosophy which, like the fizzy
drink, gave temporary relief, he made
his way through the suburbs and out
Sunday
Oklahoman
SERVICE AND EQUIPMENT
Hai been the aim of the
trusting Admah Holtz. It meant that
Amah Holtz. whose « i edit should not
have been questioned at that erisis,
had purchased what he couldn’t pay
for.
mendations.
Smith Has Opposition
!
SAYRE GETS BONUS
FOR SCHOOL BONDS
CHURCH BUILDING AT
TONKAWA GOES ON
-
WATER BOND ISSUE
UP AT HOLDENVILLE
LOCAI
Warrants for arrest of Paul Even-
ger. Guy Faulk, Jack Newman and
Coolidge Fails to .Control
Members of Own Faith.
FOR FIFTY
YEARS
ENID ATTORNEY FOR( ED
TO BE EDITOR BY SALE
policies.
Coolidge Constantly Opposed
I
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I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
I
.governor's appointments by failure or
’refusal to confirm them but, practie-
ally all of his appointees were given
approval by the senate.
No more forceful character has ap-
peared in public life in years than
Ask any ticket agent of any line in Oklahoma or write Tom Peake,
District Passenger Agent, Chicago and Alton Railroad, 717 Walnut
Street, Kansas City. Missouri.
(y
vn
CHAPTER LXXIV
OLLING up the winding drive to-
• ward his big white house. Admah
i Sunday night, for the sessions which I
New Structure Will Be Built!
Soon, Pastor Avers,
furnish-
sole nt
FEMITONE
The wonderful tonic for women
of all ages.
ASK-YOUR DRUGGIST
FOR IT
::
>
—ambitious to give this
city what it really
should have in health
protective safeguards-
promises to bend every
energy toward attaining
the climax of efficiency
in that department.
I
Q
FREDERICK — Rapid growth rer
suited in zoning plan being adopted
Saturday.
The fire came one day before th*
completion of a series of revival'
1 meetings.
The 612 hour train and the Masterpiece of the car builders
art—new features including chair cars, parlor cars, dining
cars and observation, lounging car with Japanese maid
service.
Lv. St. Louis 12:30 P.M., Ar. Chicago 7:00 P. M.
There is a
into believing that the man was in
love with > on because you wanted him
to be in love with you, and you refused
to see that he was just playing with
you.
__
CHICAGO & ALTON
"The Only Way”
SIX TRAINS DAILY BETWEEN ST. LOUIS
AND CHICAGO
a civil demand to pay or return the
goods. But it meant miore than that.
777
T
”No sah. Mist’ Holt.” replied old juvenile judge. stood to lose his of-
Linda grimly; unlike Calvin. she had fice Saturday when a partial recount
was looking I
DENVER — Judge Ron R. I.indsny,
as stated, but
Thelma Snod
the bracelet situation, now that his in his conversation, and all the time
mind was going again. He'd have to this inner mind was asking: If she feels
BOISE CITY—Cimarron county rat-
tle men Saturday appealed to state
and the way the New York legislature,
which also was republican in both
branches, treated Al Smith, the dem
ocratic governor. Is being commented
< n considerably in Washington. The
situation is the more interesting be !
cause of Smith's candidacy for the
presidential nomination last year and
lhe belief 4hat he may again be a < on
tender in the democratic convention
of 1928.
One might almost have believed that
it was Smith instead of Coolidge who
was. He had felt like this once thirty
years ago when the river was high and
he had tried to swim upstream to
i more were expec ted on late night and
i early morning trains and in motor
< cars.
patormTk,
One's Position I
i
j
keep it to himself, he is just hound to
tell her. so don't put your faith in the
suppressed love theory.
have been appreved but he has shown
from the beginning an utter inability
I J to control either the senate or the
house even in matters s personal as
th' selection of members of his cabi-
net.
< n the other hand Smith whose
destruction the republicans had every
reason to desire manifested the force
that is in him and controlled the
republican legislation of the empire
state in such a vay as to force the
comparison between himself and the
man in the White House.
(Readers are invitei to eorrespond
with Dorotliy Pit regaring personal
problem#. Adelress letters to Dorothy
Dix, cure the Time*.
Smith's recommendations has shown approval on the 5th Inst, we take the
and the entire energy of the party liberty of asking if the article was
All of this is rank nonsense. Out of
tiie fullness of the heart the mouth
ENID. April 5 — (Special )—Cinum
stances have made a publisher of Hor-
ace Greeley McKeever, an Enid law-
yer, for a while at least, Acting as at-
torney for creditors, McKeever recent-
ly purchased a daily newspaper in
the regular and the extra sessions to
confirm either Charles B. Warren for!
attorney general or Thomas F. Wood- '
Ing* nf the big
auetion. Horn Lee
S tn
o be
state
O’Neill with a gesture. It couldn’t be
possible that Flora Lee, who had run
around with kings and dukes In the
old country could see anything in that
poor fish. Certainly not.
Whatever it meant, thought Admah '
he couldn't afford to have a family [
row tonight. For the last two weeks
he had been holding on to his nerves
like a swimmer to a raft. One at a
time. that was his motto. First he’d
settle with Sim Canfield, then with the
A record nt 944 real estate deals
involving $858,980 was set for the citv
and county in March, according to
Ray Mc Lain, of the American Nation-
al company.
Good furniture need not be expen
। sive—read the bargains in today’s
| O T want ads. (Adv.I
(y
C— •
—T
He had jand he went to his wife's room to find 1
' * ‘ her cheerfully dining off a tray. She (
held up her mouth to be kissed and 1
77
/
congress on the president's recom-
never received Admah into the I’cake
> family.
Her manner chilled his spirit a lit-
tle. brought him back to the delicate
business at hand. His step had lost
us. as another custoprer has inquired
republican majority of'after it. . . .”
♦
*
had told him that? Margaret, per-
haps . . .
but make things worse?
CHAPTER LXXV
AFTER that he went to his room.
kA Without removing the shoes from
his feet or the coverlid from his bed he
Somebody had been talking to Cum-
mins. One of i he Canfield crowd. As a
grandstand play he ought to march
right oxer to Cummings, sign a check
close his account, swear and walkout.
But he hadn't the ready money to back
such a gesture. And on a day like this
he couldn't afford to go round selling
stock or borrowing.
Heigho! How his bones ached: He
coax the thing away from Flora Lee.
Gosh, how he hated to do that. She
experienced the feeling of elation
which would come to him at unexpect-
ed moments, lending a rose-glow of
optimism to every prospect. For him
the pink June roses were beginning
is probably looking for an unkissed
girl for a wife.
from taking your
medicine. A few
days after the birth
of my third child I
got up too quick.
Then just before
my fifth child was
born I had inflam-
mationoftheblad-
der and displace-
ment Seeing your
advertisement ina
gilded bed; that fancy French thing,
embroidered with hounds and swans
and pheasants whose coarse signifi-
cance. only vaguely comprehended, he
had always hated. Sitting up among
HOLDENVILLE. April 5.—(Special.) ------- “
—Cltizens here will vote April 7 on Military Funeral Planned
two bond issues totaling 8241,000. ! MVSKOGEE. April —A hig mill-
I tary funeral is being planned nese for
The money will be spend for build next week, when the body of Heut.
Ing extra storage tanks, and mnoving Guy B. Hall. Muskogee boy, killed
! foolin' round the offi< e. he thought,
when he needed Vest and a chance to
save his strength for the big fight to-
morrow? Something simple and easy
was what he wanted. Only there was
hat"bueiness about the bracelet. He
hoped that Flora Lee would be reason-
. able.
that way about him, what can I doon monthly enrolment; ami life in
surance companies may write policies
Admah!” both were drawing casually,
frightened perhaps at his blank look.
What had he seen? Nothing. Yet sud-
denly the hate in his brain seemed to
liven and sizzle scaldingly like frying
Talcville, New York. — "I thought it
would interestyou to know what bene-
1 lit I have derived
the bill was rejected by the lesisla- awoke to find that he had been snor
ture."whenit cameto, a vote.. ... ing. His unaccustomed nap had
It her ’ swhich ” soverno ’ brought on a headache—another one
ored and which were l^d over theor those durned Hed
opposition the republl.au majoritz do something about those headache.,
were bills to abolish Era de,ossing8 If you, keep on taking patent drink
at rallroarta and to release the frox , for them yourre llable to weaken
en approprlations in the treasury: heart, he reflected dimly. He had
There had been a plan to defeat the gone to sleep with a lighted cigar in
his mouth, and it had turned into a
----- -......... Lee, sick and nervous, wanted her
to open on their trellises and the baby ! elater out of the house: O'Neill! The
“ My trouble began with pimples
on my face. They were large, red
and festered and later developed
into large, tore eruptions which
caused much itching and burning.
I scratched the affected parts and
the trouble spread all over my face
and neck. Many times st night I
could not sleep for the itching and
burning, and my lace waa disfig-
ured terribly.
“ I started using Cuticura Soap
and Ointment and in a lew days I
could see an improvement. I con-
tinued the treatment and after using
two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one
and a half boxes of Cuticura Oint-
ment I was completely healed."
(Signed) Miss Minnie Trowbridge,
329 S. High St., Harrisonburg, Vs.
Cuticura Soap, Ointment and
Talcum promote and maintain akin
purity, skin comfort and akin health
often when all else fails. ,
SoayteOintmmmt-andMe.T.lrm sola
s
• Cutieure Shavie Slkli M.,
tend with a congress
- Liverpool (Eng-
land ) paper I began taking Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and
that was the best confinement I had.
Whenever I feel run down I always
take the Vegetable Compound as a
tonic. We have just removed from
Brockville (Canada) so I was pleased
when the store ordered the medicine
for me and I got it today. I would not
be without it for any price and I rec-
ommend it to ladies around here be-
cause I feel so sure it will benefit any
woman who takes it ’’— Mrs. AGNES
WIGNALL, Talcville, New York.
Women can depend upon Lydia E.
Pinkham’s VegetableCompound to re-
lieve them from ills peculiar to their
■ex. For sale by druggists everywhere.
had thrown himself down and su- ।
rumbed to the ahe in his museles. At j
dinner time Calvin’s knock awoke him, '
bear with poor Huntie. He complained
of his headache and she called him an
old growler to be working ao hard
when everybody else was up in Maine
keeping cool. And why couldn't they
take the McCoy cottage at Bar Har-
bor?
Charmingly she made it impossible
for him to believe what he knew.
Finally he went down to dinner
where he ate sparingly and drank
much. In the quick reverie which
comes upon the solitary drinker he
wished that he had not let Margaret
go: but what could he do when Flora
tails.
First he saw the coverlid on her
The longest motor bus line yet 11
censed in Oklahoma. was established
Saturday from Oklahoma City to
Woodward.
self to blame. You fooled yourself
SAYRE. April 5.--(Special.)-- Sayre’c
$48,000 school issue was bought by !
the American National company of
Oklahoma City, bringing par and ac-
crued interest, and a bonus of $650. '
The board of education is now ar- l
ranging to commence the new build- |
nig, and rearrange the old Bryan build
ing. as advertised in the notice of i
election. They hope to have al! com ;
pined by beginning of new school :
yea r.
announced. There will he no oratory
telephoned his
, wouldn’t be back
land commission in settling delin-
foamy pillws, her little head outlined quent rentals and renewal of leases.
In a lacy cap. her lips parted in an -----♦ -
PeGoldenBed
0k byhkllaceJrwin
Dancy, sheriff, Saturday. The four
are named in connection with city
robbery cases.
man will conduct the business until a
purchaser can be found.
forty-three in the New York house
and seven in the* senate. Smith is
the only democratic state official
lock am a member of the interstate
commerce commission merely empha.
sized the inability of the president to
control a congress of his own partic-
ular faith, even in such matters aa the
selection of his official family. In '
- matters of legislation he found it just I
about as difficult to get matters1
through congress as it waa m get his '
friends safely placed in federal offices. I
From the first session of congress 1
after Coolidge became president, he
has been constantly opposed in many
of his recommendations by a majority '
of both houses of congress each of ’
which is dominated by his own po-
litical- party.
It is because of the situation which I
has been emphasized so many times
and in so many ways that the action
of the New York legislature under '
He is surrounded It meant that the city was no longer
in official positions ■ ■
lard. Hr had seen nothi g. Yet he
knew. Flora Lee and Huntie O’Neill
had just kissed.
His first impulse was to fall upon
O’Neill and come to grips dog-fashion,
doing murder honestly in the presence
of murder’s cause. Instead he sat
down and said something about the
day being hot. He was unusually dull
too was smiling; his face, like hers,
was quick with pleasure.
That was a flash. An instant later
both had seen the shallow in the door.
Their bodies had sprung into attitudes
of self-conscious innocence. “Hello.
-
N
। speakers who are expected to arrive
early Monday are Frank II. MeFar-
land, national vice commander, and
G. Hixey. field secretary of the
national headquarters at Washing-
ton.
Plans to raise Oklahoma's quota of
$75,000 of the $5,000,000 endowment
fund for orphanage and child welfare
work among children of veterans of /
the world war. will be discussed by ;
post officers of leginn posts and aux- 1
ill ary branches in their meeting here
Monday.
This, alone with plans for Service
Recognition day. May 8, when an at-
tempt will be made to enroll every
i man in the state who is eligible, In the
purpose of the gathering, says James
Hatcher, of Chickasha, state corn
mander.
County weighers must" keep a rec-
ord of weights ami marks on all cot
ton bales weighed by them; heads of
schools must make sworn statements
monthly to the state superintendent
rest of the Judas Iscariot club down,
at the office. Then O'Neill's turn
would come round and the skunk
would have to face the biggest man
in the state instead of a dummy presi.
I dent, fighting for his job.
(To Be Continued)
kid theni-
found satisfactory to Mrs. Holtz. If
not would you be so kind as to inform
in the cool quiet of the big brown .its spring as he went down the velvet
library be lit n cigar and relaxed him carpet of the corridor, walking cau-
self against the huther cushions oftiously lest his adored one might be
his chair. He tried to think this out, i nodding, might resent his clumsy
this comparatively simple problem, tread. He had just turned into the
35<
tet, composed of Paul Chapman.
foul cinder. He looked nt his watch.
Goshi He'd been asleep nearly an
hour.
At the prohibitionn! bar lie ordered
another patent drink. Queer that he'd
fallen off like that, right in the mid-
dle of the day! Sort of an old man
trick—certainly he hadn't reached the
age for that! He stood stupidly by
the bar, feeling his sore muscles. Then
again he thought of Cummins’ letter.
He could see only one way out for
Fickns hotel and close with a round
table discussion wh h is scheduled
to end at 5:30 o'clock. More than a ।
there was launched an extensive
church building program, which has
not yet reached its height.
Within the past two years the Chris-
tian Science and the First Christian
churches have completed new build
ings. The Baptists have raised over
$25,000 toward their proposed $50,000
building. The Catholics have pur
chased lots and have in contemplation
a structure costing in the neighbor-
hood of $60,000. The Methodists have
recently completed a $6,000 parsonage.
Although no definite moves have
been made hy other churches, there is
some likelihood that some of them
may build some time in the not too
distant future. /
*
The following news itens
from The Daily Oklahoman
are summarized for the con-
venience of the reader who did
hot see the Sunday edition.
of marriage and asks you to name the
day. As for a man complimenting
you, that is a line that every man
hands out to every passable-looking
woman he meets. It means nothing
ion God's earth except that he is try-
ing to make himself agreeable and
that he fancies himseit a great little
a princely air; rolled lawns, trimmed
hedges, precisely graveled roads. Here
was a gentleman’s home. Such a home
as the Peakes would have been proud
of in the days when they had plenty
of money and slaves to indulge their
indolence. But I he Peakes—some-
times he treated himself to this tri-
umphant reflection—had gone to sleep
on the job, let the property run down.
Not so Admah Holts. He had fought
every inch of the way. Who was it
All visitors are to be guests of Ok-
lahoma City Post No. 35 at a lunch-
, con at Claussen’s Dinner Bell. It was
. . . . ... . . . selves into believing that men are in
of the vote by whie h he was declared . . . . , , .1 ..
. . . . .. , ..... love with them because it flatters their
electec lust November zave Royal R. . ,, , . . ...
... . . .1..' vanity. They live on false hopes that
Grihmil, Hix oiUMinoni. the lend. they manuracture themselves. They1
WASHINGTON_The field artilery iseesigniricance in the most trivial act
school at Fort Sill will be alven newthat a man dons. 1 set thousainds of
. - . . . .. .... letters from women who write me
officers, and changes in the person- .. . ....
. . . ... . . 1, that they are in love with men who.
nel of posts in Oklahoma. . , • , .
they just feel, love them, although the
ASHEVILLE. N. C.Dr. Arehibald men have never sald R" Sometimes
.......... I.,...a ..r ,1 CKh-aH.il.- ..r they attribute the man’s Silenee to his
; i., leading to her room .when his pros rconoha, wol hak hi, shyness and delude themselves into
Xu.";,. "retunvexreitedaceeption or of the e- es» “jsr ""
. . . ’ . .. .. .. f dency of the Oklahoma university ""3-— 1*
laughter, then the mumble-mumble of : , _
a man's voice. She wns having com -within n week. ....... . .. .
pany. Why had Linda said she was
asleep?
A few steps further and he found
hmself looking into her room. It was
only a glance, bfit a comprehensive
slid down deep in his chair and al- eyeful which, like the shutter of a
lowed himself to onow how tired he,rapid camera, takes in unexpected de-
judge, for $40,000 damages, opened
Satu rday.
rect legislation Coolidge has met with loved it 80. .and she'd been so tender
slgnal failure. Many of his policies I with him when he save it to her. But
your predicament. They
OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1925.
Nor lire kisses and caresses the sign
that a man has serious intentions.
There are not many Josepls among
tiie male population, and all (he bal-
a nee of the brethren will kiss any
pretty girl who is lax enough in her
conduct to permit such familiarities.
Because a man kisses you is no indi-
cation that lie intends to ask you to
marry him. finite the contrary. He
Miss Vici Hart. were ( given Ben | jollier.
blue hydra nge to blossom in their | practical side of Admah's character
tubs. The whole place had a rich air, came to the rescue and he banished
Smith has shown himself to be
through his single handed control
over a majority hostile in both
branches and singularly opposed to
most of his program.
Coolidge Has Met Failure
Here In Washington this sharp
contrast between the outstanding re-
publican and the outstanding democrat
of official life today has not failed to
attract much attention. In his ef-
WEWOKA—Suit of Grady Webster, speaketh, and even a dumb man be-
NATIONAL
CHICAGO — Poison was found in
the bodies of Mrs. Emma Nelson M<
Clintock, mother of William MeClin-
tock, and Dr. Osear Olson, it was
announced by coroner’s chemist.
SULPHun. April 5.—(Special.),An
early Bunday morning fire destroyed
•he First Methodist church of this
city. । j
The origin of the fire has not bech
determined. The blaze started in the
rear of the church and swept the
structure before a fire alarm could be
turned in. The church was built of
brick and was valued at $20,000. The
loss waa only partially covered by
! insurance.
Rev. S. G. Rogers, pastor and mem- !
hers of the church board said plans |
would be started immediately to erect '
a new building.
Th* First Methodist church was the
largest edifice nf worship in Sulphur. )
AMAn HO5.rZ, ywui..::: rawer
peddler or humble parentage, aspires
to great things in life despiie bio
youth. His ambitlon mngnifles his
interest in the Peaks family. typienl
•f th nrisfoeracy of the Old South.
1 rom n distanee Admal begins to ad-
mire the Peake daughters. Flora Lee
and Margaret, who live In n mansion
far from tiie humble Holtz nhanty.
Admah becomes amhitlnns tn ope-
rate a candy store, but his mother
acorns the idea. He has his first love
affair, with Mahel Siek, a girl of the
neighborhood, who flnaMy is drhen
from her father’s 2pnse because of her
affairs with men nf the town.
Ths yenrs of Admah’s lite until he
reaches the late thirties are not par-
tieularly eventfn), although he at-
tains wealth and business prestige.
Flora Lee has been married and di-
voreed from the Marquis an Pilar.
Margaret remains unmarried. The
(Copyright, 1925, George Matthew Adams) ...
EAR DOROTHY DIX—I am a
• heartbroken girl of 20, 1am em-
ployed as bookkeeper in a commercial
house, and my employer won my af-
fection by kissing and carressing me.
and telling me how beautiful and
। sweet I waa. He led me to l elieve that
he loved me, although he never actual-
ly told me so or took me out any-
where.
Now he is going to be married to a
rich girl and I do not know what to
do. Shall I sue him for breach of
promise?—Heartbroken.
editor of the Wewoka Capital -Demo, comes eloquent w hen he is in love wit li
. rat against George (’ Crump, district a woman and wants lirr. Hr can’t
Sessions start nt 9 o’clock at the
To begin at the beginning you have to see Mitzi
in the disheveled state that follows a shampoo It
is the time when most bobbed heads look at them-
selves seriously and debate what to do. Grow it or
have it trimmed again? Of course, any desirable
length can be acquired at a moment’s notice.
and the entire energy of the party*
has been brought into play to destroy
him because of Ilie fact that the op-
pogition has not been able to defeat
him.
The legislative program agreed
upon by the majority was opposed to
practically all his plans and yet in
the face of such opposition the gov-
ernor has mannged to put through
most of his pirns arnd do it with the
assistance of the republicans in both
houses.
In spite of republicnn opposition the
governor has managed to put through
t he legislature a bill reducing the
state income tax 25 percent. He op-
posed the measure which was agreed
on by tiie republican caucus to enact
a bill something after .the like of the
state prohibition law which had been
repealed.
Liquor Bill Rejected
The republican caucus had endorsed
the prohibition law, the steering com-
mittee had placed it upon the party
program and the passage of such a
measure had been pledged by the
party at the polls Inst November but
By GEORGE W. SUMMERS
Oklahoman Staff Correspondent
WASH I NGT( N, April 5. — The
sharp contrast between the’way Pres
ident Coolidge was treated by con
gre Ns, repnhlican in both branches.
Another way to make one’s coiffure different is t »
use a chignon—it is an easy matter now tn have it
match properly and roll the hair at the neck ai’ the
way around the head. This is turned under and
pinned in place by invisible halrpins.
score of the visitors had arrived in
the city Sunday night, and many ’
u
the T
posi-
lairy
i as-
3 A. I
part
and
At the formal front door he leaped
. from his enr as lightly as though the
I fat of middle age were not upon him.
as though tomorrow’s battle were al-
ready won. Hp gave his hat to Calvin
and made some blundering joker
about taking his half holiday. The
mulatto man grinned appreciatively
a ml showed his new gold teeth as he
repeated his formula, "Yssa, Mist'
I Holt. Yas suh!”
On his way upstairs Admah had
formulated a plan. When the election
was over ami he was safely in saddle
again he’d give Flora Lee a big party.
A bigger one than the riotous house-
warming with which they had opened .
i heir fine new place. He might find
some way of buying hack the bracelet,
slipping it on her wrist as a sur-
» prise. • • •
At the first landing he saw old
Linda, standing like a skeleton carved
out of an ebony pole. She had been
in charge since Miss .Sullivan’s depar-
ture.
“Is Miss Flora T.ee awake?” he
entertainment. Mrs.
NEWKIRK, April 5.—(Special.)—In
a deal completed last week Miss Sarah
Halliburton of Neosho, Mo., pur-
chased the republican News Journal
here from Erwin C. Conger, editor and
owner. She will take charge of the
plant on April 15. She is a former
news editor of the Republican News
Journal.
She will be the first woman news-
paper editor of this city, and one of
the few In the state. She is a gradu-
ate of the University of Missouri
school of journalism and hashd much
practical newspaper experience. Be-
mides working on the Republican News
Jeurnal in 1918-19, she has worked on
y Pawhuska. Independence, Mo., and
Neosho, Mo., newspapers.
(% • S A guaranty of it
“eg-r - gm N accompanies thia
6V7KT (( / appeai for the ac-
w%->A V a“_k_ I tive support of all
a voters.
FIVE 1
(TN re diamond and platinum
- bracelet sent to your address on
begin Monday morning. Among
several miles away in a Pensacola air accident ThurB-
Dismiss all thoughts nf a breach- '
of-promise suit from your mind. You muipppmpR ■ p-ppm
have no rase to begin with, for the 5. A F I L U
man never made any contract to •)EgnnEL M I n
marry you. Besides which a breach-
of promise suit is the ultimate limit of DIDTU E D A D V
sordidness to which a woman can de. K" E KUKT
scend. My advice to you is to be a Will I II VI VflU I
good sport, and when you sit in the -
game of hearts and lose out not to , 44:,
whine or cry over your bad lurk. -roublecaused by. Getting
Learn from it and play your cards Up Too Soon. Relieved by
Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
- Vegetable Compound
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 35, No. 284, Ed. 2 Monday, April 6, 1925, newspaper, April 6, 1925; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1985764/m1/5/: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.