The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1930 Page: 11 of 24
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PAGE 11
hutesoLORADO ‘DRY’ C
lOZAR IS OUSTED
tt with f
t Instant £
reporui ifU'tS P°St 8S Head °f Anti
bvl Saloon League Held It
mergences Zi a 9
alrtents M 18 Years
lnary tj pe J
exposed as promoter
Wealth and Fashion Gather for Sea Contest
Weekly Sunday School Lesson
UR
"slo'n jult ! C'd 0l' StOCk ° andiCaS
vut 55 10 who Faced His Organiza-
ira
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er and
ptions
could
using
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irrogs
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tion for Support
I Special to The Sewf
P DENVER Colo Sspt 18 —Less than
Si three weeks alter he was exposed In
f the role ol an ollstcck salesman ped-
tiling wildcat stock to politicians and
candidates the Rev A J Finch has
resigned as superintendent ol the
Colorado Anti-Saloon League
Thus the man who Jor 18 years has
I been prohibition dlctetor of Colorado
his at last been deposed Nor will
there be a successor Disorganized
forces of the Ant -Saloon League try-
ing to recover from their predicament
will for the presert be guided by a
I committee and thee will probably be
' no sngle leader of the prohibition
P forces In this state
Finch's resignation acceptance of
I which was announced by the head-
quarters committee of the Antl-8aloon
I League came Just before an InveaM-
p gatlon of his activities by the sena'te
I campaign funds committee was to have
u Btirted
I Despite that fact Investigators for
a committee now In Denver are still
looking Into the league's affairs and
it Is virtually certain that the books
of the Anti-Saloon League and of
Finch’s oil company will be Inspected
when the committee opens Its hear-
ings here Sept 24
League Is Issue
During r-eent primal y campaign
the league became the principal issue
when It Indorsed one of the senatorial
candidates ind opposed his opponent
-although It was 'publicly charged
that neither of them was personally
A colorful pageant of wealth and fashion was formed by the hundreds of society notables from all parts of the country who assembled In
'record numbers at Newport R I for the America's cup races Members of some famous families high In the social world are pictured here as
they gathered to watch Enterprise and Shamrock In their epic battle Mrs Vincent Astor called the "first lady of the races" who entertained her
guests aboard the Nourmahal flagship of the New York Yacht Club Is shown lower right Mrs Cornelius Vanderbilt who U seen standing be-
side her son Cornelius Vanderbilt Jr in the photo at the top was hostess aboard the Winchester With her In the picture are Mra Cornelius
Vanderbilt Jr (farthest left) and Mrs Henry O Davis At the left Is Mrs Jay Gould In the picture lower center are (left to right) Mr and Mrs
Ollter Harrlman and George A Cormack all of New York
drv
A minority of trustees demanded a
thorough Investigation to determine
the personal habits and convictions of
the candidates Instead of merely their
political statements This demand
was rejected
Immediately after The Rocky Moun-
tain News dug up the fact that Rev
Finch was president of the Fitzsim-
mons OH 8c Leasing Co and received
a 25 per cent commission on all stock
he sold Finch was discovered to have
sold stock to numerous officeholders
and candidates on whom the Antl-
Saloon League was about to pass or
lnd already passed
Included In the list of stockholders
then and since revealed were such
prominent officeholders and candi-
dates as William V Hodges defeated
randldate for the Republican nom-
ination E P Costlgan Democratic
senatorial nominee Gov William H
Adams former Sen Alva Adkms the
district attorneys of Denver and an
adjoining district
Other Purchasers
Several other candidates In the
present campaign admitted they had
re cutly been approarhed to buy stock
hut claimed they had not done so
It is expected that the lull list of
politicians holding stock In Finch's
well— which has long been known
among polltlclana as the "anti-saloon
oil well '—will be exposed as a re-
hit of the senate committee's com-
ng Investigation
All cindtdaies opposed by the Antl-
S iloon League were successful In the
primaries although In the past It had
almnf nlwavs succeeded In defeat-
ing those whom It opposed For the
first time It Is In the predicament of
bring unable to support the prin-
cipal Republican candidates
Some of the leading candidates on
both the Republican and Democratic
tickets are on the leagues blacklist
In a state which has bem strongly
rirv In the past and It Is left In the
position of having nobody to turn to
TOWN Vs HWKKI I’T
B I nltd Pres
INNSBRLCK Austria — Declaring
that the municipal treasury Is bank-
rupt bevonrt possibility of rehabilita-
tion the aldermanlc council of the
Tirollan town 3 hwnz have reqmsteo
tne Austrian supreme court for fr
maslon to file a voluntary bunk
ruptcy petition which will compel
Schwaz’s creditors to accept as pay-
imnt In full only a small part of
me sums actually owned by the mu-
nclpvhtv to them
PARISIANS WAIL
AT POOR PROFIT
Enterprising Journalists Find
Plenty of Tourists But
Few Big Spenders
By t'nlfrd Press
PARIS —Parisian merchants de-
spite High Commissioner for Toarlsm
Gaston-Gerard's plea for patience and
the well-known voice with the smile
cannot deny themselves & little grum-
bling over the current tourist season
For M Gaston-Gerard'a eloquent sta-
tistics to one side the merchants
aren't moving the goods off their
shelves and something tells them
business could have been better
In specifically combatting the high
commissioner's figures one news-
paper the "Paris Midi” finds a pos-
sible solution In the statement that
"America sends us p good many
tourists artmlttid But they are not
the right sort "
"Students” that newspaper goes on
"do not spend a great deal of money
Nor do artists and writers congregate
at places like Larue's they eat rather
Announcing —
The opening of a better beauty
shop where you can get the best
work at prices you can well af-
foid Expert operators All
work guaranteed
Opening Specials
To get acquainted we axe offering
our regular $12 wave fcg
for
Our regular $10 wave $5
These are new reallstles with
beautiful ringlet ends
Riti Beaute Shoppe
1021 E 13th 7-6221
Fait Wing of Rita Theater
at the smaller restaurants Most of
these people are here for serious work
and hence do not patronize the very
amusements we have planned express-
ly for them ”
The entire press Joins occasionally
In the lamentations and three or four
enterprising reporters-at-large have
made the rounds of the fashionable
places In the Bols and elsewhere -turning
to shed copywriters’ tears over
the sad picture of waiters captains
maltrea d’hotel and chausseurs lined
up against so many vacant walls star-
ing pensively at the clouded akles
According to these M Gaston-Gerard's
figures mean less than nothing
In the meantime “Paris Midi” la
in favor of turning sales attention on
the Germans
STOWAWAY IS BOA Eli
By Tnlled Fres
fT LOUIS Sept 18— Clarence Ter-
hune who two years ago stowed away
on the Graf Zeppelin and went to
Germany will mace his first public
nppeatanre as a boxer In an amateur
bout here Monday
Tba International rntform Funds
School lesson for Sept 38 An Estimate
of the Charset- Studied During the
3 larter Devotional readtni Psalm
36 1-S a 11 13
a a
Rv Wit I MM F fILROY D P
I dll or of The C'onjrrgatlonaltit
THE review of the quarter1 lessons
la suggested In the form of an
estimate of the characters studied
during the period It la as character
studies that these lessons have been
elgnlflcant though they have had
to do with chara-ter not only in Its
Inner aspect with but Its outward
expressions in the great tasks which
the characters that we have been
studying accomplished
First we have Abraham the g-eat
pioneer manifesting virtues that have
not always been characteristic of the
pioneer The pioneer with all his
courage and endurance and determl-
nation has often been a fighting
man grasping and eager In his am-
bition But Abraham with all the
vlrtuee of the pioneer had a largeness
of spirit and magnanimity that had
made him very truly the father of
the faithful
The Greatness of Jacob
Jacob cornea before us as s man de-
prived of the foremost place who
was aund to achieve It and to get It
by jk or crook As a matter of
fat ne used both hook and crook
and his life appears In mnnv respects
as unlovelv But he had In him with
all his trickery elements upon which
something could really be built and
In this respect he differed from hts
more likeable brother Esau The es-
sence of ths lesson concerning Jacob
was that even a rharacter like Jacob
cotild he transformed and could have
brought Into his life some real holi-
ness and Integrity of purpose
Moies s'anda before ua as a com-
manding figure great In hts moral
strength courageous In hts lealer-
ehlp one of the world's great master-
ful characters a rebel aRalnst Injus-
tice and wrong but an upbullder of
the foundations of a true society In
law and righteousness
Three women appear In our lesson
studies: In fact one should say four
for one cannot Consider the character
and career of Samuel without think-
ing of his mother Hannah Deborah
the Judge of Israel stands as a sort
of female Moses a married woman
with a call to tasks that went beyond
her own home and household yet a
I woman who appears In the leadership
of the nation with her real strength
m her womanly courage and virtues
In Ruth with her devotion to her
mother-ln-law Naomi we have a pic-
ture of persistency and devotion that
can attach to love and g'ntenes
The story of this Moablteaa Is Inter-
esting In Itself hut It comes to have
great significance w n we realize
that she was an ancestress of David
and therefore of Jesus Himself giving
to the man of Nazareth an Inter-
racial origin and significance that Is
not always recognized
The study of Samuel Is against s
background of evil conditions In
Israel — drunkenness licentiousness
and corruption Samuel displays the
qualities that one would expect from i
one who had been devo’ed In his
mother's prayers to the service of re-
ligion The storv of the first king of Israel
Is one of the world a great tragedies—
a man with a marvelous natural en-
dowment and with great opportunity
throwing all sway through lack of
self-control and dying a hopeless sui-
cide after he had lost a battle In
contrast to Saul was his son Jona-
than of whose frlend-hlp with David
one lesson has taken account
That the outward prosperity of a
nation does not always mean real
strength or greatness Is a lesson that
we could find In the life of many
peoples nos the herd-man a farm-
er with unrnrrupted nature and clear
vision esme from the fields to de-
nounce the sina of the city and to re-
mind people that no nation could be
great that sought to build upon un-
righteousness and Injustice
In the record of failure and corrup-
tion we have one lesson that marks
righteous purpose In high places The
story of Joslah an 8-vear-old boy Is
an Inspiring storv of reform
From tills we passed to one of the
aupreme prophets of Israel a man
who felt keenly hta own personal re-
sponsibility and whose message cen-
tered around the conviction of duty
that he hlmeelf experienced Like
Arnoa Jeremiah rebuked formalism
and called upon the people to mani-
fest their religion by right living
The leasone of the quarter have at-
tained a climax In the study of the
etory of Jonah— a atorv that repre-
sents also the very cllmsx of the
teaching of the Old Testament con-
cerning God Jonah cornea before us
t as a narrow nationalist believing In
God but unwilling that God's grace
should b manifested to other peoples
Jonah's Prejudice
When he Is sent to Nlnevah he re-
bels against his mission and when
ultimately he actually goes and hut
mission succeeds and the people turn
In repentance I e Is angry with th
God w no spares them He manifests
the sort of prejudice that has always
been more or less prevalent In our
limited experience of religion and In
our sectional and narrow organi-
zation The real teaching Is the
teaching of the writer of the book of
Jonah who lifts us to higher levels
of magnanimity and truth and re-
veals to us tut ortous conception of
a God whose men and grace are not
limited to those of one race or na-
tion It Is the point at which the Old
Testament cornea nearest to the rlch-
nev and fullness of the New and It
makes a fine place of approach to the
le-sons that during the coming quar-
ter we shall study concerning repre-
sentative men and women of the New
Testament
SUICIDE TESTS GUN FIRST
I Ires Hrst In Other Direction to Be
Sure Its loaded
Br I nlltd Pr
RL’MhORD Maine — Before shoot-
ing herself In the cheet in a suicide
atttmpt Frma Heath 14 a state
ward fired a shot from the revolver
In another direction to n ake sure
It was loaded
Best Known Way
To Heal Toe Itch
(Athlete's Foot)
This condition of the feet cracked
skin between and around the toes
Inflammation and severe Hehlng
water blisters and tv rnlng la new
known to be caused by a germ or
fungus growth
The only way to get relief la to
kill these fungus germs which you
can now do with a pleasant-odored
delightiul-to-use ointment known as
“Teltertne "
Tetterlne will brlrg quick and lure
relief in these distressing conditions
of the leet and It may be had at
any drug store for 80c with a guar-
antee of perfect relief or money re-
funded— Advertisement
HEAR CLEMENCY PLEAS
The state reformatory pardon end
parole board will consider 35
clemency applications when It meets
at Granite Monday E P Hill state
pardon and parole officer said Thursday
Travel
By Plane--
Save a Day
Lv Okla City 9:00 am
Ar Tulsa 10:00 am
Ar Kansas City 12:15 p m
Ar Chicago 3 :55 p m
Ar Cleveland 7:20 pm
Lv Cleveland 8:15 pm
Over NYC Railroad
Ar New York 9:05 a m
Field 3-8700 Office 2-4033
Southern Air Transport System
“I dare life to do its worst!”
cried Lolita fiery heroine of
VIVIAN GREY’S
stirring new novel
THERE were some who
called Lolita “wild”
For she was a taxi dancer
and men paid to hold her
slim loveliness in their arms
while they danced to the
tunes of a rackety ja:: band
She danced with them
but hated their small talk
their crude attempts at love
making How different Fhil
was she thought Though
he had “picked her up”one
evening on her way home
she felt somehow that he
was different from those
others
He was wealthy charm-
ing dangerously good look-
ing And twenty-four hours
after they had met he pro-
tested undying love for her!
But night after night she
danced with strangers— for
money! Could love bridge
the vast social gap that sep-
arated them? Dare she ac-'
rept the love of a man so far removed from the
world in which she lived?
This is the theme of Vivian Grey’s absorbing
new romance “Dancing Partner” beginning in the
September 2Cth issue of Love Story Magazine An
enthralling novel of a girl who played with fire and
courted new love thrills Has the modem girl the
same nght as a man to sow her wild oats? Read this
thrilling story of a girl who did
— and the surprising outcome I
Eight complete stories
in Sept 20th issue
"The Winner” by Ruby M
Avres is the enticing ttory of a
girl who drew lots to decide
which man he should marry
An unusual climax heighten
the interest of this clever story
“Silken Snares” by Cynthia
de Vinne is a dramatic story of
love pitted against family pnde
Frank loved Diane but his fam-
ily objected to their marriage
Ho Dane won over his rvran-
nical father makes a delightful
story
You’ll enjoy “For Love of
Him” “Camilla Camp Out”
“Pinch-hitter Peggy” “A Heart-
less Mia” “Love Passes By”
“Honor Bound’ and Vera
Franklin’ fascinating aerial
"The Street of False Steps”
Get your copy of Sept 26th
Love Story Maganne today!
What are your love problems?
Suppose you fell in love with a man
and later found out he was mamed—
what would you do? Suppose yoor
sweetheart left you — how could you wra
him back? These are the kind of prob-
lems that Dura Alston Brown answer
every week in her helpful department
“The Friend in Need” Do you want to
be popular — mere attractive? Vhatewir
problems ate wormng you— Mi Brow
is ready to aid you at all times
US1C IS
there
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but it takes FOUR VOICES to make a QUARTET
Did you ever stop to think
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Variety without end! You
can pick your program
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Events! Sports! Gorgeous
entertainment amusement by talent costing
hundreds of thousands of dollars
But when you buy your receiving set don’t get
one that only imperfectly reproduces these pro-
grams Get a set that will give you lasting plea-
sure and pride — a Steuart-Wamer
With sets less scientifically built an equally
finished reproduction is impossible For sets that
do not have full tone range cannot reproduce all
tones in their proper proportion In some sets the
bass overshadows the treble giving the familiar
barrel-like boom — making voices sound garbled
distorted In others the treble overshadows the
bass sacrificing mellowness — spoiling effect
But the Steuart-Wamer pours forth all the
wealth and beauty of tone exactly as broadcast
When listening to a quartet you get the full
effect of all four voices
All notes high and low whether vocal or instru-
mental come in full value — arc reproduced with
a precision explained only by the infinite care
with which these sets are built— and the many
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Here in cabinets of striking beauty are sets that
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dial Behind them is 25 years of experience in the
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SEE AND HEAR THEM rOR YOURSELF!
Without obligation let your authorized Steuart —sure to please YOU! Remember the Music is there
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Magee, Carl C. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 303, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 18, 1930, newspaper, September 18, 1930; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2009450/m1/11/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.