The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 148, Ed. 2 Thursday, March 3, 1938 Page: 4 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma News and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE OKLAHOMA NEWS
The Oklahoma News
A SCRIPPA-HOAlltn NIEWSPAPER
ROHFRT T rnrtwiRicKs rnitor
etimiLrs L NICHOLSON Busintaa Manager
"MONK 7-11351
- - nittor
bytaThiPed oiskniAd wrmubglisztsIda1 dtiol v
ell West Grand-av Oklahoma
liat5s's (ImkallarerR"12"IlVirnal
1 -: --1 the posiorfice Oklonoma Cite
: :- - -- - Okla under act of March S
-:-- EE ICU
--- r-
7:- ' --i Member of the United PrnS
O
' - Scripps toward Newspaper
---: AllifInCe Newspaper Entrprise
-Tr :--r4 Association etelce en eterrice
- — - Newspaper thformation Servara
-- 1 - r and Audit Bureau of Circula-
±476a ta:040-001:--- il Lion
Ill'etwt'lltIPTIO It
NI ATI1
In Oklahoma City by car
4"--1---"2----"'"2'±" tier 20 cents a aeek sins"Give Light and copies 5 cents daily 5 cents
S is
Sunday Ouide Oklahoma
the People W111 city by carrier 20 cents a
Find Their Own ' cents
daily b cents Sunday
Way" BY mall nosh tn advanea
tn Oklahoma le eonts a month 81000 a yearl lso-
mbar 1125 I month 111210 a year
TBUTIADAY MARCH 3 10311
"A free press stands as one of the
great interpreters between the Gov-
ernment and the people To allow it
to be fettered is to fetter ourselves"
(From a unanimous opinion by the
U S Supreme Court Feb 11 1936)
NVII0 HAVE DONE NO NVIIONG
cOMEHOW we can't see any sense
1'J much less justice in the ruling of
the U S Social Security Board by which
the old the blind and dependent chil-
dren of this state are denied further
aid
True It is that our pension rolls have
been padded
Nor can we dispute the suspicion that
our governor and other politicians have
been making campaign medicine out of
pensions
But why should the deserving old
people and the blind and underpriv-
ileged children suffer for the sins of
our governor and our politicians?
Why should the United States Secu-
rity Board further punish these inno-
cent victims of our pension scandal?
Have they not suffered enough already?
They have!
Old persons with no other means of
support have had their monthly checks
clipped to little or nothing to make room
for ineligibles on our pension rolls No
deserving person ever has received what
he should receive None has received
what wa3 collected for him in taxes or
allotted to him by the Federal Govern-
ment None of them have
Such has been the lot of the needy
old people of this state
And because they have been thus
cheated their meager monthly allow-
ances now are to be further cut by the
U S Security Board Which to us doesn't
make sense
For after all it Is the law of this state
and of these United States that they
shall be pensioned It is the will of the
people of this state and of these United
States that they shall be pensioned
And funds for this purpose are available
In the state and national treasury
So we say it doesn't matter if Gov-
ernor Mar land and other politicians
have been making political medicine of
pensions It doesn't matter If pension
rolls have been padded for vote-getting
purposes It Is neither sense nor jus-
tice that the innocent should be further
punished for the sins that are commit-
ted—not by them—but against them
Because we can't get to the burglar
we do not send the man be robbed
to Jail
We hope Sen Thomas Is right In his
statement carried In a late news dis-
patch on Page One that the Govern-
ment will atill provide money for the
state eligibles
Musicians est that the nattonal
anthem be changed as the present
one too often becomes The Star
Strangled Banner
AFTER TWO YEARS
TWO years ago today President Rooee-
a' Ye It sent a message asking Congress
to enact the tmdistributed-profits tax
Today Congress opens debate on a bill
to pull most of the teeth of that tax
The fitting commemoration of course
Is pure coincidence The Democratic
leaders of the House certainly didn't
"plan it that way'
What food for philosophic retmspec-
tioni Recall the setting of March 3
1936 Congress had passed the bonus
over the President's veto and the Su-
preme Court had killed the AAA process-
ing taxes knocking the President's
budget into a cocked hat Mr Roosevelt
had figured that the Government would
need 3620000000 a year in permanent
new revenue But in an election year
political tradition was against levying
new taxes that would be felt by any
great numoer of voters
So out came the white rabbit—a pro-
posal to revolutionize the system of tax-
ing corporations to abandon the prin-
ciple of levying against them in propor-
tion to their income and ability to pay
and instead to tax them in proportion
to the earnings which they failed to dis-
tribute in dividends
Mr Roosevelt clearly stated a desir-
able objective He said he wanted to
prevent the owners of some corpora-
tions from piling up unjustifiable cor-
porate surpluses in order to avoid per-
sonal income taxes on dividends But
the remedy he proposed was a law' to
force distribution of profits not Only by
these Corporations but by all corpora-
tions regardless of their needs to plow
earnings back into their businesses
Congress modified the bill in some re-
spects but the principle of taxing un-
distributed profits triumphed and at
drastic rats&
The recovery tide was running strong
To avoid the new tax many corpora-
tions paid out larger dividends than
prudent management justified and so
had less money to engage in new enter-
prises expand plants and hire employes
And somehow the lush revenues antici-
pated by the Government failed to ma-
teralize 9ame then the recession and
the crack-tip of the theory of the tax—
the theory that corporations wanting to
expand could raise capital from in-
vestors—and with it the spread of un-
employment and demoralization of busi-
ness confidence
The recession had many causes aside
from the undistributed-profits tax But
none we think contributed more might-
ily If the tax had beer modified last
December along the lines now proposed
we believe it might have halted the re-
cession We believe that outright repeal
now would contribute much toward re-
covery Failing that we hope for the
nearest approach to complete repeal
that is politically feasible
Then we can return to Mr Roosevelt's
original simple and sound objective It
13 till desirable to force tax avoiciers to
contribute their fair share to the Gov-
ernment's revenue But next time let's
not use a meat ax to stop a nosebleed
Now that the anti-lynch filibus-
ter has ended many senators trill
be at a loss for something to say
nothing about
A BELATED HELP
MORE economical oil development
I" should result from the state Supreme
Court's decision upholding the state
Corporation Commission's right to estab-
lish well spacing in new fields This is
a needed measure of state control
which In the long run will prove a
benefit to the industry as a whole as
well as to the people of the state
Proper spacing of wells makes for
economy in production It reduces the
waste of gas used to lift oil by natural
pressure and it means a vast reduction
In drilling costa compared to expense
in many of the older pools where the
derricks are crowded so close together
there is scarcely room for the slush pits
New fields are being developed in
Oklahoma Stillwater's field is still in
its early boom Lincoln County where
this test case originated has much un-
finished business Anadarko is begin-
ning to feel the growing pains of an oil
town Others will be found as wildcat
operations work their way around in the
endless search for black gold How many
more new pools will be tapped no one
knows but this new regulation still
should be of tremendous worth
The great pity is that it wasn't applied
before that it wasn't nearer a general
rule in Seminole Three Sands Cromwell
Oklahoma City and other areas that
have spouted the oV-new wealth of
petroleum Oklahoma has been prof-
ligate in its oil production methods as
have been the other oil states and it
is something that this state is sometimes
a leader in the struggle to enforce more
economical methods
But the oil is flowing the oil is going
and the state will not always have it to
tax or regulate The state has been a
great wastrel too through failure to
take as revenue a fair toll from the oil
produced As it moves to enforce econ-
omy measures in the industry it should
also look after the state's interest in the
matter of taxation There has been gov-
ernmental partiality to oil and it is
time for tax readjustments as surely as
for well spacing
SELF-IIEIA'
"TT is an interesting thing that self-
help seems to be well-nigh lacking
from the analysis thus far made of their
suggestions"
Secretary of Commerce Roper wrote
that to President Roosevelt in transmit-
ting a report on the study of letters from
1900 "little businessmen"
There must be a reason for the thing
Mr Roper noted—the belief of business-
men which seems to be general among
big ones as well as little ones that their
hope of getting out of their present jam
depends not on what they do but on
what Government does We think Ber-
nard M Baruch hit close to that reason
In his testimony this week before the
Senate committee on unemployment
The steam in our engine of produc-
tion Mr Baruch said is the hope of
gain "Difficult as it may seem" he
added 11 think that the only proper
solution of our many problems is one
which admits and adapts to our needs
this inherent human force Recently
we have taken too little care for this
principle"
Give businessmen this hope of gain—
the reasonable c hone e of turning a
profit—and they will help themselves
That Is certain Why then do they now
lack faith in self-help? We believe that
Mr Baruch's statement answered the
question It is because they do not know
what rules Government is going to re-
quire them to operate under and be-
cause they fear that some change in
the rules will wipe out their prospects of
gain
Mr Baruch proposed that the Govern-
ment "precisely define those practices
which we regard as monopolistic and
then vigorously prosecute all who over-
step the rules"—in other words that the
Government tell business it can go so
far and no farther
Re urged that the Government revise
Its tax system to encourage employment
and increase revenue and then stand by
that policy
He suggested that Congress devote
much time and care to economic re-
forms before enacting them He em-
phasized the duty of businessmen to co-
operate in eliminating business abuses
Mr Baruch did not ask for repeal of a
single New Deal law He suggested only
that some laws be modified to facilitate
progress toward New Deal objectives His
whole statement was so temperate so
thoughtful as to deserve thoughtful and
temperate consideration by the Admin-
istration Mr Roosevelt is now giving business
an unannounced breathing spell ap-
parently in hope that business will be
reassured Business seems to be gaining
In confidence even from that negative
treatment A positive statement of fu-
ture policies we think would do even
more to encourage business to go for-
ward—and on a self-help basis
Bottleneck'
WASHINGTON March 3—The De-
" partment of Commerce Is or-
ganizieg a new bureau of industrial
econotrees to aid business This is
a beginning toward carrying out a
suggestion made In a recent speech
by Donald R Richberg and an Idea
on which be has collaborated for
some time with Ernest G Draper
assistant secretary of commerce and
one of the few businessmen of long
experience left in the Administra-
tion But the idea still is little more
than a gleam in the eyes of a few
people here Ironically the funds
to be used come from the Depart-
ment of Agriculture which has allo-
cated $1000000 to Secretary of
Commerce Roper to foster the sale
of agricultural products The De-
partment of Commerce will use this
money to create a new service bu-
reau for business on the assumption
that the fortunes of-agriculture and
business are Interwoven It is a mod-
est beginning very modest under-
taken by grace of the Department
of Agriculture
THE Richberg-Draper idea goes
A much further It contemplates a
Bureau of Industrial Economics which
would be an agency of Government
co-operation entirely separate from
agencies of prosecution and punish-
ment such as the Department of
Justice and the Federal Trade Com-
mission It would proceed with vol-
untary efforts to develop industrial
planning and self-disciplined compe-
tition When specific trade agree-
ments were presented by an indus-
try incorporating arrangements for
self-regulation of business practices
the Bureau of Industrial Economics
would provide for continuing pub-
lic supervision to insure protection
for consumers and the public inter-
est generally
T HE underlying purpose is to pro-
vide some agency of government
where business will be free to take
its problems and to have help in
working them out When a group of
businessmen now wish to work out
Fighter
NEW YORK March 3— If the
I fighting heart and powerful will
of Gen Pershing finally wins his
Incredible battle with death in the
Tucson desert perhaps the country
will more clearly realize during his
remaining years the heroic figure
It has almost lost
We think of him as commander of
the A E F and the avenger of
Villa's raid on Columbus What is
lost in the legend is the terrible
fires and tensions with which fate
seemed forever to be tempering and
testing his character with an in-
variable result of proving it true
and unshakable
On the eve of the Villa raid he
was struck by a blow which alone
could have been enough to floor
most men While he was absent on
leave from his post of the Presidio
of San Francisco a fire in his ram-
shackle headquarters destroyed his
wife and two children I was visit-
ing that post that night from my
own station at the University of
California chatting in the officers'
club with lieutenants of my regi-
ment—the old First Cavalry Among
them was Lieut Wainwright—now
colonel commanding Fort Meyers
and soon I hope and believe to be
a brigadier general He is one of Our
best soldiers
WHEN it came time to go home
" I went to the city—Wainwright
was by then at the burning house
A nurse was on the lawn with War-
ren who is now at his father's bed-
side Wainwright asked where Mrs
Fershing was Not being satisfied
with the answer that she was safe
he rushed through the smoke-filled
house calling her name and looking
in all the rooms In one he saw a bed
overturned—the mattress on the
floor The house seemed deserted
When the fire was out Mrs Pershing
and the two children were found
not burned but smothered under
that mattress!
With that wound in his heart
Pershing a few days later was rid
First
NEW YORK March 3—This is get-
ting around to the season dur-
ing which the Pulitzer Prize Com-
mittee makes its awards and also
the Critics' Circle It seems to me
that the award of the circle carries
more weight than the judgment of
the elderly gentlemen of Columbia
After all the reviewers who face
the ordeal of seeing every show are
In a better position to decide than
any group which merely makes a
short sightseeing trip along the sur-
face of the cream No one can ap-
preciate a good show as much as a
man who has sat in the blinds along
the aisle and watched the wild tur-
keys flutter by
But since I am neither a Pulit-
zerian nor a newspaper critic I will
have to play a lone hand Maybe my
choice will find no official support
But at least I can get in the first
word And so without either plaque
or palms I nominate "The Cradle
Will Rock" as the best play of the
present season
A ND I like it so much better than
anything else that I would not
compromise on any second choice I
like it both for its substance and its
shadow Marc Blitzstein's play with
music (which is really a slightly
longer way of saying "opera")
strikes he only optimistic note of
the serious shows '2-ng Broadway
"The Cradle Will Rock" is not
wholly a series of humorous Inter-
ludes It does deal with things
somber and sad But its final note
and Rs continuina Dbilosoubv SD
By
Raymond Clapper
I
some arrangement that will stabilize
conditions in their industry they
must go either to the Department of
Justice or the Federal Trade Com-
mission In either case anything
they say may be used against them
They are told in effect that the Gov-
ernment can give them no preview
approval that if they want to take
a chalice and go ahead then the
Government will investigate and de-
cide whether to prosecute them for
violating the anti-trust laws Busi-
nessmen can never be sure they are
not violating the law until they
hear the verdict in the courtroom
B UT it is unlikely that much prog-
ress will be made in this direc-
tion for some time One reason is
that this being election year the
Administration is inclined to move
cautiously Roosevelt is likely to
do little more this year than ask for
a general inquiry into the whole
subject of monopoly and competi-
tion Another reason is Secretary
of Commerce Roper So far as the
Department of Commerce is con-
cerned he is the bottleneck He
has spent most of his life in minor
politics and in minor government
jobholding and was without any
equipment to recommend him for
the cabinet job which he has held
for five years He is pleasant but in-
effectual He has no drive and no
leadership Nothing will be done ex-
cept as others take the initiative
as has been the case in this small
beginning
THE Department of Commerce has
A a gigantic fact-gathering organi-
zation developed largely by Hoover
when he was secretary of commerce
But after the facts are gathered
they go Into the files When Roose-
velt becomes concerned about prices
he turns not to the Department of
Commerce but to the Department of
Labor and the Federal Reserve
Board He seldom turns to the De-
partment of Commerce for any-
thing In these larger affairs it has
become as useless as the human appendix
Comments of
Hugh S Johnson
ing into Mexico under the most im-
possible restrictive orders a com-
mander ever suffered There was a
railroad along his route which could
have been used to cut off Villa—
but he wasn't permitted to use it
Later after some of the most vig-
orous cavalry marching on record
he was prevented by orders from
taking Villa The reasons have been
surmised If he dies now probably
nobody will ever know They had to
do with our approaching war with
Germany
A LTHOUGH Wilson and Baker
supported Pershing' in France
the allied governments conducted a
constant campaign for his scalp—
becauFe he wouldn't feed our un-
trained boys in as cannon fodder
before they were ready or under
alien flags There were also power-
ful and ambitious influences at
home which were constantly snip-
ing at his back He once told me
that due to failure of supplies when
where and as he had asked for them
the advance through the Argonne
would have had to stop about where
it was at the Armistice had the
Germans not caved so suddenly and
unexpectedly
Nobody ever heard a squawk out
of him then or to this good day In
every battle against such frustration
he has simply clamped that grim
jaw shut on words and fought dog-
gedly on as he is now doing against
death
All this overlooks and the country
has apparently forgotten his earlier
service for which Theodore Roose-
velt picked him out as a young cap-
tain and jumped him over the heads
of hundreds of his seniors—not as
some suppose because of favoritism
but because he had conquered paci-
fied and seemed best fitted to gov-
ern one of the largest and most
savage islands in the South Seas—
a conquest the political and his-
torical significance of which de-
serves a book and will at least
get a column here
Comments of
Heywood Broun
pear to be the conception that even
a bitter and a muddled world still
remains putty in the hands of those
who are disposed to get together in
organized effort
It shocks me to find so many men
and women who are professedly
idealists rushing around and shout-
ing "All is lost!" For Instance most
of the announcements that war is
just around the corner come from
pacifists And I think the answer
ought to be "Stuff and nonsense"
This is no time for Pollyannas and
there never has been an era in
which they were of any use Just
the same it is well within the possi-
bility of man to change a tragically
Imperfect world from stem to stern
S tTCH plays as "Our Town" and
"On Borrowed Time" suggest a
placid surrender to the reaper upon
the theory that he is not nearly as
grim as he has been painted But
even if he has a smiling face I still
think it is a mistake to court his at-
tention There is no sense in ar-
ranging appointments in Samara by
long distance telephone calls
I have no personal complaints
against the next world at the mo-
ment but certainly there is need
to make something out of this one
first
And so I urge again preferment
for "The Cradle Will Rock" because
It shouts and sings that this earth
can be made to glow and glisten if
working men and women will only
decide forthwith to kindle flame by
rubbing together souls and shotl
ders
T!IIS IS NO TIME FOR A CALM DISCUSSION OF TAXES
r"1 rr-'
il47"?-
r
7p 0z-7-r1
?
0 a koth
avi at
1
A WONIAN'S
VIFWPOINT
I have always suspected that a mistake has been
made about the destination of that famous highway
through the male stomach It leads to the pocketbook
instead of the heart An excellent meal makes an
affable but not necessarily an affectionate man
We now have masculine opinion to that effect
Mr John Beeckman has written a little book which
he calls "The Way to His Heart" tBobbs-Merrill)
and never once does he hint that the preparation of
food has anything to do with falling in love To be
exact it's almost the other way around He implies
in several places that the lady who wears herself
out preparing rich herbs and perfectly done steaks
for her men friends is likely to be left with the
kitchen stove as a consolation prize in the game of
love
"Love" he says "is something men have to be made
to work for and the girl who simply lets herself be
used as a combination of Miss Lonely Heart and the
Waldorf Grill is getting nowhere very rapidly"
Plain observation proved that a long time ago If
there were the slightest truth in the adage which we
still quote so unctuously to the girls why wouldn't
Wilson
Editor of The News:
The destruction of the League
of Nations was accomplished by a
bloc of senators who had for their
objective the destruction of Wood-
row Wilson and the election of one
of their number to the presidency'
The destruction of the league was
the greatest betrayal of the people'
In the history of the country As
soon as the bloc took over the
reigns of government they began
to form a makeshift to take the
place of the league They called'
the powers and in less than II
months negotiated a treaty which
they told us would maintain the
peace of the world It was just so
many words upon paper and they
knew it but it answered their pur-
pose for its satisfied the people and
lead them to believe that the war'
had not been fought in vain This I
group thought that the League was I
dead but they overlooked one thing
and that is that principles live and
that a man lives through those
principles
I read the article of Webb Miller
in which he states that in Czecho-
slovakia the name of Woodrow Wil-
son is spoken only in reverence and
that the Czechs look upon him as
a patron saint And those who
haven't should read the editorial
In The Oklahoma News of Feb 22
The question invariably asked is
would we be in the same condi-
tion today had we followed Wilson's
leadership
When historians review the life
of Woodrow Wilson his name will
be placed along with that of Lin-
coln One the preserver of democ-
racy the other Its greatest ad-
VOefite And the betrayers of Wood
e
A
Qik ttvr-cLito
I'll
By Mrs Walter Ferguson
LETTERS WELCOME
The News welcomes let-
ters from everyone but
please write plainly and on
one side of the paper only
and confine them to 200
words Letters should be
signed though only initials
will be used if requested
No letter will be returned
Friends
Editor of The News:
There are three sure-fire methods
of losing a friend Lend him money:
make friends with his dog show a
little attention to his girl friend
In certain Instances there is a
fourth manner that may be de-
pended on to a surety And that is
merely telling the truth: the simple
unbiased truth in vain effort to
prove your loyalty and friendship
Those who succeed best early
realize that truth is the least de-
sired of virtues Hence the progress
of "yes-men"
Take a politician for Instance
Termites get to gnawing around in
his belfry and he imagines he hears
the clarion call of an attoused popu-
lace demanding he stand for office
as our English cousins would
blandly put It He seeks council
among his friends and associates
And let one of them truthfully in-
form him that the tumult he hears
Is only a busy woodpecker perched
SIDE GLANCES - - - By George Clark
"Go ask my wife if she will plcose stop bidding and give
someone es:se a chance to buu this lunk"
114'71 N
iSV:h
THERe mum!
WE'LL TEND TO
THAT OLD TA
RiGHT AWAyl
1 t A
4e
kv)'t-)()' °A' l(I7:'21-::LrfPk44°:(
-441)74
:y
A1021(
4: 1 I N‘ ((row
'N))i b'r'
MO
kiee43Lorej
In answering the question "What is a man's worn
an?" Mr Beeckman makes it plain that the funda-
mental virtues appeal most to masculine taste—fen
erosity sincerity and chastity He says in short that
all men whatever their state of intelligence have onti
idea about women in common They believe that WI
are ministering angels
"I suppose this sounds pretty daffy" he goes on
not to say poetic but the truth is often that way
and a woman's success in this sophisticated world
depends primarily upon whether she is willing to
play up to tills simple belief Don't get me wrong
By ministering angel I am not implying an ability
to cook mend sew wash or run a household What
really gets a man is the belief that a woman is well
disposed toward life That gets him over and over
again and always will"
Letters From The Oklahoma News Readers
was a friend indeed not only to the
row Wilson will receive the same individual but to the public al
condemnation as the betrayers of 1rge
Lincoln when they placed a carpet- They say that truth never hurts
bag government in the South that is unless there's somethini
L C GISH rotten in Denmark Nor does turn
ing the light on any worthy project
do other than make it stand out
Friends sharp and clear Those who fear
Editor of The News: these two qualities have something
up their sleeves or solid ivory above
There are three sure-fire methods t shoulders
elf Incina a fripnri Tpnri hill rtIntloV
HERB B SEWEL
Today's Best Poems
This column Is open to all Oklahoma
writers No remuneration is offered
No manuscripta will be returned
VISIONS OF BEAUTY
I planted future beautifulness
!Today in a smoothly made bed
I Dark tiny poppy seed containing
An embryo of a flower flaming red
As I sowed and covered them gently
I In my heart was a song and no
gloom
My thoughts raced away to a gla11
day
When they would be In full bloom
Vivid heads and snowy white ones
Dusty pinks and lavender hues
Plumy heads on stalks pea green
Dripping with dawn's silver dews
All day rm happy and contented
As I stir and pulverize the sod
Sowing seed and patiently watching
For the revelations of God
HArriE MOORE
Waurika Okla
DESIRE
I can think of a thousand loves
Better for me
Than you
A thousand things my interest to
hold
If these
I but choose to do
I know of loves more understanding
Some of them more true
But none of them can satisfy
The longing I have for you
LYNN MOSS
Test Your Knowledge
wlffm(mxr1W1FV
-
't1TIUM
1 For what invention is sir
Richard Arkwright famous?
2 In what city was the World!
Fair leolumbian Exposition) of 1893
held?
3 Who wrote the Chris tm a
story called The Haunted Man?
4 Are women eligible to the of-
Lee Of President of the U S?
5 What was the former name of I
Nova Scotia?
6 Name the birthstone for No-
vember
7 Who was Don Jose Alvarez?
8 In which ocean is the island
of South Georgia?
9 Name the capital of Oregon
10 What is the proportion 01
water in watermelons?
Ans copiti On e sqi rfl et
nong
44
04
PLE
PRE
: Coun'
1
in cut
ineligi
leader !
and as
T:
people
b een u
they 1
1
their de
and prc
b Rep S
hour-lox
Blue Rc
Simul
I rector I
homa I
1 met wit
t the corn
St and
T-
structioi
---‘-mcietzoLARiire) estimate
A Board
4ongr as Ma 14À : t
MEALS from 01
r 01
AJJ Ar Ara' Fir ILLICt I-otgazatita
AN I) N VJ
The (
14-
said the
on their
be more
more men elope with their cooks? Instead it's the said tho
hussy at the cigar stand or the lovely chorine who on their
thinks a cutlet is a kitchen utensil who snares the be morc
married male from his fireside And many times she r In tiv
drags him right out from under the nose of e wife three co
who is a magician with pots and pans k Hargrav
In answering the question "What is a man's wpm t West—a
an?" Mr Beeckman makes it Main that the funcia Cody an
11 If "The
favor oi
to relati
) !pie" sal
Mort org
I
rt Under
of 1peopte I'
Id sons anc
to 1Sof them
g came el':
y
It " They
11 I only if
E'r the lira
'support
— William:
-14
I 'the coin
tives to
1 'rhe S
1 le ti
— The S
rv7771lne ti
on his right shoulder and that for
girl
'
is scratched off his list like a poor plus ins
relative Still those that coddle and 111e1P to
a3sure him that he's the big noise hies 'rot
have nothing to lose and everything 4 The
sion
to win the other candidates are board's
just as deluded and should the Vithdra!
miracle happen and he win out to the
! they're setting pretty is in or
I Still there have been a coup lo The f
instances lately where a local cord public 't
respondent has had the temerity te I °plain t ti
stick a neck out and give the real g dinini I
lowdown Time will prove that here counter
! was a friend indeed not only to the ilioney :
individual but to the public al not eper
large e
Reflec
In the
federal 1
'commis
inelig ibli
"putting
the depc
advance
The 1
$85147
With 50
mission
-:000 for
vilepartm
$64100
I: "The
administ
'"'is prize
titre to 1
appropri
Direct
dictatori
pen
me of
be
t DI 50 n
too1111 takl
"' the adn
-
'1
11 1
:
foul
(
c
c
r
c
tk
-"'77' tt:a4
4
t() 0 a' Aft1
L"4!-
I I- ittlwr
-derAN 1--4411
d w d w d
t ik : ' ' 1 I 't I 'rIN "
V - No
-16- ))
ii -11 t IA s-7
614 77 : :-i4 i - ' '''i':' ' '' Ltze
kt - '' '' d 010
I are - i"-7 f (
I
e ' f I IS - 4
'f '- PROtirceüTtl) Y :i b'9'''' ''-' ?
i 41 I P'- '' ' '''' v TAx c--'F'':-4':-- ' ' ' ' 1
i' -4 1110''-'-'s
't'
-
i
fi 1 ell ' it- :
'I'ill 71r 4':: fil
qi 1 1' 1 ' 71 :'- ' -
-2 11: I 1: 1 ) 4 e
1!1! '!A NNO ctr 1 I 0
vK12414e1--42-40-y 7)N: ' Ntotizoit93
?:1 V7
k
it: 4z 4‘ i'":'"6:y-'1:7'477'':-''
7 ) i' 0
'' 4 e (1?) Ar )41' t ye t-
) A-ci""ii7((A)r-- -:-c1)!-' - - - k- ))
e te-
ett k
le N (1'4ts(
k TYV'l '
ih e)) vc1 c 40-1 ---zi
:
p
74 c - Tr s1 ei:-t'1?)-:!-77
q 4(c--ww " --:‘i:0:3i-:11:1:
14r --t -1
'xe::- 7-2 tte:'::r it --'1'- : ("I A '
4-4 e- 5:": to 4:::
-::-& dr--k' 1 i-o '''Nce4")'':! tii:1-4'!" 1 11 7-'ty'
: - r 6 0 k'itl(:ct ':- t! - !: v (' lf i
t:44 y 44 H '" '' - ' :- - 4 '
0-- -- '
t --N
-774N '-'c ---01'1 --fr -:k: ' : e-b--cuw -4::- -
41
t-' s e ' 71 ': I
'''-Li'F- e-r-' --)11' I Ifr'l:-1-:- 1 u4-cet D
t-i ofia rt-
- r ecieeemmre
J
el
TO'
I
I
':- --LI
I i
1—I ‘
LT" 1 I
III f!:
' I s !
I
I 11111 ) it ' 41 1 i-! ----T
i ill
I eL(1:4
t 1 9-"74:—-77-e:10:-
I i
: 1'0-:
--::4''
t‘ 01 It-:-
' 9PP400-11L''
' 3—Ses l''-f7:"'' - ---
No- —Al - s!‘-'2-' el ! 1 --11!i-
1 ))t) - '4iLl'- -:-: : ' r:i TeL P er'''
(
y
tkiQ
v v- tAgiT " zt xv 4--(1' I !tv
ic '11-(r :: L
l'---- -i - - -- 7k- t :i
4
ot‘ :fit 1I1:i7i?
- - i frOrr'7-- )
C:!:- 1 a!--fr i
! : i ' '4: 4 - c i
'' 7( t -4
4tci
2ie -! ' t ' : --1:
''' ' N ik-- ' ' f' ?4 's '-i r:
it' ') i -i i ILc --:t-
hi2°'
i
-' t itti'll4 :-:i--:-:i
-'' t1)----:- -- -
ft N: ' 't ' s--: ' ':- e 14
t
0----'''-
- Iffs ( ott—4 111: :3 '7- 1
el
'1 '14'14':' Lt11 k i I I ' --41-4— s i kAEL st
I ot
'' ' 1 : -"1- '714f 3 t( l'el li
I
$ 11
A
3
41 ‘ is- !8 0
if '' tr i4 ' : -
: 4-
' '' 1 '' 4 st t 1 ' e4"1'r
- 4 - ce'40 ' i'-
v o
UK IN 4S11-1‘ Itt4 V g 11-Yr
I I
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Fredericks, Robert T. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 148, Ed. 2 Thursday, March 3, 1938, newspaper, March 3, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2014148/m1/4/: accessed May 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.