The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 338, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1938 Page: 4 of 20
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PAGE FOUR
The Oklahoma News
A Scripps-Howard Newspaper
LEE HILLS Editor
CHARLES L NICEOLSON Business Manager
Owned Pinfl published daily
by The Oklahoma NP S Co
407 West Orand-av Oklahoma
City Okla Entered at Okla-
home City Okla nostril flee
as second class mall matter
Pull reports ot the United
Press Serinpa-Howard News-
paper Alliance NEA Service
PHONE 7-155i
By carrier 200 a weekt In
lid once Ho a month $9b0 a
year
11 Pe mall In advance In
-5111" D Oklahoma $IWOO a year else-
where $1250 a year
"Give Light and the People Will Find
Their Own Way"
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 9 1938
This Would Head Off War
DESPITE DENIALS from No 10
Downing Street home of the British
prime minister and from the foreign
office a c oss the way The London
Times' suggestion that new frontiers be
drawn in Czechoslovakia to place the
Sudeten Germans inside the reich can-
not fail to do great harm
Already it is known that British lead-
ers are split over central Europe some
favoring aid for Czechoslovakia in case
of Nazi aggression others advocating
hands-off The Times' comment can
hardly fail to create the impression that
the British cabinet at heart favors the
latter and that of course means valu-
able ammunition for Herr Hitler at a
most crucial moment
The key to world peace right now is
empire unity If Great Britain Ireland
and the Dominions stand together and
let the Fuehrer know that invasion of
Czechoslovakia in the face of far-
reaching concessions would mean war
with Britain there would be no war At
least there would be no war now and a
war postponed is a war that may never
happen
Discrimination
TO SHIP certain kinds of freight—
say butter eggs and dressed poultry—
from Oklahoma City to Chicago costs
130 cents per 100 pounds according to
the 'rVA's report to Congress on the
interterritorial freight rate problem The
distance is 775 miles
But to ship similar freight from Roch-
ester N Y to Alton Ill which is ex-
actly the same distance costs only 90
cents per 100 pounds
Thus if an Oklahoma City producer
has such a product that goes by freight
to Chicago he is penalized 40 cents per
100 pounds as against a New York man-
ufacturer shipping similar products to
his market In Illinois
This illustrates how the freight rate
differentials militate against Oklahoma
and other parts of the South and the
Southwest
And it demonstrates why The Okla-
homa News joined with other leading
newspapers of the South and Southwest
recently in a declaration which said:
"Discrimination in freight rates has
long been a barrier to the development
of the South and Southwest Its re-
moval should be the first item on the
program for economic upbuilding of
the South because the justice of the
South's case in this matter is unques-
tioned and it can be won with the least
delay"
Centralized Relief Control
WITH STATE AND NATIONAL gov-
ernments contributing to Oklahoma's
heavy relief load and with many cities
and counties helping too it may not be
easy to work out a central state agency
to check on all relief cases The Okla-
homa congressional delegation is asking
the establishment of such a unit as
well as seeking additional WPA funds
There is no doubt that such a check
Is needed Now it is not certain the WPA
worker is not also drawing some form
of state relief Even the state's agencies
are divided and some of the cities are
providing relief funds to use as they
see fit If all these and other groups
could be co-ordinated sufficiently to give
an accurate check undoubtedly much
duplication could be prevented
Johnson Says:
By HUGH S JOHNSON
BETHANY BEACH Del Sept 9—The
vice-president of the American Association
of Applied Psychology has made a vigorous
plea to put his fellow soul-probers in a
position to turn their psychological wolves
loose on our soldiers and sailors and the
one-third" of our population who he said
need advice about their behaviour — pre-
sumably WPA workers and the unemployed
on relief
It wouldn't be worth a paragraph if the
historical fact did not remain that they
actually got away with
it during the World War '71
In temporary command 41111
of the bulk of an Mien- ' :
try division in 1918 I had
a division psychiatrist on
my staff and he was a
lieutenant- colonel—that's I
how high they had
bopped In charge of the ''
detail of the execution of
the World War draft a ti
principal annoyance was g
in trying to run inter-
ference to save the draft
boards and the millions of registered young
men from the ministrations of these mental
meddlers They had sold themselves to the
secretary of war and staving them off was
no easy task They don't get many cus-
tomers in peace and the prospect of abso-
lute license to comb over four million help-
less soldiers under orders was to them what
a haunch of raw horse meat is to a hungry
tiger WPA workers are almost as help-
less and what is proposed now is Juicier
bait than the conscripts of 1918
Chance of Action
NO DOUBT psychiatry has its proper
place in connection with other treatments
for the cure of sick souls but that place
Isn't messing around barrack and squad
rooms with a dream-book trying to tell the
C O that Corporal MacEadden would be
better placed as a brigadier-general or even
suggesting to Major-General Doublestar that
his real place is with a hay-and-manure
fork in a cavalry stable—although the latter
4
Academic Freedom
DR ICKO IBEN librarian at Okla-
homa A & M College has been cleared
of the charge of being a Nazi sympa-
thizer and recommended for a yearly
contract as a competent librarian and
a valued member of the faculty This
result should be satisfactory to every
friend of academic freedom
In a free country that strives to place
a liberal education within the reach of
the people an educator certainly should
be entitled to his own political beliefs
To kick out a competent educator be-
cause he happened to believe in Hitler
who is thoroughly disliked by most
Americans would be to place this state
in the same tyrannical class to which
Hitler belongs That wouldn't be as bad
as a blood purge of course but cer-
tainly would be out of line with the
basic ideals of this nation
One City's Good Example
OKLAHOMA CITY is about twice as
large as Kansas City Kas the city that
has gone 100 days without a traffic
accident death That good example
should be emulated by Oklahoma City
now seeking to establish a reputation as
the safest city which it certainly isn't
on the basis of its accident record in
recent months
Luck isn't the only or chief reason for
Kansas City's excellent showing Traf-
fic authorities here will do well to study
the Kansas City traffic regulations to
determine what that city has that we
lack
Whither Mexico?
THE GROWING friction between the
United States and Mexico has more than
usual significance Ever since President
Lazar° Cardenas sent ex-President
Calles into exile a couple of years ago
because the latter was not taking over
foreign holdings fast enough to suit him
Mexico has been trending more and
more leftward
The United States has never ques-
tioned Mexico's right to expropriate any
American property within her borders
It has merely demanded effective com-
pensation for the properties taken in-
dicating a willingness to accept arbitra-
tion by an Inter-American agency In
all the history of International relations
It would be difficult to find a fairer or
a more neighborly proposition
To the American proposals however
Mexico replied In effect that she was
now unable to pay Whereupon Secretary
Hull quite naturally suggested the post-
ponement of further expropriations
Meanwhile he also proposed she might
set aside funds with which to assure
payment of whatever sum might even-
tually be agreed upon Mexico accepts
arbitration but makes It clear that ex-
propriations will continue and seems
entirely to disregard the principle of
'effective compensation"
Politicians everywhere have always
found it easy to stir up a following by
promising something for nothing For
tin past two years President Cardenas
has been promising the Mexican masses
elysium by turning over to them the
national wealth Now he must make
good or he will be in trouble
Thus in the dispute between the
United States and Mexico things are
not entirely what they seem This was
recently made pretty clear by Vicente
Lombardo Toledano head of Mexico's
leftist labor organization of which Pres-
ident Cardenas is in a sense an Instru-
ment He admitted that just before the
seizure of the British and American oil
properties the companies' final offer to
the workers "would have been a victory
for labor over capital within the Mexi-
can oil Industry But by refusing the
offer (and seizing the property) It was a
great victory of the Mexican people
against foreign Imperialism"
The Issue thus raised is of immense
importance to the United States Not
only is this country's good neighbor pol-
icy involved but also the Monroe Doc-
trine For should Mexico confiscate for-
eign property and the Idea spread to
other Latin American countries strong
powers across the Atlantic might not
take it lying down
It Is Very Easy to Carry This Psyche
Business For Beyond Needs Or Sense
diagnosis is frequently easier to make with
some degree of confidence than the former
I don't know just what they now pro-
pose to do but in the World War they
wanted to "psyche" the callow masses of
young recruit civilians and not only tell their
responsible officers where they should be
placed for rank and duty but also tag each
poor devil with a descriptive diagnosis that
would go wherever he went and condemn
him to their prophecies of what he could
do for the lest of his service When the
psychers begin telling hungry reliefers that
its not their bellies but their brains the
fur will fly
Any such mass operation in this shadowy
art Is Just pure quackery and hideously un-
fair to its victims who would literally not
be able to call their souls their own
0
Way For Both
I ANXIOUSLY examined my official di-
vision psycher on the interpretation in
terms of mental experience of identical
dreams that come back again and again—
like Lincoln's tragic sailing ship or one that
had occurred to me lie glibly gave it It
turned out to the precise reverse of fact
When I had convinced him of this his ex-
planation was: "That's just the trouble
Such recurring dreams indicate either what
I have said or the precise reverse of what
I have said The trick is to hit the right
one"
That was very interesting but it is a
hell of a rule on which to judge a mans
prospects in a particular job I would rather
toss a coin or shoot craps for it
There is too much ofthis "rating" stuff
in the Army and Navy anyway An officer
goes from duty to duty and commander to
commander and each one rates him If any
single one gives him a very black mark it
hurts all his future chances The competi-
tion is fierce and the system clearly tends
to make hand-shakers cat-purrers and
Charlie McCarthys out of a class of public
servants who above all things should be
genuine fearless and courageous To have to
kow-tow to a dream-doctor as well as a
commander to get ahead might be incon-
sistent and it is certainly far too much
to ask
An Oklahoma
Slant on Things
By
Mrs
Walter
Ferguson
Heaven help 118 what next? An
ambitious couple In an Ohio city
have armed themselves with candid
cameras and all for the good of
matrimony Each will take snaps
of the other in the act of commit-
ting a minor offense For example
when Hubby flicks his ashes on
the front-room rug Wifie can prove
his misdemeanor by showing him
in the act and Hubby sneaking
up on the Little Woman while
she's snitching his last razor blade
will have a camera record of the
theft
It is expected that this will prove
a fine method for cementing matri-
monial bonds Frankly rm dubious
about the whole thing Bobbie
Burns didn't know much about hu-
man nature when he wrote the fa-
mous line "Oh wad some power
the glide gie us" Few of us really
want to see ourselves as others see
us Its too hard on our vanity
According to the modern version
no good husband flicks ashes on
the rug or leaves the bathroom and
dresser drawers in a mess or scat-
ters newspapers over the house He
has too much consideration for
others and colleges today are in-
structing young men to spare the
wife such trouble
Yes my lads spare the wife and
spoil the marriage! That's what
will happen Few and far between
are the women who want mates
they can't pick up after Why?
Because nothing makes a female
feel so virtuous or put upon or
overworked as a man who comes
in like a zephyr and goes out like
a cyclone She enjoys the belief
that without her he would exist in
a welter of untidiness that his
digestion would be ruined and his
character disintegrated if he were
left to his own devices for so much
as a fortnight Don't you suppose
wives too like thinking themselves
Important and necessary to a hus-
bands happiness?
It has been my misfortune to
know well several women who had
orderly husbands They are among
the most unhappy creatures I've
ever met They felt frustrated and
invariably became embittered man-
hating cynics It's your bull-in-thechina-shop
type of man that most
girls adore no matter what the
professors say
Broun Says:
Just a Suggestion for
A Choir of Politics
By HEYWOOD BROUN
SOMEBODY SHOULD found a
chair of politics in one of our big
universities There are courses in
politics and government but I
mean Just plain politics Professors
of American history do get around
to discussing the politics of the past
and the underlying issues which
were obscured by political catch-
words of the period We know now
that George Washington was called
"a monarchist" and Thomas Jeffer-
son a "Jacobin" and we realize that
the words did not help very much
to a true understanding of the con-
flicting theories of government
which troubled our ancestors
There ought to be somebody this
autumn in one of the colleges com-
petent to give the young men and
the young women the realistic low-
down on the struggle between
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John
Nance Garner The younger gen-
eration has a greater stake in that
contest than in the campaign which
went on to prove that Washington
was an aristocrat and Jefferson a
Red
Somebody else will have to put up
the money but I will be glad to
suggest two names competent to
conduct the course I have in mind
These selections are not based upon
personal political views but on the
ability to do a factual job Of
course the two best men for the
job are tied up with other commit-
ments I imagine that both Mr
Roosevelt and Mr Farley are too
busy to take on the job
It has been my rule that when in
doubt it is a good idea to call on
newspapermen I nominate Ray-
mond Clapper and Arthur Krock
One I gather is pro-New Deal and
the other mildly anti but I again
Insist that I would endeavor to en-
list their knowledge of the technique
of American party politics rather
than any contribution drawn from
their personal leanings
Obscure Issues
OF COURSE there are other
commentators and correspondents
who know what all th! shouting is
about but there seems to be a tra-
dition in journalism that political
reporting should be almost wholly
engaged with the floor show itself
and not with any happenings back-
stage As I see it the art of politics is
largely concerned with obscuring
Issues This applies to both liberals
and conservatives Even candor it-
self can be a strategem I am neither
objective enough nor sufficiently in-
formed to qualify even as an in-
structor in the college course which
have mentioned but I gather from
Mr Clapper and Mr Krock that
I am not allowing my own fervent
beliefs to run away with my ves-
tigial reportorial acumen when I
say that the dictatorship charge in
regard to Mr Roosevelt's participa-
tion in the party primaries is
strictly bunk and known to be such
by both friends and foes who are
actually in the game
Indeed it is difficult to understand
just how anybody can be fooled by
the cry of ''Rubber stamp!" and
"One man rule!" when it must be
evident that the President's imme-
diate modest purpose is to avoid re-
pudiation by his own party
THE OKLAHOMA NEWS
I
War Maneuvers Bring Out All Germans
LETTERS
Picnic Was
Real Success
To the Editor:
The Oklahoma Welfare Federa-
tion wishes to thank your paper for
the publicity and notice you gave
of our state-wide basket dinner last
Sunday at Belle Isle Park Several
hundred from out of the city
brought their baskets and enjoyed
the day They commented on the
beautiful park and the service of
the railway and park board ren-
dered and expressed the hope of re-
turning again
Several hundred stayed over and
took part in the Labor Day parade
A W GREEN
Woos Answers
For These Questions
To the Editor:
I wish to ask a few questions and
If I could get answers from the peo-
ple I am sure it would be Interest-
ing reading We care little about the
Old Deal We want it to remain in
the garbage We have been trying
the New Deal for almost six years
now Its time to decide on some
other deal and I am sure the best
deal that could be enacted Is a
Square Del and stop the spider
who is weaving the web around the
poor people before all their liberties
have been taken from them
Roosevelt seems to think he has
done wonders and I am sure he has
He has held people down to pau-
perism and has made them like it
Sooner Poetry
BLACK CLOUDS PASS ON
A huge black cloud passed over the
moon
Shutting me out from its light
Leaving only the tiny twinkling
stars
To brighten the dark of the night
But the cloud moved on and once
' again
- I basked in the moon's mellow
glow
And I knew that no matter how
dark the night
The clouds must eventually go
A huge black cloud passed over my
life
Shutting me out of the light
And only the twinkling stars of
hope
Brightened the dark of the night
But the cloud passed on as they
always must
And the star of hope shone bright
It illumined my path and I found
my way
And emerged at last in the light
MRS JOHN SHRUM
Shawnee Okla
SIDE GLANCES
"Gregory knows the head waiter awfully well He prob-
ably will come over and chat with us before we leave"
4
I wholly disagree with what you say but will de-
fend to the death your right to say it —Voltaire
News readers are Invited to
express their views in these
columns religious controver-
sies excluded Make your let-
ter short so all can have a
chance Letters must be signed
Nampo withheld on request
People have become paupers and
many are on the dole He has no
doubt done wonders in having peo-
ple think prosperity is just around
the corner Now I want 'someone
to explain anyone what's been done
to better the future conditions of
those who have been forced to go
to the bottom of this depression and
live out of garbage cans and live
in scrap houses
I will ask any human to go to
Oklahoma City and see the condi
Peg ler Says:
ByWESTBROOK rEGLER
NEW YORK Sept 9—Another
twinge in the neck incidental to all
discussions of this countrys rela-
tions with other peoples in the re-
current bushwah about America's
debt to this or that race or nation
for its contributions to American
literature science and art
This country doesn't owe any race
or nation anything for any such
contributions Those which we have
received and put to use have been
paid for and More by American
inventions and many others which
are talked up so highly were unsuit-
able to our nature and have been
kicking around in the drawer like
so many initialed belt buckles
Moreover those which we did re-
ceive such as Shakespeare and the
radio our laws and liberties were
not intended as
'altruistic c o n- -
tributions to us - L1404L
any more than
the electric
light the tele-
phone and tele- $t
graph were in- I
tended as con-
tributions to ths
peoples of for- :
eign lands We '
took something
from them They
got more in return
You walk down the street today
and ask a thousand people to iden-
tify Gieuseppe Verdi and tell you
something he did or hum you a
bar thereof and not more than
eight will even know what you are
talking about A slightly higher
proportion may be able to remem-
ber having heard of Dante and a
By George Clark
tions there You will find no doubt
people that have gotten so poor and
discouraged that it would be im-
possible to bring them back to de-
cency Our bad conditions are
caused by the people being hoodooed
by promises We have some good
people who have tried to relieve the
old people by pensions
Now I will ask you do you think
Its right to pay $125 per month to
600 people and the main political
guys $3000 to $6000 per year and
to pay out to the old people a
small pitiful dole? Do you think
we ought to keep our mouths shut?
I say no and when time to vote
use your own head Don't listen to
those who are putting you in the
garbage can Now I ask again for
the people to write their sentiments
Rocky Okla W J
Y
The Books on What Americo Owes to Any Notion Are
Very Easily Balanced By Our Contributions in All Fields
book with a lot of hell-fire illus-
trations but in the main this coun-
try favors home-talent music and
poetry
Fovorites From Home
OUR SONGS are the Stephen
Foster songs plus "The Banks of
the Wabash" and the songs of
Irving Berlin and that school Our
favorite poetry is home grown and
even if our best artists have gone
abroad to study they are not our
favorite artists as our best artists
often observe with a trace of
pique
Even our profanity is so distinct-
ly native that Rudyard Kipling
who had messed with British Tom-
miss recruiting from the slums of
London was fascinated by the
shocking force and originality of a
phrase which he beard on the docks
in Seattle
And just as a rap on the knuckles
of anyone who here attempts to
reach out and claim the works of
Irving Berlin as a Jewish contri-
bution to American art let it be
understood that there is a catch in
such claims Berlin is an American
who does his stuff as an American
and anyone who claims his works
as Jewish works must be prepared
to accept the works of Dixie Davis
as Jewish works too
Similarly if the creditable works
of Americans of Italian or German
Irish or whatever other birth or
descent be claimed as contributions
by the homeland to American civi-
lization then the discreditable acts
of other of the same birth or
strain must be accepted too
That wouldn't be so hot In fact
whenever anyone takes some foreign-minded
hands-across-the-sea
American at his word and offers to
award full credit for all achieve-
ments the bad as well as the good
which stand against the names of
members of any particular group
the answer to that is a shill pierc-
ing 'scream of outrage
Good With Bod
WITH NO exceptions worth con-
sidering all our immigrants came
to the United States with no high-
minded intention to contribute any-
thing but merely to escape the
degradation poverty wars plagues
and oppression of their native coun-
tries They and their descendants
have made many contributions if
you want to use a noble word in-
consistent with the individual per-
sonally ambitious motives which im-
pelled them But they contributed
as Americans
They were they are Americans
and they wrought in the same en-
vironment which is always offered
as the excuse for bad conduct by
others whose works it is desired to
disown on behalf of various groups
By this process the United States
gets no credit for anything good
produced by European refugees and
their descendants but full blame
for everything for which there is
reason to be ashamed
There is too much accent on
Shakespeare too as a contribution
to the American something when
the fact is that an all-American
named Gene Tunney was hooted in
the streets as a pretentious intel-
lectual fop for boasting that he had
dipped his bill into one of the
Henrys and contrary to American
experience hadn't gagged on the
first line
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 9 19
DON'T
WORRY
by
WALT W MILLS
Hard Labor
The cotton picker picks away
And earns about a buck a day
Or possibly earns two or three
If gifted with dexterity
But never really earns i lot
As everyone must wist and wot
And often he must feel in brief
'Twere better to be on relief
Yet men acclaim the sturdy toil
Of those who till the fertile soil
And grow the cotton corn and wheat
That other men may dress and eat
Who plow and sow and reap and pick
Although they sometimes pause to kick
Insisting government should do
A whole lot more to see them through
The city dwellers praise the farm
And talk about bucelic charm
But of them very few are found
Who want to till productive ground
Or grow a crop of this or that I
Instead of dwelling in a flat
For on the farm believe this bard
Is work indubitably hard
The esteemed New Yorker intimates the
Army is likely to change the color of its field
uniforms from olive drab to slate blue and we
mean to ask Maj Gen W S Key about it
The main idea as we understand it is lower
visibility although ft subtaltern still will be
conspicuous enough for the girls to notice him
The Army shifted from blue to khaki around
the turn of the century and modified that into
the darker olive drab a little later to keep the
doughboys from being a show-off before the
enemy if any But doubtless that old Armyl
blue while scarcely a race track hue was
colorful stuff compared with the contemplated
slate blue The French army after being shot'
and half shot in red troosers at the start of the
World War changed its uniforms to horizon
blue supposed to be considerable camouflage
We liked the American and British uniforms
better but know little enough of the tactical
advantages of the different colors Still we
have friends enough amon the Army officers
to move us to remind thl authorities that a
complete new outfit is pre y tough on a second
lieutenant
Rufe Hoskins says this is a free country in
which those who take moving pictures are
pretty apt to show them
By Way of Explanation
ONE REASONABLY constant wader writes
to inquire how we can keep our cheerfulness on
straight with the world balanced on the brink
of war Well for one thing balancing on the
brink is among the best things the world does
Also we doubt if Hitler however gifted at
strutting while sitting down is as conceited as
Kaiser Wilhelm was when arranging Der Tag
Besides if hostilities should spread in Europe
It probably wouldn't be our war until someone
was elected on the theory that he kept us out
of it As a final calming influence there Is
Mencken's theory that P lot of people enjoy a
war including some of the combat troops That
wouldn't be those who get maimed or slain in it
but the vastly larger number me-fly going along
for the ride Then there would be those at
home elected to make the four-minute speeches
and willing to talk longer In view of our
pacifist leanings it is with some reluctance
that we admit a pretty fair time during the
expedition that led to such small time fighting
as we knew We shouldn't care to'travel on a
troopship again but it is one way to get there
when one is very young
a
Glad Tidings
It won't be very lor g until
The celebrated sausage season
In case you really want to spill
Some cheers with rather ample reason
It didn't surprise to read as we did latel
in The Los Angeles Times that fishing is the
most popular sport in this country In our
large circle of acquaintance we can think of
but two persons who have told us definitely
they don't like to WI Since we can't name
three we let it go at that It did surprise us
rather to learn that homback riding is gainin
rapidly as a popular pastime Russell Hogi
will hate to hear that The other surprise i
this resume is that the popularity of golf
declining steadily although we still expect
be pursued by a foursome in a hurry the ne
time we start exploring the rough Meanwhil
It seems a sound idea for the Government
proceed with the construction of a few mor
lakes and hatcheries Most of those who wan
to fish would like to catch something occasion
ally if it can be arranged
There won't be college jobs enough to me
the demand but a competent halfback can sti
manage to get along
Oklahoma Press
There Is A' n Angle of Pride
Even in Loss of Teachers
EACH YEAR Hobart loses a number o
school teachers to other schools in this an
other states which pay better salaries than th
local system is able to pay
This year has been no exception A hal
dozen members of the Hobart faculty electel
to return found better places elsewhere the
Is places which pay better salaries
From one point of view this loss of teach
ers from year to year amounts to Just tha
—a loss to the community
But there is an angle of pride to be con
sidered
!
DR W B BIZZELL president of the Unit
versity of Oklahoma expressed that opinion
when Joe Brandt former manager of The
University Press resigned to accept a similar
position at Princeton which paid a much larger
salary one which this state could not afford
to pay
He said that we should be proud of the
fact that a large old eastern school would
come out here to Oklahoma to get an Okla-
homa trained man to fill such a position—
Hobart Democrat-Chief 1
Test Your Knowledge
1 What is the second largest city in popu-
lation in Italy?
2 What is white light?
3 Who created the French order of th)
Legion of Honor?
4 What is a cygnet? 1
5 In Greek chronology what was
Olympiad?
6 Do male mosquitoes bite?
7 In which country is the province
Ontario?
8 Which two signers of the constituth
became Presidents?
9 What is the meaning of the union lab
term "fink?"
10 With what sport is the name Willis
Kilmer associated?
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hills, Lee. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 338, Ed. 1 Friday, September 9, 1938, newspaper, September 9, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2014466/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.