The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 11, 1937 Page: 5 of 8
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Fort Peek Dam Project
Is About Half Finished
Largest River Control Un-
dertalcing in United States
Fort Peck Mont—Work on the
nation's largest river control proj-
ect the Fort Peck dam is about
half Completed and army engineers
believe that water may be started
backing up behind its four-mile-wide
barrier in 1938 to form a reser-
voir 180 miles long
Toe gigantic Nev Deal project
began in October probably
will be completed in 1939 its build-
ers believe
A total of $89000000 already has
been appropriated toward its esti-
mated construction cost of $108600-
000 The recent report of the bAigd
of army engineers recommend41 to
the present congress that $8706000
be rrovided for current censtruc-
lion costs
Because al this tremendous ex-
penditure of federal funds the
plains country of northeastern Mon-
tana has found the Fort Peck dam
a bonanza far exceeding the boom
days of gold discovery Peak pe
CHARMING ENSEMBLE
AMAZE A NI IN UT E
Ths charmtni!
f-Jf New York The gown
(t velvet 1l1(1 lace Inteucting
teitu:-es are the lIttle sTre r!eck-
1rie with it t he:Ivy whitc
1:ttlnee lace fte n-Atching
culT Ile hitt cf vCvet
w:th a veil of
-----‘—A74
IF LIU It f 11- 1
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CONTINENTAL -:
1
FENCE-
1 7-
iELEPHONE POLES IN THE
U S WOULD MAKE A SOLID
PENCE FROM NEW YORK TO
SAN FRANCISCO i
I o trf
i' FASTEST IN i
-k---1x
' ---'----I COLDER WATER
I
STEAMSHIPS HAvE I
GREATER SPEED
lI IN THE
I NORTHERN ATLANTIC
TkAN )N THE TROPICS COLD 1
wATER CoNOENsING THE STEAM
FASTER TO Give ImoRE POWER
- t--7-— t7----- - 1
-1ir
—- ---:::w'-ew--7z-i
-------14
MOSQUITO PST
vv'cRsr OF MANS ENEMiES
IN11IE INSECT WORLD IS THE
MOSQUITO COMMONEST AND
MOST WIDELY FOUND OP
BLOODSUCKING FLIES
sA
!ylk
-
4 4
7 4'-7161t
1
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SUCH IS LIFE—Beaten -Buddy"
F
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f11fiti I Att''
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SCIENTIFACT$ ---- By ARNOLD
N
4
Inventor of Hole in Dotio -hut Is
Maine Seafarer Cited for the doug-inuti Ancient r
Hall of Fame vttvrsrecaJ
Bangor Me--The late Captain
Hanson Gregory of Camden has
been mominated for the Hall of
Fame by the national doughnut com-
mittee The citation declares that
Captain Gregory who died fourteen
years ago "not only disco ered
the hole in the first place but in
the proper procez-s for en-
closing the hole in the illiithriut"
Captain Gregory went to SC3 as
a cabin boy became "cook and
hand" then second rnale at nine-
teen rate at twentyene and a mas
ter mariner at hverty-five
iT) all rigs and sizes Irc-m a lime
coaster to a fuli-r4iged ship
It was while he v as a sea cock
that he "invented" the rkle in the
1
nods such as last summer when
the pay roll numbered 10546 per-
sons involved an estimated monthly
pay roll of $1000000 Even during
winter shutdowns the pay roll has
not fallen below 4000 workers
These pay rolls explain why de-
partment of commerce retail bus-
iness surveys showed Valley coun-
ty to have a 474 per cent spurt in
MO years
Flood Control Secondary
Most New Deal river projects
are for irrigation or power devel-
opment Not so at Fort Peck where
these objectives are only secondary
The prime purpose of the Fort Peck
darn is to improve navigation on
the Missouri river
For more than a century army
engineers have wrestled with the
problem of controlling the turbulent
Missouri river to provide a safe and
adequate channel for navigation
The great Fort Peck dam driven
into the hills of Montana's desolate
badlands is the foundation of the
present program of developing an
eight or nine foot channel from the
mouth of the Missouri near St Louis
to Sioux City Iowa The channel
already is open to Kansas City and
work is progressing to the Iowa
point
The rate of flow in the Missouri
river N?aries greatly Frmn the great
reservoir formed by the darn with
its shoreline of 1600 miles water
will be available for release when
needed during the aatumn months
Not to Affect Mississippi
Army engineers emphasize the
explanation that the Fort Peck
darn will have little effect on Mis-
sissippi river flood control and was
not designed to keep that river in
check
The darn of earth fill is being
built with the effort of four gigantic
dredges which ptimp earth and wa-
ter from the river valley through
long pipelines The desired solids
settle out to form the fill for the
dom Py the eml of the dredging
season 50000000 cubic yarals half
of the estimated required till were
in place
Work will center on the darn it-
self in the next two years Lining
of almeat five miles of diversion
tunnels has Leon completed with
sore vairk remaining to be done
On control apparatus rid portals
A lissge flood spillway will he com-
pleted this summ(r
Ahent Jaly 1 1!)7 the river will
he diverted through the four-mile
log tiinnels nround the darn Then
the channel seetion of the dam ivill
he closed
'
:
‘AIS SPIRIT
J
m '1 N I S
11 :- i goSIE13
(1:3 0
C'---( ? XIY
aZ-:-X-I SE Z-
I ''' i 74'''''gri
' ---- A 4''''''1
I - -4t
1 r' A-ti1 4 ''''
--
t i (ie:g4 1
Hj4 4-t':'14'
teL i' (ec'
I kluged
douiMnut Ancient mariners and old
settlers reca:1 the time down to the
Civil ‘viiir and later when a dough-
nut was just a Emit' re chunk of
dough fried in fat For the most
part they tvere soggy greasy and
almost indigestible Naturally sea-
going folli called them "sinkers"
Gregory was a cook with progres-
sive ideas and when sarc5s1c re-
marks were made about his dough-
nuts he devised improvemetts
First instead of cutting the dough
into square pieces he cut it into
dIcs with a cake cutter Then he
put in more "shertening" and
putic(i the mass tip with taliirig
novider or yeast "rng" Ile witit-
ed until Ms fat vais si71ing hot be-
fore he Logan frying—hut even then
his doughnuts seemed a Lit teo
heavy
P-k:ng it CVer a bright dea
SCIENCE-PERIL
OR PROGRESS?
By
LEONARD A BARRETT
A cursory review Of the results of
scientific research gives the impres-
sion that progrsrmssmr-9
Fess and not
peril is the con-
'1 ribL
t-ti-1 which
science has made
to civilization
We should re-
-t-N2''' member limey-
er that the prod-
uct of many lab-
' -i"-:-4-0v oratories cannot
he accredited
' '"
t h effecting
economic or so
b i 7 w4
cial progress for
the reason that
the results are of
no practical value Granted that it
would be a scientific achievement to
split the atom if the split atom can-
not in some way be translated into
forces which will benefit our daily
life the experiment must remain in
A CAGER NOW
THE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
Larry I(!Ity tind
Lpnt eLd of Lio 1I:6 foothrill
vio Lz5 1-Hs
fray f:1)i11i 11T VL1e
Loll teJm
the realm of the -Lstrnct Not un
til the roe:rtgen were applied
to photographing the shadows of
WICS füFeigll palli(leS through
the ry Nrts cf the holy did
they nnihe ay contrhutn to the
we!fare ot humanity VThen the
Ilert7ian ‘aves became the medium
of wireless telegraphy the world
enthusiasti(Ily accla:med t h e
plitudds of the sclentist SAlonee has
made tremendous strides in the in-
vestigation of d!scases In the dis-
covery of anti-tox!rs human life
has
hen sfegtwrded and rein-
forced in a miraculous mariner In
the field of therapeutic's and in sur-
gery gt eat progress to humanity
has resulted from the eVPZT1Sion of
scientific recarrh The alue of
such research is beyond evaluation
‘‘otthy if sincere gratitude
But there is iir:091er s'f'e to the
rotary
Sciet( is largcy lespo!!yihie for
having made thns a machine age
The machine has human
laher not because the machine
cooM make a htler irti'e hut he-
cause it could make a cheaper one
‘-ith greater speed fins this fact
made for !-oclal rctrogresion or
pingre-s7 el tie vi-st army
of the t11:(!:Hoyed? Scence has
given us the arplane In spite of
catialt:os due to wreOcs
the -tirplare marks a clitinet -d
nCe UI the fil arronautcs
17-'11 what id)out the use uf aircraft
71v-7771-P-5-"""-""'
717:
----
kEINA VJE WE RE our 4
1--kXj Wall -THAT 1PAILER )
BURIES) A soma LIKIPER
''1--'716A TVIE TRMFR EXP' NICA-1-1-1
' m-m--'-mmr-
j
r
76usehold
By BETTY WELLS
I T ALL started with a pair of
blue Wedgewood vases They
were wedding gifts—heavenly ones
—and the bride sad -Let's have
our living room in blue!" any a
beautiful room starts lust that way
Maybe the nucleus will be a Ming
vase or a good Ibteheock chair
or a family sampler as the case
may be This particaliir bride has
her blue barna room raw nail ev-
eryone is happy ineltaima thoae
who visit her there
The walls of the rather Lage
square room are ()aster white and
the floor is covered with a Chinese
rug in beige with blue figures A
sofa (I) and an easy chair (2)
form the main furniture group and
go beneath three windows wadi oc-
casional tables (5) conveniently by
The sofa is covered in blue frieite
and the chair in aand colored &irate
A new type spinet piano (3) stands
in an opposite wall with the sec-
retary (10) near Two more easy
chairs (6 and 7) stand in front of
the fireplace—one is in dulled ap-
ricot velvet the other is old gold
A long low table (8) stands in
front of the fireplace and two small
cabinets (9) hold lamps at either
side
The three windows together are
treated as one with straight window
curtains of :fine net and to-the-floor
draperies finished at the top with a
curving swag drapery The drap-
eries are of English chintz Nvitil a
dark blue ground ard a mellowed
floral design
A pair of crystal lamps a marine
painting over the fireplace acces-
sories in brass two Currier and
Ives prints in blond (vood frames
--and the room ia complete
Well no it isn't complete For
these are Very newly-kN yds and
their idea has been to create as
happy and home-like a living room
as they can afford raw but it will
in times of var? Ilas it not Leen
used for destruction ai ken as for
coirstruction? To whht extent i're
these 1itlan(ed in tha ir relat'on to
the progrus of secet?
It st!onis that tle of sHett-
tirie re-earch face the ilterno-ves
of hicorning tither a peril or a
1)10-:ini-t Certainly it :s no Lleshg
whon poHitied g:mcs are niade for
the purpoie denaills!-Hug entire
citicy or armaments
tured for the exclm e purpose of
Lining pritle We all roceteilye
the fact that t:iire Ecieliee takes no
ciumitaice el the rLoral
Scien(e (It vith fi hi and not
inotives But tie
of t!:e ceurtry holdirr the lialmce
of poir iS ve-ted in the kil!ot
(i(e ie the right to determine
v!ielTher our cilitin'e screuce and
patriotism shall liecerue a curse or
a resi-irig
Are we unselfish enough to sub-
ordinate the released power of iiur
modern culture to a high spiritual
and ethical ideal? Upon the an-
swer depends the security or the
tall of our western civilization
? Wu'' rn Ni Urnpn
No Flying Tackles in Mongolia
t ofter like a r 1):!ting co( hs zihout to spring
two v:'estoN are E1Iiirtd inteting n colnhlt at the rccent
peoples' h(iy cf tc r Pf:-11ts 1c plhlic Nte the un:forms
of the wre!-11er
-
struck Cook Gregory:
"Why so much (lough in one ! my Neighbor
lie got a tinsmith to make an
implement that cut the dough into — — --- ------ - S el V
To Give Brain to Science
Vienna — Herr A Grusn official
of a large Viennese firm wfio
riot slept for 15 yezirs has rigreed to
rive his brain when he dcs to the
Rockefeller institute He sliffered a
injury in the Wurld
Teaching and Following Rules
"Aey ri--an" Ea id lii lio the tige
et Clinatown "curl toct-i the rules
of preper morzd condet bLit no
trzn Crl he re4d en to Zell44
LiS own tebaings"
:Says
implement that cut the dough into -oays
1 110001111
rings leaving the famous ix le in
the middle Clean the sides wLere the soot
"Life preservers" the sill'a:rs has ctilieeted in a w(Aid-burnirig Lie-
called them That proces vastly lace with a vieak mixture el at
improved the doughnut end soon and vinegar
cooks everywhere had adopted it
When preparing early rhubarb ter
res it lE it nectsrary to reel it
Just cut it into very thin shces about !
a quarter of 'an inch thick
Always hold a pastry bag in the
it hard with tie tube cles! to the I
spot On which the rmxture is to be
itprond Press the Lag lIghtly
the right hand to ferce the mixture
through
I S S
Water in which wee:en blanhets
are c tcpA and the
vr!Jng s r tLe Earle tcn-ltra
0
intS
Le an ever-growing ever-changing
room
The Wedgewood vases? Oh they
stand on the mantel proud as peacocks!
A "Fixing Fold"
Lights out Fuse blown Iley
‘14 here's a candle? Got any fuses!?
Oh heavens! run over to the
Ili-owns and see if they have any
It is just such crises as these that
cim ntake a pleasant honie into
rither A hectic one We remember
moments of sheer chaos resulting
from blown fuses in the middle of
a piutly Other small but impor
taRt details in the gentle art of
keeping a home often con cause mo-
mentary headaches that seem pret-
ty silly since a little plammig might
avert them
We are strongly in favor of a
"fixing fold" somewhere in the
house We have in mind a simple
compact cabinet preferably on the
first floor with such things as ex-
tra (wins an electric torch a screw
— e '
' I
VHVAVI 7— 1 -
-- --- 01
t t4Q't
t
- —
1iglits Out Fuse
driver and an asortment of milli
and screws all ready to hand You
nnght even find space for it On the
of the kitchen and ‘ve're ce-
tain that could find the right
ize cabinet for such a rurpose in
the IrraY cf steel ones that most
stores have now
Th would
ticept for cniergencles
you nlight include strong twine find
fufaiture glue in your Itst of "fix-
its'i—touniti tacks inending lane
faaid sharp sciiors NAcie unto httle
''idargaret if caught using thern for
rialier (toils)
V‘ie have a hnileh that niont
viiho hole to voirk around
tlie house are that nthinly
thcy never cat find iiny
took kihisilt a "fixing 1" on your
1)11 )1111' vihen lie conies !mine
Saturdriy 14fore 3'ou
lirrig up that toile long fist of
firtie tiiii es" First thing
yI u know he'll Le locking I'
to tear up and re'ouddl And
I eill up with a it den
liine if the trioteriak for
i'nniLng zifid rerairing holv-iehold
liocessita s ie co!-y lit fi!“d hnd
rtiady to use
And OrP mote addition—a group
it diphcale iwys for all impor-
!ant doors in the house ciin he kept
CIWet lit En-W(4h IlfC'S tly
tly lifmv Welts —NVNU Setvl(e
—
1N Cltari
t e'-'-" 'IN Yott
i
---N ti---7A MOJELo
-0 (0-6 c -0 EVR3 cr
11( (T-:& 4 rivst NI
v) '-- --
- '--7- HE- NEV-S'
d1-z c --'-
--1- l -1---OUNIP
" -- v:2t i -TULAA
141 AGAiNt I
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fk
v‘E1
4A-f - 'at SA 'ft
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1
POTPOURRI
First Firarms
BAiciwons point to the ure cf
'rinon y the Chinese as far
i 20 B C However the
rp'icat on (if powder to sma'll
firearms probahly had its incep
tion with te inveritjen f te nfle
in lif18 Gunpovder had lAen pro-
duced in the Thrteenth century
but its we wris ccblIned to large
and crude guns prorninent in
early sieves
t Vf!ern Nr Urcrt
-
— ---
ture it you witih to preveat thelt
iihrinking and Lecouting
Flan for an ourlior and lorter F ea
of Itoorn y rilantitg indoors er
in rats aLoratu7n salvia and aster
sicod3
4'S:a il Pumps" Fill Salt rars on Great Inagna
‘)1
‘‘ 01121)41 I) NI UV
4 I ()OK clown now1" shouts
a passenger "We're fly-
mg over a Sahara &sort
with Hue puddles on it"
'that's all water" explains the
'
it 'Tut it's so clear you see
right through it — In nip
sandy bottom The blue puddles lire
Itel deep ocean holes"
VhA with racing cloud shadows
play of light on green islands paint-
e d coral and Lilted sands the hu-
! roan eye is easily fooled by some of
physical geography's tricks on aa
air trip thrttugh the Da Inimas
TYo hours from Miami Florida
euut ("" I he "ult S! u'ill n ill B fast
! plane you reach this 6litbmile chain
of some 3000 ilritislbowned islands
cays old rocks that stretches al-
most to Ilitlut look"
! Just new we tire flying past the
I north tin of flat loarletbrewn An-
tiros island largest of the flak-mitts
its vitt shore laprod by milky shal-
lows known as -The 'Mud" !licre
rliennuttit sponge fishers ply their
back - breaking 1rudu ii the Hue-
l green depths
E htrynhe keeps his noi e pressed
- against the windows! Ichtg the
! lithcinalnut paniatima of reek
Jets sand bats and aunt-lined wa
tin s helow
so flat and le‘v rnmettical
arc tear I f tiese t iitrithe green
isles flail itbrn h c iii lat It and-
hasiteant11 fahey they suggest
! huge f'111O111111 t'S afloat on setts
if ophany
''IOot It thi11 lobe strip of 111(1
wIth a po ate's I Cr 111 II!" )O))a)
('!u UI )ThS
"rii)11S 1:lhinci (Salt
Gay 1 It hi to John T
-
re ovcr 11 Hand vt het(' lot-
! roan hwtillvvs from Canada and the
! Stales sim thewvc1 es in winter
I There's their Porcupine uhiul tod
Patialts0 Whel'h iS
()hi COltitqh tale Hi Child) I titntr
sook toort than U cats tat
big islaral is New Ii u Hence and
las no n Nassau catetal tix
Landing at Nas‘laii
Flashes now of i:allegnig ponies
training 1)11 a dusty track awl a golf
couri-e dotted alit patens bolt by
tropic wandh a ruined tovter which
the stett aril says vas Illackbeard's
- lookout ViVII ahandelled
forts their rusty muzzle - loading
ciinnon no mote harmful now than
Hind Dual ti)OthleSS V atch(Ings yet
still frotxning grimly at that sea
loig explored by Spaniards a n d
haunted by pirates
' Swift glimpses too of stately
! Government house the lirdish flag
and stiff sentries on patrol statentus
homes set in gardens aflame with
red yellow and purple Then lower
! we glide hack over the long riiirl'OW
harbor with Its trading schooners
: lazy White yachts and glass-bottom
sightseeing drIfting over C(d-
11 beds and canary-colored fish and
s o down to a smooth hatipless
One hears the greeting "Welcon
to the EleS of June!" as he scram
Lies ask)! e
From the dot k the arriving
visitor dites thircupti long straight
Bay street which Is the shopping
center of Nassau 11gh roofed
horse-drawn Ian ks hells jingling
and red curtains rapt:tog naive
and ()lit atO(Itig 11)001' lacyclos
! and huge sponge carts their cargo
bulky hail
"T uiuu 1 Ight" says your host
in mock nonillion el! a l'butte's lec-
ture "is Old Vert iltlontague t
tured hy the batty Arno ican navy
dtirtg the Ilevolattah -Tluit v harf
vhere tiey I Lpf(1
Is the sponge
rnatirph The hymns y tat hear iirf
sung by the old 14 omen who it
huii 111 :Old Chi) iiuhgei-i
V)111 thelt f'(1 them
ready to
"Ihn tire ail the-e- extated
people" ash crovding the
twat i1erst for ti
turtle theiht anti rat kiininny dclis?
Surely they can t l I Ina in tan
small town'
: "They doul They te liavelers
Each sei!on fin or tag liners etill
here on ('rt Jur ru whys Plus
those who come by planes and grit
vate yaelits Nassau vieter vntors
almost equal the wlcle peptiliimen
1 a the litiliarritts
"Fittyr:ne thenhand r eeple tlre
scattered through these islands
Flighty tur cent Zile iJuks and 11al-
tatiOeS niary ru' ui u i ret t()
TOO( 11 IV'S the Fi))1'1(iii
hIS is neiN you
flight say of how- iital hatory"
the Croas and traded trinkets with
the shy Lucayans
All these Lucayans--about 40000
eh e enslaved by Spaniards sent
to Werk in llispaniola mines and
the Bahamas left quite uninhabited
Yet in tune these islands were to
become not only a hiaturic stepping
stone by which Europeans and Afri-
cans reached our bliores but the
stage for almost incredible adven
tures
Enmity toward England bfter the
loss of the Great Armada brought
sanguinary conflicts which in lime
became notorious for the nautical
hrigandage of the buccaneers For
generations these outlaws wet e the
cause Of constant diplomatic file-
tam between London and Madrid
as a hen Eagliah sailors seized
from the Borton ship Blessing
were stripped by Spaniards tied
naked to mangrove bualies tin a
cay and left to die of
thirst in plain sight of ench other
Familia is the story Of "Jenkyns'
Ear" When Spaniards took an Eng-
lish ship tainunanded by a Captain
Jenkyns it is written that they emit
off one of his ears and banded it
to hun telhng hint to hike it biotite
and show it to his king! This ear
in a bottle he exhibited later in
the hottae of commons
Even Virginia and the Carolinas
dreaded there Bahama pirates es-
peially tine Edward Teach o r
"Plackbpard" With his Mat Cent-
iiiiid the QtleCil Anne's Revenge
nainntaig 40 pins Itaiekbeard and
amilher tarate leader spread terror
Ii aloag our South Atlantic coast
'Pirate 'treasure' Still Bunted
When in delperation the British
ininent finally sent that iron-
rated aiiveinor Woodos liotars to
laI a pirates and make Nosaau safe
for heneat traders it began the first
narinal life it had I'er known That
‘aa ifl I718 and the motto put on its
clait of arms was "Estailsis
1willuta Commereia"
Today Blackheart his long
eIiskeis VkAtrIt in three beribboned
braids tia had into his waitaband
among las 111iny 161()IS is but a
!amnia y--or a favorite model for
masquerade parties Yet
mound the corner la a mysterious
Ti))) with an "old map" for Fate
"Feaat then famine that's liven
our history" an Englishman horn
in Naas ill will tell you "Over and
over again m the last 300 years
hordes of people have swarmed into
Nassau on every errand from selb
ing slaves to running runt these
boom periods meant hits of easy
money but there's been many a
lean time in between"
When Liverpool used t2 Send 100
or more "blackbirders" to Africa
each year rind When our own
American built craft were in this
trallic as many as 74000 blacks
annually used to be sold int() the
West Indies of Vsr'hich the Bahamas
got their share
After Cornwallis yielded at York-
n loyalists Ill III to the Ba-
hamas bringing their slaves silver-
ware and other perglial Plierts
plantitions of cane and cotton
developed by thcae royal refugees
rore antalior tide of profits This
ebbed alen slaves were freed and
when competing t-whicullure grew
Up In the Slates
Agriculture Has Failed
Loyalists departng for England
after this land boom Is:aled tamed
their farms over to IX laves or
other retainers lacking skill capi-
tal Or sullicient energyy these lat-
ter failed Farming declined An
livirdt if on a hexer standard
-- vas Uttered by the sea lb rice
today the once proihictive acids 01 e
itro and brush-grown
Andros island I o r example
named for ill) e11 ly governor 44
the 1aY-c1)1L-Atts colony was on!:
the Ecnne of much sisal growing
kvell knOWn faitallial in England be-
Ing the owners Now all that is
)l liandoned
lalasaauls truly Golden Aye (:wrie
in our aar lien the city
for Cnnielnriov
lid) run1c1:i 1s coy thvn
Nk th Enti!-1-lot!irers litarcis of mon-
ny Ind gailiint eentlemen m Co)i
federate gray Smuggled cotton aald
lime for ten tanes its coat I the
Carchrals
!-aa ta court records tell sorry
tales of another activity that far
years rave a living to many
Bahama folk That aas "wrycking"
In ore !- year pc riial 313 "wri ks"
wcie calaially reported
rdlist recent hectic Loom for NIN-
51 hit ‘k hit h
paa-e1 en tle Ameriean prahla
tali law was repealed
laelteL alreets anti public ulati
Lea—many of these Nassau paid
this lah tale of alaola
11here llaturnhus landed th:s tHrli tale of alroli‘ flc
Fast and frrzt eV( 11 in prcs1erdy
entu-ts of our Wcslern Hem-a-Their Yet thday a new kind of prosper-
in fact occurred right here In lhtc ty liolesonie and it lying is
island That was ch- Octoher 12 coming to Nhssau This is its rise
14'12 vLen thscoverf S fi Wu-der rert vhoch
Atnerica in the forro cf Fan ! conipensatcs for thr varusha1 'eve
vador nue of former more exHtiog days
On this island facing the open
Atlantic is nahaaflect sot up hy Cowl Food Siikeiling
the Chicago Ilernid ri 1l1 10 Ct When 1l:1traan of the
rhemorate the Imahrg c1 the great it Ainswick Aathete Cult navigtor ilere aho a Ightraar-a2 tee found that the chid:en attend-
rises but nol tu 1how modern slaps irg a camp at AnIle Ilnr!land
hov to anchor vklcre the Sahta were he called in a (1cctol v Ili)
r la d :Ithcr te!p them sa:d that th-y wcte from
keep safely nway fer few vnaturs 1 digestive trouLlei hccouse they
venture nolk where Columbus set up ! were unaccuslcmcd to tscd total
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 11, 1937, newspaper, March 11, 1937; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2068193/m1/5/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.