The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 18, 1937 Page: 4 of 8
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tiOntowna
Weib r rhino- Uncle Sam's Gold I board
INIrs NJ Le 1111) 1 diic1r (1
Edwin 11 II 1)1cs:‘ 11e ‘vol Lew
WLglithg gold 11Irs it the 1111leV 111:t 11 i t
Vast I1oztr1 Ili( h its let utt I a 1 r 1 1
United 1tt1c:- 1w11 i cp ilery l'ott ii
thown here is vortn 5P()10
Skiing I las Taken FirA
Rank as Popular Sport
Growth as Winter Pastime
has Been Amazing
Vashington D C—This winter
the popular sports slogan is "Go
liorth Young Man—and bring the
ladies too" says the National Geo-
graphic society
''Ski trains plow northward from
big cities their coy 'snov coaches'
laden with skis ski poles skiers
end would-be skiers Fki planes op-
erate from Chicago And 'SnOW
boats' have been leaving New York
hsrbor to give pasengers several
Weeks of slides and tumbles at the
tamous ski centers of Europe
"Department stores offer a free
lesson with each ski suit or prac-
tice on borax-covered runs to try
out a set of ikis An international
winter sports meet was held in New
ItINCUI 11:011 MINI
Peter Robert Johnson thirty-sixyear-old
coal mine operator who
was rescued alive from the Pitts-
vein mine at Flemington W Va
after he had been bulled hy a cave-
in for a week CCC workers and
other volunteers aided by the en-
'embed Illan'S dog worked 18 hour
shifts 24 hours a day to save John-
York City transplanting skiing to an 1
isdoor Arctic homemade with air- i
conditioning and machines for flak-
ing 500 tons of ice into snow ' The
''
'
aki slide came down from the raft-
ers of Madison Square Garden k
-
"This burst of onthusiNm cli-
rrirrxes MI amazing development ef
k
skiing ns a sport Eighty years
ago a ski was all for tit ildy and rot
'--
for sport It served as the heavy
suhshlute tor a galosh or a hip
:
Loot ty Scandinavians wlio had to
ters' heavy snows Itonteis skied '
trom trap to trap over drifted for-
4 ti
est trails Then some original spr-
'
It not veary with huntng (It fish-
i
ing or running errands had the
itt a tlat skiing might Le tun
New Sport Is Born : i
''-
In tie Telemark elitrict of Nor-
lk
wax' about 1:'60 robahly with no
thought beyond fresh air nnd rival-
ry and Icol:hy play some unsung '
pioneers started skiing conTett-
tams and the new sport was born
Soon the uhrle world volcolned
kings for its toes Equipment was Ellen :leyers Chicago inis w
simple: some snowy slopes tv'o handhall— gctu rally it gti (led as al
skis two poles to vuy-11 or Utake i form in that sone tcysl
-1
Seas Are Fat Eatim Away Lnulaull's Cliffs
Ominous Movement of Coasts
Causing Alarm
London—Coineident With the
startling news that Scotland is drift-
ing westward at the rate of ten feet
a year there is a more realistic
and ominous movement of the
coasts of England It is the crumb-
ling of the cliffs—the "White Walls
of England"—into the sea A con-
stant erosion is going on which is
greatly aceelnated in winters of
high winds and tides such as this
winter has been Just recently
b0000 tons of cliff fell on the beach
at one place in Norfolk carrYing
people houses and cattle with it
On that same coast there are sev-
' oral small communities which have
been forced to retreat inland by
the undermining and encroachment
of the sea In other places per-
ors reluctant to lose their homes
tire undergoing the danger of being
1
we pt to death On nelts ker
aid bivo 1i)ec!:! not voile
to trvinhle
-The ibelf has gone through
several transfortnationi The P:110V
freill WI Icelandic word for
'piece of wood' lad fuir centuries
ago it arThed alaa to leather shoes
three feet with pointed toes
curled up uiuI the rear end faiteti-
ing around the ankle An eirlier
!1(1 with tips
like grows nf ancient Viking slops
curving either in or out ill a
like curl
"Now the national sport of Nor-
way ski-running has long been at
home in that country Legend
anns that the rirst Scandinavian
!nulled Nor actually reached his
peninsula Lome On skis Early set-
tiers revered a skrshoil god of
a thousand years ago astounded
their enemies by leaping from
mountain ledges and sliding on
down slopei without injury A pic-
ture of a ski runner carved lin a
11Cir l i is
to dale from the Eleventh century
-entiiil to snowbound
vihen the Arctic winter de-
scends upon the top of the Scan-
dinavian eninsula They do not
use two ski poles Their pole is a
handy weapon against WORTS
may attack reindeer herds there-
fore only one is carried since an
additional one would ()illy become
entangled in the fray
'Wood From 'Alinnesota
"Within recent years veteran
makers from Norway and Sweden
have been importing white hickory
wood from the forests of Minne-
sota It is heavy enough to glee
the skier ballast und is extremely
tough Care is necessary in sea-
soning and varnishing hickory skis
however or they may warp ‘‘hite
ash the favorite how yowl of the
Indians is a lighter substitute
i1111i
newris Bridge Table for Handball
'-
there are gales they tremble to
think that illy moment evetytlung
they own and hold dear may start
sliding into the sea
In Yorkshire between Flambor-
ouch and Spurn Head the sea is
regularly eating away fifteen feet of
land a year Thirty-five villages
have been devoured by the waves
Selsey Edl one et the promon-
tories winch tourists see as they
approach or leave England is an-
other danger spot Already it is
four miles shorter than it was 100
years ago Deserted houses on its
furthermost point are tottering on
their foundations Nothing known
to science or engineering can stop
the process for long Concrete walls
and fills have been swept away
Thomas Jefferson Busy Man
Thomas Jeiferson authored the
Dehrtan Of Imiependence
founded the Umversdy el Virginia
served ts President el his country
and inveited the swivel chair
l-liLfl Chic:cv 1)11:s who 1-1is do-'erted the bridge Lille for
hdndball---PCnt rally rt gadett as ail iicrivity for exclw7ively Some
i form In II)nI FA-rve bcys!
while some "kis are fashioned of
maple or pine Machines are little
hclp in ski-makirg For the proper
thickness—ahout an inch in the
middle—and the correct tapering a
watchful carpenter is preferred
The straight slats are carefully
Flyntled witi they turn up their
toes
"Their length varies front 113
inches fur toddlers to about 10 feet
for adults 1iice other footgear skis
must tit hut they tit the wearer's
height of 1s feet usurrilly
they ore as lorg a II e height of the
wearir's teach
"The $1is from
Nni'WLy 1111111ty hv the word-ol
irfutil N ort!siog iiiotk-sports
In Lr Eng
Lind e-ri
r n : IS r):'ilAe
n cceintrii
ard :New Zeuizirit have
hail a tr tie ctio
('i j raced
to ciYe tpc(II-1(1
(!1 their tityi tu rurote
itorwerantii hroucht
the i'port to the :It the
hr-wine) f thiii c(littirvi Now New
VI h IA
fowl of thexrdull
traik
11ygrouiik are
SC:C1(1Cd 11rollji the POC(01S! 1r11
t!e !- in l'oiliey1tiunoi
the Cat Aduttliticl in
the Iiivon
the V:hile 111101111!- et
New In
Coh:iecticut hoh
I e Ikil' :11)(1 1-ineoi of the
Far pour city
rJr initert
villich r t he c(e4enti-
(idly rrit earl"
It) N I I) I I 01
TIIE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
Mrs Nicholas F Brady of Nev
York widow of the utilities mag
note fcrthcoming nuirriage
in Rome after nu -ter to William J
flabington Macaulay Irish Free
!-Aitte numAer to the Vatican was
revealed by Iriencis I ecently It WaS
also reported that the ceremony
prohahly will be performed by Car-
dinid Pauelli Papal secretary of
state vho was a guest at the Brady
rYlilflsluIl at Manhasset during
his recent visit to this country
Chicago — The American man
spends about two-thirds the amount
women do for "beauty aids" Re-
cording to the results of a national
survey announced here While wom-
en are paying nearly S800000000
annually to beauty shops and for
cosmetics men are spending
about $600000000 a year in barber
shops and for shaving lotions hair
tonics massages and manicures
The nation's annual barber shop
bill is reported to have dropped
from $750000600 in 1926 to approxi-
mately $500000000 in 1936 yet the
masculine use of other items to en-
hance the appearance of the face
and hair has increased about 25 per
Cent
On the basis of the 1930 census
$1621 a year is spent by the adult
maie for "beauty aids" as com-
pared with the estimated $2228 fur
welnen
ttHts J11 n
It !t I (f the
tht v -11fev cl
t vo'w f !oilit
(Jr 111!1
:flre For
tht Hhr-eL tit ai
1
Few on 13 c(inber 11('
VI( V of :lount the
Liouo of CcQTe ten
N 1111 riftraitS of :iiirq-'ten
111(1 (en Nollan( Grecne
of k olutienary r
in the Th i x one-
(flit navy stu))p ext por
traits of John PL:1 Jone
collItliander of the Bon
Ilconme 11(1 John
Litrry cornmandcr Of the
our two ouLund
ing cdptains dutit the
IZcvelution tri(11)(1:1(n tlitr
t picture of typic-d vr-11ips
Uf that ported
(it) Litolary 15 ILe - (ATA
Army-Navy senes 11iced on
1!-n1e The truly sheH)
stor
Idi
By 1:1'AIO SCOT1' IVAISON
IIETIIER he wants
to or not the aver--Ari
rii111 i5
' voin!- !i rn a It
mire the
I
try dizrin th( coininp
to
that '
(1Jilv-1 v(
wiv t1-111 i hII r!'it:itit
(2 pittient 1:-
fo'n rif
(III tot in I
(1 th ft1 I
1 Itic t I'm' is
Vi! irt
: I in ac1(n to the
rT-'"tr
t
oo
e'
History in Stamps and Stamps in Histor
f' '1
r
- t
'
Renare of Chiselers T1 LAST MELTING
"If You kin nlinti yob own Reproduction of the Painting
affairs" said Uncle Eben "You is Proposed for the New Lee-
goiter look out foh peoPle dat sizes 1 Jackson Stamp
you as B W111111' worker an wants
to merge deir business wit yours" portraits el Gen Aidrew Jackson
'kind Gen Winfield Scott in the
ovals with a vldw of Jackson's
bit! for Handball Home the llennitd:e at Nosh-
! vine Tenn betvin The na y
stamp pictured Coi nnodele Ste
Ilion Decatur lieu of the War
NVIttl HIV Barbary Pirates and
Coin medei e m
i
°ugh lano tf the ldttle n 'ale
t'hamplain nuvirdt the War of
- 1812 in tle evak' neainst a k
- plound f raval ot the
'612
1 pet led
- On Vebt aary 18 the tie'ted ent
00° y series v as relee--ed
li liIi tmps hoe-
- ' ' 1 eyed CI 11 r heres on the
- army sidinp apt ed lrads
- ' of Gen Witham Tecimisch Sher
on Ide lk it Gee Ulys-es S
in the celiter and Gen
! Phihe T Sheridan en the rght
On the navy stoup appenred
the portrads 1r Adierals
G Fart aglit d Ildvid Policy
h a battlet--hip of the CN11
F led dietvi en
Tuo Great Confederates
president Roisevelt
ed that a stamp bearing
1 the portraits et Gen llohert
--- Ice and Gen "Stenewall Jack
son vis to le incleCed In Ile
1 Army-Navy series de oted to the
S 1 heioes cf IhI1 mit the It
' 2 eibce depdrietent ITCCI tly issued
a statement that the LieJacksen
stamp was to be (ie next one
' placed on sale The President's
a o
nnu c
nement iS C1)11111S11:Ai-
) 1-11S (11-'411Cd he t bridge table for
12 rcce:Ved 111 an parts of
tivity for nwn Some tiLt'
CV111111V 11)(1 Fort1011151rIV in
' the South where it Nk X regarded
- as evidence that official Washing-
U S Nten's "Beauty" Bill ton had fin gotten the prejudices
engendered by the war between
Is $60000300 a year the states and was recognizing
the fact vkhich historians long
Chicago — The American man
ago recognized that Lee a n d
spends about two-thirds the amount Jackson were two of the greatet
women do for "beauty aids" ae- soldiers in the history of this
cording to the results of a national country Now that time has
survey announced here While worn- healed the wounds of that war
en are paving nearly $800000000 both ten have come to be re-
vered almost as much in t h e
annually to beauty shops and for
North as in the South Both had
cosmetics men are spending ' previously served their country
about $6000005000 a year in barber with distinction both counselled
re es:ort Ind lmth Inade
the cly elleiee which they could
de!:enhly enke na-
tive stale uf VArgle:a It the
UtJun
-i(iihiarn li hiing the ver-
trdilS Iee Jaeken on tee
yropesed stinip it V IS StIrf!OSINI
VIIM the central design 1-0
a reproduction of the I-writing
'The Last 'Meeting' Iv JuI
v Lich shows' the t‘An gi eat Cum-
' oing just hetet e the
13111e of Chineullurville
Jickson received the (:tnend
N14hich Liter pro id fatal Ilhis
14gestion has the inders(tnent
et tee United f)aletliters
CotJedet'ocy and if it is fulikwed
this !tainp wil i e a teleleeniil
the strehg henit ( I ned
rerucet vhich elsteJ
i
t“(iii
An( LIT -!('1 eI'ILS
which Lis i t:!1
Trovci fl inily rev-
li(hg of the (ountry i ute I at
wotild heior outsundng
Lir
letk e
distin(tion wd n ciily one UI
thuse nko eas- was u
t!ty trilnute to
Ten the Liinestcwri serie!-z of
COTIIMCMOriitIVIT'S In
Ilh(l7 the tive-ecnt stnnct ere
the rertralt Pocahenuis the
deroitie el the incident in w-hiell
Jelin Smith (so de 1ed)
S Saved front death Incident-
ally Iloyallentas was une nfl unly
e w(mierl v hose fdycs Lave
ever itpleared on our sLirrit's
INLirdla Washingtdn was the tlrst
as was delitting the fin4 -First
L(ly of the Land" (ind the other
ws Qiecn Isnl-)ella Uf Sri1n
whoHT picture i(idrnerl oue of the
Colun-bion eries of
Idle Typical Indian
The other ineinher of the red
nice whnse pltroot you v-11 flo-A
i1 stridir (r1 the l-h(:e
11-cent g-:sue Ll22) S
IA at 1(2!
( faineus in our L:stery
Lut hceitise of the iirtslie merit
!
rr5 li
1 icia-
'
0
y
R
VV4et-
t
12-
fcl'10
Design for lYe sllnn in the new navy serl!-s
The Indian "Princess" 1 ho 1as
One of the Three 1Vomen to Be
Honored by Having tier Picture
Reproduced on a Stamp
of his typically Indian ciUflle-
r“illt'e lie 'i5 Chief HOI(JW Hern
Bcar cf the Bu le Sioux
Although Bellow Dern Bear
ricvcr achieved the runcwn o f
such Sioux notobles as Sitting
Bull Red Cloud Cr aly
Rain-in-the-Face he was an in-
teresting character Born in Shcr-
idan county Nehriska in li-50
he went on his first war trail at
the age of sixteen when his father
led a party against the Pawnees
During the next decade Hollow
norm Bear took part in many
skirmishes against United States
OF4
1!I
!
C
Design for the three-vent stamp in the iitsv artily series
WII U raikh (t the la-
i(r( it t h() to(itt hiiilitihg the
rdi)r()1 v)(h
ter the tohaniest t)f the ))))uN in
irir
()ht n (HI the
i) So1111
Ciitre hctime a t-tatihicti att-
veyte -traveltrq! the wInte
Inzot's
Ile tts ntiate (-)thain tt the
11hhe thi(t rhrervati(n
nnti Ir!t1 it lull It) hii) ht t()
1:s prenerts)(r Crow
1)(g fi-r the tent(ler tf thr trreat
1the hihf Spetteit It'(t?
etert It rcHirtiled zeal tit as
HOLLOW INWN BEAR
Only Lulian Chief 1111we Pcrtrait
Ilas Ever Appeared on a Stamp
recond licotenart
the police but vas again tenni-Clod
to reigl on aeconnt of ill
hcalth When General Crook w!-
sent with a commis!Jon in 19
lo inisKe an agreement
fir the Falc of their lands
flifltw Ilorn Pcir was ciiosen
Iv the as their speaker
F')! ne was comidered by his
peep'ie to he their Lest orator
Friend of Presiank
In later years lie became a
hgure
khere he went irefluchtly
I Vie -C:'ciit Wrote Path-
( I e had a her' vey Prci- it
nwie tirce decicey
ci 'Le
de hiCh
11 in 1:I
111Fil the hitt: e
S'tUr 01 the SiCUX W1-10 hill L1“:il
irt V' Do!lCu
!! 1'j0 I Piftc riding m
pieserd
in 19:3 Hollow !tern Pcr
i r ( hy four other
chiefs Geronimo ul the Apiich-
c Pirhe 1-e C-
rinc!-cs American Horse ef the
'oux and LiWe Plume
tl t-!-e Plod-Ace as presented
th 1:evelt ty Coninnsioher
Ile saw Pres'dopt Taft become
the "Lig chief" in 1909 In Feb-
tiai'y 1913 ‘k hen ground
broken for the nitional Indian
FUrt Wadsworth on
t:iten Island L L liollow Horn
Pear vas tile leader of tie 29
chiefs vho took part in
the dedication exercises pre-d
dent Taft broke the ground for
the memorial and as be steppi2d
back Ifollow Horn Bear came
flr‘k ard from the group of
chiefs and upturned a sccond
bit of earth using a thigh bone of
a bun“lo for a spade Then he
made a speech in reply to the
addreis of the President
From New York the Sioux chief
went to Washington to be present
at the inauguration of President
NVilson During this visit he caned
upon the commissioner of Indian
affairs and on the walls cd the
-
9 PM
clOLOi
044
k
c
1
4?-
c11)
'')
a ?
- -x 4
conindiisionerls whit? this
title Hai been
lien the nirlitiry
Vie 'arms
lit the (lose (if the Gliost kince
likdimk I l Tfl Pcir
fte a riiOLide
tne
returned to him
liovever vas
I PP1 nt'or'Y e
ne Ode 11111Ctet
niLe:und pince 1h1
r
rilarch (1Jy contracted a cold ond
the old kik) dt
eloidn viar
le more twin kill a century
(Hid r rI la a
Li addition to his hrit
card
a II loin I r 1 JS
11!ye' OA? r!
1' r i t tHe '
I v h h rr e
d It Lill sena s
ds
tlic i i L 1 of l'eca-
Nein thcre ale cloy a few (lift! in-
s la
((in—rent hilve
()lir postiwe
The e of an Indian
!idili)ect zlicars lu iiave been in
hen un idtiali7eit picture
tlic fictitious Le-
rch& of LennliiiiillioAs Linons po-
em I atho— wits slioa
periodical
Several vac- a the Colum-
bian series show minor Indian
st noteworthy of
‘vilich are the ene-cent vIth in
Indian in the right panel of the
x4nette und the ten-ccrt
slai‘vs Columbus presenting na-
tives at the court of Spam
IA( 'vise the traniiii-Mississippi
tiries included several Indians
in incidental pictures The one-
lent shoved 'Marquette with sev
eral Indians and the four-cent
Indians hun1 11u2- iai1a ía The one-
cent LIMhr Urd1
oval medidlions showing Indian
rorthalts the live-cent vulue
portruyed its fea
tore The Iludinterultim Fli1171)
Y 1 a niinute ildhin
tiinice in ire fere-ground as a
foil to the i-iteaniopropelled Clef-
irLt ( if 1iiliort Fulton Ca-
- Cilrieston cornincirio
s w
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THE t insT rosTAGI: STAMP
Isued in England in MO
rative stamp showed an Indian
as one of two figures in the cen-
tral feature of the design
So V-ie rumor that the post
ctlice department might issue a
series of stamps honoring famous
members of the Indian race as
individuals has (troused the in-
terest not only of stamp collec-
tors but also of non-collectors who
are copscious of the part which
the chiefs and sachems and
warriors xvhiever they are to
be have played in the history of
(Jur country
ve!etti NCA sooner Union
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 39, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 18, 1937, newspaper, March 18, 1937; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2068195/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.