The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 3, 1938 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Luther Register and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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News Bedew of Current Erents
HITLER'S AUSTRIA COUP
Forces Schuschnigg to Put Nazis in His Cabinet
Further Demands Expected Other Nations Alarmed
Senator Ellison D Smith of South Carolina Is here pictured as he ex-
pounded his views on the farm bill "Cotton ca" who is chairman of the
senate agricultural committee said congress should provide a billion and
a half to finance the farm program instead of the half billion to which the
cost is now limited
Schuschnigg Gives In
D EICIIEFUEHRER II ITLER
1 massing 20 divisions of the Ger-
man army and presenting what
were eupheniistically termed pow-
r::7-94 7—Pmal erlal arguments
:s 'i-P ) forced Chancellor
':: NI Kurt Sehtischnigg of
'- ' Austria to reorgan-
'r1H !7- ize his cabinet and
i
''' V ' give aeveral places
r e‘ to Austrian Nazis
i'i:r At' Complete amnesty
1
- t: 4 -
i-2 for all Nazi prison
-
1- 1-': : ers in Austrian jails
was immedia I ely deL''''"''-1
creed and the Aus-
trian press was for-
Adolf Hitler bidden to print hos-
tile criticism of the Nazi regime in
Germany Many army officers and
civil officials who had been dis-
missed as pro-Nazi were reinstated
or put on pension Altogother the
Nazification of Austria was well on
the way to completion
But Hitler was not satisfied with
this and called to Berlin the new
minister of the interior Dr Arthur
von Seyss-Inquart a Nazi to dis-
cuss further extension of the "con-
quest" of Austria Schuschnigg was
still trying to maintain the domi-
nance of his Fatherland Front and
Hitler didn't like that There was
a report that he might go to Vienna
himself taking Field Marshal
Goering with him
Italian officialdom was highly
pleased with the success of Hitler's
coup saying it accorded with Italy's
central European policy and tended
to solidify the Rome-Berlin align-
ment Great Britain and France how-
ever were alarmed by the develop-
ments and agreed to lodge joint
representations in Berlin and Vien-
na asking assurance that Hitler in-
tends to preserve Austrian inde-
pendence Neither nation would ad-
mit that actual union of Germany
and Austria was feared just yet
Britain's ambassador to Berlin
Henderson is said to have warned
Hitler recently against any attempt
to bring about the "anschluss"
which has been one of the Fuehrer's
chief ambitions
One London correspondent said
the British cabinet had just been in-
formed that Hitler and Mussolini
had formed a new secret defensive
alliance of which the Austro-German
arrangement was only a part
It was said to include co-ordination
of the German and Italian foreign
and financial policies in Europe and
strengthening of tha Home-Berlin
exia in various ways
With the start he has made it
may be expected that Hitler before
very long will make the move
against Czechoslovakia that has
been anticipated for months That
country is the gateway toward the
southeast and its position Is perilous
in view of the Fuehrer's known am-
bitions France is her ally but
France would hesitate to take
strong action in her behalf unless
directly supported by the British
One observer said "the Fuehrer
seems to have started on the road
to Bagdad"
--Ir—
Ja p Refusal Starts Race
J APAN having flatly refused to re-
- veal her naval building plans it
I believed that the greatest navy
construction race ever seen is about
to start and the United States may
feel called upon to take the lead
with England France and Japan in
the competition Our government
told Japan that a refusal to divulge
her intentions would be regarded as
confirmation of reports that she was
constructing or planning super-warahips
so now according to some of-
ficials in Washington we will have
to invoke the "escalator clause" of
the London treaty and build larger
and more powerfully armed battle-
'hips The President may be expected to
order increase of the three battle
440 vr IsLef134164A
SUMMARIZES THE WORLD'S WEEK
e Western Newspaper Union
ships now planned from 35000 tons
each to 43000 or 45000 tons and
such dreadnaughts probably would
carry 13-inch guns
In order to obviate the restric-
tions on the size of battleships that
inhere in the width of the Panama
canal locks and to minimize the con-
tingency of interruption of coast-tocoast
communication through de-
struction of a Panama lock by an
enemy the administration is pre-
paring to pmh the project of a canal
through Nicaragua
Congressmen who fear the Presi-
dent is piloting the nation into war
with Japan made probably futile
moves to prevent our government
from joining in the rearmament
race
Though Secretary hull had de-
nied that there was any understand-
ing with Great Britain and France
concerning Japan opponents of the
administration were still suspicious
that it was planning joint action
Representative George Tinkham of
Massachusetts voiced their senti-
ments when he uttered a warning
that "every day brings the United
States nearer to a war with Japan
as planned by Great Britain to fur-
ther British interests"
Roosevelt said in a press confer-
ence that the United States never
will consent to Japan's aims for
navy parity Ile said that in the
opinion of experts the American na-
tional defense can not rely on a
naval establishment designed to de-
fend only one of the country's two
coasts Ile subscribed to the view
that the national defense requires
protection of both the Atlantic and
Pacific oceans as possible areas of
warfare
——
Wallace Gets Busy
LEANS for putting the new farm
A program into immediate effect
were announced by Secretary Wal-
lace to whom the law just enacted
tr----- gives increased pow-
' :'1':i7'4:' ers to control pro-
:it: '"' t- duction through
: - - - - acreage allotments
!' - : 4 and to regulate mar-
4t' : keting by quotas for
: - Individual farmers
-ft"
I1 - Ile said he would
? ss:s soon make acreage
' ''"-- and production alto
- cations and call for
LLL'A a referendum on
marketing quotas
Sec Wallace for cotton and to-
bacco Marketing quotas will be-
come effective unless rejected by
more than one third of the farmers
voting In the referendum to be held
before March 15
The secretary announced a six-
point program embodying the
"basic principles" of the broadened
farm policy as follows:
"I Continuation of the AAA soil
conservation program as a part of
the permanent farm policy
"2 National acreage allotments
for corn cotton wheat tobacco and
rice at levels designed to meet do-
mestic consumption and export de-
mands and establish reserve sup-
plies "3 Federal loans to encourage
systematic storage of surpluses in
big crop years for use in years of
shortage
"4 Marketing quotas backed by
penalties on sales in excess of
quotas to secure general participa-
tion of farmers in holding surpluses
off the market
"5 Release of corn supplies from
storage under marketing quotas to
meet farm shortages or in the case
of national need
"8 Crop insurance for wheat to
protect producers against drouth
and consumers against high prices
resulting from shortages"
Admittedly no one fully under-
stands the new farm law but Wal-
lace and his associates hope and
believe it will all work out for the
best
Relief Bill Pushed
clENATE leaders expected I() put
" through with little delay the
$250000000 emergency relief appro-
priation bill The house approved
the measure by a topheavy vote of
352 to 23 All efforts to make ma-
jo changes in the measure were
overridden Only one amendment
tarring relief to aliens temporarily
in this country was authori7ed
The Works Progress administra-
tion which has on hand about SIM-
000000 of its regular $15000f(0000
pppropriation will administer the
additional relief fund The WPA has
ri:Itorted to congress that the money
will keep at least 2000000 persons
on the relief rolls until June 30
Wiping Off RFC Debt
v V7 ITHOUT debate the senate
approved a house bill writing
off more than V2500000000 in Re-
construction Finance corporation
debts to the treasury Senator Byrd
of Virginia said the legislation
marked a "return to honest book-
keeping on the part of the federal
government" lie explained that
the RFC which obtained all its
funds from the treasury had listed
among its assets about two and a
half billion dollars it had advanced
for relief and expenditures ill va-
rious government agencies
Jones Urges Tax Revision
J ESSE JONES the usually level
headed chairman of the Recon-
struction Finance corporation con-
ferred with treasury officials and
(-rvoltri urged them to do
- - - '-'-:' ' what they could to
i fk
:ta)t - nt hasten congression-
al action on tax re-
vision Ile told Un-
)rie ' dersecretary Hos-
" wen Magill that the
:) i
kvhole country was
4-i--- t- waiting impatiently
- 4 for action on prom-
"
Led modification of
' - ll ' t h e undistributed
kii- ii
profits and capital
Jesse Jones gains ta xes
Jones indicated a belief that the
hill which is still in the hands of the
howe kvays and means committee
was being held tin by opposition to
a provision retaining a still tax on
undistributed profits of corporations
owned by a few persons
i(
Great Battle in China
(INF of the greatest battles ever
v-1 fought was reported to be tak-
ing place in central China where
the Japanese invaders smashed a
Chinese army of 15000 and forced
it to retreat across the Yellow river
under fire and without bridges which
had been destroyed by the defend-
ers Five Japanese armies were
driving southward through the rich
central China agricultural region
and were seriously threatening Kai-
feng capital of Ilonan province
From the south three Japanese
armies were advancing from the
Ilwai river
Gen Chiang Kai-shek had 400000
troops along the north and south
fronts fighting to prevent the Jap-
anese from gobbling up the huge
Lungbal "corridor"
Dictator Stato
R UMANIA is now added to the
European states under dicta-
torship Octavian Goga's govern-
ment was so anti-Semitic and pro-
Fascist that it was t-- ' ' ' :aper:ray
forced out and King ' 5::1:-4
Carol took charge of r:'ii ''i
affairs by naming A'i:e--':
Dr Miron Cristea :- t
as premier and dis- - T--:
1
solving the parlia-
ment Cristea patri- ' :
arch of the Ru- : :: 4" t
-: 1
manian Orthodox s-
church was given : '-' -
virtual dictator pow p '— :
er but it was ex- 7--- '''
pected George Tar- "ir" Cristea
tarescu would very soon succeed
him as premier and that Carol
would create a crown council over
which Dr Cristea would preside
Much of the new government's au-
thority was concentrated in the
army and a nation-wide state of
siege was proclaimed A commis-
sion was set to work formulating a
new constitution
Cristea the key man of the gov-
ernment was expected to take steps
to regain the friendship of France
and Great Britain traditional allies
of Rumania without offending Italy
and Germany
--it—
ThiS is a "Drouth Year"
RECAUSE of early dust storms In
" Kansas Oklahoma and parts of
the Texas Panhandle 1933 already
is called a "drouth year" by grain
men The weather in those regions
is being closely watched by traders
in the United States IAN erpool Win-
nipeg and Buenos Aires
Grain experts of Chicago reported
that present conditions of soil in
much of the territory from west
Texas to Nebraska is such that light
rains quickly would break it down
into powder easily blown by high
winds Only extremely heavy rains
could prevent such blowing
Oklahoma wheat is much below
that of last year at this time The
western half of the state was re-
ported in serious need of moisture
Dust storms have seriously dam-
aged wheat and done further dam-
age to the state's topsoil The cen-
tral section too was reported in
need of moisture
In all these states producers
grain traders and elevator men
agreed that only part of the winter
plant In each state would come to
harvest should the much-needed
rains fail to materialize
FILE OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
Washington—It always has been
interesting to nie to see bow politi-
cians frequently
Too Many overlook real is-
Laws sues in no tiona
affairs Many
times they atimulate the hound that
overruns the ratilats That is the
re1011 hy sa often a new man in
public 1I suddetily rises to I(a(1('-
hi1) I fe has taken hold of a bad
aitaidasi that is right under our
feat cffered a conatructive solu-
tion and has doidt with an immi-
nent condition rather than schemed
for readection through political
fence budding
Theae facts lead directly into a
bit of current history It will be
recalled how Bruce Barton cam-
paiened through congested sections
of New York's Manhattan island for
an unexpired term in the house of
representatives last fall About all
that Mr Barton said of consequence
in his campaign speeches was that
there are too many laws I think
that is obvious When he was cam-
paigning on that line he was speak-
ing for great nitaaies of inarticulate
citizens
But Mr Barton went further Ile
announced his intention to seek re-
peal of one federal law a week un-
til there is some aeiriblance of rea-
son in the structure of federal laws
Now of comae Mr Barton is
very new in politics lie had lien
keeping his nose to the grindstone
of business Ile knew only what
oilier persons outside of politics
knew namely that high preasure
minoritica sour iataaes idal nit a its
Were getting one law after anothei
through congress and that in the
end those laws would he milieus to
the country as a whole Whether
Mr Barton thought he would suc-
ceed or whether he recognized the
fact that he was only making a
start it does not matter Bruce
Barton has taken hold of an obvi-
ous issue in national affairs and it
is not outside of the realm n of prob-
abilities that he will "go places"
svith his program Thus far it roust
be said that Mr Barton has suc-
ceeded only in getting a dozen re-
peal bills into the house commit-
tees through introduction in the
house None has been acted on
Few probably' will be acted on—if
the house runs true to form That
is to say Mr Barton is a Republi-
can and the house is controlled by
Democrats and New Dealers Nat-
urally they will give no opportunity
for the opposition to gain credit for
anything no concessions at all
The significance of the Barton
program goes much deeper howev-
er and it is of that significance that
I want to write Through more
than twenty years as an observer
of national affairs here in Washing-
ton obviously I have witnessed
many issues develop or be created
or be discovered It seems to me
that the really important national
issues are those that develop as
the Barton program is developing
That means the issue is fundamen-
tal it means further that there is
no necessity for building the issue
and it means as well that it in-
volves vital questions of policy
As I said above there are too
many laws too many don'ts and
very few do's Restriction and reg-
ulation always breed more restric-
tion and regulation The Roosevelt
itdministration has been constantly
saying "don't" in the shape of laws
and the tremendous majority in con-
gress has been giving President
Roosevelt almost unlimited power
to do as he wants to do beyond
the 'don't'' legislation So the Bar-
ton program would restore a great
deal of freedom to the people them-
selves and would restore to con-
gress much of the power that it
has given to the President To car-
ry that thiniglit further then the
Barton program actually seems to
me to propose saving only those
laws that the progress of civiliza-
tion shows to be sound and workable
las r
Y S ' :'41
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sr(1Tf7T-----:-:
IL L 3 A IL I
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1 1- rf-' c-- f '
r i ) 4 c )
We might consider some of the
statutes which Mr Barton wants to
repeal There is
Time to Cut for example the
Them Out so-called Thomas
amendment — one
of the most anine and dangerous
pieces of legislation ever to get on
ths statute boeks The legislation
forced through by Senator Thomas
of Oklahoma in May of 1933 gave
the President the power to issue
$300000o000 in paper currency I
do not see how anybody can regard
it as anything but authority to issue
printing press money Of course it
never has been used by President
Roosevelt and probably never will
be but the authority to go into print-
ing press inflation exists and that is
the danger How for instance can
you or I or anyone else feel sure
that the money we have in our
pocket or the few dollars in the
bank is going to be worth anything
tomorow when the President of the
United States by one stroke of the
pen could turn loose a flood of
worthless money
Mr Barton also seeks liquidation
ef a flock of government agencies
Some of them are 20 years old or
of even greater age—built as war-
tie emergency units Lut still in
existence for no reason at all Be-
ides the War Finance corporation
and some others of that wartime
era it is proposed to get rid of
some things of more Tecent date
The Conimodity Credit corporation
and the two export-import banks to
mention only three Now there is
ro reason availahle for retention of
the skeletons Of the World war and
there appears to hove been no rea-
son for creation of such things as
the export-import banks I moon
there was no sound reason Tlioae
radicals who forced the diplomatic
recognition of Soviet Russia thought
there was reason for the export-
import banks because they held
such banks Nvould enable trade with
Russia But Russian trade has
amounted to about the same as the
sale of mules in my home county Of
Missouri
Two other pieces of legislation
Nvhich Mr Barton seeks to repeal
are strictly New Deal One is that
law which gave the President the
right to change the value of the dol-
lar at vihI within certain limita-
tions I suppose there are some
who still believe that devaluation of
the dollar has done (Jr can do good
in aiding recovery It seems to
me however that existence of that
power in the hands of one Man is
just another basis for uncertainty
orriong all of the people In any
event the failure of that panacea
has been amply demenslialted
The piece of far-reaching New
Deal legislation concerned is the so-
called Gulley coal law That thing
is a price fixing measure It gave
authority to a coal commission to
prescribe prices thronahout the
country and prod tit CFS WOUICI he
violating a law if they sold below
those figures they you'd be sub-
ject to lines and prison terms Only
recently the price fixing features
were enjoined by a circuit court of
zippeats and so at the moment they
a re not operative Yet the threat
exists And attention should be
called to the fact also that the three
judges who granted an injunction
were appointed by President Roose-
velt and supposed therefore to be
very liberal in their views Mr
Barton called the Guffey coal act a
piece of "grand larceny against the
consumers" because he explained
the consumers are made to pay the
higher prices fixed by the commis-
sion and they have no word to say
about it
Among other laws which Mr Bar-
ton wants to repeal is the ill-starred
silver purchase act That law was
another one which the inflationists
in congress forced through in 1934
when all of the brain-trust camp
followers were in their heyday The
Only result that I can discover flow-
ing from the silver purchase act is
a grand outpouring of cash for the
owners of silver mines They ob-
tained two or three times what their
silver was really worth
Analysis of the limited number of
laws I believe shows the trend of
tile Barton program It may be
that he will never get to first base
with any of them My conviction
however is quite to the contrary I
firmly expect to see a growth in
the strength that such a program
will muster
About the time you are reading
this column there will be an
dent taking place
Milestone in 'way off in Tient-
Army History sin China that is
a milestone in the
history of the United States army
Late in February orders become
operative for the departure of the
Fifteenth United States infantry
from Chinese soil That of itself
of course does not provoke particu-
lar interest Bat the famous Fif-
teenth has been on foreign duty for
20 years and that is the longest any
unit of the United States army ever
has been away from our shores
It ought to be explained that very
few of the soldiers making up the
Fifteenth infantry were with the
outfit when it first was assigned
overseas But the regiment has
been stationed abroad and the re-
cruits to its ranks have been dis-
patched continuously to it as re-
tirements and expiration of enlist-
ments have occurred It is now
coining back to American sod and
Nall be stationed at Fort Lewis
The Fifteenth has a most honor-
able record beginning with its or-
ganization in 1801 It won honors
at Shiloh and in the campaigns of
1802 in Alabama and Kentucky It
fought at Murfreesboro at Chicka-
mauga Chattanooga and at Atlan-
ta In 180 it was at the front in
the campaigns against Utes and
again in the China relief expedition
of 1900 and these were followed by
action in the Philippine insurrec-
tion There was a brief spell when
the regiment was on home soil but
then it went to work in Cuba Sub-
sequently it was moved around
here and there until the Manchu
dynasty was overthrown and China
became a republic It sailed for
Tientsin in November 1912 and
there it has remained
C Western Newspaper 11 rtitAl
ALIALAAAAAAAAAth AAAtAAAAALA
EW YORK—In 1929 at the age
111 of seventy-one Frederick
Prince the Boston banker was still
playing polo He has great faith in
the durability of
Time Better men institutions
Than Reform and governments
for Business as long as they be-
have themselves
Ile left for Europe to forget about
business for a while and intimates
that it NvoOd be a good thing if the
governmcnt would be similarly neg-
lectful "Washington should stop
trying to reform business and leave
the situation to time" he says
Time has treated him nicely and
he may well give it a testimonial
At seventy-nine be is the grand
seigneur of American business Only
four years ago he engaged in a
hard-hitting slugfest over the con-
trol of Armour & Co
Ito got what he was after—the
chairmanship of the board Ile has
many such trophies having con-
trolled 46 railroads and in general
one of the biggest cuts in the Amer-
ican dream of any man of his day
His (mainly liquid) fortune is esti-
mated at around $250000000 But
for many years
Makes Point he says he has
of Being in made it a point to
Debt Always be about $20G00-
000 in debt That
is revealing in connection with his
ideas about money and success Ile
emphasizes the dynamics of money
It isn't money unless it is working
Stagnant money just dries up and
blows away Hence you draw cards
even if you do have to drag a few
chips for markers
Ile's a little too heavy for polo
with a nlassive gray 11(e)d deep
sunken pondering eyes and heavy
gray moustache a bit grim per-
haps hut riot formidahle VI len
early in October 1929 a small black
cloud appeared on the horizon he
viewed it vith a telescopic eye saw
it for what it was and gut out of
the m ai het
The cyclone never touched hint
Until a few years ago he vas still
riding to the hounds at Pau in
southern France master of the lint
Ile has marble palaces here tel
there one of them the former roan-
SiOn of :Mrs O 11 P Belnanit at
Newport Remarking that he has
been in business 55 years he says
this little squall will blow over in
two or three rnontlis
THE reason isn't quite clear but
these days the colleges compete
for tuba players as well as athletes
Dr Walter Albert
Tuba Aces Jessup deplores
Prized Same this and other
as Athletes phases of t h e
scramble for stu-
dents in the annual report of the
Carnegie Foundation for the Ad-
vancement of Teaching of which he
is president The fight seems to be
entirely in the field of extra-curricular
activities No mere scholar gets
competing bids from rival faculties
Since he became head of the Car-
negie foundation in 1933 Dr Jessup
has been a consistent deflationist so
far as education is concerned Ile
wants fewer and better students in
the colleges Ire assails the col-
leges which would "teach anybody
anything" lie is against education-
al trimmings excrescences and
gadgets as the little Scotch iron-
master doubtless would be if he
were looking over the current scene
Other leading educators join him
in this but the big mill has to have
plenty of raw ma-
Brain Mill terial to keep on
Needs Raw grinding or else
Material become just a
crossroad plant
So they go after even the tuba play-
ers At any rate each can blow its
own horn
Dr Jessup was president of the
University of Iowa from 1916 to 1933
A native of Richmond Ind he was
educated at Earlham college and
Columbia and gathered several
honorary degrees in later years Ile
was superintendent of schools in In-
diana and dean of the college of
education of Indiana university He
Ins on high distinction in the edu-
cational field and it the author of a
book on arithmetic
One gathers that he would not
recommend Benny Goodman for a
college faculty and that quite prob-
ably the next Carnegie report may
find adversely on the shag the eep-
er and the sus''-q Ile is for low
kicking and high thinking as
against the prevailing reversal of
this formula
Consold ited Ne‘t s FezOul es
0 NO Service
Ciants Short Lived
The circus giant the man 1vith
abnormally long legs or other ab-
normalities of frame is a short-
lived human Tall men fall into
two classes those who attain their
extraordinary growth because of in-
herited tendencies and those who
become freaks because of some up-
set in the glandular functions The
man who "comes by his height nat-
urally" usually lives a normal life
span but the freak seldom attains
middle age An insurance compa-
ny given to research in such mat-
ters found that a number of men
ranging from 7 feet 6 inches tall to
8 feet 7 inches had an average life
of thirty-four years The oldest died
at forty-five the youngest at twenty-seven
PNVW‘YVW'WWWWIF 75 WWWWIPIIPIrirWIFIVIM
Ask Me Another
0 A General Quiz
towoasaataAkitaluaautalaimulksibAulkaiaall
1 Haw many fundamental odors
are there?
2 What famous actress was
born a Jewess baptized a Cattpilic
Frcricii by birth and Greek by
marriage?
3 What is dry ice?
4 What was the length of the
President's term as given in Alex-
ander Hamilton's plan for govern-
ment ef the United States present-
ed at the Constitutional conven-
tion? 5 What is the altitude of the
Deitd
th The United States has diplo-
matic representAives in how
01 any foreign countries?
A inmtr9
Four—fragrant burnt acid
anI eaprylle
2 SArah Bernhardt
3 It is a solid compressed car-
bon dioxide snow the tempera-
ture et Wh ich is 114 degrees be-
low zero F
4 For life
5 The surface of the Dead sem
in Palestine is 1290 1ct above
sea level
6 More than fifty
1111EADACEE?
It may be due to
constipation!
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Istt twiny of flotrit titt! If yttlif
Ittrtt:tte is c:ftttl if you'rit 11i iJ
1 if ytit !LINT h:tt dull Lw folittg
ore
ttt?1 r-!11 ftrtx "con-
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Now Improved—bettor than evert
rlI 9 11 Tp
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THE ORIGINAL CH0cOLATED LAXATIVE
Worthless Friendship
No one is more worthless than
he who seeks a friend for any rea-
son except friencIship—Jami
Got A Chest Cold?
Here's Good Advice
Rub Penetro on your chest—
how quickly it melts—as rubbed in
—causing warm feeling—makes
blood flow more freely in con-
gested area—loosens phlegm—
eases tightness—relieves local
congestion—helps stop tight
coughing—due to colds
Stainless l'enetro used by Ina-
lions is guaranteed Money back
if not satisfied 35c ar contains
twice as much as 25c size There's
even greater economy in the
larger sizes At dealers every-
where Demand and get Penetro
Application
There is no lack of good maxims
In the world all we need is to
apply them—Pascal
11 :1 4 to 3 t
- -
VI
I
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419
4'1:7t X
I
thJ '
Menthol Cough Drops 50
contain au added
ALKALINE rACTOrt
IAbt Through Darkness
The eternal stars shine out as
soon as it is dark enough—Carlyle
checks
COLDS
and
FEVER
1:1QUIDTTABLiTS first day
SALVE NOSE DROPS Headnhe 30 1111:1081
Try"Rub-My-Tism"--World'ilBestlialmaid
ADVERTISIN
is as essential to business
as is rain to growing
crops It is the keystone
in the arch of successful
merchandising Let us
show you how to apply
it to your business
7
I
6
4
WHO'S NEWS
THIS WEER
By Lemuel F Parton
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 3, 1938, newspaper, March 3, 1938; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2068270/m1/2/?q=virtual+music+rare+book: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.