The Alva Daily Record (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 206, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1939 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Renfrew’s Record and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
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Page Four
THE ALVA DAILY RECORD
-
I
Entered at the post office in Alva Oklahoma for transmission' IS 'FIIE BEAR WALKING
through the mails as second-class matter
— 1 A I mos t lief ore an astounded
it W DOUGHTY President :world had caught its second breath
J C McCONNELL 1President ifolltwin4 the announcement of a
O F CAYCE Etittmr pact hetw con Hitler and Stalin
FRANK BERNATT Advertising Manager
BROOKS BICKNELL
Lity Editor:goverm
nent (1)111111A and censor-
: ed Ens -kin newspapers ‘k ere re-
--
orted to be appealing to the sub-
11t 1p1 a
4: '-I l'
‘ hi i “nd o m trikt tr treeo in the
4012027)a t rip at: civo:"" 7
( (ny lacomes involvcd
4 - is xi 1 AA :ra
k - aLACoit 0
hi
-60-(LoCilroaciaireallOvi"1"4 a general war
p
And kk hen the Soviet onion poA-
L'
fa) 59yr ones the rt t lification of the Stalin-
- ---T4- -11!131! Hitler pact suppos edl y reliable
(IP) MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATEP PRESS (IF) I Pus-tan authoritley explain that
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the IISC for republi-!Ells'iti is merciv Nkailitte to see if
cation of all TICW3 dispatches credited to it or not otherwisl credited i Hitler is going to attack Poland
In 'hi4 paper and for the local news herein and that if such allitek ensues the
---------------------- "' :pact will not be ratified at all
I iiclii tactit s as tht!st ate lopmd
C I wes'“ i rt comprehension They mav '
j 11 a m e of a Nation: I indicate almost anything d'epenti-
1 ing upon I he wish and desire of
1
N Ithoc who attetOpi to read the rid-
I die
smallpox ncreasing wt Stalin animated 1) A' nothing
but the Nish to sell Furpluses to
essary We have plenty of evidencf IGermany tint! purchase needed ma-
13 0G N CLENDENING I D that smallpox may hreakout if 'lit ichinay from German when he
1 !S
world is left unvaccinated Isigned the non-aeression pact ?
V::: NAVY' discussed two di- in the United Slates in Prit3
Or was he making a sincere el- ' -----:e'
Pr Clendening will answer
quclAons of general interest
only and then only through
his column
disease that can absolutely be pre-
vented nnd one that can be prevent-
ed exactly as diphtheria and typhoid
are prevented—by individual inocu-
lation for immunity
Oldest of Methods
Vaccination against smallpox is
the oldest of the methods used to
obtain individual immunity In the
early days of its use it was accepted
eagerly because the menace of
smallpox was an ever-present and
terrifying tality Perhaps it was
too successful A long century and a
half of Inadtim from smallpox has
lulled the world into the belief thnt
vaccination is unnecessary Nobody
sees smallpox except occasionally
The epidernits you do hear about
are mild Why bother?
But contagious diseases only
sleep they do not die out Eternal
vigilance in immunization is nee
Smallpox Increasing
essary We have plenty of evidencf
that smallpox may break out if the
10 N CLENDEN INC M D
world is left unvaccinated
V:7 NAY' discussed two dis- in the United Slates in Prdl
en tht are diaprearing ty- thre were 7813 eases— ten time!
r and diphtheria They as ninny cases as of diphtheria anti
etre t:cpcaring because we know a nearly ten ti TM'S as many as of ty
m q prevention It consists phoid And it is a preventable dig
in Lit ev'es in the acceptance on ease The record is little short of
the par: of all parents of the re- disgraceful
spelibility of producing active int- It is true of late years that the
TrUnit:' by inoculation That is it disease is mild the death rate
ron:Os in every individual's mak- only half of one per cent But all
ing special and personal effort It diseases go in cycles of virulence
is la markable that in a compara- Epidemic Proportions
tively short time the public could be "There is every probability"
ethic: Yeti and persuaded to adopt says an authority "that the di
this reJnonsibility remarkable that ease will assume epidemic propor-
it htri been carried out almost uni- thins just as on as a false sense of
veroiy security results in a considerable
Today we are going to consider a unvaccinated population"
dieme that instead of being on the What the NVOrld would be like it
decrease is On the increase—small- a virulent epidemic began was de-
pox And the shame and tragedy scribed by I lacauley
of it is that it is just the same kind "That disease over which science
of a disease as the others It is a has achieved a succession Of glori
ons and beneficent vietories NVItS
Pr Clendening Nvill answer then the most terrible of all minis
questions of general interest tors of death The smallpox WRS al-
only and then only through ways present tilling the church
hia column yards with cortes tormenting wit h
constant fear all whom it had not
disease that can absolutely be pro- yet stricken leaving on those whose
vented and one that can be prevent- lives it spared the hideous traces of
ed exactly as diphtheria and typhoid ifs oowr
are prevented—by individual inocu- Vaccination is best done at an
lation for immunity early ago from eight to 14 months
Oldest of Methods Babies at that age have little or
Vaccination against smallpox is no discomfort fro vaccination and
the oldest of the methods used to it is important that they be pro-
obtain individual immunity In the tected early After the first W-
endy dvys of its use it was accepted cination repetitions are advisaldc
eagerly because the menace of at intervals of four to seven years
smallpox was an ever-present and until there is a record of three sue
terrifying f"ality Perhaps it was cessfuLvaccitiations
tqlicrr
to Th -1-711ckeye"
stot-!
It A imunds
13 More
maturo
15 Om gnilly
treazon
17
18 Month in
Jewish
calendar
19 Weep con-
vulsively 20 Settled by
arbitration
Pub !abed Mornings Except Monday by
THE RECORD PUBLISHING COMPs‘NY
PlIOYE 157 PHONE
AlT0St4
1 Offer 26 To court
4 Tempe:011ms 27 Sixth note
9 Assist 7int to of t he :caie
n oflicrr 2R Loft y
0 The "Puck- Incunt
eye" slate 29 Suppc-4‘1
1 Abounds Turkish
3 More looney of
mature areount
5 Cni gi v 35 Sitdrlc't
of treason :fi y
7 Old )1(lahoma
8 Month in 38 Genus Of
Jewish plants of
calendar the lily
9 Weep eon- family
vulsively n9 Seat for
O Settled by horseback
arbitration riders
40 Chop
DOWN
1 Coffin and 7 Roundups
Its stand 8 Measure of
2 Notion length
3 Half O Part of a
(prefix) house
4 Therefore 12 An asterisk
5 Norse god 14 German
of thunder river
8 Lubrient
È3 -22
EDITOR'S NO'PE: hr Clendening ban
aera Pamphlets whih ran be 0!Pinined by
realer Fedi pamphlet sells for la
Jr any one pamphlet deared semi Iti
cents in coin and a s:d resed envelope
Stittilted n three-rent strum to
Lottan rIrnaenimr in care fr this paper
The pamphlets are: -Three IA oelis'
hut Diet- "Indierst ion and (1IiNtiptit
"Itedueing end tlainine" "Infant Fefsl-
Ina" "Instrnetions for the TriNtiEllelit it
1111betPli" 'Folninine Hygiene- end -rho
Care of the Hair and tAin''
DALY CROSS WORD PUZZLE
Ho Ancient measure (
Creek coins 29 External
Sv1111-101 for coating of
seeds
Nocturnal 30 one or the
hirls of prey states
22 11111)c1 with 31 Kind of
a mop slipper
23 Itritan 32 Enmigh
rivcr poeti(')
21 A 111111(
25 To 0pli :7 I Ic-11
Etiropcm ( prefix)
measure (pl
29 External
coating of
Answr t pre‘lous puzzle
15111MBLIMM 0 t
111 7011-1401
M OREL:LIMP E
CE1 F A MEMO
la OOP R ‘1 111111110
OMEN A
In 11101121t1
n NNW IRMO
A ti IMOD 11111 0
1Il A
aka A ISEMICEIN
Guth in on Want -Rd OpprYttitaitleA
Zzatil 'Yowl PRoapeciblivtzudl ttlc 11671 al
Um Want 11(16-1ht attickut alau to Ilmuithl
rriii OTHER
EDITORS
Ime'Ommi IMirMitan
o MARKETS o
The nrtees were fur
AUGUST 30 1939
Quotations from J I Reed & Co1
Cream 20e
Eggs lie
L hens :
IL liens 10e
S or in 1!s 10e
BIG SISTER
THE ALVA DAILY RECORD TI1URSDAY AUGUST 31 1939
11Ms
Ur wa: he making a sincere et- wie"-7't''
fort to protect the A e- t ern flank ITtl''' 57!!:'
'51-1'r'i-4t1-'''
of the great republic in order to be - -i14'fe!e
fret tO dispose of the truculent
onitia
Japanese on the fro rs 7 ntie of Si- trt-'-:7(--!i:'' -
''-f0"
beria? f- ei
nt vas he laying an open trap !f lik'
for the fuehrer with the deliberate i
intention of sending thie red
mies W0111Nard just as soon as Ilit- 41171Z
ler shall be caught in the 111dt jaws
of a wasting war?
No westerner can answer any of
0
t hose quest ions because 1111- W014-
(411(1r has any of the answers The
only thinr t hat is fully known to
C C-1
the ve-itern piople is that Pussitt
is more Asiatic than European In i 4
Rtisan diplomacy is every sublet- i
fop and every heguilement that ft
'
-1
ever stiggestor itself to the orien- til
sic c
tal mind
i -
It was this oriental art of ws-i
si mnia t ion t hat E lifting had in
mind NVIlt111 110 NV:11110d '1 he govern-' sluerw ii 4 I
An ft s ft ex is t S
Ile declare:44 that on August 91
ment of his country 'I bid you
beware of Adam-zad the bear that Hitler thtid1 to m e
1
smil ling'
walks like a man"--Oklahomman matie nh In p v 1
i Jo wsoifin to-
i Lo acquiescence with his Lanig
1 campftin Ile arran:ed find wit
THAT RUSSIAN JOLT
1
Sonic' (hty !fli the agonies INIusso-' throu:h the alliance with Iniisia
lini hit suffered In the last two ' It wa' tf 1H' :t jidit T1tJtin itintin it
NV0AS Will be known but for the nut of it- h !: dfi -i-f nt
1110S0lItt the ctirioin and that in- :'1t''di1litt ili: noi ilWil cut his
ClUdeS ot of the world will have boot i Ile hoof in f:11
to wait for further revelations hits been ihiikiiir iit thylll iiictililv
Whieh tillIC will bring 'eve since— Vichila Efiglii
Jules Sauemein the Paris editor I
who is comegonly credited withl
possessing the low-down en inter- To tiolow ripoiliF:: in It-
national moves Fiays that previous alY the government v ill alliiw 1:‘1
to August 21 last Hitler learned (Ivr to iluPort raw and i-iiiii-ffrA(from
courty ('ia) that Italy doctored trittal aid lunilwr and
certain mechanical part: free of
dissented from immediate action
on Danzig and pointiil out a "three 014 for Ito Year-
year cause" in the German-Italian —
axis treaty Saurewein says that V"ur diflyrfult 1Pf'' a PruY
this clause committed Miler not can l'o 11lititft t" luwn will' a now
years combined nozzle and sprinkler for
to make war within three
garden hose that is held in plwa
without Italy's consont Such n
be by a spike to be thrust into the
provision in the treaty may
mertly newspaper invention 1 ules ground
Wife Preservcrs
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By Shepard Barclay
NOT WHAT THEY SEEM
TOP CARDS such as aces and
nce-kings usually are considered
the most positive values in the
deck They are far from sure
Ithings however since any one of
Ithem may get knockgd off in a
stlit contract by a ruff and any-
tone of them may have to be dis-
carded in a No Trump contract
on a run of somebody's long suit
unless there is adequate protec-
tion to stop it AU of this is just
another Nv y of saying that the
surest values of all are distribu-
tional values when the cards ure
arranged favorably to them
A K J 10 9 6 5 3
to 9 8654
Q
4 None
Q '2 N A
11C2 10 3 2 fy A 1Z I 7
tto A J 8 4 K 9 7 6
?K 7 6 S 0 J 4 '2
A
V A IZ J 7
K 9 7 6
4t Q J 4 2
(OLJ SPENT tOUI)
WHOLU WEEW'5
HOUSEHOLD
ii ALLOWANCE !l'A
ON ' DAY ' -THAT'S
rx y40NL PRETTY
ttv R ON 7
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"The Authority on Authorities"
1-Club West bid 1-Heart North
1-Spade and East 4 Hearts This
was left unmolested at one table
and five odd were made with the
loss of one trick in clubs and one
in trumps
At the other table South over-
called the 4-Hearts with 4-Spadcs
which West doubled This also
made five odd with the loss of
just one trick in each major fol-
lowing a heart lead
It is interesting to note that
North and South had only about
one and a half quick tricks az
many players count them
Tomorrow's Problem
4 K 10 9 8 6 5 4 2
K
4to 7 4
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None None
) 10 5 3 2 Q 5 3
A 10 9 8 5 3 4 6 3 2
iDosler: Last Neither side vul-
A Q J 0 6 6 3
nerable) (Dealer: North North-Sonth
This hand rrot an interesting vulnerable)
whirl at the two tables of a team If North opens with 1-Spacie
rune Everything wont exactly here and South finally doubles
the Sall1P 111) to a certain point at West's 441-carts why should
Loth tablud Exit started with North not take out the double?
DistriLoA by King Fcatura Syndicate Inc
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WHATS WHAT AT A aretKE
"li
WASt-IINGTON -WORLD
---
By CHARLES P STEWART - A spy's job simply is to gatner
' Central Press Columnist information
' UNCLE SAM'S sleuths are hav
ing a glorious time just now chas
ing international spies all over the
United States and our insular pos
sessions Ordinarily this country
Worrlea very much less about spies'
activities than
- Old World
:
ia: :
countries df‘
'i::
:" 'F'' However dis
-
t: :7 Aa: : - -
: :- i:' :-: : patches say es1:'''!$---:-
- - pionage agents
te':-144' 4it I are perf ectly
::"' rampant in Eu-
: :'‘I ' 4 rope at present
':::' ":'
owing to the
a' t ::-a!-- -& -
' $:''':'lis — strained state
-aA of inter-govern-
' ' " 410i !:
- mental relation-
- hips there And
evidently we
Charles P feel that we're
Stewart as much en-
titled to a bad
case of spy jitters as anybody is
The quest for snoopers into our
military naval and miscellaneous-
ly defensive secrets is described as
extending from Alaska to Puerto
Rico from the northeastern corner
of Maine to the Gulf of California
from the Canadian border to the
Panama canal from the Pacific
coast to Hawaii and on to the Phil-
ippines and even down into Latin
America—on account of the Mon-
roe Doctrine
Director J Edgar Hoover of the
federal bureau of investigation is
in charge of the campaign Aiding
the F B I are the army and navy
intelligence divisions the customs
service the coast guard postoffice
inspectors and every other branch
of Uncle Samuel's extensive corps
of plain clothes men
If this aggregation of talent
fails to (lig up some nice espion-
age cases Itll be surprising Its
said to be probing the dirty work
of more than 1200 spying organi-
zations already
It may seem a little funny that
our spy hunters raise such a hueand-cry
before they've caught any-
body When a peacetime fly cop is
after a miscreant he tries to sneak
up on the latter from behind as
unostentatiously as possible he
doesn't take a brass band along
with him It isn't really so queer
though The F B I and its assist-
ants are getting a heap of tun out
of their performance And a large
part of the sport consists in telling
about it
Spies Versus Saboteurs
Spies don't appear to me to be
as fl Ingerous as they're rcpre
sented anyway E'iliocage 13
something else again
COLORADO C 17A RlYSMEN Gornrm trops in 11:-s-11ia with 4i
END ITROI DV1 all ni v hose
DENVER Am 10 ordcrod trial before a
Gov Ralph I Call' TI1(Yday' de- inililarY court and untler 4
Hnobili-zcd the witinal ft"itIrd:'inun (c loan to:IRLry hw of anyone
who had 1011Y HA thy Green fll(I Ill J ive of nationality who
“tcitt11-) 1S FIJ
t litt 110i Id d!!1 10 iliCa illre Att- thrcateai i he :7-fcly of G(:rplall
1
i
gut 2 Nvhcu seven MU' WVre tr001)i ill SkVilklit
WOUnded in a ela-11 between A F
i e L union niember and vigil- JAPANESE ARE FORCED
ant es J TO LAND AT FAIRBANKS
—
of L union members and vigil-
antes At Silverton m here Mine
Mill and Smelter Yorkers' union
leaders wwa a closed contract
with the Shenandoah-Dives 'Titling
:Co A S Elnbree Denver organ-1
izer for the M M S W Ind
i ter Yates eert tary of the Silver-
on locLI were (corted out or i
town londay nighi by a mob:
!which broke up a union meeting
according to reports made to Cam!
NAZN WAWA' SLOAK
TO AIO IzEtult TRooli:41 Oitio manufacturer has de
velopcd a method for uniting
BRATISLAVA Slovakia Augttwortvrt and other copper alloys
— Premier Josef while in a moht-n state yid' steel
Ti() in a proclamation Tuesday or- formiwt a pei-manent bond after
dered Slovak authorities to supply cooling
lOtd WILL
Nil NiOU
spE111
r oR t
1AI1ZIIANicS Alaska Aug 30
---(11))--Aft(ir turning back on a
Ncine-to-Whitehorse bop the Jap-
a:1e around-the-world flight
:dane Nippon landed here at 1:30
p ni (5:30 p In CST) today
The plane had flown eastward
as far as Tanana alter circling
al'irbanks two hours earlier but
tartly() back because of unfavor-
able Ilying conditions
(t
A saboteur's stunt is to do im-
mediate damage—to toss grit or a
pineapple into an enemy's physical
machinery (like a munitions plant
or a Panama canal lock) thus put-
ting it out of commission
I can understand that sabotage
has got to be squelched But a
saboteur isn't apt to begin opera-
tions until out-and-out war is rag-
ing Even then he's a hard cus-
tomer to head off in advance He's
like a murderer or a burglar He -
can't be convicted of murder or
burglary before he's committed it
But a spy ? His intentions are
bad doubtless Yet how does he
acquire his dope?
By peeking through keyholes?
Far from it He gets books at the
conversional library or official re-
ports from the government print
ing office—books and reports that
anybody can have by asking for
'cm He digests this stuff puts it
into what looks like confidential
form and then peddles it to some
potentially hostile foreign war of
lice Said war office might reason
ably prosecute any one of thest
spies for obtaining money by false
pretenses Or maybe the spy might
reasonably complain to the FLIiIs
for underpaying him Several Ger
man spies recently were convicten
in New York of receiving $50
monthly from Berlin There isn't
much gamour in spying at that
rate
Foreigners Always Welcome
The sure-enough spies are the
army and navy attaches at the va-
rious embassies in Washington
These birds always have been
more than welcome to inspect
West Point and Annapolis out
army posts Our shipyards our de-
fenses generally They've been cor-
dially invited to ride in our newest
airships As brother craftsmen our
military folk have told 'em every-
thing they could think of—and the
attaches have reciprocated
Is this spying? Not so you could
notice it It's diplomacy
But the guy who gets his stuff
out of an easily available book in
any public library is a spy if he
tries to market it
I'm not defending spying I only
allege that spy scares aro hooey I
don't bcheve there's a cauntry on
earth with any military secrets
that are secrecs fram any either
country that takes the trouble to
read the newsrapers
What Horr Hitler has in his
1-oeln wouli be worth knov1r3--but
lncertain what that la would
take not a spy but a mind-reader
I NOW (3-TOP OR
i'LL 6E-1- ME AN
APAR-WEN-1 BY My
571-1-7 AND MAKE
'MU woo ME: ALL
OvER
ALTAIN 'iitf17----r
LikE I DID -1-1")
ONCE (tbly)
BEFoRE ce No 4
--
POOP 010 t'PECk1
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Cayce, O. F. The Alva Daily Record (Alva, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 206, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1939, newspaper, August 31, 1939; Alva, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2081274/m1/4/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 22, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.