The Boise City News (Boise City, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1945 Page: 2 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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BOISE CITY OKLAHOMA THURSDAY SEPT 6 1915
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
-
111:11' WINTED7MEN
UNION
CARPENTERS
a nd
CONSTRUCTION WORKERS
Steady Employment
60-HOUR WEEK
()Intact
Cnnstruelion Supurintendent
jinek Island Depot
Tyrone Okla
or
Paul W Cox
Will co Hotel aheral Kansas
NEWSTROM & DAVIS
Ceneral Conliartors
ton w Fth Ave Denver Cub
FORD
MECHANICS
NEEDED
Shop foreman and expert me-
hanics needed in central Kansas
county seat town Essential work
with postwar future Good pay
Pleasant working conditions in
well equipped service department
LUrr MOTORS
Lacrosse Kansas
Authorized Ford Sales and Service
1"ARA1S AND RANCHES
FAKMS—I DAVE SOMP' OUTSTANDING
ItARGAINS in rich productive tows :wit
pt e rinds Write tor F 1r
IL EN SU ELOON M 0 S ttit ROU
S 10 untrnproved 40 nti north of
tborotoiitt Mo 40 A colt Harold Stoner
15n4 L Neely Lane Plainview hansavi
11011E FURNISHINGS &
REPAIRS Ts ot Fit u Hr naygeoso
of ail M alto" sod kinds
Order through your DEALER
METZNER STOSS RIPS'S CO
istabilehed SOSO Kansas City 111Sks
I ISCELLAN EOUS
- - —
sRuNKtD0114 eliminales 100q all traCeS
of skunk odors! Nothing like it Whirlwind
Iler to farmers trappers general stores
breeders Big profits Send kt tor sample
llll met hack guarantee
$11AltillAWK f'0 Desk K Sparkill NN
CRUTCBEM WITH TIPS Itt SP Postpaid
Braces made remodeled repaired A It
Sooworth did N $ ater Wichita 2 Kano
WOO ACRE LANDS Cheap nfter the war
bomes Free Mock rause in healthful
beautiful Ozarks Free literature
11ARNSIE1( Ozone Ark
The Sabbath
While the word Saturday is de-
rived from Saturn and the word
Sabbath is synonymous with Sun
day in the English language Sat-
urday is known by the word mean-
ing Sabbath in a number of other
Christian languages including
Russian French Italian Portu-
guese Spanish and High German
b
REAL ESTATE-MISC
You CAN relieve
ATHLETE'S
FOOT
I V V I -
10 days treatment We won't geld him" said Rob
with sORETONE its suddenly
impartial sclea This quick victory was another
tific test it-----4
shock to Ken Rob raised the report
C3 card "You'll find all your life long
soREIoNE::-::7e-- ts1 thatlin3epi erfit:11t m a:7h nothing else
Nada by McKesson &Robbins will
ill get
tariarastl it s for m t
$sal with mom bleb pisrantss -$' 4:41''' "resides Thunderhead hasn't
'4 ---A really made any trouble has he?"
0 5 A
' and $l 00 '': his
it was hard for Ken to get I '
: 1 I V''1-----
' 1 ---- in otT his horse "Ile hasn't
ErzurTnesmnmrizz 111 tried to fight Banner or get any
es or—well not anything like
—1 mat
that"
"Thunderhead hasn't had a
""1
‘ lams to relteve TIMMY 1 - 1 chance to raise hell yet It's ueen
806 of cases
showed clinical kn
proventent after only
10 da)s treatment
with SORETONE id
impartial iciest
tific test
ii- PM rIVW MI Woe w w w
a rmisenct t w
hat e could
L' leve 'Touch
1 ''''st 1 -7i '' 1(1 r -'''-
'' L- i''ii4 4-N :4L1 7 t ''1 Al!1 Go with him urtil early this
' E'Cril 17"! '1':' 7-L' :i7 i::-:-1 Firing 4 t‘ hen sltehcalii:et iii tiel:itt for
pr r s " 7
kkati&64-44“ha 61 t
(Ako lino Stonaullic Linit 1)
Ijdia E Tinkhern's Vq‘etable Corn
pound t jamatis to relic‘o not only
molithly pain but aso accompanNing
Lel-VOUS tired Idelistrum7 fecilms--
wben due to functional periodic dis-
turbances Taken regulatly—it helps
build up resistance ligainst such dis-
tress l'inkintin's Compound tit:ps
lure! Follow label directions Try
ilICITARI
444 (7ttdrA4M4 CUMPOONO
gt
r Lop
p
LAT tri
o
POISON
RED YOUR PtACE or RATS Mots
13 c Dm NORAMM001 via
141NU-11 35-45
May Warn of Disordered
Kidney Action
Modern life with its hurry and worry
Irregular habits improper eating anti
drinking—its risk of ex posurs and joke-
tion—throws heavy strain on the work
of the kidneys They are apt to become
over-taxed and fail to filter excess acid
and other impurities from the life-giving
blood
You may suffer nagging backache
headache dimness getting up nights
kg pains swelling—feel constantly
tired nervous all worn out Other illglia
of kidney or bladder disorder are oome
Orme burning scanty or too frequent
urination
Try Doon's Pills D04l'il help the
kidneys to pass olY harmful excess body
tote They have had more than half a
century of public approval Are recom-
mended by grateful users everywhere
Ask your neichbor I
1y
'
THE STORY THUS FAR: Thunder
head Is the only white horse ever foaled
on Goose Bar ranch In Wyoming lie
resembles his great grandstre a wild
stallion called the Albino Ken Mc
Laugh
Iln Thunderhead's 13-yearold owner
hopes his horse will become a racer as
he Is very fast Plans are made to enter
him in a fall race meeting There Is
considerable worry however because he
Is difficult to handle Rob McLaughlin
Ken's father sells off most of his horses
to rake cash I inancial worries create
a rift between Rob and his wife Nell
He tells her that they are going Into
sheep raising Ken's school report Is
unusually good indicating that he wants
a fjor
ttrtER XX
—
Rob's big white teeth gleamed in
his dark face lie looked very
pleased But continuing to study
the boys expression he suddenly
had a recurrence of his first convic-
tion There was something fishy
"Tell me Ken" he said "is tins
absolutely on the level? You really
did it? It's bona fide?"
"Sure I (lid it dad" said Ken
his jobilance fading at the realiza-
tion that a bad reputation is hard to
live down
"When did you start vorking for
this phenomenal report card?"
"Last fall Mel sellout start-
ed" "And you kiiit it up all year?"
Ken nodded
"Just so you might get permission
from me to stay out of school next
fall when Thunderhead goes to the
post?"
"Yes sir"
"Put it there son! I'm proud of
you!"
Ken was dazed His small bone-
less hand was lost in his father's
clasp and shaken hard Ile was still
trying to explain
"The thing is dad of course I'll
make up all the lessons I lose while
I'm out of school But if I byd
Just atlced you and told you that
I'd do that you wouldn't have be-
lieved I could do it"
"And you can say that again
boy!"
"So I had to prove it to you—
before I asked you"
"You've proved it"
"Dad! Do you mean I can?"
"I mean just that This brilliant
mind of yours seems to work in re-
verse Give you horses so that you
have no time for lessons and even
have to stay out of school and you
bust yourself wide open and carry
the rag off the bush!"
"Dad—there's something more!"
"Ahl Now it's corning!" Bob's
face took on its sardonic expression
"Two things dad"
"Well—shoot!"
"You said last year when Thun-
derhead didn't get gelded with the
other twolear-olds that he could
go till this year Does—does he
have to be gelded? Wouldn't you
just—skip it—dad? Because he may
win you see—And there's a chance
that the gelding might hurt him or
kill him and anyway if he should be
a winner On the race track we'd
want to sell his services as a stal-
lion wouldn't we? And anyway—"
timing when she C:Itl'e in heat for
the first time That kept him happy
Kept him nvay from the other
mares and delayed the beginning of
vhat you might call his sex life Condi-is
he's been trained and worked
pretty consistently Volt can train
an animal you know for the kind of
life he is to live We've kept him
away from the real life of a stallion
Put that won't last forever The
time vill come One day his ears
Nval pop and he'll suddenly thump
himself on the chest and exclaim
I'm a man!"
Ken laughed "I hope it won't be
On the race track"
"Sex doesn't enter much Into the
life of race horses Stallions and
mares race together without any dis
turbances of that sort"
"I know"
"Well now — what's the ()the':
thing? Might as well get it over
with"
Ken's face flushed a little "Re
member what you said once dad?
That I cost you money every time I
turn around?"
"I remember!"
"Well—what about the money the
race is going to cost? The entrance
fee and all that?"
"I see" Rob leaned back quietly
and became very thoughtful rub-
bing his hand through his hair
"You're a lot richer now than you
used to be aren't you dad?"
"Where'd you get that idea?"
"Well—the sheep—"
"The sheep have got me so deep
In debt Thunderhead will have to
win races to pull me out!"
"Oh dad! Are you kind of count
Ing on him?" Ken's face glowed
with pride
"I'm hoping" said Rob grimly
"I've put a lot of work on that
horse myself remember and I
know he's got it in him But he's an
ugly beggar This summer will tell
the tale"
"Of course you know dad" said
Ken magnanimously "anything
Thunderhead wins viIl be yours and
Mother's"
"Will it? No I don't think so
We'd want it to be yours Then you
can pay for all your expenses and
your sch—Aing and well come out
ahead anyway!"
"But some of it would have to be
yours!"
"All right We'll incorporate Mc-
Laughlin and Son And take
what I need for the present and we
can get squared later on"
There was a moment's pause Rob
hadn't yet said anything about that
entrance fee
"You're going to have a wonder
fat big hay crop aren't you dad?
Don't you think you may sell your
hay—the part you won't need for
't
tle'
'
ir"
1
'111
4111
"We'll Incorporate McLaughlin
and Son"
the sheep or the horses or the cows
quite early—say in September?"
"Got it all figured out haven't
you?"
Ken nodded
"I don't know vhen I'll sell my
surplus hay It may pay better to
hold it till later in the season when
hay gets scarce"
Ken looked crestfallen
Rob leaned back in his chair
"We'd better count this up now and
know what we're up against"
Ken called on his fortitude and
stood waiting
"You're going with Air Sargent
so the trip won't cost you anything
but you'll be in Saginaw Falls for
three weeks—"
"I'll sleep in the stall with Thun-
derhead" put in Ken quickly "Lots
of owners do that if they haven't
got much dough"
"But I suppose you'll have to eat!
Sargent vitt send the colt with his
horses by rail and keep him in his
stables in charge of his trainer so
there'll be no shipping c table
expenses You're in luck Th re—
but Thunderhead's got to eat too
So there'll be Ins feed bill and the
jockey fee—"
"Thats ton dollars if he just
rides and twenty-five if he wins"
interpolated Ken "and chid please
don't say jockey reork that know
call
liob ignored this "Anil the en
trance fee" he finished "Altogeth-
er quite a bit of money"
Ile looked out the Window again
and in spite of fortitude Ken be-
gan to feel wet in his armpits and
around his waist
"But I'll stake you to the en-
trance fee for the one big race and
all the expenses for yourself and
Thunderhead"
"You will dad? Gee! Oh Gosh!"
"'WWII I be repaid if he doesn't
win anything?"
Ken's lips sobered in a line of
determination and courage "I'll
work very hard all summer"
"You'll do that anyway" said not)
grimly "I've never given you thie
idea you could spend the summe
sitting on your fanny have I? Or
just monkeying around your horse
either"
"And besides" said Ken "there's
another way I could make money
enough to pay you back everything
and more too"
"This brilliant mind of yours Is
getting me dizzy Ken How can
you make several hundred dollars?"
"Well—you told me once it costs
you three hundred dollars to put me
through a year of school See?" Ile
smiled brilliantly at his father
"I don't see I haven't got a bril-
liant mind"
"I — just simply — won't go to
school I could study outside and
take the exams—maybe— Anyway
I'd learn just as much and my
schooling wouldn't cost you any
thing"
! "And I'd spend the money EZIIIC
THE BOISE CITY NEWS
ing you traveling around with your
race horse I suppose?"
Ken hadn't quite the courage to
say yes but he made a graceful
gesture of assent and dashed away
Thunderhead's career was taken
seriously by everyone on the ranch
that summer and no one rode him
but his trainer young Ken Mc-
Laughlin who tipped the scale at
ninety-six pounds
During the winter just past when
the stallion had been kept in given
a liberal daily ration of oats and
hay and exercise and training by
Rob McLaughlin he had achieved a
superb development lie was as tall
as the Percheron—sixteen hands—
and would be even taller when he
had his full growth No longer could
it be Of him that he was un-
gairly !lady proportioned Al
his parts had grown togelier His
legs were long and powerfully mus-
cled his neck massive and arched
his coat a pure dazzling white and
sinning the glossiness of a stal-
lion's skin Strength power and
wilfulness were still his outstanding
characteristics
He was now shod and Ken war
out with him every day before
breakfast running him on the track
lie still fought Ken he still bucked
but when Ken complained of the
horse's dislike of him his fathet
said "You've got that wrong son
If that horse really hated you he'd
never let you get near him He
doesn't hate you He fights you be-
cause he likes to He enjoys it
You're his trainer You've got to
make him do what he doesn't want
to do and he's a fighting devil so he
tights you back But I'll bet when
he's waiting up there In the morn-
ings for you to come and give him
his work-out he'd feel pretty bad
if you didn't show up"
Touch And Go was still the pace-
maker for her big brother and Rob
McLaughlin said "When I see that
filly run damned if I don't think
she's the one that's going to be the
racer"
Touch And Go was a regular
beauty Tall and daintily made
with a long reaching neck straight
slim legs little feet that would fit
in a cup and a playful high spirit
that kept her always acting up al-
ways dancing and going sideways
tier ruddy hide was glorious in the
sun and the blond tail and mane
gave her a de luxe made-to-order
look
The summer passed very Elowly
for Ken because it was all a tense
waiting for the racing season and
a tense watching of Thunderhead
Besides it was full of excitement—
just One thing after the other The
first excitement was when he got
home and found out what was going
to happen to his mother It was
hard for Ken to keep his mind from
confusion when he thought about
that She had wanted it Hadn't she
said at dinner that night "I want
a monkey tree I want a sleigh all
covered with bells and I want a
little girl" and of course it was
right for his mother to have what
she wanted But it was hard to
take lie had argued with her about
it
"But mother you've got us! How
ard and me Aren't we enough?"
"No I want a little girl"
"Want her much mother?"
"Want her lots dear Remember
how hard you vanted Flicka?"
"It might he a boy" said Ken
gloomily and he added "De sides
doesn't it hurt awfully?"
Nell was busy it the laundry
a ay She counted the piles of
sheets she as stacking in the linen
closet
"Doesn't it mother?" ilsisted
Ken "Doc hicks might have to—"
"Ken! This is going to be a baby!
And Doc hicks won't have any-
thing to do with it!"
"Oh sure—I know that—"
"And as for its hurting—who cares
about that?" She had finished stack-
ing and her voice was very gay
"You don't get anything for noth-
ing dear"
"No" His father had told him
plenty about that
"And didn't you—" her hand was
lightly on his head arranging his
soft brown hair so that it did not
fall over his forehead "didn't you
sit all night in the cold water hold-
ing Flicka—just because you loved
her and wanted her so much?"
She was through with the linen
and went quickly back to the
kitchen Ken watched her not an-
swering her out loud but thinking
to himself that it was different now
could You love something you hadn't
ever seen and be willing in ad-
vance to stirrer for it? With Flicka
he had known and loved her and
cared for her for months
He had to struggle against a feel
big of dread when he saw his father
watching his mother all the time
with such anxiety It was a won-
der he would even let her stack the
linen He wouldn't let her do any-
thing this summer Ile himself got
up and cooked breakfast every
morning and Tim had to come in
and clean the house Gus churned
and attended to butter and cream
(TO 171: cONTINUEM
ri6eased by Western Newspaper Uniqn
By VIRGINIA VALE
UNIVERSAL has given us
another of those top-
notch psychological myste-
ries one as good as "The
Suspect" This time it's
"Uncle Harry" with a star-
studded cast—George Sand-
ers Geraldine Fitzgerald
Ella Raines and Sara Allgood who
has only to walk across a room to
steal the scene from everybody else
17-i-714f)-r!7AG
STAGE'''SCREENRADIO
GERALDINE FITZGERALD
You'll see superb acting all through
the picture especially in sonic of
Geraldine Fitzgerald's scenes It's a
picture that causes rather violent
reactions — people are going to like
it tremendously or argue about it
for weeks because they wanted a
different ending And that's a sure
sign that a picture is exceptional if
it isn't nobody carps how it turns
out
Dennis Morgan star of "Christ-
mas in Connecticut" is Ile only
Hollywood star who has worked in
pictures under three different
names so far as we know At
Metro he used his own name Stan-
hi Morner At Paramount Richard
Stanley Warners' gave him his pres-
ent name
that kept her always acting up al- If you've just stubbed your toe on
ways dancing and going sideways a disappointment here's encourage-
Iler ruddy hide was glorious in the merit for you Clark Gable lost his
sun and the blond tail and mane first film job because "his ears are
gave her a de luxe made-to-order too big" George Brent and Hum-
look phrey Bogart were dropped by con-
To Rob McLaughlin her perfect tract holders because they "weren't
conformation rmation was a justification of convincing in western drama" And
his theories of line breeding and he Bette Davis' name must still em-
sametimes studied the racing sheet barrass certain executives who let
making a note of what events were her go "because she has no sex al)
scheduled for two-yearolds "We peal"
might run her too" he said "put I
her in the baby class"
It looks as if the movie stars can't
resist the restaurant business Dur
ing filming of "Young Widow" Louis
Hayward had an architect make
plans for a cafe to be opened when
the war ended and Alan Ladd's go-
ing into partnership in a hamburger
stand
Frank Sinatra scents to be set for
the next five years in radio He's
signed a contract for 39 weeks with
a cigarette company with options
covering that time He'll replace
"Which is Which" for which "De-
tect and Collect" substituted this
summer He'll be heard Wednesday
nights on CBS He says one of the
best things about the program is the
fact that Mann Ho liner will be the
producer — thinks Ho liner's the best
producer in the business
The only motion picture iootage of
the atom smasher which playea an
Important part in experiments lead-
ing to the development of the
atomic bomb will be seen in "Mli a-
do Makers" a Warner's short sub-
ject now ready for immediate re-
lease Dr O E Lawrence who de-
veloped the cyclotron as it's called
was technical adviser on the se-
quence and appears in the film
Jack Smith who now has his own
show on CBS joins Bing Crosby
Ginny Simms and all the others
who've started on the air singing
with a trio and graduated to star-
dom Jack was in high school when
he and two friends landed the job
vacated by Bing Crosby's Rhythm
Boys at the Cocoanut Grove He
spends his free time teaching re-
turned soldiers at the New York
School of Artcraft Instruments
Twentieth Century Fox's "The
House on 92nd Street" dealing with
the development of the atomic bomb
is based entirely on records of the
FBI showing their work in counter-
acting enemy agents' attempts to ob-
taM the secret It was made secret-
ly in New York Washington and
other locales and sequences deal-
ing dirently with the bomb were
omitted till after it had been used in
Japan
ODDS AND ENDS—Guest ghosts
galore will haunt "Inner Sanctum" now
back again on CBS with Paul McGrath
as Your Host Jane Wyman liked
that leopard coat she wears in "The
Lost Weekend' so much that she had
a duplicate made for her oun ward
robe Many of the servicemen now
in hospitals are learning the inside
stories of actions they participated in
by listening to Dan Seymour's "Now It
Can Be Told" series Bing Crosby
sings :2 songs in Irving Berlins 'Blue
Skies"—a treat for Crosby fans who
won't be hearing him weekly if he cat
ries out his threat to abandon thos4
hursdtzy night broadcasts
SEWNG CIRCLE PATTERNS
1
1 ot s Jumper and AI-awning Jacket
" Make it in a pretty checked or
plaid material in her favorite
color
1111 11
i
uiIv
J UST the thing for a growing
youngster—an adorable little
jumper and jacket to match Your
young daughter will love the full
cut skirt and gay button trim
ei t" t-s cs- cs- es- e- es- es- es- c n- c e es- es- es- es- es?
ASK ME ?
?
? ANOTHER? ?
?
a ?'
in ?
? A General Quiz
? ?
4 C C C C- 0- C- C- C- C- C- C e o- e- e c- e- e
1 Residents of what state were
at one time citizens of the United
States only and not citizens of a
state?
2 Which President declined a
salary as the nation's Chief Ex-
ecutive? 3 Where is the home of the
Helvetians?
4 Who was the mother of Sa-
lome? 5 France's old Devil's island is
off the shore of what continent?
6 Who said: "Part of the se-
cret of success in life is to eat
what you like and let the food
fight it out inside"?
7 Which is considered the most
important session of congress over
called by a President?
8 Can you name one phrase
that appears twice in the Con-
stitution? 9 The albatross attains a length
of 4 feet a weight of 25 pounds
and a wing spread of how many
feet?
10 Greek mythology says that
the nymph Echo pined away until
nothing was left but her voice
because her love was not returned
by whom?
The Answers
I Virginia
2 Washington
3 Switzerland
4 Herodias
5 Northern South America
(French Guinea)
6 Mark Twain
7 The one called by President
Lincoln to prepare the nation for
civil war
8 "Due process of law"
9 Seventeen feet
10 Narcissus
TC1isjI Like 110N ie:s
Can CI eau Oda I litiion4
-----
Like the movies and radio tele-
vision can be made to create illu-
sions On0 of the oddest being the
blending of two scenes taken simul-
taneously by two cameras says
Collier's
For instance a recently tele-
vised act showing a man and a
woman dancing in flames higher
than their heads was produced by
Camera No 1 photographing the
dancers from a distance of 20 feet
and Camera No 2 photographing
the flames of some oil-soaked
waste from a distance of Iwo feet
Pattern N 8910 comes in sizes 2 it
4 5 6 and 8 years Size 3 jumper re
quires Ils yards of 35 or 39 inch mate
nal' jacket lle yards
Due to an unusually large demand and
the current conditions slightly mole
time is requiied in filling orders for a
few of the most popular pattern nun-11)41c
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT
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Enclose 25 cents In colns for eaCh
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Pattern No
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daer A
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"Hard Sponge" a new syn
thetic rubber product devil!
aped by B F Goodrich corn
bines great strength with ex-
treme lightness Experiments
point to its possible use in
airplane wings
A type of vine recently discovered
in China which attaches itself to
trees and other objects has been
found to yield latex (natural rub-
ber) Stems grow to 50 feet in
length and yield about a pound
of latex
Inner tubes made with a spit
dal type of synthetic rubber
hold air much longer than
tubes made of nature'
rubber
I Kellogg's Rice
Knape equal
Ithe whole ripe
grain in nearly
all the protec-
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essential to hu-
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The Boise City News (Boise City, Okla.), Vol. 48, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 6, 1945, newspaper, September 6, 1945; Boise City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2156520/m1/2/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.