The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 211, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 6, 1938 Page: 3 of 6
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ill'etherbys Return
)4' Mr and Mrs J C Wetherby
616 West Fourth avenue have re-
turned from a month long sojourn
In Detroit Mich and Geneva N
Nr in the Finger Lakes district
Visiting relatives
- Mrs Wetherby received a Inas-
ster's degree in speech from Wayne
liniversity Detroit Mr Wetherby
is a member of the speech de-
'Vcirtment staff at Oklahoma Agri-
Fultural and Mechanical college
Royal Neighbors
The Royal Neighbor Circle met
Monday evening in the home of
Mrs H E Ricker 1107 Main
street Following the program and
aiscussion of business refresh-
itnents were served by the hostess
Mrs Helen Vaughn assisted her
'to Members present included Mes-
Vames Helen Vaughn Laura Blos-
som Mary Carnes Edith Miller
'And the hostess Mrs Ricker
ON M S Resumes
'Regular Meetings
4 Regular meetings of the Bap-
tist Women's Missionary society
Will be resumed Wednesday after-
poon at 2:30 o'clock
1 The Ida Nelson circle will meet
fit the church parlor for an apron
party and election of officers
4 Ruth Circle will meet at the
twine of Mrs Roy 'felt North Al-
bert Pike highway
Naomi Circle will not meet it
was announced
40
MOE SENTENCES IIIS
4 BOYHOOD PAL TO JAIL
' Toms River N J —(LP)—Judge
Percy Camp sentenced Leon S
Clayton to one to two years in
New Jersey state prison for ob-
taining money by laud In pass-
Ingsentence the jurist said:
"This is probably the hardest
gentence I shall ever have to pro-
pounce" Judge Camp and Clayton were
boyhood churns and were born
and reared together on adjoining
terms
Beetles Ruin Fishing
1 Wilmington — (LP) — Farmers
oind gardeners long have been
othered by Japanese beetles but
tkow New Castle county fishermen
are starting to complain They
so many beetles have fallen
Tito ponds and streams and been
eaten by fish that now fish refuse
1 o nibble at bait
4 iittliforse Kicks Up and Dies
ndalk Ont ---(113)-- A horse
kicked up its heels on a farm near
Isere and died for its friskiness
Harold Talbot a farmer turned
ts horses out to the pasture One
ro them feeling frisky ran and
one of its legs snapped It had to
(t)e destroyed
a
id
Sc
I
4
£4
It'ESDAY SEPTEMBER 6 1938
Social
Society Editor
PHONE 11
Before 12 o'Clock Noon
Activi ties
and Clubs 1
$90 WARDROBE FOR
ENROLLEES IN CCC
Washington — (LP) — The gov-
ernment will give each Civilian
Conservation Corps enrollee $9061
worth of clothing during the year
ahead
The wardrobe of 28 articles in-
clude: four denim four cotton and
four woolen pairs of trousers two
olive drab coats an overcoat eight
shirts four summer and four
winter undershirts and drawers
four pairs of service shoes two
pail's of overshoes two overseas
and one winter cap two denim
work hats 12 pairs of socks two
belts a windbreaker a mackinaw
and two neckties
This outfit will be modified
somewhat depending on the cli-
mate and conditions under which
an enrollee is working
The $9961 figure for fiscal year
1939 campares with $9809 in 1938
$10251 in 1937 $8439 in 1936
$7847 in 1935 and $8298 in 1934
The figures are not exactly com-
parable because four shirts and
four pants were added in 1937 and
a mackinaw in the 1938 fiscal
year
WATERMELON SYRUP
Chickasha—AM—L C Hutson
president of a cotton oil company
and a dabbler in chemurgy today
believed he had something new—
watermelon syrup
"I was eating a piece of water-
melon the other night and I got
to thinking about the juice" said
Hutson "I got to thinking about
its sugar content and the practice
of chemurgy in finding new uses
for raw products from the farm
"So I decided to do some ex-
perimenting" Hutson said he got up from the
table took the pulp from half a
melon and using a flour sack
extracted the juice He then boil-
ed it in a pan
'Boiled down that watermelon
juice became a delicious syrup
with a flavor not unlike that of
honey" he said
"If watermelon syrup could be
put to practical use growers
could market only the best melons
and more than half the crop could
be used for making syrup" the
executive said
"From my experiment I believe
that it would be possible to ex-
tract from a pint to a quart of
syrup from each melon"
Town Wars on Stray Dogs
Eustis Fla — (LP) — Police
have killed more than 100 stray
dogs and cats here as a precau-
tionary health measure against
rabies Discovery of two cats and
a dog with rabies led to the strict
order to kill homeless animals
To-Day's Popular Design
I I 1 By Carol Aimes'
624
All reproduction rights to this design menet!
t
:
il NOTE: Miss Almes receives at least 200 votes for each design before it is
iliccepted for this column Send us your votes We print all the popular
Aesigns
I FLAMINGO BATHROOM ENSEMBLE
i DESIGN NO 624
4
1 Dear Readers: Here is a lovely design prepared in response to
our requests for a bath mat When you see it you arc going to
jay "Just what I wanted!" The flamingos and flowers are ap-
pliqued in natural colors on zig-zag table padding Edges are bound
Vith bias strips Very quickly made Even the designer is proud of it
tThe pattern includes transfers of the designs stitch and color
earts stitch diagrams material requirements and all instructions for
raking the complete set
Send 15 cents coin preferred
7
Pattern Order Form—To be used when ordering patterns and
I
oting for popular designs
'to: Stillwater Daily Press
f eedlework Dept 620 Main Street Stillwater Okla
DESIGN NO 624
IT ame
113treet
1
jrZy State
w rsuggest the follGwing as a popular design:
FRITZI RITZ
‘ OH DEAR--
ILL ) BET
P0011' :
SLUGGO
MISGES a
r ME
TEMBE0
r STOP '
BROODING
ABOUT
SLUGGO
'AND GO TO
-ilt3ED!r""
it&
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410
Ld
II
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DE MOLAYS IN ANNUAL
CAMP AT CRATERVILLE
Two Local Members Appointed to
State Posts at Conference
Two members of the Stillwater
De Mo lay chapter were appointed
to state offices of the organization
during the second annual leader-
ship conference at Craterville park
in the Wichita mountains last
Friday Saturday and Sunday
They were Paul Weston ap-
pointed senior deacon and Frank
Pinney named state preceptor
Attending the conference from
Stillwater were "Dad" Fred B
Taylor Paves Baker Frank Pin-
ney Paul Weston Glenn Weston
Byron Gray Bill Agee and J C
Lytton
Among notables at the confer-
ence were E G Green active
member of the grand council: G
B Tints state senior counsellor
and Kenneth Harris editor of the
De Molay News of Oklahoma
Tims whose home is in Bartles-
ville left from Stillwater to at-
tend the conference He is here
to attend the Oklahoma Agricul-
tural and Mechanical college
Recreation during the confer-
ence was in the form of mountain
climbing archery skating swim-
ming and horseback riding
LENGTHEN THE MIKE
HERE COMES JIMMY
Tulsa is hereby given warning
to lengthen her microphones for
6 foot 5 inch Shin Jim Stillwa-
ter's lonesome cowboy is heading
that way with the intention of
making a success in radio—if the
studios are large enough to ac-
commodate him
Slim Jim otherwise known in
Stillwater as Jmmy Pope will in-
augurate a program of popular and
cowboy songs on Station IcruL
Tulsa Monday He expects to be
on the air fifteen minutes every
day but does not know the time
of his appearance as yet
Jimmy has been singing with A
Frank Martin's Oklahoma Agricul-
tural and Mechanical college en-
tertainment unit for some time
and has won amateur contests
About August 20 he decided to
journey to Tulsa to show what he
could do with the result that
KTUL signed him after a twenty-
minute audition
Slim Jim has a repertoire of
200 songs he claims and adds
that he will learn more if more
are needed He accompanies him-
self on the guitar
4' FOLKS AND FOIBLES
4 4 41
4 4 dp
Wife and I are becoming es-
tranged and it is my fault The
trouble is I Just will get hungry
and this annoys here Today when
I became hungry at meal time
she was angry because she had
to put down the dress she was
making "No matter what I
start" she said "I have to put it
down and cook" I could see her
side of it and I regretted being
hungry although there was noth-
ing deliberate about it on my part
The hunger Just crept in on me
Well day after day my hunger
causes her to stop some pleasant
tailt Frequently I eat scraps so
I will not bother her but there are
times when I am mean enough to
ask her to cook for me I guess
It is the Old Nick in me that
makes me want to annoy her
Cousin Elizabeth used to be very
narrow about her own church but
she has four grown daughters now
and she is willing for them to be
led to any church alter in town
Waxie Darner doesn't believe in
marrying for money but she says
that if a man is very wealthy how
in the world are you going to tell
that you don't love him?
It is impossible to comfort
Cousin Minnie when she nas trou-
ble She is the kind that cheer-
fully tells you not to worry when
your affairs are a mess
-
Aunt Julia says her husband is
so mean that she doesn't expect to
meet him in heaven but she is so
mean that he probably will not
care
It is provoking to bave a rich
aunt send you another photograph
of herself instead of a check that
would be so much more useful
We know something bad has
happened when we receive a letter
from Aunt Julia She will not
waste a stamp on good news—
Claude Callan in Kansas City
Times
THE STTILITATER DAILY PRESS
I
CJIRL SCOUTS RECEIVE
HONORS DURNfi COURT
--
Mrs Glen Tonkinson and Wini-
fred Ligon last week directed the
final meeting of the season for
Troop 4 Girl Scouts when they
sponsored a banquet and court of
awards
Guests were Mrs Leslie Hazen
Mrs Clemmer Wood Mrs Phillip
S Donnell and Mrs Paul Swim
The following girls received
awards:
Lucille Blackwell Margaret
Boehr Peggy Graham Shirley
Lanham Betty Jayne Carnes
Veaujilla Hazen Jean Wood Elea-
nor Wood Eleanor Fry Anita Jo
Hatfield Leona Lancaster Mary
Cleverdon Barbara Donnell Mild-
red Dykes Owannalee Gosnell
Gladys Harris Mary Jane Hinkel
Joan Hawk Betty Jardot Eileen
Justice Joyce Swim and Barbara
Thomas
MOVIE COLONY TO BE
LEOION ENTERTAINER
Los Angeles Calif — (LP) —
Plans for the entertainment of
more than 140000 American Le-
gionnaires and their families at
the 20th annual convention to be
held here September 19 to 22 have
been completed
The 12-hours-long parade a
feature cif the gathering will skip
the congested downtown district
entirely and will be routed from
Washington Boulevard to the Me-
morial Coliseum seating 110000
persons
The program gets under way on
Sept 18 when the annual Fidac
breakfast takes place with Mrs
R Alfred Blackburn of Kentucky
American vice-president in charge
France will be the honored coun-
try During the afternoon a polo
game has been arranged between
famous stars and a team composed
of legionnaires at the Will Rogers
Memorial Field
Religious and patriotic services
will be conducted Sunday night in
the Hollywood Bowl seating 25000
persons Only those bearing regis-
tration tickets will be admitted
Scores of film stars under the
direction of W S Van Dyke al-
ready are rehearsing the spectacle
Herbert Marshall English actor
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Chesterfield Time
on Your Radio
PAUL WHITEMAN
Every Irednesday Evening
All C B S Stations
PAUL DOUGLAS
Daily Sports Protram
51 Leading N B C
Stations
o
- ---
----- AND BEFORE YOU GO UP 00
'YOUR POONA PUT Pk NOTE OUT
' FOQ THE MILK MNN
will precnt a pageant "The Birth
of the American Legion" Fay
Balmer Gone Raymond and Plat
OBrien will take part in a play
"The Golden Lady" a tribute to
Gold SI ar mothers Nelson Eddy
and Bing Crosby will contribute
patriotic numbers
On Monday the American Le-
gion Auxiliary will begin its ses-
sions in Shrine Auditoriu m
Throughout the day the drum and
bugle corps will go through their
preliminary competition in the
Coliseum
The Warner Brothers studios at
Burbank will be thrown open to
visitors during the afternoon
where the legionnaires can see the
inner workings of motion pictures
The drum and bugle corps
championship will be decided
Monday night in the Coliseum be-
fore 110000 persons At the same
hour the National Commander's
Dinner will be held with Jack
Benny as master of ceremonies
The 40 and 8 will hold its annual
parade through the downtown
streets during the evening
Tuesday Parade Day
Tuesday is officially parade day
with no convention sessions sched-
uled Present plans call for a
hour stream of marchers to circle
the Coliseum The California con-
tingent will bring up the rear of
the parade with a pageant of early
days
Tuesday night boxing show is
planned at Gilmore Stadium with
such notables present as Henry
Armstrong and Ceferino Garcia
Also veterans of the aviation corps
and present-day fliers will assem-
ble that night at Palomar Ball-
room to choose "Miss American
Legion"
Convention sessions will be re-
sumed Wednesday with scenic
tours planned for the families The
40 & 8 banquet will be held at the
Cocoanut Grove early Wednesday
evening following which "Motion
Picture Night" will be celebrated
in the Coliseum with Joe E Brown
as master of ceremonies
Following official close of the
convention the Battle Fleet based
at Los Angeles harbor will put on
a mass demonstration for the vis-
iting legionnaires
Garret and basement hold many
discarded articles that can
turned into cash through Daily
Press Want Ads
4ra
&bt61
I
I
DAILY PRESS
PATTERN
I
SLIM WAISTLINE
DRESS
A warm wine shade crepe made
this attractive dress It has inter-
(:sting soft detail at the blioulder
a nipped-in fitted waistline and a
pencil-slim skirt with slightly
flared hem
It is also a nice dress for the
ycung business woman or school
and college girls especially in a
clan plaid woolen The model
provides for a low vee neck and
for short sleeves Alpaca novelty
''MrT
rayon and wool mixtures vel-
veteen etc are other ideal and
popular suggestions The dress is
so easily made with the step-by-step
instruction chart that accom-
panies the pattern
Style No 2838 is designed for
sizes 14 16 18 20 years 32 34
36 38 40 and 42 inches bust Sin
36 requires 312 yards of 39-inch
material
Our new Fall Pattern Book has
over 150 of the newest Paris New
York and Hollywood designs
suggestions for Holiday Gifts
Beauty Articles and Exclusive
Cooking Recipes Order your copy
today! Price 10 cents
Address order to Stillwater Daily
Press Pattern Department 620
Main St Stillwater Okla
If you talk down to me I feel
cheated Even though I may not
understand your whole meaning
I want you to be yourself — not
try to be what you think I am
Besides if you lower your mentality
to my supposed level what chance
have I to reach yours? Stay
where you are and try to haul me
up I wish you to try to meet
me by making your language as
clear as you can That is merely
expecting you to be skilled with
the tools of your trade But that
done I want you to turn on the
Juice full force and let me get
as much as I can
Little boys who read "Macbeth"
of their own free will at the age
of 11 when it is not much more
to them than a rampageous ghost
story nevertheless are on the right
Stillwater School of Dancing
1
Hoke's Hall
I
I Only two more class periods available
1 One close floor tap class and one
1 i classic ballet
I
1
i MADELYN CASTELLO Instructor
: Seventh and Husband Phone 1062 I
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with MORE
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PAGE THREE
4-- By Bushmiller
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with MORE PLEASURE
fir millions cons
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track They grow up not only
to it but with it And at the
other end so was old Leopold
Damrosch when he was told that
his audiences did not like the
music of Wagner His reply was:
"Den dey will hear him till dey
do!" (They have and they do)
In every house there is a proper
place for egg shells and potato
parings These are the necessary
wrappings of that sustenance
which is indispensable to human
life It is such wrappings and
their contents which fill quite
rightly a considerable space in
press film radio or any other ve-
hicle of public communicatioA
Market reports light entertain-
ment sport daily news these are
the eggs End potatoes But when
their wrappings have been peeled
and the food set on the table ready
to eat that the table talk should
be kept at the level of potatoes and
eggs puts the brain in the position
of talking down to the belly
It is here that a democratic
society must have the courage to
talk not down but up — up to the
level of its highest intelligence
Institutions which suppose that in
order to survive they must keep
their sectaries children and by be-
coming childtat themselves the
next thing they know they are
outgrown by their (iwn children to
be left high and dry on the beach
of willful mediocrity — "Uncle
Dudley" in Boston Globe
Wedding invitations announce-
ments and at-home cards printed
or engraved reasonable prices
Hinkel & Sons 620 Main street
phone 13
" we been places and seen
things and everywhere we went
Chesterfields were giving people a
lot of pleasure There'll be plenty
of Chesterfields in our house now"
It takes good things to make a
1 good product That's why we
use the best ingredients a
cigarette can have
ripe tobaccos and pure cigarette
paper to make Chesterfield
the cigarette that smokers
say is milder and better-tasting
Copytght
L:Garr & MYHIS TOM COO
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Wile, Otis. The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 211, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 6, 1938, newspaper, September 6, 1938; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2161578/m1/3/: accessed June 14, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.