The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 29, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 22, 1938 Page: 6 of 6
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PAGE SIX
Social
Society Editor
PHONE 13
Before 13 o'Clock Noon
ewmipomotrombe
Mrs Lusa Hostess
ro Round Table Group
Round Table Study club Unit
4° 4 met Tuesday with Mrs
A L Luxa 306 Duncan street
with Miss Mabel Caldwell re-
newing "Dawn in Lyoness" by
Mary Ellen Chase
Those present were:
Mesdames— G B McCown
Bertha Briwgs Nettie Oura ler
J H Caldwell C E Sanborn
N DeMotte A B Wallace
H I Seatherly Mimes—
E E Hamden Mabel Caldwell
A L Luau Grace DeMotte
Arriving here this week to be
with their mother Mrs Fred
Kautz who is ill at her home at
1002 West street were Mrs R W
English of Missouri Mr and Mrs
Horace H Martin of Wichita
Kan Mr and Mrs Bert Kautz 1
of Renfrow Ok Albert Kautz of
Arkansas City Kan Mr Martin
returned to their home in Wichita
while Mrs Martin remained at her
mother's bedside All the child-
ren are present except Mrs E L
Monng et Dilworth Minn who 1
is expected to arrive Tuesday 1
A group of friends surprised
Mrs Alva Hickerson with a birth-
day party party at her home 806 Hes-
ter street Saturday evening
Games were played after the pres-
entation of 'Offs Petreshments of
cocoa and cookies were served
Guests were Mr and Mrs Ted
Carnes Mr and Mrs Oscar Col-
bert Mr and Mrs Elmer Mein-
ecke Miss Ellen Fern Tyner and
the honoree and her husband
Past President's Club
Entertained by Mrs Hughes
One of the delightful parties of
last week was the Mexican din-
ner with which Mrs Marion
Hughes 239 Hester greet enter-
tained the Past President's club of
the Business and Professional Wo-
man's club of Cushing
Favors and place cards were
brought here from Mexico by Mrs
Hughes last summer
Miss Margaret McCollough as-
sisted the hostess in serving
Stillwater guests were Mrs Lil-
lian Siekman Mrs Alice McIn-
tire and Mrs Nina Laughlin
Members attending were:
Mesdames— Ella McClanahan
Irene Watson Harry thivis
Jim Oearhart Helen Street
Jack Cca Mimes—
illeorFe Whitro hfildrpd Steinmyer
Rebecca Cochran Eunice Wyrick
Presbyterian Circle No 1 has
announced that it will not meet
the last week in November but
will hold its next meeting Decem-
ber 7 in the home of Mrs A L
Ltixa 306 Duncan street
Ross Floyd 1101 West Fourth
avenue left Tuesday to spend the
Thanksgiving holidays with his
parents Mr and Mrs George
Floyd at their home in Matton
He expects to return to Still-
water Sunday
LIVING EXPENSE OF
DODGE WIDOW 111011
Cardiac Mich Nov 22
A 19-year-old widow who less
than a year ago was earning $15
a week as the village telephone
operator at Gore Bay Ontario
Tuesday sought "living expenses"
of $33000 a month from the motor
millions of her late husband Dan-
iel Dodge
A hearing was scheduled Tues-
day afternoon on the request of
Mrs Annie Laurin e Dodge that
she be granted the money to per-
mit her to live in keeping "with
the Dodge fortune and family
tradition" during litigation over
her husbands will
Paul Oren attorney for Mrs
Dodge expected that the request
would be opposed by Mrs Alfred
Wilson Dodge's mother and one
of the world's richest women Mrs
Wilson received the bulk of her
son's $10000000 estate while the
widow received only $250000
through a premarital agreement
Dodge was drowned in Georgian
Bay while on his honeymoon last
August 15
inher petition filed in probate
court Mrs Dodge has clamed
that while living for six weeks
prior to her marriage at Mrs Wil-
son's estate at Rochester Mich
She had become accustomed to
the Dodge style of living
That living scale she said in-
cluded Mrs Wilson's 200-room
house on a 1400-acre estate a
swimming pool club house and
stables A staff of 160 servants
was necessary the petition said to
maintain the estate
ARCHER RENAMED TO
SECRETARIES' BOARD
Ralph Archer secretary of the
Stillwater chamber of commerce
was re-elected for another year to
the board of the Oklahoma As-
sociation of Commercial Organiza-
tion Secretaries during the annual
business meeting of the associa-
tion in Clinton last Friday and
Saturday
Archer who is an active work-
er in the association was chair-
man of the program for the Clin-
ton meeting He reported the
heaviest attendance at the meet-
ing of any before recorded
tActivi ties 1
and Clubs1
1
SOCIAL CALENDAR
Tuesday
Beta Sigma Phi 8 o'clock p
with Miss Marie Hanunock
323!2 West Sixth Avenue
IVedoesday
A A U W Short Course 8 o'-
clock p m Home Ec Living
Room A and M Campus
CITY BRIEFS
13-irn Friday November 18 1938
to Mr and Mrs B L Newton 220
Lewis street Stillwater Ok a
daughter whom they have named
Carolyn The child's weight was
E! 4 pounds
The Juanita Beauty Shop 318
Vilest Sixth Invites you to try
?frit-of-the-week bpechtls Phone
I96 18-2e
Mr and Mrs W A Stria lin
415 West Seventh avenue are ex-
necting a number ot visitors in
their home for Thanksgiving ind
the week-end Among them will
be Mr and Mrs Harry Kimbriel
and two children Harry Jr and
Donald of Omaha Neb and Dr
and Mrs W H Atkins and son
William Howard II of Norman
Mrs Kimbriel and Mrs Atkins
are daughters of Mr and Mrs
Stria lin Also expected for the
week-end are Mrs A L Kim-
briel and daughter Virginia and
sons Hardy and George of Durant
Phone 1210 for Pasteurized
Zrade A milk and Dairy Products
Early morning and afternoon de-
lievery Payne County Milk Pro-
ducers Cooperative Assn Inc
1 -2ft
Dr and Mrs R A Barron 302
Jefferson street returned to Still-
water Tuesday from Tulsa after
spending the week-end there with
Mrs Barron's sister Mrs David
Moffitt Mrs Barron's mother
Mrs A J Williams returned to
Stillwater with them to spend the
winter
ARRIVAL OF FRIENDS
SAVED STATE COUPLE
Nfuskogue ---41P) —Mr and Mts
Herbert Nelson a couple living on
the outskirts of Muskogee were
alive today because of the time-
ly arrival of friends at their
home one night last week
They narrowly escaped death
by carbon monoxide poisoning
from the fumes of a new heater
Installed in their home the pre-
vious day
Two friends of Nelson with
whom he rides to work each night
snpped their car in front of the
Nelson residence and honked
There was no reply even after
several insistent soundings of the
automobile horn Because there
was a light in the house the two
men Otis Mitchell and Hurley
Barnett went to the door and
knocked There was no answer
Alarmed they went to a bed-
room window from which a light
shone Stretched across a bed in
the room lay the Nelsons Their
eyes were open but they merely
stirred uneasily at the calls of
the two men
Mitchell and Barnett broke into
the room through the closed win-
dow They called the fire de-
partment and asked firemen to
rush artificial respiration equip-
ment Nelson responded to the treat-
ment immediately and was un-
harmed but Mrs Nelson was ill
for several days
Double l'humbs Giveaway
San Jose Cal — (LP) — When
Police Scrvcant Kenneth Jordan
started to fingerprint Gabriel San-
' tana he ran up against a new
ccmplleation Santana had two
thumbs On each hand and the
fingerprint cards only had provi-
sions for one thumb However
Fulticient printing was done to es-
tablish that Santana was a parole
violator on a vagrancy charge
NEVA-TWIST
SPIRAL RUI3BER
CORD
Prevents Telephone
Cords from Twisting
2
HINKEL SONS
Printers
620 Main St
I was advising Stillwater house-
Ballet Caravan Coming wives on new ways to use their
old receipts rather than prescrib-
A 1 4 1 1 -r I ing new hard-to-prepare receipts
As Allied
ftMeM11010 00NMtIIIE1111M
EUGENE LORING character
dancer who appears with the Bal-
let Caravan In College auditorium
Monday November 28 is shown
as he appears in "Billy the Kid"
Loring conceived the piece "Yan-
kee Clipper" which is outstand-
ing in the Caravan program The
group of all-American dancers is
brought here by Allied Arts
— — -
INDUSTRIAL COURSES
0E1' NOTED SPEAKERS
Problems and responsibilities of
industry will be the theme of the
second annual industrial relations
conference at Oklahoma Agricul-
tural and Mechanical college De-
cember 9 and 10
Nationally prominent men will
be featured at the series of meet-
ings according to 11 G Thuesen
head of the industrial engineering
department at the college
Capt A A Nicholson manager
of the personnel department of
the Texas company New York
will address the group on two oc-
casions He will discuss The Ma-
jor Problems and Responsibilities
of Industry" and "Human Engi-
neering as a Profession" Cap-
tain Nicholson's record of indus-
trial leadership extends back over
a period of 25 years
Bishop Brown director of the
research bureau of retail train-
ing at the University of Pittsburgh
will discuss problems Of mercan-
tile establishments basing his ob-
servations on wide experience in
the pernonnel management field
Discussion of labor legislation
at the conference will be handled
by Edwin A Elliott regional di-
' rector of the National Labor Re-
lations Board "Some Aspects of
the Work of the National Labor
Relations Board" will be the title
of his Redress
The Divisions of Engineering
and Commerce and the State De-
partment of Vocational Education
are jointly sponsoring the confer-
ence The Industrial Editors confer-
ence meeting on the same dates
will offer an opportunity for dis-
cussion of common problems fac-
ing the personnel men and the
editors
t100001 1W11AMINWIMIEK ONW 414:0
R E ROBERTS M D
I GENERAL MEDICINK !
and Specialty
Eye Ear Nose and Throat
Phone 833 523 Lewis
I X106014 LITEIZIAllia 2LEASE ElkI ta
SHIRLEY TEMPLE STYLES
Mothers be sure to see these
quaint little peasant styled
dresses Vividly colored
patterns that will definitely
be becoming to your little
girl! GET HER ONE FOR
THANKSGIVING!
Sizes 3 to 14
$198
ikt
Ant)
WE GIVE AND REDEEM
THE STILLWATER DAILY PRESS STILLWATER OKLAHOMA
Arts Number
-
Dancer Eugena Loring Featured
by Caravan Museum Visit
Flied Ills Imagination
I Eugene Loring brilliant young
dancer and chon ographer of the
Ballet Caravan which plays in
College auditorium here on Mon-
day November 28 under the aus-
pices of Allied Arts became a
dancer through a visit to a mu-
seum On off days from his parts with
a Broadway acting company Lor-
ing visted the Whaling museum
la Salem The models of the old
boats the copies of their famous
records and their proud mystical-
ly beautiful figureheads caught
his imagination lie dreamt of a
theatncal production which could
recreate for an audience the tale
of a sailor boy's experience on one
of the long voyages around the
Horn
Lor!ng came to the conclusion
that the color pageantry move-
ment and spectacle of such a pro-
duction could better be caught hyl
a ballet than in play form So
strong was his desire to work out
such a ballet that he enrolled in
the School of American Ballet in
" New York where be became so
" proficient that he was selected as
a member of the Ballet Caravan"
an all-American unit when it was
founded in 1936
Last season Lincoln Kirstein di-
rector of the Caravan gave Lor-
ing his opportunity to prove that
the story of a boy's voyage around
the Cape on a sailing vessel would
" make good ballet material In
collaboration with American com-
posers costumers and designers"
Loring developed his piece Yan-
kee Clipper which is one of the I
featured attractions of the Ballet
"Caravan bill
11111P1
COOKING RANGE BEING
EXHIBITED IN ACTION
Chamber Range Demonstrations
Start at Thompson-Parker
With only a minute to spare be-
tween demonstrations Miss Mabel
Anderson Chambers Range Home
Eccnomist currently appearing in
the Thompson-Parker appliance
department paused long enough
to explain that she was not a cook-
ing school teacher but that she
MOORE'S CAFE
Change of Menu Every Day
Turkey Dinner and Cran-
berry Sauce Sunday
1111Vest Ninth Avenue
STOVE REPAIRING
STOVES elrEANED REGULATED
0 ENS RELINED
SPRINGS CVICIIES FOR ALL
Es
FREE ESTI NI ITS-10 TEARS
EXPERIENCE—WORK GUAR-
ANTEE)) PARSON'S STOVE REPAIR
Phone 2 111
t
Nrf
1 I
ft0"- k4‘t'4
S S GREEN STAMPS!
as is usually the case in most
cooking demonstrations
Cooking school teachers make
their appearances in Stillwater
quite often during the year but it
is seldom that a well known gas
range manufacturing company
1 sends a representative who open-
ly admits that she is not an ex-
pert on how to prepare fantastic
new dishes to please unreasonable
husbands who demand the very
newest in modern cookery Miss
Anderson does admit however
that by following her instructions
I any housewife can cook a tasty
meal that contains all the delici
Gus Juices and flavor so often miss-
ing from foods prepared on the
average gas range
1 Acting as official representative
of Hales-Mullaly Inc of Oklaho-
ma City it is Miss Anderson's
duty to visit various important re-
tail outlets throughout the state
asEisting housewives everywhere
with their cooking problems Hav-
i ing spent a full month in Oklaho-
ma City and a week each in Tulsa
and Bartlesville Miss Anderson
comes to Stillwater with a wealth
of information to offer to those
who consult her during the re-
mainder of this week
wo-' today-ha
Ida Sat
REVIEWING THE NEWS
By AUBREY McALISTER
Associate Editor Daily Press
I Little Czechoslovakia again felt
the Nazi ax Monday as she lost
1106 more small villages with 60-
000 inhabitants to Germany when
the final boundary was fixed in
Berlin by the international com-
mission set up by the Munich ac-
1 cord of September 30 The Ger-
man forces will occupy the new
I areas Thursday and the Czech
Iarmy on the same day will occupy
twenty-seven small communes
"exchanged" for the territory giv-
en to Germany in the "border rec-
tification" By Mondav's trans-
fer the Germans obtained im
BLACK
a VINTAGE
AMBERUST
BOULEVARD
SEPIA
Solved!
the mystery of the
disappearing waistline
ckV
II
:LAA4:41
Vasserelkl
lows(lation
Sketekd! No
amaretteGirtile
$5i Anchored Up
lift Vassarotto
Bandeau $200
5
Waistline tiny as a Dresden figurine's
yet she lives and breathes! Vassarette's
special waist ribbing shapes her without
squeezing gives a neat in-curve
with no bulge above Other Vassarto
virtues comfortable hip slimming
a firm way with the derriere wonderful
waabability and wearability
I
portant transportation facilities
including Theben on the left bank
of the Danube enabling them to
control both banks of the stream
Secretary of State Hull said
Monday a note had been received
from Germany concerning Aus-
tria's debts to the United States
but he would not disclose its na-
ture He said it did not purport
to be final and therefore was not
entirely satisfactory to this gov-
ernment The note replied to
American notes or April 6 and
June 9 demanding that Germany
now that it has absorbed Austria
assume responsibility for that
country's debts to the United
States Principal Austrian debt is
$2405570892 due for flour sold
on credit in the post-war period
Population of Sing Sing prison
reached an all-time record high
of 2840 prisoners Monday night
forcing more than 100 to sleep in
corridors
Wilder McGowan 24-year-old
Negro was lynched Monday by a
mob of about 200 white men who
had trailed him for several hours
after the alleged rape and rob-
bery of a 74-year-old white wo-
man Sheriff S C Hinton said
the mob seized the Negro while he
and his deputies were six miles
away The lynching occurred
near Wiggins Miss This was the
second lynching at Wiggins in
four years and the 'ruskegee in-
stitute records showed it to be
the sixth in the south during 1938
"The woman" the sheriff said
"furnished a description but could
not name the Negro who raped
and robbed her" The sheriff said
he did not know exactly where or
how the Negro had been found by
Cayght Cold?
USED STIS MOTHERS OUT MS
To relieve distress—rub
throat chest back with
VICKS
w VAPORUES
$165
the mob But Peter Lott a Wig-
gins resident said the mob found
the Negro in a truck preparing
to leave for Gulfport dragged him
down and strung him up
Maj Gen John J Pershing ac-
companied by his sister Miss May
Pershing was to have arrived
veuIppeu—"boveu—ouvou—ilfrm—oloon—ditoei—Voi3
q
g oil aitct iiiketiii f
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ca Rckie 1)ek1s 4 '
A A
Fashioned to a Queen's Taste''
PaUEEN'S
LACE
— by —
NOW AT THE LOWEST PRICE EVER!
The one and only Genuine QUEEN'S LACE 110SE is
made only by VAN RAALTE and it's lovely long wear-
ing cob-web mesh is protected by copyright patents
Each pair is plainly labeled "Queen's Lace" by Van
Raalte Accept no substitutes ask to see the label A
new shipment just received Sizes 811 to 11
"BECAUSE YOU LOVE NICE THINGS!"
FOR A BRIGHT WARM WINTER
Women's and Children's
Wool Gloves
and Mittens
39c to 98c
Smart gay and warm these gloves add a
touch of color to your Winter Costumes
Plain weaves and novelties in all colors
and combinations
Better Bags for
"Best" Outfits
$195 and $295
Fine Leathers smart styling com-
pletely fitted New shapes new
leathers new colors Suedes
Patents Glove Kid Calfskin
Buffalo and Pig Grains in Black Browns
Rusts Burnt Earth and Wines Buy now
for yourself and for Christmas giving
TUESDAY NOVEMBER 22 1938
Tuesday afternoon in San An 1
tonio Tex according to word re i
ceived there He is exPected to t
remain there for several days be yr
fore proceeding to New Mexico ti
to spend the winter The coin t'
manding officer of American fore
es during the World war has been
vacationing in Europe 4
HOLEPROOF HOSE EXCLUSIVE WITH US!
ATZ
TIOLEPROOF'S NEW
"Star Light"
$115
Here's the Hose you'll want
to wear Thanksgiving! A
two-thread Chiffon run stop
Lace Top with unusual
thread vitality! See these
New Hose TODAY!
Dixie Americana
Frontier
Williamsburg
WE GIVE AND REDEEM "S & H" GREEN STAMPS
INWMiMnMO1
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alo0Emowar
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In
It
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VOL1
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cussini
of the
decide(
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and
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Okla
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a day
won t
Comes
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strike
no gar
son w
single
stumbl
that ti
dental
strikin
day's !
This
remov(
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studen
for a
that t
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sweat
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at the
momer
and tll
to sthi
room
of ten
being
were E
profess
could
tendar
prof
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bring
class
classro
stance
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the mi
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of kno
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and cc
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Accept no substitutes ask to see the label A
ipment just received Sizes 811: to 11
"BECAUSE YOU LOVE NICE THINGS!"
FOR A BRIGHT WARM WINTER es4
tt e
Women's and Children's J"lbes
Wool Gloves 41
and Mittens
slat A4 l'?1E ail h) lia NI "Jr a ' LAL Lib Li all
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Mothers be sure to see these
quaint little peasant styled
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patterns that will definitely ' 'kr ilT
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be becoming to your little
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THANKSGIVING!
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Wile, Otis. The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 29, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 22, 1938, newspaper, November 22, 1938; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2161673/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.