The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 179, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1939 Page: 3 of 6
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1929 FKIVAT JIJ 1
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FRIDAY JULY 28 1939
Social
Satiety Editor
PBONE 310
Before 12 o'Clock Noon
0110 eMaf1411wiM01001100iwain
Mr and Mrs Oliver S WI Ilham
214 Orchard Lane returned
Thursday afternoon from State
College Miss where Mr Will-
ham assisted with the state Farm
Congress held there He is a
member of the faculty of Okla-
homa A and M coll?ge in the ani-
mal husbandry department
During their stay at the Missis-
sippi school town Mr and Mrs
Wit 'ham were guests a part of the
time of Mr and Mrs Floyd Bean-
blossom who formerly lived in
Stillwater The Beanblossoms
were leaving for Cleveland Ohio
to attend the Poultry Congress
Rain and cooler weather made
the trip a very pleasant one for
the Oklahoma visitors alio includ-
ed Vicksburg Miss Dallas Tex
and other points of interest as
part of their itinerary
Mr and Mrs John Weilmilen-
ster and Mr and Mrs B C Wede-
lin returned Thursday from a va-
cation spent in northwestern Colo-
rado at Minturn and Glenwood
Springs
D-RD Club
With Mrs Cunningham
At her home 107 West Fourth
avenue Mrs Darrell Cunningham
entertained the D-RD Contract
bridge club Thursday evening
Those present Included Miss
Angela Grammas Miss Vesta
French Miss Jessie Morris Mrs
Carl Leonard Mrs Ted Carlisle
Mrs Bob Tropp and Mrs Glen
Ed Thomason High score favor
was won by Mrs Leonard and
Miss Morris received a guest prize
Mrs Parks Honored
With Farewell Courtesy
As a farewell courtesy to Mrs
George Parks the former Miss
Marie Hammock Miss Lunora Mc-
NNethy entertained Thursday eve-
ning with a Dixie watermelon feast
lit her home 1112 Lowry street
Mrs Parks was presented with a
handkerchief shower
Guests were members of Beta
Sigma Phi of which organization
both the hostess and the honoree
re members
Mrs Fred Percy and son Harry
IP 4 4- 4 4 4 4 4 f
: DAILY PRESS 1
: PATTERN
I 44
16 4 4
2582
512ES 16:46
COVER-ALL APRON
FROCK
Attractive For House Or
Gardening
Cover your dress or wear this
wrap around coverall as a house
frock when you are working about
the house or your summer cot-
tage It has a generous lap large
roomy pocket free swinging skirt
and easy to make sleeves Open
It out flat for ironing and keep
It fresh and clean ready to slip
into any time The currently pop-
ular ginghams and checked cot-
tons are ideal for this dress
Frame your face vith a snowy
white collar edged with a dainty
feminine frill You will be the
picture of efficiency and charm
all the time you are working
Style No 2582 is designed for
sizes 16 36 38 40 42 44 and 46
Size 36 requirees 411s yards of 39-
inn material
Send 15 cents coin is preferred
for pattern Write plainly your
name address' and style Alumber
Be sure to state size you wish
Address order to StWwater Daily
Press Pattern Department Box
151 Stillwater Ok Allow ten days
tActivi ties
and Clubs
Franklin Mrs Ray C Jones Miss
Georgianna Jones Miss Jeanne
Hales and Mrs Harry W Orr re-
turned Thursday night from a va-
cation spent at Holy Ghost can-
yon N M
Sue Gaunt of Cushing is the
guest of her cousin Dorothy Nell
Hinkel 319 Washington street
Mrs Iresper Oder Williams Ok-
mulgee was the guest or Mrs
Deane A Bishop today
Jolly is
Elect Officers
Mrs' Gene Waller 618 Lowry
street was hostess of the Jolly-J
club Thursday evening with Mrs
Charles Buskel of Seminole as an
additional guest
For the program Mrs Gene
Hubbard gave a discussion of
"Tasty Salads" and Mrs Bill
Selph "A Grab-bag of Household
Helps"
Election of officers was held and
the following named to take of-
fice in September: Mrs Ross
Flood president Mrs Bert Stans-
bury vice-president and reporter
Mrs C A Clark secretary and
treasurer and Mrs Gene Waller
historian
Members present were Mrs Bill
Brown Mrs Flood Mrs Hubbard
Mrs Kenneth McWherter Mrs
Selph Mrs Stansbury Mrs Wal-
ler Mrs Glen Ward Mrs Harold
Ward Mrs Everett Williams and
Mrs Clark
The next meeting will be with
Mrs Glen Ward 1320 Lewis street
who will entertain the club Au-
gust 3
Two Hostesses
Entertain Neighbors
Mrs B F Harrison and Mrs
a D Duncan entertained with a
neighborhood party Tuesday eve-
ning to honor Mrs Warren C
Woelfel Galveston Tex who is
visiting her parents Mr and Mrs
J C Washinka 1620 College ave-
nue Mrs Harrison and Mrs Dun-
can are next-door neighbors at
1621 and 1625 College avenue and
the adjoining lawns were an at-
tractive setting for their party
Japanese lanterns formed the
Lighting A huge cake of ice hol-
lowed out to form a punch bowl
at in a bower of flowers ar-
ranged in baskets on a small table
at one end of the lawns before a
background of garden flowers
Miss Fay Balsh presided at the
'ninth bowl
Guests were persons already liv-
ing in the neighborhood or who
will move to that neighborhood at
an early date and included Mrs L
B Drake Mrs Edward C Burris
Mrs Jack Washinka Mrs Lalla
Bailey Mrs Carl P Blackwell
Mrs Francis V Unzicker Mrs
Herbert Graham Mrs William H
Sewell Mrs C C Lanham Mrs
E B Shotwell Mrs F E Sher-
wood Mrs E E Culbertson Mrs
T H Reynolds Mrs Schiller
Scroggs Miss Elizabeth Edgerton
Miss Balsh Mrs Washinka and
Mrs Woel f
Boys Will Present
Piano Program
Miss Corinne Adler will present
a group of boys in an all-boys
concert Friday evening at her stu-
dio 701 Jefferson street All of
the group are piano pupils of Miss
Adler
Mark Roy Welsh Allen Kay
Grady Richard Shipley Hartley
Lambdin Bobby Lee Barnes Jun-
ior Lambdin and Kenneth Mc-
Collom each will play three num-
bers and Junior Lambdin and
Kenneth McCollom will play a
two-piano number "Down South"
by Myddleton
Arm in Wringer Unbroken
Mentor 0—(1P)--While watch-
ing her mother do the laundry 3-
year-old Ellen March's arm acci-
dentally went through the wringer
with the wash but emerged with-
out permanent injury from its im-
promptu "wringing" No bones
were broken
-
Ommumormtinlinnumnimmalitimmuntimulimcini4i
V
-14 STRODE
1
FUNERAL IIOAIE
0
AMBULANCE
SERVICE
PHONE 50
I 1
illICIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIMM01111111111110111111IMIDIMIMME
Men's Suits
Ladies' F
Plain
Dresses 1114
O'Coatt 11
Robes
DUNN'S
CLEANERS
West Eighth Ave
PHONE 1022
118 West Eighth Ave
PHONE 1022
BLONDIE
REVIOLDS ASSIONED
LIBRARY BOARD JOB
1 c P Reynolds head of the ref-
erence department Oklahoma Ag-
ricultural and Mechanical college
library has been invited to serve
on the bookbinding committee
with a group of outstanding
librarians from all over the United
States at the request of Ralph
Munn president Of the American
Library association Other mem-
bers of the committee are: Earl IV
Browning librarian public library
Peoria Ill Thomas Parker Ayer
librarian public library Rich-
mond Va John Archer librarian
New York public library Alex-
ander Galt librarian Buffalo pub-
lic library Buffalo N Y and Lee
F Zimmerman director of state
libraries Bt Paul Minn
The duties of the bookbinding
committee of the American Li-
brary association are to act in an
advisory capacity to the member-
ship at large on any matters per-
taiMng to binding of books peri-
odicals and pamphlets and to the
care and repair thereof to con-
fer with existing organizations of
library binders regarding methods
and standards of binding
MUSIC RECITAL GIVEN
BY HARDIN STUDENTS
Music pupils of Florence and
Alice Hardin and Mrs Arthur
Hardin were presented Thursday
night in a recital at the First
Presbyteriad church annex The
program consisted of piano violin
and clarinet solos and duets
Taking part in the recital were
Bill Lothers Peter Boyer Jane
Phillips Jean Walsh Alice Hardin
Carl Ellis Jack Rogers Do Do Hat-
field Anita Jo Hatfield Patsy
Ruth Whitley Barbara Rains
Vera Young- Kenneth Blossom
Ruth Rogers Catherine Hardin
George Hardin Conrad Johns
Bobby Burk Jimmy Craig Ruth
Ann Ninman Martha Sanders
LaDean Miles Pauline Payne and
Gloria Guthrie
Crash Policemen Now Walk
Akron O—AM—Police officers
H J Mick and Gale Hench are
walking now instead of directing
traffic as they do usually They
wrecked their motorcycles in a
collision with each other and were
transferred to foot patrol duty
- 41
One Child to Two Women
Livingstone Northern Rhodesia
—(12)--Semi-official estimates of
the population of the Copper Belt
of Northern Rhodesia show that
there are two male adults to every
woman and one child to every two
Women
Read and use Daily Prem Want Ad 10 ---
0
A Final Clearance of
THE STILLWATER DAILY PRESS STILLWATER OKLA
FIFTEEN OET COLORS
OF HONORARY OROUP
Fifteen members of the summer
graduating class at Oklahoma Ag-
ricultural and Mechanical college
were initiated this week by Phi
Kappa Phi national honorary
scholastic fraternity in a pre-
commencement ceremony
Initiation into Phi Kappa Phi
is considered the outstanding
honor for a member of the grad-
uating class since only the upper
10 per cent of the class is admit-
ted after election on the basis of
scholarship and character
Members initiated by schools
are:
Commerce—Sam Byerley Okla-
homa City spring class) Martha
Geneva Brom Osage: Wilson
Hubbard Cordell
Education—Mrs Mable Collins
and Argus Smith both of Stillwa-
ter and Jennie Adams Morrison
Engineering—Perry H Pelley
Wichita Kan
Home economics—Lela O'Toole
Thomas and Eunice Stith Shaw-
nee Graduate—Everett B Hanson
Blair Wis Maude Colbaugh
Bartlesville Mrs Sylvia McCub-
bins Perry: Austin L Kuykenciall
Sallisaw: Hazel Shull Lawton
and Sidney P Marshall Green-
ville Fla
WORLD WAR SET OFF
25 YEARS AGO TODAY
Quartcr of ecntury Has' Passed
Since Austria Declared War
on Serbia For Murders
By RALPH HEINZEN
United Press Staff Correspondent
Paris July 28---(1P)---A quarter
of a century ago today on July
28 1914 Austria declared war on
Serbia in retaliation for the mur-
der on St Vitus Day just a month
earlier of Archduke Francis and
his wife at Sarajevo
That clash of two Danubian
powers the mighty and haughty
dual empire and the lowly Serbs
was the spark which set off the
World war which lasted four
years and four months threw 24
nations at each other costing
10000000 dead 19000000 other
casualties 9000000 orphans and
5000000 widows
Events followed rapidly upon
the Austro-Hungarian declaration
of war on Serbia Russia great
protector of the Slays of Europe
but In events were to prove rap-
idly enough merely an empty
shell of a great kingdom rose
swiftly to Serbia's aid Germany
in turn mobilized to help Austria
ly another member of that
glom" hesitated 1)rgained and
fmally jumped into the camp of
All!es in 1915
tiermany Swept Into Belgian'
riking swift ly t hrough Bel-
gium to reach France and the
coast Germany brought Belgimn
France and Britain into the war
NVithin 10 days after Vienna's
declaration of war on Belgrade
eight major powers were at war
The rapid march Of confEct is
best shown in a timetable:
July 28 1914 -- Austria declared
war On &TWO
Aug 1—Central Powers declared
war on Russia
!Aug 2—Russian army marched
into Germany German army
invaded France at Cirey
Aug 3—France and Central Pow-
ers mutually declared war
4—Germany declared war on
Belgium
lAug 4--Britain deilared war on
Central Powers
'Aug 7—Ge11flan army entered
Liege and Belgium declared
war on Central Powers
Aug 16—B ritish expeditionary
force landed in France
Aug 23—Japan declared war on
Germany
Before the end of August 1914
however the German army was
planted in Belzium and the
swinging operation through France
had begun which was to lead a
month later to the first crushing
defeat of the Germans by Mar-
shall Joffre in the First Battle of
the Marne Before the end of the
month too the Germans were to
smash an entire wing of the Rus-
sian army when the Kaiser's
Army of the East led by !Linden-
burgh and Ludendorff defeated
the Czar's Army of the West un-
der Samsonov at Tannenberg in
East Prussia Samsonov com-
mitted suicide in disgrace and
one of the Russian armies under
Rennenkampf fled from the bat-
tlefield in complete rout
Peace Efforts Failed
Hostilities were rushed exactly
a month after Sarajevo murders
but during that month diplomats
had sought to prevent war but
when they saw tha-: was hopeless
they spent several weeks tighten-
ing alliances and double checking
with other chancelleries that all
their allies intended to fulfill their
obligations
All through July 1914 Rene
Viviani French premier and for-
eign minister sounded Vienna
Berlin St Petersburg London
Rome Niadrid and other chancel-
leries hunting means of pacific
understanding He tried without
Success to get statement from
Lord Grey whether Britain would
enter the war on France's side
Raymond Poincare French pies
her ally of the Central Powers ident took a French warship
pioigtointobsomoc-vozweakwwwkwItomNkNowtoimikuwolookwoom
0 0
0 ITT' i 7 7 -1-1 0
ornal Clearance SALLq
0 01
0
0 0
Ø Clearance of Al! Summer Merchandise
0
I I
f Group
COTTON SHEERS
OA
Regàlar $13d Valàes
tinal Clearance Prke
e 69c
BLOUSES
0
0 Laces Linens Crepes
12 Price
OA $198 Blouses - $ 99
2 98 Blouses - 149
0 SWIM StITS
0
OA Only a Few
eR gular $298 Values now
$149
GLOVES
$ $100 Gloves - $ 67
$ 198 Gloves - 157
0
4-k
FINAL CLEARANCE
Sheer Silk DreEses!
Chiffons - Laces - Bernhergs
Values to $900
Final Clearance Price
'347
Values to $1275
Final Clearance Price
'547
Regular and Extra Sims-
14 to 20 and 38 to 46
FINAL CLEARANCE
of Sheer Wash Frocks!
Voiles Chiffons Bern-
bergs 198 Dresses 127
298 Dresses - 149
398 Dresses - 197
498 Dresses - 249
Dre3ses 2P7
127
149
197
249
27
349
698 Dresses - 3
Plenty of Larger Sizes--4
38 to 46
I
Lovely Cotton Prints
all
BETTER DRESSES
Values to $298
Final Clearance Price
97c
I Group Dresses
WASH SILKS
SPUN RAYONS
Values to $598
Final Clearance Price
'177
BATISTE GOWNS
PAJAMAS
$100 Values Now
67c
SEERSUCKER
GOWNS - PAJAMAS
Regular $100 Now
79c
:4
p
aristan Styk' Shop
rA
tiLA -16- Icw' ‘111-qteqhmolokywhowommwolsokimIvi
through the Baltic to St Peters-
burg to check up personally with
the Czar and the Russian govern-
ment Satstied that Russia would
fulfill her pact Poincare started
back to Paris but was still at sea
lwhen the war started and the
i German armies invaded France
The French government imme-
diately ran into a snag in its alli-
!ance with Russia Under that al-
liance the two general staffs had
worked out in minute detail a
coordinated plan of operations In
the event of war involving Ger-
many Russia was to attack East
Prussia France reithzed Germany
was too powerful to hold off in a
direct engagement unless Russia
'could force the German general
Istaff to divide its strength and
keep a great army in the east
Czar Slow to Act
But in those hectic days of late
!July and early August France had
to put considerable pressure on
Russia to oblige the Czars armies
to follow out the general staff plan
In the sequence of developments
following the Austrian ultimatum
to Serbia Russia had threatened
to mobilip in defense of the Serbs
Germany notified France that if
Russia nmbilized against Austria-
Hungary Germany would mobilize
The Austrians next mobilized and
the Russians followed immediately
Tit? Germans then mobilized to
fulfill their warning and at virtu-
ally the same tine the French did
too but to show his pacific inten-
tions and hopes Vivian! ordered
the French army to pull back two
kilometers from the German bor-
der—a serious tactical mistake as
events proved
tinier the coordinated general
staff plans the Rusisans were to
send an army into East Prussia
but no Russian troops appeared
there Instead the Russians mo-
bilized ln the Austrian border
e‘idently picking the weaker force
of the Central Powers The French
government stormed and ranted
without success for days until fi-
nally the Russian ambassador in
'Paris Isvolski and his military
attache Captain Ignatieff suc-
ceeded in convincing St Peters-
burg to fulfill the engagement
and the Russians moved into East
Prussia where Hindenburg and
Ludendorff awaited them The
war was on
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PRAISING THE PRESS
In an arresting phrase Dr Bur-
gess Johnson of Union college told
a Chautauqua audience the other
day that "it is the peculiar attri-
bute of the press in a democracy
to serve as an extension of the
eyes and ears of the populace"
That gives a new identification to
the reporter At the interview or
scene of a !WA'S event he is a com-
posite a representative of hosts of
readers
In this nation of universal news-
paper reading the reporter has to
be as objective as possible in what
he sees and hears as free from
the prejudices or special interests
of any groups in the multitude
that he represents That is not
altogether easy especially when
he has to work with words as
tools words that carry emotional
and controversial connotations
Amerivan newspapers and re-
porters are subject to the frailties
of human nature and sometimes
fall short of achieving the ideal
but they have been coming nearer
to it in recent years than hereto-
fore Some of the emotional critics of
the press in this country will ad
LOANS
BONDS
ABSTRACTS
INSURANCE
a
We do our own insurance ad-
justing which means much to a
policy holder in the event of
I loss
THE
WINTERSTEEN
AGENCY
North Entrance Stillwater
National Bank Building
Phone 114
FOR FINEST
SERVICE PHONE 27
613 - 15 - 17 Main St
Now In Operation!
In a few days we will have replaced
our lost equipment with all new mod-
ern Dry Cleaning machines Better
faster Service is assured In the mean-
time our plant will continue to serve
YOU Auxiliary equipment for just
such an emergency is now operating
at full capacity
The Fire Did Not Interfere With
Our LAUNDRY SERVICE in the
Least! Dry Cleaning Department
a n d Laundry Department Are
Entirely Separate!
YOU GET MORE WEAR FROM
YOUR SUMMER CLOTHES WHEN
TILEY'VE BEEN SCIENTIFICALLY
STAINPRILIFEDI
PAGE THREE
By Chic Young
mit it only reluctantly but every
once in a while a disinterested for-
eign observer makes significant
comment Dr Eduard Benes for-
mer president of CzAchoslovakia
said recently as he left for Europe
that the press of America is "the
best in the world—most free most
informed and very objective"
That is high praise and the
American press generally will hope
to continue to be worthy of it
The American press has been as-
sailod from high places lately If
its freedom is to be preserved the
public should realize before it is
too late the importance of the
service it gives—Buffalo Evening
News
Fite Revisits Old Inn
Brecksville O — (IP) —History
repeating itself fire damaged the
historic Brecksville Inn oldest
stagehouse in this section of the
country More than 100 years ago
fire destroyed the original 1nr1
Rubber bands various sizes
Hinkel & Sons 620 Main phone
13
FRIED CHICKEN
30c
PLATE LUNCH
25c
Smith's Restaurant
JIM1
SMITH 1
604 Main Street
OPEN ALL NIGHT
woiAAaAIF
41111101MIERSIbi
SHIP VIA
Mistletoe
Empress
Ship up to 6 lbs 25
anywhere in Okla-
homa for
INSURANCE FREE
FREE PICKUP AND
DELIVERY
PHONE 1084
for further information
rpirPRMSOmmuimelmommmlrtwoompmmgt
NO Our Fire Did Not
CRIPPLE Our Dry Cleaning Plant!
Our Auxiliary Cleaning Unit Is
t
t i''!:-7 '
1- 0-9 :f
t:'0
'
Pour some water on a STAINPRUFED garment This is the test that proves
the x'alue of this entirely new cleaning method You'll find that you get longer
wear and your clothes look better when they're STAIN1RUFE1)! Men's Palm
Beach Suits all Silks Linens and Summer Cottons wear longer because they
do not have to be cleaned so often
WE APPRECIATE
YOUR BUSINESS!
STILLWATER LAUNDRY
VALETERIA CLEANERS HATTERS
OMIIIMMIEEP
I
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One Child to Two Women I of war on Serbia Russia great 1Rome Madrid and other chancel-
Jivingstone Northern Rhodesia protector of the Slays of Europe leries hunting means of pacific
12)—Semi-official estimates of but In events were to prove rap- understanding lie tried without
population of the Copper Belt idly enough merely an emptyluccess to get : statement from
Northern Rhodesia show that shell of a great kingdom rose i Lord Grey whether Britain would
re are two male adults to every swiftly to Serbia's aid Germany enter the war on France's side
man and one child to every two in turn mobilized to help Austria Raymond Poincare French pies- men her ally of the Central Powers ident took a French warship
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Clearance of Al! Summer Merchandise :-------r '1''
ran 0
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Small Group FINAL CLEARANCE Lovely Cotton Prints 01
COTTON SHEERS Sheer Silk Dresses! all 0 '
0
Chiffons - Laces - Bern- BETTER DRESSES 01
RegUfa"r $139 Values twigs Values to $298 01
tinal Clearance Price Values to $900 Final Clearance Price rA 1
Final Clearance Price
- 69c $2 47 97 C
- - Iii ' 1 1111-:'
Final Clearance o'f Values to $1275 I Group Dresses
t :
WASH SILKS rA
BLOUS tS Final Clearance Price
SPUN RAYONS g '-
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$5 4 F '
Laces Linens Crepes 7 Values to $598 0 7
12 Price Final Clearance Price 0 '
Regular and Extra Sizes—
$177 ti
$198 Blotises - $ 99 14 to 20 and 38 to 46 Blouses '
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Wile, Otis. The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 30, No. 179, Ed. 1 Friday, July 28, 1939, newspaper, July 28, 1939; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2162278/m1/3/: accessed July 13, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.