The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 11, Ed. 1 Monday, January 13, 1941 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE TWO
11M
Entered as second class matter November 2 1938 at the post-
office at Stinwater Oklahoma under the act of March 8 1879
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning
National Advertising Representative
MiliTO
AN INDEPINDENT NEWSPAPER
Established HOS
Pub Hailed by EMSKEL & SONS
Stillwater Payne County Oklahoma
Publication Office 620 Main Street Telephone 12
INLAND NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES Inc
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Delivered by carrier per week W 11000111
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By mail—Outstde state
I by carrier per week 10
th 40
400
in State—One year 300
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Payable Strictly ir Advance
The Oklahoma Consumer's Tax Law requires that newspaper pub-
lishers collect a 2 per cent tax upon subscription sales above 15c
Please Include the additional sum with your remittance according to
the above schedule
WILD!! onifyidtvitssounTion
AVERAGE DAILY PAID e3
AUDITED CIRCULATION 3t)
Z"0
OTIS VVitE Editor
FOREIGN TRADE — GOING GONE
The last expectation anybody might have had that
the United States would profit through increascd foreigi
trade because of the war will vanish when the figurc
for 1940 are completed
There was a time when war in Europe meant tha
American cotton and wheat went to premium priceL
eagerly sought by any means and at any prices It mean
temporary prosperit3
But today's world is a different world Let's take
look at what has happened to American export trade thc
last year
The first eight months of the war had little effec
There was some increase in sales of arms to Europe an
In material to South America which countries there found
themselves suddenly unable to gct from Europe
' Along came the armament boom Toward the en(
of the year 62 per cent of our exports were going to th(
British empire instead of the usual 40 and almost all o
th2se were airplanes iron steel machine tools machinery
and other war materials
Thus 1940 is going to show a total foreign tilt&
greater than that of any year since 1929 up 25 per cen
from last year But almost all of it is a trade in war ma
tcrials with export of surplus farm products actually
'slumpng And even if this increased 1940 export tota
exceeds $4000000000 it will still be less than hah
the 1920 figure
What does this mean? First it means that to the
extent to which our industrial plant becomes adjusteo
to arms export we are breeding trouble fir the time when
that export ends Second the cards are stacked in today'
world against foreign trade
oa volume of which
ift
as well as our own share tends to decline Third tht
South American market we wish so much to cultivate
is there all right but it can not increase unless and until
we increase our imports - Loans with their subsequeht
headaches will stimulate this trade only temporarily"
But the United States will have a "favorable balance
of trade" of $2500000000 for 1940 You might think
that's good But we don't want imports for that balance
We don't want gold for it even if anybody had it to pay
which they haven't We've got gold What then?
: 'This: Reconcile ourselves to the idea that foreign
trade is declining Plan for that--Altus Times-Democrat
MMM
PRESS
SIDE BY SIDE
It was both generous and just of the British Broad-
casting Corporation recently to render a tribute in one
of its programs to the gallantry of those American citizens
who are seeing the war through in Britain
lhe British people in the midst of their fiery ordeal
have been quick to recognize the comparable courage ot
the hundreds of American citizens who have resolved
that bombs shall not rt move them from the British Isles
how many there are of these is not exactly known
The American embassy in London points out that Amer
lean citizens are not compelled to register their presence
there but affords as a vcry rough estimate that then
are more than 2000 Americans whoso firm intention is
to stay in Britain for the duration"
Many Americans actually are bearing arms or pilot-
ing planes or otherwise aiding the fighting forces Some
are business men some are newspaper correspondents
who have worked with undaunted devotion to duty even
amid great danger
All of these Americans are exhibiting the valorous
attitude of Dorothy Dickson the singer and dancer who
when a reporter asked her whether she had thought of
leaving Britain on account of the bombs replied "Not
for a single moment" In courage as in everything else
the Anglo-Saxon peoples stand side by side--Christian
Science Monitor
I band is wondering if she wouldn't
1 FOLKS AND FOIBLES be better if he would let her cry it
1
4 lout a few times
i
—
4 1
I Aunt Sister is modern to the ex-
Even now when oar children tent she lets her children think
are grown we are nervous when 1 for themselves but she is old fash-
someone wants us at the front ' toned enough to spank them after
1
door We know be wants us to pay they have done it
a bill or make a new promise But I
in the old clays we were called to i Aunt Ellen is truthful but she
the front door because one of our i can cause more trouble with truth
children had imposed on a neigh- than the average person could
bor's child and we couldn't be I' with falsehood
sure whether the neighbor meant i
simply to insult us or to thrash us i
If it was a woman we knew she I Most of us relatives shun Cous-
g
would be satisfied with several in-
in Henry Ile ot into a crooked
sults and the prediction that our I deal and didn't make it pay
children would turn out to be —
criminals but if it was a man sent Our handsome nephew talks a
there by his wife we feared he had great deal about making a fortune
come to black an eye for us yes but he doesn't take any interest in
It is bad to be dunned at the front making a living
door today but it is nothing v hen —
compared with the possibility of 1 Hard work isn't exactly pleas-
being thrashed !ant but it surely is restful when
i
compared with going out in so-
!deo' — Craade Callan in Kansas
Cousin Minnies baby boy has City Times
been a lot better since she let him -
Cr? it out and nowMinnie's husi
- Cleo paste at H Z: inkel SonSons I
1
1111011111111r
de
MAIDEN!
VOYAGE
KATHLEEN
NORRIS
Cap) rhh Kath!oon Nor'
WSI' So viPe
CHAPTER III
ImawimA
ran not In the narrow loll
Preto la's lace wa-i a study In va-
riid ettioiloni ni4 she fkNliod to Ow
e"tiveation that 1vai by turnit
awed t‘N-HIted raiduoes:
''t Mindy" gasped
Tony ritltit!t back ti f:111 it her
sl-Iiir's knees and at her
dramatically "Ws the Call! S:11n4
Mr Gretamoild of the ('all !
tie Jilted to see tee tiniht—l'm
to see him tit tIV4) tomorrow! Ito
warded me to come down ridit
now Twertiy-tive a week—twen-
ty five a week and I'm to try thr-
citity eoluttin Oh Itendy
hely me ollt you? I IltI with
the poilite Who come into the store
—I mean getting eliZatfttilelitq RIO
tVi tt 8714 everything! Oh Iteady
Ile sounded so flli
"Viiiit Is It? Aunt Iliteggv here
Interpolated dazedly from her door-
wI y
Cliff blown and pale and tired
was In the hall doorway "Vt'hat's
all the shouting about?' he said
Tony enlightened them ecstati-
cally "Gil Cliff lust itS I was dos-
pairing—I'd been to the Journal to-
da and there 1ht seem a chance
to was despairing this
Me Greenwood telephoned from the
Call and lie wants me to gather
up all the I can nod begin
tomorrow—arnt twenty-live a week
"That's something like" flirt
with hi: slow sntile
"Anil Cliff yon know I can do
It" chattered l'ony "You know
I can thindy! Aunt help
nie and 'qrs Terry!"
"NN'ant to go down now and
clinch It?" Clifford asked
"(Hi CHIT could we? Ile really
did tflt See tile beettuse tomor-
row's the (lay he usually has ofT
and he s111 Ftl hitVe 1'0 ‘senitt
around and dig up n lot of mush
for the Sunday page'!"
your hat on" sal( ('liff "I
kow a man named win)
volts on the sports section AN'e'll
g()
'1011 angel!" Tony callfal !melt
l'OiLt Into tier room to change
l'atda smiled tit her oldest hr4i hi
er "Ilow'd It go In Sterantento
'iolt I think I botched the switch-
board all right However we think
‘1 tit k out of it"
Cliff put on his damp overcoat
fig Tony Cti tile iilit radiant
and fresh in her dark blue coat and
small hat and they went away together
TT S so much easier fo go In
I there Ivith you along: culy"
Tony said wilco they hail left the
street car and made a wet run for
the lighted doorway of the bi
newspaper building
“Sure" he said "I hope flurkes
there lie may not be though"
The elevator dashed up past
floors that were dark and deserted
at eleven o'clock at night They
out at the fourteenth
door m1300114 was brightly ani-
mated and exciting here and Tony
leified about her with avid° Interest
at the glass-top ilivors that were
opening and shutting continually
upon seething inner apartments A
gibiet girl at a telephone switch-
hoard looked up
'Mr Greenwood?" The girl re-
peated the name cautiously Into
III:10Z itobt'r moutlipleee "Theres
I 11iss Taft to see you here"
Sitting back she said "You can
go right la It's room lS"
Tony followed her brother daz-
edly !Jere W3A 100111 1'4 with
"City Room" lettered In black on
the door nn1 echarivi creenweintr
set modestly In a corner below It
cliff OP door and Tony
hail her first look at the city room
It angled the entire N‘ h of the
building on two sides Tlie third
Si de she was presently to learn
tvi the Sunday paper department
mut the fourth AR V3r10111y WNW
ed by the library the files the pho-
tetraphers' lairs Down below NVel'o
the busimss offices imposing in
heavy chairs unit eucalyptus pan-
eling: tip here everything un s con
fuion disorder haste
insictut hvr nostrils caught
the first seent of it she knew that
beleaged here that this vvas
her world her battlefield MT first
oN P Men were everywhere
shouting smoking TypewriteN
were clicking there Vac
sound as paper was torn from
Clem there was a constant eccen--
Irk chatter of a telegraph machine
from the wide littered desk marked
"Associated Pres"
Mr Charles Greenwood was a
dark IRtle weasel of a man whv
occupied a corner desk shut away
from the general (Mice on'y by a
nicked and batterod fenoe (Lir
wood with a gate Tony was
eed Into his immediate neighbor-
hoOd The desk before the city elitor
ivas heaped Wgit with tbe society
pages of recent Sitnilay parer
had evidently been clipping and
THE STILLWATER DAILY PRESS STILLWATER 01a
Ltatuina desperately: he indicated a I-IE WON'T BE II
drawer full of uninvitinattooking
lettott --
ewe tint to here a page of this t" -
tift gfettl" he eith "fer Madame f
1)1) h Lhtt thP mwell turf -
see—the Iltirlingame erowtl the la-
atilitits sloe? you know that f:rowd : dotft your he broke ort to a - -
oeittielousty looking tip at Tony
'Well" Tony answered firmly
without the fileiter of an eyeill
ewel now look here 'intelt
havet 'Itecky'a' de7411 that's What
the boys called our last Madame
Greenwood broke off to say ap-
pealing to their sympathy °She
vita a hellion shes left everytiting
ri a !DPW Now when you came
here to leave your name—Allen
aa that?"
Itfi4"144
"Three times stinee Christmas' itta6alicltgalet
Tony reminded him Atiltvisi
"Ymt said that ynti thnught you -
904 MAN tA
handl e It?" His eye Was itus
plehma nattio 7 of :
''runderstantl that every Thnre- -'
-
day we've got to have a whole page 777lillsat-2:a'rif7':i7-'!?a7
or it with two photos?"
Her heart failed her for a mee
Tnny said with a re-
assuring nod
"Yeti can Clip a lot Of It for rtEctct A$ EAN
tomorrow see? the harassed et —V s E A ' a'artT
Greenwood further explained
6-100lt °ter the papers I've got the a—aakatr:
Oakland papers here too and pick
mit whatever looks good to you I bt 11?
Itett he here but you give It to 1t1Itt 41
Florence — he's that drunk-
loohlte croek over there "Listen let's eat" Mr Burke
"tiet it ail together and hand It abruptly
In before ten tomorrow night And 'lliey went tip Market stree
have to get your own col- Inreagres where Ton:7 anti
umn teo—say about sixteen itema hail hot delicious "half-and-le
—get 'cm gond because we've been and mast and Joe had a limp
nothing down lately Yee run veal cutlet that tind been st
naiad among your friends anti from a long damp pan of en
you'll pick 'em up easy Then if displayed in Lorenzo's win
on run into any gend ('hit) stun' relied in egg and crumbs bl
—viuiun Serappiwz—bring that in ened In a pan of hot grease STI
I h:t t 'S alwaya good Keep your eye'i ered in gory catsup and SP
optn—oli find tly the way YellIl smoking hot with fried pntn
tio that dance down at the Burlin- within the space of six minuo
game club next tveek will you?" The little restaurant with
'Vertainly" Tony n greed her window grill watt bright and IN
head spinning on the ralny night the clock s
"All right then—you take all this at twelve and Tony felt ext
stuff Wong to your Oesk—Mae- and happy This was living! T
firiohi" Sh011iPti the city editer were several men having
"help Miss—help Miss Taft to take (hops and oyster stews in
all this stuff to the Dak's desk zo's and presently her brother
will you and rustle her up a type- surprised to see her flush and s
writer somewhere and get her n little self-consciously and bol
some paper Si e's geing to do our one of them
Sunday page benorrtov and bey "Who's that?"
o III it be good Ali right litot 'Mr Bellamy of
Taft 111 see you Friday — keep nal"
your shirt on and ask the boys "That's right too" said Joe
fer anything you aiit Olt and by don't know hint but I've seen
the way rout us out a couple of In here before He's pretty t
good pletttrea totnorrow for Sim- with old Arnoldson on onr pr
day I didn't get round to It!" Arnoldson told Fitch—Fitch Is
Tony :gni Clifford and the Biota- manaeing editor—that he tho
bly burdetted Matairath went to a Bellamy was the smartest mat
cluttered desk by a black tvinilow the coast except maybe An
'that was trickling rain Everytill0 down in Fresno"
Lethal at them Tony did not dare Tony knew that the man
raise her eyes waa ha lug oysters at the con
She found her new (10111:1111 fright- was watching tier she looked
fully dirty anil the typewriter sorbedly at Joe
f rit tue empty "fa Mr Greenwood smart
''I'll have Laren get on a type- narkev
writer ilownstaire" said Mac- lle Is and he Isn't" said
Grath I u elnbarral alloIngS- "Ile's a terrible souse
"Itnalia tito 1111" thPY kvi'l1 Moore Slt 1ow n Buck Thl
the names In—witos In soeitay and the new society editor Miss 1
tvho's married to whose sisters Miss Taft Buck Moore of
and all that" Sunday edition You'll have to
Tony elutelted the shabby leather
a lot of old Ruck!"
'word t'agerly Tony hardly heard him She
"oh thatli be priceless!" thrilled she was happy The
"Ile'a all right" eitillided Mae- mantle dark brilliant Mr Itell
Grath vitt' a Jerk of Ida head hal seen her alone and forlorn
toward the city edito's desk "only supplicatory this morning in
he cusses a lot" dreary rain he saw her ton
"la there a Man named Burke with three good-looking men I
vorhing here?" Clifford now found I ro Avg t org n t Tnron7og A nt
a lull in ditch to ask
"Sure Spike where's rturke?
lie's usually in the sports" said
Maeitrath lliere he Is!"
Lie smote the shirted back of a
talwart young man who was wash
fl ot not only his face but his whole
head and his arms up to the elbow
at one of the basins This person
dripping anti sudsy turned ahout
with a loud "Quit!'
"tth hello liff" The Piiirke
said then added beaming over the
filthy roller towel in a froth of
'tvhite IkTiss Taft — say
uhat a break! What's doing?"
While he (mite without embar-
rassment dried his face and hands
rolled down his sleeves Plit oa a
collar and combed his thick red
hair they told him what was do-
ing and Tony beamed hopefully
boo his pleasant red brown eyes
"Sure you can work that so-
ciety racket illte a shot I" Joe Parke
told her hearteningly 'it's soft"
"Oh I hope it ist" Tony said
Nv 11h a smile with a lift of thick
hishes with a great rise of her
1713R177ArininPilMill
ILoa
—a4--vrrt"!Lsc:rtiqlti 141 f:: tl
i I I i i'l il'ii: rt 411
a 4( 11: sw cill
Tony Had Her First Look at the
City Room
1
HE WON'T BE IIAPPY'TILL HE GETS IT
"Listen let's eat" Mr Burke said
abrit ptly
l'hey went up Market street to
Lorcazres where Ton:7 at-J1 Cliff
hail hot delicious "half-and-lialra"
and toast and Joe had n limp pink
veal cutlet that had been seized
from a long damp pan of cutlets
dIsplayed In Lorenzo's window
roiled In egg and crumbs black
ened In a pan of hot grease‘ smoth
ered In gory catsup and served
smoking hot with fried potatoes
ivithin the space of six minutes
The little retatirant with the
window grill waa bright and warm
on the -rainy night the clock stood
at twelve and Tony felt excited
and happy This was living! There
were several men having Ten!
(hops Ind oyster stews in Loren
zo's and presently her brother was
surprised to see her flush tmd Pmile
n little self-consciously and bow to
ono of them
"Who's that?"
:Mr Bellamy of Vie Jour-
nal" "That's right too" said Joe
dont know hint bat I've seen him
In here before Ilk's pretty thick
with old Arnoldson on our paper
Arnoldson told Fitch—Fitch is the
managing editor—that he thought
Bellamy was the smartest man on
the coast except maybe Anders
down in Fresno"
Tony hliew that the man who
was 11:1N hh oysters at the counter
Wag watching her she looked ab-
sorbedly at Joe
"la Mr Greenwood smart Mr
Borke?"
"lie is and he isn't" said Joe
"Ile' s a terrible souse Ilore's
Moore Sit down Duck This Is
the new society editor Miss Tart
Miss Taft Duck Moore of the
Sunday edition You'll bare to see
a lot of old Buck!"
Tony hardly heard him Site was
thrilled she was happy The ro-
mantic dark brilliant Mr Dellamy
had seen her alone and forlorn and
supplicatory this morning In the
dreary rain he saw her tonight
with three goodlookIng men hav-
ing oysters at Lorenzo's And to
Mr Moore she had been Introduced
as the Calles society editor
CHAPTER IV
IT was good to have a Job
again and to have it spring
and morning and to be txN enty
three ! Tony awakened eagerly
dressed olth enthusiasm finished
her breakfast and piled her cof-
fee cup MI berry saucer in the
sink Then came a blank
"HOW do you suppose I can get
those photographs for Sunday
Bendy?"
"I've Nen wondering" Brenda
said "Would any of the photogra-
phers help out yon think'!"
-"I don't think they'd be allowed
to give out pictures for the papers
Just the Fame they're my best
bet!" Tony decided uneasily She
left the house at nine o'clock and
went to six photographers It was
always the same It was not per
nutted : they said they were sorry
At five minutes to one she went
Into the newspaper office all the
first enthusiasm of the new Job
clouded by a sense of fear and
failure She hung up her hat and
coat in the office and confided her
problem to Joe Burke -
"Oh shticks" Joe said "I'll tell
you what you can do Look over the
other Sunday papers for the last
few weeks and telephone the stu-
tilos for what you want"
'But I've Just been to the stn
dies and they were awfully mean!"
"They wont be It you want pie-
tures that have been used Or
telephone the girls if you like"
Joe seggested eaiIy 'and say that
you are going to use an old pic-
ture and would like permission to
have a !WV one"
Yes but have we old plcturesr
'Lord haven't you seen the gal-
lery?" (To Be Lamtinued
Dog Gets Benefits
Peoria IlL Jan II — ((2) — A
cooperative watch dog to whir
they fed candy for two horns
benefited znore than two would-
be burglars in their effort to open
t f1ing statior sae Saturday
The dog kept quiet but the men
were unable to open the safe
they told police who captured
them
1
liC1 lb
edlgt
Let Us
Stillwater National
Bank
THE EUROPEAN WAR
ONE YEAR AGO
1040
January II 1940
King Gustaf of Sweden pledged
to Finland "all the humanitarian
and material help possible with
due consideration for our own
position" at the opening of Par-
liament Finns reported repelling two
Russian attacks in Petsamo re-
gion and in Saila sector
Losses at sea:
German liner Ussukuma scut-
tled German steamer Bahia
Blanca struck iceberg and sunk
Italian ship Traviata exploded
and sank British ship Leonard
Pearce sunk after collision Nor-
wegian freighter Manz sunk by
mine
Australia's only native mammals I Rend and use Dati-1 Press Want Ads
are the unique duck-billed egg-
laying animals the kangaroos
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A CHURCH AND ITS DEBT
—
I Some ten years ago when the
country was just waking up to the
meaning of a real depression the
Rem ganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints faced
a debt of $11376000
This waz the obligation only on
the general church and its insti-
tutions taking no account of the
debts of the individual congrega-
tions It rested on 120000 mem-
bers most of them small farmers
shopkeepers and laborers scatter-
ed throughout the United States
and Canada Through the teach-
ings of their church these people
had learned to honor their obli-
gations and fear debt but here
they were facing $1876000 at the
very time when more money was
needed to help the thousands of
members who were caught in the
depression
It was this situation that the
church met head-on The Order
of Bishops and the Quorum of
Twelve were called to Indepen-
dence for an emeigency meeting
with the First Presidency to draft
the "new financial policy"
Work was stopped immediately
on the auditorium at Indepen-
dence much as the members had
looked forward to the magnificent
structure with its huge dome cof-
ered with copper and its outer
walls faced with ornamental stone
Church properties not absolute-
ly essential for the operation of
the thurch were liquidated for
whatever they would bring The
costs of missionary work and gen-
eral operation were out The mem-
bers who still had incomes were
aroused to the emergency so that
tithes and ccntributions contin-
ued A program was started in
depression to pay the debt acquir-
ed boom times The church lived
within its budget at the same time
that it was doing all it could to
keep its least fortunate members
off the relief rolls
After ten years we see the re-
sults The debt has been reduced
to $540000 with complete pay-
ment expected in three years
The time is not far off when more
work can be done toward com-
pleting the auditorium and re-
habilitating the other church in-
stitutions This is an exciting ex-
ample of a small low income
church group meeting its obliga-
tion in a period of general defeat-
ism for most of the country—'
1
Kansas City Star
1
CAMERA
NOW TIME
TUESDAY I
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Bashful B
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MONDAY JANUARY 131S-11
THE PORCIL PINE LEGEND
Eill
-m
I
careful consideration will nok'
doubt be given to the proposal at
congress of Industrial Organiza-1
tions to speed up the productior
of aireialt and aireraft eneines by
making Use of the facilities of the
automobile industry UnqUestion
ably large automobile and acces1
sory plants in Detroit' are now 'f
standing idle—completely as
the case of the Hupinobile plant
or partially as in the case of tilt 1
Graham-Paige plant But it day!
not follow that these plants could' I
at once be turned to the nu 1
facture of airplanes
Responsible executives in the
automobile industry have fie
quently pointed out that little of
their tool equipment is adaptabifi
to aircraft and aircraft engine pr‘
duction‘ and that either ne
buildings radically rearranged arl
re-equipped—with about equal and
unavoidable time lag—In order to
effect a turnover from automobile I
to aircraft mass output There
is no reason why if expansion at—
plant and tool facilities is imperil -
tive in either case the aviation in
dustry itself should not undertake
it—New York Times
Boy's Library Ingenious
Peoria Ill ---(LP)-7 With three
years of work but without any
money Donald Tomlin 12 has ‘T
built a new type library for him-
self He covered 120 penny matei
boxes to resemble books he halal!'
read and enclosed a summary
each
I
AGGIE
p"inw THRu
IP 7" TUESDAY
M
4-5p)2ectli
IT ICABLI AS YOU ME HIM BEST! I
Z"' Aria71
IS HIS
sUSINESSI
alotitt
-Added-
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Wile, Otis. The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 11, Ed. 1 Monday, January 13, 1941, newspaper, January 13, 1941; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2163021/m1/2/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.