The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 227, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1940 Page: 2 of 6
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PAGE
HAWK
in the
WIND
By
Helen Topping Miller
D Arrletwv-Centur Cs
W NU Service
CHAPTER VI---(continued)—
Instantly Lucy was just Lucy
Fields again Lucy Fit Ids who lived
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instantly Lucy wag just Lucy
Ileitis again
In the shabby house at the end of a
shabby street who had a dreary
time of it supporting her mother
Marian said "Sit down You know
all these people Lucy?''
And Lucy murmured "Oh yes"
and settled herself for an evening
of pure torment
Sally Gallup wife of young Bill
who ran the power-plant over the
mountain was there brisk and so-
phisticated and wearing the little
air of personal triumph that young
married women flaunt for the ex-
press torture of spinsters Sally an-
nounced that under no circum-
stances would she agree to be a
leading lady
"It spoils the illusion for the audi-
ence knowing that the heroine is
really the wife of a perfectly solid
husband I can't enjoy some Of my
favorite movie stars any more
knimlog theyre prohably worrying
about Junior's tonsils while they're
making love in the play You'll
have to be the heroine Marlini
Could you play the male lead Mr
Daniels if we Cud the right play?"
''I've never tried acting—" Dan-
iels hesitated but obviously Lucy
saw he vas pleased
"You've such a grand voice—and
you're tall" Sally Gallup continued
to effervesce "You'd make a won-
derful actor"
Marian Morgnn said nothing "She
wants Dry Holton for the lead"
Lucy vas thinking "and the others
will be against it for fear Bry will
be drunk at the last minute and
spoil the show"
'We have to organize first"
announced "and appoint coIi mittees
have to write and
find out about plays We can't pay
any big royalty If we charge even
so much as fifty cents people will
grinnble and go to the MOViCS in-
stead Luce you can write and cud
out about the plays You're writing
letters every day I'll speak to
mother about it
"Oh yes" Lucy hated her own
faint acquiescence "I can do that"
They all left the hall in a group
and Lucy had a moment of panic
for fear Stanley Daniels might leave
her to walk home with some of the
others But he kept his hand on her
elbow and her spirits rose The
three blockr home were too pitifully
short
At the eltior she grew nervous
again hated her stammering uncer-
tainty "Won't you come in?" she fill
tered "I'm hungry aren't you?
This air is so chilly—"
Stanley Daniels hesitated briefly
His ego had been given a satisly
ing lift at the meeting by Sally Gal
lup's tuts( iliCtleSS Even Marian
loran's lack et enthusiasm had
failed to dampen him But eager lit-
tle Lucy fed some gnawing bit of
uncertainty in his nature Ile still
felt the need of approval and Lucy
was naively adoring So he was
gracious about letting her urge him
into the house and kind in ignoring
her confusion When they entered
Mrs Fields' shoes and woolen
stockings yiitire sitting in front of the
stove and Daniels busied himself
tactfully folding his overcoat while
Lucy whisked them away lie did
not see Lucy snatch a glass con-
taining an upper set of teeth from
the mantel or turn a cushion swift-
ly because of the inevitable cat-hairs
clinging to it
"Ell make some chocolate" Lucy
was a little breathless "This chair
is more comfortable I'm 'Sure"
"Can I help?" Daniels offered
"Oh ore I couldn't think of it"
Lucy laughed quickly "I'm old-
fashioned you see I belong to that
vanishing race of women who think
that men should be waited upon"
Never could she Iet him see the
inside of that dreadful old kitchen
The old wood stove tht smoked het
THE STILLWATER DA!LY PRESS STILLWATER 01:L7
1
Lle and rusty pipe the smoky little
twoburner kerosene contraption
they used in summer
She lit this affair now to heat the
cocoa carefully closing the door so
Its smudgy smell would not pene-
trate the other room The little
cups were pretty She had bought
them hopefully and kept them now
in her trunk after having found one
on the back porch with medicine in
It mixed for a sick hen She had
crocheted the lacy ediiieof the nap-
kins and ironed them to a gloss
Everything was delicate and
pleasing—even Marian Morgan her-
self could not have arranged a damn
tier tray
Then she lifted the lid of the cake
box and exclaimed in sudden dis-
may "Oh—mean! Oh what shall
I do?"
Mrs Fields had eaten all the lit-
tie cakes
Even before be was able to stand
alone without wavering Branford
Wills knew that he was falling in
love with Marian Morgan
The realization troubled him Ile
was under deep obligation to Virgie
She had he knew saved his life by
taking him in by the care he had
had when illness laid him low To
repay that debt by falling in love
with Virgie's child especially now
that Virgie was also to be his em
ployer seemed a left-handed and
slightly dubious procedure — but
there was no help for it
Marian's very aloofness her odd
prickly half-sweet half-bitter with
drawing the secret and judging
quality that lived in her dark eyes
and hid in her long lashes made
her an enigma a challenging mys
tery to dare any man with blood in
his veins And Branford Wills was
young and fiercely proud and ad
venturous
His pride was what bothered him
As he stood erect finally and shay
lug himself with a rather uncertain
hand before the mirror in his room
he told himself grimly that no one
least of all the girl herself should
tver guess the state of his feelings
until he could look Virgie Morgan
calmly in the face a man on his
own worth what he was paid and
able to love a woman without apol
ogY or without humility
So whenever Marian came near
he kept the conversation on the brit
tie half-bantering half-contemptu
ous strain that modern youth as
surnes choosing it for sophistica
(ion hiding any current of feeling
masking every emotion And so soon
as he could mount the stairs without
staggering he rented a room in the
house of Ada Clark's mother and
!prepared to move
"I have to do this You under-
stand" he said to Virgie
: "Yes" she said "I understand"
"I haven't anything to pack" he
said "so I might as well go I have
to send some wires and locate my
belongings I'll report for work on
Monday And I'll earn whatever you
pay me"
"You'll earn it all right" Virgie
was terse "I had to give up phi-
lanthropy after three banks had
busted in my face People who work
for me have to produce"
To Marian Wills pitched his fare-
well speech in another key
"I'm about to depart hence" he
remarked walking into the little
room at the foot of the stairs which
had once been David Morgans pri-
vate lair "My obnoxious person is
about to be removed from your vi-
cinity Then you can smile and be
lightsome and gay once more"
IIarian looked up from the letter
she was writing A quick little shad-
ow moved over her face her eyes
darkened and her lips caught on a
half - open incredulous question
Then her composure returned
Wengoodhy" she said getting
to her foci "I suppose it would be
too much for you to tell them in
Washington that we are really fairly
decent people if we do mill pulp"
"I'm not going to Washington I'm
staying here"
An older man a wiser man would
have caught the light that flamed up
briefly behind her eyes noted the
quick little catch of her breath But
Brantoed Wills was young and not
terribly wise
"Oh—so you're staying here"
Marian's vcix wavered ever so lit-
tle "I'm going to work In the Morgan
mill Didn't your mother tell you?"
''No" she said slowly "she didn't
tell me"
She stood waiting with the old
desk where David Morgan had kept
his dusty piles of letters and his
stacked trade papers with David
Morgan's photograph — steely-eyed
and with a fierce handle-bar mus-
tache—behind her as the tradition
of the Morgan mill and the MOr-
gan money was behind her It was
a little like standing on a proud
mountain disdaining all below but
Marian was not thinking of that
because at that moment a white pain
had her by the throat
There had been an hour—but of
course Wills had been desperately
ill then and sick men are unaccount-
able—but there had been an hour of
dusk and quietness when she had
been keeping watch and Wills had
caught her hand in his hot twitch-
ing fingers and told her that her
voice vas like a song
Mad folly of course even to have
listened! But she had listened and
her heart lonely and self-contained
and timorous for all the briery bar
riers she had let grow around it
had waited hungrily for more
But obviously there was no more
He did not care Ile was going to
work in the mill He had wanted a
job and he had been ingratiating
and smooth and engaging until he
got it She let bitter acid brewed
from galling disapntment ieethe
through her blood and sting the tip
of her tongue
(To Be Continued)
Dover castle built by ancient
Normans on the Dover chalk cliffs
has walls 24 feet thick
it
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HAMMERING IT HOME
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-
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Wily ARE WE ARMING?
Babson Appeals for a Spiritual
Awakening
Columbus O Sept 20—Inves-
tors and others should not be dis-
turbed if more important events
are in the making thi-fi even an
attempted invasion or the British
Isles Great Britain's Empire is
being menaced in the Middle East
and the Far East Count Von
Der Schulenberg working with
Russia's Molotov and Wilhelm
Keppler's manipulations through
Tokyo's Naotako Sato may now
be forming for a simultaneous
blow against the British Colonies
Britain Will Not l'all
If Great Britain is attacked by
the combined forces of Germany
Italy and Japan Franco's Spain
and Stalin's IU:ssia may assist in
i striking her most vulnerable parts
'This however need not catrie
worry The spreading out of
these enemy nations may relieve
the pressure on England and be a
blessing in disguise Remember
the story of the dog by a brook
with a bone in his mouth Seeing
his reflection in the water and
I thinking it another dog with an-
other bone he opened his mouth
to grab it and lost all Hitler
I I
may be such a dog
Mussolini wants Egypt and his
African Empire: Stalin wants Iran
and other oil fields in the Near
East Japan wants China French
Indo-China and the Dutch Eat
Indies—not forgetting India
Franco hopes to get Gibraltar
French Morocco Portugal and its
Latin American possessions Hit-
ler has no immediate objections
to these wants provided he con-
trols what they all get Because
men want things however is no
reason that they will get them
Watch Russia
Actually Stalin does not wantj
the fall of the British Empire
unless Germany and Italy fall
with it What he wants is a Ea-
'rope so weakened that Russia can
Communize it all without fighting'
He fears Germany's rise to pow-
er and may take all of Finland
as further protection in the Baltic
This program Was fully outlineJ
to me when I was last in Europe
1
Meantime Roosevelt's America
draws closer to war Without
United States' aid to England it
will be very difficult for the Brit-
ish Empire to survive the attacks'
to come I believe we will give !
that aid—whoever is elected on
November 5 We certainly Will if
Mr Roosevelt is re-elected
Let's Be Frank
Of course America is arming
for defense of her soil her way 'of
life her island possessions and
for employment of her people at
home and abroad In this connec-
tion she must support England
with all that she can spare from
her own armament program The
theory of the United States gov-
ernment that the maintenance of
British fighting power is Ameri-
ca's first line of defense is sound
from every iewpoint
' It must be known that America'
would not be aiming if the threat
from the "have not" nations
against the "haves" which are
Britain and America was not in-:
deed extremely serious Further
than this America is most desir-
l Otis of maintaining British pow-
er in the world to the extent at
least where a balance will be ar-
rived at and maintained Then
no single nation or group of na-
tions can take advantage of their
less-powerful brother states
Importance of the "Status Quo" i
The upholding of the status quo'
is the only possible Insurance
against the attempt of any one I
man to rule the entire world This
matter of the status quo is so vital
to the right of people to live their
lives in their own way that iu !
itself it becomes sufficient as iC
itselt it becomes sun-anent as a
reason for the arming of America
—and if need be to die in it de-
fense But the question of time
in which to arm weighs heavily
upon us That is why the press
11 Easy FUin SanT11
i
Advice on ng
Remodeling
Estimates
Materials
rimmr No Obligation
— 1:"arr-r
mpson-Parker
Tho
Lumber Co
Phone 33
—
!P4
I
WE'VE MADE IT
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R dent took power into his own
oger a sop hands s and ti If e IEngland " r i r IYtlfeasItItsoyAcrsetro
England
II
i tea must stand alone against the
world which has no respect for
our American right to live as we
please
But let us remember that the
I might of Hitler and his allies may
i not as yet have been set in mo-
tion Thousands of German nay-
lal officers are being sent to Brest
!Nantes and Toulon 'in France to
!man all available French fighting
!ships Points along- the Norwegian
I Dutch Belgian and French
coasts are occ:pied with German
barges motor boats and all sorts'
of small craft intended to trans-
port German troops to England
1No! Hitler has not abandoned his
ireentions of invading England
and when the blow falls it may
fall at the same time against 'the
Byitish Empire in all parts of the
world So let us not slacken our
work toward defense on the status
quo and the shores of our beloved
United tSates and our Canadian
cousins
1
Airplanes Not Enough
Arming however with only I
I guns tanks and airplanes is not
1
lenomh Selecting recruits only 1
11)3: their physical fitness without'
repard to their faith or behavior1
will not do I go further and say
that for our defense program to
lsucceed the entire country must
experience a spiritual re-birth
Too many defense planners gov-
ernment officials and business
leaders today are acting without
any rebid for the church and the
!causes of righteousness for which
t it stands When listening to them
I it seems as if the religion to
'which this nation owes so much
I has been thrown completely out of
i the window
! People often ask me: "How can
! a just God let this war continue
with all the suffering and destruc-
1 tion which it is causing?" I an
50c Woodbury 33C
SHAMPOO
!:Tiivlc3:c:p14:1 Reapndair
I'? ptt- 1
t -
) r v IS' I Remodel
1
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Jsyfie-0A NOW!
--I49--
pli
for you to
REMODEL YOUR
HOME
and keep it in repair
A $200 remodoling job costs
only 21 cents PER PAY —
NO 110‘'11 P411fT — 3
years to pay! For complete
Information —
Phone 2285
INGHAM LUMBER
COMPANY
mmtiim t -
FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 20 1940
-
swer that God may be showing us —
that the world cannot get on by 71777"7""r'
ignoring Him If we can have 1
peace by continuing in our ores-
AGGEE -
ent selfish and pleAsure-loving
ways why should we support
churches and- their good works?
T111111
Hence I repeat that our defense 1 H 0 VI SATURDAY
program must be backed up by a
change of heart on the part of - rdr-1
f 1 to to 3
the American people in order to e & uNo
l) g ni iti
me e--
save our own skins—not to men- 1 'I fkz 4t 1°beitst
bon democracy In the end "only - '- 1 4f- : 1-11
1 J1 thrilling
righteousness will save a nation" ' - ii"Al t 3 ':''-:- L-':' nrel in
An authoritative British source
said recently that if American
woman pilots should volunteer
they would be aficepted for Great
Britain's air transport auxiliary
which ferries war planes from
factories to airdromes
THE EUROPEAN WAR
ONE EAR AGO
September 20 1939
Germany announced operations
against Poland were completed
Seventy divisions moved to West-
ern Front 1
Warsaw in 13th day of battle
still held out while Mayor Stefan
Starzinski pleaded with Allies for
more help
Marshal Smigly-Rydz of Poland
fled to Rumania
Prime Minister Neville Cham-
berlain in speech in Commons de-
clared that pledge to Poland would
be kept and that Britain woulo
not weaken in its effors to wipe
out a wrong
IMI:'1
CAMERA
SHATTERS SKIES!
RENDS HEAVENSIi-'1
Behind scoots! — with I 11)1
sky melodrama! Directors 1'
ii
dreamt miracles! Camera c
inert risked lives tie give 'k'7
you the SUPREME TOMEI 't
A
1 4M"
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-
yril-fw
Istoekt-
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EXO RADIO Patur
Drama
' -:e—Zs-':- MART ASTOR
':-ifv i" '411 JOEL McCREA
''''''' &'-'Aq Airm 1
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1 9-- i::V )14res' U viits! Derby
::tiukiLhteftWkoatioN I L 0 ye
0 RADIO Picture
Donald Duck Cartoon
Newt
PREVUE SAT
NITE
Sun Mcn - Tues - Wed
V w
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F74141 '1
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f-Olt " LICL'
volt --o0P
TODAY - SAT
1-4
Stazrzng
MOAB DIX
A LEO McCAREY Production
Directed by DAIMON Wit
Wri01011 !Of the screen by Bella end
Semel mock -
HINKEL & SONS
620 Main
AUTOMOBILE
LOANS
11171t
Stillwater National
- Bank -
Itg12110!limmm
-ADDED-NOVELTY
PREVUE
SATURDAY N1TE 11:30
SL'NDAY TI1RU TUESDAY
John tioland
PAYNETOUNG
Ciatiott GREENWOOD
-Features1:30
3:30
5:30 1:30
9:30
NEWS
191
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UNMSMD to DIV
Kenneth
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'4 rove iA
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-Features2:15
4:30
6:45 - 9:00
Complete
Prokram
After 9:30
"
A
PREMIER
ENGAGEMENT
NOT RECOMMENDED FOR
CHILDREN
AND YOUNG ADULTS
-r1:11-S
George IERPHY-Brenda JOYCE
G'i)fl Elsa MAXWELL Mischa AUER
Challis RUGGLES Ralph BELLAMY
PLIEVUE
SATURDAY NUE 11:31
SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY
DIE CC A 0
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Campus p
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SATURDAY
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THE SIVINATIA---xTY11- PRESS
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
Established 1909
Published by IIMISEL & SONS
Stillwater Payne County Oklahoma
Publication Office 620 Main Street Telephone 13
filtered as second class matter November 2 1936 at the post-
office at Stillwater Oklahoma under the act of March 3 IBM
Published Every Afternoon (Except Saturday) and Sunday Morning
' National Advertising Representative
INLAND NEWSPAPER REPRESENTATIVES Inc
' SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Delivered by carrier per week $ !
One month 40
One year 400
By mall in State—One year 300
By mail—Outside state 600
Payable Strictly in Advance
The Oklahoma Consumer's Tax Law requires that newspaper pub-
hshers collect a 2 per cent tax upon subscription sales above 15c
Please include the additional sum with your remittance according to
the above schedule
NATIO At EDITORIAL i 11:11F!
MAI ' ASSOCIATION -(1 '
la la- 'OjC1441 At:1-11-4: IjL -'74r)
' orterrmn
OTIS WILE Editor
OIL AND ARMAMENTS
Delay r1 the government's anti-trust suit against
twenty-two major oil companies has practically been de-
manded by the National Defense commission There are
however continuous intimations from Washington that the
blanket suit will be filed despite the warnings and desires
af-the commission intrusted with speeding up production
in the plants and industries essential to defense
Apparently Attorney General Jackson must decide
whether to heed the call of the defense commission or
defer to the wishes of his assistant Thurman Arnold It
is understood that Arnold is determined to go on with this
action Manifestly he is starting something dangerous
and ill-advised Persons who get in the way of the defense
program now are liable to upsets
- The 'objections of the National Defense commission
represents not only the necessities of the defense program
but a vast body of public sentiment The commissxm holds
that the present oil set-up is necessary to orderly conduct
of defense and Arnold proposes to break it regardlss of
all considerations The present suit is directed more to-
ward a breaking up of a system of cooperation than to
alleged monopolistic or conspiratorial price-fixing Just
What Arnold really hopes to accomplish is not clear but
IS suspected that the same old idea of federal domination
of all business is involved
' It is reasonably certain that the genuine sentiment of
this country is against federal control Such industries as
Oil have never failed to cooperate with the government
and there is no denial of a necessity for thorough organiza-
tion to meet ordinary and exceptional demandie Oil is
among the main considerations 'We do not believe that
ober citizenship wants to see essential business disrupted
particularly when so many energies concentrate upon the
problem of defenee---:-Tulsa World
GROWING MERIT SYSTEM
Most people except politicians we believe are agreed
hat the administration of public welfare and polities are
langerous companions The opportunity to play politics
with human misery is too heavy a strain on the boys from
Lhe wards and precincts
Since Missouri social security has been administered
by outstanding commissioners there has been little if any
indication of politics in that large department employing
more than 1500 persons But it will be a lot safer now
that it is going under a strict merit system in compliance
with federal law Without this protection it would be only
as good as any administration cared to Make it
It may be recalled that the politicians got their hands
Ln the start of Missouri old-age assistance and the rolls
have been loaded ever since Although the commissioners
crating under the present state law have resisted politics
they have been subjected to constant demands And the
?mployes have been uncertain of their status in the face
A such political raids as the "job insurance" lug attempted
by some of Lawrence McDaniel's supporters in the last
primary campaign
The advance of the merit system to include the large
ocial security organization is a big boost for the cause
Pf good 'government The same is true of the "no politics"
sign raised in front of the state board of health I a fact
he plan is so logical and necessary that we might timidly
arggest' it for foremen timekeepers and administrative
mployes of the NSPA We have already seen what pol-
itics has done to the reputation of this huge organization
All the laws prohibiting political activity will not take the
place of a genuine merit system
It may be hoped that this gradual spreading of the
merit system will influence other departments stat and
rederal This and the influence of a few merit systom
!ities'might even draw a ring around the ploiticians in
heir gravy pools of municipal government Under the
lemócratic system progress moves in that (liberate way
People must see the good of a good system before they
mit permanently against the bad—Kansas City Star
7RENCII LIBERTY WILL NOT hour we have known how to re-
DIE spond and we shall act according-
Like every other European V This is the spirit of France --
lave been struck by the boundless the French that gave u the
Iptimisin of America since I ar- sYmbol of Liberty -- the goddess
ived in the United States a few ! who ever today from your shores
veeks ago But America's faith turns her eyes toward Europe
a democracy is limited to demo- There in ruined cities and plund-
racy in this hemisphere It does cred fields millions of humble
lot today envisage the possibility folk are quietly determined that
f a democratic Europe that spirit shall not periTh I a!-
Many Americans see England firm that it will not perish To
nding I see England beginning doubt this would be the only
'his gives me courage to believe treason — Current History and
a France likewise reborn How Forum
an America with Its wealth of -411
indness optimism and power so Sky Writing Tells of Troth
ashy take for granted the doom Lake Arrowhead Calif (LP)
f Europe? — Miss Ethel - Mary Hamilton
Europe is not doomed The Briarcliff Junior College graduate
rice which England pays today and Harold Spurrier Anderson Jr
or survival makes democracy as Stanford university man had
ever before precious to all Eng-itheir engagement announced with
shmen The history of my own la flourizit At the home of the
ountry shows' that Frenchmen bride's mother here 40 guests
lave never long endured tyranny watched an airplane sky writer
Inlike the Germans the French link their initials in the sky and
annot be tricked into slavery encircle them with a heart
!ince the days of Jeanne d'Arc 40
ppression has always bred lead- Mimeograph stencils at Hinkel
rs among us However dark the & Suns 620 Main St
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Wile, Otis. The Stillwater Daily Press (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 227, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1940, newspaper, September 20, 1940; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2163185/m1/2/?rotate=0: accessed November 7, 2025), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.