The Stillwater Gazette (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1927 Page: 2 of 8
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I
OACE TWO '
&basted Si tilwitt pootuffica fur
aalaaien throark the mail aa
'masa-ewe matter
' ' SUBSCRIPTION RATES !come an impression—which is well-nigh a fear
Widths First Zaao
I—that this confidence may breed too much of
014 sear ' ' ' N IL" ! an assurance of security says the Philadelphia
Six eneothe IS i
Pear mosthe '56 1 Public Ledger
'Tire wombs AO
' ' ' 11410114 Vint Zoete Feeling this bankers and industrial leaders
Sy the sear It SI I
le COMMIS' one peer 100 I have been quick to deplore any tendency to-
they' foreign euentram 4 L45 i
grim iwro woe wu a ga -wiff
' ' ' reliable wieldy la advenee I INald losing the traditional American energy
'Wheel the litn paid for isapiros (be paper 2
is topped These desiring to receive the pi I aria simplicity of living in a sense of ease and
per - continuously should watch the &sir On 1
the littl yellow label and retrieve before cto- luxurv They realize the very fact that the
laden Bask number cannot always bd sup- I
plied volume of money now in circulation is unpre-
Advertising Itstes -- Display advertising eedently large and tends to put commerce on
II to CO tents an inch according to position
'sack Insertion Locale or reading notices S I a basis of keener competition than probably
ovate pet gaunt's' lino each insertion Want
et Ilassified eds cards et thanks arid ergo I was ever known in America
'tellene' I cent it word Notice of religious or Ilf 11
On
ate:el society events where admissn io is )1' ita men and 'omen employed at the high-
shamed sr revenuer derived- regular rates
Cotborwis free All tranatent advertising est wages on record--measured 1v buying
deltable in &dream ' ' ' - "
- -
'power as well as by dollars—American busi-
- - -
Published Every )srlday at I
Sti Hooter Payne County Oh:shams I ness has at its OWn door the world's most profit-
Ciba"I Du4!sdl"ep"rgoNnisG24t4°2 rani 6trv1 I able market So great is the C1antr0 compared
1
— — with pre-war (lays that it almost seems an ('II-
- tirely new market had been created
iolipolt OK LApt -
44410r- O0174 Articles once classed as ha
luxuries ve be-
a 0 come necessities in 'Ow average home
y:1 s BUSilICS3 is again emphasHng tha he who is
4 A ' 0 I alert resourceful and persevering Nvill live
4SASSOCIA ' a e
that 11 NV110 is a laggard will go down to dk
i
i aPpear So the homely oldme -ti rules of busi-
JUNE 24
FRIDA
1 ness conduct once more are coming into re-
Y 1927
"'"'Isket
GAZETTES Strict attention to business is being advo-
cated probably with more force than at any
The Inuries of yesterday prove time since the armistice The executive as well
the necessities of today and i" a as the clerk is feeling this pressure The
Rense even the most conservative and
tridencies toward time-wasting businesi frills
thrifty Must help pay for them
- and the sadly overdone "conference" habit are
being checked Business is getting down to
Three or four fa:r days and per-
aons will beexpressing a longing for kusiness
The louries of yesterday prove
the necessities of today and in a
sense even the most conservative and
thrifty must help pay for them
Three or four far days and per-
sons wilj he expressing a longing for
rain 'again Mutations of the weather
:-re no greater-than the wishes of 1eopie
America and Japan are in accord
on the details of diFarmantent plans
as applied to 'warships of certain
classes That is a strong contact of
agreement and 'augurs well not only
for lessened current expense but for
future peace
The taxpayers of the county have'
the power to keep future commit-
ments fur debt and taxation within
14ound and reasonable limit: If they
do not exercise' that power they have
eicusetor objecting to exorbitant
taxation Federal taxes are being re
414ced state county and municipal
taxes are almost constantly increar:4
ing The oil and the remedy lie
near home
should be made When water comes
over a road street or bridge steps
should be' taken either to raise the
highway or to prevent the recourse
of flood
A contemporary last week remarked
that Governor Johnston has ouitWrit-
ing his 'weekly letters to the press':
evidently a mistake as we got one
this week The governor is still tell-
ing the people or trying to tell them
howmucb better roads will be un‘ler
his administration as soon as his ad-
ministration gets around to letting
some contracts which shall not be
tainted With the cement trust touch
system Disclaiming that attitude Per-
sonally it may yet be said that the
credit is not worth disputing about
inthe Opinion of SOnie persons or f ae-
tions '
Thecontemporary paragrapher who
sighs for the good old days when you
could get' a' haircut for 'a quarter re-
minds one of an incident ofmore than
fifty years ago: A young Irishman
green from theouldsodinquired the
price of potatoes:at a grocery in a
New York town The grocer told him
they were 00 cents a peek "Faith!!
said the greenhorn "I Could get'em
in Ireland for a shillin'" "Why
'ilidn't'yon stay in Ireland then?"
asked the grocer "Faith there was
no was the frank reply
Both Mr and Mrs Coolide:e have
been 'fishing in the Black Hi 118
and both have caught trout
There isn't quite the unwritten con-
sorship in the wide spa4es of the west
as exists in Tiashington and corres-
pondents have felt free to tell us that
-Mr Coolidge baits her own hook with
worms 'but the president doesn!t
These pleasing Intimate details about
the preicle'nt and his helpmeet are un-
usual and somewhat Tnore pertinent
AA ---003L t
-
0610
-
- - -
for breakfast or whether they used'
real napkins or the paper subterfuge'
It la a Farmers' union picnic pri-
marily to which Glencoe has inv:ted
the people of Payne county for the
Fourth of July Perkins ha a decided
to celebrate in the usual which is the
odjashioned way and also extends
the usual invitation to the neighbors
Whether Robert L Owen of Olda- --7 ----- ----- — n""'""
1
!lcorna Colonel !Louse of Texas or The Victim
Senator Glass of Virginia is entitled With tears in his eyes the little boy
to the credit of originatng or framing ran up to a policeman '
the
e federal rgserve !yalapvt dependa ': 'NA ''nS4 iV:90 I:'1tn 6 IIII4 II p16 IV:Ind
41
I
upon the point -view not only as'ii' nulkl'IIN'Pler l'e' nsked between
big sobs
the facts but as to the 'merits of the I 'owl-0 1- 1 ! !
"What's he been doing?" said the
otl-Jer
' 'Oh" wailed the small boy "huts
broken my hoop with his rotten old
bicycle"
' The plan in blue frowned Ito hail
a boV of his own
"You can easily catch him" in-
sitedthelittle chap plucking at the
policeman's Sleeve "They carried him
into i1it drug store'"—Answers
London ' r
- Then The Guardhouse
During his first:days in camn a
young recruit was tho victim of so
many phctical jokes he doubted all
men and their motives One night
h11'0 on- guard the tall figure of an
Of ricer loomed up
"Who goes there" challenged the
recruit:
"Major Moses"
"Advance Maior Moses" ordered
the recruit scenting a new joke "and
Rive the Tea Commandments"--
Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph
When Father Was It
Proud Parent (who s(rved)—What
I told you is the story of the World
war
His Son—But Dana what did they
need the rest of the army for?--Answers
London '
PoorWork
"It's too bad" the wife said to her
huzband "the careless-wav the tailor
sewed this button on This is the
fifth time I've had to put it on for
- - -
a vo A lc it La- A i rk rAsA 4- A Utse kilvs
goa dm owoo ip on- tom1 - soowas1 v goi
P - A A
BUSINESS GETS DOWN TO BUSINESS Hvorld This would:he'a bad thing for the
The Stillwater Gazette'' t - -- - 1 I ''
Irt ithtlgt t BkowN " ' - There is a strong renewal of conduence thatleountrY
1 t and for the itnrnigrants who WOUld
iloaated Si Otillwatot pootuffica fur trawl business should continue at high-Prosperity i soon find that tile land of promise Was not so
ailiallien throark the mails aa 11——t r- — -Ine4- -A ' It'11A 41“11“2'1Dromisinv after alt inundated as it would be
Amogoommin
— —
— - - -
-1lbusiness should '-continue at high-prosperity soon find that tile land of promise
I levels for an indefinite period With this hasiPromising niter all inundated as
by deluge of alien competition
BANKING LAWS RECOGNIZE UTILITY
INDtSTRY
' What is a safe investment?
Fifty years ago a man who would advance
money toward the development of the electric
t industry would have been considered a philan-
' thropist or entirely lacking in business judg
ment
That times have changed is shown by the
' fact that the governor of Michigan has signed
an amendment to the banking laws of that
state allow ing savings banks to invest in other
' than first mortgage bonds of gas and electric
companies operating in that state
The amendment is patterned after the string-
ent requirements of the Massachusetts law and
is in line with the movement to modernize bank-
ing laws with respect to other than strictly first
mortgage bonds of strong gas and electric com-
panies New England states and -Minnesota
had previously adopted these changes
The passage of the amendments by the Mich
igan and Minnesota legislatures is considered
one of the most progressive steps ever taken in
I relation to savings hanks investments Such
action emphaAzes the strong position of gas
and electric securities and is a reflection of a
broader movement among the states which
promises to place the bonds of such enterprises
' t on a basis for savings bank investment compar-:
IPTile tO other high grade securities
From a novelty fifty years ago modern eke-
) trio and gas companies have developed into
Ipuldie necessities the business of which is move
stable in value than a large percentage of the
real estate in the country
Changed banking laws recognize this fact
and offer opportunity for greater development
of industries whose past justifies prediction of
an even greater future
OUR IMMIGRATION LAWS real estate in the country
Just now we are hearing something from Changed banking laws recognize this fact
different parts of the country about the 'mod- and offer opportunity for greater development
ification of our immigration laws Doubtles‘ of industries whose past justifies prediction of
the movement for this modification will gather an even kTeater future
force as congress convenes The American
people will veiw with concern any goileral INDIVIDUAL GUTPUT INCREASED
tamrering With the immigration laws lInder That Americans more and more are becom-
the present system the country has prospored ing an efficient people is shown by a study of
1Vages are-high and this has increased the buy- the manufactures census figures of the depart-
ing power of the American people In addition riled of commerce
we are not getting immigration any faster than The physical °lune of manufactures pro-
it can be absorbed as was the'cage a few year!: duced per person increased nearly' 50 per cent
ago if the American people l'Onlain awake to from 4S99 to 1925 reflecting a growth of 180
the issue of-the immigration laws will not be per cent in 'quantity of production and of less
ment of commerce t
he physical volume of manufactures pro-
ddc'e4 per person inCreased nearly 50 per cent
from 1899 to 1925 reflecting a growth' of 180
por cent Thquautity of production and'of less
modified in any way which will tend to let down' than DO per cent in number of persons en-
the bars to cheap alien labor The laboring
men )f America realize this and as the 1170)v11Fion i outputPer person has been par-
go Tribune puts it "The law was des4rned pri- ticularly large during recent years amounting
manly to preserve the American standard of to 10 ' per cent in the two years from 192 3 to
I ike the 1
ewer Mississippi flood I living re
The standard cannot be pserVed if 1925 Ind to 40 per cent in the six years from
problem the minor examples of fltiod 1-
ing after anusual rains in city und
hundreds of thousands of workmen accus- 1919 to 19'25
'
'county 'point the way to 'what is torned to poverty are al IOW ed to come 111re Growthin output per 1E3rson may be attrib-
needed in remedy ad control 9r nt each year glad to accept wages NV Iiiqhs:nb uted to increasinír utilization of machinery and
lea41 s11”7: where the improvment 1 American would consider Labor cannot listen electric power introduction of various sorts of
to arguments against the national origins laws
without inviting further attacks upon a policy
which has made the American worMngman
most prosperous in the world"
If the bars were let down America would be
flooded with immigrants from all part ofthe
IMOMIIMMIIMMOIMOPOMOVVIOMINtAMMINOMMINIOMMOF 1004MtONEkti048
On
b
labor-saving devices and methods growth of
mas production Of tandardized articles elim-
ination of waste planning of production in re-
lation to general business conditions and other
economies resulting from improvements in
methods and management
His Convict:en Obt:gations
Nephew (wearied with the orepar- I Mother—Robert you're a naughty
ationO—This getting ' mrried is boy You can ju3t go to bed without
certaln!y a trial your supper
Misogynist Undo—Well ny soy Dobby—Well mother what about
it Lift half so bad as working om the that medIv? I've got to take after
sentence—ttoston Transcript meals?—L'oston Ttan Se rip t
MPIIIIIMMNIMMMMs1PMVIPM
of Plain Folks
y
- jeuneS 41viSLrayS
cRain
rain! Oh happy heart within me
Hear it washing through the leaves
Humming sweetly to the shingles
Laughing down the grateful eaves
Drouth i3 broken crops are rescued
John is happy now once more
On the porch he sits with Teddy
And they play and watch it pour
Oh my fingers fly more lightly '
As I do my little tasks r
And John's eyes are shining brightly—
half a chance is all he asks
succeed—:we'll be contented
As Ivelve always planned we would
In the borne we'll earn together
For it rains and God is good
1 o
M
'WEI
r
- C
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PRIDKV JUNE 24 1927
CUTTING COSTS ON FARM 1 ti NHITE HOUSE ADJOINS MILLION-
1 ACRE NATIONAL FORESTS
The farmers are making 1 emark- : 4 -' -
able strides in the direetionaof lower --:The summer white house in the
-
g' their production costs W M Custer S in the park the Black Hills of
Jardine -zecretary of agriculture to-
in
South Dakota where President Cool-
day told members of the Kansas
will spend the summer months
Banker's association - adjoins- the Black JUIN National tor-
Kansas will have '10000 combines idge
est and the Harney National forest
in the fields this summer it is said
Nvhich are not only rich in Indian lore
which Will displace about 30000 har- and pioneer historic interest but fur-
vest laborers In the southwest last
nish one of the earliest of
Year they -harvested around a million
fcrest management in the United
bales of cotton with a new home- States The president Will therefore
made "sled" In Texasavith a four-
have the opportunity both of enjoy-
row- planter tractor four-row culti- ing the hospitality of the state of
vator and thk "sled" for harvest
South Dakota and of making himself
one man handles from 7150 to 200
at home on a million-acre federal for-
acres of cottonwhereas in the old est estate
Cotton belt twenty-five acres appears The state park of 60000 acres
to be the maximum where the sununer white house is lo-
"This process of reducing costs per cated is adjacent to the Harney Na-
unit for labor is going on all over
tional forest and a few miles south of
the country and will be felt before the Black Hills National forest This
long in farm profits" Secretary Jar- park was the southeast corner of the
dine said Harney National forest until the fed-
In discussing the immediate agri- eral government exchanged it as a
cultural situation Secretary Jardine solid block for state lands scattered
stated it has been dominated more or throughout the federal holdings The
less by the rainy unfavorable spring two forests set aside by President
season floods Cleveland in 1807 ' have a net area of
Recent reports through the depart- -1135167 acres of government land
ment of agriculture - according to 50000 acres of which are in the
Secretary Jardine indicate about two
million acres more winter wheat for Theodore RJosevelt game preserve
and 50000 acres in a federal game
harvest over last year The condi- refuge adjoining the state park
don of the crop is slightly above
Within the present boundaries of the
average except for a strip through
forests there are also 240457 acres of
the great plains territory The crop 'patented lands some of them in pros-
is forecast at present at 594000000 perous farms and ranches on the
bushels' as compared with 627000- stream bottoms some timberland
000 bushel s grown last year Secre- more or less abused by hard cutting
tary Jardine gave an optimistic pie-
an
ture in the livestock industries lie 'lli fine' a!
id some mining
given
reported cattlemen were restocking to the region by the Sioux Indians
ranches and the hog raisers fairly In their tongue it was "Paha Sapa"
optimistic The dairy and sheep in-
in allusion to the somber appearance
dustries also continue relativelypros-
of the farest-clad heights as seen from
perous
"It is rather the long time situa-
tion however that represents the
farm problem" Secretary Jardine
said '"As I see it the core of that
problem lies in the derangement of
wage and price relationships brought
about-by wartime inflation and iodise-
quen(deflation Other things play a
part it is true but that is at the
heart of our post-war problem
'The thing that has happened dur-
ing this deflation period is that prices
of farm products have fallen while
Wages of city workers have remained
at high levels In consequence the
farmers' income has had a low ex-
change value as everyone now under-
Stands "Debts contracted on higher price
levels have remainad- and interest
charges have to be met out of low-
priced products il1oc4Aaxes have in-
creased and these ! ultattly represent
wages'
The:secretary said that six of the
ten niost important farm products
already have an exchange value sub-
stantially equal or superior to that
before the war -
It: is Secretary Jdrilinels belief
that agrichlture should come out on
this deflation period with gains in
the'Operatibn of the distxibutive sys-
tem There is some legislative help
that 'should be given cooperative or-
ganization in the direction of better
ing the meKchantWng of 'products
from the farmers aia4-he called up-
on the bankers to support a construc-
tive program which would place the
marketing of farm products in the
l'ands of producers
After stressing in detail the severe
results of the period of depression
Secretary Jardine concluded that in
five years he looks for accumulated
results of these adjustment processes
which will place the farmer in a sat-
isfactory position
A Universal Problem
If any one thing today makes the
whole world feel kin it is the traffic
problem London is wrestling with
it as desperately as New York and
with not much more hope of solving
it The average of three or four
deaths a day by automobile accidents
in the British metropolis maintains it-
self while injuries and fatalities on
country roads in England rival our
own in number
A committee which recently held
hearings on the subject raised the
question whether the growing use of
automobiles miht not somehow be
checked either voluntarily or by law
One witness was directly queried
whether there was not some way of
cutting down the number of automo-
biles in the streets and on the high-
ways He thought not Asked for
his reason he said: "They add to the
pleasure of 04 and the eertair4y of
The committee di not k'noW Wheth-
er to latigh or to be aghast -But is
not the fact much as stated both
there here and everywhere? — NVW
York Times
Canaries Don't Like Jazz
Those Who breed and train canaries
for the market say that the feathered
songsters will be wrecked for life if
they are brought up in a jazz environ-
ment The blare of the saxophones
with thgir syncopated music not only
spoils tileir voices but their tempers
Good music on the piano or violin
help and inspire them but the jazzy
tuff is about fatal to their vocal pros-
pects If the hot-baby ration does
that to the limly and innoeent canary
what will it do to the musical 'nature
of a youthful human atudent?—Los
Angeles Times
Punch's Wise Cracks
Punch is getting to be quite a
wisecracker in his old age Under
the heading of "The Wisdom of
Henry Ford" it presents:
A cool engine is better than a bot
dog n
There are no bees in my bonnets
Heaven is paved with good inten-
tions -
Englishmen can no longer afford
castles but any American an afford
a Ford
Had Hint Guessing
She—I saw you calling at Miss
Pryde's house yesterday Wa3 she at
home?
' Ile---That's what I've been won
Lininind:E
--:The summer white house in the
Custer State park in the Black Hills of
South Dakota where President Cool-
idge will spend the summer months
adjoins- the Black ifllh National for-
est and the Harney National forest
which are not only rich in Indian lore
and pioneer historic interest but fur-
nish one of the earliest'eNamples of
fcrest management in the United
States The president will therefore
have the opportunity both of enjoy-
ing the hospitality of the state of
South Dakota and of making himself
at home on a million-acre federal for-
est estate
The state park of 60000 acres
where the summer white house it lo-
cated is adjacent to the Harney Na-
tional forest and a few miles south of
the Black Hills National forest This
park was the southeast corner of the
Harney National forest until the fed-
eral government exchanged it as a
solid block for state lands scattered
throughout the federal holdings The to
two forests set aside by President
Cleveland in 1807 ' have a net area of
1135167 acres of government land
50000 acres of which are in the
Theodore IIJosevelt game preserve
and 50000 acres in a federal game
refuge adjoining the state park
Within the present boundaries of the
forests there are also 240457 acres of
patented lands some of them in pros-
perous farms and ranches on the
stream bottoms some timberland
more or less' abused by hard cutting
and fire Culd some mining claims
The name "Black Hills" was given
to the region by the Sioux Indians
In their tongue it was "Paha Sapa"
in allusion to the somber appearance
of the fdrest-clad heights as seen from
the plains The Itarney forest was
named for General Harney who was
one of the early explorers of the ré-
gion
The presidcrt will have opportunity
to see how riztrol ferests are admin-
istered and detottloped— He can see
how timber -stitstl area made under
methods that71pep the forest grow-
ing how grazing is regulated to keep -
The range green and how land more
Valuable for farming than for tim-
ber growing ha bern made available
for homesteading The 'first timber
sales in any natibnal forest were in
the Blat'lc INN in 1899 and 1900 and
the timber to be cut was so carefully
selected'under scientific forestry
that the 'areacan be 'cut again by
1935 About 25000000 board feet
of legs are 'cut each year from these
federal timber-lands under the same
methods with such an improvement
to the forest that the foresters expect
to maintain this annual harvest for-
ever and even to increase it to 40-
000000 feet This is partly because
the old defective trees in the virgin
forest areereinaved in the first cut
and the thriftylsound trees left to
growi' Whtirc'the'lokger comes back
35 yeii'g 12U''t4eltimber he then
gets is much more free from rot avid
other detects than was that cut the
first time Also young timber is s'
coming in On old burns and other
barren places and will thus increase
the areas which can be cut over
every 35 years—
- Within and near the 'Black Hills
and Harney National forests are
many points of scenic or recreational
interest The famous Hot Springs at
the southern 'end of the Black Hills
are visited by thousands and the
Wind Cave National park and Jewel
Cave National' monument 'also are
well known Harney peak the high-
est point in the United States east
of the Rocky mountains Custer peak
the "Needles and Sy)van lake are
other points (4 interest as well as
the old mininetpwn 'of Keystone
where is localtgithe famous Holy
Terror minedroin which came the
richest gold ore ever found in the
'world Tradition' says this mine was
named in honor of the discoverer's
wife
Sound Has Little Energy
Speech requires a stuall amount of
knergy according to telephoue en-
gineers who explain that if a million
persons were to talk steadily and the
energy of their voices were to be con-
verted into heat they would have to
talk for an hour and a half to produce
sufficient beat to make a cup of tea
One acoustic expert has divided the
English speech into thirty-six letter
soundS and he found that the vowels
carry most of the energy it is esti-
mated That at the up'mr and lower
liniit or hearing it lakes otie
times as much "energy to make sound
audible as in the range of '1000jo
5000 cycles where the ear Is most
sensitive
' On the radio the sounds "th" "f"
"s" and "v" arc the mdst difficult to
hear correctly This is attributed
chiefly to their very weak energy—
Scientific American -
New York city isto have a fifty-two-story
office building to cost
$25000000 :
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SCRIPTURE
P
404 iwAeffiefolutfill
St Ltihe ale:1024
A certain man made a 'great supper and
bade many:
And Pfbnt big servant at supper time to
saw to them that were hidden Come foe all
things bre now ready
And they ail with one c'onsent he'rnr to
make excuse The first Stirid onto hiat I
have bought a piece of grohnd and I must
needs go and see it I pray thee have me
exeused
And another said: I have bought five yoke
of' oxen and I go to prove them: pray
thee have me excused
And'another'Snid I have4married a wife
and t horefore I cannot come
' So that servant ettme and showed his
lord these things Then the master of the
hriuse being angry said to his servant Go
out quickly into the Ptrfets and lane of the
city and bring in hither the poor and the
maimed and the halt and the blind
An the servant said Lord it is done as
thou bast commanded and yet thera is
room ' -
And the Lord said onto the servant Go
old into the highways teed hedges and com-
pel them to eome in that my house may
he filled
For I say unto you that none of those
men which were bidden shall taste Of my
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litrii dim 1Liril IIILPLj VVh kme nignt H 'l - (-417:3'1 '1
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el succeed—well be 4 -
CO cents peck "Faith" tv:hilo
on' guard the tall figure of an contented 0
eenhorn "I could get'em officer loome ve alwas planned we would
d up i
1 f k t
A5 'we'y V t l it
In the borne we'll earn together 1"116
for a shillin'" "Why "Who goes there?" challenged the
1‘ to N
For it rains and God is good A
stay in Ireland then?" recruit:
trcer "Faith there WaS "Major Moses" j
"Advance Maior Moses" ordered
' was the frank reply ' t I(
1
the recruit scenting a new joke "and I I i ikkv
gve the Te i e l'is Iv -"
an 1
— io Commandinents"— I li'LP1 Viorls1111 'i 0 - t ir 7 II
d Mrs Coolidge have Pittsburgh C hroni I Tel
-egraph r:s4 -a 4 0 II 44 y if v a 1
the Bl
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r in ack Hillt4 (Olin- Ir- 7AS It i 44t 1 qie011
When Father W 14
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oth have caught trout i - 41
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t Proud Parent (who servedl—What t itilif144 --k4 !' -' ' N-3 1 -- eA ' 'I
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quite the onvvritten con- I told you is the story of the World l'" p144 I rel-it 2 4h-- --i1 t
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he wide spa of the wet war
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:W ashington- and corres- His Son—But nape V hat did they 11NZ A
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- need the res o the arms or—A - --7--'4- 41:-'- - I e' i I t ' ' 'i:Ar4
ive felt free to tell us that h t f h f
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swers London t-3"14 a'4 Of' C i 4 A wl‘ ) ft V
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e baits her own hook with e- ''--t 40 I 0
the president- doesn' t ' ' C PoorWerk "----i----41' ' z 4vA? t I '' s $ ' -
ing intimate details about "It's too bad" the wife said to her l'4:-7-44-t -- - '1: 1 ti- kl th i ili: ' ' ' ‘
huzband "the careless"wav the tailor Jiff -'?-244-' li ''' 'I 4 sof
It and his helpmeet are un- sewed this button on This is the ' '"f -- pel 11 I 11021 0 I41 I " s ' 1
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somewhat Tnore pertinent
fifth time I've had to put it on for 4) emerl"'" —114'4- -
nes
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I Half a chance i3 all he ask l'7WLniiifiSt
e—That's what I've been won- I ror 1 say unto you 101AT 10110 01 1110Re
mii6mmioUtimolimmeal men Which were bidden than taste of my '
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roommoommooloomoom onamoolomainoloommwmommoomoomosamowassmoomonemogot
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The Stillwater Gazette (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, June 24, 1927, newspaper, June 24, 1927; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2202987/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.