The Stillwater Gazette (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1933 Page: 2 of 6
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FRIDAY APRIL 7 1933
PACE TWO
TUE TT ILL WATER GA7FIT1 STI1LWATTR PAYNE COUNTY OKLAUOMA
NA
01411maommomomlinim
THE STILLYATER GAZETTE
By HINKEL & SONS
Filtered at StIllwetr postorrlee tor trans
mission through the malls as
second-clam matter
SI SISCHIPTION SATIN
Zone
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Six months 75
Three months 40
rt 70no
the year :
In Canada cue yen :ift0
Other Inrefrn countries
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When the time paid for expires the
paper Is stopped Tlitye desiring to re-
ceive the psoer continuously should
-vetch the date On the yellow label and
renew befots expiratiou Illrok numbers
cannot always iss supplied
Advertising Rates—Display advertising
25 to 40 cents an Inch according to posi-
tion each insertion Locals or reading
notices 5 cents per emnitsti lit e each in-
sertion Want or classified ads cards 01
thanks and resolutions I cent C wcrd
Notice of religious or rate:Intl SOCiPt
events where admisrion is charged or
revenu derived regula ass: otherwise
tree All transient advertiroig payable
In advance
Pub Belled Evev Friday at
StIllwetor Payne County Oklahoma
Gazette Building No 0320 Main Street
Telephone N 13
FRIDAY AP:1M 1 VIT3
CAZE1 TES
' rc rtprint of Om wevk
'frma Vie Alma Silzril tyllng of a
woman w:m entertaning her
britt! N club 1at weuk an I -Ipolvg71
for th a'Ke Nhe sei Vit caor:lainlivz
litt's'ly about the tmality l'hmr
tho itt1 CroA ii giving )t
—
Sunday was a great day for th
Andesons Wayn C and Harry Id
S4als were born in both fainilics that
This is by way of c9n2ratula-
ltion to old friends Harry and MelIva-Wayne
and Zula Mite lio:h
Ithcr! ar known as "A:liy"
chayes art the junior memlons of
the two films will have similar nick--
1110PP
— Probably the meanest April Fo-or
klirsy prank WU S engineered by tho
clirp who sent his friend a college
employe an official-appearngletter
infoiming him his ccnntetioni with
the irMitution wcre tntW from that
writing
a 'b
Milisouri the state constitution
1-017-Ct4 the motorist from diversioa
0Yr1ighway funds At the grneral
election in 1928 Missouri vets d to
amend the constitution of tV start-'
to provide that tho prtx:eeds Itiom no
Itor Thiele license fess and gakoline
itax es should be usEd rn!y the
parposcs of constructing and main-
! taining state highways suoettino
the bighway department raid paying
the principut End -interet on roa !
bonds and prohibits the funds fron
being -used for any otber -
The nmpensicn of re1 reIn1h)r nrrn ns mr7nt watrnman a!- -n- lec-
took away front the Ainercuil twoid: s'at41114“ Kr14 Wil gave 11111 s'scr
only a right that nO el'a r peopl ' ?ilfs thil moraina not to al!ow raty
I possess Other rountr104 (11-1sideved 3onmernt:e candidates for pustmas-
the tse of gold for the small ehanv er to stalo a claim en the ryounos
of businem as unceonomleal end (h durmg dark night&
not put the valuable metal into f:ir- ----
eulation but hold it as the bask' of Ikl'arch cnme in Anil elleulLed out
credit and as the medium of- inter- ihe a bulb an4 the groundhog Llblo't
national payments I do so well this yar either With
national payment& I do so well Oda yar either With
- the Chamter of Commerce and coun-
The boom most he starting An ty farmers holding a sheep-promoin
acquainfane got an L D call tfvonil mcctluic vii tho eampaa March 31
Chicago today anti listened to a brok-1 how oke couhr alarch depart exc ept
er sII a hot tip on a stock flue is: like a pile lamb?
"certain" to take a tan-point jump -
The acqu r e ng
aintane yawnd hu up :Ille Christian 1-cience 'Monitor SirIZ'
So far as present information is
available local banks will handle
stute warrants next pay day as they
have in the pest but State TreaAirer
Ray Weems has h h work allead
must dl a man's it13 in straightening
out state finances with only ail
lurislat are to help him The
will rcalize eoon that the financiol
comlition of the state is their baby
as F R said and must he taken
in off Ole doorstep Until the s!ate's
condition 14 improved uncertainder
are going to o:it in the matter of
state warrants
The speed ‘rith which the ntinlink
tration is NVOrking in Washington is
contrasted sharply N-ith the tack oll
same in Oklahoma's !Cate capitol
-
Boya Life tclis about the colonel'
411
wife sending the following nOte to
Captain Green: "Colonel anti Mrs
Brown reque31 the pleasure of Cap-
tam n Green's rompany to dinner oft
the twentieth" Captain Cretin re-
piied: "With the exception of four
men on leave and two men sick Cap-
tain Green's company have great
pleasure in ace t piing your invita-
tion" We are on Congressman Will lloz-
era' mailing list and the first meter
lel to come through under his frank
arrived recently including his nial(1-
en address to the congress For you:
Information it was not a humorous
address—unless one chose to loot at
it that way
After plowing the mud of Clay-
ton township yesterday to cheek tp
on those "cyclonic winds" that swtpt
away the nsw Amerada derrick on
the wiltPat lease five ndies south
four and a half miles east of Still-
water we learned that the territory
had mad" a hard straight Winj and :
not a cyclone It just seemed like
a cyclone Some trees were dam-
aged we found a fence blawn (town
(three-strun barbed wire too) and
ALL HONOR To SUCH FARMERS!
— No doubt the nthjor profit! hare gone from farming in it'e
tast few years to's they Lave from many industries No doubt
the burden of mortgage that has fallen upon the farmer
heR buen unbearably heavy in many instances The problem of
mLking a living on the fttro:has been a difficult problem
Vet tvith all the 11 ionlati'i'ins of the farmer the great majt-brity
or the agricultual'Workers are bettig up nobly klitringth?
yeart it distressed prie)) arid multiple economic ills There
in-tanees ef bleak failure of course ameng the :arroers
but it Feems t(1 usthatthis mide of the picture has been painted
too (Alen 'Many ha't e come to reliant the farming population
as a solid group that has' failed to meet the existing' crisis
In looling at the farm failures we have lost sight of tho)so
ruged I flr )f the soil who have Nvhipped the difficult tdtu-
ation found '‘ays and weans to weather the storm and nobly
come through the erkis of the depre!tsion
Natien's Lusness quotes stme interesting figures A bul-
letin fret the Federal Land bank of Wichita covering Col 3-
rad° Kansas New Alxiom and Oklahoma states that at the
and of January this year 57!1!' per cent of the :107i)9 fartn
loami bcm by the bank in those four states "were in good stand-
ing with all sums due on them paid in full"
If farm loans held by other institutions keep that ratio and
it is not improbable that they have that means that 1211: per
et'llt of encumbered farms are not behind hand Only 42 per
cent Of farms have any mortgages at all so) enly 121!' per cent
of 12 per cent nhout IS per cent of the farms in this region
ace facing foreclosure e‘en at a long distance
Thcse figures are not checked in full of course but we
desire to point out that every farmer isn't as delinquent in debt
as many th:nk he is—pernaps tn much as his advisers think he
ought to be And that fact we think is a direct tribute to a
hardy frugal and business-like section of our population—the
farm group that is meeting the demands of the times and
making a go cf a difficult situation To them should go an
:LNVa(1 of AmAdcanism
Reports from Argentine are to the effect that the farmers
down there ix° putting in as much grain as usual despite the
low prices It's pretty hard to discourage a farmer to the
point where he won't work
Cheer up If you didn't get an office in November maybe
you can get yourself elected delegate to on of these prohibition
repeal conventions
he row tlerr!cli' was badly tlarnaged
A 'truck load of near the well
loeatIon 'had sltopei into the ditch
ulonT the eoutrry road and you cur-
resooti(tent (44111 nut get cloie enough
40 inToct the w11 location properly
but tbotiamar waA apparent from
Illwy: ure going to poth
he ikrric constuction to conirb-
'ion and Will be a:udding in One of
dayg Oil min are optiiniAtie
aLeout6torr" new -well Of course
you hao to L oprinktic to be an oil
run Lut it g!wkn't !nut rathin z to
"e poet"
Oor old frind Bill Darnll lit now
nvt'n flq nirht watchman a 1i foe-
4414lu4cz Ktul Wit gave hm t4!vcr
'ilr4s' thiA'moroinZ riot to aBow raly
3onmerat4 candidates for pustninA-
A‘r to stalitt a claim on the ryounos
durMg dark nghts
Tie Christian Science Monitor
"The plan to refund $3000000000
in thort-terni obligations of the Unit-
ed Stutes givernment by the issuam:e
of $50 and 4100 ponds seems doubly
dta:rahle rastuuch aa thoumila of
new investor3 will at once begin to
more than 4 rer cent inteiest in
governAtent"
How about the boy4 who take only
A 32 per cent interest in goveta-
invot? rclatel on of the boys
down Nialu who to:el to live there
‘sas known in the "good old days"
al the soLon us a town that observed
three days a week! Silver Saturday
Drupliett Sunday Ind Mue Zinday
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Anathet summer Ava ton approaches
mid with it the s
rleasurc of wimming
in today' raper is neNvs Of the tragic
aowninz Tuesday of a father and
his son in tit? murky Cintat ton
Neither could swim Their boat cap-
sized The Cimarron is not to be
trwted by swimmers It alone per-
sons who are not sure of their abil-
ities in the water The shifing sonds
of the Cimarron have covered many a
tragedy The favorite swimming bole
at tin river may be one foot in depsh
today and eight feet tomorrow Par-
ents should sce during the -coziing
season that their children do their' vaats quarters The entrance is on
swimming in supervised plaeee where I the east with a broad open veranda
guards are evadable The value oft facing the post road On the west
being able to swita make & itself api is another wide perch from which a
parent I fine view of the Hudson may bo ob-
I tamed
We learned the reason this morn-I The howe built about 100 years
ti!r that Hugh Nester ran away vaa ago is a clapboard frame two stories
with a roof of s:ngle slant and
the race for commissioner llahig
'gl h
knew the fartn intimately as a boy plan consisted of a central hall with a broal spread The original floor
One chore was to bring up the horses
each side
from e m
pasture very ornin two rooms at Some time g Tht 11
ran on about forty acre or more' before 1900 the straight stlircase in
Hugh say and each morning he went 1 the central hall was removed anti the
out as a barefoot lad to bring Them stairs were built on the northwest
room
up You wit) have been there tool where other changes were
will know that on a frosty mornin!t made and from whit a snvice-wing
s
withthe horses feeling their oats a wa extended northward
lad might get in considerable road The front veranda opens intik the
work before bs succeeded in catching large central hall it one end of which
up his favorite for a bareback ride is the "big room" This is a living
di
front pasture every morning Tht
ran on about forty acres or more
Hugh says and each morning he went
out as a barefoot latl to bring Them
1
tool
up You whs have been there
will know that on a frosty mornin!lt
seiththe horses fccling their oats a
lad might get in considerable road
work before 111 succeeded in catchin g
up his favorite for a bareback ride
—
alter the remainder and tlign it AUS
a job ai hard 83 driving a pig through
a gate No wonder that Hugh ran
Ik Man-0-War with Snanper Gar-
rison in the saddle!
ft has been neecFsatv to douLte-
nark on Main oceskdonally of late and
that is a pretty good sign of inIrlCiVe-
ment Italember the old days V:11CTI
we had all that trouble over parking
and put on campaigns urging busi-
ness men to leave their cars at home
to mite room for the customers along
Main!
We hear off hand that Crowder
Aren Unit Barney Terbush are going-
into th bullfrog raisins busineass
Ilfrog raisins busine3s1 to go There will alwaya be agencier
Roosevelt Estate Will Be
The Roosevelt Estate Will Be
An Ideal Summer White House
Homestead Where the President Will Go During Hot Weather
Is 100 Year Old and on the Hudson—There Is 1000
Acres of Ground Surrounding It
President Roost TIC announce-
'taunt that he will imik Hyde Park
the sUMIlier capital marks a deviation
front the customs of the last few
chief executives who have nit had
estates of their own for sueh a pur-
pose While ex-President Ilavver
vent regularly to the "Little White
lloue" a camp on the Rapidan qth-
er ex-prqilents—nutably Coolidee
and Wilson—spent summer holidays
at rented places and as a rule
changed pun s each season The phys-
ical propeiaies of Hyde Park how-
eve would seem tu make it an keal
3unnuer capital
This nomestead of the Roosevelt
family is located a few miles above
Poughkeepsie in DucheFs county
New York The estate forms a long
narrow parallelogram with ore end
bordering the Hudson Until recent-
ly it comprised 500 acres the acqui-
sition of two neighborin g farms
brought the total acreage ta
The Albany post road pierces the
ea4ern part of it
Entrance on the East
A winding tree-hordered drive
111114 from the hghway to the huge
rambl!ng house Aiith its cluster of
outbuiLlings including stables gar-
ages laundry greenhouses and ser
-two rooms at each side Some time
before 1900 the straight sttircase in
the central hall was removed anti the
staira were built on the northwest
room where other changes were
wads and front whit a snvice-wing
i
Nva extended northward
The front veranda opens intik the
large central hall it one end of which
is the "big room" This is a living
I SAME OLD EEER GAME IN NEW
YORK
YORK i themselves 1
i
—
if unhampered by the impeciiim nta of :
1 They may even be more effective NATIoNAL AFFAIRs
It i elaitt that if GOVernot eh-
organizations for special pleading I
Malt 13 it) h3VO hie way and particu-Th ' ' I
1 e meetiree of culture with culture
hilly if he la to prevent Tammany religion with religion needs no mir-
from layine a dirty poiltieul hand ' seal intermediary in the - tweatiethi taeteassieeesaesseeesee!-seeeses-ee"a""
tur
I7Vn y It 13 inescapable' in the t
Ily FRANK P LITSCHERT
on the beer bill he will need to teke
th
tositi or bnaltirad course! Alai it maes be Jug how far e present congea1 tions the anwere If rturope had ant-
save sharply with the
ealthier if in the natural course V—
Doss Curry and hie spokeamen in 'thel I veati f the A
ve omer ican people was
'' and eiaiiv nt
th senat whid iI ple notive that the eenete as reprd'a
Rtiseona Lay die and littl e that ist pot b ound l iy :ron chid rak a
e s i
legislature Conceal their reill pur- -' °"1 not in acceril with Me Wilson's Ideaa
poae as they may seek to do with one! aermanently valuable te men be 11q! house intends to go in eonferrine clic I 6f Lutti
ng our eountry into tia
!
words the ntent of the Tammany
aith them—Ilarper's Magazine tatIrial powers on the pretidena will: League 0
I Nations So they really teal
i
i -- — probabie Ise diecleised in the ti et-dhal
politician 0
s is obvious They see in no (Mist fur eomplaiiit The feet azi
! GASOLINE TAXES ARE HEAVY tent future Such wr
Powees ee giVE'll 1
the coming licensing and sale and tax 1 that the Enropean natioas conhaq
atian of heer an immense opporturity — — to air ilattaevelt ' in the mutter of ut) t a t 1 ept een
a
to rvia I
le n ouga etates
for ptronage and graft and plitical ion t govern
'
uo leeere Med to ile ment in pow-
Croes collections of gasoline taxes laelect balaneing and reorganetet
chicane To pass IL by would seem to by the etate e amounted to n a esti- of the government bemuse it
'''''''! vr end the people are never conealcest
them the height of foll e t el 046884 32
000 in 19 generally realred by IleP"H""" andluaeut the inerita or defecte tif IIi6
Teley need i mated total
it) in their aufenetee an I meon to go as compared with aetual gross collece Demovrate alike that a tease 'lad trewes Eurola) is unable therefort)-
after it Cons of $569789232 in 193! The 'arisen and the job could be only done 0
it undtrstand our constitiutional pra-
If they sureed in nervertiag the' declitte " - e
$289052ae a as the :lest by the chief executive President vilon fde L10 i ratification by the seti-
course Of beer k!gislation at Albany n the history of the levy 11 e
nar had s te eught the right reor-I
! ate en independent arm of the goy-
it will do more than injure thie etete i Average state tax rate Lased upon ganiee the government but was
eminent responeiola not to the pro-
It m ill go echoing through other taxes in tifty representative eitite was blecked by a Denateratic congeess I
le 416 cents a gallon at the etal of or the seccetary of atate but
states It will tend to block the
anred with 408 cents at -- to the American people
peal of the eighteenth amendm com nut now we are told there i ii be
eet1 1932
s
Aleeady the desperate dry leaders are
Last year Florida raieed the rate
'the end of 1931 another request for a grant of au- lle argument that the president is
therity to the peeeident by congreasialweye handivapped in treaty making
pointing to the achtmee of Taroweny
to 7 cents from 6 cente North Car:a-lane elecleity by
at showing that if the amendment as the serate It Was became the senate is apt to apaetthe
repeeled the old unholy alliance be- i line to 6 cents from 5 cents Mieeas- arnouneed the other day by the eialal pact will net hold water There is
tweets polities and liquor will be set ! sippi to 6 cents from 5 cents Ala- department that cengreselenal tied" never any misapprehension adieu OK
up vgain As everybody knows it ba
! rna to 6 cents front 5 eents it would be eaccht by the prcsilent negotia n tio of an inlernational pact
was partly this alliance which brought r Colleetion of a gasoline tax by the berme he etarted otit on the more ar is in progre': ae to how the Amer-
about prohibition If Tummany imee federal governnwnt and of county less long anti ‘1-?11:ng road of Ller0- I ican ettette stands on the project
haste to flaunt it again in tho face and city gasoline taxes in at keit five Gating trade Lreat:e4 The realgett for I'he ianatore of all political partiee at
of the notion the effect may be to statei percludes any possibility of the this was t41id to be that European mai sail critical times do not hesitate to
hamper reasonable and orderly re- t levy having cost motorizes less money tions do not like the idea of making' express their opinion either at the
peal of prohibition I in 1932 despite the decline in state negotiations with the executive arm! White Ifause or on the floor of the
Thus the matter le of deep signift- tax collections It is estimated that
i of our evvernment when they liTaw 1 senate If the president takes the
cance and wide im th
port If Governor 1 e federal tax took an additional i
i that the tigtetnent is apt to be ut I
eee
)vishes of the senate ae representa
about prohibition If Tammany na11 federal government and of county 10s lon4 and ati:s roan of 1440
haste to flaunt it again in tho face and city gasoline taxes in at lea t
st five item ei note stands on the project
iating trade treatlei The reason for Th :41-tutors of all polit:cal partiea at
of the notion the effect may be to atates percludes any possibility of the this was said to be that European na-tsu ill critical times do not hesitate to
hamper reason-able and orderly re levy having cost motorists less money tions do not like the idea of making exerels their opinion either at the
peal of prohibition I in 1932 despite the decline in state negotiations with the executive arm! White Ilmse or on the fkmr of the
Thus the matter is of deep signiii I tax collactions It is estimated that of our tiviverninent when they ' snow! senate If the president takes the
10 er a 0 an
cance and wide import If Governor i
I ti fed I tax took additional k I that the eq-cement is apt to he triaet I wishes of the senate as represenia-
Lehman is looking for a subject on sixty-three million dollars more so because the senate fails to ratify It I tive! of IIe people of the -various
which in the public interest io as- that the nat:on's total net gasolinel In this respect it was Pointed ont I state: into consideration—and there
sert his authority and leaderiilit Jas hill will approach If not exceed that after Prelddent Wilson had gone 1 is no reason to believe that Mr
against Tammany :Lath he cauld find' "0 million dollars It is furtner es-I
! to Franee and taken part in the nego- Itooevelt ivold1 not do so—then
none more upt to his hand than this I timated that although this tax was
I tiation of the treaty of Versailles and
there need be no hesitation or era--New
York Tiines levied to finance roads about 200 mil-1 the League of Nations the senate re-I
1 Larrassment t bout foreign nego1ia-
410 lion dollars a record ailiount w" I fused to rat:fy the clocanent ail 1 Lions ea traditionally conducted
FOREIGN MI$SIOA! ARE PASSING diverted to other purposes during afterward negotiated a separate
1932
7-- treaty with the defeated powers The The senate has aIways been jealous
Never since the first imposithm of
- It is likely that missions are pale- European powers it is said fclt that of its tioaty control power and there
su
in and that the evaluations and pros- i gaoline tax by Oregon on Febr-
" they had -botight a pig in a poke' i3 no reason to believe that it will
pectu ary 25 1919 have collection !lg aes for their reconstruction are because th senate refused to ratify now surren ler any constitutional
urea revealed a decline—Atilerlean
but their requiem And their pass what President Wilson had agreed to rights There will be no crisis like
ing Petroleum Institute
I think is not an unmixeI evil -- the banking situation to be dealt with
They were part of an ugly age al -
It is true that European peliticians I when these international negotiations
pushful self-assertive parvenu age1 0 were very critical of th:s aetion of the are taken up and there will be 1)1014
and in thentserves there was twine- 1
thing narrove bigoted graceless and i t THEM WAS THE DAYS 4' senate fee many years afterward and i of time for dicussion and consulta-
1
that they du not yet like our methodl Lion with eingrese At any rate this
uncivilized I ------ f of negotiating international egteee- I Itraernolern tendency of clothing
'I heie defects were inseparable items or Early Day SO later ments through the president wit the! the chief executive wlth dictatoriel
from their eisence They may die 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 - advice feed consent of the senate as powers ill receive a real test when
and the spread of Christianity anti oc-! v provlded for by the constitution the propoeel outline above comes up
cliental culture be no more impeded! Often quaint generally informative
for that What is enduring in the! and sometimes of historic t
al value are ut lc !M m
!Mist be remembered that at! in the senate if it ever doesi come
items from the old newspaper Nes of
the time of the Versailles negotia-1 up
Christian meseage will move in the eariyseay Stillwater Ths following
normal currency of ideas now more paragraphs are selected from the Gazette
Dios of thirty-five years ago (1897)
freely than ever before with the eta- '
t
tiers of distance reduced ! The lirst bale of cotton brought No Backward Step in 27 Years
Men and women who believe as i into town came in early Monday and
Mrs Pearl Buck does that the Chris- i was sold at public auction to the ' pumps" en the east side of Main
—
tian way of life has something to ! highest bidder Abercrombie & Mil-
Stillwater Ok April 5 1931--1 street One of these was in front
contrilyite to all men will still go I ler were the purchasers at $65 of the Gazette office then in the
To the Editor: In ahnost every life
where their instincts prompt them ----- Neerman building now occupied by
e
there to exemplify it by their conduct Alex Wilson got a little frisky in
there are ceetain dates which tand
out as pereonal milestones and are of the 700 block In the 800 black
lUmes Mueic house That took care
and bearing Those with epecial tat- town hst Saturday and undertook to
ente prompted to exercise them in Paint one of Dennis Ward' e eye a
not soon forgotten
Twenty-seven years ago today I the puthp was in front of the "City"
certaia countries -whether Chine or dark brown with his fist II meat market then run by Joe Crone
Turkey India- or Mexico will be free ---- came to Stillwater from Iowa and ' In the 900 blcck the pump was in
to go There will always be agnci f e Walt Budworth became the editor of the Stillwaterl started yesterday' front of O M Eyler's grocery just
Gazetee a relation to pubile affeirs
for Utah where he has a brother -north of the present Gem These
— and business which continued for I
i iron pumps had tin cups attached by
!
living lie evil' probably remain there lwenty-two years Of course many
chains and I believe the one at Ey
state Will Be - -
during the coining winter
changes have taken place in the more
le
than a quarter of a century i I r's usually had a horse bucket foe
' the accommodation of farmers teams
W
President Morrow of the college —se r) from t(ni
tuote As I rode uptow the
but it was not chained and must have
er hite House 'purchased the Marvin Iliekox farm Santa Fe station in Shively's bus on been readily expendable
comprising Monday comprisg eighty acres that early April day my first im-t In front of the present J C Fen-
for $900 It was purehaeed as an
pressions of Stillwater were favor-
able I thought then it looked ike a ney stor e was a huge cottonwood
Investment
1tree and in its grateful shade and on
: Will Go During Hot Weather — good little town it is three times as a bench in front of Morgan's shoe
e Hudson—There Is 1000 li large now as it was then and is still i
Joe le Carter started for Kansas
City this week to lay in a line ot a good town It has had its trial's shop the SOnA of Rest daily gathered-
I Surrounding It and solved all the problems of etate
holiday and Christmas goods and viscissitudes but it never hes and of the universe Probabli the
— gone backward 1- constitutional convention which net
room about 30 by 50 feet with en Mrs W E Christie of Eagle town- I In 1906 Stillwater boasted watersi in Guthrie in 1907 owed much of the
l'8-loot ceiling Marble Ereplaece are ship is visitieg her daughter Nes worke The supply such as it was1 wisdom it developed and displayed to
Harry Bullen and when and if came from the twin the elementary echools of polemice
at each end big enough for a 4-fect i
-- dams on Boomer creek and the such as sat under that tree and poi
as!
log In it earner ie President et)OSQ-
Never in the history of Stillwater 'ter tower which gave the presure ished that bench
stood where it still stands in Lewis I "Them was the good old days"
velt'e mahogany desk with a ship's has the demand for houses to rent
clock that strikes bells instead of been so great as at present ottie street near Ninth avenue The city! yeaee Welt it is natural to recall
hours Wane and ceilings are white capitalist could
arrange for himeelf ownid no portable engines nor fire' some of their pleasant if rather bee-
the woodwork i walnut Bookeases a handsome income by building som apparatus other than a hose wagon! colic features Only an ingrate di-
s e
!
almost cover the walls coat:tiring four and five-roomed houses to rent Most of the drinking water used in pities his beginnings
both claseics and modern volumes as town came from wells The Bonnier' —Edwin 11 Brown e
well as the bound volumes of a nuns- Jno McFarland was brought home creek water may have been potable M
tier of malazinee Ship prints reflect f ront Ponca City last Saturday witee 1 and likely it was as safe as that front Bound to Happen
for the town had no san'tary l Give a business man enough rope
the president's love of the sea -
suit of a kick he received from a
one arm and twe ribs broken as a le wells
nor storm sewers but yell water was and you'll tire' hint tied up in a- con-
Fronts on the River horea a few dare before I preferred There were three "towe I ference
room about 30 by 50 feet with un
l'S-loot ceiling Marble fireplaces are
at each end big enough for a 41-fNt
log In is corner is eresident et)OSQ-
velt' mahogany desk with a ship's
clock that strikes bells instead of
hours Walls and ceilings are white
the woodwork is walnut Booknses
almost cover the walls cofitairing
both classics and modern volumes as
well as the bound volumes of a nun)
ber of malazines Ship prints reflect
the president's love of the sea -
Fronts on the River
Hyde Patk's frontage on the river —
consists of undulating terrace-a rim- Chas Reed of the Stillwater Mill-
ing gently from the Hudaott The ing Co started Tuesday on a trip
river is seen as it sweeps through the to Pawnee mid Blackwell in the in-
Long linech—a sailing course named terest of the company
in 160V by Rabert Jnet in his diary —
of the voyage of the- Half 1oon and Dr J D Murphy sold hie lot on
which was later known to the Dutch the east eide of Main street Tuesday
as De lents Rak Inland is breal morning Z Jackson tieing the put-
Plain which still bears the eighteenth chaser Consideraten $500 cash
century name of The Plate
A development of the last seven The Payne County Free Fair keso-
years is"The Cottage" which is reel- dation was formed last Friday for
ly a group of cottages where Mrs the purpose of balding a fair here
Roosevelt and her two women part- this fall
ners have their Val Kill furniture —
shop Fmploying local lebor they A bran new boy put in his appear-
turn out hand-made reproductions of ance at the home of County Clerk
fine old pieces which are marketed Means last Friday night The little
in New York fellow has excellent lung capacity and
The history of the Hyde Park ete no doubt i TV time will make a howling
tate probably begins in 1697 when populist
the Great Nine Partners Patent that —
covered Springwood—the early name - A derrick at the cotton gin fell
of the estate—was taken out In last Friday afternoon and severely
1663 a small portion of the patented crushed the foot of Charles Pearson
area was divided into nine long strips Young Pearson was playing around
of land bordering on the Hudson' the building with a number of her
which because of their frontage on boys of his sixe when the accident
the river bezame known as water t occurrel
lots Springwood wive equivalent to - —
1
LiA5 0 pi-Mg-WWII Wit Vquivnium xo i - ---- -
the south half or the water lot No 6 The band bns been receiving scv-
It was purchased in 1867 by the lath- eta' new instruments of late The
er of th premident Jame Roosevelt latest addition is the handsome tuba
and tiler Franklin Delano Roosevelt rwhIch $(1 ilsen Hand is so proud vf
woo born in 1882 ' ------
It woods and brook have made The University of Oklahoma at
a happy domain of play for the Roose- Norman opens its sixth year on Sep-
velt children—New York Times 1 tembbr 15
to 3 eild thens if they lack facilities
i themselves
t They may even be more effective
f Walt Budworth started yesterday
for Utah where he has a brother
living lie yfill probably remain there
1
during the coming winter
during the coming winter
President Morrow of the college
iPh10 sed the Marvin Maw( farm
last Monday comprising eighty acres
for $900 It was purchased as an
investment
Jno McFarland was brought home
front Ponca City last Saturday wit)
one arm and two ribs broken as a le-
sult of a kick he received front a
hort4a a few days before
It is true that European politicians' when these international negotiations
were very critical of th:s aetion of the are taken up and there will be 1)1014
senate for many years afterward and of time for dicassiun and conaulta-
that they du not yet like oar nuithodl Lion ith cingres3 At any rate this
of negotiating international zgfee- 1E-1a-under' tendency of clothing
ments through the president wit the the chief executive Vth dictatorial
advice and consent of the senate as powers ill receive a real test when
prov:dei for by the constitution the propostil outline above comes up
Eut it talist be remembered that at 1 in the senate if it ever doefi come
the time of the $rersailles negotia-f up
fillitkth -e4k 12
: '':
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A
L —--11-- s"::i--!7 -'-drAl:— 7-01
j — ---- l''-'---' zi:11:-'''''' f' —
—
Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path—Psalm 119:10:E
UNJUST STEWARD 1 which owed him a hundred pence
(Matthew 18:21-35) I and he laid hands on him and Viol(
Then came Peter to him and said him by the throat saying Pay me
Lord how oft shall my brother sin that Om owest
against me and I forgive him? till And his fellow servant fell down
seven times? at his feet and b?sought him saying
Jesus saith unto him I say not rn- Have patience with me and I will
to thee Until seven times: but Un- pay thee all
til seventy times seven And he would not: bit went and
Therefore is the kingdom of heav- cast him into prison till he should
en likened unto a certain king which pay the debt
would take account of his servants St) when his fellow servants saw
And when he had begun to reckon 1 what was done they were very sorry
one was brought unto him which and came and told unto their lord all
owed him ten thousand talents that was done
' But forasmuch as he had not to Then his lord after that he -had
pay his lord commanded him to be called him said unto him 0 then
sold and his wife and children and wicked servant I forgave thee all
all that he had and payment to be that debt because thou desiredst met
made Shouldest not thou also have had
The servant therefore fell down eompaFsion on thy fellow servant
and worshipped him saying Lori even as I had pity on thee?
have patience with me and I will pay And his lord V:ltS wroth and deliv-
thee all ' ered him to the tormentors till he
Then the lord of that servant was should pay all that was due unto him
moved with compassion and loost)d So likewise shall my heavenly Fath-
him and forgave him the debt er do also unto you if ye from your
But the same servant went out and hearts forgive not every one- his bro
found one of his fellow servants thee their trespasses
of its Li ay control power and there
i3 110 n'ilS011 to believe that it will
now surren ler any constitutional
rights There will be no crisis
the banking situation to be dealt with
when these inernational negotiations
rgg
-
é AA!7
I
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The Stillwater Gazette (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, April 7, 1933, newspaper, April 7, 1933; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2203331/m1/2/?q=led+zeppelin: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.