The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 41, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1941 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Luther Register and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS By Edward C Wayne
Both Sides Are Heard on 'Lease-Lend'
As Congress Continues Open Hearings
Reports Reach U S of Italian Revolts
FDR Meets British Envoy on U S Arrival
frOtTON'S NOTE—When opinions Ae els 4 In three eolumns the
ist theme it the news nnal)et and not nee AAAAA ily St this nepper
(Released by Western Newspnper UniOnJ I
ELEND: introduced a letter he had written
to Acting Secretary of State Moore
fp in MG in which he gave Moore the
e administration's lineup irlskk ndote" en the French atti-
included the chief cabinet tude toward a struggle that every-
s and Bullitt Dorothy one believed inevitable
on and General O'Ryan In this letter Bu Ilitt had expressed
'ped that we get in the war the belief that the French were
way) the rebuttal forces strongly depending on promises of
several notable figures but American aid in the form of a navy
ho produced the sensation and army and pointed out that he
Colonel Lindbergh was just as surely promising the
t the much-heralded state- French that they could count on
Ambassador Kennedy fell nothing of the kind
t of being critical enough of The closing paragraphs of his let-
inistration to suit the lease- ter however expressed the convic
mei those it the news nnsli et and not nee AAAAA 11 y et ths
LEASTAEND:
LineUp
To the administration's lineup
which included the chief cabinet
members and Bullitt Dorothy
Thompson and General O'Ryan
(who urged that we get in the war
right away) the rebuttal forces
brought several notable figures but
none who produced the sensation
that did Colonel Lindbergh
In fact the much-heralded state-
ment by Ambassador Kennedy fell
far short of being critical enough of
the administration to suit the lease-
lend bill opponents as he generally
favored the plan only thought the
President's powers should be limit-
ed But Lindbergh minced no words
though the administration adherents
fired questions at him hoping to
trap the flying colonel into some ad-
mission that he was "pro-Nazi"
and "anti-British"
The closest they came was when
Bloom asked him point-blank:
"Who do you hope wins the war?"
And to this Lindbergh said:
"I hope neither side wins I am
hoping for a negotiated peace"
They went back to "Lindy's" pre-
vious address in whch he had
showed more marked anti-British
sentiments and all they could get
was:
"I admit that if I had it to do cher
I would not have made that speech"
Lindbergh's plan was simple—that
we drop all aid to Britain disasso-
ciate ourselves entirely from the
war let it muddle itself out as best
It could
At the same time he urged let
us manufacture a fleet of 20000
planes 10000 on the first line and
the same in reserve and a two
CHARLES A LINDBERGH
For a "Negotiated Peace
ocean navy with plenty of bases in
North and South America
Let us take our stand on the Mon-
roe Doctrine and make ourselves
too strong to attack entering a war
immediately however if the Mon-
roe Doctrine is abused
When the anti-bill smoke blew
away Lindbergh stood as the chief
witness
BULL1TT:
Then—and Now
Former French Ambassador Bul-
litt in testifying before ease-
lend biU investigation of th house
foreign affairs committee told
Chairman Bloom that he was in en-
tire accord with President Roose-
velt's plan for all-out aid to Britain
short of war
lie used the strongest phrases
Each as "this terrible terrible emer-
gency" and stressed the need of
"buying time" for the United States
to prepare
lie said that if England fell we
must be prepared to defend these
Shor es by 1946 at least He as-
serted he was of the view held by
rnany that if England fell the Brit-
ish navy also must fall if not actu-
ally in the fall of England then that
it would be rendered useless because
the Nazis would threaten the officers
and crews of surviving vessels with
dire reprisals against their relatives
ashore
Bullitt asserted that therefore un-
less Britain were to survive this
nation would find itself with a one-
ocean navy needing two lie also
asserted that during 1941 we would
find the Japanese navy raised to
equal force with ours
His evidence was given extremely
unusual point when Chairman Bloom
Foreign Jottings
Rome — The Italian gnvernment
has ruled Cecil Brown CBA broad-
caster oil the air because it was
said the government did not like the
"general attitude" of his broadcasts
London—The Daily Worker com-
munist paper limited to a single
sheet was published in its last issue
with a guard of Scotland Yard de-
tectives standing in the newspaper's
offices
1 romm1111 ORE
WITNESS BULLITT
Candid camera photos of the former U
S ambassador to hance es he testified on
the Lease lend bill
tion that Britain also was counting
on American help and that this
would not be forthcoming
Yet Bullitt was standing before
the committee advocating a course
of all-out aid to Britain a course
to which President Roosevelt was
committed
ITALY:
Germans Take Hold
Most sensational of the ever-recurring
reports of serious unrest and
disaffection inside Italy culminated
in a dual report (ematiating from a
radio source in Belgrade and con-
firmed by N Y Times) that three
Italian generals had been shot by
Nazi soldiers in rioting in northern
Italy
Guardedly from the capital of
Jugoslavia came the report which
tended to show that Italy on the
verge of internal collapse follow-
ing the reverses in Greece and Al-
bania also on the African fronts is
now virtually under Nazi occupation
and control
That this long has been so was
often previously hinted at but that
it was now a completed fact ap-
peared reasonable and certain after
the just-concluded conference be-
tween Mussolini and Hitler so close-
ly followed by the reports from Bel-
grade These showed that the civilians
and soldiers of the army in northern
Italy in such centers as Milan and
Turin were practically in open re-
volt against continuance of the war
They were being subdued and fought
in bloody street battles by Nazi
troopers with the aid of Fascist
blackshirts who function in similar
manner to the Nazi storm-troopers
who quelled anti-Nazi fomentings in
Germany some years ago
A long-range view of the situation
Os() compelled the belief ever grow-
ing that the flop of Italy as a war
partner and agent in world conquest
would leave Ckirmany ahme in the
fight but by no means less powerful
for German leaders with Italian
troops organized and led by Nazi-
trained groups could still conduct
the Albanian and African cam-
paigns and certainly it was held
not less successfully than the Ital-
ians had been doing under their own
training and leadership
PIZECEDENTS:
Shatter Again
President Roosevelt sensing a
dramatic situation in the sodden and
unheralded arrival of Lord and Lady
Halifax on the King George V Brit-
ain's newest battleship right in his
front yard (Annapolis) broke all
precedents by auto-riding to greet
him and boarding the Potomac to
make it a "waters edge" greeting
The battlewagon was anclwed off
Annapolis by 3 p ma but it was
7:10 p m before the lanky British
ambassador preceded by attractive
Lady Halifax descended the 1- oto-
mac's gangplank and greeted news-
men with a prepared statement for
their attention
Ile read a good deal of this to
them while they took notes then a
voice said "The President is corn-
ing" Lord Halifax hastily stuffed
his notes back into his pocket again
told the reporters carbon copies
would be available to them on the
dock and joined the President
Dre—ed by U S
RMIANIA:
Follows Suit
The Rumanian situation similar
to that in Italy was quite as drarnat-
ic and had the most unusual fea-
ture of showing the Germans as ap-
parently sitting on the fence pre-
pared instantly to throw in their
hand with either of the rebel fac-
tions which might get the upper
hand
Where in Italy the army leaders
were apparently turning anti-Mussolini
and anti-Hitler in Rumania both
factions that led by Antonescu and
that led by Sima claimed that they
bore the ()Meal ukase of Hitler
Sima with his Iron Guard legion-
naires attacked Jews and looted
Jewish homes in the approved Nazi
fashion but Just as soon as the An-
tonescu forces gained the upper
hand the government leader assert-
ed in his address to the people that
he had the favoring shadow of Der
Fuehrer" hovering over him
The Rumanian situation still bore
many traces of anarchy and chaos
despite the fact that Antonescu
seemed in the caddie and one thing
seemed certain that before long
Rumania like so many other na-
tions would lose its identity and
simply become another base for
Germany to loot for supplies an-
other base for German troops and
munitions another link in the Ger-
man chain of conquered peoples
Sitting right in the center of the
strategically important Balkans
and the only really productive ter-
ritory in the whole 280000 square
miles the importance of Rumania
TI112 OKLAHOMA COUNTY REGISTER
:At:ef --"s"- '-1 WNI7 Service 1395 National Press
L0
-- lip e:14-E4
1f -:'1s : Bldg Washington D C
WASHINGTON—A new and revo-
' 0::e7:este
l utio ina
8- - :i-4- - 44'''' ' i
ry farm program for Amer-
wa s n the works If it is carried
"13' '''':'
'
'''''"7 - gt ?)f'"":'4 v4: out according to the wishes of the
' '''''''''-esiT!'''-"-1i!: '':f' administration it will mean the first
1' ''' '''' '7'11'-' '"'x'- ' step in an effort to change the whole
'44:Y k:: - ' pattern of farming in this country
- -- "'i '''''''' -4444""1--4 ' as we have accepted it for the last
NORTH DORSET ENG century
When this column is in print the
LAND—Shirley Cook six-year new bill may be made public At
Old Cockney—like many another this wrIling even its outline has not
English lass of 19-II—is pie been announced But a careful re-
hired warmly dad through the view of discussions in highly influ-
ential government circles justifies
efforts of the United States Red
three predictions:
Cross Now living in North Dor (1) That the new bill will revolu-
set because her own neighbor tionize New Deal farm policy and
hood "Somewhere (else) in will have for its goal a—
Engtand" has been bombed the (2) Vastly greater curtailment of
: production (If surplus products
tot seemed pleased with her pet and—
and her clothes—"Made in the (3) Complete change in type of
United States" some of the crops now raised by
farmers
1 -
What is behind the change in poi-
1
RUMANIA: I Icy is this: the last die-hards who
believed that any American farm
Follows Suit program should take for granted a
The Rumanian situation similar return to "normal" world trade
have thrown up the sponge There
to that in Italy was quite as dramat-
I is at long last a majority agree-
lc and had the most unusual lea- I ment in the department of agricul-
ture of showing the Germans as ap- ture that American farming must
parently sitting on the fence pre- I follow a new pattern—one that calls
pared instantly to throw in their !
1 for no subsidy for lost export mar-
hand with either of the rebel fac-1
1 kets of the past no attempt to nurse
Lions which might get the upper 1 along surpluses on the assumption
hand
I that the same foreign markets on
Where in Italy the army leaders which we once counted would be
were apparently turning anti-Musso- again available
lini and anti-Hitler in Rumania both'
Factions that led by Antonescu and I Original Purpose
that led by Sima claimed that they Roughly the original purpose of
bore the offical ukase of Hitler
the agricultural adjustment legisla-
tion was to secure reduction of cer-
Sima with his Iron Guard legion tam n crops and with the payments
naires attacked Jews and looted provide a livelihood for thousands of
Jewish homes in the approved Nazi farmers who had lost their markets
Fashion but just as soon as the An- Later conservation was emphasized
lonescu forces gained the upper ' but the theory behind the subsidies
hand the government leader assert- was also to permit the farmer who
ed in his address to the people that formerly depended on the foreign
le had "the favoring shadow of Der 1 market to keep his plant going to
Fuehrer" hovering over him I keep him "tooled"—to keep for ex-
The Rumanian situation still bore ' ample a wheat farmer a wheat
many traces of anarchy and chaos i farmer against the day when the
despite the fact that Antonescu i foreign market was restored
seemed in the caddie and one thing By 1933 when the Triple A was
seemed certain that before long started foreign markets had pretty
Rumania like so many other na- well melted but the pattern of Amer-
(ions would lose its identity and lean farming itself was the same
simply become another base for generally speaking as it had been
Germany to loot for supplies an- for a hundred years The Triple A
other base for German troops and policy was planned to preserve that
munitions another link in the Ger- pattern and fill the empty corners in
man chain of conquered peoples 1 the mould by artificial means When
Sitting right in the center of the ' I say the pattern was preserved I
strategically important Balkans : mean that all the Triple A wanted
and the only really productive ter- to do was to cut down production to
ritory in the whole 280000 square the point wlwre demand and supply
miles the importance of Rumania approximately balanced "The poi-
could not be overexaggerated in the icy of the congress as stated in the
Nazi scheme of things i Agricultural Adjustment act was to
It was another important well of restore to American farm products
supplies of oil and wheat two tre- 1 as rapidly as practicable the same
tnendous essentials needed by Ger- i purchasing power in terms of things
many in prosecution of the war 1 farmers buy that those products had
in the five-year period (1909-1914)
INVASION: immediately preceding the World
i war"
Three Dates war"
Three sources all of them for va-
rious reasons worth quoting gave
various versions of the Nazi plans to
invade England but all of them
were agreed that a serious and des-
perate attempt is to be made and
probably scion
llonald Cross British minister of
shipping said it would come in 60
to 90 days and that while the Brit-
ish Nvould be able he thought to
beat it oti it would cost England
about 250000 men and maybe half
of the fleet
lie stressed the need of American
aid in building ships to meet the
shortage that Would result
Lord Halifax also gave the 60 to
90 day time and set it as "probably
in May" and also expressed the be-
lief that England would be SUCCCS-
ful in beating back the invaders and
also urged full U S aid
The third authority was a Nazi
captured air pilot who leaped from
a prisoners' train into a Canadian
snowbank head-tirst ferried himself
across the raging St Lawrence rap-
ids On a stolen boat and was cap-
tured in Ogdensburg N Y
The youthful pilot Baron Von
Werra said he believed the invasion
attempt would come in March
would last two weeks and would be
successful He said he 'as trying
to escape back to Germany because
he "wanted to be in on the fun"
Americana
Detroit—Charles J Kalish 23 got
a 20-week contract at S200 a week
for a part in a radio show The next
day he boarded a train for Camp
Custer—in an army uniform—a pri-
vate Hollywood—The first film actor
called in the draft was Paul Barrett
Ile was playing the part of a Nazi
storm trooper in a war picture when
he gct his marching orders
Agricultural Adjustment act was to
restore to American farm products
as rapidly as practicable the same
purchasing power in terms of things
farmers buy that those products had
in the five-year period (1909-1914)
Unmediately preceding the World
war"
So if you were told to plow under
your cotton this year this did not
mean go out of the business of rais-
ing cotton for good You were sup-
posed to get payments so you could
stay alive until it paid to raise more
cotton again
Now a New Pattern
But now a new pattern has bcen
drawn It is based on the belief
that the major foreign markets are
gone for good—or at least for so
long that they cannot be reckoned
on any longer Some farmers will
just have to face the fact that they
must make permanent shifts in their
crops
Here is the key phrase a the
new policy in a sentence taken from
the annual report of the department
of agriculture recently published:
"Growing unneeded crops is sheer
waste of labor of capital of soil
even if temporarily the products can
go into storage under government
loans"
This change in agricultural ad-
justment policy was not heralded in
advance But little by little hints
have been dropped as to what is
coming Secretary Wickard sounded
a muted warning that the definite
trend in foreign trade was down-
ward in his recent speech at Pur-
due university his Supplementary
Cotton plan followed as a step in
the direction Of reducing the cotton
surpluses shifting acreage to food
Sports items from the office of
education:
Harold Newhauser left-handed
Detroit Tigers pitcher is enrolled
in the defense training class at Wil-
bur Wright vocational high school
Detroit Newhauser was an out-
standing rookie pitched tart of a
game in the World series between
he Tigers and the Reds last fall
- - -
- -
z-
4-7 Ar rt- --r"7 10:-
- -
110
'Revised' Farm Program
Begins to Take Shape
Greater Curtailment of Surplus Crops Seen
Administration's Stand Against Convoys
Has Significant Angle
By BAUKI1AGE
National !arm and Home Hour Commentator
r7iN
crops In the annual report of the
department of agriculture are fur-
ther hints as to the "adjustments"
which are to be faced by the pro-
ducers of foodstuffs tobacco and
the ether things which formerly
made up our farm export trade
Still a Possibility
Of course the administration does
not say "there will never again be
any foreign market whatever for
farm products" But the new policy
roLses to take for granted that such
outlets will ever return to what we
have always insisted on calling
"normal"
This viewpoint represents a strug-
gle between those who fought to the
end with hope as their chief sup-
port The last light went out when
the Hull reciprocal trade program
collapsed in the face of war Now
agreement has been reached that
the old plan must be scrapped and
that America must build a new mar-
ket for the farmer based on the
theory that in war or peace the
trend is strongly away from a pos-
sible profitable export trade
It might be said here however
that the producers of meats and
fruits and vegetables are going to
benefit by the immediate situation
—at least temporarily when the con-
tents of the newly filled pay enve-
lopes of the defense industries will
be exchanged for these products in
borne consumption
But a wide disparity of prices is
due between these products and cot-
ton wheat corn and tobacco The
latter staples are among those
which the administration believes
must be curtailed under the new
plan
Are We 'In' or 'Out'
Of the Current War?
There is a popular response
around Washington which you fre-
quently hear in answer to the ques-
tion "do you think we'll get into the
war?" It is another question:
"Aren't we already in?"
That remark was started some-
what facetiously but now you will
hear it stated seriously if unoffi-
cially in the affirmative by some of-
ficials And if you judge by the
old standards when a country was
either a belligerent or a neutral we
are "in" Because we are not neu-
tral and Secretary Hull himself has
said so—he said that the law of self-
preservation and not neutrality now
governs the nation
We have taken many steps which
could be offered to prove that Mr
Hull is legally correct But all the
old rules are off Undeclared war
is the popular stunt these days It
is the way the totalitarians do it
and we are being forced to take
over a lot of these measures in or-
der to fight fire with fire The job
will be to scrap them all when the
trouble is over
But in the real sense we are not
at war No Americans under the
American flag are shooting anybody
under any other flag And that is
something And a high oMcial of
the United States government has
made it clear that that was what
the President had in mind when he
said that he had never considered
using American warships to convoy
supphes through the war zone to
Great Britain It has been pre-
dicted frequently that convoys would
be our next step Well this official
explained that the reason the ad-
ministration was against the use of
convoys was because "when a con-
voy gots into the war zone there is
likely to be shooting and shooting
comes awfully close to var''
Statement's Significance
It scorned to me significant that
this statement was trade on the
same day that former Ambassador
Joseph Kennedy testifying before
the foreign affairs committee on the
lease-lend bill said almost the same
thing in other words It almost
looked as if the two spokesmen had
gotten together beforehand
That was the same day as some
of you may remember that I had
said earlier on the Farm and Home
hour that I could find no indication
in Washington that any steps were
being taken to get us into the war
My observation Was a coincidence
Perhaps the conjunction of the oth-
er remarks was too
To the men who were in France
in the last war we will still be at
peace as long as we are not shoot-
ing anybody
n it F S By 1:aukhage
C Although the machinery of defense
is slipping into gear at last there is
no denying that at present we are
behind schedule with 'aid to Britain'
C The White House press confer-
ences are the most democratic gath-
erings of their kind held anywhere
One uncierocratic thing about them
—nobody smokes but the President
WHO'S
NEWS
THIS
WEEK
By LEMUEL P PARTON
(Consolidated Features—WNIJ Service)
NEW YORK—Adam Smith de-
scribed economics as a science
and then added "Science is an anti-
dote to the poison of enthusiasm"
- It is possible
FDR's Economist
that Presi-
An Antidote to dent Roose-
'Poison of Zeal'
velt's person-
al economist
rarely heard or seen serves as such
an antidote when impulsive action
is indicated He is the somewhat
dimly outlined Dr Lauchlin Currie
graying at 37 clothed in gray as
though in protective coloring a
shadow-shape in the Washington
fogs of doubt and uncertainty
Dr Currie not only delves Into
mountains of detail as did Hay
and Nicolay for Lincoln in an-
other critical hour in March
1860 but be is a deep fount of
economic doctrine Ile has not
been credited with the inspira-
tion for the lease-lend bill for
aid to Britain but it is interest-
ing to note that in April 1938
be put forward a plan to solve
railroad troubles by a leasing-
lending procedure in which the
roads would get equipment
much in the manner in which
Britain would get war goods un-
der the new bill
As the "last of the brain-trusters"
he is an advocate of the full
utilization of technical resources by
clearing them of financial entan-
glements and commitments so far
as possible The late Thorstein Veb-
len foreshadowed these techniques
Dr Currie is a native of Nova
Scotia who became an American
citizen in 1934 He joined the New
Deal in that year three years after
taking his doctorate at Harvard as
an assistant economist under Jacob
Viner of the treasury department
Later he was taken over by Mar-
riner Eccles of the Federal Reserve
board as an assistant in the di-
vision of research
Be is not only the President's
personal economist but his liai-
son man in economic matters
appointed as one of those six
White House assistants "with a
passion for anonymity" whieh
passion seems fairly authentic
in his case lie was a teacher
at Harvard and an industrial
consultant in Boston before go-
ing to Washington
All of which is a reminder that
the average man's wife is his per-
sonal economist and that she fre-
quently is an "antidote to the poison
of enthusiasm"
F ADANI SMITH were alive he
would note that Mlle Eve Curie's
scientific antecedents had not
dimmed any of her enthusiasms
The daughter
Science has Not
of Marie Curbed Emotion Emotion rie arrives on
Of Mlle Curie the S S Ex-
cambion boil-
ing with enthusiasm for free France
and for democracy and civilization
in general science or no science
Her previous trips over here had
made her a favorite in this country
and her charm intelligence and
beauty have been eloquently ex-
tolled Her burning black eyes might
be called "an antidote to the
poison of indifference" She
qualified in science at the Sor-
bonne but turned to music in
1926 a gifted pianist praised by
her friend Patlerewski ith
all her other gifts she is an ath-
lete and a first-rate bowler
And with all that women rave
about her clothes Writing has sup-
planted music as her chief interest
and she has been highly praised for
her biography of her mother pub-
lished in 1938 Her proficiency in
higher mathematics rounds out a
perfect score for one of the most
highly esteemed of our gang-plank
celebrities
RICA MORIN' whose recent
L-0 concert drew an overflow crowd
to the Town Ilall frequently has
been called "The greatest woman
violinist" She doesn't like it While
she notes that there have been in
nearly three centuries only 73 dis-
tinguished women violinists as
against thousands of men she in-
sists that the lag is due only to the
fact that women have been too busy
with homes and children to bring
through their talents She thinks
the above accolade is patronizing to
her sex
When Adolf Hitler's tanks rolled
into her native Vienna the comely
young violinist moved out with her
$45000 Stradivarius It was in 1921
that she first came to New York a
child prodigy in pig-tails making
her American debut with the New
York Philharmonic in a recital
which one critic termed "the great-
est violin sensation since Kreisler"
Her father was Italian one of a
long line of musicians but none so
gifted as she She defies snobs and
highbrows by playing Victor Her-
bert and Stephen Foster along with
the violin classics
e
HOUSEHOLD
QUESTIONS
Keep cheese in a well-covered
dish or it will become dry and
tasteless
Parsley washed with hot water
keeps its flavor better and is eas-
ier to chop
If milk boils over on the stove
sprinkle the spot with salt Thus
will at once remove the disagree
able odor
An old piece of velvet makes an
ideal polishing cloth for silver or
furniture
Baking powder biscuits and
cookies rise better and brown
more evenly on baking sheets than
they do in pans
If you wish to boil a cracked
egg place a little vinegar in the
water in which it is boiled This
will keep the egg from seeping
through the crack in the shell
Steamed leftover fruit cake
served with a lemon sauce makes a
delicious dessert
PEANUTS
North Carolina Variety runner seed pea-
nuts Recleaned $ 5 hundred lb bag Cast'
with order Sessions Co Enterprise Ma
PHOTO FINISHING
n ROLLS DEVELOPED
(I 7 pn nts and bz7 en nirsornents
fs 2t1i0
t or 5inur chi iiiin of ib prints withonS
erilargiiminisl'iri in Heni n
rts 6 016
-J 4 3 THE CAMERA COMPANY
Dolph B Oklahoma City Okla
UTZ)- '
Common Tasks
I do believe said Phillips
Brooks the common man's task
is the hardest The hero has the
hero's aspiration that lifts him to
his labor All great duties are
easier than the little ones though
they cost far more blood and
agony
INDIGESTION
mai affect the Hein
Slas trepped M the stomach or Fillet may art like a
hair-ales on the heart At the tint saga of &crest
smart Ito n and rumen depend On Jill Alit Tablets to
set est free No laxative but Made of the fastivit
metre Itthrwn thr tIl thilliceatIhn 1r the
UST iroSE dent prove liell-aus better reboil)
Lottie to Ira ruveire LU1li1 Iluuy
Rise to Fail
As the blessings cf health and
fortune have a beginning so they
must also find an end Everything
rises but to fall and increases but
to decay—Sallust
k'4111772matallumgmallmall
4ACHOICE OF MILLIONS t
IsT1 s LJOSEPII 10c
wSRufsiLIAIRIGIST
LAi61! 5 E LIE R AT P
laionszirsummetwommoli'1111U
Plain 'No!'
"Do you think your rattler would
object to my marrying you?"
"I don't know If he's anything
like me he would!"
fantails Restioss
si Cranky? Restless!
piri Can't sleep? Ttri
easily? Leeause cY
Cranky? Restless?
Ctlasn'yt7 e ue o
sleep? 1'
? 1t re
eil f
distres of monthly
functional disturbances? Then try
Lydia E l'inkhams lieetable Com-
pound rinkham's Compound is famous
for relieving pain of irregular periods
and netV0115 cranky Epells due to
such disturbances One of the most
effective medicines you can buy to-
day for this purpose —made ecTe-
cially for women WORTH TRYINO I
NVN1J-T 6-41
Soaring Envy
Envy like fire ever soars upward—Livy
Today's popularity
efTh i 1' mof Doan' 's Psi's first rld
' ''''si 'A i any years of wo
t 1764 sa wide use surely must
I !oil 1 !e accepted as evidence
': 0 t r 7 1 sattsfacfrry use
i
of
'-'!stigh z:": ' And favorable public
-44: '' opinion supports that
N''7'''t's -F 01 the able physicians
st f who test the value of
ssas -
Doan's under exacting
laboratory conditions
These physcians too approve every word
of advertising you read the objective of
which is only to recommend Ica's' Pifl:
AS a good dluretic treatment ft disorder
of the kidney function and fur relief of
tae pain and worry it causes
If more people were aware of how the
kidneys must constantly Ttftlf)Ve waste
that cannot stay in the blood without in
jury to health there wou'd be better un-
derstarolng of why the I h Ie body suffers
hell ktIncVs lag and diure :F
tic medic
tett would Le more wren employed
Diming scanty or too frequent urina-
ton srnetincs warn of disturlifsi kidney
function You may stiffer raeging back
m he persistent headache attach of dir-
tiness getting up nights swebrig putbi-
ness under the eyes--feel weak nervous
all played out
1 se Joan 's AM It is better to rely on
a medicine that has "On world-wide ac-
claim than on something less favorably
known Ask your steighbert
own
—
- if
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WH QUESTIONS L
O'S t
t77- ! - --
Revised' Farm Program I ' t"--
r '- NEWS
Keep cheese in a well-coverel
- --ek dish or it will become d
ry 4141
k
tasteless
Begins to Take Shape : -:::(-?1 !( fi--716 IIIIS
Parsley washed with hot wate
y 1e ' N
4 keeps its flavor better and is eas
-- ' 4 Ve ler to chop
Greater Curtailment of Surplus Crops Seen ' i - ti If milk boils 4 over on the stove
tt -
! (
Administration's Stand Against Convoys i 1 - '
A WEEK
sprinkle the spot with salt Tht
Has Significant Angle 4 ? t will at once remove the disagree
I ir-sitvr? r tot A nrrikt ri hip odor
-
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Keyes, Chester A. The Oklahoma County Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 41, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 13, 1941, newspaper, February 13, 1941; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2301544/m1/2/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.