The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 12, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 16, 1917 Page: 4 of 8
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THE OKLAHOMA NEWS
DAILY KXC’KPT HUXDAY
Published at the new New* HulldinK. 407-409 W. Grand-nv., Okla-
homa City, bj' The Oklahoma News Company. Entered as second-class
mail. Wal-.ut 7000.
Prices: By Mail in Oklahoma w here there i.« *.o News carrier, $3 00
per year. Six months $1.75: one month. 35c.
Outside of Oklahoma, one year $4; six months $2.25; one month. 4fie.
U B. i'AHKKK......................................Editor
M. U. CHAMBERS.......................Bualnce*; Munaifer
THE OKLAHOMA NEWS—PAGE 4
AWAKE, YE ISREAL PUTNAMS!
More than 100 years ago, when the
United States was yet only the dream
of a few ardent lovers of liberty, Israel
Putnam was struggling with a team
and plow among the stumps and rocks
of a newly cleared New England field.
Possibly he too may have been dream-
ing of the day when America would
be a nation of itself.
Up the winding roadway dashed a
man on horseback. Opposite the plow-
man he drew up his animal and
shouted, sharply, excitedly, imperious-
ly. Putnam urged his plodding plow
horses to a livelier effort. Presently
he had reached the roadside and the
horseman wildly told the tale of the
British raid upon Lexington.
It was seeding time in the not overly
productive New England hills and
Israel Putnam was his own plowman.
But over and above all else he was a
patriot. He didn’t stop to consider
the possible cost of his leaving. He
didn’t look around for a man to finish
the job. He didn’t stop even to tell the
folks at the house over beoynd the
ridge where he was going
He left the team standing hitched
to the plow and hurried post haste to
answer the call of his country. Lib-
erty was at stake and Ke was off to
the rescue.
Liberty is at stake again today.
Your liberty, my liberty, and the lib-
erty of half the civilized world. And
every day a rural mail carrier brings
LABOR ARMY
TO RUSH WAR
WORK, PLAN
THIS PICKET WILL STAY OUT OF JAIL.
nv HASH, M. MANKY.
Washington, Oct. 16.—Mobili-
zation of a great Industrial army
Is on the cards as the next vol-
untary step toward a solution of
the nation's problem of provid-
ing sinews of war and supplying
the civilian population.
Uncle Sam is after a syste-
matic organization thru which
arc | the labor necessary to fill the
or locality to another.
In the coal industry there are
great shortages of competent |
miners In certain fields, 25,000 !
In the anthracite alone, while In
other sections men are working
less than full time. In normal |
times men would slowly filter I
from the regions of
the story with all its dread warning
along the winding country road to the
Israel Putnams.
But they aren’t in the field with the
plow today. They’re storing their $3
wheat and their $2 potatoes and the
$2 corn and their $3 onions, and all
the products of the field that
worth more than they have been since ! a,’(! ru,h work for
, , . . . j war needH can b© mobilized and
the days of the civil war, moved rapidly from one Industry
And better than anyone else they
know in their own hearts how well
they are responding to the call of
Liberty, outraged, oppressed, all hut
throttled.
It was Israel Putnam and men of
his stamp, tillers of the soil, the yeo-
manry of a virgin country, that won
its f'ci'dom in those days of hardship
anu glorious sacrifice. And in this
day of that self-same nation’s great
need the traditions of their forefathers
will call to them with an appeal that
will not fall upon deaci and unheeding
ears.
The Oklahoma farmer hasn’t yet
awakened wholly to the crisis. He has
been busy making hay while the sun
shone. Reaping his grain while the
days were fair. Garnering his crops
against the coming of Jack Frost.
Have patience, Mr. Citvman.
GiuLitude, loyalty, patriotism on the
farm didn’t disappear wholly with the
passage of Israel Putnam.
The full-fisted farmer will yet buy
his Liberty bond!
i
* t, V. ' ♦?*.: V R -f
m
*^/G/vp My+
Wm
fefov.wSfc*
HABIT—YOUR ALLY OR YOUR ENEMY?
We make life easy by our habits,
or we make it hard.
“Our nervous system grows to the
modes in which it is exercised,” is the
scientific explanation of habit.
Some of us exercise our nervous
system to our advantage. For exam-
ple, we have good habits of putting on
our clothes neatly, quickly and with-
out thought. And some of us have
bad habits of temper, or of worrying,
or over-eating.
We seldom recognize the power of
any habit until it is formed. And the
great trouble is that we slip into hab-
its, good and bad, drift into them, or
slump into them without thought.
But they are none the less binding
because we have not intended to make
them, and it is none the less hard to
break them.
What the new soldier in training
suffers from most is not the change
in his food and collars, but the making
over of the habits of his body to suit
his new profession. The walking
habits of the soldier are often bad and
it takes months of training to replace
them with the fine easy marching
habits of the regular army man.
Many human habits are being made
over by the war, and there is no rea
son why the soldier hoy should re-
ceive all of the discipline and benefit.
Once in a while it is a good plan for
all of us to take stock of our peculiar
assortment of habits—and then to
treat them as allies—or as enemies.
labor to the regions of scarcity,
but that process is too slow for
war necessities, which call for
"flying squadrons" of workers
who can move when needed.
True Elsewhere.
What 1h true of coal is also
true In greater or less degree
of ship-building, lumbering, con-
struction work for cantonments \
an,d war order factories, and
manufacturing In plants that
are rushing work for the army
and navy.
As wlntsr comes on, the na-
tion faces congestion of railroad
terminal- like that of last Feb-
ruary, and next year at planting
and harvest there must be spe
clal farm labor.
The only way seen to meet
these situations Is to have an
industrial army "flying squad-
ron" of picked men from all
kinds of trades and occupations,
definitely under the control of
some central federal body.
It seems established that the
Industrial army will be raised
on a volunteer basis, enlisted
for the duration of the war, will
wpar Insignia to show It Is per-
forming vital service to the na-
tion, superintende.d by civilians
and paid full wages for the
service performed.
Some White House pickets
surplus may land In jail. Not so Steve
Vasilakos, peanut vendor. Look
at the sign he displays.
Steve’s battleground is any-
where between the treasury,
IS THIS LIKE LINCOLN?
WANTED—A HAND TRACTOR FOR A “FEW ACRES AND A LIVING.”
Advice is always free—unless law-
yers give it.
And as a rule it should be free, for
it isn’t worth anything.
But this is a first-class*4iunch.
American inventors, why don’t you
invent a hand garden tractor that will
•ell for from $50 to $75?
You’ve invented almost everything
else that’s needed for the past 200
years.
The big tractor folk—that is, the in-
ventors and manufacturers of tractors
for the farm—have don» their duty.
They are making first-class medium
size machines that sell for a reason-
able price, and pretty soon there will
be a popular song entitled:
“The Passing of Old Dobbin.”
It may run something like this:
“Before the wise man played a
hunch and gave the world a tractor,
in plowing time and other times old
Dobbin was a factor. But now old
Dob must sadly £0—because the en-
gine’s cheaper, Tor in his place the
put-put horse is pulling plow and
reaper.
It’s up to the American inventor to
make a machine that will take the
place of a spade and hoe and rake in
the garden—and make it cheap enough
so the small truck gardener can buy
it, or the tens of thousands of men
who believe in “Two acres and a
living.”
It’s up to you, Mr. American In-
ventor, to think up a gas engine of just
sfuficient power that can be made for,
say, $20 or $25. Then a complete
garden tractor could be marketed at
from $50 to $75. With such a ma-
chine, there would be more going back
to the land—land of from 2 to 10
acres, than Bolton Hall ever dreamed
of.
This country must grow more and
more food forever. Tractors for the
farmers are coming in fast. But the
hand tractor for the truck gardener,
and the home maker on his few acres,
would not only raise astonishing quan-
tities of food but it would make its in-
ventor rich and famous.
TO SEE THAT SAMMIES
HAVE NEW MAGAZINES
American Field Headquarters, |
France, Oct. 16.—Henry Mor-
genthau, ex-ambassador to Tur-
key, will see that Sammy gets
new copies of the latest maga-
zines to read.
Visiting the camp, Morganthau
interviewed General Slbert, com-
manding the first contingent,
and learned that there wasn't
enough reading matter to go
around. General Sibert wants
his men to have plenty to read,
particularly d'trlng the winter,
but holds out for new magazines
and books and not thumbed-
over copies from the library
tables at home.
Morganthau later announced
that he Intended to collect a
fund from a circle of his friends
and buy three of four subscrip-
tlona to each of the leading
magazines for each camp. The
magazines will be sent anony-
mously.
Incidentally, the ex-ambassad-
or wonders why the big magaz-
ine publishers can’t afford to
send 100 copies each free to the
troops as part of their regular
business.
HANDICAPPED
BY BKRTON BRALEY.
They wouldn’t lot him play wttlz
the rough little boys
Who lived In the neighbor-
hood.
They told him to beware of the
tough little boys
And they marts It understood
That .a good little boy mustn't
^rub around
With the “common” lltUe boys
st all,
Bnt mast stay right close to his
own home ground
And be safe from a fight or
brawl.
They said he could mingle with
enough little boys
Who come from the “better
class",
So he wouldn’t have to frolic
with the tough little boys
To make his playtime pass;
And thus he waa coddled to his
man’s estate
In a perfectly proper way.
And they sent him forward to
combat his fate
With the world's grim game
to play.
Bad there he straggled with the
rough little boys
Who had also aged and grown.
Bat he hadn’t ever traveled with
these tough little boys
Aad he could not hold his
own
For he didn’t understand ’em or
the things they did
And his failure came to pass,
Macs he hadn’t learned to battle
when a right young kid.
With the tough little boys
Bed the rough little boys
Who cams from the “lower
IN OUR TOWN
“Goodness, Agnes, Whet'S that. yesterday.—Peris (111.) Beacon,
crowd? Whet’s that awful cuss-1 * * *
that car to jlt^skes^a.^klnd^of^olk^o mak.
*s While some men dally do their bit
cn;
lng loud? See that car
splinters smashed Looks
tfco a freight train’s crashed
with a cart of dynamite! Mebbc
It was done In spite! This Is
.awful—fierce, by heck!” — It
seemed to me there was a
wreck.
“Spite Is right,” a stranger
roared, as with laughter he was
floored. “Spit# caused every-
thing you see,” and he doubled
up In glee.
I ioo'.ed st him. and then—
b. Osd! It was Walton, city
dad!
"Quit you’re laughing. Ors-
cloua. Jack! Were you Injured
on tho track?
Walton straightened up and
said, “Oo, thou Nut, and soak
thy head! That long freight
was ‘resting* there when sud-
denly a man did swear; at the
box car then he flew. I looked,
and—’twaa Ev’rett True! Say.
my friend, I never knew what
that bird could really do till 1
saw him bulge his neck, and
light right In and make this
wreck!”
a a a
The Carnegie Nutrition Insti-
tute, of Boston, Is to conduct
a series of experiments to find
oat how little food s men can
live on. The grocers and meat
dealers have been experimenting
this long time.
a a
Wheaw Were Rose. Uly, Myrtle
and Ivy”
Curtis Plnnsll, of ganaae, and
daughters Daisy. Violet. Chryaan-
Uietnum, Pansy and American
A let of other
hamp It.
Many members of Congress
say they didn’t understand the
war tax bill when they voted
on It. Alas! A lot of 'em don't
understand It now.
• • e
Modesty.
Dr. Robert Fetters of Keokuk,
volunteered to serve in case the
governor could not secure a doc-
tor.—Keokuk (la.) Gate City.
e e e
Married in Chester, N. Y.,
Miss Phoebe Bull and Charles
Wesley Slaughter.
e e e
We have met men, and a
whole lot of them, too, who have
sworn off white bread on account
of the higher price of flour and
the shortage of wheat.
We've met many who have
sworn off lamb, beef, bacon,
shoes and a new salt of clothes.
But we've met more who have
sworn off
Cigars,
Ctgsrets,
Batin’ terbacher
,Or boose.
DIME FOR BEER; DIES
Sprcial to Tht Yeir*.
Chicago, Oct. 16. ---Sometimes
this high cost of living thing re-
sults fui-tlly. Peter Kelly, 50,
went Into a saloon today, as he
had been accustomed to doing
for many years, and ordered a
glass of beer. When It was
served there was mighty little
beer and lots of foam.
Kelly laid down a dime and |
tho barkeep swept It into tho T
cash register, audibly bemoaning 1
the hard fact that taxes and the
made It necessary «o charge 10
war and sundry other things;
cents for a glass of beer.
Kelly, who was just reaching
for his glass, keeled over and ;
fell dead. Physicians called It
heart disease.
state, war and navy buildings,
and he knows by name dozens
of the government officials who
patronize his stand. He has
already given nearly $100 to
the Red Cross and is still giving
ART WORLD
TEARS HAIR
A'pmfl/ to Tlir Vcira.
New York, Oct, 16.—There is
a tea-pot tempest in the art
world just now over the artistic
merits of this Lincoln statue by
| George Gray Barnard, <’r igned
'• to he presented to the British
| committee in charge of the Brit-
I ish-American centenary of peace
i celebration.
| By one faction, suppoitcd by
i Robert T. Lincoln, son of the
i former president and "great
j emancipator," and also by F.
j Wellington Ruckstahl, art critic
; and art editor, this statue la re-
i garded as a "monstrous figure”
j wholly misrepresenting the real
i dignity and stateliness of
SAMS MAY
WEAR ARMOR
LIKE KNIGHTS
KENNETH W. PAYNE.
London, Oct. 16.—-Shall the
American Sammies wear armor
like knights of old?
This question was put up to
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, long one
of the keenest students of the
war.
"The success of the shrapnel
helmet,” the famous author de-
clared, "certainly points to some
sort of armored cape for the
shoulders and chest as the next
stage."
If armor Is to be worn, some
observers here have declared, the
new American army would be the
logical one to use It. It is a
fresh army, as yet neither drilled
nor equipped. The allied armies
are already trained and equipped
for fighting In the old way.
“Such armor, however, could
not weigh less than 35 to 40
pounds. Therefore, you must re-
duce weight In other ways. You
can do one of two things," said
Doyle.
“First, let each fighting man
have a squire who carries for
him, and comes up from the rear
as occasion serves. This nan
would also be in armor, but the
rest of the fighting man’s normal
burden would thus be divided be
tween two men. Or you might
have special munition carrying
tanks carry the fighter’s spare
things now hung upon the men
themselves, and keep the men
supplied while under heavy fire.
"Second, you night discard
rifles and bayonets with the 120
rounds usually tarried, and sub-
stitute for them automatic pis-
tols with rifle stocks. These will
shoot true up to GOO yards."
CARRIERS WANT RAISE
DANCING SCHOOL
Dreamland Dancing School
and Private Assembly Dances.
Open 2 to 11 every day. All the
Latest Dances taught and dem-
onstrated at reasonable prices.
Desirable enrollment invited. Ad-
mitted by card only. Prof. C.
E. Cox, 20 years a teacher.
DREAMLAND
TaSay aaS WcSaraSay Oaly
l.ul.r Glaam, Trlaagle’a Faaiaaa
“Vampire'” la Her Latast Seaaa-
lliti, "IDOLATERS.” Alas. “THB
SECRET KINGDOM. Alas. Trtaaale
comedy, “His Foe thill _ Kelly.”
• a. m. to It »• aa.
Majestic tpespat
SARAH
BERNHARDT
Ilf “MOTHERS or FRANCK”
>>V
CommfielBg Oct. tt-ll
OVERHOLSER
The Treth Aheat
BIRTH CONTROL
A Powerfal
Drama
Not a Pletere
HER
UNBORN
CHILD
»y
HOWARD
McKEXT
BARNES
MOTHERS! s£:£T
MATINEES FOR WOMEN ONLY
(Except Sunday)
Claiming to be working under
a salary classification law passed
10 years ago, tho local branch
of the National Association of
. » .... . our ; Letter Carriers has voted to use
! MnCTln J?'™’, oeCs«US6v, 1 a a“ means ln Power to s»
Lincoln pressing his hands over . cure a ralse ,n v
his otomank as If Jje had the I .--p ’
STOPS BACKACHE
his stomach
colic.
By a second faction, led by
E’rt’Ef'S’ cSS: p'’”1,,"", IN A FEW MINUTES
Cent«narv Celebration, the statue 1 ESs'b’lOffT*''
is stoutly defended as truly rep- STIFFNESS BIGHT
OUT WITH "ST. J.IOOH’S
OIL.”
| resenting tho unpretentious dem-
' ocracy of which Lincoln was the
The British Committee had-lame^or ^lumba^o, 'sclatfca “r
offered a pedestal facing West- neuritis has you stiffened up,
minster Abbey as a base for the don't suffer! Get a small trial
statue but evidently thought bottle of old, honest "St. Jacob's
they were to receive a copy of oil” at any drug store, pour a
the famous St. Gaudcns Lincoln, i little ln your band anil rub It
Having seen photographs of the right Into the pain or ache, and
Barnard statue, they have cabled , by the time you count fifty, the
the American Committee not to norenesa and lameness is gone,
ship It during the war. j Don-t gtay erippled! This
ANCU/CD it DIE* ACC- : B00thlnK. penetrating oil takes
AiNoWkK 11, rLLASL j the ache and pain right out and
. . “ J ends the misery. It is magical,
A fan has sent In a question yet absolutely harmless and
■ that the sport ed has difficulty doesn't burn or discolor the
] in answering. Will someone skin.
I kelp out on this one: j Nothing else stops lumbago.
, hich is the more useful, a; sciatica and lame back misery
pool shooter or the guy that: B0 promptly ar«l surely. Tt never
boxing j disappoints!—Advertisement.
Home Of
The Palace Players
•ivHE NEW
I HENRIETTA"
(RfvlNfd Vernlom mt
Great Comedy)
Make Your Reserva-
tion* Karl? In Week.
Theater Box Office
Open 10 a. m. to
10 p. m.
25c 5KK5 25c
WEDNESDAY
Telepkone Maple 2000
PNEUMONIA
JL First call a physician.
Then begin hot
lO applications of—
V Body-<Jua*d tnYcmrHow*
VtaCSWORU
TODAY AND WEDNESDAY
AT THE EMPRESS
GEORGE M. COHAN
—In—
**7keys to
1 BALDPATE”
Arternft Price*. IS nnd 20 Cent*
CHILDREN A NICKEL
GAS, HEARTBURN,
INDIGESTION OR
A SICK STOMACH
"PArK’S niAPKPSIV KE-
LIKVES STOMACH DIS-
TRESS IN FIVE
MINUTES.
7 TOST IN TORPEDOING
Tims It! Pape's Dlapepsln
will sweeten a Four, gassy or
out-of-order stomach within five
minutes.
If your meals don't fit com-
fortaoly, or what you eat lies
like a lump of lead In your
ptomach. or If you have heart-
burn, that Is usually a sign of
acidity of the stomach.
Get from your pharmacist a
flfty-cent case of Pape’s Dia-
pepsln and take a dose Just as
soon as you can. There will bo
no sour risings, no belching of
undigested food mixed with
acid, no stomach gas or heart-
burn. fullness or heavy feeling
in the stomach, nausea, de-
bilitating headaches or dizziness.
This will all go, and, besides,
there will be no sour food left
over In the stomach to poison
your breath with nauseous odors.
Pape's Diapepsln helps to
neutralize the excessive acid In
the stomach which is causing
the food fermentation and pre-
venting proper digestion.
Relief ln five minutes Is wait-
ing for you at any drug store.
These large ftfty-cent cases
contain enough "Pape's Dia-
pepsln’’ to usually keep the en-
tire family free from stomach
acidity and Its symptoms of In-
digestion. dyspepsia, sourness,
gases, heartburn, and headache,
for many months. It belongs ln
l vour home.—Advertisement.
By I sited Press.
London, Oct. 16.—An Amerl-1
can negro. John H. Alldred, I
STdT/e Po«*oW Rl.-,nTews^ smo^ 1 -finSS
those lost ln the torpedoing of taught. Assembly and class prac-
tice dances Tuesday. Thursday and
| EUCLID SCHOOL OF DANCING
AND PRIVATE ASSEMBLY
DANCES.
an outgo'ng vessel from a Brlt-
Beauty, attended tire ball earns lsh port, U WAS announced today, j t^rahl'e* peopSa 'inrite'd 'to"enroll | if
If You Live Out of Town
You can shop on the same economical basis as though you bought ln person. No matter
what you wish—Order It By Mail—a corps of specially trained shoppers are always at your
service and should we happen not to have tho particular article that you wish In stock, we will
shop tho city for it, r.ud remember, tht shipping charges will be prepaid.
House
Furnishing
Depart meat
Third Floor
0RABADGH;RR0WNDJ;£S:
217*210 MAIN ST.
OKLAHOMA CIV* OWLA.
China and
(ilasswure
Di’partrnont
Third Floor
Attractive Feature Offerings From Dry Goods Department
SHEETINGS
—9-4 Dleaehed Sheeting, Wearwell, standard
brand Liid weight, a good smooth finish sheet-
ing for 4? !gc yard.
—9-4 Halfbleached Sheeting, Wearwell, stand-
ard brand and weight, good smooth finish and
closely woven, at 4“)*c yard.
—9-4 Unbleached Sheeting, Wearwell, standard
brand, an A-l quality, for 48c yard.
—914 Unblep.ched Sheeting, Pepperell, stand-
ard brand and weight, known the world over,
an A-l quality and vulue, for 45c yard.
MUSLINS
— 3000 yards "Purity" Muslin, 36 inches wide
finished soft for the needle—yard 15c.
2500 yards "Canoe” Muslin, yard wide, soft
finish, but a little starchy—for I2>sc yard
—Quo bale Unbleached Muslin. 39 inches w’ide,
a good smooth domestic and a good weight__
sp-cial at yard JU tjc.
PILLOW CASES
—Pepperell Pillow Cases, 42x36, for 28c each
SHEETS
—A good 31x90 "Pullaway” Sheet, full size
and weight, regular $1.25 values, for l)8c.
Dinner Sets marked at sharp reductions
Consist of 42-Piece Sets in the Best Shapes and Designs
Three sets of handsomely decorated American porcelain ln colonii’ sh-,„„.
sharp specials. We have arranged them in sets of 42 pieces which will Answer tho^rennire*
ments of both targe and small families and the prices herein quoted cannot fall to Interest tho'
housewife who is Planning a new dinner set. Note them carefully and shop promptly
42-IMooe Dinner .set—In blue Forget-Me- 1 1 ipii) •
Note design with blue border, very dainty,
an $8,00 value, for 85.W8.
42-Piece Dinner Set—In colonial design
with medallion decoration, extra special
at 85.08.
48-l’leee Dinner Set—In the new Blue
Bird and floral design, very attractive, and
a splendid value at 85.08.
The chove sets consist of:
Six i-inch plates, six bread and butter
plates, six 5-inch plates, six fruit dishes, u P
six teas and saucers, i sugar. 1 cream’.
two vegetable dishes nnd 1 meat dish.
No phone order i "lied.
At Rorahatigh-Hrown’*. .'?rd Floor, K--t
Boom.
TUESDAY AMI WKUVUSIIAY
—At Tkr—
LYRIC
VAUDEVILLE
HAYATAKE BROS*—Equilibria!*
HALEY * II A LEY — Mu*lral
ST A N TO N A (O—(outed 7 Skit.
“HI* Lant Drop.*'
CONWAY A FIELDS—la “Wfcat'f
Your A If bl f”
HUBERT DYER A CO.—Corned?
Aerokatle*.
Picture Program
“THE FATAL RING”
(Serial)
TRAVELOGUE
BEATRICE FAIRFAX
PATHE NEWS OF THE W'ORLD
Hi »
ALL WEEK AT THE
FOLLY
SEASIDE
BEAUTIES
Dipping In the Ocean of Joy
Featuring:
JAZZ HARMONY SCAMPS
WHiill.Y GIRLY CHORUS
TEN TINKLING TUNES
SCREEN PROGRAM
GAIL KANE
—IN—
“SOULS IN PAWN'.*
ALL FUN!-ALL SHORT!
ALL NEW!
Admtn«lon Scnle I* IO and 19#
I
AH Week—October 14-21
j PANTAGES | —at thf—
LIBERTY THEATER
VAUDEVILLE
1— WILL MORRIS—ArrobatiO
< ’omedian.
2— MADINA—Pa*t-Mn*ter of
the I'lano-Accordron.
Jl— STUART— A Si nicer. Some-
Omen Culled “Vaudeville**
. Patti."
4—t.HFFN. MellENRY AND
I>EA\ —— Comedy — "From
Furm to Cabaret."
0—“WOMAN PROPOSES" —
Satirical Comedy by *a«e
Lute Paul Arnintronn:.
PICTURE FEATURE
JOSEPH Gilt AH D and DON-
NA DREW la "»4t)-*I7”
OVERHOLSER
■» ■_ '■-■■■ ■ ■■ 1 n
Monday Night, Nov. 5
Madam Frances Alda
Pritna Donna Soprano
Metropolitan Opera Co.
Assisted by
Mr. Frank LaForge
Pianist
Two Real Finished
Artists to Provide
u Treat No One
Should Miss
Prices, $1.50. $2 and $2.50
Gallery Seats, $1.00.
Scat Sale Opens Monday
Morning. October 22.
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Parker, G. B. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 12, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 16, 1917, newspaper, October 16, 1917; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc860155/m1/4/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.