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Miami News-Record from Miami, Oklahoma • 2

Publication:
Miami News-Recordi
Location:
Miami, Oklahoma
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OUT OUR WAY By Williams a HU hy in 3fph i 'i i I i i "TOBACCO HEART feiV 2W Til'" 'i'lt1" T'' i Miami Oklahoma jWDa jutol 2' inter nervous Complications BARTLETT General Manager i Am IIMNU AOWashingtonDaybook Mr Northrup emerged with purple cheeks and eyes snapping KSLMl'r' i tell say April teze 'll (Copyright 1115 I guess when and the Russian down into about he dident cuss Course if it had AU we have to show for admin istration schemes is the greatest debt the country ever hadshat tered confidence and a federal gov ernment waterlogged with ward Tomorrow th Northrups laylegs to James first one to take her up rank is now making some big test flight in South America and I was glad to hear her say what a fine aviator she thought he was for had al ways thought so and so do many many fliers If he gets ahold of the right plane you are liable to see him back breaking records again connect them with a railroad in a spot where even to build a footpath would have politicians Col Theodore Roos velt The General feeling so very good tend to Miss Sarah In curl papers and a shawl with Aunt Lou at her heels in a long white night gown started down the stairs dear boy My dear child We must get you to You go on and get the bed ready Me and the General will be right James had collapsed in a chair his head in his hands telephone the Miss Sarah went on Lou you get the whiskey On my closet 1 telephone for no doctor If Aunt Lou was to make a little hot coffee Aunt Sarah had now come close to James She smelled at last the stale reek of liquor that was his breath James looked up at her think I'm he said thickly I'm not run two miles run away from Jane And never going back Do you hear me? Never" Because I like her Well intoxicated or not decided Miss Sarah he was still her boy and Jane undoubtedly was responsible there she said ten derly all You're home now get the bed ready When rested a little Nappy will help you WILL ROGERS I know is just what with white collars and enffs reading her Bible come home to were James' first words ask me what happened 1 can't bear to talk about It but never going away If you and Aunt Lou want of the house since 1916 personally popular soft spoken even tempered and amiable he could fill a spot of vital importance to the administra tion just now Taylor of Colorado acting floor leader in absence hasn't had as smooth sailing as he proba bly would have liked His failure to go along with the administration especially his vote on the work relief bill has caused criti cism to be directed against him wfzz by Entered at the postoffice at Miami Oklahoma as Second Class Mail Matter Under Act of March 3 1879 NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE Lorenzen Thompson Inc Chicago New York San rancisco Los Angeles Kansas City St Louis Atlanta Detroit lr Office of Publication A Street and irst Ave i Business Office Phone 128 Editorial Department Phone 127 perortnj Me name hypocritical father Time far May flatters to start ChinKing about earning ap MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS 7 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re production of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local news published herein One for the Educators Drivers under 20 years of age have the highest accident rate of all age groups a rate 41 percent higher than the all drivers Therefore age in the serious business of car driving News Record cooperating with the Miami Cham ber of Commerce and police department Any man who condones the NRA the AAA and other things going on in this country is a Governor Talmadge of Georgia I no longer doubt I know that there is nothing after death noth ing to look forward to in joy or fear I am going to die in a little while and that will be the absolutely the end Clarence Dar row' 8VU If I beat a clown like Baer never admit I was a fighter Jess Willard after challenging the champion By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON The 1 i Speaker Byrns gave the house for frittering away time when it should be at work has given rise to speculation on capitol hill as to whether Bankhead of Alabama the ailing majority leader may not be forced to return to harness soon The former Alabama football star who because of illness is a mere shadow of his former self is being urged both by physicians and inti mate friends not to consider such a move at the present going to do what the doctor he announced They all know however how difficult it Is for him to stay away Time after time of late in the afternoon his' automobile has been seen parked near the capitol with Bankhead Inside dictating to his secretary He was supposed to have been cruising leisurely through Washington parks or along the banks of the Potomac at the time TVANT hlmf Want him? Sarah bent over James and kissed him with trembling lips She asked no questions Instead she drew his bath herself made his bed afresh and Insisted that he get back Into IL She piled pillows high behind him brought him a Kansas City morning paper pulled np the blinds to just the proper angle for reading and departed The door was left half opened and an aroma of coffee and bacon was wafted up to hungry nostrils Aunt Sarah soon returned with a glass of iced orange juice on a lace covered tray with a little bowl of wild sweet william beside IL The orange juice had hardly van ished when Aunt: Lou called from the hall 1 come in honey? hot and Aunt beaming wrinkled face appeared in the door Nappy followed carrying another and larger tray covered with silver and tinkling china and glass and HPHREE generations pf English men have governed the small English dependency of Sarawak lying along the northwest coast ol Borneo and all three In the ca paclty of Rajah Today Sir Charles Vyner Brooke is the Rajab Brooke who rules Sarawak just as did his father Sir Charles John son Brooke and as did Sir Charles uncle Sir James Sir James had taken the title from Muda Hasalm in 1842 when he succeeded in quelling the disturbances of the country President of the united Sta teSybom BY Well all read in the papers or what I see here and there As I was telling you last week went over one night to one of our Beverley Hills school houses to hear Amelia Earhart tell of her exploits but she dident make it that way she just talked so pleasantly about everything and told more splendid jokes about herself and who all she had been taken for in her travels Of course anyone moving around as much as she does would naturally be taken for Elinor Roosevelt If there was a plane suffered a forced landing on your farm and you saw a woman get out of it you would naturally think it was Mrs Roosevelt (By the way these last were not jokes they are mine You can pretty near that) Mr Lindbergs mother she was very modest She dident she had been taken for the Col but we all know she has Where she shines in her talks are after her regular routine is over She asks anyone to ask questions and do you know where the intelli gent questions come from They are from the 'young kids in the audience many revolutions per minute do you generally fly your plane on the hazardous these landing is lands they talk of in the ocean be you gly by a ra dio beam or by tuning in on some radio station ahd use it as your Grown questions in comparison to those by older people you think place is in the your husband mind you would you do if you come went up one time and got sick What should I have asked one woman Amelia said did you do what you should have I was tickled to death to hear her say that rank Hawkes was the Independent Newspaper Devoted to Upbuilding of Northeast Oklahoma and bordering counties of the Tri State District of Oklahoma Kansas and Missouri l667cMiUon sells copyright of Lost for about £10 fb Morse American artist and inventor 3k Rule English Rmaus NAPPY brought James a long glass of cold water and James gulped It thirstily um you sure musta had a snoot Nappy com mented admiringly It takes the Army to sniff it out so quick But how come you to make such a racket? If just sneaked along quiet like nobuddy but you and me expect you to be up I'm all right now going on up to Nappy helped him up stairs helped him undress inveigled bim into drinking the coffee into a hike warm bath In his old room In a long night shirt that had been his grand 1 James slept the sleep of the i just from midnight until something after ten next morning I When he wakened there sat by 'the window a crisp and fresh Aunt Sarah In a striped lavender dimity All three Rajah Brookes are pic tured on stamps of Sarawak The one shown is of the present ruler Sir Charles Vy ner Brooks ths only living Eng lish rajah NBA Service Ine) What foreign eonn ti jes have borrowed the Statue of Liberty for their stamp designs? SYNOPSIS Jamoj Btimson has come homo from the War to hie wife Jane and to New Concord Kas Before he enlisted Jane and he were almost strangers Now he finds that things ar no better fi nally they quarrel and James leaves her to her bitter thoughts But he does not go until he tells Jane the truth about herself and for TRI STATtf DISTRICT DAILY it Consolidation of Miami News and Daily Record Herald Miami News Record Publishing Company it (Incorporated) Publishers 'Independent Newspaper Devoted to Upbuilding MASTERS SCIENCE VICTIMS STUPIDITY ar up in the jungles of the Amazon there is one of the most romantic rail 5 roads in the world a railroad according i to grim legends whose construction cost one human life for every tie in its track This railroad is a silent testimonial to the power of the human race to triumph over the most amazing natural obstacles Built to carry Bolivian rubber around therapids in the Madeira and Mamore rivers 'Ht runs through fever infested jungles I from eastern Bolivia to the town of Porto Velho in Brazil Ocean steamers can dock here more than a thousand miles from the mouth of the Amazon the railroad was built to give Bolivia something resembling a seaport Its construction took years of time thousands of lives and millions of dollars The engineering obstacles were many the region was more unhealthy than Panama in its worst days what with yellow fever tropical malaria and other maladies That the road could be built at all was a remarkable evidence of abil 1 ity to cope with nature at her most hos tile Due year by mail outside adjoining counties i One month in Ottawa and adjoining counties i Three months in Ottawa and adjoining counties Six months in Ottawa and adjoining counties Dfit year in Ottawa and adjoining counties Sunday only in Ottawa and adjoining counties By carrier in cities per week A SUCKER GETS WISE ir The Senate munitions committee has evinced a curiosity about the war time correspondence that took place between certain United States banking houses and the various allied commissions which at tended to purchase of munitions in this country Some of the committee members feel that if this correspondence were made public Americans would get some valu able knowledge about the prelude to their entrance into the World war' The British government think the idea is so hot The British ambassador has protested informally to our State de partment and Stanley Baldwin has re marked that the inquiry might revive long since obsolete and have a bad effect on the present international situation All that may be true yet the American public is coming more and more to feel that someone sold it a gold brick in 1917 and its desire to know more about the transaction is only natural If a glance at this correspondence would be as it well the committee ought to go ahead HUMAN RIGHTS ABOVE ALL Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes hit the nail on the head when he told newspaper editors in New York that the great guarantee of a free press free speech and the right of peaceable assemb ly are just about the most vital portions of our Constitution might give up all the rest of our Constitution if occasion required and yet have sure anchorage for the mooring of our good ship America if these rights re mained to us he said There js much sense in that statement In the last analysis our government is se cure as long as the democratic processes go on uninterrupted and they cannot be kterrupted as long as those three rights are maintained intact Save them and you save all limit them and you are apt to find before long that you have lost all the rest 0 Remember when people used to chew each mouthful of food a certain number of times to aid digestion? Now they do it to get their worth 1GREHT RICHES my faxMiAMt The Rule i'pAYLOR whimsically described 1 the reason for criticism against his leadership was because he did not a lot of noise on the friends point to an incident which occurred In the last congress as to why he Is missed so much at the present when his type of leadership is needed It was when he was chairman of the powerful rules committee The republicans had tied up the legislative machinery of the house near the end of the session with filibuster Bankhead quietly retired to his committee room and brought forth the now famous rule He attained a high point in drama when he marched on to the floor of the house presented the rule and declared people elected the democrats to run the country and I think time the democrats took In one spontaneous move the dem ocratic side of the house rose and sent up a great shouL The rule passed overwhelmingly Presence Needed HE EVEN has had a hand in de termining house procedure on occasions capltor hill hears been by "remote but evi dent Only recently it was rumored he was prepared to come to the house floor to stave off an attempt to re place him as democratic leader by a small group of dissatisfied demo crats No one doubts that ap pearance on the floor at present would be welcome to the administra tion and of material strength to the leadership in the house A member DRIVE RIGHT IT PAYS I SUBSCRIPTION RATES Ono month by mail outside adjoining counties 60 i Th months by mail outside adjoining counties 160 Six months by mail ontside adjoining counties '320 600 SO 125 175 300 150 15 every dish heaped to overflowing James ate every crumb of IL James spent the day at home lounging at his ease in bed reading the Master ol Ballantrae while Aunt Sarah or Aunt Lou or Nappy ran up stairs every quarter of an hour for fear he might want something and they not hear his call They had no callers and they muffled the tele phone The second morning all of Com mercial Street was electrified and half the telephones in town began a frantic jingling when Major Stim son in ancient civilian clothes wan seen to from a South lfthl Street car and limp toward his of flee the valngloriously proud and! limping Nappy close at his heels They had only a block to go but that short walk was a good deal of an ordeal AU the men on the street the clerks in the stores had to shake James' hand James was partly pleased more shy and self con scious He ducked into the shelter of the doorway of the stairs that led toi his office as soon as he decently7 could The crowd laughed and dispersed: slowly talking of James Stimson But it did not go far It was already twenty minutes after nine and in ten minutes Mr Northrup was due io pass along vommerciai oireei on his way to the Northrup elevators on West Main Street The crowd was not unrewarded At twenty seven minutes to ten the Northrup car was seen to turn the corner and speed rapidly along Com mercial Street Two minutes later it stopped before the entrance to James' office Mr Northrup a picture of injured dignity looking neither to the right nor left and speaking to no one alighted from his car and went pon derously up the steep stairs The interview was short Mr Northrup emerged with purpli cheeks and eyes snapping Mr Saw yer an old friend intercepted him this 1 hear about troubh between Jane and Jim? asking me What shall I tell I "A mere tiff a mere loversll (Copyrieht 1935 Mated arnham NEWS RECORD seemed absolutely impossible a generation But we seem to find a way to make things work after we get them built Our technical progress great enough to make the desert blossom like the rose any time we is at the mercy of our inability to master the economics of modern society We have conquered prac tically everything except our own stupid The one thing that keeps us from leak ing a garden spot of the whole world is the simple fact that we are standing in our own way The decline of this dearly bought South American railroad is a per fect example pretty soon You got to have the equipment Wiley Post just about king of I all cant break records getting to New York in a six year old plane no matter if he takes it up so high that he coasts in Equip ment and engines change too fast That Winnie May should be right in that Washington Museum along with all the other historic planes Its already done more than any plane in the world Twice has it broken records clear arounch the world broken altitude records He has thrown off his wheels and has forced landings on his And she never breaks a thing Six years thats the greatest advertise mnt for aeroplane safety the world has ever seen So when Wiley gets ready to put her into Smithsonian we all want to give him a hand Its his own plane you know Thats all he got out of two hazardous trips around the world was that old ship Lord last Summer when the family and I were days and days and days by train crossing Siberia we would come to town? with great long names and they would remind us of places where we remembered Wiley landed at on his crossing of Russia All alone speak a word of Russian land at a field and he tell a thing in the world Whatever he wanted done in the way of some minor work on his ship he couldent tell em He would have to do it when he hadent been asleep for a couple of One place he wanted a drink of water Said he never was as thirsty in his life but they couldent understand and from his motions and actions they thought he want ed liquor or vodka Well they had the welfare of his trip at heart and wanted to do all they could (And he says they were wonderful to him on both trips across there They are great aviation enthusi asts the Russians) So he was sleeping out in a shed at the hang ar and they left a soldier on guard to watch him and wake him for an early start Well he was dying for a drink and he kept making signs and the soldier kept saying and motioning He was trying to tell him that liquor would not be good for him inally the soldier seemed to get so mad that he left and it must have been miles to town but fin ally he come back with two quart bottles Weir vodka looks like wa ter and it was vodka (the poor soldier perhaps had said to himself well if you are going to holler for it all night I will give it to you) Wiley got up warmed his plane up (he dident have to take it out of any hangar as the planes all stand out over there Thousands of em in a field winter and summer with nothing but a canvas sheet over the engine) and he took off and flew 1800 miles on to another place just to get a drink I tell you I think the or some other good temperance society ought to take that true story and make something out of It Left two bottles of vodka and flew 1800 miles for a drink of water and the Russian got sore naturally after walking all that distance to get em for him Course Wiley was gone got good settled the second bottle Wiley so much been me I would have poured one bottle in my engine and the other in me and I would have been in New York by sundown That vod ka really sends you places (Copyright 1935 By the McNaught Syndicate Inc) Emergency conservation work ers are constructing recreational dams in Pennsylvania state forests our dams have already been com pitted nine are under construction and seven othera are planned Chapter 48 HOMECOMING TAMES ran the entire two milee from the house at Oak and North ifth to the Mansion To bls disor dered imagination it seemed that Jane was just behind him a sort of disembodied Jane all staring eyes and clutching predatory hands He was near hysteria wbefi be reached his old borne and pounded frantically on the front door Lights came on upstairs and down He heard voice inquiring anx iously who was there be called me in" The door opened slowly James staggered Into the hall and would have fallen but for Nappy's support ing arm Miss Sarah called quaver ingly from above "Who Is It? Who Is nobody but the General You and Aunt Lou go on back to bed I Stones in STAMPS i By I Klein vwvvrmwvwwwm But although men can defeat nature they beat their own blindnesses What jungle and microbe 'could not do human folly has done This railroad has triumphed over natural obstacles only to 1 succumb to the depression Writing in the current issue of magazine Earl Hanson tells how this rail road has fallen on evil days rubber business is on the he writes railroad pay ex penses Two trains a month are now run each way Budgets are pinched alarming ly on the maintenance and replacement side i the process continue and the road eventually be abandoned Towns full of white men will be left stranded and Jndianization now already going on will be speeded up Everything is dying and slipping back to the And right there in miniature you have a telling picture of what is wrong with world today As far as nature is concerned we have i won our age old fight We can build prac tically anything we can imagine we can fVia Tlinrrlo of ifo urArcf rtipB to the middle of South America and iKitas tv' Li jtT il ill i t' hi I 1ri I jdj UinjJi'JTiK UiLanjn 4 wiiniiiMjrx kiA a 1 mn srs a II I BW i I I II a iLl 1 hfl i)j 1 I II bl fl I'll I 111 hl I'l I I I nvnYr dDX TNA ri i 1 II jEMBBanX 1 ivk trap a I i a fl.

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About Miami News-Record Archive

Pages Available:
150,656
Years Available:
1923-1969