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the UNION-BECOKDIB. MUXSOCBV1L
f^RhAFSTOU WON'T KN0W
B, A. W. WATKINS
recent hroadewt from
-> h,t * ,h»t British bar-
I ’".I know more about . Munlmt-
llrruir* kD , he bar Him do in
l" n r£Z and 'bat ham and e**,
I F „„C cafes' feature.
autommiu is now TAinc
A toll for greater than
IN WORLD WAR
C«r» Claim Maajr Mm Victims in IB
Months Than DU tha Baltina of
The War in Same Period
If he is without friends,
if he has low ideals.
If he has a guilty conscience.
If he has tost self-respect.
If his morals are questionable.
If he is < elfish, uncharitable or
cruel.
If he has forfeited his health for
wealth. The automobile killed more Amcr-
... || |,j< broadcasting! If his mind and soul have been il ' an8 ' n tBe * ast months than the
to recently nijfht clubs w \\\ neglected. Wor,d war d ‘ d »*» the same length of
on tr<.- noor> jt pVer thc Co _ j f he haa tradcd away h ; g charac . I time, nccordin gto statistics released
shortly Pr ‘ ?n ' U ' ji . t ‘ i;Itr system. Among ter for money. ' a New York city insurance com-
1Unl '"tulkM’^' that he will introduce} If he has a disagreeable disposi- ‘ paay '
titled
I the P« or
i-ition that makes enemies
the Wolf From‘this friends,
in Ten E**y Lessons.”
—that ' err
hillbilly « nffeI
Btn
10 iranscn
repels Those killed in automobile acci-
j <lents totaled 50,900 for thc
If making money has crowded out m °nth period compared to 50,510
the cultivation of his spiritual life. ,m *mbers of the American Expedi-
If worldliness has caused him to tion ary forces killed in action
lose fellowship with Christ. died of wounds.
If love of money has hardened him The toll for 1930 from automo
bile accidents amounted to 32,500
killed and 960,000 persons injured.
i Dalhart hillbilly
featured now as
was one of the first
ibe hillbilly selec- unt* 1 the love of Christ and gospel
ds for Brunswick. j doesn't stir him to do his best for
” j the rvorld’s redemption from *the
.(.j. Robert Effors became a 'power and thralldom of sin.
rr<;; kt -imply (because an aged, [ If all investments and possessions
c0 . ^ j n jire need of immediate j are laid up on earth and he has no
bfgped Bob to buy his comet; treasures in Heaven.—Selected,
he was purser on a Lee Line J '
Misdssippi River Steamer. ”
him '
Hour
ind Hei
ic Royal Typewriter
y-George broadcasts.
Now you * bcm ' ha d just enough money
to buy as their chief item of diet-
boiled rice.
-that Lowell Thomas got himself
into hot water recently when he
n ounced that there was no such town
a , Podunk. Five Podunks protested
a: one for Podunkiuns are loyal. The
Podunks an- located in Connecticut,
\>w York Massachusettes, Minne-
.ota and Pennsylvania. In case you
didn't know. Pominfc is a corruption
of the Indian Podunkone, meaning
“the low land beyond.”
—that its 73 stations with Nation*
tl Broadcasting Company now. CFCF
Montreal, is the latest addition.
—that Irene Bordoni forgot her
encore song during a recent broad-
cost.
—that Jesse Crawford, “Royal’s
Poet of the Organ” started his mu
sical career pounding an antiquated
piano in a nickelodeon in Spokane,
Washington. . . and now they’re try
ing to Llackmail him.
—that Helen Corbin Heinl, is the
first woman to ever appear with the
United States Marine Band. She ap
pears as a pianist and in the pupil
of Edward MacDowell.
In 1929 31,215 persons were killed.
Automobile deaths in the United
States for the last 15 years totaled
282,799. Deaths in 1930 were
per cent greater than they wer
1916.
With an indicated increase in the
motor vehicle mileage in this ci
try of at least 1J,000,000,000 miles,
around ten per cent, the numLer
of accidents increased about 12 per
cent, deaths more than 4 per cent
and the injured toll 13 per cent,”
the report says.
More than 7,000 pedestrians met
death during the year in automo
bile accidents primarily through
their own fault, while approximately
2,300 other pedestrians were killed
because o fthe actions of driven. In
the death of more than 5,000 other
pedestrians the responsibility was
shared jointly.”
—that Georgia is very much
the broadcasting limelight these days
what with B : ll "Whooping ’Em Up"
Munday. young Stribling and radio’s
white headed Hoy, Bobby Jones, all
doing their stuff.
—that recently WTIC indicated
n a broadcast address that 32,500
persons were killed and more than
.’1*10.000 injured in automobile acci-
derts during 1930. This is an in
crease of fully I per cent over 1929
records.
—that radio is following the well-
known tendency attributed years ago
to Lee Shubert by that well known
theatre architect, Victor Hugo Koeh
ler: “There’s nothing constant in the
theatre, but change. There is only
thing we are sure of—the public
does not desire tomorrow what it
wants today."
—that Columbia Broadcasting
System devoted 4,315 hours to music
and only 2,028 to talk during 1930.
—that if you ask Orrell Hancock,
WABC’s production manager how
ha rot that Orrell way, he will po
litely inform you that he was chris-
teied John, but the name of John
Hancock begot him razzing.
—that recent lisUningtin testa
conducted with a Brunswick Radio
proved that out of twentysix peop'e
Mly two desired the lone controlled
the same way and that in order to
"take radio reception sound twice _
loud, it was necessary to have four
times tb f volume.
-that while only one-third
Prorram« broadcast during 1980 by
'^ * ere sponsored by advertisers,
T* “Risers spent two thirds of
1 f U!ent [| 'oney expended ly the
System.
1. T. ANDREWS, Dbtrict Age*
"Utfen— Standard Life
luract Ce.”
Our sun is a huge electric light.
All the stars, suns more or lens like
ours, are twinkling electric lights,
each with a filament a hundred
thousand miles in length.
This is the starting new theory of
the nuture of the sun and of Hie uni
verse advanced recently by Dr. Ross
Gunn, of the United States Naval Ob
servatory, Washington, D. C., Dr.
Gunns says that electricty runs
sun and that it glows exactly
man made Incandescent electric lamp
glows, writes Robert E. Martin in
the Popular Science Monthly.
Millions of volts of current, Dr.
Gunn told the writer, turn the aolar
.tmosphere into a vast incandescent
lamp.
—that Rucy Vallcc, singing “Give
Something To Remember You
' V Was Presented with bad eggs
.to* fniit by some balcony
rowd,e * in Boston.
'~ that Jo *eph Sheehan, Jr., 12
record'*’ recently created the
man /" r tBe youngest hu-
, I * u ‘ r to l ,B °t an aerdplanc in
inr lehl ' fn jnd rudio broadcast-
than *am 1 Unifying ^experience
w 7‘ h “ " U Thw a Zither" i» a
for “oaM-be radio an-
Cold This Week
But Spring Is Due Now
How about that garden you have been planning all winter?
We have—
GOOD SEEDS
GOOD TOOLSfand
The unbeatable combination for a successful garden—Come
by and talk garden—You will find us ready—
R. W. Hatcher Hdw. Co.
Wholesale and Retail
f "KWAiiin,
, u . “• Grange bed-fellow. w»
vj, j ,“' h ™ Alfred E. Smith, Cal
rrc.Mt°° el!>re ond Herbert Hoover
— «
Air.-' 5 ’ rt ha ' happened at la.t.
*iiion ‘ ** y bave cached the po-
ar» where new born babies
! "»rd,d ° r “' r tl,em ' The fir,t
lt-3 0 born on October 24,
Mtcfc sons °f Mr. and Mrs.
lri*h des . Unn * They are German
C '. n *7~ and there’s an Indian
Am 0 . reservation known
''tha*
,ne time during the ca-
Eolar, he shared a
in New
Ban uu ' u,|pb Frin »l and Otto-
tr '- ’ lit , W J ha ] lct '"aater of the
an< between the three
of v
York
■ Ini
N O T I C|E
To City. Tax Payers
At Council meeting hekl on March 2nd. I was instructed
to give notice, that all taxes due the city and not paid by the
15th, to issue Fi-Fa. against the property and advertise same
for sale. The City must collect these .taxes so you had better
come and loot after yours at once and save further cost.
R. T. BAISDEN, SR.
Clerk and Treasurer
n
SUN IS CALLED A HUGE
ELECTRIC LIGHTING FLANT
TKc worlds best provimj ground
for k4DIO»^oii/‘Oi^/2 home./
In your own home you can try out a radio
under the exact conditions it will have to
operate. Some radios need a lot of sales
talk, but we are so sure of the per
fect performance of this new* Brunswick
radio that we can make this offer con
fidently. No cost or obligation to yon.
BRUNSWICK RADIO
PURCHASE & SALE CO.
Complete Home Outfitters
Just like Mother
Used to Make
“Tfcat Owl flwr"
Heliotrope
It is easy to make good things to
eat . . . delicious pies, biscuit,
rolls, cakes, with HELIOTROPE
Flour because every lot is oven-
tested here at the Mill in a kitchen
lifcc yours, proving its uniformity
and superior quality. The spray
of old fashioned heliotrope on
every sack is your guarantee of
successful baking.
Jtmc Hesj, our home economics ex
pert, will help you solve the most per
plexing problem "What shall w have
for dinner tonight?" Her menu sugges
tions have helped many women. Write
her care Oklahoma City Mill & Eleva
tor Company, millers of “That Good
Flour Heliotrope,” Oklahoma CHy.
Okla. .
DINNER MENU
Smoked Htm, Fried
I Potato* EacaOopod C
Molded Fruit Salad
HELIOTROPE Blacuit
John Conn Co., Distributors
Thatr.GOOD flour
OKLAHOMA CITY MILLS ELEVATOR COMPANY'Oktahomamr