Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 8, 1936 Page: 6 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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WEDNESDAY. APRIL B, IWM,
3APULPA HERALD. SAfULPA, OKLAHOMA
What the Tornado’s Fury Lett in Its Wake in Georgia
■Thu uppet picture show* the damage dona to a new and aolidiy-bulit | taned. la the inset raacue worker* are eti' wn searching the rotaa in a
•choc; at Cordele, Ga , by the tornado which took two-wcore live* and left , borne where two died The death list in Cordele it nearly half of the
thousands homeless. Below, another hnck building, completely rteinol- I whole storm toll, and a thousand persons are homeless there.
Nazi War on Eckener May Banish Him trom Zeppelins
'
Wjffi&tf, % * *
In disfavor because he refused to issue a special appeal in the recent Naxi | operation of Jtghter-than-air
>tTtmas Dr. Hugo Lckener. world's foremost expert in construction and i the General Htnoenburg, ne
craft faces banishment from command el
west and greatest of Zeppelins.
Coast Guards on Mercy Errand
* 4t Ip* headwaters rose and brought the "coast" to inland cities, Ui«
* iWMI|s of the seaboard were called to aid the stricken city-dwellers
Yap || am a marooned farmhouse near Evansville, lml., and below i.
vamed farmer and kua family, aafe sad dry aboard a CoastGuard cutter
t
i
I
i
Henry A. Wallace A typical gram faaaaev
Despite determined efforts, on the part of U. S agricultural officials,
there i.- giave concern throughout the nation as to the fanners’ fate
in l'J3fi. Since the nullification of the AAA. it is feared that over-
production of basic cormnoditic-e will again create vast surpluses and
send national farm income into n sharp decline for the year. Secre-
tary of Agriculture Wallace hn> urged farmer* to co-operate with
the soil conservation act by reducing acreage in exchange for hene-
(fc payments. Farm income has been the gradual upward grade
~au:.Uljiifejtbto.il tirp|>^pd.tojU,vO0.0<MU>00.
War hero, former Tenneaaoe Sen-
ator and financier, Col. Luke Lea
(above), who haa served nearly two
years of a air to tea year term for
violating the North Carolina bank-
ing laws, is shown as he was re-
leased from North Carolina State
Prison, at Raleigh. He was paroled
by Gov. Lr.t.r^-haus
Free at Last!
Luke Lee Free
Jack Easier
ck KMtey of the University «tf
ichigan cracked all existing fW
rda for the 200 yard and 200 nt*pa
rim at New Haven. 0—n. is tas
aUraal Collegiate A. A. meet. He
m the award as the national eat
Old iieiwrv for sale ai Herald oiflce.
David A. Lsmson
Triad four times for the murder of
his pretty wife, Allene Thorpe Lam-
son. former Stanford co-ed. David
T.amson wag freed at last by San
Joee, Cal., authorities when the
state refused to prosecute after the
| jury at the third re-trial disagreed.
He had spent months in the denth
house at San (Quentin before bis
second trial was granted. That and
the subsequent third and fourth
trials ended in disagreements.
Record Cracker
i
■anamination |
[Cond-scting cros»-
Becker Key to A. T. & T. Probe
Walter Gifford
Samuel Becker
Newest of the "brsin trusters" is dynamic young Samuel Becker,
special counsel for the federal communication* commission in Re
investigation of the giant American Telephone k Telegraph cor-
poration. Although only 33. Becker is rccognixed as an »”***•**
brilliant talents backed by a thorough knowledge of the odllty AeM.
He was educated at Universities of Wisconsin and Harvard, his back-
ground reflecting the influence of the La Follettc school of liberalise
in Wisconsin and the idea., of Harvard’s Felix Frankfurter who haa
supplied the New Deal with many of its younger men. Becker ie
the key figure in the highly technical investigation of the fh.000,-
000.000 corporation which a headed by Walter Gifford.
RKPIKS PENNED TO KIND
NOTES BV QUEEN MANV
LONDON (LPf-Queen Mary, with,
th«’ help of a con* rf secretaries,
has answered more than 25.000 mes-
sages of condolence received by her
frem all parts o. the world alter
the death of King George
J xres of messages, particularly th«se
tr'ni members of for-..jn royalty and
, ersoas who claim i>ersonnl acquain-
tance with the Quee.i. were answered
tn the queen's own handwriting
The 25.000 letters came from ah I
yarts of Great lirl am. from social
Mayfair and country cottages. Ire-
land and even foreign country. There
were hundreds from the United
Stales including manv from school
children
The enormous tas.-. of replying to
the messages o condolence required
the full Ime of Queen Mary’s MX
ladic -in-writing and her men secre-
taries
Did naper* lor inte at Herald offlna
EASTER
FOOD SALES
Every Item You Want
at a Special Price!
SEE FRIDAY’S
SAPULPA
HERALD
Almost Everybody Buys From
the Ad« in The Herald.
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 185, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 8, 1936, newspaper, April 8, 1936; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1525833/m1/6/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.