Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1938 Page: 2 of 26
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TWO—THURSDAY, JUNE 2,
1938.
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I Prunes in the accident.
BegY our Pardon
No substitute for experience
or genuine Palm Beach
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salute the GRAYS
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summer
THE NEW PALM BEACH
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Oklahoma.
f£>e famous white
distinctive single [and double-breasted
models.
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Big U.S.Food,
Cotton Buying
Plan Outlined
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Buy
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Palm Beach suits, in gray shades, wash like
We’re showing them in
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You’ll take your hat off to these New Gray
Palm Beach Suits. They put to rest forever
the old idea that Palm Beach Suits come
only in white or tan. New Gibraltar Gray
and Town Gray in handsome stripes. Soft
to the touch, cool to the body and smart to
the eye.
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Sea Scouts Trim Sails for Big Regatta
__________________gvetT ■**»• more Mien in Oklahoma City thaa there an bomee
Bob Bums:
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Opening Star-Gazing
Party of Season Due
Tonight at University
Oklahoma City University’s first
star-gasing party of the summer will
train the university'* six-inch. re-
fractory telescope on the five-day oid
moon Thursday night.
O. E. Meador, astronomy professor,
who sponsored a dosen similar bees
last summer, again will be tn charge.
The party will begin at sundown, 250
yards due west of the University Fine
Arts building.
•'Well be able to see the craters and
mountains, and what are called seas,
although there la no water on the
moon ‘ Meador said
The moon will set at 11 p. m.. but if
anybody cares to stay on. Meador and
the telescope wiU be glad to look at
j star clusters for and with them.
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Joke /« on Gun IVielder;
Be Gets Nine-Month Term
James Foot. 30-year-old
charged with firing a gun at a num-
ber of men "just to see what would
happen." learned about cause and ef-
fect Thursday whan ha received a
nine-month penitentiary sentence.
Foot's allegedly experimental shot
struck Willie Thomas, 44-year-old Ne-
gro, !• North Brauer, in the neck and
ehin.
Clarence Milla, district judge, try-
ing the ease without a jury, found
Foot guilty of assault with Intent to
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Immediate disposal of Civic Center
title suits involving reversion claims
to at least IS loU on grounds that
claimants are estopped bv reason of
having supported the *4,000.000 bond
issue bv which the city acquired the
park property, was predicted Thurs-
day by Warren Conner, assistant mu-
nicipal counselor handling the city's
side of the litigation.
His announcement followed a dis-
trict court decision Wednesday by
Frank Douglass, judge, barring W R.
Ramsey's claim to reversion righto to
two lots north of the Ramsey Tower,
appraised at 433.SOO. on grounds that
he contributed 1*00 to the bond issue
campaign.
Conner said other estoppel plead-
ings are planned against the claim of
W T Hair*, who was vice ehairman
of th* bond issue campaign commit-
tee. to four lots appraised at *22.500.
and three more lots not appraised
and the claim of Local Building and
Loan association to lots appraised at
*22.500.
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is the ideal attire for travel, the office and
sultry city streets...you’ll need at least two
or three—They’re easy to take at
City Counseler Secs
Stopping Soon of Many
Negro Claims on Civic Center
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liquor raiding squad seised two bar- load them on a truck and take
rein filled with arhat they thought was to the station There they ren
Whisky. It was a back-breaking Jeb to the covers and found water.
Miss Helen Stansbury, gifted trav-
el expert and speaker for the United
Air Lines, has flown mor* than 100.000
miles to tell potential air travelers of
the attractions. to_ be found st the
I w W........ —-w ...............
Isitkm.
Only a Waler Haul
8IOU2( CITY, Iowa. June 3.—(Ah—
Policeman William J. Cullen and his
(lartloao Retirement Seen
By New York Newspaper
NEW YORK. June 2—(4%-The New
York Post says in a special dispatch
from Washington that Supreme Court
Justice Cardoso because of illness will
I not return to the court when it rs-
I convenes in October after the summer
; recess.
At Port Chester. N Y„ Cardoso's
| secretary declined in hto behalf to
comment upon the report. The Post's
! dispatch, mentioning Cardoso's pro-
. «ays his "formal retire-
ment probably will be deferred until
’ January, even though he is not able
to come back to Washington next
autumn "
,,...___ ... ________ _ „ _ -
Not pessimistic but just cautious are these sailors who'will take part in the sailboat
races during the regional Sea Scout regatta Friday through Sunday. They want to get in
a little practice balling. Left to right are Dick Ratliff. 1407 Northwest Twenty-third street,
apprentice; Everett Price. 1316*4 Northwest Ninth street, coxswain, and Adrian Hunter. 1532
Northwest Twenty-sixth street. One hundred sea scouts from all over the state are expected.
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Prosecutors to Start
s General
iifToday
Lewis R. Morris, county attorney,
and Randell B. Cobb, assistant attor-
ney general, were to appear before
the grand jury late Thursday to in-
augurate the Investigating part of
that body's activities.
The two prosecutors were in ses-
sion behind closed doors all Thurs-
day morning while the grand jury
continued to hear evidence in routine
minor felony cases, ordinarily handled
tn Justice of the peace preliminary
hearings, but now a part of the in-
vestigating body's jurisdiction
Indications were the grsnd jury
would take up school affairs first,
possibly beginning with a portion of
the audit being prepared by the state
examiner and Inspectors office or
possibly investigating individual com-
plaints about school board purchases
made during recent weeks.
Conquewt Recognized
BUBN06 AIRXB, June 2 —OPV-
Argentina Indicated Thursday she
would recognise Italy's eanqueet of
Bthtopa by accrediting a new ambas-
? to Vittorio Manuela as king of
itaty and emperor of Ethiopia. It was
believed Dr Manuel Malbran. ambas-
sador to Ixmdon. would be assigned to
the vacant Rome poet.
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For Grads and Dads
SUNBEAM
SHAVEMASTER
(A Substantial Shipment Just Received)
Grads and Dads vote the Shavemaster the
grandest gift ever thought of! Self-hon-
ing. Whisks away the
whiskers close and
clean. Powerful brush-
type, self-starting mo-
tor. With ostrich leath-
er zipper case.......$15
In our long experience with literally hundreds of
we’ve never encountered Palm
Rise io Farm Price*,
Help for Needy Goals
Of Relief Project
WASHINGTON. June 2 —
President Roosevelt snd his sdviserx
are working on a plan, agriculture {
department officials said Thursday. |
to use several hundred million dollars I
of relief funds to Increase domestic
consumption of surplus fsrm prod-
ucts.
The program. dlscu?«e<1 at a White
House conference this week, would
have a two-fold objective
1. To supplement efforts of the
agriculture department, through the
new crop control law. to bolster de-
clining prices of farm commodities
3, To provide undernourished and
underclothed relief and low income
families with Isrger supplies of food
and cotton products.
The proposal, if adopted, probably
would expand activities of the federal
a u r p 1 u s commodities corporation,
which has been buying surplus perish-
able farm commodities to bolster
price*.
Ito purchases, which hsve been
small compared to those contemplated
• under the new program, are distrib-
uted to needy families through relief
ggeneiaa.
Agriculture department officials
•aid purchases would be made through
regular trade channels, thus releasing
funds more quickly to stimulate busi-
nees.
Building Trades Group
Votes to Back Key At
Sessions Wednesday
Indorsement «< W. B. Key for the
Democratic nomination for governor by
the Oklahoma City Building Trades
eouncU was announced Thursday by
A. K. Webb, eouncU president.
The vote favoring Key was un-
animous at a meeting of the council
Wednesday night, said Webb. All
other major candidates were discussed
before the indorsement was voted.
“We iw really going to bat for Kae."
eM Webb. "A labor * *
building council. Webb nid. repre-
•eoto about X American Federation
of Labor building unions in the Ok-
lahoma City area with about 3,000
Chances that Key** labor support-
era win attempt to gain an indorse-
ment at the meeting of the Okla-
homa City Trades and Labor council
meeting Thursday night were seen
following the action of the construe-
ttan luUotilft*.
Oklahoma Fights Plan
To Store State Grain
In Outside Elevators
I believe when you study
anything too closely you take
all the mystery and Interest
out of it. Aunt Dutty use'ta
get pret near anything she
wanted out of Uncle Hod-
jest by eryin’, but her life has
been spoiled since he took up
science.
The other day when she
burst into tears again, he said,
"Dutty, them tears don’t af-
fect me anymore—my chem-
istry book tells me that tears
are made up of a small per-
centage of phosphorus salt,
a little sodium chloride and
all the rest, water.”
fer of state grain to lane
Barkett located outoide of <___
Unxee will attend a meeting of
warehouse and grain expert* conferr-
ing with Henry A. Wallace, secretary
of agriculture, on storage problems
under the erop Insurance and grain sedor
loan programs of the agricultural ad- Wy
justment act. Wallace proposes to "
develop out of the conference a plan
for storing grata involved in the pro-
that •PProxl’nate-
ly *1400,000 would be tost to state
H LPXpU n Okl*homa s bond-
f.rintLZrfh0UM re<lulrwn*nt» and I 111* Golden Gat* International expo-
y
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LEWINSOHNS
THE HUB 108 W MAIN
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Oklahoma City Turns
75 Stitches Taken
In Head, Face Of
Girl Crash Victim
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THI NIW PALM BIACH SLACKS ARI S5 5O
Head-on Collision Is
Blamed for Accident
Injuring Five
Beventy-fiv* stitche* Thursday
morning dosed th* wound* suffered'
by M1m In* Mse Dean. 20 years old.
22t Northeast Eighth street, in a mo-
tor car collision Wednesday night on
Northeast Twenty-third street near
Walnut avenue
Although weak from loss of blood
Miss Dean* condition was considered
satisfactory at Oklahoma City Gen-
eral hospital. t
Miss Roberts Babb. 21 years old. of
the Eighth street address, driver of
the car in which Miss Dean was
riding, suffered leas serious cut*.
Clarence M. Van Ostrand, 1* years '
old. 2239 Northwest Fifteenth street. I
‘i '! of the other car. and his t*u .
passengers. Miss Henrietta Poulter,
18 years old, 2235 Northwest Fifteenth j
street, and BiUy Bob Smith. 1* years |
old, 2545 Northwest Seventeenth j
(street, were still less seriously injured !
J K. Starkey. 17 years old. 1002 „W1
Northwest Ninth street, suffered body lonsed nine..
hriilBA* in th* arrirtAnt _____. . .
Beach’s equal in keeping a man cool, comfortable
and smartly dressed in warm weather. No wonder—
for Goodall’s experience in weaving and tailoring
. , .Ji’
Palm Beach suits goes back more than twenty years
...and*today they’re the greatest summer clothing
specialists in the world.
. . . You’ll find more than coolness in our Palm Beach
assortments. There’s style aplenty in the new stripes, .
checks, plaids and solid colors—in single and double-
breasted models that add height to your stature and
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let your body breathe.
It
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Third Operation Helps
Rubinoff. Says Doctor
------------_----------------- BATTLE CREEK. Mich . June 2 —
A story in the Time* Monday sbout Dr. Wslter F. Martin aaid Thura-
the graduation of Billy Kltchsn* from *ub^M'
V ... .v. •kflkrtat from peritonitis which let
Oklahoma City University aaid the w following an appendectomy Uay 8.
youth "wa* given free tuition at the underwent a third emergence oper-
city college when he graduated from atlon Wednesday afternoon He de-
hlghachool." scribed Rubinoff* condition Thurs-
W. L. Kitchen*. 1417 Northwest da>r M "raV *«xl ’ *«»» temperature.
Forty-fourth atreet. father of the boy. i)uUe *n<1 respiration near normal,
aaid the sentence left the Impression ------*---
he wa* given free tuition hi* entire KOLBERO, Oermanv. June 2.—(4A
college career. Billy received a *chol- — Major-Gen. Eugen van Kutxachen-
arahip only for hl* first year. Mr bach, oldest surviving officer of the
Kitchens said, and paid in full the imperial German army, died Thurs-
remaining three years. dsy st the sge of 100.
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AIMS, June 2.—(AA—
would recognise Italy’s eanqueet
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 2, 1938, newspaper, June 2, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1764654/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.