Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 81, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1938 Page: 4 of 18
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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■▼M7 Say the Itasca aeUe Mere papers ta Oktaheaea City than there ere taati
Scouts Begin Perilous Task of Taming Buffalo
PWA is Given '.
|
!
i
■* ' i
wo. e
• F.
lRB<x
OMs
11M M.
2 Days
i
Perrine Bldg. Lobby
BOOM OPCM 1 »M 7 Sa
<ste. tas>. ChiMrw (aMse ■«> M.
1T<hM!
I
I
< I
44
■
gMW and rushed io phone booths.
But tat.
I
£
Pat O'BRIEN
I25fl
* output from IW5 to 1MT. contrary to the first time in four yean
>• tK> trend of mrtot rwwvirerie Tf-~r —__— ... 9 .
<
0
k ♦.
A
H
MAYFLOWER
><-«F
w
CRITERION
MIDWEST
TOWER
VICTORIA
LIBERTY
HAY-NO
WAR HER
t *
wat i awe /
toises
"•OVBUI PANOBM**
"Feeh ftoe
Cento LOMBARD
-«l.*wk2Sf-
RITZ
Mat.
UHabtoka Girt* sf ths Bead
‘Young Fugitives’
TUB ONK
AND ONLY
SCHICK • SHAVER
SCHICK DRY SHAVn. INC, STANFORD, CONN.
State Moves to Pull
Ila Rejecter! Program
Rack to Life
HAY FEVER
dY SINUS
Beta tree Stmeaetratfaa
of the improved Schick from say
authorised Schick dealer. Don't de-
oualy prosecuting suits against in- prive yourself for even another day
The police found Hickman, and Kam-
Ina Mid he confessed 14 holdups.
and drum corps flor national cham-
pionships and >7,500 fa prim money.
«ta» ttarated
Fat O’Brien
case s*ta*riM
GBANT MBmi'BN
—tad yto tew-
“Whm raw aww ttow-
“TMI CHASER"
the comfort of Schick shaving to
millions of men, we are the first to
put on the market a fine quality
shaver at leas than 115.
And the standard Schick Shaver
at $12.50, is improved-— better then
any we have ever made. Changes in
design give the motor more depend-
able power, more uniform speed
and an even longer fife.
Schick patents, held valid by the
Courts, cover the Schick principle
and construction. We are vigor-
I
Marie Wilson
Hugh Herbert
Ralph Bellamy
MIC KEYM OUSE
Technicolor CaeSeea
Jumes
CAGNEY
Only 3 More Nights!
Fl ’• DANCE
’A to the
Jjf. iffy- --Br Music s<
SHAVER
reduced to
The Improved
SCHICK
™<tasa liT'
Come in and See the New Schick at the New Price
REEVES CAMERA STORE
Phone 3-3030
k**-.
FOUR—WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1938.
Washington New Dor
MERRY-CO-ROUND
rjiB4Alw>ra a 8so<
fur IS.
MEVk naoAawAY*
rKm . - ._8tastee
tobesd . . • hooi
TULTSXr-"
pmae last 1 Days:
IOAN BENNETT
Randdph SCOTT.
Helgoland as North
Sea Submarine Base
ScHICK leads again! Fol-
kOTCHEC
x 1 remarkable
Revised Plan;
• Costs Reduced
that
autumn gub- <nr
anMlta than from 1833* to 1835 L.
that two-year period, ware earners th-
«M Mew Oassao
NOW 8BOWTNO
Richard Arlen
‘ SILENT BARRIERS"
Children 10* Adatos l*d
■y *** to 8
F
Ito 5
Chft Mfru Ihbcw
CABLI*LOY«TRACY
“TEST PILOT”
—Has Lari Bls4—
"QUICK MONXT"
Fred atone a
Man in 14 Holdupt
PEORIA Ill . Aim. 34 —0P>—It was
Charles Hickman's long, thin and
pointed nose that helped police solve
14 lovers lane holdups
AU of the couples, who were robbed
while parked alone quiet roadsides, rhe long and thin and pointed nose. ,
described the robber's nose as king.' --*---- “--- ‘ “
thin and pointed
j* — “FENNIES"
*O« Person Fta Tai
Cpringlake
< musement-Park
1 > With Cagnev A OTrta to-
mbs’
th.., 11
ties siae ■
7:U-IS:M
Sw,M WwZ^PsIrula SUte
“Rorimcb m the Rmn
anoWS: l3r4A-3;M-4:ae-«:>e
Buy Your Schick From
VEAZEVS
t ■
TWKJI MAILT:. ( tag s a a.
■MMfeAA--- -__. . *
Vnworri^d G. O. P.
■pURIOUa political battles are being
r waged from ths rock-bound coast
of Maine to ths sunny shores of Cali-
fornia, but Republican national bead
quarters to burning do midnight ail
•wr them.
A group of newsmen talking poli-
tics tn the National Press chib early
the other evening got into a dtopute
over the date of a forthcoming pri-
mary. It wee suggested that they teto-
phone the Republican national ecm-
aalttee to settle the controversy
TH bet," said an oid-uanr. “that
you cant get anyone on the phone
either at the Republican national
eommittee or at the Republloan oon-
greMionel campaign committee."
We know of no other shave* that
lowing our yeara-old plan to bring gives such quick, close ahavm wuA
no injury to the dan. Nor have wo
seen any part of any motor or
shearing head we would like to
include in the Schick Shaver.
All motors need occasional serv-
ice. Behind every Schick is a year's
guarantee, with 28 service stations
staffed with experts to adjust, repair
and re-condition Schick Shavers.
toath of Richard J!
Millard 4S yean old. Atchison. Kan..
th* home of -
was received by relatives here Death
was due ta a heart ailment
toirvivors include hts
daughter. Mary Linian Millard
to making her home with he i_._
r8**-.Mr *"* O F Millard. 1442
Northwest Twenty-fifth street:
tar. Mrs w B. u^. mj NorU,_
amt TsatoU totuiid street, and u
bertbse. Oasaga Millard. Wynnewood
wtU * h'ld Th ^May in
W» to>Mw« Hm ariMf rx-MSs _____
'ow c«n «h«n pay wH»n x«ptove4—Ns___ _ , _
ex«»w« N. ew Citsbi.wwd 4B ymn. • JW-Wa—v totamiAl— — J*»
s S<| Bw-IOngi. MOO StudsMs. New Cv«» - f “** B*T ■■■"“•V
<^aai^ZX' • *** napeoMS
CMlUiCOTNI SUSiNtM COUJCA MAV-SSO LAMRAVOtoWlL toaMs^Tsa.
Sig mswm swesa. nsnsesta Mtoseed |
RHYTHMS FROM
HOLLYWOOD
»s=r<2r-
»R eente each tosses
e e e
Sprightly Gian
VFKRILY “a man may be so changed
V by tove as hardly to be recognised
as the same person ” mends and
foes of cantankerous Carter Class. 80-
year-old senator from Virginia, are
torn between amaaement and amuse-
ment at reports of his possible mar-
riage.
At the last session of congress. Ren-
stor Otass' health was s matter of
grave concern to his friends. He was
accompanied to and from the senate
chamber by a trained num. Once he
waa forced to retire to his Virginia
home because of ill health
But now the senator to a changed
man. He looks younger and more
vigorous than in years—and all be-
cause of a lady. Worried, his children
and grandchildren are bustling him
off on a yachting trip, hoping he will
forget his Indian summer romance,
but some Virginians would not be
surprised if a bride accompanied Car-
ta when be roturns to congress next
winter.
|||U w A
Reopens Friday. Aus. 26
WITH HEW ITEM ago
mtw.ua
. HyMIMeen
War Veterans Begin
W ork of Convention
COLUMBUS, Ohio. Aug. >4.—(JF>—
Veterans of Foreign Wan. thetr spec-
tacular military parade over, aetttod
down Wcdnoeday to eonaidcratton of
91 *• rseolutoono to
<-omf before their thirty-ninth annual
encampment before adjournment Prt-
Committee reporta worn to be in-
terrupted for an adttro. by Oen
Jameo A Drain. Washington, repre-
senting the social security board. The
most colorful of the day s events was
competition of approximately SS bands
El
IM S Dajei
”My Bill"
Kiy Francis
BmH* GraavtUe
Aatoe Leota
By DBMW FCABMN ata
BOBKBT S. ALLEN
VjUAfiHINOTON. Aug 34.—Prob-
•Y ably the biggest question
mark In both Washington and
Wall Street today is Felix
Frankfurter, dynamic professor
of the Harvard law school and
with an inside track as succes-
sor to the supreme court seat of:
Justice Cardozo
The question mark is in tne mind.",
of both big business and labor Big
businsss once considered Frankfurter
a dangerous and incurable radical
Most of them still do. But some of
them now think ht has tamed down,
might mellow with age. and in the
end turn out to be their friend
This also is the private deduction
of John L Lewis, the Committee for
Industrial Organisation leader. Lewis,
usually uncanny in hto judgment of
men. to not quite sure about Frank-
furter, fears that his liberal back-
grotlta t&KBT TKdi rn» that nf the
one-time crusader, Justice McReyn
eltto.
Of one thing, however both labor
f ~ __; — " ___;____' ____________ . ___
convinced Frankfurtei is one of the jected because the PWA doubted if
moot astute strategists in or out of revenues from the dormitory would
hi ng Uni
accomplished they get accomplished
Dome Ums ago he was arguing with
output from 1S35 to 1S3T were much the hard way—through >om of U»—
BMtmlldk* thmvi Fwwtsua IOT4 4 SSL T. I .
-----1 eommuniUss operate on
central standard time.
The porter awakened IS paaeengers
at S a. m before he discovered it waa
not 7 o'clock, as shown by hto own
watch, which waa ta for Chicago
daylight saving time.
-Gardner, you're a radical. I'm lib- (negates S3.000.000. but it to evident
oral. We never can agree. You play * “ *
wtth your dolls and I'D play with
mine but mine are more effecUve
data*
Magill, Tax Ace,
Quits U. S. Post,
Resumes Teaching
’ Resignation Accepted
On Basis of Previous
Deal With Chief .
HYDB PARK. N. T, At«. >4 -0)
-President Roosevelt accepted Wed-
nesday the resignation of Roswell
Magill, under secretary of the Uvaa-
ury with an expreeeton of "genuine
Magill, the treasury's top tax ex-
pert for a year ata a half, told the
president he had accepted hto ap-
pointment in January. 1837. wtth the
understanding he would return to his
professorship in ths Columbia unl-
v«ris0 law school thia September
Then, tendering hto ^estgruitton ef-
fective September It, Magill added
that if occasion arose in which he
might serve again, he hoped the
preaident would call upon him
Magill was a director of the recent
adminlstratton investigation into as-
serted tax avoidance and evasion and.
during the last congress, headed the
group of treasury experts aiding togto- I
laUve committees in drafting the
1838 revenue law.
Roosevelt Cottage Rising
HYDB PARK. N Y, Aug 34-UP)
-President Roosevelt reported that
work on his new stone cottage to pro-
ceeding apace. The cottage to on Mr.
Roosevelt's Hyde Park estate, not Car
ing cough
Governor Marland granted him
executive clemency In the form of
commutation of sentence Banford
served 38 days on his sentence of
30 days in the county jail and a
150 tine levied concurrently in
three liquor poeeesslon cases
Marland was told that Banford
to unable to pay the fine, hto wife
ata four children are destitute and
one of the children la ill with the
whooping cough Freeing the pris-
oner of the nscssslty for serving out
■to fine, the governor was in- ,
formed, would permit him to obtain
medical attention for the child
Declaring he neither protested
nor recommended clemency. Phil
Daugherty, assistant county attor-
ney said eight liquor cases were
filed against Sanford He pleaded
guilty on one. waa convicted in two,
was cleared by the court tn three
when ro-defendants assumed re-
sponsibility for contraband whisky
and was freed in the remaining two
because of faulty search warrants.
JP
Aft
OKLA. CITY
A-etees: CaeSSei tout Asa Itasa RM
Aug. 29-30
YA L E OWN E C
fringers. (The law say Bovaalnwly of tbs comfort, eoavnniaoce sad
—but in the and it works well.) eccaoay of shaving with a Schick.
ih KIALTCUr
LAST DAY
■OB JACK
•URNS OAKIE
“RADIO CITY REVELS”
WITU
HAL BK3RP*S OBCHK8TBA
------AND------
“SCANDAL STREET*
LBW WIT" LOUISK
AYBKS CAMPBILL
EDGAB KENNEDY
hia old friend Gardner Jackaon of rral aid for similar projects. North-
Labor's Non Partisan league They western asked a 45 percent PWA
both agreed on their objective, but grant and proposed to make up the
could not agrst on the strategy for remaining 56 percent by selling bonds
attaining it. Finally Professor Frank- to the Reconstruction Finance Corp,
tarter remarked: The entire dormitory program sg-
that most of the colleges must reduce
costs of their respective buildings to
win government approval
The projects were given careful
scrutiny by finance officials of the
Fort Worth PWA office. Phillip 8
Donnell, special PWA engineer fit
■ For Bootlegger
Chil.l's Illnrea Cital
In Hie Appeal For
Clemency
TV AR RY SANFORD. Oklahoma
** City bootlegger, was helped to
Worth had recorded its disapproval freedom Wednesday by ths whoop-
of projects other than that at Alvs *“ “■-l*
The colleges' difficulties are attrib-
utable to experiences with earlier
bond issues Two colleges were said
to have defaulted on interest pay-
ments The government seeks as-
surance the new bonds will be funded
Figures released Wednesday by Tom
Gammie planning director for the
Oklahoma planning and resources
board, show allocations on 13 of the
SS projects filed by various govern-
mental agencies in Oklahoma The
only state project among the 13 is a
ward hlllldtag at the Eastern Okla-
homa hospital. Vinita.
Nurses' Heme Nought
John Beckham, vice-chairman of
the state board of affairs, announced
an application will be filed with PWA
tor construction of a nurses' home
for the Western pkiahoma hospital.
Clinton The projected cost is S4S-
000. wtth the state supplying 835.000
and the PWA contributing 120.000
Funds for the state's partlripetion
will be taken from the original 8171,-
000 appropriation for purchase of the
hoenttal last year, said Beckham
Meanwhile. Senator Elmer Thomas ns •« a
SScTStatT^o^! totZ^ wrmany W ill Rebuild
ingion tnac a fwa ornciai toid nim__ J
there were "not as many projects as
he would like to*see Oklahoma ham"
under the new progtam.
Change Is Asked
The senator said this was one rea-
son given bv PWA officials ta ob-
jecting to release of a 8300.000 proj-
ect for McAlester so it eould be
built with WPA labor.
McAlester sought to change the
project to WPA. believing it would
furntoh 8200.000 and get 8400.000 ta
labor, whereas under PWA It would
--<m,y 45 percent of the total from
2!?toLW1? ** ’••■PPO*n*«> despite government
Thomas telegraphed McAlester of-
'flciala urging them to draft a WPA
application and then urge WPA di-
rectors of the state and region to
recommend that PWA release it to
A. F. of L. CJutllong?
nnxsionrr roobevelt u tak-
E tag up the challenge of the
American Federation of Labor on
Labor Board Commissioner Donald W
Smith
Pennsylvania new
the trucutent demata'rf"froe"ration
moeuto that he be bounced
Smith's jerm expires August 37 and
ths president has privately assured
him ef another six-year assignment
When this is done the next move
wtU be up to the A. P. of L. They
can do nothing excent veil until eon- V . wr w>*
grern convenes Whether they win Factory WagCS K1SC
then make s flsht on Smith's ron- ’’ r
'*5.;™Faster Than Output.
S. Census Discloses
Pennsylvania, snd behind him stands
the Committee of Industrial Organi-
sation.
n ^B’Ah » tooteee The
~ 1 O h*'1 nothing to do with put-
tta board In ta'c?’h^hlJ,u census figures Indicated Wednesday. Brown both* 34
wtth him on some decisions ^ut wtth fsre'sv’llabte-^ tta cZSIS i TuMd“J' ,or
thr A. F. of L. after Smith s scalp m«nnf.cfurJL^Cv»tLi ,n< Wllu"n 4. Homes.
tts a sure bet the C I O will he in m,nl“*rturxebooetedwage p»ulst»m church
hto rorner battling fM httn w j
atyttkw tt has ‘ '--: “
m the light of th* C. I. O's put
wmplAlnts antast Smith there is .ataMd
hTL ’I th* ,edrr*tlnn » tlrmard for
*TOUnd th*‘ >* *•
unduly friendly to the C. I. O 1
‘••ho hnny in the fact
m»na«e the t-‘......
srnatorial campaign of Alvin
2? .1 candidate
Mwjteked Guffey, c. I O .tend-
toM^rS1" **“’• f*nt ,Dd product!^ 468 percent.'
Don wu“ter,&Vmuareloff Cycle Prediction
watch The A. P of UeriTwin hate WASHINGTON. Aug 24.—UPt-
to do armu tan .u,-,..™ Mve The weather bureau tentative predic-
tion at 10 rainy seasons to come may
be good news to the dust bowl but
mighty sad for the grasshoppers.
Recant dry. hot summers have fa-
• **rte hatch of graashoppan.
Onty^r tesdinc them arsenic, sawdust
1 t?d .. hfcA :n>n bm> abto t®
nlB TirlOA
But if the next 10 yean are root
J ” n’ l£ h*u?h of ““Pl*' »IU
n be small. The experts say nature's
™em»y at uw hom. a control methods are more positive to
Lloyd Noble Ardmore toe long run.
A schools ANn cournw"
a
Wh. YOU NEED ONLY /, SHM
5,| ---------
1
u
'' n^EMBhil*
with his wouldbe tamers. Left to right are
Eugene Brown, 13 years old. 1960 Northwest
Twelfth street: John Kincheloe, 14 years
old. 1735 Northwest Fourteenth street, and
James Engel, 14 years old. 1739 Northwest
Fourteenth street, who hope to earn merit
badges by making Pawnee BUI etvUiied tn
time to lead him in the annual scout circus.
7 Then the ^MtoNSM a letter I WhtaHfcu^"
from Glenn Morrison of Connells- 1
, vtlle. Pa . who wanted to know some- j
thing about the man who married hto
daughter. 18 yean old. He wrote
that hts aon-tn-law'a name was
Charles Hickman, that he lived in
Peoria and enclosed a photograph.
Police Chief Leo F. Kamlns noticed
This is the first lesson in the training of
a wild buffalo, and before many weeks pass
these Boy Scouts from troop 44 hope to have
snorting Pawnee BUI as tame as a shepherd
dog. Right nop he's pretty fierce and it took
the aid of Leo Blondin. Lincoln park soo
superintendent, and an attendant to get
Pawnee roped so he would pose for a picture
_________________Oklahoma Qty Times
itory Project Is Drafted for Alva State College
than Ute play!!
a tot maro from HaUywaM::
WASHINGTON. Aug 24 — (JPi
Fact»rv wages increased faster than death houae
the trend of moat previous veera.
The state attempted Wednes-
day to extricate the dormitory
project of Northwestern State
Teachers college. Alva, from the
thick gumbo of federal dlsap- 1
proval which has mired it along
with eight others.
An amendment project, reducing
proposed cost from 8340,000 to 8330 -
000. was dispatched to the regional
office of the public works administra-
tion at Fort Worth. Texas
John Duncan Forsyth. Tulsa arc hl-
leaders and WaU street rnogula are t*<t. M1<i the first project waa re- I
most astute strategists in or out of revenues from the docmitorv
' When be wants things be sufficient to fund its bonds.
Prvpeasg Bond Sale
Like the other colleges seeking fed-
BERLIN Aug 34 —(M-Tbe BS-
sener Nattonatetttmg dtoctoeed Wed-
nesday that Helgoland, German is-
land tai the North sea. will soon be
an important submarine base
Ths poet war Versailles peace treaty
orttorod the destruction of Helgoland's
fortifications, but it has been heav-
ily refortified by nasi Germany.
The been newspaper ta reports on
the visit there Tuesday by Chancel-
lor Adolf Hitler and Admiral Nicholas
Horthy. regent of Hungary, said
Admiral Horthy was given a brief
desertntion of the new harbor now
under construction It to being creat-
ed especially as a base tor a subma-
rine flotilla •
Ttro Negroet Executed,
Jeraey Death Row Empty
TRENTON, N J, Aug. 34 —uPJ—
Etectrocution of two Negroes for a 78-
— cent robbery-slaying left New Jersey's
*" » empty Wednesday for
Smalley Burrell and William A
I years old. were exe-
cuted Tuesday night for fatally beat-
--* 88-yoar-oM
‘n nsvmentj. (excluding salariesi 27 per- }^71*bOrO church •elUm n>
and tacreasod production 22 per- ' .....
cent tn the two years.
eomplatnts'l«ttut"'g^lth nJ P* number of wage earners (except I rauengert Didn I Sm
.—2"""“ ■’•™l wntto toero 1a, -uned persons) Increased only 7 3 f-1,^ .2 p
hto'(Mter on’boosting the average yearly »" < •"•« trror
toVluly friendly^ the C 1% fr0“ WM ““ “OIW“ Aug. 94.-UP)
There is also irony ta the fact that “ . a ~A railroad porter making tao first
Ouffey tu msnas-the autumn J J! , P*1” ta T.PloPnflt_ Bnd Cblcago-to-Ds. Motaes run teamed
Se**^. rfm^nd"^'V£ndM.7 >maller tosn from 1833 to 1835 In thatliia'
*ho licked GuffeyTo? o .UnH r------- -
ard bearer In the bitter-fought £nn’ rr*"ed ”2 percent, wages 48 8 per-
—*---• ■ ’ P*BB" rent and production 48 8 percent.
u*-up. the federa- ___
"• Hopp^rt* Dopm
• The A. F. of Ler's willWASHINGTON. Aug. 34.—
to do some tail prestidigitation.
Richard J. Millard,
Son of Gty Residents,
Dies of Heart Ailment
Whooping Cough s iSSl
Earns Freedom
Oklahoma City, said all have been
forwarded to Washington He de-
clined to reveal the recommendations I
made at rtirt Worth, adding cau-
tiously:
Revtsten* Expected
"It to apparent certain projects will I
be revised 8ome will be considered
of much more value by reducing the
cost"
This was taken to mean that Fort
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 81, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 24, 1938, newspaper, August 24, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1764725/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.