Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 104, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 20, 1938 Page: 1 of 18
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Final Home
PRICE FIVE CENTS
ater Ballot
"It's Suicide for Czechoslovakia9
l • I
'3
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r.
PRAGUE, Sept. 20.—(ZP)—The Czechoslovak gov-
*
* -»
j
the
the 20-year-old state.
him
. O. St ear ley. cierk-bustoeM
five
"You go to hell,"
San
rush to
NEW YORK. Sept. 20 -t4h—Fer-
O k I a h
Parade
a
o n
STATE FAIR
Souvenir Edition
4
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*
1 ')
*
*
I,
II
wars**
• ■tu *• *Ml «•-
r Ms Mt
Mass rese
r*» nSsa
Grocer Rasberry Given
Robber the Raspberry
Anti He Taken It
, are a
bunch of ingrates now busily occupied tn biting the hand that
Czechs Reply to Peace Plan;
Modified Approval Is Seen;
Aid From Russia Blocked
From Germany; Six
Officials Wounded
Industrial and Agricultural
2 L _.j o m
Answer Sent to London and Paris Is
Declared ‘Acceptance in Principle With
Important Reservations;' W ay Is Left Open
For More Negotiations
THE SUNDAY
OKLAHOMAN
however.
Rumanian
ved the need for speed in submit-
it to a vote *o. If it is adopted.
c^^r^Sy J™££ni E? Deadline h Tonight On
Monday and Tuesday morning. .
Prague Says Three
Attacks Are Started
-
was
“ i
Some of Hie
many features
A recent decision of the supreme
> of the
'resident Is Confined
o White House Suite
!y Recurring Cold
WASHINGTON Sept JO.—
One Holdup, Cold
Feet in Second
Many Others Are Expected to Die From Hurts
Suffered in Collision on Siding
After three centuries of domination
—he railed it oppression—under the
Austrian empire before r
vakia was created as a republic after'
of the building were fully Insured. I night and Wednesday, and that winds
Cause of the blase was not determined
immediately. |
cept tender vegetation
I
Former School Board
Attorney to Be First
Of Indicted Officials
8400,000 Ia>am Caused
By Warehouse Blaze
CLEVELAND. Sept 20 —</F7—Fire
swept through a National Terminals
Corp warehouse early Tuesday, de-1
strayed more than J.700 tons of sugar
and caused damage estimated at
•400.000 by J. J Spralta, an execu-
were 1,1 SSZVI y vaaacrv/
. To Be October 4
i
convening the second grand jury. It Consideration of the bids will be a
was believed thia dale would be set regular order of business at the next I
trial. '
North Carolina (Wst
Is Warned of Storm;
East Florida Escapes
JACKSONVILLE. Fla. Sept 20 —
<4>i— The weather bureau Tuesday or-
dered northeast storm warnings dis-
played along the North Carolina
' jast and said a tropical hurricane of
"great Intensity" will pass eut of
Cai>e Hatteras Tueeday night.
The bureau at *30 a. m. said the
storm which Monday menaced South
Florida is moving north-northwest-
ward or northward about 17 miles an
hour.
The center of the hurricane, the
weather bureau said, was about 300
miles east of Vero Beach. Fla , at 7
a. m-
.bars ia UM V.
aw —
wCra '
■sei— asw.
Send your friends a copy!
they majaexpect if the Germans gain
centr’d! of them again.
"I wish I could be mistaken.’* he
said mildly. "I wish I could think
the Germans would show friendliness
for the Csschs. I think the German
But their leaden are
haughty. I think the Caech nation
would rather fight, because the peo-
Ntw BsalM M Ike Baek-
Ms . . OUMae'i ISM
la on . . . Ba4ee Tbwa-
der GriUei Leader . . ,
Alf. Web ea Ike Greed
Birer Jeb . . |1«M-
Aere Labe Bera at a
Seas . . . BaUdare Um
las ■sear Taaee . .
BelMlas AU Orer Oil*
kswa . . Leela Saar
Leans Hie Mark ea
Oklakeme . . . B-w Ike
ObtlkeMi Blgkway Pa-
Irel OeerelM . . . ehw
taO reverie ea Ike rear's
tleeaee. IISUSM*
btrnkiat. tdwaUtB.
rteallare. Ike «-■ Oaks
aad ns Ctab sreaae.
NORFOLK. Va.. Bept 20 —v*5—Th*
tropical hurricane moving up the At-
lantic seaboard curved sharply east-
ward Tuesday and will not strike the
Norfolk area. Meteorologist John
Murphy said shortly before noon. He
______ said, however, the Norfolk area will
Uve of the concern, who said contents be drenched by heavy rains Tueeday
.—a.--------
Wednesday win attain a velocity of
33 to 45 miles per hour.
moot com,
about (
... an edition which you
will want to preserve for
its authentic facta not
only of the Fair, but
about the state in gen-
eral. Bend copies of it to
your friends. They will
appreciate reading about ?'
Oklahoma and its State »
Fair.
♦ Tuesday, however. Petrescu
Commen, Rumanian foreign
minister, was said to have told
Eduard Heidrich. Czechoslovak
foreign office expert, that the
previous Rumanian promise had
Betow-normal temperatures were
reported generally throughout the
state. Boise City in the panhandle
reported 44 degrees minimum.
All Eyes on Russia
Russia held the eyes of all the rest of Europe Tuesday as the
question of soviet help for the .Czechs rested apparently tn the
hands of negotiators and new border clashes between nazts and
Czechs threatened to wreck efforts to prevent war. The day's
developments as summarized by The Associated Press:
PRAGUE— Border clashes, said by Czechoslovak government to
have been started by Sudeten Germans, threatens peace as '
Prague delivers Its reply to Chamberlain-Daladier peace plan, !
ernment announced Monday night it had delivered its
reply to Britain and France on their proposals to end
the European crisis and that it considered the way was
‘ * Details
of the reply were not revealed but a communique said:
“The attitude adopted makes possible further diplo-
«
IM i ...... ^1
H
Rumania Stalls Soviet Move
To Protect Czechs From Hitler
GENEVA, Sept. 20.—(/P)—Czechoslovakia waa report-
ed Tuesday to have received a Soviet Russian promise of
support if Germany tries to seize Sudetenland but to have
found in Rumania a possible barrier to such aid.
Sources close to the Russian delegation to the league of
nations said Moscow had informed Prague if Czechoslovakia
would resist any German attack she would receive soviet
support.
Russia, however, was described as declaring she could
not guarantee a means of getting soviet men and munitions
into Czechoslovakia, and Rumania took the position she
could not guarantee to permit soviet troop movements
through Rumania.
Both Poland and Rumania separate Russia and Czecho-
PRAGUE, Sept. 20.—(ZD-
Three attacks on Czechoslo-
vak frontier customs houses
by bands of men who were
said to have crossed the l>or-
der from I
with machine guns, hand gre-I
nades and pistols were re-
ported Tuesday by the Czech-
oslovak government.
i The customs house at •
• Klein-Aupa, near Aussig, was
reported burned after l»eing
wrecked by a barrage of hand
grenades. Two Czech offi- MOSCOW—Soviet press assails Chamberlain-Daladler plan.
WARSAW—Poland moves to pave way for annexation of Polish
region of Czechoslovakia.
writ memben was being carried to
idtvidual memben by businessmen,
was learned, while McRill'* pro-
wed ordinance setting up machinery
f which they can be removed by
>te of the people waa to be discussed
r the council at an adjourned meet-
« Thursday at 10 a. m.
In presenting hl« ordinance. McRIll
dmand Pecora, aupreme court Juitice.
win have the opportunity to | ’±±2 , I
i counoiTs Eleclion
nvwu*/ >UM ! UWUBJ HUM . I _ . ■—
The president’s physician adviaed Utllltv Bond Petition
m not to go to the executive office , a recent decision of the su
ueeday morning and Mr Roosevelt court upltolding luffkiency t. —
xordlngly cut down his list of ap- utility revenue bond Initiative peUtlon
nntmenta. He arranged to visit the W1I1 become final at midnight tonight
Tice late in the afternoon for his
lual Tuesday press conference.
A record early cold snap, which
brought the nation’s lowest tem- I
persture to Vinita and frost to
northeastern Oklahoma. ■ yielded
slowly Tueeday before rising tem-
peratures and fair sklea
Vinita's 32 degrees early Tuesday
morning was the first freesing
weather of the season Vinita, in-
cidentally. holds the itater cold
record—27 below on Feb. 13. 1905
Both Pryor and Vinita reported
frost Tuesday, while the mercury In
Oklahoma City dropped to 47 de-
grees. the lowest thus far thu au-
tumn.
Though the forecast called for
wanner weather, the temperature
Wont up alowly here Tuesday morn- |
Within 10 minutes of one success-
ful robbery, a bandit Tuesday after-
noon attempted another, but fled for the Caechs
when EvereU G. Rasberry, operator people would,
of the Hudson Street grocery. «!• h*u8hty I
Bouth Hudson avenue, refused to open r, . s t
his cash register and "looked sround know they 11 be worse off than
for something to knock him in the *hen they were tinder Austria”
head with." ess
I In the first robbery the bandit UE *ald 01,1 for thr*e centuries,
11 when the ancient Bohemian king-
i was an Austrian province.
Illusions as to the kind of treatment.
effort to defend themselves until
I rocket signals brought help from a
gendarmerie patrol.
Prague autjiorities said there was no
doubt that the attacking forces came
from Germany. AU appeared to be
dressed in civilian clothe*. v
Prague Delays Reply
The authorltie* Mid they had evl- man 1
dence that a number of the Invaders crushed
were members of Konrad Henlein'! leap
■free corp*." the mission of which *p- Arriong the passengers on board the
parently is to harass the frontier. Argonaut was J. H Dyer, a vtee-
Theae reports came as the Prague president of the Southern Pa'-ifh
government, confronted with Anglo- railway. Uninjured, he took personal
British dtodomIb to cede the Sudeten- charge of the rescue work. He re-
land to Germany, stalled for time ported that rescue work was delayed ment charging briben.
The cabinet . in the twisted steel'of the heavy October 4 by Uwia R. Morris, county
1 "unac- cars necessitating tlic use of acety-
---------- ' the plan of the western lene torches to cut away metal.
Lains of Bohemia long ago on the in- democracies to partition the republic. ------
Trail of Frank Wilkins, former
British propoMla to cede the Sudeten- . charge of the rescue work He re- ‘ school board attorney, on an Indlct-
was set for
attorney.
The indictment names Wilkins, Ed
Spivey and Roaco Price, the last two
former school Ixisrd member!. a» re- |
of’* NortheMt,fl'h2nM*iwif royalty**to dovakia, but Czechoslovaks took for granted that Poland
r„. would refuse to become a corridor for Russian troops and
Morn* said if the defendants asked talked to the Rumanians.
w n. <. I erod,certiir?urdo‘*heU^ni tiy wukiM A weel< Ruman>* described as having assured
Pay. Oklahoma City, .hock, <the city, nm K ® right of way for soviet troops on their way to
set for trial of the criminal charges help Prague.
j returned against the school board I —-------
members and their associates by the
last grand jury. Bids for All(lilin<
Indication* were no further attempt Qjy Book* Submitted
malning accusations seeking ouster Three blds foe the job of auditing
theb’*rd membeni’ **nre thc 01 the eHT* books in the annual audit
Lhed'm^Lrt’and11" further £££■ by ** chartor' were ,ub’ been on the assumption
lotion could suluUiitiallv change U><- fitted to til* city council Tuesday that
complexion of the new board. and were ordered tabulated.
Meanwhile. Ben Arnold, district D. C. Patterson asked *1,400 for !
Judge. Mid he will confer with Mor- the job; Beavers Auditing Co.,- asked
ria on the earliest possible date for *1.200, and W. B. Haye* asked *1.040. 1
convening the second srand turv It Cnruidmtinn nt tha hot* win K- .
on the water bond issue between
J. K. Well*, bond I ’
Harold Bradburn, leader of
water bond opposition forces.
IVE—Consideration by business men for nine years as a Methodist missionary after having spent 22
of the sdviMbllity of attempting to
get PWA to grant additional time
for the school election so It can be
removed from the September 30
•lection.
Management I rge<l
To Humanize Itself
To End Unemployment
WASHINGTON Sept 20 —OPi— A “ ^oon “ possible after the Wilkins council session.
French delegate told the international
management congress Tuesday that
management will have to humanize
itself to ehminste unemployment and
. pauperism
Alex Brule, vice-president of the
i national committee of French man-
agement. Mid:
"The management of labor Is just
| beginning. It is the task of manage-
to regulate production, dis-
tribution and consumption Perhaps
plenty will have to be limited to a
certain extent, but unemployment and
pauperism must disappear.”
Brule asserted the problem of labor
management is complicated by the ex-
istence of three classes of producers -
the processor of raw materials: the
independent artisan, free of heavy
overhead expenses, and the producer
of raw materials He Mid all differ-
ences between the first two should
be adjusted.
HREE— Demands for removal of the
present school board because of
“public lack of confidence.”
OUR-Opening of campaign hostility THE Sudet<?n Germans, eagerly abetted by Adolf Hitler.
■4 nmiav bwwwasd 4....^, u.s _____r\9 Inreraiae nnw Kssmilas aMaaaawwaiAM* 4wa —
backerr for centuries has fed them, in the opinion of Cari'Nicek, 53-year-
old Putnam City naturalized Caeph
The little bookbinder, who in 1925 returned to his native land
Cart Nieek .... “In tws vears Hiller wont have to Muff.”
Bv BILL KENT
But wo always stuck to-
in Ito struggle to maintain the life of ; by the fact that many were trapped
----------------- — --- ------L_ 2__ „„ the 20-year-old state. UL.
they were polled late Monday by 5rocTrI' P«<»u<*<i hl* pistol and or- are ingrate* is that they settled iu the was reported to have found
man- •»—»-—- — .— ---- - - .........
Next Bunday's Oklahoman ... A 8oov»-
nir Edition . . will teem with new* at
State Fair activities. It will be one of th*
omprehensivs compilations of facto
Oklahoma’s growth and progrea*
10c
years in the United States, feels—as every Czech must—that
France and England have sold Czechoslovakia down the river.
Ant'
for Ifls <.....-
and lets herself be whittled away.
----------------------------------♦ -Either way It's suicide.” he Mid tacker» from the two Ebersdorf I
Tuesday "If they give in they’ll be buildings
terribly mistreated by the Germans. .'.
If they fight^theyll be wiped out.” | glx iXment^f^Twe’re re-
TJE paused, and then Mrcaitically l>orted wounded and Czechoslovak of-
n .ndded. "It might be better to fight nc'r* •everal of lhe ‘“vadera were
That way. If they're all killed, there 111 hurt and dragged back across the
be more room for German settlers.” boundary by their comrade
1 The next txwder incident waa re-
ported from Neusorge. near Braunsu.
CMchoslo-1 where men were Mid to have sur- j
rounded the customs house and bom-
' Here Czechoslovak officials barri-
caded themselves and made no further . ■nd **° unidentified won
to defend themselves until 1 brought into Niland at 8 a.
; day. and five others wer
wreck at that hour.
Slovakian nation, it* leaders have been f.orn?ult^n h°f *n .““JIT, J®
trying to put their own people back A^to French proposal*, but the reply
on an even footing with the emigrant Monday afternoon
Germans of the Sudeten areas he' Th< rablnet went into session at
Mid.
Stands; Board
Duster Urged
Bluff Creek Barken
To Puah Drive: McRill
Aak* School Change*
By HORACE THOMPSON
Demand for ouster of the
pew school board started sim-
Wtaneously in two quarters
(Tuesday as Bluff creek bond
|Mue backers announced their
Decision to go ahead with
plans for the water bond elec-
tion September 30, regardless
bf what the school board does
kbout its bonds.
Scbsol Bsard Under Fire
I Fate of the school board i—
■rapped irrevocably with the
I wo bond issues In the compli-
cated series of moves which re-
mlted In private suggestions
t>*mg made to individual board
members to resign, and in a re-
quest by A. L. McRill. attorney,
for a new ordinance which would
pve voters a chance to reject
>r retain the present board.
Principal events were:
JNE— Decision of Bluff creek bond
backer* to push their campaign for
*3.839 000 water bonds.
two—Decision of school board mem-
ber* not to withdraw their **00.000
school bond election.
He left here s week ago. in- ma<,e lo brln* to UllU the **"
to visit relative* in
psiii.....
liXiM’|
unlea* petition for rehearing 1* filed
before that deadline.
The way is clear to put the meas-
ure on the November 8 bllot unless
rehearing 1* asked. The proixwed
amendment would permit municipali-
ties to i**ue, without popular vote,
| bond* for construction or purchase of
public uUliUss. The bonds would be
retired from earnings of the utility.
Legion Women Elect
a. .......... M LOB ANGELES, Sept M -0H-* '
?• ” P • Thelma Bailey of Michigan was
naon Mlelected chapeau national of the Eight
2 5 3 sod Forty, women's legton society. ,
* ” i Monday night. I
cials were wounded.
< aitema Haute Seised
At Ebersdorf near Friedland,
government reports said, men
who crossed the border shortly ■
before dawn occupied the cus-
toms house for a time and broke
into and took possession of the
postoffice.
Czechoslovak officials then
id as must all Czechs, he can see nothing but trouble ahead returned their fire and a detach-
» country, whether she fights Germany alone or gives in ment of Czechoslovak gendar-
merie finally dislodged the at- .
Patawaw* Ik* S E* a-z4 rv •• P
France would
Czechoslovakia's aid.
He was reported to have de-
clared that now the situation to
changed and if Russia alone <to-
FLTASB TUBN TO
8AOB a COLUMN i uovset
ra mem to teacn the less i.„.
for Csech* how to work with metal*
.nn I always were privileged.” he
and Mid — ,
‘reived far more consideration than
the natives And then, when Austria ot Aussig. Sudeten party stronghold, nue. a leg injury: Mrs Stella Stinson
took our country, they became more Cabinet CsnUnue* Meeting r ; ----------- “r '
privileged than ever, and we Bohe- Although the border fighting directory doe* not list her name; T.
mlans really were oppressed " b.ought new worries to the Prague o. Gray. Mayaville. back injury, and
8inre the formation of the Czecho- «ov<rn,nent lu flr»l concern remained Virginia Green. 73-year-old Tonkawa
*“ - •- the woman, a bruiaed back.
Rupert, a SO-year-old blind palm
reader, has lived in Oklahoma City 27
------- — I yeara
Kolowrat palace at !l:30 a. m. <4:30 tending
I a. m . Central time) with President Francisco.
Eduard Benea absent, but what was
presl- taking place in the council chamber
with | remained a secret.
Because the president was not at-
tending it was believed the govern-
ment waa not ready to draft it* final
conclusions.
Fragile Remains Calm
At Kolowrat palace it was said that
the government was in "diplomatic
contact” with aeveral power* France
they want when they want it—which I Britain. Russia and Poland were
; ; mentioned. All morning automobiles
I “Even their national son* tells thi* diplomat* rolled
■■ -'Deutschland Uber Alles.’ ----------* ------*
tog. reaching only 72 ihorUy before
noon. This reading was three de-
gree* lower than that for the Mme
I time Monday.
The 47-degree minimum la 15 de-
, tree* below the normal for Septem-
ber 20. Mid Wahlgren. though not a
record since the temperature feU to
41 degrees Sept 20. 1*0* The
freezing temperature at Vinita, Mid
the weatherman, u "unusually
early.” Wahlgren. however, doubt-
ed If the frost Injured anything ex-
rvewnmendodaq Oklahoma City Times
EditorialXpjur01> * Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper Published in Oklahoma
----------------- ge (Evening Edition of The Dally Oklahoman)
V0L XLIX. NO. 104. EIGHTEEN PAGES-OKLAHOMA CITY, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1938.
e e e
rtfUTASARYK (late Czech
Ivl dent) was too lenient
: them at that.” he Mid. "He was very
But tiie Germans even re-
sented the Caech* putting up atreet
and road signs in the Caech tongue
alongside of German signs ”
In the ultimate, he believes It ts im-
jiosslble for the Germans to be satu-
rn the case September 12 after tour
week* of testimony on the state * r.
charge that Hines acted a* political n hl m nd everything.
. "front” for the policy racket headed
by the late Arthur "Dutch Schult*,'
Flegenhelmer.
The mistrial wm ordered after
— Prosecutor Dewey made a reference L>
The Weather
lit—Fahi ‘ »•« «ati_ ___
u WaSMaSar. fair sag waeaar.
Provisions of reply not revealed.
BERLIN—German official news agency blames clashes on Czecho-
slovakia.
but hitch develops when Rumania delays agreement to let
red troops cross her territory.
LONDON—Prime Minister Chamberlain ready for second talk with negotiations in the spirit of conciliation which th®
Adolf Hitler as soon as Prague reply to received. Czechoslovak government has always shown.”
PARIS—France .reported to have told Czechoslovakia she would An Unofficial but informed source said the note “11
not fight. acceptance in principle but makes a number of impor*
tant reservations.”
The note replied to communications delivered Mon-
day morning by the British and French ministers, em-
bodying the agreement reached by the premiers of
>?,w’ apd Hungarta11 Britain and France in London Sunday.
envoys, hinting .st possible deal to join forces if war comes. London di„patches said the propoSala included ee^
------? **** ** sion of Czechoslovakia’s Sudeten areas to Germany and
FTT » w • i other terms.
/ Pt! KillPfr ' x 7 /» Iff >*£>z7 Th^communique was issued a« thousands of Czecho«l>
•* * Xz AkCl tC f / ULJU1 vak troops were*ordered on the alert in the Sudeten area to
r__ /’If • • n *1 (leal witb incursions from across the German border such
111 LClllTOntlCl Kail Crash iW *ere reported earlier in the day.
Antiaircraft gun crews around the president's palace
and government buildings kept watch for enemy bombera
Monday night while the cabinet concluded its fateful debate
■ on the Chamberlain-D'aladier plan and sent its reply to Lon-
NILAND, Calif., Sept. 20— (4*)—Ten persons killed and at least don.
77 injured, many so seriously they probably will die, was the toll The city took the latest war threats with accustomed
of a ra»road wreck near here early Tuesday. Czech calm. The grass-covered park on Kolowrat hilL
tram Ar«on»ut-CTBC,k Southern Pacific where the president’s palace and the foreign ministry are
speed -?nto a siding where it* siver^tr^?" "iir ° located, took on a war-like appearance, however, as squads
V ' **• j of soldier, manned Rkamin/.ntiaircr«ft guna in dngouU.
Five ot the dead, three trainmen
and two unidentified women, were
. m. Tues-
--....---were at the - D •!
Most of the dead and Injured were ID OFlDCry ludSC
aboard the Californian rw. ww ** ■
8 C. "Happy” Mason, engineer
aboard the Californian, leaped to
safety on the shout from his fire-
--- ” E Martin Martin was
to death before he could
DX—Statement by Mayor Martin
that as the school election call had
- Bandit Gets $7 In
IXVEN—Statement by Martin that if
the council refuses to adopt McRlll's
ordinance calling for a school bos rd
vote, he wUl call the election inde-
pendently of the council if the
measure 1* initiated.
Welk Defends Stand
Well* announced the decision of hl*
Munittee to push the water bond
smpaign when he appeared before
w council with heated denials of
^position charges that he claimed
Hacked his motives in supporting the
sndis *
He referred to published pamphlets
sued from anti-bond headquarters
r charge of Bradburn, which recalled
fells' opposition to Fort Supply
ater bonds on grounds that present
ty officials "couldn't be trusted” to
indie the money.
Bradburn replied briefly, stating
lat "Well* and I know where we
ich stand on thi* proposition
Special Meeting (ailed
Although school board member*
ere not sufficiently anxious to hold
leir election to force Martin to call
Trial of Wilkins
at the
Thomas E. Dewey'* request for trans-
fer of the second trial of James J.
I Hrnes. Tammany district leader, to
| the court of general sessions.
Justice Pecora declared a mistrial
• »MW I WCpKHiWI
weeks of testimony on ths state's
I charge that Hine* acted a* political
—’Deutschland Uber Alles? or Ger- lnb“. lhe cobb,eaton*d palace court-
Hitter wta w co^tX1herUw«Vty sto^ f*»ng It
there. He’ll take Hungary and Ru- been ,1(* *own Britain and
resident Roosevelt was confined to testimony before'a*"srand lu'rv'tn anJ manla and V>en he'll be the leading *™nc*’ retatoe® lta outward calm,
is living quarter, to the White XTSie Ths drteme ^ntendrt «Uropean nation, in a position to die- There ^ manifestations of
OUST Tuesday with a cold. the Ju twUmon>. WM 0Ut41de t*te He's bluffing now. In two year* plxabi TUXN TO n . ' ment
Aid* Mid it is * recurring he^l cold the scope of toe trial. “• wonl have to blu" " 1 5 COLUMK • Llashea
hich beam Monday aftemonn and '
Vinita Is Nation's Cold Spot
At 32; Warmer Weather Is Due
tlw bandit
took between »6 and »7 from the cash
register of toe Rosa grocery, 1120 <*°*B waa Austrian province.
Northwest Sixth street, after point- They were always trying to make us
tog a revolver at Mrs. Dorothy Rom. Germans, r * —
operator J gether ”
He then went to the Hudson Street The reason he thinks the Sudeten*
------------------ dered Rasberry to give him the rich iron. coal, and mineral* moun- ceptable”
ter, and declined to call it off after money. | *---- ~ ------- __
*° “ r“” Oklihw*““ *7
gn the election proclamation. The grocer turned to look for Csech* how to work with metal*. After report* of border clashes Hurt ill Traill Wreck
Ros* Lillard, board president. *aid U’The°bLndit' tted /nd "They al*>y* wre Privileged.” he Pr»su« promptly clapped martial law Among the injured in the train Md*Roy‘smith'
9 special campaign 1* planned by T “nd ‘ ,,wl ,nd said. "They were tax free and re- three more Sudeten diatricts. m- wreck were four Oklahompn*. Frank y
e board in favor of the school bonds. "S1*, J" ‘ c*r’ drived f.r more consideration than chiding much of the tereltory north \(. Rupert. 20South Harvey ave- |
H teacher* and principal, probably ***“ IurnWh«1'---------- ----- -* * - ---------*"*------ ------— ----------------- -------
^o?dklXtTtrona ln ““ rBrt°U‘ The SrT'fe^mute. later wm
\ I found abandoned double parked in toe
P^n™A!?Lthe r^Xtwtlons of all | 100 block South Hudson avenue. 1
Pecora Grants Dewey
Plea to Move Hines
Trial to Another Court
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 49, No. 104, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 20, 1938, newspaper, September 20, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1764748/m1/1/: accessed July 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.