Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 227, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1931 Page: 1 of 14
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LATEST NEWS
A Bttto later toaa ta anted kf
iu oUmt paper received ta Chick-
Oomptau Aaodsted
by
WEATHER
Oklahoma: Omerally Mr tanlaht
and Saturday; warmer tonight
Local Temperatures Lari 34 boon:
High tl; low It
VOLUME 32
Fourteen Pages
CHICKASHA OKLAHOMA FRIDAY OCTOBER 9 1931
in
NUMBER 227
XI
Jl
OIL FIELDS DUE
Governors Order Lifts Shut-
down and Flush Produc-
tion Again Allowed.
NO BACKING DOWN"
SAYS COUSIN CICERO
Price Is Below Demand of $1
Barrel Made by Chief;
Men Back to Work. .
' fw'-Knma City Oct f . (F Flush
eU production In Oklahoma bald
below tho ground lor M day
poveraor Murray"! martial law ahnt-
down eomaa hack again tomorrow.
Although tha prte of a band of
erudo oU atm la about M canto from
tha top tha goeemor aaya la aquM-
abla hla coueln. Lteut Co. fSlewo
L Murray. In charge of the shut-
down. toalated thera.wu no buktag
down1 In tha demand far higher
crude prtoaa and eaplalnad tha
jwopcnlng enactor at. 7 a. . tp-
momw la a relief meaaara.
OoL Murray predicted rtl
In tha Mid-Continent would liaa to
the SI lwai Governor Murray
goal In 10 days.
What affect the dcclate to re-
cocs rtelda would hen on Coventor
Munayh threat to obtain II oil
Mm tha flelde refine it at etote ra-
flnariaa and eeU It at "Bill Mur-
ray filling ataUcnk could not he
determined for Oaramor Murray
declined to comment hnaedlatdy.
It wee believed he would
nutement later In the day.
Munayh newact nm cama after
a eanferencs tact bight wW Okla-
homa city and greater. Bemlnote
opmtQKV.
-The goeemor never laid he would
keep the flelde ahut down until tl
per barrel was paid" .aald Cicero
Kcskcw rwa jmiA ha thought the
Mg eempanlaa ought to 'pay that
much to mate a fair priea end com
the coat of production.
1 As setups were taken to flu
allowances and prepare ff-ah welle
tor tha reopening. OoL Muny gars
tour reasons why Me equein lifted
tha curb.
-The prims contributing factor1
ha said "la unamplcyiiienL sad tha
fact that raoppeninf of the flelde
will put thoueanda of wn to work.
-Another factor Is oat the little
fellows In tha oil taoueby are toe-
i lng receivership and bankruptcy
Wa couldn't wait around for
further increase in
1 everybody In the
priea and
he
let
-The 'state waa lmlng thoueanda
of dolls In oU tax revenue.
-Banka holding paper for oU men
am being crippled and a eerk
situation might develop.
OoL Murray said the Texas rail-
road comm lesion would tew
order tomorrow reducing tha per
wen allowance tor the great cast
Texas field from US to 1M barrels
dally and added "If they hold to this
and the uncertainty of the eltuatloa
In Texas la straightened out tha
price at ends oU in tha Mid-Continent
win be up to $1 a hand with-
in go daya.
Military rule wU continue after
tha walla are reopened. The state
corporation rnrinileetnn win w(
out new - allowables for prorated
poole on tha bails of an Oklahnma-Hanaaa-Taxaa
production agreement
and Oklahoma dally average pro-
duction likely win be S4IAOO barrels
instead of tha former ttOJBOO barrels.
Corporation eomalesiauen pointed
out that tha former proration order
has been . extended until Oct IS
production being fixed at d per cent
of potential 19 to that tone.
AetMtiw of tha ecamlarion win
how the Governor do-
te operate the proration sys-
tem Paul Walker commleelon chair-
man aald. Whether the umpire
ystam of proration administration
win continue le not known. Otto
Bradford. Oklahoma city field um-
pire already has resigned. .
Prank Russell oil man who yester-
day dismissed a federal suit to en-
join enforcement of to. ehutdown
aald today ha did sa In order to
force a reopening of tha lblda Mur-
ray. however denied that tha
withdrawal had anything tp do pith
the reopening.
Hasty preparations werb being
made in tha Oklahoma Cttji Bald
today on tha eve of tha reopening.
Tha gnat ana. with a rated po-
tential of . UUOOOfiOO barrels dally
has bean nhnoet completely abut In.
It was estimated resumption of pro-
duction. would put 3400- men to
PEPPER IS ACTOR
St Louie Oct Sj ( Mn
Leonard nun Martin la
going to be a stags actor.
-The ..1SS1 world series hero
signed a contract before the
sixth garne today tor a abort'
vaudeville tour opening hen to-
night . Bo is scheduled to ap-
pear in Chicago next week with
other elites to follow..
HE TRAVELS FAR
Without leaving Hew York har-
bor Sigurd Christiansen (above)
has dona enough salt water voy-
ilng to ban circled tha glo
five times. He a veteran skip-
per of government boats that meet
incoming linen outside the metrop-
olis. Christiansen makes about BOO
ten-mite ptet tripe every year-
end averages about tour cigars Uka
tha ana heh seen smoking hen to
n trip.
CARNIVAL MAN
IS BADLY HURT
Em plays ef Beckman and Gaiety
Bhswi Fills taler Wkaeis ef
Trail Han Lets Thars-
fiy Night
Mika OBrien employe of the
Beckmann and Oerety Bhowi qarnlr
ealeempany playing at "13e Grady
County Free Mr hen. le in
eerloua condition hi a local hospital
today from injuries he note
when ha wee caught under tha
wheels of tha carnival train aa It
was pulling out of the Bock Island
yank hen Thursday night at f:U
oclock.
Hla right atm mangled and his
head believed injured. OBrien waa
found lying between the sixth and
seventh track on the back aids of
Rock Island yards by Dee WUeox-
aon switchman at about 11 o'clock
Thursday night tt waa neeaan
to amputate tha mangled am near
tha shoulder and hospital attend-
ants said hie skull may be frao-
tund. -
OBrien Thursday night was not
ablo to gtvo a coherent atatement
nlatlve to tha accident and could
not answer attendants at the hos-
pital when asked which ana of tha
shows in the carnival company ha
was connected with.
Bock Island employes here were
In ccnununlcatloQ . with the eh
train at Waurikallbut ware Informed
that them ware five OBriens with
the show.
Vrtday morning the man told hla
attending surgeon that hie home la
at Unwood GsL and that ha has
been working on tha many-go-rouhd
In tha carnival no said that ha
fen (Tom tha show train aa ttu
pulling out of tha yards. .
EDISON CLINGS
TO LIFE TODAY
Vitality Surprises Physicians Bat
Balietia gays Unit Iavmtsr
Is Steadily Lartag
West Orange H. J-' Oct. .()
Thomas Edison displaying st
prising vitality. Clung to lift today
although hla own physician and a
consultant aald the . end waa no
A bulletin on condition of Urn
l year-old brventor issued by Dr.
Hubert A. Howe nod: "Mr. Edison
ha undoubtedly lost considerable
strength and b In a dam all the
Dr. William R. Williams of Cor-
nell Medial College arrived with
Dr. Hows last night to see Mr.
ion. Dr. Williams told tha fam-
ily that Mr. Edison was. gradually
losing ground..
Hew York and New Jersey police
arranged today to: furnish a motor-
cycle escort to Dr. Havre during his
taqueng; tripe 'to the Edison estate
use Dr. Bows might be .called
at any-moment of the day or night
to speed to the Inventor's bedside.
The entire Edleon family was at
Wart Orange today. .HU .daughter.
Mm. Marian Our arrived from Nor-
walk .Omni completing tbs' family
group 1
Telephone and telegraph rmrgn
arrived throughout tha day. Boms
of tha phona alien were Pnddent
Boom Cardinal Hayes and Henry
Rord. . :
Heavy damage to telephone and
telegraph cables in Slam baa been
traced to an insect named the car-
penter boo -
Lnrson Selects Board to Work
with Council in Study-
inf New Program.
BODY 3IEETS TODAY
TO START ITS WORK
Water Plant Project Din-
cussed; Sub-Contracts Are
Given Approval
The dty council Thursday night
confirmed Mayor Jess L. Lanoq
appointment ef a citlame advisory
committee to review the 'proposed
new Southwestern Light and Rower
company1! franchise with offlcem
of the company requesting that the
franchise bearing an agreement tor
reduction in electrical fates ha sub-
mitted to voters of the city In the
near future although the old flan-
ehba doer not expire until 1(32.
1 Members of the committee ap-
pointed by Mayor Larson am:
S. O. Durbin temporary chair-
nan an attorney and former mayor;
Jaff Williams attorney and secre-
tary of the Retail Merchants asso-
ciation: A. J. Puckett e xtractor
and former member of tha city
council; Ben F.. Morgan a burlneer
man In Chick asha for a number of
yearn; K. H. Mulllcan. manager of
the WaahHa. Valley Abstract com-
pany. Mayor Larson announced that tha
committee will mot Friday after-
noon at 4:10 oclock perfect Its or-
ganisation -and prepare to meat
with the council mmmttlne tor Urn
purpoae of renewing franchise. Al-
dermen John Casey announced that
the council committee b prepared
to mart with the d Hams' commit-
tea at any time.
After considers hie dbcusekm the
council voted to allow contractors
a second eetlmatr on the dtywatriC
works construction project. Aider-men-
Bab and Casey raised ?m-
Hone regarding tha estimate $11.-
020 JO stating . that they believed
tha figure too high and that money
should not be allowed tor materlab
on hand but only tor work actually
completed. City Engineer Jama
DuBoss laid that approximately one-
third of the work has been com-
pleted and J. D. Carmichael iity
attorney explained that . tha eon-
tract alb for payment of M per
cent for labor performed and ma-
terials delivered upon tho work the
bet day of each month obeerving
that tha eontractaa may include In
their claims amounts covering ma-
terials on the ground.
Mayor Lanon announced that W.
O. Pltchford has been awarded tha
eub-eantmet far electrical wok on
tha project and the sub-contract
waa accepted by the coundL It was
rotated out by Mayor Lamm that
an possible sub-contract work has
now been awarded to local firms
or tadMdaub with W. X. Bdmistan
handling excavation and concrete
work Blegar and Foreman brick
work L. W. Blka' painting and B.
F. Bidding tha carpenter work.
With threw mem ben objecting on
tho ground ef an economy pin
the council voted to oend tha tons
memben of tha water rnnfirtttar
to the national waterworks conven-
tion ta Hew Orleans. Joined In toe
view of Alderman Casey Alderman
Bala old tort ha realised It
been customary to send the body
to toe convention and tort Informa-
tion of value can be received from
attending toe meeting but evpremid
toe opinion that toe dty should
not atand the expense Involved ta
of present condition. Alder-
Chine hog. Clarkson. Darnell
and Waver voted to oend tha com-
mittee to too convention Darnell
and Weaver voted to and tot com-
mittee to toe convention with Aider-
man Rab Caaey and Williamson
opposing toe motion. Alderman A. B.
Yaary waa afarant having ban -injured
ta an accident at tha toir
groumb during the afternoon.
With one member immuh w.u
opposing the move on the groumb
that it win work a hwhwip qq
many and insisting that mom torn
should ha allowed too council in-
structed the chief of police to en-
force tot ordinance ordering the re-
moval ef all gasoline pumps signs
and other obstructions from ride-
walks and curbs. The ordinance wee
pawed early ta tha summer but its
enforcement wee p rirl until
October 1
Alderman Darnell asserted ha did
not believe too council should delay
action further ta vbw of tot fact
that streets are made unrighQy by
tea boxes. pumps signs and other
obstructions and that Theyll b
moving Into the streets toe. next
thing we knoir. Be flayed what
ha termed hick town ideal. .
Application for taxi-cab lieenia
and cab drivers Hanoi wen ra-
te toe police oommlttee
mayor and Chief of Folia Ben
FhiUtpe with each application to be
examined carefully by tha special
body.
Following tho adoption of a mo-
tion' Instructing the mova. Mayor
Unon named tha ftaana com-
mittee to taratigata toe proposition
Continued On Pago Eight)
i- ..
Qrady County Fair Passes
Into History On Thursday
Night With New Mark Set
Tha sixteenth annual Orady
County Fteo Fair paced Into his-
tory hem Thursday night and toe
tart of tha exhibits were bring re-
moved from too grounds today.
Attendance bto Thursday after-
noon and early ta the evening fell
off rapidly and toe carnival com-
pany made preparations to mova
early ta tha evening. Its train bar-
tag tor tha Texas Bute Mr at
Delhi shortly baton M - o'clock
Thursday night A email crowd
witnessed the final pertormana in
toe grandstand at Orady field Thurs-
day night.
Many of tha small article wen
removed from the fair grounds
Thuraday night by to exhibitors
while mort of too livestock and
community exhlbiU remained ta toe
buildings until Friday. '
Officers of to fair board have
More Than 25000 Workers Strike
As Wage Cuts Hit Industrial Area
Of Massachusetts; Movement Grows
Boston Oct f . mUan than
BBfiOO Jobs went begging ta Maso-
chu cite today aa worked Incensed
by announeed reductions ta wages
or by unsatisfactory working condi-
tions walked toe etraeta on strike
The general strike movement
having its center ta toe textile city
ef Lawrence when approximately
22000 men and women left their
borne and bencha rather than ac-
cept a ten per cent reduction of
wage had spread to other an-
ted. In Baton approximately 3000
Longtaoramcn wort refusing to han-
dle cargo on too coastal and for-
eign Vasils plying ta and eut of
tola part although to crux of their
quarrel with too ehlp owners waa
not entirely a matter of .wages hut
centered with grater gravity on eh
wnrkinr condition. ...
In too textile city of Lowell a
geographical neighbor cf Lawrence
trike talk had brewed several daya
and wu transformed into ' action
yseferday when more toon 300 am-
ployu left ana of too mills.. An
announced ten par cent wage rat
ben alio wu too motivating ele-
ment. Several hundred workers ta
a hosiery manufacturing plant ta
Northampton objecting to wags re-
ductions succeeded -in forcing too
doing of the plant. Them wu no
Indication of an early artttement of
toe differences.
The dty of Lawrence with Its
prindpal industry practically idle
b In to worst predicament. Yester-
day strikers pickets succeeding ta
WATER IS SEEN
Washita River Lowest In
Yean Bat City Plant Is
Supplied Adequately.
White tha Washita river ta at
toa lowest point it hu been ta
yasra B. B. McBumett superin-
tendent of too dty water depart-
ment old today tort then ta no
tiger of shortage In to citys
water supply.
With tor Southwestern Light
and Power company keeping toe flush
hoard up ou Its dam below toe
terworka intake we have no
trouble ta getting enough water to
apply too dty McBumett akL
"If toa Bush boards were removed
wa would bava the same difficulty
wa had two yean ago when the
river level dropped below toe Intake
Une.
At the preeent tone the river b
carrying a volume of water many
men times than the amount needed
for consumption ta toe dty.
BALL IS ACQUITTED
Houston' Texas Oct Bi(n Col-
onel Thomas Ball former ccngreee
man and long n leader In Texu
poUUcs charged with theft of war-
rants In connection with a port cem-
mlselon land deal hen in 1(27 erne
acquitted of tha charge in an in-
structed verdict returned bera to-
day. ORDER CANNON REPORT
Washington Oct. (F) 1 Tha Dta-
trict of Columbia supreme court to-
day ordered William Tyler Fags
clerk of toa - housg of repraeenl
rives . to produa before a ' grand
Jury tot original p-ig- fund
reporta of Bishop Ames Cannon Jr.
TULSA STORE BOBBED
Tuba. Oct. ftn Cracksmen
tart night -. robbed the safe of a
retail store hero aof $1000' after
entering by means of a rap dropped
through a brofeei skylight. -
CLARA COMING BACK '
Hollywood WPV A film aetnra who
went into temporary retirement a
few months ago aa a platinum
blonde b coming back tota time as
a redhead ttk dan Bow.
termed to fair ana of to mort
wire ess ful In to point of too num-
ber and quality of entries ta the
county's history.
The quality ef term products
livestock. 4-H club work and ax-
hibtta ta tha womens department of
tha toir tote year and to interest
shown In the fair has been gratify-
ing." aid M. E. Brihert president
of the board. Our only regret b
that premiums this year win not
be as targe aa they ban been ta
the put qrhlte we win not be abb
to line up too premium Usta until
after all expena have been paid
exhibitor must reallxe that to fair
appropriation ha been cut BO per
cent We have cut expense of tot
fair this year lower than aver be-
fore seeking to give toe exhibitors
the benefit of riy laving tort could
drawing away sufficient workers tq
cripple tho lart of tho large Ameri-
can Woolen company plants to oper-
ate. In addition tho Pacific Mills
and Arlington Mills employing
targe numbers were rileweed.
The mill owners In this elty con-
tend that unlaw a reduction of ten
per cent In wagu b made effaeOra
their mills cannot eurvivs -tha
ruinous competition from ether
centers when toe prevailing wages
are lower and. ta some Instances
the working day longer. The work-
era on toe other hand claim tost
If a ten per cent eut ta permitted
the wage level will have sunk con-
nderably below the cost of Hvtag.
Tho Introduction ef too National
Textile Worfcen Union a eommuntat
organise tloa Into tho affair ta Law-
non hem -dvte leaden aeant ta-
i cnaaed-. ihcK dtffbuttp . f afbetlag
compromises.
Unto yesterday when tha immi-
gration authorities whisked her to a
detention station ta Baton tom
to await settlement of toe question
of her deportation. Edith Berkmsn
fiery young organiser tor toe union
had exhorted toe strikers each day
and ta n recent address claimed re-
sponsibility for too strike. Her plan
turn been taken however by flophta
Melvin another young organiser in
toa meanwhile the United Textile
Woken of America which b affili-
ated with to American Federation
of Labor ha been rallying toa
woekan to its standards and to a
degree hu had toe support of tha
municipal authorities.
Women Would See Her Ap-
pointed to Senatorial Seat
to Succeed Husband.
Hldgewood B. J. Oct (. B) Tha
Mrs. Morrow for United States
Senator. cry raised by memben of
toa Womcnk Republican dub of
Ridgewood gained momentum today
u persona prominent ta New Jeney
polltlra approved toa enggiuHim.
Mrs. 1. B. Thornton president of
tha Ridgewood crganlmtlon wrote
ta behalf of toa dub to Governor
Larson ' asklrr him to . appoint
Dwight W. Morrow widow to hb
tmexpirad term u she repraonte
too highest type of American wem-
Mra. Morrow helped1 her husband
conduct hb cenatorlal campaign lart
year and often spoke over too radio
and at dub rallies.
If appointed. Mrs. Morrow would
be toa . second woman to nedva
such honors. Georgia oat Mrs. Re-
becca Latimer Felton to toe eanate
tor 33 hours on tho drato of Sena-
tor Thomas F. Wataon. U waa an
Interim appointment only and Wal-
ter F. George succeeded her after
she had mads on speech far the
mate. x.
WILL
ROGERS')
says:
Beverly Hills CaL Oct A
Hera why didnt you tell mo what
tota fellow "Fepperi Martin from
Oklahoma waa doing? X had been
ta Mexico all tota rims and hadn't
heard a thing X would have flew
clear there to era that fellow
Oklahoman operate. Why I can't
hear a thtag of Hoover Borah
Coolldg Alma Capon or Gand-
hi. 'Well than wu never a time
when a man that would do some-
thing ta mars appreciated or a
novelty than ha b today. It looki
Uka Governor Murray and Marita
In TL Yours
. . WILL ROGERS
liF IS
builRT
Bentley Accused of Killing
Young Merle King on
Rush Springs Farm.
SELF DEFENSE IS
CLAIM HE ADVANCES
Saji Hs Had Been Threat-
ened bjr Deceased; Griffin
Freed of Charge.
' Oeeu Bentley fl-year-oid defend-
ant In toa Kyrb King homicide
cue pleaded aelf-defem charging
that ha bad been caused to fear
young King baauo of hla .threat!
and tha warning given hla by thorn
whoa adviae ha had sought when
ha took the witness stand ta to
trial of tha murder charge ta dis-
trict court here Friday
Bentley b charged with shooting
King with a shotgun November 13
1330 after they had had trouble
growing out ef Bentkyk Instruc-
tions to King to more from the
farm which Bentley wu renting
from Dr. J. W. Finley's alb south
of Rush Springe.
With tha state and defense calling
more than 40 wltneaae when toe
trial wu taken up .Thuraday to
state rated its case shortly before
noon Friday and Bentley wu the
first detenu witnaa.
The state's contention ta the trial
vru that King had moved to the
farm operated by Bentley and
given pnueeelon of tho houu where
be lived with hb wife and mother
Mir Tobe King under aa i
mnt with Bentley that they would
help pick hb cotton crop ' Tho two
later - broke theta agreement
Bentley ad vised King tort ha would
Aura to mow from the houu ta arte-
te-jnake b. available for other
hands to help with too crop. King
the -state cbfana wu not Aid
mova immediately arid wu not given
written aotio.- It wu'torihar al-
legi.. that King had sited Bentley
to pay the rent on a bout ta Rush
Springs that hr might move.
On to morning of the hemtefata
Bentley wu unloading a wagon of
corn at tha bam when Bentley walked
up to a gate at tlw comer of the
barn and at that time tha total
shot wu flredi - Mrs. King.' widow
of tor deceased testified that aha
wu standing ta the yard at th
houu when too heard the toot find
but wu not able to au tha too
men at tha ham until eh had run
about half way to th bam and tort
Bentley told her to go back when
she uw her husband lying on tha
ground in front if tha gate. She
uld that Bentley wu coming out
of the bam and vru doling the
door when she tint uw him.
Tha etate sought to show that
tha-ahot wu fired bom behind the
bam ter while Bentley testified
Mday morning that ha wu
tying com into th bam when he
heard King at tha gate behind him
and that King told him ho
going to carryout threats he had
previously node. Bentley tasbted
that toa threats and warning! given
him by friends had caused him to
fear King and that he picked up tha
shotgun which stood st the left of
tho bam door u he backed out
Bo laid ha fired tha shot -with the
mutate of the gun about tour feet
bom tha min
Bentley testified young King had
told him about "shooting hb daddy.
Tobe King father of Meryl King
wu totally wounded by a pistol bul-
let In a Chlckasha roaming house
about a yew before hb soak death.
Authorttba took no action against
Meryja King in connection with hb
father's death. B. F. Holding former
county attorney holding - that the
discharge of tha pistol had been
accidental th derision bate on
Tab Kings atatement before hb
death.
Tha following Jury to hearing the
trial:
K E Batcher Clay Hardesty Paul
Kgueon O. W. Grant Ray
Beata C. W. OdenaU J. S. Hinton.
. A. Robbins Clark Trammell R.K
lishon. Pellum Williams JeM Marker.
A Jury ta district court Thuraday
afternoon returned a verdict of not
guilty ta the cau of C. Q. Orlffm
who vru charged with embeariement.
- IS AWARDED TBOPHY
Edmonton Ala. n Bearish news
for th wheat pit. Jama Xbriett
of Rad river hu been awarded the
provincial government eiber trophy
tor .wheat rrtetng.- Hb crop averaged-
73 bushels on acre in a II-
acro field.' .
- NO MUSIC TABIJT
New York (AV-JWch Kleiber con-
ductor of the Philharmonic Sym-
phony orchestra sees no nte far a
tariff an music nnopcau can't
play jam and Americana are not so
d when it coma- to Vienna
waltoee. In hb opinion.
Mark Moaa a Texu .ranchman
hu caught 4L00O bunards ta the
part 10 yean by means of a specially
designed trap.
TREE DIVIDED
Oconto Wia Oct
One side of Chsrka Lawrence's
apple tree doesn't know what
the other side b doing.
La wren town of underbill
farmer today showed neighbors
hb crab appta tree ta hla front
yard. On tha north rtda ripe
fruit hangs from tha branches
he eald and on tha ether aide
tha- tree b cowed with
aom. Lawrence said
rainy weather was responsible
for tha tree divided against Itself.
"LOVE CLINIC"
AT UNIVERSITY
TO BE OPENED
Chicago Oct Ojin northwest-
ern University of Bvaneton b going
.to open a love clinic with branches
la hath Evanston and Chicago.
GouplM contemplating marriage
may taka their troubles ta toe
clinic and get a stop" or To
signal from tha experts.
Coup 1m already married" and
wondering If they mad a mletake
win be given advice.
rrofeieor Arthur J. Todd heed
of toa department of aoctohigy. will
direct the clinic toe purport of
which will be to make tones hap-
pier and ensbb Professor Todd
and hb associates ta gather a
give ter collection of facto ta en-
rich to sciences ef psychology co-
dology and economic.
MUCH OF STATE
Growers Chief Saye Between
25 and 40 Per Cent of
Crop Iu Harvested.
.
Oklahoma City Oet I. (FH-Between
3S and 40 per cent of Okla-
homa1 cotton crop hu ban ginned
A. K Kobe genera) manager of to
Oklahoma Cotton Cfrowera. reported
today following a meeting of tha
groupie directors.
Ha aald th report of .directed
bowed the grub of cotton b much
better than bat yew.
Meaawhlb tha artimats ef tha
state's cotton crop wu reduced SL-
000 balu fat tha October report of
the Ohtehnma City bureau of esti-
mates of the department ef agricul-
ture. On Sept. 1 too crop wu esti-
mated at 1 .224.000 barrels; toa Oc-
tober erttanato placa toe figure at
1195000 baba.
R ot dry weather eaute shedding
of bto blooms and small bolli toe
report uld. Cottcvl' opened prema-
turely and very few unopened bolls
are left except ta bottom lamb
favored by early season rains. Rainy
weather in October may result ta
loss of aome of toe unpicked crop
toa report added.
Crop prospects declined mart ta
west central and routh western eoun.
tia but Improved ta the eastern
WILL NOT AFFEAB IN OPERA.
New York in AI Smith hu been
-Indira tod. Mary Carden hu re-
turned ftom Europe with toa an-
nouncement that ate ta not going
to appew ta open thia seam but
wUl be heard ta concerts and on toe
raddle. That'S toa way Mr. Smith
pranounooi lt too.
LIBERATORS SCHOOL DOOMED
New Lexington O. (AV-The Pig-
eon Boot achool erected ta 1130
and attended by Januariua Aloyslue
MacGahan th liberate" of Bul-
garia b to be raud. Macflahan
died ta Constantinople after an ad-
Conservation of Natural Resources '
Spreads From Oil Fields to Coal And .
Lumber Regions Over United States
Washington. Oct. I. in The
to control natural re-
through state agreements
exemplified particularly by tha ef-
fort of Texu California and OUs-
to curtail oil production b
regarded by tha Hoover administra-
tion u of unueual significance.
Tha mat recent step in toll di-
rection hu been token by the bttu-
coel Industry. Operators
faced with shutdowns or running
at a lass have aefced th governor
of Fennaylvanlp Wert Virginia Ken-
tucky and (told to appoint eommta-
tions to study toe possibility of an
ta tar-state compact controlling
production.
Thera have bon faidlatlona of a
growing sentiment among lumber
men particularly on to west cout
to apply to asms principle to their
Industry. A strong trad organisa-
tion however will he given a chance
demonstrate He ability to deal
with - production before any steps
are taken toward a etate compact
Th ' etate compact fates had its
origin fat tha Colorado river basin
compact entered into by to state
alongside that stream u toa pre
FOXX REGISTERS
FIRST TALLY ON
Grove Selected by ConuM
Mack to Check Drive of
SL Loui nOutfit.
DERRINGER STARTS
FOR GABBY STREET
Skipper Pins Faith in Big
Rookie Defeated In First
' Game of Series.
Sportsman's Park St Louta Oet
( MV-Bobert Mom Grove toa Ath-
letics celebrated southpaw wu se-
lected to pitch too elxth game of
too world serMi today ta preference
to hb Georg Ewnahsw. Orovce
opponent wu Faul Derringer young
right hander of too Cardinal.
Flirt ' Inning
ATHLETICS Bishop up Ballon
e. strike one called. Strike two
Blehop fanned on a ailed tofad
etrike.
Hsu up: Ftoul. etrlk on agabut
Wiper deck. Ball one low Hau
"rounded out. Octant to Bottaafley.
Cochrane up: Ball one low. Bell
two low. Cochrane lined out to
Octant.
Bo rune no hit no tmo. none
ft.
CARDIN ALB Flowers up: Ban one
high. Ball-two taulde. Strike on.
Foul etrike two over toe
roof behind the plate. Flowers
grounded out Bishop to Itn on
hud smash.
Bottger 19: Ball one high. Strike
ic. called. Roettger crashed a
to center.
Frieeh -up: FrieCh bounced to
Bishop and a double pJeF wu com-
pleted Bishop to WUlia mi to Fen -No
m one bit no error now
left.
Slnunona ap: BaU one low.
mane .bounced out. Merit ta
tamley.
Mm drove s single to right.
Miller grounded to Octant and.
Pdxx wu toned out at eecond. Gil-
bert to Frisch.. Miller but toe relay
to flirt.
Dykes up: Ban on. Inside. Btrika
one ailed. Foul strike two. tat
toe cardinals' dugout. Ball two. In-
side. Dykes grounded out' Flowers
to Bottomley. Ho run on hit no
errors on left.
No stolen baa wu credited to
Miller.
CARDINALS Martin up Th .
crowd bellowed. BaU one. Inside.
Bfrlka one aDed. Martin fouled
out to Poxx.
Baby up: Bafey filed to Baa
who made a pretty running catch
ta short center.
Bottomley up: Ban one fauida.
Bottomley filed out to Miller who
took the baU with hb back against
th rlghtfield barrios.
No rune no hits no errors nano
left
Third Inning
ATHLETICS William up: Wil
liams bounded out Gelbart to Bot-
tomley who made a great stab ef
the ahortitopi wide throw.
Grove up: Orova fanned on a
Called third strike.
Bishop up: Strike one. called.
Blehop filed out to Roettger who -id
a one-hand stab after mb-
Judglng the ball.
No iuui no hits no errors none
kft.
CARDINALS Wllxon up: Wilson
skied to Haas.
Oelbert up: Strike one celled. Gel-
(Conttaued On Peg Eight)
liminary move in the building of
Hoover dam.
action by oil producing
wu urged by Prerident
Hoover and by Secretary Wilbur early
ta 1(21. It wu dbcuiied at length
at a conference of oil state gover-
nors a( Colorado Springe ta June
1(33 but no decisive action wu
taken. Shortly after California put
Into effect an oil and gu kw on
which Toxu and Oklahoma have
baaed toa la we dramatically applied
recently at the potato of najlanal
guard bayonets.
Uniform state laws controlling pro-
iction ta tha opinion ef tha
Hoover admlnbtratlcn do not omm-'
within too sphere of the anti-trust
bwR although agreement lg pro-
ducats themselves to do the same
thing wen declared Illegal by At-
torney General Mitchell ta to cau
of toe oil Industry. -The
spread of tha Ida to the coal -Industry
ta axpectgd by tha admin- ;
ietratlon to remedy aom of to iUe
now auring heavy faweu to opera-'
ton and difficulties between opera-
tors and their labor
Any state compact will have to.
hero to approval of asngrerik
: t
V.
A-
-W3W-
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Pool, J. Edwin. Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 227, Ed. 1 Friday, October 9, 1931, newspaper, October 9, 1931; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1880404/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.