The Chickasha Star (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1933 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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EOH
A STAR
Atnuoiews
OF
GRADY COUNTY
INDEPENDENT
NEWSPAPER
Nai 41
Interesting News
Items of the
World
France to all atirred ap because
It baa been discovered that the na-
tional lotteries whleh have proven
such a profitable aourca of tnoaoia
for the country during thto tost fall
am illegal. . Bomeone with a bump
of curiosity hunted around- In old
legal volumca and discovered that
back In 134 a tow was passed mak-
ing lotteries illegal- Thto law hat
never been repealed. Prance to so
delighted with thto method of rais-
ing money however that the old
law to 10 be repealed at once and
a new law to to be pasted legalising
totteriu before the nest drawing
comes off.
Canada protects herself by de-
claring the American dollar still
wxth one hundred cents in Cana-
dian currency aa far as duties see
concerned. Thus the country loses
To Prominent
Young Doctor
Dr. II. P. Burdelle Dies From
Pneumonia After Only a
Week's IllnesH
j. nor nun has a
PRIZED SIGNATURE
i f
T
1
IS
J. Roy Orr. formrr county
attorney of tins county' and
for the post four yearn con-
nected with the Veterans'
Bureau at OUanoma City
has the most prised sistna
SIGN COTTON REDUCTION
NOTES FOR. NEXT YEAR
tlr. H. P. Buidrttr. one ul the !
prominent young physicians of thto ;
county died Wednesday afternoon ury and will have that au- 4'
t Ida heme in Air alter an Illness i tlmrity up until February !'
of In than a week. Burdette for- 15. j. Roy's signature will
merly Uved In Cliickasha where he Ui put into circulation in tins v
had many friend. He moved to:- county over 4300.000. J. Roy
Air several yearn ago and had built j B Mixed his signature to Dm
up a large practice In that part of first government clirck on !'
Grady county. Death was due to U Wednesday ond by llie end of
pile uni rana. He wh only thirty-two the week he Will he algnlug -!-yean
old but had made a rrputa- them by the hundreds. Orr
tton for himself in the medical j.;i has ala stenographers In his
world. Funeral services will be; office to help prepare the
conducted from the Brown Funeral 1 4. payroll.
Home Friday morning at 10 o'clock j
Rev. Bruner la to have charge of 1 4- - r- .51 -j- -p . 4:
the funeral services.
Surviving relatives are hto wife.
Ills mother and laliier. Mr. and Mrs.
A. R. Burdette; lito twin sister. Miss
Uncle 8am to ready to sign up to
pay the cotton farmers of Grwdy
tore in Grady "couiUy nght -i- wunty for the land they win leave
j ijy mi the jout of cotton In 1034 end 1433. The
nothing In the way of revenues ik. Mane BurdN.tr; his brother. Jas.
flora American (products through
the lessened value of the American
dollar. 1
Four thousand Lutheran minis-
ter! refused to be nationalised un-
der the Nasi movement last Sun-
day the day set by Hitler to have
them consecrated as officials of the
nationalised religion of Geroiany.
They have forty million followers
under them and when the Bishop
Whom Hitler picked to be conse-
crated as head of the German
Evangelical refused the honor. Hit-
ler ran up against a real stumbling
block in hto program.
'A woman in Pueblo Colorado to
F. Burdelle. Mu- Anna Lois Bur-
dette sH of Winfield. Kansas; and
Mr j. L. LrHoy of New York
City.
Active pall-bearers are to be: Dr.
Roy Emanuel George Beeler - Dr.
Nonrnfn Hurra CVunrgie. Kills
Yount Grady D. Harris and Mr.
Primm. all of Ale. Burial is. to
he held at Winfield Kansas.
MKAT SPECIALIST
II EKE WEDNESDAY
Shreveport
Nearest Oasis
For the Thirsty
Louisiana has Old Time Saloon
New Mexico and Colorado
Also Wet
Ciiirkagha lias teen selected
one of sis elite In Oklahoma to
share in a state-wide ed rational
program on meat sponsored by the
wlnil . j Oklahoma A. and M. college in 0
LSiSSrSS!opertton wlUl lhn Live
tMtQ poisonous point to oye nor UMb and umi Board
oiiTud uauufd intoetionwhtoh I Mew' PcUckl attractive
2? hteh methods of preparing beef pork and
now threatens her eyesight. lmb for the trade will be revealed
to retail meat dealers housewives
Japan has this year exceeded
England In exports of cotton goods
for the first time. Thto has brought
about a feeling of hoetility toward
the Japanese throughout the Em-
pire and it ' looks as though an
economic war between the two
countries to on with the English tn-
dUting on denunciation of the
Aogto-Japanese trade treaty.
. The rainy reason to Just about
over in Panama but more rain has
fallen thto year than for many sea-
sons. During a recent atom 13.73
inches of water fell in twenty-four
hours.
So far thto year England has had
1734 horn of sunshine which to five
hoars more then any previous year.
o the climate of that country
seems to be changing gradually
from rain and fog to sunshine and
dear weather.
'
Albania stands alone in the fact
that it to the only country on rec-
ord In which the people voluntarily
offered to pay twice the amount of
taxes for which the government
Asked and. more than that the
government refused the offer. Thto
occurred during the past fall In
Duraxrio and Kocsowo where the
merchants offered to pay double the 1
occupational tax to help the; finan-
cial crisis but the government re-
fused to accept It unless no other
form- of relief could be devised.
: The vogue tor everything Tudor
has reached the paint In England
where the debutants try to dress to
look Uke one of Henry VIU's wives.
The strenuous game of real tennis
has come back replacing lawn ten-
uis. -Thto was the grace of the Tu-
dor period.
. Tn Holland a law was passed a
short time ago forbidding anyone
to wear black shirts even though
they might have leanings toward
Fascism. As a result hundreds of
young men have been appearing
on the streets wearing black rain-j firmed by a majority vote of the
coate in sun or rain. Last Sunday Iclty council. The appointment will
. the police arrested everyone wear- jbe to fill out the remainder of the
lug such a garb but had to release unrxplred term of Prank Roulh.
them all again because an Insisted The salary of the street comtnls-
they. were merely wearing the new sloner to 4123 per month. Since
style of raincoats which have noth- Routh was elected last spring the
lng to do with political beliefs.
Leopold at Belgium who win some
day rule that kingdom has. in a
recent interview stated that if he1
could have chosen hto own life
work he would have much preferred
to be master cf a tramp steamer
on which be could go to all the out
of the way places In the world.
National proliibHlnn is m more
In the Unit'd States. Pennsylvania
Ohio and Utah Tuesday held con
vent ion ratifying the twenty-first
amendment to the Constitution
which nullities the eighteenth and
liquor once again began to flow leg-
flint cotton acreage reduction con-
tract wa received by J. B. Hunt
county agent. Wednesday. Hurst
believes that a full supply will ha
received In a Jew days and the farm-
ers of Grady county can begin to
sum up.
The Farm Council at a meeting
last week appointed George Diet-
rich of Chlckasha. George Malr of
Amber and Grover Tlicma of Nli-
nekah to comprise the cotton acre-
age board of this county. These
three men will have the final say
on the acreage contracts in thto
county. J. W. Webb of Poeascet
and K. K. Calhoun of Ninnekah
were also appointed and will serve
if the government approve a five
man board for thto county.
The contract provides that the
cotton farmer shall reduce hto cot-
ton acreage not less than thirty-
five per cent and not more then
forty-five percent below the hose
average. The base avenge
be the amount of cotton planted on
thto farm during the past five yean
or from. 1928 to 1932. The land
held out of cotton shall be referred
to as rented acres.'
The most Important provision In
the entire contract to section five.
Thto provides the fanner may use
the "rented acres" only for soil Im-
proving cpgjs. erosion preventing
crops food crops for. consumption
by the producer on the farm feed
ally in states without dry tows.
Utah was the thirty-sixth and i 22? 11 Jl ill!'
haN he known as a parity payment
fre 44 per cent of the avenge am-
ount of cotton produced on thto
fra for the past five yean. The
parity price shall be not leas than
Frank Roulh
Is Dead; Hurt in
An Auto Crash
1
t
1
Dies'
I -5
!
Ftmnk Routh. street commission-1 .
Slreel CommixHoner
From Blood Clot on Brain
Was Thought Improving
W if Ar. 4'
J. D. BITE KILLS THREE
BIG WILD GOBBLERS
J. D. Buie veteran hard-
ware man of Chlckasha re-
turned Sunday night from a
hunting and fishing trip in
south Texas. He bagged
three Mg turkey gobbler on
the trip the first turkey he
has killed In several years.
Buie and John HaUttourton
! Over Hundred
V.
1
On Civil Works
Mtom ?u25J u!Tf I ni wthoul warn- They went after deer but
HS Wednesday afternoon at the were unable to bag a buck.
Pricea - - 1
r!f!. l1 UV b . j Chlckasha hospital when he was j.
Tb Pyltjr PymMlt might be ax .thought well on the road to recov-1
much as two or three cento a pound. I cry. j.
If thto had been effective thto year wm.u ... w- iJI
dKfi (iniftfif VdilWl tiiM rrfaluod HOUlal WM 11111 iSSt TnUIMIlf til V
rnn" wouW fecelwl an automobile crash when enroute
home from the O. U. football game
In order to WusUrte the plan the 1 bii JZllSL
Star win give a concrete example. ilSSio!
A former in Orady county has forty T "1 t
ucres which we will say In order to I " ?
make the problem easy has all been : J? lJh7
ptonted to cotton and hu averaged "tfra uSu wlS
silting by the bedside of hto father
when suddenly he saw his father
sink Into unconsciousness. Death
came from a blood clot on the
twain.
a bale to the acre .for the pest five
yum. He agrees to reduce hto acre-
age In accordance with the govern-
ment plan thirty-five percent. This
would mean that at would toy out
of cotton In 1934 and 1933 fourteen
acres of the forty. He would get
in direct cash rental from the gov-
ernment 11730 per acre for these
fourteen acres and he would also
get from the government one cent
o pound portly price on 4.000 pounds
of cotton or forty per cent of the
average production of the forty
acres for the pest fire yean. The
bag
Ttuj uw his of does but the
Mirks were all In hiding.
J. D. was mighty proud of
the three big gobMen he got
and killed them all one
morning when he ran into
a Hock. Alter toying the
hunting he went down to
Corpus Chrktl Texas and
caught all the speckled sea
trout and shrepnead that
they wanted. He also got
plenty id ducks on the trip.
jF 4'4l '
4-
4-
4r
4'
4-
it
'
4-
Nearly Three honsand Hava
Signed Up For Work
' In Chlckasha
Mrs. Routh wax hurt In the auto
accident and was in another room
of the hospital at the time of the
death of Tier hir'I.and. She was
bruised and hur cu not seriously.
Routh was el: 'ed vr-wt eommto-
.araier last spring iu close contest
w;i Dan Beets who had been
street commissioner for a number
farmer would get eighty dollar to! of years. Routh had given clow
parity payment for biS fourteen attention to the Job and was mak-
acres or a total of 42330 per acre
for Hie fourteen acres. -Another
Important provision of
the contract to the amount that the
renter or share cropper shall receive.
A regular third and fourth renter
No Depression
In Horse and
Mule Trade
Mules Sell For S150; Mares
- Bring $135 to $160
Brisk Demand
The heg and mule business to one
branch ot the farming Industry In
Which there to to depression. Mule
"Tirv Th wiirn ut'stock " Utock products foe. con- Who furnishes tools and Implements
J . u iZiri hT v uinptton or use by the producer on shall receive one-half the first rent-
was determined it would have the -i Tn.. .. w
wh uivnniirn it wmuu iihvc uiy'si.. runn fiirai- t
distinction of being the one to eastljjL
the deciding rote ending prol.lbl-1 be Pby toe
tlon and delayed Its convention un-
til Ohio and Pennsylvania had con- JJ??
eluded theirs. The latter two states
conceded Utah the "honor" and said
lk!for uni cotton raised on the land
11 cl tCt t0 tlM! for the avenge year of the post five
years with a maximum rental of
418 per acre. That to land which
thlrty-oixth.
The famous prohibition amend-
ment now fading into history was
ratified January 16. 1919. and went
has produced a bale of ootton per
acre for the past five yean shall
Into effect a year later thus It has Z. iJr.iTv
hori nsari n r bo Pid 41730 per acre. Lnd which
had nearly fourteen years of stormy
existence.
A flood of liquor was waiting the
thirsty as the time for the doth
march on national prohibition near-
ed. However this supply was not
considered adequate to tost any
length of time. Tlie government
Tuesday was considering releasing
all medicinal liquor storks In the
states where drinking may be done
legally. To hamper bootleg trade
was Ihe-gnaL lt-was estimated Uw
plan would release about half mil-'
lion gallons of domestic and import-
ed spirits and wines.
Liquor can bn sold legally hi at
least nineteen states and several
others are at work on bills design-
ed to permit sales. Hard' liquor can-
not be sold In Kansas Oklahoma
or Arkansas.
Shreveport. Louisiana to the near-
est oasis to Chlckasha for the crav-
er of an old time toddy or Tom ond
Jerry. Liquor will be sold In the
old time saloon In Louisiana. Colo-
rado and New Mexico hare licensed
liquor but it will be Mid only in
restaurants and hotels In these
States.
has produced half a bale per acre
shall be ptod 49 per acre. The
first installment of thto shall be
paid between March 1 and April
30. 1934 and the second Installment
shall be paid between August first
and September 30 of same year.
But thto Isn't all the cotton far.
mer will get from Uncle Bam. The
government agree to pay him not
al payment. That to the renter Shall
get half of the 41730 per acre. He
shall also get three-fourths of the
parity payments. A share cropper
or a man that furnishes nothing
hut hto labor shall receive none of
the first rental payment but he
shall get hto half of the parity pay-
ment. Any land owner who attempts to
defraud hto tenant or share cropper
of their portion of this rental shall
forfeit twice the amount of the par-
ity payment to the renter or share
cropper.
This -contract Shall not be accept-
ed or be In effect by the govern-
ment unless the number of acres
offered by the cotton fanners un
der this plan shall make the cot-
ton reduction plan for 1434 and
1935 feasible. The government has
until January 31. 1934 to decide
lng good in the place.
Mr. Routh was born June 25. 1874
In Moody Texas and was the son I and horse prices are mounting every
of Capt. william F. and Emily Oam- i day and the demand still continues
brell Routh. He grade the run to! Mules are bringing at the farm sales
In thto county from 4100 to 4150
apiece and mules which sold a year
agq for from fifty to sixty dollars
are now bringing twice that sum.
Kicks poo county on May 5
and staked a c!Um.
Funeral services will be conducted
by Rev. Bruner at the Baptist
church Friday afternoon at 2:3ft Next to mutes the demand to heav-
The Eastern Star are to be In charge
of Hw sendees at the church and
the Odd Fellows are to be In charge
at Uw cemetery.
He to survived by hto wife Emma
Routh; a son. Leon Oklahoma City:
Mrs. 8am Borrow. Pampa. Texas! wnm in a roar so
one sister. Mrs. Ham Ward Hous-iJ" hw1 an?
Qmgiprtoe to continue for at least three
lees than one cent a pound whtohwhather the plan to workable.
Yr.S. tv t (.MEN AKE JUST
; SMARTER THAN Mitt
'The theory that men arc smarter
than women ha received a shatter-
ing blow with tlie announcement of
Edna E. McDaniel dean of women
at the University of Oklahoma that
more men than women student re-
ceived failing grades at the end of
the first half of this semester. -Figures
compiled by Miss McDan-
iel show that out of a total of 1.409
condition and falling gradrs record -
Mayor Dearm on will hare the ap-
pointing of the new street commis-
sioner to take Uw place of Frank led. only 317 were made by women.
Routh who died Wednesday after- The record for men ' however
noon. Hto appointment must be con-1 does not seem so gloomy In view
of the fset that coeds compose only
Federal authorities recently ar-
rested a group of half a doaen
Mexicans in Longmont. Colorado
who are believed to hare been mem-
bers of a ring selling marijuana in
this country. The weed to made up
into cigarettes which are very in-
taxlriting and which make madmen
out of the smoker. It to usually
grown in the middle of an alfalfa
field io It to difficult to find where
It to rallied. It sell for 485 a pound.
. .
! Lelcar Jcdinscn. colored was fin-
ed 410 for disorderly conduct.
Lee Hart forfeited a 45 bond for
being drunk.
C. E. McDaniel and Chas. Brooks
Alex forfeited 45 bonds for being
drunk.
N. M. Coffey was fined 410 for
being drunk.
Russell Chartaln and Alford
Thornton were fined 410 cm a
drunken charge.
Pete Frost was fined 45 on a
drunken clrarge.
- F. M. Cousins was fined 45 on a
drunken charge.
Frank Woodson colored was fin-
ed 4230 for disturbing Uw peace.
Mac Thurman. Chas. Alton. John.
slightly more tlum one-third of the
student body.
Of the 317 failures and conditions
reported for women 104 were made
by freshmen. Seniors made 54
Juniors 75 and sophomores 73.
Judging from Hie report women
living at home or with relatives do
rot make as good scholars as coeds
living In scrorKles dormitories or
rooming houses.
The largest number of grades In
the nether bracket 81.' was made
by coeds living with relatives. Wo-
men staying at sorority houses
made 67. those in rooming houses
65. and tliose In dormitories 44.
Oiw hundred and forty-nine stu
dents made one non-passing grade
and 161 made one conditional grade.
Twenty coeds made two failures;
nine three failures; and two made
four failures.
Eighteen students made two con-
ditions; four three condil'mns; and
one four conditions the report
shows.
Dairymen To--
Attempt to Cut ;
Butter Surplus
Oklahoma City Dec . 7. Linking
Oklahoma's state-wide dairy activi-
ties with an aggressive national
campaign to reduce the huge pres
ent mutter surplus of the country
several hundred representatives
from every branch of Oklahoma's
dairy industry will meet in Okla-
homa City December 7 at the
Huckins Hotel it arts announced to-
day by M. G. Van Busklrk secre-
tary of the Butter Industry Com-
j mitten tom their headquarters in
' Chicago.
'It to not a difficult task for the
dairy Industry to eliminate thto sur-
plus." said M. D. Munn President
of Uw National Dairy Council at a
recent conference of the dairy in-
dustry in . Chicago. "An increased
consumption of about three-quarters
of a pbund per capita per year
would entirely eliminate it."
"That to not difficult to shown by
tlie fact" said Mr. Muhn "that In
many parts of the country the aver-
age consumption to from five to fen
pounds per capita higher than the
average of the entire country."
Oklahoma action th thto direc-
tten to in accord with similar ni-tton-wide
state- meeting which
have been held during the past
month.
Already thirty-five states have
A man In Detroit Michigan waenle CarHs colored were fined each
.thto week married by telephone to
a girl in Sweden. It was nine oclock
in toe morning In Detroit and three
in the afternoon according to the
bride's time. K was the first trans-
Atlantio telephone wedding. The
unusual marriage came about m
the girl could more easily get by
the immigration laws of America.
She plans to leave soon for thto
country. It took seven minutes to
! perform the 'ceremony
telephone connection cost the groom
4473ft
j '
j In Durango Ooiondo a woman
was tried thto week on the charge
of being a cattle rustier. Thto to
the first time In too history of
1 Solorsdo tnat a. member of the
finilnlno sex lui been accused of
rustling cattle.
$5 for bring drunk.
J. T. Nelson forfeited a 45 bond
On a drunkrn charge.
N. J. Caldwell was fined 410 for
being drunk.
A NEW UNDER-SHERIFF
Grady county now has a new under-sheriff
William Herbert Crisp
The little sheriff was born Monday
and the Dncembor 4 at the Chlckasha hospi
ILL BEDNAB WINS
HONORS AT UNIVERSITY
W. 6.i Bednar graduate of the
Chlckasha high school has bAm
pledged -to the Tu Beta PI hon-
orary engineering fraternity at the
University of Oklahoma.' Two facul-
ty members and seven other stud-
ents have been pledged to the fra-
ternity. -
Students lodged are' Henry Harms
Enid; Charles Cone Tulsa; Robert
Sullivan Wichita Kan.- Owen
Wood Seminole: Scott Reehurgh
and John Reinhart. Oklahoma City;
and George T. Anderson Heavener.
Asks Uncle Sam
To Cut Process
: Tax On Hogs
' Hogs and cattle sank to new Iowa
for the present year thto week. Hogs
went to 4330 on the Oklahoma City
market and cattle dropped a half a
cent. Heavy beef cattle have been
the hardest to sell. The govern-
ment was to Increase the processing
tax to 41 a hundred on December 1
hut they have held It at 50 cents.
Hie old mark. The Oklahoma Live
Stock News sent a wire to Secretary
Wallace Wednesday asking lilm to
cut off the processing tax on hogs
saying that It was adding to con-
fusion of the market and would
probably drive the market lower.
ton Texas; one brother.
Routh Oates vllle Texas; one grand-
child and one nitre. Mrs. Lee Bow-
man Oklahoma City.
He was a member of tlie Baptist
church. Odd Fellows Masonic lodge
at Tuttle and Ce-tory at Guthrie
Oklahoma.
Active pall-Urers out Gerald
Spencer. A. L. Hollingsworth. Roy
Johnson Denver Scurlock Claud
Roark and John Guess. 1
Honorary pallbearers are to be
Dr. M. A. Nash J. D. Carmichael.
C. A. Dearm on. G. B. Dunlap John
Quinn. Jock Holland Horace Crisp
E. H. Eads and Arthur Mead.
lest for good brood mares. A span
of four and five year old mares
sold at the Reggie Story sale for
4380. Mule buyers are scouring the
country for good young mules to
send south and east. A horse or
B. Wad. Civil Works Administra-
tor of this county announced that
over hundred men were at wore
Thursday 'd that 'more would bo
put on ever day until the full quo-
ta of 1321 men for thto county aio
drawing pay. The men ore at work
on extension of the sanitary aew-
ers In Chlckasha. The men are
4-j drawing forty cents per hour for
s sis day week. They hare a foi-4-
man In charge of them drawing 425
4. per week and one time keeper draw-
4f lng 418 per week. Over the entire
project to a general superintendent
who draws 430 per week.
Wall has now approved five pro-
ject for the county. Three of them
are road work In the various com-
mtosloner districts and two for sev-
er work In Chlckasha. He called in
a number of business men of Chiek-
atoa Wednesday and they unani-
mously approved toe extension of
the storm seven of downtown
Chlckasha. Thto project will call
for the expenditure of 435300.
Wall to getting hto office force or-
ganised in good chape. Dutch Hill
has charge of certifying the pi 7
rolls and J. Roy Orr has charge of
making out the checks. The psy
rolto win be tertified on Thursday
and Orr says he hopes to get the
check to the men by Saturday.
No orders on stores will be given
by Orr is under the old set-up. Tlie
checks will be given the men direct.
They cannot be garnished and mer-
chants of Chlckasha must look to
thq men direct for any sums owed
them. .
Jim Bird registrar for the project
announced that he had signed over
3000 nien in Chic kasha.
years.
Two New Farm
Loan Agencies
Established
FIRST SNOW OF SEASON
IN CIMARRON COUNTY
The werk was decidedly warm
temperature ranging from 12 to 18
degrees above the seasonal normal.
Maxima were above 70 degree on
a number of days at all stations
and minima above freeslng the en-
tire week over practically the en-
tire State. Light to moderately
heavy local showers occurred about
the middle of the week. Light
ow fell In Cimarron County on
December 2. Conditions were favor-
able for outddhr pursuits and the
gathering of fall crops has bem
practically completed. Wheat to
generally in fair to very good con-
dition and made considerable im-
provement where moderate showers
fell but In seme localities amounts
were too light to be of benefit and
the crop to in need of abundant
moisture. Wheat posture to now
available in the panhandle coun-
ties. Livestock generally Improved
and to in fair to good condition.
ORVILLE MATTHEWS WINS
PLACE ON CONFERENCE TEAM
Joined In thto national drive to u niI T.B
hrlnn tj ik. O.ln ...I SUB. r. 'll. rHILUD
bring to the dairy farmers and var-
ious manufacturers of dairy pro-
ducts the relief necessary to save
the dairy industry from collapse.
MILLIONS GOING TO
WHEAT FARMERS
tal. He to a husky little fellow
weighing 814 . pounds. Mrs. Horace
Crisp was returned to her home
Wednesday.
TUTTLE GIRL WINS
HONORS AT CHICAGO
Miss Ava Lre Brewer freshman
at the Oklahnma Obllege for Wo-
men won fourth pi re in the na-
tional meat identification contest
held in Chksqo last week.
Miss Brewer to the daughter of
Mr. and Mr. R. K. Brewer of Tut-
tle and has received her 4-H-elub
training under the direction of Mrs.
Nettie Coryell county home demon-
stration agent. She received spe-
cial training for the meat identifi-
cation contest under Paul Adams
state livestock specialist.
Washington Dee. 7. Payment of
43316369 In wheat acreage reduc-
tion benefits to 51300 fanners has
been made.
The payments by states: -Colorado
43319 Illinois 453.153;
Indiana. 4464375: Missouri. 4255.053;
Iowa. 4101330; Kansas. 41397.758;
Kentucky 43.716; Maryland. 4371.061;
Michigan 423.415; Minnesota 459.-
885: Nebraska 9221.467; Nevada
46395; New York 46357; North
Carolina. - 68.101; Ohio 4207330;
fiouth Dakota 424.709; Utah 95.-
836; Virginia. 4273369; West Vir-
ginia. 428364.
Orville Matthews. 18 years (rid
Chlckasha high grtfool student has
-been selected as a half-back on the
Mid-State Conference football team.
Orville came to Chlckasha two years
ago and has made a wonderful rec-
ord tn football since that time. Last
year he set two new records in the
state meet at Norman in the 100
yard and 220 yard dash. In the meet
held at Chicago he placed fifth in
Funeral services were conducted 1 the 220 yard lash. At numerous
Thursday afternoon for Mrs. F. H.jggme Orville hm made spectacular
Phillip age 73. Mrs. Phillips died Tuns -f as yards or more. Next year
at her home. 804 South Seventh ;wm be hto last year lu high school.
Wednesday of a heart attack. I Orville was the only man selected
Emma Wallace was bom near Jef-1 from Chlckasha lor the Mid-State
fenonville Md and on October 13 t.am.
1867 She married Forrest H. Phil-
lips. They moved to Chlckasha
from Wichita. Kansas in 1919. She
has been a member ot the Tisfcy-
terian church. Services were held
at her home In the presence of her
family and friends.
MBS. RICHARD MOSS
BURIED IN OKLAHOMA CITY
Funeral services were conducted
Monday In Oklahoma City for Mrs.
Richard A. Mom. Mrs. Moss was
She to survived by her husband willed In an automobile accident
and four daughters Mrs. C. C. Carp Friday afternoon. Mr. C. R. Van
Wichita. Kan.. Dee: 7. Two new
agricultural credit agencies to serve
farmers In Colorado Kansas. New
Mexico and Oklahoma will be es-
tablished here December 15. accord-
ing to information received from
Wm. I. Myen Governor .'of .the
Farm eredft Administration . at
Washington.
The Production Credit Corporation
of Wichita with a capital of 47.-
500000 subscribed by the Farm Cred-
it Administration will provide the
Initial capital for production cred
It associations to be formed through-
out the ninth federal land bank dis-
trict. Ten farmer borrowers w In-
dividual eligible to become boriow-
era may apply to the corporation
tor a local association charter.
Loans made by the local associa-
tion will be discounted through the
Federal Intermediate Credit Bank
of Wichita. They may be made for
periods of from I to 13 months lor
the purchasing and refinancing of
livestock for the growing and har-
vesting of crops and for general ag-
ricultural purposes.
The Wichita Bank for Coopera-
tives will be capitalised In such am-
ount as the Governor of the Perm
Credit Administration determines
is required to meet the credit needs
of eligible borrowers. Credit may be
extended by the bank to local end
regional cooperative association to
assist in effective merchandising of
agricultural cnmodiUes end food
products end th financing of tlielr
operations end to finance the pur-
chase or lease of necessary build-
ings end equipment.
Establishment of these two new
farm credit agencies along with the
federal land end Intermediate cred-
it banks will complete the Farm
Credit Administration's organiza-
tion in thto district as provided in
the Farm Credit Act of 1933.
Since the Emergency Farm Mort-
gage Act was passed May 13 1933.
the 17-year-old Federal Land Bank
of Wichita has advanced loans total
lng nearly 35000.000 to 3056 farm-
ers In its four-state district.
As an Indication ot how the bank's
lending to now being rushed. 913 of
these loans for over 42000000 were
closed during November. The bank's
officers also point out that the
bank to responsible for the reduction
In the rate of old prevailing mort-
gage interest rates of 0 to 10 per-
cent down to 5v and at present
4'k percent.
Deputy Sheriff
Has Close Call
"No man can tall my mother to
shut up so I Just shot him and if
It had been buck shot instead of
No. 7 I would have got him. said
Edwin Hah 21 yean (rid of south
of Rush Spring in Jail Tfaundav
for shooting with Intent to kill a. C
Oast. . Cast to deputy sheriff and
he went to the Hill home to arrest
Edwin for stealing a glass of Jelly
from the home of Ida Cetoior. The
mother-of Hall told the - deputy
sheriff to go on away and leave tier
boy alone. Cast told her to be still
that he had come to get the boy
and waa going to get him. - About
thta tlma Edwin poked a shot gun .
around the corner of the house and
fired at Cast. The gun was loaded
with No. 7 shot and a lew shot
struck Oast In the face and-one
went through hto vest.
UNCLE SAM FAILS
TO HIKE CORN TAX
Washington Dee. 7. The farm
administration last week revised its
corn processing tax regulations so
aa to continue the present 5-cent-a
-bushel tax Instead of Increasing
the rate to 30 cents Thursday night
ts originally provided.
The expectation here to that the
processing tax will be Increased to
20 cents on January 1. At that time
officials believe the higher levy will
not have a tendency to pile up sur-
pluses on farms.
STUDIO RECITAL AT
MRS. A. B. MORGAN'S
Tlie "Morgan Studio of Expres-
sion." Mrs. A. B. Morgan teacher
has Just closed a special ten weeks -course
offered to a limited number
of adults. The course Included
practical public speaking drill
voice fundamentals of speech and
Interpretation. It was offered in '
class form meeting twice a week
one evening for forty-five minute
period end one evening for two forty-five
minute periods.
A studio recital was given at the
conclusion of the course when a
stimulating program wa rendered.
A lew guests were Invited. Each
speaker In part one of the program
gave a brief extemporanaeoua talk
mi the subject assigned followed by
interpretations. Part two was wholly
interpretation. Both teacher and
student were gratified with the
progress made and a second coursa
to being planned to begin lu Febru-
ary. A refreshment plate was serv-
ed at the close of the recital.
Those taking part In the program
were Lucy Mae Goodson Mrs. Ber-
nice Drake Patti Neely Florence
Decker end Mrs. Clyde Duncan.
Rip Van Winkle slept for twenty
years and when he awakened found
a lot of changes. But suppose he
had gone to sleep in 1929 and awuk
cned in 15331
HELD ON CHECK CHARGES
A. H. Bsdgett was arrested at
Oklahoma City by W. M. Frledland-
er state Investigator and returned
to rhleknriha to answer to revere 1
complaints on bogus check count.
niNTON WILL HAVK SALE OF
EXTRA GOOD WORK STOCK
Bam Hinden. who Hves In Tabler
will have a sale on the 15th of De-
cember. He will offer for sale eight
cows sixteen head of hone and
mule and a lot of implements and
household good. Hinton has one of
the beat collection of work stock
of any fanner In the county. He
has some of the beat homes and
mules -that have been offered for
snle thto year. Colonel Otto Ren-
shaw will be the auctioneer and the
Oklahoma National Bank will clerk
the sale.
Football to becoming popular am-
ong th natives of Tanganyika and
iiuuiy teams are being formed.
Nevada Mo.; Mr. R. T. Brigham
Kanasa City. Mo.; Mr. M. R. Wil-
liams and Bin. R. J. Millar of Chlck-
asha; and one ton Robert who
died at the age of li; and five
grandchildren.
KMKX
to
m LOCAL MARKETS
4! Wheat 5c
' Barley 50c
X Oats 30c
White Com 50c
Yellow Com 50o
Alfalfa Hay. ton 411
Cottonseed ton 41330
Cotton 8.25c
Cream - 17c
Butter 25c
Whole Milk 28c
Eggs 18c
Fryers ... ...... 5c
Hens ... 5c
Turkeys- ........ 9c
Hides .: 4c
.
X
V
X
X
X
X
V
X
X
X
X
X
X
Valkenburgh and her daughter
Alice were abo injured but Mary
Jane and Clarence Van Valkenburgh
were not Injured seriously.
The five Chlckasha peranns were
enroute to Oklahoma City when
th had a head-on rhlllsion three
miles south of the New rustle bridge
X with a truck driven by K. C. Klll-
Ingawnrth Vernon. Texas who was
X killed blatantly. R. W. Martin and
X. ! Carl W.- Woodall both from Ver-
Xjnon Texas who were with Kill
X ingsworth were injured seriously.
TWO INDICTED IN CLOS-
ING OF BANK IN STATE
Oklahoma City. Der. 7- Charges
against Letanrt R. Carlberg and
Floyd O. Kerns of misapplying
funds of the First National bank
of Kingfisher were confirmed In
in an indictment returned by the
federal grand Jury end the two
men. long fugitives frrm Justice
must stand trial In federal court.
U. 8. LOANS CNF. IOWA
FARMER 4135.S6e.0p
OdcboK. la. Dee. 7. Preliminary
rtepa for the largwt individual com
loan In the slate and pcnlbly In
the nation were completed Imre
Monday night with the sealing of
300000 bushels of com on the W.
B. Adams form.
. Robert Adam who to handling
the loan for his father said the
Hi S X X X X X X ill X S 1: bain will produce 91353011.
STATE DEER HUNT
DEATH ACCIDENTAL
Cleo fiprlnga. Dec. 7. Lon Nash
deo Springs framer admitted slay-
er of L. H. Driscoll Major county
orehardtot Saturday night wns
cleared of blame Thumday by a
coroner' jury which relutpied a
vctolct of accidental death.
TULSA MAN MAKES UPROAR
IN THE COUNTY JAIL
Dewitt Martin of Tulsa who maid
lie-used to be e preacher was the
roughest customer that he -been In
the county Jail for many a d&7: D. ..
W. Oreen special deputy sheriff
picked up Martin in tlie Frisco ad-
dition where he was yelling and
whooping from the effects of bad
whiskey. Oreen .finally got him to
the county Jail when Martin put on
a show and aeid that It would take
five men to put him In the JnlL
When put behind the bars he con-
tinued hto yelling that could be
heard far three Mocks. Finally he
went to deep and next morning he
didnt know anything about it. He
was given thirty daya In Jell and
410 fine and costs.
One reason there won't be a sa-
loon on every comer to because
there to already a filling station on
every comer. '
BRADLEY BOY CHARGED
WITH PERJURY; IN JAIL
Roy Cooper Bindley to in the
county Jail pending hto trial for per-
jury. Casper to 83 years old and la
charged with getting a marriage li-
cense for himself and Miss Effic May
Easley who he claimed was 18 years
(rid. By investigation It was lmrricd
iniil Un girl wu only 14 yi.-oiw old.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Kayser, J. W. The Chickasha Star (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1933, newspaper, December 7, 1933; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1896622/m1/1/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.