Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 128, Ed. 1 Monday, October 14, 1929 Page: 4 of 20
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Every day the Times sells more papers in Oklahoma City than there are homes.
FOUR—OKLAHOMA CTTY TIMES, MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1929.
Howard First
7
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Is Corrected
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certify the levies properly did invali- in an walk* of life, who testify to
4E
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71
82
h
Fraud Charged
MRS. AVA A. MICHEL
since taking this splendid treatmei
it to others."
Not Cost City
by the first of the year is expected
g
3
7
A
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10
9
13
12
16
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15
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18
15
23
22
2l
his Kray eyes that looked as if they saw
26
ax
24
ae
21
S
Was it strange that Joseph did not know the names of these two mes-
32
not have kept them so clearly in his recollection as he did if the last time
7
31
36
35
He quarreled Miss Vandenessen’s lover and he quarreled the lover's
Q0
39
O
43
l
21
2
Abbey.
1
Chicago Feud,
CHICAGO, Oct. 14— (P— Hate, fat-
feud, dumped the dying George Rig-
4
sus-
wall.
Riggins’s death removed the last of
a share on the non-par value capital
a quintet of feudists held responsible
i
f
5
*
O’
as JPuteas
money can buy
High Court’s
Tax Decision
Daytime Street
Lighting Does
could be given.
Police believe he was shot at the
Tulsan's Announcement May
Speed Up Developments
St. Joseph’s
DutASPIRIN
the year of the Republican landslide,
he lost to T A. Chandler of Vinita,
the Republican nominee
date them. Judge Chambers granted
Nelson Judgment for recovery of $6.63
a scene,
friend.
That is why a tablet
or two of St. Joseph’s
Pure Aspirin brings
quick, safe relief from
headache, neuralgia,
earache and muscular
pains. Ask for it by
name!
A
in the last three years.
Nine slugs entered Riggins's body
complexion is a good, healthy color
and the coating on my tongue is gone.
"I Just feel better in every way
served four years.
In 1918 he first was elected to con-
I other protest suits, resulted in a total
refund of 3175.000.
general election by W. B. Pine of Ok-
mulgee.
In 1926 he defeated S. J Montgom-
ery. Republican, and was again sent to
Washington as representative in con-
gress from the first district.
Capital Stock Ruling Stands
WASHINGTON, Oct. 14— (P—The
TERRIBLE HEADACHES
HAVE BEEN ROUTE
Z2
25
—" veanauie —uguo ----- o Baker, city auditor, pointed out,
behind your own and his quiet the test cost the municipal till ab-
solutely nothing. During the month
manner of speaking
I glanced at Somerfield.
Joseph described him exactly,
denessen?
4
II
Mont R. Powell, former assistant
county attorney, had not decided at
noon Monday whether he would ac-
cept a place as as-
sistant attorney gen-
eral to succeed V. P
Crowe, who resigned
Z2
31
Sunday.
And all that city officials would
say was not "We re for street lights
during the day," but “It didn’t coat
the city anything."
This, in response to exclamations
Violent Fight Indicated
A violent fight- must have preceded
the shooting, for chairs were over-
turned. a window was shattered, and
The phenomenal demand for the
new. scientific treatment, Sargon, and
its record of matchless accomplish-
i ments can mean but one thing and
The Sargon Man is at Veaaev Dru
Co.'s main store. 135 W. Main St
EINSTEIN WILL AID
EDISON -CELEBRATION
2
*1
not likely open nine months out of the year and
giving aid to weak districts, protection
or natural resources, equalization of
definite statements from others plan-
ning to make the race.
Women’s Rights Supported
Howard outlined a program support-
ing equal consideration of women in
elective and appointive offices and
voice in government, keeping schools
DANCER INJURED IN
PLUNGE FROM STAGE
six concurring votes on the oninion
with only one dissent and two justices
not voting.
The report was given informally by
Adelbert Brown and Gordon Stater,
attorneys for the Taxpayers' associa- |
Sargon’s wonderful powers, purely
from a heart-felt desire to help other
dav. Each was fatally wounded, and
tened on a west side gambler-gangster Riggins himself was shot, but recov-
Others Die in Feud
Jimmy "Bozo" Shupe. brother of
Tommy, end Thomas McNichols. son
of a one time aiderman, were the oth- *
school, calls for a Hi-Y council meet .----- ——
ing at 5 30 o’clock, followed by a din- "rhnnewnxegutiPcommittee comprises
ner meeting for all boys in the city
I Ma ,
•S
“Fa
63
one thing only—it's a medicine that
produces results! Day after day, an
endless stream of grateful endorse-
ments flows in from men and women
tee chairman.
The number of clubs has increased
k k.
DOWN
I—In the year ot our Lord
-Within
3—To spread for drying
4—Like
—Rich earth
•— Historical German town
7—Symbol for Germanlum
in taxes and the findings. applied to sufferers. A few days ago, Mrs. Ava
A. Michel, 433 W. Frisco St., Okla-
• that was what we did.
The concierge who opened was a little man with greenish-gray eyes
and a rather obsequious manner.
"We called," I said, "in the hope that we might catch Miss Vandenessen
of Bruges." . . „ .
The concierge said he was desolated, but Miss Vandenessen had called
and departed already Somerfield brought his diplomacy into action He
took out his pocketbook and began to handle the notes therein. The green-
ish-gray eyes followed the movements of his fingers with bright interest.
"Miss Vanedessen came to call on madame—" Somerfield began.
Z2
33
pers. Capitol Hill, secretary.
The club president are. top row. left to
right Robert Naylor. George Barbqur: ।
| Cecil Peppers. Roy Lawless, Capitol Hil___
TIMES CROSS-WORDS PUZZLE
33; • 89 ■
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r %86,2
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ae;
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- •
DETROIT. Get. 14.— Prof. Al-
bert Einstein, German physicist, will
have a part in the celebration at
Dearborn next Monday, in honor of
Thomas Alva Edison.
‛n.
'' 4* i
5k
N,
I
and She Feels Fine in Every Way.
- - — ----------- • ___
29
and he died before medical help
)
h !
Spencer Smart, assistant city en- I
had not been so extraordinary and—yes. so painful. gineer, returned from his vacation
When’ About three years, perhaps more A desperate affair—the Monday-with several hundred pounds
English officer, monsieur the captain, who had come back from sea to live of assorted treatises on city planning,
with madame and mademoiselle in the Rue Rogier, made a scene—and such Chicctod hiMheni “be-pised l th
of August, the city paid $6,336.08 for
street lights.
ENGINEERS BACK WITH
CITY PLANNING IDEAS
(Copyricht. 1929, Wm Morrow Co.)
(To Be Continued)
national politics for many years.
Howard ‛89er
He came to Oklahoma in 1889 in
SYNOPSIS- Fuzitives and pursuer become partners to solve the mystery of
Roser Pells death LaXton does not arrest Grenolen and Somerfield in Bruges,
501 enlists then aid and they agree to deliver the contents of the black bag
Laxton is amezd by the discovery which Somerfield has made—that the bullet
which killed Pell was nUrnded for Parson Marling. But amazement turns to
consternation when Grenoren tells of Marling s vielou. story to the that
Pell wAg in exconvict, the parson i double dealing with Laxton by Warnin
orenoren Onis"impendins arrest, and finally MariineAlarm, when Pell ehrei:
ened to produce a chest >i»t a few minutes Before Pells .aeath. The enigma
SfBla?knt?r resolve" n self into a mangle- Pell-Marline-Fotherbury—a puzzle
that the story of Pell's past alone can unlock.
Heed Early Warning!
Don’t Let Kidney Trouble Get a Firm Hold.
T)OES every day find yourlame and achy—suffer-
• ing nagging backache, headache and dizzy spells?
Are kidney excretions too frequent, scanty or burn-
ing in passage? These are often signs of sluggish kid-
neys and should not be neglected.
To promote normal kidney action and assist your
kidneys in cleansing your blood of poisonous wastes,
use Doan's Pills. Endorsed the world over. Sold by
good dealers everywhere.
Doan’s Pills
A Stimulant Diuretic to the Kidneys
Despite a report Riven Tom G LONDON—The engagement of Miss
Chambers, district ludge, that the su-EraenesacrroebleotSasnrdfnthtag'zandd
preme court decision reversing the My.How 21-year-old baronet, is an-
■ George P. Nelson tax ras involving ; nounced. She expects to continue
1927 tax levis for Oklahoma county 1 work on the stage and screen. Her
was a four-to-four ruling, a check of friends call her "Bunny."
the court’s records. Monday. revealed ---------------------
a. .
gress from the first district. In 1920
attention to a copy of the Appellate
Reporter, legal publication, carrying
the court's decision, which shows the
vote divided with one Justice absent.
The opinion, written by Justice
Charles Swindall, held that failure of
the county excise board to certify the
tax levies to the county assessor did ।
not invalidate the levies.
Judgment Granted
Ruling that the boards failure to
son like most pills do. They rid me
entertainment. The club having the
largest attendance will receive a sil-
ver loving cup.
At each monthly roundup during
ers to die. They fought a duel with
pistols last July in front of the apart-
ment where Riggins was shot Sun-
no ^However here was a plausible excuse for calling We could now ask for
Miss Vandenessen And when we rang at the iron-grilled door of No. 39 bis.
sieurs? Joseph eyed Somerfield’s fingers as they extracted a third note
from the wallet. No, it was not, because English names were hard to
remember and he had seen those messieurs only three times, and he would
lived before our eyes. The captain was of a fury.
The two messieurs never came to the Rue Rogier again and in some
months afterward the captain and his family went away. Joseph had not
seen Miss Vandenessen since until that morning and as she still remained
Miss Vandenessen it would seem that the affair of the heart had come to
nothing—what!
That was all we could extract from Joseph. At any rate it had Riven us
Pell at Brussels and an approximate date: Seabroke quarreling with Pell;
Veronica with a passionate interest in a friend's love affair; a crisis in that
affair. But nothing to connect with Blackwater and the tragedy at Newplace
h
Again Joseph's command of portraiture was wonderful. Seabroke
library of the city planning commis-
sion Smart made a study of civic ’
problems in Memphis, he said, because
problems in that city, the waterfront
excepted, parallel closely those of Ok-
lahoma City. Memphis recently an-
nexed 20 square miles of adjacent ter-
ritory.
---*---
Powell Indicates He
Will Decline Office
have headaches like I used to. My
"That cooks our gonse," said I.
When Miss Vandenessen had put No. 39 bls on guard we were
to get much out of it. Having waited till she left 20 minutes afterward.
we dogged her back the way she had come. We sawshergointothastaton taxation, assistance to agriculture,
and leave by a train for the east. Little.doubt.Miss.Vandenesen 7 bLs that flood control and construction of roads
taken a journey from Bruges to.Brusselsmerel. towarn were to be told or the best materials at an economie
two impertinent young men might be making inquiries ana were to oe 1 cost
"Building of roads should not be
limited to the main thoroughfares, but
, that our program should make it pos-
sible for every community to reach
the main thoroughfares upon lateral
roads," he said.
Howard has been active in state and
Death Treasure
by RA .J. Walling
years old. Is the envy of a lot of
neerby apartment in which he lived
with his wife and two small children
Blood was on the floor there, and the I
place was in disorder.
I OAKLAND, Calif., Oct 14.—(-
Billy Rolls, San Francisco vaudeville
performer. was seriously injured in a
plunge from a stage into the orchestra
effectual means of saving Hialeah
from widespread flood loss is to dyke
the town.
;6
%
A wpenyoghavehekd-
• ache, feel achy, chilly
•W and sneeze—take the
• eld standard, reliable
• Grove’s Laxative
. W BROMO QUININE
• at once. Used by assay
• millions for over 40
A years. Merit is the
A reason.
. - ' J
P “s*,
A -9
are: Robert. Naylor. Central high-
school, president: George Barbour.
Classen, vice-president, and Cecil Pep-
HATS
CLEANED and
BLOCKED
(Factory Process)
75c
French - Unique
CLEANERS—DYERS
HATTERS
811 N. Hudson Phone 2-0182
’ 0
1000
k 18
Aa.
here in this city. Sargon may b
obtained at all Veazey Drug Co."
five stores.—(Adv.)
For 1930 Campaign,
The first hat was tossed into the
gubernatorial ring Sunday when E. B.
Howard. Tulsa, three times member of
congress from the first Oklahoma dis-
trict, announced as candidate for the
Democratic nomination for governor j
in the 1930 campaign.
Howard has been discussed much ,
recently, particularly in the eastern
part of the state, as a gubernatorial i
possibility.
His action is expected to bring
of an annual non-resident hunting
license. However, the bill did not
specify Texas alone.
Last year the state issued 374 non-
resident licenses at $15 each. This
year 150 annual licenses thus far have
been issued.
■. 33
b w,T9
k.nm./A
1911 he was appointed member of the
state board of affairs by Gov. Lee
Cruce and served four years He was
elected state auditor in 1914 and
No, only a few.
Madame Favaert, whom we had had the honor of seelng. was the owner
of the house; she had an affection for Madame Seabroke. And Mademoiselle l
Vandenessen. an institutrice at the school in Bruges where Miss Seabroke
was educated. Hardly anybody else.
No English people? Well. hardly any English people.
Somerfield slowly closed the pocketbook, having extracted one 50-fran<
note from it.
But there were some English people in the circle? Yes, one or two. The
In 1924 he sought the Democratic ' Plans for the first senior Hi-Y
nomination for United States senator. : roundup, which will bring all the
running second to Jack Walton in the senior club boys in the city together
primary. Walton was defeated in the on the night of October 22. were made
Sunday at a meeting of the newly
chosen executive committee.
Program for the roundup, in charge
of George Barbour. Classen high-
Supreme court records show that
Justices E. F Lester. Albert C. Hunt. 1
Fletcher Riley. William B. Cullison
and Thomas G Andrews concurred in
the Swindall opinion. Justice J. W.
somonaidurmadlroomosptweenitu’on the bench and Joseph sat down. Storm Keeps Arcs Burning
remarking that the day made very hot Somerfield was suddenly seen to
be playing idly with a pocketbook stuffed full of money. He did not delay
his dive into the cross examination of Joseph.
"You know Miss Vandenessen very well. Joseph?" said Somerfield.
Joseph had that honor. Since long? Yes. Every since the English
captain's family lived in the Rue Rogier? Yes. They had lots of friends?
C F Grady, ciassen sponsor H E War-
,L .1 will iy, An, mini her of field. Capitol Hill sponsor: F W. whin-
Each club W1 E1VE on? nuDe- “ . erv Central sponeor M T. McComhs,
Hi-Y secretary Naylor, Barbour and
Peppers. Roy Lawless. Lamar Schmidt.
Classen club vice-president: John Clayton.
Central vice-president: Robert Carroll.
Capitol Hill No 1 vice-president, and
Georce Cape. Capitol Hill No. 2, commit-
। pit here Sunday night. In the mid- supreme court refused Monday to re-
there were two bullet holes in the die of his dance act the theater lights consider its decision of last May sus-
—" I went out. Rolls stepped over the taining the New York tax of 6 cents
, footlights and pitched downward. He
। is suffering from concussion of the
I had an almost constant pain in my
..... , ------—— .। back and under my shoulder blades
With six concurring on the opinion, and I became extremely nervous.,
it devolved on attorneys for the tax- [ I was habitually constipated and fre-
payers to prepare a petition for re- quently had terrible headaches. My
hearing. Monday. Adelbert Brown, tongue was coated; my complexion
one of the tax attorneys, said thepe- was sallow and I felt miserable all
tition is being prepared for early fil- I the time.
Ing Hed the vote stood four to four [ "It's simply wonderful what Sar-
gon has done for me! I have a
place and remain in the private prac-
tice of law.
Crowe is to join an Oklahoma City
law firm.
Powell He had indicated
earlier in the mom- !
i ing he would decline the proffered
Stanford Bailey, troop 5, holder of
the city archery championship, won
the state archery championship with
93 points. Wilson Woodrow of the
same troop was second with 85, and
Charles Shewey, also of Oklahoma
City, third.
Jay Warner, troop 15, won the state
bugling champlonship. Warner is
e-“"
NEW YORK—Betty Bauer. 14
_ _--- , - -------- -- — stock of outside corporations in do- l
for much gambling, beer running and , brain and probably a fractured skull, ing business in that state. I Answer to this puzzle on page 11
meeting the public and giving tlx
shouldn't be called Pills at all because facts about this remarkable new aril
they don't nauseate or upset a per- entific discovery. He cites case atte
‘ ~ rase of Sargon s wonderful powers a
work; personal instances of healt
renewed and happiness restored. righ
pocketbook opened again. ‘ .
Joseph had mentioned only ladies so far. Yes, that was true; but he
did not know much about the gentlemen. What he saw was that one of the
two had a love affair with Miss Vandenessen—oh, very serious, he assured
you. And Miss Seabroke (a second note Joined the first in Somerfield’s
hand) interested herself enormously in this affair.
As to the name of the gentlemen, Joseph could not recall them. But
he could describe their owners. The lover of Miss Vandenessen was a tall,
dark man. And his wooing—an impetuous man, this monsieur. But his
friend, you could not have a cooler head—a veritable Englishman with
Banknote Diplomacy
rNHE express next morning landed Somerfield and myself in Brussels. We
1 took rooms at the Hotel Terminus, ns we had agreed with Laxton
Having lunched in the hotel restaurant, we went out on to the Place Rogier
and sat to take our coffee in front of a cafe bar overlooking the entrance
to the station. . .
We had just begun to lay our plan of inquiry when we plunged into
the middle of it. , ,
I was looking at the crowd pourine out of the station when I saw a
woman hurrying to the narrow street by the side of the hotel.
She was in sight only a few seconds, but I recognized Miss Vandenessen
We dashed after her. She turned to the right around the hotel, walking
fast, and made for the dome of thevchurch of Ste. Marie. Her pace did not
relax and she never turned her head; she had the air of being on an urgent
miSsw followed by a torturous way, until she stopped at one tall house
and rang. Somerfield and T dodged into a doorway till she was admitted.
Then we walked to the end of the street to look at the plaque on the corner.
It was the Rue Rogier—the eastern section of it. No doubt the house Miss
Vandenessen had entered was No. 39 bis.
| V
wyye;
* Tt*
na
Treatment. Nerves Wonderfully Strengthen!
homa City, made the following state-
ment to the Sargon man:
"I suffered terribly with stomach
disorders. Frequently, after eating,
a hard lump seemed to form in my
stomach and the pains would be
almost unbearable. My only relief
would come from immediotelv emntv-
ing my stomach and when I was
unable to vomit, I would suffer agony.
"Yes. monsieur, she called half an hour ago."
"What a pity we missed her," exclaimed Somerfield, He turned to me.
"Now we shall have to go to Bruges."
At this point we heard footsteps on the stairs to the right of the eon-
ciergie and a voice calling:
"Joseph!"
A lady came to the bottom of the stairs
"Joseph—who are these gentlemen and what do they want
"They called expecting to find Mademoiselle Vandenessen. madame."
“Tell them mademoiselle is not here.”
This third-person treatment was amusing. The lady was within two yards
of us, but pretended we were not there.
Somerfield flicked the notes in his wallet and looking Joseph straight
in his eyes. said: .. .. . ,,
"Ah, well, we shall have an hour to spare. Let s go and sit in the Bo-
tanical Gardens on that terrace in front of the grande serre, eh? Good day.'
We heard the lady's voice saying:
"Shut the door, Joseph.” and we were out in the Rue Rogier again.
"No flies on madame," said Somerfield ' But I guess Joseph will fall for
it. He has the hump of acquisition all right."
Somerfield’s expectation was not disappointed. We walked along the
front of the great glass houses to a terrace overlooking the park in the
valley and sat on a bench. We should miss nobody who came on to the ter-
race. « ,
Within 10 minutes Joseph appeared, whiffing a cigaret as he strolled
leisurely round the end of the grande serre.
He was, of course. immensely surprised to encounter us. He raised his
hat very politely, and passed along.
"Joseph!" Somerfield called.
n
CITY HI-Y PRESIDENTS
PLANNING GREATEST YEAR
Saturday, effective
November 1.
Powell was offered ,
the place by J Ber-
ry King, attorney
general, and was to
confer with King at
the capitol early
Monday afternoon.
,**3
obtained through fraud and collusion,
and based on an inadequate defense
for the county, of constipation entirely and I don't
City Scouts Capture
State Championships
Oklahoma City scouts took two of
grandfathers snd duffers. She made three first, places in state champion-
a hole in one at the Coldstream club, shipcontests.at.Norman. and two
a perfect mashie shot of 100 yards, others took undisputed champinships.
of "extravagance!” on the part of
citizens who saw street light burn-
ing brightly all day Sunday.
Walter C. Dean, mayor, explained
that Friday's nights electrical storm
played havoc with the lighting sys-
tem. when several gadgets ware
burned out at the Oklahoma Gas
& Electric Co., distributing station
at Twenty-fourth street and Olie
avenue. There were doubts, too,
about ever so many transformers.
So it was necesary to turn on the
lights while workmen adjusted this
and that.
Inasmuch as the city pays for
street lights on a flat rate, Francis
Here are some of the boys who are helping to put over the big- Clark dissented and Chief Justice
gest Hi-Y program in the history of Oklahoma City schools by Charles W Mason and Justice Rob-
serving as presidents of their respective clubs. Several of the ert Heffner, being absent, did not
clubs have not yet organized for this year, so the group still is Vote
In 1922 he won the Democratic incomplete.
nomination and defeated Chandler. --------
senior high No. 2: second row. Mont
Stewart. Harding junior hishschool No. 2:
John Walbert. Hardins junior htzh No. 31
Rex Bartlett. Webster junior hishschool
No 1 Cornell Harrell. Webster Junior
hiehschonl No 3: third row. Edwin Gun-
derson. Roosevelt Junior highschool No. 1
Leo Thronbur«. Roosevelt junior high-1 ngu t vUte siwu xour to lour i
school No 3 Curt 8h»drick. Capitol Hill in the supreme court, Judge Chambers _
lnionoh “h fourth row DSle ail Roose- would not have been reversed since a splendid appetite and eat anything I
veit No 5 Joe s Cannell. Harding No 4; reversal requires a majority vote want, without any ill effects. The ■ .... ,, alt. rcomm.n
Gordon EDperis. Hording No. 1. Howard George M Callihan county attor ' pain in my back and under my and 1 feel it my duty to recommen
ney. has announced that he is relying shoulders has entirely disappeared
on the supreme court ruling to aid andmyneryous.system has been
him in his suits to set aside the 1927 , wonderfulVostrene gargon Pills They
tax judgments which he alleges were' about tne Sargon 18 in y
Gangster Fourth of Pals -To
Die in Three-Year-Old
the year this attendance cup will be
awarded in the same manner, and at .ne ...—...................
i the end of the year will go to the club from 23 to 27, and total membership
having the best record. by the first of the year is expected
New officers of the Hi-Y council to reach 2.000. according to McCombs.
«—To be 5
9—Sharp pointed Instrument -
10— A slattern
11—A man's nickname,
12—Female deer
13—Harvest
14—Belonging to
15—To partake of food
16— A plaything
17—Behind
18—Sorrowful
19—To entice
20— To bury
21—A color
22—A flat bottomed boat
23—Ire
24— Illuminated
15—Outer covering of trees
2«—Pointed at
28—Fatty substance
29—To corrupt ■
30—To employ
21—Cornered
32—A small valley •
33—Sumx denoting a killer
34—To separate
35—Owned
36—To fatigue
37—Companion
39—Southern country (abbr.)
40—An organization (abbr.)
To Enter Race A
For Governor a1
________ ! \... —%
eEy"
“mhg-
J river by purchasing a 32.50 license,
Speaking into a microphone from a brought about the sale of 600 belore
Berlin broadcasting studio. Prof Ein- i the opening of the season October is.
I stein's word will be carried across the The season, game and fish depart-
Nelson Opinion Contained ssr'01" "" end “•
Only One Dissenting Vote, ,
Checkup Shows, D. Young. Red river to hunt ducks and other
----- I -------•-------- water fowl at about one-sixth the cost
")- ‘ l
F a. A
Here, indeed, we were on the track of Pell.
But the other man—the lover of Miss Van-
Proprietors of seven city drug stores,
charged with operating public nui-
sances as the result of a raid by
George Kerr, deputy sheriff, and his
brother, J. B. Kerr, county jailer, were
free in 3750 bail each, one in two
cases, Monday after pleading not
guilty in county court. They are
charged with selling Jamaica ginger.
Operators who denied the charges
and made bond are John C. Hadley,
123 South Harvey avenue; Roscoe
Hadley, 201 West Reno avenue; T. R.
Hadley, 1 West California avenue,
Vernon R. Beasley. Beasley's No. 1
Drug store, 200 South Broadwsy, and
No. 2, 19 South Broadway: C. J. York.
224 South Walker avenue; Frank
Lynch, 220 North Broadway, and Bob
Carson. 6 West Grand avenue.
Wiliam Spears, negro employe of
York, also made bond.
Although George M. Callihan, coun-
ty attorney, announced plans for fil-
ing injunction suits against the stores,
none had been filed Monday,
Graman Fatally Hurt
PASSAIC, N. J.. Oct. 14.——
Thomas "Tubby” O'Shea, 18 years
old, died Monday at Passaic General
hospital from injuries received during
a football game at Hackensack. Sat-
urday. O'Shea, end on the Passaic
highschool team, was operated on
* E-
H
d 3
S
Grove’s druffitU
Laxative
BROMO
QUININE
TahUU
Succesofulsince1882
ered.
gins, gaming house keeper, on the A cancelled insurance policy, pay- PT nnn ro P A Apn __
Jefferson park hospital doorstep Sun- Pble to Jessie Lafferty, was found in rLUUD Id TAUED BI
day. He had been shot down, just as Riggins's apartment. Police said she PTORTDA COMMITNTV
three of his pals had been shot down is Mrs. Jessie Lafferty Shupe. sister ------ I
of the slain Lafferty and widow of | MIAMI, Fla.. Oct. 14.—(P—With
"Bozo" Shupe, J Everglades canals north and west of
this section at flood stages of 18 feet
pouring their waters into the swol-
len Miami canal, engineers decided at
a conference Monday noon the only
holder of the Rexcraft prize bugle.
Two other Oklahoma City boys went
uncontested in their challenges. Fred
Ball in the whistling contest and Clint
Cook as undisputed champion with
the Australian whip.
Drugstore Operators
At Liberty on Bond
W -
“iead
A । -j CI other crimes on the west side: the
■ amhlar •hate last, thet is, except Tommy Shupe,
UdIIIIIUI Olivia and he is in prison for robbery,
‛ 1 The first to die was John Lafferty,
T n m • A called the "hoodlum outcast.” He was
aft IDurno At" shot to death in March, 1926. The
LOIl •YIII III 1 murder remains unsolved, but for a
e • time Tommy Shupe was suspected.
TT • "I n 1 chieflv because he was known to have
Hospital Door xn ^xer 01 PFe" *
Hunting Law Favors
Non-Resident Nimrods
Passage of a law providing that
non-residents may hunt migratory
water fowl during season on Red
I tion, after Judge Chambers's d*p- I
osition had been taken Saturday af- I
ternoon for use in trial of suits of i
George M. Callihan, county attorney, I
to set aside the 1927 tax refund Judg- Other Complications Also Yield to New Sargol
ments. Brown and Stater both called r — - — —
ACROSS
1—A college degree
2—Exists
X—A flat
6—To carry •
8—Indefinite article
9—A foot like organ
10— Individual
11— Printer's measure
12—Accomplish
13—A bivalve mollusk
14—A hypothetical force
16— Male progeny
14—Musical Instrument
18—To go to-law
19— To pillage
20—Because
21—To knock
22—succulent part of trait
23—An Insect
24—Accompanied
25—A knot in a tree
2«—A poker stake
27—The same (abbr.)
28—A pathway
29—A wild beast
30—A male deer
31—An animal trainer
32—Sharp pointed weapon
33—Announcer
IS—Not soft
36— A depraved person
37—Male parent
13—A beverage made from malt
39—A student
40—Railroad carriage
41—Prefix meaning out
42—Acted with violence
43—A stupid person
mA
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 128, Ed. 1 Monday, October 14, 1929, newspaper, October 14, 1929; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1961510/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.