Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 250, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 1, 1930 Page: 1 of 16
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■ X
Final Home
t
f
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper Published In Oklahoma
PRICE: City 2c, Out tide 3c
SIXTEEN PAGES- OKLAHOMA CITY, SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1980.
VOL. XL. NO. 250.
^STREET CAR FARES GO UP SUNDAY
Commission Is
Aged Canary Joins His Master in Death
Hen Coup
CHICAGO, March 1.—W—The
#
f
$.
3
1
N
You will pay a 10-cent street c
O.U. Officials
• ‘~2b
Iee
P
4
rolling stock and improw elty service.
Eastep Found
97
f
hours. having worked one hour after
tt; :
taken to the hospital by a Capitol Hill
smooth-
around the country because of his The appropriation of $50,000,000 to be the care* of the Munden home and
wonderful cheat measure.
Eftorts to find relatives or friends
About 60 Percent Drawn.
cants generally, in order that veterans a mamn who died at an Oklahoma
Hoover, were being made Saturday by
den.
Inside Today
I
it
\
publican. West Virginia.
Church News
Will Rogers Says.
levies.
i Markets
we felt we didn't know. some
HEAVY MOTION DOCKET
-
motion docket will be swamped during
8
The averrge is about half this num-
striking of motion hearings during
WILL.
fellow men.
« Wahington.
. . AAIMIIIIIID
X
♦
I
tir
Coalition Raid
Defeats Move
Probe Mishap
Of Car In City
Heath said, adding, "the completed
structure will not only meet the gov-
4
■
of representatives of all the American
nations Its purpose would be to dis-
Unanimous In
Signing Order
OKLAHOMAN AND
TIMES WANT-ADS
Today's Movie*
Know Your State
City
which
solid charity to everybody, and
love and affection for all his
1/ Y
?,,,
Howe Takes Up Cudgel
For Bereaved Mother
ernment’s needs for years
but will gtve to Oklahoma
monumental building of
expended by the American Red Cross
and the quartermaster general of the
death so he might marry Hughes’ wife,
Ha. who has confessed her purported
part in the slaying of her husband.
Mrs Hughes has not been tried, as
—Page IS
—Page II
—Page IS
pendents in a two-hour speech in the Cinderella of the Skies
senate Saturday by Senator Goff, Re- Everyday Questions
should be proud.”
--=-—-
Sandino Sails For
Yucatan Residence
Senator Goff Raps
Coalition on Tariff
i
culosis and have reached the stage
where the disease has been arrested for
Hr accused the coalition of obstruct- Soclety
Ing the bill, in order during the com- Dorothy Dix
ing congresslonal elections. to lay the Crossword Puzzle
blame for business uncertainty on the On the Air Today
Republican party and denounced the Sports
lowering of many existing industrial Oil News
BROOKHART PROPOSES
$50,000,000 FOR JOBLESS
— Page
-Page
- Page
— Page
— Page
- Page
—Page
— Page
—Page
army for the relief of unemployment
was proposed in a resolution intro-
duced Saturday by Senator Brook-
hart. Republican, Iowa, and referred
to the senate appropriations commit-
tee for consideration.
one hour Saturday morning.
Enstep, who is charged also with
poisoning his wife, was charged. by
34
«•
41
i fare, starting Sunday.
; Or. if you car* to invent in 13 rider
st once, you may obtain a dosen-ride
card for gl.
Casual riders on interurbans must
pay 10 cent more, also starting Bun-
ds*
New fares on the interurban will be
55 cent* to Norman; round trip t
Norman. 11: 90 cent* to El Reno or
round trip for $165, and 95 cent* to
Capitol Hill Congregation is
Successful in Fight,
Company Promises Improved
Service and Extension
Of City Linen.
Life Sentence Is Given In
Death Case.
one year, may apply for such post- Street and Draper undertaking of-
tions, _ ficials.
€- ----- E... • —• a ~ -I
Plans Advancing
great American hen had some- |
thing to cackle about Saturday- r
Another testimonial that the brentb
of spring was in the air during Peb-
ruary was shown Saturday when Dan
Cupid was declared winner over Old
Man Divorce in Oklahoma City fat
the month with a margin ot
spare.
Records of Prank Knepper. marringe
license clerk at the courthouse, reveal
206 licenses were issued during Uhe
shortest month of ths year. M com-
pared with 1M divorces filed.
Fire Sweeps college Buildinz
CRETE Neb . March 1— Fire
starting from defective wiring late
Friday night at Doane collage ob-
servatory here destroyed the building.
Mill in service.
The Shartel line. now on Harvey
avenue from Grand avenue to Pourth
street. will be moved to Walker ave-
nue where parallel tracks win be laid,
connecting it with the loop line at
Thirteenth street
The East Fourth street line will get
a parallel track Changes are planned
for the Capitol line, on which Hudson
said Til admit the service to terr-
Me." but he was unable to my what
the changes will be.
POLICEMAN SUES FOR
DAMAGES IN CRASH
i'
i
4
4
J
;
I
J
l g
car. Miss Brock and Phillips were
university co-eds, were not identified
by Phillips. Witnesses to the acci-
dent Mid there were seven in the
DRIDAY there was a hint of pur-
F pie in the brakes along the North
o'clock in the morning.
Dean R W. Reeves, head of the
university discipline committee, and
Emil R Krnetti, secretory of the uni-
versity are to come to Oklahoma City
Times Want-ads you
will find the largest and
• best seletion of homes
advertised for sale. Buy
now because local real
estate is steadily in-
creasing in value.
to come.
Hoover became ill in his room at
21242 West Reno avenue.
--*-----
who have been afflicted with tuber- City hospital Thursday after register-
1 ing at a hotel under the name of W
10 a. m
U. B. Envoy Way Home
COPENHAGEN, March I—(P-H.
Pereival Dodge, retiring American
minduter, with his wife and daughter.
Batinrday toft here for Paris on route
ALICIA, Ark., Mareh I—D—Four
bodies Saturday had been token from
the burned wreckage of tank and box
ear* of a Missouri Pacific freight
train which was derailed and caught
fire Friday
Four persons were injured. All of |
those killed and injured were Mid to
have been "beating their way" on the
train.
Theft Suspects Will
Be Returned to City
Five Young People May Meet
Quiz on Late Hours; One
in Hospital,
REVERLY HILLS, March 1 —
P Mr. Taft. What a lovely VERA CRUZ, March 1—I—Au-
Old soul; fat and good gustino sandino. exiled Nicaraguan
natured! You know of all our insurgent leader, and his eompaniona.
HVM1®, M~/“E "-amk- "I-* —- —-- ---------------------------------
“ "id! “d Dicky Cheers Home of Mrs, A. N. Munden For
21 Years; Song Ends But Memory Lingers.
March, with a total of 89 cases set for
, hearing during the term which opened
Saturday rewords of Cliff Myers, court
he will resume his residence. Before
a long distance. But the world is
much too young to forecast the ad-
vent of a day when intelligent men
will not make themselves look like
Neanderthals in chasing a bruiser
•2
A •
Capitol Hill church members Satur-
day drew first blond in their fight for
pool hall elosing, when C C. Christi-
son, county judge, ordered the closing
of a pool hall at 2523 South Robtnson
avenue.
License of the pool ha] was revoked
by Judge Christ Ison upon application
of 15 residents, in the district. rep-
resented by Mike Foster, attorney
The license was issued two months
ago to Mayme Moore, who since has
sold the place to O. E. French and
H B House.
Rate of 10 Centa, With 12
Rides for $1, Given
State Approval,
Protests Are Overruled
be great, but it’s greater to be
human. He will be remem- clerk. revested,
bered as our great human fel- The averrge is about half this num-
low. because there was more ber. The volume is due partly to the
of him to be human; one of — — — ——
If a motorist intercepts a parade of
fire trucks and policemen hot footing
it to the scene of a fire, and a erack-
up results, the motorist is fiable for
the consequences, Frank Cissne, city
motorcycle cop. contend* in a 12,500
damage suit Saturday against Abner
Prele. Cissne was tralling a fire truck
March 26, 1929, to a fire to north
Oklahoma City, when Prele collided
with him at Twenty-third street and
Broadway, he alleges.
CUPID HOLDS MARGIN
ON OLD MAN DIVORCE
the state with beating Hughes to
For Oil Tariff
Senate Turns Down Indepen-
dents, 39 to 27, After
Stormy Debate.
Blaine’s Attack Is Fiery
An investigatton by the discipline
committee at the University of Okla-
homa. Norman. was started Saturday,
following an auto accident here at 3
Oklahoma county's district court
Guthrie or 31.78 for a round trip.
Commutation books, good for to
days will continue to be available at
about a cent and a helf a mile.
Announecment that the new fares
would be effective Sunday was made
by Hubert Hudson of the Oklahoma
Railway Co
Protests Are Overruled
A few minutes previously, the state
corporation commisslon unanimously
had approved an order allowing the
inereases on the petition of the com-
pany.
The order was approved by the
commiszion despite proteste by J. B.
sort of a hen coup.
Samuel A. Sugar gave one of the
details. He was of a group which
made a quarter of a million dol-
lars through their confidence in
the nation's favorite fowl.
Early in February," he Mid.
"the wholesale price of eggs ranged
from 27 to 50 cents. Then the
price broke to 25 cento. The bulls,’
confident that prices would go up.
tried to corner the market.
February wan * month of
spring weather. Hens laid as they
never had laid before. The retail
price went down to the lowest)
has been since 1924."
WEST." Parker La Moore
paint* a living word-pie-
ture of the dangerous
frontier days of 1834. He
tells you in a most inter-
esting manner, of the
seemingly hopeless strug-
gle to tame the rod man
—a thrilling authentic
story of the west when
Andrew Jarkaon wag
president.
"WINNING Of
THE WEST
Beginning Tomorrow
in the
. SUNDAY
OKLAHOMAN
will never die.
He was Ohly a tireless.
TISHOMINGO, March 1— OP—A.
J. Eastep, Bryan county farmer, was
convicted of the murder of Will
Hughes. a neighbor by a jury in John-
ston county district court here Sat-
urday. The jury fixed life imprison-
ment as the sentence. The trial was
brought to Johnston county on a
change of venue.
The Jury deliberated only two
into their food or drink. The won-
devful thing in the story of Snook was
the devotion of the wife. used, abused
and discarded for a lithe girl, but
nonetheless a wife and the helpmate
of the man whose name she bore,
until the guards slit his trousers leg.
TT would have been big news if the
1 senate had adopted the oil tariff.
The defeat was expected Standard
Oil, Oulf and Shell oppose the tariff.
I get a kick out of the injured pride
with which the august senators eriti-
eise the frank oil men who went up
there to trade with other senators
atimiiimiQiitmmmaiimimiiiQimiinHi
A Sound Investment
and a Lasting Estate
WASHINGTON, March 1—®-
Bls me for delay in passing of the
tariff bill was placed on the coalition
of Democrats and Republican Inde-
we Admired for great ability, he left he broached plans to form an
..... "Allianza Latina Americaha."’ formed
ien, when the driver became con- — — -
fused at the intersection. causing the Audit.of their books showedithenar
car to careen mtosshecurband entcapit retum
Texas Giri In-ue“ wi Buy 23 New Cars
Miss Virginia Brock, 20 years old. | Improvements contemplated are the
daughter of Mr. and Mr*. L. E Brock purchaae of 28 new street cars at once
of Port Worth, is in Wesley honpital and the rerouting and enlargement qt
here, suffering injuries inflicted in Use a number of tinea. Hudsmm npialned.
mishap, she is not a university stu- The company plans to add 30 new
dent. It was said st Norman Rhe was street ears and buses within the next
in the university city Friday night, two years, replacing 40 obsolete car
adopted a regulation Saturday provid-
ing for the reopening within a year
of examinations which haye been
held, and have been cloned to appli-
some we had great faith in,
and all of them to us sym-
bolizedthe great office they avow the Monroe doctrlne.
occupied, but just as a man, - —
low arealhnnwstitoG 6- DISTRICT COURT FACES
yond with more real, down-
right affection and less ene-
mies than any
He always seemed like he
was one of us. It‘s treat to
redbud has vanished front many parte
of the state, destroyed by ruthless,
thoughtlesa hands. It is absolutely
the most beautiful wild thing in ns-
turs in this commonwealth. Yet we
sit idly by and see it destroyed before
our eyes. It is far more beautiful as
a purple hare in the-valley than it is
out, captured and beautifying for a
day, some family nook. We ahould
mave thin beauty, let's join another
club, without dues, oaths or obliga-
tions except our individual promise
not to destroy—Rave The Redbud.
The Weather
LOCAL—Generally fair Saturday night
s»4 nda. aider satrday aUkt. mini-
men wpoejature I* to M.
STAT--Fair end eelder Saturdey
mttt. Lwest temgerature is ta IS la the
nerbserteni 14 la tl la megthern.
nfkks WARNING — Tfs»»»r»tor»
Wisconsin Senator Sees "Ne-
farious Methods" in
Lobby Letter.
By PARKER LAMOORE
Oklahonian-Times Washington Bureau
<1312 National Presn Butldina)
WASHINGTON, March 1. — The
Thomas amendment, proposing a tar-
iff of a barrel on crude petroleum
and an ad valorem tax of 50 percent
on refined products, was voted down
by the United States senate, 39 to 27.
Friday night. The vote came a few
minute* after 10 o'clock at the end
of une of the most involved debates
heard on the senate floor in recent
weeks.
"The independent oil men. here
fighting for protection on the home
market, did not lose their amendment
on its merits. It went down to de-
feat under a bombardment of in-
neuendo and vituperation and in an
atmosphere of misunderrtanding
for support. Everybody knows that Ai ea m) T
tariffs are made by careful consid- I—111 It V nV Unrv
erations of the needs of different sec- UUIIUY • Y • Ua Y
tions, if you will support my tariff ‘ J J • I
on cement and are for my tariff on ----— . _ I
------------------------------------------------------------------------- ii ।
When St. Louis
Was the Out-
post of Civili-
zation!
—and everything to the
west was s wilderness in-
habited only by Indians
whose prowess was de-
termined by the number
of "paleface" sealps
hanging from their balta.
In "WINNING OF THE
OKLAHOMA CITY TIES
Co-Ed Tak*. Own Lfe
rAHIS in a day iate, but I can’t re- shetdidnot partic PAte.in. Fpstep
I „ . . ,.7, *a_ i mocion Ior & cnange or venue. EasUep
I frain from rubbing it in on the has: not been tried for the murder
talent which made the long trip tolof his wife
see the Sharkey-Scott operetta. To Eastep a attorney indicated he would
cal such a tango a fight is to en- present a motion for a new trial be-
courage the racket.. J1 was A flop fore sentence formally is passed upon
which will set the whole over-commer- hin clent
claused business of prise fighting back _
Flans for the promised $1,100,000
Seven years ago Judge A N Mun- addition to the federal building here
Oklahoma City attorney, and are approximately 60 percent com-
Dickie's favorite. passed away, pleted. F. K. Heath, anslatant secretary
Throughout two week* of illness, the of the treasury, informed Stanley
faithful bird strained everv muscle in Draper, secretary-manager of the
wo com w —___________ Phillips, former legialator; Mrs Harp,
durini the Atternoon to check details or.wrignt, 26168hieidabqulevard, and
of the sccldent here.
The necident occurred * t,Porty- ! Ra lwaz.niti ialinad theuinerege,
fourth street, south, and Robinson fareswikallowthemtosineregsethe
however to attend a dance.
Richard Phillips Wichita Pall*.
Texas, freshman football sar at th*
university. Mid to have been Miss
Brock's companion at the dance, was
given emergency treatment at Wesley
hospital. Later Saturday morning he
made a report on the accident to
police.
Driver of the car WAS George Rus-
Mil.-21 years old. Picher. Okla, the
report to police Mid Runsell is a
student at th* university.
Police Learn Name-
Two others in the ear. Mid to be
Qann 22
| " 13c::::: 42 2 noon
3 i 38 2 P. m
iifk
tariff on olL
• • •
IHE Ml men did nothing t® be
l ashamed n(. They have learned
some things about lobbying. Per-
haps they will do mare dissembling,
use less ballyhoo, more adroitness on
the next trip. They had 27 votes, a
splendid total.
My guess is that the whole tariff
MU will be defeated. Then a special
session of congress will come next
winter on the tariff. If the inde-
pendents are in the right to the finish,
they will keep their powder dry and
learn more about the tariff needs of
Blaine, Norris, Nye, Dale and Robin-
son.
If Wirt Franklin keeps his Irish up.
and if his associates do not weary in
well doing, there's A fine chance for
sn oil tariff within a year.
Wise selection and pur-
chase of a home now in
Oklahoma City will
prove a sound invest-
ment . . .a las ting
estate— something you
can pass on to your
children. Every day in
the Oklahoman and
Their application for a new license
will be heard Monday by the county
judge.
The protesting petition alleged the
pool hall violate* city ordinances in
that it' is less than 200 feet from a
church.
------- —
Burned Train Wreckage
Yields Four Bodies
sessions of the State Bar association
last week. One eriminal case is on
the Hat. i
had made laughing children happier ,c.
[for 21 years. He had soothed those Draft of $1,100,000 Structure
wracked in sickness and pain; even
had twittered sympathetically to those
in death.
• 7,74 •, WWT
i*y:7ve
22
e r .F Pe
-eh--.-- '
—
. to tear down some of the tender ANN ARBOR, Mich . March 1.—t)----------------- ... ,<--------------------- - —(
I beautiful shoots for the vase on the —Mias Eleanor Johnson, 22 yerrs old, ita tiny throat in an effort to dispel chamber of Commerce, in Washing-
* mantel in the living room. Most of of Flint, Mich., a spphomore in .the the sick-room quiet. ton Saturdsy.
the beauty will shatter from the stem literary college ’of the University of Sunshine kept the master alive • "It is expected that plans and speci-
• while the prise* are being carried Michigan, ended her life early Satur- time, but the master passed. Dickie fications will be placed on the market |
home, but what do the nature fovea day by inhaling gas in a rooming mourned awhile, then went on trilling for bids within four or five months."
care about that. There ought to b house. She left a note declaring that for a troubled world.
. enoukgh love of Oklahoma to check she had nothing to live for. ,1 unahi. tn his leas because of
the annual raid upon the redbud. The ------2."----X ________; ________ I Unable, to use ns legs Decau56,2.
. encroaching age. Dickie kept up the
Canadian. The redbud will shed its
opulent wealth upon Oklahoma in an-
other week, unless fickle March de-
cides to throw a snow storm. Then
on the following Sunday ten thousand
aufbists will swarm into the country
WASHINGTON, March 1.—i— backed singer. Dickie had lightened
presidents thia generation embarked Friday on the steamship
Ene*. some we knew, some Coahulia for Merida. Yucatan, where
, ‘ _ Th® investigation held Friday
Distinguished Statesnan In morning with Wirt Franklin, vresl-
g.R. A,mine W.ter dent of the Independent Petroleum
Slowly Growing Weaker, ASSOctatton, on the stand, did not. turn
.. _ up anyt hing particularly damaging |
WASHINGTON, March L— “ — and Franklin acquitted himself well
William Howard Taft Saturday was under the fire of a committee by no
slowly sinking into death while - a means friendly to his cause but Just
great nation sorrowfully awaited the | enough indiscretions had crept into
end that could not be far away. I (Pieane turn to Fas* *• Celumn 3
AMARILLO, Texas. March 1—0— Gene Howe, Amarillo editor
will leave hers Monday for New York "git her to close the biggest dra-
matic hit in New York or secure sn equitable settlement for an Ama-
rillo widow and mother."
How* referred to the play "The Last Mile " which he asserted
was based on the experlence of Robert Blake, son of Mrs. Ella Blake
of Amarillo. Blake was executed a year ago
Just before his execution he wrote a playlet. "The law Takes Ita
Toll," which was published In American Mercury, and the rights to
which were given Mrs. Blake
This playlet. Howe chargee, was used without permission by
John Wexley in anting "The Last Mile."
Howe declared that either Wexley must "do the right thing," or
he would attempt to enjoin th* producers.
Police Sunday will return Curly
Brim and Harry Morris from Bristow
for quentioning. In connection with the
theft Janunry 28 of 1150 from the
Cornish Furniture Co., aceording to
Charles Becker, chie of police. The
two men were arreated Friday night
Two men entered the furniture store
about noon While one used the
phone the other is said to have stolen I
, the money from the cash drawer, . L
His condition was said by his phy- rN 1 • II I? .
sicians to have slightly improved Bat] Irade In Hog Futures
urday morning. •
I Thhercondstomotbthletnrmedihter Started at Chicago
justice is slightly Improved as evi- I -------
denced by a moderate, rise in his i (Copyright. 1930. for Okiahoman-Times '
blood pressure which has been con- CHICAGO March 1— Trade in hog ,
tinuously falling for the past three future, began Saturday on the Chi:
days. cago livestock exchange—the first
. . ;--, I How much longer he might live was venture into speculation on the future
By MERLE BLAKELY » , a question cloaked in uncertainty. Dr. price of livestock on the hoof.
Member The Times City Staff Francis R Ganer and Dr Thomas A The first sale was made nt A car-
A broken wing. A silenced song. A cheery home shrouded Claytor, who have been in constant load of light hogs for September de- unara w .w ---,.—
In sadness. attendance Mid the end might be livery at 412. This is nearly121 above funeral home ambulance.
A master who many years ago enjoyed standing by a bird tour or five days away, but that on the present quotations on light hogs in Erforts early Saturday morning to
cage, whistling to encourage a young canary to develop his vocal the other hand, a sharp turn for the the cash market. | turn t. ess* ». Cetumn n
abilities Saturday was joined in death by the bird, worse with death following closely Representatives of the Packers, the ----—-----
Dickie was only a bird, but a happy canary. Many days since after might be expected at almost any ^cLmo rnmen of thebankand p.1W. (Acno
1909 he had trilled contentment in his pent up world a few feet time. w the chremonihlprpening P I 00111311 U10Sin8
। noYsovenemneonsene"chitaren sy,' Fe(|era[ Building I WILL .ADD veterans Forced by Church
O I WASHINGTON, March 1—(—As shaees against the probable tutur
a further aid to veterans seeking em- -______*--
P’oyment, the dvu pervice commtsslon RELATIVES OF DEAD
MAN SOUGHT IN CITY
Salary, nicht is to IS la nertherm per-
Umi IS 1. 28 la southerm.
nOvRLr TEMPERATUIE ,,
Editorial
TP the city planning commission pro- 1
l pones to recommend to the' city ,
council that the country club quarter
be taken into the city. It should do it,
instead of talking about it, else it will
reart in the paper one fine morning
that an oil irone has been executed
The lease on the Ham property was
filed within a week of the time the
city council expected to bring it in.
tN order to prevent the development
" 1 of this golf links for oil, the plan-
ning commission and the city council
should move for annexation with all
haste. »
The 160 acres involved has a valua-
tion not far from 4500,000 When th*
country club bought it it was worth at
the outside estimate, $100,000. The en-
hanced value was made by the growth
of the city, not through any activity
1 of the country club The city growing
, up around th* country club has built
a property worth half a million dol-
• Iars. During the 20 years of its
growth the club has been favored by
• paying no city taxes. It is high time
that It should be brought in. Okla-
homa City has made the country club
> a wonderful profit. It should not be
permitted to sit there longer and make
• a wildcat pitch at nebulous oil riches.
If big production were to be found
' there. it would be at frightful expense
, to the whole etty. No small produc- !
tion ever could male* th* property
• worth As oll territory what it is worth
1 today as first-class residence property
"DERENNIAL atories about the
' ’I* iron nerve displayed by murder-
, J ers when they go to the electric chair
fl nauseate me. There is nothing won-
• / derful about that. Condemned men
’ on the brink of electrocution are in
'■ a daxe. bordering on coma, and often
- aided by a few grain* of drug slipped
happy song. When he was found imt
(Min. tur to raze 4. Celumn >1
hhiaoxamnaen 1 canrd a -"1a ‘ ,
MaibrEa ange ‘hei psion A ■ •>. ‘
nne nid ‘201 ■ . b0n em
■ ches from the rhamhei.
17 r dav nich‘ " a1"ra h> ■ ‘he
FF3 nfpropsal would carr wnh votes 10
E2 spare Then several dlr hard coa-
£.n803ETESMS that
6623 had been formed among the sugar,
lumber and oil advocates which would
• ~ disrupt their entire program, played
T • "a Aij [ their trump card in a sudden raid
I iff I A I honara on the temporary headquarters of the
lull if V UlldIIU visiting oil men in which they ob-
O tained posnession of the entire cor-
w rv e C, respondence rile compiled by 50 en-
111 | off •tatA thusiastic but inexperienced workers.
J All l dIU UUOU a part of which was used Wth telling
affect during th* debate.
| > t
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 250, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 1, 1930, newspaper, March 1, 1930; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1961627/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.