Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 294, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 22, 1933 Page: 2 of 16
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■
TWo-OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES, SATURDAY, APRIL 12,
MacDonald Arrives at New York
Rumors Heard
77
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t
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3
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Efe
t
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l
Will Rogers Says:
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"h,
Luce
A Sod Wall H* of ‘89
I ■ 1
1
trade barriers.
race
our
s
S
Pr ident Roosevelt M to hi Anten-
con-
F
April 22—(P-Lord
Daily Mail declared Sat-
LONDON,
it Bat-
and
of
*
Financier Aids
In Capture Of
Threat Author
for homes on April 22, 1889; and, too, that
humblest homes now have more comforts than
National Guard Opens
Fire to Protect Levees
828.090
for the
f
v
Bear Babies Ready
. For Publics Stares
I"
-
President And
Premier Explore
More Problems
A
h,P
5
65
1,
MA
2
220.9
Squawk^ Meows and Growls Are •
Featured in Boys' Pet Parade
31.
gp-
- threats against Rosenwald and his
- family, was received.
I Rosenwald received several tele-
will preside at theatnal denedare
""SThes an aepresaiontmes," Judge
Ward said, "but. 1, during the trlal.
Bev. a. a. Berrie - ' |
Behind bars, this Mus- '
kogee pastor to appealins
a life sentence for pols-
eming his first wife. His
around wife 19 yean old.
who taught in his Sun-
day school and read hto
poetic love notes, says she
' needs him.
Mooney Witness
List Is Trimmed
6*
/e -
G2k/es,zd
•b J
Leming J. Rosenwald Victim
Of Extortionist, Turns
Tablet on Man.
6"“
of eeonomica and to “better designed
to defeat than promote business re-
Amela Barhart Fata am
In white evening gown
and long kid gloves she
served as pilot for Mrs.
Franklin D. Roosevelt on
a cross-country trip. No
fear, only a wish she, too.
could fly was expressed
by the notable passenger.
First Presbyterian Church to author-
ize renewal of present loans on both
the church and rectory has been
called tar • ► m- Wednesday. April
9
To Remain With Gold
PARIS, April 22-(P-Prance de-
clared Saturday for maintenance of
for a criuse down the Potomac.
The first hours of the British prune
“I didn’t really mean to do Mr. Ros-
enwald any bodily harm,” police quot-
ed him "It was Just that I was so
desperate for money.” ...
Rosenwald received three extortion
notes, the first on March 20, instruct-
ing him to "wait seven days” for fur-
ther directions
On March 27. a second threat or-
dered Rosenwald to leave the money
in IM and $20 bills at a lonely spot in
the northeastern section of the city.
Telephone Wires Tapped
Both letters were turned over to po-
Hee and on the day appointed detec-
Jean Borotra
Age, says the bounding
Basque, will peep him off
the French Davto cup
team this year. It will
not, say friends, who pre-
dict the veteran tennis
star will again take the
courts against America.
(Centinued ftom Paze D
under way since Tuesday night along
Lee creek. about 12 miles north of
Brushy school house. In the belief the
boy was drowned, but officers said
Saturday unusual circumstances sur-
rounding the findings of hto clothing
on a drift in the creek had aroused
suspicions. .
Local officers also were investigat-
ing another case involving a small boy
A family named Christopher living in
the outskirts of Sallisaw reported that
their 8-year-old son was mysteriously
attacked Friday night aa he was play-
ing hide and seek, shaken violently
by someone who seized him from be-
hind. and then struck a violent blow
LOCAL BUILDING AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION
CHUBCH FINANCIAL
MEETING IS CALLED
calf
The affair went off successfully ex-
cept for some slight difficulty with
and dogs with a tendency to turn the
occasion into a free-for-all.
Music was provided by bands from
Harding junior highschool and Cen-
tral highschool, and the parade was
led by ths Honor Patrol, senior high-
school safety squad sponsored by the
Kiwanis club w H Avery was chair-
man of the Kiwanis committee in
(Continued trom raze 1)
tax here cannot this year exceed $254
000 on the estimated valuation, and
will disappear entirely when a revolv-
ing fund is created ■
The board does not want to add to
the tax burden," Campbell said. "We
insisted that the bill be drawn so that
it would be only a temporary measure
to save the fair. We think it is better
that the fair be supported by those
who vtoS it than by the public as A
taxpayer.”
The fair board belleves it can bor-
row enough to pay off its $37,009 in-
debtedness from last year if it is A-
sured of the $25,000. By trimmind
expense to ths barest necessities, the
board may be able to make this year's
fair profitable, said Hemphill
Cort of tte fair last year was ap-
proximately $100,000. This year the
cost will be held to between $75,000
and $80,000. Hemphill said.
DIfficulttes may arise from the fad
that only a part of the appropriation
can be spent, under permission from
the excise board before the levy final
lyteaet. Hemphill said that difficult
will not stop the fair board, because
L"
When the future looked
dek for the state fair.
Znager Hemphul said
e would "muddle
nough —show." Ba
id Tia week legisla-
Last Laugh
Financier Traps Man Who
Tried Extortion
ver, •
' '■ »
,5, ,
F
I
3
Judge Rules Against Expense
That Is Unneeded.
BAN FRANCIBOO. April »
Efforts at Tom Mooney's defenders to
bring together for his second.trial,
starting Wednesday, persons who fig-
ured in his conviction !• years ago
for the San Francisco Preparedness
day parade bombing were checked by
a court ruling here Saturday..
standard to eliminate nuctuation in 'French Declare Plan
exchangee and to include reduction os i * .
w-t—T Penn It On
Speaker Rainey at hto preas conter-
did a ducal palace just two generations back.
That love of home which carried the Eighty-niners
into Oklahoma will sustain their sons and grand-
sons in a determination to repay the Local Building
& Loan Association the money borrowed on their
homes.
They are carrying on that run begun in '89. Home
ownership is still their goal. That great virtue of
A 2; - «
the Caucasian race is ample assurance to every in-
vestor in Local Building & Loan stock that love of
home will triumph.
“Home, Sweet Home”
Spurred the. ‛89ers!
, That race into Oklahoma forty-four years ago
was for homes. The plow, stores, banks; all else
followed. Those pioneers wanted homes; homes
they could call their own.
Only two generations back our predecessors braved
great hardships that they might have the shelter of
sod walls and thatched roofs and such communica- .
tion as they could get over gumbo roads and by
pony express.
The thing I want to picture is that love of home
brought this great multitude into the rough prairie
that was Oklahoma; love of home that inspires
great sacrifices to win a home we may call our own.
e
Love of home is no sudden fad, like the Jig-Saw
puzzle, nor a pain or fever such as the so-called
depression or periods of prosperity. Love of home
is as everlasting as the hills.
It is meet and fitting that here on Oklahoma's
birthday we should pause and be reminded of that
800 Sunday.
The bears are now almost three
from their mother for short periods.
They will be on vlew in the main 20o
bullding. —
Galmer Swtewer To Be Named
BROWNSVILLE. April
Milton Wert of Brownsville, * Demo-
crat, facet Carlos Wataon, a Repub-
Dean running as an independent. Sat-
urday in a general election in the
fifteenth Texas eongressional districb
to choose a successor to John N. Gar
ner. vice-president, __________ _
I" ?
h
dine of recent years. guest to stand at the enzenexecuu68
This interational Infiation, under own desk for a press interview of the
the plan, would be a major item to a type which he htmaelf grant* twice
broad program designed to establish a week.
a revised International currency -■ —
wavedonrerencnsAtthmpremie rideis his daughter, Ishbel. mw. TKhiusOrover Whalen
senting the mayor of Mew York.____________ ' ____________________—
tivea planted a dummy package at
.the spot named. It remained un-
L.^i.ud prege ejephoto shows Premier Ramsay MacDonald of Great Britain a* he touched but Well was seen nearby and
This Associated T™*1. tenepnob. H"A It New York en route to Washington and the Roose- was placed under surveillance.
he arrived at New xorx en u w i- aln repre- A third letter on April 13, reducing
the demand to 175,000 but repeating
Famous daughter of
Ramsey MacDonald, will
renew oM friendships in
America thia week. She
accompanied England’s
premler here onhlsdeht
discussion junket. It to
her second visit.
on the back and left unconscious on
the ground. The boy told officers
he did not see his assailant
Rope Belonged to Father
The body of the Brannam boy was
discovered shortly after dart by Clar-
ence Helms, teacher at Brushy school
who was taking a short cut through
the woods to his horns after attending
a picnic. He went immediately to hto
home and drove the nine mites to
Sallisaw to inform officers.
Green said the boy's body was hang-
ing about four feet above the ground.
One end of the heavy rope was knot- l
ted tightly about his neck, the other ।
end was tied to a limb about ten feet
above the ground. The father told
Green the rope had been tert the day
before and that the boy had been in-
structedtofindit. Scattered on the
ground under the tree were tools the
boy had borrowed from his uncle Fri-
daxmonoynpparenuy had been dead
about four hours when his body was
found, placing the time of the hang-
ing at about 2 p. m. Friday, Green
The Winnie Mae: •
She Was a One
Man Airplane
phot seek
white monoplane had borne Post and
his navigator, Gatty, with impunity.
Bogged down in a Russian mud-hole
for hours, refueling in the remote
wastes of Siberian steppes, a quick
leap from one continent to another
across the northern tip of the Pacific
ocean. through all these trials, the
“Winnie Mae” had never faltered.
Coast-to-coast hope, tours of the
country, her wheel* lifted from the
runway of a Canadian airport only to
come to rest in distant Mexico. and
through it all. Port brought hto trusty
ship unscathed. ~
A ND then Thursday, a few moment*
A after Luther E' “Rod” Gray,
experienced pilot and close friend of
Post. had taken the plane off the air-
port at Chickasha, her motor died
and she crashed into a field.
With the reticence typical of pilots,
neither Post nor Gray had much to
say about the accident, but friends of-
fered an explanation of why Post was
ence answered the attack Friday
night of Republican leaders on the
plan with a declaration that: ,
“They are from 20 to 30 years be-
hind the time* Big bualessand
bankers they follow were repudiated
Par, president ofathe board ol true-
*At the present time the chureh
building ewrrtoa a 2oAn.oln8ot09q
parrpepord mhe Vesting wuomh
ide
0.-
"They ought to know it by now.
They are never in a position to team
anything new.
"Many of the bankers they have
been following soon will go to the
' 2g*
mani
a
In addition, some of the boys showed
examples of striking originality in
their selection of pets. One carried a
large and very warty frog; another
had a possum. and behind another
trailed a small and slightly wobbly
State Fair Tax
Levy By Gty
Will Be Asked
t
Squawks. Meows, growls and a num-
ber of assorted cheeps startled the
every-day din of trafflo Saturday
afternoon when more than 100 boy
scouts proudly ted their pete through
the downtown district in the first an-
nual "pet parade.”
The Kiwanis club sponsored the af-
fair and practically everybody had a
good time including the animals.
Everything that small boysaccumu-
late in the way of pets was represent-
ed. There were more dogs than any-
thing etoe. of course, and these ranged
from aristocratie chowa and.police
dogs to plebian, but jurt as cherished.
not at the controls.
Gray is recognised as one p the
most skiiful Lockheed pilots in the
country. Post himself sald he.con-
sidered “Red" was "the best lock-
heed pilot in the world* Both men
have been flying this type of plane
for years, and as to usually thecnse,
both men have found plane* which
they think are better than others. Port
feel* that the "Winnie Mae" is the
"sweetest flying" ship he knows.
But "Red" Gray, who has been fly-
ing for Branif Airways for severa!
years, has as hto favorite one of that
company's ships, which was formerly
known as the "Cherokee" and be-
longed to C. C. Julian. Gray for a
time was Julian’s pilot.
144 thing about this
WK whole economie
Y4 Tj move. A du"mb
(GMassk man knows just as
V-EN much about it as
I43I a smart one does.
I M‛XI For I bet you there
Le“yy.N to not a man to
E<NP America could tell
"U boy you exacity what it
#F‛ will lead to. For
after all a printing press can make
you awful rich (for a little while).
Here to something you might have
forgot, in the campaign last fall
the Republicans said if the Demo-
erate got in they would inflate
money, and the Democrats swore
they wouldn’t. But who can re-
member a campaign promise. I
don't know how I ever happened to
remember that one. But let ‘er
go, we are all on a drunk for the
time being anyhow, and the durn
thing might accidentally work per-
manently. Yours.
WILL.
Bomh Explodes in Cuba
HAVANA. April 22.---A bomb
exploded shorty after midnight
| urday at the corner of Aguila
Barcelona streets. I did no damage
.2
BELZONI, Miss., April 22.—(P
National gunrdamen early Saturday
brought their gun* into play aldng
the Yazo river levee* south of here
and watched alertly as a renewal of
the feud between warring flood-
threatened delta farmers appeared
imminent.
Scores of shot* were fired by the
troop* after three mysterious dyna-
mite explosions and the chugging of
elusive motorboata in the darkness
were beard along the river.
FNHE two planes are rtster ships,
A having been made in the same
group at the lockheed factory And
both pilots think they have unbeat-
able quallties.
Several • times previously Port has
asked Gray to try hto plane and see
how he liked it. Gray had refused
to do so. Finally he was persuaded
to take the controls Thursday after
Post had again asked him to try out
his plane.
Lack of gasoline earned the crash.
Postsaid. Though the gauge showed
sufficient in the tanks for X flight
to Oklahoma City, the tanks were
found to be empty, he said.
After the accident. Port pralned the
forced tending Gray made. "I vy
sure glad he wo* at those controls
when we ran out of gas. X might have
done a lot worse."
PHILADELPHIA. April 22 —(-.
Y • (Threatened with "ruthless cruel and
vicious death” unless he paid $100,"
1000, J. Rosenwald, millionaire
- 4 chairman of the board of Bears. Roe-
Hu ' buck & Co., sided police in capturing
Ethe alleged extortionist by engaging
E I him in a telephone conversation.
^Meanwhile the senate banking sub-
committee on silver, took upall pend-
ing measures bearing on 7**”**^
of sliver prices and decided to invite
the house coinage committee to r
joint meeting on the subject next
sequoyah
>.sasaw
- ---
-- --0
to emphasize the easy spirit of Infor-
-______ maUty in which the Roosevelts are
Secretary Hull has said that the receiving him The president and hl*
matter of boosting prices to of to- family welcomed the prime mint
portance particularly to the South and his daughter. lahbel. with char-
American countries whose principal acteristic hospitallty, going to the
products are major export cammodi- front porch of the executive mansion
ties. and whose incomes have been to greet the visitor*,
drastically reduced by the price de- Then the president invited his
AS
A
d)
-me msm.eps -eruz-1~
lngsconvicted.withtMoonean I cumstances and designed to enable ua
now serving alegentencenivoiomin this country to wort out an im-
Priaan. A number ot.thegothers provement to prices which was essen-
reported in distant cities. I--
White the wealthy executive and art
connolsseur listened to the man give
him directions for paying the money,
police who had traced the call aped
to a cigar store in north Philadelphia
late Friday night and arrested the
Desperate Fer Money
He gave his name aa Charles WeR
3g years old, an unemployed clerk and
police said he made a complete con-
Bishop Kelley
petals for diovernor ।
Murray's consolidated
seat of learning, "Greater
Oklahoma Univeratty,"
are largely the wok.
Bishop Francia C. Ke-
ley, famed for hissahol-
arship. as well a* for hto
ecclesiastic rank.
used as a study.
Parley Begins Quickly
Losing no time in putting their
heads together Friday night, Mac-
Donald and Roosevelt aat down tn the
quiet of the president’s oval-shaped
study on the second floor of the White
House within five hours at the guest's
mo.__________ , arrival and gave themselves toa heart-
As to the maneuver for reduction in to-heart discussion of the ID* which
the gold bases back at all currenctes, affect their nations andthe world,
the visitors learned that Mr. Roose- Aa Informal Welcome
velt felt such a move would permit It was well on toward midnight be-
the issuances of increased quantitles fore either noted the passage of Ume
of currency against the present gold sufficiently to think about bed. For
reserves and raise commodity prices more than two hours they had talked,
overvwhere. intimately and frankly.
SurfTT boost in prices, some official concrete decisions are expected to
pointed out elsewhere, would answer take shape Sunday when the presi-
one of the chief arguments advanced dent and nis guest will seek even more
for revision of the war debts on the coaplete seclusion than to possible
ground that foreign nations receive here, stealing away aboard the de-
only a fraction of the amount which partment of commerce boat. Sequoia,
they obtain for selling their goods at for a criuM down the Potomac,
the Ume the debt settlements were ..._______* \ ~ ’
the made yet have to pay the United mtn|ttrr in the White House served
States an undiminished sum
South American Benefits
0lg0e
■
3. $
4 "“g,
re
a cContinund from Fase 1
n '
week. I qqapue WHY Aphts wih any nA-
Adams toPres Program at the won MvOt on M paymenta.
r-s sxs
administratdon‛s bin. . - .JSTw the president to work Tor
$100,000,000 in silver at 50 Move for World Advance
ounce as part payment on war oeum,
ana to issue rilvw certificates on the
basts of such white metal.
Senators Reed of Penney l vania and
Walcott of Connecticut and Repre:
sentatives Been of New York and
__of Massachusetts issued a 1,000-
word statement naserting the con-
Molted inflation plan wS "bring no
permanent prosperity." that it “vo.
‘#35 they on
•--TTT strength of the appropriation.
Leasine 1. Rouenwaia The fund will be spent before 1
—SS mm . approval at budgets and before
When an extortionist called Lessing 40-day protest period, expected
J. Rosenwald, vice-president of Bears, | come in December. The flair is in
Roebuck A Co. by telephone in Phil- ' tember:
adelphia, the capitalist kept him talk-
ing long enough for police to catch
him in a telephone booth.
Tom was 151 sJhuwih whetherthe
. WSar’de-
sr
the oval room, which looks out “SE -i-
the Washington monument and the cidedJ1*?
Potomac river. Their assistants drew meeting of the wo
up chairs closely around, smoking. ; I ference.
These Experts Present
rrnS Amsrlcraymmonacmoney.dssse Rotherthere’s Dally mannaeclareapa-
ant secretary of state; Wiulam Bum urday that Payreant
special assistant to Hal; Warren De-lain’s wardebtto the United 808
lano Robbins, expected soon to be is now impossible..
named mintster to Canada, and Her- The paper said ths abanoonmen
lertpeis, Mate department economie of the gold standard by theEnited
advisor.s’ States made u “entirtlg our
rare renoneo. « mupuzg wu J The British staff with Ambassador power to continuethe pymen* 0
ede uheannualzepontnigh program’Lindsay wu Hr Robert Van Bittart, (debt instalment*."
CU INGSFRON THS
We KS NEWSREEL
phone calls from the extortionist and
police tapped the wires. Friday night.
- ... .. an operator listening to at police
BEVERLY HILI8, Calif., April 1 headquarters heard the Rosenwald
n—Well there Jurt ain't much to number called and at first mention of
write about today but gold and the $75,000 note, radio patrol cars
there ain’t much I were rushed to the cigar store. Weil
gold to write about, was grabbed in the telephone booth.
There is one good | ------me - -
Suicide Seen
In Rope Death
I Of State Boy
"d. I
(1 1
Im
Of Compromise
In Money Plan
Capitol Hears Talk of New
Move to Curb Power
To Reduce Gold.
WASHINGTON, April 22—4—
The capitol heard Saturday aa the
senate prepared to renew its inflation
debate that an attempt would be
made to compromise on the drastic
provision for presidential authority to
reduce the gold content at the dollar
as much a* 50 percent.
This clause barely remained in the
bill Friday, for the banking commit-
tee tied 10 to 10 on a vote to throw
it out, with such influential Demo-
crat* aa Glass of Virginia. McAdoo of
Calltornia and Pletcher of Florida
voting to oust it
The rumored modification would
allow the president to cut the gold
content in agreement with other
countries and not by independent
proclamation as now provided.
There was not any evidence, how-
ever. that thia would be acceptable
either to the administration or to the
ultra-inflationist group in the senate.
Which foums a major part of the
Roosevelt support for the mensure.
Rankin Draws a Picture
Senator Rankin (D., Miss ) said if
he were a Rembrandt and wished to
paint a picture of the Hoover admin-
istration for posterity:
"I would draw a picture at cynical
old Andrew Mellon squeezing a hu-
man heart into a wine glass held by
Ogden MIUls, with the administration
looking on in smug complacency."
Byrhs of TennesBee, the Democratic
floor leader, asked for an opinion of
the "Americaniam" of the statement
issued by the Republican leaders
Friday. —7 __
“If we Democrats had issued such
a statement when Coolidge or Hoover
were president." Rankin replled,"they
would have said it smacked of dis-
loysnli, who signed the broadside,
lumped in with the declaration that
he had no apology to make "for any-
thing in it." ’ 4
Senate Democrat* moved steadily
forward Saturday despite the Republi-
can storm raging around the Ad-
ministration's controlled inflation
plan, ready to strike and drive the
Legislation through at the tirst break
in the clouds.
Heeding emphatic word from Prod-
dent Roosevelt that he regards prompt
enactment of the measur as eseen-
tial to hto general reconstruction pro-
gram, arrangements were mMa to
take it up to the senate at the flrot
mmmwe-wwT-=T:
a es ".,..42
to.lam-merzefr
mTtere were a goodly number of oats,
rabbit*, guinea pigs, birds and other
to the more or torn conventional line, charge.
geeremeerimosomt
< "(0
esc -
,82
49635. ox
V
2 1 i
S”ve A 4
Sys • k .2,3
8Mmkemmwbab 6 -13 AF
33 57 , a
The British reception to thia line
of thought had yet to be ascertained.
Meanwhile, the state department ।
notified American embassies abroad U8 800 Arcabinet meeting to
to make clear to the London, Pari*. After, “he monetary Situ-
a =--=-
“It to tmportant," the communica--pompSpremier Edouard Herriot.
arriving in New YorkL sunday,,’wa:
sent new inatructions by the cabinet
i
J?'1 '
era.t “anch
430 e , i 09 a
l,a.e
83 &3 3: 98• 383
- g-
k Y 1 ' *
,u - > mw
coveg: Democratic reply to this
crystalization of opposition was a re-
newed determination to tel the otoun
blow out its fury and then roll up t-~
overwhelming Democratic majority to
batter the legislation through both
houses.
- asgocee,
am0t
♦ it i
; . c. ba
4
Every dry tW Ttam sela mow pxpm h Oklakoswa City than there are koxeff
--------------
•88
"Los
_
permanent undersecretary of the for-
eign office; Sir Frederick Lzith-Rosa,
chief British economic advisor, and
Charles Howard-Smith, economic ex-
pert.
In Lncoln’s Study
The gray-haired and soft-spoken
MacDonald alept Friday night in the
room where Abraham Lincoln once
wrestled with the tragic problems of
the Civil war. A White House guest
until his departure for England on
Wednesday, Mr. MacDonald was given
the big blue bedroom which Lincoln
Chicago Circulator is
Slain, Girl Kidnaped
CHICAGO, April (—Frank
X. Holbrook. 58 years old, loop circu-
lation manager for the Dally Times,
was slain Saturday when police sald
he attempted to resist the efforta
of two gunmen to kidnap tote 17-year-"
old girl companion.
The shooting occurred jurt after
Holbrook and the girl. Miss Lillian
Nance, 17 years old. and Stephen
Hanrahan. 30 yeans old. toad emerged
from a saloon and had entered Hol-
brook's automobile.
After leaving Holbrook dead In the
street the girl said the men took her
to another car where three other men
were waiting. She said the first two
assaulted her.
Jack White, Actor, Dies
LOS ANGELES, April 22--t
William A Rattenberry, known an
the stage as Jack White, died here
late Friday after a heart attack suf-
fered three weeks ago. He Was 76
years old.
Free Camera
Bring in your camera for tnapec-
uon No charge for minor ad-
juatmenta. cleaning ete
Oklahoma Photo
Supply Co.
NS N. Broadwy Mm
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 294, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 22, 1933, newspaper, April 22, 1933; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1984401/m1/2/: accessed June 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.