Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 178, Ed. 1 Monday, December 11, 1933 Page: 1 of 16
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5 - _
1
VOL. XLIV. NO. 178.
novel, Ethan Frome, don't bother
By Tomorrow
Cowboy Says He Witnessed
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1144
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A
Cleaner Says ‘Other Woman’
am
Bombs Hurled
h
/
In Code Fight
By VIRGINIA NELSON
Hayter, charged specifically with
wo-
Kitchen Loses
His Hill Flock
8
□
*3
hearing in Washington
1§
in
<
— Good Only in Oklahoma nt Tixat
2
noon.
Refinery Building Resumed
administrator insisted upon going to
During the morning, how-
—Construction operations at the Pan-
ever, the pain in his side became so
HOt ELY TEMPERATURE
10 p. m
I
(
I
S.
*
N introducing my friend Mark Sul-
livan to an Oklahoma City audi-
OOK—a whole hearted indorse-
’ ment of Governor Murray without
which
were
State’s Freeze
May Moderate
Name ..................
Town .7.............,,,,
ft F O or Street No ...
AUTO DEATHS
Here this Yehri
cleaners from over the nation
to argue for lower rates.
In Hayter Case
Gains Release
Couple Killed
In Kansas, Is
Youth’s Claim
0
i
0
2
To Be Used as Witness
In Triple Deaths.
Our Virginia Follows the Beagles
MULES GROW SCARCE
DESPITE PRICE BOOM
A
A
7
FILLING STATION, OIL
WELL BEFORE BOARD
7
2
A
The “other woman” in the Hayter
triple slaying case was released late
Sunday night after she was confront-
ed by Robert F. Hayter, Lawton offi-
cials revealed Monday.
-"od.
Above, beagles and Beagle Owners J. B. McCracken, Sentinel, left:
Harry Brill, Tulsa; Ed Bailey, Sentinel, Leroy Graham and his father,
Oscar Graham, Oklahoma City, and Ed Porch, Oklahoma City. Below, Mn
Porch, with Ford, winner of first place in Sunday’s trials, and Brin wilh
Bennie, second place winner.
Mrs Pritchard's body was found
in a culvert near Bison, Okla., by a
hunter Sunday.
Scott Takes Over Tabernacle,
$1,000 Debt in Split.
Newton Douglas Case
Sent to Lincoln County
His dismissal left Earle's mother.
Dr. Alice ,L., Wynekoop, alone facing
the accusation.
w
I
City Group To
Study Parkway
Alleys Project
Property Owners Along For-
mer Railway Area Seek Out-
lets; Meet Opposition.
Herefs a
court trial that he had just closed
for the night when Anderson ap-
peared and forced him with a gun to
r
i
"42.
V1“3-"*5"7
‘ •l> -
J. E. Moore, proprietor of three
firms that posted prices below the
code minimum, Sunday telegraphed
to ask if atendanec at a hearing De-
cember 18 would be satisfactory to
NR A. He said it was possible he
would go to the capitol before that.
Earle Wynekoop
Freed in Murder
The Weather
LOCAL—Cloudy and unsettled tonizht
and Tueday, somewhat colder. 24 10 10
dezrees tonicht.
ieu
The Kansas officer’s statement
came Monday morning as the body of
Pritchard was found along a graveled
highway three miles north and one
mile east of El Reno. Okla., by M M
Golden, El Reno night jailer and Con-
stable Dan Hahn of El Reno.
Scores of officers and citizens of
western Oklahoma had been search-
ing for the body since Sunday when
Wisdom Was brought under heavy
I you live in Oklahoma City make checks pavadt, to Oklahoma
Pubitshine Co W you Uva outside Oklahoma City, make check:
Davabie to your homa town azent
o Final Home
Mercury Diops 41 Degrees in
14 Hours as Wave Sweeps
Out of North,
would be only moderately severe, and
said warm weather is likely to return
Tuesday.
Warmer by Tuesday
Northern and western Oklahoma
should have temperatures well below
the freezing point all day Monday and
probably through the night, but he
saw a quick abatement of the sudden
cold turn by Tuesday or Tuesday
night.
His charts indicated that the wave,
originating in the far northwest, is
headed mainly eastward and that
Oklahoma is being covered only by
the southwestern tail of it.
For Monday night and Tuesday
Wahlgren forecast partly cloudy to
cloudy skies.
The official reading at the U 8.
observatory on Classen boulevard was
30 degrees at 8 a. m. Monday; the
mercury had fallen steadily since Sun-
day afternoon, when it reached the
top of 71 degrees.
20 Degrees at Forgan
At midnight the reading was 46 de-
grees, and without a sudden drop dur-
ing any hour the mercury scooted to
the freezing point, 32 degrees, at 7 a.
m, then continuing its descent. The
minimum Sunday morning was 39
degrees.
In northern and western Oklahoma,
temperatures in the twenties provided
• OKLAHOMAN (week days) ONLY... $3 95
six Morninn- b» ma ‘ Per Year
- □ OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES ONLY.....$3 95
•is Eventnr—b, mal Fer Yea,
Biagsne. sheriff, and his deputies
patrolled the streets in the vicinity nt
the plant to prevent disorders The
shutdown was ordered after several
groups had struck for higher wages.
"-"A SUBSCRIPTIONS
LITTLE ROCK. Ark., Dec. 11.—(P)
—The mule business is booming, but e
mules are scarce. 2
Business is so good even "Insects' 8
are bringing good prices. fl
To those outside the trade, L. Rein- 2
man, veteran horse and mule trader, 8
explains “insect" is a name applied 4
to old or poorly fed mules.
"I never saw the season start so 2
t i n n
12 midnisht
l » m ...
2 « m ....
3 a m ....
4 am,...
S a. m.....
8 a ......
7 a. m.....
way property. For the fourth time,
a petition of L. Meadors to construct
a filling station on the northeast cor-
ner of Classen boulevard and North-
west Twenty-eighth street will be
w%. ,
About 140 dry cleaners at the hear-
ing had these alternatives open to
them—to show that code prices are
too high, to agree hereafter to
abide by them, or to face prosecution
by the federal trade commission or
Justice department. NRA officials
said that should present prices be
proved too high, the cleaning code
authority might be asked to revise
them.
Some of the seven score against
whom price-cutting charges were
lodged complained that code mini-
mums were higher than customers
could afford and. furthermore, gua-
anteed the cleaner excessive profit.
City Price-Cutters On
Job as Hearing Opens
Two city cleaning company heads
who challenged minimum prices of
the national code remained at work
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—(P—
Secretary Ickes was taken to the naval
hospital Monday for an X-ray exami-
nation after he had slipped and feU
on the ice in front of his home here.
Despite considerable suffering, the
interior secretary and public works
WASHINGTON, Dec. 11.—(P)— Re-
porta of bombing and terroristic
methods to force compliance with the
minimum dry cleaning prices estab-
lished under the trade's fair practice
Temperatures in 20's to Stay
In Northern and Western
Parts of State.
Streaking into Oklahoma
soon after the turn of mid-
night on the heels of a balmy
Sunday afternoon, a cold
wave brought below freezing
temperatures to the city at
dawn Monday.
The northwest—whence this state’s
coldest weather comes—reported still
lower readings as the morning went
along, and there were north winds to
whip the cold farther southward.
Harry F. Wahlgren, federal weather
observer, predicted that the wave
Slain in Kansas
Wisdom, Lyle said, related that the
couple was shot to death at a point
about a mile and a half north ot
Wellington, Kan., and that the wom-
an was slain first; that their bodies
then were placed in the back of their
car covered with blankets and driven
south to a point near Bison.
* Smith and Wisdom then proceeded
to El Reno, thence westward to
Depew, Okla., Lyle said the prisoner’s
story ran. It was near Depew that
the couple's car, bloodstained and
bullet-marked, was found abandoned.
The officer quoted Wisdom as say-
ing he and Smith robbed the bodies
each taking $10.
Lyle said Wisdom denied any knowl-
edge of the murder of E. J. Urge,
Meade county ranch hand. for which
a warrant has been issued for Wis-
dom's arrest.
Lyle, who had been on the case two
nights and a day without rest, said
Wisdom would be questioned later and
that a formal statement probably
would be taken at that time. •
To forestall possible mob violence,
'Plr»»e torn to ptt, j, column 1)
American refinery at Texas City
shutdown since last Thursday night.
7222022/7229279329*99
CHRISTMAS BARGAIN OFFER ORDER BLANK
_ Fill in and Mail With Your Remittance Today!
g8g' s \ :
• .
< ‛ rA
ence Saturday I should have said
that Sullivan was closer to Herbert
Hoover during Hoover's years in
Washington than any other name in
the newspaper business or any other
profession, trade or avocation.
Mark Sullivan admits that he can-
not see the new deal, thinks the old
order far superior and believes that
Governor Ritchie, Al Smith or New-
ton Baker would have had us farther
along toward recovery than Frank-
lin Roosevelt.
If his auditors only will remember
that Sullivan's thinking must have
been affected by his very close asso-
ciation with Hoover and that he must
have been bitterly disappointed over
the ignominious defeat of his favor-
ite in 1932. everything will be O. K.
Some of my lady friends criticized
me for asking a political question of
Sullivan, when, in my opinion most
of the things that he said about
NRA were predicated upon his polit-
ical friendships of the immediate
past ten years.
Sullivan is a grand historian, the
dean of Washington correspondents
and all of that, but he 13 still human
•nd. In the security of the middle
sixties, is bound to have less stomach
for violent changes than he had a
generation ago.
Aside to the ladies who thought
that I embarrassed Mark—you can’t
embarrass a man who makes a living
writing and speaking by asking him
pointed questions.
• • •
‘THE city manager has asked the
A citv planning commission o de-
dde whether the park land east of
—had themselves a field day out northeast of the city sunday.
The occasion was the first annual beagle field trials, a ti
□ Times and Sunday Oklahoman, by carrier $6.75
Erer, Evenine ana Sunday— 1 issues Weeki» Fer Imi
explain why he was not abiding by
the prices established under the code
was Bernard Shatkin of Philadelphia:
He charged the Philadelphia Cleaners
and Dyers association had employed
gangsters to try to put him out of
business.
Shatkin’s argument was that he
could make a profit in his cash and
carry cleaning business charging 40
cents a suit instead of th 85-cent
minimum for Philadelphia.
He claimed he made a net 820,000
or 8 percent at an average price of
39 cents last year despite the fact
that windows of his plant were broken
by bombs four times forcing him to
cover the entire front of his store
ANYWA, beagles have been popu-
M lar in the east for a long time and
are gradually getting better known
here, which is another proof of the
advancement of culture in the south-
west. You'd have been surprised at
the number which were on hand Sun-
day. There were 20 entered for the
two days, and they came from all
over—Tulsa, Enid Sentinel, Sapulpa.
The beagle looks something like a
bird dog on a small scale. They only
average around 15 inches in height.
(Please turn to Fate 2, Colums 8)
Hayter Back in Duncan
"We didn't get a thing new,” de-
clared the police chief.
The tyo were left alone together in
a detention room of the jail for some
time. Moncrief revealed Then the
woman, middle aged wife of an El
Reno railroad man, who has been held
since last Wednesday, was released.
Hayter was returned to the Dun-
can jail by part of the officers and
the remainder continued to Oklahoma
City for a conference with C. M.
Reber, ballistics and finger print ex-
pert for the state bureau of criminal
identification.
The Lawton officials refused to dis-
cuss in any detail the conversations
held with Hayter and Mrs. Ray but
from other sources it was learned that
facts were developed which will make
Mrs. Ray a principal state witness.
Both Mrs. Ray and Hayter, the
later an Oklahoma City refrigerator
salesman, freely told of a close friend-
ship for several years, said Dwight W.
Malcolm, county attorney of- Co-
manche county, and one of the group
at El Reno Sunday night.
Hayter Has no Lawyer
Hayter may be moved back to the
Lawton Jail in a day or so to face ar-
raignment, said Sheriff Fritz McCarty
who served a warrant on him in the
Duncan county jail Sunday .night.
(Continued on Pare 2, Column 1)
Pastor-Legion Leader
In Race for Congress
___ ~
FREDERICK, Dec? 11. _(ALOrf.
cers of the First Presbyterian church
here Monday had before them the
resignation of their pastor, Rev
Moody Nicholson, who formally asked
relief from his church duties pre-
liminary to making a race for con-
gressman from the seventh Oklahoma
Clstrict.
The planning commission Monday
postponed cosideration of a proposal
for construction of a diagonal boule-
par. from Twenty-third street and
Phillips avenue to Lincoln park.
A committee of three was named
Monday by Floyd Broderson, chair- . ... ------ —
man of the city planning commission guard toaid in the search.
to confer Thursday afternoon with * k**'—t
members of the park board regarding
a.proposal to permit alleys on both
sides of the downtown park strip from
Broadway to Harvey avenue.
The committee includes Mayor Mc-
Gee. Morgan Ferrill and J. H. John-
ston.
$
II
early,” he said. "We started trad-
rant accusing him of a part in the
strange killing of Rheta in his moth- coln
er's surgical operating room, the state
had to admit its investigation had not
developed any evidence to substantiate
the charge. Charles 8 Dougherty, as-
sistant state’s attorney, moved to dis-
miss, and Judge Jay A. Schiller wiped
out the charge.
State Drops Accessory Charge
In Clinic Killing.
CHICAGO, Dec. 11.— (PL The
charge that Earle Wynekoop was an
accessory to the murder of his wife,
Rheta, was dismissed by the state
Monday.
When the young widower was ar-
raigned in felony court on the war-
Pritchards body was identified at
an inquest conducted at the scene of
its discovery. Three relatives—V. W
Burkett of Wichita, father-in-law of
Pritchard; A. H. Adam of Cedarvale,
Kan., his brother-in-law, and Marcus
Pritchard of Walsh, Colo/, a brother-
established the identification.
The coroners’ jury found that a
gunshot wound through the right
cheek had caused death, but was un-
able to name the assailant.
Mrs. Pritchard's body previously
had been identified positively. She
was shot in the right breast
"Well, Junior, the chief wants
me to investigate this offer”
THIS money is paying bills. It is putting men back to work in the cities
tn producing the things that farmers buy, and enabling these men in turn
to buy things that farmers produce. The process has already gone a long
“y ‘ t h® south among the cotton and tobacco growers; wheat growers
•re beginning to experience it now, and the farmers of the corn belt will
soon be in a position to experience it from the corn-hog adjustment cam-
Palgn.
W. But, in all candor, 1 think * brier moment of gratification is enough;
we seem to be on our way, but we are not yet out of the woods and it is of
theutmost importance that we guard against letting a rise in farm income
tempt us to forget the realities of supply and demand.
For it is only with full co-operation on the part of the farmers that
thessuccess of the program can be assured. That program 18 worth of yomr
complete confidence and support, for it looks not alone to immediate relief,
but to a sustained prosperity based on sane principles.
resumed Monday as Frank
At the meeting with the park board
a policy will be worked out in con-
nection with the park » property—
whether it shall be improved per-
manently as a park, given temporary
improvements or divided by alleyways
Hunting Dog That Can Chase Rabbits Without His Master Pun- '
ishing Him, the Animal Expert Discovers!
Harvey avenue shall be used exclu- here Monday as the NRA began a
sively for park purposes, converted
pomA"preEideheforlhedeunNewton
hroherrH T. Douglas, president of
theeclosed. Shawnee National bank
was R. anted a venue chenge Saturday,
aonhe 1 °. are charged jointly with were
Volation of.state banking laws in con' “
nectonwith failure of the Maud
State bank and the Canadian Valley
bank of Asher which closed with the
Douglas chain banks a year ago.
You don't have to be a detective to discover
now to save from 10% to 33% on your next
years subscription to the Oklahoman and
runes. Pay for your subscription NOW a
year in advance and SAVE. This offer ends
soon, so don't delay. Send your order today.
DICK TRACY—An ice deteetive who
* . .after toush kanesters and always
rett his man. His adventures are pictured
daily on the Time* comic page.
The Farmer Is Digging Out I
Roosevelt Sees Progress Toward 'Sustained Prosperity/
Wants the Task. Will Be Long.
CHICAGO, Dec. 11-—(P)—Following is ' President Roosevelt’s
message Monday to the American Farm Bureau federation’s an-
nual convention:
J WISH that I could have come to your meeting. I should have liked this
opportunity of facing the members of the American Farm Bureau fed-
eration and telling them, as man to man, how much I appreciate their
warm support of the administration program.
The members of the farm bureau know, as I do, that the maladjustment
between supply and demand has been years in the making, and that it can
not be corrected overnight. Nevertheless, in a few short months the whole
complexion of the argricultural outlook has been changed.
Money is getting into the hands of the people who need it; it is coming
from higher prices for the things farmers have to sell; it is coming in the
form of government checks for those co-operating producers who are willing
swap a hazardous present for immediate Improvement and a stable future
• • •
code in Philadelphia marked the 1 the murder of his wife, Nelle, was re-
opening Monday of NRA’s mass hear- moved quietly from the Duncan Jail
ing into charges of violations all over after dark Sunday night by fot
the. country. ton investigators and brought
The first defendant summoned to Fl Renn ten —.... 1a- • •—
g □ DAILY and SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN. .$4.95
g Seven Day’0y mal Per inT
2 □ TIMES and SUNDAY OKLAHOMAN.. .$4.95
* Seven Days— St man Per Year
re-enter the store and open the safe. neia. .
Anderson was arrested in Chicago consdered
and returned here. Defense testimony
was scheduled to begin Monday atter-
intense aides insisted upon an exami-
. jo rnation
■J, At the naval hospital it was said a
• 9 preliminary examination had dis-
* 37 closed "nothing serious," but that
further examination would have to be
made before extent of the injury could
be determined.
ample cold for the wind to shove into
the state’s central portion.
Forgan, in the extreme northwest-
ern corner of the state, had 20 de-
grees, Woodward 25. and Enid 26.
Wichita reported 22 and Dodge City
20. Waynoka had 23 degrees, against
49 for the same time Sunday morn-
ing. and Amarillo had 34 to compare
with the previous morning's 56.
Denver, which reported 48 degrees
Monday, usually is a good indicator
of Oklahoma weather, but Wahlgren’s
map showed a freakish condition in
the western states, warm and cold
areas interlocking in odd ways to baf-
fle the prognosticator.
----•--
Lindberghs Rest
After Brazil Hop
Flying Couple Plan 1,000-
Mile Trip for Tuesday,
(Map on Page 7)
' MANAOS. Brazil, Dec. 11.—t/P}—
Col. and Mrs Charles A. Lindbergh
plan to remain here Monday, Pan-
American Airways announced. They
will leave early Tuesday on another
stage of their flight to reach home for
Christmas.
The American fliers plan to fly to
Trinidad. 1,000 miles away, but it was
not announced whether they would
make the long overland flight or
reach the Caribbean island by way of
the Amazon river, the route they
took to arrive here Sunday.
Colonel Lindbergh paid a visit to
Nelson Mello, the Brazilian inter-
ventor (government representative)
and expressed his appreciation of the
courtesies extended him and his wife
and their delight in the Brazilian
scenery.
■ o----
Suspect Is Identified
As City Store Robber
Sidney Anderson, about 30 years
old. was pointed out from the witness 1
chair Monday as the man who ob-
tained 8365 in a robbery last June 3: 1
Shootings by ‘Buck Smith/
Helped Rob Pritchards.
Body of Man Is Found
Victim Discovered in Culvert
Near El Reno; Suspect is
Held in Reformatory,
WICHITA, Dec. 11.—(A_
Blame for the murder of Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Pritchard of
Wichita was placed upon one
Buck Smith in a verbal state-
ment by Jack Wisdom, said
W. O. Lyle, captain of Wichi-
ta detectives upon arrival
here Monday.
Lyle, who returned Wisdom to Kan-
sas Sunday night, leaving him at the '
state reformatory in Hutchinson for
safe keeping, quoted Wisdom as say-
ing the actual murders were commit-
ted by Smith, but that he was a wit-
ness to the crimes.
Pritchard's Body Found
into a boulevard with drives. or de-
veloped only temporarily and at
minimum expense with the idea f
selling it when property values re-
cover.
That question already has been de-
cided.
The men who sweat blood and
fought for years to get the railroads
out of that area met when the bond
issue had carried and pledged them-
selves to the last man to fight to
the end of the road to prevent a
single foot of that property from be-
ing sold for commercial purposes.
The move to develop that area for
temporary purposes means to give the
property owners alley privileges, with
its garbage cans and litter of pack-
ing boxes.
To keep the faith with the people
of Oklahoma City that strip must be
parked. Once a temporary use is per-
mitted, the fight to maintain It sole-
ly for the use of the people will
have lost the first round.
answering' THE QUES-
TIONS ASKED IN THE FIRST
PARAGRAPH: Tragedy. Winter.
New England.
----
Burns Kill Aged Woman
KANSAS CITY. Dec. 11 —(P—Mrs
Elizabeth F. Morlan. 88 years old.
diet at her home in Rantoul late
Sunday from bums she received Sat-
urday when her clothing ignited- from
a bonfire. She went Rantoul 34
years ago from Manhattan, Kan.
Storm’s Brunt Misses Us
-
with this paragraph, because you
know the answers. Consider the
name of that book for a minute, then
reply to these questions: Is the story
a comedy or a tragedy? Does the ac-
tion take place in the spring, summer,
fall or winter? In what section of
the United States is the plot laid?
Probably you will be agreeably sur-
prised at your ability to arrive at the
correct results. You may have some
difficulty dissecting the thinking
which brings you to your conclusions.
But there is in the combination of
vowels and consonants the effects
necessary to give any highschool
graduate the proper reactions.
The next time you sit in front ot a
radio, drinking in every word uttered
by the smooth voice which comes to
you from 2,000 miles away, remember
this experiment and think, don't sim-
ply accept everything that is poured
into your ears.
The power of the spoken word is
greater than the power of the print-
ed word. If the pen is mightier than
the sword, the voice, amplified 47,-
000,008,000.000,000,000, times as It is
in a world wide hookup for a great
international character, puts the old
pen far in the background.
You'll find the proper answers at
the bottom of this column.
• • •
• hook in it!
Time out to applaud Alfalfa Bill’s
proper use of the militia. He lost no
time in putting the guard under arms
when word came from Kingfisher that
• murder suspect might be taken away
from the sheriff by a lynching par-
ty. There is no doubt that a mob was
forming. There is no doubt that the
national guard would have had trou-
ble if the officers from Kansas had
not cleared out with their suspect in
the Wichita double murder and buried
his safely in some Kansas cell.
Generally we look upon a "shoot to
kill order” as medicine too harsh with
which to handle a mob of Americans.
In this case the guard was given
loaded ammunition and ordered to use
it to prevent a jail delivery and a
lynching. We approve of this order
completely.
Unfortunately, there are a great
many people who have been en-
couraged by Governor Rolph’s atti-
tude toward the lynchers of the mur-
derers of Brooke Hart. This foolish-
ness should be ground under heel be-
fore it gets out of control.
Mobs are not going to take over the
distribution of justice in America
When they do you will hear the tim-
brels rattling through the streets.
More power to Governor Murray for
striking out quick and hard to scotch
the lawless in Oklahoma.
nxr VESrAN t r "esumed ETATE.Parlly eloudy tonisht. some-
GALVESTON, Texas, Dec. 11.—(P) what, rotder rast and south bortinnh.
• »---Tuesday probably rain. somewhat warmer his desk:
north portion.
JURY DISCHARGED IN
NEGRO MURDER TRIAL
TULSA, Dec. 11 —(PA district
cpurt jury that had debated the case
of G C. Foster, Negro accused of the
murder of Elmer Payne, white man
allegedly competing in the “policy
racket ‘of the Negro section here, re-
ported it could not agree and was dis-
charged Monday.
The Jury received the case Satur-
day morning. The state contended
Payne was shot by a hired killer.
Foster pleaded an alibi. A new t riai
will be held.
NRA Prohers Are Told Gang El Reno Railroad Man’s Wife
Methods Used to Compel
Boost in Prices,
iur Law-
— — — ——o-.t tp the
El Reno jail, revealed D. Moncrit Jr.,
Lawton chief of police. In the county
jail at El Reno. the woman, Mrs.
Lewis Ray, and Hayter were ques-
tioned simultaneously.
Maybe you don't know about
beagles, possibly thinking a beagle is
something they play tapa on. (The
word has lots of other fruity possi-
bilities. Three that we can think of
off-hand, but will forego through
noble self-control.) The Times beagle
, expert. having spent Sunday hob-
nobbing with dog fanciers out at the
field trials, is in a position to answer
all questions.
In the first place, a beagle is a
rabbit dog primarily. They are origin-
ally an English breed, rabbit-hunting
being a sport held in high regard
over there. Everybody, of course, has
heard of "hares and hounds,” and
while It is hard to recall any refer-
ence to "hares and beagles," it is
probably all right to call a man's
beagle his hound, if you are on friend-
ly terms with him and smile when
you say it.
SIXTEEN PAGES—OKLAHOMA CITY, MONDAY, DECEMBER 11. ■ ,»
- WISDOM NAMES AID AS MURDERER
■ <*••••••••••••» » -* a
Stnte 2.............
SO Sam
48 9 a. m.
48 10 a. m
45 , 11 a m
44 12 noon
42
39
32
32
Oklahoma City Times
.Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper Published in Oklahoma
(Evening Edition of The Daily Oklahoman)
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Before a crowd that filled every
seat, packed doorways and even
climbed ladders to look through sky-
lights. Rev Sam J. Scott, pastor of
the southside Faith tabernacle, Sun-
day night declared his independence
of the main Faith church and an-
nounced he will form a new congre-
gation. The first meeting will be a
revival service Monday night.
Mr. Scott said that his action was
due to lack of confidence in Rev. Wil-
liam Kitchen, pastor of the main tab-
ernacle Mr. Scott and three other
Faith ministers resigned last week as
a protest against Mr. Kitchen, whom
they accused of conduct unbecoming
a minister of the gospel.
Miss Mary Harvey, choir singer,
had announced she would address the
southside meeting Sunday night and
tell of amorous advances she alleged
Mr. Kitchen made toward her. Al-
though she was present, she did not
speak Mr. Scott explained that he
did not want to subject her to em-
barrassment.
During the meeting a message was
received from Mr. Kitchen offering
Mr. Scott the southside tabernacle,
provived the members assumed a
81,000 mortgage, the offer was ac-
cepted.
Mr. Kitchen held services Sunday
night without making reference to the
breach in the church. -
• CARRIER DELIVERY — Goad Only in Oklaboma and Texas
j □ Oklahoman and Times, by carrier......$8.75
R Mornine Evenine Sunday- 11 Imim Weekiy Fez ltu
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* Ever Moralas and Sunday— 2 Issues Weekt, rm tear
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. --1
, -
Drilling of a second well on 3 6 - ________
acres, owned by the American Oil Re- ing briskly in October and good 4- "
fining Co , was before the board of year-old mules bring around 8110, the ,
adjustment for action Monday. highest price in ten years." (
W. B Skiryin, company president, 1 —------•-------
Wi,"f‛atrpP‛ROEk‛Bian"rane Ickes Sent to Hospital ;
By Fall on Icy Walk i
WELVE beagles, some 40 beagle owners or admirers, and a
number of Jack rabbits—who Joined the party unintentionally or a street. - --
—had themselves a field day out northeast of the city Sunday. The alleys, sought by nron..
The occasion was the first annual beagle field trials, a Iwo- owners Along First and Second streets
day event sponsored by the Oklahoma City Kennel club, and one on the ground that they are vitally
which marks a distinct step forward for the community as a needed for delivery purposes, are
center of tony dog circles. - being vigorously opposed by persons
who want the park developed along
the I nes that were outlined when
the city made its 83,000,000 invest-
ment in the downtown railroad
property.
Mr. Nicholson is a former state
commander of the American Legion
His announcement for national rep-
resentative was the second within a
------X** r ’ tion. ; F. H Seal, assistant manager of
the store, testified in the district
with sheet iron.
. 1
mmmi-
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 178, Ed. 1 Monday, December 11, 1933, newspaper, December 11, 1933; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1984602/m1/1/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.