Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 174, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 6, 1934 Page: 1 of 28
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3
ERS
PRICE: THREE CENTS
TWENTY-EIGHT PAGES—OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1934
Hughes Santa to Sate Wards Marland Asks Another Arrest
Highway Fund Is Expected In
r""
Tulsa Slaying
Deficit Probe
Red Mounts to $3,400,000 Boy Not Mentioned Before Is
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3
a
9
Asphalt Paving Rapped Mystery Picture Hunted
Governor-Elect Asks Inquiry Photo Sought in Kansas City
I
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Paris Is Asked to Delay
" 1
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M2,28
across, expelled because of 11-
prominent Tulsa family in
League of Nations.
/
Yugoslavia.
30 years a red leader.
Phil Kennamer, 19-year-old son of
that he shot Gorrell to death in self
BU04PEST
€
vember apropriations, is $3,408,497.46," he acted without assistance.
and present ita
Juat a sales
Prowlers Routed
Nichols Hills Will
Orton. Pawnee.
lary, in solitary confinement for the
remainder of his term to protect him
\
from vengeance.
Cool Weather to Stay
Among the
DON'T PUT OFF SENDING YOUR.
W
war.
Tentative plans provide that the
seaplane when forced down en route ■ eluding Swedish and Dutch.
Air Record Shattered
2
appoint the three commissioners, one
Inside Today
• MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS ONLY—In Okla, and Texas
□ Daily and Sunday Oklahoman—by mail . . $5.95
Make-Believe Crime Is Grim Reality
Seven Moraina * Week
Per Yeat
1
► □ Times and Sunday Oklahoman—by mail . .$5.45
aii Arterneons and Sunday Movrnine Per Tear
5 □ Oklahoman—Week Days Only—by mail .$4 75
ah Momninzs a Week «Ne Sunda»)
1
□ Oklahoma City Times Only—by mail.... $3.95
Per Kear
aii Week Day Afterneone «Ne Sundv)
Hesjaent of ether
thelr home wwa agentL
M
week last year, according to reporta to and assoclate. John F. Gorrell Jr.,
Dun and Bradstreet
I
2 . ‘
n
Seven Condemned Men
At McAlester Reprieved
Planes Continue
To Hunt for Ulm
VOL. XLV. NO. 174.
4
Arms Probers
Told Embargo
Rule Violated
Into Recent Project! In
Commissioners’ Areas.
2
If you want to be certain of saving 11
to 40% on your next year’s subscrip-
tion to the Oklahoma and Times, send
your order now—before it slips your
mind in the hustle and bustle of Christ-
mas shopping These bargain rates are
in effect only until December 31st
M3
,7 -
Du Ponti’ Shipment Sent To
China, Through Holland,
To Evade Barrier.
From $650,000 in Three
Monthi, Is Claim.
Jake Brumley Still
In Serious Condition
Meanwhile Russia, caught
unawares by the Franco-Ger-
man accord on the Saar basin,
fears diplomatic isolation
under such an alliance, ap-
European Pact Changed
By Saar Accord.
Geoffery St, Clair Redfern, a British
subject serving 10 year* from Okla-
Russia Fean New Peril Ai
Germany and France
Get Together.
Linked ai Accessory in
Mystery Killing.
State Department Files Do
Not Show Kellogg Was
Parley Sponsor.
Is Believed to Have Some
Bearing on Case.
Beset at home also, the Soviet
executed M alleged terrorists, in
congressional heart;
views to the depart
"Remember this
Gorrell slaying was expected
here Thursday.
Reported in the city and attending
schcol with other boys in their late
teens, this youth, whose name was
Redfern has been in the prison
hospital four weeks, after being at-
tacked and beaten severely on the
head with an iron pipe. He was given
the protection of solitary confine-
ment at the request of H. B. Bowie of
the British consulate at St. Louis.
Included in the stays of execution
was one issued for Robert Cargo, 21
years old. sentenced to death for the
hatchet murder of a Bethany florist.
Governor Murray advanced the date
for his electrocution to March 19. 1935.
nold’s district since July 1, was ap-
propriated for the same type of con-
struction, materials and labor enter-
ing into the construction leading up
to rock asphalt.
“On the basis of present revenues,
and taking into consideration the cost
of maintenance and salaries, which
are fixed charges. it would take until
close understanding between
France and Germany, Soviet
Russia has asked France not
to conclude any special politi-
cal accord with another na-
tion pending the fate of the
projected pact of eastern
European securities.
Russia was described by league of
J. W. Baird. 76 years old, eldest sister
of Gov. Charles W. Bryan and the late
William Jennings Bryan, died Thurs-
day at her home here after an illness
of about two weeks
and Woody Armitage, 223 Southeast
Fortieth street.
..
Town................
Qutahgma ci, Usew
Prize Offered for Best Of
Exhibits in Suburb.
200,000 Square Miles Of
Ocean Surveyed.
1
By OTIS SULLIVANT
PONCA CITY, Dec. 6.—
Immediate investigation of
J " A 2 *
Final Home
cessory by Henry B. Maddux, detec-
tive sergeant.
Maddux spent Wednesday in Kan-
sas Cit with detective George Reif
and made the announcement there
that he had obtained new evidence
that would lead to the contemplated
arrest.
Detective Reif was said by officers
here to have remained there for fur-
ther inquiry and especially to seek the
negative of a picture which allegedly
figures in the case.
Bey Not Previously Mentned.
Maddux said the youth in question
had not been mentioned publicly in
connection with the slaying, which
already has resulted in the arrest of
Yugoslavia Drives All
Hungarians to Border;
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia.
Dec. 6.—(P)—The Yugoslav
government, it was announced •
Thursday, has decided to ex-
pel all the 27,000 Hungarians
now living in Yugoslavia.
The government decision *
means the uprooting of the
Summary
turope looked fearfully to
her border) today.
a
letter," Monaghan told the commit-
tee.
Kin of Bryans Dies
LINCOLN, Neb., Dec. 8 — (P— Mrs.
MFEATVEE.
• * m1..:
1 a. m 11
ij noon ....
2». S::::
Arrest Expected Quickly
There never has been given an ex-
planation of Kennamer’s movements
from the time of the killing last
Thursday night until he was next re-
ported in a small cafe one and one-
half miles from the exclusive Forest
Hills subdivision where the body was
found.
seven days they have sought vain-
ly for the answer.
They are convinced that the ex-
tortion plot aimed at the young
daughter of Homer F. Wilcox. mil-
lionaire oil man, is not the deep,
underlying cause. They have be-
lieved—and many still believe—that
some hidden event occurred in re-
cent months, involving these sons
of prominent families, and that
thia mysterious event was the di-
rect cause of the Thanksgiving day
slaying.
ga
h
: gr ■■
Agi 28%
> .
for two years, one for four and one
for six. Thereafter, they would serve
six-years Their appointments would
requlre confirmation by the senate and
they could be removed only by im-
peachment
May Be a Precedent
Experts remarked that this prece-
dent might be followed on other oc-
"About the agitation for an embargo
en arms and ammunition from the
United States, you can well appreciate
eral’s office Thursday to draft the
measure.
It provides that the governor shall
errmntndawnartanpskland.au" north Kansas City-New York
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V'v; gczzj/83
■. br.
ungahansthsereanstreaming Strong Protest Against Stern
Decree Is Lodged With
Marland's statement continued.
District Figure* Quoted
"Of coarse, those appropriations
which have been set up have not only
been approved, but are set up with
the view to contracting purchase of
materials and awarding existing rock
road contracts prior to "ebruary 1.
Unless it is stopped the funds will all
be used.
"The deficit on the actual funds,
not on appropriations, are: Arnold's
district, $473,000; Selman’s district
$371,000; Orton's district. $404,000,
and district of Ed McDonald, mem-
ber -secretary, it II.000."
Constitutional Law Sought
A bill, providing a state vote on a
constitutional amendment creating a
A fine Santa Claus ia W. C. Hughes Behind the whiskers
and below the Santa wig is the chairman of the state board
of affairs. Sure he's Santa, but he’s the modern, warm
climate kind. The board this week bought 9,000 pounds of
nuts and candy and crates upon crates of oranges, apples,
cranberries and grapes. They will be distributed by Santy
Hughes and other board members to wards of 18 state in-
stitutions Christmas day.
500YEARS‘AHEAD}
— ‘ - BUCK
ORDER TOO LONG DO It\
TODAY AND SAVE PLENTY J
McAlester penitentiary against a convict, whose testimony largely
was responsible for conviction of four of the doomed men.
Bam Brown, warden, has placed*----------------------------------
• -------
Twenty Seven Thousand Ex-
patriates to Be Conducted
To the Frontier.
Governor Murray Thursday issued stays of execution post-
poning trips to the electric chair for seven condemned prisoners.
"The paragraph referring to "mighty „ At the same time, he revealed an inner-prison plot at the
high officials," follows:
PHEA5E KENNAMER
• CARRIER DELIVERY ONLY—In Okla. tad Teun
j □ The Oklahoman and Times—by carrier $11.00
g Moreina Atterneon an Sundaz er tear
g □ Daily and Sunday Oklahoman—by carrier .$8 25
3 Even Mernier Ineludine Sunday Fe Keur
z □ Times and Sunday Oklahoman—by carrier . $8 25
............ State
make eheta nasapte
elties and towns ebei
tales .that they have wandered far
from the path of the erime itaelf.
Holly L. Anderson, county attor-
ney, first put the solution into words
Thursday when. trying to bring or-
der out of the confusion of his mind,
he spoke hesitantly of his chaotic
array of facts u "a silly movie plot."
A. Flint Mom. the defense attor-
ney. came close to the answer when
he described the whole, terrible
reality as “something that sounds
like it was rooked up by a bunch of
crazy young kids full of spiked beer “
These groping thoughts of two
men deep in the case expand into
the answer—a movie plot—a detec-
tive fiction plot—that went awry in
FANTASY
I-- - _ . msvvi —kuaset OV‛E-‛A8-V• AAw-
Commander John Rodgers in 1925," which they removed by the treaty of
searching forces planned to survey the Versailles ending the World
ocean to the north of Oahu island, on -
--
mne"n — ww
A , -bdc, .
Fidif.
•’ c 2 3 pi *6226 ,
defense.
In response to the request of
County Attorney Holly Anderson of
Tulsa for aid in the investigation of
the slaying of Gorrell. Attorney Gen-
eral J. Berry King will give his per-
sonal assistance.
The attorney general -rrived in
Tulsa Thursday.
How the new suspect figured in the
case was not explained. but it was re-
called that city and county officials
have said they were not satisfied with
young -Kennemer'a deelaration that
% szeceo
id
A *
relentlessly Thursday in the hunt for
Flight Lieut. Charles T. P Ulm and
two companions. missing since Tues- casions and that there might even
day when lack of fuel forced their be efforts to use it in such places as
V
Marland said he was informed.
"The deficit has been Increased to
that figure since July 1. 1934. at
which time it was $649,156.93.
“I am advised, however, that these
figures are not exact
“I am advised that on Monday of
this week there were appropriations
totaling about 8140.000 for construc-
tion of black top and rock asphalt in
_____________________ , Although Maddux did not elaborate
the districts of Selman and L. V on his plans, It vas assumed that if
the Alexander
TN search of that cause, they have
1 burrowed deep into the lives of
Tulsa's wealthy young set. turning
up unsubstantiated but sensational
disclosure* of lawlessness. They
have become so enmeshed la these
Four of the reprieves went to men
convicted of slaying a prisoner Inside
the prison walls. Redfern was the
chief state witness against them.
Ban Riley is Reprieved
These men, all covicted of murder,
and the dates for execution are:
Goldie McCollum, June 21. 1939.
Wilie Edwards, June 21, 1935.
Howard Porter, April 5. 1935.
John WiHiams, April 9, 1935.
Bun Riley, convicted of a triple
slaying st Canadian, will die in the
electric chair June 21. 1939. A stay
also was Issued for Clyde Halford, a
gradual process but will pro-
ceed relentlessly.
It is estimated that some 2,000
Hungarians already have been deport-
ed and the number is increasing
daily.
About 300 luckless former Hun-
garians have found themselves with-
out a country. This group was com-
posed of men and women who re-
nounced Hungarian citizenship pre-
paratory to becoming Yugoslavs. Hun-
gary has thrown them out and Yugo-
slavia will not permit them to re-
turn. They are living in three train*
stranded in "no man's land" at the
Hungarian- Yugoslav frontier.
Execution Dates Set Over Into Marland Administration;
Prison Plot to Kill Murder Witness Is Aire By
Murray; Victim in Solitary Cell.
ters. vice-chairman, in a statement a federal judge, and his ccnfession
isssued at his unofficial "capitol" f-- •— --- — -e •
withdraw deposits from the banks.
Most of them carried their few pos-
sessions in bandanas at the end of
sticks. Scores of the refugees said
they had lived in Yugoslavia 30 and
40 years and had all but forgotten
their native tongue.
The Old and the Blind
So far 1.800 of the deportees have
plodded across the border here and
soo st other places. As many mor*
here.
The governor-elect declared that
unless expenditures are halted, there
will be no available funds for the
commission to be organized when he
takes office Marland gave no inti-
mation that he plans immediate ac-
tion to halt expenditures, however, ex-
cept his statement that he will lay
reports of the huge deficit before
Ferris's committee.
Future Revenues Periled
"The present deficit as of Oct. 31.
ma wmteh dose not include the No-
Open Break Is Feared
----- 4 ♦ * ♦
Joe Whitaker, Eufaula. state sen-
ator, Thursday was sued for divorce
by his wife, Mrs. Pauline Whitaker,
an employe of the state highway de-
partment. Suit was filed in district
court hen. The Whitakers were mar-
ried two years ago. They met while
Whitaker was serving as a member of
the fourteenth legislature. She charged
non-support.
---------------------------..
Bank Clearings Gals
NEW YORK. Dee. «-(-Bank
clearings in the principal cities of the
United States during the week ended
December 9 totaled $4,9 11,624,000, an
increase of 7.2 percent over Um
$4,207,350,000 reported in the same
c re
Wya
.ge
| . / 0
%
Oklahoma City Times
Paid Circulation Greater Than Any Other Evening Newspaper Published in Oklahoma
(Evening Edition of Th* Daily Oklahoman)
Spanish villas, French chateaux,
English manors and colonial mansions
along the winding roads and drives of
Nichola Hills will find themselves
gaily bedecked in holiday attire with-
in-the next week or ten days if resi-
dents co-operate with the civic club's
plans made this week.
“We are going to plant a living
Christmas tree in the triangular park
near the entrance and decorate it
with electric lights," Clayton Pierce,
president of the Nichols Hills Civic
club. said. ‘Too. we are asking each
resident to decorate his own home
and offering a prim for the beat one.”
A silver loving cup to adorn the
mantelpiece of the most tastefully
decorated home will be given by the
dub. The cup is to become the per-
manent property of any family which
wins it three years tn succession.
Mrs. Al Horton has been named
chairman of a committee in charge of
decorations. She haa appointed a
group of women to assist her in tele-
phoning housewives tn the exclusive
residential section and urge them to
co-operate in the contest.
British Ship Detained
TOKYO, Dec. 8. - UP) - Japanese
naval authorities Thursday detained
the British freighter Langleebrook,
under Soviet government charter, be-
cause It entered port in the Pesca-
dores islands near the Mako naval
base.
NEW YORK, Dec. 6.—(P—What
was announced as a new transport
speed record between Kansas City and
New York waa made Thursday by a
Transcontinental and Western Air
Transport plane flying the 1.113 miles
in four hours 49 minutes, an average
speed of 248 miles an hour.
The previous best transport time
was over 5% hours. The ship carried
10 passengers, two pilots and several
hundred pounds of mail and express.
Oct 1, 1939. to wipe out the deficit but willing naval searchers went on its disposal,
without any additional appropriation."
Oklahoma City will continue to
have moderately cold weather the
next two days. Harry VZahigren, fed-
eral weatherman. said Thursday.
Thursdays maximum temperature
was expected to be - few degrees
higher than the 45-degree top of
Wednesday The minimum Wednes-
day night was 30.
Cold weather prevailed throughout
the northern portion of the nation.
With snow reported in Nebraska, Chi-
cago and Detroit. -1
The Weather
So teuse was the situation in
Budapest that newspapers were !
forbidden to publtsh the facta about
this “trail of tears.’
when this just reached our ears from
Washington, we immediately got busy, homa county for first degree bur-
•nd we are thoroughly satisfied from * " " “
the reports that came back to us there
will be no embargo from this country.
"From what we hear, the idea origi-
January by Senator Louis Ritzhaupt, -—. ____.... wn.i.
Guthrie. He asked the attorney gen- here from the mainland They finally
Ana vri. cripple, sentenced to die for murder
- April 9, 1939. Halford’s crime also
HONOLULU. Dec. 6.—(P)—Weary
Trek to the Border
New ‘Trail of Tears’
SZEGED, Hungary. *«. 6.—(--
Long line* of Hungarian refugees
ejected from Yugoslavia because of
Yugoslav resentment over their coun-
trymen’s alleged complicity in the ds-
sassination of King Alexander stream
ed over the border into their home-
land Thursday.
And as the forlorn army passed
from their adopted country, Hungary
lodged a strong protest with th*
league of nations at Geneva—another
development in the strained relatione
between Yugoslavia and Hungary
growing out of the Marsaille assassl-
nation of Alexander.
Barefoot and Sick
Exhausted, bedraggled and deject-
ed. the refugees told harrowing stor-
ies of hardship. Some were barefoot,
some costless: others were sick. From
some came tales of severe treatment
by Yugoslav soldiery. Many related
they were evicted without warning
and given no time to gather their
baggage and household effect* or
Hoover Left on Limb
state highway department
and an alleged deficit of
$3,408,497 has been asked by
E. W. Marland, governor-
elect, he announced Thursday.
Marland aaid he was “very reliably
informed" that the deficit in the
highway coatruction and maintenance
fund amounted to that figure more
than a month ago.
He said he will call the matter to
the attention of his highway investi-
gating committee headed by Scott
Ferris, Democratic national commit-
teeman. "to see if anything can be
done about it.”
Ferris Group in Charge
Ferris announced in Oklahoma
City that his committee will have its
first meeting Saturday night.
Marland took a rap at extensive
rock asphalt projects in districts rep-
resented by H. N. Arnold, Buffalo,
chairman, and L. B Selman. Wal-
it was stated authoritative-
reprisal tar the murder of Kiroft, ly that the expulsion will be a
peals to France to stay any
political accord with Germany, entire Hungarian element in
was committed in prison. He was
convicted of killing a Negro in June.
City Lawyer Aida Him
By virtue of the wholesale execu-
tive order*, giving the seven men from
four to six months' time to fight the
death penalties, final decision in the
cases will be left to Governor-elect
Marland. who will be in office on the
date fixed for execution.
D. F. Blakeney. Oklahoma City at-
torney, appealed to Governor Murray
to protect Redfern after he had talked
with prison authorities.
“I am asking you to use your in-
fluence to have Redfern In solitary
confinement during the remainder of
REPRIEVES
Wife of State Senator
Files Suit for Divorce
I son of a prominent doctor. For
the inhabitants will vote to go back
under German sovereignty, from
withheld, was said to have been con- Alarmed at the prospect of a
nected with the slaying as an ac-
By Pistol Volley
Night Club Watchman Fires
At Suspicious Trio.
Three men prowling around the
Fair Park night club early Thursday
morning were routed by Buck Robert-
son, night watchman, after he fired
three times at them, police reported.
Robertson, a former pugilist, told
police the men drove up to the club
in an expensive sedan One of the men
waa carrying a bucket.
Two hours later J. W. Clingan and
W. D Turner, police scouts, arrested
three men driving a similar ear with
a bullet hole in the rear. Taken to
the county jail for investigation, the
men said they were Bill Puckett, 429
Southwest Thirty-third street. Cliff were expected Friday.
Heflin. 1601 East Marshal avenue, arrivals Thursday were two 65-year-
mHOVNII TV!
midniiht
TULSA, Dec. 6.—(A)— Fate of Projected Eastern
Another arrest of a son of a
trans-Pacific monoplane into the the Chaco Boreal in South America if
preventative measures were deemed
Occan. iugtifjag
Pilots of a dozen. navy.seaplanes The Saar will vote January 13 as
plotted courses.0 er,200,000 sguare to whether it will remain under the
the.ad jacentPacifiwhih control of the league of nations, be
has been combed the last two days for annexed to France, or revert to er-
the illfated niers... . . . many. The general opinion is that
Basing calculations on winds and' f ~
tides and recalling the experience of
Attention was focused on 2,400 Already Deported
the Yugoslav-Hungarian Iron- -------
tier, wher
in State Another Day__________________
’to permit him to complete an appeal.
n " I *11 Former Allowance* Cited
Decorate Lavishly ."Previous.to it
J trict on July 1, about 370,000 was
T M7 I O appropriated for the same purpose
Har YllIp *pagan and about 970,000 in Orton's district
I VI l MIU •VdvI “Something like 1500,000 in Ar-
which Honolulu is situated. Saar army shall be compesed of 2,000
in 1925. Commander Rodgers and British 2,000 Italians, 500 Belgians.
e epew drifted foy nine Aavg in a an gAn n-t,gte ref +L‛ Um„tA —G, in.
The map shows the latest
theater of European dissen-
tion:
By JOSEPH E. SHARKF.Y
Associated Press Foreign Staff
(Copsright, 1934. br Th* Associnted Press)
GENEVA, Dec. 6-
The Tiny Times is on Page 21.
Richberg predicts a simpler NRA.
Page 4.
How the Ulm plane rode the
Pacific. An artist* conception.
Page 4.
By Culbertson's spade theory
cost; him 117. Pag* 8.
Banker* now rush to buy U. B.
bonds. Page 10.
How central cafeteria operation
works in Tulsa and Denver. Pag*
11.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 6.-
(P— Evidence that the du-
Pont company sent a ship-
ment of powder to Holland in
1929 for re-shipment to
China — while an embargo
was in effect against sending
munitions directly to China—
was received Thursday by
senate investigators.
This came after Senator Clark (D.,
Mo.) had asserted that it waa not
necessary for the United States to en-
ter the World war “except to protect
the munitions makers profits.”
Conference Record* Absent
Also, the munitions committee was
told that state department files
showed no indication the department
had suggested a conference of anna
makers called by Herbert Hoover, a*
secretary of commerce, before the
1925 Geneva arms conference.
The former president aaid Wednes-
day Frank B Kellogg, secretary of
state in 1925, had suggested the con-
ference.
I A little later evidence waa pre-
•anted that officials of the Remington
Anna Co. attempted to “kill" arms
embargo legislation in 1933 and “got
busy" at Washington when rumors
were received that an embargo waa to
be proclaimed.
F. J. Monaghan, export manager for
the Remington company, repudiated
the implications of a letter he had
written that “we reached some mighty
high officials" on the embargo matter
Witness Admits ‘Exaggeration’
He also said he had “exaggerated"
when he used the word "kill" with
reference to embargo legislation.
The witness explained that he
meant his company would appear to
three-member highway commission. 1 . ... . . . A... . - —.
will be introduced in the senate in his crew drifted for nine days in a and 500 neutrals of the World war In-
feeling over
assassination.
Jake Brumley, 23 year* old. 2404
Southwest Twenty-ninth street, still
was in serious condition at Samaritan
hospital Thursday morning from in-
juries received when the car in which
he was riding collided with an oil
field truck early Wednesday morning.
Mrs. Leota Hayes, 23 years old, 227
Southeast Forty-third street also In-
jured in the crash, ia in bad condi-
tion. attendants said.
, Robert Brumley, brother of the in-
jured man, was driving. The acci-
dent happened in the 100 block South-
east Twenty-ninth street. Bert Stil-
well. 33 year* old. 942 Southeast
Twenty-eighth street, told potto*
Brumley was on the wrong side.
Awihoritiei Work on Theory That Kennamer and Gorrell Talked About
Fantastic Plots to Impress Youths.
Th* Christmas shopping rush is
. on. Page 81.
And there'll be soother Times
Christmaa baby. Page IL
J K M —63- .
aocAkerpeprazatetr tmnitom
"eimm Flr"°t"" »Stisleud, tentent
anuFpxs-About treezing, in nori
ana weatefn oklnhoma tontabt.
U. S. warns Japan against acrap-
ning arms treaty. Page 18.
iuiennerg on his way out? He’a
switched campa . . , dislikes "as-
slatant president" title, Merry-Go-
Round Page 18.
(3
er
-as c,
' .2
"g.n.(
1
By DICK PEARCE
NULSA, Dec. I —Out from ita
A background of the unreal and the
fantastic, the Gorrell-Kennamer
murder case is moving swiftly to-
ward the obvious solution
Those hourly rumors and wealth-
laid scandals are dying down, and
investigators are finding time to
reflect on the mass of bizarre evi-
dence they have collected in the
last week. In IL • few of the po-
lice are beginning to find a glim-
mer of the only solution that an-
swers all the questions.
They want to know why 19-year-
old Philip Kennamer. the youngest
son of a federal district judge,
killed his Il-year-old companion
Rsn tears
heavy expenditures by the connection with the John
Even Afterneon and Sundar Movnins
i Name .....................................
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Bated with the state department but
/is not receiving any serious consider-
ation in congress or by the president.
We reached some mighty high offi-
cials in the government and fel con-
pzasr COLUMN1^ GUNS
nations sources ss fearing isolation
for herself would result from any
Franco-German political accord.
It is understood France has agreed
not to make any special bilateral po-
litical treaties without consulting Rus-
sia beforehand.
Both Are Wanted
France. It waa said, will continue
her efforts to get both Germany and
Russia into the proposed eastern Eu-
ropean securities convention—often
called the "eastern Locarno pact.”
Such a pact, in the opinion of the
French statesman who proposed it.
would insure peace on Germany's
eastern frontier.
Russia has come to the position of
giving prime importance to the east-
ern pact aa with peace assured on her
western boundary, she would be left
free to cope with the Japanese
problem in the far east.
The agreement between France and
Russia waa said to have been reached
directly between Pierre Laval. French
foreign minister, and Maxim Litvin-
off, Russian foreign commissar.
World Police In Saar
From official sources, it was learned
that Konstantin von Neurath, Ger-
man foreign minister, had telephoned
German Consul Krauel at Geneva, au-
thorizing the acceptance of the dis-
patch of an international police force
Into the Baar basin territory to pre-
serve law and order there during the
plebiscite next month.
Germany's reply to the league of-
fer of such a force, which would in-
clude British soldiers together with
those of other nations, was described
as "absolutely affirmative."
League of nations leaders regard
the proposed dispatch of an interna-
tional army into the plebiscite area
as a historic precedent which estab-
lishes the Idea of an international
force for the league of nations. It
will be the first time in its history
that the league will have an army at
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 174, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 6, 1934, newspaper, December 6, 1934; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1987510/m1/1/: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.