Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 45, No. 174, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 6, 1934 Page: 2 of 28
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TTO-OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1934
-
Will Rogers
A Pair of duPonts
Guns.
Kennamer
(Continued from Fage One)
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Continued From Page 1)
6
is buying arms from Italy
33
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MEMBER or THE BOARD OF LECTURESHIP OF THE MOTHER CHURCH. ,
THE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST. SCIENTIBT, IM BOSTON, MAM.
IN THE SHRINE AUDITORIUM
1
WILL.
(left) and Irenee duPont (right.)—(Associated Press photo).
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A Daring Watch Offer!
Tears
(Continued from Page One)
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"In tht Ht^rt of Oklaboma City"
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136 W. Main
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Lets Get
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Mountain Dips
From Sight As
Quake Strikes
Germany Is Buying
Arms From Austria
Reprieves
(Continued from Page One)
Lunebeon 11 to 2:30
Dinner s to 7:4s
MAY
Brothers
In our large assortment you will find single and
double breasted suits including the popular sport-
backs—single and double-breasted, raglan and
wrap-around overcoats—in smooth and rough
weaves, rich colors, smart pattern!—$29! And the
suits have two trousers!
15-JEWEL
WALTHAM
The May Brothers label in a suit or overcoat is your
guarantee of the utmost in style and quality at the
price!
meet possible emergencies at I
It was pointed out that while
trian manufacturers are telling
to Germany, the Austrian goven
stand that troubled Austria needs i
the arms she can manufacture 4
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00
Maybrooke
Suits and
Every day the Times sells more papers In Oklahoma City than there are home
Uiten! WKY—Tuttdty 8:25 P. M.
- A short short program that’s really different! ,
VIENNA, Dec. 8 —•—Inqutries by
government agents Thursday revealed
that considerable materials for the
manufacture of small arms were be-
ing exported by Austrian manufac-
turers into Germany.
Several hundred detectives, whose
The traffic was reported outlined
largely to the smaller factories, but a
considerable number of these were
said to be involved.
Kennamer Denies Robbery
This Kennamer vigorously denied
"I am not an associate of robbera,"
Many Towns Are Destroyed
In Honduran District;
Hundreds Homeless.
« It
Xk
League to Study
Protest Friday
GENEVA, Dec. 6.—(A)—The
garlan government informed the
of nations Thursday that Yugoslavia
had suddenly exiled 900 persons, in-
cluding women, and children, aged
and infirm.
The Hungarian statement is expect-
ed to be taken up Friday by the league
council. The statement added that it
was believed thousands of others would
be expelled.
. •
1
BAPTIST
Book Store
223 W. First St.
• Judge these MAYBROOKE suits and overcoats
for Style, for Tailoring, for the Quality of their
fsbrics ... and on every score you’ll say they’re
infinitely better!
I
■
15-Jewel Movement as new and modern as tomorrows
sunrise . . and here’s where the DARING comes in.
McEntee’s have decided to make this 15-JEWEL
WALTHAM another triumph for the good old McEntee
modern perfect buying system (which rightly interpreted
means—TERMS) after your own heart and circum-
stances.
gator for the committee, revealed the
fact that state department files showed
no indication the department had
suggested the conference of arms
makers called by Hoover.
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
IN OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLAHOMA
ANNOUNCES A
Planned by this great value-giving Jewelry
Store to punctuate another period of not-
able growth.
Growing in volume of sales like Jack’s Bean Stalk
... growing in the hearts of the people ... to be
the most loved Jewelry Concern in Oklahoma . ..
for over a quarter of a century. One per-
son has'told another until now the whole
of Oklahoma knows that McEntee’s is the
logical place to buy really and truly fine
Watches, Diamonds, and Silverware at
prices that beggar comparison.
he said shortly. He also denied being
Implicated in a narcotics angle of the
case being investigated by Frank Mc-
Millen. head of the police narcotics
। squad.
FRIDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 7. 1934
AT EIGHT O’CLOCK
YOU AND YOUR FRIENDS ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND ‘
DOORS OPEN AT 7:00 P M.
Select Year
BIBLES
from Our s10,000 Steeb
e.
son is serving in the Yugoslav army i
Another woman said she was forced
to leave her 83-yrar-old mother while
the latter was receiving the last sac-;
rament for the dying. One aged man
was seen carrying his crippled wife
on his back.
Creations Out, Also
The refugees included numbers of
Croatians and Bavarians whose fam-
ilies have lived in Yugoslavia for the
last 200 years. There were a number
of children suffering from influenza
Groups of weeping women and chil-
dren were sitting distractedly on their
bundles and baggage at various rail-
road stations.
A government spokesman said Hun-
gary would be justified in expelling
Yugoslav citizens living in this coun-
try but would not resort to this re-
prisal until ths matter is sired at
Geneva.
The Hungarian minister to Bel-
grade. hurriedly summoned by the
government to report on the situation,
arrived Thursday morning at Buda-
pest for a conference with Premier
Goemboes.
An American tourist who encoun-
tered the refugees at Subotica, Yugo-
slavia, said one little girl had a tog
tied to her coat with her father a ad-
dress in Hungary written on it.
Ne wonder MeEntee’s do th.
Diamond and Watti hutatu
of Ohlaboma
. . .A-Luui
Here’s a super quality all-wool flannel gown, the feature
value of gifts. Popular, too, because of so many colors,
blue, green, brown, red and black. Single breasted, double
breasted with smart complementary colon in the collars,
cuffs and belts. Some have the handsome contrasting
piping. All boxed individually. Orders by mail filled.
. BY
FRANK BELL. C S. B.
OF NEW YORK CITY
already have reached Budapest and
the excitement there is intense. Angry
threats have been uttered against
Yugoslavia.
Police have been mobilized to pre-
vent outward demonstrations and in-
cidents likely to embroil this coun-
try further with Yugoslavia.
Amy is Aroused
Refugees said the Yugoslav army
was in an ugly mood. They said Hun-
garian residents in Yugoslavia had
been pulled out of bed in the middle
of the night and made to walk half-
dressed to a railroad station where a
train was waiting to take them to the
boarder. In one case, it was alleged
that soldiers had extinguished all the
lamps in the streets so that the publie
could not see the half-naked Hun-
garians being marched to the station.
Among the refugeea arriving was a
T2-year-old Hungarian mother whose
*2
Representatives of the United States munitions makers were was the leader of a youthful band
on the witness stand in Washington Tuesday before the senate that took.885 in cash and two Pistols
investigating committee. Among the witnesses were Pierre duPont and A.shotgun from them and lett
/of, Sud P.n.. NDent eN i (Aesociater Press nhntn) them bound in their bathroom.
Th. aw W «v«"
ike xtreme eale
•vim • • •
AY TSe WEEK
PAY 75c WEEK
Just another square deal la the
spirit of leadership and every
purchase at MeEntee’s will
prove it over and over again.
MeEntee’s serving you for our
29th year, pledged easy on the
packet book and always trying
to de more for ear customers
than anymerehant has ever
done before.
Buyin and selling on the same
prencription For Less makes our
profits small and fair, bat we
ean count ear eustomers every-
where.
$59.75
Sold pintinum
rina of modem
simdlicity tote
which is perfeetz
l, potsed one of
the more tnport-
antsiwediamonda.
Value eivine in a
mensure sou never
even dreamed
’ onisat
’s.
Nethine would
• lease her
CAristmas
thaa lbw re:
mountine of
the dlamond
that tow, elnee
has M needed
to ka reset.
4 dlamends
in the
sviion ef
m<Um.
You’ve jot a modest sum
to invest in a good suit
or coat—we’ve got the
kind of clothes that look
better now and six
months from now .. a
the kind that give you
the MOST for your
money.
★
★
★
here and at other frontier stations
taking testimony of refugees.
So apprehensive is the government,
however, that the situation may lead
to an open break with Yugoslavia all
Hnga ri an newspapers were instr ic ted
to print anything about the
dumber or condition of the refugees.
Severs! hundred of the refugees
**,
0qA
county prosecutors and conferred dur-
ing the morning with County Attor-
ney Holly Anderson.
The county attorney said he would
request the Cleveland county attor-
ney at Norman to obtain a statement
from a co-ed at the University of
Oklahoma there stating whether she
heard young Kennamer speak in a
threatening manner against Gorrell. ;
AKRON, Ohio.—Contrary to belief
by many, men can really "take it”
better in the dentists chair than
women, Miss Lynn Nyme. dental as-
sistant, said in an interview
‛e it 1
$4, » 1 '
* -j * 3
22o/
1
$29
All Suits Wib 2 Trttutn
//4
Overcoats
*
We -
took him to Australla, and the
Australian that brought him
over this time. Gatty is a great
navigator; Lindbergh and Post
are a couple of the best pilot-
navigators. Thousands can fly,
but few can find a speck in the
ocean. You got to be on intimate
terms with astronomy. Never
mind the carburetors, or the
feed line, or the R. P. M. It s Old
Man Sun, moon and stars, that
you want to be on speaking
terms with.
Yours,
FREE LECTURE ONCHRISTIAN SCIENCE-
The government investigation led to
. . ___ several arrests on undisclosed charges
activities were closely guarded, are with the details closely guarded.
DL(I PI WALTHAM’S NEW
DLUJLL. BEN HUR MODEL
YA
!
54
i
old women leading their 86-year-old
blind father.
A 4-year-old, barefoot girl had lost
both her parents in her flight. A
young mother arrived with the new-
born babe to which she had given
birth along the route.
There were many accounts of refu-
gees being forced to depart in trains
without heat, food or water. Others,
less fortunate, said they were com-
pelled to make the long trek on foot.
Many of the weary throng were
cared for in homes, hospitals and
schoolhouses Others tramped on in
search of friends, relatives or hospita-
ble strangers in the interior of
Hungary.
Newspapers Centered
Hungarian government officials are
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras, Dec 8
—(P)— Disappearance of an entire
mountain during the earthquakes
which have devastated a large part
of Honduras during the last two days
was reported Thursday in official
commications.
The report related that Mount Cer-
roazul sank from sight with a tre-
mendous roar Observers in Paraiso
said the mountain crumbled without
any volcanic eruption.
Cerroazul was situated between
Paraiso and Santa Rita in the Copan
district, where the full force of the
earthquakes was felt
Disrupted transportation and com-
munication systems made impossible
an accurate estimate of the extent of
the damage or the number of casual-
ties One old woman was reported to
have been buried in debris as Copras,
a town of 7,000 population, was laid
waste.
An airplane pilot who flew over the
stricken area reported many small
towns and villages destroyed near the
mountains in the western region
Several were so completely wiped out
they could not be identified.
The observer estimated 600 dwell-
taiga had been destroyed in Copan
alone. A report from Santo Rosa, seat
of the government of the Copan dis-
trict, said the entire population of
12,000 persons had fled their homes,
fearing further and more serlous dis-
turbances.
I
*
I I
I},
We Thrive
On Critical
Inspection ..
We like to see food experts
come in, because our meals are
prepared to pleas the most
critical . . . Come in for lunch-
eon or dinner.
uEs: 'I
I
e H
Now on View and Sale
$19.95
Complete circlet at In
wedding ring at very newest and
■Mt acceptable style Value be-
yond compare and obtalnable
only at MeEntee’s.
Solid platinum entire rine-
« FAY 7le WEEK ♦
or 93.00 Menthi
his term so he will be protected i
against the attacks of other prisoners," t
Blakeney wrote.
Witness to Staying
"He has received several threats to I
the effect that even if he does recover 1
from the November attack, he will be
murdered as soon as he is released <
from the hospital.
"All of this grew out of the fact
Redfern testified for the state in the 1
trial of another convict who murdered 1
still another convict in the prison 1
brickyard—a most brutal murder, and
Redfern was unfortunate enough to
witness it.
Redfern was committed to prison
April 3, 1930, after being convicted of
stealing an electric phonograph from
an Oklahoma City residence.
“Informer” In Other Prison
Although he la only 28 years old.
his present record shows arrests in
England. Australia, Canada and the
United States. The state of Michigan
has placed a hold order against him
at the penitentiary, and has aaked he
be returned there to complete a term
which he avoided by escape.
Redfern obtained considerable no-
toriety when he turned informer while
an inmate of the Ionia reformatory in
Michigan. A fanastic pot, hlow
up IM institution was thwarted after
nitro glycerin had been manufactured
inside the walls, as the result of Red-
fern s tip.
Federal agents since have informed
Oklahoma prison authorities that Red-
fern hatched the plot himself and in-
volved others, squealing at the last
minute to obtain the favor of prison
officials. As a result of his tip, he
was transferred to a prison farm and ।
escaped.
$39.75
Solid platinam entire rinz.
Mounting embellished with
fident nothing will prevent the execu- I
tion of any bustness we can get.”
Senator Clark said the embargo
legislation was "talked to death by
Senator Bingham (R. Conn.) in the
closing days of the session."
He added that the move had been
stopped by Bingham's threat of a
filibuster.
During frequent clashes with wit-
nesses, Senator Clark told Irenes du-
Pont, munitions manufacturer, at one
point that the latter was not ''run-
ning this investigation.”
The clash came during an inquiry
by Clark into the shipment of mu-
nitions to China, despite the embargo
under which the American govern-
ment was operating
With the spectators listening in-
tently. Clark introduced evidence con-
cerning the shipment of powder to
Holland in 1929 for re-shipment to
China.
K. K. V Casey, duPont official, con-
ceded his company knew the ship- '
ment was going to China.
He said the advice of the state de-
partment waa not sought because that
department had no jurisdiction over
shipments to Holland.
Testimony developed that the du-
Ponta borrowed or rented a United I
States navy gun to test powder to be
sold to ChinA.
"We paid the costa." Casey said. "I
think there is a law permitting this."
"It would be interesting to know."
Clark observed, “and I think it is in
the public interest to know whether
munitions makers have access to gov-
ernment equipment to make teats.”
Stephen Raushenbush, chief investi-
he had such clear cut evidence there
would be little delay in making the
arrest after his arrival here.
Maddux and Retf announced they
had found letters in the apartment
occupied by Gorrell while he was a
student at the Kansas City Western
dental college that gave them speci-
mens of his handwriting they sought
Richard Oliver and Jesse Harris.
Oklahoma students at the same school
who had roomed with Gorrell, re-
turned with the officers.
"They told us they were afraid to
stay in Kansas City," said Maddux
Oliver lives in Tulsa, Harris in 'Wil-
burton. The reason they were fear-
ful waa not disclosed.
Oliver’s home here was guarded
Sunday night and he was given a po-
lice escort out of town when he re-
turned to Kansas City Monday. In-
formation given police by him was
credited by Maddux and other officers
as pointing the way for the arrest of
Kennamer.
There was much speculation here
whether the youth to be arrested was
one of four who were said by two
Wagoner robbery victims to have ac-
companied a fifth, identified by them
as Kennamer. to their home the night
before Gorrell was killed
.Basil James and Mrs. James viewed
young Kennamer, son of Judge Frank-
lin E Kennamer, in his cell Wednes-
day and afterward asserted that he
- \ i i,
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif., Dec.
6—Having lunch in the studio
cate Tuesday with Sir Kingsford
Smith, the great Australian avi-
ator. He was called to the phone.
He came back
and said "They
have missed
the Hawaiian
islands, and
are down.
■■ . ' 1 111 ' 1 1 11 .------------------
-- ' ’ 0n-./2
"We have some important informa-
tion that we are not yet ready to dis-
close in full,” said McMillen.
Federal narcotic agents also have
inquired into the case, but have made
no announcements.
Help for a badly pressed prosecutor’s
office was promised Thursday. J.
Berry King, attorney general, was in
Tulsa to confer with Holly Anderson,
county attorney, and probably tender
either his own services or those of one
of his assistants from Oklahoma City.
Anderson said there were so many
avenues to follow that his staff could
not keep abreast of developments and
conduct the current term of court.
Maddux arrived this morning from
Kansas City and went immediately
to his home to sleep. He had been up
more than 24 hours without rest.
E. E 'Tony” Benson, deputy sheriff
who went to Springfield. Mo., to in-
terview Sam Shumate, convicted bur-
glar, returned also. Benson said,
"Shumate just wanted to get out in
the fresh air awhile."
Shumate had told Springfield au-
thorities he had important informa-
tion relating to activities of young
Kennamer and his associates.
Attorney General J. Berry King was
here today to lend assistance to the
that’s too bad ”
Then he told
how important
navigation was,
especially over
the ocean. He
paid great
tribute to the
American that
|
Mew’s Long Wearing
HAl SOLES goe
Half Seles 49 e •0 •
SCOTT’S S
Main at Walker. Across from Ward’s
.he
Ak. I
Gt.,
b83 SbgK
studying ramification of the traffic.
In some quarters the situation, which
still is concealed from the Austrian'
people, was referred to as “the arma-
menta scandal.”
Cabinet ministers are taking the
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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/m1/2/: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.