Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 166, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 26, 1935 Page: 4 of 18
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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■ ■
4
1925
\ 2
15
)
(
Existed Amid
Natives Seem to Know in Advance, Disappear Silently,
Prison Luxury
To Return in Same Manner.
Bv LAURENCE STALLINGS
i
the British in 1331-32 spitked
Thus
% Forum
the principle for which
st Geneva
they are fighting today.
323-325 W. Main
KAYSER
MIR-O-KLEER
T
HOSIERY
It was generally conceded that at
STREETS—323-325 W. Mate •
patrols sloshed
I
downpours
i
\P
P
in 1921.
$A
\
ONLY
'tmm MM V. •. Pate, nes. 1,000,30* ana UM.IH
T
4 .
Be Democratic.
<
F
-
atm
BUT I
TEU
EVER
r %
Three Oklahoma City members of
■
i
2
9
f
I
-U
f
0
and Toasted by Folger’s—and delivered
D
I
3
134 W. 10th
3-5367
>
Men’s Suits—Plain Dresses
—serve
. i
5
—
4, 2
6m
y
&
di
advance
persistent
Ethiopia ‘s
Ark Shrine
It’s a Wonderful Way
to Soothe Itching Skin
FILL tR UP AGAIN,HONEY!
-MAKES ME FEEL LIKE A
MILLIONAIRE TO DRINK
COFFEE LIKE THIS! ,
in
the
STOPSAAIN
becausePPUJHE
Old Moorland Tract
Goes to National Trust
15
UP
scribing a battle north of Dolo on
the southern front in Italy s cam-
paign of occupation in Ethiopia.
Italian losses were announced as
Airplane Drops Bombs,
Lynching is Stoppet
Texan Slew Indian aa Child
BARNHART, Texas.—(—One of
the surviving plainsmen at the Texas
frontier is Albert 8. Colling, 89 years
old, of Barnhart, who says he killed
an Indian before he was 13 years old.
He served as an Indian scout, Con-
federate soldier, and Texas rancher.
He was born near Waco, Texas. »
Covenant Seen by No Man
Veiled From Writer.
KAYSER
HOSIERY
" have Annual Exhibition Here To
D, n..4‘.
% LESS EVERY
TIME! WHY THAT
WILL SAVE ME A
ROUND EVERY
MONTH! I'LL TAKE
A CAN OF .
FOLGERS e
RIGHTAEK
* Tunel
IUDYmaINNE
cn the cirat
14s IL M.
every day encept
SalandSun,
Folger Coffenever
MmMY
St.Joseph
GENUINE PURE ASPIRIN
roached the shrine and looked
a three-inch opening.
D. B HORTON.
Mutual, Okla.
F 3
Hd
In all
the
New
Fall
Shades
with
Quality
Unsur-
passed
with plain top85e up
• I
ep
(By the Associated Press)
One hundred Ethiopians. including
NOW *
please! I
aircraft will throw down destruction from
The plane had come at 4 o’clock in
the afternoon. By 6 o'clock, in Harar.
Ing his will properly to distribute his
wealth after his death Ls praiseworthy
indeed. Many wealthy men might well
follow his example.
If 3600,000 is left after inheritance
taxes have been paid, or provided lor,
then $75,000 should be invested in
ON THE HOME
Haile Selassie, a son of Ras Ma-
konnen, nephew of former Emperor
Menelek, became sole ruler in 1930
after Queen Zauditu died.
L Yasu succeeded in escaping im-
prisonment. disguised as a woman, in
1932. and launched a revolution, but
he was recaptured tn the same year
while awaiting the end of the rainy
season to start his fight.
Lowly, Pedigreed
Cats to Mingle
STIMSON POLICY
IyENRY L STIMSON came back
11 crestfallen from Geneva. He had
tried to set an example for peace. He
■had tried to block Japan’s initial
move toward engulfing all China. He
had tried to bolster the league of
nations. And the British had subbed
him in the back.
Police Graft Spells Death
CHUNGKING, China — UP) — Au-
thorities of this west China city, to
check graft and corruption in the local
police force, have required each of-
fleer to sign a bond by which he
agrees to forfeit his life if he is caught
accepting a bribe.
2
67790
around
FOUR—OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES, TUESDAY, NOVEMBFR 26, _________________________________
Been Guard iSclaSsie’s Rival Dies,
I iiesday
7 be embassy added however, it still
AKES LESS!
44
• •
one walked through the market place
neither insulted nor harassed for j
there was no one there. By 7 o'clock. ]
T"F
.4
the host of cameramen, surely the
most cynical of workmen, decided that
there must be truth in the rumor that
Harar was to be bombarded The
town was cleaned. The camera trucks
labored to the hill which afforded best
observation, and photographers pre-
pared for their vigil.
Just how the Harar Inhabitants
knew of an Impending raid before
these photographers, with glasses con-
tacts. telephonic tips, could surmise, is
a matter best left to students of ne-
cromancy Anyway, when the photog-
raphers descended the hill after sun-
rise failed to materialise a single
bombing plane. Harar was again its
old. usual swarming self.
Tembien and Gheralca regions west
of Makale on the northern front.
Natives told Italan correspondents
the rain might presage a wet season
which could impede seriously the next
major advance, but nevertheless
Fascist troops busied themselves with
preparations for the push southward.
On the right wing of the northern
forces Gen. Pietro Maravigna’s sec-
ond army corps drove forward to
Dama Gallia as airplanes cruised
above, ready to swing into action
with machine guns at the first sight
of Ethiopian forces.
SUPPOSE I
i ITS )
QUITE )
Emm!^
g",
r A
_
AT HOME
AOMINO date on the capital’s social
V pregram is a tea, on December 2,
to which the invitations read. In part:
Captain Tamon Yamaguchi*
Japanese Naval Attache
At Home
In the Chinese Room
Mayflower Hotel
vAA-
WM,THATS8OUTOF
’ 1
Me
LEGION
• • 555
MacDonald, prime minister of the
national government MacDonald
agreed with him emphatically, prom-
ised co-operation, a definite Anglo-
American front
But whenever Ambassador Cam-
eron Forbes in Tokyo delivered one
of Secretary Stimson’s vigrous pro-
tests to the Japanese foreign office,
the British ambassador called an beer
or so later to say that Great Britain
thoroughly understood the Japanese
position.
And when Secretory Stimson final-
ly went to Geneva himself to enlist
the support of Europe's premiers for
definite sanctions against Japan, the
only semblance of support he could
get was from Italy.
Ramsay MacDonald, who agreed
with him personally, could not swing
the Tories who ruled his cabinet.
I •-7315 W. Main
Italian
through
pursuing
i two provincial governors, were re
ported killed Tuesday in an official
communique issued at Rome de-
A
k J
HE altitude and logi “I Die reader
who desires advice about mak-
TArs WHERE
YOUUBE :
SURPRISED
-LET ME
SHOW YOU!
E-nSm*
memexgsmgrz— •
FDLCERl COFFEE
‘cuuw PACKED
MEXICO CITY, Nov. 26.—Federal
airplanes scattered a lynching mob
near Las Carboneras. state of Jalisco,
by dropping bombs on them just as
they were about to jerk the rope on
the victim. telegrams from there re-
ported Tuesday to the newspaper Ex-
celsior.
The reported victim was Manuel
Topete, elder brother of Gov. Eva-
rardo Topete of Jalisco, The rope was
around his neck and slung over the
tree, the dispatches stated. He fell
unconscious as the mob of rebels fled.
wall, ready to take north China, the
Chinene ambassador, Alfred Sze, was
throwing a resplendent dinner fee
Mayer Manstield of Boston
• •• .«• ,
? <7&£ Inquiring Reporter
AND HOW HIS MYSTERIOUS QUESTIONS SHOWED IRENE THE WAYTO THRILL A HUSBAND !
f
FROM ALL THE OTHERS
BECAUSE ITS MOUNTANN
COFFEE AND THAT 4
TANGY MOUNTAIN
FLAVOR SURE MAKES
, A HIT WITH MEN! /
DE-s- =2
flnt taste. IB’Folger’s-deliciously dif- m, richness at Folgers favor
tent becaune H’s mouptain gom m*kss it more economical to use! House-
Most ordinary brands use lowUndcofsse wivestellusyoucanactullyuele
Lan the sama kind of eoffee, merely told -and atin get more delicious,e0fee i
under diferent names! ButinFolger’a addition to the saving F* makel
J “No one," he answered.
• not seen them myself ."
* AENTURIES ago, he added, the
» U Arabs burned the cathedral. But
After Roosevelt was elected—but
before he assumed office—Stimson
went to see him, came away elated.
He had sold the president-elect his
policy in the far east.
Since then international initiative
has been reversed. The British have
been doing the talking. The state
department has been doing the listen-
ing.
The only difference is that Roose-
velt, as well as he can under the
neutrality laws, is backing the British
up to the hilt.
NoteOn the night the armies of
Japan were peised outside the groat
Italians Tried to Kidnap Him,
Proclaim Him Emperor,
By JAMES A. MILLS
(Copyright. 1935 by Th Associated Prean)
ADDIS ABABA Nov. 26 —L1J Yasu,
deposed emperor of Ethiopia long re-
puted to be a prisoner in glden chains.
Is dead. It was announced Tuesday.
The grandson of former Emperor
Menelek, a cousin of the present Em-
peror Halle Selassie, died in exile in
a villa prison specially constructed for
him at Tiara Mulata, near Harar,
where he had every comfort.
Halle Selassie, who became regent
and heir to the throne to share the
rule with Queen Zauditu. daughter of
Menelek, when LIJ Yasu was deposed
by the tribal chiefs in 1916. went into
mourning for his predecessor.
Lij Yasu who was about 50 years old,
succumbed to a lingering illness.
A Three-Year Rule
LI] Yasu ruled Ethiopia for only
three years before going into exile and
becoming subject of many strange and
fantastic tales.
The favorite legend had the one-
time monarch held in golden chains
at Haile Selassie's Addis Ababa palace
to prevent the Italians, now invading
Ethiopia, from kidnaping him
Other reports had the possibility of
an Italian bombing of Harar prompt-
ing the emperor to remove Lij Yasu
to a secret hiding place far in the
hinterlands.
F"
Cats. Just eats, will be on display
from 10 a. m. to 10 p. m. Saturday
and Sunday at 20 West Main street.
Miss Floy McGill, secretary of the
Oklahoma City chapter of the United
Cat clubs of America, announced
Tuesday
Mrs Jess Adair. Kansas City, win
judge the felines. Seventy-five silver
trophies will be offered winners in
Oklahoma City's annual cat show, in
which 150 cats are expected to be
entered.
Bunkered'* Flick of Twin Oak*,
grand champion feline at the Wich-
ita. Kan, show November 1 and 3.
is registered, Miss McGill said, as is
his companion, Double Champion
Diadem's Sun of Twin Oaks. Both
are owned by Mrs. C. M. Seran,
Castle.
On display with the long-named
ones will be mongrel “Kitty," “Pussy"
and “Fluff" House-tabbies and alley
cats will be classified as "domestie
short hairs.”
Soothing, cooling Zemo relieves dis-
tress of itching skin. For 25 years,
this clean, reliable skin lotion has
been the favorite with millions. Ex-
cellent for all kind* of minor skin
irritations, Zemo belongs in every
home. Buy toothing, dependable
Zemo today—to relieve the itching
of Rashes, Pimples. Ringworm and
Eczema. Tested and approved by
Good Housekeeping Bureau. No. 4314.
AU druggista, $35c, 30c. 31.
I
B
R i
FIT-ALL-TOP*
MIR-O-KLEER*
I HOSIERY
‘.Tree Lovers Attempt To
k: Save Road in England
’ ROMSEY, Eng.—An appeal has
, been made by the Roads Beautifying
, association for funds to help save
. an avenue of tall trees which fringe
«a length of the main London-to-
•Bournemouth road near here.
. In the autumn this stretch of un-
dulating road is extrem-ly pttract’ve
„Recentiy land alongside the road
enemy bands from
L
W.
V N
p )
traps easy, ma'am A (
FOUGERS IS SO DIFFERENT
GET EXTRA FLAVOR-EXTRA SAVINGS
WITH THIS URE MOUNTAIN COFFEE
Deliciously DEftrmt From Any Other Cotfoo Grown-
Selassie's orders, the deposed emper- gilt-edged securities for each of the
children, under such conditions that
only the income could be used until
the recipient had reached the age of
30 years. The widow should be be-
or was allowed to live in luxury, even
to such comforts as champagne "and
playing cards.
Italian Kidnaping Failed
' four native soldiers killed, five wound-
ed and two missing.
Rain over all fronts impeded some-
what the preparations for new Italian
। advances, and provided a dreary dirge
for Lij Yasu, deposed ruler who died
in exile.
ITL
9
PPSENDME 4
‛ (FOLGERS, BY
(ALLMEANS.,
#ak
queathed the income of the remaining
3300,000 until her death, such having
been put into the hands of a reliable
trust company for permanent invest-
ment, in separate accounts of »100,«
ooo each.
At the widow's death the three
3100,000 investments are to continue
to be handled by the trust company
in whose hands they have been
placed, the incomes to be used re-
spectively for a loan fund to support
students in graduate study in some
worthy field of research; to provide
free treatment for worthy but poor
patients at some first class hospital;
to provide for continuous research
for treatment and prevention of can-
cer and, perhaps, other scourges of
the race.
IF YOU NOW USE-
"58ehe
kwmi moors you md use
33--8eee
3 ONLV3 SPOONFULS tor4 cUPSi
prie per wr*the pride pee pound
BRITISH POLICY
POUR years before this—almost to
F the month—Sir Ronald Lindsay
used to come down to the state de-
partment to confer with Secretary
Henry L. Stimson.
At that time, he nodded assent
while Stimson lectured him on the
dangers of Japanese aggression in
Manchuria. The Japanese move into
Manchuria, Stimson said, was but the
first step. It would be followed by
the conquest of north China, then
the Yangtze valley, stronghold of
British trade, then south China and
Hongkong.
Mr. Stimson also held lengthy and
vigorous transatlantic telephone con-
versations with his old friend Ramsay
Over all the legends prevailed deep
mvstery ever since the Italians alleg-
edly tried to kidnap LIJ Yasu a few
years ago by airplane with a view to
making him emveror in the event
Italv connuered Ethiopia
He had been reported dead many
time*, but Ethionlan government of-
ficials disclosed last June that he was
then alive and confined in the villa
not ft* from Harar.
Ul Yasu entered Addis Ababa amid
great pomp to assume the rule In 1913
after the death of his grandfather,
Menelek.
Tribal rebellion broke out in 1916
and LIJ Yasu was overthrown. osteh-
sibly for efforts to change the nation-
al relleion, which has remained Coptic
Christian. , •
Escave la Woman's Garb
Sporadie fighting persisted for four
years. Haile Selassie and Queen Zau-
ditu encountering diffirulties through
the dual nature of their wovernment.
before Lij Yasu was finally captured
time they had not been, they were , .
or“hep"heshenasytuzuisnnosnite Ethiopian Reverses
man ‘“L™ xaa MM Reported in Rome
NEXT MORNING
* the national board cf directors of the
J Anti-8aloon league will leave Thurs-
* day for an annual directors meeting
4 Saturday, which will precede opening
’ of the annual convention Sunday at
' St Louie.
, The board members are Dr. J. B.
- Rounds, president of the Oklahoma
* league; W. J. Losinger, state league
1 superintendent, and H. T. Laugh-
* baum, league attorney.
Deposed Ruler Air Raid Peril Empties Romans Offer
Harar, Affording Mystery Apologies To
U.S. Couples
Mu MADE INU.S.A
KAYSER MAKIS IT
rt—i r
:V
2
Bl
l • consent.
| ; I checked my inability to see the
( sacred relics with a young English-
. man. But he saw nothing, either.
I • Hence I concluded that the ark and
• the tablets—reputedly brought to this
2 Ethiopian mecca by the Queen of
• Sheba—never have been seen by any
r . • living person.
ie ' • • • .
2 rNHE high priest, before granting
1 permission for us even to try to
view them, told us their history.
“The Queen of Sheba, our first
I » ruler, and the mother of the Emperor
I ‘ Menelek, first brought them from
E s King Solomon to Aksum.” he began.
"The queen. attracted by Solomon's
I • glory, wet from Abyssinia to see him.
• She fell in love with him and she
J conceived of a boy who became
1 । King Menelek L
| • t "When the time came for her to
< • return to Abyssinia, Solomon wished
I 7 to make her a present.
I “He had copies made of the ark of
L ‘ the covenant and the ten com-
Hi mandment tablets and gave them to
| J her.
I • “But the queen secretly exchanged
. 2 the copies for the originals st night
I ‘ and departed for her native country
■ 7 “Solomon tried to overtake her, but
H • didn't succeed."
i self of this. Finally, up under the
■ 9 cupola, my eyes found a small pen-
5 ■ dant mass.
I ? “It is the hire of the holy bees,” the
priest said. "If any person, save a
, I saint, should try to enter the holy of
• holies the bees would sting him to
I s death.”
• I asked the priest who, in his life
U 2 time, had seen the ark of the cove-
I Bant, the tablets and the decalogue.
AND TO THINK WEVE )
BEEN MI5ING 1
FOLGE/TS— 4
WHEN ITS JUST V z
AS ECONOMICAL (“
TO USE AS IT 15 kk
DEuaous!
LONDON—A tract of 200 acres of
Yorkshire moorland has been pre-
sented to the national trust by Maj
Hubert Peake of Bawtry hail, Don-
caster. The property, which is on
Scarth Wood Moor, lies to the west
of the moorland road which runs'
from Osmotherley to Swainby.
This highway, descending from the
moors st Scarth Nick, is part of the
old Roman road from Bootham Bar
at York to Stockton. The tract of
moorland is a favorite resort of visit-
ors from Middlesbrough, Stockton and
Darlington.
I TT was then that we asked if we
| I could go inside. The high priest
* was adamant in his refusal.
» Finally we begged to be allowed to
2 peer into the sacred room. After a
। fong discussion, tbs high priest re-
Studen.t Insults Regretted,
■ Siys Padua Prefect.
I 7
And you’re sureK*
to find the exact %
color to match \m
your wardrobe at \ U
Street’s — either yl
with or without Yl
Fit-All-Tops
Fresh, new, complete A
stock. “2
’ THE LAST 10 WOMEN '
WHO PIKEO FOLGER’S! 1
IM LOOKING INTO IHISI
• cathedral where
t the ark of the
’ covenant and the
• ten command-
• Blent tablets
2 supposedly are
) t enshrined, only
to learn that no
• mortal eyes can
« see them.
• For I saw ab-
• solutely nothing
—nothing, that
, is, save a high
• hanging pendant
• which, I was
the skies. It i '
two weeks, u ?
the next
s
X I
• was sold for bu iding. Th: ,1
• has sold the timber. It has been sr-
! ranged, however, that when the
.money is ralsed to refund the money
.paid by the timber merchant for toe
•trees, the avenue wil be preserved
♦for the natam. J
•mesema« -WM
(3 63
aNe
/we’re CHECKING TO FIND THE y/
I MOST POPULAR COFFEE, MADAM! It
) JUST NAME YOUR FANORITE <
( BRAND • AND WEU SEND J
K YOU A POUND FREE 1 /
PV, 71
• Eususivebetgtarmdrtommcokmin
world's yriM cofeeaf With a winy tang sad Aenxad the beet-ssrws
and flavor that make lowland coflees WpFEnioy itsthriling mountain
taste thin and fat by comparison! Kovoriysovhome.QrderFoigera
Folger’s b grown on ^9 plantationa todayi
iniesomssimideheAmm
ME, WHY 1$ V
_ERYBODY A
TALKING ABOUT k(
FOLGER’S COFFEE H
these days? p
ROME Ne 26 P—Italians have
ne, n reproduced here, in little, during the last mite 1uo aplogtes to two American
, town bM been teeming on. day. deserted ppln X stud
—• I think particularly of a famly of den’s mb n PadualastSaturdayt
-------------- Somali people who, seen from a high W - sald At the American emhsy
window, evidently kept a caravansary
for the salt caravans.
Streets Suddenly Quiet
• told, harbors the
' holy bees, deadly
, guardians of the Andrue Berding
• invisible srk and
• its legendary tablets.
♦ “Only a saintly man can see them.”
4 said the high priest, Taele, who per-
* mitted me to gase into the shrine
. only after I had used all the wile* and
• persuasion in my power to obtain his
a d
UXTASHINGTON, Nov. 26.—Six-foot-
W six Sir Ronald Lindsay, his
majesty's ambassador to the United
States, slipped into the state depart-
ment after it was almost closed the
other night and climbed the back
stairs because the elevators were not
running.
Closeted with Cordell Hull for more
than an hour, he told the inside
secret of why the Japanese suddenly
had halted their plans to seize north
China. * .
The foreign office in London had
called to rotund Ambassador Matsu-
daira, uncle-in-law of the emperor,
told him-that U the league of nations
applied sanetions against Italy for
conquering Ethlopla it should also
apply them against Japan for steal-
ing north China; that Britain was
ready to gw to bat for this policy
Shortly afterward. Secretary Hull
went down the back stairs of the
state department, motored to the
union station and conveyed this in-
formation to Roosevelt just before the
president's train departed for Warm
Springs at 3:30 p. m.
• • •
. ’ 1935. for. Oklahoman-Tmes)
HARAR Fth 1.1 Nov. 26.—we have heard much pother
from scienti ts d Sunday article writers about the terror which i
will grip fin habitants of the future metropolis when it is
known tha' l.
66202221
25c
FREE DELIVERY
By ANDRUE BERDING
- -(Copyrtaht. 1935. by The Associated Press)
AKSUM, Ethiopia, Nov 26—1 have
I A peered into Ethiopia's holy of
• holies, the sacred room in Oksum’s
How should n vi(iv invest
$1,00<).ih>u tn pmviile for
family ajti r hi^ thoihf
A disappointingly small
number of replies was re-
ceived on the invitation to de-
vise a suitable wtll for a man
of means. This is the best of
the lot. We don t think it is
as good as our original sug-
gestion, howeter. The Editdr.
EDITOR OF THE TIMES
I lented.
? X ap
* throug
« B was a smanl roan, rising without
I a break to a high roof where a small
i cupola let in some light.
2 But in the room itself was abao-
2 lately nothing.
g I looked and looked to assure my-
26
-,E*-EF* 1"
The day of the authentic scare even l
the caravansary decamped. Possibly it |
had word from Armenian or Arab
traders.
make representations to the Ital-
,, anornment regarding the inci-
The day of the first air scare these
people withstood the shock. Even ’he 1 ' n, ana Mrs Pred.
Police station, straggling its weak T AmpioanhDraanr andX
timbers across half the .comouna 7 K Boman of the Mayo institute,
yard, was deserted, and the clink of Minn, said the students in
chain, muted. Outaidethe station Hlmniereitytown ripped American
two sentrles hugged the shadows.chal om their autmobile, which
lenging softly where the night bip bore British lcense plate.
they had proudly shouted their Hei p... .. .mb..e0
Haile Selassie" into the ears of even i The prefect of Padua theLemDA8y
Dasterbv said, oftered an apology to the Amer-
P _ ‘ . a ngin . an consul sept from Venice to in-
The first air scare had no origin vestigate The prefect and other au-
it had begun from a whisper in - tnorities said the students who par-
market-place; It.had.grown.n1K. ti/ipated the demonstration had
tidal wave. It had emptied a town of apologized on the spot, through an
15,000 people in less than an hou interpreter to the American*. Their
These people vanished like smoke lr' s iperior ordered the apology, it was
leaves overhead. The inhabitants re- sald
turned the same way. Where for a _____
• the ark and the tablets were not de-
* strayed because the fire could not
’ find them.
. The tablets, he explained, are of
r • wood, not stone. They are inscribed
• In the ancient language called
* "Geeze" and not in Hebrew; there are
2 five of them, not two.
1 Therefore it would seem they could
• not be the tablet, which, the Bible
♦ says, Jehovah gave to Moses on
I I Mount Sinai.
* We turned away from the shrine.
* The high priest preceded us from the
* cathedral. We put on our boot, and
4 walked to his residence.
1 2 As we left the churchyard a small
: whirlwind of dust swirled before us.
I 2 Taele held up his hand in reverential
’ salute.
• "Inside,” he said, “is a spirit”
■■ —
• Dry Executives to Go
: To Meeting in St. Louis
I * —
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a Prisoner in Golden Chains
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 166, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 26, 1935, newspaper, November 26, 1935; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1987814/m1/4/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.