Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 244, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 26, 1936 Page: 4 of 20
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9H
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t FOUR—OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY U.
2
90 Percent Of
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Purchases Go
To Lone Firm
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Rain and Hail Surrounds Oklahoma City
Flee New Slide Threat
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and up
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•Mba
"I eat hearty meals and get plenty
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"Corned beef and cabbage is one of
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CHANCE
AREWATING
MOREAMATEURS
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City Briefs
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However, if proposed extensions west
3
of the Santa Fe right of way and
»
d
526 W. 9th
Phone 7-7551
am
#
is even more imminent, with that
area east of the tracks already due
2
be submitted to an extension vote at
25c 25c
2 for
2 for
5
26c 26c
for it in the bag.
N
Why Pay More?
We CUI tor and Deliver
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Government’s Ace
' 4
Attempts to End
Akron Tire Strike
You Help an Amateur
Every Time You Buy a
pound of Chase &
Sanborn Dated Coffee
Santa Fe Keeps
Clear of Fight
. Over Extension
the special election March 24.
State’s Rainfall Is Far
Below Normal for Year
Government Joins In
Joliet Narcotic Probe
Billington’s Offer Best, Says
Donnelly After Protest.
mint
sum
ANY DRESS
ANY COAT
THAT’S TOO BAO --YOU
CAN FILL UP THIS HOT
WATER BOTTLE AN' TAKE
, IT TO BED WITH YOU
Q
tutu*
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yet.
North of Twenty-third street the
drainage threat to railway property
guards if the charges by the inmates
are substantiated.
CAAL
Amoe
As he washed up after cleaning up
the office, the new devil remarked:
"Printer's ink sure makes a lasting
impression."
Road Has Large Holdings in
Path of Development.
SEONOVAN
eSaNus
Shampoo ant
Fingerwave
BOc
Beautiful waves and earls that are
the "FT" ef a smart coiffure.
WARDS
Permanent Waves
Special
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Bhapine
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Mr.5eCey
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of the narcotic division of the treasury
department and E C Yellowly, head
of the alcoholic tax unit, said each
sent an investigator to the peniten-
tary.
MANICURE
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Legislative Program Urged
For United States.
5 DAY SPECIAL
Mon., Tues, Wed., Thank. M.
J. E. (Jack) Moore Says:
BE WELL DRESSED!
Save Money at These Frices
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.. JOB
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Fall Is Feared Dying
In El Paso Hospital
IL PASO. Texas, Feb. 28 —(P—-
Albert B Fall. secretary of the in-
terior in the Harding administration,
was critically ill in a hospital here
Wednesday. His physician reported a
definite turn for the worse and that
death might come at any time.
Fall had been ill of pneumonia sev-
eral weeks but had rallied in response
to physicians' efforts to build up his
falling health.
Illness prevented Mrs Fall from
being at her husband s bedside Tues-
day night. Mrs. C C Chase, a daugh-
ter, was at the hospital.
Texas To Mark Old Fort Site
EAGLE PASS, Texas— IP) —The
Texas centennial commission has do-
nated funds to Maverick county to
provide a granite marker at the site
of old Fort Duncan, established in
1849 during the Mexican war.
IN
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BIM-YOU BETTER
dALLTHE DOCTOR-
MAMA IS HAVING
A TERRIBLE
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YOU BLUNDERING FOOL/ NO
WONDER I WAS COLD-YOU
LEFT THI ICE BAQ IN
THE HAMR/
Injunction Violation Charged
By Goodyear Chief.
AKRON, Ohio, Feb. 26.-(P_Ed-
ward F. McGrady. under secretary at
labor, and ace mediator, reached Ak-
ron by plane Wednesday to promote
a settlement of the Goodyear Tire A
Rubber Co strike, which has made
11000 employes idle.
P W Litchfield, Goodyear presi-
dent,. asserted in a midnight broad-
cast from inside the plants, where he
has been living with 1,000 employee,
that despite an injunction limiting
pickets to ten at each of 44 gate*
"nothing has happened other than a
continuation of the violence by which
our factory doors have been closed
and our shipment of goods into and
out of the factory blocked.”
He said: "The suggestion that the
management confer with representa-
tives who take this meaps of enforc-
ing their demands would be a surren-
der of rights to citizenship and a
recognition pt mob violence.’’
Litchfield defended the company'*
wage scales and revisions of hours.
The laying off of tire builders in plant
No. 2 led to the picketing. Strikers de-
manded three days’ advance notice
for men about to be laid off.
Mezzanine— Phone 3-4311
MONTGOMERY WARD
series of weekly dinner meetings at
the Pilgrim Congregational church
will be held at 6:30 p. m. Wednesday
with Rev Frank J. Scribner proaiding
; Al W. Horton, state board of affairs
member, will speak on Oklahoma’s
. penal institutions. The eerie* ot meet-
]
fan
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Kansan Admits Setting
Fire Which Killed Two
. 4
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44
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Rainfall from January 1, to the
present time is far below normal with
precipitation the lowest in years en-
dangering 1938 crops, Harry Wahl-
gren, weather observer. revealed Wed-
nesday in his weekly crop report.
Moisture is needed in every section
of the state but urgently in the west-
em and northwestern areas, he said.
Wheat has made practically no growth
in the last week and cold weather has
caused slight damage.
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Coffee give Major Bowes’ Ama
teurs their long-awaited chance.
And thia finer, fresher coffee
gives you a rail treat in coffee
flavor at an economical price.
Eana
_22
40
532 339
wTnuz,AbiqcEsmiurP? mteheock,
Blaine county, Wednesday filed peti- ;
tion in bankruptcy in federal court,
listing assets of $9,299, and ltabilities
of $12,467. indebtedness of 81.825
against assests of $2,150 was reported
by Beatrice Dooty, farmer. Strong
City, in a bankruptcy petition.
• • •
Lineman Asks Bankruptey-. Martin
L. Goslin Jr., a telephone lineman
living at 1801 Northwest Eighteenth
street. Wednesday filed petition in
bankruptcy in federal court. Assets
of 8479 and uabilities of $1,823 were
v- ___ Listen ineverySunday evening
The freshness ofChaseaSan over the NBC Red Network
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RFO0 MUST
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Rain and hall which swept Oklahoma City Tuesday night and early Wednesday hrongh.
much needed moisture to more than half of the state but missed the western area where it
was needed most, this weather map prepared by Harry Wahlgren, federal weather .. i .
revealed Wednesday. Heavy hail storms centered in the areas where the most moisture fell.
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BRAVE MOTHER
GETS BREAK-
Anne Carney support!
herself and three-year- -
old child by doing wash-
ing, ironing, cleaning.
Her grit and cheerful-
new won admiration,
tears, from the Amateur
Hour audience. The
song she ehoee to sing
was “My Kid.”
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and liquor formerly figured in the j in the extension move on either side,"
daily life of inmates. j Rainey said.
Thomas Cummins, acting supervisor He
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Every day th* Tim** sells more peytn in Oklahoma City than there are homes
———— ■“ ■ ----------------------------------------------------------
Lumber Deals; to Take Bids
( DOES YOUR JAW -
STILL HURT, HENRY .y
JOLIET, DI, Feb. 26.— (P—‘The j Robert M Rainey, head of the law
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born Coffee is assured by our
dating plan. Order Doled Coffee
at your grocer’* tomorrow!
Packed in the new carton-at
exactly the same price you paid
28k
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32
The Santa Fe railroad is not sup-
porting oil tone extension petitions
although an extensive strip of its
property lies directly in the path of
proposed new oil developments. com-
pany attorneys revealed Wednesdy.
Several persons have approached
railway officials with requests that
they sign extension petitions but these
requests hsve been turned down, said
zmzomm
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' Okemse
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8 FREEZING
Ato death
• • •
Church Series Launched--First of a
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conditions hereto determine the truth , "We have no instructions from our
of charges of convicts that narcotics i main office and are taking no part
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• * *
Filling Station Looted— Theft of $6
from a cash register was reported to
' police Tuesday night by Georg* Den-
i ny. attendant at a filling station at
900 North Hudson avenue. The' money
was taken while Denny was servicing
a car.
federal government Wednesday en- firm representing Santa Fe interests
tered the investigation of state prison j here
HOBOKEN FOUR” WIN HEARTS-AND JOBS-Throe of
the “Hoboken Four” worked in a ilk mill, n the curb market, in
dad's ice-cream parlor. One didn’t work. All 4 were out of work
when they came to Major Bowes, but their amusing rendition o
“Shine” brought them 4 good jobs with a Unit!
• • ■
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GARBAGE COLLECTOR
COLLECTS JOBS—Joseph
Rogato, singing garbage collector
of the Bronx, chose for his Ama-
severaljobs-includingatourwith the microphone But.MajortBwenPe
a Unit and position as featured suadedhertosingshewentoverb .
entertainerinaNewJerseyresort. went out with a Unit I
south of Northeast Twenty-third
street are granted, the railroad will be
forced either to lease its property or
suffer drainage of oil beneath its
Jiggs's Favorite Dish
•O
NEWARK, N J. Feb. 26 —(P-
j. T Rankin, deputy state fire Corned beef and cabbage did.it, Mrs.
marshal, said King signed a written Ann. Devaney saidWednesdayaas she
confession admitting he started the celebrated her 103rd birthday en-
tire because he wanted to collect; niversary. . . ..
VOUR day-to-day purchases
I of Chase & Sanborn Dated
Jack Cully Arrested Larkin (Jack)
Cully, paroled slayer, waived prelimi-
nary hearing Wednesday when ar-
raigned before Evert Criamore, peace
71 j justice, upon a charge of larencyo
domestic fowls. Bond was set $2,000,
' Which Cully failed to make and he
was returned to the county Jail
...
Mrs. Wiley Hausam, his 47-year-
old mother-in-law, and Mrs. Sarah my favorite dishes." .
In which two women burned to death
last January 24.
.(Cummings saidiaction would be property inehinXrehasneenlenoed
taken against both convicts and
howenwu» I
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of sleep," Mrs. Devaney said.
In a letter to Mike Donnelly and A
Grover Pendleton, new members of
the board. James Beaty, head of the L
Beaty Lumber Co., complaining firm.
Charged that the two commissioners A
obtained their election partially § ■
through criticism of purchasing pol- i •
icies of the previous incumbents, Fred. m
Lowe and Frank McCall. s
Kline 71 years old, he. mother, per- f D' J K,rvtyorg
ished in the flames. King, his wife uamP Diru unVIonS
and their 4-months-old son, escaped. -- — - —
He is a former Baker university stu-
dent.
ings will continue until Easter.
* • •
Junior Chamber Parley Planned —
Making of general arrangements for
the state meeting of junior Chamber
of Commerce here May 11-12 Was
started Wednesday at a meeting of a
local committee working under the
direction of Vernon Beals.
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Eldon Long, 22-year-old butcher's Woman, 103, Credits
helper was held here Wednesday by
authorties who said he confessed
setting tire to his home in Baldwin
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BRBs 383 N M
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CLEANERS
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Curb Upon Immunity
Of Lawmakers Urged
WASHINGTON, Feb. 2« — (-
Contending a "vicious practice of
abusing their constitutional immunity
privileges" had grown up among con-
gressmen. Representative Cannon
iD, Wis.) proposed a curb Wednesday
on the congressional privilege of de-
bating "anything and everything."
Cannon drafted a resolution calling
upon senate and house members to
surrender their immunity of debate
"insofar as It is used for private and
local matters" and require them to
eomfine their remarks to pending na-
onaltue _____
i
sromwens -—
Motorcycle Rider Injured—James E.
Caldwell, 20 years old. 708 Northwest
Third street. Wednesday was recover-
ing from minor injuries received
Tuesday night when his motorcycle
was struck by a car at Northwest
Twenty-third street and Classen
boulevard.
I ADAR •
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Lumber Co., Oklahoma City, since R
July 1, has provided the county with
more than 90 percent of its lumber »
needs. A total of 818.500 in lumber j
has been purchased from Billington •
while purchases totaling 11.742 have’ y
been distributed among 11 other firms
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OURAY, Colo., Feb. 28—(P—Sur-
vivors of the snowslide which wrecked
the Camp Bird mining camp desert-
ed the place Wednesday as new slides
threatened to wipe out the few re-
maining buildings.
Before leaving, searchers recovered
the bodies of two workmen, who with
the woman camp cook were killed
Monday when a huge block of snow
and ice slid down the mountain onto
the camp.
; Property leveled by the slide in-
• eluded the $100,000 mill, bunkhouse
I and several cabina, I Wfffl
INDIANAPOLIS, M 26.—(P)—
The American Legton, completing a
year’s review of communism in the
United States, recommended Wednes-
day a three-point legislative program
as a means of combating the spread
of the doctrine in this country.
The Legion, in a 200-page booklet
on the results of its survey, urged
congress to pass laws which will close
all immigration for 10 years: make
mandatory for the United States im-
migration service to deport all alien-
born persons who are members of any
group "that proposes to change or
overthrow this government by force or
vlolence;" make it mandatory for the
immigration service to immediately
deport all aliens who enter the coun-
try illegally, and provide for the
fingerprinting of all persons.
The report said. "the greatest
weapon with which to successfully
combat communism, and its kindred
diseases, is education.”
— ®
8-
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County Denies Favoritism in
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With installation of a new lumber
buying policy necessitting monthly
bidding, countv commissioners Wed-
nesday replied to charges of "favorit-
ism" growing out of county lumber
purchases since July 1.
The new policy went into effect on
the heels of a strongly-worded com-
plaint from the owner of lumberyards
in Oklahoma City and Jones that two
of the cemmissioners violated cam- _
paign promises in failing to distribute
the county's lumber business.
90 Percent to One Firm H
These developments brought also E
the disclosure that the Billington N
$1 000 insurance to buy a meat mar-
ket
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Billington’s Offer Beat
“Beaty’s criticism in one respect is
Justified and in another unfounded."
commented Donnelly. "I‛ll admit the
fact that we've bought most of our
lumber from Billington looks like fa-
voritism. But he's wrong about sqme
of the statements made in the last
campaign.
"Most of the year’s purchases have
been made on the basis of bids ad-
vertised last July in which Billington
made the best offer. We have not
advertised since, but have procured
periodic quotations."
The name of L D. Coate, Billington
firm official and rumored opponent of
J. V. Dobbs, commission chairman, in
the coming race, entered the contro-
yeray.
Bidding Net Required
Dobbs, however, denied that adop-
tion of the new bid policy was in any
way influenced by this political ele-
ment.
The new purchase system calls for
the advertising of bids on the twenty-
fifth of every month tor filling high-
way lumber needs during the ensuing
month. This was adopted despite the
fact that state law leaves to the dis-
cretion of commissioners the method
o purchasing any materials for high-
way usage, regardless of the amount
involved "We don't have to advertise
for lumber bide,” said Donnelly, "but
We prefer to distribute the business.
If any other company can underbid
Billington on specification lumber, it
will get the business."
Legion Outlines
Communist Fight
42
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OKLAHOMA
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HERES ANOTHER BLANKET, F
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 244, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 26, 1936, newspaper, February 26, 1936; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1990180/m1/4/: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.