Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 97, Ed. 2 Thursday, September 12, 1940 Page: 4 of 17
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.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
i
OKLAHOMA City Times
FOUR—THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1940
Nev Secretary is Dirt Farmer
Movie ‘Tin Pan Alley9 Costs 8 Million Yearly
Are All Rejected
Pension of S45
}
!
% *
3.,*g
4
I
8
8
83
■I
■ sS.- ;
g
93
S8
wom
■
"3
8
—
g 383
6
5
sonac
K ...
gia.
(
9
}403
Werner Janssen
campaign.
tavern
Indiana farm where he got hi* practical training.
notice they intend to fight
w
14
-g,-
•9
r
Best Cattle Named
star’s sing-
At Tulsa Fair
HOLLYWOOD — Hollywood's
| highway No. 9 three miles east of
Tuisa state fair, the highest awards
t
Oklahoma
I
The Colorado supreme court ruled
PAINT
u
/9T 7
4
> .
steadily
demand
studios
a
among
Oklahoma Wildcats
The Refinery Market
g3,
%,
r
3
R
exclusive of all taxes and
handling charges:
Gasoline—U
b
a
Victor
e
work in ।
composition is highly recognized.
A
12.---(A)--
fa
policy to assign a scorer to a pic-
e
24
b
CORNS
relatives and friends in foreign coun-
Albert McHenry
amendment commanding the legisla-
I
thorized at any time
308 N. Broadway
2-1156
Actual full payment of $45 pensions, i able.
By King
Me, Too!
GASOLINE ALLEY
i
#
SURE.
WUMPLE
€
5
• •
2
JEL
2
312 N. W. 1st
2-4101
/
M
(9)
2
2.-_.
4.
«
9-12
I
$
-
#8
I
71) ■
9
D-rScholls
Zino pads
V4
DU PONT PAINT
SERVICE STORE
land means a dollar spent somewhere
for the sake of the films' tunefulness,
and that doesn’t include anything but
deficit and a $4,200,000 relief appro-
priation, the legislature this year di-
the studios. He has systematized the
work to such a degree that he practi-
Minnesota. Shipstead’s opponents in 0 ,
the senatorship race will be John E.
Regan and former Senator Elmer A. •
and •
served
“Mood musicians" play off scene
while the leading Indy emotes
AND IN CASE HE
SAYS YES, ru be
RIGHT ON NOUP
HEELS, BIG BOY !
Ashurst Setback in
Arizona a Feature
1940 be a good year or a poor year
for the melody films, the rising qual-
Natural Gasoline—26-70 grade in Okla-
homa 134C per gallon; time grade in north
Erich
Wolfgang
Korn gold
Capitol Hill Carrier Has
Civil Engineering Coal
1
a
"Factory’ Has Huge
Output of Songs
Tunes for Screen
by Kingsdale farms, Victoria, III., won
the milking Shorthorn grand cham-
l pionship.
* "
* I*
Treasury Approves Aid
To Americans Abroad
IE
: §
Primary Voting In
Slates Conclusive
PRICES
Now Low!
SAVE BY
PAINTING
NOW!
a
■
ii
an initiated amendment to restore all
the income tax to the schools.
as a background.
In a few years.
" e
g,
Bill Designed to Help
Route “Fifth Columnists’
years. No one know? the amount at
stake or how these subdivisions of ths
state could pay.
The state government, like the cities
•nd towns, has been forced into in-
volved financial adventures by the $45
pension plan and its claim to the
bulk of excise levies.
tricity in their farm home.
Young Wickard bought a home gen-
erating plant, did lots of tinkering
with it.
Now he’s a candid camera enthusi-
ast. also likes hunting and fishing.
Schild Farms,” senior title cow owned
by Mort Woods of Ardmore.
In the Jersey division, “Louise Ox-
ford Nola,"" owned by Clarence Hans-
State Breeders Place
High in Contests
E,
70
Allowance Exceeded
By Contractors; Other
Proposals Refused
ess is gradual, the wearing qualities of # •
to be given
1897. looks, 1
The barre
3
• }
1
-icig
hailed the nomination of five con-
Even in his city clothes, Indiana’s chunky gressmen out of six candidates in-
r will be used to help the Amer- 3.
lean come home. water an
1
<
greater investment in the production t
of music, even when it is used simply
g . ’ “
Suga
630
SOKTER THAN Sl»o«(
New Proposal Would
Cut Dole to $30;
Old Really Pays $29
Me .;. C, sckcch
ggtee .
32.300* .
Maintain ‘Reservoirs’
It is the work-a-day business of
i A •
State Affected. Too
Another suit pending would compel
municipalities, counties and school dis-
tricts to pay to the pensioners 85 per-
cent of all general property taxes col-
lected on liquor stocks in the past four
past two and a half years, because of
shortages in the funds available, were
invalid.
63-66 octane.
' 4%c.
NEW
DUPONT
HOUSE
Refiners-marketers quoted the foliowins
" " " j 0 b pjant< vroup
■: • $ ’ "
• . I.«
,y,
H A
keeps white houses
WHITER!
minus only deductions for other in- cent one authorizing the resumption
i from Americans to
that the pension amendment, as i
more recent expression of the people’s
will. took precedence over the anti- I
saloon clause. No community, it de-
DENVER, Sept. 12.—(P)—The state
of Colorado. which spends nearly a
fourth of its $65,000,000 annual in-
come on old age pensions. is splitting
into warring factions again for an-
other November election test on reten-
tion of its $45-a-month pension pro-
gram, the most generous in the na-
tion.
The first attempt to repeal the pen-
sion amendment was crushed by a
majority of more than 100,000 votes
in 1938.
Opponents of the $45 program this
year initiated a new proposed amend-
ment for a “guaranteed $30“ pension
and are trying to convince voters that
the aged will actually fare better if it
is enacted.
Against them is the National An-
nuity league, a pensioners’ organiza-
tion which succeeded in writing the
$45 plan into the constitution in 1936.
Drinks Are Factor
By a unique chain of circumstances,
the privilege of stepping up to a bar
for a drink may be a factor in the
world-wide sphere who already are
here are Erich Wolfgang. Korngold,
M,
1
showed the grand championship bull.
Double Perfection,” in the Red Poll
class.
A
sal, all have devised special systems
that have proved highly effective and
Painters, home owners praise
this new Du Pont House Paint
..
Wl
after
in th
istral
Hl
ducti
in
he r
a
43
the film are not abnormally affected.
Ite economy lies in the fact that it
stretches the time between paintings.
Remember: Du Pont House Paint costa
no more than other good paints. Ask
your painting contractor to use it!
FALL IS THE TIME TO PAINT
Fewer bugs • Fewer Uormi • Drier wood
NOW!
^■-^1
Sa, ,9
252ae
ee
—-a ■
93a
f 359
,0
7
I
4
- - - - Also Sold Locally by - - - •
PETTEE'S - (Six Stores!
HUDSON-HOUSTON. 3601 S. Byers
Fight Waged To
Cut Colorado
_=
' i:
’*1
g 1
■ t -
. AC
E I'VE BEEN HERE Qurre a
= WHLE NON AMD THERE’S
BEEN MO HINT OF AN
INCREASE.
Pain Goes 1
Quicker
Corns Lift A
Out Easier!
NEW!
KEEPS YOU FREE OF
CORNS, SORE TOES
FROM TIGHT SHOES
Every day the Timex sells more papers in Oklahoma City than there are homes
at the rate It’s
music will re-
55*
8: z
Passed by House
288
PER GAL.
IN 5-GAL.
LOTS
C WLL, IM ABOUT DUE,To, SKEEZN.
I AFTER GODIA, HF OMHT T
\EEALLY APPRECIATE ME//
: Nelson Eddy, Jeannette Mae-
Donald
Ak.akowdava mo vadnemuona maurmxn. mams w
in the music department.
These music departments keep their
Kansas Oil Reports
Rarton County- Derby Oil No 3 Esfeld.
In NW SW NW of section 29-16-11W, had
Show oil in Lansiny nt 3.020 feet, total
depth 3,294 feet and pluzved back to To-
peka lime acidized and got two barrels of
oil an hour: reacidizing.
EiIsworth Couaty — Cities Service No 1
Kraiki, in C NL NW NW of sectton 8-16-
low, had the Arbuckle at 3.275-79 feet,
total depth 3,287 feet; set 5-inch at 3,275
feet and is cleaning out with 1.300 feet of
oil in the hole. Lauck and Moncrief No.
2 Meyer. In C NL NW of section 35-16-lOw,
hnd Arbuckle at 3.279 feet, total depth
3,289 feet: Rood saturation and testing
McPherson County—- E. B Shaw ver No. 1
Nison. In C WLSE 8E of section 18-17-lw,
reported chat topped at 2.649 feet; total
depth 2.668 feat; made eight barrels of
oil an hour atfer acidizing with 1,000 sal-
ions.
the sending of money to stranded
Americans in the invaded European
countries.
Under presidential orders “freezing”
7
1 small farmer.
Wickard is not a polished speaker.
He makes few prepared addresses but
salers. The question of whether it is ity of pictures and the competition
•till an excise levy is before the courts ------- ------- - -t-n-el-
tts brilliantly whiU... tough... du-
I rable! Du Pont House Paint krepn
houses beautiful because it stays
cleaner! Here’s why:—
Du Pont Prepared Paint forms a
tough, durable film which protects the
surface from rust, rot or decay. Like
all paints, it collects dirt on exposure
to the elements. As time goes on, how-
ever, a fine white powder forms on the
surface of this new paint. This powder
is washed away by heavy rains, carry-
ing the dirt with it, and exposing a
fresh white surface.This"self-cleaning""
process starts after a few months of
exposure under normal conditions of
weather, but may be delayed under un-
usual climatic or dirt-collecting condi-
tions. Because the “self-cleaning” proc-
If the
*
#4,
J
6
j
W E Harvey, Ada. competing for
the first time, sprung the day’s sur-
prise by winning the grand champion-
ship of Hereford beef rattle with a
senior calf. "Harvey’s 91st." Harvey
announced sale of the animal to Mrs.
W A Biorseth, Hope, Ark , for a re-
ported $1,250.
Hugh K Pope farms. Yorkville, Ill.
7 ‛B
/
. "a"
-a.
He married Louise Eckert of Logans-
1 Linthan.; pOrt Ind., in 1918, one of the bride's
r K • stipulations being installation of elec-
Richard Hageman. Werner Janssen
and one or two others
Most of these men dedicate them-
selves to one particular picture at a
। ford. Jenks, won the senior female
grand championship, and an entry by
R. A. Patterson. Muskogee, the junior
female title P R. Smith, Joplin, Mo.,
showed the grand champion bulb
City, and "Maybelle of
Texas 13c.
Kerosene—41-43 water-white, 37604%ac
per gallon: 42-44 water-while 4/4lc.
Domestic Fuel Oil—No 1 white 3120
133ic per uallon: No 2 traw, 3140332c;
No 3 low’ cold test 31 033ac
Industrial Gan Oil— Zero <32-35) 3% f
31C per gallon: ordinary <32-36) 2%
•")
llIb"
PAINTS
LOOK BETTER
LAST LONGER • SAVE MONEY
ture, sportsmen’s groups also are spon-
soring an initiated amendment to
freeze all hunting and fishing license
general. But regardless of whether
Stokowski and
More than $40,000 was spent on i house Wednesday passed legislation
8 motor 80 octane and
by-the-drink" licenses of its liquor es-
tablishments because the constitution
forbids "saloons.”
The legislature had evaded the anti-
saloon clause by legalizing serving of
liquor “with food’’ in hotels and res-
taurants. Police long ago despaired of
trying to decide how much food was
needed to comply with the law and
soon even the sandwich disappeared
from the bars. An order for a drink
brings just that
Can’t Stop Liquor
financial transactions between the
United States and these countries
such payments were permitted only on
’ I
I
• r
s <
quire the work of more and more I cally knows the cost of every note that
composers of world renown: Na- । ID anu yinyeu. ne vuu puppa
thaniel Finston, head of the music music for pictures out of a vast store
the industry has developed many
music-makers like Max Steiner, Her-
bert Stothart Alfred Newman. V“l-
Bie
Some hotel, restaurant
keepers already have
t. ’ OSiJ "b 1• 32 d** —35 -e -‛5e HVW %.••••* ryyrry QA Q 4 4.4 eryge We 1
- [ is written and played. He can supply iine continue? tieht in Oklahoma wenes-
Two other cases still pending cloud
the whole situation. One before the
■upreme court would give the pension-
ers a $10,000,000 back claim against
the state if the court ruled that deduc-
tions made from pension awards in the
• Deanna Durbin, Leopold
WASHINGTON. Sept.
। “Darling Nobly Born Champ."
He was assocated with the farm bu- “Pride of Kingsdale." a bull entered
j day and aome manufacturers reported get-
accumulated for numerous exigencles. kDRne“iofesnerebunahantcaished Drices.
Industrial Fuel nil—No 4 low cold (24.
28'. $1.0001.10 per barrel: No 4. 15-cold
test and above 4 24-28 • B56095c No 5
low cold test -18-22'. 756H0c: No 5 low
cold < 10-16 • 601 70c: No 6 15-cold test
and above < 10-16». 50055c
a,_______________________________________—-------creek north of Shattuck, Mills Con-
’ | • Co Woodward, $105,527;
personnel eternally buy They turn X (1**—AT I ,g also, bank protection at bridge over
out numbers constantly At Para- _%OW UhlilGli uOLC Wolf creek. Richards and Mullinix,
mount there are more than 3,000 such • Oklahoma City, $3,978.
numbers which never have been used || I 1 KAR Kiowa County—18 miles grading.
They're a reservoir to draw on and | C33O6 |)\ kOlb0 drainage, gravel beginning at state
“Tin from such reservoirs have come such.
elded, could cut off liquor outlets
which provided pension money, with-
out providing compensating funds.
Liquor difficulties were not the only
troubles municipalities encountered
from the pension program.
A court ruling that the claim on 85
percent of liquor license fees extended
even to local licenses forced cities and
counties to turn over approximately
$400,000 they collected from these
sources after 1937, when the amend-
ment took effect.
The city of Denver, its budget
thrown out of balance by that shock,
decided to try a cigaret tax to make up
the deficit and meet a relief crisis.
When the state claimed the bulk of
the cigaret tax for the pensioners, the
title was quickly changed to make it
an occupational tax on tobacco whole-
special licenses from the treasury.
Wednesday’s order supplements a re- B
liam Axt, Franz Waxman.
Young, and others whose
Confronted with a general fund written.
Se
--- A
ture to levy a five-mill tax on intangi- years. pension fund revenues ------
bie wealth, the yield to be earmarked insufficient, and the state welfare money,,
for relief. pensions and schools. The board has made uniform deductions penses."
measure is being fought vigorously by ! from each monthly pension award to ther-ei
business organizations. | make the cost fit the money avail- money
'department at M. G. M., speaks of ---------------- .
Prokofieff and Honegger among other Men like Leo Forbstein at Warner's I-tigrt ,
modems Noted among those in the and Alfred Newman at Twentieth Brokjn Snroadelotsf
Century-Fox, also pioneers: Dave I* i
Drver at R-K-O, Morris Stoloff at bel6<W®4T.9-».r-«Uon
Columbia. Charles Previn at Univer- 4%,604Ma: 72-74 octane 4%>
the new amnedment, even though
many of them sharply disapproved $45
pensions and their cost.
The hotel and restaurant groups
have found the 1936 pension proposal
is the only constitutional guarantee
of their right to serve liquor. It ear-
marks for pensions 85 percent of all
excise tax revenues and a similar pro-
portion of all income from liquor
taxes and liquor license fees. In ad-
dition, It prohibits cutting off of any
source of income for the pension fund
unless equivalent revenues are pro-
vided from another source.
Few realized the broad implications
of that provision until the town of •
Louisville refused to renew the "sale- 1
4 i
Claude R Wickard wouldn’t be mistaken for a “book farmer.” clorsed by his state administration, all
The newararevarzsorngrictrurswarstasrmion-pum.wisonmen hnnmEatoggmmnkanieTEu"inLue:
going, background
Arthur B. Lunglie. youthful Seattle
mayor, won the Republican nomina-
tion for governor in a runaway race.
— . —■.
Jailer Killed Accidentally
HELENA, Mont., Sept. 12.—(P--A
retired Montana attorney and pros-
pector, hired as a temporary county
tailer, was shot and killed accidental-
ly Wednesday night by Sheriff Brian
D. O’Connell. The victim, Arthur Hey-
wood, died of a bullet wound in the
abdomen.
North Texas Reports
Archer County—British American No.
2-C Wilson, 5,000-foqt rotary test in the
. Mankins deep pool. 18 at plug-back total
depth of 4.705 feet, waiting on cement.
Same No. 1-B T B. Wilson. 114 miles
southeast of Mankins pool, drilled limn
with oil odor at 4.838-41 feet, cored
4.841-46 feet and recovered two feet c:
lime with slight show of oil; now shut
down for orders.
Clay County— Horton-Wiggins No. 1 W.
T Howard. 3 miles southeast of the Hal-
Stale First Reports
Comanche County— W I Wynn. No 1
M Q. Lowe in SW NE NE of section 12-
1ns11W, 15 plnnning to start September 12.
Stephens County—Sun Ray is ready to
drill the No 1 Boring. In NE 8W NW of
section,9-15-4W, and Ware and Hawks wil
drill the No 5 Lena Simpson in SW NE
NE of section 11-1n-5w,
Wagoner County- Hill Oil Association is
scheduled to start Thursday on the No. 1
A L. Hill in NW NE NE of section 30-
17n-18e
Pottawatomie County—T. H Townsend
et al No 1 Lynn, in NW NE NW of
28-6-4. perforated again in ’he Viola
lime and reacidized with 5,000 gallons
for 2.200 feet of water, shut down for
orders.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 12-
Lone Wolf and extending north
MA.------- .-
TME TO HIT THE BOSS
e- FoR A 12A1SE.
1 S--------------
**~l Callouses, Bunions, Soft Corns
Taagetns I between toes. Sold everywhere.
I CVe I Innist on Dr. Scholl’s.
ASHINGTON 4
toward Sentinel on S H. No. 41, G. h
The new secretary of agricuiture make* frequent visits to the
verted to the general fund 65 percent | turning out music that, perhaps, reai-
of the state income tax, all of which < ly counts in movies, and here not
had previously gone to replacement of only individuals, but groups, function The treasury authorized Wednesday
county tax levies for public schools, as they do in scenario writing and
School groups, aroused by the diver- other departments At M-O-M, it's the
■ion, also are going to the voters with
Now, thanka to the New Super-Soft Dr.
Scholl's Zino pads, you need never suffer
from corns or ever have them I You enjoy
quicker relief: stop shoe friction and pres-
sure and keep FREE of corns, sore toes,
blisters. These sootlung, cushioning, fleecy
pads are so vastly more effective, because
they're 630 % softer than before I Separate
Mrdicetione included for removing corns
or callouses. Cost but a trifle—greater value
than ever. Get a box today I Sixes for Corns,
TULSA, Sept 12—()—Oklahoma
won both Guernsey cattle grand
championships Wednesday at the
a KeckFairyiew, $8,090. , .. 4,1 mi '' n om Wendell Willkie’s home going to -M. L. Rex Admiral.” Junior
over whahit Ane tour miles north I town Fmnd. Democrats title bul owned by 8 W Hayes °l
and two miles east of Aylesworth, | The farm, now 380 acres, has been
Gu! H. Janies. Norman, $24,928 in the famly since the 184 5. On it
Major County . , miles grading, are grown wheat, corn, alfalfa, hogs
drainage and gravel base with asphalt and cattle. The Wickards long have
armor coat from Fairylew southwest, been staunch Democrats. Father and
eraxand Grovelle, Oklahoma City, grandfather of the new secretary were
- g t , named Andrew Jackson.
Osage County—5 9 miles grading. v ‘ ‘
spei ialty is corn and hog pro-
ion control.
periodical trips to the corn belt,
inds time to get into overalls on
arm in Crawford count v. It’s just
—d
Jr* 298866
Pan" factory is an $8,000,000-a-year hit tunes as, for instance, “Two i
machine, which turns out a huge out- sleepy People.’
put of songs, scores, tunes and special Scoring of pictures has acquired
numbers for the dances and other । new importance during the past year1
embelishments of the films of the films themselves While a ’’B“|
Every second ticked off by the or picture may acquire a musical
clock during a working day In film- accompaniment for $5,000 or even urged bv President Roosevelt to act
are in a dirrerent class entirely, with "as little delay as possible, the
Bv The Associated Press
Returns from Tuesday’s primaries
were still being tabulated Wednesday
night, but the count in most cases
was conclusive. Of particular inter-
est was the defeat of Senator Ashurst
of Arizona, after he had represented
iiis state 28 years in the senate.
Three other senators won renom-
ination handily in Tuesday’s voting.
They were Arthur H. Vandenberg,
Michigan Republican: Hendrik Ship-
stead. Minnesota Farm-Laborite, who
ran as a Republican, and Warren R.
Austin, Vermont Republican, who was
unopposed.
In Arizona Gov. Bob Jones, seeking
renomination on the Democratic tick-
et was defeated by Sidney P. Osborn.
Phoenix publisher.
Michigan’s Republican Gov. Luren
D. Dickinson won renomination. Mur-
ray D. Van Wagoner was the Dem-
ocratic choice. Vandenberg’s sen-
atorial opponent will be Frank Fitz-
gerald. Detroit Democrat.
Gov. Harold Stassen, Republican,
was renominated for governor in
a what might be termed the accessor-
•a | les. It doesn’t, for example, cover the
salaries of Bing Crosby. Jeanette
• <•
•. < •
ture. He may write his own music.
draw upon the archives at the studio
Alarmed by covetous glances at and command the services of others
game and fish funds from the legisla-
> 0
Vokar Projector
For 2x2 Slides, $9.95
Dual slide earrier, *1.50. 100-w.
lamp, brilliant sharp image on
■crean.
Oklahoma Photo Supply Co.
MacDonald. Nelson Eddy. Dona
Massey, Miliza Korjus, Alice Faye.
Tony Martin. John Payne and all
the other singing stars. It includes
mostly what goes on behind the
wy-A
Kp
rM GOING TO HrT
HIM UP- HE CANT
DO ANN MOPE
THAN SAY NO.J"
Vga
। rd succeeds Henry Walluce
years of administrative work
grcultural adjustment admin-
#5,
Awards were made Wednesday by
the state highway commission on all
projects on which bids were received
September 3. except three.
The commission rejected all bid* on
a highway garage west of the capitol
which was included in the letting be-
cause all bids exceeded the $10,000
allowance for the project.
Award was held up on a LeFlore
county project on U. S. highway 270
until right of way is obtained. It
calls for 4.2 miles of grading, and
drainage and .839 mile paving and
bridges at a cost of $115,032.
A project for construction of a
Santa Fe underpass at South Fifty-
sixth street at a cost of $52,857 was
held up for further tabulation of
bids.
Projects awarded are:
Hughes-Okfuskee counties—1.8
miles grading, drainage, gravel and
bridge in Dustin and extending north.
Joe l . Pool, Fairview. $13,168.
McIntosh - Pittsburg counties — 5 8
miles concrete paving. Eutaula south-
west on U. S. 69. lewis Construction 1
Co. Muskogee. $120,811.
Pittsburgh county—2 9 miles grad-
ing. drainage, concrete paving and
one bridge. Canadian northeast. Lew- I
is Construction Co., $76,271: also 0.5
mile paving beginning one-half mile
south and extending north from Ca-
nadian on U. S 69, Lewis Construc-
tion Co . $12,565.
Tillman county—11 miles gravel
surfacing and three bridges east of
। Manitou, J. Briscoe, Stillwater, $71,-
, 342.
Ellis county—1 8 miles grading,
drainage, paving on V. S. 283 from
Shattuck north, Ottinger Brothers,
Oklahoma City, $23 675: also one
bridge on same highway at Wolf
When 16-year-old Albert McHenry
isn’t selling and delivering news-
papers, he usually can be found at
work on a short wave set. And resi-
dents of the 2315 Southwest Twenty-
first street area know Al as one of
the section's best amateur radio op-
erators.
Carrier Job Help*
The hobby is one way in which Ai
ran practice for that civil engineering
future before taking up the technical
side of the ambition at college a
couple of years from now.
Another way, of course, is through
his Oklahoman and Times job which,
he says, gives him the essentials of
success in any field—adeptness at
making contacts, forming good im-
pressions, selling one's self and one's
product.
The job is handy, too, from the ex-
pense angle. Albert spends some of
his earnings for radio parts and saves
a good deal toward his college educa-
tion.
An Outstanding Student
Son of a trucker. Al attends Cap-
itol Hill highschool where he is a
consistent honor roll member. Mathe-
matics “comes easy” and brings good
grades, so that is the subject he likes
best.
Al’s favorite sport is baseball—the
Oklahoma City Indians in particular.
*
talks and walks like a farmer.
pl-cheated 47-year-old-----------
sell pool. i« stll shut In. scheduled for
garly test Jone* Associnted No. 1
Bryant Edward.'-. 6 500-foot rotary test 4’a
miles northwest of Ringgold, drilling be-
low 5.249 feet in shale . ..
Jack Countv -Rathke Oli Cn. No. 1 H
L Moseley, cable tool test 12 mjlesi
l------ . - . .0 southeast of Jncksboro. Is drillin* below ,
tries. The new order permits the 2.710 feet in shale
a hair sending of $250 a month to any one,XonauzwCrant-SinsloinrPrptrie Nn
■ hnve American abroad provided that the tubing and flowed 588 so barrels of oil in
5 nave . .....— — 7 hours; now waiting on test; total depth ।
. Is 5,238 feet 2, .0
Bailor Countv—British American No ,
“ “ . three mile* northeast of
.. _____?d plug from lime at
_______feet, total depth: cleaned out and
tailed 9 gallons of oil and one gallon of
hour, shut down for orders. \
ge,- ■■ depletion and farm-price slumps.
enactment might sene to curb cer-apisshurch.Countyu6milesudrain- Wickarawas eletedstat senator in
tain fifth column activities." | of quinton to Featherston. Sraty and 1932, resigned from the ofnice 10 come
The measure of Representative Rees Grovelle. $21,385; also 3 8 miles dram- 1 to Washington 1n 1933.
' (R., Kan » 'drastically tightens" pro- age structure including one bridge ; One of his Iirst activities hereW35
visions regarding eligibility for nat- and gravel surfacing on S H 31 the organization of an unofficial intrat
- • ■ Featherstoh west toward ’ Blocker’ i departmental committee to study prob-
Same! contractor 114 448 1 6 mHes lems of the under-privileged farmer,
gravel southwest’of Blocker on S H 1 The committee meets weekly to an-
314 ,‘,62;° .i I lyze the general agrienitural program
mile gravel on same highway from I rrom the standpoint of benefits to the
Blocker northeast toward Quinton,
same contractor, $5,948. *
revenues — approximately $700,000 a 1 —- •2 2........ .g+--,
year come allowed by the constitution, were of remittances
Finally, the annuity league itacir has made only for a few months after the "
a new proposal for the voters-an 1936 amendment took effect.
“ ’ • During the past two and
time, giving it all their attention,
and Janssen, among them, is dis-
tinguished as a very rapid scorer,
finishing most of his assignments in
' less than 10 days, with orchestrations
: fully indicated and more than partly
(
k €29
i kip..
A
THAT GODIVA IS CONE,
’ THE PAYROLL IS DONN AGAIN- \"
^BE THIS IS TE psychological}
Hoosier has the big hands and strong, ।
stubby fingers of the soil tiller and he
walk.* with the characteristic leg-lift-
ing movement of the plowman.
He lias .ne farmer's deliberation in
comhnu to a decision. Fellow workers
say -Wickrd’s mind sits on an idea
like a hen sits on eggs ”
"Beau Geste," "Stanley and Living- designed to help rout “fifth codum-
£ 2e"tnpamliad s " ana ~ i
ers of the Sea' have been in the j United States citizens. 1 mmger nortn*i: omson school. Following graduation from
$30,000 upward class. “Gone With the The measure, a proposed new na- mdiou-cmnomaiagg6*8l, Purdue university in 1915, he took over
Wind' cost approximately $75,000. tionality code, now goes to the senate, drainage and gravel from a pt 10 complete management of the farm.
EE--
cialized group which has become im- The Great Ziegfeld" music, with its Said: surfacing and concrete paving around duction contiol m
portant with the growth of the aud- elnborateserfects, cost between $300,- “I am informed that the opinion is courthouse square in Perry, J. Bria- duetion contro •5 Psvsn
ib Ip rjjntirp UUl una 3UU uuu. . . , , g -4.
ioie piciurc entertained in some quarters that its
Music More Important For music and recording alone.
A year that witnesses the advent "They Shall Have Music" without
of many musical films, as such, may Jascha Heifetz' salary included, rose
see the assemblage involved in to $100,000.
creative and constructive work aug- Musical composers today are as-
mented greatly and also may show signed to the scoring of pictures in u , . ,
suddenly ruing costs for music in : much the same fashion as a cast Thls uraltzation. He also .aid that it would
definitely I. the policy of Louie Up- withdraw, citizenship, from "thou-
stone. Paramount executive, who cites sands" of "nominal' citizens, who
exceptional latitude to his composers have not been in this counrty .in
and who, because he is a newcomer xears. It also would take away the
here, probably also represents a new citizenship of Americans who serve
ec-n) ne th-Ht in the armed forces of another coun-
Finston pioneered music-making in try, or election.
{. Andre* de Segurola, the young
^^1 ing teacher.
Albert McHenry;
does well in extemporaneous talks tog ge ■■■■ ■ *
, Stephens Count) -Gulf and Carter No.' “Typical Wickardtan appeal to farm- Ma0i0 MODVESL
1 Qualls in C SW NE of 23-ln-7w. was at ers: •
8,510 feet total depth, in shale, shut «t,tr, i,,et e, enm. onnr horga sonsa
down waitng on orders. LetS just use some goOQ noise sen.se
Caddo <<>unt) --Texas co. No i Smith, even if we have a new rubber-tired
1n.C NE NW ot 2-5-12w, was drilling at tractor "’
2.842 feet in new hole, after piugging tractor. —gr,
back to 5trniglyter TTa --A** T Mten it r* A ft nT -nonriK-
Creek Count)—Shell Oil No. 1 1
in NE SE NE of 31-15-7 was drilling at
2.305 feet in shale
Garvin County— Stanley Thompson No.
1 Alliance Trust, in SW SE SW of 22-4-2,
had the top of the Layton sand at 2.920
feett total depth 2,965 feet; filled with
-.000 feet of fluid, most of which was
brine, and now is rigging up rotary to
drill deeper.
Tillman County—E A. Price No, 1 Crow,
at 7% NW NE ot 24-28-15w, was drilling I The Wickards have two daughters.
Pontotoc County- j l Cowley et al Betty, who was graduated from Pur-
N°rikesmtddp rDtFE NE NW of 29-4n-6e. | due last spring, and Ann, who will en-
Seminole County—IMid-Continent No i ter Purdue this autumn.
Porter, in NW SW NW of 12-7-7. was at
total depth of 4,485 feet in Viola lime-
stone shot off drill pipe at 4 244 feet
and is setting whipstock to drill past.
- 8
r a.dsi)
pns 0, ,9
j-MM- Ma.ada du
g adbow,
IC gu.
FFP,
Bids on Garage
Of Road Division
<
A
Benson, Farmer-Laborite.
Democrats pin their hopes for re-
gaining the Colorado governorship on
1 George E. Saunders, 39-year-old sec-
l retary of state.
Gov. Sam H. Jones of Louisiana
is for “necessary living ex-
An additional $250 is au- l-g,ue, ---
extra kkaKa; "IFsifa
1.026-28 ' ii
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View three places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 97, Ed. 2 Thursday, September 12, 1940, newspaper, September 12, 1940; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1993284/m1/4/?q=wichita+falls: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.