The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 14, 1936 Page: 3 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma News and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 14 193 6 -Read and 1186 kethi Waiit Ads—Phone 7 -1551 : TIIE OKI:AROMA' NEWS- - 7
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AS NO QUARTER
THREAT IS MADE
Locked in Death Battle as
Moors Attempt Relief
4
of City
I t Summary
1 MADRID—Lolayists On offensive
!
i west of Madrid believe insurgents
I must relinquish recent gains or be
i ' destroyed ' i
' OVIEDO — Insurgent 'column
' reaches Oviedo and final phase of
long siege is reached :
!
PORTBOU—Wives of prominent
fMadrid officials arrive at Alicante
' VALLADOLID—Gen Francisco
Franco insurgent dictator con-
fesses Loyalist resistance has been
greater than expected but asserts
victory is sure A -
- By EVERETT BOLLES -
i
I United Press Staff Correspondent
I (Copyright 1936 by United Press)
HENDAYE French-Spanish Fron-
tier Oct 14— Eighteen thuusand
men comprising every One of the
conglomerate elements in the Span-
ish war were locked today in a
battle for Oviedo
The miners are in the city proper
blasting their way house by nouse
eastward through it using dynamite
bombs whose fuses they ignite with
their long black cigars
The besieged garrison under Gen
Miguel Aranda is in possession of
the cathedral Machine gunners
and sharpshooters are in its tbwer
over the center of the city tiouses
have been made into strong local
' fortresses The main body oil the
Garrison under Aranda is fortified
in the Vega Arms factory -
Slaughter Expected
In the garrison are regulars civil
guards - storm guards and Facist
1 volunteers—completing a cast which
i combines all classes and all kinds
of Spaniards who are lighting
Spaniards 411 this war
The setting for a m e r c 1 le a a
slaughter is complete Gen Aranda
is the man who commanded the
foreign legion regiments which in
1934 killed thousands of Mturian
miners in the October revolt They
took no prisoners Gen Gonzalez
Pena commands the miners He
a' politician led the 1934 revolt
Captured later he was sentenced to
death but reprieved He has sworn
publicly to take no man of the
garrison alive
Two thousand Moors foreign
legionnaires and Galician militia-
men sent by the insurgent guvern-
ment to relieve the garrison be-
sieged there have - arrived oatside
the city - -
Fight Way to Town
They are fighting their way into
the town against -15000 Astorian
miners who in turn are seeking to
blast a path into the last battered
defenses of the besieged garrison
numbering now perhaps 1000 of the
2500 crack fighting men who seized
the town for the rebels 89 days
ago today ---
In Oviedo among thousands of
civilians are six United States 'chi-
n zens according to a Cuban who
escaped yesterday It was an-
nounced today that foreigners had
been asked to fly the flags of their
country over their residences so
they would not be involved in what
seemed certain to be mass slaugh--
-- Carry Battle to Ail -
The Moorish-legionnaire column
Is at the northwest corner ct the
suburbs fighting for possession of
Mount Naranco which dominates
the city
Who held the supremacy in the
air was uncertain Loyalist planes
have seen active and have bombed
the town many times The rebel
Cadiz radio station reported five
separate fleets of insurgent planes
flew over the miners' positions yes-
terday and inflicted more than 1000
casualties -
It appeared the end of the long
siege must be in sight A victory
' by the miners would release thou-
sands of men for the relief of
Madrid A viotory by the-rebels
would send new hordes southward
to attack the capital
STUDENTS ON PROGRAM
The music department of South-
eastern State Teachers College Du-
rant will present a program to the
Oklahoma Artists luncheon at the
Biltmore Hotel next Wednesday
school officials said today
KEEPS HAIR NEAT
A little Moro line rubbed into the hair makes
combing easy and keeps hair neatly in place
The 10c size contains 334 time as much as
the 5c size Try it today Demand Moro line
140110111rIE
SNOW WHITE PETROLEUM JEW
Atoommoolomossowinim
Room On W 1 2th
Rented Quickly
I
311 NW 12TH—Room and board tor
2 24511 each 1-113O
Minks began to happen
"right now" when this lit-
tle 80-cent NEWS Want
Ad went Into actions The
room was rented without
delay and the ad prompt-
ly cancelled -
Perhaps YOU have a
room you'd like to rent
It so advertise it in The
NEWS and get Results
for Less!
NEWS WANT ADS
"READ BY THOUSANDS'
Phone—t-1551
She was mote interested in listen-
ing to the radio news broadcasts
each day than in recounting to
friends her parents' stories of the
days of her infancy in Paris Prance
when the royalists led by Louis Na-
poleon were taking over the govern
'' c)f::::ProTriip4ri-0170pporitpiiity:i:Erids':inCty
F EtED STILL to whom the New -World proved a
disappointment rather than a land of promise
was buried today in the Catholic section of Fair-
lawn Cemetery Funeral services were conducted at
the Hunter Funeral Home '
At the age of 25 Mr Still decided to leave' his
native Czechoslovakia and come to America to seek
his fortune He obtained a position in the shipping'
room of an organ factory and worked three years
carefully saving his small salary -
He decided in 1891 to take his savings and move
to a yet newer land of opportunity He settled 111
Oklahoma City and entered the transfer business
for himself His fine span of horses and freshly
painted baggage wagon were a familiar sight on the
streets of Oklahoma City at the turn of the cen-
Friends Mourn Mrs' Collar -
Who Pioneered in Oklahoma
Woman Who Never Let Advancing Years Still the
Enthusiasm of Her Youth to Be Buried
Today in Logan County ' -
The final chapter of the story of sa woman who never
let advancing years still the enthusiasm of her youth was
i'vritten today when the body of Mrs Mary Arenson Collar
was returned to Logan County where she and her 'husband
pioneered in 1889 ' - -
Members of the Business and
Professional Women's Club and Mrs Collar was reared in St Louis
many °theta gathered at the Halm
Mo Her -father- died whine she was
Funeral Home this morning to pay a girl and her mother opened
tribute to the active energetic 88- chinaware store to make a' living for
year-old woman who by her philoso- the family In addition to her music
phy of life her interest in current the young 'girl became Ouite skilled
affairs- and her love of music had in dancing and won several prizes
made a host of friends here during 3
She married Morris Collar in 1874
the past 15 years She died of apo-
anu the couple moved to the new
lex) Sunday at the home of a
town of Dodge City Ras where
daughter Miss Julia Collar 2115 N
: they operated a general store -
Douglas-ay- '
Past Past - The prosperity earned by he
- young couple during the cattle
The past to Mrs Collar was past boom which made Dodge City the
Only the present and the - future -
cattle center of the Southwest was
mattered her friends said The clues- wiped sway by drolith- and fire
tion of whether Alf Landon could however' and again they decided to
balance the budget if elected was move to a new country - ' -
of more moment to her than the
Mr Collar entered Oklahoma' in
memory of the hectic days of 1874
the 1889 run staking ' a- claim on
when she hid behind buffalo' robes
the townsite of Guthrie There he
or fired out of peepholes at raiding
erected one of the 'first implement
Indians in the village of Dodge City stores in the early-day state capital
The family lived above the store and
She was mote interested VI listen- rebuilt their finances- and built a
ing to the radio news broadcasts home
each day than in recounting - ' -
friends her parents' stories of the Moved to California
days of her infancy in Paris France Mr Collar died in 1921 and Mrs
when the royalists led by Louis Na- Collar moved to California ' to live
poleon were taking over the govern- with a daughter Mrs 'Kate Shet
She retained her childhood love of win A few years later she moved to-
music throughout life -She memo- the city to live with another daugh-
rized and learned to plar"The Sec- ter: Miss Julia credit manager of
ond Valse" by Godard after she had Kerr's Department Store - -
sultered a broken wrist In an--auto
' She also is surVived' by font
accident four years ago and physi-
clans had predicted that she would grandchildren Miss :Helen- Collar
never be able to reach an octave piano instructor at Oklahoma Col-
again She took a correspondence lege 'for :Women Chickasha ' Mra
course in Spanish at the age of 84 Clare Keegan and Jake Collar both
Reared In St Louis of Tulsa and Miss Martha Sherwin
Brought to this country by her Los Angeles Cal and one great-
parents in 1849 when 1 year old grandchild
trE prospered but prosperity was to be comoara-
Uk tively short-lived The- development of the au-
tomobile and truck had begun to cut into his horse-
drawn transfer business noticeably by 1910 and in
1913 he was forced to give it up -
Since then he had worked at odd jobs in city
restaurants until ill health had forced him to 'quit
all form of labor six years 'ago
The 73-year-old native Czechoslovakian toppled
from his chair at the home of a son William S
Still a Western Union Operator 712 SE Noble-av
yesterday Physicians said death was caused by
apoplexy-
His body was taken to the Hunter Funeral
Home '
He 'is survived by another son Eddie and two
daughter Mrs Tina Sanders and Mrs Marie Crain
all of the city
DRILLING DEFENDED
AS HOME WRECKER
Garvin Denies Responsibility
For Falling Plaster
-
State Senator Knox Garvin Dun-
can today denied to the state Board
of Affairs that his drilling oil wells
had shaken the plaster from the
University Hospital nurses' home
Mr Garvin's letter suggested to the
board that the inspector who
blamed the falling plaster on the
vibration caused by his oil rigs
should not be used by the state any
further He also lambasted the
architect who supervised construc-
tion of the building Mr Garvin en-
closed letters from two engineers
whom he had to inspect the build-
ing -
One letter from Harry G Fred-
erickson Oklahoma City stated
that the plaster was not shaken
from the ceiling by the vibration
caused by Garvin's oil rigs and
"would have fallen anyway" be-
cause of sparse nailing '
A A Park Oklahoma City the
second engineer wrote that there
was indication that the roof had
sprung leaks
Lea Nichols chairman of the state
Board of Affairs said a claim prob-
ably would be submitted for the re-
pair work now being done and Mr
Garvin asked to pay the damages
despite the report he submitted
HONOR MM CHOUTEAll
The Oklahoma Memorial Associa-
lion of which Mrs Prank Korn of
El Reno is president was notified
by Gov E W' Mar land today that a
proclamation has been issued calling
on the people of Oklahoma to ob-
serve 04 lg as the anniversary of
the birth of Maj Jean Pierre Chou-
teau Maj Choteau established the
first white settlement in what is now
Oklahoma in 1796
Blue Star Kills
1 The Itch Germs
To get rid of itch rash tetter
ringworm foot itch or eczema
cover itching skin with Blue Star
Ointment which contains tested
medicines that kill itching quickly
Very comforting No burning'
Into :1?ebel
URGES CONTROL Treasure
- OF ASSESSORS Bank DePaTt
Legislator— Seeks to Avoid
-Boomerang From
- Homestead Tax'
A proposal to place county assess-
ors under direct control of the state
Tax Commission in an attempt to
prevent expected homestead tax ex-
emptions from becoming a 'boom-
erang to the home owner is being
Isdvocated by Austin R Deaton
Pontotoc County representative
Mr Deaton who is a candidate
to succeed himself asserts he has
found much favor for his plan fol-
lowing widespread criticism of the
assessment system of Oklahoma
which has no semblance of uni-
formity He probably will present
such a bill to the 1937 Legislature
he said
' A similar attempt of the Tax
Commission to level the assessment
hills and valleys a year ago failed
when increases in valuations wire
ordered in nearly half of the 77
counties of the state Taxpayers
created such a storm of protest that
the state Equalization Board reced-
ed from its position and rescinded
the proposed increases
Mr Deaton is a Marland support-
er and predicts that J T Daniel
of Waurika will become speaker In
k that event the state assessment plan
might get somewhere as Gov E W
' Marland sponsored the ill-fated plan
to give the tax commission super-
vision over assessments a year ago
' However should Leon C Phillips
win the whiphand in the House
there is little chance that any plan
to give the tax commission more
power would get a afar as first base
ATTORNEY SUES FOR
o$97000 TAX PAYMENT
Wewoka Lawyer Files Action in
U S Court Here
- -
A suit to recover 119713877 paid
under protest as 1933 federal in-
come taxes was filed today in Fed-
eral Court by B F Davis retired
Wewoka attorney
Mr Davis alleged that an item
of $28951896 in gross income was
erroneously recorded by the Gov-
ernment in his account He also
asked return of $17000 for interest
on the amount paid under protest
-NwEimmimffmmffil
read and Use News Want Ads—Phone 7-1551'
Treasure Seekers
Bank Department Swamped
With Calls About De-
- posit Funds
-
Officials of the state Bah k De-
partment are advising depositors
"Write don't phone" as a result of
recent announcement that fu1135 are
on hand from a number of tailed
banks
The lure of hidden treasure
worked as usual and the Llopart-
ment is being swamped with re-
quests for information
One man telephoned from Clare-
more His long distance oil was
O He had 9 cents to his ci Edit
A woman telephoned from Ile lens
Her bill was 75 cents She had 1
cent due to her
WPA WOMAN CHIEF
To SPEAK SATURDAY
Peggy Ale Ewan to Continue Series
of Talks at Walters
Mrs Peggy Mc Ewan acting state
director of women's and professional
work of the Works Progress Ad-
ministration will go to Walters Sat-
urday for another in a series of
lectures on women's activities in the
WPA
She will speok at a meeting of
county school teachers Andy Con-
nally WPA assistant director of
information will show moving pic-
tures Mrs Mc Ewan will speak at Ton-
kaws Junior College Oct 21 Still-
water Oct 22 before the Federated
Women's Clubs at Guymon Oct
27 and at Hooker Oct 29
VISICLI a LoLUP-10 1511 tA y UAW" 60
27 and at Hooker Oct 29
Rheumatic Happy
Stops Pain Quick
So many sufferers have foend such orrIck
terref frogs the torturing pain of neeralgia
mends sciatica lumbago and rheumatism
throegh Nitrite that it ra now sold at your
drug sone This prescription which speed t
ffy rebeves muscular aches and pains was
denim:eft by an eminent speciahst and is
mow avaitable to the general public every
where NUTDO is harmless — contains DO
opiates or naroitics If yoe want to feel
again the joy of relief from pain rind avoid
needless agony that prevents sound Bleep
ask your druggist now for Nurito under
this iron-clad guarantee If the very first
three doses of tient° do mot relieve even
the most intense pain — your money will
be instantly refunded Try it today
THURSRU SPECIALS
NDJ
Pineapple and Grated Cheese Salad Sc
Egg Custard Pie Buttered Crust 6c
Boston Baked Beans Sc
Yankee Pot Roast with Spaghetti ' 12c
Tasty Ham Croquettes with Fruit Sauce 9c
'BRITLING CAFETERIA
At Night—T-Bone or Tenderloin Steak Potatoes-250
Outer locket of
'Cellophane opens
from the bottom
Garrison at
ALWAYS
ITIRESHNESS in a cigarette is as
important as freshness in a tulle
gown Tobacco loses -much of its
appeal when dry or soggy
To women smokers a HILSII riga-
rette has a special appeal A truly
fresh cigarette leaves no unpleasant
odor in fabrics or on the breath
which-accounts for the ever-growing
preference women are bhowing for
Double-Mellow O Cs That double
TULSA TRUST SUITS
SEEN AS UNLIKELY
Voluntary Payments Reduce
Cause for Action
Voluntary payments by stockhold-
ers of the defunct Exchange Trust
Co of Tulsa have reduced the like-
lihood of quits being filed A Francis
Forte state Banking Department
attorney said today
About $400000 was collected before
the recent Supreme Court decision
held the stockholdPrs liable and pay
Inner jacket of
Cellophane opens
from the top
The Gusset Sleeve in
SAWYER-SPUN
is right! 11
11$
The ruggedness the comfort and the swank of
the Gusset sleeve so naturally fits the "type" of
this wonderous material that it can't help being
"right" And Sawyer-Spun material is what you
want in your suit for business sports and practical
wear See our complete selection of single and
double breasted models
P
Out-1111s
Cesi t PRRHS
Charge
Accounts 128 1PIerturict
ASC
Oviedo
mints have increased since the de
cree became final about two weeks
ago the attorney said One oil man
La making ironthly payments of 000
to clear his obligations
Although about 200 persons owe
the departmeht as a result of the
court decision Mr Porta said most
of them accepted the court decision
as final and are arranging to make
payments Probably not more than s
score of suits will be necessary he
said
Improvement in real estite values
have greatly improved the position
of the assets in the trust company
the attorney asserted and with the
payment of stockholders it is likely
losses of Investors in the company
will be held to a minimum
Cellophane wrapping keeps the ciga
rettes strictly fresh factory-fresh
in any climate anywhere
But the BIG doublemellow reason
is the prize crop tobaccos with
a delightful doublemellow flavor
and fragrance that win both "her
and him!
a
Establibhed 1760
PAGE 3
Open
a
charge
Account
at Parks
P S That "DoubleMoney-Back" offer still holds good It's open for 30 days from today
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- of men for the relief of -?1!' -17Air ww:e" l)r-'!-::':-:'
the town many times The rebel
7:5?: x'sglie 14"- 6ov ' :::':- '-' :4:
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flew over tile miners' positions yes- ::::iX- :11 ii0 ' --'j1z44'1y vevli4" 46"::::6 :(1
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STUDENTS ON PROGRAM ' 1 '7' 1-:::':iPli 07)::-::'::::'::1::-::"i::::::':':: ': '':-::::::" f!45::'st:: t t s music department of South- ' : -4'
eastern State Teachers College Du- o mo
nun will present a program to the : : T wonten skers a FRESH cia- is helioplirtifzuel erdoopubtioebcoame ellsow th
flavor
Oklahoma Artists luncheon at tile : 1 -
Biltmore Hotel next Wednesday -: 4e 1 -:-i' r'- :: z::4::e4::::::::: : :: : xs frreetsteh hciasgaractstpeciceictalivaspnpoeauln
-:::-:v --:'::'-''
school officials said today -1 pAleatrsuanlYt aanddef:agrance that in both her
KEEPS HAIR NEAT
Wednesday
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combing easy and Iceeps ha 1 th Ia
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Room - ''':- ::-:''' k - ' -3:-- ---4- : : '''' ':' "!' r -':--:-::-- -Z -"---3:-)'' $
' ' P S That "DoubleJloney-Back" offer still holds good It's open for 30 days from today 1
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2 at SO each 1-113a y
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Fredericks, Robert T. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 8, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 14, 1936, newspaper, October 14, 1936; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2010123/m1/3/: accessed June 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.