The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 281, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 14, 1937 Page: 1 of 18
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0
RUSSIAN PILOTS
FORCED DOWN BY
GAS LINE LEAK
'A Soldier Has Fallen With
Face to the Battle'—Roosevelt
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m1A116-mAxalanlottmo
ki SCRIPPSHOWARD
Break Distance Mark
Set by Frenchmen by
Nearly 1000 Miles
BATTLED STORM FOG
Report of Safe Landing
Ends Search Started
By Long Silence
se united pre
SA N JACINTO Cal July
14 — Three Russian fliers
made a forced landing in a
-
cow pasture near this Cali-
fornia village today when a
leaking gasoline line diminished the
fuel supply of the big red mono-
plane that had carried them over
the North Pole to a new world's
non-stop flight record They land-
ed at approximately 8:30 a m
(Oklahoma time) after slightly
more than 62 hours in the air
The three "air heroes of the
Soviet" Pilot Michael Gromov Co-
Pilot Andrei Yumashev and Sergei
Danilin the navigator had trav-
eled approximately 6625 miles since
leaving Moscow at 2:23 p m (Okla-
homa time) Sunday The' former
long distance non-stop record was
5657 miles set by the French fliers
Paul Codos and Maurice Rossi in
1933 in a flightfrom New York to
Syria
Turned Baek By Fog
1!4 revealed that they actually
were as far south as San Diego but
were forced back north by fog
Figuring the distance they trav-
eled in passing over the two cities
—and then Sack to San Jacinto—
their mileage before they officially
touched earth far exceeded the old
record
Officials estimated that their
plane covered 10000 kilometers
from the time it left Moscow The
Russians explained that San Diego
was the destination that they hoped
to reach They passed over March
Field this morning and saw it on
the way south When 14s Angeles
and San Diego were obscured by
fog they could not locate the Army
field on the way back Then they
decided on the forced landing
Ends Fear for Safety
They appeared in good condi-
tion when they stepped from the
plane after a bumpy landing in the
cow pasture three miles west of
this village
News of their safe landing came
as fears were felt for their safety
because no message had been re-
ceived from the big plane since
10:110 p in yesterday At that time
the Army Signal Corps station at
Presidio San Francisco reported
the fliers were sending a message
In Russian which was "broken"
abruptly in mid-sentence
Attempts to contact them by ra-
dio failed and a Coast Guard
plane was ordered to search
for them Another plane
chartered by Soviet consular out-
dais made a series of survey
nights in the vicinity of Bakers-
field Cal on the theory the plane
might have been forced down aft
TURN TO PAGE 10 COLUMN I
CITY PLAYER MOVES
UP IN TENNIS MEET
Donald My Neill Defeats New Yorker
In Spring Lake Tournament
—
Sy United Press
SI3RINO LAKE N J July 14—
Wilmer Allison of Austin Tex the
No 1 seeded player reached the
third round of the annual Spring
Lake teamis tourney today when
3e defeated Haines Stockton of
?inehurst N C 6-3 6-1 Allison
!ompleted the first round by beat-
ing Joe Rice local player 6-3 64
Donald McNeill Oklahoma City
heeded at 8 advanced with Allison
by beating Roger Williams of New
York 6-2 6-4
(Early Details on Sport rages)
VOL 31 NO 281
Weather Forecast
Partly cloudy tonight and tomor-
row: not much change In tempera-
ture CITY HOURLY TEMPERATURES
Last
Today Tear
Midnight 82 87
a tn 82 86
2 a m 80 85
3 a m 80 83
4 a m 80 81
S a m 79 19
2 a m 78 81
7 a m 79 85
I a m 81 90
a m 86 96
10 a nt 90 98
lam 93 101
felon 94 103
p m Pe 104
2 p m 98 105
3 p m 104
Press Agent for
State to Take
Journalism Course
Lane Beaty named July 2 as
publicity director for the state De-
partment of Agriculture today en-
rolled in a Journalism course at
Oklahoma A Sz M College
Mr Beaty was sent to the col-
lege by Joe Scott Board of Agri-
culture president for a week's train-
ing period in writing articles about
farming
Formerly publicity director at
Southeastern State Teachers' Col-
lege Durant Mr Beaty was given
a $125-a-month salary to prepare
newspaper releases for the Depart-
ment of Agriculture
His announcement at that time
that he was to be a "ghost writer"
for Mr Scott and that he was to
receive a yearly salary of $3500 was
denied by the Board of Agriculture
president
MERCURY HEADS
To 100 DEGREES
Tillman County Town Ripped
By Twister Guthrie
Woman Hurt
Despite the forecast of clouds the
temperature in Oklahoma City was
expected to climb near the 100-mark
today
The clouds Weatherman Harry
Wahlgren said will remain through
tomorrow but today the mercury
will go between 95 and 100 degrees
The night will be comfortable he
said predicting a low of between
70 and 76 degrees '
The high mark yesterday was 99
at 4 p m just before the city was
visited by the winds that were the
tail-end of the storm that swept
other sections of the state
Twister Strikes
Guthrie Stillwater and Davidson
bore the brunt of the winds and
rain Several chimneys were wrecked
and trees uprooted at Guthrie and
at Stillwater six tents on the A &
M campus were blown over
Mr A L Nason was injured by
flying brick when the wind blew
over the chimney of the Neson
Lumber Co office at Guthrie Mrs
Nason suffered severe bruises about
the head and shoulders
A small twister ripped through
the northwest corner of Davidson
south of Frederick in Tillman
County tearing the roof off a two-
story building and damaging the
roofs of a number of houses The
twister cut a path 200 yards wide
through the town and then swept
south across the Red River
Alva High at 107
The 99 yesteraay compared to the
105 the same day a year ago when
Oklahoma City was just getting
started on the first of the extended
heat waves
Rains were reported at 10 points
last night the heaviest being 141
at Guthrie Lawton received AO
Enid 13 Geary 05 Barlesville
01 Chandler 07 Newkirk 32
Pryor 20 Tulsa 08 and Vinita 02
One hundred-degree temperature
or over were general throughout
the northwest and southwest por-
tions of the state Highest was Alva
with 107 Altus and Clinton with
106 made a close second
Other high marks were 104 at
Carnegie Frederick Elk City Enid
and Woodward 103 at Lawton
102 at Beaver and Ponca City and
100 at Chickasha Waurika and
Geary
MRS1 ROOSEVELT TAX
RETURNS DEFENDED
—
Jackson Says She Followed
Treasury's Advice
By tintird Prefil
WASHINGTON July 14—Assist-
ant Attorney General Robert H
Jackson described Mra Franklin D
Roosevelt as i "conscientious tax-
payer" today and proposed that the
congressional tax avoidance com-
mittee drop the question of whether
she used tax-law loopholes
Jackson replied to charges by Rep
Hamilton Fish qt N Y criticiz-
ing Mrs RooseveWa method of
turning over to charity proceeds
from a series of radio broadcasts
Jackson said that she was advised
by the treasury in 1934 that the
methods used were properJackson
at that time was general counsel of
the inteenal revenue bureau
"If the gentleman from New York
desires to indulge in criticism of this
treasury attitude" Jackson wrote
Committee Chairman Robert
Doughton "the responsibility for it
Is not that of Mrs Roosevelt but
that of myself and others who were
treasury officials at the time"
STATE SENS
ATTACKED IN
DEBT HEARING
Attorney Charges Legis-
lators Attempting to
Become 'Masters'
DEFICIT IS ADMITTED
Official Tells Court There
Is No Way to Stop
Spending
Attorney General Mac Q Wil-
liamson admitted to four District
Court Judges today that a state
deficit will result from huge legis-
lative appropriations but declared
there is no legal route by which
the spending can be blocked
Making the admission for the
sake of argument" Mr Williamson
asserted that "nevertheless under
the known law this injunction suit
should fall"
Concludes Argument
Mr Williamson was making the
concluding summary in two days of
argument on the'Vigilante suit that
asks the court to step in and pre-
vent a state deficit Argument was
to be concluded late in the day The
four Judges Sam Hooker George H
Giddings Prank P Douglass and
Clarence Mills have not decided
whether they will rule at once or
take the case under advisement
Earlier in the day Sid White at-
torney for the Vigilantes had con-
cluded an argument in which he
described legislators as "'binder-
bund politicians who are attempting
to become our unbridled masters"
He argued that the anticipated
deficit will be a state debt and if
this deficit is incurred it will be a
violation of the constitutional ban
against a debt in excess of $400000
He pleaded for a court order limit-
ing state expenditures tO the amount
of tax income
Attacks Legislators
Mr White digressed frequently
from legal argument to attack the
actions of legislators at one point
condemning Presiding Sen Al G
Nichols of Wewoka for the latter's
recent effort to silence Dean A B
Adams at the University of Okla-
homa "Business men have come to this
preacher" said Mr White pointing
to Rev Hale V Davis Vigilante
official who filed the suit "and
have given him $5 and $10 to push
this lawsuit and asked him not to
reveal their names lest the poli-
ticians take from them all they
have"
Mr Williamson contended that
court decisions in similar cases in
the past have held that the Legis-
lature can appropriate more for
current expenses than it collects in
taxes The resulting deficit has
been held by courts in the past not
to be a state debt within the mean-
ing of the constitution he declared
UNIVERSITY ADOPTS
FACULTY COUNSELOR
City School Also Drops About
50 Study Courses
Ii
Adoption of a faculty counselor
system at Oklahoma City Univer-
sity effective during the 1937-38
school year was announced today
by C M Allen university dean
Students will be divided Into
groups and assigned to various
faculty members who are expected
to act as their advisers throughout
the school yesterday
Dean Allen said that the 1937-38
catalog ready for distribution
shows elimination of approximately
50 courses from last year's curricu-
lum ' Some highly technical courses
have been dropped entirely while
many others have been consolidated
THUMB-SUCKING
BLAMED FOB ILLS
Dentist Traces 'Unfavorable Social
Behavior' to Habit
By United Press
An Ammo CITY N J July 14
Retarded growth inferiority com-
plexes and "unfavorable social be-
havior" were traced by a dentist to-
day to the habit of sucking the
thumb "common to millions of
American children"
Dr Earl Swinehart of Baltimore
told the 79th annual convention of
the American Dental Association
that scolding the children would
only make matters worse
"Thumb-sucking causes definite
and often serious nervous disturb-
ances The evidence found among
these children was so plentiful and
so plain that there can be no doubt
of that" Swinehart said
Some of its main nervous and
psychological causes are unsound
sleep deficient appetite abnormal
restlessnem excessive crying tan-
trums lack of powerto concentrate
and unfavorable social behavior"
la
ralifi0)Tiiiá':'witfriyonstoi
Local Forecast: Partly cloudy
OKLAHOMA CITY WEDNESDAY JULY 14 1937
aNe
! 'xLx!-
ecord
Final Home
Edition
PRICE THREE CENTS
Bs Carries 11 Cents a Week
SENATIR JIE ROIINSON DIES
CIURT FIGHT SETBACK SEE
Pajama-Clad Body of Democratic
Leader Found in Apartment
By United Press
WASHINGTON July 14--Senate Majority Leader Joseph T Robinson of Arkansas
died alone in his apartment early today a few hundred yards from the Senate chamber
where his political career was coming to an angry climax in the fight to enact Presi-
dent Roosevelt's Supreme Court reorganizationplan
Sen Robinson was 65 years old and had served in the Senate for 24 years
His body was discovered pajama-clad on the floor beside his bed He was pronounced
dead of a heart attack at 7:15 a m by Dr Warren Fletcher who accompanied a Cas-
ualty Hospital ambulance to the senator's quarters
Senator Robinson's death was seen as a major setback for the judiciary reform
measure as he was the foremost Administration leader in the fight for passage of the
compromise program An expert in parliamentary procedure and a rough-and-tumble
political fighter he was playing a major part in the Senate floor battle to secure a fa-
vorable vote on Mr Roosevelt's proposal
A further blow to the court plan was seen by observers who predicted Robinson's
death will open a bitter contest over the majority leadership in the Upper House
11 However Sen George M Berry
Fighting Breaks Out
Again Near Peiping
By UNITED PRESS
Fighting broke out again late today between Japanese
and Chinese armies near Peiping ancient Chinese capital
as both nations poured troop reinforcements into the dis-
puted region Hopes for a peaceful settlement of recent
armed clashes were reported remote
Japanese warships arrived off the China coast and
Japanese army reservists in the Tientsin (China) area were
ordered to stand by ready for action
Dispatches from Peiping said 14 trainloads of Japanese
troops were sent from Tientsin to the scene of the fight-
ing and that additional regiments under full war equip-
ment were marchifilf the 60 miles to—the indent carpital
Ten thousand Koreans were called to the colors and doc-
tors chauffeurs and laborers were being mobilized as the
Japanese government apparently was preparing for a ma-
jor war
Meanwhile the Chinese central government at Nanking
ordered the 29th army to stand firm at Peiping and mo-
bilized heavy detachments of crack central Chinese army
soldiers for transportation to the scene of hostilities
Thirty thousand of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's
German-trained troops have arrived in Hopei province ready
for action against the Japanese both Japanese and Chinese
sources reported
Peiping Chinese military headquarters announced that
Japanese forces around the city were withdrawing apparent
ly awaiting reinforcements before engaging in a major
battle
Negotiations for a peaceful settlement were deadlocked
as a small Japanese unit was reported repulsed by Chinese
troops in an early-morning clash
—
Japanese Open DROP IN RAIL ISSUES
Battle on 2 Fronts
BY United Pren
TIENTSIN (Thursday) July 15
Japanese infantrymen today fought
their way along two routes towards
Fengtal outside the walls of Peip-
ing to reinforce 20000 of their
comrades who were reported men-
aced by more than 60000 Chinese
troops
Two battles were reported—one
at Lola a village near a bridge of
the Peiping-Tientsin Railway 30
miles northwest of this city and
another near Tahungmen south of
Peiping
The Lofa fight started at 9
o'clock last night when Japanese
troop trains were halted by the
Chinese who had dynamited the
railway bridge Firing was con-
tinuing this morning Japanese
said that 600 of their troops were
engaged
Japanese Unit Trapped
The fighting at Tahungmen be-
gan when a detachment of 100 Ja-
panese proceeding to Fengtal from
Kupeikow one of the Japanese gar-
risons along the Great Wall of
China north of Peiping was stir
TURN TO PAOLI U COLUMN I
GIRL SAYS LOSS OF
TEETH CHANGED LIFE
Sues 'Railway for $2581 as
Crash Aftermath
' Loss of from teeth which
"changed her from a happy care-
free girl to a 'person who is moody
shy and whose entire mental scope
has been twisted ond warped" WM
valued at $2581 by Geraldine Duryea
Douglas Kim hi a damage suit
filed today hi District Court against
the Atchison Topeka & Santa Ire
Railway
Miss Duryea alleges that a train
struck her auto when it approached
a crossing without giving a warn-
ing ivhistie in 1935
The suit said that "plaintiff was
a charming attractive girl budding
into young womanhood" when she
ivas disfigured by the accident and
became "ashamed to go about In
public"
S
DROP IN RAIL ISSUES
CHECKS STOCK RISE
List Turns Irregular After
Advance
By United Press
NEW YORK July 14--Stocks re-
sumed their advance with renewed
vigor today but turned irregular late
In the session when railroad issues
declined Selling in carriers was in-
duced by a deadlock in wage nego-
tiations and declines in car loadings
U S Steel reached 115 UP 3
but slipped back to 113 It rallied
from the low
Other active issues included
Armour Greyhound Paramount
Pure Oil Republic Steel General
Motors and Electric Power & Light
Farm implement issues were
strong early Case touched 176 up
7 then fell back a few points In-
ternational Harvester and Deere
made new highs
-
CURBS IRREGULARLY UP
Industrial and utility shares led
curb stocks irregularly higher Jones
& Laughlin Steel topped the list
with a 4-point advance American
Cyanamid B and Brown Co pre-
ferred were up a point each
WHEAT TO NEW HIGHS
A nervous choppy trend failed to
prevent wheat futures from reach-
ing new highs for the season At
the close wheat was unchanged to
i cent higher new corn 1 to Pit
cents lower old corn 1 cents lower
and oats cent higher to cent
lower
COTTON FUTURES RALLY
Tapering off In selling and an
increase In buying on reports of
weevil infestation in the Carolinas
Influenced a rally in cotton futures
after early easinets' At the close
new crop months were unchanged
to 3 points higher while July was
up 8 points Spot was 1239 up 3
points
LIVERPOOL--Spots quiet: mar-
ket steady: receipts 19000 bales in-
cluding 1800 American bales Fu-
tures opened quiet and closed 5
points lower
-
RAIL BONDS WEAK
Weakness in railroad loans fea-
tured irregular domestic bond deal-
ings U S Government bonds were
mixed Medium-priced rails were
under greatest premttre '
(D Tenn) first senator to see
President Roosevelt following Rob-
inson death said after his White
House conference that "the Court
fight will go on" He added that
"while Robinson's death was a great
loss I believe it changed no votes
either way in the Senate"
Senate Adjourns
After a 44-minute session—de-
voted entirely to tributes to the
departed majority leader—the Sen-
ate adjourned in respect to Robin-
son until noon tomorrow
Thus an end was brought to the
"legislative day of July 8"r—the
parliamentary device which Robin-
son himself had invoked u a
weapon against filibustering tac-
tics in the judiciary fight At the
close of each session since Court de-
bate opened the Senate had re-
cessed instead of adjourning By
this means the same legislative day
was continued and under Senate
rules senators were allowed to
speak but twice on the pending
business
Burial In Little Rock
The Court dispute is over for a
time Perhaps a week may elapse
before all senators will return to
their duties and the firing can be-
gin again
After consultation with Mrs Rob-
inson Col Edwin Halsey secretary
of the Senate announced that a
state funeral would be given for the
majority leader in the chamber of
the Senate at noon Friday Mrs
Robinson will come from Arkansas
to attend the services The body
will then be taken to Little Rock
Opposing factions in the Senate
fight over Court reorganization
agreed to suspend business until
next week Sen Alben W Bargley
(D Ky) assistant floor leader
said that in all probability no leg-
islation will be discussed until next
week
House Honors Robinson
The House of Representatives met
at noon and in 15 minutes ad-
journed until noon tomorrow out of
respect to the late Democratic
chieftain
Sen Burton K Wheeler (D
Mont) leader in the fight against
the Court plan appealed to the
President today to abandon the
Court enlargement plan Pointing
out that Robinson was "both a po-
litical and a personal friend of
mine" he said:
"Had It not been for the Court
bill he would be alive today I be-
seech the President to drop the
fight lest he appear to fight against
God"
Reluctant to Comment
Leaders on both sides of the Court
fight were reluctant to comment
publicly on the effect Robinson's
death tight have on the measure
Some of the opposition leaders said
privately that they considered the
measure definitely defeated as a re-
sult of developments in the last 24
hours
Chairman Hatton Sumners
(D Tex) of the House judiciary
committee who until yesterday had
been at least a lukewarm champion
of the judiciary measure broke
sharply with the President yester-
days When it met at noon the
the House floor urged that con-
sideration be dropped at this ses-
aion Sentiment in the Senate took a
strong turn against the measure
after two anti-bill apeeches there
yesterday by Sens Josiah Bailey ID
N C) and Royal S Copeland (D
N Y)
Robinson's death was sudden He
was in the Senate briefly yesterday
to receive reports on the Admin-
istration program to reorganize the
federal judiciary
Robinson since the start of the
I Court fight had been prominently
mentioned as President Roosevelt's
Supreme Court appointee to succeed
Associate Justice Willis Van DeVan-
ter who resigned in June
His death abruptly if temporarily
Interrupted Senate debate of the
court proposal He leaves the Sen-
ate and his party torn by the bit-
terest debate since "a little group
of willful men" scuttled Woodrow
Wilson's League of Nations The
Democratic Party in the Senate now
will enter into a contest over the
TURN TO PAOg COLUMN
By United Prefts
WASHINGTON July IC—
President Roosevelt paid a high
tribute to Sen Joseph T Robin-
son his friend and New Deal
leader in the U S Senate
Robinson was leading the Sen-
ate fight for Mr Rodevelt's Su-
preme Court program at the time
of his death
Mr Roosevelt's statement fol-
lows: "In the face of a dispensation
so swift in its coming and so
tragic in the loss it brings to the
nation we bow in sorrow A pil-
lar of strength is 'gone A soldier
has fallen with face to the battle
"I personally mourn the pass-
ing of a greatly beloved friend
whose fidelity through long years
never wavered Those who knew
Joseph Taylor Robinson best rec-
ognized in him the qualities of
true liberal thought Mindful of
the needs of the underprivileged
"Joe was a tall gangling boy
when he came to Fayetteville to
study law" Mr Childers recalled
today "He was unusually studious
and instead of taking an interest in
baseball and football like the rest of
his classmates he confined himself
strictly to his studies
"At that time he gave very little
Indication of being intevested in a
political career He Just concen-
trated On his studies and although
he soon assumed a leadership
among his classmates he didn't
seem interested in anything that
did not have a connection with his
law course!!
Three Offices In 60 Days
Mr Childers who served as sher-
iff of Lawrence County Ark be-
fore he came to Oklahoma where
he has served as state corporation
commissioner before being elected
auditor recalled that Ben Robinson
had one of the niost unusual political-
careers in the nation
Fe was congressmen governor
and U S senator within 60 days
Ile WU elected governor et Arkan-
sas while a member of the House
of Representatives from the Lonoke
Ark district He was governor but
a few days when U B Ben Jell
Davis died suddenly The Arkansu
'runs TO PA01 10 COLUMN
Sen losepb T Robinson wit
died suddenly today of a heart at
tack is shown here in four char
acteristic poses
he was devoted always to itn-
provement of the lot of the
manes
"In his going Joe Robinson has
left a record in high achievement
as it was faithful in performance
He never temporized with prin
ciple nor bargained where the
public interest was the issue
"But day by day through long
service in high office he brought
to the national councils the con-
tribution of great learning and
sound wisdom—a leadership in-
spired by courage and guided by
consummate common sense and a
devotion to duty given without
selfish interest
"And so death found him at tha
last with hope unfaltering with
vision undimmed and with cour-
age unafraid Of him well may
it be said: He has fought a good'
fight he has finished his course:
he has kept the faith"
0121ahomans Are Former
Schoolmates of Robinson
Four Oklahomans were schoolmates of U S Sen Joseph
T Robinson when he was a student at the University of
Arkansas Fayetteville
C C Childers Oklahoma state auditor Sam Morley
912 NW 14th-st former warden of the Oklahoma state peni-
teunettioarry:nd labor leader d co H
taratalwnaycon
d -
P Brewer district Judge at Mus- CLOUDS HALT NAVY
kogee were in the same class as
the Democratic leader
Kept Close to Studies SEARCH FOR AMELIA
CLOUDS HALT NAVY
SEARCH FOR AMELIA
Planes Poised for Hunt When
Weather Permits
tnited Prtss
HONOLULU July 14—The aerisi
search of the Pacific Ocean for
trace of Amelia Earhart and Fred
J Noonan her navigator was to be
resumed today if weather conditions
permit The search yesterday by 60
planes the carrier Lexington
was cut short by rain squalls
Hope for the fliers Will at the
vanishing point but the Navy fliers
w111 scan approximately 360000
square miles before they give up
Miss tarhart WR3 forced down July
2 on a 2500-mile flight from Lae
New Guinea to Howland Island
Sixty of the Lexington's 62 planes
Joined In the search yesterday fore-
noon after poor visibility had held
the pilots on deck through the early
daylight hours By noon they had
covered 21000 ware miles Twe
planes were held for emergency
purposes
The planes were to have resumed
the search in the afternoon but
after 30 had shot off the broad deck
of the Lexington the clouds closed
down and it began to rain The
planes were ordered br
(
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Fredericks, Robert T. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 281, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 14, 1937, newspaper, July 14, 1937; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2010351/m1/1/?q=architectural+drawings: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.