The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1938 Page: 4 of 12
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PAGE FOUR
The Oklahoma News
A Scripps-Howard Newspaper
LEE BILLS Editor
CHARLES L NICHOLSON Busineu Manager
Owned and published daily
bv The Oklahoma News Co
407 West Grandav Oklahoma
Cite Okla Entered at Okla
home City Okla Postottice
45 aecond class mail matter
Pull reports of the United
press Scripps-Howard News
payer Alliance NEA Service
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PHONE 7-1551
By carrier 20c a weekl In
advance 800 a month 8950 a
veer
Bv null In advance In
Oklahoma al° Oft a year else-
ahem 61150 a year
"Give Light and the People Will Find
Their Own Way"
TUESDAY JULY 3 law
The School Board
Blunders Again
THE SUSPENDED School Board mem-
bers seem more intent on hanging onto
their Jobs than on letting any more
light into the shocking mess turned up
by the grand jury
Which when you consider the board's
past performances is not so surprising
as It is typical
Perhaps nothing they could have done
would be more revelatory of their out-
look and their approach to public re-
sponsibility The grand jury has cast a cloud over
the operations of the entire board It
has accused all nine members of mal-
administration and negligence It has
indicted two members a former board
attorney and an oil royalty broker—
charging them all with bribery Cer-
tainly there can be no public confidence
at this time in a continuation of this
groups control of the school system
Whether some of the board members
can win back that confidence and jus-
tify reinstatement remains to be seen
The course they are now taking cer-
tainly Isn't aimed In that direction
WHY DOESN'T THE board—or at least
those members not involved in the worst
of the scandal—come to the fore at once
with a demand for a more complete
Investigation of all its actions? The
grand jury itself said it had merely
"scratched the surface"
Why don't those members join in the
widespread public condemnation of cor-
ruption in office and offer to do their
utmost to uncover anything that may
have happened?
Why don't they say that they do not
want to serve under such a cloud and
that they are willing to pitch in and
help clean up whatever needs cleaning
up help prove any charges that are true
and help disprove any charges or ru-
mors that may be unfounded?
Why instead of doing this do they
start out to fight the District Court's
suspension order on legal technicalities?
Why?
The public right or wrong will sus-
pect that the board has something more
to cover up People will say that It
looks fishy for the School Board to be-
come so frantic about keeping control
of the school system pending hearings
and trials
In the minds of board members the
issue seems to be whether a new im-
partial board can be kept from getting
an inside look at the school operation
pending final disposition of the affair
The public is sure to look upon this as
a desperate move and wonder why
In the minds of school patrons par-
ents taxpayers and citizens generally
the issue is honest government
The School Board has made many
blunders in the past
It is now making another
EVERY MEMBER of that board who
has nothing to fear in full hearings and
fair trials should realize the serious
boomerang that is being started They
should speak out and say they want no
part of it They should be Intelligent
enough to know that even if they win
reinstatement by this route they have
little chance to regain the public con-
fidence that is so necessary in the ad-
ministration of school affairs If they
can't win that confidence self-respect
would then dictate their resignations
anyway
It will take more than the present
political bombardment against the pros-
ecutors and the court to answer the
questions and meet the Issues raised by
the grand Jury's penetrating report
Youth Can Curb Erosion
DR PAUL B SEARS until recently
head of the botany department of the
University of Oklahoma spoke hopefully
of the nation's fight against soil erosion
in a recent radio address Perhaps no
other scientist has a clearer understand-
ing of the soil waste that has devastated
so many fertile acres It means some-
thing when such a man forecasts a
Winning fight against erosion and it
means more to Oklahoma than most
states for it is here that Dr Sears has
given the problem most study at close
range
The hope for the future as Dr Sears
sees it rests with the young people
schooled in scientific farming and eager
to till the soil in a manner to assure
permanent usefulness From the 4-H
Clubs Future Farmers of America and
the agricultural colleges he sees youth
emerging with the knowledge needed to
enable them to conserve soil fertility
and even restore much that has been
depleted
Oklahoma has done much to foster
this training of farm youth The state
should be interested in every plan which
helps them continue in the work for
which their early training has fitted
them
A youth who went out to look at the
moon escaped injury the other night
when he fell from a roof but young
people who go moon-gazing still ought
tq wittch their step
Riding the Rods
Into Oklahoma
BACK IN THE DAYS when men wore
celluloid bosoms Mark Twain said some-
thing to this effect—that dignity is no
more a sign of mental strength than a
shirt front is a sign of a shirt
Anyway whatever you may think
about dignity the most dignified person
In this land of ours is the United States
senator when he walks down the aisle
occupies his seat or rises to remark
What for example could be more ma-
jestic not excepting a snow-capped
mountain in a desert or an 80000-ton
liner at sea than J Ham Lewis either
In action or in repose?
- But getting the job Itself in which
one's craving for dignity can be in-
dulged frequently requires much that
Is the very opposite of dignity We have
now come to such a time and are about
to witness the ungraceful necessities
that confront certain of those who as-
pire Trains must be Chased and snubs
swallowed the whips and scorns of si-
lence endured while the opponent gets
a mention and all those other processes
of not too subtle torture borne In the
awkward scramble for votes—and for
vast dignity later on if you win
NOT-SO-HAPPY CHANDLER will
come first as the presidential special
toots into Covington late this week The
visit is in behalf of Mr Chandler's op-
ponent in the Kentucky senatorial race
none other than Dear Alben Barkley
AND THEN WILL come Governor Mar-
land who has been as much a 100 per
cent New Dealer as any governor in the
land And Gomer Smith who is at least
as far to the left as Roosevelt and is
about 98 per cent New Deal
But when the presidential train rolls
into Oklahoma City Saturday it will be
In behalf of their opponent Sen Elmer
Thomas
And like it or not Governors Marland
and Chandler will board the train and
Old Gomer probably will swallow the
snub and be somewhere in the picture
Where will they get on? The cow-
catcher the bumpers or the rods—or
will they be accorded a little better spot
somewhere within gazing distance of the
mighty visitor? That they will be con-
siderably humiliated no matter what
they do is foregone But they've got to
go through the pretense of paying trib-
ute to the one who as party leader is
trying to lick them but who neverthe-
less is leader of the party They must
make that train and that Fair Grounds
platform if they have to stumble over
every railway tie in Oklahoma City and
slip through a cattle barn at Fair Park
GOVERNOR MARLAND by the way
who has been campaigning under a
banner 'March Along With Roosevelt"
may even find himself slapped for "a
clear misuse of my name"
As for Gomer Smith who because of
the harsh urgings of expediency must
put forth a friendly front—where will
Gomer be seated at the Fair Grounds
when that vast gathering greets the
first President who while actually in
office has ever visited the state?
We have a hunch that Gomer Is in
no danger of being sideswiped by any
presidential arm-swinging during the
course of the presidential speech despite
the fact that he has been named on the
reception committee through a neu-
trality gesture of Mayor Martin
And so it goes In the days of yore
favor at court meant everything Today
It may mean everything or nothing de-
pending on the votes The voters can
look and listen and then make up their
own minds
Meantime we're glad we are not in
politics and that we don't have to spend
the dog-days chasing trains and elbow-
ing our way onto platforms
Poor—But Rich
THOSE WHO HEARD again the songs
of Stephen Foster in commemoration of
his 112th birthday which was July 4th
were told once more of the genius who
died with 37 cents in money to show
for his life's work and with a note in the
same thin purse which read: "Dear
friend and gentle heart"
Had he lived in these times when the
rights of the song-maker are copper-
riveted the composer of Old Black Joe
Swanee River My Old Kentucky Home
and the many other imperishable melo-
dies would have died rich
The genius is seldom if ever heavy on
the business side That goes for musi-
cians painters inventors poets creative
artists generally So Foster sold his
songs outright for "eating money" then
he wrote more songs and sold them too
with no strings no royalties no equity
in the future except the satisfaction his
own soul felt in having done something
immortal
It remained for the latter-day Irving
Berlins to clean up financially
1
Oklahoma's Fine Record
OKLAHOMA CAME through the
Fourth of July celebration without a
fatal accident
The nation too had a better record
this year than last with a death toll
of 449 compared to' 563 lives lost a year
ago Motor accidents as has been the
case for several years caused most cas-
ualties with drownings second This
year the nation's fireworks deaths on
the Fourth were reduced to three which
is gratifying progress in conquering the
peril
Oklahoma City had the further ad-
vantage of a quiet Fourth because the
ordinance against fireworks in the city
was enforced Fireworks are an ad-
mitted and needless danger and the
ban now in effect in the city should be
embodied in state law
Oklahoma's splendid safety record
yesterday is proof that accidents can
be curbed It should be some encourage-
ment toward trying to do as well on all
other days of the year '
Mrs Waiter Ferguson I Old Faithful?
'An
Oldatioma
Woman's
Viewpoint
IA
A FEARFUL LOT of fuss is made nowadays
over the importance of getting along with peo-
ple The idea began as a cult is now an ob-
session and threatens to become a nuisance
But how do I get along with myself? Do I
enjoy being with Me? Those are questions few
ask although from every angle the answer ap-
pears important to individual happiness From
birth until death each is accompanied by that
being—the real 1—which may be and often Is
entirely different from the outer man as the
world knows him
During millions of moments this secret self
Is our sole companion It rises with us every
morning goes to bed with us at night directs
our desires dictates our dreams
Do you know why so many people feel a con-
stant need for 4c ompany?
It is because not one has learned well the
art of getting along with himself
A number of people who are popular in the
generally accepted sense of the word function
well only in large groups They respond best
to the unusual occasion
The sum of human happiness might be tre-
mendously increased if we tried as hard to get
along with Self as we do to charm others
Actually when we have mastered the first we
cannot fail at the second The hours we spend
alone are our hours of growth No individual
should live for himself but every individual
ought to know how to live with himself
Raymond Clapper
NATIONAL AFFAIRS
THE WORK of trying to shackle President
Roosevelt in the 1940 Democratic national con
vention so that he will be unable to control the
selection of the next nominee of the party has
begun This will be undertaken by fencing off
states with ''favorite sons" in the hope that
among them they can hold the balance of
power through an informal coalition and then
trade out the prize The same tactics were
used in 1932 in an attempt to head off Mr
Roosevelt
First formal action in this direction unless
I have forgotten something Is Mississippi There
the state Democratic executive committee has
Indorsed Sen Pat Harrison as its candidate
for President in 1940 That means Sen Harri-
son will go to the national convention in all
probability with the Mississippi delegation in
his pocket with power to throw his votes where
he will
This is a chicken come home to roost be-
cause a year ago White Heuse intervention
knicked Sen Harrison out of becoming Senate
majority leader Sen Barldey of Kentucky won
It when Administration wire pullers the night'
before the vote pulled Sen Dietrich of Illinois
away from Sen Harrison and swung him to
Sen Barkley Sen Harrison has never forgiven
the Administration From then on his knife
was out As chairman of the Cenate finance
committee Sen Harrison had great influence
in shaping the recent tax bill When Mr Roose-
velt refused to sign it and made a radio speech
criticizing the measure Scn Harrison replied
in a frigid Senate speech saying the President
had apparently been misinformed as to the
text of the bill and disputing flatly Mr Roose-
velt's statement of some of its provisions
Now Sen Harrison with the backing of
his state organization is even at this early
date preparing to be his own boss in the next
nominating convention
Old Political Practice
THIS IS ONLY the first of a long parade
of favorite sons that may be expected to line
up before the convention Tennessee Demo-
crats are talking of indorsing Secretary Hull
as their favorite son—and indeed if Secretary
Hull were not 68 years old he would be a
national favorite Vice-President Garner can
have not only the Texas delegation but some
others Sen Bennett Clark will have Missouri
pledged to himself Paul McNutt will be In-
diana's favorite son and he expects a good
deal more Sen Byrd of Virginia is a perennial
favorite son of Virginia and the next Demo-
cratic convention would take on a strange ap-
pearance without those "Byrd for President"
signs and the Byrd band which have been fa-
miliar convention sights for several years Sen
Wheeler will have Montana sewed up Sen
Barkley—if he is renominated for senator in
August—will have Kentucky although in this
case he will not be an anti-Roosevelt favorite
son but a friendly one Gov Murphy of Michi-
gan probably will be at the convention in a
similar role
This favorite-son strategy Is time-honored
although not always successful It helped to
beat down Al Smith and McAdoo in 1924 and
the nomination was traded off to West Vir-
ginia's favorite son John W Davis of Morgan ez
Co Republican favorite sons combined against
floover in 1928 but with no more luck than
the combination had against Roosevelt in 1932
This strategy is effective where there is no
dominating single candidate or where there are
two or more sizable candidates with strong
- appeal But when one man alone towers above
the field it is seldom that a combination of
favorite sons can beat him
No one knows whether President Roosevelt
or some other single figure yet to rise will
head the field of candidates when the 1940
convention meets The anti-Roosevelt Demo
crate don't know who they will have to beat but
whoever he may be they are laying for him
John T Flynn
TODAY'S BUSINESS
NEW YORK July 5--There Eire signs that
the New Deal is playing with an idea which is
the direct opposite of the original New Deal
The original New Deal went off upon a
frantic experiment in organized scarcity
Farmers were to be organized and compelled
to cut production Under the NRA industrial
producers were organized to limit industrial
production through trade agreements in or-
der to raise prices
The new idea which apparently is being
toyed with in Washington is to organize busi-
ness to induce it encourage it and pay it for
producing more
Instead of paying farmers and rewarding
business concerns with high prices to produce
less this is a plan to reward industrial con-
cerns to produce more
BUT NOW in a confused and uncertain way
it seems to be veering around to a policy which
is the direct negation of all that it has done
The latest expression of that idea is the
cloak and suit plan to have the Government
buy up the surplus stocks of the suit makers
The scripture of this plan is the book of Mr
Mordecai Ezekiel economic adviser of the Agri-
cultural Department called "$2500 a Year"
No one has yet explored minutely how It
will work or whether it can be made to work
But there is something about it which appeals
to those who like the word "abundance" May-
be we will adopt it without examining how it
works as we did the NRA In any case the
thing is significant because it may give the
turn and character to our next New Deal flight
toward abundance
THE OKLAHOMA NEWS
I
SHUCKS-
WU ANTSEER
0604YTHIN41
COHE Art OuND
NEWT"
L YEAR!
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-
LETTERS
Oklahoma City
Gains Booster
To the Editor:
am a native of what many
writers are wont to call the "hos-
pitable West" But never in my
life have I associated with more
friendly people than those who live
in Oklahoma City
When I arrived from San Fran-
cisco two years ago I was a
stranger in Oklahoma City Tcda
when I am ready to depart for Salt
Lake City Utah I am not a
stranger I have friends — real
friends—in every part of town and
all are genuine people
If testimonials are in order I
sneak my gratitude for the beauty
and friendship which exist in Okla-
homa City Recently I was a mem-
ber of the Chamber of Commerce
Trade Tour but now I am starting
on a new good-will tour I shall
always be a booster for Oklahoma
City!
L B BIGLER
Praise For
Veterans Hospital
To the Editor:
am Just recovering from tt se-
rious operation in the U S Vet-
erans Hospital in Muskogee I
wish to commend the doctors and
nurses and management for the ex-
cellent work being done here for
the veterans No partiality is
shown All receive the same excel-
lent attention
OSCAR E JOHNSON
City
Sees Danger
In Ban
To the Editor:
The law enforcement agencies of
this state seem to think that they
must be the "big shots" regardless
upon whose liberty they infringe I
So They Say - -
Racketeering like municipal cor-
ruption cannot stand the light of
clay and the powerful exposure of
public opinion which only a free
press can provide
—D is tr I c t Attorney Thomas E
Dewey of New York
like to be a brat
—10-year-old Sibyl Trent stage and
moving picture actress of "brat"
roles
SIDE GLANCES
01141 !wa
Cent
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105111Peve"' OdUT7
Ond" 111 gr
Uolkik A Leb1:747--"1
I wholly disagree with what you say but will de
fend to the death your right to say it —Voltaire
News readers are Invited to
express their views in these
columns religious controver-
sies excluded Make your let-
ter short so all can have a
chance Letters must be signed
Names will be withheld on request
am writing this about the hitch-
hiking ban that was proposed
When a motorist passes a hitch-
hiker he has enough brains to de
PRESIDENT ROOSEVEL T'S
speech before the National Educa-
tional Assn brought out to the full
his great capacity as the articulate
spokesman of American democracy
I have in mind the closing portion
of his address in which he spoke
of the burning of the books
of course I am stating an opin-
ion It may be that there will be
almost universal approbation for
what he said but generally when
the President touches on foreign
affairs the criticism is made that
our Chief Executive should make
no comment whatsoever on events
in foreign lands It is said that the
internal affairs of other countries
are nonc of our business It seems
to me that the President was emi-
nently sUccessful in pointing out
the fact that there are trends
ac-oss the water which do vitally
concern us here at home
He spoke of the burning of li-
braries the exiling of scientists
writers and other artists and of
the censoring of literature painting
and news And what he said I be-
lieve was said deservedly and mag-
nificently But if he had stopped
there some critics might have ob-
jected "Even though it is true why
run the risk of stirring up bad
blood with Germany? It still isn't
our business"
But I think the next paragraph
ought to be graven in bronze and
kept before our eyes If the fires
of freedom and civil liberties burn
low in other lands" said Franklin
Delano Roosevelt "they must be
made bnghter in our own"
Sincere people differ enormously
as to what the details and general
shape of our foreign policy should
be Yet I believe and hope there
can be a broad base of solidarity in
By George Clark
coo' we 0 fa900 4K etEALLea CPP:
"Here's the place for us to go Jerry—hiking horseback rid-
ing dancing mountain climbing—'
qr
(Y"
' t
cide If he wants to give him a
ride The car is the property of the
motorist and if he wants to give
somebody a lift that is his busi-
ness Would it be fair to take the
only means of transportation that
some people have away from them?
A hitch-hiking ban would cause aev-
eral more deaths as it would mean
that men and boys would start
hopping freights and that is danger-
ous I loin the college boys to protest
any hitch-hiking ban C E M
Heywood Broun - It Seems To Me
the statement of those things for
which free men strive There is no
smugness in the paragraph which
I have quoted It is not a holier-than-thou
attitude On the con-
trary it is a call for self-examination
Before poking at the beam in
any brother's eye we should of
course remove the mote from our
own
Obviously American practices
have not always lived up to the
finest American precepts We have
known and still know of censor-
ship and suppression of civil liber-
ties within our own borders That's
our fault and our problem But it
is undeniable that recent develop-
ments abroad have had their reper-
cussions here
Nazi followers have boldly stated
that they hope to promote anti-
Semitism in America Official Jour-
nals in both Italy and Germany
have hailed Hague as a hero on
account of his efforts to curtail
free speech But even if there were
no direct propaganda of that sort
aimed at the life of things we hold
dear the echoes and the shadows of
Fascism would reach our shores
And our answer must be to aug-
ment and develop the liberties to
which America is pledged It will
not suffice simply to say that our
press is freer than that in other
lands We must strive to make it
still more free
We must root out anti-Semitism
vim when it manifests Itself In
small and subtle ways
We have no such censorship as
Germany knows but that Is too
modest a boast for comfort Once
at a d'nrer I heard a speaker assail
wrist he felt were limitations in our
radio practices A broadcaster who
followed him said that he thought
the criticisms were too severe
''After all" he remarked "In
America radio Is almost free"
That gave the critic an opening
"Take tne phrase 'land of the free'"
he suggested ''and transpose it into
'land of the almost free' How does
that sound? It won't do It isn't
good enough"
"If the fires of freedom and civil
liberties burn low In other lands
they must be made brighter in our
own"
We cannot preserve our liberties
by standing still Freedom cannot
be frozen like a football in the clos-
ing minutes of a game In order
to hold what we have we must go
forward Our founders were suffi-
cently practical to know that in
building for the future they must
dram dreams Our Declaration of
Independence was a brave dream
Part of it has come true Now is
the time to make it good to the
utmost limit of that vision
Test Your Knowledge
I 'What is copal?
2 In what war was the Battle
of Five Forks?
3 Name the commander of the
U S Asiatic fleet
4 Is a child born in China of
American parents a citizen of the
U S?
5 In which country is the city of
Linkoping?
6 What is lineal descent?
If a sentence ends with an
abbreviation is it necessary to use
two periods?
8 What was the first name of
the Hungarian composer Liszt?
9 What is an ophthalmoscope?
10 In which state is Oneida Lake?
Answers found on classified page
Sooner Poetry
TUESDAY JULY 5 1938
General Johnson
Says
Mexican
Policy
Failure
Thoughts-
GRANDAD'S PAL
There was a man I used to know
When I was but a lad
Who'd of'en come to our old home
To chat with my Grandad
Sometime they'd sit for hours and
hours
And talk of this and that
They'd chat about when they were
boys
And played with Bill and Pat
They'd talk about the swimming
hole
And how the boys threw mud
They'd chat about the picnic days
And 'bout their neighbor Bud
They'd laugh about their old school
days
of Nellie Grace and Pearl
And how they played beside the
rocks
Each claiming the same girl
Though that's been more than 30
years
When I was but a lad
When that kind man I used to know
Would that with my Orandad
CECIL BROWN
Fall's Okla
I
e
To give light to them that sit In
darkness and in the shadow of
death to guide our feet into the way
of peace—Luke 1:79
The preaching that comes from
the soul most works on the soul—
Ful ler
I
1
BETHANY BEACH Del July 5 j
Mexlcu hasn't done a thing about
paying for the foreign oil properties i 1
she seized She is selling oil on a I
barter basis to Germany and Italy
which is to say she is not getting I
much money for it—mostly mer-
chandise and machinery which thia
country used to sell to Mexico
'1
Many people seem to think that I)
some kind of offer to pay has been Il
made by President Cardenas and L
0 '
rejected My information is that
only the most tentative kind of an p
offer has been made to permit the 1
dispossessed companies to have 20
per cent of their own oil as and
when it is withdrawn from the
earth—a suggestion that can scarce-
ly be considered as payment
Loons Cut Of
THE OIL WAS taken because of
a refusal by the companies to adopt
fantastic labor conditions as to
wages hours and union manage-
ment of the properties They were
cynically impossible and since the
seizure no such idyllic terms have I
been given the workers Nowhere c
in the world have the dictator i
countries whether Communist or I
Fascist failed to make working con 4'
ditions very severe Labor is prac 1
tically conscripted unions are
broken up long hours and low
wages are the rule While Mexico
has not yet reached the dictator
stage of her leftward wing this
experience has been a disappoint-
ment to labor
Government simply hasn't got 1
any money to pay workers or for l
any other purpose A recent at-
tempt to float an internal loan was
almost a complete failure With the
1
wholesale seizure of private foreign '
preperty nobody outside her bor-
ders will either lend or Invest a 1 I
cent in Mexico
There Is a somewhat similar left- I
1st muvement in nearly all of the
other Latin-American countries
Legislation similar to that under
which Mexico seized these oil prop- L
eries is being proposed in more t -
than one Why shouldn't such 1
property be taken if the govern-
ment whose nationals suffer makes I
no complaint? 5
Test In Policy'
THAT IS A purely rhetorical :
question with an obvious answer
These are nearly all countries of Y
tremendous but undeveloped na-
tural resources They simply can- !
not progress without foreign trade
loans and investment — any more '
than this country could have de-
vexped without such assistance 1
Such seizure of properties without i
paying for them is a swift and cer 1
tam n way completely to dry up in- 1
ternational intercourse whether
conmercial or financial
The better organized and less d
desperate governments know this 1
The Mexican seizures can have
only one eventual effect—complete !!
collapse of the present economic
and political internal Mexican struc-
ture
If there is anything realistic I
about the good neighbor policy it
will lean across the back fence and !''
give Scnur Cardenas some friendly 4
advice No we are not going to I
send any ships or soldiers to save i
anybody's oily dollars but there are
plenty of other things we could and i
shGuld in good conscience do to f t
prevent a paralysis of economit re- -
lations Among the least of these ' 1
is to stop seeming by silence co-
vertly to encourage and approve 1
this red adventure as an item in a
counterpart of our own third New -
Deal '
Our ambassador to Mexico the
good Josephus Daniels is a loved
and lovable gentleman but he is
an ardent third New Dealer and
his advanced age is taking its toll
His public utterances have approved
the general course of Cardenas
Nothing that our State Department
has uttered has been more robust 1'
than a tap so gentle and tentative
that Mr Cardenas -probably con- I -
sidered it an encouraging slap on
the shoulder rather than a disap- 4
proving kick in the pants 1
His attitude or ours is no -service
to worlci peace and prosperity to
Mexico herself and certainly none 1
to this country It seems to be
inspired in part by the Administra-
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Hills, Lee. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1938, newspaper, July 5, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2014353/m1/4/?q=architectural+drawings: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.