The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 356, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 27, 1938 Page: 2 of 14
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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PAGE TWO THE OKLAHOMA NEWS TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 27 1938 1
Babies Share Fair Spotlight With Pulling Horses and Prize Cattle
BIO CROWDS DUE This Modent
FOR CITY'S OWN
DAY TOMORROW
4Er4‘"Pi-'
City Hall Capitol Courthouse
I g
Workers to Have Half- m
Holiday
The state Capitol county court-
house and City 'Hall will lock up
shop at noon tomorrow for Okla-
homa City 's big day at the State
Fair
With favorable weather In store
city residents are expected to swell
attendance figures well on their
way towards an all-time record of
298000 set in 1929
The Fairgrounds was compare
tively serene today after yester-
day's influx of school children who
boosted the ' day's fair-going total
to 84052
Baby Results Due
sables cattle sheep swine and
- poultry occupied the center of the
stage as fair attendance passed the
100000 mark for the first four days
First results in the baby judging
contest were to be posted today by
Mrs A J Raines superintendent
of the powder puff derby
Judging was to start early in the
junior pigs and junior dairy cat-
tle classes
Aberdeen Angus cattle sheep
goats Poland China swine and farm
products were on the program
starting at 9 a m with light-
weight draft horse pulling contests
scheduled for 10 a m Lambs were
to be judged at 1 p
Expect Big Crowds Tomorrow
Entertainment features the re-
mainder of the day included the
rodeo and show before the grand-
stand at 2 p m and the 'Belles of
Liberty" at 730 tonight
One of the fair's biggest days Is
expected tomorrow which has been
designated Oklahoma City Day and
'89ers Day
Employes of many firms and city
state and county workers will be
given half-holidays to attend the
fair Mayor Frank Martin has pro
claimed the day an official holiday
Special events programmed to-
morrow include automobile stunt
show to be put on by Flash Wil-
liams and his "death drivers' be-
fore the grandstand Crashing
speeding auto through a building
will be one of the features
Horse Show to Start
The annual Horse Shoir will start
at 7:30 p m tomorrow In the
pavilion and will continue through
Friday night
Oklahoma City school children's
day yesterday was a hectic affair
Queues stood most of the day before
ticket windows' for practically all
the "rides on the midway
Fairgrounds caretakers were over-
worked last night cleaning up debris
left by the thousands of children
who brought their own lunches to
eat on the grounds -
The "Belles of Liberty" played
last night to a second capacity
audience In the grandstand while
the auto races in the afternoon
drew a good-sized crowd although
riot as large as that drawn by the
rodeos
Ask WPA Road Aid
County commissioners today asked
the Works Progress Administration
for $115560 for aid in construction
of four miles of pavement on County
Highway 17 from Edmond to the
Guthrie cut-off Total cost of the
construction 'will be $169789 the
county providing $54220
City
IT0 20 today)
Deaths last 24 hoar I
' Deaths this month
Deaths this year 211
This date It year t U
County
(Inetuding City)
(To J a m today)
Deaths It 34 hours
Details this month 4
Dath this veal 46
This data last year 40
State co
(To 4 p in yesterday)
Deaths It 24 hours 8
Deaths this mnrth
Deaths this year —338 City Train
Thla date last year 484 Toll
Traffic Arrests
(To I a 171 today)
Feckless driving I
Ni driver's imense
Speeding 3
Punning Et f lin 4
Left turn Into alley
Imnroper turn
IRAFFIC FINES assessed yesterday $164
Fires
freoorted to tha Fire Der Cartrent In the
04-hour period ending at 7 S m todag1
710 a m—NW 27th-st and Western-
Iv grass no damage
OM a m--2O4 NW 26th-3t gratts no
damage
7028 S m—N Park-pl and Santa Pa-
sty grass no damage
1058 a nt--1000 block NW 21st-at gram
no damage
113a a m-1932 NW 18th-st eigaret In
bed $45 loss
7327 p m--2212 34th-at gram to I
damage
12:27 p M---figa East-dr Incinerator no
' damage
13:46 p m-214 SE 33nd-st grass no
damage
7:20 p nt--000 Second-st defective
flue no damage
1:36 p m--2106 NW 27th-at grass no !
damage i
513 p m--2519 N Walker-co barbecue
pit$35 loss
219 p m-1360 N Linwood-ay grass
no damage
3:55 p m--1400 block N Westernav
grass no damage
404 p m-712 NW 4lat-at grass no
damage
509 p m--813 NW 30th-st trash no
damage ' I
5:11 p: ro—NW 20th-st and Robinson
ay grass no damage
5:23 p m--500 NW 42nd-fit grass no
damage
5:21 p tn—Wiley Post Park grass no !
damage
a:40 p m--400 block N Central-av
gram no damage
- -
1121 p m-3300 block NW 14tb-st grass
no damage
7:42 p m-2804 NW ilth-st curtains
no damage i
10 05 p m—Stock pavilion state pair- I
grounds startril by lire-1
woilss no damage
It
- z
74
I
The original dilapidated Washington School will be torn down and
replaced by the new building sketched above by Architects Layton &
Forsyth if the $800000 school bond issue carries Friday A new 20-
room building is provided for by a $120540 appropriation in the
BARNETT MAY
BE TRIED SOON
Judge Arnold Expects to Set
Long Delayed Case on
October Docket
The long delayed trial of W J
Barnett former state b an king
commissioner charged with corrup-
tion In office appeared nearer to-
day as District Judge Ben Arnold
announced that he expects to set
the case on his October docket
The Barnett case has been In
the courts since April 1935 when
he was indicted by a grand jury i
The jury returned two indictments
both growing out of reorganization i
of the Farmers State Bank of I
Bethany
After twice cerrying to the U S
Supreme Court their fight to void'
the Indictments defense attorneys I
last spring filed demurrers asking I
dismissal of the charges when the
case was called for trial before
Judge Arnold
Judge Arnold had the case under
advisement all summer 1
Today be said he would set it
for trial as soon as County Attor-
ney Lewis Morris "hen cleared up
the School Board indictments and I
gotten the new grand Jury out of
the way"
Fair Program
TOFIAT
g:tai a open: JudginR Junior
pigs and Junior dairy cattle
9:00 a ta—Judging Aberdeen Angus
cattle sheep goats Poland
China FiViTIP farm product!
Dian S m—Draft horse pulling contest
100 p m—Judging lambs
tea p ni—State championship rodeo
before grandstand
it30 p m—"Belles of Liberty" musical
revue before grandstand
TOMORROW
Oklahoma City Day—Eighty ?liners Day
PIM a m—Ostes open
9:00 a m—Judging cattle aheep and
goats and swine draft horse
pulling contest judging
Howell corn and wheat
9:00 p m—Plash William1 and his
'Thrill Show" of auto
founts State championship
rodeo
p ni—Horse Show on pavilion
'Relies of Liberty" musical
revue before grandstand
OKLAHOMA CITY TODAY
Births 1
ROTS WERE BORN TO:
AIR AND M1313 J C MILLS 1n 8 !
Walnut-ay Sept 21 1938 at Polychnic
Hospital
MR AND 141391 CLARENCE WRIGHT I
Bethany Sept 28 19311 at St An- 1
thony's Hospital
MR ANT) MRS J H HAMMER 538 SW 1
241b-st Sept 281938 at St Anthony's I
Hospital
MR AND MRS GERALD MeGUREIT of 1
NW 84thiat and Olie-av Sept 26 1938 1
at University Hospital
G11118 WERE BORN TO:
MR AND MRS L N TOMLIN& 1811
NE 25th-st Sept 26 1938 at Polychnic
Hospital
MR AND MRS J 13 DOUGLAS JR
NW 28th-st Sept 28 1938 at at
Deaths
MR JOHN DOVE 82 of 1517 NW 26th-
at Sept 26
MR E E GIBRENS 87 of 905 N ?rancia-av
Sept 26
MR S GEORGIA AMOERSON 64 of 1115
W Grand-a Sept 36
Marriage Licenses
0
JACK HOUCK 21 and KATHERINE
LOVELL 22 both of Norman
LINWOOD HOUCK 25 and NONA
AHRENS 18 both of Norman
HENRY DONIHOO 37 and EARRIAL
WILLIAMS 36 both of Guthrie
'
ELBERT EUGENE LUTTRELL 24 and
EDNA ERTEL 23 both of Harrah !
LEONARD EARL HANLEY 23 and JUA-
NITA MAY ?HELPS 20 both of Los
Angeles Cal
JAMS ARMSTEAD BONNE 34 of 4
N Broadway and C MILLER 24 of
824 NW 41st-st rear 1
CHARLES HUGH SNYDER 17 of 410
NW Seventh-st and RUTH JONES IL
of 619 S Harvey-ay 1
1ACK RUNSTINE 25 nt Edmond and
NORMA DALE SCHMIDT 23 of 1644
NW 10th-8t
STEPHEN EDWARD KNOWLES 21 of
11120 NW Third-at and BETH LAHOMA
VVESCOTT 19 of 1301 NE 20th-st
FRANK FREDERICK CISPER JR 20 of
2715 NW Ilth-st and MARY KATHRYN'
KORDELISKI 18 of 2913 S Shartel-av
RORERT B BROWN 21 of Lawton and
EVELYN HERRING 12 of 618 S Has-
vey-av
GORDON KEITH HULL 21 of 1505 NW
30th-st and REBECCA MOGENE ROB-1
INSON of 1921 SW 131h-3t
ODA O CARTER 35 and LULA JONES
21 both of Hutchinson Has
')i vorces Granted
Nadyn from Anton Coot
Lee from Eleanor M Witcher
Beulah from Jake McKee
Wylie from Marie Pitchford
W H from Helen Louise Biankenship
School Will Replace Dilapidated Firetrap If You Vote for Bonds JOHN DOVE VINO
Mrs Hatfield Wife of
Kiwanian Dies in Canada
Husband Had Been Flyirg to Her Side Were
Active Supporters of Bethany Or-
phan Home
Mrs H G Hatfield wife of the president of Kiwanis International
died this morning in a Kingston Ont hospital where she had been a
patient more than a week
Mr Hatfield was en route north by plane when word of his wife's
death was received by friends here
Death was attributed to a hearts-
ailment i
In San Francisco with her hus-
band last June when he was elected
president of the Kiwanis Interna-
tional Mrs Hatfield insisted on
accompanying him on his arduous
travels despite ill health They left
Sept 16 for Canada and friends
said Mrs Hatfield entered the hos-
pital at Kingston soon after her
arrival
HadBeen Improved
Her condition was so improved
last week-end however that Mr
Hatfield decided on a brief business
trip home He received word of his
wife's turn for the worse last night
and left by plane for Chicago at
12:30 a m
Mr and Mrs Hatfield came to
Oklahoma City in 1910 soon after
their marriage She was the former
Lillyan Errion a native of Illinois
Two years later Mr Hatfield or-
ganized the Oklahoma Coffee Co
and remained in that business while
civic Ft ctivities absorbed more and
more of his time
'Father Mother to Many'
Mrs Hatfield sharing her bus-
band's enthusiasm for civic affairs
was active in child welfare work
Theo M Green past president of
the city Kiwanis Club wrote of
them in the Kiwanis magazine re-
cently: Not being fortunate enough to
have children of their own Glen
and Lillyan Hatfield have been fa-
ther and mother to probably more
children than any two people in
Oklahoma City
"For many years they have put
their hearts and souls into and
have been the guiding light of an
orphans' home near Bethany where
Fair Cooler
'—'" '" ''''''-'" "' '' "" I Amarillo P4 62
Anthony's Hospital ' Ardmore 96 fig
MR AND MRS HOWARD DAVIS Ponca 1 Boise 80 54
ity
C Sept 26 1938 at St Anthony's Boston 74 54
Hospital Brownsville 68 SA
MR AND MRS PRANK A TAROS- I ROW° 76 66
l
MEER 311 NW 26th-st Sept 27 igsc Charleston 80 MI
icsan
at St Anthony's Hospital Ch 82 62
Columbus a R4 82
MR AND MRS AMES JUSTIN NW Dana 06 70
Mithst and Portland-av Sept 26 1938 Denver An 54
RI University Hospital Des Moines PO 52
MR AND MRS RAY WILSON 1207 NW Detroit 86 82
30th-st Sept 27 19:111 at Wesley lios- Elk City PR 84
total El Paso 90 56
' Pt Smith 96 66
- Gslveston 62 72
Houston Mt fill
leaths Indianapolis 64 64
Jacksonville 84 72
MR JOHN DOVE 82 of 1517 NW 26th- Kansas City 04 62
RI Sept 26 Knoxville 811 56
MR E E GIBBERS 87 of 905 N ?ran Little Rock PO 64
els-av Sept 26 Los Angeles 02 60
I
Oklahoma rite and
Vicinity: Generally
fair today and to-
morroa: anmewhat
cooler tonight
Oklahoma: General-
ly fair today and
tomorrow Cooler
tonight and in
southweat portions
tomorrow
NATIONAL WEATOES
First figures highest temperatures: sec
end Izsures lowest temperature&
Louisville R4
Lubbock 92
McAlester Ann
Memphis 86
Miami
Mple-Eit Pi 82
Montgomery en
NPW Orleans Re
New York 72
Okla City 94
Omaha RR
Phoenix —108
Ponca City 98
Portland 92
OKLAHOMA CITY WEATHER DATA:
11ohest Sept 27 last year IS
LOPAI Sept 27 last year
Hiahest Sept 27 last 47 years 94 Ma
Loweat Sept 27 It 47 years 42 1908
RAINFALL:
Total for 24 hours end 8'30 Monday 0 MI
Total so far this month 123
Total so far this year 2914
Normal this month in date 218
Normal this year to date 2463
Events Today
Stale Pair Fair Park aii day
Folk Dancing Y W C A 8:30 p m
t
$1454545 School Board-PWA program and will be connected with a
comparatively new addition More than 1000 students attend Wash-
ington School 400 on half-day sessions since the oldest part of the
present structure was condemned by the state fire marshal last spring
Willi H G liatriPld
almost 100' children have come to
know and love them"
The Hatfield residence is at 500
NW 41st-st Mrs W W Banks a
sister of Mrs Hatfield was under
the care of a nurse there today
Mrs Hatfield also is survived by a
brother H G Errion of Peoria
Funeral services are expected to
be held here Arrangements have
not yet been made
E E Gibbons
Services for E E Gibbens early
day Oklahoma lawyer will be con-
ducted at 2 p m tomorrow at the
Perrine Funeral Home Death oc-
curred yesterday at his home 905
N Francis-av
Mr Gibbens came to Oklahoma in
1893 with opening of the Cherokee
Strip and lived at Perry for many
years He was 87 years old
Death was attributed to effect of
a fall which he suffered at his home
several weeks ago a
Survivors include two sons M
Gibbens and E E Gibbens
both Oklahoma City attorneys his
wife and a daughter Mrs Hortense
Melkle of Tedford Ia
Burial will be at Perry '
Mrs C F Faris -
Mrs C F Faris of 721 NE 151h
65401 Mrs C F Faris of 721 NE 15th-
:91: st was to be buried in Memorial
7s Park Cemetery today following
46
64 services at the Hahn Funeral Home
75 I Mrs Faris 33 years old died Sun-
" day after a three-month Illness
:ie lEastern Star services were to follow
the sermon by the Rev George
St Loon lie 70 i
Sail Lake ut 116 52
Davis of Chickaxha
S Tranolao0 00 58 Survivors include the husband
Sltntit Fe 711 he
sattle 70 he 1 the mother Mrs Nancy Orr of Ed-
t
Tulsa n4 ha mond and a brother James Orr of
Washington
Waynokik MI 70 I
74- 6--n j Oklahoma City
98 1 Waynok8 188 761
64 I Wichita 04 68
68 I Wichita Pls 98 70 1 r uler Heads Glass Union
By United Press
CINCINNATI Sept 27—Paul W
Fuller Cincinnati regional director
of the Committee for Industrial Or-
ganization has been reappointed
provisional president of the Feder-
ation of Flat Glass Workers it was
learned today
Stolen Car Burned
it t au! eau ranr rare an nay Highway' patrolmen today found!:
Folk Dancing Y W C A 8:30 p m I an automobile stolen from James
Perm Progress dinner Chamber of !McArthur of 3109 S Phillips-ay
Commerce 8:38 p m
'
Neighborhooel Clubs St Mark's Center I stripped and burned at a spot 10
1 p m miles east of the city on SE 29th-at !
Hootnannie Club Hotel Black 8 a al Mr: McArthur reported the car'
Master Barbers Hotel Black 8 P m 1 stolen Sept 15
I
Rotary Club luncheon Hotel Biltmore
Pi Beta Phi meeting Hotel Biltmore
1 p m
Junior division luncheon Chamber of - - — —I
Commerce rP10711118P
Alpha Chi Nu Chamber of Commerce Postmen
8 p m
Oklahoma 1nventer's Club Chamber of Policomo
Commerce a p m Firma
And Other
Events Tomorrow
1 Stationers luncheon Hotel Black CA AS BROS
Crown Drug Co Hotel Biltmore 2:30 I 1 IN A N S i
P In I
Phi Beta Pi Hotel Billmore I p in oaran sto i
1
Beal Estate Board Chamber of Corn
G -
merce 12:15 a In a srat so
Oklahoma Independents Chamber of 0
Commerce 12I5 p in 1411FORIMIS
Certified Public Accountants Chamber
of Commerce 12:14 p in
Aviation Committee of Chamber of 'Corn-
- 9 o a a m n
Chamber of Commerce 12:15 p m -
oil Scouts Chamber of Commerce 4 p in'
CITY IS DENIED
VENEREAL AID
State Health Department Re-
fuses to Grant Share of
Federal Funds
-
A renewed demand that the state
Health Department furnish the city
with a portion of the federal funds
given the state fcrc venereal disease
clinical work was made today by
City Manager W A Quinn
The state was given $60000 by
the Federal Government for vene-
real disease work but so far has
given the city nothing and has indi-
cated that no portion of this fund
will be given in the future Mr
Quinn said
He criticized Dr Charles M
Pearce state health director for
"keeping all the federal money for
his OWT1 department when the city
deserves a share and could put it to
excellent use"
Mr Quinn said that Dr Walter
H Miles city health director had
sought an allocation of the federal
funds only to be turned down by
Dr Pearce
"The city is the only municipality
in the state to my knowledge that
has a venereal disease clinic" Mr
Quinn said
''We spend about $15000 a year
on the clinic If anyone deserves
an allocation of the federal funds
we do But Dr Pearce insists on
spending the money throughout the
state and our own practical pro-
gram is ignored It isn't fair"
Dr Pearce could not be reached
for comment but city physicians
said he Justified spending the
money in state-wide clinical work
on the grounds that the money
could be put to better use that
YOUTHS OF ATTACK
Dne Norman Youth Out of
:- k
'41°" :: :: 40001g000rtrer
::'‘----iii:-
POSTAL EMPLOYE'S
WIFE WINS DIVORCE
Mrs Myrtle RosebrOugli of 1604
NW 44th-st won' an uncontested
divorce today from her husband
Harold D Rosebrough a postal em-
ploye The hearing in the court of Dis-
trict Judge George H Giddings
ended with allotment of $3750 a
month alimony for 18 months and
$3750 a month support money for
a 5-year-old son Harold Jr until
be is 21 years old Mrs Rosebrough
was also given the home and
furnishings The grounds for di-
vorce were "extreme -cruelty"
RAY HAMILTON GETS
25-YEAR SENTENCE
Texas Desperado Faces Trial
In U S Court Next
By United Prem
DALLAS Tex Sept 27—The
state of Texas agreed today to re-
lease Floyd Hamilton to the Fed-
eral Government for trial under a
bank robbery indictment although
he was sentenced late yesterday to
25 years in the state penitentiary at
Huntsville for robbery with fire-
arms Authorities said he will be held
in jail here probably several weeks
before federal agents transfer him
to Texarkana Ark to stand trial
in the robbery of the Bradley Ark
Bank
District Attorney 'Andrew Patton
said today he is ready to trY Ted
Walters Hamilton's companion in a
three-months tout of holdups and
robberies through the Southwest
and Midwest on a similar state
robbery charge
I When the jury returned its ver-
way I diet last night Hamilton turned to
Judge Grover 4kdams and said:
GIRL ACCUSES THREE can'Juddogoe that may be more than I
Hamilton was convicted in the
same courtroom in which the death
sentence was meted several years
ago to his- brother Raymond a
member of the notorious Clyde Barrow-Bonnie
Parker gang of desper-
Granite on Parole
tluuu°
171LAGUARDIA MASSES
Three Norman youths one 17
and two 20 years old were held
the city Jail today after a 16-yearold
city schoolgirl told officers they
attacked her last night
One of the boys it was learned
was paroled on Aug 18 1937 from
Granite reformatory where he was
sent in March 1937 for an armed
robbery He has a criminal record
that includes half a dozen or more
arrests officers said The parole
was granted when two Norman
merchants offered the youth a Job
Of the 'other two boys one was
a student last year at Norman High
School
The assault occurred the 'girl
said in an auto on a road leading
off of SE 29th-st
According to the girl sh e was
with her sister and her sisters es-
cort a city youth in a beer tavern
on E Reno-av last night Her sis-
ter and the escort left her for a
few moments and as she sat alone
the three boys one of whom she
had met before came in
She said she refused to go with
them at first but they were in-
sistent and finally she agreed to
"go for a ride" They drove to the
southeast part of the city she said
and to the side road There she
said all three attacked her They
put her out of their car near the
beer parlor she told officers The
officers arrested the youths
Actress Due to Be Mayor
x1'U e
United Prx
HOLLYWOOD Sept 27—Glenda
Farrell blond screen star accepted
the nomination today for mayor of
North Hollywood She is a favorite
to win the election Oct 13 and be-
come the first film actress mayor
The only duties consist of presid-
ing at banquets
Cracked stalls and general deterioration have made the old building a
fire hazard with poor sanitary facilities and crowded halls and rooms
necessitating its closing last 1 tine Every child who attends the achool
has a stake In the bond election -
TRUCKS FOR FOOD
-
By 'United Press -
NEW YORK Sept 27—Mayor F
H La Guardia massed 800 city
trucks today as evidence of his in-
tention to move perishable food
products and other merchandise
unless striking truckmen and em-
ployers reach an early agreement
The mayor said be had formed a
citizens committee to designate ma-
terials to be moved first and that
he expects to have more than 1200
trucks moving tonight if the strike
is not ended Each truck he said
would be manned by a city-employed
driver with one or more
striking drivers as helpers
Neither side had accepted the
mayor's proposed settlement when
the conferees met at City Hall in
a renewal of yesterday's day-long
sessions Members of the Merchant
Truckmen's Bureau said they were
individually determined to resist
higher wages or shorter hours
Errol Flynn Is Better
13v Umted Presa
By UM Ira rrrsm
HOLLYWOOD Sept 27 — Errol
Flynn the screen's Robin Hood
showed improvement today from FM
infillenni and malaria attack that
for a time sent his temperature
to 104 Flynn's studio said he would
be back on the film sets within a
few days
cures
MALARIA
in '2 day end TPtiove
COLDS
— — firyt day
LIQUM TARLETY
SALVE NOSE DROPHeadache 30 min
Try Rub-lity-Tiem—Worlit's Beat Liniment
sito6
toll' otos
(ISM t
130511" ‘a it
floot cot Ihe
Be9
Se"'
Let us stand
YOUR Loss!
With Burglary Insurance
Phone'2-1138
926 First Nat'l Bank Bldg
&Sad eilt7
arill
PLAN BUILDING
SHOW FOR CITY
150 Firms to Sponsor Per-
manent Construction
Materials Exhibition
Oklahoma City is soon to have a
permanent construction e xh ib I t:
sponsored by 150 business firms1
where prospective builders may see
examples of the work they pay for
and a specimen of the hidden ma-
terialA behind the walls of homes
A new organization the Construe-
tion Industries League will sponsor
the exhibit It is headed by R W
Robberson president Roy Patton
first vice-president Lee Sorey sec-
ond vice-president Ray E Bssore
secretaryand AW Hauck treas-
urer To Have 73 Exhibits
Location Of the league headquar-
ters which will house the 73 con-
struction exhibits and the organiza-
tions offices and headquarters will
be announced soon Joe T William-
son assistant secretary said
"When a client wants to know 1
something about the building he in-
tends to construct his architect can
take him to this permanent exhibit
show bim every step of the building
the type of material to be used Ond
other details which ordinarily the
client does not know" Mr William-
son said '
Meeting Scheduled Thursday
The new league will hold its first
official function at - 630
Thursday on the' Roof Gatelet1 df
the Skirvin Hotel when the aims
and plans of the organization will
be discussed by Roy Roller WIT-
tary of the Construction League of
Tulsa
The leagues board of governors
includes Bert Bissell Harry Bolton
George P Brown: Harry Cook Jack
Dunning Ancel Earp W L' Eby W
T Flynn George A Gaddis A G
Hoge Oran Huston Albert E Maidt
Sr Charlie Makins Joe Fteeme Joe
Rider Orville Savage S L Small-
wood T R Steele P W Tibbs
Harry Wright Mrs Basore:' Mr
Hauck Mr Patton Mrs Robber-
son and Mr Sorey
BLIND MAN STABBED
IN RIGHT SHOULDER
Lee Steel 56-year-o1d blind man
was in Oklahoma City General
Hospital today as a result of a flesh
wound he suffered in the right
shoulder in an altercation with a
fellow roomer at 1191 W Reno-av
where both men live
The roomer told officers the
blind man bumped into him in the
hall F1 n d started fighting In the
melee police ssaid Mr Steel was
stabbed
IN WAGON DIES
1
Pioneer Staked Claim Near
Edmond and Lived There
Proclamation
'30 Yeari
"John Dove who with his wife and
six children made the run into
Oklahoma in 1889 died at 9:45 p tn
yesterday at the home of his daugh-
ter Mrs Jake Slater of 1517 NW
26t h-st
He was 82 ' -
Coming to Oklahoma from
Beatrice Neb in a covered wagon
Mr Dove staked a homestead six
miles east of 'Edmond and lived
there for 30 years s
A seventh child was born on the
farm and today his grandchildren
number 20 and his great-grandchildren
29
All but the three of them live in
Oklahoma
Mr Dove retired 19 years ago and
has lived in Oklahoma City since
John Dove
He had been since he suffere
a paralysis stroke' Sept 17
He will be burled in the Myers
Cemetery near his farm at Edmond
following services at 10 p m today
In Hahn's Funeral Home
Besides Mrs Slater Mr Dove is
survived by a son Jesse Dove of
Guthrie and three other daughters
Mrs Logan Kearby 2922 NW 13th-
st Mrs J T McCoy 1824 NW 39th-
st and Mrs Ward Bean of Ed-
mond
Jess Dean
Jess Dean of 713 SE 10th-st died
today of an infection resulting from
a spider bite last Thursday Dr
A R Jackson bis physician re-
ported Mr Dean 32 taken to Samaritan
Hospital Friday when he became
He told Dr Jackson that he
brushed the spider off his arm after
it had bitten him and did not be-
lieve that it was a slack Widow
He died at 8:05 a m
Mrs Georgia Anderson'
A heart ailment brought sudden
death to Mrs Georgia 'Anderson
63-rear-o1d city resident yesterday
She died at her home 1115 W'
Grand-av
Funeral services will be conducted
at ig a m tomorrow at the Pente-
costal Holiness Church Burial will
be in Fairlawn Cemetery under di-
rection of the Hunter Funeral
Home Mrs Anderson a resident
of the city since 1913 is survived by
her husband
Airy Honeymoon
By United Pres! -
MONTREAL Sept 27--Mr Rd
Mrs Newton H Peyton had a "fly-
ing honeymoon"
'Peyton a qualified amateur pilot
came here in his own airplane from
Duluth Minn to claim his bride l
Shortly after the wedding the new-
lyweds Jumped into the plane et
Cartierville airport and started on
their honeymoon
'ublic
By His Honor Frank Martin
Know ye that 1 Frank Martin
Mayor of the City of -Oklahoma City
do hereby proclaim a half-holiday for
Wednesday the 28th day of Septem-
ber 1938 commencing at 1 o'clock
and the same is and shall be ob-
servecl as a
Half Holiday
For:Business-
IN ORDER To ENABLE ALL CITI-
ZENS TO ATTEND THESTATE -
'FAIR-AND EXPOSITION
And all good citizens are request-
ed to'observe the half holiday bysus-
pending business and attending the
State Fair and Exposition
Give'n- under my hand this 26th
day of July 16k D 1938
- -
2 Frank Martin Mayor
N
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the Myers
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p m today
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daughters
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an of Ed-
10th-st died
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ursday Dr
ysictan re
Samaritan
he became
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did not be-
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derson
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'Anderson
yesterday
e 1115 W
e conducted
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oon
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Hills, Lee. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 32, No. 356, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 27, 1938, newspaper, September 27, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2014496/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.