The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 72, Ed. 1 Friday, December 16, 1938 Page: 13 of 24
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2 LOAN FIRMS
FACE COURT
TOMORROW
Charged With Violating
City Licensing
Ordinance
The Junior Ear Associa-
tion's drive against usurious
money lenders moved today
towards its first major legal
)11 test
Warrant Officer C O Willis
served notice on officials of two city
loan companies to appear in Police
Court tomorrow morning for hear-
ing on charges filed by the young
la wyers
The charges allege technical vio-
lations of the city's ordinance regu-
lating small loans Conviction would
subject the defendant to a possible
$20 fine
'Opening Gun'
The complaints were against the
Dixie Finance Co and the Liberty
Finance Co
Lonnie Jones Negro of 425 NE
Fourth-at claimed that the Dixie
Finance Co did not supply re-
ceipts for payments on a 11560
note provided by the ordinance
Clude Edwards of 527 SW
Fourth-st alleged that the Libert
Finance Co failed to fill in all
blank Wages Qn a $50 note and
salary assignment which is made
mandatory by the ordinance
Joe T Martin Jr representing
the junior bar mum described the
court action as "the opening gun"
In the young lawyers drive against
usurious money lenders -
t Promises Police Aid
City Councilman Leonard Dick-
erson pledged the support of the
city administration to the drive at
a meeting of the Central Trades
and Labor Council last night -
He said he did not believe the
city had the right to audit the
books of loan c om p an I e s but
promised full police assistance 1
the campaign against usury
Victor Purdy former secretary of
the state Federation of 'Labor said
the federation for many years had
sought to secure passage of legis-
lative bills to refiulale the small
loan business and to "put teeth"
in the law restricting interest in
such transactions to not more than
10 per cent t
"But every time we were getting
any place the loan companies
would raise a slush fund and beat
Us" he said - -
SOVIET SURVEYS
METEORITE CRATER
By United Press
MOSCOW Dec 15 --- A photo-
graph of the place where the
famous Tunguska meteorite the
largest that ever hit the earth fell
on June 30 1938 has been made by
I Sotriet air expedition
Although at the time of its de-
cent a pillar of flame was visible
over parts of Siberia and the thun-
der of the impact was heard hun-
dreds of miles away all efforts to
find the mass were fruitless
On June 26 of this year' how-
ever an expedition left for the
Jungle and located the meteorite in
the area of the Podkamennaya
Tunguska River
TVA Has Deficit
ly United Press
WASHINGTON Dec 16—A pre-
liminary draft on the Tennessee
Valley Authority's annual report to-
day disclosed that power operations
of the agency registered a net oper-
ating deficit of 6310171 during the
last fiscal year
The report was placed in the rec-
ord of a Joint congressional com-
mittee investigating TVA by E L
Kohler TVA controller
r DAYS LEFT
I D TO SAVE
I
for 1
1 Highway l Safety' IIVIU11110 IV
I
mnNn Ig
Huge - Map Helps State Drive 'Jo 11 g ) THUP
ir!'7"'''''''''' ' '''''''''''''!:''''''r''117'':'?::777—: ::'':''':'''::'''''':''':Y''''7'''Ill''7'7!!1:1:''glg':::'111::'4:'s:''''' :::' :?:: -p ::A :: ::::
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: yell I :: f tr-- 's
AA AAOOEE
Oxygen Tent
Used to Save
Life of Calf
By United Piens
DENVER Dec 18 "blue-
blood' of c at tied° m—Jaysee
Bracelet Ormsby Spofford—rallied
today from double pneumonia
with her head in an oxygen tent
'Jaysee a 35 - day- old Holstein
heifer worth approximately $300
will survive as the first member
of the animal kingdom on record
to receive oxygen treatment vet-
erinarians said
Daughter of a champion Hol-
stein milk producer Leedora Tri-
une Nancy Pontiac and an aristo-
cratic' bull Carnation Walker
Spofford King Jaysee is a valued
member of the Jewish Consump-
ives Relief Society Sanatorium
prize herd When she became
veterinarians bon'owed a regula-
tion oxygen tent tied Jaysee's feet
to keep her quiet and placed her
head under the flaps
The heifer's condition' quickly
improved they reported
Warn of Storm
By United Press
WASHINGTON Dec 16— The
weather bureau in an 11 a m ad
visory warned today that a dis
turbance now over the Bahamas
will cause strong northeast winds
along the Middle Atlantic Coast
-----—
gasDECEMBERcm
The Oklahoma NeCv's One Payment
One Receipt
ANNUAL BARGAIN
eskr-rrn -$Q50
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To Subscribers
Home Delivered—By Carrier Boy 11
21
Cut Out Om Coupon
IMndn Mg ED 0
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Moil Your Order with Remittance di-
rect to The News or hand it to your
Oklahoma News Carrier
Attached you will find my remittance of $950 which I un-
derstand pays for The Oklahoma News Daily & Sunday
for One Full Year—by carrier delivery to my address in-
dicated here
Name
ss
Amt Remitted P Apt f
Make all checks payable to The Oklahoma News
z This offer applies to carrier home-delivery subscribers only
f The News also has an annual bargain offer for mail sub
scribers
PER YEAR
Make checks pay-
'able to The Okla-
homa News'
— An accident is reported and another spot takes its place on this
6::041-:4'hOt4A-N0s
map said to be the largest of its kind in existence at state Safety
Department headquarters- A careful study of highways where acci-
dents occur most frequently is made and steps are taken to eliminate
the responsible factors In the photo Ann Sandefur 409 NW Ilth-st
is placing a pin denoting an accident while Richard Burton (standing)
who painted the map and Joe C Love assistant commissioner look on
Pins Facilitate Study
of Accident 'Factors
By WALT DENNIS
' When the National Safety Council suggested a year ago that the
Oklahoma Department of Public Safety keep a traffic "spot" map en-
gineers got busy and as a result the state now has the largest map of
its kind in the world according to the Council
Measuring 10 by 20 feet the map is used by the highway patrol to
record geographically a compre-s—
hensive picture of the general traf-
fic accident situation in Oklahoma ELLIOTT TO STAY
Assistant Commissioner Joe Love'
-
says
Pins—square triangular and OUT OF POLITICS
sound—are used to spot the map
and details are supplied by reports
submitted to the department daily By United Press
from 01 -parts of the state BIG SPRING Tex Dec It—
' Crosses Mark Deaths s Elliott Roosevelt second son of the
Square pins represent colliMon in-
jury accidents round non-collision
and triangular pedestrian injury
For every fatal accident a pin with
a white cross in it is "spotted"
Hazardous locations indicated by
the map over a period of time are
studied in detail by the engineers
who refer to the accident records
and then visit the scene
If any particular place shows a
group of accidents immediate study
is ordered and the engineers deter-
mine what physical features such as
trees billboards signs road align-
ment or other factors may be caus-
ing the accidents
' Watch Outcome persons who paid taxes he got such
a confusion of figures that he
Often the highway itself is not
finally
properly marked and drivers there-
decided only two persons in
lore are not warned what to expect
the country paid—"my old man !
It is then possible through this map and myself"
and what it shows to give proper "And he goes fishing while I'm:
tired of working" 11 o o s e v e 1 ti
engineering treatment and insure
adequate enforcement to stop acci- laughed I!
dents - --
After a location has been checked s PEAK 'NG 01
and engipeering treatment corn-
pleted a green flag'is placed on the
map with the number of accidents t ' q '
!prior to the treatment marked on c
$)
' the flag
This location is then watched to 4-IE 'TAXES
see whether improvement has re- Al'4 140 UR'S
duced or eliminated accidents E XERC ISE
Fatal accidents are spotted daily i EV E RV DAY
!through the reports received from
I newspapers the Oklahoma Highway
'Patrol and local police offices In- JD
1 jury accidents are two to three
s -
weeks behind now because of the! liq
time required to handle them Dick N '
i Burton assistant traffic engineer ‘
I Mid 1611 Al
i Keep Yearly Record ‘ alPTC- —11"'"' k
:I At the end of each year the map s tit ‘ S
I ‘
t 1S
Is photographed by counties and a ‘ ‘ s N
! record is kept so that comparisons s
N st4' ‘ - ":
may be made annually t '' -s --- 14E AVOIDS t
A: i'tk: L
The map was painted by Mr Bur-1 ' DRArrS AND
ton after the state was laid out in 1 ' ::'' WEARS RS
'
I pencil on the base All cities towns 1 "41-it
S s' ilq ''
!federal and state highways princi-I ‘‘ RUBS ERS
404sc!!
pal rivers and state patrol head-1
quarters and radio stations are de- "s OP' Ike:117:4 - s:
:lineated
I Highways ' were painted in differ-1 —Z's i"t
ent colors to show types of surfacI ' Vft
1" 'Ai ing--red for concrete or brick greenl
for asphalt or oil-treated gravel BUT' W44E N I-I ' '1:1
orange for untreated gravel and
brown for dirt roads ' DRIVES 'HE P14!S CI
Count) boundaries are painted
' black as are all city and town! A STUNT Ltvct
names County names are a dull'
gray rivers a light blue the area : II-1 I S
surrounding the state a light yel-
low The state background is white
The maple maintained by the ac- i :!1'' : ! - I
eident retord department of the De-
oartment of Public Safety under os
supervision of Virden A Rittgers
director of Traffic Control r and d)
ReguIation
OKLAHOMAcITY FRIDAY DECEMIIER 16 193-8
By United Press
BIG SPRINO Tex Dec It--
Elliott Roosevelt second son of the
President Inferred today that the
only interest he would ever have in
polities would be in its relation to
business'
"There la no business but what
you have to go to Washington to
find out how to run" he told the
annual Big Spring Chamber of
Commerce meeting
Now that my brother Jimmy has
entered the movie industry thst
makes two Roosevelts who are not'
in politics" said Roosevelt who is
head of a Texas radio network
Recalling a recent trip to Wash-1
ington in which he sought from
Government bureaus the number of 1
persons who paid taxes he got such
a confusion of figures that he
finally decided only two persons in
the country paid—"my old man
and myself"
And he goes fishing while I'm
tired of working" Roosevelt
laughed
SPEAKING Of smrry
'7:)(k -
'TAKES (((44:)
AN Houres
EXERCISE vc
EVERY DAY
0
I s
14E moms
DRAM AND lit:
WEARS 415
RUBS ERS
4
TUN' SLAYING
TERM UPHELD
Appeals Court Affirms Seven
Year Sentence in Beat
log Death
I The state Criminal Court of Ap-
thelpeals today upheld the jury in
en—District Judge Sam Hooker's court
of
which found Roy Hodges guilty of
to first degree manslaughter in the
---death of Jasper B McAfee and
sentenced him to seven years' im-
prisonment 10 The evidence di-closed that on
Sept 9 1936 in a Capitol Hill beer
'parlor Mr McAfee a 60-year-old
man was thrown from a bench by
Hodges and struck in the face al-
the' though "there was no action on
the part of Mr McAfee which
bneishowed any aggression on his part"
in Mr McAfee struck a post when he
to!fell and died of a broken neck trial
'records showed
hat I "There's nothing in the evidence
I
to to show that Hodges intended to
kill McAfee" the high court said
the 1"Hodges did not know McAfee and
of
there was no cause to strike him
it seemed to be the defendant's idea
Ig1sI of having fun" the opinion con
tinued "and especially when he
(Hodges) was evidently under the
influence of liquor
But the law does not sanction
fun of this character for it says
a person is legally responsible for
the -natural and necessary conse-
quences of his own unlawful acts"
In 'another opinion the Appellate
Court affirmed an Alfalfa County
District Court conviction of George
Duncan on charges of driving while
drunk at Cherokee He was given
six months in prison
AND READS TI4E LATEs-r
BOOKS ON i4EALTH
CQC OD'
CIJC 'coo!
:14
-!'
4
stIO
fl IA
Ifiationat Safety Council
Mother Asks Freedom
For Death - Driver
Given Life Term
(Editorial Page 4)
P Mrs Mary D Williams of
Fittstown today asked the
state Clemency Board to pa-
: role her son from McAlester
pion to "prove to hundreds
t of thousand& Of people that this
:j is still a land of equality"
Her son John T Williams two
years ago was sentenced to life
prisonment for the Oklahoma 'City
auto crash death of Mrs Myrtle
Lambeth
The 71-year-old mother renewed
5 her plea when she learned that
A L Thurmond Jr was given a
90-day reprieve by Acting Governor
James E Berry yesterday Young
Thurmond was to have gone to Mc-
' Alester Jan 2 to serve tWo years
z for the hit-and-run crash death of
M K Beam more than five years
ago
Mrs Williams recently wrote
the clemency board asking a pa-
role for her son citing the
Thurmond case
"Mr 'rhurmond's son" she wrote
the board "had almost the same
kind of case and only received four
years to start with had it repealed
received two years and is still a free
man
'Can't there be some ex-
planation for the difference
My son was given life and was
taken to McAlester right away
It has made hundreds of thou-
sands of people take notice of
the unfairness of the two
cases"
The temporary disposition of the
Thurmond case checking final ac-
tion to Governor-elect Leon C
Phillips was opposed by Clemency
Attorney Fred Cunningham who
also vainly opposed a six-month
leave of absence for Phil Kennamen
Mr Cunningham refused to com-
ment on the possibility of clemency
in the Williams case
Williams was tried convicted
given a life sentence and taken to
McAlester prison within four
months Young Thurmond's case
started its tortuous grind through
the courts three years before Wil-
liams struck and killed Mrs Lam
oppose any efforts to parole Kenna-
mer and Thurmond 'until the day
I go out of office"
Irked by executive clemency In
"They do not deserve more
consideration than other young
men
I "Why? In the first place they
have both had every advantage in
the world all through their lives
They have had everything to pre-
vent them from going wrong
"They had every courtroom ad-
vantage in retaining the best attor-
neys Then they had every advan-
tage in appeals to higher courts
'Somebody Else's Turn'
'With all of these advantages I
believe that the scales of Justice
should not be further tipped to
their advantage in clemency mat-
ters "I am told they are good boys
and have reformed
"We have a house full of good
boys willing to reform at McAlester
and Granite
"I'll wager that if half the young
men at Granite reformatory had
such advantages in their youth
they would never have got into
trouble"
The retiring clemency attor-
ney said however that the
eventual decisions concerning
the freedom of young Kenna-
mer and young Thurmond will
not concern him
"They are the problems of the
new administration" he said "I
have stood by what I thought
was right It will be somebody
else's turn to figure it out after
January"
4 SENTENCED FOR
KIDNAPING OFFICER
By United Press
LEBANON O Dec 16—Two men
-nd two women who pleaded guilty
) charges of kidnaping State High--”ay
Patrolman Parker W Powell on
'Pc 8 were sentenced today to five
ro 30 years imprisonment on the
'cidnaping charge and to 10 to 25
years on an armed robbery charge
Sento' Ice was passed by Judge
Charles B Dechant in Common
Pleas Court upon Coy Russell 29
'Houston Tex: David L Cross 29
Namilton Pa: Marie Day 25 alias
1 Matfield Ashland Ky and Naomi
' Hayes 25 Steel Mo
Judge Dechant ruled that the
I men's sentences must be served con
-ecutively but that the women's
'entences might be served concur-
cmtly Corpl Powell was abducted when
)e questioned the four after an auto
)11ision in which their car figured
'e was released a 'short time later I
inharmed All four of his kid-wers
were captured within a few
News-Acme Telephoto
Mrs Nona McAdoo Taylor
(above) daughter of former
United States Senator William
Gibbs McAdoo of California has
established residence in Reno and
expects to file suit to divorce her
third husband Francis Taylor of
New York City
STATE BANDIT
I
loPPose any eitorLa tu palule iciiiiii-'rioug Wilbur Underhill gang is!
I mer and Thurmond 'until the day scheduled to die in the lethal gas
11 go out of office" chamber of San Quentin prison 1
1 Irked by executive clemency in His death in an experiment by!
the two cases Mr Cunningham said
which California authorities hope to:
they are the only cases in which he decide whether gas or hanging is a
1 has not eoncurred with executive
more humane" form of capital
1 action !punishment will further thin the
"I look at the Kennamer and ranks of the desperadoes who over-
Thurmond cases" he said t e
"-11 - ran Oklahoma and Kansas for
same way I would look on the eases
years with bank robberies holdups'
of any two other young men of various sorts and daring prison
1 I breaks
By United PrPsn
Corpl Powell was abducted when LITTLE ROCK Ark Dec 16—
n- questioned the four after an auto The land utilization division of the
)11ision in which their car figured soil conservation program will be
'e was released a 'short time laterl transferred from Little Rock to the
inharmed All four of his kid- regional office at Port Worth it
–ipers were captured within a few was announced today
About 100 employes of the local
Russell and Cross admitted bank office were affected by the transfer
ups and robberies in Ohio The Fort Worth office directs ac-
"nsylvania Oklahoma and other tivities in Ti"x!- O'Inhoma Ar-
i tate& ‘ ikansas Louisiana and Mississippi
SPORTS-OIL NEWS
PAGE THIRTEEN
DICE PLAYER
GETS 25 YEARS
FOR SLAYING
Youth Emotionless as Judge Giddings Delivers
Lecture on Crime and Assesses Long Sen
tence Appeal Is Planned
The rigid formality of justice became a man-to-man
affair today as District Judge George H Giddings sentencad
a 22-year-old youth to 25 years in the state penitentiary for
manslaughter
James Fletcher Wag convicted by a jury earlier this
week of whipping out a knife and cutting the throat of
Charles Floyd Clark 32 of Goldsmith Tex in a dice game
at the Silver Dollar Night Club Nov 7 He Waa led into
-court in a striped prison suit this
SEEKS DIVORCE morning
lie placed his hands on the
judge's bench and rested the weight
of his body on them in the man-
ner of a schoolboy conversing with
544P his tearier
You re Going to Pay'
- Judge Giddings leaned on his
r bows and looked straight into the
youth's face
To DIE TODAY
"James" he said "you ati
here for sentencing You have
been tried by a Jury and found
guilty of the crime of first
degree manslaughter The pun
ishment waa left to me
"It's always hard for a Judge to
send a man to the penitentiary
particularly a young man But rm
not going to lecture you You're
going to pay the penalty"
Then Judge Giddings pointed out
that Pletcher might have been sent
to the penitentiary for life under
the conviction
Listens Calm19
'But too great a sentence is often
worse than too light a sentence"
he continued "Crimes of violence
of this kind are not always indica-
tive of a criminal nature But there
is very little excuse for this crime
you have committed
"James you're a young man
I don't want to give you such
a long sentence that when you
come out you will he an old
man I hereby sentence you ta
serve 25 years in the state peni-
tentiary and remand you to the
custody of the sheriff"
Davis Gained Notoriety as Fletcher listened intentAy to the
i discourse No trace of emotion was
Phantom Bandit lapparent in his calm ieatures
'
--- As his jailers started to lead him
S t e p h e n s County's t'PhantomJ4waY Judge Giddings motioned
Bandit" of several years ago was Fletcher back to the bench and
o with his life today for
8 j offered a parting word of fatherly
t pay
bah ---- I As his jailers starteeto lead him
'Had Every Advantage' Judge Giddings motioned
S t e p h e n s County's 'Phantom J4waY
M Cunningham is preparing to'Bandit" of several years ago was Fletcher back to the bench and
j a
retire as clemen T 0 cy attorney when pay with his life today for 8 offered parting word of fatherly
the new state administration takes California slaying Ed Davis one- advice
over In January He said he will 1 time member of Oklahoma's noto-I
---- affro-te tit rrnIP TCPnrIA- i "Now James" he aid "you've
Last In Break
! Davks was the last of five men
I executed at San Quentin for the
' killing of Clarence Larkin Folsom'
L: prison warden and two guards in
a break Sept 20 of last year
:1 At the same time a man who!
!claimed he shot his wife by mistake
was to be hanged Official wit-
1nesses were to compare notes later:
1 in their effort to analyze the re-'
spective "merits" of gas and pope
as modern execution methods
Born in Jefferson County Davis
spent his boyhood at Waurika but!
:lived in Stephens County the great-1
er part of the time he was hunted'
!as the "phantom bandit" His first'
!major crime was the slaying of
Constable J R Hill of Marlow in
April of 1931 Two companions
:I pleaded guilty in the same slaying !
and received life terms
Shot by Trio
1 The constable was fatally wound-
ed when he and Ike leach night
chief of police at Marlow stepped
up to a car containing three men
early in the morning The officers
were shot before either had said a
word Chief Veach was wounded'
seriously and one of the three men
was paralyzed by a bullet in his
spine
Davis went to McAlester peniten-
tiary but later escaped and was
said to have joined Underhill's gang!
Then to prison at Lansing Kas
from which several years ago he
escaped reputedly as the "brains"
of the break along with Underhill
Harvey Bailey (now serving a life-
' term at Alcatraz in the Urchel kid-
naping and other desperadoes1
Underhill was killed at Shawnee in
a battle with officers
I It was while being sought in
'Oklahoma that Davis was caught
'in California
Cleared State Man
Only a few days ago in a gesture
of sympathy toward another man':
!held by "the law" Davis broke into I:
i Oklahoma newspapers again—with:
a letter asserting that Walter Phil-I
pott "had nothing to do" with a
'Clinton bank robbery five years ago
Davis wrote to PhilpottS mother
that Underhill Bailey and he him-
self robbed the bank
State pardon and parole authori- 1
ties are investigating on the chance
that Philpott serving a 25-year term
in the Clinton case may be Moo-
cent Already the 55-year-old man
has served four years of the term
Move Soil Office
"Now James" he aid "you've
been in the penitentiary before
You can get along You know
! you can get out long before
you're 40 if you're good You'll
still have plenty of time left la
live too"
Robert Rittenhouse Fletcher's at-
torney filed a notice of appeal to
the Criminal Court of Appeals
Fletcher will be taken to McAles-
ter Penitentiary within the ne'd
few days pending the appeal As-
sistant County Attorney Walter
Marlin said
CLEAR ARMY OFFICER
OF HOUSE CHARGE
By United Presp
WASHINGTON Dec Ia—Former
Brig Gen Alexander E Williams
and Nathan and Joseph Silverman
dealers in surplus Army goods were
free today after a Federal District
Court Jury acquitted them of
charges of conspiring to prevent the
appearance of a witness before a
House committee investigation four
years ago
The verdict brought to a close the
case involving the non-appearance
of Frank E Speicher New York
salesman before the House military
affairs committee's inquiry into al-
leged splitting of $10000000 in con-
tracts for war materials
After the verdict Irvin Goldstein
special assistant to the attorney
general dropped similar charges
against Rep Thomas Jefferson
Ryan of New York who had re-
quested a separate trial
FAMED RED PILOT
HONORED IN DEATH
By United Press
MOSCOW Dec 1ff — Valery
Chakalov famed Russian plane pi-
lot killed in a test flight yesterday
will be buried in the Wall of the
Kremlin as a national hero it
was announced today and each
member of his family will be pen-
sioned: Chkalov was the first aviator to
fly over the North Pole to the
United States He and his com-
panions flew from Moscow to Van-
couver Wash in July 1937 Chka-
lov a railroad fireman as a boy
entered the Red army at 15 years
of age during the civil war At 17
he entered an army flying school
at 19 he was a star test pilot
ACTOR'S SISTER RENTS
DUKE'S FIRST HOME
By United Press
LONDON Dec 16--The birth-
place of the Duke of Windsor and
home of British royalty for 200 years
Was reported today to have been
rented to the English-born wife of
an American
The lessee was said to be Mrs
Reynolds Albertini a sister of
Reginald Denny movie actor Her
husband is a grandson of an Ameri-
can railroad millionaire William
Reynolds
The house Is White Lodge in
Richmond It was the girlhood
home of Queen Mary and the house
to which the present king took his
bride when he was Duke of Yor
The royal family gave up the
house 11 years ago
sum mop tuts win' rHul no str
- -1-
F
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Hills, Lee. The Oklahoma News (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 72, Ed. 1 Friday, December 16, 1938, newspaper, December 16, 1938; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2014634/m1/13/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.