Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Miami News-Record from Miami, Oklahoma • 8

Publication:
Miami News-Recordi
Location:
Miami, Oklahoma
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE EIGHT INCOME TAXES (ARE POURING IN One and One Half BiDion A Dollars Paid Today in Second Quota for 1929 i June if With more than one and a half billion dollars passing through the United States Treasury today the second payment of taxes oh 1929 incomes was pouring into the gov ernment coffers to swell such col lections to unprecedented totals Treasury experts expected to collections to amount to $500000000 or more At the same time the government was payng off $450000000 in maturing certif icates of indebtedness taking in $450000000 from the sale of such: securities and paying about $90 ij 000000 interest on the public debt On June 12 the last day shown' in the daily statement the government had collected for the fiscal year which started July 1 a total of $3457920019 and had spent in the same time $3968572 649 Though this left a deficit of $240652630 Treasury officials ex pected President first full fiscal year in office end with a comfortable surplus Of the total receipts for the year $1919005251 were received as tax incomes of 1929 despite the fact of the Wall street collapse last fall and the one percent tax reduction The tax reduction alone meant about $80000000 less in come for the government neverthe less Indications were that the Treasury estimates of a total re turn of $2480000000 from income taxes in the fiscal year would ze borne out so closely as to surprise even veteran experts of the fiscal department The total income for the year to June 12 was $105000000 more than received in the same period ot last year while the expenditures were $177000000 greater due part to increasing government ac tivities and the operations of the federal farm board General expenditures of the gov ernment amounted to $2078445 165 about $90000000 more than for the same period last year while the postal deficiency this year to tals $85017870 to date as compar ed to $70020900 in the same peri od last year MINISTER POINTS OUT LESSON IN ATE At the evening service of the Southern Methodist church Sun day the Kev Willmoore Kendall used as his sermon topic and Spiritual Lessons of the Shar key Schmeling Heavyweight He succeeded in finding for the discourse a strangely ap propriate text Il Timothy 2:5 a man also strive for mastery yet is he not crowned except he have striven said Mr Kendall a great lover cf athletic contests His epistles are filled with simile and analogy based upon the competi tions of physical prowess in the Greek and Roman games Those who object to football and wrest ling matches as Unchristian sports would have found no support for their attitude in the apostle to the Gentiles He would have climbed eagerlv to the bleachers to watch a great game with the enthusiasm of a real fan doubt however'' the minister continued he would have looked with favor upon a sport marked by such extreme severity as a heavyweight fight I suspect that the popularity of this type of contest indicates that a good deal of the savage left under the thin veneer of civilization in the lives of many modem men foul said the minister a striking example of the way in which a man may lose a victory by indifference to the laws of the game Gene Tunney tells us that the left upper cut which Sharkey turned into a foul is a dificult blow to control Tun ney says that he himself abandon ed' it though he considered it a tell ing blow because it was likely to fall low and become foul It tended toward lawlessness and it cost Jack Sharkey the heavy weight championship of the world it be a warning to every man who imagines that he can defy the laws of God and man with impunity Indifference to the laws cf the game of life will rob genius of victory It was alcoholism which prevented young Erwin Rus sell from becoming Americas greatest poet of negro dialect It is infidelity to th elaw of wedeu love which has sent many a mar riage which promised great happi ness upon the rocks It is disobe dience to the law of industry and thrift which brings financial dis aster to many of us today He who would be crowned must be careful indeed to keen the laws of the game if a man strive for mastery he cannot be crowned un less he shall strive Pair Slay Manager in Chicago Restaurant CHICAGO June An other North Clark street restaur the Villa saw muruer done early today when two men probably robbers slew Christ Petras night manager Twenty persons witnessed the shooting They said two men en tered and engaged Petras in con versation over the cigar counter Their talk may have been personal or it may have been a demand for the restaurant receipts Police are not certain which 'luddenly hand reached below the counter and came up vith a pistol He fired twice and missed One of the men snapped a gun from his pocket and shot Petras down Among those who saw Petras shot and the killers flee tvas his wife Job jee NewsjKecord MIAMI OKLAHOMA1 MONDAY JUNE 16' 193Q erm MRS resh I a 80c The feel per Pound on their COLEMAN HUTTS COMMERCE 1301 Phone 173 I Phones 607 with a Softy 25c Powder 25c Talcum my 2 for the Inebriated BRIEIJNSg See Our Displays of Porch and Garden urnitfj Garden urniture urnish Your Home Subscribe for the News Record THE BUNGLE AMILY Legal Worries By HARRY TUTHILL I'LL 4' Illi out for OLD RED SHIRTS HOLD SPOTLIGHT WITH MUSSOLINI Poetry States entered IRE DAMAGES YACHTS NEW ORLEANS June ire originating in the engine room of the yacht Cintil in the new basin canal here today criti cally burned John Gercich a watchman and destroyed or dam aged nine yachts and seven boat houses with a loss estimated at around $90000 Primary to Decide Bitter Schall Christianson Race for Senate Nomination AM PM PM PM PM PM PM Hardships Lead Two Bandits to Surrender Aimee'Real by ines for Smuggling Two cities and 27 municipalities go to make London which stretch es more than 15 miles in every di rection This city has an assess ment value of more than $325 000000 an area of 700 square miles and a population of more than 7652000 Supreme Court Bldg Work to Start Soon Natives of the Landes rance in going about through their swampy land are forced to travel on stilts from house to house REE DELIVERY SERVICE Many a need is supplied through the Want Ads CM EACkf TO KISS HER UUSBANO NEW YORK June Re turning from a week end in the Catskills Aimee Semple McPher son Los Angeles evangelist said she was today after she learned that customs officials had assessed her $277 in duty and fines for merchandise purchased abread but undeclared Mrs McPherson landed Satur day on her way home from a pil grimage to the Holy Land Customs men said they found a rench dress and some embroider ed pajamas among the articles in her baggage which did not appear on her declarations The evangelist said the pajamas were a present from her daughter Roberta who remained abread SATURDAY HE CHEWED UP ANOTHER $5 BILL BY THE TIME HE GETS A JUDGMENT i'll owe so much TO RESTAURANT MEN THAT BE LUCKY TO BREAK EVEN South 8:20 12:20 3:50 6:20 MINNESOTA IS VOTINGTODAY Bungalow Chocolates jjrls and HEATH STANTON UOS KEN 1830 Df CHELSEA MOUSE COL WILBUR Auctioneer Office phone 128 Res 697 304 St Miami Okla a fields Mr and Mrs Lightner who had been visiting their daugh ter Mrs Mildred Cotfey of Chica go returned home riday Mrs Ed Pottorff a student in the Tulsa university was called home on account of the death of her father in law Pottorff Dr and Mrs Ralph and children have gone to Angleton Tex for a two visit Mr and Mrs Otto Smith spent Sunday in Bartlesville Mr and Mrs Milton Abrams visited relatives in Picher Thurs day Mr and Mrs Rolla Tapp of Ok mulgee are guests of Mr and Mrs Ed Gregg this week Mrs Mid Morgan and Mrs Bort Townsend were in Joplin Satur day Mrs Walter Nelson who has been ill for some time suffered a relapse riday Ernest Logan Son of (Cap) Logan is seriously ill of typhoid fever Mrs Carman Brownell who has been ill of typhoid fever for some time is slightly improved Oren Crow a student of Has kell institute Lawrence Kas is home for the summer vacation Mr and Mrs Walker dis trict deputies of the Security Bene fit Association returned Sunday from Topeka Kas where they at tendeda national convention of the order Mrs Sanderson and chil dren Milton Wayne and Helen re turned to their home at Lawrence Kas Sunday after a several visit here with friends Mrs Una esperman of Tulsa Is visiting in the home of her broth ers Guy and Cecil esperman Mr and Mrs Jack Kinsey of Mi ami were dinner guests of Mr Kin mother Mrs Belle Kinsey Thursday evening Mrs Jessie Conway returned to her home in Kansas City riday after a several visit with rel atives anj friends Amil Vass is at ort Gibson Okla on business Herman Searcy who underwent a mitjor operation at a Joplin hos pital recently is improving Hazel Vass went to Joplin Mon day on business Mrs Reed and Mrs Bert Sear cy and' children visited Herman Searcy at St hospital Jop lin riday The new parsonage of the Meth odist church which replaces the one recently destroyed by fire is on her sixty ninth birthday: "Out oh the stage I would sing the last note of a song Oh no 1 want to die before the audience and create a disturbance But after the last note I would go off the stage and then out of sight I would die That would be the most beautiful way to JOHNSTOWN Pa Having caught 53 trout of which 46 were undersized Blair Borger of Nan ty Glo is in jail for 491 days He was fined $485 and costs which he was unable to pay CREEK Victoria turned the police station into a shop in this thriv ing town in the foothills of the great dividing range Nobody has been arrested for seven years The state government has found other duties for three policemen BARRALIER New South Jim Leslie and Dave Elli ott are champion squealers Mak ing a noise like a wounded rabbit with aid of a whistle hunters use for the purpose they lay in a thicket one night and bagged 40 foxes and two dingoes or wild dogs The noise tricks the animals within range of the guns NEW The favorite out door sport of Yale seniors is golf ootball rates second NEW YORK His eyeglasses smashed in a polo game John Hay Whitney must take it easy for a week He was struck by the ball when riding off an opponent Three stitches were taken Mrs N' Bigelow of Anderson Mo who had been visiting her daughter Mrs George Lamphear went to Carthage Mo Thursday to visit other relatives Little Tose Marie Wilson who lives with her grandparents was injured lats Wednesday by being run over by a wagon John Calston son of Calston pf the New Stateoad will leave this week for theJJansas harvest By PAUL HARRISON NBA Service Writer ENGLEWOOD June Mrs Dwight Whitney Morrow who is campaigning through New Jersey in behalf of her senatorial candidacy is not polit ically minded In and this is no reflection on the acumen or abilit yof her whom Mexico still ability of her whom Mexico still Morrow is playipg good politics by refusing to talk about politics at all In her busy schedule of speech es which are more like informal talks she is endeavoring to give the New Jersey electorate a hand tinted vignette of Ambassador Dwight Morrow as a human being The voters know him as a former potent partner of Morgan an eminently successful Ambassa dor to Mexico an important mem ber of the navy limitations dele gation now as an aspirant for the Senate But Mrs Morrow believes they should know him as a man So she voices no profound theo ries about government She makes no promises no predictions She is certain that her audiences would rather hear the friendly! intimate interesting things which to rarely get into the political spotlight'wdth a public man Speaks As a Neighbor It is as wife of a that she speaks at clubs and lunch eons in nearly every county in the state When she finishes her lis teners may not know just how Mor row feels about the tariff but it may be that they will say to them selves Morrows certainly are nice The wife of Neighbor Morrow the mother in law of Lindbergh and the soon to be grandmother of the most famous is quite a distinguished personal ity in her own right She has re ceived wide recognition as a poet is active as a Smith college alum nae and in philanthropic and pa triotic work rom her home town clubs here in Englewood to the diplomatic circles of foreign nations she is known for her ready wit her unaffected charm her ap parently youthful spontaneity The other day as she was leav ing on a long motor trip for a couple of speeches Mrs Morrow ran back to get a kiss from her husband good Then she reproached herself for an im pulsive act which she feared might be interpreted as undignified Carries Own Lunch After she had begun her pro gram of speaking before large groups of women a stranger ask ed Mrs Morrow how she passed time said the Ambas wife just go about speaking to groups of large wo Then she blushed and fled On many of her out of town speaking engagements this wife of a millionaire carries along her lunch It saves time she points out and she wants to be at home as much as possible Clothes worry Mrs Mor row She is well dressed but has the air of a woman who makes careful selections and then forgets the problem She appears almost everywhere in the same modest little blue and white printed en semble Mrs Morrow is tall arid slender but her face strikingly resembles (By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA An American hopes to be a mis sionary in India Given the title at the sesquicentennial celebration Miss Alice Thompson spurned opportunities to make money from it She has been graduated from Ohio Wesleyan university and has become director of religious educa tion in the Oakland church in Philadelphia but her goal is the foreign missionary field particu larly India NEW YORK Mme Ernestine Schumann Heink has an idea of a beautiful way to die She told of it WASHINGTON June (Al Work begins this week on a pro ject the ultimate aim of which is caps under which the members of the elimination of serious handi the supreme court have worked for years This is in preparation for the erection of the new supreme court building across the plaza from the capitol near the Library of Congress The immediate op erations concerned the removal of buildings now occupying the se lected site The importance of the new building will not lie in providing a commodious courtroom tjut in giving the members of the court adequate office rooms or years most of them have been forced to do the onerous work of preparing opinions at their homes without adequate library facilities GEORGE I HAVEN'T 1 MUCH SYMPATHY OR YOU IN YOUR ATTEMPT TO JUST TAKE MONEY AWAY ROM THOSE MOVIE OLKS IS THAT YOUR IDEA JUSTICE? Each' Week bf nice WHILE EXPLAINING THINGS TO A JURY TOO AND THE REASON SO CALM ABOUT THIS THING IS BECAUSE YOU I HAVEN'T HEARD THAT LAWYER DESCRIBE WHAT HAPPENED TO US YOU DON'T KNOW HAL IT A TENTH WAIT UNTIL YOU READ THE PAPERS THAT LAWYER DREW UP YOU'LL EEL' LIKE v' A REUGEE Revival services now in progress at the American Legion hall which are being conducted by Elder Leon Hollowdy of Lamoni la were well attended last night These meetings will continue for ov' two weeks every evening ex cept Saturday Elder Holloway is a man of wide experience and in a forceful man ner presents the gospel story to his audiences "Gospel topics of vital import ance will be presented each even ing and special music will be ren church leaders said today special invitation is extended to all to avail themselves of a wonderful opportunity to hear a man with a WELL I HAO A $3 GE LUNCH TODAY WITH THE LAWYER TRYING TO PROTECT ME AGAINST THAT MOVIE OUTIT WHO SCARED US SILLY ABOUT MAPS PIRATES I AND SO ORTH ALL I HOPE IS THAT THIS LAWYER CAN HOLLER AS LOUDIX TO A JURY AS HE CAN TO A WAITER that of her daughter Anne Col Lindbergh she insists noth ing to do with this and is not to mentioned in it But in connection with her stories of Mexico she cannot resist tell ing how during a flight with him they dipped into the crater of Po pocatepetl He is incidentally the only pilot with whom venture into the air Do the Cooking Because she like public ity Mrs Morrow has refused to fly with the Colonel on her speaking tour Neither will she consent to interviews pointing out that she is campaign never did her own cooking or took care of a tiny apartment while her hus band was making his start toward wealth But Elizabeth Reeves Cutter of Cleveland had no more money than Dwight Morrow when they were married just 27 years ago She had taught English rench anil history in private schools Soon after tlieir marriage they found a house in Plainfield at $70 a month Mrs Morrow juggling the family budget decid ed that was too much for a mod erate salaried lawyer to pay so they moved to a cheaper place in Englewood Even then she de cided they could not afford a tele phone A maid of all work did the cooking and cleaning but Mrs Morrow' for all her apparent lack of housewifely skill always has been primarily interested in her home She planned the furnish ings decoration and landscaping of their new home here? While in Mexico they built a summer home in a suburb and Mrs Mor row not only was supervising ar chitect but went buying up old tiles and other materials she wanted used A somewhat wierdly carved fountain in the garden she immediately christened The ountain ot She Writes When the United thg World war Mrs Morrow or ganized the Smith college Relief Unit the first group to sent workers to Europe Later she spent three months in rance supervising the ac tivities at the front Aside from her home and fam ily poetry is her chief delight Here again Anne Lindbergh is like her mother except that Mrs Mor row has contributed a considerable volume of verse to national maga zines camera shy when asked: to pose with them The reason may1 be that thi men of '60 and 70 had to fight troops and that) Garibaldi himself was a rabid anti clerical In these days of religious peace brought about by himself and Phi's XI last year the Duce prefers mot to revive painful memories lMl2S MXR0lD WtSNl Pisdbs POLITICS 1H HEI2 CAMPAIGN 'SPEECHES Mrs Dwight Morrow pictured here is active part in the campaign for a senate nomination But instead of talking politics she prefers to tell of the intimate human little known characteristics of her famous husband Yancey Stevenson Mgr WE DELIVER AM Phone 6 4 0 Coach Lines North 10:25 3:10 7:10 11:10 The cost of light has decreased so enormously that as much light can be purchased today for one cent as a hundred years ago for one dollar ST PAUL June Po litical futures off two outstanding Republican leaders were at stake today as party fol lowers registered their preferences for nominations for United States senator governor and other state and congressional offices in the biennial primary election The two leaders Senator Thomas Schall and Gov Chris tianson' have brought two strong elements in the Republican party into bitter conflict during a cam paign in which the two men were in agreement on national questions but made up for this peace with torrid persona 1 warfare Both openly hostile to the Smoot Haw ley tariff bill and favorable to pro hibition and to continued affilia tion of senators with the independent Republican fac tion they virtually ignored a third aspirant for the Senate nomination He is John Selb a late entrant into the race who campaigned entirely on a platform calling for repeal or modification of the Eighteenth amendment armer Laborites as well as Re publicans voted their choice for nominees for the Senate for Gov ernor but had fewer other con tests between candidates while Democrats who selected their nominees at a state convention had only minor contests to settle Knud Wefajd and Ernest Lun deen both former representatives in Congress entered as candidates for the armer Labor'senatorial nomination ive Republican con gressmen were unopposed in the primary You are Sure to Be Satisfied Variety of Kinds MINIDOKA Ida June (A1) Despite an unsuccessful effort to hail a passing posse so they might surrender two alleged bank rob bers were in the hands of Idaho sheriff today safe from the rigors of the Shoshone country Disappointed by the posse the two men Phillip Simona 31 and Earl Ross 30 treked 50 miles and turned their attention to a freight train with better results Apparently near starvation they were removed from the train here last night by officers who said they confessed the $5500 robbery of the irst National bank of Wen dell Wednesday Like ship wrecked mariners the alleged bandits hoisted a white flag above their hiding place in" a swamp riday night Simona told his captors in a futile effort to attract the attention of a nearby posse Revival Services at Legion Hall Here now completed and'the Reverend and Mrs ranklin are at home and are well: pleased with their new home and its neat furnishings Mrs George Lamphear and chil dren visited Mrs Bis ter Mrs Ed Haynes of near Car thage Mo Thursday The met this after noon with Mrs Bertha Jacobs Wert Commerce street Dorothy Davis who baa been visiting Mrs Maxine Davis returned to airland riday Mr and Mrs red raley and children moved to Tulsa Sunday to make their home While crating his goods Mr raley injured his right hand Pauline Oldham is spending this week with her grandmother Mrs Sadie Eick of Miami Mrs Cecil esperman and chil dren visited Mrs William Hinkle of Treece Kas riday Mrs Hink le is a former resident of Com merce Mr and Mrs Hinkle an nounce the birth of a daughter June 4 Eat Marvel Bread tf Mr and Mrs Wayne Wilson and children visited relatives in Baxter Springs Thursday Miss Irene McBrien left Mon day for Oklahoma City to tenter a training school for nurses LORENCE Italy June Red shirted veterans of Gari baldi's campaigns wearing square vizored stfikingly similar to those used by union sol diers in the civil war were centers of attraction second only to Duce himself through the pro vinces At every big meeting in the pub lic squares and at the mammoth military review here the grizzled octogenarians were in evidence Being mostly of sturdy peasant stock they trudged by twos and threes along with the youngsters of the Black Shirt militia taking all the dust and heat Only a few of them consented to use canes and if any member of a local re ception committee had so much as dared offer them an automobile he would have had a duel on his hands They all turned out in uniform their red clad breasts heavy with medals The invariable gaudy bandana handkerchief was around every neck Their trousers were baggy old affairs some of cordu roy others reminiscent of the ex tinct zouaves It was surprising how few 6f them wore eyeglasses and not a one turned up with crutches or in a wheel chair These remarkably spry whose service records date back to anywhere between 1860 and 1870 asked nd special favors but got many Mussolini let it be known that their uniform was a good pass when they wanted to get near him and wherever he spoke there was always a little knot of them right under the bal cony hanging on every word Independent citizens they are they have no auxiliary and they seem to have a sublime contempt for the sons of Gari even for their own kin in it They are per fectly able to take care of them selves and they let everybody know it Mussolini made no political capi tal out of the Garibaldians He seldom mentioned them in his speeches and while always glad to shake hands with them and give them his infectious smile was AND THEY I' WM VERY NICE ABOUT Millner ribley in Hardware and MIAMI OKLAHOMA (Continued from Page our) Oh how could I let you 7 You love me you love me! You belong to Chummy Do you think steal you from my And just then while the two stood facing each other trembling with the reaction from that mo ment pf irresistible passion there came quick footsteps flying down the stairs and the voice of Clara Jenks cried breathlessly: that you Judy? What a re lief! Such a dreadful thing has happened been taken frightfully ill! Doctor is up there now He think live through the Judy forgot all about Alan Steyne She forgot all about every thing She was up the stairs like a streak of lightning She never answered Clara She could only take in that Chummy was ill des perately ill And she had been out enjoying herself! She had been having that wonderful time lost in her dream of unreal delight! She felt like a traitor ing was so violent that her skin tingled with it Doctor was landing and Clara Jenks came up stairs again The fiery face was grave he said hope pull her through a nurse on the way No Miss Judy never be able to do it She must have skilled attention get a bit of seen to that and be in early in the Judy pulled his sleeve and as she did so Alan violets fell from her hands aipoor withered bunch She did not notice them although a few minutes ago the young arms had crushed them against her breast in that embrace which now was to her such a monstrous sin say she pleaded hoarsely bear The doctor looked at her with the quick response to emotion do all we can Miss he said must be hoping all the He had to hurry away Judy went into room and looked distractedly at the restless figure with the changed face and the burning eyes of high fever She ten utterly nopeless and went again to the landing to wait the nurse never had such a fright in Clara Jenks informed her do you think? given her her supper and gone to my room for a minute or two and when I came back she was exclaimed Judy said Clara must have been light headed all the time Luckily I thought of the cafe and followed her and there she was drinking vermouth and smoking Bastien Dumont brought her back to me and in an hour I saw there was something wrong so I sent Bastien for Bastien was awfully Judy gave a groan Chummy out all alone on a cold night like that! The nurse arrived and went into the room Clara returned to her own quarters Judy was just going to hers to get into a dress ing gown when she heard a voice calling softly up the stair case: Miss Grant may I come She stood irresolute for a mo ment and then ran down She met Alan Steyne of the third landing you she asked How could I without knowing? How is Judy was just on the point of hysteria may die she whis pered in passionate self accusation dare say she will and be my fault for leaving her and your fault! I hate you I never want to see you again! dying and been having a good o(c Choking with sobs she ran up the dark stairs again leaving Alan to make his way out of the house (To Be Continued) Mrs Morrow Avoids Politics in Stumping Campaign for Husband OUTDOOR tdetuen id here MH 41 I 25c IfUTII it Turin inrA nir I OlLflSil ULJ23IIUE 1U I MKIJVV A 1 vn A LOT IRE CRACKERS THAT TMC? INTO MY NERVOUS I SYSTEM AND THEN il IT I VUXL JIJT IKWIM IHINU3 OUT BY 1 HANDING ME A PASS Th I I OR TWO SEATS THAT I 11 i UZMDYA AOC DLlIMn 1 7 Illi i in it tfi a in nr nuiMiiai iii'Na UXJ BHHURII I 1 II I JiOMr vx I off I rm Vi II I at irii 2 it in i i jci nil en 1 vv zafttivm jqr LHA I 2 it I UVi Ml fl' 71 riim i in I dX 1HT DRUG Mil 1.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Miami News-Record Archive

Pages Available:
150,656
Years Available:
1923-1969