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Miami News-Record from Miami, Oklahoma • 10

Publication:
Miami News-Recordi
Location:
Miami, Oklahoma
Issue Date:
Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PAGE EIGHT MIAMI NEWS RECORD 'MIAMI OKLAHOMA VALENTINES OR POLITICAL CANDIDATES BARTLETT General Manager 1936 NEA AWashintonDaybook 1 MAN ABOUT The only consoling factor in The conn MAN OUT OUR WAY By Williams pmnnrrnT iMtarauMimct wa ana a einr err Read all the advertisements 13 iiggUArtM ebruary' 1936 rance not a half been heck since they passed At SMITH MAY THROW AVYAY HlS DERBY I AM STILL THB SAME OLD HERBY Oh I DO NOT WITH WILO ABANDON But you can depend rankie sends an urgent message tomorrow to Bobby 1 a wa Any instance Smith of South Carolina' Senator Smith however have to run until 1939 was a tacit understanding among friends on the committee that his name shouldbe placed oi the bill as its author His co ton control act has been faring dly in court tests and the odds are it will be thrown out entirely by the supreme court It was a political ges ture frankly admitted by almost ev eryone concerned Everything went well until a sub committee recommended two minor changes in the original bill which necessitated a reprint of the whole measure The rub came when it was discovered that the reprint had left name off as author way through to A deck The water was running in the halls six inches deep and everybody was frighten ed Lady Leon of London is aboard and so is Paolo opera basso at the Met In the Nicholson was a She kept out of his way after din ner attaching herself to the gentle fragile Mrs Nicholson She noticed that all the time Mrs eyes still watched her husband Was it love rankie wondered or fear? said Roger after they had gone do you think of our Dr Nicholson? A very forceful per sonality likn said think I like him very much I like her (Copyright 1933 35 36 Agatha Christie Office of Publication A Street and irst Ave Business Office Phone 128 Editorial Department Phone 127 Entered at the postoffice at Miami Oklahoma as fj Second Class Mail Matter Under Act 1 of March 8 1879 Has the new deal 'evolution' HANDED YOU SOME AWUL SHOCKS? HERE UPON THE CONSTITUTION CAMS AND STAND BESIDE RANK KNOX lounge one encounters Arthur Schwartz the song writer was Paris?" I say shooting him an original he tells me JTISSENTERS felt the stern of a military dictator when they sought to overturn the rule of President Justo Rufina Barriosf Guatemala more than a hall ventury ago Barrios born in 1835 educated for the bar had fought in a revolution himself before he at tained the presidency But' once in office he built the first railway laid out new roads repaired old ones and constructed new bridges He mod ernized the police force? improved educational facilities and intro duced telegraph service 1 All this time however he had to tight off insurrectionists Twice assassins endangered his life' inal ly fearlessly Almost thoughtlessly leading his army fn a war with Salvador he was ambushed and killed in 1935 on the centennial of Bar birth Guatemala issued a set of eight stamps depleting incidents ini his life One ivrshown here 'MEMBER ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re production of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news published herein illustration of our national negligence than these figures driving and careless hunting to mention only two types of accidents ought to be severely prosecuted as one means of cutting the tragic toll This is a public responsibility and Americans who value their lives will do well to think it over News Record Want Get Results! MG VJOMT BV TH' TIME VOU GET UIM OUT THE RE AMD IM IT HE'LL LOOrs LIAS HE BORM IN 1 1 Here is Mrs Hal Roach and her daughter Margaret was I inquire very she tells me before King George died London was won deful All the theaters crowded and everybody raving over Diana Wyn A diminutive blonde in ermine is this wife of the mo tion picture producer She went to Europe two months ago to retrieve her 15 year old daughter from fin ishing school and is just coming home i was I ask her sis ter who is likewise blonde and di minutive only exciting thing about Paris is the can can They really dance the can can in Paris I ran into Michael anner too plodding around in dark glass es Georges Carpentier 1 looks younger than Thoughtfully pulling at a ciga ret is Poulsen whose Cafe de Paris and Cafe Anglais are impor tant in scheme of things ran into the damdest storm about 4 o'clock Saturday he says huge waves battered through the gym nasium and tossed a torrent all the 0 AND SUDDEN DEATH! Ninety nine thousand Americans died NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE Lorenzen Thompson Inc' Chicago New York San rancisco Los Angeles Kansas City St Louis Atlanta Detroit rank Political Gesture SENATE BILL NO 3780 embody ing the ideas ou the farm situation was reported out of the senate agricultural commit tee with the name of Bankhead of Alabama as author what happened: Bankhead is up fo reelection thisear Ordinarily a measure of this sort would bear the name? of the hairmar of the in this Uy HERBERT PLUMMER The senate agri cultural intensive inquiry into a stopgap farm plan bill tc meet the constitutional fall of AAA was not wholly devoted to such deep stuff as farm economics and questions of constitutionality that may arise later Al! that and more entered in of course but at least one committee vote and a lot of maneuvering re volved around the question of whose name the bill was to bear In non election years when bills are introduced in either senate or aouse it make much differ ence he gets the credit of author ahi This however happens to be election and an extremely important one Pride of authorship in so far as farm legislation is concerned is a very re thing to a senator or rep resentative just now if he is up for reelection it is a decided political asset L'w 'N vf' rankie explained the catastro phe was too he said as she finished having perhaps mode a more detailed story of it than' seemed strictly necessary you seem to have made a very good re won't admit she's cured yet We're keeping her with said Sylvia The gaze went to Sylvia Something' like a very taint smile came to his lips but passed almost immediately should keep her with you as long as posslble' he said gravely rankie was sitting between her host and Dr Nicholson Henry Bassington ffrench was decidedly moody tonight His hands twitched he ate next to nothing and he took no part in the conversation Mrs Nicholson opposite had a difficult time with him and turned to Roger with obvious relief She talked to him in a desultory fash ion but rankie noticed that her eyes were never long absent from her husband's face Dr Nicholson was talking about life in the country you know what a you mean" book asked rankie rather puzzled no I was referring to germs' 1 They develop you know in specially prepared serum The country Lady rances a little like that There is tlme and space and infinite leis ure suitable conditions you" see for you mean bad asked rankie "That depends Lady on the kind of germ Idiotic conversation thought' rankie Why should it make you feel creepy? Yet it did! She said flippantly expect developing all sorts of dark Name Put Back On Bill BANKHEAD asked why' persuad ed hi colleague Pope of Idaho to put the same query to Chairman Smit Smith suggested that AAA officials thought it better to have no names attached AAA officials de nied the alegation with a show of veh mence Whereupon Pope arose in commit tee and formally moved that Bank name be put back on the bill It was so ordered Who actually was responsible for th omission cf name is not kowr and probably will not he Stranger things than that have hap nened in politics 160 320 60050 125 175 300 150 15 By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK Covering the ter front in New York is like other dangerous but exciting chore it may leave you with frost bite but never ennui! Today going down the bay The Ide de rance is due at quar antine about noon and the report ers have opened a sweepstakes be cause some of them think the Ber engaria will get there first You pays your money and takes your pick! Naturally being nobet ter with ships than horses not around when the divvy is made But thertfse the Berengaria now with the He de a wave behind and neck ever Ambrose light a mighty slippery feeling on lacquered with ice and I feel like Byrd at the Pole i fc Si feels the sort of verdict he is seeking would be foreclosed His lingering progress toward an actual announcement obvious ly 'has not resembled the usual coyness of presidential aspirants His tentative and cautious foot steps have 'been more like those of a wise pedestrian crossing an ice covered street in traffic A candidate who expects to be nominated must go out after del egates wherever Lthere is any out side chance of gathering in even a few Mr Borah has had Ions experience in politics and must know the difficulties which stand between him and the nomination He chooses to strike only where the psychological effect promises to be greatest Convention Possibilities Whatever the immediate effect of the Ohio venture by way of forcing the hands of other candi dates it ii the more remote pos sibilities of which the senator ob viously is' thinking (Continued on Pag ourteen) 'T'lIAT evening Dr Ncholson and his wife were expectedjojinmer rankie was finishing dressing when she heard their car drive up to the front door Her window faced their way and shp looked out A tall man was just alighting from the seat of a dark blue Talbot i rankie withdrew her head thoughtfully 1 Carstairs had been a Canadian Dr Nicholson was a Canadian And Dr Nicholson had a dark blue Tal bot Dr Nicholson was a big man with a manner that suggested jreat re serves" of His speech was slow and on the whole he said very little but he contrived somehow to make every word sound significant He wore strong glasses and behind them his very pale blue eyes glit tered reflectively His wife was a slender creature of perhaps twenty seven pretty in deed beautiful She seemed 'rankiethought slightly Jiervouttand chat tered rather feverishly as though to conceal the fact had an accident I hear Lady said Dr Nicholson as hetook his seat beside her at the din table SUBSCRIPTION RATES (tee month by mail outside adjoining counties 60 Three months by mail outside adjoining counties Six months by mail outside adjoining counties One year by mail outside adjoining counties One month in Ottawa and adjoining counties Three months in Ottawa and adjoining counties Six months in Ottawa and adjoining counties One year in Ottawa and adjoining counties Sunday only in Ottawa and adjoining counties By carrier in cities per week LQRIMMEDIATEACTI0NU men jointly and individually should immediately use every ounce of their power to develop a nation wide pro test against any kind of currencyjnfla tion and to beat the inflationists in the present congressional session by the wid est possible margin is not enough to say as is perfectly true that inflation does not appear to be an immediate danger because if it is ap nrnvpd bv a maioritv of each house of Congress it will nevertheless be stopped the initiative in this respect and has now by President veto It musU decided to pocket his pride to save the people ana me uonsiiiunon Talking about the Constitution Borah has been the leading protector of that document since 1907 Just to hear him roll the word off his tongue in the Senate creates a new rever ence in the minds of his listeners for this' national scripture and sends them home praying for the of this docu ment There is one embarrassing question however which Senator Idaho constituents not to mention a few other curious voters may wish to have him ex plain That is' the Act of How did the braintrusters manage to write a potato bill and get Borah to vote for it when that bill was unconstitu tional that ranklin Roosevelt asked Congress to repeal it? Any Idahoan had a' right to expect that if a potato bill were written Borah 'would bestow upon it the benefit of his superior constitutional judgment and write it himself Who could possibly know more about the constitu rankie Derwent it not to twre Roger murdered tke man identi fied at Altaandrr Pritchani at tht wat when the ttaged an with the help of BoDby Janet and teenred admittance to the Baitint tonffrenoh conntri haute ghe it convinced aleo that the real name woe Ilan Car ttaire al though tkat rgmaint to 6e proved Meanwhile the name of a Dr Nich olton a Canadian running a drug cure nearby hat entered ike cona tion' Baron de la Grange of the rench aeronautical commission appears 'slightly impatient at the delay The lie de rance has been trying an hour to crack the accum ulation of ice nn the pier slip and short The Marquis de Saint Perier of Paris like it 'either but he manages 'to put a good face upon the matter He wanders off to that room where a rench orchestra is playing Goes 'Round and and or ders something to eat That woman standing by the door is Mrs Lawrence Hills wife of the manager of the Laris edition of the New York Her ald and the other one next to her is Mrs Clara rank the New York style creator Out on the promenade the captive passengers are shouting to friends who are waiting on the pier They are just 20 feet short but that 20 might as well be a mile inally the master decides to back her out into the river again This time she makes it but it takes 40 min utes! nearly three hours late BY BYRON PRICE (Cltief of Bureau The Associated Press Washington) There are special reasons why the dominant leaders of the Re publican party are deeply inter ested indeed in Senator decision to enter the presidential primary in Ohio If it merely were a question of delegates of a few votes more or less in the national conven no one would be greatly concerned But what Mr Borah isafter amounts to a great 'deal more than that" Ohio is 'a proud state in Repub ican tradition This year it will entertain at Cleveland the na tional convention It commands almost the largest bloc of elector al votes in that Mid western sec tor where many politicians believe the election of 1936 will be decid ed Against that background Mr Borah proposes to submit to a popular test his demand that the present leadership of the party be repudiated by the rank and file Particularly he asks for a pop ular verdict against the conven tion plans of the old line leaders These plans as announced in the various states captemplate' the selection of uninstructed delega tions in the East and "Midwest including Ohio in sufficient num bers to hold the balace of power With respect to the nomination Psychological Blow Suppose Borah wins his case at the hands of the Republican voters of that crucial state What becomes of the plans of the lead ers morally and psychologically and what becomes of their lead The answer' need not involve except incidentally the much dis cussed question whether' Borah seriously is a candidate or wheth er he has any idea he can be nom inated He has said quite directly that his first concent is the breaking which he regards as reactionary That fits in exactly with his hesi tant conduct his determination not to go into state where he TTE looked at her and said calm 1Aly: no I think so 1 Lady rances I think you would I always be on the side of law and I Was there a faint emphasis on th word law? fl Suddenly across the table Mrs I Nicholson said husband prides 1 himself on summing up I Dr Nicholson nodded his head gently right Moira Little things interest He turned to rankie again had heard of your accident you know One thing about it Intrigued me very I said rankie her heart beating suddenly doctor who was passing Tho 1 one who brought you in I must have had a curious to turn his car before 9 going to the rescue" fi understand" "Of course not You were uncon 11 scious But young Reeves themes a senger boy came from Staverley on his bicycle and no car passed him Yet he comes round the corner 1 finds the smash and the car pointing the same way he was going towards London I see the point? The Doctor I did not come from the direction of Staverley so he must have come the other way down the hill But in that case his car should have fl been pointing toward Staverley it Therefore he must have Il turned it" 8 "Unless he had come from Staves fl ley some time said rankie if his car would have been standing there as you came Ij "the hili Was it?" it "1 said rankie i "1 think so" tt "You sound like a detective Jas ji said Mrs Nicholson all about nothing at things interest said I Nicholson He turned ti his hostess and rankie drew a breath of relief Why had he catechized her like that? How hadhe found out all I about the accident? "Little things interest he had said Was that all there was to it? rankie re membered the dark blue Talbot and 1 the fact that Carstairs had been a1 Canadian It seemed to herfthatDr I Chapter 20 DR NICHOL8ON pRANKIE attaked Sylvla the fol lowing morning She started by asking 'carelessly: wasthaman's name yon mentioned last night? Alan Car stairs was it? I fee sure heard that name dare say you have rather a celebrity in his way I believe a a naturalist and big game hunter and explorer I really kndWjhlm Some friends of onrs the Rivingtons brought him down here oneday or lunch A very attractive man 'big and bronzed and nice bide was sure I'd heard of been over to this eOuntrybetare i believe East year he wentatiur through Afrlfia with that millionaire man John Savage one 1 who thought he had can cer and killed himself in that tragic way Carstairs has been all over the world East Africa South America simply everywhere I a nice adventurous per son" said rankie' he was Distinctly attrac his being so like the man who fell over the cliff at March said rankie "I wonder if everyone has a They compared instances but rankie was eareful to make no fur ther references to Alan Carstairs In her own mind she was guite con evinced that the victim of the cliff Tragedy at Marchbolt had been Alan Carstairs He fulfilled all the con ditions He had no intimate friends Ar relatlons ln this country and his 5 disappearance was iunlikely to be noticed for some time Very good then next' stepwas to learn more about Alan Car stairs His connection with the Bas sington ffrenchs seemed to have been of tbe slightest He had been brought down there quite by chance by friends What was the Rivington rankie stored it in her memory for future use want to be poisoned or knocked on the thought rankie with a grimace were ready enough to bump off Bobby for practically nothing at all Her thoughts flew off at a tangent to that tantalizing phrase that bad started the whole business Evans! Who was Evans? Where did Evans fitin? dope decided rankie Perhaps some relative of Carstairs was being victimized and he bad determined to bust it up Evan? may have been one of the gang who had retired and gone to Wales to live Carstairs had bribed Evans to give the others away amTEvans had con sented and Carstairs went there to see him and someone followed him and killed him Was that somebody Roger Bas sington ffrench? It seemed very un likely The Caymans now were far more what rankie imagined a gang of dope smugglers would be likely to be ky' 4 1 If I could reduce the number of wrong connections by 100 eaqh day there might be such a lessening in In use of profane language that myL work could easily be as great that of any preacher JxU Cairns Canadian telephone officiaLEfat Lk The Lord did not command us toll go forth and adapt His word tel 1 prevailing cultures and poltical con R( ditions but i to bear witness to His word and proclaim it Martin Niemoeller defying Nation Ip al Socialism In Germany 1 It would do us all good to laugh for half an hour after every meat Dr James Walsh ordhanr university sociologist I MIAMI NEWS RECORD tirelessly than ever and the calamitous TRI STATE DISTRICT daily experience of Germany in its postwar' in Conaoiidation of Miami News nd flation' would be repeated in the United Daily Record Herald Qt ntaa Miami News Record Publishing Company otaieb (incorporated) Publishers strength of the inflationists in the session is even greater negatively Northeast Oklahoma anq bordering counties of the 0 0 Tri state District of okiahnm Kansas snd than aff irmativeljr Since many members unwilling to vote for inflation will help to give it half a victory by opposing new taxes to pay the bonus If they have their way the country will be saddled with a huge unamortizbd increase in its pub lic debt This in turn will stimulate the campaign foi inflation next year should reject inflation and levy adequate taxes to provide for the gradual paying' off the entire bonus debt The people must be taught that newtaxation is necessary because the govern ment has taken on new obligations with out reducing any previous kind of ex penditure Above all they must be taught to arise and smite inflation as a deadly enemy to the welfare of every Business Week' SURPRISE! 120000000 American citizens' men women and children awoke one morningabout a Aveek ago to receive through their newspapers the surprise' of the year Wil liam Edgar Borah United States senator from Idaho and critic of every good badandf airly tolerable President whom these people have voted into office' in thirty years had announced publicly that he would give those same citizens (whose past presidential tastes have not been his tastes) the opportunity to install him in the White House next November He has waited thirty years for the people to take GOLLY WE GOT HltA SO GLEAM AM' MICE IT'S A SHAME TO PUT KIM IM TUA! OL' DIRWySNABBY BUSTI WAGOM ME LCXKS 50 Vmucu above) 1 sTMATITT BACK TO THE not only be stopped but decisively stopped must be whipped so emphatically as to encourage its opponents discourage its supporters swing popular opinion against it deter congressional candidates next fall from pledging themselves to itand ensure its defeat when it is brought up in the first session of the next Con gress a year from now is the time when the inflationists really expect to put their program across Already their strength is dangerous They have a fair chance of winning a majority of the House and a third of the Senate By incessant effort including a Sabbath roar of ignorance on the radio they have made considerable gains If they are al lowed to keep on at the same rate they may make 1937 unforgettable in Amer ican history as the turning point towards financial disaster their advantages is the support of one of the leading bonus organizations the Veterans of oreign Wars whose commander James Zandt cries out that the bonus must not be paid tionality of the potato crop than Borah? through new taxation That would pro duce resentment among the taxpayers he it would make the The country must be led tcrbelieve in accidents last one every six min blissfully that the veterans can gain by utes National Safety Council records the bonus and nobody need be the loser have revealed Nobody need pay anything Start the The onlyconsoling factor 'inihecoun printing presses rolling and there you report was its note that were have the bonus It is as simple as that 3000 fewer deaths than in 1934 fact it is simple enough tn make Surely we ean ask formtrnTOreraphiC not only tne veterans but the whole coun try the goat or the trouble about starting the printing presses rolling is that after they are started you cannot stop them It would take too much cour tage There would have to be new taxes heavier by far than if the tax method £had been used in the first place And once' more the1 cry would go up to stave off new taxes by printing a little more paper LThe presses wouldwhir more rapidly and STORIES IN STAMPS By I Klein EUEEHJ 'oyriKlii IHM NKA NEXT: stamp btwk I I AL4 LASJPOH i I I 7 a I i a a sb A 1 HRS Vi 1 1 mzxzn I nwhl MZ zz 1 mi if a I I 1 Ss I 'Aiiiiii i9ouArtM.

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About Miami News-Record Archive

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