Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 67, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 1, 1921 Page: 1 of 8
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§ An independent neu-spaper published 1
1 every day except Sunday. Owned by =
| more than 7,000 farmers and workers. En- |
i tablislied to defend and cherish freedom I
I of the press and liberty of public opinion. I
I It serves no interest but the public good. §
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Vol. 2—No. 67
Oklahoma Leader
"FEARLESS AND TRITE"
Full Leased H ire United I'ress Keport—Member Federated Press.
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1921
PRICE, THREE CEN'Tl
I i) Pit
♦in HI
RS
LG
LOOTED OF SI,000,000 REGISTERED MAIL
ESS
1EET
I" JUIl *.
|o r
ajoiu jpitii
o| aj n |il |4.w
I JD1II *! -ii.i
« l oi|l 0.1 ■
«IJ||d
Pays Tribute to America's
Contribution — Faith
Pinned in Meet.
KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Nov. 1. (By j
U. P.)- "Hope «."r,Jie future lies In
the coming disarmament conference
at Washington," General Pershing,
who in his home state of Missouri,
today officially welcomed Marshal
Foch and other luter-allled heroes to
America, and declared he believed
JOJi
|etu
t'ln-aiiij
MARSHAL DOUBTFULLY
EYE'S HIS LIVE GIFT
KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Nov. 1.
A Montana bobcat, caught on
Powder river and raised on a bot-
tle, will be taken back to France
as a souvenir of the western
United States by Marshal Foch.
The marshal came in for con-
siderable "kidding" as he eyed the
bobcat rather doubtfully and row-
boys in the Montana and Wyo-
ming delegations pulled six-
shooters and peppered holes in
the roof of convention hall as
Foch accepted the gift.
01 EX
MM
LODES CAN'T
L'S Hl-J
ACKE
ICE JUDGE ASSER
CI
rlERE
1)
Lewis Frowns On Walkout
To Protest Court Order;
Operators Expect Strikel
None Injured in Protest of Sarcasm Follows Release ol No
Death Sentence on Sacco Accused Man By Dis-
and Vanzetti. trict Court Jury.
Authorized Nation-Wide MANY WALKOUTS
THROUGHOUT U. S.
Strike to Be Ordered: Union
Heads Consider Action.
people are confident an understand- i
ing lessening chances of future wars
will be reached at the Washington
conference.
The American commander in chief,
in his address before the legion con-
vention touched on the arms limita-
tion and Pacific conference, unem-
ployment among service men and
other problems more liberally than
any other of the military leaders.
"The coming conference in Wash-
ington should be as important as any
ever held." Pershing asserted after
reviewing the indebtedness and other
burdens brought on by the war.
Time Hlpe lor .Meet.
"The time seems propitious for the
nations to meet and frankly discuss
Questions of mnmal interest that
might later affect' friendly relations.
"Thinking people everywhere, I
believe, are confident that an under-
standing can be reached that will
lessen the chances of war in the
future, and strongest in their wish
for such a happy culmination are ! P.)_The Benate today adopted
those who have fought and those
who have suffered."
Foch's speech was mostly a review
and tribute to America in the war,
declaring to the ex-service men "You json, Georgi,
may well be proud." |ln prunce
He recounted the qiuckness in
which America placed 3,500,000 men,
in the field, the rapidity with which Watson declared he whs ready t
men were trained and placed in the!go before any committee and prov
WASHINGTON. Nov. 1.-(By U.
—The state department was ad-
The daring mail robbery committed in New York's downtown section.
at 1ft o'clock at night, netted the robbers greater loot than was first esti-
mated. It is now practically certain that the booty of he holdup men will
exceed a million dollars. Frank Haverank, the driver of the mail truck,
shown in the above phoiogiapu, was uriving through one of the street?.
| when a touring car containing three men pulled up alongside the mail j vised today of the explosion ot a
truck. They drew revolvers and forced Haverank to drive down a dark j bomb yesterday afternoon in the
and lonely street. In the center of the block the driver wi, ordered to ! ve8tibuie of the American consulate
stop, and the holdup men looked over an assortment of fifteen pouches of
nip.il and selected four containing securities and bonds. Postottlct in-
spectors working on the case are of the belief that it is the -same gang
which commi'ted similar robberies in Chicago and I.os Angel".-,.
, practically impossible to INDIANAPOLIS. Nov. 1. —There
conviction in a hi-jacking wm be no authorized nation-wide
charge in Oklahoma county," de- ,<oai strike as protest against the
clared Judge James I. Phelps, of the ruling of Judge Anderson, it was
day when a bomb was exploded in (j|8trict court, Tuesday. The state- learned here today. There may be
the doorway of the American con- rnent came after a jury released HOme walk-outs, but they will not
sulate. Earnest Williams, charged with rob- spread throughout the country, nor
« Hurl n n rrnw t,erT- *111 they be ordered from the lnter-
° ... when the verdict was brought in, national headquarters of the United
and it was announced that the pris- Mine Workers of America here.
oner was found "not guilty." Judnu, President John L. Lewis and other
all right international officers of the union, it
ve get in js understood, will follow the assur-
ance they gave Judge Anderson to
Williams was charged with holding obey his temporary order restrain-
up and robbing Clyde Davis in Cap- jnK them from sending money into
itol Hill. September 24. It was West Virginia for the purpose of I
charged that he got $22.50. Davis unionizing the open shop region !
identified Williams as the man who when civil war recently waged. The ■
held him up, but Williams denied l>e- i ordei* also banned the check-off sy |
ing anywhere near. tem whereby the mine operators de-
Robert W. Maupin, assistant coun- ducted union dues from the miners'
ty attorney, asked for the maximum p„y checks.
penalty of fifty years in the state To Consider Action,
penitentiary. He spoke bitterly o( Officers of the union met with j
the difficulty In obtaining conviction* their attorneys today to map out a
from Oklahoma county Juries. ; course of action against the injunc-J
— tlon. Lewis will frown upon a pro- j
posal to strike, it was known.
A decision may be reached to take
LISBON, Oct. 31.—(Delayed.) <By "It w,
U. P.)- The Sacco-\>uzetti protest obtain f
was extended to this country late to-
cape, but was not injured.
The building was badly damaged.
A letter to the consulate declared Phelps exclaimed, "That's
the bomb was exploded there in pro- That's the usual verdict
. ... Oklahoma county."
I test against the imposition of the
I death sentence on Sacco and Van-
j /.etti, communists, in the United
j States.
Hollis' dispatch stated at 5 o'clock
yesterday a note was put under the
door of the consulate which was
I found later to be a protest against
i the sentence of the Italians, Sacco
, ami Vanzetti, in Massachusetts.
Almost simultaneously the bomb
! exploded.
Soldiers Hanged
Without a Trial,
Watson Asserts
Wm
Committee Appointed to In-
vestigate the Charges Made
Against Officers.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 1. illy !
res-
olution authorizing the appointment
of a committee of five senators to
hear the charges by Senator Wat-
that American soldiers
ere treated inhumanly
and hanged without courtmartial.
at Lisbon, Portugal.
Stanley Hollis, the American con-
sul there who reported the bombing,
stated that no one had been injured,
although the bomb did some damage
to the consulate.
j Department of justice agents today
started a nation-wide investigation
of communist activities to determine
whether the bombing of the Ameri-
can consulate in Lisbon yesterday
and other attacks on diplomatic of-
| fleers abroad were directed from the
i United States.
Orders for the inquiry were issued
immediately after the receipt of news |
of the bombing from Stanley Hollis
t of the American consulate In Lisbon.
SUN BREAKS
ALL RECORDS
RENEWED WAR
IN ERIN FEARED
Irish Peace Negotiations Ex-
pected to Be Resumed
Under Dire Threat.
LONDON, Nov. 1. The newspapers
united iu declaring that the Irish
peace negotiations which were to
have been resumed today, were on
the verge of a breakdown.
At Downing street it was admitted company's Interested in the Indiana
that "the situation is most difficult," j *uit and apparently based on the
but representatives of both the gov-j theory lhat Judge Anderson would
ecu men t and the Sinn Fein denied not have jurisdiction over this st xte "
that any actual break had come. Reports have reached miners' head-
quarters of a partial tleup of the In-
LONDON, Nov. 1.— (By U. P^ illana mines. Only five mines In thie
Irish peace negotiations were ex- state are known to be affected, but
pected to be resumed today under j the reports were incomplete.
the case to the circuit court of ap
peals.
"They will proceed until an injunc- J
tlon against the union Is granted j
here," H. W. Houston, attorney for \
the United Mine Workers of America,
told the United Press.
"I hardly see how Judge Ander- i
son's injunction can affect West Vir-
ginia. There is a separate and dig- I
tinct suit pending in the court here |
which will be heard November 10 or I
It was brought by the same coal
A thirty-one
entered (V Oklahoma was smashed when the
final figures for October were com-
ing and a pocketbook containing $40 Pilft(' ruesdav. according l" 11 1 "
was taken. According to police. Miss j W'ahlgren of the oca wea u
general strike should be called |
against Judge Anderson's order. It is ;
understood the call would be based
on the award of the bituminous coal |
commission two years ago inserting
the check-off system in the contract
and a subsequent letter from Presi-
threat of renewal of civil war unless
a settlement is reached.
Lloyd George called Austen Cham-
berlain, keeper of the privy seal;
Arthur Griffith, head of the Irish
Fsranps With I not nf Fnrtv Rainfall Also Low: More Sun- delegation, anil Michael Collins, 00111-
n II am d UU- yi shinp in Month Than In mamler in chief of the Sinn Fein
Dollars After Robbing . y . ; military forces, into conference dur- j dent Wilson directing the miners and
Ninth Street Home. I n in V - one led! . the f0ren00n. While the reason the operators to follow the dictates
I for the meeting was not announced, |0f the award.
room at the uome of W. D.| «• w™ ,,®r ™C".' it was characterized as "important.",
Krahl, 809 East Ninth, was entered rV Oklahoma was smashei This warning was issued in the
by a burglar early Tuesday morn-1 ,inal f|«urca for October - , of commons last night by Pre-
... . 'P.. — nnrtnCfllnff tO 111*. ... .
micr Lloyd Geerge Just before that
body endorsed uie negotiations by
! the overwhelming vote of 449 to 43
when he said:
his charges. He asserted that
had seen pictures of a scaffold on \iurguret Krahl awoke just as the reau-
which American soldiers were al- burglar was crawling out of the win- According
leged to have been hung. dow. A watch and other jewelry on shone 94 per cent or an I,0hSI"lc i "if the conference is broken off,
Senator Borah of Idaho interrupt- a bureau in the room was not no- during the mouth, as '"'It.' the first thing the government would
ed Watson to say that he had seen tlced by the burglar. Another girl average of 6t> per ceDt oi < have to do would be to ask a
in the room at the time and :IIK' compared with H- pet '1 n ^^ ^ strengthening of the cftwn forces in
Ireland on a considerable scale. Un-
whole of the month. 211 less th « is absolutely necessary for
days were cloudless. 8 days w
! the picture to which th
i ator referred.
j "The ex-service men have co
firmed that picture to me in con
! dence."
Borah took the picture out of 1
sd it around to t
showe
lo Wahlgren the sun
ent of all possible time
was almost hysterical when officers ! highest percentage before
arrived. Which was in 189.1.
Another house at 719 East Eighth During th
was about to be entered by a burglar
when occupants turned on the lights. partly clouded apd onl>
It is thought that the same man,c^ou,'y- .
The total rainfall for th
operated at both places. N<
were made.
arrests
diers hanging from a scaffold.
Wutson's charges, which \N
: worth challenged, follow:
"How many senators know thai
private soldiers were shot by offi- WASHINGTON. Nov. 1. (By U. P.
cers because of some complaint p j -The department of justice today
against officers in silence; and that jogt out jn itR attempt to prevent the
they had gallows upon which men intervention of the Southern Whole-
I were hanged, day after day, without 8aje Grocer*
court-martial or any other form of consent deer
trial? I have photographs of one « t Motion of the department to strike
those gallows upon which, twenty out the intervening petition was de-
; nied by Justice Stafford of the Dis-
trict of Columbia supreme court.
WHOLESALE GROCERS-
APPEAL IS ENTERED
association in packer
month is
the lowest, with the exception of the
years 1893. 1894 and 1917, in the
past thirty-one years. Only .18 of an
inch fell for the month as compared
with T.r,8 inches in 192'
and 8.13 in
The mean temperature for Octobei
ras 64.0 or 2.7 above the normal am
he highest in the past five years.
D0LLARWHEAT IU
CHICAGO HEARING H W MAKE
chicago. Nov. I
•ame very near on th
of trade today
Dollar wheat
hlcago board
when future quota-
field and accomplishments of the
country as a whole.
Pays His Tribute.
The French chief paid special trib-
ute to the second and third army di-
visions at the Marne and the five di-
visions which participated in the
Franco-British counter offensive be-
tween the Aisne and the Marne.
Work of the first American army at
St. Mehiel, the men who fought at the
Argonne and reconquered the Meuse
were also lauded.
"More than 75,000 of your brothers i P°ckpt and lJi
are buried in France," the marshal' senators.
said. I The icturi
"May they rest in peace. Your
French brothers in arms will watch
over them. Glory to you who sur-
vive them. You may well be proud
of your exploits."
After reviewing the last days of
the war with the American army
stretched before Metz the marshal
declared the A. E. F. an "army with
its task completely fulfilled."
Foch Gets Finblem.
Following his speech Foch was
presented with the emblem of the one white boys had already been ex
American Legion by special action edited at sunrise when the photo
of the convention as were Generals graph was taken and there were
Diaz and Jacques yesterday. others waiting in the camp to be OSVGK I.AMi SALE SOON.
New Orleans was selected as the i hanged morning after morning. PAWHUSKA, Okla., Nov. 1. The | tlons dropped from eight to ten
convention city of 1922 by a vote of "Such statements as those made by jnfjjan agency announced today that December wa sold at $1.02 tw
538 to 512. ' I a senator can not be put lightl> jjjp next sale of Osage leased lands sales of No. 2 mixed were at $1.05.
New York's huge block of eighty aside and excused on the ground ot wm be held here December 12. At Flooding of the markets, heavy
votes swung the selection away from ; excitability in debate." said Wads- this time 150 tracts, comprising ■ ongestion at the northwest termin-
bun Francisco—the losing city. . worth. nearly 3
The Pacific coast delegation then Bristling with wrath, the Georgia j for lease. I the drop.
moved to make the vote unanimous, senator leaped to his feet and ahak-
Charles G. Dawes, director of the ' ing his fist at Wadsworth, declared
government budget, was advanced that "his language will not go on the
today as Ohio's candidate for na- floor of the senate."
tlonal commander of the American "I am not in the habit of making
Legion. statements that I can not prove.
A resolution criticising and con- said Watson. "I can prove every! WASHINGTON, I). ('., Nov. 1.—! According to charges made at the
demning President Harding for his word that I said." Meeting the charges made by former time Garvin sold the whole of the
attitude toward ex-service men as re- "I have a picture of the gallows on Alien Property Custodian Francis P. patents and formulas for $250,000.
fleeted in congressional action, was which white soldiers were hanged in Garvan, that "the German dye mo- According to testimony submitted to
printed and circulated on the floor violation of law. I can produce wit- nopoly controlled certain members of congress, two patents alone would
of the convention. The proposed nesses to prove it if the senator from congress," Congressman Frear, of hav brought more than $10,000,000
resolution particularly calls atten- New York will guarantee immunity ; Wisconsin, declared that it was a if the public had known. According
tlon to what is termed a lack of sym- : to the man who testifies. "contemptible subterfuge for such to Frear. the Du Pont Powder com-
pathy for former soldiers in the Watson went on to say that h- men to claim that they were acting pany and another subsidiary pur-
world war. ; could prove that American soldier- in behalf of the American people. chased the patents and dye secrets.
The resolution was circulated by in France "were shot down by oi- "They have w rapped the cloak ol According to Frear, Garvin is now
the legion resolutions committee. ficers;" that they were almost stan patriotism around themselves, hypo- making these charges because the
ing while American food was "virtu- crites as they are, and demand thai senate will soon begin an investiga-
KTATK SUPPLIES ON IIAM). lly given away to France"; that congress give them the exclusive 'Ion of the sale of the dye patents
All supplies for state institutions they were "subjected to barbarous right to fleece the American peopl< and formula
have been purchased to last until junishment if they wrote home th>- he charged. Frear declared that when the dye
January* 1. George F. Clark, chair- truth of conditions" , Frear declared that Garvan was.embargo bill wa before congress,
man of the state board of affairs, Watson declared ex-service men ! the public official ' who sold to him the dye interests were swarming
said Tuesday. Plants are in good re- had told him the alleged execution- self at about 2 per eent of their value around the house importuning the
pair, %nd in excellent condition for, took place "in a wooded dell behind'th*- -1.300 alien patents and chemical
*** later, he said one of the camps in France." [formulas.
con
ESPICK
3ELLHULL
the honor and security of the coun
two were!trjr thi9 is not the tlrne to ask tho
house to impose great additional bur-
dens upon the taxpayers and to in-
vite our young men a«ain to risk
their lives."
Press comment today on the debate
Tennessee Man Is Chosen to
Succeed White as Na-
tional Chairman.
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 1.—Cordell Hull.
Tennessee, was named chairman of
the democratic national committee to
succeed George White.
Hull was formerly a congressman 1
• the vote of censure asked by ifrom Tennessee but was defeated for
unionists w hich was turned into j re-election in the recent republican j
a vote of confidence in the govern- landslide. Hull has been identified j
nicut, was distinctly pessimistic an! with the progressive branch of the
several newspapers interpreted >.he | party.
premier's speech as a warning to the } Breckenridge Long. St
public
breakdo
for
possible
egotiations.
INSANITY PLEA?
ash
LOS ANGELES, Nov. 1 "Insan-
ity" will he the derense of Arthur selection following a
Courtney Burch. minister's son. on preceded the executiv
trial here for the murder of J. Bel-
Louis, was
the choice of the ' ox aud McAdoo
factions, but his appointment was
impossible when Edward Goltra, St.
ixjuis, refused to resign as demo-
cratic committeeman from Missouri.
Senaitor Carter Glass. Virginia,
and Senator Harrison. Mississippi,
made the announcement rtf Hull's
ucus which
ssion of the
ommittee.
CHICAGO. Nov. 1. Date for
the strike of packer employes
who have voted to walkout in
protest against open shop pro-
gram of the "big five" packing
couipunles, will be set the latter
part of this week.
A meeting of the butcher
workers and allied unions will
be held here to decide on the
course of action and set the date
for a strike.
ATHENS. Ohio, Nov. 1. Three
hundred men employed at a mine
of the New York Coal company
here walked out today. They quit
because of the federal court In-
junction against the "check-off."
More Athens county miners
are expected to follow today.
CHARLESTON, W. Va.. Nov.
1. Union efforts to organize the
West Virginia coal ft!
not be halted by the injunction
of Federal Judge Anderson in
Indianapolis, district officials of
the United Mine Workers here
declared today.
NEW YORK. Nov. 1. Eight
million persons in New York
and vicinity faced a milk famine
today as result of a strike of
wagon drivers.
GALVESTON. Texas, Nov. L—
One thousand longshoremen re-
fused to take their places at
their jobs here today pending
wage settlement.
Their refusal to return to
work today also Included 600
men at Houston and 150 men at
Texas City, it was reported.
NEW ORLEANS. Nov. J. (By
U. P.) A complete tie-up of
river shipping was threatened
today when approximately five
thousand longshoremen and
screwmen went on strike.
The men quit work in protest
against a cut in pay from $1.20
to 90 cents an hour in overtime
wages which followed a wage
slash of from 80 cents to «5
cents an hour for straight day
work.
TERRE MAUTE, lnd., Nov. 1.
- Several hundred miners em-
ployed near Terre Haute refused
to go to work today as the result
of the check-off injunction is-
sued by A. B. Anderson.
A few mines were closed down
entirely.
HOUSTON. Texas, Nov. 1.—
Ships in the channel here and in
the ports of Texas City and
Galveston were not being loaded
today.
longshoremen and screwmen
have not been at work at these
places since last midnight, when
the temporary reprieve which
was granted October 1 pending
settlement of wage problems,
ended.
Shipping will be practically at
a standstill until the controversy
is settled, it was announced by
union representatives.
The longshoremen contend for
75 cents an hour and $1.10 for
o\ertiiue.
Foremen Instructed to Pr<|
pare for Walkout Again:!
Anderson's Check off Oruil
CHICAGO. Nov. 1. I By I . P.)-|
I
I
mine opei atlng < ompanies tods |
their general offices here.
Mine operstoi. believe the mlMfl
I
in« by Judge \ B. Anderson m i|
dlanapolls preventing collection
union che< k-oft s^|
tom.
• instriKl
to get their property in conditi'J
to prepare for a shutdown.
Miners union officials are nisstlB
[
| will be taken to fight Judgt |
son's ruling.
Leaders In labor circles here
<ia> declared they believed if 1
' d, ir Will me|
the downfall of all unionism.
I.abor Support (tanned.
Victor A Olander, secretary of ti
Illinois division of the Amefkfl
Federation of Labor, who has mal
I injuil
lions on organized labor, decku|
that the decision by Judge Anders
if upheld, < an be construed to apt|
I to any other strike.
i nder the ruling, it win be i|
possible for any labor union to sif
| no m|
' ter where it might be."
Robert Buck, editor of ( hicag
; leading labor paper, declared
only way to beat an injunction
to ignore It.
"The American Federation
Labor's policy since 1919 has beeul
ignore injunctions, inasmuch ah til
are contrary to the constitu'icl
Buck stated.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 1. <By
I
association to block anti-trust
proceedings on the department I
justice against it and 225 coal dd^
en pending In the federal < <>urt|
■Indianapolis, failed by action of
District of Columbia supreme co|
today.
The assoication sought to enjl
the attorney general aud the l'ni|
St "W • • -
pc , •
xrn
i.
PRINCETON, lnd.. Non. 1.
Six hundred Gibson county
miners walked out today as a
protest against the check-off in-
junction granted in Judge An-
derson's court at indianapolis.
acres w ill be offered als and lack of export demand caused tor an insanity plea, causing a smash
i the drop. Ing sensation.
Solon Attacks "Patrioteers"
ion Kennedy, wealthy broker. Ola s was inilignani because Uol-
As the trial opened today, attor- tra refused to resign to make way
filed affidavits to pave the way for Long.
heard,'* Frear declared, "that hun-
dreds of thousands of dollars have
been spent in order to secure the dye
embargo legislation and we know
that over the $100,000 was spent to
procure the last dye embargo laws
on the statute books."
Freiu* declared that the congress-
man who defeated the attempt of the
dye trust to get the embargo passed
were "influenced by the fact that the
American public
prices for their dyes and refused to
be a party to the proposition."
Frear charged that Garvan is
chairman or president of the Chem-
ical Foundation company and de-
clared that the attorney general
should prosecute
! "Goltra kept us waiting for two
hours and then came up and told us
it would be disastrous for the party
if he stepped out."
Goltra kept Glass and other pow-
ers of democracy waiting while he
entertained women committee mem-
bers at a breakfast.
White, who will resign as chair-
man to make room for Hull, will do
so willingly, he said.
harmony to
chieftain, a Cox
thing that will b
party," the oust*
appointee, stated.
Wilbur Marsh, Iowa, strong Cox
supporter, said that Hull was a good
choice. Hull's selection, which is
certain to go through, will not be of-
ing four ficially sanctioned until late today
when previouf
mittee, such
and other routine matters are dis
posed of.
Hull's selection followed twenty-
four hours of conference between tin
Police were kept busy answe
calls Monday night from the
- in « districts of the city where 1
loween pranksters were operatl
;' .in flit- < .■■! ■ were answel
I
ti. ,. • >. • pi in rli«- case of an af
, t parked at Twelfth and W|
• rn ^hi«ii was damaged more
loo I b> top ripped to shrf
iud th- body had been beaten
■oine rough instrument. At Ml
and Walker a car was turned of
but was not damaged much, po|
aid. Windows and street lights ^
broken in a r. ; nber of districts.
Only six boys were arrested, |
these were not placed in jail.
•e tfae\ were tal
j home. One <.f these boys had tuj
• alt on a porch in the 2500
of Classen boulevard.
Quito a number of less s<
tiii. w< i • ■ pla •■■] by the uangst|
I Porch chairs and porch
seemed to be favorites w
ni.i ! i:de: Some headlfal
on cars were broken and dinui
reni<> • M ' b'\enth and Penn
v re ib. treet railway l|
are being constructed, ties
Although Independent Candi-. i'"e<i •' the street blocked.
- — • Application of whitewash to
i du.- .Hid the ia intinsj
tore AIVIDW; MS illiof
• mk ■ i::« h was quite «
I . > window!
ect >|
ii some eases
white t'.r'nt. ><>apin ot car trs|
was another favorite sport.
The et - M'-k-t.ick parties J
over the city, and ".spooks'* We
the streets and took Joyrldes
main streets. Sheeted fig^
pea red on the streets ea^
3E
TISANS
DPE
dates Win Some of Their
Changes Are Lost.
With some
FARGO. N. D , Nov
of the measures in the recall election Broadway In th<
I am more than willing to do any- undoubtedly defeated, non-partisans ' ceived u sign.
today took on new hope.
If they succeeded in defeating even
two or three of the measures put up
by the independents the ousting of
their officeholders will not be so
serious, they said.
Around league headquarters there j^ey have ever come bef
business of the com- was talk of a general re-organiza- jng t0 Captain Ha<
is committee reports tlon before the primaries next spring force.
Meantime independents who cap-
tured the offices of governor, attor ANGLESEA, N. ,
ney general and commissioner of P.) The bodienir
agriculture and labor, planned to were i
ompany
Cox faction, led by
ami the McAdoo
Sen at
:rowd hea
Ha
th^i"
Bsutnc from what 1 have cancel their alien patent contracts. < arter Glas
rlson perfect a political organization in others we
d by the next few months that will be j drowned
| able to fight the league. uizud in )
cover
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MacLaren, William. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 67, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 1, 1921, newspaper, November 1, 1921; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109583/m1/1/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.