Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 125, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 7, 1922 Page: 1 of 4
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I An independent newspaper published g
i every day except Sunday. Ou-ned by |
more than 7,000 farmers and workers. Es- §
3 tablished to defend and cherish freedom i
= of i/ie press and liberty of public opinion. -
5 It serves no interest but the public good. g
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Oklahoma Leader
"FEARLESS AND TRUE"
Full Leased ti ire United Press Keport—Member f ederated Presf.
Vol. 2—No. 125
OKLAHOMA CITY, OKLA., SATURDAY. JANUARY 7, 1922
PRICE ONE CENTI
IT OVER
ARMS CONFERENCE BANS POISON GAS
How some government offi-
cials look upon the difficulties
of the farmer is well illus-
trated by a bit of advice given
to them by Mr. Jesse E. Pope,
who is designated as an agri-
cultural expert of the Depart-
ment of Commerce at Wash- j
ington. In a recent article he j
says:
* * * and the farmer's living
expenses must be cut down
through a radical change in his I
standard of living.''
No doubt a diet of "corn
meal and molasses" with occa-
sionally a little bacon gravy
and sour dough biscuits would
settle all of the farmer's prob-
lems.
*. * .
But the expert has more
sound (?) advice:
The net return to agriculture
must be increased by improve-
ments in farm management
rather than by resort to legisla-
tion or by indiscriminate co-
operation actively directed to-
ward the elimination of the
middleman, a restriction of
acreage or the holding of crops
for higher prices.
That tells the whole story.
Our Department of Commerce
agricultural expert wants the
farmer to learn how to more
■scientifically "slop the hogs,"
but under no circumstances I
must he be permitted to legis-|
late for his own interests. Only i
packers and bankers and rail-1
roads and other industrial
magnates have the brains to do j
this. Neither must the farmer]
co-operate to eliminate the t
No, this would be
AGIST FIRST
L
Interest of 23 Per Cent Al-
leged in Suit tor $15,000
Against Bank.
Ireland Fears
Renewed Fights
Pact Vote
Over
IN JO
IE FILED
LLIE CASE
46
Sinn Fein- Split Believed Cer-
tain, No Matter Which Way
Vote on Treaty Goes.
Usury charges were made against
the First National bank of Oklahoma
City in a suit that has been filed by
Harold F. Brad burn, trustee for the
bankrupt Aurelius-Swanson com- \ DUBLIN, Jan. 7. Pail Elreann's
.iii' ,, . . decision to ratify or reject the peace
The petition allegeH that the bank
has violated the state usury law and treaty with Great Britain is ex-
the United States law regulating the Pelted to be reached today.
interest rate to be charged by na- The parliament met at 11
tional banks 1 o'clock today at the National Uni-
Interest was charged at the rate j versify and final debate on the
of 23 per cent Bradburn alleges in i Downing Street compact began,
his petition filed In district court. | After Burgess concluded Ins
The loan was negotiated with E. L. I "peech of opposition, the speaker de-
Aurelius, president of the bankrupt flared another recess.
company. It was said. The Ball was to meet at 7 o'clock
The receiver seeks recovery of tonight when (Jrifflth would make
$15,092.58. which is double the in-! 'he final speech and the vote would
terest on a loan of $50,000, alleged
CAGQ
STJ
il
SI
ST
L
KE
Sergeant Warner Said To
Have Confessed; Insurance, j
Motive—Woman Held.
Murder charges were to be filed
Saturday before Ernest Chambers, j
United States commissioner, in the j
case of C. A. Jollie, army field clerk.)
murdered Thursday night at Fort I
Ileno, Okla.. according to Lee Mul-1
lenix, city Bertlllon expert.
Mullenix stated that army officers
Bomb Plots"
Alarm Clocks
Heard to Tick
IEET
Arrest Men With Long For-
eign Names — Local Strik-
ers Warned of New At-
tempts to Provoke Trouble.
Pull details of a "fake bomb plot"
alleged to parallel in audacity the
Tom Mooney frameup following the
L
ILL! LE
were coming to Oklahoma to present Preparedness Day parade In San
! the case to the United States district
Wage Award Rejected—Open
Shop Gauntlet Taken
Up By Workers.
to have been made to the company
The petition alleges that Aurelius
paid $7,546.29 in interest and com-
mission on the loan which was for
six months.
be taken.
There
tomorrow-
vote goes, was the prediction in the
ctreets this afternoon.
attorney.
Unravelling of the mystery of Jol-
lie's murder came to a swift conclu-
sion with the alleged
made Friday by Sergeant Byron
CHICAGO, Jan. 7. Renewal of liV'jl.ilL"'*" 'That he'nnd j have ^r(t)^erf™™
Chicago's building trades strike was Jollie s wife might collect *15,000 in , „n |hf, <trlklng work-
d have be
suit the packers.
Francisco are being awaited by Fred
Kemp, secretary of the local Butcher
Workers' union.
Kemp has received dispatches from
confession I Kansas City stating that two pro-
fessional dynamiters are alleged to
DERS
will be civil war in Ireland > * uuuu.ug «.u« ... .,on.es mipi plclon on the striking butcher wc
r whatever wav the Da ordered today to start neit Tuesday, Rovrrnment Insurance carried by the e|.a wh0 be(.n t00 „rderlv
■ 411 unions except the bricklayers murdered man, Mullenix declared. ., . nack.,e.
All unions except the bricklay
finally voted to reject the wage
1 Whichever way the vote goes, and I award made by Judge K. M. l^indis
i- . i >1.1. . i The strike will attain tie UO all
UN
I PLANS
be extremely close, Sinn Fein will be ( hicago building
Telltale Print.
llB Mullenix was summoned to El
all | Reno Friday morning to investigate
hich has been at murder.
FACE TO FACE
Lloyd George Thinks Head of
Soviet Will Attend Genoa
Conference.
CANNES, Jan. 7.—(By U. P.)—
Nicolai Lenin, head of the soviet gov-
ernment. will meet allied premiers
and possibly a representative
France Has Plans For Devi
opment of Air Forces: Sut [
To Be Regulated.
\ N || | \ I. | || \. j„„. 7,- I
Poison gas a«> a weapon of war |
fere wns barred l y the arm
conference I "da*.
The five urrent powers—thh
I nited Mates, I. rent llritaii>
Japan, Irsnce and llal> adopt1*]
ed the resolution drawn up b
I Iihii Knot and backed by tlij
\iiierlciui delegation, placing
strict ban on Hie use of deadl^
gases.
The aciion in banning poison
vs hich follow • adoption ol tfce R |
resolution prohibiting unrestric
RUbmariiK warfare. hiik taken up. |
the conference. -ittinu as an an
I nient limitation committee.
Later It will be formally appro
split to its foundation.
i a standstill for nearly a year,
protruding tack in the * army
Leaders of both sides in the treaty : Lfade",let 11 J" t"ftJhe I J?'." s,
,t„ K,v. annoiine.il .hev win r„. strike call was intended as taking | cause of his arrest.
Warren was
fight have announced they will
hrown i Jollie was sitting at his desk.
middleman. .\u, mis wuuiu uc i
gross ingratitude. The farmer | Sixteen New Bndyes and Two
and the consumer have earned Schools Inc uded In |at ' K'antn'a™7
this burden SO lTian> jeais! ESlltTlcltCS. rdgning and standing for re-election
that the middleman should be; —— j as president.
recognized as having a vested! f—I" or° ™"lt,n'r
right to live off the farmer. |ple who had r,|nm„| thejr hope
j promise*, of peace. Trouble was
feared if the treaty were ratified;
! trouble if it were rejected.
I Approval bv a sjpall majority was
And then it should be next to
high treason for the farmer
County commissioners are making! Throughout Ireland today there
plans for a big program of road con- | was anxiety in the minds of the peo-
struction which is to begin at once,
according to Ed Butterfield, chair-
crop for higher prices. ! surfaced roads are contemplated to
* « * I COpt $200,000. and sixteen bridges in
The departments at Wash- 1 different parts of the country are in-
in<rinn iv.nt tn n nmsnpr- ! eluded In the construction plans. The
ington want to see a prosper brtdfeB wi„ COst iioo.oou.
OUS farmer. Hut first Oi all I roadH which will be hard sur-
they are interested in main-; faced by these plans art. according
taining things as they are. No to Butterfield, one and a half miles
radical chanffes to benefit the to connect With the three-mile strip
laaicai cnanges to ueneiu trie to the rlevelan(1 county Hne, three
farmer Will be made until the i m||M connecting with Britton, and
farmer makes these changes two miles in the eastern part of the
for himself. He has the votes county.
to put into official position the Two new schools at Arcadia and
y . -11 • Britton, and the new county hos-
llien that will conscientiously p|tajf complete the building work
work for the farmers' interest, j under the supervision of the com-
How long would Mr. Pope hold missioners.
a job as an agricultural expert
if men of the type of John GETS
the i
believed likely with the resignation
of DeValera and his cabinet and the {
formation of a new ministry to fol-
low. If the treaty were approved,
it wa.s feared internal fighting would j
break out over the week-end.
On the other hand, it the treaty
were rejected, and Griffith and Col-
lins and other leaders resigned, it
was believed possible hostilities with ,
Great Britain would be. resumed. ] e or
for the truce, it was felt, could not1 I)nn>
long hold good with the DeValera-1 ^al'
ites.
A popular demonstration, planned
to celebrate the ratification of the
treaty has been abandoned.
Kemp has been told to watch out America face to face at Genoa at an H Plenary session.
for similar activities of paid provo- ecimornlc ,.ouf„r,March, The aircraft subcommittee re,
eatfttri in Oklahoma City. f . recommending again t a curtalln(]
Two men held on bond in Kansas ' George believe:-. of aircraft, w as submitted and
City gave the names of Andrew i 'I'he British premlei is said to have j,e acted upon Monday.
Creska and Tony Waeelvitch. said i avsuran<-<>^ that Rut-sia w ill meet the Limitation of aircraft construct*
by police to be "imported dynamite conditions laid down by the supreme other than on airplane carriers.;]
men." council for its participation In the improbable.
\la.rm Hock* l unnd. propo ed confirBlttt and that Lenin Xhi French .> > • undei itood
Ten men win Jtiitd w h n police and Tehltcherin, bit foreign minister J imve been the leading objectorsj
began making their arrests in Kan will appear in person. limitation. • specially as they
■m 1 u> alleging a deep plot to The official invitation to the j ambitious plans r« i developnunjH
dynamite the plant Mollis and ' Tin tod Mat.' to pint i< ipair in the t Ii«m i ail > -r\ic<' in the future
company. Genoa conference which will seek
The-quarter' ot the alleu«d "homl' tht* I" t methods for comtinic rehab- WASHl.NtiTON. Jan. 7.— (By U.J
Tracks with the peculiar tack m«k" were raided and resulted Inhumation of Burope ws transmitted Thi arms conference today
print were followed bj Mullenix, the seizure of an alarm clock with washington today by Ainbessa driving head rapidly in its tasW
and a gun In a clump of bushes was 1 electrical appliances attached, police (jor Harvey. , "killing the vipers of war."
found, he declared. The tracks were announced. They claim that similar , "Down to llmiucs*.* Having taken the sting from
then followed to Jollle's house. (clocks were found in several recent Ambassador Harvey himself told marine warfare, the committee hoj
Warren's shoes with the protrud- j 'ires. United Press he believed the , to conclude its work by
ing lack fitted th ' tracks exactly. ^ nian living th«- uame ot ic. A. arnis conference at the America^ ban on the use of poison gas*
He confessed and his statement was Hwanson. whore identity is unit - «capital Had i;reat effe^-t ujWi *K n- warfare.
W'ft with federal authorities at the sealed, claimed io liavc heen .is- p,,,in,. ,.oim(.j|- action- oi ye.-terday. \t the .same ti|,n tin Shant1
j army post Mullenix declared. Wnr- aanlted ' > a cmwd at men Friday "As contrasted with previoustteet- railwaj empassi awaited M
I pifpr Wrifpr Spnri* Rpvnlvpr len Is :'t old md Mrs .tollle t«ht. following " hi eli h. wne P<> in_ of fho allied lead. i. Harvey from S.-.retan Hughes and ArtJ
Leuei Wlliei oeilUb n^vuivei ( ^ ^ _ ^ hCi, j lice the "Information leading to the|K.li(J "th#. Ktrlking thinu wa.s th - J. Balfour. The Chinese said
husband, Mullenix said.
fn from the Dall government „ I the shot was flred through
Eamonn DeValera, whose dramatic | frme,I ostensibly to force the labor | dow Mullenix was told
resignation and withdrawal of the ^ap*p a "
resignation was characterized
Arthur Griffith and Michael < ollins, i 'Ul
proponents of the treaty as political iea( s c a
trickery. wilL make one last attempt
win-
t Fort
v The committee is merely a cloak Warren was found at .follies
^ for the open shop campaign, union j home, and was supported in an alibi
by Mrs. Jollie and her daughter,
when he was questioned
HD
El'
and Cartridges to Grand
Opera Singer.
HICAGO. Jan. 7.—(By U. P.) A
! writer of poison pen letters who has
j terrorized wealthy society matrons
| of Chicago's Gold Coast, today
j threatened the life of Mary Garden,
hicago Opera com-
rrests."
Rwanson said he overheard the al-
leged plot to dynamite the plant and
was beaten up when the men dis-
covered him listening
exposed in St. Paul In the packing
house strike where it was claimed
that the strikers had planned to
dynamite the boiler room of the
GIRL CLAIMS OFFICER
MADE HER GO WITH HIM
Garden received a box con-
taining a revolver and six cartridges.
The letter writer said she retain-
ed three cartridges for use on Miss
Garden and "hoped soon to see her
body floating dow n the Chit ago riv-
Simpson were holding
reigns of government?
Speculation in wheat has
been restricted through "po- T/, „ w„rn„
Rppnnnition Will n,ftrshal here, following the story
litical action." The board of 10Ky°JwamS necogniuun^wiii | |)?. Mlu.; s|mf, ,, ,elep„om
JAP THREAT
BLOOM FIELD. Mo., Jan. 7.
thorities today announced they
seeking J. It. Allen, former
trade regulations are now sup
posed to cover transactions on
REAL grain only, and not
imaginary grain. This will
Be Discontinued Is "Ex-
posures" Go On.
TOKIO, Jan.
i. The Japanese
forwarded
make the grain gamblers lake j protest to the chita government
another direction. Cotton has against its action in publishing docu-
always been the "most specti- ments designed to show an alleged
lative commodity" raised by Franco-Japanese secret agreement.
Al e. m, ii | The protest includes n re-dr
the farmer. The cotton ex-1 of ( |ltta exposures" mad?
changes at New York and New washington and warned that recog-
Orleans are in full swing, and nition of the Chita government will
you can put up your money be discontinued if such procedure
right here in Oklahoma Cityjdoes not ceas0
bales' ThLZnry ^oUor''BURGLARS LOOT HOME OF
These exchange!operate under CLOTHING AND JEWELRY
government protection. The ; :
agricultural bloc could perform r",-
service than to, dettce
; girl who disappeared a month
Miss Shock returned here
said Allen forced her to go to
i phis with him under a thn
death.
'■ARREST PROOF" COAT.
NEW YORK. Jan. 7. An ingenious
"arrest proof" coat, made in two sej
back of P. E. Hunter when two de-
tectives grabbed him. They got him
1^ter. iin 1 iiis shirt s 1 eeves,
•'Why, the pig," was the only com-
ment Miss Gardeu would make when
asked about the incident. The case
Au- I was reported to Chief of Police Fltz-
rsro j morris by Miss Garden personally.
Police and federal authorities have
been working for several weeks on
poison pen letters w ritten to Chicago
social leaders. They are convinced
and J the writer is a woman, probably
em- mentally unbalanced. About n do/.to
t of such letters were reported. They be-
lieve the one received by Miss Gar-
den was written by the same per-
son.
The majority of tin letters re-
ceived by "Gold Coast" social lead-
ers were reported to repeat bits of
gossip and scandal regarding friends
and members of their families. Oth-
ers merely carried threats.
SUSPECTS ARE CAPTURED
AFI'ER STRENUOUS CHASE
Two suspected negroes were cap-
tured after a motorcycle chase Sat-
urday afternoon by J. T. Brown and
S. c. Wilkes, city officers, they de- , .
1 clared Saturday . The negroes gave | packing plant. I he plot w as
ti... names of' James Johnson and ; to a private detective agency and the
chief of police disclosed the entir«
frameup.
The Sacco-Vanzetti case in Boston
where two workers are being rail-
c,t>- , , , i , , roaded to the gallows in connection
One of the negroes is being held wJth R pavrou murder ]h causing
in connection with the snatching of |ntornatlonal protest.
a purse from Mrs. J. W. Campbell, ' Seek l(e>eley ('*«
Friday morning. They are being i Forrest Hughes, county attorne
questioned in c
other hi-jacking
j way this conference got down to { would consult them before Monfl
business Immediately." in the hope of some action perhfj]
French Attitude Changes/ mediation to unravel the xnarl. '
A parallel with the opening ses , Acceptance of the poison gas
sion of the Washington parley was by all the powe
The latest bomb plot frameup waH , ^een in the way Lloyd George went thoifgh
the
was deemed Ilk
Root resolutions
right to the heart of things with
(Continued on Page 3)
counter to the views of most of
(Continued on Page S)
Arthur Williams. They tried to es-
cape on a motorcycle, but were cap-
tured about four miles east of the
mnection with two reasserted Satuarday that the
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Getting Down
To Brass Tacks •
.,. !iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiii'ii"iii"i"i"""'"i"""i""i'"
HOOCH HOUNDS, BEWARE!
greater
abolish the Cotton Exchange.
of E. K. Slack. 1501 West
Thirty-eighth street, it was reported j
• . • by police Saturday morning.
Cotton during the past six I A suit of clothes, a dress coal a
,i i ladies' sweater, and some articles oi
months or more has see-sawed ^ were t:ik„n The hot,« w;,
in a perfectly bewildering entered «hon ihero was no one ut
fashion, SO much so that home. Police found no clue.
neither planter nor spinner has Police officer Martin ar.este.i a
known whether he stood on his j !
head or his heels. The specu- v„tl);at|on in connection with the
lator has had it all his own attempted burglary of a house at 117
way, and has cared not a rapEast Eleventh. The man was found j
what became of those whose at Thirteenth an.1 Broadway.
bread and butter depended on D...nlT
the industry, says Sir Charles ALLEGED MAIL BANDIT
MaCara, one of .the British AGAIN UNDER ARREST
textile experts. lie advises |
that the American and British ! L,t<'k Ro«' b-
i • -4.1.. u ft.,. : was ordered re-arrested Saturday by
governments jointly abolish the judge Cotteral of the federal court,
speculatixe exchanges. 1 nlS ^following information that his $5".-
means New York. New Or- ooo bond is alleged to be worth less
leans and Liverpool. With than ? 10,000.
these exchanges abolished, it An investigation ■ conducted t.j
"oujd Permit co-operative or-
ganizations, like the Oklahoma g_^or overheard Roach's attorney. O,
Cotton Growers to function J cargiil. «av io Mont powell as-
more orderly and without the sistant conpty attorney, that the
constant fear of wild variations j bond of Roach was a "straw i.on.i "
in price created through the lbal ho ,0iu'(J ihavl" I"""*6 * Dr. .\m> Kanbon.e.i ih< iwei
nnAiilutinn mi im irinarv col hundred thousand if he had liked, j |SBUeg a warning to all booties
speculation on imaginary cot Roaci, Is Charged with bein? Im.- 1„ her own laboratories she if ,1
ton. r armers. It lo time lor I pi|ril^,Mj )g r.'I, Santa 1 ' mail roll- , tMBd home brew. She Is pcrhap.
political action. Depend on i iiori near Edmond seieral months She was elected on a "dr> ticket
your own strength. I ail" i ork testing home brew tn he
TO DISCUSS
G. 0. P MOVES
Republican Congressmen and
President To Talk Legis-
lative Program.
I WASHINGTON. Jan. 7. <By
The republican legislative program
i for 1922 and its probable effect on
ihe congressional election.-- this fall
• 111 be discussed by President Hard-
ing and a group of house, senate
administration and party officials at
;• white house dinner tonight.
The two leading republican ad-
visers in the cabinet. Attorney Gen-
eral Daugherty, and Secretary of
W in* Weeks, and John T. Adams, na-
tional chairman, will be present
The senators invited are lx>dge,
.Massachusetts, majority leader; Cur-
tis. Kansas, republican whip; Wat-
son. Indiana; McCumber, North Uu-
, Uota. and Brandegee. Connecticut.
Uepresentatives invited ar ^ Speak-
er Gillette. Massachusetts; Mondell,
Wyoming, re 'il>lioan floor eader;
Anderson, Michigan, chainn* n of the
.joint commission to inv\iiu.<i" a^ri-
! cultural affairs. Madden, Illinois;
Fordney. .Michigan, chairman of the
ways and means committee; crow,
Pennsylvania, and Sanders Indiana.
There isn't another daily in the United States with 1
***! < M. Itewi..>. Morris «.,t..|.- c;rcu]ation enjoyed by the Oklahoma Leader that carries I
ui'l'n'thr!.'' Btrlking ex-eerv- little advertising as the Oklahoma Leader. Something's wnM
I 1
Sometime tlie Southwestern l ell Telephone Compthl
asked for an increase in pnone rates for Oklahoma City. 1 f
Leader, through its attorney, opposed the raise. Il was m
back for several months as a result. The people were sav
Chrlstn
ice men
filed.
Investigation Friday led to tbe
belief that the case had never been
tiled or had been "side-tracked" in
Justice court. Mont Powell, assist .. ,. . - - ,
ant county attorney, declared that, money, but how do you think the telephone company feels
he filed the case in the justice court wards the Leader?
of Walter Benson. Benson denied.
however, that be had the case, and
every other justice In the city stated
that he did not have it.
The information charging It
with a.<
weapon
lard, wji
Decern hf
veley
nilt with a dangerous
id beating of Luther Wil-
filed in Benson's court
27, two days after the
mil occurred. Hughes
Business men of Oklahoma Cit> introduced a $7,500,fi|
bond issue. The Leader was tin- only paper that objected
the issue. It was defeated. The people were saved hiw|
♦axes, but how do you i hink "interested" contractors wo
natural!
murdered
d' af-
N \TI i: AI l /I
WASHINGTON
Timothy CostelL
American citizen,
January 4. at Viexico. (lei
Summerlin. American charg
fairss at Mexico City, informed the
state department today.
Summerlin has made representa-
tions to the Mexican government.
• hYI II >01 i.u\ IIV PCM H K.
NKW YORK. Jan. 7. On the trail
of "Sure Death" Boddy. negro *ho
killed two of their comrades and
: ...'I towarii> tin' I...ad.'i-
N.m ' h- Ir i- 11 ,\ mm i, ' ■ i. p.• in for a tit} owiW
cl. i'li ic liulit. |.|jiiiL \\hi,'., th. i'' op.Tation of nia.iy .Ma'il
gers of City Owned Electric Plants in this flght. A city ..wi<>|
t 1-11 ■ l.ialil • ii. V • ■ :■■ ■ |.|. :,. 11 ■ ■ \ . i ,11; '|..V\ il.. VI.u t h
tho Oklahoma (las and Electric Company feels towards H
i."afli'r. 1'i.r I'lidany. i'in^ llirir prufits al.inx this line?
The Oklahoma Leader has, and will continue to eneotoM
. he oiyanization ul ('"-i .pt'i ativ. Stores, owned by the peo}li|
These stores " ill endanger the profits of privately owned stoih
The Oklahoma county farmers, within a short time t
open tin- first lanm. co-operativ.- store in Oklahoma Ci'l
How do Oklahoma City big merchants feel towards the Lea.r
lor endangering their profits in this manner? o
That's why onjy a few, a brave few, of our Oklahoma C
merchants advertise in the Leader. That's why the OklahoM
r nnnu rn n/1 'JlITT CC Leader must depend mainly upon circulation receipts to mi11!
rnUIVI LUlYIlrU I 1 Lc , ,
An understanding of these "brass tacks" gives you
TON, Jan. " KecrHtury ut |K.st reasons on earth why you should build up the Leat
" Knowing these facts, how can you delay helping the Lea.
' by getting new readers? I'se the following coupon:
Saturday mori
would look it
bail time.
Preliminary
for an alleged ;«j
was to be held
Saturdaj afterrn
Paekingtown c
urday. according
ty officers.
but said tha
hearing of thn-f
assault upon Hev
in Ilenson's c
on.
>ntinued quiet
to police and c
WEEKS RESIGNS
StlCC
John L . Weeks
I \l\ H'** national republ
P , 1 today and will h
M. Butler of Boj
here todaj
Frank H. Koi
mi t tee chair mar
ington tonight U
i committee
ded by Win. 1
vaS reported
republican <
will go t( W
otifer with We
K M I S N01
MUSKOOKE
feminine knee
jurors of tbe «
I.. Williams ri
kopkk r. \ ii i mi
Okla., Jan. 7. j
ICa-rvi?.orve tx,
TrBM RsCft ,
polii
net
nother man. train <
spread their date tb
th<
thr
ods<:
in an el-
•three-year-old mayor of Fairport. Ohio,
s in her immediate vicinity to beware,
uctlng chemical analyses of all eontra-
ie youngest mayor in the United States,
photo shows the fair mavor at
own laboratories.
' fort to apprehend the assassin. Yen- ,
terikty. detective pals of W. L Mil
ler and F. J. Buckley, who met death j
from the negro slayer's gun. misseo J
their man by a scant half hour at j
' his home in Mount Clair, N. J.
VII o SHOW \ I M w rOBK.
NEW YORK. Jan. 7. Hundreds of
automobile men front all parts of the
country were arriving here today for
the auto show which opens in the j
Grand Central Palacc this afternoon- I
■
lai
L
.-,,000 N1,>V KKADKHS—IT CAN BK DONE
CIRCl'LATION DEPT. OKLAHOMA LEADER
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
oil will find $3.00 for which send the Oklahon
year to the following name and address:
Enclosed
Leader for oi
Name
I his Coupon t-.ixl lor >lt.il Subscribers Onlj
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 125, Ed. 1 Saturday, January 7, 1922, newspaper, January 7, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109641/m1/1/: accessed May 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.