Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 150, Ed. 1 Monday, February 6, 1922 Page: 3 of 4
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OKLAHOMA LEADER
PAGE THRI
• n
• •
i, h
SEC
ECYUR
GEO 'S
fp
:H0
Whitecapping Statute Called
To Attention of Body.
AUSTIN. Tex.. Feb. 6.—Wliile not
making direct reference to the Ku
Klux Klan or any other masked or-
ganization, Judge James It. Hamilton
of the criminal district court of Trav-
is county, in empanelling the grand
jury for the February term this
morning charged the quizzing body
on the white-capping statutd and
warned that all proceedings ot the
iirand jury must be kept secret
"The court iH informed that some
of the grand jurors have already
been approached on matters that may
come before your honorable body for
consideration." Judge Hamilton told
the grand jury.
He then instructed that "the law
provides that you shall keep secret
all proceeding* of the grand Jury and
not reveal either by word or sign any
matters that may come before you
for your consideration."
The most Important matter to come
before the grand jury will be inves-
tigation of the killing of Peeler
clayton, service car driver, which
occurred near the entrance to "Ku
Klux hall" on the night of Decem-
ber 15.
On complaint of Earl Shelton, a
local attorney, seventeen Austin citi-
zens. some of them prominent in
rocial and busincss^life, have been
bound over to the' grand jury in
connection with the killing, each on
bond of $5,000. On information fur-
nished by Sergeant of Police Ed R.
Nltschke the complaints having been
sworn to by County Attorney John
W. Hornsby four officers are charged
with the killing, all bound fryer in
bonds of $1,000 each.
•L
LE COMING
PER OP
K GIRL
BEING SOU
S
GUI
GOVERNOR SUED
FOR SEDUCTION
(Continued from I'aee 1)
United States district court.
"It is a damnable lie," Gov-
ernor Russell said when he was
told several days ago that the
suit would be filed against him.
.Miss Blrkhead said she met
Russell in June, 1918, when he
was then lieutenant governor of
the state.
The girl said he persuaded her
to come to his office.
"After he found that I really
cared for him and trusted him.
he undertook and succeeded in
seducing me," she said.
In October, the girl declares,
she found she was soon to be-
come a mother, and that she
asked Russell to adopt the child.
Governor Russell, she de-
clared, claimed the idea was im-
practicable.
P
m
«
RH
GP
EOT
Untermeyer Urges 45,000
Apartments for New York.
By Federated Press.
NEW YORK, Feb. 6,—A plan to
construct 45,000 apartments in New
York City, to house 225,000 persons
at rentals of not more than $9 a
month per room, has been proposed
by Samuel Untermyer, chief counsel
to the Lockwood committee investi-
gating housing conditions. The
building program, estimated to cost
about $100,000,000, if the proposal is
successful, will be financedt by life
insurance companies. It would be
necessary to amend the state insur-
ance laws to permit the companies
to invest up to 10 per cent of t£eir
total admitted assets In tenement
houses for the period of the existing
housing emergency, provided the in-
vestment yields a 6 per cent return.
The plan already has been broach-
ed to the officials of the Metropoli-
tan Life Insurance company. Unter-
myer announced, where it met with
a prompt response, conditioned only
on the company seeing its way clear
to protect the interests of its policy
holders.
This project met with immediate
endorsement by the officials of the
Building Trades Council, and affili-
ated labor organizations, who have
given assurance that they will each
contribute one day's work per week
of each man employed in the project,
or, as an alternative, reduce the
standard of wage of each man so
employed by $1 a day.
The only criticism of the idea has j
come from the interest which Unter-
myer has been fighting in his capa-
city, as counsel to the" Lockwood .
committee. The workers' organiza- 1
lions which he has consulted, he de- i
clared, have shown a fine public
spirit and eagerness to co-operate. (
lu return he has suggested that
every mechanic and laborer working
on the buildings shall have pref-
erential right to rent an apartment
in them.
In announcing the plan Utermyer
said the city is facing a housing
crisis which, unless"" corrected at
once, threatens to reach the dlmen-
sons of an cataclysm.
FOUND WORK;
DIED OF JOY
By Federated Press.
NILES. Calif., Feb. 6.—Jose Del-
gado, a Mexican laborer and father
of three little children, had been out.
of a job for months. His children
were cold and starving. So was Jose
himself, but that didn't matter so
much. And then at last he got a job
helping to dig a cellar for a new
' uildlng. Five minutes after he
ook hold of the shovel, Dejgado
dropped dead. "Heart failure," said
•he doctors, "induced by low nutri-
tion and the shock of sudden joy"!
Sudden joy sufficient to cause death,
because finally he was to be allowed
'o work hard to earn enough to feed j
luratseLf and family. j
Howat and 'Provisional' Fac-
tions To Send Delegates
To Convention.
PITTSBURG, Kan., Feb. 6.—A stiff
revival of the battle between the
forces of Alexander Howal and the
international union is promised on
the occasion of the opening of the
next national convention in Indian-
apolis, February 14.
"We are going to the convention if
we have to walk, and we're going to
take about a hundred delegates," was
the statement here, Friday, of Jock
Fleming, acting president for the
llowatites.
To make the delegation from the'
Kansas district "complete," the pro-
visional government of the district,
in charge of the International union,
also has announced it will send that
many delegates to the meeting.
Two Conventions.
Present indications are that the
convention will be the most bitter In
the history of the miners' union.
To further the battle. Fleming an-
nounced Friday that the Howatltes
also will hold a district convention
some time in April.
Almost at the same time It was
announced from headquarters of the
provisional government that the in-
ternational forces will hold a district
convention here also "sometime In
April."
The provisional convention, it was
said, will be held for the purpose of
electing permanent officials to head
the International organization In this
district in the future.
Ilrondtdde Attack.
However, the procedure at the In-
ternational convention is expected to
have considerable bearing on the
situation in the Kansas coal fields,
and the dictrlct conventions to fol-
low.
The Howat forces, Fleming de-
clared. will make a broadside attack
against the action of John L. Lewis,
international president, in suspend-
ing district 14. and ousting the offi-
cials while a voluntary strike was In
progress against the Kansas indus-
trial court law.
Lewis conveyed the idea to the
public that the district was suspend-
ed because of the refusal of Howat
and the district board to order the
strikers back to work in two small
mines. At the time tho men were
on voluntary strike against the court
law.
Howat indicated that he will sign
the peaco bond upon which hinges
his release from the Cherokee
county jail at Columbus.
Object to Guard*.
In the meantime dissension con-
tinues to grow among the ranks of
the miners aliened with the provi-
sional union, and daily men are quit-
ting work and joining the Howat
forces.
At virtually all of the mines in
operation armed guards—deputized
by the county sheriff—are main-
tained "to insure peace."
Even the international miners,
however, resent working under
guard, and arc also quitting work
because of the conditions allowed to
be imposed by the provisional gov-
ernment.
Witnesses Get License Tag of
Car as Screaming Girl
Is Abducted.
Mysterious kidnaping of a young
girl on East Thirteenth street Sun-
day niglit was being investigated
Monday by police.
Screams attracted several resi-
dents of the neighborhood who
rushed to the street and found a girl,
about 17 years old, making a desper-
| ate effort to escape from the arms
I of a man in a large automobile. The
'car had been parked by the curb for
some time, it was said.
GET BERGQDLL
LIVESTOCK
PRODUCE
MARKETS
COTTON
GRAIN
Secrecy Maintained as Plans
Are Pushed Forward.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6.—A way
has been found to bring O rover
Cleveland Bergdoll, millionaire Phil- j
adelphia slacker, back to the United
States for punishment, ex-servicet
men in the house declared today. 1
Bergdoll is now reported to b
hiding in Switzerland. He fled then
livestock
OKLAHOMA CITY
cohon
NEW YORK COTTON
grain
CHICAGO GRAIN
RECEIPTS TOPA.V.
Cattle
Cttlvn
Hog*.
, March
I May .
; July .
Oct. . .
Oklahoma Leader Want .
Rates and Information
17 West rtifrd fltrvet.
PHONK MAPLE 7BOO
!Tq.. Hi average woraJl
the una. twelve una, to ^ lnclu
chary® want ada are due and p* ya
the day lirat uiaeruou ol adver
i appears.
| Ailvartlaem*-nr« am received until .
I noon, tor Uisertiou earn* day. CaioeJ
uona aud correction® received until
noon, of earn* day.
Eatlpuited receipts in the local cattle j
division were placed at 2,000 head to- 1
day, a moderate supply. Trading was
alow, ami lower on altars, possibly 15c
to •Oc. Early top on steers was $6&,)' March
with the bulk nrmiud .5 loads m-UIhk • >' j|:i,
for safety from Germany when peace Hutcher market was fairly active Ju,y
relations were re-established be- ! ,t<m fairly tead> odd head of good helf- jUct
Op. lltgii Low close; CHICAGO, Feb 6 — <iiv
lb Ko 17.08 14.10 imiL... . , 1
16.60 ik 3 lb 50 lti.bc " prlc*ja advanced sharply on j
16.09 16.27 16.07 1S.JU Chicago board of trade today. yiu llt
UM 15.10 15-61 l UIfel,
wh." huvlli and off.rli.gii v„r« lln>- | U Relmbi. l ulljj^onur'^mn,!
|lted. Receipts were small. Buying of J?* NorUl "•Mnson. makes them o
was cumulated by the upturn in at *** ^ •*« *** dotui.
NEW ORLtMWS COTTON
tween Berlin and Washington, fear-
ing that Germany, as the conquered
nation in the war, would bo forced
to hand him over to the United
States.
Representative Walter Llnebarger
of California Is now in Europe
Harry V. Kahle aud R. E. Brittaln w"rk nR out the plan there while h s
tried to aid the girl, they told polio-. "wclate, ' ho'""1 a"' busy In
hut the man reached for a *un. <-au.«- i w"hlnrton I hey have finally de-
IriK-them to stand back. He (Jrovt' termlned upon a plnn which they are
away at high speed, they «ahi. confident will land Bcrndoll In a
The license number of the car was United States federal prison to ser\e
I procured, however, and the owner of) "«' <hc sentence he escaped when ; ■•£* ■" • ■_•••,
the car was being traced through the made his sensational dash for M/,dluin Lo gQO(1 heiters!!!!!!
records of the highway department, freedom from Governor's Island, a ; fctUr lo m^ium he ;era
efs selling around |6 and cowa $4.20
fanners and cutters were from $1.6o to
$3. llulls, $-'.75 to |3.7J . Calf market waa
steady wtth a top of 17.50. Stockora and
Spot*. 15.75, unchanged.
Open High Ix>w Close
lo.JK lo*5 16.60 16.60
16.71 15.77 16.62 16.62
16.60 16.65 15.32 15.32
14.94 14.9b 14.76 14 76
overed freely.
feeders steady and generally 26c lower.
STEERS—
Good toycholce baby beet. .
Good o Choice corn fed
Medium to goc 1 gralu fed..
Ilt-dium to oesi graas
Caked on graa« . . . •
Plain to medium gruasera.
COWS AM) HEIFERS—
Med. to good butcher cows..
r I
f..5!0 7.25
6.0UW 6.75
6.254/ 5.75 BUTTER—
4.00w 4i* Creamery extras ...
5.00 iP 5.50 Creamery standards
«.26<0 s.oO Firsts
Seconds
4.26«> 4.76 POULTRY—
3.50V 4.25 . Fowls
4.00® 4.40 | | ,uck8
produce
CHICAGO PR0D0CE
di. 35
County and city officers spent tho >'«ar ago.
, I'luin to medium grass cowa 2.6o\ 1-00
night in a search for the girl and the j "If congress will act quickly when ftirtng cutiera .
mysterious kidnapor, but without we say the word, we can have Berg- Cannera ano low cutuia....
success. doll back in America within six J 10 oholos dulis,....
Some witnesses declared that the months," Representative Fltigerald,1 ^miuon °boiognas V.V.
girl was walking along the street, republican, Ohio, leader in tho move- j CALVES—
and was seized by the man. incnt, declared today.
^ "To reveal our plan, even on the
■ floor of the house, would be fatal,"
1 Representative Fitzgerald said to-
I day.
t.ooe t.*•
1.-6© i.OI
2.600 S.M
2.00tf 2.60
LCotf 2.00
Oeeae . ...
Springs . .
Turkejs .
Hooater>4 .
BOOB-
Ordinarles
Firsts . ...
IB
CKS HULL caddock may
"comeback
Good to choce veal 7.00® 7.60)
Fair to good light #.00® 7.00
Good to choice ueavy calves. 4.00® 5.00 |
Common tor fair o*lv«a i.00®
STOL'KEKS At*U FEEDERS-
Feeders. SOO to 900 lbs 4.60® 5.21
Good 50u-7o0-lb. Blockers.... #.76® 4.60
Dent whitefaco yearltnga 4.75® 551
Mod. 10 good yeaning* 4.26® 4 71
Common to plain yearlings.. 8.25® 4.00
local market
WHOLESALE I'lllHHTE.
Corrected by W light Produce Co.
8prlnga 10.16
Young roostera . 11
Hens % 20
Guineas, ycung ard old JO
No. 1 hen turkeys, i Iba. and up
(other grnlns. Sh..rta
( 1'rovlsloiiH were higher.
May wheat opened at S1.25V up W
I and closed up 2fcr. juiy opened at
I $1.09*«. op lr. cloning up lHe.
May c«jrn opened up Se at 6« sc. and
cloaed up July opened at 68%r
j op *4c, and closed up 2c.
May osts opened up iic at 30«ic, and
rloseti up .|ul\ opened at 40«4C. un
Hr. closing up I*,.
u mi:AT—
No. 8 red .... \
N10. 2 hard
No. 3 hard ....
CORN—
No. \ yellow ....
No. 2 yellow ...
No. 4 yellow ....
No. 6 yellow ....
No. fi yellow ....
No. 2 mixed ....
No. 3 mixed ....
No. 4 mixed ....
No. 5 mixed ....
No. 6 mixed ...
No. 1 white .....
No. 2 white
OATS—
No. 3 white
No. 4 white
Standard
1-27$1.28
*..1.32H01.26tt
...1.20 ® 1.201 i
... .63 V«
... .fi2Va>.63H
... .504W.614
... .49\®.gl
... .4P'4®R0Vi
•••. 62H®.I8<«
... .61H«.62H
... .501^^.61
... .&ni^4;\6ftV4
... .48 'i.t>.50 "
... .63 Va
... .53^0.83>i
... .34^®.86«4
... .34>i®.3«H
... .33 Vj <0.34
1 ^ -"■ ■ , M u no. i nen tuiaeyn, a iu . .uiu ui>....
yy Good 10 choice Slock heilera 8.00® JJJ No f lom lurkeyg< n lbs. and up..
BE*'
H IS ASK
FOR MADA
.0
When Negro Dance Orchestra
Is Hired By Students.
.Choicc. atock calves ..
! Plain stock calvea
Young slock cows, light.
Aged stock 00ws
4.00®
2.60® 8-M
2XU® 4.01
2.00® 8.88
Fresh egga. new cases Included
worthless out. delivered Oklahoma
City
(Local Creamery)
9.50
!'"Smartest Wrestler" To Get a > ii... P.cklll,
Crack at Zbyszko. Hog"market waa acUve and largely 6c j
NORMAN, Feb. 5.—Because a band
of negro musicians had violated an
unwritten law which exists In Nor-
man, that negroes must not be found
in Norman after sunset,
stormed and wrecked a dance hall I who went to war.
Saturday night where the negro1 When he came back with his arm Throwout« Und roughs
orchestra from Fort Worth furnished laden with service stripes and his *
the music. I lungs filled w ith gas, he found his
A mob of approximately 500 sur- wrestling championship title In the
rounded the dance hall soon after ' hands of about a dozen claimants.
• ... «w w- hulk 1 via exprene
.to 10c higher Top was |b 85, the Dulk 1 f>e|lh creHmery butter. CO lb. tubs..
NEW YORK, Feb. 6.—(By U. P.)—! selling from $8.75 to $8.85.
Earl Caddock Was one of the very Bwt butchers, 200 300 iba..
mob | few champions of the upon realm h.av!«.
Good stock hogH
CHICAGO FUTURES
WANTED—A farm hand, man 1
Hlth no children, not more than
at leaeL L. a. Mnk-i.. Colony, okia.
:
...
Pope, Ht. j. Lexington, Okla.
SITI'ATIONS WW l 1 1, ~ M UK
WTUAHUN Mtuiied eaperi
FKMAI.K HKi.r nijtjo.
NN ANTiil>-—m"iduTJaged lady' to li col
i^anion tu lady couvaieaoent. CallT
Perso^i:i West Noble street. I
W01HK8.
t-'UAli'LLJj h; Iiue 01 reouuTTypevvutel
. ''1 '-'r eastt. Lowling & tj
I
Second strteL Maple U7l a.
IT W'lLd. pay you needing tools, nal
•,ra^e' <luefc"SWare. kuim, oikl
etc.. to cau on H. L>. bteeie. til w. J
IX)R chi-ap atorage and bnggiikre hal
big call M. 3J51.
8.80® 8.80
the dance started and began to throw
bricks. They were armed with clubs,
guns, and some carried ropes. There
was talk of lynching the negroes,
and it was said that several auto-
mobile loads of persons went to the
city park to prepare for the hanging,
telling the rest to bring
"niggers. "
Sheriff W. II. Newblock quickly
gathered in all available deputies,
and deputized nearly 100 students of
the University of Oklahoma, In order
to protect the negroes.
The negroes were taken to tho in-
terurban station and sent to Okla-
homa City when the mob grew in
strength and It became evident that
there would soon be troubln Fights
occurred between the mob and stu-
dents who formed a bodyguard while
The grounds were given that since
Caddock wasn't home to defend the
championship, that he wasn't entitled
to it.
In many ways wrestling is not like
boxing.
Johnny Wilson. Johnny Kilbane,
the | the noted non-fight champions, can
ignore challengers and go their way
with the title undisturbed but Cad-
dock was hardly out of the service
when he forced to go on the mat.
Joe Stetcher took tho title from
him very soon after he had shed
his O. D's. Caddock made a game
effort to put up a valiant battle but
the gas in his lungs cut off his wind
and he went down bravely.
Tonight in Madison Square Garden
Caddock comes back a new boy
who has been living the life In the
the negroes were escorted to the I open. He gets another chance to get
station. the title back from Stanislaus Zby-
Negroes are occasionally seen on 1 nzko, the giant Pole, who has been
the streets of Norman in the day- holding forth in the throne room
time, but the "rule" that they leave
at night is strictly enforced. Several
other Oklahoma towns have similar
customs.
Several prominent business men
were seen in the mob here Saturday
night.
longer than usual.
Joe Stetcher is only one of the
many mat stars who have predicted
that Caddock will win back the title.
It is generally conceded that he is
the smartest wrestler of all the pres-
ent school and if he were not handi-
capped by lack of weight he would
be one of the greatest of all time.
LINN APPOINTED
FOR GOBIN CASE santa fe says it cant
Health Apparently Shattered
After Stay in Jail.
LOS ANGELES, Calif., Feb. 6. —
(By U. P.) — Madalynne Obenchain
today heard Deputy District Attorney
Asa Keyes demand of prospective ju-
rors that she be hanged if they found
her guilty of conspiracy with Arthur
C. Burch in the murder of John Bel-
ton Kennedy.
Mrs. Obenchain, pale, her health
apparently shattered from six
months in the county Jail and her
nervous breakdown during which she
fought with another woman prison-
er, was ready today when her trial
for alleged complicity in the murder
of Kennedy, was called.
"I am greatly relieved to have
these weary months brought to a cli-
max. whatever it may be," Madalynne
declared.
THIRD ARBUCKLE
TRIAL DATE SET
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 6.— (IT.* P.)
—March thirteenth was named today
as the date when Roscoe "Fatty"
Arbuckle must go to trial for a third
time for alleged responsibility for
the death of Virginia Rappe.
TOM CAVNAR COMES
OUT FOR SHERIFF
Announcement was made Monday
by Tom Cavnar, formerly of the city
health department, that he would
seek the democratic nomination for
sheriff of Oklahoma county in the
coming election.
Cavnar has been a resident of
Oklahoma for 27 years and of Okla-
homa City 15 years. He has served
as city health inspector for ten years
and as deputy sheriff of Pawnee
county for two years.
CO-OPERATIVE THEATER
By Federated Presp.
SEATTLE, Feb. 6.—Considered the
first attempt of its kind in The coun-
try, members of a defunct stock com-
pany here have formed a co-opera-
tive theater for production of stock
plays. The theater is managed by a
Tlirector chosen by the company. Pol-
icy for the theater is determined by
an executive committee. Members of
the musicians and stage hands
unions are participating in the en-
terprise.
Judge Will Linn of Chickasha was
appointed Monday as special judge
j to preside at the new trial of Cleo
| fiobin, charged with the murder of
! Russell Sprague, Lawton taxi driver.
! The trial is to open at Lawton Tues-
day.
Judge Linn was appointed by the
supreme court at the request of
judges of the criminal court of ap
peals which allowed Gobin a new-
trial.
Gobin was charged jointly with
Will Tait, who pleaded guilty and
was sentenced to the electric chair.
A stay of execution was granted
Tait to await the outcome of the
Gobin trial.
CAPITOL HILL JUNIOR
COMPLETE FULL PROGRAM
KANSAS CITY
HOGS—-
itecelpts, 13.0o0; lQcto 15c
Bulk
Heavies . ...
I "ackers and butchers
Lights
Light*
CATTLE—
Receipts. 13,000. Slow, aU
Prime fed Btseers
Plain to fair dressed beef
steers
Western steers
Southern steers
Cows
Heifers
Stockers and feeders
Bulls
Calves
SHEEP—
itecelpts, U.000. Stronger.
Lambn
Yearlings
Wethers
Ewes
Stockers and feeders
May
July . ...
CO I IN—
May
July . ...
OATS—
May
July . ...
POltK—
May . ...
LARD—
OltALN ANII FJ££D. [May
, Retail prices for grain und feed In \ July , ...,
I'm Okianorim City: I "HIS-
••{J® e aa ! Chicken feed, per cwt 1.80 May . ...
HhortM. per cwt 1-80 July
Corn chops, per cwt
Shelled corn, per cwt.
Oata, per bushel
Linseed una I, per cwt
Kafir, per cwt
Bran, per cwt
BAY A.NB STHAW.
Prices for huy and straw in Oklahoma
City:
No. 1 alfalfa bay, ton 20.00
No. • alfalfa bay, ton 18.00
No. 1 prairie hay, ton 13.00
WHEAT —Open High I^ow Hose
W'JJS V ILSSi* 11.28*
108 fc 1.11* 108 1 10\
.BO*
.58%
.S8 4
.40%
11.75
10.87
6.60V 7.00
0.6041 8.00
higher.
8.86© 9.15
X 50 'tr 9.10
8.90© 9.30
9.00© 9.30
b.65© 9.15
6.25© 8.00
t.OOfl 7.05
6.00© 7.50
2.50© 6.00
i 75© 7.50
6.00© 7.25
2.605(1 4.50
4.50© 9.60
12.50© 13.50
10.75©11.76
7 50© 8.00
6.76© 7.40
10.25©11.75
3.60 ,
1.2
1.60
KANSAS £ITY GRAIN
'-J06 cur,. Slcdy, 2 io
HIDE JIAIiKET.
(J. 8. hides, short hair...
. .$ .04
G. S. hldns. long hair
.. .04*
G. S. hdiea, grubby
.. .02
O. S. hides, side branded...
.. .03
Green hides
.. .08
Glue hides
.. .1*
Dry salt hidea
.. .0120 .06
IHiOOJl CO UN.
(Revised by Traders W arohouse and
Commission Company;
Lindsay Standard-
Choice I -08*
Good . . ••••••••• .07*
Fair .07
Oklahoma Dwarf, self-working—
Fair 07
CHICAGO
HOGS—
Itecelpts, 61,000; 1(
Top
Bulk of sales
Heavy weight
Medium weight
Light weight
Light light*
Heavy packing sou
Packing sows rough
Pigs
CATTLE—
Receipts, 21,000; vm
Choice and prime ...
Medium and good ..
higher.
.. 9.85
.. 9.00© 9.50
. 9.00© 9.20
. 9.60© 9.05
,. 9.50© 9.85
.. 9.60© 9.*6
,.. .90© 8.75
,. 8.15© 8.05
,. 9.25© 9.80
TOPEKA, Kan., Feb. 6.—The Santa
Fe railway will spend ,^3,140,000 for
improvements, equipment, new Inain
lines and branch lines, it was an-
nounced through general officers
here today.
Developments in tho southwest
warrant an expenditure of $60,000,-
000 a year for the next three year
period, "but because of present con-
ditions—expensive financing, labor
conditions and the legislative situa-
tion—this extensive program can notlLamV,]
be undertaken at the present time,"1 Lami
It was stated. Yearll
Last year $35,000,000 was spent. It • • •
wus naid. Cu!l 10 cornm<m
Included in the new second track j
ork to be done this year
to 10c lower.
... 9.00© 10.00
... 7.00© 9.00
... 6.15© 7.00
Good and choice 8.00© 8.50
Common and modi urn ...
Hutcher cattle and heifers
Cows
Hulls
Canner and cutters cows a
heifers
Canner steers
Veal calves
Feeder steers
Stocker cows and heifers.
SHEEP—
eipts, 14,000. Stead
6.85© 8.00
4.36© 7.35
4.00© 6.25
5© 6.75
FInahUAL
LIBERTY BONDS
3*s
First 4W
Second 4'4H...
Third 4'« h .. ..
Fourth
Victory 3%m..
Victory 4%b..
95.20
96.10
95.98
. 97.10
9600
1IW ''4
. 100.22
-46 V*® .47
47*
.42*0.48
©.37
WHEAT-*)!!
higher.
,2 01.12
01.30
2°- i ,"<l .1.21 01.26
3 1.19 ® 1.23
CORN—lo to 2c higher.
No. 2 mixed
No. 3 mixed
No. 2 white
No. 2 yellow
OATS—lc higher.
No. 2 white
N'o. 2 mixed
R>
KANSAS CjTY FUTURES
WHEAT — Open High Lon- Cloan
Ky Ml 18 J1.1SH fl.UK 11.1614
July . ... • ■
CORN—
May , ...
July . ...
OATS—
May . ...
OKLAHOMA CITY GRAIN
Prices to farmers on wagon grain
quoted by Garrison Milling Co.:
Wheal, No. 1 per bushel |Q.90
Wheal, No. 2, per bushel 87
Whet.U No. 8, per busheJ .84
Kafli per hundred pounds 86
Oata, per bushel 40
Mixed corn, per bushel 45
W hite corn, per bushel 45
.03
1.03
1.01%
1.03
.*8*.
.61
41\
.48 li
•50T«
.4 H
•87*4
.37 \
.37 Vi
.37%
MAIL US ONE HO Li. WITH VS.-
'I 1 IAL CHI •) :i: ,\.\i. \v i |
VKl.01' AM, rttl.vr MX , Ulil
I'll 1 N'T.N. quick aKKvicii wIal
MNMHma 00. 28 TKKMINAL. /
CADE UUILD1NU.
l,OSi AM) HH Ml
TSTRAYETuRlTULtN"
iTom tny place January 17. two m
•outh of Shamrock, (old Capper) .
dark brown mare, little in rifeM el
i*ii in (Ofilmd, u-it (on IQ^
small white sikji on left weather, weld
about I.Duo pounds
One black mare mule, long taU
mane, small pm llt left ear. ti
marks on side, coming 1 yeurs old I
spring, weighs about 1.U50 IU ..
lor recovery of both animals. J
Hlevlns, Depew, UL 1 Dox 65.
phone H-8 Shamrock.
_____ I'K HSON \ |..
Its?}—io Ote miUa alai euit oclti
circular to Dr. O. MoOeli, beaver,
A NEW secret in making yarn flow!
taught by mail. Write Alra. Lnou
llama. Kl Watonga, ukla.
VIOLINIST wishes to correspond
lady piano player ZD to .'III. MatrimJ
laUy Inclined. F. X. E., West i-rankfd
111., Hox 171. ^
WIDOW wishes to make the acquaij
anco of a lady or gentleman over
years of age to asaist In a businJ
proposition. Must have means aud
bail habits. Give right name and
dress. M. Y., care Leader.
MA.N "f 55 v, ould like lo correspol
with lady about 60, matn.r, v
cllned. M. Z., care Leader.
PROKK**IO> 41,.
Oil t luCiv—.-1~ • mi atluiuiuii Jjiv
nervous, ruenuu ana uuajaeci j 1 woJ
en. Iii2!^ W. Main. Phone W.
J. N. ROBERTS and K H. HOWE, lal
yers. 805Vk N. Robinson
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
NEW YORK. Feb. 6.—Demand Ster-
ling |4.3'.':<t, up V*; francs, .0840, up
.0001V4; lire. .0468, off .0051; marks,
.0049, off .0000^,
Damascus, Benares, \nd Constanti-
nople are among the oldest cltlss In
the fold.
r,v> 4.00
7.50 ©10.76
4 itt.75
3.40© 5.00
PRIVATE IN VEST1GATOH. Dlvoil
and«1 iininal ca.-i ,, 17 years' exp
ence. Best of references. Strictly coi
■ dentlaJ. Box 923, Oklahoma City.
i >. It. CUNNINGHAM, Chiropractor,
I Baltimore Hldg. Maple 444U.
i illAM I r. (,.
'd-Ai.. — "^TwTrmrr
For Oklahoma < ity u.m.i Vicinity.— j ^ s ^ 1 ^ CLl^A.\d l> A*J
Generally fair weather tonight ami Tues- MESSED, fl.yu. We employ tixpj
day. Colder tonight, minimum tempera- ! clu'4,,ero* dytib. iiutters; accoiuiau pi«J
ture 20 to L"'i degre- - /11c 'iat wanner ' a'^era"ul,8 relnniifc; ulai ureasm
Tustfgy I*®*' 11 orUuIS g«vou prompt
For Oklahoma. — Tonigh
colder. Tuesday, fair
portion.
the weather
fair and i tlon « Uslacuoii guaranteed.
armer wMUrr.i , *'>r" 'UWU UK""'°'n*
FIKNISUKI) KUOMS rOn
iti >1
fi 50© 11.75
,60<a 4.75
a 13.00
6.00© 7.7
15001 4.75
Mibk #vi«iwii |work to bo done this year is a! ^ saving of 1.'00 l"n i'",!1..,1
HIGH SCHOOL NOTES stretch of 75 miles in Ari'zonn. Tilt t«> |.o cff.'( t< il bj the «!«<tn!^
I sum of $1,066,689 Will bo npent on <:ation , °,i stb" l,al,an rftUWEy<l ,10W
Capitol Hill broke even in its new oftice building, and stations |m 1,10Ble88-
basketball games, the girls' and during the year.
boys' teams winning from Classen
FUTURE CONFERENCES
PREDICTED BY HARDING
and losing to Webster.
The C. O. R. gave an interesting
program Friday nighu There were
I readings by Wayne Huff andVrank
Lamb, both of Central High, also a
I comedy. Joe Holland sang. The
proceeds went to pay for the moving
j picture machine.
RULE EGYPTIANS
BY ARMED FORCE
CONTINENTAL HALL. WASH-
INGTON, Feb. 6.—Future confer-
y Federated Press.
Egypt, Feb. 4.—British
hold down the peo-
(Editor's Note — Publication of
state market commission's "quotation
circular" has been resumed It appeitrs
semi-monthly. The following Items are
among those listed. The Leader will pub-
lish thr-He Items lree of charge In line
with Its policy to be of service to Its
many farmer readers.)
POIT.TR Y.
Fifty fullblood Buff Orpington baby
chicks Give price and besl time to ship (
them. Mrs. W. P. Wagner. Antlers. Okla 1
WANTED
MEED.
Want Sudan seed. A. L. Weldin, Leedy. I
Okla., R. F. D. No. 4
Two bushel each Michigan favorite
Whlpporwlll and Brown Crowder peas,
also twenty lbs, black rippers. J. H-
Spangler, Cheyenne, Okla. Would like to
Strangely enough, the venom of
snakes acts upon man and the lower ■
animals only when it is introduced
into the circulation, as by a bite or
as an injection Into the veins. Snake
j poisons could be swallowed with 1m- NICE sleeping rooms, la and u jfl
the 1 P Ullity. ^ kite hell ti. re...-liable, j 1 1 jj(1w
LAHGL trout
4th. Mapio u
,uuuy rooms, i.ui v\d
)1 i&LLI.LALLOCS ruiC ALfc OH
1 Hint
liiUii i uutabn
WILL exchange windmill ai
a good cow. 1817 East Tu
street north.
AIRO
£eCe8wo°rk "begun8 by ^"lon^o PleT/a™"" Bo steadl.y of la. no- „h.r. ,
on arms limitation were forecast to- tllla of :irra.c<1 Ntle .^"VovaTnuvv '
day by PreHident Harding in un ad- offlcurs and men o( the royal mvy. ilud
, u ,1 j . ; lireaa formally bringing tbe prescni Jone 1;p ' J*n . . .l;,;, Kl.,. u1! I,.. „
The Junior Jeff Debating club met n,.rl„v to „ ., will be stationed at each of the prin- '" > ■
Monday and elected new officer*: ..since tsil, (.onfcrencP of ^ 'clpal ri er town., Nmpwe' 1 N„ 's„a„U
Thurston Land, president; Julian ha8 pointed with unanimity to the Ihave betI; f°rbl W"" 11> | «v.,i -.-. .i i.v
j Lmblem, vice-president; Harry y n[ peace today, like conferences ' Publish anything that dlicret s
j Ix>gue, secretary, and Charles Con- m the future, under appropriate
nelly, sergeant-at-arms. conditions and with alms both well
orty
fifty
of good spring barley. Chai
Wilkinson Scott A Hudson, a
at law McAlester. Okla. 60 11
H.
INCOME TAX IS
A BIT EASIER
Changes in the revenue law aro of
conceived and definite may illumine
the highways and the byways of hu-
man activity." said Harding.
This generally accepted as Hard-
ing's invitation to the nations at-
tending this conference to become
material benefit to the average fam- partners in a general association of
"A man' ^ n(^er revenue act of nations for preservation of world
1921 a married person, living with peace. His address followed the
1 husband, whose net income gjgnjng of the treaties of all the nine
for 19.1 was $5,000 or less, is &l-jnations in the conft ;rence.
lowed a ^ personal exemption of' j^e work begun here will not end
?2,500. I nder the revenue act of with expiration of the naval holiday
1918 the exemption allowed a mar- Harding predicted. That holidav
ried person was $2,000, regardless wm be extended, he said, and "those
i of the amount ot net income. 0f us who li\- another decade are
The normal taxe rate Is the same. (more likely to witness a growth of ,,
4 per cent of the first $4,000 of net public opinion, strengthened by th<
; income above the exemptions, and 8 new experience, which will make na
per cent on the remaining net in- tions more concerned with livlnu to i>,
come. Given his personal ex#mp- the fulfillment of God
ition of $2,50<>, plus $400 for each de- than with agom°:' of
j pendent, a married man with three destruction.
children—the average American fam-
| ily—will pay this year on a net in- Th< present habitation ot New
I come of $4,000 a tax of $12. On the | York city could accommodate the
I same income for 1921 he w ould
, _ ; 6 lbs. Haiti
ders from the military or that tends j and 5 it s. Tom \\
"to excite the minds of the people or | prl
encourage strikes." ,etl
Bui the vital news of the day is j J
that all the dissentient members of
the national delegation have joined
the two members left unarrested and Tigt of wharj _
thus the unity of the old delegation powell, .lohimen City,
is effected. The reunion means that ; n i; We are ric-
Zaglul is reCogniaed as Egypt's sole 1 bcr of requeKts from
leader. 'or Te*'4'1 Seed
Atoka, Okla. R 2. Box 104.
PLANTS.
Want ail kinds medl< inal roots, hertw
back, seedii, flowers, budu. berried. l e«
M11 •
net Modern School Alutliods, practically ;
new. Price $1*5. Reason for belling given.
Anyone *ho is interested write Uraow
Haidren, Chester, Okla.
KOlt SALK—Remington auto-loadlriK
shotgun, model 11, out six monUis and
in perfect condition. A bargain guar-
anteed. $60. Art Wllkens, Ix>rraine
Kan., Rt. 1.
ill sis isspi'i'in; i i '. 11 u s.
b'Ukt toAl.L—Uargain, nearly new, nai
laundry ooing good hualneas. Uee i
work forenoon any week day We
Hickory Btre«t, Packlngtown.
FOR SALK— Capiiol Hill gfi.-ery ar
meat market, doing good buHiness. I
voice and fixtures about $2,1'00 Reas.
for nelllng bad health; 5 living room
■ heap rent. Call M. 404*
l pump for i-oit hl.m - j .mj j
enty-fourth | agnt iiouaekeopun
I furiaened. Lignts, g
j nice gardeu ai>oi it «
i .ii* «ou uA
turmsned or
I
i ted. Call w.
I
lfcL A.M> RUU.dLMf HUL
FOR HALF— Ele
Hargairi for c
'trie she
1 |*i
id up. W. Mai
NEW TRIALS SOUGHT
IN MAIL THEFT CASE
Motions for new trials were to be I
filed by attorneys for four men found ]
guilty of robbery of a Santa Fe mall I
last August, when sentence was I
d Monday afternoon.
n O. Duree. Jeff Duree. G. K. 1
uer aud Ed Dodge were those ■
high Intent convicted, while Dick Roach was,
Anyone having f fM«l need
should inform this office, g:
tlon and price f. o b. oar h.
idtr breeding, go
arfare
I ones,, $:0 «
| old. reglst
Mill, i >kla
; trils) (and
paid a tax ot $56.
whol
b of Ohio.
the population of the State
acquitted.
According to the low tho sentence*
would be twenty-five years eac h, fed-
eral" officers said.
Defense attorney's declare they Sl-
have discovered new testimony which j okia..
they wish to investigate. i and nr
Al JOS, \ i illl 1 I N |M
ACl'KSHORI KS.
LAlUUIi-LLil
Chain Tire Protector, save your Urea.
L',000 miles guarunttwd; second r and tires
bought aii«i eoid. lor information caU
at 706 South Robinson or Maple ZUS1.
PARTS 1XJR ALL CARS
NEW AND USED.
SAVE 25 to 75 PER CENT
PHONE—WIRE—WHITE
AUTO PARTS CO., 220 N. liDW'Y,
REAL KMT ATE FOB SALK.
uuide rooms
O H KM,
n Ait Ht.s, j
10
>1 I I
rui i i in v i
RHODE ISLAND REDS
HX)R SALE—
Acres ideal poultr;
cash; terms. On State >
id, 1709 E. lOUl. I E. Walk i
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 150, Ed. 1 Monday, February 6, 1922, newspaper, February 6, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109666/m1/3/: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.