The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 11, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 14, 1920 Page: 1 of 8
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111
The Gutmme Daily leader
F
i
.V0LUA1K XLX1V.
EVERYTHIHG
IS
SEI It
FOR FREE FAIR
SF.UttTAHY MKKAN HK-
POItl S Mi di KNT Hl SISM
SHOWN uv kointy
i'ahmkhs ami jiwv
kuit.i.knt k-
nir.ns ukady
ARE ON THIS WEEK
OHLANIMi IJYKLK. KltlS
(KM IIAYK NOMH.HITK
i:iiutns ai i.iu;i:
CIKIU IIS; U I JI XI I.
AM) .N A YIN A I AIHS
TO UK IU.I.II
I.AIIH
w.
K. McKean Bevreniry of the I-
gau county free fair. re.tfts Hint
he has visited the community fairs
at Orlando Lovell mid Crescent and
was greatly satisfied at the wonderful
displays of agricultural horticultural
and livestock exhibits at all these
fairs. IK' Hays that tho women have
done great work and that the boys
and girls clubs are doing astonishing
things. He declares thai It would
be well wortn the white for any rill-
ten of OuthrU' to spend a day at any
of thees fairs as they ar very in-
teresting. The fairs at Mulluill and Navina are
yet to be held anil then the best din
playa at all these municipal fanrs are
to he assembled at the coming county
fair to be lielj next week.
Many Guthrians Attend Fairs.
Many Uuthrii' citizens have attend-
ed the fairs already held and they
are all very enthusiastic over what
will be ent to make up the general
dl3;'ays at the coming routity free
fair. County Aleuts Wiley and I.ang-
don are being given great credit for
their efficient work in gathering to-
gether all the good thiug8 from the
farm products farm live-stock and the
various clubs over the county. Kvery-
thign now Indicates that the coming
free fair will be the greatest ever
bj.-ld in Out brie and every man wo
man boy or girl In Iogan county
and the adjoining counties for thai
uu'tter should make their arrange-
ments to attend and profit to the
fullest extent possible. Such annua!
displays of the work of the farm the
women the various boys and giTs
clubs In Logan county should be seen
end carefully studied. They are the
practical demontd actors of what can
be done end just how to do It. These
are the t h i : 1 st of practical Importance
and must be Been and studied 'by
every live progressive man woman
and child. In order that our great
county may more fully realize its va-
ried opportunities In the upbuilding
of a community of a hpiy prosper-
ous nd contented citizenship.
McKean On the Job.
.Secretary McKean reports that
everything possible is be"ng done to
make the coming free fair the most
complete and beet organized fair ever
held in Ix'an county. The 600 fair
catalogs have been systematically
distributed to all the people who ever
made any kind of display at any of the
previous fairs; they have -been sent
to all the various club including the
women's clubs and every banker In
the county has been-an active contrib-
utor. Every newspaper In the county
hag carried advertisements of the free
fair and everything possible has
been properly done to .give the fair
the necessary publicity.
It now remains for the public gen-
erally and duly to fully appreciate
the importance of the coming free
fair and to give It their attention and
patronage. That is what endourages
the hard workers who are laborfng
Incessantly to give them the best din-
play possible. -"I
Make the first Logan county free
fair the greatest and most popular
success ever known to the county.
FAIR CONCESSIONS
There are some fair concessions
to be sold for the free fair. See
CJias. Olsen Frank Jtrown. ur
Chamber of Commerce. -
THE WEATHER
New Orleans Sept. 14. Tonight
and Wednesday generally fair.
HI
HOME.
Wheat Prices Go
Tumblingon 'Change
Chicago Sept. 14 Big breaks m
the pr.crt of wheat corn and oats
took place today started by acuta
depression cf sterling exchange.
Wheat dropped as much as nine and
cne half cents bushel and closed
demoralised at tne bottom figures
' of the day.
The greater part of the decline j
came Just before the market clos.'d
Price tumbled rapidly in the ab
sence of any aggressive support.
FEDERAL AGENT TO WO
Pest Bird Have Been Problem To
Farmer. Who Lose Thousands
of Dollars Annually By
Their Activities
J. H Wiley county agent is an
avowed enemy of the destructive
crows. He ha taken an active inter
est to eliminate Hie pest from Lojan
and other cnunties of the state mid
judging from the following letter re-
ceived from W. t Henderson acting
chief of the bureau of biological e.f-
vey. he Is making proKret
"In response to your letter of He:.-
einber 1 relating to depredations by
crows In Oklahoma 1 may s.iy that
the biological survey has planned to
have a representative in Oklahoma
this fait to make as thorough a study
of the situation as possible. This
muti is now In Oregon engaged lu
ulmllar work and will reach Oklahoma
by ihe. time serious damage usually
begins.
"I would Inform you however that
tin biological survey has no appro-
priation under which it would be Justi
fied in undertaking control of a blrt
l-4-st. We tan investigate eondltions
thoroughly however and perform all
experiments necessary to devise ef.
fective methods of control. When
these are learned. uUually putting
them Into effect must be undertaken
by the state counties or the public.
We are writing our representative in
Oregon Mr. K. It. Kalmbaeh inform
ing him of the receipt of your letter!
and he will he directed to get In ton. h !
with you when he readies Oklahoma "
Thousands of dollars are lost
Dually by farmers In Oklahoma from
ravages f the crows. They come to
the male in the spring when planting
Is on and in many cases cited ha . e
swallowed an entire corn planting at
one sitting. I'oison is the only so-
lution and Agent Wiley Is working
to that end.
nonv ok ih:a moyii;
SI AH TO ( OMK IIITtK
Paris. Set. M.-H is probable the
body of the late Olive Thomas.
American motion picture actr'M n
filed Here lute last week wll he
shi;;ed to New York Saturday on the
liner Mauritania. Jack I'lckford hu'
band of the dead woman and a f ;w
friends will accompany the body to
America.
Acute Neuphritis set up by thu i-b-sorptlon
of bichloride of merrmy y
th kidneys was said to be tile ciur.e
of death following an autoniy . r-
fornied yesterday.
SUNKEN SHIP IS FLOATED
IN YOKOHOMA HARBOR
Tokio Sect. i4.xhe freighter City
of Onuelia which sank in Vokohomi
harbor while on Its way to Sun Fran
iseo from Kobe has been refloated
according to advices here.
VETERANS IN CAMP
Washington Sept 14. Delegates
from various sections nf th cuinfrv
were in attendance today at the .'-
Ine session nf ik ..... .
' '".; e.m annual
encampment. of the Veteran of For-
elgn Wars.
OLIVE THOMAS' BODY
RELEASED BY FRENCH
Paris. Sept. 14. Judge Parnart last
night granted a permit for the re-
moval of thie body of Olive Thomas
wife of Jack PIckford who took mer-
curial poison last week to the United
States following; an Investigation
which resulted In a statement that
death was "accidental."
WAS POPULAR ACT RE Si
Pittsburgh Pa. Sect. 14.
Tho dead actress' real name was
I Olive Elaine Duffy. She was born la
IN ELIMINATING CROWS HOUSTON AND DALLAS
Cater t lk Welti rte
. QUTHhMK OKLA.v;rri-:sAY SKIMHM 1 1 mi PRICE
CITIES OFTHE
SOUTH SHOW
LARGE GAINS
HI'.M llk ( K INfJlKASK IS
SHOWN IN I'Oril.AIION
IN IKN KAHS; .MANY
c;o into mi: loii.ooo
i i.iss m mm;
ivst i:ii
SHOW GREATEST STRIDES
Ills AND OKLAHOM A 1 I V
ALSO IN FAST (.KOM(.
uiorp; i (n(;hi:ssion-
Al. HI I'HKSKNT A I ION
10 ItK IN( HKSI I
ALSO
Whim;ton Sept. 14--Kemarkable
Kiolh III imputation has bei-n shown
by a number of aouthern ill it-n In the
last ten yearn preliminary statist l-s
of the bureau of the census nhow
Announcement of 192.1 population
have added four cities to (hone of the
1 00000 class in the south making a
lotal of ten while seven cities have
advanced Into the rlas with 2ii.4U'i:
or more population muklng a total of
85 in that class. In all. the south ha-.
43 cities with 2.1. (mxi or more popula-
tion. CITIES OK 100.000.
The cities whirl udwtr.cod into the
100000 cliiss are Sun Antonio Oulh.s
Houston and Norfolk. Of all Owe
cities in this c'.ass Houston showed
the largest rut of growth 75 2 per
cent. OuJUis w as second with 7S 6
per cent; Norfolk third with 71 6 iT
cent and San Antonio fourth with'
.07 0 per cent. Nashville showed the
smallest rate of growth 7 3 pr cent.
In K)lnt of numbers Ihillas had the
largest growth the Increase in ten
years having been C!.S72. San An-
u"l wttM SlH'"'"l with lH.Tfi.'i lions
H" llir w"h ri.27it nd Norfolk
fourth with 4X2.V New Orleans the
1R"""'" largest illy nbowed a iiuiiier
ici'l Inorease of 4S.H4 wMch was fifth
largest and a rate of growth of n2
;ier cent.
Of the cities of the 2.".000 to MO.000
class Miami. Klorldn ah -.wed the
highest rate of growth lis percentage
"uvlng been 440.1 while Wichita Kalis
Texas ranks second with 88.8 per
cent and Tulsa Okla. third with 2!.4
I per cent. Tulsa advanced fiftieth
city of the south to lih Wichita
Kails from 111th to 22nd. and Miami
from J7.lt I to 4:iml. Other illies of
this clasa w hich have more than doub-
led their population In the fen years
me Knoxville with 114.1 'per cent and
Winston Sniem with 1 1 .1.2 per cent.
It Is not possible to give the 1920
rank of all southern cities of 100000
or more population as the population
of several have been announced.
Thn increased representation :n
congress based on popualtlon will
greatly swell the south' vot. Okla-
homa alone will have four addej con-
gressmen. CKLAIIOM VOI N(; MKN
mi i n i on itoiiitKitY
alnsvlllo Tex. Sept. 14 -Two men
about 2.1 years old believed to have
come from Oklahoma wer arres'.ij
and Jailed here today shortly after
the safe in the express office waa
broken open and robbed of 1250
Fif-
f.on ni uhi.. i i .t...
Oklahoma C y Z Ll 1
... ou
ill (iubm'hi oi llie III (-(!. TlieV Wtn'ini Kl. i . ...
arrested in a room.nc bouse l I'i! a '? "" ."" kW"'
'
were count nir monev oi a ml
Life Story oj Beautiful Movie Actress
ITiarlerol Pa. Her father died wen
she was yet a child after which the
mother and children moeed to Mc-
Kees Rocks. Pa. where the beautiful
girl spent hs-r childhood and lived
until .going to New York to seek famj
and fortune at the age of 19.
While Olive was yet a child the
mother married II. M. Van Kirk an
employe of the Pittsburgh & Lake
Erie railroad and the family lived in
McKees Rocks Pa. until a year ago
whe the Van Kirks moved to 450
ltailey avenue. Mount Washington.
"Olive Thomas was a lovoly and
Pktaeeata. etofne re earae flaw estl
Bandits Make
Futile Attempt
To Rob Bank
Dison III. sett. t After cut-
ting telephone cables at the vil-
lage limits erecting a barricade
of rolls of wire fencing takeii
from a nearby lumber yard an. I
sheeting out all the electric
street lights In the business dis-
trict robbers made a dirl.tij at-
tempt to rob the Franklin Crow
bank at Franklin Grove east of
here early today. Cltiiens
aroused by the shooting were ter-
rorlied and gutits at the Phoen
hotel across the street from te
bank watched the robbers at
Work for over an hour afraid to
venture within range of the a-meit
guard left outside of the Lank by
the robbers.
Tour toads of nltroglycrtin
were shot by the robbers but
they accomplhhed only the des-
truction of the ou'er walls of the
vault the currency bones remain-
ing Intact
After the fourth epioioft sev.
ral cltiens armed with rifle
and shot guns opened fire on the
bandits. Theil attack frightened
the robbers off ami they escaped
in a big touring car.
s
TO HOLD STATE MEETING;
. j two pistol battles resulting In em
Every Chapter In State Will Bedfth'
Represented At Oklahoma
City Convention October
13 and 14
Kvery ( Ivepter iif the American H-.l
Cross In Oklahoftii Is expected to ln
I repiese !ed by in nr more d.-b'Kat
at a stale route; em of workers to
be held at Oklahom.i fliy October 13
hikI 14.
j Noted Hed Cretit workers from na-
tional headijuitrtmu and divisional di
rectors will aildresH thn work
ueiuiieil lnronn;ilioii concerning tho j
Kendal Ite.i Cross progrum for thu'
coming year will he given theiu by fTio
experts. Tills l.hase of the Conferem-ft
'Is expected to be of invaluable mm-
l oil e to the workers In polling
' problems that will coiun up I
flails for the fourth iinniial Hed
Cross roll rail which) will begin on
'Armistice Jtuy and last through
Thanksgiving Iny particularly a
they relate to Oklahoma ul-m will b
dlscusised at the confei'enee
! Anioiu the speakers at the meetln.;
will be Dr. t.lvirigntou Farrund. chair-
man of the American lied Ook;
Frederick O. Munroo general man- j
atier Ir. K A. I'eturson director gen-
eral of health service and othera
I whose names hava not yet been an-
; noiinced. (
I The meeting ':i cne of a series he-
I Ing held th rough c( the southwestern
dlvWon of he Hd Cros betweii
dates October 4 and 14.
HI Pl HI ICANS MAKK A
LKAN SWI.KI' IN MA INK
Portland Maine 8ept. 14The
veto of the state for governor with
returns from forty small twns ana
plantation in remote districts miss-
ing was:. Parkhurst (Ret.. 113317;
Mclntlre (Dem.) 69241
The Republicans hav swept every
thing.
COX PLEDGES SUPPORT
TO PROHIBITION LA W j
Portland. Ore. Hept. 14. -To an a t-
dlonce of women this afternoon (ov
"Bh"r
r - 'arJ fo the liquor question pledKP-
"""""" U1 mieresi may be ur
... ..
i'HlLu. 1
4
lovable gin and was very popalar
her'. said fnr.! In McKee Rock
yesterday all of whom exp.ested grief
fit '.he news of her death. Zta came
quite frequently to her liome town
after her success on the musical com-
edy stage and In the motion pictures
and she always came dressed quite
s!m;ly and called to visit with herw'' ery happy together and ro-1
n ui tuiiuiiuou aays. one tool "ueij nui a contrast was tier itc-
us of the wonderful times she 'a'on' marriage to her first to Klsj?h
havlnir In New York and that whit j JThomas of McKees Rocks to w'torn
sh would not he contented to Hve"" married on April 1 1911 at
again In McKees Rocks she liked .the of 16 and from whom she was
to come back" they declared. granted a divorce February 25 J915
ake t as f Bsf
STRIKERS SHOOT
TO KILL WHEN
OTHERS IRK
AI.AHM MINI. Its THY TO
riUAI NT NOVKNION Ml.
I HOM WOUMMi; lN-
MIIK I'SKII 10 HK.
SIHOV SHAITS
mm mis iin
si vKN lU Nniti H or I hi:
I.mio IN M'AI KSTKU HIS-
uticr Hin si: ro .o
It K H W OHK;
It I It M I N (. II A M
.H im;k knioins
i i:niits
BULLETIN
Birmingham. Ala. Sept.
14. Llntl
ay Parker was killed and several "th-
er were Injured In a fight at the
mines In Jefferson county last night
according to reports tihing here
today. Since the geneial strike was
called In the Alabama coal fields
I there have been two dynamiting ad
M ALESTCR MINES CLOSED
Mc Aleut er Hept 1 lle inlse they
me dlsw.it Ihfied with the wuge award
iiiiule by the foul Operators' assocla.
tlou In this city lastweek. 7iM of the
1 00 miners who deil.tred Stilurday
that they would refuse to work until
their demands wem met remained
out on strike this mornliiK ib'pte
tlie onlers of luli'i national und dis-
trict union miner officials according
to J. II WIIhoii coiil coinmlssloner of
Oklahoma
The stilke was brouj.hl on by the
tonnage laborers who we:e dlssatls
fied because their
demand for ill-
creasei pay wem not met.
while dav
laborers wet
granted firm Increase
I" day.
The firsl striker 4 went out Thurs-
day mot ti!r!;r but tin walkout did
not a-imiiiie proportions until Satur
day lieu the RntioUiu eiMent wi
lii.'i.le tiuit Hie eiilue field Would bo
shut down 1'nioii officials however
checked Ibis and loivn llopes of get
ting nil the men back to work by Wed
nesday inoiiiiim.
JUDCE ENJOINS LABOR HEO
Itli uiington Ala Sept. It .--J.idgt
W. I. Oruhb of the federal dUUi'l
(oiirt late yesterday Issued a
rweeping Injiiixilon aralnst J. K.
Keiinamer president and other offi-
cial nf the Alnhaina division of the
I'nlted Mine W'oikeis of Auiefl'i
lorbbbliiig them to interfere with .:
(nitloiis at the (himhle mines of thj
1'rult t'otemlldated Oo:il compittiy.
(t'oiillnu.! on I'axe 4)
Ok LA I imiTlTltY '"slTll III
TO OI'KN IHtlVK IN I.ONHON
W a s Ul n g t o n Sept 1 4 - W. K.
"I'ussyfool'' Johnson well known In!
Oiilahomn left Washlnltton today fur
New York enroiite to Pingland to be-
gin the biggest campaign yet In that
country and Scotland to eliminate the
flowing howl.
Johnson spent many years In Okla-
homa before he became widely known
p a result of loss of one eye when
Kngllsh students demonstrated objei-.
"n I I TT n "T
llefore leaving Washington Johnson
. . . .1
. Mrrit' tt"!"
commissioner or Indian afrairs whom
...
lie knew ilur tiv file OkHfuiHi . iv
" - -
Poisoned In P
arts
Said 8h Was Happy :
The last time Olive was honn"
said a school friend "was a 111111
over a year agd at the time of tlvi
death of a sister In law. I asked her
then how she liked married life and
she declared she and her hushcirJ
X&'ZZX''
Jack Johnson
Must GotoJaUmaUl I I U II Ul
l-hkagj Sept. M Jatk Johnson
former world s heavyweuh( chtm-1
pion was sentenced to one year
and a day in Leavenworth nnten j
Oary and fined 1 1 OCX) tjil.iy by fed- t
er) Judge George A. Carpen fr!
violation of the Mann act.
THIS WAS DIVORCE DAY
T
T
Many Are Oivcn Relief By Judjfe
Swank; Cannlnr Is Held for
Trial In Sum of
$1000:)
Indue S ark rt mti never ) di
votenH In district inmt this mornio
nd will t ike up ct r tl inhere ilil
llK til term SefelU Miller fnilj.
William Miller on the grounds ut
rluindoninent. Huih Wood etutsln ;
lion support and abandonment i
(1 ii Hie n decree rroiu Itoht rl Wo e
lioito tlrlfflu ti (irtiited divorce
ml al had her maiden mnne it
Tucker reelored Hhe munird T..v
(Srlffln In i;K Atmndimmeiil in I
noUsilplHUt charged. OeofKe t'ailiet
rnrge that t wjfrt guilty f
sdultrv and liiuned the man He .ni'
cd hi ulb'gallona mid wS ;iiii(ed l
tllvnrcn.
Harry H. t'annlns h.rjn. wil'i
Incest wis iirralgued Hits mot nliut.
I leaded not guilty and was hel l in
the sum of $i(.noo which he )i .t so
fnr .(lied to nvik.
The d!vorcn cnen of I'.lmer Hinie.
well to do farmer' who charges hi
wUe Annie Haslet wlih ibseitiou.
w reset fur lieiu tng on the I .'ill
He i loo .( th..t when be hecsnoi .
crlpplii his wife deserted him end
their two children.
MN IIMK.LI) Willi
kh.i i; (iitoi i n i hi i n
Ml.imi. Okln Hept. H - After . -llian
two bonis deilherrttloM a J.i. y tl
!f'e Ottawa county district court -it
IH: tO o'clock ibis monilnir rrtun-eJ
Verdl. t of "not gut'of ' iu tli c ie
of fhailes II. Wood. I'll her ut'oier.
Jointly eloirgid wllli
WllllMiu H.
kins with the murder of Norti-i A
( 'i tidier. general iitanu-er of the
Mi K iniiev t 'handler grocery eoini'.iny
v ho tttt rhot In an nuioiuoh!!! on
'he ro:id between t'ommeren .111
Miami on the iDeriiiHK of June l-l
WOMEN RECOGNIZED BV
CONNECTICUT LEGISLATOHn
H.ntford Conn. Sept 14.Th cne-
nrctlcutt legislature this afternoon by j
' I
roncurrent action ratified the women-
suffrage amendment to the f if ril
ccnstitution making Connecticut! the
thirty seventh state In the Union to
ratify the amendment.
TULSA'S BIG WATER BOND
ISSUE HELD INVALID
Oklahoma City ept. 14 The s i-
pume cUrt of Oklahoma today hel l
Invalid the legality of the city of
Tulsa's five million dollar water bond
issue basing its opinion upon the le
(jfility of Tulsa acquiring property
within five miles of the present tity
limits.
CUDAHV PACKING COMPANY
TO PASS DIVIDENDS
f'hlc.vo. Held 14.--Thn ftid.ibv
Packing eoitr.iuiy passed its dividend
today Official aid it was tint first
time mIiko the reorganization of the
company that a dividend had b-eii
passed.
CONTRACTS FOR THREE NEW
AIR MAIL ROUTES LE f
Washington Sept 14 - 4'ontra'.-te f i-
threw new lr ma.il route at a total
"
- ' of $;r..00o . year were award
td.iy bv t im.n.ffien d...ri-
1 ' "y ' l''orrii o depurtr.t i.c
.. -
i" a ' i t' -.r." air line company.
on (he grmimlij of neglec t and 3e. .
tlon.
"Of course Olive liked to have
good times." said another friend ?ue
wife of a local druggist. "She wa;
'
KnJ ov'1 b"utl" h'' '
njoyeo. snaring with her mother t r.d
stepfathdr. :!ie was always very
good to her mother she declared. to
whom sly. some time ago gave a
llOO.OnO home in I.os Angeles. Mr
and Mrs. Thomas of 404 Woodwtrd
Nli.MHi.li II
spiminiTifiM nc
COTTON CROP
T
; SLUMP
Willi I N M
M.IHI It.
IN lo;vn
III I III.
IN
U HOI
III LHOI
MY Ulll.
I si IN t
:its
BOLL WEEVIL ACTIVE '
JN SOME FIELDS
ri.vNi i ni si n.v i aiu.i;
m i in mnv ii.is
o i it mil sum ks
I'OOHIA Mil III O
rilMMil.lMIUI.
soon tf .
IN L0OAN COUNTY
l-etlon Is in good shape lit Logsei
county Just at present. The heeey
rams of the first ten days of Septem-
ber li.j.irej the crop the plant I
still growing and the stalks are loadetl
wtih blooms and b"llt. 8oire bottom
ami I becoming grassy and foul on
account of heavy foliage which e-
cluttcs the sunshine which I badly
needed just now to open (h boll.
Prospect are generally very good
however. Plenty of hot dry weather
such a we are now having Is what
Is needed now but an early frost
would damage considerably.
The upland crop I In much the bet-
tr shape; msny fields will produce
a bale to the acre if the rains wl?t
give the plant a chan.e. The first
bale will probably be on the marhel
this week.
OKLAHOMA
t'oltou d"ertortil bei .mutt of J.
fb lent sunshine temperature which
were somewhat too lovr 9d fre.iilut
rains which were mod.rite heavy
Th plant Is well fruited for the boo
linn Kiel mtddlo crop and coittlime
to bloom freely hut th top crop and
a i im.ildei-able part of tho mlddU cr.i.f
are d-'i emteiit upon !.!. front Uoil
wemtl das Hiipesred 1(1 soliirt section
but li Is nut numerous and U causlniC
little iliUiuiKit me apprelietlsioli but
b. ll worm rather serloii iu sout and
smith central portion of state Ths
brillmiit piouiUe of a month ag. may
yet be r.nli.d. but the plant U run
and kii.tie v slut eaxttv h.h U.K. i..
. ... .
I'uury Warm dry weather U e-sett-
tliil Home but tint iiiucli cmplalnt
of lalii- i ai city.
OVER THE COTTON BELT
OU.sh.0u4 y Sept. H j
ters 4r the average dare of Meiitemher
III from cm respondent tudlcat
tiuit tho ciidiHoii. w( ib cotloit crop
ha derei lorate.l lu rjcess of norml
sinc AuK'isf 2i. rietertornlloii ha
been general t henvleet In okUho.
ii a and l-a-it In X ert h Curollna. Ttia
general condition of the cot .oinn-
ft.'otitlioled ml fat.. )
I IHSI NUION W SIIOUS
HI XL IHV It INK SI A I IMKM
On another pjt. i (hU ppr
ar tlie roiiib-risetl staiin.ni lf t.ti
First N'.i!l..nnl l!nk f .ity
This t:iein it sh..we att unio all
ro.. ennditlon of the hank. coniei.
iiiiC the t loie condition nf th mom y
martiet at this (In. The SUferiK et
show $-; ".Moo eurplu ed undlvld.
e. profit. Miti rtti and slbt ex-
ci.aiKe of I.n:i7 and no rpr rc
liiscoill.ted. T)lrt r-lfs Nal11r
'ertalnly a financial IrmtltuUou that
' a credit to lgan County.
WOMAN PRIUTT SLATED
FOR INDICTMENT
Moiiun J'rlu't. criminal Uwyer at
Oklahoma 4'!f is slated t be lnd.it-
d by the feifri stand Jury lcifi
en enforcement -officer found a hal.
pint of corn whleky Irt his hiMise. ft
t uhtrge! that Ktrby Fratis In "out
t'j get Crultt "
"If they Indict me." atd Pruitf.
I'll have every eeilir u Oklahoma
City searched.
F. W. JOHNSON WINS
OVERLAND CAR
F. W. Johnson 1'unfedcrat veter-
an af this city was Ln Oklahoma City
rrcently. While ther h. bought a
rt cent ticket n thn Confer.rp
ularlty voting contest staged for th
benefit of the veteran who will o
to the Houston Texas reunion.
Tha lirlm was an lu.rhna . .
S
(Coittluttd on Pasa 2.) johngoQ. Ucht wtn th car -
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Niblack, Leslie G. The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 11, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 14, 1920, newspaper, September 14, 1920; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc713098/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.