The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 124, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1922 Page: 1 of 8
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OTMISJIE ;BAIILY LE ABEEL
S
ii
s00 Til IU lC"o RTaTTiT 1 1 a vrATWTlTrijEI
& tsnw
Business
Breaks In
BULLETIN
(By TTm Associated Pr)
New York An. ll.-Baley
Fiakt president of the Kttro
politan Lift Insurance company
which it a large investor in ire 11-
roftd securities west before the
conference of rail executives
called to act on President Hard-
irf ' peace proposal shortly after
noon today. It was reported he
carried an important message to
the executives from financial in-
terests. Eail Union Heads Meet
Washington Aug. 11.-Chief
officials of the 17 railroad labor
organuationa went into joint
Horrors! CfBrien
The Beauty Spot
Loves His Curls
(By The Associate l'rr)
Lo Angele Aug. ll.Cu8ene
O'Brien motion picture actor who
uferee) possible Irac'tf of the
ekull and Internal injv.rtse when he
was run down y . motor truck
last night wt rport(f ratting
eaei'y at a Hollywood hoapital te-
ay. .
Surgeon ..treating ..O'Brien's
scslp found it ncaury to shave
off Ma curl.
Strikers
. ' Sssort
To Bombs
wee a.
Sts Mmk. Mi iM.
vara sgac;
3BlSavl
FEOEIl.'L OFflCIIILS MIL
CESTMrfliOEflS
32 Striking Ehoomen Ar
Placed In Jail Here Awatt
inT Trial In Federal
Court
One In Jail eerving eenenre of S3
session shortly after 10 o'clock
vtnv in cmisufor Iho reanonse
which will be mad hr the seven for eonteufpt of Joudga Cottersl's
atriam ahoD craft ' unions to I''raWac order forbidding striking
President Harding's latest pro-'.hoPa from Interfering with the
poaal f a basis for settling the Pi'"nK or railroad in tb tste. end
railrna.l strike. xmny-one others confined lit the
j'Ioga county Jail or under surveil-
Rlil Magnates on Hand l.ance of 17. 8. dajwty marshals la
New York Aug. 11. Two evidence of the acilvltla of (ha
hundred transportation magnates mlnlona of Cnc'a Sam in the aae
representing the nation's biggest J'nd shows the determination of the
railroad (fathered at Orand (federal ofi'lclal to enforce tha order
Central Terminal today to vote j'issued from federal comt recently by
acceptance or rejection of Prosi-('Judge Cotteral forbidding Interfer-
deit Harding's latest proposal in ence with the railroads by theatriklnj
th ahopmon's strike. ('shopmen or their sympathUers.
From the start a sharp division 'There will be no Jet up on this
was apparent which was so ( 'taatter. Just so long as the shopmen
clearly defined as to be almost j "who have thrown up their Job anil
sectional. . I 'walked out. .persist in Interfering with
The eastern division appeared vmen ho hte hwn la.ed lh(!r
uualtorablv 0PPRP tto n(Vt- 'old poallionB and who want to work
ance of the President's pbm be- imt that long will the manshala office
cause it provided that the and the office of the district attorney
tion of returning strikers witrt .actlve!jr pr0fecte ihs iaWbreakera"
seniority rijJhW """'i'" " 7 ald a federal official today.
.vv ..K-ti wvv fi;trit in iflff
i I I L. .I.itn ail hlll'K IQ
RtlOUUl C Bliuii.v.. - -
U. S. railroad labor board.
'Logan county Jail here today pend-
ing their trlala a federal court
here: Clem Barrutt K. D. Uarr W.
an !M Ceo Ty1" J Bmlthy all
or sapuijn-
Kver
Snodgraas Joe Dunlary William
'Ohl Corb Cll)8on( John Snodgraaa
'all of Knld-
' The above men were all former
'employea of the Ftlaco ahora In
'Enid and Safruli and ' are charged
with civil contempt of the Cotteral ln-
Junction. Their trialg will come up
'here following dlpoitlon of ten
ri9ime rr roads
TO SC ASKED 800
whinton. Aug. 11 Here 1
nti!n. of the bill that would autb-
orlie Prealdent Harding to aelte Titd Mrnea William Mernaa
operaU the railroads If hU latest ni. M. Baker. Alfred Hamilton Money
Vopoaal to end the strike fall. U Deem. D- . Hammeraon O. D. Wtiit-
PMTTit'ny BD nobertls' M- u Trophy.
iumui.ro i Ruaaell SuUth. Thoma. Webb
ANOTHER SLCCiESTION
AS TO THE SIGN POST
-Speaking of the elgnleaa alfin
peat l the bead of the street lead-
ing to the country club" eaid citl-
sen oday m Mrt plai ne
abaft ehould have been set In the
. niri nirTti fcrnue wlwre
cernrr I "sntwne( hopmen now on trial here
pirialon street croa.es L
"la all otner cme iu u'i -plain
v'w ner rave lert enter-
ing a city can eaaily ; nJ
travelers lnvariablj are locking for
the (post when tboy n?er
town. A.Ide from that Guthrie on
account of Ha peculiar location and
many entrances should have tour
sign posee for the bennt oil the
ourUt and each post should have
painted instructions on It how to
reach other towns and the distances
to them.
One '8B Pt should N set at tbe
loot t DIvifion near the bridge
another should b set near the St.
Mary's convent nd another near the
citj- high school."
HARDING FAILS TO SEE
WHY MINERS REFUSE
(By The Associated Press)
' Chicago Aug. 11. President Hard
Ing In a tatter to C. Honnold .ec-1
rotary of the Illinois coal operator
aaaociation made public today dec'ar-
d tie waa frank to eay I do not sea
how your workmen can refuse" the
offer made by the mine operators of
Illinois ; ; TJH
Explosion on Liner
At Sea; Several
Killed and Hurt
(By The AxMiated pro)
New York Aug. 11.Two mem-
here of the Adriatic' crew were
killed five were seriously Injured
and one I missing as the result of
an explosion of undetermined or.
Igln In her number 3 hold accord-
ing to a wlre'es. message received
today by the White Star line.
The moesage reported that the
Adriatic was proceeding to New
York at half apesd. Coal stored in
the No. 3 hold and officiate of the
line In the absence of details
thought that spontaneou combus-
tion may have caused the explosion.
The men killed were a fireman
and a trimmer. Thoee injured in-
cluded electrician and other em-
ployee of the enginroom.
BULLETIN
(ttf T AMorlaitml I!.
Ban Bernardino Calif. Aug.
11. Twenty-three tim bombs
have exploded at intervals from
1:30 to 3 o'clock this morning
in the stockade of the Atchison
Topeka & Santa Fe within two
hundred feet of the company's
roundhouse according- to the
sheriff's office.
The bombs were buried in the
ground and in exploding did no
damage but blew much earth into
the air it was said.
None of th guards on duty
was hurt.
More explosions were eipected j
momentarily and no one was al
lowed in the stockade this morn-tag.
... -The bombs according to the
theory of the investigators were
either thrown from tree tops or
from passing automobiles. Two
bombs exploded after U. 8. mar-
shals and members of the sher-
iff's office had reached the
scene.
It was thought at first that the
bombs were thrown into the
stockade but explosions occur-
ring at intervals led investiga-
tors to believe that the bombs
had been previously placed.
The belief that- the explosions
were caused from high powered
caps and not bombs was express
ed by United States Marshal
Greewood. He also was of the
oninion he said that the ex.
plosiots were intended not to do
any material damage but to
frighten men at work.
A high voltage power line of
the Southern California Edison
company was broken just as one1
of the -. expu.cus occurred.
Breaking of the line catrscd the
lighting system of the citf to
become grounded and the city
was In darkness for more than an
hour.
Deputy United States Marshal
Albertson was seriously burned
when a bomb exploded in his
hands shortly after the exploj-
ion of the twenty-three bombs.
. Explosion of the bombs created
terror in the vicinity of the
shops hurling fragments several
hundred feet. The bombs were of
cast iron pipe elbows filled with
a white powder and according
to investigators apparently were
thrown into the stockade
.. . ii ) ii ma "imi. ia .w.m.': ...... - . ni i iesi '. if 1 piniTtBTiST"- V m ' Ml luMj M BMiaWU
. - u j.IJCi ornciBi to manou coal tktmoiNCY. jpe 1i Tt
. .r'v P c3v-:':" : Speed
V ni'i Limit
If 1 Ml Ui ii
0 K SsSI
i J
A
The aewly at pointed offtcer. will work for prompt and effectual ad miaiatralloa d Hna lh .r.nt r
mergwacf or.Atiiribution. priority of tare etc. They will a t with th wr of tha latitat enmm-ree" mm..
ntlailoa 1eblnd them rrunt row. len to right abow Clyde a Atchiaoa commta.loner Juhn O R.lh director
llureaa of 8rrf& K. It. X)e Cro Jr as. Want dim tor and K O jm iih. chief lnt.. ter HwOnl row J
It. tr4 ntrnttochem Ala. It .Kobertaoa WaefleW W Va O. V kmH ttuatiaiton W V. t ft e"yn.'
t.d KnoivUle Tenn. II. M. West lamlavllle. Ky. W. h tlarry Norton. Va and ti J May ! Thinnl
W. Va. ' :
Mirwrcmmrmmm-'mM'wmm sawt'Wiit-T Tiiti-rirai a-'ijjrieigBMMnr- . ...
ED. WLZl TELLS OF IIDI ASSUMES
cheat OEDicray
Members of His Old Church In
Mt Camel Illinois Raise
$90000 Por New
Building
Pator J. W. KCbo'n. of tha First
Christian church arrived home this
nio.elng after so absence of a week
la hie former pastorate at Mt Car-
ml( III. where on last iSunduy he
assisted In the dedicatory of the
great new Christian church building
of which enterprise he was the Inntl-
gator ome twelve year ago.
The cost of the building Itself waa
$30000 on which tW.OM . had brn
paid. When all was totaled tip last
Sunday night It was found that the
grat nm of $031 J had ht raised
In cash and pledges beside which
the women of tha church made a
pled a e of 0000 parable In three
years for faraisslMKt and general
exrufpment. U was a ?ret and hap
py day and the giving wa rt.lo-
ial and hilarious.
WELL-DRESSED RAIDERS
CRAB A BELFAST TRAIN
(ly Ti Aflatd !
Belfast Aug. 1 1-A band of well
dressed raiders wrecked a train on
the Grrat Northern railroad mar
Dublin today says a dispafy h re-
ceived here Th wreck ha. tmuned
Interruption of tratffe northwarl.
ilQULD LEASE BATH
ETB
Ten " Years' Lease Is Recom-
mended By C. of C; Three
Years To Be Rent
Pree
At a meeting of the Chambpr or
Commerce yeaterday afternoon the
following resoutlon wa sdopted
with reference to the municlial bath
houser
"We request the city commissioner
to sorest .Mr. It T Hansford's propo-
sition which la a ten year contract
three ySeta free seven years at one
thousand dollars tyer year; Hansford
to furnish all materials for repairing
Snd Improving of the building to-
gether irlth bond of sufficient size to
guarantee the maintenance of bath
house for the period of the contract"
CO-OPERATIVE CONTROL
Buys Stock In Job
Concern Held By
and Hurst
Printing
Welch
A buslnexa transaction was con-
cluded whereby T. II- 1lilnon takct
over the controlling Interest of the
Co-operative Publishing Coniimay
having (urchased the stack of W It
Welch 1'. M. Hurst and Harold
Welch. P II. Ileyers. the other stork
holder still retains his Interest.
The original rompsuy wa
composed of T. 'It II a r mo n.
W. H Welrh Jam... Peck' . M.
lliinrt and r' II. Ilcyors Mr I'wk
died several yeara ago and hie In-
terest si purrb'asrd by Wet h and
Harmon and the stockholder remain-
ed the tame up to the resent time.
The Co-opetallve eompauy la tit
outgrowth of the State Capital Print-
ing Company whih ws. eaisblUheil
In by 11 Oreer and J P.
Wlnton In WtifWId Kansas and the
first lau of the paper was printed mt
tb preR of the Winfteld Ourtr In
red ink and the paper sold on the
'I- ... W....
(Continued on Page 4)
JUDGE COTTERAL HOLDS
STRIKER FOR CONTEMPT
B. A. Moore. Friaco Shopman of
Shawnee Is Given 30 Days
In Logan County Jail;
Other Cases
Hi'Jackers Busy
In Oil Field;
Bold In Work
McAIster Ok a. Aug. 11. L.
S Smith rig builder of Okmulgts
waa held up near Crewder yester-
day fy four man who asked him
for a ride. When Smith stopped
to let the men into his car he was
aelied and drago'd from hie sat
bound hand and foot with bailing
wire and then trt'eeed up te a
bunch of bushes with a wire
gag In his mouth.
The men drove off with Smith s
car after taking all Smith's money
and traveling off seta. Smith sue.
ceeded In freeing Himself shortly
afterward and enme on to McAf-
estsr where he reported the rob-
bery to the aherlff. The aandonsd
car wa found by officers later
near the scene of the hold-up but
the robbera are still missing.
'he tt;l of the eleven striking
Sitpmcn fron hhswn and )m
Julia t'itjr tr contempt of court :
voiating the tmtorsry InJuaHion
onttr Issued by Judge Cotteral f dm
Hit KaoVrai court J"ljt forbid!-
ng iny tutrfervnc in th op) a-
t on of trains carrying tha mu on
lh Frisco ralUay was begua In tb
Peileral tkiurt Iwre at tn of tor
this morning. The wirt rxim was
crowded with railroad men a He
fndnta wllnesse and eympattils-
er of the men on trlsl a. court cw
venej One criminal and ttt civil
casca wera on Ui docket.
The first ese to ome U trial
aa that of II. A. Moore of t)hwaee.
a striking ahuman wh was charg.
ed with assaulting John T. tltut
rkk A'strlkebroaker and bltn off
one of his eara. After hearing the
vldno of severs! wKnensr. on
ft. a. . . m.
ixnn siaes woor was nvl(t.d f
sUlt and glvn thirty dsy. )n the
Logan couniy jail.
Tlw femelCiitag ten (' !h.k hi
wer oeing tried tbl ftrooon are
c'vil csc In contempt ts the re
llra'nlng order The ee of Moure
or assault Hn the remaining cases
now on trial ar the fir.i case biur.
full car load of pahs were ship-! n" on t' railway atrlke that have
ped la K(irn markets la the n"a UP trial In the state. Many
pint this on bard has yielded as
I'laCII CROP IN ST ATE
IS NOT SO LARGE
The llolnian Klberta peach i.'chard
located two milNi wri of lh c"y
made ponr hotng thla sr Two
Ausft It A
ss'M' on mm !
a Milton c Qtvber
in f.r cvagtest
('kish.'oia dt.rrt
loj . han.a (twlndalL 4e-
I a n
LiJ 't Wanm aawsj
-tn
liall roar that Uarbe
's'iticis itn.liuree greatly at
e-dd th h limitation fiset If
statute.
la furtherance of hie Wagreealanal
aspirations the proteM allege. Oer-
twr pmha half btrt In the
KuU ttally Keea. t.r fhtuh b paM
00(W and dating tb vanspalga
prcdtng lh primary eteetloa o
Akist 1 prlntsd thousands t4 d.
irs worth of porsoaai advert hlag la
the rspapr. . : I
flnJU further aver that Oer-
'"r mallM J.iis copies of the Hum
free U v tr sad thai the aub.
rUHloni will wtnu until after
the general election ln KvsM.her
Ct.sifng him eiprostma(r f 7m
MoMair eroounU for itvwrtia
menu n othee newspaper of U
slabth district wre apeat by Oaf-
bf Swlndall'a protest aeserte ad.t
fug that he caused to b publlabe.t
fr of chert to h :ali kNee
PlUtcal edrerttmteikt of fcdl-
dales whoe Influent might ba
fit him"
lnda!1 ask tb board A with.
hold (Jar bar's certificate of elect Io
Bftllt rmptu taveatUgMtlOm has
bn made.
la bis affidavit of eampalgn x
pefte filwl with the state eitlo
board. Oerber set the total amount
t 1777 71.
f
a
HOT U'l.MM I.MIT.I
nwny ns 05 imdiv beldpe th
Tarty hundreds Of busbe! sold to
Iocs) people.
The tornado that swept thl pa't
cif the slot recently destroyed
many small orchard and damagrnl
the Holmaa orchard badly.
more or like estuM howr sua
'n f...i'ral dockn In both tro
VWslera districts of the sute.
sssaaaaaaasagsaassasaisagsjajay
faflESIDENT HARDING TAKES
MANO IN TARIFF OHT
(Py Tli AnufH Utml raii)
; Wsshlngton Aug. It. President
'Harding lntryend today In the sen
'ate fight ever the flexible tariff pee
visions outlining to Senatore sum
moned to the white house .the .deelr-
ability of elasticity In thstsrlff during
bresent hiftlng world eondKlens-
TUQ BOAT OVERTURNS;
riVC ARE MISSING
New York Aug. II. A tug boat
overturned In the harbor early twlay
following an exploelan and the four
of flv in;mbers of her crew were
rt-portMd killed. Th scclderat eccur-
rtd off Port Richmond Btstrn Is-
tl'Dd
I AST ST kk tmaivs
iujji i i1 at nki i).i;n
By The A4M prrt)
Lo AnSslss Aug. 11-Cast bound
passenger railroad trains ef the Attn
son Tepehe and Santa y ttm
tied up and no through trains will
leave Los Angsts until the walkout
of ths Big Four bretherheode en the
division centered at Nstdl.e CaMf fa
cleared up it w aBnounesd by . t.
HlBbard today general manager of
the Santa Fe coest line
The hot weather f ih trast two
wkt ba pty4 haron with the
corn crop. aordlm o farmers Is
tw flity tHty who asy ihoit fitim
(nda bav etukel tb corn In many
n the er).B ' has b rtt
lwirlally result.
Three week gu th WB en9
proapecte in Ugaa county war the
best In years U fakes bu4 few
daya of hot Sad U W$hl the hope
of the farmer. Cottoa I Jookiif
wk and the bit awevl! ta gradually
lx-lng rme.I nordtg ta IWay.
AbpiU Wiley eho ha been on th
Job continually and gratlfletl at
the result.
HUNK llltOWN IS
I IULMI OK III MT llS
irccmuicK wms
(By Tke AsswUtMt prH
Parle Aug. 1l..Harold r. McCer.
mlek or Chicago and Mrs Alexandre
hISL a ....
""" vocnran (Madams Walska)
-w.. m.rn.o toosy m the city hail cf
the Sixteenth Ward her.
frank IJroavt cHrf cornmis4jnr.
has men at work building "utility
sad hunter'f lodg at the
city reservoir lake. The bouses wilt
be for the use of thus who have)
hunting license sad ; wilt be fu;
storsge it decoys Umta and fttbef
btirdns the hunter h o eerry
hn he g-ee duck aHootln In the
cold of the stsrfy Bwrn'og. A biff
firpptac wll t bul! Into the bust-
ing lodge e. the hunters can tve
sttme mean of thaelng out after
olti m th biin.J fr several boars.
NO IOLTIO OF
I1MIL HAI L I.AUH III ISK
FORXER GUTHRIE NEGRO
SHOT IN BOOZE RAID
"Toots Champ a former Guthrie
aegro waa ahot and dangerouvy
wounded at Oklahoma City yesterdiy
when he resisted arrest on a charge
of selling boose. Champ la wU
known In police chrclea here and haj
a reputation of being a very reckless
young man who holds th0 laws of
the land In contempt
Pistol-Toting Is Demoralizins as Well as Dangerous Is Claim
JOB FOR THE SCOUTS
Work for the Bor Scouts: Clean
candidates cards from phone pole
and windows. Scouts are doing this '
work la other places.
WEATHER
San Francisco Calif. Aofy. 11. De-
claring that tb" piHtol "serves no
useful purpose in the community
today "the committee ; oa law en-
forcement included in its recommen.
dations submitted to the American
liar association Thursday night oae
for. the prohibition of the raaftufac"
ture and sale of pistolx and of cart-
ridges or ammunition designed 1o be
naed in them "save aa such manufac-
ture shall be necessary for govern-
mental and official nse under proper
legal regulation and control.'
"We find that mor.j than f0 per
cent of the crimes in this country
are committed by the nse of pistols"
continued the report of the com
mittee of which Judge William B.
tzi Cxtartay w'7 to f ChaUanooga Tenn was
clinirman.' "We find that th? laws
prohibiting the carrying of firearms
or deadly weapons are ineffective
in fact that they work to the bene-
fit of the criminal rather than the
law-abiding citizen."
Little Respect for Law .
Other members of the committee
were; Judge Marcus Kavananigh C'hi-
eago; former flovernor Charles S.
Whitman 'New York; Wade II. Ellis.
Washington. D. C and Charles W.
Farnham of St. Paul.
"The criminal situation in the
I'nitcd States o far as crimes of
violence are concerned. Is worse than
that of any other civilized country"
the report said: "Here there is lesa
respect for law. From all available
sourer of information we estimate f
lhat there were more than 9."0() tin-
lawful homicides lunt year in Hlu
cotintry; that in 1W0 there occurred
not lens than !)0()0 sucli liomieideg
nnd that in no year during the Iatt
ten years did the number fall Wlow
PrW. . In other wordjr during the
last tea yenrs no less than b.'MMH) of
our citizens have perished by pouoriay
by the pistol or the knife or ly sprite
other unlawful and tkally instru-
ment.
' Burglaries Increase
"Burglaries have increased m this
country during the last ten years
1200 per cent.
- "Deliberate murder burglary and
robbery will seldom attempted
unless the eriminal U armed. In
Kurt-ean cotjKirie the criminals as
rule Me not armed.
''On the other hntid i crimes which
indjeafe the dishonesty of the i-.p!e
aueh as larny ei tori ion cotuitcr-
feiting frgrr fraud and other
crimes of swindling a eomporisoa of
eooditions tk-nioiwtrafcs that the
morals f this cotintry are better than
m any other of the krge eonntries of
ihe world
"Jt is our united opinion that the
means provi.k.l in the United Kiates
coping with crimes and erimitiHls
are today neither adequate nor effi-
cient for examples
Parole System Wronjr
"First we find that the parole and
probation laws as administered wry
generally fail to flecnmplinh the pur-
(Continued on Pag S
"y what fju my. thef has
hcn itf little. If gay violation of
tb pool ball laws." abi jttdg flows
rewntiy. ma bf tha tht the
poo! hall oor of Uuthrl try sad
lo maintain law abl.tla placet tt
fr as f know
"If anyone knows suythlug u tha
contrary just til complaint with me
ssd I l;l ufc sctiwn. The ls of
the laud be opheI4 and 1 an
oae official h will not hesitate
ben the sltusttlon arises. he add
judge burforo
critically ill
Judge John fl Burford pioneer
lawyer of Oklshoma ssd ehlef Jus.
tics of the supreme court ttt terrl-
lorlal days. Is critically m at Unx
Iteach Calif. Frank Burford sow
sad law partner of the pioneer
iu'lgo ha left for California -.y.
ford te the senior member J tie
law firm Biarfbrd VVsr. 1 .
and Durford. Governor Cot:rlrra
was jnember of UU f.ra lz;r
taklnj sis cxscuUvg
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Niblack, Leslie G. The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 124, Ed. 1 Friday, August 11, 1922, newspaper, August 11, 1922; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc713552/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.