Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 294, Ed. 1 Monday, July 24, 1922 Page: 5 of 6
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OKLAHOMA LEADER
WHEAT CONTRACT
10 HIGH COURT
Agreement of Kansas Wheat
Growers' Is At Stake.
WICHITA, July *4— The vausas
State Supreme Court will oe called
upon to settle the luestion as to
whether a memjer of the Kansas
Wheat Growers' association may
break his contract *ita the o.ganiia-
tion a ixl sell his wheat outside the
organization, following a deoislor in
Sedgwick county dist-ict court Satur-
day.
The decision was bonded <iown by
Judge Jesse D. Wall, who refused to
grant an injunction against Frank
Schulte, member of the organi; anon,
from selling his wheut outside the
organization. Ichuite, wlo had
signed up a 5-year contiact. Jispuae J
or 1,000 bushels of wheat to iocuI
millers without the consent of the
organization. The waeat growers
association asked tLat an injunction
be granted against Schulte selling
any more of his wheai other than
through the association. TMt was
denied by the court.
Much Depend- o« Decision.
I bis case was the first biought to
test the validity of tho pooling plan
agreement, and it In declared 'hat
much will depend upon the dnal de-
« Islon In the supreme cour
The Kansns Whe.; Crowos' asso-
ciation has approximately 2,b00
members In the stare. Some dis-
satisfaction has developed in tho
organization due to the slrwness to
.^et into operation.
Hundreds of the members or tan
organization were present during the
bearing "with the view of being
guided by the result*.
The plaintiff claimed, under a pro-
vision of the co-operative marketing
law passed by the 192) session of the
Kansas legislature, .he right of a
temporary injunction on filing i
verified petition aud bond without
introducing evldeuco. However,
Judge Wall held that this r-ght Joes
not exist, but that evidence should
be heard and that the case s! ouid bo
deterlned on the issuen.
And in so doing Judge Wall
strongly Intimated tuut in his opmlou
the section of the co-operative mar-
keting law pleaded in t e c«* e is un-
constitutional on the grounds that it
does not authorize i* hearing before
the injunction is issued.
FARMERS GIVE
(Continued from Page One)
now would be desertions or union
men.
Calls Halt to R. R.
Coal Confiscation.
The rirst move upon the part or
the state to prevent the railroads
rrora confiscating coal supplies con-
signed to other public utilities of the
state, was taken Monday by the cor-
poration commission when the com-
mission sent letters to all railroads
entering the state asking them for a
direct answer to charges that they
have been conriscatlng the coal
shipped to other public utilities or
the state.
Art Walker, member of the com-
mission, declared that complaints
were coming in thick and rast from
light plants, water plants. Ice plants
and other utilities, declaring that
coal shipped to them had not been
received and that upon Inquiry It
was round that the railroads had con-
fiscated the coal ror their own use.
Walker declared that the commis-
sion was demanding to know what
the attitude or the roads was going
to be in the matter as the coal short-
age grew more acute.
'The matter is already becoming
serious and many utlity plants are
threatened with a shut down because
or the failure to receive fuel supplies
sent them." Walker declared.
Unless the railroads stop the prac-
tice or confiscating coal and allow
the shipments of coal to reach their
destination, many cities and towns In
the state would soon be without
lights and water. Walker declared.
A large per cent of utility plants
over the state, expecting a settlement
of the coal strike before this time,
have made no attempt to lay In coal
supplies, and as a result are almost
out of fuel, it Is declared.
Ships Held Up For
Lack of Coal.
NEW YORK. July 24.—'The coal
mine and rail strikes have progressed
to the point where they are rutting
down ocean shipping at Atlantic
ports. Twenty-two ships, mostly
from New York to South America and
Pacific ports, have been field up at
Hampton Roads for lack of bunker
coal, and scores of barge and towing
companies in New York harbor have
had to curtail operations for lack of
coal.
No Wage Cuts On
Canadian Lines.
By Federated Press.
OTTAWA, Can.. July 24. The re-
duction In wanes In the shop craft*
which has been put into effect on U.
S. railways will not go into force on
the Canadian section of the Michigan
Will Check Up Story of Willie
Williams.
Charges will not be filed against
Willie Williams In the death of Mar-
tin Sumpter until certain evidence'
against Williams is investigated j Central, pending an inquiry ylf'H w
more thoroughly, according to W. R. being instituted under the irdustria
Wlthington, assistant county attor- disputes act which mikes it unlaw-
! f.tl foe ct rllroo tn h« r'lIlPO o- wiires
ney.
Chief of Detectives John Hubatka
after a conference with Assistant
County Attorney Wlthington and
ful for strikes to be c-illed o- wiges
decreased until an attempt has first
been made to settle the matter by ar-
bitration.
County Evidence Man Joe Layton is-
sued the statement that the charges MciyOr Hylcin WOn t
would not be filed until Layton had rnQji Ctrj|/pnc
investigated Williams' story of his bee ha,! oiriKerb.
stay in Bristow. Williams claims
that he was in Bristow on the night
of the murder and had been there
since July 3. 'The police, however,
are in possession of the register of a
rooming house showing that Wil-
liams stayed there the night of the
murder and had been there for some
time.
Owing to the fact that most of the
evidence against Williams is circum-
stantial there will be no charges filed
until certain phases of the case are
checked up. Besides the register the
police have Beveral witnesses who
say that Williams was seen to leave
the vicinity of the murder in a mo-
torcycle shortly after shots were
heard by neighbors. Sumpter was
killed on the night of July 11 by un-
known assassins supposedly for a
large sum of money that Sumpter
was known to have had on his per-
son. Four men have bnen arrested
in the case by the police and the
sheriffs office is holding Irene Hen-
sen, Sumpter's fiancee. Two of the
yien were released on writs of habeas
By HARRY GODFREY
Federated Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK. July 24.—Mayor John J
F. Hylan, self-styled "friend of the
people" and Tammany executive un-
der whom a number of A. F. of L.
labor leaders here drew fat salaries '
In various city departments, has re-
fused to see a delegation of the cen-
tral strike committee of the rail
shopmen. The delegation Intended
to ask the mayor's assistance in
stopping violations of a number of
city ordinances by railroads enter-
ing the city.
No official explanation of the re-
fusal was given out, but it is known
that Hylan said he would not Uke
up such a matter at this time, and
that the committee was informed it
should go to the health department.
MAN POISONED BY
DRINKING POLISH
LAWTON. July 24— John Stove-
NO RELIEF FROM
HEAT PROMISED
LET'S THINKJ)F OKLAHOMA
(Continued from Pane One)
perpetual plunder, if they listen to the groans and wails
of the lie factory on Fourth street.
Let's think of Oklahoma, where the bankers wrote
the banking law which destroyed the spirit and letter of
the original act providing a guarantee of deposits, which
placed the supervision of state banks in the hands of the
bankers, allowed them to name the commissioners and
examiners, intended originally to protect the people, but
used in an opposite direction, to protect the thieves while
they picked the pockets of the people. Through ineffi-
ciency, speculation, mismanagement and out and out lar-
ceny and embezzlement, they destroyed the bank guaranty
fund and have taken from the depositors nearly five mil-
lion dollars.
Let's think of Oklahoma, where the big political banks
have taken, since the time they took charge of the state
government, in surpluses, undivided profits, dividends and
enormous salaries, through exorbitant discount rates,
usurious Interest charges, and unfair manipulation of
public and private funds, although defrauding and de-
faulting the bank guaranty fund, more than $250,000,000.
Let's think of Oklahoma, where for three years last
past, the fire, hail and life insurance companies, operating
under the protection of the staie, Tcave been allowed to
take from the people of the state and out of the state,
over and above the losses and claims they paid the people
of the state, nearly $55,000,000.
Let's think of Oklahoma, where the government, be-
cause it is owned and directed by Big Business, thinks
ALWAYS to protect the banks and the insurance com-
panies and NEVER the farmers. Let's think how it has
refused and failed to pass an honest grain and cotton
grading law, and because of that failure, the growers of
wheat and cotton, by far the largest group of citizens
in the state, have been robbed of not less than $15,000,000
annually, and that this daylight robbery has been going
on for thirty years, amounting in the approximate aggre-
gate to $450,000,000.
Let's think of Oklahoma, where the people are sup-
posed to rule, but where the farmers, the largest portion
of the population, through the refusal and failure of the
state to build warehouses and elevators in which the cot-
ton and grain could be stored, are forced to offer their
products at ONE TIME and ALWA YS on a falling mar-
ket, at a time when only one-twelfth of it is wanted—
forcing them to sell—rthus giving speculators an opportu-
nity to make hundreds of millions of dollars, cheating
and robbing them of not less than $25,000000 per year,
totalling, in thirty years, not less than $750,000,000.
Let's think of Oklahoma, where the failure and re-
fusal of the state government, directed and controlled by
the political banks, to protect the farmer in the grading
and marketing of his produce, has helped the speculators
to acquire it and hold it for unfair and exorbitant profits,
thus profiteering on the consumers who must have it in
order to live, robbing them of at least $10,000,000 an-
nually.
Let's weep over North Dakota, if we must, where the
farmers spent several hundred thousand dollars in an
honest and honorable effort to throw from their backs a
gang of thieves who were plundering them mercilessly,
but let's think of Oklahoma, where the plunderers, unhin-
dered, and until now unafraid, have robbed the people
of enough to buy outright every bank in the state, pay
every unsatisfied mortgage and till this Oklahoma with
home owners instead of tenants.
Let's think of Oklahoma when we vote next Tuesday,
August 1.
LIVESTOCK
PRODUCE
MARKETS
COTTON
GRAIN
LIVESTOCK
OKLAHOMA CITY
Cattle
Hogi .
S...00
400
1,100
MARKETGRAM
A summary of the markets a« fur-
nished by the United Stated Bureau
of Markets for the week ending
July 20, 1922.
GRAIN
Heavy ccelpta und lack of quality pro-
duced a alow market In the local yard*
today. On steer* trade whh generally
steady with an early top of $S.$0. ami u
bulk price of $5 00 and up. The butcher
market waa slow and largely 25 cents
lower. Good cows and heifers sold
und $4.00; eannem and cutter* *1 r "
2.00; bulla $2.60®3.26. The calf market
was low with an early top of $fi.nu
Storkera and feeders sold mostly 26 cents
lower.
HOOS—The hog market was active and
steady to strong with a top of $10 36,
and a bulk price of $10.20 and up.
steisks—
Good to choice baby beef . $ 8.00© 8 00
Med. to good buby beef 7.60© 8.00
Good to choice corn led 7.60 8.00
Good 1100 to 1200 srasa fed.. 7.25® 7.76
Med. to good cakid gresaers. 6.60(0' 7.26
Plain to ined. grsssers 6.00(0 U "0
Uow wows 4.250 6.00
COWS AND Hlil* KKS--
Best beef cows 6.25© 6-75
Med. to good butciier cows... 4.26© 5-00
Good to choice nailers 6.76(0"
Med. to good hellers 6 00© 6.76
Fair to medium 4.00© 4 60
Plain to med. grata cowa.... 3 50© 4.-'6
Strong Cutters 2.60© 3.00
Cuuners and low cutters. . .. 2.00O' 3-60
Good to choice bulla 8.26© 3.76
Med. to good butcher bulls.. • 2.76W 3.26
Common bolognas 2.26© 2.76
uaiauk—
Good to choice veals (i.50(0' 7.60
Fair to lights 6.50<8> 6.60
Uood to choice heavy ualvta. «"0 6.60
Common to tan calves «.00© 3.60
STOCKfiUb A N1J l-EFvUtlHS
Cotton.
■ot cotton prices declined 25 points
during the week. New York July fu-
luraa down 33 imlnts.
22.66c per i>ouiid.
ros 22.28c.
Feeders, 800 to 1000 lbs...
Uood 600-700 lb. Blockers. .
best While I ace yearlings.
Med. to good yearlings...
Coin, lo pla.u yearlings...
Good to choice stock hfra.
Medium to good heifers...
Choice stock c-l\es......
Plain stock calves
Young slock cows
Aged slock cows
HOGS—The hog market
day with steady trading,
light, only 800 head
).00© 6.60
.. 4 50© 6.00
.. 6.00© 6.50
4.25© 4.75
.. 21.50© 4.00
.. 3.00(0 3.50
2.50© 3.u0
.. 4.00© 4-iO
.. 2.00W 4.00
.. 2.61© 3-0U
.. 2.00© 2.60
was active to
Receipts wero
The
York July
OKLAHOMA CITY GRAIN
Wheat, No. 1, per bushel
Wheat. No. 2, l«er bushel
Wheat. No. 3. per bushel
Mixed corn, per 'jua>hel
Wlilte corn, per bushel
CHICAGO FUTURES
PAGE KrVi
Uklahoma Leader Want Ad
3ates and Information
17 West Third Street
I'll ONE MAPLE 7600
CLASSIC iiijj ADVIflltTlSlNU HAT LB
—C11AKL.L KATES—One insertion, per
. line 8 cents. I hree Insertion*. p*r line,
. 6 cents. Si* Insertions, per line, 6 cents.
I fso advertisement acepted for less
than 25c. Count six average words to
the line, twelve lines to the Inch. All
I charge want ads are due and payable
^ the day first insertion of advertisement
(B/ Jam*. L. Burnett M Co, *30 Orala
Lxrtiuiig* HI tig- Oklahoma City.)
Wheat continued its toboggan down-
.Markets higher the thirteenth fifteenth war<j Monday anil July wheat closed at
n apprehension damage to spring wheal |j.o8 after opening at $1.11. September
erritory and rail strike but trended low- | wheat closed at I1.07H an compared with
I the remainder of the week on In- i H close < r $l n9'4 Saturday. Corn fol-
rcased offerings from counlr> ; hedging J |„wed the weak grain market and July
pressure and rumors of the betterment h08t cent, closing at til7* cents, while
trike Chicago Seplembei wheat seplemb
> cent higher. Chicago September «,ornlcentH
ctlonally higher On the 20th wheat '
rket dull early with prices steady but
strong toward last and closed around
«t prices for da\ Foreign markets
showed untxpeeted strength and exin rt | COItN—
sales aeal>oard estimated around million July
and quarter. Corn firm and advanced Kept.
early oil big export business yesterday [ OATS—
and continued strength In cash market. | July
Closing prices In Chicago cash market: I Sept
No. 2 red winter wheat $1 l2Tt; No. 2j
hard winter wheal $1.15; No :: mixed | llllv
corn «SHp; N... 2 yellow corn fij^c; No.
3 white oats 3Gc Average furin prices;
No. 2 mixed coin In central Iowa 51V;
No. 2 hard winter wheat In central Kan-
sas $1.06; No 1 dark northern wheat In
North Dakota $1.20%. Chicago Septem-
ber wheal $1.1 :; Chicago September corn
64Hi', Minneapolis September wheat
$1 lSVfc; Kansas City September wheat
$1.04; Winnipeg October wheat $1.17.
id do
WHEAT —Open
July Ill
Hept 1.08%
Sept.
'fc cent at 62%
Low Close
1.0fi\ 1 ('«
1.06% 107%
>v Au tos, JMVU.UI, mc.
WE liUY OLD GOLD,
SILVER AND DIAMONDS
MOREHOUSE JEWELRY CO,
■i.h North Rroadway
SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO
FINE WATCH REFAIRING.
EDUCATION AND INSTRUCTION
.31%
.33%
N\ AN i LD—Men tj leaiu barber iiuue,
no tuition, tools free; ag«i wtlUe
learning; position guaranteed; catalog
mallei I free. Sohwarxe liarber College,
106 W. California Ave., Oklahoma City.
razor blauee when
Ray.
Markets quiet during the week. Re-
ceipts Increasing. Prices hardening in
Minneapolis and Kansas City but not [
materially changed during past few days, v,
Offering.-, goo.I. quality hay readily ab-1
sorbed. QuotM July 15: No. 1 alfalfa j pj
$14.50 Khiisils City; $25 Atlanta No. 1
prairie $13 60 Kansas City; $17 60 Minne-
apolis; $1U St. Louis.
KANSAS CITY CASH GRAIN
wheat-
no. 1 dark hard...
No. 2 dark hard.
No. 3 dark hard...
No. 4 dark hHrd ..
No 6 dark hard. . .
No. 1 hard
No. 2 hard
$9.85. with the bulk $ 75©9 X5. blockers I , ,(.1(
■Old down 25 cents at $8.26®8.76.
Rest butchers, 200-260 lbs
Medium to good butchers
Feed.
ed markets quiet Heaviest out
ement of wheat feeds for months
n Minneapolis. Prices are held firm
I b> mills and Jobbers. Rail strike con-
sidered bullish factor. Deferred ship-
ments bran and middlings offered at
I $1.00-2.00 below prevailing prices. New
d meal for shipment up to Heptemb
ted $3.00-4.00 less than old j Seplembei
quoted July 19: Mian compared
middling* bushel.
o 3 hard .
o. 4 hard...
o. 2 red
CO ItN-
ci. 2 \vhlte .
o. 1 yellow,
o. 2 yellow
o. 2 mixed.
OATS—
113 ti 1.20
1.12 #126
t.lt H1.25
1.15 <i 4 1.25
1.08 dl 1.20
I.OS (fi11.14
1.02 tf 1.14
.99 ti 1 11
98 01.15
1 04
hlte
KANSAS CITY FUTURES
the Itellahitt Cutlery Sharpening Co..
3oo North Robinson, makes them better
than new at 35o and 36c per doaen.
COMPLETE line of rebuilt typewriters,
priced low for cash. Downing A Co.,
Woodstock distributors, 205 West
Second street. Maple 67G9.
WILL pay the highest price on cowa,
calves and hogs. Call Maple 73S0. Li
Siuth Harvey.
Ft U PAINTING call Maple 8307.
SEE R. D. STEELE for hardware, plowa.
garden tools. 403 W. Grand Ave.
."P INTERESTED In Scientific Research
for more und chea|>er dally necessities
from crude oil, address O. E., caro
Leader.
J'HOl KSSIONA I,
K CUNNINGHAM, Chiropractor# *40
Raltiioore Uldg. Maple 4440.
CANCKR—best remedy on eurth. WrIU
Dr. O. Nobell, Reaver. Okla.
Plain to medium heavlei
Good stock hogs
Throwouts ard roughs
,I6'50; 117.00; rye
... ii'-'w o.joj,]66(, Mll No
lii 115(8)10.20 . ....
[y July Wheat Inst "Ms cents
rkct closed Monday at $1.00.
heat closed down 1% cents,
jrn closed at 68% cents, ss
of 66', cents a
ivlth
10.Oo® 10.20
8.25'0< 8.75
6.50(0 8.60
Representative salen at published by
the Live Stock News, Saturday:
COWS.
No. Wt. Pr. | No Wt. Pr.
1 1060 $4.50 i 1 1020 $3.50
1 960 3.75 |
CANNERS AND CUTTERS.
2.75
720
Short May Delay Case Until
After August 1.
CHURCH HITS
CHILD LABOR
Birth Control Rapped: Race
Suicide Feared.
When the case against W. R. Clark
coine up in Justice W. P. Hawkins'
orpus and one man released because | kovld, a railroad worker employed
f lack of evidence against him. | at Richards Spur, ten miles north of
Lawton, is in a serious condition in
a local hospital as the result of
drinking half a glass of shoe polish
or shoe dye.
Entering a shoe shop with a friend,
Stovekovld went back to where a j,
i NEW YORK, July 24.—"The m tllg-
j nant cancer of easy divorce, result-
ing in race suicide, is today po\\.gr
. _ . fully eating Into the teart of domes
court Tnesday mom-.ng there will be | (|c ^ of (he Am„;|(,an peo))|e..
many thrills and spectacular revela- j say8 a report made by the Episcopal
tlons if the statements of some of 'church to be presented when the or
the people connected with the action j ganlzation holds its K«nenil conven
can be relied on. Attorney General i
George Short has promised many j
surprises when be places a certain
witness on the stand, whom rumor
BULLS.
1270 3.25 I 1 109(1
135 3.60 | 2 1040
1520 3 50 j 1 1110
1010 3.25 |
STOCKERS AND FEEDERS,
STEERS.
640 6.00 | 1 600
... 420 4.00 | 6 474
700 3-00 | 2 620
616 3.00 |
HEIFERS
433 3 26 | 10 i\l
670 3 50 | 1 480
680 3.60 |
COWS
835 2.00 j 4 742
830 2.50 :
BULLS.
alfalfa ineal I
410 3 25
1.
600
970
2.60 |
CALVES.
Dk Wt. Pr.
80 232 $10.30
— 180 10.25
HOOS.
Dk. Wt. Pr. I N
.. — 239 $10.30 I .
.. — 18H 10.25 | 78. — 180
. . — 19(| 10.25 | 102... — 215
.. — 214 10.25 ; ?• lit
ROUGHS AND THROWOUTS.
.. — 230 7.50 | 1 17''
. . 70 520 f. 60 3 — 430
$17.60. Kansas City; 3fi per cent cotton- Ijuly
seed meal $40. Memphis. I sept. ..
Fruits and Vegetable*. CORN
Potato markets show firm tone at the'Sept.
close of week of declining prlcea. Vlr- Dec.
giuia eastern shore cobblers advanced
?1 50 per bbl. In New York city in two
days; Chicago and Pittsburgh weal^er.
New Jersey sacked cobblers up 36 cents
in New York. Carlot arrivals light.
Peach markets generally weaker, slight
gains In Philadelphia and Chicago. Can-
taloupes weaker California and Arlaona
stock down 26 cents per crate In city
markets. North Carolina green inests
steady; Georgia und South Carolina
watermelons slightly weaker eiuitern
markets Georgia stock down $10.00-16.00
per car f <>. b. shipping points. Early jj
eastern apples, various varieties slightly'
weaker in city wholesale markets. On
the 20th Virginia eastern shore cobblers
ranged $3 50-3.76 per bbl, in leading east-
ern cities; down 20 cents in Chicago at
$3.85-4 10. Steady in Haltlmore and
Philadelphia at $2.76-8.00; $.'.76-2.90 f. o.
I> shipping points. New Jersey cobblers
$1.65-2.00 per 100 lbs. New York. Philadel-
phia and Pittsburgh $1.60-1.65 f o. b".
shipping points. Kansas early Ohloa
weak at «.5 cents to $1.00 f. o. b. Geor-
gia peaches sixes and bushel briskets El-
bcrtas $2.75-3.25 leading markets. South
Carolina various varieties $2.60-3 25;
North Carolina stock $3.00-f.00; Califor-
nia salmon tint cantaloupes standards
45s mostly $2.(io-2.50; slow, dull Balti-
more at $1 50-1.66. Arlsona stock $2.00-
leadlng markets. North Carolina
neats 76c-1.26. California honey-
ats mostly $1.76-2 00. Tom Wat-
W H EAT — Open
High
1.02
1.004
.54*,
•52H
COTTON
NEW YORK COTTON
(By James E. Bennett A Co, 680 C#rsa
July
Jan.
Bldg.. Oklahoma City.)
Open High Low Close
.... 21.98 2198 21 17 21.18
21.85 22.10 21.32 21.39
21.90 22.0ft 2126 2136
,... 21.72 21.86 21.08 21.19
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
Open High l/>w Close
Open High lx w
11 y 21 40 21.40 21.07
r.i 21.40 21.58 20.78 20.89
21.36 21.62 20.70 20.8:
in ... 21.24 21.38
1.10HT liOl&KhKUriAU liOOMS
t O It KENT
314'.* Lust Third.
ALIOS, VKMIXES AM)
Al l IXSOHIKS
PARTS FOR ALL CARS
NEW AND USED
SAVE -6 TO 75 PER CENT
PHONE—WIRE—WRITE
AUTO PARTS CO., ^20 N. BROADWAY
MISlT.U A.M Ol S FOR SALE
i A l 1UU UAiNuLU au«i f cUllt looia ior
sale, cheap. Also two light housekeep-
ing rooms lur rent. 407 W. Choctaw.
FOR SALE—Fine male Jersey calf;
sired by Registered Jersey, out of G-
gallon cow. same sired by registered
male, out of ti-gallon cow; subject to
registry. F. E. Kuckuck. Herlngton, Kan.
A M I !) 9!IHCELIiAN E0U8.
WANTED—To buy a second-hand in-
valid chair. Address Dr. 1L Shepherd,
Box 618, Henryetta, Okla.
1*01 I,THY AM) PETS
liUiOi.LLU anu Uied iNuw
doe und Junior buck at a bargain.
I>7 20.73 i ^ Walker, Madill, Okla.
Ne
$17
Philadelphia $175-375;
330
7.50
1th the ex- I water cooler was sitting in the dark,
here By some mistake he picked up a
I glass containing the polish or dry
With all of Oklahoma
ception of extreme portions
| -.Jr.nK a ,arse „Ua„,i.y before
109, no relief was olfeted by the lo
H.
Wahlpren,
cal weatherman,
Monday.
• Oklahoma City hid a temperature
of 102 Sunday and it may be that it
will not reach more than lftl to-lay,
Wahlgren declared.
Asked what the people of Oklaho-
ma were going to do for relief, W ihl-
uren suggested that they 'hink of
Calgary. Canada, where the ther-
mometer registered 38 In tb 1 : un.
Southwest OkWhom i ;*.s me h trd
est hit In the heat bntlle.
held the unenviable record
the shade. This wi«h Just 1
he realized what he had done. A few
minutes later he had a convulsion
and was taken to the hospital.
CHILDREN TOIL
has charged with being a teachers'
certificate broker. Short refuses to
give out any specific information, but
merely smiles and predicts a very
sensational trial. Ben Williams, of
Norman, and attorney for Clark has
also promised hot developments.
He has subpoenaed it. H. \ iison.
candidate for governor and present
superintendent of instruction, as one
of the witnesses. Ailllams has also
I tion In Portland, Or*., Sept.
The lack of parental con'•ol, the
j absence of instruction conccrnin-, the
purpose of marriage aud indiscrimi-
nate marriages are responsible, says
the report for a large part, of tho
evil.
Health certificates with the pro- hogs-
hiblting of criminal.!, feebly-minded generally
and morally vicious persons marry- | «a 10.60.
lng is declared nee.,a ary >c safe-
guard the nation.
WICHITA
WICHITA, Kan., July 22— CATTLfc
Receipts 150 head. Market for week
hotter grades butcher cnttle steady; o
ers 25® 50c lower; veal calves 25 cei
lower; Blockers steady to strong;
classes steady.
HOOS—Receipts 600 head M
steady. Top $10.25; bulk $10 15(^10
KANSAS CITY
KANSAS CITY, Mo., July 22.—
TLE—Receipts 200 head Market f<
week on better grades beef steer< e
lo 26 cents higher. others fteady
cents lower; yearlings and fat she
steady lo .'6 cents lower. tanners s;
bulls and stock calves 50 «*nls I
stockers. feeders
stock $1.75-2.00 in Chit
dropped 6-30c du
FINANCIAL
LIBERTY BONDS
(By James h. Bei.astf >,oinpwiy.
Uraiu Exchange bulldinf.l
3 Vfcs 100 96
First 4 (48 101.40
Second 4'*s 100.82
Third 4'*s !««•#-
Fourth 4'*s 10O.5K
Victory 4%a 100.64
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
Call money 4 per cent
Sterling $4.4il.
Mark .0020.
Lire .0450.
THOROUGHBRED Barred English S.
Comb \\ hlte Leghorn egg*. $4.do per
100, $8.90 per 200. R. Copeliii, Granite,
Oklahoma.
FARM AKD ACJBE TRACTS.
10 ACRES at barguin;
near city; Ideal for
poultry. Phone 4-1797.
I DO YOU WANT A REAL BARGAIN
In 10-acre tract on paved road In 16*
! minutes drive from Oklahoma City?
! Priced far under value; 50 per cent cash.
1 balance on terms. Address O. X.. care
I Lead* r. Phone 4 1797.
A. M. RAYL c
to hear from
ers und one e>
cash; also all 1
cheapest land in
dateline. Miss., wlshea
me co-operative larm-
lenced dairyman wltli
1 wish to buy the best,
le south; good climate
lid '
ater; a snap to the proper parties.
thei
id
higher also de- |
od grade beef 1
s lower; heifers |
LOCAL MARKET
FE.MAI.ti HEM' WANTED.
aI calv
50
'steerR w
" S'SOIJiHALS FBODUCK.
Sheep and lamb prices followed the samel Corrected by Swift A Co.
trend; fat lambs and yearlings declining Spring broilers
L'.V50c; fat ewes 16-25c, while feeding Leghorn broilers ...
lambs were unchanged On July 20 Chi- via. express
casrq hog market was fully steady with Young roosters
WANTED—A
working girl to keep house
; no objection to widow
I. Address G. W., care
MAM: HEM' WANTED
We
nfed be
Cho
id pr
He
WANTED—All
idy
llpts 200
id.
eady. Top $10.5"
id butcher she stock Ou
irn lambs
to weak
np $10.85;
I ondemn I ti lid i.aboi CHICAGO. Jul.
— , , . ceipts 1,600 head.
Touching the economic pham- o? I week ago: choice
the family, the report condemns ^blH 'strong to 15 cents
promised to show that Short is at- labor, demanding tho* it be abolished including grassers
tempting to continue the case until Qr rigidly controlled. The employ- ®50c lower; sjwt.
after the primaries and then dismiss j nient of expectant r.iothers or 'ore- ' cows and heifers a
it. Short says that cage will |ng them hack to work before the) bstwssn gri
IN /? f~f fi lit* /Si AND n*01"® than likely bo continued until f are physically fit.. ?h alao condemned ,'r • r'
III illiVJEJld MVEdrkil v j Auiu t 8 and be triad the g .me time Tb. report pt daager cow* . cenU
that the case against Dr. M. H t() girls in Industry wovK!n ai
By Federated Press. Wakefield, negro dor .or of BrtPtow wagea so low that they arc tempted /tee'H «10 85
At least anrj co-defendant w'th C lark, is into Immorality. 't also w.irn.* steers $k 75't 'lo.lo
against men being yila wages so low .heifers $6.<
CHICAGO
e, youiifc una old
11 lLifc«> , 1U lb*., and 1
tout turkeyb. 11 JUS. und
egga, new Cttaen UK
liit-.^ UUI. UeliVeruU UKlu
(Local crttunery.)
H kluci butler, good
1 utlivelcd uaianoiua
t.KAl.N AMD i 1 I D.
ge of 2
THE WEATHER
blielled cor
Oala, pel 0
. Linaeed int
Kalir, pel
NEW YORK. July 2
5,000 children under 16 years of age trje(j
have done industrial work during the Clark and Wakefle'd are charged I that they cannot
Mangum year 1921 In Rhode Island, according with obtaining teachers' certificates family, and "hence
>f ft:t in to a study of three Rhode Island from W. T. Dodson, former secretary
ree cities received here from the U. S. j of the state board of education, by
lower than the record established by 1 children's bureau. Rhode Island has fraudulent representation. Tho
thts city Friday. « hijh Vtrcfee the , nf, cbild labor laws. j charges were fibd by Coun.v actor-
state's record for the >ear. 1 ,\PW York state has laws regulat- ney Hughes at the solicitation ol At
Vegetation all over the state is jnR home work, but as the working I torney General abort and vr evi-
twlsting up under tburning rays (jay of a state factory Inspector Is dence furnished by Short and aworr.
of the sun and much r'amage to ;.11 plgj,t hours. It would require three i to by Dodson.
growing crops is being reported. 1 jnspectors to each tenement to which are out 011 $1..
Corn, especially latu cor^ oelns thfi ]gw ftppijes, or an army of more
hard hit. than 45,000. to set a continuous day
While the wind a^pel'-st,J''e^erv ;nd n ht wQtch upon these dwc„.
hot. the weather bureau declared , violations of the
,bat it could no. b, called hot wind,. | OB.
and said that it w
the Period July S4, 1 JC<, to
2 . 1022, Inclunlve.
Wholesale pricee
City:
1 alfalla hay.
HA 1 AMD blllAtt.
ie yiic«s lor hay in Uklaho.
'"lain and Wakefield
1,500 bonds.
rry and ear a (
re tempied into
vicious course of Immorality.".
Birth control was ait.<cked.
CONDUCT HEARING
IN GINNING RATES
Oft 3.76; bologn
others stead
higher; !op
late $10.h& .
10,75; holdo>
$M.O0<tt 9.00;
$] ' - II
$10.76© 10.85
14 uo
m 12.60
;u 11.00
to the
tense heat.
POWERS WINS HOME
PLANNING CONTEST
J. t . Powers. Jr.. 1316 Went Ninth
street, was awarded first prize In the
Classen ' ompany Country Home con-
ttest of $100. Mr. Powers furnished a
Incomplete set of plans unl details
suitable for a country houie.
were going on.
H. E. SMITH DIES
H. E. Smith, farmer, of Riverside
Park lied at the home of his daugh-
ter In Oklahoma City. Sunday night,
after au Illness of about two weeks'
duration.
Knowix to his friends as "Riverside
Smith." h' waa a tireless worker for
th< cauw 1 working clatf emanci-
pation.
$3.60« 10
A hearing to set the price of cotton
ginning for the present season Is be-
T\A/n oadc OC CI dcdta I ing conducted before the corporation
IWU UAhb Ur tLutn I A commission Monday.
PEACHES 0M MARKET The farming interests are repre-
j sented by John Simpson, president of
Two carloads of elberta peaches, Oklahoma Farmers l nlon. and a
onn from McAlester anil the other1 number of mummers of farmer union gnniiatlon of
from Ilokoshe. were received hy the Kins over the state. adopted
stale exchange of the Farmers'1 It Is declared that the farmers
union. Monday
According to H. B. Converse, man
i $10.45il 1"
TOKIO. The Nob
conse;
olutloi
members not to hav
sking for the same rate that existed -so that the money
-(last year with the exception that they he sent for relief
their
SA>
the bolM
FRANCIS' (
ager, the price ranges from $2.00 to re asking that the rate be based stricken in Russia.
$2.50 wholesale. The peaches from upon the lint Instead of upon the seed ~
this section are especially fine qual- cotton basis. SKA I" 1 L L. William
Ity this season. Converse said, owing secretary of tin tra'.o
to thp fact that they have had plenty ; There is enough Iron in the blood league, addressed large mei
ol rain and other favorable growing of forty-two men to make a plough j the Pacific north
conditions. J share weighing twenty-four pounds. 1 cent visit.
famine been on strike since
the Bethlehem Shipr
have gone back to v
Foster, was settled by a o<
utional men accept the wag
Ings in cent, but have
st during his re- tlons
land i
ll 1...
iver Mil
isourl
itorms";
tem-
'ta!or
; a lid PI
id Vic
ht and
Tu'-v
and Tu«
M
embert
< of
aion
who
have
Apri
! 17 a-
a Inst
corporation
«.rk.
The
jtlke
rapr
nmise;
tho
ti b hidu
U b. bide
G. S. blue
HIDi. MAlikhi.
, bur i hull 4 X
(llev
UliOOSl IUH>.
by 11 a.leiw Ware!
Id working condi-
Conimieeloii Company.)
Liiuaay blunUard—
| Choice
tair
Uklahoma D^arf. self-worklng-
GROVELAND, cal. Men wt
here lor the city of San Fran i>
the Hetch-Hetcliy ;r«it,atioM p
claim that union men aro bo.n
criminated against. They also t
that tunnel workers arc obllj
work underground more tb n
CHEESE FfiCTDfll
GO-DP. SUCCESS
Five Thousand Farmers In
Celebration.
SEATTLE, July 24. -With the ele-
itlon of P. J. ( leaver to the asslst-
nt managership of the state grange
warehouse, a huge co-operative
krholesale, the story of the success
Cowlitz Valley Cheese Co-op-
association is being told here,
r was organizer and manager
of the plant.
At a recent picnic the cbeese co-op
celebrated its third anniversary with
5, )00 present. Its present invest-
ment is a $12,000 cheese factory con-
suming 13.500 pounds of milk each
da> and turning out 1.450 pounds of
. he. • . The association was financed
by members paying iu $5 cash
and a bankable note of $10 on each
of th(
['leave
with double .me for overtime, hours a day, In violation of
half tiay ou Saturday. I labor lawn.
07Vt Members are receiving 13 to 14
' cents more a pound for butterfat
,, in, than on the open market. An assess-
no on I nient of 5 cents a pound on the but-
,U(m terfat has added improvements, an
li. ice plant and other equipment while
barge farmers still receive S to 10 cents
;e<l to more a pound.
. i^h- The plant is managed by a boari
siat« of directors who devote one dajr •
I mouth on pay to the work.
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 294, Ed. 1 Monday, July 24, 1922, newspaper, July 24, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc100081/m1/5/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.