Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 14, 1922 Page: 2 of 6
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_GE TWO
OKLAHOMA LEADER
'ST CITIZENS
TO FACE COURT
IMHERHINCASt
jzied Open Shop Prosecu-
* >n Gets Pioneers—Con-
trasted With "Scalies."
(* By MAUD McCREERY
.derated Pre* Staff Correspondent.
I ' \ K !i i.\. 111.. Sept. 14 Tli.it m< m-
' of Williamson county's best
' lies, from point of honorable cit-
lihlp for generations. must stand
|, in the $25,000 prose< utl< n P ild
II the Illli ham be r of Coin-
I m'c In connection with ibatlis r.
ftyng In the riot June
1
■''"Hteri by the murder of three un-
(1 union men June 21 by com-
t J ofTlctnls and guards, is an out-
fflllnr feature In the list men
LfjUd bby the grand Jury for mur-
J Mnd conspiracy to murder. Twen-
I
I
I'.oses ft majority of Anglo-Saxon
|k.W instead of those of foreign-
|l jrhom tho public has been tnught
1
Ionised labor, and that families
1
|>i.1ie building up of this country
In^jknown to be active In church and
ti,, activities are now branded as
f w iw ■ and inurd rers.
y ) Nil) ( hurch Members.
nUOige Anderson. 30. indicted
8. Is charged with murder. Not
■it has his family a good standing
. I larion. but be personally ha-
K.Ved such ft good reputation that
* Vss than an hour after he gav<
l^rielf UP at the county jail I • w
I IpMd "ii his own recognizance by
I V °s Attorney I)elos Duty. Andei
J
l-'Sils a member of several fraternal
T'i'M ie*.
* -ed Travels! e;i(l. L'11. a No eli i id
'y„ murder, is the sun and grand-
1.1'of men and women who plo-
I ,toed in this county and today ari
•ghered among the mo;t siibHtan-
tial families from point of service in
the community Fred is a member
of the Marion Baptist church and his
parents are property owners.
Dill Guliedge has spent all of his
60 years in ('atorvllle and contrib-
uted to its stability.
Attorney Indicted.
John Rushing, about 35. Is a mem-
ber of a family that for three fen-
erations tilled the osil in William-
son county, with some members of
the family working in the mines.
Otis Clark, the first man indicted,
and whose name appears again on
later lists, is also a farmer-miner
and well known nnd respected In
Weaverfof his sense of civic respon-
sibility.
The friends and admirers of Fred
Cooper and Darby Babbington, both
of Johnson City, were amazed to
read their names as indicted for con- I
spiracy to murder. The first named
has been connected for five years
with the legal department or District
No. \2, United Mlno Workers, and the
latter Is a district board member,
llnrd to Convict.
It is the general opinion of cit-1
isens of Williamson county that it
will be a difficult thing for the prose-
cution to connect men such as these,
whose names were picked at random
from the list and are typical in the
main of those Indicted, with murder
or even conspiracy to murder.
The contrast between many of the
persons named by the grand jury,
their well known civic activities and
general good standing, and the shady
reputations of most of the men killed
in the June 22 riot is causing com-
ment. The people here are recalling
that the men imported as strike-
breakers were recruited from Chi-
cago's "flop houses" and that a
ticket from the Hargravo dotectlve
agency was found on each dead body.
One of the most celebrated family
heirlooms lu the world is the Lee
penny, which has been in possession
of an English family since the Cru-
sades. It Is a silver coin, and formed
part of the ransom paid for a Sara-
cen chief. Its value mainly depends
on the fact that it is supposed to be
capable of curing nny ailment, and
for this purpose it was hired in 1655
by a plague-stricken town In ox-
change for securities to the amount
of $125,000.
PRISONER IS
RELEASED TO
VISIT CHILD
Still 75 Inside Federal Jails on
Espionage Violations.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 14. E. F.
Doree. political prisoner, whose case
haH attracted much attention because
of the critical illness of his only
child, 5-year-old Hucky, in Philadel-
phia, was set free by President Hard-
ing last week. Ills sentence was
commuted to expire at once. Doree,
who has been serving a ten-yanr
sentence at Leavenworth, received a
leave of absence last week to visit
the boy's bedside under guard, ills
leave was to terminate Sunday night,
and now he will not have to go half
way across the continent to return
to prison.
The plight of the Doree family at-
tracted much attention in Philadel-
phia. and many prominent citizens
Interested themselves In securing
Doree'a release. The prisoner him-
self made an excellent Impression on
ho met him during his bri-f
visit He was a dock-worker during
the war. and had a splendid record
loading munition ships. Yet he was
included in the big group conviction
of I. W. W. members in Chicago and
has been serving his long sentence
under the section of the Espionage
law restricting freedom of speech,
though the law itelf has been sus-
pended since early in 1021.
The freeing of Doree leaves 75
Espionage law prisoners still serv-
ing aggregate sentences of 800 years
in federal prisons. All but five of
them were labor organization mem-
bers like Doree. On July 19 it was
announced at the White Houso that
the Attorney General had been ord-
ered to hasten the reconsideration of
all these cases, with their unprece-
dented sentences, but virtually no
progress has yot been made. The
Doree case Is the first to be passed
on since August 3.
At Windsor Castle there is a room
entirel ydovoted to old Wedgwood
pottery, and here are displayed In
cases some of the finest and rarest
HOW FRENCH TROOPS QUELL RIOTERS
riotiryf
,W
DELEGATES O.K.
FARRINGTON
Dy TOM TIPPETT.
Federated I'reM Staff Correspondent.
PEORIA, 111.. Sept. 14.—One per
cent of every dollar earned by the
60,000 members of the Illinois coal
miners' union was pledged to defend
the members of the organization In-
dicted in connection with the Herrin
mine war by the 650 delegates in the
convention of the Illinois ttine work-
ers. The action came after the Her-
rin situation was discussed by the
delegates in executive cession.
Hugh Willis, board member from
k had b «r]
real position of Vurringtel
for a separate agreement
After discussing fbe report of
President Partington for one and
one-half days, the convention of Ill-
inois mine workers, accepted it by a
vote of 31ft to 107. Vice President
F ishwlck allowed the widest latitude
to the many speakers who d*scu«ic<i
the report.
Besides Executive Board Members
Walker ami Fulton, those prominent
who opposed the report on the floor
were Delegates Hlnetnarsb. Squire.
Thompson (Freeman), Watts, uni
others. Board Member Wilson de-
fended the report, as did Fish wick.
Farrlngton then spoke an hour ami
15 minutes on the many charges aii'l
accusations made against his report.
Farrington's victory was an easy-
one. The delegates refused to hear
the Herrin field, wired the conven- , , ... .
tlcm that many members of the union "there speak. instating that debuts
had been Indicted arid that mauv
This striking photograph, declared by experts to be one of the most remarkable action pictures ever
made, was taken in the streets of Havre. Frame, when French mounted troops, with drawn sabres, quelled
a riot of striking dock laborers. Many were killed and scores Injured. The cavalrymen may be seen charg-
ing through the mob, while many strikers are seen hurling missiles at the charging troopers.
WALTON SPEAKERS
ANNOUNCE DATES
h.g.wells
FAMOUS
Outlines History
The Romance of Mother Earth,
rodays installment—(1)
Creatures of the Early Seas
LII'^E IN EAKLY PALAEOZOIC AGE
Note its general resemblance, except for size, to the mlscroscoplc summer ditchwater life of today.
|l9 tins o*ei and abo\e t !>.■ !
rocks is ;i third series, which
|lh OUnd to eont derable
H%iber anil variety ol traces of
I
1 ■ of a diversity of shell-lisb,
■ W"bs and -u< h like ct \wling
|
then of a multitude Of fishes
ii of the beginnings of land
|\V ent.s and land creat
r brae rocks are called the pel-
I
Tit n a va i era, during h
Jo' \ slowly spreading, im I
|i*f i developing in the seas of our
I
[ f 'OUgh the
' e, it was no more than a pro-
curation of such swimming and
I yepin•: 1111 m
I * Through Long \ges.
I v
'ites; they were crawling things
in those days lived under water for
most or all of its life.
Between the formation of these
fewer palaeozoic rocks in which
th" sea scorpion and trilobite ruled
and our own time, there have inter*
vened almost immeasurable ages,
represented by layers and masses
of sedimentary rocks.
There are first the upper palaeo-
zoic rocks, and above these the
geologists distinguish two great di-
visions.
Next above the palaeozoic come
the mezsozoic (middle life) rocks, a
second vast system of fossil bear-
ing rocks, representing perhaps a
hundred millions of swift years,
and containing a wonderful array
of fossil remains, bones of giant
reptiles und the like, which we will
presently describe; anil above these
again are the calnozolc (recent
life) rocks, a third great volume in
. big sea woodlice that were the history of life, an unfinished
11 TJbably related to the American | volume of which the sand and
g-crab of today. There wore mud that wus carried out to sea
Jsea scorpions, tin prefects of >«sterday by !,.• rivers of the
I "'it early world. The individuals } world, to bury the bones and scales
'"l,certain species <>f these were and boiiies and tracks that will be
, e feet long. These were the
'Hy highest sorts of life. There
'p'e abundant different sorts of an
"or of shellfish called brachi
\"%h. There were pi nt animals.
ted and joined together like
_ nts. and loose wet- lb.. • wa\od
| >the Walei
I* ^t was not -!,. ! la\
itt- our
r hing that ran or flew or even
swiftly or skillfully. Except
I the size of some of the crea-
(1«*es, It was not very different
and rather less various than
ril kind of life a student would
. i her from any summer-time
I nowadays for microscopic ex-
amination.
f luesi was the life of the shallow
\ ('Cs through a bumlrc i millions
y I '/.i'l •' ill II'' • ■ ' i ' . '
|Jy* period. The land dui ii that
'i* c
Jren. We find no traeo^nor hint
land life. Everything mat lived
come at last fossils of the things
of today, constitute the last written
leaf.
The Record of the ltocks.
These markings and fossil in the
rocks and the rocks themselves are
our first historic documents. The
history of life that men have puz-
zled out and are still puzzllne out
from them Is called the record of
the rocks. By studying this record
men arc slowly pit,in! together a
story of life's beginnings, and of
th" beginnings of our kind, of
which our ancestors a century or
so ago had no suspicion.
But when we call these rocks
and the fossils a record and a his-
tory It must not he supposed that
there Is any sign of an orderly
keeping of a record, it is merely
that whatever happens leaves somo
trace, if only we are intelligent
enough to detect the meaning of
that trace. Nor are the rocks of
the world in orderly layers one
above the other, convenient for
men to read. They are not like the
books and pages of a library. They
are torn, disrupted, interrupted,
flung about, defaced, like a care-
lessly arranged office after it has
experienced in succession a bom-
bardment, a hostile military occu-
pation, an earthquake^ riots and a
fire.
Speculations about geological
time vary enormously. Estimates
of the age of the oldest rocks by
geologists and astronomers start-
ing from different standpoints
have varied between 1,600,000,000
and 25,000,000. That the period of
time has been vast, that it Is to be
counted by scores and possibly by
hundreds of millions of years, is
the utmost that can be said with
certainty in the matter.
And be it noted that whatever
the total sum may be, most geolo-
gists are in agreement that half or
more than half of the whole of geo-
logical time had passed before life
had developed to the later palaeo-
zoic level. The reader reading
quickly through these opening
chapters may be apt to think of
them as a mere swift prelude of
preparation to the apparently much
longer history that follows, but in
reality that subsequent history Is
longer only because It is more de-
tailed and more interesting to us.
It looms larger in perspective.
For ages that stagger the imagina-
tion this earth spun hot and life-
less, and again for ages of equal
vaatness It held no life above the
level of the animalculae in a drop
of ditch-water.
Not only is space from the point
of view of l"e and humanity empty
but time is empty also. Life Is like
a little glow, scarcely kindled yet.
in these void immensities.
AT STATE FAIR
Eight Days of Entertainment
—Fireworks and Vaudeville.
An amusement program of unpre-
cedented scope and completeness Is
awaiting visitors td the Oklahoma
State Fair and Exposition at Okla-
homa City from September L'3 to 30.
So many and varied are the attrac-
tions that It Is difficult to say which
is the feature.
Auto Baccs.
Of course the automobile races on
September 23, 27 and 30 are always
spectacular and attract big crowds.
These races are under sanction of the
International Motor Contest associa-
tion, and the most skilled drivers lq
America compete. Among them this
ar will be such men as Ben Gotoff,
Jules Ellingboe, A1 Watters and Paul
Clancy. Efforts will be made to low-
er southwestern and track records
during the forthcoming meet.
Running horse races on September
25. 2ti, 27 and 29 will of course draw
huge grandstand crowds. The Okla-
homa State Fair always attracts fast
horses, and this year's purses of $5,-1
100.00 are sure to bring out the swift-
est animals of the southwest,
".Mystic China.*'
"Mystic China," the night fireworks
spectacle, is another stellar attrac-
tion. The first performance ot' this
spectacle will be on the night of
September 25. It fittingly commemo-
rates the China of the fifteenth cen-
tury i.he China that invented gun-
powder and fireworks. More than
300 actors are required, and the
stage on which the pageant is pro-
duced is 500 feet long.
Con T. Kennedy's midway shows
will entertain hundreds of thousands
during the eight days of the fair. The
Kennedy shows are among the most
progreslve and cleanest of their kind
In the world. Many new features
are promised.
Auto Polo Daily.
Auto polo is another fascinating
entertainment feature. The Pacific
coast team and the American-Cana-
dian team will battle at the state fair
this year twice every day In front
of the grandstand. Auto polo is one
of the most thrilling and dangerous
sports ever Invented and one that Is
a sure-fire entertainer wherever
played.
The double vaudeville program,
composed of acts booked from the
largest eastern circuits, will be un-
usually interesting this year. These
acts appear every afternoon and
night on double stages In front of
the grandstand. The vaudeville pro-
gram Is headed by the "Ballet of
Jewels," a dance performance by
beautiful young girls.
Other features arc the Thomas
Saxotette, A1 Sweet's band. Kaaiwa-
puhi's Hawallans. the Flying Millers,
the .Misses Hencke and Meeker, the
La Role troupe, Lester. Bell & Grif-
fin, and the Seven Demons.
IMPASSIONED KISS
DESTROYS GERMS
PHYSICIAN ASSERTS
utaranroBx, i "iiii., sept, n
— Defense of the impassloued
kiss was entered yesterday be-
fore the Bridgeport Philosophic-
al society by Dr. Simon Louis
hat/off. A. >U M. iLj physician
and psychologist.
"S o m e bacteriologists," he
said, "would have us carry
around a jugful of carbolic £3id
or other germicide to wash our
lips before kissing. They forget
that heat is the greatest anti-
septic known, and that the hs^t
generated by a kiss destroys tiie
supposed germ.
"Among sweethearts, kissing
sends forth ethereal and hjp-
notic waves, traveling with
great velocity, electrifying and
rejuvenating every cell struc-
ture of the body, so that next to
love Itself it becomes the most
potent agency for courage, opti-
mism, hope, health and longe-
|
PLAN TEACHERS
SAYS FARMERS UNION
IS GROWING RAPIDLY
SPEAKING DATES
OK WALTON
Sept. 15- Bristow, 2 p. m.# Friday.
Sept. 36—Atoka. 2 p. m., Saturday.
Sept. 19—Fairview. 2 p. m. Tuesday.
Enid. 8 p. m.
Sept. 20—Cherokee, 2 p. m. Wednes-
day.
Alva. 8 p. m.
Sept. 21—Medford, 2 p. m. Thursday.
Blackwell. 8 p. m.
Sept. 22—Newkirk, 2 p. m. Friday.
Ponca City, 8 p. m.
Sept. 23—Perry, 2 p. m. Saturday.
Mulhall, 4 p. m.
Sept. 26—Cheyenne, 2 p. m. Tuesday.
Sayre, 8 p. m.
Sept 27—Mangum, 2 p. m. Wednes-
day.
Hollis, 8 p. m.
Sept. '28—Eldorado, 2 p. m. Thurs-
day.
Altus, 8 p. m.
SepL 29—Frederick, 2 p. m. Friday.
Snyder, 8 p. m.
Sept. 30—Lawton. 2 p. m. Saturday.
Anadarko, 8 p. m.
SPEAKING DATES OF PALL M:S-
BITT.
SepL 15—Nowata, 2 p. ra. Friday.
Claremore, 8 p. m.
Sept. 16—Vinita, 2 p. m. Saturday.
Afton, 8 p. m.
Sept. 18—Grove, 2 p. m. Monday.
Jay, 8 p. m.
Sept. 19—Westville, 2 p. m. Tuesday.
Stillwell, 8 p. m.
Sept. 20—Tahlequah, 2 p. m. Wed-
nesday.
Muskogee. 8 p. m.
Sept. 21—Porter, 2 p. in. Thursday.
Coweta, 8 p. m.
Sept. 22—Wagoner, 2 p. m. Friday.
choteau, 8 p. m.
Sept. 23—Pryor, 2 p. m. Saturday.
Adair, 8 p. m.
SPEAKING DATES OF C. D. j
McNALLI.
Sept. 15—Tonkawa, 2 p. in. Friday.
Kildare, 5 p. m.
Newkirk, 8 p. ra.
Sept. 16—Burbank, 2 p. m. Saturday.!
Fairfax, 8 p.m.
Sept. 18—Osage, 2 p. m. Monday.
Hominy, 8 p. m.
Sept. 19—Wayuoua, 11 a. m. Tues- j
day.
Nelngony. 2 p. m.
Avant, 8 p.m.
Sept. 21—Tipton, 2 p. m. Thursay i
Elmer. 8 p. m.
Sept. 22—Eldorado, 2 p. m. Friday.
Olustee, 8 p. m.
Sept. 23—Altus, 2 p. m. Saturday. |
SPLAhlMi DATES OP . A. j
VILLLNKS.
SepL 15—Douglas, 1 p. m. Friday.
Marshall, 3 p. m.
Covington, 8 p. m.
Sept. 16—Hayward, 11 a. ra. Satur-
day.
Garber, 2 p. m.
Billings, 8 p. m.
SepL 18—Bliss, 1 p. in. Monday.
Red Rock, 3 p. m.
Sumner, 8 p. ra.
Sept. 19—Morrison, 2 p. m. Tuesday. I
Pawnee, 8 p. m.
Sept. 20—Skeedee, 1 p. m. Wednes- J
day.
Maramec, 3 p. m.
Quay, 8 p. m.
Sept. 21—Hallett, 1 p. ra. Thursday.
Jennings, 3 p. m.
Oilton, 8 p. m.
SrEAKLNU DATES OF FRANK
NLLkhK.
Sept. 15—Lovell, 2 p. m. Friday.
Crescent, 8 p. ra.
SepL 16—Mulhall, 2 p. m. Saturday.
Orlando, 8 p. m.
Sept. 18—Fletcher, 2 p. m. Monday.
Sterling, 8 p. m.
Sept. 19—Geronimo, 2 p. m. Tues-
day.
Holliday, 3 p. m.
SepL 20—Faxon, 2 p. m. Wednes-
day.
chattanooga. 8 p. m.
Sept. 21—Cache. 2 p. m. Thursday.
Indiahoma, 8 p. m.
Sept. 22—Manitou, 2 p. ra. Friday.
Hollister, 8 p. m.
Sept. 23—Loveland, 2 p. m. Satur-
day.
Grandfield. 8 p. m.
SPEAKING DATES OF J. U. HARP.
Sept. 15- Headrick. 2 p. m. Friday.
Blair, 8 p. m.
Sept. 16—Lugert. 2 p. m. Saturday.
Lone Wolf, 8 p. m.
| Sept. 18—Blair, 2 p.m. Monday.
Martha, 8 p.m.
| Sept. 19—Victor, 2 p.m. Tuesday.
Duke, 8 p. m.
Sept. 20—Gould, 2 p. m. Wednesday.
COUNTY MEETING Sept. 21—Shrewder, 2 p. ra. Thurs-
| day.
A meeting of the executive board Vlnsom. 8 p. m.
of the central division of the Teach- Sept. 22 — Reed. 2 p. m. Friday,
ers' association was held at 2:30 Brinkham, 8 p. m.
o'clock in the office of the county Sept. 23—Granite, 2 p. ra. Saturday.
might be named before adjournment
of the grand Jury in Marion. Hot
resentment was expressed by the
delegates against Attorney General
Brundage for his labor day comment
on the Herrin matter to the effect
that the rank and file of the miners
would not support the indicted men.
President Farrington's report, rec-
ommended for passa?;e by the com-
mittee, summarizes the strike and its
settlement. It tends to show that
the position of the president has been
misrepresented on the question of
a separate district settlement, both
by the commercial press and by Far-
rington's opponents within the or-
ganization.
Delegate John Helnmarsh, Rlver-
tou, 111., opposed adoption. In a
long address to the sweltering dele-
That the membership of the State
Farmers' union is growing rapidly. ,. . ,.
is the statement of A. E. Lewis, one s-"lon he attempted to provf that the
of the state organizers, who was in
the city Wednesday conferring with
the stato secretary, Z. H. Lawter.
Mr. Lewis and C. H. Butts of the
Prairie Queen local, were in the city
to make arrangements for the hold-
I ing of the coming county union in
! Oklahoma City the first Thursday in
; October. This union meeting will
! be held under the auspices of the
Prairie Queen local, it is announced.
cease and voted as recorded a wm
with the ukual demand for a roll
call not being made.
Although flowers are being im-
proved in size and color. It is at tha
cost of their perfume.
Among the various economic prod-
ucts of the plat klgdom the pith of
the sunflower stalk is by far the
lightest.
PEOPLES FISH &
OYSTER CO.
Jos. McDermott, Prop.
222 West Grand
Phone Maple 4026
Full line of fresh and salt
fish.
UN.AO/
Hadley's Drug Store
PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST
WE HAVE IT
WE DELIVER
Agents for Eastman Kodaks* Wo Bo Finishing.
100 West Reno Street Phone Walnut 3762
Tbe Circlet it more than a Branicrt. It's
Self-Adjaatinf, aod tunply slips aver
tha head, clasps at the waist and under-
arm, and smooths oat agly iiass.
If your dmalmr can't gat it, land actual
bait meatura, name. addrutB and
^ W*'" tmd th* Circlat pr -
paid. Siza 34 to48.
Nemo Hygienic-Fashion Institute
120 E*at 16th St., Now York, Dep't M.
BIG PICNIC
REAL OLD FASHIONED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16
BIG BARBECUE AND BASKET PICNIC
WEB STERNS FARM
South Santa Ife Street
End of Npedhum I'ar Eln* Free Anto Serrlee
Auto* Follow Robinson Street 1'iiTinK to Corner of Webster Farm
to lll'illc t.ronn(Is
Prominent Speakers
Plenty Shade
Fine Water
Lots of Amusement
Free Parking
COME PREPARED TO STAY ALL DAY
CONTINUOUS ROUND OF PLEASURE
r
This store is open esch
evening till 7 P. M.;
Saturday nights till 10
o'clock. Our salespeo-
ple work shifts for
your convenience.
\bu AI-WAYS pay less at
1 COVERSALE5 I
1 LION DEPARTMENT STORE^B
BROADWAY AT GRAND « OKLAHOMA CITY
Men and Young
Men's Suits
two pair trousers
518.50 up
Boys' Corduroy Suits
Each suit lias two pairs lined trousers; coat Norfolk
style; dark color; heavy, and a dandy. Sizes 7 to 16.
*685
right. 1121.
the MurmlUsn
.Newspaper Syndicate
The Peculiar Thing
ti lit <1 Life.,
superintendent at the court house
Wednesday afternoon.
The purpose of the meeting
to make final arrangements for the UpWard
j district association which will be
I held in Edmond in November. It is
planned to make the Edmond meet-
ing one of the best in the history of- ■*
the sasociation. Rather than delay the departure
The executive committee Is com- 0( hla marhlnc while he dresseil. an
I poaed or Mr*. Ida M. Haje. chair; | a(r „„„„ p|lot who OVer.lept.
Mangum, 8 p.m.
The air which we breathe extends
for 12% miles, after which
it contains so little oxygen that it
would not sustain any form of life.
and
$ J.50
If you don't care for both pairs of trousers we will g'ive
you credit for one.
Boys' Heavy Wale Corduroy Trousers;
ages 7 to 17, per pair $1.50
Boys' Suits (two pair trousers) $5.85 up
The Store That Always Saves
You Money!
G. Hopkins, of Tonkawa; ,m « • ", "'.i,
dy. of El Heno, and Mrs. j'If from London to Paris clad onlj*
man: W. G
*. H. Grad,
oru J'arrell, of Guthrie, secretary. | in his pajamas.
YOU ALWAYS PAY LESS AT
[COVERDALE'Sl
LION DEPARTMENT STORE ■
BROADWAY AT GRAND * OKLAHOMA CITY
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 26, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 14, 1922, newspaper, September 14, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc100125/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.