Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 62, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 26, 1922 Page: 3 of 8
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oklahoma leader
fAGE THRiiJS
POLLY AND HER PALS - Pa Has Something to Feel Thankful For.
by CLit'r Sltum*.
ILL F?l_WtAua~l<3. F&
I CWT \)C«MT.
/JCW "in AT vOO-Ct ODOJfc. FutfTUKS
WIT* THAT 'GHCKEA' PERHAPS *>UU.
(2>aoB:SCte^ho To v«^iT Ol MEL
\
HA^t XXI
HAT
LOCKS Uks. THE-/
v/AS &XWA TAKt
-OA-/TPUT
Thsm 'aIiTialS
I*1 MV AjfeW/ rtfl"
/JO. "Tha4K
HEI
-M IF 1 HAO 1
VCXJLXwJT Wjt-VU3
Toe. 'DER^i Thm£
Ol /A SfcT!
\
LiKt Thp?T,
m
CCT^5< IB
0*• "r^Tt-RRiT u
Reinforced Union Industrial
Instead of Craft.
WALTON SPEAKERS
ANNOUNCE DATES
SPEAKING DATES
OF WALTON
Oct. 27.—Sallisaw, Friday, 2 p. ni
Oct. 28.—Chandler, Saturday, 2 p.
Oklahoma City, 8 p. m.
Oct. 30—Hugo, Monday, 2 p. m.
Idabel, 8 p. in.
Oct. 31.—Durant, Tuesday, 2 p. in.
Madill. 8 p. in.
Nov. V—Tishomingo, Wednesday,
2 p. in.
. . Ada, 8 p. m.
ployed lu the packing bouses of the Nov. 2.—Tulsa, Thursday, (all day.)
St. Louis Packers' association is be- Nov. 3—Miami, Friday, 2 p. m.
By MARTIN A. DILLMON.
Federated 1'rens Staff Correspondent. 1
ST. LOUIS, OqI. 26.—One big in-
dustrial union of all workers em- 1
STUDENTS IN RADIOS FOR VETO BONUS
TOKIO RESIST FORD PLANTS A DONATION
TO BUSINESS
SPANISH KING CELEBRATES FIRST
VOYAGE AROUND WORLD.
ECONOMY DAY Railroad Also to be Equipped
Report Says.
'Blow' Pooled Funds as Pro-
test Against -Hypocrisy.
DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 26.—All
Ford Motor company branches and
factories throughout the world are
to be connected by radio, It was
"Excess Profits Tax Would
Hay Four l imes Over."
factories throughout the world are
By Federated Press. jje connected by radio, it was WASHINGTON, Oct, 26.—By re-
TOKIO, Oct. 26.—Poverty-strick- learned here today at Henry pealing the profits tax and turning
en students in Tokio showed up the Ford's Dearborn office. down the bonus "$4,000,000,000 was
hypocritical "Economy Day" by in- Radio experiments along the douated to the profiteers," was tr
troducing an "Extravagance Day" ™ute of tlie Detroit, Toledo and stalenient made by Captain Chari
at the same time Thev cooled their Ironton railroad, owned by Henry 0 shRW in hl8 lalk on Protit3
at the same time They pooled then Ford have proven SQ 8ucce88fui( it VedBU8 Soldiers. Repeal of the ex_
funds and found they had 2 yen was stated, that all division points cess proflu law he claimed, cost
( 1) each to blow In in defiance of 0n the D. T. & I. also are shortly the government $8UU,l)00,000 a year.
Economy Day. They went to a to be radio equipped in place of the He declared that this sum would
moiiest resUiuraiit where they or- old system of wires and poles. , cover ., soidier bonus four times
Conductors on the D. T. & I. are over.
soon to receive their dispatches
and orders by radio, it was said.
dered what to them was a boutiful
dinner.
About 40 business men, scrupu-
lously observing Economy Day,
happened in at the same restaurant
to order what they considered a
cheap meal, but which ip fact was
a good deal more luxurious than
the "banquet" the students had ord-
ered. Discussion between tiie two
groups waxed hot but stopped short
of violence.
U
HEALER" IS
FOUND DEAD
Once Posed as Messiah—
Ponce riuiu woman t-nend.
CHICAGO, Oct. 26.—Francis
Schlatter, .lleged "divine healer,"
who boasted from one end of thd
country to the other that he had
"healed" more people than anyone
since Christ, is dead.
Schlatter's body was found in a
rooming house in St. Louis several
days after he had died. A young
lady, declared to have left Chicago
with the healer, was being searched
for by the police.
Two decades ago, Schlatter
created a national sensation when
he toured the country posing as the
Messiah. With his long beard and
hair, long flowing robe and a staff,
LIKED BLONDES
A BIT WO WELL
DETROIT, Oct. 26—Van Harris
predilection for blondes ruined
DEADLY "FAD?'
MEN,BEWARE!
CHICAGO. Cel. 26. — "Ropes"
O'Brien, who earned his nickname
as a prosecutor of murder cases
while attached to the states attor-
their married life, Mrs. Helen Har- ney's office, declared today that .1
ris told Judge Richter. She was I wave similar killings will fol.ow
granted a divorce on her cross bill j acquittal of Peggy Beal 1:1
in the suit Harris filed. Harris is , ,.!?fa8 ( ity\ .
secretary of the Wayne county | ^ e*Perience has
board of road commissioners. i
"He told me he loved me, but
wished 1 were a blonde," Mrs. Har-
ris said "He said he had sacri-
ficed his ideals by marrying me, a
brunette. IJe also told me any per-
son who went to moving picture j
shows was a bundle of fluctuating I
emotions, and insisted I study Em-
erson and Shakespeare. I tried to
study them one summer, after he
had told me my education had been
neglected."
On one occasion, Mrs. Harris
said, lier husband knocked her
down.
been that
when any of these freak murder
defenses succeed they are followed
I by at least three or four similar
cases," O'Brien said.
"Like other things, murder de-
fenses run to fads. This should be
a popular one "
Kmg AtJ
ox\?o Quean vtctb&iz* ^
Vinita, 8 p. m.
Nov. 4.—Pittsburgh County, Satur-
day.
SPEAKING DATES OF SAM
FLINT.
Oct. 27—Buffalo, Friday, 8 p. ra.
Oct. 28—Freedom, Saturday, 2 p. ra.
Fairvalley, 4 p. m.
, Waynoka, 8 p. m.
shown by parking house employes. I 0cl_ 30- Avard, Monday, 11 a. m.
I "lie organization work is being mi- | Dacoma 2 p. ra.
pervlsed by O. J. Hayes, Chicago, Capron 8 p m
I international president, Amalgamat- 0ct 3i_Burlington, Tuosdav, 11
1 ( d Meat Cutters and Butcher Work- i
men of North America; E. W. Jim- |
ing formed to demand the return of
the eight-hour day. time and a half
for overtime and Improved wages
and working conditions.
Mass meetings are being held in
furtherance of the movement.
Scores of applications for member-
ship are being received and much
Interest and enthusiasm is being
erson, Fust St. Louis, International
vice-president; Dennis Lane of Chi-
cago, international secretary-treas-
| urer, all of whom are in St. Louis;
Otto Kuhn, secretary and business
[ nancial Methods of Klan agent of loai1 No- and J"h"
Are Attacked.
Connors, president, St. Louis dis-
trict council No. 12.
After practically losing the strike
MILWAUKEE, Oct. 26.—-A new last winter, local and International
foe to thtf Ku Klux Klan, the officials became convinced that they
American Unity league, made its j lost the struggle because too many
appearance in Milwaukee today unions were involved. A resolution
with the arrival of O. K. Itutledge , j was unanimously adopted In the
secretary. ! last convention of the International
Rutledge threw his first bomb- union, held in St. Paul last July,
r jell in the form of tin assertion I change the union from one of
ti.at he has Informers inside the
kian.
At the same time lie issued a
challenge to Kleagie W. M. Wiese-
mann, to explain where the $20,-
000 Initiation lees, taken from the
Klan's alleged 2.000 members hero, j to^J'to"the™™ft'
has gone.
Shows Money Split.
Rutledge declared that $4 out of
every $10 initiation foe has gone
into the Kleagle's pocket, while the
other $6 has found a repository in
the jeans of Imperial Wizard Ed-
ward Young Clark, Atlanta, Ga.
T o extra $6.50 required by the
Klan for the night gown and pii-
I low slips which constitute he
I "robes" also goes to the higher upj
of the secret organization, Rutledge
! charged. He asserted Klan leaders
{controlled a factory in which the
nighties are
sausage makers, cattle and hog
butchers to a general Industrial
union, including all workers of any
trade in the meat industry. This
means teamsters, firemen, engi-
neers, oilers, electricians, etc.
Heretofore these workers have be-
unlons of their
MEXICAN "BAD MEN"
FADE FROM PICTURE
MEXICO CITY, Oct 26—The
Mexican bad man has been barred
QUAKERS APPEAL
FOR ENDING WAR
King Alfonso of Spain, with Queen Victoria and their childivu and i)rofitH
representatives of all the nations of the world, were present at Guetaria, "Hie' Klan Is z
Spain, to celebrate the fourth centenary of Ju a Sabastian Elcano, na- (,:aj organization
tive seaman of that town, who made the first voyage around the world,
in 1522.
on.
a. m.
Driftwood, 2 p. m.
Ingersoll, 8 p. m.
Nov. 1—Lambert, Wednesday, 11
a. m.
( Si men, 2 p. in.
Helena. 8 p. m.
Nov. 2—Goltry, Thursday, 31 a. m.
Jet, 2 p. m.
Carrier, 8 p. m.
Nov. 3—lahoma, 11 a. m.
Meno, 2 p. ra.
Ringwood, 8 p. m.
Nov. 4—Ames, Saturday, 11 a. m.
Drummond, 2 p. ra.
Waukomis, 8 p. ra.
SPEAKING DATES OF LEE
CJtUCE.
Oct. 27—Friday, Hugo, 8 p. m.
Oct. 28—Saturday, Durant, 2 p. m.
McAlester, 8 p. m.
Oct. 30—Monday, Perry, 2 p. m.
Enid, 8 p. m.
Oct. 31—Tuesday, Cherokee, 2p.nL
Alva, 8 p. m.
Nov. 1—Wednesday, Woodward, 8
p. ra. All day.
Nov. 2—Thursday, Elk City, 2 p.m.
Clinton, 8 p. m.
Nov. 3—Friday, Cordell, 2 p. m.
Hobart, 8 p. m.
Nov. 4—Saturday, Anadarko, 2 p.
| m. Chickasha, 8 p. m.
SEATTLE, Oct. 26—Tales of un- ! „„„. ^ _
limited wealth In gold to be pan- ' EARING DATES OF T. I*. GO KB
ned from the creeks of Siberia are ' ®CL 27 Alva, Friday, 2 p. m.
to be taken with a grain of salt. I Cherokee, 8 p. m.
according to Alaskan sourdoughs Oct. 28 Fairview, Saturday, 2 p. ra.
who have been in the Arctic I Enid, 8 p. m.
stretches of the country. While 0ct- 30—Medford. Monday, 2 p. m.
made* "and Docket tin gold haB ,)fien discovered, the hard-I Blackwell, 8 p. m.
ships of trading, getting supplies, Oct. 31. -Perry, Tuesday, 2 p. m.
purely commer- and KetlJn8 out of country with __ . Cushing, 8 p. m.
Rutledge went the fnr outweigh the possibili-
ties of striking it rich.
respective trades.
ALASKA GOLD
YARNS FISHY
LONDON, Oct. 26.—The Friends'
peace committee is issuing on be-
half of the Society of Friends in
England and America, an appeal to
the churches of Christ to take the
lead in a great crusade for a war-
less world. The appeal says: "We
see two roads before us. One leads
Inevitably to another war by re- I
newed preparedness; the other be-
gins with a complete rejection of TlluOrCUlcir
HYLAN PROBING
MINE CONDITIONS
ARE MISLABELED
. — —...ti gi
he presented an appearance in some from American films, Bernoii ; wi
respects resembling the pitcures of Woodle, personal representative of I
the ancient patriarchs and thous-; \vm Hays, supreme rule of movie- SEDALIA, Mo.,Oct. 26.—P.Faust,
ands of persons flocked to his dom, announced here today. active in the conduct of the strike
Elimination of Mexican villians of railroad shopmen here, was ar-
was ordered to promote more cor- | rested this week charged with vio-
slandards, declaring that he had
come to emancipate the world from
sickness and disease.
On several occasions the healer
was arrested and at one time faced
a long term in federal prison for
having sold through the mails
"blessed handkerchiefs" which he
claimed, if placed on afflicted
parts, would cure all bodily ills, j
JOIN THE
UNION LABEL
SUIT CLUB
And get your Suit or Overcoat on j
the easy payment plan.
For particulars ask John Howe at
—THE—
UNION LABEL STORE
12 W. Grand Phone IV. 6307
Hospital Made
Into Factory; Fort Worth
Concern Distributes.
dial relations between the govern- lating the Daugherty injunction
ment of the United States and Mex- j against the shop crafts. He is
ico, Woodle said. I charged with attempting to induce an(ls of raen s
By PAUL HANNA.
Federated Press Staff Correspondent.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26. Thous
alls, laden
He made his declaration after a la strikebreaker to refrain from tuberculosis germs and labelled
conference wjth President Qbrogon. ! working in the local shops.
istribute-i! 8,0>
rican
More Truth Than Poetry
By James J. Montague
(Copyright. 1821. The Dell Syndicate, Ene.)
for
■ by <
quota
DOGS.
• Democratic
, '
RALLY and
PARADE
^eadecl Iby
■ A mmm m . m y ^
nOUTE OF PARADE
Parade forms north of
Sixth street on Broad-
way at 7 p. m. Headed
by Women's Division, it
moves south to First
street, west to Harvey,
south to Main and east
t'i Sne"Vei*s' Stand.
I like a dog—a vital dog—
A dog that romps and races,
Exploring, with his tail agog,
The great wide open spaces.
I like a dog of fairish size
And bold and robust habit,
Who glories in an enterprise
Like hunting down a rabbit.
I view the miscroscopic dog
With hatred and resentment,
Who sits beside a gas lit log
In puerile contentment—
A dog, which in a lady's muff
Is capable of parking,
Emitting now and then a "wuff!"
In lieu of honest barking.
Such dogs are well disposed, no doubt,
And innocent of evil
Yet I suspect they have about
The brain stuff of a weevil.
They yap or doze about the house,
Shed hairs on people's clothing,
And women love them, who a mouse
Would look upon with loathing.
I may be wrong about these mites
That seem like sets of sables,
But I prefer a dog that fights
And chews up antique tables.
I like a dog to run and race
And scorn restraining leashes.
These microbes are a black disgrace
To all the canine species.
union made are being
every week among the ^
people.
These garments are mad
vlcts, driven to their ta*
the lash in the Virginia state pen-
itentiary at Richmond, and Gov. E.
Leo Trinkle says it is all right.
The profit from this Illegal and
outrageous enterprise goes. In tl-o
first instance, to the private con-
tractors who own the overall fac-
tories in the Virginia penitentiary
and control the slave labor of its
inmates. The state of Virginia
sells its convicts to the contractors
for a few cents each per day.
Acrording to Dr. Earl E. Dudley,
president, Prisoners' Relief society,
Washington, the former tuberculo-
sis hospital of the penitentiary has
been turned into a contractor's fac-
tory. It has never been disinfected
to rid if of germs.
Go To Fort Worth.
A large concern in Fori Worth
is named by Dudley as the principal £a
distributor of overalls made by the
Virginia convicts. Garments made
for that company are falsely and
illegally stamped "union made" be-
fore they leave the penitentiary.
This practice is in violation of a
federal law which requires that
goods made by convicts shall bo so
stamped before they are admitted
to interstate commerce.
In a letter addressed to Presi-
dent Minter, Virginia State Feder-
ation of Labor, Dudley writes: *T I j
am told that each convict must per-
form a task of about twice the
amount required of a workman out-
side prison walls, and that the lash
is used if he fails to make the
amount set down by the contractor.
I think that working men should
be interested in this slavery, and | „a.p_„R.
should do something to help put
end to it." «
"At the head of the order are a
little group of money makers. 1
happened to be intimately acquaint-
ed with Clark, the "Imperial wiz-
ard." Atlanta happens to be my
home town.
"The fact is that before Clark NEW YORK,
became publicity man for the Klan arid living conditions in the coal
he and I worked opposite each regions of Somerset county. Pa.,
other, where I had plenty of oppor- are to be investigated by the city
tunity to observe him. ' of New York. The investigation,
"As the result of his affiliation to be performed by a committee of
with the Klan. Clark has made a' five, was ordered by Mayor Hylan
cool million if he has riade a cent. ; t the request of the United Mine
In ClnrliV Name. Workers of America, following the
"There also are several large failure of the Berwlnd-White coin-
e iVi-ceniui:i Liini- tracts of property and a magniii- puny, which owns the collieries, to
by wh:ch entrance of cent home for Clark in Atlanta. jvcep a promise to the local fuel
.-•l^ns w a restricteii to a percent- The deeds for the properties, it j administration to instruct its man-
age of the various nat.onal groups should Interest Klan members, aru
now here, seems to - vaporate when all in the name of Clark."
one studies the report of the de- j Thus Mr. Rutledge is here to en-
part ment of lr.bor. list the aid of a number of Influen-
in September, of the monthly tial business men in the commun-
21 for Germany, but ity in lodging propaganda for the
The United King- purpose of increasing the member-
lom, entitled to 15,468, sent but whip of the American Unity league.
l:us: ia, whose quot a waslThose who desire to enroll are re-
atere I only ^,5(J4. The total qdlred to pay no duos whatsoever,
ptembei was 41,51o, while ior Place themselves under further
for the month wasTl,5GL !obligations than to signify their
' '[stand against the Klan and live
NOW CHECKED
Only 40.000 of September
Quota of 70,GOO.
liy Federated Press.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—The
fear of a flood of immigration, I
which led ti
tation act,
Nov. 1—Coweta. Wednesday, 2 p.m.
Pryor, 8 p. m.
Nov. 2—Claremore, Thursday, 2 p.
Vinita, 8 p. m.
Nov. 3.—Okemah, Friday, 8 p. m.
Nr.v. 4—Chandler, Saturday, 2 p.m.
Bristow. 8 p. ra.
Oct 26 —Mining ! Nov- 6.—Anadarko, Monday, 2 p. nr.
Lawton, 8 p. m.
WORKERS SHOULD
BACK SHIPSTEAD
STONE DECLARES
thir3?33
CLEVELAND, Oct. 26.—"The-vot-
ers of Minnesota have the oppor-
tunity to render a natlo.vil service
agcrs to confer with the miners. ] bJ electing Dr. Kendrick Shlpstead
The Berwln.i-Whlte company has •Sl:!tes senator to succeed
the contract to supply fuel to the ">elr Present representative. Sena-
Interboroush Rapid Transit com- ■"« w "«„ s st„„„
up to it, according to Rutledge.
WHEAT SHORTAGE
LOOMS FOR 1923 RUSSIAN RELIEF
puny of this city, in wi\Mi the city
supposedly—is a partner. Fail-
ure of the company to deal with
its employes has been keeping
about 8,000 men out of work, as
well as seriously crippling the In-
terborough's fuel supply. There
are 80,000 miners and their fam-
ilies in Somerset, Fayette and
j Westmoreland counties still living
i in tents.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—For the
first time in the history of the
United States, wheat growers are
facing the possibility of growing
less wheat than the nation con-
sumes, according to the department
of agriculture.
Lack of sufficient moisture, which I
prevails generally over the great
wheat belt west of the Missouri
river and as far south as wheat is ,
raised is declared t<> bp the injifd
pronounced since 18M4.
It Is declared that there are more
than 10,000,000 acres of winter
heat seeded in the dry area that
not come up and with rains
coming soon, cannot promise more
tb'in half a crop at best. Thous- i
ands of wheat fields In the Dakota:;
have not been seeded and the rye
crop planted lies dormant for lack j
of rain.
DON'T SEND 21 -INCH
ALLIGATORS IN MAIL
QHiTWTV PfiflPF AUSTRIAN PLANTS ARE
Mllb I 1 l KUbt V0RKED CO-OPERATIVELY
NEW YORK. Oct. 26.—After two
months of study, the investigating |
committee of five which probed the
charges of irregularity made
against the Friends of Soviet Rus-
sia by the Jewish Daily Forward
has made its findings public. In a
long and detailed report the com-
mittee deals with every one of the
accusations specifically, reaching
By Federated Press.
NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—Austrian
industrial plants being operated
along semi-sociallstlc lines by the
state, provinces or municipalities
in partnership with employes and
consumers, not only have increased
the total production of the nation,
but have turned In substantial
profits, improved working condi-
tions and cut the cost of their
products.
The biggest of these co-operative
enterprises is the Austrian Works,
formerly the greatest arms and
munitions plant in the country.
Transformed into a peace institu-
tion through the investment of
OF PHHI FRA TO FlfiHT 50,OOO.OOO crowns by the state.
___ (this establishment, employing
bout 3,300 workers, manufactures
nachlncry, hunting weapons, roll-
ug stock, furniture, etc., and has
urnc' In a net profit of 65,000,000
rowns.
tor Kellogg," says Warren S. Stone,
grand chief, B. of L. E. "Ship-
stead has a remarkable record as
a public administrator, both as
mayor of his home city, and as
member of the state legislature. In
both of these capacities his record
is 100 per cent clean In support of
labor's ideals. Kellogg used to
pore ub a progressive, but his rec-
ord proves that he has betrayed
the people's Interest, and has voted
against them on every important
message In recent sessions of con-
gress."
i conclusion: "We
ice of the diversion 1
er hands. There w
of extravagance 0
ities which offer an:
1 criticism."
ave 110 cvi-
r funds Into
s no show- !
of lrregu-
ground for '
JAPAN HAS EPIDEMIC
NEW INSPECTORS FOR
RAILWAYS ARE NAMED
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—Com-
plaint that railroad safety laws are
not being enforced and that the
rolling stock of the steam lines is
in a serious condition, was laid be-
foro President Harding October 12
by Oscar J. Home and Thomas
Stevenson, counsel respectively for
the Brotherhood of locomotive En-
gineers and the Brotherhood of
Ixicomotive Firemen and Engine-
men. The president acknowledged
that human life was endangered by
the present deterioration of rail-
road equipment and said he had
asked congress to authorize em-
ployment of 35 additional federal
inspectors.
WASHINGTON', O
,ve .i live alligator
■t. 26.—If you
not more than
loi
hi curi
end
it through the mails. Also, says
a new postal regulation, "harmless
live animals, having no offensive
odor and requiring no food and
water in transit, such as baby ter- j curred on a fishlr
shell crabs, blood j
ms, chameleons, etc., may also
be sent and insured against loss."
TOKIO, Oct. 20.~Tho cholern
epidemic in Japan, which at first 1
was not thought serious, Is rapidly i
spreading in Fukuoka province, and j
from there to neighboclng prov- ,
luces. The campaign to combat it '
includes instruction In the rudi-
ments of cleanliness to school chil- !
dren, and the forbidding of the j
sale of fish from Kukuoka province
in Tokio and Yokohama, as the first
reported Is said to have oc-
raft.
CONSPIRACY AGAINST
UNION LABOR CHARGED
PASSION PLAYERS
TURN DOWN OFFER
REAL REDEL
JAPANESE CHILDREN
STONE CROWN PRINCE
TOKIO, Oct. 26.—The children of
the Kure Arsenal workers resent
the fact that the arsenal cars which
are supposed to be used for Injured
AMERICANS ARE FIRED
AND CHINESE HIRED
SEATTLE, Oct. 26.—Determined
to Increase profits by reducing
wages and discharging white work-
ers, the Admiral line has now ex-
panded Its policy of "Oriental labor
EL CENTRO, Crd., Oct. 26.—
Judge M. W. Conkling discovered
what a real rebel Is like when he
offered Roscoe Thunnan, I. W. W.
member convicted of criminal syn-
dicalism, probation on condition
that he renounce his social and
SAN DIEGO, Cal., Oct. 26.—Gen-
eral Organizer Muir, United Broth-
erhood of Carpenters and Joiners,
in a speech before the trades and
OF MOVIE MAGNATE labor council, charged the repub-
lican party with conspiracy against
MUNICH, Germany. Oct. 2«.-The 1 organised labor both before and
[ workers at Oberammergau have re- •«« the preaidential el^Uon of
| fused a huge financial offer from a 19-IJ- ; T „
I'nited States film magnate for the ut on th„1'
; film rights to their Passion play. !P"rpoae of attacking the child labor
j In spite of Munich caricaturists,
who have recently pictured the
players selling their art for money,
the village theater has never com-
i merciallzed its art.
TWO HELD FOR AUTO THKFT.
Julius Hardin Fincannon and
law.
The common house-fly ordinarily
makes eight hundred wing-hats per
second, which force it twenty-five
feet through the air.
laborers are used for pleasure by on American ships" to its cargo i Qaentin," Thurraan Immediately j day
the officials. The children havo
lately developed the habit of ston-
ing all arsenal cars. On Wednes-
day, uot recognizing Prince illro-
yoshi Fushimi, who was using one
of the arsenal cars on his way to a
banquet given in his honor, the
children indulged in their usual
pastime. He escaped Injury.
carrier service. Thirteen Chin
firemen recently brought from
Shanghai will man the Wheatland
Montana, engaged In Seattle-Far
East trade.
MANY IN KANSAS JAILS
told the judge
GAS KATES CUT!
SIOUX CITY, la.. Oct. 26—Gas
rates have been lowered 10 per
cent and electric light rates 20 per
LITHUANIA ELECTS
economic beliefs. "I would far Morris Jones were lodged in iho
rnther serve fourteen years in San j Oklahoma county jail late Thurs-
vening by Deputy United I
Marshal Simcox and are be-
I Ing held for officers in Los An-
geles, Cal., charged with y violation
of the national motor car law. The!
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.-Re.ul J "'V '".aUcgod to b. U poWMkmI
of the first general election held j uf an ■" """l'llc. L
In Lithuania under the new per
manent constitution indicate, ac
cording to figures given out by th<
Lithuania legation here, that th
PEOPLE'S FISH &
OYSTER CO.
Jos. McDermott, Prop.
222 West Grand
Phone Maple 4026
Full line of fresh and salt
fish.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—On July
1, 1922, there were 2,507 persons
held in the prisons, jails and police j Christian democrats received 40
stations of Kansas, as compared i per cent of the vote, social popu-1
with 1,719 on the same date in 1917. , lists 33 per cent, social democrat:!
In Iowa the total of prisoners on 10 per cent, progressives 3 per cenf.,
cent by the Sioux City Gas & Elec- ! July 1, 1922, was 2,471, as conir j Jewish party 5 per cent, and Polish
trl company | pared with 1,775 in 1917, | party 1 per cent.,,
Remember—
STANDARD AUTO SUPPLY CO.
Cor. Reno and Harvey .|f
SAVES YOU 20 TO 50%
Guaranteed Ti.es, Tubes and Accessories—Airline Gaso-
line, l'ennolene Motor Oils—Dependable Winter Products
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 62, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 26, 1922, newspaper, October 26, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc100161/m1/3/?q=%22Country%20boy%20lance%22%20date%3A1910-1930: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.