Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 77, Ed. 1 Monday, November 13, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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f'Auh TWO
OKLAHOMA LEADER
Number 77
Bt M r?on Farley
MRC CONTRARY —
ZJLJU
mater'
noT^
IT'S TOO &«t.RT A
MOW UO/tLf
RISK FOR m LITTLE
LITTLE sunwtist
ron too, m BtftH
TMt BOSS CrAVt nt
6 Wist TD'DOT, SO
nfilBt Wt CAN
0"ord to navt>
aorrtPFL^ - X
: AM AFRAID
TnftT ThE
F£EUN£ OF
PO>NER
WIU. TLND TO
MAKE "<OU
\NSU60RD\NATt!
5HAU. RUN IT!
CAK :
i
a
CRIGIN OF FIVE PER CENT BEER
IS UNDISCOVERED BY OFFICERS
JOHN NIMICK
Graeme street net the beer that
ba a ti tier tent potency.
! a number of raids have been
PITTSBVRGH. Pa., Not. 13' made on truck* alleged to have
••Bee-town"—mecea of lovers <>f been unloading the tu# Into the
iritn his- cellars of "Beortowjo, but prohibi-
real beer—may soon pass - ilgentB have not yet been able
torv. ,,, secure convicting evidence to
That section of the "diamond." warrHnt bringing the saloon own-
where hundreds crowd Graeme erg inl0 court.
street, liasilnc In and out of the 1( la openly whispered that only
fou: dispensaries of real beer— I the initiate may obtain the real
f, per cent stuff—will be silent . ud , C(.r whj|e poorer stuff Is kept on
deserted evenings, if John Exnicios, | ,ap for unknown customers.
chief prohibition agent here, has urn everybody seems to have
his way. i.ecn Initiated. Any evening will
Exnicios recently was called back see the bar in the saloons lined
10 hlf post in Pittsburgh and his (our deep, while the dining rooms
transfer to El Paso, Texas, called upstairs are crowded, with space
on th< eve of his departure Pow- -,t a premium, by flappers and their
I able to put forth his collective stantly bear In mind the words of its organiiation into sections here-
strength In combatting the deadly Governor Walton tufore barely touched.
efforts of those who. In the Inter- I "If the tanners (and laborer*) I W« must have a working organi-
[ests of the great craditoi inatitu- elect me pmrrnor of Oklahoma and za'.lon in every legislative district
:10ns ol the east, foster deflation then refuse to onranise co-oper- In the state in order that when ;t
and failing prices, thereby bringing ativelf 1 can be of little lieneflt legislator becomes forgetful of the j
lobbies of the legislature in Janu- ruin and disaster upon those who to them." platform upon which he ran and
plentifully supplied with produce the wealth of the world Governor Walton is u strong (a'ls, *tv' tlie governor that
NUMBER 1
(Continued from One)
SEVEN HURT IN
ELECTED Hill! GRANDSTAND FALL=
erful influences were said to have
Induced Commissioner Haynes to
allow ExnicioB to remain in Penn-
sylvania.
Now that Exnicios is back on
the job. he plans to find out where
the four famous old saloons on
FALL PLANUM. FOB BPM5U
BEAUTY.
ary,
the spring garden i to at-
full beauty, bulbs must be
planted in the autumn. Of these
the tuhp has long been the ac-
knowledged leader, and every tulip
^scorta. - .
Considering the times, the price
is cheap. For 60 cents you get a
glorious setdle-a pint—of clear
amber fluid with a coating of foam.
And the steady customers say it is
cheap at any price.
hard Ye retain their unfair advan- g ver or of Oklahoma and then re- ™* ^ wn' imTthere is must dt" i- entitled he can be reminded of jjew Governor of Kansas Bov's Skull Reported Not
— " ^ fOU5ht t0 «r u.t be prepared to go Into! DedareS He KnOWS It. | ' FraCtUPed. centuries ago when over,51«,,as
h|HteU. Ithe campaign in 1924 and elect a
thoe* advantages. We must stand iidiflBtod herein, 1 can
behind our stalwart leader and as- ver> little benefit to them."
sist him with every ounce of What Mayor Walton said or the
strength at our command in doing farmer applies with equal force to
|ule camua.pn iu lu. .™ - . ■ ■ |P 'd f°r a tiulb'1
, . . ... __ 1 legislature pledged to vitalise the TOPEKA, Kan., Nov. 11. — "The The football game at Norman be- Yet nothing has ever equaled the
ue,,CB lS larmer-labor program J man who works-and not the sleek, tween the University of Oklahoma tulips of today Fashions come and
the thins* that we placed him in tbe lalwrer. ^ He can do little as ™ol purpoB(."thBt the league We must be prepared to put or- starched collar man. helped put me marredty "the the (Tver- late floweHnp Breeder. . 'ouaee and
office to do. The farmers and la- governor without the organited co- ^ ^ di , jeave jta work only ganized pressure to the membeis v r g governor ol Kansas." fiow ptan'd ltt th, nortt end of the Darwin tvpes art- in parti cul1 ■
borers of each stale senatorial and operation of those groups that ^ Tfae executlve board in- of the legislature the minute they Ii0* BlanG ai ine noru- ena ut uar* 111 l-118 1
representative district must be made his nomination and election tK^ work of the league ; tail tc back the efforts of Governor
constantly alert and keep tbeir or- possible. has Juat commenced and muBt be Walton.
prairtzatlon In working order and Tbe iaborer organized on the carried to a rinal conclusion and , We aiust carry on a constant
must give their lerislators to nn- economic field and the farmer is t^at the program upon which the | campaifrn of organization and edu-
derstand that they meant wJJaJ |m organised to some extent- But peoplt elected Jack Walton gov- cation.
they said at Shawnee, and that tbe organisation of both groups ernor must, in time, be placed in During the long campaign just
they mean to have the things tney ajong co-operative lines is not j fUn force and effect. To that end closed the farmers and laborers be
demanded there. wrhat jt should be, either politically W(. ure appealing to you. the farm- | came conscious of the power that
On June 10, J. C. Walton issued „r economically. ! ers and laborers of Oklahoma, to i is in then handB and they used
■tatement under the caption. "A jt iB with political co-operation \ continue and extend the organlza- j that power.
should have, therefore, only old,
thoroughly rotted manure thorough-
ly mixed through the ground, or—
as some growers recommend—
bonemeal. Set tbe bulbs five to
six inches deep, five to six inches
apart, on a cushion of sand to shed
the water, and preferably in the
sun.
Daffodils (which in most cata-
logues include narcissi and Jon-
quils) date back to the days of
Greek mythology, and the differ-
ent varieties are determined by the
length of tbe cup and number of
flowers to the stem.
The long trumpet, with a single
flower to a stalk, Is commonly
daffodil. The short
flow stand at the north end of the Darwin types are in particularly
Shucking corn on his farm near field, injuring seven. high favor. No wonder, either, for
Bronson, Governor-elect Jonathan The crash came shortly after Ed- they are truly glorious, some of , termed the
nnviK mooned lone enouah to nmke die Johnson. Oklahoma quarter- them standing fully 30 inches high , truinpet kind, named after the
Davis stopped long enoug to make bftck made a spectacular run of The stately Darwins which often Greeb youth, is the popular narcis-
this statement over long distance 5eventy-five yards run even higher, range through the j BUB ^he short cup variety with
to Topeka. j The stand* which was a very pastel shades (without yellowsi tc fragrance and four or five blos-
Asked just what he considered flimsy structure, held a crowd of crimson, purple and black, showing Bomg to a stem, is the jonquil,
the big tactor in his election ttovia approximately a thousand. Many the wonderful bloom of the i J'liuitinc Karclsso*.
a statement unuet tne caption. * j, iB wlth political co-operation continue and extend tne organize-. uiat power. to tne inou:inai coun iav. m .lb were hurt badlv „o t-'l generally have larger blot- hardy boruer. anions sui uuueij u.
Bnehei of Wheat." In which he re- ot thr twp KrouI that thie appeal tlon of the league in order to en- i That power Is still in their hands present lorm knew they couldn't > tun wtt6 jota Bomfl and include tbe rare shades naturalized in the grass. They
ferred to the "Sixteen Facts sub- d(ials ltl tt(. nmir. act into law that program and bring 1 and it will always remain there pel any reu.'i from the republicans, • * He received a fractured'of bronze pu-ple dull sold dark should be set mi inches deep and
mitted earlier In the campaign, an( ]n jBot-, u„. [arniers and laborers ' the era of exploitation to an end. The only thing that is necessary it so they voted for me." wrist Others iniured were Arthur lilac mauve and blue-blaik that same distance apart and ill
co-operated politically and a great ; The work of tbe league during for the farmer and laborer to use Hl„ program, he declared, °uld i^iL insSliuir in the un^ver- Se^are shorter (from K ' multiply rapidly. They like cool
"In Fact No. 12. "What Is the victory was won for the common the next lour years will be to sup- 'hat power, as they used it in the |,e -just a t-ood. honest program of sltT wrenctled bock Rut,, Smith ' to 24 inchef have pointed petals, quarters.
remedy" 1 stated that the fanner peopTt Then their vigilance laied port Governor Walton with a united recent campaign. II tluit P""er is 1;1X reduction anu added that he o{ "oKlahoina City, sprained ankie; and a lovely range of color in vei- The crocus, of the bulbs avail-
who saves himself from utter de- and year by year the fruits of that , front in securing the enactment of | «►*_.. __5T** -.l!.. !!'. intend, to carry out the platform Bpn Butler citv' employe of Ok.a iOWs and orangi not found in tbi able today, is the earliest to t . :;i
homa City, sprained neck ; Mrs. G. j other varieties. The three classes | and can be bought in good mixtures*
etructiou must organize co-oper- victory were lost. the league program into law. And it « f no all snd the r |mm n people ^pon wtiich bt was elected.
atively as a producer, and fix the in 1921-22 these groups again ; must he understood now that that wmtinne trr he the l.rUms 01 —
price of his product" co-operated politically, and the re-1 program cannot be enacted In its !u,WLlu-n5:rr.. WALL STREET SEES
And farther:
suit was the greatest victory foi entirety in one session of the let-' The way to use thai power is
"In Fact No. 12 1 stated that the the common people ever recorded islature. That could hardly be ac-
maintain the organisation we now
farmer must also organize co-oper- in the state's history. ; oumplished with a legislature unan- *U,JP P^rpetiiHte the Fanner-
mtively as a consumer, and shut Will we again t>eoonie careless lraou* for the entire program, and i Latoo^Kejjm^racao^Ijggn^aM
out the profiteer. In Fact No. 12 and apathetic and again lose the the ninth legislature will not be
I alao stated that: fruits of a hard-earned victory?) of one accord in this regard We
* *He mast wnranise co-operative- Shall the Farmer-Labor Re-on-1 must enact the most urgent de-
1) as s citisen oc the political struction league l e perpetuated, or I mands first and then go before tbe
field that he may lunc might shall it be allowed to disintegrate? | people and elect the tenth legiBla-
and influence is state and national That is the question that the i ture to earn* out the balance of
fovcmaicuts pr« tect his co-op- farmer and laborer must decide,; the program. Here, again, in shown
erafcve organisations of profiteers snr! decide now. And in reaching j the vital necessity of keeping the
and consamerK, and to he better their decis'on they should con- league functioning and extending
j
11. G.WELLS
FAMOUS
OUTUNE^HISTORY
The Pomuzcc of Mother Earth,
carry out the great work il has
started. This must be done—it shall
hr done.
Farmers and laborers interested
in vitalizing the program of the
league and continuing the organi-
zation of the league are invited to
write their sentiments to Charles O.
Rhoads, secretary-treasurer, 200
Baltimore Bldg., Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma.
CO-OP MARKETING
CLUBS IMPORTANCE
from the big.dealers as cheaply as
30c a dozen.
In tbe twelfth century the Per-
sian poet, Sadi, sang his love of
C. Barnham. Lindsay, bruises : 4- j provide a marvelous combination
year-old daughter of Hallum, in-1 Gf shades and can be chosen
Jured by flying timber. | bloom well through June.
The most seriously injured was j Among the 1 ancj Tulips.
Eddie Smith, aged 10, an orphan ! Among the fancy tulips are the the hyacinth.
who was being cared for by the j Bybloem, queerly striped ana "If thou of fortune be bereft
NEW YORK, Nov. 13.—That Wall Lions club of Norman. The boy ■ feathered and showing rose color And in thy store there l e but left
Street hap come to realize that co-j was under the stand when it col-1 or violet on a white ground; the Two loaves; sell one and with thy
operative cotton marketing asso- j lapsed. He was carried off the Bizarres, striped and leathered oi. dole
ctations are a real factor on the iground unconscious and it was I a jrenow ground and the Parrot tu- Buy hyacinths."
market is indicated in comment in i«ared that he might have suffered ; iipBt unusually feathered and The fine single varieties of hya-
tbe New York Journal or Com- a fracture of tht skull. However, frmgecit which before opeainp are cinths come in all shades and can
* j this was disproven and Sunday he j iikt. tiie neok of a parrof. They j be bought at a price ranging from
fl ~T>erative associations loom WBB dismissed from the hospital. can be b0Ught at as low a price af^ 12 to 25c each for "monster" bulbs.
i t i« r>meh r f th« HtATid aided the I others, and give a touch 'The fancy varieties, mixed and un-
novelty. 1 named, sell as low as 75c a dozen.
lteiueuiher. Jack Walton cannot the irturnn "Y«rv ~ •— — j xuiips uo iioi uuve io ue mit'u i iney hTTouiu uc net ma ^
bring almtil }he ~farmers tav" ?old 'en^Tli 'X would I lh,OUE.bt necea- I and six inches deep, on little cush-
many intuitu b _™ 1U UUU&IJ e(i out that such accidents would Kll - ,f. i.nB of ounri tnr rirninncp
nn «K imDortant factors in the fu- I Tbe crasli of lbe stund ai^ed any of the others, and give a touch The fancy varieties, mixed and un-
crf anot nrices and of snot' unlverBit>' very much for ln lhe/1®® ! of novelty. i named, sell as low as 7fie a dozen.
the Jimmul states j "Very lhat was m'l!ie for funds t0 . I Tulips do not have to be lifted ; Thev should be set sis inches apart
mg tne jouruai states^ \ery . ttQHiiiTn it vn« uoint- • .
unsHsisted. , t« nav their debu and now 6(1 out tbat RUcb accld®n^6 v °U1" ] saryj, but can be left in the ground 1 ions of sand for drainace.
1 - iuas - ^
Today's Installment^—No. 55
H01V M.AVLKI BKUAN
Slaves and Social Gasses—(Continued)
much nnw us lie (lid in the cam-
piilen. And he ig Just as much en- ,lrJceB are comint: They were told
"titled to it now as he was then. BOme t(m(, back that they might cet
I T . 25 cents if they held their cotton.
,k ■ ^ !h aS i1" * ' Thev refused to do It. They saw
l h,'i .the, 20 cents and took it rather than
he .s the Wend of tfa<.independent ,y n(Iw.fld by thf
Ilead, siuc and oil producers| m is
the friend of all legitimate busi-
■ , It netted the
They believe that higher 1 g^oo! about $1,000 toward its fund.
co-operative associations. Now
! ness in the «Ut,, None need le-ar ^1^!!
The earlier wars did not Involve
remote or prolonged campaigns,
and they were waged by levies of
the common people. But war
brought ln a new source of pos-
sessions plunder, and a new so-
cial factor, the captive.
In the earlier, simpler days of
war. the captive man wan kept only
to be tortured or sacrificed to the
Victorious god', the captive women >
and children were assimilated into j
the tribe. But later many cap- !
tives were spared to be slaves be-
cause they had exceptional gifts or
peculiar arts. It would be the
kings and captains who would take I
these slaves at first, and it would '
speedily become apparent to them
that these men were the peasant
cultivators and common men of
their own race.
I seful Bh Workmen.
The slave could be commanded
to do all sorts of things for his
master that the quasi-fre* common
man would not do so willingly be-
cause of his attachment to his own
early period the artificer
a household slave, and the manu
facture of trade goods, pottery, tex-
tiles, metal ware, and so forth,
such as went on vigorously in the
PROBLEMS IU HISTORY.
Do you luiow—
When classes of people simi-
lar to the idle rich of today
first appeared among the citi-
zens of ancient nations?
Do you know—
What great traveler of an-
tiquity wrote the first critical
and intelligent history?
Do you know—
What wonderful works of
man still to l>e seen in tl%
world attracted sightseeing
tourists 2.600 years ago*
Do you know—
When free intelligence dawned
among men. and what vaat
changes it wrought?
Answers in tomorrow's In-
bailment of H. G. Wells' •Out-
line of History."
him except the nthleM exploit,tv >ear 3« cents predicted. TI,, y are
of honest business, and thronirli so skeptical about 3d cent, It
him we hope to build up and not is aB *ere ftbout
who happened to be about, had tear down. He stood irrevocably cents.'
couie Into existence. committed to tbe Nhawnee plat-
Deirianiag of («ang Labor. form in the primarj; he stood ir-
But another and far less kindly revooablj committed to that plat-
sort or slavery also arose in the form In the general election, and
old civilisation, and that was gang he staudt Just as Irrevocably corn-
slavery. If It did not figure very mitted to it and to the farmers and
largely in the cities, it was very laborers toda?. He is standinir
•ontinue to do well. When they
begin to deteriorate they must be
taken out, the poor ones rejected,
and Uie good ones set out again.
Prices range from 40c a dozen to
as much as you care to pay for
named varieties. Many fine and
named specimens can be had as
low as 60c a dozen.
Tulip beds should be cool. They
One special satisfaction in grow-
ing bulbs is that wiih the erup-
tion of the hyacinth, they can be
left in the ground year after year.
—Christian Science Monitor.
That no women should be per-
mitted to attend her funeral, was
the unusual request contained in
the will of an aged woman who
recently passed away in England.
Hard Blow to Them When
Sweet Is Elected.
BEN LINliJiAT fcPEAKS HERE.
The principal speaker at the DENVER, Nov. 13.—With the
Tuesday meeting of the Rotary club I election of William E. Sweet, dem-
will be Judge Ben Lindsay of Den- ocratic nominee for governor, run-
ver. Tbe meeting, a father and ntng on the non-partisan league
i r ci in ujc i,-iuvb « . ««« w son get-together gathering, will be ticket and thirty-two members to
much"in1U.vldencr.rBewherr 'The hquarelj bj y'o'u. 'Vvilf yoti KUnd held at the Huckin. hotel. In tbe lbe housf of" representatives,
kin* was. to berin with, the chief squarely by hinit eveninp the speaker will addresB i pledsed to carry out the league
entrepreneur He made the canals Yours for the league program. ) Bchool children at the high j program, the reactionary forces
and organized the Irrigation (e. r. EXEC UTIVE BOAFtK FARMER-; "t-h"°'
Hammurabi's enterprises noted in LABOR RECONSTRI. CTION
the previous chapter.) He exploit-
ed mines. He seems (at Cnossos, e.
g.) to have organised manufactures
for export. The Pharaohs of the first
.dynasty were already working the
copper and turquoise mines in the
! peninsula of Sinai For many such
purposes gaugs of captives were
1 cheaper and far more controllable
'than levies of the king's own peo-
LABOR AWAKENING WORRYING
ENGLISH REACTIONARIES TOO
,ple.
the king's household grew up the lYom an early period, too. cap-
households of his great ministers ; tlves may have tugged the < ars of
and officials, under the temple!the galley", though Dorr ("Ancient
grew up the personal households Ships") notes that up to the age of
patch of cultivation. From a very bof temple functionaries; it is not pericles (450 B C.) the free Ath-
«o.rlv neriod the artificer was often difficult to realise how houses and entan* were not above this task.
patches of land would become more I And the monarch also found slaves
and more distinctly the property of convenient for his military expedi-
the occupiers, and more and more Hons. They were uprooted men.
definitely alienated from t&e origl- they did not fret to go home be-
LEAGUE.
J. B. TOSH. President,
FRANK DAVIS.
W. A. VILLINES,
J. A. YORK.
EARL WITT,
JOHN L. BRITTON.
CHARLES O. RHOADS.
Secretary,
H. O. MILLER.
State Manager.
Astor Riches Going:
to England
FRftZIERWINS:
LEUE BEATEN
household city of the Ml no. of ! nai owner-god. I cause they had no home togotc. ainrmar jcanc VA/jn for Sf>n-
Cnoasos, was probably a slave in- The earlier empires in Egypt and The Pharaohs hunted slaves in Nu- IVUMpdl llbdllb Will rui OCII
dustry from the beginning ; China both passed Into a feudal Ma tn order to have black troops ate. LOSe For GOVemOr.
Savce, In his Babylonians and Btage, in which families, originally i for their Syrian expeditions. Closely
Assyrians, quotes Babylonian agree official, because for a time inde- I allied to such slave troops were the FARGO. Nov. 13.—With returns
mente for the teaching of trades'
to slaves, and dealing with the "
ploitation of slave product. Slaves
produce slave children, enslave-
ment In discharge ot debts added to
the slave population; it is probable
that as the cities grew larger, a
larger part of the new population
consisted of these slave artificers
and slave servant, in the large
households.
They were by no means abject
slaves; in larger Babylon their
llres and property were protected
by elaborate laws Nor were they
all outlanders Parent, might
Mil their children into slavery
and brothers their orphan slaters
Free men who had no means of
livelihood would eveu .eli them-
selves Into slavery. And .lavery was
tbe fate of the insolvent debtor, i ants nor prieats nor officials, but
□
Kiryptian peasants selied for non-psyment of taxes. (Pyramid Age)
pendent noble families. In the later Mercenary barbaric troops themon-
stages of Babylonian civilisation we archs caught into their service, not
find an increasing propertied clast< hy positive compulsion but by the
of people appearing in the social brlbes of food and plunder and un
structure, neither slaves not r*as- |der lh^ pressure of need.
antu nor orientb nor officials, but Ag old civilisation developed
coming in slowly from western
counties. Linn J. Frazier. nonparti-
san league candidate for the United
States senate, was in the lead to-
day. His election has been con-1
ceded by his opponents for sev-
eral days.
With 1.834 precincts out of 2.138
reported. Frazier had 88.479 an
compared to O'Conner's 87.323
votee.
Remaining precincts are in the
western portion of the state where
it is admitted the league has car-
ried the section by a vote ranging
from 2 to 1 to 10 to 3. Frazier's
lead, it is expected, will be around
Governor Nestos. the I. V. A. can-
didate. is leading Lemke. the non-
partisan nominee by 30,000 votes.
While the lead will be materially
reduced. Lemke supporters admit
lot overcome Nestos' lead. 65
I they cannot
•FREEDOM SANDAL" NOW
(United
toward
Craft apprenticeship, asain, was t widows and descendants of such , merc6nary armies replaced
sort of flxed-torm slavery. people, or successful traders and thf natlonai ^Vies of the old order
Slave* W ho Bought ('elves. the like, and all masterleas folk, j lnore ant! more and servile gang
Out of the slave population, by j Traders came in from the out- j jabor became a more and more im-
a converse process, arose the freed- side. Babylon was full of Aramean i porrant and significant factor ln
man and freed-woman. who workec traders, who had great establish- economic system From mine* IC I ATCCT FOOT - WEAR
for wages and had still more defi ments with slaves, freedmen. em-Jftnd canal and wall building, the u "
nite individual rights. Since in ployes of all sorts. Their book- (Bpreac« into cultivation
Babylon slsves could themselves keeping was a serious undertaking. Noble* and temples adopted the
own property, many slaves saved up It involved storing a great multi- 1
and bought themselves. Probably tude of earthenware tablets in huge
the town slave was often better off earthenware jars.
and presumably as free as tbe cul- Upon this gathering mixture of
tivator of the soil, and a* the ru more or less free and detached peo-
ral population increased Its eor^ pie would live other people, traders
and dsughters came to mix with merchants, small dealers, catering
and swell the growing ranks of I for their needs fisyce (op city )
artificers, some bound, some free gi%*es the particulars of an agree-
As the extent and complexity of meat for the settling up and stock-
governmen' increased tbe num- ■ ing of a tavern and beer house for
ber of households multiplied. Under 1 exsmnle. The passer-by. the msji
which have controlled the state for
several years were handed i
smashing blow In the recent elec
tion. Sweet was formerly a social
1st, and made his race on a "rad-
ical" platform.
With returns in from all but one
legislative district, tne democrats
had thirty-two and the republicans
j thirty-two members in the legisla-
| ture. However, it is known that
i a number of republicans elected
j are favorable to the league pro-
gram, and it is safe to predict that
I the league program will be adopt-
ed in the main.
Chief among the issues advocat-
ed by the democrats wae the abo-
lition of the "Colorado rangers.'
which is the same as the mounted
police in Pennsylvania Labor has
bitterly opposed the use of the
rangers in industrial and labor dis-
putes. *
In the campaign the democrats
declared that they favored the re-
peal of the ranger law and the
placing of the enforcement of law
in the handB of the sheriff, con-
stables. police officers and. if need
be, the state militia.
! The program condemned the of-
ficial lawlessness that has existed
in the state for years to the ad-
vantage of coal and iron companies
jand charged that the republican
administration had disregarded the
law in denying freedom of speech,
peaceable assembly and freedom of
the press.
! Other issues advocated by the
democrats were the guaranteeing
to labor of a wage more than suf-
! ficient for the mere necessities of
i life and in which dividends on cap-
; ital were to be secondary to the
t rights of the men: co-operative
.. marketing of farm products; the
, erection of state warehouses for
-J storing farmers' crops; a soldiers'
i bonus; against coal profiteering;
'i the protection of state water rights
against corporations seeking to se-
soaufiH
WANT A !
GIVE" THEE A
CHECK
' I'T.'* "f Joku Jg/r&'r Jizksr: |
Major John Jacob Astor. younger j
Here are four of the politics
. cure control of the same, and the! over England in the parliament!.!
' condemnation of the Teapot I>om<
oil deal.
< HAKTKItS (.RAMKII.
WASHINGTON. Nov. 13.—Ten
_ ,TOU11„ ^ AUSTIN. Tex.. Nov. 13.-
own'property, many slaves saved up It involved atorlng a great multi- Igang-slave svstem'for their works Pres..) — Another agye
- - *• . • —«—n- i. « ——— •« -'tut.. reenora ot the iemai
doni sandal" Astor, who renounced his American . —
The freedom sandal." allowine citizenship to become a British j central bodies and three
Plantation gangs began to oust tbe
patch cultivation of the laborer-
serf ln the case of some staple
products.
JUi «# uuu tfnvuu JIOIUI , ' . , .. . ..
"the free- non o! the late "William V>a!d.irf rblirt'r" werf fanted by -he A. F
iree- 1-* L. during September, four to red control.
been inaugurated ln the danelnc England, declared he was trans-
Copyright. t.^^T .b. Marmili.n | claa. of Miss Susie Fisher, in- ferring his huge American fortnn.
i'ubiiRhed t y with structor of terpischore at the uni-
versity here.
There are 135 members of the
class, all of whim will wear the
sandals.
ihr McClure New >p^per iflBi
Tomorrow — **A Famous Larly
Iriveler."
to Lngland. Major Astor was se-
verely wounded in the World War
and lost part of his foot while serv-
ing with the Royal British Life-
guards.
1mm Hmt have been circulated all
•' by (he National Unionist Tarty,
howing how the Labor Party Is scaring them.
Political Interest iu Europe in tiring • entered around the Intense
campaign now being conducted In the Knullsh parliamentary races,
which will be decided the latter part of Novenibm
Issues similar to those In many states where labor has supported
certain candidates, are apparent in ICnsland chat go* or "bolshevtsm."
many others ure l«*dti made against the l^nbor
Tarty candidates by the ultra-conserviitlva party, the National Unionists.
Like the campuigu against I .al'Villrtir in Wisconsin. HrooKhart In
federal union is one affiliated di- Iowa. Howell in Nebraska. Hliiptt• ntl In Mlnnrnotn. IVa/.irr tn North
rectly to the A. F. of L. instead o! Dakota. Walton in Oklahotnu, and tlm i<snipalcn agatnnt other pro-
through an international union. igiessives. the reactionary foices t f Knglaad air making a tight against
! the l^abor Party nominees.
The power to do great thlngf^ Tbe Unionist party is covering every puillsmeutary district with
general!^ arises from the willing- , flaming posters and other literalur< Int. ndeil tn piejudlce the voters
ness to do small thingf I against the real issuon iu thu campaign.
ach to
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 77, Ed. 1 Monday, November 13, 1922, newspaper, November 13, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc100176/m1/2/: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.