Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 165, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1922 Page: 2 of 4
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'AGE TWO
OKLAHOMA LEADER
rjHold Deputies
; For Murder Of
Woman Leader
' ':annie Sellins. Union Organizer, Was Killed Two Years Ago;
Coroner Justified the Murder.
POLLY ANI) HER PALS
BT)
FOlLV'
■Dt
rr
r 1
Yes. Half Way Between Six and Eigrht Is Seven.
^T| [,vt e
A'j S I I btvc
-By CLIFF STEKKEl I
By Fxlrraud rr—*-
' w&lklnf up the hill toward the min*
1 PIT] SB'.'RGll. Feh. 23 -A mw thry met D put> Sheriff FUwmrd
" !tep |n the Tanme SalHnt" murder M nnl oo. bringing down one of Uw ;
c : ..p wh'ch foi mor* tk B two yew* tr:k*r M'.v r . " •
y 5s been cited by mine union work- hr«rd up the hill. Omm teettfle<l
notable eiample of injustice that he leit Mrs. >. .n order t
, n ■ PmnajT'-ania coal field*, waa aak the of ti. peace to enc
'alcen February It. when the (rand the f..s tie Mr* S« prr- e.- e<i
J1} y bere reCurned trve bills ng* nst up the fc : to rr.it. - thee on-,. ,r.
2 hroc deputy sheriffs thsrted with , children Sana he heard a voile; or
lotinierins th.> woman labor leader shots and - I ■■■ nnlnt
f Edward Maoaisoa. John Pranon Found Bod;.
• nd James Reillejr must Hand trial He «. stt^ed that h. h r •
*,ja charn of murder!njc Mr*. Selliaa , Fred Board, -n New Kennnttoa. a
'taring the frost atrihe at the Brech- | son-in-law of Mrs. Solllas. wbo came
V mrldse coal mine of the Allegheny to the scene In sn suto. Together.
- /alloy Coal and Coke company in they went up the hill, where the;
3 9J<1 ' ! found the body of Mra. Sellins.
3J' Kn. Finale Sellias. 47. onaaisar Dr. Q. I- Osumjisrten testified be
"l'lf the United Mine Worker* of Am had held sn u' ; n the N. :. i •
J! '.rica and J.veph Stnelecki. M a th vi,--ms •• t Vts >ellin« had
yu. miner, wore killed by strike I died of s fractured skull and gun-
i> usrds of the Alleebeny coal and shot woasaj on Ihe '.sft .de of her
I Oke cotnpanv of West Natrona, head and thst Strseleckl had died of:
3 Cm jg 1919. I ire tronahot wouda la rarloua parts
V lie Is; Justice. of the bod;
'' The inquest in ihe killing was held The coroner's Jury hitw tht in a
(tember It. J l . before Coroner „„i!rt istifylat the killing and
nuel O. Jatnieeon at Pittsburgh commending William C. Haddock..
Jacfc Sell las. a son presented a pe shertt: of Allegheny oouniy. for his
I. .ition to President .lod^e Kennedy. prompt and successful action in pro-
,. sklng for the transfer at prosecii- teeUtig the property and persons in
,i|ng powers from District Attorney r^ja. ^ ':nj
, ■ llowand to his own attorneys Peplore Agitators.
0 h,T* waited this long to se- '-ft e deplore sod criticise the for-
, «"a case against those meqi.wha ^ • Tf*u , par, Pf the
i ) «*taliy *hot wy notfcer wlthou. venJlct ~Wbo instill anarchy and
1 ■ Vo prAtloa." .Sellins aald. ^w>d *re MAlvW|e doctrines imo the minds
1 Vrudnly are not r>to« &*** « 1
W )«opATtSj hy allowla*
, Idamfi office to pros
Um> dlrtrtct
prosecutc ft
on-American and tin educated t
, i&I)«nt of tfce district."
ja"tor «T« ofltoa to pcosccutc it. J^roee Oatas. oriranixcr of I'nited
g 1 *^Ta knov whst s fare* Ui«y wou ^ mij<j after hearing the
*'aale of the eme. aad et-arybcdT ^.
b, nows how they base delayed Justice . W|1 got wlli( ,, t0 A>.
U-®r twto years.' lngheny county, a whitewash for the
Bef«a« Oat ea Bead. murderers and the arrest of the
tJ Tk, three dejuUea. wbo wjre ^-i„nkfr, whlI, wh„ aid the
^ ested mootts «othe k;, r . (f> coo,lnu<>
hooting ox Mrs. Sellins and released . ft re<cn mitators
| AT Si* >^Pp'l
Sta-JO HEQfc
t«4 fT^ aJO>*/ LkonT' ,
vvah1 tai-V«> T
V^-S f^xxz
PWCUil.5 IML
UStlAL
WITH 3SK. «
"K> AACET Him * C
—Uu HALltti U Oil AN
JERRY ON THE JOB
Our Best Little Explainer.
TUS.ir/. VA^E!!' HI SiNS-
"TUS COxi \Mfc?"T:EO'Tb"TV*E'
EKO OC A "fEM Vcvjr Y*r> ,1
Sep? Mro y*t ~?sacxs) A \v'11, //
AOS 50 WT "
AV)W*0 J N
aa-Tkf A>rr
vs arjw •T^ssr
CitAiS 5ba.~«iO<.
a&wAsss Gem
es Suooro td
n« Bo sr.
= MAMBE "TVE OTWEE.
EMI? OF TfcE COPE-
NNASMT Ti ED
"To Mcrwwtf
S\NEU.,THAT
DOWT MA.V.E )"r
A TAWEa
HEE£S A ClA'wv WW*
A GIN "TKAT SWS CXA
ChooOoo
US' OiUWi./*
^ loop.
i A/^VW11/ /yi
IRISH SOVIET
A POSSIBILITY
PR VIS
RS
TODAY'S EVENTS
WAR ON THE UNBORN
1
.
FGHTS
Sf""1* *r.a ; wort As for the foreign agltatora. SaVS Oklahoma GrOUD Were! In * norel called Witte Arrires.1 meant to help to.i rain jour goai. P of C SDeakfir SaV'
t S th. charge makes my blood botl. .7,jL" " o!! r aVrL.nt Irhysican speaks He sutes the she bbed until it s.emed that her ! 01
''Sd* district sttoraeya oOca; Aasericaa Koaaa. Jammed By Government. I facts bsldly sod we think truly It heart would break She would not It 3t All COStS.
^ Barnes Oate*. organuer of the " Fannie Sellins waa as able and
i -alted Mine Workers, testified at the patnouo as American as ever lived.
acue-st two Tears ago that there was ! She was a moth, r and a grand-
Quotations from the book. "TVitte | sat and wept and told tne how a
Arnrf*," by Eliaa Tobenkln. pages child would be her ruin. She told
J me all about Tourself. your job. your
employers. She told me how she
LONDON. Feb. 23.—Frankly ad-
mitting the possibility of a coup
d'etat which would result in the es-
tablishment of a workers' soviet re-
Seventy-fifth anniversary of the
American victory at Buena, Vista.
Boston today rounds out its first
century as an incorporated city.
The President and Mrs. Harding
* Fannie Sellins -as a. able and, — SfRENCE TODD.
Federated FT*as Correspondent
a rwtiaa for the shooting; i mother. She was bom m Memphia j
Lat iht* strikers and their wives Tenn.. sent her onlv son ;nto the re- rinc^ that .he Oklahoma group
° 're with the deputies previ- cent war and her brother fought for among the politics prisoners at
to the shooting, that the non-1 this country in the Philippine war Leavenworth are chiefly the victims
3 Vnion men w«re In the mine until Twenty witness*** were beard by I ^ "jamming" or "railroading" on the
f i ter the shooting. ibe grand jury, and at the conclusion Qf prosecutin. ,ulhoritie.B
! ••v * related bow he had gone ;o of their e\idence indictments fof
I with Mrs- Sellins. When I murder were voted. Senator Harreld of Oklahoma has
— ■ ---------u trying to secure the assent of
V'iphdcc DBfHic imiiicKvuiri nncn
Oklahoma is Stanley Clark, who was
arrested on the charge of having
made a seditious speech, but was
taken to Chicagro and tried with the
jjp 105 I. W. W. prisoners brought there
" ..a Follette Shows Compara- Defunct St. Louis Institution [^nh^dVuiner,Tnr,(bhT«^,an,) ,rom
is the story of a young newspaper leave this room until 1 promised to
reporter with the ambition to become I Mve her—or read a death sentence
a writer, who marries at the age <•' to her
mmnm
:i FRRMtRS' PLIGHT IN BANK ASSETS
tive Prices Affecting Him.
Held Certificates.
25 on a salary of $22.50 a week. His
wife has faith in him and in his am-
bition to become a writer. She vows
she will not be a burden upon him.
When she learns that ahe is to be-
come a mother she grows desperate.
She keeps the husband in bewildered
ignorance. The following is Wltte's
conversation with the doctor, quoted
from the story:
'Hold public for Ireland. Winston Churchill, -ive a reception at the White Hou.v
secretary of the colonies, and one of this evening in honor of the army
the bulwarks of reaction in Eng- • * nd navy.
| land, expresses the fear that the In response to a call from Go\-
WASH1NGTON. Feb. 23.—Denun- Irish cause may be "ruined" for a « rnor Morrison of North Carolina
OT century- Churchill made this state- delegates from the southern states
(•derated Press
At the hospital Witte had to wait! worried in their edi-
tor an hour. Finally the doctor em- ^rtal ™ """" °™r P™11
erged. He was accompanied by an- J^fe suicide. But do they mean t
other physician. They talked briskly Oo they pay their employes enough
and seemed well pleased. The doctor ^ r :E« .'am'.hes' Do they pay them
informed him that the operation was ■ M>ough to marry? Does not society,
"verr successful." that his wife was ; d° not ^0,lr Publishers, the moulders
safe and would be home in a week or!of of public opinion, look
The physician was silent, -ppar- 1 --'.fn. c. f \ . ..t i ~ rol - ment in moving the second reading'will meet Id conference in New Or-
n",n*vJL<>n , !! ownership of railroads, demands for < f (rf{ >tau. w„ in the houee of ]eans today to discuss plans for "put-
^peak. But Ln.il could not utter a repeal of full crew laws in the commons an(j reassured the ting cotton on a business basis."
m several states, and approval of wage- house that such a move was not With the main idea in view of iro-
loung man. the doctor resumed, c utting as a remedy for the existing likely, in the opinion of the British proving educational standards in the
,H him Wftc ""'"r "War freight rates were features of de- government. j proiession. the conference on legal
hate in the national council of the Events in Ireland during the last education, authorized at the last
chamber of commerce of the I inert week howeveri lend t0 bear oul th,. meeting of the American Bar asso-
States here The council session j imporUnce o( Churchill's first ad- ciation. is to open in Washington to-
was devoted to the report of IU rail-1 mif!lon Eventa show thllt the p-eat i day.
road committee, which proposed that^ of Irish peopIe COnstdei . The case of Mrs. Inez L. Crow,
legislation be enacted prodding (or lhal the provisional gorernment has i who seeks $50,(Ki0 damages from
a commissioner general of transpor- ,,,Ue tQ o{f£r them lt is heing com- Sheriff Bob Buchanan on account of
and his voice was softer now.
on the unborn is not made by phy
sicians. It is made by society. The
newspapers and your Chicago Star in
10 days.
upon the boy of 25. who marries, as
But doctor, what happened, what!a ^ w*>° W'J1 •oon, wber up and
tation. wto ! Pared to the Kerensky government >he death of her husband, who wj,
terest of the public before the inter- ^ Russia, overthrown bv the work- shot on October 5 last, when the
state commerce commission and the jn tte fall of 3917 .-heriff is alleged to have interrupte-1
railroad labor board
This report met with immediate
and powerful opposition. Alba
realite the great mistake he has I Johnson of Philadelphia, president of l'F Eamonn De\ alera in a huge dem-1
The active campaign against the A Klux parade, is scheduled for
provisional government was opened today at Waco, Texas.
d you do to her' >Mtte stammered , . , ® . ' , " «4 lin«tri tinn h« ld nn O'Connell street ln India Tiger meat is esieeme<3 aa
The physician's face flushed with If ^ not the doctor who «s | the Railway, Business association. ' Tr-ffic was suspended for]a food- PartI>" because there is a
user. responsible for the race suicide but .oiced the f«|rs of what app^red to ^hlln. Trarac wm suspenfled tor ,uperMmon tha, ,{ ,raparls to the
aiiMtionR - 1 society It is the curse of our civili- r e a majority of the delegates when hours, while the speakers addressed
i You wi'l "tion that is taking the joy ajid te declared that any attempt to have the cheering crowos. Before the
. .. nrl.la /*ti* r\f naranlhrwl Kr tha rkAa* tK« \n/4ancndaru>s nf lh > ;nlpr*tj>fp meeting there W3S a Pcliade OX ft"
anger.
"If you want to ask me
find^he offlce^hotirs on^his card^" Pride out of parenthood by the ghost the independence of the interstate meeting there
When Witte entered his effler an unemployment and the terror o!: commerce commission impaired by
tases Jammed.
This is one of the cases which
J I \ AS.H1XGTON r Feb . ST. LOUIS. ' I>h M.—More makes me believe that most of these
d' ' « the farmer s stacking up In than one thousand certificate- each
« x.e toboggan slide of farm products calling for a barrel of whisky in nber,,^ Mld Se'nato/'Ha'riSl'd. *
t^d the apparent maintenance of government warehouses, were seized -Mr. Nebeker. the government
J o:gb prices of farm machinery and ks a part of the assets of the de- prosecutor, told me when I took the i hour"later, the physician Tooked him P°vfn^ * *
rl Uher thing* the farmer must buy funct Night and Day bank here saae up with him that Clark and one OTer curiously. 'Many self-respecting physicians
vividly shown in a report mad* Wrn. R. Gilbert, attorney apoear- other roan ought to be pardoned. He Have tou come to cross-question like myself, perform such operations -ou*
. con^rea6 through Senator L*F\>1- in* for A. O. Meinin*er. the default- "*ou*hl tliat Clark would never have ; rne- - ^tor snapped * Do you not because we relish war on the un- 1'
ft tie. *ag cashier wi o disappeared, de- convicted if he had not made fcDOW that your wife has only pail horn, but in order to save those al-
U According to the report It was clared that 250 of the certificates & scathing sUtement on his own ar-iroo balf of miserable sum'of $25 ready living Go home, young man.
y -und that a fann wagon that could were the personal property of Mein- rest, arter he was in jail. That state- which j charged her for this opera- and be thankful that your wife is
u % bought in 1914 for the price oi mger and that 123 barrels of th« m*nt innuenced the verdict, presum- tion? She dld not havP ^ 0^er now on the road to mental and phy-
d *!4 bushels of corn now requires the whisky belonged to htm for attorney bo Tar as I am aware. Ne- j12 |Q. But it did not matter. T sical recovery in a hospital instead
m ale of W3 bushels. A gang plow fees. l*eKer ™ not followed up his *d- |ylrtd€K| 1o h?r plea5 for this opera- of lying a suicide, ss she would have
f<Vt required the sale of 0 bushels Commissioner of Finance Hughes i ™1Ml®n bJr recommending pardon to ^lon b#cainre threatened to com-; been, had not I yielded to her plea
n !T corn in 1$ 14 now requires the sale said that he would hold the 1,065 tne attorney general. mjt 8Ujclde. And she would have Go home and when you have thought
a af 302 bushels. barrels of whisky as assets of thr ' ^ *now a11 *** fV*ts in «ommittcd it. 1 am a pretty good it over, and find that I have earned
f< One of the big items in the wide bank. He refused to turn over the °« cases: it may be that jtKlg(, pf huraan nature I know the the $25 which your wife was sup-
it Jiscrepancy price comparison is 121 barrels to Gilbert taking the po- or a[e P)"*- Bul * port of i eople who only threaten and ; posed to pay roe. you can send roe a ■ —
p J,wyed to freight rates. In 1914 sltion That as the whisky was worth f v ,Z ge^ral those who do. I check for the other $12.50. But
parade
Resolutions de-
the intervention of a spokesman of claring that the Irish nation was one
the president would be "mischiev-: and invisible were adopted and the
provisional government condemned.
Fear Goterifaient Ownership. The British crown was declared
"It :s futile and feeble for us to alien to the Irish people.
hide from ourselves the seriousness
of the juncture at which we stand.
said Johnson. "If we fail in the
present experiment with regulation.
the outcome will be government
ownership. I do not know of any
competent observer who doubts it-
If we cannot regulate railroads we;
cannot regulate banking or business
or agriculture or labor. If the gov
superstition that it imparts
eater some of the strength and cun-
ning that characterized the animal.
involved" m a wagon sold in ; approximately $1.00* a barrel, $123.. ; conditions tinder they were ^ this chair where you are sit-1 is no hurry about it. Pay it when i own and opfera?e_Hl
> Wisconsin wa* $17.40, while at the 1000 waa too much for attorney fees j J #K Justified in tinp .. ^ physician continued, "she i you can."
reeeru time the amount is $99.64. ;n the caso
heee figures include the freight
urging that all of the cases be re-
■ considered on a basis of the facts.
aarvw* o- the wagon tram Chicago | a bill to lower the legal work day j ^ |J |
1 ,rw^« well as the freight for women, from Te'n hours to Vght ^'o'k?
a '-arge. on the com .old to purchase hours, has been Introduced in the j ' r«
n l e
I Maryland legislature.
Broken Promises
John Arthur Kelson in his great labor novel recalls
the promises made the workers during the war in the
following paragraphs:
"Don't be afraid of losing your jobs," he would tell
them. "Mr. Fanning has promised that all a man will
have to do to get his old place back will be to show that
he wore the uniform. And it will be the same al! over
the country. Employers, generally, are pledging them-
selves to give the bevs first consideration when they gel
back. Your sacrifices will never be forgotten. In the
long run you will be the ones to gain. Won't they boys ?"
and his companions in khaki would assure him with
cheer? that they would.
And why shouldn't they? From the government
down to the humblest employer, every possible assurance
of honor i ad appreciation was held out to them. In addi-
tion to offering the certainty of a job to every returned
soldier, Peter Fanning was said to be considering giving
every enlisted man from the shop ha'f pay while he was
away, so great was his enthusiasm for the cause. No
one could recall having heard him promise that in just
so many words, but he was not known to have made any
denial, and his silence was accepted as conclusive evi-
dence. if evidence was needed, of his staunch and unsel-
fish patriotism.
Kelson's "New Disciple."' if read by every man and
woman in Oklahoma would be the means of the workers
and farmers carrying the state by a landslide. It's easy
to understand, interesting throughout and convincing.
The book is given free by the Oklahoma Leader for
two yearly subscriptions, or for $1.75. plus 10 cents post-
age.
Circulation Department
Oklahoma Leader
vi
homa. if he was really convicted lor
the offense of making a quite dif-
ferent statement after he was in jail.
That is not law nor justice."
Harreld to (ontinne Kork.
S ill
:*
ENSS
LLYPDP UNION PROM
WORK
15
[R
LY
The background of this railway prob-
lem is our whole political and eco-
j r.omic life. The railroads are the
[ first trench. We must hold iv
f "Whether we hold that trench or
| not will depend upon our railway
i policy and its administration. Ade-
quacy of income as a statutory aim
j of regulation is fighting for its ex-
istence against the forces of repe^;
The chamber stands solidly against
ALWAYS THE BEST
GOLD
CBOWSS
BB1IH.L
WORK.
com n An
CBOW3S
$£00
Op
Set Teeth $10.00
ALL WOKYk GCABAMEED
Dr Romine, Dentists
11IH north Broadway
5ortt of Oklahoma Gat * Llec. Co.
Harreld has been quietly working Five ThOUSand Prepare for All PennileSS and Persecuted, such repeal
on these cases for some weeks, but CfrlLn UAno Ic Almnct ftnno Senato; ummint- as the father o
Without result. The department of Winter Strike. MOpe IS AimOSl bOne. lhe E-cb-€ummins :raaspoitatio:
justice has done nothing. The presi- j _*! " act, was given an oration when he
dent will do nothing unless the de- J*™"?1? „ • -.-—JS , pleaded for a fair trial of his meaaurt
partment makes a request, or unless YORK, Feb. 23.—The Bor- DETROIT, Feb. fetay of dr- experiment of such fur-
public opinion again becomes aroused (den's Farm Products company, one portation until March 1. granted to . ther pressure upon the interstate
ln faror of amnesty. Yet the Okla- 0f the two big milk distributing con- Nicholas Mansevtch. a Russian work- commerce commission as the com-
homa senator 11; going to continue to, cern, which for m Tears h^e :jian. suspected of being a radical, mittee s report propose
appeal to the administration. One of • . . . .
Uk prisoners tor whom he will «p-! <'tU«>«l * practical monopoly of the bas temporarily iirei . 'ted tie break- No momh of ,hc year in Cuba if
p«el :s Walter Rewler. a socialist cf' milk business here, has started a -P of his family of three little girlfc , free from rain.
admitted high character, who was .. company or "lollypop" union by although his modest home has l.p o
fining mark for local hysteria dur- it hop„ to kwp tu ,mployM bukrupwd and his ** in the r r, J". o PrP«pH I
V^iSL , ■ n, happy and contented. The action :i plant lost. The evidence tcainst i IPdlltQ «V rrtsscu ^
mmee organic here by the Amerlj^ t"'e™i^w^,Tff" uVeW^ un! M"^lCh w" ^ VT J ^ | nV'ir |
cent* = flJKI
CRESCENT |
125 S, Hanei M. ilihi =
ATTENTION. FARMERS!
Biggest meeting in historj" of
Farmer# Producing Milk and
Sour Cream at Farmers Cen-
tral Dairy. 1201 Linwood,
Sat., Feb. 25, 10 a. m. Mem-
bers and non-members.
BANKRUPT SALE
On Strictly Guaranteed
Heavy Duty Dural Red
TUBES
While They Last
S1.29
§1.49
•99
30x3
30x31!.
31x4 ..
32x4 i/n
33X41,2
34x41*.
. 35x5 ..
36x41/;.
We Carry Retread Tires
50% Less.
STANDARD AUTO
SUPPLY CO.
Cor. Bono and Hanej IVaL S181
1
*A1 F. I> OKLAHOMA CITY
Oklahoma's Hand-Made
c_— -CIGAR C>
uCuNION MADEvC
i"rLi xl « 6«veral weeks effectively tied up. 7 " , " . . V = Su
ican Clrll Liberties I nion has been , . f . ,wll n eratura had been delivered at his = --
v „ tne dehvery sernce of botn the Bor- = • «►
Ind ^s^u^d a doaln «««« « i" 1 awtn«d Farm house. He,declares that he belongs s
to its petition to the president ask*
company. About 5.WK employes of to no radical organiration and that =
general amnestr Many ,h' concern will have "rep-. the literature was intended for an - mJmii'iHlHUIL..:iiiuillinillimnil
- - resentation" in the scheme. other man. —— „ llt_A
Scheduled for deportation to Pa THE ©HEAT WKSTI RN WHITE
1 K5T C OR>
tng for
other members of the hous* have ^
verbally expressed sympathy, but Stripped of the vague and rosy
hare declined for the present to sign "or<!in* "hich the company offl- Kind February «. Mar-.evick pained
the petition. project, it provide." the delay through the efforts of
the workers no power whatsoever to many Detroit liberals to reopen the
I j D/"\D VtrUTQ enforce demands for better workinc case While work : t at the Ford
LfiD\JIX t i Uii I 3 renditions, and it deprive? them ef- plant he had saved $1.' 1 wh h he
fe«stually—if they accede to the con- had applied to the purchase of a
ditions—of the possibility of con- *3,800 home. When he lost his >ob
certed resistance to wage reductions, as a result of his arrest h« was
The only "powers" conferred upon forced to sell his equity in the home
the employes are the right of sue- for $400 and now ;s almost penni-
KU KLUX KLAN
Bt Federated Pre**
ASTORIA, Ore.. Feb. 23.—Resent ,
ment is running high here among | cessive appeals from the little bosses less
labor men *.% members of the Ku big bosses and finally to thr If he should be deported alotr h -
Klux Klan have begun to parade the president of the company, whose de- wife and three littie girls would be-
streets in broad daylight, rfrounted cision will be final. It is specifically ^o'ne public charges here, while '
•on horseback and wearing the noto-! provided that the manre- in which the entire family is deported all w "
nous nightgown and mask uniform the local committees will function ' starve in Poland which is in the gr-.p
The fiery cross recently appeared on m ill he such as to enable the com- 3f famine.
the < rett oT a hich hill behind tte P J>y at all Umea to "sit in"
city, followed by a huge bonfire and Fully 5,000 of the 11.000 milk Lightnins conductors are coir.-
initiation ceremonies. Moving pi< - wa^on drivers and handlers wtc uonly made of copper became
fures of the scene have been uken. went on strike November 1 still arc conducts' better than «lt other
Organised labor, for years militant out. according to Milk Wagon Driv- materia] will not : is* so ca? . ,.nc
fcere has demanded that the Cham-jers' Union No. f48. s leas liable to corroaioiL Tl* fu--
ber of Commerce, which ia baching j " This is an all-winter fight: so ng of met*l by lightning f nt: be-
the Klanstera. withdraw support or don't let any driver tell you that it cause of the metal ► so! . en*. - t -
short. Fats
thick. ATKl B
bu«hels i«er a
\%T en r*ar
fore the hot
the first days
of
Pri
■'f-g
ihave been
• ? CO',
also
appealed t#.
Be A Winner
Mr. "Harnman, the wizard of Wall Street, born of
"poor but honest parents,*' dies a rnulti-niiUionaire at 61
and was counted a winner. He said. 'There is nothing
like a winner." This is very like the old man's advice to
his sons. You have heard the story: "Get money, my
sons; get it honestly if you can, but get it." To win. that
is all: sacrifice friends, health, shave as ck>s£ to the law's
dead line as you can and keep out of jail—that is the
modern ideal.
Though one takes millions, though one owns stocks
and 1 nd untold, ard lives in a palace of 2&0 rooms, k
little J;ink in tj.e bo ■ el, a growth that closes the pylorus,
and piff: the lamp is out.
The rea! «mner is he who lives to be a hundred, on-
joying good health, making a living and helping oth<M>
do the same. Such a man though humble and unknown
is the "real winner. We are helping people repuin tlw"
health and live longer. Auto-intoxication is the founda-
tion of many ehixmic ills that are a burden to mjtny ''olki-
and by means of Anti-Toxis and medical advice tiov hihI
then when :,eeded in each particular case we are doinj.
a lot of good.
When in Deed f health advice, write us. Wf are heif
to sent i <u. Keaa oui booklet, "'How to Get Well and
Keep WeJL' ]t is free for the asking.
Co-Operative Distributing Co.
Box TH-!i. Oklahoma City. Okla.
path to lit current.
1 MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllltllllllllllllllllli'
V ' /
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 165, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 23, 1922, newspaper, February 23, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109680/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.