Oklahoma Weekly Leader (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1922 Page: 2 of 4
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OKLAHOMA WEEKLY LEADER, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1022
OKLAHOMA (WwWj) LEAHFRtgj ||||£|| jj^ jj£|||||£ . [||JJ|J|| J(jjj|]^ || I 'court HOUSE NOTES
TOGA IN II STATES! SHOWS BIG DECREASE
BY LKNI.IB G. NIBLA< K.
Efltabtlibed 1HW. published «yery
fbur«iln) fi-iu 1«7 wm wy nJr
Keiinr md enn*ml lu ti"? •
AuthrW*. Okmln lua. ah
Uttor.
Kubicrli>tl«>n $1 '•< the yvnr. invariably
mill
MtMlil.il 01 IgiOCUTlP I'HKss
OKLAHOMA (WBEKI.V) LIAOIB.
publlsbfd Every Thursday
A deaf inaii ni'iir lYrry ' li"v
railroad track ii|«>n which
walk Yt'H, it resulted .jiisl
Mill lli.niglil 'I nii^'lit
Fifty Two of This Number
Contested For Governor
Nominations In Eight
States
CfelaMD, Ml . 8*pc 26. 8i*t>• • «
i-it / ■ nh aspil'inK to reprci-.ent their
stoles in the United Slates senate.
I,(dime candidates for that office In
(on late,.' of th central west In pri-
thls sprint; un I simmer
Roxana
1-2, NW
More
Than a Third Decline
Shown By Statistics
Compiled By
Experts
Some
eonseiet
afraid of hill ■
men arc afraiil
Hut all in'*" ar
tist.v
nan1 it
Some
•siill of tlieii
fiic it art
•tors. Si iin
tin ir wives
r;ti | ill' 'Ini
Lo^ran eoiintv people ar r.
in# to the support of the
with real enthusiasm 1
great show and is showing"
resources of tin* county t«>
best advantage.
I1S m.iiy rare
I I'.leci 1011 of governor in elgin stat s
called out a field of r riy-tw" linn
ir ! tor (ho officer
J Nebraska l« <l in the "open field
;t 11ti no favor c* nto t for senator,
six fighting for the repub'ican nom-
ination. three for the •!' " <> rat!«• anil
three for the progressive, Missouri
followed with six republicans fight-
ing for the privilege of opposing Sen
ator Heid, who won over a field of
i a ! three in the democratic
t he | race#
Ohio Favorite Field
Iowa ha«l i 'lit candidates for the |
fair
euate offict
few htinilr
no doubt.
Otp JO A*p !
will have 1
In the meantime perhaps it 1
not he a mistake to eiiltivat
friendly feel in" for the sort
readv in existen- e
In 1
years,
u&iiinq
specif
republican« ai-d
•tw„ democrats, Tovas, Minnesota and
Indiana followed close with s- vu
Oil and Gas
Kddhatone Oil Corp'n t(
Pet Corp'n, assignment S
129 l9-:!w.
i C. Strallin and Laura L Stri-
n to II F. Knebel, Mineral I>eed
NE 1-4. NW 28-16-1 w
Frank P. Kelly to T. M Deal.
[k 1-2. XW 28-16 lw.
Washington, Sept. 26 Th * cot'o'i M A. Briggs to Frank P Kelly,
trade of the world has d«f" rea.se I Min i Deed. K 1-2. NW 28-16-lw
one-third of approx inately two b 1 ! Mary E Connell to J M. Heath,
lion pounds from the fkure which j Mineral Deed, $ 1 .«M) SW 1-4. NW
it had reached before the war, say-. 27-16-lw
1 rev ewjufit issued by the textile 1 Mary E Council to II. F McCros-
divl.- on of the department of cora- key, Mineral Deed $100. SW 14,
nif 11 e The combined importation of NW 27-16-lw
raw . otton by the twelve principal cot j Conveyances
ton iMi'porting countries of the world! j m. Pieratt to Edw 1) Thorough
in Pan totaled tl.(Vt1 p unds. /nan. W. I). $ 1 I> t 17. block
whore.s In 1991 only 1.412,06. 00. C IT
pounds were imported, registering a! n \\ Ettleman et al to Margaret
iloeiea-e of 2,03s,070.616 pounds The j a W I), 0U O-l-oU. IL<ty
comb ned export* for the six principal lit-14. bl- ■< k 4.r . E 15
cotton producing countries In 1913 to- | Sylvia L I logan8 to ("has H nry
nomination ,;.7IS.tsS.202 pounds, w'th the Meeks. Q I' 1 D . $ (Si Lots 11 and
total for 1931 of 4.697.s*7,f*<:, pound■*.! 12, block 2, Langston
i a decrease of 2,060.600,." 17 pounds, j a L. Avers *t ux to David Buf
Dirreames in importation oC raw ;„rj q <• n, $f 0.00. Lots 11 and 12
FREE Fill WAS HUGE SI1C-: FIFTEEN MORE ABE ]DB. BRUT TELES
CESS FROM ALL ANCLES' ARRESTED FOR FLOGGING; OFjMTRNA IISIT
Crowd jTmmed Grand Cush.ng Men Give Bonds For East Side Pastor Says Killing
1 thou
v ' ' ' | candid.ite . <ihto and Michigan
'x '' ' - Ii&toilal • ontes 8 oallc >i out five
' " ' N " '' 'didates each. North Dakota bad
and Wisconsin three.
If oiie half of what American
Legion investigators are now |
publicly char^iti^ is true, the
fact that profiteers who fattened
at the expense of the government
have not yet been prosecuted
and made to disgorge s even a
worse national scandal than we
had supposed nil along The
Legion investigators are mention-
ing names. They do this doubt-
less because, as the\ sav. most
cotton are <hown for Belgium, Knu b'ock
lend. Pram •• Qei man j Ataxic 1 Hoi-
land and Spain These decrease- |
range from about 33 per cent for Bel-
gium to 66 per cent for Germany w th
Mexico failing off nearly 100 per ceii. j w'lle
I Increases are shown by Canada, Oh'11 .,l)Iock
Japan, end United States, but Japan
j took approximately 2: per cent more
in I1' than in lf.13 and China even a
' greater Increase.
! With regard to exports
Langston
Conveyances
K Heiden et ux to Roy Walcoti
D, 5 IS 22, $6f 00.'00. Strip 50 ft
irosa center of lot- 19 to 24,
!2, E (1
Nick Doffing to H D Stewart, W
, 3 5 21. $4,00-1.00. Lota f.-6, block
Ohio prov> d tlir- ravorite i>e!d .1
gubernatorial (Handidatfs, thirtu
jumping into the race for the or
executive offici of that state Kan-I grealor ,ni;rBa"B' | K D Stiowart et ux to Pdw. Nix
M wsj the conflict fieM lor ten With regard to • !«« . own cjan-.q. ,• u.. 9 SI. $tS.00. I^li r.-o
ian.ll.l:.!, ^ for Kovernor. two or try under review showed decr.-as' >lil<M-k 28. E. a.
them women Nebruka bad eight, 'or '',e year I9®t compared with MW3. J T. w Maddox et ux to F 11 Moo..
Record
Stand and Exhibit Buildings
on Guthrie Day; Enter-
tainment Excellent
The Fair Is over, the crowds are
gone; the exhibits have been taken
home or on to the State Fair and the
fair management is already plann-
ing for n xt year
As a Whole, I he 1922 County Free
Fair goes on record as the most suc-
Sitful yet in Guthrie
Some mistakes were made, but a*
a rule the people were well satisfied
with the program of the week.
Judges who had worked at other
r ,iis. represint&tiv*« of the Dopart-
n. nt of Agriculture, sent here to in-
spect the exhibits and concession
men who have been over the stat?,
aii piontuncid ours the he t county
fair held in Oklahorra this year, and
that's encouraging
Th,. attendance the last day w.<
large, the grand s .nl and quarer
stretch were packed with Pe°I'ie to
witness th,. excc-llent pro rain put oil
by the Lions club and the race®
staged for Guthrie day by the ruir
management Kverybody enjoyed the
ent-1 ainun n and praised the ex-
hibits and w.nt home well pleased
with the fair.
Appearance; Accused By
Lawyer Who Was
Tarred
Fifteen more men were arrested
Friday at Cushing in connection with
the beating of Walter Matthews,
rushing attorney. Governor Robert-
son was informed Friday aftirn on
This makes u total of eighteen men
arrested, charged with riot sin'-e
Governor Robertson directed Attor-
ney (Jeenral Short to conduct all in-
stigation of i he alleged episode.
Warrants were sworn out for tin-
arrest of 4 he in* n Wednesday, but
the names we! • ::ot. announced until
after they were in custody. The at-
torney general b"lieves no more ar-
rests will be made Mauy of those
arrested are said to be prominent
so tally and in business life of
Piyne county
Mattln w claim- lie was wilpped
and then treated to a suit, of tar ami
feathers by the men. who accused him
of in■iking a speech unfavorable to
ihr Ku Klux Klan
Kach uf the men arrested is said
to have made bond of $ !,ooo. Pre-
liminary hearing was set for ne\i
Tuesd., at Cushinx. Assistant At-
torney General N W. Gore will reP
Wisconsin and Oklahoma five each
North Dakota and Michigan four each
ii ti l S uth Da kotua three.
Marked Increase
This suddta inciease In the num-
ber of candidates for state offices is
in marked contrast with the num-
ber placed before the voters under
Export from Brazil fell off from ap- q q d t jri 5 21, $350 00
•prox'mately S3 1-2 million pounds t« ' 4 i}i0ck 72, Langston
Lots 1 to I
. 1 , 1 1 " ...I the old par y convention sysw m
men who bad dealititrs with the! ,
. - The ncre is< in tin- number of < andi
government wer.t honest Hie 1
1 1 1 . . 1 , , . dates for congressional offices was
number who did not hesitate to 1
, ., , . .. . 1 sen larger than tint for senate ami
make use 0! their ortieial post '
tions to benefit themselves audi "N,in"r
their friends U large, however. Indu,na >n'v ,u" cand daW
and the tragic part of it is that I lhe nomination, for thlrt—
:: 1 I million pounds Chinas de«re.a-e
was only a little less than .'••• pe cent,
tin- decreased exports* from K vypt hi
Ing approximately 40 per cent, for In-
dia about 33 per cent, Peru tbout
nor cent and the United States about
2.1 per cent
City of Guthrie to A C). Talhman.
€omr. D , 1 3 21. $5o.00. Lot 22
block 37, Summit View Cemetery.
Miscellaneout
Ira Dodd et mar vs. Sadie A. Morr
Lee et al, Journal Entry. NW 19
17-4w.
V'
they are still free men. Kepub
licans blamed the Wilson admin-
istration for not prosecuting the
grafters, and now that llicy are
in power they theniselves arc
doing nothing. "There is 110th
ing more contempt ible in the
SOW LESS WHEAT
IN STATE IS PLAN
Sam
congressional offices. Four hundred |
and forty were out fci the jihi vacan-
cies in the st ite house of repre.*- .
entatives. l n - sample l|lllot, that ,
fro 1. Mien county, contained name
<f more 'than f>i>0 oandldatesi f<
s-inte. county and township office
Unless Long Drouth Is
Broken the Acreage Is
Be Reduced Materi-
ally
whole history of the Am.-i i.-in j The . .imp',; hallol required x c. nt« j Oklahoma City, Sept %. Farm.-a
people," savs the Colnniliits His 1 posi;.K«. | are HxperlencinK about the same co>.
patch. "Thee (the profiteer* i In Olilo there were 104 repuhli an dltlonB now as they did a year ago.
and (rrnfters) rtdtlted their conn jeandidaiej, for the lcj;isliture twenty in the matter of preparing and plant
try with all the ruthlessiiess id , four for th" senate nnrt eighty fo
the T It ill. The swiil' is still in the lion !'!■: number w.is tnr
their possession. .*1 nil none of n,, r incre.-i-nl i,y forM-tour cuult
dates on the democrat'c. ticke
Twenty-two t)f this number will 1>
elected.
Fifty nine candidal
It
possession,
them has buen punished
not strange that the soldiers I el t. ,
when they returned home, that
Homething was coming to them, |
and everybody would have been , on j-ol, congressional iiomlnat'ons ii
happy d the illicit gains could J ,|lik s,x districts of Nebraska /
have been taken troni tic plot j^tal of Ins candidates sen lit nom
iteers and gicen to the men ^"'Mination for county offices in Dougla
did
1 jet
io much t«
have all t
win the war.
e facts exposed.
INS TOUR
OF EAST SIDE
county, which includes the i'ty of
Omaha
Sixty-eight candidates sought
county offices in Scdgwisk county.
Kansas, eighteen of whom will be
ltded to office Thirteen candi-
dates wer,.
of sheriff
in the tield for the offie
Democratic Nominee In Fine , SI-\ \ l(HI \\\IS( \ 1^
Fettle; Democrats Open j III Vl> IN I VI'll \l.
Branch Headquarters; Allania. tin, Sept 2i; senator
Conferences Called Thom.i* I-: Watsuii of deorgin who
I died suddenly ut his residence in
Oklahoma City, Sept :•« Aft 1 j Washing!' ti. . arl> today, wa, one of
resting over Sunday and Monday J Hie mo>i
Walton, democratic nominee for gov- history of
Dis rict Coort
Filed 9 18 22. Alice Henry
Henry. Divorce.
Filed 9 20 22. Dorris Jacobson vs
Don L. Jacobson Divorce, alimony,
custody of child. j
i Filed 9 20 22. J W Chit wood.
Soon executor vs. K T Collins and J E
To .Collins. Attachment of crops.
1 Filed 9 20 22. First National Bank
of Guthrie vs. E. J. Allen et ux. P. E
Dooley, et ux. E W. Trapnell, et ux.
Foreclosure of Mtg. Lots 1-2-3 and
21 in block 46. G P. $1709 83.
Lenlne W. Hansel vs. George D
Hansel. Divorce, alimon. and cus-
tody of child.
John It Forbis vs. Susie Forbis
Divorse
Oli and Gas
Prairie O. and G Co. to Jeremiah .
B. Wingate et ux, release, 9 7 22
S 1-2. SW 14-17-3w
Gypsy Oil Co. to Jeremiah I'
Winirard et ux, release. 9 15 22. N
1-2, SW 14-17-aw.
halted, as farmers have not forgotten ' Conveyance
their exiierlence of a year ago, when1 U. A Henderson to Lllliam M.
much of the wheat planted then under Henderson, et al, W 1)., 9 11 22, {1.
similar conditions failed to apn lit. or , l.ots 3-4. block 5, Ixitigston.
where it did sprout came up to a poor j Robert II Vincent et al to Sarah
stand, and it was necessary later to A. Seyller, W. I).. 9 20 22. |3? oo.oo.
plow it up and plant to other cro.-s S 1-2. SW 9-15-4w.
There will be a material decrease in District Court
acreage unless relief comes from the j j t Walton Lbr. Co. vs. J L.
long drouth. ! orNrfal. Manertal iianVi lien,
Demand for mill feeds is on the in- i 23-24, block 44. Oak
crease, it is stated, as during the rres-.-ent
month of Auguat tax collected for mill I QUthrle pialli,lK Mm v, j
feeds was ilounble that of same month A!1(n lhref| hjg t> M
a year ago. Tills indicates that farr.i
vs have been forced to buy much
more feed than usual.
I resent thP attorney general, he an-
At the clo.ve last night two eai j n0unoed Friday 'I'reliminary hoar-
loads of cattle and one of bogs, a | (jle (jiree arrested Thursday
| lirge exhibit from the farm women at stillwater is get for next Wednes-
I and boy's and girl's clubs, as well as (laV
many individual exhibits, were taken |
on to he s ate Fair. ! The men arrested Friday are: F ('
President Rouse and Secretary Thompson, Roy Miller. Fay Fack.-r.
We,in and their abi,. corps of as Perry. Jones. Cliff Moore, B. T. Wal-
sistantt are to he congratulated upon
th.- success attained hv this first fair
under their management Ever •body-
helped to make ii go and it went
over strong. The people frun all
the community fairs joined hinds to
make the Guthrie fair a success and
they are ready to do it again of they
get full cooperation from Guthrie,
which of course they will with a
heart \ good Will.
ker. M A Abbott, John Gro i n. Frank
Davis. Jim Deedman, R W Norton,
E. E. McCormick. R W Wlnnlngoi
and H. R Shaw.
Uick Hickman, tbo fifteenth man
facing charges in connection with the
ase. was unable to appear before
E. W Doran, justice of thy pence,
with the others. He was in a Drum-
right hospital with a broken leg.
On< thing overlooked by the
chamber of commerce or the city
commissioners, or whoever has it in
charge, was the failure to f'y the
flags as is customary when unusual
events are staged Many comments
were made on thi< oversight
IIISV FIHEMAN IV
in m i> iv\iM or million
ng their wheat ground, according u
the weekly, crop resume of the sta e
board of agriculture, issued today.
This means that in the northern and
eastern sections of the state where
some rains have fallen, the ground
in good condition for working. Mm a
of it has been plowed and wheat sown,
which is coming up to a fair stand. In
the drier sections the work has bee i
fId 60.
Grow,
and Will Patterson. Mechanic's I
$24.65. Lots 1-2-3 and 21 block
famous figures in the
Georgia politics and during
four years was considered
by observers as wielding the strong
est political influence in the state.
p i st
TAKE BOCY FROM
Kail tv City, Sept. 26 —
f an unidentified woman
RIVER
The bod >
about 27
it'ifs "Id w i- taken from ;l e Mis-
souri river near Wellington, Mo. i ■ r
Monday, there were no marks n
ernor. was to resume h's tour of iin
state today at Tulsa He will vary
his program of two speeches a day . ■«
this visit «nd instead will spend thn
day's the oil capital and vic'iiltv.
making several addresses in point? i
and around Tulsa and In addition A
take part in a number of conference
The State Central Committee In
opened headquarters in Tulsa for tl
First Congressional district with j iiidiact
Newt Graham in charge The comnn* j \> .
tee will work in conjunction wiih tli i' >n ti
general headquarters at Oklahoma . (lothet
C'ty. Local and distri t committer imoith
were named during the pa ; week to ! man
assist Graham in the work. The san 1
plan was followed in the Second Dis- $100,000 COUNTERFEIT
trict with headquarters at Muskog e , PLANT SEIZED IN CHlCA
where J King i- in command. j Chicago Sept.. -ti. >V<ret -• rv
Everything has moved very tnoo.li- • n - sei/-d ov.r $10o,i ui.i in coi
ly with the campaign duriiv the pa-. 1 erfei: fed r i reserve hank notes
week and it now is functioning like a a r . d n print ng cn.d «-ngrav
well-oiled machine and State Chal.*- shop. Jtx Kov.ch. allen, d maker
HE WINS A MCE
WITH OEATO COMPETING
un Ki:\ siioors oki.viiom \
it m i: iioksi: u\\ \i:u
body,
tiad I
It wa..
official-
whicli
lound
Lexing
partly
water a
fitier-
«By The Associated l i> «)
I Abilene. Sept L'i;>-x„l.le Teller i
jokey, was relewseil on a five hundre 1
| dollar bond in justice court today t.n
ia charge of assault with intent 'O
j murder and hid Duchanan of Ok a
homa. owner of a ring of race hor- 's,
i Is in a local hospital w th u plst d
iMy iiie AsHiH-tateil Fr'*ii> j w tiiel in the stomach. as the i.^-e-. t
Jai k-oiiville, Fit . Sept -ti Alter of a difficulty at the West Tex
a race with death, accompanl. d «itli|ibi< morning
eli- nil thrills to last a man a lit- | — —
LINTZ STORE PROGRESSIVE;
BEST IS NONE TOO GOOD
F. W. Lintz Makes Another
Pilgrimage Into Marts of
East To Seek Bargains
For His Patrons
F. W. Lintz left last week on a
buying trip through central and east-
ern markets. Mr. Lintz is making
this trip when most buyers of the
larger stores have been to market
and have been home two weeks or
more. In fact, this is Mr. Lintz'a
second trip within two months, a
service whittfi tliei patrons oft this
great store must appreciate.
1 With the 1922 Anniversary sale of
the Lints store announced for the
' mar futute. new marchandise must
be on the shelves, and already the
express arrivals have begun lo swell
as a result of Mr. Lin z's purchase
The policy of the Lintz store is such
that the stocks must never be over
loaded, thus enabling the buy. rs t<;
' go into .market and buy necessary
un roh-andise. The public demands
"the new" and The Lintz organiza-
tion proposes to satisfy that demand
Christians Is the Favorite
Spoit In Unhappy Asia
Minor
The more Christians a Mohammed-
an kills the more w ne and women nc
will have in the next world, he think
He is taught hatred of Christian^
and crueity to them from infancy ac-
cording to the Reverend Doctor John
L. Brandt who spent eevcral week« n
Asia M'nor and in Smyrna and Con-
stantinople. l)r Brandt is a Mugkog e
pastor He was in Guthrie today.
"When in the very city of Smyrna,
and hi three other cities, Dr. Brandt
said, "as we walked toward the Turk
ish headquarter* stones were rolled
down the streets at us. One or cut
party desired to throw them back at
our assailants but the guide would n i
let him So great, be said is the.r
hatred of Christians and foreigner *
that that is their purpose m throwing
the stones If you were to oast them
back at them they would then thr -«
them directly at you and kill you.
Dr. Brandt recalled traveling with
an Armenian who had been educated
iu an American college and who w .a
an American citizen
On approach'ng Smyrna a Turkic i
soldier drew his sword and held It at
lhe Armenian's breast. When be
pulled back bis coat and showed h s
American papers the sword was
sheathed.
A Bibical City
'What,' the minister asked, ' won d
have happened bad you not been an
American?"
"I would have been cut in two," th *
man answered without hesitation
Smyrna, the Reverend Brandt ex-
plained is a city about 2*2f miles from
Constantinople and was built Too
years before Christ. It has one of the
seven churches mentioned in the Book
of Revelations and both Paul and Tim-
othy are mentioned as having preached
there.
In order to make the character of
people clearer Doctor Brandt explain. ,!
some of the customs an I some of b:s
experiences in Asia Minor.
Unique Fire Department
Constantinople, he described nfi
having narrow, dirty, fi thy streets,
with no sewerage. Mon rel dogs, of
which there are 1."9,000. are the gar-
bage collectors.
Smyrna is d'vided into four quar-
ters. Greek. Armenian, Mohammedan
and European. There are 200,000 ii m-
pi- in the city, 7.">,900 of which are
Greeks, 2." ,000 Armenians, a few Eu-
ropeans and the rest Mohammedans
When there is a fire in Constanti-
nople. he says the Pre department
tho o\o
Tulsa, Sept. 26. A court order in-
forming him tiiat he is one of the
heirs to an estate in Texas valued
at several million dollars, left by
his grandfather was received Thurs-
day by Loya Patterson, fireman at
he Central fire station.
A1 hough Patterson cou'd not be
localed last night for a state-
m n t the particulars. Fire
Wesley Bush said he unciers.ood that j
the estate consists largely of 1)0,000 J
cicres of land, half of which is in the j
oil dis rict and half in the
section in ihe
state. There are also thousands of he pi-id t i extinguish the blaze, if re-
cut on g<"to the house next
southern part of the burning and asks how much they will
bales of cotton, the a'cumulation
fiom crops that have not been mar-
keted for several years.
Patterson has obtained a leave of
dl>*.er ce from his job to go to Texas
in response to the court order.
VKTKKANS 01 4 IVII \\ \lt
i\ r>i;m skssion
fused payment the house is allowed
to burn.
In the hymn-b oks of the Christians
all songs with the word soldier or war
are cut out for fear this will incite the
singers te insurrection.
!> ("°r Brandt's party had a hard
time getting 'n Constaninople and aa
equally bard time getting out They
bought their way from p'ace to place.
Every Turk. Doctor Bradnt said, had
his hand out. palm up.
Florida Man, Bitten By Poison
j ous Snake. Has Many Tin ills
In Reaching Medical
Aid
inn Midi III KIM.
I II \111 \ Mil IN
11 \ \v.
fa r
(Mar
B ach
l \\Wil l i MS X MIMI'I
111 III l)W I | COM IKON
(By Tbe A*aoi'lu;:'d Presto
Birmingham, Ala., Sept, 26
ing
man Ed. M. Seanians is . tnfident no
merely of a vicotry at the polls in No-
vember, but of a smashing maj r t >
from Walton at the head of tbe tick
all down the line One or two repub-
lican papers have been se king to
spread the report that there w ; fri<
tion among the democrat at heod-
quarers, but as a matter of fact ther
has not been a campaign since .-I tf-
hood when all elements were workin ■
together more evenly and efficlnet y
tih-
was arrested. Th<
time. W I) Bacon today was <
the winner by hospital an h
Bacon drove alone to P«b'>
late yesterday ml whib tin • was
struck in the hand by a rattlesnake
Realizing that im iediai. pr. per at ■■ thorities of the district today were
';.t am was n i -ii\ he -tar ed f"1'i directed In an effort to trail alleged
.la c- nvill< . twenty in !•-< a* y dynamieps who are reported to have
wpi his motor wide open. I made an unsuccessful attempt last
lb.' en's speed was t oogreat for night to blow up an extra coal train
li rp curve one mile from Pablo 'on the Louisville and Nashvil'e rail-
(By The Assciateil Press)
\\ ichita Falls, Sept. '36 Bli n< y
Ric , nils. and Archie Richard on
2M. were shot through tbe abd'inen
during a charivari party twelve miles
from Vernon last night
About forty young people had gone
to celebrate the marriage of a couple
of the community and it was during
(By The Anmn i«tc<l Press)
Desmoines, la, Kept 26 twenty
thousand civil • war veioaaas, he| 1 won \N \\ III) Kll.l.l lk
lor the 56th annual en ampment. of
the Grand Army of the Republic,
I joined totlay in r. iitii.ui of evry
major unit of the liiion army .n the
civil war.
V ti rails of th" Iron brig id -, sur-
vivors of tbe wattle of Shiloh, tin
i remnant nt! war prisoners, colored
troops, naval veteran* and troopers
iwlio participated in any of the many
• tngage cents of tbe war ,'atbered t>
• fight cain in memory ill. conflict-
iii lhe Tennessee wilds, with Far
! ragiit at Mob 'e Bay or to recall th-1
(tragedies of Ai dersonville.
w iiu si wilt wixinn
SI I KS 1(1 I I \si; I ItOM ,1 All.
(By The AssoelHt<*d Preaa)
Miami, t-'la . Sept 26. Jud^e
j vv. Davis, of Palm Beach, was e
the demonstration that the young men peeled late today to annouiiiv I
were wounded by ai cident, ia believed | ,!e.'isi..n in the appeal of KiUar
blned efforts of military and civil au ' Th"sr «ere removed to the sanitarium (j,.rai)). n|-,.e. ,| wit . slayer tor re-
said tc be
be h^ orv
the
eatest siiu^le raid
department
AMERICAN HEN BREAKS RECORD
The American hen has set a new
record this year - perhaps we should
say layed. Twenty-two billion eggs
have been laved by her in 1922. The
Department of Agriculture has kept
count The egg consumption of the
United States is one-half egg a day-
raid a
chine turned over. Injuring Ba on
A rear wheel <olJajpsed and the ma-
few minutes later, a passing motorist
rescued Bacon and took up th^ race
with death Bacon's injuries receiv-
ed in the wreck were not serious.
t'rnon and phytsiclans cave out
hope of their recovery
SI \\IMI\(. 01 OOOU
<:\rsi:s nimm 01
( Mil O
on bond from the county jail
Arguments of both the state
peti ioiier were heard \1 s:. r-
OIL DEPOT OPENED IN IRELAND
Belfast. Ireland. Sept . 26. The
new oil storage depo; has been
road at Fulton Springs crossing, eight
miles from Birmingham.
5 CRUSHED TO DEATH IN MlNE
CUmrleston. W V"i . Sept. 2*5.—
Five workmen employed by the Glenn
Rogers Coal company at Glenn jwas jarred f om
Rogers. Wyoming county, were kill- | when the door
ed today when a hoisting bucket
loaded with stone, fell down a 70*V Inlaycil with the pelle
(Hv TTjp Associate Tressl
Serra Madre, Calif. Sept 26.—The
slamming of -a door indirectly
brought death to the two year old
child of Mr and Mrs W. L Hlbbs
A b ttle of poison, in ndltt form
helf to he floor
s si mini" i
der liild opened the bottl
Fritly based his hanea- corpus p
on the con ention that unless he
released illness from will h he I
suffered will prove fatal bflire ,
trfal next Januarv
m skxmi, ma i\ki: i\s ink
fBy 'flip Associnteil Press)
West Palm Beach, Fla., Sept. 26 -
Mrs. Grace Howell, charged with the
murder of her husband, Thomas S
Howell and who was found insane by
a special jury Saturady, was placed
in the slate asylum at Chattahoochee
today, where s he will be held pend
nig further orders from the circuit
"ourt according to Judge K. C. Davis'
ruling.
Mrs Howell is alleged to have
killed her husband at Miami in 191S.
She was on trial for the fifth time
when the Insanity hearing was
I orderf d.
BIG SI II I. CAPTl mil)
io ihi\ oi i M iats
A -."II I. lion still, Said to have
be-M the main source of supply for
. "1>- hi ti in i <v corn consumers was
' | i tur d by enforcement officers a
north of Edmond. In oklahoma
I county y. Sterdav. .it |s *ai(j to lie
largest still evej. captured in tho
'ate. More thn 2.5 0 gallons of
: nnsh and forty-nine gallons it
, 11 hisk\ w.re destroyed.
for
EUGENIC MARRIAGE LAW FOR
j ILLINOIS RECOMMENDED
(By The Associated Press)
OIL MAN TO QUIT PERSIAN JOB Chicago, Sept. 26.—I)r Herman N.
^ ,li! !°n s pt 26 Arthur ( 1 Bundesen, city health commissi nrr,
An j M "• P 11, ercnomU idviser and oil today made known his Intention to
.mi j I"' i the state dt p f r im nt. recomment Eugenic marricgo legisla-
r'-s.mi soon tn be. nie finan iai j tion to the general assembly next Jan-
r t.i the Persian gov. nment j uary The proposed law would pre-
l eader classified ads get results
time
for its HO mllilon people Thj> in- opened it Connswater Road; it is one 'foot sh"ft. crusbin.a them to death 'an(^ then left them sca-tenM on the
crease of eggs Is accounted for by de- w ri,j-wide chain to supply ves- Glenn Rogers is an isolated mining f'oor. There lie young'-r child -M ! oigh h. s made a study of the vent marringes unless both pnrf' S
creased consumption of poultry, mak- town fcund them and swallowed - vera! international petroleum situation. 'nrrsonted physicians' certificates,
ing prices for eggs comparatively low. inat " '
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Niblack, Leslie G. Oklahoma Weekly Leader (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 28, 1922, newspaper, September 28, 1922; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc120673/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.