The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 19, Ed. 2 Sunday, May 13, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
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5
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITALSUNDA Y MORNING. MAY 13 1906
SHALL OKLAHOMA AND INDIAN TERRITORY SEEK SECOND
OR THIRD PLACE IN THE ORGANIZATION OF THE IN."E. A.?
J
Shall Oklahoma Try tor the N. E.
A. Presidency this Year?
To 4he members of the Oklahoma and Indian
Territory Press Association*:
MANY INFLUENTIAL SUPPORTERS.
Out of over 600 letters I wrote to mem-
bers or 4lie N. K. A. I have more than 400
responses. A large majority of these re-
sponses are either pledges of support to me
or declarations of friendship and probable
support. Nearly all the members who do
things at the annual meetings are for me.
With the endorsement of Oklahoma and
Indian Territory, and with a strong dele-
gation to go to Indianapolis. I foel certain
that I will win. I know you will feel the
same way when 1 show you at Shawnee the
strong letters I have from members of the
x* E. A. in every State of the Union
... in cvcij ouiie ot uie union.
1 am a candidate for President of th3
National Editorial Association, at the elec-
tion to be held at the Indianapolis meeting.
I will ask the Territorial Association at
Shawnee May 18 and 19 Lo endorse my can-
didacy and elect a delegation to go to Indian-
apolis who will assist in landing this honor
for Oklahoma;
I had over fifty letters from promi-
nent members of the N. E. A. asking me
to be a candidate and 1 Anally consented
to the use of my name. <>ugh declaring I
would not make an active canvass. Later,
matters came up in such a way that I con-
cluded to actively seek the National Presi-
dency and 1 am now into the canvass with
vigor.
This is the llrst office of any kind I
have ever been a candidate for.
ient'l'n 'lir '.i"lle"n l or ,hi' d vice-pre.I-
aolHlv f. mi ?' °" lh's |,romla^ voted
solidly for the meeting in Oklahoma.
WHERE WAS NIBLACK
WHEN VICTORY CAME?
Of course, Mr. Nibl.ck had no hand in
this promise and did not kno* of it .t the
time, for the convention selected Guthrie at
3 o'clock and adjourned sine die at 4 o'clock
and Mr. Niblack did not arrive in St. Louis
until 8 o'clock in the evening! THOUGH 200
EDITORS AND 300 CITIZENS OF OKLA-
HOMA Ai.D INDIAN TERRITORY, WITH
THE GOVERNOR AND HIS STAFF, TWO
BANDS AND TWO SPECIAL TRAINS,
WENT TO ST. LOUIS WHOOPING IT UP
FOR OKLAHOMA, MR. NIBLACK STAYED
£u.=H£ME AND DID N0T APPEAR ON
THE SCfcilE UNTIL VICTORY WAS WON
AND JUBILATIONS WERE IN ORDER!
AND WOULD HELP NONE AT HOME
JUNKIN WAS BEATEN ONCE.
Hie most active candidate against mo,
Is John E. Junkin. of the Sterling, Kansas,
Bulletin. Mr. Junkin last year, was execu-
tive committeeman for Kansas and at Guth-
rie he was elected first vice-president, over
V W. Folsom, of the Gazette. Hope. Ark.,
who was present and thought he ought to
be promoted from second to first vice-presi-
dent.
Mr, Junkin was first vice-president at
the Denver meeting and a very active can-
didate for president. He was beaten by
Joseph B. Maccabe, or Boston, who was
taken from the fioor.
In the twenty years history of the asso-
ciation, only six first-vice presidents have
become president, and one of these suc-
ceeded to the presidency by the death of thy
president
ONLY ONE THIRD VICE-PRESIDENT
EVER PROMOTED TO PRESIDENCY.
In twenty years, only one third vice-
president has ever been made president-
Major \V. W. Screws, whose ability and pop-
ularity would have any time made him pres-
ident regardelss of any position he had held-
and Major Screws, at Omaha, was jumped
from third to first vice-president.
SOME FACTS ABOUT "ROTATION."
I point out these things because Mr.
L. Niblack of the Guthrie Daily Leader,
| claims he should toe endorsed by Oklahoma
for promotion from third to second vlce-pre<-
; ident, based on an "unwritten law" of the
association of rotation from third vice-presi-
dent to the presidency. Mr. Niblack knows
no such rule exists. He knows the associa-
tion has always, and emphatically, declared
against such a rule. Mr. Niblack limited
his ambition to the third vice-presidency
when he accepted this place, based on the
history of the association. He had no idea
of asking promotion until Mr. Junkin wrote
him that It might be to hly, Nlblack's per-
sonal disadvantage* to have me made presi-
dent, and the way to defeat me was to come
out for promotion of all the vice-presidents,
getting the Oklahoma delegation for Niblack
for second vice-president, instead of Gre*r
for president and thus aid Junkin to de-
feat Greer.
NIBLACK LATE IN ANNOUNCING.
I came out for president more than six
month, ago. Mr. NlMa.k did not announce
until a month ago-after Junkin mw the
drltt of the responses he Kol from his letters
to the members and knew the onlv w iv to
heat me was to discredit me at home bv
failure to get the Oklahoma delegation
With this, Mr. Niblack readily fell in
KANSAS WAS AGAINST OKLAHOMA.
The Kansas delegation voted at si
Louis against bringing the N. E. A. meeting
to Oklihnma. When I went to Indianapolis
In January, 1906, to attend the executive com
mlttee meeting for Mr. F, G. Prouty our
executive committeeman, who was a mcm'.Vr
of the legislature and could not gel away,
the first thing I learned was that John K.
Junkin, the executive committeeman from
Kansas, was urging the committee to
change the place of meeting from Guthrie
to Anbury Park. N. J. He wos declaring
there was nothing to *ee In Oklahoma and
that a meeting here would be a dismal
failure; that nobody would come
The committee was overwhelmingly on-
poaed to hi, p|„n ,lnd jllnkln flil|,,,t
purpos". Having taken no part in getting
he convention to Oklahoma, or in keeping
Mr v'lhi !! arranging for Its entertainment,
lnta for entering '
Oklahoma " Kt"m' t0 ' *"
Twenty days before the N. e. a. meet-
ing In Guthrie, when my wife lay at the
point of death and i could not leave my home
I Phoned Mr. Niblack. who was second on
committee, and asked him to head the
finance commtttee and complete the raisins
Of the money for the entertainment. He
said he would. When I came down town a
week later, I found he had been out with the
committee less than three houra and raised
less than a hundred dollars 1 took charge
of t and with the other members of the com-
mlttee, raised the money. Though a mem-
er of the IIwince committee he would do
nothing in the solicitation. Any member of
finance committee will verify this.
HELPED NONE WITH JHE RAILROADS.
And though Mr Niblack was a member
of the transportation committee he never
SiXVLT," LraVeled 11 ,nllc ln arranging
. d r rallroads to get the delegates to
d from t.uthrle and to Portland as we
Pledged at St. Louis. Mr. Prouty and I
.ToT re«Uru,Vtl?" " °Ur °W" anJ "id
not rest until every agreement for trans-
the executTvS Wr',""B for Presentation to
z,r:z\ meitinK 1,1
were mad. H TS'"" a"angements
lie made. Hovi,g declared in his paper
be">re Oklahoma decided to
?h. N E Amd"t",31,t,,i" ,0 a"elr,pt *° br"">
ire in. t. A. down here was a b.g mistake
'onststently stock to it. I doubt if the,,
to ar,Vu 0klahom<> who did so little
tain It oonv«"'ion here or less to enter-
tain ,t after we got it, than did Mr. Niblack.
HIS CANDIDACY A DISCOURTESY.
<he, invention was here he com-
bers of th" discourtesy which the mem-
bers of the convention mel among the
wonderful hospitality they received in Okla-
homa When Mr. Derwln. who was not a
delegate or a newspaper man, pres-nted the
name of Mr, Niblack. for third vicc-pre.i!
nt, among the delegates, it was viewed
lion l?!,'"1 th" of the conven-
tion fot its entertainment, it ls not usual
hev faTOr °< your guests while
ItJ,n , under your rou'—and especi-
bnt thV0r8U , dem:lnd oome from a mem-
the family who had not invited the
kuests and who had done nothing t„ make
he r stay comfortable and pleasant. Mr. Nib-
lack s candidacy did not meet the favor of
ihly. oklahoma delegates, who felt
that the host 'should have the courtly to
give all the honors to outsiders. And they
also felt that the promise of Mr. Prouty
end the Oklahoma delegates at St. Louis to
h mT , aS' wh" «« a candidate
should be kept. Hut, notwithstanding, Mr.
a lb lack p resisted in his candidacy, getting ..
lawyer, Mr. Roy Hoffman of ('handler, to
speak for him on behalf of oklahoma,-and
Hoffman neither a newspaper man nor
a delegut,. and with ti# right of the fluor
to make the speech only by the courtesy of
the convention.
grounds of an "unwritten law" of the isbo-
ciation for advancement of vice-presidents,
ENDORSED BY LEADER OFFICE.
Mr. Niblack claims that the Logan
1 ounty Press Association endorsed him.
lie means the Leader office endorsed him.
There were nineteen who were present and
entitled to Join the l^ogan ('ounty Pn>ws
Association; seven from the State Capital
office, three from the Leader office, one from
the Coyle Clipper, one from the Mulhall
Enterprise, one from the Guthrie Search-
Light, one from the Crescent City News, one
from Home Finder, one from The Hatchet -
< arrie Nation's paper—three correspondent*
for outside papers. The qualification was
fixed" by motion to be one "actually engaged
in editorial or repo>torial work on a news-
paper or periodical In Logan County, or a
correspondent of a newspaper having a rep-
resentative located in this county."
FOURTEEN NIBLACK "PADS."
There were thirty-three Joiners of the
association. The other fourteen were "pad-
ding' put in by Niblack to endorse him.
The Leader had three—Mr. Niblack himself.
Otto Beckmeyer. managing editor; and Miss
Nellie Bunyan, city editor,—who were elligl-
ble to Join: and yet tltere were ten Joined as
representatives of the Leader's editorinl
force. Mr. Nlhlack's lender on the floor was
Henry Derwln, who travels for the Leader
hook-bindery and never wrote ten lines for
the paper in his life. The acme of ridicu-
lousness carrve. however, when Mr. Jolly,
foreman of the Leader Job department, came
into the room, his hnnds and face covered
with the nobility of Ink—to vote for Nib-
lack; Endlcott, a Leader linotype operator,
also voted.
THE ENDORSEMENT A FARCE.
Of course, the endorsement was a farce,
and the man who would thus illegitimatire
such :iii organization, Is entitled to no credit.
The State Capital was entitled to seven mem-
berships- active men on the editorial force—
and this is all It attempted to have Join the
Logan County Association.
SAYS HE WILL GO IN AUTOMATICALLY
Mr Niblack s.iys the mere fact that he
is a vice-president will "rotate" him auto-
matically, into the N. E. A. presidency. He
really believes no such thing He can read
history better than that. This Is only a
blind to mask his support of the Kansas man
ugainst one of his own State. He is not
so foolish as to ask in good faith the Okla-
homa Association to throw over the very
strong possibility of getting the presidency
this year, for the chance to "rotate" him in-
to it three years from now!
He knows if Oklahoma does not get the
presidency this year, it will never get it.
THE RECORD OF "ROTATION."
Let us examine the rotation question.
'1 lie officers elected at New Orleans In 1801
vice-president, lie was elected by acclama-
tion Docs this look like there i« an un-
written law" for the advancement of vice-
presidents?
The officers elected at (Suthrie were:
President—John Dymond. New Orleans,
llrst Vice-l'resident—John E. Junkin
Kansas.
Second Vice-President II B. Vamer
North Carolina.
Third Vice-President—Leslie a'. Niblack
Oklahoma.
ROTATION WILL NOT BE CONSIDERED.
Viewing this record, do you think there
will be any "rotation" at Indianapolis? Some
vice-president may go up, but It will have
to be purely on his merits, not on "rotation."
Mr. Bumgartner of California and otheis,
have already announced tor llrst vice-presi-
dent over those holding vice-presidencies
now.
Mr. Junkin cannot talk rotation, for ha
wns made first vice-president over Folsom,
Kline and Varner, who, under the rotation
theory, should have all gone up. And if Mr
Niblack depends on "rotation" his chance to
he president Is only one In twenty—for only
one, third vice-president has been made
president since the association was organ-
ized.
SHOULDN'T OKLAHOMA
TRY FOR FIRST PLACE?
Don't you think, then, that Oklahoma
should try for the llrst office of this dis-
tinguished organisation, rau.er than for the
third place, with even rhls Improbable
and the first place so remote by "rotation"
as to be practically impossible?
I am in the contest to win and I am
sure I wdll win if the Oklahoma Association
,™"'Sf.n.d t0 Indianapolis a strong delegation
favorable to me with resolutions of ap-
proval.-thus adding to the influence alreadv
being exerted for me b> many of the olde.t
and best workers ln the association.
IS HE A MEMBER OF THE
OKLAHOMA PRESS ASSOCIATION?
Mr. Niblack I, |n no wise entitled to
any support from the Oklahoma Press Asso-
ciation, He has attended very few of Its
meetings and taken no interest m",," -
doubled tr h *"* h" '"at 1
I thei.of W"s eve" " m<™ber now and
M N,r:r0" 10 ",e s-*"tary asking If
M. Niblack was on the membership roll
"r<'sent' Mr- "'""diet replied as follows:
m , i "°,bart' 0kla-. April 30, 1906.
Mr. Niblack has paid no dues since I
have been Secretary and the books show
that HE IS SEVEN YEARS IN ARREARS,
year ago, at the request of Mr. Dsrwin
o'n Nil, ,n"ury *3.00. I drew
Nib. for the money but the draft
r "IT, pa!f- ' " thi* lime holding
the sack for that $3.00."
Fraternally youra,
OMER K. BENEDICT,
Secretary."
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NIBLACK IGNORED OKLA-
HOMA'S PLEDGE.
At St, Loul«, Mr. Prouty. who Initiate
the movement to ,h, convention to Okla
homa. In order to get the vol.. or the T,,,,
rtelewtlon, prom'sel. with the consent th,
Oklahoma delegation, that Oklahoma „ould
.uppor. Will H Mayes, of the ■rownwwd
NIBLACK WOULD NOT BE LOYAL.
When he heard that Mr. Niblack was
out lor third vice-president, Mr Prouty
went at once to Mr. Niblack. In front of tlio
Royal Hotel, and told him of the promise nt
St. Umis to the" Texa-s delegation, for Sir.
Mayse, for third vice-president and that the
Oklahoma delegation had ugreed to fulfill
the pledge and second Mr. Mayes nomina-
tion and do all possible to put him In Mr
Nt black Obstinately refused to pull out.
though plead with on the ground that
It would be outrageously unji-st to Texas,
and put an unmerited reflection on the Okla-
homa delegation which was for standing
by Texan, us agreed.
MAYES HAD A RIGHT TO OUR SUPPORT
Mr. Mayes had a right to expect that
Oklahoma would keep its promise—and our
delegates wanted to keep It. In a letter
to me dated April 14, 1908, Mr. Mayes says
about this:
You may remember that as a special
compliment lo me, our delegation put me up
last year for third vice-president, thinking
there would be no opposition- land having
the pledge of Oklahoma) -until at the last
moment, Niblack came out, when of course
common courtesy to the Territory i,s host
of the association, demanded his election
The Texas delegation did not charge this to
you. but 1 do not know what obllgatlmn they
may have felt were Incurred by othem by
reason of my treatment at Guthrie ■ • .
Texas will feel like giving you unanimous
. which I hope we may be able lo do "
HE HAS NO N. E. A. SUPPORT.
Mr. Niblack does not assert any support
whatsoever among the N. E. A member, for
Ills promotion. He says three States have
endorsed Junkin and general rotation He
Is mistaken. Junkin has not hern endorsed
l)y a single State and by fSw individual
members. It Is not usual for the States to
declare for anyone until they get to the
fcnnual meetliiK
Mr. Niblack puts hi* . latms only on the
President—Albert Tozier. Portland, Ore-
gon.
First Vice-President—J. W. N. Burket,
Jackson, Tenn.
Second Vice-President—F. R. Oilson,
Benton Harbor, Mich.
Third Vice-President—Ernest H Pierce
Revere, Mass.
ALL TURNED DOWN AT HOT SPRINGS.
At Hot Springs in 1902, every vice-presi-
dent elected at New Orleans was defeated.
Her* are tin officers elected there:
N YPr,'sldent—Garry A .Willard, Booneville,
First Vice-President—P. V. Collins, Min-
neapolis, Minn.
Second Vice - President — Gomer T.
Da vies, concordiu, Kan.
Third Vice-President—'W. W. Screws,
Montgomery, Ala.
IN 1903 AT OMAHA.
At Omaha Major Screws was advanced
from third to llrst vice-president over Gomer
T. Dftvies, .who was second. P. V Collins was
made president. F R Oilson ran uKainst
Collins for president, declaring he was llrst
vue president at Hot Springs and unjustly
turned down there, which now entitled him
to election, but Collins was elected. So the
officers elected at Omaha were:
President—P. V. Collins, Minneapolis,
Minn.
First Vice-President—W. W. Screws,
Montgomery, Ala.
Second Vk e-Presldent—Geo. C. Wood-
ruff. Litchfield, Conn.
Third Vice-President—C. W. Robbins,
Old Town. Maine.
ALL BUT ONE VICE-PRESIDENT
DEFEATED AT ST. LOUIS.
At Si. Louis in 1904 all the vise-presl-
dents were defeated for advancement except
,ih- first vice-president, though Robbins,
third vice-president, made a gallant ti^ht and
lost by only a few votes. The officers elec-
ted at St. Louis were:
^ President W, W. Screws, Montgomery,
First Vice-President—W. W. Folsom,
Hope. Ark.
Second Vice-President—Wm. J Kline,
Amsterdam, N. Y.
Third Vice-President—H. B Varner,
Lexington, N. C.
PRESIDENT TAKEN FROM
THE FLOOR AT GUTHRIE.
At ihe Guthrie meeting, H. B. Varner,
one of the most popular members of the
association, was the only vice-president ad-
vanced John M Junkin—who urges Mr
Niblack to talk "rotation"—went over the
heads of two vice-presidents and was elected
fli*t vice-president, though Mr. Folsom was
present and li a stalwart member with more
tha > ample ability for the presidency.
John Dymond was taken from the floor
and made president. He was executive com-
mitteeman from Louisiana, and rvever was a
WAS DISQUALIFIED FOR
THIRD VICE PRESIDENT.
♦ h ,he c'bn8titutlon and By-laws of
the National Association, to be qualified to
hold an office, the person must be a member
in good standing of some Stale or District
;is,«(K'iati.iu ,i till la t im | uith the N. K A
When he was elected, Mr Niblack was not
a member in good standing of the Oklahoma
1 ress Association and was therefore Ineligi-
ble to hold an office
The fact Mat he has not paid his due*
for SEVEN YEARS proves that he thought
the association of no value to h.m and that
he did not desire to longer belong to it
If he is now on the membership roll it Is
only by courtesy. Under the by-laws he
should have been dropped long ago.
He is not now a member in good stand-
ing and yet he asks the association to en.
dorse him!
EVERY OTHER MEMBER
MORE ENTITLED TO IT.
1 here w. < not a member of the associ-
ation who was not more entitled -to a vie -
presidency than he, If Oklahoma was to be
honored. But all the other members ob-
served the proprieties of host and asked
nothing of the guests.
1 do not believe I have rnisHt'd a meeting
of the association since it was organised.
1 have enjoyed Its fraternity and appreolate
its great value to myself-and all member*
You mad.' me your president by acclamation
in 19(14 and authorized me to extend the offi-
cial invitation of the Oklahoma asportation
lo the N. H. A at St. Louis to meet in Okla-
homa in 1905 mi honor 1 greatly appreci-
ated ami fulfilled to the best of my ahilit.v
Our victory at St. Ix>uls was a triumph for
the association a large majority of whoso
members were there. working Ilk" beavers.
Mr. Niblack took no part In the prelimtnars
Work Hu t u - ,u home when ilu hot con-
test fur the meftlng was on at Si. Louis
and deliberately tried to discredit this great
work of the association,
HE SHOULD BURY
PERSONAL GRIEVANCES.
Mr. Mblai k and I have alway, beett
personal friends and I can see nothing m
our past personal 4>r professional relations
Which would warrant him in being so un-
putrlqji is to support Mr Junkin, a Kan-
sas man. over one from Oklahoma.
I t;.ke if that if Mr. Nibtack has In his
,own Imagination any grievances which he
deems sufficient to prompt him to su< h a
course, that hi* fellow editors of the Okla-
homa and Indian Territory Press a*<m., ia-
tlons will have more Interest In putting
Oklahoma st the „f the National A*m -
' iatlon than In uMHtitiK Mr. Nlbla< k to
avenge some narrow and baseless prejudh e.
• Fraternally,
PRANK H. OREER.
Guthrie, Okla., May 2, 1906. '
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 19, Ed. 2 Sunday, May 13, 1906, newspaper, May 13, 1906; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc126138/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.