Nowata Daily Star (Nowata, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 131, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 19, 1922 Page: 1 of 10
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State Historical Soc.
Capitol Building. °mP')
SUNDAY MORNING
W F. A T H F. R
Sunday
fair.
Stomata Daily
_ telegraph News Service of Associated Press and United Press—“Today’s News Today.”
BOOST
My attending the
Sunday y< hool of
your choi-e this
I morning.
VOL. XL—NO. 131.
TEN PAGES
NOWATA, OKLAHOMA, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1922
THEY PREFER DISHES
CIRCULATION TODAY, 1800 COPIES
Three Oaks, Mwh
I claring they would
Feb. 18.—De-
„ ------ “rather wash
dishes than argue over a paving con-
| tract,” and that “polities takes too
| much of a woman's time from her
duties as „ house wife,” Mrs. Maude
Arnold ami Mrs. Melen Ludke, the
two women members of the Three
Oaks city council, have resigned
Farmers’ Nation*! Bloc'MAY CALL HUSHES
Puts Organization j fQ TES1 !FY ON FACT
In Field
PLAN GREAT MERGER
By United Press.
Washington, Feb. 18.—The person-
al testimony of Secretary Hughes re-
gard ng the negotiations of the four
_ ) Pfw’-r Pacific treaty will be demand.
I 0(1 next week, if President Harding’s
Plan to Merge all Farmer Or- wer to the Hitehc>ek resolution is
unsatisfactory, Senator Hitchcock de-
clared toni<fht.
•Hitchcock is th? author of a resolu-
ganizations Under Party
Title of United Farm-
ers’ Bloc.
i < n r questing information as to the
negotiations which led to the treaty.
The resolution war adopted by the
senate and it is understood the presi-
|dent will reply Monday
l!.' United Ppm. ,
W RAILROADS RACE
a position in tr.e poktical parties of
America. Representatives of Amer-
ican farmers are determined to place
a new polUi.al organization ,n the
field, with a full list of candidates
for the presidential election !n 1024.
To Merge Farmer Organization
A. C. Townley, president of the
nen-partisian league secretly pre-
lent at the formation of the new
party, was reported as holding the
whip hand of the organization. The
organizers da m the bloc veil! have
a million members by election time.
Representatives at the meeting said
they Lelieved the bloc would be in
a posit on to dictate in the fanner-
labor meeting here next wlcL. La-
bor delegates, however, arc not ex-
pect d to form a third party, but will
work more or less in conjunction with
the bloc. H. Welis Andrews, a
farmer of Geneseo, Illinois, was
elected president of the bloc organ-
ization today. Plans were made to
merge members of the grange, the
Amerinn frum bureau, thtrdJnited
S’atos fruit growers and other farm
organizations into the panv. Na-
tional committeemen for ten western
and southern slates were elected to-
day.
Scrap Non-Par.izian League
Townley is understood to be pre-
pared to scrap the non-part sail lea-
gue and merge its followirg in the
new party, which is to be officially
known as the united farmers' national
bloc. He is said to oe d.Matisfied
with the extreme* radical element
which obtained control of the non-
partisan league ;n North Dakota.
Feed Calves and Pigs Skim Milk
By P. G. IIOLDgN
Field Director, Agricultural Extension Department
International Harvester Company
All oxperierjro and experiments show that four things are neces-
sary to produce the maximum profit in dairy farming.
Grow your own feed.
Save all waste.
Utilize all product to *the best advantage.
Improve your herd.
If we use the money we get for a can of cream to purchase oil
meal, cotton seed meal or bran with which to produce another can of
cream, there will be no profit left.
There is no better milk-produt ing fooi than alfalfa ard silage.
Alfalfa is as rich in protein as wheat bran, greetly reduces the amount
of high priced gra.’n food required, and help to maintain the fertility
of the soil. We cap grow our own alfalf* and make our own silage.
Silage saves waste.
J
If vve knew our hogs arc worth $7.50
would not sell them for $0.00.
per hundred pounds, we
Yet when we sell our butterfat and was e that portion of the food
value contained in the skimmed milk by not yoperly feeding it. we are
not gottirg a? m;ch for our dairy products as we should.
A hundred pounds of sk’m milk, when fed to hogs or calve? while
it i fresh and sweet and contains the animal heat, has a food value tnat
is equal to five c tncs the valjg of one pound of live hog.
Skim milk, fresh from the separator, is one of the best foods for
growing calves and pigs. It contains ull the necessary food elements
except butler fat, and a subst tute for that can be supplied at a small
cost by urinp corn meal, ground oats, cottor seed meal, etc.
By feeding the skim milk to calves or hogs, practically all the fer-
tility taken from the soil in the production of milk is returned to the
s< il. The butter fa!, the only part marketed—conains l.'ttle or no fer-
tility.
If I camo to you to buv a cow, would you sell me one of your best
animals? Or would you sell me one of your culls? The dairvman who
buys this cow never improves his herd. The only sure way to build up
your herd is to raise vour own calves.
Skim milk s the most economical food for growing calves, hut it is
important that it be fed regularly as it comes, fresh, warm and scyeet,
dij-cct from the separator. When fed that way it is always the same.
It is not sometimes sweet and sometimes sour, sometimes warm and
sometimes cold.
CABINET RESIGNS AGAIN
JUDGE K. M. LANDIS
QUITS FEDERAL JOB
FOR COAL FIELDS
— !
Parsons, Kans., Fell. 18.—The race I
is ten for the gate city to the new
OMahoma-Kansas coal fields, said to
be the largest in western United
States. Vinita, Ok!a.: Miami, Okla.;
Coffeyville and Parsons are entered.
The Missouri, Kansas & Texas is |
iunning a survey from Chetopa -south
fifteen miles into the heart of th>
new f.eld, preliminary to building a 1
blanch. The Katy has not promised ;
>o build the line, hut unofficial in-
formation is that this road will make I
any extndon necessary to get the!-------- _
business expected to come from iff __
PvH *-* —I-. I FOUR PRISONERS i SEVEN THEATRES
ESCAPE AT PURCELL ARE CONDEMNED
the railroad which will build from the
coal fields into that town. j - T *•' ' *-
( offejville s chamber of commerce j By United Press. By United Press.
!* "* .- Missouri Pacific for . Purcell, Feb. 18.—Four prisoners, Washington, Feb. 18.—Seven thea-
. . . t'n®,°n into the field, which is ; two of them negroes, escaped from tres in the national capital including
, y mles from that tjown. Towns | tjie county jail here today by tearing 'both movie and stage playhouses,
tii n k Frisco, from Cherryvala i up the jail floor. ; have been ordered closed by the Dis-
i < nrtur *! * C* u meeb‘n8s. 1° Pn- , Edwards and Herb Kaufman, | ’rict of Columbia commissioners as a
An „„ ™a; r» Broad to build from ths white men, were held as suspects consequence of the Knickerbocker
amont into the new coal field. - in connection with store robberies at disaster,
mil 6 ,*?ew ‘ ,e‘d 's about fourteen | Stratford. The negroes were held Building inspectors declared the
n«i'S » 30uth of Altamont. <>n charges of chicken thievery. heusos wore unsafely constructed.
Bot,, the Katy and PrfSCO go through
By United Press.
Rome, Fob, 18. Premier Uoliomi
.today presented to King Emanuel
the resignation of the Italian cabinet
for the second lime within a month.
Ai attempt will he made to form u
.coalition government.
______
SAYS FARMER IS
MADE THE GOAT
By Associated Press.
( hicago, Feb. 18..—The money
powers of this country, manipulated
by Mternational investment bankers
have decreed that the farmers be
made to hear the brunt of the war
fogts, Benjamin C. Mar h, manag-
ing director of the farmer’s national
council, told member- of 'ha holy
in session here today.
He declared that during the list
three years farmers have ioct twenty
billions through the deflation of
pr ces of farm crops, foreclosing
mortgages and high freight ra es.
OS'
MINERS TO STRIKE
IF WAGES ARE CUT
POSTER ROAD
TO BE BUILT
Commerce Commission
Grants Permission
to Begin Work.
NOWATA IS ON ROUTE
Will Build From Caney to
Vinita and Into New Coal
Fields—Believed Work
V/ill Now Start.
By United Press.
f i ve^'Cnd n-d*’ thojsandToaf“n'^n • ? i. ',.<!"tion build a" ^tension ten
Anril 1. tvin., „n „li n,1<M northwest of Vrmta to connect
By Associated Press.
Washington, Feb. 18.—The Kansas
4 Oklahoma Southern Railway was
authorized by the Interstate Com-
nerce Commission today to construct
i new line sixty-one miles tong from
’aney, Kans.. to V-inita, Okla., and in
'ddition to build an extension ten
this pqtnt.
This new field of immense area has
been worked desultorily for many
ISZi m..VL'te'iyL?P.er.at,,rs have l,ee„
By United Press.
Oklahoma City, Feb. 18.—Accord-
ing to Detective Chief Mullenix, H.
M. Jones, town marshal of Stratford,
KANSAS CITY MARKET
Chicago, Feb. 18.—Federal Judge
Kenesaw M. Landis today announced
that he had designed from the bench
♦and would devote his entire time to
his position of baseball commissioner.
Judge Landis will have virtually
completed seventeen years as judge
for the northern district of Illinois
when his resignation becomes effec-
tive March 1.
It has been generally understood
that Judge Landis would have resign-
ed some time ago, but for the at-
tacks made on him by Senator Dial,
of South Carolina, and the notoriety
brought through His handing of the
case of Willie Dalton, 17-year-old
b-.-.nk robber.
On the verge of designing when
these things came up, the judge
(hanged his plans, informing friends
that he “would nevtr res gn under
fire.”
Landis is one of the most widely
known federal district judges in the
country. He first attracted atten-,
t ion when he fined the Standard 01 j
Company twenty-nine million dollars, j
Tl.e fine was later remitted by the
supreme court. The judge was ap-
p .intcd baseball commissioner a year
ago at a salary of $42,500 yearly.
----—---
HARDING SIGNS MARKET BILL
.-I - ■ .....V »,xi««in nave oeeu jm. oorex, town marsnal of Stratford, . „ ,
1 . glean? at high figures with the confessed participation in store r b-1 ■' ar* ,ty! 8,' ' alt-ei r-'
intention of developing the field iberies there Thursday nicht and im i ™,,pts> •»005 steady; teers f>.60@
naid6 if?" 5 ,millinn d°9ars has been [plicated Joe Edwards and Herb Kauf"-, " « "nt hoif* S--'7*'®7-50-
Paul out in leases in the last year. ! man, who escaped from the Purcell , m ‘P^ - ,1A°1?0.i, s ronK:
tha^th m ^ mtt?burp jai1’ an<l Fr<‘(' Q’lbert. who is held in Iq'ooJ 975 |S-50®9’s0! 1
saj that the new field is the largest jai! at Pauls Valkv. J.75.
• half of the United -------
1 tates some of the veins measuring
1 more than five feet
'S'-
April 1, tying up all union mines in
the nation; was ordered by the united
mine workers’ convention, subject to
referendum vote, providing the mine
owners refuse tt> coninue th" exist-
ing scale of wages after that date.
Other demands formulated by the
convention, which the operators nvisc
meet to avert a strike call, arc for a
six hour day, a five day week, time
and a half pay for overtime, double
pay for Sunday and holidays and
w.ekly pay for miners.
The abolition of the automatic
penalty clause and the demands of
anthracite miners for a twenty per-
cent increase in pay was approved.
. Tl*3 convention adjourned tonight
in a wild uproar, leaving the wage
fight in the hands of President Lew s
By a margin of 'about 100 of its
3,825 votes, the delegates in the con-
vention of the united mine workers
here today refused to consider the
appeal of Alexander Howat for union
reinstatement of himself and oti or
expelled Kansas miners.
In effect the vote apnroved the \.
Dulsmn- of Howat and his follow r-
by President John L. Lewis, who ]
he acted because of r fusal of the
deposed Kansas leader to direct strik-
ers to return to work as ordered bv
the mim rs’ convention last fall.
TRAPP UNCERTAIN
AS TO CHRISTOPHER
More Mexican Revolution Talk;
Federal Troops Are Distributed
-- | By United Press. 1 Reports are in the hands of the
Fir it—;x . D l „ Paso. Feb. 18.—Rumors are military from the Mexican depart-
nv« 1 FreJsl flylnK wlde*y a»aln toniRbt in con- ment of justice, that a revolutionary
“ jee: feb- t18—E- J Dick necYon with the reported Mexican movement is to be launched simul-
" t ",Led t0- y that he Pre- revolution. Persons in close touch tanecudy at strategic ooints. inelud-
rPs,Rn;’t-on of Superior with Mexican affairs are inclined to ng Teotate, Tia Juana and Mexi-
' et i-topher to L‘eut. Cover- believe that reports of brewing rc- calia
no.' Trapp, in Oklahoma City, Mon- volts are grossly . xaggerated. j official cognizance was given the
___ a * . ! Planne<l uprising and it is feared by
Oklahoma City, F,.b 18 _Thp ByDUn,ted Ves®’ _ . . close observers, that it may be the
lieutenant governor said he is uncer ■ B,c'vns'4-le-Tuxas-Feb- 18.—Mex-1 most pretenti ous revolt launched in
tain as to what act C he wii" take *nnouncea t0;
on the res enation Ho nlght that the Obregon government ( -
ing, however ‘ke said that milht rnn' had d,stributed three thousand fed-
flict with the vfews 0/ Toll”"; eral. tr?0P^. at b-der points
Mexico City, Feb. 18.—Francisco
; ;r ---- erai troops at strategic border points x>ny, reo. tn.—rrancisco
a trade tour in Mexico.
BONUS MEASURE
MAY BE HELD UP
against revolution re-
ported brewing.
By United Press.
Washington, Feb
18.—President
By United Press.
Washington, Feb. 18.—The first
faint flickering of :<entimei«t for
postponement of soldier bonus legi
| Gen. Rosalio Hernandez, reported in
- rebellion in the state of Chihc-thua.
By tfnited Press. Back in 1914, Hernandez was Yil-
Mexico City, F b. 18.—Military la’s trusted aide, but fc. went ov;r
leaders, alarmed over the reports of to Carranza vvh n Villa and the lat-
a revolutionary movement along th?,ter SP-1- Villa now sees a chance
ertiie Mexican border, met here in to pay off the old score and his
hurried council today to discuss pre-1 emissary is said to have arrived in
cautionary measures for the northern ithu capital yesterday to obtain
MATHILDE WILL
SAIL NEXT MAY
By United Tress.
Chicago Feb. 18—Miss Mathilde
McCormick, 16, granddaughter of
io.m I). Rockefeller, today arranged
passage for Europe in May, tending
to confirm reports th*. she will marry
-lax Oser, a Zur ch riding mas’er,
tnrte timers her at?e.
datkilda McCormick live! |n Zu-
neh with her mother eight years
and there met Max Oser, r ling mas-
years cf age, with whom che
s reported in love. Sk* returned to
this country last fall.
Her father, Harold McCormick
and mother, formerly Kdi h Rockc-
feber, were recently divorced and
although she has i oi yet officially
decided whether the will cast her iot
with her father or the mo her, she
sttyed at her father’s ihccse here
lest night. \\ hen she returned from
Europe, she d"d not travel wuh her
mother but came on Phe ship with
her father.
---
vith a coal mining district.
The railroad, if it proceeds with
he construction’ of the line, the com-
mission also ruled will be allowed dur-
ug the first ten-year period of opera-
ion on the extension to retain all
•arnings which it may realize in ex-
es:-, ; t six percent. Under the
ran portation het, earnings in ex-
•e's of six per cent by railroads are
o be divided equally between the
■ 4 * er concerned and the govern,
pent except when special permission
s granted by the commission of the
ind given today to the Kansas &
Oklahoma Southern.
The above dispatch bv the Asso-
at d Press to the Star Saturday in-
dicates <ha* toe Kansas & Oklahoma
Southern railway, which has been the
’net hobby" of former Senator Sam
’orter. -;f Caney, for several jl is,
vill finally b» constructed. The ex-
(nsion of ten miles which is men-
.oned is to the new oral fields near
Central!*.
On his last visit to Nowata Col.
n<>rter informed the Star that the
only obstacle to the building of the
ead was the securing of permission
rom the Interstate Commerce Com-
•ission and now that this obstacle
ns been removed, it is believed that
(dual construction on the road will
begin at once. Col. Porter stated
bat the fund? for financing the road
were availahl and that the goad
I vonid surely be built.
Nb watn and Northeastern Okla-
I borua’s dream of an east and west
■•l end js aboti! t-i he fulfilled two
y-—witk the Porter road and the
iron os d electric line from Miami
o Pavhuska. With both of the*?
oads in operation. Nowata wi’l be the
best city -n Northeastern Oklahoma,
•nd we should do all in our power
n help the promoters in'the two pro-
jects.
TRAIL NEW CLUES
IN TAYLOR CASE
district of lower California.
“assignment” for his chief.
Harding today signed the co-opera- r .......-■ -miu- it-gi
the presence . a,on untu early summer, appeared
today. It had its inception among
middle western congressmen, par-
ticularly the Ohio group.
However, in the event the bill is
in shape for consideration by a re-
publican^ caucus within the time set
by Mr. Fordney, leaders said, it would
be passed prior to March 4.
“There is no power in the hojse
to head off the soldier bonus now,”
said a republican leader and that
seemed to be the view of most of
the members insisting upon its early
passage.
Democrats opposing the measure
insisted on the other hand that ob-
jection to the sales tax was so ,-tropg
n some quarters that if the plan
payments was
tive marketing bill in
of the agricultural bloc.
-(-*'■:--
POLICE BATTLE.
WITH BANDITS
By United Press.
Fort Worth, Feb. 18.—One man
was killed and two others wounded
in a gun battle between police and al-
leged bandits here today.
The fight followed the robbery of a
customer in a grocery store and the
holdup of a drug store. „ MUUrl«;IB |
The alleged bandit who was killed . of meeiing soldier
n« iHon tif inrl Yr A ft Ml!* Poll n# 1 ______
wn« identified as
Chicago.
Bell, of : p-e^ented squarely
‘ feated.
it might be de-
'We Have With Us Today1
CHURCHES—Regular services at the usual heur? in all of the
churches.
R05 AI. THEATRE—Will Rogers and Lila Lee in the Paramount
feature “One Glorious Day.” Matinee 2 o’clock. First night show
7 o’clock, second night show 9 o’clock.
NEW’ REX THEATRE—Louis B. Mayer presents “The Child
thou Gavest Me" also Mack S-nnett comedy “Hard Knocks and
Love Taps. Matinee 2 o’clock. -First night show 7 o’clock, second
night show 9 o’clock.
By United Press.
Los ATgcies, Feb. 18.--Police to-
day sought a taxicab driver, missing
[ s nce February 2, whom they believe
! h-ive been e. hired assassin in the
Taylor mysierv. Authorities are
said to have found several bullets
; of the same calibge that killed Tay-
lor, in the dirver’s room.
, lmmunty for Edward F. Sands
from prosecution on a charge of em-
bezzlement preferred against him
; last August by William Desmond
(Taylor, mjrdered film director, was
! promised by Thomas Lee Woolwine,
disti et attorney, provided Sands
| proves his innocence of the slaying
| of Talyor and can “untangle this
murder mystery.”
• Woolnire’s promise to the missing
former butler-secretary to Taylor
was. made in a letter addressed to
“Edward F. Sands, through the pub-
[ I ?hers”, in answer to a letter which
' purported to have been written by
! S'-nd*, stating that he knew whe
killed Taylor.
Warn. “Perk. Up”
1 Bv Daily Star Staff Correspondent.)
The little citv of Wann just now
' as a hright and rosy future. We
have three good chances of securing
;-n east and w. st railroad. The thing
hat enhances our ralroad prospect’
•note than anything elsf is the fart
hat ti e East and West railroad is
already graded through the town from
near Can y, Kans.. to the northern
Oklahoma coal fields around Cen-
tralia and Vinita. This railroad
•rade was buf'lt several years ago by
Col. S. M. Porter and associates of
Caney. The dump runs from Wann
n an easterly direction to Nowata
!h nee to Vinita and traverses the
ich coal fields which have recently
[ ’eer discovered and when developed
[ «1i be rerhpDS th’ largest wpst of
I river. The Frisco,
j vatv and Santa Fe railroads are just
J now in a mad race to get th{ first
nilroad bait into this coal field.
One or the other of these lines is
ure to grab this railroad grade
hrough Wann which has already been
huilt at a cost of about $10,000 per
mile. This is- the op-nion of a prac-
tical railroad^man, who has pur-
hased some lots in Wann on the
tr:ngth of her prospects.
-<S)--
WOMAN ROBBED
' OF DIAMONDS
Joplin, Mo., F b. 18.—Mrs. Jerry
Connor was forced to take off her
diamond ear screws worth $800 and
turn them over to a masked bandit
who entered her home early this
morn ng. Her husband in an ad-
joining room, slept through the rob-
bery. It was the third robbery with,
in less than a we:k in which the
victims were forced to give up
jewelry.
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Norton, J. T. Nowata Daily Star (Nowata, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 131, Ed. 1 Sunday, February 19, 1922, newspaper, February 19, 1922; Nowata, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1320436/m1/1/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.