Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 55, Ed. 1 Monday, October 18, 1920 Page: 1 of 8
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There is a force that eternally
makes for right.—Carlyle.
Oklahoma Leader
f ull Leased Wire United Pretn Report—Member Federated Press.
HOME EDITION
Vol. 1—No. 55
OKLAHOMA CITY. OKLAHOMA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1920
PRICE, THREE CENTS
\
MOVE ON FOR CO-OPERATIVE MM DEPOT
Miners' Demands Proven Justified LOtoconsumer
TENCT
Nb cum
[ STRIKE
COST IE
Forty Per Cent Increase Won During War Rendered Value-
less In Face of 200 Per Cent Increases In Necessities
—Salt Meat Rises 337 Per Cent.
BY OSCAR AMERINGER.
McAlester coal is sold in western Oklahoma at $18 per ton.
Ten bushels of wheat for one ton of coal is pretty steep,
isn't it? And, of course—"it's all the fault of the miners.
These fellows have been striking and striking and whenever
they got their increase the poor consumer in Elk City or Altus
Lad to foot the bill."
To be sure if one judges the income of the coal diggers by
the selling price of coal, these miners must be getting rich
fast. But the trouble is that the price of coal bears not the
remotest relation to the income of the coal diggers.
The coal miner i^ not getting rich slow or fast. In fact,
lie is poorer than ever and looks it.
Before the war the miners in this locality received 85 cents
for digging a ton of coal. Since then they received two "wage
hikes.'' The first "hike" brought the digging price up to $1
and the second "liiko" fetched it to $1.25. That's what the
miner is getting now—one dollar and two bits for digging a
ton of black diamonds.
So he is getting a little less than one bushel of wheat out of
the ten bushels paid by the fawners around Elk City and Altus.
Miners* Increase Valueless.
Some one in making an awful kill-
ins. but you can bet your boots it
Isn't the miners. As I said before.
this poor devil is poorer than ever.
which means he is several degrees
poorer than Job's turkey, or a mouse
in a deserted church.
Out of the golden tidal wave of
war prosperity a 40 per cent wage
inerease trickled down to the miner.
From this forty cents the miners
spent a dollar to contribute to the
"war prosperity"—of others.
Before me are some statistics <•< n-
piled by John Wilkinson, president
of the miners' union in district 21,
showing the increase in the cost of
FARMERS URGED TO
HOLD WHEAT FOR $3
PONCA CITY, Okla., Oct. 18 —
All farm organisations in the
United States and Canada have
been asked to co-operate in the
request by the National Wheat
Growers' association to suspend
delivery of wheat from farmers to
markets until the price of good
wheat is stabilized at $3 per
bushel at the terminal market.
The request was made in a
proclamation issued by officers
and directors of the wheat grow-
ers' nssoication It is alleged that
$3 a bushel is the cost of produc-
tion on a ten-year average yield
per acre.
I<ocul and county wheat grow-
ers' association. It is alleged that
ify this action at meetings to In
held the afternoon of October 23.
Striking Newsies Appeal to Public
As Imported Boys Take Their Jobs
Hustler Brought Here From
Fort Worth Declares Situa-
tion Was Misrepresented to
Him By Employers.
3
ANK
iTflAlES
Strikebreakers arc being imported
by the Times to break the newsboys'
strike, it v. as said by union members
Monday.
Two hoys were brought in from
Fort Worth, Texas, and more are on
their way.
As in the case of .the carpenters'
strike, the Imported strikebreakers
claim that the situation in town was
misrepresented to them.
"They told us the strike was
over," one of the boys said. "If I
had known that there was a strike
on. I would not have come. I knew
that a strike had been on, but they
said it was over. They said 'that
they would not take the boys back
again. I don't want to break up the
newsies' organization. '
Joe Morel, president of the News-
Iboys' union, fcnld that the boys were
J optimistic, and that there would be
' no violence. He said he hoped soon
to havt the new hustlers with bun.
F
Eli
USE
Wilkinson Asks Grave Delib-
eration of Facts Presented
at Convention.
Flour, 100 lbs....
.$2.20
$6.15
Salt meat, lb
. .08
.35
Kraut, can
. .08
.20
Irish potatoes, bu
. .00
3.45
Overalls
. .85
3.(Ml
Work shoes
. 1.50
4.25
Coal shovels ....
. .50
1.50
llnnnnzn,
Arkansas*
1014.
1919
Farmers Claim Financiers Are
Cornering Money They
Need for Crops.
WASHINGTON. Oct. 18. — (By U. j
P.)—Charges that a small coterie of
Wall street bankers fix money rates
so that value of liberty bonds has
declined and legitimate business has
been stiL'ed, will be gone into by
farmers demanding loans to finance
their crops, their representatives
said today.
The charge was made by John
Skelton Williams, comptroller of tin-
currency. who said that the small
group flxec be rate for demand
money shortly before the stock ex-
change opens each day and the rate
thus fixed is reported as the rate
for that day.
'This, he said, tends to defeat the
purpose of the federal reserve act,
which looks to an orderly distribu-
tion of money.
Farmers believe that Williams'
statement may explain why they are
unable to get more money for legitl-
j mate crop financing, despite the as
AMONG THE
DIZZIES
.60
Irish potatoes, bu. .90
Dry Salt belly 15
Pink salmon 10
No.3 can tomatoes .0S £
Sugar 08
Star bacon 30
Corn No. 2 08 %
Arbuckle's coffee. .25
Getting l.ess in Heal Money.
These are just a few samples. The
same rise took place in every coal
mining town in this district. Rut.
they are enough to make the much-
heralded forty-cent wage hiks look
like thirty cents, including a coun-
terfeit quarter.
The cold hard fact is that the
the miners are eating less food,
KANSAS I I TV, Mo. Vet,
times are truly hard. Go hers
toda) were to lose their cuddies.
The truaut officer hath said*
"Disperse, ye cuddles !**
Caddy muster* of aii clubs
have been forbidden to hire boys
under 14 years of ut?e and those
iMdween 11 and 1(5 years may
caddy only upon showing per-
mits from purer,ts.
ATHENS - King \Icxamler
had a fair nlglit and is limiting
satlst'actorj progress, a bulletin
from his physician said. The
king is suffering from infec-
tion, the re-iiit of the bite of a
pet monkey.
MUSKOGEE, Oct. 18.—The special
i convention of representatives from
living In mining camps during the the 131 local unions In District 21 of
war. Here Is what happened to the the United Mine Workers of America
price of a few of the prime necessi- met here at the Y. M. C. A. building
ties of life: at 10 o'clock in pursuance to a call
Anderson, Oklahoma* by John Wilkinson, president of the
r/r | district, to discuss measures to amel-
1913. 1920. Inc Ijorate the conditions in the district
207 ! that have resulted In numerous "out-
337 hiw" strikes this summer.
15<> The immediate cause of most of ' sertion of the federal reserve board
28'. the trouble is i^e dissatisfaction of that it is doing everything possible
253 I tonnage workers as a result of the i to aid the farmers.
143 j $1.60 a day increase granted day! Williams' charges follow a state-
200 workers in August, without a corrc- j ment by the board in which it indi-
sponding increase being granted cated that its policy of shutting off
% i them. The tonnage workers are ' money for speculation would be con-
Ine. j working under a contract signed tinued. This statement also said
$2.40 167 April 1 of this year for a period of that the loans for farmers had in-
.30 lOti I two years. | creased.
.30 200 | Contract Signed Under Protest. Williams' charges tend to the con-
.25 200 Leaders of the union told the op- elusion that the setting of ,high; I I'MMIXGS IN KANSAS.
200 erators when the contract was money rates Is putting legitimate in- TOPEKA, Kan.. Oct. 18.—Homer
100 signed that they were signing it un- dustry out of the money market and j S. Cummings will speak here tonight
135 der protest and as a result of du- favoring speculators who will pay on the league of nations. He will
100 I ress, not because they thought it the high rates. | speak Tuesday night in Wichita.
just. They told the operators ■
that as soon as the pressure of war I
vas removed that the men would
Boys Appeal to Public
Which f m
PAPERS"
AIRlf
Sl<iiwilfU>5* ||||S
WHICH
PAPiiff
Ah>£
iFAIRi
L
Canadian County and Wheat-
land Producers Negotiate
With City—Commissioners
Favor Farmers' Plans.
British Mounted Police Club
12,000 Rioters In Down-
ing Street.
BRITISH COAL STRIKE
BRF.AKS COTTON PRICE
NEW YORK. Oct, 18 Fear that
lirttlsh coal strike may involve
other industries caused heavy
selling on the cotton exchange
here today. Prices broke 30 to
40 points at the opening with all
options at or near the 18 cent
level except spot month, which
at 19.46. was off 3 points.
Shortly afterward short cover-
ing and buying by Liverpool
caused a recovery of 20 to 40
points.
It was predicted that half the
Manchester spindles would be
Idle by the last of the week.
Farmers belonging to the Canadian
County Dairy association and Wheat-
land milk producers were taking
bteps Monday to establish a central
distributing plant in Oklahoma City
to market their own milk.
Mike Donelly, commissioner of fl-
uauce. said Monday morning that he
believed the farmers are Justified f*
.their demands and that ho would Ifc-
j vestlgate the situation thoroughly.
Ora Kovse, A. I«. Castle and
Charles Schult2. three dairymen from
I El Ileno, were in Oklahoma City to
negotiate with city officials on a dis-
tributing plant. They tfere sent by
the Canadian County Dairy ausocla-
I tion.
"We are standing pat," Koyse said,
"The Canadian county farmers joint-
ly prtMiuce about 9,000 pounds of but-
jterfut. They have not been selling
fyHlCfi | %
paperst■ f
AR3r~ |
FAIR I
SEATTLE*—.lack Mundy, presi-
dent of the Central Labor Coun-
cil, lias extended a n >el chal-
lenge to Trunk Turco, council
delegate from the bluulismiths'
union. Following a brief pas-
snge-at-nrms between the two hi
the progress of u council meet-
ing, Mnndy invited Turco to
meet him at nny time or place
und disrobe In-order to deter-
mine whose clothing was supe-
rior in the matter of union
lubcls.
The striking newsies evidently believe In signs. They picketed Main
street carrying a banner which asked the public to buy only fair papers.
The boys sold Leaders.
When the public, learns the truth, the boys declare, it will not buy
non-union papers. From right to left the youngsters iQ the lower picture
are: Pleasie Dodgen, "Shorty" Shull, and Sid McDessy. Shorty's sel 1 -
ing Leaders abojjff. Bh^y*n^^hy.
milk to any of the distributors here.
We are either feeding the milk to
the hoge and the cattle or selling It
to the creameries or our neighbors.
"Straight Milk.
"If It comes to the point where
babies and the hospitals cannot get
milk, we will gladly donate the milk
LONDON, Oct. 18. Rioting follow- (directly to the sanitariums and the
itm the calling of the nation-wide others who cannot get aloug without
coal strike, broke out today in milk."
Whitehall and Downing streets on The new plant. If established, will
which the government offices and sell "straight milk, the way it comes
the premier's residence are located, from the cow." Koyse said. This
Forty were Injured in fighting be- milk will overage from 4 to 4Vfe per
tween police and rioters at 4:20 p. m. icent butterfat.
The fighting was still continuing. C. E. Clifford, city chemist, said
The rioters met repeated charge;* Monday that if the milk, put out by
of the police witl^ a shower of mis-jthe proposed plant, can pass the
siles. tearing tip the pavement and]sanitary milk test. It will not have
ripping down balustrades. Many po- to be oasteurized.
lice were knocked from their horses Donnell) Iu Sympathy,
and the animals ran wildly through "The farmers will receive,, every
th • crowd. | possible assistance from the city,"
At 4:10 p. iu. the police got the Mayor Walton said Monday. "A cen-
crowd on the run. tral distributing plant will mean
The police came on again and cheaper milk for the public, It will
again, hitting out right and left with | mean better inilk and an assureJ
j their truncheons at the heads of the i supply."
.rioters. ■ jyjjjte Donnelly, commissioner of
Many injured were carried into flnance. said that his sympathies
Fitzgerald Succumbs
In Cork Prison After
Fasting for 67 Days
Death of Prisoner First of Its Kind—MacSwiney Lingers—
Deputy Lord Mayor of Cork Ready to Testify
Before Committee Here.
Downing street which looked like a
hospital with many laid out on the
sidewalks and others being tarried
into houses:
Traffic was diverted from the area
in which the riots occurred and po-
lice cordons were established at
| some distance from the scene of the
fighting to hold back the great
crowds which thronged toward it
from every direction as news of the
riot sproad.
j The crowd carried red flags in Its
'front ranks and sang a revolutionary
song entitled "The Red Flag.'
The fighting extended from Down-
ing street through Whitehall, a dis-
tance of one block to Trafalgar
' Square.
walk out again.
"The action of Governor Robert-
son in declaring martial law with-
out a single act of violence having
been reported and without even a
complaint having been made to the
civil authorities was one of the most
Driver of Death Car Is
Prostrate In Hospital
drinking less coeacola and wearlne high-handed pieces of autocracy in
less clothes than before the war. i the history of the American labor
Last fall the coal miners went on movement.'' one official said.
strike for a 60 per cent increase in ; After laying all his cards on the
wages. The price of coal had in- table revealing the awkward situa-
creased over a hundred per cent. The i tion that the officials of the district
cost of living had more than dou- are in, President John Wilkinson,
bled. The miners' demand for a 6" of District 21 U. M. W. of A., con-
per cent inerense in wages, however eluded his report to the special con-
was so "outrageous" that the gov- vention in session here with this ap-
ernment stepped in to break the peal to the delegates:
strike. The Lever act was resur- "Summing up the situation as a
rected and applied to the miners, whole and realizing that we are con-
(Continued on Page Six)
(Continued on Page Six)
Texas Miners Seek
o No-Strike Bill Repeal
Coal Diggers Affected by Measure Aimed at Transport Work-
ers—Operators Cause Strikes, Wilkinson Says.
'Kansas Industrial court act. that
] they are kicking so about up there."
another Texas delegate said.
Will Take Law to Court.
| The law does not go into effect
until January 1. If it is not re-
pealed before then an effort will
be made by union leaders to have it
declared unconstitutional by bring-
ing a test case into court, delegate?
say.
John Wilkinson, president of Dis-
trict 21, In analyzing the conditions
obtaining in the fields over which
his organization has jurisdiction,
declared in an interview that the
principal cause for the discontent
! which exists among the miners in
the Twenty-first district is the feel-
ing among the tonnage workers that
they were discriminated against
when day wiorkers received a raise
of $1 * o a day August 16 without
the scale for tonnage workers hein •*
raised. He went on to say that
there are fundamental reasons
Little Girl Killed While Cling-
ing to Tree Where She Ran
For Refuge.
Following the otitomoblle crash of
Sunday afternoon, when 10-year-old
Lucille Johnson was instantly killed,
O. A. Carglll, county attorney, was
preparing Monday to make investi-
gation of the accident. Thus far a
coroner's jury has not been called.
The automobile driven by Atcr
Shadid, climbing the curbing at Cal-
ifornia and Western avenue, crush-
Special to Leader.
MUSKOGEE, Oct. 18. Texas dele-
gates to the special convention of
the United Mine Workers of America
here will seek to have resolutions
passed condemning and calling for
the repeal of the open port bill,
passed at the last special session of
the Texas legislature for the pur-
pose of forcing striking longshore-
men at Galveston into line.
The open port Ml! makes it a
crime for anyone connected with
the transportation system in
Texas to strike. Hy u liberal in-
terpretation of the law, miners
who dig conl used by railroads
can be brought under the law,
Mux Hossatto, of Tlmrber, Tex-
as. declured.
Should a strike occur any
striker who talks with a strike-
breaker is liable to u lieaty fine
and imprisonment. \nd if t.ro
strikers confer together they
can be prosecuted for conspir-
acy
Mrrh« law lb much worse than the
m
; LONDON, Oct. is.—Relatives today
refruined from telling Lord Mayor
MncS«ine\ of the death of Michael
Fitzgerald, one of the eleven Cork
prison hunger strikers, 'i lie mayor
developed a flight cold over Sunday
liiiil his relatives feared the depress-
ing effect of the announcement.
Other strikers in the jail consented
to medical treatment for Fitzgerald
and another prisoner when their
condition chuugcd for the, worse yes-
terday. ,
MacSwiney slept T>ell last night,
hut developed a chill. It was the
sixt)-seventh day of his fast.
LONDON, Oct. 18.—Michael
Fitzgerald, on Irish hunger
striker, held without trial in the
jail at Cork, died last night after
going sixty-seven days without
food. His death is the first of
its kind. MacSwiney is still
lingering.
The condition of Fitzgerald
and Murphy had become so
grave yesterday that, with the
consent of the other hunger
strikers, the priBon doctors were
permitted to give Fitzgerald
medical treatment. A Cork spe-
cialist also was called in.
Fitzgerald was one of the
eleven men on a hunger strike
in the Cork jail whose cases for
a long time have caused great,
astonishment on the part of the
Little Lucille Johnson, 10, Who Was killed Sunday Afternoon.
medical authorities. Almost a
month ago Dr. Pearson ami Dr.
Rattiscombe, the jail physicians,
> expressed amazement that the
' men were still alive and con-
scious. At that time the physi-
cians said that except for the
devotion and care of the nuns
In attendance upon the prison-
ers it was certain that several of
them would long since have
been dead.
By Federated Tres*
NEW YORK. Oct. 18. The com-
mittee of one hundred on Ireland
has announced that three more
Irish witnesses have cabled their ac-
ceptance of the committee's invita-
tion to come to this country and tes-
tify before an impartial commission
as to first-hand knowledge of atroc-
ities in Ireland. The witnesses are
the deputy Lord Mayor of Cork;
John Derham, town commissioner of
Dalbrlggan; and the chairman of the
town commission of Mallow. Bal-
briggan was recently wrecked by the
British "Black and Tans' and Mal-
low was burned and plundered by
British regulars on September 28
Owing to widespread interest in
the investigation, the committee has
expanded to nearly one hundred ami
fifty members, including the gover-
nors of four states, ten United
States senators, thirteen mayors and
ten bishops of various denomina-
tions.
were all with the farmers.
"I have come to look into the mat-
ter rathti closely and find that the
di.diibutcrB are making about 200
per cent of the actual producing co. t
of the milk," Donnelly said. "Thi
d'fliinutors are paying an avenge
of six cents a quart to the farmers
nn! a * askh •: tin consumer froei
17 to eent . Some of th«) 'arm-
on. have come to my office and c'vtn
rw their l$vo.ce for two y •".r.*, to
tbHi'i?ate ih ujitter. I am con-
vi!i< id that th" It -mors want t.u ^o
square with the public, and I n;n
wsiting for the ( :<t lbutors to t'o ti e
s ine and lay tl«! books open f« r
m •"
"he milk y of the city was
s.i^htly below rnmal Afondiy, but
':Ct sutler ing h;.d lesultec.
WILSON ASK WHITEHURST
FOR GRAIN MARKET DATA
In answer to the statement of J.
A Whitehurst, president of he state
agricultural board, that erratic grain
, . I markets were due to grain gambling.
hl"U« .lucked t...re UB1 «.<*. ex,-ct-;■ lW(lPnI Woo.lrow Wilion has asked
ton.tojrte hack tb<) M unl cargo of | (or |nf0rrantlon he has affecting
wheat prices, it was announced at
the < apitol Monday.
The Information was forwarded to
Washington.
Millers' associations throughout
the United States have joined in
petitioning the president to discon-
tinue all option markets until con-
gress convenes.
By Unittd Press.
LONDON. Oct. 18. — (Sundays-
England today watched the tide or
unemployment rising around her as
the nationwide coal strike became
effective.
Seaports were becoming congested.
There were 700 vessels tied up at
Cardiff alone, no coal in the bunk-
in the holds. Many
nmtI Tha* wae prevented by th
| port embargo issued the moment the
miners let it be known they Intended
I to strike. It w;ib believed many
ships will leave the ports in ballast
! netting away before the situation be-
i comes too serious.
The first indication that such steps
| might be token came In an announce-
: ment Issued by railway workers.
"The railway men of Scotland are
prepared to cease work at noon to-
morrow, (Monday), in support of the
miners," that organization tele-
graphed the miners' executives.
There was a fear that the Scottish
decision might determine railway
men here to leave before they
, forced out of employment by
shortage.
Robert Smillie, president of
(Continued on Pago Sixj
ing the child's body against a tree to
which she was clinging. The child
was the daughter of W. E. Hoaglaod,
1117 West California. She had been
roller-skating in the street and had
run to the sidewalk to esca |
fiom the automobile The girl driv-
er is the daughter of Assad Shad'.d,
women's ready-to-wear merchant.
Driver Hysterical.
Edna Shadid, 13-year-old daughter
of the Rev. Shukrallah Shadid, of
1015 West Main street, was In the
car at the time of the accident and
was thrown to the sidewalk, sus-
taining painlul bi uisca about the i
'face. The girl driver was violently
hysterical and was taken to the
University hospital. She was quitt-
ed by opiates but passed a restless
night. Her condition is not believed
to be serious.
Gladys Tallman of -J20 Not^i
'Francis avenue, who was also In the
icar, said that the driver, who was
inexperienced, intended to turn east-
ward into California avenue, but
upon seeing the little girl became
nervous. The result was that th>
car went over the curbing on the
(Continued ou Page Sis)
BARNETT HEDGES ON
ADMITTED KILLINGS OF
HAITIANS BY MARINES
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18.—The na- |
val board of inquiry appointed by
Secretary Daniels to Investigate the j
charge of General Harnett of "In-
discriminate killing" of Haltlens hy
American marines and ali other criti-
cisms of the occupation of Haiti was
expected today to get under way
early this week.
General IJarnett, expected to be
one of the first witnesses before the >
board, has issued a statement ex-
plaining his statement of "indiscrim-
inate killing" was meant to express
"without due process of law and not
as seems now to be misinterpreted i
u 'proif' i
CHRISTENSEN LOOKS
TO 1924 CAMPAIGN
TOPEKA, Kan Oct. IS.—P. P.
ChristensTn, Farmer-Labor candi-
date for president, spoke here Sun-
day night.
While admitting that lie did not
expect his party to win this election,
he said he hoped for victory in 1924.
Christensen stopped here enroute
from Kansas city to Denver.
PRINTERS* STKIKK AT IM .
OMAHA, Neb., Ocf. 18. I'ndei
threats of losing their cards, fifty-
five striking "outlaw '* printers, who
walked out ;i t the Bee and World-
Herald last Thursday, returned to
wuxk today.
CAMDEN POLICE SEARCH
FOR A"MURDER AUTO"
CAMDEN. N. J., Oct. 18.—A "raur-
der car" carrying three mim alleged
to have made :i mysterious visit to
oal fbe vicinity of Tabernacle last Fri-
day. was sought today in connection
of the v* ith the murder of David £. Paul,
! miners' federation, made the first ot 60 years old bank messenger, wbosi
his appeals to the fiuhtins: spirit of | body was found in a shallow grave
his men in a speech last night In near that place.
T.arkhall, Scotland. Smillie spoki Paul disappeared October 5 while
before a holiday gathering of miners carrying $10,000 in money and $12.-
Many were accompanied by their 500 in chocks from the Camden bank
wives to whom Smillie appealed for where he was employed, to a bank
jaid. in Philadelphia.
"This fiuht is the most serious in Paul's skull had been crushed.
British history." Smillie said. "The The money was missing.
government plans to use all its
, . ST. LOUIS MAN IS KILLED
■ • FOLLOWING AUTO THEFT
ernment's offer to lay our demands
before ftn Independent tribunal be- SALINA. Kan., Oct. 1« A man
an not trust such a trlb-1 in Uo p, ( Moline of St.
ihot and killed bv
deliberately cut down the output a: >vas fryjnK t0 escape. Officers
fftiment for restoration of the stopi>tHi inspect a car in which he
war riding, believed stolen from
Anderson & Company of Salina. Mr*
line opened fire on the officers and
they returned the fire, killing him.
Moline also stole .in automobile
from II A. Slick of clinton. III., aufi
drove it to this city, left it in An-
derson's garage and took a new car.
valued at $2,30". Moline carried a
it to be
Mo., wi
i of Tre
mines to thetn after the long period
of £ovrrnmoht Control.
Tiie government Was well prepared
fot- th" Mtriite. Plftns had been com-
pleted for tvanspoftation of food and
other neressitie* and scheduhs foi
users of coal we-e made public.
Claims that parliament can settle
the strike within a week If It
chooses were advanced giving the
(Continued on Page Six)
I membership card :n St. Louis rail
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Newdick, Edwin. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 55, Ed. 1 Monday, October 18, 1920, newspaper, October 18, 1920; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc149207/m1/1/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.