Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 139, Ed. 1 Monday, January 24, 1921 Page: 3 of 8
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OKLAHOMA LEADER
three
^1
ABOUT fOLKS
She Lost a $200,000
Pearl Neckkice.
Telephone Items
To Jlaplo 7600
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Mrs. Jack Smith. of 2012 West j grim Congregational church enter-
Twelfth street, left Friday for De- tained in the church Friday evening
troit, where she will visit her with a cafeteria lunch. One huhdred
mother, Mrs. D. Silver. 1 guests were present.
Mr. W. E. Wheeler arrived from
Denver Friday to bo the guest of
his sister, Mrs. C. G. Jones, of 915
South Walker street.
Mr. and Mrs. E. Furrey, of 1825
West Ninth street, with Mrs. T. R.
Cook and Mr. and Mrs. Oliver C.
D 1 a c k, attended the Masonic
An eleven-pound baby was born to
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Johnson, of
I 623 West Wheeler street, Friday af-
ternoon.
Mrs. H. A. Van Ness, of Shamrock,
Qkla., is vlsting here with friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Prickctt, of
1428 East Ninth street, assisted by
consistory dance Thursday evening her mother( Mrs. T. Dennlston, en-
i;i Guthrie. tertalned in honor of Mrs. H. A. Van
(Vl.-bnites llirthdav Ness, retiring president of the
In celebration of tbo birthday uuHUary to the Brotherhood
nlversary of her lutie 3on; Jack Mr, , ^ned^er^ Mr and Mrs. B. L.
j Wallace, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Klley.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bryant, Mrs. J.
P. N. Biewer, of 1739 West
street, entertained the following
guests Saturday afternoon: Edith
(ioodard, Peggy Ragland, Billy Hahn,
Phillip Schuyler jr.. Jack Brooks,
Marion, Ruth and Donald Biewer.
Miss Margaret White, of 926 West
Seventh street, will be hostess Satur-
day evening to Chapter V., P. E. 0.
Mrs. Albert P. Crockett returned
Thursday evening from New York,
where she has been vlsting friends
and relatives for the past two
months. She will be at home to her
friends at the Skirvin hotel.
( KffS* cj-A-MsiXVfib.
BR!
N
LEE
"SCORNED" SOONER CO-EDS PLAN WAR
ON STRANGERS WHO BEAR OFF HONORS
... Taylor, Mrs. Will Brown. Mrs. A.
N. Hammond, Mrs. Bryon Selken.
Mrs. H. JL. Tynes. Mrs. Shelby Fisher
and the Misses Davis, Mr. D. Den-
nison. Mr. Willace Goodwin anfl Mr.
J. L. Robinson. The house was beau-
tifully decorated in red, white and
blue. After the business session re-
freshments were served.
Mrs. J. A. Mango, wife of a Lon-
don ship magnate and prominent in
London society who lost a pearl
nocklace valued at $200,000 during a
New Year's Eve visit to a well-
known London restaurant. The neck-
lace consists of sixty-nine 'flawless
graduated pearls collected during a
period of several years.
Mr. Phillip Shuyler, ftf 1110 North
Indiana street, who has been very
ill with the flu, is improving rapidly.
>lrs. McCormack Improving.
Mrs. Roy McCormack, who has j
been very ill in her home, 520 West
Maple street, for the past week is
slowly improving. .
*>-—
The Golden Rule class of the Pil-
llendy-to-Help Club.
The Ready-To-Help club enter-
tained Friday evening in tne home |
of Mrs. John Francis Martin with i
a program on "American Vocalists
and Violinists," under the direction j
of Mrs. Thomas Madden Miller. A -
committee was appointed to have !
charge of the club's charity dansant j
to be given Saturday afternoon.
Guests of the afternoon were Mrs. ! n|nfhinn Firm'*? Labor Man-
Harry C. Guthrie, of Denver. Mrs. J. _ ; . u,'"
T. Martin, Mrs. David Stovall, Mrs.
J. Frank Nelson and Mrs. B. H.
Byrnes.
1 TIES'LIE
S RETRACTED
ager Says Agreement Was
for Closed Shop.
NEW CURFEW
HITS CORK
Wage Workers as Well as §
Shops Handicapped by
British Rule.
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I PUBLIC
I RECORD
JR.
Hilllllllllllllllll!IIUIIItlll||||lil||||||||lillllllllllllllllllllllll7,
CORK, Jan. 22.—(By U. P.)—The
new curfew regulations imposed
upon Cork by the British military
sire causing the greatest consterna-
tion.
Trade in the city already has been
practically paralyzed. The restric-
ted hours, which are the longest in-
flicted in martial law in Ireland,
have proven awkward from a busi-
ness point of view.
Workers' wages are paid Satur-
day afternoon and shopping always
has been done Saturday night The
smaller shopkeepers do their princi-
pal business that evening. This
custom has been completely killed
by the curfew laws, which also have
badly affected other lines of busi-
ness. Theaters and other amuse-
ment places are obliged to close in
the evening while tobacconists and
barbers are hard hit and even the
clubs have suffered.
The railways are restricted, even-
ing trains to Dublin ceasing to run
at night. Sunday evening church
services have been suspended.
Father Mannix, a cousin, of Arch-
bishop Mannix of Australia, has been
arrested and placed in jail here be-
cause he was found outside a house
where an ambuscade tooiv place.
A group of Sinn Feiners held up a
hunt near here yesterday. Major
Watt, master of the hunt, protested
when the men were ch'dered to dis-
perse. There were no casualties.
At Glenwood five housse were
burned in reprisal.
PERMANENT BODY TO
OPPOSE THE SOVIETS
"Figures don't lie, but liars can
figure like h—," was the trenchant
remark of Mark H. Kesler, commis-
sioner of public safety, Friday, after
reading statistics pretending to
show that the city is "broke."
Riding on vacuum cup non-skid
tires. Public Record Jr. skidded with
his bicycle in front of the Leader
building Friday, sustaining severe
contusions of the wrist-watch, abra-
sions of the rubber handle bars and
fractured Eversharp pencil.
Noting that Oklahoma has been
clothed in snow only once this
winter, we are prompted to remark
that this January weather feels
much like September morn.
A certain local newspaper is ex-
pected soon to change the names of
its editions to these:
"Anti-Walton Extra."
"Says Mike Donnelly Special!"
"Horrible Police Force Final."
"Six o'clock City Deficit."
Ruff Rudolph says: "Love is two
darn things after each other."
"Island of Yap Controversy to
Open Soon," reads a Friday head-
line.
Now it's the .Taps who want the Yaps,
In spite of Yap's dislike for Japs,
And Uncle Sam, our pap, he slaps
The Japs who are no saps, perhaps.
Each nation wants the isle, to stay,
And play* 'neath South Sea suns
all day;
We say that YAP the other way
Should soon be turned, to make
them PAY.
"Let us tan your hide," proposes
a St. Louis tannery in its advertise-
ment in this week's issue of Country
Gentleman.
PARIS, Jan. 22.—A permanent or-
ganization to oppose the soviet gov-
ernment in Russia will be created
by a special committeo of nine, ap-
pointed by the conference of anti-
bolshevik leaders called by Alex-
ander Kerensky.
One of the objects of the organiza-
tion, it was announced, will be to I
appeal to the governments and peo-
ples of the world to help refugees
• in order to preserve Russia's con-
tribution to universal culture.
Among the members of the com- j —
ntttee are Kerensky, Millultoff and RacliCa|S in JligO-Slavia Elect
Avk3ienl0ff- 58 Deputies-Balkan Al-
NEW YORK. Jan. 22. — Complete
retraction has been made by two
_ New York dailies, the New York
EE! Times and the Daily News Record,
= trade paper of the clothing industry,
S of stories appearing in their columns
S proclaiming that the Henry Sourne-
ss born company of Baltimore had set-
tled with Amalgamated Clothing
Workers on the basis of the "open
shop.*4
The retraction which appeared in
both of the above papers on the day
after the publishing of the false re-
port, followed the emphatic denial
by Boris Emmet, labor manager for
the Sonneborn company, that the
settlement by his firm was an "open
shop" agreemnt. That there might
be no possible misunderstanding in
the matter, Emmet personally wired
to President Hillman, then in Chi-
cago, that the statement purporting
to come from Emmet in some morn-
ing papers that'tlie Sonneborn agree-
ment eliminated the "closed shop"
had never been issued by him, and
must be due to the "misunderstand-
ing or imagination of some report er."
Reiterating the fact that the Son-
neborn agreement is a renewal on
the old terms, 1 lyman lilumberg,
manager of the Baltimore joint board
of the Amalgamated, in a dispatch
received at New York headquarters,
reported that the negotiations under
way for a market agreement be-
tween the fifteen Baltimore shops
and the Amalgamated have been fav-
orably influenced by the announce-
ment of the settlement with Sonne-
born.
"The maintenance of the union
agreement with the two largest con-
cerns in the clothing industry,
Henry Sonneborn and Hart Schaff-
ner and Marx, constitutes a striking
endorsement by the employers them-
selves of the Amalgamated's stand
to defend the same impartial ma-
chinery against the little group of
New York^manufacturers who have
not only broken faith with their
own employes, but with the rest of
the manufacturers of the country."
Settlements on union terms have
been reached with several New York
firms, among them two members of
the Clothinc Manufacturers' associa-
tion. The largest shop has a force
of over 400 workers. In Boston
settlements with fourteen firms have
been made affecting about 1,000
workers, or 20 per cent of the num-
ber locked out. Two of the Boston
firms are association houses.
Stride Forward in Science ot
Aeronautics—"No Desire
for Supremacy."
LONDON, Jan. 22.—(By U. P.)—
Gteat strides are being made :n the
f.cicnce of aeronautics in preni Bit-
tam it was learned today. But of-
ficials denied that Britnin is con-
templating seizing control of the al",
as stated by General Mitchell, of the
American aviation service, in in In-
tel view given the United Pros? this
week.
"Britain lias not the slightest in-
clination or intention of entering the
race for aerial supremacy." an of-
ficer of the ministry declared.
Great strides are being made lr.
the science of aeronautics, buT I an.
net aware of any official deolre t >
concentrate on gaining control ot
the air."
It was pointed out that the 'inan-
cal estimates of the air minist-y #
to the end of 1923 do not call for a:i
Increase in expenditures in counei -
Hon with the building of service
squadrons. Also theanaterial which
has been ordered is barely sufficient
to keep the air force up to normal
slze*
Next War In t louds.
However, European nations are
known to be conducting important
experiments with aircraft. Their
air ministries believe the nex' war
will be fought largely abova the
clouds and that the air navies mav
render fleets and fortifications ob-
solete as means of national defense.
Experiments are being conducted
with huge planes capable of carry-
ing large numbers of soldiers, as
\>ell as enormous bombs with
enough high explosive to sink a bat-
tleship. or blow a small lown to
.items in one blast.
With the league of nations in ex-
istence and much talk of disarma-
ment in Europe and America, these
experiments are being conducted on
a small scale and, in many ins'anc, s
\yy private concerns with wnic'i the
government has no direct connec-
tion. They are being kept in the
background. If disarmament fails,
however, and a new war loom.-.
Europe is likely to engage n an
air navy building competition th-t
will throw all previous armament
rac es in the shade and fill the skies
with air fleets.
Special to leader.
NORMAN, Jan. 22.—The an-
cient and honorable Jeffersonian
precept of "state's rights" may
bei dragged into university poli-
tics here. The women of the Uni-
versity of Oklahoma are up in
arms at the honors that have
been bestowed on out-of-state
women in elections the last few
years.
And the final straw may be
the election of Dorothy Arnold,
of Fort Worth, Texas, as May
Queen. Miss Arnold won the de-
cision over two Oklahoma girls
in the election held this week.
Every year the same thing
happens, the Klrls say. List
year Margaret McMillan of Dal-
las, Texus, was elected Beauty
Queen over six Oklahoma candi-
dates, and the year before Lu-
cille Wagoner, of Monett, Mo.,
was May Queen. The honors of
May Queen and Beauty Queen
are highest tributes that can be
paid to co-ed's beauty by her
fellow students.
The protesting Oklahoma
beauties say that the fair in-
vaders from other shores sail
into Oklahoma and captivate the
men.
"Men u ways go batty over
soinethiUK new, ami it is all the
rage to Mil for some girl from
another state,Mmo co-ed pouts.
And these loyal Sooners are
determined to stand up for their
rights. They say that the next
time that an extra-state beauty
enters a contest they will con-
centrate their strength on one
candidate and«*e that the in-
vader is routed.
But the men In the university
do not take the question so seri-
ously.
"We ought to encourage these
\isitors from other states. gl\o
them a few honors, and maybe
they will come back next year
with oilier recruits." one repre-
sentative student said.
So far the girls have not at-
tempted retaliation by concen-
trate their votes on out-of-
state men who are candidates,
but they quote the old maxim
about the "woman scorned."
and <ay that they may get des-
perate.
: we ofTer present historical, economi-
cal and political manipulations ai
l undeniable evidences.
1st. Banks have loaned not their
own money but our money, coined
our own country, to us on ouf
lands and wheu the borrower wiBhca
pay his loan the rich buyers re-
fuse to buy our own production and
I when the borrower offers to the
Resolutions of Socialists in ir,?,
MS ISSUE5
Convention at Newton,
Are Received.
MARY GARDEN STARTS
•■BARNSTORMING" TRIP
CHICAGO, Jan. 22.—Miss Mary
Garden, director of the Chicago
Opera company, left with her troupe
today on her first "barnstorming"
trip.
The, company is booked for en-
gagements in New York and other
eastern cities.
Before starting. Miss Garden an-
nounced the appointment of George
M. Spangles, for thirteen years head
of the convention bureau of Chicago
association of commerce, as business
manager of the opera company.
HUGE CO-OPERATIVE
SCHEME IN EUROPE
LONDON, Jan. 22. A schonie to
establish international eloarinv
house for the exchange of the pro-
ductions of the European Co opera-
tive Societies has been adopted.
The principle is barter. Details have
ti ill to be worked out. Tho schema
would tend to hiake the co-operativ
societies independent of th • wirla-
tion of tho money exchanges, it is
said. •
HAMILTON, Ont., Jan. 22.-Two
thousand Niagara Peninsula fruit
growers formed a co-operativ."1 com-
pany to market all their product,
which, it is expected, will total inor >
than $1,500,000 during the comin
BRIlKil HI II.IMiitS TO WORK.
TYLER. Texas, Jan. 22.—Employes
In the bridge and building depart-
ments of the Cotton Belt railway, j Biason.
laid off because of "lack of busi-
ness." are being reinstated with con- In certain districts in Wales the
tract providing for longer hours and | peasantry are averse to telling their
a slight reduction In pay, officials of j names to strangers, deeming it to bo
the road announced here today. 1 unlucky.
At the largely attended state So-1
cialist convention recently hold at
Newton, Kansas, a number of rete-
ntions and declarations were In-
formally adopted and put on record.
The resolutions which have just
been conmpiled for newspaper pub-
lication. are as follows:
"The Socialist state convention in
fccusion at Newton. Kansas, Decem-
ber 29th, 30th and 31st, 1920, herein
declares that a geographical portion
of this country known as Kansas,
naturally and by right of inheritance
belongs to labor that produces all
VMltk and not to MTOftttt gre. d
that takes possession of wealth in
the form of human necessities from
such production. Resolutions hav<
come and gone and the economic and
ommerclal analysis proves that all
war is the result of unnatural and
human greed and that no portion or
part of God's law, or natural ami
perfect operation of said law, Is at
fault for the disruption of our eco-
aomic condition at this time:
Not Politicians.
"Therefore, be it resolved in this
state convention that, notwithstand-
ing tho attempted disruption of the
Socialist party of America *hat no
such disruption occurrs. We arc not
politicians; we are believers, actors
and receivers of scientific and na-
tural law and we demand that all
national laws shall be enacted upon
i human basis for intellectual,
moral, social and spiritual good. We
further resolve that tho present
crime wave is the result of economic
(febauchery of labor by greedy cap-
ital ism. and in proof of such facts
refuses such security.
Mortgage Issue.
'2nd. The robbery of the s^ricul-
tiual class has also led the Kansas
farmer to refuse to sell his farm
prodiyts until a fair profit shnll he
paid him for his labor. Fo * such
leasons we insist upon the suspen-
sion and operation of intercut upon
ouch mortgages until full values
-hall be paid for all product! of lu-
bur.
"3rd. We demand that labor bhall
receive full social value for that
which It earns. When this Is ac-
complished, crime will disappear,
tenements will rot on their founda-
tions, divorce will be eliminated
from the docket and the arrogam.
brutal greed of czars and employers
will melt into brotherhood and tho
world's most brutal will not be left
free while American labor leader*
are kept in ten years imprisonment,
and the bold and audaciously brave
oid Scotchman, 'Howat,' will not be
imprisoned by a wholly unnatural
itiuustrial court, whose decisions al-
ways reach and are In favor of tr.o
capitalist class but not the laboring
class. At this moment great corpor-
ate bodies are discharging labor to
cut tail expenses and force 'abor
unions to go out of existence by pu*-
ting laboring men into competition
with his own class and all into pov-
erty and pauperism."
Crescent Grocery
FRANK C. PAGKLS, Prop.
Phones 212 and 1).">
213 South Hock Island Avenue
Kl; RENO, OKI.A.
For Results Try the Want Ads.
W> F. Cleaners
and Dyers
Two car* at your service to all
part* of the city.
«21 V. Oil* Walnut 7895
COMMUNISTS
TRIUMPHANT
FORLUMP SUM
REPARATIONS
Belgium, However, Insists
That Her Share, $2,500,-
000,000, Be Unchanged.
PARIS, Jan. 22.—The Belgian gov-
ernment will urge the supreme coun-
cil to fix a lump sum for German
Reparations as soon as possible, ac-
cording to the Brussells correspond-
ent of the Echo de Paris.
A demand will be made that Ger-
many shall provide treasury bonds
which may be negotiated in Amer-
ica. Belgium insists that her
priority share of the indemnity
amounting to $2,500,000,000 is un-
changed.
"The longer we temporize, the
more Germany will be able to op
pose our demands," Pertlnax writes.
"Two months from now the United
States probably will conclude an in-
dependent agreement with Germany
Our task will be proportionately in-
creased."
The Japanese are said to have
made a profit of more than $30,000,-
oou last year by smuggling opium in
the form of morphine into China.
Loader Want Ads Tor Results.
II G SINKS; JiONE LOST.
NEW YORK, Jail- 22.—No lives
were lost in the sinking of a tug
and a barge in the bay here, accord-
ing to police today. -Siarbor police
first reported nine lost. Later they
accounted for all hands.
Many a small article can be turned
'.nto ready money if a small ad is
placed in tta*, want ad columns.
TODAY IN CONGRESS
SENATE:
Manufactures committee con-
tinues hearing on Calder coal
bill.
Appropriations committee works
on sundry civil bill.
Various committees consider
nominations sent in by President
Wilson.
Sen;fte continues discussion of
minimum wage bill and hears
more speeches on packer bill.
HOUSE:
Continues consideration of ag-
riculture appropriation bill.
Ways and means committee
continues hearings on agricul-
tural tariffs.
Foreign affairs committee con-
siders bills to purchase em-
bassies and extension of war-
time passport control.
Military affairs sub-committee
continues hearings on war de-
partment real estate holdings.
Appropriations sub-committees
considers army, navy, diplomatic
and consular appropriation bills.
Judiciary committee considers
bill to incorporate firms engaged
in Chinese trade.
liance Favored.
ZAGREB. JUGO SLAVIA, Jan. 22.
—The result of the elections for the
constituent assembly in Jugo-Slavia
may cause great changes which will
embarrass the allies. In these elec-
tions no party got a definite ma-
jority, nor can any combination of
parties give a working majority.
Besides this, in spite of terrific
oppression by the government, the
communist party had fifty-eight dep-
uties elected.
To realize the importance of this,
one must know that the total num-
ber of deputies is 424, and that the
largest party only number ninety-
four.
Right through the Balkans the
Socialist and communist parties
favor a Balkan federation as the
only solution of Balkan troubles. In
Bulgaria the communists are gaining
strength. They have forty-eight
deputies, and in the last municipal
elections they practically swept the
country. And in the ranks of the
M'KilMLEY SCHOOL TEAM
WINS DEBATERS' PRIZE
McKinley school debaters won the
grade school championship when
they defeated the Leo-^sehool by a
!i to 0 decision in the high school
auditorium.
By virture of this victory they will
retain permanent possession of the
"Jeff" cup, as this is the third con-
secutive year that the McKinley
team has taken the cup.
The gt*ade school championship
was decided by an elimination con-
test in which nineteen of the city
grammar schools took part.
McKinley school emerged the
victor in all five of their debates.
Those taking part in the debate
were: McKinley: Robert Harris,
Bert Blakney and Harold Taylor;
Lee school: Commander Pulliam,
Ethelyn Young and Zebert Brown.
FARMERS SEEK BODY
TO PREVENT GOUGING
MADISON, Wis.. Jan. 22.- ^:irm-
era in the legislature are having
prepared a bill to turn the market-
ing commission into a state trade
commission with sweeping powers
to preevnt profiteering in Wiscon-
sin. It will be proposed tha' this
National Cleaners
and Dyers
Suits Cleaned and Pressed $1.25
II. K. VICKOKS—VFRTS'ON KAY
Walnut 1G90. 603 W. 24th St.
MRS. DONNELLY REID
• will receive her friends and their
: friends every Saturday evening In
the Private Hall Room. 8:30 to 11:3U.
DANCING
Kot| AnnieiBUt fop Least Hon/
Teaching >n clans or in private. Twelve
class lessons, ladies. $3.00; gentlemen. I
$5.00. Single lesson, 35c and 65c. May
remain for ihe dance.
School for Dancing.
Supervised
Phone W. &S6t.
AUDITORIUM
Bulgar "peasant party," too, there new commission shall have sta .
are many who favor a republic and powers similar to the national pow-
I federation with Jugo-Slavia. ers of the federal trade commission.
The full results of the Montenegrin No attempt would be made to reg-
j elections are now available. The ulpte prices beyond the establish-
outstanding feature is the success of mint of machinery to stop prodteet-
, the communists, who polled 10,80!) ing.
out of a total of 27,638 votes, and re-
turned four members out of ten. RRITIQU QMRMARIMF
Second to the communists came the Dni ...X.,, Anr-i*i .n i no-r
|republicans with 4,414 votes, and twn WIIH LnbW IS LOST
members.
, LONDON. Jan. 22.—(By U. P )— 1
Official statistics issued from The British submarine K-5. with a
I Tokyo show that there are 252,683 ciew of six officers and fifty m n.
Japanese in the United States, Can- was lost in the English channci on
1 ada and the Hawaiian Islands, as Thursday, it was announced to lay.
i compared with fewer than 10,000 in i Details of the accident were no:
It all Europe. ( made public.
BONDS
Buy German. Austrian. Belgian,
Italian and French bonds. Not
only a safe investment, but one of
the greatest speculations of the
day. 500 to 2,000 i ercent profit
can l e made when foreign ex-
change comes hack to normal,
which will be done when trade re-
1 lions are resumed with Euro-
pean countries. Send for quota-
tion- Twentv-fivfe dollars invest-
ed low may make you $900 in a
few years. Not an oil stock prop-
osition, but interest bearing bonds
of above named countries and of
mam' European cities. German
bonds worth $238 at normal ex-
change can now be bought for
from $10.50 to $18. Representa-
tives wanted in each county seat.
NIGHSWANDER
REALTY COMPANY
^3 3
To 0ut-o!-Town Ladies
READERS OF THE LEADER
You can order your ^aprons, waists, kimonas,
garters, lingerie, etc., at reasonable prices by
mail frdm ^
GEROLDYNE LINGERIE SHOP
202 Shops Building Oklahoma City
Cut out this ad and se'nd it to
us with your name-an^ address.
-WWC
Ideal Shoe Repairers
JOi: 001)V, Prop.
10 S. llnney. Walnut 1195.
NOTICE
n a The Supreme
*—■■ ' • Cleaners and
Dyers are not
in favor of the
open shop.
Call
Mnpie 4630.
hot W. 6th SU
W e ao your work on a gt" rantee.
W. S. PIULER, .Manager.
THE WIGWAM
CASH STORE
Dan McLaughlan & Co.
Phone 282
Coalgate, Okla.
Mail orders promptly
attended to.
Why Pay More?
Suits Cleaned
and Pressed
$1.00
PEOPLES CLEANING CO.
J. E. MOORE, Prop.
Phone W. 0832 <02 W. 51 li St
Chiropractic tor CoSds, influenza and Flu
DO YOU KNOW -
That a fever, no matter iiow high, can be "broken up" and sweating
produced by using CHIROPRACTIC VERTEBRAL ADJUSTMENTS.'"
That respirations, rapid and shallow, and pulse full, strong and fast,
become normal under CHIROPRACTIC VERTEBRAL ADJUST-
MENTS?
That even after Pneumonia lias become very serious, consolidation
occurring rapidly with its resultant weight and non-expansion of
lung substance, exudate is expectorated, pain subsides and breathing
becomes easier after a RELEASING OF THE NERVES THAT
SUPPLY THESE TERMINAL BRONCHIOLES AND COMMUNI-
CATING AIR CELLS?
These results have been accomplished in thousands of cases.
When the Chiropractor is called in time, i. e., in the beginning—
PNEUMONIA DOES NOT FOLLOW INFLUENZA
The real mission of the Chiropractor is to prevent the occurrence of dis-ease; and one of the special features
about the Science is its Hygienic or Prophylactic influence; in other words, its ability to ward off dis-ease.
The resistance of the body against Dis-ease depends up..n the condition of the Spinal Column
Pressure removed from nerves—allowing Nature to do her work without interruption.
BE SURE YOUR BACKBONE IS NORMAL
"That the World May Know
This advertisement is paid for by the following Chiropractors of Oklahoma:
\V. R. GORBY
lll'/i West Main, Oklahoma City
A. J. BAYS
409 Security Building, Oklahoma City.
c. J. Lee
506 Security Building, Oklahoma City.
A. J. SUPLER
Scott Thompson Building, Oklahoma City.
JQHN T. SCOTT
311 Baltimore Building, Oklahoma City.
CARVER CHIROPRACTIC COLLEGE
521 West Ninth, Oklahoma City.
ELIZABETH BORDEN
600 West Eighth, Oklahoma City.
C. W. harper
Suite 316, Herskowitz Bldg., Oklahoma City.
JOHNSON & CAMPBELL
1535 West Main, Oklahoma City.
1). J. JENKINS
1100 West Twenty-fifth, Oklahoma City.
W. T. SHAKER
421 West Park, Oklahoma City.
W. F. JACKSON
Idabel, Oklahoma.
CASSIE V. STONE
Walters, Oklahoma.
GERTRUDE HARWOOD
Enid National Bank Bldg., Enid. Okla.
\V. V. DAGGETT
211 West Delaware, Nowata. Okla.
C. J. GOESKE
Henryetta, Oklahoma.
I'. M. PALMER
Seiling, Okla.
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Newdick, Edwin. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 139, Ed. 1 Monday, January 24, 1921, newspaper, January 24, 1921; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc149300/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.