The Tulsa Democrat (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 164, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1914 Page: 1 of 10
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Om |i|crS tkt|*i4i«ttkl1
wife, ia worth tM tm tk« hub at
„her hn*ku4 at tha office. The Tataa
Democrat goaa to the home.
THE TULSA DEMOCRAT
rm maud wins jumkiatid r ai mnri anvm and wuian bcnoa* uobmxu uasid wiu sebxicb
iim4 gap
Average Daily Circulation Th«
Democrat for February, 1914.
VOLUME X—No. 164.
TULSA, OKLAHOMA, FRIDAY EVENING,MARCH 20, 1914.
TEN PAGES
PRICE, {SXSEA
MOMM
IIITHK UMIIESS
j lOtHMETOlSI
Infamous Advertising Is Given
the City by the Loud Noises
of the Hypocrites.
SMITH'S TRIAL NEXT
IN SUPERIOR COURT
The next case to be tried at the pres-
ent criminal term ot the superior court
will be that of Henry Smith, farmer, for
the killing' of Bert Took, an oil pumper,
at Turley a few weeks ago. It was given
out by Judge M. A Breckenrldge today.
It la expected the Smith case will be
started about noon Friday with the con-
clusion of the Charlie McCoy murder caae
now In progress.
Although Smith was bound over for
trial by a justice of the peace only a few
days agothls ease la not scheduled on the
present docket, his attorneys desiring a
speedy hearing have asked that It be spe-
cially set. He Is held without ball and
prefera a hasty trial to the long wait In
jail.
IN LEAGUE WITH AL
JENNINGS, THE BANDIT
dutlaw Openly Endoraed by 8cab Of-
ficial Organ of Crew—Outbreak
of Thu80ery Here Since
| Campaign Started.
ti,a widespread and effective advertis-
ing Tulsa has received all over the coun-
try as the hotbed of crime and lawlessness
through publicity Incident to the Inde-
pendent campaign has had one specific
result. It has attracted to this city crim-
inals and hoboes by tho dozen, who have
been led to believe that they will be wel-
comed here, that they will fl"d" "|ty
In the city polico department and city
commission and that under, such favor-
able circumstances It will be an easy
matte- to ply their trade.
The unfavorable advertising Tul; has
received during the past two weeks and
Is dally receiving at the hands of Carl L.
Magee Independent press agent sinvpV
viewed from n financial standpoint, will
lose Tulsa business Interests thousands
of dollars and hundreds of reputable clti-
fi-itiii other stales who had planned
BY con LOST
No Lives Lost and No Convicts
Escape in Midnight Catas-
trophe at Reformatory
500 MEN LINED UP IN
A FIERCE, COLD WIND
""maki' this city their permanent ul>lclln«
place. Those who live hero are un
their game, but
l^'T,e"«h 'the publication of un-
^ ..j ....rm,mi.d c*o*ies about Tulsa s
Warden Reed Calla for Shipment of!
Blanketa—Inmates Greatly In-
creased by Convicts from
M'Alester for Quarries.
GRANITE, Okla., March 19.—Fire be-
lieved to have been set by convicts en-
what "of 'he thousands j tlrely destroyed all the buildings, hous-
are kept front com-
ity and unfounded stories about
dep.a '' A|t|ed w(th Al jennings.
What the Al Jennings movement is to
OkUl(4.a ln general, the M^-Magee
scandal promotion party is pMef
particular. A recent issue of the Chief.
A. recent issue — --- -
a scab paper taken over aP fUj- | the bitter wind the prisoners wer
by the Sanderson t, S, $ the i ferine severely and Reed made def
ing 500 men, inmates of the state reforma-
tory here, early today. All food and sup-
plies of every kind were lost.
No lives were lost, nor did any convicts
escape. The fire started Just ufter mid-
night and at 4 o'clock Warden Clyde Reed
hacj the convicts In the open air, guarded,
and telephoned the" stato board of affairs
at Oklahoma City asking an immediate
shipment of blankets. Unprotected from
suf-
A Startling Discovery.
PftODu ceits
BLOWING OFF HEADS"
GETS WADE INTO JAIL
After he had threatened to blow un-
other negroe s head off, it was claim-
ed Wade Hall, negro ex-convict was
arrested by Detective Harry Saniitfvs
Inst nielli for dUpIaylur, and carry-
ing firearms. He pleadid guil.y in
police court today to carrying a swi
and was fined $60 and sentenced to
90 days in Jail by Judge C'ark.
Halt wag released front the OI-laho-
ma slate penitentiary n'. McAVr'.^r
only '.wo a.onths agir after sprvlntj 4
sentence of two years for manslaugh-
ter In ccunection with killing d
a noKro u: Okmulgee. II) has the rep-
utation of being a "bad negro," and
Judge Clark declared that an extend-
ed stay in jail would probably do him
good.
(SECRET WITH HIM
Reputable Business Man Is Sur-
prised to liearn He is a
Crook and Reprobate.
REGARDS GAMBLING A
GREAT PUBLIC EVIL
Highwayman Wounded When
Attack Was Made on Wag-
ner Has no Chance.
REFUSES TO SAY WHO
HIS COMPANION WAS
Will Endeavor to Enforea All Lawa
Tulsa Batter and Cleaner
in Every Respect—Carl
Magee's Slander Mill.
Recently Married Here But Will Not
Tell Where cr Who Hie Rela-
tlvca are—Condition Today
Deaperate, Unchanged.
The old faucet, which never failed to produce, is found to b e "froze up."
e Sanjerson b . jenn|ngPi the ferlng severely and Reed made desperate
some endmsemenl - oresent-day j efforts to put up temporary sheds for
ex-bsnilit, train robbei aM_Pr . flnne! their nrotectlon. The bnlldl
Sad But True.
blatherskite and ,n't'0 "aiarepute j were not intended for permanent qtiar-
hl*lhe"habltat of thnB and outlaws. Now ; terg, but were to be used until the gran-
A1 has donei their protection. The buildings burned Por over forty years Standard Oil has Ills part In the upbuilding of Tulsa by re-
and heat up
citlsens.
and otherwise maltreat our
Was All RlQht Then.
• , a -^Anderson was drawing
wteBas .ej.etaiy oMA.
backing UP board of
his membership on^
the directory board
Tulsa, in his opinion.
ite structure now under construction could
be completed. The number of men at
the reformatory was swelled ffom S.; 0 to
more than 500 Wednesday of this week by
the arrival of 150 ^-ansferred from Mc-
Alester to work in the quarries.
Because They Couldn't Smoke.
The temporary buildings were set on
fire by the 150 convicts recently trans-
ferred from the McAlester penitentiary
because they were denied the privilege of
smoking.
The prisoners were huddled against the
stone wall of the new building now In
course of construction and held there by
the organization, rulsa. ^ !ndu8trlal
Just couldn t be neal. ,,enter. But j armed guards. A temporary food supply
business, church and reform i was secured from Granite. The warden
when these two shining 8 fnr ti,e: set men at work constructing bunks
decldi d to enter into a ia P. I „m_ alnnfr the wans of the new building and
vilification of the city ^ fip (g preparing to hold them in such parls
W words can hardly expreu
nnatlon of Tulsa and things
the Comnif
lty, and n
(Continued on Page Three)
Kraffro
, 6010W
Mrs. Dulaney's Husband Res-
cues Four Children but Is
Unable to Reach Her.
always been successful Jn securing the
sistance of a considerable number of pro-
ducers to do errands for it. Sometimes It
was necessary to threaten them, some-
times it was necessary to purchase their
properties at satisfactory prices, and on
other occasions a vagrant bank proved the
motive actuating the particular stand
taken by such oil producers as carried the
message.
From the time Hitcbcook was secretary
of the interior to the late visit of Mr.
Cullnan. certain producing Interests in the
Mid-Continent district have always obliged
the Standard Oil company in whatever
requ(|it It made.
After the election of President Taft, the
Standard Oil company had a number of
conspicuous producers, most of whom were
nonresidents of Oklahoma, visit Washing-
ton under the captaincy of J. E. O'Neil of
the Prairie Oil & Gas Co., and to insist
that the interior department relinquish its
" jurisdiction over pipe lines. This power
had been agreed to in writing between the.
secretary of the interior and the pipe lines
themselves. The secretary had determined
that the Oklahoma oil field would not be
gobbled up by Standard Oil as had every
other field. It is quite true that Secre-
tary Hitchcock did many things which
were absurd and which were entirely too
restrictive, but the city of Tulsa, Okla.,
can today bless Secretary Hitchcock for
making conditions such that the city lias
become the home for the Individual oper-
ator. The federal government has played
strletlng monopoly, llitckcock, Garfield
md Fisher all played their parts. The
Standard OH company was continuously
having producers, at their own expense,
visit Washington and have some trick
turned which meant one for them and
fifty for Standard Oil. Owing to the fact
that Standard Oil produces such a vast
quantity of oil, every benefit which the
oil producer can secure will atso give
forth assistance to Standard Oil? How-
ever," there are (and should be more) cer-
tain regulations which affect the pipe
lines only. These regulations are being
constantly and gradually "put to bed" by
Standard Oil with its hired publicity de-
partment, singing a requiem or a lullaby
as the case may require.
Since the publishing of the now famous
O'Neil letter, tho faucet of aid heretofore
so bountifully supporting Standard Oil
whenever it found it ne^ssary, has been
found to be frozen vp, to the great sur-
prise of StanrOil.
Today, owing tho . cheap manner in
which the . publicity of the Standard^ Oil
has been handled for the past year, Stand-
Oil would have a durn hard Job marshal-
ing a corporal's guard to assist It In get-
ting benefits for itself. The publicity
outfit has absolutely deserted the publish-
ment of argument, because it is now
equipped with men who are not only in-
experienced In matters pertaining to oil,
but whose existence has heretofore been
dependent upon their power to personally
attack the managers and directors of
Standard Oil. Hiring them has become
the cheapest manner In which to secure
their silence. By Instructing them to direct
their mud-slinging batteries upon ail who
might bear a different massage, Standard
Oil has thought to hide its greed and its
very self by hiding its head in the sand
of Indifference. One'publicity artist was
years ago blacklisted because of his fak-
ing up an interview with one of the of-
ficials of the Prairie Oil & Gas Co. Today
he Is one of its chief scribes. Abuse of
any and nil 1s the instruction to the pub-
licity men of Standard OH. The man
who' does most of the writing is a man
who never goes near a well or Into a
field, but whose vocabulary of abuse is
satisfactory to the Prairie Oil & Gas Co.,
hence his employment.
There was a time when Standard OH
had publicity men who not only were fair
enough, but had ability sufficient to give
the pipe line side of the argument. The
pipe lines had ten friends then to one
now. The disgraceful attacks of a per-
sonal nature against certain oil producers
has done more to make public opinion
against Standard Oil than can the sub-
stance for continuous argument and the
presentation of facts by the votaries of
pipe line reform.
Standard Oil is finding that some few
things have frozen up. We could sug-
gest a few things which might thaw mat-
ters a little, but we ftre glad to see Stand-
ard Oil waking up a little. Flies come
faster to taffy than to vinegar.
With ARDMORE, Okla.. March 19.—Mrs. A.
Qpecial Services lonignt, M Dulanoy, aged 35. and her two-year-
* • nM /lanohtar wr.po hlirnpd t f llf.l th Ot
"The Conversion of Busi-
ness Man" as Topic.
INSPIRING SERVICES
MARKED LAST NIGHT
leautiful Tribute to Motherhood and
Rebuke to Those Who Scorn the
Great Mitsion of Nature—
■( Intense intereat.
«■ ❖ ❖
<•
tabernacle program.
daughter were burned to death at
Cornish, near here early today, when
their home was destroyed by fire. Du-
laney succeeded In rescuing four other
children but his wife and baby were
burled under the fallen timbers before he
could reach them. The blaze was caused
by the overturning of a lamp.
TEXAS CAVALRY FLAG
RETURNED TO TEXAS
-Thui-tday— -3u«lne«a Men' Nlflht.
7:30 p. m.—Song service.
8 00 p. m.—Dr. Lyon tells A
Vtory of a Business Man s Com-
version*"
Friday.
*0 a m - -Neighborhood meetings.
12 to I P m —Christian workers
conference at Boston Avenue M.
R. church. , _
a-30 i>. ni. —Old folUs service. Dr.
Lyon will preach special sermon.
7-30 p m.—Usual tabernacle ser-
vices. Federated Club Women's
night 1
WASHINGTON, March 19—The battle
flag that the Seventeenth and Eighteenth
Texaa cavalry followed during the civil
war until it was captured by the Fif-
teenth Mlchingan infantry after a des-
perate struggle before Atlanta on July
22, 1864, is to be returned to the state of
. Texas. The flag is now in possession of
Jf I John T. Callaghan. former commander of
T ! Camp No. 171. U. C. V. It wns given to
him recently by Mrs. Laura Clark, widow
of General Wm. T. Clark.
Showing engagements in which the two
regiments participated are these In-
scriptions on the flag:
"Arkansas post. Chlckamauga," "Tun-
nel Gap. Tenn." and "Hinggold Gap."
"I've only one time to die find it'a Just
as well now aa later. My wife can write
my people, telling them I am dead and-
that's all there will be to it."
With the ghastly hand of death already
clutching at him, after being told by hlB
physician. Dr. Fred S. Clinton, thai he luii
practically no chance to live, Charlie
Johnson, tho wounded highwayman wIiobo
death Is expected almost hourly at the
Tulsa hospital, this morning finally re-
fused to disclose the Identity oi his rela-
tions or tell anything that mlghL lead to
the capture of the bandit who escaped aft-
er the attempt to hold up Dr. K. S. Wag-
ner Tuesday night.
"You have been seriously Injured and
are in a very critical condition anil it
would be well for you to give us the
names and addressed of your people, so
they could be sent 'or and be at your
bedside,'' he was Informed by Dr. CUn-
ton.
Rut the dying man smiled weakly and
closed his eyes.
Johnson's condition became graudally
worse yesterday and by last night the
attending physician. Dr. Clinton, had tittle
hope that he would recover. Ha held OP
Inst night and was still alive this morn-
ing. There had been no change In hie
condition either way during the night.
Tho identity of Johneon, who claimed
when sent to the hospital that his name
was Frank Smith, has been positively es-
tablished. Justice of the Peace I.ee Dan-
<el todav furnished the police with a mar-
ringn certificate showing that he had been
married, under the name of Johnson. Feb-
ruary 18 to the woman who visited him at
the hospltil yesterday.
The police have found no clue to the
other highwayman taking part In the at-
tempt to hold up Dr. Wagner but expect
developments shortly. They believe they
know his Identity and will attempt to lo
cato him by Friday.
Speaking In a general way concerning
the qualifications of the men who make
up the personnel of the democratic city
ticket this spring Carl C. Magee in the
World today said:
"Mr. Hunt and Mr. Quinn will. If
eleoted, be the ornamenta in the house
of the organization. It will point with
pride In this campaign to the high char-
acter of these men. It will boast leas of
Mr. Downing and Mr. Gregg. It will try
to keep the search light away from thesa
amiable and pliant tools of crime. But,
If electfd, they, with the mayor, will ba
the administration. Of course Mr. Quinn
will be given the pleasant and agreeable
task of looking after the revenues of tha
city ^>id Mr. Hunt, may. In a way, look
after the city water which nobody can
use, but Mr. Downing and Mr. Gregg
will attend to the very essential things
which they should have nothing to do
$2 PEREAR REL FO R 01L
MO MORE 2900% DIVIDENDS FOk5TAMPAR0 OIL
EEP THE MONEY FOR MARY ANP THE BABIES
JOHN D. HAS EM0U<JI<
MRS. WOODROW WISLON
ON ROAD TO RECOVERY
Woodrow Wilson was well on the road
to complete recovery today from the ef-
fects of a fall over a rug on the white
house floor. Officials at the executive
department eatd her injury was not se-
rious and that she would be out again in
a day or two.
White house officials said today that
Mrs. Wilson had undergone a slight op-
eration to correct the effects of the
bruise which resulted from her fall.
They denied that social engagements
cancelled by members of the family yes-
terday were on that account.
1ST EFFECTIVELY
Mysterious Stranger, a Woman,
Appears at Station With a
Peculiar Request.
M'COY DENIES SCHEME
TO GET WIFE KILLED
THE WEATHER.
WASHINGTON, March 19.—Forecast for
Oklahoma: Tonight fair, colder In east
portion; Friday fair, rising temperature.
A woman whose name could not be
learned camp in at the Frisco station
yesterday on a morning train from the
east and immediately approached Dea-
Teatifying In hia own behalf, Charles coness Elsa fiustafson and asked If her
. | McCoy, negro, on trial in the superior i organization would take up a collection
At 2:30 Friday afternoon Dr. court for nlleged conspiracy in connection at the tabernacle so as > send her to
will conduct special services for the old with the killing Qf hig wife. Martha Mc- | Eureka Springs, Arkansas, where her
people of Tulsa. It ia requested ny tne today denied the existence of any i physician had ordered her to go for treat-
committeo In charge that all persons ^ between him and Scenla Johnson ; ment. She was about 62 or 63 years of
OYiitgS p'tfnrmbile* which they can _ involved the death of the woman 1 ago and sold sh* owned l«i nores of land
donate for carrying aged people to ana, ^ declared he never told the Johnson ; near Eureka Springs, but it wasn't mak-
Mrs. Walter Brown, Mother of
Six Small Children Victim
of Pneumonia.
from the tabernacle communicate at
once with Kev. J. E. McConnell, pastor
of Tlgert Memorial church
woman to kill Martha McCoy.
Arguments in the McCoy case probably
Tltfert Memorial cnuren. ' bo started Friday morning. The
The member* of the Federated! w o-. cag(J wlu g0 t0 the urjr before noon. It
men's clubs of the c.ty will attend tn been the longest drawn out trial of
tabernacle In a body Friday evening. j H(a crlnljnai term 0f court now In pro-
Street Parade. having lasted nearly a week.
On Monday evening there will be a big , •
nUeet parade of the Chrlitlan workers ^ BU)bonl ,, glck w!th Bniaiipox, hav-
The committee Jn ^tr^ of thh. import- ( ^ ^ ^ Kinaaa 0Uy and
UDeinOIlZer, innir n m. hnma Ua aaotna tn
."t event isIB. fipll I Is .uarlmlnTd kt his ho^e" He .e^ns" to
mm: W. E. I.HloU, V. VV. Bryant, ^'P1' : hav)nir an ltle bad luck coming these
Williamson. J. W.
Fred Bessard, C.
Tenser, A. Erei:bcrcer and A
(Continued on Pace
T IL Cole |! havliiK all the bad luck coming these
"Sard,' C. E. Buchner, 3. Alien he r«enl* lo*.t lw0 by
— - * * E French ' ui*8*
' \ O. Wm Colliver is here from Oklahoma
six) city.
ing her any money
The deaconess could not lear* -#<heteh-
er she had any relatives. Sh« waited
until six o'clock for the answer from the
deaconess, and then left for Afton.
MISS WAGNER CHAMPION.
NEW YORK, March 19.—Miss Ma-
rie Wagner of New York retained her
title as national woman indoor ten-
nis champion today by defeating Mrs.
C. N. Ueard of Chicago, former west
Mrs. Walter Brown, Trenton avenue and
Katy tracks, died this morning at 7
o'clock in a local hospital after lingering
several days with pneumonia.
Mrs. Drown was 35 years old and was
the mother of six children, the eldest be-
ing 12 years of age.
Mrs. Brown was a member of the Cath-
olic church and will be burled In the
Catholic cemetery beside her husband,
who died last
TI
TAKE TULSA DATES
Man Who Touched Express Car
for $14,000 Escapes Atten-
tions of Bloodhounds.
BEAUMONT, Texas, March 19—The
middlf aged bandit, who, slnglehanded,
Association Agrees to May 26-27 I secured H.OOO from the Well* Fargo
and Will be Here With a
Big Crowd.
Neglects to Find Out.
In the above statement Magee con-
cedes that Hunt and Quinn are aincera
in their desire to see that the gambling
houses in the city are closed for good.
arfU'JS that the three other members
o. the official family are opposed to such
a procedure. Ho has evidently not in-
vestigated this matter with any degreo
of honest Intent. At least he failed to
afford Carl Gregg, candidate for com-
missioner from the third district, the op-
portunity to tell where he stands upon
matter, pertaining to law enforcement
If he had ftane so he would have saved
himself tho neceslty of a retraction, of
being forever branded aa a political
blatherskite who atoopa to whatever low
ends are necessary in carrying out his
object of trying to deceive a citizenship, -
in whose minds la still keen a recent
Junketing (rip he took at tha expanse of
the taxpayers of tha Tulsa school dlatrict.
News to Drags.
'1 am surprised that Magee should
P^jg&ig^^twynta about me with-
JMt.fain i "iBI the opportunity to
doctor* myself," Mr. Gregg told The
Democrat this morning. "It ia th* first
time I have ever been branded aa aa
amiable and pliant tool of crime In thla
city. It aeema to mo that thla is putting
It rather strong. 1 always thought that
my respectability would compare fav-
orably with that of this exponent of re-
form. Of course I have been unable tc
get in on the financial end of overy band
wagon, being content to make my living
honestly by attending to my own busi-
ness affairs. I have endeavored to be a
credit to myself and family but am not
worried very much that my ambitions
along this line have been so adversely
construed by this apostle of Sanderson."
No CampalQn of Noiiea.
"During the heat of tho primary cam-
paign I did not think it necessary for me
to make any pledges. I made- the race
upon my record as a democrat and Tul-
sa citlxen. When people asked me
where I stood upon certain propositions
I always told them, but I did not think
it necessary to shout a platform at thera
from the housetops or in the public press.
To me that savored too much of hypo-
crisy. Political promises made to get
office are usually broken when the
ambition of the aspirant is realized. I
simply offered vnyself as a candidate
content to let tho voters Judge me for
what 1 am and have been which after
all Is the fairest and surest test of
American citizenship.
> "Now. however that Mr. Magee has
charged mo with being an "amicable
and pliant tool of crime" It can not be
objectionable for me to state emphatically
Just where I stand. In fact It Is a duty
I owe to myself, my family and friends
who so loyally supported me In the pri-
mary race for me to make a statement.
And in doing so 1 am simply reiterating
what they all have previously known
and what they knew they have reason
to expect of me If I am elected a mem-
ber of the city commission.
Enforce all the Laws.
"I am strictly In favor of the rl^1 d
enforcement of all the city ordinancc-s
and if elected will work unceasingly to
make Tulsa a better and greater city
in every respect, morally, financially and
every other way. I am strictly opposed
to open gambling and will do everything
in the power of a city commissioner to
see to it that such places are kept for-
ever closed In this city. Money a pent
in gambling dens leaves the channel* tf
pre8s ear on the northbound Santa Fe lraJ(1 forvyn ftnd pub„c gH,llW1 acU
train near here yisteday, had apparently (mii a ,M(h (m „
made good his escape today. Not
Information that the Ozark Trails as-
sociation concurs in the section of
the dates by the Tulsa committee in
charge of good roads meetings was con-
tained in a letter received today by J.
Burr Gibbons from C. \V. Fear, secretary
of the trails organization. He says that
the tentative dat"s, May 26-27, are en- 1 Beaumont" had been bound with
tlrely agreeable to the organization, the j anj then locked in.
officers of which have formally rutlfled I Local pollre are still looking for two
the action. mPn whose actions were remembered af-
The secretary Indicates that there wll! ter the holdup becamo known and were
additional clue was reported up to noon.
.Sheriff Giles and a posse returned from
the scene near Helblg early today, the
bloodhounds having failed to strike a
trail. They made a general search of
that section, which Is heavily wooded
and thinly settled. It Is not known at
what spot the bandit left the train. The
robbery was discovered at Sllsbee, when
tho train cro wforced a way Into the car
leach on the legitimate buaine.;
Interests of a city. As a business man
1 cannot countenance it. I have spoken
In as plain language as I know how ind
you will find me on duty every day in
the year In the work of keeping tne city
clear of this pernicious form of puMio
evil."
This doesn't read like Map*o would
have It read but coming from Carl Oress
absolutely _ true. Gregg should
Services will be helil at the Holy Family ; be a big Arkansas and Missouri attend- ! considered suspicious.
where Express Messenger llcb Martin of! know more about his own purposes ar.d
8Ick Intentions than Magee knows about them
If Magee does the manly thing Ua
will publish a retraction. But he woa'l
do it, because manliness and truthfulness
are not numbered among his requisites.
church tomorrow morning at 8 o'clock.
MANY SINS CHARGED
AGAINST M. T. TUCKER
Charging her husband with gross neg-1
ancc at Tulsa when the good roads ad-
vocates gather.
Mr. Fear Is also editor of the South-
western Automobillst.
Dates for tho national good
meeting are to be set later.
Signing Treaties.
WASHINGTON, March 19-Secretary
roads I Bryan celebrated his 54th birthday annl-
Senator versary today, receiving congratulations of
Bankhead of Alabama will indicate to j colleagues and friends. Ho had expected
marantic nt-r iiuewauu w.v.. N. ithc ,ocal committee the earliest time at to celebrate the event by signing peace
nf rliitv extreme crueltv and adul-I which he can leave Washington for the treaties with Brazil, Argentina and Chile. Wednesday afternoon to M's. Leorh«
tery, Mrs. Ardella Tucker today brought na*ional gathering here. | but the conventions were not prepared In {Twist, whose thre* children^potseas vfti-.
suit for divorce In thc superior court
MRS. TWIST OF GLENN
POOL NOW MRS. WFLDY
tires.
A marriage license was Issued from the
offtce of the clerk of tha county court
liable estates In the Glenn Tool oil field
against M. T. Tucker. She alleges that: Local Temp?r*tures.
em Champion m the final round of the he once |n a drunken rage, threw her to! Maxluin
tournament. The scores ware 6-1, 2-6, the floor and kneeling on her body al-1 Minimum
and 6-2. [moat crushed tho life out of her. J Precipitation
President Wilson w.'ota Secrotary Bryan I and Albert D. Weldy, a local grocer?
' They were married last night
SI a birthday letter, which was not made dealer.
Zlijpubllo, but was described by officials as and left today for
tH' being one of the warm congratulation. trip.
short lioneymoos
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Stryker, William. The Tulsa Democrat (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 164, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1914, newspaper, March 20, 1914; Tulsa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc169356/m1/1/?rotate=270: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.