Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 25, 1919 Page: 1 of 20
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OKLAHOMA CITY TIMES
Paid Circulation Guaranteed Creatar Than Any Other Evening Newtpaper Published in Oklahoma
LATE SHEET
EDITION
Knt!d (i int Oaihont Ot tniHim uiirfiM mxhiiI run mm utiiMi in act ir Ufa I. isis.
HOL. XXXI. No. 14
Nlsht stifl 111 Wlrw
TUB M.UTlCl PHttl.
TWENTY PACKS OKLAHOMA CITY FRIDAY AI'KIL 25 1019
1'iMitfd tui'f Wft iurM.f.
4n pmr (ninitt A 00 ft tur III ftdftnr.
PRICE TWO CENTS j
NTY
OVER II
OAN
cou
I.
ISi
WITH APRIL
COLO HE
Flowing Weather Prevails
East of Mississippi.
CROP DAMAGE PREDICTED
1 ow Temperatures in Nearly
All Other Sections
WASHINGTON April 2S.-S gen-
eral cold wave with snow flurries
and freezing tempe ratutrt prevailed
today over nearly U of the territory
east of the Mississippi river.
Crop Damage Feared.
Although no April records weie
broken so far ai reports received
here indicated the cold was unusual
and will not begin to shade off he-
fore tomorrow and Sunday. In On-
tario the temprratuie this morning
was 10 above ero and 20 alios e in
a numher of placet in New York
state. Much crop damage was pre-
dicted although high winds last
night laved early crops from greater
destruction. v
In looking over hit map today the
weather man said it was entirely too
cold for baseball especially is the
wind still was high and rather in-
clined to show that it was trying to
reach yesterday's mark of 40 or SO
miles. Many cities in the south re-
torted that it was more like football
eather.
Cold in Mlddla Wait.
With the exception of snow or
nin j'ii the lower Ohio valley and
rain in Tennessee the west portion
of thi middle Atlantic atatei and
north portion ef the east gulf atatei
the veat her will be fair tonight and
Saturday the bureau announced
;tb continued law tentperaturet. The
eM however will not read! F'or-
Ma. Freezing temperatures were In-
dicated for tonight kt the region as
far toJth at Kentucky and southern
Virginia. It will be lomewhat warm-
er tomorrow in the lakt region and
Ohio valley.
The disturbance of yesterday was
over Maine this morning and moving
northeast and storm warnings were
displayed on the coast from Norfolk
tr Eastpnrt Maine.
Oittl COriPLETIOfl
PLANS ADOPTED
Sheet Piling to Be Used City
Commissioners Decide
Plans for completing construction
of sheet piling at the west end of the
new waterworks dam prior to build-
ing a core wall decided upon re-
cently were adopted this morning by
the city commissioners following a
Communication from S. W. Stewart
president of the Ambursen Construc-
tion company.
The commissioner decided upon
the move when Stewart said the com-
pany is unwilling to run the risk of
bulling the core wall unless first
protected by the completing of the
piling. When the eommistonera de-
cided to build the core wall from the
western end of the dam to the em-
bankment It wai thought unnecessary
to complete the piling. Stewart says
that with the gap existing between
:he dam and the bank the chance of
in overflow U too great. With the
completion of the piling it is decmeJ
that the ensuing' construction of the
core vail would be fully protected.
To complete the pile driving a
space of 80 feet between the end ol
the dam and the embankment must
be driven. It is thought thli can be
done In three dayi. Following its
completion the core wall 18 inches
thick and constructed of reinforced
concrete will be itarted.
Preildert Stewart in a menage to
the commissioner! said he would be
in Oklahoma City about May S. He
ft now at Savannah Ga.
rf! WORTH TO GOTHAM
FLIGHT SATTEMPTED
FORT WORTH TeaaiApril 25-
Major T. C Macauley army (tier left
here it 7 a. m. today fr New York
City in hit plane. He will try to reach
New York City tonight. He went by
ay of Memphli Term.
DALLAS. TeaTsTsprl! 8-Mtjer
Macaulay reached here shortly after
daylight and stopped a few mlnittYs
to make tome minor adjustments it
wa announced at 1-ove field. Ht
left at toon ai they were completed
and expected then le reach New York
by aigat
14 Italian Divisions in Fiume Report
Dalmatian Port Is Said to Be
Full of Soldiers and More
Arriving Constantly U S.
Soldier Says
ITALY'S ENVOYS HOPEFUL
Solution of Conference Dis-
pute May Be Reached
Soon Italian Delegates De-
clare. PARIS April M.-An Ameiiri
olficer who left Fiume three daya ago
and who hn just arrived in Paris
savs it was reported there that a total
of fourteen divisions had been moved
to flume by the Italiana. He aaid
the city waa full of Italian aoldien
who were arriving eonaUntly.
PARIS April 25. A distinctly more
hopeful and less irreconcilable feeling
prevailed at Italian headquarters to-
day. No longer was there talk of a
breach with the peace conference but
instead it was said:
"All may he settled within a fort-
night. Premier Orlando has g'ltie to
Rome to consult parliament. There-
alter we shall see."
ROME. April 25-The Italia says
that because he was acquainted with
President Wilson's views of the Ital-
ian claims Thomas Nelson rage
American ambassador to Koine of-
fered his resignation.
In mid-February some time after
the visit of President W ilson to Home
rumors were in ciroWatirm that Am-
bassador Page was to resign It was
laid at that time that Mr. Page has
said he always expected to return to
the United States when the war was
ended. Early in April it wai reported
from Pari that the ambassador hid
sent in hli resignation but there ha
bean no official confirmation of the
report. Mr. Page assumed his post at
Rome in 1916. -
PARIS; Thursday! April Z4.-(Ha-vaa.)
Premier Orlando of Italy left
Paris for Kome it 8 JO o'clock tonight
iccompmied by Salvator Barzilai
General Diaz and two other members
of the Italian mission. He wai given
an ovation at the nation by a crowd.
Peace conference circlei were in-
clined to believe today that an amic-
able solution of the Italian incident
wislin the making.
For one thing. Inly has ihown her
desire to maintain good relations with
the allies by the fact that the Italian
delegatei remaining in Paris will con-
tinue to collaborate in the work of the
inter-allied commission not pertaining
to the actual work of the peace con-
ference. It is thought posiible that Premier
Orlando may call the Italian parlia-
ment together at an earlier date than
May 6 as previously fixed and may be
back in Paris for the opening of the
negotiation! at Versailles which will
not begin before the first or second of
Mey. j
ROME 'Imqrsday. April 24.-A
monster demonstration has beeu or-
ganized to greet Premier Orlando
when he returns Friday from Parii.
The organizers of the demonstration
(Continued an Pag t Column 4.)
POM GOODNCSS SAK(! AH
SUTMY !$ i PROUD PC 6oot
LAVfof AlN'j HAM 1' A ' MULE
so it pat! mahd It tiliJ
ON
T'oTHC H
LOCAL rORICAIT-ClasNty ana tin.
rtllte svaatstes tenlfM ana taturtfiy.
wMfc feteMjr ralni aewtewHat warmer
aeteraay.
TAT I FOMCABT-TanlaM ana
Satttrtlay eiesiey sveMShr rein) eeWer
tenifM In eawtiMMt tcrfon.
KANSAS -atwweiss tenleM ant preka.
Wy tatureayi astwlv rlotwi tempeeatvre.
'. HOURLY TIMMftATUMa.
1 p. m
11 p. m
II mldnteHi
- ) a. m.....
I . m
I a. m
4 a. m
U:
I a.
a.
10 a.
m..
ra..
m..
t
SG
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47
4f
II
41
11 a.
if M
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I
'.JAUtX.'
J
Europe on War Bread
Basis Three Months
By Order of Hoover
PERJURY CHARGE
IS FILED AGAINST
COLD DRINK MAN
Discrepancies in Tax State-
ment and Suit Charged
Perjury in making an allied fale
lax list for the Krml Kola company
of whiih hr is secretary is charged I
against K. K. Phillips in an informa-
tion containing seven counts filed this
morning' by John 1J. Guyer assistant
county attorney. Phillips was arrested
-st before noon and will be arraigned
before Joe I". Deuprce justice of the
peace this afternoon.
The information filed by Cmjer is
based upon a comparison of the tax
list said to have been sworn to before
James Reatv county assessor on Feb-
ruary 7 by Phillips and an answer in
a civil action against the company
filed with Cliff Myers1 court clerk on
February 14.
Discrepancy Alleged.
It is charged in the first count that
the paid-in capital stock of the com-
pany ii not $7JTO ai alleged to have
been ihown by the tax list but $181-
75 ai alleged to have been ihown in
the answer.
The lecond count alleges that the
undivided profit! of the company ire
$15IXJ0 as alleged to have been shown
in the inswer rather than $10(10 as
alleged to have been shown in the tax
list.
The net value of the moneyed capi-
tal is alleged in the third count to be
(Continued en Pane f. Column I)
BIG DEFICIENCY
IS FORECAST BY
STATE OFFICIAL
Treasurer Declares $300000
Debt Is in Sight
There will be a deficiency of not
lest than $.100000 and perhaps more
in the state treasury at the close of
the current fiscal year it was stated
thit morning by Frank Carter state
auditor. This ts almost one-half the
deficiency created during the preced-
ing two fiscal years.
According to Cirter the deficiency
wrlj be due chiefly to emergency ap-
propriations made by the recent legis-
lature which must be met with funds
appropriated for this fiscal year.
A general statement of the state's
financial condition and its financial
obligations it now being prepared by
Carter.
RATE READJUSTMENT
ON OIL SOON SAID
That there will soon bei mate-
rial readjustment in oil rates between
Oklahoma and the Texas oil fields
wa : the statement o H. C. McCord
this morning. McCord just returned
from a hearing in St Louis before
the Western Freight Traffic asso-
ciation on the rates. He was ac-
companied by S. P. Sidney N. M.
Vaughan and Piut M. Pope Okla-
homa City oil men. Local interests
am arixiout to get a rate of ty
cents per 100 pounds on oil shipped
from Texts points and McCord pre-
dicts that some such rates will be ob-
tained when the matter comes up be-
fore rate officials in Washington.
RED CROSS SERVICE
WILL BEC0NTINUED
Home service work of the Ameri-
can .Red Cross will continue not only
through the period of demobilization
hut also i a peace time activity and
will be expanded In some communities
to include others betide the families
' soldiers and sailors it wis an-
nounced In a bulletin received at Red
Croat headquarters yesterday after-
W . v
American Wheat Stocks Suf-
ficient to Permit People of
U S to Continue Eating
White Bread Barnes Says
PARI5! . r I 25 An increase in
the milling percentage which will vir-
tually put the world hack to a war
bread basis for the next three months
is part of tile program sdoptrd by the
supreme f'od council under the chair-
manship of Herbert C. Hoover.
The program also includes a com-
plete plan for securing and distribut-
ing food to allied liberated neutral
and enmv countries until the next
haret. One object of the program is
to determine the available food supply
and so to distribute shipping as no'
to put undue pressure on any one mar-
ket. .r.VY s.ijKr .pril J Americans
will continue to cot "white bread" re
stored late last
sear after months
of milling on a
Victory flour bas-
is despite the re-
turn of European
countries to a war
bread basis an-
nounced by ' the
supreme food
council Julius II.
Dimes president
of the food ad-
ministration grain
corporation and
federal wheat di-
rector said today.
Julius
araee.
A survey of wheal
stocks. Mr. pirnes
Slid had convinced his department
that the American supply was suffi-
cient not only to warrant continued
production of all wheat flour but to
meet the export demand until the next
harvest.
Reversion in Europe to the war
bread basis Mr. Barnes asserted
might help to impress upon Americans
the alarming food shortage in the
war-torn and neighboring lands. Dur-
ing the war he added English millers
extracted 86 percent of the wheal ber-
ry. When the armistice wis signed
more brin wis thrown out in the pro-
cess reducing the extriction percent-
age to 71. It now has been restored
he said to 75 percent and the corpora-
tion's advices were to the effect that
a similar standard was to be adopted
for other belligerents and lilierated
countries while neutrals sharing in
the inter-allied food distribution would
be required to take similar action.
The 75 percent basis the wheat di-
rector stated wis approximately that
of the American "victory flour" milled
luring the greater part of the war.
The necesiitv. five months alter the
cessation of hostilities of reestablish
ing the war bread regulation Mr.
Barnes pointed out showed the dire
straits in which European countries
had been .placed by the ravaging of
harvest lands and the killing and dis-
abling of millions of agriculturists.
CHICAGO. April 25. -Excited
jumps in the price of corn followed
announcement from Paris that "war
bread" would be igain The rule for
Europe. The steepest rise. was in the
July delivery of corn which soired
to $1.70 bushel an idvince of b'.i
cents to 6 centi over night.
Provisions again smashed the high
price record.
LOGAN FARMERS
AGAINST BONDS
Council Decides "No" in
Thomas-Golobie Debate
The "no" had it at Guthrie yester-
day where Senator John Golobie and
J. Elme.' Thomas met in a joint debate
on the road bond issue before 1000
members of the Logan County Farm
Council. It was estimated that the
crowd stood 24 to 1 agetatl the bonds
The council admitted it was In favor
of good roads but not hard-surfaced
roads in all parts of the country it
this time. It recommended repairing
the bad places in aut rnads building
new culverts and bridges and taking
up the hard surface road proposition
in a more conservative way. according
to Senator Tiiomas.
Thomas' statement that the proposed
good roads amendment would if car-
ried out tS completion cost the state
more than $200000000 created a vreat
deal of excitement among the "ami's."
B.
Mother Consents
So Wedding Will
Take Place Soon
u. '. s
Mitt Elisabeth Wrentmore and her
fiaaee Ooveraor Ceaeral Fraacfa
Barton Harrison of the Philippines.
BERKELEY CaL. Aug. 2S.-(Spe-cial.)
The announcement of the en-
gagement of Miis Elualveth Wrent-
more a sophomore at the University
of California to Francis Burton Har-
rison governor general of the Philip-
pines created quite a stir in Califor-
nia tociety. Miss Wrentmore who is
the daughter of Dean Clarence Wrent-
more head of the engineering college
of the I'niversity of the Philippines
is but 18 sears old while her fiance
is 5.
Miss Wrentmnre's mother it is re-
ported was much opposed to the
match because of the great disparity
in their ages. She has however been
won over and the wedding will take
place in Berkeley early next month.
Miss Wrentmore is a tall beautiful
blond with haiel eyes. She Js an ex-
pert golf and tennis player a horse-
woman and a graceful dancer. She is
a native of Ann Arbor Mich.
Cost of City
Government
$9.04 Year
Police Protection 73 Cents
and Fire $108 Figures
Disclose
if every man woman and child in
Oklahoma Cilv were asked to go to
the office of Mike Donnelly city com-
missioner of finance and accounting
ind par down today his per capita
share of the annual cost of governing
this municipality each would have to
give up $904.
Oklahoma City's municipal govern-
ment costs exactly $6.52 less per cap-
ita than that of Tulsa and exactly
$1 84 more thin that of Muskogee ac-
cording to figures assembled by the
federal census bureau which reached
here today.
The figures show that of the entire
cost of city government here 73 cstnts
ftoes for police and $1.08 for fire pro-
tection; Tulsa with a per capita cost
of $1536 pays $1.50 per capita for po-
lice and $1 48 for lire protection and
Muskogee with a per capital cost of
$7.20 pays 81 cents for fire and 58
cents lor police protection. '
AUTO LUBRICATION
TALKE0JT MEETING
General discussion of automobile
lubrication aiuJ the best commercial
methods was to be held at the second
mvrting of the conference of the Pierce
Oil corporation in the Skirvin hotel
this morning N. VV. Rioe vice-president
of the company was to make a
short address. The convention will
last through tomorrow; afternoon.
: J
.em K
JUL JaVi I
Wilson Has Only to Speak
and He Will Be Nominated
and Elected Palmer Says
PHILADELPHIA ApriT"25. "If PreMiW'iit Wilson
no wiahod ho would nominated and would be re-
tdectnd. I do not think there is any doubt of that."
Thin is the optimintit: prediction of Attorney Gen-
eral A. Mitchell Palmer in a statement issued today re-
garding tho reports that Mr. Wilson mitfht seek a third
term.
Incidentally Mr. Palmer who last night spoke in
this city disclaimrd any personal presidential ambi-
tions and emphatically haid the department of justice
would enforce prohibition following July 1.
On the subject of prohibition Mr . Palmer said:
"You could hardly say that demobilization has
.liken place when we have a million men or no utider
irms as we will have then. Unless the president re-
scinds his proclamation the country will go dry July 1."
Air gun Ruled
Dangerous by
Commissioners
Boys Toting Guns or Slung-
sliots to Be Arched
Henceforth1."
I'.arh of the fne cftv coinmissione rs
shamelessly admitted tiiis morning that
they as boys gleefully plugged derlncs
with slingshots and air niles. Each
also admitted that the cops paid little
attention to this phase of lioyhood ac-
tivities ami that any interference in
that respect nould have been looked
upon as transgressions against their
inalienable rights.
Despite their refreshing memories
of Auld Lang Syne the commissioners
decided that air rifles and slungshots
are dangerous to fcwajorty and. listed
that any youngster found guilty of
using; inch shall be arrested. It was
pointed out that city ordinances pro-
hibit this form ef amusement but that
they are not being observed. The po-
lice will be instructed to rigidly en-
force these measures. '
DANK LOOTED
OF $25000 ;
BY FOUR MEN
Cashier Office Boy and Cus-
tomer Locked in Vault.
KANSAS CITY. Mo April 25-
The Inter-City bank on the state line
between Kansas City Mo. and Kan-
sas City. Kan was robbed today by
four men of approximately $Jo000.
The robbers escaped in a motor car.
The loss is estimated bv bank of-
ficials included $11000 cash and $14-
0 I in Liberty bonds.
Three of the four myi i itcred the
bank while the fourth remained out-
side in the motor car. The three
locked the cashier and a 14-yar-old
office boy in the vault. A customer
who entered while the robherv was
under way also was Idtked in the
vault.
LICENSE INCREASE
ASKEDJBY OFFICIAL
William Morris city license inspect-
or this morning requested the city
commissioners to increase the licenses
of junk buyers from $10 to $20 annu-
ally and to fix a license for the oper-
ation of second-hand stores. Morris
said that junk dealers are taxed $50
yearly and that he believed junk buy-
ers should pay more in proportion. He
said that pawnbrokers pay a tat of
$1(0 and that second-hand men deal
in much the same traffic. The matter
was referred to Commissioner Donnel-
ly for investigation.
LAST MINUTE NEWS
Nmos of men from whom th governor will name the
commiuion of four which will auperrise expenditure of money
from the $50000000 road bond issue if it paaaet was an-
nounced late this afternoon by Ben LaFayette chairman of
the state board of affairs on behalf of the g orernor. The
men are D. N. Fink Muskogee i C. B. Ames Oklahoma City
Harry Rogers Tulsa j E. W. Marlsad Ponca City; C. S.
Arery Tulsa; H. C McKeerar Enid; X A. Whitehurst
Doxies Wirt Franklin Ardmore; J. H. Burford Oklahoma
City; E. B. Lawson Nowata i Z. Harris Black well; Perry
Freeman M cA tester Edgar Fenton Lehigh; Frank Bailey
Chickasha; R. W. Htggms McAleater; C. E. Dudley Antlers;
- -Sl S22? !is ef fiur.v
BONDS INDORSED
BY CITY FATHERS
BY 3 TO 2 VOTE
Patteison and Donnelly Decry
" City in State Politics"
liy i sole of 3 to 2 the city com-
missioners this morninR passed a
resolution indorsing the $50000000
road bond issue and requesting the
support of residents here in passing
the measure. The resolution was
passed alter much discussion from
each of the commissioners. Commis-
sioners Mike Donnelly and Joe Pat
terson voted against the measure and
Mayor Walton and Commissioners
Kesler and Wilson voted in its favor.
Commissioner Patterson stated that
personally he strongly ' favored' the
bonds but that he opposed the expres
sion of a sentiment either way by the
commissioisrrs as a body. Patterson
slid he construed indorsing the reso-
lution as a move toward mingling in
state affairs which he opposed. He
also said that in calling upon voters
here to support the bonds it savored
of dictatorial methods.
Donnelly said he was squarely op-
posed to the bond issue an several
points. First he said he looked upon
the revolving fund with disapproval;
that no good business venture ap-
proved it. and that it was a dangerous
thing with which to become entangled.
Donnelly said that he looked with dis-
fasor upon the unlimited overhead ex-
penditure as provided in the bill. He
expressed the opinion that while Gov-
ernor Kohertson approved the bill
there were many points in it that the
state executive disapproved t ike Pat
terson Donnelly said he considered the
adoption of the resolution is an at-
tempt to guide the sentiment of the
voters.
I
RAILROAD CREW
HEARING MONDAY
Conference on Full Switch-
ing Personnel Is'Set.
Ot'iiciats of railroads here will con-
fer with the city commissioners next
Monday morning relative to the ar-
rest of train crews on a charge of
switching without a full complement
of switchmen. Complaints filed in
municipal court state that the switch-
ing crews were operating with three
men instead of four as provided in
the city ordinance.
Following their arrest the switch-
men gave bond and returned to vork.
Mayer Walton said this morning that
the o.dirance would not he enforced
until the hearing Monday. He ex-
pressed the opinion however that
railroad companies here are observ-
ing the ordinance.
?5irtM. Uwt. . w .
DISTRICTS IN
COUNTY ARE
ACROSS TOO
Total Subset iptions in City
Are $3108150
COUNTY NOT REPORTED
Eleven Thousand Individuals
Have Bought Bonds
BULLETIN
Reports from state headquarters at
1 o'clock today indicated that $793c
0O0 -hid been officially reported sub-
scribed to the Liberty loan in the stale
campaign. This with the amount an-
nounced at the noonday luncheon in
the cily will bring this state total un-
officially subscribed to nearly fH-
000000. Oklahoma county went over its Vic
tory loan quota today at noon when it
was announced at the 12 o'clock lunch-
eon of workers and committees in the
Chamber of Cominerthhat $3108150
Had been raised in Oklahoma City
Reports from the county this after
noon will more than r.iake up the
county quota of $250.01)0 and the com-
bined county quota of $.124151)0 it was
forecast by Charles Phelps in charge
of statistical work.
Two new records were made today
wnen a U'tai ot Jxn ttmiviauai sud-
scriptions was announced and a total
of 1407 in one day by Scott's division
was also made puhlie. Subscriptions
today totaled $660100.
Records (or division- at noon today
were :
Anas 402 subscriptions 1110.340.
Dean 208 subscriptions 1. 10340.
Scott 1407 subscriptions $241740
Vesper 614 subscriptions 149790.
Gross 304 subscription! $96390.
Banks 199 subscriptions $IiOO.
All reports indicated this morning;
that the county Victory loan quota
would be subscribed by noon. It was
only necessary to raise a little more
than $400000 today and with several
big; subscriptions this amount seemed
assured. V. J. l ettee said he was
confident he would be able to an-
nounce that Oklahoma City had "gone
over the top" at the noonday luncheon
tooay.
Rain interfered to some extent with
the work and spirit of the teams but
a lar:e percent carried on their work
as effectively as during the first two
days of the campaign.
May Break Records.
If the success of the campaign is
announced today it will break all
irevious records for Oklahoma City
in the support of war activities. This
loan will have been raised more quick-
ly than any of the other four. Okla-
homa City will also be the first big:
community to go over in the stats ami
it is expected it will draw others after
it Tulsa has only raised four-fifths
i f its quota. Muskogee has still a
Urge sum to collect. State officials
tre expecting that both these cities
will go over shortly after Oklahoma
I 1 1. .r
With the success of Oklahoma Citv.
the sucrrss of the Third district is
nr.ictirally assured according to Neal
0Sulliv.in. associate director of the
campaign. O'Sullivan expects that his
listrict will he over by Saturday nieht.
The quota for the district is $d.500.000
the second largest in the state. About
two-thirds of this has been raised.
The first two counties to go over
Cleveland and l'ontotoc were in the
Third district. Three more out of the
11 have been reported over unofficial-
ly and with OklalioinaTi official report
more than half the counties in the dis-
trict will have reached their quotas.
Many Bis; Subscriptions.
One of the two biggest individual
subscriptions today was made by th
F.quitahle Life Insurance company of
New York for $25000. This was ths
same amount subscribed by the com-
pany last year. The Oklahoma Nat-
ural Gas company maie a subscription
of $25000 Robert Watrhorn $?000.
Wilson & Company and Morris
Company and their employes $l00(l"0
each. Employes of the Ford company
subscribed $12500.
C H. Ames and one of the off:cers
touring the state in the interests of
the loan were to talk at the noonday
luncheon todiy.
Arrangements for the Carter Gliss
luncheon next Monday are now being
perfected by the Chamber o( Com-
merce and the luncheon room U est
pected to be filled to its capacity with '
Oklahoma Cityans who wish to hear
the secretiry of the treasury. Class
will speak promptly at 12 o'clock
Reservations can be made at the
Chamber of Commerce.
state totals at 10 o'clock this morning
the complete figures for the cimoelffi
slto date being Vfi3bXQ reports?) V
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 31, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 25, 1919, newspaper, April 25, 1919; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc171105/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.