Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 35, No. 272, Ed. 5 Monday, March 23, 1925 Page: 1 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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6
OCLOCK OKLAHOMA
NIGHT
i
I
VOL. XXXV. NO. 272.
PRICE: City 2 Outside 3^
PROBE OF BRIBE CHARGES
•1
STARTED BY LEGISLATURE
A
★
ON my HOTELS
/
Will Be
(
4
/
Lorin Mackey
HERE still are old-fashioned boys
the
‘ W
’HAT then-omitting (Ke fireworks—is General Mitchelrs contention?
to
the courthouse in an ambulance it
OK
possession
bell boys
Joe Looney said he
was
The senate was at
for
ease
minutes while Johnson prepared
4
I
. 1.15
March 20, today stood at seven.
%
Y
EDITION
EXTRA
Is Mitchell Right?
Is Weeks Right?
Will Irwin Tells
Britton Boy,
Winner of
County Prize
For Spelling.
Says He
PROTESTANTS TEND
TOWARD CREED UNITY
Bright New Cars Are Lined Up
For Automobile Loving Public
our
now’
five
an
boys we used to know, even though
he has reached the advanced age of
1 13 years.
gin their inspection of'the exhibits.
A lavish display of cars has been
assembled to dazzle the eyes of the
auto loving public. The trim. efficient
STATE BANDIT HONOR SYSTEM
GETS 25 TEARS TH HE DECIDED
SEVENTH PERSON DIES
FROM INTERURBAN CRASH
SCHULTEN MINE WILL
BE OPENED WEDNESDAY
understood and may have to testify '
this afternoon from a stretcher.
woman.
Mrs. Robertson will be brought
DAUGHTER NOT
TO APPEAR IN
president of the student council.
Ballots cast at the mid-year student
r
(,
Monk that what
action.
Johnson then
and porters had in their
for sales purposes.
Twenty-six porters and
Cadillac roadster ever built and a
handsome, specially constructed road-
ster of the latest type standing at its
side.
No tickets will be sold to the show.
Turnstiles, of the same type as those
"perfectly satisfied with any investi-
gat ion the senate would make.’*
"I believe that Monk’s resolution is
smoother. I mean I believe it is in a
very formal and precise and proper.
(Continned on Page e, Column 6.)
(Tomorrow: "Supposing a case—" the second instalment of Will Irwins’
series on the aircraft controversy.)
DYING GIRL‘5
LOVER SOUGHT
9
P
MISSOURI PACIFIC
LOSES TAX DISPUTE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Exclusie’Service
hand when they talk to ladies,, and
who are almost gallant in their man
*4
60
65
72
74
77
77
78
is
To Drop Flowers On
Grave Of Dead Comrade
10 p. ......
11 p. n.....
If midnight
1 a. m.....
1 1 *• m.....
3 a. m.. ...
; a m.....
I S a. m.....
i 7 a. .......
an active member of the student coun- | little better English," Johnson said,
cil.__--- ---------------- —-----
road lined up for inspection, groomed
and cared for by capable attendants,
aa beflta the finest products of the
motor world.
This is the scene at the opening of
Oklahoma City’s greatest automobile
show at the Coliseum Monday after-
noon. At 2 o'clock the turnstiles will
FIKST. in- the
EVENING FIELD
Missionary
or Preacher
CITY TIMES
(Evening Edition of The Daily OkiaLoman)
with Effie Thomas. As they were walk-
ing along. Miss Boyington suddenly
turned a gun on herself and shot her-
J self through the abdomen.
Hospital attendants said Monday
। that she had made no statement that
i would indicate a motive for the shoot-
■ ing.
The only thing she has said Is that
she was tired of living.
A Street & Draper ambulance was
, called from Oklahoma. City and Miss
Thomas accompanied her companion
i to the hospital here.
' The only indication of a motive was
the monnings of the girl on the way
• --
Bitter Row Over the Air, Setting Army and Navy
By Ears, May Force Disarmament Parley
■Mw L
w •
" RUT in case he tails? Then we must needs consider seriously the defence
• of our population and our cities from this new and subtle enemy and the
’ question of way< and means becomes impotat
nu uauatiy are som. . money. intoxicating liquors, position.
He holds, to begin with, that the greatest future danger to
“PERMIT BILL”
LOBBY WILL BE
NVESTIGATED
stead of long trousers, just like
COLLIER TRIAL A
times. Fred Hamm and his Terrace
Garden orchestra will play.
Every opportunity to make the au-
Sky Men U. S. MAY TRY TO
* POT PADLOCKS
=zzt =zvea- I
uriuus, massive contours of the larger i mining has been seized by the exhib.
cars will be exhibited side by side. nonei .. _ ..
Practically every design and style I°" Daneing to the music of Fred
of car on the market can be seen on Hamm orchestra will be one of the
bing the People's National bank of Tuesday, according to Lee Thompson,
North Kansas City, November 10.
I Maine*. Holland has wired Boyington
• but had received no reply Monday
, morning. He also has wired the chief
' of police at Bangor. Rows of new automobiles glistening
• ! beneath a canopy of decorations and
scheme of national defense is air power. He believes that when plans
But persons at Norman who knew
; her. said she had few boy friends.
She was an employe in the Vanity L
• Beauty Parlor nt Norman.
Miss Boyington ‘s father, according
। to J. D. Holland, Cleveland county at-'
torney. is H. T. Boyington of Bangor.
Painted green aisles lead to the
various exhibits. Decorations this year
are said to surpass those of any pre-
vious show. Green curtains cover
amendment to the Monk resolution
which incorporated the lobbyist fea-
ture of his resolution.
When the amendment was offered
T HAVE used the phrase "national defense." There are two ways of defin-
- ing that term, and the difference is important. -You may say that na-
tional defense consists in equipping yourself so strongly that you can pro-
tect every American interest in every part of the world by force of arms.
N To do this, you are going to need the greatest armament in the world. One
finds it hard to distinguish this ‘perfect defense" from militarism and im.
pe rial ism.
a tinea ar the eminn.
clek as the hundreds of visitors be- all. windows. Vari-colored lights will
play on the billowy canopy at all
Monday apparently had developed into
one of the most extensive liquor clean-
up drives staged In Oklahoma City in
months.
Following up their drive of Saturday
afternoon with a general round up
Sunday of hotel porters suspected of
having violated the prohibition amend-
ment. the raiders announced that nu-
merous charges would be filed Monday
morning.
More than fifty porters from leading
hotels in the city passed before an “in-
vestigation" court of the squad. None
was put in jail Sunday night, but
thoze against whom evidence was ob-
talned were held for farther investi-
gation in a room of the Huekins hotel.
The squadron. Headed by W. Frank
Cunningham, without warning Satur-
spoken to, who hold their hats in
SPRINGFIELD. Ill., March 23.-
With the death Sunday night of Mrs.
J. W. Clear, wife of a Girard, III., ga-
rage proprietor, the death toil In the:
interurban crash south of Carlinville,
Amendment Adopted
The committee was appointed after
* he senate unanimously passed a reso-
lution introduced Monday morning by
Monk and seven other senators calling
for the appointment of the probe com-
mittee. An amendment offered by
Johnson to include a probe of the al-
leged lobby in the scope of the inves-
who say
Ma am" when
rHE flight was the first of ha
- kind ever attempted by civil-
ians, it is said, and its progress
was being watched "by army air-
men in the state.
Members of the squadron were to
meet Monday night, according to
Dorsey Askew, flight commander,
to complete plans for strewing
flowers over the grave of Bennett.
election on the honor system were
mysteriously destroyed before count-
ing. making the calling of a special
election necessary.
Other questions to be voted on at
the election are:
The proposal to place all finances
i for the operation of student publica-
lions in the control of the faculty;
I representation of the school of geo-
! logy in the student council: use of the
roll call vote in conducting student
I council business, and the making of
I the presient of the student union
from leading hotels in Oklahoma City
were caught in the drag-net spread
by the prohibition flying squadron.
Complaints against this number
were filed early Monday before Earn-
est Chambers, United States commis-
sioner. by Bee DeMoburn. general
prohibition director for the district.
All in Custody
All of those named in the complaint
are in the custody of officers. Seven
employes of the Huckins hotel, five
from the Kingkade, three from the
Skirvin and three from the Lawrence
hotel, were included in the roundup.
Only in a few cases were the names of
ihe defendants given in the complaint.
The numbers issued by the hotel be-
ing used by the defendant. Sale of
liquor to members of the squadron
was alleged in most of the complaints.
Week end visit of the "flying" pro-
hibition squadron of Kansas City.
said he would he
NEW YORK, Marell 23.- Mr*.
Isabelle Cooms Gwathmey Jr.
formerly of New Haven. Conn.,
brought in supreme court today, a
separation suit which will test the
validity of a divorce decree ob-
tained in Dallas, Texas, by Archi-
bald G. Gwathmey Jr, cotton brok-
er, and of his ma triage to Mrs.
Betsy Judd, at Greenwich, Conn.,
last July 4.
Precipitatjon, to dute 1925
PAWHUSKA. March 23.- The
Osage counei today approved all
oil and gas lenses sold on tribal
lands here March 18.
rHF two fliers were members of
- a squadron of eleven planes all
piloted by civilians, members of
Sholom Alechem oil fraternity,
which had planned a week end air
visit to Tulsa fraternity members.
The remainder of the squadron
hopped off Saturday and arrived
at Tulsa without mishap. Krohn
and Benpett were delayed and did
not get away until Sunday morn-
ing. Some members of the squad-
ron did not learn of the tragedy
until their return to Ardmore
Monday,
Once a mysterious anonymous communication, probably from some high
source, threw the inquiry into an unaccounatable panic. Once again, Gen-
eral Mitchell seems to have been marked for immediate removal. Then
hidden counter influences got to work, and Mitchell stayed for a time. Then
when the Inquiry ended, Mitcheil was sent back to the line with the possi-
. bility of a court-martial hanging over hrs head. Did the American army
and navy recognize the duel. doubtless there would have been coffee ami
pistols for breakfast all along Potomac park.
r Congressional inquiries always listen to some real wisdom and a great
, deal of unsupportd bunk. This was no exception. The several thousand
Vises of testimony contain some facts, many half-truths masquerading as
‘ fit, and a lot of flat contradictions, together with at least 1.000 pages of
• irrelevant matter. This series is the earnest attempt of a neutral to set
. forth the vital facts in the controversy.
Democratic Floor Leader Is
Named To Head Com-
mittee,
Investigation of the Jed
Johnson charges of an unlaw-
ful lobby and bribery at-
tempts, was placed in the
hands of a committee of five
senators, appointed Monday
afternoon by W. J. Holloway,
president of the senate.
Wash Hudson, senator from Tulsa,
and democratic floor leader was named
chairman of the Investigating com-
mitte The other members are Sen-
| ator Ira Hill of Cherokee, Harry Cor
dell of Manitou. John E. Luttrell and
Carl Monk of McAlester, who is chair*
man of the senate committee on
coupling service corporations. Hill is
the only republican named on the com-
mittee.
will pay floral tribute to a fallen
comrade here Tuesday afternoon,
when the body of Floyd S. Ben-
nett, Ardmore oil man is laid to
rest In the Ardmore cemetery.
Bennett died Sunday afternoon
of Injuries sustained when an air-
plane in which he had William
Krohn. newspaperman, were fly-
ing to Tulsa, crashed to earth at
a point ten miles north of Ardmore
Sunday morning. Krohn is in a
hospital here, but will recover.
It was accepted by the senate unani«
mousiy and the body then unani-
mously voted the. Monk resolution.
Hearing Up To Committee
Whether the hearings will be open
or closed had not been decided Mon-
day. Johnson’s resolution called for
open hearings while the Monk resolu-
tion gave the committee authority
to hold closed hearings if desired.
"I don’t know whether the henrings
will be closed or open.” Hudson said
after his appointment as chairman.
"That is entirely up to the committee
| and I have not talked to all the mem-
| bers."
I The text of the Johnson resolution
I follows:
"Whereas. It has been charged that
an unlawful lobby has been main-
tained before the state senate of the
Tenth legislature of Oklahoma, and.
Bribery Is Defined
“Whereas, it has been further
charged that money, position, or other
valuable consideration has been of-
fered certain senate members of the
Tenth Oklahoma legislature, which al-
leged acts are defined as bribery, and
prohibited by Section 1597. revised
laws of Oklahoma, 1921,
"Therefore be it resolved, that a
committee v five (5) members of the
senate, to be appointed by the presi-
dent of the senate of Oklahoma, to in-
vestigate the alleged illegal lobbying
and attempted bribery, by offerink
Character Witnesses Testify
The girl appeared at the courthouse
today for the first time since the trial
of her father began.
Little more than a child, her face
framed in blonde curls making her
look even more youthful, she twisted
a bit of lace handkerchief in her hands
nervously as she stood on the court-
Ifouse steps before entering th- room
Character witnesses occupied almost
the entire morning seasion. They were
intended to refute testimony of the
defense against Mrs Hattie Robert-1
son's reputation.
Boy's Mother to Testify
All of them declared they believed I
her to be a hard working. good!
is still the kernel of the matter. You cannot beat an enemy unless you
occupy his territory; and how can you do that without aircraft? Such being
the case, nn Independent air force would merely complicate matters. What
we need, in both army and navy, is an serial arm skilled not only in flying,
but in army and navy tactics: an integral part of the force. Admiral Sims,
by the way, dissents to the point of believing that aeroplane bombs have
an edge on surface craft and that the battleship is doomed; but he opposed
the united. Independent air force.
agreed with
needed wns
POUGKEEPSIE, N. Y., Mareh
SB.—Prof, George Fullerton, visit-
ing professor of philosophy at
Vassar college. and a noted au-
thority on philosophy, hanged
himselr in his home here today.
He had been in III health and de-
spondent.
ner toward teacher.
If you don't believe it look up Lorin
Mackey of Brilton, Oklahoma county
spelling champion.
Lorin is rather grave and serious,
quaintly so. He wears knickers in-
tisation was adopted by the senate.
Johnson offered his investigation
resolution after the convening of the
1 afternoon session.
With both Investigation reolutions
up for consideration the senate en-
gaged in considerable debate on the
adoption.
Monk asked for the ndoption of a
resolution offered by him and the
seven other senators.
Monk Wants Action
Bulletins
WASHINGTON, March 23.—
Gen. Jolin J. Pershing today was
named by President Coolidge as
president of the Plebicitary com-
mission which will supervise the
holding of a plebiscite to decide
the sovereignty of the disputed
provinces of Taena-Arica, between
Chile and Peru.
THF higher officers of the regular army and navy—especially the navy—
1 differs with Mitchell on every point. Though the airplane, they say.
has revolutionized tactics, it remains nn auxiliary, in our first line of de-
fense. the navy, the battleship is still the undefeated heavyweight champion.
The air bomb is a new enemy, but not a dominant one. On land, infantry
Proprietors To Lose Control
Of Business If They Had
Knowledge Of Trade.
Federal injunctions which
would close some of the lead-
ing hotels in Oklahoma City
may be sought as a result of
evidence obtained in the'
liquor clean-up staged by the
flying squadron of the prohi-
bition forces of Kansas City, I
W. Frank Cunningham, in
charge of the squadron, de-
clared Monday.
Cnningham declared that if the in-
vestigation showed that the prop-
prietors of hotels where liquor was
being sold had knowledge of th* law
violations, padlock proceedings would
be started.
Forty-Five Are Arrested
WASHINGTON, March 3.—
Bids were opened today at the in-
terior department for the pur-
chase of oil and natural gas gaso-
line obtained from wells in the
Red River bed in Oklahoma. The
bids will be analyzed by the bu-
reau of mines, and the successfui
bidder announced later.
Approximately forty-five persons
had been arrested at noon Monday.
About thirty of these were employes
in down-town hotels, according to
Cunningham. Liquor was seised in
quantities at both the Lawrence and
Kingkade hotels.
Proprietors of both hotels denied
any knowledge of liquor being sold
in their places of business.
Two suitcases of liquor was found
in the check room of the Kingkade
hotel, according to the raiders.
More than five gallons of liquor
was dumped in a raid on the Law
rence hotel Sunday.
Twenty-six Caught
No liquor was found at the Huck-
ins hotel except that which bellboys
to the hospital when it is said that she day afternoon swooged down on office
repeatedly said. “O. I loved him. I (Continned on Page i. Column 1.)
| loved him. I wish I had killed myself."-----— ----------------------
the floor of the exposition building. I chlef entertainment features.
Cars to suit every fancy or pocket- i The Greenlease-Moore exhibit is I
book will be shown. There are twen- I sure to attract much attention. This
tyeight different makes of cars, 130 exhibit features a model of the first
exhibits in all. in the building.
now Colonel—Mitchell was chief protagonist of this view. Probably most
of our airmen agree with Mitchell, though consideration for military eti-
quette and perhaps fear of their jobs keep the rest silent.
OKMULGEE. March 23 —The B &
A. coal mine at Schulter, south of
• here, which has been closed down sev-
, tin 1 weeks, will resume operations
Wednsday under the 1917 wage
> egreement, virtually on an open ship
• bania, officials announced Monday.
at the State Fair grounds, which
work only with 50-cent pieces, are at
each entrance to the building.
Change makers will be in the win.
TULSA, March 23—Unification of
proteatant churches is on throughout
the world. Thia was the message
carried to the women’s missionary
council of the Methodist church,
south, at its morning session here to-
day, by Mis Daisy Davies of Atlanta,
a., an internationally known leader
in mission work, who has but recent-
ly returned from a year in Scotland
and other parts of Europe.
City and nuburban, 45c mo.; $6 yr. in ad.
vance. Outside 50c mo.; $6 yr. in advance.
Search for the lover of Bella G.
Boyington, Norman beauty parlor
expert, who shot herself Sunday, was
being made by city officers Monday
morning.
It is believed that he is a city man.
“Oh, J loved him!’ she cried, ac-
cording to attendants who were with
her in the ambulance that brought
her to Oklahoma City. “Yes I loved
him, and I wish I had killed myself.'-
Miss Boyington shot herself in the
abdomen Sunday while walking with
a companion. She may die, University
hospital reports indicate.
"She is in a critical condition hut
still has a chance to recover," her
nurse said.
Miss Boyington was out walking
WASHINGTON, March 23.- The
Missouri Pacific railroad company
lost a supreme court appeal today
brought in an effort to set aside taxes
assessed against it by the Walnut
Ridge-Alicia road improvement dis-
trict. Arkansas. The decision of the
lower court upholding the taxes, was
affirmed.
- maturing In foreign countries are worked out, air attack presents more
danger than attack by either land or sea. He maintains that every form
of surface naval craft is in process of being rendered obsolete by the air
• bomb. As the army fights on land and the navy on sea, the aeroplane
Tights in still another element. Its technique, strategy and tactics are sb
different from those of the army and navy that nn air force cannot be
* wortked out to full efficiency unless it is organized as a whole, and by ex-
- perts who understand the game. Hence, what we need is a separate air
service, under a new department of the cabinet. As I have said, General—
"Oh, I Loved Him!” Woman
Wails, Cursing Fate That
She Does Not Die.
Killed in Crash.
66 1 a. m.
63 9 a. m.
*3 10 a. m.
60 11 a. m.
57 13 noon
55 1 p. m.
57 3 p. m..
55 ' 3 p. m..
it 4 p. m..
S3
What are the merit of the Washington aircraft controversy ? General Mitchell’u
rharges, heated rebuttals from high official*, congressional investigation, show it to
be the most important question of nationnl defense raised since the world war. The
Oklahoma City Time* and the North American Newspaper Allinnce commissioned
Will Irwin to go to Washington and wInnot nur the facta. Will 1> win was chosen
for thia work; first, because he believe* international co-operation will prevent
future ware and lienee has no aympathy with alarmist opinion; secondly, because
his experience as a correspondent in the late war gives him a first hand knowledge
of conditions under discussion, and finally becaune he is regarder as the foremost
reporter arid news-writer in the United States. Mr. Irwin ha* presented his findings
lii a series of twelve article*, of which this I* the flrat.
THE great majority of Americans would give the term another definition. 1
A Here we are, 3.000 miles away from any nation powerful enough to '
trouble us. We are so selr-sufficient that even a blockade would deprive us
only of our foreign commerce; it would not keep from us anything necessary
to maintain our ire and to arm our men. If we can prevent an enemy
from landing on our shores and cutting our sea communications, we shall .
have enough national defenses. Anything further Is perhaps a provocation.
When and American Capitalist gets squeezed in a foreign business deal, when
e a missionary gets massacred In China, that hardly justifies the use of armed
force for indemnity, justice, or vengeance. After all, most of these matters I
may be adjusted or compensated by the existing machinery of diplomacy.
• • • •
TF WE regard the mater in this light, world wide limitation of aerin armn.
. A ment is the best defense, and by all odds the cheapest. By mutual agree- ;
e ment, cut down the air forces of all nations to such a point that while they
can protect their own territory, they cannot muster the superior offensive
1 force necessary to atinck their neighbors. I venture a guess, here and now. '
, that President Coolidge has In mind nt this moment just such a scheme of
, defense ns resards aircrart. Stories in the news which look like feelers
from the White House; the sudden silence about the League of Nations die
armament plan, a hint in a recent aircraft debate in the house of commons-
R a kind of semiofficial announcement that Japan will accept a 5.513 ratio
, of aircraft as she Kas of battleships: certain unexplained Incidents in the
inside workings of the congressional committee Investigating ain-raft—all
point toward this conclusion. Mr. Coolidge may not be quite so silent as his
• press sgents would make us think; but he is the most mysterlous man who
, has occupied the White House in our time. Before he ever pokes his head ’
?bove ground, he has built his sub-structure. If he succeeds satisfactory
, home defense of our continent area—and probably of our colonies will have I
been achieved to the satisfaction of most of us, and the aircraft inquiry will I
, have been most hsppily settled.
• • • •
AUTO AND GAS TAX
BILLS PASS HOUSE
—
Both highway bills, the -cent gaso
Une tax measure, and the automobile
regist ration tax bill, were passed by
the house of representatives today.
The vote on the 3-cent tax law, was
seventy-three to twenty-one.
The roll calls were on passage of
the bills after amendment by a confer-
ence com mittee.
The senate adopted the conference
report on the automobile license bill, 1
and it was passed by a vote of 24 to
15, a bare majority.
The taxes on automobiles as sug- i
gested in the conference committee
are 312.50 on cars valued at $500 and i
$1.50 on each $100 over $500 on the list 1
price. The license is to be reduced 20 1
percent each year for three years. The
minimum tax is set at $8, 1
Girl-Widow ’Excused From
Testifying Against Former
Wichita Falls Mayor,
WICHITA FALLS, March
23.—After a conference with
Mary Frances Collier Robert-
son, J. V. Allred, district at-
torney, announced that he
probably would not put the
girl-widow on the stand as a
witness against her father, |
Frank Collier, former mayor,
charged with killing Buster
Robertson, her 17-year-old
husband.
It is understood the gill’s rerusal to
tell either the state or the defense
what she would testify was the reason .
for the decision.
LIBERTY, Mo., March -3—True NORMAN, March 23 —-(Special
Arganbright, 26 years old, was sen- , Question of suspending the honor
fenced today to serve twenty-five system of conducting examinations at
years in the penitentiary, following the University of Oklahoma will be
his plea of guilty to charges of rob- l voted on at a special student election
. By WILL IRWIN
, (Copyright, 1925. In United States, Canada and Great Britain by North
Ameriean Newspaper Alliance. All rights reserved.)
Chapter 1: What It's About
* A CONGRESSIONAL investigation, started last year for
• ax the sole purpose of determining whether an aircraft
inventor named Martin was getting his rights from the gov-
- ernment, broke into a hornet’s nest. The inquiry broad-
ened, as congressional inquiries have a way of doing, until
it embraced the whole question of our aerial defense. ,
, There rose a storm, whereof Brig. Gen. William Mitchell, the truculent
second in command of the army air service, was the center. By now, every-
one had forgotten Mr. Martin; the questin of a united air service, a separ-
ate arm of the national defense, became the main issue. The controversy
proceeded with that vindictiveness which seems to mark all rows in any
army. The men of the air service, speaking more frankly in private than
on the witness stand, called the generalstaff of the army, the general board
"> Of the navy, desk soldiers and mossbacks. The generals and admirals
called the aviators “air chauffeurs.'" There was "school girl stuff"; high
officials of the government refused to attend social functions managed by
members of the opposition.
van-colored lights.
Sleek grayhounds of the open
Te TVeather
LOCAL: Generally fair weather tonight
and Tnesday. Somewhat colder Tuesday.
। STATE: Tonight partly cloudy east
I portlon. Tuesday partly cloudy. colder.
HOURLY FEMPERATURE
RDMORE, March 23.—(Spe-
cial.—Mourners of the skies
T T ’ S deep gre} eyes are very, very
-- earnest, and Lorin himself is very,
very earnest. His vocabulary is
rather advanced fur his years; but it’s
1924.
Arganbright formerly was a star
quarterback of Northwestern Teach
era" college of Oklahoma, from which
he was graduateil. He worked as a
railway express messenger, handling
thousands of dollars, he said, without
being tempted to steal. He blamed
narcotics for his present predicament.
The defendant’s father, A. M. Ar-
ganbright, a merchant of Cherokee,
Okla., was in the courtroom when
sentence was passed.
TWENTY PAGES— OKLAHOMA CITY, MONDAY, MARCH 23, 1925.
tion is too confining. Now lot's lot
down the bars. Our resolution does
that. I move our resolution be
adopted."
Harr Cordell asked recognition.
“I want Senator Johnson satisfied
in this matter," he said. “I do not
want a resolution that will not be sat-
isfactory to him. He has the publicity
on this thing and I warned you sena-
tors that you had better satisfy him.
I do not want the word to go out that
we attempted to block Johnson's reso-
lution."
Looney and Monk Agree
Former Oklahoma Athlete Is Three Other Questions Toaround t want ^."’h. X
। Sentenced For Bank Rob- Come Up At Norman Monk said hehad1 objection to in-
bery n Missouri, Election Tuesday. sonPo’atlMutlon anhifsrtsrtutnon.ohn-
---— i ----- "I think Senator Johnson's resolu-
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 35, No. 272, Ed. 5 Monday, March 23, 1925, newspaper, March 23, 1925; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1985703/m1/1/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.