The Muldrow Sun (Muldrow, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
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THE MULDROW SUN
DOINGS OF
STATE
W F Bickford I
Oklahoma City — In the Initial bal-!
lot in the Senate court 'of Impeach!
menf Walton suspended governor
suffered defeat by a vote of 37 to 1
when the court killed the defense mo-
tion to quash the house Indictment
A deranrrer was then filed by Tom
Neal of Poteau to fifteen of the twenty-two
counts
Walton was attired in a dark suit
and sat smoking his pipe throughout
the proceedings apparently unmoved
Riddle defense attorney fired the
first gun when he sought to obtain a
continuance of ten days to enter plead-
ing to the Impeachment This being
refused the defense then announced
they would contest right of certain
members of the court After a short
adjournment the house board of man-
agers headed by Disney attacked the
disqualification stating no precedent
could be found where an impeachment
court member could be disqualified
He cited the Sulzer case In NeW
York where a tenant of the senate
president sat on the impeachment
court the court holding it his duty
to sit in the case and even went back
to English history citing the case of
Anne Boleyn during the reign of
Henry VIII her father having sat as
a member of the court
Riddle filed for the defense excep-
tions to each ruling of the court
throughout the proceedings
Walton declared in forma) state-
ment he was offered life membership
In Ku Klux Klan by William Joseph
Simmons Imperial wizard In a letter
addressed his home and dated Sep-
tember 10th 1923 He said he re-
quested the certificate be not mailed
him
Oklahoma City — Before even the
day of Governor J C Walton’s first
scheduled appearance before the state
senate sitting as a court of Impeach-
ment his struggle to retain his office
or at least his political prestige as-
sumed the form of a battle of strate-
gy Assuming that the worst possible
fate would bo his early conviction on
one or more of the 22 counts against
him and that ho still might conduct
a propaganda campaign before the
people the governor suspended pend-
ing trial Issued a fresh broadside
against the Ku Klux Klan and made
it plain he would strive to confine the
case to that Issue — now and later
Retaliating thee house lawyers con-
stituting the board of managers to
conduct Walton's prosecution indi-
cated their intention of eliminating
the Klan issue so far as possible by
pressing the counts which allege cor-
ruption and ignoring those relating to
the declarations of martial law hero
and there In the state
Simultaneously publication began
of the verbatim testimony as taken
before Representative Wesley E Dis-
ney’s general house Investigating com-
mittee This too was designed to up-
hold the anti-Walton contention that
Impeachable offenses had been charg-
ed to the governor apart from the
Klan Issue
In the pronunclamento issued soon
after the senate had fixed a day for
him to be arraigned Governor Walton
reiterated his charge that a majority
of the lower house of the legislature
were Klansmen thnt the call for a
special session in September was a
Klan plot financed from Atlanta Ga
Walton cited refusal of the house to
consider a resolution that would have
forced representatives who weio
Klansmen to disclose their identity
He pointed out as an illustration of
Klan sympnthy the forcible ousting
of Representative J W Callahan of
Wllburton when Callahan charged in
a speech on the floor that Grand
Dragon N C Jewett of the Oklahoma
Klun was dictating the policies ol the
session
lie laid great stress on a letter writ
t?n by Representative Jess Pullen of
Sulphur to each house member Aug
30 asking of eneh whether he wns Col-
or aguinst impeachment of the gover-
nor "This of course was regardless of
what the evidence might show" was
Walton's cotnmpnt
Tho governor declared thnt anti-
Klan legislation being drawn ostensi-
bly to penalize use of tho mask in
reality was designed to legalize It
"The question Is not shall I bo lm-
s peached but shall government ns
handed to ub by the patriots of the
pnBt continue to exist" was ills con-
clusion To conduct his defense Governor
Walton hired a whole corps of lawyers
including former Supreme Court Jus-
tice P E Riddle of Tulsa Warren K
Snyder and E J Glddings of Oklaho-
ma City Cornelius Hardy of Tisho-
mingo and H M Martin of Tulsa
Most of the attorneys in the houso
First of tho prosecutions (rowing
out of the bank failures In Okmulgee
ended in an acquittal
John M Rebold former capitalist
state food administrator during the
war was freed on a charge of receiv-
ing deposits in the Guaranty state
Sank when it was known to be In-
solvent Governor J D A Robertson
and Bank Commissioner Fred Dennis
were among others indicted by the
game grand Jury which charged
THE
LEGISLATURE
of representative! are on the board of
managers or the special advisory com'
mittee designated by Speaker W D
McOee The managers themselves are
Wesley E Disney of Muskogee James
R Tolbert of Ilobart Dave A Stovall
of Hugo ’William J Otjen of Enid
Leslie E Salter of Carmen Thomas
H Wren of Okemah and Jess L Pul-
len of Sulphur
Walton’s counsel announced their la
tention to produce a whole army of
witnesses to flogging parties to sup-
port their contention that Walton's
use of his power in declaring martial
law and suspending the writ of habeas
corpus was justified
To the same end the suspended
governor again launched a news
paper distributed free containing a
large mass of matter friendly to his
cause
Members of the supreme court ask-
ed that publicity be given the state-
ment that there was no division in the
court on the question of restraining
Walton and District Judge T G
Chambers from Interference with the
senate order suspending Walton pend
ing trial Circulation had been given
a report that the court split five to
three with one absent
Governor Walton continued to draw
his salary after his suspension upon
order of Acting Governor M E Trapp
who held the elected executive entitl-
ed to his pay until Ills actual and com-
plete removal from office
While the senate Impeachment court
was disposing of the Walton case the
lower house investigating committees
continued their Inquiry Into the con-
duct of various state departments
other than the governor’s own office
Separate probes wore under way la
connection with the state penitentiary
the Miami school of mines the acts of
some six house members the state
prison farm at Aylesworth the state
highway department health depart-
ment fish and game department and
board of affairs
At the same time all evidence be-
ing gathered by tho legislative prob-
ers was being submitted to the Okla-
homa county grand jury In order that
criminal prosecution might be started
as well as impeachment proceedings
If justified
President Charles W Gunter of the
Liberty Nntional Bank Oklahoma
City and R O Brewer manager of
the Local Building and Loan Associa-
tion Oklahoma City were subpoened
to bring before the Jury books show-
ing financial dealings of the governor
with their respective Institutions
During his “interregnum” Acting
Governor Trapp is conducting himself
so far as possible as an "acting" gov-
ernor in truth but he could not avoid
some admissions of policies he might
be expected to pursue in the event of
Walton’s removal
For example he quickly evinced an
intention to abolish the revolving
funds at various state institutions
through which monies taken in by the
operation of Institutional industries
are expended again without passing
through the’ state treasury and being
reappropriated by the legislature
Governor It L Williams originated
the revolving fund Idea
Trapp indicated that an entirely
new and strict pnrdon and parole poli-
cy would be enforced
Tlie acting executive Is known to
favor adequate anli-KInn legislation
There Is every indication his actual
liosl ilily to the Klan is every bit ns
great as that of Walton
Tiapp has alieady discussed tenia-
llvo measures having the sincere pur-
pose of removing the slate university
and other state schools from the pane-
fill effecls of partisan politics
The new executive has agreed to
recommend a till tliiough which pmp-
ertv owners can he compelled to have
sidewalks built In front of their resi-
dences A side Issue In tlm general program
of Impeachment and Investigation now
In Older lit the capital Is the legal
bailie eeiiiei lug about the special
statewide election of Oct 8
Governor Walton ullcmplcd to can-
cel tho volo at the eleventh hour tint
under Inslrucllonit of tho attorney
genernl tho election was held partici-
pated In by nearly 300000 persons and
resulted In llin defeat of five propo-
sitions and tlie adoption of one— a
constitutional amendment empowering
tlie legislature to convene 1(8011 for
Impeachment purposes
Tlie governor has a battery of at-
torneys In the courts seeking to linve
the election declared void Friends of
other questions submitted are eager to
linve the vote on the one proposal
thnt won declared Invalid In thnt
event at least two other questions
woull be found to have been endorsed
by a majority of the persons partici-
pating in the election
If the vote on the legislative amend-
met was valid than all other questions
failed of passage since thousands who
voted on that amendment did not vote
either way on others but urv counted
us voting "No"
The amendment removing all legal
disabilities from women and the pro-
posal thnt each school district bo as-
sured -15 per capita of state funds for
Its school going population may be
held to tiavs passed If the supreme
court ultimately nullifies the vots on
WORLD NEWS FOR
THE WIST WEEK
Events of General Interest from
All Sections Put Into Short
Concise Paragraphs
NEWS FROM MAN! CAPITALS
Brief Mention of What la Tranaplrlno
In This and Other Countrlee
f the Globe
War’s Echoes
Premier Poincare’s statement of
the Fiench attitude toward the new
leparations inquiry is construed in
official quarters in Washington as
little more in substance than a re-
assertion of the obvious fact that
rights acquired under the treaty of
Versailles cannot be abridged except
with the consent of the parties to
the treaty
A note from the government of the
reich dismissing the cabinet of Sax-
ony from office was handed to the
cabinet recently and the members of
the ministry’ submitted to the dis-
missal says a Central News dispatch
from Berlin
In a recent address premier Poin-
care asserted he welcomed American
representation on a committee
charged by tho reparations commis-
sion to investigate Germany’s capa-
city to pay but that every act of the
committee must remain within the
terms laid down by the Versailles
treaty
4-
An official communique written by
Premier Poiucare and issued at the
Franch foreign office reiterated de-
termination to refuse to agree to any
reduction of the German debt The
communique insisted the committee
of experts be organized witbln the
scope of the reparation commission
Although acquiescence of the Paris
government to the proposal for an in-
ternational commission of experts to
tackle the German situation is sur-
rounded with reservations and stipu-
lations it permits the program to go
ahead The United States will sit
in the conference
Much satisfaction was expressed
in government circles at Berlin re-
cently over tho report the Hughes
plan for determining Germany’s ca-
pacity to pay reparations had been
accepted as the basis of a proposal
for a discussion of the subject
Washington
Under an agreement with the Brit-
ish foreign office the state depart-
ment has made public correspondence
supplemental to the agreement with
the allied powers covering methods
by which the United States will be
reimbursed in twelve years for the
costs of the American army of occu-
pation on the Rhine
-i-
That the Interstate commerce com-
mission may assume full control of
the coal industry of the country with-
out an additional line of legislation
except that providing for an adequate
appropriation is the view held by
leading members of the United States
coal fact finding commission
The United States formally has re-
iterated its willingness to co-operate
in an economic settlement in Europe
—even to sit in an economic confer-
ence This was revealed when the
state department mude public its re-
pluy to a lengthy note from Lord
Uurzon
4-
Two Pottawatomie Indians one as-
serting himself to be 113 years old
and the other three years younger
arrived in Washington recently from
their home in Mayetta Kan and
through an interpreter placed clulms
in beliulf of their tribe before Sec-
retary Work of the interior depart-
ment for land along Lake Michigan
in Chicago valuod at $35000000
4-
Consolidation of tho Kansas City
Mexico & Orient railroad with one of
the Southwest’s lurge systems wus ad-
vocated before B II Meyer chairman
of the interstate commorce commis-
sion recently by a delegation from
the West Texas Chiimber of Com-
merce Oomestlo
The old Washington elm at Cam
bridge Muss under whose wide
spreading limbs 148 years ago In
1776 George Washington assumed
commu’hd of the Continental army
crashed to earth recently as workmen
were beginning to remove limbs
which had become a meuuee to ths
safety of the publlo
Frank B Kellogg United States
x-aenutor from Minnesota has been
selected for Amorlouu ambassador to
London He will succeed Geosge
Harvey who recently resigned and
the appointment Is expected to be-
come effective in the near future
Although the American govern-
ment standi ready to enter a Eu-
ropean reparations oonfereneo having
a lull audience of allied powere it
le nut willing to agree beforehand to
u meeting at which there might be
emnty chairs
Theft of a secret ' United States
diplomatic code In Buchanan fifteen
years ago waa recalled in the Stokes
divorce trial at New York in an at
lack upon the teatlmony of Horace
G Knowles formerly American min
later to Balkan and Latin-Amerlcan
nationa
Conspiracy and draft evading
charges against Erwin R Bergdoll
brother of Grover Cleveland Bergdoll
notorious army deserter who fled to
Germany have been dropped by the
government
When John Romanelll king of
Brooklyn’s Little Italy returned to
his undertaking office the other day
after serving less than two years in
prison lives of 101 persons killed
by wood aichol had been paid for
with about three yeara of prison ser-
vice The edict of Mayor William' N
Gableman of Portsmouth O against
the Ku Klux Klan was enforced re-
cently when police stopped a parade
of klansmen and arrested 244 of the
par&ders Of this number 187 were
in klan regalia y
Dr Charles Proteus Steinmetz in-
ventor scientist mathemetlclaii and
electrical wizard is dead at bis home
iu Schenectady N Y from heart
disease Induced by the fatigue of a
trip to the Pacific coast He was a
native of Breslau Germany
The daily theatre attendance of
New York City is estimated at 677840
in the annual report of the depart-
ments of licenses The borough of
Manhattan Brooklyn and the Bronx
have a total of 174 theatres and 498
motion picture houses
t
The United States submarine 0-5
was sunk recently In Llmon Bay
Canal Zone after a collision with the
United Fruit Company’s vessel Aban-
garez the navy department has been
notified by radio Five members of
the submarine’s crew are missing
Southwest
Police investigating the circulation
of counterfeit $10 bills in St Louis
recently arrested Miss Mary Snyder
27 years old who gave her home as
New York One hundred and thirty-
six of the spurious bills were found
in the possession of Miss Snyder
4- 4-
Mrs Viola C Kingsbury assistant
cahler of the defunct Farmers’ and
Merchants' Bank of Tempe Ariz has
been sentenced to a term of between
three and four years in the state peni-
tentiary by Superior Judge Phelps
4
B J Dalton former valuation com-
missioner of the MiBsouri-Kansas-Texas
railroad and former interstate
commerce commissioner is dead in
the Mlssourl-Kansas-Texas hospital
at Parsons Kas following a long
illness and several strokes of apo-
plexy Mrs Carrie Sherman Menard wid-
ow of the late J M O Menard and
eldest daughter of Gen Sidney Sher-
man who fought with Gen Sam
Houston in the battle of San Jacinto
for Texas Independence is dead at
Galveston Tex
'
Capt Lowell Smith and Lieut
John Richter in their border to bor-
der flight passed Rockwell Field
San Diego Cal going south at 6:36
o’clock twelve hours flat from Sum-
as Wash They circled over Tiaju-
ana across the Mexican line and re-
turned to Rockwell Field
Foreign
Following the Irish government's
pronouncement that none of the nu-
merous hunger strikers would be re-
leased from prison it has been an-
nounced officially that 1490 persons
who were refusing food had aban-
doned their strike
4- 4- 4-
The Saxon ministry composed of
communists and socialists and head-
ed by Dr Ziegaer have withdrawn
from their official quarters in com-
pliance with an order Issued by Dr
Carl llelnze the newly appointed
commissioner representing the reich
in Saxony
The Netherlands cubinet has re-
signed in consequence of the rejec-
tion by the socond chamber of par-
liament of the government s navul bill
providing fur the construction of a
fleet for the Dutch EiiBt Indies
-
Any attempt by the European pow-
ers to prevent a communist revolu-
tion in Germany will be considered
provocation sufficient to bring war by
Moscow and should auy capitalist
government move troops against the
German communists a red army will
net to dofend revolutionary Germany
says Trotsky
Germany will proclaim a Rhineland
free state If the Separatist movement
spreads dangerously The state would
retain allogiance to Germuny but
would recoive wide autonomous pow-
ers $ fis $
The fact that the expert committee
of the British imperial conference
bud agreed in principle to accept the
proposal of Secretary Hughes that
vessels In American waters might be
searched within a 12-mile limit for
eonirubrand liquor became known re
cently
Plundering and violence suddenly
have become so general and menac-
ing throughout the Ruhr thut both
the French and German authorltlei
are beginning to realise something
drsitlo must bs dons lmmsdlatsly
EVEIffS OF STATE
WIDE N
T
J C Jonas living a lew miles east
of Duncan brought in a sweet potato
of the Nancy Hall variety to town that
"tipped the beam” at 8 Vi pounds
Ths bousing proposition Is fast be-
coming a real problem for Wewoka
With dozen of cottages going up the
demand is so great that not one-third
of It can be met
Life Insurance claims paid In Okla-
homa City in 1922 totaled 8429260 ac-
cording to figures of life Insurance
business throughout the country com
pilatlou of which has just been com
pleted
After continuous operation for nine
months the George F Collins glass
plant of Poteau has been closed for
repairs It will be reopened lu lour
weeks officials report The plant em-
ploys 150 men
Vocational teachers from all parts
of the state will meet at Edmond in
connection with the fifth annual con
vention of the Central Oklahoma Ed
ucatlon association to be held Nov-
ember 8 9 and 10
A sack of mall supposed to bave
been taken during the heavy transfer
work during the flood when mail was
transferred from the Katy to the Mis
sourl Pacific was found in a cotton
field near Wagoner
Shake Manus 75-year-old Cherokee
Indian and Baptist minister was killed
recently by an unknown assassin who
fired through the window of the In-
dian's home seven miles south of Still
well Okla while the aged man was
undressing
A hay shed and 810000 worth of
govenment hay burned on the Fort
Sill reservation despite efforts of the
military fire departments to save it
This is the third hay shed to burn this
fall Origin of the fire has not been
determined
Oklahoma's total cotton crop this
year is valued $267740 higher than
last year's yield despite the drastic
revision downward forced In the es
tlmales of the crop since September
25 when the estimate was approxi-
mately 1000000 bales
Harvest of Dewey county’s apple
crop which Is one of the largest in
the history of the county is In full
Bwing following the recent frosts The
sub-irrigated lands along the South
Canadian river produced some of the
finest fruit raised in the state
Legality of the marketing contract
of the Oklahoma Cotton Growers’ as-
sociation was sustained by District
Judge Barrett at Pauls Valley in the
case of the association vs H P
Coles The association was asking li-
quidated damages as provided in its
marketing agreement for cotton al-
leged to have been sold by Coles out-
side the association In violation of the
agreement
The twenty-eighth annual conven-
tion of the western Oklahoma division
Anti-Horse Thief association con-
vened at Blackwell recently In a ses-
sion President A E Walker of New-
kirk presiding Proposed legislation
governing automobile clienslng and im-
proved roads formed the chief toplo
of discussion at the session follow-
ing the appointment of convention
committees
Salary claims against state funds
for positions not provided by law were
sliced off by M E Trapp acting gov-
ernor on recommendation of Fred
Parkinson state examiner and inspec-
tor when department payrolls were
approved by the acting executive The
axe hit forty-nine employes carried as
"extra help" in the highway depart-
ment and one statistician was lopped
off the roils of the board of equaliza-
tion Pecans are comnig to market at
Pau’B Valley tapidly In many In-
stances the iarmers' pecan crop will
biing nioie money tills year than any
crop grown on tlie hum Often the
pecan crop nets u farmer $500 The
crop this year Is especially fine and
tho pi Ice is good
R I Allen prominent Bristow pliysl
clan is dcud as a result of having
boon struck by an automobile here
in the downtown district Internal In-
juries a severely lacerated head
coupled with the severe shock proved
fatal three hours alter the injured
man hud been removed to u liospltSI
Harry lieu a carpenter wus the driv-
er of the cur which lilt Allen
The annual full meeting of tho As-
sociation of Natural Gasoline manufac-
turers scheduled for Dallas on -November
14 and 15 hus been rearranged
(or November 15 and 16 at Fort Worth
Inability to secure the assembly
room at the Adophus hotel at DhIIiih
and tho tact that most of the natural
gasoline plants of Texus are neurer
Fort Worth caused the change In
the plans
One mile of trees each dedicated to
some representative citizen of the
stato of Oklahoma will be planted by
the state board of ugilculture along
East Twenty-third street highway
starting from the capltoi according to
tbe president of the board
When' the National Editorial asso-
ciation convenes la Oklnhomu the
week o( May 10 the members will
havt a completo schedule showing
where each hour of theli sojourn in
'he atals is to be spent This sched-
ule is nearly complete
Relayed of C&tarrb
Duo to La Grippa
Thanks
To
PE-RU-NA
Mrs Laura Berbericlc over 70
rears of age 1205 Willow Ave
Hoboken N J writes : “A severs
attack of La Grippe left me with
a hoarseness and slime in the head
and throat I had chronic catarrh
It grew worse I could not lie down
or sleep at night I was always
bothered by the slime pain in the
back and a terrible headache every
morning
Finally I bought a bottle of
Pe-ru-na which was of great bene
fit It gave me blood and strength
I have no pains in head or back
nor noises in the head The slime
has gone and I can sleep My
weight has increased I am cheer
ful and happy thanks to Pe-ru-na
which I shall always keep in tho
house and recommend to my
friends"
For every form of catarrh
Pe-ru-na meets the need Coughs
Colds Nasal Catarrh Indigestion
Bowel disorders are all forms of
catarrh
Buy it any where in tablet or
liquid form
Not 8o Cheap
"May I Inquire whether you hav
matins in tills church?" asked the ele-
gant visitor of the antediluvian verger
at the village church
"No indeed mum" replied the old)
fellow with scorn "We 'as oilcloth I"
—London Tit-Bits
MOTHER! GIVE SICK CHILD
“CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP"
Harmless Laxative for a Bilious)
Constipated Baby or Chlldw
Constipated bil-
ious feverish or
lek colic Babies
and Children love
to take genuine
“California Fig
Syrup" No other AVI
laxative regulates dL-
the tender little Xfj
bowels so nicely
It sweetens the
stomach and
starts the liver and bowels acting with
out griping v Contains no narcotics or
soothing drugs 8ay "California" to
four druggist and avoid counterfeit! I
Insist upon genuine "California Fig:
Syrup" which contains directions—
Advertisement
Compliments Exchanged
Prison Clmpluln (to prisoner who
hoe Just served his time) — “And now
Mllbank I hope you will turn over a
new leuf and become a useful mem
ber of society" Prisoner (deeply
touched)— “Thank you kindly slrp
same to you sir"— I’cnrson’s Weekly
London
BACK ACHY?
Lame and achy In the morning? Tor-
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Kidney Pills Doan’s have helped
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Ask your neighbor!
An Oklahoma Case
Mrs lluth Mar
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When I stooped I
had dizzy spoils
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I — CASGAEjpiilNINI —
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to Sail KANT-FOUL SPARK FIXIOS
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tIMIOOO IN THUMfc-Joln our ward rontaaC
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Carroll, James O. The Muldrow Sun (Muldrow, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 52, Ed. 1 Friday, November 9, 1923, newspaper, November 9, 1923; Muldrow, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2030321/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.