The Oklahoma Weekly Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1929 Page: 4 of 6
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Labor Men in
Commons Retain
Class Tastes
Get 'em Stewed
How? Quite easily They
would reitallarly get these minis-
ters of the king drunk and then
find what the ministers tongues
wagged about When a man has
two sheets In the wind he talks
from the heart When properly
lubricated tongues wag what is
felt is expressed
Thus it is easy to see that in-
stead of working themselves into
a moral lather and state of nerv-
ous suspicion the left winger
should find consolation and com-
fort of sure knowledge with the
aid of the beers brews and boozes
of Britain While this reporter
was unable to try his bright idea
out on actual members of the La-
bor government he was able to
drink with and listen to a number
of rank and file labor members of
Parliament
Government "Pub"
Out of the richness cf its wisdom
the House of Commons has estab-
lished for its own benefit a "pub"
where members may drink and
entertain friends and still be with-
in calling distance when a vote is
about to he taken on an important
matter This place is not frank-
ly known as a "pub" but Is eu-
phemistically called the "Ilouse of
Commons smoke room" Its fit-
tings comfort service variety and
quality of drinkables undoubtedly
make the "smoke room" the best
"pub" in England
The "smoke room" of the House
reeks with tradition Since Par-
liament meets In one of the royal
palaces—the "Royal Palace of
Westminster"—it is not bothered
by closing hours As long es there
is a thirsty Member of Parliament
about the bar is kept open ready
to cater to his needs Another
tradition is that women are not
permitted in the smoke room when
the House of Commons is in aes-
sion When the House has "risen"
a woman may slip in if accompan-
ied by an M P otherwise they
are strictly barred
Bar Means Bar
And when in England any class
of persons is barred they are
really barred Not even women M
Ps are permitted to enter the
smoke room when the House is sit-
ting About 1924 when women be-
came numerous in the house
a problem arose as to what to do
with them in view of the smoke
room traditions The terrace of
the royal palace of Westminster
is one of the most attractive places
in London It Is where M Ps us-
ually entertain their guests But
the only entrance — at that time
— was through the smoke room
It was generally recognized that
to bar women not only from the
smoke room but from the terrace
BRITISH M P'S
INFORMAL IN
BEER HABITS
Parliamentarian Who Was
Once Yank Hobo Enter-
tains Miner Scribe
TELLS OF DAYS ON ROAD
Reporter Guzzles Amid His-
toric Scenes Finds Pri-
vacy Hard To Find
By KARL PRETSHOLD
What is the proper working
class attitude toward the formal-
ity and doodads which surround
the social functions connected with
13ritish political life? That ques-
tion is troubling more than one
good drinker in the British Labor
Party The members of the new
British Labor government when
they attend parties thrown by the
King of England or the Queen are
expected to adorn themselves in
knee-length pants silk socks
"dress swords" and fancy head-
gear But the left wingers in the La-
bor Party the revolutionary boys
think that when a working stiff
who by the fortunes of politics has
become a King's minister sticks
his foot through the legs of knee-
length pants he has abandoned the
cause of the upsurging proletariat
They contend sympathy with the
working class can not survive in a
breast covered by the lace and
ruffles of court dress
Breech' And Ambition
Strange ideas wander througn
heads covered by cocked bats they
hold Social ambition surges
through anatomies covered by silk
breeches and the sufferings of the
workers are no longer thought of
So the left wingers are filled with
suspicion and their eyes glitter
with watchfulness at all who have
been known to invest the necessary
money in court dress
But were these left wingers as
wise as they are earnest they
would not wonder about the slate
of mind of Labor ministers They
would find out if proletarian back-
grounds have been forgotten They
would ascertain whether ambition
and the social urge outweighed
passion for Justice in ministerial
hearts
as well was unjust Ilad it not
been for the brains and ingenuity
of Arthur major domo of the
House and smoke room women
members of Parliament vemild not
even now have access to the ter-
race But Arthur is inventive Ile
' saw a door thst opened unto the
terrace and which ran beside the
smoke room Though it had not
been opened fur perhaps a hundred
or more years he had it opened
and thus gave the women M I
a chance to get on the terrace
without entering the smoke room
Drinks tin Terrace
On this terrace drinks can be
served SO that the female members
need not see their guests die of
thirst
Another tradition of the smoke
room is that words uttered there
by political opponents cannot be
Used either in debate or quoted in
newspapers Thus an M P can
get as stewed as he chooses and
need never fear that his words will
come bouncing back at him in de-
bate on the Boor of the House
Newspapermen who get into the
smoke room as guests of M Ps
may gnash their teeth as they will
when some person of the opposi-
tion for once in his life tells the
truth — but he never uses what
was said
Why British newspapers have
paid so little attention to the lieuse
of Commons pub is a mystery Re-
cently there was appointed a Royal
COninliSSiOn charged with the job of
investigating the drink question
Some members of it will be sent
to America to be deceived about
the workings of prohibition there
It is doubtful if any member of
that Royal Commission will be
sent to the House Of Commons
pub to find how people behave
when they can get all they want
when they want it and be assured
of the best
Were a group of members of the
drink commission sent to the
smoke room and were they to
study their problem well there
might be hope of improvement in
British pubs in general
Good Sponsor
This reporter was unusually for-
tunate Nvhen he investigated the
House of Commons pub He had
as sponsor one of the wisest and
most moderate drinkers who holds
membership in the House of Com-
mons Ile was accompanied by
friends who knew good brew and 1
how to drink it The evening he
spent in pressing his probe was
one of the most remarkable he
spent in Europe
A W Haycock who is in P for
Salford — -ehich is near Alanches
ter — was born in Canada Ile
spent several years of his youth
hoboing across much of the United
States and in Canada Ile had
flopped in parks carried the banner
In 'Frisco thrown his feet in Los
Angeles ridden the freights across
the Great Divide been ditched on
the Utah desert and travelled with
medicine shows
He acted as host for this rerorter
at the House of Commons During
the early part of the evening
Ilayeock and his group of guests
sat on the terrace watching the
fading lights and sheilows of Lon-
don Within a few feet of them
rolled the Thames Behind them
loomed the great pile of stone
which is the 'louses of Parliament
Big Benmost historic of clocks
—tolled off the hours and the half
hours
American Mho Talk
Since the House of Commons
usually meets in the evenings —
from three p m until 11:00 p
has become tho habit of the
socially important members to
leave the House for dinner and
then wander back I the full re-
galia of dinner coats white stiff
shirts and top hats Young Tory
members wandered up and down
the long terrace attired in dinnei
clothes with lovely and idle litdies
hanging on their arms
But here in the foreground sat
louse Of
Working
1 Drink
1116-11ATISM
MISSING FROM
"SMOKE ROOM"
Observer Thinks Court Dress
Not Turning Heads of
Limey Laborites
ARE STILL 'PROLETARIAN'
Commons Runs Own "Pub"
And It is Among Best
In Great Britain
Haycock with his guests One of
them a "blown in the glass"
American hobo who knew every
Jungle between 'Prise() and Jersey
City another one of the editors
of The British Miner another this
reporter A round of drinks was
ordered served and Haycock be-
gan talking of his young days in
America Ile talked of "being on
the burn" and going hungry of
having no where to sleep and "car-
rying the banner" night after
night of medicine shows and
"mooching a feed along the main
ACM lie said "I forget the old
lingo of the road It has been
years since I talked to an Ameri-
can 'bo Dut lad them were the
days When I was young and hun-
ger was only an adventure"
Lingo Came Back
Though be had forgotten tie old
lingo of the road the presence of
others who had "hit the ties"
"been ditched by a lousy shack"
"mooched their grub" and "boiled
up" in the jungles of the United
States together with the inspira-
tion of good drinks— flooded the
backwaters Of bis memory and the
old slang came less haltingly to his
tongue
Here was a picture for some nov-
elist A Member of Parliament
adorned in all the dignity of his
office and decent clothes and with
the security of 400 quid a year
sitting on trie Ccirancra
terrace yarning of his youth when
he had known hunger and cold and
wet and had been as illy clad as
any man can be Dig Den striking
out the time the grey pile of the
Royal Palace of Westminster fur-
nishing a background the quiet
Thames roiling sear( ard furnishing
a foreground the high hatted Tory
M P's and their cloaked and eve-1
nimr dressed ladles as stage fix-
tures---and in the center this little
group who would have felt more
at home around a jungle Lire sit-
ting here drinking the best brewsl
of Britain
Haycock yarned about his own
(lays "on the road" in America
"I can claim to be a real 'ha" he
Said "I bummed my way over the
Continental divide which is the
great test of a hobo Or at least it
was in my day"
Modivine Show Mita
Ile chatted on about working the
harvest in western Canada ral
fleeing from the bitter northwest
cold —by way of the freights to
California the land of sunshine
and empty-bellied hoboes
Ilaycock had traveled both as
'bo and as a member of medicine
show companies over the greater
part of the American west coast
Ile recalled with gratitude a Cath-
olic mission in Los Angeles that
had given him a "flop' one cold
night Ile told of being "ditched"
in Utah desert remembered "town
clowns" and railroad "bulls" who
had helped nmke life miserable
"I remember" he said "gettit7g
into Los Angeles after a long trip
with a medicine show For a 'bo
I had plenty of money I was flush
A BAVARIAN FAIRY CASTLE
Neuschwanstein Castle in the Bavarian MouItains This
castle from an architectural point of view is considered one
of the most beautiful in Bavaria
THE OKLAIIONIA WEEKLY LEADER
Norway's Child
Little Inga Storm cele-
brated her seventh birthday
by being declared the winner
in the first child beauty com-
petition ever helc in Oslo
My brother was there too We ate
the best and had a regular flop for
a couple of weeks We kids lived
in clover The Salvation Army WaS
collecting money to furnish Christ-
mas dinners for the poor I knew
what it was to be poor So my
brother and I gave a dollar each
to the Salvation Army to help feed
the poor devils who were hungry
"It was several weeks before
Christmas but we were flush and
full of Christmas spirit and good
cheer But when Christmas rolled
around we were no longer flush
nor did We have aught of Christ-
mas Weer
Ate Their Own Bread
"But an old timer on the road
reminded us on Christmas morn-
ing that the Salvation Army was
going to feed the 'boes and so my
brother and I went to Army head-
quarters and ate our Christmas
dinner there among the poor to
whom we had been generous a
couple of weeks before"
As Haycock and his guests chat-
ted various Labor M P's wan-
dered up to the table greeted mem-
bers of the party were asked to
take a drink did or declined lis-
tened or contributed to the conver-
sation and wandered on The drinks
ordered were noticeably proleta-
rian There were no Labor men
who called for the fancy concoc-
tions of the exploiting class They
stuck to beers ales and an occa-
sional one called for one of the
more reasonably priced whiskys
Ito Admires
The addiction to brewed drinks
again forced from this reporter
awed admiration far the capacity
of British bladders While the two
American members of the delega-
tion were forced to miss some por-
tions of the conversation because
they found it necessary to seek
privacy on numerous occasions the
Britishers could and did drink
without finding solitude necessary
The Americans left the party tem-
porary about three times as often
as did the Englishmen
But these retirements (let us say
these so necessary retirements)
had their complications All en-
trances to the House from the ter-
race are guarded by uniformed
cops An ordinary person can not
wander about lie must be accom-
panied by an M P So when the
comforts of private communion
-4-cira sought it was necessary for
the M P host to grab his guest
by the arm and steer him past the
watchful copper Being a very con-
siderate host Haycock steered his
guests both toward and (when they
were ready) away from thhse civ-
ilized conveniences located within
the sacred premises of the Royal
Palace of Westminster
No Change In Attitude
To recite all the interesting de-
tails of this large evening would
require too much space and too
much time in the telling But the
evening did furnish a moral
Anyone who could sit thus and
hear these Labor M Ps talk
would leave having little fear of the
effect of court dress on their work-
ing class state of mind
MOULDERS WAGE
FIGHT TO FREE
THOMAS MOONEY
CINCINNATI — The Execu- L
tive Board of the International
Imouls' Union of North America (
announced here that it had adopted t
the official position that Thome!
J Mooney is innocent and it is per- f
secution to continue his impriron- f
mcnt in California in connection
with 1910 bombings which killed 5
10 persons
The board declared their official I
position has been teken following
"revelations made since his im-
prisonment" The board declared t
the unions "unqualified belief in I
the absolute innocence of Thomas I
J Mooney" and added "we are r
firmly convinced that he was the v
victim of a diabolical conspiracy
and willful frame-up by interests
which hoped to profit through the
elimination !of his activities"
The board's official statement
concluded by callig upon C C
Young governor of California to t
grant Mooney an unconditional I
pa Hon
Mooney is a long time member !
of the San Francisco local of the a
NUDE EDITOR Indian 1)ance
iK1
WILL LIVE IN 1
CANADA WILDS : 't
Takes Only Spectacles On
His Trip North To Live
As Cave Man
Wearing nothing except a pair
of spectacles carrying no equip-
ment save a pair of non-shatterable
goggles to substitute for the
fragle spectacles in moments of
danger Burt Nr McConnell a
large plump serious man has
plunged alone into the uninhabited
wilds of northwestern New Bruns-
wick to stay three months
For ten years McConnell has
been clipping newspaper editorials
and fixing them up into leading ar-
ticles for The Literary Digest But
for eight years sitting-in his swiv-
el chair putting on weight he has
longed to be a cave man
He plans to keep a diary on
birchbark with a charcoal pencil
and make it into a book when he
comes back
The place to which he is going—
he is not specifying it exactly be-
cause he doesn't want any photo-
graphers around—is a highland
where the head waters of three
rivers converge A local committee
will escort him there to verify his
story The altitude ranges from
3000 to 7000 feet
No Sleep First :Sight
"I imagine that the first night
will be rather uncomfortable be-
cause I won't have any clothes"
he said "I'll have to get some
grass to sleep on and keep me
warm I'll make a hammock out of
cedar bark and hang it ten feet
up between two trees My whole
outfit for the first day or two will
be cedar bark I'll make pants
shirts and leggings
"My feet are very tender and
the first thing ni have to have is
a pair of shoes I'll make them of
the inner bark of cedar woven
Pounded with rocks over a dead-
fall it gets as soft as crepe paper
Then I'll make outer shoes of the
heavy outer bark and lash ttem
on with the soft bark platted'
cut the bark with a sharp stone
You can just start it at the bot-
tom and rip off 40 feet with no
trouble at all"
Doesn't Mind Fast
McConnell doesn't expect to
have time to get any food the first
day but that doesn't bother him
He has often fasted for a long
time Once in Seattle he went
without food for seven days and
then broke the local Y M C A
broad jump record This was to
vindicate one Mrs Hazard who
was accused of starving a sani-
tarium patient to death in four
days but Mrs Hazard was con-
victed of manslaughter anyway If
McConnell gets sick while in the
woods he expects to fast himself
back to health
He has been a follower of Ber-
nard Mac ladden's physical culture
Ideas Once he lived for a year and
a half on vegetables at Mac fad-
den's Battle Creek sanitarium but
In the woods he expects to eat
nothing but meat He cites Vit
hjalmur Stefansson's recent suc-
cess in living healthily on meat for
more than a year to show that
it is practical McConnell was with
Steffansson in the Arctic expedi-
tion of 1912 and 1914 and in those
days they lived mostly on meat
Then He'll Spear a Fish
He expects to get his first food
by spearing fish with a wooden
spear After he has enough fish
heads he will make them into glue
and glue a stone head on a spear
shaft Ile admits making flint
points is a lost art but he expects
to do it
"I'm never going to travel with-
out a spear" be said "I think a
man is perfectly safe in any coun-
try of the world if he has a spear"
On the second day out he hopes
to make a fire boy scout fashion
with a twisting stick and a bow
strung with cedar bark McCon-
nell has read all about this and
knows just how it is done He says
he hasn't tried yet actually to do
it for he wants it to be a thrill
when he makes his first fire
Thirty 31ile Corral
McConnell has been ln commu-
nication with the Hon C D Rich-
ards of New Brunswick and with
the local Guides' Association about
his plan Ile has arrrnged tt have
a circular area thirty miles Li di-
ameter all to himself
"The reason I insisted on that
was that I don't want any hunter
to shoot me for a moose" he said
"I expect to get a moose myself
with what the natives of Siberia
call a trap-gun This is an adapta-
tion of the English cross-bow set
with a figure 4 trap I'm going to
get myself a moose as soon as pos- 1
sible
"I'll be right by the Quebec line1
so when I have got my quota of 1
deer and moose in New Brunswick I
I can cross over into Quebec and
get some more
"The only thing I regret is that
ihey haven't any wolves in New
Brunswick There's nothing I'd
like better than a nice wolf-skin I
robe to sleep on in November
when the snow gets deep You
know Ill have three seasons up
lnere: summer in September fall
in October and winter in Novem-
ber McConnell stands 5 feet
inches and his shirt front pro-1
trudes a bit He expects to lose 1
14 of his 194 pounds I
"My neighbor lives on cheese
knd onions alone" He certainly
ug ht to!
Greeting the morning sun
in true aborigines fashion
Betty Hull did an appropriate
Indian dance on the altar of
"The Mountain That Was
Cod" to the natives of this
realm
CARS AREN'T
CAUSE OF ALL
"ACCIDENTS"
Odd Factors Discovered In
Injury List Of
New York
i NEW YORK—"Accidents" sug-
gest automobiles grade crossings
airplanes explosions or high-speed
machinery But a recent survey
of the injuries listed in claims un-
der workmen's co:npensation in-
surance reveals that even the dec-
orative daffodil a timorous mouse
or the wind may be the cause of
an accident that means months in
a hospital for the victim
Oddly acquired injuries come to
light frequently through the claims
work'of the New York State Insur-
ance Fund which is the largest
carrier of compensation insurance
In the state A perusal of the
claim files discloses that hidden
perils often beset the most innocent-appearing
circumstances
An elderly man engaged to run
errands could not cope with a
strong wind at the Battery He
was blown against a railing and
his leg severely injured
Needle In Leg
Some danger lurks in the current
fashion — a girl forgot she bad
placed a needle in the hem of her
skirt Her leg struck against a
table The needle was driven Into
her leg just above the knee
A spicier in the cellar bit a
plumber
A machne at which a girl was
working broke with a crash that
sounded like an explosion The
girl's facial muscles became para-
lyzed from the fright
A school principal handed a di-
ploma to a girl graduate With it
he presented a bouquet of roses a
relative had sent A thorn pricked
his finger and blood poisoning de-
veloped He was incapacitated for
several months and the courts
awarded him compensation hold-
ing that the injury was received
in the course of his employment i
Risks Of Bookkeeping
1
A bookkeeper turned his head
suddenly and a pen in his hand
pierced his nose Infection de-
veloped that brought on a fatal
bre:n abcess
A girl who fell on the marble
floor of a large office building ad-
mits she did not break any bones
—in fact did not even suffer a
bruise But she insists that she
"caught cold"
A delivery boy who says that in
accordance with safety instruc-
tions he waited for toe proper sig-
nal light befdre crossing Fifth
Avenue traffic alleges that as a
result he was incapacitated by in-
haling the fumes from passing
automobiles
Even the safety of the
home may be overestimated
"It is not generally realized"
Said Charles G Smith manager of
the State Fund "that about one-
fourth of all fatal accidents are in
the home The best information is
that there were approximately
100000 persons killed in accidents
of all kiwis in the United States
last year and that about 25000 of
these deaths occurred in the home
"I n general automobiles
brought about most accidental
deaths while falls took the second
largest toll of life In the home
falls stand first in the list of
causes of accidental deaths In all
they caused 35 per cent of the
fatal home accidents asphyxiation
and suffocation came next with 21
per cent and burns and scalds third
with 19 per ecnt"
sET FREIGIIT RECORD
ear loadings of railroad freight !
are setting n eW records for the
season according to newest re-'
port3 of the American Railway
Association The volume of goods
beirg moved by the roads is hold-
ing well above the 1928 and 1927
levels a:id in some instances is ex-
ceeding the former high marks of
1926
Bible's Influence
On Morals Small
Hoosier Declares
I NEV HAVEN — Knowledge of
the Bible does not help people to
walk the straight and narrow path
the savants of the ninth Interna-
tional Congress of Psychology were
Informed by Prof Pleasant R
Hightower of Butler University
Indianapolis Ind
Prof Hightower tested 3316
school children ' of various ages
first for their knowledge of the
Bible and second for their con-
duct in situations offering oppor-
tunities for cheating lying loyalty
and altruism
He found that the group of chil-
dren having the greatest knowl-
edge of the Bible were the worst
cheaters whereas these children
whose knowledge of the Bible was
so slight as to be practically neg-
ligible scrupulously avoided lying
and cheating
Finds No Relationship
Taking the returns as a whole
he could detect absolutely no re-
lationship between Biblical infor-
mation and virtuous behavior But
they did not show he emphasized
that the Bible could not be made
of value in character building
Orthodox believers failed to
measure up to religious liberals in
several respects in an experiment
reported by Prof Thomas H How-
ells of the University of Colorado
He subjected fifty extreme con-
servatives and fifty radicals among
600 university students to psycho-
logical tests
The orthodox group proved less
capable in solving Intellectual
problems more susceptible to the
influence of others in certain situa-
tions less willing to endure dis-
tress in competition and less able
to co-ordinate their muscles They
were however more able to in-
crease their efficiency in order to
defend themselves in a dangerous
situation
Edueatien No Criterion
Religious education even of the
ethical non-Biblical varieties used
by liberal churches and 1 eat-religious
organizations me tes no
perceptible difference in the moral
UTILITY PROBE
TO BE RESUMED
WASHINGTON — Resumption
of the Federal Trade Commission
inquiry into the financisi structure
of electric light and power utility
concerns will begin early next
month it has been announced here
The commission last October
opened hearings into the financial
structure of the Electric Bond &
Share Co but was blocked by the
refusal of the company's officers to
produce certain books The com-
mission petitioned the courts to
order that the books be produced
but early this year an adverse de-
cision was handed down by a Fed-
eral District Court in New York
This judgment has not become
operative as both parties requested
and obtained a delay until net
Monday for the filing of further
motions
LAMPLAND
50 bell years Old
On October 21st 1S79 Thomas A Edison threw a
crude switch that sent the first rays of ELECTRIC
light into a world of tallow candles and kerosene
wick lamps Light forever the symbol of the quest
for knowledge has been a proud pioneer in the field
of electrical things helping in a hundred
ways to bring about the amazing inventions that
have follewed
On October 21st the entire world will celebrate the
Golden Jubilee of the incandescent lamp Thomas
A Edison will be feted at a great birthday party in
Dearborn Michigan and the nation will stand by
to do him tribute Watch for al nouncements of our
community celebration of the event
i
OKLAHOMA GAS AND ELECnIC COMPANY
JEOwnsYirr Prri 'Went
inif Genera Algriarn
Friday September 20 1929
behavior of school children so far
as tests made by Prof Hugs
Hartshorne of Columbia University
show
Of the 27 most consistently be-
haved pupils out of 100 all but
four came from Protestant homes
One was a Catholic and three
families bad no affiliation In the
least consistent group half were
Protestant four were Catholic or
Catholic and Protestant one was
Jewish and five had no religious
affiliations About half of each
group belonged to organizations
teaching ethics As between sexes
girls were a little more consistent
than boys
Pet Peeves
Another interesting paper pre-
sented to the Congress dealt with
"pet aversions" Using the figure
30 as the maximum of annoyances
Prof Hu ley Cason after question-
ing 600 subjects of both sexes
found the following annoyances
graded thus:
Gushing manner 18 arguing
23 continually criticizing some-
thing 23 young person showing
disrespect for older person 26
salesman 23 crowding in front in-
stead of waiting in line 24 talk of
one's illnesses 20 to see intoxicat-
ed man 22 to see intoxicated
woman 26 musicians making un-
necessary movements while per-
forming 17 hearing jazz 6 an-
other person talking during mo
tion picture performance 18
Also person looking over shoul-
der at book or magazine 14 see
baid head of man 2 see or hear
animal being treated cruelly 28
hear mosquito near roe when try-
ing to sleep 26 see or hear child
harshly treated by older person
28 flies 25 cockroaches 24 mice
20 snakes 17 find hair in food
26 smell liquor on breath of per-
son 23
Women Annoy More
A comparison of the pet dislikes
of men and women revealed that
while the average woman's aver-
sion to dancing wan a fat partner
is only eight the average man's
aversion to dancing with a fat
partner is 13
Throughout life it appears
however women are a greater
source of annoyance than men are
Both men and women reach their
high peak in the production of an-
noyance between the ages of 40
and 60
'kTilli
Household goods packed
stored and shipped
Heavy machinery moved
and installed
PROMPT SERVICE
Union Transfer
& Storage Co
205 S Broadway W 5193
artPunt PPrronot 417P71113
fir Every Gilgit&
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. The Oklahoma Weekly Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1929, newspaper, September 20, 1929; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2070956/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.