The Oklahoma Weekly Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, July 11, 1930 Page: 5 of 6
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PRESS SCRAP
RAGING OVER
LINGLE CASE
0
Friday July 11 1930
Charges Flung Back And
Forth by Chicago's
Big Dailies
CHICAGO —(FP) —Echoing the
Federated Press story of two
weeks ago The Chicago Tribune is
printing a copyright special article
which ends with the words: "Who
killed Jake Lingle? This investi-
gator ventures the forecast that
the world at large will never
know"
In the meantime The Tribune
has admitted in print the charge
that Lingle exposed gang fixer
racketeer and extortionist though
on The Tribune payroll hardly
ever wrote a story It has also
admitted that he flashed lots of
money sometimes believed to have
been inherited though public rec-
ords have shown for years that the
estate he was supposed to have en-
tered into totaled only $500
"Daily News" Attacked
LieW turn was taken with the
publication of a story in The Trib-
une tending to show that The
Daily News was just as bad in
dealing with known underworld
characters This is another round
in the newspaper war for news and
circulation that in Chicago at
least has never stopped short of
murder and corruption The Hearst
papers are also in the war to clip
The Tribune's prestige Arthur
Brisbane comes round to the Fed-
erated Press theory that the high-
erups are the ones to catch in the
following paragraph in his daily
syndicated column:
Brisbane's Opinion
The most serious statement in
this lamentable exposure is that
Lingle dealt in police promotion
To be made police lieutenant the
charge was $1500 for a captain
5000 No wonder some of the
police turn to graft and gangsters
when thd position they bold is part
of a graft system
"Ilovvever Colonel McCormick
and Major Patterson whose own-
ership controls The Tribune will
want to know what particular in-
dividual in The Tribune organiza-
tion DID know of Lingle's activi-
ties supporting him with The Trib-
une's authority and presumably
sharieg his profits"
In this amazing statement Bris-
bane intimates tnat Lingle had to
divide his racket spoils with high-
erups on The Tribune and he hints
as broadly as he dares at persist-
ent rumors that a tremendous
shakeup of The Tribune staft is
abouC to take place to cleanse the
paper of the corruption arising
from the slain gangster-reporterfixer's
easy moLny side lines A
recent article in The Tribune
signed by Robert M Lee city edi-
tor states that nobody on the pa-
per had any idea in the world that
Lingle was anything else than a
competent police reporter
"Respectables" In
Racket Exposures
Cif ICAGO—(FP)— Independent
of the fatal finish of Jake Lingle's
racketeering whien threatena to
reach to a number of higher-ups
Cbicago has been treated this week
to a revelation of the corruption
and rascality which seems to be
the regular cider of business in
the most honorable and respectable
spheres of life Three first-class
holier-than-thou pillars of society
have been publicly exposed They
are:
1 C'ol Charles J Kraft Illinois
National Guard
2 The Beller Business Bureau
presid-d Over by a confessed tax
dodger
3 The ielioldt Foundation
dedicated to philanthropy d the
higher life found paying Out money
to have the taxes of its founder
fixed
The nolitia racket had been go-
ing on for seven years according
to an indictment charging Col
Charles J Kraft with graft that is
expected to have cost the govern
ment $100000 and the state of TM-
ibis much more
Elmer F Wieboldt is pre:iident of
the Better Business Bureau de-
voted to exposure of the rackets
that prey on business in Chicago
But when Ui e government
ilagged an assessor into court
charged with income tax frauds
tb:a same anti-racketeering Vie-
boldt testified in open court that
he had signed a check as a bribe
if) have the taxes on his depart-
ment store and other real estate
reduced To racketeer against bus-
iness is awful he seems to think
hut to racketeer against the public
is great stuff
Bribed Assessor
Werner A Wieholdt a heavy de-
partment store advertiser and
therefore tenderly treated in the
daily press testified that be and
his family had paid $4277416 as
bribes to have taxes adjusted Ad-
justed means reduced and the act-
a1 amount of the reduction was
t :e the Wieboldt investment in
tax-fixing
Wieboldt recently gave a splen-
did building Wieboldt Hall to the
University of Chicago Wags sug-
gest that it should be renamed
Tax-dodger Tower He also gave
money to start the Wieboldt Foun-
dation which makes a pretense of
holping whatever is bet in civic
lite along ctrtain lines But the :
ADVENTURES (IF HENRY DUB!) MINER—nen Ilenr)'s God-Oen Gift Failed This Time
11QUISITION"
OF TODAY TO
ANGER MASSES
Dreiser Says Effort To Curb
Economic Heresy Only
Breeds Violence
The present hysterical and all
too savage and unreasoned perse-
cution for political and economic
opinion everywhere in America and
this in the face of economic mis-
ery—can only inflame the masses
to concerted and more than likely
unwise and destructive reprisal"
declared Theodore Dreiser novel-
ist according to an announcement
by the John Reed club
Dreiser according to the John
Reed club an organization of writ-
ers and artists has announced his
active support of the campaign in-
stituted by the club to organize
writers and educaters with the
view of combatting the growing
"red" scare throughout the United
States
Repression Dangerous
"You may see for yourself"
Dreiser continues "how dangerous
it has recently become—and that
under a government that in its
constitution guarantees the right
of free speech—for anyone even so
much as to mention communism
socialism or indeed any local ill
whose airing might tend to stir
in anyone the notion that the pres-
ent corporate capitalistic system
with its individual favorites is not
perfect: that it is not all right for
every rich man to will his spine-
less heir millions of age-old eco-
nomic properties while denying to
the underling who comes with
nothing the right to complain when
he is starving"
"As I see it the entrenched cor-
porations and individuals apparent-
ly loelieve that to silence or if ne-
cessary destroy the protestor in
times like these is the way to main-
tain peace and prosperity to say
nothing of niaintaining unaw fled
their personal prosperity Eu is
it? For certainly the sufferers
from overproduction as well as
greed are equally sure that to
overcome or destroy the selfish
self-centered individualist w h o
thinks that mere money is so im-
portant to him is the way to eco-
nomic existence for them
"The wisest and greatest among
the individualists today are those
who see this clearly But mean-
while this persecution for political
and economic opinion must cease
It is not only unconstitutional in
America but unethical and mean
and worse—idiotic For those who
are peaceably seeking to exercise
freedom of opinion assembly and
speech whatever their views are
right And those who in the face
of their suffering deny them are
wrong In sum it is time that the
world's creative geniuses every-
where now sit down together and
take counsel in regard to new ne-
cessities—the new order they im-
ply—some new way of living our
economic and social lives And the
men of wisdom and genius in poli-
tics economics and education will
be those who will not think that
the best thing to do—however
drastic the change—is fire on the
ignorant the weak the hopeless
or the defeated
Change ill Come
"Only fools and evil-doers will
counsel that or stand back and an-
nounce that all is well and there
can be no change For there can
and will be a change It is here
And all courageous thinking men
and women everywhere should step
forward and demand that there be
thought--not merely stubbnrn and
angry and blind use cf force The
ostrich's head must come out of the
ground"
Among those who have enlisted
in the John Reed club's campaign
to combat persecution for the ex-
pression of political and economic
opinions are: H L Mencken Slier-
wood Anderson Evelyn Scstt Ed-1
Wieboldt Foundation signature
was found by the government on
one of the bribe checks indicating
that the Foundation exists to help
tax-fixers among other ornaments
of Chicago civilization
He Squeals
"I believe I tive been the 'itctim
of a racket" Wieboldt said after
the testirnonv But it looks ss if
he had bee n running a pretty
healthy one against the ptThe li()rt
w)t h a not profit of 2771
hy his toNn tive
Howat Pleased
With eetings
hi Field
Accompanied By President Dorchy of District
14 International Chief I folds Enthusiastic
Rallies In Oklahoma and Arkansas Ilen-
ryetta District Invaded and Big "Fourth"
Meetings Ile Id On Arkansas Side
l'ITTSBUIC(l Kans — Contin-
ued optimistic reports relative to
re-organization work in Oklahoma
and Arkansas followed the trail
during the past week of Alexan-
der Howat international president
of the Re-organized United Mine
Workers of America and August
Dorchy president of District 14
who have beer in those two states
on an extended speaking tour
"The meetings have been well
attended and enthusiastic endorse-
meta has been given the re-organized
union everywhere" Ilowat
said in a telephone conversation
with the District headquarters
here Oklahoma and Arkansas
are included in District 14 in the
nov set-up of the Southwest in
the re-organized union
Resolutions have been adopted
6101'S COSI WIC LAMM
Discontinuance of convict labor
on state highways as an aid to un-
employment has been ordered by
Governor Green of NI ichlgau
About 300 froe Ia bor(!rs will get
work as a result
The Milwaulif:e road is laying
oft 170 shopmen in the locomotive
department and 250 in the ear
building and repair department in
Milwaukee bigitaling July 1
mund Wilson John Dos Passos
John Sloan Boardman Robinson
Malcolm Cowley Upton Sinclair
Michael Gold John Cowper Powys
Alfred Kreymborg Louis Unter-
meyer Carl Van Doren William
Gropper Louis Lozowick William
Boaz Burton Rascoe and Hugo
Gellert
(Continued from Page Four)
Iceland a Danish island in the North Sea
northwest of the Shetland Islands and 250 mil(
ken In this isinid is prineipally Danish This
tive hut The Icelanders are the best ed!icated
TIF 01i1A11011 IA 1:EEIN
Howat said pledging loyalty and
co-operation in reorganizing the
two states back to full strength
The tour was continuing the
first part of this week with speak-
ing dates at Henryetta Harts-
horne and Panama in Oklahoma
Other dates may be added and
the two leaders were to return to
Pittsburg the last of this week
Last week-end found them in Ar-
kansas where they spoke at
Fourth of July celebrations at
miners' picnics Dates in that
state included Clarksville Coal
Hill and Greenwood
It is the second speaking tour
for Howat in the two states and
also the second for Dorchy It is
the third time re-organized union
speakers have appeared there in
the past two months
ADAM COALD1GGER
who are so enthusiastically beaten up by the minions of law
and order--are the true sons and daughters of the American
revolution
Political and industrial democracy either go together like
two good and faithful feet or there is no marching at all I
know of what I am talking for that right foot of mine is as
sound as sound can be and yet I'm a cripple all over because
my left foot is sore as hell On the other hand if it hadn't
been for that sore foot I might have been among the empty-
headed fools who are shooting of their mouths and fire-crackers
down in the streets instead of writing this much-needed
sermon So you see there is good in all things—including a
sore foot
TELLING 'HIE Ilti It
The engineer was having his
troubles getting over the Craw-
ford hill and received the follow-
ing message from the superinten-
dent: "Why the delay on the
Crawford hill?"
The answer was start but plain:
''Out of sand"
At the next telegraph office he
received the following: 'What
were you doing on the Ciawford
hill without sand?"
The reply still short but lull
was "Slipping"
New Recruit—How do you get
rid or these cooties?
Ohl Soldier—That's easy Take
a bath in sand and rub down in
alcohol The cooties get drunk
and kill each othei throwing
rocks
A DANISH ISLAND IN TI11 NORTH SEA
COAL COPS TO
SERVE A FEW
WEEKS IN CAN
Killers of Miner Get Olf With
Extremely Light
Sentences
PITISB ( FP ) —Coal and
iron policemen J M Lyster and
Ifirold Watts who brutally beat
John Barkoski to death arrived in
Pittsburgh June 26 to begin sen-
tences of 12 and 10 months respec-
tively in the Alleghany county
workhouse They were found guilty
several wonths ago of involuntary
manslaughter instead of murder
following expensive defense activi-
ties of the Mellon-controlled Pitts-
burgh Coal company for which
they were working
It is more than 16 months since
Barkoski's wife received in place
of the healthy miner who went off
to work a macerated broken corpse
"The worst abused subject that
ever came through our doors" said
morgue officials
At first the public was so
arou4ed that the Pittsburgh Coal
company disowned Lyster and
Watts but when they were tried
for murder last September two
high-priced Mellon lawyers defend-
ed them They were acquitted af-
ter a half-hearted prosecution by
the Late
HOOVER SCORED
BY FLINT GLASS
WORKERS' CHIEF
TOLIEDO — (FP) — President
Hoover came in for scathing com-
ment for the administration's fail-
ure to meet the industrial depres-
stin in President William P
Clerke's repott to the American
Flint Glass Workers' convention in
Toledo
"Evasion and subterfuge seem to
be the chief characteristics of the
policies of officialdom In Washing-
ton" aid Clerke They tell the
public that times are getting bet-
ter employment is picking up
wages are not being reduced and
that prosperity is Just around the
corner when every sane person
knows the reverse to be true The
facts are that we have had more
unetnployment (luring the last few
months than has existed in this
country since 1Sf43 and there is no
let-up in sight
"All my life I have been recog-
nized as a conservative and I want
to protect that record as well as
live consistently and conscientious-
ly with it but being a man of vi-
sion and responsibility it is my
imperative duty to sound an alarm
when danger signals appear upon
the horizon so clearly and so vis-
ibly that any ordinary student of
industrial and political questions
cannot help but observe them"
close to the Arctic Circle lies about 500 miles
soutiuast of Greenland The language spo-
Loto shows a family group outside their na-
mtion in the world iliturary being unknown
'AmiMMMMlail
Teachers' Union
'rakes Fear From
Members' Lives
Teno—( FP)—Fear
the bane of the school teachers
life cannot be banished until the
teacher becomes free by joining
the union of her profession That
was the keynote of Mary C Bark-
er's presidential address to the
American Federation of Teachers
the A F of L union meeting in
fourteenth convention in Memphis
"It is amazing to witness how
teachers are controlled by fear"
President Barker said "Until you
make contact with those who know
nothing of our plan you have no
conception of the depressed condi-
tion under which they work They
are afraid to express their opin-
ions for fear of losing their jobs
This is a condition that the fed-
eration is seeking to remedy—to
put the teaching profescn on a
level with other professions
Promote I hmoe racy
One of our purposes is to pro
DARE HOOVER
TO START BIG
PUBLIC WORKS
Fearing It Might Boost Taxes
For Rich H3 Is Forced
-To Eat W ords"
NLW 010i — t —"Every
month that the present depression
is allowed to go unchecked costs
the business men and investors of
the tation half a billion dollars
and the wage and salary workers
another half a billion — a billion
a month" declares the National
Unemployment League headed by
Darwin J Meserole
Tbe League C1113 on President
Hoover and congress to act to
speed public works in accordance
with the report Of Hoovers own
committee on recent economic
changes which slates that timeli-
ness multiplies the effectiveness
of each project
Is Plan Forgotten ?
"Iroy do we hear nothing of the
'Hoover plan' calling for an expen-
diture of $3000000000 for public
works to relieve unemployment
and stabilize business which was
presented to the conference of
governors in November 1928 by
ex-Governor Brewster with the ap-
proval of President-elect Hoover?"
asks the League
Secretary of Commerce Lamont
IS subjected to withering sarcasm
by the National Unemployment
League for his figure of 229358e
' for national unemployment based
on federal census figures
Nearer Seven Million
According to the most reliable
figures the league says unem-
ployment ranges from five per
cent in the best years to 20 per
cent in bad years Based on the
non-agricultural working pepula-
tien of 33000000 this would give
1650000 jobless in the best years
3300000 in average years and 6-
600000 in had years 'rue A F
of L's current figures of union un-
employment show 20 per cent bile
Unemployment is nearer 7000-
000 than Secretary Lamont's 2300-
000 the league concludes "It is
earneitly hoped that no one who
is endeavoring to help in the pres-
ent emergency will be deterred
from continuing his work because
of Sectarary Lamont's statement
from the census returns at Wash-
ington" the league advises
Hwy — Papa wot 13 business
ethics?
Able — Veil ter instance —
sell a pair of shoes my customer
giffs me a ten dollar bill but on
the way to the cash register I tind
der is two ten dollars stuck to-
gether Now the ethics comes in
—should I tell my pardner?
--
FIZEAKI:11
Fanner I've never sen stet a
season My corn isnt an ire b
high
Neighber n ineh Viiy the
sparrows ha ve to kie±el down to
eat mine
mote a democracy in the schools
that will enable the teachers to
equip their pupils better for their
places in the industrial social and
political life of the community"
she declared
"This democracy will never be
realized except through the activ-
ities of the teachers We believe
that the teachers are one of the
most highly productive workers
and that the best interest of the
schools and of the people demand
an intimate contact and an effec-
tive co-operation between t h e
teachers and the other workers of
the r mmunity upon whom the
future of democracy must depend"
Militant Leadership
Secretary W C Birthright of
the Tennessee Fetir:Ltion of Labor
followed up President Barker's ad-
dress with a stirring appeal to
widen the scope of the trade union
movement to include the unskilled
and semi-skilled workers particu-
larly in the mills
"Tennessee" he said is the best
state south of the Ohio river from
the standpoint of the labor move-
ment because we have the mili-
tant leadership which a labor
movement in the south requires
Unionism is an old institution to
many killed workers but it must
be extended to the unskilled"
Discussing the displacement of
workers by machines Birthright
called for old age pensions to take
care of aged veterans of industry
and unemployment insurance to
help those thrown out of jobs
Rap Alonhey Law
Rabbi Harry W late Ison hit at
Tennessees anti-evolution law "IL
is a mistake" he said "for state
legislators to try through the
passing of laws to decide a thing'
which has to be determined by in-
vestigations in the laboratory
Boards of education trustees of
colleges and presidents of univer-
sities make the same mistake when
they interfere with academic free-
dom Of teachers The evil of at-
tempting to suppress freedom of
thought and expression and tench-
mg is worse thnn tenching erro-
neous thought"
rage Fly
FREE TRIP
TO VIENNA
Is MERU
Campaign for Finding "Jim
mie Higgins" Will Be
Started Soon
NEW HAVEN' Conn— (FP) -
America's best Jimmie Higgins
going to get a free trip to View"
the Socialist city and to the
ternational Socialist Congress
be held there in July 1931 the S
cialist Party's National Executh
Committee decided in it quarterl
meeting at New Haven He will I
judged on his ability to get men
bers for both the party and
Young People's Socialist Leagu
and subscriptions for Socialist p
pers
The campaign to find out who
the party member best living I
to Upton Sinclair's classic lab(
figure of active if unrenowned
cialist worker will last from Se
ternber 1 to March 1 Second pri
consists of a year's scholarship
Brookwood Labor College cr tl
Rand School and three other prizt
will be awarded
The national committee plannt
an energetic congressional can
paign to be backed by the pick (
party candidates and an intensiN
literature program Leallets fe
turing Old age pensions injun
tions Socialism- and tbe tariff wi
be printed in the hundreds of thol
sands Financial sinews for
campaign already consist of $25
750 raised in the United Sociali
drive under the chairmanship
Marx Lewis
Secretary Clarence Senior sui
gested that a questionnaire on ti
change of the party's name be sei
to the membership but the con
mitte unanimously decided to r
tam n the name Socialist A motic
to transfer national beadquartei
from Chicago to Washington b
cause of its superlor publicity fe
tures on national political issut
was defeated 4 to 5 but may
reconsidered at the next meetin
INSTALL 5-DY WitEK
A five-day week for texti
workers with increased produc
lion has been installed in Danie
Company mills in l'hiladelphi
Aevorth Ga And High Poin
S c
4551 BUILDING
01 fo r a
Greater Oklahoma
Oklahoma in 1929 produced one and one-half BIL-
LION dollars of new wealth from agriculture manu-
facturing and minerals the three almost nvenly
balanced Closely identified with this remarki1)le pro-
duction is ELECTRIC POWER generated in efficient
central power plants nd transmitted over wide areas
to farms industries and oil fields at constantly lower-
ing costs
Providing dependable economical electric service in a
courteous manner taking a substantial part in
progressive civic affairs and assisting in the
development of Oklahoma are fundamental policies f
Oklahoma Gas and Electric Company Three thou-
sand Oklahomans members of the O G Sz E
organization are the human media through
which these policies are earnestly practiced
ten thousand Oklahomans are shareholders
OKLAHOMA GAS 2nd ELECTRIC COMPANY
J F OWENS Vic President and General Manager
Courteous Paraotted Attoostton 'Po Ivory Cuaterawe
C
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. The Oklahoma Weekly Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, July 11, 1930, newspaper, July 11, 1930; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2070998/m1/5/: accessed July 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.