Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, June 17, 1927 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Oklahoma) and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Labor is prior to and independent of
capital Capital is only the fruit of labor
could never have existed if labor had not
first exiided Labor is the superior of capi-
tal and deserves much the higher emsideration
-By ABRAHAN ILICOL31
0
I
I
-
I
i
VOL 8—No 41
Roai Material
Choice is
440 jw
c
CS s3s
'4 V ' e a II
S 1 a I e (Cpyte 4Q I 11 0 n
tZ 47 $ 11'
I Alk
:4V
Johnston Apparently Deter-1 k
t
kRICAN AGENT FOR
mined To Keep Cement In- !
DYE TRUST IS JAILED
dustry From "Hogging"
Contracts Western Coun- BY GERMAN OFFICERS
—
ties Renew Interest I n I HEIDELBERG Germany — Ac-
Hard Roads Since John- mined of espionage in the interest
of an American dye concern Dr
ston's Election Franz Meyer a German chemist
— was sentenced here today to two
By GRIZZLY CUB months' imprisonment and a fine
-
Apparently there will be no extra of $500 or 100 additional days in
oossion of the legislature unless the jail
supreme court says so The convicted man was formerly
a director of the Theodore Gold-
Thus one more buck has been schnildt Company of Essen and
passed to the state's highest court manager of the Mannheim branch
In the test suit brought by the at- of this firm Two years ago he
torney general to determine the le- obtained a position as the German
gality of highway contracts on representative of a large firm in
which work has been begun which the United States
were let without putting the time In this capacity he Is said to
tor completion in the specifications have organized an espionage sys
tem to pry into the production and
I What Is Rosicucian? price secrets of the German Dye
I Trust
(Editor's N)te: )Vebster's
dictionary gives the folloning
definition of Posicrucian—The
name Is probably due to a bet
man theologian Johann Valentin
Andrea 'oho in anonymous
Ph mphlets called himself a
knight of the hose Cross using
a twat nith a St Andrew's cross
and four roses One aim in the
7th century- and the early part
of the tsth claimed to belong
to a secret society of philoso
phers deeply versed in the se
ere( s of nature the alleged so
defy having existed it ivas
stated several hundred years
The itosicrueians vivre also
milled brothers of the Rosy
Cross itosytross hnights find
Rosy-Cross Philosophers Among
ot!esr tretensions they clahned
to be able to transmute metals
II) prolong life to know n hat is
passing in distant places and
to discover the most hidden
things by the application of the
Cabala and the science of num
hers)
Governor Johnston himself will
have brought the legislature down
about his ears if the court holds
that contractors can not be
paid for work under construction
which was not let according to le
gal specifications for bids For It
was governor Johnston liiuwelf
Who through friendly contractors
intervened in the Green-Boots suit
against the highway commission to
set up the illegality of the lettings
as grounds for forcing the commis-
sion to relet the April contracts
Give Others a Chance
The governor's plan apparently is
to give the asphalt brick and
gravel men some of the contracts
which were specified for concrete
construction in the April lettings
Where the governor originally
talked asphalt and brick he talked
Troy gravel Ile said that it would
cost $7500 a mile as compared with
30000 a mile for cement lie ad-
mitted that it might not be suitable
for the main highways yet for the
next few years these are the very
ays on which t state
cercering its attention
If the supreme court holds that
the work under construction must
be stopped as a result of the notice
given by the Chambers decision in
the Green-Boots case then the only
way in which contractors can get
money for work done is for the ie-
islature to meet and appropriate
The situation would be a stirring
(Jr the hornets nest which would
not be at all pleasant for the gov-
er1101 According to the governor's
own diet k of the ivirislature
there fe 2S in favor et a spe-
ela se-sion to investigate his
actiwis now with 21 noire in-
dined to nwet in the fall and
GppOSed W Huy session un-
less the governor himself
r ants it
A Lee Battenfield's questionnaire
to the solcAs had barely received
Its publicity when another legisla-
tor F 11 Belly of Shawnee sent
out a feeler for a special session
Iteily was one of the governor's
supporters in the legislative battles
and was on his feet most of the
closing days lighting to pass the
governor's anti-trust law amend-
ments Apparently the rottawa-
tonne county solon has joined the
list of friends alienated by the gov-
ernor's course
But if 1( nston Las made many
enemies by As highway program
at least one promise made by him
during the campaign has borne
- fruit as a result of a law which
the governor sponsored in the
eleventh legislature
'estern Coutdies Vote Bonds
This law provided that counties
could use money from automobile
license and gasoline taxes to retire
bonds toted for highways
As a result of this law Caddo
county voted bonds last week
while Jackson and Jefferson now
are preparing to do the same
During the campaign Johnston
pledged himself to see that the
western counties got roads and he
will be able to point to the fact
that during his administration this
promise has been fulfilled and
claim with some basis for his zfn-
tention that be is largely responpihin
COURT RULES NO
HARVESTER TRUST
Monopoly Ch2rge Made By
Government Dismissed
WASHINGTON—There is no har-
vester trust according to the Su-
preme Court which held the Inter
national Harvester Company guilt-
less of allegations made by the gov-
ernment charging that it operated
in violation of the anti-trust laws
The Government charged that the
Harvester Company's control of in-
terstate trade in harvesting ma-
chines had increased between 1918
and 1922 that the company due to
its resources was able to undersell
competitors that the number of
competitors was steadily diminish-
ing that unless this "combination
and monopoly" should be effective-
ly dissolved by dividing the com-
pany int at least three independ-
ent concerns its monopolistic con-
trol would increase and become
'complete' " and that the consent
decree of 1918 was generally Made-
quata Sees No Trade Suppression
"it does not appear" said the
Court "that since the entry of the
consent decree the International
Company has used its capacity and
resources — which although much
larger than those of a single com-
petitor are but little larger than the
aggregate capital and resources of
all its competitors and are in large
Part employed in its foreign trade
—its subsidiary companies or inci-
dental advantages for the purpose
or with the effect of restraining and
suppressing the interests trade in
harvesting machinery that It has
at auy time reduced the process of
harvesting machines below cost for
the purpose of driving out its com-
petitors or that it has at any time
controlled and dominated the trade
in harvesting machinery by the
regulation of prices"
CARRIE NATION
SHRINE SOUGHT
MEDICINE LODGE Kan — A
movemeni to make a shrine of the
former home of Carrie Nation fa-
mous "hatchet—witider" of pre-
prohibition days has been staed
here by friends who plan to pur-
chase a little brick house once the
home of the fatuous Carrie
Thirty years ago Carrie Nation
started her crusade by smashing a
saloon in Klowa her own county
town She then went to Wichita
and splashed the finest mirrors in
that city's saloons From there she
traveled to Topeka and after
smashink a number of saloons was
jailed only to be released again
She died several years after in a
sanitarium at Leavenwor h
Sleeping Baby Is
Found After Car
Thieves A re Gone
Jackson County To
Vote On Road Bond
ALTUS — Jackson county ill
have a road bond election July 19
to dvtermine v:11(111er or not 00-
009 bondi shall be issued to im-
prove and gravel 152 miles of per-
mrnent road 111 the county and to
buld five bridges If the bonds
Olkllahoma
' OKLAHOMA CITY OKLAHOMA
POLAND WILL
NOT GIVE UP
RUSS SLAYER
Executions Follow In Wake
of Murder of Russian
Foreign Minister
WARSAW—Any demand by Rus-
ala for the ext radit ion of the young
Russian royalist who shot Soviet
Minister Peter Volkof here last
week will be met with refusal ac-
cording to the I'olish foreign min-
ister Even though the assassin is a
Russian citizen the foreign min-
ister said he must be tried in War-
saw? N here the crime was com-
mitted Polish law generally shows
great clemency toward minors and
It is feared that anything less than
the death punishment will not sat-
isfy Russia
Announcement of the execution
of twenty anti-soviet agitators in
Russia corning on the heels of the
assassination of Volkof has pro-
foundly agitated all Europe Re-
ports are current that 88 persons
have been arrested in Russian
provinces for agitating against
payment of taxes Other reports
say that 16 persons have been Le-
rested at Odessa ou charges of
agitating to discredit the govern-
ment Reports come front other sec-
tions of wholesale arrests on
charges that persons arrested are
Rumanian spies and that others
have encouraged peasants in burn-
ing portraits of Lenin
Soviet Russia's war minister
Clemeny Voroshiloff told a meeting
of workers today the England had
so stirred up feeling agzoir-st Russia
that a class war loomed
Terming the international situa-
tion "acute" and asserting that "no
slackening of the hostilities against
us can be expected" he added:
"There are many who believe we
can avert a conflict but I declare
we are nearing the point where
chute war Is inevitable"
T it e governments' published
statements contained by no means
all the data available concerning
England's hand in organizing in-
ternal plots in Russia he said but
those published were enough to in-
dicate "the enemy's activities"
"More than once" be contiued
"captured English spies have had
evidence of English support of dif-
ferent White Guard organizations
Nevertheless the soviet maneuvered
to prolong the period of peace to
the utmost limits
"Today those comparatively quiet
times are behind us England is
leading propaganda against us in
Poland Lithuania Latvia Estonia
and Rumania
"If until now she has not suc-
ceeded in throwing them upon us
It is not due to lack of intention
but to political controversies which
do not permit the creation of a
solid front"
LAUD HERETICS
AS SERVANTS OF
SOCIAL ORDERS
NEW YORK—The best servants
of social order are the heretics de-
clares Rev Paul Jones formerly
Protestant Episcopal Bishop of
Utah in a sermon delivered in the
Episcopal Church of St Marks
"The great figures of every age
are those who have tried to remake
'olitical social and religious con-
cepts We need them now for
man is being warped and cranufed
by our system of education by our
political system and ty our ortho-
dox unchanging religion—by the
very machinery that he has set up
to help him"
Enlarging on his views on eductc
tion Doctor Jone said America
had built up a great system but that
the educators atialcd tne pupil
with facts rather than helped him
toward real understanding Ile
cited the case of Charles Lind-
bergh a failure as a college stu-
dent because he would not contemn
to the system in force
"At the f'olumbia University last
Neel( oursons were given de-
grees" Doctor Jones continued "I
wonder whether those degrees
would be aeceptable as a record of
growth Are they not merely rec-
ords of successful conformity?"
ilburn Youth Is
Held in Shooting
OILTON--- An automobile thief TISIIHOMINGO - Bud Horton 22
had no ambition to take up kidnap- years old of Milburn is being held
lug and so be abandoned unhurt a in the county jail here in connec-
baby which be fourcd in the car he Don with the shooting of C E Os-
stole here Mr and Mrs Orval No- 'erne 42 years old of Denison
tile parked their car in front of the Texas Osborne's story is that he
home of a friend and leaving their was shot by a nmtorist near Mil-
baby asleep in the car stepped in- burn Sunday The motorist he
side for a few moments They had says sideswiped his car during the
been inside but a few moments argument which enrued hot him
when they heard the motor of their Ile is in a critical condition from a
car and rushing o saw it had wound in the spine w hich may
been driven away A search was I leave him paraly7ed In case of re-
soon started by men in automobiles covery Horton denied the shooting
who scoured the country The baby when arrested
was found on a vacant lot
Governor Johnston
Revokes 3 Paroles
Governor Johnston last week re-
yoked the parole of three men con-
! victed of ether crimes since they
i left penal instilutiong 'limy are:
!Roy Abott paroled v Walton and
convicted since then of burglarly
Wallace Ruth paroled from the
!state reformatory later couvicted
1
"FEARLESS AND TRUE"
SAYS BABIES ARE BORN
TO LOAD OF DEBT NOW
LONDON—"Children are no
longer born with a silver spoon
in their mouths but with a load
of debts around their necks"
Sir George Lunn educational
leader told a conference of edu-
cation committees here today
lie urged the teaching of the
principles of the League of Na-
tions and the stressing of the
billions of pounds and the Mil-
lions Of lives lost in the long
war
No more glorification of
bloody battles" was his peroration
County Officials
Of Garfield Will
Ile Investigated
Cmmy In Garfield are to
be pcollcd by the attorney general's
once by request of Governor
Jocuston who has received numer-
ous complaints of graft by county
facials One charge according to
the governor is that county com-
missioners tircW $5060 fOr oil and
gas doting °De 111011111
Pontotoc Countg
Gets a Producer
Fall Federated Pm Service
FRIDAY JUNE 17 1927
NEW YORK CITY WELCOMES LINDBERGH
Police Third Degree
Methods Are Described
By Newspaper Writeri
NEW YORK—Ilow criminals are detectives still in E1 whita rage
(
put through the third degree Is de - look at them The Icor opens A
ung s
scribed in the current issue of The yo policemaa in uniform pok
his headT "Ion tellers is easy
Nation by A C Sedgewick a re-
with em ' he sA:i "Is that so"
porter on the New York Times
roars a oeteeme and kicks a pri
proceeding in one of the police sta-
s-
who was an eye-witness of such a
oner in the face pulls him to his
feet plops him against the
dons of Greater New York
then with thebut of his revolver
One detective takes a piece ot
rubber hose which is part of the aLes a gash in his head Titi
three prisoners go to the hospital
equipment of the dettetive bureau
and Is favored for use because it If it were asked of any official
source what happened to these Men
leaves no marks Another take-1
out his blacii-Plek Others grub it would be said that they received
their injuriei r(sisting arrest or
anything — blackjacks revolvers
perhaps that the "sidewalk came
night sticks "I seen you before"
bawls a detactivo "No sir" the up and hit 'ern
pdsoner answers The detective Thc newsmtpers later said the
strikes him This Is the signal three men were questioned and
The "shellaeta" lies started Blow admitted not only IA hat they were
after blow from the rubber hose caught doing but all sorts of
black-jacks nod night sticks Th i "stick-ups" in the last six months
The blood pours 116111 their faces They admitted everything with
Thty spit and cough blood The which the detctives charged them
WII0 WOULDN'T?
Lr'!? 4'"t'
V: 01
1
r r
vt
n few
! I let
trrf
41 sitii'Yftr2ic 1
40Aga --' 2 4- "'-"
-
-
:
OILTON BANDITS
FOUND AT OLIVE
Abandoned Cars and Part of
Money Recovered
SAPULPA Okla—Two men and
:three women are being closely
!guarded in the Creek county jail
I here in connection With the robbing
! londay of the First State Bank of
Oi Iton of $1250
Jack Corlett and (la ude Bruin-
mett were arrested near Olive when
two abandoned cars were located
and identified as the cars in which
the bandits rode into Oilton The
men were found in a wooded tract
near Olive
!!Three women !Myrtle Lyons BB-
ly Parker and Leta Philyaw were
arrested when it was discovered
that one of the cars found was
rented by lliFs Lyons from a renta-car
company in Tulsd
Coll el t i nil Brummett w ere cri p-
tured after the bandits opened fire
on officers APProklmatelY ft265
vas found on the men nd the tact
that one of the TIVII had $50 In $i
MA $50 in change convinced
officers that the men WC! re the ban-
dits wanted
A well mhich flowed CO) barrels It was declared that the bandits
during the first 24 hours 1ms been used machine guns in the hank
completed in Pontotoc cminty It holdup but oilleers were unable to
is the best -well yet reported in the I locate such arms (111 Ulf' men or in
county and is located north ci Ada the aliandomid cars
-
116c
eadeT
1
I
NATIONAL MOVE TO
PENSION OLD AGE
IS STARTED HERE
With the 'United States and
China the only remaintng na-
tions without a national old age
pension system petitions asking
congressmen to support such a
law are being circulated here
under the diredtion of A Burry
607 West Firth Street Oklahoma
City
Under the plan all persons
reaching the age of 60 would he
in case of need entitled to $10
a week The movement is being
sponsored by the American As-
sociation of Old Age Security
The plan proposes to raise
pension money through a tax
and Berry points out that it
would abolish 75 per cent of the
tiOn'S poverty
tI
'
i
Malmo
Picture here elows the huge throngs which gathered along Broadway to welcome Charles Lindbergh
back to the United States after his successful fly to Paris A great display of airplanes was a part of the
program
CONGREGATIONAL
CHURCH PASSES
ANTI-WAR PACT
o:tA1IA—Tl)e National Council
of Congregational Churches took a
stand against war at its session
here today When the Commission
on International Relations made its
report in which a World Court and
arbitration were favored and a
stand against all wars was taken
The report urged a Mand for "the
new diplomacy which repudiates
threats and violence as a tneang of
sett ling international difficult ies
and resort to conferences courts
and arbitration"
MObLRNISTS WIN
IN BAPTIST TILT
NIEN040059PMPSSPIRMOSSOMMICISTOMMOMINCOMPIMPAIIMMAtqf AVAMIONSRMINEMOMWMUStit 11111 ail 1111) Nt) l niiii
along' that it could not he (hocked iian
Here is tho teautitnl lodze in the Wack IliUs viiire President before the inniier yard v-as COW- I )1)04!
t The freest government can not long en-
a dure when the tendency of the law is to
create a rapid accunuilation of property in
the hands of the few and to render the
masscs poor and dependent
DANILL
'
s'eokle Aroused
11-! ver FloggL s-:'s
hi iTtl7N4t '''''-lates
PUP OR DEAD IS
BROUGHT TO LIFE
WITH ADRENALIN
Ew yoRK - cience xecri-
Illerdill! on the Loparently lifeless
body of a pup "born dead" has
NS on a victory according to
those in charge of the experiment
ii11-113 ft titoride was injected
ten mintues after tho birth of the
pum Artificial respiration wasi then
used A snort time after a flutter
of the heart was noted then a jiasp
anti after twenty minutes the
shine which IliPa et that life had
been restored The pup is now as
nirich alive as the rest of the
faintly
HRINIIIMEJST
SEREPENTERM
Governor Refuses Clemency
To Hale Witness
Executive clemency said to have
been promised Ernest Burkhart
confessed slayer in the ysage In-
dian murder cases was denied
Tuesday by Governor Johnston
who declared be saw no reason why
clemency should be extended
Burkhart was the chief witness
for the government andIitate in the
trial which sent W K Dale and
John Ramsey to the federal peni-
tentiary for life
In Burkhart's plea for clemency
be declared that Ile had been prom-
ised provided he pleaded guilty
and turned "slate's evidence" a
light punishment
During his trial at Pawliuslia
It annOillieed 'that he wished
to plead guilty lit participation in
the killing of W E Smith his wife
and Nella Brookshire
The tbree died when Burkhart
said that John Ramsey and At
Kirby dynamited the home of the
SiMths node' instructions from
lime who had made it a point to
be in Fort 'Worth 'l'exas when the
crime was committed
lie told the court that he hart
carried the messages between Ram-
sey and Dale and that although he
did not believe he was guilty of
any murder that his attorney
Moss had advised him that he WM
guilty at law
The court accepted MS Plea awl
sentenced him to life in prison The
action in Open court -it after a
conference between 11 tart John
Leahy E pecial attorny for the
United States ginernoent - and
George Short the attorney general
in which it ift now nil:flitted that the
attorneys promised to recommend
clemency
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Mob At Marshall Texas Whip
Family of Five—Two Vic-
tims Disappear — Eighty
Lashes Given Woman and
Son At Taccoa Georgia—
Declares Floggers Were
Klansmen
--
Ainmst sonultaneusly two flog-
ging parties in which the victims
were brutally beaten occurred this
eelt One at Abash:Ill Texas and
the other at Taccom Georgia
Al Tirecoag a small town Airs
Ansley llOWVre her 15-year-old
son were taken from their home at
midnight rend spirited out of town
where three carloads of men beat
her with snore than 80 lashes The
son wa4 also beaten when he
souzlit to protect his mother
Airs flowers said that she was
sure the :loggers were members of
the Kix Klux Klan as they were
robed In the regalia and threatened
to brand her with a "K" it she did
not leave town at once
Four men believed to be mem-
bers of the band are under arrest
toitowing information giveu ME-
tiers IV J Acree principal of the
Easione ile high schJoi L B Low-
ery turniture iactory foreman and
two railroad men Eimer Clark and
Charles Thomas are under attest
Airs Lowery said that the band
of men entered her house Willi
clubs and guns and ordered her to
remove all her clothing 'When she
refused they grabbed her itLid
dragged her to the car
At ter traveling several miles ki he
said they forced her to get out and
a car seat was placed on the
ground and she was 1or8ed to lie
acrutis it Then a man pinned her
head between his la 'as and others
held her by the hamis and feet
while one began lashing her with a
heavy leather strap atter throwing
her clothing over her head
"When 1 asked them what 1 was
being whipped tor" she said ''one
of the men said 1 ahould be whipped
again I was had across the seat
and whipped some more"
Hospital physicians declared lhat
the lo v er portion of Mrs Lowery's
body was cut and flayed It was
discovered that three other persons
have been whipped here recently
but Until officers began an investi-
gation were afraid to make com-
plaint One of the persons flogged
was a 55-year-old woman
Fiteltemeat at Marshall
Excitement was in high at
Alartffiall Tfxas IN here five persons
were iffigged during the week Fed-
eral state and county officials are
making investigations and vtarrant3
are expectee to include some of the
1110Sl prominent people la lbe ens'
Two of the victims W L Straps
and wife disippearvid after beiug
flogged °theft believe that they
have either been spirited away by
some of the 14eitti's or have gone
because of the tear in stayffig
J It Rich trdson an his wire
the latter being the mother Of Mrs
Straps Vete 111 a 'terious condition
foliox Mg the severe flogging given
them Tim filth member of the
family which was flog teri was Mrs
Hester Lee Alilis of Dallas who
CHICAGO —Although the outbreak
between fundamentalists and tnod- clentt'neY
101AVIUUyli pLVIJUNVU US JUVV111W11 -
because of tbe tear In staylpg
J it Rich trdson auntl his wife
ernists In tlie Northern Ileptist Burkhart tru-n went Into federal
the latter being' the mother of Mrs
convention w Inch ended here last court when W K Bale wealthy
week did not materialize modern- ranchman and John liamsey con- Stra"' wPre la a '' "in" tladiti°11
v
following the severe Hogging given
its won a nOtittlIC victory federate were tried on it charge of
them The filth member of the
NV C Coleman liberal and md- murdering Henry Roan another
family which was llohged was Mrs
enlist was elected as president of Osto! Intlialt and it s'as ItlfgelY
1
the association after fundamental- through his testim ny th
oat the fe d !!"4" 1ee rils "a ) allas "
')
ists had led an unsuccesslui at- era1 gmernm a h)
ent was ble COIL- "I'Periel '" de "-Idag 'tics' t"tal'4
her aister
tempt to defeat him with Dan Bit- vitt the pair they receiving sen-
tenhoue of Columbus Ohio tenet's of lire imprisonment prisnent in tte nalldulltil 1:'laut uf Sherlat'a
lederai (listrict attorney has prom-
During the selection of tbe direc- federal prison at Leavenworth Ran
'red a t hot ough investigation
(orate m
tor the Aerivan Bapitist
)c" ut
Foreign Miss a
ionry Society th SOrtATLUNRESTIS
e the ca a
se nd wiil remain tit tli
n
" h 1"" "
fudamentalists selected a slate fa- '- IL" 1 comity until the parties are ar-
OHM a h t rict inter irt (- t '
I ' C 'ti Hi A tile I FINEST IDEA' IS
m 1 td
Bihk aarging that the organiza- A special seslon (if the grand
lion has becn sending to foreign
fields inistionaries with modernist pirv has lOoIt CRI IfOi tO take up the
1 motel
PASTOR DECLARES —
idtts Th (win slate was to ----- A n iiihr-r of church organiza-
featd by a modernist slate headed
NEW YOKE -S(icial unrest (:- triths hAve Ntiolttv't letittl'ttton3
by Charles A Brooks Chicago
tiod in the world today has nui j L i ill t the tbeing it" condemned
------------- t
een vans(1 hy tbe filininatliav it th' 1 d
11N7 as "astardly cowards
Carter Sheriff Is !iitioi- iiiiim lit is Hi -itt ii le ()shortie employed ttn a farm
bloaS I ta! t PIM! Slattl Was fll- I ------------ Aliber of church organIza-
featd by a modernist slate headed NEw 101zi: soda' nurpC fx- tIWIS ha ‘'t 11I011O4 IOSIIVII10113
by Charles A Brooks Chicago
' tiod in the IA °rid tOdIO IlaS Ind aLailftt 'III' ib'11ILI and emideinneil
---------
1 heeli valisod Iv Vac ilimillatiow ia riii lioicN7 as "ffisu'irdiy cowards
Cartel- Sheriff Is i labor ai4liation iIIIt IS Hid' reSilit Cr II OSIOICIP employed on a farm
i 1 nip "iimi!-A iik-i11ill ilnit itio V011d 0!) NOlitII the ttigL:IiigS leek dal e
To Be Inuestigateahas evfd- ddiiiivi m' imiIiimili to lot -i 12I'i II arICSII11 It IS '41-itrrally
---- Ilarifis i41(121 SIIIIIiIIII Ili bna' ICo bollO‘ed tile MIIIPPitCIS wre inInvel-bigatiou
into the official ad- annual conforetwo Id Ilio l lion it in H'il3'1 14 Porsollal anillmsl'ics
no:nllratioll of Lwim: London i Industrial coutiiiiiiiiiii t blow
tIleillf of Carter comity has been 'I' Imologimil Sidliiiiiii v ONLY IIALF CROP
(Il'at red Iv Governor Johnston 011i “It i4 raw 1: iw:iii -liy pliidm
ciiiirgt-i (II umItict of duty and that iiali -1 1Lito: los III ori
clih OF IVHEAT FOR
lie kep a t prio
sncr ill jai! four or i rill ottwi 0"eftwat III
daYs tater Liu order to commit i firms which 1114' far their litirtioso ' inn il re T rb IN rt t- I II' 7r ry rt
1J er (lays a I imr au uraer t) CO1fl11111 t ion whiot 1 A p I 0 r I lief r purt sTATE pRED1cTED
hi kJ tt blitiki IiriSUll hail ln re- I the hplitt 01 loi m
r
"1101 I 10'"ih'e the seci:"I throhlla 1"
------
fun(laionbill) a if ftdoli lo-ohlfm Oislahwild's w beat 101(is will By-
Drinik Dive- Is m1 IOW be settled tipon tho4 hosi rtie Mir: lillif 1u1iels per acre
-1
11 - - - - tt" ( 1"11( h "I t 110N a in
t n thnl'ant this 1 i teletal-stat c-dirotte
(Ill-cit 1 ' mi 7 1 (-I itz r la it i-'01 iti IOU Tio ei'llitc!I tly u)lcitI by t'ai I lb Rob----
' iiim t tit iti'i Mt' a( court t be n w inon am' S liar' I- I!Ln ( Top
l' C ilutier was sfntelit ed Tue- e 'Ilona ll ua tion ft( ilr t b! s' oi Id st111iHar- iii i!ii state
day to (-rie one yr-a la tio pent- todv- ploed the total ield at ''S It'u
'Hitiary for IIIIN Iz till antotnotite loi Iel 51 per (ant of itoren1 No
while drunk Olt A Pill 4 Butter r r viD2Alrl nufkArD toto owc14 'revis will 11tnt so
ran doa n and 1 nes in
dy jured nur C0111 I ihiv vismivu 1‘ ‘t 0
tp s 0:01111 u
'Ain :I" a 11i'': Sluut ''-'1"-' ‘"3 PI!' EATS HIS FOOD RAW (u 11t1 tuii
p rn
icp
ial IA ittIPSS ii 11- i Writ al- Miiiiil it tOlithillii-itit 11 oSti'l 111:v0
tilnli" !'ll" II"i li) he n'''ISt"li I 1111 tiff) — I i I r shippimt a chlt"'" are (tram4 the woik oll tlito
about Ibe (""rt7-"111 11"t I“'Ing rope I'Lalat tivirs 1illit'at sittit- "-tizils of lia r cr" bawls 1- Oka-
: I tester itheret :7 ear old thresh the r hot iii 4112 oprrtior
fully re"lv°r"I fl'uni twr inj" I l'''''' Pim' nil''' irints I rtt0 intlirs ' how Ttie- e niacin nes 140 and
l'ii-e Iluitis Largt I Kampilin riipr SLifilitr ili 'LIN x0-tiv tiliei lug the w My' 111-
Oared lie was nide to neettun ltettn Anotner inhante— of the
City Lltniber l'ai-d !dish the feat b h I ' 1 i ti I I I)
4 ithe hi 04 ' i'ilEiliitie 'fiit--' it' i1 VI it fir
--- - his food rite cot itt the vliteination of losi iu
osa t sttinatetl at more than "I eat rali Mild eter3thilitz the stack or shock 1tov0er the
Ilonnolt iiN itS Cii iiied 1Y an e illy ravt h't aiti la dtcrilling- his Ith-li initial to-4 of the ittachol
'tanning tiro in the t hickastw ititn- reioarkattie endurance In pil the ia t thtt the NN heat must he
her yard "1 Last TYc11111 SItur- ' itet tip a 121ittnship record he "leati rieo" ladore It Cill IA' vita
dity 11110 tilaZo Wtri illOVPI i'i 't : ttt ilk iirmer record of litiii 1 hilS ittel t'ii111 OW 111i'lliiiniii lir
about 3:311 a WI 14 it' id rel ay so far anti olectured that John I Siti- diintwe tlitomh hal' c )ixe I'd i 11
aiiilig that it could not he (hocked 1 lhan in his prime eittild ship ' or cind to the sta Milli 'g I till FA l
holm fi tho I iimiPi V2 rd 11:14 CI-Uri- I :1-1)1M in itioill harveAt veithet ftrii fit
1
'''
VOL S-N() 41 OKLAHOMA CITY OKLAHOMA FRIDAY JUNE 17 1927 PRICE FIVE CENTS
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 44, Ed. 1 Friday, June 17, 1927, newspaper, June 17, 1927; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2093571/m1/1/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.