Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, July 15, 1927 Page: 3 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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Vol 8—No 48—July 15 1927
f
FISHING MITT
IA
IN VOTES
NEU FARMERS
Thus Prophesies Senator
La Follette of
Wisconsin
WASHINGTON — Prophesying
that the "farmers would not be
taken in by that kind of guff" Rob
ert M La Follette Jr declared that
President Coolidge surrounded by
newspaper reporters and publicity
men "is attempting to make the
farmers forget his veto of farm re-
lief legislation by wearing a ten-
gallon hat and catching trout with
milk-fed worms"
La Follette declared however
that the farmers would not forget
that Coolidge had given the finan-
cial interests of the country every-
thing they asked while refusing to
countenance any genuine measure
of relief to agriculture
INo Stampede
According to the Wisconsin sena-
' tor there does not seem to be any
stampede of important political
' leaders in the west to see the presi-
dent "Up to the present" he declared
"Coolidge hasn't made a very aus-
picious F tart in his campaign to
break the third term tradition in
the United States"
La Follette said that a number of
time-serving politicians and job
holders under the Coolidge admin-
istration declare that there is no
longer any validity to the third
term tradition at least that it does
not apply to the individual upon
whom their jobs depend "I believe
they are in grave error in their
analysis of the northwest" he said
"The American people are not
UnftWare of the enormous growth
of the power of the executive since
Washington's time They have not
overlooked the tremendous federal
Patronage machine carrying With
It control of southern delegates
when the sitting president Is a Re-
publican The intelligent citizens
of this country know that once a
presitient has smashed the third-
term preceden- there will be no ef-
fective limit to the tenure of a chief
executive who has come to exercise
kingly power which gives an un-
' scrupulous nein an opportunity to
perpetuate himself in effice
Ranger Is Real
"The danger that a president
w hen no emergenta exists out of
mere greed for office may attempt
to grasp a longer term in office
than NVashington Jefferson or
Lincoln enjoyed is imminent not
academic
"Every person conversant with
polttical conditiona in this country
knows that Preident Coolidge's
power in the Ileputillean party rests
I argely on his control of southern
delegates who tire bought and sold
ith federal jobs serving as tne
medium of exchange It is his con-
trol of this large bloc of southern
delegates from territory where the
Republican party has no real
strengt h that makes President
Coolidge's renomination a foregone
conclusion in the 11111)(IS of most
political observers This situation
is in end of Itself a powerful ar-
tU111e111 against a third term be-
cause it demonstrates the vast po-
litical power which he executive
vtlelds by virtue oi his control Of
federal patronat
"In spite of the opinion of his
t-ubordinates and politleal hangers-
on that President Coolidge is in a
positiort to force hit- renomination
end election he is in fact a long
way from his goal
Begineing Ill Fade
'During the past months the pic-
ture of President Coolidge dis-
goised as it ittrong tiilent man'
which the nee snap( rs built up ill
the public mind is beginning to
fade The people are getting a true
measure of the man as be really is
Even his most ardent supporters
among the press no longer write
editorial panegyrics on his great
ii bilit y intellectual pow e r and
Fiat esmanshi p"
After a biwk ward glance at Cool-
idge's record from his indifference
to the oil scandals to his imperia-
listic policy in Nicaragua tint! Mex-
ico and refusal to call an extra ses-
' idOn to relieve flood devastated
areas the senator looked ahead to
the insurgent incoming senate
"The issues of farm relief flood
relief tied cntrol tax reduction
Mitscle Shoals and Boulder Canyon
Dam Nicaragua Mexico and Philip-
pines are SOIlle of the important
questions which the administration
will have to face with a precarious
control of the senate in prospect"
he said "Even al this early date
It appears that the president will
have to do more than wear a ten-
gallop bat kiss babies and catch
trobt in order to carry him to a
third term in the White House"
MORE FLOGGINGS
IN ALABAMA TO
AROUSE SOLONS
SHEFFIELD Ma— Mrs 7Igrtha
A Slay 2S of Florence was taken
from her home by Pight men and
flogged after bet refusal to ccrifess
to "some scandal in the neighbor-
hood" The men she said wore
Ku Klux masks and robes and
told her if she informed officers of
the flogging she would be run out
tho country
Anotlier flogging was reported at
Bessemer where 17-year old Eaton
Murthison W as taken from an
automobile in which he was riding
with a friend 4ind two girls and
vMptird lice masked awn corn-
' posed the flogging party Murchi-
son said
As the result of three flogrtigs
in the state within two weeks a
bill carrying a penalty of working
on the chain gang has been intro-
duced In the legislature by Senator
Williams of Franklin county
All Canada joina in celebration of
siVieth anniversary nf exirtence as
a free self-governing dominion un-
der the British empire
Miner Is Awarded
Compensation For
Three Of His Eyes
TOPEKA— Daniel Moore a
miner is receiving compensa-
tion for the loss of three eyes
The supreme court 'Wed re-
ently that Moore is entitled to
full compensation for the loss
of his sight in an accident
1925 despite tile fact that be
had received $1188 as compen-
sation for the loss of his left
eye in 1918
The high court ordered the
Western Coal and Mining com-
pany to pay Moore $15 a week
for 415 weeks
ANISEITS HEtR
MRSillOSESIIEVI
Secret Hearing Opened By
Committee
BOSTON -- The Sacco - Vanzetti
case was being reviewed this week
by the advisory committee appoint
ed by Gov Alvan T Fuller Hear-
ings were behind closed doors
Frank P Sibley and Elizabeth
Bernankoff testified to prejudice
manifested by Judge Welster Thay-
er who sentenced the tNio Italian
workingmen to death
IVrs Itose Sacco also appeared
before the committee Other vk it-
nesses presented technical advice
and opinions to the committee
Judge Thayer is slated for exam-
ination and also the district attor-
ney who prosecuted Sacco and Van-
zetti Villiam G Thompson de-
fense attorney will be questioned
FLOGGER IS
CONVICTED
High School Principal I s
Found Guilty
TOCCOA (a--W G Acree princi-
pal of the Stephens county high
school declared to have been the
leader of the flogging party which
Whipped Mrs Ansley Bowers June
12 was found guilty before a jury
of assault and battery
Judge Sutton (lid not pass judg-
ment he said because others were
to be tried anti he wished to wait
until all cases had been tried
Mrs Bowers idobrailied Acree as
the man who held her head be-
tween his legs while others
whipped her with a strap Mem-
bers Of the flogging party told Airs
Dowers she was twine whipped be-
cause of her immoral conduct and
because slie did not go to church
Living Death 3
-
ol enwomnronsom
VT
Uncorzscgous
Girl Lives
Three Months
r iR E 8 N 0 Cal (I-I-N
Special) — Doctors are
seeking to play the part
of the handsome prince of the
fairy tale to awaken a real
slping beauty
For P x 3 etly that Is Mrs Clara
Drumnend twenly-one Beautiful
itrled and unamakening
do'!' ohinost three months now she
has sie-it All efforts of medical
ecience to awaken her have been in
vain
On April 4 she was found In a gage
filled room of her home here She
was taken to a private sanitarium
where she recovered physically But
never did she recover consciousness
She has since been transferred to
the county hospital Great special
ists have attemptrd to bring back
her mind but to no avail
Doctors believe that the gas pot
soiling killed the brain celel that
control consciousne3s If thls is
true it Is doubtful If the girl Will
ever "live" again Meanwhile other
brain cells controlling breathing di
gestion circulation of the thoil and
other operations of the body two
Con norrial!y ---
I ARBITRATION
' ON RAILWAYS
NOW DOOMED
Watson - Parker Act Fails
To Accomplish Its
Purpose
CHICAGO (FT)--The eventual
doom of the NVatson-Parker rail
labor act was probably sounded
when the arbitration board sitting
on the wage case of Ole 50000 con-
ductors and trainmen of the weat-
ern rallaoad refused to grant any
inerease in wages
The award made after almost a
month of hearings in Chicago up-
set all the dope both company and
union Everybody expected that
the seven and one-half raise ob-
tained earlier in the year on the
eastern and the southeastern roads
would be extended to the western
train service workera also Higher-
ups among the officiala of the Or-
der of Railway Conductors and the
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen
almoat regarded the arbitration
proceedings as cut and dried pre-
liminaries to the anticipated in-
crease Railroad presidents aaatned
to think the same and President
Gorman of the Rock 'Island was so
quoted in the financial columns of
the leading afternoon paper
The Lillie Fisher
The refusal to grant what Presi-
dent L E Sheppard of the conduc-
tors called adequate pay for re-
sponsible work was made effective
by the so-called neutral arbitrators
who rushed to the aid of the rail-
road nominees on the board The
brotherhood nominee dissented
These alleged neutral arbitrators
are the big joker in the Wat3on-
Parker act under which the roads
and the unions are to name their
representatives and to agree on
neutral representatives But if they
can't agree the neutrals are packed
on the board by the permanent
board of mediation and this is nom-
inated by President Coolidge Thus
the fraud of ostensibly "public"
representatives on the old rail
labor board nominated by the pres-
ident is succeeded by the fraud of
"neutral" representatives also nom-
inated by the president In other
cases the unions after a little en-
couragement at the start got the
raw deal
"Neutrals" A nti Labor
The neutrals in the western
wage case were two men whose
syntpathies are naturally with the
employing class and against the
workers They were President E
(' Brown of the National Live
Stock Exchange of Chicago and
President W M W Splawn Of the
Univeraity of Texas a large em-
ployer of labor and a man whose
salary and surroundings remove
him far from the life of the rail-
road brakeman getting less than
$5 for an 8-hour day
The decision WaS based partly on
the agricultural depression in the
northwest though this runs count-
er to the principal laid down by
the interstate commerce COninik-
Mon in rate casea to the effect that
the right of a company to charge
certain rates does not depend on
whether its customers are making
or losing money thereby
Opposition Grows
Signs of opposition to the Watson-Parher
law are increasing
The convention of the Switch-
men's Union of North America has
demanded its repeal Vice Presi-
dent Goff of the Locomotive Fire-
men is taking cracks at it and now
the conductors and trainmen are
expected to drop their former ad-
vocacy of U Taken in connection
with the demand of President Dan-
iel Willard of the Baltimore &
Ohio railroad that railroad em-
ployes drop the basic 8-hour day in
favor of a flexthle (lay of 8 to 10
hours all straight time it appears
that the railroad wolf masquerad-
ing these years in sheep's clothing
is about to have the hide torn off
hi in
ORGANIZER OF
PEACE MISSION
BARRED BY US
NEW YORK - - Rosika
Schwimmer organizer of the Pord
Peace ship xpedition whose object
was to bring the world war sol-
diers out of the trenchew by ChriFt-
Inas 1914 has been tentatively re-
fused American citizenship Her
application has been on file in the
federal dtr1 t court here for al-
most two years
IL Gemmill attorney for
Nits Schwimmor said the naturali-
zation director has taken exception
in her ease on nationalism pacifism
anti other questions political and
economic
Mrs Sehwimmer who is a Hun-
gaian in reply to a queAlon on
the application form as to whether
she would be villing to take no
Ine d in the state that -1I wr
prms in lefense of the tniteo C“ t-i- :: emits her capita per inmon : ' - l ' 1
owning their f)W11
States said: -not pet:sin-tally- sew Compared v ith the almhouses ll (i'l ill1"''
syFtent the pension sysp id stands " lia' Illu l'tin't "Wans ot suP- !
explained by itfiding t 1-1it as far aa
port upon reichin- old age and
I klieW WOMen Were not required (flit as not only econouni ail:- a sav- - '
it to th state but Inauh to te ta e‘ehinaity must receive asArance
to bear iffillt for an country ' I front tlic tile
Another point understood to have k'l'"11 l'Y' Pursmi3 no:41)W ILe as- ' ' '
been raised by the na turalizit ion di- sil'fat"'e In a study of S': of the alinhouses
rector was said to have been that 1tider the old alinhor:: Fyteln in the state the conitoison issued
Mine Sehwilmner exPressed herseir it A itS found that in the '':' i:mti- ' the following report:
as an atheist lit a radio lecture in tutimis it cost the state mid contr "Onr poorhouses are w'aritzcil
Nevi York In a letter to the na ties $7111710 a year or 115'2 per and maintained on the principal of
turalization director she explained I reek as ligatust :I3118 a week tor tharity
that religious belief was a private I el"'ll Ptrl'oll under the new l'cusi"ri "The limids of thuse institutions
matter system are laiody ioltical appointees
— 111'411er words I he '"sl nr k"- alai very few have Mel experience
trig inmate in all f o the Montana i in theirv or k
CORN CROP TO au i
priorfi 1 to
th re
e i point mein previous to their ap-
and a half tunmi thc cost under the :
BE VERY LICHT rensi-n 'Y't'ins -man of the men connected with
: the mahagirdent or th- aluthonses
Agcording to a Fur ey it vas are pH-pp-heed against their unfor-
found that with hainily any excep- : 4
WASH INGTON —The country will : ornate inmates and ale vire!' with-
aged ersons e
have the shortest corn crop in Hon p In th
preferred to accept the meager Pen-
sl'" : out Ow rudim a d
cnts ft n eucation
history the departtnent of agrk tit-
houses which NV OW d tit thi m for thetr re-
titre declared in its July crop re-
SIMI thn a to be 1LiC01 In aim- sponsibilities
port The greatest reditction is in i "Lae in On almbouse is dull de
OKLAHOMA LEADEh
JESSE MINI ES' GIZANDDAUGIITER
zi
Low corn prices in 1921 are old age pensions WI a view of
blamed by dcpartment officials alioPtin W(I a law has disovered
Other farm crops will be some- that its Fystem of poor relief dates
what near normal in production hack to original poor hws of
although thingerous sliortaues are England adopti-d i Hol v gucen
forecast for sevPrpl minor products Elizabeth Vhilo :rigla rid has I(T) Wheat production will slihtly ex- provided pensif n for the agd
ceed last year's crop Ivanut finds 1ts4 if still using
77-'11
li
'-'
gO
IOWA CITY Ia— For years
young men have been considering
knees as WCII as faces when they
estimated women
Now science has stepped in and
has devised a method IA hereby a
youth with serious matrimonial in-
tentions may determine hy a sim-
ple experiment upon the girl's knee
whether she will make a good wife
or not The method is as follows:
Sneak upon the damsel when site
"intik his hones oiler the stones!
tle's only a pauper 11 hom nobody own!"
—Thomas
By V I libottylnick
With practically ali civilized na-
tions cxcept tne Cnited z-itates
China and India alriady providing
some systems or old tge pensions
caring tor approviininciy baoisilo-
o00 needy persons tne problem in
the United t7itates is being serionsly
considered hy forward ItYhing
rAvAloticnr"
'Lk"
Descendants of Jesse James are in the movies now Jesse Estelle
James his granddaughter ls playing the role of the mother of the
James brothers in a film built around their lives and Jesse James Jr
is technical director for the movie
Nervous Young Feller?
Don't Try To Tell'er
But Whack Fier Patellar
IOWA CITY Ia— For years appear She hes more than her
young men have been considering share of bad temper lowever if
he- shin bone is only slightly agi-
knees as WCII as faces when they
tated sieze her by the wrist and
estimated women force the engagement ring upon her
Now science has stepped in and linger She will make a good
has devised a method IA hereby a wife
youth with serious matrimonial in- The theory back of it all is this:
tendons may determine by a sim- a strong patellar reflex (which
pie experiment upon the girl's knee means kick) indicates a nervous
Whether she will make a good Wife temperament: a light patellar reflex
or not The method is as follows: indicates an even temper
Sneak upon the damsel when she Or W W Tuttle of the Univer-
is reading a funny paper or "Snaky city of Iowa is an authority upon
Stories" or anything She will have the patellar reflex lie has
her legs crossed of coarse Whack whitchA hundreds (male and le-
her smartly pist below her knee- male) upon the knee and has care-
cap (Young men have a fairly ac- fully measured I he l'Irellglh of
curate notion of the location of the their reflex lie is convinced that
kneecap and of other anatomical a strong reflex Indicates irritability
features of a girl's chassis) o Furl hermore his tests have dem-
If she kicks like a hay steer nsti Hied that women are more IN
leap down the fire escape and dis- ritahle than men
PCIISIOBS for the Aged
Ify ' I lihodylnicit I the obsolete tnethods brought to the
With practically all civilized na- United States from that country
tions xcept tne United titates 'I he rommission reports that the
China and India air ady providing poorhouse system had its inception
some systems of old itve pensions at a time when much institutions
caring for approxiiinatviy im00011- were used for the care of the in-
OM needy persons tne pnibletn in tirinP feebleminded orphans moth-
the United states is being seriowdy ers of illegitimate children crim-
considered hy forward looking inals prostitutes epileptics and
statesmen in many states sufferers from chrome diseases
A 1' henign ngit Hon for °id age ile there has been improve-
pensions otgan only ten years ago meats including the partial Fegre-
eignt legislatures arid the territory gations Of inmates the commission
Alarka have adopted oid aAe pen- finds that the whole system is
ion plans while at toe 'resent wrong
time such laws are on the staidte f finds that while the orphans
books (it Montana Nevada 'V iscon- through the N!others ' Asidslance
and Alaska Fluid have been taken care of the
The operation of tfle law in feelde-minded the insane the mid-
tana is most significant in its MU- imam the prostitute and other
eliority over the old system or elaps provided Institutions the
poor relief tespectalde aged persons who after
Intritig the three years Hie la W a lifetime of toil and tifirVikPii havn
has hem' in operation in Niontana limonle dependent through circum-
applicants per county did not i-tanees over wnich they had no
amount to but 111-i per limo pilot- (141:VOI Ii1V0 Wit been 1111A-11111 1r
Minot and the total nuiMie ni pen- - as they should have bcen
siorm iid it i'XtPtit Wore Inan in an ux haust stin(y of the
11)"9 1r1"11"111u "twe ih mine' km in it V as found
her act1tallY receiong Pclismosi 1y the cotomMsion that of all the
doc-- not rxceed If- per Moe 11en entering ainilionms 11 t
Under the Nionlatia law toe max- state 73 rai cent or them were ru-
flIIilIl Ji 1t0 ciir llut leg less than $12 a veek at the
the iivelce tor the Y'ar was thi-y Were torced to titor state
coly $157SI tier year or Ii I idwhowcs had property of any
week The total Per ei11'11"- kind
t siai e 1 n a t01 Of ail
was hot J' cents a yrar or 4 44)4
IOWAN WANTS Rogers Taken Up
n Ott Ford Non-Stop
SOUTHERN Flight oas tCoast
SOUTHERN AID
AGAINST EAST!
Bad Faith of Coolidge In
Vetoing Farm Bill
Shown
BELOITKan---Calling on the peo-
ple of the south and vest "to unite
in a commoa program to end thsi
financial rule which dominates both
parties" Smith W Brookhart sen-
ator from Iowa assailed the Cool-
idge veto of the farm relief bill and
the federal reserv:e system
The Federal Reserve bank
Brookhart said by its 0 n admis-
sion is "a money trust for UM in
taining higher rates t')f interest up-
on the public generally NV bile
veiling this vast sum for red( in New York at low rates of in-
terest for speculation"
The coolidge veto of the McNary
ilaugen bill Itrookhart declared
was a veto of the Republican plat-
form it veto of the right of the
farmer to economic equality a veto
of the west and south witn an un-
derwriting of Vail Street
Explains Bank Issue
"The federal reserve banking sys-
tem gives as its reason for paying
notiong for the use of depiisits by
members in the federal reserve
banks" said Itrookhart "that it
would require an investment of the
funds to earn the necessary inoney
and therefore tie up these deposits
$o they could not he used in a sud-
den einergency or heavy seasonal
requirement The right to issue
federal reserve notes is the co
plete answer to this suggestion
"A more sinister or evil device
could not be arranged for using the
people's savings to their own in-
lury and the dstruetion Of their
property ye hies Therefore I con-
clude the federal reserve system
upon its merits is against agricul-
ture and against every legitimate
business"
Transportation industry credit
and public utilities of every kind
have had the assistance and protec-
tion of the federal bank law he
said and declared agriculture
should receive equal consideration
To receive equal consideration he
the McNary-liangeo farm re-
lief bill was formulated
Reasons For 'Veto
"It was vetoed" the Iowa senator
said "because it was said to be in-
adequate The president said it
omitted part of the agricultural
products A suggestion from him
would have put them all in Ile
objected to it because it is a price
fixing bill but the tariff is also a
price fixing law About the same
day he vetoed this bill he raised
the tariff on pig iron by about 50
per cent to assist the steel trust in
price fixing lie said that as a tax
collecting agency it was unconsti-
tutional Even if this were true
there was an appropriation of about
I-4 million dollars that was not un-
constitutiona1 and would have
st art ed ope ration v
"In one paragraph be says the
bill would injure the farmers by
causing overproduction In another
he says it would violate the anti-
trust laws because it would ad-
vance prices Ile Ka it A011 hi put
the government in business but he
has never objected to putting the
government in business for the rail-
roads anti taking 529 million dol-
lars from the treasury to pay their
operating expenses and war-time
return
POORHOUSES OF
DENMARK AREN'T
LIKE AMERICA'S
CLAREMORE Okla Will
Rogers' otter of for a non-
stop Ford drive from Clare-
more to itekerly !tills Calif
will be clainud tf Bob K104:h
Mitt liOSS Hutchins are success-
ful in their plans
They are tuning tip a Ford
roadster and studying WeRther
reports 'rho Ford NV II I till
1131111'd OW "Spirit of Clare-
more'"Ille car is equipped
with rolling jacks so that tires
may be ('ha hile the car
is in niotion Telegrams are
being sent to mayors of the
totns along United States
highway G) which is the route
chosen to toipend traffic stops
anti arrangements are being
Made for taking On gasoline
from trucks Rogoqs has been
notitied
kEXT
BE HER THING
Women and Children
Fight Next Time
LONDON -- Women and children
w-ill be combatants in the next
great world war in 1 he opinion of
Marshal Poch head of the allied
armies during the last ar
On a vastly larger scale than
the last Foch declared such a war
be a 1vorld W a r and not local-
ized in any sense of the word for
every country will take part
"Remember how whine batalions
of English women were utilized in
the last war not only in hospitals
of the Red Cross but also in trans-
pot work where they proved in-
valuable The younger women
probably will take an even more
active part in the war of the fu-
ture "The nation in arms as the
French reoluntionaries called it in
3792 will climprise therefore not
only every available man hut every
woman and child Since all will
have allotted to them Borne definite
task and so contribute their quota
to the final result Will IV4 will be
fought not only by land and sea bob
in the air where planes will light
not singly or in squadrons but in
serled masses
"bighting on land and sea will
resemble that which we witnessed
in the closing year of the war for
though science will continue to de-
vise more novel and destructive
weapons in the form of gas shells
and heavy explosives I do not be-
lieve they will oecasion any more
casualties since there is sullicient
evidence to warrant belief that as
in the past defensive nwasures will
be developed to neutralize these
ne NV and more distructive methods
of offensive
"Remember the mine and torpedo
and how people at I he time of their
invention predicted the as lid de-
struction they would cause in war
Yet means of protection wwre found
soon afterward The same will
happen again to-morrow
"Think how scientists predicted
that in attacks from the air bombs
would prove so destructive that
neither armies nor navies would la
ahle to operate under their domina-
tion And yet finti-aircraft guns
and smoke screens and many other
devices amply illustrated the extent
to which defensive measures could
be devised to meet tliP now danger
"In the vse of land forces and
assuming that (It her defensive
measures have proved unavailing I
am convilwed the concealment of
position personnel and material as
well as the avoidance of large con-
centrations can always materially
reduce the efficiency of III bombs
COPEMIAGEN--To be an in-
nate of a poorhouse in Denmark PRISON GUARDS
is considered a privilege Lore the
care of is regarded ail a duty LOOK ON WIIILI
of slate
On the outskirts of o openhagen
is perhaps the most famous 11011Sti in 3 BOYS DROW
the world -Old People s Town it
was founded ill 1919 by Burgomas-
OSSINING N Y -111(1 hark
ter Viggo Christi-n-4n and otters in 6 —
prison 1'fie e by the threateni
iihelter to any (inzen "1""a- ritte3 M the pcntlentiary gnarl
gen Man or woman ho 13 more willing rearners among the 1
than S yoars old provided the eiti sing inmaies mero fmnpell
zen has never been punished by 1a o
to valch 1110 firow king of lin'
()1 r"eiv" young canoeists in tio littOtmn r
retain all privileges (If in- 'tot prison ans
zenship including political rights sol2 prismit
and votes
watched the three na'n striho4le
There are no reitrictions to sa a
in Ohl Peoples Town They come (thI' naria 166
and go to thy plene and rert'l"1 thew to leap over the rente
their room nnd hottrd clothing proiects the dock The guar(
lainntry and medical attontion I I however 60661661 me men 111
th!'Y h"'” 1"r"me th"- "1" 11' 1143 awl thr ml
edim to 3boot
iCIVP VIU(Kly sloth to siteno one iisiti4tioitti
its they illeaFe the titios 'ling Men
There are men and S2:1 wo- wat616n 116-6s rem
men reidelits The oldo-st women to divulge 116 nani tto guai
is lot years old
at the I J son v tot refil-01 perill !
rli t"" n fiWn nion tor In attinpted
ihow iind motion pit tnre theater 11 art teit to 16
aral a picturesque cherch is located hot mner
in tho heautitll i'den in the I
ik ia itc It is 0 h
grounds thore wasal it gord Ailljog to ri
ENpenses f-ar tho to n ilfe Milt 16t4 A man iH 1i rid
Mint31 by the
t'"'111"' inChidIng th" than one w hot sticks to) it-
ci apla
The eittzuns are UP of all n TT n Iv RI
ionfrni“nt orni1 v6 A IL I 10i LI A
1ive retired on sinall FORD Hue raenoateri toisoos and pm 1VILL HELP
if'-'41(111:11 j)()J)I fld (1 -01110
Invn
PREDICT 5-DAY WEEK —
' k Icilrm vonrs retri(tiiin Of
WITHIN TEN YEARS' 1
tit: )i it ti
- iiiipitr tile 1)tirr1 iloiiindirit
RAVINE— 11 'to Priii"Y of J i v111 r4rkre oni iii ite 1:iii:1
J- liandhY s"rutaY of the WI' ttunildilig blocks in Ili ad Inve-
iiiiti 1-i-dilation 1-ii 1''111' is fill- iii-fit iii co4iiiriitive rilarkiiig ac
W111
PRISON GUARDS
LOOK ON WIIILE
3 BOYS DROWN
PAGE TIII-zEE
-
CHINE5E ROUT
LEAGUE TEM
FREEDOM NEPIS
Bitter Hatred of Britain
Seen In Statement
Of Delegate
111 i GENEVA—nil' there is a single
es Intim in all of China in NNilOSO breast
ar does not beat anti-British sentiment
re that man is not Chineqe"
Chu-lisin-chan Chinese delegate
ls to the League of Nations thus ex-
le pressed his disdain tor the Britisix
empire not long ago Now as a
rig final gesture of contempt for the
no whole tkestern hemisphere be has
l'n ileparted t rum Geneva hnillf' ant
bound probably to ally iiimself
with the Nanking government
"t'llina has had enough of for-
eign oppre:is LUll The time will
soon he at Imnd when her htlf
billon i of people will rise and throw
off tlie alien yoke" Chu has said
11 and recent events in his country
have home him out
With his withdrawal China has
no representative On the league By
Will a unique combination of circum-
stances China was given a tempo-
rary seat last year despite the op-
position of the British government
dren Chu who was sent by -die Peking
next gm eminent but spoke for all of
m of China often during his term as
tilled delegate employed his powers of
sarcasm at the expense Of the Eu-
ropean powers
than "Your government he said to
war the British representative -can anneal-
swer nie diplomatically or with
I for forte Nly government will wel-
come either"
lions It Is thought that he became con-
iti lit vinced of his utter lodpiessness
iltals against the designing diplomats of
ans- the western nations and so turned
I in- his hack upon the lot of them as a
mwn ftiiitl gist Ute of contempt for their
more methods
IMPORTED MILL
TOWN PREACHER
DEFENDS BOSSES
ASIIEVIIAE N C—The stinging
attack 30 prominent southern
hishrtitt and other clergymen on the
mill town evil has gotten under the
skins of the textile employers The
Southern Textile association at its
recent convention in Asheville N C
imported a ndll town treachr
defend the institution
Al their banquet the Rev 1 W
9
flake (Mai 8111)rovingly the
wOr(11 of William Gregg 101111del
the first southern mill town that
they constitute the "embodiment ot
a new social order allowing great
prosperity for the few and notch
welI being for the many"
Speake made Tin direct defense of
these ventures in company pater-
nalism vi here the employes live iso-
lated from the world and "labor
agitators"– in - little town owned
body snit Fimil by the mill omploy-
ers Itut they are such improve-
over the miserable one-room
cabins of the Carolina 'hill-billies'
as "pool as the peons of Nlexico and
as removed Dom hope" that it is
"unchristian and uncharitable" to
criticize them
New company towns arise every
week Last week Unlit ract s V t re
let for three of them involvtng
housing for t50 flIIlttn3 in cheap
one-story shacks The Connecticutt
Mills company of Danielson Conn
even organized a separate firm to
take over the construction of a
toivn near Decatur Ala to house
operatives for e 312000-s1)in1tie
--------
Syntsric tic Il'ittes
Made By Belgian
Exhibited In U S
NEw yin the Itid of A
-secret substance" which may
Prove to be the 11011W hITWN'S
equivalent of the philosoplu
htune sought by the alchemists of
the Middle AgPS two Beglans vh1
produce synt hole champagne sher-
ry and iit W Incs at the Colum-
bia uniVVrsity laboratorie6 These
WOWS haVe all the nat!eal
OS-11NING N Y -Held hack or the Nlidd10 Agiis two BCgiallS
the prison mime by the threatening produce synthetic champagne sher
rillee or the penitentiary guards ry and IN-rt wilics at the Co him-
willing resetters among the I2!"' bia university hiboratorie These
Sing ti inmates Mfit'fii Hell will litiVe ail the natorai
to vatch the drowning of thrce silbsiancys of ter-
young calltiCIAi 111 tiq! winiis the licitzaes
er near the prison v‘tills have declaryl
Sing Sing' Prisoners The Belgians had to promise not
watched the !lime li'n Sti I t trade or give away ttiii
-de tt'iitivs SOTO( and lif'Y IH itit‘e to destroy
others la setliyit gnarls to a:low trL
th111 to tilii rite ehtch ' The atitM l flies necessitate
proiect3 the dock The gliarthn the 01 a secret substance which
huwever 1 Itie tI1191 VI- put into watT to produce the
110s and threalriel to ahV- favorable 'Iloilo:1i in whieh the MI-
one whit 'Atilt 10 Ih sides this secret
ihi titow 'ling Men ingredient sugar and 11t1oils bac-
NrVarirn E 'awes reritI
to the tiante- of the guards sktite have hten devised to
at the iison Aim refused prmit late ind pr -erve the hiitittiria that
FiOn SO 1114 they can be
1-11 ate not to ht tiii11101F14fi in so!id roi II In 4 dry
he Faid -tall It a 11:'oncr I:I- state they ta the form or
Inv to is ii it is 0() tide it )1t or (1)111
there wasn't a 41111 IIlifl to risk (lees not toteet these
1h4 A Mali iiipped itilyvIll're he
stonetimes shows himself IMger
thin Tbli cost Of inaltint vnthette
titid to he !-inni 'File tent-
RETRACTION BY peature of the room where Intl
wine to be pro111-1 lteitt at
FORD1VILLIIEL3 '1
C Thirty-:1111e (hti
CO-OPERATIVEJ are necessiry pFt1!“- lie uL
13 hercent alcoholic cehtetim
SOUTHERN FARMERS
KEEP MILL WAGES
AT LOW STANDARD
v":411:11): —The e"tintry vl!!ill i t) 0 -- - ! !:( ti 'i- stit'e '""""' 1""1"'" "" "I'' """ wIin-1 lill"d illilli"ill'll wl"b"I's 'vill b' cording to fl It liownie gner:11 i FOREsT 1-1t- 1---
hare the shortest corn crop hi 1
history '111P demirttnent of agrit in- sion
' "( 4 14 1 '''ill''' 11 ' - ' Ora OW rudinicnts Of an educadon
preferred to accept the Illtigrr lien-
than to- he phiCfi in alni- ' spfaislibiliriCs
whiti would tit ill ni for thir re- 1
w!"!kinv pre day a eh ten ycal!! in iti2r of no KnI co-p ra- ery attu:ht ot the texrtle hulorth tq
' ' " ! ence Thls tr-wili trIn fie nyt(1 T4) ! tk lwat Nii!)H4 m1!tion 01ini!0 the ((mon factory workers
turf' declared in its July crop re- 1 thp delegates to the state conven ! “we hav 1fi a 1rd pelt gel- of the South is sinasLed by the cot-
houses
port The greatest reddction is in ! l "ilin'i in in aini"lil'e i"iill c"- '
thiit ction knon s th
on of mail cal riers lilid nhiii titig 1 10 t1t1 tif II Slartk'11" I t1W UA1 lLFIri-rs !-a-la ll-el 4 zirl Taylor
Few ae corn " ! -
Pennsylvania a stzito viblyll now preslng 1!Ticteil and to say th ! elrks hre
lilt sibt 11 'la VU been a num- of il-4 N th Carolina College of
peit" I has a commission iit work t-tudying ! least not tin initilhz place for one
has a commis041 at work 1-thlying lewt not In 1n1tin2 for onp ' 'up :-11(1 I t11 1 4
1 -0
I hr of tH lorLf7 chi s (n- ‘ricultutv at the 1Tie tor In
----- -
f
I() SPolld tliPir (1ClilliPg days I 11- of nor K 1111 0 (Inns tiY cn- Nt4ritMtItv at tne taaiiie itir lu-
'In ma 'av ttlinhimss Iliti worthy rere"t"°: (1' 1111 ''111111"nl'InP1 tanti ti" Hai aticiarim ()I tlitse :diatrial iiemocritcY
hilt tinfoitititat 4ik1 arners at ondtJ1 lay 11t1:1110t SAIIP ihln1- 11nry
rwd s mach w hich ' —Idle tarawr4 ::at bpiliti on tho
airi t7onitipllod altor a life fir vain- : "3' "-I It""1'4111:'' to 91° MillIstrY inclinital Ow fight f'll Aaron Sapiro land aint take tilt factory ititis-
nide si'rvice III II itlid PN'tql Pit : ut l'al'°F ('''''''''t'' ' once nationA cilin:(1 for the grow- sold iraytor "and no idatir how
at the sarit! laid i‘ith the in- cl-s its-rttion ki pro“1 die low tlaii: Vt 31S !boy arc lwtter t
slne echlt—mitidt1 iind Cpileptif-s chronic Ili --filSS ptrons w itli of 1 he tioi witole vo iiions ol 1 thittl in the hOPY1-S 1ft' Pri 111
Hind and dcal stilfti ors t tom criminal r40fis and pro!t It utts" trio eiNsociition't4 tocs land
"
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 48, Ed. 1 Friday, July 15, 1927, newspaper, July 15, 1927; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2093575/m1/3/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed May 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.