Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, July 29, 1927 Page: 8 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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fasuissorb as all say privets lateresta aro on tb
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A- t !trort7 1J179
"AMERICA THE TERRIBLE"
THE KING BUSINESS
It is unfair to a boy uf 5 to crown him king of Pumania
or any country and F loi1 his boyhood and his manhood
It is far more unfair to the people of the country The
situation in Rumania With the kings son banishea was such
that it would have been easy to establish a republic but the
wrong men were in power
Kings have become useless figureheads Prime ministers
and other cabinet members and the financial and industrial
magnates who back them are the real powers In modem
kingdoms and empires
George of England for instance lie is a nonentity a
mere puppet show At the opening of parliament he talks
in a speech written for him by someone else about "my ar-
my" only navy" "my dominions" "my loyal subjects" and
more drivel of same type In view of his powerlessness it is
perfectly childish and it roust make him feel like a fool
Ilut then Georgie never attended a vocational school and
the kinging trade is the only one he knows He'd probably
he a failure as a carpenter or a milkman or even as a lawyef
or a realtor So he'll most likely stick to the king industry
until he is kicked out although it isn't what it used to be
Put it loes seem that considering the hollowness of king-
ship he would resign if he had any self-respect
The Laborites of England are not worrying about
teorgie They have more important matters to think about
and to do Nevertheless when the proner time comes they
will kindly but firmly remove the crown from his head and
rliup it into the waste basket
T 1 G 0 S 'EL OF LO V F4
------ —
Billy Sunday is quoted its saying about Sacco and Var-
zetti "Give 'CM the juice let 'em burn I'm tired of having
these foreigners these radicals coming over here and telling
Ili what we should do"
Sunday professes to be a follower of Jesus Christ Can
you imagine Jesus delivering himself of such a brutal and
hateful sentiment?
Jesus Christ while suffering agonieg' on the cross for-
gave those who nailed him there Ile forgave the murderous
mob that had howled for his death Ile was an apostle of love
not hatred If he were living now he would be a radical as
he was then Ile would be in favor of a brotherly social sys-
tem instead of the fraticidal system which Billy Sunday
upholds
Even if Sacco and Vanzetti were guilty we do not be-
lieve a follower of Jesus would want them electrocuted But
every uninterested person who has investigated the evidence
given in the case is convinced that Sacco and Vanzetti are
not guilty This makes it even more certain that lo Christian
would want them executed
"By this shall all men know that ye are my disciples if
ye have love one to another"
And we wonder who will deny that the plain men and
women of labor who raise their voices in behalf of a square
deal for these two Italian brothers are more truly Christian
than the widely heralded Billy Sunday?
"I saw one republic more—America—the mightiest and
the last for the justice of heaven on the land the most
terrible for the mercy of heaven to mankind the briefest in
its devastation But there all was hypocrisy that was not
horror the only equal rights were those of equal robber
the sacred figure of Liberty veiled its face and the offering
on its violated shrine was the spoil of honor bravery and
irtue"
That terrible prophesy was made decades ago by the
great French author Eugene Sue
Is it about to come true? Is our loved country dedicated
by our revolutionary fathers and mothers to the principle
of "Equal rights to all and special privileges to none" to
become but one more terrible usurer empire another Rome
gutting the nations for gold? Are we the "common people"
of America to give up our dream of religious political and
economic freedom for the "glory that was Rome" a glory
that rested on sixty alaves t
we are not to sutler this terrible fate then it is time
)or the American people to look around and ask themselves
-hat the government at Washington is doing in their name
at the bidding of the mighty usurers of 'Wall Street
No people can suffer to be committed in their name the
crimes that are today being committed in Mexico Nicara-
gua Haiti Cuba China and other countries by the servants
of usurers without themselves finally paying a dreadful pen-
alty "The sins of the fathers are visited upon the ail-
tiren" now as of old and we the "common people' have no
right to bring children into the world predesiid to be but
slaves and tenants Allow the destruction of the freedom
' of others and as surely as the sun rises and sets you will
lose yours also This is a fact written over all history It
is an inescapable natural law Enslave and you will be
enslaved
Think not that labor can avoid in America what labor
suffered under Rome Egypt Babylon Once gold and silver
Nvere as common as stones in Jerusalem as they are said
to be in America today But "Man does not live by bread
alone" That also is as true today as it was two thousand
years ago Let labor take heed of this Let it read and
study a little history Then let it ask itself: "Whither
goest thou?"
We say let labor do this for American labor '1(111S tolay
o be thinking of little beyond the things of' the belly and
important as the belly is in the scheme of mundane well
being it is not the all in all of life Life real life a man's
' life is something more than that To guard the belly is
well but to guard the spirit is also well Guard it 0 labor
if you would have your children freemen!
With only 4000000 organized workers on the job ac1
25000000 unorganized there can be neither security nor
safety to and for American labor All must be free or none
are free The skillled workers cannot therefore much
longer ignore the state of the semi-skilled and unskilled
without soon suffering terrible consequences
WORM-PINCHING AND PENNY
PINCHING
More light on "Coolidge onomy"
Officers of the Northwestern Bell Telephone Company
have declared that providing telegraph and telephone serv-
ice for the president on his vacation will cost the trifling
FUM of $200000
He'll have to do a lot of economizing by pulling his
worms for fishing bait in two in order to cover this telegraph
and telephone bill won't he?
11n thAt f ber Inver Find aceerena-1 19!Inty rit oto
Pan 11gan
Buttitems MarialCT
The European debt question i5
still with tis and promises to be
with us for many a day The
very mention of it rings bells
around the world and stirs emo-
tions ati deep as the Paleozoic Age
Bold Indeed is the person who can
say that he has solved Archimedes'
problem and found an immovable
fulcrum for hie lever Hence a lit-
tle humor and some dubiety ought
to mark all discussions of this
thorny issue Hid not the stern
logician John Marshall °nee warn
mankind that "the judgment Is so
influenced by the wishes affections
and the general theories that a con-
trariety of opinion ought to
excite no surnrise?" What wishes
what affections what general the-
ories are involved in any decision
slth respect to Europe's obligip
dons to America? Still more perti-
nent whose wishes hose affec-
tions whose general theories? Um
less Marshall was wrong a little
analysis of emotional sources ought
to help clarify this vexatious prob-
lem in international finance First
of all who have substantial rea-
SOnS for billing to curtail or can-
cel these mountainous debts?
Banks Anxious
At the head of the list are I he
American banking houses engaged
in floatiree the bonds of Europeen
goverr ments cities torporations
and other enterprises and selling
them to the citizens of the United
States This is a legitimate and
honorable business—and Weil
prolitsble Whether I hose le
loans are really use to the colin-
tries that botrow is a debatable
question Whether they do not sow
the seeds of new bitterness and
wars is equally open to debate But
the business is legitimate and
honorable -- and highly profit a ble
If American bankers could secure
It gentleman's repudiation of the
total amount osed to the govern-
ment and people of the United
States by the Associated and Allied
Powers 'hen would be easier fot
them to garner more commissions
on new loans made to the debts)i
countries and their nationals
There is no mystery about that—
except to the yokelry among the
ssphistleates that knows not what
Its right hand is doing
Debts alld the Tariff
In thf SaMO class with the bank-
ers are the manufacturers of goods
heavily pmtected against Europeanl
eompetitiod by high tariffs Since
the aforesaid debts and all new
debts must be paid sooner or later
—if ever paid at all—in commodi-
hem it is inevitable that a clamor
will arise for a reduction of the
tariff to allow these commodities
to flow more freely into the United
States Now that is just what the
beneficiaries Of Republican pater-
nal benevolence do not want Hence
if they can make the people ol
America pay hat the debtor coun-
tries owe and than keep the tarift
up yielding more and better prof-
its they will count themselves for-
timate in purse and generous in
patriotism No obscurity hang3
over this scene in the drama
And it ill hardly be denied that
the influence of these two classes
In Amrrican politics 14 Somew hat
out of proportion to their Punier!
cal strength Doubtless the cry
baby terms granted by the Cool-
idge administration to Franco
Daly and certnin other countries
are largely due to the favorable
ltiterression of these two respect
Able parties in interest
"Blood Is Thicker"
After cash COMPS blood Nothing
could be more natural than I ho
Oklahoma Leader
TRYING TO HANG IT ON HIM
the Britt Canadians Italians
French and other races and na-
tionalities represented in the poly-
glot population of the United
States Though as residents of this
great commonwealth their taxes
might he leer-eased slightly by a
remission of the debts their love
of their kind overcomes their pe-
cuniary passions For followine
the law of the chromosomes they
are not to be condemned—or
praised Who sings hymns to the
embattled 7ighteousness of t he
tides?
Debts and Reparations
Aligned with them) heroic spokes-
men of the former Allied and As-
striated powers are the German-
Americans though it must be con-
fessed that they are at present
confused in thcir councils Soft
voices are heard among them urg-
ing a cancellation of the debts—on
the secret wish that some of the
Reich's stupendous "reparations'
bill may be forgiven if its former
enemies escape scot-free Since
Germany never prouuced a Vol-
taire a Shaw or a Swift but is
given to Hegels and Spetiglers the
'tumorous view of the issue as aeen
beyond the Rhine 1 not known but
it may be surmised that Fritz and
latthiting up their sleeves
would regard it as the best Sc:nera
in the wide world it the whole bill
for the 'Via for Democracy were
shifted to the stalwart yeomanry In
President Wilson's legions of holt
nese And in a way it would be
Spass if not it Scherz But per-
haps the aforesaid yeomanry may
not be its simple as Fritz and
Heinle imagine
In a group apart are the Pil-
grims— threne ubiquitous globe
trotting Americans who are always
currying favor abroad at the ex
It-use of their country-men at home
They are pained to read and bear
the terrible things h tut tie 'ery
t People attached unto and be-
longing to the former Associated
and Allied Powers emit about
America n crassness ig norance
selfishness—this in spite of the
table manners shown by certain
Holy :den in Versailles w hen they
swept in the stakes of the game—
ships oil colonies and cash—in
sacred trust for mankind If the
debts were forgiven the Pilgrims
could travel with in connfort to
Stratford or along thi-t Riviera But
even they may be Mistaken for it
is douldful whether Publius Dab-
bittianus civis Romanus would be
more loved in the role of a largess-1
dispenser than in that of a bill
collector Still the Pilgrims most
be reckoned with in tine making of
Public Opinion lie and she are
Persona of Importance in New
York Emporia Little Rock Back
Day Seattle and El Paso
lore prniseworthy in the defense
A Bankruptcy Fire Sale
By CHARLES A BEARD in The American Mercury
support given to cancellation by 'of forgiveness are the Poignant In- hard of heart are the apostles of
the Britash Canadians Italians telleetuals who are never happy cancellation who base their emo-
French and other races and na- except when doing good evdecially tions and logical patterns On the
tionalities represented In the poly- at little cost to themselves Thie firm belief that the cash is gone
glot population of the United party of the sixth part carries lit- and will never be recovered no
States Though aa residents of this tie weight in the State Department matter what turns and twists are
great commonwealth their taxes but It is facile with the pen and made by the Hon Andrew Mellon
might be inereased slightly by a can raise a big dust storm on ten With a kind of Celtic humor Mr
remission of the debts their love minutes' notice It le not to be J N Rosenberg a prominent New
of their kind overcomes their pe- ignored in the calculations of prob- York lawyer ot long experience In
cuniary passions Dor followine abilities Unrelenting Purity has winding up bankrupt corporations
the law of the chromosomes they great power—when backed by such a man who can sing to a harp all
are not to be condemned--or substantial parties as those of the the threnodous wails of debtors
indeed Who sings ityrnns to the first and second part in this caught in flagrante delicto pro-
embattled 7ighteousness of t he schedule poses that the debts should now be
tides? Akin In spirit to the Poignant In- forgiven or cancelled ills sugges-
Beide and Reparatione tellectuals are the lovers of Inter- tion derived of deep experience is
Aligned with these heroic spokes national peace among whom must that President Coolidge should sim-
men of the fornier Allied amt As- be reckoned the writer of this bull ply say with the bland smile of
soeiated powers are the German against tee comet They seem to which he is roaster and in his soft
Americans though It must be con suppose that the relations oi the New England voice: "I appreciate
leased that they are at present United States to the European the difficulties under which you la-
confused in their councils Soft powers in the matter of oil trade bor and the high sense of honor
voices are heard among them urg- open doors and the other desiderata which always actuates you in pe-
ing a cancellation of the debts—on Of imperialism would be more cuniary matters hence I will make
the secret wish that some of the pleasant in case these debts were no demands upon you for cash now
Reich's stupendous "reparations' forgiven with a magnanimous ges- or at any definite date but will
Lull may be forgiven if its former tore—even now after every effort wait your pleasure and con-
enemies escaPe scot-free Since has been made to squeeze them out venience" When the paint Is
ilermany never proouced a Vol of the beneficiaries By just what rubbed off this diplomatic language
Mire a Shaw or a swift but is process of logic and lucubration it meens that the cake may be both
:then to alegels and Spenglers the they arrive at the conclusion that kept and eaten The sacred honor
tumorous vww ot the ISSUe as eeen nations now feverishly arming for of the debtors will be preserved in-
beyond the Rhine le not known but the next war with all the energies tact but they will not have to pay
it may be surmised that Fritz and they can command will grow soft It seems reasonable to assume that
Reline lauallIng up their sleeves at the mention of cancellation and more affection may he gathered in
would regard it as the best Seaters oblivion does not appear in the by this gesture than by any other
in the wide world It the whole bill bond In any event it seems just that is on the hypothesis that zero
tor the Vat for Deniocracy were as reasonable to assume that freed added to nothing equals triumph
thifted to the stalwart yeomanry in from the necessity of paying these People 11 he believe
President Wilson's legions of holi- honest bills they will spend the Finally there are the defenders
nests And in a way It would be garnered pelf in guns airplanes of grace remission absolution and
1 Spass if not a Scherz But per subnuirines and poison gas oblivion at home and abroad who
imps the aforesaid Yeomanry may whereaa if they have to get down rest their taee on the mythology
ma be as simple as Fritz and to work and pay what they owe of the lied Green Orange Yellow
Heinle imagine they may be less bellicose for a and other rainbow books issued by
decade or two Judging from the
In a group apart are the Pil- the Entente belligerents contain-
rims — those ubiquitous globe flight of birds and other auspices log as we know now falsified and
one chance Is as gopd as another
rotting Americans who are always garbled dispatches for the purpose
iirrying favor abroad at the ex Professional Lovers of gulling gudgeons According to
emse of their countrymen at home
Utley are pained to read and hear no Lower in batting average but this argument w hich may spring
t without vocal organs are those
e terrible things Vk hich tie Vera from abstract ethics or the emo-
h a ho crave affection They cling Bons above catalogued the Ger-
America would be- mans were solely responsible for
tinging to the former Associated
ilet People attached unto and be to the hope that Ame
come the Beloved ( roesus if the
starting tile war and the Entente
In)! Allied Powers emit about whet° account v ere gloriously Allies were really defending the
kmerican crassness ignorance spomaed They are pained when United States frcm the beginning
ieltashness—thia in sidle of the they hear that French hotel keep-
manners shown by certain !lr NVilaon's government instead
able
ers raise their prices on Pilgrims
Men in Versailles w hen they of springing heroleally to the de-
aoly
and that dry goods clerks make fence of American teghts in August
vry faces and say- nasty things be-
wept in the stakes of the game— v 1914 delayed nearly three years
i causing great damage suffering
acred trust for mankind If the
IliPs 011 colonies and cash—in hind the back of Madam Babbit-
tianus when she goes to Worth's or
Wide were forgiven the Pilgrims and distress to the defendants in
Jenny's to buy a gown wherewith this debt case and therefore Q E
'ould travel Wit II II) re comfort to to make the eyes start out of the D any part of the bill paid by the
Stratford or along tha Riviera But
sockets of the sartorial bezonians United States would fall far short
ven they may be Mistaken for It
and gaberlunzies of the hinterland of justice In other words runs
s doulaful whether 1'1113111m Bab at home A cloud of uncert a I nty this plea the debts should he can-
wittianus civis Romani's would be
also rests on this aspiratian There celled in full and with a contrite
nore loved in the role of a largess- is an old French proverb to tile
heart
liepenser than in that of a bill- effect that there is no enemy like
ollector Still the Pilgrims must II hi) StartiA the liar
a forgiven debtor and it is difficult
e
If reckoned with in th ranking aking or to think of any Fmottos French m of the major premise of this con-
al bite Opinion lie and she are long standing that are altogether I tenti()u l ‘
'e granted the conclusion
1 v
'ersone of Importance in New false and fleeting i inexorable but the major pre-
mise Is now shot so full of holes
Pork Emporia tattle Rock flack Ian They Pay ty horny-handed historicel sehol-
lay Seattle and El Paso Touched by no anguishes -above arship that it looks more like a
fore praiseworthy in the defense enumerated but (dons of eve nndleeeeeerrae then n creel antlia lane
A NATION'S STRENGTH
By RAI Pit WALDO ENII RSON
Not gold but only men can make
A people great and strong--
Men who for truth and honor's sake -
Stand fast arid suffer long
Brave nien who work while others sleep
'Who dare sink others fly--
They build a nation's pillars deep
And lift them to the sky
hi) Stard the liar
If the major premise of this con-
tention be granted the conclusion
is Inexorable but the major pre-
mise is now shot so full of boles
bY horny-handed historical schol-
arship that it looks more like a
scarecrow than a Greek statue Can
nyone read the writings of Gooch
Fay Fibre-Luce and a host of
American French and English
scholars to say nothing of Mr
Barnes' powerful book (in F pile of
It s argumentative tone) and then
stand up in court and declare on
oath that the Entente war myth-
ology deserves the credence of in-
telligent men and women? The
advocate of dcht cancellation for-
eign and domestic might as well
learn once for all that the Arnerb
can people are not all boobs In
matters of European history: that
in magazines newspapers scholas
tic journals class-rooms shops
railway trains and tieldg the flues
Hon or V a r responsibility is being
debated with understanding and
“i n I --Pn fro
Were bait tba tpover last Ails Ina worin with
terror
Wire ball' the wealth bsolownd no tamps &oil
courts
Given $o redacts tla Amman Wad tram cm
There were no awed St arsenals or torts
—Longfellow
TIMELY AND UNTIMELY OBSERVATIONS
A THIRD TERM FOR CAL
-
Ford Coolidge and Brisbane the trinity of profit ueber
alles are unanimously agreed that Cal is entitled to a third
term Business under Cal has been the best ever says the
trio And so the pettiest politician and the most complete
mediocrity that ever sat in the White House is due an
honor which Washington and Jefferson declined Lincoln
would not have accepted and Grant and Roosevelt sought
in vain
Sure business has done exceedingly well during the ad-
ministration of Coolidge and this is especially true of big
business
Figures from the Internal Revenue Bureau for in-
stance show that the 207 persons reporting incomes of a
million and over did even better than in 1916 when war
profits were at their height The gross income of corpora-
tions also rose from some ninety-seven billions in 1923 the
best profit year since the war to about a hundred and thir-
teen billions in 1925
But how about the seven million farmers who made no
income reports at all in 1925 and this for the simple reason
that there was nothing to report but hard luck?
How about the hundreds of thousands of soft coal min-
ers who just now are fighting to maintain their present
wages which hover around the thousand dollar a ycar
mark ? And against whom freight rates have been juggled
in favor of the non-union fields without rhyme reason or
conscience? How about the tens of thousands of textile
workers who have suffered wage cut after wage cut? How 1
about the clothing trades which only maintained their pres-
ent money Nv a ges by the most heroic struggles while being
decimated by unemployment?
However let us not make the fatal though customary 1
error of blaming a president for the ills of industry or prais-
ing him for prosperity Business is good bad or indifferent
irrespective of what set of politicians point with pride or
view with alarm or shoot hot air about it The economic
forces which bring about the terrific ebbs and tides of busi-
ness are no respectors of persons—not even of presidents
All that a President of the United States Senate and
Congress concurring can do is to take money out of the
pockets of some people and put it in that of others which
is exactly what Cal has been doing
'The taxes of the rich and super-rich have been reduced
Wherever it was within the power of the President to in-
crease the graft of the tariff barons the increase was
granted Every free booter pirating in foreign lands in the
name of American trade was given the protection of the
army and navy So every recipient of special privilege may
properly thank God for Coolidge
All this however has very little to do with my objec-
tion to Cal—for any other president elected by the grace
of boodle would smell just as sweet
Nor am I opposed to a third term in principle What
gets my goat is that an overstuffed shirt like Calvin Coolidge
could be elected at all—to say nothing about a second or 4
third time
The talk about the strong silent man in the White
house is blah and every Washington newspaper man knows
it his method of getting the votes of the groundlings
smacks of the Kasper! theater (Punch and Judy show) One
has only to recall his ni'squerading as hay pitcher sap
gatherer milkmaid cowboy and trout angler to realize how
hopelessly petty the man is
And to this must be added his reluctance to shake out
the grafters of the Harding regime his cold blooded treat-
nient of the farmers in regard to farm relief ar last but
not least his refusal to call a special session of congress for
the relief of the six hundred thousand flood sufferers—and
this for the sole reason that he was afraid something might
come up in that session that might spoil his chances for a
third term
Otherwise Coolidge is O K
ANOTHER UNION HEARD FROM
The International Brotherhood of Magicians in conven
tion assembled at Kenton Ohio adopted a resolution to stop
exposing each other's tricks after one of their number Fred
Hurst had caught a marked bullet fired from an ancient
I horse pistol between his teeth
By a strange coincidence I happen to know how this ma-
gician's trick is worked and not being a member of the Ma-
gicians' Union I take pleasure in exposing it by telling the k
"story of the man who catches the flying cannon ball between
his teeth" as told to me by Jim Maurer
Long long before Jim became Honorable James IL
Maurer member of the Legislature and president of the
PennsylvaniA Federation of Labor he and his brother Char-
ley ran a one-horse show the chief attraction of which
'as the aforesaid cannon ball trick
With the solemnity due to a life and death act a small
cannon was wheeled on the center of the stage The audience
was requested to elect a committee of reliable citizens to su-
pervise the loading and firing of the death dealer The com-
mittee marked the ball so as to prevent substitution or dupli-
cation The committee also loaded the cannon and rammed
home the fatal bullet
The doomed bullet catcher was now placed at the proper
distance from the mouth of the cannon Between the mouth
of the cannon and his own mouth he held a plate One of the
committee aimed the cannon at the center of the plate A
second committeeman fired the cannon The plate falls crash-
ing to the floor And a third committeeman pries the marked
bullet from between the teeth of the catcher
All open and above bo'Ard Everything is done by the
committee of reliable native sons—everythirg but the one
thing which makes the trick possible The ramrod handed the -
committee is hollow at the ramming end As the rod is driven
home a small spring catches the ball
Quiet dignified little Charley chief assistant -to Magician
Jim retires with the loaded ramrod behind the scene Ther3
the ball is extracted and placed in the mouth of the catcher
where it is safe from the prying eyes of committee and audi-
ence The moment the blind shot is fired at the plate (which
must be a cracked one) the roan behind it gives it a quick
pressure with the thumb on the crock the plate falls and the
ball which is pushed between the teeth with the tongue is
extracted by the committee secret mark and all
s
Great applause and vondrment until one fatal day
Charley returned from behind the scenes where he had re-
tired with the trick rod and hoarsely whispered into Jim's
ear: "That damned rod didn't catch The ball is still in the
cannon and if it's fired will kill that rrplot-A sure as—well
Oh what'll we do what'll we do?"
Unperturbed by the shocking n ws Jim turned from the
11
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 50, Ed. 1 Friday, July 29, 1927, newspaper, July 29, 1927; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2093577/m1/8/?q=%22new-sou%22: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.