Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1927 Page: 1 of 8
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i
4
I
Labor is prior to and independent of
capital Capital is only the fruit of labor
could never have existed if labor had not
first existed Labor is the superior of capi
tat and deserves much the higher emsideration
4 r)
$4 bee 0
T pnno RI 0
5 o1 CerA:44' DUI anze a June 9
Are (tit àlllltail Unilo It e 14: 11h
FULLER REFUSES
MINCE TO SEE
FEDEIIAL FILES
Radicals Protest Innocence
Until Death Whole
World Shocked
BOSTON — Last minute
efforts to save Bartolomeo
Vanzetti and Nicolit Sacco
from the electric chair failed
and the execution took place
shortly after midnight Tues-
day morning
Friends of the two anar-
chists fought for seven years
to secure a new trir1 for
them charging that Judge
Webster Thayer who tried
them for the alleged murder
of a paymaster and his
guard was prejudiced
against them because of their
radicalism
The men went to their death
with millions of men Ia the United
States and the rest of the world
convinced of their innocence or still
in doubt as to their guilt
No :Mercy From Fuller
Gov Alvan T Fuller refused
clemency despite the fact that two
Lawyer Praises
Doomed Men for
Their Kindness
Michael Angelo Musnianno 1
one of the Sacco-Vanzetti de-
fense attorneys was refuseid
permission to sneak a farewell
word to his clients Warden
Hendry of the state prison de-
nied his request
Newspaper men asked Mils-
manno what he wished to say
to the doomed men to which he
replied:
"I wanted to tell them there is
more mercy in their hearts than
there is in the heart of many
who profess the orthodox reli-
gion -
"I wanted to tell then that I
knew of their innocence -116 that
all the electric chairs and gal-
lows in the world can't change
this knowledge
"I wanted to tell them that
they are two of the kindest and
tenderest men I have ever met
that they love their fellow men
with a sincerity that is apparent"
cases were pending in the 'United
States supreme court in behalf of
the two men Four justices of the
United States supreme court re-
fused to issue stays of execution
bowel er
They were Justices Ilohnes
Brandeis and Stone and Chief Jus-
tice Taft
The department of justice finally
offered to open its tiles in connec-
tion with the Sacco-Vanzetti case
but Governor Fuller refused to take
advantage of the offer evidently
fearing that the innocence of the
two men would thereby be proved
Protest 1nnoeenee
The men went to the electric
chair bravely Both made short
Statements before their death pro-
testing that they were innocent
They were preceded to the chair
by Celestine Madieros the young
Portuguese Who confessed that a
gang to which be belonged commit-
ted the murder for which Sacco
snd Vanzetti were killed
"1 wish to tell yott 1 am in no
cent and never connected with
liii y crime" said 'Vanzetti "I
thank you fo r everyt h lii g you
have done for me I ant hum-
cent of all crime not only of this
One but all 1 am an innocent
man 1 wish to forgive some
people for w lint they are won
doing to me"
Sacco only declared: "Long live
anarchy Farewell my wife my
children and all my friends Good
Avening ntlemen farewell moth-
er— It hi believed that Justice Bran-
deis of the United States supreme
court would have granted a stay of
execution but for the fact that
members of his family have been
active in the defense of the two
men
Trial Judge Supreme
The supreme court of Massachu-
setts refused to grant a new trial
rulinq that the trial judge only ham
-By ABRAHAM trscout
N
!S 4s
Georgia Whites Fete
Negroes In Move To
Prevent Race Exodus
WOODLAND Ga—Economic de-
terminism asserted itself here when
several thousand negroes were
guests of the white people of Tal-
bot county in a picnic given the
negroes as an appreciation of their
loyalty and industry
Speakers declared that only a
small number of the negroes of the
county have followed the th:gration
movement that has left many coun-
ties of the state without adequate
workers to take care of the crops
So great has become the exodus
of negro workers to the north
where they find ready employment
in the building trades and other in-
dustries that the south is making
desperate efforts to hold them Tal-
bot county is the first county in the
state to attempt to hold the negroes
MO LH IN
DRUNKEN DEL
Earlsboro Oil Field Scene Of
Double Slaying
-
—
EARLSBORO Mkt — Buster state planted this fali according to
the state crop reporting service
Cain 22 and Dill Holmes 23 are
They announced that the farmers
dead Dave Slaughter has a Fhot
through the arm and Slim Cron- 1)1 the state "'lid sew c"siderablY
over 500000o acres as compared
well Earishoro cafe owner is In
Jail as the result of a drunken
n vested this summer
with approximately 3750000 bar-
Ibrawl and fight in which the me
rngaged 1
According to officers Cain and PROSPERITY DUE TO
Holmes who were drinking en- STAY SCHWAB SAYS
gaged in a fight with Slaughter
—
Slaughter fired one shot at Cain CIIICAGO--"As steel prosperity
but missed him Cain then shot goes so goes the rest" according
Slaughter and with Holmes he left to Charles NE Schwan chairman
town Cromwell followed the men of the board of the Bethleham
overtaking them just outside the Sit:f1 company who declared that
city limits In an attempt to ar- prosperity is here to stay Dia be-
rest them Cromwell said they lief in prosperity he said was
threatened to shoot him and he kit- based on the heavy demands for
le I them ----
EIGHT MEN FLOG GIRL
SHE TELLS OFFICERS
DOUBT THAT WILL NOT DOWN
DOUBT
FLORENCE Ala—Eight masked
ITIPTI kidnapped her and took her to
the 1roods where she was floggAd
with a leather strap Recording to
Marie Bishop 17-year-old daughter
Okllashom
through the bonds of amity and
goodwill in the first home-coming
ever given the negroes by a white
citizenry
Members of both races made
speeches on friendship and a boun-
teous free barbecue WaS served the
negroes White speakers stressed
the need of the negroes on the
farms and promised better oppor-
tunities for the future
With a normal cotton crop ready
to gather and other work to be
done on the farms of the south the
migration of ncgroes from some
counties especially where lynch-
ings and floggings have taken
place has been heavy So desperate
have become the whites that they
have provided committees to meet
all outgoing trains in an effort to
persuade the negroes to remain
BIG INCREASE
SEEN IN WHEAT
CROP FOR STATE
--
Due to the unusually favorable
beason for plowing during August
Oklahoma will see the largest
wheat crop in the history of the
state planted this faii according to
the state crop reporting service
They annourced that the farmers
of the state would sow considerably
over 500000o acres as compared
with approximately 3750000 bar
CIIICAGO---"As steel prosperity
goes so goes the rst" according
to Charles M Schwan chairman
of the board of the Bethleham
Siffl company who declared that
prosperity is here to stay Ms be-
lief I n prosperity be sail wits
based on the heavy demands for
St eel
BROOKHART BELIEVES
NORRIS LOGICAL MAN
STOUGHTON 1V1 — Renewing
that there is a demand for a pro-
gressive presidential candidate on
the Republican ticket Senator
George NS" Norris of 1cbraska has
a right to rue n vidnee
nnd that I of Prank 11 shop The ghl kept the 1K4n suggetted by Senator Smith
o e
the alleged Preiudiee of a trial I hippIng secret for several weeks W Itrookhart of Iowa as the
thee No 3—raN B under the threat of death cal man
Le
"FEARLESS AND TRUE"
Full Federated Press Service
OKLAHOMA CITY OKLAHOMA FRIDAY AUGUST 26 1927
FINE FOR KILLING
C J Robinson and M Green-
man both of Lawton must pay
a fine of $200 each for killing a
deer in the Wichita Forest Pre-
serve the Criminal Court of Ap-
peals decided after reviewing the
case appealed fre'n the Coman-
che county courts
The men were found near the
body of a freshly slain deer af-
ter a shot had attracted men
nearby The defense of the men
was that no one saw them kill
the deer and that the evidence
was purely circumstantial
COTTON GROWS
11 bile the cool weather inter
sprrsed with showers is declared
to he detrimental to the stateN
cotton crop (an Robinson ef the
federal crop bureau ay In crop
Is maid 11 g good progress despite
lite weather
Mille growing conditions are
all wrong Robinson said I hat rt
ports Indicate coition is blooming
and fruiting right along lie
said that present conditions
"might mato us change a lot of
our ideas about what weather
does to the cotton"
fi5511115IVUE
TO SHIFT VAR
BIIIIIIEN TO IL S
France Not Inclined To Meet'
Her Obligations
Prof Says
1
WILLIAMSTOWNMass—The at- - "
raisei Just enough to e
tempt of some foreign nations ab- her ankles and a dozen 1
etted by a few misguided American or so of calf NVben the pi
professors to wiggle out front un- of elimination was over
der their war debt obligations and Wood remained
throw all the burden upon the peo- I
ple of the United States was assail-I
ed by Phillip M Brown prkessol I T 951115T
of international law at Princetown
University who declared before the
Institut e of Politics that "capacity
to pay" 1e as the most reasonable N oEuli
and only fair manner of settle-
) nient
Prof Brown prai Oklahoma Flier Wins
sed England
Italy and Belgium for their fair-
ness and declared that because of For Hawilan Trir
this attitude their debts had been
HONOLULU -- Stark trai
:Z7 reduced 50 percent
which one girl and six bras
"We loaned Great Britain $1-
711181915" be Ellid "and we re-
tors apparently gave up the
Ilawi
duced this obligatioa in the debt in an attempt to reach
funding settlement by 51414233- San Francisco all but blot
4141 913 or 17 percent We loamA liel-
the l glory credited to the sin
glum $ 18342600 and we reduced
aviators who reached lionol
this amount by $291642765 or 46
er flying over 2400 miles ol
' percent This amounted to a sum
which exceeds Belgium's pre-arm- Seven days have passed al
istice debt by $11986276531 thur Goebel MI Martin
"‘Ve loaned Italy $215e150000 successful vi inners of th
and we reduced this amount by $1- prize landed here and no w
72366353366 or 75 percent We
been received telling of the
loaned France 4230777000 and
we reduced this amount by $2549- Miss Mildred Doran Angie
02131311 or 52 percent nos sum and Vilati Knope flying th
!exceeds the principal of Francel Doran" and Jack Frost and
pre-armistice debt by $579021313- Scott piloting the "Goldea
11 Five days have passed Mill
Prof Brown said "the splendid
and loyal manner in w hich Italy
laid everything on the table and
asked us to judge for ourselves of
her capacity to pay left a deep im-
pression on Ainericans
France Is trilloized
'It is most painful however" he
continued to confess in all friend-
ly candor that when France sent a
mission in 1i22 to expose her in-
ability and disinclination to meet
her obligations we were quite un-
able to understand a language so
enirely foreign to Anglo-Saxon
principles and methods
Dr George Winfield SLott formerly-
professor of international law
at Columbia University indorsed
Prof Iirown's stand and added that
MEN MUST PAY BIG lir the probinn today is "How best to
HOPE IS GONE
rolitivil Two uniiidfilkyil Dien Ivear-
log overalls Hiker's the bAolt Fri-
day kiwi took $itiO oiaking their
escape in a Car April 2 8 the bank
was robbed of $12111)
With hope practically gone hips of every size comb the Pacific
Dcean beNeen San Francisco and Honolulu searching for the three
)eople shown above: Left to right: Juhn A uggpy pedlar Mildred Horan
Ind lies Enope the three occupants of the Aliss Horan niissing Oahe
J) the Dole race
delto
GRANDMOTHER SHOWS
FLAPPERS THE GATE
IN ANKLE CONTEST
STONINGTON Me—Nude col-
ored hosiery end flappers tock
a back meat here when Mrs Har-
ry Wood CO walked off with the
prize for having the prettiest
ankles in a contest In which
more than 200 women and girls
entered
Mrs Wood eight times a
graruhnother W as up on the
tage with the rest with the cur-
tain raised just enough to expose
her ankles and a dozen inches
or $o of calf NVhen the process
of elimination was over Mrs
Wood remained
HEE RITE
Oklahoma Flier Wins Prize
For Hawilan Trip
HONOLULU—Stark tragedy in
which one girl and six brave avia-
tors apparently gave up their lives
In an attempt to reach Hawaii from
San Francisco all but blotted out
the glory credited to the successful
aviators V ho ruined Honolulu aft-
er flying over 2400 miles of water
Seven days have passed since Ar-
thur Goebel MI Martin Jensen
successful m inners of the Dole
prize landed here and no word has
been received telling of the fate of
Miss Mildred Doran Angle Pedlar
and Vilati Knope flying the "Miss
Doran" and Jack Frost and Gordon
Scott piloting the "Golden Eagle"
Five days have passed since Capt
William Erwin and Al Eichwaldt
of the "Dallas Spirit" On a scout-
ing trip searching fOr the lost
planes sent in an S O S saying
they were in a tall spin
While frantic efforts were being
made to find some trace of the
three planes and their ill-fated oc-
cupants little Lope is held out now
that any of them have survived
Hope that aid would reach Erwin
and Eichfuldt in time was express-
ed at first due to the fact that
their location was given and that
a number Of ships were within a
few hundred miles of their location
However no trace of thorn was
found when the first steamer reach-
ed the spot givtn in their S O S
call
FLOGGED EDITOR
LEE MUST SERVE
LONG PEN TERM
I IVI1JJ I I tl I Lal VI
'control the great human forces of 14 LUGGED LD K
I I U
NE FOR KILLING Europe in the interest of prolonged
DEER IN PRESERVE
peace" LEE MUST SERVE
Frederick W Peabody managing
rector of the American Associa- LONG PE
' Robinson and M Green- di m N TERM
both of Lawton must pay tion Favoring the Revision of Inter-
of $200 each for killing a I allied Debts took the opposite SOPERTON Ga—Raymond Lee
n the Wichita Forest Pre- !stand Ile argued that the loans first of four men to be tried for
the Criminal Court of AP- were made for our benefit "for the flogging II M Flanders editor of
lecided after reviewing the p the Sopetton News was found gull-
tppealed fro-a the Coman- rosecution of our war That not
being a commercial investment the ty and sentenced to serve from
unty courts money should not be treated as three to live years In prison on a
men were found near the !such That against our money con- charge of assault with intent to
pf a freshly slain deer af- I tribution to our allies should be murder
shot had attracted men !offset the cost to our allies in blood
Flanders editor of the Soperton
v The defense of the men while doing our fighting for the fit-1
I News on the stand as the sole
hat no one saw them kill teen months of our war period for "I" I 1(' c 1' nu in II I
er and that the evid li evidence when our armies were inactive On member ?
vely identified Lee as a ember of
urely circumstantial the battle front
the mashed band of men who stop-
— 1 Mr Peabody adduced figures col-
pad his car on a lonely road knock-
'TON GROWS lected by E II Outerbridge form-
I him unconscious and beat him
caly president of the New 'York ' ' '
SOPERTON Ga—Raymond hee
first of four men to be triad for
flogging H M Flanders editor of
the Sopetton News was found guil-
ty and sentenced to serve from
three to five years in prison on a
charge of assault with intent to
murder
The freest government can not long en-
dure when the tendency of the law is to
create a rapid accumulation of property in
the hands of the few and to render the
masses poor and dependent
-By DAMEL WEBSTER
II?:ssell 3pens
Ne!- Aft'ii-ek 1 D
CHEAP LABOR IS
MOVING COTTON
MILLS TO SOUTH
MILLIAMSTO WN M a a 8--T h e
Cotton mills of Massachusetts and
the textile industry in general are
moving to the southern states not
because of gebgraphleal reasons
but because of lite poorer economic
status ot the workers and the an-
tiquated laWM favoring the exploi-
tation of the workers according to
Prof John A Todd head of the
London Cotton Exchange speaking
before the International Institute
of Politics here
"The south" he tiald "has the ad
vantage over Massachusetts In
cheaper and longer 11011111 Cotton
is a black man's crop and not a
white man's crop and I believe
that question Is already being dem-
onstrated in Texas m here the
standard of living has been affect-
ed by the poor returns to be de-
rived front cotton
Harry C Butcher managing edi-
tor of The Fertilizer review pub-
lished in Washington took issue
with the recent charge by Prof-
essor Todd that laziness on the
part of farmers of Texas was re-
sponsible for their present crop
CO nditions
"The American farmer Is not
lazy" said Pincher "Ar a class
farmers work harefer and longer
than any other group"
because of gettgraphival reaon
ss by CIIIZZLY CI 11
but because of the poorer economic Campbell Russell sponaer of pe-
status of the workers and the an- Wien 101 providing for a five per-
tiquated laWM favoring the ex plot- cent gross production tax on oil in-
tation Of the wmkers according to stead Of the present three per cent
Prof John A Todd head of the tax Jumped into the political spot-
London Cotton Exchange sneaking light this week with a broadside at-
before the International Institute tack upon the "Jim Williams" con-
rtf Polities here spirators 'and others whom he do-
The south" be 8:11d "has the ed dares are opposing the measure
vantage over Itlassachusette I n through melfish greed ignorance
cheaper and longer 110111'8 Cotton and duplicity
is a black num's crop and not a In citing the fact that out of
white man's crop and I believe 2000 straw votes sent out to the
that question Is already being dem- people of Oklahoma City BrittAm
onstrated In Texas m here the and Bethany over 1200 have voted
standard Of living has been ntieet- for the measure while le88 than 150
ed by the poor returns to be de- haNe voted no Ruesell declares that
rived from cotton it is only a queetion of getting the
Harry C Butcher managing (di- facta before the people of the etate
tor of The Fertilizer review pub- Answering the question "what Is
lished in Washington took Issue Initiative petition No 1011" Rue
8e1 declarea it Is a measbre Intl"
with the recent charge by Prof-
essor Todd that laziness on the ated by the people instead of the
part of farmers Of Texas was re- one destroyed by the "Jim Williams
sponsible for their present crop conspirators" "It 18 a measure"
conditions he says upon which the big tax-
"The American farmer Is not dodgers were determined that wa
lazy" said Butcher "Ar a class should not vote"
farmers work harr and longer Asked If the otl producer is not
than any other group" am they allege paying a Just por
tion of the state tax Russell de-
sTATE cuisEs
clares emphatically that he is not
'lie Is paying the same rate that
be paid 11 yeara ago while the ad
SAPULP BANK
valorem v l ne e a
tax payRussell points er
O out 1)1(s r paying c e percent
the ad-
l producer taxed only upon his gross
Frozen Credits Given As production is paying only one-third
the value of his producing property
Cause In Closing "IIII4 millions invested in non-pro-
- clueing leases" he says" are ex-
Frozen credits according to O empt from any taxes"
B Mothershead state bank corn- According in Russell the gross
missioner was responsible for the produetion tax now amounts to
closing of the Bank of Commerce around $10000000 per annum One
at Sapulpa Friday With a cif pita! billion dollars he says would not
stoeit of $50000 the bank had de- buy the mineral properties of the
posits Of $475000 W B Key Was state "Thus the tax actually am-
president of the bank ounts to less than one percent of
Mothershead after an investiga- the marketable value of the prop-
tion declared that the management elites"
(Jr the bank hod been clean but Pointing out that ad valorem tax
that due to the inability to collect ! is based upon about one-half the
money due the bank it was closed value of the property or about 385
The two other banks Which are mills on the full value of the prop-
assisting in the liquidation have erty he points out that this is
arranged to advance enough money
about double the gross production
so that depositors in the failed
tax on oil properties
bank ntay draw 20 percent of their Answers Charge
money now Itumgell nnewers the eharre made
GERMAN FARM
METHODS FIND
AMERICAN O K
v ck On
ii I 1erattors
1
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Says State Users of GasoIin
Would Pay Only Four Per-
cent of Increased Tax And
This Would Be Only One-
Eighth of a Cent a Gallon
—Highway Project Is
Again Tied Up
value of the property or about 385
mills on the full value of the prop-
erty ho points out that this is
about double the gross production
tax On oil properties
A tisiNers Charge
Russell answers the charge made
by the oil operators that is ex-
pected to appeal to the average au-
tomobile owner that a hiavier
gross production 7 would in-
crease the price of gasoline by
pointing out that the people of
Oklahoma use less than four gal-
lons Of every 100 produced in the
state "The rest of the wJrM" be
says "would pay upon the 96 gal
stite
IlEillIN--AniaztAtient over the ' '" itt"'"-ts-t:tA t-ttt
thoroughness of the German agri-
"The rest of the wjrld"
cultural experiment stations soil 'n31" "w°"ld Pay "Pon the 96 gal-
testing laboratories and health! Ions that they used
services tor eliminating pests was "We h"IP to PaY Brazil's tax
exprs sainuel Thoipn hen we buy coffee" flusselt de-
's
preiddent of the Anleyluan ranu H'Ir" "We helP to pity Great
Bureau Federation and other tle10-1 Britain tax when we bny rub-
gates from the lilited States mak-liter Then why oh why should not
-01
ba 11a VI la severely exit-tressed hy Samuel Thompson!"'"-'" ""
DESPITE COOL !State Chamber of Commerce F how
thg that in otibl to tiiiy $27o hinders testlfied one of his four president if the American Farm el'Ires' "We helP PeY Great
year for xty-two a FS
assailants had declared: "We'll limeau Federation and other tilde- Britain's tax when we buy rub-
RAINY 1VEATHER:
a si yP
our Allies would have to resort to teach you what to print In that pa- sat ps from tito "nod st Then by oh why Fhould not
per of yors" The state endemor- in g a study of A2tien n
iirai ineth' those IA ho use and exhaust Okla-
' unftossilde metistireq u
I ed to prove the ivhinping followed mk in Europe Minot's great resources help to pay
While the emit eat her Int or " tneY ould have to produce a r?'iI iL fair share of Oklahoma's Lax?"
r'
t !icy It mini have tu pi-utiiii it ! -
profit" he said if at leaht 5 p Ttnders
Tier that a five percent grnss
of worth fir The c ry
vigorous editorial eruhade "They have a definite -a
ite orgitnil " '''" '""'" ‘-'' '-''—"" '''' - ---
$700100110
tent upon the annual prodoetion 11114 lawles:juess and particu- agrietilim al policy and that is That 1
4 (14iiioriiiins se
ioods or 1 larly against liquor Iolations The Nve 'want Thompson declared afier Produmvin tax on oil would in-
543-Lim:ha:wpm in tIxty-two 3ars: 1 verdiet was alurned after the Jury in piiii1 id crea OP price of gasoline ma-
had deliberated two boors imiy iii Ki kini1 qisH terially is met hy Russell In the
The other men under indictment late e t a
BLUEJACKET BANK IS 11 I mreent on I- : s
TM American farmers comment : in n th t it would he less than
en the satin' charges are Sherlif "I 4-11111Y un "J' t'lni- ft' -1- ' 1 4 'la g 411°11
'
'"I'he prtsent oil and g:ts produe
RO BC ED SECOND TIME ' '
1 Thigpen of this county Henry Mc- In' 111""I'' l'FP Wiwr'as In AinPrira!
-
BLUEJACKET ()Ma For the I Leinion and Joe LAP AA 110 will have i 11"he1)' anallzed and it: tion itl tkhtlionia" he says "will
semind lime wi:hin the past four separate trials ' ' 111'1““1"'Y htPlirled li the farmer: Yield over 71000M1000 gallons of
W it)) reeonimemmiton of the kin) gasoline annually Ortmeighih of a
months the Bluejacket State Bank or i-urtihziT loOI Ilfre trl Gt!!' cent per !i110T1 would bring $1010
WitS entered by bank bandits and SEVEN-YEAR-OLD BOY many 1 v erityone different tmds Mo"
- —
DROWNS IN CANADIAN are melte Then nets or vheat tire! is) Adiame in (ross Tut
planted in lan4 enntolltilig '411liple-i! Doclaring that the gross produe)
Playing on the concrete so lk er of each soil Ind to) NN 11A various tin tax has not advanced in pro-
Hll crosses the North i iniiu1 kinds of fertilizers are appliedR portIon to the athance in ad valor
river near the Walker street v io- Thu' 110- 10 ri1J I lIns an ocular Mon- I o m tax for the reason that the
duet Frank Novak even-year-old moo rstion of Just ))1ist liciwItt and ' oil rr'1 have been active in
on of Peter Novak Oklahoma Fit y lita It 11 of plonts tan he oidaint t their 0)) n Itchnif Hassell points
eat penter fell into the water and from each otit that these interests have dim-
as drowned :Nionday 1 inated the state Ict-tislature and
All 4ft111A to reclaim the body FIERY FASCIST of the slate officials
had failed Thursda du to the 1101 --
water Arnie! a niy ne-y e ear -old bro- EDI OR OUSTED P'' ""
' ' S( "1""
I t111: IlFC4111: I) At tIN
Fier of tbe drowned boy said that I
Frank fell in and never came up It0'IE litIef that a more lib-! parthai and parole seandals
again ertit "odic: tolrit opponents of ))Lich litVP (ii:-'graflPil tile Stato for
Fascism is grecainq ainoo Ihe ttp the pt se)ertil years were re-
LA FOLLETTE PARK TO tellectutols in the Fascist party is can" "g:"" this ri(''k "" (1'w-
ornmor Johnetan charged thiA offers
BE DEDICATED TO HIc' '"'"'t in the comartnt strub“zio be-
of ono line been InJoie to him 13
') tween the strong-arm had It-Heller-
HONOR LABOR DAY tuttl factions over strong-arin poii an effort to) secure clemency for O
'
-- cies I Lacy wealthy endnele county
A PPLETON W—La Follette I man N't10 has become wetilthy
L n m n
'Impero the strog-arews-
Park named in honor of the late paper 11
Ps a result of ts rut h-
since the Seminole oil field cam
Senator Ttiliert M L Fo lo-
e
4i1 i
leosnesa been deprived of the title ' in!° Prnini"iire
e llette
rated at Kaukauna will be detileat- °glottal Faso-Alt organ anol one of : LnoY wail convicted In 1923 of
ect on Labor Day under directl:m nf Its ealltors EmElo Scttimelli hes Adlling Ilichtird Itomine and sent-
the Kaukauna federated trades 1 extmtd from thr imety for cnced to serve thirty years in pHs-
counell "gNiVe 11111tripillie” on Ile is now out on a parole
Dr Gienn Frank president of — granted by a inriner administration
tin) Frilveratty of Wisconsin will I Swedish Natienal Federation or I fle)croor Johnsom In refusing to
spvak rnillip 1a rollei re ?nut n( Labr ro!Ket3 prnivriol for eytnpa- l grant Lsce a pardon declared that
the) Ninon)! American hi also been i thy si rhse In protest 4 glhist !ezino- !h- was endeavoring "to condoct tho
given a place on the program vanicit I c totetice i orfairi of lits ori:ice and so derueat
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VOL 9—No 2
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 26, 1927, newspaper, August 26, 1927; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2093581/m1/1/?q=Amanda+Montgomery: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.