Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, January 6, 1928 Page: 2 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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?ACE TWO
1
GoverH':or is Mit
Run Driver --ays
Accident Victim
Executive Speeding A f t er
Midnight On Oklahoma
City Streets Struck An-
other Car and Didn't Stop
Johnston Claims He Was
Alone At Time
Governor Henry S Johnston is a
"hit and run" autoist according to
charges made by George B Gold-
farb of the Huckins lintel Gold-
farb was slightly injured and his
wife was hurt and suffered shock
when the car in which they were
riding was crashed into by an auto
driven by the governor
Goldfarb declares that Johnston
was driving at a high rate of speed
and his car had no lights when the
amash-up occurred
He also charges that the governor
failed to stop after the accident
Two autoists chased the car driven
by Johnston and got the ear number
No accideut Report
The accident occurred Tuesday
night but Johnston did not report
it to police till the following Fri-
day Attempts by Goldfarb to se-
cure information from the State
Highway Department about the
owner of the license on the gov-
ernor's car were met by evasions
Goldfarb charges
Johnston in his tardy report to
police said he was "driving slow-
ly" at the time of the crash lie
failed to explain why be didn't stop
after the crash He did not say he
knew no one was seriously injured
in the smash
Passerby who saw the crash ex-
pressed boiling indignation at the
driver who failed to atop John-
ston had spent the evening at the
El Patio Night Club it is under-
- stood He Walt Oupposed to have
been alone at the time of the acci-
dent The crash occurred the ARMC
evening Johnston ordered the
militia to guard the State Capitol
for the Hecoad time
"I was driving east on Tenth
street at 11:30" Goldfarb said As
the streets were very wet I was
driving slowly when suddenly airs
tialdfarb who was in the back seat
of the car screamed I do not re-
member the crash The next I knew
I was lying on my wife' s lap in the
' back seat
Two Followed Car
"A crowd had congregated
around the car which I found had
been struck at the left rear wheel
My wife says she saw a car with-
out lights approaching at a terrific
rate of speed going north on Hod-
son My ear was knocked com-
pletely around It stopped with the
front of it about a toot from the
northeast curb of the intersection
"I asked the crowd who had
struck my car and some one cc-
plied that the driver of the other
car bad gone on and that two oth-
er cars had followed it The other
cars came back in about fifteen
minutes with the auto number of
the car that struck me They bad
chased it to Classen boulevard and
said that they could not catch it
because he was going too fast
"Nly wife and I were taken to
the Iluckins hotel where we live
and I went to the police station to
make a report Some One at the
station told me that a man had re-
ported a collision at Tenth and
Hudson saying he was Henry S
Johnston
"I returned to the hotel and
found that Mrs Goldfarb had be
come hysterical
At 9 o'clock Weonesday morning
I went to the police station again
and asked police to lind out the
identity of the driver They had
called the highway department I
waa told and said that the car la
longed to the governor's °nice
They said that wee all the informa-
tion they could get
"I called up the highway depart-
- ment and a young lady ethi
would call me back with the infor-
mation in a few minutes but there
-
was no response 'When I called
later she asked why I wanted to
know whose car it was that had
struck me so I Old her that I had
a right to know and she said that
there was no record of that car on
- file
Denied Information Ile Nays
"I asted to talk to whoever was
in charge of the aka I was con-
nected with a man who also asked
- why I wanted to know who the car
belonged to 'I am a citizen of the
state That is a public record and
- I demand the information' I re-
plied The man hung up
"About II o'clock I called again
and asked who was in charge of the
office and was told Mr Seaman
When I told him what I wonted he
said be would call me back in a few
minutes but I told him that I had
been put off before Ile Baia he
would call me back in 15 minutes
and I agreed
"Six minutes later the Phone
rang and a voice said 'This la
Henry S Johnston They said you
and I had a collision last night at
Tenth-id and Hudson-ave I am
very busy this morning and I would
appreciate it if you would come fait 1
- to my office this morning to speak 1
with me about It
'Went to GcTerneel Office
"I wart to the governor's office
with a friend and waa admitted at 1
exicP The goverzor aekod me Ivr4
S
t
I wanted to settle the affair now
I told him J IN'afi busy Ile told toe
lo have my car repaired awl to
send him the bill 'You know I'm a
poor man so don't go too strong"
be said lle then wanted to buy
my friend and me some ciyars I
refused them because I do not
smoke and my friend already bad
cigars
"Thursday morning the Shel-
burne Motor t'ompany called me
and said my car was not worth re-
pairing suggesting that I buy a
new car I weut bat k to the gover-
aora office about noou and told
him what the mechanic had said
After inquiring as to what the
Vatic of the wrecked car which
had been driven only 750U miles
might be he suggested a cash set-
tlement of $750
Infer the Doctor
Here a heavy see man came Into
the governor's office The tovernor
called him 'doctor' The 'doctor'
wanted to know why I didn't want
to wait a while to settle the affair
I told him I was a busy man and
did not have time to wait Besides
I was without the Wie of a car The
'doctor" then said I should give
Governor Johnston time to go down
and see the damaged car himself
The governor said be did not want
to go down nor would be have
time to go this week
"I told him I was seeking no
financial benefit from the affair
and that I wanted only what I was
justly entitled to have 'Nor did I
come hero to be insulted' I said as
I put on my hat t3hall place the
matter in the hands of toy lawyer'
I left then"
Insinuating and Insulting inquir-
ies made by other persons concern-
ing the accident In -which the gov-
ernor figured caused delay in infor-
mation being given Goldfarb by
the state highway department It
Seaman secretary of the com-
mIsaion said Saturday
Governor Johnston Saturday do
dined to make any statement con-
cerning the accident
NEGRO SLAVES
LIBERATED IN
SOUTH AFRICA
FREETOWN Africa—Nearly 250-
Ooo negroes of the Sierra Lone
protectorate were given their lib-
erty from slavery by a decree based
upon political equality Compara-
tively few of the former slaves re-
alize their now freedom and have
remained with their masters
77M
Ezra Meeker
Pik
Ezra Meeker who traveled
the Oregon Trail in 1852 by
wagon et a two-mile-an-hour
speed and lived to make the
trek by airplane at 102 miles
an hoar celebrated his ninety-
seventh birthday this week
Among the many felicita-
tions he received was one
signed by 36 United States
Senators and a number of Rep-
resentatives Officials of the
Oregon Trail 'Memorial Asso-
ciation of which he is presi-
dent presented him with 07
silver half dollars of the
Limited Oregon Trail coinage
"People of today are advanc-
ing intellectually but they
ride too much for their
health" Meeker told inter-
viewers "I owe my own good
condition to platy of exercise
temperate eating end abstin-
enC2 from ale° 110 —
AMINO-11MM
AS PURVEYOR OF
HEED PAPERS
Engineer Says Hearst Agent
Could Not Produce One
Character Witness
WASHINGTON — Miguel Avila
a ho secured the "documents" for
Ilearat papers wag notoriously
know n as a purveyor of such ja-
pers tbe Senate investigating com-
mittee wag told by Frank Y Mc-
Laughlin of Superior W18 11 civil
engineer in Mexico City
McLaughlin said Avila could not
produce a single character witness
in Mexico City
Melaughlia said he offered his
services vol Li ntarily to th) commit-
tee "to show Avila la his true
light" The docients published
by the !karst papers he said had
resembled "the papers dealt In by
Avila" of which he had seen 20 or
3U ile said he knew nothing of
the papers published in Hearst
newspapers purporting to fill ow
creation Of a fund of $1215000 for
four U S Senators
The committee unable to find
A vil a asked McLaughlin to
return next week Counsel for
Randolph Hearst said they
were trying to locate Avila who
was registered at a hotel here
When attempts to reach Avila were
unsuceessful the committee ad-
journed until a later date
On U S Embassy Paper
McLaughlin said that in the
tunntner or autumn of 192(3 Avila
came to his apartment on what
Avila Bald was very important bus-
iness at the same time showing
McLaughlin a typewritten docu-
meut on American Embassy paper
Mr McLaughlin then was vie-
president of the El Sol Petroleum
company' which had a contract
with the Mexican Government
"This proposal purporting to be
from Arthur Bliss Lane the first
secretary of the Embassy but un-
signed offered to sell the Mexican
Government for 10000 informa-
tion on what transpired between
Secretary Kellogg and Ambassador
Sheffeld" on a visit of the envoy
to Washington McLaughlin testi-
fied "Avila said Lane was downstairs
I told Avila I did not intrigue
against my own Government and
dismissed him
"Avila came the next morning
with two photostatic copies of the
documents I called Irving E:
ift formerly of the Department
of Justice and a friend of the em-
bassy I asked him t) show the
copy to the embassy Swift replied
that Avila was a very dangerous
loan I ftSSUM0 Avila thought I
would call this to the attention of
Mexican officials
"Avila came later and said I had
gotten hint in a lot of trouble by
speaking to Swift I never spoke
to Lane about it" McLaughlin
salt! he did not believe Avilas
story and told him so "iu no uncer-
tain terms"
BE BREW
MI PRESIDENCY
Colorado Farmer -Labor
Party Endorses Iowa'
Senator
DENVER -- Senator Finith W
Brookhart Iowa was indorsed for
the U S presidency by the Farmer-Labor
party of Colorado here
following a reorganization of that
group in Colorado
The reorganization was perfect-
ed at a meeting in the Windsor
liotel after revised articles of in-
corporation had been filed by Mor-
ton Alexander acting chairman
Ned MacArthur secretary-treasurer
and Bert Martin attorney
The reorganized party represents
a union of all the progressive par-
ties in the rtate Martin said
Under its articles of incorpora-
tion which are for 20 years ell of-
ficers delegates and candidates
wIII be cb-sen hereafter by refer-
endum Members of the party de-
posit $1 as an initial fee and an
additional 25 cents each time there
is a referendum it is specified
Delegates to the national Farmer-Labor
party convention in
Milwaukee Wis May 17 1928
were selected at the meeting
Bruhn Dr E S Agnew IL IL
Marrs 1 Whidden Edward Mc-
Cormick Edwin A Miller and Wil-
liam Penn Collins They were in-
structed for Senator Brookhart
Affairs of the party in Colorado
are vested in an executive commit-
tee composed of Ale It nder Mac-
Arthur Martin Whluken McCor-
mick Marrs and Agnew and pro-
vision is made for an election in
1929 to name their successors
Members of the executive commit-
tee are to bold office for one year
TEACHERS WAGES LOW
wAsillNaToN--The annual sal-
ary for high school teachers prin-
cipals and supervisors in 1925 av-
eraged $1252 in this country pays
the federal commissioner of edu-
cation la his annual report
The largePt active volcano in the
world is Kil Allell in the Hawaiian
IelandS
I
OV
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TEXAS BOY BALKS SANTA CLAUS BANDIT HAUL
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Woodward Harris (upper left) aged 14 of Rising Star Texas prevented bandits pos-
ing as Santa Claus from getting away with $150000 loot from First National Bank of
Cisco Texas The bandits seized Lavern Comer aged 12 (lower left) and Emma May Bot
inson aged 10 (beside her) and used them s a shield in making their getaway after the
robbery in which nine persons were shot down including one bandit two officers and six
civilians Upper center circle shows Louis F Davis of Wichita Falls one of the bank rob-
bers as he lies in a Cisco hospital recovering from gunshot wounds
The Revolt of the Te ant
Farmers of New Mexico
(By Murray E King in The New
Leader)
Down here in New Mexico where
the west and south and north and
old Mexico Itself comingle in a
diverse population of ranchers
fruit and vegetable growers cotton
growers and wage workers a new
Insurgent farmer and labor move-
ment has arisen within the last
two years and is meeting with phe-
nominal success considering the
fact that during the past two years
capitalistic reaction bas made al-
most impossible farmer and labor
organizatioas in almost every oth-
er part of the United States
This new organization—the Pro-
greas Builders of America—has
overspread the better part of a
state in two such years is now
preparing to overflow into neigh-
boring states and has members-atlarge
in almost every state in the
union
This organization is frankly radi-
cal in its aims In the language
of its founder W F Richardson
its purpose is to "kill capitaliza-
tion with its own club" It aims at
nothing less than the socialization
of the farmer and wage worker
through collective experience and
struggle by means of a most ambi-
tious and daring propaganda plan
It prints a paper—The Progress
Beilder—that is as full of idealis-
tic Socialism and the advocacy of
the co-operative commonwealth as
Wayland's original "Appeal to Rea-
son" All the leaders and officials
I have met so far are Socialists in
their class consciousness and their
collective outlook The new organ-
izers they are breaking in are
drawn largely from the ranks of
the radicals and advanced progres-
sives A Growing Movement
Yet in spite of these evidences
of radicalism calculated to alarm
the individualistic American farm
er this movement I8 undoubtedly
growing and spreading
Why? The answer is found I
believe in the conditions that have
prevailed in the southwest since
the birth of this organizatioa and
In the unique methods of this or-
ganization First let us consider conditions
in this section now and at the time
The Progress Builder organized
The curse of New Mexico in parti-
cular and the whole southwest and
the old south in general is the
alarming growth of tenantry--a
growth so appalling and rapid that
It threatens to wipe out the last
vestige not only of farmer inde-
pcndence but of farm ownership
In Texas for instance better
than 70 par cent of the farmers
are tenant In Oklahoma 63 per
cent of the big farmers have been
reduced to tenantry since 1890
Those with whom I have talked
here all agree that the New Mexi-
can record is even worse although
figures were not available The
ahnoat incredible exploitation of
the Interests controlling transpor-
tation the markets and money
leaves the farmers year after year
not only without compensation for
their long hours of hard labor but
plunge an increasing number into
hopeless debt ruin and the loss of
their farms
It remained for New Mexico to
furnish the unique combination of
factors that made it ripe for just
such a movement as the Progress
Builders Less than twenty years
ago the whole eastern half of the
state in which Roswell is located
was occupied by cattle ranches and
small farmers of the northern and
western typ4 Then came the inva-
sion of the coao h growers from the
old south bringing in their wake
ORLATIONIA LEADER
Vtl3t$MMIsOMPVallklIMOMPNOWMAWAWYSIMItVc:$xmlow04:
1 a lowered standard of living a
harder struggle child labor and in-
creased tenantry The Santa Fe
Rai lresd system is practically a
monopoly in this section of the
state and gave the finishing touch
to a condition yearly growing more
hopeless
Today the Pecos river valley is
producing far greater wealth than
It ever produced before in its his-
tory but the real producers see
themselves sinking into a position
of tenant servitude Great cotton
gin plants and cotton oil mills have
sprung up Owned by corporations
that cover a dozen states with
these industries One sees at Ros-
well vast rows and piles of cotton
bales representing fortunes The
money received for the output of
the gins and oil extraction plants
must be immense but the farmer
fs poorer than before the advent
11
ma
S
Here is a Chance
to Get a
N
of these great implements of ex-
ploitation In the meantime the old cattle
ranges and ranches are passing
The influx of the sheeprneu In-
crease of farming and cotton grow-
ing and other causes are putting
the finishing touches on cattle
ranches in this part of New Mexico
A sturdy race of western small
farmers and cattlemen find them-
selves fighting with their backs to
the wall—fighting on the one hand
against lower living standards of
the old south and lighting on the
other hand against the mightier in-
struments of exploitation of the
new north They are ready in in-
creasing numbers to listen to a
movemet that promises them col-
lective protection and something
to hope for in the future and that
Is why they are Joining the Pro-
gress Builders in increasing num-
bers in spite of its distinctly So-
cialistic official organ
To those who will do a little work for The Leader
while we are making a special price of $100 a year we
offer a nice cloth-bound book free
If you will bend in 5 subscribers at MOO each we
will send you as a FREE present your choice of any
of the books listed below:
Mark Your Choice and Send It In
DAUGHTERS OF THE REVOLUTION—John Reid
THE GREAT FRENCH REVOLUTION—Peter Kropotkin
FOUNDATION OF MODERN CIVLYLZATION—M C Thomas
WHERE IS CIVILIZATION GOING?— Scott Nearing
HEAVENLY DISCOURSB—Charies E Scott Wood
WAR MYTHS IN U S HISTORY—C H Hamlin
RUSKIN'S NIEW OF SOCIAL JUSTICE—John Ruskin
WAR—PATRIOTISM—PEACE—Leo Tolstoi
INIPERIALISNI—N
THE CONQUEST OE BREAD—Peter Kropotkin
NVELL'O SOCIAL ANTICIPATION—H G Wells
PROGRESS AND POVERTY—Henry George
INDIVIDUAL LIBERTY—Benjamin R Tucker
THE A B C 0? EVOLUTION—Vance Randolph
TIIE A B C CF ASTRONOMY—Jay L Taylor
THE A B C OF PHYSICS—Jay L Taylor
THE DESCENT OF MAN—Charles Darwin
THE RIDDLE OE THE UNIVERSE—Ernst Macke'
HISTORY OF (IVILIZATION IN ENGLAND—henry Thomas
Buckle
HISTORY OF EUROPEAN MORAJS—W E IL Lecky
HISTORY OF THE CONFLICT BETwEaN RELIGION AND
SYIENCE—Prof John Wm Draper
TIIE THEORY OF THE LEISURE CLASS—Thorstein
THE STATE—Franz Oppenheimer
OUT OF TliE PAST—R W Potgate
BASIC PRINCIPLES OF SOCIALISM—A S Sachs
NEW TACTICS IN SOCIAL CONFLICT—Harry Lalder and Nor
man Thomas
TIIE IMITISII GENERAL STRIXE—Scott Nearing
L(K)KING BACKWARD—Edwarfl Bellamy
NEWS FROM NOWHERE—William ISIorris
THE JUNGLE—Upton Sinclair
YEARNEY'S JUSTICE—Ivan Canhar
AGGRESSIVE ACTION FOR CIVIL RIGHTS—Clement Wood
THE ESSENTIALS OF MARX—Alsernon Lee
LONDON'S ESSAYS OF REVOLT—Jack London
WHAT IS CO-OPERATION?—James Warbae
WHAT IS SINGLE TAX?—Louis P Post
THE A B C OF PHYSIOLOGY—Vance Randolph
THE A B C OF CHEMISTRY—Vance Randolph
THE SOCIALISM OF GEORGE: BERNARD SIIAW
by citing the enormous profits
made by Il!g Business the bank-
ruptcy court tells a different strory
la the fiscal year just ended
there were 48753 bankrupichs in-
volving 11A111108 of 8t51517000
of this amount 871940o0 or less
thaa 8 per cent as recovered by
creditors v ccording to the U 13
WASIIINGTON — What becomes
of the taxpayers' dollar?
According to Secretary Mellon's
annual report 51 cents goes for
the public debt 218 cents for mili-
tary purposes and the rest for "or-
dinary civil functions" It was
about the same in 1926
How much of the dollar is spent
because of wars "past and future?"
"It is well known to students of
public finance" says Mr Mellon's
report "that the peace time budgets
of modern continental nations are
largely concerned with the costs of
past and future wars
Fig-ures of Ross
"Many expenditures of the gov-
ernment are either always partly
military and partly civil or else are
predorninantely military in war Pe-
riods but change to a distinctly
civil character in times of extended
peace Any definite figures of ex-
penditures for war must therefore
Involve many judgments that are
far from a mathematical certainty
"The best known compilation of
data in readily available form for
use in answering this inquiry was
made for the years 1910 to 1920
by the late Edward B Rosa of the
United States bureau of standards
Ms figures were later brought up
to 1924 by the bureau of efficiency"
The report says that for the
fiscal year 1927 82 cents of the
taxpayer's dollar was spent for
"wars past and future"
Highest In 19IS
On the same basis in 1926 81
cents went for war and 1925 80
cents Back in 1915 it was 62 cents
It rose to 90 cents in 1918 during
the World War fell to 70 cents in
1920 then climbed until it was 87
In 1922 and 85 in 1924
The report adds "That in mod-
ern times the federal tax bureau of
one generitton is largely deter
ecial Rio lid
0
Tra110
Vol 9—Not 21—January 6 1923
Barikruptcies Show Big
Increasc ii Netion for
Fiscal Year of 1927
I
Although prosperity boomers District Attorney's office
have been busy declaring the year The figures for the past yetat
Just closed as one of the most pros- show an increase of Vio0000(
I over the year 1917 just before the ‘
perous in tile history of the nation
is ar
War Gets 82 Cents
Out of Each Dollar
Spent By Taxpayer
Wage earners conetttuted the
largetit class of bankrupts with a
total of 18000 merchants next
with a total of 12000 and farmers
third with 6000
It cost the government $21342-
000 nearly as much as it costs to
operate all federal courts and pris-I”
on to administer these estates
BLACK SHIRTS SORE
INSIST GREEN IS RED
WASHINGTON—(FP)—Amer-
lean Federation of Labor offi-
cials are astounded at the pub-
lication in a pro-Fascist Ital-
ian paper in New York of a
charge that President Green
while refusing to visit Fascist
Italy secretly favored the re-
cent visits of American workers
to Moscow Thus by Fascist
logic Green is Red and the
Black-shirts cannot look upon
him as a friendly White
mined by the military activities of
the preceding one"
The budget for 192C carries $645-
000000 for "national defense" an
increase of abont $20000000 ovtI
the present fiscal year Adding in
figures for "retired pay" for those
on the inactive list subject to call
In time of war the total rises to
$67069675 an increase over cur-
rent figures of more than
$48000000
HALE MAKES
ATTEMPT TO
GET RELEASE
Another attempt to save W
Hale convicted of murder and
charged with being the brains of a
murder ring which killed a number
of Osage Indians will be made
here January 25 when the United
States Circuit Court of Anneals'
bears points of error in which
counsel hopes to get a reversal of
the life sentence Hale Is in the
penitentiary at Leavenworth Kan
In looking over our list we find that a great many
subscribers last year subscribed during the month of
January
Eon't Let Your Sub
scription Expire
NO
In order that these subscribers have an oppor-
tunity to secure the paper at the dollar rate we are
extending the special offer for a few more weeks
If you know that you subscribed sometime during
the first of the year send in your dollar at once so you
will not miss a copy If you know your subscription
will expire soon you better send in your subscription
now and save a third
I REMEMBER FOR A SHORT nu ONLY
'YOU CAN GET THE WEEKLY LEADER AT
While you are renewing your own subscription include
the name of some neighbor who will appreciate the
paper
REMEMBER
This is Presidential Campaign year and you will
want to keep up with the various political movements
over the nation nnd state The Leader will keep you
posted on all political movements of interest to progressives
Address
OKLAHOMA LEADER
P 0 Box 777
17 West Third Oklahoma City Okla
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, January 6, 1928, newspaper, January 6, 1928; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2093600/m1/2/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 21, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.