The Albion Advocate (Albion, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1922 Page: 2 of 8
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ALBION UNION ADVOCATE
LYMAN ABBOTT
DEAD
I
SHERMAN A CUNEO
Y BLAZE
TENAMENT HOUSE SWEPT
BY FIRE STARTING FROM
BABYCARRIAGE
17 YEAR OLD BOY HERO OF FIRE
Many of tho Dead art Children Who
War Found Tucked in Thair
Beda by Firemen After Haw-
ing Sufflcated by 8moke
: v L
'PK
AvF
New York N Y — Fourteen perilous
tost of them childien lost their lives
sere recently In a fire believed by
City officials to be the work of a pyro-
maniac The flames swept with mur-
derous suddenness from cellar to at-
tic of a five-story brick tenement at
Lexington avenue and 110th street In
the thickly populated district
The blaze apparently started In a
baby carriage under the stairs In the
lower hall under almost Identical cir-
cumstances as the recent incendiary
fire in an upper west side apartment
house which resulted In seven deaths
Bo quickly did the flames shoot
through the building that a number
of the dead were found In bed burned
or suffocated without the slightest op-
portunity to escape
Shortly after 1 o’clock in the morn-
ing ClLy Marshal Joseph Lazarus
while on his way borne saw smoke
Issuing from the hallway of the build-
ing He ran to the next corner and
turned In an alarm When he re-
turned the whole building the ground
floor of which is occupied by stores
was a mass of flames and exit by
stairways was cut off Most of the
persons on the second floor succeeded
In making their way down the fire
escapes but those on the upper
floors bad to battle through smoke
and flames pouring out of the win-
dows Many Threaten Leap
Several tenants perched on upper
story windows threatened to jump
but were prevailed upon by firemen
to remain until ladders could be
raised to take them down One aged
woman disregarded the warning and
leaped from the fourth floor receiving
Injurier which probably will cause her
death
Nearly a score of persons owe their
lives to 17-year-old James O'Donnell
a merchant’s helper who was eating
at a restauralt In the vicinity when
he heard a woman cry for help
Running to the street he saw the
woman leaning out of the window on
the second floor of the burning tene-
ment with two small children by her
Bide The young man clambered on
the sill of a store window jumped
and caught a swinging sign and pull-
ed himself up to the window He led
the three frightened tenants down the
fire escape to the street and then ran
back and rescued the woman’s 18-months-old
baby who was asleep In a
Crib Later he went to the roof of
an adjoining building and by throw-
ing a board over the alley space made
It possible for a number of tenants
who seemingly had been cut off from
escape to gain the roof terrace in safety
-- - ’
iW
Dr Lyman Abbott editor In chief
of the Outlook with which he had
been associated nearly forty years
clergyman lawyer author and succes-
sor to Henry Ward Beecher as pastor
of Plymouth church Brooklyn died
He would have been 87 years old next
December When the end came his
four sons and two daughters were at
bis bedside In New York
Dr Abbott Buffered a severe attack
of bronchitis at his country home In
Cornwal!'On-the-Hud80n last summer
from which he never fully recovered
CRUISERS ARE LOST IN STORM
RUSSIAN ARMORED
GO DOWN
SHIPS
Other Crafts are Reported in List of
Missing on- Baltic Sea Which
Was Swept by Storm
Elga Russia — The Russian armor-
ed cruisers Rosslya and Gronabol aud
several oilier vessels have been lost
in a storm in the Baltic sea
The Rossiya was a 12195-ton vessel
and the Gromoboi a ship of 13430-
tons The former had a length of 480
feet and the latter of 472 feet The
Rossiya was laid down at the Baltic
works In 1893 and completed In 1998
and the Gromoboi was started In 1898
and completed in 1901 Each vessel
had a speed of about 20 knots The
Rossiya in pre-war days had a com-
plement of 833 men and the Gromoboi
8G8 The Gromoboi was scuttled by
a mutinous crew at Kronstadt In No-
vember 1920 It Is probable that she
was later raised and repaired The
Rossiya (also known as the Rossla)
was said to have participated In the
Knonstadt mutiny in the rlnter of
1921
LIMIT OF SLASH IS REACH-1
ED AN INCREASE WILL’
NOT BE ASKED
MORE U S SOLDIERS NEEDED I
The General Opinion of Military Lead-1
ere in Thle Country le That
More Defenoe May Ba Need-
ed Inetead of a Cut
Washington D C — President Hard-
Ing'i belief that the regular army at
Its present strength 12000 offlcara
and 125000 men “la as small aa
should be contemplated unless thera
hould be a decided change In mili-
tary ooudltlone throughout the world'"
Is stated lna letter Secretary Weeks
made public by the war department In
order to correct any misapprehensions
Is stated In p letter Secretary Weeks
In budget estimates for 1923
Reply to Weeks
The letter was written tu reply to a
communication from Secretary Weeks
September 21 explaining to the presi-
dent that while estimates for 12000
officers and 125000 men were being
submitted the opinion of military
leaders regular national guard or re-
serve was unchanged that the mini-
mum force to carry out the national
defense act of 1920 was 13000 offt
cers and 150000 men
In reply the president said that
while he did not bleleve the govern-
ment would be justified In exceeding
Its resources for the coming year
"there are limits in reduction beyond
which we cannot go even in the
pralseworthycause of economy with-
out destroying the excellent founda-
tion now laid for our national de-
fense and forfeiting the accrued bene-
fits of world-war experience"
“ From Printer te President- Is the
itory of the life of President Harding
e written by a lifelong friend and fel-i
low-edltor Sherman A Cuneo of Co-
lumbue O who le now connoctod with
tho prohibition office of the bureau of
Internal revenue The book takes up'
the ancestry and aarly day of tho
President hlo success In printing In!
urancs advertising and publishing
AIRSHIP FLEET AROUND WORLD
U S ARMY IS NOW PLAN-
NING THE VOYAGE
Two Routes Are Being Considered
Other Nations Will Be Asked For
Consent to Cross
MOTORISTS FIND LUXURIES
Once a Feat For the Expert Is
a Vacation Procedure
Now
STEWARTS WISE TO LIQUOR
New Interpretation of American Law
Makes It Necessary
Washington D C — Ocean steamers
which sailed from foreign ports for
the United States faced the necessity
of carefully computing the amount of
alcoholic beverages on board against
the mileage shown by the ship's daily
log
The last stein and decanter must be
emptied before the ship crosses the
three mile marking the accepted limit
of American maritime Jurisdiction
under an interprettion of the pro-
hibition laws which became effective
Oct 23
Fleets of nine companies temporar
Ily are exempt from operation oi the
law by reason of Injunction proceed-
Ings pending before Federal' Judge
Hand in New York and will be per-
mitted to enter with their wet goods
safely sealed under the system which
prevailed before Attorney General
Daugherty ruled that the elgieeoth
amendment and the Volstead act ap-
plied to American “teiritoiy” as a
whole and not only to the continental
terra firms
Los Angeles Calif — Motorists tour-
ing to Southern California this winter
will find a new service to aid them in
exploiting the varied recreation
grounds Co-operating with the
chambers of commerce which have
dotted Southern California with con-
venient auto camps the Automobile
Club of Southern California with
branches in every sizable town has
added a special department exclusive-
ly for the use of motorists who wish
to find the choicest locations on the
trout streams lakes and hunting
grounds
The new department is under the
direction of an experienced and expert
forester who has been for seven
years with the government making in-
vestigations of fish game and forests
along the Pacific Coast
With the signposting of the high-
ways leading to Los Angeles from the
middle west auto tourist travel has
been increasing almost 100 percent a
year since the war The trans-continental
Journey once a feat for the
expert is now an ordinary vacation
procedure for the average auto driver
The Southern route to California is
open the year round enabling motor
tourists to the land of oranges to in-
dulge in the popular winter pastime
of cross country motoring
BRAND BURNED INTO FACE
Three Men Tie Boy With Wire and
Use Acid on Him
Los Angeles Calif — Surprised while
asleep In his home by three unidenti-
fied men and tied securely with heavy
wire William Sykes a former servioe
man and student at the University
of Callfronla southern branch suffer-
ed agonizing pain recently when the
initials "U S C” were burned upon
his face and neck with a strong nltrlo
acid solution by the men who escaped
immediately after the attack
On the lad’s forehead and neck
long livid scars where the acid ate
into the flesh The Initials “U S C"
are on Sykes’ forehead and neck
while on each side of his face are two
scars from the acid Prompt medi-
cal treatment It is hoped may save
the boy from permanent disfigurement
Washington D C — Tentative plans
for an attempted flight of army air-
planes around the world have been
under consideration for some months
by air service officials It was learned
but the project has not as yet passed
the preliminary survey stage
Valuable data on available routes In
both directions have been obtained
send a considerable aerial squadron on
however and ultimately it is hoped to
the vayage The project will not be
laid before Secretary Weeks for ap-
proval it was said until it takes much
more definite form
Two Routes Considered
Two of the routes considered are
from the Atlantic coast by way of
Iceland and Ireland and that from
the Pacific via Alaska the Aleutian
Islands Siberia and home via Ireland
Iceland Air service officials said the j
route offering the most favorable con-
ditions as to prevailing w-Inds would
be selected should the flightbe or-
dered and it would then become nec-
essary to obtain permission of each of
the countries to be traversed before
the squadron could start
Bakers Bake It For You
—no need to bake at home
HERE’S your old-time ft-
bread You’ve never tasted
finer food Order a loaf now
and count the raisins
Raisin bread It a rare com-
bination of nutritious cereal and
fruit — both good and good for
you Serve at lent twice weekly
to get the benefit!
Ute Sun-Maid for home cook-
ing of puddings cakes cookies
etc
You rnty be offered otber
brands that you know lets well
than Sun-Maids but the kind
you want it the kind you know
It good Insist therefore on
Sun-Maid brand They cost no
more than ordinary raisina
Mail coupon for free book of
tested “Sun-Maid Recipes"
SUN-MAID RAISINS
The Supreme Bread Raisin
Your retailer ahould aell you Sun-
Maid Raisins for not more than the
following prices:
Seeded (in 15 os tint fit) — 20d
Seedless (in 15 os rtd pig) — ISa
Seeded end Seedless (11 flx ) — 15c
Blue Packagt
r
I Sun-Maid Raisin Growers
I Dept N-559-4 Fresno California
I Please send me copy of your free book
"Recipes with Raisins”
Name
j Street
I Crrr Stats
The easiest way to be reconciled to
Sge Is to observe a few young simple-
tons trying to net smart
No great success was ever wore
without bounding vitality that comes:
from good health
$48000 IN GOLD IS FOUND
Kentucky Mountaineer Runs Across
Pot While Digging Pit
DIRIGIBLE MAS ACCIDENT
Sister Ship to C-2 Damaged When It
Crashes Into Hangar
Norfolk Va — While attempting to
get away on a flight to the proving
grounds near Perryville Md the C-14
Crashed into the side of her hangar at
Langley field and tore a wide gap in
her hydrogen inflated bag Army of-
ficials say no one was injured
The C-14 Is a sister ship of the Cyl
recently destroyed by fire at San An-
tonio It is claimed this accident to
the C-14 was in some ways Identical
to that which completely destroyed
the C-2
HUGE LEGACY FOR SOCIETY
Wfcman
Owner of
Southern
Much Property
Republic
in
Reserve Head Seriously III
Dallas Texas — William Itamsey 67
years old federal reserve agent for
the eleventh district Is seriously III
at his home here He became 111
about a week ago but Improved until
recently when he suffered a relapse
The nature of his illness has cot been
announced
BEGGAR HAS FINE SEDAN
When Arrested He Drives To Police
Station With “Cop”
U S Revenue Agent Dies
Chattanooga Tenn — George Glenn
Draper 38 federal revenue agent in
charge of the enforcement of narcotic
laws In Tennessee died at his home
bere of pneumonia
Armenians Loyal to Kemal
Constantinople— The vicar of the
Armenian patriarches here raid an of-
ficial call upon Rafet Pasha the new-
ly appointed military governor of
Thrace and expressed the loyalty of
the Armenian community toward the
Kemallst government
New York N Y — Fred Hammlil
legless mendicant arrested on Fifth
avenue while soliciting aims drove
his astonished custodian to police
station in a flve-pasenger sedan
which he said he had had especially
built for him at a coat of $8000
At police station Hammlil said that
his home was in South Dakota and
that he had traveled from city to city
in his special car which Is equipped
with sleeping and cooking facilities In
night court Hammlil produced cash
ball of $100 pending a bearing
El Paso Tex — A legacy of $4329-
475 has been left to the private bene-
ficlent society of Mexico City by Mrs
Isabel Pesado De JHer who died re-
cently in Paris France according to
a telegram received at the El Paso
Mexican consulate
The society was notifed by a pro-
bate court of Paris of the bequest
which is to be used In public charity
work
Mexican Consul Thomas Oreozco Jr
of El Paso said Mrs Pesado De Mler
owned much property In Mexico
Million and Quarter Killed
New York N Y — A million and a
quarter Christians are all that remain
in Asia Minor of the pre-war Christian
population of three and a half millions
It is revealed in estimates of a League
of Nations commission of Inquiry call-
ed to the Near East relief headquar
ters here
Packing Firm Offers Bonds
New York N Y — A syndicate
headed by the Central Trust company
of Illinois announced the offering
of a $5000000 Issue of first mortgage
20 year sinking fund six percent
bonds of the Jacob F Dol nacking
company Tb bona will be offered
at par
Rail Payment la Ordered
Washington D C — Payment of
000000 to the Chicago Rock Island
and Pacific railroad In partial settiw
ment of government liabilities arising
out of the war time government con-
trol of the railroads was authorized by
the interstate commerce commission
Rail Bridge la Burned
Corsicana Texas — Fire of unknown
origin recently destroyed five spans
of the Trinity river bridge of the SL
Louis-Southwestern railway Just east
of Corsicana The loss la estimated
at $100000
Somerset Ky — David Jones a
mountaineer is classed as rich by hill
country standards Jones while dig-
ging a pit for a saw mill in the rural
section of Thomas county sank his
pick into the top of a pot He pulled
It out and there in orderly rows was
a great mass of gold
Trembling with excitement he hur-
ried home and counted It The money
was In ancient English pieces Jones
did not know of what value He called
on an expert from the state banking
department who assured him his find
was worth $48000 in American gold
Jones had thought the gold about $12-
000 He was informed that if he kept the
money twelve months and no one ap-
peared who could prove ownership it
would be liis -
It is believed the money was secret-
ed there by bandits more than 100
years ago This section was the lair
of a gang that preyed upon the people
A million men
have turned to
One Eleven
Cigarettes
—a firm verdict for
superior quality
PLANE GLIDES 3 HOURS
Two New Records Are Set In Competi-
tive ’Test
New Haven England — Two new
records for gliding were established
In the competition at Itford Hill re-
cently Flying without passenger the
French aviator Maneyrolle remained
In the air for three hours 21 minutes
thus beating by 11 minutes the record
made In Get man competitions recently
by P P Henzen of the Hanover Tech-
nical school Manyeroll ewon a 1000
pound prize by his feat
Extraordinary ability was shown
by the Frenchman in spite of ever
changing winds He occasslonally
glided Into dangerous eddies
The other record was In flight with
a passenger In this competition G
R Olley gliding In a Fokker biplane
remained in the air for 49 minutes or
36 mlnuteB longer than the best prev-
ious record
cigarettes
tLjL
DeValera Heads New Government
London England — According to ad-
vices from Dublin the republican
party haa announced the formation of
new government In Ireland with
Eamonn DeValera as president
Facta and Cabinet Quit
Rome Italy — Premlei Facta and
his entire ministry resigned following
the bostlle attitude of the fascist!
against It and the ordering by the
tasclBtl of a general mobilization of
tta forces throughout the country If j
the cabinet declined to give up power j
Save Money
fit On Overalls
Long wnf considered KEY Overalls
ad Work Pants are the cheapest work gar-
ment you can buy Best Quality material
and workmanehip throughout Cut for com
fort Satisfaction guaranteed or your money
back If your dealer la out of your site write
THB McKEY MFO CO
Kansas City Mo
IFY0URSutter's"
VETERINARIAN:
Serums and Vaccines bets
doing iu best to conserve your
I interests 25 years
concentration on
one line count fa(
something
The Cutter Laboratory
Tkt iiiirotiy that faei
Berkeley (UL boose) Calif ora le
iMERa'KCLYiTH1!
1 — n- NEW YORK N Y Lj
2opt a oe
ft ft astti as
ava-
? —
as wsur-lry U At all rood dragfUte A eenta
r direct from HESMC-ELLU Im
W N U Oklahoma City No 44-1922
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Allen, J. S. The Albion Advocate (Albion, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, November 3, 1922, newspaper, November 3, 1922; Albion, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2324199/m1/2/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.