Okmulgee Daily Democrat (Okmulgee, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 157, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 2, 1922 Page: 4 of 18
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4
GkMuLGfefi BAtLV bfiMGGftAY &t)tt&AY(Jt)LY S
‘ PAGE POUR— A
Okmulgee Daily Democrat
Published by th Okmulge Democrat Publish'd Co
Vvory Afternoon ticcpt Saturday and Sunday Moifctng
Cntrrd a Second Claw Matter at the Post Office la
Okmulgee Oklahoma Under Aot of March I 1079
Foreign Kepreaentatlvaat
Win D Ward Tribune Building Mew York
Robert E DourIm 745 Marquette Building Chicago
SUBSCRIPTION BY CARRIERS
In Okmulgee and all county town 16 cento per week W
cent per month 0760 per year
Firat Zone IB 00 All other Zone S6 00 per year
MID-CONTINENT OIL AND FARM NEWS
(Weidtly Kditon of Democrat) 01 00 per year
The Associated Press la exclusively entitled to the uC for
pubffention of all new dispatches credited to It or not
otherwise credited In thia paper and also the local newa
published herein
Telephone— Bualneaa Office PS Editorial Dept 1100
I
r
For Governor
IION J C WALTON
of Oklahoma City
UNFAIR METHODS OF ATTACK
That portion of the press in Oklahoma un-
alterably opposed to the nomination and elec-
tion of Mayor Walton as governor of this
state persist in putting their own construc-
tion upon the Walton program in utter vio-
lence of its true meaning and in wanton dis-
regard of the sense in which the program is
understood and advocated by Mayor Walton
As instances of the unfair methods adopted
in this campaign of abuse and malice two
planks of the Shawnee platform 'are pointed
out with virtuous horror by the hostile press
as the acme of anarchy I W Wism and red-
cardism The planks are these:
“We favor laws to relieve tenantry on the
farm and in the city by placing the credit of
the state back of an effective home-ownership
law”
“We favor laws to establish a state bank
which shall be' a depository of the funds of
the state and its subdivisions”
What is there anarchistic or socialistic
about a public policy which has for its ob-
“Those who profess to see in the nomina-
tion and election of Mayor Walton a menace
ject inducements and proper aids to worthy - to the vested interests of the state are singu-
men to acquire their own homes? Does the
ownership of a home tend to make a man dis-
satisfied and indolent? Is the ownership of
real estate an inducement to violence and
public disorder? Is it a menace to the peace
and tranquility of society? “Will a man fight
for a boarding house or a shack on a rented
farm?” It is Mayor Walton who asks the
question Is it bolshevism to use the credit
of the state in the interest 'of the man who
desires to acquire a home and conservatism
to lend the credit of the United States to the
railroads and banks of the country?
If indeed this be bolshevism then it is the
bolshevism of Democratic party which has
already enacted just such a measure as May-
or Walton advocates in this plank Both of
i- o — — — — jgr and the Turkn are obvious and 600
Mayor Walton s opponents for the nomina- sense we should say But it will not be easily vr" of domination by the latter did not
tion on the Democratic ticket are committed digested by those who want an inner circle H‘rve "alieat- Tl"'re B al-n-“:t
to the very same principle Why is it empiri- to control the state— Tulsa Tribune
cism and anarchy when advbcated by Walton o
and sound statesmanship when advocated by Mayor J C (Jack) Walton of Oklahoma
both of his opponents? All that Mayor Wal- City Democrat candidate for governor will i bJSTr 'ion fiha?
ton means by the plank to relieve tenantry speak in Tishomingo tomorrow afternoon at Rumanian! to II
on the farm and in the city is vitalization of 2:00 p m His first stop in the county will ”
the law already on the statute books of Ok- be at Mannsville where he speaks at 11 a m
Jahoma His talk will be made at-Milburn at 4:30 and
It is easier to understand why there should Wapanucka at 6:00 p m Advance men for
be evidences of alarm manifested by the inter- Mr Walton here yesterday stated that Jack
'ests behind the newspapers in question on the Walton was a sure winner and that the “jazz”
second plank The source of alarm is cer- band he carries with him insures a good
tain banks in Oklahoma City and elsewhere crowd wherever he goes So far as we know
which heretofore have exercised proprietary there are only three or four Walton meft
right over the millions of state funds peddled here but evidently there are more As we
out to them for building up of a political ma- have stated a number of times we do not be-
chme When Mayor Walton favors the plac- lieve all the propaganda which is being circu-
ing of this money not in the big political lated about Walton but there is one thing
banks but equitably with country and city sure if he is nominated this paper will sup-
banks throughout the state port him In the primary we shall support
Is there anything unsafe or unsound or either Owen or Wilson but we know nothing
particularly anarchistic about that? It is against Mr Walton and take no stock in all
true it will seem so to the favored political this mess calculated to prejudice 1 people
banks of the state but we are unable to see against him— Johnstone County Democrat
CHEMICAL CONTRACTS
AND PATENTS ORDERED
RETURNED BY HARDING
WASHINGTON Tulv 1— -Instruction
re issued today by President Hurtling
that a demand be made on the Chemical
Foundation IcM for immediate return
to the government of all patent trade
narks copyright contract and other
property transferred to it by alien prop-
er! v custodiau of the Wilnon adminia-
tmtion The instruction contained in letter
written v Mr Harding to Thomas W
Miller alien proKrty custodian wa
wholly nnexiiected although the Chemical
Foundation numerous time ha been tin
dcr the fira of ltepublican members of
congress
PRESIDENT HARDING
SIGNS ABOUT 20 BILLS
WASHINGTON Jnly I — President
Harding today signed about 20 hills
passed by eongreiw Just before the house
adjournment the most Important among
them being the annual naval appropria-
tion hill at the deficiency appropriation
measure
AMEMCAN MVMIONAftfK
ARK ORDERED TO LEAVE
ADANA Tarkey Jotr 2— Krmaf Pa
aha head of the national!! government at
agora ha Issued orders that all Ameri-
can mi— inwariea resident In Cilieia dis-
continue their wort aad learc the fona
pi iauneriialcljr
SACKS ASKS NOMINATION
OF G O P FOR SENATOR
(Bv the A—! frm1
ST LOI’IH July I— William Sacks
local hauler and reputed wealthy oil
operator opened bla campaign her to-
day for the Mepubliean nomination for
Mir t'nited State eenate with a revere
criticism of United State Senator Helilen
I Spencer of Missouri whom he termed
the “national Joke in Waidiington a
welt aa in St lamia” in ref err in to the
aenatnr'e activity on behalf of Nat t u!d-
atein and during the Newberry election
content in the aruate
VERDICT OP MURDER AND
HI iriltR KKTl HNKII IN
DEATH OP TKVNKNNKB COLTMfi
CHICAGO July I — A verdict of mur-
der ami aulcide wa returned by a cur-
uner'a Jury which today investigated the
death of George E Haas Chattanooga
Tenfl and Mrs Evelyns Ran hia wile
Itana nhot hia wife here yesterday and
the killed himself Samuel B Kraus
father af Mra Bam waa the principal
wltnem He declared Bam wa mentally
unbaianred and raid hia daughter had
been unhappy with him
NEGRO SLAYER OF
WOMAN IS SOUGHT
BEAUMONT Texs July 1— Hun-
dred! of men are aiding city and coun-
ty official la aearrh for I nrgnt who to-
night fatally ahot Mra Fannie Goldatein
47 ami then robbed her atore of about
fTS Nn tram ef Uw negra baa been
ion ad late tonight
where the country banker or the ordinary
taxpayer is put in jeopardy by being given
access to the public funds on the same terms
as the “insiders”
Mayor Walton is merely endeavoring to
enforce in a practical and effective manner
an axiom of human conduct that appears to
be more honored in the breach than in the
keeping— “Thou shalt not steal”
We have no doubt the same newspapers
and especially their backers will find this
axiom dangerous to the very foundations of
liberty — their liberty
o—
BITTER MEDICINE
The nomination of Lynn J Frazier for the
United States senate over Porter J McCumber
in the Republican primaries in North Dakota
hands another jolt to the stand-pat Republi-
can administration and tends to take the
wind out of the sales of certain Oklahoma
newspapers who have bden 'exhibiting the
cadaver of North Dakota to the electorate
of Oklahoma as a horrible example of the re-
sults of bolshevism
However it is to be accounted for a ma-
jority of the Republicans of North Dakota
have deliberately rehabilitated and endorsed
for the United States senate a man whom
two years ago they recalled as governor of
the state
One of two things would appear to be true
Either the results of the domination of the
state by the Non-Partisan League have not
been so baleful to the common weal as report
would indicate or the great majority of
North Dakota Republicans are willing to
stand for anything rather than another term
for the membership of the present Republi-
can congress
It is bitter medicine in certain quarters
either way you look at it
o
larly myopic of vision — blind to danger from
any source” says the OKMULGEE DEMO-
CRAT “It will not be contended that the
administration of government in the recent
years has bden in the hands of revolutionists
or political pragmatists But the credit of
the state broke down and the savings of the
people have been lost or squandered It was
neither the farjner nor the laboring man that
brought Oklahoma to its present state Noth-
ing in the platform of the radical political
policy that is before the people of this state
could have done the state as much harm as it
has suffered for some reason at the hands
of the conservative business men and bank-
ers who have been administering its affairs”
Rather plain English and eminent common
14 PERSONS INJURED
IN STREET CAR WRECK
EAST ST LOUIH 111 July 1— Four-
teen peraona were injured tliia afternoon
when a trailer of a two-car Intrrurban
Hooted train cralird into a girder on the
“stern approach to the Karin bridge
which apan the Miaaiaaippl A break in
the front aile of the trailer rauaed the
accident the crew reorted
PEASANTS GET FIRST
VIEW OP HOME OP CZARS
MOSCOW June 6 —Three hundred
members of the ail Kuaaian central execu-
tive committee the parliament of Hun
ain montly peaaanta and workmen recent-
ly had their firat glimpae of the magnift
cent quartern in which the Clara lived
when in Muemw
SWEDISH RFSlVpSS MEN
SEEK BROKERAGE BUSINESS
STOCKHOLM Jane 10— Swediak tml
nem men ohaerrlng that American com-
mercial batmen barn to emptey middle-
men in dealing with Bamiaa concern
ana inter ted in the pamtbllKy of cap
turing thia later "
BULGARIA TO TAX '
WKAt-mS P LUXURIES
SOFIA Bulgaria Jane S — Balgarta
cnanldera Start oktrtn rilk atacklaga pa
sols aad notary Hixarien aad bet
forth wen rent ef thaac artMes will
tased M beam pep- -1 on carrying
cmn trlS km (fnfU mm g pear-
THE CAMPAIGN FOR CONTRIBUTIONS IS NOW OPEN
“A country largely of pcaitantft acorn-
fill of IiIIciiohn ana protcnne yet producer
of whut in irr)iaift( the world beat
known nymbol of luxury attar of
Much” May a bulletin from thg Wash-
ington ! O headquarter of the Na-
tional geographic Society "i Bulgaria”
The country ha recently come into the
nubile eye and It agrarian character ha
been more ntrongly eniphaixcd by the
meeting in Nofia the capital of a emi-
gre of email farmer to diaeu the tak-
ing of even more radical atop toward
making Bulgaria etill more truly a “peas-
ant state” '
VJttte In Common With Neighbors
“Bulgaria” ontinue the bulletin "1
often conNidcrcd merely one of the Bal-
kan tttnte’ But whatever its fault and
it virtue it certainly i not colorle
and it fully deaerve to stand on it own
feet The difference between the Bui-
How the Beautiful Little Hti—itng Bird '
- Feed o the Hoey hi Flowers
'ToHlRjr tm ffofac to tell you abort
fh running Itttl humming bird you
children hav noticed in tha garden"-
announced Aunt Dee at story telling
time
"Oh I arr w glad Aunt Dee" aWl
France' "! love to watch the tunny
little thing The other afternoon
Horace warVmktng at the rosea with
me and a humming bird flew near tta
nd he didn't know what It waa I
think he thought It was a be fee
looked so frightened"
"Humming bird do make a noise
like a bee don't they Aunt DeeT"
arked Happy
"Tea dear the little tiny wings work
so fast that they make a bussing
sound much like the droning be But
Horae should not be afraid of beta
Rome day we will have our story about
them os that he will understand aad
not he afraid any longer"
"Aunt Dee do humming birds eat
only honey from the flowers? And
en they Itve on Just thatT" asked
Tom
“For a long tlma Tam” anawsnsl
Aunt TVs -people thought thay M
I've an hnney a Iona but now ft haa
' been proved that they alia oat tnoects
nd the aweet p which woodpechru 1
4raw from the maple and blech Of
Tur‘- honey forms large part of
their ftot
"Their long beak lets them ptires
far Into-the flower tod their rtsft
tongue acta like a tube throuah which
thev pump out the honey limp gu
rauth for the winter and follow the
flower north 'aguln'eu they tils—
when spring and summer eomeu"
"Aren't they aehMtlmdu Used eu heft
In cases Aunt Boor naked rranmo
“Tea dear they are easy to tamo
ft does not take kmg to make thorn
fret et home end etmeBy oftsg tlmtr
rapture they wul feed ee the haesy
ItmiL" tM ' kaM
“I wish a meld have kddlhe Me
we sew In the garden ft a pet Auet
Dec exclaimed Happy
“Mom Happy that tittle trammlx
bbd had a mmlly watting pig him
bow the little mothor Mod m-t
enough to liava brought about friendship
or I anting co-operation In a phrase the
Bulgam are ‘Slava who are different’
“The -very name ‘Hulgar' ia of non-
Slavic origin It wan brought in by Tutar
ennquemra from miutlicrn Russia in OTIi
Relatively few in number the Bulgam
merged themselves with the Slava and
adopted the Slavic language and customs
They were but the apice which haa given
the Slavic Bulgarians of today the flavor
that differeutiatta them from their
brother Slava Their contribution to Bul-
garian character accma to have been cool-
ness practicalness and tenacity i
1 Farms Kept Small By law
- “Agriculture ban always held firat
place in the life of the Bulgarians Turk-
ish domination for half a millennium
made farm nig still more general among
tlio Bulgara for practically no urher call-
ing wa left open to them By weeding
out the upier classes too the Turkn
made Bulgarian agriculture more and
more a peasant aetfrity And now by
legislation tlife Bulgarians 'themselves are
emphasizing farming on a email scale
A national law limits the estate that aa
individual may bold to a maximum of
about 74 acres and bioat of the holdings
are much smaller Another law alma to
abolish a leisure class by requiring all
adults between pertain ages to work The
peasant are now almost completely in
control of the political machinery with
one of their number holding the premier-
ship and with a marked majority in the
cabinet and the national assembly -
With the Children
rmJ V : V
’Bout Her Knees
Aunt DeeTells—
hare worried if he waver ewae heme
gain” e
"That la trust Aunt Dsn t Ntllv
hadn't thought ef that and then It
there were no pretty btrde flying
around the garden It wouldn't be
nice at all whuld ItT"
“No dear tt oeeme cruel to house
tho little birds that hav been need
to freedom It to dlffwent If they
hay been born to captivity like Dicky
But now children which ana of you
have evsp oeea a huaunln bird's
fleet?"
Tom thought he 'had so Aunt Dae
dud hha to toR thu ether what It
wae Ilka o —
-Well” said Torn'! remember
tTnole Ned showing ma ewa and tt v
aeems to me tt was Very email and -that
you could hardly am It II lookad
eo fnnrh like the breach at the tree It
wee on" -
“Tm deor'they are eery punning to '
making their nests ee they are hard -to
see ” as Id Aunt Dew "And they
I°ve Ipelr dear little baby Mrds eo
meet! that ahhoagh they are as tlay
tkmahw they are Wuvu saeugh am
j R they think they evea fly i
ey have amde for t
iS’SrSAVffSUSSZ
that pooooah face They pretoaf Maid
yowixf m a woMmful way - -
"Ttummlag Mrds hardly atooo Hha -
hind" TTr "-"Tt
hooauaaMey awo bs ttny 7
Iwll S0f Inmn Cfegg nn thSAe eM
In a dlfMroat way May asam fe ' '
e hfrda Aaaf Dee
- - a - - WW
to ted tl
su tia tf
the pretty Itttlo MrA 1
' la Mefeat Hoop dw4 Mw
BY MORRIS
“Bulgaria long suffered not only from
the tyranny of the non-lTiriatian Turk
but also from' the diplomatic intrigues of
the Christian powers of Europe Russia
liberated the country from the Turkish
yoke by the Bnsso-Titrkish war of 1877-
78 and proposed to set it up as an inde-
pendent nation with considerably more
territory than It lias today But other
govern fearful of a strong state In tne
alkans compelled the transfer of areas
to adjacent states divided the territory
that waa left into Bulgaria and Eastern
llunielia and placed both back under the
suzerainty of Turkey Bulgi
independent princiiiailty elt
for Its rule
Bulgaria a acml-
elected a Ger-
man prince for ita ruler and remained
much as it was created for seven years
Then by a coup d’ etst Eastern llunielia
was aunexed to the principality an an1
rangcinent accepted by Turkey Full In-
deiiendence came only in 1IN18 when th
then Prince Ferdinaml proclaimed himaelf
tsar like tha Bulgarian rulers of the
country’s ancient golden age
Poor Leadership Daring War
“Poor leadership during the last decade
has given Bulgaria p had name with
much of the outside world After the
war in which Bulgaria Herbia and Greece
defeated Turkey in 11112 there was a
war over the spoils between Bulgaria end
the other former ollica with Kumonia
finally intervening against Bulgaria The
responsibility fr this conflict whether
rightly or wrongly has generally been
laid at the door of Bulgaria During the
War perhaps largely beeausa of
the Holirnxnllem blood of the Bulgarian
tsar Bulgaria lined up with Germany
Austria and Turkey But tha present
premier was opnoeed to this atep and was
imprisoned becmine of his apposition His
attitude probahiy reflected that of hia
party which is now overwhelmingly in
power -
“Thera la a temptation to consider Bul-
garia touching Greece an it doea a south-
ern country But its latitude ia apnroxi-
nwtely fbkt of Iowa Ita area i om dent-
ally la some 12000 square miles leas than
that of Iowa The principal port Varna
on tho Black Hes Is farther north than
Boston and Ita harbor Is often froxea In
winter The southern portion 'of the
country however becomes very hot In
summer
“Though Bulgaria produces the usoal
grains fruits tobacco and lire stark
of its part of the world It is best known
for Its extensive raltnre of roses for
the manufacture of tha famous and valu-
able attar of roses The number of acres
of roses cultivated for this purpose In
Bulgaria baa approached 200m An
acre produces about 4000 pounds af rose
petals but this great balk of petals
yield only about 20 ounces of attar The
salable product front a whole aero Is
therefore little more t than one pound
Thin much-sought f senes however is
worth from too up per pound in Bulgaria
and many times mors than that la for-
eign countries"
ddNM
v a
T rs 1 tm
r via I
f r
"rL
Mtial Acsocexst
(Paid Political Advertlaement)
DEMOCRATIC TICKET a
For Congress I I
y w Hastings
of Tahlequahi -s'
For Corporation Commissioner
FRANK CARTER A
Tillman County 1 '
For Treasurer j
HENRY S TUCKER 1
of Okmulgee N
For the Legislature
JOSEPH P ROSSITER
of Henryetta
For Representative
DR A H CULP J
of Beggs ”
For District Judge
CHARLES A DICKSON j
of Okmulgee i ’ 7
For Constable j
RM HULSEY fli
f ' Of Okmulgee
KKIM BLU'AN TICKET
For Count? Judge
y HUGH MURPHY
I
of Okmulgee (
FOB RE-ELECTION
Happenings of the
Long Ago Retold
- c —a
Twelve Twi Aga Today
(From th Democrat's Fuss)
J C Hill on of the Monty Jailer
reifnd handing hia retignstlos to
Sheriff Vane to take effect u soon as
hi eucceiuior I appointeds
William V Wilson left for Be no N'er
to see the Jrffri-Johuon bout
Okmnlgee won the third etraigbt shot-
out feme from Muskogee thereby becom-
ing entitled to the amateur championship
of the state
A camping party composed of the fol-
lowing young peonleeft for Flat Roek
to remain until after the Fourth : Mimes
Nina and Nelt Robinson Lula Barr
Ellxnbeth Clark Ray Moore Htan F
E Htorm Fred Tdncll MulhaB Earle
Wright Harry DeVInnn Hariaod Read
They will be chaperoned by Mrs Btoda
- ' ' Tea Yeara Ac ' ‘
Governor Woodrow Wihma waa nom-
inated aa the candidate of the Deonocratie
party for president at Baltimore ou tbs
46tb ballot 1
Mlaa Eva Rnnaell announeed bar can-
didacy lift tha office of ragiater at Saadi
- Dr O A Lambert' retnrsed frum a
trip to the north and east baring at-
tended both national coarenUoaa
Wm
T3AVCLER3 GUJD3
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11 to Mm Mltdllf(ltdH 9M fe to
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Ilf i fMl Wrife eiMdttteii f M to III
- - toM toM
Ff to Emfefe eeeeeeeeteMiM I lift fe Ik '
M to IwMIg to to
fed hfeimi eteaedetdtddO 41 gk to
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®to j mteeeleiMett ftriV fe
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Okmulgee Daily Democrat (Okmulgee, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 157, Ed. 1 Sunday, July 2, 1922, newspaper, July 2, 1922; Okmulgee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2327718/m1/4/?q=frisco+collin+co+tx: accessed June 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.