The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, March 21, 1919 Page: 4 of 8
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IHERE "THERE
WORLD WWt M MUO
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♦ ♦ ♦ Md bg»:i up utot ito <|>ur
A 'h^bae lb Ito •llim4« tol tto Ufll -t »»r * »nr.>|h l'|t»rtil»l b»»t I,
ito «o»«rt>»eiJt frgMdiitc ito plan tu fifth of ito *niitr .r* auitii to»
•isk inivrnto UwriMii • to* *"**'' * I »urM anil r«mi-ri»cj Id
ton t*»Or«*l tine* ito rviain of Itr 1cr fr0t of all »M|>* titaiing ftotst
j«l»f Uto4 (tow to litu ll now • l'WN Ht*i»# port* a* wltii
«H*«f« prwtoble that in*tva4 of ito ^" tor f*#l tofori> th« er«al war
M*>ru**b <•» afi to inn *unk tlroat llriiain 1 ♦ ♦ +
will to willitif tu permit |*ranr« an4 Compl#llon of ihi* p«T*onnt>| of ih»' n*,»rM' tolm •« whlrb ihf
Italy lo lt<*«p m>8» of tto »hl|i#. bm Munrial bewrj of thr lxr|Mrtttu tit of * 'r,n *l'Ilf"i»rhp4 <h«t town of K|i>k-
will ron**t>t to •ink tor own »IJofc jCommorco. togoibto »Ub tho plan* of; n,,,u?r '* ,,bu^' " "'N* lo ,hw wwi.
ui«nt f the boanl for ha*tenit>i tho prlre* of
♦ ♦ ♦ f '•**! «»<i w»«e* to normal wa* an
With lb* French pr»ml#r i midlm nount-«Hl rntnilt thn>UKb ih« vounitj
•nd Lan*tns »nil t olonH Hou*e i»p- «mUoimI drfenae.
♦ + +
SOUTHWEST.
A petition ri-queatlng a rer«-|v#r»hlp honoa and hrul*ca
for the Zook k Zook Ur« stock Com- Tho damage la eatlmnted at over
niualoa Company ha* been filed In ■' I2«o.000. More than a half dozen
the federal court at K*n»an City by atore bulldingx and 25 renldence,!
H. S. Grant. \V. P. Grant and A. E. i were destroyed.
rvaenting the l'nlt»d State*, the __
prente war council lia* taken definite i
atepa lo put Germany forever beyond (
the hope of obtaining military domi-
nation over the world.
♦ + +
Among the Incidental matter* under
T*
M IIMI** •«* | „
I* ih«l atakl u» ota*
wat. MJxrwl Itorr
tto *«Mt*a *tta« a tto *«MbwM»i«ft.
PMtof ahd to^to # KHtla* M*
fotltih of « miti, «)a|v a« tuw in*
• wtittiy m 4 aurltoaaicrty 4lrwi|i«
a . . I ''** iw frank J*rto«4i, tm ivm
t".».«-« M » ^£JSrS?T,S'i{l^0!'r
•Ilk .k. * * v •"••ra at* J II Ktrfiaiia. J H
I Koliwllg. t, iu* Mr&taban. aad
' Charlie Hala<e««|.
Monumant ••v«*n Oe«*n.
The munumetit al llM grava of A.
J. Heay. urn* governor 'f Uklahoma
larrltory, a a* blown doan. and ito :
total damage to the t«twimry la mh|- i
mated a' 92 ««h».
The noareat p<dRI .It •hlrb the j
Death* At Porter. Two.
' Coweta.—The death liat at Porter,
j near here ataml* at n»-o. one of the
! Injured may *||«. Hn.pitala at Mua-
; k..gee are aiih with Injured, but mo*t
of the Injnrle* constat of broken
P
toll"
SflllMM III nira**toig wa>IU.g l»f Itotr d»*Jj iai»*«% A«M*>og itotn ale a ntuator of laen In aufctor*
K. OF C. WAGON TRAIN FOB AMERICAN SOLDIERS
?e NUpren,e.rTi",i r8,»e™ °t I've atoclt. The "con." i
nprovemento'f iXidra^lwa^ u'Vl0'.lh*'"r«,f'1 "v« •,ock ™!n?'nd R'Ln McAlester.
the Improvement of porta and railway
and telegraph systems In Austria.
Eastern Germany and parts of Kussia.
The council probably will recommend
that the Allies supply essential ma-
terials for this work to the amount of
approximately 100 million dollars.
. + + +
The supreme council expects to set-
tle the difficulty over the German
merchant ships, by arranging for the
firms in Kansas City. I McAlester.—The storm otruck Pitts-
+ + + { hur* county at midnight doing thous-
\\ itn score.* of spectators from the | ands of dollars worth of damage
American side as invited guests, Mex- j Trees wore uprooted, i-mall houses
lean military officials hanged eight [and sheds overturned, signs blown
Mexican outlaws on the banks of the down and torn loose from their moor-
Rio Grande near San Benito, Tex., re- ings. plate glass windows blown in
cent,v- :»nd electric lights, telephone and
+ + + j telegraph wires leveled.
The much sought after place of! The storm came from the south-
food supplies' asked foV to Ge'rmanv" r^!!l VuT, .°°"""l8s'on,er in the j west and was accompanied by one of
which the American delegation regard' 15 Shh 1» h °h I T?! downpours of rain in
as part of the armistice pledge to Ger-! L? wm * l° ^iNl?ia"y yef8- an inch ot rain falling
? "ain ^• Hill, a young attorney pf Mc-1 in less than a half hour. All told.
Alester, by Judge R. L. Williams, for- j the fall of rain a mounted to nearly
mer governor of Oklahoma and newly i two inches during the night.
appointed federal judge of this district. | An odd feature of tho storm was
+ + + the way it treated the "White Way"
— •—i Orders countermanding the demo-' in McAlester. Every one of the lights
val 1ft «s ♦ ri' 00 Saturda>'; I bolizatlon of practically all the organ-: and globes on the north side of the
May 10. Secretary Glass announced izations at Post Field have been re- Btreet were blown off as If removed
:rt,°fher r\h thf faet th«t;cived. the adjutant at Post Field by an expert. No loss of life resuS
short term notes maturing in not over 8tated. Only the balloon detachment
five years would be issued instead of | 0f 160 men is to be completely de- Two Injured By Storm at Crun.
mobilized. Paris, Texas—Mrs. Sidney Cun-
+ + + ningham, and little son, -were brought
Kansas state officials in the United |to a hospital here suffering from in-
states Supreme Court have attacked
the authority of Postmaster General
Burleson to fix intrastate as well as
f..r a.Swi'SSUSr.?
GRAVES OF U. S. AVIATORS IN FRANCE I PRESIDENT'S NEW GRANDSON
many.
+ + +
WASHINGTON.
The Victory Liberty loan campaign j
will open on Monday, April 21. and :
longer term bonds.
■fr + +
The number of telephones In use in
the United States at the close of the
calendar year 1917 was 11,713,228—
one to ®'<ry nine persons, or every „ulrcaull lo lu mtrasiaie
two families—and the number of calls interstate telephone rates,
made during the year is estimated at ...
.... i -P + -p
21,842 million.
4- -P -P
One man was killed and four in-
jured severely at Worcester, Mass.,
when a barrel of naphtha exploded
at the plant of the Baldwin Chain and
FOREIGN.
juries received in a windstorm at
Crum, Okla. The mother suffered a
j broken leg and collar bone and the
boy a broken arm.
Details of the storm were not avail-
able.
Three German steamers captured
by Allied warships for violation of the
armistice terms have arrived at Dun-
kirk, France, for internment. The
— fc"v ^/aiuniu vuuju »uu ....... .uuvv, i "i unci uu1ciii. 1 lit?
Manufacturing Company on Chandler steamers are the Italia, Mercur and
street. The property loss was slight. Pluto.
+ + +
Secretary Glass, acting under au-
thority conferred by the Victory Lib-
erty Loan Act, has issued an order re-
opening to holders of converted bonds
of the first Liberty Loan and of bonds
of the second Liberty Loan the privi
Britons Downed 8,000 Hun Planes.
London.—During the war 8,000
enemy airplanes were shot down by
the British air forces, while 2.S00
British machines were missing, Brig-
I adier General J. E. B. Se'ely announc-
. . ^ .. e(i in the house of commons in intro-
An invitation has been sent to all I ducing the army's estimates of $33*-
the neutral nations in Europe, Asia 500.000. General Seely said if the war
and South Amerioa, asking them to had continues the estimate would
attend a private and unofficial con- have been $10,000,000 000 When the
ference in Paris on Thursday, March I added, England was turning out 4M0
20, with the object of giving neutrals | airplanes a month and had 200 squad
f'9
Photo
Newspaper
Graves of American aviators at Chierry
rftted by the French.
Aisne, France, that were deco-
YANKEE HEROES EMBARK FOR HOME
__ _ „ — " a»a -w, liTuirais , ftirpianrs a monrn ana had 200 squad-
lege of having their bonds converted an opportunity to express their views j rons in commission compared to six
into 4M. per cent bonds. TIipkp two1 on the Leaeup nf VaHnn= 1
into 4*4 per cent bonds. These two
classes of bonds now bear interest at
4 per cent.
+ + +
Mail matter seized since the sign-
ing of the armistice has disclosed that
the I. W. W., Anarchists, radical So-
cialists and others are "perfecting an
amalgamation" which has for its ob-
ject the overthrow of the American
government through a "bloody revo-1
Jution" and the establishment of a
Bolshevist republic.
4* + +
DOMESTIC.
Railroad executives and govern-
ment representatives have laid the
foundation for the machinery through
which loans on banks and the War
finance Corporation will be made
available to railroads during the next
on the League of Nations.
+ + +
The Polish National Assembly, ac-
cording to a dispatch from Warsaw,
has approved by a unanimous vote, a
law calling to military service the
| classes from 1891 to 1896. inclusive,
j It is expected that the measure will
! provide Poland with an army of 600,.
I 000 men.
+ + +
Queen Marie of Rumania may soon ;
| visit the United States. Whether the
| trip will be made before or after the 1
conclusion of the Peace Conference,
has not been decided. The queen re
centlv left Paris for London.
*f* 4* *#•
President and Mme. Poincare gnv<j
a luncheon at the Palace D'Elysee the
other day in honor of Queen Marie ot
Rumania and her daughters. The
at the beginning of the war.
Fleeing U-boat Sunk.
Paris.—The German submarine U-
48. while attempting to escape from
j Ferrol. Spain, was chased by a des-
troyed and sunk. The U-48 took ref-
uge at Ferrol in March. 1918. and was
interned. The attempted flight of the
U-boat was observed and the torpedo
boat destroyed Antato pursued her.
The German boat was sunk outside
the Ferrol roads. The crew was
saved.
26.798 Officers On Reserve.
Washington.—Officers ?nd men de-
mobilized number 1.419..t««!. the war
department announced. 8S.774 being
in the commissioned grades. Dis-
charge has been order.-1 for a total
arauauie io ranroaus curing tne next me of officers apt. vine '„r re
few months in lieu of the funds which tb* serve commissions total 26 79« '
rnmrr»*t faiicH tn nwtvUo tial mansion with military honors.
In preparing* plat, ftr the emplo, ' At"nt,' Fire" j
r ■ ' Atlanta. Ga —Damage estimated by j
at approximately
. This is the first photograph taken
of President Wilson's grandson and
namesake. Woodrow Wilson Sayre,
who was born to Mrs. Francis Sayre,
the youngest daughter of the presi-
dent. Mr. Wilson paid his little grand-
son a visit at Philadelphia en route to
New York, where he took the George
Washington for France. The photo-
graph shows little Woodrow and his
nurse, Miss Ruth Swisher.
Sound Advice.
The senior major of a British regi-
ment was giving the benefit of his ad-
I vice and experience to a youthful
sub.
"See here." he exclaimed, "this •»
your first dinner, and, well, go ensv
with the decanter, ray boy. Remem-
ber esprit de corps, and—er—and al!
that sort of thing. Here's n good tip.
See those silver candlesticks there?
When you can see four Instead of twa
—why, clear out. go home. See?"
"Perfectly, and thanks awfully," re-
plled the young officer, "but don't you
think you hnd better go home at
once? There's only one candlestick."
—Ideas.
Congress failed to provide
+ 1r +
General Pershing has been author-
ized by the War Department to send mem of fT"m Oerman railroad ' officials" at
to the United States for immediate civil>ans on road repairing and other' ti <„„■ ooo re«ni«eH fr,.™ ,v. ,
».». *rT" rr.,0"*"-
upon presentation of convincing w -
my that there is Illness or other i'^adquartera haa approved a pro- man vards
distress in tha family ot the officer I***1 u*t ,h* Germans be paid partly
or soldier conrrrnad. In ratioaa.
♦ ♦ ♦ ! \ *
Ac* Meets Deat* In H(xnc n.fht
■. uJ „rtl. o. — r«r I
rtoe * or km. against private boat taw •» Peirograd Kaye«fe wa4r»ll» aad at • -
—Tly longshore aaea *** IW.bevfW dan., ,ba Ua« fort- ^^
R v Pri?ceM "nd Ki"»
Every preference is given the wounded in coming back to the States. As the foll^ing^i'iy^hlT'^llSlSl
'» '' w',und'd t« travel be I. placed on a train and sent to of the Wartime (>Lnlss|on of ,7.^?
an embarkatk* port . The fhotngrnph show, wo«„d.d leaving a train at St. frchurcl. deration after a «nfir
Nasaire and being bwded Into an ambulance that takes them to the pier. ence: confer-
" "American soldiers were marching
The lightest wood I. the wood of am- ^
^.rr* ^
ITEMS OF INTEREST
fftorkholm Is ballt on Islanda. an1
the name means "an Island In a
•nand" For several months In tk*
year It la rkawd hy lee
Until a ti
7;u..,nbu;.n„ snZ-
•Metlaaea called the pith tree, often "ayl* at the san.e lune I ,ra -;,d '
attalna a diameter nf aix Inches In the %l*e yna tt>e«e. J mm llw p..- _ n
yeara a«o the rate of two or thrra yeara of ita life At that a»d So • 'Tiaiwa So-
- — — iapaa iagie it dl«a aad
* - - — «« it* hiv. jk( ;ni|
hKTrase la tk* r-^alatkai nf Japaa I •!» It dlea and another sfea* starts -Tke T.nk- _ ,
last year's
la rmt
■to tfce Mth af Ml, ^ |*«a PaMK Ledaa r
■H
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Thurman, W. R. The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 38, Ed. 1 Friday, March 21, 1919, newspaper, March 21, 1919; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc403386/m1/4/?q=led+zeppelin: accessed May 31, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.