The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1914 Page: 1 of 8
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The Gutbdr.
Daily leader
In MMitwhll Tell Visitors
of Hercules Water and the j
Municipal Bath Houee. J
- uvuig mil rteni n
Too; 3 lines 3 Times 25c
'J
.VOLUMKXLVI
HOME
GUTHRIE OKLAHOMA FIJI!) AY MARCH 27 .1914.
PRICE 2C
NUMBER 65
cTawlfied Want Will Self!
VAIIM Lin.... taJIII n.. .. I
(
WILSON wins
1ST ROUND IN
TOLLS BOUT
HOUSE VOTES 207 TO 176
TO DISMISS SIMS RULE
DISCUSSION
PARTY LINES ELIMINATED
IN FIRST BALLOTING
Congressmen View Tolls' Contest
as Fight Between Speaker
and President
(By Aaamdated Presai
Washington Mar. r(--Vln-u the
Panama toilu HkIiI was resumed in
tin; House Uils morning Hie oppns-
ills forces prepared lor mi of lli
bitterest congressional li:;hts in re-
cent years.
iPorty-five minutes remained I'm
'flit; debute on the special rule tc- iiinil
the discussion to twenty hours on the
Sims hill to repeal exemption for
coastwise ships.
The House disposed of inulinc bus-
IneSH In less than len iniimtes ami the
rule lo limit Hie tolls debate I" twen-
ty hours was then taken up.
'Soiilio cnugij'Ssnieii profe?sod the
xiew that the fight had taken on the
aspect of a conlcst between the Pres-
ident and Speaker Clark.
"There Is no change in the senate In
the statu. .'of the ral bill l here
which rests with the canal committee
awaiting devclopim nts in tin; House
The administration forces opened
tin; fluid ill H twelve minute speech
by Representative Adumsun who re-
ferred to the arguments in favor ot
tolls pxemplion as "clap trap poppy
cock and a delusion. '
"Tin? Democratic platform pledge
favoring exemption." Adamson said
"was written into the platform by one
of the loading friends of exemption.''
Wilson Wins First Battle
The President won the first half;
when the House by a vote of two
hundred and seven to one hundred
seventy-six refused to continue the
discussion on the rule to limit dchalc
on the Sims bill to twenty hours.
Party lines were eliminated lu I tic
-vole which was a round victory fo
the administration.
The hallotim: was nreceded li
bv Ail
hour of impassioned speech i
Speaker Clark l'ndeiiwood. fit;.
gerald and other Democratic leaders.
voted against the motion to cut off
delta (o.
Special rule then was adopted it;
twit hundred lo one hundred seventy-
.two. This put the Sims bill to repeal
the tolls exemption sipiar.dv before
the House for a twenty hours' debate
and protected it against intervenina
motions and amendments.
ALASKA COAL NOT
SUITABLE FOR NAVY
(illy Assoeiitled Press I
."Washington Mar. Ti -Secretarv of
Navy PanicM rcyorled to congress to-
day that ronl rrom the Hering liver
fields in Alaska is unsuitable for use
by the navy because it is incapable of
generating sufficient steam.
MAIL BOXES
For City or Rural Route
made of Galvanized Iron
Approved by the Govern-
ment. It.ixrs all ready lo put
up.
Price $1.00 Each at the
Leader Office
paper: ma
Deposited $900 Cashier's Check
and Borrowed $35; Claude
Mize Made Arrest
'Charged with shoving bogus paper
'. W. Williams w:is arrested nl
'.'i-escenl. City last night by CUiimIi;
.l isc mi a telephone message from
Sheriff Mahonoy.
IWilliams is an (ilil offender. Hi;
has served time for passing I
chucks. Tin complaint tills time wn
made liy ioti ('. Doyle company
I'.uld. .Williams presented a a sli ii-r'
cheek lor flHHI and borrowed !(..;. on
it Uitrr it was discovered lo lie
bogus. Thi arrest followed. Officer
took Williams to Knid last night.
PREPARING HOT PROGRAM
FOR "SPUDDING IN" DAY
Tile Cimarron Valley Oil company
is preparing for a. ' red letter day."
The event will bo the moving ot
When the "spudding in" occurs
When tin; "spudditrg- in' ihapiieiis
('has. Civsscr will sing a notch song
and make a speech in four different
languages. Vtmv beeves and five boss
II bo barbiruod; three bands have
iilicndy hieu arranged for and John
Cnlo'bio may iconseut to make a
speech. Suds for the "spudding in
will be provided by a philitnthmpist.
who signs himself an unknown. Many
lea I u r is will lake place that you will
liot sco on the program. Tho Owls
hud the Eagles and tho rest of the
folks wi'l do the loading and un-
loadinghorses will haul tho ma-
chinery to the spudding sitei.
II will ho a gala day and nun long
!o b. remembered 'by all who .parti-
cipate. Moso Weinberger will be
master of ciremonies.
LOCKED WIFE OUT OE
HOUSE; IS ARRESTED
(larlield I la liner a West '.'Has ne-
urit was arrested today on complaint
f his wile who alleges he locked her
out of their home and will not per-
nit her to return. She says she has
never done anything to merit this
sort of treat men t.
Mayor Xisslev took the case under
idvlsement.
E
'While Mr. and .Mrs. Lynioii lir.rv
were attending the "Diner Dansantt-"
it the I on i 1 last evening burglars en -lered
their home at iai Kast. Mansur.
i ltd lelt evidence of bavins inspeciei
he place thoroughly. The customary
aiode oi ingress - screen and window
was departed from the visitors
i'-ic;( a skeleton key on the rear door.
lr.""ijay alter a hasty inventory
-illumed up his losses as one revolver
in I a purse coniainiug ubul il'i cent-
li (diam-e.
TEAMS AND SCRAPERS
SKIPPED TO WILSON
One hundred teams ami two liun-
:lred scrapers use here by Annis
Deaue the contractors who built the
Saul. I Ke rescrwdr east of the city
were shipped last niciit to Wihon
Oklahoin.i. where they w-H4--4t"--pit !
work on the Kingling railroml ion-
strin tion.
The contraetors ami Kin of tin ir
men will leave tonight on their wink
train.
CIRCUS BILL POSTERS WILL
ADVERTISE JINERAL WATERS
Paul names and 'Dutch" Young
lelt today for Chicago where they will
join the IC.nglini; circus as advaioc
bill P'iftei's. The boys took along
riuantitv of bath house and mineral
water advertising matter. They will
rea.-h more than i.'i towns diirins
the season of Call ami w'ill advertise
the waters wherever they go.
(fxumxsiiisxxusriiiu
v FREE FLOWER SEEDS. X
V Fifty packages of frev flower X
v feds'at The Leader can be had
K for the asking. Xot ovir two Xl
V iHM-iHcen to each person. A
HIIMIKIBIIII
Coke' a
iidin .llrowu b
an t
lie
hi January r.i
plan
JfU'hl
in n hiir bank. Him salary
month- and there wa
indication that he would b
regularly. At thirty years
might have become an
pi-oi"cl'"l
if ;c;e lie
assislant
cashier and
something in
that position meant
he bank in which be
worked.
But he liked ids "ioko." lie foam!
be (Oiildti't stop. He got so that h 1
had to .slip off to a eoner during
working hours and "snuff" He came
back to his desk and worked bril-
liantly aft'T these expeditions. Kvcry
time hp was alled in by an official
T
FOUR LARGE CONCERNS
WARNED TO STOP PRES-
ENT PRACTICES
. V"i l M ir 'i n
li in ies iino '. I'ii i I '" i
:IS disiiltCL'l-.lfe I b. I
imrl. dc-ree or '' I ' "la
until next M'.n lay to p '"'
for abandoning iiioiiopcd
which the alt .! ie .. g. si.-i
-a nl
ic .
a Ida ii
are in loiiiiioii o: iue u--
t tiitcd .Slid. ; lu -'!:
Marshall told tin- aiioi".
coin(innies that the 'o.
tended le put an ca-l t' e
ru an-
c !j!
tions t.y inienction
hut lie promised lo
until Mourn v at I he
haoco attontevs.
T!ie corpora' imi s r
conference were li
Liggett r My. r-. t:i
r o';
pr le.
ceTns
; lion
it. d .it "ii
Aineri in. f-i
It. I. ID noi l-
the P. l.rili
tobacco com
;-l.
.alii
.u I I a
COMMERCIAL CONGRESS
MEETING CHANGED FRON v
OKLA. CITY TO MUSKOGEE
The Southern Comnieri'ial f-mii:rest .
'l not m-rt in Oklahoma City. That
-lt.v faiW to come through with the
Promised $1000.'. Mu-kogee will en-
trtaiu th .t.uwros and pay the j
I pK 4 v I iA t !;
rVit i. V!J if f M m
(3 .-Sf a f - f
4
.-' i ! ' ;1 fl v fM
&h Jq 1
T)X(.. coin.;. ;oni:.
II. -h held n
evel-c i
0
COM
IN TRUST
price. j t.
Tragedy in Three
Fifteen Months
k J
in -;ouirt lung I.'i
.-nun.' His iniiid wonn."
liiiely iiiiidc engine and tli-;
ol'!ic;i.s bj met could net help ad-
mire him.
.Six 1111111 hs later he li.el heculii -o
circle that uil his iiicnd i asu !
him if be were ill. Snincl noes he
didn't show 1 1 at. I he :cank lor day i.
II i lost bis job of course lie didti'!
have ambitieii to look for anotler
and his idle luiio was siwiil. with the
oilier "coke" fiends be had become
acipiaiuled wilb Ho evli adopt'd
their fashion of ilrs and he slouch-
ed around ill a soiled suit and a cap
tho gel-up of the average tough
w iih iiiie-ipiarier his ducal ion an I
bleeding. His friends - -Hie few who
stuck to him alt'-i they learned the
cause. and hi relatives tred to help
him. put. he preferred in live Hie life
of bis kind. They didn't know bow
be ate. nor where lie slepl nor when.
They never miw Ii hi except when he
was reduced to ip'spcral ion v his
i raving for a "siiut i" and bad lo fac
i hem lo N.g a. f v doli.u --
.Nine inouih-i ail' i- that Clow n bad
lic( eilh
been ii
bouse
pooled
ll' Ver .
a liopelc. s I ra n i . He b id
( he i ii ii 1 1 ja it or the w .o'1;
i of. II that Hi. ' ccwr; e
liim -e::u!:i I'll-. Cut be va.-
lit Up li
Tin
on:' i'FIoii -ii
' :i ( in
CelMlllg oul
for tie-
I'
I he could I
I
peon III i
d al a'l.
iil'i'iciiiciil h
IS
TO iOCII
IL i
"GENERAL" NOTIFIES PRESI-
DENT OF COMING DESCENT
ON CAPITAL
M i
I'M
i ..
...--'lt wd w.iM.ei n; it ij. ; . v
lor Wa.-hiii."' n in a .... ml ". -
army" w hi. h ii -.! will sta t A
from Masioon. Ohio Ui.. .-t.ci.iig
poii.t f.;- tLi: i.r.l jrtiiy tAei.ty ;..-.;!!
'iVioUst luglit.
"fhn." i. S. Ci.-y of Mi ;."ii
the load.r niaii-d th-i -"-M-nt a
le:ter tciilig of li..-. pians lie 111-
. loted a ranii'h'et on ' Thj Cox
Itian of setting; the id'C to work on
(Continued on Page 4;
Dl' t lh. III! M 1. If) i'V !
like a
P
Acts Covering
link around alleys and dark .streets
In the liaylinie and al night waly-hod
furlivlly for the "copper" on his boat
::o ho might g'-f a cIuiip o lo le g a
quarter with which lie luighl. got. an-
other "snuff."
Crown had been reduced to the
position whero bo ii'(Ver had money
to buy enough of the drug. Ilccituso
of that bo .seldom ale e would
rather "snuff" than have a sipini'e
meal.
Thr. o months from now be will
die. If he i-nlelios robl bo wUl fall
an easy victim ot pneumonia. There
isn't tho barest iiostiibilily of bin liv-
ing t.o see tho year 1!il-"i.
s
LEADS TO
ANOTHER ASYLUM SCAN-
DAL SHOCKS COUNTRY;
ROUGH TREATMENT
ic t
ie I
II
il'l
.C
b d I'
i . ti i'ii
in a do.:
el leieyv
... c 1 I
i ;.. '1 1-
. di
. ri.
d
FACTORY EAST OF CITY
i.
V
-ii-'.a I'!...- difposeii
i ai r- of iar.d n -rCi m" tin; city
i .elieinifi." the South est t" n Iron
works propeity to James K. Oilier.
".i ni leratb.n $!"'. per acre. Mr.
..'hver n.a) ei- i a. ciinins factory
oa tho site.
M
D. A. R. ASSOCIATION
Mr. John D. Hall Defeats Mrs.
Francis Key Brooke After
Hard Fight
Tulsa Okla. .Mar. L'7.)klahoiua
City will I'litortaiii the p.15 state
convention ot tho 'Daughters of tho
American Jtevoliillon. McAtoator
was tho only oth u- c-andid.-ito for lh"
PMfi gathering'.
Tlio convention was featured by
tho appearance at tho opening of the
election of officera of a Well-defined
'plan on the part of chapters of tho
eastern part of tho st.alo to IvOep
inembein of tho Oklahoma City . hap.
I'M from seeming any office. The.
movement caused Mis. John D. Hall
of Tulsa to bo elected s'nt.e) regent
over Mrs. Crancls Key llrooke ol
Oklahoma City. Culi'lHIug mi agree-
ment oiillinot at l. n alleged suwr.-t
caiicuu .Monday night ddcgaiojt voted
against Mrs. ltiooke wilh learn In
their eyes and the Tul 'a nominee
won. .'! I to St.
Mrs. liroolic who wain not present
at tin; convention wa.i nominated
slalo reg.Mil by Mm. W. 1. felloe of
Oklahoma City. Tho followliur Is a
list of the officers elected for' tho en
suing year:
Mm. John I"). Hall Tulsa regont;
Mrs. W. O. Pea H Muskogen vlco re- J
goiil; Mrs. Mattoon tsapiitpa rorord-
ing secretary; Mrs. Iluclier Musko-
geo. treasurer; !iru. niuiiii I'.iii.i
itilrar; Mrs. Crumbb'y Alva his
torian; Mis. Moore. Haskell chap
lain; Mrs. Shannon McAlester par-
liaiiienlarlaii; Mrs. W. It. lledwtne
MeAletitcr and Mrs. W. J. Potion
Oklahoma f 'it y honorai'y stato re-
gents. CHARGING CRUELTY JENNIE
DEHONEYJtSKS DIVORCE
Charging that her husband ro-
peal.dlj beat her that; ho used lu
cent and viln langiing.; Junnio
Dehoii'iy today brought suit In lls-
rlcl court iigainst Willis .Deboney for
ihsolufo divorce temporary alimony
and division of properly and fit-
onieys fees of $l."(l. Tho pair were
marrieil In Ohio in issu. itenouey .n
vv.viilhy land owner.
MAN TURNS TRAITOR
DEFAULTER ARRESTED
Ralph lloherlH former clerk of the
;iuperior .(iiiil. of (larfield comity wlut
ilelaulleil in the hum of $::.Mll and
di: aii'peai'eil aboul two years ago has
been located in Oregon. Ilo l.oki a
wiunaii with him wlpji bo b it. and
ile-eiled his wll. and two children.
Tile woman informed the officers
w here Huberts wan living.
HEAVY RAINS REPORTED
GENERAL THROUGHOUT STATE
Heavy rain idonn'. are reported
from .nil points in tho soulh part of
thoidal.e. In north ru Texas a num-
ber of liV'S W'To lost. ami III'K ll
piopcrly diiru-io snslained. The
rain In l'i-an iutily y.-stcrd.-.y even-
ing amounted to 1 I I inches. Til '
lain was awoiiiianlyd .by bail whl a
w.i.i vry heavy at different point.-.
'n damage has yet I teen reported.
JENNIE CHAOWELL
GETS DECREE
I. nut'- ' li t I a . I ! i l-.'i.i . . r.inf -f
.1. ii vfir ' i!'ni ' 'ii ' 'I Mil
f:i" . pniiiii ; r i h .' .t'i'l n!t .- i t
;ifrf. S:f vv.i i ;!. ".i' '-ft ' -'
-t HiiTl'"!' '"iiti't.
NO VERDICT IN
1. 1 .
I -i
l F
I'iUI
P.
t..v. a ft-
:!
inai. (i.e.
f'-tarncd to the c.c."
I . .on at midnight and reported that
it had failed to arrive on a verdict
and J idge Steen then adjourned un-
til morning instructing tho Jury to
continue its deliberation. Thfl court
room at that time was packed.
Toe argument for the prosecution
and rietciiso was j.eard at nls'at and
at 11 o'clock Uia jury retired.
BUTTLE
RAGES FOR
F:
VILLA OCCUPIES GOMEZ
P ALL A CIO. AFTER 96
HOURS' FIGHTING
LACK OF WATER AS
DEADLY AS BULLETS
Re1?! forces Confident of Winning
Ion eon-Rebel Chieftain Con-
spicuous In Battle
(lly Associated Piths.)
Constitutional Ifaud.iuartors abov
i'oi'i'oon War. 2r...(joay. by con-sor.)-.
(icneral ViHa aftor four days'
almost Incessant righting during
which victory Hoeined rimt. with ouo
sido and then with tho other occupiud
Come J'aliu io( today.
Tin losses on both nldoa wero
heavy.
Tho robela dollv.irud thrco UHKaults
before permanoat uuocosa wa-i
achlovod and at ouot tiuio tho hattla
oxlendod into tho roads leading Into
Torreon proper.
Villa predicts ho will have tho Jat-'
lT city by Saturday or Sunday.
Wounded Soldiers Eeg for WaWr.
Tho most pltlubJo of tho many
heart rending spectacles of tho bat-
tle woro tho disabled wounded crying1
for water. Turf lack of water w
a deadly as the bullets.
What water available was mipplled
from tlio tanks hauled on freight cars
at tho army s roar uotatng honnm
but the desert nothing ahead bu thl
enemy 'iho rebols rouutit on unai
ded by hcapg of (load.
Villa in torn dusty clothes and
slouch hat was the most conspicuous
figuro among th ragged thirsty
half-famlsliod soldiers.
Federals Fall to Retaks La-do
Juan; Mar 27. Tho federal sol-
dlers ul Torreon last nltfht failed In
a Ion hour fight to rotake Lerdo ac-
cord I iir to a telegram received her
signed "Ownernl Villa" and dated
Co in ok Palaelo.
Iei(lo Is a manufacturing town In
tho suburbs of Torroon.
Washington l. C Mar. 27. .Th(
Mexican embastiy hero received th
followlnR (lispatch from the Mexican
'onsul Sonor Dleiliold at Kl Pao;
' The reholM wer sovorely defeated
at Torroon. A column or flvo thou-
sand under tleneral Mnro has left
Sallllb) In a flanklns movement
relnrorco th Karrlson"
fV-bels to Dismantle Only Warship.
Douglas Ariz. Mar it. IIotlled up
In tho harbor of Topolobunpo th
gunboat Tauiplco Is to be dismantled
by tho Mexican constitutionalists ac-
cording to advices that reached here
today. Th. veseel's puns will he nsd
o. 1 in defenso "f Topolohaniito or
.cut 'o as-wt tn tho prosipoctive at-
tack; upon Cuaymaa.
Sin. tho Tauiplco entered th."
(Continued on Page 4.)
(the weather)
(Coprttsto. vci-iaii ayt.ilic.
What Government Forecaster Resorts
Via Ophelia
(By Associated Prasia.)
New Orleans La. Mar. 17 To-
cigat and Saturday general! ctoudy.
on s
I
7
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Niblack, Leslie G. The Guthrie Daily Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 65, Ed. 1 Friday, March 27, 1914, newspaper, March 27, 1914; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc617741/m1/1/: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.