The Supply Republican (Supply, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1919 Page: 3 of 12
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THE
---■.nil Sl'PIM.V. OKT.AIIOM V
r> r. 1 ^ T
'
;.JE UPHOLDS
SHANTUNG DEfi
Turns Down Amendment to the
Peace Treaty by Wlajarity
ot Twenty Votes.
LODGE TO RENEW the FiGHT
1 t.'.ORE STRIKERS BtCKTO WORK
Pittsburgh District
p- .■
| ■, V v» y ♦ ■
liv' *'Ui
L
^M^Oams.neroaucOon
_Labor Request
Refused.
Will Move to Strike Out Sections
Awarding Rights of Province
to the Japanese.
Shan
Pittsburgh.- More ^ins l*i me° “d
greater production were reported ^
stfrS
rr vis
MV'Tn^rjTot tErlworks were
started up pans ul nii-
* )
%
«V v ✓
r/
.... _
■Mi:
i
l-£«885S
•
■BM)
a
[Vl
V-:.
^Ifil
K,/-
-.........■jPiPgJV^ggf
B»3a
4;
i
E*
the A. M. Byers
Company and the Oli-
ver
iron ami Steel Company
in the
£k
:
1f§
ffl
£1
Washington.—Defeat of the
^ fourteen Republicans, including
it to japan.
im
i
X*W$h:'
m
BIG GOOD ROAD BOND ISSUE
Dallas County, Texas, Votes $6,500,000
for Construction of Com-
plete Belt Line.
(Prepared ^the ^“cultured" ^
The largest bond issue ever submit-
the largest voted anywhere In the
T'l
¥
China Instead
claimed a large number of men re-
■*“■»«“ W lh« “To?
were slightly offset h>' a B ^
bricklayers in some <rf tn® *teel
along the Monongahelia, River-
jx.
^££'u-xn:ssJr
MSBmmmi .................... ^---------- „lrwt. N-w York. •«
*. o( w ’V'^'TS 7rm ,, , f tuta ..........worker.
-v-r -..........—
strike of (lie longshoremen.
-Col. E. M. Hoase, ill
with
ss sss^^s-si
Gore Of Oklahoma and Walsh or ^
sachusetts—voted with
cans for the amendment
licans who
the Repub-
m______ The Repub-
voted against the amend-
Colt,
It Cummins, Hale. Kellogg. Iven-
von Keyes, Lenroot, McCu.nber, Me-
Nar’y. Nelson, Smoot, Spencer, Ster
ling and Townsend.
Capper and Curtis for
ras rant'd ot
CURRENT EVENTS
Both* Capper and Curtis of Kansas
7L committee amendment
er-
“had'permitted an outrage to be
voted for the committee .
the ground that the Pwce’ Coafe
ton were three roU ca^anl
-- | Cabinet Takes Over Rule ot Na-
heTherSe was considerable debate on
M. could .«nd » “couucfl
listen to complaints, ......? ^ give a
tion Pending Recovery of
the President.
worst regions.
South Chicago
on
ence had permu-.^ - ~. and
made a party to it.
Republicans
f Tf "one Tam11 cScilmen, op-
pSd gto the hearing, suggested that
HIS AILMENT NOT REVEALED
the book on syndicism. written by W
Industrial Conference
who voted against the ^ and coupled this with »«£*-
== as well as several DemOe alien that he would -
crats during the week of debate, gave hearing for any
notie’e they would vote %£”££]***« ^^ier.
tlement. The reservation, however
„any tb. United
StaSTof openly approving the theft
idX .1 the n»«dm.«th wouW
not vote
man or anybody con-
DArmy Is Hot After “Reds"—League
of Nations Comes Into Being
Anti-Bolshevist Armies Closing
Soviet Russia.
In on
the
have sent the Peace Treaty back^
ihp other powers and put n ui
to correct5the injustice that had been
lone China, an ally in the war While
Senator Lodge after the vote, gave
notice he would next move from i wuc** ---- .
ihn pntire Shantung provisions ’states Grain Corporation.
the treaty, the vote, of course, means States^ ^ Senator^Grouna.
ASK WHEAT EMBARGO PROBE
Action of United States Grain Corpor
ation an Injustice to Farmers,
the Senators Say.
Washington. - The Senate has
adopted a resolution offered by Sena
the — ..
defeat of that motion
A Turning Point In Figh •
The Shantung amendment has been
!r the two big turning points n
going to become a paW
to the ‘‘rape of Shantung, aB l
generally designated.^_
TO EXCLUDE ALL RADICALS
Extending
chairman of the committee on agricul
ture take the position that the en
has been laid in such a manner
work injury to farmers
bargo
as to
benefit
to the wheat
and
speculators.
They declare that the Grain Corpor-
' headed by Julius Barnes, has , aftpr
to the protests
that Mr.
House Passes Legiclation
Passport Restrictions
Is Signed.
War Time
Year After Treaty
further attention recently m
BrSeveral bills having tor their pur-
sffS'rfS
-
55 5=** -
ation-
acted in opposition
of the wheat farmers.
Senator Gronna said
Barnes would be summoned before
STSmmltU. and .hat »>• »““ '
Stratton, especially in
carefullv invesUgated. He cnargou
St Mr. Dan.es kept the embargo
on wheat while the WJ««
in wheat and that when it wa ^ storea
in elevators the ban was .
result in lack of production
Tt ye- ami declared it “an injus-
tice and a blunder.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD.
Because of the certainty that
resumption of his official duties l.v .
President Wilson will be long delayed, ]
Hie cabinet lias taken matters Into its
“*££ .nd ,« virtually running
tlie government. For the Ins liu^
«ince Mr. Wilson became the chief
magistrate, it is performing the fum-
ZS .noted it by the Const,tu on
Bach member of the cabinet Is handling
•til executive matters within its Juris
diction, and all other questions that
come up are passed on by Dmfulta
inet The most important decisions
are submitted to Mr. Wilson for bis
approval, through Admiral Grayson.
Specifically, the industrial and eco-
nomic situation which has nen
brought to a crisis by the steel ^
s being handled by Secretary Baker.
Secretary of Labor Wilson s coking
the threatened coal miners
nnd Secretary of Agriculture
is doing what he can to avert
department of Justice is not dolus: »>
it might in this respect—and it m.i
be-the army is certainly active ami
achieving excellent results. This lb
especially true of the central depail-
ment under General Wood, which him
to deal with one of the
that Including Gary,
and the surrounding towns. Repeated
raids have been made on the
there, great quantities of tlmlr prnpa-
ganda ma-ri,.' Have been seized and
some of the ringleaders a,Tested and
held, presumably for deport., o... M«* ■
they are mostly unnatural./.ed Luc g
ers' The army authorities assert that
e revolutionists, taking advantage
of the steel strike, are trying to or-
gauira 111" ivorkurs tor » .r-JJJ
volt against the government. Colonel
M ines in command at Gary, s‘t>N
be were to make public the evidence
hr has collected, the strike would cob
luose but'the government is not taking
a hand in the situation for the purpoi
iking the strike.
The steel companies claimed st«id.V
Snt. Deniklne kept up his advance
on Moscow, capturing Orel and "‘her.
Important points. The army of the |
northwest under Yudenitch took LuK"
•mil pressed on toward letrogiud,
tv >se fall was imminent. Tills army.
derst undlng with Admiral Kolchak
whose Siberian troops were imshin„
the bolshevlkl hack to the European
border. These three commanders have
rejected all overtures from Cerman>.
maintaining their connection w.tli
""au official dispatch from Archangel
said the North Russian
pursuing the bolshevlkl
^ntr w- -tlfled by a big major-
,tv recently In Dallas county, Texas
It provides $6,500,000 for a complete
belt line around the county, with 1-
roads radiating from Dallas to all sec-
tlons and six intermediate roads ca -
nceling »toe rndi111 hlBhway8‘ , f
system provides for 882 miles of road.
' . . .I,.itlon feeder roads amount-
tenance expenses.
In main-
Fcderal old
1 !
of breaking the strike.
were unskilled. Alien steel men »
large numbers are engaging steainahu
passage back to Europe.
Despite their wartime agreement to
woT.1.1." IT"."... •»io»,S"tK
is officially declared or ^e .-oun-
-i<y>o the soft coal miners of th
trv about 600.000 in number, Have b«
"raVr^i on, «. «m»« *r»r, ’•
forces were
in the dlrec-
tlon of" Onega after occupying their
fortified positions along the >a uma
capturing guns and prisoners and R
stroying an armored train I f •
n.iv seem to he doing very well with
out the help of the British and Amec
lean troops that were withdrawn.
Meanwhile the British fleet in the
Baltic was very busy. The supreme
“rnirtl iravlw .l"C.rad . M-k;;;' ”
,11 unman l.nlS.-vik
Of German vessels were seized. I »
,he British warships moved on Kron-
s,.,<lt Vfter a severe bombardment It
the fleet entered the harbor. AU ne t-
tT.,t natlons have been asked to join
ln ,he blockade of bolshevlst Russia.
tim6r ^Kll Recommended by the
ST» d™ Sill, .nd deigned -
keep dangerous aliens
- to
WON’T OPERATE^ ON WILSON
Presldentls ««£ 1
tic condition to Be Greatly
proved—Had Retarded Recovery.
strike,
Houston
theTheUgprefsidmenFs physicians and ev
ervbodyat the White House have com-
mned to keep from the public the real
character of his illness. Admiral Gray-
told tlie cabinet what it ■■
pledged it to secrecy. All the people
Z permitted to know is contained
"n the official bulletins, which report
Mr Wilson’s continued improvement
vith occasional slight set-backs such
*U headache, and re*tl«ne« . «. to
swelling of the prostate kd. '
that he had a lesion of the bra* n
jk \
M
; v>'
Building a Hard Rock Road.
amounting to $250,000 bad been al-
lotted to Dallas county for its big
way development, and It Is expea
„„ . ,.rg. «*«
Secretary of Labor Wilson took im-
mediate steps to avert the strike an
last reports was hopeful of success.
The miners demand a five-day week,
^1- "nr day and a general wage in-
crease of 00 per cent The mln«n«*
receive $H to $10 a day and the mine
labTherSs?Hke of the longshoremen
theU .Metropolis with a serious Raid
S^e^f^coSeVthe
•trike was foreshadowed by the \o
to work, and the firm stand taken by
the railway administration in dealing
with the express company employees.
lieutenant D'Annunzio seems to
have adopted a more yielding attitude
regard to Flume, which he 8«u
holds. He has sent to Premier_ G e-
mencenu an appeal to take the
live in obtaining from the allied gov-
ernments a declaration making Flume
open port. The present Ttallan plan
eonSares mT Independent buffer
state at Flume with the extension of
Italian control over the strip of coast
Flume to Trieste so the new
from
state
shall abut
on Italian territory
be surrounded
on that side and not
bv jugo-Slavia influence. The dan-
bB;, „r\v,r over 11.1,
D'Annunzio sent word to
that he had drafted a manifesto urging
lo,!, Serbs and Italians to reco=
mutual national rights and to nuih
tab, the bonds of brotherhood which
have been sealed by blood.
SESTETS'
is contingent on
to
out of the
the Senate.
CTSngTlgupepro7iriations fo^ nat-
uralization work 'vere continued
fore the House immigration commi -
tee. Raymond F. Crist, deputy com-
missioner
the
Grayson
in for
of naturalization, told the
tL 11 ooo 000 foreign born per
eonsmin the country were not citizens
and that the presence^ suchi » ^^
undigested population create
alarming situation. _
ence Room
two marble plates
in the Versailles Palace
nlates were affixed re-
syr^V«=rjrs
Wasliington—Deli. He l”>PWJ“^
White House by near «
r,t
snrjss-’: SDSL’s
”tTo, ol 11.. 11 "a“ 8a'a’
operation «•
this time by the physi
story
has been
denied, but it is
n,u- The truth appears to be
that he has had no cerebral attack but
is suffering from a general
and physical breakdown.
The League
being on
France
of Nations came into
„ October 13. Great Britain,
and Italy having ratified the
‘ stens were taken at once look-
ng to its regular organization and
goodness knows there Is enough for
t0Tlie United States is still outside
ilie league and the contest in the seri
!'Je coiitiuues unabated. Considerable
and much vehement language
wppk to debuting
amendment.
— aisrs-“i.>;
leader. One bears an
statue there was
the people of
his
presented to
Virginia as
^mark'of friendship and esteem for
services To Virginia, and the other sets
forth aid given by France m the War
of Independence.
Ends Steel Strike Probe.
FZSrr sr as
visits to strike zones.
and the other physicians to meet him
the o^her day to continue the study
of the case Doctor Young returned
White House, observed the pa-
TieTSn and had a long conversa-
tion with Dr. Grayson.
labor
BeaX FNebe-Tbat the Nebrjj. B^ “^nda and Great Falls af-
armers’ Union solve he sugM( , ‘d with the metal trades council
Refine Sugar.
A “Dry” Test in Scotland.
London.—Announcement was made
at a great prohiblUon mas^ mating
at Glasgow that women th
Scotland would be canvassed
question of prohibition._
Voted to End Copper Mine Strike.
Mont.. Oct. 15- Unions in
Apparently irreconcilable differences
between the several groups arc crop-
,tm out lu th. imlrntrla1 “nt‘'r™"
*»?
should bring in its report on collectBe
on^whidf agreemOTt° see'med almost
^^ht^of1 workers" to ' bargaffi through
the unions and to pick its representa-
ry1fRtlsS!d:-hUe%Cu!..0decires
has
time
were devoted last
'„.d down
........-......
Prices of food throughout the Uni-
ted States have fallen almost 25 per
cent, according to Attorney General
Palmer. But housewives, also through-
out the United States, are asking why,
if this is true, they are forced to pay
as much as ever or more when they
visit the retail dealer.
Tlie cost of leather and of footwear
has dropped 20 per cent since the mid-
dle of August, says the president ot
the National Boot and Shoe Manufac- j
Hirers’ association. But ‘he consumer
iur »s:d ¥.«■rs
bureau of public roads, United States
department of agriculture, to have a
worth of roads are now under co
struction.
WIND HELPS ROAD BUILDERS
When Used In Construction of Hiflh'
ways in New Mexico Experiment
Is Successful.
M-ZSXZtZSSjl
successful, that, after making a nine-
mile experimental stretch In e
ico roadmakers In that stat
built 80 miles of similar highway^
First of all. the grass and weeds are
cleared from the right of way and
then a trench is made through the
sand to the clay bottom. ™oloose
sand is deposited n stacks ten feet
IS ----- , iL i
from either side of the .^andjhe
rest of the work Is left to the ^rt
winds. During the spring and falbthe
winds sweep away all the sand and
widen the clay strip. Then the road
graded and the work finished.
COUNTRYNEEDS MORE ROADS
Improved Highways Influence Every
Branch of Economic and Financial
Structure.
reservation on the same line*^ Si n
tor Shields of Tennessee DeinocraL
declared himself in favor of tlie Lodge
reservations and the Johnson amend-
ment giving the United «
votes in the league as Great BrUaim
The administration forces let it
known on Wednesday that they were
determined to vote for rejection of the
La,v with the Lodge reservations,
and the opposition at once prepared
to retaliate with a resolution deelar
tag the war at an end and restoring
U,PTheatente0ntePeailies are disturbed
American situation because
"b^iminv commissions provided for in
Th%ertre^rSiaTw..l Put it into
delayed by the allies in con-
bl8loesPaamf the aforesaid president There „ n0 doubt about It the cou-
ih.t the shoes now being man- t needs more good roads. 11 "
xxs* zrnot be -r9 ab: sss y6r--
'n'*rh7°t'renien<h>us hullabaloo about ^fluence every brandi and twig of the
Ss Te Imprered because good roads
The tremendous hullabaloo abol't I umucu^ —- financial struo
freely b. heard with th, M owd.ro.d. »>»«•«; ^
lnt0 a for the small “unlty wlth poor roads has limited
aruountse of sugar to be had. The do- trade
£SE5 IGNORANCE PARTNER of mud
area.
throughout
on the
"ttfSir. of , con,ld,r,hl. 1»n
”'^C™U”rapr«.»..«vt.. *
of
effect was
sequence.
one of the big jobs of the League
f Nations will be to seitle affairs in
rr,.......
|r.‘mn.nt'‘f«ethl. editionMotorl.„ coraplal, T W: Fjrmra
It limited tlie wholesale pr.ee w m e Districts Know Not
European dealers were willing to pay ^aa ^ Ab0^Road8.
anything. -. ^ a ^ lgn0rance accompanies
The federal trade commission came Many motorists in bad road»
to bat again with another of its reports d,8trlcts, 8topping to ask a farmer m
i ini, the big packers, stating they fornlation about roads not
h mdie more than 200 food prod- ! f“have found that the farmer d
„,s ml related to the meat Indus- traveled so far way and could
' “and m fair to dominate the whole- , ^ye n0 directlons.
«le grocery trade, dividing the field' --—
now
^astid among tbejapRanl.sts,pre- | the = .to■ hi-
are
sented-
have^by referendum, form^y ended
fem^r its members by operating
£g refinery In the western part of
the state, is
■ • - local, au iu— uls two months,
o million dollars is rccom-, ter plants t _____|
Roosevelt Tablet in Hospital.
_____. , _ vnrk_A Roosevelt memorial
Vladivostok* The American Army New \ * Qf Mrs Whitelaw Reid,
_____rtreat Northern, sailed Oc- j tablet, tn ^ -n the othudiedic
Hospital here. Colonel Roosevelt*,
father founded the institution.
ment of
Tnended.
statement -
M these *m**> «* "srk"''
Birttt. ,re «M terth f j1f
i vtuch returns as will i>i“'.
1‘ ‘ thcn, for their capital «n-
oensate them their man-
vevel; ..........
R*2T That tliev and their families have
“»i...................
force of Russians
determined attack on
lots been mak...„ ,
Tlie I trade
Riga.
. fission's figures were greut-
xaggerated and the conclusions
il t r , U d o .lie defense of the city 1 ‘^^0. Utterly absurd. As us-
v^re aided, according to report toned^ ^ supply fftCts and
British fleet. Tin* most recent l,‘‘• {o uphold their entire Inno-
tlfis writing say the Rus- go but for some reason the general
“ ’ luiiLvi , _ inAb> oalr»inf*P ill
and
so-Germun foices ««>« .
portunitles equal to those engaged m bnck. The Poles l'^
industries. I scran, attacking- the Ge , ^ ________
ar s.
tober
fourteen hundred
the United States
other Industries._
_ pointer has been
Attorney *” for Ids apparent
attacked in congress forhts jp
v in dealing .with the _ o
to the United States, but if
nubile has learned to look askance
scrap, attacking-, - ~ —
• cupturing_ Kovno and ^ ullssion calls_“the maze and secrey
the scrap,
rear.
laxity
ace
mon-
ths
lines of communication.
‘“Vt ihe rara <*•
Of the pucker’s methods of conducting
much of his business."
provement will depend upon the in.
terest the people take.
Earth Road Is Foundation.
The earth road is the foundation
upon which all other surfaces we
placed, and upon which we should de-
pend for the load-carrying capacity.
Water for the Dog.
oeQ f0 it that the dog has plenty oCI
C0rd water to drink in hot weather.. >
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Mayfield, J. W. The Supply Republican (Supply, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1919, newspaper, October 23, 1919; Supply, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc847970/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.