The County Democrat. (Tecumseh, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
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THE COUNTY DEMOCRAT. TECUMSEH. OKLA.
WILSON STOPS
LAVING OPCABLE
FIVE DESTROYERS SENT TO
MIAMI HARBOR TO EN-
FORCE LAW
ARE GIVEN ORDERS TO ACT
Western Union Insist on Laying Cable
Without the Consent of
the State Depart'
■ menu
MOBS BURN AND SACK HOMES’!
TROOPS SENT BY LOWDEN
TO QUELL RIOTERS.
) Finding of Bodies of Slain Youths
Lead to Outbreak of Citizens
and Then Disorder.
AGAINST REDS
MEXICAN CITY IS B0M3ARDED |||mjRN$ ^f|[
FERRIS lORITY
U. S. FLIERS TO BE EXILED
WHO TAKE PART
Washington. — Five destroyers are
patrolling the entrance to the Miami,
$Fla., harbor, under orders from Presi-
dent Wlleon. to prevent, by force, If
becessary, the landing of a cable the
Western Union Telegraph company Is
having laid from Ilarbardos, a British
|>ou9esskm in tho West Indies.
A British cable ship, tho Colonial,
has been chartered by the Western
Union company to land the American
end of the cable which would connect
With a British cable Uno from Barba-
dos to South America. At the slate
department It was stated that the
British embassy had been uskod to
inform the master of the ship that
Buch a landing would be In violation
tof American law. Officials explained
there was no significance In the fact
that the vessel was British; that she
ftrobably was the only cable craft
available to the American company
When she was chartered.
Action Has Been Delayed.
Work on the cable lino from Bar-
bados was begun last summer.
Some time ago tho Western TTnfon
Company applied to the state depart-
ment for an eexcutive permit to land
the wire at Miami, but officials said
Action on it bad been delayed pend-
Bng the holding of the international
tnunlcations congress, called to meet
In Washington September 1C.
Change To Be Discussed.
A British cable company, It was ex-
plained, now has'ui monopoly of cable
rights In Brazilian waters. An Amer-
ican concern desires to construct a
direct cable line from the United
•States to Brazil and it. was stated
that the American government desired
to know before issuing tho permit to
the Western Union company, whether
the arrangement entered into by the
company with the British concern, the
Western Cable company, controlling
the line from Barbados to Brazil,
While tliero is a direct cable line
between the United States and the
Pacific coast of South America, cable
communication between this country
and Brazil is possible now only by
way of London, unless the messages
are sent to the west coast and re-
layed over the land. A direct cable
line to Brazil, officials said, is much
to be preferred as It would affoid a
means of faster and probably cheaper
communications.
Company Was Defiant.
There were reports that after the
(Western Union company filed its ap-
plication for a permit the state de-
partment requested that a copy of
ithe contract with the British cable
•concern also be filed and that tbe
icompany had refused to comply. No
information as to this was obtained
at the department.
Full Power to Act.
The orders from the president
•Which resulted in the destroyers be-
ing assigned to patrol the three-mile
limit off Miami were issued. It was
Bald, after reports had reached the
government that the company planned
Ho complete connection of the line.
(Secretary Daniels was advised of the
brd-ars upon his return from Alaska.
It was announced that the live de-
stroyers had Instructions from the
president to use any means necessary
to prevent the landing of the cable.
(Rear Admiral Pecker, commandant
at Key West, Is in command of the
destroyer force, but Secretary Daniels
paid he would be replaced by h!s
eenior, Rear Admiral Anderson, com-
mandant at Charleston, S. C.
HUERTA NAMES DELEGATES
Panl Has Been Recalled From Paris
On New Mission.
Mexico City.—Provisional President
de la Huerta la reported to have
made the following diplomatic ap-
pointments;
Uilberto Valenzuela, who recently
resigned as sub-secretary of the In-
terior, will go to Switzerland; Jim-
enez O’FarriU will be named rlinage
at Guatemala City, and Dr. Alvaro
Diaz, who until recently represented
the Mexican government as confiden-
tial agent at Washington, will go to
Brazil.
Alberto J. Pan I has been recalled
from the Paris legation to take up
another mission, and Rodolfo Nervo,
at p-esent secretary of the Paris lo-
cation. will remain In charge
t£PER PATIENTS IMPROVE
Treatment With Chamutfa Oil Shows
Progresa.
St. Louis A mob of more than
3,800 is in control of West Frankfort,
111., threatening to drive out the for-
eign population, following the discov-
ery of the bodies of Amici Calcater-
era, 19 years old, and Tony Ilemphel,
18 years old, who bad been murdered,
according to a long distance telephone
message received from Cartersvllle,
III. Forty persons have been injured,
four seriously, In riots, it was said.
The rioting starteu according to tho
message when two more suspects
were arrested in connection witti the
murder.
Jail Is Stormed.
Tbe moo, hastily organized, stormed
the )a!l demanding the prisoners.
When this was refused, they demand-
ed that a committee chosen from their
members be allowed to talk to the
prisoners. The authorities granted
this demand and tho prisoners, one of
whom Is a chauffeur. Is suid to have
informed hie questioners that ha
drove Calcaterora and Hempel to
ltoyalton in company with Settino de
Senate, who is also held in connection
with the murder.
The committee then withdrew from
the jail and the two prisoners were
hastily removed by the authorities.
Other Towns Searched.
Tile mob is reported to have divided
and started for nearby towns, where
it Is believed that Sensls and tho
other Two suspects may have been
taken.
Foreigners are reported to bo leav-
ing West Frankfort and Marion by
every road carrying what household
goods they can, and in many instances
driving cattle ahead of them.
Homes Are Fired.
The mob began setting fire to the
houses in Frankfort Heights, a sec-
tion occupied by foreigners, accord-
ing to reports reaching here.
Other homes throughout the town
also are being fired, it was stated.
Springfield, 111.—Governor Frank 0.
Lowden has ordered five companies
of tho Ninth Illinois infantry to pro-
ceed at once to West Frankfort,
where disorders are reported in prog-
ress. The troops were sent after
word had been received from officials
at West Franklin that the situation
was beyond their control.
Photographer Dead at Hands of Mob.
Carbondale, 111. — A photographer
who attempted to take pictures of the
riot in West Frankfort was beaten to
death by the mob. according to a
message received here from the com-
pany’s telegraph station at West
Frankfort. This is the first death re-
ported from the outbreak there.
DENVER HAS A STREET RIOT
Tare Up Plant of Post and Damage
Street Cars.
Denver.—Troops were reported com-
ing to Denver from Fort Logan. A
mob was marching toward the city
hall) There were cries of "wreck the
hall.” •
One man wae killed and three
others seriously wounded at the south
side ear barns. Tbe dead man has not
been identified. The injured are:
Between thirty and thirty-five per-
sons including Chief of Police Hamil-
ton Armstrong and eight or ten other
policemen, were Injured, several seri-
ously, In rioting between striking
stroet ear men, their sympathizers
and strike breakers. Five street cars
were wrecked and the plant, of the
Denver Post damaged by the crowd.
The first two cars stopped were
badly damaged. A third car was at-
tacked near the downtown bams and
others were turned on their sides in
front of the cathedral of the Imma-
culate Conception.
Strike breakers who manned tho
last two cars took refuge inside tho
cathedral and remained there until
recued by the police.
The mob gathered in front of the
Post building after attacking the cars.
It was dispersed at that time without
having done more than taking copies
of the noon edition of the paper from
newsboys and littering the streets
with them. The Post has opposed ths
strike.
The mob entering the building, ham-
mers and spikes were thrown into the
linotype machines, paper rolls were
moved into the streets, water was
poured on tbe presses and tbe presses
were damaged by hammers.
Shots were fired and a number of
persons wounded. Others were in
jured by flying bricks and other mis-
siles.
Austrian Boycott of Hungary Tight.
Paris—The economic boycott against
Hungary la now one hundred per cent
effective. All railroad communica-
tions between Vienna and Budapest
are severed. The last train to pass
the boycott frontiers was an Amerl-
ttents at the state leper colony on j
Perlite»e Island, who have been un-
der going treatments with Ch.<txiuifa ]
can Red Cross relief special loaded
with condensed milk, fats and rhil-
• dren’s clothing for Hungarian bos-
•it. a product of an Fnet Indian fig
tree ha< shown unusual progress to-
1 pita!*. Tn# boycott wi* recently emH*
I - d by the In bar rif i miltU •( Au»trU
ward rfTOf»TT. Jtfttorwrti Tbe ro*ti have
It Is aimed agatrw the rear* ternary
•lenient* In TTungary. who sue-.i-.led
U report of the mod leal commission |
to power 1 allowing ths down!ail
SLAVS DEFIANT IN THEIR
ANSWER TO GREAT
BRITAIN
FRANCE JOINS WITH ENGLAND
North Sea Squadron Ordered To BaL
tic—Germany Is Said To Aid
Russians in their On-
slaughter.
Paris. A sharp ultimatum to the
soviet governmen' at Moscow has
been prepared as a result of the con-
versations between the British and
French governments. *
It calls upon the bolsheviki to halt
immediately their advance against
Poland under penalty of breaking off
all negotiations for the resumption of
commercial realtions and for the es-
tablishment of a complete peace be-
tween Russia and the allied nations.
The note declares the allies will
take the severest measures If the de-
mands are unheeded, but it does not
specify whether this means military
intervention or a blockade. This de-
cision will presumably be made by the
supreme council.
Italy Is now being asked to sub-
scribe to the draft of the note.
Planes Said To Be Manned By Amerl-
can Pilots Fire Upon the Citl-
» zens Unexpectedly.
I Mi-xico City.—Two airplanes. believ-
ed to be pnrt of the equipment of Ks-
teban Cantu, the rovoling governor of
Bower California, have circled over El
| Colorado. Lower California, exchang-
ing shots with the government garri-
I sou. No hits were scored, El Demo-
1 era la say the planes were piloted by
! Americans.
Unconfirmed reports are to tho ef-
fect that Governor Cantu Is ready to
surrender within fifteen days.
Bavaria to Block Troop Movements.
London.—The Bavarian tralllc coun-
cil has decided to Issue a proclama-
tion to the postal and telegraph em-
ployes, calling on them to prevent the
conveyance of entente troops or arms
and munitions by all means, paralyz-
ing it' necessary, the whole of the
Bavarian transport system, says a
wireless dispatch from Berlin.
North Sea Squadron Ordered to Baltic
The Herald, the laborite organ, says
that the British north sea squadron
has been ordered to the Baltic sea
and that instructions have been is-
sued tojeiinpose the blockade against
Russia.
Reds Defiant to Allied Proposals.
The soviet government announced
that it has no intention oi revising
its proposed peace terms to accord
with the effectiveness of the military
operations now progressing. Diplo-
mats here believe that the bolshevik
forces are aiming chiefly at the rail-
road He between Danzig and War-
saw.
Russian Reply is Given to England.
The Russian note in reply to the
one received from the British govern-
ment was delivered to tile British
foreign office tonight. It explains that
the Polish armistice delegates were
not qualified to give the undertakings
which were necessary non-commdants
to the armistice.
Those Joining Cantu Face Expulsion.
Calexico, Cal.—American' aviators
who join Governor Cantu’s forces in
Lower California will be exiled from
the United States, according to an-
nouncement of Walter Boyle. Ameri-
can consul at Calexico. Acting on in-
structions from Secretary of State
Colby, Mr. Boyle sent word to John D.
Goree, the American pilot in charge of
Canlu’s aviation operations, to return
to the United States within twenty-
four hoars or he would be ostraziced
by this country.
Lieutenant Payne, another Ameri-
can aviator, who was retained by
Cantu, was refused a passport to go
Into Mexico.
Goree became lost while piloting a
plane instructing Paul Dato, brother-
in-law of Governor Cantu. The plane
was damaged but the aviators were
not injured.
Reports that Cantu had a large air
force were discounted here. Persons
familar with his operations said he
had but two airplanes and if Goreo
returns to the United States he will
have no experienced pilots.
SENATOR NOMINEE LEADS
HIS OPPONENT BY
26,000
SWANK IS LEADING BY 1,700
Elmer Thomas of 6th Distrjpt Is Lead-
ing By 500 Votes With One-Third
of the Precincts to Be
Heard From.
SUFFRAGISTS SEE VICTORY
Special Session Will Meet To Vote On
Amendment.
CANAL DAMAGE IS FEARED
Americans Appeal to Government For
Protection from Mexicans.
Washington. — American property j
owners along the border between j
California and Mexico have appealed j
to the state department for protection j
against possible damage to the great j
Irrigation canal which serves the Im-
perial valley. The canal passes
through a portion of Mexico and it is
feared that it may be damaged in the
threatened coiiflict between Mexican
federal forces and those of Governor
Cantu of Lower California.
The situation has been laid before
the Mexican government by tho
American embassy and Miguel Covar-
rubias, in charge of the Mexican for-
eign office has replied that the Mexico
City authoirties will take all precau-
tions to guurd the canal and, also to
protect the lives and property of
Americans along tire International
border.
Nashville, Tenn.—Gov. A. If. Rob-
erts issued a call for the extra session
of the T^nessee legislature, which is
to consider ratification of the suf-
frage amendment. Should the legis-
lature act favorably, Tennessee will
be the thirty-sixth state to approve
the amendment, and equal suffrage
for the nation will be an actuality on
the issuance of the proper proclama-
tion.
The first item mentioned in the ex-
tra session call is action on the nine-
teenth amendment to the United
States constitution. The next is ac-
tion to fix the lagal status of women.
The third item is to prescribe the
quanifications of women for suffrage,
inducting imposition of poll tax and is
to provide for their registration. The
call is lengthy, embracing many local
matters.
There are thirty-three members in
the senate and seventeen is the re-
quired constitutional majority. The
house has ninety-nine members and
fifty votes there are necessary to a
measure’s passage.
When the state suffrage bill giving
woman’s suffrage in municipal and
presidential elections was before the
senate in 1919, it passed by a vote of j
17 to' 14. All of tbe seventeen senat-
ors who voted aye are still members i
of the senate.
In the house the Tennessee bill waa j
passed by a vote of 54 to 32. Succes-
sors were elected recently to fill the
places of five of those voting a/e, and
five voting no.
Scott Ferris’ majority over T. P.
Gore is 26,256, with only 306 precincts
yet to be heard from, according to the
tabulation of the latest reports avail-
able. The totals of the two candi-
dates are Ferris 100,884, Gore 74,629.
The small gain of Gore voies recorded
which reduced the Ferris lead to ap-
proximately 24.000 was swept aside
by complete returns front a large
number of counties received later.
McCurtain county, claimed as a
Gore stronghold, gave Ferjis 2,079 and
Gore 1,474, with returns complete. In
mer years, McCurtain county fre-
quently has been the last in the state
to report. Rogers county is the only
county from which no reports have
bean received so far on Tuesday's
primary.
Gore Leads in Panhandle.
Gore carried the Panhandle accord-
ing to returns from forty-eight of the
fifty-eight precincts in the district,
which show Ferris 917 and Gore 1,051.
Twenty-three out of twenty-four pre-
cincts in Texas county give Ferris 463
to Gore’s 370, but in Cimarron and
Beaver coutines, Gore leads.
Ferris Wins Noble.
Noble county gave Ferris 544 and
Gore 396.
J. W. Harreld declared that unoffi-
cial reports throughout the state in-
dicated that he would receive three
times the total of his nearest oppon-
ent for the republican nomination for
United States senator.
Totals on the republican senatorial
race reported here were much less
complete than on the democratic race.
With approximately half the counties
entirely silent and others giving only
scattering precincts in most cases, the
figures on the leaders were as fol-
lows: Harreld 9,311; Cullison 5,402;
Small 3,550; Blake 2,690. N. D. Welty
is reported to have his home county
of Washington by a 700 margin, but
in other counties his showing is light.
With two precincts missing Judge
F. B. Swank of Norman leads Roy
E. Stafford by approximately 1,700
votes, for the democratic congres-
sional nomination in the Fifth district.
Elmer Thomas, democrat, is 500
ahead in the Sixth district with fig-
ures based on two-thirds of the pre-
cincts.
HOME WORK FOR WOMEN
Tulsa Commissioner is First of Her
Sex in State.
Tulsa.—Mrs. Frank Seaman, city
auditor of Tulsa, the only woman in
the state of Oklahoma to hold an. elec-
tive city office, Is firstly a housewife
and secondly city official, according ti»
her statement.
She declares she would rather be
at home "puttering” around her
kitchen, roasting meat and making
pies than listening to the mournful
complaints of dozens of Irate citizens
who visit her office every day. Aside
from taking a casual interest in na-
tional political affairs, she pays little
attention to politics.
OIL COMPANY SCHOLARSHIP
Engineering Courses Picked by Em-
pire Oil Refining Company.
In a late Issue of The Empire te
jiublished an announcement by If. R.
Straight, vice president and general
manager, to the effect that nomina-
tions will be received for the Doherty-
Frueauff scholarship, whereby the son
of a Doherty employe may be giVen
an education in an engineering school.
On Mr. Doherty’s forty-eighth birth-
day it was made known that he and
Mr. Freauff, his partner, had created
a fund for the purpose of giving a
scholarship to the sons of Doherty
employes.
SEVERAL BURNED TO DEATH
Series of Blasts Results in Death of
Firemen.—"Pill” to Blame.
TO ENGAGE IN OIL INDUSTRY
Buck Action Recommended by Fed-
eral Report.
U. S. Biggest Buyer of Diamonds.
Chicago.—"If the United States
should go broke” writes a correspond-
ent in South Afica, “the Kimberly dia-
mond mines would collapse over
night.” The reason of this is that
the United States is the world’s great-
est diamond buyer and 70 per cent of
the output of the Kimrebley group of
mines and of all South African mines
Is purchased here. The Kimerley
min is an open hole 13.000 feet deep
In the henrt of the city of Kimberley
—the largest and deepest hole ever
made by man. Tunnels now lead
down 3,601 feet deeper.
American Paymaster Robbed.
Monterey, Mexico.— Bandits, have
appeared again in the Tampico oil
fields. I.eopoldo Gonzales, paymaster
for an American firm or contractors,
was robbed by bandits of $6,800 and
his automobile while on his way to
the camp of pipe line workers.
Ootten Conference Is Called.
Columbia, S. C.—Governors of
Southern states have been Invited by
J. Skottowe Wannamaker. president of
the American Cotton association and
IL C. Hammer, president of the Sooth
Carolina division of the association to
attend a conference here August 28
Army Deserter Is Sentenced.
Wrtghtston. N. J.—Fdward J Re*- 1
sler of New oYrk City, convicted of
desertion from the army In war rime,
was sentenced hy a rent martial at
Washington.—Belief that the United
States must go into the oil business
or take steps to prevent other nations
from monopolizing the world’s oil sup-
ply is expressed by the department
of commerce
"It appears that the British govern-
ment is definitely going into the oil
business,” the department’s report as-
serts. "During the war period It ac-
quired two-thirds of thg stock of the
Anglo-Bersian oil company. This
cotapany has an exclusive concession
for oil exploitation throughout a11 of
Persia except the five northern pro-
vinces and has valuable concessions
In Mesopotomia and other parts of
the world.
‘'It would seem imperative that our
government must take the same
coarse or at least find a way of pre-
venting. so far as possible, the mon-
opoly of future sources of oil supply
by the nationals of foreign countiros."
British Women Must Serve On Juries.
London.—In accordance with an
act of parliament already passed, the
lord chancellor an non nods that after
July 16 women are liable to serve
on Juries under tbe same conditions aa
Cincinnati, Ohio.—Several members
of the Cincinnati fire department
were Rilled and another probably fa-
tally burned in a fire and series of
explosions at the plant of the Refin-
ers Oil company.
One unidentified body wae received
at the morgue.
Lieut. Fred Hotel of I ladder Com-
pany No. 8 is among the known dead.
A cigarette stump throwa into the
yard of tfie refining plant Is believed
to have caused the fire.
ORPHANS TO RESUME TRIP
War Destitutes From Russian Leave
en Japanese Liner.
San Francisco.—The second lap of
the long sea journey from Siberia to
Petrograd was undertaken by 782
refugee Russian children when the
Japanese liner Yomet Matu, chartered
by the American Red Cross and desig-
nated as the "children’s ark,” weigh-
ed anchor in San Francisco Bay and
steamed for the Panama canal.
State Got Taxes on Red River Bridges-
The state of Oklahoma received
taxes paid on railway and on bridges
spanning the Red river and surround-
ing disputed territory according t a
testimony offered at the special hear-
ing of the Red River case before
Fred S. Tyler of Washington at the-
federal building. Railway engineers,
and tax inspectors were placed on
the stand and questioned by attorneys
representing the state of Oklahoma,
the state of Texas and the United
States.
E. J. Heckle, of Wichita, Fans., as-
sistant chief engineer of the Missouri,
Oklahoma & Gulf railway, who has
had complete charge of the engineer-
ing work for that railway for the last
three months was one of the largo
number of witnesses who were ques-
tioned during tho day. Heckle sub-
mitted several blueprint valuation
maps showing boundary lines as they
existed when various railway bridges
were built over the river. The bridges
of the Missouri, Oklahoma &. Gulf
railway cross the disputed territory
in Jackson county. Elmer W. Fisk,
another official of the railway, was
also a witness. He testified that the
Missouri, Oklahoma & Gulf bridge-
was constructed in 1910.
Attorney General Freeling repre-
sented Oklahoma in the hearing, form-
er United States Attorney General
Gregory represented Texas and John
A. Fain, special assistant United
States attorney general, represented
the United States government. Mr.
Tyler, the 9ommissioner, was espec-
ially appointed to collect evidence in
the case to submit to the supreme-
court.
Only a comparatively small part of
the evidence has been submitted. In-
vestigation will continue.
Inter-Church Move To Be Abandoned.
New York.—The future of the inter- j
church world movement, the co-oper-
ating of thirty Protestant denomina-
tions, was up for decision here before
the general committee of the organl- l
ration, composed of 200 clerical and
lay delegatee from all parts of the I
country. Failure of the movement’s J
campaign to come within $100,000,900
of the $336,777,572 fund sought for
denominational work, coupled with
the recent withdrawal of the Northern
Presbyterian and Northern Baptist de-
nominations from tbe movement has
caused some leaders to favor aband-
oning the project altogether.
Camp Dti to fifjetn
rriMHi ml hmrd labor
Carnival Train Wrecked.
Huntington, W. Va—Two persons
are known to have been killed, five
are missing and several reported in-
jured In a railroad wreck on the Lex-
ington division of the Chesapeake and
Ohio, near Ashland. Kentucky. It Is
reported here. Three cars of the
train, whieh was carrying n carnival
from Olive It HI. Ky_ to Iiexlnrton.
were derailed, and were buried under
the wreckage of wight ear* of the
trail The oauae of the wreck has not
been learned
Flier Burns To Death.
Topeka. Kan.—U. H. Nadeau of Kan-
sas City, an aviator waa burned to
death at Cowles Field, west of Topeka
when his airplane came down In
flames as he attempted a landing. H.
C. Travers, of Plainville. Kan.’a pas-
senger crawled from the plane when
his safety belt broke Ha suffered
serious burns.
Czechs To Remain Nestist.
Carlsbad—OsechoSlovakia will re-
main neutral In tbe war between Rus-
sia and Poland.
Hospital for State War Vets.
Approval of tbe use by the public
health service of Rainy Mountain In-
dian school as a tubercular home for
Oklahoma returned soldiers is certain,
according to a telegram sent to Rep-
resentative J. W. Harreld by Cato
Sells, Indian commissioner.
Sells said the public health service
has only to make a formal request
for the school building and it will bo
granted. At a recent meeting the
American Legion and Red Cross join-
ed. with the public health servico in
asking for the use of the school as
a hospital.
Dr. Hugh Scott, head of the public
health service in Oklahoma, wired
John M. Holt of Houston, district
supervisor, asking an early applica-
tion to the Indian commissioner for
the school.
The Rainy Mountain school can be
made into a hospital fully equipped
to care for 300 former soldiers of the
stale in less than a month, according
to the opinion of Doctor Scott.
Rate to G. A. R. Convention.
A reduced railroad fare of one cent
per mile is to be given O. A. R. vet-
erans who attend the national en-
campment of the civil war veterans at
Indianapolis. September 19 to 25, no
cording to Information received by
J. H. Norton, assistant adjutant gen-
eral of the Oklahoma department
from the PennsyR inia railroad offi-
cial a
Must Vote on Street Car Raise.
That the proposed raise in street
car fares In Oklahoma City mus* be
first ratified by a vote of the people
unless the Oklahoma Railway com-
pany is to lose Its presen) franchise
Is aa opinion which was preien’ed
to Fred Parkinson, state rumbMr and
CaN for Broom Corn Harvesters
An nrgent call for broom oorn har
| veeters was sent out hr Claude Con-
j nally. state labor commissioner, to sue
i rounding states
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Henderson, L. P. The County Democrat. (Tecumseh, Okla.), Vol. 26, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, August 13, 1920, newspaper, August 13, 1920; Tecumseh, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc936857/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.