The May Bugle. (May, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1922 Page: 1 of 6
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Vol. 18.
May, Harper County, Oklahoma, Aug. 31, 1922.
No. 49
GIANT SEAPLANE
ON RECORD FLIGHT
The Sampaio Correia Takes Its
Departure From New York
For Rio Janeiro
WILL EXPLORE THE AMAZON
LORD N0RTHCL1FFE
■-*
On First Flight Between North and
South America, Airship Will
Follow River 1,000 Miles.
New York.—Off on the flight of the
century! Taking the air from the
Hudson River, the giaut air cruiser,
Sampaio Correia, piloted by Lieut.
Walter Hinton, was on its way on its
flight to Brazil. The 8,500-mile jour-
ney will mark the first North-South
American voyage by nir.
The Sampaio Correia’s -Irst jump
was a short one. The plane stopped
at Rockaway to take on fuel, prepar-
St:.v
WANTS AN END TO
INDUSTRIAL WARS
In Address to Congress Presi-
dent Hardinq Says Law
Must Rule Nation.
MORE POWER TO LABOR BOARD
Urges Amendment to Esch-Cummins
Act So That Decisions Can Be
Enforced—Into Coal Troubles.
Famous English publisher who re-
cently died at his home In London
from a mysterious malady believed to
atory to starting for Manteo, on Roan- have been contracted during a visit
oka Island, N. C.
With Lieutenant Hinton, the com-
mander and pilot, go four others,
among them Dr. Eyclydes Pinto Mar-
tins, assistant pilot, and John Wilhu-
sen, mechanic.
The Formal Departure.
The formal departure was made
from the Columbia Yacht Club sea-
plane harbor in the presence of busi-
ness men, representatives of the gov-
ernments of the United States and j
Brazil and aviation students.
to Germany after the war.
57 years of age.
He was
SIX DEAD IN FOREST FIRES
Minnesota National Guara Ordered
Out for Relief Duty by the Gov-
ernor— Towns Wiped Out.
GOVERNMENT MARKET REPORT
Quotations of Price* of Farm Product*
From Various Center* Gathered
by the Federal Bureau.
: The following report Is dlstrtb- :
: uted by the Bureau of Market* of :
: the United States Department of :
: Agriculture and is compiled from
: telegraphic reports from all section* !
t of the country: J
EVENTS OF SIATE
WIDE INTEREST
NEWS ITEMS GATHERED FROM
ALL PARTS OF OKLAHOMA
BURNS ROCK ISLAND BRIDGE
Suspicious Appearing Foreign . IVUn
Start Blaze, According to Farm-
ers who Lived Nearby.
Oklahoma City. Okla.—Rock Island
Duluth, Minn.—Six known dead, hun-
_________________ It fol-1 dreds homeless, at least two towns
lowed long tuning and testing of the i wiped out and a dozen others in immi
big cruiser.
On the starboard and port bows, re-
spectively, the Sampaio Correia car-
ries the inscriptions, “United States
of America” and “Estados Unidos do
Brazil.” On the seaplane’s snub nose
nent danger Is the situation after a
series of forest fires which swept
Northern Minnesota, causing the worst
conflagration since 1918, when four
hundred persons lost their lives The
flames have been whipped to a sud-
is painted "Sampaio Correia,” with den fury by a brisk, shitting wind. It
the flags of the two countries on
either side.
Will Go Up Amazon.
The route of the Sampaio Correia
follows the coastline of North Amer-
ica to Charleston, S. C„ then swings
out across the Atlantic, touching
South America in Venezuela. From
there it follows the coastline to the
Amazon River, which will be trav-
ersed nearly a thousand miles. Then
the plane will return to the mouth of
the giant waterway and proceed down
the coast to Rio de Janeiro, its des-
tination.
Ready for the second take-off. the
Sampaio Correia rested in her cradle
at Rockaway. The-crew rested in the
best beds of the Park Inn, two miles
away, at Rockaway Beach.
Washington. —- President Harding
told congress and the nation that he
was resolved “to use all the power
of the government to maintain trans
portation and to sustain the right of
men to work.”
Government “by law must and w^ll
be sustained,” the President said, "no
matter what clouds may gather, no
matter what storms may ensue, no
matter what hardships may attend or
what sacrifice may be necessary.
"Right to Choose Work”
The President, in an address to con-
gress in which he recommended spe-
cific legislation, desired to cure the
nation’s industrial ills, declared with
emphasis that the right of employers
and employees alike “to establish
their methods of conducting business,
to choose their employment and to de-
termine their relations with each
other must be recognized.”
In declaring positively for the right
of men to work, the President said
that in both the coal and railroad
strikes this right had been "denied
by assault and violence,” and in some
cases winked at by local authorities.
He added:
“It is fair to say that the great
mass of organized workmen do not
approve, hut they seein helpless to
hinder. These conditions cannot re-
main in free America.”
Wants “Teeth” In Rail Act.
Stating that the Esch-Cummins act
in establishing the railroad labor
board was inadequate, being with lit-
GERMANS FEAR FOR FUTURE
Breakdown of Premier’s Conference
in London Brings Wave of De-
pression to Berlin.
Berlin.—News of the br< .kdown of
the London conference sent a wave of
depression through political and fi-
nancial circles here. There is much
speculatictn over the attitude of the
reparations commision on the London
results.
The inglorious termination of the
conference, says the Morgen Post,
“must fill the world with apprehen-
sion regarding the new developments.
Germany remains now in that terrible
is believed the death toll may reach
twelve.
Gov. J. A. O. Preus personally took
charge of the situation, ordering out
national guardsmen for relief duty. ________________________
Drought conditions have increased ' no power To enforce" its decis-
the menace to alarming proportions, . jona> tbe presjdent recommended ac-
according to state forestry officials, , tJon tQ make the board-s decisions
and more than two thousand men were “en(orceable and effective against car-
fighting the fires in various sections. riers and employees alike.” *
All the fires are said to have result- other than the amendment to the
ed from smouldering peat beds, which I Esch.Cummins law t0 mafte the rail-
were whipped into raging furnaces by road board,s decisions enforcable the
a strong wind and spread to nearby i pregjdent djd not recommend any leg-
forests. islation to deal immediately with the
Fires also were reported in Wiscon- ra,lroad strlke.
sin, where it was said Drummond,
Bayfield County, was menaced, but
telephone communication with the
place was interrupted and no details
were available here.
Official reports were that Fairbanks,
Silver Creek and Plmio in Lake Coun-
ty, all small settlements, had been de-
stroyed.
Forest fires west and south de-
stroyed
Forest fires west and south of
Dcnounnces Cruelty in Strike.
Stating that sympathetic railroad
strikes had developed and-impaired in-
terstate commerce seriously the Pres-
ident said that trains deserted in the
western desert had “revealed the
cruelty and contempt for law on the
part of some railway employees, who
have conspired to paralyze transpor-
tation.”
Asserting that the striking unions
Eveleth increased their menace and 'n som® instanc®s had Mr^Hard
reports said “every man in town was orces to law observance Mr Hard.
leaving for the fires,” which were 1ng sald there is . s •
reported to he fanned by a stiff south- chocking to every conception of
west wind American law and order,
In a telephone message the Eveleth nounced his intention to invoke laws,
News reported the town was “full of J civil and criminal, forbidding conspir
smoke.” Eveleth, with 7,500 popu’a- , acies hindering interstate commerce
tlon, is protected on the west by a and requiring safety in ra roa ser-
large open pit mine, hut residents of vice.
weakness? in coarse grains led to gen-
eral selling and decline. Corn led de-
cline today and support lacking on way
down. Country offerings old corn fairly
large early but dropped off when market
broke. Closing prices In Chicago cash
market: No. 2 red winter wheat, $1.03;
No. 2 hard winter wheat, $1.04; No. 2
mixed corn, 62c; No. 2 yellow corn, 63c;
No. 3 white oats, 32c. Average farm
pripes: No. 2 mixed corn in central Iowa,
49&o; No. 2 hard winter wheat in cen-
tral Kansas, 85c; No. 1 dark northern
wheat in central North Dakota, 9&c.
Closing future prices: Chicago Sept,
wheat, $1.00%; Chicago Sept, corn, 69%c;
Minneapolis Sept, wheat, $1.04; Kansas
City Sept, wheat, 94c; Winnipeg Oct
wheat, $1.02.
• Hay.
Receipts light but generally equal to
the limited demand. Market weaker at
X. w York. Hay fairly firm at most
western markets. Prairie hay slow sale.
Quoted Aug. 18: No. 1 timothy, New
York $30.50, Philadelphia $19, Minneapo-
lis $18, St. Louis $20, Atlanta $23, Mem-
phis $20.50. No. 1 alfalfa, Memphis $22,
Atlanta $25. No. 1 prairie, Minneapolis
$14, St. l^ouis $17.50.
Feed.
Feed markets quiet. Offerings small.
Demand light. Hominy and gluten feed
quotations steady, little demand. In-
creased offerings of linseed meal, and
prices a shade lower demand unimproved.
Wheat feeds draggy, prices unchanged.
Cottonseed meal in good supply. De-
mand fair. Alfalfa meal firm. Offer-
ings light. Demand fair. Receipts good.
Some delay reported on account of rail-
road strike. Quoted August 18: Bran,
$14; middlings. $16.25; flour middlings,
$21.50; linseed meal, $14.50; rye feed, $15,
Minneapolis. Winter bran, $16.50; mixed
feed, $20; grey shorts, $24, St. Louis; 36
per cent cottonseed meal, $34 Atlanta,
$34 Memphis; white hominy feed, $24.50
St. Louis, $24.50 Chicago, gluten feed
*29 to Chicago.
Live Stock and Meats.
Chicago hog prices showed net declines
ranging from 15c to 60c per 100 lbs. for
the week, light hogs declining most.
Beef steers were 10c to 15c higher and
butcher cows anti heifers firm to 25c
higher; feeder steers were steady while
light and medium weight veal calves
advanced $1.00 to $1.50. Fat lambs and
yearlings were 35c to 50c higher, feed-
ing lambs steady to 25c lower and fat
ewes unchanged. August 18 Chicago
prices: Hogs, top, $9.65; bulk of sales,
$7.50m 9.55; medium and good beef steers,
$8.10(a'10.50; butcher cows and heifers,
$3.90@9.25; feeder steers, $5.40@7.75;
light and medium weight veal calves,
$11.00 O'-12.75; fat lambs, $12.00(9)13.00;
feeding lambs, $11.50(0)12 !*); yearlings,
$8.75(0>11.00; fat ewes, $3,50(0)7.65. Stock-
er and feeder shipments from 12 Import-
ant markets during the week ending Au-
gust 11 were: Cattle and calves, 84,395;
hogs, 3.278; sheep, 54.580. Eastern whole-
sale fresh meat prices were generally
higher for the week. Beef ranged from
50c to $2.00 higher; mutton from $1.00 to
$2.00 higher and fresh pork loins from
$1.00 to $1.50 higher; veal advanced gen-
erallv $1.00 while lamb was firm to $1.00
up per 100 lbs. August 18 prices good
grade meats: Beef, $16(0)18; veal, $150)
18: lamb, $24(^27; mutton, $130)18; light
pork loins. $23(0)37; heavy loins, $13.50
<0)19.00.
LORD N0RTHCLIFFE BURIED
ELECTRIC MINER IS USED
Humans Never Touch Coal Dug By
Nt.v Machanical Plan.
Washington, D C.—For the week end-
ing August 18, 1922.
Grain.
Grain price* lower for week on re-
stricted foreign demand. Buying support
was lacking. Liverpool market also
weak. Only firmness shown August 16
and 17 Whan foreign demand was some-I . j were deoured north and south
what improved and hedges were removed
against sales to Seaboard. Premiums for of El Reno by way ot Geary and
cash grains also were lowered. Chicago , n-idarko recently and federal officers
Sept, wheat 4c lower; Chicago Sept, corn Anauarao it nutty ana atueiui umw
l‘/4c higher. On August 18 grain prices were combing Packington for two
on down grade from start. Bulge last | .. hidden two ami a
two days reduced short interest and this nien who burned a 1)1 luge
half miles south of El Reno. The men
were hotly pursued by railway guards
until they were near Oklahoma City,
when the trail was lost. Farmers
who reported the burning to special
agents of the road said the men were
both foreigners and escaped In a Ford
car. Passengers were delayed by
trains which were unable to go
tli rough.
The burning was reported to the of-
fice of Alva McDonald, United States
marshal by John Burnett, chief spec-
ial agent of the Rock Island. McDon-
ald dispatched deputies to intercept
the inceudarles, but fulled to flnO
them.
The bridge is between forty and fif-
ty feet long, according to deputies, and
it took two days to replace it. Six
passenger trains were tied up.
It is not known whether the men
were strikers of sympathizers, as the
only description given by farmers was
that “they looked like foreigners.”
McAlester, Okla. — In the power
house of McAlester-Edwards Coal com-
pany at Pittsburg, is the only plant
of its kind west of the Mississippi that
takes coal front the mine, and, with-
out it being touched by human bauds,
converts it into electricity and other
potential energy, according to officials
of the coal company.
The plant was put into operation
July 25, and consists of a continuous
mechanical operation which takes the
potential energy from the coal in the
ground and turns it into electrical
power, without anyone handling the
coal.
Tite pulverizer receives slack coal
and pulverizes it to such fineness that
it burns like gas. The one machine
takes the coal in at one end, and,
after it is pulverized, a fan blows the
powdered coal into tile conibusion
chamber under ilie boilers wiiere it
burns in suspension.
Another feature of the machine is
due to the complete combuslon of the
coal, as tlie coal is burned out so that
less than half of 1 percent combust-
ible is found in the ash. The plant
is smokeless.
STATE ORE SHIPMENT BIG
Price of Lead Climbs to $80 While
Zinc Remains At Same Figure.
R. R. AT STRANG NOT TAXED
$35,000 in Valuation Not Listed. Mayes
County Claims.
Pryor, Okla.—Valuation amounting
to $35,000 to Strang, northeastern
Mayes eountw. was not listed by the
Kansas. Oklahoma & Gulf railroad, the
Southwestern Bell Telephone com-
pany, and the American Railway Ex-
press company, iu giving tax assess-
ments last year, according to J. L.
Gibbs, county assessor. Strang vi%s
not incorporated as a city until 1921.
Besides this, a valuation of approxi-
mately $85,000 for the new Oklahoma
and Arkansas railroad, from Kenwood.
Delaware county, to Salina, Mayes
county, was not given in for taxes bv
the corporation. The railroad com-
pany maintains no ruils weft laid by
January, 1, 1922.
Westminster Abbey Scene of Funeral
Ceremony for Dead Publisher—
A Large Crowd Present.
the city feared the fire might be
driven into the town from the south.
Can’t Imperil Public Welfare.
“Surely the threatening conditions
must impress the congress and the
‘
state of uncertainty which above ; K.nsaa city Has Symphony Orchestra country.” the President went on, “that
has caused the present condition of , Kansas City._The Kansas City no body of men, whether limited in
affairs in Europe. 1 Symphony Orchestra’s season begins number and respons.ble for railway
The VorwaertB, discussing^ the lines Convention Hall October 27th, management, or powerful in numbers
| *a>'s: , , „ , Raisa, ‘The01world’s greatest dramatic ! operations, shall be permitted to
“She can, though not legally, rush s()prano 8Upportfid by Kansas City’s choose a course which so imperils
[things to extremes and decide upon QWn ..LitUo symphony,” augmented to Public welfare.”
| drastic military measures. She then fprty.two playerg In discussing the coal situation the
j; would stand before the entire world * _1_ President referring to what he termed
as the disturber of peace. Her isola- SouthwesVs Qwn Symphony Orchestra | the "shocking crime at Herrin 111.,
” "" ~ France her-, Kansaa city.—Kansas City’s "Little ; which so recently shamed and horri-
Symphony” is being rapidly booked in ! He(I the country, an(I a e 6 n
1 cident was “butchery of human beings
tion would be fatal to
self.”
A MONUMENT TO ROOSEVELT
merce, and nearly every large organ-
Vice President Coolldge Breaks Ground ization „f Kansas City,
for Equestrian Statue of Former
Executive at Portland, Ore.
Peking.—Dr. Sun Yat Sen, deposed
1 president of Southern China, has been
fa rortland, Ore.—Three times a gold- invited to come to Peking and his
'%n spade held in the hands of Vice- support has been asked by every im-
President Calvin Coolidge sank into portant Northern leader,
the ground here, and on each occasion -
lifted out a heap of dirt, marking the j HEF3 FROM THE WIRE
spot where a few months hence will
rise an equestrian statue of the late —The senate agriculture committee
Theodore Roosevelt, given to Portland bng unanimously offered a favorable
by Dr. Henry Waldo Cox. Thousands report on the bill to prevent grain
lAf of persons gathered to view the gambling. The bill would bar the
ground breaking ceremony. mails to grain gamblers who trade in
' Before actually bre; ing the ground futures. Proponents of the bill hope
the Vice-President paid tribute to Col- bave the senate take it up immedi-
i olnel Roosevelt, who, he said, though ately after the bonus.
* '■ born in New York City, with a phys-
ical handicap difficult to overcome, —The Belgian delegate on the rep-
j? was possessed of that resourcefulness arations commission, under instruc-
aud love of humanity which enabled tion from his government, will vote
him in the end to come before his against granting a moratorium to Ger-
fellow Americans as a man sprung many, which accordingly will be re-
Irom the soil. fused by the commission
wrought in madnesH.”
Urges Coal Legislation.
The President declared a national
investigation for constructive recom-
mendations as to the conduct of the
coal industry to be imperative and
recommended a government commis-
sion to advise as to fair wages and
conditions.
Immediate legislation to establish
temporarily a “national coal agency,”
with necessary capital to purchase,
sell and distribute coal, also was
urged by the executive.
Would Block Profiteering.
In asking for coal legislation, the
London.—The funeral of Viscount
Northcliffe was solemnized in West-
minster Abbey. Seldom has the last
tribute to any Englishman whose po-
sition was wholly personal and unof-
ficial gathered such an assembly.
The dean of Westminster undoubt-
edly expressed the public wish when
he asked Lady Northcliffe to permit
the rites to be celebrated in thq ab-
bey. The great company of eminent
persons gathered within the famous
edifice, as well as the crowds of
humbler ones in the streets outside,
gave testimony of this
The American ambassador, George
Harvey, was among the host of mourn-
ers, chief of whom wer- the widow,
Viscount Northcliffe’s ged mother
and his six brothers, Viscount Rother-
mere, Cecil B. Harmsworth, Sir Rob-
ert Leicester Harmsworth and Hilde-
brand Aubrey, St. John and Vyvyan
George Harmsworth. Other near rel-
atives and members of the household
staff were present.
ST. TRUCK RAISERS TOUR
Party Leaves Hugo for Investigation
In Arkansas.
Hugo, Okla.—Composed of represen-
tatives from nearly every town iB
southeastern Oklahoma, a party ot
truck glowers left recently for an
extensive tour of the truck growing
sections of Arkansas.
Tlie party was Headed by D. E.
Eicher, horticulturist of the Frisco
railroad, who laid plans for the trip.
The first stop will be at Rogers, Ark.,
from where the party will tour the
fruit and truck growing area by auto-
mobile.
Miami, Okla.—Despite railroad strike
conditions, more zinc and lead was
purchased and shipped from the Okla-
homa-Kansas mining district during
tlie week ending Saturday night, Aug-
ust 12, than in the week previous,
according to the weekly report of the
district.
During the past week 12,410,790
pounds of zinc and 2,713,270 pounds of
lead were shipped from the district.
The zinc was valued at $221,420 and
the lead $106,330.
The price of lead advanced to $80
during the week. The zinc price re-
mained the same.
More than 523,743,080 pounds of
zinc and 119,127,960 pounds of lead
have been shipped from the district
since January 1, tlie report showed.
The total value of the lead and zinc
was $11,984,984.
ST. JUDGES ATTACK BUREAU
County Jurists to Confer On Encroach-
ment Upon Their Rights.
Okmulgee, Okla. — A meeting of
county judges of the state has been
called for September 5 at Oklahoma
City by Judge Hugh Murphy of Ok-
mulgee county to make plans for or-
ganized opposition to what is termed
the encroachment of the commission-
er of Indian affairs on the jurisdiction
of the county judges.
Judge Murphy has mailed letters to
all county judges, inviting them to tlie
conference. There has been no state-
wide meeting of the county Judiciary
for two years, lie said.
ARDMORE CLUBMEN ON TRIP
CHARGE A WORLD OIL TRUST
Reports of International Monopoly
Will Be Probed by the Senate’s
Investigating Committee.
Two McCurtain County Stills Seized.
Durant, Okla.—Two whisky stills,
eighteen gallons of whisky and 2,100
gallons of mash were seized by Jake
Rims and M. H. Neal, federal prohi-
bition officers, in raids in Kiamichi
mountains of McCurtain county.
Price of Gasoline Takes Drop
Okla. City, Okla.—Gasoline prices in
Oklahoma City took another tumble
when a reduction of 2 cents was an-
nounced at city filling stations. The
new quotation is now 21 cents a gal-
lon, replacing the 23-cent figure on the
filling station placards. A steady de-
cline in price has followed the first 1-
cent slash from the 27-cent a gallon
mark in the latter part of June.
Fifty Kiwanians and Band Charts.*
Special Cars to Gelveston.
Ardmore, Okla.- Fifty members of
tlie Ardmore Kiwanis club will attend
the district convention of the organ-
ization at Galveston, Texas, September
3, 4 and 5. Accompanying them will
be the Kiwanian band and two hon-
orary members, Miss Frances Mabel
Robinett, vocalist, and Miss Frances
Jones, pianist.
Two special Pullmans will carry the
Ardmore delegation, which will be at-
tached to tlie Kiawunis special at Fort
Worth, Texas.
Rural Mail Carriers to Meet.
Clinton, Okla.—Rural mail carriers
from all parts of Oklahoma wdll be
here September 4 and 5 for their an-
nual state convention. A large atten-
BR00M CORN HARVEST ON
Many Tons of Ceip Being Handled
Through Marlow Market.
Marlow, Okla.— Marlow, reputed to
be one of the largest broom corn mark-
ets in the stnte, is busy taking care of
tlie many tons of broom corn being
hauled in daily. The crop is of good
grade and commands a market of $150
a ton, which is distributed among the
farmers in the nothern part of Steph-
ens and the southern part of Grady
counties.
Washington. — Ramifications of an
alleged gigantic oil monopoly, extend-
ing throughout the world, will be
in usKing iur uimi roBinnuiuu, me probed by the senate committee in-
President said that the administration vestigating high gasoline prices, Sen- Cate, president ot the Mail Carrie, s
had sought earnestly “to restrain prof- 1 ator Smith of South Carolina, rank- j association.__
iteering and to obtain the rightful ing Democrat, declared recently,
distribution” of coal, but was without j Charges have been brought before
legal power to control* prices. members of the committee that three
Other legislative recommendations | monopolistic companies, with exten
were for "better protection of aliens ! sivo holdings in America, Mexico and
anil enforcement of their treaty Europe, had ircquired, directly or in
rights,” a measure to give federal ' directly, control of about tlireo-fifths
MEAD MAN SHOT TO DEATH
dance° lT'expecVerir7icc0fding 'to R^L. I Slay|n0 Near Durant Said To Be Re-
courts
altoilR
jurisdiction in protecting
of the world’s crude oil supply, ac
cording to Smith.
suit of Feud.
Durant, Okla.—Alvan Roland, 25
yefirs old, was shot and instuntly kill-
ed on the streets of Mead, six miles
west of her. J. M. Davis accused of
El Reno School To Be Full.
El Reno, Ogla.—Although an annex
was built to provide for the overflow ■ doing the killing is reported to have
of school children, it now appears that said as he fired the shot, "\ou have
there will be one class too many to
be accommodated by the schools.
” EnlinUy
been following me too long,
which lias existed between the fami-
School authorities are trying to rent lies of the two men is suppose to have
a room suitable for the children. I led to the affair.
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Latta, Charles W. The May Bugle. (May, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 49, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 31, 1922, newspaper, August 31, 1922; May, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc941137/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.