Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 15, 1922 Page: 3 of 4
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OKLAHOMA LEADER
PAGE THREE
ft S
CURE OEBA
EB
Nearing Says Present System
Makes It Inevitable
I peak of the boom which took place ]
: during the latter months of the war. |
: "Slncc 1811' wo hu\e had the capi- j
I tallit system in this country,"' he j
I continued, "and siucs 1870, the year j
| which the Standard Oil company had 1
jits beginning, practically the whole
world has been in the grssp of this
H STRADUC
fC GAS STATION
:r5?
Shows State House Janitors
system. It wan under that system
that we ran headlong into the war .
and the distressing conditions pre- WhO S Th01T DOSS.
vailing since then. Surely It can
NEW YORK, March 15.—"Ameri-1 offer no remedy now. Any appoiutee of the governor Vho
« a a economic system offers no rem-1 The debate attracted the largest • mauct0us rumors
euy to the widespread unemployment crowd of the season. It was the ' tail, Hhout the
situation now facing the country. I eighteenth gathering in the joint (iu,prs in ,0™. *k
The only remedy will be found in board's program, I transactions in which the o er
doing away with the investors an<l
turning over the means of produc-
tion to tho workers, who will pro-
duce not for profit, but for the com-
inou good of all."
With these words Scott Nearing
concluded presentation of Ihe nega-
tive side on the question: "Can the I
present system offer a remedy for
PUMPS FALSE
Chemist Finds That Half Gas
Pumps Give Poor Measure.
LIVESTOCK
PRODUCE
MARKETS
COTTON
GRAIN
soriCEfc.
I COMPLJii L in.® of rebuilt typewrite
priced low for cash. Downing & ^
inc. Woodstock dlatrlbulors, 2U6 W«
second street. Maple 6763.
:'r;nmXTmu^i ntHwC.chh::? Truck DwasrHCeedlessEnCJinCer
under the auspices of the Education
ill Department of the New York Joint
Hoard of the Amalgamated clothing
"Workers of America. Professor
Walter B. Pitkin of Columbia, upheld
tho affirmative. A. I. Shlplacoff. gen-
eral manager of the joint board, pre-
sided.
Professor Pitkin maintained that
tho fact that the country has mil-
lions of people who leave the farms
annually to take up residence in the
city was ono of the underlying
causes of unemployment.
lie suggested unemployment In
is mentioned In connection with such
things as receiving a slice of a
three-way division of a $25,000 check,
will hereafter feel the gubernatorial
ax upon his or her official or clerical
neck, according to rumors at the
capitol.
Governor Robertson, having
In a report to Hob Parman. com-
missioner of public works, C. E.
Clifford, city chemist, charged that
or in-1 fining stations were glviuj short
measure on gasoline sales, ranging
from one-third of a pint to ftvo gal-
lons to one aud a half quarts.
Parman declared that he would
take immediate action to see that the
practice was stopped.
Of the 100 filling stations in the
city. 52 gave correct measure. 58
LIVESTOCK
OKLAHOMA CITY
KANSAS CITY
GRAIN
TODAVS HLCI1PTS.
t.ses
. 1*0
4.800
KjVNKAS CITY. March 14.—CATTLL
Receipts 11.000 head; beef steers dull. CHICAGO FUTURES
Ud 'Jic !o*sr thsu thta linn dornls. ; , ..
Jamei 1 Bennett arid Company,
early lop II 10. ihe stock, utockern and Grain Lfchang© building )
feeders, steady to 26c lower, cows |4 |rt The Chicago wheat markst again
good sod choice heifers $6,600 "howed a to*;, Wednesday after making
7.-6; some held above *7.76: plain to recovery Tueads>. opening at
choice stecker* |<.00®7 }0: feeder* 86.76 " °r cents leaf- than the closc the
07.50; calves atssdy tn 5nr lower; good da> before it went down to $1.29 In the
and choice \eslem gl.OOtfS.SO; other early acsstou but recovered and .Toned
classes around stead.v j •' U S- July w heat lost 1 cent closing
HOOS—Receipts 11.000 head; market *' 14 Ul*r °P®« "g « cent lower than
openeri slow, some later sales fairly nc- « market of 91.16. Corn, follow-
tlve. I'ftCMOc lower than .xenterday's *Jle v eaknesi In the < hest market
range. ... :6{f8fre below xssterday's av-J,'{bl " "lh "*om th® close Tuesday lor
were Incorrect, while 12 gave more j uni l0 foml ,ulcher oau.e sold $RM 1 ^ J°,y WhWU
than thr required measure. Clifford U.oo. The 'all market wa« uuu, "a| ass? V'**K 1,1 «•• "«• bu « 0( .
found In his report.* I vealers sold 97 60«l.00
WE buy watches, old gold, cleaned ,
mainsprings. 76c; crystals. 26c. 109 I
Harvey. Denver Jewelry Co.
* stile
Calve*
Hugo .
fthesp .
Despite the increase in receipts, the
percentage of desirable kilting cattle
continued light here lode;-. The siecr
inn i kcl wan largely 10 to 16 ct.i.U lower
with a lop of f7.10 and the bulk selling
$ .26tf «.7e. TUe buuner market was Sc-
i.nd lUlly steady. The bulk of medl-
HUMB-GHOWN trees, roses and shri
bery at reasonable prices. Co-Opi
live Nursery, 41U W. Main St. Ok.
City.
Unless pumps are primed every STKlSKb—
fercd reward for the spreading «t ] morninK. nlfiord found, pump. wlil Ooud ie «M«e teh> H # I
malicious ruraor* about Ibp'gu.ran- in%ariubly sivr short measure. He Uoo,i 10 cl
SPORT STUFF
Simpson alleges .11 a suit for 150,050
damages filed Wednesday in tho
Oklahoma county cistrict corn ;
The St. Louis and San Francisco
Railway company was named as de-
fendant In the petition.
Simpson alleges that the railroad
suranoc us the most feasible method tr*cks at the point where the cross
which the present system has to of-1 inS < ,the accident occurred
IC1. are on a high grade ibout fifteen
"The cost of unemployment." he feet u|8her thao thc urroun4tar
said, "must be met from a fund, es-
tablished and supported by the in-
dustry and segregated for the pur
pose of meeting that cost alone.
tec fund" and the "state banks," has r,,comm,.niied thai nn ordinance rc
| resorted to yet more drastic cur,a"'j quiring pumps be prlmod be passed
Au ..uto truck belonging to Cbavlos ment or the "loose, babbling tongue, 1 al oQc(t
T. Simpson of Okmulgee county, according to the reports.
stalled on the railroad track of thc Several janitors who are reported j
Frl.co between Schulter and Okmul-hMvt bern indiscreet enough to I
gee, and was struck bv a pa ^n? r , "'l""'1 10 ,hc verbal "nd "'"c. rn'i
train before It .ould he ret.iov.n, counters in which Governor Robert-)
son engaged at Okmulgee without
proper respect to the gubernatorial I
majesty, are now "considering the
lilies'" and pending thr opening of
the governor's heralded "era of
prosperity and good will."
George W. Clark, chairman of the
board of affairs, declared that but
two janitors were fired. He stated
that .Mrs. Margaret Alley, affairs
board clerk since the preceding ad-
ministration, has also resigned. : champlonphlps. at Madison
though Clark refused to commit him- I Garden. Dave Shade vb.
choice corn-ted..
Medium to good grain-fed..
Cake on grans
COWB ANL> HliirjjJHb—
He t fed cows 6.00^ 1-50
Medium to good butcher cows ^00
7.00 U 7.71
l oo
l.butf 0.2S
TOIUTS i 4I.I MIAU OF SFOKTS.
Tennis—Close of entries for the
Dayia Cup competition of 1922.
Polo Opening of annual tourna-
ment of Camden, (S. C.), Polo c lub.
Golf-Annual Spring tournament
at Miami. Flu.
Boxing Metropolitan amateur
Waby beef helttra.
Medium to gi<otj heifer#....
i tir to medium .
Plain to medium g.aas cows
Strong cutters
Can.iurs und low- cutters...
Uood to choice bulls
*.:• # 7.00
9.O(>0 b.oo
l.|04^ 6.00
a.uu'cj 4.:*
•j.6O« ;«
ing \,sak st decline; bulk of
I? Ilitf 10.05; most throwout sows 18.50;
stock pigs lO^fi'ic lower; ver. few o- c
t* 50.
WANTED—A doctor to locale at
Okla., a einaU imand town. 1 or till
thtr Informstio i write W. A. L>avls. m
rwtary local No. :'68. F. L U. ot A.
IF Toll want to move that etock
groceries from jour shehes. quote
giving invoice and discount. Zalubak ~
Co.. Kingfisher, Okla.
WILL pay the hlghvet price on cow
noted in oats and H^ and ho«11- •'
CHICAGO
CHICAGO, March 14.—CATTLE-lis
relpis 12.000 head; market very slow;
undertone wssk to lower on all cjasaes;
few eiirly Mile* beef Mteern ttnd fat she
stock 15 to Sue lower, bulk beef steers
of quality to HStl 9T.4008 -5.
HOUH—Htcelpts -a.uOO head; market
mostl> '.'Co lover than yenterdav'i
WHEAT —Open
May .... i.Si-
July 1.J4
DATS-
May
1.75V - 5b , rgei top J10.7": practical llmli 910.C5;
S. o^ 4.00
Medium to ffoed butcher bulls 3.6ufc> S.:'9
Common bolognas .. li.GOt# -50
caLveb—
Good to choice \ eals 7.50 flp 8 00
Kan to good lights ti.OOfji 7.00
Uood to choice heavy cslvss 4.-t>'d> 560
Common Co fnlr calvoa. . 4 00
STOCKEKti AND I'KEDERH-
reslgned under pressure.
It is said that the governor called'
land, and that thc company baa
failed to keep the crossing in repair.
When the plaintiff drove his truck
upon the tracks, tberc was no train
.. . | In sight, but the engineer of ^he
this way only can the burden of the passenger train negligently ap- in tho heads of departments under
cost be sufficiently felt by those who pr0Rrhed and struck the maohlue his control and gave son led orders to
must take steps to reduce it. It without warning, while be was try- weed out the "unfaithful.''
seems to be a cardinal principle in (nR lo start It again. Simpson al- This meeting was followed by
social insurance that specific alio- j meetings of clerks and employes and
cation of tho responsibility and bur-! He was carriod down the tracks thereupon the janitor's force was re-
don js an indispensable first step in • 66 feet after the collision, bo stated, j duced by five, according to reports.
thc eradication of the evil." j and suffered serious injuries. j a number of department heads do-I A FT!') It AM..
nled any know ledge of the reported I Doleful m
feeders, Dou to 1,000 lbs..
Square i Good 8"0 700 lb. Blockers..
Johnny j Hest v hltefaca yearlings.
I lie for boll placers to get
married. Pitcher Nalte Hoyt,
received an Increase of salarj
of over 100 per cent at a wed-
ding present ironi Ihe w ierk
Yankees.
Common to pia^> > esrllngs..
i Goad lo choice stock heifers.
J Medium lo good heifers
! Choice stork calves
I 'In In slock calves
Voung stock coas. light ....
Aged stock cows ...
Medium to good stock bulls..
6.40 V 6.50
4 75 2/ 5.50
i.ib'd t 00
4.75^ 5.*-'&
4 00^. 4 50
5 L'S-tf 4.00
•:..75'flD a.; J
b.'JO® 1.00
3.50 J> 4.50
^.75® 3.75
1509 8.00
3.00# 4.00
Profesaor Pitkin said that there j
were At leait 100 other methods of HUGE SUIT ASKS
remedying unemployment under the ron C7t;n Ofin
present systom. The only other that , rUn ^/OU.UUU
he specifically mentioned was the e*-'i
tahlishmcnt of nationally organized i Alleging violation of a contract by
employment agencies. Robert \VatchorO of lx>s Angeles,
"Our prenent system," declared suit for the recovery of $750,000 was
Nearing, "is built on a foundation j filed Wednesday in the federal court
which Is bound to produce chaos. It I by thc Roxana Petroleum company,
is an insane system." The plaintiff declares that the dc-
In support of this statement he fendant was to obtain oil rights on
quoted statistics showing that Inter- certain property aud that Watchorn
est and dividend payments were far i was to develop the property. The
dismissals of thc unfaithful.
STORMS TAKE
heavyjtolls
Twenty-Three Killed—Heavy
Property Damage.
Twenty-three reported to have
higher in this day of unemployment j plaintiff asks for $250,000 in each ot , heen more than 100 injured they journey to Wichita Falls for
nd distress than they were at the | three counts in thc petition. an(| property damages amounting to ! games with the Texas league Drill-
almost half a million dollars is the era. Other exhibition names have
= result of storms which swept across been scheduled for the uear future.
|j four Htatos. ; including a pair with the Kansas
S Two deaths are reported at Sul- City Blues March 27 and 28.
= phur and ten at Gowen, a mining ; Nearly all the Tribe have reported.
5 town near Hartshorne. , wjth some more of the late arrivals
|| ■ Six negroes were killed near Jef- , atraggllng in Wednesday.
g , fcrson and I<onoke. small towns in!
= Arkansas, and in another section of
{* the state visited by thc storm, a man
= | was killed.
= ' At Corinth. Mississippi, approxi-
= mately 30 persons were injured by
H the storm which swept through that
= section.
1| A 5-year-old white boy and four
S negroes were killed near West Baton
S Rouge by the storm and many homes
3 w ere demolished.
Representative ealen as furnished by
JKSS III Nsl.H NOT TO Bfi HERK Ith* Uv« X**" ,or Tu.wl.y:
is m;hs to trim;: . stekhs
i for the Jack Holland
1 Tribe was received Wednesday with lg ^
the arrival of a dispatch stating that
'Jess Runser, the star shortstop of j 2g...
the Red Men last year, could not be
here.
Mrs. John Hagel. wife of the busi-
ness manager of The Leader, re-
ceived the notice from Mrs. Runser, j 600 | y> 790 550
who has objections to living in Okla-
homa City. 5 602 5.50 1 4 730 5.00
j The Indians will meet their first
, test under the leadership of Gus
! Fisher Saturday and Sunday when
Wt.
Pr. ! No.
Wt.
Pr.
697
57. M 14..
...1211
$7.10
PBS
6.75 | 22...
... 7«9
6.6S
4M
6 60 18...
. . . 8DJ
G.I0
11-5
6.76 ! 8-...
... f70
6.48
\'1Z
6.76 36...
... 886
6.2$
6t>0
6.00 : J...
... 850
6.00
870
6.oo ; l...
...1150
6.00
•Mixed.
i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiii"'""""i""""""""""'^
"// the weak
fail to gel their share
\ The strong
are not to be blamed
John Arthur Nelson, in his groat farmer-laboA novel.
| explains how Big Business crushes the small competitor.
| Head thc following quotations from his great book. The
1 parties quoted are Mary, the daughter of a manufacturer,
| not a member of the monopoly, and Wharton, emissary
I of Big Business.
*«*«***
Mary took a seat and motioned for Wharton to do
1 the same. Then opening the book where her finger still
| marked a page she read:
" 'American industry is not free because the laws
| of the country do not prevent the strong from crushing
1 the weak.' Shouldn't something be done to protect men
1 when they haven't enough strength or ingenuity to pro-
i tect their own interests?" She looked up at her guest
I quizzically. It was evident from his manner that he
j didn't relish her viewpoint but. Tor the moment, his or-
| dinarily quick wit seemed unable to provide a plausible
| argument with which to attack it.
"Economists are inclined to be rather prim and dog-
! matic old ladies," he, smiled lamely, and shrugged his
| shoulders with feigned indifference.
"But if such an unequitable condition exists it should
1 be remedied, should it not?" Mary queried persistently.
"1 am not sufficiently familiar with the premises laid
| down by the author which have led up to his statement—
| so that I am not in a position to get his viewpoint."
"Well, here is a statement that supplies what you
| require," she said with a twinkle in her eye that escaped
| him. Turning back a few pages she searched for a mo-
= ment and then began to read:,
" 'Some of the biggest men in the United States, in
§ the fields of commerce and manufacturing, are afraid of
i somebody, are afraid of something. They know that
| there is a power somewhere so organized, so suptle, so
| pervasive, that they had better not speak above their
| breath when they speak in condemnation of it. , . .
| They know that America is not a place of which it can
I be said, as it used to be, that a man may choose his own
| calling and pursue it just as far as his ability enables
| him to pursue it, because today, if he enters certain
I fields there are organizations that will see to it that the
| ground is cut from under him and the markets shut
| against him. For if he begins to sell to certain retail
| dealers, to any retail dealers, the monopoly will refuse
i to sell those dealers, and those dealers, afraid, will not
1 buy the new man's wares.' "
As Mary finished the quotation Wharton's eyes nar-
§ rowed and a scowl spread over his face much as if the
1 words of the writer had been directed against him per-
il sonally. In his heart he knew- that the statement was
I true, but he searched for words with which to refute it.
§ lie also knew that economic promises authoritatively
I vouched for by a president of the United States plus a
I charming but persistent young lady who had already
! shown him that she would not be satisfied with evasive
i half-truths, was both a rare and difficult combination to
g effectively combat. So in sheer defense and with thc
g assumed air of a grown man explaining something to a
| child, lie said.indifferently:
"Business is inexorable. If thc weak fail to get their
I share, it is not the fault of the strong."
I ,,,,«* ««
"The New Disciple" is given free with two yearly
= subscriptions to the Oklahoma l.eader, or for S1.85 cash.
l..
l...
. .100(1
. 1260
..1200
,.i:'40
.. ':?o
HEIFERS
e.oo ; 12..
<.U0 , 3..
6.60 | 4..
4.00 I 4..
COWS
t..'5 | 1..
6.00 I 1..
(.00 I 1..
6.oo ! :s..
CALVISH
1..
1.00
217 7.76
. .1100
..1110
..1161)
.. 8C5
.. 3S0
.. its
4.50 I 1 190
... 350 0.50 ! 1 150
CANNBRft AND CL'TTEflfcS
1040 3.00 |
120 pounders $3.00
WICHITA
Hill!
1 JO
115
.3D
lx>w
1.13
1.12
'lo e
l 14
$.700
4.00
6.00
865
J.00
7*0
HOTEL BURNS
AT RENO, NEV
I.\t K 01 t 0 N'T KOI. II \S HI F.N
OBNTAI U; 01 MIVI.IK'S PATH
Ed Novllk, who announced several
daya ago that be waa retiring from
baneball to enter bufdnen*. may boast
of one of the ehcckered careers in
the national game.
Novllk has worked In a half dozen
minor leagues and has been watched
closely by nearly every club In both
majoi leagues. His lack of control
was the only thing that kept him
from landing a berth in the big show.
He pitched last year for Minneapolis
In the American association and on
several occasions when be was right
i was practically unbeatable. His lack
of control was an ailment that usu-i
Onf> ally cropped out unannounced.
MULLS
1010 3.00 | 2 10S0
....1180 3 00 1 1 1260
STOCKERS AND FEEDERS
STEERS
.... 7~0 6.50 | i ... 170
.... m 6 75 ' 6 JlS
. . . . 588 6.7R •
11 BIKERS
WICHITA. Kts . March 14 —The cattle
innrkti continued nhmjt steady on the
800 hemi oonUng today. Calf market
(•honed some weakness eli hough thc $9.*>n
top wan retained. Top on butcher ateeri
wen $7.U5 with the Itulk wiling around
60 and up. Hutcher helfrrn topped at
|i 50 with bulk aellln $5.0o©t .00 and cows
15.000)5.TS. Miockers and feeders top
was $7.50 with bulk nelllng J5.76®6 75.
Ten on hogn nettled Ml >9.85 after a
lower tendency wan apparent. Hog* na
heavy na -K6 pounds nrn Helling from lo
to K5 eenta lower than thr light weight®.
Heavy aow a and atagft aold around $8.50
and meet stock hogs brought $8 00.
IIUTCHER 8TEURB AND HLU'ERS
No. Wi. Pr. | No. Wt. Pr.
44....?. 608 $7.00 | 45 .... 530
HUTCHER COWS
8 1083 4.L'5 | 1 180
1 liCO 3.10 | 1 1170
STOCK UTJBEK8
6-'l 0.60 | 6 622
HULLS
"040 2.75 |
Lit; 11T VEALS
l'JI 7.50 | 1 320
135 4.60 | 1 180
IIEAVT CALVES
) C 60 | 0 415
3 6.00 | b 440
9 8.60 | 2 820
STOCKERS AND FEEDERS
24 873 7.00 | 1 780
6 771 6.S0 | 2D 604
20 b45 6.25 j 9 816
2 7fc5 li.00 j 24 6:8
18 «2l 6.76 | 7 640
6 ISO 8.60 | 4 604
ttTOCK COWS AND HEIFERS
2 825 6.25 | 6 660 4.50
3 J)a6 4.00 j 2 785 3.60
1 970 3.00 i
CARLOT IIOG8
o. Dk. Wt. Pr. | No. Dk. Wt. Pr.
«... 80 207 811.00 | 78... — 206 f 11.00
HEAVY SOWS AND STAGS
1... — 340 8.76 | 8... — 420 8.60
1... 70 4o0 6.60 I 1.. . 70 220 6 50
W A (.JON HOOS
7... — 200 10.76 | 6... — 200 10.78
6... —210 10.75| 3...— 1 4 10.75
RYE—
May oo o_. >90
July . . l.oi! i o: .95 l
KANSAS CITY GRAIN
WHEAT—
No I dark hard..
No. 3 dark hard..
No. 5 dark hard..
No. 2 hard
No. | hard
No 4 hard
No. 5 hard
No. 4 red
OATS -
No :t white
CORN —
No. •: white
No. 'J mixed
1.45
1.44
130 01.32
1.22 4/it-4l
. 1.32 $143
1.30
1.10 01.20
KANSAS CITY FUTURES
(By Jnmca E. Bennett and Company,
Grain Excliango building./
Kansats City grain showed a Iosh In
all divisions. May wheat opened at 31-21
after n closc of 81.23 for Tuesday and
vent down io 11.20 or registering u Iona
of 2 rents. July wheal was 2 cents
loner.
GOOD-UY ITCH.
'• • u iv ill m ike t i tryit.
"< >i .ii. : < " -,<■< i ;• .speed
tei Wo have Speedy l&caema aud ltc
Remedy both In liquid and ualvt. If Ui
i -nn vers ;i largo rt or th
body *o would recommeud ibe liciult
otherwlM*, the salve. The Pile re-tiedy I
wi ; hiiI\c only. Prl-c. eltlic: Jiyuiu c
< ilve, }1 i" r hot(lr «-mr prepitl
if ia«ii accompanies order Call or a<J
". Speedy Remedy Co. 5:«; Wei
Grand. Oklahoma City.
M >\ f:i> -n i . Steele, to 403 W (Irani
I'!' '' < and all kinds of hardware, hot!
and rakes, granite. Qutenaware, timvarj
etc.
SUDAN GRASS SEED, raleaned. H.J
per 100 lbs. f. o. I>. Greenfield; feterlt
ie. (I. 'leaned. $!>'> per loo u.. t. il
Grei ui old Addit V iillum- ll!( , . J(out|
3, Watonga, okla.
PIKSOYW,.
82
a
l
.\la> corn showed Imtiteft of 2 cents,
closing at 63 cents. July corn closed l'^
centfi lower.
WHEAT—Open lllgh Low Close
] May 121 1.21 1.1H 1.20
July 1.07 1.07 1 05 1.06
CORN—
6.0#! May .54 .54 .52 .63
4-00 | July 57 .57 .55 .5*
6.50
4.60
8.00
6.60
6.25
6.16
6 75
6.60
6.00
682
630
1.
3.74
4.00 I
COWS
3.60 i 1.
BULLS
S 392 4.25 |
Live pork values continued lo decline
today, tho local loss amounting to 10 to
15 cents The top wan |9.tJ5 on the best
with the bulk selling 19.45 and up. The
arket closed mostly 60 cents
} ( RENO. Nevada. March
I hundred per.sonH who narrowly es- Several times last year he wa« | hocker
I'capod death when thp Riverside ho- ( working on tho inouud like a champ,
I tel burned last night, were buying , only to blow up like a rank busher. I Hest butcher. '-'00 -50 lb*
| new wardrobes today. Most of them apparently unable to locate even the | Medium to good butcher*
= were forced to flee from the building < atelier. Milwaukee Leader. i Plain to medium heavies.
: in their nlfht elOthM. [ Good stock hogs
Ii The Riverside was tho largest ho- IS IIK N N11 01V! \ DODGING \
j i-i here. The flit Is thoufht to hav4 GAME WITH IG«IB SCHOOL 1 No j>k. w
5 started from defective wlrfng. Rumors trickling down from Still- 77 _
water have it that Bonnie Owen, Uni- $i... — 200
IOngland more than 15,000. verslty of Oklahoma coaeh. fears to | 20 . — 185
. ?9.«0tfro.«5
1.3001.10
. . 9.3641 9.50
. . 6.00^7.00
.. 1.00© 1.25
Dk. Wt. Pr.
— 203 |9.70
— 194 9.46
70 210 9.60
COTTON
new york cotton
(By James E. Hennett and Company,
Grain Exchange building.)
Open High Low Close
March 18.1:.' 18.16 17.76 17.87
May 17 04 17.94 17 61 1 7 7:,
17.25 17.25 17.00 17.11
16.74 16-74 16.54 16.70
Among thc oldest twins in America
arc Joel and James Cbeatwood, who
are 9U years of .dgc and still work
their own farms In Leavenworth
county, Kansan. They were born In
Stokes county, North Carolina, In
1831.
YOL'NG man. age 27. heavy sel, \\
to correspond with single, healthy ladl
ot Junior age Must be intelligent, libera
minded mid idling |-. .>\<*haI,K' a por|
sonal quest louairre. Addrc. a N. O., i
Leader.
ci 1.N r1.1.M A> wlih g " d reputatloil
u fjet a. nualntr I u|th ;t ,-hrlJ
''an lady that would h*. willing to liv|
on a farm. N. I., care leader.
PH0FK88I0NAI,.
S. R. CUNNINGHAM, ChiropfMotOfi 2j|
lialtlruure Uidg. .Maple 4440
MPKC1AL ATTENTION -Treatment
.aih-r and skin dln<mge. 1>i VolncJ
311 on Exchange Hidg. oklahoma, CUM
Phono 61. 6048.
DR FJCCK Special attention given
chronic, nervous, mental and diacasel
of women 122 j W. .Mali,
HOTKIJ* AND KOOMJMi HOl&KS
SANTA !•'E HOTEL, No. U VN cj i cuu|
lornia. Speulal wuokly rates.
Oklahoma Leader Want Ad
Rates and Inlormation
CLASSll'IED ADVERTISING RATE8
—CllAitOU KATES—One Insertion, p«r
Une « cents. Three insertions, per line,
6 cents. Six Insertions, per line, 5 cenia.
No advcrtlttsment accepted for lens
than 26u. Count six average words lo
lite lino, twelve lines to the Inch. All
charge w«tnt a us. are duo and payable
Uie day Hrot InserUou of advertisement
appears.
October
new orleans cotton
March ..
May
October .
10.66 16.66 16.29 16.40
16.66 1667 16.25 16.48
16.U2 U.|2 15.74 15.85
women registered an domestic serv- match a grid game with the Okla
ants are drawing unemployment homa Farmers under the guidance j
benefits, notwithstanding the fact I of Johnny Maulbetsch.
one of the;
S | that housewives still complain of
S their inability to obtain help.
|l
1 Rich Widow Swindled
Out of $375,000.
C
Bennie is known
shrewdest coaches and athletic dlrec- J
tors In the west, and there is a pos- i
sibillty that he sees In the Maul-
betsch-trained athletes a nemesis for I
his 1922 warriors. There Is also the
chancc that he Is trying to match a
game with only the strongest Insti-
tutions. which the row-college has When
cwtalnly not been in the past. , Whea
Director E. C\ Gallagher of A. &
M. may bo biased bccause his pchool
is missing on Ihe Sooners" schedule,
but he gives good reason for his be-
lief.
Gallagher has investigated and
found that Owen has matched a game
with both the University of Texas,
and Iowa State collcge on November
18. Neither school will agree to a
change unless the forfeit is paid.
He says Owen is trying to get some
team to take one or the other off his
hands, and that the Sooner coach is
holding November 25 open as a bonus
date for any team who will play
Ames or Texas. Both want to play Fowl:
Oklahoma, however, and cannot play
on Novemb
*9.75
H.70
9.10 j
87... — 175 9.60 84 — 189
— 18? 9 60 ' 89. .. — 178
• 17.. M0 [ 36 . — 169
STOCKERS ANI) FEEDERS
. — 90 7.60 J.i . - 100
ROUGHS AND TltROWOt'TS
. — 438 8.26 | 2. . . — 865
— 285 8.25 I 1 230
oklahoma city grain
Prices to farmers on wagon gra.r
noted by the PlSnslfter Milling Co.:
No 1, per bushel $t.tl
No. 2. per bushel 1.13
No. :j. per busne! l.io
\aflr, per hundred pound*.,.. 100
Oats, per bushel 50
Mixed oorn, per bushel 60
White corn, per bushel b>
FINANCIAL
liberty bonds
(By Jame E. t:e:.sett and Company,
Gralc Exchange building.)
S'fcs $ ll.ll
first 4s 96.96
Second 4s 97.40
First 4«is 97.50
Beconf 4',* 07.44
Third 98 66
Fourth 4M 97.66
M ALI: UK LP W ANTED.
WHY discard used razor blades when
the Reliable Cutlery Sharpening Co.,
306 North Robinson, makes them better
than new at 26u and 85c per dozen.
I CAN use two hands tor a while If
they can board themselves. Will fur-
nlbh a house, wood and water. A. J.
Foiw. Rt. 1, Lexington, Okl®.
SALESMEN lo cover local territory
selling deulerf Guaranteed salary ot
|10i> \ i-ek for right man. The Commer-
cial lludium Co., Fifth Ave. Mldg., New
York.
It lLMSllUll IIOISES AND
AI'AUi Jlh.NlJt H)l< HKN1.
FOR REM 11i)iir-' , furnished or unfurl
nished. iiic r g.;uJ WC]i
Call evsAlnfa Mupic 7au.
L> HUMS UK I) liut Sh.S AND
AVAKT.MIiNTS KOlt IIKM.
KENT JUrgain. Am leaving city, iiuvl
good five-room bungalow with bu^. |
ment. Largs barn and garage. chwlM
house and lots. UOod well and cislein
plonty of good garden ground Rent n
party with good reference. Phone Al.
LIGHT liOlM kKhPlMi HOUJI^.I
FOB KENT.
H)ll RUN f — Une lurg(> ilgnt huus«f|
keeping room. 314'«j Last Third.
FURM.-illlilJ hoimokcejilng rootnJ
adults, also sleeping looina. 421 LasI
Third utreet.
FUKM8HED U00M8 KOIt HE5T.I
Full HUNT . it-c|"i't' i'j ims for moi|
and $5 per week. 317 West 4Ui.
CHOICE ROOMS, furnished for ou
more; modern, fl 50 to $4.00 M. 57*jl
■SlTLAriO.NA> rED~.UALE.
SITUATION wantod by espert vulcan-
ifcer, eight yeurtt' e*j« .-nente In both
ahop and factory. 519 North Blckford,
LI Reno. Okla.
MAN AND WIFK with son 14, girl 12."
and a baby, wanta work on ranch or
farm; experienced with stock; would
consider sharu crop. Address S. A.
Mahwine. Rox 1072, JJurkburnett Texas.
foreign exchange .t^t,
ii is i \ ins or pout i:.MnK,s.
FOR SALL-bargain, nearly new, hsnd
laundry doing good busineas. See us
work forenoon any week day. .'252 West
street, Pui-kingtowtv
Ktsrllng f4.t
Call. 4 per
irk* 008 .
Sterlln. J4 2
PRODUCE
chicago produce
BUTT13R—
Creamery eatrae ...
Creamery standards
Firsts
Be cor. da
POULTRY-
US .
-Union bsker** to locate at
>ewar. Okla. Population about 3.000.
od opening; no bakery here, good sur-
jndlng terrltorj If Interested, write
i« R Downen. Box 508. Dewar. Okla j
BIT AT ION A; I) l>WII(l (TION.
A^.'i hi.u—Men lo learn barber '
. —, I low tuition; tools tree; wages whiin |
>YHOI.i;SAI.L PEOBltt. learning, position guaranteed; catalog
! Correcte.l by Wright Produce Co. mailed irec Kchwargs Barber College,
! Bprlngs 10.17 | I0ti W. California Ave,. Okluhoma ICty
Young roosters
Hens
Guineas, young
No. 1 hen tu:
ALTON VEHICLES ASD
AlCKsaOKlEM.
PARTS FOR ALL CAIU3
N1CW AND USLD
8AVJA 25 TO 7u l'ER CENT
PHONE—WXIUC—WIUTB
AUTO PARTS CO.. 220 N. ifDW Y.
POl I/ntY AND PETS.
ruOltOUUHUlilfiD EngUsh Single Coml^
Whits Leghorns, and Barrsd R<
cockerels, 2 ench, >1 per dottn. Lrn
Collin. Uranlte, Okla.
RHUDE ISLAND RLDS
About to or lo thoroughbred hens and
••la : • '• y - -i". '•, l LiijiJ
Tenth. Maple 5248.
LOCAL MARKET *
1 'I i' iOi i .CD i 1 . ■ v alan^
< •• .-u i ju' r L'- -«t u bargain.
!£. alker. Madill, Okla.
<a S5
y.so
(lef . ..
Aggie fans openly declare that' q urke^s .
Owen is afraid of them, but doesn't Roosters .
want to say so. Looking at It from i LOOS—
the Sooner standpoint, however, the Ordinaries
question bobs up: Why should the irsta
university be compelled to play the
agricultural college, a much smaller
school, which has never had a very
strong grid team?
l
City
irke>
[id old
. 10 lb
. 11 lb
out. uellv
H ATI) IIKS, JI EL IIV. ETC.
s and'up..* 30 WK UUY oLi duLD,
.-i aid up 50 1 S1LVUR AND DtAAlUNDS
>s Included ilOftfciliOUS JUWLLRV CO.
1 Oklahoma • 325 North Broadway.
. . 5 75 SPECIAL A'i'l KNTiON U1VLN T
,ery.> FINK WATCH RLPAiKlM4A
' 7v IIEAL ESTATE KOII SALE.
,L PUPS FOR
I'HHf- I I' li.-avv Iay-|
I Si 15 llenr
Okla.
61b N. Walker!
THE WEATHER
(Local Creamer
I Packing stock buttei. g<
No. 1 delivered Oklahi
via express
Fresh cresmer- butter. i< In tubs... .85 I FOR HALF
GKAIS 4KD FEED, otisge it
! Retail prices for grain and feed in -nai, six bl
| Oklsho
('HEAP - 5-room
Edmond; block fn
cks from high schn
chicken houw ;ind
feed per
ANNABELLE EDWARDS
FIGHTS FOR ESTATE
H |1aIha.ii, DwJe^.-]
= [AlE-Xrirulrxy- |
Oklahoma City.
Oklahoma City t
weather tonight a
what warmer Thu
For Oklahoma-
extreme east por
somewhat warmer
! Chic!
Shorts.
Shelled i-orn t
i Ost«. per bush
.>1.80 , -ella
. 1.75 fuit
. 1.4( I iOCk
\|{.MS AND At HE I'lC %« IS.
I 1.1.AM 01 S I OH 8AEE OH 1
THAIlE.
71 STOVLR F(
MIM 1 I I \ N KOI > I Oil SAI.E.
Thursda
S aire tobacco manufacturer, and ( ar-
= 1 lotLa Nlllson. winsome actress. Mrs
= Duke, shown in this picture, has
= I filed suit to recover $376,000 her
S! entire personal fortune, of which
a she alleges. Lindsay (shown In thc
iljllllillllinilHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIllHIIIIIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUlllllHHIUIIUinmillUIIIIIIIUIIIIUIIIIIIiSI m«ei )swindled h- i.
Ci re ul at io n I)ep art ment
Oklahoma Leader
The fight of Mrs. Annabellc F.d-
wardS for a share in Lbe esbate of her
husband, Billy IJdwards, who was psi cp AprilQATinN
„ho. a j-rar ,-onUoued In ft^^rcn RY WIPF
the district court of Judge Georgo ^ . j UnAnUtU D 1 WlrC
Through promises of big proflta In ' lark Wednesday.
stock irsnsactlons, Alfred V. Llnd- A death- <vj will of Edwards' a
sav of Nyaek. N. V-, i.> accused by protnineot Oklahoma City sportsman.
numerous persons of having swln- most of his property to his par-
dled them out of $700,000. Included cnts. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Edwards of
among those w ho claim to have been ; Perry.
victimized by Lindsay arc Mrs. Lil- Annabellc Edwards was acquitted
lian N. Duke, widow of the million- several months ago on the charge of cruelty, declaring Avers often struck
the murder of her husband. , and beat his w ife, and non-support.
:— j Alimony of $100 and custody of a
Gunnery practice and naval man- child, three an*; a half years old, Is QhoU*
euvers in the Firth of Forth have requested.
been suspended by 'he British adml- — —
rslty in order lo improve the sea A wave of thought takes a minute
flshin.;. i to travel a mile oi nerve.
HAV \.Mi STRAW.
Prices for ha und eiruw i,i OI
City.
No. 1 alfalfa hay, ton
No. 2 alfalfa hay, ton
Na 1 prslne ha>. ton
HI HE M AHMET.
Alleging that W. R Ayere bas | j*. 8. b!des. sh rt hair.
"falbdy and unjustly accused o'8. hidsa trubbv"
plaintiff of unfaithfulness and imnrn K h ,!(j0 branded <
rallty," Jo Jewell Ayera, Wednesday. Green i idea <
tiled suit for divorce in nistrict court. Glue hide* .. .<
The petition slso alleges extreme ' Dry salt hides .. .(
• ! BROOM CORN.
(Ite ise l by Traders Warhout
Commission Company)
Lindsay Btandard—
nolos
! «ood
11
«u. I
- I
. t '..la
•ro tra. ts in Last
oad Priced to i*r
;>s ul egual value
ndrvd ix>un<lM aeit-worKiiig uw"
corn, well bulfcd, J3 |*.r nui<«Jr
C. C. i aidwsll, Cogar, uku.
ids.
BARBKR SHOP FOR tfALK ON
1 l<; VI rH HTRKET. i' i s.Mj I'll.
l OR FURTHKR INKOKMATlUf
WR1TI: t I 'A N I 1' t ■ LAMAR, \ R K.
I WPI (Ml ( KK I l! U IS.
« ks and ix>ult
r-lfii, good!
|
' m1'hm .or western t iklahurtn
Tt'MIMH UL< SIS I N M 1
ptive «-«ider aud price Hat oi,
k>\ okla.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 182, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 15, 1922, newspaper, March 15, 1922; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc99970/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.