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June 1923

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The following events occurred in June 1923:

June 27, 1923: Airplane refueled in mid-air for the first time
June 20, 1923: U.S. President Harding leaves White House to go on tour, never returns
June 9, 1923: Bulgaria's Prime Minister Stamboliyski overthrown

June 1, 1923 (Friday) Edit

June 2, 1923 (Saturday) Edit

June 3, 1923 (Sunday) Edit

  • Voters in Switzerland overwhelmingly rejected restrictions on the production of alcohol, turning down a proposal that would have given the Swiss government an exclusive monopoly on brewing and distilling.[7]
  • A commission in New York City released the findings of its investigation into charges that some American history textbooks included anti-American propaganda. The report found eight such textbooks that were seen as pro-British. "Any history which, after 150 years, attempts to teach our children that the War of Independence was an unnecessary war and that it is still a problem as to who was right and who was wrong, should be fed to the furnace and those responsible for those books branded as un-American", commissioner David Hirschfeld said.[8]

June 4, 1923 (Monday) Edit

  • The British cargo ship Trevessa foundered in the Indian Ocean while traveling from Australia to Mauritius. While all but ten of the 44 crew were able to escape to lifeboats before the ship sank, sixteen men in one lifeboat spent the next 25 days drifting at sea before they were able to reach land, finally getting to the Mauritius island of Rodrigues on June 29 after a voyage of 2,000 miles (3,200 km).[9]
  • The Unitarian Universalist communion service known as the "Flower Communion", created by Norbert Čapek, was performed for the first time. The ceremony took place in a Unitarian church in the Czechoslovakian capital of Prague.[10]
  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided Meyer v. Nebraska, overturning bans in 20 states against the teaching of languages other than English in school. The case in chief had been brought by Robert T. Meyer, a teacher in a private Lutheran school, who had instructed a 10-year-old child in the German language, and had been consolidated with cases from Iowa and Ohio as well.[11]
  • The "Zero Milestone", marking the geographic center of the city of Washington, D.C., as originally designed by Pierre Charles L'Enfant, was dedicated at a spot near the White House at latitude 38°53′42.38736″ N, longitude 77°02′11.57299″ W.[12]
  • Born:
 
Frank Hayes
  • Died:
    • Frank Hayes, 35, American jockey, attained posthumous fame while riding the horse Sweet Kiss to victory at the Belmont Park in New York. Hayes crossed the finish line on Sweet Kiss ahead of everyone for his first, and only, victory in horse racing, then died of a heart attack. Doctors attributed Hayes's death to heart disease, aggravated by his efforts to lose weight in order to reach the required limit for entering the race, and the excitement of the event itself, making Hayes the only person known to have won a horse race after dying.[13][14]
    • Filippo Smaldone, 74, Roman Catholic priest canonized in 2006 as a Catholic saint
    • Juan Soldevilla y Romero, 79, Spanish cleric, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Zaragoza, who had been elevated to the rank of cardinal by the Pope, was assassinated by gunmen who also killed his chauffeur. Cardinal Soldevilla was seated in his car, preparing to visit a monastery, when members of the terrorist group Los Solidarios fired multiple gunshots into the vehicle.[15]

June 5, 1923 (Tuesday) Edit

  • Germany asked for a new reparations conference.[16] The proposal, as presented by Chancellor Wilhelm Cuno, asked for a new arrangement in which Germany would transfer materials worth 2.5 billion gold marks over the next five years while rebuilding the nationn's economy and would then pay 1.5 billion gold marks every year beginning in 1928.[17]
  • In an address in Washington D.C. to open the national convention of the Shriners (at the time still called the "Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine"), U.S. President Warren G. Harding delivered what was seen by reporters as a thinly-veiled criticism of the Ku Klux Klan, which had recently held a large demonstration in nearby Maryland, though not mentioning the Klan by name. "Secret fraternity is one thing," Harding said. "Secret conspiracy is another. In the very naturalness of association, men band together for mischief, to exert misguided zeal, to vent unreasoning malice, to undermine our institutions. This isn't fraternity. This is conspiracy. This isn't associated with uplift; it is organized destruction. This is not brotherhood; it is the discord of disloyalty and a danger to the Republic."[18]
  • The White House released President Harding's "Voyage of Understanding", a 19-stop speaking tour by train that would travel to 10 western states, as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia and (by ship) the U.S. territory of Alaska, starting on June 20 and continuing until August 4, after which the presidential train was scheduled to take him back to Washington.[19]
  • The tiny nation of San Marino established the Order of Saint Agatha for charitable work in the service of the republic.[20]
  • Born: George Montague, British gay rights activist; in Hackney, London (d. 2022)

June 6, 1923 (Wednesday) Edit

  • The Russian Civil War saw its last major battle as the Soviet Army defeated the remnants of the White Army near Okhotsk.[citation needed]
  • France and Belgium released a joint statement saying that Germany's request would not be considered until passive resistance in the Ruhr ended.[21]
  • Papyrus won the Epsom Derby, the United Kingdom's premier thoroughbred horse race.[22][23] Edgar Wallace became the first British radio sports reporter when he reported on the Derby for the British Broadcasting Company.[citation needed]
  • Women over 25 with a grammar school-level education were granted the right to vote in local elections in Italy.[24]
  • The U.S. Army dirigible TC-1, which had set a dirigible airspeed record of 74 miles per hour (119 km/h) earlier in the year and was the largest American airship, was destroyed at Wilbur Wright Field in Dayton, Ohio during a severe electrical storm. Though not struck by lightning, the hydrogen-filled bag was "highly charged with electricity" when winds blew it into contact with a steel mooring tower. A U.S. Army sergeant and a civilian from the Goodyear Rubber Company were injured after having to jump to the ground from an altitude of 40 feet (12 m) while escaping the fire.[25]
  • Born:

June 7, 1923 (Thursday) Edit

June 8, 1923 (Friday) Edit

June 9, 1923 (Saturday) Edit

June 10, 1923 (Sunday) Edit

June 11, 1923 (Monday) Edit

  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles, holding that a local government could use its power of eminent domain to take land from a private landowner for the specific purpose of building a scenic highway, despite the fact that a highway could be built elsewhere on land within the government's jurisdiction. Writing the opinion on behalf of a unanimous (8 to 0) court, Justice Edward T. Sanford wrote, "Public uses are not limited, in the modern view, to matters of mere business necessity and ordinary convenience, but may extend to matters of public health, recreation and enjoyment. Thus, the condemnation of lands for public parks is now universally recognized as a taking for public use. A road need not be for a purpose of business to create a public exigency; air, exercise and recreation are important to the general health and welfare; pleasure travel may be accommodated as well as business travel; and highways may be condemned to places of pleasing natural scenery."[38]
  • Born:
    • Dr. Eric J. Trimmer, English general practitioner and medical writer known for The Natural History of Quackery and for a subsequent series of books for the general public about health and medical science; in London (d. 1998)
    • Özdemir Asaf, Turkish poet (d. 1981)

June 12, 1923 (Tuesday) Edit

June 13, 1923 (Wednesday) Edit

 
President Li
  • Chinese President Li Yuanhong was captured at the railway station in Tientsin when troops surrounded the train in which he was fleeing from Beijing. Orders to stop the train came directly from the Governor of Zhili province, Wang Chengbin.[44] Li won his freedom the next day by sending a message to Beijing, by telegram, resigning his office and turning over authority to the cabinet.[45]
  • The value of the German mark fell further to an exchange rate of 100,000 marks to the U.S. dollar. Prior to World War One, the exchange rate had been 4.20 marks to a U.S. dollar. By June 1923, the rate was 81,000 marks to a dollar.[46]

June 14, 1923 (Thursday) Edit

 
Carson

June 15, 1923 (Friday) Edit

  • The American Relief Administration (ARA) halted all further aid to the Soviet Union after discovering that the Soviets were exporting grain to other nations, despite an ongoing famine that the ARA had been working to alleviate.[51]
 
 
Lou Gehrig and Wally Pipp

June 16, 1923 (Saturday) Edit

June 17, 1923 (Sunday) Edit

June 18, 1923 (Monday) Edit

  • On the Italian island of Sicily, several villages built on the side of Mount Etna— specifically, Piccilo, Pallamelata and Ferro— were destroyed by lava, but no casualties were reported as residents had time to evacuate.[61]
  • Pancho Villa, a diminutive (5'1" or 154 cm) Philippine boxer whose real name was Francisco Guilledo, won the world flyweight championship when he knocked out the titleholder, Welsh boxer Jimmy Wilde, in the seventh round before 40,000 spectators at the Polo Grounds in New York City.[62][63]
  • Speculation about Henry Ford running for president ended when he was quoted as saying, "I am much too occupied with my own affairs to become the next president and I do not intend to run.".[64]
  • Political leader Marcus Garvey was found guilty of mail fraud for using the U.S. mail to sell stock in the bankrupt Black Star Line.[65]
  • Died:
    • Vasili Komaroff, 52, Soviet Russian serial killer who murdered at least 33 people over a two year period, and his wife and accomplice Sofya Komaroff, were executed by firing squad in Moscow.
    • Walter Flanders, 52, American automobile and motorcycle manufacturer, died three days after being seriously injured in a car accident.
    • Hristo Smirnenski, 24, Bulgarian poet, died of tuberculosis

June 19, 1923 (Tuesday) Edit

June 20, 1923 (Wednesday) Edit

June 21, 1923 (Thursday) Edit

June 22, 1923 (Friday) Edit

  • The United Kingdom enacted the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge Act 1923, granting each of the two universities £100,000 annually.[26]
  • The first major feature film in Thailand, Nang Sao Suwan (Miss Suwanna of Siam), had its premiere in a theater in Nakhon Si Thammarat, and was seen a few days later in Bangkok in the Phatthanakon Cinematograph and in the Hong Kong Cinema Hall.[79] The 8-reel silent film was distributed in the United States by Universal Studios.
  • Born: Oba Erediauwa I, Nigerian civil servant, and ceremonial ruler of the Benin Empire and the Edo people in the Edo State of Nigeria from 1979 until his death in 2016; as Solomon Akenzua in Benin City (d. 2016)

June 23, 1923 (Saturday) Edit

June 24, 1923 (Sunday) Edit

June 25, 1923 (Monday) Edit

June 26, 1923 (Tuesday) Edit

June 27, 1923 (Wednesday) Edit

June 28, 1923 (Thursday) Edit

June 29, 1923 (Friday) Edit

  • Juan Crisóstomo Gómez, Vice President of Venezuela, Governor of the Caracas Federal District and the younger brother of President Juan Vicente Gómez, was assassinated in his room at the presidential residence in Caracas, the Miraflores Palace.[100]
  • French Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré made a speech in the French Senate indirectly responding to the pope's letter by explaining that "the only screw that we have on Germany is her desire to recover the Ruhr. We have no thought of annexation, and we energetically refute all accusations of imperialism. France does not wish to confiscate the Ruhr. We will keep it, however, until Germany has paid her debt." Poincaré also called the resistance movement in the Ruhr "active, insidious and criminal."[101]
  • Died: Gustave Kerker, 66, German composer

June 30, 1923 (Saturday) Edit

  • A time bomb exploded on a Belgian troop train just as the cars were crossing over the Hochfeld railway bridge in the occupied Ruhr region of Germany. Eight Belgian soldiers were killed, along with two German civilians.[102] Another 43 were injured. The bomb had been placed in a toilet of the car, which was transporting the Belgian soldiers home while they were on leave. The bridge itself was wrecked, and the mayor of Hochfeld and 12 other local officials were arrested by occupation forces as suspects in the crime.[103]

References Edit

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External links Edit

  Media related to June 1923 at Wikimedia Commons

june, 1923, 1923, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1617, 2324, 30the, following, events, occurred, june, 1923, airplane, refueled, first, timejune, 1923, president, harding, leaves, white, house, tour. 1923 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt June 1923 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 20 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 910 11 12 13 14 15 1617 18 19 20 21 22 2324 25 26 27 28 29 30The following events occurred in June 1923 June 27 1923 Airplane refueled in mid air for the first timeJune 20 1923 U S President Harding leaves White House to go on tour never returnsJune 9 1923 Bulgaria s Prime Minister Stamboliyski overthrownContents 1 June 1 1923 Friday 2 June 2 1923 Saturday 3 June 3 1923 Sunday 4 June 4 1923 Monday 5 June 5 1923 Tuesday 6 June 6 1923 Wednesday 7 June 7 1923 Thursday 8 June 8 1923 Friday 9 June 9 1923 Saturday 10 June 10 1923 Sunday 11 June 11 1923 Monday 12 June 12 1923 Tuesday 13 June 13 1923 Wednesday 14 June 14 1923 Thursday 15 June 15 1923 Friday 16 June 16 1923 Saturday 17 June 17 1923 Sunday 18 June 18 1923 Monday 19 June 19 1923 Tuesday 20 June 20 1923 Wednesday 21 June 21 1923 Thursday 22 June 22 1923 Friday 23 June 23 1923 Saturday 24 June 24 1923 Sunday 25 June 25 1923 Monday 26 June 26 1923 Tuesday 27 June 27 1923 Wednesday 28 June 28 1923 Thursday 29 June 29 1923 Friday 30 June 30 1923 Saturday 31 References 32 External linksJune 1 1923 Friday EditThe Albert Roussel opera Padmavati was first performed at the Paris Opera citation needed Mabel Philipson a stage actress who had been better known as Mabel Russell became the third woman in British history to be elected to the House of Commons Her husband Hilton Philipson had won the Berwick upon Tweed constituency in the 1922 general election but the result had been overturned following charges of corruption against him 1 Mrs Philipson took her seat on June 7 2 The U S state of New York became the first to repeal enforcement of the nationwide prohibition of the sale of alcohol as Governor Alfred E Smith signed the Mullen Gage bill repealing the law 3 June 2 1923 Saturday EditFrench boxer Eugene Criqui knocked out Johnny Kilbane in the sixth round at the Polo Grounds in New York City to win the World Featherweight Title 4 Babe Ruth hurried over from Yankee Stadium to attend the bout 5 The Kaufman Act was signed mandating the electrification of all railroads in New York City by January 1 1926 6 June 3 1923 Sunday EditVoters in Switzerland overwhelmingly rejected restrictions on the production of alcohol turning down a proposal that would have given the Swiss government an exclusive monopoly on brewing and distilling 7 A commission in New York City released the findings of its investigation into charges that some American history textbooks included anti American propaganda The report found eight such textbooks that were seen as pro British Any history which after 150 years attempts to teach our children that the War of Independence was an unnecessary war and that it is still a problem as to who was right and who was wrong should be fed to the furnace and those responsible for those books branded as un American commissioner David Hirschfeld said 8 June 4 1923 Monday EditThe British cargo ship Trevessa foundered in the Indian Ocean while traveling from Australia to Mauritius While all but ten of the 44 crew were able to escape to lifeboats before the ship sank sixteen men in one lifeboat spent the next 25 days drifting at sea before they were able to reach land finally getting to the Mauritius island of Rodrigues on June 29 after a voyage of 2 000 miles 3 200 km 9 The Unitarian Universalist communion service known as the Flower Communion created by Norbert Capek was performed for the first time The ceremony took place in a Unitarian church in the Czechoslovakian capital of Prague 10 The U S Supreme Court decided Meyer v Nebraska overturning bans in 20 states against the teaching of languages other than English in school The case in chief had been brought by Robert T Meyer a teacher in a private Lutheran school who had instructed a 10 year old child in the German language and had been consolidated with cases from Iowa and Ohio as well 11 The Zero Milestone marking the geographic center of the city of Washington D C as originally designed by Pierre Charles L Enfant was dedicated at a spot near the White House at latitude 38 53 42 38736 N longitude 77 02 11 57299 W 12 Born Elizabeth Jolley British writer in Birmingham England d 2007 Dr Margot Shiner German born British pediatrician and gastroenterologist in Berlin d 1998 nbsp Frank HayesDied Frank Hayes 35 American jockey attained posthumous fame while riding the horse Sweet Kiss to victory at the Belmont Park in New York Hayes crossed the finish line on Sweet Kiss ahead of everyone for his first and only victory in horse racing then died of a heart attack Doctors attributed Hayes s death to heart disease aggravated by his efforts to lose weight in order to reach the required limit for entering the race and the excitement of the event itself making Hayes the only person known to have won a horse race after dying 13 14 Filippo Smaldone 74 Roman Catholic priest canonized in 2006 as a Catholic saint Juan Soldevilla y Romero 79 Spanish cleric Roman Catholic Archbishop of Zaragoza who had been elevated to the rank of cardinal by the Pope was assassinated by gunmen who also killed his chauffeur Cardinal Soldevilla was seated in his car preparing to visit a monastery when members of the terrorist group Los Solidarios fired multiple gunshots into the vehicle 15 June 5 1923 Tuesday EditGermany asked for a new reparations conference 16 The proposal as presented by Chancellor Wilhelm Cuno asked for a new arrangement in which Germany would transfer materials worth 2 5 billion gold marks over the next five years while rebuilding the nationn s economy and would then pay 1 5 billion gold marks every year beginning in 1928 17 In an address in Washington D C to open the national convention of the Shriners at the time still called the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine U S President Warren G Harding delivered what was seen by reporters as a thinly veiled criticism of the Ku Klux Klan which had recently held a large demonstration in nearby Maryland though not mentioning the Klan by name Secret fraternity is one thing Harding said Secret conspiracy is another In the very naturalness of association men band together for mischief to exert misguided zeal to vent unreasoning malice to undermine our institutions This isn t fraternity This is conspiracy This isn t associated with uplift it is organized destruction This is not brotherhood it is the discord of disloyalty and a danger to the Republic 18 The White House released President Harding s Voyage of Understanding a 19 stop speaking tour by train that would travel to 10 western states as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia and by ship the U S territory of Alaska starting on June 20 and continuing until August 4 after which the presidential train was scheduled to take him back to Washington 19 The tiny nation of San Marino established the Order of Saint Agatha for charitable work in the service of the republic 20 Born George Montague British gay rights activist in Hackney London d 2022 June 6 1923 Wednesday EditThe Russian Civil War saw its last major battle as the Soviet Army defeated the remnants of the White Army near Okhotsk citation needed France and Belgium released a joint statement saying that Germany s request would not be considered until passive resistance in the Ruhr ended 21 Papyrus won the Epsom Derby the United Kingdom s premier thoroughbred horse race 22 23 Edgar Wallace became the first British radio sports reporter when he reported on the Derby for the British Broadcasting Company citation needed Women over 25 with a grammar school level education were granted the right to vote in local elections in Italy 24 The U S Army dirigible TC 1 which had set a dirigible airspeed record of 74 miles per hour 119 km h earlier in the year and was the largest American airship was destroyed at Wilbur Wright Field in Dayton Ohio during a severe electrical storm Though not struck by lightning the hydrogen filled bag was highly charged with electricity when winds blew it into contact with a steel mooring tower A U S Army sergeant and a civilian from the Goodyear Rubber Company were injured after having to jump to the ground from an altitude of 40 feet 12 m while escaping the fire 25 Born Joe Hyams American syndicated gossip columnist and author in Cambridge Massachusetts d 2008 Jean Pouliot Canadian broadcasting magnate and founder of the Tele Capitale broadcasting company and the TVA network the first French language TV network in Canada in Quebec City Quebec d 2004 June 7 1923 Thursday EditKing George V of the United Kingdom granted a charter of incorporation to the Federation of British Industries 26 Four radio stations in the United States made a simultaneous broadcast of a live program that was from New York City to Chicago and by hundreds of thousands of listeners in North America making a performance from Carnegie Hall the most listened to broadcast up to that time Persons tuning in to WEAF New York City KDKA Pittsburgh KYW Chicago or WGY Schenectady New York heard the singing of Metropolitan Opera soprano Anna Case followed by a speech by Julius H Barnes president of the United States Chamber of Commerce after the radio event was set up for the annual convention of the National Electric Light Association 27 Born Kinuko Emi Japanese modern art and abstract painter as Kinuko Ogino in Akashi Hyōgo Prefecture d 2015 June 8 1923 Friday EditThe British House of Commons passed a bill giving women the right to divorce their husbands on the grounds of infidelity without having to prove cruelty or desertion 26 28 The Craven Holding Corporation purchased the trademark for Pepsi Cola including the secret manufacturing process from the soft drink s inventor Caleb Bradham for 30 000 citation needed Bradham had filed for bankruptcy eight days earlier on May 31 after having marketed the beverage since 1893 Bryce Canyon National Park in Utah was designated as a U S national monument by proclamation of U S President Warren G Harding 29 Died Ambroise Dydime Lepine 83 Canadian Metis Indian leader in the Red River Rebellion of 1869 and 1870 Herbert Jenkins 46 British book publisherJune 9 1923 Saturday Edit nbsp nbsp Stamboliyski and Tsankov The government of Bulgaria s Prime Minister Aleksandar Stamboliyski was toppled in a bloodless coup led by General Ivan Valkov s Vonnyat Soyuz a private organization of reserve officers Stamboliyski had been vacationing in his home village of Slavovitsa and had returned by train to the capital Sofia the night before and was detained at the station by troops 30 Aleksandar Tsankov a professor of political science at Sofia University was installed as the new Prime Minister with the approval of Bulgaria s king Tsar Boris III Stamboliyski who had survived an assassination attempt by the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization IMRO on February 2 fled back to Slavovitsa where he was arrested by his former bodyguards 31 Brink s unveiled its first armored security vans 32 Australia s national soccer football team hosted its first international game after having played three games in New Zealand in 1922 The 2 to 1 win against New Zealand took place at Brisbane Cricket Ground before 7 000 people 33 The Belmont amusement park opened in Montreal Quebec Canada It would close in 1983 citation needed Died Princess Helena of the United Kingdom 77June 10 1923 Sunday EditElectricity was introduced to Mandatory Palestine the future location of Israel as the Jaffa Electric Company went online and lit streetlights on the main street of Tel Aviv 34 Fishermen at Long Key Florida reported harpooning a 20 000 pound sea monster They said it continued to fight even after fifty rounds of ammunition had been fired into it 35 The film The Shock starring Lon Chaney was released citation needed Hamburger SV defeated SC Union 06 Oberschoneweide now 1 FC Union Berlin 3 to 0 to win the soccer football championship of Germany and the Viktoria trophy The playoff had been contested by seven teams that had won regional championships with Hamburger SV being the Northern German champion and Oberschoneweide bweing the Brandenburg state champion 36 Born Robert Maxwell Czechoslovakian born British publishing entrepreneur who controlled Pergamon Press Macmillan Publishers and Mirror Group Newspapers and embezzled funds from the companies as Jan Ludvik Hoch in Slatinske Doly Czechoslovakia now Solotvyno Ukraine drowned 1991 Ivan Kabalin highly decorated Soviet Army officer in Aleksandrovka Chuvash oblast Russian SFSR d 1982 Died Pierre Loti pen name for Louis Marie Julien Viaud 73 French novelist known for Ramuntcho and Pecheur d Islande An Iceland Fisherman 37 June 11 1923 Monday EditThe U S Supreme Court decided Rindge Co v County of Los Angeles holding that a local government could use its power of eminent domain to take land from a private landowner for the specific purpose of building a scenic highway despite the fact that a highway could be built elsewhere on land within the government s jurisdiction Writing the opinion on behalf of a unanimous 8 to 0 court Justice Edward T Sanford wrote Public uses are not limited in the modern view to matters of mere business necessity and ordinary convenience but may extend to matters of public health recreation and enjoyment Thus the condemnation of lands for public parks is now universally recognized as a taking for public use A road need not be for a purpose of business to create a public exigency air exercise and recreation are important to the general health and welfare pleasure travel may be accommodated as well as business travel and highways may be condemned to places of pleasing natural scenery 38 Born Dr Eric J Trimmer English general practitioner and medical writer known for The Natural History of Quackery and for a subsequent series of books for the general public about health and medical science in London d 1998 Ozdemir Asaf Turkish poet d 1981 June 12 1923 Tuesday EditThe last eight of the hostages of the Lincheng Outrage the May 5 seizure of 300 passengers from an express train were freed after Shanghai mob boss Du Yuesheng of the Green Gang delivered an 85 000 ransom to Sun Meiyao and the Shandong Outlaws 39 equivalent to almost 1 5 million a century later 40 41 General Feng Yuxiang issued an ultimatum to Chinese President Li Yuanhong stating that his troops would enter Beijing if Li did not resign 42 Lithuanian born American stage magician Horace Goldin was awarded U S patent 1 458 575 for creating the famous sawing a woman in half illusion blocking other magicians from performing the same trick for the next 17 years but revealing the secret to other people 43 Born Richard Lehman U S presidential adviser who developed the top secret President s Daily Brief for President Kennedy while at the CIA Deputy Director of Central Intelligence 1976 to 1977 and Chairman of the National Intelligence Council 1979 to 1981 in St Louis d 2007 June 13 1923 Wednesday Edit nbsp President LiChinese President Li Yuanhong was captured at the railway station in Tientsin when troops surrounded the train in which he was fleeing from Beijing Orders to stop the train came directly from the Governor of Zhili province Wang Chengbin 44 Li won his freedom the next day by sending a message to Beijing by telegram resigning his office and turning over authority to the cabinet 45 The value of the German mark fell further to an exchange rate of 100 000 marks to the U S dollar Prior to World War One the exchange rate had been 4 20 marks to a U S dollar By June 1923 the rate was 81 000 marks to a dollar 46 June 14 1923 Thursday Edit nbsp CarsonThe first commercial recording of a country music ballad with lyrics was made by Fiddlin John Carson as he sang The Little Old Log Cabin in the Lane while playing a fiddle at the studios of Okeh Records 47 Aleksandar Stamboliyski who had been overthrown as Prime Minister of Bulgaria five days earlier was tortured and murdered by agents of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary Organization IMRO His captors cut off his right hand in retaliation for secretly signing the Treaty of Nis with Yugoslavia on March 23 48 49 Gao Lingwei became acting President of the Republic of China A tugboat towed the remains of the Florida sea monster found on June 10 near Long Key to Key West The monster was identified as a whale shark 50 Born Judith Kerr German born British children s author and illustrator in Berlin d 2019 Died Sir Mansfield Smith Cumming 64 British Royal Navy officer and the first chief of the Secret Intelligence Service MI 6 since its creation in 1909 June 15 1923 Friday EditThe American Relief Administration ARA halted all further aid to the Soviet Union after discovering that the Soviets were exporting grain to other nations despite an ongoing famine that the ARA had been working to alleviate 51 nbsp nbsp Lou Gehrig and Wally Pipp Arthur Havers of England won the British Open golf tournament by one stroke defeating Walter Hagen of the U S in 72 holes The tournament was so close that the first four finishers Havers Hagen Macdonald Smith and Joe Kirkwood finished at 295 296 297 and 298 respectively 52 Lou Gehrig who had been a college baseball sensation at New York City s Columbia University made his major league baseball debut entering a game for the New York Yankees in a 10 to 0 win over the St Louis Browns as a ninth inning defensive substitute at first base and taking over for Wally Pipp 53 Born Dr David Morley British pediatrician and humanitarian who developed low cost methods for the prevention and treatment of illness in Nigeria and other nations in Africa in Rothwell Northamptonshire d 2009 Koentjaraningrat Indonesian anthropologist in Yogyakarta Dutch East Indies d 1999 Johnny Most American sports announcer in New York City d 1993 June 16 1923 Saturday EditThe Yakut Revolt the last resistance by the White Army to the Soviet Union in the Russian Civil War ended as the remaining 333 officers and soldiers of the White Army surrendered the port town of Ayan to the Red Army citation needed The French occupied Dortmund railway station leaving only one line leading from the Ruhr into unoccupied Germany 54 Rioting broke out in Brandenburg in Germany over the rapidly increasing prices of goods due to hyperinflation 54 A rally of the Ku Klux Klan white supremacist group attracted 200 000 people in Kokomo Indiana 55 The prohibition of the manufacture and sale of alcohol went into effect in Turkey 56 Born Joseph Colombo American organized crime boss who led New York s Colombo crime family and created the Italian American Civil Rights League advocacy group in New York City d 1978 Died Kavi Kant 55 pen name for Manishankar Ratnji Bhatt Indian Gujarati language poet and playwrightJune 17 1923 Sunday EditNorthern Ireland had its first dry Sunday prohibiting alcohol sales on that day Towns just across the border in the Irish Free State were swamped with visitors who crossed over to drink 57 Mount Etna erupted in Sicily with several loud explosions 58 The anti drug film Human Wreckage produced by Dorothy Davenport widow of Wallace Reid was released by Film Booking Offices of America 59 When the film reached New York a critic for The New York Times wrote It is a story that might appeal to an audience of those who need narcotics but to the average person who has a night off and goes to the theatre for entertainment it is not pleasing and added that the story wanders along until it becomes tiresome and the dramatic climax is spoiled 60 The Stan Laurel comedy film Pick and Shovel was released Laurel s future partner Oliver Hardy was in the film The Midnight Cabaret at the same time citation needed Born Elroy Hirsch American professional football halfback and inductee to both the Pro Football Hall of Fame and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Wausau Wisconsin d 2004 Indonesian Army General Hasan Basry military officer in the Indonesian National Revolution of independence in Kandangan Borneo Dutch East Indies d 1984 Sukh Dev Indian organic chemist and inventor in Chakwal Punjab Province British India now Pakistan June 18 1923 Monday EditOn the Italian island of Sicily several villages built on the side of Mount Etna specifically Piccilo Pallamelata and Ferro were destroyed by lava but no casualties were reported as residents had time to evacuate 61 Pancho Villa a diminutive 5 1 or 154 cm Philippine boxer whose real name was Francisco Guilledo won the world flyweight championship when he knocked out the titleholder Welsh boxer Jimmy Wilde in the seventh round before 40 000 spectators at the Polo Grounds in New York City 62 63 Speculation about Henry Ford running for president ended when he was quoted as saying I am much too occupied with my own affairs to become the next president and I do not intend to run 64 Political leader Marcus Garvey was found guilty of mail fraud for using the U S mail to sell stock in the bankrupt Black Star Line 65 Died Vasili Komaroff 52 Soviet Russian serial killer who murdered at least 33 people over a two year period and his wife and accomplice Sofya Komaroff were executed by firing squad in Moscow Walter Flanders 52 American automobile and motorcycle manufacturer died three days after being seriously injured in a car accident Hristo Smirnenski 24 Bulgarian poet died of tuberculosisJune 19 1923 Tuesday EditBritain and the United States signed an agreement on Britain s war debt obligations 66 Lava from Mount Etna reached the outskirts of Linguaglossa and Castiglione 67 The flow of lava from the volcano stopped by June 21 68 The popular U S newspaper comic strip Moon Mullins created by Frank Willard made its debut citation needed A feature of the Chicago Tribune and New York s Daily News Moon Mullins would be syndicated in 350 papers at its height and would run until June 2 1991 Died Shō Shō 34 member of Japan s House of Peers as the Marquess of the Ryukyu Islands died of appendicitis The Marquess had been the leader of the House of Shō since 1920 as the eldest son of Shō Ten the former Crown Prince of the Ryukyu Kingdom June 20 1923 Wednesday EditU S President Warren G Harding left Washington D C for the last time and would never return 69 President Harding embarked on a cross country speaking tour which he called the Voyage of Understanding set to take him through much of the 48 U S states and as far west as the U S Territory of Alaska 70 71 President Harding relinquished control of his newspaper The Marion Star which he had owned and operated while in Marion Ohio 72 Born Bjorn Watt Boolsen Danish film actor in Rudkobing d 1998 Died Sumner Increase Kimball 88 U S government official who organized the United States Life Saving ServiceJune 21 1923 Thursday EditOn the first stop of his western tour President Harding gave a speech in St Louis reiterating his advocacy for American participation in the World Court but not the League of Nations The speech was carried live by three radio stations making Harding the first president to be heard by a million people simultaneously 73 74 During the day the presidential train had made whistle stops in Indiana at the towns of Washington Seymour and Vincennes and in Illinois at Olney and Salem 75 Marcus Garvey was sentenced to five years in prison for mail fraud 76 William S Silkworth was forced to resign as president of the Consolidated Stock Exchange of New York a rival to the New York Stock Exchange after a criminal investigation discovered irregularities in his personal finances 77 The Consolidated exchange soon became the subject of investigation and would cease operations three years later 78 Born Richard Kinney deaf and blind educator and school administrator and only the third deaf and blind person in the U S after Helen Keller and Robert Smithdas to graduate from college Kinney was later the president of the Hadley School for the Blind in East Sparta Ohio d 1979 June 22 1923 Friday EditThe United Kingdom enacted the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge Act 1923 granting each of the two universities 100 000 annually 26 The first major feature film in Thailand Nang Sao Suwan Miss Suwanna of Siam had its premiere in a theater in Nakhon Si Thammarat and was seen a few days later in Bangkok in the Phatthanakon Cinematograph and in the Hong Kong Cinema Hall 79 The 8 reel silent film was distributed in the United States by Universal Studios Born Oba Erediauwa I Nigerian civil servant and ceremonial ruler of the Benin Empire and the Edo people in the Edo State of Nigeria from 1979 until his death in 2016 as Solomon Akenzua in Benin City d 2016 June 23 1923 Saturday EditAmerican sculptor Gutzon Borglum began carving the Stone Mountain Memorial bas relief sculpture and would complete the first stage a large image of Robert E Lee in time for an unveiling on January 19 1924 citation needed Ronald McNeill spokesperson for the British Foreign Secretary told an audience in Sturry that the occupation of the Ruhr threatened to bring about the complete collapse of Germany which would end all hope of ever recovering reparations payments 80 Gambhirsinhji Himmatsinhji a 9 year old prince became the ruler of the princely state of Malpur upon the death of his father Dipsinhji II He was the nominal ruler of the small state within the Bombay Province of British India until Malpur s accession to the Indian Union in 1949 as part of the state of Gujarat citation needed Born Anna Chennault Chinese born American journalist and politician as Chan Sheng Mai in Beijing d 2018 Giuseppina Tuissi World War II resistance fighter in Abbiategrasso disappeared 1945 Elroy Schwartz American television scriptwriter and comedian known for authoring episodes of sitcoms created by his older brother Sherwood Schwartz in Passaic New Jersey d 2013 George Russell American jazz composer in Cincinnati d 2009 Died Sodnomyn Damdinbazar 48 Prime Minister of Mongolia since March 1922June 24 1923 Sunday EditThe Nigerian National Democratic Party the first political party in what was then the British African colony of Nigeria was founded by Herbert Macaulay Thomas H Jackson Crispin Adeniyi Jones Eric Moore and Egerton Shyngle to lobby for independence citation needed The French Chamber of Deputies debated whether to give the colony of the French West Indies to the United States as payment of war debt Prime Minister Raymond Poincare said I never would permit such a proposal to be officially made to the French government 81 Lithuania s national soccer football team played its first international game a 0 to 5 loss to Estonia at Kaunas 82 Top hats which had been out of fashion in Paris since the beginning of the war in 1914 made a sudden comeback among French men 83 Born Cesare Romiti Italian businessman who was chairman of the board of Fiat Motor Company from 1996 to 1998 in Rome d 2020 Died Edith Sodergran 31 Swedish language Finnish poetJune 25 1923 Monday EditThe Canadian province of Ontario held a general election in which the Progressive Conservative Party led by Howard Ferguson received a majority defeating the incumbent Premier Charles Drury and the United Farmers of Ontario party which had campaigned on a platform of prohibiting the sale of liquor in Ontario 84 Seven people were killed on Atlantic Avenue in the Brooklyn borough of New York City and 70 injured when an elevated train derailed and the locomotive and two railroad cars fell onto automobiles 35 feet 11 m below 85 The disaster the worst in Brooklyn since the Malbone Street wreck of November 1 1919 which killed 91 people happened when a bogie also called a truck a set of the axle and wheels from one of the trains broke off and smashed into the second car of the train Born Jamshid Amouzegar Prime Minister of Iran 1977 to 1978 in Tehran d 2016 Sam Francis American painter and printmaker in San Mateo California d 1994 June 26 1923 Tuesday EditPrime Minister Stanley Baldwin announced that Britain would add 34 squadrons to its air force to give the country a total of 52 This was still smaller than France s air force 86 Okmulgee County Oklahoma was put under martial law by Governor Jack C Walton to investigate Ku Klux Klan activity 87 A large fire broke out at night in the northwest corner of the Forbidden City 88 Died Edith Smith 46 the first fully powered female police officer in the United Kingdom killed herself with an overdose of morphine 89 Adjutant General Oskar von Chelius 63 Prussian Army officer and classical music composer 90 June 27 1923 Wednesday EditThe first refueling of an airplane in flight was accomplished as U S Army Air Service Captain Lowell Smith and his co pilot Lieutenant John P Richter refilled the fuel tank of their Airco DH 4 biplane from a hose lowered from another DH 4 plane The two planes took off and landed from Rockwell Field in San Diego California 91 The successful refueling made easier the prospect of an airplane staying aloft longer without running out of fuel Pope Pius XI condemned the occupation of the Ruhr taken by French and Belgian troops in Germany to secure payment of reparations A letter was publicized in which he warned that it could lead to the final ruin of Europe and recommended that the reparations issue be determined by a panel of impartial judges 92 A fire in Beijing s Forbidden City destroyed the treasure hall and the imperial gardens 93 Four Scottish members of the Labour Party were suspended from the House of Commons when a debate over funding cuts at the Scottish Health Board became unruly The fighting started when James Maxton said that the cuts directly caused the death of hundreds of children and called Sir Frederick Banbury a murderer 94 95 The House of Commons of Canada voted unanimously to grant Dr Frederick Banting a lifetime annuity of 7 500 to continue his medical research 96 97 Nikola Pasic the Prime Minister of Yugoslavia was slightly wounded in an assassination attempt in Belgrade A Serbian bank employee Millutone Raic fired six shots as Pasic was leaving parliament Pasic was able to enter his limousine and dropped to the floor and sustained an injury to his hand 98 Born Miriam Boulotchnik London American sociologist in Philadelphia d 2011 Tesfaye Sahlu Ethiopian comedian and children s author in Kedu Bale Province d 2017 Gus Zernial American baseball player who was the 1951 American League leader in home runs and runs batted in in Beaumont Texas d 2011 June 28 1923 Thursday EditThe first general elections in Turkey s history were held to pick the secondary electors in each precinct who in turn would elect the candidates for the 333 seats of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey Although all candidates were approved by the sole legal political party in the nation the Republican People s Party there was no limit on the number of candidates in a constituency Firearms inventor John Browning filed his patent application for his Browning Hi Power semi automatic pistol with the name high power being a reference to its larger capacity an unprecedented 13 round magazine citation needed Browning would die in 1926 before the granting in 1927 of U S patent no 648 275 From his hospital bed in Oklahoma City George Bigheart one of the Osage Indian oil millionaires called Pawhuska Oklahoma lawyer W Watkins Vaughan and asked him to come to the hospital for an urgent meeting Bigheart s physicians suspected that he had been poisoned and Bigheart provided Vaughn with information about documents that would identify a murder suspect Vaughan boarded a train that evening to return to Pawhuska but never arrived home Bigheart succumbed the next day and Vaughn s body was found afterward beside the railroad tracks near the town of Pershing 99 Born Daniil Khrabrovitsky Soviet Russian film director in Rostov on Don Russian SFSR d 1980 Gaye Stewart Canadian ice hockey player in Fort William Ontario d 2010 Died Prince Devawongse Varoprakar 64 Foreign Minister of the Kingdom of Siam now Thailand since 1885June 29 1923 Friday EditJuan Crisostomo Gomez Vice President of Venezuela Governor of the Caracas Federal District and the younger brother of President Juan Vicente Gomez was assassinated in his room at the presidential residence in Caracas the Miraflores Palace 100 French Prime Minister Raymond Poincare made a speech in the French Senate indirectly responding to the pope s letter by explaining that the only screw that we have on Germany is her desire to recover the Ruhr We have no thought of annexation and we energetically refute all accusations of imperialism France does not wish to confiscate the Ruhr We will keep it however until Germany has paid her debt Poincare also called the resistance movement in the Ruhr active insidious and criminal 101 Died Gustave Kerker 66 German composerJune 30 1923 Saturday EditA time bomb exploded on a Belgian troop train just as the cars were crossing over the Hochfeld railway bridge in the occupied Ruhr region of Germany Eight Belgian soldiers were killed along with two German civilians 102 Another 43 were injured The bomb had been placed in a toilet of the car which was transporting the Belgian soldiers home while they were on leave The bridge itself was wrecked and the mayor of Hochfeld and 12 other local officials were arrested by occupation forces as suspects in the crime 103 References Edit Actress Is Elected to British Commons Mabel Russell Succeeds Husband for Berwick Polls 12 600 Votes to 5 858 for Liberal The New York Times June 2 1923 p 3 Former Actress Takes Her Seat in Commons The New York Times June 8 1923 p 1 Smith Signs Dry Act Repeal but Warns Wets Holds State Law not Needed for Enforcement The New York Times June 2 1923 p 1 Criqui Knocks Out Kilbane in Sixth Captures World s Featherweight Championship With a Right to the Jaw The New York Times June 3 1923 p S 1 Roberts James Skutt Alexander G 2006 The Boxing Register International Boxing Hall of Fame Official Record Book 4th Ed Ithaca New York McBooks Press Inc p 95 ISBN 978 1 59013 121 3 Ponder New Law The New York Times June 5 1923 Swiss Voters Reject Liquor Restriction 93 031 Majority Against Federal Measure The New York Times June 4 1923 p 1 History Probe Brands 8 Texts as Un American Chicago Daily Tribune June 4 1923 p 12 Foster Captain Cecil June 30 1923 Three Weeks Adrift in Indian Ocean 16 More Survivors Reach Mauritius 25 Days After Shipwreck 2 000 Miles Away The New York Times p 1 Zottoli Reginald The Flower Communion A Service of Celebration for Religious Liberals PDF Unitarian Universalist Association Ends 21 States Ban on Foreign Tongues Supreme Court Decides Pupils Have Constitutional Right to Be Taught Them The New York Times June 5 1923 p 1 Veroske Ariel July 10 2013 All Roads Lead to Washington The Zero Milestone BoundaryStones WETA org Jockey Dies as He Wins His First Race Hayes Collapses Passing the Winning Post The New York Times June 5 1923 p 1 Britton Bianca December 10 2018 Frank Hayes The jockey who won a race despite being dead CNN Cardinal Soldevilla Assassinated in Spain Chauffeur Is Also Killed and Secretary Wounded by Unidentified Men in Saragossa The New York Times June 5 1923 p 1 Germany Asks New Conference on Debts Chicago Daily Tribune June 6 1923 p 1 Germany Pledges National Wealth for Reparations Note to Allies for Delivery Tomorrow Offers 1 500 000 000 Gold Marks Yearly The New York Times June 6 1923 p 1 Harding Rebukes Menacing Groups Hit at Klan Seen The New York Times June 6 1923 p 1 Harding Announces Nineteen Speeches Completes the Schedule for His Western Tour Others to Be Made in Alaska The New York Times June 6 1923 p 2 San Marino Order of St Agatha Medals org UK Wales Henry June 7 1923 German Offer Spurned Until Ruhr War Ends Chicago Daily Tribune p 1 Papyrus Wins Derby with Pharos Second The New York Times June 7 1923 p 15 The Derby 1923 Greyhound Derby Retrieved January 28 2015 De Santo V June 7 1923 Italy Revises Election Laws Women to Vote Chicago Daily Tribune p 2 TC 1 Army Dirigible Burns in Electric Storm Two Men Hurt in Leap of 40 Feet to Ground The New York Times June 7 1923 p 1 a b c Mercer Derrik 1989 Chronicle of the 20th Century London Chronicle Communications Ltd p 307 ISBN 978 0 582 03919 3 4 Radio Stations Send One Program Address at Electric Light Convention Heard Over Entire Nation The New York Times June 8 1923 p 6 Commons Frees Wives of Yoke in Divorce Suits Chicago Daily Tribune June 9 1923 p 9 Lorraine Salem Tufts Secrets in The Grand Canyon Zion and Bryce Canyon National Parks National Photographic Collections 1998 p 73 Army Overthrows Bulgar Cabinet Arrest Ministers Military Surround the Parliament Buildings and Seize Members and Deputies No Bloodshed in Capital The New York Times June 10 1923 p 1 Body Guard Seizes Deposed Premier Stamboulisky Has Been Arrested by His Own Soldiers Prague Hears The New York Times June 12 1923 p 2 Smitha Frank E 2013 1923 Macrohistory and World Timeline Retrieved January 28 2015 1923 Australia Men s National Team Results by Thomas Esamie et al Ronen Shamir Current Flow The Electrification of Palestine Stanford University Press 2013 Fifty Shots Fail to Kill Monster in All Day Fight Chicago Daily Tribune June 11 1923 p 1 Deutsche Meisterschaft 1922 1923 Spielplan WeltFussball de Pierre Loti Dies at Home in France Famous Novelist Traveled the Seas for Forty Years as a Naval Officer The New York Times June 11 1923 p 13 Rindge Co v County of Los Angeles 262 U S 700 707 08 1923 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from this U S government document Holding Hostages in China Holding China Hostage Sovereignty Philanthropy and the 1923 Lincheng Outrage by Caroline Reeves Twentieth Century China November 2001 pp 36 39 Inflation Calculator U S Department of Labor Bandists Let Americans Go Clears Crisis Bulletin Chicago Daily Tribune June 12 1923 p 1 Soldiers Hold President of China Prisoner Chicago Daily Tribune June 14 1923 p 12 Illusion Device US1458575 President of China Flees from Peking Troops Stop Him The New York Times June 14 1923 p 1 China s President Quits Under Duress Li s Wife Gives Up Seals After He Is Subjected to Third Degree at Tientsin He is then Allowed to Go The New York Times June 15 1923 p 3 Mark Slumps to 100 000 to the Dollar Stocks Skyrocket on the Berline Boerse The New York Times June 14 1923 p 1 David Dicaire The First Generation of Country Music Stars Biographies of 50 Artists Born Before 1940 McFarland 2007 Stambulisky Slain After He Is Rescued by Bulgar Peasants They Overcome Guards Holding Him but Later Near His Home Run Into Soldiers The New York Times June 16 1923 p 3 Stamboliyski Aleksandar by Richard C Hall in World War One A Student Encyclopedia p 1721 Tiger Sharks Fight Tars Bringing in 20 Ton Fish Chicago Daily Tribune June 15 1923 p 2 An Inquiry into the Termination of Soviet Famine Relief Programmes and the Renewal of Grain Export 1922 23 by Charles M Edmondson Soviet Studies 1981 pp 370 385 Hagen Dethroned Havers Wins Title American Holder of British Open Golf Championship Beaten by One Stroke The New York Times June 16 1923 p 7 Ripken Cal 10 April 2008 Get in the Game 8 Elements of Perseverance That Make the Difference Gotham Books ISBN 978 1 4406 3192 4 a b Ruhr Begs for U S Aid French Cut Off Food Chicago Daily Tribune June 17 1923 p 6 Wyn Craig Wade The Fiery Cross The Ku Klux Klan in America Oxford University Press 1998 p 216 Turkey s Dry Law in Effect Today The New York Times June 16 1923 p 5 Ulster Has Dry Sunday Drinks Free State Ale Chicago Daily Tribune June 18 1923 p 11 Hot Lava from Volcano Wipes Out Four Towns Chicago Daily Tribune June 19 1923 p 1 Human Wreckage Release Info InternetMovieDatabase A War Against Heretics The Screen The New York Times June 28 1923 p 10 Etna in Eruption Blots Out Villages 30 000 People Flee The New York Times June 19 1923 p 1 Villa Knocks Out Wilde in Seventh Filipino Wrests World s Flyweight Championship From British Holder of Title The New York Times June 19 1923 p 15 Casey Mike Whirlwind Pancho Villa Was Dempsey In Miniature The Mike Casey Archives Retrieved January 28 2015 Ford too Busy for Presidency He Says in East Chicago Daily Tribune June 19 1923 p 1 Crouch Jeffrey P 2008 The Presidential Pardon Power Ann Arbor Michigan UMI p 134 Chronology 1923 indiana edu 2002 Retrieved January 28 2015 Etna Pours Out Fiery Lava on 2 More Towns Chicago Daily Tribune June 20 1923 p 1 Molten Rock of Mount Etna Has Ceased Flowing Chicago Daily Tribune June 22 1923 p 13 Harding Off Today on 15 057 Mile Trip Journey Will Be Only Twenty Miles Shorter Than Taft s Record Tour in 1911 The New York Times June 20 1923 p 1 Henning Arthur Sears June 21 1923 Harding Turns 22 Chicago War Offenders Out Chicago Daily Tribune p 1 Greenspan Jesse August 2 2013 The Unexpected Death of President Harding 90 Years Ago History Retrieved January 28 2015 Harding Sells Control of Marion Star But Will Continue to Write Editorials The New York Times June 21 1923 p 1 Wilcox Grafton June 22 1923 Harding Court Bars League Chicago Daily Tribune p 1 Cox Jim 2013 Radio Journalism in America Telling the News in the Golden Age and Beyond Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company Inc pp 33 34 ISBN 978 0 7864 6963 5 Three States Greet President Warmly The New York Times June 22 1923 p 1 This Week in Black History June 21 1923 The Atlanta Voice June 21 2013 Archived from the original on January 29 2015 Retrieved January 28 2015 Silkworth to Quit as Consolidated President June 28 The New York Times June 22 1923 p 1 Robert Sobel AMEX A History of the American Stock Exchange Beard Books 2000 p 31 32 Bangkok Daily Mail June 25 1923 reprinted by Thai Film page Cornell University British Fear Loss of Entire German Debt Chicago Daily Tribune June 24 1923 p 10 Wales Henry June 25 1923 French Oppose Paying U S Debt with West Indies Chicago Daily Tribune p 10 MATCHES international football results of Lithuania eufootball info Archived from the original on 21 August 2019 Retrieved 27 May 2019 High Hat Back in Paris Favor After 9 Years Chicago Daily Tribune July 2 1923 p 7 Conservatives Sweep Ontario Election Farm Party Beaten in Fight on Dry Platform The New York Times June 26 1923 p 1 7 Killed 70 Injured in Elevated Crash When 2 Cars Fall Into Brooklyn Street Truck Drops on One of Wrecked Coaches Crushing Victim The New York Times June 26 1923 p 1 Steele John June 27 1923 British Race with France to Boss Skies Chicago Daily Tribune p 1 Walton John Callaway 1881 1949 Enctclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Retrieved January 28 2015 Fordbidden City 4 Destruction and Rebuilding CRIEnglish February 15 2007 Archived from the original on September 1 2009 Retrieved January 28 2015 Knowles Bob Courtney Finn Sterry David 2018 Edith Smith Britain s First Warranted policewoman PDF Oxton Society Retrieved 3 December 2019 Oskar von Chelius prussianmachine com Retrieved 2021 12 27 Wagner Arthur H Braxton Leon E 2012 Birth of a Legend The Bomber Mafia and the Y1B 17 Trafford Publishing p 102 ISBN 978 1 4669 0603 7 Spare Germany Pope s Plea Chicago Daily Tribune June 28 1923 p 1 Dailey Charles June 28 1923 Forbidden City Swept by Fire Blame Thieves Chicago Daily Tribune p 2 Ryan Thomas June 28 1923 Sharp Tilts in Commons Cause 4 Suspensions Chicago Daily Tribune p 2 Knox William 1987 James Maxton Manchester Manchester University Press pp 42 43 ISBN 978 0 7190 2152 7 Bliss Michael 1992 Banting A Biography Toronto University of Toronto Press p 126 ISBN 978 0 8020 7386 0 Banting Listed for Annuity For Discovery of Insulin The New York Times June 27 1923 p 1 Pachitch Jugoslav Premier Is Wounded In Hand by Serb Firing Six Shots at Him The New York Times June 28 1923 p 1 Donald L Fixico The Invasion of Indian Country in the Twentieth Century University Press of Colorado 1998 Assassins Slay Gen J C Gomez of Venezuela Vice President and Brother of the Dictator The New York Times July 1 1923 p 1 Wales Henry June 30 1923 France Clings to Ruhr Premier Replies to Pope Chicago Daily Tribune p 7 Williams Paul July 1 1923 Ruhr Faces State of Siege Chicago Daily Tribune p 1 10 Belgians Killed by German Bomb on a Train 43 Other Soldiers and Some German Workers Hurt and River Bridge Wrecked Hold the Mayor 12 Other Officials and Four Leading Citizens as Hostages The New York Times July 1 1923 p 1External links Edit nbsp Media related to June 1923 at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title June 1923 amp oldid 1167755077, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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