Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1910 Page: 1 of 8
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KLAHOMA STATE
NINETEENTH Y E A R
GUTHRIE, OKLA.,
THURSDAY,
APRIL 28.
1910
$1.00 PER
I
*
i *
Roosevelt Crowns His Career As the Guest
of Paris In A Great Speech Before
the Sorborune.
Paris, April 23.—To use Colonel realize in its full sense government by.
Roosevelt's own words, today marked \ oC and tor the people—represents the
the crowning ot his career as a man
oil letters.
From noon until midnight he was
the guest of intellectual Paris, parti-
cipating as a member at a session of
the Freinch Academy, delivering a
lecture at the Sorbonne, the fore-
most seat of learning in Europe before
America was discovered, and remain-
ing as the guest of the faculty for
dinner and the grand reception given
by the university in his honor,
Colonel Rosevelt's reception at the
French institute and that at the Sor-
bonne were equaly impressive, but in
a different way. At the former he was
introduced merely as a member, and
he took a seat among his distinguish-
ed conferees, most of whom have
grown old In the service of science.
At the Sorbonne no attempt was
made to restrain the demonstrations.
The facade bristled with American
and French flags and fully twenty-
five thousand persons packed the
streets and acclaimed Colonel Roose-
velt on his arrival. Within the build-
ing enthusiasm was unbounded, the
vast crowd in the amphitheater in-
terrupting again and again with
storms of applause as the speaker de-
fined the duties of individual citizen-
ship in a republic, scorning the slug-
gards, synics and ide rich and preach-
ing the gospel of work, character and
strenuous life.
Several times he interjected obseh-
vations in French, and after he had
defined his attitude on the subject of
human rights and property rights, he
repeated this in French, saying that it
constituted the crux of what he had
to say, and he desired every one to
understand him. His words in this
connection were:
"My position as regards the money-
ed interests can be put in a few
words. In every civilized society
property rights must be carefully
safeguarded. Ordinarily, and in the
great majority of cases, human rights
and property rights are fundamental
and in the long run identical. But
•when it clearly appears that there is
a real conflict between them, human
rights must have the upper hand, for
property belongs to man and not man
to propert..
He made his auditors clearly real-
ize that he considered republican in-
stitutions still on trial, both in Amer-
ica and France.
The distinguished persons occupy-
ing seats on the Estrade were evi-
dently quite as much impressed as the
students and other auditors in front,
joining heartily in the applause, es-
pecialy when Mr. Roosevelt spoke
against race suicide.
In replying to M. Boutroux before
the Academy of Moral and Political
Sciences Mr. Roosevelt spoke in
French. He said he would not dare
to do so if he were not among con-
ferees, for he was certain of their in-
dulgence.
"I cannot express how much I have
been touched bv the honor you have
paid me," he said. "It is the crowning
of the career of a man of letters."
The Address,
Strange and Impressive associations
-rise in the mind of a man from the
aiew world who speaks before this au-
gust body in this ancient institution of
learning. Before his eyes pass the shad-
ows of mighty kings and warlike nobles,
•of great masters of law and theology;
■through the shining dust of the dead -cen-
tturies lie sees crowded figures that tell
of the power and learning and splendor
<of times gone by; and he sees also the
innumerable host of humble students to
whom clerkship meant emancipation
whom it was well-nigh the only outlet
from the dark thraldom of the middle
ages.
This was the mout famous univer-
sity of medieaval Europe at a time
when no one dreamed that there was a
aiew world to discover. Itservices to the
«ause of human knowledge already
stretched far back into the remote past
at the time when my forefathers, three
centuries ago, were among the sparse
bands of traders, plowmen, woodchoppers
and llsher-folk who, In hard struggle with
.the Iron unfriendliness of the Indian
liaunted land, were laying the founda-
tions of what has now become the giant,
republic of the west. To conquer a con-
tinent, to tame the shaggy roughness of
wild nature, means grim warfare; the
generations engaged in it cannot keep
still less add to, the stores of garnered
wisdom which once were theirs and
which are still in the hands of their
brethren who dwell in the old land. To
conquer the wilderness means to wrest
victory from the same hostile forces
with which mankind struggled for the
immemorial infancy of our race. The
primeval conditions must be met by
primeval qualities which are incompatible
with the retention of much that has
been painfully acquired by humanity as
through the ages It has striven upward
toward civilization. In conditions so
primitive there can be but a primitive
culture. At first only the rudest schools
can be established, for no others would
meet the needs of the hard-driven sinewy
folk who thrust forward the frontier in
the teeth of savage man and savage na-
ture; and many years elapse before any
of these schools can develop into seats
of higher learning and broader culture.
Individual Citizenship.
Today I shall speak to you on the
subject of individual citizenship, the one
subject of vital Interest to you, my hear-
ers and to me and my countrymen, be-
cause you and we are citizens of great
democratic republics. A democratic re-
public such as each of ours—an effort to
Part
court in ns.
Fish, l'art Fowl. Decision*
Railroad Tax ( uses.
Kll KSTRKWS UK\SONS
YFAL
in,
most gigantic of all possible social ex-
periments, the one fraught with greatest
possibilities alike for good and for evil.
The success of republics like yours and
like ours means the glory, and our fail-
ure the despair, of mankind; and for
you and for us the question of the qual-
ity of the individual citizen is supreme.
Under other forms of government, under
the rule of one man or of a very few
men, the quality of the ruletrs is all-
important. If, under such governments,
tho quality of the rulers is high enough,
then tho nation may for generations
lead a brilliant career and add substan-
tially to the sum of the world achievfe-
ment, no matter how low the quality
of the average citizen; because the av-
erage citizen is an almost negligible
quantity in working out the tinal results
of that type Qf national greatness.
But with you and with us the case is
different. Witli you here, and with us in
my own home, in the long run, success
or failure will be conditioned upon the
way in which the average man, the aver-
age woman, does his or her duty, first
in the ordinary, everyday affairs of life,
and nejft in those great occasional crisis
which call for that heroic virtues. The
average citizen must be a good citizen
if our republics are to succeed. The
stream will not permanently rise higher
than the main source; and the main
source of national power and national
greatness is found in the average citizen-
ship of the nation. Therefore it be-
hooves us to do our best to see that the
standard of the average citizen is kept
high and the average cannot be kept
high unless the standard of the leaders
is very much higher.
It is well if a large proportion of the
leaders in any republic, in apy democracy
are, as a matter of course, drawn from
the classes represented in tills audience
today; but only provided that those class-
es possess the gifts of sympathy with
plain people and of devotion to great id-
eals. You and tho^e ike you have re-
ceived special advantages; you have all
of yeu had the opportunity for mental
training; many of you have had a chance
for the enjoyment of life far greater
than eomes to the majority of your fel-
lows. To you and your kind much has
been given, and from you much should
be expected. Yet there are certain fail-
ings against which It is especially in-
cumbent that both men of trained and
cultivated intellect, and men of inherlt-
wealth and position should especially
guard themselves, because to these fail-
ings they are espeefairy liable; and if
yielded to, their—your—chanees of use-
ful service are at an end.
Not the Critic that Counts.
It is not the critic tnat counts; not
the man who points out how the strong
man stumbles, or where the doer of
deeds could have done better. The cred-
it belongs to the man who is actually in
the arena, whose face is marred by dust
and sweat and blood; who strives val
iantly; who errs, and comes short again
and again, because there is no effort with
out error and shortcoming; but who does
actually strive to do the deeds; who
knows the great enthusiasms, the great
devotions; who spends himself
worthy cause; who at the best knows in
the end the triumph of high achieve-
ment, and who at the worst, if he fails,
at least while daring greatly, so that his
place shall never be with those cold and
timid souls who know neither victory nor
defeat. Shame on the man of cultivated
taste who permits refinement to develop
into a fastidiousness that unfits him for
doing the rough work of a workaday
world. Among the free peoples who gov-
ern themselves there Is but a small field
of usefulness open for the men of clois-
tered life who shrink from contact with
their fellows. Still less room is there
for those who deride or slight what Is
done by those who actually bear the
brunt of the day; nor yet for those others
who always profess that they would like
to take action, if only the. conditions of
life were not what they actually are. The
man who does nothing but cuts the same
sordid figure in the pages of history,
whether he be cynic or fop, or voluptuary
There Is little use for the being whose
tepid soul knows nothing of the great
and generous emotion of the high pride,
tho stern belief, the olfty enthusiasm
the men who quell the storm and ride fhe
thunder. Well for these men if they
succeed; well also, though not so
if the yfail, given only that they have
nobly ventured, and have put forth all
their heart and strength. It Is war-worn
Hotspur, spent with hard fighting, he of
the many errors and tho valiant end,
er whose memory we love to linger,
not over the memory of the young lord
who "but for the vile guns would have
been a soldier."
Praise for the French.
Fiance has taught many lessons to
other nations; surely one of the most
important is the lesson her whole his-
tory teaches, that a high artistic and
literary development is compatible with
notable leadership in arms and state-
Judge John H. Cotteral in the Unit-
ed States circuit court here Wednes-
day issued a temporary injunction
in the canes brought by the railhead
companies to restrain the collection
of the last half of the 19U8 taxes. The
particular case in which the oi'Jer
was issued was the one brought by
the Santa Fe to restrain the collection
of taxes in Kay county, which was
made a test case for the suits involv-
ing other counties but involving the
same point,
The colection of all state taxes is
enjoined because of the fact that the
state hoard of equalization made its |
estimates of income and expense not ;
only fcr the fiscal year ending June ;
30, 1908, as required by law, but al-1
so for the iisciri year ending June «0.1
1009. and the court holds that there
is no way to tell what part of the
tax belonged to the different years.
In connection with county and
other local levies, the injunction ap-
plies to the part of the taxes which
wjuld corespond to the reduction!
made by the state board on the valu-
ation of other classes of property.
The court holds that sufficient evi-
dence indicating discrimination in
that respcct has been presented to
warrant an injunction against the col-
lection of that much of the taxes,
pending a final hearing. The rail-
roads are required to pay the remain-
der of the local taxes, corresponding
to what their taxes would have been
if their valuations has been reduced
in the same ratio as other property,
within 0 days and to give bond for
the payment of the taxes enjoined, in
ase the matter should be decided
against them on final hearing.
The cases were heard jointly by
Judges Cotteral and Campbell of the
Eastern District, as similar suits
were pending in both districts and the
opinion Js the joint work of both
judges, expressing views in which
both concur.
On all of the other points, most of
which were brought out in the West-
ern Union and Pullman cases, the de-
cision is against the railroads. The
question of discrimination by the pur-
posed undervaluation of other classes
of property was also involved in
those cases. In those cases It was
decided that the complainant had not
succeeded in showing an intentional
undervaluation, but the court states
that it cot Id not decide this case on
the evidence in the former case. A
sufficient showing was made as to the
mistake in valuation and enough evi-
dence intioduced to show that it was
intentional to warrant the granting
of an injunction pending a final hear-
ing.
This decision is practically final as
to the state taxes, but leaves the part
of the local levies now enjoined still
in doubt.
Editor Register: 1 am with you In
voting down the capital location at
present, for it is illegal, dishonest.
When we accepted the Enabling Act
of Congress and adopted a constitu-
tion. it was the understanding that
the capital should remain at Guthrie
unci 1913. But there it an >th« r
proposition coming up for decision at
the same time that I and most of the
>eople ot tue state are vitally inter-
ested in that it* the amendment of tht
Constitution as regards corporations
Hay Brother Farmer and Laborers,
when they get that amendment out ol
Constitution they have got us coni-
let.*ly in ti.eir power. Why is it
Mr. Editor that neither democratic 01
republican papers mention the propo-
sition to f.iike ovt Section U of Ar-
ticle 9. 1 see tliat one paper made the
assertion ii that section was knocked
out It would add $750,000 to our tax-
able wealth. Say it does, the rail-
roads would enjoin the officers from
collecting the taxes, as now, and how
many thousands of dollars would the
corporations take from the state in
illegal profits. Say boys stay with
the Constitution, it is good enough as
far as it goes, but doesn't go far
enough. Until they are initiating dif-
ferent measures to vote into the con-
stitution they forgot the main spoke
in the government wheel that is the
imparative mandate of right of recall.
Give us that with 'the initiative and
referendum and then we, the people,
can run the government of the state
and do away with grafting.
••HAYSEED" M. H. RICKSTREW.
Some Legal Reasons Why Capital of
Okla. Should Not Be Voted " at This Time.
4i
BARRETT
CAN'T Ql'lT HIS
SAYS ROAUD.
,10IJ,
It has been definitely decided that
Charles Barret ot Shawnee will re-
main secretary o[ the hoard of agri-
culture.
The Board flatly refused to accept
his resignation at this time and Bar-
rett will give up the position offered
him at a salary of $2,500 per annum
with the Shawnee Chamber of Com-
merce to remain secretary of the
board of agriculture at $1,800.
It was learned today that J. S. Mur-
ray, brother of Bill Murray demo-
cratic candidate for governor, failed
to be elected secretary of the board
of agriculture because of the interven-
tion of friends of Murray, who took
the position that such action would
hurt Murray's candidacy for gover-
nor. Before this came up Murra had
the pledge of a majority of the mem-
bers of the board, it is understood.
The following colored people are
suing for divorce in the District
Court: Parletta Younger v. L.
Younger; Anna Lewis v. Henry Lewis
.Martha J. Johnson v. Albert Johnson.
The Peoples Trust Co. and Savings
aBnk, Clinton, Iowa, has begun suit
in the U. S. District Court at Guthrie
against several citizens of Hobart,
The suit grows out of the sale of the
Hobart Cotton Compress to the Trad-
ers Compress Company in 1905. it Is
alleged by plaintiffs that they had an
execution issued on a judgment for
$15,000 against defendants, which was
placed in the hands of a deputy U. S.
marshal who returned the execution
endorsed, de bonis non, or no goods
found. Afterwards it is claimed the
Hobart people sold the compress for
$45,000 and divided the proceeds
among themselves.
In the Superior Court, Tr^v B.
Stotts is suing Hattie Stoots—on gen
eral principles. Also Mrs. Belle Jen-
nings is oiling up the divorce mach-
inery that has ben rusting for five
years, in this case, and asks Judge
Sandlin to forever separate her from
her erstwhile husband, W. W. Jea-
nings, formerly a barber in Guthrie.
On the civil docket, W. P. Hard-
wick appears as plaintiff and H. Reed,
et al., defendants, in a suit to recover
on a note; also, Hausena Craig has
sued J. Jacobson, with the same ob-
ject.
J. B. Beadles and Son, L, N., have
begun suit against G. W. Stevens,
guardian, et al., to recover on note
and foreclose mortgage on real es-
tate.
Built by Citizens of Guthrie at a Cost of $200,000 and Used
By the State. Why Spend Millions for a Capital
Lo caticn at this Time?
Kl) Oil Kit II01,/.Kit FOR
COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Ed Oberholzer, the present member
of county commissioners ot the first
diMr.tr, h«s announced for a re-nomi-
nation. It Is useless to say that he
has worked hard during the last three
years looking after the county's busi-
ness and has given as good a satis-
faction as is possible for a man in
such a responsible public position.
Ed has much interest in the county
as any farmer, and has worked as
hard for what h ehas, as any of the
early day settlers can testify who
know him. It is therefore sure that
he has done the best he could to pro-
tect the people's interests, and those
who know the county's condition
when he took hold know that he and
the other members of the board have
done the best they could for when
they were in doubt they have not only
asked legal advice but have sought
advice from the general citizens. Ed
was the first chairman of the present
board but not desiring to monopolize
anything he has any business with,
he insisted that the duty be passed
around, and at the beginning of the
present year, Mr. Wolfe of Crescent
township, was made chairman.
.1. S. SHEARER FOR RKPRESEXTA-
TIYE OF THE SECOND DISTRICT
craft. The -^brilliant gallantry of the
French soldier has for many centuries
been provorbial; and during these same
centuries at every court In Europe the
"freemasons of fashion" have treated the
French tongue as their common speech;
while every artist and man of letters, and
every man of science able to appreciate
that marvelous Instrument of precision,
French prose, has turned toward France
for aid and inspiration. How long the
leadership in arms and letters has lasted
is curiously Illustrated by the fact that
the earliest masterpiece in a modern
tongue is the splendid French epic which
tells of Roland's doom and the vengeance
Continued on page fourl ?
SECOND ANNUAL DERATE..
On the evening of April 22nd, at
the Brooks, the Enid High School
young orators, composed of the fol-
owlng: Messers. Monroe Goode and
John Bass and Miss Luclle Haines,
were adjudged the better debaters in
contest with Messers Thomas Morris,
Robert Stewart and John Nissley.
The subject of debate was—"Re-
solved that the Public Utilities of a
City should be under Municipal owner-
hsip." Enid taking the affirmative
and L. C. H. S. the negative.
There was a large and enthusiastic
audience present composed principally
of Guthrie people, though a number
were present from Enid, and it was
pleasant to note the generous applause
the decision of the judges was given.
While our boys did splendidly it was
generally conceded that our neigh-
bors out-weighed them in argument,
if not In oratory.
Judge M. J. Kane of the Supreme
Court presided. Miss Louise Bierer
everyone, Sha and Miss Smith also
gave a duet on the piano. Miss Fern
Miles, who always pleases, sang a
beautiful solo.
J. S. Shearer has been solicited by
his friends to stand for another term
as a member of the lower House of
the legislature from the second dls
trict. Mr. Shearer has the interest o£
Guthrie and Logan county at heart.,
and in the former sessions has always
been of great service when special in-
terest came up. He is a working not
speech making member, and does his
work in committee at close quarters,
Mr. Shearer is one of the most loyal
and public spirited citizens in Guthrie,
and his name is always near the head
of the list when it comes to subscribe
to public enterprises. He has his all
in Guthrie and believes in the fu-
ture. He is a man who holds up the
religious and educational Institutions
of the city and is one of the most ac-
tive members of the Chautauqua lec-
ture course. He is the state agent
of one of the largest, if not the larg-
est, fraternal orders.
Arguments, against initiative Ques-
tion to be voted on June 11, 1910, for
the immediate location of the Capital
of Oklahoma, and against moving
said capital from Guthrie.
KirstJ. Because the Enabling Act
provides;
"The capital of said State shall tem-
porarily be ?t the City of Guthrie, in
the present Territory of Oklahoma
and shall not be changed therefrom
previous to Anno Domini nineteen
hundred and thirteen, but said capital
shall, after said year, be located by
the electors of said state- at an elec-
tion to be provided for by the legisla-
ture.* • * "
That Act was adopted by Sec. 497
of the State Constitution, and by sec-
tion 492:
"Was engrossed with the engrossed
copy of the Constitution on parch-
ment." (Bunn's Constitution; Sny-
der's Constitution.)
The Enabling Act protects the
rights granted by Congress to Indians
and their lands; prescribed toleration
of religious liberty; prohibitel liquor
in the Indian Territory; Territorial
debts to be paid; provided for public
schools; restricted abridgments of the
right of suffrage; granted millions of
acres of school lands to the state, and
protected rights therein; and these
and many other rights, protected by
the Enabling Act can be violated, if
the state capital can be located before
1913. This attempt to violate the
Constitution and Enabling act should
be voted "NO."
Second. This measure unconstitu-
tionallly, would appropriate $600,000
to be placed in the hands of three
persons, selected by the Governor.
This is done to move the Capital
twenty (20) miles NEARER Oklaho-
ma City, but not necessarily AT Ok-
lahoma City.
Third. There is no necessity for
this violation of Enabling Act and
State Constitution and expenditure of
$600,000 to be followed by millions
more, for the time will soon enough
come for the location of the capital,
and in the meantime the state is kept
busy providing moneys for the other
Institutions of greater necessity. The
institutions already located have re-
quired and are requiring millions of
dollars of the people's money; the
state debt on November 30, 1909, was
over $2,000,000; the recent special
session of the legislature alone au-
thorized the issuance of over $2,000,-
000. more in warrants, liens on the
funds derived from public building
lands, and bear 5 per cent interest.
No necessity exists for appropriating
immediately, $600,000 more for state
capital site to be followed by appro-
priating millions to construct capital
building, because Guthrie is centrally
located, with nine railroads connect-
ing this city with all sections of the
state and one more being built. Guth
rie is nearer the majority of the peo
pie of the state than Oklahoma City,
which proposes the change; Guthrie
is naturally situated for being and is
one of the healthiest of the state's
SHERIFF MAHONEY ASKS
RENOMIN ATION
Sheriff John Mahoney asks for re-
nomination as sheriff of Logan coun-
ty. He has made a good sheriff and
there has never been a day so rainy
or a night so dark that he hasn't gone
in an answer to a call, no matter how
far, when some one needed him in his
official capacity. He has been signally
successful In apprehending and cap-
turing horse thieves. In his official
duties he is as quiet and undemon-
strative as if ho were a minister of
the gospel. His friends surely do
stick to him, even those whom he has
to arrest.
John Mahoney was a farmer in the
southeast part of the county before he
became sheriff He has made a good
record and thinks he deserves a sec-
ond term on 't.
best of sanitary sewerage, with pure
filtered water in abundance, with
streets paved and beautified at a cost
of a million dollars; it has electric
lights, natural gas and the latest sys-
tem of street railway. When it was
designated as the capital originally,
more than twenty years ago, it set
apart as line and commanding a site
as there is in the state; four blocks
of ground on the principal street and
only eight blocks from the geogra-
phical center for state capitol pur-
poses, and under an Act of the state
iegtslature, it has expended In mon-
ey of its own people, costing the
state nothing, in beautifying these
grounds, building Convention Hall—
A state capitol—used ever since as
legislative halls, Supreme Court and
Criminal Court of Appeals rooms.
Chambers for Judges, offices for At-
torney General, and State Library,
used by the state on a five year lease,
rent free,—$1 a year,—approximately
a quarter of a million of dollars, and
these grounds and building, worth a
half a million dollars are the State's,
having been provided by Guthrie for
the state, temporarily and permanent-
ly, and are, with the one hundred
acres in a beautiful park nearby,
which is also provided for the
State, worth more than the $600,000
which Oklahoma City asks the State
to appropriate. The other executive
offices are using the magnificent
Court House, built by the people of
Logan County. These buildings pro-
vided are serving every present need
of the State and at a small cost to the
taxpayers.
Fourth. You may vote twice at
the election; a vote "NO" on the
measure and "YES" opposite Guthrie
will support the Constitution and the
Enabling Act, and leave the Capital to
be located where the Law provides
and save much trouble and expense.
Fifth. The bill is unfair; it at-
tempts to locate the State Capital on
terms dictated by one of the candi-
dates; it permits a commission of
town lot boomers to select the site for
the capital and erect the capital
building; it creates jobs for three
commissioners at $4,000 a year each
and gives them unlimited power to fix
any number of employees and their
salaries; it requires the city that loses
the capital to pay the expenses of the
second election and relieves the city
that wins from any expense; it bar?
all cities that might be capital aspir-
ants from the race excepting those
selected by Oklahoma City; an unnec-
essary special election is called at the
request of Oklahoma City when the
proposition could have as well been
submitted at a general election at the
time fixed by law and without this
expense; the bill raa«es no minimum,
limit of the amount of land that may
be purchased for the enormous sum
of $600,000 and does not exclude in-
terested parties from being members
of the capital location commission.
COMMITTEE ON BEHALF
OF THE PEO PL 10 OF THE
CITY OF GUTHRIE.
A. G. C. BIERER, Chairman
cities, with splendid drainage, the L. G. NIBLACK, Secretary.
(il'AHRIE LADIES' CHORUS GAVE
SUCCESSFUL CONCERT.
A large audience greeted the Ladies
Chorus o nthe occasion of their spring
concert at the Brooks. Wednesday eve-
ning, and without an exception every
expression of those present was that
the concert, as a musical event, sur-
passed anything heard in our city for
many a day. Ahe assembling of this
musical talent, training, blending and
harmonizing of the Individual voices
of so large a number, though each
voice may have by nature passed su-
perior qualities, was no small under-
taking and Prof- Robinson, the direc-
tor of the Chorus is to be congratu-
lated on his succes in its accomplish
ment.
Althought he chorus has always
been successful in their past concerts
itls doubtful If any program has ever
been carried out In such an excellent
manner. A novel and delightful feat-
ure was the singing of the Irish
double quartet, who were heard for
the first time in that character in. the
"Folk Song." Ahe ladies of this quar-
tet made their appearance in white
gowns adorned with green of the Em-
erald Isle while the men wore bou-
quets of the same color on their
coats. The voices In the chorus were
never better displayed and two good
soloists rendered selections, Mrs.
Maud Wiliams-Hughey. who sang the
"Token" composed hy Prof. Robinson,
and Mr. Cecil Williams who rendered
"Kashlmirl Song," and the "Temple
Bells."
There Is an abandon, swing and
dash about the "Strollers" that takes
the audience bodily into the spirit of
their songs.
GRAND LODGE K. OF P.
The Grand I^odge K. of P. of Okla-
homa, will convene in Muskogee, May
3rd,, and Frank Sarber Frank Woods
and J. C. Templeton will start for that
city on Sunday, to represent Guthrie
Lodge No. 2.
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1910, newspaper, April 28, 1910; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112699/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.