The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 129, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 29, 1916 Page: 3 of 4
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NORMAN DAILY TRANSCRIPT
/
After
the Years
*
By Frances Elizabeth Lanyon
(Copyright, 1916. by W. G. Chapman.)
"Gone!" uttered Alton Merrill, and
his heart sunk within him.
"Yes, sir, a week ago. It was strange,
Inexplicable. For a <fuy Miss Harra-
tlen moped around the house, looking
—stricken Is the word—us though she
had received bud news that hud
crushed her. We found a letter on the
muntel of her room. It was addressed
to you."
"Give it to me, quick 1" ordered the
young man breathlessly.
"My wife has it. I'll get it for you,
Mr. Merrill."
The caller tore open the letter ad-
dressed to him In feverish haste, lie
staggered at the perusal of the lnelo-
sure like a strong man under a heavy
blow
"It's Impossible—Incrediable!" he
gasped, and went from the spot bewil-
dered, dnzed, heartsick.
"Mr. Merrill," so the letter ran, "1
have discovered your cruel and wicked
duplicity. You will never see me
again.
"ESTELLK IIARRADEN."
Alton Merrill hud in his pocket the
ring provided for his marriage. He
hud more than that. lie hud u pretty
cottuge furnished with every comfort
and ornument ut the edge of the town.
For u your he hud courted the pretty
schoolteacher. The appointed wedding
duy wus less than forty-eight hours
ahead. What misadventure hud sud-
denly, mysteriously blighted his fend
dream of happiness?
lie could not tell and did not find out
—just then. He recalled a rival in the
past, Bruce Wyant, but he hud not
Have
Suffered Deeply for
Wicked Action."
been seen in Rroeton in six months,
lie expended time and money in
seurching for his missing love. It was
in vain. Estelle Harraden had disap-
peared as effectually as though the
earth had opened and hud swallowed
her up.
So Alton Merrill, when he came to
the sad conclusion that Estelle Harra-
den, from freak, fancy or plotting, was
beyond recall, accepted his cross
silently. He could never forget, never
cease to love this woman. He kept
the wedding ring in a little paeket next
to his heart. He went to a friend in
the town and arranged that once u
month the little cottage he had worked
so hard to possess and furnish should
be dusted and uired und repuinted once
a year.
Then, with a heavy heart, Merrill
started out once more ou his wander-
ing role of a truveling salesman, lie
applied himself to it und mude money.
One duy, while sented in a ruilway
stntion a haggard, shubbily dressed
woman seated opposite to him came
over to him. Her fuce bore the truces
ot former beuuty, her munner showed
u eertuln refinement.
"You ure Mr. Alton Merrill," she
spoke. "Am I right?"
"Thnt is my nume," assented Mer-
rill.
"I saw you four years ago In Broc-
ton and remembered you. Mr. Merrill,
because it lies heuvy on my conscience,
because you ure too goo<\ a man to go
through the world saddened by the
mystery of the disuppenrunee cf the
weman you loved, I am ubout to make
a confession. I wus the enuse of Miss
Estelle Hurrudeu leaving Brocton nnd
you."
"You!" exclaimed Merrill, incredu-
lously.
"At the behest of another, Bruce
Wyant. Thnt other wus the mun who
swore thnt you should never wed the
womun he coveted. He led me to
pose us one you hnd ulrendy murried
and deserted. He furnished me with
forged proofs to sustain the fiction.
I did my work becuuse he clnimed he
sought only revenge, because he prom-
ised to mnke me his wife If I would.
He followed Mjss Harraden, but she
ignored him with scorn. He failed In
his promise to me. He was killed in
a quarrel in a gambling den und I—"
she uttered n low plnlntlve monn. "I
Polite Boy.
"I wonder which of us will die first !M
snld n little boy pensively to his sister.
"You will," said the little girl brisk-
ly, " 'cos you are the eldest."
"No," nnswered her brother, not nnx-
have suffered deeply for my wicked lous for the privilege. "Lndies first 1"
action." | —London Answers.
"You hnve no idea where Esu-lie—
Miss Hurrudeu went to?" engerly in-
quired Merrill.
"None," wus *he depressing reply.
"You will curse me, but I hnd to re-
lieve my mind," and, despite his gen-
tle words of forgiveness, his protYers
of money aid, the poor creuture vuu-
ished In the throng.
It wus then thnt Merrill renewed
his quest for Esltlle. He advertised
In the papers, he even employed de-
tectives, but no trnee wus found of
missing or hidden Estelle Harraden.
His grief wus tlte more poignuut, how-
ever, now thnt he knew thnt u plot, u
lie hud driven from his side the lovely
girl and probubly destroyed her fnith
in nil mankind.
He hud a mlrneulous cscnpe in u rull-
rond wreck nt a little town In Iowa nnd
wus compelled to remuin there owing
to a bruised limb for severul dnys. It
wus the first duy he hud been uble to
wulk reixNIy since the accident, nnd he
wus turning u corner when nn nuto-
moblle came whizzing uround the cor-
ner. A little chilcf passed directly in
Its path. Merrill sprang forward, lie
drew the child aside In safety and held
her In his arms us she sobbed with
fright.
"Don't cry, dearie," spoke Merrill
soothingly.
"But my books, look 1 they are all in
the mud."
"We will soon fix nil thut," promised
Merrill encouragingly nnd he gathered
up two books held by a strap, un-
loosened them and with his handker-
chief rubbed off the damp dirt thut hud
gutliered on them.
"You see, Miss Burtlett guve me the
books," explulned the little one.
"She's tuught me the alphubet nnd
soon I can rend words I'm to go to the
school."
"Here they ure, nil nice nnd clenn,"
said Merrill, but in bunding the books
back to the child one of them chanced
to come open. Merrill started, stared,
his breath came quickly, for across
the fly leaf was written in u deur fn-
iulliar bund the nume: "Estelle Har-
raden," and after it the date of the
year she had disappeared.
"Child! child!" he uttered eagerly,
"you say a lndy gave you the books.
Where, who is she?"
"Miss Burtlett? oh, everyone knows
her," prattled the little one. "She Is
a music teacher."
"Yes! yes!"
"She lives with the school princi-
pal's family in that gray house—see
it, just beyond the church."
Alton Merrill tried to control him-
self. A clue ut lust—oil, surely! for
Estelle had been a musician ulong
with her other accomplishments. So
abruptly did he leave the little child
that she stood staring wonderingly
after him.
Merrill approached the gray house
beyond the church. Could he be mis-
taken—was he cherishing false hopes?
(Mi, surely not! for us he approached
the front steps of the house, sweet,
mellow, reminiscent, the notes of a
piano sent out nn old song Estelle hud
often sung to him.
The struins drew him up to the
screen door, ills range of vision took
In u neut little purlor. At the Instru-
ment sat a girlish form. Her fuce
wus half turned towards him. Ills
furnished eyes feasted upon its rure
beauty.
"Estelle!" he spoke simply.
She turned, her being athrill. Her
hnnd sought her throbbing breast us
she recognized him.
"I have found you after the years,
nnd oh, heuven hus opened to me,"
ho uttered In n joyful, thrilling tone.
She enme slowly towards the door.
Her eyes scanned his face. Truth,
love, were there. Oh, she could not
mistake it!
ller euger hearing drew in the rapid
word, he spoke, a voice as from a lost
pitradise.
It wus she who pushed open the
screen door. It was she who reuched
forth her arias towards him with the
weury, yet heartsorae cry.
"Oh, why did I ever doubt you?"
"It mutters not," he spoke, for love,
huppiness have come back to us—uf-
ter the yenrs!"
SOMETHING NEW FOR THE AUTOIST
k\
By striking a lever towards the right, a chauffeur informs those behind
J him that he Intends to turn to I lie right. Similarly, when he strikes the lever
j towards the left, he shows his intention-to turn to the left. By striking the
I lever downward he causes both arrows to indicate simultaneously, a stop
signal universally accepted. To bring back the lever to neutral position, a
chauffeur need but strike the lever slightly. lie need not hold his hand on the
lever while signaling. A buzzer indicates whether the arrows are signaling
or not, and calls attention to the indicator after the desired change in direction
has been made. The device is practical, both day and night. By day, the ar-
rows show white; at night, red. It combines a tail lam;', and a bracket for a
j license plate. The arrows turn red only when the tuil laup is lit. It is rain-
proof, dustproof and foolproof.
WELL TO REMEMBER
Legislative Enactments Dealing
With the Regulation of
Auto Travel.
KNOW LAW AND OBSERVE IT
Smithsonian Institution.
The first grent scientific institute in
America, the Smlthsonlun institution
in Wnshlngton, was founded 70 years
ago. James Lewis Macle Snilthson, who
bequeathed the funds for the founding
of the institution, was a natural son
of the third duke of Northumberland.
He was a distinguished scientist und
freethlnking philosopher, und on his
death In 1820 left his fortune of about
$r>;)U,OOC to his nephew, with the pro-
viso thut if his heir died without issue
the money wus to go to the United
Stutes government nnd to be used In
estubllshlng un institution for the ln-
creuse ui.d diffusion >f knowledge.
Ills nephew died ir. 1835 without heirs,
und the property uccordlngly cume if.to
possession of the government. The in-
stitution wus formally organized on
August 8, 1840, nnd plnced under the '
control of n bourd of trustees, consist- j
ing of the president nnd vice president j
of the United Stutes, the cabinet mem- |
hers, the chief justice of the Supreme |
court, und other oiliciuls. The Snilth-
soniuu institution hns played nn im- j
portant part in the scientific re-
searches of the last hnlf century, and J
its publications have added vastly to |
human knowledge. The remuins of
Jumes Snilthson, burled nt Genon, were
brought to Ameriea In 1JH)4 und burled
on the institution's grounds.
These Rules Are in Force In Illinois,
But They Are Practically Sim-
ilar to Those of Other
States Throughout the
Country.
Tho license of nuy chauffeur who
while Intoxicated operntes a car will
be revoked, on proof, by the secretary
of state.
No person shall operate an automo-
bile or motorcycle without.copsent of
the owner. A fine of $200 and six
months' imprisonment is the maximum
penalty.
Any person hiring nn unlicensed
chauffeur is liable to a fine of $-00 and
costs.
Any person violating the speed pro-
visions of the law is liable to a fine
of $200 and costs.
Racing on the public highway is
forbidden by law. It might cost you
$200 to indulge in this dangerous pas-
time.
Don't use a fictitious automobile
number! It may cost you a fine of
$25.
It Is dangerous as well as unlawful
to allow your engine to run while un-
attended. It makes you liable to a
fine of $25.
Any chauffeur or other person hav-
ing the care of a motor vehicle, >\ho
takes nny conslderutlon for the pur-
chnse of supplies, pnrts or work, for
snld vehicle, mny be fined $200 und
imprigoned six months.
Any person giving or offering any
consideration is liable to the same
penalty.
No person shall operate an automo-
bile as a chauffeur without a license
from the secretary of state. Anyone
violating this provision may be fined
$25.
If you run an automobile at night
without lighted lamps you are liable
to a fine of $100.
The switch controlling the illumina-
tion of the rear plate must be lo-
cated on the outside of tho vehicle.
Chauffeurs must display their badges
in a conspicuous place.
Any person using a fictitious chauf-
feur's license or badge is liable to a
fine of $25.
Head the motor-vehicle law and ob-
serve it! It is your duty to know it
and observe it!
You are supposed to know the
speed ordinances of cities and villages.
If, as a matter of fact you don't, take
no chances.
POP CAME IN HANDY
USED BY AUTO DRIVER TO FIN-
ISH UNFORTUNATE TRIP.
Plunge Through Bridge Into Swift
Stream Had Emptied the Batteries
—Little Other Damage Done.
When a North Carolina mountain
stream is taken with a sudden, Insane
tit of temper, motorists, pedestrians—
ull people, movnble property, live
stock, everything—will do well to give
the erstwhile gentle brook a wide,
wide berth.
Commodore Ernest Lee Jahncke of
New Orleans, who hus his summer res-
idence ut Asheville, N. C., abides by
tlie.above rule, but he got cnught in u
storm recently, on n trip from Ashe-
ville to Toxuwuy. He wus obliged to
cross u small bridge. The stream, with
vicious cunning, had so weakened the
foundations that the bridge was fairly
a trap for Jahncke and his touring
car.
When the automobile was fairly on
tho bridge, the structure gave away.
The car turned over and disappeared,
leaving only part of one rear wheel
and a fender showing above the tur-
bulent water. Mr. Jahncke was obliged
to swim desperately to get away.
"This accident occurred nt two
o'clock in the afternoon," said Jahncke,
"and with the help of farm hands and
a good pair of oxen, we were able to
get the machine out of the creek, as
the water hud receded enough in u
few hours to ennble us to work. When
we righted it, much to the surprise of
myself und the onlookers, I tried the
car und the machine actually started!
However, when the car turned over,
tho batteries were emptied, and we
knew we would need distilled water
to replenish them. This seemed a
knotty problem until we thought of
two bottles of pop which had stayed
in the machine. We poured the con-
tents of these two bottles into the bat-
tery.
"At nine o'clock that night we were
back home, having made the trip of 60
miles with our own power."
TME
IKITCMEN
ICABiNETI
The question for each man to aettU
Ib not what he would do If he had the
means, time, influence, and educational
advantages; but what will he do with
the things he hue -Hamilton W. Ma-
t>le.
FOOD FOR THE FOLKS.
It Is the cooking and serving of the
common things In an uncommon way
which takes genius; any
food attraetively served
is better enjoyed and bet-
ter digested.
Caramelized Rice and
Apple Pudding.—llr«wn
one cupful of sugar in a
saucepan or Iron frying
pan; be careful not to
burn. Add three cupfula
of boiling wnter, simmer
und stir until the cara-
mel Is entirely dissolved, then ndd *
cupful of well-washed rice. Boll for
five minutes and turn Into n pudding
dish lined with sliced tipples. Place
In u hot oven and sflr until the rice Is
tender. Hake five minutes longer and
serve cold with cream.
Nut and Cheese Roast.—Cook two
tablespoonfuls of chopped onion In
one tablespoonful of butter until
brown. .Mix n cupful of gritted cheese,
a cupful of nut meats and a cupful
of soft crumbs moistened with a little
water from the pan In which the
onion was cooked, season with salt,
pepper and the Juice of half a lemon.
Pour Into a baking dish and bake
until brown.
Baked Celery With Cheese.—Wash
und cut celery into inch pieces nnd
cook In boiling wnter, salted water un-
til tender, reserving the stock. Use
the stock to make a sauce, using four
tablespoonfuls ench of butter nnd
flour, cooked together; n little crenm
and the liquor In which the celery was
cooked. Season well with salt and
paprika and add' to the celery; put a
layer of this in the bottom of a but-
tered dish und n layer of finely grated
cheese, cover with more of the celery
nnd snuee, finish with buttered crumbs
and bake until the crumbs are deli-
cately browned.
Broiled Oysters a la Francaise.—
Butter ten scallop shells and place
four or five oysters In each. Mince
one large onion, half a clove of gar-
lic, and cook in five tablespoonfuls of
butter until lightly browned. Add the
oyster liquor with a cupful of crisp
bread crumbs, salt, pepper and pars-
ley; cover the oysters nnd dot with
bits of butter. Place shells on a tin
sheet and broil quickly.
Partridge Fricassee.—Fry two par-
tridges, cut In halves, In bacon fat,
then mid three slices of fried ham or
bacon, one cupful of hot stock and
half a cupful tomato catchup. Cook
well covered for an hour and a half,
adding more stock as needed; thick-
en thflt gravy and serve the birds In
the gravy.
SMALLER ELEVENS SHOW MUCH STRENGTH
.v."'.'.'*.'.'.'.'.'"".' ' T
SAVES CLOTHES AND TEMPER
Homemade Device for Use in Garage
When One Must Make Repairs
Under the Machine.
The sketch shows a homemade de-
vice for use In the garage when mak-
ing repairs under your automobile. It
is the back of an old chair, re-enforced
with three extra cross-pieces and
mounted on four ball-bearing truck
The gripping Carburetor.
A enrbutetor that persists in drip-
ping when the throttle is closed usu-
ally will be found to have a worn
needle valve that requires grinding to
its seat. Use a very fine grinding
compound fv this work, one which
is not composed of emery, the par-
ticles of which will not imbed them-
selves in the brass and keep the valve
and its seat in bad condition.
casters. The cross-plece3 are made of
heavy barrel staves. The heudpiece
if padded to form a rest for your head.
This device provides a comfortable
supi>ort for your body while uiider the
machine, and enables ycu to rod undei
and out again without bumping youi
head, thus saving both clothes ua<
temper. If an old chair back is no
handy, the creeper may be nia'le <
two strips 2 by 2 by 3(5 inches and s«
or eight barrel stuves.—Orange ,'u.
Farmer. '
Who liopos tho best goes forth with
forehead bare
And to the open blue he lifts hla
fare.
And crit'8 "All good of earth or Bea
or air
Io mine by boundless largeness of
God's grace."
GOOD GERMAN DISHES.
The appetizing dishes that our Ger
man cooks prepare should lie more
generally known foi
many of them would be
served often.
Almond Rings.—Mix to-
gether three-fourths of «
pound of butter, half s
pound of powdered sugar
the yolks of three eggs
rnd a pound of slftec
flour. Roll thin and cut into strip*
and form in rings; dip these in whlti
of egg, then In chopped almonds, sugai
und cinnamon, mix nnrt bake in t
moderate oven. Keep in a cool place I
Sauer Braten.—Cover a piece of
| stewing beef with vinegar and let stand !
•18 hours; druin, hird It nnd sprlnkh !
i with spice and fry in hot drippings
When browned well ull over, put Intt j
I the kettle with u lemon find, two slicec !
currots und two leeks, ndd n little hoi '
| wnter und simmer until the meat is
tender, strnln, thicken the liquor left, j
with flour, udd enough lemon Juice or |
vinegar to make It tart. Serve with 1
the meat and sauerkraut.
Beet Fritters.—Mash five beets to t>
pulp, add the yolks of four eggs, beater,
with two tablespoonfuls of cream and
| two tablespoonfuls of flour. Add the |
grated rind of a lemon, sugar and nut
meg to taste; mix and shape into!
small cakes and saute in n little but |
ter. Serve with tnrt fruit us u garnish j
such as cherries or apples.
Roast Goose With Stuffing.—A six
month-old goose will require no par '
boiling, nn older one should be pur
boiled. Scrub the outside thoroughlj '
with u vegetable brush nnd sodu wnter, !
using enre not to break the skin. Wipe !
dry, rub the Inside of the goose with '
the cut side of an onion, dust It with j
sage, salt and pepper, dredge with flour
nnd stuff It, cook In u covered roaster. I
When tender serve with gooseberry
Jelly and garnish with cooked apple j
rings with n stewed prune In the center
of ench slice. Stuff with n pound eucl j
of rnlslns, blanched and chopped al-
monds, bread crumbs, with the goose
liver cooked and finely chopped, two
teaspoonfuls of salt, one minced enion,
a tablespoonful of powdered sage and
n cupful of melted butter. Do not
pnek the stuffing in but fill lightly, new
WHIPPING CORNELL'S WARRIORS INTO SHAPE.
There was n time In foot Will, nnd it
wasn't so long ago, when if u no-
cnlled small team defeated un eleven
representing one of the larger colleges
or universities It would have been
guilty of lese majesty. It was seldom
thut it happened. Occasionally, of
course, one of ti e big tennis cnine u
cropper in un early-season clash, but
f' r the most part the gurnets served
the purpose for which they were sched-
uled—namely, the mediums whereby
conches grnduully developed their
charges for the feature gumes of the
season.
Score Over Big Rivals.
Rut in recerft years these smaller
elevens have been scoring victories
over their bigger rivals more frequent-
ly. They hnve been climbing grndunl-
ly to the plune of the Mg teams, until
now tunny of the "youngsters" ure en-
titled to be clussed with the big teams.
Swarthinore, Lufayette, Lehigh, C«\l-
gate, Washington and Jefferson are a
few of the smaller teams that nt dif-
ferent times in recent seasons hnve
developed power enough to score vic-
tories over the "big uns" in the enrly
practice gnmes.
The reuson for this is evident. Tho
SIGNAL BELT FOR FOOTBALL
Coach of Kewanee High School Team
Receives Patent for Device
Worn by Captains.
Coach TI. .T. Hamilton of the Kewn-
nee (ill.) high school nthletlc team has
received a patent on a belt to be worn
by f(u tball captains which will furnish
Blgnms for plays during games.
A double row of letters and figures
slide between the outer cover of the
belt and apertures permit the combina-
tion of cue figure and or«e letter to
shew. The combination can be quickly
shifted and will do away with the
possibility of any member of the op-
posing team breaking up plays by hear-
ing the signals called.
CAPTAIN OF PENN TEAM
Capt. N. M. Mathews, Who Plays
End on Formidable Pennsylvania
Football Eleven.
SWIMMER HAS CLEAN RECORD
Goodwin, Star of New York ^thletic
Club, Has Never Been Defeated—
Holds M:'e Crown.
Goodwin, the star swimmer of the
New York Athletic club, by his triumph
in the five-mile swim In the Hudson
recently, closed his twenty-third out-
door season of competition with an un-
broken record of victories. lie has
never been defeated at distances
greater than a mile and he has now
held the mile crown for 16 consecu-
tive years.
up the goose and put Into the roaster
HELP TO FOOTBALL PLAYERS
La Salle College Inaugurates Unique
Plan for Purpose of Assisting
Bruised Youngsters.
Football coaches at La Salle college
have Inaugurated an unusual idea for
the purpose of preventing staleness en
the part of youngsters bruised and
kveary of gridiron confinement. Driving
md putting golf balls has been taken
ip a* a diversion and beueficial results
uive beeu uoted.
small colleges have engaged good
coaches. These mentors hnve been
uble to whip their material Into ma-
chines capable of playing the best of
football. Furthermore, since beuting a
Mg team Is quite u fenther in the cup
of the little eleven the couches hnvo
rushed the perfection of their tenmu
for these enrly gnmes. The smullcr
elevens are developed enrlier than the
big ones, the coio hes of the big ones
preferring to perfect their machines by
degrees, always working with the one
or two big games on the schedule as
tho objective.
Good Example.
Tufts Is a good example of the early
development of a small eleven. When
Tufts Invaded the stadium at Cam-
bridge recently there were few who
anticipated a defeat for Harvard. The
majority viewed ;he game as an early
season romp for the Crimson. Instead
Tufts wen by n 7 to 3 count.
Critics were nt n loss to understnnd
whether the upset wus due to wenk-
ness (tn the pnrt of Harvard or strength
on the part of Tufts until Tufts Invad-
ed Princeton and compelled the Tigers
to resort to a field goal In the closing
minutes of play In order to win.
I^TEPESTl^G
• 5P0S?T •
MMGRAPfliS
New York public school pupils are
forming walking clubs.
An amateur boxer is one who is not
caught with his palms up.
* * •
Fielder Jones says he will stand pat
on his llrowus for next year.
• ♦ *
Everybody who wears a sweater
these days is not a football player.
* *
Michigan Aggies' new $250,000 gym-
nasium is being rushed to completion.
R. Norris Williams, IT, is the eighth
Harvard man to win the national lawn
tennis championship.
The fans of the country are in favor
of the efforts to cut down the price of
ndmisslon to the world's series gumes.
• ♦ *
This year's eastern intercollegiate
track and field championships held at
Harvard stadium netted a profit of 2f4t-
8GC.
« • *
President Joe Lar.nln of the Red Sox
has realized his fondest ambition In
baseball, and that was to win another
fennant. |
• • *
When a certain green table maker
threatened to nail up the pork barrel,
the three-cushion urtists immedlutely
buried the hutchet.
If the Reds fail to get a flying start
next spring, Christy Muthewson ex-
pects the Cincy hammer throwers to
call him a big bum.
• •
Rill Killlfer, tjie star backstop of
the Phillies, had a fine season last
summer in spite of the fact thut he
sturted out with a bad arm.
George Foster, the Red Sox pitcher,
who hns been suffering with n bad arm
for the last part of the 1910 summer,
says he will retire from the game.
Fullback Mnginess of Lehigh ran 00
yards for a touchdown against Ursinus
and later mude a 45-yard forward puss
over the goul line to McCarty, who
scored.
Some of the members of the Winter
league in St. Louis have started the
season by trading Catcher Snyder of
the Cardinals for Arthur Fletcher of
the Giants.
* •
An all-Pacific conference indoor
track meet may be held in Seattle next
spring. The second annual eastern
competition will be held either In
Philadelphia or New York uext spring.
Right halfback Prank McCain of;
University of Okhfhoma, after seorlngi
three touchdowns, on runs of 15, 25«
and 35 yards, respectively, In the gamet
acalnst Central Normal at Oklahomai
City, Okla., suffered a broken collar-
bone.
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Burke, J. J. The Daily Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 129, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 29, 1916, newspaper, November 29, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc113352/m1/3/: accessed April 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.