The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1897 Page: 1 of 8
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■ R
l.!E> A LOU r KANSAS
V0RM U- ' ' ■•'' '•'•AM) COl'NTV OKLAHOMA. FWDAY. !\M'.U:Y !. ISO"
Wiehlu Elgle, 1)
eastern --I , . !. rers,
pai( ron ,,f i,r^, ,
ern agent ,•
poor M- < ( ; i, s> ,,
30: Our
' r llie IIKI31,
whose west-
i Iliutiry ot)
will) forget,
"ben ' ■ 11 |i urn.' 11 Ial s (.(
woe into 0) can tit e. ■. r>. e.|j'.,r<
'bat same iti 1.in 1 ,-,-1,1-, m
* '""i ' s I t .. I, ,c(1
defaulted , .,1 per 'i nj. <1 the |,or
r"w' ' 'I kit. Ill miiex; | J,, , _
togcth-T > ill, all otb 1 ,, „r iy, ale
8"ing to ■ ij t'-eir r. s i<■ the far.|
some 1I1, in mu neill In lire, tti.ii
Kar s.i 1 : ;ifI (lie \v, • : 11 states, i-
the sunn;! ,1 fiiMiic 1 ilU; t' 1 it, taken
as a whole, or liy |tl 1 cgpfta, ihe
State ami iu people ar« si debt,
bindened iiiul have in,ire i<> pay
witn than :.ny ..tiier ,.i ihr imttarti
stale* I lie poll 1. ,i editor* tJf
comm. ■ i. ; >iirii.n >, the liii.incial
office «i ,li., s, ami ail tlmt herd
3,1,1 : 1 who hii\ en vl* 11 ting
their spleen ii;;on,'Ht,ii l.i>iny at the
ir disappoint
1111 up ag^iiis1
.•able fact diit 1 hey have
Hie uuen.anlc black
;' Hug to I• > 1111 lxj> oppo-
rabismalic optics, dis-
ti l> l>oi 11 1 mi it iii.it Kan
e icwcr, ili.i Kansas in
e 1111! inn
aiil; that
tin
ci>>. 1
111 ti
tii
hi-
fi, 1
811.
cl. . . .
SHs 'lei
t<' I
nil ip !
K
ta 1
fenbral
po i-.il
<
drastic
la,
inn.'.'
or l> ,1
tli. E
sh.
Ei
tw. '., .
lo.lli..: i
Ki usas t
.'t- L- ling t.
iv ifl>nIs .r ■
1 re prom
i.«h .re so . 1
■get her, K
havi more
consent ..f I...ti, parties. Hut now
"1 a livili/.eil stale, the necessi".
lor 111..nev is aiisolute. We are vir
lually burning up fur want of jnoti
e>, in a Ian,I of plenty—plenty ot
a.I that Gilland working nun can
produce. We know if the laws ot
| >>ur country were in the interest ul
|l,,B tuiiimiM, people the uuiion
would Lie supplied witli a libera1
volume ot currency, created and is
sued by tiie u jveriiment in ubcii
euce to laws by congress, and made
full legal tender for all debts and
obligations that mature within the
dominion of the republic; and suc;i
money would lie, 111 the language ot
1 Senator Sherunn, "Uetter money
mortal man never conceived.' 'l iii-,1
money would not depend on th.-1
1 wealth of the government, but on |
its law power, t hus having all the
functions of money, why redeem it
with ether money? Could you give
us any better money? It is Monev
«e want, ami when once created
anil in circulation tve want its vol-
ume to increase .villi the population
anil business of the country. We
also want a social system that wiil
prevent corporations from absorb-
ing the money. Ciive us a govern-
ment run by the people in the inter
est of the people, and let lis be a
> nappy people mid not wage servants
j to money kings. All this can be
I.'tie if we legislate in tlieii teri-st of
wild scramble by lawyer* ami spec-
tators for places of safety, but 110
other persons were harm, d
'lunrtred. She is portrayed1 by lit
rue-born Jenkinses of the Ne*
Y"rk newspapers in glowing col-
umns, eloquent of imported back
■a.is gossip. Mi s Dcliarril may
be regsrded as horn to the purple,
is she trained in the suite of the
imperial Vanderbilts, holding the
enviable appointment of "state sec
'■'U'. to Mr.- Frederick of that
loyal house. Slie possesses "High
birth, great tart, anil powerful social
knowledge, and li is made a fine in
come from these qualities." She is
a Spaniard "of fine Castillian do
scent, and frankly takes the position
of Leader as a means of financial
benefit. ( ood. Noiv there will
be no need fur American patriots to
crois the seas to bend the knee at
the shrines of K tropean sovereii ns I ',UV h"" tnore than
" I before. Pat listened mteutly
will learn in the course of
it is that such eslalibcl
erected by free and iinf,-!!
I'li'Tirc np on...,, ilal on the south sidi t,f
■ I.AU PIES OF SOUND MONEV «• 1
i-*l-JC raiide, and the k-iml
the
NO 2.5
■ ot
.,>ld
- ho
-1>
1 vii
- <n v
rllilii
Progressive Marnier: Put had j ""ce "btai'ie.l, will 1
worked steadily on the sertion for! ,,,re to fo8ter tlu< l i.-i,h M1..1.,
't 1> of a 11
twe-.ty years without losing a day,
and concluded he would lake a day
"ti. He went lo Cnicago and sat in
the cushioned chairs of the Great
Northern hotel. I'he.e ivas a bank
ers' convention in session and the
<*a| ita!ists in groups on the
rharlde floor discussing the beauties
of "sound money" and were agree
ing together that the present high-
priced dollar was the best the work
standard.
Now that >hc rite (ion ,
find a Kingfisher R pu!,!,
pressing himself in ri aril
congressman as f"l|l UVs
".Mr. Callahan ii .in ali!e,
conscientious man unl r il
people hark him m , I.,- .
as well for free 1 ...j j
'"lllllnjf
■ N. w
■■Iv "v.ir
ll '11
.,,,illy,
«_r 11:. I'HIH
, l< 0
ma genera III
can 1I1
li 1 iriest,
1 if the !
Ic to do
:>kl,iI,o ;
\ «4 * i ' '
• !>ort :
as Ilie i re<eiu ilelei
fact. M : < 11.: 11 t|
A GROWMNC WOKI.D.
Hie New York World helped elect
finally the following colloquy en
I sued :
. ''al—"Gentlemi 11, would yees lie
1., Kittle) and is now growling over ,;inil enough to answer me a ques-
ihe result. It fieictly attacked ,
Mark Hanna as a probable secret.!- |
ry of the treasmy and "sense-keep
er" of the president-elect. Its |ires
ent o' j^rtive attack is noon tht*' stands ; I wenly ye^rs n^o
I * •>«. ' 11 >. 111 r, [ .
itigiueii ever had, because ii would c ,-
i.„„ 1.;... ... . ! ",H" "f bne ability in I :i-i |. .1,.
kl ' Oklahoma lerrilois, n.
' ing the si a Inn en is 1 if I ., ,,.
('HOMl);
monthly
n ■■ IHIor
M'linol
Maggie
tie, Ve"~
■ - ter an.
A'.'Ht,
V'er.
Mi Kinley program.
" It is proposed
barbarous ant"
lo increase tin
linn?''
Hanker—"Certainly we will, ami
be glad of the opportunity."
''at—" I his is how the matter
I wenly
Hear it—
to restore
the
I wurruktn' on Ilie Lliuoj Central mul
J I was geltin' $2.50 a day; tliat made
Steel,
trary
Del,.
al.
■ W.
-"linn
! ( 1 Sva*
1. A] Tiner. Ciol<lic
{ ' ' •'■ >>> .lit-; Iirrtha
IM St •"it1 g i i... 1. c- . . 1
an American |m.11 sbq.1.eil fi.mi (i.,;
veslon, 011 ue schooner AIg..a, on ,
October a jth last, she had aboard: '
'S,.J«| ball s of I , Hjo ,,1.J : ' :1
, ..OJO «CKS . ,..nh to nihil
Of colt.II, seed oil rake, 1 .
wheat, 10,75 . feet of iuniber,
walnut l.'g>, .148.445; potinils of spel.
1 .37.1.4 '(a pounds of pi- lend.
or 1:1
Je If,
: Ida West,
fed, and win
; (lot
, ami tnat, ,
, i the peoide.
'« pen pie
money, less, WICIII I'A LANDS.
cruel lax on wool,!5' ' a woel<- 1 supported me fain• j ter 1.,,,.
ta* on woolens, to|lly* l'al11 ,llt: rtMt* !«"<l t-«bli. «te.J m* Galveston will i.i,, -,n oi t), • ,
raise the rates on crockery and «"> W H week, and saved i „u', orpins, i¥it,,' grcu.tr , 1.^ '
*7 a week. I ma wiirrukin' now on | ,he produce, ,,vern
11 about t
Iti U t
. of each
d are more independent,
co.ile..1,
1 his
I Washington dispatch: Secretary
stern coin-
/
tli hi any other
, ibrr it be,Pop., G O. P.
' G ildiiug. Only yesterday
q '■ ited frotii the ha lance
'■bed by the London
ilUi showing that o it of be-
.ind five million dollars
me London corporation
to the farmers of the west there was '
less than ?j6,coo of defalcation |
Somti!iiu« h,':e one mil
I l-rancis will appoint the allotting
j agents for the Wichita reservation
j without waitirg for further formaI-
j ities. It is his present intention to
I name the men before congress reas-
sembles after the holidays, which
means probably some time next
week. He has not decided upon
the number, and before determining
upon the number, as well as the
men, he will consult the statutes to
| find to what extent the civil service '
Vot k C: .... mercial Bulletin hut a
*eiv '' ■' attempted to make a
showing linst Kansas, but to do
so it lied tn the face,.' the plainest
figuies m , of well-kn.iwu facts. In
l)eAail.,1(( the Populism of our
pen,; ,11,il 1 lie Socialistic tenden-
cii > 1 lie Sunflower realm it made
the predii tioQ that the w«rld would
see Kan.M hanks going to the wall
wllli institutions ill the Repub
Ilcan , ue of Illinois wotiiil indicate
soiiiniii'-ss begotten of confidence
an.I piospi 1;ty. Within a week, the
8r' ■ 11 • 1. million H ink of Illinois
at On. 1 dosed its doors, precip-
itation .. ,ck and ruin lor others.
Follpring that there were three or
1 hanks, the president of
1 li coin milled suicide last
t hen came the closing
•if the Atlas National,
Again yesterday niorii-
ics told of tiie collapse
ilii'iois hank, at Uatavia.
to these were accounts)
i .res at Milwaukee and
' s , and Mi nneapoiis
' reaction are equal,
-i never talis of io11«>vv•
r. Kansas, in every-
■ is. and in all that she
"■ ■ to beilrocK, and has
'■ many months. She
ed 1 lie bottom of her bust-
ed ■ ... . tore the other slates had
comuic-ii 1 ■ .1 iheir decline, and there
is on 1 one way left for Kansas to
lnoi , id ■ iat upward, and no
!'-icaI prejudice or lies
upon the part of outsiders can, in
inv
stat.
Saturn 1).
of the
of 1 •
ing'- s
of .
In
of 1
Supi-
A' 41".!
antl I
ing ■ .11
thi. ,
has, ■
.been
'iad
million of this j 'V*
in. . I W'H handicap his choice. The work
j will probably be assigned to three
| men, and they will receive instruc-
1 tions to push it as fast as possible,
as the secretary js anxious to have
everything in readiness for an early
opening of the lands to settlement.
1 he report of the Dawes commis-
sion on the Choctaw treaty is now
being examined preparatory to be-
ing laid before the secretary for his
approval. This will not consume
many 'lays-, and will still further fa
cililate the opening of the. reserva
f°n t hese matters are being rap-
idly pushed in the interior depart-
ment. The report on the Cherokee
freedmen is also being examined,
it has been marked "special," and
several experts have been assigned
to go over the testimony anil certify
lo the correctness of the roll. This
will consume all of two weeks, as
there is a conflict in the testimony
bearing 011 about 1,000 names ad
milted by the commission These
j names were placed 011 the rolls by
the tinanimons consent of the com-
mission, after hearing the testimony,
but they are subject to a critical re-
view on the part of the legal divis-
ion of the interior department,
whose finding will be final. As soon
as the roll is approved, the secretary
will order the money lo be disbursed
to the freedmen.
|glass, to rei 111 pose duties on lumber,!
.' eo''. poiatoe;., onions, cabbages audi
nay, bin 10 continue the exemption,
of wealth in every form.
''In 1866 the internal taxes col-i
cteil on manufactures, aside from
whisky, beer tnd tobacco aggregat-
ed $ 122,000,000. I hey were all re-
peuled.
Other taxes collected from wealth
in that year were : From incomes,
$61,071,000; from banks, railroad
companies, etc , <13,279,000: licens-
| es, 51^,038,000; gross receipts from
j2'^'o 3 per cent—of publishers,
: telegraph, express and insurance
! companies, steamboats, ferries,
.stage coaches, theatres, operas, cir-
icuses and museums, $10,092,000:
j legacies and successions, it,170,000,
:stamps, $15,044,000. A'l of these,
j one after another, were abolished
at the instigation of wealth's lobby.
1 here are other small tax
11 rov
• i of the Ik'iicIHh de~
• immtlih review*, r
"i • • <'-i i nclgh-
■ 1 ■ ■ ■ ■'' twain*
' lit* \ «if I'Voruarv,
' . -I 11 . ■. Uil .'i,| i t ;uI T
.*hool«
' t'« 1 ft i h HiliS ri tllt-r
' !« ii -cliool h.•, ,■ l',!m
or at our nv. n. (ii ami Valley.
M ••■'" i • sii-.l i ■ auiia;i lion
umittfii ')\ i!:" i iiiii'v ;,per-
f..J a day; that makes <b9oaj Congres.ma^cTc^ahai, Has '1 < ache"^
Wt*e Now the question I wants to, been quite sick with malaria I fever,! 1 not «"l«h to 1„- uiuh rstood a#
ax yees, is ibis: How can I support 1 and of the paper,^ ,. ,,r ^ tW* proposal in a spirit of
ine family, eddicate me children, I ed him di ing, but despite 1 eports J " ;i; ",;i "''i' "• buatoeaa,
an' pa) me rent, an' save oot, S7 a j he is ra pi.lli , -ovri,,. ,n,l ■ J':". ; ,"rn"( 1«« rh. to
week—when i ain't a gettiu' but six ' to start for U 1 i 1 '! ''** a '* '""l >' i«le-«ii..- de-
ninety. be gob?" !(lerwl. . soon ren «>>■<• f emulation In ..„r country
.... . , |t,er w'Mt assistance he can to con ■' '•uol. and thus advance the
I he bankers adjourned lo the bar, gressuui, Flvnu in irving to si-
lo «g„re on the problem. I th passage of ,he free home bill
the Klinoy Centra I, 01, th ■ se|f same; MeBl rai wa,
rliere 1 was. I'm geltin'J
day; that makes {6 00 a! C"iiL'res,n
1 .ins,:
I lie triangular oratorical contest
between the territorial university^
1 lie Cuban paljiuts
niakiiiu it so intercstilit
have
normal school and ag.ic.ltnral coV | """o S " i""1 CX " ,,s
lege was held a. Oklahoma City las, I ta ^ ."Ul ^",r',r> is,low
I'hursday eve The univ^sily "/ .°/ ">' a
was represented in the contest by'.,.,. , li,ls
L- \v 1 1 , i manner Ilie Liibnn patrjois will rci
K. VV. Johnson, the normal by Miss LItif , , , 1 1 ^el
i i ii just about what lliev are liL'li tin <* I'm-
I.cl^es, and the agricultural college ; " i " ° '
i.i/ c \jn im ' ^ "han !ii(l(*: endt'iiiv.
h> L. C. Regnier. 1 Ik* contestants
I acquitted themselves very credit ) It is reported tluT^.Ter
'ably, and everyone thought M
•cliuoN, and thus
' of education.
A great portion of our valuable
i ti c, a-, te.icher:-. is lost, for want of
; itioie method it.ul .--Item and concert
been oi a, lion among ourselves.
I hope to hear from our rellow
teacher on this subject, tli rough the
columns of The Voice.
1... N. Wish, Teacher.
i uioii tinni> Sebool Dist
ileport I nion (irove school, tup. H,
range 1 west, for month Nov. .'Kith lo
Dec. Jith :
in
..: t .1
..... x/v.i^i a ii iaii idxes, ; '' j "w n*«i(jin f
like those on salaries of public oflic-i-'°'"lson ,vas an ca%Y winner a! the
Number pupils enrolled, lit.
. watomie county a thief stole another! Aggregate days attendance Ti;:,
i"7 ——«u. puoiicomci' -• t«nBjman's wife and mole and it is alio Nu® *rday* attended by each'm*
lals, on passports, etc , the proceeilsj oseo orations, but when the' said that Hit injured hnVaand will' |,|J' '
of which bring the total of ini,rn.i! judges reported the medal w.,.
of which bring the total of internal j j"d8es sported the medal was! „()t attempt to nr,,ser.,t,.'"Vbr ,t"' rl l,aii-v attendance, -II).
awarded to Miss Kckes. The only he wife r'tin i!s 1
exolanation that can be uiveti f,.r! I" 1IL" ""ti tides attendance ai
revenue taxes repealed immediately
.iiicr the war up to $240,000,000.
'• l'his exemption of wealth left the
whole burden of the cost of Ihe gov-
ernment upon consumption—mainly
of the common necessaries of the
people. And this is where the par-
ty bossed by Mark Hanna, with
McKinley as its figurehead, deliber-
ately proposes to leave the burden.
•'If it shall do this, the history of
1890 will repeat itself in the elec-
tions of 1898,"
I he World knew very well what
the McKinley program was sure to
be, and yet deliberate'y, and, as
some people think, unscrupulously,
helped him to triumph. The World'
must take its medicine, and shou'd
do so manfully,— l"om Watson.
the action of the judges is that they j The Georgia legislature has nam
desired to have the medal go around j eii a sweeping law against trusts,
the university having been awarded Unless Hie monopolies subside with-
it last year. The Norraanites, an.I in four yesrs, the whole nation will
there were a host of them there, J be up in arms.—Wichita Eagle
fairly shook the buildings in Okla- j ^ J *
lioma City with their yells and the It is plain that Major McKinley
Oklahoma City and Stillwater en- j is going to have an exciting four
thusiasts joined with them and vied, years. Ilie conditions to cause
together in suppressing the Ed-| trouble are on every si.le, and they
mond yell, l'hey were vanquished cannot be smothered.—Eagle.
'tis true, hut too strong to allow
their victors to jubilate and lie I he wave of returning prosperity
— J'* '"K'dfing several of the oldest i
892 the campaign by the two ' , "'f ' awl uth ! J-1!" ^
16 ) me two ers to avctd a collapse have gone , s'rl"""«
I \ior. (iraillng on scale of
figures indicates beginner-
column Studies, il coin,1,11
mice, lid column JJehavlor:
II111 wit Willdrn «.,
li )>n|>il,
ami hclia-
UMI. NO
I'Mrst
\ ttclid-
Jms rHitrc 1 ..
Joijn tiioiiiim
I .i/./li* \\ UltOII
III'-- It* Mdfirtt
Hurtle milkliih
IJn-rn lU'Zilwlk ..
Mut l it* Muiiro.
11 r
l-fwkl« WHMim.
•vuliiMieri*iMl
1:1 in rirm-r
Alli-o OiHck
Kit II 1:1 Willi (jn
!KI
.. .v.1; imi «i&
In
repi.
hard
casn,
sa« 1
Mi
;reai
can
lone
real 1
reat
•iwe Ic
1 one
■vav, harm or hurt Ihe
l' iiu longer a question of
'-"i 1 even of credit, but of
, ' hard facts and cold
ti liese particulars Kan-
ground fl ;or.
s and neighbors, the
• 1 now before the Amer-
• is the Money Question,
born. It is not God's
the invention of man—
v. llefore law existed
money. 1'rading was
r 1 ter, with the mutual
S'CIETY HAS A "QUEEN."
The American: Great is the re-
joicing of the Ciothamites because a
second Ward McAllister has come
down to rule its Upper Ten. Since
the death of that famous but im-
perfectly appreciated king 'New
York society has become a body
without a head, an invertebrate
nonentity, consisting of nothing but
four hundred tails. This time it is
a Queen, which may prove a sad
calamity, as queens have been
known to be under the thumbs of
favorites who wield the scepter
without wearing the crown. e
this as it may the new Queen of
New York's only recognizable Some-
bodios rules by the divine right of
the infallible decree of her Four
CRAZY FISCHEL SHOOTS HIS
WIFE.
St. Louis, Dec. 30—The young
wife of old man Jacob Kischel has a
suit for divorce before Judge Wood
of the circuit of this city. During
a part of the proceedings today,
which were unfavorable to FischW,
he got into a towering rage, and as
the plaintiff and her uncle, Julius
Schrieber, and her attorney, Walter
Mclntire, were leaving the court-
room he suddenly drew a revolver
and opened fire on them. One ball
entered Mrs. Fischel's left shoulder,
another struck her un-le directly)
over his heart, but a rib saved his !
life, and a third shot grazed Mcln- ''
tire's arm.
T he frenzied man was immediate-
ly seized by officers of the court and
hustled into the sheriff's office,
where he expressed the hope that he
had killed his wife and her uncle.
There was a scene of great excite-
ment and confusion in the court
room for several minutes' and a
old parties was made on'the tariff V'"-?" "
question and resulted in the e'ection ' v
of Cleveland the free trade or lower ,,, ,....„7T~T .. .
tariff candidate, won, and one of '' °,vNtJrt-
first things Ite done after being in- j tba "Jv" y'C^'nX^Tor'0^
it I to Davtrt
Kii]>liti Iliirillu
Clibrltoy
I >o i T«'H
K<l I'hoiiiiui
.In 11108 «;<>**
lliinrv lluvln
rincii
Wtlllec;oMH
v I ha j ine v
augurated was to c^ll an extra ses- j |"K ll1"5 ,i.™1' 'I"1 fcrv«iu« wtMem u. a
sion of congress for the purpose of nlTV V',* I
completely demonetizing silver. 11 l" l|i« nerve cuir.is in the "
The campaign this year was made ^tTaTd'l^r.'nd a*ld.mi°|lew
on the money question and McKin-I throumg ,.fr impurities in the blood
ley the sound money candidate has
won and he too proposes to call an ! .l,,ow> "ho have tried u hh the very
an extra session of congress, and the T,*v J1"s ,i 'i"f''i."n.'' u"U -"."AT
1 • t , • y "• ^•ilu lor 50c. or J?I 0(1 ncr Iwit-
object of his extra session will be to ll« at Ulnka A ituod's Drug sioh-,
put a few more hoops around the !
rotten staves of the old tariff barrel "oulali l.niul .School.
to try and preserve it for another' f(jrmonth ending l>ec. ixtli.
campaign. The paramount issue of Average da^MtenSi5, 21
the campaign of 1892 was lost sight Pupils averaging !*> or more, 5th
of after the inauguration and it reader grade: Kula Jennings, Nellie
looks like that issue of the late cam- "reese, Myrtle Jennings. Second
reader grade Mattie Bieese, .Mary
Alair. George Huston.
Averaging 80 or more: 4th reader
McMaster's Weekly: The erec-1 K,radc-^-Walter Hill, Luella Huston,
tion of cotton mills in Mexico still ''lore,,ct' Alair, Cora Huston, Ivan
continues, it being noted that En-' Hunom' M rPa<1er Rrade~A,lce
ropean capitalists are now erecting Frank W. Wirk, Teacher.
*8,000,000 plant at Orizaba, to em- ,
ploy many hundreds of operatives. UKANDf-.al ltKMLDY.
ti.. ^Hi. ^
iU) y 5
. ,W IfK)
96
pa'Kn.
fate.
was going to suffer a like
l.nvl
ICoy Al unit in-
Kiiuik I'fell r
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till rill' y lt.isi.1411
llt.ri.,.1 Itowiiiaii ,0
riank .stripling 0,
I11 grading, every day missed taken
live off the attendance; every correc-
tion takes tlve from behavior: stuiiic*
graded according to work done in
school. W. L. Ward, Teacher.
Fnrm Loans.
lam now prepared to nuke farm
loans on short notice. Call and see «.a
for teems.
2«-lf. D. W. IIa IttiC a nr.
N ow is the time to subscribe.
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Allan, John S. The Peoples Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, January 1, 1897, newspaper, January 1, 1897; Norman, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116908/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.