Mulhall Enterprise (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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Tlie Mulhall Enterprise f"~j f
ESTABLISHED JANUARY I. 1893
01HCIAL_ PAH.K OK MULHALL
Enteral »t tbe PoBtofti.n at Mu'hsll. Oklahoma*
f«>r t ansnihsion through the lulted state* nialla
ad booont! cUsfl mail mat tor.
PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY
ADVERTISING RATF-S
^pltplay advertiseg, single oolumu. per Inch par
Copv f >r ads should be In this office r.ot later
(ban Wedn«.«day noon.
Local advertising, slnfla Insertion, per linn, fire
Mints.
Special rates rtrenon contracts foronr yeir or
fraction thereof. Position of ad. and length at
contract to be considered.
Kates to foreign advertisers to be (fov<'rn< on
the basis of reliability and upon the claw of ad
▼ertislng.
Subscription Price, $1 Per Year
IT—
News Notes
Epitome of the Most
Important Happenings
at Home and Abroad
! L
WOOD,
Psblitber
OKLAHOMA HAPPENIcuo
The cornerstone of the girls' school
It Chickasha will be laid about the
middle of October.
Willis Smith, publisher of the Grady
County Town and Farm, is dead from
Hii attack of typhoid.
The contract for the erection of the
federal building at Enid has been let
to the Tom l^ovell company, of Texas.
Fire destroyed the five-room cottage
of Mrs. I). 11. Hayes in Duncan. The
loss is estimated at $l,"i00; insur-
ance $800.
Platinum is said to exist in the
vicinity of drove, in Delaware county.
Practical work in the way of develop-
ment is soon to begin.
The hoard of regents of the Okla-
homa School for the Blind are to meet
noon and select a permanent site for
I he school, it is believed.
Okmulgee is to have its street cars
soon. They are on the road now, ac-
cording to a statement made at the
council meeting recently.
Captain Frank (loodule, with his air-
»hip, the lightest in the world, has ar-
rived at Tulsa and is preparing to
make flights over the city.
Two masked men entered the de-
pot at Nelagony, and holding up the
men in the station at the point of re-
volvers, secured $75 In cash.
A Carter county fruit raiser is suc-
cessfully growing five varletis of
Rx Congressman Joseph C. Sibley,
who retired recently from the fight for
re-election to congress, has been ar-
rested at Franklin, Pa., on a charge of
conspiracy to debauch voters.
Mrs. Louise Wenster of St. Louis, is
short $7.f»5 as a result of using her
kitchen range as a bank. While she
was in the front of her house a burg-
lar got the money.
Workmen doing street work on Lake
street, in the very center of Reno,
New, uncovered a ten-foot ledge of
copper. Sexrral hundred pounds of
the metal was extracted. It is nearly
solid metal.
Aaron L. Shoop, the 5-yearold son
of 11 J. Shoop of Progress, Pa , died
of lockjaw resulting from a wasp
sting While playing in the yard at
his home he was stung on the leg by
the insect.
One hundred men. women and chil-
dren were injured, three seriously and
one perhaps fatally, as the result of
the collapsing of a grandstand at
North Hergen, N. J., where an athletic
exhibition was in progress.
The Oregon Short Line is having
soundings made in Salt Lake as far
as Antelope island, preliminary to
building the Raft river cutoff, which
will reduce the distance from Salt
Lake city to Portland, Ore., 75 miles.
After having been held in jail at
New York City for three dayB on a
charge of homicide, Kdward T. Rosen-
heimer, a young millionaire, has been
released on $25,000 bonds. He is ac-
cused of having run down a woman
in his automobile and of having left
her in the road to die.
Search has begun at Pueblo, Colo.,
by the sheriff of Pueblo county
of Jefferson county, Kans., for F. M.
Haines, a wealthy resident of Wag-
oner, Okla, who disappeared aboi^
two months ago and whose relatives
now fear has been murdered in this
vicinity.
Two warehouses were destroyed,
the stables, four carloads of wheat,
two carloads of oats and eight head
OKLAHOMA NEWS
Interesting Items of the New State Told
In Few Words For Our Busy Readers
COTTON EXCHANGE WILL MEET i FINANCIER DROPS KROM SiGHT
WASHINGTON.
The census bureau has announced
the 1910 population of the state of
Michigan to be 2,810,173, with an in
crease of 289,191, or 1C.1 per cent. .
Revenue officers at Washington, I).
C., seized the corn whisky distillery of
the Capital Supply company, whose
plant is almost within sight of the
United States internal revenue head
quarters, and took Into custody its
owners.
There has arrived in Washington
from Mexico City, under heavy guard.
a special car containing gold and sil
ver vullion valued at $1,260,000.
The bullion comes from the Mexican
government and constitutes Mexico's
interest payment on a loan made to
that country by Cncle Sam.
DOMESTIC
Robbers blew the safe In the post-
office at Albion. 111., and escaped with
money and stamps amounting to near-
ly $10,000
Chas. Yates, a citizen ot C.age, Okla.,
was found unconscious at the edge of
town, suffering from a stroke over the
head by parties unknown.
Two soldiers were seriously injur-
ed in the first contest between the
blues and the reds at the army ma-
neuvers at Fort Riley, Kansas.
After rescuing her 10-year-old sis-
ter and another child from a whirlpool
into which they had been drawn while
swimming. Miss Cleora Dion, sixteen
yearn old, was drowned In Sprint? I of "i,0rePS ^ere burned"," entailing a
river, near Joplin, .Mo. j ln8s ()f jjo.ooo by a tire of unknown
Meeting Looked Forward to as of
Supreme Importance to State
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Because of
its supreme importance to the com-
mercial interests of Oklahoma, the
special session of the Oklahoma
state cotton exchange, which will
convene Sept. 3, is being looked for-
ward to anxiously by business men,
and its deliberations will receive their
closest attention.
This will be the annual meeting of
the exchange, which is always called
just before the cotton crop begins to
move to market. The membership in-
cludes all the leading cotton buyers
and shippers of the state and the rules
enacted by the body govern the pur-
chaes and shipment of cotton for Ok-
la lioma.
The exchange has been organized
four years. It is modeled closely af-
Ray Hoss Gone From Fairfax and May
be Behind Financially
Fairfax, Okla—Ray Hoss, president |
of tbe Osage and Western railway, a \
cattle buyer, financier and investor of i
Osage county, has disappeared from j
his home here, and all efforts to lo- j
cate him have proved futile. Hank- !
ruptcy proceedings have been filed
against him at Pawhuska.
How much Hyss is supposed to be
behind financially, probably will not j
be known for some days. Wild esti- j
mates afloat now are to the effect that ,
he is anywhere from $05,000 to $101,-1
000 short.
It is known that Hoss had been \
somewhat of a plunger. With some i
others he has been buying up the
Osage lands, and also has been a
close student of the cattle market, let- .
ting his money back his judgment.
Formerly he was cashier of the
WORTH
MOUNTAINS
OFGOLD
During Change of Life,
says Mrs. Chas. Barclay
Graniteville, Vt. — "I wis passing
through the Chan Re of Life and suffered
from nervousness'
andother annoying
symptoms, and J
can truly say that
LydiaK.riiikhain'a
Vegetable Com-
pound has proved
worth mountains
of gold to me, as it
restored my health
and strength. 1
never forget to tell
my friends what
LvdiaE I'mkham'u
trying pc
restoration to health means so much
Vegetable Compound has done for me
during this trying period. Complete
A reward of $500 has been offered
for the convic tion of the party or par
ties attempting to destroy the M. O.
& O. Railway company's bridge now
being constructed across the Red
river near Denlson. Texas.
Despondent because he had lost all
of his own money and $20 which he
is said to have borrowed from his
wife, gambling. Jack C. rammer, of
Muskogee. Okla., drank carbolic acid
and died.
Three former officials of the Illinois
Central railroad company have been
arrested at Chicago in connection
with the alleged huge<rauds by means
of which the railroad claims to have
been defrauded out of $2,500,000.
The Chicago K- Northwestern rail-
road shops at Chadron, Nebr, have
grapes which are said to equal those completely destroyed by fire
of California in quality and flavor. ^0B8 '8 $225,000, which includes j leyt a traveling salesman of Wichita
origin that broke out in the stables
of the Acme Milling company at Ok-
lahoma City, Okla.
Prewitt & Sons of Kansas City have
purchased the "J. J." ranch, near Am-
arillo, Texas, consisting of 121,000
acres, from the Prairie Cattle company
of London, England, The price paid
was $1,200,000. The ranch will be di-
vided Into 700 farms and will be sold
for cultivation.
Two thousand employes of railroads
in Oklahoma have signed a petition to
the interstate commerce commission,
requesting that their employers be per-
mitted to make slight increases in in-
terstate freight rates in order that
they may not be compelled to reduce
the wages of the railroad men.
While racing to catch a train an
automobile containing Charles F. Cor-
»$ r,
ra<,
W-.
Proposed Capitol Building for Oklah oma
sixteen engines that were in the
r. M. Ilray, a farmer or Lincoln ronudhouse with fires out..
county, killed another bear fruit thief j The body of B. 8. Ktrby, n promi-
last week. The first one of the sum- nent citizen of Little Kock, was found
mer was killed by a Comanche coun- i In the road near there. He had been
ty man. "hot and killed by an assassin con-
I cealed in the canebrake near the road.
At a baby contest held in Sapulpa
f»0f»,21J> votes cast, more than ti rover
Cleveland received when he was elect-
ed president of the United States the
first time.
Arrangements have been completed
and work on Shawnee's two new col-
leges will start at once. They are a
Baptist university and a Catholic col-
lege.
R. L. Scott of Carter county has a
pumpkin that weighs over 90 pounds.
It was put in cold storage at Ard-
Kansr.s & Texas car shops at Denlson,
Texas, fell a distance of fifty feet from
a scaffold and received injuries that
may prove fatal. He has a family.
Max Wagner, a farm hand Employed
by llenry Shomser, is in jail at Fre-
mont, Nebr., because he prodded
Shomser with a pitchfork. Wagner
tnore to be saved and exhibited at the became angry because his employer
State Fair. Mr. Scott refused $2f» for
the big pie melon.
The Chickasha city council is pre-
paring to let the contract for eight
miles of cement sidewalks w here pav-
ing has been laid. This will be tne
largest contract of the kind let in that
city.
Attorney General West has express-
ed an opinion to the effect that un-
less the courts decide otherwise, the
newly created county of Swanson Is
Kan., and R. B. Anderson, cashier of
the First National Bank of Hamilton,
Kan., and wife, was struck by a pas-
senger train near topla. and all of
the occupants of the car killed.
Fifteen thousand acres of the finest
land In Colorado will be opened to set-
The Illinois railroad warehouse com- j tlenient in October. The greater por-
missiou will order a 10 per cent re- j tion of this land is in the Battlement
duetion in all express rates in the Mesa National park. Although the
state beginning October 1. j land is 6,000 to 7,000 feet above sea
J. Lusk, a laborer employed in the ; level, it is well adapted for the grow*
construction of the new Missouri, j ing of alfalfa, grain and for grazing
purposes.
(lovernment agents at Nelson, Neb.,
have arrested William Moody, aged 12,
and charged him with robbing the
mails. He led the officers to a cave
where he had secreted nearly a bushel
of letters, over $2,1*00 in cash and sev-
eral hundred dollars In drafts. The
boy entered the postofflce and stole
the mail in sacks he carried.
Carter county farmers are inuch
worried because they can't find jars
large enough to hold the fruit that la
raised there, and consequently the
finer specimens cannot be preserved
disputed his wage account by ten
cents.
Lightning struck a shed at the rear
of ti. (i. (Irovanes' home, near Pitts
burg, Kan. The shed contained dyna-
mite and was completely demolished
The 3 year-old daughter or the tiro I tor the county fair. Not a bad com-
vanes was hurt by flying wood. i mentary of Oklahoma fruit, however.
Four people were killed and a num
ber injured when a (Irand Trunk pas | FOREIGN
senger train crashed Into the Chicago*
ter the New York cotton exchange,
except that it does not deal in fut-
ures. Because it includes all the
prominent cotton buyers and shippers
of the state all the acts are of the ut-
most importance to the commercial
world, for they define the relations
between buyer and shipper and have a
direct bearing on the local cotton sit-
uation.
At the coming meeting all matters
pertaining to the cotton situation will
be thoroughly discussed and any new
rules deemed necessary will be en
acted. It is not thought that any rad-
ical departures will be made from
past years.
L. H. Love of Ardmore is president
of the exchange, W. L. Clayton of
Oklahoma City, vice president; C. W.
Hancock of Ardmore, secretary-treas-
urer. The board of directors follows:
W. L. Clayton, Oklahoma City; S. W.
King, Dallas, Texas: R. T. Harriss,
Oklahoma City; J. R. McKnight, Ok-
lahoma City; A. H. Cleaver. Dallas,
Texas: J. M. Caine, Oklahoma City;
L. H. Love, Ardmore.
New Pipe Line Planned
Tulsa. Okla.—The biggest pipeline
announcement in years was made here
Friday by prominent officials of the
Texas company who state that that
company will Immediately begin the
laying of an eight-inch pipeline from
Tulsa to Bartlesville and from there
to Nowata.
First National bank of this place, but
resigned from that position about 18
months ago. According to a state-
ment of L. A. Witmeyer, president of
that institution, Hoss has absolutely
no interest in the bank now. Mr. Wit-
meyer is one of the creditors, accord-
ing to the bankruptcy procedlngs.
Montreal train two miles east of Dur-
and. Two unidentified bodies were
An amusement park similar to Luna
park at Coney Island is to be built
so recognized, and officials of other recovered. Two were burned
counties must recognize It until a de-
cision has been reached.
Somebody played a mean trick on
the dog catcher at Clinton. After that
worthy had labored and succeeded in
bringing between ten and twenty
harmless animals into the fold some
kind-hearted citizen sneaked up and
turned them all out.
Ardmore has twenty-two blocks of
paving under construction and has
arranged for enough more to give her
I in Rome by Americans.
Dr Hans Volhrecht, chief surgeon
The steamer Kirby Bank has just Thirty seventh division, has
sailed from the Texas company wharf |)(,en app,,inted head of the medical
at Port Arthur, Texas, with the first j service in the Turkish Army which
full cargo of kerosene ever shipped to J he will reorganize on Herman models.
South America from any American j Japan has thrown off her mask and
port suoth of Baltimore. < has formally announced the annexa-
The war department has been re j tion of Korea accomplished in viola-
quested by the forest service to send i tion of Japan s specific pledge. The
two companies of troops to the Yak j "Hermit Kingdom is no more,
ima Indian reservation in Washington. ' Herman l)e la C.erarantz, the re pre-
where five separate forest tires are M utative of Sweden at Washington
raging. The troops were asked for ulnce 1907, has resigned, according
by Superintendent Young of Yakima, to an announcement made at Stock
eighty three blocks. Ardmore Is one who reported that the fires are beyond holm, to look after his own personal
of the hustling cities of Oklahoma and
may ultimately become the metropolis
of the Red river valley.
According to au opinion by Attor-
ney (ieneral West, all superior court
judges apiKilnted since the primaries
in August, hold their positions until
1913,
Henryetta is much excited over the
big gas well that has Just been
brought in in that vicinity. Henry-
etta has all the natural rcsourcc*
needed for the development of a big
city and Is one of Oklahoma's metro-
politan potentialities.
The identity of the man whose
drowned body was found In the
the control of the forces at his com
maud.
David O. Hinkley, a pioneer farmer,
living near Kendallvllle, Ind . died of
bee stings, received when he unearth
ed u nest of bumblebees while plow
Ing He was found lying In a fur
row. with his head Mtid neck covered
with bee stings
An explosion in the Peacock Flour
mill in Milton, Oregon, caused a fire
which totally destroyed the tulll and
a number of small buildings. For a
time the entire city was threatened
business In Sweden, where he has
large Interests.
America and Kngland are joining in
a scheme for a great Dickens celebra-
tion In 1912, the centenary of tin nov-
elists' birth. Representative men of
both countries will form a rommlttee
to settle the details of tlx* nature of
the schemo.
Owing to the fact that out of the
total population in Hawaii of 175,
000 but 34,000 are voting natives of
America, the rest being orientals or
Kuropeans, some dissatisfaction has
The fire department from Wall* Walla j arisen. The few control the many,
was rushed to the scene and the lilase 1 There Is no Immediate danger of rev
extinguished The loss is estimated
at between $75,000 and $100,000
Ths residence of James K IMum
Canadian river «t Oklahoma City last Carlisle. Ky , was dynamited re
ccntiy. Plummcr was hurled from his
bed. His Injuries are not serious.
Plummcr had been active in the pi
week is still a mystery, all efforts to
dlsoover whether he had a family or
was a resident of Oklahoma City hav-
ing proved In vain
olution, however.
Jose Dolores Kstrada, to whom
President Madriz turned over the ad-
ministration of the Nlcaraguan gov-
ernment before fleeing the country,
has retired from the piesldency In
favor of (Ieneral Luis Menu, who was
•cution of alleged violators of the lo designated by him as act/fig president
cal option law. t the republic.
Wins Premium for First Bale
Hobart. Okla. J. K. Campbell, who
won the premium last year for the
first bale of cotton, again won the
premium this year, receiving $105 foi
the first bale turned in at this city.
He also received $3"> from the Cham-
ber of Commerce for the first bale,
rhe bale weighed 505 pounds, and was
the best grade obtainable.
To Extend Midland Railroad
Muskogee, Okla.- According to in
formation given out from the Midland
Valley railroad here an extension of
the line is to be built from Arkansas
City to McPherson, Kansas. The new
line will be known as the McPherson,
Wichita and Arkansas but will in fact
be au extension of the Midland Valley
and operated by that system.
Four Killed in Train Wreck
Duland, Mich.— Four people were
killed and a number injured when a
I (Jrand Trunk passenger train crash-
; ed Into the Chicago-Montreal train
two miles east of this city. Two unid-
entified bodies were recovered. Two
were burned.
Boy Accidentally Killed
i Ada. okls While playing with a 38-
caliber revolver, the three-year-old
j son of (i. W Walker, who lives six
! miles north of Ada, was accidentally
| shot and k led. The mother of the
I child was in the garden.
Oklahoma Town Vote. Bonds
J Mannsville, Okla.—The city of
Maunavtlle has voted f20,0U0 worth of
I bonds for the purpose of putting In
. waterworks. Tbe bond Issue curried a
laile over three to one.
i
Boy Jailed for Twenty Years
McAlester, Okla.—Lewis Nave, 13
years old, has been brought to the
state penitentiary here to serve twen-
ty years for conviction in Murray
county of murder. His father tied
him to a tree and gave him a severe
whipping. When released he procured
a shotgun and killed his father, near-
ly cutting his body In two with a big
load of buckshot. The sheriff who
brought the boy here says he is an
incorrigible and said on the way here
if it was to do over again, he would
"sure shoot the old man."
Frisco Road to Use Oil
Tulsa, Okla.—Announcement was
made here this week that the Frisco
railroad will soon begin using oil for
fuel on all its southwestern lines. The
Texas company is building a pipe line
across the Arkansas river from Tul-
sa, and it is rumored that the produc-
tion has been contracted for by the
Frisco. The Frisco is now using oil
on some of its fast trains and the
story that it is going to extend the
purchase of fuel oil is considered as
coming from reliable sources.
to me that for the sake of other suffer-
ing women I am willing to make mv
trouble public so you may publish
this letter."—Mns. Ciias. Bahclat,
11.F D.,Graniteville, Vt.
I\'o other medicine for woman's ills
has received such wide-spread and un-
qualified endorsement. No other med-
Icine we know of has such a record
of cures of female ills as has I.ydia 15.
J'inkham's Vegetable Compound.
For more tnan 30 years it has been
curing female complaints such aa
inllammation, ulceration, local weak-
uesses, libroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, indigestion
and nervous prostration, and it is
unequalled for carrying women safely
through the period'of change of life.
It costs but little to try I.ydia E.
l'inkham's A'egetable Compound, and,
ns Mrs.Barclaysays.it is "worth moun-
tains of gold " to suffering women.
GOOD WORK IS PROGRESSING
Women in Every State Join Earnestly
in Campaign Against Tu-
berculosis.
Four years ago the only active woni-
I en workers in the anti-tuberculosis
movement were a little group of about
i 30 women's clubs. Today 800,00f*
■ women, under the I nited States, are
handed together against this disease,
and more than 2,000 clubs are taking
a special interest in the crusade. Not
less than $500,000 Is raised annually
by them for tuberculosis work, be
sides millions that are secured through
their efforts in state and municipal
appropriations. Mrs. Rufus P. Wll
Hams is the chairman of the depart
ment that directs this work. In ad
dition to the work of the General Fed
eration of Women's C'iuhs. the Public
Health Education committee of the
American Medical association, com
posed largely of women physicians,
has carried on an educational cam
paign of lectures during the past year
In which thousands have been reached
The Mothers' congress, the Young
Women's Christian association, and
many unat tached clubs bring the num
ber of women united in the ttiberculo
sis war to well over a million. There
Is not a state in the union where soni«
work has not been done.
Pawhuska to be Terminal
Fairfax, okla. -Work on construc-
tion of the Osage K Western began re-
cently near Billings and Is extending
westward through Fairfax and to Paw-
huska. At a meeting of directors here,
Joseph Osier of New York City, and
II. 1'. Wallace of Chicago, were elected
directors. Wallace was formerly con-
nected with the engineering depart-
ment of the Illinois Central and later
with the Panama Canal, and he will
supervise the construction of the line.
The new road is surveyed through one
of the best agricultural sections of the
state. In addition to the great oil and
gas fields, and ii generally conceded
to be the best prospect in the way of
new railroad line In tltc entire state.
Doctor Facing Criminal Charge
Muskogee. Okla. Dr. W. T. Tiller
has been arrested here on a charge of
\ criminal libel, preferred by I)r. J.
llensley of Oklahoma t'ity. He was
taken before County Judge Jackson
and made bond for $1,000 and Instruct-
j ed to appear at the county court In
Oklahomu City on October 1.
Flagman Falls Under Train
byars, Okla. Ragman John Clark
of the Santa Ke fell under a moving
train Sunday night and his leg was
cut off between the ankle and knoe.
Shooting Affray at Tulsd
Tulsa, Okla. -L. P. Mitchell, a har-
ness maker, fired five times with a
revolver at A. I.. Clay, another harness
maker on a down town street here.
| One of the bullets (truck Clay, in-
flicting a flesh wound. A crowd erperg-
| ing from a picture show were In dan-
Igi'i as tlisy were exposed to the Ore.
y
c*
English as She Is Spoke.
Chinatown Visitor—John, sabee, s«-t>
screen—how much sabee want for
him ?
The Chinaman—What's the matter
with you? Can't you speak Kngliah?—
Judge.
The Witching Hour.
Claire—Jack told me he wanted to
fee you the worst possible way.
Ethyl—And what did you say?
Claire—I told him to come to break
f ist some morning.
LACK OF MONEY
Was a Godsend in This Case.
It 1b not always that a lack of
money Ib a benefit.
A lady of Green Forest, Ark., owes
her health to the fact that she could
not pay in advance the fee demand
cd by a specialist to treat her for
stomach trouble. In telling of her
case she says:
"I had been treated by four differ-
ent physicians during 10 yeara of
stomach trouble. Lately I called on
another who told me he could not curn
me; that 1 had neuralgia of the stoni
in h. Then I went to a specialist who
told me 1 had catarrh of the stomach
and said he could cure me In fouri
months but would have to have hisf
money down. I could not raise the
necessary sum and In my extremity 1
was led to quit coffee and try l'ostuin
"So I stopped coffee and gave l'ost-
um a thorough trial and the results
have been magical. I now Bleep well
at night, something I had not done
for a long time; the pain In my stom-
ach is gone and 1 am a different
woman.
I "I dreaded to quit coffee, because
i every time I had tried to Btop It I suf-
fered from severe headaches, so I con
I tinued to drink it although I had res
son to believe it was injurious to in«.
I and was the cause of my stomach
trouble and extreme nervousness. Hut
when I had l'ostum to shift to It was
i different.
i "To my surprise I did not miss cof-
fee when 1 began to drink Postum
"Coffee had been steadily and sure
ly killing me and 1 didn't fully real!/.<«
what was doing it until I quit and
changed to Postum "
Kver rrml Ike itliovs IrfterT A Bfn
enr ippcnm lime In lime. 'Ni»r
orr vrnulne, true, and full of huuian
lalireat.
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Wood, A. B. Mulhall Enterprise (Mulhall, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, September 2, 1910, newspaper, September 2, 1910; Mulhall, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc305035/m1/2/?q=%22A.+B.+Wood%22: accessed May 27, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.