Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 17, 1916 Page: 2 of 6
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THE COYLE CLIPPER
NEWS OF JOE
• STATE CAPITAL:
Echo of McDarment Case.
State Superintendent Wilson has
called a meeting of the state board
[of i*du. at ion mi Aug . to lieu
[charges which have been preferred
I against Prof. A. S. Walker of the l)a*
• rant Normal and to complete arrange-
ments for tfie opening of the ne\
Street CAR LINE BARRL& ON school year
READY FCR BIG STRIKE
NEW STATE CAPITOL
TRACT.
NEWS FROM STATE OFFICES
•What the State Officials and Depart
ments Are Doing—Items of In-
terest About the State
Government.
ALL EFFORTS AT MEDIATION AND
ARBITRTION HAVE
•FAILED.
The charges against Professor
Walker were preferred by Jess Wat's
of Wagoner, father of the high school
boy who was killed in Wagoner early
last spring. Corley P. McDarment, a
teacher, via. acquitted of the killing WILSON CONSULTS LEADERS
and it is alleged by Watts that Prof.
Walker was.unduly active in behalf o.
McDarmegt *and that he assisted in
raising funds *for Mcuarment’s de-
tense.
At this meeting the board also wPl
Oklahoma City. Unless there Is mi m"kt’ arrangement, for temporarily
appeal granted from the recent edict m',nK lhp ljli‘"'s <lf thn’« professor.
, ,, ... i who are now with the national guard,
of the capitol commission that the Ok . . .. .
. . „ „ „ „ , 'wo Of them being in service on the
fahouia Hallway Company will not be .
border. 1 hey aie Major Jack Alley, paralyzing commerce and throwing
-permitted to run tracxs through the ,eacher or economic-, and Prof, (i, Y
-.late capitol ground., the chances that Williams of the science department of
senatorial and represenrative feet will1 the slate university, who are on th-
in Final Effort to.Prevent Catastrophe
Which Would Result if the
400,000 Men Decide to
. Walk Out.
New York.—A general strike on vir-
Uinlly all the railroads of the nation,
2,000,000 men out of employment, can
be averted only through the good of-
fices of President Wilson as a result
Vcnes during the stormy weather of | history at the Alva Normal, who has ,,f developments in 'he dispute over
nett January loom up formidably b*en commlsslonei by the wat depart "»' m,’n'J demand foi an eight-hour
There now appears no Indication that ■u"’nt to recruit a company of militia day and lime and one-half for over-
rthis rule will bo changed ; ll Krild The,r P*i,ces in the schools time. The controversy was laid be-
* 1 will be saved for them, it was stated.
New- tracks will he built by the rail
•way company, it was announced Iasi
•week, so the Capitol car line, will
Cars Must Show License.
fore the president, at his invitation,
after the workers had flatly rejecte 1
any form or arbitration. They refused
mediation
On To Washington.
Soon after accepting the president’s
summons, extended through the fed-
eral board of mediation and concilia-
George 'it Ni-l'it high*.,-, commit. ,lon- ,1'" men annoum“<I ,hat ,lH> I,a<’-
si.rner to Mayo. Kd Overhuiser of O!. er.s of “*•' four raiIn’al1 brotherhoods
lahoma City hal1 departed for Washington City,
‘ -There Is no reason why any citizen accompanied by thirty or the 600 dele-
of Oklahoma could not have an Okla- KaU“s “ambled here. The railroad
homa 1016 tag on his or her car.’ mana*erii’ nineteen in number, left
the east entrance to the edge e! L1 s reads the letter. "Any applicant for tor the capital at the same time,
<i'ouiwl and build *a porte cochere so a tug can procure same Immediately Mr Tumulty, the president's secre-
<he curs could stop iu a sheltered upon request. Those operating cars 'ary, brought here with him a cominu-
4>|ur.e without lags or displaying cards, ‘li- nlcatlon from President Wilson, ad-
cense applied for,’ should he arreste I dressed to the brotherhoods and the
for violating the law Then- Is Yio e\ railroad managers, pointing out that.a
cuse for the owners of cars or trucks paralysis such as would follow a gen-
ii,,. having already procured tags "'"1 railroad strike would be a catar-
"The constabulary of Oklahoma trophe at any time, but would be noth-
have sworn to enforce this law as 'nR short-of disaster under present
well as all others We earnestly asa conditions. On this ground the presi-
your co-operation and support iu the dent based his request for a confer-
enforceme.it of this law." cnee with representatives of both fac-
Automobile owners who, in lieu of
€0me closer than a block of tfie ea t ■ „ regulation license tag, place a.card
entrance. . General Manager Knox of on the rear of their machines bearing
•Hie company said that the pluns pave the inscription, “license applied for”
<iot been worked out. hut th^t new are violating the law and are subject
track will be built. Some act!in -a ill .to arrest, according to a letter from
taken soon so tno construction
work can be finished before any of
the state offices are occupied.
The ideal plan, certain engineers
■•ay. would be to extend the steua at
Objects to Negro Election Officers.
The question of tlie right of negroes
to ad as precinct election officers is
presented to the supreme court for de-
termination in a case appealed by the
county election board of Okfuskee
county. By an order of the district
court of that county the county elec « « an approximately ........ auto Hons before a strike order is issued
Hon board was required to establis , owners in the state who are delinquentl by the leaders of the men.
•one or more voting plai In BoieyJ wlth th< Mr- debate Six Hours Long,
i small place of which the population moml' collections o. The flna] break came after the men
to 90 per cent negroi rhe order di-J1^6 ^epal'tment amounle^ to approx - been in secret ■
Tecta that one or two precincts be os- ruat‘‘l> , hours Reports differ as to the reason
tab 11 bed tnd . • for the failure of the negotiatioi
oe appointed from among Lin* inhabi- Wheat On Ground For Lack of Cars, view of the cheerful outlook of the
4anU of i he place regardlet race, A *
color or former condition « of serv! tinued high for the past week, the refused to arbitrate because tb«• rail-
tudeH I ^
ously resisting the order. (len oft considci abl> since the big ris * contingent proposition." The board
- ! in prices came. Grain buyers of Ok- af mediators, in a statement, declared,
. . , e. lahoma City sav this is due partly 10 however, that the men rejected their
Oklahoma s Share $i,J9,lKJO. . ..
the fact that cars cannot he had fast proposition, contending that they
i he Oklahoma highway department , riough and partly to the belief that would not arbitrate even if the rail-
m,Xs dnl> _ '' !'r'' ' :i ''1
ence in Washington on August 16 for }jSgiiel- before winter. tion. The stafement of the mediators,
working out P>an* (or handling thi The ho, g( ha becom( vel ed by Judge Martin A Knapp,
goveyiment good roads fu 1 recentlj K, ....... have chairman of the board, just before
"f .........• l8,t0| * coming In to ioL omceslhatlu some th.tr departure for Washing.on, foi-
• toned among the several states of the 4 . . . . .
•Cite union sections ot the state buyers have been low:*.
piling the grain on the ground. This Offers No Suggestions.
M I., Cunu.nKl.am, stale highway ha3 been done in the Alfalfa county : ■•Atter repeated efforts to bring
engineer in the highway department., ,owng more than any other place. about an arbitration of the pending
represented Oklahoma to the ronf.G Elevators in many towns have shut controversy between the railroads and
♦Mice. Oklahoma s share of the fun l doors and are refusing to take their eniDlovees in train and vard
in I'” , • < i ed State board of
delivery. mediation and conciliation was today
It is estimated that 4.000 more cars advised by the representatives of the
( are needed to handle the Oklahoma ' employees that they would not submit
U is estimated by Mr Cunningham (.rop than are available now. the matters in dispute to arbitration
That the problem of getting freight in any form.
c#ri > the grain Is more seriou **xhe mi
than ever before was the opinion ex- | the board that they would not arbi-
pressed by I. < Williams of Wichita, (fate their own demands, even if the
Kan. Mr. W illiams is commercial contingent demands of the railroads
were withdrawn and also declined to
, Buggc>t any other plan or method of
Delegates to Tax Meeting. *ft peaceful settlement of the contro
• ion commissioner, according to ex- State Kvimim and Inspector Fred
pense accounts filed by the candidates Parkinson and Slate Auditor E. P.
with the-state election board. This Howard, both* members of the state
is an i v ! aye of a lit lie a ion* t a b- ani < -f * .a . . ~r- au i - nu.a li
ft.‘.'00 foi < (andula'e The legal "f d«
T init i $! ,.T00. NYillif i* to repr cut Oklahoma «it
The statrmenis slum that .1. H. "I<> na'ional .-onferenre on tax-
ation, which will be held in Indian-
luore than $ I "9,000, according to U
’ plan of apportionment announce 1
some time ago.
that it* will be six months before air
work will be done in this state to l>2
paid for out of the federal fund.
Candidates File'Expenses.
A total of $6,0lo was spent by the agent for a railroad
live candidates for the democratic
nomination for the long term corpora
r». .. i _ i’ ...... i l ..
versy.
Double Pay the Rub.
'fhe « hief objection of the inen to
pri>pn :• ,i ..v ii tli- .r ecu'ention
that the proposal entailed the wiping
out of double compensation features
. v\ lii.^» tt* men hav* gained, during
«h» 4"" ' ™ ey. His exi '
11,07.11 Campbell Russell, who won ° ' • .
• he race, spent $1,218.85. Henry Will- governor an
luering spent $1,460; Ben F Harriso.i Hohrit W Burn- \\ alien K ^ Sn\
$l,ir.i f.i, and A l*. Watson. 76ft 1 Hoop. Mik-
Donnely, all of Oklahoma City; -+1 M.
Kerr and Walter Eaton of Muskogee;
.State Convicts Farmed Out. p \\ \(|J i\,t. u. M M Kyab
Application for 140 convicts from .Spiro, Hi T. 1L How* 1. Duvi 1 1
• iie pentteiuiary at McAleater to work Smith, Alton: E. J McBride and W.
on tic constructiffh of .-sale is ids M M t < n- of \ i and C \ Fu 11>.
were approved last week by the stat** Eufaula.
Johnston, who finished** *c«>nd. --j»• • i• t
highway department, and the • tat
board of affairs as ex-officio prison
board of control Of this number fifty
78 Widows Draw Pensions.
Seventy-eight widows In Oklahom \
WILL BE MANAGED FROM
YORK GITY.
NEV.
Railroad Men Claim They Can Stop
Every Train In the Country
In Very Short T
T ifne
MEXICAN AND UNITED STATES
* DIPLOMATS WILL SOON BE-
GIN CONFERENCE.
New York.—If Pros! fent Wilson
fails to persuade the railroad men and
their employers to settle their differ -
ences and a general strike is called, i*
will be directed from headquarters in I
this city. i As American Representatives—Arre-
LANE AND BRANDIES NAMED
At brotherhood headquarters It was
said all preparations have been mad ■
for putting into effect a strike that
will stop every train, passenger and
freight cm the 225 railroad systems o'
dondo Outlines Proposals the
Mexican Members of the
Commission Will Make.
Washington.—Formal announcement
the United States. The critical state was made by Acting Secretary Polk
r\f Q i I'O wo o i n i n n ♦ .1 I... Si... _ . c , t.................. . r / 1 .... 1 Pnseon.
of affairs was indicated by 4lie anxiety
displayed in every big industry which
will be crippled by the failure of trans-
portation.
Authorities here declared while the
national labor laws give the president
no right to interfere offic ally, the
broad police powers vested in him
give him authority to put soldiers on
the trains and even to declare mar-
tial law if he believes the peril of the
situation calls for such drastic meas-
ures.
Attention was.called to last national
railroad strike in 1894 when President
Cleveland used the regular army to
guard locomotives and cars.
The tension in business circles here
acute danger of a national calamity
An aggregate of financial losses, run-
ning perhaps into hundreds of mil-
lions, labor idleness and food priva-
tion are some of the possibilities
which a strike presents. It is to be
remembered, business men said, that
there is scarcely a factory of any im-
portance which does not depend on a
railroad for its products. A strike, for
instance, will mean that the steoi
mills of Pittsburg will be cut off from
their ore supplies in Michigan and
Wisconsin, the automobile industries
of Michigan from supplies of steel
from Pittsburgh; the cotton mills of
New England from their cloth from
New England, and every industry ev-
erywhere will be cut' off from coal to
feeil their furnaces and dynamos.
Of more immediate seriousness
would be the question of food supply
The large communities which receive
the bulk of their food from long dis-
tances will be forced to rely on what
products can be brought in by wagon,
automobile, trolley or vessel.
The suspension of the country’s e\-
I
coast cities, the stranding of hundred-. Washington.—Their offer of a com-
of thousands of travelers and summer I promise legislative program which |
resort visitors fur from their homes—! might lead to an early adjournment o£;
•r the cor gress, rejected by the republicans,
rtrike situation presents, to sav noth- democratic senate leaders decided to
log of its effect, on the railroads them- drive along without republican co-
if the acceptance of General Carran-
za’s proposal of a joint commission
for the settlement ot border disputes
■ind to discuss other matters which
may help clarify relations between
the United States and Mexico. Only
■ he time and place for the conference
remain to be decided.
Secretary Lane of tlie interior de-
partment will head the American com-
mission, supported by Associate Jus-
tice Brandeis of the supreme court
and a third commissioner, whose name
will be announced later.
Eliseo Arredondo, Carranza’s am-
bassador-designate, gave ‘ assurance
that General Carranza is in complete
accord with suggestions of the Wash-
ington government that the commis-
sioners be given the broadest possible
scope. The ambassador said that his
government regarded its recent note
as a full answer of acceptance of Sec-
retary Polk’s suggestions that the
scope be broadened.
Withdrawal First Subject.
As It begins its task the commission
will be required first to reach some
conclusion on the specific points out-
lined by General Carranza in his orig-
inal proposal. The first subject treat-
ed under this view would be the with-
drawal of American troops from Mex-
ico, to be followed by negotiation of
a protocol covering future military
operations along the border.
The immediate military situation on
the border disposed of. the commis-
sion will be ready to proceed with its
remaining specific task; investigation
to determine whether interests desir-
ing intervention have inspired border
raids.
ADJOURNMENT 15, NOT IN SIGHT
No Telling When Congress Will De-
cide to Quit.
selves and their employes.
Twenty Billions Involved.
The total capitalization of the rail-
operation in an efTort to dispose of
pending legislation by September 1.
Republican leaders who had given
the democrats hope that their adjoum-
DR JOHN B MURPHY IS DEAD
Noted Surgeon a Victim of the Munde
lein Banquet.
Mackinac island. Mich.—Dr. John P,
have i
sation, together with the demands ot
>
more than 100 per cent.
11.;, u in the country amounts to more ment proposal might be accepted were
than twenty billion dollars and their unable to control the party conference
gross revenue has been estimated at j which took up the matter for ratifica-
more than $4,000,000,000 on the basis | tion.
of Progressive republicans, led by Sen-
The latest estimates available show ators Borah, Norris and LaFollette, re-
that the railways operate 251,984 miles j fused to be bound by any program
of lines and transport annually 1.03J,-, which would prevent action on the cor-
679 680 passengers. The passenger nipt practices widows pension civil
cars have been computed at 51,700 and, was veterans', retirement and immi-
other cars at 2.393,808. jgration bills
__I The result was*that a resolution was
adopted rejecting the democratic pro-
posal and urging passage of the immi-
gration hill before adjournment.
Democratic senators said tl.at no ]
change in the legislative program \
' enily by ti>:,i raumi
now was contemplated. They were
hopeful that the shipping and revenue |
Murphy of Chicago, one of the worlds and conference reports could be
most renowned surgeons, died sud
,!. i ,oiel w hiie on a summ>'
outing. An attack of heart disease
was the immediate cause of deats.
Dr. Murphy had been in poor heaitn
for several months and some had as-
cribed his condition to the poisoned
soup partaken at the -banquet given
to \:viibiifhop AThndelein* at the Uni-
versity club, Chicago, last winter. His
w w as w :i Idni at the t ine of hi.-
deal h.
disposed of and adjournment reached
early in September at the latest.
SIXTY-SIX DEAD IN BIG FLOODS
Four Hundred Square Miles In West
Virginia Devastated By Water.
Milk- Striker At St. Louis K Med.
’
if driv i • ■ for ro< al dairy
reached a climax iji the killing of
Have Mitchell, a striker, who was shot
In an argument on the street. George
Schneider, foreman of the dairy, was
,»rrt ted Many st»lk( i t »•
will go to Johnstoi......... , ..... .....
Leflore county and fifty to Kirk towu- county are on tht i ’ rested There was considerable Inter-
ship
charin' of di '.in "in. tit of the pension moir |mlk r,.laiI amJ leeYro.iiu was
Requisition For Printing. 1 s
* ,
f i
n C.aveland Milk Driver* ®n Strike.
,m M u >r in ■ f.u .a. a
,, , - n ons
which will be - bn ted I t tei •
i 1
Charleston, W. Ya.—Sixty-six per-
sons were known to have lost their
lives in .1 fh'dcl which swept three
West >Y;-ginia mountain .i;
I he famous surgeon, who recently ,|orjnp f0n thousand persons home-1
was knighted by Dope Benedict for his ]pg8 an(| causing a property loss estl*
v in - UI gc ry, w as only 68 mate(j at *
years old. He first came into inter Reports are still meager owing to
national fane through his specializing interrupted wire and rail oommunica-
in intestinal disorders, and invented tion, but the authorities expressed the
what was known as the Murphy but- L>elief that the death toll might reach
ton, making possible operations whi> h joo.
theretofore had been deemed impossi- Tll0 National Tied Cross offered aid
ble. He was credited by many with flood sufferers, but the* local
being the first surgeon to perform op* and state authorities replied*that they
11 u a
•» liagno ed as fully handled w ithout
quick consumption**'! other intestinal mice
>t '
• * m
l <»•
h
tion that rheumatism and o'h»-r im demolished? Railroad official- do 1 in
li t *T 1
in tlie body. the main line to Cabin Creek
ITALIAN TR33PS TAKE GORITZ
FINALLY ACHIEVE NOTABLE
SUCCESS AGAINST AUSTRIANS.
Gen. Letihitsky's Notorious Army
Driving /ill Before it In Galicia—
British Continue To Gain.
London—News from the Isonzo,
front indicates that the army of the
duke of Aosta is rapidly following up
the not'able success won by tlie Ital-
ians in the capture of the Austrian
stronghold of Goritz with some 20,000
prisoners.
Italian forces lire reported In force
over the Isonzo vigorously pursuing
the retreating Austrians whose big sea-
port ot Trieste, twenty-two miles
southwest is threatened.
Tlie Italians have pierced the strong
Austrian entrenchlflenta northeast ol
Monte San Michele, on the Isonzo
front, arid near the village of San Mar-
tino, the Rome war office announced.
They have occupied Boschinl. The
statement says more than 12,000 Aus-
trians have been captured.
The British pressure continues to
be exerted northward from Pozieres,
where they are struggling to gain com-
plete command of the ridge overlook
ing Baupaunie. They made a new
advance last week.
On a front a mile wide the Air
tralians under General Birdwooil
smashed their lines forward 400 yards
into the third line position of the Ger-
mans northwest of Pozieres. This
last gain entirely eliminates the
Ovillers salient.
„ lew miles to the east, beyond
Maurepas, north of the Somme, Gen-
eral Foch’s victorious poilus made
gains on a front of three miles which
took them into the foe’s third line
strongholds beyond Maurepas.
The Russians in Galicia under Gen-
eral Letchitsky have pushed west of
the Stanislau-Kolomea railway lines
and cut the Stanislau Nadvorna rail
way at Krypiin. The progress of the
Russians brings them to the south-
west of Stanislau.
A German statement says repulses
with heavy losses was-met by Russian
attacks on the Stokhod line.
The capture of Goritz by the Ital
i.ins is seemingly as important as any
g'.in yet attained by the entente al-
lies in their present offensive, the city
being the door through which the Ital-
ians may now pass in an endeavor to
far. "iu their lone cherished i-lea ot
capturing Trieste, Austria's big sea-
port at the head of the Adriatic sea.
Viet na, in admitting the loss of Gor-
itz, says the evacuation followed the
repulso of new Italian attacks on the
Dube to plateau, and that the straight-
ening nf the Austrian lines made m
cessqry by tlie opera’ion, was carried
out - ithout molestation from the Ital-
ians " Vienna also reports that. 4.10<">0
Itali ns have been taken prisoner In
the ’ecent fighting in this region.
Ir Galicia, in the sectors of Stanis-
lau and Halich the Russians have
dri- >n their forces further westward in
the r endeavor to capture the central
portion of the railroad running from
Kc-lomea to Lemberg. Passing across
th • Monasterzyka-Niznioff railway,
they have forded the Zlota Lipa river,
southeast of Ilailch and south of Stan-
iUau have etlptured the town of Kryp
lin on the Stanislau Nadvorni railroad
The counting of General Letchitz-
k.v's prisoners during the last ten days'
operations In Galicia brings the grand
total of prisoners since early in June
to 402,000.
A further series of surprising suc-
cesses by the armies of Generals Rak-
liaroff and Letchitsky were announced
Iiy the Russians. The most conse-
quential of these were the capture ol
-the important railway junction and
town of Stanislau, 87 miles southeast
of Lemberg; the definite occupation
of Monaeterzyska, and the seizure ol
Important positions of the Z!ota4.1pq
ine. Coupled with these victories
yvas the capture of many thousand
jirisoners, especially on the rig-lit hank
(.if the Rereth, where the prison?!s
taken number 5,000.
MORE TROOPS TO THE BORDER
Remaining Units of the Militia to b«
Moved.
; Washington—All the national guard
uDits included In l’n idunt Wilson'?
cjfcll of June 18 not yet on the Mox.
ie,‘in border were orderetMhere by the
w .ir department.
v
tHoops will thus be added to the bor
di'T forces. National guard forces
mere will number appi oximately 125,
0(h) and the total of all troops on tha
border or in Mexico will be 175,000.
j Secretary Baker made a formal an-
il uncement ^hat the troop movement
h 1 nothing whatever to do with th*
ty* xican situation as such, and was
• i »u
BK'A held in mobilizatioh camp only
l( ause they lacked a few recruits to
j'ting units up to fixed minimum
strength.
Spree For Historical Society.
New quarters for the Oklahoma Tils- •
to i*:.I S..< i- fry \n l
floor of the state capitol building ■*
Practically ten time- re tn I
as tlrat now occupied in the ('arm • 1
liUihii : will v
allow for the ino-t atr.»«tlve di
tion of the latyfh collections,
hundred*bound volumes of Okla’.
new papers is the latest additio
the Oklahoma Hi totical SocIimj’s
lection. It is expected that about
n
stack this fall.
^tntc tq Examine Levies
Governor Williams has requ
tate . xaminer anti Inspector Fn<
♦ '! 11 \ • t A fr
venue for the current fiscal yea
, - •> t: - cm -t if uttonal lint'*
ANOTHER LOAN FOIL ENGLAND
Oredit Expected To Be
Placed in New York Soon. *
i<
pressed in financial circle
louncement would he mad 1
.hat arrangement
had he
iat an-
shortly
onclud*
Appropriations Break All Records.
Washington. The importance * of
.> .'• ‘.0* revenue bill on whie t
mate demo- rats devoted many hour
by tl’
319 Guardsmen Released.
»•
'•rxcccdcd. \nsf
nl for
a new loan.
report t
Bd to b*‘ $250,-
i’ th-» pa :»ge this week
mr* year Mr. 1
n .‘-Mate's that* \n
h to (Ii
cut
•Britai >
t. Tl i> loan , tj,
i;i P itch e hill
i, vs f/; c
h > A
frould
" •
r tv
- ° > • '
:s. according 4
approval by the ho.:-.-
!
eh had
t<. l v, validated hi,
o n
frummar
d here, with /
p, naval bill, tl
i X * i r
ion of
11 • i< i dature •
e
st at 5
per
cent ji
uni the note •> *
of the sixty-font!
• i.r* t. 14.1« \
cstall
itiutnuciablg law
,11 1- ' : .
two
years
wquld be of-
r
i KUitS.
( lere.l
at 99.
•>
r* >: d by at least a hall
Ran Art on io.
- Disc hat
'ges under th'
pendent
family provl<
ion have beei
anted *t o
319
men sin<
: the federal
r
t roc
>ps were
placed on pa
ol duty i
j the bor
der, accord try
tit
red at dej
mrtment hear
tartors.
Otfii
4%
1
r>t begin
to r
ppresent 1
the number o
!en<i of this nature
unfed. There is n st,
>atinnn from men wh
leaving the service <
at they are needed I
i ir families at b<»m£.
■ 111 'he
w of ap-
Nrw York plague Worse
ll 4
daughter in-law of Walter Hlnei
United States ambassador to
’t: v-
t New
it age
tl1
1 \ f Brit uin. <! il of • p.ii'hh •
• |i - at her summer home in South (Jar-
*l|' it City, L. I. Health department of-
t'V'iaV announced tl at last week was
4
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Wandell, Clarence F. Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 17, 1916, newspaper, August 17, 1916; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc910526/m1/2/: accessed June 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.