Oklahoma City Daily Pointer (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 150, Ed. 1 Monday, July 11, 1910 Page: 3 of 8
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Monday, July 11, '.910.
OKLAHOMA CITY DAILY POINIER.
Don't Be a
Scarecrow
Have your lothes kept iu perfect
repair and correctly pressed. You
will find it pays in the Ions run.
We have . y facility for cleaning,
pressing and dyeing.
Suits dry cleaned a? o prou.tcj |1.00
Skirt', dry cleaned and pressed 75c
ALL WORK CALLED FOR AND
DELIVERED.
Chicago Cleaners & Dyers
10 8. Harvey. Pho.ie 45S3.
4/)00 Olil'OSITOHS
CAPITAL $86,000
DfcPOWT6 OVER *tt40C4.
ABN€R DAVIS. President.
F. H. MEYER, CnMtr,
"The Bank the People Made."
Open 8 a. m. to 9 p. rr.
DALLAS TAKES
SECOND GAME
FROM JNDIANS
Giant Hatters Slam Two Oklahoma
I
i'itche.'j to All Parts of Lot
and Win 8—0
RESULTS
Dallas, 8; Oklahoma City, t.
Houston, 6; Sa? Antonio, 1.
Port Worth, 2; Shroveport, 1.
Galvoaton, 4; Waco, Z.
to reach home failed to tag the baae
and the Inning was over.
In the fifth inning, Gowdy objected
to Hurlburt's decision on balls and
strikes and was fined $25 and suspend-
ed for three daye.
Score:
Dallas
AB
R BH
PO
A
E
Glour. cf
4
1 1
0
0
0
Maag, 2b
3
1 1
3
2
1
Jackson, rf .
4
1 3
4
0
0
Gowdy, lb . .
1
1 1
6
2
0
0 0
3
0
1
8torch. If . ...
4
1 3
1
0
0
Ens. 3b
1 01
1
2
1
McDonald, m .
0 1
1
1
1
Onslow, c , ...
4
0 0
8
0
0
Shontz. p . ..
4
1 0
0
t
0
NEW LEAGUE
PLAYED FIRST
GAMES SUNDAY
——-
Ttw Suod.y Baseball league opened
yesterday with games on the fair
(rounds and pumpicf station dta
mouda A pennant has been donated
and a close race ia expected. Only j
Sunday games will be played by the
league.
RESULTS SUNDAY.
nally Oklabojnau 14. Railway Co. 9
Water Dept. 6, Knights of Coluw
bus 2.
Gas A Electric Co.. 20; Barth &
Meyer 2.
Page Three.
Totals
30 6 11 27 9 4
AB. R H. PO A. E
STANDING.
Wen.
Houston -..,.4?
Dallas 4*
Fort Worth 4J
Ban Antonio 44
Qaiveston 43
Oklahoma City 3^
Shreveport 40
Waco l'J
33
35
or.
38
40
40
43
66
.588
.578
.544
.537
.518
.494
.482
,253
GAMES TODAY.
Oklahoma City at Dallas.
Waco at Galveston.
Shreveport at Fort Worth.
San Antonio at Houston.
Dallas, Tex , July 11—The propen-
sity of the Giants to hit Crowson and
Morton to all parts of the field and
the inability of the Indians to safely
connect with the shoots of Johnson
proved the undoing of the visitors
yesterdaj, and consequently Dallas
won, 8 to 0.
I In the first inning Crowson allowed
I two safe bunts to get away, gave a
j base on balls, and then Moran cleared
two of the pegs by a double. Morton
I went in and retired the side, but the
I Giants found him with great success
in the third inning and tallied three
more runs.
The Oklahomans played a listless
game and refused to go after difficult
chances, and as a result the game
proved a walkaway.
The score:
Oklahoma City
White, cf 1 0 0 2
Nagle, 5 1 1 3
Davis, rf 4 1 2 1
Downey, If 4 1 2 I
Casey, 2b 2 0 0 2
Noyes, o. 3 0 n 6
Begley. lb 4 0 0 9
Miller, 3b 3 0 0 0
Chellette, p 3 0 1 0
Drncke, x 0 0 0 0
Totals 32 3 6 24 12 5
xDrucke batted for Chullete in the
ninth.
Score b> innings: R
Dallas 200 000 40x—6
Oklahoma City 000 003 000—3
Summary—Stolen bases—Maag 2, Denver
Jackson 3. Gowdy, Storch, McDonald. Wichita ...
Miller; sacrifice hit*—Ens, Noyes, j Lincoln ...
Maag, struck out—by Shontas 6, by Des Moines
Chellerte 6; basee on balls— St. Joseph
Sbontz 2, by Chellette 4; batters hit Omaha ...
—by Shonty. 2; first base on errors—I Topeka ...
Dallas 2, Oklahoma City 2; left on,
STANDING.
Teams -
W.
L.
Pet
Daily Oklaboman . .
.1
0
1,000
Water Dept
.1
. 0
1,000
Gas A Electric Co. .
.1
0
1,000
Barth A Meyer . ...
.0
1
.000
Knights of Columbus
0
I
.000
Railway Co
.0
I
.000
HOW THEY STAND.
WESTERN "ASSOCIATION
Won
Ix>st
Pet
Jop'.in
59
27
.686
El Reno
51
36
.586
Enid
47
39
.547
41
.534
Bartlesville ...
43
38
.531
Guthrie
37
51
.420
Muskogee .....
35
51
.407
Tulsa
25
62
.279
WESTERN LEAGUE
. "This Is Fred."
Meet me face to face 19 N. Broadway.
(Opposite Hotel Lee-Huckins.)
1 Sell
Clothing and Gent3' Furnishings.
JOSLYN
Who Makes
CUTS
Has Moved to
118 West Second St.
Dallas.
AB. R.
X
c
Glawe, cf
....5
2
3 2
Maag, 2b
....3
2
2 4
Jackson, rf ...
1
2 2
Moran, lb
1
3 11
0
2 2
1
1 2
McDonald, ss .
0
2 1
0
1 3
Johnson, p. ...
....4
1
0 0
8
16
27
15
2
Okla. City.
A B
R
H
PO. A.
E
White, cf ....
4
0
1
1
0
0
Nagle, ss ...
4
0
I
6
2
0
0
1
2
0
0
Downey, If...
3
0
1
0
0
o
Casey, 2b ...
4
0
0
4
3
i
Noyes, c ....
4
0
0
4
2
0
Drucke, 3b ..
3
0
1
1
0
0
Bagley, lb ..
4
0
0
6
2
2
Crowson, p .
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
Totals ....
0
5
24
10
3
Won
Lost
Pet
46
28
622
45
30
600
.40
27
.597
.40
35
.533
.34
44
.436
.30
43
.411
.27
39
.409
.26
46
.361
bases—Dallas 7,Oklahoma City 8;
wild pitch—by Shontz; passed ball,
by Onslow.
Time of game—2:05.
Umpire—Hurlburt.
FORT WORTH, 3* SHREVEPORT, 2.
Fort Worth, Tex., July 11.—Fort
Worth won a clos? game by two suc-
cessive bits in the tenth inning.
Score by innings: R. H E.
Shreveport ...000 100 001 0—2 9 1
Fort Worth . 000 101 000 1—3 7 2
Batteries—Tesreau and Garvin; Lat-
timore and Green.
HOUSTON, 3: SAN ANTONIO, 2.
Houston, Tex., July 11.—Abies and
Rose had a great battle until the ninth
when both seemed to weaken
Score by innings. R
San Antonio ....000 000 002—2
Houston 000 000 012—3
Batteries—Abies and Cantz;
and Burns.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
H. E.
7 3
7 4
Rose
I SELL LUMBER
CA8H OR CREDIi.
SEE ME AT
Wheeler Park
Lumber Y a rd
WILL M. BAUGH MAN.
521 West Pine St. Phono 618.
PACK BROS.
HOUSE MOVERS
327 W. FRISCO.
PHONE 2096.
OKLAHOMA CITY. 147
BRICK
COMIION AND FACE PAVERS.
C2MSNT AND LIME.
J. B. Garrison & Co.
Score by innings:
Dallas 203 012 00*—8
Oklahoma City 000 000 000—0
Summary: Innings pitched, by Crow-
son, 1-3: by Morton, 7 2-3; runs made,
off Crowson, 2; off Morton, 6; hits
apportioned, Crowson, 3; Morton, 13;
two-base hits, Moran, Jackson; stolen
bases, Moran, Ens. McDonald, John-
son, Davis; sacrifice hit, Jackson;
struck out, by Johnson, 2; by Morton,
4; bases on balls, by Cowson, 1; by
Morton, 1; by Johnson. 2; team errors,
on Morton, 3; first base on errors,
Oklahoma City, 2; left on bases, Dal-
las, 7; Oklahoma City, 8; double plays,
Ens to Maag to Moran. Time of
game, 1:15. Umpire, Hurlburt.
FORT WORTH, 2; SHREVEPORT, 1,
Fort Worth, Tex., July li.—A home
run by Riggs was the only drive Fort
Worth got off Herbert In the regular
nine innings, but It was sufficient to
force the contest into extra sessions
and two hits in the tenth gave Fort
Worth the necessary run.
Score by innlnRs: R. H. E.
Shreveport ...000 109 000 0—1 8 0
Fort Worth ...000 000 100 1—2 3 0
Batteries- Herbert and Henninger;
Burk and Gribbens.
HOUSTON, 6; SAN ANTONIO, 1.
Houston, Tex., July 11.—The Buffa
loes got to Blanciiug with a vengeance
in the fifth inning and again in the
eighth, winning easily by a score of
6 to 1.
6core by innings: R. H. E.
San Antonio ....010 000 000—1 G 1
Houston 000 040 02*—6 10 1
Batteries—Blandiug and Schan; Eu-
banks and Burch.
WACO. 9; GALVESTON. 5.
Galveston, Tex, July 11.—After
Waco was aparently defeated by a
score of 5 to 1, they came up strong
in the eighth and made six runs,
Crabble being weak and wild.
Score by innings: ft. H. E.
Waco 000 100 2fi0—9 13 3
Galveston 013 100 000—5 14 8
Batteries—Valt, Ogles and Thack-
ara; Crabble and Braun.
HOT RACE IN CITY LEAGUE
A close race Is being run In the
city league between the Alexander
Drug and Audit System teams, both
have a per cent of .786.
SATURDAY'S RESULTS
Pioneer 4, Board of Trade 3.
Sash & Door 1, Tile Co. 0.
Audit System 11, Carsev 4.
Alexander Drugs 3, Putnam 0,
STANDING.
Won
Lost
Pet
82
.590
32
.: 68
35
.533
36
.514
Montgomery ....
37
42
468
Memphis
34
44
.436
39
.435
Mobile
31
43
.419
AMERICAN
ASSOCIATION
Won
L06t
Pet
30
.655
....53
32
.624
Toledo
....46
36
.561
Kansas City ...
38
42
.475
Columbus
46
43
.456
Milwaukee
35
45
.438
50
.405
42
.400
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Won Lost
Chicago 44 26
New York 42 26
Cincinnati 37 33
Pittsburg 34 31
Philadelphia 32 36
Brooklyn 31 38
St. Louis 31
Boston 27
41
47
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Won
Philadelphia ...
46
New York
40
Boston
40
Detroit
41
Chicago
30
Cleveland
28
Pet
.629
.618
.520
.523
.471
449
.431
.365
Pot
.657
.*>88
.571
.562
.448
.438
.389
.319
Credit
Good
SPARKS & LIGON
The Big Store With the Little Prices
Open
An Account
With Us
Rocker Special Monday & Tuesday
$20 Rockers $12.85
Golden Oak, best genuine leather seat
and back, good steel spring construc-
tion, well made and perfectly finished,
a $20 rocker the world over; like cut
$12.85 6
$20.00 Rocker $12.85
Mission finish, handsomely upholstered in best genu-
ine leather. This is a well made, very substantial,
beautifully finished $20 rocker, like cut
$12.85
132-134
WestSecand
Street
SPARKS & LIGON
Walk a Block or Two, Save a Dollar or Two
Oklahoma
WICHITA WINS
CLOSE MATCH
FROM LOCALS
Won.
Lost
Pet
Alexander Drugs .
.. .11
3
.786 ;
Audit System . .
....11
3
.786 !
Putnam City . ..
....10
4
.714 !
Rash & Door . ...
9
5
.643 !
Pioneer
.... 7
7
.500 1
Tile Co
.... 4
10
.285
Board of Trade . .
.... 3
11
.214
Carsey Athletics .
... 1
13
.071 !
AMATEUR GAMES
McAlester 8, Wilburton 7.
Altus 5, Fort Sill 0.
Watonga 8, Audit System 4.
Thomas 2, Custer City 1.
White Sox 13, Regulars 0.
Witt-Badgett 7, Moore 4.
Hotels —Hotels
Look them all over, then come tc the
Cadillac, corner Third and Robinson.
Fireproof. Private baths, cafe. If we
can't please you we will give you a
room free. Summer rates. 147 i4
GALVESTON. 4; WACO, 3.
Galveston, Tex, July 11.—Galveston
bunched hits on Schultz in the eighth
before he was relieved by McAdams
and won from Waco.
Score by Inning?: R. H. E.
Waco ' 000 001 020—3 7 3
Galveston 010 001 02*—4 8 1
Batteries—Schultz, McAdams and
Gordon and Thackara; HIse and
Braun.
The Halver&on Supply team yester-
day defeated rhc Knight-Beck team
by a c'ose score of 8 to 7. The game
was played at Putnam City.
Dallas, July 11.—Bunching hits and
taking advantage of errors in the
first and seventh inning Saturday,
the Giants were enabled to defeat
the Indians in the opening game by
a score of 6 to 3.
The Indians forged ahead of the
Giants in the sixth inning when with
one down, Nagle was safe and Davis
singled to left field. Downey beat
out a bunt, placing the men up a peg
Casey slammed one to McDonald who
threw wild at home and Nagle and
Davis scored, Downey came in on
Novps out and Casey in his endeavo:
SATURDAY'S RESUL a.
TEXAS LEAGUE
Dallas 6, Oklahoma City 3.
Waco 9. Galveston 5.
Houston 3, San Antonio 3.
Fort Worth 3, Shreveport 2.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Pittsburg 7, Philadelphia 1.
St. Louis 2, Boston 1.
New York 7, Chicago 3.
Cincinnati 4, Brooklyn 3.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE.
At Atlanta 1, Mobile 0.
At Nashville 1. Montgomery 1.
At Memphis 2, New Orleans 8.
At Chattanooga 1, Birmingham 4.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION.
At Kansas City 4, St. Paul 0.
At Louisville 1, Toledo 1. Called
in seventh, darkness.
At Indianapolis 1, Columbus 4
At Milwaukee-Minneapolis game
called in third; rain.
WESTERN LEAGUE.
Topeka 11, Wichita 10.
Denver 6, St. Joseph 1
Sioux City 5, Lincoln 3.
Des MoinesOmaha game postpon
ed; rain.
WESTERN ASSOCIATION
Sapulpa 5, Enid 1.
Tulsa 7, Muskogee 2.
Joplin 9, Bartlesville 1.
Guthrie 5, Ei Reno 3.
AMERICAN LEAGUE.
Philadelphia 5, Detroit 4.
Boston 5, Cleveland 4.
St. Louis 9-2, Washington 6-3.
GAMES TODAY.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
Boston at 8t. Ixniis.
Brooklyn at Cincinnati.
New York at Chicago.
Philadelphia at Pittsburg.
WE6TERN LEAGUE.
Lincoln at Des Moines.
Omaha at Sioux City.
Wichita at Denver.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION,
St. Paul at Kansas City.
Toledo at. Louisville.
Columbus at Indianapolis.
Minneapolis at Milwaukee.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE
Birmingham at Atlanta.
Montgomery at Chattanooga.
Mobile at Memphis
New Orleans at Nashville.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
Chicago at New York.
St. Louis at Washington.
Detroit at Philadelphia.
Cleveland at Boston.
The Wichita golfers won the match
Saturday from the Lakeview golfers
by a score of 15 tolO. A smoker was
tendered the visitors in the evening.
1 he Nassau system of scoring was
used, one point beiug given for the
first nine holes, one for the 18 holes
and one for the total score.
The following is the score:
'Jh. Fl.i Okla.
0 1 Freilerh-kson
.1 :i M.Milieu . .
.1 Patterson .
.1 1 Westervelt .
.1 Toppln* . ..
0 i); Oimpbell . .
1 11 n«rk
.< 1 Pope
.1 lj Srott
.1 2 Cunuiuahain
Wlobltn.
Paul Ilyde
T. Turner ,
Sternberg .
Hooter . .
Rose . ...
•.'has. Hjdi
C. Turner.
Oh. Fl.
NOVICES AEROPLANE
MEET TO OPiiN TODAY
Griffith
151
East St. Louis, 111., July 11.—The
first annual aeroplane meet for no-
vices will open Monday afternoon in
Washington Park, under the auspices
of the Aero club of St. l>ouls.
The complete list of entries and the
type of machine used are:
W. T. Thomas, llammondsport, N.
Y., biplane.
William C. Robinson, Grinnell, la.,
monoplane.
Eric. Bergstrom, Chicago, mono-
plane.
Howard W. Gill, Baltimore, Md,
biplane.
,J. W. Sparling, Grafton, HI., mono-
plane and biplane.
Claude W. Harris, Overland Park,
Mo., biplane.
Charles Khuno, St. Louis, mono-
!! I plane.
| William F. Sehler, St. Louis, mono-
i ' plane.
Cash prizes are offered varying
from $100 to $1,000. The meet con-
tinues six days.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS.
WESTERN ASSOCIATION
El Reno 4, Guthrie 1.
Sapulpa 5, Enid 4.
Tulsa 1, Muskogee 1.
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION
At Indianapolis 1, Columbus 6.
At Milwaukee — First game: 0;
Minneapolis 3; second game: Milwau-
kee 1, Minneapolis 8.
At Louisville, first game. 7: Toledo
9; second game, Louisville 3, Tole-
do 0.
At Kansas City, first game 3: St.
Paul 1; second gajne: Kansas City 6,
St. Paul 7.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Boston 5, St. Ixniis 2.
Brooklyn 2, Cincinnati 0.
New York 10, Chicago 9.
WESTERN LEAGUE^
Des Moines 6-0, Omaha 1-5.
Wichita 4, Topeka 0.
Denver 10-5. St. Joseph 5-3.
Lincoln 7, Sioux City 6.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE.
No games.
AMERICAN LEAGUE
No games.
PITCHER IS GROUCHY
AND GIV-S TWO HITS
MUSTANG TOWNSHIP TO
BUILD A MODEL ROAD
Black Pank, the negro twirler of the
Lone Star state, proved too much for
the Monarchs yesterday and Fort
Worth won 5 to 0. The heaver al-
lowed two hits and did not give a
pass. Baby Webb did not pitch up to
his standard and the Black Panthers
had an f«asy time hitting him.
The Monarchs won the opening
game Saturday by a 3 to 0 score. The
teams play again today.
JEFFRIES WANTS
ANOTHER FIGHT
WITH JOHNSON
San Francisco, July 11.—It is ru-
mored here that James J. Jeffrie9
would soon demand that Champion
Jack Johnson give him another tight.
The demand will be made upon the
grounds that Jeffries was sick at the
time of the Reno fight and therefore
Incapable of giving the negro a truly
stiff run for the championship.
JOHNSON WILLING.
Chicago, July 11.—Jack Johnson
when told of tho Jeffries rumor stated
that he would give the defeated cham-
pion another fight and would not fuss
over the division of purse or gate re-
ceipts. The negro declared that he
believed Jeffries was not in good con-
dition at the time of the fight. John-
son suggests Labor Day as a time for
the fight.
Johnson has already employed
Charles J. Mulling, sculptor, to make
a cast of him. The cast will be pre-
sented to a museum, bo that In after
years ethnologists may have a type
by which a study of perfect human
architecture can bo made.
SECURE STATE CHARTER
HER MODEL HUSBAND.
"My husband never chides me," I
heard her sweetly gay;
"He makes no moan concerning the [ grade with 18 Inc h crown, hard
bills there are to pay; ipacked and scientifically ditched to
He never comes complaining about; prevent any washing Vn appropria-
te hats I wear, It ion of $3,000 is Immediately available
And offers no objection to my com- for this vear'n work.
mercial hair. , —
WILL ENTERTAIN BAPTISTS
"My husband never grumbles because | Tiie B. Y P. U. of the Baptist
the coffee's cold, j white Temple will be entertained at
He is not roused to anger by eggs in-1 the home of their president, J. M.
Mustang township, the southwest
corner township In Oklahoma county,
cornering with Oklahoma township.
has decided, through its board of
trustees, to make an investment in
good roads. I
Tue township has an assessed valu- Foreign corporations are Incorpor-
ation of $1,500,000 and ranks as one; ing daily in Oklahoma City to get the
of the richest in the state outside of benefit of doing business under the
those having incorporated cities. The state laws. If they are incorporated
announced determination is to make | in this state they can sue in an Okla-
its road system the model for the en homa court, and if they are defend-
tlre state to follow , ants in a suit the company Is liable
Work is to begin Immediately on only to the amount of its Oklahoma
grading, the plans being for 30-foot| capital stock.
The latest outside concern to incor-
porate within the state is the E. M. F.
firm and old;
He never sits and murmurs while pre
cious moments pass,
Because I have to linger to primp be-
fore the glass.
"My husband cares not whether the
bills are big or small—
The cost of living never gets on his
nerves at all.
He never sits at banquets when I'm
at home in bed;
House cleaning never makes him lm-
patiet—he is dead!"
Ott at 1010 North Stiles, tomorrow
evening at 8 o'clock.
CLAIMS HE WAS ROBBED.
Asaulted and robbed of $9." in cash
by two men, one of whom was his
roommate, who also took all his
clothes, was the allegation of George
Bethel, negro, who appeared at the
county attorney's office today. War-
rants were sworn out against two ne-
groes suspected of the crime.
Oklahoma City company, an automo-
bile concern with its plant at Detroit.
The incorporators are Charles M. Bar-
ber of Oklahoma City, Walter and
Robert Flanders of Detroit. The capi-
tal stock is $25,000.
UNI. CLUB SEEKS LOCATION
The newly organized university
club of Oklahoma City is considering
a proposition to secure quarters in
the Colcord building adjacent to the
future Chamber of Commerce rooms.
This is to secure the use of the Cham-
ber of Commerce restaurant service
and also to be in as ccntral a loca-
tion as possible.
Sell It' A 15-word, 3-day 30c w^tot
ad. will do it In the Daily Pointer.
THEY BROKE EVEN
A Pennsylvania mining official and
a New Jersey merchant were chaffing
ach other during their after-dinn* r
smoke at a hotel in Atlantic City.
"They say," said the Pennsylvanian 1
"that you Jersey farmers come to th.; , On*-1 day little Bessie asked her
ccean once a year to bathe and that mother for a pair of fairy w ings, and
the nexi day the beach is covered i mother told her they could noL be
with hayseed." j had.
"Yes," the Jerseyman retorted "ani bedtime Trudie coaxed Dadd. to
I have heard that once, off here, a g'V(' them to her, but Daddy said,
oal barge was wrecked, and th.^ Fairy wings' Bessie, I'm afraid such
storm washed great quantities of coal , things can't be bought."
Uncle Fred's "Tales the Sand
Man Tells" for Little Folks
GOVERNOR WILL SPEAK
Corbett, Okla is to have a big pic
nic and political speaking bee Wed-
nesday an l Governor Haskell is to be
tho principal orator. Claude Weaver | from Carbondale yesterday,' her com-
up on the white sand
"Two young women went down
from the Mai Iborough-Blenhelm and
strolled up and down the beach.
Dear me," said the younger one,
lifting her white skirts daintily,
where does all this coal come from?"
'There was a miners' excursion
from Oklahoma panion replied, 'and I believe most of
Then Bessie flew into a tantrum
and mother put her to bed.
"I do want a pair of fairy wings,
and I will have them!" she sobbed.
"Eh, what's that?" asked a tiny
voice, and she saw a lovely little
fairy sitting on the bed.
"I'm the fairy Content," said the
fairy, "and I've come all the way from
Fairyland to tell you that no mortal
wings."
when they refu&e you anything; espe-
cially things like fairy wings that
are quite out of their power to give
you. Now. goodl.ye, little mortai,
I must be off! I've got lots of work
to do elsewhere!"
Then, with a smile like a beam of
sunlight, she flew away.
Bessie sat up in bed and rubbed
her eyes. Mother was standing be-
side her.
"Oh uiummie," said Bessie. 'It's
you! I've had such a funny dream.
Take me in your arras, mummie, and
forgive me. I'm sorry I was so
naughty at bedtime."
Then mother took her penitent lit-
tle daughter in her arms and Bessie
told her mruhf-r all a.'mm h# r
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Oklahoma City Daily Pointer (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 150, Ed. 1 Monday, July 11, 1910, newspaper, July 11, 1910; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc101597/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.