Tulsa County Chief (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1916 Page: 3 of 4
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“GINGLES JINGLES’1
“GO TO IT."
Grab the line that sulta jrour fancy,
then go to It, gel the dope. Study
hard; learn all about It; where there'i
knowledge there is hope. You must
have a dome that's freightod with the
stuff on how It's done, then work hard
and keep a sticking. That's the way
success Is won. Always keep your
colors flying. Never flunk and toss
the sponge Quitters scarcely get well
started ’fore they turn and take a
plunge: You must all expect reverses.
Things seem never breaking right,
but expect to grin and bear it or you’ll
pull a losing light. Floating down the
stream Is easy, but Is not there with
the rep. Going some against the cur-
rent Is the thing that takes the pep.
Working hard and keeping at It Is
no pipe we must admit, but go to It;
stick and conquer. Show that you are
long on grit. It’s a cinch your Job
will seek you when you show you've
got the stuff. When you prove that
you're a comer and not slipping us a
bluff. Make your preparation thor-
ough. Work can’t put you on the
bum. Grab the Job that suits your
fancy; then go to It; \p . ^ o. a
make ’er hum.
L
“GINGLES JINGLES”
"GINGLES JINGLES”
LEAVING HOME.
We never cared to wander,
but we did one time vamoose.
It was years ago, when we were
callow squab. We waved a fond
farewell to pals, from home ties
we broke loose; we were headed
for the city and a Job. Our garb
was not the latest, we were sad-
ly out of date, In our cotton
hand me-downs we were a
sight; but thought beneath our
tacky lid we had within our pate
all the goods that we would
need to put us right. We took
the G. M. Flyer and obeyed the
city call, and we soon were gllm-
mlng incandescent lights; but
found for bumpkin ways and
togs the city would not fall, and
In short were Jolted from our
dizzy heights. Our kick of shin
Ing shekels made its getaway
with ease; disappointed, hun-
gry, broke, we longed for home.
A train dispatcher saved our life,
when we. upon our knees, took
the pass and said we never
more would yt . a. t
roam. ^***\H-
w
GETTING BUSY.
I said to myself with a sort of grin,
you cannot arrive, if you do not kick
In. You've squandered enough of your
valuable time. Come through and get
busy or give up the climb This earth
Is no morgue and no place for the
d.'ones, so speed to the limit or want
for the bones. You had a good start,
your equipment was fine. You could
have made good had you but kept In
line. So blame yourself If your luck
has broke wrong. The guide posts
were many as you went along. You
can’t blow your coin and make pleas-
ure your God, or you will wind up six
feet under the sod. So right about
face, make a start for the heights, and
capture a crown for the fellow who
fights. You know that you can't make
the summit with ease, and that to
make good you can't do as you please.
You know that you must pay the price
tf you win, but you will get nowhere
If you don’t begin. Then switch on
the current, release all the brakes.
Get down to the real stuff and cut out
the fakes. Develop a punch and
go In for a place. You're never too
old to get Into the
race.
| "GINGLES JINGLES”
“LET 'ER SLIDE."
When your troubles seem to come In
flocks, and you are sorely tried, and it
looks as though the clouds would never
break, you can smile If you will do
so, you can say. I’ll let ’er slide. Just
relax and see the change that It will
make. Watch the rays of Joyous sun-
shine brighten up the path for you,
when the woes have pulled their
freight and you are free. Being cheer-
ful Is a habit Just, the same as feel-
ing blue; cut the grief and say. It’s
let ’er slide for me. I will change my
ways of thinking; I’ll enjoy Instead
of fret. What’s the use of wasting
time in feeling sad. Being overanx-
ious never has done any good as yet,
so I’ll ditch the whine and cut out
feeling bad. I will go In for a pleas-
ant time and laugh dull care away;
I’ll disperse the thoughts of discon-
tent, and face the sun today. Feeling
good is Just the knack of knowing
how. It is worth a little solid thought,
when you are batting wide to adjust
your mental works to come across
and forget your cares and troubles
and say. I’ll let ’er slide. Do not ba
controlled. Insist y>. n. a
that you are Boss. iKyta
"GINGLES JINGLES”
CHEER UP.
It’s sure a great world and we
like it. 1 wish we forever could
stay. It’s up to the letter, could
be no better, cheer up and enjoy
It today. Go scamper around ’mid
the beauties, and kiss nature's
sweet honeyed lips. The world
and its blessings can use our
caressings, cheer up and forget
all the slips. Today ne'er again
shall be with us; it goes and shall
uever return; don't kill it with
worry, swing in and be merry;
cheer up, there is sunshine to
burn. The bright golden harvest
is ready, go gather it in while It's
there; don't wait for tomorrow,
disperse gloom and sorrow, cheer
up and forget all your care. Tho
world is to us what we make It;
it hands back the things that we
give, our grief and heart aching
is all our own making, cheer up
and begin now to live. Lick up-
ward and see not the shadows the
dark clouds of sorrow may cast;
It’s great to be living, and we
with thanksgiving, should gladly
smile on to the sp . n. t
last.
"GINGLES JINGLES”
DISCOURAGEMENTS.
Get the right attitude and get
on the right track. It’s the
right mental slant is the thing
that you lack. If you're out for
a Joy ride and don’t give a cuss,
you had better change wagons,
you're on the wrong bus. For
you can't go the limit in pleas-
ures unwise and be up on the
Job with the hard-working guys.
And for you to start slipping
will give you the blues, then
discouragement comes and
you’re listed to lose. So get
wise in the start and live simple
and plain. There is nothing
you’ll miss, but there’s much
you will gain. Your discourage-
ments always arc backed by a
cause, for they show you are
shy on obeying the laws. And
the moods of discouragement
stand in your way. You can
never succeed and permit them
to stay. It is all up to you and
it’s in your own hands. You
should think It all over and
make your demands. And then
simply stand pat when you put
in the claim, and your wants
will come over If you're only
game. Your discouragements
beat it if given a chance. So
Just chain the blue devils and
on with the y> . . n. a
dance. tkjgttA
r
“GINGLES JINGLES”
GAME LOSER.
Just be a game loser. Don’t
howl when you're atung. Let no
one get wise to the fact you got
bung. They don’t care a rap,
all they'll do Is to talk, and say
serves him right, he was always
a gawk. The lid for your trouble
and put It down hard. Let-
nothing get by your most vigi-
lant guard. You can If you will
face the music and say, There's
no one more happy than I am
today. We all have our troubles,
but mine I forget. I don't har-
bor worries. I’ve no rooms to
let. There’s someone at homo
all the time every day. I'm wise
to my cue and I know how to
play. I'm shy on the dollars.
I’ve no coach and four, but Jit-
neys are plentiful right at the
door. I care not for either the
way that I feel. I’m healthy and
strong on the pedalmobile. Let
those take It easy who want to
get sick. I’d rather work hard
and be there with the kick. I’ll
not make a murmur or loosen
®y Kflp. no matter how far
down the ladder I slip. I’ll take
a new hold, never minding the
drop, and make a bee line again
straight for the \p . a. a
top.
"GINGLES JINGLES”
NOT 80 MUCH.
Do not think the world can’t
get along without you, do not
think she'll cut out whirling when
you blow; we’ll admit you are a
cog. In the wheel that makes us
Jog, you aro needed but you're
not the entire show. Do not get
It In your bean that wo must
have you, or the doings on this
earth will go to smash; you aro
but a common skate, and regard-
less of your fate, you will never
cause a universal crash. There
will come a time when you'll be
but a memory, when you'll live
within the thoughts of but a few;
and the rank and file will say, ho
has checked and gone his way—
he was not bo bad—we’re sorry
that he blew. Then you’re blot-
ted from the minds of men for-
ever they’ll forget that you were
molded for the place; things will
move along the same, as when
you were in the gamo; someone
will step In and fill the vacant
■pace. So forget the thought that
you are all-important, things will
move right on when you have
pulled your freight; thiB old earth
will never care, whether you are
here or there—It will speed on
never changing \p . a. a
In Its gait.
"GINGLES JINGLES”
"GINGLES JINGLES”
8LEEP,
I cannot sleep, the yokel said.
It seems I'm shifty in the bead,
when I put in to clear. No nods
are batted 'neath my roof. I’m
muchly wrecked from head to
hoof. I'm going bugs I fear.
There is for me no sweet repose.
No naps I cop; I cannot doze.
I am a wretched guy. The
Somnus kid has scampered
hence and who can tell just
when or whence. He'll put a
nick in I. The poor unsteady
boob was sad. I said to him,
Wouldst thou be glad, an earful
I will hand. He said if you will
slip the guff I’ll soak It up; no
thought I’ll muff. I’ve tried to
stick, but fanned. Said I, 'tia
well; Just follow me and slum-
bers I will give to thee, but you
must go it straight. Cut out the
Jitney torch and suds and blow
your coin for steak and spuds
and clean house in the pate.
Then floor a job and hold ’er
down. Toss up the nighthawk
stunts in town. Hike early to
the hay; thus from bang over
Jags you're freed. Three-cush-
lou bracers you’ll not need and
■leap well, I \p.
should say. V^yUA
"GINGLES JINGLES”
PLAYING THE FIDDLE.
It a nice to fiddle, right you should—
to play the fiddle, does you good, but
If you play when you should work, you
waste your time and learn to shirk;
but when you’re sure you've done your
best and know that you deserve a
rest, though folks complain as many
will, and say that you're a worthless
pill; Just grab your fiddle, play a tune,
and you will find out very soon, that
you’ll feel cheerful, bright and good,
to shake the blues will be a pud; but
when at work forget your play, and
put your fiddle right away. Apply
yourself with ail your soul. Aim high
and strive to reach your goal. Work
hard for that’s the way to win; the
Job's halt done, when you begin, but
when all In and tired out. don’t sit
around and whine and doubt. Just
get your fiddle by the gills and fill
your carcass full of thrills. If you
can't fiddle, you can walk, or read a
book or have a talk. The fiddles do
not all have strings; they're hobbles
that with good cheer rings. The Ad-
dling spirit is our need, that from our
task we can be freed. Old Nero fid-
dled, which waa sound, while Rome
was burning to the ground. He did
not fret, he did not stew, as you or
I no doubt would do. He was no fire de-
partment guy, ao simply passed the
matter by. The man who fiddles never
•ours, but fiddles dur- \p . n . a
Ing fiddling hours. ikyttA
SELF-RELIANCE.
Just learn to rely on yourself as
you go. The more you will do this,
the stronger you grow. To lean upon
others Is mighty poor biz, aud he who
will try It is bound to get his. For
when you leau heavy the props ars
released and then you are dumped cn
the skids that are greasod, and
straight to the down and out club you
will slip, to mingle with hobos who’d
not take the tip. Then stop the do
scent, for it leads to the pen, where
many have landed who might have been
men, had they but have learned or
themselves to rely, and not been such
dubs but gone in for a try. So do your
own digging and draw your own p!ans,
make use of your head and work hard
with your hands, and don't be a trailer
but get In the lead. The men that
make good are the men that we need.
Do something worth while and depend
on yourself. Get into the game and
come down off the shelf. There's
work to be done, so get busy at once.
Forget all your troubles and don’t be
a dunce. Come out in the open; look
upward and climb, you all have a
chance and ail you have the time.
Rely on yourself and have faith
and don't shirk. The medals are
only for those who yj . n, a
will work.
"GINGLES JINGLES”
CUT THE CON.
If you’re a loyal member of the old
Wind Jammer Clan, You better change
your tactics, cut the con and be a man.
You’ll find that people as a rule are
hep to hot air stuff. It’s up to you to
cut the con, They’re Jerry to your
bluff. The backwoods guy is most ex-
tinct and suckers 'bout as few, As
healthy oysters hidden in a hotel oys-
ter stew. The public now has come
across with filbertB freighted strong,
On how to dope the proper line on
chatter that is wrong. Get wise at
once and cut the con, Be honest, true
and fair, And folks will soon begin to
know that you are on the square. The
sledding will not be so hard, when peo-
ple know you’re right. You’ll gain
their confidence and help and stage a
winning fight. There's nothing stands
so solid, nothing pays so well today,
As being on the level in the things
you do and say. For people know your
motives, You reflect the thoughts you
think, And if you’re not four square
and right, they’ll put you on the blink.
So get the hunch and cut the con, let
folks know where you're at, And
watch success come skidding through
red hot right off the \p . „ n . a
bat
Oklahoma Free Employment Bureau
Furnishes Hotels, Contractors, Farmers and all other Employera—
Offices located in Tulsa, Oklahoma, Enid and Muskogee.
Tulaa Office Located Corner of Second and Boston, Tulsa, Okla.
Phone 3540
DAVE L EASTERLY, Supt.
¥MTIQNAL¥
CAPITAL ATTAIN
Ayww%^vwvw>
President Wilson’s Oid Typewriter Cannot Spell
^WASHINGTON. When President WWIxlson wrists a mexsagXe to cou
I* gRezs It looks something like tbiZ”s* In addition to which the
machine's alphabet is badly chewed as to legs and shoulders. The space bar
suffers from Intermittent paralysis.
uur&r Boms of ths letters are virtually muta.
WHtRT IS SO Others have bold, black faces The
THAT LfTTfft (jCl *7. ribbon is about as fresh and whole
U_ / •• a battle flag In a museum, 'ilia
*• ■' A An r—V mechanism generally is decrepit, and
limps heavily tlirou h tha affairs of
state only under the severest presi-
dential goading. Mr. Wilson admits
It is far from faultless, but ho likes it,
and ho is very proud of tho fact that
It has no hyphen.
. You couldn't get a typewritten
line out of the president on any machine but this one—not even with a dark
lantern aud a Jimmy. White House humorists say he has hand raised the poor
Old thing so long he has developed a personal attachment for It. If so, thut
la the only valuable attachment it has.
bor years and years the ancient machine has endured professorial, nu
thorial and preiidentlal pecking. And pecking Is right, for Mr Wilson la a
dlaciple of the Hunt aystem, or forefinger hesitation.
V\ herefors It may be said that this is the only typewriter that ever had
the distinction of having hesitated with a president
The low, rakish form of this ancient, rusty friend of the president re
poses In his library. They understand each other's idiosyncrasies anil eccen-
tricities and they stand together at any time to battle submarines, blockades
of neutral ports or a—a—oh, any darned thing.
Stanley & McCune
FUNERAL DIRECTORS
New Location
415 SOUTH BOLDEN
Motor Ambulance
Phene 1522-1000 \
Starting Lively Campaign for Trade in China
AN aggressive campaign to obtain for American business a share in ths
t\ development of the enormous resources of t’hlna has been planned by
the departments of state and commerce. Tho plan contemplates the develop-
ment of an American vested interest
In China that will Insure to the United
States a fair share of that country's
foreign trade and be powerful enough
to take cars of Itself In the compli-
cated political and commercial situa-
tion there.
The scheme was developed by
Paul 8. Retnsch, minister to China;
Julian H. Arnold, commercial attache
at Peking, and Dr. Edward E. Pratt,
chief of the bureau of foreign and
omestic commerce. Mr. Reinsch
rought to Washington a program framed by himself and Mr. Arnold, which
was submitted to Doctor Pratt, Secretary Lansing, anil other officials. II
was generally Indorsed, and the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce
has already begun work along the lines suggested. Mr. Arnold will return to
tho United States this winter and tour tho country to secure capital for in-
vestment In China.
State department officials have been watching commercial conditions in
(Jhlna since the recent granting of extensivo special privileges demanded by
Japan. No political steps have been taken to obtain concessions or privileges
for Americans, however, and the policy of the government has been stead-
fastly against commercial politics such as other nations have employed in
China. The plan now proposed will, It is expected, develop an American In-
terest there which will be powerful enough to moot tho competition of other
nations.
Doctor Pratt pointed out that American capital was piling up as a result
of the European war, aud that vast sums of idle money aro avaiiahio for In-
vestment. The bureau expects to take advantage of every opportunity now
offered In China and to have an American interest strongly Intrenched there
at the close of the war.
Work in the desired direction has already been begun by agents of tin
commerce bureau In the United States, and several New England- business
men aro now In China closing contracts for the Installation of American
machinery in cotton mills built under Chinese government supervision.
White House Social Secretary Must Know a Lot
•pHB appolntement of a new social secretary at the White House has served
1 to direct attention to the Important duties of this “official,” about whom
so little is usually heard and yet who wields a remarkable power in direct-
ing the social affairs of the admlnis
The
Tulsa County
Chief
E
4h)?
$1.00 a Year
50 Cents for Six Months |
i£K25]
Only Real, Genuine,
True-to-Principles of
the Democratic Party
Weekly Newspaper
Published in Tulsa
• •
• •
Subscribe Now—$1 a Year
TULSA COUNTY CHIEF )
Hanal Y jar Book and;.ncydcpedia
• 9
ft
.vri-Vl'etk.y Constitution, One Year ( fo <
OU hen Larmiirj (Weekly), One Year ) : olj.>
tration.
It is generally acknowledged in
Washington that tho now social seo
retary, Miss Edith Benham, a daughtei
of tho late Rear Admiral Benham, has
brought to the post qualifications
which ought to insuro tho success ol
the social regime of the new mistress
of tho White House.
First, tho social secretary at ths
White House must be a lady born and
i bred. She must have had experience
in Washington society and have learned that It Is an unpardonable offense
»°h?dlR l»the Wlfe °f a Unlted States senator to stop In or be seated at a
table before the wife of an ambassador. She must know all tho rules of! ft yl. ww*
precedence down to the dotting of the ’Ts” and the crossing of tho ’Ts" She / ’ * £ S f O IV Ol I HP iTJ D <3
must be a woman who will never forget that no one may properly precede VI » H ^ IfUk Ail B
an ambassador and his wife except the president of the United States the
vice presideat and the members of the cabinet and their wives.
Not only must this question of precedence be thoroughly understood by
the social secretary in Washington, but she must also kuow each and every
individual In the wealthy resident and unofficial circles, it Is necessary for
the invitation list maker to know the personal and social standings of all
whom her employer may meet or from whom she may receive calls.
The social secretary at the White House has charge of the social mall
and the visiting lists. She opens and replies to every formal note, and after
conference with the mistress of the White House accepts whatever engage-
ments she thinks should be accepted and sends regretB to those her Judgment
dictates she should reject. Sometimes it has been said that the. White House
•octal secretary stretches her Ingenuity a little aud manipulates tho dates and
•ngagements of the first lady of the land so that she may accept those which
are considered especially desirable and turn down tho others.
Jflfl
openings During 3§i5
It Is No Wonder That Guard Jones Exploded
'■'HERE is a man who stands guard near the entrance to the grounds at
I Mount Vernon, and while his name may not be Jones, still again it may
bs Jones, so Jones It must be until further Information. He was attending
strictly to his own business ono day
not long ago, when an Englishman of
most pronounced type entered the
gate. Mr. Jones is used to having
people thrilled as they set foot upon
that sacred soil, but this Englishman
did not display the least sign of a
thrill. He looked at Jones and aBked:
“What is there to be seen here,
my man?"
Now, Mr. Jones is exceedingly dis-
pleased when spoken to In that fash-
ion, and probably showed It in his re-
ply, which was that some of the hedges of boxwood were very ancient. The
burly Briton moved on and looked things over in the garden. It wasn't long
before be returned to Mr. Jones, and, fixing his stolid gaze upon that warden
Of the (acred soil, made free to remark;
“Why, I see Mr. Washington got these box trees from England.”
Jones exploded:
"Taa, and what's mors, ho got this whole country from England. Good
by."
r
s
National
YEAR BOOK
and iJicyclopedia
A1
017 TieeJ thin riffw N.ittoti.il Ymj
*■ Hook. Alin tl.ac ■ !
pedi& for i 91 'j —)ot«> fu ■•*!.» • , < -..*• It
-creiT Iwirff on -'jl ,i ivn It-,
i *Jffr your copy today. I i ml;,
full of intoreatliii; Ij -t . -Ij'
information.
“Tdc bssl fcnol. ol . e !< „<i
Ilif lioiiir ever j»u'i;i>ue i”
whole
'COUflBfl
1 FROM
fMUM,
Rob Grocery Store.
While one man stood guard in front
of the place two others entered tho
Hawkins grocery in West Tulsa about
l o’clock last night, held up the pro-
prietor and rifled the cash drawer
of about $6. The police were notified
at once and descriptions furnished
but no trace of the robbers had been
found at an early hour this morn-
Ins.
RAILROADS PUBLICITY POLICY.
Tlie railroads aro very anxious for
the people to know that tie railroads
are not being treated fairly. The
people would be moro worried about
this if they t-.ad not learned in one
way or another, n pr.-nt many thlnr-
which the reilroads for years tried
to keep them from learning. And the
railroads would not today he coming
to the people for relief If tho "old
methods" of getting results could be
used.
Aii elaborate <•< ncrlj>. ;<»u of the
•food thing* to i>< found v. ilhin it«
'•ovrrs is not porsiIn in th:n njiuct,
but here is u bn«f i vUicli
v !l ifive an idea T the wide rar*-;
f mi 1>leclH treated.
jOl /' J nporlBnt Kvciiin of IIH.1, Includ ni
'j •i*n account or trie *»ieai world war
With chronology, I .ip'*:, it..
*7 * 'tl. tJcirna?!) and o * ii : maUrp
/ ' , y of Interest
laiarae »lalter, showing caleiKiH-*-
^ I *-'tr .loinic .1 talculut.ona. 1r*a1
holidays, ready rc fercnce cnlendar
Air 200 years, etc
.rtlcle* and statistics «»• **nch ••
ly Sabjrct* nr the i.' ’’np.s\.i'i , r.
Industrial TlclfU.oi's th. 1 :a£U'
for National D-'.cn.- . The U-rjiic
Tribunal, triff 1'i. • ’ • I Sintcs A run
and Navy, the VU • or c-f Com-
merce of th? United dtatr.,, Boy
.Scouts o t Arne rim, C'lrnj. •Tire
■i l‘asm! st/,.. n,s in.-h, s Reclamation Service, . to-
i<r«!rrji| l,ui»t i;j which ill a-c vital-
v i<,t■ |«mJ, ,-u. ii ns Pun* Food, Interstate Commerce, Income Tax. Tariff.
... .j.-iv . I:.i l: ur.d Curu ncy, Copyright. J^n-», etc.
Ittili Littii n 11’ Suffrage, Marriage and Divorce, Klght*Hour Day.
. . ; .r ; lU'cordM, Liivi i ecoi U* in aviation, automobile spe^d retordH, baseball
i ' moliu:, Olympic games, etc.
i • i..;h Ion uin! MuHmIIcm on Agriculture. Manufacturing and Mining Induj*
D-litic.il D irth-a and many other vital thing*.
; ii>tlv«* Article* of each state in the union, treating of physical featuro*
t lea, go eminent, etc., climate and h *
I.-w ho. k . - »h«- biygent. wi have ev.r '■•fferffd our readers There er#
tl tnda of i. fferent nubjecta are covered* and averythlnif right
■ to the minute—it annw-ra every question.
\ ourself
Get ii t.o|iy Tor
UI KERN MitMfNG
i uls i Ion of over 75,Of,
•llou't II ir. 'Mfv lwHr \tlgh^er’*.
Published In Atlanta every week. 1b effognlfcffd a*
. • of ti a s? f.^rrn journal* in the south It hai
, i, 4 *.vM- j circulated fn m Virginia f ■ Tex'1:-., It
n ©very topic of Interest i Lite fr*:rn<»r and ’he farmer* »v'.fe, and ! »n
riiv on pouihern f.irminu • id me, ... - he problem.-* of ihe *outhern farmer.
N*!\FiKIY I DIMS tl I r II; W 1 ,hrc’ with an
- - llhtnu V v!l7ft|ILll<nY ,t. -8t lew-. It 1* the bl.t illustrated
.1 >cr m the c<-entry, and, hetdde* t.* n *, carries mnnv department*
- f to «*ll t- • f.'inlly. I'* oontlnu- d ories, humor and - tlitor M# arv of
* 'f or-! r -inuh.ng it 'The fandarcl i ovvspaper of th« xoutb “
"svt* 'lutm-’d ’ -'t in I i-lubh.iiK r*t• • s which en i! ! • > maVe the
'm iriarkn l Iff < n er for ca«h subnet ipt im Copy of the V i.- Hook and
• '-" iUh-i’i 1 , nn" and Tri We 7y ConstituM-M can bt> m<vi1 at
’> *' om-e, r i . a y, •, aubseriptltoi and lake luwu.-vje of thh
t'kuhjc offer.
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Jones, J. D. Tulsa County Chief (Tulsa, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, March 17, 1916, newspaper, March 17, 1916; Tulsa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1042696/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.