The Hennessey Clipper (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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The Hennessey Clipper
The Sprague Ptg. Co., Pubs.
AIRSHIPS TO BRING MANY
PEOPLE TO WICHITA
OUR STATE CAPITOL LETTER
HENNESSEY.
The sleeping sickness Is Increasing
"—In Philadelphia.
0KLA~ PREPARATIONS ARE BEING MADE TO HANDLE BIG CROWD
AT THE AVIATION MEET
Thl6 Is the season when Ash is con-
sidered u fine brain food.
MAY 4th, 5tli AND 6th
The harem skirt seems destined to
t short life an ! an exciting one.
In Russia they call the hurem s',drl
k. "jupeeullotte." That ought to kill
It.
Our notion of the height of folly is
an all attempt to shoot up an ocean
tiner.
The crusade against the housefly
this year is to be exceedingly strenU'
011.1
Man has worn the trousers too long
to allow women to appropriate thein
without protest.
Sleeping slcknesB Is said to be car-
ried by gold-fish. Don't allow your
gold-fish to run at large.
Wichita, Kan.—These are busy
times in the offices of O. A Boyle,
who is bringing the ilig Aviation Meet
to Wichita, May 4th, 5th and Gth. for
it is here that all the plans are laid to
make this meet as big a success as
they have been in other cities.
And don't imagine for a moment
that it is a small matter to see that
all the preparations are made, either.
First, there is the question of getting a
suitable location for the meet a place
where the aeroplanes may start and
alight easily; hangars la place where
the machines are kept) for the rita-
chines; stalls for the automobiles,
where every man having an auto may
reserve a location before hand; and
finally, the question of arranging seats
and the necessary enclosure for the
in the city this week and told Mr.
Boyle, "You may count on me to
bring at least a dozen from Fairview.
Another man with a Rooseveltian fam-
ily said, "I will be responsible for
bringing my nine."
Another feature of the publicity
work is the posting of bills and win-
dow cards, and the newspaper adver-
tising For this latter Mr. Boyle says
he is using more than one hundred
and fifty different papers published In
(he various towns of Kansas and Okla-
homa, and several hundred thousand
people who are naturally in Wichita's
trade territory will read of this Meet. ,
The programs covering the three
days' flight have not yet been publish-
ed, but it is an assured fact that we
w ill get to see all the latest and most
DOINGS OF THE
OKLAHOMA
STATE OFFICERS.
A Brief Resun*-e of What Our
"Hired Men" Are Doing, How
They Spend Their Time, Etc.
Among those who are not kicking
about the weather are the youthful
•portsnien who play "mibs."
Black frost has killed the Georgia
peach crop, though perhaps white j
frost would have been as bad
Despite electricity In its various
uses, the mule goes right on becom-
ing every year more valuable.
■ti
;•
Jail sentences should not be con-
fined to women smugglers. The male
wholesalers should get their share.
Paris affirms that modistes are born
and not made. It is a pity that hats
and gowns do not come the same
*ray.
A new revolution Is threatened In
Turkey. It begins to look as if Tur-
key must have Spanish blood In its
▼*ins.
A Chicago mail order house has Just
•hipped 10,000 alarm clocks to China.
What China really wants is something
eat.
One man predicts the end of the
world in 1912 and another sees the
coming of the millennium in 1915.
One of them must be wrong.
A Danish warship going to Green-
land will be the first craft of that kind
to enter the arctic circle. Let us
hope it will not get cold feet.
Eugene Ely in his Belmont Racer with which he won the Internationa
Trophy at Rheims. Ely will fly In this machine at Wichita, May 4th, 5th
and 6th.
If radium is to become the rival of
coal as a heat producer the coal pro
ducers think that their article should
be nearer the price demanded for the
rival article.
An American girl is alleged to have
paid $25,000 for a handkerchief In
Paris a few days ago. Foolish maid-
en. She might have bought an inter-
est in a French count for that price.
A lady who seems to have investi-
gated reports that one may live to be
150 years old if one will take the pre-
caution to avoid the use of heavy un-
derwear She is likely to get in bad
with the wool producers.
grounds. This requires considerable
thought and attention, but there are
other preparations which are equally
important. For instance, getting the
people to and from the grounds quick-
ly. The Arkansas Valley Interurban
company are tackling this problem in
earnest. A spur track is being built
at the grounds, and an extra siding or
two for passing cars is being put in.
Arrangements have been made for
enough cars to handle an enormous
crowd quickly and well.
And then there is the publicity work.
Thousands of letters have already
been sent out to business firms, lodges
and individuals in Kansas and Okla-
homa telling them about the meet,
and urging them to come. This work
is already showing results. One busi-
ness man from Fairview, Okla., was
thrilling stunts known to aviation,
such as bomb-dropping, the spiral
glide, altitude flights, etc.
These three days will be red-letter
days on the calendar of Wichita Ou
each of the three mornings thore will
be a big baseball game—two Wichita
vs. Denver and one Wichita vs. Lin-
coln. The Kansas State Association
of Elks will also have a big convention
in Wichita on these three dates, and
W. M. Dedrick. who is Acting Secre-
tary, says they are planning for from
five to ten thousand Elks to be here
at that time, and witness the flights
Many of the wholesale houses and
traveling men are boosting for the avi-
ation meet, and they say they expect
to see here on these days one of the
biggest crowds Wichita has ever had.
There is a natural precedent to sup-
port the tale of the New ^ ork dog
which is turning black as the result
of eating a black kitten. Plenty of
human beings eat crow and, as a rule,
it makes them look black.
Another kidnapper has Just been
sentenced to twenty-five years' im-
prisonment. At this rate of effective
Justice the kidnappers, when they re-
gain their liberty, will find their pe
culiar industry among the lost arts.
Mr Arnold and the American Lady.
Matthew Arnold was sitting in hi«
study one morning when the butler
showed in an American lady and a
small boy. Tho lady said, "Glad to
make your acquaintance, Mr Arnold.
I have often heard of you No don't
trouble to speak, sir: I know how
valuable your time is." Then turning
to the boy she said: "This is him,
Lenny, the leading critic and poet
Somewhat fleshier than we had been
led to expect!"—A. C. Benson, In the
Atlantic.
An investigation recently brought
out the fact that students of a well-
known college are being supplied with
skim milk. If the theory is correct
that men are what they eat. no wonder
need be expressed at the opinion late-
ly delivered by a prominent lecturer
that the colleges are turning out
crooks.
It is proposed in Nevada to allow a
prisoner sentenced to death to make
choice between hanging or an Instant
and painless poison. Taken in connec-
tion with its willingness to sever un-
pleasant marital bonds for any old
reason, this new proceeding certainly
establishes past argument that the
State of Nevada has a most obliging
disposition.
A Gotham magistrate complimented
in his court a wife who resented a
beating with a forcible remonstrance
conveyed by a stove lid If all wives
were so resourceful with the family
furniture there would be no need of
the whipping post, and even the sen-
timentalists could not complain that
a wife injured her husband's *elf-re-
cpect by not taking her beating* with
patient submission.
Buddhism and Animal Life.
It must be said of Buddhism that It
has left one Indelible mark all over
India. China, and the enst, and that j
is the teaching of gentleness and
kindness to one another and to ani
mals Buddha taught that life is but j
a prolonged endeavor to escape from i
suffering, and that, therefore, to '
carise others to suffer is the unfor
glroable sin. —Price Collier in Scrib
ner's .Magazine
Greatest Thing In Life.
Neither rich furniture, nor abund-
ance of gold, nor a descent from an
Illustrious family, nor greatness of au-
thority, nor eloquence and all the
charms of speaking, can produce ao
great a serenity of life as a mind
free from guilt, kept untainted, not
only from actions, but purposes, that
aro wicked.—Plutarch.
Dressing a Chicken.
"So you think you can dress a
chicken?" "Oh. yes," said the amDl-
tious bride "I saw my uncle take a
clock apart once, You Just number
the pieces as yon take 'em out "
The students of a well-known worn
en's college will probably be thrown
Into spasms of Indignation by the
statement of one of them that plain
girls go to college to try to compote
•with rivals more endow. d with natural
gifts in the i; .itrinionial market that
pretty and attractive girls do not nee!
college training to secure husbands.
This fran. conf< salon will not help to
popularize college education, nor the
exponent:-, ithcr. of such startling
candid theories.
Colonial Meeting Houses In Winter
In winter the colonial meeting house
was a cold place. It may be said
that the congregation sat "shivering
on the brink" of i>erdition. if the icy
temperature of the house and the ter-
rible doctrines of the sermon are to
be taken together. Samuel Sewall
notes that there was a "great cough-
ing" in the congregation; that the
sacrament bread was frozen hard as
pebbles, and pieces of It rattled as
they fell In the pewter plates —
Bliss's "Side Glimpses."
Llrolt of Trouble.
Three times on the run between
Worthing and Shoreham the beautiful
prima donna's nearly new car had
broken down. Ultimately coaxing It
to enter Brighton, the fair lady re-
ceived in th« hotel porch the solicit
tude of a sister artiste who had pass-
ed her on the road. "Much trouble
with my car, dear?' she echoed, bit-
terly. 'Why, I couldn't have more trou-
ble If I was married to the blessed
machine!"—Sporting Times.
Cause of Red Hair.
Hed hair i* of that color, says a
scientific Journal, because it has In
its composition a larger proportion oI
sulphur than black hair.
A Treasure Indeed.
The woman who can both act and
think for herself Is h treasure indeed
to the man lucky enough to possess
her—"Madame "
Piano Hint.
A small bag of unslacked lime hung
Inside, underneath the cover of the
piano will catch dampness and pr*
vent rust of the wires.
Exemptions Under Land Tax Law.
A detailed statement of the exemp-
tions has been given to the state au-
ditor by the attorney general's office.
According to this statement the first
320 acres is exempt, without regard
to its value, and the second 3-0 is
also exempt If its value does not ex-
ceed $20 per acre. If its value exce. ds. j
that figure, tax must be paid on the
excess.
All holdings above C 40 acres are sub-,
ject to tax, but on the basis of a valu-
ation of $20 per acre, so that a man
who had 040 acres excess, valued at
$10 per acre, would have to pay ta^.
on only B20 acres, while the man who
owns the same amount of land worth
$40 per acre would have to pay ta\
on 1,280 acres. The opinion was giv-
en in reply to an inquiry from the au-
ditor, submitting a letter from Joseph
Jos. A. Schmits, a Kay county asses-
sor. in regard to a specific case in
that county.
The county attorney also holds that'
it makes no difference in how many
counties the land may be located-
Governor Revokes Bootlegger Parole.
Governor Cruce has revoked the
parole of Will Reed of El Reno, con-
victed of violating the prohibitory
law, and released by Governor Has-
kell on January 7, 1911. He was sen-
tenced to 00 days in jail and to pay a
fine of $200 and costs. He paid $100
on the fine as one of the conditions
of his parole- The parole was revok
ed on recommendation of the countv
attorney, county judge and sheriff,
who represented to the governor that,
Reed was again charged with boot-
legging.
Lawyer Gives Banker an Opinion.
The state banking board in making
an emergency assessment on state
banks for the guarantee fund cannot
base such assessment upon the de-
posits in a bank on a given day. but
must instead base it on the average
deposits of a hank for the preceding,
year. This is the opinion, given by
J. B. Ferguson of Enid, president of
the Oklahoma State Bankers' associa-
tion, by Percy Simmons, former at-
torney general of Oklahoma territory.
Hobart Land Is Withdrawn.
The state school land commission-
ers issued an order withdrawing from
sale the three tracts of land adjoining
the city of Hobart now held under
lease by the Hobart Industrial com-
pany. The land was leased under the j
provisions of a bill passed by the re- j
cent legislature authorizing commer-1
cial bodies to lease school land within
one mile of a city or town.
State License for Iowa Co.
The fight of the Bankers' Life Ins.
Co. of Des Moines, la., an assessment
company, for a license to solicit busi-
ness in Oklahoma, ended when Insur-
ance Commissioner Ballard gave that
corporation a jermit. Four years a.'.o
'he company was declined a permit
upon the ruling of Commissioner Me-
Comb that the law did not warrant it
Canadian Company to Write Insurance
The London and Lancashire (iuaran-
t.\ and Accident company of Canada,
with headquarters at Toronto, which
was created by a special act of the
Canadian parliament, has applied to
Insurance Commissioner Ballard for a
license to write accident, health and
plate glass insurance in Oklahoma.
GOVERNOR'S STAFF NAMED.
Cruce Appoints Fifty-Three Oklaho- |
man's to Wear State's Gold Lace.
Governor Cruce has announced the
appointment of the members of the
governor's staff to serve throughout
his term, as follows:
Brigadier Generals—Roy E Staf-
ford. Oklahoma City; William Black.
Oklahoma City.
Colonels John R Doolin, Oklaho-
ma City; John R. Williams, Oklahoma
City; Willjam I. Gilbert, Oklahoma
City; James L. Wallace. Oklahoma |
City; Thomas C Harrell, Waggoner:
Xewton L. Medlock. Hobart: J. W.
Zevely. Muskogee; Thomas E. Owen,
Muskogee; E. L. Cralle, Norman:
Hunter A. Cray croft, Oklahoma City;
Charles F. Adams, Oklahoma City;
Clarence H. Douglas. Muskogee; Alva |
J. Miles Sentinel; W. B. Merrill. Elk ;
City; .T TV Gillespie, Tulsa: Earle G. j
Bayless. Claremore: U. S. .Tones, Ard-
more: TT. W. Pentecost. Oklahoma
City; John M. McClelland, Oklahoma '
City: Jack Jones, Oklahoma City.
Lieutenant Colonels—George W.
Key, Lawton; J. T. Sturm, Oklahoma
City: Ed. L. Dunn. Oklahoma City; J.
Frank Loux, Oklahoma Citv; C. .T.
Wrightsman, Tulsa; Boone Hite, Ana-
darko: Klrbv Fltzpatrick, Oklahoma
City; P P. Duffy, El Reno: J. D.
Carmichael. Chickasha; T F. Warren.
Oklahoma City: W. B. Johnson, Ard-
more: Chares Shaw, Lawton: Joseph (
Haskell, Oklahoma City; A. N. Lee-
craft, Colbert: John Davis, Chandler:
D. O. Groff, Atoka.
Majors—Robert TT. Bums, Duncan;
E. IT. Bond. Oklahoma City; Tame-;
Sain. Alva; M. V VanMeter, Oklaho-
ma City: Eugene E. Morris, Oklahoma
City; F. S E. Amos* Vinita; J. S. Mul-
len. Ardmore; Albert C Hunt, Wag-
goner; M. L. Webb, Hugo; J. A.
Adams, Homestead; John Bu ke,
Shawnee; C. F. Dyer. Geary; W. P
Head, Sulphur; John R. Whayne, Ok-
lahoma City; William F. Kerr, Okla-
homa City.
To Sell 1,353.862 Acres.
Announcement has been made by
the stafe school land department that
1.862 acres of school land will he
sold in this state beginning June 23,
Purchasers may buy as many sections
as thev can pay for. Heretofore not
more than a quarter section has been
sold to one man. The purchaser
must pay five per cent in cash at the
time of the, sale. The balance may he
paid in 40 yearly payments. Five per
cent interest is charged on all notes.
Receivership for Company Asked.
Suit has been filed in the district
court here in the name of the state
on relation of P. A. Ballard, commis-
sioner of insurance, and Sam Hooker
county attorney, to require the Union
Mutual Insurance company of Enid to
j show why it is still writing hail insur-
ance when its license has been re-
voked bv the commissioner. A re-
ceiver for the company is also asked.
Demurrage Case to Supreme Court.
The case of the Santa Fe Railway
| company vs. A. M. DeBolt, involving a
general test of the validity of the cor-
poration commission's demurrage or-
ders. has been appealed to the au-
I preme court. There are thirty-six dif-
ferent causes of action, involving from
$1 to $0 each, and totaling only $65,
although the general principal at is-
sue is an important one.
Is Appointed School Inspector.
State Superintendent Wilson has
appointed E. F. Profitt, teacher of
mathematics at the Alva Normal, to
the position of state school inspector,
created by the last legislature.
Trolley Line Files Report.
The report of the El Reno Interur-
ban Railway company to the state au-
ditor shows capital stock of $400,000
and property valuation of $83,405. No
! income is reported.
Bird Jtkyll and Hydt.
The catbird is our northern mock-
ing bird. When love attunes its voice,
It can warble as sweetly as the night-
ingale. You must catch it in one of
its melting moods if you would know
the charm of its liquid notes. It is
not at all beautiful—-no more is the
mocking bir^l — only a grav-brown,
perky, restless thing, of lesser size
than the robin, with the soul of song
in it.
The wonder of the catbird lies, of
course, in this, its dual nature. At one
time it hops about screeching com-
plaints against the circumambient air;
at another there throbs out from its
delicate throat the essence of a divins
melody.—Philadelphia Press.
AN ESTABLISHED FACTORY
Producing standard goods used by stores,
banks, farmers and practically everybody,
is sending its special representative to
oppn a distributing office tor this district
and other unoccupied territory and desires
a resident distributer with $600 to $3,000
in cash, carrying stock for immediately
filling orders; we allow $100 to $200 month-
ly compensation, extra commi-Mon , of-
fice ana other expenses, per contract, ao-
cording to size of district allotted and
stock carried; permanent arrangements;
references required. If you can till re-
quirements write promptlj'. "Liberty"
Manufacturing Association, 230 West lit*
ron St., Chicago.
Cure for His Dyspepsia.
Hogan—Phwal makes ye swally all
your dinner in two minutes, Grogan?
Are yez atin' on a bet?
Grogan—It's for the good av ms
dyspepsy, Moike. Sure the docther
tould me to rist an hour after atin',
and how else am Oi goln' to git the
hour of rist in onless 01 ate loike the
divil?"
Deaths From Wild Beasts in India.
Wild heasts and snakes were the
cause of 21,904 deaths in India in 1908.
Tigers killed 900 people, leopards 302,
wolves 2C9, other wild animals C8G,
and snakes 19,738, while 17.926 wild
animals and 70,494 snakes were de-
stroyed.
Garfield Tea. Herb remedy, overcomes
constipation, indigestion and sicklieadache.
Some men are as easily rattled as
others are hard to shake.
Many a man goes broke—in Health
—then wealth. Blames his mind-
says it don't work right; but all the
time it's his bowels. They don't work
—liver dead and the whole system gets
clogged with poison. Nothing kills
good, clean-cut brain action like con-
stipation. CASCARETS will relieve
and cure. Try it now. ui
CASCARETS Tc a box for a wsek's
treatment. All druggists. Biggest seller
In tbe world. Million boxes a month.
and be compelled to ray to your landlord most
of your hbrd-eerned profits? Own your own
Secure a Free Homestead In
**-nitoha. Saskutchewnn or
Alberta, or purchase
lard in one of these
districts and bank ta
nroftt of SIO.OO or
$ 1 2.00 a it acre
every year.
Land purchased 3
years h*o at $10.00 an
acre has recently
changed hands at
$25.00 an acre. The
& crops grown on these
lards warrant the
advance. You can
Besom® Rich
by cat tie raising,dairying,mixed
farming and grain growing in
the provinces of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta.
Fre« homesteuii nod pre-
emption Hrpn.i, us well us land
held by railway and land com-
fanies, will provide homes
or millions.
Adaptable so!', heulthful
climate, splendid schools
onrt churches.tfood rail>va\ s.
For settlors' rates. (l«*«..-riptivf
literature ,,I.ast Be?t \V '-i,"how
to r u< li tbe country and ot her pur-
tlcnlnrs, write to Sup t Imuii
tr ration, Ottawa, fan ml n. <>r to tbe
Canadian GoTornmeut Agent.
CANADIAN GOYFRMUIT AGENT
Nfc 125 tt. Nnth Street kuut Dir. Si
(17se address ni nrr*t you ) 38
Keeps Back Modernism.
Tis mortmain—the dead hand
that keeps back modernism. So long j
us any institution possesses funds (
there never will be any lack of per
. ons to administer them—Israel Zang
will.
Excellent Knife Hone.
| bona for houae-
hold use can be made by oiling the
• . i' of the grain in a block of wood,
the right bliape, and rubbing em-
cry powder into It.
Water as God Intended It.
Robert Browning shared Thacke-
ray a appreciation of good wine. His
liking for port, never immoderately
Indulged, would seem to have been In
heriud, for he used to tell a story of
his father's Indignation on one occa
slon when he asked for a glass of wa-
ter "Water, Robert!" exclaimed the
elder Browning, in dismay. "For
washing purposes it Is, I believe, often
employed, and for navigable canals I
admit It to be Indispensable, but for
drinking, Robert, God never Intended
it"—London Chrof&ie.
Cruce Defends Guaranty Law.
Aroused by the concerted attacks on j
the Oklahoma hank guarantee law,!
Governor Lee Cruce came to the de-;
tense of the law in a spirited state-!
j ment. The governor, who is a former j
i national banker, defended the law
from the hanking standpoint as well
as from the public standpoint. He de-
I clared unjust and unfair the recent at-
; tacks on the law and said that it
would he vindicated One of his sig-
I nificant sentences is near the close of
| his statement, where he says, "It will
j he the effort of the present banking
| hoard to place the dishonest hanker
! where he properly belongs—in the
i state penitentiary."
Medical Board Members Picked.
I Governor Cruce has named Dr. J. T>
I Whorton of Duncan and Dr. R. T.
I Caatelhury of Ada members of tho
] state board of medical examiners,
I vice Dr. (\ F. Stillwell of Piedmont
I and H. J. Shackelford <>f irdmorei
| who declined to serve. The new
board will elect officers at once- Fifty
' applicants will take an examination to
i practice medicine.
Circuit Court Reversed.
The supreme court of the United
■ States at Washington reversed the
1 judgment of the circuit court of the
i United States for the western district
of Oklahoma, which had dissolved a
i temporary injunction granted to the
Sh ' A' ee Sewerage and Drainage Com
patiy to prevent the city from replac-
ing the company's sewerage pipes by
pipes of its own At the same time
; thi court directed that the action be
dismissed in the lower federal court
j for want of jurisdiction*
Parsons Chosen as New Secretary.
The state board of education at a 1
meeting here selected A. C. Parsons
of Alva, who lias been serving as as-
sistant state superintendent of public
instruction under Superintendent R.
H. Wilson, as secretary of the hoard.
There was a large number of candi-
dates for the place, which is regarded
almost as important as those of the
hoard members. Prof. George A.
Landrtim of Weatherford has been
named by Superintendent Wilson as
assistant state superintendent to suc-
ceed Parsons.
Agents Must Have License.
As a result of a quiet investigation,
State Insurance Commissioner P. A.
Ballard has discovered that ninety-one
insurance agents in Oklahoma have
bc< n selling insurance without taking
out an agent's llcen e from the state.
The insurance commissioner will go
after all who are delinquent if they
do not take out licenses at once.
Agents who have requisitions before j
the commissioner for licenses will not '
h© prosecuted.
Six Wells Produce 1.000 Barrels a Day
The report submitted to the state
auditor by the Finance Oil company j
of Bartlesville, operating in the Osage i
nation, on its production for the quar-
ter ending March ^1, makes one of the'
most notable showings of any report '
of the sort ever received here. With j
only six wells in operation, he pro j
duction from them was over 1,000 bar- i
| rels a day each, or '.7,273 barrels for j
the quarter. The company's tax on j
the production of these six wells for j
I the quarter was $1,092.
Instead of Liquid
Antiseptics°r Peroxide
100,000 people last year u.-ed
Pax tine Toilet Antiseptic
The new toilet permicide powder to be
dissolved in water as needed.
For all toilet and hygienic uses it Is
better and more economical.
To save and beautify the li~'~
teeth, remove tartar and —r-.-,'j
prevent decay.
To disinfect the mouth, de- p •
stroy disease germs, and y
purify the breath. | jl-v
To keep artificial teeth and Ljy" j|^
bridge work clean, odorless
To remove nicotine from the teeth and
purify the breath after smoking1.
To eradicate perspiration and bodj
odors by sponge bathing.
The best antiseptic wash known.
Relieves and strengthens tired, wenk,
inflarnetleye>. Heals sore throat .wounds
ami cuts. 2 and r.n cts. n box. drnygi^ts
or bv mall postpaid. Rumple Free.
THE P AXTON TOILET CO..Boston.Mass.
SiNGlE
mum®
STRAIGHT fiSSCIGJR
Y u P y 10c,
for Cigars
Mot • Goo<S.
F.P.I.EWIS Peoria. Ill
Ci) XJ' ■ (' CO GRANULATED
I* W hull'2-
■— i CAN uL CURtI
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Sprague, G. E. The Hennessey Clipper (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 27, 1911, newspaper, April 27, 1911; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc105758/m1/2/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.