Cleveland County Enterprise. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 25, 1912 Page: 2 of 10
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CLEVELAND COUNTY ENTERPRISE
J. 0. FOX, Manager.
N< ■' MAN OKLAHOMA
Winter should nave been *ent to u
school where stuttering is cured
Both poles have been discovered
but mo"t of us prefer to take a middle
cou rse
In some parts of Spain there are 200
holidays a year This is held to be
excessive.
A year on Mars contains 730 days
.Tust think of the length of the ba«e
hall season
It will readily be observed that
reaching the south pole Is no Sunday
afternoon stroll.
Wp may hear tu*xt that they have
derided In China to do something for
the ultimate consumer.
Yale has given up basketball What
1b to become of our colleges If thla
sort of thing keeps up?
It Is all right to tack calling cards
on the south pole, but election posters
should not tx? pasted there.
A highbrow informs us that a wom-
an la at her best at the age of fifty.
Cheer up, sisters; there is hope
POLL
A California woman wants a divorce
because her husband is faultless It
seems he Is faultless to a fault.
Kgjis sell for five cents a dozen In
China Hut for ordinary purposes
china eggs are not worth even that.
If Is said that Sir Thomas Upton
will get a wife if he wins the cup
Tliere is no limit to Tom's gameness.
"A woman should enjoy a No 6
shoe." says a lady medic. This la
especially true if the woman has
corns
Norway appears to have been stung
by the discovery bug A Norwegian
astronomer says he has discovered a
new star
Shine
Stays
Don't imagine for a
moment that all brands oj
stove polish are alike.
If your stoves become rusty and
dull soon after they arc poii&hed it
shows that you are not using
Liquid and Paste—One Quality
Black Silk makes a brilliant,
silky polish that does not rub off
or dust off, and the shine lasts four
times as iong as ordinary stove
polish.
It is used on sample stoves by
hardware dealers. Sold by them
to those who want good goods.
All we ask is a trial. Use it on
your cook stove, your parlor stove
or your gas range. If you don't
find it the best stove polish you ever
used, your dealer is authorized to
refund your money. Insist on
Black Silk Stove Polish. Don't
accept substitutes. All dealers
can get Black Silk from their job-
bers.
"A Shine In
Every Drop
Krpp your eratrs. registers, fenders and Move
pipea bright and free from rusting by using
BLACK SILK AIR-DRYING FNAMF.I Hrush
free with each can of enamel only
Use BLACK SILK MFTAL POLISH for
silverware, nickel, tinware or brass. It works
quickly, easily, and leaves a brilliant surface.
It has no equal for use on automobile*.
II
A scientist has discovered that wine
can be made of bananas. If It affects
locomotion the way the skins do, take
it away
That coming baby show at Palm
Ifeach will not be a fashionable hc.tel
function, but the result of local en-
terprise
The south pole has been spotted,
but it will prove no more valuable I
than its colleague at the other end
of the earth.
If the courts are going to decide
how much a girl's hat may cost it will
be lucky that women may not servo
on the juries
Chicago will have one of the biggest
aeroplane meets ever held, and it has
arranged already to furnish the neces-1
sarv nky room.
A statistician tells us that the per
capita debt of the United States la
$10 S3 Now, if we could only con
vince our tailor .
Black Silk Stove Polish Works
STERLING. ILLINOIS
Get a Can TODAV
44 Bu. to the Acre
Is a hPiivv yield, butthaf* what John Konn.ulyof
Bduiouton, AllM'rtu. Western I'unadii, sot froin 4U
acres of Hprlntf Wheal in HMO. Hoport.s
from otherdlNt rlctw i n that prov-
ince show e t other excel-
lent re suits—sue h us 4.-
1)00 bushels ot wheat
from l'JU acres, or JW 1 H
bu. oerucre. '26.80and 40
bushel yields werunu in
erons. A.i hi|tb us i:.'J
bushels of oatfl to the
acre were threshed from
Alberta tie ids in 1010.
The Silver Cup
at the recent Spokane
Kalr wns ii warded to t he
Albertii government for
nxhibltof k rulna. urns Res and
(Ulables. HeportK ot excellent
Ids for UU0 come ulso from
ikatchewan and Manitoba in
western Canuda.
I'ree lioin strmls of 1MJO
fiereH. ami u<ljoining pre-
emptions of II0O urreM (at
per Here) ure to be luui
In tne elioieeM <11st r |« ts.
.Schools eonvenieiit, cli-
mate excellent, soil the
very best, rallw ays close at
band. Imi 11 <11 n *; lumber
cheap, fuel easy fogel suol
reasonable In price, water
easily procured, mixed
farming a nucccss.
Write us to best place for set-
tlement. settlers low railway
rates, descriptive lilnst
Americans complain that they are
not safe In Mexico, but there Is no
law compelling Americans to live In
that forsaken country
About the meanest way a man could
(lit was experienced by an unfortu- (
Jiate one In the south who was kicked
to death by a dead mule
Considering tlielr familiarity with
the language shouted by railroad sta- '
tlon announcers and street car con I
din-tors. It seems unreasonable for |
Americans to object to grand opera in
French and German
Archaeologists claim they have dis-
covered the Broadway of Pompeii, but
how do they account for the Jar of
water they found there?
I West" i
nl tn
rinfurtiiu-
Munition,
rto the Uanadla n
Another aviator threatens to fly
across the Atlantic, but up to date,
no newspaper has bought the exclu-
sive rights to Ills story
•\ Pennsylvania farmer has discov-
ered a coal mine In his cellar. This
has been a splendid wfnter In which
to make such a discovery
A Philadelphia!! swallowed poison,
lnlaled ras and cut Ills throat For a
resident of that town he seems to
have been In quite a hurry
We are Informed that a plot to de
throne the king of Siam has been dls
covered Chowfa Malta Vajlravudh's
name Is not the (inly burden he has
to carry
Hiram Maxim Informs us that with-
in a few years armor plate will be
no more effective than cheese And
yet we have met some highly effec-
tive cheese
Nearly all Boston girls are reported
to have bow legs and big feet But
there may tie Boston girls whose left
shoulder blades are pretty
Have vou figured out Just how much
that propofi r| national tax nf ] per
cent on all net earnings In excess of
$5,000 a year is going to cost you?
applli-atl
Hon, to :
Ottawa. (
Government A Kent
W. H. ROGERS
125 W. Ninth St., Kansas City, Mo.
Pleatto write to theapent neareet you
20TH CENT0RY
Corset
M \ LB *70
The Automatic
Boning gives what
the 20th Century
woraa n demands j —
It yields to every
in o v e in e n t of the
body.
1 it bending there Is
a sliding movement
distributing tho
Bt rain.
The Automatic
Steel;; are warranted
not to break for one
year; and no other
corset possesses this
advantage.
AT DBAI FRS $1 Cf|
or sent direct I.JU
WW
BIRDSEY-SOMERS CO.
233 FIFTH AVEN0E,
NEW YORK
We had never heard of 1,1 Yuen )
Tiling until he was elec'e.1 vlce-presl
dent of China It is different In this j
country We never bear of him after-
ward
FOR BEST RESULTS
PLANT BARTELDES
Garden The
Flower Best
Grass That
FicJd Grow
A.sk Your Dealer for Them Today. From
THE BARTELDES SEED COMPANY
Oklahoma Seed House, OKLAHOMA CITV
OQQOOOOQOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
g THE HOMESEEKING FARMER
X looking tor wonderfully productive
TEXAS FARMS
in lieallby c limate, perfect title from
first bands, can have details fur the
asking. Large body Inr selection.
Any good farmer can make this
land pay itself out on our low
prices and easy terms. Address ft
SPUR FARM LANDS 8
SPUR DICKENS COUNTY TEXAS G
.'OOOOOOQOCOCOOOCOCCOCOOOO
Ms ii iviHi i:-. i, I, i.TrlL.rv tli-hnwlci
WMC3M1UEED
FOR VARIOUS MEATS.
By Martha McCulloch Willians.
Every manner of meat, even the
humblest, may be made tender and
palatable by means of paper bag cook
lug, if only the cook knows how anil
Is willing to take the pains. Kven the
humble pig's head and feet. An ex-
treme example, you say! Try It—and
see If you incline to gainsay further.
Scrape the outer skin very clean, cut
off the ears and nose of the head,
scalding both head and feet well and
removing all removable Integument
outside and in. The brains, of course,
will have been removed. Break off any
sharp projecting bones from either
head or feet, blanch them by pouring
boiling water upon them, taking out
and dropping in very cold water, then
drain and season lightly with salt ljiy
In a large well-greased paper bag with
a stalk or two of celery If at hand and
a single slice of onion. The pepper and
herbs come in later. Add half a pint to
a pint of cold water, according to the
bulk of the meat, seal bag tight, lay
on trivet, set in hot oven for five min-
utes, then reduce heat two-thirds and
cook for five or six hours. Take up,
empty into a bowl, and as soon as It
can possibly be handled, pick up, re-
moving all bones. The gristle will
have dissolved. Now add the season-
ing—pepper, powdered herbs, especial
ly sage, a bare dash of tarragon vine
gar, and a bare suspicion of garlic. If
there is much liquid, add either sifted
cornmeal or bread crumbs, both
browned in the oven. Pack smooth in
an earthen mould and let get cold
T^ere will be headcheese worth eating
Nor is stuffed pork tenderloin, which
is as full of relish as either goose or
turkey, or even the lordly baron of
roast beef to be disdained. Get large
fat tenderloins, have them split, but
the halves left together down the side,
lay a good breadcrumb or mashed po-
tato stuffing, highly seasoned with
butter or drippings, pepper, sage, and
onion, in the split, skewer the edges
together over the stuffing, and cook
In a well greased bag with a very little
water until well done. This is special-
ly economical, in that there is no bone
to be thrown away.
Either a fresh ham or shoulder,
boned, stuffed and cooked in a paper
bag, will furnish a mighty satisfying
dinner meat. Tho oven ought to be
very hot and stay so for seven to ten
minutes, depending on the size of the
meat. Then slack heat one-half and
cook until thoroughly done.
A square of rib-pork, the skin cut in
checkers, well seasoned and baked in a
paper bag with apples or sweet po-
tatoes about it, will need no water,
only a well greased bag. Spareribs can
be paper bag baked if care is used in
handling them to see that the rib-ends
do not go through the paper. l>oin-
roast, cooked thus with either apples
or potatoes, or white potatoes with a
slice or two of onion, will make any
hungry soul rejoice.
Perfect capon is none so plenty in
the markets, but if to be had Is the
best of p.ll poultry. Get a big bird-
eight to nine pounds. Stuff, but not
too tight, putting a handful In the
crop-space. Truss extra firmly, fas-
tening thin slices of bacon over the
breast and thighs underneath the trus-
sing strings. Grease all the rest of
the body liberally with soft butter, put
a little butter under the bacon on the
breast, then pop into a loose-fitting
well greased paper bag, lay on a trivet,
set on broiler in hot oven, let cook
till bag corners turn very brown, then
slack heat half, or even a little more
if the heat Is fierce, and cook for an
hour and a half to an hour and three-
quarters.
Choose your goose young and fat,
even though you know the paper bag
will make a tough bird tender. Singe,
wash and drain the same as capon,
and hanging in a cold place a day and
night improves it. For the stuffing
boll mild onions very tender, slicing
them and letting them lie in salt water
half an hour before cooking. A
medium goose will take two to six on-
ions, according to size, and two or
four apples. Peel and slice them, cook
soft with the onions, adding a very lit-
tle chopped celery. Mash all together,
then add to mashed potato enough to
fill the goose, but not too full. Season
with salt and pepper, also a table-
spoonful of powdered sage and a tiny
pinch of mixed herbs. Add a large
spoonful of lard or butter, stir it well
through the hot mass, let it cool a bit.
then stuff the goose, which has been
seasoned Inside and out, truss very
firmly, rub over well with lard, buttec
or drippings, put into a thickly-greased
bag of generous size, add a tablespoon-
ful of cold salt water, seal, and set in
hot oven for ten minutes. Slack heat
half and cook done, allowing twenty-
two minutes to the pound. Serve with
mashed turnips, baked squash, baked
apples or apple sauce, hot corn bread
and sweet cider.
Stuffed Tomatoes, Milanalse.—Cut
out freely the stem ends of six l.-.rge
tomatoes, scoop out the seed and part
of the pulp, dust the Insldes well
with pepper and salt and put a bit of
butter in each. Kill with finely
minced cold meat—beef veal, lamb
or chicken, mixed with minced raw
bacon and seasoned lightly with salt
and pepper. Sprinkle fried bread
crumbs thickly over the lop, put In
a well-greased bag and cook la
a quick oven ten to twelve minutes.
Serve on a very hot dish.
BAKING FAVORITE CAKES.
Paper bag cooking betters cakes ai
much as it does meat or pastry. Please
to keep this fact in mind. Also the
lact that you should never try to make
cakes at haphazard Instead, take a
day or several days off from bridge
and shopping and give your whole
mind to the matter in hand. Decide
first what cakes you care to make,
then reckon up what you will need
lo make them of. Many a good cake
i has been saddened past all remedy
through waiting at the wrong minute
for some essential ingredient, over-
j looked in the general buying,
i Never melt butter unless melted but-'
ter is specifically called for in your
receipt. Set the butter crock outside
the refrigerator for several hours be-
fore you need its contents—the
kitchen temperature will make the but-
ter just right for creaming. Keep
eggs cool—they beat light the quicker
for it. Always add a tiny pinch of
salt to the whites in beginning to
froth them—it makes the frothing
easier and improves the taste. Eggs,
it is needless to say, must be above
suspicion. Sift flour and set it where
it will get warm and dry without
scorching, then sift it again before
| using It. Measure it after the second
[ sifting, and if baking powder or soda
[ and cream tartar are to be put in it,
i add them to the measured bulk, and
| sift a third time.
Cake must be beaten well, and thor-
i oughly, if you want it firm, yet light,
| and of fine, close texture. Sweet milk
J helps to this fine texture. Sour milk
j or cream, contrarywise, tends to a
| coarse, bubbly grain.
Prepare fruit over night, if possible.
Two such flavors as lemon and va-
nilla, vanilla and rose-water, or rose-
water and almond, give to cake a tang
as delicious as it is unusual. A spoon-
ful of brandy or even a good corn
whiskey, beaten well through the cake
Just before the flavoring—which
should be put in the very last thing—
will make the cake lighter, better col-
ored, and of better keeping quality.
Sift spices through part of the flour,
adding the spiced flour alternately
with what is left plain. Always sift
sugar, and more than once if It Is
clammy. Warming it gently helps to
make light cake. It should be sifted
afresh after the warming.
As I have said, paper bag cooking
betters cake as much as it does meat
or pastry. It can be done in the bags,
but 1 advise using in conjunction with
the bags either paper souffle-cases or
very thin tin moulds, square, oblong,
or round, or cases made from the bags
themselves.
To make a square paper-bag mould,
split In half a bag of the largest size,
crease each half gently all round about
three inches from the cut edges, and
fold up each corner neatly, clipping
the folds firmly with two or even three
clips. Brush over this mould liberally
with soft butter, taking care to cover
every fiber. Fill three parts with cake
batter, then slip the loaded moull
Inside a big greased bag which rests
upon a wire trivet. Seal the outer bag,
taking care that it does not press
down the empty upper edges of the
mould Inside, prick two or three small
holes in Its upper side, and set the
trivet on the broiler in a very hot
oven. Put on the shelf above it a
shallow pan filled half way with boil-
ing water, and on the floor underneath
a pan with a little col-.l water. Close
the oven door and leave for ten min-
utes. Take out the water pans then,
and after two or three minutes slack
heat one-half and finish baking. The
time will, of course, depend on the
size and kind of cake.
Paper bag baking Is a little quicker,
and ever so much more certain.
Small patty pans, or fancy-shaped
muffin moulds, filled with cake batter
and baked Inside bags, will afford an
almost Infinite variety of ornamented
good things.
(Copyright. 1911, by the Associated
Literary Press.)
Sweets for the Sweet
By Nicolas Soyer, Chef of Brooks' Club, London.
■paid. N
. I lu
i . .!■. i;,
Beignets a la Portugaise: Wash well
six ounces of Caroline rice, place it In
a clean stew pan, adding four ounces
of powdered sugar, two ounces of but-,
ter, half a stick of cinnamon and a
strip of lemon peel or a very little
grated rind of lemon. Allow the but-
ter to melt, shaking the pan to avoid
burning, then add a pint of milk. Cover
closely and bring gently to the boll.
Then draw the pan to the side of the
fire and simmer slowly for rather more
than a quarter of an hour, when the
rice should have absorbed all the milk
and be perfectly tender. Withdraw
tho pan from the fire and allow the
mixture to cool a little. Then add the
well-beaten yolks of three eggs and
the whites, whisked to a firm froth
with a tiny pinch of salt anil a little
lemon juice. Mix lightly, but very
thoroughly, and then form into balls
about the size of a small tangerine.
Make an aperture in each as carefully
as possible, and insert a small spoon-
ful of either apricot Jam or marmalade
in the middle. Close up neatly, then
dip in egg and breadcrumbs Have
ready a well-greased bag, put In the
beignets, and cook for fifteen minutes.
Take out and serve at once.
(Copyright, 1911, by Sturgis & Walton
Company.)
INTIIMTIONAL
SKTSoiooL
Lesson
E. O. SKLLKRS, Director of Kven-
lni? Department, The Moody Bible In-
stitute of Chicago.)
LESSON FOR APRIL 28.
THE BEATITUDES.
LESSON Tr:XT-Matt. 6:1-12.
GOLDEN TEXT—"Blessed are tb« pure
In heart for they shall (No doubt about
it) see God."
It was St. Augustine who first gave
the ordination address of Jesus, after
choosing the twelve, the title of "Tho
Sermon on the Mount," a title now uni-
versally accepted. It is better perhaps
"The Gospel of the Kingdom," telling
us of the characteristics of these mem-
bers of the new kingdom Jesus came
to establish, the Influence of these
members upon the world, and Ib a com-
mentary upon the laws of this king-
dom. It Is tills, and more, for It Is a
prophecy of the church at work and
also a test whereby we are to know
who belong to tills kingdom.
Their Spiritual Meaning.
There are In reality only seven of
the Beatitudes, the "blessednesses"
and seven Is always typical of perfect-
ness. They are written in Old Testa-
ment language, but give the old form a
new and spiritual meaning. The re-
wards are not arbitrary, but are the
logical outgrowth of the character de-
picted.
The first four are passive virtues.
Happy are those who are poor in spir-
it, not the poor-spirited but the humble
minded ones conscious of their need.
It 1b the poor, as to this world, that
are to be rich in faith and to be heirs
of that kingdom which Christ has
promised to those that love him (Jas.
2:5). Happy are those that mourn,for
they mourn not as those who have no
hope, they shall be comforted, yea,
they shall be strengthened. Paul tells
us of that sorrow which is unto Balva-
tion and need not to be repented of,
but the sorrow of the world worketh
death. Happy are the meek, those who
are not proud. The pride of man Is
soon cut off as grass. In him, the
meek and lowly, we are to find rest to
our souls. We are exhorted by the
meekness ami gentleness of Christ to
receive Instruction and Peter tells us
that our ornamentation that shall be
of the greatest price is to be meek and
Quiet In spirit.
At this point the master begins to
make his practical application of the
lives of those having these character-
istics, upon the world about them.
Happy are the merciful. The with-
holding of mercy tends to poverty, but
the liberal soul shall be made fat, for
to the merciful he will show himself to
be merciful. Forebearing, and forgiv-
ing we enter into this happiness, being
kind, forgiving, tender-hearted, even aa
Christ hath forgiven U3.
Righteousness Defined.
Happy are the pure for they may
draw nigh unto God in full assurance
of faith for themselves and on behalf
of others. Indeed the writer of He-
brews tells us that without holiness
(purity) no man can see God, not our
own righteousness wherein we might
boast but the righteousness of Christ
which is by faith.
Happy are the peace-makers, the re-
ceivers and the diffusers of this king-
dom. Not merely peaceable men, nor
pieces of men, but rather as Tyndale's
version is, "the maintainors of peace."
Led by the spirit of God they are not
only called the sons of God, but are
the sons of God (Rom. 8:14). "The
cause, not the pain, makes the
martyr," said St. Augustine. Those
who are presented for righteousness"
sake, not those who seek persecution,
are possessors of this kingdom; pos-
sessing it they are persecuted.
Being is doing—doing does not pro-
duce life, and we have here a linking
of the old law and the new gospel. His
kingdom brings blessedness, happi-
ness; satan's kingdom turns to the ap-
ples of Sodom. God says, speak out,
endure for others. His kingdom is dis-
tinguished by altruism. The kingdom
of darkness says: "Keep still, live for
yourself." This kingdom knows not
the essence of brotherhood
Man ever asks this old question:
"How may I be happy?" Those whom
Jesus selects as the happy ones are
looked upon by the world as the most
unfortunate, but time has proven and
eternity will justify these declarations
of Christ. The good of this age be-
longs to the Belfish and self-assertive,
the good of the coming age to the self-
renouncing. It is better to have sor-
rowed and to have received his com-
fort than never to have sorrowed at
all. The message of the meek will get
a hearing as against the censorious,
and the supremely happy are those
who shall see God.
Hunger for the highest and the
noblest can find a supply for all Its
needs In Jesus the Son of God and
only according to the principles he
here sets forth.
Jesus saw the multitude when he
gave us this sermon, which Is not a
sermon at all. He understood their
Deed, the state of their hearts and
what was In their minds. He did not
see them as so many pawns upon the
chess board of life; he saw their life,
their sorrows, their sins. He read the
story of human need and human des-
tiny.
Why rejoice over our reproach? Be-
cause this is the path into this new
kingdom. And when we walk "for
Christ's sake" we shall enter therein
and rejoice greatly for we shall have
"great reward in heaven."
"Eit ry Picture TvlU a Story"
BAD BACKS DO
MAKE WORK HARD
Backache makes the daily toil, for
thousand#, ail agony hard to endure.
Many of these poor sufferers have
kidney trouble ana don't know it.
Swollen, aching kidneys usually po
hand in hand with irregular kidney
action, headache, dizziness, nervous-
ness and despondency.
Just try a box of Doan's Kidney
Pills, the best-recommended snecial
kidney remedy. This good mcuicine
has cured thousands.
HERE'S A TYPICAL CASE—
Henry J. White, 41 i N. 3rd St., Ft.
Smith, Ark., says: " I suffered every-
thing but death from terrible kidney
trouble. I luid awful headaches and
dizzy spells, urine scalded anil myback
ached constantly. I loan's Kidney Pills
cured me completely and I have had
no sign of kidney trouble since."
Get Doan's at any Drug Store, 50c. a Boi
DOAN'S
YEARS OLD
Beauty specialists encounter many
hard lines.
Good health cannot be maintained where
there is a constipated habit. Garfield Tea
overcomes constipation.
What Happened?
"Yes, I aril going to kiss you when I
"Leave the house at once, sir!'
A woman is so used to pinning
things that she can't understand why
a man should make so much fuss about
a missing button.
As the Streets Are Cleaned.
Mother—Well?
Tommy—Don't you think I might let
the rain wash my face instead of re-
moving the dirt myself?
A Correction.
"We are drifting toward a paternal
form of government," said the econo-
mist.
"Pardon me if correct you," re-
sponded the suffragette, gently; "to
be accurate, you should say a mater-
nal form of government."
Found Imitation Difficult.
Bert, a freshman, closed a letter to
his cousin Joe, five years old, by say-
ing: "Now, I must quit and write
five pages on Esther."
The next day his father found Joe
armed with tablet and pencil, trying
to hold down his young brother Rob-
ert, and said to him: "Joe, what are
you doing?"
"I'm trying to write, five pages on
Bob, but he won't be still," replied
the little fellow."
Needn't Kiss Husband.
Supreme Court Justice' Mareau In
Brooklyn, dismissed the suit of Sam-
uel Markowitz, a New York real es-
tate broker, for the annulment of his
marriage to Mildred Markowitz.
"It Is absurd to frame such issues,"
Justice Mareau said. "Practically the
plaintiff asks an annulment of his
marriage to the girl because she re-
fused to kiss him."
The young woman was eighteen
years old when she married Marko-
witz, who, as alleged, had already had
four wives, of whom two had died
and two were divorced.
r
Every Crisp,
Little Flake
Of
Post
Toasties
has a flavour all its own.
"Toasties" are made of
selected white Indian corn;
first cooked, then oiled into
wafer-like bits and toasted
to an appetizing golden
brown.
A favorite food for
breakfast, lunch or supper
in thousands upon thousands
of homes where people
are particular.
"The Memory Lingers"
Sold by Grocers
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Fox, J. O. Cleveland County Enterprise. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 20, No. 43, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 25, 1912, newspaper, April 25, 1912; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc108344/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.