Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1910 Page: 1 of 8
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i
Oklahoma State Register.
nineteenth year NO.31
GUTHRIE, OKL.iL, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1910.
*1. 0 0 PEK YEAH
ing too rapidly, we will begin the next
Cruce Elected By A Majority Of Twenty James A. Harris' Statement
Thousand-Republicans May Contest. I wo'v!".!uhmn'a.'san3:a
Harris, chairman of the Republican
, I state committee, tonight, "it will be
| due to the Haskell counting machine
I and the enforcement of the grandfath-
Oklahoma City, Nov. 10,—By plu- claiming a victory, interest in the
ralities ranging from 18,000 to 20,000,1 Tuesday's election has centered
Oklahoma has elected the entire state' around the local option and high li-
Democratic ticket. cense amendment but little, if any,;
The state has given the Democrats' authentic news was obtainable upon
three out of five congressmen, a gain the vote.
of one. j At the local optioir headquarters, it
Local option has failed to carry by is claimed the amendment, which pro-
probably 25,000 votes. i poses to do away with state-wide pro-
The count on the woman's suffrage | hibition, has received a majority of.
and other amendments is extremely 25,000 in the "yes" and "no" vote
slow. I alone.
The next state administration will j The manager asserts that this fig-
be conducted by these officers: ure will be more than sufficient to
Governor—Lee Cruce. give local option a clear majority of
Lieutenant Governor—J. J. McAles- the total number of qualified electors
ter participating in Tuesday's voting. This
Associate Justice Supreme Court— j |3 necessary on initiated measures.
Treasurer Cardwell of the resuli-
submissoin committee claims the
amendment lias carried in the county
precincts, as well as in the cities. The
town of Stiawnee, exclusive o:' county
30 MAJORITY FOR DEMOCRATS 1\
NEXT HOUSE.
Complete Returns Show That Repub-
licans will Have Nine Less Seats
Than the Present MInorty
Party.
The Next Congress.
M. J. Kane.
Associate Justice Supreme Court-
Jesse Dunn.
Justice Criminal Court of Appeals-
Northern District, T. H. Doyle.
Justice Criminal Court of Appeals
Eastern District, Jas, R. Armstrong.
Justice Criminal Court of Appeals
Southern District, Henry M. Furman.
Secretary of State—Ben Harrison.
State Auditor—Leo Meyer.
Attorney General—Charles West.
State Treasurer—Robert Dunlap.
Superintendent of Public Instruction
R. H. Wilson.
State Examiner and Inspector C.
A. Taylor.
Chief Mine Inspector—Ed Boyle.
Commissioner of
Daugherty.
Commissioner of Charities and Cor-
rections—Kate Barnard.
State Printer—Giles Farris.
President Board of Agriculture-G.
T. Bryan.
Corporation
Henshaw.
er clause amendment that disfran-
chised at least thirty-five thousand ne-
gro and Indian voters throughout the
state and particularly in the Third and
Fourth congressional districts which
contain the big negro and Indian pop-
ulation.
"in Southern Oklahoma the majori-
ties Bryan got two years ago, have
been reduced one-half and in some in-
stances, two-thirds, and in the case
of Pottawatomie county, wiped out en-
tirely. This shows that the honest cit-
izenship of the state, irrespectiv
politics, was voting to
| kellisui, but that en on
disfranchised to offset
Democrats elected
Republicans elected
Socialists elected
Doubtful district
Total
Majority of house
Democratic niaj. in house
.421!
. l(i:i
sin
. lit:
so
How Wou\( You Like to Bid Against a
Stranger VSfer Wants to Buy Your
Home Frofcj. Under You?
Buffalo. Okla . Nov. 10.—The may- to this place, and as they were poor,
or of Buffalo, the county seat of Harp- he rented laud adjoining, w.th a house
er. talking of the recent state land until they were ali!e to build them-
sales, said: "We are glad that there selves a home. On this school land
iias been as much land sold as thereI.Mrs. Neut'eld and her husband had
has been here. We are in favor of the planned how they would build a home
sale of all the public land in this coun- for themselves and children. When
>. Almost without exception you can! this 'and was offered for sa'.e today,
diBt.nguiBb between a le
a farm farmed by tin
his reports show, voted 1,25" wet and
543 dry, while some of the country
precincts in Pottawatomie have gone
wet by small majorities. This is re-
garded as one of the strongest anti- j
counties in the state. The organiza-
tion also claims the following coun-
ties by wet majorities: Comanche
280, Caddo 170, Murray 161. Grady 50.
Jefferson 200. Love 100, Washington
id Dec:
PLCUALMY or
morr
liminate Has-. publi
: voters were 1 or It
.e many thoi
ipportel M
Chltago. Nov. 9.—1Complete returns
on tlie election of representatives in
congress ImlicatH the Democrats will
have a working majority of 30 In the
next house. The number of demo-
crats elected td congress, according to
the latest returns, which are of an
unofficial character, is 226. The re-
representation will be 163
or nine seats less than the
ts now have in the Sixty-first
sd farm and .
owner. Tae
on the land sold will bring
than the apportionment—
de
:
si r mi-
lo,ooo.
etUI*.
Reports
from 1**1 of the 105 t onntic
the Governor a Lead of
9,433 over Hodffes.
Topeka. Kansas, Nov. 9.—Governor
Stubbs has been re-elected governor
agreatlyreduced
1,563, Coal 929, Delaware 350, Tulsa
350 (claimed wet last night by 1,000),1 of Kansas, but by
and Carter 134. All but two of the, plurality over Hodges, the democratic
Labor—C. L.' counties went dry in 1907. (candidate, Reports have beer, rsceiv-
I Their reports also show Bryan had ed ftom 91 c? the 105 counties of the
gone dry by 600. Woods by 400 and state and they show a proband plur-
Woodward by 250. :-luy for th; governor V 10.00
Texas, Cimarron, Beaver and Harp-
er are also conceded to the dry side.
while other former Indian Territory
Commissioner—G.- A.1 counties are regarded at the local op-
I tion headquarters as being heavily
Thy Eleventh Pennsylvania district
•vMcil is represented in the Sixty-first
>or ' congress by a republican, is in doubt.
The Twelfth Pennsylvania district, al-
l so normally republican, is likewise
SI 1.11 - | doubtful.
Absolute confidence Is not felt in
I the returns for some of the Wisconsin
districts, and it is not Impossible that
the official count will change the tot-
als of the two parties, but only by
two or three congressmen.
Congressional gains were made by
the republicans and democrats in the
following states and districts:
Connecticut, 2nd, democrats 1,
Illinois 6th, 7th, 9th, 16th, democrats
taxes alon
us in nior
ten to one.
"The sales here show that som
the minor parts of the sales law i
amendments. A bidder cm sev
tracts of land here bought a tract that I
had improvements appraised at $17.e0;
10 per cent of that sum was $1.75, and
after the land had been sold to him at
a raise of $1,000 above the appraise-
ment he found out what sort of laud it
was and refused to take it. The pub-
lic consequences were that he forfeit-
ed only $1.75 ; he was thirty minutes
making up his mind and this stopped
the sale for that time. The lesson is
that there should be a deposit of at
least $50 on each tract put up to pro-
the state on the expense of the
sale. Further, the deposit of 10 per
ent on appraised values of improve-
nents should go to the lessees.
"At the sale in Woodward county,
Walker and Brewer, residents of an-
other county bought farms on small
a Bohemian, Henry
fanner of Caldwel
bid on this place
tears in her eyes,
lan.. raised the
and witii
said if she ac-
lecd |
eral
eepti
hope
take
el the land, this
for a home she
nan had soma
er the price of
ened sometime
the land came
ar went to the
This
conclusion is based on the unofficial
count and estimates received at re-
publican and democratic state head-
quarters from the county committee
chairmen and the n?v.spapers
The
25.-
c"lerk of Supreme Court—W. H. L j W0t Muskogee county was reported entire state ticket won by about -j,
to Democratic headquarters as being | 000 plurality over the democratic can
300 dry, whereas the wets expected at didateS
Compbell.
The Democrats gain their new con-
In the 99 counties Stubbs is given
pressman in the Third district by the least , 000 mapority . , TI ,
ooeratlon of the grandfather claue, There ls a wlde difference between a total plurality of 20,367 and Hodges
which kept from the polls in Mu.ko-1 (lgures at the local option and the a total plurality of 10, 34. Tins glv-
^ee and Wagoner counties hundreds Antl.Sai0on league headquarters. The es the state to Stubbs by a total p u
■of negro voters. I latter has Washington county, claim- rallty of 9,433. The missing counties
Jamls S. Davenport, Democrat, de- ed by local opUonists as 1.563 wet, to are nearly all western counties which
feated C. E. Creager, the present Re- be 200 dry it also claims as dry
nublican cangressman. Two years counties, Pontotoc by 815, Pawnee b\
ron aealnst each other and s00 (;reer by 750, Texas by 500,
small
ago they ran against each other and 500 Greer by 750, Texas by 500, Choc-
■Creager won by 2,100. I taw by 200, Pottawatomie by
Then ext Oklahoma delegation to ^ majority and Oklahoma, excuslve of
Associate Justice of the Supreme Co tbe cj^y 500
congress stands: I Superintendent Conger says most of
First District-Bird S. McGuire, Re- the league's reports are from the Ok-
Second District-Dick T. Morgan,! lahoma slde, and that there has been
Republican. 1 a shift of sentiment in many of the
Third District—James S. Daven-, heretofore wet counties in favor ot
port, Democrat. ! prrhibition.
Fiurth District—Charles D. Carter, The ^nti-Saloon league claims that
Democrat. - j reports to local option
Fifth District—Scott Ferris, Demo- j are {rom prejudiced sources.
cra{ "I see no reason to alter my esti-
Aiiiendments Are Lost. j mate of last night." said Conger, that
Reports indicate that six proposed , ,ocal opt;0n wou'.d be defeated by 25,-
amendments to the constitution have Q00 or 30 000 majority."
gave Stubbs fairly good proportionate
majorities in the last election and in
the primary and as the republicans
won in most of them for the legisla-
ture it is expected that the governor
will gaiu a considerable plurality in
these precincts. It may not be
enough to bring his total to the 10,000
mark, but it will be close to it.
deposits and then refused to fulfill
their contracts. The land was offered
again and the lessees bought on ap-
praisements. Then these same men,
after failing to make good with the
state at Woodward, came to Harper
county and ran the prices of lands up
so high that lessees lost their homes.
One of them, on No. 15, was living 011
the land and had no other home nor
any other hope of owning land.
Last spring this lessee, A. L. Lypm
was married, and he brought his bride
to this place. Their plans for a home
are now broken by. men who did not
buv the land for homes, but for in-
vestment. They remarked several
times that they were safe investments.
In this case the state of Oklahoma
made $1,380 and this county lost one
of its good citizens and gained a non-
resident land holder who evidently in-
tends to hold the place for a raise and
will probably not improve the land,
but will profit only by the work of our
citizens." , , ...
"There is more to the sale ot this
land than simply the money value,
said ti. H. Hyde, secretary of the les-
sees organization to a reportei. 1
In another case a 1
trouble with a lessee o'
some hogs, which hapd
ago. A few days before
up for sale the neighb
lessee and asked him what he would
take for his preference right and the
lessee said about fifteen hundred dol-
lars. He asked if he wouldn't tak«
thirteen hundred, and the lessee said
he would not. On the day of the sal**
this near neighbor, for revenge, btd
the thirteen hundred dollars above the
appraisement, having previously founl
out that ho would pay this before hn
would lose his home.
In another case, In Garfield coun-
ty, a negro who was not wanted in the
neighborhood, ran a place up from
Borne eight thousand appraisement ti*
fifteen thousand, and the lessee, having
his improvements on the land, bougu.1.
it before he would desert a home he
had beautified for the purpose ot
spending the balance ot Ills days in it.
In the majority of cases where the
lessees are raised 011 their valuation
by an outside bidder, it is due to some
former quarrel with the lessee, or tak-
ing advantage of the lessees condition
of not being able to take Xre of him-
self.
JUDOE KILLS ENEMY
OVER ELECTION Fl'ED.j
Russell
common
failed to be adopted
Large numbers of voters throughout
the state failed to vote on the amend-
ments because of the length of the
ballots.
The heaviest vote was cast on wo-
man suffrage and local option, both
failing to receive the required majori-
ty over all votes cast as provided In
the election law on Initiative mat-
ters.
The other amendments were the
railroad amendment to article nine
section nine, the Campbell
capital location bill, the
school tax distribution and the amend-
ment to the general election laws, re-
quiring registration of all voters in
the country precincts as in cities of
the first class.
Blames Grandfather Clause.
"They splashed us on the east side
of the state. If it had not been for
the grandfather clause I would have
carried Muskogee and Wagoner coun-
ties by 1.000 votes each."
So says Joe McNeal, Republican
candidate for governor.
"I probably lost 6,000 or 7,000 votes
in the Third district. Race prejudice
"Basing the estimate on a total vote
was used to line up the white vote."
of 270,000, I figure that my plurality
■will be not less than 30,000." was the
statement of Lee Cruce Wednesday
afternoon.
"We have carried Muskogee, Se-
quoyah, Seminole, Cherokee, Okfuskee,
McIntosh and Okmulgee counties, all
of which gave a heavy Republican ma-
jority three years ago."
Cruce's majority, however, is con-
servatively estimated at close to 20,-
000 votes.
, t luiuio WUMI i
headquarters Judtre Beckett Shot and Killed County
Treasurer Mcllrayer, of Haskell
County, in Streets of
Stigler.
Stigler, Okla., Nov. 10.—County i
Treasurer J. C. McBrayer, of Haskell;
eonnty, was shot and killed in the t
streets of Stigler today by County
!•> A L. Beckett.
,% killing followed ill feeling be-
tween the two men since the August
primary.
Judge Beckett started to town this
morning and encountered McBrayer
standing in the street with a cotton
hoe.
McBrayer attacked Beckett with the
t race's Lead Over 25,000.
T'nofficial figures received at Demo-
cratic state headquarters from sixty-
two of the seventy-seven counties give
Cruce tDem.l a plurality over McNeal
(Rep.) of 25,974 and upon this basis
"I still believe that the final return
it is claimed the plurality in all coun-
ties will reach more than 30,000.
While not a single bulletin has been
received on any other race, managers
admit that owing to a centering ot the j ^ beating him over the head until
campaign on the governor's race, plu- ^ had broken the hoe handle
1.
Indiana. 6th, democrats 1.
Iowa 2nd, 4th, democrats 2.
Iowa, 8th, republicans 1.
Kentucqy, 9th. democrats 1.
Maine, 2nd, 3rd) democrats 2.
Maryland 3rd 6th, democrats 2.
Massachusetts, 3rd. democrats 1.
Massachusetts 14th, republicans
Michigan 1st, 6th. democrats 2.
M ssourl, 13th 14th, Id, 16th, demo-
crats 4.
Missouri 11, republicans 1.
Nevada at large, republicans 1.
New Jersey 3rd, 5th, 7th, 8th, demo
crats 4.
New York, 1st 3rd. 4th, 5th, 13th, orgauizatlon
15th, 17. 21st, 25, 27th, 33rd. 36th, | havg attended the sa!es in most of the
democrats 12; New York 32d, repub-; counties and have watched the men
licans 1 interested in the sales of their homw.
.. ,A.i. T have seen those who seemed to be
North Carolina 5th, 8th, 10th. demo- ^ ^ ^ np b ome so nerv ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Qnly & ^
crats u Oi * OU8 when their leaseholds-w ? fnntr1 tracts sold above appraisement, and
Ohio, 2nd. 7th. 11th, 15th, 19th, 21st for sale that they turned pale under, #jo remalned un80,„.
18th. democrats 7. the tan. Watch hardly The counties yet to be visited are
Oklahoma, 3rd, democrats 1. I haniis tiremb . g. ^ ^ h(itue being Lincoln. Oklahoma, Canadian, Blaine,
Pennsylvania. 5th, 8th. 12th, 14th, ^kata auction. Many ot the lessees | Major, Custer, Dewey, Beckham, Roger
22nd. 24th. democrats 6. have spent the best twenty years ^ Jef^r-'
Pennsylvania, 10th, republicans 1. | their ° 1 beyond the | son. In addition to these sales thera
Rhode Island. 1st. democrats 1. ; ^ Mfe and unless they buy their j will be sales of town sites between
West Virginia. 1st 2nd, 3rd, 4th, ,eagehoWB tUey are without hope of *^^rtDeCLawton -'and
lem0CraU 4 1 the'saies have resuited in Luther,
the lessees getting about three-fifths |
of the land at appraisement : about Disposal of the state lands will bo
one-fifth has gone to the lessees at urged on the next legislature. Sec-
ralses about one-filth have been re-' tions 16 and 36 in each county are
fused at appraisements. Not over fit- likely to be designated for sale early
tv tracts have this fall been sold to j next year. The principal arguments
State lands In ten of the twenty-
three counties in the third sales dis-
trict brought a total of $1,616,746. The
92,937.95 acres were appraised at $1.-
330,649,80. The cash payments amount-
ed to $82,709.41.
For the first, second and third salea
districts, embracing sales in twenty
counties to date the grand total of
prices is $2,815,762. There were 248,-
484.69 acres.
Grant county yielded the largest re-
turns in the third district, the 15,188
acres sold, bringing $396,220.
The sales force returned to Guthrie
for the election and will resume salea
at Chandler Thursday, continuing four
days. The first leg of the district was
finished at Arnett. Ellis county, Thurs-
day. The acreage was 7,544. The av-
Totals: Democrats 58. Republicans
6.
Net democratic gains, el.
DEMOCRATS >11 ST REVISE TARIFF i
Texas Congressman Says Country Has out side bidders."
,, , I —
Imposed Trust 011 Party.
advanced for the sale of these sections
j are that there are hundreds of people
One of the unfortunate incedents | wh0 are eager to buy homes; that im-
I connected with the sale of the state' mense amounts of taxable property
v™ 0 The members 1 lan.l under the present law. happened : will be added to counties by the sales:
Washington, Nov. 9,-The members and unde 1 tn I tract No.1 that the land matter should be dlspos-
of the Sixty-sccond congress who, in Grant; to. 1 ^ ^ ^ eaHy so Rg t<j remove R ,
voctpninv ran not as- Lizzie Neufel , nnntcntinn from tatp nolitics: that the
Both Sides Claim Resubmission.
Oklahoma City, Nov. 10.—With both
prohibitionists and resubmisslonists tare
ralities for other state candidates will
be greater.
The grandfather clause Beems to
have had the desired effect in many
counties of the so-called "black-belt."
Wagoner county gave majorities for
the state and county tickets, with the
nearly 1,500 negroes barred from the
polls by the educational test. Musko-
gee, heretofore 10,000 Republican, is
given as 500 Democratic: McIntosh
200 Democratic in place of 400 Repub-
lican; Okfuskee, closely Republican,
is now Democratic, and Sequoyah
changed from 300 Republican to 350
Democratic.
The Socialist Vote.
Returns to the Socialist state head
quarters indicate, Secretary Branstet-
ter claims, that the party made mater-
ial gains in the heretofore strong
counties. The Socialist vote in Choc-
taw and Murray counties is said to
have been doubled over two years ago,
with Pottawatomie and Comanche
counties nearly so. Secretary Banstet-
ter says it is possible Socialists have
elected members of the legislature in
Marshall, Johnston and Pushmataha
counties.
"We are satisfied since our ticket
has received an increase throughout
the state and nation," said the secre-
Since there is danger in graw-
of
wore elected yesterday can not as- 31, Lazwe rteuieiu, I contention from state politics; that th
sume office until March 4, but in all te0Qne year ag0 ,ast May, her husband j clfances for "®-'e8"«nt
likelihood they will not be called upon was kljled accidentally, leaving her a and non-progressi\e
take their seats before the opening w'dow with a girl now four years old, decid .
lessened.
to take their seats before tne open..,* w-,ow husgand!I The current sales are generally of
of the regular session of that congress and a > b hj a lease on this j section 33, but in some counties smalt
in December of next year. Yet the (tract seven years ago and when he, lots of indemnity and college lauds
Democratic congressional leaders are marr[ed six years ago, brought his wife | have been put up.
. already discussing the party policy j _____ 11 —
ner of a bul"llr.7 wheTe"" McBrayer ] for 1911 and 1912 in view of the heavy ^ be nQ unsettllng tentative from that county and th
followed him and made a second at- responsibility which the voters laid on ^ buglnegg for we can revlse the tar- dtetHct judge In the Osage-Washing-
the Democratic party when they put ^ by sclledUle.
Beckett retreated around the cor-
taek with the broken hoe handle.
Beckett then pulled a revolver and that party In con ro o
shot McBrayer in the face. I house by a substantial majority
McBrayer died in a few minutes
next.
The best jtgtrict.
opinion inclines to the view that this Republicans elected every mem-
is the safest and most satisfactory ^ of the )egisiature and state sen-
, The voler8 ot the COU°try °UtlTJway from a business standpoint to re- ^ ^ eyerjr dlgtrict judge ln the.
The trouble started last August the character of legislation expected form the tariffi and it has the indorse- Ffrgt conKregsional district. The stat*
when McBrayer was a candidate for | of the next congress by results of m(mt nQt on)y Qf the leading Demo- senator dlBtrict judge and flotorlal
re-election as treasurer. His elec- their ballots Tuesday as surely as ir j cratg but Pre8|dent Taft and former ^ ln the district compos-
tion was opposed by Beckett, and he (It were written into a platform, an j j>resj(jent Roosevelt have gone on rec- ^ ^ Lincoln and Pottawatomie coun-
was not re-nominated. | that work is an honest revision o e , ^ ag favorlng such a plan. Ueg balf jn and ha|( out of the dis-
Beckett was a candidate for re-elec-1 tariff. Such, at least, is t e v ew 0 „„r,oamto- trlct were still in doubt Thursday. All
tton and he was successful. I the prominent Democrats now
The bitterness of defeat at the prl- Washington, who include leading
mary and the envy of seeing his pollt- members of both the house and the
senate. In a statement here today ln
which he acknowledges the responsi-
in MAJORITY OF McOlIRE 28,000s
ical enemy crowned with success ran
kled in the bosom of McBrayer.
Last night Judge Backett was read-, bllity which the election lias put on
ing election returns. | the Democratic party and which he
After reading dispatch, he added, says must be met frankly and con-
wlth ridicule: "McBrayer is not yet servatively by the Democrats of the
heard from." i hoU8P- Representative Burleson, of
This angered McBrayer to such an j Texas, possibly the next chairman ot
extent that he met Beckett In the the house committee on appropria-
street with a hoe this morning and at-, tlons, said: "The Sixty-second con-
tacked him. ! Sress must revise the Payne-Aldrich
Judge Beckett surrendered to the ^ tariff. The vote of the country > es-
sheriff and was released on his own terday was a command from the peo-
recognizance. | P'e to the next congress to make that
Eye witnesses to the affair declare revision along honest lines, aml^ we
that the shooting of McBrayer was can not " ' "
in self-defense.
Both men were democrats.
LOOSES LITTLE
were Democratic last year.
J. J.
shirk that responsibility.
That revision should be made fear-
lessly in the Interest of the whole
Jones, Republican, was elected to th®
Returns from the First congression- senate over Clarence Davis. Th
al district show that the plurality of | composition of the lower h°"8e °C
Congressmen Bird S. McGuire, Repub-, the legislature is still in doubt and
Hcan will not vary 100 votes from,the Republicans are claiming a ma
that by which he was elected two'jorlty. Holdover senators Insure
years ago, in spite ot the elimination Democratic
of a large part of the negro voters
of the district.
McGuire's majority two years ago,
was 2,811 and this year it will again
be very close to 2,800. He carried ev- ty.
ery county in the district except
Osage, carrying Garfield by 400,
Grant 50, Kay 150, Kingfisher 500,
Lincoln 400, Logan 1,350, Noble 50,
Pawnee 25 and Payne 25. McGuire
lost Osage by 150, but the Republic-
ans have apparently elected the rep-
house. The Socialists will have at
least one member of the legislature,
as they are reported to have elected
their entire ticket ln Marshall coun-
Congressman Dick L. Morgan. Re-
publican, seems to be re-elected in.
the Second district, although the re-
sult ls still close. Ex-Congressman
James Davenport has been elected ln
the Third, Charles D. Carter in th®
Fourth and Scott Ferris In the Fifth.
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Golobie, John. Oklahoma State Register. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1910, newspaper, November 10, 1910; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112727/m1/1/?q=del+city: accessed July 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.