The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, December 18, 1896 Page: 1 of 4
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The Chandler News.
VOLUME VI.
CHANDLER,OKLAHOMA, FRIDAY, DEC. 18,189(5.
NUMBER 13
Rail Road Time Table, Guthrie, 0, T
Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe R R.
NORTH, EAST, AND WEST.
No.
Arrle
Guthrie.
Leave 1 Arrive 1 Arrive
Guthrie | linn. «'itj j (.'liicaKo
106
408
<*.
ISO
5:35 a m
4 off piu
12:15pm
5:45 ti in j 5:f>0 p m , W 13 u m
5:08 p m 6 60 a in ! 10:^(1 p m
7:00 am 1 I.neal Freight.
1 Local Fro.Klit-
BOUTH, SOUTHEAST. AND SOt'THWE8T.
No.
Arrive
Guthrie.
j l.-avH j Arrive ; Arrive
i Guthrie ! ft VV'th ! GTv'st'a
407
40ft
tfl
12:25 pu). 1 1p in ' W: 15 p m j H m
10:68 p m. 11 <>« p m | 8:10 u ni ' 9:80 p in
Vi.15pm. I 1:00iini | Local Freight.
J hours to Los Angeles
Free chuir cara ou all
truitis 1'nlman T'alaca
eleepera to Kansas Cltv
and Chicago without
chtitftp. Also to Ft. Worth
and Cah eftton Connects
at Newton with Vestibule
''mited having chair oars,
Pulinun palace compart
jnent sleepers and dlahig
ears through 1o Los An
peles and San Diego alio
with train carrying chair
earn. Pullman and Tour-
ist sleepers to El Paso,
I-oh Angeles, and San
I'rauslsco rnrou«h railroad and steamship
ticktrs sold lo ail points. Passengurs hooked
to all points In the continent of Europe; nlso
from any portor inland point in Europe through
to any point in the United States Prepaid
tickets paid for here will be delivered to pas-
Be tigers at their residence In Europe. For full
particulars, call on or address, Geo. T. Nichol-
son, <t P. A.. Chicago: W. J. Black, a. G. P.
A.. Topeka. Kuus ; L J(. Delanev. Agcut.
Guthrie, Oklahoma
Wanted -fin Idea °
Who can think
of some simple
thing to patent?
, Patent Attoi
.■HR. .. ,1.000 prist
f two hundred Inventions wonted.
Ilailroad Time Table. Shawnee, Okla.
CHOCTAW, OKLAHOMA, & GULP R. R
The short line from and to all points in
the Indian 4 Oklahoma Territories,
Through tickets sold at short line rates to
nil points.
Depart Arrive
Except Except
sunday. Daily. Daily. Sunday.
2 35pm 145pm Wister 2 3', pm l Ofipra
3 13pm 2 12pm Fanshawe 2 12pm 12 25pm
3 58pm 2 32pm R«-d Oak 1 52pm 1 i 00| m
4 57pm 301pm Wilburton 123pm 1150pm
it 15pm 3 45pm Hartshorne 12 45pm OlOjtn
7 10pm 4 09pm Anderson 12 20pm 0 07pm
7 33pm 4 25pm Ar South Lv 12 05pm 8 30um
H 15am 4fiOpm L RTcAlstr All 45pm 6 40am
0 35am 5 39pm Calvin 10 35om 4 25am
150am 0 12pm Holdenville 10 02pm 317 m
2 33am 0 32pm Wewoka 1' 42pm 2 28am
2 10am 7 20pm lOarleboto 8 5ipm ! 00am
2 00pm 7 40prn A Shawnee L 8 34pm 12 15am
2 45pm 7 45pm I. A 8 29pm 100pm
2 30pm 8 14pm McLoud 8 01pm 12 30pm
3 00pm 8 41pm Choctaw City 7 35pm 12 01pm
3 30pm 9 10pm Okla. City 7 u5am 11 SOpin
5 15pm 8 10am " 7 55pm 1125pm
5 50pm 8 4fiam Yukon 7 20pm 10 Minfn
ti 20pm ltlnain El Reno f< f>0pm 10 20pm
pin 9 35am Fort Reno 9 50am 9 50uic
For rates and pther information applv to
Hknky Wool), J. F. Hoi dkn,
Gen. Manager. Traffic Manager,
South McAlester, J. T.
Wanted-fin Idea
Write"'J6HN WKDDEHHC RN ft CO.,°Put«-nf, At tor-
nevs. Washington, I). <\, for their fl.flui prlto offer
and list of two hundred Inventions wanted.
JOHNEMBWV
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
CO. ATTORNEY OP LINCOLN CO
Office at Court House,
CHANDLER, - OKLAHOMA
EMERY A. FOSTER,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office, Corner Manvel Avenue and
Tenth Street.
CH4.NDLEO,
OKLAHOMA
DR. L A. ICELSEY
DENTIST,
Office on Manvel Avenue, Uetwcen 9th
and 10th Streets. Office Hours
9:00 to 12:00 & 1:00 to 5:00.
CHANDLER,
OKLAHOMA
CALVIN AND FUNK
BARBERS.
Second Door North of Manvel House.
Only Pirst-Class Shop in Town.
12 Shaves for $1.00.
CHANDLER, • OKLAHOMA
H.L.COHEN
h
MERCHAN'
TAILOR . .
Men's Fine Furnishing- Goods
and Hats. A Full Line of Fine
French and Domestic Piece Goods
Now on II.'nd. Call and Examine.
GUTHRIE,
OKLAHOMA
HAS A GRAM) VOICE.
BUT POVERTY MAY LOSE IT
TO THE WORLD.
I*r«*tty I.it • I •• sarali Kan. I all MtrtiKffl*-* to
<i *t Lohhoiih Daughter of u PoorMlner
Near Itfllfville, III.. With it Phenomenal
Hinging Voice,
(St. Louis Letter.)
KOF. GEORGE"DT
Tufts gave n con-
cert over in Belle-
ville the other
night which was
marked by probab-
ly the last public
appearance of a
young singer who
is conceded by the
best judgment of
that critical mu-
sical town to have a voice of phenom-
enal range and sweetness. She is
Sarah Randall. She lives at the mouth
of Dutch Hollow, just opposite where
the Louisville and Nashville tracks
curve sharply into the devastated val-
ley where stood the village of Birkner
before the May tornado swept it out of
existence. Her father Is a Welsh coal
miner and digs a scant living for his
family out of the mines at the Hollow.
Sarah was born in Birkner nearly 20
years ago and is the eldest of seven
children, but she is slight and fragile
and seems but a child. During these
twenty years the family has lived in
she has what many strangers
I would give all they possess
and much mere to acquire. She
I reaches high F above the treble staff
i very easily now. and with good health
and favorable surroundings I feel con-
fident she could in time reach the sec-
| ond high C above the staff."
The professor also speaks in terms
of the greatest praise of Miss tlan-
| (lall's amiability and winning traits of
character and of her devotion to her
| parents and other relatives.
j But in addition to her failing health
| her spirits have been recently affected
by the deaths of her grandmother, to
whom she was greatly attached, and
! George Mozart Tufts, the gifted young
violinist, in whose success she was
greatly interested. She has become
discouraged and lost ambition, and al-
though no such announcement was
made at the time of Prof. Tuft's last
concert, it is more than probable, as
stated, that she will not be heard again,
and her brilliant voice will be lost to
the public unless she finds friends who
will assist her.
To the writer Miss Randall talked
modestly about herself, her voice and
her lost ambition.
"I had hoped," she said, "to complete
my studies and maybe make myself a
place and possibly be able to lo some-
thing for my parents in their obi age.
but I have given up all thought of that
now. If I never recover, a musical
education will do me no good. If I
should get well, perhaps I can study
again, but we are very poor"—this last
in a trembling voice—"and it may
never be."
MISS SARAH RANDALL-.
K. \V. W ASH,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Office on Mnnvtl Avenue, lletween 7th
an.1 8th Streets.
CHANDLER, - OKLAHOMA
one mining community and another
and a couple of years ago gravitated
back to Birkner. Ever since that her
health has been growing worse and
now, after a heroic struggle to continue
her musical studies, she is forced to
give them up. Prof. Tufts has repeat-
edly urged her parents to move her to
a more healthy location and has tried
to make her father realize the im-
portance of saving his daughter's voice
but Jesse Randall is not an ambitious
man. His first duty as he sees it is to
feed and clothe his family, and he is
able to do that where he is. lie will
let well enough alone. Nearly four
years ago Prof. Tufts gave a concert at
Freeburg. In the audience was Sarah
Randall, then a slip of a girl. She lis
Literary strangers who come to the
city very often inquire for Poe's grave
and are surprised to find it in the heart
of the town instead of in some pretty
suburban cemetery. An English ec-
clesiastic who was here recently said
that Westminster reminded him of
some of those London churchyards,
with low walls and railings round
them—in most instances very old—in
which celebrities are buried. The com-
plete history of these London burial
places has been recently told in a book
written by a lady who has devoted
about twenty years to finding out their
history. There was, of course, a great
deal of curious lore unearthed, as there
is a story attached to every foot of
It stirred j ground in London. Some of those who
V FT K R 4 \ S" PI) R \ I'' I? Department in W Khitigton at $100,000
J * 1 1 * ! All these and many items besides brin^
SOME GOOD SHORT STORIES
FOR OLD SOLDIERS.
ful Arn
ltetort Ar-
1 REVERENCE that
j day and hour
That laughed a ty-
rant's power to
scorn.
When bravest act
of noble men
Proclaimed a na-
tion born.
Those grand, true
men, who dared
to stand,
And with a courage high, divine,
Fling off allegiance to a crown
And bow at Freedom's shrine.
I see them now with fancy's eye.
All doubt and hesitation past,
They've staked their lives for liberty,
The deed is done, the die is cast.
! up the expense of the American army
to more than $50,000,000 in a year for,
is said. 23.000 soldiers, and it requires
' no elaborate computation to show how
Kreat is the burden of expense abroad
with the prodigious armed forces which
! are maintained in European countries.
Rusisa has an army on a peaco foot-
ing in excess of 800.000 men Germany
and France follow with «r>60.000 each—
there is less than 3,000 difference—
Austria with 360.000. Italy with $260,-
000, England with 190,«)00, and Spain,
exclusive of the army in Cuba, with
100,000 troops. In fact, there is no
country in Europe making any pretense
of having an army that does not possess
a larger force on a peace footing than
the United Stateo. Even a kingdom so
insignificant as Portugal has a standing
army of 30,000 and three small coun-
tries of Europe, Holland. Denmark and
Belgium, have each of them more in-
fantry soldiers than the entire United
States army, rank and file. The main-
tenance of the Russian army costs
$125,000,000 and the French and G -
man armies cost about the same.
They played the game of life and death,
And all but country was forgot;
Their noble brows are garlanded
With holy name of patriot.
Let us, the sons of noble sires,
The grandeur of their courage sing,
Transmit to nations yet unborn
The liberty they died to win.
Food for Soldier*.
An officer in the United States army
has recently compiled some interesting
figures on the food allowances made to
the soldiers of different nations, and
argues that the better the rations, it
naturally follows the better the fight-
ers. For instance, the case of the vic-
torious Japs in the recent Chinese-Jap-
anese war is cited. The Chinece troops
subsisted mainly on rioe, together with
what they could pilfer, while the Jap-
anese soldiers had rioe, tinned and
fresh meats, flsh and vegetables. The
meat allowance of a Japanese soldier is
seven ounces. The Russian standard
is sixten ounoes, the English twelve,
the Italian eleven, French, Belgian,
Turkish and German nine, Austrian
and Spanish eight. The allowance to
the soldiers of the United States is
higher than any of the others, and is
twenty ounces. The dally allowance
troops, who receive thirty-two ounces,
and the lowest Is the English army,
where each man is allowed sixteen
ounces. In the United States army,
the Frenclf array and the Italian army
the allowance is twenty-two ounces.
In the German army it is twenty-eight
ounces. In the Russian seventeen.
All modern soldiers, except the Rus-
sians, have a daily allowance of rice.
The American army is the only one in
the commissariat of which beans are
an article of diet.
Tli a
D. N. FRAZIER.
FRAZiER S NEWBY,
Attorneys at Law
CHANDLER. - OKLAHOMA
^HANDLER ^ SHAWNEE.
I MAIL AND STAC.E LINK
R, S. HLA1U, MANAGER.
Lv. Chiindh f!i a.m. Ar Shawnee .-.P.M.
Lv. S,i .vn. • •' M Ar ChanuliiM M
Ij-. . ts with train* on Ch ct > •••
,.„i I .i..i!iii! cure
Office in pojt oflioe, Chandler.
tened raptly to the music.
her deeply. She went home and to bed,
but she could not sleep. She knew she
could sing and the concert had awak-
ened in her a wish that she might cul-
tivate her voice. Visions of herself
holding great audiences spell-bound
by the magic of her voice filled her
mind. Before she slept she had made
up her mind to try. The next morning
she arose early and slipped out of the
house, ran to the depot. She knew Prof.
Tufts would take the early train to
Belleville. When he reached the depot
a moment before train time she ap-
proached him timidly and asked him if
he would give her singing lessons
He was in a hurry and told her that if
she wanted to take lessons she would
have to come to Belleville. She did so
and he began to teach her. As soon as
he heard her sing he discovered that
she had a remarkably beautiful voice,
but it was not until two years later,
when he began giving her instructions
in voice culture that he bad an oppor-
tunity to know how great was her
range. She has been studying ever I production of the precious metal in
since, but for one reason or another j new fields.
she was forced to miss many lessons. j8 ^nis very fact that makes the
and many others were taken at times j promjae Gf a great gold yield for many
when she was in no condition to re- j ,jecades to come most solid and trust-
ceive instruction, being wearied and worthy. T-iere is reason to believe
dispirited by the heavy tasks she was j t^at science will yet render possible
obliged to perform. Bur she was the extraction of vast quantities of gold
ansuming ambition to
made the pilgrimage to Poe's grav
think the walls and railings should
come down, and this was Joaquin Mil-
ler's opinion. He thought the effect of
the monument, placed in the corner
and partly cut off from view, was di-
minished. It had, to his mind, a con-
tracted and squatty look. The trees
and grass of the graveyard wear a dull,
deep green at present, and almost ev-
ery morning the custodian of the place
and a ferocious mastiff stand at the
gate and look about as if they had been
vigilantly on duty all night. The school
children go shyly by. afraid of the big
dog. and the sparrows hop among tho
slabs.—Baltimore News.
New Method* of Extracting Gold.
The real cause of the recent notable
increase in the production of gold has
been almost entirely the marked im-
provements made in the processes of
mining. To the engineers rather than
to the gold hunters and the explorers
credit should be given for the immense
Retort Courleoim*
Lord Russell's visit to America re-
minds the London Chronicle of an an-
cient story. It says that during Lord
Russell's pevious tour in this country
with Lord Coleridge, he came in con-
tact with many members of the bar, in-
cluding Mr. Evarts. It was
walking with Mr. Evarts one day along
the banks of a stream that his atten-
tion was called to a point at which
Washington, according to tradition,
had thrown a dollar right across. The
water was wide, and Lord Russell
looked doubtful.
"You know a dollar went further in
those days than it goes now," the
American lawyer blandly insinuated.
"Ah." said Lord Rusesll, quite equal
to the occasion, "and it may have been
easy enough to Washington; it is well
known that he threw a sovereign across
ihe Atlantic."
During the Civil War the state of
Loulsana established at Mount Le-
banon, Bienville parish, a laboratory
for the preparation of medicines to be
used in the Confederate service. To
supply the water needed a deep well
was dug. After the war all the build-
ings connected with the laboratory
were destroyed by fire, and the well
remained yawning and uncurbed.
Thus it has remained ever since, for no
one uses it, and it's noonc's business to
fill it or cover it over. A pine wood ha«
grown up about it; and the well has
long served as a pitfall for animals
that stray in that direction. A l^oulsl-
ana paper says that when a cow or
pig or any other animal disappears
from the neighboring town, it 1b com-
monly remarked that the animal is
"at the bottom of the well," and that
is the last that is said about it. One
day recently a very fine goose, which
belonged to a gentleman named Mat-
thews, who lived not far away, strayed
off in the morning, and in the evening
her brood of goslings came "cheeping"
back without her. It was surmised
that the goose might have fallen into
the well. Two days afterward. Mr.
Matthews, rifle In hand, on bis way to
Join a hunting party, passed near the
old well, and noticed that a large l*iwk
appeared to be greatly interested in
something which was going on In the
well. The hawk circled round and
it, reappewieu ...•• —
down again. After a succession of
such movements the hawk finally
emerged from the well with a great,
white load in his talons. It was the
missing goose: and the goose, to Mr.
Matthews' astonishment, had a long
black snake banging from her beak.
A shot from the rifle brought the trio
to the earth, and the man set about
solving the mystery. The snake ap-
peared to have attempted to swallow
the goose, bead first, for her beak was
sticking in his throat, so that he could
not get away, nor could she get rid of
him. Evidently after her fall down
the well the goose had found a foot-
hold on a bit of curbing, and had there
been attacked by the snake, with the
singular result described. In that pre-
dicament she had been pounced upon
while I b>' the hawk- Mr- Matthews killed the
snake, bagged the hawk, and restored
the goose to the bosom of her grateful
family; for she was little the worse
for her extraordinary series of adven-
tures. The hawk was found to meas-
ure five feet from tip to tip of its out-
stretched wings.
I by
• succeed and no obstacle was too great
j for her to overcome. She did washing
and other heavy work in order to gel
j j;: v for her lessons, and many
; walked six miles from her
Birkner to Belleville for her
weekly lesson. Prof. Tufts cannot speak
too highly of the possibilities of Miss
Randall's" voice under favorable condi-
tions To the writer he said:
Her tones are peculiarly rich, sweet,
nd have great carrying
mone
l times
home
from ore, which has been passed by as
not worthy of attention, and the refuse
or tailings of old diggings may be
made to yield another harvest to min-
ers.
Horneo Drink While Kitting.
It is said that in Norway a bucket ol
water is always placed within reach
of a horse when he is taking his al-
lowance of hay. "It is interesting,"
says the writer of this incident, "tc
see with what relish they take a sip
to her wonderful I out of one and a mouthful of the othci
uncommonly | alternately, sometimes only moistening
lugs from E their mouths, as any rational being
c" rI space in th i*>a staff, to the I would do while eating a dinner of suet
nV\ llat abo\t the treble staff. If: ury food. A broken-winded horse if
■Aii. no farther than that J scarcely ever seen in Norwa
pene t rat in
pow
high
ArrnieH Are KxpeiiMive.
The United States army, limited by
law since June, 1874, to 25,000 men,
forms a very modest land force com-
pared with the prodigious armies of
European countries, yet its mainte-
nance costs more than $50,000,000 a
year and the treasury estimates for
next year will entail a larger appropria-
tion for army purposes, if adopted, than
in any previous year since 1870. when
the Indian wars on the frontier and the
army doing police as well as military
duty in the South, the total expenses of
it were $57,000,000. The United States
army at the present time consists
roughly of 14,000 infantry. 6,500 cavalry
and 4,500 artillerymen and engineers,
the officers of each service being in-
cluded. The United States own and
are put to no expense for the rental of
the various forts, barracks, and en-
campments required for military pur-
poses. The pay of a soldier is not on a
scale of extravagance and congress is
more frugal than liberal as a rule with
army appropriations. What will be-
come o? the $52,000,000 asked for this | artisans hailed him
year; what has become of $51,000,000
expended for army purposes last year?
A very little examination will show
Just what becomes of the money. First
is the item of pay, which requires $18,-
500,000. Next comes the item of suste-
I nance, which is $1,600,000; next, cloth-
ing for the troops. $1,100,000; then the
Ordnance Department, $1,100,000; then
medical supplier $140,000: cavalry and
artillery horses, $130,000; arsenals
$130,000, and quartermasters' supplief firm.
with other miscellaneous expenses, $3.
000,000. For the maintenance of mili-
tary posts, parks, hospitals, and ceme-
teries, $4,000,000 was required The
West Point Academy for the training of
, future officers cost $500,000. The trans-
I portatlon of troops is jJTH down at $2
Archibald Forbes, in his "Memories
of War and Peace," says that the
prince imperial, the son of Napoleon
III., took back to his Spanish ancestry;
that he had all the pride, the melan-
choly. tho ardor to shine, tho courage
bordering on recklessness, of a true
grandee of Spain. How perfect bis
self-restraint could be is easily seen
from an incident of the time of hit
studying Hi the government school in
Woolwich. England. He one day
heard that a Frenchman was visiting
the academy, and sent out to say that
he should be glad to see his country-
man. The person, who happened to
be a bitter anti-Imperialist, was pre-
sented. and the prince asked from
what part of France he came. The
visitor looked the youth etraight in the
face with a sarcastic smile, uttered the
word. "Sedan." and grinnlngly awaited
the efferrt of his brutality. The prinee
flushed and his eye kindled. Then he
controlled himself, and quietly re-
marking, "That is a very pretty part
of France," he closed the interview
with a bow. His dignity and self-con-
trol were finely manifested when, a lad
not yet seventeen, he followed his
father's coffin, as chief mourner, along
the path lined by thousands of French
sympathizers; and his demeanor waa
said to be truly royal when, later on in
that trying day, the masses of French
shouts of
"Vive Napoleon IV!" He stopped.
"My friends," said he, "I thank you,
but your emperor is dead. Let us Join
in the cry of 'Vive la France!' "
Then he bar# d his head and led off
the cheering.
Not to Re Beaten.
A good story is told of one of the
canvassers of leading publishing
found his way into the pri-
vate offlce of a bank, and saw the man-
ager, who, i -oon as he learned his
business, ordered him out.
Very quietly lie said:
• 1 meet with so many gentlemen in
the course of the week that I can afford
to meet a snob occasionally." and he
' A. D. WRIGHT'S DRUG STORE
1 -3B00K AND NEW9 DEPOTb-
{ Jvl®dloinLe>«,
4 Paints, Oils Glass, School Sup-
2 piles, Fancy and Toilet Articles, |^=S
1 A F"mil of "Wall PepW
PRiSCIUPTIOaiB CARlirULLY OOMPOUMDMOi
SOU I'll MANVEL AVI7.., CHANDLER, O. T
•. a. mi, PuiaiaaiiT, p, |, HOYT, V. I. MIHYPITH, A «T. OfW—
The ' Llncolr) * County * BanK,
aBBBOAPITAL. •TO.OOO.OO
0OE3 fl OKNEF^AL BflNK,INa BUSINESS
. . . . . bpecial attention given to collectioh*
—— STOCK HOLDS RSI
W. E. Mtrydkl), F. B Hoyt, O. B. V. I. Mcrydltfc,
Chaodler, OKIahomo
1 n_Fi||ST ci,ass WEEKLY NEWSPAPERS—'
—«1F0R $1.00 CASH!*-^
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SOME OTHER CLUBBING RATES:
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I m St.. ..a mmm
[;<l MOYT ABSTRACT CO.
BONDED ABSTRACTERS.
WTEtE ONI-Y COMPLETE SET OF ABSTRACT
K3 BOOKS IN LINCOLN CO
E. W, HOYT, Secretary and
Office in Lincoln County BanK-
SAM IJEL ELLIS,
JOBBER AND RETAIL DEALER IN
DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, OILS,
GLASS, PUTTY, BOOKS, STATIONERY, AND A FULL
LINE OP DRUGGISTS' SUNDRIES.
Cor, Manvvl Av*. and lltli
Chandler, - Olclahomi
SUBSCRIBE
For Tho
CHANDLER
Poor Printing Pays
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Work that U done in a slovenly manner or done
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"Cheap John" printing ii regarded as an in< cx to
a "Cheap John" business. While our work is not
hijfh in price, it is auperior iu quality. We have
tho advantage o? experience and <quip::icnt.
tenca meaUH time; time means money. (> *n time an
mvq money hv taking your printing '<> ' ^
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Gilstrap, H. B. & Gilstrap, Effie. The Chandler News. (Chandler, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 13, Ed. 1 Friday, December 18, 1896, newspaper, December 18, 1896; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc115320/m1/1/?q=wichita+falls: accessed June 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.