The Peoples' Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1908 Page: 3 of 8
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State NEWS
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Farmers Educational
AND
Co-Operative Union
Of America
TISHOMINGO GETS SCHOOL
New Secondary Agricultural College
Goes to Murray's Town
GUTHRIE: State Superintendent E.
p. Cameron has made the announce-
ment that the new secondary agricul-
tural college for the second supreme
' court district is to be located at Tish-
omingo and will be known as the
Murray Agricultural School in honor
tif W. H. Murray.
The city of Tishomingo has turned
over its high school building to house
the school for the first year, and has
donated 100 acres of land adjoining
the city. It is expected that the per-
manent building for the school will be
finished in a year. Caddo was Tisn-
omingo's only competitor for that dis-
trict.
The board has its next meeting at
Muskogee and will probably locate
the first district school at that time.
Muskogee has the first call. The se-
lection of presidents . for the new
schools may also be taken up at that
,ime.
REQUISITION REFUSED
Governor Does Not Believe Wads
Murdered His Wife
GUTHRIE: Governor Haskell re-
fuses to honor a requisition for the
return to Hot Springs, Ark., of R. G.
Wade, a traveling salesman, arrest-
ed at Lawton a few days ago on a
charge of murdering his former wite,
Mrs. Ada Reichers, of Dallas, Texas.
Wade proved conclusively by a num-
ber of Lawton business men that he
was in that city at the time his wife
was murdered.
At the time of the murder Mrs.
Reieher's nine year old daughter was
kidnaped and taken to Birmingham,
Ala., by a man giving the name of
Bannister. Wade was also suspected
of the kidnaping, but was likewise
able to prove his innocence of that
charge.
COURT FREES WOMAN
Mother Failed to Call Doctor When
Child Was Bitten By Snake
FREDERICK: Judge Griffin, in the
county court, held that Mrs. Margaret
Stephens, on trial for manslaughter
because she did not .summon a physi-
cian when beland Dodson, S years
I old, was bitten by a snake, but used
Christian Science treatment Instead,
J was not guilty and ordered her dls-
; charged. Mrs. Stephens, grandmoth-
| er of the boy, was arrested on cotn-
j plaint of neighbors shortly after the
I child's death.
I The mother of the boy also was ar-
I rested. At the trial the defendant in-
troduced evidence to show scientists'
healing experiences. The court, in dis-
j charging Mrs. Stephens explained that
] under the law she could not be held.
ARKANSAS RIVER NAVIGABLE
I "City of Muskogee" Reaches Home
With Cargo of Nails
j MT'SKOGEE: That the Arkansas
| river is navigable at least to this
I point was proven when the "City ot
| Muskogee" reached here with a cargo
lot' wire nails and wire from Cincin-
I nati and dropped anchor at Hyde
Park landing.
! This is the first steamboat that has
] plied this river this far toward the
i source within the past thirty-eight
| years. The boat left Cincinnati July
j 4. It will start on a trip to St. Paul
j and New Orleans about August 1.
ONLY IN CASE LOTS
Dispensary Agents Can See No Medi-
cinal Value in Single Bottle
GUTHRIE: Fred S. Caldwell, pro-
hibition enforcement attorney, who
returned from a trip through Woods
and Woodward counties, says that
the sentiment there is rapidly chang-
ing in favor of the state agency sys-
tem. He states that strict precau-
tions have been taken in connection
with the sale of beer from the agen-
cies, no one being allowed to pur-
chase less than half a case while it
is usually sold only by the case. The
theory of the dispenesary officials is
that the only way in which beer can
be a medicine is to use it through an
extended period of time, and that a
single bottle of beer can never have
any medicinal value.
Eloped With 14-Year Old Girl
BARTLESVILLE: Acting under the
orders of Chief of Police Turner of
this city, the officers ot Kay county
arrested Henry Armstrong, a married
man, charged with eloping here two
weeks ago with Maude Franklin, a
14-year old girl. Armstrong will be
returned here and trteu on a kidnap-
ing charge.
Says Pipe Lines are Necessary
TULSA: General J. A. Kirkwood,
special agent appointed by Governor
Haskell to investigate conditions In
j the oil fields, has completed his work
and will lay an exhaustive report be-
j fore the governor. General Kirkwood
stated that he found conditions as rep-
resented by the oil men. He said the
oil industry is in a deplorable condi-
tion.
He is convinced that additional pipe
lines are absolutely necessary for the
| prosperity of the oil Held and says
| people outside the oil belt have no
| conception of the true condition of at-
! fairs here.
ALLEGED FRAUDS
Attorneys Attack Rolls of 11,000 In-
dians on Grounds of Illegality
Mi'SKOGEE: Claiming that all o!
tthe work done by the Dawes commis-
sion and the citizenship court in al-
lotting the lands of the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Indians has been done
fraudulently and illegally and that, ij,-
000 claimants have been illegally left
off the rolls, Balinger & Lee, Wash-
ington attorneys, argued In the fed-
eral court here for a permahent in-
junction restrmaining the secretary of
the Interior from completing the al-
lotment of Indian lands.
Held for Robbing Dispensary
TULSA: George Mason, charged
with burglarizinng the dispensary at
McAlester of all the stock of booze
on hand, several wagon loads, was
arrested here and returned to Mc-
Alester. The robbery was committed
two mouths ago.
State Nursery Inspection Begins
GUTHRIE: The annual inspection
of Oklahoma nurseries, under direc-
tion of the state board of agricul-
ture is to be taken up at once. Prof.
.T. F. Nicholson, of Stillwater, state
nursery inspector, was here arrang-
ing for that work and will arrange
the itineraries for himself and two
assistants. The work must be corn-!
pleted by September 1.
Work Completed; $3,000 Left
EUFAULA: The city has completed
its water plant and has an amount of j
$3,000 remaining iu the water works:
fund. The dam, which was construct-
ed to hold the supply and which gave'
way under the? Immense pressure of
the floods during the recent period of
rain storms, Is ail thai remains of the)
civic improvements.
Democrats Knew Man Was Republican
GUTHRIE: The state election'
board decided the only formal contest
which has come before it in connec-
tion with primary nominating peti-
tions in favor of F. (1. Cutshall, a re.
publican candidate for the legislature
in Caddo county, whose petition had
been attacked on the ground that it
was first circulated ie , democratic
petition and democratic signers se-
cured in that way. Cutshall proved
17 democrats had signed it knowing
it to be a republican petition, and
the contest was dropped.
Tulsa Will Hold Another Election
TULSA: Tulsa will hold another
bond election on August 25, when the
question of the proposed bond issue
ot $30,000 for the extension of the
storm and sanitary sewers will be
voted upon and finally decided. Ot
this amount $13,000 will be used at
once for the extensions as planned.
Secretary's Office a Money Maker
GUTHRIE: Assistant Secretary of
State Leo Myer has turned over to the
state treasury the sum of $6,890, col-
lected by the secretary of state's of-
fice for the quarter ending July 1.
This makes a total of about $15,000
from that office since statehood, and
under the new charter law, which
makes the fee 1-10 or 1 per cent of
the capita! stock of the corporation
the receipts will show a very mate-
rial increase. As the total appropria-
tion for the office is only about $9.
000, it is a decided money maker for
the state.
Suit Under Fellow Servant Law
SHAWNEE: Because her husband,
it is alleged, was acidentally killed
by a railroad detective wnlle In pur-
suit of escaping prisoners, Mrs. J. L.
Frltch, of tit is place, has invoked the
fellow servant law and sued the Santa
Fe railroad company for $25,000 dam-
ages. In order to mnke a case the
woman's attorneys will be compelled
to submit proof of nominal manslaugh-
ter.
Government Does Not Fear Strike
MUSKOGEE: Commissioner .)
George Wright has two diamond drill
outfits working In the Choctaw nation
prospecting the segregated coal landi
to determine just how much coal
there is. The drillers nave notified
the commissioner that they had to
have $125 per month or they did not
propose to work iu the wilderness
among the snakes and wildcats for
$90 per. The reply of the govern-
ment was that they could continue at
$90 or other men would be secured.
Forty-Seven Dollars Per Week From
Ten Cows.
Edwin C. Taylor, in "Southern Ru-
ralist," says:
We only have a small dairy c.f thir-
teen cows: we make a specially of
fancy butter and butleru I go to
market three times a 'r We have
a forty-five galion barrel churn that
works backward and forward and gives
splendid results with least labor. Mon-
day we had eleven gallons of cream
and made thirty-one pounds of gilt-
edge butter churned in about thirty
minutes. On Wednesday we had twen-
ty and one-half pounds, and on Friday
twenty and one-half pounds, making
seventy-two pounds of butter from ten
cows that we were milking, one a
heifer that lost her calf at seven
months when she was sixteen months
old. Two others are cows that will
have calves In July. The other cows
were freshened in February and
March. Most of my cows are thorough-
bred Jerseys or high grade. We have
a cream separator, and from thirteen
gallons of milk this morning we got
three and one-half gallons of cream. I
feed the heavy milkers in the winter
about a gallon of wheat bran and a
heaping quart of cotton seed meal
with about three gallons of cotton seed
hulls at a feed night and morning. The
cows are turned out on the range,
and get no other roughness the whole
year round. Heifers and the smaller
milkers do not get quite so much
grain. The most of the buttermilk is
sold to colored people, who come to
the house for it the day we churn at
15 cents a gallon. The skim milk from
the separator is put in stone jars hold-
ing five gallons and allowed to clab-
ber. On market mornings we put
all that is clabbered into the churn
and churn it for about ten or fifteen
mintues, enough to thoroughly break
it up and make it smooth and thick,
and you ought to see how my custom-
ers like it. I have no trouble in get-
ting customers for every woman who
uses it tells her neighbors about it,
and 1 often have to refuse to sell to
new people. 1 get 20 cents a gallon
for all the sour milk. Should any of
the milk get loo sour to make good
buttermilk, we nut it in a 100-pound
can and set on the back of the kitchen
stove until it is slightly warm, not
hoi—then empty into a cotton sack j
and bang up to drain. We do this
at night, and next morning empty into
a big dish nan and put on a,little salt
and some cream and then work ii with
our hands like mixing bread until it
is smooth, and put a little over a pint
of the curd in a clean white cloth
and w rap it up and sell it for 10 eems I
a package as cottage cheese or smear-
kase. I have a great demand for it. |
I get 35 cents a pound for butter. Last
week I sold 70 pounds of butter for j
$24.50; 100 gallons of buttermilk, $20; I
18 packages of smearkase, $1.80; 2 1-2
gallons sweet milk at 40 cents a gat
Ion, $1. Total, $47.30, from ten cows
in one week. This week we will do
better, as v.e will have three more
fresh cows. I have two registered Jer-
sey cows and a registered bull tour-
teen months old.
After a bit 1 expect to have a better
lot of cows than I have now. Have
one two-year-old heifer fresh about
three weeks that gives over four gal
Ions of milk a day. We are town
people; have only been on the farm
for four years. My daughter, myself
and a colored boy do all the work;
have ten acres in bottom, four in corn,
one and one-half in Irish potatoes and
other garden stuff, and a strawberry
patch of one-fourth of an acre. I take
a half dozen farm papers, but the
Ruralist beats them all in practical
matter for the Southland.
Springdale Farm. Little Rock, Ark.,
Route 3, Box 39.
Work of the Farmer.
The countless millions of our popu-
lation are fed and clothed by the
American farmer. The grain waving
in golden beauty upon the great,
plains of the west, the cotton drifting
like summer snow upon the fields of
the south, freight the fleets of nations
>;nd loose their sails, thread the couti-
aents with track of steel, fill the earth
with the roar of trains and heap for
trade and commerce and useful art
those stores that make a nation great.
Where are the sinews of our strength
If they are not found in our great,
diversified agricultural products? What j
victorious hosts ever waved as joyous j
banners as those that float above the;
tasseled maize from the snows of i
Maine to the spicy groves of C'alifor- j
nia? What spirit of beauty hovers
above southern fields when fleecy bolls
uncover to crown "King Cotton!"— J
Hon. Ezekiel S. Candler, Jr.. of .Mis j
sissippl, in House of Representatives. |
Some Questions Answered.
The most common objector says the
Farmers' Union will not stick. Farm
crs are the greatest organizers and
stickers in the world and they will
rtlclc when there is something to stick
lor. Show the farmers benefits in the
way of profitable prices for their
crops and no power on earth can draw
them apart.
The farmers have got enough rense
to appreciate a profitable business
arn^ they will stick to the thing that
makes them money and elevates their
calling.
But still another says farmers are
too numerous to co-operate. This is a
great fallacy. If great numbers was
an element of weakness, then indeed
our cause would be hopeless. Would
you think a nation weak because it had
millions of able-bodied men? No;
but you would say, "Organize them
into armies and equip them with up-
to-date arms and they will he lnvin
cible before any invasion." So with
the farmers. The greater the union,
the greater the strength, provided you
have up-to-date methods and plans
to co operate on.
A union without a plan and a pro-
gram is no union at all. Unity of
prices and controlled marketing is the
up-to-date gun and even fanners can
use It.
And now another objector comes
along and says, "Suppose the farmer
should produce a surplus?" Are farm-
ars expected to be foolish enough to
throw In their surplus for Rood meas-
ure" Surely not. Controlled market-
ing will take care of the surplus If
any exists, and if farmers are co-oper-
ating i hey can easily bold the surplus
of good seasons over to the short
years, thus equalizing supply and
prices and benefitting both producers
and consumers.
I appeal to you farmers, brothers, in
behalf of the tired wives and mothers
of your homes, and if you are not will-
ing to stand up for the freedom and
glory of such high and exalted devo-
tion, you are unworthy to be called
a husband and father and to bpar the
name of an American citizen. What
must lie the quality of the courage of
the farmer who stands back an<l re-
fuses to assist in throwing off the
cowardly curs of commercialism who
have t'asiened their rabid mouths upon
the throats of helpless women and
children on the farm and threaten the
industrial life of the nation? The
farmer who falters is a coward. Then
let'.! be up and doing, brother farm-
ers. Place a standard upon our busi-
ness like the commercial Interests have
done and then conform to the stand
ard; that is, a minimum price below
which we will not allow our produce
to come.—Correspondence National Co-
operator.
Advertise the Union.
If outsiders do not know what Rood
we are doing, it is mainly because we
do not tell them.
Traveling through a still unorgan-
ized country, I was unable to find one
single farmer who knew anything
about our Union. I heard later that
efforts bad been made lo organize that
county, but that they had failed, it was
said on account of lack of Interest.
On investigation. I found though that
none of the local papers had ever
received one single communication
from the Union, and that the meetings
had not been advertised. That same
story can probably be told in many
other counties. A publicity campaign,
made in advance and well advertised
meetings, would very probably have
given quite different results.
1 have found that leal and even
daily papers willingly reproduce all of
the Union news they can get, providing
they be of general interest. Every
local should, if a suitable man can
he found, appoint a Union correspond-
ed for the local papers and particu-
larly the organizers should avail
themselves of all what the newspapers
are willing to do for them and for us.
Of course, the maximum of results
can he obtained only by systematic
work. A regular service of Union pub-
licity should begin below, with the lo-
cals and the county Unions Arrange-
ments can be made with most of the
local papers, whereby a certain amount
of space would be reserved for ilie
Union and edited under its responsi
billty (similarly to the temperance
and W. C. T. U. columns). Whatever
a local or a county will have to pay
to its union editor, will prove a good
investment and result in an Increase
of interest in the Union and its mem-
bership.
The State, as well as the National
Union, ought to organize their bureau
of publicity, which should keep in con-
stant touch with the daily papers and
the news agencies. At comparatively
little expense a complete system of ad
vertlslng the Union could and should
be established. It would not only help
dispel many misunderstandings and
false reports circulating In the press,
but gain many new friends and mem-
bers for our great organization.
C. Grandplerre.
Poplar Bluff, Mo.
If our cotton crop can be sold at a
better price all are benefited. If $lt>
be add-d then for a twelve million
crop we have $120,000,000 added lo re-
sources of the South. This Is to be
spent, and means better trade, more
deposits, more and better clothes, and
more money for all.
The man who values money above
the good things money will buy is af
flicted with blindness. Can we buy
a better thing than Intelligence whlcn
will bring profit of n thousand fold iu
material gain—and happiness besides?
Evanishing.
| Yd, the rose is beautiful, and Time
lie withers It; and fair is the violet In
1 spring, and swiftly It waxes old; white
is the lily, it fadeth when it falleth;
and snow is white, and melteth after
i ii hath been frozen And the beauty
■ of youth Is fair, but lives only for u
, little season.—Theoirsitus.
No matter how proud a man Is of
being able to do things around the
house It never takes any useful form
like chopping wcod.
KEEP ORCHARD FREE OF TRASH.
BED-BOUND FOR MONTHS.
The Only Safe Way to Keep Trees Hope Abandoned After Physicians'
fr6m Injury by Rodents and Insects. Consultation.
Mrs. Enos Shearer, Yew and Wash,
tngton Sts., Centralia, Wash., says:
"For years I was
weak and run down,
could not sleep, my
limbs swelled and
the secretions were
troublesome; pains
were Intense. 1 was
fast in bed for four
months. Three doc-
tors said there was
no cure for me, and I was given up
to die. Being urged, I used Doan's
Kidney Pills. Soon I was better, and
in a few weeks was about the house,
well and strong again."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
In regard to the protection of fruit
trees from rodents, my experience
has been that most people neglect to
do anything for the protection of their
trees until it is too late and then get
discouraged and do not try to raise
their own fruit, being more Interested
in the production of a good hog or
calf than in the comforts of their fam-
ily (until the agent comes along again
and sells them some more trees.)
Well, 1 have known of one instance
where a certain neighbor sowed his
orchard to wheat. Just before the
wheat was ready to cut the rabbits
barked almost every tree. This was
in June, mind you. They must have
had queer constitutions to have need
ed the hark at that time of the year.
These trees, I think, had been set out
two or three years.
My experience is that the rabbits
prefer the very small trees, al
though they will sometimes gnaw
quite large ones. But there is no
limit to the s ize of a tree that a mouse
will try his teeth on. While examin
ing trees for borers I have found
trees from 25 lo 30 years old that had
been gnawed by mice. 1 would con-
sider the surest remedy against them
to he to keep your orchard so clean
of trash, grass, weeds, etc., as to leave
no hiding place for them.
I should say that most rodents pre
fer the apple, pear and quince to
most other kinds of trees; but 1 find
that rabbits will invite their friends to
a picnic whenever they happen to find
rose bushes unprotected. 1 use chicken
wire netting to protect my trees in
the nursery. Three feet high is suf-
ficient provided you stake it down
well. One of my friends, a nursery-
man, is also a school teacher, and not
being at home very much when the
time came for protecting his nursery
by putting up his fence, he entrusted
the Job to his hired man. He put up
the fence; he put it high enough, but
failed by about six inches of getting it
low enough. The consequences were
that one bunny fixed a hundred or so
of his trees before he found him.
1 prefer veneer wrappers to any-
liting else for protection, because they
can be left on the trees two or three
years without the least injury being
done to tho trees. They are a great
protection against borers also. I once
examined a 30-acre orchard that they
had been on for two years and only
found one tree with borers in it in the
entire orchard. We have tried the
veneer. Of course, we do not recom-
mend any paint that has grease or oil
in it. 1 know of parties living near me
here that bought trees of agents of
certain nurseries aniUtlieii the agent
would sell them enough paint to kill
them, and there you are.
Finally, dear friends, concludes the
writer in Farmers' Review, if you
have neglected to protect your or-
chard otherwise and Brer Rabbit is
cutting up capers try this: One part
sulphate of strychnine, one-third part
borax, one part sugar syrup, ten parts
water, mix and paint small twigs with
this and scatter in their paths, and
that will be the last of Brer Rabbit.
A GRAPE TRELLIS.
Serviceable One Which Can Be Built
for the Garden.
A grape trellis made of white pine,
put together as shown in the sketch,
will last for several years. The 2x4-
inch posts, A, are seven feet long. The
feet, B, are made of 2x4-Incb, four
SWEET THINGS.
Maude—How do I look in the water,
dear ?
Ma belle—Best ever—when your fig
ure is totally immersed.
For and Against.
A Philadelphia lawyer, retained as
counsel for the defense in a murder
trial, tells of the difficulties in getting
together a jury.
"Counsel were endeavoring," says
this lawyer, "to elicit from the various
prospective jurors their views con-
rerning the death penalty.
"One man to whom the question was
(nit, 'Are you against the infliction of
the death penalty'." replied, 'No, sir'
"'What is your business?' he wai
asked. 'I am a butcher,' he replied.
"When the same question was put
to the next man he answered that tw
vas against the death penalty.
" 'What is your business?'
" 'Life insurance,' said he."
"Riot at Yale"—A Recipe.
Take half a hundred Sheff Fresh
men dying of ennui, and the same
number of academic feeling the same
way—only more so. Mix well by the
flagpole, and pour into Church street
Introduce at two-minute intervals half
a dozen trolleys with temptingly- dang
ling ropes. Now put in on the run
three or four vigilant representatives
of the law, stir till the whole mass
comes to red heat, and then pick out
an entirely innocent grind, and place
'n the cooler to cool. Garnish with
huge headlines and serve for break
fast to fond parents, etc.—Yale Record.
Making It Sure.
The lawyer was drawing up En
peck's will.
"I hereby bequeath all my propertj
to my wife," dictated Enpeck. "Got
that down?"
"Yes," answered the attorney.
"On condition," continued Enpeck
"that she marries within a year."
lint why that condition?" asked tin
man of law.
"Because," answered the meek and
lowly testator, "I want somebody t«
be sorry that I died. See?"
DROPPED COFFEE
Strong Grape Trellis.
feet long, and rest on a brick placed
under each end. The crosspieces and
braces are 1x2 Inches. A piece of
strap iron, C, fastened to the foot by
means of a nail through a lioie in its
top, explains Popular Mechanics, is
driven into the ground, which holds
the trellis from blowing over.
GARDEN NOTES.
Worms if left to feed at will on
currant bushes will soon ruin them.
A garden properly taken care of is
a source of considerable profit and
much pleasure.
I)o not permit deep hoeing In the
garden, as tills destroys the lateral
roots of plants.
Push the growth of the new straw-
berry plants so they may develop
large root systems for next season.
Cut back the monthly rose bushes
as soon as the first blossoms wither.
This will Insure a second growth at
once. The blooms always come on the
new growth.
Cultivate the Onions.
The most important essential in
onion growing is thorough cultivation
at the right time, which means that
we vi ist-keep down the weeds and
grass and keep the soil loose around
the plants w hile they are young. This
requires careful work for the first few
(linen, but if well done one will feel
well repaid when the harvest comes
The patch should be gone over as soon
us the ground is dry enough after each
rain. For cultivation by hand as de-
scribed above I plant iu drills from
to 1G laches apart,
Doctor Gains 20 Pounds on Postum.
A physician of Wash., D. C., says of
his coffee experience:
"For years I suffered with periodica!
headaches which grew more frequent
until they became almost constant. So
severe were they that sometimes I was
almost frantic. I was sallow, consti-
pated, irritable, sleepless; my mem
ory was poor, I trembled and my
thoughts were often confused.
"My wife, in her wisdom, believed
coffoe was responsible for these Ills
and urged me to drop it. I tried many
times to do so, but was its slave.
"Finally Wife bought a parkage of
Postum, and persuaded me to try It, but
she made it same as ordinary coffee
and I was disgusted with the taste
j (I make this emphatic because I fear
' many others have had the same expe-
rience.) She was distressed at her
failure and we carefully read the di-
rections, made It right, boiled It ful!
15 minutes after boiling commenced
and with good cream and sugar, I
liked it—it invigorated and seemed to
nourish me.
"Tills was about a year ago. Now I
have no headaches, am not sallow,
sleeplessness and irritability are gone,
rav brain clear and my head stead}
I h:ue gained 20 lbs. and feel I am a
new man.
"I do not hesitate to give Postum
due credit. Of course dropping coffee
was the main thing, but 1 hud dropped
it before, using chocolate, cocoa and
other things to no purpose.
' Postum not only seemed to act a?
an invigorant, but as an article of
nourishment, giving me the needed
phosphates and albumens. This is n<>
Imaginary tale. It can be substaoti
ated by my wife and her sister, wh<
both changed to Postum and a i
hearty women of about 70.
"i write this for the information an I
encouragement of other-, and with i
feeling of gratitude to the inventor ot
Postum."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read riie Road to Well
vllle," Iu pkg- ' There's a Rim-sou."
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
Interest,
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Allan, John S. The Peoples' Voice (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, July 24, 1908, newspaper, July 24, 1908; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc118208/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.