The Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1914 Page: 1 of 6
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'*«KS!SS8iK:*aH?r.>5j)!4l
* FOR THE HOME AND H
<C FIRESlOE £J
■ mm a e a b s - s a a
"VTMNS Ai.; THE NEWS %
Or OKLAHOMA r
' « '•= i ¥ 'i <k W a
volume 24.
\
uuthkik, oklahoma. nii'l'sdav. .11 "lv i<tn.
SCANDAL DOCUMENTS WOMEN MAY HOLD
do not exist! office IN oklahoma
Paris, July 13—4a a result of a de- Oklahoma City, :kt.. . j„|y •>.
maud upon the government by Maitre'.N'o qualification prescribed bv Hie
l^i bo ti Stored hU first victory In the | Oklahoma constitution makes any lis
trial of Mme Caillaux for the murder ' Unction etween the sew in lb'
of Gaston Calmette, editor of Flgara. j matter of holding the of: ir. of county
Prosecutor Hertaux, on behalf of i ierk or for Unit matter of clerk ot
the government, declared In open 11he distrlc- court it is held In a de-
court that the alleged Agadlr docu- , ' i 'lon or the supn me court handed
ments held by Calmetta implicating 'own today. The decision comes in
Caillaux in a scandal in connection . '<* case of Mrs. John Stop." of
with Morrocan affairs do not exist, (washita county who sought to man-
Great excitement followed the an-' lamus the county election hoard to
nouncomwnt and l,abori said: "We j Permit her name goin. on the ballot
Will consider the Incident closed.'' I or the offlci of county clerk. The
Employees of the gunshop where ; election board' refuse i to allow It.
Mme. Caillaux purchased the iveap The position of tihe election bard was:
on with which she shot Calmette. 1 sustained in the district court which
were next called to the stand and de- '* reversed today.
Borlbed the woman's actions
Th^sald^he practiced In a range j _,UEEN THj- CANNING
SENATORS HITCHCOCK AND REED. WHO BEG.N FIG HT ON PRESIDENT
number 28
ENGLISH KING RAISES
under a stone on a target the size
of a person.
The deposition of President Poln-
care was read. It told or Calllaux'e
visit when the minister of finance
said that Caljnette intended to pub-
lish his private letters to Mme. Call '
laux before their marriage. "If he
does I will kill him." Caillaux declar I
cd to the president The unpreced- I
en ted deposition created a sensatior
which rivalled Caillaux's appearance 1
as the principal witness for the de '
fense yesterday.
M. Caillaux, on the stand said:
"At the police station on inj way
home from the senate 1 learned o' ;
the tragedy. My wife's constan
(prayer was 'I hope he Is not serious j
ly hurt; I meant only to give him i
lesson.' "
Caillaux asked for 10 minutes res
and went over to the dock, took on' j
of his wife's hands and kissed it fer
vently.
M. Caillaux now entered upon the I
purely political phase or his testl
mony. The excitement of the listen i
ers reached fever heat. Some of hi' [
statements were greeted with hoot: j
and cheers, despite the orders or thi 1
"residing judge to arrest any dis
turber.
The campaign carried on by th<
Figaro, he asserted, wa* meant tr
tsrike him down at any cost because
he stood for the income tax and the
interests hetiUqd the Figaro hated
that measure of fiscal reform.
"The Times," be said, "was con
demned for publishing things abou'
Parnell which were not true. If w,
had English laws in France, then
would have been no Flga.ro campaign.
He had been accused of prevarica-
tion In the Rochette affair, and o
•reason in connection with Franco-
German treaty. To this he replied:
"We are simple bourgeoise; w
have no coronet, but we wjll defen
our honor aifl our Ihpt^sly. The
postponement of the Rochette casi
was a step for which I would not hes-
itate to take the responsibility ever
today."
CLUBS ARRIVES IN LOGAN
Miss Katharine Smith, federal can-
ing club demonstrator for lx gin
ounty, is holding1 a canning demon-
: ration cigiht miles northwest of the
Ity today, with a large number of
•lub members In attendance canning [
omatoes. The canning < luh girls'
ave kept right tit work in their
egetable patches in spHe or the c|iM
veatiler and heat and have been can-
ins beans, corn, lieats and early'
lilts in considerable quantity and 1
re now busy with tomatoes, an any J
f thorn having exceptional yields.
'OBBERIES ARE
TRACED TO POLICEMEN
VOICE IN PROTEST
| CUTS HIS VEINS
WITH SHOE shank
London,
in the nun
lii« responsible
, the Kohinson, eli;
[<<1 that thi
e I i I is of r
f Polii
11 •«, tur
Jul) r
'1 with lth<
Norton,
I'll lodjo
in the ne
'Lawrence-
murder of
•omuiitted
iy • nil ins
\ ami UIH
th< I.
of t
los called lop.
at nuekingham
ave In its tone a
jarded them as
h« n( T and pea
mu to confer in
letflement.
hem their responsibilities
i, re great and that time was short
nil ml vised thrill to exercise patl
nee and to e earnest and ,-oti' Ilia
orv in their deliberations
MOOSE ASKED TO BE HEARD
lid left III
'aching a
ll> told t
lions
Oiinfgton, ,i iiiy :
^lt in a letter
of the Senate
committee, askt
)rtunity t
ho
- iV>l. Theo.
to Chairman
Foreign Rela-
d for an op-
>1 j ul< ide in
ed j his jugula
.'li j rtery ol' !.i« K ft wrist with a ste^l
iluink removed from one of his slioee.
he Roihinaon \va regarded; hy tlie po-
■'i li<• •«. as the most dangerous character
linn have handled in recent years.
l : The police feared the man's re-
iouiv.'s so much thait tiiie.v kept ihim
iii nlufht in the court building1 to avoid
of It . daily trip to and from fche jail
I tin rim his trial.
cs j 1 was rumored that <-onfeelerates
would att'ai i K liberate him and
fi\e armed men guarded him con-
stantly.
Robinson's home was nt Washing-
ton Courthouse. Ohio, where his rela-
tives are higflilv respected.
It was said his mother had planned
to come and testify in Iher son's de-
ft use. making the plea that he was
not. mentally responsible.
SIC .NATO R HITCHCOCK
S i:\ATOft IUCEI).
Senators
nd Reed
Hitchcock of Nebraska, firmation
Missouri, democrats. \,.w Yori
)f Paul .M. \\;
have begun aholher fight on Pros! Jon
j dent Wilson in the senatt
^fletermlnrfM opposition to
—
murder is charged
,, , ,,, t0 preacher
Itockville Center, N. Y., July 22 j
■all of tills city's police force of J West Plains, Mo., July 22.—Though
fee men are accused of burglary In the charge has been chant-ed from
irrants issued today. ( : manslaughter to second degree nnir-
Two policemen were arrested on der in the case of the Rev. Lawrence
uty and a third Is on a vacation In s. Flanner.v. a Methodist preacher,
oljoke, .Mass. j charge,! with the killing of Olin Mc-
There have been numerous unsolv- | Connel, a linotype operator and fellow
'I robberies in the city, but the de- I hoarder, by a blow of his fist, the
redatlous culminated when a general youn . minister continues to fill hi'
re across Hie Main street from po- apjioin'.miutK on '.lie W■ t Plains ( ir
ce headquarters was robbed. jcuit. He will be placsd on trial in
The owner of the store found the j the Howell county circuit court he -
olen goods being worn hy negroes 1 next we«k. He has been under bon
nd made Inquiries which resulted In ;of $2,000 since the fatal outcome of a
rbuiv, th ■
Pliomas i .
the Chicago capitalist, who h.. l
iKH-ui named for the Current \ Reserve
hoard. Tin > led Hie opposition in
the nieeeting of the banking and -tir-
renc> committee of t!>e senate eth
other day to Mr, Jones. The fact
that he was a director in the In-
ternational Harvester Trust and as
such had been namejl
1 si1-lent
ift
far refused to do so, and
Wilson issued a statement in whi
he n 'held the banker's position. Thus
the issue was joined and a fitrht. on
the administration is expected.
LEFT WIFE DESTITUTE
AFTEr? SPENDING FORTUNE
rd in opi>oflition
to tin pending treaty, proponing fn
pay Colombia twentv-five million dol-
■ 1 partition of Panama.
The request ftaa considered h\ the
committee without action l ecause
C halrman Stone was unable to mar
slial a quorum.
Mr. Stone said that he wrote
Roosevelt thai he would present his
application to the cimmittee.
Stone indicated that he personally
opposed the bearing
in the government suit against th
trust was the deciding factor in hit
virtual rejection.
They insist too that .Mr. Warbun
shall go before the committee an.
Wichita, July 22 A woman whost (
defendant husband sold their childen's bed in I
1 200,000 MEN ON STRlKt
IN ST PETERSBURG
am
order to desert them, was yesterday
turned out of her home by her moth- , Sl Petersburg, July 22—Street cur
er-in-iaw. Deserted for the second i servIc° here is «nsj ended, the em-
time within a year, and this time left! l''0VeB the roads having joined a
without a home, she lias been com- I K^neral strike called by the workmen
• HMD IU.VII I Ulll •
■ wer questions about bis financial; pelled to appli to the (iood Fellows |" " protest a«alnst thed rastic raeas-
ineetions and Idena u« i'" -« housework In order to support lhe authorities at Baku and other
girl ' provincial towns have taken against
strikers bore. Other workmen joined
connections and ideas. He lias
free for all fight
AS DRYS WIN
herself and llttJ
| The domestic life of this woman, as
she told it to the chief Good Fellow, j
full ol' sorrow. The husband de-
have joined the movement and It 1
•stimated that two hundred thousand
e arrest of the policemen.
dinner table argument
McConnel's fian e. Miss Effie Cow
EDERAL CANNING CLUB
DEMONSTRATOR HERE
James S. Wilson, assistant state
Sent for tho Federal Farm Demon-
ration work was in the city yester-
ly looking up the farm demonstra-
on and hoys' corn, cotton and leaffir
lub work. He says that while the
ry weather has discouraged a few
ho moiorii ,• ,i ,,ve in i'oise t'ity, Idaho,
he majority of the <.enionstrators are .
om.in.r , . ; employed counsel to assist
^epin.jj i ig'ht up with their work and 1
ill have good yields on their dem-
mstration plots while cro ;s aijoin-
ng, improperly farmed, are failures.
<len of Springfield, Mo., to whom iie
was to be married in September,
determined to send the slayer of her
sweetheart to the penitentiary. Wi!h
earnings she lias saved while employ
ed as stenographer for a Springfiel I
law firm, the young woman lias em-
ployed Col. Robert Maxey of .Mem-
phis, Tenn., to assist in the prosecu-
tion. The parents of McConnel, who
live in Uoise City, Idaho, also have
Kansas ( ity, July 22—As the result
>•- ()f a spirited local option election In-
dependence, Mo., a suburb, went dry
today by aboilt 100 votes. The elec-
tion was the most hotly contested one
ever held there. Fights were numer-
ous and several workers for both
sides were arrested.
Women dry workers took an ac-
tive part, using buggies and motor
cars and help get out the vote. Oth-
ers, armed with cameras, pencils and
ads. were stationed outside the poll-
ing places. All trains and street cars '
serted his wife and two children—a | n,en arp
boy aged 7 and a girl aged 6—-July 10. j —
I'M::. He returned February 30, 1914, ABDUL hamid is
entirely too kindly
lluenos Aires, July 22 John (J.
and romised to remain with hi)} wife
and family. June lo, after selling the 1
children's bed and an organ which i — -•
had been stored away he deserter I keishman, ex-American ambassador
again, going to Alva, presumably to I lo Turkey, is here. In a long pro-
wOrk in lhe harvest fields. ' urkish interview, he said the depose1 I
The woman w as left $4,000 by her I SulUu, Namld, "was too kind
father, who, before his death was a
sold gasoline for
kerosene: death resulted
Oklahoma City, Okla., July 2'-.-
Damages in the sum of $50,000 for the
death of Mrs. Joseii+iine iiumann at
Pocasset. December ."i, 1.91:5, due to
bums caused by using gasoline wnh !i
she had purnhased as 'kerosene art1
asked in a suit fllekl- in tlie district
court this morning against the Pierce
Oil corporation by J. H. Iiumann and
Mirs. A. Albert, tvusband and mother,
lit is alleged that the* oil conporation
sold 100 gallons of gasoline to ti'ie
Golden-1 lumann-Webb com,pany at
Pocasset on an order from the latter
company that called for l<>0 gallons o'
Soerosene.
vicious hogs tear
boy to pieces
- ■ — uuu ntirci ruis
The father an.I mother of Flannery from Kansas Clt.v were met bv boy
have come to his aid and! have re- scouts distributing dry circulars,
lained three West 1'lalns lawyers for. A dlshturbance that amounted al-
the defense, in addition to .7. (i. most to a riot occurrcil near one of
Uireatlhouse. former state's attorney of the iiolling planes. Rev. H. K. Piui-
• arranza prohibits jl.MonteomiT.v county. 111. The lathe- dletOQ, iiastor of the First Christian
generals to take office !al"1 brother s|>ent several days here!church was thrown violenilv to the
—r— ! recently conferring with the minister, ground during a controversy between
laedo, Tex . July 22.—A high or-; They advised him to continue bis the wet and dry workers.
I icial among constitutionalists at j preaching until after his trial or until The minister, a dry leader, was ac-
aievo I.aredo, opposite ihere, today | ;ome action is taken by Che confer- cused of being within 100 feet of tbc
aid General Carranza had issued an , "nee authorises. Thus fa.r, no polling booth and was ordered away
Thus far, _ o
■ diet forbidding any of his genera's ; charges have been preferred aualn t by a deputy constable,
becoming candidates for the presi- ""
Mexico at future elections. |1
A crowd surg-
Flannery ilrv the church authorities, e,i around the two men and a general
- — - ""•"c ciDuuuiiB. Iand ^ i8 Raid that no a ition will be fight started. Obims were wielded
he official, who declined to allow taken until after'the trial. | and blows were struck freely
the use of his name, said the order Killing Follows Strike Argument. j —_____
ncluded all generals in the constltu- kilinj? of O'Connel occurred at
'.he home of Mark Sommers, where
both men boirdeil, 011 June 4. They
angued over labor strikes while eatinn
''finner. They appareiJy were on good
I terms when they left the table, but
when O'Connel started to leave th
lonallst army,
roffered.
No explanation was
no 8 plague case
SAVES CHILD BUT DIES
UNDER TRAIN WHEELS
Hulbert, Okla., July :2 - When P. C.
Wright, a construction foreman, saw
fast freight train approaching
. .#-■ , ' uniiri Btfll It'll IU It il \ • III' « "UA.ll III L-
1 ' ~~ ''l0 eighth I house on 'his return to work. Flan- 'iro,,nf' a curve as he and his 8-year-
prominent cattleman. The husband
blew up" the money in a short time,
leaving his wife, at the time of de-
sertion, destitute.
hearted and did not know when and
| how to cut off a few heads. The
j < hristians, said .Mr. Leishman. were
I more brutal than the Turks.
1 TO PROBE JUGGLING OF PRICES
WILSON ORDERS HAVEN
TO be PROBED
Washin^ixui. IV C, July 22.—The
I long eontiiuifNl effort to untangle the
New Haven railway without litigo-
tion, came to an end lawt nWsht when
President Wilson in a letter to At-
tonif.v (ieneral Mclteynolds, directed
the institution of a Sherman law suit
'<> dissolve the system and ordered
that the ■ Ti initial asp«>et of the case
be laid before a federal gran<% jury."
The President's approval of the
course mapped out by the depart.-
mei;t of justice means that the civil
•'nit. will he filed against 'tfhe New
llaven in the Tnitedf States court at
New York at once. The attorney
wneral also Immediately will direct.
ITnfted States District Attorney Mar-
shall. at New York, to summon a
"srand jury and the task of laving evi-
dence before t'hnt body on which o>
ask for criminal indictments against
officers and directors of the Nsnr
Haven under the Mellen management
will ' e berlin as soon as possible.
ALGEBRA SLUR PAINS BOSTON
,, , , r4 , Washington, 1). July 2^.—lnves-
Hoston, Mass., July JI—(Boston j t.
, i , , . , _ taga/tion ot an alleged conspiracy
was shocked by the declaration ol , . .
, . . , among dealers and exporters of wheat
Dr. I-rancis of Los Angeles that worn- Vnnr ,... 4 ,
, „. . . . , , „ , lu Kansas City to depress prices to
en who study algebra lost their ., . .
gQUjy farmers provided in a resolution of-
n , ..I , , , , , ] fered in the house to'dknv by Hepre-
Had lie libelled the sacred codflsli , nn .•
.. , j sentatne Doolittle of Kansas, was fa-
or 1-1 nkhid things or beans ti.- J vorlll)Iy rP|)ortefl llv tl)p (n,WR(J)t(>
would still Have retained some of ; no,mile„„ „)]nmission
the many friends he had here until I secret*-,. i,„,i.,„i,, ,
ne'-retar.v Redfield said lie would
today but now none of them will ever ! itllinnft. . ,
, , p na two inspectors to Kansas to in-
look in his direction after what he | vestigate
said of algebra.
GUN FIGHT SHOWS
UP CHICAGO BOSSES
Chicago, III. July 22.—'Police dr-
ies were stirred today by the declar-
ation that ll'occo Venille, said to be
"the man in gray'' nccusedl of starting
♦the shooting whi h led to Che death
r>f Detective Burns and t he wound-
ing of five others iast Thursday night
in the levee district, was a New York!
gunman, who ha/1 been sent. we t af-
j ter the electrocution of the murderers
of Herman Rosenthal, the gamfoler.
Silatge s Attorney Hoyne was the
author of the statement linking;
\ enille, who is now in a Chicago 'hos-
l>ltal suffering from a wound In his
foot, with tlie New York east side
ejang of gunmen.
WEST HARRISON
resort CLOSED
Gallon Vinton Bowditch, who for
seventy-six years has never gone to
bed without having spent an hour
working out algebric problems, is in
favor of lynching Dr. Francis.
"CALENDAR GIRL" IS
REFUSED A DIVORCE
( hicago, July 22 Judge Petit today
refused a divorce to Marjorie Hamil-
Word reached the city today of a
tragedy that happened near Kingfish-
er last nig'ht.
While the 14 year old son of Mr. henry ludwig killed-
and Mrs. John Hopako, Sweeds, living his mules ran away
on a farm near the Logan county line
..vAotr uU ii,n it-uun ui Horn. ri«in-
case of bubonic plague was discovered nerv followed. Thev had gone but a
here Monday night. Charles II. Lea- few 8tp,,s when Flanner.v was seen to
man who resides at 2S45 Baronne dieal .Mrt'onnel a blow on the jaw,
street and is employed at 829 Canal, which sent him to the sidew alk, il"
Street, the principal business street: died within a short time.
of the city was taken ill Thursday and f Boarders at the Sommers home it
us caso was diagnosed as plague. the time differ as to which of the
old daughter were on a hand-car. he
hurled the ehild to safety, taking a
chance himself—and lost.
At the instant he stood up and
threw the girl off the track the train
struck him. and he was killed in-
stantly because he was unable to
men made the first offensive move and dr0P to the floor of the hand-car in
also as to the language used during time to seize a grip before the Impact,
til" argument at the table, l'lannery With a party of nine, Wright and
has made the statement repeatedly his daughter were riding along the
was feeding a bunch of hogs, he got Henry X. I.udwlg, aged in of . ,
caught in a barbed wire fence; the Pleasant Mill, Mo was killed near 8 ,h<> b'°W St'" " an'' ria" Franoisco railway
wire cut his arm badly. The sight of Red Hock when a team of mules ran , , "" """ '""l "" int"ntio" ,ra,'k' WriEht plttin« on the car.
blood evidently maddened the hogs fo: away with him. II ■ was a farmer and ' ° «"■« McConnel. I«l„ ■ lelans Who the other men operating it. When tbr
attended the injured man, however, train was noticed, there was not time
.... . .w maijuriB riainij-
For a Boston woman algebra Is ton Kertln* Cunningham, the famous
not only harmless but necessary, ' he ,ak.miar Blrl>.. who beoamo „,e w|f,,
said. ".How shall she estimate other- , „t tt Denver ma„ |0(, W)on af(er
had been divorced in Illinois. She was
told to take her plea before the state
supreme court, as she admitted sli'
violated the Illinois divorce laws.
NEW YORK BREAKS
THE DIVORCE RECORD
they literally tore the boy to pieces was visiting his eister, Mrs. John
before help could reach hfm. He died Horn.
a few hours later. * -
welon thieves deplete
REED COMPLIMENTS widow's truck farm
PRESIDENT wilson
Melon thieves visited the tmek
Washington, D C„ July 22.—Con- farm of Mrs. Kim an near the sand
gratulations to President Wilson and j boat north of the city and stole many
Attorney General McR'evnolds wert find luscious melons. Mrs. Eiman
expressed in the senate today by s-ys she knows who committed the
Senator Heed of Missouri, for Ml" theft anil will not make (barges if
government's determination to 'pro- i settlement is made immediately,
ceed crlmlnallv and rdvllly against the Otherwise warrants will he Issued for
New Haven directors. . tiieni on her complaint.
' ' • > "UO IIUI I I lilt"
say that thoug"i /he skull was frac- enough to lift the hand ear from the
turod when McConnel's bead Btnir'kl ■ rails. All of the part; leaped to the
the sidewalk the blow from the fist ground. I it the child, who was numb
was of sufficient force to cause death, with fritflit, and her father who stay-
Mc( onnel is said to have liorne a ed to £ave her.
good reputation in Itolse City, where
he lived for a number of years
1 lindsay case near jury
DEMAND for LAEOR. Xorman, July 21—Arguments are
The Oklahoma City free employ- . complete^ In the rase of I.lnd-
ment ureau sent fifty jnien to Und- .say, charged with the murder of Ed- .n.rza, me sixteen year old Shah or
"J; f° lesfay' lnlanBWOr a itor Sfllneck Tl ' case will likely go I Persia, attained his official majority
In th.T ,hP:r 2"i n,"n to help j to the jury today. Lindsay's defense today and took the constitutional oath
in the harvesting of br^pm corn. lis insanity. |of offic.e.
wise the eapaclcy of the bean pot
which is to satisfy the needs of hus-
band and children; how derive the
number of thermal units which shall
«>ake those beans to just the proper
point.
"1 have done a lot of figuring on j
lost souls with spiritualistic friends. ;
but have never beard from one, male j Xew Vorki Juh. onfi borou .
or female, that blamed algebra for I of Greater Xew York alone- Manbat-
what had happened." i tan-,',40 absolute divorces were
granted during the six months ending
prepare for jllne as against S72 during the
election in 3 weeks | <am„ period list vear. These figure^
l-ondonj July 21-While party were made public by the county clerk
leaders are endeavoring to find a ! >oday.
solution for the Home Rule problem, j
the chief of the Cnlonlits' organiza- i local option election
lion sent orders to all constituencies causes big row
to prej are for an election in three j
weeks as the leaders are convinced | Kansas City, July 21—A fight
that no matter What Is done at tbelal„onK workers at local option elec-
onference, the House of Commons tion at Independence Mo., resulted In
will soon be dissolved. | several arrests.
The trouble started when the lead
SULTAN AHMED TAKES OATH
Teheran. July 21—iSultan Ahmed
Mima, the sixteen year old Shah of
\not.lii'[- resort on West Harrison
lias been declared a nuisance and is
under lock and key. Sheriff Mahoney
Was ordered by Judge Huston to see
that lhe place was keipt closed pend-
ing a final hearing.
The resort is operated by Paul Levy
and W ill lteece, who conduct a pool
hall The building Is owned by E.
I. Saddler, a local colored attorney.
A clean up of all i|iiestlonable
places Is to he vigorously prosecuted
from now oil," said an official today.
'The health of the city demands that
the many moles in the wall' sliall De
losed Main of them are breeding
places for disease and the nuisance
must be abated "
anderson's assailant
is GRABBED BY POLICE
' By Associated Press)
St. Isolds, July 22— Edward King,
who has been sought four days by
the ixdlce in connection with the at-
tempted assassination of Felix E. An
derson, assistant to the president of
the Terminal Railroad Association,
surrendered to the police today.
King wns dismissed by the com-
pany recently aud when asking ad-
mittance to President M<dhesney'a
office and refused, shot \nderson.
er of the anti-saloon forces was ac-
cused by a deputy constable of sta-
tioning himself within one hundred
feet of the voting booth.
The officer ordered the minister
away and the fight started.
LITTLE girl dies
from kick OF COLT
The 11-year-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs, Wheeler Van (relson ol
Fairview was kicked in the stomach
and killed yesterday Irv a colt with
which sihe was playing on a farm
near longdale, where the family is
s-Pendin^ the summer.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 24, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1914, newspaper, July 23, 1914; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc122017/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.