The Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1915 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
HOE FOUR
OKLAHOMA LEADER
BY LESLIE C NI BLACK
PuL. ru
fro as lf7-iW 1-2 West Har-
r; w atd taiered in th« Poat-
otP.r* at Gathr e Oklahoma. as
eias* wukii mailer.
-ip'.joa SI !"•
vtfteftfty i advax.ce.
tie fttr. •*-
ptitlMLMl t'e.7 l--u." OA/
L* d«*
STAtEVESt.
Of iw • *-*>• P ®uu**aeE.t-
ew*> «• 4; rr_
J -• -v -
srs *Vo
H"T"T w:::r !- G oJ.-.r.
oi:L Mi*rTr 1
Csthrrf. C*-i P'-k •'
Gul^r-* <-*•*
NifcJwfc Cirtfcri* OS-*
C th? ' <■*-* lLnr-V"\ l: r
**■* •Uj*r J 0«" , a!
'of '"Ui' b t W« i w
Owner*
Mew Yorti
„ _ DERWTN
Busmest M^'>afer
If
Alios Ewing. a:.<o. refuses lo sub-
scribe to the million dollar loan.
The war proves that trenches sur-
pass all fortresses Poor Belgium was
the horrible example
Eastern bankers have agreed on a
$509,600 loan to the allies, while the
i£*tf railroad goes into the hands of
a receiver because it can not borrow
19 millions. What's American railway
traffic to piling up the dead in war
riven Europe
Any physiognomist is interested in
knowing just what a full shave would
reveal in Carranza's case. It i6 an
axiom among them that whiskers and
mustaches hide vastly more character
than they indicate. And then there is
always the suspicion of germs and of
inaects hiding out
We live and learn In Mrs. Rebecca
Jtipcfc'a volume. "Oklahoma." a picture
of Colon* I Boy Hoffman, st-ated on a
charger, is given, with th. inscription:
"Col. I tollman ban played an important
pajt in the history of Oklahoma In
fighting the Indians prior to the open-
ing of Oklahoma to wh.te settlers."
Since th* Colonel "lit In" Guthrie in
18&S and saw his first Indian at the
Sac and Foi Indian Agency in Lincoln
county some months later, we lear the
>:ifkortf "Oklahoma" lia* allowed her
% jr ipn lo become obscured by a too
close perusal of "Ferguson's Annotat-
es IJIstory of the Crazy Snake Rebel
V"
The University of Oklahoma at Nor-
man receives approximately $:>00,000
each year from the state. This
ooney is contributed by the tax pay
ers of the state. Th« university is
supposed to be a state institution, of,
b> nd 'or Oklahoma. Yet we read in
a Norman paper that "The Cnlversity
Sooner officials are In Kansas City
making final arrangements for the
1916 Sooner." Printing in Oklahoma
Is not "good enough" for the university
officials, the Norman paper says And
|800 of tax payers' money is to be sent
to Kansas City. The term "short-
sighted policy" isn't applicable in de-
nouncing these pin-headed university
officials. What the university needs
Is a swift, terrifying jolt in Its appro-
priations department
TIME TO WORK ROADS.
The coining winter will be mild,
■with long stretches of clear and In-
vigorating weather. This being the
case, begin lo prepare for a Good
Roads Day I hat will be the real thing
—when tenderfoot laborers from town
Vlll do in one day aB much as they
could possibly do In three days under
the hot sun, ami do It better and
easier; when the biggest problem for
the housewives on the farms will be
to feed them because of their frost-
stlmulated appetites. Good Uoads
Day should be In January, or possi-
bly February, when men can best be
spared from their work in town
where business la Invariably season-
ally slack, and when work out of
dborfc Is more congt nlal than at any
Other season.
dition to her various state debt*
Austria-Hungary has borrowed nearly
12.000.000.000 already for her share of
the war expenses. Italy's contribution
is rapidly running up toward 11,000.-
000,000.
The cost of the war in all the
belligerent countries together is esti-
mated to be so far about $1*000.00#.-
000. It may be double or triple by the
time the war ends, for the daily cost
keeps constantly growing. And before
the mar began the nations were all
tax ridden
This vast sum. too. represents only
tiw operating expenses of the war.
leaving out of account the billions lost
in productive energy, in the destruction
of life and property, the liabilities for
pensions .etc piled up for the future
If we include such items the total can
hardly be leas than $40,000,000,000.
It is worth while to take a little in-
ventory like that occasionally and bee
pre< isely what war means as part of a
nation's business. The more anybody
ponders on these figures, the less
bellicose he's likely to become. Even
if humanitarian facta are waived these
are hard facta that can t be dodged
And what has Europe got for its
140.000,000.000 expenditure* Well,
nothing very definite yet. That sum
seems to represent the price paid for
Austria's determination to punish
Serbia for something or other, and for
Germany's decision to let Austria hare
her way about iL Servia. by the way.
hasn't yet got her punishment.
Derwi:
ie Gut cian wlo goes from borne
u his goods and supplies stands
his own light. Guthrie merci-
are not excelled either in quali-
r rite b. stores at Oklahoma
City
The Crescent
"Guthrie needs
Hasn't she it?
City New
a hoodoo
No more relief for Belgium is need-
ed The Germans are restoring that
country to its prUtiae glory.
Pity the poor schooi teacher who
must answer questions j ertainlng to
the j re.- :st condition* existing in
Europe.
**-> r. * y. * x a & « * x is a
x 0\ KK THE STATIC. *
x >: y. x x x x xxxxaxxa
T. Ti 7. J* A S5 * * R * * *
V IN REALM OF THE CURIOUS
sKBSHSKJSHXSaXSSW*
British India
devoted to rice
THE LEADER. OrTTTKTE. OKI.A.. TTTTRSPAY. ^rPTF.MTTR 1f>1~
DpginOllAglri Health Talks 11 Cartoons OfTheDay[
^TWCKUNDIW._G1111U^
The Handicap
Trying to work with the kid? about
Is an awful stunt—believe me!
Tryiag to think 'mid their shriek
and shout—
From all of such pain relieve me!
Trying to think of a lilting lay
With somebody howling Father!
WhatH you give me to go away!
Ain't I a lot of bother?"
(Here is a chance for the usual
twist
Given by versifiers—
Business of saying how they would
be missed—
Verse that the mob admires!)
Trying to work with the kids about
Cannot be done, by gracious'
(Business cf driving the youngsters
out)
Who wouldn't grow pugnacious?
If Billy Sunday succeeds In reform
ing Omaha he may consider himself
In training for a < leaning up of Tulsa
Muskogee phoenix.
We notice that the Kate Barnard
Oil < , ! jMiiy will soon begin a well in
I he Cuxb.Uj field, if there Is any-
thing in a name, the company should
get a good gasser in the shallow sand.
Weleetka American.
A youth went to a doctor the other
day and asked him if cigarette smok-
ing was Injurious to the brain He
was hardly satisfied with the reply,
for the doctor Imparted the following
information: "Oh. no, not in the least,
for the boy who has any brains will
not smoke Ihem." Hominy News Re-
publican.
Editor of the Ada News begins to
suspect that the Italian army has be-
come lost in an Alpine pass or has be-
come overwhelmed by an avalanche as
nothing has been Ik aid of the army
since it left Rome.
BY WILLIAM BRADY, M.D.
Tuberculosis—Early Symptoms
Finnigin Piloaofy
Almost annybody can git into
high sassiety long enough t buy
what th' high-sassietyites ha t'
sell, befure bein' shnubbeu an'
kicked ouL
has 70,181,000 acres
growing.
WAR'S COST TO DATE.
The British war debt Including the
i w issue of $1,250,000,000 will amount
to $7,000,000,000, making a total na-
tional indebtedness of $11,000,000,000.
And the figures will keep right on
mounting up lo the? extent of at least
C17.500.000 u day month after month,
indefinitely.
France, after her next loan, will
have a bill of more than $4,000,000,000
for the war to date and a total debt of
nearly $11,000,000,000. Russia, by the
end of this year will have doubled her
qnte-bellum debt, making a total of
over $8,000,000,000. erinany has, spent
nearly $4,000,000,000 on the war and
• owed before some $1,200,000,000 in ad
Canada's mineral production in
■'.•14 was valued at $128,475,499.
Merlin dentists have invented a
nourishing yeast, containing more
than -"o per cent albumen, prepared
from sugar and ammonium sulphate.
(Experiments have shown that the
•< hinesc wood oil tree, from the nut
of wM'h an oil used in varnishes is
oi tiiii' 1 an be successfully grown
in northern Florida.
The report of the first census !s
contained in an octave volume of 5i
pages Nowadays, in a decade, the
Census Bureau issues 100 or more
quarto volumes, with more than 40,-
000 pages.
Flies do not breathe through their
mouths, but through holes in their
bodies. Their eyes ar - mame up of
Something To Keinemlur
The biggest fool and blackleg
you ever knew can swear far more
fluently than you ever can, so *hy
lose control of yourself and com-
pete with bira? Better try to excel
In something that requires samp
degree of intelligence and chaiac-
ter. Huh?
Good lleaM>B
Dear Offagain.—Do you recom-
mend ivory hair-brushes?—J. Z.,
Abbott's Crossing, la.
Sure—think what you have to
ose it on!
Just Makes A Fellow Think
Seeing a recipe in an exchange
for "canning without salt" (refer-
ring to green corn), reminds us
that we've seen many a fellow
eanned because he wasn t worth his
salt.
In The Higher Realms Of Humor
First War Aviator.—I am just
over the enemy's camp, and can't
quite decide what to do with this
bomb I have here.
Seccad Aviator. — Well, never
mind. Just let 'he matter drop.
Too Bad!
fome people have a way, you'll
note, it seems that naught
may alter—
Of grabbing Progress by the tail,
inbtead of by the halter.
That's Itiglit! Give Him A
long Sentence!
Th*re seems to be a disposition
r f norne people in this world to
l ave their hammer ready at all
tMnes ati'l to kmck everything that
coines al"i.g. Now, Mr. Knocker,
this may seem a pleasure to your-
<elf. but if you could see yourself
cs others see you, it would wake
you up; it Is a sad plight to
get into, for you not only make
things disagreeable for yourself
but for your friends as well. Now
try to turn over a new leaf and be
an optimist; throw away your pess-
imistic ideas just for a day and see
how much better the world will
> '-em to you. We are indeed sorry
for the knocker, but if he is deter-
mined to continue In the old chan-
nel he may wake up some day to
his folly, probably too late.—Tou-
togany, O., Times.
Deprohed
We feel very much out of it, In
this column. While the press in
general has done all in Its power
to scare the gizzards out of the
newspaper readers, In the last few
months, we have gone on comfort-
ably remarking about things, just
us if human nature were remain-
ing the same. If some one will
kindly tell us hov; to throw an aw-
ful, sleep-disturbing, hair-raising
ucare into our readers, we will
gladly consider it.
Think This Over
The dirty hound, layman or
preacher, who hugs a strange girl
up to the vest-pocket which con-
tains a watch-case with the picture
cf the said d. h.'s wife and baby,
ought to be shot at sunrise—and
cn the twenty-first of June, at that,
because the sun rises earlier then.
TheYoun^ Lady
A.cross The Way
\ FREQUENT c :*ry is: What
A-\ are the early symptoms of pul-
^ • monary tuberculosis?
Different modes of onset were de-
ecribed in the Health Talk published
January 30, 1915. Ti.e^e were, brief-
ly. as follows: (1) With symptoms
of dyspepsia and anemia; (2) With
pleurisy; (3) Symptoms like ma-
laria; (4) With laryngitis (prolonged
hoarseness or hUEkiness of voice);
(5) With bronchitis ("acute bron-
chilli" is always suspicious in young
people); (6) Onset with hemorrhage.
Symptoms alone are only sugges-
tive; the diagnosis of incipient
tuberculosis of the lungs must be
made by a careful consideration of
symptoms in conjunction with the
signs found on examination of the
naked chest. If there is any ma-
terial expectorated it should be ex-
amined for the germs of tuberculosis,
though a diagnosis may be made
without finding the germs; indeed,
most case of incipient tuberculosis
expectorate no sputum, or if they do
expectorate any the microscope
shows no bacili present for many
ueeks or months.
Any person, espec!al!y between fif-
teen and forty years of age. who
notes a loss of weight, a falling off
in endurance, an unusual breathless-
ness on moderate exertion, a little
feyerjshness now and then, a slight
cough or a frequent desire to clear
the throat, should think of the pos-
sibility of tuberculosis as a cause of
the ill health.
Practically all of us harbor living
tubercle bacilli somewhere in the
body, perhaps in the deep lymph
nodes — latent tuberculosis — as
proved by the tuberculin tests. Un-
hygienic living conditions favor the
lighting up of this latent Infection
into active disease which produces
symptoms. Then, too, prolonged in-
timate contact ulth a person who
has tuberculosis and doesn't know it
or wilfully neglects to take sanitary
precautions against spreading the in-
fection. may add enough infection to
light up the smouldering spark.
Men who have studied the disease
most thoroughly teach that childhood
is the time of infection, youth the
time of super infection and lighting
up of the disease.
Don't worry. Have your chest ex-
amined—not your breast, or your col-
lar bones alone, but the entire naked
chest, fore and aft, right down to the
diaphragm. And have it examined
at least once a mcnth if you have
been living or working in contact
*ith any one who had the disease.
Above all, never waste precious
time taking "cough medicine' not
prescribed by your own doctor.
Nearly all ready-to-swallow cough
medicines contain some kind of dope
which lulls the nerves and suppresses
the cough, no matter what the cause
may be—and that is a dangerous
business for the individual who hap-
pens to have tuberculosis.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Deafnes* Following Sham poo
7 hcvf had a numbness and deaf-
r\rss in left ear for several daj/t fol-
lowing a hair shampoo. Is ti a coldf
Will you advise?
Answer—No. It sounds like a plug
of hardened wax in the ear, which
swells when moistened and gives
trouble. Better have it syringed out
by your doctor.
We Advise The Yankee Treatment
Would it be safe to have an ul-
cerated tooth drawn while the face is
swollen t
Answer—As safe, or rather more
so. as it is to pull out a sliver from a
festering wound.
Vest Pocket Essays
BY GEORGE FITCH
WEST POINT
\\J EST POINT ifi a military
\\ school where young Ameri-
* * cans are educated at great
public expense to look down upon
the common soldier and refuse to as-
sociate with him.
It is the only real snob factory in the
country. By the timeafree-bornyoung
citizen has spent four years in this
school measuring the distance be-
tween a private and a commissioned
officer with astronomical Instruments
he is quite ready to take a commis-
sion in the regular array and to dis-
infect himself whenever a private
soldier comes near enough to him to
clean his shoes.
And yet the only difference between
the two may be the fact that the
father of the private didn't have a
pull with his Congressman.
There is great distress in military
quarters because young Americans
rush out of the regular army faster
than they rush into it. Yet we
6hould take pride in the fact that
very few American young men ca:i
be persuaded for $13 a month to ac-
cept a job as an inferior animal.
Besides being taught aristocracy
in its most deadly form, the cadets
at West Point are given a thoroug i
instruction in mathematics, the
sciences, military tactics, horseman-
ship, bed-making, housewifery, danc-
ing, uniform-wearing, glove-cleanln ?
and obedience in its various branch-
es. When he graduates he knows
more about calculus than a college
professor, is a daring and decorative
young soldier and can talk to a girl
in a way which makes her wonder
why they allow common taxpaying
young chaps to linger in the vicinity
of brass buttons.
West Point Is located on the moun-
tain side above the Hudson River
and has recently been rebuilt into a
very beautiful place with a tall Gothic
chapel and vast barracks and school
buildings. It has the hardest
course of study of any school in the
country and the government is never
so pleased as when it is booting out
Napoleonic
•a
f-
CLEARING OUT A HAD NKST
—Pittsburg Dispatch
People's Legal Friend
BY H. R. BRANSON
Ready to disinfect himself whenever
a private soldier coines near enough
to him to clean his shoes
some young soldier on which it has
spent two years and several thou-
sands of dollars for falling to ac-
quire enough French to fight well.
Almost all of this country's famous
soldiers have been graduates of West
Point. Each congressional district in
the country is entitled to a cadet in
the school, but It sometimes takes a
district a long time to find a boy
who can pass the mental and
physical examination. West Point
boys are natural athletes and get a
fine training in every branch of
athletics but running.
Views Of The Press
from
I'll
fines their own weight
For several months a Norwegian
company has been successfully cr-
t-acting copper from crude ore by
an electrolytic process invented by
an engineer in that country.
Birds, in the construction of their
nests, almost without exception avoid
bright colored materials, which might
possibly 1< ;iil to the discovery of their
place of abode by an enemy.
The young lady across the way
says her father's very well oft now
and If he keeps on making money
he'll soon be a regular pariah.
/nr^ HAT is an appealing story it
I is at ' as well authentU at< d
A as most of the war anecdotes
which History will sift and edit at
leisure—about the young officer of an
Austrian regiment who, having com-
plained of discrimination in the dis-
tribution of military honors, was dec-
orated by the German Kaiser, In per-
son, for extraordinary valor.
It may be believed that there is a
good deal of complaint of this nature.
Some deeds of valor are likely to be
exaggerated, and some that are
worthy of recognition may be over-
looked. With Iron.Crosses being dis-
tributed with a lavish hand, an hon-
est soldier who fails to get one is apt
to feel slighted. From all accounts
of the great number that have been
so honored, the effect may be that the
soldier who cannot display a decora-
tion may find himself, ultimately, as
distinguished as the occasional Civil
War veteran who, fifty years after,
recalls with pride that, among bo
many Colonels, he was a private.
It seems that this young Austrian
ofheer, being attached to the Kaiser's
retinue when he made his headquar-
ters one night in the house of a
landed proprietor, "somewhere in
Poland," had the temerity, sur-
reptitiously. to pen his complaint in
the Kaiser's private field book: on
behalf of his comrades alleging that,
because of the favoritism of higher
officers, not a single reward had been
conferred on his regiment, though it
had served faithfully and valiantly
from the beginning of the war. The
Kaiser, upon discovering the un-
familiar handwriting, summoned all
thu letfimtulal uilKcia iulo hid pres-
ence and demanded to know the
writer. Bronzed faces blanched, for
all felt that the impertinence might
be punished by death. But the cul-
prit promptly stepped forward, and
boldly repeated his grievance, with
additional particulars and argument.
"In how many battles have you
fought?" demanded the Kaiser. A
long list was enumerated. "How did
you dare to write in the Emperor's
note-book, and where did you get it?"
The response was full and frank. "I
congratulate you on the highest cour-
age, as a Knight of the Iron Cross,"
said Wilhelm, instantly—according
to the narrative, "as he embraced the
Lieutenant."
Now wasn't that handsome of the
Kaiser? It was truly Napoleonic. It
may bring to mind the threadbare
anecdote of the soldier of the Old
Guard who had suffered the loss of
on arm In his Emperor's service.
Napoleon, happening along, noted the
emblem of the Legion of Honor on
his breast, with the distinctive deco-
ration of the lowest grade, Chevalier.
' Lose your other arm and I will make
you an Officer of the Legion," said
Napoleon. Whereupon, according to
the veracious chronicle, the devoted
soldier seized his sword and cut off
his other arm. This story could not
be improved, of course, if we could
have it explained how he did It. And
we would not. for anything, press
the point of whether the Iron Cross
was bestowed on the Austrian Lieu-
tenant for extraordinary valor on the
field of carnage, or as displayed in
daring to write In the Kaiser's note-
book.— Providence Daily Journal,
A Real Estate Contract
Q. Where one makes a contract to
sell real estate, is it necessary for
the contract to fix the pricet
A. Before the bargain can be com-
plete, the price must be definite and
certain. However, if the contract
does not specifically name the price
to be paid for the property, it will
be sufficient if it provides a means
by which the amount to be paid may
be definitely determined.
You Should Have Thought Of
That Before
Q. I am occupying a house as a
tenant. I signed a written lease
whirh says that I am to "keep and
maintain the premises and all fix-
tures in good and substantial repair
and condition." My landlord is much
better able to afford sut h repairs than
I am and the house needs some re-
pairs at the present time. What could
1 do about itf
A. You are bound by the terms of
your lease.
Contract Must Be In Writing
If a contract i.t not to 1 per-
formed until eighteen months after
the time the agreement is made, must
it be in writingf A. Yes.
His "Fountain." .\s Usual,
Wouldn't Work
Q. Where oric. in making out and
signing a check, uses a pencil, in-
stead of pen and ink, will the cheil:
be goodt
A. Yes. The practice is not com-
mendable, however, as it invites
fraud.
Fire Insurance In A Mortgage
Q. May a provision be inserted in
a chattel mortgage requiring th"
mortgagor to insure the goods against
loss by fire! A. Yes.
A Legal Provision
Q. Where a landlord rents out a
farmhouse, is it legal to put a clause
in the lease providing that the tenant
must reside in the farmhouse unless
authorized by the landlord not to do
sot A. Yes.
Then He Repented
Q. I gave a man permission to
clear my land of timber. Isn't it
possible and legal to canccl this per-
mission/ A. Yes.
Federal Judges
Q. How are federal judges ap-
pointedt
A. They are appointed by the
President of the United States, with
the advice and consent of the Senate.
The Life Line
By Laura Kirkman
The Man Who
"Didn't Khow It Was !n" Us
"What! Not little Meade Brown!"
he exclaims when, in another state,
he comes across an old school-
mate's name heading a list of gu-
bernatorial candidates. "But it
can't be the same!" he tells him-
self, "that boy was a dunce." Yet
it is the same, he discovers. And
the discovery gives liira rather a
guilty feeling: for years, little
Meade Brown has figured as his
strongest illustration In arguing
that the public school should vary
its curriculum to suit the Individ-
ual. "When I was a boy, I used
to do one of my schoolmate's les-
sons for him—a stupid little chap
named. Meade Brown," he has told
many people! "Now, is It fair that
Fuch a child should have to wrestle
with an amount of work that
brighter children can master In a
minute?" And here was Meade
Brown a candidate -how did lie do
it? The biggest dunce in the
world is he who doesn't appreciate
the capacity for rehabilitation in
human nature.
His mouth hangs open.
A Personal Check
Q If a man should sign a check
■■John Jones, Agent," would this
l„ considered his personal checkt
A. As a general rule, where one
Elgns a check in this manner, with-
out revealing the name of the person
for whom he is acting, the check will
be considered as his personal check.
Office Not A Domicile
<). If a professional vian main-
tains an aflce in a certain town, is
this conclusive evidence, in law, f/iaf
he resides in such townt
A. No. It may afford some evi-
dence, but is not conclusive.
(Current Poetry
A Divorce Plea
A man who told the girl he wooed
His age was forty-three;
For alimony now is sued
And finds that Fate is rather rude;
Thrift takes the mask from pul-
chritude; ot
And mulcted he may be;
Because when "forty-three" li© told
her Uttm*
He knew that he was ten years
older.
A man's no older than he feels,
So runs the ancient saw;
For pity such a case appeals;
I \e heard of few more luckless
deals.
Yet Justice though with leaden
heels
Pursues him with the law;
She quite ignores compassion hu-
man,
And, being a Goddess, backs the
woman.
—J. A., in Brooklyn Eagle.
BY
lay E .MouJ?
The man who can cook and make ,
himself handy around the house
might as well do it. He seldom is
worth much down town.
As soon as a man begins to make
money and achieve prominence,
somebody starts the story that hi3
mother died in the almshouse.
Suggestion to wives: Unless you
are prepared to compliment your hus-
band it is far better to let him alone.
A man has very little Interest In any-
thing which does uot concern him
personally.
The hammock has been superseded
by the porch swing and matrimony
thus loses another of its most ef-
fective aids.
It is only when you have occasion
to ship a dog that your Indignation
at the express companies overmasters
you.
Eph Wiley says one of the mys-
teries of life is involved in the case
of the trained nurse who, after tak-
ing care of a man through a long 111-
i• ess, deliberately marries him.
A good many of us who are nim-
ble enough as to tongue stutter In
the head.
Eph Wiley saya if it were left to
Mm he'd rather be a hammer than
an auger.
Do not attempt Impossibilities. Do
not, as an instance, promise to make
p woman happy.
lank Beverly says his notion of
nothing to y< * i a lady club trying
to play baseball.
While Uie women plan most of the
parade the men do practically -11
of the inarching.
I he longest vermiform appendix on
record was yielded by an actor. In
what particular line do you excel?
.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
The Oklahoma Leader. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 25, No. 42, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 30, 1915, newspaper, September 30, 1915; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc122077/m1/4/: accessed April 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.