The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 146, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1894 Page: 3 of 4
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Professional Directory
LAWYERS
The State Capital.
By tin Stat* C.pittl Printing Co. I Kas
MARKET REPORTS.
Kan«a City Live Stock.
Batki or subscription:
T H KEMP,
Attorney-at-La\v.
I'. O., Seronil St.
OKLAHOMA.
ABEL S DUNCAN,
Attorney- at Law
TO MAII. irMCRIBVM:
Three month* 11.50
Quo month.. 73
Oaa year .. .|5.oo
Six mouths . .3.00
DELIVERED BT CAR1UXKS.
One week
Two weeks
i s cents
83 emu
SAS CITY. Oct.
11 Cattle -ltece'ptf.
calves. W2 ; shil
IKd yesterday. : .HiW,
1® The steer ni
irket was steady; cows
; feeders and ei
Ives unchanged: bulls
to IOC lower; Tex
n ste«'rs strong; cows
r. The following
are representatlva
UtCSSKD HKKK AN
EXPORT STEE11S
1 i&.on
fb 1 873 ti
!!!!!.l.joo n.<v>
•jo i HW
WMTWUI
NTBEKS.
J. W. MILLER.
Attorney - At - Law.
OKLAHOMA'
CHAS. BROWN,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
Cor. Division ami Okla.. Ave., Gray
Block up btaira.
ll'thuii, oklauoma.
Edward M. Dawson
, of the
Attorney and Counsellor at Law
Practices In th* courts of the Dis-
trict of Columbia, Court of Claims, tlie
Executive Departments ami Con-
gross. Special attention given to
J. b keaton, jko. ii. cottieal
KEATON 6l COTTERAL
ATTORNEYS-ATLAW.
Rooms 1, and 3, International Loan
aii<i Trust Bu'ldg Okla., Ave.,
OrrosiTi U. s. Land Orrics.
The People's Guarantee,
Saving and Loan Association
Of Pleasant Hill, Mo., are making-
Ileal Estate loans in Guthrie. Long-
Monthly payments: ean pay a part or
all before maturity. Stock in the
association can also be secured; as
investment there is nothing safer or
better. For information as to stock
or Loans, call on
1JL I_. MOOK,
Office with Herod a Widmer, 2nd St.,
Opposit U. S. Land office.
WEEKLY EDITIOK.
One oopy, per year 11.00
UTln requesting a change of Postoffice
address all ways five the name of the
Poatoftlce to which the paper has been
sent;otherwise their may be adalay in
makinf the charge.
Sample copies sent frae.
tWLiboral inducements to Postasast-
ars and Club Agents.
.1 I II
1.108 &Ti
. IMO 'J. 30
Time-Table.
north bounp.
No. -101. Chicago Express, leaves • 7 a. m.
No. 408, Mo River Rxpre s, 4 (I p n
No. 428, Local Freight, «:30 a m.
soctii bound.
No. 403, Texas Expresa, • • 11:00 p.m.
No. 407, Local Express, • • I :■* p. in.
No. 423, Local Freight, 1:00 p. m.
Passengers should procure tickets
before getting on the train and save
money, in purchasing round trip tick-
ts to local points 10 per cent off.
L. R. Dklanev, Agent.
5...,
\ |*> m
4 ft IB I 8
texas ( ow
• *90 | 80
8rt) |2. M
710 2.1
Vis i n
IK)"> 2.15
8 3 12.20
■'Some Problems of Today5'
THE VOTER WITH FACTS AND
ARGUMENTS IRREFUTABLE.
3 1
stock BUS ANIi FEEDERS.
r> . Loin $.i:a> ' 3' i.oos *3.20
M 00 i ft IB j 88 970 8.08
HI 73 3.0 7 710 3.0)
8 874 ft 80 18 1.187 MS
Hojrs Receipts. 7.710; shipped yesterduy. l <8.
The market for choice hogs was 10c higher and
others steadj Th top was $5.88 and the bulli
..f sales ti.'.M to the same as yesterday.
| The following are representative sales:
310 $5.25 I < • $5.25
253 5.20 *7 245 510
•.'Hi 5.10 117 217 5.05
•JIS R.O'i 00. . ,22ll 5.05
•17 5.0") 55. . .250 5.05
: ;i i i'j1, ill J ID sej'4
241 5.00
i ABE
s
o
3
o
o
o
ft)
3
AND
Properiy
For Sale.
ii,
LYNDS
X
o
£
<n
o
(n
AN INFORMER HELD
McDaniel Is Charged with Conspiracy
to Rob a Santa Fe Train.
TRIED TO WRECK A TRAIN.
A lloy of Twelve Years Charged with the
Wrecking of the Fast Mall on the
Louisville & Nashville ltailro.nl
—Attempted Suicide.
Memphis, Mo., Oct. 1.'. The prelimi-
nary examination of \V. 15. McDaniel,
charged with conspiracy to rob a Santa
Fc train near (Jorin. Mo., last month,
in progress in this city, was concluded
last night and McDaniel was bound
over to the grand jury. Witnesses tes-
tified that Link Overlield was the origi-
nator of the plot. McDaniel is the man
who gave the information which led to
the frustration of the robbery and cap-
ture of the robbers.
ATTEMPT TO WRECK A TRAIN.
Pknvkr, Col., Oct. I'.'.—Soon softer
midnight a bold attempt was made,
7 miles south of here, to wreck
an eastbound Santa Fe passenger
train for the purpose of robbery, it is
believed. Spikes were pulled from
rails and the engine, baggage car,
coach, chair car and sleeper ran off the
track. The damage was trilling and
no one was hurt, but the track was
blocked for five hours.
a small roy as train wrk< kkr.
I 5.10
n 5.06
17 5.05
73
.235
21H 5.00 83.
10 1-1 L00
1'*.. 153 4.00
41 123 I.S3
5.01
20" 4.05
231 4.05
01 212 4.00 75.
S3.
10
5.00
243 5.00
urn 4.
8 IB I '0
1*1 1.00
213 4.00
22! 4.85
201 4.80
Sheep -Receipts
The folio*
45 lambs
151 4.824 4
224 1.80 41 . iru
107 4.75 30 171 4.70
34* 4.05 I 11 .130 4.00
1.085: shipped yesterday,
•t for good sheep was fairly
steady to strong, with others dulL
ing arc representative sales:
7.< fi.5ii ! 40lambs.... 80 $3.40
72 unit 123 2.35 | 40 milt 110 2.05
Horses Receipt 203. shipped yesterday, 100.
The market was quiet at late low prices.
< hieago Live Stock.
t in, ao , Oct ii Hogs Rocelpts, 10,000;
official yesterday, 17,887 shipments yesterday,
8,32*: left over, about 3,60); quality not so
good: market acti\. ^o.ickin.? and shipping
account and prices 5c jRgher. Sales ranged at
:<«•> •"<.15 for light; rI s ..• i ■.<" for roujjh pack-
ing; $4X*'.-5.50 for mixed; $5.iMX'*5.00 for heavy
packing and shipping lots; pigs. f-'.50(£5.00
Cattle Receipts. 17 o to. oftlcial yesterday.13,•
040: shipments yesterday, 3,378; market SftlOo
lower.
Sheep—Receipts. 20.0.T1: ofllcial yesterday,
10.201: shipments yesterday, 2.700; market 5$
10c lower.
This is certainly a year when we
must appeal to the kk vson of men.
Many good men—men of honest eon
viction and true patriotism have gone
into the people's party. That they have
done this is proof that conditions, not
ri as* m. have taken hold on them. What
we want now is to get down quietly
with them, around their hearthstones,
and by the evening lamp, and reason
with them about remedies. There is
not a tenet in the people's party plat-
form which will stand before calm in-
vestigation. History, past and pres-
ent. refutes every plank in the plat-
form We have carefully seancd his-
tory for information—and have found
plenty of it, proving that the "land
loan" and other people's party schemes
were tried three centuries ago, and
many times since, and brought a train
of disasters impoverishing all who
lived under the in.
By visionary and plausible literature
the people's party has made its con-
verts. They have not done it by ora-
tory. Look at the floods of pamphlets
| For the Texas State Fair and Dallas
I Exposition at Dallas, Texas, October
i .'ii t< November 4, the Santa Fe Route
; will -eli excursion tickets from Guth-
rie L<> D :!ius at rut.* . f *13 for the
1 round trip. Tickets on hale October
10 anil :.'u and November limited to
i two days in each direction, with final
Check, postal note or cash must ac- limit ..f November 4n.—L. R. Df.la-
, Agent.
Can you, Republicans, expend
little money in any better v
than to get either Tin: Weekly S i
capital or this supplement, or i
pamphlet into the hands of ev
voter?
failure, bringing fearful disaster and
ruin; why disregard the warnings of
history ?
Tenth—The people's party inevita-
bly against metallic money; quotations
from all populist leaders and populist
literature given to prove that free
silver with populism is only a subter-
fuge, a resort only in lieu of free and
unlimited paper money.
Eleventh The republican party the
tlrst and only greenback party on
earth, making the llrst paper dollar
that ever passed at par a year after it
was born.
Twelfth—The "exception clause;'
why the power to demand "coiu" in
payment of duties furnishes the only
means of redemption of greenbacks in
"coin."
Thirteenth—What brought the
greenback to par and why there must
be a metallic redeemer.
Fourteenth—What is money? Noth-
ing if not property, and labor must
make i Is value.
Fifteenth—History of silver; Jeflfer
company the order—ami if order is foi
the weekly through the mail direr
to voter, the list of Names and ad
dresses, must come along alto.
Address,
FRANK II. GREER, Editor.
Guthrie, O. T
fir
To Logai
; want to a<
\ ill
mnty Citizens,
in disseminat-
ay that we are
* of articles on
' showing where
from and where it.
will be put into a prop.
Ide reading l>ef<
and circulars that they send yearly | son first demonetized it in 1K00, strik-
mto the homes of farmers and labor- | ing the silver dollar from coinage,
ing people. The republican party has
been long on orators and short on lit-
erature. Viewing this matter in this
light, We have tried to collate some his-
torical facts, to analyze the conditions
and advance some remedies which
will go to the family circle and show
the fallacies of the visions the popu-
lists advance. This we believe we
have done in a way that will be of
great benefit to those desirous of in-
formation verified by history and
present conditions.
These arguments will appear, about
St. l.ouis l.ive K
St. Louis. Oct. 11. Cattle
market steady at Wednesday'
—Receipts.0.000; market activ
heavy, j.5.15vi.5. lo mixed, $1.0)
<2.5.25. Sliei p—Receipts, 000;
-Receipts. 3,003;
s advance. Hogs
e and 5c higher;
15.30. light, $5.03
market llrm.
to-da;
but i
1U
City <>rain.
1. -Very little
ipts show ti
r lots
' ap-
plied on contracts and the offerings on change
were light. Soft wheat was about 4c lower.
Hard wheat was very scarce and was worth !ic
more than yesterday with good billing.
Receipts of wheat to-day wore 43 cars; a year
igo. 124 i
Quota
Ions for ci
,'ity at tin
2 hard,
rd, 45-- 15
3 red, 45
r lots by sample on track at
close were nominally as fol-
17ti48c: No. Shard. II '17c;
,c; rejected. 15c: No. 2 red,
. No. I red. He; rejected.
l\li
50
o
3
Albert hipzel*
TAXIDERMIST.
Birds and Animals of nil Kinds
Mounted in tho Most Natural
POSITIONS.
No. 708 S First St. Guthrie, 0k.
Instrumental Music.
CTION GIVEN UPON THE P1A.N0
FOH 250 V KK LK. . N.
Moore, a I .'-year-old white boy. was
arrested at Hells, charged with wreck-
ing the fast mail on the Louisville A'.
Nashville, Monday, in which several
persons were injured, some probably
fatally. The youthful train wrecker
confessed his crime, ami said he opened
the twitch to see what would happen.
attempted suicide.
Detroit, Mich.. Oct. 12.—Julius
I Lichtenberg, one of the school in sect-
ors under indictment for receiving a
! bribe, probably fatally shot himself
i this morning. Mis case was to begin
I in the recorder's office to-day. William
C. Lipphardt. the first of the alleged
boodlers to be tried, was convicted yes-
terday.
The Russell Sago Case Dropped.
New York, Oct. 12. The action
brought by Delia Kecgan to recover
$100,000 from Russell Sage for broach
of promise and seduction was dismissed
to-day in the court of common pleas.
The counsel for Miss Keegan was not
present and counsel for Mr. Sage
simply said that Judge Pryor had de-
cided previously that the action was
barred by the statute of limitations.
A .steamboat'* Crew Prolmbly Lost.
Providence. II. I., Oct. 1.'. The
steamboat Majella, of Newport, with
stone for the new breakwater which
left the west side of Illock island yes-
terday afternoon for Newport, i- re-
ported bottom side up near Point. Ju-
dith. and it is believed that all on board
were lost. The captain was James II.
Cook, and she had a crew of live men.
Those <
iter Spi n
I lioulevard, or drop a
7.00; No. 2, $5.00n
of oats to-day. IIc
nlzo i. nominally 884 No 1
I"27e No. 2 white oats. I car
. nominally. 3i",c-
38 ears; market stead v. Tim-
. No. I, $7.50-r.* (K); low grade,
prairie. 87.80; No 1 $0,803
3.0J; packing hay, $2.00^3.00.
• (irain and Provisions.
Oct. 11.
Opened HI
rh'st
Low'st
'losing
Wilt—( Kt
ftl j
51
GO'*
fxi \
Dec
634
May ...
f>7\
Corn —Oct
r<o
«)'4
4WS
Dec
47 'K
47 ,
May
f.ll;T,
50'4|
411',
49
Oats—Oil
Nov
May ....
:ua*j
'4
1 • 4
.inn . .
l ] 77 ., i •
si)
iC'
■ .
Lard (>d
: 1
Jan
111 j
7 I
Ribs- Oct ..
Jan
Ii 17'J ll
i r1 |
— -
!•! V' '
Louis drain.
:. 11.—Receipts, wheat, 10,030
IK) I>11 corn. 21,00) Int.; hist
(>ats -Cash,
Dwight Ityington Dead.
Leavenworth, Kan.. Oct. 1
Dwight Ityington. grand secretary of
! the Masonic grand council of Kansas
MISS EFFIE M DUNBAR, and "f the grand commai this city to-day in the A. O. I W.
p. o. Ho.\ 203. K,,ights Templar, died this morning at, hall, several hundred members of the
' family being present. There are
The llarlan Family in Reunion.
St. iIosepii, Mo.,Oct. 12.—The annual
reunion of the Harlan family was held
1 illness
his home in this
Do you want the famous Glueinurn cf several months, resulting I com a branches of the family in nearly every
pens? Tin State '• \pital is the ter- j general breakdown < t the s\ stem. I j(l til(> union. The reunions have
rit.trial and keeps tlicm 111 The spomicv Tibrur.v "f the Kunsu/I held unnuully during the piu,t tea
' university has been dedicated. years, ^
eight columns at a time, in T111: \N eek-
i.y State Capital for the next three
weeks—and then all combined in a
supplement of four pages, twenty-four
columns, solid matter, in an issue of
the weekly to leave this office not later
than November 1st, so as to reach the
readers in ample time for thoughtful
digestion before the day of election.
These article, one a day, will also
appear daily in The Daily State
Capital.
We have entitled this discussion
"home prori.emk of today."
Some of the main points covered in
these articles are:
First—The duty of good citizenship.
Second—Repson anil Patriotism, the
only true guides.
TUl. a. WI.IkK -l iU TU oo U-.uJo
Should the True Patriot Take
Fourth—Who have the real power
the \Ni per cent who pay the wages, or
the HO per cent who earn them
Fifth—Populism What are Its Tend-
encies.
Sixth—Socialistic, communistic and
archistie utterances of Henry George,
whose literature populists injected by
piecemeal into the congressional
record, thereby endorsing it: of 11 err
Most. Lieb, Fielding, Scwab, Bellamy,
Pcffer, Simpson and other devout
populists.
Seventh—"Single Land Tax," as ad-
vocated by Henry George and all lead-
ing populists—what it means and what
it would inevitably lead to striking
down all private titles and making the
people all tenants of the government
at an annual rental <>f S >.OOan acre for
productive land.
Eighth—Government ownership of
railroads a failure, as demonstrated
by comparative official statistics of
every country in the world: but two
countries now running all of its own
railroads—Egypt, with 1000 miles and
Nicaraugua with l2 miles: railroad
wages in America #" 'l per month, in
other countries average but 81 v. cheap-
est passenger and freight transporta-
tion in America of any country in the
world: the strike problem and how to
cure it; the remedy for railroad op-
pression.
Ninth—"Fiat" or "cheap money"—
origin of paper money; "land loan
scheme" tried in England 1« «)( , France
1718, Rhode Island 17*'"., Massachusetts
is:$7, Georgia 1 * ^Mississippi 1832,
Argentine Republic 1873-1SM4: alway a
who imi
ing the truth, we
preparing a ser
"County Finance
the money has con
has gone. This ti
supplement for tin
election, ami it is very necessary to
every tax payer, that no voter fails to
read these startling disclosures.
Weekly State Capital l<
Jan. I, ".M>, St 00
Wft'Uly Stale Capital to
\o\ I!, Cor to cents
-l, IWt.]
ir.v of >Ulahoma, in favor
niul M iriin *ton« and
r.l-. atnl lliilda Edwards
■heriff "i Mild conntji I
..11 the 21UI1 day "f Oet >b-
ouse door in (iutluie pre-
r Logan. Territory of <>k-
at publie Hiii'lioii the
lifie<-
foi
Dated th
II W P i
115),
p (4i
on uiy,<>k-
To be r.old lo the high-
said order salt* as the
,rdH iind Hnida i :.
.pie
. IV I.
. S1mt.IT.
A R UAL 11 lis.
A RTUUR WILLI aes.
WILLIAMS & WALTERS
THE TA LO 'S.
Weekly State Capital to
<lau. la. tor ''5 cents
HOME LABOR.
Do You Need a Ledger, Cash Book
or Journal ?
THEN Bl!Y THEM HOME-MADE.
Sixteenth—Who is silver's true
friend and what party must the people
look to for free coinage ?
Seventeenth—Why "Free and l'n-
limitcd Coinage" would be worse than
a single gold standard; free coinage of
the American silver the necessary
thing.
Eighteenth—Democracy the implac-
able enemy of silver and why ? He-
cause, in power in all branches, it not! torv
only has not given free coinage, but , , . . . . . m„i,
...... ... , ! ledgers, cash books, journals, small
has entirely dishonored silver at the 1 *
| lay books, butcher's blotters and
Mir Stato Capital llookbindery lias Man-
factured a Large Lot of Commercial
Record* Such an Merchants la
Oklahoma Use and Can
Sell Them Vary
Cheap.
Tiie State Capital book manufac-
ade a large number of
mint and at the treasury.
Nineteenth—"The Percapiter" -How
much we need and how to get it.
Twentieth Our banking system and
how to improve it.
Twenty-llrst The record of popu-
lism in Kansas, Colorado, South Caro-
lina and Oregon.
Twenty-second—Democracy placed
in power by populists; who are the
source of all present woes?
Twenty-third—Why populism ean
never get national control and can
only split the north and elevate demo-
cracy to power.
Twenty-fourth Cost of democracy
aud what it now proposes to
the people with.
Twenty-fifth The Gorman bill, an
"incubation of trusts aud vainpers,"
cheap, plain records of all kinds. These
For $25.00
Tim finest line of Samples found
in the Territory, consisting of
l ine Clay Worsteds, Cheviots,
and Fancy Suiting.
Also a special line of
Trousering, the finest of work-
manship guaranteed.
NO FIT, NO GO.
Finest West England Trousering.
Call and sec for yourself.
WILLIAMS AND WALTERS
Tho Tailors.
i 2o\ South 2cl street,
south of Post-office.
passed by Populist votes.
Twenty-sixth How the tariff effects
oklahoma, and the income and outgo
of every farmer.
Twenty-seventh Mistakes of the
republican party and why it has the
sense to profit by experience.
Twenty-eighth Why immigration
must be restricted, the anarchists shut
out and kicked out.
Twenty-ninth What of the Future
and what the duty of the people?
Resides the above, there will appear
in each weekly a vast amount of gen-
eral political matter beneficial to the
cause.
We will furnish these we. klies,
through the mails, to any add re -
until and including the last issue be-
fore the election—the last issue to
contain all the articles on "Some
Problems of Today '—at lo cents per
name—that is the four issues, includ-
ing the supplement, to any name you
may send us, for 10 cents.
IfcinihllctlliH, haven't each of /& 11 sunn
I'ii/hiUnI irr Ih iiinrmtlr m bjlihors //ou run
11 linn I to ncnd THE WEEKLY STATE
CAI'ITAL In for thine, four weeks, Unit
he nm\i rewl nil the hlt*h>ry nn<l fact* In
"Some Problems of ToiUi]/." Thirl, of it, i*
Jone issues to ench of five neh/hlmrs for \ #
V/ rents! What rcjmltliran cannot do this I *
murh for the ijood of Ids rountru? n
Or, if you want "Some Problems of j *
Today" in pamphlet form, so the voter
can keep it in his pocket for frequent
reference, we will furnish them at
these prices, postpaid.
Single copy, each, 10c
Per dozen. 00c
are on better paper and better bonnd
than the cheap books sold by whole-
sale stationers—aud j'et we can sell
them to you 25 per cent cheaper than
you can buy the eastern made records.
We have them bound in canvass,
manilla and in leather—any grade you
want from ten cents to SL50 per quire.
Merchants, when you want a ledger,
cash book or journal, don't buy till
you get our prices and see
These books are made here at home,
mrge ^.e monCy for the labor on them R., Topeka, Kan
being paid to men who spend it amonx
our buthers, our grocers and our dry
poods merchants. Wouldn't you rather
buy goeds made at home than to buy
goods made by eastern labor? Of
course you would, especially when you
can buy the home-made article 'J.r per
cent cheaper than the foreign-made
article. And remember, we have these
books right on the shelf ready for you,
in any size or price you want, from
one quire to eight quire.
3d door
THREE-MINUTE TALK Isthe title of
ABOUT an illustrated
NEW MEXICO. folderdescrib
ing the farms, ranches, mines and
towns of New Mexico. The profits of
fruit raising are set fourth iu detail;
also facts relative to sheep, cattle, and
general farming. No other country
our records. ' possesses such a de irable climate all
the year round. Write to G. T. Nich
olson, o. p. ^ T. A . A. T. & S. F. R
ree copy.
SEALS AND RUBBER STAMPS.
Make them For
1 say! I did not go away t
But I staid and ate one of those
delicious meals set up by
The Stale Capital Ca
You, L*pre««ly.
Notaries Public, when you want oj
seal, a eoir.l-'. ied notarial record and
all notarial blanks, don't send to
Ivans is but writ ti!;; State Capital
and get tli••in as cheap and as good in
quality as you can get anywhere in 1
c kep the roister and CAME OF ALL KINDS IN SEASON.
Lock and can fill your
Frink & Hisself
COFFEE LIKE YOUR MOTHfcR
MADE.
Mtl
l'ostoffice.
Open Day and Night"
the union >
blanks iu
orders by return mail. We can fix
you out, too, in rubber stamps of any
kind, ou short notice.
* ... *
ti *tiT ''
WANT COLUMN, *
#
-☆-OF the ft- *
STATE CAPITAL;
HEACHE3 *
THE PEOPLE J
Weicker 4 Fairfield
TUB LEADING
TRANSFER I
ot Gathrie. Dealers in
S ► *1HY IT*-. •
•West of depot on Harrison
Telephone No. 20.
'Em Q-xiiels:
THATS TIHEK! TRICK.
This Week Fair Prices for All. Do You Need Clothing?
Now is your opportunity to cloth yourself for less money than ever before. Tiie tarrilF oil'—so are we 011 prices Come and see what we are doing
* - •• 1 ■ 1 1 ll,n rnnnlolim, n/'onllln.r nl S", " ftld anil Si I 9. f) (I fl wliat WC Ctlll yOUT
and sizes are complete
^ U H in J UUI V/|/jAM lUlllliJ \J\J VlOtll j VUIUVII ^ v * • - ~ |
for vou in Clothing. Men's suits, good, honest, reliable goods such as we have the reputation of selling at $5, $7, and s what we call your
attention to this week. You can't afford lo miss ih. There is a 50 per ecnt cut over any former prices. Don't delay. Tho so.-k a
Come one and all to the only reliable house that isn't always selling out.
Second St. Opposite Postoffice.
Bee Hive Clotning Co.
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Greer, Frank H. The Daily Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 146, Ed. 1 Friday, October 12, 1894, newspaper, October 12, 1894; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc122545/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.