The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 246, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 2, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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HAf.F TWO
THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITAL. THURSDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 2, 1911.
IS
liEHIl com
Her Frameup With Oklahoma
City Is Far From Ending
Happily
ONLY WHISPER BAD FAITH
Must Take Chances With Clinton
Which Eliminates Chance for
Real Consideration by Legis-
lature—Roddie Again Loses
YOU ARE AS WELL AS
YOUR STOMACH. "
HQSTETTTR.
OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, Kel>. 1.-
The lirst round In the contest i)n the
flour of the senate over the Muskogee
lair bill was rather unfavorable to
Muskogee, which uas defeatt-d in its
effort to ha\e that bill considered
separately from the Clinton and Mus-
kogee propositions and disposed of
solely upon its own merits.
The bills were reported to the sen
a! * yesterday uithout recommenda-
tion and the matter came up today on
the motion of Senator Roddie, repre-
senting Muskogee. to have all th*- bills
printed and p!a< ■ d on the a <-ndar.
Tiiat motion was adopted without np-
posltion, but when the question was
raised ac to whether the bills would
he considered jointly as suggested by
th«- committee, Roddie opposed this,
stating that he exported the Muskogee
bill—a house bill—to be considered on
'house day and the Clinton bill—a sen-
ate bill—on senate day.
A motion was then made by Mitchell
to consider the bills jointly, which was
adopted. Roddie fought the motion,
declaring that he did not propose
to see Oklahoma City use all of the
other towns in the state to whip this
bill. He also asserted that it would
be impossible to create fairs at two
places at the same time and in the
same act.
* TRIAL OP
THE BITTERS
will prove to your sat-
isfaction it3 great mer-
it in cases of Head-
ache, Belching, Sour
Stomach, Poor Ap-
petite, Indigestion,
Costivencss, Colds,
Grippe, and Malarial
Disorders.
REMEMBER — YOU
WANT
Hosteller's
Hitters
SIX Mill*
SLMUSI iitfiliti)
Forty-One Appropriation Bills
Are Now Up For
Consideration
*V
GIRLHOOD
Scoffs Emulsion
HOUSE ADOPTS NEW RULE
Xnlarln « anim I.om of Appclli^,
The Old Standard Grove's TmstHen* Chill
iii', drives out malaria and builds up the
«yst«m. tee grown |x ople sn<i children, boc
Is
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
were produced to prove thru no such
marring had been recorded.
The daughter In (mention, now the
wifo of Captain I'. Napier, entered the
witness hf>Y and said that she had
seen the kin* hut three times In her
life.
Myllus offered no testimony and did
not examine the crowns witnesses
He confined Ills defense which he
conducted himself, t„ technicalities,
asserting that lie could not be legally
tried in the absence of his accuser.
The proceedings cam- to n dr.. ma tic
lose when, after sentence had been
pronounced Sir Rufus read a letter
from King George in which the writer
set forth that only the advice of the
officers of the crown that such a
course would be unconstitutional had
prevented him from appearing per-
sonally In the court room and publicly
branding as untrue the allegation that
he had ever entered into any marriage
alliance other than that contracted
with Mary.
rOLDft t Allit, al «. 1<> A< III:.
LAX ATI VE BKOMO Quinine, the world w de
Uola and Cirip remedy removes Csll for
^iiaauic. liook for uruature K.W. GROVE /So.
AGAINST MEDICAL TRUST
Mrs, M. L. Patten Makes Charges
to Legislature
Those Who Would Get Through
Private Money Pulling
Laws Are Made to Show Up
Early and Give Reason
are linked together. TV
reason is that at a period
when a girl's digestion ts
weak
Scott's Emulsion
provides her with powerful
nourishment in easily di-
gested form.
It's the food that builds
and keeps up a girl's
strength.
OKLAHOMA CITT. Okla., Feb 1 —
The house appropriations committee,
-x,r Crawford of Pontotoc, chairman.
met Wednesday morning and began
the Important work of remodeling en-
tr-.v the legislative m- thuds of hand-
mg appropriation bills.
In the past the method has been to ' I^riiu^^ 7.T
report out, usually. one general «P-i m e or sTmai 1
jiropriatlon bill carrying the expenses! rht, .
of the state government proper, and i Deficiency
ihen each individual number or set i" ,r
" members, fought out individually I Pnp"
General Promotions All Along
the Line in Local Freight
Office
CHICKENS TO CHICAGO
Number Seventeen Three Hours
Late On Account of Engine
Break Down Guthrie to the
Rescue
t* State Capital § now carrying a
railroad time table.
Rcvk l iand received a car of
^ n for tha new Viae street paving
^ eoiH s-oaj.
Travt ung Passenger Agent K J. Ken-
" c. s t the Santa Fc w as hera Wednes
av f:-oiu Toj«ek.a.
the question of appropriations re-
state Institutions in his district, and
often a* many as fifty different ap-
propriation bills would be passed.
The house appropriation committee
hn.- decided to change this, and to
bunch everything |n two general bills.
The first will carry all the expense
appropriations of the state govern-
ment. including the sala.-fps of officers
contingent expenses, maintenace. etc.,
also ah maintenance and expense ap-
propriations for the state institutions.
The second bill will include all the
building appropriations, etc.
iTwral
Board of agr^coiture J:
Weatherford normal. J.
Tishomingo saix'nJarv ,
college, f 14.570.
Reimburse game wardm
Records of the coostitut na con-
vention. IC.tOO.
Maintenance secondary agriculture:
schools,
Assessments against stante lands in
Hackenberry Flats drainage i.r.iect
f 1.597.
Support C rnbh Orphans home,
15.000.
Addftiona! lands for Broken Ar-
■ame in the house Wednesday• "^''.riaUon!
OKLAHOMA CITY. Okla.. Feb. 1. —
Ever -Inc© statehood, at various times,
tnere have been dark hints dropped in
legislatures, of the existence of a medi-
cal trust, Just suggestions. not charges,
or anything at which the doctor* could
take offense.
I \ho-it the strongest "hint" let loose
SO f«
iti ti « shape of a memorial from Mrs
M. I.. Fatten, ax secretary of the Hen-
iii # y local. F. K. ('. U. of A., whatever
that is.
Ali' Patten allege.! that there was an
Ironhound organization among the meMi-
cal fraternitj, tiiat at their meeti.igt
scales o* fees for professional service*
f-stahllshed and moans devised 10
profe't tlie monopoly generally.
All She asked wad that the legislature
ena r taw fixing tfie maximum fees
allow.•(! physicians and surgeons.
A substitute committee from the -tion.v lands fc
house committee will probably he ap- G00dwil1 a^ricultural «boola,
Pointed, and will induct hetirinKs <
Salaries district court stenognuihen
$32,500.
Consolidated rural schools. 2,5(K',WKi.
Dormitory at Ada. SlOO.OCO.
Buildings at Alva. $100,000.
Special judges criminal court of ap
peals. $1,000.
Law building at Norman. S150.000.
Maintenance, Chickasha. $50,000
dally, at which the state officials and
heads of the state Institutions will
app«ur -\ith 'heir demands or tenta-
Ivc budgets. These will be con-
sidered In connection with estimates
of the revenues r.f the state, the total
am<>unt to be raised by taxation, *tc.,
and all the different appropriations
will be trimmed and fitted together to
keep within the state revenues.
It is -s lima ted that fully $250,000
to $ .0u moo w ill he saved the state an-
nually by such a methodical adjust-
ment of the canvass of proposed ap-
The first formal action In the house
exhibiting the plan occurred Tuesday
when u resolution of Mr. Moore of
Coal, as amended by Kerr, of Mus-
kogee members of the appropriations
committee, was adopted instructing
the committee on rules, that in a gen-
eral rule to be added to the permanent
house rules, that a?l appropriation
bills should be reported at one time,
instead of sifting out one by on*.
When the appropriations committee
met Wednesday. Mr. Crawford .hair
Mileage and per diem. $75.0^0 (su-1 8a°tA Fe win run a special Nil
perceded by senate bills already pass-i ^*Uthne <rom Oklal,oma <-ity to
I Lnid Saturday, the Chamber of Com-
SHIPPING HSI We have just
received our
first shipment
of the
NEW SPRING
Knox Hats
i mmmmmmtmwmmm ■———qi
New
Manhattan
Shirts
For Spring are
Here.
:*go \\ ednes^a
i^oromiSFion sompany
cat of chickens to Chi-
o\-e ithi Santa Fe.
Trt\ eling Auditor C. H Hill of the
M. K A T *a.« here Wednesday from
Faxons checking up the local freight
: Agent D
'island
Rainsburg of the Rock
j ~r-.«4 w iias lecovered enough frora his
attack of ia grippe to get down to tue
ac, ot AA'ednesciaj'.
| The Rock Island is contemplating
changing the time of train No 745 from
handler from 9:S a. m. to 11:25 a m
but no oficial notification of the change
been received here yet.
Number 11 was almost three hour*
Ute Wednesday as the result of two
engine* breaking lown between Arkan-
sas City and here. Al usual. Guthrie
had to come to the rescue and sent en-
gines from here to bring the train in.
ed).
Building at Edmond. $125,000.
Expenses Jamestown exposition.
etc., chief mine inspec-
!These State Capital Bargains
Continued to
FEBRUARY 6, 191!
/hieh we know will In tera>t you. Do you want a magazine? Sant FREE witw
Your pick of more than 35. No greater ofter ever made in literature in Oklahoma.
BY MAIL WITH MAGAZINES.
Bargain F—The Daily State Capital, with Coi-
mopolitan Magazine and People'a Popular
Monthly—all three one year by mail % 3 65
Bargain G—The Daily State Capital with any
$1.00 Magazine, one year, by mail 3.5f
Bargain H—The Daily State Capital, one year,
by mall, with any $1.50 Magazine 4.00
BY CARRIER.
For any yearly offer made In this ad. where Daily
is delivered by Carrier, add $1.50. The regular price
of the Daily by Carrier is 45c per month, $5.40 per
year. Papers only delivered in towns where the
Daily wtate Capital has reouiar carrier service
Here are (ome bargains
the State Capital
BY MAIL ON THE DAILY ONLY.
Bargain A—The Daily State Capital, by mail
for 6 months ,
Bargain B—The Daily State Cap tal. one year,
by mail ...
Bargain C—The Daily State Capital, two years
by mail
Bargain D—The Daily State Capital, three yeara,
by mail __
Bargain E—Th Daily Stata Capital, five yeara,
by mail
$1.50
2.73
5.00
6.75
10.00
Any Magazine in Group Below FREE With The Dai]y state Capital by Mail One Year For $3.50.
Tut net r kj e A-r^r. . .. -
THE DELINEATOR
THE COSMOPOLITAN
BUSINESS BOOKKEEPER
MEN AND WOMEN (National
Catholio Organ.)
MOTHERS MAGAZINE
GIRLS' COMPANION
TAYLOR-TROTWOOD MAGA-
ZINE
NATIONAL HOME JOURNAL
RAILROAD MAN'S MAGAZINE
THE WORLD TODAY
WOMAN'S WORLD
PICTORIAL REVIEW
HARPER'S BAZAAR
AMERICAN BOY
AMERICAN MAGAZINE
SUCCESS
THE HOUSEKEEPER
THE LADIES' WORLD r
OOOD HOUSEKEEPING
PARIS MODES
METROPOLITAN
THE DESIGNER
THE HOUSEWIFE
NATIONAL SPORTSMAN
PROGRESS MAGAZINE
SCRAP BOOK
YOUNG PEOPLES WEEKLY
BOY'S WORLD k
MUNSEY'9
CHILDREN'S MAGAZINE
PHYSICAL CULTURE
ELBERT HUBBARD'S PHIL-
LI8TINE
HUMAN LIFE
THE ARGOSY
STURM'S OKLAHOMA MAGA-
ZINE
THE HOME MAGAZINE
NEW IDEA WOMAN'S MAGA-
ZINE
THE CAVALIER
ULL STORY
Any One of the Magazine, in the Group Below FR EE With The Dtuly State Capital by Mail at $4 00
per year.
FIELD AND STREAM
WOMAN'S HOME COMPANION
AINSLEY'S MAGAZINE
McCLURE'S MAGAZINE
ETUDE MAGAZINE
PEARSON'S
EVERYBODY'S MAGAZINE
HAMPTON'S MAGAZINE
NATIONAL MAGAZINE
TRAVEL MAGAZINE
TECHNICAL MAGAZINE
THIS OFFER CLOSES FEBRUAR V ft ion
If an old subscriber, ssnd all barU #4.... . *u. . " —
and add tha amount of any of th« bargain, and you * iVgatPthJaa *1'°° y#ar"""33 13 centi Per ™nth—
If you are an old subscriber the yellow tag on v m ."m [ " 'h* ,,,r" " * n,vy •ub «ib«r.
No commission will b. p.id to ./.nt.V'h." £ "" Wh*" "0U
I
BCL;Vr 0UT' F'LL IN ™E BLANK AND e NCLOSE TO US WITH THE RIGHT AMOUNT.
THE 8TATE CAPITAL CO,
8lr:—Encloaad
Capital and °®"«ra1 for whioh plea,, „nd ma The Dally State
vear I .nrln.e ««h for one
Oollara for back aubaoription, at the regular rate by
1911
mail of $4.00 per year—33 1-3 oents fir mMth.
My Poatoffioa address la —-
la th. Magazine selected . renewal er a new «"u .oHptl'on?"
Are you a new or old subsorlber?_
Write your name and poetofflce very plainly eo no er rors will •
$4,569
Contingent,
tor. $8,000.
Bridge across Grand river. $23,000.
Assessments against state lands.
Deep Fork drainage district. Oklaho-
ma county. $1,867.
Heating plant, etc., Tonkawa
$3.*.500.
Bridge across South Canadian, $75,-
oon.
Stf-nographic work supreme court,
$1.6:19.
Contin#,'<*iit expenses. secretary of
of state, $1 1,057.
Granite reformatory for maintenance
c.. $228,491.
To comj t^e McAlester peni-
tentiary, $321,700.
Rewards fpr fugitives, $3,000.
Extradition agent expenses. $5,000.
Maintenance, etc.. McAlester peni-
tentiary, $450,652.
For the safety of aviation, $25,000.
LEGISLATIVE WES
Stump Ashby's oratorical
powers cinched the passage of the
free text book bill by the house.
Muskogee and Oklahoma City
are still in a state of armed neutrality
and would both like to go to a clinch
if they dared.
The optemercy bill has gotten
through the senate, but the chiro-
pratlc bill has not yet been reported
from committee, although the lobby
is busy.
—o-—
Consideration of the new "booze
bill is st>t for Friday in the senate,
and a liely discussion is expected
there, although probably not as heat-
ed a8 that in the house.
Senator Joe Thompson claims to
have discovered that the Garvin coun-
ty man who sent in an Inquiry as to
the name of the senator from that
•ounty is a socialist.
I merce of Enid having extended an in-
| viration to the governor, state officers
and legislators to spend the day with
them.
Engine 170 came in Tuesday night and
for awhile Wednesday occupied the
Santa Fe round house in solitary grand-
uer. every other engine being busy. The
railroad boys say that it is the first
tin.€ in many months that only one
An§Ine has been left, as the stalls are
usually full and engines lined up out-
side.
H. P. Hasp, chief clerk in the Santa
F*r freight office here, has been trans-
formed to the same desk in Oklahoma
< it.v and as a result there was a promo-
tion all along the line, Ed. Powers going
from cashier to chief clerk. Harry Speer
formerly on the notification desk taking
his place; Lewis Herwig of the car desk
succeeding him; Joe Grimes of th night
car desk taking Herwig's old placo .md I
Marion Phillips, who was formerly with ! *° uP'10'd locomotives and loaded
the Missouri Valley car «"ietvice came.j ' ,rainK i—i—
Into t e office as the new man on th«>
The Only One Price
Clothier in Guthrie'
(CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE)
night enr desk. They are all Guthrie
boys and their friends will be pleased
to hear of their promotion.
J
STOLE HUSBANDS
REAL AFFECTIONS
sld
he seating of Eugene M. Kerr as
flotorlal representative from Mus-
kogee and Haskell counties adds an-
other to the long list of newspaper
men in the lower house.
Senator Tom McMechan, of Okla-
homa City, probably has the record
for the number of bills introduced
so far. He is always on hand when
the order for the introduction of bills
is reached.
—o— •
Any bill that oarries the union
label looks good to Senators Frunklin
and Sorrells, who have been exceed-
ingly consistent in their support of
legislation advocated by labor or-
ganizations.
—o—
OKLAHOMA CI7V. Okla, Feb. L—
Represt-ntatlvt W. R. Anthony seems
e getting his share of glory this
time. After serving a speaker In
the special session he is now demo-
cratic floor leader and ehairman of
th.- congressional apportionment com-
mittee at the regular session.
MRS MAMiH
• TAVLOB •
Love letters of high voltage signed
by "The Woman Who Understands."
are made the basis of a suit filed in
the Kings county clerk's office in New
^ ork. which Mrs. George Orcutt Roe,
of Philadelphia, seeks to recover 125.-
000 damages from Mrs. Mamie Taylor
of 9 Lafayette avenue. Brooklyn, for
the alienation of her husband's affec-
tions.
MINERS TO INDIANAPOLIS.
roLI'MBl'S, n.. Fob. 1.—Indiana-
polis was chosen today as the next
year's convention city of the United
Mine Workers of America by delegates
attending the international convention
at Memorial hall which closed after
being In session fourteen days.
ST. LOUIS WANTS CONVENTION
T. LOT IS, Mo., Feb. 1.—An active
campaign to have the two principal
national political conventions meet
In Louis next y« ar was Inaugurat-
ed today by the Business Men's
letyjufc
Famous Pint of Cough
Syrup" Receipt
nedy at Any Price.
Guaranteed.
♦♦*♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦'
Make a plain syrup by mixing ono
pint of granulated sugar and ; nlnr
of warm water and stir for two m n-
utei. Put 2 hi ounces of pure
worth) In a pint bottle.
, UP with the Sugar .Syrun
This gives you a family supply Sf tho
best cough syrup at a saving of S-
It never spoils. Take a teasnouufui
every one, two or three hours
The effectiveness of this simple rem-
edy Is surprising. It seems to tako
hold Instantly and will usually stop
the most obstinate cough In 24 hour!
It tones up the jaded appetite and Is
just laxative enough to bo helpful in a
cough, and has a pleasing taste. A ,5
excellent f,.r bronchial trouble, throat
tickle, sore lungs and asthma, and an
unequaled remedy for whooping cough
This recipe f.,r making cough rem-
edy with Pinex ai.d Sugar Syrup / ■
strained honey) is a primo favorite
In thousands of homes in tile United
states and Canada The plan 1
been imitated, though never success?
fully. If you try it, use only genuine
Pin ex which Is the most valuab"o
concentrated compound of Norwav
white pine extract, and Is rich In
gulalcol and all the natural heallnic
pine elements. Other preparations wil1
not work in this recipe.
A guaranty of absolute satisfaction
?Mam,rn0inI)r°V,jtly *"- With
or Vill'L.t It f"'.r •lr,,K?'st ll"a Plnex
or wiii i (t r• j vimi. If not h.-miI t.
The Pine* Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
trains. Over the broken edges twisted
the steel rails of tracks. A steel gon-
dola car on the southern most track
looked like an old hat that had been used
by boys for football.
All about were strange freaks of th«
explosion. One freight car had the
r- of blown inward, as if it had been
>d by a falling bcujder, but the
were undamaged. The iron sheath,
ing of the freight house on Dier No. 6,
to the north, was pushed inward on the
side nearest the explosion and outward
on the farther side.
Train Sheds Wrecked.
In the train shed of the terminal,
nearly the whole southern exposure of
thf* ela-ss roof collapsed, showering the
passengers with broken glass. One man
was struck by a twenty pound fraRment
and so severely cut that he died.
A locomotive engineer was blown from
his cab and died of a fractured skull.
A tug boat captain was hurled from Ida
wheel house and fished out of the wat
If) minutes later, swimming about the
southern side of the demolished pier.
Inside the passenger station there v
damage visible everywhere. The floors
littered with broken glass. Win-
dows fronting on the Inner court had
been sucked from the frames, sashes and
all.
Slates were torn from the roof. The
hands of the ferry house clock were
torn off. The southern wall bulged
like a pastboard box left out in the rain.
There were no sashes in most of tl o
windows and no glass in those that ha.l
snshes.
Two ferry boats of the Central rail-
road of New Jersey, the Somervflle and
the Plain field, lay in the terminal slips
and a tldrd, tlo Lakewood, was Just
edging into tin- river. AH of ^iem ca-
reened violently and were showered with
their own glass. Many of the wounded
nassengers came to New York for treat-
ment.
Rocking Skyscrapers.
v York the terror was Intensi-
uncertainty. For half an hour
nobody knew what had happened or
where. Those In the rooking skyscrap-
ers thought th<> lower floors had been
torn from under them
Tho.-e In the street thought the massed
towers above them had been toppled
down. Literally acres of glass were
broken. Kighteen windows were smashed
in Ihe Standard Oil cumpany bulldlnc.
In Trinity church a valuable stained
glass Window was strewed In the aisles.
New ) ork business men who stood at
llielr office windows looking out over
the North river at noon. „« „ puff
of yellow dust shoot Into the air juts
of yellow dust Shoot Into the air lust
MOW the 3 n y Central terminal :inn
wind until it ,. ,...
ered the terminal train shed.
The next thing (hey noticed was that
eve-v lug hoat In the river seemed In
be heading to f'ommunlpaw.
F.ro Alarm Wires Down
Turning to the streets below they saw
them black with a surging throng.
There was Incipient panics, here anl
thero throughout the city as far north
hs the Bronx. The jar crossed manv
telephone and fire alarm wires down
tow and all sorts of complications en-
sued. Fire engines were dashing hither
ana thither in quest of non-existent fin o.
Terrified tenants made matters worse
l,y turning in alarms that had not
sounded of their own accord.
Rhlnelander Waldo fire commissioner
for New- York anil Fire Chief Cro -er
were among the first to reach Communl-
"a'v from New York. A picked band of
-New York police accompanied them.
Ambulances could not come fast enough
and express wagons were comma-, lere.l
for duty in their place. How man- v. cro
Injured never will be known in Ml, out
the count of those treated in the New
York hospitals alone were i"u and in
those of Jersey city, Hoboken, Union
""I and surrounding towns more than
double that number.
Estimated number of dead Is thirty
-two of whom lice have been reorerej.
In No
JTCKINC. nozinp, 8ca]ing Sa|t Rhpi]m
the . J "ood's Sarsaparjlla,—
Rreat nnd unequalled remedy for
every, kmd of SKIN DISEASE.
ST. LOUIS GETS NORTHERN
CWCKIAT1. ... Fob. l.-Outfleld-
>r -Northern, who played with the
Houston, Texas team last season aid
was signed by the St. Louis Ameri-
iin league club was purchased today
'V ^ the Cincinnati National league
Ihe x.'iy . .. oners of tin
State Capital have bee-i continued
to Monday, February 6, 1911, 33
many forgot. We want to give
all a chance. See the list on page
2 There are some rare bargains
in liteiature. .Read them ovv
c a r e f u 11 y—and then send the
amount for some one of them.
And now the prohibition party Is rent
'■ a Ml war. And nobody In sight to
Pour liquor on 11,e troubled waters!
AiJ tAiil misLi rlAHldL .00 ,iu,i
TO DARKEN THE rtAiK.
Who does not know of ihe value ol
eare and sulphur for keeping th" hair
dark, soft, glossy and in good condition?
An a matter of fact, sulphur is a natural
element of hair, and a deficiency of it
in the hair is hclil by many scalp spe-
cialists to be connected with loss of
cp.or and vitality of the hau-. Unques-
tionably, there is in. bette- remedy for
hair and scalp troubl's, especially prema-
ture grayness, than sage and sulphur, C
prop""l, prepared. TI, - Wy thChcmie.i|
Company, 74 Cortlan.lt St., New York
City, p„t up an Ideal preparation of this
kind, called Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur.
It is sold by all leading druggists for
o 0. and $l.(MI a bottle, or is sent dire, c
' 'he manutacturers upon receipt of
and Kcojmmcnded Oy
Drufl Company.
Owl
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 246, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 2, 1911, newspaper, February 2, 1911; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127625/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.