The Yukon Sun. (Yukon, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, October 15, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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THEYUKON SUN
YUKON
Gordon McComai, Pub.
OKLA
News of a Week
Itemzied Form
Epitome of the Most Important
Events Gathered From All
Points of the Globe.
WASHINGTON.
President Taft arrived in southern
California Monday and received an en-
thusiastic greeting. He visited lirst
the deep water and Inner harbors of
San Pedro and had a sail of an hour
and a half before returning to Los
Angeles.
More than three thousand reported
cases of leprosy in the United States
and the colonial possessions of Uncle
Sam are at present engaging the se-
rious attention of the public health
and marine hospital service.
lo maintain constant and free com-
munication between American embas-
sies, legations and consulates abroad,
a new bureau has been created by
Secretary of State Knox, whiih will
be known as the "division of infor-
mation of the state department."
That service in the Unite States
army whicu carries one beyond the
pale of the nation does not forfeit
citizenship right Is charged in a suit
filed in Washington wherein the re-
storation of the name of Frank Boon,
a Cherokee Indian, to the Cherokee
citizenship rolls is sought.
1 he condition of the corn crop of the
United States on October 1, last, was
73.S as copared with 77.8 on the same
date last year, according to official
estimate of the crop reporting boar
of the department of agriculture.
Senator Itobert L. Owen and wife of
Muskogee, Okla., returned to Wash
ington last week after a three months
sojourn In Europe. Senator Owen will
leave for Oklahoma soon.
Five tnousand dollars worth
stamps and $5,600 worth of unsigned
bank notes consigned to California
banks which mysteriously disappeared
from a Union Pacific mall train in
Wyoming some mouths ago, have been
recovered.
Enid has received a check for $5.-
000 to apply on a donation of ?2ii,UOO
of Andrew Carnegie for u new library.
Fire which started in a car of <*>rn
at Caddo about noon Saturday, do-
stroyed the Katy cotton platform and
burned 100 bales of cotton and four
cars of corn. The total loss Is csti
mated at $20,000.
Two hundred students of Epworth
university enforced a holiday against
the wishes or the faculty and attended
a foo'tbal game between Epworth and
Central state normal at the State
Fair last week.
Allorney General Charles West has
decided to make his campaign against
the aleged glnners' trust started in
Logan county state-wide and has sen
letters to all county attorneys of the
state asking their assistance In ob
tdlnlng evidence.
President Diaz left Mexico City
Monday on the presidential train. Ho
wil bo taken to Chihuahua, where ho
will he entertained for two days From
that city he will go to El Paso to
meet President Taft.
As a result of the hurricane which
struck the southern coast of Florida
Monday, Key West Is a mass of
wieckage and the damage to property
is estimated at $2,000,000.
I he corporation commission has
found ■ Santa Fe guilty of imposing
tress switching charges on the Cap-
ital Grain & Eevator company of
o!
DOMESTIC.
Santa Fe passenger train No. 17 was
derailed near Temple last week, the
engine overturning and several coaches
,-avlng the track. Several persons were
seriously Injured.
Vice-President Sherman will be
among the distinguished speakers at
the conference of Friends of the In
dian and other Dependent Peoples,
which wil hold its twenty-seventh an-
nual meeting at Lake Mohawk. N.
Y„ October 20, 21 and 22.
The criminal court of appeals has
revised the decision whereby W. H.
Pilgrim, deputy clerk of Alfalfa coun-
ty, was convicted of perjury and sen-
tenced to two years in the peniten-
tiary.
The Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe
railroad company will soon begin the
erection of Y. M. C. A. buildings at
its division points between Kansas
Ciy and the Pacific coast, according to
announcement made recently.
The announcement eoon will he
made that the American Vigilance As-
sociation, a national organization with
headquarters in Chicago, will take up
a determined war of extermination on
the white slave traffic.
Within the next few weeks every
mbordlnate grand lodge of the Ma-
sonic order In Oklahoma will vote to
accept cr reject the proffer of the
United States government to build a
grand lodge site and buildings of
the Darlington Indian school, near
EI Bono, for $75,000.
It Is rumored that Victor E. liar-
low, secretary of the state board of
affairs, Is to resign soon and go Into
the newspaper business.
The state of Kansas through the
state board ofhealth will make an ef-
fort to find out the cause and cure and
stamp out an epidemic of Infantile
paralysis which has appeared with
deadly results In several parts of that
■ state.
An average of eleven persons have
been injured and one killed every
day for the last three months by
Chicago street cars.
At the instance of Attorney General
West a grand Jury was called at
Guthrie to Investigate charges eman-
ating from Crescent, In I gan coun-
ty, that a glnners' trust had been
formed to control prices.
Dr. E. M. Klng bur> of Norman
has gone to Chrlstobal. Panama, to
take a position as surgeon for a
construction company.
A charter was issued last week to
the Sapulpa Steel and Iron mills which
propose to establish a big manufactur-
ing plant at Sapulpn, with a branch
d' tnand for money to handle the crops.
Ohio's wheat production for this
year was 1,600,354 bushels lets than
for 1908. The average yield per acre
wag slightly In excess of last year but
the acreage was less.
The corporation commission has
announced the hearing on the proposed
ordt-r of the commission fixing tele
phone rates In the state had been
postponed from October 1? until Oo
tober 20.
Oklahoma City, and fined the offend-
ing road $100 and costs.
Tho Rhodes Trust has sot the 19th
and 20th of this month as the dates
for holding the next qualifying exam-
ination for the Rhodes scholarships
in Oklahoma. These examinations
wil be held at the State university at
Norman.
Some very important changes may
be made in tho reclamation and the
settlement laws of the country as the
result of the recent tour of investi-
gation which a committee of the
United States senate has made
through the west.
Arrangements are being made by
the oil producers and officials of com-
mercial organizations of Tulsa to hare
Secretary of tho Interior Balllnger vis-
it this section of the stale and Inspect
the oil and gas situation.
That a railroad regulation provid-
ing for the enforcement of the Jim
C row law when the train reaches the
Oklahoma state line, is reasonable and
legal, was the holding at Newkirk of
District Judge W. M. Boles.
Eire of unknown origin which start-
ed in the business district of Red
Fork, caused a property damage of
about $2,000, practically burning it-
self out. No means of fire fighting
being available except by bucket bri-
gade.
Governor Haskell has written a let-
ter to George F. Clark, chairman oft he
board of county cominisfioners, offer-
ing the aid of the state prisioners to
help build the hard surface road acros3
Lincoln county.
In an opinion to £. H. Gibson, coun-
y attorney of Be'tcham county, Act-
ag Attorney General E. G. Spllman
holds thut the salary of a county of-
ficer appointed to All a vacancy Is
the same as that oK the first Incum-
bent of the office.
Theodora Roosevelt -"!! «pnd sev-
eral weeks next year, probably In the
spring, on the Damsite Farm of Col.
Cecil Lyon, of Sherman, Texas. In Har-
deman county, Texas, just over tho
ver frocm Oklahoma.
The citizens of El Paso will present
President Taft and Diaz with loving
ups when they meet there. The cupa
'ill be of soil dgold and will bear
the coat of arms of both Mcxico and
the United States.
Tho cify council at Sapulpa has
dcclaivd for a commission form of
government and ha3 authorized the
layor of that city to call an elec-
tion for Oct. 16th, for the selection
of a board of freeholders to draft a
ew charter.
TAFT SCORES OKLAHOMA
WARNS PEOPLE AGAINST MIS-
TAKES OF NEW STATE
President Terms Oklahoma's Constitu-
tion a "Zoological Garden of
Cranks," in Speech to People
of Arizona
Prescott, Ariz.—President Taft has
proclaimed whereved he went in Ari-
zona that he was heartily in favor oi
statehood for each of the territories
of Arizona and New Mexico.
Mr .Taft sought to impress upon
the people the .necessity for delibera-
tion in framing state legislation. He
declared that their constitution should
follow the simplicity of that of the
United States and should be mere fun-
lamen'al law, with simple rules and
limitations.
Mr. Taft urged the people of Arizona
to profit by what he termed the mis-
takes of Oklahoma in constitution
making. He characterized the Okla-
homa constitution as a "zoological
garden of cranks."
The president's train was whirled
along at breakneck speed Wednesday
through scorching desert wastes of
sage brush and cactus.
The territorial officials, headed by
Governor Sloan, met the president's
train at Yuma before daylight and con-
tinued with him until after his visit
•to the Grand conyon.
In his principal speech delivered at
Phoenix, Wednesday, President Taft
said:
"It is a new sensation for me to'
talk to the people of a territory and
may say thus far it is a very pleas-
ant sensation. I want to congratu-
late you on having such a territory,
such energy and such en'huslasm.
"Now, gentlemen and ladles—for I
don't know whether you are going,to
let the ladles vote or not, and I speak
therefore with due consideration—you
are anticipating statehood, yon are
anxious to show what you can do as
an independent government, and I am
afraid you are anticipating the pleas-
ure of that independence without fully
understanding or realizing now the re-
sponsibilities of it, and therefore, If
after halvng made this announce^nm'
I point out some of the difficulties that
you are going to have, you will excuse
nie.
You have got to formulate a consti-
tution after the congress says you
shall come in, and I want to say a
word about the constitution.
"A co.ns'ltutlon Is for the purpose of
laying down fundamental limitations
upon your legislature and your execu-
tive Now, if you think that in that
constitutional convention you ought to
lay down all the limitations that are
ordinarily included in the statute, you
are going to make a great mistake.
"You take the last constitution that
was made—that of Oklahoma—and 1:
Is a zoological garden of cranks.
"I don't mean to say that It has no
good Ideas in it; it has. But the Idea
of tlelng down « legislature which
13 an experiment, so to speak, with
the laws that are to 'be adopted for
a new territory, with a long discourse
imposing all sorts of limitations. Is a
mistake which you ought to profit by."
Ofclah oma Outli
ines
What People of the New State are Doing Told In Short Paragraphs
Tecumseh Cotton Crop.
Tecumseh.—It is reported that thl3
year's cotton crop is going to exceed
last year's crop in this immediate vi-
cinity, and with the Increased prices
which both cotton and seed are bring-
ing growers ought to be considerably
better off this year financially than
last. The dry hot weather which so
greatly reduced the yield also caused
an early opening of the boll, so that
practically all the crop will be saved
this year. At least a much greater
per cent will be saved than In former
years. There will be very few imma-
ture bolls for the frost to catch. An-
other advantage has been the fair,
open weather, without rains or storm
of any kind to soil or injure the open
cotton, making picking easy and
rapid and resulting in an exceedingly
clean, white staple.
COTTON MARKET.
New York.
New Yofk, Oct. 11.—The market
opened barely steady 10 to 12 points
lower and continued to decline until
the net loss was a matter of 13@2l
points. Spot cotton closed higher, 10
points up. Middling uplands $13.30;
middling gulf, $13.55. Sales 817 bales.
Cotton futures closed firm. Closing
bids: October, $13.08; November,
$13.08; December, $13.17; January,
513.13; February, $13.10; March,
$13.19; April, $13.20; May, $13.22;
June, $13.18; August, $12.90; Septem-
ber, $12.15.
The Way of the Worlo.
If we were charged so much a heail
for sunsets, or if God sent round aj
drum before the hawthorns come fnto
flower, what a work we should make,
about their
Stevenson.
beauty.—Robert Louis
Has a Real Greivance. ,
The California man who struck at!
n fly, hit a moving saw and lost two
fingers, doubtless has an active ap-
preciation of the fly menace, against
which the scientists warn us.
Not by the Merit System. '
Many a man who cannot govern his
own family is elected to govern a
commonwealth. — Charleston News,-
and Courier.
Work on Rock island.
Tecumseh.—A large construction
crew Is at work on the Asher branch
of the Rock Island and much specula-
tion Is again being indulged in as to
whether or not the line Is to be ex-
tended on south from Asher. At pres-
ent the work train and crew are mak-
ing headquarters at this city. This
part of the line has received much at-
tention during the past few months,
and rumor is abroad that the Rock
Island has sold the line, although they
are still operating it. It Is reported
that either the Frisco or the Illinois
Central are the new owners, and
when they come Into possession of the
line it will be extended from the junc-
tion to a connection at Okmulgee and
from Asher south to Texas or Into
Southwest Oklahoma.
New Orleans.
New Orleans, Oct. 11.—Cotton spots
were quiet, l-16c off; low ordinary,
9%c nominal; ordinary, IOMiC nomi-
nal; good ordinary, 11 9-16c; strict or-
dinary, 12c; low middling, 12 7-16c;
strict low middling, 12%c; middling,
13c; strict middling, 13%c; good mid-
dling, 13Vic; strict good middling,
13 7-16c; strict middling fair, 13 916c;
middling fair to fair, 13 15-16e.
Receipts 10,082 bales; stock 69,311
bales. Sales on spot, 550 bales; to ar-
rive, 975 bales.
Revenge.
A Connecticut man slapped his wife
because she sent souvenir postcards
to him. She might get even when
she goes away from home again by.
sending him telegrams to colect,
Recover From Heart Wounds.
Dr. Roberts' suggestion in 1881 of
sewing wounds of the heart was re-
ceived as a joke. Dr. Rehn, of Ger-
many, In 1897 got the firsc recovery
from heart wound. Altogether there
have been 16 such operations, with
seven amazing recoveries.
St. Louis.
St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 11.—Cotton un-
changed; middling, 13%c. Sales, none;
receipts 658 bales; shipments 210
bales; stock 10,187 bales.
Galveston,
Galveston, Oct. 11.—Cotton lower;
middling, 13c.
Let Your Conscience Guide.
Your compass is your conscience.
It will not deceive you. Use it and
your life will be the best kind of a
success that man knows, satisfying to
yourself and useful to your brother
men.—Chicago American.
Refused Medical Aid; Dead.
Manitou.—In the faith of his sect,
which embraced the doctrine of the
holiness cure for all ills, S. Davis, a
well known farmer of Manitou, suf-
fered for twenty-one days with ty-
phoid fever and died without having
taken medicine for relief. Shortly be-
fore Davis died a physician was call-
ed, but too late.
The peculiar belief to which Davis
and his brethren held was known as
the "Tongues holiness doctrine," and
a great deal of their time was spent
in preaching and teaching entire sanc-
tification and opposing the use of to-
bacco and other narcotics.
FOREIGN.
The kaiser of Germany is at logger-
emls with his subjects again, because
they have dared to criticize Ills Inordi-
ate passion for traveling.
Jules Millerand, minis ti r of public
orks in Paris has a great idea of
America's pre-eminence In civil engln-
rlng, which he seeks to utilize for
the In neflt of French civil engineers
of the future.
1'lie annual supply of water to Lon-
don, England, Is 82,125.000,000 gallons.
Herr Heiiricb Urban, who enjoys
Rome fame In the German press as an
uthority on America, publishes In the
Ag a virulent attack on America l«
general and on New York, In particu-
lar. in connection with the celebration
of the discovery of the Hudson river..
It Is reported that In connection
with the International labor exhibi-
tion to be held in Turin in 1911, the
Turin Chamber of Commerce offers a
prize of $10,000 to be given to the
author of any invention of whatever
kind which m practice will prove ad-
vantageous to national economy.
The i)ope of Rome has recently
given proof of his freindllness to the
press In a striking manner. A party
of journalists from newspapers whieh
support the Church were received by
his holiness at the Vatican, and made
the novel request that he should be-
stow his blessing upon their pens.
Evidence of a very ancient civiliza-
tion has been dug up, during excava-
tions. at u busy corner of Paris. The
tavvies found an earthenware pot
containing thirty gold coins of ancient
design.
Grain Car Shortage
Topeka, Kan.—Many complaints are
coming to the state board of railroad
commissioners from elevator men Over
the state of a grain car shortage. The
railroads say all their cars are in
use, but deny a shortage. One ele-
vator reports no cars for eleven days.
Upset the Buggy.
Kingfisher.—Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Lankard and daughter were driving
when they were passed by an automo-
bile. In attempting to cross a ridge
the automobile was stuck. The driver
backed the machine, when Mr. Lank-
ard's horse, which was Just behind,
turned quickly, throwing Mrs. Lank-
ard and the child out and upsetting
the buggy. Mr. Lankard was caught
in the top and dragged a short dis-
tance. Mrs. Lankard escaped with
bruised hip while her husband receiv-
ed a few slight bruises and the child
was uninjured.
Labor Laws Must be Observed
Oklahoma City.—"Violators of the
child labor laws will be prosecuted It
they do not cease employing children
under the age prescribed by law,"
said G. E. Warren, state factory in-
spector.
Mr. Warren has been here several
days investigating, conditions and has
Inspected about fifty factories. Sev-
eral children under the age of four-
teen have been ordered removed.
The factory inspector will spend
several days here investigating and
will warn all employers that there
mpst be no violations of the laws. Mr.
Warren will visit all the big down
town stores where women are em-
ployed and ascertain If the laws in
regard to women employes are being
observed.
Under the law, all stores must pro-
vide comfortable seats for the use of
women employes when not engaged
In waiting on customers. In stores
and factories there must be suitable
lighting and ventilation, and the ele-
vators and sanitation must be prop-
erly conducted.
Demand King's Life in Revenge
Paris.—Clamoring for King Alfon-
so's life in revenge for the execution
Wednesday morning of Francisco Fer
vert, convicted of Inciting the Barce-
lona riots, all Spain is aroused. The
execution was carried out by shooting,
despite the protests of Pope Plus X,
the king of Italy and others. Revolu-
tionaries are busy throughout the en-
tire kingdom. Every step has been
taken to presA ve order. Believing that
nn outbreak is threatened all the
large cities are under martial Hw.
Ballinger is Wanted.
Tulsa.—Arrangements are being
made by the oil producers and offi-
cials of commercial organizations of
this section of the state to have Sec-
retary of the Interior Balllnger come
to Tulsa and inspect the oil and gas
situation here, with reference to the
building of additional oil pipe lines
and the piping of natural gas from
the state of Oklahoma. Balllnger left
Seattle, Wash., October 4 for Arizona,
California and Oklahoma, and it is
hoped to have him spend several days
in this immediate vicinity.
Killed by Wheat Drill.
Beaver.—Austin Hostetter of Zel-
ma, met with a fatal accident while
drilling wheat. He was standing on
the drill box when the team of mules
became frightened and started up,
jerking him forward to the ground
and the drill passed over him, tear-
ing his body In a horrible manner.
Swine Breeders Elect Officers.
Oklahoma City.—At a meeting of the
Oklahoma Swine Breeders' association
work for the coming year was mapped
out. Practically all the swine breed-
ers at the fair are members of the
association and it is becoming one of
the strongest organizations of Its kir.d
In the west. Addresses were delivered
by Mr. Singleton, judge of sheep and
swine; Manager Irwin of the Ea-mers'
Star and Live Stock Inspector; Bon-
ney Youngblood of the United States
department of agriculture, Air. Doty
of Illinois and Mr, Offutt of Texas.
The following officers were elected:
President, J. R. Sparks, Hunter; first
vice president, Ed. Edmuson, Clinton;
second vice president, C. H. McAlister,
Carmen; secretary-treasurer, A. E.
Lovett Hunter; committeemen, A. B.
Campbell, Geary; Joe W. Allison, An-
adarko, and George W. Miller, Kil-
dare.
The association will hold its first an-
nual institute meeting at Stillwater
during the farmers' short course at
the A. & M. college in January. The
regular annual business meeting will
be held the first Monday after the first
day of the state fair at the state fair
grounds.
As to Babies. j
"Any one can be a parent, but It'
takes a gift to elevate such common
products as children. You have got
to make the public forget that they
yell, have to be fed at regular hours,
and get colic. You must make people
feel that they are pretty and pink
and a tremendous privilege."—Maude
Radford Warren, in "Peter, Peter,"—
(Harpers.)
After Us the Deluge.
The remark, "After us the deluge,"
is geerally ascribed to Mme. Pompa-
dour, the imistress of Louis XV.,
though It is attributed by some au-
thorities to Prince Metternich. The
champions of Mme. Metternich claim
that while Metternich may have used!
the expression, he borrowed It from
the Pompadour.—New York American.
Surveyors at Work.
Ardmore—W. T. Forsythe, civil en-
gineer, arrived here from St. Louis
with a corps of surveyors and has be-
gun on the work of surveying the line
for the Interurban from here to Chick-
asha. Oscar Ayers, the promoter,
says the line has been financed and
will be built.
Oil Shoots From Second Base.
Muskogee.—Shooting from beneath
the spot where once lay the bag of the
second base on the baseball diamond
of old Benson park there sprews into
the air, one of the greatest oil gushers
of the Muskogee field. It has a ca-
pacity of 4,000,000 cubic feet per day
and the full depth has not been
reached.
Hore's Hatred of Bicycles.
An old Irish steeplechase horse
called Tornado, who was well known
at one time, was a perfectly good tem-
pered horse, but he had a hatred of
bicycles, and whenever he saw one
he would t ry to put his forelegs
through the wheels. For what reason
nobody ever knew, for he never
seemed to be afraid of them.
Easy Knot to Tie.
"Some people," said the trained
nurse, "think they cannot tie a bundle
securely unless some one is at hand
to put a finger on the string lest It
slip. If a simple little suggestion bo
borne in mind there never will be fur-
ther trouble. It is this: Instead of
looping the string only once, loop it a
second time—the way a surgeon does
in tying arteries—and there will never
be any slipping. A trial will con-1
vince you that it is eminently prac-
tical."
Enid Banks Respond.
Enid.—After a thorough considera-
tion of the matter, representative of
each of Enid's five state banks an-
nounced that the draft of the local
state banks indicated that three-
fourths of one per cent on average ae-
posits for the replenishing of the bank
guarantee fund would be paid on pre-
sentation.
In interviews previously the offi-
cials of the local state banks indicat-
ed that the banks would resist the ef-
fort.of the state banking board to col-
lect the assessment.
The assessment has been levied to
replenish the guaranty fund now be-
ing used to re-establish the Columbia
Bank and Trust company of Oklahoma
City.
Prospective Railroad.
Sickles.—If present plans mature
Sickles is to have a railroad. A. H.
Bales reports that a liightly enthusi-
astic and satisfactory meeting was
held at Sickles and arrangements ps--
fected. The road extends from Wood-
ward to Chickasha.
OKLAHOMA DIRECTORY
3-ROOFING
BEST EVER
Curtis & Gartside Co., Oklahoma City
Wholesale Manufacturers of Sash and
Doors, Hardwood Finish Office and Bank
Fixtures. Ask your Lumber Dealer.
Child Drowned.
Mulhall.—The 30-months-old child
of Mr. and Mrs. J. V. Connors, who
lives seven miles north of this place,
was drowned in a pool of water. The
child had followed his father out Into
the field and fell over an embankment
into the pool.
Nice light bread and flaky biscuits
can be made from
CHOCTAW FLOUR
Insist on this brand and yon •
are sure to have the best
YOt'H (iliOt'Eli ni:i.i.s it
Notary PtjMic Record Book. - •
Merchant* Quirk Price M.rl^r,
Oar. Silver lint or Coat BaMto.
Rubber Stamps, I'a<ls Stencils, Di
all itamp supplio* Writ* for pri
lojue, O K. Rubber stamp &
U.00
ti.1)0
II M
11.00
II# W. Qrand Av«
. Oklahoi
Negroes Are Imitative.
Tulsa.—Fifteen negroes boarded a
train at Wybark and attempted to
take Arthur Manny, a negro charged
with horse stealing, away from Sheriff
Hooper, with the intention of lynching
him. Sheriff Hooper held the crowd at
bay with his revolver until the train
started, and with the assistance of the
conductor forced the entire mob to
jump from the moving cars. Wybark
has no white citizens. Manny was tak-
en to Oklahoma City and landed safe-
ly in jail.
Alfalfa $50 Per Acre.
Kremlin.—Gus Gummerson of Krem
lln has just finished threshing the seed
from the last crop of alfalfa on a 100-
acre tract, twelve miles north of the
city. Mr. Gummerson sold the seed
for ten dollars a bushel and the hay
for ten dollars per ton on the ground.
The several cuttings during the sum-
mer and the seed, brought him more
than $5,000, or about $50 per acre.
Petitions for Turnpikes.
Ada—Petitions are being circulated
in this city and the adjoining county
for an election to be held in Pontotoc
county for the building of good turn-
pikes and bridges to the amount' ot
$150,000, the turnpikes to begin at
Ada and extend In four directions
across the county. The most urgent
needs of this county are good roads
and bridges, and the county commis-
sioners are determined that Pontotoc
county shall keep abreast of the times
In tills respect. "
SHERMAN MACHINE & IRON
WORKS Roger ■ Cotton ClaaiK
Engine* and Boilers, Repair Work t
Supplies, etc.
winning Mitchii
Specialty, ftttf'hl
OKLAIKHHA
MACHINERY E-Jtag
Write, call or phona f
Southwestern Mfg. Co., Oklahoma City
ELECTRIC SIGNS
Tha low c
"pnrating
•urpri*<
—or"" ELECTRIC SUPPLIES "Hh
S. W. ELECTRIC CO.,
BOOKKEEPING
A I'lMi TI' AL an,!
THOROIOH TRAIMNC*
lit M«.lorn MotW«l« un-
der the direction of an
TANKS
FOR STOCK AND STORAGE
CULVERTS
ALL KINDS OF SHEET METAL WORK
SWANDA BROS.
SCHOOL ' " .BOOKS, POST CARDS
TABLETS, SCHOOL SUPPLIES
STATk Al>OPTKI> M'HOOL i EC t MIL'S. kt<
OKLAHOMA BOOK CO.
M9 DEERE IMPLEMENTS
and VELIE VEHICLES"^""dealer
CRJOHN DEERE PLOW CO., OKLAHOMA CITY,
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The Yukon Sun. (Yukon, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 41, Ed. 1 Friday, October 15, 1909, newspaper, October 15, 1909; Yukon, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc128075/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.