The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 117, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 7, 1910 Page: 4 of 8
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PAGF, FOUr.
THE 0KT.AH3WIA 8TATE CAPITAL WEDNESDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 7, 1910.
The Oklahoma State Capital
By Ul« t««« C«plUI Corrptny.
FRANK M. ORB6H. EDITOR.
will doubtless respond Reni-rouslv lo Col. Koosevelt'ii
suggestion.
Nothing could In. more appropriate than a monu-
ment cri't'lnd to this artist by the men whose deeds
and achievements he has (riven lasting fame.
On. w--v
On* Mont
Cili* V a*r
•UMCRI^TION RATI*. -mW /
Dally fry Carrier—Itrlclly In Advanoa. t
One Month
Three M.xitha
I \ M "Ml hn ....
On* Vm ..
Daily by Mall—®trlctly In Advano#.
On* T*ar by Mail
fc.x Months
On* Year
To 8uum/KmKne Th.
the dato your subscription aspires
EAST MATCHES US.
Oklahoma is a 'new' country. Tortious of it
have been open to white settlement only a few
years, so that the recent influx has been excep-
tionally heavy. Still, it is pleasing to know
that tin' gain of population in Khode Island in
the same decade was at a higher rate—L'ti.ti per
(int. The great Southwest cannot vet, with
j propriety, jet'er to us as the effete Kant.—I'rovi-
| ilcnce (R. l.i Journal.
I The Journal hasn't much presumption to take, in
——■ ;— 'ONipanson with Oklahoma, a decade.
l bol on your yapea fives
No ir MBrlptl*na avlii • lent by M«ii in Cl« •* #u*rl .
SUNDAY COITION.
-II.H
I FOREIGN REPHtbENTATIVES—N M. "Pt.
Ks^icu UulUlni. LW«|0; Trfc6un MUU . N.
)Sork.
whru « r*mitiaiH« u mad* Oklahoma luts I). - ii stati Ifss than four
•ih*rwln* w* will lak* It that you - .
and that you will r*> for It at th* regular ubscrlptlon rat*.
w. ,V.' 1
W: I :
1
!* 3 V. M N U
IJ Gilbert W. Piikf*
|J>ona\l U F>a*er
Thoa S. Dulaney
F Joseph N. I >odsou
. J W II pill
P
REPUBLICAN TICKET
STATE TICKET.
I ,1
■ UBID JUUI "U"?' • ----- - , , . . . •
«I% « .Hie., m ami, had our state government and laws been such
S:.lns (or Ch.,,(. or powofflo. .lw.y. lrt.. old .. w.U « n.w
It M...IIII Ih. i A.n«r Btoui>*d. writ* u* to that «ffec t, tin in .
Instead of discourage capital, railroad building-
and property investments,—
The past three years would have seen such ail
inflow o! people and capital as would have caused
little Rhody to hive kept her peace on subject of
comparison of gain in population.
Watch us travel this next decade.
The first four years of McNeals administration
will make Oklahoma with what we have to build on
the envy of all other commonwealths.
We do not make this statement in idle boast.
Oklahoma has all tho building ami life sustaining '
products of earth and soil that has auy other state. |
and that too in endless profusion,—
Hence, when given a fair show, Oklahoma will
astonish the world
, John
V it
<1 John
John
I' Rvans
!«aln
T Hall ...
V Fun.it or
>i*t* H Bljrfferi
dames T Puma
h Samuel I. Kartholomew
► | William II. Reaver ..
Fmory P. prownlee
' Charlea C. Chapell,
.Governor
-Ideut. Governor
.8e<\ of Stat*
..Auditor
_ Atty General
...Treasurer
Sh.pt Public Tna.
..F*am and lnsv-
-Mine Inspe- tor
.Com of l.abof
rom. Charities
-Insurance (Jom.
Stat* Printer
I'ret, Roard Ajr
.-.Corporation Com.
..Clerk Supreme Court
« l awrence .
C. Strang
m Adams
1 tV. ii Mitchell
COUNTY TICKET.
Wiip Hnr Juflf*
, fniintv Judge
. .Countv Atty.
ShrrlfT
F \\
Rltterbuach
KtcKean
CiHswold
|. w K
I C. II
It XV. T. Warren _ .
: C. P Olsfn
Nell Humphrey
'I F K Tnllnian
' X. J Ohprholier
8 J Fbvnr
MC. F Hudspeth
B. S. Reeves
.County Treasurer
Realster of l>eeds
Clerk Plst. Court
Clerk Superior Court
..County clerk
—County Svipt. Schoola
.Weigher
Ct mr. lat plat.
Cntnr. ?nd Plat.
Comr. Sr\1 Plst.
^.County Surveyor
ROAMING AROUND
LIVE TOPICS
CURRENT COMMENT
\\ <• atruKKie gamely out of debt,
Then we grlu.
And noon contrive a way to get
iiuck In.
—o—
Help to make your home the best placa
to live lit on earth.
—o—
The mint la the only concern that
makes money without advertising.
The aon of it Urttlsli peer Is washing
diahea lu Texas. Ilia Job ought to pan
out.
—o—
If the f irest Area continue conservation
will have to consist principally of re-
planting.
Savannah must have done some genuine
hustling to bat New Orleans out of sec-
ond place as a cotton port.
Weather experts are predicting an early,
long and levere winter. Hark! Was that
the coal man who snickered.
—o—
Tho public is not "fernlnst" the auto-
mobile, hut it does object, and with good
reason, to the reckless driver
—o—
Determining Just the thing to wear may
he difficult, but you can t depend upon
women to solve the problem.
Every honest \oter should take up the
cry for honest flections, and stay w ;ui
It until after the November election.
—o—
Wp wonder If It is any worse to cheat
a preached in a trade than a layman. It
seems to be easier and more fun.
—o—
It app-ara that the interpretation o*
the new football rules is giving the ool-
le* ' l.« ys more trouble than their regular
The man who has no concern In the
wellbelng >f the town and of his neigh-
bors and friends, is not worthy the name
of citisen.
It is said a sucker ia born every min-
ute. but unless you know more than the
tombstones tell you van nowhere find
the grave of one.
—o—
Now will salvation and the church
come in for a boost. v minister an-
nounces that automobile scorchers will
never get into heaven.
The government w
xylotomlst at $1,100
would stand being
1
HAS TRIED BOTH
1 Mr. Sherman does not wish to se~ the day when
the American policy of protection to Its own in-
terests will not be the rule of the nation.
The vice-president has experienced other tariff
conditions than those which have prevailed for a
Uu-adc, and he is therefore in a position to know
which order of things he prefers.
lie does not hesitate to declare that he likes tho
conditions of todav better than the opposed stati
of atTaiis, and that i.. wants no change.
Mr. Sherman knows both kiuds of tariff as does
the greater part of the voting population of the
count r).
Fourteen years ago this was not the case, for at
that time comparatively few men recalled the effect
which low tariff duties had in earlier years exer
cised on the industries of the country, and even
many of these thought that the experiene would
not be duplicated, were the nation to return to tiv
liade.
They learned their mistake, of coins.'
They found that no people could grow so pr> -
perous as to not be iu dang, r of b. oiuing th- r
Wise.
They found, indeed, that the very fact that peo
|>le possess much makes it possible for t 'in ;
heavy losers
As the importance of anything inert1 ^ - >..c
rare in preserving it is needed
Tht lessons learned since fourte n years ac i\
impressed more than the vice prestd. nt
Throughout the land is a determination • • •
[return to the prosperity wre. kiug period . . tiu
rountrv s history
The people feel, a^ does Mr Sheruian. tiiat on
•noli exjK'rience in a life time s enough.
AN APPEAL TO THE COWBOY
Col. Roosevelt at the recent cowboy carnival at
Cheyenne made a suggestion that should be taken
to heart by the plainsman and frontiersman gen
erally.
Hi proposed that the West erect a monument to
the late Fredrick Kemington, the artist who has
done -o much to preserve :n tirourc and ou canvas
thv spirit of the now passiug frontier.
To put it iu the Colonel's own words
"In Remington's pictures all ihe most vivid
and characteristic features of the Western
pioneer life which is just closing were set forth,
and he has commemorated forever the men of
the plains and mountains as th. \ actually were.
• * • Now. I wish very much that these uien
themselves would in their turn provide a monu-
ment for the treat artist, t!:.' sum of who- . t
ivities represents such a feature of American
achievement, and. above all. represents the mi-
niemoration of some of the most interesting
figuivs that have ever appeared on the stage of
American life."
For lack of artists in the days of the hiekn
nan. when the pioneer was moving on into the Mid
«lle West^a !'! '"r. -. ra of our uatn:i
for. \ er. or liv > \ in «,
' Remington saw his opportunity in th. land <i th
■ Indian an J the cowboy, aud has recorded it for all
, generations
Remington loved t W i ■ W >• ,
•tmtratcful in forgetting him
i 0Uiu m«u and vow boy are ( irted, and
THE STATE S DISGRACE.
It is little less than a state disgrace if it be
found that there is no method available for
punishment of the election thieves recently dis-
covered in Oklahoma City. If our laws pro-
vide no means for protecting the state from
such outrages, no time should be lost iu pro-
viding legislation which will protect.—Shaw-
nee Herald (Democratic.'*
The laws are in ,iust that condition. Mr. Herald.
Twenty live dollars is the limit of tine or punish-
ment for tampering with ballot-box stuffing.
And everybody who lias a thimble full of braina j u,V("torTu'ch a'pUtry'ium
knows that this was not "a happen so." | —
The men who drafted and studied the election
law knew what they were doing
The arch villain of the irang was not napping
when those laws were enacted.
His willing followers, and tools at the time of
making, knew the condition and helped to work it
through.
Bill Murray knew what the law was. and when
finally, he protested against its being used upon
him one of its makers.—
He squealed good and loud.
Nad business all around.
In fact rotten,—
Devilish rotten.
employ an
Now, who
name like
The Washington Post feelingly sa
"Don't mutsle a laying hen." Evidently
the post In acquiring Its poultry ha
also acquired some nature fakes.
—0—
"Tomorrow never (omes, 'tis said '
Remarked the man who lives to quote.
"\ou II find ;t does," the other warned,
"If you have falling due a note. '
A Kentucky girl took a prize for straw-
berry jam, also for riding a horse, .it
Carthage fair. Evidently she did not
any of the horse's hair get into the J,
WATCH ITS CURVES
The Oklahoman Is the champion wab-
bler.
THE
When
Listen at this from Its editorial col-
umns:
"Perhaps there will come a tim«
when the prlnci| a) purpose of the fed-
eral courts will not be to destroy tho
work of the state courts. Maybe that
day Ih not long distant."
So soon as the decision on the state
c,-Ipita! question I rendered by the state t ,u, investigation In the Washita val-
aupreme court, - ley around Chickasha and hla opinion la
The editor of the Oklahoman will be nowhere in Ihe world la there a val-
wlth t e mob that will he clamoring for: ley more fertile and better adapted to the
an appeal to the Federal courts ffromng of fruits, vegetables, sweet corn,
Watch the oklahoman s curves about melon.* berries, squash and other trucK.
that time and see If we are not right Not only do these products grow In
abundance here." he asserts, "but the
quality Is superior to the product from
almost any other locality, not excepting
California it may not be generally
known, but It Is a fact that Washita val-
le\ melons ate prize winners wherever
Shown. They excel In sir.e. In yield per
a ■ re and capec ally in flavor, and whlli
It Is true for these products It may be
no less true for doiens of other Items tha'
can be grown so abundantly. For ln-
st wire, in this locality the tomato Is as
prolific and well flavored as any place
In the world. Then we have grapes, which
we altvad> know rival California's excel-
lent product. Peaches, plums, cabbage,
beets, sweet potatoes, pumpkins, squush
sweet corn and many other commodities
that make up the table bill of fare can
be gn>wn here In abundance and with
scarcely a crop failure "
I lav ng persistently urged the ad van-
j tages of Oklahoma for Intensive farm-
J Ing the Oklahoman Is Intensely inter-
ested In what Mr. Stockier has to say
along tlii:- line, and no one who has ever
seen the Washita valley is prepared to
auch dlvialona in its ranks as to make it
plain that thousands of Its voters sup-
port It either by force or hereditary
habit, or for other reasons than its tar tf
doctrine, while other thousands support
It In the expectation and belief that it
can be restrained from doing what it has
pie Iged itself to do.
The result has been chaos whenever the
democratic party has hud to make a new
tariff law. in the end, as it waa In 1N!H,
THE QUEEN CITY
OF THE WASHITA
Chickasha la referred to by the Jour-
nal of that city as "The Queen City of
the Washita," and that publication grows
enthusiastic in pointing out the possibil-
ities of the fertile farm lands of the
Washita valley and'the future of Chlcka- that element In its electorate who write
sha as a packing • nd canning tenter. I 'ta platforms and force their adoption, in
The Journal says that H. K. Steckler of always strong enough to make sweeping
that city has recently returned from a| reductions in the schedules. Before thH
RECOVERY OF BURTON
I. It. Burton was kicked out of
place as .1 senator from Kansas for sell-
ing himself to a quiek-to-get-rleh scheme
In S; Louis, he was fined $-.500, In addi-
tion to losing his place
The fine was never collected on account
of a technical error In the commitment,
papers.
Everybody supposed that J. P. was
ruined, but after he lost hi office hel
went down into Texas. bought huge
tracts of land, cut them up Into small i
farms and disposed of them to eastern
buyers.
One deal alone Is said to have brought!
1dm und the department of justi •
Is thinking of beginning proceedings
against him to make him pay the t2,6 A)|
line.
All of which shows that the possibil-
ities In this country are great
In any other land the expulsion of Bur-;
ton from office would have been
financial as well as his political luin. but!
in this land of freedom, a man Is no . ., . , , ,
doubt any statement that Is made rela-
sooner ruined tti one line than he pops , , ,,
* * I tivo to Its fertilly. brom his observation"
I Mr. Steckler has prepared a table of
i figures as to the yield of the various
' crops in that region per acre, showing
i t! at fruits and vegetables are very profit
j able crops. Here '.s the table
up In anotl:
A la Haskell.
When he is debarred or run out of one
state he can go Into another and com-
mence over, indulging in town lot grafts,
political bossing, tate >>ank breaking.
state capital barter
school fund raid in it
ing.
He can join real estate graft companies
and participate in rm h disreputable things
in his official capacity that If performed
by a private Individual in settled states
would send him to ti.e penitentiary.
Truly, America, and especially this por-
tion of it, is the home of the brave and
the land of the free, that is. a home for
those who brave public opinion and are
free to dabble in any sort of enterprise
that promises large profits for little ex-
ertion.
Lillian Russ
nlng down a
not her first
the fai- Ldlia
married him.
■II ha been
?d fo
M.in\ a
man to
With
tht4
I AVe
cam-
^l NEAL S HEADQUARTERS
I'ncle Joe McNeal will retain heailijiiBrtcrs
tint brie.
This is one of the two political centers of
state:—
This is bis home, and state capital issue has noth-
ing whatever to do with it.
He cau not well maintain two or more headquart-
ers hence, much as be would like to, he can not
please all sections of the state.
And no one could w ithout going to au immense
outlay.
I n le Joe is conducting bis campaign just as h '
in the i ast conducted bis personal matters; on
as economical basis as possible.
II is an ouoniical basin- «< man a success is
very body knows
He never has be. n ac ;, d of "loosim: his head"
ill the past aud he is not going to do it now.
He cant be in two places at one time.—
Hence he will continue to the end of the
paign—
His headquarters at Guthrie
AND STILL THE COLONEL
The colonel must often have prayed for deliverance
from his fool frit uds.
They were, in point of fact, about the worst en-
emies he bad when president, aud now that he is .11 <a,
<iu«si private i men swinging at anchor in a peac. •! •
ful harbor, the militant bray of th' same fool friend
is heard in the land.
Tbes fool friends are authority for the statement
that the colonel is a "receptive" presidential candi-
date for 191". and that he may feel compelled to bow
to the call of the people for a third term
The same old t'.ubdub that we used to hear from
the MUM old fool friends in 1908
They have got that third term
crosswajs in their noddles, and >
out if. as Pr Holmes s;n s in the
had the tire of all creation straiir
crowbar "
Well, let them rave
cn.«r of the ntnosj or thlnir*
'et w o stole nn Atchison womlr. *
■nrs <nme bai'k ihe next week and
her peaches. He proved that he
"come bat'k."
—o ■
>1 n*t usual'\ worrv verv nr..
"NOT A DEAD EASY"
What would be real exciting, would
be to have a real estate usent try to
sell t ad Allard some lots in the Put-
nam i apltol addition. We think the
mov ng picture men. if they would pay
attention to it, could make as much
out of such a scene as th* \ did out of
the Jeffries-Johnson fight.—Chii-k.iaha
Journal. •
Well, what we would do to him w •.:!
be i plenty, alriu. t, alrljtht:
And : «'t. we doubt if we would be an}
more expressive in ridding ourself o' flu
designing grafter than would any othe
self ret-'pi'ctlng Oklahoman who reads)
newspapers published outside the Graft-
erviile Units.
Everybody in Okl
Putn.
Is a graft of ^he most brazen, law
Wheat. oat3, corn nnd otton ?1- to $15.
Watermelons W to $150.
Cantaloupes $100 to $4«X>. >
< nlons $200 to $4">.
Tomatoes $300 to $5o0.
Pes . s $:tno to $5"a .
Plums $500 to $SOO.
Apricots $5<X> to $->00.
Grapes $350 to $5 >0.
Strawberries $400 to $700.
Sweet potatoes, cabbage, sweet corn,
etc.. reasonable yield $100.
Vssuming that those estimates are ap-
proximately correct, it would appear that
experienced truck gardeners should find
i veritable bonanza In these valley lands,
a: d their exploitation should serve to a
ti. the Inten.ive farmer. w itn tne1
valley about Chickasha inhabited witn i
intensive farmers there would be no oc-
ca- n to doubt that the Journal's dreamt
of Chickasha becoming a packing center
of considerable importance would be real-
ized.
result can be reached, however, the delay
hesitation and uncertainty In the business
world have already brought about con-
ditions which the new law can only in-
tensify. Since every man of intelligence
knows that the public opinion of the coun-
try favors the protective policy as our
permanent policy, and Hincr there is but
one party In our politics which consist-
ently and unitedly supports (hat pol . .
the wisdom of trusting revision only t
the frientls and never to the enemies <■?
tariffs. Is very clear. The point seems t .
have been obscured In the fug In whlri
we have all been groping for some tltno
past. Mr. Sherman has set tho fact out
clearly and It should be made of grott
value to his party between now and No-
vember.
A CLEAN RECORD
From Lamont Record. .
Bird S. McGulre has triumphed again
over his enemies, by being exonerated by
the congressional Investigating commit-
tee. relative to the Gore charges. It look i
now, as though those charges wre mado
for political purposes, and the originator
of them expected to Ret away with som"-
thing that would help the democratic
party in this congressional district, but
he pinned his faith to the wrong star, for
all that he had to offer was hearsay evi-
dence. and did not have one lota of any-
thing positive The people at the Novem-
ber election, will again exonerate Con-
grersman McGulre, by electing him by i
larger majority than ever before. And
why shouldn't they? When a man can
stand and rer.ent the attacks that have
been made on him and come out with
colors flying and untarnished as Congress-
man McGulre has. he ;s deserving of rec-
ognition. And not only that, but the peo-
ple know that in him they have a man
representing them who is fearless, hon-
orable an 1 above political trickery. This
Is just the kind of a man that the peoplo
nerd In congress, for they know at all
times that he is devoting his time and
energy to their interests As a tribute to
his sterling manhood the people will send
him hack to congress by a majority of
over three thousand.
HASKELLITY.
COST OF PROSECUTING
THE LIQUOR CASES
I From Oklahoman.
! The number of liquor cases, court costs
| etc.. are bt«ing collected at the head-
j quarters of the local option and higa
Ilcnse pt ople in Oklahoma City. There
is a large force of clerks and stenograph-
i ers mailing out letters and other infor-
. , ma no*s tlut l!l"| mation gathered from the courts in every
Mask. ! c; pltoi s.t- prop. - ■ 1
mi-
It
the c
hold the bag; lt'i
9 buying from the
f re Invading the
en Europe.
of
•ma i
wouldn't
toter" w
county In the state
The resubmissionists are going ahead
waging a t am paign as though the election
would be held Nov. S.
Tie local optionists make the follow-
ing statement:
Re >rds of county courts of fourteen
counties In Oklahoma showing number
I of prosecutions for violations of the pro-
i hlhition law since statehood up to June
1910.
spotted as a j
ie time wearing
forming distr
i, however, win
be no novelt:
FOOT BALL NEXT
I is the next natl nal mo
n In that
nd the Illin
' inexpert
o a so great'
.nd small c
ng and Inter- :
•a me.
forward pass
>re open game,
d come ■ earer
s to ha\ .ng :ts
plain as those
t > the aa-
t is safe to estimate the avera«e cost
prose, uting the average liquor .-ase,
hiding sheriffs1 fees. Jury fees anl
ier court expenses at $25 per case At
s rate It has cost these fourteen eoun-
s $231.ITS to prosecute violations of this
\ a one At the g:tnie ratio it has coat
p state a million and a quarter dollars.
s not ir.> lude costs In oth^r
urt> such ts grand jury Investigations.
Tli
injunctio
pealed t
penalty s
e supreme
ilts and • sp« ap-
court and criminal
s estimated that S3
< appealed to the
ils are liquor cases.
< are taken from
unty courts of the
Criminal Iaquor
cases cases
1.7*0 i,m|
It is a little more than four months
until Oklahoma will have a governor tha:
has some regard for the courts of the
country and la not a law unto hlmse!r-~
Vinita Chieftain.
The state levy this year Is another cas*
of levying one-third enough to pay th«<
state's debts, but we should not forget
there Is a campaign on tit is year Next
year you will get It like you did this
year—a double levy —Lamont Record.
"When you think, Gov. Haskell, that
you can dictate to me—a member f
the bench—what I shall do, and wh.it
I shall not do, do you reckon your host,
sir. I want nothing more to do with
you. Good day, sair, said Judge Mc-
Millan in the governor's office the other
day.—Shawnee News.
"If the court has more contempt for
us than we do for them they are daisies
is the expression credited to Gov. Has-
kell. A fine expression for the execuUvs
of any state to make about the esta -
1 shed courts of his state at any time, eh .
Even the ruler of the Fiji islands • an t
N* coaxed Into using such an expression
Haskell and his bunch are find ng out
that the people have no respect for them
and t ey are sore Tuttle Times
v—o—
Fred Branson, Governor Haskell 4
chairman of the state election boird. the
man whom the governor says is so
1 white and so free from taint of any sort
that there is no reason to watch him, *
, • -a a rased . f implication in the Okl*-
j homa City election frauds. Branson ?
; -esignation will be called for. It Is said
, although the governor has been advertis-
' ig. n his answer to McNeal s request
| for an honest election, that Branson s
resignation had "been In Ills hands ever
since his appointment as chairman < f the
democratic --tate committee.' r.v.dentl
somebody lied—Altus Times.
\\ -r
tcr*\st
ast away
' Th*
*rd and soft
ABOUT MOSQUITOES
I M skogee
jComatuie
whole Johnson
mated «'arter
| Caddo ..
little;
POLITICAL POTPOURRI
SUNLIGHT FROM -SUNNY JIM"
eroti'hot j.imtne 1
i couldn't prv it
' Autocrat," "von
lit -,i 1 out for s
F'n
i r.t Sherman
nI for tar f
o be the str
o get under their hide
—<y—
C. I? Jone« John FV
•on and pennls Flynn
itate for McNeaL Thej
kind that will make the
The revelation^ in the
tion frauds In Oklahora
sample of the state if
rd
• U ' :-
-Wat nga R. t
ngest. he
ity and the
i ripping
ustment c
R,'
d*D.'<
SPEAKrXO IN RIDDLES
inwUtiw KeQiin aays that th.
irtwii in at th.- Burk. h.-aruu i
>n with tho Indian had) MhM
s. lf That is true, au.l it dowttt
the double skirt
b«i: tj v.us
i|vak
w.'ll c>; Mr Mithiir. Oklah.Mu.ni
TIh> Oklahoman has a way of s(vakiti^
uro that i< both cowirdly an.l d.'vilish.
in ri.lillis. li. v.'r ipeeifyiMf.
j-
It Vak
Altkuuirl
thru<ts as
the cud d
M
HKirtod
,
With ti ■ sa- fa
•n —Shawoee N<ws.
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Greer, Frank H. The Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 117, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 7, 1910, newspaper, September 7, 1910; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc128291/m1/4/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.