Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 8, 1904 Page: 3 of 8
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REGENT
The incapacity of a man's admiulp-
tiator to receive the proceeds of a
policy on his life, which had been as-
signed to his wife, because he willful'y
took her life is held in Lanier vs. Box
(Tenn.), G4 L. R. A. 458, not to cause
their escheat to the state; but it Is-
held that they will pass to her dis-
tributees as though the husband ha.I
never been in existence.
Accidental death of an assured re-
sulting from taking poison to frighter
his wife into giving him money is held
in Courtemanche vs. Supreme court 1
O. P. (Mich.), 64 L. R. A. 668, not
to be within the provision of the policy
that it does not include assurance
. against self-degtruction or suicide.
Employes of a mining partnership,
who are charged with the care and
management of its property, are heM,
in Markley vs. Snow (Pa.), 64 L. R. \.
685, not to act within the scope of their
employment in causing, long after the
commission of the crime, the arrest,
for the purpose of vindicating the law,
jf one who is suspected of having set
Sre to a building belonging to the part-
nership, so as to render the partner-
ship liable for malicious prosecution
in cass the arrest proves to have been
without jurisdiction.
A watch is held, in Rains vs. Max-
well House Co. (Tenn.), 64 L. R. A.
470, to be within the operation of a
statute providing that, if a guest at a
hotel neglects to deposit jewels in the
safe or other place provided by the
hotel keeper for their custody, thev
shall be at his own risk.
Mental anguish and suffering are
held, in Cowan vs. Western Union Tel
egraph Company (Iowa). 64 L. R. A.
545, to be sufficient to sustain an ac-
tion for breach of contract promptly
to transmit and deliver a telegram.
The fact that a municipality takes
its water supply from a lake is hell,
in People vs. Hulbert (Mich.), 64 L. R.
A. 265, not to justify the denial
through the police power, of the right
of an upper riparian owner to bathe
in the lake.
The right of the probate court, in its
discretion, to allow an administrator
a reasonable amount to compensate
for the services of a real estate broker
TWO STORIES OF LUCK.
Affidavits, Unfortunately, Have Not
Been Recorded.
Probably readers of this column
have enjoyed a laugh long before now
at the amazing story of the luck of
the Liverpool man who returned to
his native city after a ten years' ab-
sence in Australia, and while retail-
ing to a friend, as they walked along
a bye-street, how, just before leaving
home, he lost a shilling at that very
spot, suddenly stooped and picked
up—not a shilling, but twelve-penny-
worth of coppers! Whatever evi-
dence there may be in support of the
truth of that story, the following
stroke of luck can be vouched for.
Last week, a Liverpool business man
was dispatching a message from a
telegraph office at one of the railway
stations in the city, and, when paying
for the message, momentarily placed
three sovereigns on the ledge beside
the office window. Half an hour later,
when at his own office, he discovered
that he had forgotten to take up his
gold before leaving the station. He
hurried back immediately, and there
stood the three sovereigns untouched.
—Liverpool (Eng.) Mercury.
He Lassoed a Bear.
Tug Wilson is a Colorado cowboy.
The Meeker Review tells the follcw-
irg story of a lively experience which
he had on a ranch near , that town
the other day: "While the round-up
v.ys on the head of James creek W.
IC Templeton started up a largo cin-
namon bear, but drew off, stroked his
board and said: 'Let him go, boys; we
have no time to fool with, him.' Tug
Wilson soon spied the bear and at
once took down his rope and began to
make a loop, intending to have bear
steak for supper.
"When Rusty got to the top of the
ridge Tug let the string fly and got
him by the neck and one front leg.
which temporarily disarranged the
bear's retreat. Seeing that he was
caught. Bruin began to walk up on
the rope. Tug sent in a wireless sum-
mons for assistance, but the boys fail-
ed to understand the message.
"The bear got nearer and flno!• v
landed on the pony, inflicting an ugly
wound in the thigh and also tearing
Tug's overalls. Tug has sent in for
a bottle of liniment and a new pair
of overalls and will now confine him-
self to roping cattle and horses during
the rest of the round-up."
who succeeded in securing for the
property belonging to the estate a ma-
terially greater amount than was bit',
foi it at the attempted auction sale, is
sustained in Re Willard's estate (Cal.),
64 L. R. A. 554. The other authorities
on liability of estate for commissions
of broker or agent who sells property
are collated in a note to this case.
A statute providing that insurance
policies snail not be avoided lor the
falsity of representations or warran-
ties, unless made with intent to de-
ceive or increasing the risk of loss, is
held in Continental Fire Insurance
Company vs. Whitaker (Tenn.), 64 L.
R. A. 451, to be within the police
power; and it is held to be immaterial
that it applies only to policies, issued
by old line companies and not to those
issued on the assessment plan.
The death of a husband, whe with
his wife, had occupied a tract of land
belonging to him as a homestead, is
held, in Cross vs. Benson (Kas.), 64
L. R. A. 560, not to deprive the wife
of the right to maintain the home-
stead, and to continue to occupy it,
free from forced sale under process of
law for the payment of the husband's
debts.
The power of courts, at common
law, to order an examination of the
person of one alleged to have been in-
jured by the negligence of another, for
the purpose of ascertaining the extent
of the injuries, is denied in Austin &
N. W. R. R. Co. vs. Cluck tTex.), 64
L. R. A. 494.
The use of land for the erection and
maintenance by railway companies of
hotels and eating stations along their
roads for the accommodation of their
employes and passengers, is held, in
Abraham vs. Oregon & C. R. Company
(Ore.), 64 L. R. A. 391, to be a legiti-
mate railroad purpose only when they
are reasonably necessary for the con-
venience of such persons.
The act of the officers of a munici-
pal corporation, wlio, in attempting to
guard the public health, remove a
smallpox patient to a pesthouse so
overcrowded and illy adapted to its
purpose that he dies from the conse-
quent exposure, is held, in Twyman vs.
(Frankfort (Ky.), 64 L. R. A. 572, not
to render the municipality liable.
MERE MATTER OF REASONING.
No Question Day Must Have Been
Windy in the Extreme.
Hon. John E. Roche of Scranton was
a member of the Pennsylvania legis-
lature during the first Pattison admin-
stration. He used to tell a good story
about how a pretentious orator was
squelched. Two young lawyers from
adjoining districts had been trying
during an entire session to make rep-
utations as orators. When the appor-
tionment bill was taken up ofie ot
them spoke for five hours against the
bill, and when he had concluded his
harrangue the other man took the
floor for another lengthy ebullition in
favor of the measure. In his peroration
he said that he was sorry to find his
brother on the wrong side, for there
was every reason why they should
agree.
"We were raised together, we stud-
ied together, we played together, we
were born in the same year; yes, even
on the same day."
"Did I understand you to say that
you were born on the same day?" in
terrogated a member from Philadel-
phia.
"Yes," came the prompt reply.
"On the very same day?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then it must have been a very
windy day," said the Philadclphiau.
The orator sat down, squelched by
roars of laughter.
Senator Tillman Called Down.
Senator THIman of South Carolina
is the father of the dispensary system
which controls the liquor traffic in that
state. He tells a story about an Irish-
man who bitterly opposed the restric-
tion of the traffic.
"My friend from the Ole Countbree,"
says the senator, "was fond of the
'cratur comforts wunst in awhile,' and
sometimes oftener. He was agin the
law from the first, and one day I met
him. He wore a rueful countenance
and said to me:
"'Ye are hathens to make sich a
law, Misthur Tillman. It gives me
heart a big shtroke. Divil a wonder
they call it the Maine law. Phat will
we do at the wakes 1 dunno now.
It's the bad times intirely when a man
can't bury his frinds dacently;'nor him-
self nuther. It is my opinion tnat the
law is calkerlated to bring great dis
tress not only on the livin' but on the
dead. Bad luck to it.' "—Nashville
Banner
i LIVE SD3Ci£
Realizing the Presence of Dirt.
It is the experience of these fac-
tory inspectors that where the owners
of a factory are prosecuted for keep-
ing an unclean establishment the men
that supply their milk quickly come
to the conclusion that it does not pay
to send milk to a factory of that kind.
In many cases the defections have
been so numerous that the factory has
bad to close and go out of business.
Partners have listened to the cam-
paign of education long enough to be-
gin to realize that high prices for their
milk products cannot be obtained if
the medium through which they reach
the public is a filthy one.
One would suppose that the farm-
ers who take their milk to a factory
every day for six months would be
able to realize the presence of dirt in
the factory before a stranger came
along and pointed it out. It is a
queer thing this realization of dirt.
If an inspector had not begun legal
action against the factory the farm-
ers would have been content to bring
their milk to the same dirty factory
year after year.
The men that could not realize the
dirt in the factory till it was pointed
out to them do not realize the untidy
conditions of their own farms. If high
prices for cheese made in a dirty fac-
tory are not to be hoped for, neither
can wo hope to got high prices for
cheese and butter made out of mill;
produced in a dirty stable.
Roots and Silage.
Roots are good for cows and so is
silage. In the United States silage is
lar cheaper than roots if we compare
the cost of the dry matter in each.
Careful estimates have been made of
the amounts of nutrients in the form
of roots and in the form of silage that
can be produced on an acre of land.
It has been certainly proved that
twice as much nutriment can be pro-
duced in the form of corn as in the
form of roots. Then, too, it costs less
to raise an acre of corn than it does
an acre of roots. The corn is planted,
cultivated, cut and made into silage
by the use of machinery, while beets
have to bo raised largely by hand
work. Labor is a very expensive item
in the United States. In some parts
of the Old World, where labor is
cheap, the cost of raising roots is
comparatively low. Raisers and users
of roots in those countries come to
the United States and try to do the
same thing, but scon give up the at
tempt. This is why ail the admoni-
tions to raise roots for cows seem to
fall to the ground without bearing
fruit. It is a matter of finance. It is
by far more economical to get succu-
lent feed from silage than from
roots.
Up to Date Machinery.
The farmer and the creameryman
must have up-to-date machinery it
they are to get the amount of good
out of their products that it is possible
for them to receive. In the great
world of manufacture it is found that
the men that stick to the poor, slow,
obsolete machines are outdistanced by
the men that put in the best and most
complete machines possible. The
first stick to the old machines be-
cause they are cheap, but their profits
are soon eaten up by the decreased
amount of work they are able to do.
The farmer that uses a hand separa
tor or even an artificial cooler for
cooling the milk wants to know that
he has the best. To this end he
should educate himself as to the rea:
merits of rival machines. He cannot
take the say-so of an agent, for every
agent is bound to speak well of the
machine he is engaged to sell. The
farmer has a machine in his cow. Too
many are willing to get along with a
milk producing machine that is able
to do only half work. The best cow
machine will cost more than the poor-
est, but the profit generally lies in the
high-priced machine.
Root Rot of Apple Trees.
In some of the Western states root
ret is becoming a great source of an
noyance to the orchardists. It is found
quite generally in orchards over five
years of age and even in some
younger ones. The disease is, how-
ever, of more frequent occurrence in
new land than in old. The disease is
most to be mot with on poorly drained
and, though it is found more or less
on any kind of land. The disease is
not a product of the apple orchards
but exists in our native forests.
Thence it spreads to the apple
>rehards. This Is a very important
reason for not setting apple orchards
-. recently cleared land. That the
iisease is highly contagious is shown
ly the fact that it will attack an
ipple tree and spread from it in all
Erections killing every treo it
ouches. The best remedy is to re-
'ove and burn infected trees, not put-
nc other trees where the old ones
ive been. It takes at least three
rs for the disease germs to die out.
rn-me-o irc quite gener-
. m,lr.h Iaml
. '"AV"N piv, ' ( Y'A-
- .y. *
/ t ,j> t ... .it-
Free Vaccine for Blackleg.
The first vaccine sent out from the
experiment station was in October,
1899. From that time until October,
190 i, over four hundred thousand
doses of vaccine have been supplied
free of any charge to farmers and
stockmen of Oklahoma. During tho
above time every effort has been
made to have the vaccine used regu-
larly and in a systematic way, and
many are doing this, vaccinating their
cattle regularly twice a year. How-
ever, the fact remains that at this
time about four out of five requests
state that vaccine is needed because
one or more calves have already been
lost by blackleg. This loss can bo
almost completely avoided by vacci
nating the young cattle at regular in
tervals until they are too old to take
the disease.
There is a groat variety of opinions
among cattlemen as to how the calves
get the germ of blackleg into the sys-
tem. A grent many, and possibly the
greater portion of them, believe that
the germ is taken into the body with
either the food or drink. To test this
two calves were purchased, placed in
close stalls, and drenched with a
arge dose of pulverized meat from
a calf that had died with tho blackleg,
i he calves were kept under observa-
tion for a week and no noticeable re-
sults followed drenching with a large
amount of infected meat. At the end
if this time these calves were in-
oculated under tho skin of the hip by
laking for each calf one one-hun-
dredth of the amount given in the
drench, with the result that both of
the calves died with tne blackleg, one
forty-one hours after inoculation and
tile other in fifty-two hours. From
this and the results of other work
that arc available it is evident that
calves become inoculated with the
germ of blackleg through some wound
if the skin. This injury to the skin
may be very slight and easily over-
'ooked. but there is sufficient injury
lo allow of inoculation.
The policy followed by tho station
n sending out vaccine is to supply
anyone villi the amount of vaccine
leeded on receipt of a request for
the vaccine. This plan has enabled
us to get the vaccine to the party
leeding it with the least loss of time,
is it lias been our experience that
• cry few vaccinate until they have
lost one or more animals. This plan
)f supplying the vaccine will be con-
inued in the future and all that is
required of anyone is a request for
the number of doses of vaccine need-
ed.—Oklahoma Station.
. k —C-- .
The Zebrula.
A new breed of horseflesh lias come
nto public notice, namely, the Zebru-
la. Some of these animals are being
shown at the World's Fair. They
originated in Africa from a cross of
the Zebra stallion and the horse mare.
They are said to be highly regarded
n South Africa, where they are valu-
able on account of not being affected
by tho bite of the tsetse fly, which is
sure death to the horse or donkey.
Breeders in South Russia, In England
and Germany have taken up the
breeding of these animals. They are
said to be hardier than the mule or
horse. The Zebra is known to be a
very wild and swift animal and for a
long time it was found impossible to
make him useful to man on account
of his wildness. The crossing has
taken some of the wildness out of his
progeny. The name given to the pro-
geny is Zebrula. It is likely that we
will soon have a good many varieties
of the Zebrula, as there are two spe-
cies of zebras, those inhabiting the
mountains and those inhabiting the
plains, and the crossing of these in
various ways should give a great vari-
ety of markings and other conforma-
tions.
Stock Judging at Ames.
The Iowa Agricultural College will
have another two weeks' judging
course this winter. It will begin on
January 1' and continue till January
14. This course is intended for the
farmer and his son and all who are
interested in the breeding, feeding
and management of improved horses,
cattle, sheep and swine. Three days
will be devoted to each class of stock.
There will be two classes—one for be-
ginners, In which will be Btudied the
different market classes and grades,
and another for those who have at-
tended a previous course, In which
will be taken up the characteristics
of the pure breeds of our domestic
animals. On Wednesday, January 11,
in connection with this work, there
will be a block demonstration in
which beef animals of different types
will be judged on foot, slaughtered,
and then cut up to show the different
market cuts and the value of the
same to the producer and the con-
sumer. The classes in this course
will alternate with those in corn and
grain judging, so that all students
may take all the work in both
courses.
■ !>.
XLANY
English Wheat Imports.
Statistics which have been collected
relative to tho wheat acreage of Eng-
land show that whereas In 1868 it
was 3,500,000 acres, in 1904 it was
only 1,375,000 acres, the shrinkage
since 1903 being 13 per cent. Under
these circumstances it is not surpris-
ing that England is the heaviest im-
porter of wheat and wheat flour in the
world. Heretofore this trade has
largely been held by the United States
which had until 1903 furnished more
than half the British imports of wheat
and three-fourths of their Imports of
flour. But in 1903, though Great Bri-
tain imported 164,505,380 bushels, the
United States supplied only 43,167,991
bushels, or about 27 per cent. During
tho first eight months of tho present
year or up to August 31st, the United
Kingdom imported from all sources
113,390,350 bushels, or about 9,000,000
bushels more than during the same
period last year, and of the total the
United States furnished less than 10
per cent, the balance being obtained
from Russia, Argentina, llrltish In-
dia, and Australasia. This indepen-
dence of the biggest buyer of wheat
of tho United States as a source of
supply only deepens the mystery of
the present extraordinarily high price
of wheat in tills country. True the
crop is under tho average aud much
of the Northwestern wheat will rank
below milling grade, but unless the
supply is insufficient for home con-
sumption, and that is not claimed, it
is difficult to account for abnormal
values on any other basis than specu-
late e manipulation of the market.
High prices are of course factors in
the decline of wheat exports.
Help the Creameryman.
The creameryman and the cheese
maker are bound up with the men
that furnish them with milk more
than is the ordinary manufacturer
with the man that jirovides him with
raw material. The patron should
feel it his duty to help the creaaiery-
inan in every way he can; for in so
doing he is helping himself. Let him
consider I hat tho creameryman and
the cheesemaker would like to have a
greatly Increased volume of milk. He
can afford to do some agitating in this
line for the greater the volume of
milk the less will be the cost of mak-
ing butter and cheese from It. The
man that furnishes only cream should
take unusual care to see that the
cream is in perfect shape when it
goes in to the hand of the man that
is to make it Into butter.
Bulk of Rough Feed.
Nearly all kinds of rough feed con-
tain the nutrients the cow must have.
The straw of grain contains the very
things the cow needs out of which to
make milk and butter-fat. Iiut we
have to consider the bulk. One hun-
dred pounds of oat straw would fur-
nish enough nutrients to make ten
quarts of milk with a richness of 4
per cent. But no cow could digest
more than a third of that amount in
a day. Therefore straw is of very
little practical value In the feeding
of milch cows. We must have more
concentrated roughage, such as clover
hay or eoru stalks. It is of course
different with oat hay. That is cut
at a time when the grain is in the
dough stage and much of the sub-
stance is still in the stalks and leaves.
Too Many Starters.
A good starter is a good thing, but
the ordinary farmer lias too many
starters connected with his dairy en-
terprise. There is a certain practice
among our farmers that consists in
not thoroughly washing out the sep-
arator more than once a week. The
inevitable result must be that the va-
rious parts of tho machine contain
starters that are all ready to go to
work both in the cream and in the
sklmmllk the moment they are sep-
arated. There Is such a tiling as hav-
ing too many starters. Pastueriza-
tion would help such cream, but pas-
teurization is not at all common and
Is not likely to be on the farm where
the bulk of the milk is not too greo
to be handled by a hand separator.
Hand Separator Cream.
Hand separator cream needs to be
kept as carefully as any other kind
of cream. Progress in this has been
made but slowly since the introduc-
tion of the gathered cream system, or
indeed since the introduction of the
hand separator. Considering the
small volume of gathered cream com-
pared with the wholo milk system
there seems little reason in overy
farmer not having a perfect arrange-
ment for keeping it. But it must be
acknowledged thai so far as we are
able to learn by far the greater part
of the cream from hand separators Is
still kept in cellars with vegetables
and all kinds of things that have an
odor that is not an addition to the
flavor of the cream.
Eyplanations Later.
An elderly clergyman was recently
seeing his wife off from Euston Sta-
tion, London. He handed her ir.to a
carriage and a porter followed her
wilh baggage. Then the clergyman
gave his wife twopence, kissed the
porter and departed.
In Old England.
Three ccnturles ago the great stat-
ute of James I. came into operation.
It made felons, without benefit, of
clergy all who "shall ur-e, practice or
exercise nny injuration or conjura-
tion of any evil and wicked spirit, cr
shall consult, covenant wilh. enter-
tertaln,employ, feed or reward any evil
son shall be killed, destroyed, wated,
and wicked spirit to or for any intent
or purpose or take up ar.y -lead man,
woman or child, out of his, her or
their grave or any other place where
the deail body resteth, or the skin
bone or any part of nny dead person,
to be employed or used In any man-
ner of witchcraft, enchantment,
charm or sorcery, whereby any per-
son shall be killed, destroyed, wasted,
consumed, pined or lamed in his or
her body or any part thereof." Un-
der tills act witches were executed
for more than a century.
Good News for All.
Bradford, Tenn., Nov. 21.— (Spe-
cial.)—Scientific research shows Kid-
ney Trouble to be the father of so
many diseases that news of a dis-
covery of a sure cure for it cannot
fail to be welcomed all over the coun-
try. And according to Mr. J. A. I)a\ is
of this place just such a cure Is found
in Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Davis
says:
"Dodd's Kidney Pills are all that is
claimed for them. They have done
mo more good than anything I have
ever taken. I had Kidney Trouble
very bad, and after taking a few boxes
of Dodd's Kidney Pills 1 am com-
pletely cured. 1 cannot praise them
too much."
Kidney Complaint develops into
Plight's Disease, Dropsy, Diabetes,
Rheumatism, and other painful and
fatal diseases. The safeguard is to
cute your kidneys with Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills when they show the first
symptom of disease.
No Daylight Weddings.
A Russian bride Is not submitted
to the trying ordeal of appearing in
white satiri and lace in cold, broad
daylight. The wedldng takes place
by candle light in a drawing room.
More Flexible and Lasting,
won't shake out or blow out; by using
Defiance Starch you obtain better re-
sults than possible with any other
brand and one-third more for iaml
money.
No, Cordelia, a long headed man
isn't necessarily narrow-minded.
*'l>r. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy.
Ronilout, N. Y ,«*ured m serious kldner trouble. I -rained
IV pound*." M. Wardell, Bui nsvllle, N. J. Buttle# ti.uii.
When the flying machine is perfect-
ed we can visit our castles in the air.
Mr*. Vt lnalow'a SootiLlng Syrup.
Fo~ children teething, softens tho Riinta, reduce* fn«
il aut ma tiou, allay a pain, cures wind colic. 2&c % bottle.
A woman cries either because she
has a reason or wants to have one.
Defiance Starch Is guaranteed biggest
and best or money refunded. 16
sunces, to cents. Try It now.
Our idea of an unpopular man Is
me with a fad for collecting bills.
Write MURINE EVIi KEMKDT Co.. Chicago, If
Tour eyes ;tre norc or Inflamed. and t*et oculist's
advice and free sample MURINE. It cures all eye-Ills.
Some men take religion as a polit-
eal afterthought.
JJITC perraannntly cured. No flt«or nervousnessafter
* I I w llrst d/ir's uho of Dr. Kiltie's Grt-af. Nerve Hector*
lir. Send for t KICIC M'i.OO trial bottle and treatise*
Du. U. 11. IClinx, Ltd., u::i Arch Street. fi:iladt;lph a, Pft
Bucking the liger has frequently
-trough! the wolf to the door.
You never hear any me complain
about "Defiance Starch." There is none
to equal it In quality and quantity, 16
junces, 10 cents. Try it now and save
your money.
f a woman Is born beautiful she
'an marry riches and then buy luck.
How's Thia ?
Wo offer One llouilreil Dollar* lt( waril for njr
case ^f < a turrit that caanot be cured by Halls
Catarrh Cure
F .1. CJIF.NKV A CO., Toledo, O.
We. the nnilersl&nrd. ba\o kuowu K. .1. t henejr
for tbnlaht 15 year-*, mid believe him perfectly hon-
orable In all bu«inei«rt transaction? and financially
uble t«> carry out nny obllK tl> Diinade by hlxllrm.
Waldino. Kinxan iV Marvin,
YVholeaate I)ruKKl«'«. Toledo. O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, acilun
tllrrtcUjr upon tiie blood and un:c« us surfaces of the
system. Testimonials sent free, l'rlce T5 cents per
bottle. Sold bv all iMUKKbua.
Take Haifa Family fills for constipation.
Some infants might cry less if their
mothers wouldn't attempt to vocalize.
Important to Mothors.
Examine carefully every bottle of ('ASTORIA,
a safe and wire remedy for intimtK and children,
aad nee that It
Beam tho
Signature of
Ilk Uao For Over 30 Ycur.,
The Kind Yon llave Always Bought.
Wanted too Grind the Water.
(irandpa has a chain pump that
turns with a crank. Little May was
visiting at the farm, and seeing grand-
pa pumping rushed out, exclaiming,
"Oh. grandpa, grandpa I l.ei me grind
the water!"—Youth's Companion.
J
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Peters, S. H. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 8, 1904, newspaper, December 8, 1904; Garber, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc143632/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.