Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 2, 1917 Page: 2 of 8
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THE SENTINEL. GARBER. OKLAHOMA
The Real Adventure
By Henry Kitchell Webster
Copjr^t; ISIS, Bcbat-VIerri2 Ca
COMES THE GREAT EVENT IN ROSE ALDRICH'S LIFE. THE PROSPECT OF A BABY. AND
SHE REAU2ES THAT WOMAN'S FINEST PROFESSION IS MOTHERHOOD—BUT
PLANS GO SADLY AWRY
tait ber>^\us5y over "Bec:er iat.e Florence u •(v3"
r oid it*-*, ia-.rm «£-* f " .
re in nor
SYfcOPS 8 Rote SBAi Bodaey A i-.d. a r.:b yocig Iotv. after i brief cocrtship. *ad in-
santfy is taken -p by Ciiap'i excimfve k ~-a1 and made * of the py whirt of the r.th fit It is
a3 *w W the girt. anl for the first ft* M«ki * is charm-* with -he life. Aid then she con« to fed that
she .« ST-^r * a*ie aHhem re. that the is * see-id banerty. a nsere cflstz.^: .a her hcsfcan-d ? h:«e. E-:se
keg* ta ii sccsettisg ti :> Lit. tbe to enuptof bee m-rai aad atiliae her talent lid -fia-
otvto. Rodney feeis much the saae *17 himseif. He ti.it* be ought to potter ariund In K«i«y >st to
please La wife, wi -a .1 real-ty be d ruber be giving hit i ti ; ": stady w swciil s-err.ce of Kcse s :-m They
ITT reach sa ti ','-.w-g ie Ik: of two Xew Y.-rk fnenis. *-0 have worked cwt satis^ac: jrtiy
r> « kit* pniita.
fispaKGM
0*d With
-d-ig w toother 11: sister. and 1
sort cf c 55ni5-:-d i sctcw in the
sack? WISH & the ;^V*;u;e
dvfBsatisai. of the city of her birth.
Towird btnetf, tbe cociifsa
rii, ooe TT-,(•*-r say. 5?S'ioci2t
locate. Sie r ■ W t-eiig either <2s-
«1 in a k'a of E:ise coti
see, inde*-i. bo* she avoided it.
About this iw the qaesti>n where
Rose ac-d ftad—y were gixng to 1st*
after thetr lease on tfce M?Op« bocse
ez-Z-ai. tii b«~L3 to f<«s for ui
• -T.-. Or:c^j fcs *«? vt r. ti<
l«j> t2d it w-UE't fir frc-3
Ae 4*:* st *±J(A eir-- -e i ti.-e
M.bj. Tb*y ?i>eat s>:<z-e - <--T tfttr-
mkw ew-Jif tbe of -J* =«T-
-f spttiz. ^ * '.r !x ti{ it
Ttis *u ibf Eir-
riet x tiz.i iz it. It * rit^i-
::ca cas^« to cri-ef for Hi—« t:-
aie t t.'.r-i in. ?J "d -t c? it
1 r .ire. n_i;-c *p her mind in tir«*
-r« wilt the aeBsMe thing
for th«a to do, vr-.nea t t>?te to
P sr c.re MrCrea .3 Pir.?. ni the*
t.ie<! ber 7 to I^t ter idea
iato iSi<t. To ber t. <5>? ttls ^~P -t *
we--=^ iMde^uiteiy
CHAPTER X —Cw-.-.fi.
• ir-^? Kit* la b«- Up. iU u if si.-?
_S_ LiC*T fc*xri Tie loeg alenre irkM
Est i* w*l: Ke*±^y ca. Tea List Hr pdei oct his *iteh. l;oke-i
wtrt tlnr* k> <i«_" tioct it. Bt: tt it. tsi t*ssn It- He M>d-
•—ri. . . . r Hf? the ire so that it wald safe
c j rtsr?*i * ae c^ke l there n*i f:-r the Eight; !;e>i a window. Et-
«£id the tears la I ■■i ll z? ti7 r :nate or two te st i-Ce a l k at
ig fBU dowa her eheeis. B:' her. bet she wis always }ziz the
•te k<5< !«■ fire y Xi« saae. Exce;< for the faint r.5e ai i
u v.« fall of her bosom. Le sight ha^e
-That's what I ail ai- ct t«izr tei a ptoiw, w* a wocia.
BArr.fi asi r-x nr.i* rj oats. I At last he said agi_h, -Cose al-xtg.
s«j5<s .* he saii g!crJy. "lx wis a Eose dear."
Jiia. I> yes kk* 5 I d hare sa- I it -ItU l-e tno late :a Octcier she
if I rr*+-: tlT 'aid. "That's why I wiote d to de-
" It wtsit ocJt ttaL" she ca=ajr-i -de thii?s toaigbt. B^Mise xre mast
ta go oo. nt was the way tiey looked btfin nAt a - ay." Thes she looked
at the basse; the way y** apologised JP ihto his fat-e. 'It win t* too ,i la
tm mtj dns; the way yoa looked I Octsber." ate repeated, -unless we U-
whea yoa tned to get est of aas*er- S"a D ;r-
!-g Barry Lakes q-ecSc-as aboot
what yoa were doing. Oh. how 1
desfise-1 Ejseif! Ar.i how I knew attectioa.
yea aid
"The oce — ,
the eTeaicg." be said, with the pa-
Oeace that marks the last stage of Or.ob(^l 5- e ttil-
exaspefatixi, "was pride. I was rath-
er eraiily prood of yon."
"As my loTer yoo were proad of
oe," she said. -Bat the other man—
tba caa that's more truly yoa—was
ashamed, as I was ashamed. Oh. tt
doesa't matter! Being ashamed won't
accomplish aaything.
do is going to accomplish something." j
"What do yoa mean to dof he
ets great ssore. All I ■" jfeV
wst-k.. xig flC the
rvi i "l " ir\ /s .-t- cL j
The deep, tense sierlcesaess ol
Toioe and her lo-ik arreste-J his
cyseif! Ai-3 how 1 tie*
they mast be despising met" "Why." he a'^-l Aal t.
oce thing I felt abcct yoa sli " io y ''1 —
ft5n A f-. TA
hen. "Bose,
CHAPTER XII.
baby In
exception was the Mw L^agae siow
in F.is~.er «e«k. for *h.ch she pa: m
qaite a lot of *&rk- She «is to have
duccd la it.
enter
by whitk Ch.cago se
(-—r.--: tii
yoaarer set take par: ia it. in ct*-
tame« that w&isid do credit to a choras
dresser, and as taach of Chicago as
.s «."i.ig 11-i a:le to ray £t« de bars
a seat tor the p-riTile;e is w«5«oe
to ct=e aid kok. IXiLrioas weeks
ire spent ia rehearsal. nni*.r a tot-
rlass profess-.:aal director; aa-i-ence
and performers hare aa equiy good
time, and Charity, as residuary lega-
tee. profits by th:-aiiils.
Eose dropp-fd In at a rehearsal one
day at ifce end of a solid two h-:ars
of committee work, foond it cneipect-
edly amasiag. and mi.de a point, there-
after, of attending when she could.
Her Interest was heightened, if not
rboliy actuated, by some things Jim-
my Wallace had been telling her late-
!.j about how rich Thir.gs were done
on the real stage.
He had written a musical comedy
once. liTed through the production of
it, and had spent a hard-earned two
living si mJtJ a"'.
y ^ „ i fe. _se was ?roadsed to ber.
g V ~i.de the besi ficfet she cocli.
ti: Harr. s anr---1'"^ re-stated
-.-■1 ty Ec-iaey wiA fall cxiiirtioa.
TT^f -<V> -ah for her. Wh« sha
bKie d -1 and cr.r-i as she coalint
heJp dc.ig. E.-iaey K-othed and coa-
forte-i her. issared her that this 30-
qob of hers about the expeosiTenesa
of It ail. was jss* a nodoo. whicb
sie mast straggie agaiast as best
she cv>a!d- She'd see things in a truer
n afterward
,.•••••
Xtrj fine and small and weak. Eose
Stan: a. lyiagg In a bed with people
ai-out ber. let her eyes fall heanly
«ha: lest they sh : a!d wan: her to speak
or think. . . . Theu. for a !ong time.
tj-wrr Then r^esently. a hand, a
firm, f.vrreriul hand, that picked up
her heavT. limp wrist and two sensi-
tive fiager-ti{<s that rested lightly on
the upper sarface of it. After that,
an even, measured voice—a voice of
auti r.ty. vh *e words do doubt made
sense, an y E*e was too tired to think
what the sense was:
"Thit's a splendid pulse. She's do-
ing the best thing she can. sleeping
like that."
And then another voice, utterly un-
like Eo«dney s and yet unmistakably
his—a ragged voice that tried to talk
in a whimper but couldn't manage it
—broke queerly.
-That's all righL" It said. -But IT1
find it easier to believe when—"
She must see him—must know
what it meant that he should talk
like that. V>".th a strong physical ef-
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zjtrm r*j SAI* jen I.XtfL
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Every n omaii M ant
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PATENTS
^Wilson E.Col«n)%D,Wu *
z ItCBoollfiW H (!•
eti r^fertaee*. b« \rta..- .
W. N. U- WICHITA, NO. 29-1917.
- - -
opened her
and tr.ed
asked.
"I want you to tell me first." she
■aid. "how much money we have, and
how much we're been spending."
"I don't know," he said stubbornly.
"I don't know exactly."
"You're got enough, haven't you.;
of your own ... I mean, there's
enough that comes in every year, to
lire on. If you didn't earn a cent by
practicing law? Well, what I want
to do. is to live on that I want to
lire, however and wherever we have
to—to live oa that—out in the suburbs
The Dae? That Was ta Open.
What a ally little Idiot she'd been weeks' vacation trouping with it oa
not to have seen the thing for her- the road, so he could speak with aa-,
. ^ ^ self! She'd bees, all the while, beat- tbority. It was a wonderful Odyssey f
Rn kHt mil lag her head against blind walls when when yon could get him to tell it, . .
But what we.. ^ w a £or there waiting to ■ aM as Eose made a good aaience. -ie bec'
ci>en of itself when the time came, she got the whole thing at her d-iner
Motherhood: There'd be a doctor a;.>. , |a >*ece rfw■Mini —*
Sr.e Stared, Be !d«red.
clary,
;rfi her mtnUge with R*>iney, of
; and a narse at first, of courses bat The thing got a sociological twist st® Florence McCrea :
presently they d go away and she'd eventually, of course, wbea Jane want- answer to her letter, she
be left with a baby. Her own baby! -<1 to know If it were true that the -r^ occasion to get Bc-dney off by
i She could care for him with her own -boms girls received inadequate pay. aimseif aid talk a i. ...e common
, haads, feed him—her Joy reached an J;nmy demolished >hi« with more sexism into him.
| ecstasy at this—from her own breast, i-rath th«n he often showed. He didn't -What about where to live. Bod-
That life which Bodaey led apart c^w any other sort of job that paid aeyr she asked. -Made up your
from her, the life Into which she had % totally untrained girl as well. It mind about It yet? It is time some-.ae
tried with such ludicrous casuccess : fc a really accomplished stecogra- with a little common sense straight-
to effect an entrance, was nothing to pfcer, for Instance, to earn as much a ened yoa out about this."
this new life wh :h waj to open before ireek as was paid the average chorus Harriet couldn't be sure from the
her In a few short months now. Mean- The trouble was that the Indis- length of time he took seeing that
while, she not only mast wait— pensable assets In the business were his pipe was properly lighted, wheth-
she could well afford to. not character and intelligence and am- er he altogether liked this method of
That was why she could listen with billon, bat just personal charms. approach or not.
that an troubled smile of hers to the ! "But a girt who's serious about It, "Common sense always was a sort
terrible things that Bodaey aad who doesn't have to be told the same of specialty of yours, sis," he said at
James Bandoiph and Barry Lake and thing more than once, aad catches on, ia*t, "and straightening out. You
Jane got into the way of hurLng sometimes, without being told at all, were always pretty good at it." Then
! across ber dinner table, and to the why, she can always have a job and out of a cloud of his own smoke.
more mildly expressed but equally she can be as independent as any- -fire away."
I alkaline cynicisms of Jimmy Wallace, body. She can get twenty-five dollars -Well. In the first place," she said
Jimmy was dramatic critic on one a week or even as high as thirty.' j-ou had your house today you d be ^ ti!it wa5n': quite
of the evening papers as well as a bit | The latter part of this conversation |0cty y the paint was dry and the a "a Xoy and a girl- They're
of a playwright. He was a slim, cool was what she was to remember after- thiag was fit to move into by the firs: sp'e"did. One ^e.ghs seven
! smiling, highly sophisticated young ward, bat the thing that impressed oi September." rounds and the other six."
man. who renounced all privileges al Rose at the time, and that held her -Bc. wiTe got to get out of here * H_.r eTes widened acd she looked
an interpreter of life la faTor of re- for hoars looking oa at the League EnjTray. in October. And that means cp iat0 'h;J fs.^ M that the pitiful
maining an unbiased observer of It show rehearsals, was what Jimmy had we Te ?ot t0 tare ^ne sort of place t^wiidemem in hers was revealed tc
He never bothered to speculate about told her about the technical side of t0 g.,._ jE,0 j{ t5 an gwkward time.
, what yoa ought to do—be waited to the work of production, the labors of n, adBjL- ^D{ tte bsb_T - Her wide
see what yoa did. the director, and so on. -XOi yoa havec't" she said, "lot fy„ 'tne4 tears and her vote*
j WeO. In the light of the miraculous As the weeks and months wore away, i ^ stlJ netlt here tcother six broke weakly. "I wanted a taby."
i transformation that lay before her. and as the season of violent alter- ^ Joxl uj-e l xe heard froai -You've got a baby." he insisted
i Rose could listen undaunted to the nations between summer and winter. r,,.e;:w vvten I f : und how things and now iLizhe-i oatr.ght. There ar
! tough phllosophitings her husband and which the Chicagoan calls spr.ng. 5.x>j j 13<i t.ked her if .^0 of th>m. Don't y -a understand
j Barry Lake delighted in as well as tc gave place to summer itself. Eose gfce.(J fo. SI „ more if
i the mordant merciless realities with was driven to Intrench herself more _w^ .j.e ct-inc<> £Q(j sbe wrote back
! which Doctor Randolph aad Jimmy and more deeply behind this great ^ t -- 7 rr- ed at it."
Wallace confirmed them. She wasn't expectation. It was like a dam hold-1 ra^ed half way through
to s^-eak his ti~e. She couldn't; bat
someone must have been watching and
have seen, because a woman's voice
said qa.ckly and quietly -Mr. Aldrich."
And tie next moment, vast and tow-
ering and very Marred In outline, but,
like his voice, unmistakably, was
B -iiey—fcer own big. stroag Bodaey.
She tr.ed to hold ber arms up to h.ia,
but if course s!ie couldn't.
And then he shortened *-i ienly
He hid knelt down beside her bed.
that was it. And she felt upon her
[Aim the pressure of bis lips, and his
unsbaven cheek, and oo her wrist «
warm wetness that must be—-teara.
And then she knew. The urreocy
of a sadden terror gave her *er voic^
-Roddy," she said, "there was go-
ing to be a—baby. Isn't there T
Something queerly like a Iiarh
broke his vaice when he answt'ed
Oh. you darting! Yes. It's all n.bt
That isn't why Tm trying. It's ji.*
because Tm so happy."
-But the baby 1" she persisted
-TVby isn't It here7"
Bodney turned and spoke to mm
one else. "She wants to see," h
' said. "May sheT*
And then a woman's voice (why
it was the curse, of course I Mist
Harris, who had come last night) said
in an indulgent, soothing tone: "Why,
surely she may. Wait just a minute."
But the wait seemed hours. Why
didn't they bring the baby—her baby 1
There 1 Miss Harris was coming at
last, with a queer, bulky, shapeless
bundle. Rodney stepped in betweea
and cat off iA* view, but only to slidl
aa arm under mattress and pillow
and raise her a "Attle so that she cocli
see.
And then, under her eyes, dark red
and ha-ry against the whiteness of the
pillow, were two small heads—twt
small, shapeless masses leading sw&j
from them, re tching, squirming. She
stared, bewildered.
"The first
shall be firs'
xex
"It makes
yon arran;-
w*y. I'm th
Unfearing.
shall be last and the last
" quoted the devout dti-
no di Terence to tne how
em." n-plied the expert
•TO pet mine cither
• middle man."
IMITATION IS S:NCEREST FLATTERY
bat like counterfeit money the imita-
tion has not the worth of the originaL
Insist oa "La Creole" Hair Dressia?—
It's the original. Darkens your hair in
the natural way. but contains no dye.
Price $L00.—Adv.
A
On the Editor.
magazine editor of New York
prid«s tin.—if on his knowledge of
poetry and on his delicate critical
sense of the same. His friends often
Joke him about this.
A noted illustrator laid oa the edi-
-,,r's desk the other day a couplet that
ran:
"Help us save free conscience from
the paw
Of hireling wolves whose gospel is
their maw."
The editor read the couplet, then
lauehed heartily.
"Did you write this?" he said. "By
Genre*, it s-">oi ds like you. Better stick
to the pencil, boy. L k at that rhyme
—paw and maw. Wl
the S. O. S. call of
Paw and maw! Ge<
"I didn't write it"
tor.
"Oh. you didn't eh? Who did.
then?"
"A duffer named Milton." raid the
illustrator. "John Milton. Ever hear
of him? He was the author of a little
thinr called 'Paradise Lost' I believe,
but these line« are cut oat of a sonnet
written to Cromwell in 1652. I—"
But the editor had fainted dead
sway.
It sounds like
kids In distress.
wiilikinsr
said the illustra-
The Averjje Consumer.
"Who's this man who is tellies me
to eat the luxuries of the table so as
"There were twins. Bose." she heard to st'T(' '
Rodney explaining triumphantly, but
"Why. what's the matter with you.
man!"
-He's either r>">? to give m® the
m^ney to boy the lobsters wi:b or tell
ne I'm one myself!"
Interraticnal Accomplishment*.
"Can the new recruit talk Fren.-h?"
"Vo. bat he know* how to <ra!k
Spani"h."
dearr
Her eyes drooped shat but
tears came welling oat along
lashes. -Please take them sway.*
th
fcei
sh«
It was like s dam hold-
indifferent to it alL lng waters that otherwise would saT c^ea: begged. Aad then, wfth s little sot
"Jim's pretty weird when he gets have rushed down upon her and swept ^
"That"* Why I Warted to
Thirv®* Tonight."
going," Eleanor Randolph said to Fred- her sway.
erica, oo the next day after they had And then came Harriet, B>dney"s
; been (fining at the Aldriohes", -bat that other sister, and the pressure behind
, Barry Lake has a sort of surgical way the dam rise higher.
I of discussing just anything, and his Bote had tried, rather unsuocess-
wife's as bad. folly, to realise that there was a
"We never got off women all the ally in existence another woman who
I evening. Barry Lake had their his- jccapied, by tlood anyway, the same
Dec it torT d '511 ft0® early Egyptians, posii-oo toward Rodney and herself
and Jim got off s string of psthc-'- g-
"I wanted
baby
ca rhi« suggestion. Thi* house isn't she whispered:
just what we want," be said. "In the cot those."
first place. It's expensive." Podaey started to speak, but soau
Harriet shrugged her shoulder*, sort of aducaitory signal froa th
picked up oce of Florence's poetry curse silenced him.
books aad eyed the heavily tooled bind- The curse went away with her bun
icg w-.th a satirical smile before she die. and Rxlney stayed strok.n#
Rose's limp hand.
leal freaks. Aad then Bodaey came
somewhere, or in a fiat, so that yon oat strong for eccncti.c lcdepecJen -,
will be free: and I can work—be tome oi'.y with his own queer angle en it.
sort of help." of coarse. He thcaght it would be a
Too can wash the dishes and stb! fine thing, but it * nida t hap^ u un-
the floors," ba MffhwateA. "aad 11 til the me i Insisted oo It. When a
'Td ao Idea there was that In it,"
that Frederics did. She felt almost , she a.d at last. "Freddy said tome-
l.ke a real sister toward Frederics. : thing. . . Bose had been tai^.ng
But without quite putting the notiot to her." Then, after another ..::.e
iito words, the had alway, felt it «ij««^snd with a f^dec scceM o ^ ^ R,^ drar.k lt
T-as just as well that Harr.^t wis aa vehemence. Y>u c a . want to g
acd do a regular fool thing. Boddy. « f-y-i^ag e^e. tae n-r*
In the dark, ever so much Ister
she awoke, stirred s little restlessly
and the curse, from her cot. cam*
quickly snd stood beside her bed. Sh
tad something in her hands for Bos«
can carry my leata ta the oCce w.th
me In a Hole tia box." He U>3*ed st
his wateh. "And now that the thing's
reduced ta an abrard.:y, let's go to
bed. It's getting along toward two
o'clock."
"Tea deal have to get to the off-e Rose, taiuig it all
girt wasn't regarded as marriageable
calesa she tad been trained to a trade
or a profession, then things would be- HIVBHI . B I
gia to hi;<>ea. I th-ai he meant It aristocratic sort o< (uw. i Rodney grunted. -You re beyond
t.(fx 1 She d discarered, along ia the win- yoar aepUi, sis," he said. "Come back
-Wen, and a3 the whila there sat ter societime, thit Harriet's affairs where yoa don't have to swim. Tte
with theee big were going rather badly. It was along expense isa t a capital cons.der*iion.
that. Now go
old
cheerfully. The loveliest, liveiiesi
little pair yoa ever saw."
Thank you." said Bose. "I jusl
wanted to know."
She shut her eyes asd pretende*
. . . to go to sleep. Bat she didn't. It ws*
times, s_e oo- ,
from
ill-tcm: red grim-
true then. Her miracle. It seemed
on nine tomorrow swraiag.^ mid ty«s of hers. tc..Lag to fcerseif acw la May that the cable cine to Frrfe- I'.l admit■
Rose. "Aad I want to Uli It oct and then; saying th-ngs. too, some- r!ea announcing that Harriet was com- there."
now. And I don't think I said any- tices. that were pretty good, though lag back for a locg viait. "That's all Th-it's tike
thing that was absurd." ' nobody bat Jimmy seemed to cader- she said." Eodney expb-.ned to Bow served with • - W ( haJ ladicrously awrv
-I shouldn't haTe called « absurd.* staid, slways, Jtast what she meant -Est I setose it means the finish ace. "I wonder If yoa ti.k to Rose
he admitted after a rather long ti- They've talked before, 'hue But She said she dlda't want any fast like that Oh. I k ow the Hw is
lecce "Bat It's exarr rat«d aad an- the was no mora embarrassed than made, bat she hinted she'd like to have rather f - tan and absurd. It s Flor-
... ... « • . . • . aa— a. •— — V ■ A. A V. IS . ti - U«'s tVa ri«A
Next October, when the ■
<« this hoate runs oat. we caa
manage, perhaps, to change the tca.e
a little. There yoa are 1 Now do stop
w-rrj1ng stoat It and let's go to bed."
Bat she sat there just as the was.
| tf we'd been f.'t-'T embroidery Fre<Jdy meet her In New York, and i ence t rseif all over, that's the sire
ititchea." i Freddy's going. Poor oM Harriet I We of It. But what doea that matter far
.So far a* externals w«ot. h«r life. I must try ta cheer ber up." six mon-Jii tnore
•hat spring, wat immestteiy <■ !!! I ll ■ She didat seem Bach !n need of He l-'keted his pipe aid got
■ The sorisi deasands ap«o he*, which cheering cp. Ef.aa tboagbi. wbea they
had been so Insistent an winter.' im Bet. AH that showed oa the cm,-
■tariog st the d/.ag fire, her bands , stopped almost aauaaauea-/. The
oat of his -hair
Theres something
In It," be
i's hlgh&y poiithed surface was a Bitted. Til think U aver,
Knowir; that they have plenty
of money to ra e twin* property,
why thould Roie re*e-t the fact
that *he has been presented with
two fcahe* instead of one!
4TO B& coNTisrvaam
Instant
Postum
A table drink that
has taken the
place of coffee
in thousands of
American homes.
"There's a Reason"
POjIttK
C CtREAL'
Delightful flavor
Rich aroma
Hesilthful
Economical
Sold by grocers everywhere.
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Peters, Kay. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 2, 1917, newspaper, August 2, 1917; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144978/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.