The Edmond Sun (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1910 Page: 2 of 4
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"<S < ' O /'
* * #o/<a ' ..-r „ ^
• ' Vv . „'.„...„ - " ' • %*<•",
v . -Ho •«.
\s;
iMpariaM1?
MANHATTAN SHIRTS
We appreciate the
patronage
YOU GIVE US AND IN RETURN FOR
IT WE SERVE YOU WITH CARE-
FULNESS AND WITH MERCHANIMSE
; HA I W il l. IIOI-O VOU AS A CUS-
TOMER. —
Hart Shaffner & Marx
SUITES and OVERCOATS
Our Three Specials
4 20 $25 $30
jNO. B. STETSON HATS
MENS' I Nl5. SHOES
Knight, Beck & Co.
MS Main St.
Oklahoma City, Okla.
PROVED OCULIST WAS RIGHT ^JQST DEADLY DRUG PRISON LIFE IS A LUXURY
the fnjsonl1 sun
A. D. DA1LEY, Editor and Pub
r SAM'S
CITY COL CIL MEETS.
j ovular Sesdo 1 of the Council
Held Thuiiday Night.
"he city coim ' i in regular
V .isimi rinirsdax vilh 1'reai-
. ,11.00 Pet > car,
\ '.l"iit Hi plons in lie
— ~ i vHubera pivHoii'
Kutrm'<l at Vb« t'ontnfHcu *'«■ Kduioud, Ok * ,.,1 j^s
(or lratiriiu>ttal through Mm mall® ru retux.d
tux until onaver.
■hair and all
PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS.
Mr. John Volz of Chadwiok,
111., in visiting at the houie o£ his
son, northeast o( Edmond,
A. Q. Wilson and son of Bing-
hatuton, N. Y., ar« the gue ;& of
Kev. H. Y. and 11. A. Hazard ot
this oily. Mr. Wilson ha* in-
vested in (hie oounty ana will re-
side in Edmoudj
Mrs. Prof. Fil/. si.ji J'/sl) and
little dii lighter, visitod with Mrs
S. T r.:;J ulmr friends
the first of the week. They were
on their \\ y ><• Tssa*, ..acre liiey
will spend the winter.
s follow
^,244.49
. 194.00
18.50
31.80
9.15
3.0fi
H.64
Mrs. W. B. Thompson has
opened up a dress making par-
lor in the building first door
south of rhe old furniture store,
where she invites all her lady
friends. First class work guar-
anteed.
Patient Gifted with Double Sight
Took Early Opportunity of Secur-
ing Benefit Thereof.
A well known oculist of Now York
city tells a story of one of his pa-
tients who proved rather more than
a match for him. The patient waa aj
quaint old fellow from one of the,
rural couatles of the state, f 0 years
of age or more, who strol'ed leisurely
Into the doctor's office, and after takJ
ing an optical inventory of tho place.
Including; tho doctor himself, re-
marked that he was afraid that his
eyes were "glttlng a lettlo out o'
kilter," and he guessed tho doctor had
better "take a peek at them."
He was seated and, an a prellml*
nary, was Invited to look through a
prism at a photograph.
"Why, now," said he, after squint-
ing awhile, "this is curious. I see
two photographs. What makea m®
see like that?" j
The doctor, who is something of a
humorist and inclined to be Jocose
with certain of his patients, replied
that this phenomenon was certainly
very Interesting, and that while pos-
sibly It indicated some slight abnorm-
ity, it yet had its compensating ad-
vantages.
"With double vision you have a
great advantage over ine, for exam-
ple," ho continued, smiling, "for you
will be able to see twice a* many
beautiful things in the world as I can.
Tou will have twice as many friends.
Your family will be doubled. You will
have twice as much real estate and
two pocketbooks Instead of one, and
when you hitch up your horse to
drive out, you will have a span."
The old fellow did not say much
In reply but seemed to be pondering
It; and meantime the doctor com-
pleted his examination and having
made the sppropriate prescription it
came time to receive his fee, which in
this case was ten dollars.
Very slowly the old man still
pondering, drew forth a roll of bills,
and carefully selecting a five looked
hard at It for some moments then
proffering It said quietly: "Here's
your ten dollars, doctor."—Youth's
Companion.
EVIL IN THE PRACTICE OF 8WO-
KING QANJAM.
i Convicts Have a Delightful Time In
the Comic Opera Jails of
6wltzerlana.
Oil \VHV8 mill
m w..h recomomi led the transfer
of $'.2000 from ill' sewer fund and
.if #?'i0 from Hi water fund to
] In light fund. 1 ie reei.mtnenda-
un was adopted.
laims w re all'
Water and Light
C'i y hall
r«lsry .
Contingent - - --
Meter extension -
K r Slid Water
Cemetery
Sevtr .
On motion of Oi meilmnn l!oh-
>Kon it wan ovdere, that the fire
li U he placed in a 'nwer.
Councilman Karri r moved that
an iron eage be | lrchased and
ylawd in the eity i.r and also that
. U'.nectionc he made with water
i tul sewvv pipes. The motion ear-
ned.
Arthur Bunstine, who is em-
ployed in the Buiok automobile
works at Flint, Mich., is at the
home of his parents with his bride,
who was 'Miss Eloine Paddock.
They will stay till after the holi-
days.
Thnrouehhred Poultry for sal
7 Whit# leghorn Corkerells, each
1.00 Black I.nnchsns hen*
*1,50 each: Pullets *2. Conkerll
S2, fo^k" St. The above are all
ohoi e fowl*, s n« f'
Habit Introduced by the Hindus Into
America la Greatly to Be De-
plored—In Effect It la
Worse Than Opium.
waits.
Main.
Mrs. Ouim Ringd of Anadarko,
who waa very low with typhoid
fever, is much improved. Ihr
mother, Mrs. Bunstine. who has
been with her. returned home Sat
urtlay.
W have just received a ship-
ment of St. Charles coffee, a
coffee that ha* taken the prize
at 40 state fairs. Sold only by
Otvens and White.
Thr Misses MrC.aughey Fntrrtaln
Out of eomphiment to their
sister, Mrs. Louis Schultz the
Misses McGaughey last Thurs
day afternoon entertained the
United Daughters of the Con-
federaey.
With gracious hospitality these
hostesses received their guest*
and presented them to Mrs
Schultz who beautiful in rose
color chiffon, stood just inside [Sanders.
W. A. S. H >ff.
Fdmonrf, OH*
320 R.
IVin't you need * sack of O.
R floor and a can of ,
coffee for Thank-trivie"? Order
to lav from Given" A Wi ite.
Prohibition t ntorcemeot.
'rohibition Enforcement ai d
Jubilation Meeting, at M. E
ohurch. Saturday Night N >v-
ember 12:h. Every uiie invite I
Musie
Invocation, Rev. Wardner
Reading of Scripture-1 Sam
XVll. Ml, Kev. Cornloi
Song, "Keep Oklahoma Drj
trade marks.
Sherlock Holmea P'cka Out the Vi
cationitta and Labels Them.
Sherlock Holmes, seated on the
hoard walk, languidly injected a pint
of cocaine into his sunburnt arm
"My dear Watson," said the detect
Ive, "let us beguile an hour by picklw
out the occupations of these vacation
Ists. In their cheap white flannels ti ey
nil tli'nk they look like miillonaiMa,
but—ha, ha—what a delusion!
"There goes a waiter. Waiters ara to
be told by the size of their feet and
the soft, careful way they set them
down
"The man in the Imitation Panama
hat Is a tanner. His clear anil ruddy
complexion gives him away. The tan-
ting trade Imparts to the face a pe-
culiarly healthy look. Why shouldn't
It? What Is good for dead skina must
be good for living ones.
"She Is a cook, the stout, scat let
ladv gettlns weighed. Her Are, of
course, gave her that unmistakable
color, but it was not the eating ot
food that made her so fat No; cook
have notoriously poor appetites It
was the inhalation that filled her out
Sooks inhale their fat. That Is cheap^
er for the mistress, isn't it!
"The little, thin chap in the large
bathing suit is a groom. All good
grooms are small and bowlegged, and
thav all wear tight trousers and are
partial to brown.
"Do you see, niy dear Watson, the
stately man whose overtures the fir!
In white Just repulaed? Well, be If
an actor. The muscles In his tao«
show It Actors, you know, by the
continual practice of expressloa, 4
velop face muscles as marked as the
arm muscles of a baseball pitcher."
Where the Octopus Abounde.
| "The rocky coast of Brittany." said
a life guard, "abounds in octopus—
the pieuvre. as they say down there.
"Walk a Breton beach at low tide—
the hSSTlh of SL Lunalre, for lnataooe
—and you will easily find In a half
mile a score or mora of perfect cut-
llcUsh of those friable white bonee
ttiat birds love.
Suddenly Saw the Light. '
The drowsy afternoon calm of Mag-
istrate Harris' office was rudely brok-
en by a very stout woman who tore
through the door In a mood for which
indignant or angry adjectives are far
too mild. She was furl-jus, says th
Philadelphia Times.
Ruatling up to the magistrate she
smacked her hand loudly on the desk.
"She called me a tropple," she shout-
ed, "and I want her to prove It."
"Who? What?" exclaimed the mag-
istrate, rousing himself from a revery
o.i the recent unsuccessful campaign
for an Increase of magistrates' sal
srles.
"Mrs. Blank, that resky neighbor of
mine, that's who. She called me a
tropple and—"
"A what?" asked the puiiled magis-
trate.
"A tropple!" roared the woman, "do
you hear? A tropple! tropple! and I
want—"
"Madam," Interrupted the magis-
trate, "my Jurisdiction extends only
to words in the live language and
Latin and Greek are dead. Good day."
Aa the woman flounced out Magis-
trate Harris brought his fist down on
the desk with a bang
"By golly!" he said, "she meant
trollop."
American Money In Canada.
The Toronto Monetary Times has
been Investigating American invest-
ments in Canada and finds them to be
at least $236,000,000. To collect the
neceas.iry information certain forms
were sent to every United States firm
having a branch in the Dominion, In
addition to letters and forms sent
to more than BOO correspondents.
From the data received it appears
that in British Columbia mills and
timber Americans have Invested $50.-
000,000 and in mines ISO,000,000; in
Alberta In land deals, $10,000,000 and
In lumber and mines, $50,000,000; In
the Dominion proper, J5.000.000 in
packing plants and $4,000,000 is im-
plement distributing houses. In Brit-
ish Columbia In land deals $2,000,000.
In addition, Americans have 168 com
In California and down through
Central America and the West Indies
the practice of smoking ganjah, or
Indian hemp, has been introduced
within recent years A rubber planter
from British Honduras, who Is fa
miliar with the Pacific coast and all
tropical America, described the prac-
tice and some of Its efTects the other
day.
Ganjah smoking," he said, "follows
the Hindu. Tho plant Is Indigenous to
the tropics and was used to a limited
extent by "he Axtecs of Mexico. IB
India It has been a curse for cen-
turies.
"When the East Indian laborer was
Introduced Into the West Indies about
30 years ago he brought It with him,
and revived and encouraged the uss
of the weed among the natives. More
recently he did the same evil turn for
Callforn'a. so that at the present time
ganjah smoking Is prevalent from the
Canadian border to Panama.
"The plant needs no cultivation. It
grows luxuriantly, usually in patches,
wherever the climate Is warm and the
ground Is moist The leaves are
charged with a powerful narcotic, and
the method of use merely consists of
gathering them when they are half
dry, cramming them Into a pipe and
inhaling the heavv white smoke.
"Ten or twelve" Inhalations produce
a pleasant stupor. This gives way to
a buoyancy of limb and a desire for
action. The smoker becomes very
quarrelsome and is obsessed with the
Idea of blood. This Is backed up by a
conviction of his own courage, no mat-
ter how timid he may be in his normal
state. As the drug gains further hold
upon him he snatches up the flrsl
weapon at hand and rushes forth tc
kill.
"Wherever ganjah Is smoked mur
der Is a comparatively common crime
Most Hindus are physical cowards, but
on the other hand they do not regard
death with horror. Some of them be
lleve In the transmigration of souls
while the more Ignorant think that
their disembodied spirits are per
mltted to return to India to dwell
among their friends and relatives whe
are still in the flesh. Therefore when
they have a grouch against any one
they use ganjah to key themselves up
to the point of killing him and do not
worry about the consequences.
"Taken In smaller quantities, say
five or six Inhalations, and on an
empty stomach, the drug has the ef-
fect of Imparting an unnatural energy
Tasks requiring great strength and
powers of endurance become easy,
and for several hours the smoker feels
no fatigue.
"The persistant use of ganjah weak
ens the brain and impairs physical
strength. The victim becomes
wreck."
Prison life In Switzerland 1b a lux-
«ry Instead of punishment. The
comic opera Jail at Thorburg, where
the Inmates did as they pleased, has
only recently been suppressed by the
lierno authorities, yet details are pub-
lished of a similar Institution at Sar-
nen. In the canton of Oswald.
Sarnen is apparently an ideal penal
resort, for the happy criminals who
are sentenced to terms of "decenticm '
In that Institution have a far better
Ume than hundreds of "free" Swiss
citizens who are forced to earn their
bread.
A correspondent of a Lausanne pa-
per Btates that he was passing
through Sarnen when he saw a num-
ber of men, dressed In dark bluo
clothes with white stripes, walking
about the village, smoking and Joking.
Others were seated in a cafe, and
some were working in a leisurely man
ner, carrying brickB for the construc-
tion of a new building. To his as-
tonishment the correspondent found
that the men were convicts from the
cantonal prison close by.
These convicts aro permitted to
leave the prison early in the morning
and find work around Sarnen, or walk
about the country until nightfall, when
they return of their own accord to
the prison.
They are unaccompanied by ward-
ers, and there is nothing to prevent
their escaping, but they are far too
comfortaable to think of relinquishing
their quarters, for they have as much
liberty as other men, and are, more-
over, fed and lodged for nothing.
The money earned by these con-
victs who choose to work can be spent
as they like. One convict, who is em-
ployed as a gardener by a local mag-
istrate, sends bis monthly Lalary to
his wife and children.
Two or three convicts "escaped"
some weeks ago, but they eventually
returned to the prison in a half-fam-
ished condition, and after being se-
verely reprimanded, they were al-
lowed to return to their apartments.
t hompson's
j46 Bakery
111! Soth Droadway
BREAD and PASTRY
Our llread is on sale at all gro-
cers and butchers at a uniform
price. Quality guaranteed : ;
Edmond
Steam Laundry
Under New Management. Sat-
isfaction Guranteed. Packages
called for and delivered.
Gillett & Son, Proprietors
Phone No. 145
City meat market
Wm. A. Schirck, Prop.
All kinds of
Fresh and Salt Meats
Fresh Fish, Etc.
Phone 100
C. W. SPRAOCE
MEAT MARKET
Fresh and Salt Meats and Fish
and game In season
Phone 9H
0
4iA School Man's Oj iui n
What Should Constitute h
School Town" Dr. Mclanohlin
Reading, "The Recessional
Miss Maud Drake
••Looking Backward" R«v.
PI.. "They are from six Inches to a fool
Fore ward'
Re
or more In length, snowy and rerj
prettily shaped; they make nice ast.
tray- The peasants gather them for
hird food, for ash trays, and also, I
believe, for cigarette cases.
"They are bones of the octopus.
%nd their abundance Is a convincing
proof of the octopus In those rock-
strewn wtuers of France."—Minn*
npo.'ijr ,'ou'iial.
The Ancients and Immortality.
Then shall the judge of the dead
answer; let this soul pass on; he lives
upon truth. He has made his delight
In doing what Is good to men and
what Is pleasing to Qod. He has giv-
en food to the hungry, drink to the
thirsty and clothes to the naked. His
Hps are pure and his hands are pure
His heart weighs right in the balance
He fought on earth the battle of the
good, even as his Father, the Lord
of the Invisible world, had command-
ed him. Oh. God. the the protector ot
him who has brought his cry unto
Thee, make It well with him In the
world of spirits! He loved his father,
he honored his mother; he loved his
brethren. He never preferred the
great man to him of low condition.
He was a wise man; his soul loved
God. H
Bachelor Snubbera.
When the bachelor, who is undenia-
bly that, finds girls staring at him
■with their noses turned up and a cold,
Icy stare In their eyes, he may be sure
that he is in tne presence cf bachelor
snubbers. The organization made at
Paterson, N. J., reputed to have been
e home for anarchy and like delusions,
is composed of young women who dis-
dain the men who disdain the maid-
ens. Their slogan is : "If he wants to
flock himself, let hira flock tlll^ he
wearies." He will be cut out of lawn
parties and river chills and all the
other incidents of sentimentality and
feminine sociability.
Tho provocation to this position was
the organization of a bache1jv asso-
ciation by the fellows who thought
they could play friends and yet not go
further. The girls believe they will
break up the recalcitrant organization.
As the movement has spread, the
6nubbers may be met anywhere, ex-
cept in Baltimore, where the girls are
so pretty and alluring that they have
to shoo off the men who flock about
them with proposals to wed.
PROFESSIONAL
dr. j. h. malone
OSTEOPATH
Office at Residenee on Second St
edmond, . oklahoma.
DR. H. R. watkins
dentist
Up-te-date methods at reasonable
prices. Rooms 3 & 4 over Clti-
cens Bank.
, w. howard, m. d.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office over First National Bank
Office hours 9 to 12, and 2 to 5.
Phones; Office 2; Resider.ce 16.
Office with
RINGER BROS.
Col. 0. F
Phone No
12
Hurt,
Auctioneer.
Edmond
Okla
"Drugs Is Drugs."
The writer took a doctor's prescrip-
tion to the drug store to have It filled.
In some way this piece of paper be-
came torn In half, so that when the
patron handed the druggist the first
piece, that public servant at once
measured out the ammonia salt it call-
ed for and placed the small vial befors
his customer.
"How much?" askod the patron.
"Ten cents."
"Oh, beg pardon!" said the purchas-
er, at this juncture finding the remain-
der of the prescription in his pocket.
_ "This piece says to add enough water
raa'a bro"the"to"the great to tho other to make It four ounces"
A. m. ruhl, m. i).
PHYSICIA N AND SURGEON
Office over the post office. Phone.
Office 68; B°sidence B1. ^
Dk. f. vv. briqham
DENTIST Phone 159
Modern methods, reliable work.
Front Rooms over post the office
EDMOND, -
OKLAHOMA
T. H. FLESHER, M. D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Phones: Residence, 71; OCice 28.
Rooms 1 & 2 Citisens Bank Build-
ing.
and a father to the humble; and he
never was a mischief maker. Such as
these shall find grace In the eyes of
ths great God. They shall dwell in
the abodes of glory, where the heav-
enly life Is led. The bodies which
they have abandoned will repose for-
ever In their tombs, while they will
"Very well," rejoined the apothe-
cary. dumping the contents of the
small vial Into a fonr-ounce bottle and
adding the required water. 'There you
a**e, sir, 40 cents more, please."
"What! 10 cents for ammonia and 40
cents for the water?"
"Exactly. Tho doctor's name writ-
panies with an average capital o! the pre8ence of the great God.— ten after the water makes it a pre-
1600,000, aggregating 1100,800,000. —j— ™ "—*•■*-« -
From the Egyptian Book ot the Dead.
scrlptton under
Library.
50 cents."—Judge*
"Looking
Colvilla.
Music
"The Woman's Part" Mrs.
Dow.
The Edmond Problem" Mr.
the parlor door.
The regular business session of
the chapter was held after which
an elaborate luncheon was served
Mrs. 6chultz during her twelve
months stay in the United States
has been an active worker in the Barrett.
chapter at this place, and as he "How Commission <■ vern
severs her relation now to ret.isrn ment will Make for Civic Belter
to her home in the Argentine ment". W. G. Himes
Republic. The Daughters pre- Musio
sented her with a beautiful
Souvenier Spoon and a "Mail
More Important.
"Ah! Mrs. Newcomb," said the no
pish Mrs. Suhbubs, "my many social
dutlea have prevented me from calling
upon you as I should. However, 1 will
surely return your visit some day—"
"Oh' that doesn't matter much,"
replied Mrs. Newcomb promptly, "but
I do wish you'd return the groceries
you've borrowed from time to tlma"*—
Catholic Standard and Times.
Cost of Students' Living.
In Vienna a student can board for
940.60 a month; in other Austrian j
towns for *24.36 Rates in Russia run 1
from 138 80 to J62.ll in St. Peters-
burg. and this includes service, heat- j
ing and light, in Moscow the cost Is
136.67; outside of Moe-ow, $27.02; j
Odessa, *52.11. Mexico. Including
washing. *42-50; Argentina, without
washing, *57.90; Uruguay, board and
lodging, 129.15 to *31.08. The Paris
Student association schedules New
York, without luncheon and washing,
at from *30.88 a month to *38.60.
When Poetry Is Popular.
Tbe efforts of the poets of this da/
and week to get a hearing are both
pitiful and heroic; It depends upon
An Expert.
Qualified For Musical Comedy.
De Wolf Hopper, in the ceurBe of a
^ IH^Hylalt to Coney Island, praised the lithe
one's mood whether the plttfulness or figures of the young girls who, In blue
the heroism predominates. 1 am en- bathing suits and silk stockings, paced
tlrely In sympathy with the man, who, the glittering and windswept beach
knowing his work to be good, com- "These graceful girls," said the !
plains that nobody will print It. It la comedian, "make me think of a young
a complaint aa old aa pain. But In lady I took down the other night to
my experience It Is anly In a petulant dinner.
mood that tbe real poet will thus ac- " 'Mr. Hopper,' she said, as she sip-
cuse the publishers and the world It ped her cup of cold consomme, did
should aurely be taken as an axiom you know 1 waa starring In musical j
that poetry never can be popular. If comedy now?'
" 'Why, no,' said I, 'I
ROOSEVELT'S Own Book
The Most Popular Book
bag" containing ome pleasant
remembranoe for each day of her
long journey.
Flour's going down. New
prioe this week $1.30 aaok.
Benediction, Rev. Spangler
No address is expected to ex-
oeed five minutes.
What is home without a sack
of O. B. Flour and a can of St.
Charles coffee. Sold only by
Givens 4 White,
Asked to Stay In.
In Changstia the other day all the
foreigners received a communlcatloa
from the Teotat requiting them ta
remain wtlhln their own doora for a
period of (our days, as a religious fes-
tival was In progress, and tbe Taotal
could not hold himself reapcaslble for
"Do you know what to do If the car
should break down?" asked the
thoughtful mother of the young man
who was going to take her daughter
out In hla new Napier.
"Certainly," he answered
The young people were quite late In
returning. The fair young daughter
rushed Into her mother and said: ,
"Oh, mamma, the car did break
down! But Jack knew exactly what
to do! We—we aro engaged!"—Pick'
Me-Up.
it does happen to catch the public ear,
It Is not because It la poetry, but be
oaur.e It atates universal emotlona In
measured cadence or rhyme.
Close to the Truth.
A teacher In one of the lowei
grmle achoola waa lnatructing a clas«
didn't even
know you'd studied singing.'
" 'Oh, 1 never Btudied singing,' she
replied. 'I took a gymnastic course j j Af. !#an Hunt,
lor the figure.'"
T.
SyThe fttost Popular Man
African
&®meTraiSs\
ivo* in book 'cm by Hootevi.lt'*
, w hand ths solo aooount ol hl
Unfortunate.
"I am so unfortunate," she said, lm-
ln the departments of the national presslvely and confidentially,
government recently and came anal- possess the gift of divining exactly
ly to the cuetoms department. "When what every one thinks of a«."
London's Telephones.
At the beginning ot the present
the safety of foreigners who eouM I year there were 163,208 telephones Is
veaturv among the crowds.—Hoa *se In London.
kok* Dally Press.
an ocean liner reaches Philadelphia,"
said the teacher, "a man all dressed
up in uniform meets tbe passengers
and takes all they have and inspects
It. Now, can any one In the class tell
me what that man Is called?" A reidj
hand In the last row flew up. "Well
1 'amy?" "Pleas*, mVai . he's called
He (abaent-mlnSrdly); "That la un-
fortunate."—ScraM
A •ligh* Mistake.
"8ee here, did you tell Von Clubber
I was the wormt liar you ever met?"
"Not much, «1£ chap—I told him yoa
wsro the bes^--*-Judge.
WAN
vi!u«°
cv RL«* scmoNtrs so is
1 S3 Flllh Avenue • New York
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Dailey, A. D. The Edmond Sun (Edmond, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 10, 1910, newspaper, November 10, 1910; Edmond, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc150270/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.