The Tecumseh Herald. (Tecumseh, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 4, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 4, 1893 Page: 1 of 4
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ecwm
Vol. III.
The greatest fair ever known
closed at Chicago, last Monday eve-
ning-
The Pacific Mail Steamer New
York was wrecked on the rocks
last Friday.
Thf H enrietta, Texas Herald is
booming up the Ft. Sill country and
working hard for its opening.
J. H. Miller, for sixty-one years
postmaster at Gauley, West Vir-
ginia, died hist week at the age of
88 years.
Tiik Voorhees hill passed the
Senate Monday by a vote of 43 to 32,
for unconditional repeal of the
Sherman bill. t
A hill has been introduced in
congress limiting a homestead to
eighty acres, and provides that the
land be sold at auction.
The county commissioners of
Lincoln county have issued $'22,000
worth of bonds, which have been
approyed by Judge Scott.
While you are investigating,
Mr. Speed, look into the timber
stealing that was done under Mar-
shal Grimes administration?
■\ mob threatened to linch ex-
Priest Joseph Slattery in St. Louis
last Friday night, while lecturing
against the Catholic church.
Kansas people are talking of re-
moving their state building at the
world's fair grounds to Topeka and
set it upon the state fair grounds.
Governor Renfrow has revolted
the commission of the county clerk
of "L" for taking fees and filings
from homesteaders withont author-
ity- ^
Gold has been discovered in Mor-
gan and Brown counties Indiana,
and the farmers have abandoned
their farms and gone to washing
gold. _
Ths Press-GazetfeT* ribbing up
the city council of Oklahoma City
for paying §1,000 to a contestant
on a lot that had been awarded to
the city by the townsite board.
What does the Times-Journal
think of the resolution passed by
the bar of Kingfisher, in behalf of
the ability and integrity of Judge
Burford? It is a pretty hard slap
ut the T. J.
Norman's newspapers are crying
for sewerage and waterworks. Nor-
man is large ijuough to take off its
short skirts and enter the progres-
sive of civilation, and Tecumseh
will not be long in following.
President Cleveland is now
taking part in the investigation of
the alleged strip fraud. He has,
through secretary Smith, called
Gov. Renfrow and Sec. Lowe up
to Washington. Let the light be
turned on and no guilty man escape.
Henry Star, the notorious mur-
derer and train robber was found
guilty by the jury at Ft. Smith last
week for killing Floyd Wilson, a
deputy United States marshal. He
was also found guilty of robbing a
store, and there are several other ac-
counts standing against him.
The Kansas City Star of Satur-
day, Oct. 28th, contains a supple-
ment of four pages devoted to the
reservations soon to be opened up to
settlement. Its description of the
Kickapoo country is very good, and
we will in a short time republish
a portion of it in the Herald.
We were informed by good au-
thority recently, that ex-Marshal
Grimes sold all the walnut timber
from the Cherokee Strip to one man
for $400, and that oyer 400,000 feet
of valuable walnut timber had been
removed from the vicinity of the
southeast part of the Cherokee
8trip.
In another column will be found
the Kickapoo bill as passed by con-
gress last winter, to open up that
country to settlement. We publish
the bill at the present time that ey-
ervbody may know what it contains.
A great many intending settlers are
forfeiting their rights by going into
that country hunting, and looking
oyer the land.
Tecumseh, Pottawatomie County, Oklahoma Territory, November 4, 1893-
The Kickapoo Bill.
Protection Must Fall Back.
Communicated.
Commissioners Proceedings.
Oct. 21st 1893.
" 7 ,1 Democratic time given to re- The Pottawatomie* are citizens1 OMmtataw*'mot pursuant to <41
Beit enacted by the Senate and crimination over the Sherman act is of the United States according to : by the clerk. ....
House of Representatives of the ] waste(] The cowardly makeshift their naturalization papers, sworn Present J. s McAliater una a. ao-
United States of America, in Con- is not worth a word of disagree- and taken out by their heads of ; Johnston
ii i ment among democrats. Clearsigh- families proper m 188(5. W ith the clerk, by 1 J. Perry deputy .
gress assembled, ed bimetaliste might be tempted to : doctrines as citizens, therein set, The petiti >u of K Finnell for liquor
That said agreement be, and the | wKho hrtVe brought i forth, these people are entitled to Iton* and "M*"" .Rain. same
same hereby is accepted, ratified, jj^cu|tjea aCross ihe path of are- all the rights and privileges accord- were taken up and considered and after
and confirmed. I formed standard of prices and of ed to United States citizens as set I Ixarlop both sides of «a!d cm, ttie clerk
"That for the purpose of carrying1 debts bv allowing bimetallism and ! forth or accorded to any United
into effect the provisions of the bullion purchases to <;et mixed in States citizen ov birth and sustain-
ing elicet tlic provisions or i b., the s,ipre.ne court of Kansas.
foregoing agreement there is here- that and other lnisunder- With these same rights they are ar-
by appropriated out of any money 8t[inj;nca w;n right themselves if rested bv the United Sties mnr-
— I i: ... .1 .1 .1 /A..4-1. trx- inlnJiw.
j ri r -- - stanamgs wm ngun uicniOCMw u ...... , -
in the treasury of the United States j we cull once the republican shals at Guthrie tor introducing, ...
not otherwise appropriated, the sum makeshift out of the way. the re- in other*vords for treating before
of sixty-fdur thousand and six hun-! publican stringency alleviated and the bar, or to a member of their
, , , ,, , • the renublican doctrine of protection I own nation a drink of wlnsk>--as
dred and fifty dollars; and paying. ^ g ^ interestg Beparatc-d from i introducing intoxicating liquors in
John T. Hill the sum of live thous- j the ^rtl,lt qUestjon 0f free coinage. : violation of one of the ancient stat-
and one hundred and seventy-two In preparing a tariff bill certain i utes. It appears to us that where-
dollars for services Kivdered said industries will get incidental pro-1 in these privileges are accorded rt
Kickapoo Indians and in discharge ! tection. No democrat stops on that should appear that every I ottawa-
rsrss JL - "tr-ff. - 11
j enmity to the manufacturers be-
saul Indians and recommended liy clll]Se they are manufacturers. Kn-
the Secretary of the Interior, the | mjty only arises against the con-
remainder to be expended for the j struction of a tai<i£ primarily for
use of said Indians as stipulated in j manufacturers and secondarily for
..a M .b..u; -«.
said Indians elect to leave any por- j same category. The democracy
tion of said remaining balance in j cannot tolerate a coinage law made
the treasury, the amount so left | primarily to furnish a bullion mar-
shall hear interest at the rate of ket. Anv free coinage system will
.. , „ n p-^vwi i incidentally benefit the silver min-
five per cent per annum. 1 rovid- intere8{g. That is accepted as
ed, that none of the money or inter- j ^ 0f tjle effect. But silyer min-
est thereon, which is by the terms j ers must not dictate the terms of
of said agreement to be paid to said j the law: and silver mining Senators
Indians, shall be applied to the pay-! cannot lead the democratic party
„ . , , ,, ,, , ! with a halter whenever a discussion
ment of any judgment that has been , the cnrrency ar;8C8.
or may hereafter be rendered under; ■ • ■
the provisions of the act of congress
United States and should lie given
all the rights and privileges of a
United States citizen as recognized
by the county of Pottawatomie.
If one privilege is denied to one of
the members thereof and be taken
to Guthrie for violation. Why
should Oklahoma demand a tax per-
sonal or road tax personal of this
people? Another matter of conse-
quence these people complain of is,
they voted the democratic ticket
and if the votes cast by them is il-
legal. why all the county officers or
their acts as such, since their in-
stallment have been illegal. These
people not only demand their rights
as citizens by their naturalization
papers and by the Daws alotinent
act, which gives to every Indian
getting an alotment the rights of a
United States citizen, but also wish
that they were no longer slaves in
accordance to the provisions of said
act that they should not dispose of
their alotments for twenty-five
years. They are asking congress
to relieve them of this proviso so
that they can be enabled to sell'a
portion of their inheritance and are
asking the department concerning
this exact status, whether they can
he dragged to Guthrie and not be
jariiti jul =1, muni ...w. tried at Tecumseh before their near-
output. They wanted 110 other, and j est United States Commissioner, or
- all their long speeches for bimetal- be under the thralldom or ltussia
the necessary surveys or re-surveys, ^ wefe n*th{ng but sallj thrown ; and be dragged olf to Russian Gutli-
there be, and hereby is appropriated j jn ^jie ()£ free coinage voters, rie before a despot where they have
■ t> . • tin 1 . " .1.1 ...11 —11 " i Mm milt */- i* 11 in iuil in tirefprence to bond.
approved March 3rd, 18SI1, entitled
'•An act to provide for the adjudica-
tion and payment of claims arising
from Indian depredations."
Sec. 2. That for the purpose of
If the energy of the silver pro-
ducing States, aroused and concen-
trated by the severe losses sustained
in the market decline, had not dom-
inated one side of the debate, there
would have been comparatively lit-
tle trouble in meeting the urgent
demands of business, and at the
making the allotments and pavments I time beginning a restoration of sil
eluding the preparation of a com- , ;n Cou^.eH3 were belll upon holding
plete roll of said Indians, the pay j t|,e S|lermau law. Under no ether
and expenses of a special agent, if 1 legislation could they get a certain
the president thinks it necessary to regular market for so nuich of their
appoint one for the purpose, and
to go to jail in preference to bond.
Lexington Leader.
Why this needless expense of
subpoenaing everybody to appear
before the grand jury, Mr. Speed?
Is the Major Dodd plan of securing
an indictment no longer in vogue?
Do you want ns to tell how that
particular indictment was secured?
Indictments appear to be what you
are after, and what does it matter if
, ? harmless to the
the persons indicted are wholly in- ,)erfect 8eCrecy
nocent of wrong doing, so long as ran be noticed a
.. . .v..w eyes of free coinage
out of any moneys in the treasury j They would rather sell 4,500.000
not otherwise appropriated, the sum j ounces a month for gold than have
of $5,000, or so much thereof as ^ bullion coined into legal tender
dollars of 412J grains under a sin-
mav be necessaiy. - gle silver standard. They compell-
Sec. IS. That whenever any of ; e(j llieir aj|jes from agricultural
the lands acquired by this agree- j States to insist on concessions to
mfint shall by operation of law or ! silver—not silver money, but silver
proclamation of the president i bnllion. And the saddest part is
' it i i ct ! i,„ that a considerable body of the peo-
of the I nited States, ^ ^ hftTe been ]e(1 1)y tilig filtration
open to settlement or entry, they j mininj, ideas through agricultu-
shall be disposed of (except sections j ra[ gtate Congressmen to imagine
sixteen and thirty-six in each town- j that a blow has been struck at bi-
ship therof) to actual settlers only j metallism. , ,,
' , . . , ,, i„„„ In the currencv contention, the
under the provisions of the home" j immediate duty of the democratic
stead and townsite laws (except , jlarty ;8 tuko control and let the
section twenty-three hundred and i Stewarts mid Joneses understand loe ulm vllc B ..
one of the revised statutes of the I that, while we are friendly to silver : ,,ran(j jury tiie trouble of investiga-
United States, which shall not ap. coinage, it is the money standard I tion by filldmg the indictment yonr-
, , „ , , , .. ,„„u v/hich must be tne paramount I s,.lf on the promise that vou will
ply,) Provided, however th« cach BnUion protettion must he I produce the evidence at the trial?
settler on said lands shall, before I jhe incident. Did you keep that promise? or was
Not only is that democratic and | t|ie gentleman indicted by you, not
right, but it is the only way to win. j)y t|)e gran(l jury, aequited becausc
We shall never get away from
the British gold standard if we wait
upon the nod of bullion sellers who
do not wish to get away as long as
they can sell bullion for gold.—St.
Louis Republic.
was ordered to issue naid license.
The application and bond of Bryant
and Conner for liquor license, was taken
up, bond approved and clerk ordered to
i&bu* said license.
Adjourned sine die.
W. Joiinton, Clerk.
Ily T. J. PinftY, Deputy.
Oct. 20th 1896
Commlwloners met pursuant to caP
by the clerk.
Present J S McAli«ter and A A Ander-
son commissioners, and W Johnston clerk
hy T J Berry deputy.
Matter of Incorporating the town of
Shawnee was taken up and after hearing
same it was decided that the statutes had
not been complied Willi and therefore
said petition .vas uot granted. v
Adjourned sine die
Attest W. Johnston.
Clerk.
By T J Prkrt, Deputv.
What do those who have been
hoodwinked by Dennis Flvuu think
of his opposition to the bill to com-
pel all trains to stop at government
towns ill the strip? The bill passed
but Flynn opposed it bitterly upon
the advice of the railroad officials,
who control him body and breeches.
—Perry Democrat.
NOTICE.
Bids will be considered on Nov. 10. 'lift
for plastering the Tecumseh school hou.vo.
The sump to lie made for "tlirco co«t
drawn innrk." by Ihe yard, parties to
furnish all material and take in lew there-
for school orders.
The board rewerves the right to reject
anv and all bids.
G. P. Lkioiiton, Clerk.
By order of board.
J. 11. Pahkkk. tkhnitokial Auditor
* and Sup't ok Pcbi.ic Instructioni
gctiihik, <)kla.
i Sept. 18th 181)3.
Mr, O. J. Slattkry,
TKTUMSRH, O. T.
Dear Sir:
In reply to yours of the 11th, 1 have to
say that each district should assume lia-
bility as to value received In the settle-
ment of old township indebtedness, and
the county fund should be used for this
purpose.
lleap't Yours
J. II. Parker.
No. 4.
SNIltER.
Caries a lull Line of
\ Watches,
Clocks and
Jewelry.
Will order anything not carried in stock ou ahort notice and at Chicago prices
D 1) KI.ai-p's drug store, opposite the poatofflce, Tecumseh, Ok!a
Hoes all kind of
WATCII, CLOCK and
JEWELRY REPAIRING.
ADAMS *1 SO.\
UNDERTAKERS
DEALERS IN
Sasti, Doors, Mouldings & FurnUure.
Saw Mill. Corn Mill,
and Saw Shingle Mill!
j^-I have added a llrst class Corn Mill of the latent patent, and also a new SAW
8H1NOLK MILL inoonnwtion with my saw mill, aiid am now prepared to grind
corn on any terms,either for cash or foi toll. I will saw shingles on shares or for
cash. Shingles lor sale at all times.
J. W. MOYLE, Tecumseh, Okla.
Donaldson & Son,
rs
Iin
n
if
DISCOVERED AT LAST
It has been thougberly demonstrated
to the dellirht of all who have tried its
wonderful effects that Dr. Holt's
Fhknch IIair Invioorator will positi-
vely grow a Mustache, and promote
hair on bald heads. Restoration of l^sir
guaranteed within three months If used
i according to directions. It is perfectly
harmless to the skin, can be used with
and its wonderful effects
liuceut vi muug uvn.fc, ov t un „t, uuuvnu after a few applications-
vou attain vour purpose of making ! Young men who appreciate a tine mus-
yuu attunt p , n i tHche uri. ^titled to tiud that this appl -
political capital 1( r} . cation increases the growth with double
not, as in the case of Major Dodd,
save the government needless
pense and the gentlemen of
Tecumseh, Oklahoma.
Job Work,
House Moving.
Satisfaction Assured.
D. D. KLAPP,
Drugs. Medicines, Oils, Paints, Trilet
Articles, &c.
UROADWAY, TECl'MbEII, OKLA
O K WAGON YARD,
J. F. Rush, Proprietor.
II Kinds of Fsed, Corn. Kay, and Oats.
the
I rapidity. A package containing three
months treatment sent to any address
upon receipt of $1.00. Address,
Ki'hkka Cukmical Co.,
4.6_in Kansas City, Mo.
making final proof and receiving
certificate of entry, pay to the Uni-
ted States for the land so taken by
him, in addition to the fees provid-
ed by law and within five years from
the "date of the first original entry,
the sum of $1.50 an acre, one-half
of which shall be paid within two
years; but the rights of honorably
discharged Union soldiers and sail-
ors, as defined and described in sec-
Tiie honorable commissioner has
decided that a homestead claimant
j can enter lands in the Sac and Fox
| country and also take lands lying
tions twenty-three hundred and . jl|st the North Canadian riv-
•five of the revised statutes of the er in the Pottawatomie country.
United States shall not be abridged In November 1802, Charles Win-
, . ,, , -,i | del made application to enter some
except as to the sum to be paid , fracli()nal ,ots in sec j _ twp 10, if <3
aforesaid. Until said lands are j; 0I) tju, north side of the river in
open to settlement by proclamation j the Sac and Pox lands and also on
of the president of the United j other lots in the same section but in
NOTICE.
The next regular examination, for Ter-
ritorial certificates to practice medicine,
will be held at Oklahoma City, at the
ofllre of l)r. W. It. Thompson at ten
o'clock A. M. Wednesday Nov. 8th 18113.
j. A. ovhhstkket.
ChorgeH Ileasonable.
John \V. Lkwib, Cashier
8am. Clay, Prnnident.
3AM OF TECUMSEH,
Capital Stock, $25,000.00.
Organized under the Laws of the Territory.
Does a General Banking Business.
Loans made on HO, 60 and 00 days ou good security. Kxchange of
principal cities for sale
DlRKCTORS: J II Maxey, John \V lloelior, Sam. (ia\, <1 IV Lewis
of the total absence of any testimo-
ny whatever against him? So ca- , m -.■—
pable and honest a prosecutor as | i 4t Ter. Bnpt. of
yourself should not be put to the , published la IliSKVi.n Nov. 4,1803
necessity of proving anything be- j NOTICE.
fore a "rand jury. Or is it possible To Whom it May Cowcbus :
y°" have a grand jury that is ; SSTiJL
unwilling to take your word for it I
—Guthrie Leader.
Williams & ('w., -----
I petition for license to retail liquors in
! Sacred Heart, Pottawatomie County, Ok-
| lahoma Territory, and that uulesi* object-
ions to the same as required by law be
Thk newspapers in several of our , tiled by the 18th day f November i898,
neighboring towns are growling be- ; said petiMon will bc gmited.
cause Purcell is taking trade away
from their towns. That's just what
she is doing and she uses only
square methods to do this. Our
merchants are all built 011 the "Gret-
there-Eli" order and they know how
to draw trade and to keep it. They
Qaylord's
Pure Drugs, Patent Medicines, Taints,
store.
Varnishes, Cigars anil Toilet Articles.
PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED, DAY OR NIGHT.
Pure wines and liquors for medical and family uso.
N«. KB Broadway, Opposite the Court House. Tecumseh O. T.
rroiidcnl.
Roht. A. koobkp,
Vice-Prcsidcnt.
kuw. 11. cook*.
Cashier.
of the president 01 me uuucu to draw trade ana t< .
State* no person shall be permitted f the "I ot country. I he receivei . .fc jlgre 0ffering extra indqee- Mare 14 hands high H years old, sorrel
,o SL - - i SJsJrtiS srSLfJZi'™* -
ments in the wav of good prices for j color, star in forehead
were i ,, , . ..iwl'th'-v keen if here i left sholder and right hi|
•all products and tney keep it nerc /stallion) 11 hands I
pon or occupy any
lands, and any person violating this contiguous and also for the rea- j j'" ^^,',,7 their customers courte-
provision shall neyer be permitted , gon that an entry could not legally |lonorsl.blv and fairly, selling
to make entry of anv of said lands embrace both classes of land. 11. them goods at prices the other towns
or acquire any title "thereto: provid- | C. St John prosecuted theappeal can.th touch And ,,ur(.ell „sos
... i i which resulted in the allowance ot • •_ i., * i, in fi,( naonin Lmiw
, ,, , i wiiicn resiuteu in mic unu
ed,that any peraon having attempted , ^ entry>__Times.journal.
I printer's ink to let the people know
! what she has to offer.—Purcell Heg-
j ister.
Cvbtkr H. Habkison, r.iavor The merchants of Tecumseh can
WHO mane entry uuuC. , f r ; f Chicag0 an(] a mBn and do sell as cheap as at Purcell,
known as the commuted provision | i°ur U1UC5 U1 ,,b , , ,
of the homestead law, shall be I who was universally respected by
to, butfor any cause failed to acquire i
a title in fee under existing laws, or j
who made entry under what
who was universally
ot me noiue&iettu sumi i .* « ..
qualified to ninke homestead entry!"" ( es o soeie y, was oil y
H .. , , murdered at his home in tliicego
"Approved March 3rd, 1893. i Sunda>' h>' u crazy cra"k "al"ecl
11 I Patrick Prendergast, who after- ui i utwnOWu..v j - ( UKtain iii , w. i., mi *# .•«. . **
! wards gave himself up to the police j cumseh know that they are doing
w is jail. | business. Advertise. wltaeaws to prove her con'Jtioiis residenc
■ nttnn mid I'lilliviition nf saiil littlil \\7.
Tiiis 2Sth day of October 189.1.
Wll.l.Alto Johnston,
County Clerk.
First published in Heiiai.d Nov. 4, 1893
ESTRAY NOTICE
Notice is hereby jjiven thut the follow
ins Kstrays were taken up by Thus.
Goodboo, October 15th 18911 to wit: One
" * * - ni-f, old, _
bruuded .1 on
__n_ _ r, and One
horse (Stallion) 11 hands hijrh 8 years
old, haj color, Star in forehead, 2 white
hind feet no '>rands.
That the residence of said taker up is
withe south east quarter of Section 22
Township 10, Range 3 East Said estrays
were vulued at $50 fifty dollars.
Willard Johnston
County Clerk.
This panic of 1873 was under re-1 ^ ^ mnv
publican rule; the panic ot 18U0 \
First published In Hkiiai.d Nov. 4, 1893.
XOTICK.
* . ., . LAND OKKICK AT Oklahoma, O. T.
but with few exceptions the ciuto- (xt. 20th, 1893.
mors do not, know it. It is time! Notice is hereby given that the follow-
imia uu j jnK.,Wmed settler has filed notice «f her
the mere cants of this town were I int0ntion to make finnl proof in support
wakin" up and letting the residents i -f her claim, and -hat said proof will be
a* 1 . , rr mtid<* before Ileglster und IlecHVer at
of Pottawatomie county and le- j ()|,thorns, O. T., on I)ec. 11th 1803,
" "" twp
•inK
prov
The State National Bank.
Cor. Main and Robinson Streets, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
CAPITAL, 50,000, PAID IN.
, D. C. OldJimra, John D.Rogers, Edw
It is real amusing to read in the I Y\ hy don t 1.11 i ted States At tor-
republican papers the cause of Perrv ney fejieed investigate the timlier
upon and cultivation of said land viz;
Lander T. IIa<rar, Davi I F. Dorr, Nathan
II. Morgan and Webster Snoddy, all of
Clifon. O. T.
Any person who desires to protest
rainst the allowance of such proof, or j
,;as under republican rule, and the
panic of 1893 was under republican
laws. All the hard times and all ^ ^ ,
the panics for the last twenty years democratic. Gentlemen of thieves in the Strip? ex-United .....
were underlawsp^sedby republi- | ^ papere „f tl„ Terri. I Stat,s Mondial Grimes sold for ^00 , Z
their laws politics and panics?- tory, the reason Perry went h-1 j all the walnut timber in the south-1 tniw Department, why such pro.,T sjionld
Lexington Lender. j bent democratic was simply because east part of the < lierokei
———— 1 nlic has more democratic voters, than 1 What riiiht had Marshal
—'The Tecumseh meat market, opposite ri,p„t,ljcari. and ron
the post-Olhte, is the place to get your j 1
c. • 1 ri'it i e allowed, will be given an opportu-
' ' ! nity at the above mentioned time and
Grimes ! plan* to crown-examine th * witn^sso.-, of
1 1 1..; ' .vblo" . i , re.
can't f'irure! tc
Why don't
niHKCTOHS;
Ilrnry Will, F. M. Riley, D I>. Kulilman, H ' t. A. ltoycrs,
ii. Cookf.
Tlil. hank .OIMU ymir b.i.lne,. pl.-dt-ln^ carclul "<! C.lturnl 1'""""" C°lr°'1
ed to an. Drafts inued on all principal cit - . h.i statoa and Kurope.
The T iQOy
MARION LEE. Proprietor-
BEST ACCOMMODATIONS IN TOWN.
Tecumseh, Okla.
T'lie
F. W. CE^RICH, Prop.
(Successor to Mrs. Chisholni,)
My tables are as well supplied as any in Oklahoma Territory, and 1
can and will feed all that come.
86F"Remember The CAFE, south side of square.
DR§. DEANA DETRICM,
entists.
National Bank Building, Hooms 10 and 11.
anything else.
ape<
U. M. Utl.lI:Y. it'.'
OFFICK-I
i OK1.AH0MA CITY,
OKLA, TY.
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Hebard, J. H. The Tecumseh Herald. (Tecumseh, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 3, No. 4, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 4, 1893, newspaper, November 4, 1893; Tecumseh, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc165654/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.