El Reno Daily American. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1909 Page: 1 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
EL RENO DAILY AMERICAN.
SEVENTEENTH YEAR
fL RENO OKLAHOMA. Tfil'KSDAY. JULY 22. IQOQ
NO. 7
MATERIAL IS NOW ON THE GROUND •'
Alule Power used to Haul cars of Ma-
terial for El Reno Packing and
Provision Company.
The railroads have finished laying pin next week. Chas. Bottroff, pack-
iheir sidetracks in the stock yards in
this city, and 'the El Reno Packing
and Provision company is now haul-
ing cars by means mule power, in
order to get material on the ground
as soon as possible. Engineer Rivins
V^as finished the trenches, and is
' ready for the concrete work This Peckingtown. Every visitor tc
will begin today as the material is the grounds buys one or more
■now on the ground. Meanwhile
crews of Hock Island workman and a
umber of teams will continue work
jT«f grading for the other tracks and
within a short time switch engines
will be hauling cars up to the com-
pany's buildings.
The first building will be finished
it is thought, before the schedule tlmi
and work on the tank house will be-
ing plant engineer, will arrive within
a few days and take charge of the
construction work.
The commercial club has finished
the work of grading the streets and |
alleys in Packers' addition, and this!
pari of the city looks like a real
the
lots
and the club expects soon to put ou
a big sale.
Already lots in this addition are!
increasing in value along with the,
demand for this property. A visit
to this part of the city and a glance!
at the activities now under way will
readily convince the unitiated that
Packing own is going to be populat-
ed ver> rapidly.
Guthrie, Okla.. July 21.
tor.iey General Charles
West, in an opinion to Gov-
ernor Haskell, holds that the
governor has no authority u
commission citizens of the
state to seize intoxicating
liquors, or arrest persons vio-
lating the enforcement ait
indepeade t of the sheriffs
and sworn officials.
The a torney general in
another opinion holds that
the city of Miami has author-
ity to purcahse the toll bridge
owned by individuals which
crosses the 'Neosho river near
that town.
• ••••••••••••••
LAIM >15 RAY CKLKRRATIOV.
: PRUPEklY
• I
:STATE TAX
LEVY FIXED
AT 2.5 MILLS
roYKiw \pi ropri\n<>\ ron
YKAK IMUNG .MM; 30.
LOSS IN GALVESTON
WIRE COMMUNICATION
IS $100,000
IS RESUMED
RAILROAD
ARGUMENTS
COMPLETED
R\ILRi>\l> ATTORNEYS \i;I: < ov
i 11>i:\t or oik o.mi:.
DECISION EXPECTED SOON
I kdkkab .11 IM.I <\MPRII.I, I \-
arlk to ri; pri;si:\t.
Conflicting (Question I* Whether or
Not, Hoards Intent ininlly \s-
sessed Kailroads Too High.
\l W SLLRLING PK.ACH.
Special to the American.
Fort Gibson, Okla.. July 21.—H. R.
Gilllland has found a new seedling
peach that he would propagate for
its fine flavor, large size and pro-
ductiveness. The peach is nearly
white in color, a free stone and about
as large as an Elberta, but much
finer in flavor. I; looks a great deal
like an English white. He found
the tree about three years ago grow-
ing in a field where lie was raising
potatoes, took it home and set it out
in his garden. Last y<
rew peaches, and this
lie only full tree that
the fruit much finer in f
ar it bo
year it
Central Rody Votes to Participate.
At its regular monthly meeting,
held in Labor hall last night, the
Central Trades and Co-operative
Union of El Reno voted to hold a
Labor day celebration. Definite ar-
rangements have not been completed,
but it is planned to have the best
celebration in the history of Union
labor in this city. There will be a
parade, with the various locals repre-
sented. in the morning, and sports
and speaking by prominent labor
speakers at the park in the afternoon.
The details will be afranged at a
special meeting of the central body
to be held next Wednesday night.
.11 l>GL I \ II \\\ A MAX I.s|. WHS.
Special to the American.
Sapulpa, Okla., July 21.—The an
nouncement from Washington that
George Woodruff, former y connected ,
with the Interior department, in the
capacity of legal adviser, has been
appointed United States district
judge for the Hawaiian islands, caus-
ed considerable interest in the Okla-
homa oil field.
NEARING THE LIMIT
to Ame
Tbpe
Guthrie, July 21.—Arguments
the railroad tax injunction suits in
1 the United States Federal com
jp^'-oncluded late this afternoon. Fed-j
Vrai Judge Campbell of the Eastern I
s Jistrict of Oklahoma was unable to
be present today, on account of ur-1
gent matters demanding his atten-
tion at McAlester. This morning As-j
sistant Attorney General George Hen-1
shaw made a splendid argument in
behalf of the state, declaring the
facts in the case and the affidavits,
filed by the railroads not sufficient ,
for the court to grant an injunction
He cited many decisions by the
United States Supreme court din
point, which sustained the .state
board's action in every instance.
Attorney General Charles West j
followed this afternoon with a two i
hours' argument, giving much data |
on the assessments made by the state j
on railroad property, as compared to
other property, showing the railroads!
to be all assessed at about (JO peri
cent of their fair cash value.
Dowii to One (Question.
^ This afternoon Judge Cotteral, aft-'
* er hearing the argument of the a:tor-j
ney general and Clifford Jackson,
who concluded the argument for the
railroad, stated that there was but
one legal point in the case on which;
jgfthere was any conflict of testimony,I ^®r8,
t foe I a tho nrnnni linn of vholh. I Attomc
100 PINTS OF CHAMPAGNE IN A NiGiiT
, w„v Mrs. Setze says it was a Merry Life
while it lasted, but it didn't
last very long.
• Record ol' Cleveland Woman
• Bought 100 pints of Cham-
• pagne in one evening.
• Fifty dollars an evening
• was a slow night.
• Retiring at 3 o'clock was
• .-onsidered early to 'd "
• Pour dollars during the
• day $:.n ,i; night.
• Street cars to work during
• the day; automobiles and tax-
• icabs at : L-ht.
• Impulse to spend money was
• "madness."
• Wine she couldn't drink,
she poured into men's pock-
the proposition of wheth-
the board did intentionally assess
i ae railroads at a higher value than
other property, holding that a court
j equity could not interfere with
frhe assessment of a state board, al-
though there be serious errors of
judgment as to value, except whe
fraud or the intention of the board to n 1
to discriminate against railroads was :i" ov
proven.
Assistant Attor
shaw stated this afternoon that he
believed the state had the case won,
as the railroads could not prove
fraudulent intention of the board in
the matter.
$1,000 bail by Police Judge McGan-
non. Her companions are held on
suspicion.
Last night, shorn of her finery and
attired in a plain blue frock, she oc-
cupied a cell in the county jail. Dur-
ing the next few days she will
straighten up the books her em-
ployer. helping to repair her own de-
falcations. «T'he books will be brought
to the jail, and she will be allowed
to put in her entire day working on
them.
"It was a short life and a merry
one while it lasted, but it didn't last.
It couldn't. It was madness," she
said last night in her cell.
"It was after I had been here for
two weeks that the evil impulse first
came over me. J sought companions.
1 found them. At first they provided
the money When theirs ran out we
Special to the American. i had to have more. I was continually
Cleveland, O., July 21. In her cell intoxicated. 1 was reckless.
iquarters this evening; "The first of the six weeks we were
etze, s.enographer to moderate. We never spent more than
I Johnson, confessed $50 a night, and we went home early,
to forgeries amounting to $1,500. never later than Last Saturday,
The Merry Widow says she was mad when I managed to get away with al-
and intoxicated all the time during most $1,000, we became mad. Wo I
the past few months, and while she { started early, with thret
feels some pride in the swath she Before long we had ten
cu:, with her dlpslay, yet she re- from cafe to cafe in automobil
grets the "madness' that drove her bought champagne, always cliam-
and says she is glad it is | pagne. I myself ordered at le.
Arrested,
over."
• • • • •
and
• • •
ONK-giAHTMU OF A MILL LI A -
1hi) FOU COMMON SCHOOLS.
Ibu&ixl Lstfiliates Revenue of Over a
Million from Other Than Direct
Taxation.
Guthrie, July 21.—The State Hoard
of Equalization at 1 o'clock today
passed a resolution fixing upon all
the taxable property of the state a
levy of two and one-fourth mills for
state purposes, as follow-:
For appropriations for the fiscal
year, June 30. 1909, to June 30,
1910, $1,900,000.
For erecting and equipping school
of mines building at Wilburton uni-
versity preparatory school at Clare-
more, and for additional buildings for
Fort Supply insane asylum, $127,-
120.
For the expenses of the Second
legislature, $151,000.
For removing state convicts from
Lansing, Kan., to Oklahoma; for
maintenance of prison and erecting
temporary buildings, $XO.OOO.
For the payment of old accounts
pjior to statehood and for deficiency
appropriations passed by the Second
legislature, amounting to approxi-
mately $4so,000, which, with the
$1579,426.18 which the state failed
to collect last year from gross reve-
nue. income tax, inheritance tax and
coal tax, now in litigation, makes a
grand total of $3,204,527.49.
The board estimates that the state
will receive from sources other than
direct taxation during ,ihe coining
fiscal year between $ 1.000,000 ana
$1,200,000.
The board, following out the pro-
visions of the general revenue bill,
made a separate levy of one-quarter
of a mill for the aid of the common
schools, which will mean about 4 0
rents per capita for all children of
school age in the state, and will bring1
r $200,000.1
et received
valuation from five of
s the
state
,000,000
\ DA HON DS SOLD
Special to the American
Ada, Okla . July 21 Th.• st
improvement bonds for the paving of
Twelfth street of this city have been
sold to Harto, Scott & Co . of Colum-
bus, O., and the paving of this street
will begin at once. The contract for
the paving has been let to the Metro-
po itan Engineering company of Kan-
sas City, and Shawnee. Main street
and Broadway and Townsend avenues
of the city are to be paved some time
during the year.
STRIKERS MAY
GO TO WORK
\GRMM TO ltllMO\ 1-1 TROOPS
FROM Till! PL \ XT.
Wage Scale Is Indefinite, Strikers
•ay, lint This Will Also He
Remedied.
;uff
Rutler, Pa.
July 21.—V
lib
cowski addre
sed thousand
i.
workers here
tonight, and
im
them to go t(
work under
the
agreed upon 1
y their emplo
ver
ing that thei
families woi
lid
Work of Repairing Uriilt/n Connecting with
the iyi.unl.nul Alrcmly Begun. \o
Lives were L st.
Special to the Vmerican
UAI.VBSTON. TBX . Jt'l.Y .1 U.UKAI1Y WOHK HAS IlKiJUX
UKI'A IHI.NtJ T1IK IlltlLHlK ItKTWKKN (i AI.VKSTON AND TIIK MAIN-
LAND. \N!> tkakfic WILL SOON 1ik HKSlwtKl) A ItAltOE STRUCK
niK IIUIDCiK IWRlXti TIIK STOIIM OK YKSTKIIDAY. AND 1IROKK
PUO SPANS TWAIN SEHVH'K II\s HKKN DKMOKALIZRD ON AC-
' N ''"s hi r THK on v is i'\sr li kvo v k hi ni; krom htcu
S( AKE, AND TODAY WILL SKK THK liKSI'M'PTION OK TRAFFIC.
NO LOSS OK I.IKK IS HKI'OKTKD
•sh they diil so.
under the spt
■st, and tomor
in take up thei
11 mill r
of men
1 of the eloquent
ow morning will
dinner pails. The
superintendent of the mills states to-
night that the troops will be re
moved from around the plant as soon
as indications of violence die down.
There is a general inclination on the
ot
men
definite, but it is a conci
workmen, and the const
ment is in favor of
Father Becowski was
cheered and hissed as h<
evening. The backbone (
is apparently broken.
rn to
apit illation,
alternately
spoke this
he strike
l.< HO OF sii \\\ x111: 11
Special to the American.
Shawnee. Okla.. July 2 1
Special to the Vmerican.
CiALVKSTON. TKX ,11'LY I. Willi 1IKK SKVKNil'KKN KKET
OK SEA WALL TO I'ROTKCT, (.ALVKSION HAS SAKKLY PASSED
THROI'dll \ IIUKUICANK WHICH liKSKMHLKIl SOMEWHAT IN
INTKNSII Y TIIK KLOOD OK 1 !M> 1 \ PART OK TIIK ISLAND UPON
U'HK'll THK CITY IS LOCATKD WAS INK
I'M! SKA WALL REAOlllXli A 11 101 (11 IIP
KKKT. I'HK PIIOTKCTKI) PORTION 1)1
COMPAIt VTIVELY LI I I'LK IIAHM. wd
L1VKS WKIIli LOST IN THK CITY OR ITS
I'Y LOSS, ORIUINALIA KS.IIM ATKD \T $ 100, mill, WILL HE SMALL.
S\\ KKPI.NO U KSTWARD, TIIK TROIMCAL STORM WHICH HAD
IIKKN CKNTKRKD OVKR II110 IIKLK KOR SKVKRAL HOI'ItS, STRUCK
(iALVKSroN SHORTLY IlKI'ORK NOON
NIIAI KD, TIIK OVKRKLOW-
OK OVKR SKVKNTKEN
' TIIK CITY SKKKKRKD
KA.R IS KNOWN NO
VICINITY. I'HK PliOI'KR-
The wind attaint*
orty-eight miles an 1
o the northeast. he;i
iT (lalveston bay up
Hid. The water bac
lervous pros-
: sea. None
the isl-
migl
bath ho
An ech<
in a total revenue of
The board has not
the propert
the county boards, but estima
total taxable valuation of th
for the year at over
against $727,000,000 returned last i
year.
r fie cons: itutional tax limit fori
state purposes is thi
mills.
of the evangel 1 iil-official turmoil so
sensationally made here last spring,
is he resignation of Rev. L. A. Wolfe,
one of the ministers who so vigor-
ously aided the Rev Rulgin in his
meeting here. The announcement of
the resignation simply states Mr.
Wolfe will take up evangelical work.
There was no rupture with his con-
gregation, one of the largest in the
ci'ty.
TIT.SA CM \ I'D
eial to the America
'tilsa, Okla.. July :
a published repor
Tulsa has properly of
total value of
among the city ownin
wa;er plant, valued at
DHitil Xf FOR (,OLD.
1 a half Special to the American
I Durant. Okla., July 21. Hi
that they have missed th
I ^ gold which they claim is
the banks of the Rlue
ccording miles north of here, two
city of sinking a second shaft,
wn of a empts have been made to
Chief supposed treasure, but
i'ig
b chest of
burled on
river, ten
men are
Many at-
reach the
all have
ter backed up Into the
of the city, and for a time
feared that heavy property
principle
>d to the
uses and
pleasure piers were swept away, but
shipping was not seriously disturbed.
\ hurricane for Blast Texas was fore-
casted at the district weather bureau
it New Orleans early yesterday
morning, and the city was tint wholly
unprepared for the storm. A heavy
dredge was torn from its moorings,
and blown against the only bridge w,i
which connects Galveston with the I
mainland. Two spans of the bridge
were torn down and the cable part-
ed. As soon as communication was
severed wild rumors of a Hood be-
came current, and ii was reported
that the flood disasters of 1900 had
been repeated. These reports were
denied as soon as communications
was again established
f to result will be from
11 t ration and accidents
I have yet been reported.
The water rushed down the streets
>' (lalveston at . terrible speed, and
t looked like the whole city would be
ngulfed. The wind, however, shift-
l i" 'ie south, and the storm abated.
Mew V i
At 2 oYlo
■unied wir
k Ju y 2 1. i Rulletin. >
i the Western I'nion re-
communication with (lal-
vcHton It w a - then believed that the
worst or tiie storm was over. The
message -aid ihe wind attained its
'i: :u. velocity, sixty miles an hour,
ths morning at about 10:30; that
! *' me of the streets were covered with
for the deptn of two to four
\s the day progressed the wind
shifted to the south and diminished
somewhat.
I liree sections of the Galveston
bridge were blown down, and no
trains are running between Galveston
and mainland.
The
ecial to the American.
West •Gaalveston, Tex., JuJ,
fury of the worst storm
Ills section si tare 1901 has
and till danger from flood Is over.
The property loss may total about
$1
m in
i ted,
W ashington, July 21. A report re-
ceived at the weather bureau from
Galveston stated that at 10:20 o'clock
this morning the gulf was high and
i :si;;g, and that wa or in the west-
ern portion of the city was several
I'et deep. The barometer was fall-
ing rapidly. The storm that is ap-
| ioaching the Texas coast was first
sighted last Saturday over the Car-
city
fail*
hopi
1 The tw
to be rewai
i men at work now
(led with a rich find.
COMMITTEE LEAVES FOR ENID TO-DAY
ll( l
<iRA XTS P \RDO\ \ XD HAROLM
irrest followed a de-
| bauch last Monday evening, in which
General Hen-, "'^ht Mrs. Setze herself ordered and
opened 100 pints of champagne. "Al-
ways champagne," she said. Noth-
ing but champagne." Automobiles
and taxicabs at night; dictation in
a law office during the day. She m,Mat
have been mad to imagine she would
escape detection.
It was a slow night said Mrs. Setze. I u
when she spent but $." 0, a J retiring'o
at :\ o'clock was considered good' T
conduct. 0
The woman came to
land from
go wo months ago. She reg-
d at the Grand .Central hotel,
n a few days obtained emplo.v-
H.
'A
Special to American.
Guthrie. Ju y 2 1.—Hover or Has-
kell granted a pa 1 >n to X. O. Wal-
* tors, convicted in Oklahoma county
in 1905 on a statutory charge and Ch
sentenced to fifteen years in Lansing - '
peniten lary. Walters was rent back j a t
to Oklahoma county, after serving nient in the office of Attorney T
two months, the pris m warden pro- Johnson, at 220 Superior avenm
•nouncing him crazy. Walters has
r, since been in the county jail at Okl -
^ homa City The pardon was recom-
mended by County A tot : ey Reai
den and the trial judge, who believe
Sl the prosecution was unwarranted.
The governor also Issued a parole
to Krnest Picko'is, convlctei of the
charge of lar.eny in Stephens coun-
ty a year ago.
pints. These, when we had drank
until we could go no further, we
threw over each other. I poured sev-
eral bottles of wine into the men's
pockets. When we tired of this we
bought champagne for the house.
Bwry one of the cafe habitues in
tftcb place drank wine at our expi nle
Thus elided the $ I0O.
"When we went home we stayed
until Monday no in. Then we went
out and stayed until Tuesday noon
n I was arrested. I had not ipept
• ve: $100 for clothes.
"Throughout the six weeks I was
us'ied ahead by my impulse. Re-
ld-'s, i feared to stop, because I knew
f the consequences 1 had to face.
|Commercial Club Committee will Con-
fer with Packing Plant Ex-
ecutive Committee.
That is the main reason that I kept
on. If there had been any method
K. She was soon made head book to my madness I surely would have
keeper. In this capacity she han- planned to escape. As it was, I was
lied all the checks. intoxicated, and my arrest was In-
Six weeks ago, with John Flynn evitable.
ind Wal er Ormshy, advertising men. "I am sorry for Mr. Johnson. He
he started on a debauch. When has been kind to me from the first,
uiids gave out she forged checks ; d is even now. I do not know what
detc ted Tuesday, and 1 shall do. I await anything calmly,
■d. Yest< rday she was I am chiefly relieved that the madness
grand jury n'U over. I am myself again."
a ud
.000 in Galveston alone, anil j ibbean sea.
several cities along the coast are
tlmost completely destroyed. Wire Ht.u ton, Tex.. July *1.—(Ball*
lln.l Report, of storm of hurrl-
Htl"s •'* «aur.„.,l : 1)i a. (lalv,ai3n reached
afternoon, and telephone .ervtoe In here over the telephone. Alt other
(he city has heen partially repaired, i wlrea are own.
Ities along the coast I ing pavilions are
I'd, and wires are wrecked,
jeveral miles. It Is
ie loss of 11 f
small
>us calamatU's have
\o word from
has been recei
still down for
feared that soi
have resulted 1
hough no serious ca
been reported.
it is stated that th
reau at Was
Two bath-
said to have been
fishing piers swept
iway. fhe surf is reported jump-
iay ing over the sea walls in several
st towns, places. The wind has reached a ve-
f sixty miles an hour.
weather bu-
A merlcan.
, July 21.
\ message
Herman Harnies. II H. Stephens, inK of the hoard of directors In Enid
•M. H. Lyons, II. W Hiley. U. A Wll- today. It Is known that, proposals
■s0"' ^ "■ ' 'nhelpaugh, II. s. Hut- will he submitted to that board l
terwiir.il. Henry Sehafer, Frank | the cities of El Reno, Chickasha,
Compton. E. C Vouiik | Oklahoma City. E.ild, Tulsa and Mas-
and J. P. Guteliug
mlttee that goes to
ing to land the I
£>ian: for this city,
meeting of the Conn
mittee here last eve
tnents were complet
mlttee goes instruc
xeentive commltte
sonab e in the line
buildings.
oniii
the
Knid this morn-
eople's Packing
At an informal
ieicial Club com-
ilng all arrange-
d, and the com-
kogee, and it is probable that sev-
eral other candidates for packing
house honors will be represented at
the meeting. The capital stock of
the company is stated at $500,000,
and the board of directors claim that
every share of it will be disposed of
• I to offer 'the to members of the order. The board
anything rea- also states that there Is not a shadow
of grounds and of doubt that the plant will be built
during the present year. At a mcet-
IS1 Reno the packing center of 'the ing of the BI Re
state of Oklahoma, is stronger today held y<
than ever bel'ore. and nothing will se: d a
be left undone that could result in of some of the city 's liest business' the worst to conn
•no Commercial Club
• i i' Seven feet of Water.
ington warned this city Special to the
as early as Sunday morning that a Dallas Tex
storm in the Caribbean sea was trav- i . ... • i ,
i1 eeived here from Galveston prior
eling toward the Texas coast, but to
the city felt safe with her water wall
and breakwater, it was not consid-
ered possible
the location of another packing plant men to Enid
la his city. This comm
The location of the plant of t lie . | > • , | , . • ,
People's Packing company, the name live . >nimitt«
all wires going down stated that
the western part of the city was un-
der seven feet of water. Two spurs
waves to lop the of the railroad bridge connecting the
seventeen fool wall around the city, is!:, ,| with the mainland are down.
at:d not many thought thai the water and water was (lowing over the sea
" '"aMy vt '"Hy arter wall tt number ofpiacea, with the
it struck the breakwater. The en-|w|nrt blowing sixty-five miles en
glneering teat, accomplished here aft hour.
er the terrible flood of 1000 was con-|
s:d. red sufficient to render this city I others in (Jn at Kanger.
impregnable to attai ks from storms j Houston, Tex., July 21. Front the
at sl'a- I na.ure of the gulf hurricanes it can
Ihe wind was traveling at a vo-1 be said with certainty that if the
loci y of sixty miies an hour when it, wafr at Galveston has risen so that
struck tills city at II o'clock this ihe surf jumped over the sea wall,
morning, and before noon had lopped :la reported to be a fact, here Is a so
the (lalveston wall and the streets of perilously high water along the Texas
the city were running four feet with coast for scores, and perhaps hun-
water The tlooil of 1900 was fresh dreds of miles on either side of c,al-
io he minds of the people, and they veston. In which case small communi-
sterdaj It was resolved toI huddled together in churches and ties and numerous summer resorts
strong committee, composed | residence, helpless and w ilting for along the unprotected coast would bo
The fire depart- in the greatest danger.
this morning. ments a d city police
tt.ee will be In Enid all out, and government tn
confer with the exeou-l upon to aid the pa ie
* of ,he Pi ople's Pack-! habitan ■ in saving the
Little hanger at New Orleans.
Iiound over to
under which the Farmers' Union has Ing plant relative to the proposition i property. The wind
taken out Its packing house char- th city ha. I • offer. \ de Is'ou w 11. i.'i r, and some order
'er, wi" I'e dec,dt 1 upon at the nieut-l p ,bab y ... i-eat-hed this
I'll .11.
The
called I
called I
ti k. ii in-
1 Vi :" «l weather bureau says there is not
> • rlous u i a .New
v> re- Orleans. Reports indicate little if
oi li >i llke.v d« . e to shipping.
i
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
El Reno Daily American. (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 22, 1909, newspaper, July 22, 1909; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc166566/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.