Cherokee Weekly Messenger. (Cherokee, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 3, 1910 Page: 2 of 12
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Cherokee Messenger
CHEROKEE OKLA
C L Wilson Pub
NEWS OF THE WEEK
Most Important Happenings of the
Past Seven Days
Interesting Items Gathered from all
Parts of the World Condensed
Into Small Space for the Ben-
efit of Our Readers
From National Capital
The supreme court has resumed its
sessions at Washington and a decision
In the tobacco case is expected soon
Secretary Meyer of the navy has
presented to the naval committee
plans for building the greatest battle-
ship of the world It will be of 34000
tons and will carry 12 14-inch guns
capable of hurling shells weighing
1400 pounds a distance of 612 miles
The senate committee investigating
the cause of high prices have decided
to call the meat packers among the
first and will investigate the cold stor-
age business and its influence on the
food supply
Horace T Jones a special agent in
the land department testified before
the Ballinger committee that men
who were interested in the Alaska
land frauds brought pressure to bear
on President Taft to keep James R
Garfield out of the cabinet
Senator Stone bas offered an amend-
ment to the rivers and harbors bill
making the amount appropriated for
river improvement at St Joseph Mo
150000 Instead of 275000
' The naval committee will recom-
mend to congress the building of two
battleships of the Dreadnaught class
of not less than 28000 tons
A bill introduced in the house re
quires all government vessels to be
equipped with wireless aparatus
Dr Wiley chief chemist of the de-
partment of agriculture told the
women graduates of Cornell university
that "the woman who can sew a but-
ton on a shirt and tea fresh eggs from
stale is worts more to humanity than
ill the women college graduates in the
vorld"
When congress refused to make the
ialaries of the judges of the new court
)f customs appeals 210000 as the
resident wished he withdrew the
tominations he nad sent to the senate
for the positions '
The only recognition given Wash-
ington's birthday by the senate was
the reading of Washington's farewell
address by Senator Depew
Aaa departments of the government
at Washington were closed in honor
of Washington's birthday except congress
toe Domestic items
The Wright brothers have secured
an injunction in the federal courts
preventing Paulhan the French
aviator from making any more flights
in this country
The 'United States leads the world
in exporting tobacco Since 1890 the
value of the exports aggregate $646-
000000 and imports were 386000000
The lower house of the Oklahoma
legislature has passed a bill repealing
the dispensary system and maaing the
sale of liquors In the state for any pur-
pose illegal
Friends of Prosecutor Garvin of
Hudson county New Jersey who is
prosecuting the beef trust have been
approached by men from Chicago and
assured that the prosecutor could re-
tire a rich man if he would drop the
prosecution of the packers
J M Fiske & Co the firm of New
Tork brokers that became involved In
the Hocking pool slump have been de-
nied reinstatement by the stock ex-
change By an order of the court at Lexing-
ton Ky nearly $2000000 assets of
the Southern Mutual Investment com-
pany will be distributed to 'creditors
Two youqg men at Mutual Ok
have Invented a new wireless tele-
graph system by which messages may
be sent privately and by which boats
may betdriven and controlled from
land
Richard Frakes once had a 400-acre
farm on ale Missouri river near Atchi-
son Kan but it has been taken acre
by acre by the river until it has all
disappeared s
A Nevada Mo jury brought in a
verdict of not guilty when a boy
charged with robbery confessed that
he broke into a store because he was
hungry The jury took up a collection
of $1685 to buy him a ticket home
A special grand jury has been called
at Kirksville Mo to investigate the
death of Prof J T Vaughn in whose
stomach strychnine was reported to
have been found
The National City Bank of Cam-
bridge Mass has been taken in
charge by the comptroller of the cur-
rency upon the discovery of a shortage
of $144000
According to the decision of Prof
Taft of Michigan Agricultural college
the most perfect ear of corn has been
found near Kalamazoo
More cars are being operated in Phil-
adelphia and the street car company
asserts that the strike of the trolley-
"nen is broken
Fred S Jackson attorney general of
Kansas has Bled a motion for anew
trial of the insurance trust case in the
Shawnee county district court and un-
less the motion is granted will appeal
the case
Pittsburg Kan has voted to adopt
she commission form of gavernment
Reports regarding the condition ce
the Kansas wheat received by gram
dealers cause them to estimate that 80
per cent of an average crop will be
produced
The World Federation League will
ask congress to assist in organizing
"The United States of the World" by
which the promoters hope to bring
about the disarmanent of the nations
of the world
Over 2o000 operating threshermen
are expected to attend the meeting
of their association at Wichita Kan
A New Jersey grand jury has in-
dieted the National Packing company
and 21 directors personally on a
charge of criminal conspiracy in re-
straint of trade The directors in
dude many of the prominent packers
of Kansas City St Louis and Chi-
cago The effort of the miners and 'pea-
tors to reach an agreement at Kansas
City failed and the matter will go
before the national convention in
April
The Cruiser New York will be sent
to the Philippine as the flagship of the
Asiatic squadron
The district court of Shawnee
county Kansas has denied the state
a new trial of the insurance trust case
and an appeal will be taken to the
supreme court
A New York food scientist says we
live but 40 years When the normal
span of life should be 200 years
Two men lost their lives in the lire
which destroyed the Forney hotel at
Forney Texas
J C Simpson of Kansas City and an
ardent believer in the Laymen's Mis-
sionary movement says that the
spreading of the gospel means a turn-
ing back of the tide of immigration
that is threatening America
A Carbondale Pa man held a roYal
flush in an exciting poker game and
was so overwhelmed by his winnings
that be went home and died of heart
failure
President Taft in a speecb in New
York advocated a budget system of
government expenditures based on in-
come in order to prevent waste
The referee gave the decision to
Wolgast in the 40th round at San
Francisco and Battling Nelson is no
longer champion
Col Bonner who owns a farm near
Toledo Ohio took a car load of tur-
nips to Toledo and distributed them
free to the people as a warning be
said to the high priced grocers
The supreme court has decided a
land suit in Aavor of Mrs Belle Frost
an Indian woman by weich a valuable
piece of land adjoining Mill Creek
Ok passes to her possession
Believing that moving picture
shows have a soothing effect on the
insane Nebraska officials will buy
machines for use at the asylum
An examination of the stomach of
Prof 3 T Vaughn the Ktricsville Mo
teacher who died suddenly showed the
presence of 49-55 of a grain of strych-
nine Two hundred bankers from 19 coun-
ties of northwestern Oklahoma attend
ed a convention at Enid ''
The Democratic state committee has
elected W P Sapp of Galena as na-
tional committeeman from Kansas to
succeed John Atwood who resigned
Foreign Affairs
Russia now fears that China Is pre-
paring to drive the czar's subjects out
of Manchuria and expect war to result
Senators Millies-Lacorix and Senator
Lintilhac fought a duel with swords in
Paris
The insurgent forces in Nicaragua
have captured Granada
President Madriz has fled from the
capital of Nicaragua and the insurgent
troops are expected to take the city of
Managua soon
Chinese troops have entered Lhasa
the Capital of Tibet and the residence
of the head of Budhism who fled at
their approach
Personal
Jacob Geiser who went to Leaven-
worth Kan in 1854 the year the town
started is dead of paralysis He built
the first hotel there
Mrs Sarah Louise Van Tassel taught
the infant class in the Tomkinsville
Staten Island Sunday school 77 years
She has just died at the age of 91
years
Dr Hull arrested in connection
with the death of Prof Vaughn of
Kirksville Mo has given bond in the
sum of $7500
Senator Tillman who suffered a
stroke of paralysis has regained the
use of all his faculties and is 'gaining
strength
Gov Hadley of Missouri addressed
the meeting of the North Central Kan-
sas Teachers' association on "The
Reign of Theodore Roosevelt"
Byron E Church who for 20 years
has been president of the Bank of
Hol3rrood 'Holyrctod Kan was ar-
rested at Kansas City Irregularities
of nearly $100000 are said to have
been found in the books of the bank
Miss Catherine Hinsdale has re-
signed as teacher of a Sunday school
class at vy insted Conn after a con-
tinuous service of 63 years
Aviator Hamilton flew a mile at El
Paso Tex on a iialf mile track in 1:11
which is the same as his record in
California on a mile track
Dr J H Hull of Monroe City Mo
has been arrested in connection with
the death of Prof J T Vauhn of
Kirksville
Cot W F Cody has dismissed the
suit by which he tried to collect $60-
000 lost in attempt to make an actress
of Catherine Clemens before she Tar-
ried Gould
Senator sieo Hodges of Olathe
Kan has formally announced himself
a candidate for the Democratic nomi-
nation for governor of Kansas
Ex-Gov Ferguson of Oklahoma has
announced hims:If a conlicate for the
republican nomination its govtrnue
ONLY NECESSARY
TO TREAT STOMACH
SAYS COOPER
The new theory advanced by L 'I
Cooper relative to the human stomach
has attracted such widespread atten-
Uon that the public in cities visited by
the young man has been joined by
many physicians in a discussion of his
beliefs and medicines
Mr Cooper says human health is
dependent almost entirely upon the
stomach He says that no disease can
be conquered without first alleviating
all stomach disorders He further says
that most men and women of this gen-
eration are half-sick owing to degen-
crate stomachs And lastly he claims
that his New Discovery medicine will
rejuvenate the human stomach in 90
days
Cooper has been traveling from one
city to another conducting in each
what he calls a campaign of educa-
tion For the past year he has met
the public in the larger cities of the
country and his success bas been
phenomenal Thousands of people have
Socked to hie headquarters wherever
he has gone and the sale of his medi
cine has been beyond anything of the
kind ever before witnessed
Possibly the niost interesting tea
ture of the attention this young man
has attracted is what --his army of
followers whom he has converted to
his beliefs through his medicines have
to say on the subject The following
statements are from two well-known
residents of Chicago and Boston re-
spectively and the enthusiasm of
1 these is characteristic of Cooper's ad-
' mirers generally
Mrs H B Mack of 3201 State
street Chicago says: "I have been
suffering for 12 years from a combina-
tion of stomach trouble catarrh and
constipation I bad a gnawing pain
In the pit of my stomach a sort of a
dull pain that I could not quite under-
stand Then there was a dull head
ache and my mind seemed to be wan
dering continually I could not eat
and what little solid food I did eat I
could not retain on my stomach I
tried every remedy I could think of
and also tried out a number of patent
medicines but without any apparent
result It was through one of my
friends that I beard of Cooper's prep-
aration and I immediately decided to
try some of it It is two weeks since
I took my first dose of it and I feel
like a new woman The headache
seems to have disappeared and the
pain in my stomach along with it
The medicine is worth its 7eight in
gold and I want to thank Mr Cooper
for what he has done for me"
Mr Edwin F Morse of 20 Oakley
street Dorchester a suburb of Boston
says "For three years I had not a
well day My stomach was in fright-
ful shape the mere thought of food
would nal:seate me and I really had a
horror of anything to eat All solid
food would cause me extreme indiges-
tion bloating and gas on my stomach
and nothing tasted right Some time
ago I got some of this Cooper's medi-
cine about which there is so much
talk I actually feel as well and strong
as a boy ever since the first bottle
Every sign of stomach trouble has dis-
appeared and I have a hearty appe-
tite and eat three square meals every-
thing seems to taste good Anyone
who knows what chronic indigestion
Is can appreciate what this means to
me I consider this the most remark-
able medicine I ever heard of"
Cooper's New Discovery is sold by
all druggists If your druggist cannot
supply you we will forward you the
name of a druggist in your city Who
will Don't accept "something just as
good"—The Cooper Medicine Co Day-
ton Ohio
He Had No Objection
"We—we want you to marry us"
said the blushing young man indica-
ting: a young woman with downcast
eyes and styling face who stood a step
behind him '
"Come in" said the minister and he
endeavored to ease their embarrass-
ment for a moment but he soon de-
cided that it was useless to try
"Will you be married with a ring?"
he inquired
The young man turned a helpless
gaze on his companion and then
looked at the minister
"If you've got one to spare and it
can come out o' the two dollars I
guess she'd like it" he said at last—
National Food Magazine
Sunday School's Want Ad
There is a church in Brooklyn that
had adopted a novel scheme for en-
larging its Sunday school It adver-
tises for boys and girls to come to it
In the shop windows in the neighbor-
hood of the church one may see pla-
cards such as are used for 'adverti-
sing entertainments of various kinds
that bgar the legend:
"Wanted—Boys and girls to join our
Sunday school" Below this are set
forth the advantages that will come
to the young folk who attend the
classes
Talkative Woman
Hewitt—Some men talk and don't
say anything
' Jewett—Yes my wife is just that
kind ot a man
If It's Your Eye Use Pettit's Eye Salve
for inflammation stys itching lids eye
aches defects of visivo and sensitivity to
strong lights All druggists or Howard
Bros Buffalo N Y
Whatsoever you do not wish your
neighbor to dci to you do not untv
him This is the whole 'law: The res
Is a mere exnosition of it—Jewish
Many a itians rod r‘rutat!on I
lite to what 'sal found oat abo
Link
DISPENSARY IS On 1-101
House Passes Ross Repealing
Measure by a Vote
of 6 1 to 31
Guthrie Okla The house of repre-
sentatives of the special session of
the Oklahoma legislature have pas-
sed a substitute measure by Repre-
"tentative Ross of Lawton abolishing
the state liquor dispensary system
by a vote of 61 to 31 Twenty-seven
democrats and thirty-four republicans
voted for the bill and thirty demo-
crats and one republican Represen-
tatlee Bison of Okfusitee county
voted against it After the bill was
passed any possible reconsideration
was blocked by the motion to recon-
eider being tabled
The passage of this bill was hotly
contested from the 'time that Repre-
sentative Rosa offered his substitute'
two weeks ago and the lines were
drawn so closely that practically ev-
ery member of the house was pledg-
ed cue way or the other before the
bili ever came to roll call
Several bills were passed finally
Including Wortman's oil inspection
bill increasipt the fees for oil inspec
Wm on an estimate of 25 to 40 per
cent Governor Haskell eubmitted
his fifteenth message calling attention
to the fact that the state must soon
acquire the 1500 acres for the Mc-
Alester penitentiary and making plain
one or two minor matters previously
submitted The house blocked a pos-
sible fight In that body over the re-
location of the secondary agricultu-
ral schools which occasioned such
turmoil In the senate for two days
Senator Echols' bill to re-locate the
Fifth district secondary agricultural
school at Helena was killed In the
house committee the house adopted
the committee report and cinched the
report by tabling a motion to recon-
alder -
The passage of the Ross substitute
abolishing the state dispensary is con-
sidered here as one of the most im-
portant steps taken by the special sei-
sion and was' in the nature of a sur-
prise despite the proparation of the
anti-dispensary forces since the mat-
ter first came up The bill carries as
authors Representatives Jahn and
Burnette though both voted against
it on final passage today As original-
ly introduced the bill provided for
two amendments to the existing pro
laws one providing tor the
sale of confisticated liquors and the
other providing for the removal by
the governor of officers reglecting té
enforce the prohibition law
When the bill first came up two
weeks ago Representative Ross of-
fered a substitute which was to cut
out all after the enatcing clause and
insert a bill of one section abolish-
ing the state diepensary There was
a hot fight immediately but the house
adopted in committee of the whole the
Ross substitute by a vote of thirty-
seven to thirty-three nearly one-third
of the members being absent Since
that times the anti-dispensary forces
led by Ross Tillotson Dunn and
speaker Wilson and the forces fight-
ing in favor of the dispensary led by
Durant Ewell Cope Jahn Burnette
and others have been daily engeged
In preparation under cover and in the
open for final roll call on the bill
It was soon discovered that the anti-
dispensary forces had a majority of
the legislators in smypathy with them
at least but they did not put the bill
on final passage until today using
the meantime to further strengthen
their side
Three-Cent Fare to izeturn
Oklahoma City--The threecent
rassenger fare will be placed in op-
eration on 1111 line i of the Missouri
Kansas & Texas railroad in Oklaho-
ma within the next two weeks
At the same time a general in-
crease in all freight rates will be
come effective insofar as the commod-
ities upon which the corporation COM-
IttelOn has establisned rates during
the past two years The announce-
ment was made in a telegram to J J
IIartnett commercial agent for the
road in Oklahoma City Saturday after-
noon The commodities which will be af-
fected are cement lime asphalt
brick stone sand gravel petroleum
aud its products and grain and its
products hay lumber cotton cot-
tonieed and cotton and cotton-seed
products and coal
Local representatives of the Santa
ire have not received notice of an in-
tended increase by that company
The Frisco and tha Rock Island can
rot make increases with permission
from the state ccrporation commis
Eton
Bristow School Teacher Stabbed
Stpuipa Okla—J S Weimer a
school teacher of Bristow Is in t se-
rious condition as a resu'k of being
tabbed &even titres "Tocley"
Legg a farnmr Legg esenoed
'owing thi2 Mid has not been
Thirehertded
Legg ipactita a - -topty befrosta
Ter runishoti it-t ictber Ile went
to the Sfhncl south cf Briollí and
-a ling l'reime to the door asAniiii-
ri him with a 17niro
wilich It is bejavio are fatal
w9vwwv
CIVIL SERVICE FOR SCHOOLS
System May be Adopted In Indian
Schools Thinks Benedict
Muskogee Okla—John D Benedict
who for ten years was superintendent
of Indian schools for the government
In eastern Oklahoma and whose of-
fice has been abolished tog-ther with
that of all the supervisors of the Five
Civilized Tribes has returned from
Washington Benedict may be a can-
didate for the republican nomination
tor congress in the Third district
Benedict believes that the policy of
the Indian bureau will be to place the
Wien schools of the Five Tribes un-
der the civil service This means
that they ate to be placed in the same
Oars as Indian reservation schools
and that only restricted Minns will
participate in the benefits In other
words the government will revise
the school system and endeavor to
provide school facilities only for the
Indian children who are of more than
one-half Indian blood This will re-
quire the abolishment of some of the
largest Indian schools in eastern Ok-
lahoma and possibly the building of
new schools in other localities where
there are more full-bloods
The idea of the commiseioner of
Indian affairs Robert G Valentine
Is to let the state take care of all
Indian hchool children wh6 are of
less than half Indian blood because
from them and their parents the re-
strictions have been removed their
land and property is taxable and they
are paying their part towards the
support of state schools and must
take their chances with the whites
The Indians of more than half Indian
blood are restricted their land is not
salable or taxable and they do not
like to attend the state schools with
the whites and they do not contribute
to their support
If this system is adopted it is pos-
sible that the government will have
to pay all the expenses of such schools
as it maintains as the tribes would
not be likely to pay out of their own
funds as now money for the support
of schools to which only a limited por-
lion of their children are eligible
Tulsa Plans Big Fair
Tulsa Okla—Preparatory to hold-
ing the first annual Eastern Ok laho-
ma fair in this city net xfall the Tul-
sa County Fair association is arrange
ing for eixensive improvements Ex-
hibit buildings stock stables pavil-
ions booths and other structures are
to bP erected at a cost of 110000
The stock stablas will accommodate
several hundred head of cattle many
horses and 300 hogs The fair will be
open Aug 29 A feature of the exhi-
bition will be the display of products
'of the oil fields'
Bilis Approved-
Guihrie Maas—Governor Haskell
OW- signed the Yearger bill fixing
the qualifications of the state printer
and a memorial to congress asking
the federal government for 200000
acres of school land under an old con-
gressional act
Chaplain Candidate
Guthrie Okla--The Reverened H
H Tucker the blind chaplain in the
senate has announced himself candi-
date for state auditor The Rev Mr
Tucker is a Presbyterian divine well
known throughout the gtate and has
some warm supporters
Start School Work
Guthrie Okla—Work has been
started on the new $20000 building
for the Girls' Industrial school at
Chickazha The contract calls for its
completion In 225 working days and
It is expected to be ready for occu-
pancy about October 1
Other Roads Attack Two-Cent Fare
Guthrie Okla--Suits were filed by
the Frisco and Rock Island railroads
lAere Thursday to annul the Oklaho-
ma twO-cent - fare law insofar as it
applies to those roods
The suit also ask to relieve the
companies from the orders of the
state corporation commission as re-
gards freight rates on certain commodities-
The suits are ! along the
same lines and involve the same ques7
tions as those recently decided in fa-
vor of the Katy and Santa Fe rail-
road by Federal Judge Hook at St
Louis- I
Here as in the former eases the
railroads 'allege that both the freight
and passenger rates are confiscatory
and therefore unconstitutional
The action of these railroads was
anticipated but was not expected im-
mediately Althpugh no direct admissions are
made It is known that the freight
and passenger business of both the
Rock Island and Frisco has shown
a -material increase' as a result of the
announcement of the Katy that high-
er rateswould be placed in effect:
Shot In Leg Prisoner Sues County
Bartlesville Okla--William White
who is serving a sentence of one year
1 In the county jail for killing an In-
mate of the city jail while he was in-
I carcerated there has filed suit against
the sheriff and the county for $5000
dnmaeus because of having been
I wctultdcd by Jailor Jordan During a
sertifte in the county jail betw?en in
rurtPs Jordan oshot White in the leg
Altss :Kato Bunard commissioner
"r ettariEles remit-mended that be be
removed in Vinta tinganital
OIVES
HER
LIFE TO
Lydia E Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
Chicago Ill" I was troubled with
falling and inflammation and the doe
tiiiii :ii i'''T:icii tors said I could note
'
iii: !::i
r get well tmless I
i!' 14FINt- i had an operation
r
'W
eqrsiti
I knew I could not
vo J stand the strain of
one so I wrote to
era ep you sometime ep
ii w 1 about my he a lth
Iliiii! 0
' limo) H and you told me
111'1111T: ore' !ii h t to d Alter
i!!y 1 a o r
iiiiiN" i 'i!! taking Lydia E
P':' 1 :rstT Pinkham's--Vegeta-
i s ble Compound and
' ? f i t Blood Purifier I am
INSTRUCTION IN THE SCHOOLS
-
Children Being Taught the Nature and
Methods of Prevention of
' Tuberculosis
Definite instruction concerning the
nature and methods of prevention or
tuberculosis is being given to less
than six per cent of the public school
children of the United States accord-
ing to a bulletin of the National Asso-
ciation for the Study and Prevention
of Tuberculosis Recent investigation
has shown that in only nine cities
Washington Dallas Tex Richmond
Va Poughkeepsie N Y Detroit
Mich Malden Mass Salem Mass
Saginaw Mich and Knoxville Tenn
are special text books being used or
lectures being given about tuberculo-
els In three states and one territory
Michigan Massachusetts North Carol
line and Porto Rico laws have been
passed requiring that instruction
about the nature and methods of pre-
vention of tuberculosis be given in all
public schools In Tennessee the
state department of education has re-
quested that such instruction be given
and has issued circulars for this pur-
pose In New Jersey and West Vir-
ginia wall cards giving instruction'
are hung in every schoolroom and the
attention of all children is called to
them
Damage Done by Smoke
Herbert M Wilson of the United
States geological survey places the
annual damage and waste by smoke
in the United States at $500000000
In the large cities alone or about $6
to each man woman and child of the
population
Thermometers make more liars
than the big fish that get away
A GOOD CHANGE
A Change of Food Works Wonders
The wrong food and drink causes s
lot of trouble in this world To
change the food is the first duty of
every person that is ill particularly
from stomach and nervous troubles
As an illustration: ' A lady In Mo has
with her husband been brought around
to health again by leaving off coffee
and some articles of food that did
not agree with them They began us-
ing Postum and Grape-Nuts food She
says: -
"For a number of years I suffered
with stomach and bowel trouble
which kept getting worse unutil I as
very ill most of the time About four
years ago I left off coffee and began
taking Postum My stomach and
bowels improved right along but I was
so reduced in flesh and so nervous that
the least thing would overcome me
"Then I changed my food and be-
gan using Grape-Nuts in addition to
Postum I lived on these two prin-
cipally for about four months Day
by day I gained in flesh and strength
until now the nervous trouble has en-
tirely disappeared and I feel that I
owe my life and health to Postum and
Grape-Nuts
"Husband is 73 years old and he was
troubled for a long time with occa-
sional cramps and slept badly Finally
I prevailed upon him to leave off coffee
and take Postum He had stood out
for a long time but after be tried
Postum for a few days he found that
he could sleep 'and that his cramps
disappeared He was satisfied and has
never gone back to coffee
"I have a brother in California who
has been using Postum for several
years: his whole family use it also be-
cause they have had such good results
fx om it"
Look in pkgs for the little book "The
Itoid to Wellville" "There's a Reason"
Ever rend the above letter? A new
one a-openra front time to time They'
are genuine true and full of bunkum
Interest
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Wilson, C. L. Cherokee Weekly Messenger. (Cherokee, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 37, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 3, 1910, newspaper, March 3, 1910; Cherokee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1714942/m1/2/: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.