Wagoner County Record (Wagoner, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1913 Page: 2 of 8
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Wagoner Record
WAGONER OKLAHOMA
UKUH9MA NEWS NOTES
An Oklahoma oil well is desirable
though crude
A camp of Sons of Veterans has
been organiezd at Perry
That thirty-two-page edition of the
Checotah Times also among the nifty
holiday productions
Pottawatomie county's poultry show
was held at Shawnee with many en-
tries Five jurors who failed to respond
to roll call for the October term of
court at McAlester were fined $5 each
The Interdenominational Sunday
School association of Kay county held
is semi-annual convention at Ponca
City
The petition of Phony Johnson a
convict In the state penitentiary for
a release on a writ of habeas corpus
w-as heard by Judge Liedtke of the
superior court at McAlester and the
writ denied
The Consolidated Oil and Gas com-
pany which has eight strings of tools
working in the Wayside and Bolton
fields brought in a 3500000 gasser
on the Geiger farm near Bolton and
a seventy-barrel oiler on the Neer
farm at Wayside
H C Selvldge of Hanna had a
preliminary hearing before a United
States commissioner at McAlester on
a charge of introducing liquor and
was bound over In the Bum of $500 to
await the action of the federal grand
jury
M A Clark for twenty-five years
a missionary to Oklahoma Indians
now a superannuated minister of the
M E church south left Lawton with
hia family to reurn to his old home
in Georgia They will make their
home there among relatives
B P Wylie living twelve miles
northwest of Lawton is suffering from
a pronounced case of meningitis but
is recovering Another case is re-
ported from Cotton county Precau-
tions have been taken and there is
little fear of the disease spreading
The unallotted land sale opened in
Haskell county and Commissioner J
George Wright sold 203 of the 374
tracts up for sale He disposed of
12720 acres out of a total of 2500Q
'acres for sale The initial payment
one-fourtb of the purchase price
amounted to $10102
I
The general store of George Bald-
ridge located at Maple an inland vil-
lage in Sequoyah county was de-
stroyed by fire together with the en-
tire contents The poBtofflce which
is located in the store also was de-
stroyed Only a part of the books
were saved The Iobs Is estimated at
$3000 partly covered by insurance
Charles McCain the Rock Island
detective who fired a shot to frighten
Fannie Gibson an El Reno negro girl
aged 13 while the latter was picking
up coal In the yards here the bullet
deflecting off a rail and hitting the
child in the head and causing death
was exonerated by a coroner’s jury
it being shown that he was blameless
Joe Mitchell aged 55 a coal miner
" left his boarding house at Dow with
his month’s pay and a new shovel he
had Just bought He was found near
Dow dead seven feet from the rail-
road track A blow had fractured the
skull at the base of the brain causing
death His hat money and the shovel
have not been found and the officers
are working on the theory that he
was murdered and robbed
“Not guilty” was the Jury’s verdict
In the case of Sam Norton prominent
citizen of Seminole county who was
charged with numerous forgeries of
deeds to Seminole allotments
They’re having near-war in Blaine
township Garfield county in a con-
solidated school controversy that has
run the gamut of the courts Consol-
idated District No 2 has been dis-
solved but that fact makes the school
board of the defunct district more re-
solved The Garber Sentinel suggests
that “when the time comes that they
muBt turn over their records and ac-
count for the money spent” there
likely will be a bit of gun play Word
was sent out from Enid the other day
for the opponents of the consolidated
school to go to the school building
and remove the seats belonging to
various district schools When this
was attempted the consolidated build-
ing was found garrisoned by “con-
solidatlonlsts” but they berame as
ineck as lambs when the deputy sher-
iff read a court order The “cons”
then filed out about sixteen of them
all armed with double-barreled shot-
guns of repeaters
The Nowata Star Brick company
brick manufacturers of this city filed
suit in the district court against the
Southwestern Surety Insurance com-
pany of Durant for $17163 which
amount plaintiff claims is dud because
the defendant company guaranteed ac-
counts made by a construction com-
pany now bankrupt All the rest of
the creditors tiled their claims In the
superior court at Muskogee but the
brick oompany is relying on the Dur-
ant company for payment The
amount is due for brick furnished for
the paving In the city
FOREIGN
Piesident Taft in a speech at Jack-
sonville Florida said that if he found
conditions favorable at Panama he
would take steps to establish civil
government In the Canal Zone
Joan Jaures the socialist editor of
Paris received a challenge to personal
combat from Senator Henri Berenger
The reason given for the challenge is
an article reflecting upon the senator
which appeared in Jaures’ newspaper
Humanite
The Swiss government in view of
the possibilities of war is augmenting
the amount of ready cash at its com-
mand A consignment of $5000000 in
gold and silver arrived In Berne by
special train from Paris and was
lodged in the Swiss National Bank
The differences between the peace
envoys of Turkey and the Balkan
allies now In session in London are
so great that It seems likely an out-
side power would be asked to mediate
As practically all the European powers
are in the struggle the United States
may be invited to act
Mexican railway employes who ar-
rived on handcars and afoot from
Mexican points report the almost to-
tal destruction of the Mexican North-
western railroad below Juarez With
forty-five railway stations already
burned the rebels continued their de-
struction of the American-owned line
within twenty miles of Juarez where
600 federal troops are stationed
Instructions forwarded by the Otto-
man government to Recha Pasha the
leader of the Turkish peace delegation
in London authorize him to treat with
the Greek delegates without their pre-
vious signature of the armistice proto-
col In official circles at Constanti-
nople It is explained that the change
of the Turkish attitude toward Greece
is the result of the fact that the situ-
ation in regard to Greece has now
turned so much to the advantage of
Turkey that the Turkish government
would demand exceptional conditions
before signing an armistice with
Greece
DOMESTIC
John S Huyler 19 years old young-
est son of the late John S Huyler
millionaire candy manufacturer fell
under a train at at Morristown N J
death from his injuries following
The news that President Taft has
made up his mind to accept the Kent
professorship of law at Yale was re-
ceived with keen pleasure In Yale
circles at New Haven
Judges of the United States circuit
court of appeals at St Louis gave the
attorneys for the International Har-
vester company sixty days In which
to prepare for the hearing of the har-
vester company’s witnesses in the
government suit to dissolve the cor-
poration as a trust
William J MacDonald of Calumet
Mich defeated for congress on the
progressive ticket in the Twelfth ds-
trict having been counted out by the
state canvassing board because of an
error In the printing of his name was
denied a writ of mandamus by the
supreme court MacDonald wished to
compel the board' to reconvene and
show cause why the 458 votes cast In
Ontonagon county for "Sheldon Wil-
liam J MacDonald” should not be
counted for him
One million one hundred thousand
eggs were sold In one day under the
auspices of the Chicago Clean Food
league in the campaign to break the
egg market The managers claim the
victory and point to the fact that the
dealers throughout the city have of-
fered for sale guaranteed eggs at the
league’s price of 24 cents a dozen or
less A few egg selling stations will
be maintained permanently in differ-
ent parts of the city it was an-
nounced as “monitors’’ to see that
the price of eggs is kept down
Information that Mrs Belle Gun-
ness on whose “murder farm” noar
La Porte Ind in 1908 thirteen bodies
were found is believed to be In Leth-
bridge Alberta was received at La
Porte by Chief of Police Meinke In a
telegram Bent by Frederick Wise A
woman answering the description of
Mrs Gunness has been under surveil-
lance several days
In a fight in the hills at Tamala
Springs Cal between a young desper-
ado name unknown about 30 years
old and more than 100 county officers
guardsmen and citizens the outlaw
who had attacked a young girl was
killed
When Arthur Lewis alias Louis
Forbes who with two companions Is
being held at a Chicago police station
as alleged automobile bandits was
searched a card was found in his
pocket showing that he is a member
of the Tuesday Evening club of Trin-
ity Episcopal church
Eva Walls llalley or Shreveport La
convicted of attempting to poison her
husband C C Bailey a wpek before
he was murdered by A L Watson
now awaiting execution was sen-
tenced to five years in states prison
The Chicago bank a private insti-
tution which offered to pay 1(10 per
cent en all deposits whether one cent
or fifteen thousand dollars in closed
Eight dead and seven injured was
the toil of the wreck at Ashtabula
I Ohio when u Lake Shore and Michigan
Southern coal train struck a btreet car
J II Logue fi5 years old proprietor
of J H Logue & Co diamond dealers
was found murdered in his oUces in
McVieker’s theater building at Chica-
go Robbery is believed to have been
the motive
In the presence of Governor Deneen
of Illinois his staff and a large party
of Illinois veterans and representa-
tives of the government the monu-
ment to the memory of Illinois sol-
diers buried at Andersonville Ga
was unveiled
News of the supreme court's de-
cision in the anthracite case Bent up
prices of stocks with a rush on Wall
Street Excited bidding for Reading
came after the first word from Wash-
ington and for a few minutes there
was a wild scramble of brokers about
the Reading post on the exchange
Nne suspects four women and five
men are held In connection with the
murder of J H Logue a diamond
merchant in his office in the McVick-
er Theater building The police
profess to believe at least two of the
men have been connected with a
series of daring automobile holdups
and other robberies recently
County Physician William J Pitt-
man aged 72 was found dead below
an Iron Mountain railroad trestle in
the outskirts of Ft Smith Ark He
had either fallen or was knocked to
the ground a distance of twenty feet
His buggy was found wrecked and the
harness stripped from the horse some
distance away while his lap robe and
medical case lay upon the top of the
trestle
Gold mine stock which is alleged
to have realized $360000 on sales
although the promoter had spent
scarcely $400 upon the mine itself in
the previous year was told of by
George W Stork a federal account-
ant who testified In the trial of A L
Wiener and John W Meyers at New
York The defendants are charged
with fraudulent use of the mails in
promoting the mining property of A
L Wisner and company
H M Bradley who says he was at
one time a resident of Kansas City
Is in the Houston Jail charged with
the murder and robbery of his part-
ner J H Wright They were in the
automobile business Wright disap-
peared and Bradley asked the police
to look for him saying that he could
not account for his absence The
police complied with his request with
the result that they arrested Bradley
He confessed to killing Wright but
claimed it was unintentional
The eve of Christmas week brought
good cheer to the several hundred
men who through the year take care
of the lawns paths and shrubbery of
Central Park Mrs Russell Sage drove
up In her automobile to the arsenal
in the park and delivered to Park
Commissioner Stover a box tied with
ribbons In the box were 327 envel-
opes each containing a $5 gold piece
one for every park employee whose
pay does not exceed $2 a day Mrs
Sage has made similar gifts to the
men at Christmas time for several
years
WASHINGTON
Governor Wilson announces that
the names of his cabinet members
will not be made public till March 1
Senator Bristow of Kansas intro-
duced a bill providing for 'a prefer-
ence primary for the appointment of
postmasters which would affect the
appointment of every postmaster in
the United States who received $300
or more a year
The right of 7000 Cherokee freed-
men to participate in the distribution
of the lands and funds belonging to
the Cherokee Indian nation was sus-
tained by Judge Anderson of the Dis-
trict of Columbia supreme court The
court sustained the government’s de-
murrer to a suit of the Keetoowah
society to restrain the secretary of
the Interior from permitting the f reed-
men participating In the property
The case was dismissed
William R Hears t who published
the now famous “Archbold letters”
gave to the senate campaign funds
committee photographic copies of all
letters In his possession Indicating a
connection between John D Archbold
of the Standard Oil company and legis-
lative and campaign activities
Representative Dyer of Missouri In-
troduced a resolution to create a com-
mittee of fifteen representatives to
represent the house at the unveiling
and dedication of the Thomas Jeffer-
son $450000 memorial at St Louis
to commemorate the acquisition of
the Louisiana territory The dedica-
tion ceremonies will be April 30 next
The Democratic Senate caucus
reached a decision to ptnn't onlycon-
flrmation of army and navy nomina-
tion before holiday recess
The determination of the adminis-
tration to adopt a stiffer policy toward
Mexico as disclosed in the anr-mnee-ment
of the purpose to make fresh
representations to that government
regarding the continual ion of th re-
bellion is directly attributable to the
recent return to Washington of sev-
eral persons thoroughly conversant
with alleged evil conditions existing
south of the border
OKLAHOMA
CAPITAL NEWS
INQUIRY INTO VARIOUS PUR-
CHASES FOR THE STATE
PENITENTIARY
COMPETTIVE BIDDING OPPOSED
Senate Committee Is Making Investi-
gation of Prices for Its Supplies
—Particularly Khaki Cloth
and Coffee
That the state benefits by reason
of the fact that state warrants are
now equivalent to cash and discounts
can be secured on purchase of goods
where a year ago many concerns
would not sell supplies to the stute
because these firms would have to
wait indefinitely for their money and
that the penitentiary at McAlester is
being maintained at a less per capita
cost than any other prison in the Uni-
ted States were statements for the
benefit of the Benate committee in
the investigation of methods of the
board of affairB
Warden R W Dick of the state
penitentiary was questioned regard-
ing the purchase of khaki cloth Mem-
bers of the board of affairs stated
that in making the order for the
goods they had acted on the recom-
mendation of Warden Dick and his
storekeeper as to price and the qual-
ity of the goods Mr Dick told the
committee that he personally knew
nothing as to whether the price was
right relative to the kind of goods
ordered that he too depended on
Ids storekeeper that the pr' e fur-
nished the board of affairs was sim-
ply done in an advisory way and they
could have changed it had they de-
sired to do so
He also said in answer to a ques-
tion that the hoard could ignore tile
recommendations regarding supplies
and purchase what it wished but that
he might refuse to approve the claim
for the same when the goods came to
him Members of the board said that
in some Instances they were guided
greatly by recommendations from
beads of institutions and in some in-
stances felt they were justified in
acting on the suggestions else when
it came to approving claims the heads
of institutions would not do it
Warden Dick stated that when the
goods were received his storekeeper
called his attention to the quality
and said they were off weight The
matter was reported to the board of
affairs immediately and the claim
held up Mr Dick said that he noti-
fied the company sending the goods
and it volunteered to make a reduc-
tion in price He approved the claim
but asked the board of affairs to look
more closely into the matter The
latter did and a further reduction
was secured
That the whole system of competi-
tive bidding on supplies for the state
institutions is wrong and not condu-
cive to the best interests of the state
was the statement of Warden Dick
He cited a number of instances to
hear out his contention and said that
if the board of affairs could go into
the open market and buy supplies like
the wholesale houses there would be
a great saving and the best goods
could always be secured
Investigating Khaki Purchase
Chairman Thomas of the committee
aBked Secretary Howard of the board
of affairs If any correspondence had
been had with army headquarters as
to the price paid by the United States
for the army khaki Howard stated
that he had not He did say how-
ever that he had understood that T
C Beeler once an employee of the
board had on bis own personal re-
sponsibility sent a telegram to Con
SINGLE CHRISTMAS PRRDON GRANTED
Out of approximately 300 requests
that have been made to Governor
Cruce for Christmas pardons by In-
mates of the penitentiary only one has
Veen granted O K Harbour of
Reid Jackson county a 17-year-old
boy Vho was Berving a sentence at
McAlester for burglary was the lucky
one
The town of Alen is excited be-
cause a number of oil men have been
viewing the country” thereabouts
Fraug B Long Indian agent at
Tulsa resigned to engage in the oJJ
business Is succeeded by George M
McDonald of Muskogee
A good story is told on a Sapulpan
He bad been called to TallahaBBe a
negro town Not knowing its charac-
ter he took a night train and was
landed In a negro hotel The next
morning he went Into the dining room
and took a seat A waiter approached
him and asked him to take a seat
at a single table saying that the table
Canton Files Report
Adjutant General Frank M Canton
has filed a written report with Gov-
ernor Cruce regarding his virlt to
Dslaware county whore he investi-
gated the necessity of state troops to
prevent bloodshed In the county seat
fight between "old” Jay and "new"
Jay The report gives the details of
his trip but makes no recommenda-
tions and contains essentially the
same features as were given out to
tne newspapers upon his return
gressman McGuire to secure lifonn
tlon regarding the price the war d(
partment paid for it but that he dh
not know what the result was a:
Beeler was doing it in a personal wa
and not for nor through the board oi
affairs
Investigate of Code Completed
Additional testimony in the Bunn-
Harris controversy concerning the
annotating of the Oklahoma code was
offered before the senate Investigrt-
ing committee completing this phase
of the investigation The committee
adjourned 'Tuesday for the Christmas
holidays and will not convene again
until almost time fur the legislature
to open its session when the inves-
tigations of John B Doolin and Ben
W Riley will be held
During the day Judgo Sam Harris
and C O Bunn were the principal
witnesses The testimony was con-
fined to matters concerning the com-
piling annotating and indexing of the
Oklahoma code in order that the
work might be completed without un-
necessary delay Judge Harris was
asked to prepare a written statement
with diagrams to illustrate the man-
ner in which he asserts Bunn is fail-
ing to comply with the contract The
judge agreed to do so Bunn also
is to prepare a statement showing
what steps he has taken to comply
with the terms of the contract
Bunn made a statement in which he
told how he secured the contract at
$7500 and the way in which lie Ha
been carrying it out He stated that
he agreed to pay Harris $2000 for
certain historical notes and that $1-
450 of the amount has been paid
there being a court action now pend-
ing to compel payment of the balance
Freedmen Share in Distribution
The right of 7000 Cherokee Freed-
men to participate in the distribution
of the lands and funds belonging to
the Cherokee Indian nation was sus-
tained at Washington by Judge An-
derson of the District of Columbia
supreme court The court sustained
the government’s demurrer to a suit
of the Ketowah or Knight Hawk so-
ciety to restrain the secretary of the
interior from permitting the freed-
men participation In the property
The case was dismissed
The freedmen claim that their
shares in the property run anywhere
from $5000000 to $50000000 Tho
Ketowah society is composed of full-
blood Cherokee Indians in Oklahoma
The freedmen are the descendants
of slaves of the Cherokees and are oi
mixed Indian and negro blood
The court in dismissing the suit
said the freedmen were clearly en-
titled to equal rights with the native
pherokees The freedmen have the
right of appeal
New Directory of Manufacturers'
Secretary Paul B Smith of the
State Manufacturers’ association has
practically completed a revised direc-
tory of Oklahoma manufacturers and
coal operators which- he will distrib-
ute to all members of the association
in the January issue of the “Bulletin”
a publication devoted to the activities
of the home manufacturers Secre-
tary Smith says the directory pub-
lished in the issues of the "Bulletin”
in the early months of the present
year has proved a valuable help to
all members of the association and
owing to the many changes which
took place during the 'year the secre-
tary has obtained fresh data with
which to revise the list The direc-
tories have benefited members great-
ly In the past as a source of reference
in making up their mailing lists
Cattlemen Asking for 8pecial Law
A meeting of the Oklahoma cattle-
men is to be held at the Hotel TuUa
for the purpose of securing legislative
action The Oklahoma League of Cat-
tlemen is trying to get through a state
law to permit the closing of section
lines in grazing districts and the erec-
tion of gates thereon
he was at was for colored people He
moved And he tells that the people
of that town enforce the Jim Crow law
to the letter
A A Harder has launched the Pro-
gressive Star at Red Oak in Latimer
county It Is a neat eight-page pub-
licatlpn The Choctaws and Chickasaws have
$135281438 to their credit held in
trust by the federal government This
money Is laying idle In the banks of
St Louis
Judge Wade Stanfield of Sapulpa
has the oil fever and wants to quit
his judgeship
Sheriff J F Lamison of Medford
says the state orphanage at Pryor is
one of the most useful eleemosynary
institutions In the state -
The- oil mill at Wapanucka Is a
great benefit to that town paying out
$13000 a year in wages and swelling
the tax roll by $100 per month
J W Whitehead and !f F McMIllln
of Soper and Lon Stokes of Forney
have organized a company and will
supply the town of Soper with electric
ffghts
Watt Asking Change
Ben Watt who was executive clerk
to Governor Cruce when the adminis-
tration began but later mas mads
deputy game warden located In the
eastern part of the state believes that
some changes should be made In the
game laws and will probably make
these -suggestions himself Watt
thinks the term “deputy” warden
should be changed to "district” ward-
en He believes there should be two
fish hatcheries In the state one on ths
cast side and one on the west side
CANADA WEEK
9
CANADIAN EXHIBITS AT LIVE
STOCK AND LAND SHOWS CEN-
TER OF ATTRACTION
The hats were doffed to Canada
during the two weeks of the Land
Show and the week of tho Live Stock
Show at Chicago Willing to display
Its goods anxious to let the people of
the central states know what could
be produced on Canadian farm lands
and the quality of the article Hon
Dr Roche minister of the interior
of Canada directed that sufficient
space be secured at the United
States Land Show recently held to
give some adequate idea of the field
resources of western Canada Those
In charge had splendid location and
Installed one of the most attractive
grain and grass exhibits ever seen
anywhere Thousands anxious to get
’’back to the land” saw the exhibit
saw wheat that weighed 68 pounds to
the' measured bushel oats that went
48 and barley that tipped the scales
at 65 pounds The clover the alfalfa
the wild pea vine and vetch the rye
grass the red-top and many other suc-
culent and nutritious varieties of wild
grasses demanded and deserved from
their prominence and quality the at-
tention they received The grain in
the straw bright in color and carry-
ing beads that gave evidence of the
truth of the statements of Mr W J
White of Ottawa and his attendants
that the wheat would average 28 to
35 bushels and over per acre the oats
51A to 105 bushels the flax 12 to 28
bushels were strongly In evidence
and arranged with artistic taste on
the walls The vegetable exhibit was
a surprise to the visitors Potatoes
turnips — cabbage In fact all of it
proved that not only In grains was
western Canada prominent but In
vegetables it could succesfully com-
pete with the world
One of the unique and successful
features of the exhibit was the suc-
cessful and systematic daily distribu-
tion of bread - made from Canadian
flour It was a treat to those who got
it Canadian butter Canadian cheese
and Canadian honey helped to com-
plete an exhibit that revealed in a
splendid way the great resources of
a country In which so many Amer-
icans have made their home
' A feature of the exhibit was the
placards announcing the several re-
cent successes of Canadian farm
produce and live stock in strong com-
petition with exhibits from other
countries There was posted the
Leager Wheeler championship prize
for Marquis wheat grown at Rosthern
in 1911 beating the world Then I
Holmes of Cardston entered the com-
petitive field at Lethbridge Dry Farm-
ing Congress and won the wheat
championship of 1912 beating Mr
Wheeler with the same variety of
wheat Hill A Sons of Lloydminster
Saskatchewan in 1911 won the Colo-
rado silver trophy for best oats grown
competed for in a big competition at
Columbus Ohio In 1911 The produce
of British Columbia at the New York
Lnd Show In 1911 carried off the
world’s championship for potatoes
and incidentally won a $1000 silver
trophy and then but a few years ago
the same province carried off the
world’s prize for apples at the Horti-
cultural Show in London England
But that was not ail These Cana-
dians who had the temerity to state
that corn was not the only feed tor
finishing high-grade beef cattle en-
tered for the fat steer championship
at the Live Stock Show in Chicago a
polled Angus — “Glencarnock Victor”
Nearly 300 entries were in the field
"Glencarnock Victor” didn’t know a
kernel of corn from a Brazilian wal-
nut There were Iowa Illinois Ne-
braska Kansas Minnesota Wiscon-
sin and their corn-fed article deter-
mined to win bound to beat this black
animal from the north and his "noth-
ing but prairie grass oats and barley
feed” as his owner proudly stated but
they didn't Canada and McGregor A
Sons with their "Glencarnock Vlctoa”
won and today the swelldom of Amer-
ica is eating of steaks and roasts
— the champion steer of the world
But once more the herd of cattls
that won the Sweepstakes at the
same show was bred and owned by
the owners of "Glencarnock Victor"
fed only on prairie grass oats and
barley near Brandon Manitoba Ths
royal reception given to Mr Mo- ‘
Gregor on his return to his horns
town was well deserved
Omission must not be made of ths
wonderful and beautiful display ot
apples made by British Columbia oc-
cupying a full half section of the
great Land Show This was in per-
sonal eharge ot Mr W E Scott dep-
uty minister of agriculture for that
province who was not only a host to
those who visited the exhibit but
was also an encyclopedia of informa
tlon regarding the resources of that
country With 200000 Americans go-
ing to western Canada this year It is
plensing to know that so many from
this side of the line can participate in
the honors coming to that new coun-
try — Advertisement
Fears Woman With Horns
Declaring that he was being pur-
sued by a woman with horns and that
his life was in danger Dr Joseph
John Gnrstdo aged 60 years of
Philadelphia was committed to the
Montgomery county Jail IIo was ar-
rested by a special officer while talk-
ing and acting strangely in front of
the Philadelphia A Western Railway
station
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Foster, George H. Wagoner County Record (Wagoner, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 2, 1913, newspaper, January 2, 1913; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1720832/m1/2/: accessed July 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.