Marietta Monitor. (Marietta, Indian Terr.), Vol. 11, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, December 15, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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STATEHOOD BOOMERS ARRIVED
I atf 000000 IMI400400 601000000 tj 73000000 uSjooaooo
Comparative Value ef Farm Products In 1B0S
Delegation from Torrlterleo Are Hard
at Work In Washington
WASHINGTON: The delegation of
territorial statehood boomera bare Ap-
pointed a committee of tea to outline
a program of action Messrs Rogers
and Barrett of the two territories
were chosen to preside over the work
of the committee Much time was
spent In visiting congressmen and
I spreading propaganda for statehood
The executive committee of twenty
will present the memorial of the Joint
statehood convention to the presldont
and to congress Senator Beveridge
Is expected to present It to the senate
and Delegate McGuire wilt probably
do so In the house The delegation
will call on the president In a body and
also on the vice president and tba
speaker and expects to stay In Wash-
ington n week or tea days
The westerners have already at-
tracted a good deal of attention and
are making their presence known la
every conceivable manner They
were met by a brass hand behind
which they marched from the station
to the hotel and they are giving In-
terviews to the local and eastern pa
pern right and left
REPORT IN PART
GOVERNOR FERGUSON INFORMS
INTERIOR DEPARTMENT AS TO
OKLAHOMA'S GROWTH
STATISTICS THAT ARE INTERESTING
Secretary Wilson's comments upon
the wonderful prosperity of the farm-
ers of the country have attracted gen-
eral attention to the fact that never
before have crops been harvested at
such a general high level of produc-
tion and price
Com Mr Wilson says has reached
11s highest production 2708000000
buahela and Its highest value which
may be fl216000 No other crop Is
worth half as much
The nearest crop In value to corn
la that of hay the figures being $605-
000000 For the preceding two years
cotton held second place but It drops
to third rsnk this year when Its
value Including seed la expected to
be nearly or quite 1575000000
Wheat according to the report Is
the second In size of that grain the
country has ever produced 684000000
bushels while lta value 8525000000
Is fl 1000000 more thaft ever before
reached
Mr Wilson places oats fifth In order
of value of the year's crops the yield
being 939000000 bushels worth $282-
900000 Then In order come potatoes
8138000000 barley 838000000 to-
THE FIRST MOUNTAIN RAILROAD
American Transcontinental Linas
Were Not tha Pioneers
Uncle Sam perhaps thinks that the
construction of mountain railroads In
their greatest and most comprehen-
sive sense was practically pioneered
by tha construction of his own great
transcontinental lines the Union Pa-
cific leading the way But one Amer-
ican engineer notes that he rode over
the railroad from Vienna to Venice
two-thirds of the distance between
New Tork and Chicago passing over
several ranges of the Alps and par-
ticularly the Semmerlng pass over
a mountain railroad constructed be-
tween the years 1848 and 1864 or
within fifteen or twenty years of the
Introduction of the railway Into civil-
ization and twenty years before
America's first transcontinental rail-
way Thirty-five miles over that pass
the Semmerlng southwest of Vienna
was constructed during those years
having In lta length fifteen tunnels
and sixteen viaducts with a maximum
grade of 2H per rent The cost of
the thirty-five miles was 8300000 per
mile It was built as was the en-
tire line from Vienna to Venice 600
or more miles owned ow-ned and op-
erated by the Austrian government
since at that time Venice and that
portion of Italy was under the do-
minion of the Austrian and Italian
governments Jointly
SEES IRON A PRECIOUS METAL
Exhaustion of Present Ore Fields Pre-
dicted by Scientist
Iron as a precious metal Is a pos-
sibility Indicated by Prof Tornebaum
of the Swedish geological survey He
predicts that the ore fields of the
present large producing countries —
namely: North America Great Brit-
ain and Germany — will be exhausted
within one or two centuries and the
high grade ores much earlier The
future center of the Iron Industry will
as now be located where natural fuel
abounds since the ore travel to the
coal and not vice versa A a con-
sequence Great Britain where the coal
supply It Is estimated will be ex-
hausted In 250 years will thereupon
cease to be an Iron producing country
while in the United 8tates and Ger-
many with their much larger coal
areas the Iron Industry will continue
although being dependent upon Im-
ported orea For the same reason
north China where coal and Iron are
found assoc'ated la regarded as a
promising Iron center Prof BJogren
of the same survey declares that a
great Iron Industry depends on other
factors as Important as the fuel ques-
tion Of these factors are the ex-
tent richness and purity of the ores
freight charges for orea coal and Iron
products traffic regulations etc
Rich Man’s Odd Fancy
Most extraordinary was the little
luxury of a Mr Skidmore who ac-
cumulated a goodly pile in the pro-
vision trade He engaged two valets
one to tickle the crown of hla head
and the other the aoles of his feet
He said he liked the sensation Im-
mensely and when remonstrated with
by hla doctor declared It to be "ever
so much better than massage" The
case was recorded In the medical
Journals or tha time aa an esample of
a strange development of n well reo-
ognlxed physical liking
bacco estimated at 852000000 sugar
cane and sugar beets worth $50000-
000 and rice which is expected to ex-
ceed In value laat year's crop which
was worth 813892100
Of tita total production Secretary
Wilson remarks that "the wealth
production on farms In 1905 reached
the highest amount ever attained by
the farmer of this or any other coun-
try n stupendous aggregate of results
of brain and muscle and machine
amounting in value to 288151110-000"
which la 2258000000 greater than the
figures for 1904
Besides this enormous' value of
crops tha secretary states that the
value of farm lands has Increased
86133000000 alnce the census of
1900 which means that "every sunset
during the last five years has register-
ed an Increase of 83400000 In the
value of the farms of this country"
Secretary Wilson gravely asserts
that “the results accomplished by the
Weather Bureau for the benefit of
the farmer -the mariner the shipper
the manufacturer and tha seeker after
health or pleasure prove that there la
no weather service anywhere In the
world comparable with It"
RIVAL FOR YANKEE FARMERS
TEN KILLED IN WRECK
Engineer Failed to Fellow Orders and
Caused Head-End Collision
OMAHA NEB: Ten persons wers
tilled and eleven train employes and
eight passengers were Injured In s
wreck of Overland Limited passenger
train five miles west of Rock Springs
Wyo The limited was run Into head-
on by a freight train and both engines
were demolished and the dynamo car
mall car and dining car on the limit-
ed were burned up Several of the
bodies of the dead were Incinerated
Both engines were demolished and
the three first cars of the limited Immediately-caught
fire and were en
mediately caught fire and were en-
tirely destroyed
Engineer Brink of the freight train
who It is slated officially was respon-
sible for over-running hla orders was
one of the killed Several train bad
beed badly delayed at Granger with
the result that the four passenger
trains were running close to each
other The freight had received posi-
tive orders to meet all four of these
trains at Ahsay and the officials say
that the orders were either mlsunder
tood or mia-read
Enlightened Russian Peasant New
Factor In World
Illustrations of the world’s economic
solidarity are the recent Russian ln
finances on the security markets
everywhere Russian enlightenment
and- freedom promise to make mark-
ed Impression on future American
farming Henry D Baker says that
agriculture now gives employment to
87 14 per cent of Russia’s population
but Russian agriculture la now In n
terrible condition The Russian peas-
ant enlightened will prove n powerful
rival to the Yankee farmer The
average return per hectare of land
In Russia la said to be 282 klloe
while the German return la 1300 kilos
Russia has to use 25 per cent of her
harvest as seed for future sowing
which is about double what other na-
tions use Curiously even in the
direst times like during the recent
war and late chaotic conditions Rus-
sia still makes heavy exports of
wheat This doubtless la because
wheat la one of the chief quick assets
of the country The Russian peasant-
ry have wheat to export to England
when they scarcely can afford to buy
rye bread tor their own hamlets Their
exports of wheat will help pay the I
interest on their nation's enormous
foreign obligations but Individually
they yield trilling cash returns
TERRITORIAL SOIL 8URVEY
PICTURES SENT BY TELEGRAPH
'Photograins' tha Invention of Prof
Korn ef Munich
Pbotograms are photographs tele-1
graphically transmitted Prof Korn
of Munich uaee as dispatcher a
lenlum tube revolving on a small
shaft and aurrounded by a glass cy-
linder on which la wrapped the trans-
parency negative or positive which I
la to be telegraphed Light from an I
electric arc lamp Is thrown through I
the transparency and falls upon tba
selenium tube In a small patch or
spot Every part of the tube and
every part of the photograph passes
In turn under the spot of UghL The
receiver la a cylinder carrying a sen-
sitive film revolving and also trav-
eling along the line of lta axis at the
same speed aa the transmitting cy-
linder Near it Is a vacuum tube Jlght I
shielded by Inactive material except
for a tiny window whence a ray of
tight falls upon the revolving sensitive
film The strength of this light con-
stantly varies as it Is controlled by
the electrla current which In turn
Is controlled by the light playing
through the tranamltter'a transparency
upon the selenium coll Every part
of the receiving sensitive cylinder Is I
exposed In turn nnd only requires de- I
velopmcnt to give a negative or positive
Work to Be Carried On by Govern-
ment During the Winter
GUTHRIE: Some time during the
present winter experts from the bureau
of sella of the United States depart-
ment of agriculture In co-operation
with the Oklahoma agricultural experi-
ment station will make soil surveys
In both Oklahoma and Indian Terri
tory Oklahoma county has been se-
lected aa the location for tba Oklaho-
ma survey very largely on account of
the great variety of noils which It ex
htblts It Is mid to have speclmers
of almost every kind of soli to be
found in the territory
The expectation Is now that the sur-
rey will begin about the first of the
year and will require probably three
months for Its completion The work
will be in charge of M E McLendon
who Is now working In Virginia assist-
ed by C B Jones who comes from
Michigan At the conclusion or their
work here the experts will probair'y
return to some of the more northern
states The summer is put In In the
north and the winter months In the
states farther south where the work
can be carried on without so much
Interruption
At about the same time the work
will be started in Indian Territory in
charge of G E Rice and O L Ayres
They will make their headquarters at
Tishomingo and their survey will
cover the greater part of the Twenty
second recording dlstricL
Sam Remarkable Advance All Along
the Lin That Ha Always Charact-
erized Oklahoma as One ef tha Beat
Spots on Earth
WASHINGTON: la bis report to
the secretary of the interior Gover-
nor Ferguson maintains his reputation
a a “booster" for Oklahoma The re-
port la a comprehensive statement of
facts showing the growth and ad
vancement of the territory during the
past year He says In part:
According to the assessors’ re-
turns the present cash value of farms
Including Improvements representing
the farmers' Investments exclusive of
implements cropsor stocks Is 8232-
081776 or an average valuation per
farm of $1613
"All farming Implements and ma-
chinery owned by the farmers of
Oklahoma a Indicated by the asses-
sors' returns are valued at 8518C20U
and live stock at 821859913 giving
total amount Invested in lands imple-
ments and live stock' of 8259127919
aside from the chief crops valued at
8C0C52984 making a grand total to
the credit of the agricultural resource
of the territory of $319780903
"At the Louisiana purchase expo-
sition the territory was awarded med-
als aa follows: Agricultural products
three gold forty-two silver and ninety
one bronze flour one gold cotton
one gold broom corn one gold one
liver and one bronze horticulture
one gold eleven silver and twenty
bronze section of ethnology one sti-
ver and five bronze: anthropology
one gold five silver and three bronze
elementary education one silver and
one bronze mines hnd metallurgy
one gold three silver and five bronze
threshing machine one bronze The
entire appropriation made by the leg-
islature to defray the expenses of the
exbllbt was 160000 Of this amount
the sum of $221402 was not drawn
out of the treasury
“The amount of revenue required to
be raised for the maintenance of the
territorial government tbe educational
and other Institutions is $59603660
To raise this amount requires a terri-
tbs common schools collected $1696
76524 and expended 2145962354 for
school purpose acbool bouses have
been built' aggregating a valuation of
207227427 the territory haa 8069
acbool districts during the year 1904
8077 teachers' certificates were grant-
ed and the average salary of first
grade teachers was $48 per month
Probably nc other state or terri-
tory baa built a stronger barrier
against mixed school Tbe legisla-
ture of 1901 enacted n aeperata school
law which not only prohibits tbs at-
tendance of negro children at white
schools but la equally mandatory
against the attendance of white chil-
dren at negro schools Tbe acbool
census of 1904 showed a total of 204-
716 children of school age In the terri-
tory of which 9051 or four per cent
were negroes
"Tbe newspapers published In the
territory aggregate 345 of which
thirty are dallies 287 are published
weekly nineteen monthly five semi-
monthly nnd four quarterly
"The public buildings most needed
In tbe territory are an asylum re-
formatory penitentiary and school for
deaf and dumb A federal building Is
being constructed nt Guthrie An ap-
propriation baa also been made for one
at Oklahoma City A new contract
has been entered Into with the au-
thorities of Kansas for tbe care and
maintenance of Oklahoma prisoners In
the Lansing penitentiary at forty
cents per day There are now 437
prisoners
"The territorial Insane are confined
and cared for In n private Institution
known as the Oklahoma sanitarium
located at Norman By the terms of
tbe last contract with the sanitarium
company the territory pays 8200 per
annum for each patient This con-
tract expired June 15 1905 and was
not renewed as It Is intended by vir-
tue of an act of the last legislature
locating the asylum for the Insane at
old Feet Supply to move the patients
to tbe new Institution within tbe year
"At the general election held on
November 8 1904 there were elected
a delegate to congress thirteen mem-
bers of the council nnd twenty-six rep-
resentatives as well as the various
county and township officers The
total voto of the territory for delegate
to congress in 1904 was 109145
"During the past year there have
been issued 652 notorial commissions
fifty-two requisitions were granted
twenty-eight requisitions honored
and 845 corporations chartered There
was received from tnsuranoe by the
secretary of the territory $15269 SO
and from Incorporation notaries and
POSTAL RECEIPTS
REPORT OF POSTOFFICE DEPART-
MENT SHOWS A GAIN IN NEAR-
LY EVERY TERRITORIAL'TOWN
OKLAHOMA CITY PASSES GALVESTON
Twelve Cities Hav Reached th Tan
Thousand Mark— Twanty-Thrse Of-
fices In Beth Territories Have Re-
ceipts of Over Five Thousand
WASHINGTON: The annual reports
of tha executive departments and tnetr
bureaus which ar usually printed nnd
given to the publle several weeka
prior to the assembling of congress
were held hack this year until tae
opening day Tbe report of tbe audi-
tor for the pbstofllce department la
always interesting aa showing the
growth In business of the vartoua
ettlea and towns In tbe country and
la second only to a United States cen-
sus report In showing tbe relative
standing and Importance of such
placet The report of the auditor for
the fiscal year ending June 30 1905
bows that there are now twelve towns
In Oklahoma and tbe Indian Territory
having postal receipts exceeding $10-
000 per year As usual Oklahoma
City makes tbe greatest gain her re-
ceipt equaling those of Galveston
Texas for the fiscal year and will ex-
ceed Galveston very materially for tne
calender year now closing Muskogee
baa passed Guthrie and Enid baa
passed Shawnee in the race Alva and
Tulsa have stepped up Into tbe better
than $10000 das The receipts of
Oklahoma City are considerably larg-
er than the combined receipts of th
next four largest towns In Oklahoma
Territory or tbe four largest towns in
tbe Indian Territory but not quite
equal to those of tbe four best town
picked from both territories
The following nr th receipt of
tbe twelve leading offices this year
compared with the receipts for the
torial levy of 6 4 mills Farm land mieeUtBeoul item $789620
WINTER CATTLE IN OSAGE
Great Frias
Robinson Crusoe stood on the cliff
and gated In depressed loneliness at
the vast waters that surrounded hla
prisonlike Island "It's pretty tough"
be algbed "to be marooned afar from
civilization"
Just then he observed faithfully
Friday preparing a turtle atew
"But there la one consolation" he
continued brightening up "I hav a
cook who cannot leave on short notice
Ilk tbe cooka do la civilisation"
And Robinson felt so exuberant he
went out nnd Jested with the parrot
Quarantine Regulations Removed on
Those From th South
GUTHRIE: Aa a result of the mod-
ification of tbo regulations regarding
the shipping of cattle into the Osage
nation recently made by the bureau
of animal Industry it la stated by Dr
Leslie J Allen federal cattle Inspector
that the "Katy" railroad alone haa
brought 1000 head of southern cattle
Into the reservation for winter feeding
and spring pasturage These cattle
are being dipped nt Hominy and Wyno-
ns During the spring movement last
year cattle were allowed to enter the
Osage country If dipped according to
federal regulations That condition
was ended however on May IS after
which time all cattle had to go through
regular Inspection and be quarantined
If any ticks were found Recently
John M Palmer an Osage Indian at-
torney petitioned the Oklahoma live
stock sanitary commission to have
the order modified If possible so at to
allow cattle to enter again during the
winter months If properly dipped
Secretary Thomas Morris of th
commission took the matter up with
the authorities at Washington and se-
cured the desired modification to hold
good until further notice Tbe people
c Ihe Oaage country were very anx-
ious for the change on account of th
Mg crop of corn and other feedstuff
grown there last year which can be
used more profitably In feeding than lu
any other way
Kind words can be used In a style
which produces a feeling of real uneasiness
have been assessed at an average of
$331 per acre horses at $1573 per
bead cattle at 26 67 sheep at $107
and swine at $173 Hence the total
valuation 293130721 as fixed by the
assesors Is not more than 16 2-3 per
cent of tbe true value of all property
subject to taxation
"Since January 2 1905 255 oil and
gas wells have been drilled near Cleve-
land Of this number twenty-eight
are dry seven are producing 50000-
000 feet of gas per day and 220 are
producing 11000 barrels of oil per
day Tbe gas is used for develop-
ment purposes throughout the field
and Is piped to Cleveland where it
Is used for lighting beating and
manufacturing purposes There are
thirteen storage tanks of the capacity
of 35000 barrels each filled with oil
and six still being constructed A
four-tneb pipe line connected with this
field conveys 8000 gallons of oil per
day by way or Bartlesville I T and
Kansas City to Whiting Ind and from
tbenoe to the Atlantic seaboard
"There are nine lines of railway in
Oklahoma all but one In operation
and Ibat In course of construction
Tbe total mileage Is 303063 and the
new roads constructed during tne
gear coded June 30 1905 amounted to
42371 miles The various railroads
In operation have during tbe past
year shipped 13920 car loads of wheat
8023 car loads of flour 4587 car loaas
of corn 23C8 car loads of other food-
stuffs 422092 bales of cotton 3204 car
loads of hogs and 8569 car loads of
cattle and during the same time there
14814 car of coal 2 054 car of farm
have been shipped into the territory
Implements and 1626 cars of emigrant
goods
"The population of the territory is
about 800000 these figures being
based on the annual school census
that la taken for tbe purpose of appor-
Honing the school fund The number
of foreign born is not more than live
per cent nnd that of Illiterates not
more than two per cent During tbe
past year 20000 homesteaders have
filed upon goeernment lands In the
countie of Bearer and Woodward
alone 427777 acres have been taken
up
"The official statistics 09041 show
an enumeration of children of acbool
age 6 to 21 of 204716 (the Incom-
plete centu for 1905 Indicate an In-
crease of five per rent I an enroll-
ment In the public schools of 152886
an average dally attendance of 93495
that 3671 teacher were employed
"Tbe total capitalization of railroads
chartered during tbe year was 116-
905000 During the year the territorial
treasurer received from other source
than taxation $50290578 At the
present time there are fifteen deposi-
tories holding the public money all of
which is secured by a deposit with the
treasurer of territorial warrants The
amount of cash In the tereasury June
30 1905 was 61209293 Tbe total
outstanding warrant indebtedness
June 30 1905 was 2C73804l7
"A consolidated statement of the
condition of all tbe territorial banks
at the rtose of business June 1 1905
shows the capital stock to be $2491-
200 and the total deposits $8393-
110 37 The total number of banks
reporting is 257 The average reserve
held Is fifty-lwo per cent while the le-
gal reserve required is only twenty-
five per cent There are ninety-five
national banka In operation Tbe re-
quired resorve Is eighteen per cent:
the nctual reserve on hand is 44 63 per
cent
"More than 82500000 la now Invest-
ed in tbe flour milling business in
Oklahoma The rato of loss to prem-
iums collected of the fire Insurance
companies In this territory for 1902
was 39 per cent 1903 52 2 per cent
1904 45 6 per cent
“During the year ending June 30
1905 the receipts from the rentals of
school lands reached tbe sum of $442-
97541 an average of nearly 81500 per
day The total gross expenses of tbe
department for the year were 122-
29199 Deducting from this amount
the sum of $3881 collected for
transfer rental permits and other
special fees and paid into the fund
leaves a net expense of 818410 99 or
about 4 per cent of tbe proceeds The
receipts for rentals for the current
year will exceed 1500000
"Oklahoma I qualified for and en-
titled to statehood There are in tne
territory of Oklahoma approximately
800000 people These people have
come from every part of the United
States and represent the best ener-
gies and highest possibilities of citi-
zenship peculiar to any and all of the
states of the American republic
"Tbe sentiment now prevailing tn
Oklahoma is for immediate Joint state-
hood and a similar sentiment beyond
question prevails in tbe Indian Ter-
ntory The proposed state will be
very rich In natural resources and
possibilities along all tines of development"
celpts But less than $10000:
Perry $9844: Vlntta $9808 Bar-
tleavllle 29730 Norman $9151
Pones $8795 Durant $8626: Hobart
88483 Stillwater $8312 Blackwell
$8259 Kingfisher $8235 Chandler
I80C9 Woodward 7378 Anndarko
7099 Wagoner 27004 Ada $6769
Mangum $6357 Pawnee $6355 Coal-
gate $6222 Tahlequab $6054
Okmulgee $5819: Sapulpa $5799
Paula Valley $5429 Atoka $5358
Four Indicted for Murder
MUSKOGEE: Tbe grand Jury at the
Sapulpa term of the federal court re-
turned thirty-six Indictments four o(
which were for murder
Those Indicted on murder' chargee
Include Alex Scott charged with kill-
ing hla wife near Bristow five years
ago It is claimed that Scott blew the
woman’s bead off with a shotgun
Green S ho use wa Indicted for killing
n Tulsa railroad man with an ax last
summer Willie Stepney was held un-
der a charge of killing Charles Rob-
bins last September and Edna Com-
mander S Degress was Indicted for
shooting nnd killing Natban Martin a
well known citizen of Tulsa last summer
HAVE FAITH IN WITTE
Head ef B'Nai B'Rith Believes Pre-
mier Will Right Jewish Wrongs
PITTSBURG PA: A universal or-
ganization of Jews Is not necessary
to correct wrongs committed upon the
people of Israel was the emphatic dec-
laration made by Adolph Kraus or
Chicago International president of
B’Nai B'Rith
“In my opinion If Count Witte re-
mains premier of Russia" said th
speaker referring to tbe recent Inter-
view he had with the Russian pleni-
potentiary while the latter was In tae
United States “that Interview wtll be-
come aa Important nnd historic for the
Jews as tbe peace conference haa be-
come of permanent significance for all
nations"
President Kraus said tbe B'Nai
B'Rith la preparing to appoint work-
ing committees all over the civtneed
world to take care of homelesa Jew
from Russia
The fellow who shoot off his mouth
never seems to run out of ammunw
tibn
Feraker's Amendment Again
WASHINGTON: Senator Foraker
ha Introduced a proposed amendment
to Senator Beveridge s Joint statehood
bill eliminating all the provtstona lor
n state to be composed of the area em
braced In the present territories ot
New Mexico and Arizona and also
aa alternative amendment requiring
tne acceptance of th conatitutlon pro-
vided for aucb a state by a majority ct
th legal voter "In each of the territories"
Rival for Location of a Horn
GUTHRIE: Tbe plans and specifica-
tions for the erection somewhere In
Oklahoma ot an Odd Fellows home are
completed and during the past week
the board held a meeting In Enid to
call for bids from the various cities
and towns that are seeking tha loca-
tion These bids will be opened at
another meeting In tbe near future
Chandler Oklahoma City Enid Guth-
rie Kingfisher Shawnee and El Reno
are among th towns In tbe race
Lincoln May Go to Mindanao
GUTHRIE: Reports have reached
here from F! Reno to tbe effect that
Colonel C- P Lincoln of that city
former assistant secretary ot tbe in-
terior has been tendered the position
of attorney general on the Island Min-
danao In the Philippine The posi-
tion carries with It a salary of $l0'J9
per year and an official residence
Too much credit Is apt to do more
In tbe way ot harm than i no credit
at alL
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Choate, Henry Willis. Marietta Monitor. (Marietta, Indian Terr.), Vol. 11, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, December 15, 1905, newspaper, December 15, 1905; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1752862/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.