Marietta Monitor. (Marietta, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1916 Page: 2 of 8
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THE MARIETTA MONITOR
I
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EXCELLENT
Returning Tourists Speak Well
of Their Treatment h
Canada
The Canadian Government bavin
made extensive preparations during
the laat few ye are to Impart to the
National Park system a degree of com-
fort and pleasure to the visitor com-
bining the best efforts of man with the
very heat gifts of creation haa now
the satisfaction of seeing an apprecia-
tion of the efforts they have made
Tourists returning from a trip over
the Canadian Pacific the Grand Trunk
Pacific and the Canadian Northern
railways speak enthusiastically of Iho
beauties thst are revealed as theae
roads enter and pass through the
mountains The Government has spent
enormous sums of money laying out
roads and developing easy means of
access to glacier hill valley lake and
stream For what purpose! That the
wonders that Canada possesses In Its
natural parka may become more easily
accessible and afterward talked about
that a tourist travel through Canada
would result Tonrlst travel means
business and It is business that Can-
ada seeks To make It even more easy
for this travel the Government haa
taken pains to make every step of the
tourist's entry Into Canada one that
will give the very least degree of trou-
ble On crossing the border there Is
only the ordinary examination of bag-
gage and the only precaution la that
In the case of foreign aliens snd even
in their case there is no difficulty
when the officials are satisfied that
they are not attempting entry as ene-
mies Although officials of the Government
have taken every means to bring to
the attention of the tonrlst and others
that no difficulty could be placed In
the way' of their admission there still
remained doubt In the minds of some
Lieut Goodwill Spalding of the In-
niski'len fusiliers haa been killed in
action Lieutenant Spalding was the
Only the other day the Government Shipment of food from the United ''' ° Spadln'
jr ni nrimrivMf th i States into Sonora was resumed after ne man
an Interruption of three weeks Re-!
ports from the Interior Indicate that : committee of the Franco-Ameriraa
numbers of peons are on the verge of j n corps has decided to present
took action again and authorized the
statement that no measures taken for
recruiting the forces cither hare been
or will be applied to any persona who
are not ordinarily resident In the lo
ninlon Nor la It the intention to ask
for volunteers except from among Brit-
ish subjects resident In Canada More-
over the Military Service Act under i
which couacriptlon Is applied In Great
Britain affects only erso(ia “ordinar-
ily resident In Great Britain”
Americans and British subjects resi-
dent In the United States who de-
sire to visit Canada will And no more
trouble at the border than they have
experienced In the past and upon ar-
riving they will be made as welcome
as ever War conditions of any kind
wilt not Inconvenience or luu-rfere ‘‘"mmittee I -ren to be severely damaged that Its
ith them 1 return was extremely doubtful llv
The Immigration authorities aug- Henry Ford of Detroit will be named Us1 cruisers seen to sink— one of
gest that as a precaution against in- for Present on the prohibition ticket ‘hem possibly a battleship— six (In-
convenience naturalized Americans at lheir convention here July 18 to 21 ‘rovers seen to sink threa destroyers
whose country of origin was one of I ° damaged that It was doubtful If
thone at war with the British empire Th Modern Woodmen of America “ey would be able to reach port and
should provide themselves with their wil1 Pa the death claims of members j submarine sunk a total of twenty
certificates of naturalization who may lose their lives while en- to fourteen lost by the British
Now that It I Impossible to visit FSed In the military or naval service
' of the United States In event of war
with Mezlco
Europe the planning of your vacation
trip through Canada Is on to give
consideration to The Government haa
taken an active Interest In Its Na-
tional Parka In the heart of the Rocky
mountains These can be reached by
any of Ihe lines of railways and the
officials at these parks have been ad-
vised to render every attention to tba
visiting tourists w ho In addition to see-
ing the most wonderful scenery In the
world — nothing grander — nothing bet-
ter — have excellent wagon and motor
roads taking them Into the otter re-
cesses of what was at one time con-
sidered practically Inaccessible
Xn addition to this the tourist will
not be Inactive to the practical pos-
sibilities that will be before him as he
paasea over the great plains of the
Western Provinces The Immense
wheat fields bouoded by the horizon
no matter how far you travel The
wide paature lands giving home and
food to thousands of beads of horses
and cattle The future of a country
that he bre only heard of but knew
no little about will he revealed to him
la the most wonderful panorama and
Imprinted In the lens of bla brain In
such a way that he will bring bqck
with him the story of the richness oi
Agricultural Western Canada And
be will also have had an enjoynble
outing — Advertisement
Hailed the Change
“Too look very smiling this morn-
ing Toner“ said Bailey “I guess
I ought to be I went to a fortune
teller Inst night and she prophesied
Immediate financial reverses" chor-
tled Toner
“I fall to aee anything very Joyous
In that” said Bailey
“Too would if you knew anything
about my finances" said Toner "1
tell you right now that If they don’t
reverse pretty quick I’ll be busted”
Willing to Oblige
"Have you found apace for my poem
yetT asked the party with the un-
barbered hair aa he entered the edi-
torial sanctum
"Not yet" replied the busy man be-
hind the blue pencil "hot 1 expect t-
jnat aa soon aa the office boy finds
time to empty the waste basket”
Science and Philanthropy
"Think of the lives science saves”
"It all depends on whether your sci-
entist Is working with medicines er
high explosives” '
wimmiimimni HHimiHiimmiminiii ninmnnmnnw
Duy Tan the 16-year-old king of the
French protectorate of Annam on the
China Sea haa been dethroned aa a
result of revolt at Quang Ngai which
be la accused of havlilg fomented
e
Official dispatches received le Latin-
American diplomatic quarters say a
secret agreement baa been made be-
tween Peru and Vneaula with h
I object of taking vast tracts of lands
rightful possession of which they dis-
pute with Colombia and Ecuador
Grave fears for the peace of the na-
tions Involved were expressed
With the arrival of the Sixth Penn-!
syl vania Infantry approximately 24-! Ths socialist newspaper Tribune
000 soldiers are now stationed at El 1 Amsterdam says that 65000 work-
Paso of whom about 20000 are nation- j mn employed In munitions factories
al guardsmen and electrical works In Berlin and In
Ian aerdome at Johannesthal have gone
Few applications for discharge from t on t rikw as a protest against tho prts-
the national guard branch of the army on entrnce Imposed on Doctor Karlt
as a result of the permission for those Uebkneeht the socla’ist leader for
baying dependent relatives to with- participating In the May-day demon
draw have been received at head-
quarters
The war department announced that Hr voyQ ot j800 miles— setting
276 more nurses are needed for the w rcor( for a cruise by a tub-
army nurse corps In service on mrnlb( tnul(-r(r ndml tb Oer-
border where n series of base hospl- man merchant submarine Deutschland
tala bit been established by the medi-
cal department
Major General Leonard Wood com-
mander of the department of the east
announced that three week after
President Wilson' order for mobllii-
atlon of the National Guard only 43000
men have been sent to the front mil (
of a possible 130 000 In his command
of twenty-two states and the District
of Columbia This means he declared
that there are 90000 men yet to be
rent to the border
Mexico
The Villa forces have evacuated
Jiminet and railway communication
has been restored with Mexico City
Two Villa bands attacked Carranxa
garrisons at Rosario and Parral but men-
In both cases were beaten off with
losses according to official reports to
General Trevino
famine
From 200 to 300 Carranza soldiers
and camp followers were massacred
by Yaquis last week In lower Sonora
i according to stories told by arrivals
from that part of Mexico Those of
the defacto government forces not
killed by gunflre It la said were
burned at the stake
Domestic
Cornelius N Bliss will be the next!
t"‘srer of the republican national
enmmttlaa
Th longest baseball game of the
reason was played by Rock Wand and
nth”!" n ! Thrp Han-
twenv ?cindm nnD nB- ° n the '
twenty-second inning
M W Savage one of the foremost
horsemeli of the country died at Min-
neapolis after a brief illness He was
about 55 years old His death followed
by a day that of his most celebrated
horse Dan Patch the world's cham-
pion pacer
I
The North German Lloyd line re- " " I
celved from persona in all parts of the' The senate haa began discussion of
country offers running aa high aa 5- h” $315440040 naval bill the largest
000 for the privilege of taking passage appropriation measure by many
on the German submarine Deutscb- millions in the nation's history and
land on her return trip No passen- hearing Increases of nearly 154044-
gers will be carried °f° over total a It passed the
e house I
Th treasury of the city of Nashville a
was looted of $7118779 by former city The country's foreign trade during j
officials from 1909 to 1914 according " fiscal year ending with Iasi month
to the final report to the city commie- reached a total of 86523 400JK16 ex
aion by James Cameron an expert ae reeding by many million all previous
countant who has been auditing the records Exports were valued at 83
city's financial books The com mis- 245fU00O4 nd Imports at $1284004
aion did not intimate whate action It 0°- The figure are based on com
might take on Ihe report plete returns from fh first eleven
month of the year nd estimates foi
Lester Btilwell 12 years old was June
killed by a 'man-eating shark while
bathing In an arm of Raritan bay near Further emergency appropriations
Matawan N J Stanley Fisher 24 for the army to segregate almost 13-j
years old who went to hla aid was W'Oooo were asked of congress by the
SO badly injured In a straggle with r department They Include $1-
the sea monster that he died while Jnnooo for mountain field and siege
being taken to a Long Beach hospital artillery prarticslly $861 0n4 for alter
Joseph Dunn 12 years old bathing atlon and maintenance of mobile ar-
aome distance away In the same Inlet tiiiery material $26400 for storage
was attacked by a shark and one of facilities for reserve supply of sodium
his legs waa so lacerated It probably nitrate and $307500 to increase a tor-
will hare lo be amputated The shark er facilities at the Rock Island as
was killed i senaL
aee
Doe Phillips of Dallas Tezaa while President Wilson aigned the good
resisting arrest shot and killed 8her- roads bilt recently passed by con-
Iff Charles C Webb and wounded Dep- gross authorizing the expenditure of
nty Sheriffs Dave Toung and Henry JS5000004 In five years by the f-d-Houpt
at Hot Springs Ark Young eral government oa condition that
may die Other deputies killed Phil-' slates expend amounts similar to those
Ups
Twelve peraoos are kuowa to havu
been killed and nt least forty are re-
port ad missing as a result of last
week's tropical hurricane on the gulf j production manufacture and market-
oast and a aeries of storms torus- tag of crude petroleum and all Its
foes and floods that followed la tho products wan favorably repo Usd to
nf Alabama and Georgia tho house by th mimes committee
Foreign
ilrtton Berlin
WAR
was entered formally at the Baltimore
customs house without opposition On
delivering his ship’s papers to the of-
i flee of the North German-Lloyd Has
nd lllliued forlnal statement declar
tn(j m formal statement declar
n(f hu royll -ross 'the Atlantic
eIudlng the British blockade had
brokn EngUnd- rule of the sea and
restored Cerman-American
freight
traffic
European War
Col Percy Wilfrid Machell haa been
killed in action In France Ilia wid-
ow la a cousin of the German emperor
The Russian contingents which ar-
rived in France recently have been
sent to Join the French forces at the
front They number probably 25000
money prizes lo members of the corps
on whom war decorations have been
conferred Five hundred franca will
e given to the cross of war 1004
franca for Ihe military medal and 1500
franca for the Legion of Honor
Admiral Jellicoe officially reporta
fthe German losses In the Jutland bat-
tle at two battleships of (he dread-
naught type one of -the Deutchland
type which was seen to sink the bat-
tle cruiser Lutszow admitted by the
Germans one battle cruiser of the
dreadnaught type one battle cruiser
HFFH tft gVroW flntnatPil lh ft
Washington
John H Clarke United States dia-
trJcl Jud(£e at rievalend Ohio was
pamed by PrPiqdent Wilron fo?
seat on the supreme bench made va-
r resignation of forme Jus-
1 tice Hughes
apportioned to them
Ths Carter bill to authorlzo the sec-
retary of the Interior lo collect and
publish statistics and data relative to
TRIP OF UNDERSEA
CRAFT THRILLING
Story of Voyage of German U-
Boat Across Ocean Out
rivals Fiction
HOSTILE SHIPS ARE DODGED
Submarine During Hazardous 2800-
Mil Run Submerged Many Tlmea
to Escape Possible Attack
From Enemy
Baltimore Mil — Pictures of adven-
ture no leas thrilling than those which
fill the pages of Jules Verne's "Twenty
Thousand leagues Under the Sea" are
called up by the amazing story of the
trip of the Germuu U-boat Deutsch-
land across the Atlantic ocean— a voy-
age that haa been pronounced the most
daring In the history of the sea
The story of the remarkable voyage
made by this submarine— the first to
cross the Atluntlc ocean— through a
maze of hostile warships haa been told
simply by CapL Tsui Kbenlg com-
mander of the undersea craft
Koenig was modest about It all lie
had a few words of praise for hla
crew and none for himself When he
spoke of the fatherland hla eyes spar-
kled and hla whole body twitched with
eagerness yben he talked of "Just
dropping down when he saw a de-
stroyer" hla voice was calm
Would He Surrender?
Just once dW he display real emo-
tion That waa when toward the end
of the Interview this question waa
suddenly shot at him:
"Suppose on your any back Just
as yon left the Virginia copes you saw
a destroyer bearing mercilessly down
upon you Suppose there wasn't time
to dodge wasn't time to submerge
what would you do? Would you sur-
render?” The undersea sk!pier's face turned
a sudden red that looked queer under
hla thick weather tan Ills hnnda
clenched hla eyes flashed then slowly
each word painfully thought out cnuie
the answer:
“Would I surrender? I — couldn't
fell about that — positively I can't 1
don't know— surrender? I think the
moment would bring the decision Yes
that moment would carry Its own de-
rision" That was the spoken reply but In
every hit of the man's tone In every
net line of his face could be read the
real answer— Capt Paul Koenig haa no
Intention that the Deutschland shall
ever fall Into enemy hands
Fears No Enemy Warship
And he haa every confidence thnt
he will take llie IVuIschlund hack to
Bremen loaded with the rubber and
nickel that the Fathfirland so craves
for Its munition factories
“Six ten a dozen twenty cruisers
outside will not stop us” he exclaimed
“We will go bnck wo will go back
essy And we will come again and
others will come and trade will go
back and forth and the British block-
ade— that will be a thing to laugh at
“The future of the submarine haa
now been proved to be unlimited” he
asserted "There la practically no
maximum to their capacity their
mechanism haa been perfected we
have shown that they do anything any
other ship can do and more besides
"About thnt I am positive The
coining of the Deutschland 3900 miles
to America and her arrival with a
range of almost ten thousand miles
left with fuel and water and supplies
and everything for that much travel
till aboard shows that you can ro
with a submarine simply where yon
want to go"
Koenig Is a small man ordinarily
looking until he begins to talk when
his force and personality become at
once apparent
First Submarina Trip
One of the first questions asked of
him brought one of the most surpris-
ing replies of the Interview Request-
ed to tell In detuil of all Ihe snhmnrlne
experience he had before being select-
ed to attempt the crossing he replied
quickly j
"But you see I have not had any
Of course we practiced after we went
atmn'rd We practiced a great deal
Navigation 1 know Submarines I
think I know now
"Was It fun? Sometimes yes Most
It was fun In the English Channel
lliere we lay ten hours on the bottom
snng and comfortable Some of us
slept and some of us rend snd most
of us listened to our grnphophone play-
ing u hentitlful song from "Peer Gnt"
while nbove us raged the destroyers
and cruisers that would have thought
ns the very choicest of prey had they
hut known whnt lay hidden there be-
low them It waa not a long ten
hours We drank a little rhampsgne
and we ate and attended to the tna
ehlnery
"No we didn't submerge because of
ny cruiser rtissing uu not once were
we chased"
How Thay Submerged
Nothing more vivid almut adven-
ture could be drawn from Koenig than
the detailing of these times "we Just
sank" Aa far as hta words went that
waa all tliere was to It A vessel waa
sighted the Deutschland was quickly
submerged she rsn along under water
for a time and then — she cams up
and opened her hatches for fresh air
while officers and men went about
their work their rest or their play
I"Oeca each day we submerged aa a
practice drill" ha aald "and besides
w submerged aa -1 remember flvq
times In the North sea six In the Eng-
lish channel and three or four In the
open water
"Tea" laughing heartily "yea each
lime there waa a reason
"The longest we actually stayed un-
der wna that ten hours In the English
channel but we could stay four days
At the end of that time our batteries
would be exhausted and wa would
have to rise and recharge them Dur-
ing the entire trip wa traveled a total
of ninety miles under water
"As far aa tha physical effect oa tha
ship's company la concerned we could
remain forever We can submerge fifty
fathoms— three hundred feet — but aa a
matter of fact we never went nearly
that deep and probably aever ahalL"
' Liked tha Submerging
Those on - tho Deutschland beside
himself were First Mate KrapuhL Sec-
ond Mate Gyring Chief Engineer Kiel a
and a crew of 23 men Kiel he said
over and over again was "the moat Im-
portant of all" Then he told how the
crew spent the time'
"On board they busied them eel -a
with the machinery for practically nil
of them are mechanics They played
cards and they had their singing and
their sleeping and their alttlnr-about
and the time passed
"Best of all they — all of us In fact-
liked Ihe submerging Unpleasant?
Indeed It waa not It was Just Ilka
sinking Into a sort of blue nest Wa
open the portholes and then through
the gtasa we could uee the fish and Ihe
formation of the aea and always we
listened listened listened
"IIow do we listen? There are
aboard two microphones and with
them we were able to hear the whis-
tling of a buoy six miles off when we
were under water And Just before we
earn up about thirty miles from the
Virginia capes we were able to hear
the ringing of a bell buoy six mile
from us
“Th screw of a ship we could bear
quite plainly while It waa yet a aafa
distance from ua More than hearing
IL we could tell whether It waa a
cruiser or a destroyer It waa quite
fnaclnatlng to listen so
Details af the Trip
Captain Koenig did not take the
Deutschland around Scotland a has
been conjectured He eaine straight
through the Channel he said
"We left Bremerhaven at noon ba
June 14 W proceeded quietly to Hel-
goland there we stayed four tlnya
There were three reasons for that : No
ship proceeds ail Lite way after start-
ing II la too easy to calculate when
she may he expected at some given
place So we lay In wait a while
Then too we wanted to train the men
During those four days we drilled and
taught them hard and when once mora
"we proceeded we bad a capable sub-
marine crew
"Again we had to trim the cargo
That must always he done after a
start is made We must shift tilings
about and stow them away And every-
thing needs to tie tested All worked
nicely
“We carried ISO tons of fuel olL Of
that w have ti5 tons left — more than
enough to take ua bark — and ws shall
not ship any more here Then we car-
ried many ton of oxygen and t-cnty
ton of fresh water of which we had
ten left
"The lust time we submerged was
as we were nearing the Virginia rape
and we snw an American hont ap-
proaching We thought It wna a fruit
hont so we just dipped under for the
last time Th men were always glad
when we did that— It mnde such
smooth traveling The Deutschland
scarcely rolls at all under water
"And that about complete th atory
of the voyage We trawled we new
ship and submerged we traveted
agn'n on the surface and at (st we
arrived"
The rientachtand Built hy the Rrupp
Germania work coat $VK)on0 This
voyage will pay for her he said
Beat a Mass af Machinery
Aa described by Dr John C Travers
assistant U S health officer who waa
taken through the boat by Captala
Koenig the iK-utschlamr Interior ap-
pears to be mainly a mas of machin-
ery She ho but one deck below and
a aeventeea-foot depth of hold for her
cargo- Dr qravera descended through
the forward batch where he found
the crew' quarter bunks on either
aide of a narrow passageway leading
to compartments occupied by the cap-
tain and hla two officer The cap-
tain's room Is scarcely six feet square
and barely high enough for a man
to aland '
It Is furnished ail ‘ in metal with
the exception of a amntl oak desk
Directly beneath the officers’ quarters
la the dynamo which stores electrical
energy to drive the vessel wbea sub-
tncrgqd-
Next Dr Travers waa taken Into
the officers’ messroom scarcely larger
thna the staterooms with a galley
built with all the economy of space
of a Pull ms n dining-car kitchen Aft
the messroom about one-third the
ship's length from her stern Is the
submerging machinery and two peris-
cope Calls It Amazing Sight
"1 never saw such a mass of ma-
chinery In my life" anld Dr Travers
"It waa an amnxlng sight and I doubt
If It would mean much except ta tha
engineer who designed ' It Thera
seemed to he 6000 different pieces
an Inexplicable tangle of burnished
copper and glistening steel”
Aft of the submerging machinery
were the submarine's two powerful
Diesel oil engines which propel her
oa tha surface -
Oaptalo Koenig told the doctor that
while oa the surface the noise of ths
machinery was almost deafening
I OWE
MY HEALTH
To Lydia E Pinkham'a Veg-
etable Compound
Washington Fork IB — "I am the
mother of four children and hava auf-
farsd with female
trouble backache
nervous spells and
tha blues My chil-
dren' loud talking
and romping would
make me so nervous
I could Just tear
everything to pieces
and I would ache all
over and feel o sick
that I would not
want anyone to talk
Lydia E Pinkham'n
to me at tiroes
Vegetable Compound and Liver Pill re-
stored me to health and I want to thank
you for tha good they hava dons roa I
have had quits a bit of tronblo and
worry but it does not affect my youth-
ful looks My frienda any ‘Why do you
look ao young and well I ’ I owe It all
to tha Lydia E Pinkhaa remedies”
—Mrs Roar STorau Moors Arecoa
Washington Park lilinoia
Wa wish every woman who tuff era
from female troubles nervousness
backache or tha blues could ee tha lot-
ten written by women made well by Ly-
dia E Plnkbam’a Vegetable Compound
If you hava any symptom about which
you would Uko to know writs to tha
Lydia E Plnkham Medicine Co Lynn
Mass for helpful advice given free af
charge-
Big Statu
"There la one author I know who
hasn't bought himself an automobile”
“Perhaps It Is because he Is a back
writer”
A FRIEND IN NEED
For Instant relief and speedy cure
use “Mississippi" Diarrhoea CordlaL
Price 50c and 25c— Ad v
A stupid man may harvest a bumper
crop It takes a clever man to enjoy
It
Stop That Ache!
Don't worry about a bad back
Get rid of IL - Probably your kid-
neys are out of order ltesume sen-
sible hablu and help the kidneys
Then kidney backache will go
also the dizsy spells lameness stiff-
ness tired feelings nervousnesa
rheumatic pains and bladder trou-
bles Use Doan's Kidney ' Pliio
Thousands recommend them
I
ATexasCise
Mrs J T Hurt
123 E Heron fit-
lnton Ttii
mti: '1 tuffem
awfully from mjr
bark 1 couldn't
rnt well at niirht
and momlmra waa
tiff and lama 1
aiao had haadarfeaa
and dtssy apella
nd objacta float!
tforo my tyn
Tha kidney ancra
uana wera frrwau”
Ur and painful In paaaajra Doan'a
Kidney Pill atrangthnned my back
and banafltad ma lo avary wayM
Cat Daaa'aat Aa? Staaa SOa Baa
DOAN'S
F03TULSULBURN CO BUFFALO N T
Delicate Woman
Is Truly Grateful
For Stella Vitae
( MraParaleo Frailer of Long
k view Tex who bad been in bad
B health for two years writes this
B heartfelt letter in behalf of this
great preparation for women
I -TL-” tkavtottLarf rrrLLA
B vTTABuS am sow jam wall tnma a
” i-s-of MckMS I moot mar In
iKtosl I ho
Mag pamaisk r m a' i r If
STELLA VITAE l guaranteed
If you are not benefited srith the
first bottle your money back if
Do not delay Begin
At your dealers'
K first bottle you
you want it Di
taking it now
7 in (L Dottles
iu f a iHiuo a
I THACHER MEDICINE CO J
- CHATTANOOGA TUtlt
Kill All Flies!
biMita
Daisy Fly Killer
wsrsMts
MaotoaoMtaiMOeaiaAvs a-M-riN v
SUNS ON ALCOHOL
ta?kir win
Barlngn OowwwiiiwaL
wwniUN ud iw uB la ia
fc14 k'Miwr
f n ‘ ft ft fit b u
fwntua Mri fog Uw Blcft (ima
Tka MWflfl A prov4 PirrMi
MDk Bilk HwmIi livry
u ta
lAb UrM Muter
ewwscaiuafigBA
tmwwv n rww arnmi y-rm-a
Mk Mm ri tiJkXmm
APPENDICITIS M j
Ik IHU kftTIOM (i A a III Ml bb I b Hm nshi mw ffi'v a i
h ft awwaak OT a —iiawB m tm utm ’
w N U Oklahoma City Ne 30-1914
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Choate, Henry Willis. Marietta Monitor. (Marietta, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1916, newspaper, July 21, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1753207/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.