The Taloga Times. (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 2, 1907 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Taloga Times-Advocate and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ARRESTOFALFANO
: f
Italian Bandit Wanted at Rome
for Manj Crimes May
Be Released
IMS A ROMANTIC RECORD
Wat Head of Italian Terrorist and
Looked Upon a a Demigod—
A Feast -His Undoing in
New York
New Vork April 12— Enrico Albino
wanted la Italy for many crimes may
In released Monday unless requisition
papers arrive front Italy or strong
t epresentations are mndo ut the state
department in Washington '
Tbe arrest of Alfan unfolds liic
story of Lta romuflc curecn In Italy
He was Lead of the mysterious 'Cmu-
’ mnrrUti di Napoli'" or the C’ltniuinrrn
an Italian terrorist' organization He
was active as a bandit but was forced
to flee to America to cscok arrest
for assassination
Death was the punishment Infll 'tcd
on the C’ucoolo a pretender to the p-
billon of ruler of the Cammarristl and
Alfano Is declared to be tho alnyer of
Ills rival The pretender was lured
to a forest where he was stubbed to
death It is claimed by Alfano and bis
conspirators Then the wife of Cuc-
colo was condemned Alfano and Ills
men called at C'uccolo's home uuU
w)ir the wife opened tho door she
was stabbed her body pierced by a
lorcn blender shafts of steel Tbe
assassinations spurred the ?entlnrmes
10 extruordit ary activity Alfano and
ihe conspirators seemed immune front
prosecution Indeed lie was held by
tlio populace as a demigod free to
roam at wit! unharmed because en-
veloped with some divlno authority
tiivulne-jble as to the bullets and ira-
iKissible of capture But suddeuly Al-
fano disapjetared going to New York
The Catuniarra thrived in New York
too with all its slnster much I nations '
which baffled the police even the
Italian detectives By the New York
t'uromarra the chief was greeted with
many honors A feast was prepared
in recognition of the coming of tbe
leader an 1 Aifaao was banquetted at
t lie Pattrjchi But this feast was ltis
undoing He wa3 spied upon by a fol-
lower of the murdered pretender and
the word was passed to Petrosin! and
Archiopolli New York’s Italian detec-
tives Tlreir subsequent descent upon
the East Side underground resort end-
ed the bandit’s l’herty
As he app-ared before Magistrate
House in ten police court Saturday
Alfano bad all the appearance of an
Italian of high rank He wore a suit
!of fine texture moulded to hts slen-
der form He admitted through an
interpreter that he was Alfano but
denied that he had committeed any
crime He was be cooly declared
v (siting the lioited States because of
Uie frequency of political arrests In
Italy
The utmost endeavors of the police
to discover Alfaro's headquarters have
been futile They realize however
that powerful influences are with him
in hia present predicament and are
not at ail evrtaia that they can hold
him for ext-adition
New York April 23— Enrico Alfa-
iio alleged leader in Italy of the
secret an 4 criminal Camorra society
of Naples who was arrested in this
city last week during a police raid
Monday was turned over to the immi-
gration authorities by whom he will
4c deported to Italy
CONSTITUTION ADOPTED
After Being in Session Five Months
the Oklahoma Convention
Ends Its Work
(Jutbrle Okla April 21 — Without
i dissenting vote but with 27 of the
S3 delegates present not voting the
constitution for the proposed state of
Oklahoma framed by the convention
tvhicn baa been in session nearly the
last five jnoifhit was adopted at 2:30
Friday afternoon'
Prolonged applause from the floor
and galleries gristed President Mur-
ray's announcement that the work of
the convention had been consummated
Only one of the twelve republican
1'iemiKrs Delicate Cloud an Indian
clergyman saw the finish
At 2 : o'clock President Murray
signed the sheepskin copy of the con-
stitution with an alfalfa pen The at-
tending district number and the oth
r di tails were affixed with a pen
presented by W J Bryan
The election committee will report
Saturday wliea a definite time for ad-
journment a'ae die probably will be
announced ’
A Job for T T Kelly's Brother
Topeka April 24 — John Kelly a
brother of T T Kelly ex-state treas-
urer was appointed a 'deputy bank
commissioner and examiner in the
office of John Q Boyce bank com-
missioner Monday Mr Kelly was
- assistant stale treasurer under hla
brother several years
An Oklahoman Accidentally Shot
lotwlon Ok April 24 — Whiter Fe-
lix a sign painter while duck hunt-
ing near Chattanooga accidentally
shot and killed himself He is a
brother of Mayor FaUg at Jeplla Xa
OONTQRUMBLK AT TRIFLE
Twenty-five Bushels Wheat and Forty
five Bushels Oats Per Acre Are
in Western Canada
‘ a ' Saltcoats Saak
Sth December 1905
To the Editor '
IVnr Sir
I willingly give you the result of my
four and a half years experience In
tho District of Saltcoats"
Previous to coming hero I farmed la
Baldwin St Croix County Wisconsin
and as I have heard a great deal about
the Canadian North-West I decided
to take a trip there and see the coun-
try for myself I was so Impressed
with the rlchnes8 of the soil’ that I
bought half a section of land about
five miles from tho town of Saltcoats
I moved on to the land the following
June anil that year broke 90 acre
which I cropped In 1904 and had 39
bushels wheat per acre In 1905 with
an acreage of 160 acres I bad 24 bush-
els wheat and 35 bushels of oats per
acre In 2906 with 175 acres under
crop I hal 25 bushels wheat and 45
bushels of oats per acre
Front the above mentioned yields
you can readily understand that I am
very well pleased with the Canadian
West Of course I have had to work
bard but I don’t mind that when I
get such a good return for my labor
To anyone thinking about coming to
this country I ran truthfully say that
if they are prepared to work and not
grumble at trifles they are bound to
get on Some things I would like dif-
ferent but take tbe country all round
I don’t know where to go to get a bet-
ter Yours truly
(Signed) O B OLSON
Write to any Canadian Government
Agent for literature and full particu-
lars ZEAL WITHOUT COMMON SENSE
Striking Examole Related by the Late
Or Field
A Presbyterian clergyman waa
praising tbe late Dr Henry Martla
Field of Stockbrldge who for 44
years edited the Evansellst
"Dr Field did so much good" he
said "because he went about his
work diplomatically sensibly reason-
ably I once beard him declare that
reformers failed often because the
moment they started a reform they
dropped common sense Common
sense was swallowed up in zeal He
3ald that a nerve cure faddist once
entered a shop and leading the pro-
prietor to one side whispered mys-
teriously: ‘Ah my friend you can
do the race untold good if you will
only take tbe agency for our anti-
ta preparation It la warranted to
cure In a week the most confirmed
and nerve-racked teaJippler Never
again — ’
"But the dealer langhed and drew
away ‘You have made a mistake'
he said ‘I can’t take such an agency
as that Don’t you see that this la
a teashop?
'“Oh no mistake' said the reform-
er eagerly 'It la because you run
a teashop that I have sought you out
You come into constant contact with
the very people we are trying to
reach’ ”
Great Stunt by Geronlme
In a single day Geronimo wbea In
his prime ran 40 miles on foot rode
500 miles on one stretch as fast as
he could change horses and so com-
pletely wore out the column which
finally captured him that three seta
of officers were needed to finish the
chase and not more than one-third
of the troopers who started were In
at the finish says a writer In Outing
Wrinkled and crafty and cruel is
his swarthy face to-day but the fire
of his infernal energy has died and
be la no more than a relic of tbe
Geronimo of whom Gen Miles said
after tbeir first meeting: t
"He rode into our camp and dis-
mounted a prisoner He was one of
tbe brightest most resolute deter-
mined men I ever met with the
sharpest clearest dark eye Every
movement showed power and en-
ergy” ’
APPENDICITIS
Not at All Necessary to Operate In
Many Cases
Automobiles and Appendicitis scare
some people before they are hit
Appendicitis is often caused by too
much starch in the bowels Starch la
hard to digest and clogs up the diges-
tive machinery — also tends to form
cakes In the cecum (That's the blind
pouch at entrance to the appendix)
A N H girl had appendicitis but
lived on milk for awhile — then Grape-
Nuts and got well without an opera-
tion She says: "Five years ago while at
school I suffered terribly with consti-
pation and Indigestion” (Too much
starch white bread potatoes etc
which she did not digest)
"Soon after I left school I had an at
tack of appendicitis and for thirteen
weeks lived on milk and water When
I recovered enough to eat solid food
there was nothing that would agree
with me until a friend recommended
Grape-Nuts
“When I began to eat Grape-Nuts I
weighed 98 lbs but I eoon grew to 115
lbs Tbe distress after eating left me
entirely and now I am like a new per-
son” (A little Grape-Nuts dissolved in hot
water or milk would have been much
better for tbis case than milk alone
for the starchy part of the wheat and
barley la changed Into a form of dl-
gestable sugar in making Grape-Nuts)
Name given by Postum Co Battle
Creek Mich Read tbe little book
“The Road to Wellvllle” In pkgs
“There’s a Reason”
“WONT YOU
GOT THEIR REPLY
S
President Roosevelt Adds a New
Chapter to the Moyer-Hay-wood
Episode-
STANDS BY HIS ASSERTIONS
Not Only Are They “Undesirable Citi-
zens" but action of Their Friende
ie Flagrantly Improper — De-
fines a “Square Deal”
Washington April 21 — In a letter
addressed to Honore Jaxon of Chi-
cago chairman of the "Cook County
Moyer-Havwood conference" made
public Tuesday President lioosevelt
replied to the criticisms of his recent
1 otter in which he referred to Moyer
and Haywood officials of tho Western
Federation of Miners charged with im-
plication in the murder of Former
Governor Stuenenburg of Idaho ns
“undesirable citizens" The president
says he regrets any body of men
should so far forget their duty to
their country as to by formation of
societies or In other ways endeavor
to influence justice and coerce court
or Jury that they not he are-trying
to influence justice and he condemns
what he calls their flagrant Impro-
priety in the matter He says that he
indicated no opinion as to their guilt
of the Steunenberg murder bet that
It was a simple absurdity to suppose
that because a man Is on trial he is
free from criticism as to his mauner
of life He said he might as well be
accused of trying to Influence the
suits against Harriman some of whose
friends had also criticised him He
said that Moyer and Haywood stand
ai representatives of those who habit-
ually appear as guilty of incitement to
or apology for bloodshed and violence
lie added that be was profoundly in-
different to the condemnation of him
for his criticisms of the undesirable
types of citizens regardless of the
power of either labor or capital
BANKS ESCAPE TAXATION
Supreme " Court Holds That Capital
Stock Invested in Government
- Bond Pays No Tax
N
Washington April 123 — Deciding
several cases brought to It by saving
banks in Des Moines Iowa the United
States Supreme court held Monday that
government bonds in wbirh the cap-
ital stock' of such banks Is invested
are exempt from taxation The t:st
opinion was delivered by Justice
Moody in the cases of tbe Home Sav-
ings bank s the City of Des Moines
Tho Iowa supreme court In deciding
the cases laid down tbe general doc-
trine that-“general exemption from
state taxation with which the bonds
of the United States are clothed does
not entitle the bank to deduct the
amount of such bonds from the value
of the shares of their stock which are
ar-sested to it for tbe purpose of tax-
ation” Justice Moody’s opinion re-
versed that ruling on the ground that
the course outlined is “to clearly di-
rect tax on the securities of the Uni-
ted - States” and therefore not per-
mUsable The chief justb-e and Jus-
tices Harlan and Peckhain dissenter!
Inventor Hammond Insane -New
York April 21— James Bart-
lett Hammond Inventor of the type-
writer bearing bis name was commit-
ted to the paychopnatic ward at IP I
levue for observation Tuesday on com-
plaint of bis brother Thomas r Ham-
mond Man Killa Assailant
Macon Mo April 23— Posing as a
target while Fin's I’etesoa fired five
shots at him W If Yeakey a young
b'acksmith of Kas-yvilie drew hla
revolver and wi h one shot ended
Peterson’s life here 8undiy during a
saloon brawl
Guthrie Convention Adjourns
Guthrie Ok April 21 — The consti-
tutional convention Mo day adjourned
until Aup:rt 5 or at the call of the
president Delegates left for their
homes Monday night
SIT OOWNr
NEBRASKA FRUIT DAMAGE
9
Rot All of It Has Been Killed by
the Unusual Conditions
Benefit to Grain Crop by Recent
Snow Will Offset Financial Loss
of Early Varieties '
Omaha April 23— As a result of the
unprecedented weather which pre-
vailed during the greater part of the
month of March and the freezing
weather and heavy snowfall of I ho
last few days early fruits such as
peaches plums apricots cherries and
blackberries In this section hare been
Injured but the general opinion
among those who have the best
means of informing themselves is
that the damage Is not as great as
has been reported indeed many
are In same instauees completely
killed and possibly some of the later
varieties have been hurt the hcmAlt
resulting to the grain crops from tho
snow storm more than offsets the
damage
“Our reiiorts from point a long the
Hues of our road are not unfavorable"
said CS W I-oomis assistant general
manager of the Burlington Sunday
’ Tito frhit In the southern part of
Nebraska which the unusual warm
weather la March bud brought to an
advanced state of development Is re-
ported to have been pretty badly dam-
aged but little or no damage is re-
ported from points north The snow
however did a vast amount of good
to winter wheat aud has put Uie
ground in a fine condition for other
farm crops”
NOTHING BUT PROSPERITY-
Wages Are Higher Than Ever Before
and Betations Between Employer
and Employe are Harmonious
Chicago April 24 — For the first
tiino in years May I will ho ushered in
without any serious disturbance in the
industrial world This peaceful con-
dition applies not only to Chicago
but to all the large cities throughout
the couutry according to Jauico A
Emery secretary of the Citizens In-
dustrial Association who was in Chi-
cago Tuesday
“There Is hardly a cloud on the in-
dustrial horizon anywhere” said Mr
Emery “Wages are higher than at
any time in the history of the country
and In most of tho cities the relations
between the employer and employe
are harmonious Through reports
from our different association I am
kept in touch with industrial affairs
In every part of the country and I
have never seen tho outlook so prom-
ising "In nearly every Instance where
working contracts have been renewed
wage Increaeo have been granted so
that May t this year will not only
bring fewer Btrikcs' but nlso higher
wages than ever before"
- Oklahoma i 18 Years Old
Oklahoma City Ok April 24 — Fif-
teen minutes of 12 o’clock Monday
all of tbe whistles and 1m1Ib in tbe
city were soundpd to celebrate the
eighteenth anniversary of Uie open-
ing of Oklahoma to settlement The
"Elbhty-niners" club met during the
afb rniK n and had a good programme
with ex- Gov T B Ferguson as the
principal siH’dker
That He Might Escape Work 1
Jefferson City April 21 — "I'm not
able to work and 1 don’t proiioso to”
were the words of Harry Campbell a
convict In the Missouri penitentiary
who deliberately thrust his left hand
In front of a power saw in the Sulli-
van saddle tree factory Four fingers
were 'cut off
Lamp Explosion Cauoaa Blaze
South McA!e8ter I T April 21—
The business portion of Alderson a
mining town in this county burned
early Tuesday Tbe post office and
the Cdd Fellow hall were totally de-
stroyed The loss la estimated at
925CW) Fir was caused by a lamp
explosion - -
k RECEIVER FOR BREUERS
The Kansas Supreme Court Granti
Petition for Appointment
Attorney Gensral Jackson Stems to
- Hava Strong Casa and Boost
Dispensers Plead for Quarter
Toiicka April 24 — The supremo
court late Monday afternoon ullowud
tho jieUtlon ofAttorny General Jack
sou for receivership in the ouster in-
junction case against the brewery
companies in Kansan Tho tourt did
not uiuuo the receivers but will do
so In a day or two Attorney General
Jackson staled that he did not know
Just how much property this receiver-
ship Included but mentioned eight or
ten suloon fixtures in Ixwveuworth
and some In Atchison There Is a
possibility of live brewer being glvuu
their property If tlioy withdraw from
Kansas and agree to stay out
complete surrender and confession
of judgment on tho part of the brew
era la looked forward to as the prob-
able outcome of the suit One of the
brewery representatives said Monday:
“Juckson U too severe on tut lie
wants ua to promise to furnish names
of all the places in the atato in
which we are Interested before Iks
will agree to let up on tills prosecu-
tion” Attorney General Jackson said: “I
nui not making any terms with the
nllurneys for the brewers They
must got into court aud reach soino
pnHwltlon satisfactory to the court”
THE PRESIDENT'S PLANS
He Will Go to Hia Bummer Home
June 12 Immediately Following
Hia Speech at Jamestown
Washington April 24 — President
Roosevelt will leave Washington for
Ills summer home at Oyster Itay on
Jiuio 12 This is much earlier than
has been the president's practice
heretofore but ho feels that public
business Is in such shape lliet ho can
conveniently leaver lie looks for-
ward to a long period of rest nml rec-
reation Secretary Ixieb Monday said that
no aiiccchcs were to be made by the
president after ho leaves Washington
until he goes to Cauton Ohio for the
imvt lllng of tbe ’ McKinley monu-
ment September 30 From Canton
I ho president will return to Washing-
Ion for the Fall and Winter scuson
The president Is to make two
speeches on Georgia day at the
ojK-nlgg of tlie Georgia building and
tho other before the National Edi-
torial Association He will 'reach
Washington on the Eleventh from
Jamestown and on the following
morning go to Oyster Itay
Only a Crazy Man’s Talk
Washington April 21 — The an-
nouncement was made Saturday by
jecret service officials that no further
afieuilon will be paid to the state-
aunta of Jnn Ilartula who Informed
the police of Newark N J that a
conspiracy was on foot among the
-minors at Hazleton Pa to assassiu-
at President Roosevelt The offi-
rials state that investigation clearly
established Uie fact that the story
told by ltnrtula had no foundation and
i hut Ids mind had Itccomc imbalanced
by the death of ids wife several
weks ago -
Forty-One Suita ' Against Railroads
Topeka Knn April 23 — At the in-
stigation' of tho department of agri-
culture the district' attorney will
Tuesday commence In tho federal
court here 41 suits against the Chi-
cago Rock Island and Pacific rail-
road for violations of the 28-hour live-
stock shipping law
Lake Vessel Lost
Manistee Mich April 24 — The
wooden lumlier barge Arcadia which
left this port April 12 for Two Ulv-
-s with a cargo of hard wood hat
undoubtedly been lost in Lake Mich-
igan with her captain and - owner
Harry May his erlfo and a woman
and a crew of about 11 men
Funston Going to Kansas
SI Louis Mo April 23 — Briga-
dier General Fuuston and Mrs Funs-
ton departed Sunday night for Kan-
sas City and will visit with relatives
in Kansas for a time ' alter which
General Funeton will proceed to 8bu
Francisco
Burned to Death at 87
Tulsa 1 T April 21— Mrs Emily
B Measles 87 years oM was fatally
binned nt her home in Owasso Dear
Tulsa Friday She was sitting before
an open fireplace When her dress was
ignited by ' the flames She lived
alone ’
Thirteen Inches of Snow at Denver
Denver April 21 — Thirteen Inches
of snow fell in Denver during the 21
hour ending nt 6 o’clock Saturday
morning It was tho heaviest snow
fail of tho winter and the greatest
precipitation recorded here in April
since 1S85
Thirty-Five Drown in Neva
St Petersburg April 23— It was
definitely established Monday that 39
persons lost tbeir live through tho
tolTudcring of the ferry steamer
Areliangh-sk on the Neva Haturday
niglii The owuer of tho line will b
prosecuted on the charge of gross
negligent
HENt KNEW THEIR BU8INEKA
Never Wauld Thay Lay Anything but
the Frsahsat of Egg
There la a German dalrytnaa and
farmer whose place is not far from
Philadelphia who greatly plume him-
self upon tho nbaoluto superiority of
hla product above all other in the
vicinity
On tino nccnalon b pnroonnlly
plied to a Germantown liouaekaeper
for a tranafor of her custom to hliu-
aelf “I hears dot you lief lot of
d rouble with dot dairyman of youra"
he said "Yust you gif me your gue-
tom and der will be no droubl
“Are your eggs always freeh?" nak-
ed the woman
"Fresh!” repeated the German la
an Indignant ton “Let me deli you
madam dot my ben nefer oefer lay
anything hut fresh esg!"
KIN SORE EIGHT YEARS
pent $300 on Doctor and Romedia
but Got No Relief— Cuticura
Cures In a Week
“Upon the limb and between thn
loea my akin waa rough aad sore and
also acre under tho arm and 1 had to
Slav at homo several time because of
this affection Up to a week or so ago
1 had tried many other remedies aad
several doctors and spent about three
hundred dollar without any auecesa
but this Is today the seventh day that
I have been using tho Cuticnia Remo
die (routing a dollar aud a half)
which hare cured mo completely a®
that I can again attend to my busi-
ness 1 went to work again to night
t had been suffering for eight year
and have now been cured by the Cut-
trura Remedies wlthla a week Frits
Hirschlaff 24 Columbu Are New
York N Y March 29 and April 6
1906”
GONE FOREVER
Ten years ago a farmer put his Ini-
tials on a dollar bilL The next day he
went to tho nearest town and spent it
with a merchant Before the year waa
out he got tbe dollar buck Four tiinoa
In six years the dollar came back to
him for produce and three times he
heard of It In the pocket of his neigh-
bors The last time he got It back four
years ago He sent it to a mail order
house Ho never has seen that dollar
since and never wilt That dollar blit
will never pay any more school or
road tax for him will never build or
brighten any of the homes of the community-
He seut it entirely 'out of
the circle of usefulness to hiiuscif and
his neighbors
rntronlzo your local merchant who
helps you to pay your taxes support
your schools and churches and lends
a helping hand in times of sickness
and trouble
World's Cheapest Gas
: According to the Gas World pride
of place as tbe suppliers of the cheap
cat gas in tbe world la now shared
with the Widnes corporation by the
Sheffield Gas company of England
who have just announced a reduction
of one penny per thousand cubic feet
a the price making the new scale Is
4d Is 2d and la according to con-
sumption and la for gas used in ga a
engines The Widnes scale is 1 Id
and Is 3d with lid for gas used foe
powet purposes
The EYolution of
Household Remedies
The modern patent medicine Du si- '
net la the natural outgrowth of the
old-time household remedies
In the early history of this country
EVERY FAMILY HAD ITS HOME-
MADE MEDICINES Herb teas
bitters laxatives and tonics were to be
found In almost every house compound-
ed by the housewife sometimes assisted
by the apothecary or the family doctor
Such remedies as piers which was
aloes and quassia dissolved in appla
brandy Sometimes a hop tonic mad
of whiskey hope and bitter barite A
core or more of popular home-mad
remediee were thus compounded tha
formulae for which were passed along
from bou se to house sometimes written
sometimes verbally communicated
The oatent medicine business is a
natural outgrowth from this whole-
some old-time custom In the begin-
ning some enterprising doctor Im-
pressed by tho usefulness of one of
these home-made remedies would taka
It up Improve it In many ways manu-
facture It on a large scale advertise it
mainly through almanacs for the home
and thua it would become used over a
large area LATTERLY THE HOUSE-
HOLD REMEDY BUSINESS TOOK
A MORE EXACT AND SCIENTIFIC
FORM
Peruna waa originally one of these
old-time remedies It was need by the '
Mennonites of Pennsylvania before it
waa offered to the public for sale Dr
Hartman THE ORIGINAL COM-
POUNDER OF PERUNA la of Mea-
nonlte origin First ho prescribed It
for hi neighbors and his patients
The eale of it Increased and at last ha
established a mono factory and fur-
nished It to the general drug trade
Peruna ie useful la a great many -climatic
ailments such as coughs colds
sore throat bronchitis and catarrhal
diseases generally THOUSANDS OF
FAMILIES HAVE LEARNED THE
USE OF PERUNA and Its value in tha
treatment of these ailments They
have learned to trust and believe la
Dr Hartman’s Judgment and ts rely
a his remedy Peruna
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View eight places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brownlee, R. G. & Dunnagan, A. W. The Taloga Times. (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 2, 1907, newspaper, May 2, 1907; Taloga, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1766210/m1/2/?q=no+child+left+behind: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.