Claremore Messenger. (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1914 Page: 2 of 8
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As Told in a
Few Words
Good and Newsy Items
of General Interest Con-
densed to Smell Space
WASHINGTON.
President Wilson issued a general
reprimand to the -officers of the army
md navy responsible for the program
Of the recent Carabao dinner.
The senate confirmed the appoint
ment of George F. Williams of Massa-
chusetts to be minister to Greece and
Brand Whitlock of Ohio to be minis-
ter to Belgium.
Each of the White House employes,
about one hundred and fifty of them,
received a fifteen-pound turkey with
Christmas greetings from the presi-
dent and Mrs. WHson.
To prevent the spread of trichinosis
the department of agriculture Issued
a warning against the consumption of
raw or uncooked pork products, the
declared source of the disease.
More than 400 national banks and
trust companies, representing every
state and almost every large city In
the country, have applied for member-
ship in the federal reserve system of
banks.
An appropriation of $1,000,000 for
Improvement of roads used In the ru-
ral mall service was asked of con-
gress Tuesday in a letter from Post-
master General Burleson forwarded
through Secretary McAdoo.
Historic battle flags of the United
States In the museum at West Point
military academy are sadly In need
of repair, and the civil service com-
mission is nedeavoring to find an ex-
pert needle woman to mend them.
Raising the old battleship Maine
from the mud of Havana harbor cost
the United States $729,989, according
to a report sent to the house of repre-
sentatives by the war department.
This Includes the transportation and
burial of the bodies of more than 200
of her crew In Arlington.
George Dewey, the admiral of the
navy and hero of Manila bay, began
the celebration of his 76th birthday
by appearing early at his office to
discharge his duties as president of
the naval general board. He received
many birthday gifts and congratula-
tory telegrams from all parts of the
country.
Congressman 1. 8. Pepper of tki
Second Iowa district, died st Clinton,
Iowa, of typhoid fever.
Jose Santos Zelaya, former presi-
dent of Nicaragua, has sailed for Eu-
rope on the La Touralnc.
The "Book of Job" will be staked
as a drama by the University of Wis-
consin dramatic society this season.
More than three hundred cadets left
the United States military academy
to spend the Christmas holidays with
parents or friends.
Michigan has accepted Harvard's
invitation to play a football game at
Cambridge next fall and the contest
will be staged October 31.
Defending his father and mother
from the attack of a madman, Bert
Webster shot and killed Frank Ken
yon, a telegraph operator, at Amboy,
N. Y.
FOOL CRIES FIRE'
DEMIES
721
CHILDREN'S HAPPY FROLIC WITH
SANTA CLAUS TURNED INTO
TERRIBLE SHRIEKS OP AN-
GUISH AND SORROW.
The Chicago Dally Press, Socialist,
which has been In existence for about
17 months, has been absorbed by the
Chicago Day Book, an Independent
daily newspaper.
Walter Grimes, 34 years old. shot
and fatally wounded his wife. Edith,
36, and then committed suicide at
their home in Baltimore, after a quar-
rel over a Christmas present.
The resignation of Frederick A.
Delano as one of the three receivers |
of the Wabash raflroad was formally
accepted In an order Issued here
Tuesday by Judge Ammons at 8t.
Louis. Delano becomes the head of
the Monan.
For having In their possession 825
pounds of decayed cnicken unfit for
human consumption. Armour & Com-
pany of New York, were fined $300.
The company pleaded guilty. Hear-
Inga on three other charges of viola-
tion of the aanitary law were post-
poned.
Need of money to be used as a
Christmas present for his sweetheart,
is the reason Louis Bundy, 19 yeurs
old, gave the police for having mur-
dered Harold Ziesche. a drug store
messenger boy, 15 years old, who was
lured to a lonely spot near Los
Angeles and beaten to death.
DISASTER FALLS UPON
MINERS' CELEBRATION
Christmas Celebration for Children of
Calumet Strikers Made a Scene
of Deslth for Seventy-Two
by Foolish Joke of
a Drunk Man.
Calumet, Mich—Seventy-two per
sons, mostly children, were killed at
a Christmaa celebration by copper . 4 ..
mine strikers In an Italian hall be-, front. of tbe .
were plied around the large Illumi-
nated tree.
The children were Instructed to
inarch up the stales to the tree so
that the presents could be handed to
them. The aisles were filled with
boys snd girls when a large-bodied
man thrust his head Into the door
of the main hallway and shouted
Fire!"
Mlachlsf-Msksr Escapes.
A woman who was near the door
realized the Import of the act snd
seized the man by the shoulders snd
tried to counteract the alarm, but her
efforta were futile. The man wrested
himself from her grasp and ran away
and the cry of "Fire" waa repeated
throughout the room.
The word was shouted In several
languages as parents rose and rushed
forward to get their children. The
Uvea were crushed out In almost B
twinkling. Then the physical Impos-
sibility of further movement brought
the panicky persons to their senses.
It was realised too late that there was
no Are, but most of those In the hall
could not get out of tho Jam they had
caused.
5ME-WIBE
NEWS EVENTS
SANTA P* PLANNING TO PUR.
CHASE SEVERAL SMALL
INDEPENDENT LINES.
DIRECT ROUTETSTHE PANHANDLE
First Link Formed by tho Purchase
of tho St. Louis, El Reno A
Western—Negotiating for
Clinton A Okla. Western.
Guthrie.—With tho purchaae of the
St Louis, El Reno A Western, the
Santa Fe system has secured the first
link In the proposed lino south and
west from Guthrie to tho Oklahoma-
Texas Psnhandle boundary. Negoti-
ations are now pending. It Is known,
for the Clinton * Oklahoma West-
DOMESTIC.
Mrs. Adall Stevenson, wife of form-
er Vice President Stevenson, died at
Bloomington, 111., aged 70 years. She
had been 111 several months.
The Indianapolis American associa-
tion club was sold by Sol Meyer,
owner, to J. C. McCiill of Denver, and
William Smith of New York City, for
$175,000.
Fire of undetermined origin swept
through the main depot of the Mich
lgan Central Railway Company at De-
troit, damaged the structure to the
estimated amount of $1 [>0,000 and de
stroyed railway records.
The historic Plaza district In the
older section of Loa Angeles, where
a riot among unemployed men re-
sulted In the death of one man and
the injury of more than a dozen on
Christmas afternoon, was placed un
der martial law by the police.
Two thousand dollars, the receipts
of Chrlstmaa day, were stolen from
tbe box office of the Orpheum theatre
at New York by four men who hid
under the balcony seats after the per-
formance and surprised tbe night
watchman.
Of the 18 Harvard men who played
FOREIGN.
A French aerial squadron will short-
ly attempt to fly across the Sahara
desert.
The rebel forces are crowding close
on Tampico and a formal attack may
be expected soon.
Japan has decided to Inaugurate a
steamship service with Its terminus
at Boston by way of Panama.
The cabinet decided agains* offi-
cial representation of Great Britain
at the Panama Pacific Exposition.
An entire native tribe devoted to
brigandage has Just been broken up
and scattered by the Japanese police.
The United States battleships Loti-
lslaana and New Hampshire sailed
from Vera Cruz for the United 8tatea
The French cruiser Conde sailed
from. Vera Cruz for Tampico. the com-
mander having received an urgent call
from that port.
The Norwegian steamship Sagnvald
Jarl In ashore 600 miles north of Ber-
gen. according to the first wireless
call for help ever recorded from the
Arctic circle.
A so-called "Nitlonal Welcome"
was given to Francisco De La Barra.
special envoy from Mexico to thank
Japan for participation In the Mex-
ican centennial.
cause of a needless panic caused by s
false alarm of fire.
While several hundred miners snd
their wives looked oi:. th9 children
pressed eagerly toward the stage to
receive Christmas presents. At this
point a man put bis head In at the
door of the hall and yelled "Fire!"
The cry wis taken up by thoae In
the hall. Everyone started for the
doors. The weaker were thrown to
the floor and those behind tried to
cl'mb over those ahead of them.
The stairway and other avenues of
egress were blocked so effectually
that those Inside could not get out,
and those without could not get In to
aid the panic-stricken crowd In the
hall. It was some time before the
panic subsided.
The alarm was spread ouUldo the
hall by a few persons who hsd been
near the door and escsped unhurt. A
crowd soon assembled snd tho work
of clearing the hall was begun.
The principal exit was a narrow
stairway at the back of the hall. When
this had been cleared of the bodies
that filled It to the top and a quick
accounting had been made. It was
found thst seventy-two corpses had
been piled up beside the hall build-
ing.
The dead that were piled up beside
Pol I cement and firemen hurried to era. which now extenda from Clin
the building to find the hall congest- ton ninety miles west to Strong City,
ed. Several officers climbed the fire In Roger Mills county, or a point with-
escapes and entered by the wlndowa. In twenty-five miles of the Texaa bor-
In a short time the uninjured and tho der. This line was promoted orlgl-
faint had been pulled from the tangle nally by C. C. Codman of Fort Smith,
of human beings and placed In tho ] Ark., who constructed the first 60
miles.
Other men began to pull the bodies | The St. Louis, El Reno A Western
PARMER FINDS BRIDE
THROUGH WANT AO
Bartlesville. — When Elmer
Crissman, a well-to-do farmer
of Meeker, Okla., and a wid-
ower, received a strange look-
ing paper he threw It away.
"Some patent medicine con-
cern wants to get me to take
their dope," -Crissman said.
But his curiosity got the bet-
ter of him. Crissman recov-
ered the paper, removed the
wrapper and found he had re-
received o matrimonial publi-
cation. He opened it and In-
stantly found a "want ad" that
oaught his eye. The picture
of a woman was there. It was
that of Mrs. Llssls Gallup of
Bartlesville, who was lone-
some and wanted to get mar-
ried. - That is the statement
at least made in the ad, and
Crissman answered It That
waa eight weeks ago. Christ-
mas week the wedding cere-
mony was performed in Bar-
tlesville by the Rev. J. W.
Bloyd. They will IWe on s
farm at Meeker.
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PLANE RACE SEGREGATION.
Ordinanes Limits Nsgre kssldsncse
and Business to Csrtain Block.
Anadarko.—The segregation of tho
men.
Excited men and women stood
about the building, some dazed by the
sudden change of the festivities to
tragedy: others calling hysterically
for a child and a few even threatening) tor.
violence to the rescuers for keeping • There was a fire escape st tho rear
them back from the long row of i of the building, but only those who
bodies. ! were ve*y near It could make any
Little Work for Doctors. > use of It until attar tho fatal ruah was
There was not much work for the over. Prohobly not more than s bun-
many doctors who hurried to theldred peraons escaped the first rush 6a. been made by the city wlth wr- Jsona ^ Chandlsr. hjs ™*rtficcnt
-1 by way of this fire escape. About a vivors snd families of ths men killed homo was In ruins and thsflremen
scene as soon as the alarm was spread j by way — - —— -i „ . i ... .<
for those who were not killed In tho score mors Jumped from tho windows and Injured when the well under con-
first rush were held upright and saved near which they asL As It waa not atructlon by tho city caved la and riurC
onrush many feet from tho ground tho Jump | entombed the men. The city held a I home of h s mother, airs. Voter Hoe
Only three Injured
Thirty-nine American citizens refu-
gees from Tampico, came to Galves-
ton sboard the United States srmy
transport Sumner, which was sent by
the war department to aid foreigners
during the constitutionalist attack on
the Mexican aeaport. When the fight
lng was at Ita height, December 16,
the Sumner protected 570 people.
The king of Spain has decided, in
In the Yale game 10 are eligible for .jue to send his son and heir
next season. to gton to receive ths groundwork of
Suit for divorce was filed at Chlca- his education
go by Madame Schumann-Helnk. the
opera Binger, against her husband,
William Rapp. Desertion is the
charge. They have no children.
Nearly s thousand employes of the
William H. Tarbell hosiery mills In
Kensington, most of them girls, went
Dn strike. Notice announcing a 2 per
cent reduction In wages after January
1 caused the walkout.
The amount of grain pasalng
through Buffalo for the season Just
clossd came near to record figures
The total was 192,000,000 bushels, sn
increase of 25,000,000 over last ysar.
Tho record was 2I1.000.000 bushels In
ISM. Of this year'a total 22,000,000
waa Canadian trade.
A fugitive for four months after be-
ing accused of embezzling 913,000
from W. C. Edmonds, a wholesale
hardware dealer of Baltimore, James
Ralph Hackstt. confidential dork, ar-
rived at Now York In tbe custody of
a detective oe board s steamer from
MIS. Used Morris Schwab, daughter
tBa 1st* Nelson Morris, has filed
gall for divorce from Henry C.
Bchwsb. vtos president of oae of tho
lepartmeat storss at Chicago,
Vtrglsls Vaughn, writsr of ly
jfcg aed paoato, translator and friends
«( Nsthsnlel Hawthorne, the Drown
lass sad other sathars of half s cen-
tury past, was klllsd by a street car
la Now York. Miss Vsugha wss tho
——— Vaughn,
Robert Bertram Slack, a well known
English aviator, wss killed In an au
tomobile accident between London
and St. Albans.
dHiMor of Jsha Chsapjon
era si
newspsp
She
9MS« VSStS
A mandate (sued by President Yuan
Shi Kal expressed full approval of tho
petition suggesting the definite ter-
mination of the Chinese parliament
The commissioned officers and
many sergeants and corporals of the
tenth bsttallon of ths federal gar-
rison at Guayamaa were executed for
munlty.
Although negotiations have been
under way for the payment of $250,
000 for hla release, Luis Terrazas,
Jr., still Is held prisoner by General
Villa at Chlchuhua.
Canntbala In NouMecklonberge, an
Island la tho Bismarck archipelago,
bars massacred Dr. Detainer and an-
other Germaa scientist, together
with fourteen natives who aocom-
paaled thorn.
Tho srsoaal st Toklo Is manufactur-
ing a quaatlty of arms ordered by tho
Meilcal government, which It Is os-
pected will be shipped at aa early
dats. Japanese officlala explain thst
this Is merely a matter of bualacoa
Tho Chlnoso foreign mlststor and
tho Oorman minister us China signed
at Pekln aa sgreemeat for tho coo-
structlon In Cklns of twa railways to
bo uader tho Oenusn engineers, who
are to aUllso purely Oorman
of the dead and helpless from tho purchase gives the Santa Fe a 70-1
stairway and lay them in a row be- mile line from Guthrie to El Reno,
side the building. The disposition of making the sixth Santa Fe line out I races In Anadarko is about to be un-
the crumpled bodlee was found Inad- of this city. To connect with the dertaken with a vim that rivals the
vis able because pf the hyateria It Clinton * Oklahoma Western at Clin- seal of memebers of tbe first legists-
caused among the spectatora and tho ton would necessitate the construc- ture, wh® orated at length on the vlr-
bodles were csrrled back Into the hall tlon of about 10 miles of road south tues of a bill called "Jim Crow." The
as soon as It was emptied of frighten- and west from El Reno. The plans city council has had prepared an ordi-
ed spectators. All the chalra worn call for the extension, ultimately, to nanco that Is soon to bo voted on.
lined with bodies and corpses had to connect with the present Panhandle telling the negroes where they may
be placed In the kitchen of tho hall division of the Santa Fe somewhere live In that city and where they may*
and beneath the stage. la the Panhandle country. not live. Following are some provls-
Withln an hour almost every per- Eliminates Rock Island. Ions of tbe ordinance:
son In Calumet was at tbe scene. The purchase of the Guthrie-El Re- 'It shall be unlawful for any white
Police formed a cordon about the ao line by the Santa Fe also eltani- person, firm or corporation to sell, rent
place and kept back the crowd. After nates the Rock Island as a shipper to or lease to any negro person, firm or
much effort a lane waa opened Guthrie. During the past few yoara corporation any residence or buslneea
through the chowd and the bodlea of the Fort Smith * Western haa con- property In a block located In the city
the children were carried through tho trolled and operated the St. Louie, of Anadarko, Okla.. whom more than
ranks of mourning men and women El Reno * Western, and through traf- one-half the real estate property la
to Red Jacket village ball, which was flC arrangements tho Rock Island has value or area In such block belongs to
turned Into a morgue. It was many shipped Into Guthrie over thle line any white person, persona, firm or
hours before all the bodies fend bean from El Reno. The Rock laland by corporation."
identified the Santa Fe purchase, therefore. Is The next section makes It unlawful
For hours frantic women ran tha deprived of this old privilege. for any negro person to sell to any
streets calling for their little ones. The change perhaps wHl cause the white person any property In the city
Efforts were made to calm the women Rock laland to build a line Into Oath- where more than one-half tbe block
and many were taken Into homes that rie from Cashion, this county, about Is owned by netro persona.
had not been bereaved ao that they! ten miles of track. From the Rock I Section 6 provides that nay person.
Island main line at Kingfisher a line persons, firm or corporation that vio-
la now In operation eaat to Chandler, Intea the ordinance shall be guilty
too, tbe Rock laland- has a 60-mlle of a misdemeanor and subject to a
line, and to connect this with the fine of not lesa than $$0 nor inure
Caahlon-Klngfisher line would call for than $100 abd to Impriaonment In tha
only ten mllea of conatructlon. A city Jail not lees than fifteen nor mora
horseback survey or such a line, north than thirty days.
from Caahlon to the Cimarron river
and then eaat Into Guthrie waa made [
last spring.
had not been bereaved
m£ht have proper attention.
Crowd Meetly Children.
Of the 700 persons In ths hall more
than three-fourtha were children.
the hall Included thirty-seven girls, j many of them having gone without
nineteen boys, eleven women and five | their parents. These fathers and
mothers soon rushed to the scene and
added to the confualon. They did not
understand what had taken place nnd
hindered ths rescuers by aaklng for
Information as to what waa the mat- ]
HOFFMAN'S HOME BURNED
SETTLEMENT IS MADK.
Militia Trophies, Indian Relics, Alee
Destroyed at Chandler.
City of Frederick
tlOOOO Which
eld Policy Par |
Distributed.
Chandler.—Thirty minutes after Roy
V. Hoffman led the grand march at
Frederick.—Satisfactory settlement I the annual Chrlstmaa ball of the ck-
first ruah were held upright
by tbe very force of the
toward the exit
persons were taken to hospitals snd a
few went home assisted by friends.
For msny days the children of the
copper mine strikers had waited ex-
pectantly for the Christmas tree exer-
cises that had been arranged by the
Woman's Auxiliary of the Western
Federation of Miners. The entertain-
ment waa aet for tbe early evening
and the hall, which Is on the second
floor wss soon filled to its limit. The
children elected to recite Christmas
selections and sing carols had finished
their part of the program and the man
selected to plsy Santa Claus had f>-
peared to distribute the presenU that
did not cause Injury. I policy In the Maryland Casualty Com- ■««,. go «.pjln
The Italian hall wan built about Ave p,ny for $10,000, and as soon as the I names turned the private library of
years ago and wan wall provided for draft arrived this was divided nssong *r- Hoffman Into ashes aa the
eorgencles. It wns thought The en tbe families of the four men who lost hundreds of Christmas celebrntoru
trance was n hallway about tea. foot their lives nnd the two survivors, "tchsd ths conflagration and ths vto
deep. A stairway about eight feet Alva Dean nnd O. H. Brewer, the two I jjn of Jack London, one of tho best
wide let up from this vestibule to a who were taken out alive, but injured, • tihe weot-wsa burned.
email landing about eight by ton foot, were given each $1,000, while Mrs. I '
The main door of the hall opened on M. A. Dean. Mrs. J. O. Waggoner. Mrs. Jhu home whlrt belonged to Hoffman,
this landing. There Is a small cloak o. g. Sells and Mrs. John Odell were the entire collection of cape nnd other
room about ten feet square to oae each glvoa $2,000. Robert Wtlsoe, the trophies owned byHhe Oklnhoma Ms-
stde of tbe mstr <foor. The loe of fifth man killed, hsd no relstlves so ttoall Guard and In the possession of
life waa heavy it Jhs small door of far as knows now. la addition to Hoffman as commaadlng officer wore
this room, lie rush upparuatly the cash that waa paid, all medlcai reduc^ to rulns as well as the fsmous
turned mnny ngnlnSt tho door of this «ad burial eipensee of the dead men collection of Indlnn relics, on dlsplny
room and crashsdtbem to deeth with-1 and tbooe Injured were poid by the the reception room of Hoffman*
la the doorway.
elty.
home. The loss Is IU.00S.
TERRIBLE SCENES ENACTED WHEN PANIC BREAK
Even the children were seised with *"* * J'
panic but the small children, many
not more than five years old. soon
were deprived of fear with the snuff-
ing out of their lives under the heels
of the turgor persons who. blindly or
beonuse Impelled by thoss behind.
trampled their very offspring to dooth.
One man wns seen to stoop to pick
ap his little girl oaly to be pushed
with such force thnt he trod her be-
neath bis feet. A woman who ran
to seize three small boys was seen
to fall as aha sought to shield them Is
sad sspitaL Ths cost at
Search lng for Alarmist
A search was bogus for the
who caused the panic.
It waa said that ths maa earns up
tho stairs from s ssloon below. It
was said by some of tha
thnt the man mny have been la
maudlin condition nnd shouted tho
word without say thought gs to what
ho waa doing.
Many swore vssgosaos If tha mss
who caused tbe catastrophe could he
found. It alas Is fsarsd thst tha
Venire Ordered for Renter Case.
Bart leevit to.—Judge R. C. Alon, or-
I dered the drawlag of a special venire
lot 70 Jurors tor the Mrs. Lours M.
the miners and the Cltlaons' Alllsnce.
The coroner haa begua aa Isvestl-
gntloa. Holiday fontlvttlea horn gen
orally have been abandoned.
Among those hilled wns Job a P,
Weetloa, secretary af tha Flnslsh Ma
taal Life lnsarsaca eompsay le Csla-
Oas Order In Effest
Ardmore.—The recent order of ths I
distraught condition of mind undsi |t|tl corporation commission to com-1
«. MM svsTO- cow,« *H«.„ -
a result of ths disaster may renew to finish the Ardmore cltlseas with „ j^ Alen han bron assign,
open hostilities between members ol | u n,<M(, Mpply has tskea effect ^"****
Tho company has bees gstttat Rs ^ ^ trlml Haary Hadsoa,
supply from wetls, five miles aorth of I ^ presided at ths first trial of the
Wllsos Is tho old Wheeler Sold. What JsasSlsiMs?
Is considered the biggest gna wall m ^ta VraauTg Urn wamaas
ths entire Sold was broaght la reseat-1™ It ^Timored thst the
ly, however, sad tha Intaatloa Is to I y. y dismissed although aa statt-
I |Mlllt lfta MAA In I eiewewBM, MtBvtsga IMP
Arnmore gas pipe aao *o i the kiad has beoa made from
to gat aa sdefunto ,UP" ] tbe oMcs af tha oouaty attoraey.
Pu-
Cltlseas of Cslumsnt sad Houghtoa
rallied to the aid af tho* bereaved by
i pasts. Reddents of Houghtos
pledged $1,200 aad s committee waa
appointed to take charge of addition-
al subscriptions. This aetiei
takea at s public meetlag at which
KIMsd by OMssr.I Muskogee—W.
Bartlesville.—Another
besa added to the list of tbooe
la aa attempt to get shtpssas
whlshsy across ths Ksasss 1Um
_ „ ... , . . . Oklahossa. tills Ume It wss a negro, cd with
HoughtoS tsi do sU la 0(Ua WMlM| who was shot to death faads. His 1
their power to relieve ths distress 11( p^were, by City Msrshal Wlltlam I ossss s great
. . _ I Mayfield at Ussapsh Westaa. while I he stadled Frsnua. oonasa aad Bpaa-
Arraagemsnta already sis |t~m ths iMsiri. was nhotilsh. so that today hs aaa road aad
I ad let ed ONIolsl Known aa Student.
H. Walawright la-
has | dlctid tensor county trossursr sad
st tho towa at WslawrighU
of | spoat maay years stadytag tar the
Wslawriffht aow id eharg-
l HMSt at caaaty
firsssw worn to be-
ta the church, sad
Osnasa sad
1SS4 Jsnusry S, Church of the
Jesuits, huntings, Chits....
1S7S Dessmbor I, Brostdyn the-
ater, Brooklyn, N. V
1SS1 December S. Rin« thsntsr,
Vlenns, Austrin
I— Ism IS. ssheei al Sasdsr
west part United States SIS
Tbnss building
1>1S Nsusmhsr I
N. d....
IStt—Pehrusry,
IMtSsaroh'si, Mew Varh TH
way ter a public faaeral of tbo^oad I ^ eye, hilling him lastast- spssh ths lssgasgis aa well as Msg*
aed ths suspuastee st sB war* la | ^ This is ths third nsgra MnySnld Ush. Hs Is aadsr a doose ladlst-
!S.nrr.f • • psussltaaats sedthstaaalmamp^lty ter
n imlivyimr
LIVES LOST M FIRE DISASTERS Of RECENT YEMBI
is tt yuan.
Now SspirlslisSisli I QMihsiM Wssslvss Passim Fund.
Wllssa Ths epoistsseat at W. 1.
teaeburesr st Ksasss City. Me„ to Ug psrttea st
hs general suporistsadsat of the I faed. provtdeds by ths last I
railway Itess Is Otrtshssw, aad tho mossy, $1,Slt.lt, to asw se
by Ooaeral Maaagsr I dspsstt la a Isssl bsah. OsmpHaaoo
WMmr has had a I with ths saw law la that osrtlficsto
loag ospsrlssss is lattway ssastws mast hs Slsd whh tho
V_ hssa|mlssioa bsters Jsausry 1. wss
m. nsviag nssa aOmloa bsters Jsaasry 1, <
Js bulMlsg the I several ds*s see. The las
A Oulf aad with Utat sag psr ssat st tha firs
rsstara Mass. Hs H^aM la ten te tto i
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Claremore Messenger. (Claremore, Okla.), Vol. 19, No. 5, Ed. 1 Friday, January 2, 1914, newspaper, January 2, 1914; Claremore, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc178567/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.