The Medford Star. (Medford, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 13, 1906 Page: 2 of 9
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BIB
Standard 0:1 Magnate Taken Into
Custody at St Louis ou an
Attachment.
IN SHERIFF'S CUSTODY OVER AN
A MiK'tinirnr Wim I*.
Ii« I
Anthony ill
Hltiifeil liy Mi.
iri.
St. liouis, Sept. II.—H. Clay Pierce,
chairman of the executive board of
the Waters-Pierce Oil company, was
arrested Monday at the corner of
13roadway and Olive streets, on an at-
tachment. issued and served several
weeks ago to compel his attendance as
witness in a civil suit. Mr. Pierce
twas taken to the sheriff's office' iu
the court house.
From the sheriff's office Mr. Pierce
was taken before C. B. Allen, com-
missioner of the St. Louis circuit
court, who hart issued the attachment,
The case upon which the attachment
was issued is a suit brought against
ilje oil company by John P. Gruet,
former secretary, for salary.
After having been in (he custody or
the deputy sheriffs for more than an
hour, during which time Mr. Pierce's
attorneys made strenuous efforts 10
secure his release. Commissioner Allen
agreed lo accept bond and he wis
released. Former Judge Priest, one
of Mr. Pierce's attorneys, signed the
bond.
Mr. Pierre, later appeared before
Judge R. A. Anthony, special supreme
court commissioner, at the Southern
hotel, as h witness in the ouster pro-
ceedings instituted by the state of
Missouri against the Standard, Repub-
lic and Waters-Pierce Oil companies.
Former Judge H. S. Priest, Mr.
Pierce's i rsonal counsel, conducted
the examination in chief. His first
Question was:
The testimony given by Mr. Pierce
amounts to this: He admits division
of trade territory, says it has existed
nearly :!fl years and attempts to ex-
plain his part in it, saying he built
up the trade in the territory assigned
to him. He asserts that the trouble
in Texas, when his company was found
guilty of violating I he anti-trust law
In 190(1, w,;s not his fault, but that
of a minor employee of the company;
that after the reorganization he at-
tempted to obey the law and did un-
til the Standard Oil company began
t.o interfere with his business and
made him give up two-thirds of the
stock of the company that had been iu
his own name.
LEFT LITTLE INSURANCE.
Frank K. ti<i>i>l Carried Only $2,300 on
Hie Life—IiiveatiKiitliiB
Trust Fuii<I .
Philadelphia, Sept. It.—Contrary to
general belief, Frank K. Hippie, the
suicide president of the wrecked Real
instate Trust company, carried only a
small amount of life insurance. This
became Known Monday when counsel
for the Hippie family announced that
policies for a total of only $7,500 on
the life of Hippie can be found.
The experts who are investigating
the affairs of the trust company are
examining securities for trust funds
In the care of the institution. These
trusts aggregate more thau $2(5,000,-
000 and there is considerable anxiety
by beneficiaries of these funds over
their safety, tip to this time there
has been only a hasty examination
of the securities and with the excep-
tion of about $50,000 they were fouud
practically intact.
OVERWHELMED BY MUD.
A Whole Towii liit> in llin i.iih Ob-
literated 285 Pent..lis Were
Buried Alive.
Titlis, Sept. 11.—Practically without
warning the side of a mountain rising
above the township of Kwareli broke
away and in a sea of semi-liquid mud,
sand and stones swept down on the
township and obliterated it. Some 255
persons have been btfried alive. Flf-
ty-five bodies have been recovered
from the mire, which is six feet deep.
In addition to the lives lost, countless
head of cattle perished and the crops
were destroyed. Kwareli township
occupies an aiea of five kilometres in
the district of Telaw, in the Caucasus.
Similar disasters are or common oc-
currence in Caucasian valleys.
Suffocated by Uum in Kl.-mtor Shaft
Minneapolis. Sept. 11.—Monrad
Lund and Norval Nelson were suffo-
cated by p«s Sunday while working
on ths elevator shaft of the Oneida
block. Lund fell thirty feet to the
hot tom of the shaft when overcome
and Nelson lost his lire trying to
rescue the body of his companion.
Four other men were overcome b fore
the bodies were recovered.
STOMACH PAINS
*V Williams' Pink Pills Brought Re-
lief, ord Cure for Splitting
Hcadaches as Well.
f)r. Williams' Pink Pills, n remedy
which has been before the American peo-
ple for a generation, is still accomplish-
ing wonderful results as is evidenced by
the following interview with Mrs. Ra-
chael Gardner, of Wilsey, Kans.
"It was Very strange," she says, "I
never could tell what caused it and
neither could anybody else. For a long
time I had bail spells with my stomach.
The pain would commence about my
heart and was so dcadlyagoni/.ingthnt I
would have to scream aioud. Sometimes
it would last several hours and I would
have to take laudanum to stop it. Be-
sides this 1 had a headache almost con-
stantly, day and night, that nearly crazed
me, so you see I suffered a great deal.
And when I think of the agony I en-
dured it si ill makes me shudder.
" 'Doctors,' did you say? Their medi-
cine made me sickcr. I couldn't take it
ami I kept growing worse until a friend
advised me to take Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, and I did. I began to feel better
and was soon Wholly converted to this
wonderful medicine. It did me more
good than I had ever hoped for. I kept
on wiili the pills and now I recommend
them to all who suffer."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have cured
severe oasesof indigestion, hloodlcssuess,
influenza, headaches, backaches, lum-
bago, sciatica, neuralgia, nervousness
and spinal weakness. The genuine Dr.
Williams'Pink Pills are guaranteed to
«be free from opiates or any harmful
drugs and cannot injure themost, delicate
system. At all druggists, or from the
Or. Williams Medicine Co., Schenectady,
N.Y., postpaid on receipt of price, 60
tents per box, six boxes for 12.50.
Lincoln as a Lawyer.
A leader of the Lincoln party told
the other day in Philadelphia a story
of the astuteness of Lincoln as a
lawyer.
"When Lincoln was practising law,"
he said, "he had a case involving a
dispuied will. The opposition claimed
the will was genuine and for several
hours adduced proof of this. For
Lincoln, who had to prove the will a
forgery, things looked black.
"Lincoln, however, only called one
witness, a retired paper manufactur-
er, renowned the country over for
his wealth and probity.
" 'Mr. Dash,' Lincoln said to this
witness, handing him the disputed
will, 'please hold that paper tip to
the light and tell us what is the water
mark on It.'
" The water mark of my own firm
Blank & Co.,' the witness answered.
" 'When did your firm begin to
manufacture paper?'
"'In 1841.'
"'And what's the date of the docu-
ment in your hands?"
"'August 11, 1836.'
" 'That is enough. Gentlemen of
the jury our case Is closed.'"
Tact.
He had crossed her and she was
in a dangerous mood.
"See!" she hissed, pointing her fin-
ger at him, "see how you have worked
up my feelings. Why, 1 am purple
with rage."
Rut the young man only smiled.
"So becoming," he mused, softly.
"What is becoming, «ir?"
"Why, the purple. It just matches
that purple waist you have on."
And the next moment she was all
smiles and telling her girl friends that
George was the cleverest chap in the
world.
Hail t'aMml for 24 Ony*.
Boswell. N. M., Sept. 11.—R. G.
Treat, who «*ay8 he was connected
with the Oklahoma Times-Journal two
months ago. was found Sunday in a
sandpit at Riverside stock yards al-
most dead from exposure and starva-
tion and mentally unbalanced. He
was maintaining a 40 day fast and
says he had not taken a morsel of
food for 24 days.
Tri# *t lo Rribi1 an
Philadelphia. Sept. 11.—'Three men
have been arrested for attempting to
bribe an immigration inspector in
connection with the case of an Amer-
ican woman who recently arrived here
suff-iing from trachoma.
South Africa's Gold Production.
The production of gold in the mines
of South Africa for the month of June
was the greatest ever recorded. In
the first six months of the current
year the production was nearly $0,-
000.000 greater than in the corre-
sponding time last year. ^
Lord Milner, the former high com-
missioner for South Africa, has re-
ceived through the duke of Somerset
an address expressing appreciation
of his services in South Africa signed
by 370,000 persons.
HOW MANY OF US?
Fall to Select Food Nature Demands
to Ward Off Ailments.
A Ky. lady, speaking about food,
says: "I was accustomed to eating
all kinds of ordinary food until, for
some reason, indigestion and nervous
prostration set in.
"After I had run down seriously my
attention was called to the necessity
f some change in my diet, and I dis-
continued my ordinary breakfast and
began using Grape-Nuts with a good
quantity of rich cream.
"In a few days my condition
changed in a remarkable way, and I
began to have a strength that I had
never been possessed of before, a
vigor of body and a poise of mind
that amazed me. It was entirely new
in my experience.
"My former attacks of indigestion
had been accompanied by heat flashes,
and many times my condition was dis-
tressing. with blind spells of dizziness,
rush of blood to the head and neural-
gic pains in the chest.
"Since using Grape-Xuts alone for
breakfast I have been free from these
troubles, except at times when I have
indulged in rich, greasy foods in
quantity, then I would be warned by
a pain under the left shoulder blade,
and unless I heeded the warning the
Did trouble would come back, but
when I finally got to know where
these troubles originated I returned
to my Grape-Nuts and cream and the
pain and disturbance left very quickly.
''I am now in prime health as a re-
sult of my use of Grape-N'uts." Name
given by Postum Co., Battle Creek.
Mich.
UNCLE SAM: "GUESS I'LL HAVE TO COME TO THE RESCUE AGAIN.'
Jews Massacred Indiscriminately
and Houses Looted at Siedlce,
Russian Poland.
FIRE ADDS TERROR TO AWFUL SCENE
Blooilllilrslj- .Soldiers of the ('7.nr lT*e Ar-
tillery on DefeliKi-less City — Mirny
lliiililiiiKii llefttroyeil Dispatch From
■\ViiiKaw l'lnei-sOisnnltit-Kul 200 Killed
ami 3,000 Wounded
St. Petersburg, Sept. 11.—The pre-
dictions made in the dispatches un
August 23 of a Jewish massacre at
Siedlce, Russian Polanu, unhappily
have been justified by the fighting
which broke out Saturday night and
developed Sunday into a carnival of
indiscriminate slaughter and pillage
in which the soldiery and the mob
took part. Unfortunate Jews were
shot and bayonetteu iu the streets of
the town. Houses and shops were
broken into and sacked. Valuables
were carried off and offered lor sale
by soldiers to passengers on passing
trains.
In addition to the Jews a number or
Christians and even some officers met
their death in the fighting. The num-
ber of victims has not yet been es-
tablished but a conservative estimate
places it at 140. The Jewish fugi-
tives who thronged the railroad sta-
tions at Siedlce are in a stale ot
panic.
Reports received here from Warsaw
and other towns in the vicinity of
Siedlce place the number of victims
at several hundred.
The early reiiorls of the Siedlce
massacres put the responsibility at
the door of the terrorists but fugi-
tives declare the soldiers never would
have been allowed to get so conipletly
out of hand without the connivance,
if not the actual direction of their
officers. The first reports received of
the Bialvstok massacre last June said
the terrorists were to blame there
also.
After the murder of a policeman by
terrorists on Saturday night and the
firing of a volley by troops into the
assembled crowd which resulted in
the killing of two citizens and the
wounding of many more, the terror-
ists met and decided to exact ven-
geance by inaugurating a general
campaign against the police and the
troops, similar to the recent activity
in Warsaw. Sunday morning 12 pa-
trolmen and soldiers were killed. As
a result of this the Libau regiment,
In anger left Its barracks in the af-
ternoon and marched into the Jewish
quarter, shooting light and left as
It went. The troops were joined by
crowds of Hooligans, who co-operated
in the plundering and wantonly de-
stroyed everything they were unable
or undesirous of carrying away. The
sale of booty by the soldiers went on
under the very eye of their officers.
Late in the afternoon the Kaluga
regiment arrived on a special train
from Biala and measures were insti-
tuted to put a stop to the pogrom.
In spite of this, however, the shoot-
ing continued up to a late hour Sun-
day night.
Siedlce is a town of 30,000 people,
half of whom are Jews.
Warsaw, Sept. 11.—Artillery was
used in Siedlce Monday morning.
Buildings on Pienkna, Warsaw and
Aleina streets have been destroyed.
According to (reports received here
200 Jews were killed and 3,000 were
wounded (luring the pogrom.
A telegram received here from
Siedlre Monday morning says the
rioting and shooting there continues.
The revolutionists are firing at the
soldiery from windows and the troops
reply with volleys. The Libau in-
fantry regiment took the principal
part in the massacre. Some passengers
on a through train were hit by stray
shots on Sunday. The loot ofTered
for sale by the soldiers consists prin-
cipally of jewelry and clothing.
Siedlce, Sept. 11.—Six buildings In
the big bazaar of the city are now
In flames, adding another terror to
the killing and plundering which has
been going on here for 3(5 hours. Fre-
quent shots and occasional volley fir-
ing is still heard in different parts of
town but because of the general panic
it is difficult to learn accurately just
what is transpiring. As far as is
possible to learn there have been up
to the present time about 60 persons
killed and 200 wounded.
Hundreds of Jews were assembled
Monday at the railroad station await-
ing means of getting out of town
but Siedlce is surrounded by troops
who do not permit exit or entrance.
Field guns occupy points of vantage
on the princinpift streets.
There seems to no doubt that the
terrorists are responsible for pro-
voking the massacre by their fusil-
lades from roofs and windows on
Saturday against soldiers and police-
men who were patrolling the streets.
The troops surrounded the houses
from which this firing came and
poured in volleys through the win-
dows and doors. This was followed
by a search of the premises, which
soon developed into wholesale plun-
dering and subsequently into a mas-
sacre and slaughter. The trouble be-
gan in Pienkna street and spread rap-
idly to a large portion or the town.
Almost all the Jewish shops have
been looted. Owners who defended
their property were killed or wounded.
Any person seen leaving a house or
looking out of a window was shot
without mercy.
Hon Hon Hi eli Priftst#,
Oklahoma City, Ok., Sept. 11.—The
Osirlan cloister of the Hoo Hoos
elected the following high priests
Monday: Ptha, A. D. McLeod, Cin-
cinnati; Annubis, Jay Hammon, Port-
land, Ore.; Thoth, J. H. Baird, Nash-
ville; Hathor, J. Oxenford, Chicago;
Oslrius, William Stevenson, St. Paul;
Ra, Nels Darling, Oklahoma City;
Isis, G. M. Duncan, Houston, Tex.;
Shu, J. K. Long, Mcxico City; Sed,
O. H. Rectnus. Kansas City.
Money in I'nnnina Jnnk.
Washington, Sept. 11.—The sale of
7,200 tons of cast iron junk on the
isthmus of Panama for $00,000 recent-
ly has encouraged the canal commis-
sion to believe they have a small for-
tune in worthless machinery pur-
chased from the French canal com-
pany. The lot of scrap iron sold was
assembled from a few acres of grouna
which Chief Engineer Stevens found
it necessary to clear in order to con-
struct new switching yards for the
Panama railroad. One of the officials
of the canal commission said Mon-
day that there were 30 miles of ground
strewn with similar machinery. He
roughly calculated that when this ma-
chinery is gathered up it will be worth
$1,000,000 or more.
May Deport Chorus Sineem.
New York, Sept. 11.—Fifty mem-
bers of the Metropolitan Opera
chorus arrived on the steamer La
Bretagne. Later the chorus may have
to go on Ellis Island to prove that
they are not contract laborers. A
theatrical agent, John J. Barry, filed
a complaint with the department of
commerce and labor in Washington
and with the inmraigration author-
ities in this city in which he alleges
that the chorus singers come under
the contract labor law, in that they
are laborers brought to this country
under contract.
Flow of BritUh Hold Cnntlnnen
New York. Sept. 11.—Kuhn, Loeb
& Co., Monday announced it had en-
gaged $2,500,000 in gold eagles in Lon-
don for import. Under the order of
Secretary Shaw a national bank act-
ing for Kuhn, Loeb & Co., may draw
upon the United States sub-treasury
for $2,500,000 pending the arrival of
the gold in this country.
Parker'* Trial* Postponed.
Chicago, Sept. 11.—The trial ot
the packing companies under indict-
ment on a charge of being in a com-
bination in "octraint of trade and
commerce was originally set
for Mond:v continued until No-
vember 10
%i 'roop Train.
Havana, S~ —A troop train
from Hav"1 Hacked early Mon-
day morntt1 tempa. The rebels
were driven <ith machine pint.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color
Silk, Wool and Cotton at one boiling,
fast, beautiful colors. 10c per package.
Just because a man glv^s up a dol-
lar to hear a lecture downtown it
doesn't signify that he cares for free
lectures at home.
War on Liquor and Tobacco.
Tlio Kansas Anti-Liquor Society linn
adopted a new plan in light the liquor
traffic. It is mailing free a recipe for tlie
cure nf the liquor habit. It can be given
pceretly in coffee or food. AIho one for
the tobacco hfthit that can >he given se-
cretly. Tlie only request they make is
that you do not. sell the recipes, but give
free copies to friend*. Their address is
Room 10, Gray Uldg., Kansas City, Mo.
Anything but Friendly.
'"^lii astonish me. Your engagement
with Miss Welloph Is broken, Is It?
Are tlje relations between you still
friendly?"
"I should say not! The relations be-
tween us are her relations, and they're
my bitter enemies."—Chicago Tri-
bune.
The extraordinary popularity of fine
wh'te goods this summer makes the
choice of Starch a ma'ter of great Im-
portance. Defiance Starch, being free
from all injurious chemicals, is the
only one which is safe to use on fine
fabrics. Its gTeat strength as a stlff-
ener makes half the usual quantity of
Starch necessary, with ths result of
perfect finish, equal to that when the
goods were new.
States of Brazil.
Politically, Brazil is divided Into 21
states (including the federal district),
but so unequal Is the division that
three of these embrace practically her
entire lowlands, as well as a portion
of the western uplands, and exceed
in area the remaining 18, which lie
within the highland region, except
for their narrow margins upon the
coast. These latter, however, contain
more than 96 per cent, of the popula-
tion.
TERRIBLE SCALY ECZEMA.
Eruptions Appeared on Chest, and
Face and Neck Were All Broken
Out—Cured by Cuticura.
"I had an eruption appear on my
chest and body and extend upwards
and downwards, so that my neck and
face were all broken out; also my
arms and the lower limbs as far as
the knees. I at first thought it was
prickly heat. But scon scales or
crusts formed where the breaking out
was. Instead of going to a physician I
purchased a complete treatment of the
Caticura Remedies, in which I had
great faith, and all was satisfactory.
A year or two later the eruption ap-
peared again, only a little lower; but
before it had time to spread I pro-
cured another supply of the Cuticura
Remedies, and continued their use un-
til the cure was complete. It is now
five yeatrs since the last attack, and
have not seen any signs of a return.
I have more faith in Cuticura Reme-
dies for skin disease.? than anything
I know of. Emma E. Wilson, Lis-
comb, Iowa, Oct. 1, 1905." •
There is nothing truer than a sif-
ter's love—for some other chap.
The Ago of Lead.
We are wont to speak of this art
ns the "age of Iron," and there Is no,
gainsaying that, industrially speaking,!
Iron is a "precious metal."
Nevertheless, few people realize,
how useful, If not absolutely neces-l
sary, to modern civilization, is thatI
other metal, lead. Soft, yielding,
pliable, it ia not much like Its sl.;ter|
metal, but those distinguishing quali-j
ties are what give it such a prominent!
place -In the arts and industries.
Modern plumbing, requiring many
turnings and tvvistings, but withal1
tight joints, would be almost impos-
sible without lead pipe. The great-,
est civilizing agent in the world—the
printing art—Is absolutely dependent
on lead. Hand-set type, linotype
"slugs," monotype type — all are
made of compositions of which lead
is the chief component—to say noth-
ing ot tho bearings in the presses as
well as all other kinds of machinery
in which "babbitt" metal is used.
Solder is another lead product—
what a field of usefulness that one
form opens up.
Then there is the most important
use of all to which lead is put—paint,
that necessary material which keep3
our houses looking pretty — inside
and out—and preserves them from
decay.
How many of us thank metallic lead
for the comforts of,paint? Yet the
best house paint is nothing but me-
tallic lead corroded by acid to a white
powder known as "white lead." Of
course, there are many imitations of
"white lead," some of which are sold
as white lead and some which are
offered by the name of ready-pre-
pared paint under the familiar pre-
tense that they are "just as good" as
white lead. But all good paint Is
made of the metal, lead, corroded and
ground to a fine white powder and
mixed with linseed oil.
White lead is also used in the coat-
ing of fine oil cloths and for many
purposes besides paint.
"Red lead" is another product of
metallic lead and is what is known as
an oxide of lead, being produced by
burning the metal. Red lead is the
best paiut known to preserve iron,
steel or tin, and is used largely in
painting metal structures, such as
skyscraper skeletons, mills and
bridge-.
There are many other products of
the metal lead, such as litharge,
orange mineral, etc., which are es-
sential to many of the arts in which
we never Imagine that lead would be
of the least use.
Verily, we live iri an age of lead
as well as of iron. .
Seeking Only Bare Justice.
Creditor—So you've come around al
last to pay me what you owe me, have
you?
Debtor—Not at all—just the con-
trary. You made a statement at the
club last night that I owed you 600
marks. As a matter of fact the ac-
counts show I only owe you 5ii0. I've
come around to collect that balance oi
40.
We cannot expect the pleasure ol
friendship without the duty, the priv-
ilege without the responsibility.—
Hugh Black, M. A.
STOP, WOflAN 1
AND CONSIDER THE
ALL-IMPORTANT
FACT
That, In addressing1 Mrs. Pinkham yon
are confiding your private ills to a woman
—a woman whose experience with wo-
men's diseases covers twenty-five years.
The present Mrs. Pinkham is the
daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham,
and for many years under her direction,
and since her decease,her advice has been
freely given to sick women.
Many women suffer in silence and drift along
from bad to worse, knowing full well that they
ought to have immediate assistance, but a natural
modesty impels them to shrink from exposing them-
selves to the questions and probable examinations
of even their family physician. It is unnecessary.
Without money or price you can consult a woman
whose knowledge from actual experience is great.
Mrs. Piukliam's Standing Invitation:
Women suffering from any form of female weak-
ness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs.
Pinkham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received,
opened, read and answered by women only. A
woman can freely talk of her private illness to a
woman; thus has been established the eternal
confidence between Mrs.Pinkham and the women
of America which has never been broken. Ont
of the vast volume of experience which she
has to draw from, it is more than possible
that she has gained the very knowledge
that will help your case. She asks noth-
ing in return except your good-will, and
her advice has relieved thousands. Surely
any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if
she does not take advantage of this gen-
erous offer of assistance.—Lydia £. Pink*
bam Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass.
Following we publish two let-
ters from a woman who accep-
ted this invitation. Koto tho
result:
First letter.
Dear Mrs. Pinkham!—
" For eight years I have suffered something
terrible every month. The pains are excru-
ciating and I can hardly stand them. My
doctor says I bt ve a severe female trouble,
and I must go through an operation if I want
to get well. 1 do not want to submit to it if
I can possiblv help it. Plea.se tell me what
to do. I hope you can relieve me."—Mrs.
Marv Dimmick, 59th and £. Capitol Streets,
Washington, D. C.
Second letter.
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—
" After following carefully your advice,
and taking Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable
Compound, I am verv anxious to send yon
my testimonial, that others may know their
(«.:• ami what you have dona for um.
" As yon know, I wrote yen that my doctor
said 1 must have an operation or I could no6
live. I then wrote you, telling you my ail-
ments. I followed your advice and am en-
tirely well. I can walk miles withrut an
acbe or a pain, and I owe mv life to you anil
to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable CV.uipouiHt.
I wish every suffering woman would read
this testimonial and realize the value of writ-
ing to you and ytnir remedy."— Mrs. Mary
1 limoiick, With and K. Capitol (Streets, W<ub-
ington, D. C.
When a medicine has been successful
in restoring to health so many women
whose testimony is bo unquestionable,
yon cannot well say, without trying it,
"I do not beli?ve it will help me." If
you are ill. don't hesitate to get a bot-
tle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege'able
Compound at once, and write Mrs Pink-
ham. Lynn. Mass.. for special advise—*
it is free and always helpful.
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Wood, E. A. The Medford Star. (Medford, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 15, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 13, 1906, newspaper, September 13, 1906; Medford, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc186341/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.