Mannford Herald. (Mannford, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1910 Page: 2 of 4
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MANNFORD HERALD
H. M SULLENS, Editor and Publisher
!
OKI AHOMA
MANNFORD
the
all the emotional plays.”
i
one
his
"But In confidence. I'll tell
made at Sitka.
horses climbs into his automobile, or- ture in the Provinces of Monitoba,
a
man gets inside and one gets outside,
City delights (small cakes), Klondike
nuggets (yellow cheese in round balls and they pound frightfully; and then
t
F i
i
in
- I
apply cloths wet with a weak solution
"‘There’s
Reason"
i
/ .
padded tube covering the axle bar.
Across this he lies face foremost, and
show that during the past decade a
remarkable development has taken
place, and, when compared with the
thing and reckless tomfoolery is an
other.
hands he propels himself along the
streets and roads in a marvelously
been invaded by infant paralysis. The
doings of the average student make
this invasion entirely credible.
Michael
proudly.
trol of the machine, his hands acting
as pedals, steering gear, and brake
combined.
on
be
Be
€
<
Fifty-six Indiana counties have lost
in population since the 1900 census. As
■oon as people make a fortune in lit-
erature, they move out of Indiana.
Miladi says a man's clothes always
seem to fit him real loose after his
wife's relatives have looked him over.
ders the chauffeur to "hit 'er up." and
is whisked away to the horse show.
The New York milliner who built an
aeroplane doubtless utilized some of
the models in the shop.
An airship that will break down
without falling is one of the crying
necessities of the age.
------------------ producing capacity imperative on the
A prominent New York college has cultivation restriction of 50 acres of
I
but it will not be as hard to learn to
say hangar as it was to get chauffeur
to roll correctly from the tongue.
The aeroplane is becoming a danger
ous rival of the automobile in the toll
of deaths.
on crackers), Nome firewater (coffee).
—Woman's Home Companion.
they tie it to the other thing, and you
ought to see it go!”'
The dollies were
in the middle of the
tules, make a lotion of chloride of zinc
instead of the lead; finely powdered
charcoal may be sprinkled over the
cloths
The consumer hopes the Ice crop,
too, will be a bumper.
Nearly every gift that is made has
some sort of a string tied to it.
The earth remains safer than either
the sea or the sky.
population, a greater percentage of In- |
crease in Industries of all kinds than
has ever been shown by any country.
R
M
F,
but when neglected, it invariably ruins
i all trees It reaches.
An Alaskan Luncheon.
Runners of woven Indian basketry,
I
I
I
THE CENSUS
OF CANADA
Cure for Scratches.
Scratches are caused by exposure to
e
h
h
in
in
t
er
la
when is added the 40,000 160-acre pre- with white drawnwork doilies at each
emption blocks, there is an additional of the 12 covers, were used on an oval
10,000 square miles. or a total of 35,- mahogany table.
000 square miles—a territory as large
They are building liners so big the
globe trotters will expect to find on
them golf courses, porte cocheres and
outdoor sleeping porches.
Marriage may be a lottery, but the
proposal of a woman in the west to
raffle herself off for a dollar a chance
is emphasizing the fact a little too
strongly.
■ >
Ba i
l
A f
E -
in,
H
lit
ns
ar
nin.
you, I didn't know it five minutes
ago.”—New York Tribune.
English Women Smoke Pipes.
The latest fancy of the woman
smoker is a pipe—not the tiny affair
. that suffices for the Japanese, but a
railways have made a steady march good-sized brier or a neat meer.
Statistics show that April and Sep-
tember are the favorite months in
which to go crazy. That may account
for the hunches that induce some men
to become candidates for public office.
Commerce, mining, agriculture and
American brides entering Germany
are to be compelled to pay duty on
their wedding outfits. The counts and
barons they take over should not cost
much if the duty on them is levied ad
valorem.
That returning tourist who disobey-
ed father and was fined $800 for fail-
ing to declare dutiable articles now -------------------- —--------
realizes that her Uncle Samuel is one cold and wet. local irritation or low
relative that will not stand any non- 1 condition, all of which should be
sense avoided if possible. In simple cases
Acknowledgment.
"You will admit that you owe a
great deal to your wife?”
“I should say so,” replied Mr. Cum-
rox. "I wouldn't be invited to any of
her receptions or musicales if I wasn’t
married to her.”
The least that can be said of that
rotten egg Industry declared to exist
in New York is that it will be in bad
odor with the pubitc.
____ I grow upon a tree before the tree it-
A census of the Dominion of Canada will be. killed. The. parasite saps
... I the life of the Infected branches. For-
tunately, it is of slow growth, taking
years to develop to large proportions.
rapid manner. He has complete con-
The hobble skirt has gone out of
fashion even in Paris, and it will soon
be marked off the list everywhere.
hospital and at the risk of death be cut.
Plain common sense shows the better way
is to stop food that evidently has not been
digested.
Then, when food is required, use an easily
digested food. Grape-Nuts or any other if
you know it to be predigested (partly digested
before taking).
We brought to Court analytical chemists
from New York, Chicago and Mishawaka, Ind.,
who swore to the analysis of Grape-Nuts and
that part of the starchy part of the wheat and
barley had been transformed into sugar, the
kind of sugar produced in the human body by
digesting starch (the large part of food).
Some of the State chemists brought on by
the "weekly" said Grape-Nuts could not be
called a "predigested" food because not all of
it was digested outside the body.
The other chemists said any food which had
been partly or half digested outside the body
was commonly known as "predigested."
Splitting hairs about the meaning of a word.
It is sufficient that if only one-half of the
food is "predigested," it is easier on weakened
stomach and bowels than food in which no
part is predigested.
To show the facts we introduce Dr. Thos.
Darlington, former chief of the N. Y. Board
of Health, Dr. Ralph W. Webster, chief of the
Chicago Laboratories, and Dr. B. Sachs, N. Y.
If we were a little severe in our denuncia-
tion of a writer, self-confessed Ignorant about
appendicitis and its cause, it is possible the
public will excuse us. In view of the fact that
our head. Mr. C. W. Post, has made a lifetime
study of food, food digestion and effects, and
the conclusions are indorsed by many of the
best medical authorities of the day.
Is it possible that we are at fault for
suggesting, as a Father and Mother might, to
one of the family who announced a pain in the
side: "Stop using the food, greasy meats,
gravies, mince pie, cheese, too much starchy
with wooden clogs strapped to
when It Is not in use. Shed is short.
Developing the Aeroplane is
The race for wealth ends at ths
cemetery.
Rat Bounty Excites Merriment.
Seattle, fearing the introduction of
bubonic plague by rats, has offered a
bounty of ten cents a rat. This moves
Tacoma, safe from Infection from the
sea, to raucous laughter, and the Led-
ger says that the bounty, “though not
intended for rodents of Tacoma,
Everett, Bellingham and other popu-
lous and busy centers, has been find-
ing its way into the pockets of non-
residents of Seattle for non-resident
rats. But the Joke would be on us if
it were found that our rat popular
tion had found its way Into the Seat-
tle census.”
Pretty Good Definition.
We hear some funny things in Fleet
Street sometimes, and the following
definition of the height of aggravation,
by a gentleman in rather shaky boots,
whom we encountered in a well-known
hostelry the other day, struck us as
being particularly choice.
"The ’eight of haggravatton, gentle-
men." said this pothouse humorist, set-
ting his pewter on the counter and
looking round proudly, with the air of
one about to let off a good thing, “the
'eight of haggravatton—why, trying
to ketch a flea out o' yer ear with a
pair of boxin' gloves."—London Tit-
Bits.
Lightning Change.
The Manager—Can you make quick
changes and double in a few parts?
The Actor—Can I? Say, you know
the scene in "Love and Lobsters,"
where the hero and the villain are
fighting, and a friend rushes in and
separates 'em? Well, I played all
three parts one night when the other
two fellows were ill.
Kindly intentions.
"A man who enjoys seeing a woman
in tears Is a brute."
"I don't know about that,” replied
Miss Cayenne, "One of the kindest
busbands I know takes his w±a to see
Largest of Whales.
The largest whale of Its type of
which there is scientific record was
captured recently off Port Arthur,
Tex. He measured sixty-three feet
in length, and was estimated to be
about three hundred years old. Cap-
tain Cob Plummer, mate of a United
States pilot boat, sighted the monster
in the shoals off the Jetties, and the
crew of his vessel captured the mam-
mal. The huge body was towed ashore,
exhibited and much photographed be-
fore being cut up.
A New York woman is enraged be-
cause her son wants to marry an
actress. She might as well cheer up.
He'll be back home again in a little
while.
Echoes of Munchausen.
It was an absent-minded traveler
who had lately taken to ballooning.
"Yes," he observed impressively. "It
was a fearful journey. The machine,
a thousand feet up, and no more bal-
last, beaded straight for Siberia, and
the rarefied air—well, you know as
well as I do what effect that has on
a balloon.. Yes, the peril was terri-
ble.” Then the old habit was too
strong for him. “The wolves detected
our presence. A desperate race en-
sued. We felt their hot breath on the
nape of our necks.”—London Globe.
Will be made during 1911. It will
Not Altogether Dead.
Mr. Robert Butler of Marlborough,
England, has bad the peculiar expe-
rience of hearing his death announc-
ed. He was attending the poor law
conference at Exeter when one of
the delegates moved that, in conse-
quence of the death of Mr. Butler,
which they all regretted, another gen-
tleman, whom he named, should be
appointed to fill his place as one of
the representatives of Wiltshire on
the central committee. Mr. Butler
rose from his place on the platform
and announced to the conference,
amid much amusement, that, so far
as he was aware, he was still alive
and in good health, and would be
pleased to continue in the office if the
conference desired.
Hillegas," said
An Unnecessary Confession.
A hearty laugh was occasioned at
the Birmingham police court by a pris-
oner who gave himself away in a very
delightful manner. The man was the
first on the list, and the charge against
him was merely one of being drunk
and disorderly. He stepped Into the
dock. however, just at the moment
when the dock officer was reading out
a few of the cases which were to coma
before the court that morning, and a
guilty conscience apparently led him
to mistake these items fcr a list of hla
previous convictions.
He stood passive enough while the
officer read out about a dozen drunk
and disorderlies, but when he came to
one "shopbreaking" the prisoner ex-
claimed excitedly, "That was eight
years ago. your honor,” Everyone be-
gan to laugh, and the prisoner, realis-
ing the blunder he had made, at first
looked very black indeed, but finally
saw the humorous side of the matter,
and a broad smile spread over his face.
His blunder did not cost anything.—"
Birmingham Mall.
Also It is reported that the size of
women's hats is being reduced. But
the masculine payers of the bills have
not yet made the happy discovery
that the price has been reduced in
proportion.
The Bright Side.
Nebuchadnezzar was lurching in his
accustomed style.
"All flesh being grass,” he reflected,
“this must be Beef a la Mowed."
And chuckling hoarsely, he took an-
other chaw.—Puck.
Planting Wedding Oaks.
Princess August Wilhelm, wife of
the kaiser's fourth son, has set herself
the task of reviving one of Germany’s
oldest customs, that according to which
newly wedded couples immediately af-
ter the marriage ceremony plant a cou-
pie of oak saplings side by side in •
park or by the roadside of their na-
tive town.
The town of Mulchausen, in Thurin-
gla, is the first to respond to the prin-
cess' appeal. A municipal official ap-
pears at the church door after every
wedding and invites the bride and
hridegroom tn drive with him in a car
riage to a new road near the town and
there plant oak saplings.
The tree planting idea was started
by a former elector of Brandenburg
with the object of repairing the rav
ages caused by the 30 years' war. The
elector forbade young persons to mar-
ry until they had planted a number of
fruit trees.
A woman in Washington washes all
the paper money that she receives in
order that it may be clean. All of us
are not so particular. A little dirty
money looks good to a hungry man.
one knew the name.
A clean flue may save the house
from burning down.
great—a vast—Increase In the num-
ber of farms under occupation, as well
as in the output of the farms. When
the figures of the splendid Immigra-
tion are added to the natural increase,
the total will surprise even the most
optimistic. To the excellent growth
that the western portion of Canada
will show may largely be attributed
the commercial and industrial growth
of the eastern portion of Canada. All
Canada is being upbuilded, and in this
transformation there is taking part
the people from many countries, but
only from those countries that pro-
duce the strong and vigorous. As
some evidence of the growth of the
western portion of Canada, in agricul- '
tural industry, It is instructive to
point out that over 100,000 home-
steads of 160 acres eacn nave been
transferred to actual settlers in the
past two years. This means 25,000
square miles of territory, and then.
"Hangar,” the French word which is of sugar of lead and in winter cover
used in connection with flying ma- to keep out cold When cracks have
chines, means merely shed—a place | appeared, apply n similar lotion with
In which an aeroplane may be kept | the addition of a few drops of carbolic
scid in case or discharge or pus
ITS GROWTH IN TEN YEARS
PAST.
Her—Yes. He's employed in
government bureau, you know.
"We are assured that men are
drinking less nowadays," observes the
Philadelphia Inquirer, "but bow is It
that the internal revenue increases so
fast?" The census figures of 1910
may help you. brother.
“Why. it's
the man
Two Very Old Ladies.
We have heard a great deal lately
about long-lived people, but It is prob-
able that the oldest two people in the
world today are Frau Dutklevitz and
another old lady named Babavaslika.
The former lives at Posem, in Prus-
sian Poland, and was born on Febru-
ary 21, 1785. She is therefore one
hundred and twenty-five years old.
The latter, however, is nine months
her senior, having been born in May,
1784.
She is still a fairly hale old woman,
and for nearly one hundred years
worked in the fields. Her descendants
number close on 100, and these now-
make her a Joint allowance. She lives
at the village of Bavelsko, whose
neighborhood she has never quitted
during the whole of her long life. She
remembers events which happened at
the beginning of last century much
more clearly than those of the last
40 years.—Dundee Advertiser.
as the State of Indiana, and settled
within two years. Reduced to the
Holidays In the States.
Washington's birthday is a holiday
in all states. Decoration day in all
states but Florida, Georgia, Louisiana,
Mississippi, North Carolina, South
Carolina, Tennessee and Texas. Labor
day is observed everywhere. Virtu-
ally every state has legal holidays
having to do with its own special af-
fairs—battle of New Orleans In Louis-
iana. Texan Independence and battle
of San Jacinto in Texas, Admission
day in California, and so on. Missis-
sippi is like the federal government
In lack of statutory holidays, but by
common consent Independence day.
Thanksgiving and Christmas are ob-
served. A new one is Columbus day
in a few of the states.
An Iowa man paid $105 the other
day for ten ears of corn. Yet there
are people who risk their lives hunt-
ing for gold.
Mistletoe is Dangerous.
Few people who know mistletoe
only as a desirable feature of Christ-
mas decorations understand that the
plant is a parasite dangerous to the
life of trees in the regions in which
it grows. It is only a question of
time, alter mistletoe once begins to
An Ace Up His Sleeve.
Munich has once more become the
scene of a “painful incident” through
Ignorance on the part of a young man,
the son of a high official, as to how
to hold his cards when playing, says
the Munchener Post A game was in
progress at a club when some one
saw the young man draw an ace from
his sleeve. When the excitement
caused by the operation had some-
what subsided a prominent citizen
prevented criminal proceedings by
bundling the card sharp into an au-
tomobile. whi.- " ok him without stop
across the Bavarian frontier.
Disqualified.
Her—My brother won first prize in
that amateur guessing contest, but
they ruled him out as a professional.
Him—A professional?
Saskatchewan and Alberta was an
experiment to many. There were
skeptics who could not believe that
it was possible to grow thirty, forty
and even fifty bushels of wheat to the
acre, or that as high as one hundred
and thirty bushels of oats to the acre
could be grown. The skeptics are not
to be found today. The evidence of
the hundreds of thousands of farmers
is too overwhelming. Not only have
the lands of western Canada proven
their worth in the matter of raising
all the smaller field grains, but for
mixed farming, and for cattle raising
there is no better country anywhere.
The climate is perfectly adapted to all
these pursuits as well as admirable
for health. The Dominion government
literature, descriptive of the country,
is what all that are Interested should
read. Send for a copy to the nearest
Canadian government representative.
arctic slices (brick ice cream). Circle got—they have to make a boiler. One
Too Ardent a Lover.
Georgotto Fontano, an embroiderer
who lives in the Rue Sevres in Paris,
has found herself condemned to a
month's Imprisonment for what seems
to her a harmless act.
She was going home from a concert
a few evenings ago when she decided
she would like to see her fiance. As
he happens to be a fireman whose
station is in her owa neighborhood ft
occurred to her it would be very easy
to summon him to her side by break-
ing the glass of the fire alarm and
sounding a call.
She did so anr in a few moments
fire engines came from several direc-
tions, all laden with firemen, of course,
but alas! her fiance was not among
them, and more than that all the fire-
men were angry, and before she knew
what had happened she was taken to
a magistrate, who proceeded to make
the course of true love run unsmoothly
by sending her to prison for a month
in spite of her tears and protests that
she thought it would be a simple way
of bringing her fiance to her side.
That Suit for Libel
Against the Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Gave a Splendid Chance
to Bring Out Facts
Takes Himself Seriously.
Nicola Tesla, dining by himself fh a
hotel's great dining room, takes a
table where he can be seen. Through-
out his meal he wears a deeply stu-
dious, a completely absorbed, attitude
He may bring to the table a portfolio
filled with papers. These he may
scan with prolonged solemnity. In
any event, he sits an eloquent tableau
of profundity.—New York Press.
A disagreement about advertising arose
with a “weekly” Journal.
Following it, an attack on us appeared In
their editorial columns; sneering at the claims
we made particularly regarding Appendicitis
We replied through the regular papers and
the “weekly” thought we hit back rather too
hard and thereupon sued for libel.
The advertisement the "weekly” attacked
us about claimed that in many cases of appen-
dicitis an operation could be avoided by dis-
continuing Indigestible food, washing out the
bowels and taking a predigested food Grape-
Nuts.
Observe we said MANY cases not all.
Wouldn't that knowledge be a comfort to
those who fear a surgeon's knife as they fear
death?
The “weekly" writer said that was a lie.
We replied that he was ignorant of the facts.
He was put on the stand and compelled to
admit he was not a Dr. and had no medical
knowledge of appendicitis and never investi-
gated to find out if the testimonal letters to
our Co. were genuine.
A famous surgeon testified that when an
operation was required Grape-Nuts would not
obviate it. True
We never claimed that when an operation
was required Grape-Nuts would prevent it.
The surgeon testified bacteria [germs! help-
ed to bring on an attack and bacteria was
grown by undigested food frequently.
We claimed and proved by other famous
experts that undigested food was largely
responsible for appendicitis.
We showed by expert testimony that many
cases are healed without a knife, but by stop-
ping the use of food which did not digest, and
when food was required again it was helpful
to use a predigested food which did not over-
tax the weakened organs or digestion.
When a pain In the right side appears it is
not always necessary to be rushed off to a
cultivation on each 160 acre home-
stead within three years, there will
be within a year and a half from now
upwards of 6,000,000 additional acres
from this one source added to the en-
tire producing area of the Provinces
of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al-
berta.
In 1901, at the time of the last
table a mirror held a tall central vase
of frosted glass, surrounded by four
smaller vases, all filled with white
spring blossoms The edge of the
mirror was banked with the same
flowers Four totem poles were placed
on doilies in the angles made by the
runners.
Place cards were water colors of
Alaskan scenery. Abalone shells held
salted nuts, and tiny Indian baskets
held bonbons. The soup spoons were
of horn, several of the dishes used
_ . . . . __ less than one-third of the Immigration try. Both his legs are withered and
mm ngsg°by.contrar h- when, to the United States during the same useless, but the Leicester Cripples'
down in the depths period with its 92.000.000 of popula Guild has provided him with a two
P Uon. Even with these hundreds of wheeled pedalless machine, with a
When sold merely by weight. dla thousands of newcomers, the great
monds are still a little more valuable majority of whom go upon the land,
than breakfast bacon. Uere is still available room tor hun-
_________________ dreds of thousands additional. The
census figures will therefore show a
the cakes were served on baskets.
The menu was as follows: Poisson
a la Bering Sea (halibut chowder),
Yukon climbers (broiled salmon, po-
tatoes Julienne), snowbirds avec
auroraborealis (roast duck with Jelly),
Shungnak river turnips. Tanana
beets. Skagway hash (salad), Fair-
banks nuggets (ripe strawberries ar-
ranged on Individual dishes around a
central mound of powdered sugar),
Vivid at Least
Dr. Hiram C. Cortlandt, the well-
known theologian of Des Moines, said
in a recent address:
“Thomas A. Edison tells us that he
thinks the soul is not immortal; but,
after all, what does this great wizard
know about souls? His forte is elec-
tricity and macuinery. and when he
talks of souls he reminds me Irresist-
ibly of the young lady who visited the
Baldwin locomotive works and then
told bow a locomotive is made.
“ 'You pour,’ she said, 'a lot of sand
into a lot of boxes, and you throw old
stove lids and things into a furnace,
and they you empty the molten stream
into a bole in the sand, and everybody
yells and swears. Then you pour it
out and let it cool and pound it, and
then you put It in a thing that bores
holes In it. Then you screw it to-
gether. and paint IL and put steam in
it, and it goes splendidly; and they
take it to a drafting room and make
a bluep rint of it. But one thing I for-
Hereupon the enthusiastic lover of census of Canada, successful agricul- were made by Alaskan Indians, and
The Cat Came Home.
The story of a cat’s remarkable
Journey comes from Wycombe Marsh,
Buckinghamshire, Eng’and, which
seems to indicate a marvelous sense
of direction. Some few weeks ago the
feline went amissing. The owner sur-
mised that the animal had been stolen
or bad strayed away, but the other
day communication was received from
some friends to the effect that the
cat had returned to its old home at
St Neotas, Huntingdonshire, a dis-
tance of about 90 miles.
Postum Cereal Co.. Ltd
Battle Creek, Mich.
onward. The population will be con- : schaum. The pipe is boldly carried
sidcrably over 8,000,000. Thousands along with a gold card case and chain-
of miles of railway lines have been purse. For some time now the cig-
construction since the last census was arette has given place to a cigar,
taken ten years ago. This construc- small in size and mild in quality,
tion was made necessary by the open- Women said they were tired of the
Ing up of the new agricultural dis- Carette, and wanted a bigger smoke,
tricts in Western Canada, in which "on on Mat_____________
there have been pouring year alter cripple Rides Bicycle.
year an increasing number of settlers, George Anstey, aged 12, a cripple,
until the present year will witness ot Leicester, England, is one of the
settlement of over 300,000, or a trifle most remarkable cyclists in the coun
Bankers and Bank Notes.
Four men, three of whom were con-
nected with brokerage concerns in the
Wall street district, were discussing
United States paper currency and the
disappearance of counterfeits. “We
are so sure nowadays," said one of
the party, "as to the genuineness of
bills that little attention is paid to
them in handling, except as to de-
nomination." To prove his assertion
be took a $10 yellowback from his
pocket, and, holding It up, asked who
could tell whose portrait it bore. No
one knew, and by way of coaching
the broker said It was the first treas-
urer of the United States. Again no
Just think! Angels' food cake is
made in New York of “rots" and
“spots."
Ten orphan baby seals have been
brought down from Bering sea to pass
the winter in this country as an ex
periment. If the y do well we may yet 1
raise our own sealskin coats in inland
waters.
food, etc., etc., which has not been digested,
then when again ready for food use Grape-
Nuts because It is easy of digestion?”
Or should the child be at once carted off to
a hospital and cut?
We have known o’ many cases wherein the
approaching signs of appendicitis have dis-
appeared by the suggestion being followed.
No one better appreciates the value of a
skilful physician when a person is in the awful
throes of acute appendicitis, but "an ounce
of prevention is worth a pound of cure."
Just plain old common sense is helpful even
nowadays.
This trial demonstrated Grape-Nuts food
I s pure beyond quest I on. "
It is partly predigested.
Appendicitis generally- has rise from undi-
gested food-
It is not always necessary to operate.
It is beat to stop all food.
When really to bcgin~feeding use a predi-
gested fooef ----------------
It is palatable and strong in Nourishment.
It will pay tine returns in health to quit the
heavy breakfasts and lunches and use less
food but select food certainly known to con-
tain the elements nature requires to sustain
the body. May we be permitted to suggest a
breakfast of fruit, Grape-Nuts and cream,
two soft boiled eggs, and some hot toast and
cocoa, milk or Postum?
The question of whether Grape-Nuts does or
does not contain the elements which nature
requires for the nourishment of the brain, also
of its purity, will be treated in later news-
paper articles.
Good food is Important and its effect on the
body is also important.
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Sullens, H. M. Mannford Herald. (Mannford, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 16, Ed. 1 Friday, December 23, 1910, newspaper, December 23, 1910; Mannford, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1945283/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Keystone Crossroads Historical Society.