Luther Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 35, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 31, 1935 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Luther Register and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Ja Irle3 K Itik
Ey ELMO SCOTT WATSON
1r 1 IEN Cougressinan Joseph V Pyrns
Is s ir of the Sixth Tennoissee district
d WIIR
tdeed fippnlier of the United Slates
o
house Of representatives nt the open-
ing of the Seventy-fourth congress
- It was (mother case Of "Idstory re-
penthog itself" For It was just 100
J4 !a Yearm ngo thnt nnother Tennessean
')41- r'7 t1 1iit t tt sit'
14- fr 1 1 1—11 t
-4- --" lie i" — "( ° la" le
i' i linigne distimitien of being the onl
p y
'01' senker of the house the h ighest
s her (official In the legislative lorgnelt of
our government to become Presi-
dent of the United States the highest tollicer in
the estamtive branch
That Man fifi James K Polk who became
speaker In 1835 find AVini ton year:4 Inlet wnS
IPIOOted President—the first "dark horse" tonnoll-
date In oor history If the repetition of history
Is consistent who linOW$ but that tett yenrs
hence Speaker Ityrns may boo loccupyine the White
Mouse as did his fellow-Tennessean? It Is not
likely of course principally because of the lige
Dr the new 'polities Ten years from now he will
be seventy-five find It 11D1 not boson floe custom
tof the Anwrienn peopte It) pima) the heavy re-
Iponsibilltioos of the highest totliee in our gmt-rnWent
upon the shoulders tot a man ‘vho lots
passed the proverhial three score and ten Eut
In the whirligig of poollties virtually nothing is
Impossible
Jannis K Polk was not the first Tenntkstin to
become speaker hOWeVer lits immediate prede-
Cessoor John !fell who presided over one sessioon
Of the house in the Twtonty-third congress ( ils:11-
V)) was also a citizen of that commoinweoiltit
Fo the election tot Joseph Ifyrns mokes the third
representative from the Volunteer state vim has
e lehled the gavel tover his congressienal col-
leagues Although 31111MS K rtdli WfiM the only speaker
elm ever became Presloient lit toast live others
have aspired to that high office Three a tlie
five canoe ns motor to) it DS Whining the nOtninfi
thin of their parties only too he defeated in the
eleetloon
outstanding monolog Goose w a s Henry nay
e hose record of repeated Nils foor the Presis
(honey and being denied it was matclord only by
Viiiia in 10111111p liti an In l'oi:i I he receive' i7
tlectoral cottes lout John Quincy Adanos Nvon the
Presidency NVIlen the tdeetion W 71A varied too tilt)
house of representath es fir 8 deoilidoon to itii2
be received -19 electoral votes hut Andrew Jack
ton got 2Ill and the Presideney Ito 1st I Clay
‘‘ UM hfick 111 tloto ring miain lids time as the
fiontillee or the whis the Ltd prwlot!sly run as
I Lepulolicnn nnol a Natinal izopolk10 110
reeelved illi:i eleetooroll votes but that ostler ex-
spiiiiher Jannis K lion the "Work boorii" nem
Mee of the litimocratie party got rot and tile
plectioon
The next speahoor to nspire to) thoo Presidency
IN its john rell or Temee vht A19 the (:ilidt-
Mite Of the Obnsfillithql:11 11110n rt8rty In 1S0)
In the election which sent Abraham Lincoln to
the White House and to lois immortalOty
The nest was James C Itiaine "Waffle of
!!ttno" 1hoso record its s "porpetnid canilidate"
closely minim:oohed that of Henry Clay In 1slit3
It seemeol certain that he )(oath be the itepub-
Ilean nominee hut totoother "dark hers" eanoll-
date Rutherford It Iloyes won the nomination
Intl the election In Isso he wits again n strong
poissitottity butt twain he failed of the mintination
this time by his (Wil 1Nil1 lie threw his strength
to James A Garfield In order to torevetit the
nomination (of Crotnt m too oe its attempting to
tipset Coe "no third to'rm" tratiotion In 1s4 lie
won the Itepulolican nomination lout lost the elec-
tion tto (troves Cleveland the Dulllocral IC Dorn-
IMP In P-SS he was the popular choke of his
party for the nomination hoot lie was in poor
malt h tired mit from lots many battles in the
polithall arena mid in no anwtt to undergo the
rigors of nnother campaign So Ile denied the
requests of his friends too try to Stafilpede the
1:v111h:1c:1u coilvelitiii WhIcli was deadlocked
find engineered the nomination of Ileniandri Har-
rison who )(on the election
Ulm of the noost picturesque Ilgures who ever
held the speaker's chair Mini Josoph Gurney Com-
Won oof Illinois the nool000lotable "toile Joe" who
ruled tile house from lls13 to Loll when the re-
volt of the 'Insurgents" ended his reign 111 EN)8
cannon received -IS votes (or the Presidential
noontintoloon at the Republican national Com ell-
Lion in Chicago but tbe influence of Theodure
The 5peaker's RostruM
5chuvl er Collaz
LoOSON'Olt Nkho MOS deto11111OVII thlit his gem'
friend intim flow ara Taft shooldil be his sue-
kelit the speaker from coming Hoy
to the IVIolle Molise than that
"Illicit) Jowls" successor was Champ Clark of
IlssourI vvho pohaloly came as near to winning
the Presidency' as any speaker duo ever just
noisseil It At the Deemer:Mc national ceeveldien
Iii tholtimoiro) In 1912 he lea the field for ll2t) bal-
lets unit had a clear majority ton eight ilut the
Demeeratie two-thirds rule prOVOlitod his notnittaii
lien on tiny of the vielit Then the vete sw wig
to IVII0111low ‘Vilsotli of Now Jersey mut lio) was
tionlinateol ir on any of thooso) eight leolloits Clark
(multi have !mistimed enough votes to have given
toilcilssItrY two thirds he would have
been Ilresident l'or every ono) knows the result
of the eiection of 1912—k Detimeratic vietory
after '20 straight years of Republican ride
Ilut If Npolii'S of OW house have not fared
so well In aspiring to the Presidency they have
'CVO SODIO1Olt fOlecOSf111 III ITIO'11111: the
setaind highest V:WilitiNV 0111e0 TWO Of
p been vice 'residents Schuyler Colfax yr
Indiana after a six year SO1111'0 Spo:11Cr
(Irani's running mate In isiit) anil IN vice prom'
(Molt presided over tho United Stales senate from
1sio Is73 Tito) next speaker too vacate the
rostrum of one house of the national legkiature
to mound to) tlw ether v‘as J11I111 MIRY Garner
of lexas elected speaker by the Smenty-second
congress in only to move over to the senate
chamber a year later after the Roosevelt land-
lido hail Made thO TOX011 too president
To it Pennsylvanian Frederick A C Milliten-
berg goes the honor Of having been the first
speaker of the house of representativms under the
new government established by tho) adoption of
the tlenstitution on September 17 I7s7
ratitication the next y ear Ile totek ()Mee on
Alwil I 1711)9 tVIO 3o1Lrsi whet) lit wits
$iteeceiled ty (lentiectient's lone contribution to
the history of the spealiership This
than Trumbull the friend (If IVashington in the
Ite obition who gave him the nickname Nkitich Is
OW Of tti f4 for the Ifulteol
Stiotes—"Prother Jonathan)
After Trumbull Milloloinberg served another
two yoeir tern) :mil was succeeded by Jonathan
Itayton of New Jersey NIho served two terms
Dayton's chief eialin to fame Is that In 1117
iS urrestoul for coniplicity III Aare!) Poirr's trea-
son:dile conspiracy lint he "-as released on bail
iittil flower tried on the charge lilhoodore
:134sAciiiisoils' first sile:iist‘r ti veteran
tho rk hi) tiilIj itl(l1it
till' Ian unit made the latter his profession lio
wils the first spoitilser to serve itt the new capital
41 or the It
t'orAOTO1 there on Noiveniker 17 P-II)) A
lew weeks later he was suomeeded tv Neigh
first slimoker Nathaniel :)iiicodi w lio
held the o hair front 101 to
Mitimit came another Pay siater-3oso111
I'd mile)) V a main 1:1'N'olliti011y or t cram
Ido 'was ri' sticimedeol by the
"Altil Boy of the Slashes" Heoliy cmy of Nett
tacky Clay IMO tiNt ViOclea Spe:11er in Isll
III Nvas re electeil in ILt resigneil from cote
vress iti moil wits sticodiedeil us speaker by
Clieves of South Carolina who presided
to er the Th1111411)11 congress Put the next vete
gress !motel Clay again in the house tona again
speaker Ile was re pivoted In 1s17 11'!ilin
hilt resigned once flillIt tu IS20
John W lllaylior or Now York (the hist trent
that stat(') was tho next speaker anol iitr Lin
Philip PItioriidur of Virginia (also last from 11:$
state) In Clay was back in the Louise
again moil again elected speatdir this lime sir
Ing his last term in that whoa) bler now twgan
his repeated attempts to hecome President
Or: tilt' lirSt hut to o ii ntl ovrclary or state
in the cabinet of Johu Quincy hich
WilWr011ir3 AtidreW jitchson whom
Adillti8 hail defeated to renew their stignishea
cries of "thirgain rind corruption:" 'rho
tion wits that Clay's portfolio in the Adams
lIlt Will his price for throwing his ituluenee to the
Mils-auto:set ts man w hen the election of pe24
wt)s in the !Heise of representatives Uri-
tible to use the speaker1de as a springloard to
the Presidency Clay was again elected to the
Senate in vvhich he remained most of the time
lols death hu Issi2 lioing In the meantime
made two more unsuccessful attempts to get to
the lotto) Douse
After the Kentuckian's last term as speaker
John IV lllay loor of Now York servo! another
term 1 le was succeeded by Andrew ISItivensen
T TIE LUTHER REGISTER
Joseph W1yrn5
gitioljuT irginian who after Iwo terms retired
and later became toinister to ohn
as the tist- speaker frmn TcHne!see lie erved
only one !eir when he was succeeded by James
E Polk the future President Dili later WaS
secretary of war In the catilnets or Presidents
‘Villiant Henry Harrison and John Tyler and in
1S1I0 the unsuccessful Prosidmtal candidate of
the Constitutional Union party with the famed
Lilward Everett us his running mate
The wentysixill congress elected another
Virginian as speaker—lioltert I T Hunter Nvhe
had had a long career in congress anti vim On
two oee:oaitns had declined the talkie of seat
tary wide lb I4 oloyted to the senate in
'317 and continued there until his state seceded
from the Union III ht:ttli In 1s115 he was one of
the Confederate pence commissioners who mot
1ith President Lincoln and his party at Hampton
'toads In an abortive effort to end the Civil war
After Hunter came another Kentuckian John
White then another Virginian John W
Mid after him Indiana's first speaker John W
Pa is lite next speaker was Robert C Winthrop
of Massachusetts who the year after his election
'was the chief orator at the laying of the corner-
stone of the Washington monument on July 4
1S18 Thirty-seven years later congress adopted
a Joint resolution Inviting the former speaker to
perform a similar stinice when the monument
was dedicated Winthrop was then seventy-sits
years old and after preparing his speech became
a viellin of pneumonia anti tVaS unable to attend
the ceremonies
In Georgia's first speaker Howell Cobb
was elected lie later beCallie governor of his
state served again in congress then became
secretary of the treasury under President Pao
chanun liming the War Iletween the States
Cobh was a major general In the Confederate
army Ile WaS Succeettol on the rostrum by Linit
lIoyd Of Kentucky w ho after two terms was fol-
lowed by Nathaniel P Ilanks of Massachusetts
whose career rather closely paralleled that of
Cobb of Georgia Ile too served many years in
congress WaS governor of Lk state anti a major
general in the War of 1ttil-65 although his serv-
ice was in the Union army
Following lianks is speaker came James
Orr of South Carolina William Pennington of
New Jersey tlithisha A Grow of Penlisylvaula
gmt hr (41:'i7s: of Indiana ono of the two
who beelline Oce Presitiellt Then cline
the "speaker for a day"—Theodore 'Al Pomeroy
tit New york who vas emetedaner the resigna-
tion of -Schuyler Colfax and totesidell lifting the
(iiIit hours of one session of congress
James it Illaine the "Plumed Knight" anti the
unsticeessful Presidential candidate ruled the
house from itttit9 to 1s7) when he was succeetied
Iy another Hoosier M C Kerr who wits fol-
lowed by it-I:motel J Ilandall a politician ‘‘lio
wits scnatilatig of an anomaly—a '111411-t:tv'd1
lkomoorat trom 1'emo4yivania" and who served
three consecutive terms the next speaker was
another tiVII War general end Ghlo's first speak-
Warren Keifer He was succeeded by
John G Carlisle of Kentucky one of the ablest
WhO c‘er sat in the speaker's chair who
Lehi the office for three terms anti later became
secretary of the treasury tinder Cleelantl
When Thomas Hracktitit 'teed of Maine took
the speaker's chair in issti a new era in (tom
grsslitnal protaithire Iteed changed the
rules $o drastically that the Pentocrats dubbed
him "Czar" Iteed and he ruled like a zar front
Itst) to 1'01 and again from 1Ii to lsttli
In between Reed's two terms its Speaker Vat
another Georgian Chales F Crisp NA Ito served
four )ears Aftor 'teed's second term the next
speaker was liavid it Ilianierson of Iowa und he
fellewt'd by the Fellow lit'd '111cle Joe" Can-
non of Illinois ilholit whom a whole host of
legendary tales clustered during his four eonseeu-
tire terms Champ Clark or illissouri also serveci
tour conseeutive terms and was followed by
Froideriek It tilllett of :VassachusettS Who had
three terms as did Ids suecessor Nicholas long-
lkorth of j hie probably the best-liked man who
ever sat In the speaker's ch A f ter tiongworths death in Lill "Cactus Jztek"
Carper of Texas was elevated to the speakership
as the result of the Viettitteratie congressitomi vic-
tories in the middle of Hie iloover administration
and When he became vice president In 19:12 the
gavel went to Henry T Itainey of Illinois vhose
death last snmmer pave4 the way for the ac-
cession of the new speaker Jotg-iph W l'strtis
C by Western None aper Cntun
Queer Transports Still
in Use the World Over
In Odd Contrast With Mod-
ern Speedy Traffic
Washington Record break ing
Ftrvalallne trains and giant
haVe teC(!lilly 'Welk tieVg In
America Italy Is still applauding an
air-minded son who sped through the
air more than 1) miles an hour
short time ago and Great Ilrltaln Is
Jost tilithittlig down aftr celebrating
the victory of No of her 11:ittrs who
won the London bi--Melbourne ir race
To tern transportation this 'tut
coot ton slid trtt
t!11 the AN orlTs
est titles mot their rural
hoods that wttre In use docitiles
"Cabbies" Still Available
"Tlioiit is iritd: U Shlahle toNN'll ill the
Stel III Which alie (-ihnet hail
a 111 tool in many of them (barter a
plane yob the top hatted cabbie Ivitose
pompous tiie held Nway over traffic
col boulevards in the guy ilinctiVs has
Dot boot entirely sheivell" sitYs
National Coographie soelety "'Those
ltixinietil of another era have jealous
ly ‘itittiliett IiV traffic lights have
liven installed trattle lanes have been
painted to keep modern noitortsts from
crushing bumpers and fenibrs and
streets have helot widened and trees
sacrificed to matte room for more of
their rIvals yid they still constitute
something of it tratlie problem
siidit or cittiercte
and less thnn a
hundred miles frion Vas:him:ton:1)c
tool Annapolis ex-drawn Neltieles
plil 1111alio ti!0e:: while la the Isellit-
C1 tileahtain re4is thit Vest sure-
footed burros and pitalt voiles continuo
to lie the only companions of many
ruinteil tiroiiipeetors
of vititors anlve at At-
lantic City by flatena1110 llluIe nna
train 3et to see the 'sights' atom the
boaribivallt they hire three-41asitid
rolling (halt's Others arrive at Fier-
tionla aboard palatial steamships but
tube to bicycles to tour the Island
'')11 the corners of modern vide
thorouglifitreS if laraght1 Hong-
' Ifitig and Canton China the traveler
tutus a riltslut tool 'weaves perilously
111111101 a maze of motor aryl
trlan trallio In tiw
streets of the native towns himiever
Ile may prefer a sedan chair to avoid
jostling men anti women met stain
tiling over children to v limo these
Iniere byways tire playgrounds
Even Wheelbarrows
" Vhat traveler Ittaves Durban Natal
without employing a Zulu Eft:sham:in?
he dark-lined tribesman In galy-fcatittired
headdress and $ciint clothing Is
tone of the colorful features of the
Irliitith African city In remote Szeoli-
W au pro‘ince chtnat wileelharroNso
TALLEST CACTUS
This onHis 1catk(I on the desert
him!' tulles trent Ihix Arit: is sAhl
to be the largf'st In the World It is
40 feet tall has 51 branches or "tunes"
Ielelis ten tons and is t':irnated to be
totne three lonl(lrea yenrs
Acts to Curb Pests
('hoenlie C011011 :Nlortnon
fin1 grss!ioppr invasions
which :koar l0011!) acres
state farm law) 801 r000001 acres
ur range C slato
Kist will for a llAloral grant of
"'14ipoo to lit! ws-1e“101 noxt spring
iti1 stallnar
Husband Cannot Even
Lock at Screen Women
Dewsbury Ellg land—John Jessop
was summoned for alleed desert14411
by ids wlie fit the loval court here
1II! it NN imt he pleaded:
'My wife" he said "ohjeets to my
look!nz tit photographs Of women In
the tLIty newspapers When I go to
the talhles and a WOltifill comes on
the soreen niy wife malies me hold my
head down until the WOUlart goes oft"
The wtre fal!ed to susta:ri the
charge of tlesertiori
Race 5000 Miles So Baby
Can Be Born in America
Akron 01110—A tiny bithy coos and
Plairnis lu Ills crib !ION' univaare et
the battte his parents put up to give
him the r41(t to tweolue Presidolt of
the United Slates seine day
viirouts Mr 11
Milo raced the storlt for '51011 miles
so that the laihy might be tT11 un
AnieriC:in soil mil be an Anal-ln
701 They wen by a intitillt The riot?
trolight Mr lin I NN
which ore the local transports have
Nvorn ruts In Ilmtone pavements
Sumatra If otie goes hative Le Inut
travel In a buffalo-drio‘n cart whose
thatched top i3 shaped like a say
hacked horse pointed at eiteh end In
Palermo Sic:IY the purely Sicilian
way to get ahout toNn Is by hailve
cart a two-wheeled vehicle on whos
side panels aro gayly ileplciol Lib le
scenes and Sicilian panorittna and
Ireianil the aunt:rig cur on
141-tPgiTS kick tO kick litrt
lace 0111W:tri lotitk Ithstlo!re to a
tour of the I:nail-Mil
'Llamas still carry loads In the
Andes and elephants are favori-I
firming the tiger limiters of 7 dia In
spite of pro70- in Itelgium 0e Limit-
ing milk Is sill! delivered hy
at many n dimystip and (low sleds are
cf Henry II in New York
This embossed parade shield once carried by Henry TT of France has been
acquired by the Metropolitan imenat of Art Now York and Is now exhibited
among the recent accesionA to the collecticas
Braid' Giant Liner to Seek Sea Record
Expects to Make Crossing in
Ninety-Six Hours
Loralon—New York ill be brought
tio hours of the European con-
tinent WIIO'n the giant ilitish liher
"Queen litry" launched last l'entein
bur takes licr place la the Atlantic
steamer service
The schedule now being worked out
for the liner will provide for fl tW)
hoWr 1aSarg0 betWtq'ti Cherbourg and
New York at an average speed ot '3212
hmits—four knots faster than the
filtoist crossing ever made This
would bring her near to dirigibles with
respect to speed
One hundred and eleven hours is the
present reeord for tho Cherbourg-New
York passage made a few weeks ogo
by the liner 'firemen The actind At-
lanti record Is held by the Italian
liner Ilex idyll in Augast cov-
ered the l1I MHOS' from (lIbraitar to
New york in pit) hours at an avvrage
of 2c')2
To make up for delay due to foez or
had weather the "Qneen Mary" If the
tol-hour schedule Is to he maintained
will sometimes have to teavel at a
N1u2eurn Sword Identined
as That of Joan of Arc
alleleIt art of
diviiiing known under its scientific
term of radiosthesio has identi!lool on
old sword In the Dijon museum Os the
blade of Jouut of Are
A French vointan diviner using a
prismatic pendulum over the preercod
-igtiatuto of Joan oil Arc arrl then over
the sword obtained the sante tisciila
tions--pre accord:rig to her that
eloan's w :lye W as present in
both ohltets
White Buck iCilled
Moino—A lootono white
sinhc horiA(1 hock deor '‘IS 101141 ty
prvston Proho It t hviic‘el to I”!
the first vvor hifli n thk terrtory
hIslit Albania to Akron
Last November 1:1‘) hrought hero
'25 years ago hy Ills uncle xvklit bark
to visit his rornwr home While at
licwkisht he met It dark-eyed Athonian
girl Last February they were mar-
ried When they learned the stork was
on the way determined the baby
should he born in the United States
The couple made a htirried trip through
Europe then boarded a liner !earful
the child might arrive before they
reached American soil but they won
Mule Power Values Up
Wash—ITUle power values
are lfiereasing In central 1Vashington
-Jose:di Wyhorney Wibur fernier ay
eniliql $117:15 each on the auct!on sate
of heed of mules Oiie in brought
Texas Town Has Curfew
Sulphur SpringA Texas--A curfew
twil hi rung here every right tit till
tit:ht Alt tkersonm found on the street
after that hour are seht lteute or taken
Is
Insect Invasion Is
Menace to Snakes
Ean Diego Calif—A piague of
mites is one of the chief causes for
worry that has occupied the minds
of ollicials of the an Diego zoo
recently These tiny dreaded In-
sPetti Lave direetol their work of
destruolln to the reptile division
chiefly and are F a11 to be capable
of killimz rattlenakes Its well as
garter snakes ill a fvw days' time
yet the most denewlable transportation
in the ley NVHtt!4 Of the Arctic and
Antaretle The tiol explorer enjoys
comfortAhle travel in a hammock-
uLt uh:cit Lorne hy native porters in
central Afrita the mountaineers of
northern India and NI tterri China era-
Coy the yak as theft boast of burden
Eta) 4 CItal S1i:1 plodi the caravan
rowei of north Africa Arabia and
th!ral Asia mid tho carahao (wator
hurfilo) Is the lopendable dilatant
mai of 1114 Last Indian islands"
considerably higher speed than 3212
knots
it is asserted however that the re-
serve of power in the propelling ma
vitinery is great enough to drive the
giant at '3-1 to hinds without caus-
ing undue vibration or making her
sh1 much water In rough weather
The "Queen Alary" apparently must
he content vvith being the world
speedie1 ship rather than both that
awl the world's largest
While Uritish interests are main-
taining that the 'Queen !vlary" i1I b
the largest liner the French have an
pounced a set of figures to prove It
will be their "Normandie"
Beavers Slowly Ousting
This Man From his Farm
Ilmoling--A colony of beavers hat
all lint taklol over the farm of Nalhat
I Lath near here
And Whi'At Ituth scans the recordi
for Immo form f fartn relict for bli
particular cme the beavers under pro-
tection Of ttat e goam laws are steatt
ily moving in Oil the property In great
er numbers and building their homes
Some fif the damage caused by the
beavers Wert? listed by Ruth They
included:
Yelling of trip
idimr of a 113m and changing the
course of a toredm traversing the farm
Three acres under water and con-
vcrted from once dry meadow to sod
611 mashia
I )est ruet ion of an !Jere Of corn
stored away by the iiiit1 for the
winfer sv:!s“1L
Huth is faced w111 a perplexing
probiem Ile cannot trap the 11111:11:11S
lei they are protected by stjte
That action was talien HVeral years
ago by the state game commission be
tanse the beaver vas rapidly becoming
extinct
It is believed the beavers moved In
tin Ilath's farm because It contains a
innzo supp!y uf birch and poplar
trees—the principal Iliet of the beaver
Dam Reversed Flow of
Neuces River in Texas
Itolltrwn Texas — 'Ira volers
Highway No 129 near here were not
oxperteneing when
they noticed the wat'r in the Nueces
rlver was higher below the Calallen
dam than it was nhve it
This tyverse condition was really
true 1107) dam i9 a low-water stmt-
tare built to Impound water for the
city of Corpus Christi
Itecent heavy rains had brought the
river to the flood singe and the river
took a short cut through the Sdn Pa-
trtelo county bottom lands Water
coming front the short cut reached the
rver s'7ain near the highway before
the water In the main stream and be-
gan ruining up stream
This reversed the flow of water even
over the dam
Plane Used in Fax Hunt
Kenton ohlo—A n airplane circlet! the
!Ines and gave the marchers signals
when the second nmooll fox drive and
torkes giviot F:!PTitt fit g SrIngs
Ohio m:ar here was held
i
1
rnplt
Ft Ji
1111(11
Crvil
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Keyes, Chester A. Luther Register (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 35, No. 31, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 31, 1935, newspaper, January 31, 1935; Luther, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2055784/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.