The Logan County News. (Crescent, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1912 Page: 6 of 8
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Logan County News
CRESCENT.
oklahoma
As Told in a
Few Words
Good and Newly Item*
of General Interest Con-
densed to Small Space
The National Retail firocera, In ses
lion in Oklahoma City, decided on St.
Louis for their 1813 meeting place.
The senate of the Arizona let,'isla
ture defeated woman suffrage by a
tote of 11 to 7.
John W. Denny, whs crushed to
death by a falling tree on his farm
near Belleview, lnd.
Canton, O., officials have placed a
b*n on moving picture eihlblts of the
Titanic disaster It was learned th«
pictures were "faked."
John S. Wood and Charles H. Hyer,
farmers, were killed by lightitThg that
struck a barn near Buffalo, N. Y,
where they sought 6belter from a
storm.
The Ohio constitutional convention
defeated a proposal to incorporate a
provision for the recall of public of-
ficials in the constitution by a vote of
67 to 40.
William C. Matthews, a negro law-
yer, was sworn in as special assists
ant I'niled States attorney at Boston.
Matthews is a former Harvard base-
ball and football player.
Jack Johnston, champion pugilist,
was injured severely at Pittsburg, I'a.,
it is believed, when an automobile j
truck ran Into the rear of his machine. |
Several tendons in I he champion's :
Hack were sprained. Johnson's vale' j
was lightly hurt.
CAPITAL LETTER
FUNDING
BONDS COMPLETED
OF RECORDING
COMPLETE
NOW
ALL BROUGHT UP TO DATE
SECRETARY OF STATE CATCHES
UP WITH WORK
Large Number of Documents Spread
Upon the Official Records of the
State—Other Capital City
News of Interest.
Oklahoma City —For the first time
since statehood the office of the sec-
retary of state is up with its work of
recording, an immense number of
documents having been spread on the
oflfficial records of the state
the last eighteen months, three times
as much recording whs done as dur-
ing the first three years of statehood.
As an indication of the amount of
work accomplished the small force
The freight steamer I^ena, which
arrived at Portland, Me, was within
thirty miles of the Titanic when tha
latter floundered. Had the Lena been employed in Secretary of State Ben
Mrs K. C. Carter, who was lost on , , ^ wllh a w|reles., it could ; K. Harrison s office has tiled and re-
have saved many of the passenger* corded since Januarj ! , 191 , a to a.
of the lllfated liner. of 8,820 corporation instruments^
i There have been tiled since statehood
City authorities of Cleveland, O, j m,264 charters and other corporation
are offering school children one cent I records, and of this number but 1,444
for every ten flies delivered dead at
the city ball, and a vigorous "swat
fest" is under way The authorities
believe that a "swat in time saves
the Titanic, was u daughter of Thomas
Hughes, author of "Tom Brown s
Bchool Days."
Senator Owen's bill for the consoli-
dation of various health departments
tinder one head is acceptable to
Christian Scientists
State Warrant Indebtedness to Ex-
tent of $2,660,800 To Be
Taken Up
Oklahoma City.—Final arrange-
ments have been completed at a
meeting of Governor Cruce, State
Treasurer Robert lJunlop, Secretary
of State B. F. Harrison and W. C.
Reeves of the attorney general's of-
fice for the issue of funding bonds lo
take up the state's warrant indebt-
edness.
The total amount of the outsanding
warrants is $2,660,8flTl, and the total
inierest to July 1, to which time the
warrants will bear the present rate
of interest, amounts to f2t>9,704 62, an
aggregate issue of $2,870,505.41.
The bonds will be dated July 1, 1912
and will bear interest at the rate of
l percent, payable semi annually. The
warrants now outstanding bear inter-
est at the rate of -6 per cent and a
During of 2 per cent interest conse-
quently is affected, in addition to dis-
tributing the payment of the deficit
over a long period of time.
The bonds will be in a series of ten
annual payments, the first payment to
be made in twenty-one years and the
last payment in thirty years. Inter-
est on the funding issue and the sink-
ing fund will be taken care of in the
annual state levy.
The Thomas Cusack building. J
Omaha, Neb, was destroyed by tire
together with $150,000 worth of auto- |
had been recorded up to January 9,
1911. The record on corporation in-
struments cover 22,200 pages. In ad-
dition to this there have been ap
proximately 3,600 pages of miscellan-
Russian Scientific Explorer Tells
of Sakhalin.
Declarat Its Agricultural Possibilities
Are Small, but Soys There Is Good
Pasture for Cattle—Deep Bor-
ing* Made for Naphtha.
St. Petersburg.—Sakhalin, the for-
lorn easternmost island of the Russian
empire—onoe the grimmest of convict
settlements, and now, since the Ports-
mouth treaty, Japanese territory in Its
southern part—is attracting consider-
able scrutiny as to its natural re-
sources. Russia is doing much to
open up her Amur territory, and the
process would be helped if Sakhalin,
"the cork of the Amur bottle," were to
prove an economic asset. A Russian
scientific explorer, M. Polovoy, has just
given the St. Petersburg Geographical
society an estimate of its resources.
Henshaw Returned
Oklahoma City.—Corporation Com
missioner George A. Henshaw, has
returned from Washington and Chi-
cago, where he has been lor the last
month attending to a number of busi-
mobiles, and other goodB.
From Tullulah, La., a sea of muddy
water extends in every direction.
There is no railroad communication
ard probably the people of Tallulah
will not see a train again for six or
eight weeks.
A northbound Missouri
'ueltio
Constable John A. WoodB, Omaha, :
Neb., was shot and instantly killed by
Sebastian Puglisi, a Sicilian, while
serving replevin papers in a suit in- !
volving a small amount. Puglisi is at i
large.
freight train jumped the track aud
j crushed Into the depot at Willis, Has.
Peter Gayaddo and Frank Lopez, rail-
j road employes, were burled under the
j wreckage Gayaddo was taken out
dead Lopez's Injuries are fatal. The
1 depot cuuglit fire, and the locomotive
and eight cars were burned up.
eous matter recorded as against 1,800 j ness matters of importance, in which
pages of the same class of matter , the commission is interested. Mr.
recorded during the entire first ad
ministration
Pardon Recommended
Oklahoma City.—Because he assist-
ed in the capture of the two men
charged with the robbery of the Vian
postoffice on April 17, when $1,342
worth of stampB and $140 in cash was
Henshaw was at Washington during
the fourteen days' argument on the
Minnesotta rate case appeal in which
eight states, including Oklahoma have
joined A brief in the case was sub-
mitted for the Oklahoma commission
by Mr. Henshaw. Other matters at-
tended to on the trip was the hear-
ing on the railway scale question, and
Upon his return to lexington, Ky„
from Milwaukee, John E. Madden, con- 1 stolen, postoffice inspectors have tile application for a rehearing on tne
; firmed a report of the sale of Belwln written to Governor Cruce suggesting cattle rate order At Pittsburg, re-
McKinlev, 2 "1 1-4, the champion • ea ! n pardon for Otis Hinds, who Is serv cently, Chairman Prouty, the lnter-
ling trotter of 1911, to H J Schles- Ing a sentence at Enid for violating stats commerce commission spoke be-
slnger Madden snvs lie got $15,000, 1 liquor laws. Hinds is a trusty in the for the commercial club and spoke of
F Howie of Elm Grove, | just double what the colt brought at Garfield county jail, and when Enid the work which the commissions of
mod a member at large Madison Square garden last Thanks- was notified that the alleged robbers the various states are doing in con-
giving (lav. Billy Andrews will cam- were on a freight train that was due nection with the interstate commis-
paign him. ' to pass that point, Jailor Conrad took sion, mentioning the Oklahoma body
Hinds with him and went to the j especially as one of the most pro-
train, making the capture. When the gressive, and one that is "staying
postal authorities heard of it they with" the interstate commision on all
recommended a pardon. County At-, rate questions that come up.
torney Harmon of Garfield county ;
takes a different view of the matter. Subject to Taxation
however, and has protested against Oklahoma Citjy.—Borrowed money
granting clemency to Hinds, declar- invested in the business of a corpo-
iriK that the latter is a professional ration as its "moneyed capital" is sub-
bootlegger In whom the authorties ject to taxation as well as other oapi-
had difficulty in securing a convic tal, is the substance of an opinion
j rendered by the attorney general's of-
Mrs. Adda
Wis., was named
to the state board of agriculture. She
is the first woman in Wisconsin to re
ceive such honor.
A large amount of silverware and
jewelry, part of the $5,000 loot taken
from the home of a Boston millionaire
by burglars nine years ago, has been
Articles of incorporation were^flled
in Denver by the American Baptist
Tuberculosis association, which plans
to establish free sanitariums in vari-
ous parts of the United States. Funds
unearthed on the grounds of the Mil | for establishing the institutions are
to be raised by the unique plan of as
sessing each of the 5,000,000 Baptists
in the United States 10 cents each
ton academy, Milton, Mass.
Chinese residents of Chicago have
contributed $2,000 to the fund of the ; annually.
Chicago China famine relief commit-
tee. Hong Sling, proprietor of a
Chinese restaurant has had charge
of the work of collecting the money.
A theater for Chicago within a yeai
devoted exclusively to plays for chil-
dren, is the plan of the local branch
ol the Drama lague of America. Tha
project has been suggested as part
of a plan for the cultivation of a na-
tional taste for better drama.
It 1b said that the will of John Jacob j
Astor will soon be filed for probate in |
New York, and that the bulk of the
$125,000,000 estate will go to his son 1
Vincent to be kept intact. His present ;
wife waived her dower right at the
time of the marriage, when Mr. Astor j
settled on her the sum of $o,000,000. i
i fice to County Attorney J. O. Counts
of Harmon county. The question
came up when the McClure-Naftzger
After n battle with the Parisian po-
lice in which he shot and kiled As-
sistant Chief Jouin and seriously in-
jured Inspector Colmar, Leader Bon-
net of the gang of "phantom bandits"
who have already killed 20 people,
leaped from a first story window and
forcing his way through the crowd,
escaped.
Justin McCarthy, novelist and his-
torian, and for many years a member
of parliament, died at Folkstone, Eng-
land. He had been ill throughout
the winter and spring. His daughter
had acted as his nurse and friends
had hoped that he would live to see
the fruition of home rule.
One of the most interesting auc-
tions of autograph letters and histor-
ical documents that hat taken place but
Police officials In several eastern
cities are searching New York for
Miss Elsie Nicholas, aged 17, of Win-
chester, Va., a cousin of the late Sen-
I Hundred and Fifth street, New York. Ottawa county. The company, which
| has been missing for four weeks from i engaged in mining zinc in Ottawa
the home of her aunt on West One
1 Hundred and Fifth stret, New York.
Because his father couldn't pay a
j hoard bill. 6-year-old Wester Baughn
Is occupying a cell in the Savannah,
! (Jr., police station Haughn was ar-
I rested on complaint of Mrs. W. H.
Temple Because his young son had
no other place to go he was placed in
the same cell with his father.
To Supreme Court
Oklahoma City.—Dissolution of the
injunction restraining plaintiff in er j Lumber Company of Granite prayed
ror from shuWng off the supply of \ for a certificate of error, contending
gas to the defendant in error, is the j that only 58 per cent of its capital is
basis of an appeal to the supreme | subject to taxation for the reason that
court by the Quapaw Gas company the remaining 42 per cent is bor-
and the Consumers' Gas company of j rowed money. The company, it was
Bartlesville against the Carson-Dod-| claimed in the petition, has $49,036
son Mining company. The injunction J borrowed money in its total invest-
was granted in the district court of | ment of $117,117.60. The suggestion
is made by the attorney general's of-
fice that an answer to the petition
be filed by the county attorney and
In case of an appeal to the supreme
court, a brief will be filed by the
county, secured, some time ago, an
order from the corporation commis-
sioner, reducing the price of gas
burned in gas engines, and it was al- j state's attorney.
leged that the gas companies threat-1
ened to cut off the gas supply. I I" Wrong Pew
Oklahoma City—At a meeting of
the state board of education last week
archltectects were selected to draw
In London in some years was held at
Sotheby's The collection Included
letters of Lord Nelson, Queen Eliz-
abeth, Mary Queen of Scots, the Duke
of Wellington, Cardinal Wolsey,
Charles II, Oliver Cromwell and many
other celebrated figures In English
history.
When the White Star liner Olym-
pic, sister ship to the Titanic, was
ready to sail from Southampton for
New York, 300 firemen and engine-
workers refused to sail, alleging that i
the boats was not well enough equip- |
ped with life boats, and declaring |
that the extra collopsible boats were ;
unseaworthy.
A statement was given out that the j
general committee of operators aud j
miners will meet in New York May 2
to receive a sub-committee's report on ,
the anthracite coal situation comes j
the report that an agreement has
been reached as to wages and hours
of labor. The terms of the sub-com-
mittee's report will not be made pub-
lic until after the meeting May 2.
Thus 170,000 men who have been Idle
since April 1, are expected to be at
work by May 10.
A fisherman's hook brought to the
eurface of Wabash river the body "f
Christopher L. Gates. Jr . who was
drowned with a companion while can-
oeing some days apo. dates was a
student uf Purdue University of In-
diana.
The remains of Benito Juarez Maza,
•on of Benito Jaurez, the great patriot
of Mexico, were Interred at Mexico
City. President Madero, accompanied
by Ills staff and cabinet, escorted the
tiody to the cemetery nnd the greater
part of the senate and the ("umber of
deputies was present.
Assess Second Track
Oklahoma City.—The assessment of
the second track of the Katy double i plans for the new law building at the
l track system from Coalgate south j State university, the Pryor-C reek
Killed by a toothpick, John Dolan, ! to the Texas line, which has been de- ; orphan asylum, and the boys reform-
s traveling salesman, died at ills home ; laved from time to time by the hoard, atorj at I aula Nallev, ut .in opinion
in Minneapolis, Minn , after nearly a \ was brought up, and the line assessed
week of suffering. Mr. Dolan was on nt $20,000 per tnlle for the second
the road, he accidentally swallowed a track. The assessment of the Midland
toothpick. He thought nothing of it, ; Valley road was reduced from $14,000
1 per mile fo $13,000 per mile of main
track.
week ago was taken ill with
abscess of the stomach.
Jonkheer J G. Reuchlin, managing
I director of the Holland-American
1 steamship line, went down with the
| Titanic. Mr. lieuchlln was coming
I to this country to arrange business
1 relative to the opening of the Panama
! canal.
An amateur baseball game at Ave-
nue City, Mo., resulted in serious in-
juries to two players. Robert Bar-
rows of St Joseph, fell through a
barb wire fence while running for a
ball and his throat, wrist, and right
shoulder were lacerated so that he is
unable to leave his home. Frank
Clark was hit in the temple by a
pitched ball aud was unconscious for
twelve hours.
An announcement has been made
of the marriage of Laura Minnie Cor-
nelius the last princess of the Oneida
Indians, to Orln J. Kellogg, a wealthy
citizen of Seymour, Wis, Ht Stevens
Point, Wis. Mrs. Kellogg is a gradu-
ate of Wellesly college and Stanford
university. She became renowned as
the Indian Joan of Arc. She danced
in the courts of Europe to obtain funds
to aid the red men to a higher civil-
ization. *
Madison, Wis—Mrs. Adda F.
Howie, Elm Grove, was appointed
member at large to the state board of
agriculture She is the first woman in
Wisconsin to receive such an honor.
Other appointments on the board are
Danforth W. Larkln, Sturgeon Bay;
Henry E Krueger, Beaver Dam, and
George C. Kuntz, Milwaukee.
Seattle, 'Wash.—The steamer Ale-
mada crashed into a dock here. Many
reported injured. The Alemada
ploughed through the pier, sinking the
sound steamer Telegraph, moored on
the other side.
Petition Denied
j Oklahoma City.—The court of crim-
I inal appeals Tuesday denied ;he peli-
| Hon of Bird Gee for a writ of habeas
corpus. Gee was held under $2,"00
bond in Justice Bartell's court on a
1 perjury charge, the information filed
was rendered by the attorney gener-
al's office later, holding that it is the
duty of the state board of affairs and
not the board of education to select
architects. New plans will be asked
by the board of affairs.
Railroad Appeals Case
Oklahoma City.—An appeal was
taken to the supreme court by the
Frisco railroad, alleging error in the
district court of Washita county,
where W, E Rickey secured judg-
ment for $1,950 damages to 30,000
Facade of Government Buildings.
Its agricultural possibilities he rates
a3 low, but there is good pasture for
cattle. The meat trade, however, is
not organized at all. Vladivostok,
close by, gets its supplies in cold stor-
age from Australia.
Coal Is probably the best of its as-
certained properties. He believes
that there are at least ten million
poods of it in the Island. It would
find a good market In the western
states of America, besides in Japan.
Deep borings are now In progress for
naphtha, which is in as good position
as the Baku wells and should be able
to compete with American petroleum
In east Asia. Gold prospecting has
not had success. There is a great
supply of timber, of which no use
was made until in 1906 a firm began
to export railway sleepers.
The population, which a dozen years
ago consisted of 20,000 Russian deport-
ed convicts, and about half as many
free persons, sank to about 6,000 after
the Japanese war. The convicts had
got their liberty on condition they
volunteer for the war. Russians
sold their houses for next to nothing.
A whole village was left to caretakers
for 50 rubles. Last year the ex-con-
victs who had served in the war and
returned were declared free peasants
and settled near Alexandrovsk, the
seat of government.
Sakhalin's weak side, as M. Polovoy
found It, is in its cut off condition, not
so much geographically as through
want of steam navigation. Moreover,
the coasting trade is closed against
foreign shipping. There are very few
roads into the interior, even the roads
prospected by the Russian prisons de-
partment have fallen back into waste.
Harbors are scarcely to be found at
all. Labor is unskilled and there is
no ascertainable general rate of
wages. Evidently the plantlessness
that has hitherto marked the adminis-
tration of the important "cork of the
Amur" will need to be changed if its
great coal and lumber resources are
to get a chance.
being to the effect that he had sworn j bushels of oats which Rickey had ffe-
falsely as to the amount of property j livered to the railroad company at
he owns
O'Brien
in making bond for Mike
Complaint Filed
Oklahoma City.—Complaint was
filed with the corporation commission
by citizens of Hamilton, asking that
the Frisco railway be required to
make Hamilton a regular slop for its
early morning train southbound and
evening train northbound
Report of Accident
Oklahoma City.—The corporation
commission has received a report
from the M. K. & T. of an accident
near Noxie in which Amil Walters, a
tresspasser, received injuries of
which lie may die. Walters was lying
by the track, when struck by a so-
cial engine.
Rickey for shipment to various
points. Rickey alleged that the com-
pany left the oats out in the rain,
damaging them to the extent of six
aud one-half cents a bushel, for which
he sued and secured Judgment
WONT SELL JEFFERSON HOME
Installment Plan
Oklahoma City.—A parole or
dition that the balance of a $li)
Parole Granted
Oklahoma City.—A parole was
granted by Governor Cruce to Albert
Bernstein of Kingfisher county, sen-
tenced to serve two years in the peni-
tentiary for forging a check for $25,
and securing money and merchandise
on the forged instrument from the
Davis Mercantile company. Bern-
stein pleaded guilty to the charge,
nnd subsequently paid the money to
the company, which joined with the
county authorities in the request that
the man be paroled.
330,000 Acres Affected
Oklahoma City.—Notice of a sup-
line plemental quarantine order by the fed-
be paid on the "installment plan" was j era! bureau of animal industry has
granted by Governor Cruce to A I . been received by the state board of
Congressman Levy, Owner for 35
Years, Announces He Will Not
Dispose of Monticello.
New York.—Congressman Jefferson
M. Levy has no intention of selling
Monticello, once the home of Thomas
Jefferson, to the government or ar.y
one else. The Idea of the purchase of
Monticello by the government, recent-
y proposed by patriotic societies ir
iVasbington, is distasteful to him, he
.leclares, In a statement given out
here
Mr. Levy has been the owner of
Monticello thirty-five years and dur-
ing that time the property kas been
scrupulously maintained. Visitors have
been admitted to the estate freely,
Mr. Levy explains, and the condition
of the property is better than it
would be if owned by the government.
Johnson of Shattuck, convicted of
violating the prohibitory law, fined
$400 and sentenced to serve ninety
days in jail. Johnson has served out
the jail sentence and thirty days on
the fine. The parole was granted on
condition that he pay $150 of the tine
upon his release, and beginning Jan-
uary 1, 1913, the balance bo paid at
the rate of $10 per mouth.
agriculture, which made application
to have a large area of the state
placed above the federal quarantine
line. The new order places two town-
ships in Comanche county and part of
Grady and Pottawatomie counties
above the federal quarantine lines.
The entire area affected includes more
than 330,000 acres and becomes ef-
fective at once
Will Aid United States.
Washington.—Dr. Huebner, profes-
sor of insurance at the University of
Pennsylvania, was selected by the
house merchant marine committee to
assist In preparing the investigation
of the "shipping trust."
POLL
Shine
Stays
Don't imagine for a
moment that all brands oi
stove polish are alike.
If your stoves become *"ustv and
dull soon after they are j«>lished it
shows that you arc not using
Liquid and Paste—One Quality
Black Silk makes a brilliant,
silky polish that does not rub off
or dust off, and the shine lasts four
times as long as ordinary stove
polish.
It is used on sample 6toves by
hardware dealers. Sold by them
to those who want good poods.
All we ask is a trial. Use it on
your cook stove, your parlor stove
or your gas ranpe. If you don't
find it the best stove polish you ever
used, your dealer is authorized to
refund your moncv. Insist on
Black Silk Stove polish. Don't
accept substitutes. All dealers
can get Black Silk from their job-
bers.
"A Shine In
Every Drop"
K<*p your f rates, registers, fenders and itove
pipes bright and free from rusting by using
BLACK SILK AIR-DRYING ENAMEL. Hmsh
free with ea<h can of enamel only
Use BUCK SILK MF.TAL POLISH fur
allverwaD-. ni.lcel, tinware or brass, liw. rks
quickly, easily, and leaves a brilliant surface.
It Las no equal for use on automobiles.
Black Silk Stove Polish Works
STERLING. ILLINOIS
Get a Can TODAY
What Do Students Know?
Another professor Joins the ranks of
the critics of college students with the
statement that he has found many
students who do not know that France
is a republic or think that Portugal
is a city, who have no knowledge of
the chief Industries of a grpat country
or are ignorant of the difference be-
tween latitude and longitude. Recent-
ly a Harvard professor complained
that not a student in a class of 100
knew anything about Aristotle; other
instructors have lamented the ignor-
ance of the Bible and English litera-
ture. Poor college student—what
does he know? Yet somehow he la
admitted to the college and eventually
is graduated from it. The number of
college students has greatly Increased
in the last few years—has the quality
deteriorated with numbers? There are
still scholars, doubtless, but what is
the average student? If such criti-
cisms continue. Indignant graduates
of mature years may demand an inves-
tigation to determine what has hap-
pened to the colleges and preparatory
schools. The public already may well
ask: What is education, anyway?-*
Chicago Record-Herald.
20TH CENTURY
Corset
■ style 270
The Automatic
Boning gives what
the 20th Century
woman demands;—~
it yields to every
movement of the
body.
In bending there is
a eliding movement
distributing the
strain.
The Automatic
Steels are warranted
not to break for one
year; anil no other
corset possesses this
advantage.
or "o*dlreH$l.50
BIRDSEY-SOMERS CO.
233 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
Paderewski Is Peeved.
Cape Town.—Ignace I'aderewskl.
the pianist, had some unpleasant
things to say about South Africa be-
fore his departure Paderewski's tour
was not a financial success.
f
FOR BEST RESULTS
PLANT BARTELDES
Garden The
Flower Best
Grass That
Field Grow
Ask Your Dealer for Them Today. From
THE BARTELDES SEED COMPANY
Oklahoma Seed House, OKLAHOMA CITY
®®®ooooooooooooooooooooooo
g THE HOMESEEKING FARMER
S looking for wonderfully productive
! TEXAS FARMS
© in healthy climate, perfect title from
g hands, < an h i e details for the
asking. Large body tor selection.
Any good farmer can make this
land pay itself out on our low
prices and easy terms. Address
SPUR TARM LANDS
SPUR DICKENS COUNTY TEXAS
... ' territory. Good rlmnco to
l " > >• nnaii-nt luisin.-ss, Mull iin M ft.r ;* lb.
f fiit hpr HimI ami roeelve.w itliutit o.M.tilli. pair pil-
uwr 1- relwht «.n alt pivpnld. N.w foothorB, host tfok-
NltlNra<*ni>nirTinram« ftd. Turn*! k ( nrnwpll.FrtllMV
U.P., H.ltaH.11., I. I. It,.f. Cutn'l Nul l Hank.
f
V
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Wnorowski, B. F. The Logan County News. (Crescent, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 26, Ed. 1 Friday, May 10, 1912, newspaper, May 10, 1912; Crescent, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc235234/m1/6/?rotate=270: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.