The Logan County News. (Crescent, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, September 29, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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CRESCENT
OKLAHOMA
J
L.
News of the World
Briefly Told
Mo l Important t-.veati ®f th« P« t Week
Builrii hown (or the Bu y Kudrri
I 1%| fir, nf t! • pllBt Of ,l" H( « ttlH
1 nornn CountV NpWh 011 Hoitnii.: iii < ui.
uogau v^uuniy v>. wiiiph i)irn (i f(r tw,.hlv(our
I bourn, was brought under ronlrol ut
mldnlilit. Three tanks of mule "II
are Mill burning. but little further
damage will be done. 'I he lows In c -
tliniit.il at $150.bl)li.
The pack of pink salmon on I'uget
Sound this Heuson now lb expected to
total 900,000 eason, or more llian
double the park of the largest prtivlous
■eli Hon. I'M ill, when the Sound's park
was 44K.73U last s Almost the entire
eateh ban been sold. Packers declare
this In unprecedented
Champ Clark speake r of the house
/if representatives before he left Tor
j Lawrenceburg, Ky., hl« birthplace,
I where he will "talk some straight old
Democratic doctrine, tomorrow, told
United States Circuit Judge I'eter S. j the difference between a speech and a
(Irotmcup, Chicago, announced that lie -lecture "The difference between *
would retire from the bench the first speech lind a lectur Is that you net paid
week In October. 1 for the lecture."
The will of John Warner dates was
r
domestic
filed for probate at Hoaumont, Tox
The application for probate Htaten tti.it
the i state will amount to "over
1*00,000."
l.ouls LauRuet, a son of wealthy
parents, reBtding at t'hihuahna, Mexi-
co, was arrested In Chicago eliar^od
by tlii polii-e with th« thett of a
000 diamond pendant.
A serious rorest Are, the third in a
month to threaten the Cleveland na-
tional forest, Is burning near ldylwlld.
a resort in the San Bernardino moun-
tains, California Hanger Keeker has
hurried all available men to the srene
The Kansas state charter board baa
cancelled the charters of more than
fourteen thousand corporations be-
i aus. they failed to tile annual reports
with the secretary of state as provid-
ed in a law passed by the legislature.
Many of the corporations were mining
BLAME PLACED
ON RAILROADS
ATTORNEY GENERAL WEST COM
PLETES RATE CASE BRIEF.
COMPREHENSIVE IN SCOPE
Enters Exhaustively Into Rate Dis
crimination, and Other Attorneys
General Attach Their Signa-
Tures Thereto
Oklahoma City.—A brief by Attor-
ney General Charles West in the Min-
nesota an4 Missouri grain rates, in
which Oklahoma and other southwest
ern states are vitally interested, has
been completed and will be filed with
the supreme court of the United
States within a short time. Attorneys
general throughout the section in-
volved, which includes the northwest,
I A. A M EXHIBIT AND SCHOOL
AT OKLAHOMA STATE FAIR
1 Larger and Better Than at Previous
Expositions and Clo&er Attention
to Educational Features
! The A. & M. College is preparing
much larger exhibit than has hereto-
| tore been made at the State Fair. The '
I Experiment Station and the College
1 Farm *111 have instructive and euter- 1
mining exhibits of farm products ;
; showing what can be grown in Okla- 1
huma during a dry season.
The School of Agriculture will be
t-nlarged by adding a Domestic Science
I department for girls, and it is expected
' one girl from each county will be
Ipreseut. Two boys from each county 1
have already been selected by the j
County Agricultural Clubs. This or*
^anization of young people throughout
tlie state now has 16,000 members.
The exhibits of scientific equipment !
for the departments of instruction will
occupy one-half of the new college |
RECIPROCITY
IS DEFEATED
WOMAN
ESCAPES
OPERATION
PREMIER LAURlER SWEPT UN-
DER BY AVALANCHE OF VOTES
CONSERVATIVES CONTROL WasCuredbyLydiaE.Pink.
Farmers and Fishermen of Dominion ham's Vegetable Compound
of Canada Go To Polls and Over,
turn Liberals—Laurier Ad-
mits Defeat—Will Retire
Montreal, Quebec.—The Laurier gov-
ernment and reciprocity suffered an
overwhelming defeat in the Canadian
elections Thursday.
13y a veritable political landslide the
ind oil corporations and had been do- eentral west and southwest, conferred
fund for a number of years. on ^u, subject and all signed the brief,
13> the official count the statewidd imt it was written principally by Mr.
prohibition amendment was defeated west.
b> a majority of 6,8711 in the election
held in Texas July 21!. The returns
i were canvassed Wednesday by the
1 state election board, consisting of the
: governor, secretary of state and at-
1 torney general, and showed 237,130
The Archbishop of * anterbury uis volos u^.,in j: the aim udmcnt, and
230,251 for its adoption.
I The strike of the Detroit United
Hallway employes was settled by arbi-
I t rat ion. The employes accepted a new
wage rate schedule of 23 cents an
hour for the first six months, 27 Vj
I cents for the next year, and 21P,£
I cents thereafter. The rate was with-
interested himself in the campaign to
prevent the scheduled Johnson-Wells
tight at London and has written the
Home Olllco urging that action to sup-
press the contest be taken.
Four members of the family of
Frank Klein. Hock field, Wis. were
killed, one is dying and another was
injured when the Klein automobile
was struck by a Soo line train at tier-
niantown, Wis.
The brief, declaring that Oklahoma
suffers from existing rates more than
any other state, says:
"The state is a great producer of
petroleum oil, wheat and cotton. Na-
turally then, we should expect a flour
ishing flourmill, cotton seed oil mill
and petroleum refinery business.
"Hut if Okahoma wheat cannot pro-
ceed to the Oklahoma mill, intrastate,
as cheaply as Nebraska and Kansas
wheat can proceed, interstate, to the
Oklahoma mill, then both the Okla-
home farmer suffers a discriminative
building erected for that purpose by I liberal majority of fortjy'three was
the Fair Association. The other one- swept away and the conservative
half will be devoted to the Girls' 1 party secured one of the heaviest ma-
School. | jorities—upwards of fifty—that any
The purely agricultural exhibits will : Canadian party has ever had. Seven
occupy space in the large tent, like- ! cabinet ministers who have served
wise the County Demonstration Farm with Premier Laurier, were among
exhibits and farm products from the the defeated candidates.
district agricultural schools. The ! The liberals lost ground in practic-
Hoys' School will occupy a separate ally every province of the dominion,
tent, as last year.
Members of the faculties of the col
1 liu strikers w
I liiaudcd
day.
Ross Chat man. alleged assassin ot Champ Clark, speaker of the natonal
Deputy He venue ( ollodor S '/< Zau« i. |U)UBt, 0j representatives, "came home'*
lege aud the district agricultural
schools will give the work of instruc-
tion.
The evening programs will be illus-
trated with lantern slides and moving
picture films. Arrangements will be
made for these young students to nt-
Elwood, Ind.—"Your remedies haye
cured uie and I have only taken sir
bottles of Lydia E. 1'inkham's V egeta-
ble Compound. I
was sick three
months and could
not walk. I suf-
fered all the time.
The doctors said I
could not get well
without an opera-
tion. for I could
hardly stand tha
pains in my sides,
especially my rights
one, and down my
right leg. I began
to feel better when 1 had taken only
one bottle of Compound, but kept ou
as I was afraid to stop too soon."—Mrs.
fcADiE Mullen, 27-3 N. B. St., El-
wood, Ind.
... why will women take chances with
Where they won their majorities were : an operation or drag out a sickly,
• small. Where the conservatives won jiaif_bearted existence, missing threo-
tlieir majorities were tremendous. On- fourths of the joy of living, when they
tario was declared almost unanimous- can find health in Lydia E. l'iukham a
ly against the administration and reci- Vegetable Compound?
' itv For thirty years it has been th
Robert L. Borden, leader of the con- standard .remedy for female_ill_s, and
was surrounded in the Alabama mourn
tains where he has been living, cap-
tured by a posse and taken to Aunis-
ton, Ala.
David Steen, aged 30, a mine super
intendent and paymaster, was found
shot to death twelve miles from Pitts
burg, Pa. He had been robbed of
about $3,000. The highwaymen are
supposed to be Italians.
Herman Carnan, official dog catcher
of the City of Denver, has received
bis two thousandth dog bite. Follow-
to make a
sta'e demo
to Lawrenceburg, Ky.,
speech in behalf of th*
cratic ticket. An escort
one hundred men who
of Clark when he taught school in An-
derson county nearly forty years ago,
were at the depot to welcome Mr.
Clark.
| Nine persons are dead and fourteen
j seriously injured as the result of an
j accident in the tlfty mile race at the
j fair grounds when a Knox racing car
driven by Lee Oldfield, leaped from
,ing tils custom lie anointed the wound tlu, trm.k (inj piunist-il into the throng
with furbollc acid and pursued his of s,let.tlltor8 on the other side of the
work, fence. The list of dead may bp In-
' The completion of Canada's fifth ' creased as it is believed several of llio
census, befun In June, will show a injured will die.
total population considerably under 8, Twelve hundred and tlfty foreman
000,000 according to nil ofllelal caleu- al)(j bands on the Delaware,
lilt ton. The otllelal figures will be made ftrkHWiinna iitul Western railroad have
public in a few days, as soon lis the l)(,on ori|pr(lli [)V i r,.si<i«Mit A It Lowe
returns are In from the northwest dls- maintenance of way union to strike,
trlcts. The strike was caused by national
An advance of three cents a gallon officers of tin rrackmens Union and
the basis for distillers' finished
Is
goods, commonly referred to as whis
kcv. has been made effective. ThU
tlxed the basis about $1.88 a gallon.
The advance Is made because of the
high price of raw materials, such as
corn, malt, etc.
That threats of her son to kill him-
self unless he wore kept In mono
drove her to repeated forgeries In or-
ln a halt cent of that originally de- , loss In the price of his wheat, and the
out one j Oklahoma miller suffers from failure
I to develop a nearby volume of pro-
duction.
"Likewise, the large production of
cotton we have supposed would indi- j
cute a development of the cotton seed ]
composed of I oil milling business, but as long as j
were pupils j Infyastate rates from Oklahoma to |
ouside points are relatively much
lower than Intrastate rales in Okla-
homa, this business will continue
stunted.
"Similarly the large production of
oil In its auxiliary industry of refining
would be retarded by any great dis-
parity between interstate and Intra-
state rates. And in coal mining, a de-
cided decrease In both \alue and vol
ume would be noted if Intrastate and
Interstate rates were unreasonably
apart."
The brief recites that a readjust-
ment of almost impossible traffic con-
ditions is sought by the states Inter-
ested, while the railroads affected seek j
the prevention or delay" of that read- !
JuBtment.
Railroads are blamed for the failure
of the Mississippi valley states to in-
crease in population as rapidly as
othe. -. This retarded growth, the
brief declares, is not due to a lack of
opportunity for development, but
through transportation charges.
"The circuit court of the I'nlted
States cannot make rates nor substi-
tute proper orders for those It en-
bas cured thousands of women who
servatlve party, will shortly become Jiavo been trouW(>d with such ail-
prlme minister of Canada. He will be as displacements, inflammation,
tend the Horse Show and other at- supported in parliament of a working ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularl-
traetive features of the Fair, and visits majority of far more than amide for ties, periodic pains, backache, indige3-
will be made to the packing plants
nnd other points of interest in Okla-
homa City.
The girls attending the school will
be under the immediate care of Miss
Kolshorn and will have sleeping quar-
ters in the A. & M. College building.
Both boys and girls will be given most
careful attention while spending the
week inside the Fair grounds.
WOMEN NOW PLACED
ON EQUAL FOOTING
A. O. U. W. Following Lead of Other
States Takes Degree of Honor
Into Full Membership.
relation will not be possible in the
Immediate future.
The conservatives are committed to
a policy of trade expansion within the
empire and a closed door against the
United States.
Although re-elected in two consti-
tuencies in Quebec, the defeat of the
liberal party also means the retire*
ment from public life of Sir Wilfred
Oklahoma City.—Following the lead Laurier, who for nearly two decades
of California. Maine and Missouri, the j,as directed the destinies of the do-
11rand Lodge of the Ancient Order of minion. Several times during the cam-
United Workmen for Oklahoma voted ; pajgn which preceded Thursday's elec-
to take members of the Degree of tion the venerable premier said that
Honor, which Is the women's auxiliary defeat of his party at the polls meant
of tlie order, into full membership, the end of his eareer.
The action ot the grand lodge was result at 10 o'clock Thursday
ratified by the state convention of night, with a few of the distant con
the Degree of Honor, which w as also \ gtituencies estimated, were:
his nurnose tion, and nervous prostration.
The government defeat means that ^VLT.lia'l^^Pinkham's VegC-
the Fielding Knox reciproc ity agree lable f-olnpolln(1 „ ni help yon,
ment ratified by the American con- Mrs. Pinkliam nt Lynn,
press in extra session will not be in- for aclvlce. Your letter
troduced when the twelfth parliament -will bo absolutely confidential
assembles next month, and that a re- auil tlio ad\ico frcOf
vised CJnited _ _
States, looking to a closer commercial ; PADLy APT
land and watorrU'htfi Op*r
l<> entry <>n li.g Wood
liiver Project in Southern
Idaho. I50..M) an a,-rein 15
annual Installments. Ample wau*r supply guaran-
teed. IDAHO lKUlGA'IiO.N ( <>., RuliNuid, Idaliu.
CONTAGIOUS.
comes from the refusal of the com-
panv to arbitrate differences with the
men.
Kgbert Gillette, the Shaker elder,
who. with Kltzaheth Sears, administer-
ed chloroform to Sadie Marchaut, an-
other member of the Shaker colony,
who was suffering from tuberculosis,
was held for murder following the an-
nouncement of the finding of the cor-
nieeting here, by an affirmative vote
of two-thirds of the delegates present.
Before adjourning, the grand lodge
also adopted an entirely new constitu
tion and provided for new insurance
rates for all new entrants to the
order and such of the present mem-
bers as care to avail themselves of
them.
rearrested and held without ball. No
mention of Sister Sears was made ■ n
the verdict.
The situation along the Mexican bor-
der is under close w;iteli of the United
States government. If the raids of
Tuesda) upon American farms and
raneho b> irresponsible bands nv< re-
peated and the border towns of Texas
endangered the war department will
adopt measures of protection. There
are plenty of troops in thi viclnl:> of
the border to meet any emergency.
No oBcdal advhvs relative to disorder*
have reached Washington
FOREIGN
der to provide the funds was admitted oner's jury at Ki^slmmee. Fla. He w.
In police court In Chicago by Mrs K
K l.yon, wife of a wealthy manufii.'
tutor. After hearing her ston the
court discharged her
A wife has a right to scold her
hnsbutid, Circuit Court Judge Thomas,
Kansas City, Mo., decided, in refusing
a divorce to C.lenn C Hurnlium, from
his wife Ida Htiriihani. "There is no
such thing as a perfect wife Judge
Thomas said. \ wife has a right to
scold her husband if he give- her pro-
vocation, This husband took his wv.e
n> live with h(s folk 1 hat was
enough to make her pee\ ish
Panger of a famine In the Fhllip
pines on account of the failure of th.
rice crop lias become so threatening
that Governor General Forbt - decid-
ed to order the purchase by the gov
eminent of an entire shipload of the
icrcal in Rangoon.
State Pure Food Inspector 1. It.
Brown, of Tennessee, has begun a v
orous crnsade against unscreer 1
stands, issuing meno four sta e w.u
rants charging v.olation of the
food law*
From Information which the;, have
received recently, the tie. ir>
part nicut officials believe at !
"Mona l.is.i. the J O.t'Ol mast
piece which was stolen from il'.e
l.ouvre, l'aris. will be smuggled it
(he Flitted States through the swan-.; -
Alleges Cotton Monopoly
Oklahoma City.—The Harriss-lrby
Cotton company has been cited to ap-
pear before the corporation commis
joins." declares the brief. Tills pow- j slon September 30 at 10 o'clock, when
er. It continue*, the state corporation evidence will be taken in the matter
boards have and their power should be of the complaint of G. D. Baldwin and
appealed to before an injunction is other cotton growers of Geary, who
Ontario, liberals, 13; conservative*.
70. Quebec, liberals, 36; conservative^
27. Nova Scotia, liberals, 10; con
servatives. S. New- Brunswick, liberals
8; conservatives 5. Prince Edward Is-
land, liberals 2: conservatives 2. Mani-
toba, liberals 1; conservatives 9. Sas-
katchewan, liberals 7; conservatives
S. Alberta, liberals 4; conservative*
1. Total, liberals 81; conservatives,
131. Opposition majority, ."0.
"There is no doubt that we have
been decisively defeated." declared Sir
Wilfred Laurier early In the evening
nt Quebec to a group of friends who
had gathered with him to hear the re-
turns. "1 gladly lay down the burdens
which 1 have carried for fifteen years.
We believed that in niakin gthe reci
tZc..
Gayboze—When my wife saw the
condition I was in when I got hom«
from the club last night It just stag
gered her!
Martini—I'm not surprised. You
know you drank enough for two, old
man!
heard in the federal courts. As in j charge that unreasonable rates ^are arrangemen( we had done
something which would be greatly of
the case of other questions of the charged for ginning cotton nt
day, the matter is an economic one, place. The complaint tiled by Baldwin ,
nnd the courts have no precedent to ! nnd twenty-four others, alleges that
guide them, and the constant appllen- the Harriss-lrby company has the only
tion of the injunction must eventually gin in the vicinity of Geary, and that
stifle the power of the state to gov- i the company is charging 25 cents per
ern Itself. Every opportunity, argoes hundred for ginning cotton and adding
the attorney general, should be of-1 an extra $1 per hale, which they al-
tered the states to amend or control lege Is unreasonable. Complaints al-
their own acts, and tliere should first . lege that the company has a monopoly
be a resort for correction to every on the ginning business of that sec-
function the state 1ms before the court, tion, which enables them to charge a
Is appealed to. high price for the work.
benefit to the people of Canada. The
electors have declared otherwise and
I bow to their decision."
of
Whisky Goes Up
Cincinnati, Ohio.—An adv;
three cents a gallon is the b: -is for
distillers' finished goods, commonly
referred to lis whisKy. has bee i t
effective This fixed the basis about
$1.36 a gallon. ~
Don't Expect Kindness.
There are six sorts of people at
whose hands you need not expect much
kindness. The narrow minded think
of nobody but themselves, the lazy ar«
too Indifferent, the busy have nol
time to think, the rich disregard ai>
peals for kindness, the poor have
nelti.er spirit nor ability, and the good
natured fool Is not capable of serving
you —Home Notes.
Liver,.
Eng .
In the
crease
Ml 1
of tet
MANNER IN WHICH
WARRANTS MAY BE PAID
State Superintendent of Public In-
struction Wilson Explains That
School Warrants Are Good
Insurance Receipts
Oklahoma City,—That $19*28157
has been received thus far this year
bv the state insurance depatrment is
Wife Has Right to Scold
Kansas City, Mo.—A wife has a right
to scold her husband. Circuit Court
Judge Thomas decided, in refusing a
shown bv a table of receipts prepared divorce to Glenn C. Burnham from his
wife. Ida Burnham. "There is no such
Ok!al
ent R
other 1
emn t ;
H. Wil
•tter co
v ,trr
In an opinion fro
standing
cou!d not
of a levy
ebto
State Superintend
Is sending out an
Df the matter ol
in school districts
n the attorney ctj
■j held that any out-
ness In a district
are of with funds
by State Insurance Commissioner I'.
: A. Ballard. The receipts by months
'follow: January, $597.-"0; February,
$240; March, $142,711.65; April. J l.-
190.96; May. $10,031.70; June. $6.-
1670.41; July, $3,236.35; August, $1,60$.
thing as a perfect wife," Judge Thorn
as said. " A wife has a right to scold
her husband if he gives her provoca-
tion. This husband took his wife to
live with his folks. That was enough
to make her peevish."
It
ar
j r
Ni'
Minm
it.;
ex . aust* i
v. This.
'.Id
get
of
Board Locating Seed Wheat
Oklahoma City.—On account of the
shortage in the wheat crop in the
state this year, hundreds of inquiries
are re.o : ing the board of agriculture
every day, asking where ^ood seed
wheat can be obtained. The demon-
stration farm department, of the board
b.
I
the St'
nois i\
death In
Walbri.tM
upon the
tet Ins a* a picket of the striking
freight and y*t
Thirty six sa- • Toxa
Louisiana are
feared tbl* number * ha inr
to fifty in less th. i a fi ,
there Is a decided « . ..
us of the dispute I . < i the mi l
owner* and th« tir-ibir workers' broth-
erhood
an-, d Saturday. N
11.
stri '•
c ty v. ^
ife Is .
Slid the
military
The T
Rio Jai
' S.' .c
iestn . shed. The to'a' i >< of
' r. .ted at several hund . .
*ids art* being fed ai -he
: ictitration camp .t Ta' .ir
rational rr.ntir.e worn-,
.ro. were destroyed by rr#
Other valuable property *
i the damagt a «.st.mated at
McConna^l Appea's Case
An arpeal from a 111 lit Ml* t to he
d;< :i,t ,:-t of Woodward conn y in
whit h a verdict of $2.1 6 was rer.de ed
in favor of the Security State tank
of W< dward. *as taken to the su-
preme court Wednesday by R N Mc-
A HIT
•Vhat She Gained by Trying Again.
A failure at first makes ua esteem
final success.
A family In Minnesota that now en-
joys Postum would never have known
how good it 1b if the mother had been
discouraged by the failure of her
first attempt to prepare it. Her son
tells the story;
"We had never used Postum till last
spring when father brought home o
package one evening Just to try it. W«
had heard from our neighbors, and In
fact every one who used It, how well
they liked It.
"Well, tho next morning Mother
brewed It about five minutes, just as
she had been in the habit of doing
w !th coffee w ithout paying special at-
tention to the directions printed on
the package. It looked weak and
didn't have a very promising color, but
nevertheless father raised his cup
with an air of exceptancy. It certain-
ly did givo him a great surprise, but
I'm afraid It wasn't a very pleasant
one, for ho put down his cup with a
look of disgust.
Mother wasn't discouraged though,
and next morning gave It another trial,
letting '.t s'and on the stove till boil-
ing 1 • iran and then let ing It boll for
fifte- n or twenty minutes, and this
time we were all so pleased with It
that w e have used It ever since.
"Father w.-.; a confirmed dyspeptic
and a i .p of t veo was to hlr.i like pol-
? n. So he r. ver drinks it any mora,
Vat '.:.r.ks P . -jgulaiiy. He isn't
troubled with dyspepsia now and Is
actually growing fat, and I'm sure
Postum is the cause of It. All the chil-
dren aro allowed to drlr.k It and they
are perfect pictures of health." Nama
g'ven by Post .tn Co., Batilo Creek,
Mich.
Read tie little book. "The Ro*d to
a'tions and plan* for highway work | places lie is to safl for Japan next Wellvllle," in pkgs. "There's a reason."
ml exre. ta to have them rer.dv to j Tuesdav. Pending the arrival of hi* the atm Intvrr A •"
v -r, ni l K. i "HP*"™ from tlm In time. Thrr
! *ubm!t to tre ccmmi *u - - be ,„ni,r, lrn,. fun „f hvmma
i ti* next few dir*. , in charge of Mr Maasanao Hanihara. '
has
havi
■ per:;
help
ted >
-d se
ei.t
lie and
led. The sta*e ex-
Stillwater also l*
ig the farmers of
d. by keeping or.
• . J w heat of good
.ir.y one desiring
or Er dges
— The s
Street Car Strike Settled
Detroit. Mich.—The strike of the De-
troit United Railway employes was
settled by arbitration. The employes
accepted a new wage rate schedule
of 23 cents an hour for the first six
months, 271? cents for the next year,
and 29cents thereafter. The rate
w as wi-i.ln a half i ent of that ori.
inally demanded. The strikers were
out ne day
on e d
ts and bridge#
ar the
Mexican Arrested for Theft
Chicago, 111—Louis Laupuet. a
of wealthy parents, naiding at 1 h
hua. Mexico, was arrested i. rge
Texas Officially Wet t. 6.S79
the statewide prohibition atus;
was defeated by a ma. rny f 7
the election he'.d in Texas July 22
plans and s; e
concrete culve
highways of the state have been com
pleted and approved by Commissioner Uchida Starts for Home
Suggs and are on file in the office of Washington. D C.—Viscount I", hida
State Hishway Eng.r,e?r W. K. Golt- the reiirng Japanese ambassador, left
is engr.ged on other speciii- Washington for Seattle, from which
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Wnorowski, B. F. The Logan County News. (Crescent, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 46, Ed. 1 Friday, September 29, 1911, newspaper, September 29, 1911; Crescent, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc235658/m1/2/?q=%22United+States%22: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.