The Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 9, 1916 Page: 3 of 8
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THE HOLLIS P 0 S T-H E R A L D
V
V* f
«
^THOUSMfffl
WOMAN WITOVtt
Author of "GkeAMATEUR G^GGMAN,
RAFFLES. Etc.
ILLUSTRATIONS by O. IKWUN MVERS
CQpyRIOHT Pfr POPP3 CO^PAMy^
8YN0PSIS.
Camlet, on the steamer Kaiser Fritz,
homeward bound from Australia, cries
out In his sleep that Henry Craven, who
ten years before had ruined his father
and himself, is dead, and finds that Hil-
ton Toye, who shares the Btateroom with
him, knows Craven and also Blanche
Macnalr, a former neighbor and play-
mate. When the dally papers come
aboard at Southampton Toye reads that
Craven has been murdered and calls
Cazalet's dream second sight. He thinks
of doing a little amateur detective work
on the case himself. In the train to town
they discuss the murder, which wns com-
mitted at Cazalet's old home. Toye hears
from Cazalet that Scruton, who had been
Cazalet's friend and the scapegoat for
Craven's dishonesty, has been released
from prison. Cazalet goes down the
river and meets Blanche. Toye also
comes to see her and tells Cazalet that
Bcruton has been arrested, but as he
doesn't believe the old clerk Is guilty he
Is going to ferret out the murderer.
Cazalet and Blanche go to Cazalet's fid
home and meet Mr. Drinkwater of Scot-
land Yard. Cazalet goes with Drinkwa-
ter to the library where the murder was
committed, shows him a secret passage
he knew of as a boy.
CHAPTER VII—Continued.
"Oh, that was as easy as pie; I'd
often explored them. Do you remem-
ber the row I got into, Blanche, for
taking you with me once and Bimply
ruining your frock?"
"I remember the frock!" said
Blanche.
It was her last contribution to the
conversation; immediate develop-
ments not only put an end to the fur-
ther exchange of ancient memories,
but rendered It presently Impossible
by removing Cazalet from the scene
with the two detectives. Almost with-
out warning all three disappeared
down the makeshift trap-door cut by
one of them as a schoolboy in his
father's floor.
She hardly even knew how it hap-
pened. The little place was so small
that she never saw the hole until It
had engulfed two of the trio; the third
explorer, Mr. Drinkwater himself, had
very courteously turned her out of the
library beforer following the others.
And he had said so very little before-
hand for her to hear, and so quickly
prevented Cazalet from saying any-
thing at all, that she simply could not
think what any of them were doing
under the floor.
Under her very feet she heard them
moving as she waited a bit in the hall;
then she left the house by way of the
servants' quarters, of course without
holding iany communication with those
mutineers, and only indignant thaf
Mr. Drinkwater should have requested
her not to do so.
It was a long half-hour that followed
for Blanche Macnair, but she passed it
characteristically.
She turned her wholesome mind to
doga, which in some ways she knew
better and trusted further than men.
There was a dog at Uplands, and as
yet she had seen nothing of him; he
lived in a large kennel in the yard,
for he was a large dog and rather
friendless. But Blanche knew him by
sight, and had felt always Borry for
him.
The large kennel waB Just outside
the back door, which was at the top
of the cellar steps and at the bot-
tom of two or three leading into the
scullery; but Blanche, of course, went
round by the garden. She found the
poor old dog quite disconsolate in a
more canine kennel in a corner of the
one that was really worthy of the
more formidable carnivora. There was
every sign of his being treated as the
dangerous dog that Blanche, indeed,
had heard he was; the outer bars were
further protected by wire netting,
which stretched like a canopy over
the whole cage; but Blanche let her-
self in with as little- hesitation as she
proceeded to beard the poor brute
in his inner lair. And he never even
barked at her; he Just lay whimpering
with his tearful nose between his two
front paws, as though hiB dead master
had not left him to the servants all
his life.
Blanche coaxed and petted him un-
til she almost wept herself; then sud-
denly and without warning the dog
showed his worst side. Out he leaped
from wooden sanctuary, almost knock-
ing her down, and barking horribly,
but not at Blanche. She followed his
Infuriated eyes; and the back door-
way framed a dusty and grimy figure.
Just climbing into full length on the
cellar stairs, which Blanche had some
difficulty in identifying with that of
Cazalet.
"Well, you really are a Sweep!" she
cried when she had slipped out Just
in time, and the now savage dog was
•till butting and clawing at his bars.
"How did you come out. and where
are the enemy?"
"The old way." he answered. "I left
them down there."
"And what did you find?"
"I'll tell you later. I can't hear my
voice for that Infernal dog "
The dreadful barking followed them
out iuto the yard, and round to the
right, past the tradesmen's door, to
the verge of the drive Here they met
he quavered. "Do you hear our Roy!
missj I ha'n't heard that go on like
that since the night that happened!"
Then Cazalet introduced himself to
the old gardener whom he had known
all his life; and by rights the man
should have wept outright, or else
emitted a rustic epigram laden with
wise humor. But old Savage hailed
from silly Suffolk, and all hiB lffe he
had belied his surname, but never the
alliterative libel on his native county.
He took the wanderer'B return very
much as a matter of course, very
much as though he had never been
away at all, and was demonstrative
only in his further use of the East
Anglian pronoun.
"That's a long time since we fared
to see you, Mus* Walter," said he.
"that's a right long time! And now
here's a nice kettle of fish for you
to And! But 1 seen the man, Mus
Walter, and we'll bring that home to
him, never you fear!
"Are you Bure that you saw him?'
asked Blanche, already under Caza-
let's influence on this point.
Savage looked cautiously toward
the house before replying; then he
lowered his voice dramatically. "Sure,
Miss Blanche. Why, I see him that
night as plain as I fare to see Mus1
Walter now!"
"t should have thought it was too
dark to see anybody properly," said
Blanche, and Cazalet nodded vigorous-
ly to himself.
"Dark, Miss Blanche? Why, there
was broad daylight, and if that wasn't
there were the lodge lights on to see
him by!" His stage voice fell a sepul
chral semitone. "But I see him again
at the station this very afternoon, I
did! I promised not to talk about
that—you'll keep that a secret if I tell
'e Bomethin'?—but I picked him out
of half a dozen at the first time of
askin'!"
Savage said this with a pleased and
vacuous grin, looking Cazalet full in
the face; his rheumy eyes were red
as the sunset they faced; and Cazalet
drew a deep breath as Blanche and he
turned back toward the river.
"First time of prompting, I expect!"
he whispered. "But there's hope if
Savage is their strongest witness.'
1 "Only listen to that dog," said
Blanche, as they passed the yard.
CHAPTER VIII.
«
Finger-Prints.
Hilton Toye was the kind of Ameri-
can who knew London as well as most
Londoners, and some other capitals a
good deal better than their respective
citizens of corresponding intelligence.
His travels were mysteriously but en-
viably interwoven with business; he
had an air of enjoying himself, and at
the same time making money to pay
for his enjoyment, wherever he went.
His hotel days were much the same all
over Europe: many appointments, but
abundant leisure. As, however, he
never spoke about his own afTairs un
less they were also those of the lis-
tener—and not always then—half his
acquaintances had no idea how he
made his money, and the other half
wondered how he spent his time. Of
his mere interests, which were many
Toye made no such secret; but it was
quite impossible to deduce a main in-
dustry from the by-products of his
level-headed versatility.
Criminology, for example, was an
obvious by-product; it was no morbid
taste In Hilton Toye. but a scientific
hobby that appealed to his mental
subtlety. And subtle he was. yet
with strange simplicities; grave and
dignified, yet addicted to the expres
slve phraseology of his less enlight-
ened countrymen; naturally sincere,
and yet always capable of some in-
genuous duplicity.
The appeal of a Blanche Macnair to
such a soul needs no analysis. She
had struck through all complexities to
the core, such as it was or as she
might make it. As yet she could only
admire the character the man had
shown, though it had upset her none
the less. At Engelberg he had pro
posed to her "inside of two weeks.'
as he had admitted without compunc-
tion at the time. It had taken him.
he said, about two minutes to make
up his mind; but the following sum
mer be had laid more deliberate siege,
in accordance with some old Idea that
she had let fall to soften her first re-
fusal. The result had been the same,
only more explicit on both sides. She
had denied him the least particle of
hope, and he had warned her that she
had not heard the last of him by any
means, and never would till she mar-
ried another man This had incensed
her at the time, but a great deal less
on subsequent reflection; and such
was the position between that pair
when Toye and Cazalet landed in Eng
land from the same steamer
On this second day ashore, as Caza-
A plainer Indication was the down
right yet sunny manner in which Caza
let at once returned to the contentious
topic.
"Well, my dear Toye, what do you
think of It now?"
"I was going to ask you what you
thought, but 1 guess 1 can see from
your face."
"I think the police are rotters for
not setting him free last night!"
"Scruton ?"
"Yes. Of course, the caae'U break
down when it comes on next week but
they oughtn't to wait for that. They've
no right to detain a man in custody
when the bottom's out of their case
already."
"But—but the papers claim they've
found the very things they were
searching for." Toye looked non-
plused, as well he might, by an appar-
ently perverse jubilation over such in-
telligence
"They haven't found the missing
cap!" crowed Cazalet. "What they
have found Is Craven's watch and
keys, and the silver-mounted trun-
cheon that killed him. But they found
them In a place where they couldn't
possibly have been put by the man
identified as Scruton!"
"Say, where wns that?" asked Toye
with great interest. "My paper only
sayB the things were found, not
where."
"No more does mine, but I can tell
you, because 1 helped to find 'em "
"You don't say!"
"You'll never grasp where," contin-
ued Cazalet. "In the foundations un
der the house!"
Details followed in all fullness; the
listener might have had a part In the
Uplands act of yesterday's drama,
might have played in the library scene
with his adored Miss Blanche, so viv-
idly was every minute of that crowd-
ed hour brought home to him. He was
not so sure that he had any very dell
nite conception of the foundations of
an English house.
"Ours were like ever so many little
tiny rooms," said Cazalet, "where I
couldn't stand nearly upright even as
a small boy without giving my head a
crack against the ground Hoofs. They
led into one another by a lot of little
manholes—tight fits even for a boy,
M5 DIE WHEN
6PANISH VESSEL GOES TO THE
BOTTOM IN FIVE MIN-
UTES.
143 PERSONS ARE RESCUED
Only Meagre Details Received of Dia
aster, Which Occurred Off
the Coast of
Brazil.
Santos, Brazil.—The Spanish steam
ship Principe de Asturias has been
sunk by striking a rock. She went tc
the bottom in five minutes. Eighty-
six members of the crew and fifty-
seven passengers have been brought
to Santos.
The survivors were brought to San
tos by the French steamer Viga.
Estimated 338 passengers and 101
members of the crew on the Prlncipt
NEGRO FINDS EIGHT DEAD BOD
IES IN FARM HOUSE
NEAR LAWTON.
TRAGEDY ENDSLONGQUARREL
James O'Kane and His Aged Father
Often Disputed, According To
Neighbors of the
Family. —
Lawton.—The finding of the dead
bodies of James O'Kane, aged 75;
Mrs. Daniel O'Kane, aged 40; her five
children, Lewis 13, Daniel 8, Margaret
7, Lillian 5 and baby Robert, aged fi
months, and of Daniel O'Kane, head
of the family In a dying condition, at
de Asturias are missing. The steame. I ^ ^ °! the °'Kane family'
was wrecked off Sebastiao Point, the 'V6 m,'eS 80U,hwest ot Lawt°n an1
western extremity of the Island of that
name, near the entrance to the bay.
The Principe de Asturias was en
gaged in the passenger service be-
tween Barcelona and Brazil. She was
a large and comparatively new vessel.
Her gross tonnage was 8,371; her
length 460 feet; her beam 68 feet, and
depth 29 feet. She was built at Port
(wo miles west of Tlnney, marks the
most terrible tragedy in the history
Of the southwest.
Daniel O'Kane, believed by the offl
cera to have murdered his entire fam
lly and then to have sent a bullet into
his brain, died at Southwestern hos-
pital.
The discovery of the bodies was
Glasgow in 1914 and owned in Cadiz, by li°rm>xn Senter- nc®ro fari
1 hofln tlrUn ion.. ^.. 1 ..I 1 y-V Tr
Spain.
BLACK SEA FLEET BECOMES ACTIVE
"They Haven't Found the Missing
Cap!" Cried Cozalet
but nearly fatal to the boss police
man yesterday!"
Hilton Toye, edging In his word,
said he guessed he visualized—but just
where had those missing things been
found?
"Three or four compartments from
the first one under the library," Bald
Cazalet.
"Did you find them?"
"Well, I kicked against the trun-
cheon, but Drinkwater dug it up. The
watch and keys were with It"
"Say. were they buried?"
"Only in the loose rubble and brick-
dusty stuff that you get In founda-
tions."
"Say, that's bad! That murderer
must have known something, or else
It's a bully fluke in his favor."
I don't follow you, Toye."
I'm thinking of finger-prints. If
he'd Just've laid those things right
down, he'd have left the print of his
hand as large aB life for Scotland
Yard."
"The devil he would!" exclaimed
Cazalet. "1 wish you'd explain," he
added; "remember I'm a wild man
from the woods, and only know of
these things by the vaguest kind of
hearsay and stray paragraphs in the
papers. I never knew you could leave
our mark so easily as all that."
Toye took the breakfast menu and
placed it face downward on the table
cloth. "Lay your hand on that, palm
down," be said, "and don't move it
for a minute."
Cazalet looked at him a moment
before complying; then his fine, shape
sunburnt hand lay still as plaster
under their eyes until Toye told him
he might take it up. Of course there
as no mtfrk whatever, and Cazalet
laughed.
Russians Bombard Turkish City of
Trebizond.
Petrograd.—The Russian Black sea
fleet is extending the scope of its op-
erations far to the westward of Tre-
bizond and has bombarded the mouth
of the Terma, where a fleet of sailing
vessels had taken refuge. The Terma
is 210 miles west of Trebizond.
Thirty miles east of the Terma the
fire of the warships destroyed barri-
cades and depots and many Turkish
craft. Along the coast line included
between the two points the Russians
during the last few days had surils
more than thirty sailing vessels laden
with war supplies.
The civil population of Trebizend is
reported to have virtually evacuated
the city.
The Russian front southward of the
Caucasian theater extends 270 miles.
Military critics emphasize the caution
and deliberation which are character-
izing the advance along this whole
front, the difficulties of which multiply
daily with the increasing distance
from the Russian bases, in contrast
with the impetuosity of the earlier
days of the campaign.
The Russian advance is still 260
miles from the nearest point of ap-
proach to the Bagdad railway, south of
Bitlis, namely Raselln.
The American consulate was struck
by a shell during the bombardment
and a Persian subject was killed with-
in twenty feet of the desk of Consul
Oscar S. Heiser. Another shall struck
the residence of the vice consul.
NEWTON BAKER WAR SECRETARY
Former Mayor of Cleveland Succeed!
Garrison.
Washington. — Newton D. Baker,
former mayor of Cleveland, has been
selected by President Wilson for secre-
tary of war. His nomination has gone ' not fire the shot into his own brain
hand who was employed by O'Kane.
The four-room farm house presented
the appearance of a slaughter pen
upon the arrival of the oflicers. The
heads of all the children had been
crushed with a hammer and the
throats of the four elder children were
cut from ear to ear.
Mrs. O'Kane's head had been
crushed with the hammer and sho had
been shot in the left temple. The
baby had also been shot and its skull
crushed.
The bodies of the four elder chil-
dren were found in the two beds in the
Inside bedroom while the mother and
baby were lying in bed In the front
room. In the southwest bedroom was
found the body of James O'Kane, fath-
er of Daniel O'Kane. He had been
shot in the right temple as he lay in
bed.
Killed While Asleep.
There was no appearance of any of
the victims having struggled, and it
Is supposed by the pfficers that all
were struck in the head as they lay
asleep, and that the razor and pistol
were later used.
Daniel O'Kane was found lying in
the center of the floor of his wife's
bedroom with a bullet through his left
temple. He was fully dressed. He
was lying on his back and breathing
aeavily when found. He was rushed
to Southwestern hospital here where
a careful examination convinced the
surgeons that no operation could save
Bis life. He never regained conscious-
ness.
A thirty-eight caliber revolver was
lying on the floor beside the dying
man. Placed against a trunk was a
imall mirror and partially under
O'Kane was a small box. Appearances
indicate that O'Kane sat on the box
and looked into the mirror to direct*
the Bhot into his brain.
The four persons Bhot, the older
O'Kane, Daniel O'Kane, Mrs. O'Kane
ind the baby had similar piBtol
wounds, each shot entering just above
the temple and coming out at the cen-
ter of the head.
Surgeons agreed that the family had
been murdered about the midnight
hour but it is thoueht that O'Kane
LESS 1 HAN THIRD OF 4,000 SOL-
DIERS AND SAILORS ON
PROVENCE SAVED.
GREATEST MARINE DISASTER
t/essel Sunk In Mediterranean Febru-
ary 26; Pails Gives Out
Few Details of the
Affair.
Paris.—It was announced at the
French ministry of marine that there
vere nearly 4,000 men on board the
French auxiliary cruiser Provence
when she was sunk in the Mediter-
ranean on February 26.
It was stated that on board the
Provence were the staff of the third
colonial infantry regiment, the third
battalion, the second company of the
Qrst battalion, the second machine
gun company and one extra company,
in all nearly 4,000 men.
As the ministry of marine on Feb-
ruary 29 announced that the number
of survivors of the Provence disaster
was estimated at 870, it is indicated
iy the foregoing dispatch that upwards
af 3,130 lives were lost.
The loss of more than three thou-
sand lives in the sinking of the French
luxiliary cruiser Proveuce is the great-
est ocean disaster of modern times.
Up to the present the largest numbed
of lives ever lost in one wreck was
when the White Star liner Titanic
itruck an Iceberg off the Newfound-
land banks on April 14, 1912, and sank
with a death loss of 1,595. The res-
ted numbered 743.
The French ministry of marine had
previously issued no statement as to
:he number of persons on the Provence
when she went down. The vessel, how-
ever, when in the trans-Atlantic serv-
ice could carry 1,960 persons includ-
ing the crew and it has been presumed
that as she was transporting troops be-
tween ports not far apart, she was car-*
tying a number of men larger than her
normal capacity.
No signs of submarine were noticed
either before of after the sinking. La
Provence was armed with five cannon
of fourteen centimeters, two of fifty-
seven millimeters and four of forty,
seven millimeters.
Other Great Disasters.
Among the other great sea disasters
In addition to the Titanic already men-
tioned were:
The CUnard line steamship Lusl-
tania, torpedoed by a German sub-
marine and sunk off Klnsale, Ireland,
on May 7, 1915, with the loss of 1,206
lives.
The burning of the excursion steam-
er General Slocum In the East river,
New York, June 15, 1904, when nearly,
one thousand persons met their death.
The French line steampsliip LaBour-
gogne sunk in collision with the steam-
ship Cromartyshire July 4, 1898, with
the loss of 580 lives.
The Japanese liner Kiuku Marti
sunk off the coast of Japan, September
2a. 1912, with the loss of one thousand
lives.
The Canadian Pacific Bteamer Em-
press of Ireland sunk in collision with
the Danish collier Storstadt In the St.
Lawrence river May 29, 1914, with the
loss of more than one thousand lives.
The burning of the Uranium line
steamship Volturno In mid-ocean on
October 9, 1913, with the loss of 136
lives.
to the senate and administration lead-
ers expect quick confirmation, so that
the new secretary may take active
until after daylight as the lamps had
been extinguished and daylight would
have been necessary in order that he
I came up #rom those foundations,
not fresh from my tub!" said he.
"You wait." replied Hilton Toye.
taking the menu gingerly by the edge,
and putting It out of harm's way in
the empty toast-rack. "You can't see
anything now. but if you come round
to the Savoy I'll show you something "
"What?"
"Your prints, sir! 1 don't say I'm
Scotland Yard at the game, but 1 can
do it well enough to show you how
It's done You haven't left yonr mark
upon the paper, but I guess you've left
the sweat of your hand; If | snow «
little French chalk over it. the chalk'll
stick where your hand did. and blow
«„ . i 'et sat over a late breakfast In Jer
- n unft^ ? f IemK U8 hUrn I mjn treet- To>e ^nt in his card and
Jto. instantly was permitted to follow It. rather to
formed, and came to anchor*Wronl iTd^Id^betwee^kidneJsTnd bTcon ' T^h ^'d 'S ^ COn"
hi,C1 !mend8 f°r hl6 fuU> W >" how it « done "
great heat In yesterday s argument I tTo be CONTINUED.,
Inp wrinkles.
"Why. If that isn't Miss Blanche!"
Berlin.—Official announcement is
made by the naval general staff that
the German commerce raider Moewe
returned to Wilhelmshafen. She had
on board 199 prisoners and 1,000,000
marks in gold bars.
The announcement says fifteen ves-
sels were sunk by the Moewe, which
also laid mines at several ponits. One
of these mines, it is stated, sank the
British battleship King Edward VII.
The vessel captured the following
enemy steamers, the greater part of
wheh were sunk and a small part of
which were sent as prizes to neutral
ports:
The British steamers Corbrdge,
3,687 tons; Author, 3,496 tons; Trader.
3,608 tons; Ariadne, 3,035 tons; Drom-
onby, 3,627 tons; Farring House, 461
tons; Clan Mactavish, 5,816 tons; Ap-
nam, 7,810 tons; Westburn, 3.300 tons;
Horace, 3,335 tons; Flamenco, 4.62J
at . , , Neighbors all testified that O'Kane I tons; Saxon Prince. 3.741 tons.
j g' but not ,on* therfr was pond to his family and evidently T'ne British sailing vessel Edin-
after moved to Cleveland, where he Joved his wife and children, but they burgh, 1,473 tons.
became city solicitor in 1902. He helc | said he had trouble continually with ( The French steamer Maroni, 3,109
this office for ten years, until his elec his father, James O'Kane, who is re-' tons.
tion as mayor. In 1914 he was re PutP(I to have been of vicious tempera- The Belgan steamer Luxembourge,
elected mayor for a two-year term. ment. 4,322 tons.
charge of the war department's plans I ^S^t look into the mirror and fire
for army increases and reorganization the shot lnto his own brain- He was
^rr(r" ~ %%'~,when iie °Bcer>
tloncd In cMmwtfoT'wilh the^E | j b'°°'ly| tb "•«'
Kvvnr:,! tta „ I e position Ind several cartridges were found on
several times He was offered a place the kitchen table. In the revolver
w en he cabinet was formed, but de ; there were Tour empty shells and two
cllDed- loaded ones.
Bloody Water In Pan.
Mr. Baker is 44 years old. He was
born in Martinsburg, W. Va ami m 1
the age of 25 was appointed' private 1 *h T I T ^ K°°dy
where bloody hands had been washed
y t Postmaster General Wil and many blood stains were upon the
son in President Cleveland's cabinet, towel.
MOEWE EVADES BRITISH NAVY
Famous German Privateer Reachea
Home Port.
v - m h k *n ke began the practice of law
Vou should have caught me when 1— k... * .
Eighteen Die In Jail Fire.
New Depot For Oklahoma City. El Paso —Eighteen dead and a score The Pope For Peace.
Oklahoma City—The Oklahoma cor or more ,esp p?ri°usly wounded was Rome-Pope Benedict has again
poration commission formally signed 'he toll of an explosion and fire at the raised his voice for peace. In a sr .'ial
and issued an order directing that the hath house. The blaze started letter written for the len'en season the
St. Loom & San Francisco railroad and 'rom !i "ash of flame from a large tnb pontiff says he cannot sit silent, indif-
the Rock Island railroad build a Joint of gasoline and kerosene solution used ferent to tte terrible conflh t which is
depot at the intersection of those line? to des,ro>' germcarrying lice. In theii reading Europe. Ht recalls all that
with Hudson street. It is reportec reports officers attributed the or- be has done to induce the contending
that the two railroads already have 'he deliberate action of one nations to lay down iher nrrna, virtu-
agreed upon plans* which Lave been of ,he prisoners in throwing a lighted a]iy throwing himself between the bel-
drawn, for construc'ion of a seven- roatch in one of the containers. H. M. liferents and adjuring them, in the
story office building to cost approxl- ^ross. the American, is accused of name of the Almighty, to desist in
mately $700,000. The depot is to b« 'triking the match that caused the fire, their unusual plan of mutual de-struo
finished by January 1, 1917. I was in Jail for vagrancy. j Uon.
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Huff, Thomas B. The Hollis Post-Herald. (Hollis, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 9, 1916, newspaper, March 9, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc268058/m1/3/: accessed May 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.