Hooker Advance (Hooker, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, February 17, 1911 Page: 2 of 8
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THE HOOKER ADVANCE.
Advance Pub. Co. (Inc.)
HOOKER,
oki. a
NEWS OF THE WEEK
Most Important Happenings of the
Past Seven Days.
Interesting Items Gathered from all
Parts of the World Condensed
Into Small Space for the Ben-
efit of Our Readers.
National Capital.
The senate passed the bill advo-
cated by Secretary of the Treasury
MacVeagh, which prohibits the use of
Panama 'J per cent bonds as a basis
of National bank circulation.
"If the necessary appropriations
■were available, I would establish
postal savings banks to-morrow in 500
additional cities and towns of the
United States." This statement was
made by Postmaster General Hitch-
cock in view of reports thus far re-
ceived concerning the first month s
operation of the postal savings sys-
tem.
That W ashington has an opportu-
nity of winning the 1915 Panama ex-
position was indicated when the sen-
ate committee on industrial exposi-
tions decided to hold an additional
hearing to hear the claims of the
capital.
That Senator William Lorimer of
Illinois holds his seat as the result of
bribery and on that account should
not be permitted to continue in the
senate, is the conclusion reached by
Senator Root and announced by him
in an argument on the floor of the
senate.
That the bill in equity brought by
George W. Glover to defeat the be-
quest in the will of his mother, Mrs.
Marv Baker G. Eddy, is scandalous
and impertinent, is the declare.;on 0/
the counsel for the estate in their
answer.
The largest missionary onvention
of women ever assembled in Wash-
ington opened when the Women's Na-
tional Foreign Missionary Jubilee
gathered in a two-day session.
Clarence W. Watson took the oath |
of office as Democratic senator from !
West \irginia. Senator Watson was
elected to fill the unexpired term of
the late Senator Stephan B. Elkins.
"Mercury and Venus already are 1
dead and dried up worlds; Mars is
rapidly approaching a state of wrink- i
led old age, and the earth is next in }
the procession, headed towards the
EXONERATE OIL CO.
PUBLISHER OF HAMPTON'S MAGA-
2INE RETRACTS ACCUSATION
AGAINST STANDARD.
ARTICLE CAUSED LIBEL SUIT
Hampton's and Moffett Declare Upon
Investigation Oil Company Is Not
Connected With Sale ot
Impure Candies.
New York.—In the matter of the
libel suits brought by the Standard Oil
SENATE MAY KILL
COMMISSION BILL
House Republicans Agreeing on
Dalzell Measure but Its Fate
Is in Doubt.
MAY PROBE NAVY ACCIDENTS
^71^' , lNeW York for a the form*r the publisher and the lat-
E3t e°tUreS bef°re 6cientlflc ter « • writer, of an article in the Feb-
Tll„ ,. . ., ; ruary issue of the magazine which de-
tiJ setJle SSSf 1 PaS80d famCd the comPany to connection wasningi
14 and S2 a rtf r ®i ^ 7 Vth the Sale of g,ucoae and «««* in nd means
cln Ishii J t respectlJely * An?eri- ! Philadelphia, the following retractions sanction to
camsnips of the second and third have <„
second and third have been signed in the office of
class operating between American Shearman
ports and ports of China, Japan,
Australia and South American ports
south of the Equator. This bounty is
to be paid only for the outward bound
voyage.
comes the speaker's gavel, ana tne
voice from which there is no appeal
calls out, "The gentleman's time has
expired."
The navy department has given the
members of the academy board at the
Annapolis school the right to pass
final judgment upon the request from
the many midshipmen students who
recently have been seriously ill with
typhoid fever, to have their seml-an-
nual examinations postponed a month.
At the government school at West
Point when a boy was sick in the
hospital and consequently lost standing
in his classes he never was given an j
opportunity to take his examinations I
at a date later than that fixed for the I
quizzing of the rest of his class. The
result was that the youngster who was >
hurt at artillery drill or who had scar- i
let fever or measles or something :
else, was obliged either to go before :
the examiners in an unprepared con- j
ditlon or to accept a leave of ab- i
sence for six months which meant j
By GEORGE CLINTON, I that on h,s return to the academy he
Washington.—Members of the ways must Join the class next below his I
committee having refused own *n other words, lose a whole
to the Longworth tariff com- year's time and the close companion-
Department Roused by Many Recent
Disasters—Speaker Cannon's Hour
Glass—Mine Fatalities More
Numerous In America
Than In Europe.
* Cured
Neuralgia
Pain"
pleas*
ore fa
writing
■ to you
that I had a neuralgia pain in
my arm for five years, and I
used your Liniment for one
week and was completely
cured. i recommend your
Liniment very highly."—Mrs.
j. McGraw, 12i6 Mandeville
St., New Orleans, La.
Cured Quinsy Sore Throat
Mr. Henry L. Caulk, of
1242 Wilson St., Wilmington,
Del., writes :—"I bought a bot-
tle of Sloan's Liniment for the
quinsy sore throat and it cured
me. i shall always keep a
bottle in the house."
SLOANS
LINIMENT
— L.wxupL reuei is iortncoming. entitled 'ra«iilii mil th. 1* u.""cu- I ^euencn L. Hoffman did the work 1 • • , . v r < 1
-Negotiations for a settlement be- oners.' ' in thaJ articie l referred to wfer« L V^6 ln ^ 8ena^. °J gathering the accounts of the acci- gives instant relief from rheu-
k-een the ,v.„ „ , 1 article 1 referred to where the chances are verv much dents. Th« i__
Foreign Affair*
Information received at Shanghai
indicates that thousands are perish-
ing from starvation, the dead remain-
ing unburied. It is said nearly 2,000,-
000 people are in danger of death un-
less prompt relief is forthcoming.
ship of the men with whom he had
gone through plebe camp.
Mine Fatalities Numerous.
The bureau of labor has just com |
piled its statistics of the fatali-
ties ln mining operations in the
_ , | United States. The work of compila-
hm If °^orth bfl1 and the Dal- tion was one of great difficulty be- !
mission bill and having endorsed one
said to be more to their liking, the
Republican leaders of the house are
now more in a mood to pass the
legislation which the president has
asked.
There are some wide differences be-
& Sterling, the Standard
Oil company's lawyers in the case,
and have been issued from the com-
pany's offices at No. 26 Broad-
way:
"Hampton-s Magazine, 68 West
Thirty-fifth St., New York,
"o. . . "Jan- 31 1911- zel1 blH which has supplanted it, but I cause of the fact that^nn mmin
"ew Yo L P"y' " BrMl1*""- " «« .k. .Wtl.tlS,2X
J, _ u „ Republicans will not refuse to vote and that there are often material dis-
« frv ^ February issue for the substituted measure, believing crepancies ln official return of the
hii , !? n 3 MaSaz,ne there was as they do that it is an advance along same state for different vears
b-!fZ8d- The Hoffman "did the work
Domestlt Itemn.
By concurrent action both houses
of the Ohio legislature urges the
adoption of the Bourne resolution
pending in the United States senate,
providing for the lection of senators
by the people, through constitutional
amendment.
The Moline, Kan., creamery has
turned. The plant was valued at $18,-
000 and was insured for $8,000.
Leaders of the recent cailed-off gar-
ment workers' strike at Chicago have
announced that the strike against the
clothing manufacturers would be re
•umed April 1.
Gen. Wood, chief of staff, has let it
l)e known that at least one aeroplane
would be employed in observation
•work along the Rio Grande.
Owing to the state of war existing
In northern Mexico the Wells-Fargo
Express company is refusing to ac-
cept business for that part of the
•outhern republic.
New Orleans has decided not to
carry the fight for the Panama canal
exposition further and to yield to the
decision of the house in favor of San
Franclsoo.
A census report shows that in 1909
there were in Kansas 3,427 manufac-
turing plants with a capital of $154,-
925,000 and an output of $325,357,000
end employing 50,333 persons.
The bank at Linwood, Kan., was
blown open and robbed by three men.
While the men were at work citizens
of the town notified the owner who
lives at lawrence that the bank was
being robbed but no effort was made
to stop the work or prevent the es-
cape of the men.
The population of Xew York by the
1910 census was 4.766,883, an increase
of 38.7 per cent in ten years. The
claim has been made for New York
made _♦ , , * J mm lueir conservative Ke- was 29,293, an
Aviator Say, ~ competing " for the pany manufactured" and' soiTlmpu™ fewfswr^SYh? bn W T ^ 1,0°° employe*~s 3.11 SOre throat, ton-
ine's I*?™ PriZe f°r the aViat°r fl>" material which went ln"> these can iTaw " tte blH 'allS t0 beC°me P" * silitis, h Oarse-
ing 60 kilometers (40 miles), over a dies and tbat, when the various deal- In th* r, . , e. decade endlDS w,th 1906. npw anH rhpsf-
circuit course covered 42 miles in 32 ers were arrested and fined, at the in- Jubilant hS£?,«i^f ^ T 8re , Peri0<3 WhiCh figures from other
minutes. He used a biplane. stance of Mr. Cassidv, your companv which h«« ^ d"®agTeement c°al mining countries are available,
Abdul Hamid former sultan of Tur- paid the fines OVfir ^ the Republicans [the fatality rate in North America was
key, has gone violently insane, has "Upon investigation I have ascer- mlRsinn' J*?,, , tb,! taHff com' far hi«her tha° that in any other im-
killed two of his wives and is con- talned that your comoanv was In no ™ !f!?^-v^Slf"01LShould take" _Un- I portant coal fle!d of the world. The
mission legislation should take. wa. „e.u „r rn« wr
fined in irons. "trTn" c'So" ,D ^ ^ for the ^e°d was 3.13
Revised estimate® place the num- referred t^and 7hasten tomJacMn teUe^on/noT ^ Zn be \k7 h°°0 empIoyees- In United
the fullest manner all charges made rZ *L !i.C°m^,0n bU1 . ,s I the rate wa« 1-29 per 1,000;
Mount Taal and drowned in the tidal
waves at 600. _ _ _
Rates In Different Sections.
coast. Many fishing vessels * were truIy' Cleveland Moffett." retort^VMyin/that1 th^nrn^"'."68 I The fU" extent of the r,sk in coal
dashed on the rocks and their crew, "Jan. 81. 1911. have nof? ^ ^ AmeHca ,S' h°WeV€r'
6 25 BalIors were "Standard Oil Company, New York the opposition for two years. All is the coaTflelfsTs^0 h^1"68 \°I
pains.
Prices,25c.,50c. & *1.00
SLOAN'S
LINIMENT
Sloan's book on
hordes, cattle, sbepp
and poultry aeut
free. Addreii*
Dr. Earl S. Sloan,
Boston, Hass., U.S.A.
NO CHANCE.
- , , "Standard Oil
round along the coast.
•l French submarine Mariotte, ucm ou . neiernog 10 lopegoing . . ianu 1 eacn Keoeranhira
« ch?rZ ° l !eUM ot. Clev""d • «« S. wri^TSrt.b""n'.bT 1?" T "",he "asl e"tr '
-comprt!M Ke°tuek7- iiiimu"
Kj."rr!°<.to. I Hum.
Sf,?erb0,U,rE , The Mari°tte 18 of 1*- you' we beS to state that we are con-
100 tons displacement. vlnced that Mr. Moffett was in error
The Thunderer, the seventeenth ,n bis statements with reference to
British Dreadnought and the fourth 3°ur company. We greatly regret that
of the super-dreadnought type, has these errors should have been made,
been launched. It is the desire of Hampton's Maga-
. ■ and Indiana, the fatality rate for the
Army to Get Aeroplane Fund. 20 years ending with 1908 was only
The house of representatives has 2 25 per A'000 employees while in the
put Into the army bill an appropria- western section (Colorado, New Mex-
tlon of $125,000 for the use of the sig- ico and Utah) it was 6.4 per 1,000. and
,, g - ^ 0 1 me use or tne biz- i u was d.i per l.uuu. and
hanrt George s reputation as a hus- to be accurate and fair ln all nal corps of the United States armv ,n the Pacific coast section (Wash-
band and a father was vindicated th,°f; In our March number we will in aeroplane experiments. For a year M^ton and British Columbia), 7 per
when a jury acquitted him of bigamy PuhUsh 'his letter and the foregoing the signal corps officers have had an ! 1'000- 11 w°u'<i appear that the va-
by convicting another man of libel. 'ett«r of Mr Moffett. Yours truly, aeroplane on their bands and have I rlatlon ln th* fatality rates Is due to
The convicted man is Edward F. My BenJ. B. Hampton, President, Broad- not had money enough to put it to dlfferent mlning methods and to differ-
.offense.was the writing of *ay Magazine. Inc." U8e. It was not the war department Iecces in the coal seams.
alone wh,ch urged congress to grant The agricultural department Is anx-
MUST TFLI RRAFT QTHRY ™0ney for flyinS Purposes, for peti- ious because a mongoose is now known
MUbl IbLL bRAFT STORY tions came from all over the United to Present in the United States.
n-nvin. I.,Hi,. n A D states from persons who are interest- If the,fe is only one mongoose the dan-
,0 - oth.r per- will not be gra.t, b«t the (ear I,
by sons who thought (hat if Great Brit- 'that another may come in or that the
ain, Germany, France and some of the I one at Present here may find a mate
other nations were making arrange- I whose presence In the country is
story, often told verbally in Eng-
land, that the king put aside a mor-
ganatic wife to marry the present
queen. He was found guilty and sen-
tenced to a year in prison.
The open charge was made at
Pekin. China, that the Japanese are
spreading the bubonic plague in Man-
churia and northern China.
Answer All Questions Put
Jury in Bribe Quiz.
"ersonai.
men.s to fly and to drop dynamite
bombs into the enemy's camp, the
United States ought to be prepared in
Mr. and Mrs. George Jay Gould, be-
came the wife of Lord Decies, a mid-
j die-aged English nobleman in New
SS£ Mr" - * *• I'
Danville, 111.—Judge Kimbrough in
the circuit court harfded down a de-
cision ln the case of City Attorney „ Ul IO
England s nobility was enriched by Jonef; who dec,1"ed to « wer certain some~wayTo check the game orovid
the addition of several more millions ^^tions regarding vo-e 6ellinK and ed It should come when Lme forei^"
of American dollars w hen Miss Vivien bUylDg *b,ch the grand jury put 10 nati°n intended to try to play i?-Mn
Gould, aged 18, second daughter of h,m' our back yard." 7 * °
**- —* " The court Instructed Jones to an-
swer all questions. The opinion stated
that, according to a decision of the
Supreme court of the United States.
a witness before the grand jury 1b
immune from Indictment. The court
To Probe Ncvy Disasters.
Accidents have been of such fre-
quent occurrences on the United
States men of war recently that It is
probable the navy department will or-
An explosion or dynamite at the Topeka "at^rt^CaDne? mihlfaW ®!eo held that ,he c,ty Action law is J" a comprehensive investigation to
ills of the Piute Powder company, of0^ Top^CamutTrobabfv'wni "ncons,ltutlonaI' wh,ch means that ** 1°.' ®omethln5 back
ra f f vl rt.o mi!/io oaii4 V. 1.. 1. .—. . P p flDlJ Will Tnnno nonnftt V> .1 V tb© dli^iters whlrh Pin K r%
mills
located three miles south of Ishpem-
Jng, Mich., killed ten men and serious-
ly injured another.
An explosion of 25 tons of dyna-
mite that was being loaded at the
pier in New York harbor destroyed
two lighters two freight cars, killed
at least 24 men on the spot and rock-
. probably
become a candidate for governor of
Kansas at the next election on the
Republican ticket.
The Missouri state capitol building
at Jefferson City, has burned. It waa
struck by lightning and the entire
building was destroyed witii many
*.-* uicu vu iuo BJ/UI ami rvHJK- i .v. „ , . ,
ed the entire city. It caused a panic I ?n valuable records including the
ln the business section where build- ,°USe °f rePresentative Journals or
Ings were damaged and hundreds ot | -Se"lon„^ Tbe senat« rec-
x>ersons injured.
Jones cannot be questioned about hap-
penings more than eighteen months
ago
This means that the investigation
will continue until all the witnesses
now summoned are examined It is
Bald that many indictments have been
voted, but whether they are for vote
selling is not known
At a celebration of the National if," ° °/ th® d°me and 8P'«ld
Press club it was brought out that I w bad made Buch fteaJw*y
the total daily circulation of newspa- .u™ T® local flre department got o
pers In the United States ia now 22,- . 5. was unabIe to tb™"1*' water
000,000 a day—one tor every rour per- I 1 hei^ht to 8t°P the fire which
ords were saved. The flre started in VOLCANO'S TOLL IS 700
tons in population.
The Kansas senate has passed the
bill making a burglary with explo-
sives subject to a sentence in the pen-
itentiary of not less than ten and not
more than 30 years.
Four troops of cavalry from the
Presidio, Cal., and six troope from Ft
Meade. South
soon spread to the hall of the house
of representatives and later to the
senate chamber and falling inflamma-
ble material soon caused the entire
building to be in ruins.
}i0/j
to the
It cost George P McLean, senator-
elect from Connecticut $14,541.51 to
be elected to the senate by the gen-
•akota, were ordered era' assembly January 18, according
Mexican frontier to to a statement filed with the secre-
tary of state as required by the elec-
tion laws.
preserve the neutrality.
Th > proposed charter of the city of
St Louis was defeated at a special
•lection by a majority of 40.15". The
total vo«e was &9.D37 About half of
the total registered vote in the city
was polled.
Gov. Stubbc is going to bare an ln-
Teetigation ot his own on the busl-
ne** management of the state officers
and '.heir contingent funds He ba#
appointed Judge J. C Rupert ha! of
Russell. George W. Marble ct Fbrt
Soott and William MacFerran of To-
peka to make the inreerieaUoa.
One hundred signal men from Fort
[ Omaha. Neb., together with ali signal
apparatus including one of the war
balloons kept at the post, hate been
ordered to the Mexican border.
A St. Ixwis ft Southwestern passen-
ger train ran into a herd of wild
deer ten miles from Brlnkley. Ark., at
2 o clock in tbe morning, killing five
of them
Five Thousand Families In Philippines
Have Been Wholly Ruined
By Disaster.
Washington.—The eruption of Taal
volcano and the accompanying dis-
turbances ln the Philippines killed
700 people In tho town of Talisav. ac-
cording to the report of tbe governor
of BatangaB province, which w as ca-
bled to the war department by Gov-
ernor General Forbes of the Philippine
Islands.
The earthquake shocks continue, the
governor general added Five thousand
families have been ruined by the dis-
aster.
The Philippine authorities are face
house of representatives whose hands
to face with the absolute necessity of ^ °D ^
adopting relief measure. !„ order to ir!,nJ 5 I? ,D °rd*r th,t ,he
avoid suffering, a, the falling Ld lTr °r !!, V*™"
and lava destroyed the crops within a rannnn ^ Speaker
considerable radius of the volcano q.. , *k . *r' 5*" not trust to
clock to let him know when a rep-
DECIES HONEYMOON IN EGYPT STCm?.
to speak to a measure under the flre
the disasters which can be cor-
rected.
The recent peculiar explosion cn
the battk hip Delaware, resulting in
the killing of nine men, is now being
made the subject of inquiry by a
board consisting of eight naval offi-
cers of high rank and standing. This
particular accident Is the first of the
kind which has occurred in the navy.
and machinery experts and engineer-
ing officers are puzzled as to its
cause. It will be remembered that
recently there has been an overhaul-
ing of tbe different bureaus ln the
navy department and that changes
have been made. The thought Is that
It Is possible the shirts ln the super-
vising bureaus may have been detri-
mental to the proper inspection ot
original construction work. The whole
matter is to be gone into thoroughly
and it may be that some or the
changes which were made arter in-
finite pains and study or the navy .
bureau management must ot necessity | !:0arcb health. The Rhode Islander
ba "made back again." I wore blmseir out pretty thoroughly
Cannon Uses an Hour Glass. I d-Ur,Dg ,b<? h°5 WPa,h*r tariff debate
There is a fine old clock in the
yet unknown. There has been a ten-
dency to poke fun at the anxiety of
the agricultural department people
lest a mongoose or several of them,
(nobody knows what the plural of
mongoose is) should get a foothold In
the United States, here multiply and
begin to devastate the earth. The
danger a real one. nevertheless, for
th mongoose is a menace to agricul-
tural life. It preys first on rodents
and snakes whose loss can well be
sustained, but as soon as the supply
of this food ends it begins killing
ground nesting song birds and game
birds eating their eggs.
Mongoose a Great Peril.
Poultry yards are not safe, and as
the destroying animal multiplies in-
credibly, it is said that whole sections
of the country can be laid waste by
it in a comparatively short time, tor
with the disappearance or the bird lire
the insects would increase by the bil-
lions and devour the green thingB of
earth. Some years ago a pair of mon-
geese or mongooses, or whatever plu-
ral you choose, were Imported into
a West Indian island. In a short
time some hundred of square miles of
the island became uninhabitable be
cause of the increase or Insect life,
due to the killing off of the birds
which had lived on the pests. The
mongoose was responsible for the dis-
appearance of the bird lire.
Senator Nelson W. Aldrlch of Rhode
Island has said rarewell to the United
States senate. He has gone south In
Puggles—May I offer you my hand
and fortune?
Jessie—No, thanks, dear boy. Your
fortune s too small and your hand's
too large.
Very Tortuous Indeed.
The late Hugh J. Grant of Nev
York once talked at a political ban
quet, about a noted corporation law-
yer.
"Oh, yes, he's a grand mind," he
said. "A grand legal mind. He's got
the most tortuous mind in America."
Mr. Grant shook his head
"A tortuous mind indeed." he re-
peated. "Why, ir he swallowed a
nail, he'd bring up a screw."
A "Friendly Match."
I speak ot a 'Triendly match," not
at all forgetting that dictum or the
Scot to whom his opponent, breaking
some trivial rule, said: "I suppose you
won't claim that in a friendly match?"
"Friendly match!" was the reply.
"There's no such thing at golf!"
London Telegraph.
Afraid of Disfigurement.
She—Aren't you going to ask papa
tonight. George?
He—No, dear I think I'd better
not. I want to have my picture taken
tomorrow.—Yonkers Statesman.
Rear
Admiral
I'nit^d s
Charles Millman
lair* saw. red
fcou of ti
few..: a re
oapiial fron
Tbe most
p axu- ia ri
•t vblrk pi
(kccubMOI
wer
' -Nevada legislature de
oiutioa to remove the
Carson to UicMnscca
alarming pbaaes or tbe
na it present la the rate
lrfans and curse* are
> the disease
world
D the
who commanded the Uhr
the last log of Its rxrin
cruise, is dead of pneunvc
Naval Medical School heap
A bill preet-nted In tbe Missouri leg
ishuure to permit tones to become
member* ot school hoards a as klllef
I la committee.
Vivien Gould, After Wedding to Eng-
lish Lord. Will Tske Trip
to Africa.
New Tork. — It la announced that
Lord and Lady Decies. the latter
now Miss Vivien Gould, who are to te
married Februsry 7. will spend their
hon«ymoon In Egypt. They will leave
America February II by tha Canard
liner Carmanla la Egypt tbay win
aper.d a few days la Cairo and tteo
visit notable points la upper Egypt
minute rule On a desk In front of
Mr. Cannon stands an old fashioned
hour glass, but one from which neariy
all the "sands of time" have been re-
moved so that which Is left takes five
minutes to the second to run through.
When a member arises to talk the
speaker turns the glass and starts the
aanda to moving. He keeps one eye
on the glass and one eye on the
house When tho last grain has run
through the tiny ape rat ore down
of a year and a half ago. and then
he was hurt In an accident In New
York city, an accident which apparent-
ly was not serious, but which haa
I brought disagreeable results ln ltr
| train.
The senate has passed a bill appro
r riatlng $135,000 to construct a crypt
to contain the remaiaa of Admiral
John Paul Jones. The story of the
[ negiect with which the remains of the
sailor have been treated have been
1 told time and again In the public
presa Ever since the body was brought
from France It has remained In Its
coffin behind a stairway In the dorml-
, 'nry of the Naval academy at Annapo-
lis Unquestionably the house will
1 pass the senate bill and the remains
; if tbe man who won the famous revo-
lutionary battle In European waters
*111 rest ln a fitting crypt In the beau
tlful new cad't chapel at tho govera
j ment ses schom.
If You Knew
How Good
are the sweet, crisp bits of
Post
Toasties
jou would, at least, try 'em.
Tbe food is made of per-
fectly ripe white corn, cooked,
sweetened, rolled and toasted.
It is served direct from
the package with cream or
milk, and sugar if desired—
A breakfast favorite I
-The Memory Lingers"
POSTt'M (
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Hiebert, A. L. Hooker Advance (Hooker, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, February 17, 1911, newspaper, February 17, 1911; Hooker, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc272275/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.