Taloga Times-Advocate (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1922 Page: 6 of 8
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TALOOA
TIMES
ADVOCATE
STATE IMPROVEMENTS BIQ
EltlffS Of STATE
' HE INTEREST
Public Utilities. Railroads, Highwsya
Oil u4 Min«* Make Up Total.
Oklahoma Cltjr. Okta Morr than
fl00,i>0,000 la Involved in Oklahoma*
present building program. Including
ron*i run inn completed during tin
>ear and construction now under way
«r In immediate prospect. If any con
FINE SHORTHORNS AT FAIR , "W.Tabl.* proportion or proponed pro
I Jr<-ts become reality, according to es
BPNdtn and Farmers Frem All Ovar 1 « ihered from many sources.
The program Include* municipal lm-
NIWI ITtMS GATHERED FROM
ALL PARTS Of OKLAHOMA
Southwest Attracted.
Thia Vaar.
Oklahoma CHy. Okla. - Shorthorn
day at the state fair aaw the moat not-
able showing of shorthorns from three
states, In the hlatory ol the fair. Judge
\V. A. Kora.vih declared the range the
beat he h; d aeen, and attracted breed-
er* and farmera Irom all over the weat
arid southwest.
There was no crltlclam of the plac-
ing* made by Judge Foray th. although
In the younger classes too many III
filled animal* showed up I he work of
judging somewhat. Good apecimenla
were by far In the lead, however.
Frank R. MelN-armond and H. C.
!x>okabaugh had a battle royal in the
bull classes, and shared senior and
junior honois respectively, with Mc-
Ivarmond taking the grand champion
ship. Preston notes, for the Garfield
County Shorthorn Breeders' club, made
larger breeders take notice in junior
calves, with his Sultan of Gold, a roan
of exceptional qualily, and the out-
standing bull calf of the entire west-
ern fair circuit this season, according
to Judge Forsyth.
provementa both public and private
permanent highway*, railroads, public
utilities and oil and mining construc-
tion.
Report* from fifty-eight Oklahoma
cities, reveal a construction program
In those cities alone of $91,871,181. Of
thai huge aum. llt.101.9Ro i* being In-
ve*ted In new home* t30.lK7.001 In
business and Industrial plants and 145.
5112.100 In public Improvement*.
WOKONEWSFOR
THE PAST WEEK
Events of Gmrallnterest from
All Sections Put Into Short
Concise Paragraphs.
HEWS FROM VARIOUS CAPITALS
Eighty *lt bualneaa men of Herrln,
Johnson City and Marlon appeared bo-
fore Circuit Judge D. T. Hartwell the
other day, gave their namea to th*
clerk and furnlahed bonds for 1410,000
upon which the men Indicted for mur-
der In connection with the Herrln
mine killing's ware releaaed.
♦ ♦ ♦
The fight for compensation for the
men and women who aerved In the
World War has juat started. Col. Han-
ford MacNIder. national commander
of the American Legion, declared In
a statement upon his arrival In Chi*
cago from Terre Haute.
♦ ♦ ♦
In the most Important decision ever
handed down to organized labor In
federal court. United States Judge
Jarne* H. Wllkerson at Chicago sus-
tained the temporary writ of Injunc-
tion obtained by the government
againat the striking railway workers.
+ ♦ +
In the Fast Liberty dlatrlct of Pitta-
SEN. THOMAS E.
U
SON IS DEAD
[Rheumatism and
Dyspepsia Are
Soon Ended .1
one no
aaaiii
ANTHRAX IS CONTROLLED
Quarantine is Established; 3,500 Cattle
Were Vaccinated.
McAlester, Okla.—After three weeks'
combat with the dreaded anthrax
among livestock of northern Pittsburg
county, W. F. Hall of Holdenville, dep-
uty state veterinarian, announces that
the disease is under control and a
rigid quarantine established.
Nearly 3,500 cattle have been vaccl- j
nated without charge under direction J
of the agricultural department of the |
stale, aided by Pittsburg county com- i
missioners. The infected section ex- ,
tends along the Fort Smith & West- i
ern railway from Cains creek to '
Featherston including about five miles
on each side of the road and taking j
in about eight sections in Latimer
county, according to Hall.
There have been no new outbreaks
of the disease and few deaths among
the animals, Hall said. Cool weather
has a tendency to retard the infection.
Not more than 150 cattle, horses and
mules have been lost by the disease
in the section infected this season
Hall estimated.
Much Road Improvement*.
During the last twelve months, ac
cording to record* In the ofTice of the
sfate highway department. thirty-
four large bridges have either been
completed or placed under construc-
tion, atan aggregate cos* of $1,455.
509. Several of these bridges span
I such streams as the South Canadian
| river, th.- most expensive of the lot
j being, the Newcastle bridge now being
erected over that stream between Mc-
' Clain and Cleveland counties, south-
j west of Oklahoma City. The contract
price of the Newcastle bridge is
*276.009.46.
J During that same period, contracts
| have been let for the construction of
355.3 miles of paved road at a total
I cost of J5.23S.100.58. The coat Includes
| drainage, grading and surfacing,
j From the best information obtain-
| able from the various counties it ap-
j pears that approximately 1,400 miles
j of hard surfaced road either has been
i completed or is now und'er construc-
j tion in the state at this time with a
j cost of approximately $90,000,000.
j Muskogee county possibly leads the
state in miles of construction of
graveled road, while Tulsa county un-
questionably takes first place in the
number of miles of high type pave- !
ment.
Tulsa county already has completed
91.6 miles of high class paving outside
the limits of incorporated towns and
cities and by the middle of November
will have completed a total of 110
miles.
■He# Mention ef What •• Transpiring
ta This end Other Countrlee
• the Qiebe.
Peace Notea.
Great llrltaln la willing to admit . . u
soviet Russia to the forthcoming Near bur*h the concrete lobby of a motion
Ka*t peace conference at Venice, pro- plc,ure theatre collapaed. dropping
vided France concur*. This decision titty faltering. excited achool chll-
was reached by the cabinet after hear- ,lren' who 1,*d been Invited to attend
Ing a full report on the recent Pari* ! ,h' frcp 8how'nS. Into the basement,
negotiation* from Lord fur*on, for- k,ll,n* one and Injuring thlrtynlne
eign minister 1 others. Including the theatre proprle
* + + - ,,or
In a telegram to Paris from Dean- „ + * *
vllle. ex Premier Venlxelos of Greece " A M'""- noted naturalist. Is
flatly denied report* from Athens that <lead Rt h,s home- Lon* lack's Inn
he had sent recommendations to the near E,'te, rark' 0o1- I)eath was un
Greek government regarding the expected, although be never had fully
course it should pursue to save East- recovered fro"> Injuries received In a
ern Thrace from the Turks. subway accident in New York last
+ + + J January. He was 52 years old.
Bucharest —The Russian soviet has ' * + +
UNITED STATES SENATOR OF
GEORGIA VICTIM OF
ASTHMA
POWERFUL FIGURE FOR YEARS
Congressional Party Accompanies
mainns to Thompaon, Georgia,
where a Very Simple Funeral
waa Held at Hla Home.
seized upon the arrest of two Russian
aviators who crashed to earth at Bes-1
F. L.
Southwest
DIJley, president
of" the
sarabla four months ago as a pretext Standard Brake Shoe and Foundry
to precipitate war with Rumania, gov- Company, an electrical steel industry,
ernment officials at the Rumanian has bought from the United States
Washington. D. C.—Another power-
ful and picturesque figure passed from
public life In the death of Seuator
Thomaa E. Watson of Georgia. Hla
death, waa sudden and unexpected, ac-
cording to physicians, resulting from
an attack of asthma.
The senator had been a sufferer for
several weeks from the disease and
only recently experienced an acute at-
tack. Two physicians and a nurse
were at the bedside when the end
came, but the widow, who Is In Ill-
health, and other relatives were at
the home In Thompson, Ga., for which
Mr. Watson had planned to depart
for his congressional reces*.
Once Presidential Candidate.
For forty years Senator Watson had
been active In politics, a national as
well as a state figure. He was nomi-
nated by the populist party for presi-
dent In 1904 after receiving Its vice-
capital believe
+ + +
The return of Turkey to Europe was
assured when Great Britain, France
and Italy, at the final session of the
allied conference in Paris unanimous-
ly agreed to concede to all the nation-
alist peace terms.
+ + +
government five carloads of airplane
parts for scrap, paying $3,000. The
original cost of these parts was >4
million dollars.
+ + +
Joseph Rogers. 49, a prominent bro-
ker in the oil business, died in his
apartment In a hotel at Tulsa. Ok.,
j the other afternoon following an at-
The question of peace or war in the tack of acute indigestion. Burke was
Near East seems to turn upon wheth- a widower.
er the question of the future states of I + + +
Thrace can be kept separate, and sec- The sawmill and power house of
ond, whether the guns begin to speak the Peavy-Moore Lumber Company In
before the negotiations between the Deweyville, twenty miles northeast of
allied representatives in Paris have Beaumont, Tex., were destroyed b?
The loss is es-
fire the other night
tlmated at $200,000.
+ + +
A fight to make Kansas City the
national heaquarters of the American
Legion will be waged by delegates to
the national convention of the organ-
iS. in New
Opening of Deer Season Announced.
Open season for deer will begin No-
vember 15 and end December 15, ac-
cording to Ben Watt, warden. The
! open season will not apply in Coman-
Bridge Beam Slip Kills Man. ; che c addo Major and B]aine countjc8
Norman, Okla —Joe Martin of Moore, ' Watt said as the
was killed instantly when an iron
bridge beam struck him on Hie head
ended.
+ + +
Limited assutances involving the
return of Constantinople, Eastern
Thrace, and Adrianople to- Turkey.
were tentatively agreed upon at a
meeting of the conference of allied
representatives and will be consider- Nation, October 16, 1
ed formally by the French and British l Orleans.
cabinets. I + + + r
+ + ■¥ I Found guilty of misappropriation of
Washington j cI">rcl> funds, the Rev. G. L. Granger
Alleged shocking conditions at the Ian,'! Rev 'f' A Crow were ex
Irene Byron hospital near Ft Wayne i peIIed from the Methodist ministry by
Ind.. where thirty-three veterans are ithe conference Mr. Granger was pas
alleged to have been "farhied out" by ! tor 0f ,he First Metl odlst at Spring
while unloading material at the New
Newcastle bridge on Canadian river a
few miles west of Moore. A chain
which was being used to hoist the iron
from Martin's truck broke and the
massive bridge structure hit him be-
fore he could get out from under it.
Martin had the contract for hauling
supplies and materials for the bridge
that is now under construction.
Gets Life Sentence.
Ardmore, Okla.—Oscar Van Noj,
charged with having driven a speeding
car into a party of four persons and
mortally injuring two on the night of
October 14. 1921, was found guilty by
a jury in district court and sentenced
to life improisonment. Attorneys for
the defense announced they would a>
peal the case.
government owns
game on reservations in those counties
and is anxious to protect it from ex-
| termination. According to Watt, gov-
ernment deer on reservations often
leave the reservations and if hoT pro-
tected by the state are apt to be killed
by hunters.
According to Watt, quail are plenti-
ful on the state game preserve in Mc-
Curtain county. Watt returned to Ok-
lahoma City from a visit to the pre-
serve. Hunting is not permitted on
the game preserve. The quail season
begins on the first of December and
ends December 31.
New Engineer or State Work.
Max L. Cunningham, former state
highway engineers under Governor
Robert Williams, and who served for
the first part of Governor Robertson's
administration, was appointed to that
position by the governor.
He succeeds E. S. Alderman, who
resigned under pressure from Robert-
son, after friction with him and B. E.
Longest String of Casing.
Ardmore, Okla.—The longest string
Cf 1Wnch' 4° I ound. DBX 8-thread cas j ClarkTsUte 'highway' commi's^lone".
ing ever run in a well in the mid-con- fpderal road work Choctaw ^
tinent field has been set in the West ! Alderman was dismissed when he ob-
LecMnn'^> 9 ulf" ■ ^cted to proposed changes in the fed-
^ d,n/h fW9 w , ? district, j eral project, declaring he would not
at a depth of 2,287 feet, according to j ^ responsible for change which he
the government for treatment, were
denounced by the American Legion at
Washington.
+ + +
President Harding and his cabinet
will consider the tangled question of
international rum running, which
threatens to become an Issue between
the United States and Great Britain.
+ + +
Secretary Hughes has
| field. Mr. Crow's pastorate was
j Siloam Springs. Ark.
+ + +
John C. Chaney, American oil man,
is being held captiVe by Mexican
bandits, who are demanding $1,000 for
his release, according to a dispatch
from Tampico, Mexico, received at
Oklahoma City recently.
,
Galveston was selected as the 1923
returned meeting place of the Texas Pharma
aboard the battleship Maryland from ceutical Association and the conven-
Rio de Janeiro, where he attended the tion dates as May 13-15. The choice
opening of the Brazilian centennial ex- was made by the executive committee
position, and a few hours after dis- at a special meeting in Galveston
embarking boarded a train for Wash-1 + + +
ington. Foreign.
Pro m j!1, t The Brltish foreign office is fearful
1 m "ar,d,n* has i8sued a the massacres may break out in Smyr
proclamation designating Monday, Oc- na after September 30 Dispatches
rto ™aS ,^atlODal Fire Prevention from Athens said the Kemallsts have
stJL. T, r. Wa8tC *he Uaited l«"ed an order waraing all Greeks
States; year after year, the President and Armenians, except those of mill
Thomas E. Watson
Victims of stomach trouble and
rhciimatlxni often find that when their
stomach la set In order, the rheums-
Ham disappears. Thousands of people
everywhere have testified that Tanlac
has freed them of both troubles Simul-
taneously. Mr. Robert Trotter. US
State 81., Ht. Paul. Minn., saya;
About a year ago I began to gn
down hill. Hour stomach nnd rheuma-
tism In my arms and shoulders kept
me In misery all the time, since tak-
ing Tanlac all my aches nnd palna
have gone, and my stomach la In fine
shape. Pm glad to endorse such a fine
medicine."
Badly digested food fills the whole
aystem with poisons. Rhenmatlsm
and many other complaints not gen-
erally recognized as having their ort>
gin In the stomach quickly respond Ia
the right treatment. Get a bottle to-
day at any good druggist.—Advertise-
ment
Height of Meteors.
During the display of the perseld
meteors one August In France slmul-*
taneouN observations were made In
that country from points about six
miles npnrt. Fb iii the parallaxes thus
ibtiilned the elevation of several con-
splcuous meteors above the earth wae
calculated. The height at the begin-
ikkig of the night varied from iMI to
175 miles, nnd nt the end from 22 to
41 miles. The longest distance tra-
versed In he atmosphere was about
152 miles, and the shortest 35 miles.
presidential nomination in 1896. He
was a populist member of the bouse
of representatives 1891-1893. In 1920,
he was elected senator, as he said, on
an^anti-WHson, anti-league (of na-
tions) and anti-war measures," plat-
form defeating fomer Senator Hoke
Smith and former Governor Dorsey.
He was 66 years of age, September 5,
last and his senatorial term would
have expired March 3, 1927.
The funeral was held at Thomson,
Ga. A simple funeral service In ob-
servance of the wishes of the dead
Georgian was held over the body of
e late United States Senator Thomas
E. Watson, before It was consigned to
its last resting place in Thompson cem-
etery beside other members of the
Watson family.
When the funeral party arrived from
FREEDOM FROM
WXATIVES
Discovery by Scientists Has Replaced
Them.
Pills and salts give temporary re-
lief from constipation only at the ex-
pense of permanent Injury, says an
eminent medical authority.
Science has found a newer, better
way—u means as simple as Natura
Itself.
In perfect health a natural lubricant
kee|>s the food waste soft and moving.
But when constipation exists this nat-
ural lubricant is not diffident. Medi-
cal authorities have found that tho
gentle lubricating action of Nnjol most
closely resembles that of Nature's own
lubricant. As Nujol is nut a laxative
It cannot gripe. It is In no sense a'
medicine. And like pure water it I*
harmless and pleasant.
Nujol is prescribed by physicians;
used In leading hospitals. (Jet a bottle
from your druggist today.—Advertise-
ment.
Fight Over Latin and Greek.
A bitter war Is Itelng waged In the
French parliament over the retention
of I^itln and (Jreek ns compulsory
studies in French colleges. Socialists
nnd others with modern Ideas wnnt to
abolish them and give more attention
to mnnunl training and Industrial sub-
jects. Cnthollcs nnd conservatives In
general see great dangpr to the state
In abandoning the study of the lan-
guages from which French was de-
rived. America was cited as having
brought studies up to date, but the
reply was made that even In America
a certificate ns expert wood chopper
weuld not help In matriculation.
declared, reaches appalling flares J.™ 7T"'' °f , 1 Washington the body was taken to the
*%ich are not approached I n anv ^ n^t" , "7 "**1? w. P T Watson home on "Hickory Hill 'w-nere
other country. PI,roacDe<J ln "T , ers of war, to leave Asia Minor by the casket remains!
i that time.
H. P. Quinn, of Pittsburg, Pa., field
representative of the company which
manufactured tbe pipe.
Oil Man Held for Ransom.
Tampico, Mex. — John C Chaney,
general field superintendent of the In-
ternational Petroleum company (Mex-
ican Seaboard) is being h'ld captive
by bandits who ere demanding $5,000
before his release Chaney was cap
tured at Agua Naclda, September 10.
•while on a trip of inspection covering
way department to decide
+ + + j + + +
Operation or the Mississippi River' Turkish cavalry, armed with ma
government owned barge line ln_the chine guns, have returned within the"
last year showed net profit of more neutral zone at Chanak, General Har
than 7 per cent and. in tbe opinion of rington. tbe British high commission
war department officials, demonstra- er. instructed the nationalist repre
ted freight can be hauled at 80 per sensative at Constantinople to re
cent of the rail rates and a profit quest of Mustapha Kemal Pasha to
made in doing it." ; order their withdrawal.
+ + + 4 + +
t'onrad E. Spens. vice-president of 7116 British torpedo boat Speedy
the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Banlt recently in the sea of Marmora
The governor said j Railroad Company, has been appoint- as the re8Ult of a collision with a
for the state high j ed federal fuel distributor under the ^tch trawler, says a Renter's dis
did not think the federal department
would approve.
that was a matter
Rainbow Order Formed at Durafit.
Durant, Okla.—Forty Durant girls
Joined the Order of Rainbow at its in-
Bertha Sawyer and I>r W. M Cleve-
land addressed the girls.
Union Station Ordered.
Plans for building a union station In
Oklahoma City must be in the hands
of the corporation commission within
j sixty days, according to an order is-
sued by the commission. AH railroads
Into the city, tfie Rock Island. Santa
j Fe, Frisco, and Katy are ordered to
| confer and agree on a site for the sta
j tion within that length of time, ac-
! cording to the commission's order
j Grade crossings are ordered elimina'
board.
♦ + +
Oomestic
a public highway, but the commission
reserves right to amend that ord* r In
apedal cases.
Kenton Apple Picking t Begin Soon.
Kenton, Okla.—App'e picking in
northwestern t' mmairun raiatv will I
Warrant Out for Teacher.
Warrant for the arrest of John
berin about October 15, according to { BIack- *r - teacher at Noble, near Pur-
preseitt indications. Tlie crop is the Jce"' ecru"H) bf Miss Maude North
heaviest in five years, orchard owners cult 8Cf>00, wp rintendent of Cleve
sty land county, of having sold state ex-
- "* . —— j a mination questions, was ies-jed by E.
Sh;wr.-e Man Wins Fair Pri«. | „ Holland, county attorney of Cleve-
nee. Okla. W. p. Rearls. p0t I | n<j county Thrt* of tbe thirty five
county farmer, received teachers of McClain and Cley land
i , .rr*'" *l tC falr b°"rd " 1 mantle* aatd to bave bought copies of
« ... fcr $3covering twenty-eight , the questions admitted to Miss North
pr. r- - be won at the Kansao fair j ertt they paid #50 each for them. It
oo Red Polled cattle j was said at tbe office of a H. Wilson.
tawatoru
from th-
at
under the
| new coal distribution and antl-profi- Patch from Constantinople. Ten ol
teeiTng act. the destroyer's crew were drowned
+ + + and eighty-seven saved.
moved in American shipping aJord *i?° Ce^/'T atv,Le'P
foreign TrJe'mZdl by 'fb Ti"'?"* the de,eSates that a^Jparaflon!
foreign trade made by the shipping which had proved successful £d been
| discovered ln a laboratory neal
, Cologne.
H nrv f. rA in . ' -An "narine traffic between Constan
, V. . "*w'P-r.er tmo.-le and Black Sea. Marmora and
™ TSS:
sarrsur- " '""'inr.srr* ,!o —
+ + + + + +
Bootleggers have killed 125 problbi-1 Tbe agreement of tb« allies on
tion enforcement agents since the war tbe political Hide of the Near Eastern
on ram-runners began. Prohibition problem leaves th general situation
Commissioner Haynes estimated the much clearer and transfers tbe Intw
other day Of this number, twenty- est to the Dardanelles, where latest
four federal agents and tbe remainder news provea the combustible nAtnre
atate. county and monlcipal. of the problem to be solved there
♦ + * ♦ ♦ ♦
Thousands of men have gone back : The Kemalint forces are rapidly In
to their work at the Highland Park, creasing on tbe Cbanak frontier, but
River Rouge and Dearborn plants of bove not committed any overt acts of
the Ford Motor Company in response hostility, says s Reuter dispatch from
to Edsel Fords notification from Ohio Constantinople
the casket remained open for a short
time to permit the family and close
friends a last look on the familiar fea-
tures of the "Sage of McDuffle" as he
Is known in his county. There was no
church services and no singing.
Floral tributes and telegrams of con-
dolence arrived at the Watson home
by the hundreds from all sections of
the country.
Thousands of visitors for the funeral
taxed the town of Thompson to Its
capacity. In addition to the congres-
sional party which accompanied the
body from Washington there was a
large delegation of slate officials from
Atlanta and other delegations from
nearly all the larger cities of the sfate.
Senate flags were placed at half-
mast for a period of thirty days out
of respect to the late r^nator. and
the senate will adlourn ouf of respect
when It reconvenes
TO SPEED UP PRODUCTION
Ford Hopes to Make 6.000 Carsa Day
Gyring Next Ygar.
New York. N Y — Henry Ford has
set a new production mark for his
Plants to aim at next year which will
put hundreds of thousands more care
on the market In 1923
Orders have been given to all gen-
eral foreman. It was announced, to
speed up production and Install addi-
tional machinery with a view to mak-
ing 6,000 cars a day.
Just say to your grocer Red Croae
Ball Blue when buying bluing. Yoo
will be more than repaid by the re-
sults. Once tried always used.—Ad-
vertisement.
Why the Umbrellas7
A rather nmuslng sight was that at
York bench one rnlny dny recently,
when a party of hnthers all ready fur
the morning dip came from their cot-
tagi's on their wny to the beach alf
carrying open umbrellas. Vn cat Ion 1st*
witnessing the procession of Imthera
approaching the water nil set for the
plunge wondered at the theory of car-
rying "bumbleshootx" to protect them-
selves from the niln when they would
shortly he drenched while tnklng their
morning bath.—New York Sun.
Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin.
On rising and retiring gently smenr
the face with Cuticura Ointment.
Wash off Ointment In five minutes
with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It
Is wonderful what Cuticura will do
for poor complexion®, dandruff. Itching
ond red rough hands.—Advertisement.
that tbe shutdown forced
shortage was at aa end
by
coal, that a still more serious concentre
I tion Is occur rang la Ismld.
Surgeon Gives Blood to Patient.
New York. N. Y.—Dr. Felix Scarda-
pane, Brooklyn surgeon, gave np a
quart of hie own blood to save tbe life
of a patient, it waa learned recently
Reliable reports say I In a hospital announcement that the
Sweot Young Gardener.
Numliensl among iny acquaintance*
is a very sweet young woman who, like
nmny other inuldens, during tills yenr
became obsessed with the desire to
have a little garden of her own, enil
being like most young women very
fond of pickles, she trlp|>ed gayly one
dny Into n store where tliey sold gar-
den and flower seeds nnd wanted to
know If they kept any pickle seed.
Secretary of Agriculture Wallace,
please take note.—Washington Star.
Melodious Irony.
'Why dlil the tears come Into yonr
eyes when "the band played "Hall, th*
Gang's All Here?"
"In view of the factional fights we've
h'cn having." replied Senator Sor-
-liom, "the tune sounded downright
Ironical.**
patient. Mrs Roae PaaqaerelU. woeM
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Taloga Times-Advocate (Taloga, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 12, 1922, newspaper, October 12, 1922; Taloga, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc280583/m1/6/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.