The Cushing Democrat (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 30, 1910 Page: 2 of 8
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CUSHING DEMOCRAT fllSMISSEI) '
s-r: ST BYXAMPBELl
THE* WATER'S Fl«
.Ml
fr
GUTHRIE APPEALS SUIT
*l««t H»l«« Tn*l *• •*
MM MM A*y V**t*«
To AfH*1 Wh*e*
ll •
MBM
Itrt
tenatead*
•h*wn** IS »lgt>t>
n«« »ndH(jf»u» and
TiaM «bo ktt* aeei
> ffiAtto flceat nwrtii
II M
of lit 0»«
ntloa tail
it to truly
for Oktokomi City's
,ltor cotton mill !<*•
rork *111 t»*m in a
is grading and •»«*•
On'brto. Obla.-That tb* <on4Uk»BS
ISApO**4 upon Oklahoma IB the OMb.
line •*"* **r* 'or lb* general Interest
of til tli* rltlitu of th* C#Ht4
and not (o subserve tbo individual or
private lB'*reets of any oo« or »or»
cittoens of Oklahoma or nay locality
thereof. was held here by Judge Kalpb
E. Campbell of tbo lolted »t*te* *»«"
cult court, and h* dismissed th* easn
fitod by Uutbri*. ttking temporary In-
junctions agalnat tb* removal of MM*
rtctrdt,
-Tb* United Stat** government In
tbta cas* may d*cld* to actjulesc* la
tb* r*moval of tb* capital ." said Judg*
Campbell "It to conceded tbat plala-
tiff bag no »mi«4 right In Ita remain-
ing gt Ciutbrl*,. therefor* to ao poa-
glbta theory In my Judgment on wbleb
thto caae can bo maintained It can-
not therefor* be aaid to be a ca»*
trltlng under the constitution. laws. or
... . . treat lea of the United State., and the
At a result of a apree on diluted jurtwjjclion Df thto court falto.
alcohol three Mexlcana are dead at entjre decltion maket atrong
Marietta. Two were men and one a ^ |tand uken by B. P. Burwell In hit
woman. A negro, who mat out with ( arg1jmenl tor Oklahoma City
them, to >1111 alive but to In a critical . . K„
condition.
The coalract
»ew minion d
been let and
few day* oa t
varlng
Gag*, a thriving town of Kllla coun-
ty. to aooti to bar* a wat*r ayate®
and aa electric light ayttem Twtl»i
car loada of pip* will be used la In
a tailing the water ayatem.
*<c®»rngt>c IW i
, SESSION! HAS
REACHED END
OtTTtNO mCM IWHOl* IkOUMi
Y#mir c
/IINMtftT
)N6RIII rAM C AO.
IN UM/Ai 0*0fH
Knld'a first laterurban railway, a
gbort Une from that city to North
Knld. a distance of four mil**. seems
to be an aaaured aucceaa. work having
be«n atarted on the conatruction.
GETS BIG APPROPRITATION
bills pull of oklahoma pro-
visions are passed.
Practically All Legislation Paaa*a—
Surface Lands Sal* Maa Pres»-
dtrit'a Support—Te Aid Okla-
homa Congraaamcn.
BIO •ATTtE OOES TO RENO
i N* Oppeaitton «" Rart *f 0avamer *f
Nevada
Reno. N*v.—With Reno daflalteiy
I fUeJ at the battle ground. with ^oal-
U*e aaturacce from tie gu**rnor taat
no attempt to Interference will bo
male t>y the eiate autboritlea. and
with preparation already under way
tor building the arena, the Jaffrt-;
I Johnson fight aeema certala of lul-
| Aliment July 4.
The teiection of a alte for ttaging
the big fight »u made Tuesday after-
noon. It l» a rock-strewn field In
The Oklahoma State Fair at Okla-
homa City thia year prorata to be the
bett In Ita hiatory according to plana
of the aaaoctotlon. There w'UI be rep-
reaentaUve exhibits from every county
in the atate.
Arden Carver, of Pryor Creek, met a
horrible death while cutting oata. The
team, hitched to the binder, became
frightened and ran, throwing Carver
In front of the machinery. He wai
dragged fifty yarda.
Waahlngton—The omnibua public
bulldluga appropriation bill patted
I Wedneaday 1a full of Oklahoma pro-1 ^."^uiTmlie and a half
I vtaiona and the aame may be aaid of j ^eart of the city, and to
the omnibua Indian bill by which It
of the n»n-w~» — _ . .
1SK)$. On one aide It la flanked
the aegregated coal and aaphalt; tracks of the Southern Pa
eific railway, and on the otter by
the Reno-S^arkt nterurban railway.
Contractor McLaughlin went over
the location Tuesday with Promoter
PRESIDENT IS PEEASEO
Pracfaaiiy All Matter* L*f»aiat'a«
Ha*e Re** S»»i*ed by Cn»e# Eaee-
M«»w« — Recatvea C*o»ra«o«a-
t «na Pr*»n C
Waahlngton. D C.—Tba alaty flr»«
eongreaa adjoureod at II • clock Sat-
arday nl«bt aad Preeld*at Taft baa
aigaed prartlcally all auittera ot to*
tolatloa that had b**a placed bofata
bim H* rec*lv»d coagrutulatloaa
from bia cabinet aad m*mb*ra of both
branch** of congreea upon tb* au«c*aa-
ful pttMi* of moat of bit pet m*aa-
urea.
The latt measure aigned waa a Join!
reeolutloa to autborta* the a«^r*tary
of war to loan tenta to the Appala-
chian eipoaitlon. to be held at Knot
ellJe. T*nn . in September, wblcb Mr.
Taft etpecta to attend.
Prealdent Taft arrived at the capltol
about 10 o'clock with varioua mem-
ber* of the cabinet. Tbey »eat to thf
president a room, where the chief ex-
ecutive stood by to act upon mora
important bllla coming to bim from
the two houaea.
The cloatng procedure waa of the
usual order. The gavel of the pretid-
ir.g officer* fell at approximately tha
agreed hour, and the flrat regular aea
elon of the ilxty-flrat congreaa waa
at an end.
By order of the city com mixtion
Tulsa to to have a aane Fourth of July.
The commission enacted an ordinance
prohibiting, under threat of arrest and
fine, the ahooting of firecracker* or
other explosives on the Fourth.
Fairfax, by an overwhelming major-
ity. voted bonds for water works and
aewerage. The next enterprising move
to to pave Main atreet. A telephone
franchiae waB also granted to R. E.
Sperry-
The Sapulpa Morning American has
been sold to a etock company. Senator
Clarence Davis will be editor of the
paper, succeeding James Dennis
Flynn. The company will be re-oran-
Ized and the capital stock incorpor-
ated.
in
tract In Choctaw and Chickasaw na
tiona. The bill, in Ita preaent form
doea not provide for the opening of
| thia land to aettlera. for the fight commit
that the aenate hat refuaed to paaa Kick to carry
upon auch legislation directly. That tee an pre[ared for the
the senatorial conacience would not fejSS-TT the arena.
object to voting for a conference re- ^ building about 300 feet square
port containing auch leglalatlon aeema «• -
certain. Senator Owen proposes to
tee that the provision goes in the bill.
So does Representative McGuire, whe
may also be a conferee on the bill.
The aale of the surface lands has
President Taft's support, and the good
b«lleve ta trusta"
-Me doeta'i Br*d to M*# owaa a
a jmm*r -raaort botat"
SKIN HUMOR 25 YEARS
-Cutkura did woad*ra for m* F*
twenty Bv* yeara I aufered agonp
from a t«rrlbl* bumor. completely cov-
erlng my bead, neck aad abouldera, ao
*ven to my wlf*. I becam* aa object
of dread At large *xp*na* 1 conault
*d tb* moat able doctor* far and aear.
Their treatment waa of no avail, nor
waa that of the Hoapltal. during
lis montbt' efforta I tuffered oo
and concluded there waa no b*lp for
me tbia tide of tb* grave Then I
beard of tome one who had been cured
by Cutlcura Remedlea and thought
that a trial could do no barm. In a
aurprialngly abort time I »aa com-
pletely cured 8. P Keyea. 147 Coa-
grett St., Boa ton, Maaa., Oct II. '09.
Fact Covered v*ith Plmpl**
•i congratulate Cutlcura upon my
. apeedy recovery from pimplea which
'speaker Cannon, in a atatement from «>v-red dTya
the rottrum ju^t ^before the loute ad^ Ointmentand , am perfect
journed. declared he had nothing to y ^ ^ tr)ed doctor, for WT.
apologize for as a member .f the / , monthg but got no result*. Wm.J
house or aa speaker and he Susquehanna Ave.. Phlla-
ed each member could aay the same S*j"W ^ ^ m9..
thing. '
The speaker paid moat attention to
the ataaduaenay^ ~ vlatoaa and the aame may be wid of j — ^ fle>rt of the cily. and U the nostrum juat before the house ad- Ointment and i«ao»e« or
f^rthe^Mbllng art to binding: It the omnibua Indian bill by which It \ ic r.Dg hWtory aa the «cen®Journed. declared he had nothing to »nd^my ace^c^e ^ iQctmn for
I. » contract between the United is hoped to bring about the aale of ( fne Han-Rooi content held Jul apo^x. for as a member .f the / , month, but got DO reaulta. Wm.J-
Statea and Oklahoma, and only the 43O.OOO acrea of rich agricultural land : 4 Qn one ^de It to flanked house or M ipeaker. and be prcsum-
1ft 11 Siiaauehanna Ave.. Phila-
United Statea can complain ahould 11. ik« u>rr*nt»d coal and asphalt
any of Its terms be violated
Judge Campbell doea not pass upon
the validity of the enabling act fixing
the state capital at Guthrie, and at
first glance it might appear that the
caae waa thrown out on a technicality
and that the question of enabling act
Btlll overshadowed the siuation. A
careful reading of hla opinion shows,
however, that he has absolutely taken
from Guthrie any apeclal or Individual
rlghta in the atate capital of Okla-
homa or any right to contect regard-
ing the aame. , . .
Guthrie, through Judge Burford, at
once served notice of appeal to the
He Gets "Commercial Extra."
"Don't you touch that sprig of cel-
ery!'' commanded Mrs. Heckpen.
• Why not?" asked Mr. Heckpeiv
"Ain't it good?"
"Good? Certainly it's good—it's tho
best there is. I'm keeping that for the
canary."
A UUUU1U§ awuw wvv .vv. —I
modeled along the identical lines of
the structure begun In San Francisco,
will be put up. It to boped to have
it completed by the first of the
month. No change wll be made in
th* original arrangement of seats.
Another selection made was train-
I IIU I >>»• v» —
the legislative work accomplished,
ferring only incidentally to the fight
which had been made on the rules of
the house. The reform of the rules,
be said, had resulted in little advan-
tage. The speaker declared that the
congress just ended had done more
and better work than any congress of
which he had been a member during Horrible Thought
his thirty-five years of service in the "But why do you think we are(la
house. After recounting the legislation Imminent danger o
enacted, the speaker said: land?"
"This work of legislation has gone "Ain t Alfred Au«"n ^agioa
on quietly, but effectively, while those as not to write a poem on the occasion
who view congress fr<»m a distance °* Roosevelt s vis ■
have been assuming that the house TAKE A poOT-BATH TO-NIGHT
was doing nothing but changing it" -
*
Rogers county is coming along fine-
ly with Ita farming. Reports to the
board of agriculture show that it last
year raised nearly a million bushels
of Kaffir corn. Everything except
cotton Increased, and hay, poultry, ani-
mals for slaughter and cow peas were
doubled.
On the theory that the federal cen-
sus will show Comanche county to
have a population exceeding 30,000
and the city of Lawton to contain
more than 8.000 people, four candi-
dates have filed notice with the county
election board of their candidacy for
the office of superior court judge to
be created there.
supreme court of the United^Statea , President Taff. support ana ! inTauamrs'for Jack Johnson. Tom
and the appeal was granted by Ju g i reason to believe that Senator Flanagan the champion s manager,
Campbell. What else th«' ^ j lette. also has changed front, and will ^ ^ looklng 0vet several sites, fin-
torneys may have in m ^ j ^^^rate wjth the Oklahoma con- settled upon a roadhouse three
gresssional delegation to secure lhis mile8 southwest of Reno, known a*
piece of much-needed legislation. ) nj^-g resort. According to Flana-
In the public buildings bill that was gan Jt is an exCellent place for a
passed delegation shared aa follows: trajning camp and affords all the
Representative McGuire: Enlarge- necessary facilities.
ment Guthrie federal building. $125,-, Jim Jeffries will be stationed at
000; new projects, Kingfisher $45,000,' Moana Springs, three m les south of
Blackwell $50 000. ! J -
Representative Morgan. oklah ^ ' bg deslred in connection | 0f the legislation and the care taken
City $130,000 for additional site and fighter's camp. Natural hot in Its consideration. Measured by
first class building material; El Reno, » water gprlngs an open air j that standard
building and Bite, $100,000. - ■, J -—
Repretentative Creager
fishing^ streams and lakes, are among
the inducements offered by this place.
Decision in Railway Cate.
Guthrie, Okla—The state supreme
court revised and remanded the case
of the Tulsa Street ^way company -"-^telTigen^ ^Tn'^elV le^isto
ing $130 uuu j The "high court E^lds that the county "of "^passage of
Senator Gore as a member of the : iould bank 0,11 and COD"
committee on public exempt it from the control of the state • judgment thiB ls the be8,
grounds co-operated with the del^ coloration commission, but sends the mu8tration of party legislation we
tion throughout and it was only cage back tQ the COrporation commis have faad }q many yearg and u fuHy
sion to i»rmit the btreet car companj justifies the necessity for party ac-
to make a showing that it was opernt- ^ jn & Rre&t legislative body.
ing a a loss
\ I
V
Rolling stock for the street railway
at Chickasha has arrived and has been
placed in the car barns on Nineteenth
street. Steel for six blocks has been
delayed and the managers announce
tbat the line will not be In openation
until July 15.
Irrigation appear* to be an unqual-
ified success in Harper county. Along
a ditch from Englewood, Kansas,
aouthwest through Harper, it is re-
ported to the board of agriculture that
the wheat is vastly more promising
than in dry sod fields adjoining. It is
estimated the yield will be fifty bush-
els per acre against twenty in near-
by fields.
a iu*j uo'1- •" —
tain. The Injunctions are atill pend-
ing in the state courts. Guthrie is
said to have another case preparing
by which it thinks it can get the fed-
eral courts to pass directly upon the
enabling act. Thto is doubted, as It is
not seen how any case could be framed
except It were originated by the
United State*.
It 1s said also that the department
of justice at Washington will be ap-
pealed to, and that Attorney General
Wlckersham has already been con-
sulted relative to requests that he in-
struct United States Attorney John
Embry of Guthrie to institute suit
against the State of Oklahoma in the
name of the United States.
It is regarded as more than poe-
aible that all opposition to the re-
moval of the capital to Oklahoma City
will now rapidly dissolve.
Order Forbids Wheat Deductions
Kansas City—An order issued by
Attorney General Major of Missouri
forbids the Kansas City Board of
; Trade to carry further the practice
! of deducting from each car of wheat
shipped into Kansas City 100 pounds
I for shrinkage. Notice was given that
prosecutions would begin immediately
unless the practice was stopped.
Twenty-five Injured in Wreck
Des Moines, la.—Twenty-five peo-
ple were injured, two perhaps fatal-
ly, in a passenger derailment and
rear-end collision on the Wabash near
Percy Friday night. The wreck was
caused by a waterspout which had
undermined the track. The engine and
three cars ran into the ditch, but
the rear car was left on the track.
| The passengers in the rear car had
I not had time to recover from their
fright when a fast freight struck it,
knocking it from the track.
was doing nothing but chang.ng its di-soivinK one or two Alien's Foot-
rules. The changes of rules have con- Tabs (Antiseptic tablets for,ih*
tributed to the pleasure and pertiup. undeVn^0'"Vemov? foot
the power Of some individuals la th* odors and freshen the feet. Allen a Foot-
house, but the current of legislation ^|tl^t*rnVnfiam'idVfeetWaSd "hot nerv-
itself has moved on as usual, with ousn<.Ss of the feet at night. Then for
little disturbance on account, of a few
new methods and with little advan-
tage therefrom.
"I do not think the work of a con-
gress should be measured by the vol-
ume of business, but by the character wjth everyone, but above
on and the care taken aU w(tb y0Urself. I mean, do not ba
Fl Reno won a „ , . ^ea?ured by disturbed because of your imperfec-
and cold water springs, an open air that standard, the sixty first congress Uon8 and alway8 ri8e bravely from a
navilion already provided, comforta- will take a high place in the record jalj—Francis de Sales.
$360,000 ! Pavilion -„artprR and nearby of legislation. There have been, how- i
s
stitutes. Samples of Allen s r0011
mailed FREE or our regular size sent by"
mall for 2Sc« Address Allen a Olmsted,
LeRoy, N. T.
building ana bub, 1 already provided, cuuiiui"»- r.m a
Representative Creager: »360'000 ' sleeping quarters and nearby of legislation. There have been, how
additional appr0pr,.t,0„ for ..dara, ^ ,ake.. are amon* over. = ,ha» *HK> U-
building at Muskogee; Tulsa, building
$135,000.
Representative Carter: Ardmore,
building and site, $150,000; McAles-
ter, building, $135,000.
Representative Ferris: Lawton,
building, $152,3000; Chickasha, build-
ing, $135,000.
Senator Gore as
ever,"more than 6,000 of the 27,000 A torn jacket is soon mended; but
bills considered and reported from hard words bruise the heart of a
committees, and about 300 public laws child —Longfellow.
enacted in this session, as against
400 public laws for the entire sixtieth
congress. I can commend the entire
membership of the house for indue-
Alice Wilson, an aunt of Senator
Robert L,. Owen, drew the first check
In the big Cherokee payment which
began at Tahlequah laat week. Five
thousand persona were here to draw
their money. Thto to the heavleat pay-
ment ever made there. Hundreda
Election Does Not Affect New Road
Lawton. Okla —Although before the
recent apeclal election it was declared
that unless the proposed railroad
amendment ahould carry, the Lawton
and Wichita Falto line of railway pro-
jected from Lawton to Devol, could
not be built, on the heela of the
amendment s defeat comes a revival
•f the propoaition. President Kemp
through his persistent fight that the
senate did not eause considerable re-
ductions in the omnibuB bill.
It was he who added McAlester,
Chickasha and Tulsa to the bill.
Senator Owen distinguished himself
by refusing to permit reduction of the
Muskogee appropriation of $360,000,
which seemed too big to most mem-
bers of the committee; also by amend-
ing the bill on the floor of the senate,
enabling Craig. Carter and Pittsb irg
counties and the city of Muskogee to
acquire title to federal jails in their
respective communities.
The omnibus Indian bill as passed
by the senate among other things re-
fers the Osage civilization claim
amountinf to $700,000 to court claims;
authorizes Dennison Coal Co., to sur-
render unprofitable coal leases In the
Choctaw and Chickasaw Nation; au-
thorizes the secretary of the interior
to pay taxea on landa of minor In-
diana in order to prevent tax sales;
to enable the Savannah Coal Company
at Savannah to enlarge Its coal lease
to 200 acrea and the allotment
Woman Aids in Jail Delivery
Hugo, Okla.—A sensational jail de-
livery is reported from Idabel. Ed
Horrace was serving a fine and sen-
tence in the McCurtain county jail
fnr bootleeKing. and Friday morning
his wife in company with another ^ngle appropriation bill that has not
woman, went to the jail to take Hor- »>een increased by a non-partisan vote
tion in a great legislative body.
The speaker then detailed other leg-
islation which had been enacted.
"The appropriations," he said,
"have been large, but not nearly as
large as demanded by the people who
were agitating over the development
of the various departments of the
government. There has not been
race his breakfast. While the jailer
was unlocking the door. Mrs. Horrace
and the other woman caught the jail-
er from behind and held him until
Horrace made good his escape.
in the house over the report of the
committee.
Work on Big Packing Plant Begins.
Oklahoma City
coming of C. D.
manager for the Schwarzchild & Sulz
berger company, and C. F. Welhener
who haa arrived to take charge as
local manager, real work on Oklahoma
Clty'a second big packing plant in un-
der way. Over one m llion brick are
,se on the ground, 200 men are employed
of on the conat ruction of the office build-
—^ L 1*11.
Fail to Reach Agreement
Kansas City.—President Thomas L.
Lewis, of the United Mine Workers of
i,. America, and James Elliott, of Mus-
okla—With the ko«ee- okla • rePre8enl,n* the South*
western Coal Operators' association,
Skip worth, traffic conference Saturday
BEAUTY!
The Discriminating:
Woman Demands
FRECKELEATF.R on her
toilet table. It ls a fac®
cream so exquisite, so
effective that it has be-
come a necessity. It 1»
beauty for your asVing.
Two sizes—60c and 25c.
All Dealers
Baker-Wheeler Mfg. Co., Dallas, Tex.
PREVENTION ^
better than cure. Tutt's Pills If tmken In tlM
not only cure, but will prevent
SICK HEADACHE,
biliousness, constipation and kindred dljesses.
Tuft's Pills
Oklahoma Directory
and VELIE VEHICLES
Ask yonr dealer, or
perators' association. JOHN DEERE PLOW CO., OUihomCitt
adjourned their conference Saturday j —
night without having reached an agree-
ment upon which the miners would re-
turn to work.
acrea.
ment ever mad. there. Hundred. „ th. propo„„on. President Kemp to 200 ^. and the lng lt „ hoped that March 1. | throat indtoted she met ceath by
slept the night before inthe squara ^ chlcaKO arranging to finance the Kiowa. Comanche a wiu Bef. the great three million-dollar
around the capltol building, where d mvn decUre the line dren born prior to June &. iw*.ne king planl completed and doing
payment 1. being made, to get » good ^ in operation before the flrat , tofore unalloted, each to receive 1*0 ng
position in line. ^ th* year 1
Owing to the fact tbat the Rock Is-
land company failed to depoeit money
to meet the expense of the propoeed
•lection at Lawton to grant additional
trackage right-of-way In tb* city, the
•lection waa not held
Piedmont Woman Found Murdered
Piedmont. Okla.—Mrs. M. J. Miller
*as found dead in her home. She was
bound to a bedstead and marks on her
punm supplies fAora,.plr,r^*Mjr,,:.n2
Fnil I II n»te»»nd Chemicals, Mounts. Print
I IIU I U Kodaks. Films, Ktc. OKLA-
HOMA PHOTO 8LPFI.T OOMPAVT. S3 Wes*
California Oklahoma CMj. Oklahoma
, AH Orders Hhlppsd (Mun* Day Bsrsifsd.
4%-
UiPUINPRY 0F ALL KINDS F0R SALE
mnUnlllLn I Repair work carefully and
promptly done. Write, call or phone.
met ceath by SOUt^WCSteri MlllBflCt«rillg CO.
strangling after a criminal assault
had been committed. HOME OF
iUni in
I M • • b#
tfeiftf IB 1
n| ao
tb# ch
iber of
'W 1
bill C
prom
tb# tf
WOfU
\ duty
aa4 1
I b#4r«
■ mm* »
' Jtfci U
Tribal Bill Through Seeste
Washing'on, D. C.—By the terms of
• bill (toaaed by the aenate the laat
restige of the tribal organtoation of
tb* Indiana of the Ktre CtrlItosd
Tribe* will fMae In 1912. The bill
abolishes all office* at once except
■at In 1912 Aa reported, the
a)Bed a proristo* relieving
■tary of the interior froB tb*
approving deed* glv^n by
4erea»«d fall Mood*, tot tt
.■ as the oblecttM Cf
Airship Paaaeegsr Service Preposed
St. Ixjaia—A regular airship passen-
ger service between 8C Looto. Chicago
and Kansas City will b* attempted
STORY &
CLARK
PIANOS
„ . Tom,_ Crop Condition at Chattanooga
°~~r ™ oku.-o-.« .0 ,b.
t Mondl" Mohllt, Indict, dry cor* U fatting r«»t. ,n(I . ,.j .... — — ,
her* Mon y m;M. and the yield wUl be light nnie** a ^,4,,,, two months if th* plana <rf Al-
!!!*" tb* rain come* within a abort «1»*. Co.- V Voo Hoffm^t. Inventor, do not
f I dto^-a «*'• which swept ton 1. doing fine and promise* a good _
't^i wnB«day »l«ht Six handled ] cf«P Wheat to nearly all tbrsabed. I ^ tee* secretly constructing an air-
I - V(rt destrove4. tb* At tbto timm ima cars bav* ban ,sbi» niJalai on tb* Um* of tbat of j ^r^,»,i7f^r'f^7irm»abiM
a ^Ttb U Bbipped fr«n Chattooga. The f.m Co«t Zeppelin, bnt l^hter and wltb
i mtmr a eSorts to cbc<k tb* fiasM* ttree car* were *oid oa a baato <* s greater capartty foe passenger*. Von g,, <*, pr
anaCniUag.* and tb* btoa* oaiy K oeata. and tb* «tor fonr carsbave
"*" XT. COLUMBIA GRIPKOPHGNES
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DITZELL MUSIC CO.
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The Cushing Democrat (Cushing, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 7, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 30, 1910, newspaper, June 30, 1910; Cushing, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc284022/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.