The Chattanooga News. (Chattanooga, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1924 Page: 2 of 6
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THE CHATTANOOGA NEWS
LVES
OST IN FIRE
MAJ. J. C. BARCLAY .t
CHICAGO ASYLUM DES-
TROYED BY FLAMES ON
COLD RAINY NIGHT
LOSS ESTIMATED AT $45,000
500 Inmates Of Institution Transferee!
In Safety One Half Mile To Tem-
porary Quarters At Night
By Employes.
ClitciiKO, III Knurl wit [uitlctitn nn*l
ft woiiuin nurse* til tln« slab* Imspliul
for 11 it* ilisiitlf Were hiiniftl to dttlltll
ftnif three patients are missing as t!»«•
result of a lire which ruined the tu
berculnsis pavilion.
More than 500 patients were led in
safety through smoke ami ruin, under
brilliant illumnimilinn, to the main
ussemhly lial 1 lnilf a mile uwn.\ There
was no panic anions the mi inmate-
Several patients were resetted from
burning wards hv llreuieii ald<d I•>
Inmates of ilu parole rlnss.
The llrst rail of lire was extended
to a general alarm and the Fire <'hief
responded wit It thirteen or fourteen
engine and hook ami ladder eompan
les. The -4«H) employes of the instilu
tion kept the excitement down to n
inlnlmuiu I'ollee from neurhy sta-
tions were stationed around the
grounds tg prevent a general escape
and other squails of police eulered the
building* to aid the attendants.
Building Was Furnace.
The count of patients at the assent
My hull showed ut first that sixteen
were missing As soon us the main
lire luid hurtled down the tiremen he-
gnu searching tin* ruins. It was
thought thut the patients had wander
ed out over the grounds or had made
their way to one of the other thirt.x
two buildings. Then the tragedy was
uncovered, in blackened embers with
In a circle of twenty feet, the ruins of
old ward No. .'t, the Iioiich were found.
Loss is $45,000.
Dr. Daniel Ooltey, superintendent in
charge of the institution begun Imme-
diately the preparations for emer-
gency housing of the homeless pa-
tients. Cots were sent out from other
institutions and temporary wards
were arranged in the amusement hall
Doctors attended the patients who
were exhausted from cold and excite
incut.
The loss in property is estimated at
$45,000 and cutne Just after an expense
d | MXX> foi^epalro to tin- imumV:*
STRONGHOLD RECAPTURED
Mexican Federals From Interior, Make
First Real Contact.
Nogales, Ariz.—Two thousand feder-
al soldiers under eneral Luzuro (,'ar
nes, marching from the interior of
Mexico to the rebel stronghold ut
CiUadulajara, capltol of Jalisco, made
their first contact with the rebel army
at Tamacula, capturing the town at'
tor repelling the enemy with severe
losses.
The defeated rebel troops were part
of the army under the command of
General Knrujuez Kstrada.
The victorious government forces
captured 200 prisoners and are pur !
suing the routed rebels toward (Suad !
alajara, in central Jalisco.
While the Ohregon army marches
on (tuadalujara from the southeast,
federal troops from Topic, Nayarit. are
intrenched on the Jalisco Nayarit fron
tier in httif--moon form Hy this means
the government hopes to halt a retreat
of the Iusurrectionarles toward the
west coast it the Obregon army suc-
ceeds in driving them from Guadala-
jara.
SAYS CAN'T FORCE REPLY
Sinclair Declines to Answer Questions
About Teapot Dome.
Washington, D. tV The authority
of a senate committee to compel a wit
ness to testify concerning "private
business trim suet tons" was again ques
tioued by Harry I-'. Sinclair, who rals
cd a similar issue nearly a year ago
when the LaTollette oil investigating
committee unsuccessfully sought in
formation of him about oil stork deals
Appearing as a witness in the In-
vestigation by the senate public lands
committee Into leasing of naval oil
reserves, Sinclair declined to answer
questions relating to certain features
of the organization of companies to
bundle his lease of the Teapot Dome
A ballot in the committee resulted
four to three in favor of compelling"
the witness to reply to all questions
but when adjournment was taken
"subject to the call of the chair." the
members had not discussed an\ pro
grain designed to carry out this deci-
sion.
Kansas City Shops Are Burned.
Kansas City Humes destroyed
twelve shops covering a block in a
surhnrbaii business center, entailing
a loss of $350,000 The tirr inspector
was unable to determine the origin
of the blaze.
Bogus Federal Notes are Passed.
Corsleana, Te\ Counterfeit federal
reserve notes, believed to amount to
thousands of dollars, have been placed
in trade channels hi this section. Wal-
ter tierrou. Inspector for the state rail-
road coin mission, said
MaJ. J. C. Barclay, above, eighty-
five, now living In retirement at Car-
Iinvilie. III., the last survivor cf the
famous military organization known
as the United States Zouave Cadets,
commanded by Maj. E E. Ellsworth.
SHIP GOES DOWN; SIX SAVEO
HOURS IN OPEN BOAT BE-
FORE RESCUED
Try to Lower Boats But Waves That
Cut With Ice Like Blades Wash
Men Overboard.
Beaumont, Tex Only by a niericui
were live men who were rescued from
the illfated Norwegian steamer Ituna
"to tell the story," stammered one of
the survivors The men, all who re-
main of the Kami's crew of twenty-
eight, arrived here on the (tinker XV.
W. Mills and sent to Port Arthur.
The Ituna was lost with twenty-
three members of her crew off Fry-
ing Pan shoals on the morning of
December 1f>. The survivors told the
details of six harrowing hours in the
icy waters of the North Atluntie see-
ing their shipmates drown before their
eyes in ineffectual attempts to hiunch
the ship's boats when it was decided
to abandon her.
The Ituna was on her way to Liver-
pool with cargo of resin from Savan-
nah and it was stated by the survivors
that there was a noticeable list to port
when she left for sea. This list con-
tinued to increase during the night
of the 14th and despite frantic ef-
forts of the stockhold c.ew, assisted
by others to restow the bunker cargo
and if possible right the vessel, it was
apparent that the ship was doomed
Skipper Clings to Oar.
The listing of the ship, washed by
heavy seas, bad been taking the toll
one by one ami the survivors tell piti-
ful stories of the last goodhys called
by their shipmates as they were
dragged overboard or could no longer
maintain their IijdUI on rigging and
deckhouses.
Captain I vernon and Fireman John
Aalieim were seen struggling in the
water, clinging to a long oar but when
the Ituna filially went down twenty
minutes later both were sucked under
and Aaheini was the only one to re-
appear. He was draged aboad the
raft by the second mate.
66 MILE WIND DAMAGES
Ships Wallow in Pacific Off West
Coast In Hardest Gale in Years.
•
Seattle Wash In a storm which
wrecked the tug Tyee with the loss
of four lives in .North Pacific waters,
and in which the wind reached (W
miles an hour, the highest velocity
that bus been set down in the thirty-
three years that the t'nltod States
government bus kept record here.
liesides these marine accidents in
the Pacific ocean and the Strait of
Juan de Fucii, the steamer Dawn sank
at her dock in Seattle on l.akc Wash-
ington
One hundred telephone wires wore
broken throughout the city 20 Plate
glass windows were shatctrcd by the
gale. Street signs nnd mail boxes
were upset everywhere.
Three New Shocks Are Felt.
Guayaquil. Kcuador. Three new
earthquake shocks have been felt in
Tulcan, according to advices from that
city. Tulcan several days ago was
severely shaken, main persons were
killed and a great amount of material
damage was done.
INTERESTING NEWS HAPPENINGS
OF THE OKLAHOMA STATE CAPITOL
Charges of grand larceny against ; that there were seventy-seven mem-
.1 C Walton, ousted governor, are hers of the klan in the house of repre-
added to the Indictments already sentatlves and twenty-eight in the sen-
pending In district court by the report ale, and thut the klun st t the move*
<>t the Oklahoma county grand jury nient on foot to have hint impeuched.
which closed lis session of more tliun The impeuched governor contends
ten weeks Thursday night, 'lhe true thut he was denied due process of law
hill alleges that Woiitou obtained $5,-1 when his motion to disqualify a nuiu-
immi from the democratic state ceutrul her of the members of the impeach-
committee for his personal use. inent court wus ordered not tiled, when
I he former executive wus suid to his motion to set aside and vacate lui-
have represented to Kd M. SeainansJ peaohment was stricken from tlie
Illinium of the committee, thut he court tiles, when the court ruled that
was indebted t<» the extent of $5,000 j no member should be culled as a wit-
MISS JANET McWILLIAMS
for campaign expenses ICvidenee be-
fore the grand Jury tended to show,
however, that lie placed the money to
his own credit in bank and building
Hid loan stock, according to J. K.
Wright, county attorney.
Three true bills against John A.
Whitehusi, ehairmun of the state
hoard of agriculture, nnd Kd L.
Speairs secretary of the hoard, were
returned aleging diversion of state
funds Wliitehurst and Speairs are
'barged Jointly with turning slute
money to their own use when they
drew three warrants on Juiiuury 12
111(I |.", for u total of s'l'M) to defray
ihe expenses <>(' bringing the A. and
M college band t< oi.e Walton hurhc-
iic.
.1. C. Walton was tried for conduct
ni• I»<•«-oniing a Mason and his member
ship in Oklahoma City Siloam lodge
icriiiimited according to Masons who
it tended the trial in the lodge rooms.
Walton did not appear in person
ind did not send counsel to represent
him. The grand muster of the bulge
nl lo appoint counsel to defend Wal
ion on the charges made against him
The trial began in the afternoon and
listed until midnight. Hundreds of
Masons attended.
January 1 murks the beginning of
Irives to collect hunk accounts, and
the state government, now working on
i business husis, will also commence u
'umpaign to collect money due for
leased and purchased lands, it is an-
nounced.
"Pay up" Is the slogan at the land
office, and there is around $1,000,000
(» he puid up.
The state leases 000,000 acres on a
Int yearly cash basis to farmers ami
tockmen. Ibit farmers leasing state
and have had difficulty during the last
our years in making payments. There
s .S-fM.i».r>»5 due the state from leaser^.
Accurate check has not yet been
nade of the back payments due in tlij^
olcs division of the lund office, but
hey will total .?1,000,000, it is predict
<1 Check also has not yet been made
ness to testify on beluilf of the house
or the defendant, when he was sus-
pended, and when he was removed.
Here's a belated (Jhrlstmus gift for!
the tax payer.
Despite the fact that the attorney
general will perfect his appeal from'
the district court opinion which would
refund $'2,000,000 in illegally collected !
taxes, (Joveraor Trapp's govermental
survey will probably result in a re- |
fund, Fred Parkinson, state examiner '
and inspector, announced.
I recommended that the auditor re-
fuse t(0 refund the $2,000,000 collected 1
hy an illegal levy during the Kobertson I
administration because tlx1 appeopria-
t ion was made from a surplus and
there was none. Hut JI the Trapp coin- i
mil loo cuts off $2,000,000 in expenses
there is no reason why Childers should i
not drop his appeal and pay the mon-
ey," "said Parkinson.
C. C. Childers, state auditor, \\.»s|
sued «by Oklahoma County following
his refusal to begin the $2,000,000 re-
fund lie host the suit, but (leorge I<\
Short, attorney general, acting for him
was not released hy him from his ob-
ligation to appeal.
The $2,000,000 was collected from
tin* smaller tax payers, railroads and
wealthy corporations paying under
protest, and lor this reason receiving
refunds us soon as the courts decided
the levy illegal.
J. A. Yolbert, Hobart, chairman of
the general house investigating com- I
mil lee, declared that it will be up to
the entire body to take action on the !
demand of the state board of agricul- I
ure, for an open hearing of ids case, j
when the membership reussembles.
itumors that Whiteliurst will resign j
again were denied by the president of
the state board of agriculture. The !
Shart examination ordered by Trapp 1
will extend to the accounts of M. J. 1
Otey, former college financial secre-j
taryr^about whom a battle has waged
in tfie house investigating committee,
it is understood.
Whiteliurst charged that farmer la-
7^
Sure Relief
FOR INDIGESTION
RIU.-UNS
INDIGESTION
23 cm
6 Be ulan s
Hot water
Sure Relief
25$ AND 754 PACKAGES EVERYWHERE
A
Relief ^i.
'Coughs
lUsePISO'S-this l
relieves chili
A pleasant syrup. No opiate*.
35c and 60c lizeatold
'erywheri
is prescription quickly!
tildren and adults. ^
»f iiionex loaned by the land office, but I bor factions,still vengeful (over the re-
looth will he made by January 15, it is moval of George Wilson, non-partisan
Miss Janet McWilllams of Washing-
ton, D. C., has been employed tine#
1890 to assist in the preparation of
data compiled in the Navy department
•Imanac. She Is principal of Forco
•chool in the capital.
MEAT PRICES MUCH LOWER
5 TO 10 PERCENT BELOW
1513 QUOTATIONS
Wholesale Prices Less Than In Ten
Years; Production Is Very High
During 1923.
Chicago, 111.—Meat production dur-
ing the year just closed will be the
greatest in the history of the nation,
and wholesale nicut prices have been
the lowest of a decade, or more, in
many instances being below the levels
which prevailed ten years ago at this
time, according to a review of the 1023
trade by Charles lv Merrick of Chi-
cago, president of the Institute of
American Meat Packers'.
"Not in years have meats been sell-
ing at such low levels in the whole-
sale markets," he stated. "Declines
from peak prices range from 20 to
more than 70 percent. I'ork loins, for
example, have declined 71 percent
from the peak reached during the post-
war period, and now are selling in
the wholesale markets from 5 to 10
percent below the quotations which
prevailed in 101U.
'This enormous amount of meat—
CLEARtj°»rC0MFLEX10N
J Remove all blemish fa, discoloration#. Have a I
I smooth. »oft akin natural, All drugftiita 11M6 I
I Or hbI prapaij. Guaranteed, li.-aui, booklet ilea Writ* I
, t)R C.H.BERRYC0,2975A Mich.Ave.thocago.
The Post Mortem.
Mr. Gnaggs—If you should die first
you can rest assured that I shall nevei
marry again.
Mrs. Gnaggs—Is that devotion or
cowardice?—New York Sun.
DEMAND "BAYER" ASPIRIN
Aspirin Marked With "Bayer Cross*
Has Been Proved ''afe by Millions.
Warning I Unless you see the name
"Bayer" on package or cn tablets you
are not getting the genuine Bayer
Aspirin proved safe by millions and
prescribed l)y physicians for 23 years.
Say "Bayer" when you buy Aspirin.
Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv.
Then the Millennium.
This will be a perfect world when
men are as liberal with their money a»
they are with their advice.—Bello
Plain Herald.
A Simple, Safe, Sure Remedy
for all local aches and pains due to
taking cold or over exertion Is an
Allcock's Piaster.—Adv.
Uncomplimentary Ones.
"Alice plays without notes, doesn't
she?"
"Yes, but not without comments."—
Boston Transcript.
| leaguer, fromthe A. and M. College, j __
if the land office on de- and disgruntled former employes dis- i „ _ ,
1 , , , .. of the Packers institute, would sunice
charged hy him, are seeking to ruin I
fill,(Kin tons"—continued the president
him. He charged that certain meni-
I ilie population of the United States
for nearly a month. To distribute it
require 08,000 refrigerator
In worthy cases whore there is a dis
position to pay, but in which the farm
er has suffered crop failures for reus
nns not attributable lo negligence or
Ids part, more time may be given, ii
was stated.
Formal presentation in the supreme
court of the I'nlteiO States of J. C
Walton's petition for writ of certiorari
will he made January 14, K. C. Kiddle,
• .mnsol for Walton, declared on bis re-
turn from Washington.
Walton, asks the supreme court to
either here or abroad, Mr. Merrick as-
serted.
TULSA BANDITS GET AWAY
Loan
Minted.
The repo
imjuenl accounts give the total num-
ter «► l" payments due for alone as
nnd the amount as $H7,442. One I hers of the committee are in league . ^
mndivd and lift> six payments are two with these individuals. I ' J,
.•oars in arrears and the sum is JjsM,-| False testimony is being given, he; '"s
507. I charged. Ho said a political bribe in ' ^ irtually all of this increased pro-
I'ayinenis due for the three-year pe- the form of a higher office was of- | 'ti°!| lms moved into consumption
rind, lli'Ji I'.i'J.'l, total ami amount ferod him by the Walton and league
10 $ 1and for four years 78. j factions. lie said he was informed
amounting too s.'N.'JMl, a total «of $21fv that a member of the committee con-
sul. For live years or more there are ducting the tnvestigution was involv-
. ssoors in arrears the sum of ed in a plot to dissipate a $1,250,000
Collectors are t«» commence lmmedi- state appropriation,
ately a drive too collect the money due , "For eight to ten weeks this office
from all lessors in a position too pay. and myself have rested under the stig-
ma of a searching investigation. I
have n») objection to this if it were in
the open. I have every reason too be-
lieve that the motives of certain wit-
nesses are grounded solely on a desire
to destroy me and my administration,"
said Whiteliurst.
"Some of the witnesses constantly
seeking immunity for themselves,"
saiol Whiteliurst, "are the same bunch
coming out of the Egbert hotel, in-
cluding (Io»o)rge Wilson, O. A. Hrewer,
Walton detective Ivn Mitchell, former
tinancial secretary o»f the state board
Keep Well! Avoid Sickness.
Take Rrandreth Pills, One or two at
t>ed time will cleanse the system, purify
the blood and keep you well.—Adv.
Pollyanna Says.
"Cheer up! When all our neigh-
bors buy autos, we'll be able to get a
seat in the street cars."
■i -
Hall's Catarrh
%jff *%. is a Combined
MCCIlCltftC Treatment,both
local and internal, and has been success-
ful in the treatment of Catarrh for over
forty years. Sold by all druggists.
F. J. CHENEY &. CO., Toledo. Ohio-
$15,000 In Loot Taken From
Firm By Two Thugs.
Destroyer Officers Lose Seniority.
Washington. O (\ ('apt ialward 11
Watson, o ouiliiamb-r «*t the de^s rover
snuadron wrecked on the California
const, near INiint llonda last S<>ptcm
her, will lose IN) numbers mid Lieut.
Com. Oomild T Hunter commander of
the destroyer Pelphl one of the squad
ro'i, will lose 100 numbers us a result
of naval court martial sentences ap-
proved by Secretary lVnby
require the court of impeachment of of agriculture, and John Hendley, re-
cent l\ dismissed from the pay roll.
"Words have been put into the
mouth of John Hendley. Hendley Is
one of the men Walton sought last
July to place at the head «»f a respon-
sible department controlled by the
board of agriculture through Ills espe-
cially appointed board when I brought
aninjunctlon, went to trial and defeat-
the state o»f Oklahoma to certify for
; s review and determination the im-
peachment ease.
Kiddle has served notice of date of
presentation of petition ton W. E. l>is
ney .oof the house hoard of managers.
Phc board has until January 11 to pre-
sent its answer or demurrer.
Several week's time will elapse fool-
lowing presentation of the application ed the entire gan
before the supreme court announces
whether or m>t it will accept jurisdic-
tion. Kiddie stated.
in accepting the petition, the su-
preme court waived tlo* rule that a
certilied copy of the records of the
rase be tiled with the petition, accord
Huerta Names Cabinet Member.
(Jalveston, Tex. Miguel Palaclos
Macedo, a prominent Mcxican attorney
has been named secretary of finance
in tin* de la IJuerta cabinet, according
i t<» an official dispatch received by
\dolfo .11miner., representing the rebel
I movement
Judge (toorge W. Clark. Oklahoma
county district judge, disqualified him-
self from hearing the motion of J. C.
Walton to quash indictments against
him. Judge C. C Smith, of Logan
county, was assigned to hear the mo-
in : to Walton's counsel, requiring in tion of theformer governor in the dis-
stead that a sworn afTldavit that the triot court.
records are too be tiled. This was done, j
Kiddle declared il Impossible to ob With the discontinuing by the post
• :iin a certified copy. office department of the post office at j wilson
Walloon alleges in the petition that Cestos, Dewey county, nnd the legal
the Ku Klux Klan had committed vacation «»f a part of the townsite, one
many crimes in the state, and that be of the oldest towns in western Okla-
cause «>f its influence he was compell- homa and for a number of years the
ed to proclaim martial law in order to metropolis of northwestern Dewey
afford citizens protection. He charges county, passed into history.
~ j Situated in an excellent fanning and
Return »»f the justice «»f the peace stock raising territory, Cestos was for
Tulsa, Okla.— No trace has been j
found of the two bandits, who held 1
up the Goldberg Loan company here I
and escaped with approximately $15,-
000 in cash and diamonds.
The bandits in their hasty robbery
overlooked gems valued at approxi-
mately $15,000 loan officials reported
to the police. That the men over-
looked these was not discovered until
a check of the loss was made.
BIG LUMBER DEAL IS MADE
Avoid & Relieve
COLDS
INFLUENZA
MALARIAI
BY TAKING
slftNTERSMlTH's
V? Chill tonic °
li it a Reliable Central Invigorating Tonic
Manufacturers, Heavy Losers By Fire,
Buy New Orleans Firm.
Jackson, Miss.—The Enochs Lumber
and Manufacturing company of this
city, whose plant here was destroyed
by tire recently, with a loss of more
than $500,000, has purchased the plant
of the National Sash and Door com-
pany at New Orleans. The purchase
price was saiol too have been approxi-
mately a half-million dollars.
hook-ups containing 22 tested circuit* for get-
tinn now thrills out of your present equipment.
AIbo latent All-Amcricnn iliiisrram circular de-
scribing l'owhot Amplification. Enclose 4c in
ALL-AMERICAN 10 ■»»" Al!"
i_nii,wln- Americans nre world h largest s* 11-
amplifying tnK Amplifying Transformer* he-
iransformen cause they're the beat. All dealer*
Hnuland Mfjf. Co., Lake & Joff. St*., Chicago
TAHrm
! Sentence of Villa's Slayer Confirmed.
' .hiuriv, Mr\ Tlir iwcnty year sen-
i II'tuv t>f Congressman .lesns Sains IS,
mnfi's'.iil slayer of KrHnoiseo Villa,
I lias Imh'ii sustained by the supreme
j court of Cbiliualina City,
system in Muskogee is forecast as n many years an Important trading point
! -u!t of a division In tla> slate sii- j for farmers an important trading point
] reme court in a case relating to Tulsa built up an inland town of considerable
j wherein the hi^ii court determined proportions that played an important
that the common pleas courts of Tulsa pari In the early history of Dewey
did not supplant, the jurisdiction of the county.
justice courts of that city. j The building of the Wichita Falls
I'lie Tulsa common pleas court Is A Northwestern llailway through west-
said to have been patterned after the era IVwey county fifteen years ago
law that created the city court in proved to be tlif Waterloo of Cestos.
Muskogee, flic city court has sup V new town. Vici, was started a few
planted rhe Justice couits there for the utiles west of it. and lias succeeded in
past four years. erasing Cestos from the map.
Wants To See Packers' Books.
Chicago, III.—Petitions for writs of
mandamus were tiled in the United
States district court over the signa-
ture of Attorney (ieneral Harry M.
Paugherty. seeking an order compel-
ling the Cudaliy Packing company,
and company and Swift and
company to give the government ac-
cess to their books and records. The
packing companies must answer the
petition on or before January 11 of
this year.
Gen. Christmas Seriously III,
New Orleans, l.a — (ieti. Lee Christ-
mas, noted Central American revolu-
tionary leader, must submit again to
transfusion, it was learned when his
physician issued a call fur volunteers
who would give their blood to him.
PEARLS PEARLS PEARLS
ftf- (money order)
buys L'4-inch TahUl
pearl Indestructible
necklace; solid gold
clasp, plush case.
Money-back guar-
antee. Pearl rings,
bracelets, scarf pins, earrings, necklaces. a'\y
lengths. Expert re-stringing; ncver-break
cord. Single pearls, fl. Agents wanted. Mb-
®rnl proposition. SOUTH SKA PEAHL CO.,
*04 Spreckles Bldg., HAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
For Best Results
Ship Your Live Stocft to
NATIONAL
UVE STOCK COMMISSION CO, Inc.
Paid-Hp capital, $1(10,000
OKLAHOMA CITY. OKLA.
N. S. SHERMAN MACHINE
AND IRON WORKS
Engineers, Founders and Machinists
Grate Bars and Smokestacks
18 to 36 East Main Street Oklahoma City. Okla.
Learn the Best Trade on Earth
Special low tuition; export Instructions; po-
rtion guarantee*!; free catalog.
Sfltwari* SyHtem of Iturher College,
too IV. California Oklahoma City, Okla.
French Land Slide Takes Nine.
Chuinbery, France—An avnlun.he
Tarried away a cottage between Rose-
Ittnd and ltcaufort, thirty miles north-
east of Chamber}', killing nii.e of the
eleven occupants of the dwelling.
Ship Your* Live Stock
-,,5 ^ to the
OKLAHOMA
NATIONAL STOCK YAfcDS
OKLAHOMA CITY '
W. N. V., Oklahoma City, No. 52-1923.
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The Chattanooga News. (Chattanooga, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 3, 1924, newspaper, January 3, 1924; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc287243/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.