The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, December 10, 1909 Page: 2 of 10
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Granite Enterprise jSni flNI flF NfHlflN
CHA5. E. HILL * SONS. EO. S Prop. I*,""'""'"'" >"rh°'n'"' F ",™ UULUIlU Ul IIM I I U IT
r art or the Insnranrr crnnrtnla .»f Qnmo
GRANITE,
News of the World
Briefly Told
Holt Important Events of the P»«t Week
Boilrd Down for the Busy Reader
WASHINGTON.
President Zelaya has asked the
United States to send a commission
to Nicaragua to investigate conditions
existing there and says that if its
findings show that his administration
is detrimental to Central America he
will resig-n.
President Taft has resumed his fav-
orite amusement, golf, and defeated
after tho insurance scandals of some
OKLAHOMA. I years ago, has passed to .1. Pierpont
, Morgan with the $472,000,000 of as-
sets which the company declared In
j its last statement.
| The special federal grand jury In-
vestigating alleged violations t.f the
interstate commerce law in Louisville,
Ky„ has returned indictments against
the Louisville & Nashville and Louis-
ville, Henderson & St. Louts railroads
and the American Tobacco company
for rebating.
United States commissioner to the
Five Civilized Tribes, J. George
Wright, of Muskogee, left for Wash-
ington last week. He will remain
there indefinitely conferring, on offi-
cial business connected with the af-
fairs of the Dawes commission
The condition of Representative
Charles D. Carter of Ardmore contin-
ues improved and he may be able to
Senator Bourne and Frank P. Kellogg. loave ,hc a!Ulftar,u'm in \ few day,
in :i iramp Saturri.iv whpn it li<vr>nm<» .. .
a game Saturday when it became
impossible to follow the ball in the
growing dusk.
Recalling the fact that the leading
political parties during their last na-
tional conventions pledged themselves
to the passage of statehood bills,
George Curry, who recently resigned
the governorship of New .Mexico,
his annual report to Secretary Bellin-
ger, again urges his aid and influ
ence toward obtaining statehood
N'fcw Mexico.
Diplomatic relations between Zelaya
and the American government have
been broken, and regardless of tht
outcome of tho revolution it is highly
probable that tbe United States will
establish a provisional government in
Nicaragua. Troops are being sent to
both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts.
Many changes in the military estab-
lishment are suggested by Secretary
of War Dickinson in his annual re-
port to the president, mad'.* public
Wednesday night.
Tbe department of justice in Wash-
ington is investigating the electrical
trust with a view to prosecution un-
der the Sherman anti-trust law.
DOMESTIC.
Among, the convictions of game-law
violators during November, In the
monthly report of State Game Warden
J ,G. Askew filed with the secretary of
state Friday appears the name of S.
A. Floyd, hotel keeper of Fairview,
who was fined $25 for serving quail on
his menu.
The state meeting of the Murray
County Farmers' Institute held in Sul-
phur Thursday was largely attended
by farmers, stockmen, fruit and truck
growers, anjl by ;he land owning cit-
izens of the towns.
On orders from the superior court
fourteen buildings have been closed
by the sheriff in Shawnee and he ha&
secured keys to them. They were
closed on the grounds that they were
being used for bootlegging joints.
V new record in the first prize win-
nings in the draft horse class was
established Wednesday night, when
Morris and company won the blue rib-
bon in Chicago at the international
live stock show. It was the com
pany's one hundredth blue ribben fot
heavy draft animals.
Railroad officials in St. Paul, Minn.,
declare the end of the strike of the
■switchmen of the northwest is in
sight. One prominent official said th'i
roads were handling 30 per cent of
ail business.
Following filial arrangements for
the acceptance of the fish and game
wardenship of Kansas Wednesday,
Prof. L. L. Dyche of Topeka announc-
ed that he will not be able to make
his proposed trip to the Arctic regions.
Governor Haskell has signed the
pardon papers for fifty-two convicts
whose terms are within thirty days or
less of expiration, under the rule re-
cently adopted by the state pardon
board.
The hunting season in upper Mich-
igan and Wisconsin this year prom-
ises to have the most fatalities to
hunters for years. Already the num-
ber killed has reached 28.
One man unconscious with injuries
that may prove fatal and another
seriously hurt, while a third is slight-
ly injured is the result of an auto-
mobile wreck which occurred in Tulsa
Thursday.
Independent telephone Interests
in New York have an available fight-
ing fund of $100,000 subscribed to ao
battle against the giant Bell Tele-
phone interests wherever the latter
attempts to wipe out competition.
The state board of public affairs has
let the contract for the building of the
Southeastern State normal school at
Durant to the Daugherty-Kirby Con-
struction company of Sulphur for $93.-
385 and active construction work will
he commenced at once.
One million six hundred thousand
acres of Oklahoma school lands are tQ
be sold at public auction, cn forty-year
payments, beginning December 15, at
Chandler, the county seat of Lincoln
county.
An estimate completed Saturday
makes the Income to Colorado farm-
ers from sugar beets this year, $",.
500,000, an fticrease of $1,000,000 over
the product of last year.
Contrary to the usual custom, no
Christmas paroles will be granted in-
mates of the state reformatory of
Kofbr8 this year.
An exploring party of Epworth geol-
ogists left Oklahoma City Monday for
Cleo in the Glass hills, where, in -spite
of the cold weather, they will spend a
week In t)i» field studying rock forma-
tions.
He announced that he expects
reach Washington by the end of the
first week of congress.
The locking up of fourteen buildings
in Shawnee, alleged to have been
used as joints, by order of the supe-
rior court upon application of Coun-
ty Attorney Holt, for temporary in-
junctions. has made the city dry as a
desert.
Everett Purcell, editor of the Enid
Events and postmaster said that an
application for a charter for the news-
paper company he- Is promoting will
be made soon .Representative B. S.
McGuire of the First congressional
district is said to be interested in the
paper.
lTpon the application of the W. W.
Cook & Son Construction company of
Kansas City, Judge J. H. Cotteral, of
the United States circuit court at
Guthrie, issued a restraining, order en-
joining ibe city of Frederick from
disposing of the proceeds of a $25,-
000 sewer bond issue .
E. D. Cameron, state superintend-
ent of education, stated that arrange-
ments had been completed to have
Ex-Governor Charles B. Aycock o
Goldsboro. North Carolina, addres
the meeting of the state teachere as-
sociation in Oklahoma City during the
latter part of December.
The Oklahoma Bar Association,
which was to have held a three days*
?ssion in Oklahoma City beginning
Dec. 17. has indefinitely postponed its
meeting on account of failure to ar-
range for a suitable speaker to de-
liver the annual address.
Delinquent town lot purchasers in
Indian Territory paid up last week
or forfeited their lots. Money flowed
into the Indian agency in a steady
stream up to the time limit, but in
almost all the smaller towns lots of
greater or less value were forfeited
and revert to the Indian nations.
That the next Thanksgiving foot-
ball game will be held in the new $50.-
000 stadium cn Epworth university
campus, seems an assured fact. A
committee of prominent Oklahoma
City business men has been appoint-
ed to carry out the plan.
A. D. Rldgway, of Denver, for many-
years general manager of the Denver
& Rio Grande, is said to be slated
for second vice president in charge of
operations of the Rock. Island end of
the recently divided Rock Island-Frls-
co system.
The first known case of pellagra in
Oklahoma has ju3t been reported to
Di. J. C. Mahr. state commissioner of
health, by David W. Griffin, resident
physician of the Oklahoma hospital
for the insane at Norman.
Returns from the saie of 17,272 res-
ident hunting licenses issued in the
state for the month of November is
shown by the monthly report of Stato
Game and Fish Warden J. S. Askew.
LeFlore county led for the mcnth
with a sale of 574 .
Sixty-First Congress Meets in
Regular Session.
BRILLIANT THRONG PRESENT
House Greets Speaker Cannon with
Great Applause—Many "Taft Pol-
ley" Bill* introduced In Beth
Chambers.
By EDWARD B. CLARK.
Washington, Dec. 6.—At noon to-day
Vice President Sherman in the Senate
and Speaker Joseph G. Cannon in the
House called to order the Sixty-first
congress of the United States for its
first regular session. Really the first
session of this congress was the extra-
ordinary one of last spring called to
revise the tariff.
Some interest was lacking in the
proceedings of the first day in the cap-
itol because at the beginning of the
extraordinary session in March last
the speaker of the House was elected.
-Moreover, before the extraordinary
session was ended, Speaker Cannon
appointed all the committees which
are to take legislation under consid-
eration for the next two winters. The
appointment of the committees ended
the campaign on the part of the mem-
bers for choice chairmanships and. if
the chairmanships were not forthcom
ing, for seats in the more important
subsidiary bodies of the House.
Ready for Work at Once.
The members have had time to get
over jealousies and rivalries and so it
is that, so far as committee work is con-
cerned, the House not only is ready
to proceed at once to consider legisla-
tion, but most of the members have
brought themselves into a frame of
mind to do what they are called upon
to do without regard to their past feel-
ings of disappointment and perhaps,
anger.
As is always the case on the open-
ing day of congress, admission to the
House and Senate galleries was by
card and only those fortunate enough
to know senators and representatives
sufficiently well to secure admission
tickets were allowed to witness the
proceedings.
Galleries Are Crowded.
The galleries of both House and
Senate were jammed with people. All
classes of Washington society were
represented in the throng of visitors.
The diplomatic gallery in the House
and in the Senate as well, was tilled
to its fullest capacity with ambassa-
dors. ministers, attaches and the la-
dies of the different legations. Mem-
bers of the families of the president
and of the vice-president of the United
States occupied seats in the executive
galleries, and the cabinet and judici-
ary and army and navy circles were
well represented.
By a rule which was adopted not
long ago, flowers are barred from the
floor of the House excepting when
they are to be used as a tribut
the memory to some deceased mem-
nouse was present and that congress
was ready to receive any communica-
tion that he "may be pleased to
make." On receipt of this message
from the senate, Speaker Cannon ap-
pointed a committee to join a like
committee of the Senate to wait upon
the president. The members of the
body directed to notify Mr. Taft that
i he House was in session were by the
appointment of the speaker, the Re-
publican leader, Sereno E. Payne, and
the Democratic leader, Champ Clark.
The first day in the HouKe as usual
brought out hundreds of legislative
measures in bill form, all of which
were read by their title only and re-
ferred to the proper committees. It
was evident from the tone of the bills
introduced that some scores of repre-
sentatives vs^re anxious to father
measures which had been recommend-
ed by President Taft as being neces-
sary to carry out proposed policies of
progression. The bills ranged fr«m
those Intended to correct alleged ex-
isting evils in interstate commerce to
those to give increases of pensions to
veterans of the civil war.
Applause Greets Speaker Cannon.
If Speaker Cannon anticipates any
particular trouble with the "Insur-
gents" of the House at the coining
session, he gave no evidence of it
when he took the chair as presiding
Speaker Joseph G. Cannon.
PROBE INSURANCE GRAFT
PHOENIX COMPANY CHARGED
WITH GROSS IRREGULARITIES
TEN YEARS Of
Annual Reports are Declared "Doc-
tored" for Aid of the President
Who Has Been In Charge
Since 1887
New York.—The Phoenix Insurance
company of Brooklyn, ia under inves-
tigation for irregularities, which it is
believed have impaired its surplus at
least $1,000,000 and to have resulted
in condition, which SnprWUntoUt »»,
GAVE UP
ALL HOPE
After Four Long Years of Suffer*
ing, Mrs. Dean of Benbrook
Was Finally Relieved by
Cardui.
Benbrook, Tex.—"I feel like it is my
duty to advise other women to take
Cardui, the woman's tonic," writes
Mrs. L. C. Dean, of R. F. D. No. 6,
Benbrook, Tex.
"I suffered for four (4) long years
with female complaints. Such a mis-
erable person as I was! I had three
doctors, but they did me no good, and
I gave up all hope of being relieved.
"At last, my doctors advised me to
take Cardui, the woman's tonic. I
ilotchkiss of the state insurance de- |
Cardui saved my life and I cannot say
enough for it I have prescribed it
partment, laid before the district at- I great success for young girls and
torney Monday for possible criminal I women with various forms of female
action. complaint.
It is charged that the president has [ "Cardui is a real boon to suffering
overdrawn his salary; that he has un-
loaded doubtful securities on the com-
pany and that he has used the com-
pany's assets as collateral to secure
women. I am thankful for the good It
has done me and I know it will cure
| others."
This remarkable letter from a lady
who has actually tried Cardui, ought
his own personal speculp,tive account, j surely to convince you of its genuine
Nor do the directors escape their merit and induce you to give it a trial
share of censure. j for your troubles.
In a statement Monday nieht Mr. I Purely vegetable, perfectly harm-
otclikiss says he does not believe ' '®f8' non-lntoxlcatlng and free from
.. , , &11 deleterious ingredients, Cardui Is
the company s capital Is impaired and ■ th(J ,deal romedy fop a„ weak Buffer.
that thus far there is no evidence that ing women, young and old.
its securities are not intact, but he You are urged to get a bottle at the
admits the present investigation is drug store and commence its use to-
still uncompleted. day-
George P. Sheldon has been preal- wotb—The Cnrdnl Home Treatment
dent of the Phoenix since 1887 and it 1 Thre«ifVrTiTn'mn«"kl.nrauRhtrar(Mr>.(*Vr
charged that under his adminlstra- |
tion the company's annual reports | tnken Ntnjciy. by theniielrM, if de-
. *!red, or three together, in a complete
made to the insurance department , trentment for n-omen'o ill-. Write tot
.luring at least the last ten years and
probably longer, are false. Sheldon is Sn*el«i instruction*, nnd At-nnire book.
, . "Home Treatment for Women," sent In
a member of many clubs and chair-
man of the board of fire underwrit-
ers; is one of the best known insur-
ance men in the country.
Under the law, the insurance de-
plaln wrapper.
FOREIGN.
It is generally known tint tiie Grand
Duke Michael, the upcle of the czar
of Russia, who was exiled for taking
as his morganatic wife the grand-
daughter of Russia's most famous
poet. Pushkin, has recently received
on intimation from the czar that he
aiigfct rctu a to Ruaala.
A census of the Camorra, the pow-
erful and sinister secret society of Na-
ples has just been completed. It show*
fl.at there are 13 sections of the
society in Naples, and 27 in the pro-
vince. The members in the city of
Naples number 92,000, and In the pro
vince there are 48,000 Camorrlsts.
By a, majority of 215, after a brief
but exciting sitting, the house of com-
mons in London recorded its claim to
exclusive control of the natlc-a's purse
—a claim never before challenged in
modern times.
The system of slavery was abolished
throughout all the British colonies by
act of parliament in 1833, when a bill
was passed which gave freedom to all
classes and Indemnified their owners
with an award of $100,000,000.
The Finnish situation has never
been graver than now . Almost every
month the czar Is making, efforts to
new intrigues and new provocations
In order to make this peaceful, free
and highly educated Independent coun-
try a suppressed province of Russia.
President Fallleres, of France, is
sorely puzzled over the style of attirt)
to don to receive King Manuel of Por-
tugal. who will shortly pay him a visit.
The conservative frock coat, It is
thought, would form too marked a
contrast alongside the brilliant trap-
j pings of the youthful monarch
officer. He was greeted with great
applause from the galleries and from
the floor of the House, many of the
Democrats and insurgents joining in
the demonstration, though in either
case possibly the hand-clapping was
given as an evidence of regard for the
office of speaker, rather than as evi-
dence of any overweaning affection
for the speaker himself.
With the committees ready to begin
work, the House will settle down to
Its winter's business at once. No bills
will be passed immediately because
all measures must be considered
in committee, and the meetings of the
committees will be held daily from
now until the Christmas holidays and
some of the more important House
bodies will sit during the recess.
When congress reassembles in Janu-
ary many of the committees will be
ready to report bills, and the debates
of the winter will begin.
Opening of the Senate.
Vice-President Sherman called the
Senate to order at noon. Rev. Ed-
ward Everett Hale, the chaplain of
the Senate, having died during the
summer recess, his place as chaplain,
temporarily was taken by a local
clergyman who offered prayer. In the
Senate the roll was called and It was
found that nearly all the Senators
were in their seats. The resolutions
were adopted to the effect that com-
mittees be appointed to inform the
House and the president that the Sen-
ate had assembled and was ready to
begin the business of the session. As
was the case in the House many bills
were introduced for consideration dur-
ing the winter by senators who, like
May Paste Million Posters.
Artists, billposters, printers, paper
manufacturers and tuberculosis fight-
. . . . , ers are all united in a gigantic crusade
partment is required to examine into agaln8t tuberculosl8 whlch about to
the condition of all life insurance com- be started under the direction of the
panies at least once in every three
years, but Mr. Hotchklss says the
Phoenix had not been examined for
nearly twenty-two years, or since Mr.
Sheldon became president.
National Association for the Study
and Prevention of Tuberculosis. In
addition to the gifts of free space on
billboards and free printing of posters
made by the Associated Billposters
and Distributors of America and the
,■*!i . . niiu uiBuiuuiurs oi America ana me
The insurance department alleges Foster Printer9> Assoclatloll, 8evera,
it finds that questionable securities hundred paper manufacturers have
originally sold to the company by Mr. | given paper for the posters to the
Sheldon, have, year after year, pass- j value of several thousand dollars, and
ed through "wash sales"and by this j artists from all over the United States
method have been concealed in the I are contr,butlng sketches for posters,
annual report I free ot cllar8e- The local, state and
Speculative accounts have been "^!°nal anti-tuberculosis associations
maintained by President Sheldon, ac- ""V* ,the po8tf'a are ptaced
cording to Mr. Hotchklss, in at least Ls n^eded *
ore brokerage house, and the assets
of the Phoenix have been passed as
collateral to cover his operations. It
The posters are nine feet long and
seven feet wide and will be printed in
i. . .u . „ . several colors. If sufficient paper is
1®. th.Bt f°r Beveral years : Procured a million will be pasted up.
the president's salary ha* been over-1 The value of these various contribu-
drawn and now is paid up in full to ; tions would reach fully $2,000,000 if
*' 1910' j paid for at commercial rates.
During the last seventeen years, It!
is alleged, members of the state in-j The More Glorious Alternative,
surance department, whose duty it j Maud Muller knew what she wanted,
wis to supervise the company, have ' "I'd rather be written up in a poem
accepted collateral loans from it. made j that the funny men will be parody-
to them by President Sheldon, in inS a hundred years from now than
amounts varying from $40,000 to $100,- ! marry the judge to-morrow!" she ex-
000. claimed, and suiting the action to the
The Phoenix Insurance company of 1 word, she raked the meadoftv sweet
Brooklyn, does a fire risk business, is I with hay ln 8ucl1 a manner that the
incorporated for $1,500,000 and Is crcd j Judge riding slowly down the lane,
ited with a surplus of $1,010,453. smoothed his horse's chestnut mane,
| and let it go at that.
Noted Aviator is Killed Naturally the girl's folks were con-
Nice. France.—M. Fernandez. th« ' 8lderabIy. dla(?U8ted at having her left
aviator, was instnntly killed Monday
when his aeroplane dropped an osti-
j mated height of sixteen hundred feet
the representatives, desire to have a | following the explosion of the motor
band in forwarding administration pol-1 while maneuvering.
icles.
After a comparative short session
in the open," the galleries were
cleared and the Senate went into ex-
Vice-President Sherman.
ber. The result of this rule is that
now on the opening days of congress
the desks of the members are bare of
floral decorations. In the old days
both House and Senate were turned
into conservatories for the time of
the opening proceedings.
At sharp noon Speaker Cannon
called the House to order and asked
the chaplain. Rev. Henry N. Couden.
to offer prayer. In his prayer which
was in a sense a Thanksgiving offer
Ing. the chaplain referred to the pros-
perity of the country, the opportuni-
ties of the present and the bright
hopes and promises of the future.
Absentee* Are Few.
As soon as the prayer was ended
the clerk of the House called the roll
of membership by states and it was
found that there were only a few ab-
sentees. The roll call ended the read-
ing clerk of the Senate who had ap
peared in the House was recognized,
and he announced that the Upper
House had passed a resolution to In-
form the House of Representatives
thnt a quorum of the Senate being as-
sembled, that body was ready to pro-
ceed to business. The House also
was told that the Senate had appoint-
ed a committee to join a House com
ralttee to inform the president of the
ecutlve session behind closed doors thp „ '"r 'Hsn' ana ,hat
for tbe purpose of considering nomina-^"'.H t """ ^ FHS°° dls" I
tionB for office sent to the Upper ^ ved wi;^out owmK each other any-1
Frisco Sells fcr Cash
Guthrie ,Okla—That the sale of the
Frisco system was for cash, and that' "le t'eB'ra'Jle things of life are coming
on their hands that way, but who ever
purchased a worthy immortality
cheaply?—Puok.
Envy.
"I envy the good-natured man," said
the philosopher.
"So do I," answered Mr. Sirius Bar-
ker. "His good nature indicates that
his way."
House by President Taft.
Curious Trees.
Among the curiosities of tree life is
the solar, or whistling tree, of Nubia.
When the winds blow over this tree
it gives out flutelike sounds, playing
away to the wilderness for hours at a
time strange, weird melodies. It Is the
spirit of the dead singing among the
branches, the natives say, but the sci-
entific white man says that the sounds
are due to a myriad of small holes
which an insect bores in the spines
of the branches. The weeping tree of
the Canary islands is another boreal
freak. This tree in the dryest weath-
er will rain down showers from its
leaves, and the natives gather up the
water from the pool formed at the foot |
of the trunk and find It pure and
fresh. The tree exudes the water from
innumerable pores at the base of the
leaves.
An Easy Duty.
The late Gov. Johnson was a witty
as well as a wise man," said a resi-
dent of Minneapolis.
"Once, at a dinner, a New York mil-
lionaire said about his taxes:
• I've got a little piece of property
that brings me In a fair rental, and
the taxgatherers haven't spotted It
yet I don't know whether I ought to
tell them or not. WVat would you do.
Gov. Johnson?'
Jhe governor's eyes twinkled.
" 'It's the duty of every man,* he
thing, is the information convoyed to Health .n^Na^® fcoSulS,. Com*
Attorney General Charles West, of Ok-
lahoma, by a personal letter from R.
A. Jackson, president of the Rock Is-
land board and general attorney for
tbe system, informing the Oklahoma
officer of the dissolution. Mr. Jack-
From Right Feeding.
mmee to Inrorm the president of the said, to live unspotted Still If T
United States that a quorum of each ' wers yot, I'd Up.'" '
Man, physically, should be like a
perfectly regulated machine, each part
working easily in its appropriate place.
„„„ . . — A slight derangement causes undue
son also says that now no member j friction and wear, and frequently ruins
or the Rock Island company owns ; tho entire system
stock in the Frisco. j A well-known educator of Boston
found a way to keep the brain and the
Bridge Company Chartered body in that harmonious co-operation
Guthrie, Okla.—The Missouri, Okla» whlch mukes a joy of living.
homa & Gulf Bridge Railroad com-' "Two years R*°" "he writes, "being
panv was chartered here Monday with ' ,n a condlt,on nervous exhaustion, I
a capital stock of $200,000. The com- • resI^ned my Position as teacher, which
pany proposes to build a bridge acros* I 1 had held over 40 ypar8- Since then
the Red river In Bryan county I the en,lre reBt- his. of course, been a
' benefit, but the use of Grape-Nuta has
Fcur Killed in Fire removed one greut cause of illness In
Mr*. , plant Monday .,,,1 (our| brBal
persons including the fireman were
killed, and several were Injured.
Church Store to Pay^Debtt
Evansvllle, Ind.-The congregation
fast on a raw egg beaten Into four
spoonfuls of Grapo-Nuts, with a little
hot milk or hot water added. I like
it extremely, my food assimllntes, and
iZTT AverrBapt,Rt ^1
In this city has opened a grocery store j dltlon much greater and I know thai
and meat market In n building near
the church and the procecdfl of the
sales are to be used In paying off the
$4 000 bt' "h'0'1 amounts to about
Goods nre to be .old ot a small
profit. The pastor of the church R»r
K. G. 8. Burdet-.e, has applied to
all member* of the church to patronlw,
the new venture.
the use of the Grape-Nuts has contrlb
uted largely to this result.
"It is with feelings of gratitude thai
I write this testimonial, nnd trust II
may bo the means of aiding others in
their search for health."
Look in pkgs. for the little book."The
Road to Wellvllle." "There's a Reason."
'-"r r*,,< shove letter? A new
J?. rsrr M,n """ •" to**
r:r "ir-1— •»
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Charles E. Hill and Sons. The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 30, Ed. 1 Friday, December 10, 1909, newspaper, December 10, 1909; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc402759/m1/2/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.