The Wellston News (Wellston, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 4, 1913 Page: 2 of 6
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The Wellston News
W'ELLSTON
OKLAHOMA
ACCIDENT DUE
TO A CUSPIDOR
Mother of Yoimg Baby Stumbles
And Falls. Serious Com*
plications Set In.
DIES IN HE
END'COMES QUIETLY TO THE
WORLD’S GREATEST
FINANCIER.
Duffleld, Va.—In advices from this
place, Mrs. J. L. Johnson says: "When
my baby was about a month old. 1
stumbled and fell over a cuspidor, and
contracted such pains In my back, I
could not stoop over without falling to
the floor.
I got terribly weak, and was very
uneasy about myaelf.
My c se was certainly a serious one.
1 was so delicate that most people
thought 1 was going to have consump-
tion. and I thought so myBelf.
Finally my husband advised me to
try Cardui, the woman's tonic. I tried
It, and am confident that It Baved my
life.
The pains In my side and back have
disappeared, and all of my frlendB
here say that I am looking better than
1 have done for a long time.
I recommend Cardui to all of my
lady friends, as 1 believe It will help
them. Just as It did me, If they will
only give It a trial.
You may use this letter In any way
you wish. I feel so grateful, for If It
had not been for Cardui, the woman’s
tonic, I believe I would by this time |
have been In my grave.”
Try Cardui for your troubles. It will
help you, as It did Mrs. Johnson.
N. B.— H'rt/t to Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
Ladies' Advisory Dept., Chattanooga. Tenn., for
Sn.iatImtruttions on your case and 64-page book,
"Home Treatment for Women," sent in plain
wrapper. Adv.
Paradox.
’’What makes you think those
rumors are groundless?"
“Heeause they are so much Id the
air”
MEMBERS OF FAMILY WITH HIM
Telegrams of Sympathy Pour In from
All Over the World—Unconscious
for Some Time Before
His Death.
Rome—J. Pierpont Morgan, the
American flnancitr, died here of heart
trouble.
When the death of Mr. Morgan was
seen to be approaching rapidly. Prof
Bastlanelli and Dr. Dixon forced Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert L. Satterlee, his
son-in-law and daughter, and Miss
INVIGORATING TO THE PAI.E AND
HICK 1,Y.
The Old Standard ui in rul RtrenKthenlnu tonic,
UKoV B'S TAHTK1.KHH chill TONIC, drive* out Ma-
laria. enriches the blood and build* up the m.
A aure Appetiser. For adulta and child
ren. 60 eta
The average girl treats a new ac
(juaintance far better than she does
an old friend—so the old friend
thinks.
OKLAHOMA NEWS NOILS
In the local market reports at Black
well, the price of old roosters is quot
ed at 4 cents.
Postmaster Dailey lias issued an
order prohibiting smoking In the post
office at Edmond.
William Peterson has resigned at
city attorney at Woodward, and has
moved to Guthrie.
It is announced that work will soon
start on the construction of » feed
mill and elevator at Bartlesville.
Sam Downs, clerk In a drug store al
Blue, has been arrested on a charge ol
violating the prohibition laws of the
state. He is accused of selling cider
The jury in the district court at
Pawhuska in the ease of the State vs.
Chester Graham, charged with killing
Oscar Sears, returned a verdict of not
guilty.
The executive committee of the
Bryan County Sunday School assocta
lion haB selected Durant as the place,
and May 23-24 as the dates for hold
Ing the fifth annual convention this
year.
Since the noon train service was
put on by the Santa Fe, it has been
found necessary to enlarge the depot
et Tonkawa to accommodate the In-
creased number of passengers who
stop over there.
Sheriff Nix, at Lawton, poured 305
quart bottles of beer, 376 half pints
of beer, one gallon jug and ten full
cases of whisky Into the sewer. The
liquor had been seized upon Its ar-
rival at the depot.
At a meeting of the Shawnee city
council It was decided to purchase a
triple combination automobile fire
truck. The contract is In the form of
a lease, the machine to become the
city's property after a specified time.
The Independent Torpedo com-
pany's magazine near Bartlesville was
burglarized several nights ago and a
can containing ten quarts of nitro-
glycerine, together with an additional
two and one-half gallons of the ex-
plosive, was stolen.
One hundred feet of trestle over the
Blue river on the Ardmore and Ar-
klnda division of the Frisco was
burned the past week. The bridge is
a combination wood and steel struc-
ture, with the approach proper all lu
wood.
^ After having suffered for several
years from a cancer on one of his
fingers, which had reached the stage
where a cure was said to be impos-
sible, W. F. Mower of Ft. Scott, near
Lawton, had the finger amputated, and I
believes he has now rid himself of |
the dangerous growth for all time.
’
, Wagoner was the first town In ]
Oklahoma to respond to the call of
President Wilson for aid to assist the
Red Cross society in giving relief to
the Ohio and Indiana flood sufferers,
that town having raised the sum of
$86.75 and forwarded it to Washing-
ton.
Bristow citizens have raised a fund
of $10,000 to be used as a atari toward
a permanent turnpike and automobile
road from Bristow to the Cushing-
Tiger oil fields. This sum will be
placed In the hands of the good roads
committee and work will start as soon
as the weather permits.
The fourth annual convention of
the Woman's Foreign Missionary so-
ciety of the Methodist Episcopal
ghurch will be held Tuesday and
Wednesday, April 8 and 9, In Med-
ford and arrangements are being
made by the ladies of that town to
entertain the visitors In royal style.
Stillwater may soon have a lilgh-
school building. The citizens of that
town have appointed a committee to
•elect a site, compare school condi-
tions and secure data as to other high 1! I L HiPPrfnPV ' testations of sympathy received,
school buildings. WKiailOIIlU y I _ _ ^ r«d,,_nw__
Frank Wilson, employed on the
Campbell farm south of Garvin, was
dragged to death while plowing In the
field. The plow team became fright-
ened at a tree that had been blown
down. WIlBon had the lines tied
Dr. fierce’. Pleasant Pellets regulate axd
Invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-
coated, tiny granules, easy to take. Du nut
gripe. Adv.
Speaking of Bquare deals, a corner
In food products is something else.
Helen Hamilton, who had been in con-
stant attendance, to leave the room.
Mr. Morgan toward the end showed
that he was suffering internally only
by a movement of his right hand.
Otherwise he displayed no sign of
vitality except by continuous heavy-
breathing.
Mr. Morgan was unable to assslml-
late the artificial nourishment admin-
istered during his last hours, and his
physical weakness was extreme
Heart tonics were injected but these
had no effect and for several hours be-
fore his death he was in a state of
coma, unable to respond to any ques-
j tions or to recognize any of those at
fils bedside.
One of his relatives. Mrs. Fitzslm-
I mons, wife of the Rev. M. Fitzslm-
I mons, arrived from Cannes and was
I shown into the death chamber, but
On the
“firing line"
II you would maintain, your place in her presence remained unknown to
the “front rank” you must keep strong the dying man.
and robust. Sickness soon relegates Vl8lt t0 Rorne a Ml5ta
you to the rear. Try
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
when the appetite lags — when the
digestion is bad—when the liver and
bowels are inactive. It will surely
help you.
no appetite, Indltfeatlon, Flatulence. Sick
lache, “ail run down" or loalnit flesh, you
w... find
Tuft’s Pills
THOUGHT INDOLENT AT FIRST.
Morgan Started Business Career Half
Century Ago.
New York.--John Pierpont Morgan
started his business career half a cen-
tury ago on the board of directors ol
a large maritime insurapee company.
Ho secured the position through the
influence of his wealthy father. For a
year young Morgan attended the di-
rectors' meetings but never opened his
mouth, except to vote.
The president of the company told
the elder Morgan that nothing could
be done with his son, who seemed to
take little interest in business. Young
Morgan, however, all the time was
laying his plans for his first railroad
consolidation, which, when accom-
plished, established his standing in
Wall Street” later was applied to have
got the better of Jay Gould.
The president of the Insurance com-
pany had mistaken taciturnity for In-
dolence. The sobriquet of "Sphinx of
Wall Strett’ later was applied to have
been without business acumen but
later became the Supreme head of the
finances of the American continent.
Morgan's control over men and
money was the dominant keynote of
his life.
At the height of his power he is
said to have controlled nine billion
dollars.
In addition ot finance, art, litera-
ture, philanthropy and sport, all came
under his influence. His prestige was
not confined to his own country; kings
and emperors and even the Pope were
wont to call him into consultation.
Mr. Morgan came from an old New
England family which dates back in
this country to 1636. He was born in
wealth and his father, Junius Spencer
Morgan, left him $10,000,600. J. S.
Morgan had accumulated HTs fortune
in the dry goods business with Levi
P. Morton and later as an associate
of George Peabody, merchant, banker
and philanthropist.
J. Pierpont Morgan was born April
17, 1837, in a modest red brick cottage
in Hartford, Conn. As a youngster
hjs tendency to write poetry gave him
fhe nickname of "Pip.” When he was
14, Morgan was sent to Boston to the
English High school. He showed a
particular bent for mathematics but
had no gifts indicative of unusual
mental power. Probably his first at-
tempt at finance took place in Boston.
The school teacher gave him money
with which to buy erasers. Young
Morgan was gone for a long time.
When he returned he handed the
teacher the erasers and also Borne
change.
“What’s this for?” asked the teach-
er. “1 gave you just enough to buy
the erasers at the price I have always
paid for them."
"Oh." replied young Morgan, “1
went around town until I could find
a place to buy them wholesale.”
For two years after graduating from
the Boston Hi^h school Mr. Morgan
was a student at Goettingen, Germany.
Of J. P. Morgan, financier, and of
his achievements all the world knows.
Few men have been as widely feared,
yet more generally trusted. Those
men who met him only In a business
way saw a man rough, emphatic and
repellent, inaccessible as the emperor
of Russia when he chose to be,
known as the worst man in the world
to interview ami as a man who be-
lieved absolutely In himself and ap-
parently never questioned the cor-
rectness of his methods.
His friends, however, knew him as
a simple, unaffected companion, an
interesting conversationalist with
keen wit and genial humor. Once a
woman asked him why he kept on
accumulating money when he already
had more than he needed.
"I do not love money,” Mr. Morgan
is said to have replied. "But I do
enjoy the excitement, the fun of mak
ing it.”
Business was not all to the life of
J. Pierpont Morgan. His office hours
were short and at the close of his best
day he left his office and his business
behind him. AVoe to the person who
then approached him on business bent.
SHE THE ORPHANS
LIFE SAVERS FROM CHICAGO RES-
CUE INMATES OF FORT
WAYNE ASYLUM.
CARLAND RELATES INCIDENTS
Children at First Afraid to Truat
Themselves In Boats—Crews Strug-
gle Desperately Across Mile of Rag
ing Flood.
lust what you nwd. They tone up the weak
• tomach end build up th** (lagging energies.
Besides the four trained nurses in
attendance, Miss Helen Hamilton was
of great assistance to the three physi-
cians, Prof. Guiseppi Bastianelll, Dr.
M. Allen Starr and Dr. George A.
Dixon. During the morning, George
Post Wheeler, secretary of the Ameri-
can embassey, called to make inquiries
on behalf of the American ambassa-
dor, Thomas J. O’Brien, and was told
that Mr. Morgan had collapsed and
that his condition had been rendered
worse by increasing deafness.
From his arrival In Rome, Mr, and
Mrs.' Herbert L. Satterlee had feared
a mistake had been made in bringing
Mr. Morgan to Rome instead of tak-
, Ing him direct to London, where he
could have been in his own house in-
stead of a noisy hotel and they
thought, too. that the climate of Rome
was too mild and enervating for him
In his condition of ill health
The financier's secretary found It
impossible to replv to all the Inquiries He qared little for society but was
lmposaiDic C ___.—„„„,i I fona 0f a good dinner in congenial
and Mr. and Mrs. Satterlee expressed
the desire to jLform the inquirers
how touched they were at the mam
SEEDS
company, of rare wines and big black
cigars.
At 21 he embarked upon his career as
. . u„i a banker.
Burial At Cedar Hill. __
New York.—John Pierpont Morgan's ok|ahorTta Youths Go To West Point
Washington, D. C.—Representatives
* v» i vxi ix. -.....
resting place probably will be in
Darning on Your Sewing Machine the mausoleum in Cedar Hill cemetery, j pjaude Weaver and Joe B. Thompson
BtocklngH,HMD.,clothing.urnterwexr. Attach. I Hartford, Conn., which he had erected , ()k,ahoma have announced theit
incut 86 cent, with full direction.. AdUre.« j me years ago In memory or ms tain- | annointmenta to West Point and An
Hanry Frledenhelt,316CulbertsonBldK.OklahomaCtty.OkU and moth(.r, when the body of Mr. o]iB
about his waist and he was draggeA ^ MAGNETOS Morgan reaches here from Rome, it is |{epresentatlve Weaver has chosen
a distance of 150 yards, when hi. ! AUTOJXHLS ANDJIAGNIt lTJb Wlta^ ^ funerai g,-prices will be , „ Menrhsm of Clinton at
head struck a stump, inflicting an in ]
Jury from which ha died later.
Keneflck Is enjoying a boom lust
at present. Wai. Kenefec*. president
of the M. O. & G. Ry. is erecting
•even brick business blocks, and two
other brick business rooms have Just
been finished. The Commercial Club
was recently organized and Is doing a
great deal of good for the town. The
new water works system has Just been
completed and found to have a capac-
ity more than sufficient for the town.
And last but not least. Hill A Johnson
are turning out a cracking good paper,
the Dispatch.
It la estimated the storms of the
past few days In eastern and north-
eastern Oklahoma have caused dam-
ages In the oil fields to the extent
of $40,000 or more.
Two Intoxicated men were led from
ths First Methodist church %» Durant
to which place they had wandered
during the services. The minister
refuses to prosecute the men, say-
ing that he was doing all in his power
to get men to come to church, hut
they are too few at best. He Invited
them to return when they became
•ober.
STORAGE BATTERIES
Lawrence B. Meacham of Clinton at
held in the cathedral of St. John the J jdg prinejpa] to West Point, with Rob
Divine, toward the construction of I pr( Wolfe Arnold, of McAlesler. nni!
BARBER COLLEGE utor
which Mr. Morgan was a large contrlb- i john flifton Townsend of Oklahoma
I KKBW .'ZS&JIX
Nt 1IW4K7.K SYSTEM OF llAKHKIl C'OL-
I.KGKN. 106 < nit Klreet, Oklahoma i Uy,
Ok In., or IlH K. lHiuRtm*. WW-tiita, KaiiMU
TENTS, AWNINGS,
CANVAS COVERS
OKLAHOMA CITY TENT A AWNING CO.
311 WEST riRST STREET
WRITE FOR PRICES NOW
City as the alternates. He has selected
When the news of Morgan’s death j TpomaB Joseph Lee, Jr., of Rocky and
in Rome reached New York expre I Walter Llgerot of Tonkawa for ap
salons of regret were heard on every j po|ntment to the naval academy.
side In the stock exchange and the j Representative Joe Thompson has
consolidated exchange, expressions of j naraed Walter D. Henderson of llo
respect to his memory were passed |,arl an,i James Herbert Phillips, ot
and flags everywhere were placed at Rauis Valley for his principals to An
half mast. ' napolis. John W. Spaulding will bt
The office of J. P. Morgan and com- alternate. Charles S. Price of Shaw
■ nee Is his selection for West Point, the
alternates being Joe Loftln of Idahei
and David Howard Koontz of Lindsay
Chicago.—Half-frozen and without
food, fifty-eight children and their at-
tendants were rescued from the Fort
Wayne Orphan Asylum by Captain
Charles Carland and his crew from
the Chicago'life saving station. Cap-
tain Garland and bIx life savers re-
turned to Chicago from Fort Wayne
with their surf boat, but Immediately
departed for Terre Haute to continue
their rescue work.
Captain Carland's story was graphic.
He told how be and his men arrived
at the asylum just after four children
had met death when an attempt was
made to rescue them. Five tripe to
the asylum were made by Captain
Carland and each time a boatload was
taken safely across half a mile of
swiftly flowing water. Besides the
children four matrons and six men
were rescued from the building.
Carland Telia Story.
“We arrived at Fort Wayne when
the water was highest,” said Captain
Carland. "No sooner had we arrived j
when a report reached us that the (
children were marooned in the Orphan
Asylum. One attempt had been made
to rescue them which ended disas-
trously for four of the children and
two brave men. The small rowboat
In which the would-be rescuers had
reached the building overturned after
four of the children had been taken
from a Becond story window. All were
drowned.
"Conditions in the asylum were aw-
ful when six men and myself finally
reached the building. In one small
room, huddled together half frozen
and hungry, were the little girls and
boys with their attendants.
"Many w^re crying, a few were
asleep from exhaustion. One of the
women had fainted.
Afraid to Trust Boats.
"At first they refused to trust their
lives to our boats. They had witnessed
the fate of the first boat and were
afraid. We finally carried twelve of
the little ones out of the second-story
window and then our fight back start-
ed. It needed the combined strength
of every man on the boat to
fight the current and prevent the
boat from overturning. Then we
were hampered by the cries of the
children and at times the one matron
we took with us would become panic
stricken. After getting to shore the
children were placed in the care of
merchants of the town, and we went
back for another load.
"We received a different reception on
our second arrival at the asylum. A
shout of joy went up when they heard
that the first load had been landed
safely. A little confusion resulted
from the natural anxiety df the tots to
get into the boat. No one was hurt,
however, and after five trips.we suc-
ceeded In removing all the children
and their attendants to safety.
“The merchants thanked us for
what we had done. One of the ma-
trons told us the children had not had
a full meal for 48 hours. They had run
out of coal and were breaking up the
furniture in the place for fire wood.
The fire they kindled In the middle of
the room, braving the danger of the
entire building burning up."
Brings 200 Peru Children.
Charles H. Thacher and his wife,
who live at 3260 Groveland avenue,
arrived here from Peru, lnd., with 200
Peru children, many of them now
orphans.
A man in Peru, having a boat, de-
manded $50 from Thacher to take the
two away. There was another wom-
an in the marooned house, aud the
boatman refused to take her.
"A shot was fired and the man fell
out of the boat, dead," said Mr. Thach-
er. Mr. Thacher escaped with his wife
and the other woman In the boat. A
second man, Dr. Hupp, offered a boat-
man $100 to take his wife to a hospital,
there being imminent a visit from the
stork. The man refused and the doc-
tor knocked him out of the boat with
a brick. A Winona college Btudent
rowed the doctor's wife to the hos-
pital, where a baby was horn, mother
and child being saved.
Trio in Stolen Boat Drowned.
Three unknown men were drowned
at Peru when a leaky boat, which they
had stolen, sank. The boat was own-
ed by Oliver Wilson, a farmer who
liveB near the water line of the Inter-
urban tracks. Wilson discovered the
OH! MY BACK!
A stubborn hackacho that hangs
on, week after week, is cause to
suspect kidney trouble, for when
the kidneys are inflamed and swol-
len, bending the back brings a
sharp twinge that almost takes the
breath away.
It’s hard to work and just as
hard to rest or sleep.
Doan's Kidney Pills revive slug-
gish kidneys—relieve congested,
aching kidneys. The proof is an
amazing collection of backache
testimonials.
AN IDAHO
CASE
L. C. Warner 1206 No.
Garfield Ave, Pooa-
tello.lduho- f»ay«:'*l!or
years 1 suffered froin
kidney trouble and
iften confined *
was orten conflnea i
bed. More than on<
1 passed kidney stoni
and the pain was aw
fill Morphine waa th*
only thing that gave
uie relief until I used
1 Xian's Kidney Pills.
This remedy dissolved
the stones and from
then on I gradually
Improved until entire-
ly cured. "Evtry Plctur* Till* a Story”
Get Doan's at Any Store, 50c a Box
DOAN’S k^lnl!y
FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. Buffalo. N.w York
Get a Canadian Home
In Western Canada’s
Free Homestead Area
THE
PROVINCE
OF
Manitoba
has several New Home-
steading Districts that
afford rare opportunity
to secure 160 acres of ex-
cellent agricultural
land FBEE.
For Grain Growing
and Cattle Raising
this province has no superior and
In profitable agriculture shows an
unbroken period of over a quarter
of a Century.
Perfect cl I mate: good market#;
railways convenient: soil the very
best, and social conditions most
desirable.
V acant lands adjacent to Free
Homesteads may be purchased
and also In the older districts
lands can be bought at reason-
able prices.
For further particulars write to
G. A. COOK.
125 XI. 91h STREET, KANSAS CITY. iSO.
Canadian Government Agents, or
address Superintendent of
Immigration, Ottawa, Cudi.
I
ARCTIC SKEPTICISM.
(irDTnr-'*
“Did you see the janitor?”
“Yes. I told him it was as cold lm
our flat as at the north pole."
“What did he say?”
“He merely looked supercilious and
asked for my proofs.”
Its Place.
"Where shall we put this sleepy
hollow chair?"
“On the nap of the carpet."
A bachelor is a bachelor because he
is either too foolish or too wise to
marry.
A boy isn't necessarily good for
nothing because his pareuts refuse
to pay him for being good.
Cheap. MONEY. Quick
Before you sign up anybody’s loan
papen. save money by getting all (he
mi of malum pom Me. Tell ut How much
•oerv r*rn «nal aad your land Munban.u •Hown
on ImI tai raoaipt, awi wr will giva you aotna
farts at** rate*. Mom oi loan* aoJ name ot
aaBMig A*mi
If yon et part to tala out a farm loan,
better write ua—IX) IT MOW
Okhhorm Em flortgage Co.,
OMomd Qly, U. S a.
n Hi n if ii n
panv closed immediately on receipt of
the news and little news was vouch-
safed by members of the company.
The Immediate effect on \5>ll street
of Mr. Morgan's death was eompar-
nTIvelv sltghl. On the stock exchange | Charging that the senate sitting at
“,l J ■ . ____. .. X- ImnAnnhinanl hail UflttK or
Ballard Decides to Quit
the news from Rome had largely spent
Its force within fifteen minutes' afler
the opening of the market. Mr. Mor-
gan's Illness had prepared the finan-
cial district for the end and every pre-
caution had been taken to guard
against a serious break In prices. At
the opening the prominent stocks de-
clined a point or so but they received
prompt support und rallied quickly.
Therefore the market was dull.
a court of Impeachment had gone ot
record to sit In judgment on his cas«
whether it had or had not heard the
evidence for the defense, State Insur
mice Commissioner Perry A. Ballard
tendered Ills resignation to Governor
Oruce, to take effect at once. Imme-
diately upon the receipt of the reslg
nation it was accepted by the gover
nor who sent it to the senate. The
reading of the resignation was greet
ad with loud applause.
FLY TO PIECES.
The Effect of Coffee on Highly Organ-
ized People.
“I have been a coffee user for
years, and about tvta years ago got
Into a very serious condition of dys-
pepsia and indigestion. It seemed to
me I would fly to pieces. 1 was so
nervoUB that at the least noise I was
distressed, and many times could not
straighten myself up because of the
pain.”
Tea is just as injurious, because it
»ntalns caffeine, the same drug found
In coffee.
"My physician told me I must not
eat any heavy or; strong food, and or-
dered a diet, giving me some medi-
cine. I followed directions carefully,
but kept on using coffee and did not
get any better.
"Last winter my husband, who was
___________ away on business, had Postum Berved
theft when the three men were 100 j to him in the family where he board-
yards from shore. When they had
gone a half mile, they appeared in
distress. The WilBon family watched
the men struggle in the water and
disappear. No effort has been made
to recover the bodies.
At Logansport heftiic work was
done by the crew sent from Lake
Bluff and by the cadets from Culver
Military academy In saving lives.
In all more than 5,000 persons were
rescued from marooned homes and
taken to safety In rowboats. Many
lost everything they possessed.
Horses, cattle and other animals were
killed by the hundreds.
Mounted Squad on Zebras.
The German police of Africa are
mounted on the backs of zebra, and
these animals have been found to be
very successful as mounts.
ed. He liked it so well that when he
came home he brought Borne with him.
We began using it and I found it
most excellent.
"While 1 drank it my stomach never
bothered me in the least, and I got
over my nervous troubles. When the
Postum was gone we returned to cof-
fee, then my Btomach began to hurt
me as before, and the nervous con-
ditions came on again.
"That showed me exactly what was
the cause of the whole trouble, so I
quit drinking coffee altogether and
kept on using Postum. The old trou-
bles left again and have never re-
turned."
"There's a reason,” and It Is explain-
ed In the little book, “The Road to
Wellville, In pkgs.
Kvfr rfnd the above letterY A new
one npiieiira from time to time. They
•re ueiiulne, true, anti full of huiuuD
Interest,
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The Wellston News (Wellston, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 14, Ed. 1 Friday, April 4, 1913, newspaper, April 4, 1913; Wellston, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc407208/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.