The Canadian Valley News. (Jones City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 34, Ed. 2 Friday, January 7, 1910 Page: 2 of 4
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Ff?e Canadian Valley News
JONHS,
OKLAHOMA
NEW STATE NOTES.
•fsERIAL^
STORY C\J
F. 0. Sickles has been recommended
for re-appointment na register of the
K1 Heno district land office.
A. W. Jordan, recently of the Morn-
ing Courier at Lockhart, Texas has
purchased the Love County News at
-Marietta and will take charge this
week.
The Slate board of affuirs has re-
ceived the plans for the first two build-
ings for the eastern insane asylum ut
Vinlta, as prepared by Charles W. Daw
son, of Muskogee, architect.
The officers of Canadian county are
making violent effort to suppress the
sale of intoxicating Unitors In 1CI Re-
no and are waging relentless war
against the festive bootlegger.
Mangnm and vicinity have beeu
having the longest cold spell of weath-
er known in years. Wheat is In fine
condition, and the prospects for a
good crop are the best in yiara.
With every city or town of impor-
tance in the state represented the at-
tendance running into thousands the
Oklahoma educational association con-
vened In Oklahoma City last week.
One Way
or Love
It was rumored last week that a
deal Is under way for the sale of the
Altus, Roswell and Hi Faso railway,
now under construction to the Mis-
souri Kansas and Texns.
The Presbyterian congregation and
Sunday school of Conlgate have adopt-
ed resolutions nsking Governor Has-
kell to cause an investigation of flag-
rant bootlegging In that city.
By
JBKNETTK
LKB
Pictures by
A. WEIL
t'opjrriffht. I'«A t\v J A. I.lppiucot* Co.
AH righto rw»*rv*U.
SYNOPSIS.
Richard Dcrrlng. rcturnlns from a win-
ter In the wimhIh to his mother'
his unde.
mother's farm
home, is overtaken by his unde, accom-
panied by bln ei-eentric wife, coming to
pay a visit at the farm. Aunt Jerusha’s
questions ubout lCmlly Hutton, supposed
to be Richard's sweetheart, bring out the
fart that she Is to marry a merchant,
Hdwards. Derrlng’a disappointment stim-
ulates his ambition and under the advice
of Seth Kinney, a hermit of the woods,
he resolves to fit himself for college. Kin-
ney promises to teach him Greek. Dur-
ing tells Ills mother Ills resolve,
ind In Ills grandfather's old lab-
oratory begins the study of Greek.
Beth Kinney hears Richard's Greek
recitation In the woods while he and Tom
Bishop ply the cross-cut saw. Per-*
ring learns that he can look Indifferently
upon the loss of Emily. He visits Aunt
Jerusha, who volunteers to help him
a, who volunteers to help him
through college. The Greek learned In the
tods carries Richard triumphantly
WOi
thr
mgh entrance examinations, wins np-
raf from the professor and Insures ids
proval from the professor and insures ill
popularity among Ids fellows. Four year
In college obliterates the memory of Em
IlF. r
Chlcui
In college obliterates the memory of Em-
ily. Derrlng: begins journalistic work in
L
with Helen.
ago. lie m<
Herring is
his puper.
comradeship
Jotirm
lelen
g Is promoted to art critic on
He makes rapid progress In
He meets Helen Gordon, an ar-
tist. Herring Is promoted to art critic
CHAPTER XI.
Two large dynamos are being Ia-
si ailed at the Washita dam at Chink
r.slia and when these are In place the
power developed by the river will be
tuoereased from 750 horse power to
1750.
Dr. Thompson a purcticlng physician
of Yukon in Canadian county, was
arrested last wees charged with boot-
legging ou three counts. His bond
was fixed at 1,000 which he immediate-
ly furnished.
One day short of a month on the
road, George Palmer, the Oklahoma
City pedestrian, who Is walking to San
Francisco, New York and return, has
arrived in El Paso, Texas. Palmer
Is hale and hearty.
Murk McLaughlin, a laborer in the
oil field south of Snpulpn, was fatally
burned last week. With his clothes
saturated with oil lie stood too near
the engine, the fire In which ignited
his coat.
District Judge Shea of Bartlesville
has dismissed indictments returned by
a recent special grand juty against
sixty-three defendants and the aceiisa
lions against H. A. Alexander, deposed
county judge of Okmulgee County.
G. D. Moss teaching at Cheyenne, was
one of the veterans in attendance at
the Teachers Association in Oklahoma
City. He has been teaching for more
than thirty six years. For over ten
years he was couniy superintendent
of Kingfisher county.
Ben Hyden and Fred Babbert of
Stratford fought a duel with kni-
ves as a result of which Hyden is
dangerously and perhaps fatally
wounded ani Gabbart lias numerous
wounds about his body. Gabbart shot
at Hyden, the bullet entering the neck
Gabbart is a son of a county commis-
sioner.
Trouble begins early In January in
Chandler. Marietta and Sulphur.
Grand Juries have been called in
those cities.
The paving plant of (he Parker
Washington company of Muskogee to
which was let municipal paving con-
tracts was destroyed by fire last week
together with a number of oil tank
care nnd box cars that were standing
on the tnreks adjacent.
The information leaked out at Law-
ton that the man who did the work
in placing the bomb In the office of
County Attorney J. A. Fain several
weeks ago, with intent to nssiaaluate
Fain, is believed to be in custody In
the Comanche County jail.
Attorneys for the /;lty of El Reno
In the suit brought against the city
by the Cleveland-Trlndad Pavtng com-
pany, which was appealed to the sup-
reme court of the state, received noti-
fication that the case has been advan-
ced on the calendar of the court and
was set for hearing Jan. 20.
Chief of the closing acts of the
str.te socialist convention which con-
vened in Oklahoma City last week
was the adoption of what in known ns
a Farmer's Program, articles advocat-
ing means of betterment for the ten-
ant landholders about the state,
A rlplo of excitement was caused
in Muskogee when the Times Demo-
crat, the leading democratic paper
of eastern Oklahoma, announced for
Justice Jesse Dunn, of the supreme
cctirt. for governor.
He sought her the next day in the
studio and found her occupied with a
pupil. He had forgotten It was her
day for pupils. She would be busy
until four o'clock.
"I will come around and walk home
with you—If I may."
"Very well.” she assented.
They stood in the doorway, just out
of Bight of the pupil. He was watch-
ing her face anxiously. Ho fancied
that she looked pale and worn, as if
she had not slept.
"You are tired?" he questioned in a
low tone.
She admitted that she was—"a lit-
tle.”
"Perhaps 1 would better not come
for you to-night."
“No. Come. It will rest me to
have some one to talk to.”
“But if I come, I shall speak," he in-
sisted.
She did not raise her eyes to his ns
he had half hoped. She hesitated for
a moment, ami then only said, as she
turned towards the studio, "I will
wait for you.”
He left the building, a tumult of joy
and doubt in his heart. She had given
him permission to speak, but site
seemed to have refused his demand
before it was made. He dared not
hope. He hoped In spite of fear.
As the day wore on the fear sub-
sided and the joy of love took pos-
session of him. That, at least, she
could not take away, no matter what
she might refuse.
He found her aione, at work in the
gray afternoon light.
“I am Improving the last minutes,"
she said, looking up as he entered and
speaking lightly, as if eager to put
their meeting ou a commonplace foot-
ing.
He did not answer, but seated him-
self on the long couch opposite her.
He watched her as she sketched in
the outline of a still-life study. She
was sitting as usual, with the light
falling full upon her. Yes, he had been
right. Her face was pale.
“What is it?" he asked abruptly, at
last, in a low tone.
"I am afraid of it," she answered
quietly.
“Why?”
"Because things will never be the
same again.”
"I hope not," he responded quickly.
“I want them to be. I don't want
them to change," she replied ns
quickly.
“Then they shall not. I won't say
anything more."
A silence fell on the studio. The
shadows in the corners grew darker
and lengthened softly toward the cen-
ter of the room. The light suited the
room, Herring thought, as he sat wait-
ing for her to speak. The harmonious
tones and subdued colors seemed to
gather and center in the quiet figure
under the skylight. It was always so.
She would always gather the light and
life In everything and transmute It to
something softened and human.
She was trying the colors on the
edge of her block, making ready to
wash in the sketch. She spoke slow-
ly, without looking up. "But you know
that I love you?”
Derrlng started suddenly. "No, I
didn't know—you hadn't told me—”
Their eyes met, and they broke into
a laugh.
“You will marry me?" he said
bluntly.
"No."
"Why not?"
She had become absorbed in tlie
edge of her sketch and was draw-
ing futile, ineffective lines.
“Why not?" he repeated.
“It's so selfish"—after a pause.
"Selfish ?"—blankly.
“Yes, two people full in love and
they forget everything else and mar-
ry. They seem to think that love jus-
tifies everything."
"It does."
'Hut there are other claims.”
He was looking at her intently.
"Grace must be sent to school nnd
the hoys are hardly able to take care
of themselves; and there is mother.
They alt depend on me. Don't you
see that it would be selfish?" She was
leaning forward and looking at him,
Impersonally, with the old air of com-
radeship.
"But I would help."
"1 know. But you have no right to
marry yet. There would be children,
and the children of Bohemia are not
always so happy as their parents. It
is not fair that two people should be
happy at the expense of so much.
Probably marriage was meant to be
right; but it is all wrong as things
are now."
Spoken with quiet conviction, bap-
idly. Whatever she decided must be
right. But one phrase stirred his
pulses.
. “That two people should be happy,"
he repeated. "You think—"
"1 think that most marriages are
mistnkes," she replied, taking up her
brush ugaln and sketching rapidly.
"People are madly in love. They mar-
ry. And then apparently the love
dies. 1 should die myself," she said
quickly. ”1 could lot bear that."
He had risen and was standing, one
hand raised and resting on the easel,
looking down at her.
She lifted her face to his, smiling at
him a little wistfully. “1 had not
hoped that you would understand. I
thought there would be an explana-
tion—and parting."
“Not that—never!"
"But there are no promises," she
said quickly. "No,” holding up her
hand as he would have interrupted
her, "I am older than you, you know.
You may outgrow me. You must not
be bound even by a promise. If we
are made for each other, we shall find
it out, as time goes on, without them;
and if we are not, we shall only drift
farther apart and there will be no
pain for what never really existed.
But if we were bound by marriage—"
She broke off, looking straight before
her.
"You have loved before." He was
looking down at her. “You would not
reason bo clearly—”
“1 thought once—that 1 loved.” Her
eyes were on her work.
The question sprang to his lips,
“And he is dead?"
“Thank God—yes."
He stared at her blankly.
"I should not have found out in
time. We should have been miser-
able. 1 thought I loved him. I mourn-
ed a long time, llut lately—1 have
known—" Her head bent lower over
her work.
His face deepened. He started to-
wards her. “Ah, you have learned—”
“1 have learned that I dare not trust
myself," sbe said. She began to gath-
er up ner materials and pnt them
away.
Presently she stood beside him. She
had put on the long gray cloak. "1
am going now,” she said.
He looked about for his hat and
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not have guessed that they were more
than good comrades. Only, now and
then, a word, half-breathed, as he sat
watching her move about tbe studio,
would speak volumes and bridge over
hours of commouplace. Then again
there would be days when they would
talk of their love as of any accepted
fact of common interest.
Perhaps nowhere but In the art
world could such a friendship have ex-
isted without danger of misunder-
standing. At the boarding house they
had Instinctively remained mere table
acquaintances. But among the artists
they came and went with Platonic
freedom. No one criticised. No one
watched with malicious eyes. Here,
as wherever artists meet, life was too
busy for petty spying. Or is it, after
all, not Indifference or preoccupation,
but the inherent purity of an appa.-
ently careless life, that makes artists
slow to think evil of each other? In
any case, these two were safe among
them from fear of misunderstanding;
and Derrlng was in the studio when
ever his work, or leisure, gave him op-
portunity.
“1 always knew you must be some-
where,” lie said one day. He had
finished writing and sat leaning back,
his hands clasped behind his head. It
had been half an hour since he fin
isbed work and no word had broken
the silence till he spoke.
“I never dared believe I should find
you, though.” he continued.
She was turning her head to one
side and leaning back, with half-closed
eyes, to get a view of the last wash.
“Yes, you were a good while finding
it out.” She gave critical touches
here and there with the extended
brush.
He started suddenly forward to an
upright position. “What do you
meon? Did you know—or care?”
That is another strange thing.”
she Haid, smiling a little to him, "the
woman always knows first. But she
must wait patiently until the man’s
lumbering intelligence finds it out."
"But I never dreamed,” he persisted,
coming back to the concrete case.
"You seemed so indifferent—”
‘Of course. It wouldn't have been
modest not to. And, besides, I did
not want you to find out. I didn't
suppose any man could be generous
enough to understand how a woman
might feel.”
"It isn't that we don't understand.
Any one can see how unfair marriage
is to a woman—that it compels her to
give up everything and offers her
nothing. We see it plainly enough.
But whr.t can we do? We love yon,
and most of us see no way out of it
but marriage."
"Now It is you who are hard," she
returned. “The fault cannot all lie
on one side. Marriage, in itself, is no
harder for a woman to-day, I suppose,
than it has always been. The differ-
ence is that so many other ways of
happiness are open to her; and when
she finds her marriage a failure, she
does not t v to make the best of it,
without protest, as the only thing
open to her. She is more restive un-
der her own mistake than when fate
left her no choice. So everything
gets into a nice tangle and they don't
live happy forever afterwards,” she
finished laughingly.
(TO BE CONTESTED.)
BITE FIGHT IS BEGUN
railroads and state clash
BEFORE JUDGE HOOK
ATTORNEY GENERAL WEST IS IN CHARGE
Clause of State Constitution Creating
Corporation Commission is
Attacked—Outcome is of
Vitai Interest
“But If We Were Bound by Marriage"
—She Broke Off, Looking Straight
Before Her
found it still in his hand. He heid it
out with a whimsical gesture. "I have
been eminently proper,” he said.
With a iaugli of the old comrade-
ship she held out her liund and he
covered it with his own.
"It is a compact?” he said.
"That there are no promises,'' she
replied.
CHAPTER XII,
But if there were no promises, there
was much happiness in the months
that followed. After the talk in the
studio their life assumed a new phase
—something as far removed from the
unrest of courtship on the one hand,
as from the eoiumonplaceness of mar-
ried life on the other.
Herring had nceApied her decision
as final. There was to be no marriage
—not even n promise of marriage at
sonic distant day. His love for her
must begin and end in itself. One less
capable of love, or one who had
longed less for love, might have fret-
ted at the anomalous position in which
he found himself—neither aspirant
nor accepted lover. Hut to Derrlng it
seemed that never since man was
created hud a love so unique been
upon tbe earth.
He was at the studio daily, some-
times several times a day. He fell
into the habit of going there to write
up the articles for which he had been
gathering material—an art lecture be-
low stnirs or a first view above. Oft-
en he read these articles to her us she
sat at work. Her criticisms were
irank and unsparing. Sometimes for
days together, a stranger, overbearing
them as they talked or jested, would
"Bread” and "Pigeon" Seed.
School children In the crowded
parts of New York do not speak of
corn and oats and wheat by those
names, but always refer to them as
“seeds." The other day in one of
the big schools the teacher was talk-
ing to her pupils about gardening.
She ended with a request for each
pupil to bring a few seeds the next
day to be planted in the window
boxes. The following morning the
children appeared mostly with either
oats, wheat or corn. While putting
a few grains of each in the earth the
teacher referred to them by their fa-
miliar names. One of tbe girls in
tbe class took courage to “set tlie
teacher right” and said; “Some one
must 'a told you wrong, teasher.
That”—pointing to the wheat—"is
bread seed, an' that yellow stuff ain't
corn; it’s pigeon seed. We always
call them that in the block where we
live."
St. Louis, Mo.—Arguments in the In-
junction suit instituted by three rail-
road companies against the state of
Oklahoma to prevent enforcement of
a two-cent a mile passenger rate,
were begun Monday before Judge Wil-
liam C. Hook, sitting as a district
judge for the Western district of Ok-
lahoma.
Clurles West, attoncy general of
Oklahoma, assisted by P. N. Judson,
of St. Louis, presented a demurrer
declaring the railroads bringing the
suit have not applied for an exemption
from l he law's provisions and are not
entitled to relief.
The morning and greater part of
the afternoon were taken up with
the arguments on the demurrer.
Judge Hook took the demurrer under
advisement and announced he would
hear the arguments relative io a tem-
porary injunction and hand down the
two decisions together.
In arguing in favor of the demurrer
Judson and West contended that the
plaintiff's bill on its face, did not show
that they I,-id made proper application
to the corporation commission for ex-
emption from the two-cent rate, as
provided In the Oklahoma constitu-
tion and had no right to appeal to
the federal court until they had done
so. The railroads also had no right
to bunch the freight rates, as they
were distinct and separate and should
be attacked separate, they said.
Frank Hagerman, of Kansas City,
special counsel for the railroads, con-
tended that was neither the corpora-
tion commission or the Oklahoma
state supreme court would give the
railroads a supersedeas they were en-
titled to an appeal to a federal court.
He also held that the freight rates
were not confiscatory nnd that under
the constitution of the United States
the corporation commission has not
the right to tie up the railroads in
the state courts and that they had a
right, to appeal to the federal court.
Arguments on the injunction suit
were begun by Attorney Hagerman.
The injunction suit, attacks a provision
of the constitution of Oklahoma by
which the state corporation commis-
sion is created and asks that the sec-
tion he declared Invalid.
All railroads in Oklahoma are vi-
tally interested in the outcome of the
suit hut the fight is being made by
the Missouri, Kansas A- Texas, the
Gulf. Colorado & Santa Fe, and the
Midland Valley railroads. Gardner
Lathrop. of Chicago, representing the
Santa Fe system, will participate in
the argument. Clifford L. Jaekson, of
Muskoeee. Okla., also will assist ill
the arguments for the railroads.
George Henshaw, assistant attorney-
general of Oklahoma, is in attendance.
A Remarkable Blind Student
Guthrie, Okla.—As an example of
the work which can be done by the
blind, President George W. Bruce of
the state school for the blind at Fort
Gib3on is exhibiting at the state house
a cord hammock of beautiful design
woven by a blind student in the
school, George Ennings of Newkirk
19 years old. The hammock is in
three colors nnd of remarkable de-
sign and workmanship. Young En-
nings can make one or these ham-
mocks in a day and a half.
Cutting Out Annoyances.
It is not selfish to cut out annoy-
ance. Generally It means the highest
good of those who must live thus
The woman who can be fretted and
not vent it on some one else, either
actively or unknowingly, is so rare
that for the peace of her friends she
should cease to be annoyed if within
her power.
Pride Has No Market Value.
Pride is not a marketable commod-
ity; it won’t get you a job.
More Hygienic Than Ten*.
The common notion that a tout is
specially hygienic is incorrect. A
tent is far less hygienic than a wood-
en schak, because the air Is more con-
fined and there are no windows to
open. The best shelter for Invalids
camping in a dry region, like the Ari-
zona desert, is made of four posts
supporting wire netting, into which
branches of some tree have been wo-
ven, leaving just enough light to read
by.
"Halcyon Days.”
The expression "halcyon days" has
been handed down to us from the an-
cient Sicilians. They firmly believed
in an old legend that during the seven
days preceding and the seven follow-
ing the winter solstice (December 21)
the halcyon, or kingfisher, brooded
over her young in a nest afloat on
the surface of the water, and that dur
ing these 14 days the seas would be
calm and safe for the mariner. Hence
tlie name “Halcyon Days," when, ac-
coring to Milton,. "Birds of color sat
brooding on the charmed wave."
Muskogee Makes Record
Muskogee, Okla.—According to the
annual report of the department of
justice, the United States marshal’s
nlllce at Muskogee has done more
business than any similar office in
the country. Its volume of business
was twice that of Its nearest compet-
■ r the District of Columbia.
A Home for Spirits.
Andrew Hale, a recluse who re-
cently committed suicide at Lebanon,
Ore., had a house to which he had
about twenty additions. Each of its
small rooms was for the abode of the
spirit of a departed friend. The
lienee was filled with curious things,
gathered together to amuse the spir-
its. A lot of shoe strings, several
clocks, musical instruments and vari-
ous articles were there. The collec-
tion must have cost Hale more than
*2,500.
At Five O'clock Tea.
"And did you really go to Rome?"
asked a guest.
"I really don't know, my dear," re-
plied the hostess, Just returned from
her first trip abroad. "You see, my
husband always bought the tickets.”—
London Opinion.
The average skinflints mantle ot
charity is considerably moth eaten
from banging in a closet so long.
Corporation Commission is
Athens, Ga.—The third annual ses-
sion of the cotton school opened Mon-
day at the State College of Agricul-
ture. and will continue for ten days.
In addition to the work on cotton
breeding and culture, the course of
this year provides for lectures and in-
struction in regard to soils, fertilizers
I and feed stuffs. Particular attention
Is to he given to the cultivation and
| selection of seed cotton and methods
for the eradication of the boll wee-
■ vil, nnthranose and the cotton wilt.
Secret of Literature.
Literature is the expression of ec-
stasy; it is the discovery that nothing
is common or unclean; It 13 the reve-
lation of the latent magic and wonder
which underlie all thlugB; which in-
deed, cause things to be! To the un-
initiated and unenlightened eye life
seems a pattern of dull and opaque
surfaces; art beholds all things as
shining, translucent, marvelous.—Ar-
thur Machen, in London T. P.'s
Weekly.
A Hero
He sang of joy; whate’er he knew ot
sadness
He kept for his own heart's pecu-
liar share;
So well he sang, the world imagined
gladness
To be sole tenant there.
For dreams were his, and iu the
dawn’s fair shining,
His spirit soared beyond the mount-
ing lark;
But from his Ups no accent of repin-
ing
Fell when the days grew dark.
And though contending long dread
Fate to master,
He failed at last her enmity to
cheat;
He turned with such a smile to face
disaster
That he sublimed defeat.
—Florence Earle Coates, in Ceirtury
Magazine.
Daily Thought.
There’s nothing like settling with
ourselves as there’s a deal we must
do without in this life.—George Eliot
OKLAHOMA CITY
HAS OPEN TOR BUSINESS THE
LEE-HUCKINS HOTEL
FIRE PROOF I
TeN STOmCS OF solid comfort
Ask to Be Shown TbroDzk When Next in the City
EUROPEAN PLAN: Room* $1.00 and lip per Day
Room With Bath $1.50 and Up
REGULAR MEALS SERVED IN THE DUNGEON
Clnb Breakfasts 25c to 75c
Merchants' Lunch 50c. Table d* Hole Dinner 75c
Making il Possible to Stop. 3 Meals anti Room for
$2.50 per Day
OPENS JANUARY 1st. 1910
PLANT
BRAND
For sale by first-class dealers every-
where in sealed dated packets only.
TEXAS SEED & FLORAL CO., DALLAS, TEX.
Send for Beautiful Illustrated Catalog.
Mention this paper when writing
1872
SEEDS
Yecuits to U. S Army
TuDa Okla.—During the month of
December. 1909, the recruiting station
for the United States army located In
this city, sent a total of :> -ecruits
from Tulsa alone, besides • number
from nearby towns.
0. K. SEEDS
Sues Railroad For Husband's Death
Tulsa. Okla.—Suit to recover *15.000
damages from the Frisco railroad
company was filed in the district
court Monday by Mrs. Nellie W.
Koch, whose husband was cut to
pieces at the Main street crossing of
the F'riseo on December 18, 1909.
Nice light bread and flaky biscuits
can be made from
CHOCTAW FLOUR
Insist on this brand and you
are sure to have the best
VQT.)K (iROCKU NKI.I.S IT
BILLIARD TABLES
POOL TABLES
LOWEST PRICES. EASY PAYMENTS.
You cannot afiord to experiment with
untried goods sold by commission
agents. Catalogues free.
The Brunswick-Balke-Collcnder Company
14 W. Main Street. Beat. B. Oklahoma City. Okla.
/
y
SEED S
BEST FOR THE SOUTH
1910
New 1910 Catalogue of
HONOR BRAND SEEDS
Now Ready. Write Today
Robinson Seed & Plant Company
221 Elm St. Dstlis, Texas
FOR BEST RESULTS USE
are the
grow
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM
BARTELDES SEED CO.
Oklahoma Seed Houae OKLAHOMA CITY
MACHINERY
Write. caH or phono
Southwestern Manufacturing Co.
__OKLAHOMA CITY
BJ2SISb DEERE IMPLEMENTS
and VELIE VEHICLES your dealer
CR JOHN DEERE PLOW CO.. OKLAHOMA CITY
/
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Keyes, Chester A. The Canadian Valley News. (Jones City, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 34, Ed. 2 Friday, January 7, 1910, newspaper, January 7, 1910; Jones, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc859860/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.