Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1913 Page: 3 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Cimarron Valley Clipper and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
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TIFF-Ill IS'
INTRODUCED
SWEEPING REDUCTION PROVIDED
IN RATES ON NECESSITIES,
OF LIFE •
SIS MESSAGE
UPSETS PRECEDENT OF CENTURY
BY PERSONAL DELIVERY
FROM FLOOR
ROBERT M. GATES
2s*
INCOME TAX PROVIDED CLOSER TOUCH IS DESIREC
T
■
Sliding Scale of Revenue on Large
Salaries and Profits Expected to
More than Make Up Deficit
* on Other Imports
Washington.—The democratic party
in full possession of the legislative and
executive departments of the nation
has turned the wheels of .legislation
toward a revision* of the tariff.
Leaders of the house presented to
the country a tariff bill, voluminous in
detail and radical in its proposed re-
duction of existing duties. As a whole
it was the product of debate and study
iy the democrats from the time they
came into the majority ‘in the house
two years ago, but it represented par-
ticularly the conclusions of the house
ways and means committee after sev-
eral months of work. It carried also
the approval of the president.
Coincident with the introduction of
the measure in the house during the
opening hours of a session called
especially to revise the tariff, the
president was turning over in his mind
- questions of procedure and strategy
on which the success or failure of the
party program may depend.
While the democratic majority in the
house is sufficient to gain tariff revi-
sion by a single bill or by a series of
bills, embracing separate schedules,
the situation, in the senate admitedly
is different, as sectional interests have
produced alignments which make the
question of method all-important.
Seven of the ten democratic apt Et-
hers of the senate finance committee
early in the day, headed by Chairman
Simons, told the president that an at-
tempt to put through a single bill
would be hazardous. With all sched-
ules molded in a single bill, they ar-
ygued, the enemies of separate sched-
ules, feeling a certain response to the
will of their constituent* who might
be adversely affected, would unite and
the whole measure would be defeated.
The president said he did not believe
any of the democratic senators would
seek to shoulder the responsibility for
defeating the program of the party.
Mr. Underwood said the caucus of
house democrats would begin to con-
sider items and that the question of
reporting a single bill from the ways
and means committee or segregating
those portions around which opposition
♦ centers would not have to be decided
immediately.
The president in the meantime will
canvass, through his friends, the situ-
ation in the senate. ® If it should be-
come apparent that a single bill cannot
pass it is likely he will consent to a
segregation of the sugar schedule, pro-
viding for a duty of one cent, with
Special Session of Congress With
Both Branches in Control of
Democrats Starts on Labors
Tariff Bill First.
Washington.—Selling aside prece-
dents of more than a century, Presi-
dent Wlllon apptared in the halls of
congress to deliver his first legislative
message in person.
He is the first president of the
United States to appear officially at
either body of coiigri ss in delibi rative
session since John Adams, in the first
few years of the last century. An at-
tempt was made exactly 100 years ago
in 1813, to revive the custom but
President Madison declined an invi-
taUpn to discusi foreign relation^
the senate. Since then no president
has even suggested joining in the de-
liberations of congress.
The president believes that he can
get into closer touch with the mem-
bers of both houses of congress be-
cause personally expressing his views
to them in addition to his official vis-
its to the house which will become a
matter of "white House policy. The
president will take advantage of these
visits to hold conferences with the
party leareds in congress.
The president had read with con-
siderable surprise reports that he had
actually written parts of the tariff hill
or that he had fort ed agrt < ments with
committees of congress. He declared
he simply had been asked to make
suggestions and had cheerfully done
so; that the bill \,s the work of con-
gress and that his part in it has been
that of counsellor and advisor. It is
known, too, that the president is anx-
ious to give equal consideration to tin-
leaders in both houses of congress in
seeing that party pledges are carried
out.
Tariff Bill Comes Early.
Both houses of the sixty-third con-
gress got down to business in e^tra-
ordinary session Monday, confronted
by the task of revising the tariff. The
democratic tariff hill completed by the
democrats of the ways and means com-
mittee probably was introduced in the
house shortly after it convened at
noon.
The senate had already organized for
the new congress and its session was
a mere routine meeting. Immediately
afterward, however, a democratic cau-
cus was held, when the fight to revise
the senate rules to liberalize proceed-
ings in the upper body will begin. This
matter will occupy the senate during
a part of the time that the house
busies itself with its weeks of tariff
debate.
When the house convened in its
m - - *•;>-.
Ifl
i
/A,
m
¥
FARE WELL
BOTH OKLAHOMA SENATORS ARE
FAVORED BY NEW COMMIT-
TEE SELECTIONS.
CONGRESS IS LESS FGRTUNATE
» _
All Democratic Members Receive
Much Better Quarters By Ouster
of the Old Republican
Members.
Washington.—When the extra bps
sion of congress assembled on April
7 many of the Oklahoma members of
congress were found in new oilices.
Senator Owen was the luckiest in
obtaining choice quarters. He> as
chairman of the 6enate banking and
currency committee, which is one of
the most important in the upper house,
occupies* a beautiful three-room suite
on the third floor of the senate office
building, which faces Library Park.
Two of the rooms were formerly occu-
pied by Senator Lodge of Massachu-
setts, but v.hen the senate changed
hands the democrats immediately set
Doings of the Lawmakers
«• ______
Activities of the Week Among the Members
of the Oklahoma Legislature
I
REP. THOMES DIES SUDDENLY
_ «
Ptomaine Poisoning After Illness °f
Only 24 Hours.
Oklahoma* City. Representative C.
H. Thornes of Willis, Marshall county,
died Sunday evening at 7 o'clock, from
ptomaine poison, after an illness of
twentj*four hours.
Saturday afternoon, Mr. Thornes at
tended the basebajl game at Davis
park, returning about 6 o'clock, and
ate a hearty supper of canned plums,
onions and liver. He retired about 9
o’clock and an hour later complained
to 'his roommate of pains in the
stomach. From that hour on until day-
Lower House Grinds Away.
Oklahoma City.—During the two
liourB the house of representatives was
In session Saturday morning fou*
constitutional amendments were
posed; a futile effort was made t
consider the vote taken Friday v
passed the hill requiring health
| titivates to be-presented by mad-
j plicants for marriage license; a
lution was introduced requesting
supreme court to divide the state
congressional districts for the h
and Benate; a futile effort mad
have the committee report on thi
visability of abolishing various
institutions and have the report i
; a special order for 2 o’clock Moi
Among the many candidates for the
position of secretary of the senate was ,
„ . _ . ' . about to oust the republicans from
Robert M. Gates, who ha* represented |.
southern newspapers In Washinqtof | tll( ,r more elaborate quarters, taking
♦or ten yeprs. * 1 them for theft)selves.
| Senator Owen rules over probably
nnro LJIICDTIA Af*DCC° Tfl fill! handsomest committee room in
ifltOi nUtnllA Abttttd IU yUll I*Washington. Its walls are marble and
the ceilings are covered with beau-
famous art*
*ehandelit rs
rectiorists of Sorora and
Other Districts.
Concession Is Made to Pacify Insur-1 tiful mural paintings by
ists. Three elaborate
hang from the ceiling.
When the new senate office building
El Paso, Texas.—To satisfy all fac-| Avas erected it was decided that there
tions in -the Mexican melee, General ; should be some room where the am-
Huerta has offered to agree to the j hasEadors and ministers from foreign
naming of Pedro Lascurain as provi*1 countries could be received. The room
light, Mr. Thornes suffered chills and
convulsions, becoming delirious toward j and" a" vote "lodged to reconsider
^ll** , vote, taken Friday, which passed
Sunday morning be was removed to ,bnl that wouId Kllollsh the offlc
SI. Anthony’s hospital and three physi- j 8(atP hlghway commissioner
calle‘1 'W" attendance, but his Among the bills reported out of
condl,lon ' ' -’ - iarj N< 1 < f the house, were: B1
throughout the day. The doctors ,ating diBtript court Btenograp,
agree that death was caused by recommended that It do not pass;
ptomaine poison, from the canned food ^ providing that the state pay for
he ate the evening before his death. transportation of convicts to the
The family of tffe representative I tentiary, from the various co
lias been sent for and are expected to j,PatBi recommended that the bll
arrive early Mo*;day morning. I Ilot p#BB; commiuee substitute.
Members of the legislature Sunday bnl by Carr and ivters, act requi
night stated that until the family of persons or corporations fttrnis
Dr. rhomes hud arrived no plans natural gas to consumers in towr
be made for holding funeral .. than 600 inhabitant*, *o pass
* a 1 hi ugh itandard rQ< t< rs. Fai
Speaker 1 ro Tempore kinanuel said comply with the provision of
that tile house \\euld probat :y ad- Iast measure is punishable by a fit
journ Monday, following the appoint- not It in $5, nor more than $2;
rnent of a committee to attend the path ♦partite offense. Judiciary <
funeral service* to be held at Wills, mltte< No 1, reported out wit
Oklahoma. # ; recommendation; bill by Wright,
Mr rhomes was Rgti ;s. end vlding for improvements of streets
leaves a a if< and adopted son. ( haries other public places, and also repo
rhomes, aged lb year*, lie came to out. W.tii .irtiivornble reeonirmla
vtklahoma front Texas, where he liwil bill relating to superior court ste
sional president. Lascurain would " hich Senator Owen gets for his com- jycar8
»t Houston, and was justice of the
peace of Grayson county, Texas, four
serve out the uncompleted term of the
late President Madero.
As minister of interior relations in
Madero's former cabinet, Lascurain is
entitled to serve as next in line, in
view of the deaths of Madero and VitFe
President Suarez. The Huerta cabinet
would be retained by the compromise.
This arrangement, it is said_ has
been offered to the constitutionalists
now fighting the Huerta government
in Northern Mexico. It is declared
that Governor Carranza of Coaliuila
has agreed and that the Sonora insur-
rectionists will fall In line. The deci-
sion of the president 4s said to have
been occasioned by the recent uprising
of Zapata in the South, which places
the Huerta forces between two fires.
Mexican military men estimate that
Huerta has not more than 14,000
troops in all Mexico with which to
meet the situation.
This is even less than Porfirio Diaz
possessed in combating the Madero
revolution.
Monument for Express Riders
St. Joseph, Mo.-—A handsome gran-
ite monument, commemorative of the
pony express riders of earlier days,
has been unveiled in Patee park at
this place. The monument stands on
changed champer, where benches have
the free-in-three-years provision, from j taken the place of the old-time desks
the rest of the bill. This, it is believed, | and chairs, the members, including IO lllu„ulllcul ull
'n6U? PassaSe °f the bu,k j hundreds of new representatives elect- ; ,he spot where the first express rider
of tariff reforms by the democrats in j ,.<J last fall, were sworn in. Clerk j started April 3, 1860. It was present-
the senate while the sugar schedule south Trimbell was the presiding of- ! ed to (he city by the local chapter of
■would be pulled through by the addi- | ticer until the seats were filled
tion of progressive republican votes. and the speaker elected. The demo-
As introduced thp bill can be de- crats, following their caucus decision,
tached Into separate schedules at any renominated and re-elected Speaker
time if during the debate in the house Champ Clark. The republicans nom-
it should be deemed best strategically | inated Representative Mann of 111i-
to take this course. I nois, and the progressives, the new
The bill was referred back to the
ways and means cimmittee, where re-
publican members for the first time
the Daughters of the American Revo-
lution.
Charles Cliff of St. Joseph^ one ^of
the few surviving pony express riders,
unveiled the shaft.
The monument is of red marble,
blasted from a quarry in the Ozark
party organization in the house, nom- mountains. On its front the following
mittee was built for this purpose and
on an elaborate plan. The committee
on foreign relations was supposed to
have used it, but owing to the delay in
obtaining the expensive furnishings,
mahogany and velvet, the foreign com-
mittee never moved into thj: room.
No other suitable room being avail-
able it was decided that it should be
turned over to the banking and cur-
rency committee. Senator Owen’s
private offices immediately adjoin the
committee room.
Senator Gore occupies his old offices
in the senate office building, but also
has the commodious room set aside
for the senate committee on agricul-
ture in the Capitol. It is one of the
most beautifully furnished rooms in
this building.
Oklahoma's new members of con-
gress^ ‘‘Alfalfa Bill” Murray, Joe B.
Thompson and Claude Weaver, will
have to be content with unpretentious
quarters for muny months. They have
been assigned rooms in the old senate
annex building, two squares from the
new house office building. There are
not enough rooms in the new building
to provide for ail the new congress-
men who will begin their service at
the extra session, and consequently it
After coming to Oklahoma, Mr.
Thornes taught school in old Indian
Territory for forty years.
Mileage Bill Passed Over Veto
The house asserted its unqualified
disapproval of the liberal use of the
veto power by the governor by passing
House Bill 29, making an appropria-
tion of $50,000 for mileage and per
diem of ffiembers in the special ses-
sion over the executive head, by a vote
of 80 to 14.
raphers.
Judiciary committee No. 2 repo
out substitute for house bill No.
and which provides for a systen
prison government, recommending
it do pass.
Opposition to Cutting Salarie;
Members of the house who had
spaired of ever being able to ge
bill through the legislature redm
tile number of county officers trie
put through the measure by McC
Wright and Cook, reducing salarie
This action was taken ! a number of county officers. The
following a number of vitriolic speech- met Buch violent opposition, howe
es, in which Governor Cruce was | that further consideration was del
roundly scored for alleged Interfer-1 ed until after another attempt is tr
ence with the constitutional prerogn- in the house to consolidate some c<
tives of members of the legislature.
The bill was sent to the senate imme-
diately with the governor’s veto mes
sage attached for action of that body.
Governor Cruce was not without de-
fenders on the floor of the house, hut
ty offices.
Will Not Reduce Membership
House Joint Resolution No. 3,
Hunter and others, providing fot
resolution in the number of meml
such members were on the unpopular of the Benate from 44 to 24 an(1 in
side, a majority of the members dls ! hou8e from 99 to 60 and placing m
playing an attitude of open resentment | bers on a flat saiary of $750 a y
al the action of the executive in d» with Jf) a day additional pay w
approving the mileage measure. ! meeting in special session, was ki
_ . _ , -7 7 1 , _ In committee of the whole.
Twenty Delegates to Road Congress
Child Labor Conference
Twenty representatives from Okla-
homa to attend the National Good
Roads federation were appointed by
and 25 and lift following delegates April 28 29, were appointed by Go
inated Representative Murdock of Kan-
sas.
will have an opportunity to pass upon j The democrats with a‘ majority of
4
its provisions. No progress will he
made on the bill however until after
the democratic caucus considers it.
Removal of all tariff from many ar-
ticles of food and clothing; broad re-
ductions ’in the rates of duty on all
necessaries of life; an increase of tariff
on many luuxuries; and a new income
tax that would touch the pocket of
vvery American citizen whose net in-
come exceeds $4,000, are the striking
features of thi new democratic tariff
revision bill presented to the house.
Sugar would be free of duty in 1910,
the bill proposing an immediate 25 per-
cent reduction and the removal cf the
remaining duty in 1916.
approximately 160 members in the
house, contemplate little trouhle in
running things to suit themselves.
In the senate the democrats will line
up with 51 senators, republicans 43,
and progressives 2.
Both houses of congress were be-
werds are inscribed:
“This monument, erected by the,
Daughters of the American Revolu-
tion and the City of St. Joseph, marks
the place where the first pony express
started on April 3, ’I860.”
State Troops Fail Back
Naco, Ariz.—General Ojeda’s 300
federals late Monday we,nt out from
Naco, Sonora, and bombarded the
state troops’ line. The state troops
who numbered nearly 2.000 fell back
and Ojeda returned to the city. Gov-
ernor Pesqtjera Monday telegraphed
Genral Obregon to*hastn the cam-
paign against Naco so’that the move-
ment might be made against Guay-
mas, but Obregon is said to be wait-
ing for artillery from Hermosillo.
Fire Wipes Out Town.
Smithvilie, Ga.—Fire of tfnknown or-
igin Saturdi.*,' practically wiped out
sieged Monday by a small army of suf- ,he buBine8B Bectlon cf thig tmvn Four
—* —*** *“ - *•*<
vidual suffragists performed mis-
sionary work for the cause among the
members of the house and senate.
RED CROSS FUNDS
FOR FAMILIES ONLY
Washington.—The Ohio Red Cross
reliW commision has decided that not
a dollar of its funds shall he expended
.tun), drug store, hardware store and
a meat market were destroyed. Farm-
ers helped the local fire department
and, with the aid of dynamite, the
blaze was subdued after it had burned
for three hours. The damage is rough-
ly estimated at more than $50,000.
were chosen: W. A. Brady, Black
burn; J. W. Sullings, Henryetta; F. K.
Romberg, Shawnee; T. C. Otinger, Hy-
dro; H. Tredway, Hollis; J. L.
Hughes, Altus; T. F. Gafford, Sulphur;
A. L. Sanford, Weleetka; James Bow-
er, Stigler; J. W. Sutton, Tahlequah;
Earl Brown, Sapulpa; C. S. Avery.
Tulsa; Hugh Wlgga M ..ill; C. H.
was necessary to find quarters else- Governor Cruce. The meeting will be
where. Representatives Weaver, Mur- held in Birmingham, Ala., on April 24
ray and Thompson will keep their
t filers in the annex building until the
roof of the house office building is
raised and more rooms provided.
Although it is declared that this work
will be completed by the time the reg-
ular session of congress begins In
December, mere conservative ones
hazard the gt/ess that it will be a full
year before proper accommodations
for all can be provided.
Representative Carter has moved
his office from one of the
dors of the house office building to one
nearer the main entrance.
Representative Ferris, as chairman
of the committee on public lands, will
retain his haim.-ome three-mom suite.
Representative Davenport, who has
been occupying a room on the ground
floor, may be given better cAtarterB if
he desires them. The republican mem-
bers of the delegation, Representatives
Morgan and McGuire, will remain
where they are at present.
Five delegates to the southern t
ference on woman and child la
which will be held at Meridian, M
nor Cruce. The delegates are: G
Kerr, Oklahoma City; W. O. Deal
Shawnee;. F. O. Lutz, Guthrie; J
M. Noble, Oklahoma City; T. L.
gram, Muskogee.
Single Tax Proposed
A house joint resolution propos
a single tax amendment to the t
Cleveland. Skiatook; W. S. Kilgore, j stitution was Introduced In the ho
Chickasha; ( M. Redmond, Wewoka. by Rei»resentative Spengler.
S. E. Sweeney, Durant; Charles Greer, ! same proposition was submitted at
? ar corri [je(1 jobn h. Ashberry, Lexlng- regular session hut was killed b;
ton; G. W. Lowery, Tishomingo.
; committee.
Frisco Naval Yard To Ee Continued.
Washington.-—Secretary Daniels of
the navy department Saturday decided
Rioting Begins in Buffalo’s Strike
Buffalo, N. Y.—Scenes of disorder
followed the attempt of the Interna”
tional Railway company Monday night
to operaate its cars with strike-break-
ers of whom it is charged 700 arrived
from other cities to break the strike
of carmen called Sunday in an effort
to get higher wages and a readjust-
ment of working hours. Nearly Very
car met a fusllade cf stones and
bricks. Considerable damage was
done, hut no one was seriously hurt.
for public works of any character, hut ,„at ,he Mare Islan„ * yard al San
slnll be devoted exclusively to restor- rrani.ifieo sb(mId be continueti as a
lug stricken famtlies to normal life, i yard of the flrBt claB8. Tj,,, deciB,on
National Director Bicknell. in < hange . wag reached after a two bouts’ confer-
of the situation in Ohio, advised the , „nce wlth th(. enUre California COD.
home office here Sunday-that a super- LrcBBional delegation atm i special
visory audit would be kept over all committee from \ »ta •
expenditures and that eventually all ; Henry T. Mayo, commandant of the
accounts would be audited hy the war yardi alfio waB pregent and it was
department.
The Red Cross upon Mr. Bicknell’s
recommendation has telegraphed
$1,600 each to Peru, Lawrenceburg
and Terre Haute, Ind., winch cities
have received a like amount from the
governor of the state. One thousand
dollars was sent to Piqua, Ohio.
Score Lost on Wreck
Bay City, Ore.—Twenty-two men.
Including the ship's captain, the pros,
dent of a wrecking ccmpnny of Port-
land and a representative of the
marine underwriters wire trapped tn
the hold of the German ship Mini!,
which capsized off the beach here
early Snnriny after having been hauled
largely upon his recommendations
that Secretary Daniels ordered that
the work of dredging should proceed
and that no ’change should be made
in the status of the yard.
Levees Still Holding*
'Memphis, Tenn— With the Missis-
sippi swelling to what will probably
be the highest stage in its history
and the flood beating with its greatest
toree against the embankments at
Caruthersville, Missouri, and along
the Reel Foot levee west of Hickman,
Kentucky, the only report leom the
levee workers Sunday night that
might be regarded as unfavorable
came from Biggs. Arkansas, south of
this city, where a “boil" developed
off a reef on which she had been fast
two months, llow many perished Is j Sunday. Officials of the St Francis
not known.
Suffragette Is Found Guilty
London.—Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst,
the leader of the militant suffragists,
was found guilty and sentenced* to
three years penal servitude at the Old
Bailey BeBsions on the’»charge of in-
citing persons to commit damage.
The trial required two days.
The jury added to Its verdict of
guilty a strong recommendation for
mercy, and when the judge pro-
nounced the heavy sentence of three
years the crowd of women in the
court, room rose in angry protest.
As Mrs. Pankhurst stood up in the
prisoners’ enclosure, her sympathizers
cheered wildly and then filed out of
court singing “March on, March on,’’
to the tune of the Marseillaise.
Mrs. Pankhurst’s closing address to
the jury lasted fifty minutes. She in-
formed the court that she did not wish
to call any witnesses.
Secretary Bryan Asks United Action
Washington.—Secretary Bryan has
formally notified all diplomatic repre-
sentatives here of the intention of the
United States to recognize the new
Chinese republic on April 8, the meet-
ing day of the assembly, and has for-
mally proposed that all other govern-
ments recognize the new republic Id
concert on that duy.
To Raise‘Standard Of State Schools
A bill Intended to raise the stand-
$75 Per Month or Not Marry
The man who does not have
income of at least $75 per mo
ard of state schools hy discouraging would have bfen deprlved 0f the b
onlj grade of matrimony if an amendment off#
work, and also to Increase the reve- by Representative L. D. Lewis
nues of such institutions, was intro- Kiowa county had been adopted a
duced by Representative Peters. It j part of the marriage bill by Bond t
provides that pupils ’doing work in ; Bearing. The proposed amendm
the eighth, tenth, eleventh or twelfth secured but seventeen votes In d
g'rades of any state school, shall pay mittee of thp whole- Sevpral raemb
a tuition fee of $50 per year. Another u_____ ______;------,
bill by Peters appropriates $60,000 to
pay the premium on insurance policies
carried by the state.
have married if this proposition 1
been a law.
Another Passenger Rate Law
•
The corporation commission is giv-
en power to enforce a passenger rate
on the railroads in Oklahoma which
to the commission seems fair after in-
vestigation by a law which passed tho
senate. TIRb contemplates a 2 l-4c.
rate in case the present injunction is
made permanent. The senate also
passed finally the bill by McClintic
abolishing the twelve district game
wardens. This will save In salaries
$1,400 a year each for the twelve.
Norman to Get an Interurban
i vNorman.—At a mass meeting heli
the district court room the citizens
Norman unanimously accepted
proposition of the Oklahoma Railv
company looking to the extension
their interurban line out of Oklaho
City from Moore to Norman. 3
proposal made by John W. Shar
which amounted to the'etty of Norn
conceding right-of-way privileges
streets leading through the city to
site of the university, and a term!
site, consisting of seven lots, Is v
advantageous.
Ballard Decides to Quit
Charging that the senate sitting as
a court of impeachment had gone on
record to sit in Judgment on his case
whether it had or had not heard the
evidence for the defense, State Insur- ....... .
ance Commissioner Perry A Ballard Representative Vea ch As passed
tendered his resignation to Governor senate the
Cruce, to take effect at once. Imme-
Prlnt Session Laws
Provision for printing the sess
laws of the regular and extraordim
sessions of the fourth legislature t
made by a Benate resolution m
passed by both houses which »
drawn hy Senator Blasslngame a
diately upon the receipt of the rtalg
nation it was accepted by the gover-
nor who sent It to the senate. The
reading of the resignation was greet-
ed with loud -pplatiBe.
printing 1,600 copies of the sessl
laws, but the house adopted an amei
ment by Whitman to increase t
number to 2.000 copies. The laws
both sessions are to be printed in o
volume.
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Cimarron Valley Clipper (Coyle, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1913, newspaper, April 10, 1913; Coyle, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc911962/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.