Capitol Hill News (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 45, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 29, 1908 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
TH5 SPOILERS
15 V KKX E. HE AC II
Copyright T 05 by Rex K. Beaclij
i
ill lii> lie; boots with "niuk*
i. .” w l i ’li '• ' . i»; -of, light and
, ilr f.. .r 111;11i>.• fro.ii tlu* skiu of
► i-.il and . in* was thus able to
move as no as though In inoc-
cii'ins l'iiuliiiK neither peuell nor pa-
per in In- i- l -t. 1m* tried the outer
door ol the oJtiee, to lind it unlocked.
He stepped inside and listened, then
moved toward a table on whl h were
writing materials, but lu doing ho
heard a rustle In Struve’s private of
tiro. Evidently bis soft sides had not
disturbed the man Inside. Hoy was
about to tiptoe out as he had corn©
when file hidden man floured his
throat It is in these Involuntary
Voituds that the voice retains Its nut
nral qualify more distinctly even than
In speai ing. A Htrange eagerness grew
in (.lb nl* t-*r’s far**. and lie approuehed
tin* partition sie ilthlly It was of wood
and glass, the panes clouded and
opaque to a height of some six feet;
but, stepping upon a chair, be peered
lu to tin* room beyond. V mail knelt In
a litter of papers before the open safe,
Its drawers and eompnrtnients remov-
ed and their eon tents scattered. The
watcher lowered himself, drew Ids gun
and laid soft hand upon the doorknob,
turning flu* Infeh with firm fingers. His
vengeance had come to meet him.
After lying in wait during the long one certain und logical event
night, certain flint the vigilantes would
spring his trap, .McNamara was as-
tounded at news of the Imttlc at the
Midas ami of Hlenlster’s success. He
stormed and cursed Hin men as cow-
ards. The Judge became greatly exer-
cised over this new development,
which, coupled with Ids night of long
anxiety, reduced him to a pitiful hys-
teria.
“They’ll blow us up next. Great
heavens! Dynamite! Oh, that is bar-
barous. For heaven’s sake, get the sol-
diers out, Alec.”
“Ay, we can use them now.” There-
upon McNamara roust'd the command-
ing officer at the post and requested
him to accouter a troop and have them
ready to march at daylight, then be-
stirred the Judge to start the wheels of
Ids court and Invoke tlds military aid
in regular fashion.
“Make it all a matter of record,” he
said. “We want to keep our skirts
clear from now on.”
“But tlie townspeople are against
us,” quavered Stillman. “They’ll tear
us to pieces.”
“Let ’em try. Once 1 get my hand
on the ringleader, the rest may riot
mid Lie damned.”
Although he bad made It*-*-; display
than had the judge, the receiver was
no less worried about Helen, of whom
no nows entne. His jealousy, fanned
to i.*ed heat by the discovery of her
earlier defection, was enhanced four-
fold by tin* tliougut of this last adven
ture. Something told him them’was
treachery afoot, and when she did not
return at dawn he began to fear that
she had cast in her lot with the riot-
ers. This aroused a perfect delirium
of doubt and anger till In* reasoned
further that Struve, having gone with
her, must also be a traitor. He recog-
nized the menace in tills fact, knowing
the mail's venality, so began to reckon
carefully its significance. What could
Struve do? What proof had he? Mc-
Namara started and, seizing his hat.
hurried straight to the lawyer's office
and let hiiuself in with the key he cur-
ried. it was light enough for him to
decipher the characters on the safe
lock as he turned the combination, so
he set to work scanning the endless
bundles within, hoping that after all
the man had taken with him no incrlm-
iuatiug evidence. Once tin* searcher
paused at some fancied sound, but
when nothing came of it drew Ids re-
volver ami add it before him just in-
side the safe door and close beneath
his hand, continuing to run through
the documents while h* i : viue.v; in
creased He had been engaged s.> for
some time when he beard the faintest
creak at his hack, too slight to alarm
and just sufficient to break his tension
and cause him to Jerk his head about.
Framed in the open door stood Hoy
GlenLster watching him.
McNamara's astouishmeut was so
genuine that he leaped to his feet,
faced about, aud prompted by a secre-
tive iustinet swung to the safe door as
though to guard its contents. He had
acted upon the impulse before realiz-
ing that bis weapon was Inside and
that now, ulihough the door was not
locked, It would require that one dan
gerous, yes, futal second to oi>eu It.
The two men stared at each other
for a time, silent aud malignant, their
glances meeting like blades; in the old
er man’s face a look of defiance, lu the
youuger’s « dogged and grim purposed
enmity. McNamara’s first perturba- :
tlon left him calm, alert, dangerous,
whereas the continued contemplation
of his enemy worked in Glenlster to
destroy his composure, und his purpose
blazed forth unhidden.
lie stood there unkempt and soiled,
the clean sweep of jaw nud throat
overgrown with a three days’ black
stubble, his hair wet und matted, his
whole left side foul with clay where
he had fallen In the darkness. A mud-
dy red streak spread downward from a
cut above his temple, beneath his eyes
were sagging folds, while the flicker at
his mouth corners betrayed the high
nervous pitch to which he was keyed.
”1 have com© for the last act, Mc-
Namara. Now well have it out muu
to man.”
The politician shrugged Ids shoulders.
“You have the drop on me. I am un-
armed.” At which the miner's face
lighted fiercely, and he chuckled.
“Ah, that’s almost too good to be
true. I have dreamed about such u
thing, aud 1 have been hungry to feel
your throat since the iir»( time 1 haw
row If'ft grown on me till sii lotln*
wouldn't satisfy me Ever* bad the
fetdiug? Well, Fn* going to choke tar
lift* out of you with my bare hands”
McNamara squared himself.
“I wouldn't advise you to try it 1
have lived longer thun you, and 1 was
never beaten, but I know the fending
you speak about. I have It now.”
His eyes roved rapidly up and down
the other’s form, uoting the lean thighs
aud close drawn belt, which lent Ho*
appearance* of sparseness, belied only
by the neck aud shoulders lie had
beaten better men, and 1m* reasoned
that if it came to a physical test in
these cramped quarters his own great
weight would more than offset any su-
perior agility the miner might p<*-se>
The longer he looked the more he
yielded to his hatred of the man before
him and the more cruelly he longed to
satisfy It.
“Take off your coat,” said Glenlster.
“Now turn around. All right! I Just
wanted to see If you were lying about
four gun.”
“I’ll kill you!” cried McNamara.
Gleqlster laid his six shooter upon the
safe aud slipped off his own wet gar
ineut. The difference was more mark
«d now and the advantage more
•trongly with the receiver. Though
they liud avoided allusion to it. .<■ -i- h
knew that this fight had nothing to
do with the Midas and each real bed
whence sprang their fierce enmif •
▲ ud It was meet that they should
come together thus. It hail been the
" li - h
they had felt Inevitably approaching
from loug back. And it was tilting,
moreover, that they should fight alone
and unwitnessed, armed only with ilio
weapons of the wilderin \ for thc\
were both of the far, free lands, were
both of the fighter’s type and hud
both warred for the first great prbe.
They met ferociously. McNamara
alined u fearful blow, but Glenlster
met him squarely, beating him off
cleverly, stepping In aud out. his
arms swinging loosely from his hIioiiI
ders like whalebone withes tipped wiili
lead. He moved lightly, bis fooling
made doubly secure by reason of his
soft Boled inukliiks. Recognizing his
opponent’s greuter weight, he under
took merely to stop the headlong
rushes ami remain out of reach as
loug as possible. lie struck the poli
tlciau fairly in the mouth so that the
uiuu'b head snapped back and his fluffs
went wild, then, before the arms
could grasp him, the miner hail brok
eu ground anil whipped another blow
across, but McNamara was u boxer
himself, so covered and blocked it
The politician spat through his mash
ed Up a and ruohed again, sweeping
his opponent from his feet. Again
Glenlster’s list shot forward like a
lump of granite, but the other came on
head down and the blow finished too
high, landing on the big man’s brow.
A sudden darting agony paralyzed
Hoy's hand, and he realized that he
had broken the metacarpal bones and
that henceforth It would be useless.
Before he could recover McNamara
had passed under his extended arm
and seized him by the middle, then,
thrusting his left leg back of Roy’s,
he whirled him from his balance, fling
lug him clear anil with resistless force.
It seemed that a fatal fall must foi
low, but the youth squirmed catlike
in the air. landing with set muscles
which rebounded like rubber. Even
so, the receiver.was upon him before
he could rise, reaching for the young
muu’s throat with Ids heavy hands.
Roy recognized the fatal "strangle”
hold and, seizing Ids enemy’s wrists,
endeavored to tear them apart, but
his left hand was useless, so with a
mighty wrench he freed himself, and.
looked in each other’s arms the men
strained and swayed about the <>ffi. <•
till their neck veins were bursting,
their muscles paruly ed.
Men may tight duels calmly, may
shoot or parry or thrust with cold do
liberation, but when there comes the
Jur of body to body, the sweaty eon
tact of skin to skin, tin* play of iron
muscles, the painful gasp of on bans
tiou -then the mind goes skittering
back Into Its dark recesses while ev
try venomous passion leaps forth from
Its hiding place and Joins in tin* horrid
war.
They tripped across the floor, crash
ing into the partition, which split,
showering them with glass. They fell
.J. J. NOVAK & CO.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
farm Loans, City Loans, Investments,
1nsurance
LIST rOUR BARGAINS WITH L’S.
— Phone 898-
135 W Grand Ave Oklahoma City. tj. B. A
txtrac lint) ftprcialUt
THE SUNDAY SCHOOL,
Lesson IV.—Third Quarter. For
July 26. 1908.
THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES.
Pho.>« a«
OW. b. S. hHSHAIM
lit NIISI
Second Floor Security hUg.
Corner Mam and Harvey St*.
OKUIOIA nil. «ttli
Text of the Lesson, 1 Sam. xv, 13-28.
Memory Verse, 22—Golden Text,
Josh, xxiv, 24—Commentary Prepared
by Rev. D. M. Stearns.
I Copyright, 1908, by American Vrrsu Association. ]
In many ways the Lord is ever prov
Gradually the oldei man’s face was ! hig us t<» sm- it wi* are willing to be
beaten into a slmpt-less mass b\ tin- j whole heartedly Ilis ..ud to walk iu
other’s cunning blow's, while (Herds Ills ways, and He is also asking us to
tci'8 every Imne wok wrenched and prove Him and see if Ilo will not do
twisted under Ids enemy's terrible on- Juat as He says ((ion xxli. I; Hoiit. viil.
Slant;tits Idle minor’s ohiof effort, it is a, HI; John vl. li: Mai. iii 10*. that we
true, was to keep his feet and to break
the man’s embraces. Never had he eu
countered one whom he could not beat
by sheer strength till he met this great,
snarling creature who worried him
hither and yon us though he were a
child. Time and again Roy beat upon
the man’s face with the blows of a
sledge No rules governed thVs solitary
combat; the men were deaf to all but
may know Him and glorify Him in the
eyes of others. In Jesus of Nazareth
God found one who was perfectly l!is
own in thought, word ami deed, one
who could say. “I delight to do Thy
will. O my Goil; yea, Thy law is with
In my heart” (Ps. xl. Hi. All others
have failed in greater or less degree,
but some have desired to live thus,
anil where God sees that desire lie ac-
.........t ____ _____ _____ w mii >fwi repts it and makes much of it. for "if
tlu) roaring in their ears, blinded to all j there be first a willing mind it is no-
but bate, insensible to everything but
the blood mania. Their trampling feet
caused the building to rumble and
shake as though some monster were
running amuck.
Meanwhile a bareheaded man rushed
out of the store beneath, bumping into
a pedestrian who had paused oil the
sidewalk, and together they scurried
up the stairs. The dory which L
had seen at sen had shot the breaker
They tripped across the flour% crashiiiy
into the partition.
and rolled iu it, then, by consent.
Wrenched themselves apart, rose, eye
to eye, their jaws hanging, their lungs
wheezing, their faces trickling blood
and sweat. Roy’s left hand pained him
excruciatingly, while McNamara's mac
erated lips had turned outward in a
hideous pout. They crouched so for an
Instant, cruel, bestial then clinched
again. The office fittings were wrecked
utterly, and the room became a litter
of ruins. The men’s garments fell
away till their breasts wen* bare and
their arms swelled white and knotted
through the rugs. They knew no pain,
their bodies were Insensate mechuu-
lAOl*.
and now its three passengers were
traekiug through the wet sand toward
Front street. Bill Wheaton in tin* lead.
He was followed by two raw boned
men who traveled without baggage.
The city was awakening \n , ' ♦lie sun
which reared a copper rim on. of the
sen. Judge Stillman and Yoorhces
came down from the hotel and paused
to gaze through the mists at a caravan
of mule tennis which trotted into tin*
other end of the street with jingle and
clank. The wagons were blue with
soldiers, the early golden rays slant-
ing from their Krags, anil they were
bound for the Midas.
Out of the fogs which clung so
thickly to the tundra there came two
other horses, distorted and unreal, on
one a girl, on the other a figure of
pain and tragedy, a grotesque creature
that swayed stiffly to the motion of its
steed, its face writhed into lines.of
suffering, its hands clutching cantle
and horn.
It was ns though fate, with Invisible
touch,e were setting her stage for the
last act of this play, assembling the
principals close to the golden sands
where first they had made entrance.
The man and the girl came face to
face with the judge and marshal, who
erb"1 out upon seeing them, it us
they reined in. out from the stairs be-
side them a man shot amid clatter and
uproar.
“Give me a hand quick!” lie shouted
to them.
“What’s up?” inquired the marshal
“It’s murder! McNamara anil Glen
Inter!” He dashed back up the steps
belli. <i Voorhees, tin* judge following
while muffled eries came from above.
The gambler turned toward the three
men who were hurrying from the
beach and, recognizing Wheaton,
called to him: "Untie my feet! Cut
the ropes! Quick!”
“What’s tlie trouble?” the lawyer
asked, but on hearing Glenister’s name
bounded after the judge, leaving one
of his companions to free (he rider.
They could hear (he light now and all
crowded toward tlie door, Helen with
her brother, in spite of his warning t»»
stay behind.
She never remembered bow sin*
climbed those stairs, for she was borne
along by that hypnotic power which
drags one to behold a catastrophe in
spite of liis will. Reaching the room,
she stood appalied; for the group she
liad joined watched two raging tilings
that rushed at each other with in
human cries, ragged, bleeding, lighting
on a carpet of debris. Every loose und
breakable tiling had been ground to
splinters as though by iron slugs in a
whirling cylinder.
To this day. from Dawson to tin*
straits, from T’nga to the arctics, men
tell of Hu* combat wherever they fore
gather at flaring campfires or in diugy
bunkhoiises, and. although some scout
the tale, there are others who saw It
and can swear (o Its truth. These say
that the encounter was like the battle
of bull moose In the rutting season,
though more terrible, averring that
two men like these bad never hern
known in tin* land since tlie days of
Vitus Bering and Ids crew; for their
rancor had swollen till at feel of each
other’s flesh they ran mail and felt
superhuman strength. It Is true, at
any rate, that neither was conscious
of the tilling room, nor the cries of the
crowd, even when (lit* marshal forced
himself through the wedged door and
fell upon the nearest, which was Glen
later. He came at an Instant when tin*
two had paused at arm’s length, glar-
ing with rage drunken eyes, gasping
the labored breath back Into their
lungs
(To be Pout «n
I---- — }.NSURANCE --—
ALEXANDER & ALEXANDER.
phone 791; 12 North Harvey
I’KATEUN \L INsi KAN( IT
J. D. BROCK, phone 706;
319 Baltimore.
j-----JEWELERS---—
BOASEN BROS., phone 1213;
West Main
J. F. HARTWELL, phone 302;
l Oil West Main.
A. F. FRICKE, Phone 2096,
eepteil according to that n man hath
and not according to that he hath not”
(II Cor. vili. 12). Saul soon proved him
self willful and disobedient, and Sam-
uel had to say to him: "Thy kingdom
shall not continue. The Lord hath
Bought Illm a mam after His own heart
who shall fulfill all I. s will” (chapter
x111, M: Act-. \:ii 221. The Lord tried
F:itd • •.iredly, for lie is long suffering,
j but again and again he failed After tic*
J night at Samuel’s house Samuel sent
him to Gilgal. saying. "Seven days
shalt thou tarry till I come to thee d
shew thee what thou shalt do” (chapter
x. S). We read in chapter xiii. S-11. ibai
he tarried seven days, but evidently
not quite tin* full time, and himself o/
fered the offerings, aud as soon as he
had made an end of offering Samuel
came and reproved him and said the
words quoted above. Thus we see
Saul taking upon himself to do what
he had no right to and so impatient
that he could not wait the full time
By little things God tests us. ns when
He tested Gideon’s ten thousand.
Iu the lesson chapter today God
again tries Saul by sending him to
smite and utterly destroy the Arnale-
kltes, who were the first to .fight with
Israel after they left Egypt and con
cernlng whom God sam mat He would
put out the remembrance of them from
under heaven (Ex. xvll. 8-10). Saul
went forth and smote them as he had |
been commanded, but not fully, for It
!s written. “But Saul and the people
spared Agag and the best of the sheep
and of the ox'en and of the fatlings
and (be lambs.” etc. (verse 9). Yet I
Raul met Samuel with this greeting: j
“Blessed be thou of the Lord. I have |
performed the commandment of the j
Lord” (verse 13). Tills, however, was
not the Lord’s view of It. for lie said
to Sa ucl. "It ropenteth Me that I
have set up Saul to In* king, for he Is
turned back from following Me and
hath not perfonneil My command
ruents” (verse ID A word is In order
here about this repenting of the Lord
spoken of In lids verse and In verse 35
and the seeming contradiction in verse
29. with which compare Niim. xxiil. 1!)
It Is Impossible that God should
change Ilis mind or be sorry for any-
thing He had done, ns if things had
turned out differently from what He
had expected: but. foreseeing all events
and knowing that at a certain point He
would have to change Ilis mode of
procedure, when these turning points
in the unfolding of Ills purpose come j f.
tllASO nro r>fill<wl 1T?« rnttriiif liuru Wax ♦!•
- Freeze To
DEATH
If you stay in a
room cooled by
the Kemiojjton
ice making and
refrigerating ma
chine. Thebes:
small machine
on the market.
These machines
are built in two
styles, the Ver-
tical Single Act
ing oompressor
and Horizontal
Double Acting
compressor.
Built in
sizes from
1-4 Ton
to 5o tons
Sold b\ Zrtlotidek Machine Company. We are tdso ngents for the
inuious JiiiiicH Lelfel Engines find Boilers. Also do nil hinds of ma-
chine work. overhauling of steal.i plmits u speeiidtv Employ only
.'killed Ihbor. < hir mill roll re-con ugnting de| ai'hnt nl is tilted up-
to-date. We solicit your tmde. Yours for success,
1 he Zalondek Machine Company
Local and L ng distance Phone liOiit. '212 \\ Hen.., (fUuhotna Oity
Tub and Wring-
er Stands
(1 lie Good Kind.)
Boss Washers, One Minute
Washers- Wringers of all
Kinds. Hampers, Baskets.
Tines and Pins.
1
-
I We want Part of Your Trade!
^ur Goobs are the best and Prices right J
A LARGI STOCK TO
SELECT I ROM
NO TROUBLE TO
SHOW GOODS
BPS PAINT MAJESTIC RANGES PEARL WIRE CLOTH
I win Mon Hardware Co.
Cor. Grand and Bdy. Oklahoma City.
* V it,
.219 West Main come the world.
these nre called His repentIngs. We
change our mind and do otherwise;
but. while God does otherwise than
FTe bad been doing, Ilr* never changes
His mind. Sec in verses 20. 21. how
Raul persists in saying that he had
obeyed the voice of the Lord, but ad-
mitting that he had saved the best of
the sheep and oxer, to sacrifice unto
the Lord. Tnon follows Samuel’s sting
ing rebuke: "Behold, to obey is l>ettef
than sacrifice * * * Because thou hast
rejected the word of the Lord He hath
also rejected thee from lielng king”
(verses 22. 23). See also In verse 2fi the
emphasis upon the fact that his partial
obedience was a rejection of the word
of the Lord. There Is even In these
days much partial belief of the Lord’s
messages, blit few consider that n sin.
Here Is something to consider serious-
ly-that a partial belief or obedience Is
a virtual rejection of His word. It Is
to be feared that many a preacher who
Is falling to declare the whole truth
has no better excuse than that of Saul.
“I feared the people and obeyed their
voice” (verse 24). That man has sure
ly missed his calling who while pos-
ing as a minister of Jesus Christ gives
more thought to his congregation and
how to please them than to pleasing
Him whose messenger he professes to
be. Such n one hail better give heed
to Gal. 1. 10. “If I yet pleased men I
should not be the servant of Christ:”
also I Thess. il. 4. “Not as pleasing
men. but God. who trleth our hearts.”
It Is sadly true that there are preach
ers who. knowing that If they preach
ed the whole counsel of God they could
not keep their situation, prefer to be
false to Go for the sake of their IIv
Ing. There are also many In the pulpit
and out of it who. while professing
hearty obedience to God, allow their
'hearts to carry them away and their
eyes to wink at certain things (Job xv.
11. 12) lest by being wholly conformed
to God they should Incur the displeas-
ure of their friends. The whole heart-
ed life for God means a whole hearted
opposition to the world, the flesh and
the devil If we will follow Jesus
Christ we must deny self and over
MA CE 3 JOHNSON
"|;ALKKS IN FLOUR, FEED AND WOOD
t erms Cash Phone 2317-Red
1 <** GOLDEN RULE GROCERY 'je f
Groceries, Dry Goods And Notions
Feed and Produce.
heed I’ot-roes, Onion Sets and all Kinds of Fresh (Garden Seeds
M FA I MARK! T
I tlsIi and Salt Meats, Sausage, Lard and Poultry always on hand.
W buy ai.kix ds op produce and pav huih ir "n :t
SAUK & SCOTT CHOI'S.
Phone 1948 South Robinson Street
»*i ’' i ltra LYON
I he.e ;.iv kuii !listutions on Cap- , , * 1 *\T'* t
itol Hill that I rail your alien.ion ro )\_ y 1CO
that our people should be proud of
ihey are located centrally and in leach ahoma City, Oklahoma,
of every body Wholesale arid Retail Harness, Sad,
Out of these four has grown what idles, Fly Nets. Whips, Fine Horse
is knovvn as ihe Mens Bible class. j Goods of All Kinds, Gilliam Turf
I his includes every man from 21) j
io 100 years of age whether you be j Goods and William s 1 oe Weights,
long to any churc h or not you are |
welco re.
()ur aim to study the Bible and !
better the condition of humanity both j
f CAPITOL HILL BARBER i
t SHOP *
morally and spiritually. I o do this
we must meet and talk together.
On next Sunday we meet at die!
First Baptist church at 3 p. m I
Reader will you be there you can j
sttrelv spare one hour of the day for
this meeting we will expect to meet
you there.
11 1, t. Patterson Prop.
Sharer’s block, Robinson St.
Ice cream and cold drinks ,
a—i-*i-'i-a.U'.t..|..f.i.a-a.x -t*
The poles tor the trolley wire of the
lnter-1 than cat line are put in as far
as Robinson street and it wont be
long until the cars a e running on this
side-
Palace Laundry
I
1.0 W. First
Phone 3
N'Ut-rtf, Torn
t he subject for discussion at the
Methodist church Sunday at II a. m
will he, “infant membership in the
church, or shall we baptise infants ”
Regular services Sunday evening. |
Subject, “F.lijob’s failure." Every!
-r,- yrui IntereHtra*.
the t rain market?
We handle rtiMracts of lonn bu hela and
up la nil future n)&.*ketfl
A/r/iA/K HARftAH at CO.
JOMM/SSItt(k BHOKEHS
cirr mau
I'HONK 207
I body invited.
C S Walker Pastoi
WK K It FA IK—Blcyclea, Uun». Lock a. Ui
brcllas. Uaaollne Ktovea Ktc ; saw. Hie
s. its. If aud Knlv. Sharpened; Braklo
VAOlk k eDuplnlty
HILL’S SHOP
We«t Grind opposite Optra House
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Capitol Hill News (Capitol Hill, Okla.), Vol. 3, No. 45, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 29, 1908, newspaper, July 29, 1908; Capitol Hill and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc937905/m1/2/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.