Colony Courier (Colony, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 23, 1911 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Colony Courier and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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/
I
h-
jk
m
OMAN
ESCAPES
OPERATION
WasCured byLydiaE. Pink-
ham’sVegetable Compound
Elwood, IndL—“Your remedies hare
cured me and I hare only taken si*
bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta; |
BBSmKffimSlKlSIble Compound. I-1
sick three
OKU. CAPITAL LOCUTION
NEARING ITS FINAL TEST
MAY SEND DEPARTMENTS
TO GUTHRIE.
BACK
months and could
not walk. I suf-
fered all the time.
The doctors said I
could not get well
without an opera-
tion, for I could
hardly stand the
pains In my sides,
especially my right
.one, and down my
lU right leg. I began
to feel better when I had taken only
one bottle of Compound, but kept on
ns I was afraid to stop too soon.’’—Mrs.
Kawb Mullen, 8788 N. B. St., LU
wood, Ind. , .
Why will women take chances with
an operation or drag out • sickly,
half-hearted existence, missing three-
fourths of the joy of living, when they
can find health In Lydia E. Finkham’s
Vegetable Compound?
rot thirty years it has been tho
standard remedy for female Ills, and
has cured thousands of women who
have been troubled with such aiL
ments as displacements, Inflammation,
ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregulari-
ties, periodic pains, backache, Indiges-
d.uM
that Lydia E. Vege-
table Compound will help you*
write to Mrs. Plnldiam at Lynn*
Mass- for advice. Your letter
will he absolutely confidential*
and the advice free.
artAND VOYAGE TO THE POLE.
Reversal in Supreme Court Would Re-
sult in This—Ruling Expected
Within Sixty Days.
Oklahoma rilty, Okla.—The activity
of Guthrie attorneys In seeking to have
tiro Oklahoma state capital lltlgatloii
advanced on the docket of the cu-
preine court of the United States is
causing much speculation at tho pres-
ent caultal as to what would be the
result !f the high court within the next
few months should reverse tho recent
decision of tlie state supreme ocurt
u'.d held that the provision of the
enabling act lequirlng the capital to
remain at Guthrie until 1913 vnlld and
binding.
All the departments except the su-
preme court, cilmlnal court of ap-
peals and attorney general have re-
moved to Oklahoma City entailing an
expense of about $10,('00. Should tho
doclsior of the highest court re-estab-
lish the seat of government at Guthrie,
and It can have no other effect,If the
enabling ah Is sustained, the depart-
ments would be required to move back
to Guthrie
Whe n the department a left Guthrie
the state relinquished Its loose on the
county cott't house where more than
half the officials were housed and Lo-
gon county now Is using It. Guthrie
would have no Inducement to make
any effort to find another hotno for
the state departments and probably
would not make any effort along that,
line. The departments therefore vir-
tually would be homeless and would
have to accept, quarters In any place
available.
Guthrie attorneys have argued the
motion for an advancement of the cap-
ital ense and expect a decision on the
(notion soon. They say that,if the
case Is advanced a decision jtvlll be
reached in t'.ilrty to sixty days.
WOULD LYNCH BOOTLEGGER.
Th* Rope Is Thrown Around His Neck
Gut the Sheriff Saves Him.
Watnnga, Okla.—Charles Hawkins
an alleged Imotlegger, narrowly es-
caped lynching on the streets of Wa.
tonga, following a desperate attempt
to escape, and the injury of u minis-
ter’s wife. Only the entreaties of the
prisoner and the firmness of Sheriff
Soufhcriand prevented violent action
by the mob.
Hawaii's and -Joe Stiles, both alleg-
ed bootleggers, made an effort to es-
cape Iron Sheriff Southerland in a
buy,gy about 5 o’clock In the afternoon.
In so doing they ran over a Mrs. Mal-
ver*c,n, the wife of a minister of Win-
field, Kan She was sorlouly injured
and Is not expected to live until morn-
ing. Tho sheriff fired at the men and
they were finally recaptured. On their
refusal to accompany the officer to the
Jail a mob speedily formed and a rope
was placed around Hawkins’ neck.
The prisoner begged for mercy, say-
ing that he would go to Jail and that
he was sorry for his offense. The
sheriff prevailed upon the mob to al-
low him to take his prisoner to Jail,
but the chowd followed and another
demonstration was made at the Jail.
The town Is In an excited condition
aim a monster mass meeting was
held. Back of it all la the determined
policy of Sheriff Southerland who ban
Ret out to stop bootlegging in thl*
county. \
Police Accused of Murde-.
McAlester, Okla—The preliminary
trial of Detective rt. 1.. Cole and Officer
T. H. Crawford was held here and the
men were remanded without ball.
They wore charged with the murder of
Hoy llaeley recently In North McAles-
ter. Begley was here looking for work
and was found by the officers near the
Missouri. Kansas and Texas tracks, ac
cmnpanied by his brother and another
man. The officers ordered the men
to halt .but they ran instead. Several
shots vere fired and Bagle.v was al
n.ost Instantly killed. Crawford and
C le were first, arrested upon the
chr.rgo of manslaughter but later the
charge w as changed to that of murder.
OLD FORT GEORGE Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Interior of Maine Fortress Is Now
a Ball Ground.
Hlstorio Earthworks Bultt by tho Brit*
Ish in 1779 sm»8 Named In Honor
of England’# King—Outline*
Still Visible.
All Spring Blood Diseases
and Ailments
Possesses medicinal merit Peculiar to Itself and^
unequaled record of cures. Take it this spring, i
liquid form or tablets known as Sarsatabs.
has an
i usual
Drop Embezzlement Charge.
Muskogee, Okla —J. W. Wilson, for-
mer superintendent of the Muskogee
citv waterworks department, who has
been cell! la prison here for several
weeks on ti e charge of embezzlement,
was released from Jail and the case
mr:«ln“t. him dismissed Wilson left
her-* several years ago for the north-
west, sml a shortage of $700 In Ills ac-
counts was alleged. He was found
two months ngo and brought buck. Af-
ter his case was s>*t for trial tho coun-
ty attorney found n supreme court <lo-
ek'lou that a vnlld indictment cannot
he secured In criminal cases original-
Ir g before Oklahoma was admitted as
a *ta?e.
Go to your druggist and got "Two
iitinuon of Glycerine and liulf an ounce
of Concrntrutod l’lne compound. Mix
ihcse with half u pint of good whisky.
Slmko well. Taku ono to two teaspoon-
fuU after each meal and at bed lime.
Smaller dose* to children according to
age." Any one can prepare this at
home. This Is said to be the quickest
rough and cold cure known to th*
inealcnl profession. Bo sure to get only
the genuine (Globe! Concentrated Pine.
Each half ounce bottle comcB In a tin
Hrrew-top scslcd case. If the druggist
Is out of stock he will quickly get It
from his wholesale house. Don’t fool
with uncortuln mixtures. It Is risky.
Rotten Cigarette Paper.
Much cigarette paper Is made from
waste untnrred hemp rope.
Ann YOUR CLOTHES KADEDf
Use Hod Cross Bull Blue and umko them
whito again. Large 2 o/.. package, 5 cents.
I um not so lost In lexicography us
to forget that, words arc the daugbterc
of earth and that things are the sou*
of lienvcn. Samuel Johnson.
Mako Good.
"Woke up, Gull," says the burglar,
shaking the man by the shoulder.
Tho man wakes up, and jumps up,
too.
"I went troo ills house las’ week an*
got $100 an’ a hum gold wttteli," ex-
plained the burglar; “an’ de papers
said dat you said your loss was $100
an’ Joolry to tho amount o’ five or six
hundred.”
"Ye yi-H?"
"Well, make good, sport. Me pnrd-
uer dat wns wutchtn’ on de oulsldo
made me rough up do difference be-
tween what I got and what you mild
I got, Now, you got to make good.
You can’t boat me dat way." --Jmlgo’a
Library._
COLDS
Prank Jama* to Missouri.
Guthrie, Okia.—Frank James mem-
ber of the former James hand, will re-
turn to the James homestead, In Clay
county, Mo. He has disposed of his
effects at g public auction sale on hi*
form near Fletcher. That he has been
n successful farmer wns proved when
some of his hogs sold as high as $86
a head anil rather than part with one
span of Mules James bid them In at
fr-r.o. Kellc hnnlerr. attended the sale
anti purclmsod historic articles, in-
cluding one of the James boys’ saddles
which brought $-S8.
Fries Convicted of Murder.
Oklahoma City, Okla.—Loon Fries
was foind guilty in the first degree
here of the murder of Artie Hose. *
chauffeur of Oklahoma City. The pen-
a’ty will be life Imprisonment. In the
spring of into. Fries employed Hose
to lake him Trom Oklahoma City to
Norman. When ivtlhir. two miles of
Moore, Rose halted the machine aud
got out and as he climbed back into
the car Fries struck him on the head
with a hammer and then dragged the
body Into a clump cf hushes, robbed
it of a.Miit $45 dollars and proceeded
to Norman. It le said that Fries had
a eon-jemlng desire to own an auto-
mobile. Insanity was the. defense.
Augusta, Me—Ancient Pentagoet,
better known as Casttne, situated on
the eastern side of Penobscot bay and
river, is ono of the moot prominent
Jdstorlc spots tn Maine today. It has
preserved the well-marked traces of
the works of the past and no small
settlement has within Its borders so
many earthworks and old forts. Fore-
most among the earthworks 1* Fort
George, situated on tho high land in
the center of the peninsula. It was
built by the British In June, 1779, and
wa* named Fort George In honor of
his majesty, George III. The fort Is
tetragonal' In form with « bastion at
each of the four angles. The bastion
where was located the magazine was
fully occupied by it, the entrances be-
ing made of arch passages of brick,
which may be seen today, covered
with mortar, and over them a layer
of logs with a heavy covering of
earth.
According to tradition and history,
it was from these same barracks that
Gen. Pol eg Wadsworth escaped when
held a prisoner in 1780, after being
captured by the English at his home
In Thomaston and taken to Casttne,
where he was confined for a long time.
Following the departure of the British
from Castino in 1816 the Americans
took possession of the fort and the
government had It repaired, strength-
ened and garrisoned, new barracks
taking the place of those used by the
British. The interior of the fort has
long been used by the boys as a ball
ground. The foundations of the old
barracks are still visible.
History says that It was in this old
fort that the gibbet was erected on
which both Ball and Elliott were
hanged. Both names were well
known in the early period of Maine.
The palisades, the barracks, the muni-
tions of war and Its buildings have all
Spring Humor* are due to the im-
pure, Impoverished, devitalized condi-
tion of the blood brought about by
the unhealthful modes of living dur-
ing the winter, too close confinement,
too little outdoor air and exercise, too
heavy diet. Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures
them and builds up the whole system.
Hood’* 8arsaparllla has no equal
for cleansing the blood and expelling
the humors that accumulate during
the winter. It effects it* wonderful
cures because It combines the utmost
remedial values of more than twenty
different ingredients. Insist on having
Hood's. It has no substitute.
COLT DISTEMPER
STILL
•BONN MtDIOAL CO-
SUSPENSE
Auto Falls Into River.
Tulsa, Okla—One man was prob
ably fatally Injured and one man and
twd small hoys narrowly escaped be-
inn, drowned when the motor car in
which they were riding from Tulaa to
Sapulpa went off the edge of a wagon
bridge and fell 25 feet into the Ar-
kansas rived. The injured man. Iaml*
Kish, was caught under the car and In
addition to internal Injuries lie was
nearly drowned. J. V. Boole, the own-
er of the machine, refused to tell the
names of the boys, both of whom were
about 0 years old.
Munyon’s Cold Homely HHI(*t«** (ho
bead, throat and loom iiliuoat limiirdluK*.
CtMK-ltH Favors, stops iMauhurgr* of
tho oosr, lahos away ulf aohoa and pains
i-susml hy colds. It cure* llrljp ami oh-
■llnata Cotuilia and prevent* Pnciitnonlit.
Writ* Prof. Monyon, fVUi-il amt JalTorson
Ha.. I’hlls.. I’u.i
solotaly trvs.
for lurilti'Ml mlvh-o ab-
SWAMP-
ROOT
Is not rornmmomlod for
overy thing; hut It yotl
havo kidney, llvor or
hladdor trouble ii will ho
found lust tho remedy you nosd. Al drug-
gists In fifty emit and dollar a!*--* You
may Imvc u sample u>tlh< of tide wonder-
ful now dheovery by mall ficu, nito
pamplitot lolling nil about II.
dddross, Dr. Kilmer * ()o.. Ulnghamton. N. Y
BOIMS IM IUV two*
Cener.il Stanley Oklahoman.
Muskogee, Okla.—General N. Stan-
ley, tt lender of the revolution In Mex
leo, and the officer who nocepted the
ltnw order or Dlnx suspending the per-
nonnl Bnarauleo and in reply declared
that he would shoot on slain, any ofll
cor of the Mexican federal army, for-
merly was an Oklahoma hutchor He
**1)1(1 meat for six years tit llcnryoitti,
near here
Oklahoma Town Fire Qwtfpt.
Muskogee, Okla.—The entire htisl
ness district of Webber's Falls, Okla.,
about 15 tnllcs lo the smith of this
ollr, was destroyed hy fire. Only one
store has been left standing. Three
dry goods stores, two lutttka, two drug
stores, a meat market, a pool hall and
telephone offices are among tile
buildings destroyed. The town l< Is *•
luted, nil wires being down. It Is Im-
possible to estimate tho damage. Tho
life skirted in the McCorklo drug
store Inil tin* cause Is unknown. Web-
ber's Falla on the west banks of the
Arkansas Giver, Is n town of more
than 1.000 neople. It has no rutlrnnd.
Oklahoma Lads Trap Eagle.
Tulsa, okhi. A larg" American
eagle believed It' he about the Hat
or Its kind arciiml hero, was trapped hy
t'lie* hoys In Osage coiit.ty. The
o-’glc had grown lo In* it lie'iuro over
n score of ninny inllor, nttm-klng and
eiii-rybg iif f lit tubs mid ulus and even
attnckir.g small children Geo. Adams
of Tiilsn ptirrhnsed bird and pre-
sent! d It to ilu* Baud H|h lags zoo near
h< re.
Blgan-y Cham* niiml*s*d.
•i'iiIsm. O! hi. William rtperry. nllnr
Wl’lium Botiiid, fur yours a deacon of
the First Hujitlst church, and at oils
time one of Hie wealthiest men of thin
chy, w!«m fietd on the eltnrge of big-
amy liy Judge Poe In l he criminal
branch of the district court. Judge
Toe dl«inis*ej the care because, In
Mtd, it hid not been brought In the
proper nnii'iter. Hporry'a arrest was
prised hy h'< daughter, Mrs Margaret
Wort nil, t.r Wnsl Ington, D. C., M MW*
bogie, ln«r n,minor,
Private Leahy Questions Sergeant
Donahue Regarding a Point in
Military Law.
Private Donahue and Private Leahy
were the best of friends, but when
Private Donahue became Sergeant
Donahue, Private Leahy saw the fall-
ings of his former companion with
amazing clearness.
“Sergeant,” he said one day, after
long, fixed gazing at his superior In
rank, "If a private stepped up to a
sergeant aud called him a consated
little monkey, phwat wud happen?”
"He’d ba put in the gyard-house,"
said the sergeant.
“He wud?”
“He wud.”
“But If the private only knew the
sergeant was a consated little mon-
key, and said ntver a wurrd, wud ta'e
be put In the gyard-house for that?”
inquired Private Leahy.
“Av coorse he wud not,” said the
sergeant, loftily.
“Well, thin, for the prlsent we’U
l’ave It go at that,” said Private
Leahy.
•MsaMPO) Qoshen. Ind— ill B- As
Where Surgery Fall# Short.
“Surgery,” said Simeon Ford nt a
dinner In New York, "accomplishes
wonder nowadays. Hearts are sewed
up; the appendix is removed; the
large intestine is done away with.
But—”
The noted humorist smiled.
“But will the time ever come when
surgery will be able to remove the
cheek of a young man or the jaw of an
old woman?’’—New York Sun.
TO CURB A COLD IN ONE DAY
The Beginning.
Children learn to creep ere they can
learn to go.—Heywood.
Constipation, indigestion, siek-headacho
and bilious conditions ore overcome by a
t-ourso of Garfield Tea. Drink on retiring.
You can often tell what a woman
really means by what she doesn’t say.
Visits Old Home; Arrested.
Muskogee, Okln.—The desire to vis
it scenes of his younger days to see
whet old friends were doing, led le
the arrest of Ed. Plunkett, after ten
veers, on it charge of murder. Plum
kett was arrested ill his home nt Sulll
saw. He wns Indicted by the federal
oourt In old Indian territory, charged
with killing Elvltt Samlet's In lflill, dur-
ing a quarrel.
Dynamiters In Swanson Town. I
,-hiyder, Okla. Unknown parties at-
tempted to destroy tlu* septh; tank
thnt Is a part of the minliary sower
ny-'tciu of tho city one ntrlit recont’y
A heavy charge of dynamite wns plac-
ed unde r the concrete wall of thn tank
and exploded, but only small lnuingo
resulted. Nearly one hour nfter more
dynamite was discovered about the
handsome oily school building, but
vigilant watchmen foiled what seemed
to he n well planned effort to destroy
It. Snyder will make no reprisals, but
should the perpetrators of these out*
rages be caught they will he aharply
dealt with.
McConnell's Field Expand*.
Guthrie, Ok'n -J. .1. McConnell, for
nirrlv of the University of Iowa and
rerunsl> general student secretary of
Y M. C. A lit tire Oklahoma State
university, line been mndo general atn*
dent socretnry for the entire state,
sitococalng P L Corbin of Oklahoma
Cltv. who lias boon transferred t>:
Nashville, Tenn., to n*slst In llm work
In that state.
I idioms M:>n Elected President.
Wiehlln. Kan -The Interstate Aastv
chiton of opi milng Threslierman, In
•OHihii here, alerted the following of*
fleets; A Dittrich, Lnhotna, Okla.,
president; J. M. Wlleox. Belle Plain#,
Kan., v|(e preiddent; \. K. Johnson,
Lament, OUhl, vb'0 president for Okla*
Immn; Mike Dlmlo. Ft. Marys, Kan.,
vIce-prtT'dent for Kansas, These of-
fleer*, with *t M Fnlwllar, retlrnlR
president, wore elected directors. Th*
Knmna law requiting vehicles of mot*
than one ton In weight to <snrrr «xti»
plank* for brldfaa wa* condtmned.
\
Old Magazine, Fort George.
disappeared, but otherwise the old
fort remains practicaly the same *as
when tho British left it.
In early February of 1780, whlio
the country was In a session of quiet-
ude following the conflicts of the pre-
ceding fall, General Campbell, then
in charge of the garrison at Fort
George, learning that his hated Amer-
ican foe, Oen. Peleg Wadsworth, was
at his home on the St. George river
in. Thomaston, determined to make
him a prisoner. The British general
hearing that his only guard was six
soldiers, he detailed Lieutenant Stock-
ton with a force of twenty-five men to
mako tho capture. A sharp sanguin-
ary tight took place, In which several
of tlie TlrltlBh soldiers were killed and
wounded.
The news of the capture preceded
tho detachment on their return to
Castlne. The story Is here told that
General Campbell sent his compli-
ments to General Wadsworth and n
surgeon to dreRs his wounds, assuring
him that IiIb situation would be made
comfortable. Ho wns furnished with
books and allowed to receive visitors.
Ho dined with tho commandant utid
met all the principal ofllcors of the
garrison.
It was not long bofore General
Wadsworth made application for a
flng of truce, by which means he
could transmit a letter to the gover-
nor of Massachusetts and another to
Mrs. Wadsworth. This was granted
on the condition thnt the letter to the
governor should be Inspected.
General Wadsworth’s escape follow-
ed soon after, lb company with Major
nenjamtn Burton he bribed their wa-
ter carrier and from him received a
gimlet. They bored holes in the
boards of the side of their bnrrncks,
covering the holes with chowod bread.
One stormy night they cut their way
out with n knife and escaped. For
miles they were forced to go through
the then wilderness, crossing the
river to Stockton, thenco south
through Belfast, Northport and Rock-
Innd to Thomnston. Tho fort was
Anally vacated In 1A1C.
Doubting His Word.
Two Irishmen occupied beds In the
same room. By and by one of them
woke up.
“Mike,” said he, “did you put out
the cat?"
“I did,” said Mike.
An hour later Patrick woke up
again.
“Mike,” said he, “Mike, did you put
out the cat?"
“Sure I did,” said Mike, sleepily.
“On me word of honor.”
Some time later Patrick again
waked up.
“Mike,” said he, “Mike, ye dlvvle;
ye did not put out the cat.”
“Well,” said Mike angrily, "if ye
will not take the word of honor of a
gintleman get up and put her out
yerself."
Barmaid* in South Australia.
South Australia Is suffering from •
barmaid famine. Two years ago bar-
maids were abolished In that state by
act of parliament. No more could be
legally engaged, but those already em-
ployed could remain on condition that
they registered themselves.
There are now only 400 of them loft,
and the competition for their serv-
ices is such that their wages have
Jumped from 26 shillings to £3 a
week. Tho hotels that have had to
employ barmen report a considerable
chunge for the worse in their receipt*.
“Cured
Neuralgia
Pain”
All 8nake* Are Killers.
But. all snakes, great and small, are
killers. All of them eat creatures
which they sluy. None cut vegetable
food of any kind. Nor will they eat
animals which they find dead. That
Is one reason, no doubt, why they have
always been shunned and dreaded by
human beings.
Good Customer of America.
Morocco uses about two thousand
barrels of American cottonseed oil
yearly.
Glounlineus
John Wesley.
Is next to godliness.—
Potrlflod Woman 900 Founds.
Hellefontalne, O.—One of the most
remarkable cases of petrlflcatlnn evet
on record was discovered hore when
the body of Mr*. J. W, Ovorly, who
died 18 years ago, was exhumed st the
Roundhead cemetery. Tho body and
"nflln hml petrified and were hard to
novo owing to (he weight reaching
tonrly 000 pounds. Mrs. Overly wns
» small woman. At burial both she
sad tho roflln did not weigh as much
u 800 pound*. The -peirlflcatlon U
«»ld to b* perfect.
A FOOD 8TORY
Makes a Woman of 70 "Ono In 10,000.”
The widow of one ot Ohio’s moat
distinguished newspaper editors and
a famous leader In politics in his day,
a&ys she Is 70 years old and a "stron-
ger woman than you will find In ‘ ten
thousand," and she credits her fine
physical condition to the use of Grape-
Nuts:
"Many years ago I had a terrible
fall which permanently Injured my
atomach. For yeara I lived on a
preparation of corn atarch and milk,
mit It grew ao repugnant to me that I
bad to gtvo It up. Then I tried, one
after another, a dozen different kind*
of coreals, but tho process of diges-
tion gave mo great pain.
“It was not until 1 began to us*
Ornpo-Nut* food three years ago that
I found rellaf. It has proved, with the
dear Lord's blosolng, a great boon to
me. It brought me health and vigor
such m I never expected tn again en-
joy, and In grntttiido I never fall to
round Its praises." Name given by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mloh.
"There's a Besson."
Look for It In tho little book, "Tho
Bond to Wellvllle," to be found In pkgs.
Hver reed Ik* eknve ledrrt A m*w
cue eaeeere fro
err gear
ia terse (•
“1
take
pleas-
ure in
writing
* to you
that I had a neuralgia pain in
my arm for five years, and I
used your Liniment for one
week and was completely
cured. I recommend your
Liniment very highly.”—Mrs.
J. McGraw, X2i6 Mandeville
St., New Orleans, La.
Cured Quinsy Sore Throat
Mr. Hinry L. Caulk, of
1943 Wilson St., Wilmington,
Del., writes:—"I bought a bot-
tle of Sloan’s Liniment for the
quinsy sore throat and it cured
me. I shall always keep m
bottle in the house."
SLOANS
LINIMENT
gives instant relief from rheu*
matism, lumba-
go,sciatica, neu-
ralgia, croup,
sore throat, ton-
silitis, hoarse-
ness and chest
pains.
Prlo3t,2So.,60o.fi 81.00
Moan's book on
honn, cattle, *hrpp
and poultry tout
fr*o. Addraa*
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Seger, Neatha H. Colony Courier (Colony, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 23, 1911, newspaper, March 23, 1911; Colony, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc941615/m1/4/?q=del+city: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.