The Jacksonian Democrat (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1914 Page: 3 of 4
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An Oklahoma Awakening.
The people of Oklahoma will probably grasp at au early
(toy a relation between the private character of their public
servants and the character of the public administration.
J4eme times government is unsatisfactory and inefficient
through the iueompeteuey of ftlean, well-meaning honest men,
Pit more frequently the failure of government to meet the
►leatands of the people is the result of short comings due to
the moral deficiency of those who exercise authority. We
nay aeeept as an axiom of public economy that immoral,
nit rustworthy public officers must inevitably lead to demor-
alized administration. The applause given in Oklahoma
City this week to two speeches one, addressing a great busi-
ness organization, and one addressing a representative
lathering of the Democracy of this state, when they gave
Tiice to the sentiment that the morality, the integrity, the
Article V. Seal.
ENERGY FROM * SUGAR DIET HEART WOUNDS NOT FATAL OLD DOG REJOINS MASHER
The seal of thi eagsocaation shall consist of tb<* expression Tha, i» mm m «.
of faith and love, showing through a cordial smile, and -nan a WoB<Urfui Effect upo# the Rssutts Have Been satisfactory
be used whenever it is necessary to validate any of the acts
of this association or of any of its members.
o o o
At moat Beyond Belief.
a Wondarful Effact Upon tha
Human Body.
The physiologist who discovered
that your liver and your muscle*
manufacture sugar while you sleep accomplish. Recently Dr. Francis
Stewart of Philadelphia reported Are
case* In which he had been obliged
Faithfulness of Dumb Animal Wan Ap-
preciation That Took tha Form
of Practical Assistance.
There seems to be no limit to the Although every ona pitied him and
wonderful things modern surgery can wanted to be hind to him and there
Insane Man Wills Away Raptures. hag bPPD surpt.a^j by tb* German
The la*t will and testament of Charles Lounsbury, who physician who use* sugar dissolved tn
t5u“v Agv.uu,, i. MWvH .o W tk, --
most remarkable will ever written by Ilian. Dre Jacques Pan sot and Piere them lived for five years and then
-I. Charles Loansbury.^g of md «Bs;
posing memory, do hereby make and publish this, rn\ la. t riod| „ dm tertuN. wall for wonderful technique and skill
will and testament in order as justly as may be to distribute to mend and then fall Clot* arc liable to form and
mv interest in the world among succeeding men. away again a* the diet continue*.
The part of my inL-reat which is know,, in law ami re »» /<-“
arc liable to lorm ana when
j swept tnto the circulation the patient
dies as If shot through the brain
veice to uie sentiment, mat tne morantv, the integrity, the: . r~: , * , , . , iwini.! fll“«ree« *no »«»•»>«( , Conatantm^n of tt» organ om*
. * . i, : n i . • ,, . v li-i cognized in the sheep bound % olunies a» my proptrty, IN mg sav* sugar is comparable to gaso- for a quick « ye -nd rapid, steady
'rustworthines., m all relations ot life ot those who seek high .onsiderable and of no account I make no disposal of in this. une. a* the uc.er i* the fuel of the ; work it is interero.ng to note that
poblic positions, must be considered, lU evidence ot the llttl- 1 internal combustion engine, so sugar at the present time onohalf of ail
tsde of public opinion. We are beginning to recognize ajm- w1 . . .. , • . . stnte is not at mv " the fuel of th® £uma“ h.“!® ccratn* tnt0 1 * °*P
r , , . , , ® f . “Mv right to live, being but & nie estat* , 1- not at III) Sugar, he says, is the staff of life, are saved.
demand for a higher moral standard and the prospect at the • ,f , thi’ ex«kPted all else in the world I now and man can produce mere energy A Parisian surgeo, restored heart
present time is that the people in the approaching struggle 11‘TOSai, - . from sugar than from any other food action in a case of a.'tua! death. The
mil insist upon ,-a,ululates irrepraohable in tbeir privalu )mT^ ^ father. ami mothers, in trust for
lives. No State ever confronted a more opportune occasion -,]miS a]! *» everv flower of the fields, and ‘ of lump sugar in the treatment of a done the surgeon ordered the patient
(•r taking this position. The people are gradually learning 1 ‘ ' ‘ , • ./ (t t i . «m0nir them n<>arI>' eighty year* old who was to be put upon the operating tabi*
whv this is so Thev will learn more as the davs and weeks the blos8°ms of thf* woods» "nth the n*at to P,a> aTn* ‘. Lying with a vicious disease of the i half an hour after death had been pro
why tni- is so. inej will Kara more as the da\s, an u. g freej v according to the customs of children, warning them i heart AfHr all lhe usual remedial, nounced. The chest cavity was open
pass, and the democracy that Will go to the polls the first I • .J , ■ . thS.+lo* ttn,i fhnrns \nd I devise i measures had failed one of the maids ed In 50 second*. A pint of blood was
Tuesday iu August wil be a Democracy informed responding,at tlie1 ^ f thi WA ! i l .sk“T there w.* any objection to - found in the heart «c from a wound
° , . . . J to children the banks of the brooks ana tilt gotain .-ana. ,he sufferer lump sugar. The! In the heart muscle two ana a half
i# ‘ftellierE-noe and lo consaeuce. A Dem^rwy determined j water8 thereof, and the odors of |ho willows that to. «< t»,. siooa ...
!. make the pul,l,e admm.strat.ou m the state ot Oklahoma 1 d.p lh(,r(lin llm, clouds that float kith over the j a-H ^ |'w-« ^ia““S
giant treos. And I leave the children the long days to *MV aC(i in a weflj. was a ueii man j puu« waa tmit at th* wrist. The heart
Dr. Berzeller recommends to one of j continued to beat more than half an
is the usa hour and then stopped. It was found
Of powdered sugar in the treatment at autopsy that injurie.
of old .11 treated and neglec^d can- gan* had been too great for rccov-
He says the application of j ery
us efficient and as stainless as the public administration at r:^-- — An(i j leave the children the long days to h,
Washington. Imerrv in in a thousand wavs, and the night and the moon ...................
The Morning News with but rare exceptions, will not I - ’ - ‘ vr;n.,. 'Wav- t,k wnndor at but subiect !i the German medical societies the use! hour and then stopped.
A i;,-; nrimnrv an<1 the traul ot the Ml,k> "A> U> WOn. 1 ar ,lU SUJ *i ...... the treatment! at autop*y that injurie* to other or-
advocate individuals m the approaching Democratic prunarj, never^ejeg8 j}u, rights hereinafter given to lovers.
Imt wo shall from Umo to time endeavor to .rnpress thow .jointlv a„ tUe „sef„l idle Held.
voters who read these columns, with a sense of their duty to , . „ , ... when* i *u*ar !° lhe fel'a 1>ari* “*S*TOB incu‘s'
Ike Demoo ratio party ami to the people of Oklahoma. There eo,muons where b. lmay he .1.i>e, ; all ph-asam »a .s coo, «d«. h
r.oi.»eni „w5„»SvkiL ti,„t L Laapntsd f.vr tbo «,id- one may swim; n\\ snow clad lulls Where om may toast, therInore. lhe genera^ condiuo.iof^the
are general pnneiplea tha, may be presented for and ponds where one
ENDED SUPREME COURT LEAK
left to those who vote intelligently. • mess we — '"'.i-he .ame^for a period of their bovhood. And all meadow.
misapprehend the temper and “* s<““e Si_„..... .....,
signs of the time, unless we
„ ____... ______ _____ you art* liable to be deluded into the
. with the clover blossoms and butterflies thereof, the woods belief that the cancer ha* heated.
auce of the voter, the application of which may i>e saieiyi**^ ‘ T,inv .t„t„. have md t»> hold i ce“e unie,M, >ou nave “aa “ I Lea*' Body Forced to Taka Precau-
Unless we mistake the j»hen gnu. winters comes, one may skate, to have fml to hold | long MPfrjen« w-uh cancer patient*. tlon. ^ the Safe9uar,in, 0»
Its Decision*.
• Yes, it is true that supreme court
decision* leaked in the old day*/' re-
marked on old-time Wall street broker.
I remember a certain Important suit
about 20 year* ago. It was the great
case of those days, as big In it* way as
the Standard Oil and Tobacco suit* of
recent date. A week before the de-
cision came down the son of one of
wa* not a home tn the town that
would not have been glad to take him
in and keep htm, Bniee. a shepherd
dog. wandered disconsolately about
the streets of an Arkansas town He
»as pining for the ontr master he had
ever known. For fifteen years he
had had all that a dog wants—a good
home and somebody to love continu-
ously. and now that his old master
had gone away to California he was
broken-hearted Perhaps, too. he
* tiered over his ma8;er’<» lllen for
tunes and the fact that he bad failed
in business and had been compelled
to remove to another place Surely It
was a bard fate that parted a» ever-
faithful dog from his life-long friend.
Hut kind eyes and sympathetic
hearts noted the old dog as he tramp
ed wearily around the town, seeking
the one who was all the world to him
and refusing to attach himself to any
other.
Touched by the dog s misery, some
one proposed that a collection be ta-
ken to send Bruce to California to his
master. The suggestion met with en
thusiastk: approval. The hat was
passed and It required but a few min
utes to secure enough money.
One of the old dog's friends made a
crate, furnished It with enough food to
last him a week, and Bruce was start-
ed on his long journey to rejoin his
master.
And now, in the town wherw Bruce
lived so long, they miss their old fav-
orite; but a warm glow comes over
the heart when some one remarks
about the happiness that must have
come to the faithful old fellow when
he found his master
Skillful Touches ih Arrangement of
Furniture and Draperies Will
Accomplish Wonders.
spirit of the people, the business of government in Okla-i__.a I ----
homa, U going to receive more careful, more serious ami kj andistant places which may be BRIGHTEN THAT NORTH ROOM
more intelligent eons,deration, this year than ever be-tore. I??'! *'' wi ,, tho adventures there found. And it
The politidan who merely entertains the thoughtless voter, | *<£ JJ," "h ”u own place at the fireside at night. 1
will have less weight and a constantly disuttegrating follow- h all pictures that mav be 'eon in the burning wood to!
lag. The man ..th the political mari,me wali proha dy- learn l" “Vwithout let or hindrance and without any encumbrance j , „rtM ^
to his sorrow that the ignorant ami thoughtless \oter who * - wlth a geiftoned paper, light tan in,------------
supplies the raw material from which the machine manufac- of oare , , d(,visp their imaginary world, with *• »*" <« tSi'StTSTSm.“.S
ascendancy will be so scarce an article “ ,b ucc,1; As lhe st,irs of the sky, the red Lb mo.1, o,-« .outadroid.•«, wd.o.-.«. wo«bl je
vear that the machine Will not be able to 'vualt'er u*“- . , the sweet the house Then make your drepwry fraln from any opinion, and the re-
operate even on'half time. It will be surprising, too, if the ■OSes by the wall; the bloom ot >te hawtho nc tl,( «m~. -•■ .I».,.■«
* - -- u-trains ot music, and aught else M. which tttev mat o .1 deep hemstitched hem at the bottom.
so and so/
He smiled and went away
short-
lures political ascendancy will lie so scarce an article in ' " ,. v.‘ f *tlf‘ ^t-v tj,’e mj
Oklahoma this year that the machine will not be able to j ^t*>" ^ wall*; the bloom of the hawthorn.*; the sweet! theTo*^. ™k.'“jro«; dreary | k“4
voters should turn away from those who have t0° o’thel'the laltingneM1and*l^auty'of their aUow'tbem'to hang straight
mately identified with politics and give their support to those,- ® ' Staln tl3e woodwork White and give j ly after the decision was rendered, and
who have definite plans and ideas for the advancement of i . , ,lpvis(, a„,| bequeath all buster- j ■■ "’f™*'.“ Z" ,S 12^““ “oSTiTLSd *2k
the public welfare and who evince some other concern than . of rivalrv, and 1 give to then, the disdain ““J 0° «... .» 1 to omc.^ h. ..id hi. t.tb.r ...
the consuming greed for office-Chas. I- Stewart m En,<1 L,f Weakness and undaunted ranfidenee in their own strength, «p
*NewB- o o o * lhough thev are rude. I give them power to make lasting! “J , pref(>r thP woven rugs and ; them trace the source of my inform*-
_ .. I iriendhips " and of possessing companions, and to them b,.au,ifUi solid effect, with handsome i tion. 1 told him what knevr. n«»
A Good Corporation. ineuumpB, “uu i e r , J v. t,w,««thie lone of
ARTICLES of Association of the Joy Company, Unlimited, j exclusively I give all merry songs and brave ehoru-es, to
William Allen Wood, of the Indianapolic Bar, in “Lf/V/ i-ing with lusty voices.
’ Article I Name “Item. And to those who are no longer children or
The name of this association shall be The Joy Company, |lovers, I leave memory, and I bequeath to them the yohmies
,, .. .. , icf {Kiems and Burns and Shakspere and of other poet.-, it
unlimited. Article II. Object. there In* others, to the end that they may live ovr tin*
That
the official supreme court
stenographers had been selling ad
dominate in rag and arUcles of fur- j vance copies of the decisions to a very
nlsbing for the bureau and chiffonier, prominent broker of that time. What
pillows and couch cover With white \ this broker paid for his Information
enamel furniture, the north room will I. of course, do "ft know, but !t was
borders now [-osslble
Try to have the rose color pre-
CAN LEARN FROM THE PAST
Poultry Breeders of Today Might
Profit by a Study of Methods
Used by tha Egyptians.
The announcement Is made by a
British scientist that he has discov
ered bow the auclnnt Kgyptians Incu-
bated chickens to the number of 120.-
000,000 a year. He has found l*cu
bators which he declares were used
in Egypt 5,000 years ago.
The secret has been well guarded
but it is laid bare at last. They had
no oil stoves or gas or electric heated
incubators, but they had ovens which
worked much better, even though they
required more constant tending. na»ch
oven was calculated to hold 7,000
eggs, and the fuel by which it was
heated consisted of chopped straw aud
dung, but for the last ten days of the
hatching the energy was supplied al-
together by the chickens themselves
It is the commonest error of those
operating our modern incubators to
use too much heat, especially toward
the end of the period, and new we
may learn from the old Egyptians how
not to do things as weM as how to do
them. The use ot the straw and other
be far from a
cold renellant room, j established that 1 was correct as to j Hght fupi „hows that the Egyptians
- _____ in fha ____M__l a ____id tAA 4*1.
<1 and will be a transplanted sunshiny where the weak spot was
The object of this association, in
rights ot lif •, lil>crty, and tlie pursuit of happiness and
the intercut of good comrad »-hip, is o* emote the use v:
the easy chair, the stein, .lit soothing v < cJ, and the story ,
by means of crackling logs in a broad fireplace, to incite to
tfie geniality that knits closer the group of hearty talkers and
contented listeners; to induce boisterous laughter, merry
songs, lusty choruses, and strange, brave, and romatic stones;
to journey in the world ot imagination and through there
be snow and storm outside, to wander in green forests, to
gather the blossoms of the peach and hawthorne, to hear the
night birds sing, the streamlets purl, the far-off harmony
furfheranee of the days again, freely and fully without title or diminution.
“Item. To our beloved ones with snowy crowns I be-
queath the happiness of old age. the love and gratitude of
their children until they fall asleep.”
a o o
Patronage.
There is a striking similarity in the views of th*
teemed Oklahoman with those of practically every Republi
corner.—Exchange.
To Break Up a Cold.
The hydropathic treatment of a cold
In the head is more reliable than any
other one which scarcely requires the
aid of a physician It is as follows:
In the morning after rising and at
night before retiring wash the feet
and legs as high up as the knees in
cold water, then rub them with a
rough towel and massage them till
were most careful to avoid too in-
tense heat at any stape. We thought
that we were the first to use Incuba-
tors. but we are fifty centuries behind
court.
Since then every decision of the
supreme court has been written in
long hand tone copy), thus making it j t|,e times.
absolutely impossible for an outsider j .............———
to get the news in advance. This ex- ( Hew t0 Keep Eflfl, Eleven Months,
plains. In part, why It now takes so of tbe o)deet methods of pro-
long for the court to announce its de- j gervjn(? eggB lg to d,p tbpm j„ a bath
cisions." | ol jincBte 0f soda, or "liquid glass: '
but recently the wisdom of this meth
Replacing Delusions.
od has been questioned. It being said
__ if the popular Imagination Is to be- tbat the eggs absorb soluble silica la
«n"^pi-r"‘ir”tho“tater on tlie q,/S,io„ of'p„tron,.e. ' The | IXTST* *° **"
tion to this, snuff tepid water up the
nose frequently during the day aud sip :
dixxy feeling or momentary illness j Dr Bartlett, an English chemist.
Oklahoman says:
•The average citizen—the rank and file voter of all the parties—!*' *“,* ,‘“^1“ a's “hot 'as ] suffered by a young woman in a pub- ; hag be€n testing eggs so preserved
little concerned about who fills the federal jobs so long as they are filledI 1 b<? borne gn hour before each He place, it will be unsafe for a man gnd hag proved that If the bath con-
Z^ZdlSmT* on Stan- ~ fond n„.l ™:h,r ,h.n r-..r4. , .ouv,,v ! i ^ ’ ST “
to enjoy thelunsrian right, and privilogo, of an Itnlwn night;h<l.» ,h.» . con,» ■«. - "■'« ------' ' " '
in .luno; to enjoy all these rights and ” rJ^Mc’n ,a.i Mod lob, m o,a.r ,o t.i.hroi nmU i eWo«. .»e to so u> b.r mi
seasons; to use such nicknames, terms of affection, handcla-ps, i # jg rapid',y becoming obsolete The public wants a businesslike! reauired if ta —J—
and caresses as will promote good feeling and show the ! administration of public affairs no matter Which party is in power. We
antl retrard in which companions are held; to give words of|arP beginning to lean: that we cannot expect the same if the Offices art-
praise and encouragement to one another, to assist one I to be used for paying partisan debts; for herein is where the public ser
another in everv wav possible not inconsistent with our j vice usually suffers.
mutual strength‘and our personal sense of justice, and to We will have to take issue with General Stafford that
another’s confidence in the strength of manhood the “rank and file” ot the Democratic party is little eon
businesslike required
of the disease a cold Is broken up
which might otherwise become a se-
vere case of bronchitis lasting many
days or weeks
not happen to know To assist a worn ; wben a ten per cent, solution of slli-
no into a car will subject him to sus- | cat(l of go,ja be used there is none of
this absorption. After being !m
mersed for eleven months the eggs
contain no more silica than when
if she
faints in the street will render him li-
able to arrest as a whiteslaver.
Anatoli* France says somewhere I frPgb. They are In very much better
tha: one result of getting rid of old j condjtion than when preserved for the
delusions is that they are often re-
placed with others of worse aspect
This present phase of popular credul-
foster one
?nd one
Rewards of Inventors. ^ _ ________
It is not always the greatest tnven- Qn* [he 8ubjPCt would deserve to be
tion that brings the largest financial rt,Kardf.d merely as silly if It were
same length of time by freezing, as
the pores of their shells are her-
metically closed.
Another’s hones of living up to high ideals and at- eerned alnjut “who till- the federal jobs.” It we can read rewards Rotter skates are «udw i, tor thP tendency of an exaggera-
another sho^qfli.R P^^.............riJ..... ,i„„„ ....................... who have »uri, ' £
taining high accomplishments; to preserve pleasant memories the signs of the times those congressmen t WD1.e near,, o — -- to ccnfuge th
mrnmmMmmMMrn .........
expressed for’us the bright and happy colors of life and the come obsolete; and is not even ltfpidh becoming «
beauties of crowdetl hours, and all those caressing or in- And if we are not particu ar y wronguiour %u*u
spiring memories of larger experiences, deeper emotions, subject we opine that the <>k almnian will find from the
^ ^. .. * ____i __________ :n)oiionfiiiil nvocatinns that of the Aufimst primaries that the rank and fib-
lift*
tb
moi-rat-
more
mis aasociauou m y ni }Iome ()ffice with abnormal tendencies tor exploiting a suffenmr pco|Je
The home office of this association shall be any place with his silly gush about performing a Sabhnth morn duty-
where there are a sufficient number of good fellows, two or or pleasure. 0 0 Q
more, to create 0^!^ Stock. ^ ^ now looks like there will he at least six or eight can-
„ .. , .. nf tilis association shall In* unlimited 1 didates for Senator Gore’s place. Will the Jaeksojnan
but to creato an atraoaphere of uoo.1, Clubs of Oklahoma City be ore,lit,-1 with brinpu* th.au all
cheer shall be sufficient for working capital, and shall he,out? o o o
contributed by the members in such ways ana proportions as
they may see fit.-provided the total is always enough to
Spondylotherepy.
Spondylothcrapy is the gospel of
set-lng red It has been invented and
promulgated by a San Francisco phy-
sician. and already numbers Its little
squad of devotees.
Why Parsons Might Not Hunt. The spondylotherapists declare that
An English clergyman may shoot rpd is the greatest human energixer
birds without outraging popular sentl- | A ,nan or woman who is an habitual
discovered*80(1 described The~priiic!pie ment, why not. then ride after a fox? j victim of weariness may be stirred to
of the telephone in 11)55. died poor. To find the answer we must prob- ambition and activity by wearing a
Mirhaux the inventor of the bicvcle. ably go back 10 those old days when rpd shirt, red stockings or a red neck-
hard riding meant hard drinking, and i tie. A room papered or painted a
when spiritual life was at a low ebb giaring red is the idea! workshop.
The hunting parson" came to be a Redness tends to bring out the maxi-
Democrat- laces. The inventor of the safety pin.
ho took the Idea from a reproduc-
tion of a Pompeiian fresco, says U-«
Nouvelles, made $10,000,000. On the
other hand Charles Bourseut. who
lilt ended his days in the utmost penury,
and Frederic Sauvage, who is credited
with the invention of the screw pro-
rank and file Democrat peller was imprisoned and died bank- type of cleric who habitually neglect ; mum of human efficiency
'' > » Is ie a k-nmv Clmi TTY - ...m Uttnosia BA Bpr
bu-ilH*— like atlmini- rupt and insane.
Alabama's iron Ore Deposits.
The boom which followed tbe dis-
covery of the extensive deposits of
iron ore in the vicinity of Birmingham,
Alabama, in IS82 was without prece-
There Is
ed hi® duties it is a happy clrcum- j no cage of !axine«*s so serious that it
stance that iu these days foxhunting cannot he cured by persistent spon
need no longer be a reproach because j dylotherapic treatment.
the gr.ater reproach has been re- —---
moved A parson who does bis work
faithfully and well need not be
grudged a few hours' gallop in his
leisure moments. Indeed he can
All surplus profits shall be turned over to the world at
large.
have the advantage of being near de-
The JunMtrion for a “short t*Hllot” is merely anutliei j poatu of good coking coal and of the
*7 , , . . • .. ; limestone requUite for fluxing so that
way of making a demand for an increase or tfie appointive j Blr:ntngbani, tixe Pittsburgh of the
jiower. What is needed is not a “short” ballot but an j south, can manufacture pig iron cheap-
honest ballot and a short road to the penitentiary- for the I er
election thugs who curse Oklahoma.—Bristow Enterprise.
Why He Left Scotland.
At a Caledonian banquet in Lon-
don a Scotsman who had settled In
?.Tr7n”.he industrial history'' o'f the leisure moments <noe.u ne cau uu |he mgtropolig made a speech, in
dent in the ind jslrlal history ot better for me exercise, and . , ^ , d
United States, and the rush to llirm- j " au «hl'‘h Scotland and
ingham was paralleled only by the
stampedes which followed such dis- i
coveries as the Comstock lode in Ne-
vada and the Alaska gold fields The
iron ore# of Alabama, while inferior J
in quality to those of Lake Superior, j
which Scotland and all things Scot
win respect for his spiritual teaching f|gb wpre so fulsomely praised that an
by gaining a reputation for manli-
ness and pluck
Croesus Preferred.
Two poets sat having a frugal glass
”1 wish Burns and Poe were with
as tonight.” -aid one We could
have a rollicking time "
•*i d rather have Croesus here, said
than any other district
world.
of th#
the other. "He could buy a few
drinks Those other fellow* wouldn’t! g** Ah cans' •«>' Sooth, an sin' syne,
Eng'isbman. who sat next him. said
when he had finished:
“If Scotland is all that you Scots
men say It ts why don t you stay
there instead of coming here?”
-Weal." answered the Scotsman.
-Ah'Il tell ve hoo it wts wi me. When
Ah wt# <B business in Fife Ah fand a
th# fowk wis just as Oliver as tnesel
an' Ah cudna gar the two en's meet
have a cent-”
Ali ve been daeln' rale weel'
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Cardwell, W. D. The Jacksonian Democrat (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 29, 1914, newspaper, January 29, 1914; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc941996/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.