Weekly Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 31, 1894 Page: 1 of 8
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THF FIRST PAPER PUBLISHED IN OKLAHOHA.
vc
5.
1111. 11—
GTJTH RIJC, OKLAHOMA SATURDAY, MAHOH BJj> 1B94
> () -48
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LIBERAL LECTURE
A Religion That Needs No Ritual but
Truth, Beauty and Good Works.
ABOUT CHARACTER Bl'IUHNH
teil by the universal creed makers
The forms ami eerem >r.ies rituals |
ami methods of the churches are ouiv
it machine for saving decrepit ras-
cu'ity.
And after you sum it all up. after
you fathom its best efforts, yon timl it
is only filling heaven with trash.
THE PARKS ARE OURS.
■{offer*, the lloltniliin Minister, D«-| .
ver* Another l,«rtur« un the Faith
Tlmt Will 1>« to Live Hjr «
Well an to Die by, to a
1.a rite Audience
l.Kttt Nlglil.
JUDGE EDWARD D. WHITE, of Louisiana.
Recently nominated by President Cleveland, and immediately confirmed by the Senate,
Associate Justice of tbe IT. S. Supreme Court. Born in Louisiana in 1845. Served in the Con
The Townslte Hoard Receive* t. iln l.itin
l-'roin the Interior Department.
The Townsite Hoard is now again
organi/.ed with .loe Saunders as a mem-
ber. Today it received a decision from
the interior department deeding the
I city of Guthrie the Capitol Hill square,
Another good sized audience listened, ht,jino] block and the large park of
to a lecture by ltev. Rogers, the I ni I oyer t|,;rty acres at the north end.
tarian minister of Oklahoma City, ii j jji( actjOM was taken on the West
the district court rooms last, evening Guthrie park in the bend of the Cot-
The speaker's theme was "Charactw j tonvvooa.
and Character Huiiding The until'* Dave ltlubaugh also received a de- j
lying principle of the theme was tha j t,)sion favor for the I'ulace Hotel
the only permanent thing—that whiul (
all the writing, all the preaching, al
the teaching, all the building of tine
temples of worship of the ages w$ . _
intent upon—was human charactei . Cullll,„„ iQ<iiau An ir« to lteport
This the speaker moulded out, infusel Aaatust KatlfylnK tl> sale,
and wade palpable to his audience il 1 Washington, March 24.- (Special |
the lights and shades, epigrams, metti j u uu.etin(f todav the sub commit-
KIOWA RESERVATION.
te> c€iolT«
"IT© ^ Lefld ©f
EWk fifo <&§
Hl@GV fifo Ifiht <S@<al
toy If® Hit
i phorcs, semiles, sylogis-ms. graphit !
Indian affairs virtually agree
federate army, in the stale legislature and a* associate Justice of the State Supreme Court, pictures, flights of oratory ami philo j of a report against
' sophical paralylism possible. Each i ^ ratification of the sale of the lvio-
Afterwards elected to the U. S. Senate, taking bis seat in lbOi.
KNOCKED OUT.
The Pop Ticket Goes Down by Self-
Carelessness.
IT WAS NOT FILED RIGHT.
The Residence of Purtjr Chairman and of
Candidates Omitted, anil Ofllc*
lluunlnjt for Not l)«ilKnated,
Which Left the Law
Dncomplled
With.
e*ing, at)d for their protection, then
%ve have been mistaken in the man and
uust frankly any ho to our readers. Hut
ve also say to them, rest assured these
hings will be ferreted out and the
lemocratic party will exonerate itself.
'l ime only has been given that the
work might be done at home and the
•vorld given to understand that we in-
vestigate our own corruption and pun-
ish our own criminals.
If it must be done by congressional
investigaiion the sooner it is over the
better. Let the work begin at once.
DESTROYED BY FIRE.
The Milwaukee iNliloet Work* Com-
pletely lkewollKhfd*
one of his propositions was a logicalj CoIIlam.iie and Apache reservation,
sylogism, that being tested by th« t)r, oppoHition to the ratification of
reason of the hearer, could not be de- -• 1
these lands has been thoroughly ex-1 BRADSTREET.
stroyed and had to be accepted. 1 he , ined through these despatches, and
speaker showed that character is th.v q gubgtancei i(i as Kiven in the memo- i
very basis the first principle of humanl rU] wMch chie{ ,.arker presented,
nature from which proceed and is re"! clftiraing that the Indians had agreed |
di:aim.och
ItepnhllcaiiM Unfu
IN Til R
IKMSK.
ii tht> O'Neill*
Prices Have Advanced for Rice, Cot
ton and Indian Corn.
suttant all moral action. If that was] ^ thp ^ q{ the ,nnds through fraud |
builtled inviolate nothing could de-' raisropre8entation on the part of ] ()WER PRICKS l'MU CATTLE,
stroy the moral citadel of the Individ-!^ coraml8sion an<1 the Interpreters '
ual. The lecturer spoke extempore [{ lhe fll)1 .-ommittee accepts the re- H,Ve stim.ii i«<i Trad- u> All
Under the law, the city clerk and the
chairman of the central committees of
the two leading parties are an election
board to see that the law is complied
with by candidates and that the ticket
is legal. Clerk Seixas, \V. Ii. Ren fro
for the republicans and Mr. Searcy for
the democrats met this morning to ar-
range the ticket. It was found that ,
ihvI ;r|i.tr,.:.: .. f.i'.at .u:.„ Apartment, however, saved the neieh-
,i.„ . o/.h j boring houses. The plant is a total
j loss amounting to about $6,000.' It
•un by Johnson Co., who leased
A
At a few minutes past six o'clock 1« M
evening a fire alarm wns given and the
next, instant the fire department was
rushing west on Oklahoma avenue.
The Milwaukee Cabinet works were
on fire. Being full of lumber and dry
shavings it was soon a tna.s* of flames.
and whs impossible to save. The tire
-.eli t *.H. J .*• '1'Wtuient. howe* ...... ...
* * , ., . . | boring houses. The plant is a total
the law requires, the residence of each I, * „ A «« nnn . f
candidate, and of the chairman and
secretary of the populist committee, j " .
wtrewnjri , p , , , , the plant from Owart <fc Griswold
who certified to it. fhc school board .
I quantity of unfinished bar fixtures and
candidates, too, had no long or shorM^ ^ wfl8 (n th(; houM, al„, WBli
term, as required by aw designated , ^ tota) ]o^ u> (htf There
after their names. Mr. Adler had a
, ..... no insurance on the property or mate-
petition of second ward residents ask-
ing that his name be placed on the ^ '
ticket as an independent candidate for i Federal Jitll Note*,
thecouncil. The netition did not state. Deputy United States Marshal S. S*
as the law requires, that the petition- Jlix returned last night from Xebras-
ers desired to vote for him, and it did wjiere ju. ],ad been after John
not state whether he was a candidate jjrazennief a Bohemian who
with only a <fe\* notes and his lecture
! cannot be yiv* . The following are a
tew prineipies, t ut of cum ->e detached
; from the speaker's glo^iijg illustra-
tions accompanying art- tithing like
' the gems when in their seiling:
We are deeply con>-eri *d about sal
vation, and the world i« luine, and we
are wearied with definitions of what
is required in order to secure.it.
And iuauv have In
! port it will be necessary to appoina a
new commission.
A JUMP FOR FREEDOM.
.1. W. .Manning. Tried fur I'erjury, <ilve«
thesCourt the Slip-
Yesterday afternoon as the prosecu-
tion had finished its testimony in the
solicitous W Manning perjury case, the de-
about escaping from tne results of law fendant took occasion to go out under
that they have neglected to observe , the excuse of going after some of his
the requirements of law. witnesses and never returned. The
We have been so busy in building a ! A 4 ... ^ l9c,. nml
/ * .1 . , court went riirht on with the « ast. an ti
wall to protect us from the storm that *
,.v. r« ii i— r.vtvoun|r th i—y in averdictoi guilty,
us from the storm it has also shut out: ||e h;ts ntit yet been caught,
the sunlight. question now is are the bonds
In hastening
to Vote
cti on cn* e*
Wakiunoton. March '24. —Although
1 this was (iood Friday the house met as
usual. Mr. Sayers presented for im-
; mediate consi leration a joint resolu-
i tion appropriating $f0,000 for the sal-
aries an I expenses of mlditional deputy
i collectors of internal revenue to carry
. out the provisions of the Chinese exclu-
! sion act. as amended by the joint reso-
I hi tion passed December last. It was
agreed t•
Aft* r the transaction of the other
routine business the strucgle over ihe
O* Neill-Jo\ contested election case,
from Missouri, was resumed. Mr.
! Waugli (rep ). of Indiana raised the
tion of cons deration against the
port of the commit ee and the flli-
bu' otaithstandin* itcrc hoini? pracdcailv j bustcring Ijegan. The republicans re-
one lens business da. tnis wccU ih nl.wi, con .^ated their former tactics by refusing
turned prtiiv-like .miIut has iur.her sitrna I ^ tIm. result of til
laled Hales « i st ip'es ui nearU ftU lurner cities ,
In eastern. uililUie mill in me ut til ■ weiie.ni 160 to !. which allowed till
tivolv few ho ithern dlstribut- i were eighteen short of a quorum. A
l.liien. I iikllv (iwnrie*, I>ry
(•oods itiwl lli rdw n« - Contloiifd
Mirloktifft* In the Total
NumtMir of llii.liifM
New York, March *24.—In its review
of the state of trade llradstreet says:
Increased ot h rv hum* 01 Good Krid iv in bi.si-
ne*s circles to ch^ck the volume of tra 1
que
vote was
lemoerats
after the mirage of !t, . ,,
have surrendered th, tm'Nn^",i ,lil.- torliim;
Kill.ED IN TIIK HANK.
future good w
joy ami happiness of today.
In our fear of God we have failed to
cultivate the beautiful blossoms of
lo e.
We have been so long struggling to . , , ,
change and renew our natures which | entered the branch office
do not change that we neglect to cul- Francisco Savings Union
tivate and develop our characters, j street and presented to Assistant Cash-
whlch are the only things that are sus- S ier A. A Merrick a note written in red
ceplibleof change in us. ink stating that the hearer should be
vVe have been so long analyzing a jjiveii money or he would blow up the
God of wrath that we lose sight of the j plac-e with dynamite. On the bottom
fact that if He is a 4.od of wrath He With drawn a skull and cross-bones.
The Ca«hl«*r of i Smo I um ln o
Institution Killed by an Outlaw.
Hax Francisco, March 24. -A man
f t.h e Sa n
m Market
to Indians, and
nitted him to the federal jail.
only thing which will pass th
j way of death is character.
Theology and religion have given
j strength to millions, yet if they fail to
j produce good characters our lives have
j been an inexcusable blunder.
After all —after height and depth
for long or short term. The law is j wan^0<j here for perjury. He got his
specific, and not having been complied man ani, iandcd him safe in the fed-
with by the pops and Mr. Adler, their era| ja.j
petitions were thrown out. The board j Deputy United States Marshal John
was unanimous In declaring that they j ]jjxon j0£t for Newkirk this morning
had no power to place on the ticket I H H i>asco an,i Robert llrooks.
petitioners, whose petitions were 'n 'Phcy (?() for trial. They are charged
illegal form. This leaves only two wj^jj introducing whisky in the Osage
tickets, the republican and democratic, ,.ountry.
in the field. The pops declare they j ,)epnty United Marshal M. A. Jan-
will mandamus the board and say they | Ron came in with llenry Clem from
believe they will secure a writ coin- ] Kdmonds this morning, charged with
pelling the board to put their men on j se)|!n? ,^ hlsl<-v
the ticket. It would be a dangerous]
precedent for the board to establish | HIGH RITElS
to allow names to be placed on the |
ticket the petitions of which did not i The scott 1-1. Kite. Hold mi An-1 an(j iellgth and breadth have been
comply with the law. It would be | "■' Couvoe.tlou. I traversed-the only thing that will
, . .. i i I Ttiu sioftttlfih PUitK Musnns df (lklu-1 evei be saved is character
much better that the matter be sub-
mitted now for judicial determination.
Daniels says he copied the republi-
can petition and handed it to Shippey
as an accurate, form, but Shippey
failed to heed it, hence the error.
No citizens' ticket has been tiled.
MUST HAVE LIGHT.
Mmii.i Democrats Demand That the Gov.
ernor Kxplaln.
! From the Daily Oklahoman, Democratic. 1
It seems strange that Governor Ren-
frow should continue to remain silent
under the stinging accusations that
have been made against his personal
and official honor. That there was
much corruption in the organization of
the strip counties cannot be truthfully
gainsaid. Governor Renfrow, by a
personal explanation, could fasten
this guilt where it properly belongs,
bring the offending parties to justice,
and relieve the democratic party of
the odium that must attach. He could
remove the guilty parties and wipe
Herrick ordered the man away when
he drew a revolver. The first shot
went wide of its mark and Herrick se-
cured his revolver and fired at the man
but missed. Then the fellow shM a
second time and the bullet entered
.■anuot he a God of love.
We have so implicitly accepted the
poetic legend of the Genetic Eden
story that we have failed to realize the
fact that as a literal truth it is an im-
possibility.
Many of us seem to think that God's .
law demands change of nature, for- Herrick s head causing lustant death,
getting that nature's compacts are in-1 ' • I Melvin, the paying teller, fired
violable. ! two shot.s at the assassin, tioth of
Shrouds have no pockets. You may j which missed.
pile your wealth as high as the Rock- The porter ot the bank made an at-
ies. You may fill the land with pal- j tempt to disarm the murderer, who irn-
aces and the seas with commerce: the mediately turned his Hre upon him, but
The Scottish Rites Masons of Okla-
homa held their annual convocation
here last night. The lodge doings are
always highly secret and no one knows
what took place, but they held a ban-
quet at Mrs. Van Voorhees' which was
visible and highly interesting They,
like the Hebrews, seem to hold the
passover, and that was the occasion of
the meeting. The following were
present:
Harper S. Cunningham, :s:ird degree,
deputy of the supreme council. W. T.
Cannon, 32nddegree, I- 1>. DeSteiguer,
32nd degree, all of Guthrie; R. A. Rog-
ers. I). Wolf, I.. Kllison. G. Thompson,
J. Tanner, W. McClure, all 32nfl de
gree, and all of Oklahoma City.
CARVED TO THE HEART.
iiiarrei Over a IHviNlon I.ine Lradn to a
K t al Stabbing.
Twelve miles west of Stillwater two
t'laims adjoining were held by August
the shots went wild.
The murderer then fled from the
bank pursued by police and the crowd
which had been attracted to the scene.
He hail only gone a short distance be-
fore he was captured.
The murderer gave the name of Fred
Horneman. and the police said he iw-
rived here last week from Denver.
rut .U' in
! Beliefs are never important only as
they lead to important results. 1
John Calvin believed in a cruel and KfM.river t lerk «,d the t nion Paeiiie >i^u
vindictive God because he was himself i „*bie t.<> Agree.
cruel and vindictive. Omaha, Neb., March 'ii. The last
Hence, in forming character, it is , UJOVe in the joint conference of officials
necessary to consider our theories °f j au,j employes of the I niou Pacific
character. | was probably made to-day when the
For instance, fidelity to truth marks flren|gU slllmliUed the schedule pre-
and measures the dignity of human t/) Ml, , ,I(rk and was
nature: and he whose life is 111 unison r . . .
with the heart of nature is the nearest "formed in return that it was not ac-
to God i ceptaole. I here is a possibility that
The opposite of this is infidelity. Cle the engineers may be called to confer
who reposes with satisfied complacency i with Mr. Clark again.
Kverything will remain iu statu
skiti.i:
every stain from liisown garments. If i Rehrant and Perry Kline, respectively,
he refuses to do so, it is incumbent1 We(lnesdaV they met and quarreled
upon the party to — 4U~* 14 A
within a narrow cultus is an infidel.
Intellectual infidelity is, in my opin-
! ion the most to be dreaded form,
j It is not surprising that men mis-
I trust preachers, professions, Kibles,
j while we are unfaithful to that from
which all these have sprung.
He who is devoted without reason is
superstitious.
And he who clings to faith which his
honest thought condemns is an infidel.
Unquestioned belief in any theory is
demoralizing to character.
The easy credulity that has meas-
ured the faith of the ages has been a
pitiful system of deception, and that is
only another name for incipient lying
see that it is done j " •' V'^ """ j,et me say to you that the religious
independent of any assistance from!over the ,liTlslon hne between their ; 8eltishnpss „n(1 exclusivenesss of the
' ' i-*— 1,1 * - *'"1 ! ^ world with pious
IUO
until the arrival of Judge Caldwell
next week. T. W. Harper, of Terre
Haute, the attorney of the firemen,
who represented the organization in
the Ann Arbor ease, the Northern Pa-
cific matter before Judge Jenkins. Is
here and will make the arguments be-
fore Judge Caldwell on behalf of the
firemen.
The men deny that they have any in-
tention to strike and declare that they
have not even discussed such a move.
They believe that Judge Caldwell wiP
see that they secure justice.
I ition Men Win u I.oiik l ight.
CmcAoo. MarMi *i4. The long tight
between Kahu, Sehoenbrun A, Co. and
the governor, and this course will be j claims. l?elirant became exasperated , past lias tilled the world with pious i t|u. United Carinent Workt^rs of Amer-
rcsorted to and congressional aid will and drawing his pocket knife stabbed i prevaricators. ica has been amicably settled in favor
be invoked. This paper has persist-1 K]ine in the breast- the blade reaching! " yo« Relieve in ti harsh and cruel j ofthennioll.
entlv defended the governor against j . . . .... ,. . . <«od you will develop a harsh and cruel I
his accusors and expressed a belief lus heart aml killing lum instantly. ,haracter. i it K...,«.rh.,
that he would meet the accusations liehrant was arrested and taken to Every modern revivalist pleads for, Ivmi-oiua. Kan . .March -t .\. ic
in so far as they affected him and stillwater and is now in jail. The af-! salvation, not of character, but from | cold weather prevailed here last night,
wipe them out. If he shall refuse ^air caused great excitement in the
to do so at the behest of those i .
most deeply iu tac miro of olliial plun- weigh Jorhoo' ,
' punishment. * which it is thought by many has badly
The place in all the universe most damaged, if not totally dcstroyel,
laeUing in character is the heaven ere- fruit. Ice nearly an inch thick formed-
Mtutf-*, coal para'
' int? point* reporting corresponding gum*
I While eastern woolen mill* cannot incut ordure
i for /until* 'trvHH goods, nv.inv woo'.« n mills arc
running on part time, and large stock* of old
wool, vdih new '.ii forntn and Texai ullpav II
able witbin sixty d y<, depress prJcrs Print
cloths nre Brliing well and eastern cotton mills
an; active although sales eontinusmaller tnan
the output
At Chicairo Kevral I.u0)-ton orders for coke
pig iron, it0 delivery, have beer, ta en as well
m for steel rails at l&i. Uut prices are h irdly
saiisfactory 81 I^iuis rcportH that demand
for ilnlshed iron and s eel, whi e inn rov ug, Is
due to cuts in quotations Among more con-
spicuous staple product*, prices h iVo advanced
1 r rice, cotton and lndi.in corn, decre st*d
available nupp les l>eing primarily responsible
Coff. e and leuf tobacco remain -troiu: at prac-
tically unchanged figures, and lower ranges of
value have been reached by several varieties
of iron and steel, b/ llva cattl ttiud ho « at
western markets, by both raw and rellneJ
sugar, by wheat, oats and incsK pork
Consiilerable activity is reported at Kansas
Cit. with country buvers making personal se-
lections Omaha reports go ><1 weather and
good roadK have stimulateJ trade in all lines,
notablv dry gotwlH, «ro eries and hardware,
while Minneapolis. St Paul and Uuluth agree
wnile th re is more activity in business circles,
the volume of general trade still remains mate-
rially below that of a vear agu.
The continued shrinkage in toiai number of
business failures each week is another feature
of the situation the total for the, past week
(one dav short) numbering wr, against '-Wl last
week. 20*2 in the week si year g >. liM two years
ago und 2)* in the third week of March. 1A.M.
Stock speculation in New York has been nar-
row. the market depending entirely on profes-
sional activity the direction of w hlch h is teen
constantly eh miring on thu unc rtaint/ regard-
ing the j resident's action on the Hiaud bill.
Prices, however have held firm and anv in-
crease in the short interest causes rallies. Lon-
don bus been inactive in view of th i Easter
holidays. Sugar stock declined In u generally
steady market on threatened opposition iu the
senate to tbe protection to r lined sugar.
TIIK SIM Kll CON VKXTION.
The Two Old l'artl«s Sa <1 to He lle*p >n-
hUiIp for tli<> I'« ihIiMoii of the Country.
Dks Moinkn la, March 'i4—The na-
tional silver convention closed last
evening. At the morning .session brief
speeches were made on the question:
"What is the proper remedy, and how
inav it be applied?" President John*
son, Itimetallic League of Kansas, was
the first speaker.
"The silver age is upon us. Kngland
holds the key to all values in gold.
The repeal of the Sherman act was the
death of silver in this country. A gold
bullion value depreciates values de-
pending upon free coinage. The end
of the titrht may l>e the dethroning of
gold.
"The international conspiracy seems
to have been at work to reduce silver
I far below its true value. Any change
I in the relative values of silver and gold
j is treason on the part of congress of
' the United States. The conspiracy of
capita) has given us the mortgages of
J to-day, amounting to $3, .">00.000,000,
payable only in gold."
Ignatius Donnelly, ui Minuesota,
made, a brief address, in which he said:
"The demonetization of silver was a
colossal conspiracy and crime, the
greatest ever perpetrated against the
human family. It is demoniac." He
urged all to proceed on constitutional
lines. The two old parti
sponsible for the fearful
the country, lie warned the peopl
not to trust all who cry "free silver.
call followed.
lllir PI re ut l^snver.
Dknver, Col., March '24 One of the
most destructive and at the saints time
spectacular conflagrations ever seen in
Vhis city broke out at tt: 15 p in. yester-
day in the recently finished six-story
Champa building between Fifteenth and
Sixteenth streets, and threatened for a
time to sweep the entire block. The
fire department worked with desperate
energy, and, in spite of insufficient wa-
ter pressure, conquered the flames after
about a quarter of the square had been,
destroyed, at a total loss of $175,000.
The St dames, one of the largest hotels
in the city, was also damaged by lire.
I.itr-.re Kul <if \Vh«-*t.
Minni.apoi.is, Minn., March '24.- All
the wheat, in th" elevators of the Pea-
vev (ir.iiu A E evator Co.. amounting
to H.-.'.'iO.ODfl bush 'Ih. was sold yesterday
to the I'illsbun - Washburn Milling Co.,
to be delivered iu the next four months.
The price is not stated, but. it is cash
on delivery, and the aggregate makes
it the largest cash ileal ever made in
the northwest-.
To lleterilOno i m Kuntty.
( iii< woo, March 2*1.— After a hearing
which lasted nearly eight hours Judge
Chctlain last night decided that lie had'
the power to prolong the date o/ tha
execution of Prendergust, and he there-
' fore delivered an oral opinion extend-
j ing the time two week, and ordered a
trial to l>egin Saturday to determine
the sanity of.the murderer.
Heavy Forgeries 4>'tiurge«l.
I V i unw, Ivan., March 24.—Consta-
j ble f.reen has arrested Farmer John J.
Hat'ield and Cashier l . L. Anderson,
of « sedgwlck City bank and a warrant
is it for Thomas Hazzard, now
in i i • East, on charge of forgery
an -ansing to 1 >e forged promissory
notch for sums, running into thousands
of dollars. Most of the property sub-
ject to these forgeries is said to
be located in Barry county, Missouri.
The notes were acknowledged before a
notary named MeCrow, at Cheney, this
county. The person who purchased
these notes is .). W. Ramsey, of the
firm of Thoipson & liland.
t l>ar£««l With Mt tli<>/./.Iemnit..
i Kansas City, Mo.. March 24.—T. W.
I'hambl ibh, formerly Independence.
Mo., representative of the Kansas City
limes, was arrested there yesterday on
the charge of appropriating 1200 be-
longing to the newspaper company.
He gave bond before Justice Prewitt of
that town for his appearance next
1 hursday. (.'hambliss has lieen identi-
ded with politics recently ti") which he
has devoted considerable time.
i'dmber i'lnnt Destroy***!.
Kildakk, Ok., March 24.—The im-
mense plant of the Poster Lumber Co.
at this place was completely destroyed
by fire at 1::J0 yesterday morning. It
! was of incendiary origin and 8. F.
% were re- •' li,rv' who has a line claim here, is
mdition of ' ' n,,C1' nrrest on suspicion *>f having
• started the blaze The value of lum-
ber ami improvements destroyed is
i 1^0,000.
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Greer, Frank H. Weekly Oklahoma State Capital. (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 48, Ed. 1 Saturday, March 31, 1894, newspaper, March 31, 1894; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth352568/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.