The Gotebo Gazette. (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, March 18, 1910 Page: 1 of 7
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:
The Gotebo Gazette
COTEBO.
OKLAHOMA
NEW STATE NOTES.
El Reno Is selling lots for the money
to start a packing plant.
BIG RAILROAD STRIKE
DISPUTE OVER WAGE INCREASE
AND EMPLOYES PROMOTION
TUFT BILLS NEGLECTED
Beaver county farmers are going to
try semi-season Irrigation by using
ccnerete supply stations.
Thirty-one real estate dealers of
Chickasha have become members of
a real estate exchange organized
there.
The Kansas City. Mexico and Ori-
ent car repair shops at Fairvlw, valu-
ed at $100,000. burned. The shops will
be rebuilt.
FEIGTIG1LIT ill IfSTEII USES IffECTCJ
MEASURES OF ADMINISTRATION
LACK PROPER PUSHING
Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen
and Enginemen Have Voted to
Strike—25,000 Men Will
Walk Out
The postofflce safe at Howe was
blown by burglars and $1,000 in
stamps ind mnn y taken. The burg
lurs escaped.
The New Jerusalen bill died in the
house Thursday on a tie vote of 47
to 47. The bill required a constitution-
al majority of 53 votes to carry.
The minister* of McCloud. have or-
ganized a ministers and laymens con-
ference. J. T. P.-lescott was elected
president and S. H. Aldrich secretary.
The city charter carrying the com-
mission form of government was de-
feated in Sapulpa by a majority of
42 votes out of 730 cast. The vote
was light.
Chicago.- At midnight Monday
night W. S. Carter, president cf the
Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen
and Enginemen, said hat a strike of
25.00# firemen on practically all if the
western railroads had been called.
Mr. Carter stated the decision to
strike has been reached at a meeting
of forty-three members of the western
federated board of the brotherhood,
each member representing a western
road.
The exact hour at which the men
are to walk out, he said, would be do-
. CHINEES ME TO COM!
Matters Pending In House That Will
Call Out Sharp Debate—
Special Message May
be Required
STANDARD OIL FACES CRISIS
Woman's Mining Claim
Lady Sybil Grey recently accom-
panied her father. Earl Grey, gover
nor general of the Dominion, en his
trip to the Canadian artic gold fields
GOVERNMENT CONTINUES TO jjPar Dawson City, the capital of th
Washington - Although identical
when introduced In the two houses
of congress, it is now evident that
the measures to create a court of
commerce and to amend the Int rstato
commerce law will bear little resem-
e.Htions of the two bodies are con-
cluded.
In the house committee many of
the administration theories in regard
to the issuing of stocks and bonds
Great Legal Battle in U. S. Supreme
Court Begun
Washington—The most serious le-
gal battle that Standard Oil has over
faced began Monday, the day set by
the supreme court of the United
States to hear arguments on the ap-
peal of the Standard Oil company
of New Jersey from the adverse
Judgment of the United States cir-
cuit court for the eastern district of
Missouri, which ordered the dissolu-
tion of the New Jersey corporation
as an illegal combination and mon-
opoly in restraint of interstate com-
merce.
BUILD UP STRONG EVIDENCE
WHO IllECIl USE OF Mills
Klondike, she pegged out a claim for
herself with all the prescribed legs
formalities and christened it the Sybil
Her first panning out produced |20
irorth of gold, which she considered
a very promising start. During the
long arctic winter I-ady Sybil Is work-
Many Litters Are Produced as Evi- lng j,er claim by deputy, but she says
she will return next summer.
Measuring Heart Beats
William Duddel showed In a lec-
ture at the London (Eng.) Royal In-
stitution that the manner in which
Council Bluffs. Iowa —The govern- the heart beats canbe
.rent continued Friday to fortify it- electricity. He used as a
self with strong evidence against Dr. Wallera ^lldoj. •r- ™e
John C. Maybray. and his IS alleged £?.
dance—lowan Who Lost $9,000
Identifies ••Millionaires"
Who "Stung" Him
aasoeiat , who are on trial for
To point out the alleged errors or | |,.peri conspiracy to d fraud by means
the circuit court in its findings and 0f illegal use of the mails.
Col. Temple, the prosecuting attor-
•y, presented many letters exchang-
ed between the defendants and their
in its decree the keenest Intellects
within command have been procur-
ed To argue for the affirmance of
W. Wickepshnin. the attorney gener-
a! of the United States, himself will
Tho state board of affairs have let
the contract for buildings 1 and 2 for
the \ini;a insane asylum to the J. E.
fjibson Construction company of Tul-
sa for $123,797.
cided Tuesday and every member of and the merging of non-competing
the union between Chicago and the lineR have been shattered and the
Pacific coast woud then be informed ! end is not in sight, for assaults on
by telegraph when to quit work. j tj,e bill will continue- on the floor
• The atrike has been called—that While the opposition to tne admin
much is certain," said Mr. Carter. "It juration bill was not strong enough
means that not only 25,000 firemen, to an,ei;tj the bill in the senate. It
members of our union, will go out, jg ^needed that several important
but perhaps that many more employes changea wm be forced on the floor.
The debate on the bill will begin
* — - " I u —
the decision of the lower court Geo | v|ttlmt. In each Instance fol
lowing up this evidence, secured a
recital from witnesses of all the
events lending up to and in the final
loss of large sums of money on fixed
sporting events.
The defense put forth strenuous.el
forts to keep out a number of letters
taken from Maybray's effects when
Governor Haskell has issued a pro
clamation setting forth the result of
the county seat election in Adair coun-
ty and ordering the removal of the
sent of government from Westville to
Stilwell.
The annual convention of the mas-
ter plumbers association of Oklaho-
ma nt Tulsa adjourned Wednesday.
The next meeting will be held in Ok-
lrhorua City.
Tulsa motorists have organized the
Tulsa Motor dub with Judge Charles
J. Wrightsman. president, and J L
Gillespie. secretary. The club has
started off with forty-five members.
I
A rivalry in torn growing between
Carter and Jefferson county boys is
bving aroused. Citizens of the two
counties are offering prizes to the boy
order IS years old who beat3 the boy
of the same age In the other county.
will be thrown out in consequence,
"We gave our ultimatum to the rail-
roads that the men had voted to
strike and we were prepared to call
one unless w© were granted an arbi-
tration of all questions in dispute. The
railroads refused to arbitrate any-
thing but the wage question."
The controversy which has been
under discussion for six weeks, in-
volves 47 railroads operating west.
Tuesday. Senator Cummins will
open the discussion in support of cer-
tain changes advocat d in the mi-
nority report of the sen at 1 commit-
tee.
Practically all the "insurgent" sen-
ators will speak on the railroad bill
and there will be many speeches
from the democratic side No one
northwest and southwest of Chicago, estimates that the debate will be fin-
and embraces about 150,000 miles of ished in less than six weeks and
come senators predict that much
time will be consumed.
ed backward and forward. "Those
Jerks," Mr. Duddell explained, "re
present the electromotive force of
Jimmy's heart. You will notice that
they are unequal. This is not due to
excitmeut through Jimmy finding
himself in the presence of such a
large audience, but is the natural ac-
tion of a deg's heart. The beatings
of the heait of all auimuls are, in
In fact, unsteady."
A punishment to fit the crime was
. . that Inflicted on a grocer In a Penn
he was arrested in Little Kock, Ark., gylvnuia town who was compelled to
Judge McPherson, who is presiding. Pat eg?gs alleged by a customer to be
decided to wait until tomorrow be- safe to say that in future
fore making a final ruling in the ef.gs ln that town will be sold only in
mutter, but indicated he would let a g.ate of pristine and unimpeachable
the letters in. It is said there are pur|ty.
more thin 2.000 of those letters giv- |
itig a complete record of the trans- . cost of Living In Mexico
actions of the millionaire's club, in- Everywhere, as populations grow
I eluding the nam"# and residence of I thpre lg the Cry of the higher cost "
GEORGE
WICKERSHAM.
railroads.
It has previously been stated by
both sides that if a strike were calle|
It would tie up practically every
freight and passenger train between
Chicago and the Pacific coast.
Points In dispute are:
Increase in wages demanded, which
On a charge of embezzlement to-
taling between $600 and $1,000, D. N
Woodson president of the Frederick
business college, has been brought
back to Frederick from El Paso. Tex-
as, where be was arrested.
The gin of thj Okemah Gin com-
pany at Okemah which was destroy
cd by fire last fall, is being rebuilt
on the same site an J will be as mod
era as the former one.
Stay of execution has be«n grent
ed in case of Alf King, went.'nced
to hnng at Nouata for the mur-
der of George Boyd. King s appeal
was turn-d down by the court of ap
Deals and Coventor HasUoll hasgran-
ed a reprlve of 60 days from March
21.
K<?el A Sons' elevator was deatrov-
•h* by fire at Lindsay , aleo a box car
fit longing to the Atchlsor. Topeka Sr
«anta Fe railway company, which was
one tho track near the elevator. Los
te Keel & Sons about $15,000. partly
covered by Insurance.
Two small children of William
Cook, w-ho lives eight miles north-
west of Pragi;e, w«re burned to death
in a fire 'hot destroyed Cook's barn
and its contents. The children, whose
nges were three and five were r'ay
ng in the barn and are supposed to
have e >t fire to the hay
victims, together with the amounts
thev lost.
,T. H. Socrest. a retired farmer of
Icwa City, Iowa, related how he
first contributed $3,000 to the million-
aire's treasury, and still satisfied
with the legitimacy of their existence.
returned from New Orleans to his
U. S. Attorney General Conducting hwa home and secured $6,000 more
Case Against Standard Oil J which he lost, both sums solng Into
the pools of fixed horse races.
head a brilliant array of counsel for I gecrest pointed out Maybray as
Statehood legislation, which has (the government. 'one of the •'millionaires'' He also
passed the house, and postal savings The circuit court announced grave nrotluced i(.verrJ letters which he tcs-
bill legislation, which has passed the findings against the seven individual werP received from Muybray's
senate, have been sidetracned for th<- defendants. John D. Hockefeler. Wll- .,ssof iat .s
administration railroad bill. The pos ijam Rockefeller, Henry M. Flagler. arrest's testimony was only one
tal bank bill, in view of the fact th.T .Henry H. Rogers. John D. Archbold, | of ,everaj similar stories told during
hearings have been ordered by the silver H. Payne and Charles M. I ^ dav gaTnUel Sutor of Cass Lake.
" "" " ,0(10
living. Because ours is comparative-
ly virgin soil as yet. the cost is higher
and the cry louder In nearly all other
countries that have come far rasi
barbarism, reclaimed their untitled
lands and cleared forests. In Mexico,
where rents have doubled, all prices
•re higher than in the Unlt d States,
with wages nowhere near the level
which has been attained here.
the union officials say would amount | bouge rommittee on post-offlces and praU the Standard Oil company of Mjnn.t explained his loss of $
'and other defendan'
that
to about 12 1-2 per cent. The right of pof,tro!,d3 wm not reach the floor s>w jersey
the union in question of representa- jor geveraj weeks, and in all prob- companies.
tion when a fireman has been promot-1 ^-^nity not until the session nears Its —
ed to an engineman or to another ca^ cioge Opposed to U. S. on Oil Tariff
pacity over which another union! BeKanlieBg of the fact that the pos- Washington. D C.—It is frankly
claims jurisdiction. ! <a, bank b)ut tJ e anti injunction admitted by t> vuirv officials
Questions of seniority, or the pro- measure, statehood legislation and the tariff situation bet'
motion of new men over old time em- thf. administration conservation ed States and France is asMimirg a
oyes 1 measures are all a part of the ad- serious aspect \t the present time
Th,. railroad mana-ers' committee, irliist-atlon procrram. there is not p-act:rally every article exported y
composed of fen of tL general man- .PParen, a ywh,re a positive fore, t,,
agers of western railroads and bead- ( pushing them for consideration.
and Alex. Delaine told of losing $2,-
500.
Zarhariah Pierpont of Pav nee. Ok.,
lost o" a fixed wrestling matca.
The defense's cross-examination
,thus far has been confined almost
tariff situation between the? 1 nit- pnt|rc.|,. (0 an attempt to show that
' letters which passed through the
p.ails did not have the direct result
of victims losing their money.
If Jevted by that country to the maxl
on the railroad bill lags mum tariff, ln aoine cas)?s. as in the
„ W. C Nlxoo, fener*! „| Jb. -
..fZ ■« i« * *>■* "1S"'.""
road, already had agreed to submit Pr,J
the wage qilestion to ^^ati"n UDd I 0T"r Tatums of the program,
der the Rrdman act. but had declined
In the hous e many matters are
Horseshoeing Bill Causes Fight
Washington.—The sum of $237.66
What Becomes of Grain Crop
In the year 1908. when the total
crop was 2,636.000.000 bushels. 241
000.000 were consumed in flour and
gristmill products. 8.000 000 bushels
In the manufacture of starch. 9.000,-
C00 bnsh'ls for malt liquors. 17.000.000
bushels in the production of distilled
liquors, 40.000,000 bushels for glucose
100.000.000 bushels for export nnd 13-
nnn.ooo burhels for seed, making
total of 518.000.000 bushels, or 19 3
per relit, of the entire crop. The re-
maining 80.7 per cent., or 2.118,000
000 bushels seems to have been used
almost entirely for feeding.
8oldiers' Care of Th^ir Feet
In our army more care !s taken of
the feet than any other part of a
man's body Your trained. profes-
to Instill new life In exclusively against the I nlted States.
• pent by the state department last sional so'dier knows that if his feet
year t<• shoeing horses, was chara>-- J are sound, ilty and^ *^rmi hands
t ilzcd ad extravagance by Represen-
to arbitrate the other two points on !
the ground that they were matters of pending that will call out sharp de-
official authority and discipline and
could not be arbitrated.
To this attitude the union officials
on Sunday sent what they called an
"ultimatum," declaring that f all
three points were not submitted to
settlement by arbitration, a strike
would be inevitable.
The railroads today Informed Mr.
Record Cattle Price*
San Antonio. Tex.- Th* record
bate and there is a disposition to let price paid for cattle in west Texas
some of them go by the board Thes thjg year is reported in the sale of
Include the Mondell bill, to permit i soo three and four-year-old steers
the homestead entry of the surface of at Mason. Texas, and 500 three-year- to
coal lands, which would Involve "0.- 0i(j and upward
000,000 or more acres: ship subsidy; Texas, for $32.50
the construction of two battleships.
which may bo a feature of the naval
bill, and the issuance of certificates
of indebtedness or bonds to th<
steers ai
flat.
Brad>,
ti lives Hamlin and Clark of Missouri,
In the house Friday.
Mr. Burke of Pennsvlvanla sudden-
ly terminated th-* long dehate wlt.i
the following remark: "1 will remind
the house that it costs $10,000 a day
run this house and we have al-
Carter that notwithstanding the strike Bmount „f Sllr h 30,000,000 to coin
possibility, they were determined to r,.,.)amation projects.
FouioiS Gets Record
San Antonio, Tex. I#'eut. L B.
Fonlols made five successful flights
■ady sp.'nt $2,5000 worth of time on
the cost of shoeing horses."
Deputy Sheriff Uses Gun
Muskogee, Okla.. J. P. Wadsworth
deputy sheriff, shot and killed
"stand pat" on refusing to arbitrate
anything but the wage question. They
announced that if all the wage de-
mand was granted other railroad un-
ion's would soon after ask similar in-
creases and this would virtually bank-
rupt the roads.
•Polls are be'ng taken on the ques-
tion of tiH-injnnc tion legislation
along the line of the Moon bill. The starting
preitn inary court i>, said to be op- Curtiss.
in the I'nited States army's Wright Grant Harris and fatally wounded
ae roplane on the drill grounds Sat , Howell at Cathay, a remote town
urd-iy at Kort Sam Houston and iti in McIntosh county.
one of the flights broke the world's Howell had a gun and Wadsworth
record, held by (Jlenn I' attempted to disarm him, Harris a
This was during the third fri( nd Howell. Interferred and was
will be steady and lils h?nd clear
If he has to sleep In a swamo he wilt
««e his blankets and otner equip
meat to protect his feet, though his
bodv may be soaking In rain or
mud. Anywhere and everywhere,
winter or summer, the disciplined sol
dler who is going to sleep, for his
night's rest or for an afternoon nap
throws some covering over his legs
from the knees down. In our army
cclds an"* tare —New York ^ress.
his aero-
"ro--. <1 to battleships but the attl- flight, when Ixiulols got
tude of the house on the subject of plane off in 65 feet. The best record
A resolution is pending with the
city council and one doubtless will
he pass <d by the commercial club
asking C. E. Creager. representative
in congress from the Third Oklaho-
ma District, to use his influence in
having the department of the Inter
lrr convert the old Creek council
building at Okmulgee Into a mentor
id musem of the Creek nation to per
petua'e custom* and arts of the nation
Oklahoma City's new $20,000 jail
will be completed by May 1 and the
•regulars." who mak3 a weekly ap-
poarancc in poll-e court or oftenor.
if they can obtain the funds to pay
their way out, will be treat -d lo clean
cells, after their months and months j
of inconvenience at cloea quarters.
Finding that box ears—none too
plentiful at that—had outlived their
usefulness while masquerading as do-
pots at Milburton. the Millor Lumber
company has complained to the cor-
poration commission in an effort to
force th-i Frisco to put up adequate
buildings there.
Right salaried state enforcement
officers and about fifteen commis-
sion paid men have been laid off the
state dispensary board because of
lack of funds.
Hogs to Reach $12 by April
Ch'< ago.—With the prospects for •
short crop of corn an increased de-
mand for meats and a decreased supply
to feed a larger population, commis-
sion men predict that the price of
hogs will go above $12 a hundred be-
fore April 1 The top price was
reached Saturday when pork on the
hoof sold for $11 at the Union stock
yards.
.Not only will pork prices rise, the
commission men declare, but all other
meats and provisions as well and Lhey
add that before very long pork tender-
loins will cost more here than sixty
cents
the Moon bill has not been disclosed
Shriners Buy a Show
Oklahoma Clt'—The Shriners will
gather at Oklahoma City Friday.
March 18 for a grand reremonlal
session. Arrangements will be made
for the Journey of the representatives
that will attend the Imperial Coun-
cil meeting at New Orleans next
month and other Important business (.||() n,.,nra< taring and mining estab-
flight heretofore has been !>0 feet.
3000 Miners Strike
Greensburg, Pa.--Three thousand
I miners in the recently organized Ir-
win fields of Westmoreland county
went on a strike Friday to force rec-
ognition of the union.
After Industrial Statistics
Oklahoma City. Statistics of over
matters will be transacted The
enings entertainment will be the
thril'ing drama "The Third Degree" j,, regatd to the niirnbt
at the Overhol ;er Opera House The ^ ployed, the ■ apltal of
Shriners have bought the entire
show and this highclass production
will be a fitting close to the session.
I "The Third Degree.- by
Is one
Bailments in Oklahoma, Cleveland
and McClain counties will be secured
of men em
ch Industry,
the output, the business transacted
rv.ct the Income on the business by
"pedal agent llar.-y l> Cortell. of Ok
Charles 'ahoma city. Mr CorrHI tes that
, .there are over ">' 0 manufacturing e -
These predictions are based on the Klein snd Arthur Hornbtow, is on«" ; tai.u-hru^nt* in Oklahoma City.
scarcity of bogs. I'p to tho present of the season's most popular plajs —
time shipments for the year have been M well as one of the first sellers of ; Choctaw Outlaw Dead
500,000 head shorter than they were j the late books and serial stories it Sulphur. Olila. Word was received
during the same period last year. i typin,.s all that is best in modern Friday evening that Will llnn-
Receipts for Saturday, even under a "topical" drama and proves its auth ' drlx, th ? < h<><taw outlaw, was lead
forced supply, were 2,000 less than ! ors psychologists of keen perception 11„ t|ie I'.tis. Texas jail from the ef
normal Shipments are said to be 30 as well ns dramatists of ability The ,)f drinking poisoned whisky
days in advance and drawing on the two performances Saturday the l th (Hendrix was ar-ested at Roff las'
shot dead, nnd Howell was mortally
wounded. Wadsworth is In jail at
Checotah.
Many Buried Under Falling Wall
Pittsburg.—A wall fell at the bolt
• I'vtory of M. L Anzc and son here
j T'..tirsd*y, according to a report re-
c-jived at police headquarler* and 2~>
! cr 30 men were burled In the debris,
j 1'itrol wagons and ambulances were
i n shed to the scene. Nine men hare
been removed from the wreckage,
i tv-'O of them deed.
OKLAHOMA DIRECTflRY
1 matinee and night will be open
the public.
<0 j S.'ndav
officers.
ifler a running fight with the
Sentenced to 45 Years
Stillwater, Okla —Another chapter
In the history of one of the most re-
volting crimes ever committed
in <
future ha« intensified the situation.
Entire Family Cremated
Boise, Idaho.—An entire family, j
composed of Thophll Theni. wife and 1
two grown daughters, were burned to
death early Monday morning in a fire
consuming their home on a farm six
miles west of Twin Falls. It Is sus-
pected the bouse was robbed and then
fired to conceal the crime. Then)
ceutly came to Idaho from Nebraska, flrBt degree and fixe d his punishment , grant King a p prbn.- to give him
purchasing a valuable far#! In the nt forty-five years In the penitentiary. 11 line t* npieal hl- ca ' in view of the
Twin Falls country. He was a man Mis brother, Riley, twelve years blsjfnct that his attorney did not ier-
of considerable means. junior, was convicted last week and i feet an appeal within >he required
I sentenced to fifteen years (time
Indian Cuti Man's Throat
llar'lesvllle, Okla.- In a fight her? j
Wednesday night Dick Brown had his
hoad severed by a knife In the hands
of Wade Suag e. Twenty-s« ven
•ritches were required to close the
wound Brown will live.
Grading on Southwest Road
Frederick. Okli. Joe DeBaum, one
of the officials of the recently char-
| tered Red Itiver Valley and Texas
railroad, ban announced that grading
on this lln" has begun from Love-
land, some fourteen miles southwest
of Chllllrothe, Texas, a distance of
120 mil't and Is to coat about $1,-
929,000.
*WITTRENGINES^
use OAS, OABOUKE OR;
KCftourm
HE
ur iun4«r4
.. 25 tear* of Mf•
< n at rat < I t >«U
w rth lw«e m. rk • ••*<
I 4nl
I ofmft
« !«*•
f ••«•( < u
I eultad
I toMw. H 4
I Bbellor <UaayUii
I
if r—d9
rrvt |
YZAtt
DC HO _
OUAHAMTrF I
Wa build all liira in f
•tationarr •rportahl* I
' typa. Hopperiacket I
or water lank cool- I
In*. Indacr-nantato I
introduce in new lo- I
entities. Wr.'a Stat- |
Ins aua want*4,
its a d^uUN IMUM I O
•... . •
Negro Gets Stay of Execution
Outhrle. Okla- Justice Doyle
the criminal cour; of appeals has
granted a stay t( execution i'ir 60
Payne county was concluded this days to Alfred King, sentenced to
week when the Jury In the case of j hang at Nowata on March .6 for the
Artie Blue, charged wl'.h the murder , murder of Oeorg" Byrd. Governor
of I) T Rising last summer, brought Haskell has asked the court for an ! thay, Okla.. Tuesday Deputy Cole
ix a verdict of manslaughter In the Opinion as to whet'ier h- should | stf.blo Wndsworih, who attempted to
In^erff re durlnr the quarrel, was bad-
ly beaten with a gun. Howell was
shot by Hnrrls, according to Deputy |
Cirr, of Checotah, snd he In turn
lired, Instantly killing Hnrrls.
Wounded, Alleged Stayed Surrenders
Muskogee, Okla.- Le Howdl, buf-
fering with a buil-*t wound In the
stomach, surrendered to the offi -er*
Wednesday and !s In Jill at Checo-
tah, twenty miles from herd, tharged
with murdering Crnnt Harris at Ca*
0. K. SEEDS
MACHINERY
I
Philadelphia scientists say that 'he
missing link has been discovered ln
the cultured chimpanzee. As an alter-
| native we suggest the giver of mon-
key dinners.
Kermlt Roosevelt recently killed
two bongoes. We don't know just what
n bongo Is. bu* the probabilities are
that It la just as fierce a man ater as
the yam yam.
Cornell university says there are 'o
be no more babies after 2.0.19 A. D.
and dealers in baby gooda will have to.
make hay while the stork flhs.
Our fellrlt nions to the Ice man, but
not the artificial ice man.
FOR BEST RESULTS USE
They are the
best that grow.
ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM
BARTELDES SEED CO.
Oklahoma Swl Houa* OKLAHOMA CITY
DEERE IMPLEMENTS
• n d V E LIE V E HIC L E S>
OiiJCHR OLE-RE PLOWCO..OaAHOMACITV
•( All Kiada far Salt
, vs k <* i viitily a«
dw-M.
VrtU ml\ o
Soutbwcitern Maoyfactviriof Co.
OKLAHOMA CUT
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.
Stewart, A. H. The Gotebo Gazette. (Gotebo, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 32, Ed. 1 Friday, March 18, 1910, newspaper, March 18, 1910; Gotebo, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metapth353213/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.