09.24.05
Posted in History at 7:58 am by NW Okie
[taken from Renfrew’s Record, Friday, November 26, 1920, Alva, Woods County, Oklahoma. The Only Democratic Paper in Oklahoma.] — “Ross Frazier, a former Alva boy is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Frazier on Barnes Avenue, and will remain until after Thanksgiving. Ross has for several years been a valued employee of the New York Trust Co. The Company’s offices are located in the same block with those of J. P. Morgan & Co., and he was a witness to the terrible effects of the explosion on Broadway the past summer. He was just stepping out to lunch when the explosion occurred.
The effect was undescribable. It seemed as if the concussion drove a persons eyeballs back into their sockets. The shrieks and cries of the injured in the crowded streets. The crash of falling glass and other horrifying sights and sounds combined to make a scene never to be forgotten by one who witnessed it. Mr. Frazier says that every window in the immense buildings for blocks around were broken out as cleanly as if cut out of the sash with a knife, and all of the glass from top to bottom of the great 20 to 30 story buildings crashed down into the streets. He thinks that most of the deaths and injuries were caused by the falling glass. It has been some four years since Mr. Frazier’s last trip to Alva and he is enjoying his visit with his parents and old friends very much.”
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09.20.05
Posted in History at 6:18 pm by NW Okie
[taken from Renfrew’s Record, dated Friday, August 27, 1920, Alva, Woods Co., Oklahoma] — A tall, 6 foot 2 man, straight as an Indian chief’s arrow, wearing a large white hat, with the top collar button off duty and wearing a broad pistol belt with a big shining buckle, walked into this office smiling Monday evening just as the office force had gone to supper. It was Mr. Dave Harrington, a good-natured gentleman of 54, who spent years on the trail with the cow boys when the wild and wooly west was wide open and in all its unbounded and gilded glory. He left his home near Alva at the tender age of 16 and plunged into the wild life on the plains of the Golden West.
Mr. Harrington spent an hour talking to the writer Monday evening and his recital of his experiences riding the bucking bronchos and keeping from being run over by thousands of cattle on a stampede was highly entertaining, of course. The smile left Mr. Harrison’s (sic) face when he expressed regret that the good old days had faded away and gone forever. The thoroughbred race horse “Prince” died at his farm nearly a year ago; a beautiful sorrel that had outrun every horse that tackled him for a race and he was as intelligent as the average man with “horse sense,” which means to not only be bright but brilliant, to use picturesque phraseology, in connection with some of the world’s most interesting history, that made the cowboys and fast horses.
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Posted in History at 5:54 pm by NW Okie
Some Facts Concerning the Men Chosen by the Democrats for County Offices — [taken from Renfrew’s Record, dated Friday, August 27, 1920, Alva, Woods Co., Oklahoma] — County Treasurer S. L. Walton has been chosen again by the Democrats of Woods county to fill that office for another term. Keeping faultless records of all the money business of the county appertaining is a task almost as difficult as trying to make water run up hill, but it has been accomplished in the most satisfactory manner, to all concerned, by Mr. Walton and his competent deputies. He is a native of Missouri where he spent the first 30 years of his life and where he “showed them” he was a good citizen. He has lived in Oklahoma for 15 years and is a man liked most by those who know him best. Mr. Walton took charge of the office of County Treasurer well equipped with business experience. He had previously taught school for twelve terms in Missouri and Oklahoma and been examiner; he had also served one term as township collector and one as collector in Missouri. The one year as deputy treasurer for D. F. Miller in Woods county and two years under John W. Prigmore added the finishing touches in point of equipment to discharge the responsible duties of the important office well. So the voters of Woods county have said, figuratively speaking: “Well done, thou good and faithful servant.”
County Clerk F. S. Gunn has made one of the best officers Woods County has ever had, according tot he consensus of opinion, and Mr. Gunn is the democratic nominee for re-election to one of the most responsible offices in the county. For 27 years he belonged to that class of men who move the world by producing everything — the farmers, whose prominent position in the world was never fully realized by millions until the great world war proved it to them. Mr. Gunn was hotel manager for fourteen years and was popular as a landlord by a wide range of patron. The records show that he is thoroughly conversant with the plan of keeping the records in the best possible manner and t the entire and perfect satisfaction of every voter in Woods coutny. Mr. Gunn is a member of the Methodist church and of the I.O.O.F.
There is no limit to the prominence a young man can reach if he has ability, ambition and energy and keeps all those essential qualification working all the time and over time, as history has proven, Abe Lincoln is a fair sample of the proposition or suggestion. One of the Democratic nominees for a county office, is L. Z. (Bob) Lasley, who aspires to the office of county attorney and is the Democratic nominee for that office. For eight years this young man has had the determination to become versed in law and by his own and unaided efforts graduated in June from the Law Department of the Oklahoma University.
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