The Daily Oklahoman
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
December 12, 1905, pg 5
A Negro Killed
Another Murder Sunday in the Little Town of
Luther
The Crime Followed a Dance
George Wilber's Slayer Not Yet Identified,
Although Several Arrests Were Made.
Another murder occurred in Luther, Oklahoma,
Sunday morning at 1:3o o'clock, immediately in front
of the Dewey rooming house, the victim being Geo.
Wilbers, a negro.
The identity of the murderer has not yet been
established, although three persons are now in the
county jail to be investigated as being implicated
in the crime. They are S. A. Allen, Otis Neil
and Oscar Harmon.
The parties are all said to have been involved at
a quarrel, which developed at a negro dance held in
Luther Saturday night.
Allen and Wilbers left the room shortly after 1
o'clock, and in a few moments shots were heard and
when the dancers rushed out they found Wilber lying
on the ground with a bullet through his heart and
another wound in his neck.
Suspicion, however, points strongly toward
Harmon, who is alled to have paying attention to
Mrs. Wilbers.
The county authorities are busily probing for the
facts in the case. Deputy Sheriff Bartell
states that Wilber's wife seemed very little
interested in the fact that her husband had been
slain. Bartell does not believe that Allen was
implicated in the crime, although a gun of the same
caliber as that with which Wilbers was shot was
found on his person. Neil and Harmon were also found
carrying pistols.
The
Daily Oklahoman
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
December 14, 1905, pg 7
Essie Allen Held For Luther Murder
Coroner's Jury Recommended That He Be Detained
For Inquiry By The Grand Jury
The inquiry to investigate all the ascertainable
facts relating to the murder of George Wilburn,
a negro, which occurred at Luther, Okla. at about
1:30 o'clock last Sunday morning, commenced its work
at Luther at about ten o'clock yesterday morning.
All the testimony was in by 3:45 o'clock in the
afternoon and, after a very brief deliberation, the
jury returned a verdict recommending that Otis
Neal and Oscar Harmon be discharged and
that Essie Allen be held for further
examination into the facts relating to the tragedy.
The Oklahoma City contingent present at the
inquest was composed of Coroner, Schaefer, County
Attorney Hays and Deputies Dyer and Bartell.
A number of witnesses were examined and the gist
of the testimony very strongly points toward Allen
as being the guilty man by no means establishes it
as a fact that he did fire the fatal shot.
David King, who was serving as night watchman the
night of tragedy, testified that he was sitting in
Crossley's restaurant at about 1:30 o'clock Sunday
morning, December 10, and heard two shots fired.
Immediately rushing outside he noticed a negro run
by him, traveling from the direction in which the
firing was heard. He was going in a northerly
direction. King heard the negro say, "Someone is
shooting at me." and he was muttering, " Oh Lordy!"
Druggist McCutcheon heard the shots fired and ran
to the front door of his store. He resides in the
building. He saw Watchman King across the street and
inquired as to who was doing the shooting. Looking
northward he saw someone crossing the Frisco depot
platform, running in a northeasterly direction,
toward a point where Essie Allen's team is known to
have been hitched that night. McCutcheon identified
Allen as a negro who had purchased a paper tablet in
his drug state the day previous. He believes Allen
to be the guilty man, but admitted the possibility
of his belief being erroneous.
John Celestine, a colored witness, who was at the
Dewey rooming house attending the dance the night of
the murder testified that he saw Allen there that
night and that on two or three different occasions
Allen threatened to have done everything in their
power to ferret out the guilty person or persons in
this case and express themselves as satisfied with
the result of the inquest.
[09-19-2017 I did not find a match at FindAGrave]