Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 60, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 April 1909 — Mrs. Lamott Hubbard Visits Rensselaer. [ARTICLE]
Mrs. Lamott Hubbard Visits Rensselaer.
Mrs. Lamott Hubbard, who will be remembered here as Miss Ola Sigler, is here for a visit of a month or such a matter with her aunt, Mrs. G. W. Goff, and will be kept busy a considerable part of the time visiting with her many old friends. She is the daughter of C. C. Sigler, and moved with her father, her husband, and the balance of the Sigler family to Tulsa, Indian Territory, about seven years ago. Mr. Sigler and Mr. Hubbard both engaged in business that proved very successful, and all have fallen thoroughly in love with their new home, which is now a part of the state of Oklahoma. Mrs. Hubbard has always been somewhat of a business woman and was never content to let the masculine part of the family be the exclusive bread winner, and she was not siezed with inertia when she moved to a warmer climate. Quite to the contrary she became associated with the —Tulsa Evening World, where she has been employed for some time as an advertising solicitor. The World is a handsome paper, and the tastily worded advertisements that crowd its columns are largely the work of Mrs. Hubbard. With the greatest pride she exhibited the latest Issue In the Republican office, and she speaks of “my paper” with the true style of one really in love with “the fourth estate.” Mrs. Hubbard reports her husband, father and brothers Clarence and Rom, enjoying good health, but Mrs. Clarence Sigler, who was formerly Miss Blanche Makeever, a daughter of Mrs. W. 8. Coen, is in rather poor health.
