After selling the paper in 1919, she wrote for Elva Shartel Ferguson's Watonga Republican and she wrote the syndicated "A Woman's Viewpoint" column to compete with Edith Cherry Johnson's column in The Daily Oklahoman.
She co-managed the paper with her husband and they would debate women's suffrage in a column, although both privately supported enfranchisement.
She was elected chair of Alfalfa County, Oklahoma's first National American Woman Suffrage Association in 1918 and helped campaign for the passage of the 19th Amendment.
[3] In 1919, the couple sold the paper and moved to Oklahoma City, although she continued to publish the occasional article in Elva Shartel Ferguson's Watonga Republican.
[2] She died in an automobile accident on February 27, 1962, near Cross City, Florida, and was buried at Rose Hill Mausoleum in Tulsa, Oklahoma.