The Perry Weekly Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1895 Page: 2 of 6
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-BY-
THE TIME9 PUBLISHING COMPACT.
BERT. R- QUEER, EOITOK AHO Mamao**
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1895.
What Galveston wants to make it a
great seaport i8 more "Ships That
Pass in a Night."
Now, will the bicycle girls rubber
tire iu retirement during winter while
the girl rubbernecks in a ball room?
With the president aud all the
officials gone from Washington it is a
good chance for Adlai Stevenson to go
there and receive some notice that he
is still alive.
A son of John Mackeydied in France
in riding a horse in a steeple. This is
a warning to all Americans who ride a
foreign hobby- It will surely prove
suicidal ___________
Sknator Ei.kins is said to keep his
youth better than any man in public
life. By good husbanding he may yet
reach a presidential possibility before
he is too old.
Dors France think it necessary to
appease its honor that John Waller
serve the full term of twenty years in
prison that it would not let him die in
the old Chateau d'lf ?
In his deepest distress the pop gov-
ernor of Colorado should not forget
the proverb that "All things come to
those who Waite"—that is, wait until
they do come.
MR. Olnky is right. He might as
well resign as to be an inactive figure-
head, which Mr. Cleveland's foreign
policy makes him. Mr. Whitney, of
New York, is more to the president's
taste.
It might be appropriately stated
once more that the editors of Okla-
homa and the Indian territory "har-
bor" none but the "deepest" of feel-
ings of gratitude towards the people
of Galveston for their treatment there.
If the editors of Oklahoma should
seem to be a little "fresh" for the next
few weeks their readers will have to
excuse them, they have had the first
bath in their lives—In the salt water
at Galveston.
So it is the democrats who clamor
for the impeachment of Cleveland.
The people have already impeached
him and his assistants too, in their
minds, and as usual the democratic
move is almost useless.
Now, there is no one who cares par-
ticularly about Cleveland roosting at
the seaside all summer; but if he is go-
ing to hibernate all winter also, we
object to him doing so on the grounds
of inocuous desuetude.
It is plain that John Sherman has
given up the presidency. No man
who writes a book can ever hope to at-
tain that position. The lx)otblack of
President Grant may now be an in-
fluential citizen in his state and will
resent the fact of not being mentioned
Ivks and Shaffer have taken the cue
and are trying to carom the wind
raised by Corbett and Fitzsimmons
into their corner. It is a wise move if
they can "keep the ball rolling." How-
ever billiard contests are no match for
a contest with the Hilly dukes.
Tin. democratic party, being one of
reaffirmations, it is about time they
adopt the following: "We, the demo-
cratic party, reaffirm our belief in the
Monroe doctrine and commend the ap-
plication of its benetlcient principles
to the president of the I nited States
acts." ________
From a four-dollar-a day hotel to a
diet dependent on a contribution of
vegetables by the subscribers is a
change that will not be relished by
the country editor of Oklahoma on his
return from the Galveston excursion:
but he can have the satisfaction of
knowing that a clean stomach makes
clean thinking.
Rev. Kaihk Edward Davis, who
has for years been styling himself as
the "American Oscar Wilde" is frantic-
ally calling in the lithographs which
so designate him and has a notion of
cutting his hair. It is a warning that
a man cannot patern after a living god
for he may fall from his Olympian
height at any moment.
Although Jackson, the negro pugi-
list has not been heard from for a
long time, it need not be inferred that
it is he who is on Frances Joseph
island making his headway to the
north pole. Jackson does not have to
go that far to catch a death of cold, he
has already been frozen out in the
pugilistic arena.
NousA, the famous band leader, said
at the Dallas press asssociation ban-
quet because it was so hard to think
on one's feet, he thought most of the
papers indicated as though they had
been edited standing up. The ques-
tiou is, would they be any better if
the editors were compelled to stand on
their heads all the time as the Okla
horna editors are.
EUGESE WAKE'S WAR.
Eugene Ware, known mostly by his
title of Ironquill the Kansas poet, is
having a great deal of trouble over his
recent statement in an address that
war was a necessary good. That it
was a startling public announcement
bv a public man there is no doubt.
Most public men dc not utter any of
their convictions that are not already
accepted by the public. But the fact
remains that war is shown by his-
tory to have been the best civilizing
force in the national life of the differ-
ent peoples. Civilization, itstands out
prominent on every page of history,
has walked in the wake of armies and
conquest.
One of the things that is still least
though of is that the human race is
amendable to physical laws the same
as any living organism, either animal
or vegetable. While a farmer acknowl-
edges that his corn or wheat would
run out and degenerate if the same
product were to be planted over and
again, while it is admitted that cattle
and horses can be bred out and con-
tinual selective crossing of the e
suits of various breds is necessary to
keep them from degenerating, the
human family has drifted these many
ages of even comperative civilization,
the victim of haphazard breeding,
regardless of the knowledge that
the law of its existence is the same as
that of any other and that it goes
either up or down in the scale of ani-
mal selectiveness according as certain
of these laws are observed. But in
spite of this fact it is seen that prog
ress has been on the lines of greatest
activity of the race, which activity
of the race was the contin-
ual conquest of surrounding peo-
ples, and which conquest of peoples
made possible a continual mixture of
the different varieties and races. The
consequence has been that while na-
tions and peoples like the empires of
Asia that were of a high state of civil-
ization when Kurope was an uncon-
scious savage, have stood still under its
religious belief that it has reached ul-
timate wisdom and knowledge of the
here and the hereafter, the latter has
gone forward until it could carry
Asia in the hollow of its hand. Now,
by counteraction, these eouutries are
waking up again. By what? By war,
which, if followed by inter-breeding,
wil preserve them; if not, they will go
out of existence, as many have done
before. There are ether forces of civ-
ilization besides war; but Eugene
Ware has not stated the case strongly
enough for that element as a test for
the survival of the fittest in the exist-
ence of the human family or the selec-
tion and dominancy of governments.
OF COURSE HE SHOULD LIVE.
The American Missionary society, in
session in Detroit, Mich., after an ex-
haustive debate on "the Indian factor
in the Indian problem," has arriyed at
the astounding conclusion that after
all the Indian should live. The gentle-
men that came to this conclusion were
Rev. C. J. Rider, of New York, and
Rev. Dr. Nehmia Boynton, of Massa-
chuetts. These good eastern people
still take care of the Cooper novels In
dian and year after year get off some-
thing wise esthetically upon the senti-
mental side of the Indian problem.
The basis of the present conclusion
that the Indian should live is the fact,
tersly stated by one devine, that it
costs but 81,000 to educate an Indian
while it costs SI,000,000 to kill one.
It has always been a matter of
amusement that while the west had
the Indian, at least the savage Indian,
it is the eastern not the western
preacher who is eternally talking
about his civilization and regeneration
It would seem some western man who
has a chance to be intimately acquaint-
ed with his condition would solve the
problem of what to do with him and
how to do it. There are ministers
stationed at the prominent towns in
all the different reservations in Okla-
homa and the five nations of this terri-
tory. If there is a way to do other-
wise than is being done with the In-
dian these gentlemen should enlighten
the philanthrophic east and inaugur-
ate such a way of promoting his civili-
zation as is most practicable. That a
system to promote the Indian'3 self
help could be inaugurated there is no
doubt, but how best to do it is a ques-
tion. That he cannot be forced be-
yong his natural ability to grasp the
progress of the white man there is
no doubt also. They can only be
helped by proper methods that are not
too forced. This method and the
ability to carry it out would seem to
be the province of the home religious
missions. But under any system it is
the western and not the eastern
preacher that should enlist himself in
the work.
Cl'UA, Venezuela, Armenia. Hawaii,
Nicaraugua and Waller—these and
many more are crying for Cleveland
aud he does not, even Hamlet like, cry
out "the world is out of joint, oh, fear-
ful plight that I was ever born to set
it right."
By assuming to be Cleveland's spir-
itual adviser, does not Talmadge take
quite a load on his shoulders? The
question that should seriously present
itself to hirn is, can he serve two mas-
ters, the Lord and the devil, at, the
same time?
COM PA TIATIVE INTELLECT!'A LITY
If Col. Robert O. Ingersoll goes on
raying such pleasant things of the
American woman of this generation a
he has been doing lately he may yet
live down his reputation that he is
some sort of human ogre that tries
to steel all the hope and happin'e-s leit
in the world and leave it in an hopeless
abys of darkness and despondency. Iu
fact he may live to see the day when,
like Kmerson, he will ha^e outlived
by the kind things he says of this life
the sin of saying so many sarcastic
ones of the life that is like
the poets nameless beauty, found
"neither on sea or land." The
question of woman's equality with
man is one of tliejmany that is tumbl-
ing about in the different arenas of
public expression. Opinions are as
many as the individuals who express
them. But that the women them-
selves resent the idea that they are
not the equals intellectually of man
there is no doubt. Col. Ingersoll has
recently expressed himself on that
subject in his peculiar plain way that
he does about everything else, in a
manner that will raise him several
degrees in the estimation even of the
extremely religious of that sex. lie
said:
"Shakespeare has been criticised on
account of the trial scene in 'The
Merchant of Venice.' The critics
pointed out that nothing could be
more absurd than a young fellow com-
ing along and taking the place of a
judge and proceeding to try a case.
All these objections to Portia, how-
ever. have been found to have no
foundation. At that time it was the
custom for students of the great law
school at Padua to assist legal judges.
Many of these judges knew nothing of
the law, and when in doubt or trouble
they sent to Padua asking that some |
one learned in the law might be sent.
And it was in accordance with this
custom that Portia presided at the
trial. Now, if we had any women like
Portia, they certainly would make
good lawyers. If we had any men
like Portia, they certainly would have
made better lawyers than we have.
Portia had all the intelligence of
Shakespeare and consequently was
equipped to shine to the zenith either
as advocate or judge.
"Personally I have no objections to
women lawyers. I would not like,to
try cases against them if they were
handsoma, and. especially before an
old judge, old men being easily flat-
tered, nor before a young jury. It is'
very hard to compete with when she
is plaintiff or defendant, and it would
be equally hard to defeat her as a law-
yer But I hardly think that the na-
tive woman is very well adapted to
the practice of law. It does not call
into play the better or higher facul-
ties. There is a good deal of cunning
and pretense, and a good deal that is
along the lower lines of conduct; not
much opportunity for geuerosity or
nobility.
"Of course, there are exceptions, tut
the trouble is they are exceptions. I
think woman has plenty of ability to
understand and practice law, but I
really think the profession would run
a little across her grain. I think she
is better qualified for medicine, and.
after all, there is not a nobler profes-
sion than the medical. A doctor is in
partnership with nature. He lessens
pain and advances the happiness: of
human life, and to do these things is in
exact accordance with the nature of
women. I have always thought that
woman was the equal of man intel-
lectually. providing she had the same
opportunities. In school the girls
were always ahead of the boys. They
were always smart, and certainly
would remain so, except that they
don't quit studying, and become
overwhelmed with the drudgery
and toil of domestic life, and finally
resign themselves to their fate and let
intellectual questions be settled by
their husbands and sons.
"A great many men in this country
imagine women are inferior, but we
have as yet produced no writer of fic-
tion in the I'nited States the equal of
George Eliot or George Sand, or poet
equal to Mrs. Browning, and it would
trouble us somewhat to name any poli-
ticians the equal of Harriet Martineau.
So I insist men and women, given equal
opportunities, are substantially equal
in the intellectual world. And I want
every avenue opened to women that
leads to wealth, success and liberty.
And I do hope that some time I may
have the pleasure of becoming ac-
quainted with a modern Portia.
Indian Agent Wisdom has again
broken loose. When he got off the
following he must have had them bad:
"You will not be deterred from the •
discharge of your duties because you I
have been heretofore threatened, by
law less editors, with a coat of tar and
feathers and with a necktie hanging,
nor because you have been denounced
as fit associates for the Daltons and
other outlaws; but you will carry out
these instructions without fear, favor,
or affection: and if said editors, their
aiders and abettors, should interfere
with you in the execution of this
order, you will treat them as I have
directed you to deal with the said Cor-
bett and Fitzsimmons and their train-
ers and managers." This was to the
police to stop the Corbett-Fitzsimmons
Miss Francis Willard in extending
the right to do good and charitable
acts to the Hebrew and other women
outside of the Woman's Christian Tem-
perance Union may think she is a
dangerous iconoclast, but so far it has
failed to be as sensational as the
bloomer fad.
The momentous question with Dur-
rant is, will he or the jury hang?
Qlebn Victoria's China is costing
her more trouble than all the balance
of her household bric-a-brac.
Senator Palmer's post mortem re-
venge on Garfield has the felicitous
touch of infelicity and inappropriate-
ness.
Qcf.en Victoria drove twelve miles
in the snow: but it was not she but the
Prince of Wales who was frozen with
astonishment.
Mr. Cleveland is said to be a great
curiosity at the Atlanta exposition. It
is not indicated whether this is com-
plimentary or not.
It looks now as though the trial is
but a preliminary training school for
Durrant's nerves to tit him for the
greater ordeal on the gallows
The next national campaign will be
one of extremes all around. Boss Plat
sits in New York City, and San Fran-
cisco is pulling for the convention.
The controversy over the tin plate
Industry in this country is simply
whether the tariff on it makes more or
less '"tin"' for the factories, that is all.
The governors of Texas and Arkan-
sas have reversed the proverb of saying
"he is more holy than righteous."
They may be right in fact but hypro
crites in spirit.
The country accepts Senator Hill's
recent declaration "If we are right
we want to win, and if we are wrong
we deserve defeat," and says "You de-
serve defeat."
The Topeka Capital suggests that
the tannery to be started in Atchison
will undoubtedly prove profitable.
John J. Ingalls will be able to furnish
it all the hides free.
Governor Morrill has called a
council of war and decided to make
another aUack on Wichita. He is
bound to see the last drop of liquor
drank up in that city.
Clevkland's speech at Atlanta, as
usual, was full of principles. But the
American people have long since
found out that bread and meat are a
better diet than noble gastrations.
What! Surely Russia and England
will not double up on Japan? The
yankee of the east may be able to
handle one at a time, but of course
two such antagonists are too many.
It is feared that the woman suffrage
in Oklahoma will suffer from the fact
that the women here have not suffered
any shorti omings of their rights.
They are as free as the air they
breathe.
Mr. Cleveland was very shy of any
national issues in his speech at Atlan-
ta. Hut then what could he say. It
would be cruelty to expect him to lay
down and acknowledge his inability or
culpability.
What the South American republics
should do is to forget their differences
and go into a mutual compact for self
protection against the foreign powers.
If one is attacked they should all be
agrieved.
11 Corbett does not tight or do some-
thing. the newspaper paragraphers
will suffer for paragraphs and his wife
for alimony. Corbett must tight or he
is a worse licked man than if whipped
by Fitzsimmons.
Minister Bayard is still waiting in
parenthesis until Lord Salisbury gets
through speaking. Such is the force
etiquet It must be observed even if
it costs Vene/.ueia or any other coun-
try or concession.
It might be a waste of wind, but a
waste of wind is sometimes a great
relief. A merchant usually makes his
greatest effort during hardest times:
but the board of trade has "done gone
and give up the ghost."
I n figuring out the real estate trans-
actions it is found that Miss Corsuelo
Vanderbilt is a real sensible girl after
all. It is found that she has allowed
but one mill on the dollar sinking
fund on account of love.
What astonished the Oklahoma
Press association was that after his
world's fair record, Ouien, 0f the
Shawnee Quill, could withstand the
Texas excursion trip. Say, old boy,
were you afraid of catching cold in
that gulf bath at Galveston.
No, no, it is not true. It was the
Brazos river, raised by rains up in
Texas, emptying into the Gulf that
made the Oalveston beach riley, not
the feet of the Oklahoma Press associa-
tion, the day they were in bathing.
From recent killing and lynching of
outlaws, Oklahoma is in danger of
substituting its fame for lynch out-
lawry in place of the outlawry of out-
laws. This is a hint to the newspaper
correspondents to work a new vein
It is now seen that England will not
use ultimatums with China, she has
expended this form in the Venezuelan
affair and has nothing but compara-
tives left. This is the difference she
holds between the United States and
Russia. ________
Th at was evidently not a carbonized
kiss Governor Morrill took from a
school girl the other day. Should he
get well from his sickness, supposed to
have resulted from it, he will probably
issue a sanitary edict on all asculations
within the state.
THE NEW TAX LAW.
The new tax that was passed by the
last legislature and took effect March
sth of this year reads as follows:
"On the first Monday of August, 189f>.
all taxes assessed in t&e year 1 94. and
then unpaid, shall then become de-
linquent, unless otherwise ordered by
the county commissioners, as in this
act provided. Any person charged
with taxes on the tax-hooks in the
hands of the county treasurer, other
than the tax levied in the year 181)4,
may, at his option, pay the ful 1 amount
thereof on or before the third Monday
in December in each year, and receive
a rebate of two per cent on one-half of
said tax, or he may pay one half on the
third Monday in December and the re-
maining half thereof on the third
Monday in June, next ensuing, and if
any past of the said first half of said
taxes remains unpaid after the third
Monday in December, the whole
amount of taxes charged against such
person failing to pay the first half of
eaid tax. as herein provided, shall he-
some delinquent, and a penalty of two
per cent shall at once be attached
thereto and shall he collected as pro-
vided by law, and all taxes due and un-
paid on the third Monday in December
in each year shall be subject to have
added thereto as a penalty, the two
percent before provided. If one-half
the taxes be paid on the third Monday
in December and the remaining half
be unpaid on the third Monday in
June, next ensuing, the same shall be-
come delinquent and shall be subject
to the pera'ties and be collected in the
manner provided by law. To all taxes
after delinquent, in addition to the
two per cent hereinbefore provided,
there shall be added, as a penalty, one
per cent on the amount thereof on the
first day of each month for the first
three months, and two per cent a
month to be added on the first day of
each month for the second three
months after delinquent, and five per
cent per cent shall be added on the
first day of each month thereafter un-
til the taxes are satisfied.
IT WAS AX OVERSIGHT.
As is usually the case that which is
nearest us is the least remarkable or
remarked about, so it happened that
in suming up the late Oklahoma edi-
torial excursion trip to Galveston and
the framing of proper resolutions of
thanks to those persons and element
mostly conducive to the pleasures of
the trip, that no special resolutions
were framed thanking the Santa Fe
system for its courtisies extended. This
was merely an oversight In extenua-
tion of this oversight it may be said
that the roads officers who were im-
mediately instrumental for the trip
and who were personally met were all
remembered in print as they were and
are more so in the hearts of the editors.
But still it may be said that so great
a concession as a free trip with
two reclining cars and a sleeper
for a week's glimpse of a deep water
harbor that shall in future play a
great part in the commerce of the
west made to the overworked and illy-
paid editors of Oklahoma should not
go without a special notice. The
Santa Fe road had every accommoda-
tion of first-class service for the editors
and sent William Dougherty, one of
its traveling passenger agents, along
to coach and look after the welfare of
the party. The Santa Fe's service on
its Gulf branch, south of Purcell, is
equal to any on the eastern roads.
Fred Harvey's eating houses are estab-
lished along the road, as well, and
buffet car service is given, serving
luncheon on the train. Though n >
expressed in resolutions, the editors
expressed everywhere their apprecia-
tion of the courtesies extended and
the pleasurable trip made possible by
the kindness of the Santa Fe road
DUKE
Cigarettes
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and
ABSOLUTELY PURE
A HINT TO HIS GRACE.
The Chicago News says that the
Duke of Marlborough is reported to
have complained bitterly in an inter-
view of the treatment he has received
at the hands of the American-. From
all acounts his grace has been very
shabbily treated. Not a day has
passed but he has been tendered a
banquet, a ball, a tally-ho party or
some such entertainment. One of
America's richest hi ressea :.:i- given
him her hand and presumably her
heart Her parents have done the
right thing in the way of pocket
money. He has been recognized in
police circles In return he has be-
stowed the inestimable boon of his
presence and will give an American
girl a title.
The News says to a person on the
outside this does not seem like a poor
display of hospitality; in fact, if an
American were assured of such a re-
ception in England he would not be
apt to remain home just on that ac-
count, and adds that if his grace is still
pining for something more lavish let
him come out west, disguise himself
ana Chicago alderman and visit Mil-
waukee.
WELL PLACED TRUST.
K. C. Journal John L. Waller says
he trusts the American people and is
confident they will protect a citizen of
the I'nited States, no matter how
humble that citizen may be. They
would if they could, John. The peo-
ple of the I'nited States are with you.
But unfortunately their han-!s are tied
by the adininistrat'ou. I'nder ordina-
ry circumstances, the administration
is the mouthpiece <>f tin- people; the
voice of the president is the voice of
the nation when we have an Ameri-
can president. But it isn't that way
now. The administration now in
power is arrayed against the over-
whelming sentiment of the American
people on every important question
touching our foreign relations, to say
nothing of domestic affairs. The Amer-
ican people are in fayorof the recogni-
tion of the Cuban insurgents as bel-
ligerents. but the administration is
hand and glove witli Spain. The peo-
ple sympathize with tne Armenians in
their inhuman perst notion, but the
official representative of the govern-
ment sides with Turkey whenever
possible, and he - ems to be persona
grata to the administration. The peo-
ple from one end of tin' country to the
other have denounced the outrages
upon John L. Waller, but if anything
has been done to secure redress the
people do not know what it is. The
people are demanding a vi„r >rous as-
sertion of the Monroe d< trine and the
maintenance of the inviolability of
American soil, but the ad ministration
stenuou-ly denies that it has insisted
upon such maintenan*
Mr. Waller can conf en- elyupon
the American people, but until the
American people • an administra-
tian that will carry out their purposes
and uphold their dignity and honor.
Mr. Waller's confidenc •••• bile
placed, must >• >nt::. to be ineffec-
tive.
The duke of Ma ■> _h has an-
nounced himself as cii gusted with
America and eager to g«-t away from
our barbarous sh<>ref- He say- "I
nave thus far seen lin • than a
desire to insult me. Why this should
be so I cannot dis -em 1 came here
with every feeling < f fi ndlint ss and
kindness for Ann-i a and its people,
but the feeling ha-- b«*t*n in no sens-
reciprocal. as far as I h.. -e be n ah
to discern." Jus: wa t until you get
across the ocean, duk nd then v< ut
your spite on Coiisuelo Y.;i an tin;
revenge yourself on th« . blawsted
Hainericans and, it the -arne tim
keep in harmony with <i /ens of other-
of your ilk whohavt e\« hanged wormy
titles for American gold. You will
also evade the charge of being an in-
novator.
It it is said that Chauneey I. Fi 1 ley
was asked the other day to take a
gluss of beer in company with Mat
Ouay and Thomas C. Piatt, and now
he is added to the list of men who can
make or unmake the next republican
candidate for president. I'illey must
be enjoying that glass of beer im
mensely.
Of course Minister Bayard said no
unpleasant things to the Marquis of
Salisbury about the Venezuelan affair.
Mr. Hayard is too much of a gentle-
man to assert the rights of the I nited
States. He wouldn't think of wound-
ing England.
Thud, is a dainty p of romance
connected with the ep/ag rnent of
Miss Vanderbilt and Duke of Marl-
borough. It seems that Consuelo
while out walking with her mother
one day happened to ■ spy the noble
duke and in an exhuberant burst of
girlish delight at beholding it -he ex-
claimed: "O, mama, buy m that
Her indulgent maternal ance tor could
deny her lovely daughter nothing and
so the purchase was made.
Tnk clammy corpv .,i txfongres
man Breckinridge addressed a big
audience at Louisville. Kv , the other
day. The dispatches failed to state
whether it was a prospective office or
a pretty typewriter that resurected
and rejuvinated this putrid and ill-
smelling cadaver.
Tiir Dawes commission has moved
its headquarters from Timbuctoo to
Skowhegan. This is, properly speak-
ing, a news item, and is given out so
that the public may not lose si^ht of
the fact that there is such a commis-
sion somewhere.
Thk exhilcrating and enthusiastic
manner in which Embassador Bayard
maintains silence in regard to the
roasting he received in the Sackville-
West pamphlet stamps him as a diplo
mat of the first water.
Skvkhai. agricultural societies have
hung up good sized pur e.s for Corbett
ami Fitzsimmons to talk against time.
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Greer, Bert R. The Perry Weekly Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 31, 1895, newspaper, October 31, 1895; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc127684/m1/2/: accessed May 15, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.