Daily Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 214, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 9, 1896 Page: 3 of 4
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i *
DICK'S IMOLnONS.
S. Ci. W. IIKN'JASII*.
I C K
niaunhip. This \\
*-tu n m«u captain
«il** or purchnw a
Jie navigation nf
Fl.KTCHEH
was aa 1'kely a
vtiui.^ mail of his
years as lived on
tlu* coast of Main**.
All who knew him
said he wai smart
as lightning, and
hound t< lie mas-
ter of a ship Ix'foro
long, although not
yet 21, for he waa
quite as good at a
trade as in se;4-
s important in day >
had to manage tin
a eargo no less thai
hip. j)iek wasji«ati
<•«! t<
him
Xf
M the 1 i"i(i..idiug *stur, lmui.il to 11
Spanish main. 11«• had 1: i« 1 in |.rii :.t
,1ock of knick knacks ami notions. In
ti inline to niukettgood |<i'
with the natives. He h
Munich. |x-rha|M, to eiuil
u hut he hail alri .nl v laid by. to Jiur-
•liasc a share in a vessel anil 1 lecumc hiT
•uptaln. Then Susan Harriett wan to
become his wife.
The ilny when the Invent must «uy
farewell eanie at last. How long they
vnultl lie separated or when lie wolilil re-
turn WU far more uncertain tlu-n than
it won hi Im- in our diiy. The occasion
was, therefore, not without anxiety ami
nudnesa. Moved by a sudden impulse
:ir presentiment. Susan snitched from
the mantel a * a I I I .ox. w I'.i i l.er mint
had lx'i|«i'(jthecl her. anil gave it t
Hi
I
his gha-tly appearance anil served to
deepen the impression that he wn*
actually dead.
lie could her.r the pirates rummaging
all in r the ship So far as he could
judge, they hid nearly finished their
arch fur treasure and were preparing
scuttle the prize, preferring that
means nf ilestruction to burning her,
as less likely to attract the attention of
cruisers. All on a sudden they were
thrown into a wild panic, mill furious
oaths and confused orders rang over
both vessels. Dick understood Spanish
enough ti. pit her front the clamor that
an Keir'i-h frigate, attracted by the •
roar of the guns, was now coming down
fast toward the scene of action. There (
was lint a moment to lie lust, and the i
shrill orders of the captain and oili- 1
rs ot the pirute were heard command- |
: utr their n-n to haH"U aboard the!
1 schooner and to make sail. ]
This anexpeet il torn of ntfi.irs led
Dick to hope almost against hope that
his treasure might have undiscov-
cred by tin- rtllHan*. Its safety nu-nut
hi,:;: perhaps his entire future
,ti-1>i*mI I upon it. To his horror, at
that moment lie heard one of several
men who w* re still in the cabin exclaim:
••Hello! what's that lviiiff on the sln lf
in thebunkV We haven't examined that
It of there, or I'll blow
,11"." yelled the second
f the corsair just then, p'lt-
iddown theoompanlonway.
lii Utel
[II*' III 1111« i •« iiiij'f' \ I /j/
uad 11., n'eat led her. ai.d i< ' l&d
hick with the r.'|'l."< ti at. wliatc.cr
h.ip| ned, he would cherish it as a re- \ -
' . V , ■*'
Dirk " - dee| !v t-
K' . '* * \ /
int nn hat
ray 1.
lie was well aware how
prized it ; and yet he kn
;id w itli it. How, ser. Ii
m use it for a "ditty-box." in which
keep the needles, thread and t
•very sailor needs at sen. As s
san
bo:
though resembling a famil
which. Indeed, it was intended
■ cut. The 1 mix had been mad
jf Susan's ancestors, w ho had
id it hnd
i in
nnnl
V
£ ft
.h
The vovnge out proved lucky, so
Dick was concerned, lie traded
S wares to very (rood account, and
ltcd down asnug sum. which, for ion-
niencc, he put into doubloons, noli •
lil coins worth from eight toteiwlol-
,rs apii'i'e. Inspired by a happy
Dick packed the coins in the
mix Susan gave him. They just tilled
1. and few would he likely to seal eli
'or money in an innocent-looking case
•eseinhling a hook.
\\\ went well after the l rig turned
ncr head toward home, until on. after-
ioon in the neighborhood of < iibn. when
, susplciotis-looklng sail hove in sight
Pirates were not lis • hick h' ■ 1
In those waters, hat...* b..-,,
thinned out by cruisers. Still the dan-
■cr was not quite over; a few piia ua
.-raft yet lnrkeil among the islands,
i id all on the brig, therefore, anxiously
11K Kl
i Witlv
BI.OW OS HIS HEAD
■ word the men sprang
im (1 aboard t he schoon-
liately sheered off and | proviili
lVort to escape the fri-
iMCk of Hoi") > I llipedlnie'lt to the
Htutlent unti lit* |
The city registrar's office in the 01 J
court house is llie scene of on* or t
marriages daily, and at the present
time business is iioominff. Amusing in- i
cidents freiiucntly occur. Perhaps t n
most iieculiar case that has come up n-
i centlv, an account of which was re-
latetl to a Herald reporter a few Huyii
11Ko, is Unit Of a Harvard student who
was in love and without funds. I ho
1 love conquered his pride, and he con-
cluded to investigate the matter with a
view of getting married oil trust, lie
! made his n p(S..ranee at tbede.klnthe
registrar's office and inquired if that
was the place where he could procure a
marriage certificate, and ulso get mar-
ried. lie was informed that it was. am
a blank application w us handed to him,
which he proceeded to fill out.
Vfter this proceeding was g ^
through with, he looked up and. in a
hesitating manner, asketl the ilei ,
he could have u few moments' private i
conversation with him. He was taken
into the ante-room, and this is the t.i i
he unfolded: He suiil tha< he was deep-
lv ii. love with a young lady, and that
she was also very much in love with
him. Hut her parents had serious o •-
i lections U. the match, and did all that
was in their power to breas. it olT. I he>
i i,ad closed their doors to him, but. not.
V. ithstiindiiiK this, he succeeded inar-
: ranging meetings with his heart,
choice, and during one of these In 1 .
posed marriage to her and wasaeccpte.
he arguing that if they v.ere jiyi" 1
t|H. holv bonds of matrimony nothing
even her stern parents, could sep ,
urate them. They bad arranged the de-
tail,, „,„| concluded that the only thing
, , he done was to get married in secret
and then separate until he should grlt.1
uate from his college. She, of course
would go back to her home, mid live
with her parent* as if nothing out of tin
ral run of events had nappeneil.
" Hut the voting ;nan, being without
funds, was in a dilemma, and the worst
Of It was that he could not see his way
; dear to procure the necessary amount
,,aV for rtlticate an 1 ceremony
„ i,,,me was in a western state, and he
received all allowance from his fatlwi
onh once in six months. It was not
due for nearly two months. Be con-
cluded that his only course waatotrj
the method referred to alx*e. I m
clerk, being a kind-hearted man. told
tv vouth that he would perform tin
e< reinonv and trust him for the pay
' the lady In question was of
Qhukti Are Pale and Shadowy.
a... thoee who nrofess t > have Interviewed
?£.a °?VhetheV spmiks ure iJl-
.. morula ure liesc bhn.il is tulii aial
wuterv la c..n«quence "f liajierfect !> '
luti n' When lovah.li resort t • H ■•tetter s
St' mach It Iters. au.l use that unequalled
Uaiic^icrslsteiitly, they^s . „ • •, hk uj. m
Btrenirtli. ttosh uml cuIt It
us,si also to prevent Bia anul rlieiims .«
nnd kidney complslnu. and to rtiut*l>
itlputiou, sick htaJache and nervousness.
PITH ANC POINT.
—Judge "Defendant, can you d
vanci1 any til in# more towaril your de-
fense'.'" "Defendant "No. your honor.
1 hail only one dollar, and 1 have al-
ready given that to my lawyer. —Una
Eehoo.
Elsie "My dearest Stella, I haven t
Keen von for four months. How is your
Charles?" Stella "< h. my Charles
has changed very much since then. Ilia
name is now ilobert." - Hiegcnde
| I'.lr.etter.
; _sh>—(to Iter fiance)—"1 heard a
! la.lv pay you a great compliment y.
t- riliLv " 11> *Quite natural. Whatw— .... . - -
Itr She -She said you must be a hamsport, P.-, Nov.
verv bright man to attract nu as >ou TorrK—"I shay, mister, c
I Truth. I ihie i where the sldowaUi is^
I _"S -e the young woman. Is ,,m
I voting woman being suddenly anil urvx-
...Cteilly kissed?" "Ah. yes. 'And
' ilis's the young woman raise a hue and
,.rvv hie young woman niises a
' - light hue, but no cry."—Detroit Trib-
On, "busy bee," exulted bo,
We'c* w« rk like you, w vow,
If wo could lonf hi* w .nth« or so
A.yousreloaflnjln(i«-.iugtcnHiar.
r-„ - , arteaj.by^amhid.fh-mi
'Quite natural. \N hat was 1 guvod hyl i*(> * ' urt
Can't Break
because its so strong ;
Can't get out of order
because its so sim-
ple ; Can't unhook, by
itself—Why ?
Km ru Earn.
iwa.
'hu you U'll ir.c
I am a.hraa
gei- hero."—Fliegende Itiacttcr.
-iiiistlputien 10c nnil
, at vour drujrtrtst'R
iiU-H b,(K>0,0tlU tMiXCft
bl lj ham's l-ii.i - 'or
tict the bulk ifr«
aud go by it. Annual
tine
The next day the couple rut in an
appearance and were married. 1 pon
-"Johnny." ealleil his mother, "quit
using that bail language." ""by- re-
plied the is,y. "Shakespeare said what
1 just did." "Well," replied the moth-
er, jrrow inir infuriated.Myoii should <l lt
gointf with him hefH noeompaniou for
you."- N. ^ • Herald.
— Wife (to husband, an insurance
agent)—"Why, .lack, what kept you so
late'.' It I-after midnight. Husband
—"Business, my dear." Wile "ltusi- |
ncss at this time of night '.'" Husband
_"V.-s, my dear. A couple of footpad,
stood me up on the corner, and 1 in-
sured their lives for *5,000 "piece. -
The Wave.
—"Josiitr," said Mrs. Corntassel, "ye
hcv been worryin' n gisid deal about tl.o
parity of the money metals. "«1
j that.' An' I'm worrying about it BOW
ies ea much e, ever." "Iloll't ye tbinl:
! ve'd better do some worryin cluster
ter home?" "What about?" '"I!out
; the pill-it V of our wood piles. 1 he one
1 doiirs is bigger outcn all propor-
tion than the one behind the cook-
ptovc."'—Washington Star.
\ Self-Proclaimed Ass.—A story is
told of u certain committee meeting in
which the proceedings commenced
with noise and gradually became up-
roarious. At Wst one -f the disput-
ants. losing all control over his emo-
tions. exolaiun '1 to his opponent in de-
"Sir you are, I think, the blg-
,-cst ies 1 ever had the misfortune to
pet eves upon." "Order! Order!" said
the chairman, gravely. "You seem to
forget that 1 am in the room. —House-
liold Words.
'•is love? I puehi not!" "How do you
know! "They never sit silent for a min-
ute!"
t'ttnnwii'i DkoKCUIXL Tu< t ni:s" ore un-
rlviill'e.l fur relieving Cottgli*. Il.-iu-s.-iui.
ii.d all Tliruat Troubles, hekl otily nil. *<■
"Ami did he say ho remcinl
I was a t-il-1 s ; 1"- sai l lie
you when lie was a ho> -Lau
P.ml two .-enta tn
tlooan l
RlchMd«on A D'L -
Hroj..
ni ? isFure and unsweetened \
■ — land can be retained by|
the weakest stomach j
1 iiiiables tte musclesa O 1 . t
IA safe, easily digested?
5FOOD for DYSPEPTICS!j
\ Sold by DHt aOISTS EVERVWHbREI I
1 STIFF NECK,
OPIUM
^ts'uituis PAI IB «*«n ««•« •
eet. Dick stn*- |
and was enraptured to j
i his lie....a- store of gold just a~ he
hid left 'it in his batik. It had not been
touched. lb ascertained, lilso,
that he was tie onlv living person left
hoard. Thebodirnof hiHHhiinnates
,f the dead pirates utivwi'd the
ell as ;/mils draped from the
Tin* hull and ri^kri«B" wt n-
i,v the broadsides of the
the arrival of the next allowance from
his parent the youth walked into the
office one day. nuule himsell known nnd
presented the clerk « ten-dollar bill.-
lloston Herald.
IN
THE LAND OF THE FREE.
4canntMl ti
■ stra
ke h*'
..t t:ik«
und
leek, ns i
hatches.
enemy.
Hut hi
tin* rupi«
frigate i
The con
liseh
H
She
<1 her
the
read
lintf St
vhicli
« f «
<ttiddiii(T Hall**, rm^saii-.
everything that would dri
I ,,,,'isome trader present.-.! I
ight gliding over the blue vv a
the pressure of white Wings
t, rrilile spcctttrle
w bat a fat
turn
sails, !
1. in fact,
i\v. The
beautiful
t«-rs under
, and yet a
hen one considc re«l
,s tn'injr to escap
for all her efforts were useless, as tlii |
-sbooner so within cannon Shot.
,|,e balls from her bow cl.as.-rs
whistling over the water.
.n„. hrig could inde.ll make a f • '.1'
insistence, onlj .ulfieient to mfunate
but not beat off the incarnate fleno*
who coon laid their rakish schooner
tiott was soon called *o
. which showed that the
.sing w ith the schooner,
comi ill ".is tierce but short. Th •
!i..- were greatly overmatched, and,
ling further resistance useless, low- j
1 their black tia .'. The frigate sent. :
officer and Unit's crew to take p. —
■ion. Scarcely had they reached the j
schooner when 'her captain touched a
match to the magazine. The vessel
blew up with (in appalling explosion
that hurled ncores of souls intoetcriuty.
After picking up the few survivors
the cruiser squared away for the brig,
and sent off u boat to render such as-
sisstain-e as might Ik- required. 1-Hid-
ing her leaking and otherwise badly
damaged, the British captain ordered
tier to be set on tire.
Dick was taken to the frigate with!
I his sea chest, ill which he had already
' ea refui! y stowed his Itible box and its ,
treasure. Two day* after these stir-1
ring events an American vessel was
sighted I tearing nortJiwaril. i lick was
I rnnsferred to heranil in due t inie sailed
into Hoston harbor. There he took pas-
sage on a schooner bound to Maine. j
The consternation of the people when ,
lie reached home and told his story may
well l e iina^'intMl, ft r the eaptain and
most of the crew of the (iulding Star
hailed from that neighborhood. Susan
was one of the few who met Dick with
rejoicing.
"Well. 1 suppose \ ou lost every tliinp .
she said to her "lover, after the first
greeting was over.
1 ltucss I lost some duniing*; but l
■d to sale the box you gave me,"
one Sucre.I, lli-rcdlliiry. Iliall.-ii-i'..1' RlKl>t
th,- Auicrli-ao t It If en l'MMMM.
Ves " said the Knglishman who has
heel, for some years a resident of the
"states " "America ean fairly claim to ,
,1... freest country on earth. 1 used
,o think I-:.,gland was. I believed that
in it . of your boasted republican In- ;
stitutions and your universal m.«™M j
,,„d vour bird of freedom anil lots of
i other things we had more real freedom
and .....r, personal rights on the ot be |
side than vou had over here, l.ut l
! changed my mind. The American has
re libertv than the Briton. Hut th.
advantage isn't due to the form ofgw-
or political institutions,or the
tariff, or the size and youth of the com,-
trv It's just in the matter of peanuts.
'••'it is the sacred, hereditary and in-
alienable right of every Ainer-
u,iu citizen to eat peanuts when and
v, here he pleases and to throw the shells
on the floor. I was crossing the river the
other .lav on one of the ferryboats
The deck hands hud just swept out the
irentlemen's cabin and were even then
washing the floor. Two young men
came In. sat down on the side whic.i
h ill lust licen washed and begun to
, a, peanuts. The deck hands w ho were
sweeping wen- not afraid to do their
,|t,tv for they had very quickly sub-
ilm-il a drunken tough who got boister-
ous and they plainly saw the young
lneii throw the peanut shells on the
clean IhHir, but they no more thought
Of Objecting thmi they would think of
dictating to a mail what kind of clothes
he should wear. They respected the
first right of an American citizen.
••I've seen the same thing in elevated
and cable cars, in public halls, in the-
aters -yes, even in church—and it is
always' taken as a matter of course
that the man who eats peanuta shall
throw the shells on the floor wherever
l,c happens to In-. We poor Englishmen
are slaves—we are serfs and bonilserv-
FACTS ABOUT COTTON.
The Meney l.r,,uu-lo IC. the South tn
Nineteen Veiim
A study of the crop figuv s w ill show
that seven year*successively Increasing
crops from 1S85-U to 1891-2 were
orecedented in the hlstury of trade
It is doubtful if any leading crop rn is. •
I can show such un unbroken increasi
for seven vers. .lumping from 5.7oo.-
ooo balea ill lMM. there waa practically
no halting until 1-11-2. when the yield
was 8,084,000—a gain of 3,300,000 bales,
or nearly CO percent, advance in seven
lu 1 year
the south iii
vast that th
have been
, cotton has brought into
r sii,000,0(10,000—a sum so
profits out of it ought to
,ugb to greatly enrich that
KHK OAVK IT TO HICK.
alongside and swarmed on.boardI the
trader armed to the teet . an
whelming, tumultuous throng of howl
i,,,. devils. In the short but desperate
fi^.t that ensued ,he heroic^defenders,
foremost among them
succeeded It. killing a number of th. Ir
assailants. Ib.t they were soon over-
powered. and ^^^'oTttat let 'me o,x-n it." he said.
supposed, to n \n
W'\u!t Oiek, more fortunate than his
. ,..s escaiH-d death almost mirnc-
ulouslv lie receiv.-d a terribje blow on
he hend from the butt of a musket.
joe he was leftjfor dead near the com
mantft — • ■
lie answercMU with a twinkle in his
••I'll hrinir it around and show you how
. .. i are siuveo— - •1 "v>-
"^'i!..n'was so gratified by such a L ants beside you Yunkees."-N. T.Her-
touching evidence of Dick's affection j aid.
thai she had to give hiln another kiss. Rankin ...<1 Sclmos
The next time he called to see ills j Une of the worst enemies of scieiKi ,
Susan Dick took the box With him; but | Mr. Huskln. When Agiussiz published
' hen she reached out her band to take >,is hook on "Fossil 1-ishes, which
H she was surprised to find how heavy j I of such importance in deter
section. I nfortun-iti-ly. however, the
svstein i.ee. ssitate.1 by the conditions
lirevailing immediately after the war,
„f raising cotton only and buying pro-
visions and grain ill the west, left at
home but little, if any, surplus money-
out of the cotton crop. The west and
north drained that section or several
hundred million dollars eiery year, be-
cause it .lejiended upon ihem for all
of its manufactured goods, as well as
the bulk of it-s food stuffs.
Hence, of the enormous amount re-
ceived from cotton, very little remained
ill the south. The increase in the di-
versification of farm products, the rais-
ing of home supplies, the development
of trucking and the building of lacto-
nes ill-.- all uniting to keep at home the
money which formerly went north and
1 West. Whether the cotton raiser him-
| self be getting the full benefit of this
or not. the south at large is necessarily
! doing so. The increase in the attention
i given to grain cultivation is illustrated
' by the fact that the south'* grain crop
for l si<i4 was 011,000,000 bushels, valued
' at $302,n00.iioi>, or more than the value
of its entire cotton crop, and the yield |
' of 1895 will probably exceed these tig-
UI-CS by tit least 00,000,000 bushels. j
The importance of cotton in our for-
eign trade relations can is- realized
from the simple statement that since |
ls75 our en|Hirts of this staple have ag-
gregated in value $4.000,0.10,000, while
the total exports of wheat and tloui
combined for the same period had been i
about $2..io0,000,000, show ing a differ-
ence of $1.400,000,000, or over 50 per
and nothing ao promptly
.'.ST.llCOBSOIl.
n\iii;n wkitin*
nlrnftn Hl te
ut In t l* l MH
and eurcly
ciiresthem ■■ — —
Be sure to brinf^
thelari
and no other, for it is
" —st piece
M iobiceo
ever sold for
ID CENTS
33:
it had grown. . .
••I'or the land sake. Dick, what in tho |
world have you got in It?" she ex-
claimed.
•• j ust jet me show you. 1 lit It square
on your knee; there, thafa right; now
t me open it," he said.
When she saw tl.e pile of yellow, shin-
in,, doubloons, glittering like the sun-
liuht in the tropics. Susan almost fell
h,„.k in a faint. She had never seen so
much gold before in all her life. To
her it seemed a large fortune. ^
•■Yes, Susie, darling, that's all ours.
Them's the profit* 1 made on my ventur .
Them pirates didn't see it, or leaMw-ays,
t'nev didn't suspicion what was In that
ere'Itible. lying so innercent like in my
hunk. It all belongs to you. sweet-
man he hn<i snoi f„r if it hadn't been for that ere
tl.e brig, the .pirate# prpqe.ede.l to plb
1;TfhtPlbck earn," to himself he had
the presence of mind to remain pi
fectly still, although suffering
pain from his wound. (
which hail run down his luce iucriak.d
imnc'by the board. All yo .^gottodt.
now is to name the .lay mil wel get
i,„l Nest v'v'ge I'm r'Ing a.ster
married. ,m xl , • " _ . ... ... he
of the new schooner 1 ■
launched to-morrow. We >•' g-" K «'
name her the 'Gentle Si nt'l you
"hull be uiy mute." N. V
mining the relative ages of the strata
in which they were found that the
1'niteil States government contributed
to the expenses of publication. Mr. llus-
kin. in "l'raeterita" vol. 2, I>- 112. says
that "Agassi/, was a mere blockhead to
have paid for all that good drawing of
the nasty, ugly things, and that It
didn't matter a stale herring whether
thev luid any names or not, a piece of
crit icism written with the pen of ignor-
nuoe. ltut what shall we say when we
sec the same writer speaking of little
M, Farudav" finding a hydrocarbon
oil in Ilealcu which makes a stink. (I
quote from memory.) Surely, if ever
.! man waa great both as a man and an
explorer if nature's mysteries, it was
the b'.tiefcamitli's son who made his
wrtv from the position of a little news-
hoi to that of the greatest experimen-
talist that ever lived.—Notes and
tjucrics.
—-Itrlght-ltoy.—Teacher "Have you
lent ned yA-t to use the exclamation
point V" Small Pupil-"Well. I should
rcniurU!"—Detroit Free l'ress.
FIELD AND HOC FENCEdWmE.an8hip
o per 2f5 33, A2, SO. or 08 J?„ri with it Write for full information.
..in favor of cotton. Moreover.,!.,, «o«iinU on ^COMPAKY. DE KALB. 11X.
Ing the same period, we have exported — -
about $200,000,1)00 of manufactured cot-
ton goods, making the total value really
.j00,000,000. Compared with the ex
porta of wheat. Hour and corn com-
bined—the vol e of which since 1875 has
been about $H,200,000,000—there is a
difference in favor of cotton of $1,000,-
000.000.
Going back to 1S20. it is found that
the total value of flour and wheat ex-
ported for the bust T4 years is. in round
figures, 54,000,000,000, or $20(1,000,000
less thun the value of the cotton ex-
ported during the lust 19 years. Har-
jicr's Weekly.
Convolution.
'Did you read my speech on the tar-
iff?" aske.l a member of congress.
"Ye-s, 1 heard of it."
"What do you think of it?"
"It's as clear as mud."
"Well, it covers the ground, anyhow.
There is some consolation in that. —
Texas Sittings.
The manners, which ure neglected
s small things, are often tlios* which
decide men for or uguinst VC1U-
Iiruverc.
toast bread
and keen it dry. There'll be no danger of its molding.
KS moisten ,L bread with water._and see the resu ,
in -i short time it is covered with mold, it is just so
with consumption. Its germs will not grow in the
luno-s unless everything is suitable to them. Weak-
ne-- poor blood, loss of appetite, coughs and colds
fton nrpnare the ground for the development of the
^msPof consumption. To destroy germ-hfe.the sys-
tem must be kept in a well-nourished condition Do
not lose flesh. Take SCOtt'S EmUISlOU,
^Sies'Vhe reinforeement. ne£
sary for the body to conquer in the easiest Poss^^e
form The oil is in a state quickly taken up and rap-
idly transformed into the organs and tissues.
f.SS m.r, with yo« pr«crlptlon.l
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemist#, New York
goccataand
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Daily Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 214, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 9, 1896, newspaper, January 9, 1896; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc111653/m1/3/: accessed March 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.