The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 354, Ed. 1 Monday, October 14, 1907 Page: 2 of 8
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rhe Shcwnoa News
MONDAY, OCT. 14. 1 07.
3- Montfis $1.00
Shawnee NEWS. ,he h0U8°lB the Illlnj|8
ppV S. ALLAH I >. Qll06l aad Pnhlikbn
NBW PHONK
News Busnit**. Office 32:
I/>u S. A Hard'a Residence, 246
entered as second
Shawnee, (-4. latum*,
i of March 1H .9.
-<UNjj
legislature, and was president of tii-
illinols, Vlcksburg national park
commission.
Tho most Interesting momber of the
United States senate |rom many
points of view will be the first blind
man to take a seat there—Thomas P.
Gore of Oklahoma. Mr. Gore has
not yet been elected, but he was chos-
en by the democratic party caucus,
la* mail matter and as the dtmocrats won the re-
w<iee the act of cent election In the state he Is sure
of being named. Gore Is well
known throughout Oklahoma and has
long been prominent In public affairs.
Thr *e candidates are making i\ hard
battle for the governorship In Loulsl*
UNIQUE JOURNAL
IS
COTTON. HANDLING
Tahlequah. I. T., Oct. M.—Frank I
Boudinot, a Cherokee lawyer at F 1
Gibson will purchase the old Cherol
Advocate plant from the Cherokee n t
Venlent bales.
tion and resume the publication of that
unique Journal for the benefit of th •
Keetoowah society, the full blood Cher-
Indians who have always been re-
nnn this year. All three have been bellous against the government policy
stumping the state and It has been J of allotment of lands to Individual In-
many years since a livelier campaign dlans.
has been seen there. The abolition! The Cherokee Advocate was first
of sinecures, the adjustment of the published In Now Echota, Ga., in 1830 and "when h
• lhore jta utuofc 4 mteroet to cotton compensation of public officials, and hv
ifafllorg iii ike >1" the commit- increased public revenues are Is-Ik-V:
<2? ®n tho growing uii handling of BUoH flouring prominently In the cam-
top crop befirirc lite- international palgn.
ecfefereace of ooil#ii growers at At- jn belief that the Btatute pass-
lanta yesterday G(j by the Massachusetts legislature
Umch has beciu ,aj<| iu-.I written jn 1903, forbidding the soliciting of
with reference tu I11 proper cultlva positions In public service corpora-
tion and mnrkctAig m' the crop to on- tlons by public officials has been vlo-
m*1" tfco grower b\ v<*vive the groit- lated, a grnnd Jury in Boston has re-
eiiJ iKjaaiblc I>oih4i<, the four card- turned Indlctnu'iits ngalnst two state
hi t 'rules laid toy the commute nenators, two members of the legls
ace so nfuiple *■ ! w wsiiy followed lature and two aldermen of this eli v.
Ellas Boudinot,
DETROIT DEFEATED.
For the Second Time Chicago
Is the Victor.
Chicago, Oct. 1°.—The Detroit-Amer
lean league team suffered Its second
defeat Thursday at hands of the Chica (
go Nationals, storing only one run
Chicago tnllled five times, being th<4
result of solid hitting. Sevier startr !
to pitch for Detr it, but the loca
took kindly to his curves and battr j
him out of the box In four innin '
Killlan then trok up the work, ar I
was found for three hits and anoth •; J
run in the fifth.
Detroit tried vainly to brerik thrc •• |
the Chlcigo defense. Reaulbach ?ii*
ed st ron fly In the opening Innin
e showed signs of weaken
New fall Suits
tli at tho advioe >**•! At. «ee appeal
♦ ho planter.
The matter of the •Section of seed
is tho first KMjtMWlv with the object
insuring a standard of
plants oacli ytwu 1tit« advlco has
It Is charged thaT the men solicit
posltlons from a telephone company
grandfather of |ng In the fifth and sixth Innings his.
Frank J. Uoudlnot. In 1844 the pa- teams mates came to his rescue with
per was re-established at Tahlequah; fast double plavs.
with Frank P. Uoss as editor, and has; For some unexplainable reason the!
since been maintained there, until two game failed to attract the usual !ar <
years ago, when publication was sua-1 crowd to the grounds Tht- official I
ponded because tho Cherokee council attendance figures made the total 13.-
did not make an appropriation for It.: 114, and the many empty seats in
The Advocate was printed In th > the enlarged bleachers made the gath
Cherokee language and the Cherokee, ering appear even smaller than th s.
characters were used. It was a nat-j Ac that, the crowd was more demon
lonnl publication. The council each stratlve than the big outpouring ol
year made an appropriation for Its sup-1 Wednesday. Ttrulbach's brllliantp;*^
port and appointed an editor. In the Ing in the early Innings and the en:
Indian mind there was great honor at Ings hits of St< Infeldt, Evers 1
William J. Bryan has been select' <1 tached to the position of editor of this Sheekard roused the Chicago p«n
deliver the first lecture this sua- paper. The salary was but fifty dol-j sans, wnile tho Detroit contln?
sou before the League of Political {arR j)er month, yet the place was eag-
k«w .. rji..w .1 ^ > -.« Education In Now York City. Other erly sought by prominent Indians. J.
followed *iCh^KiYat^proflt B[),,lU(.,s who wm h„;mi un.l. r (ho s M. W.1S th(. c,mnr appoint-
hnme auspices during the winter or e(j by the council.
Dr. Edward Everett Hale, District The paper was printed for the Cher-
Attorney Jerome, William Lloyd Gar- okeea, who could read no other lan-. ... _= „ ,
rlson. Jacob A. Rlls, Hooker T. Wash guage> and was distributed free to any \ Chicago h'tters Inst no time In 'stratcM
th.t aii hn..oU4 t„ inKto*' M^wttrd Howard Griggs, Dr. Indian family who wanted it. The ening out Seivers' benders. The ft
Neit that all be housed for Heber Newton and John Graham1
in the raJsdng of <raln and corn
tiftit it will surely ♦ my the cotton
piantor for th«* fn«ihi«^ he takes in
lookftg aftor au«i proper seed
far the newt ortm.
cheered the more heartily so t.br
tho visiting team might not think !
self descried. The play was urrc
faster than on the preceding da"
Only thirteen batsmen faced Reulba"
In the 'Irst four Innings, while t^
frtHMi 4tt to 60 dAfti twrfore being sent
t£ the gin. 1 no muxuiim for this have
liQpn preaoliod \m4 minted so often
tlfat It Is not aortwarr to comment
IKrUiec.
Third, that mm, t.u x* possible far-
mers adopt gin xauprc^slng, thereby
escaping tlio of the com-
l ross tnutt and ^UMliwiiig the trip ol
ctftton from th< graw'r to tfie spinner
Fourth, that tJi« fflgyptian style of
Brooks.
INE BIG SHOW
Ringling Bros, big show
circulation seldom exceeded 1.000 run came in the second inning, wh"
copies and the council kept a careful Stelnfeldt lined the ball over thlr
roll of the Indians who could not read . base, reaching second on the hit.
English. A special building was er-
ected at the Cherokee capital for this
newspaper and it has always been
printed there. The building still stands
as the property of the nation and the
Advocate plant is locked up there.
The paper was live column, eight
pages, and In the last few years of
arrived existence was printed one-half in
Knig sacrificed and Eevers sent t
double over first base. Stelnfeldt s' •
ed, but Evers was left when SchuV
and Tinker were retired on infi^!-
grounders. With Reulbaeh goin* *
top speed that one run looked go
enough to win. but just to make t'
result certain the Nationals went a'?
er Slever's curves savagely In t'
Copyright
Um'ugh0llt 8 n'l«y over the Katy, the four EnKlfsh"an7 the" rth«r"ln"che"roke£' fourth Stelnfeldt drove a long r
aw, unit tho a 18 being eyer<l hours apart. It The advertisements were set In Cher-I 10 'eft fMd to start the Inning. Jc c
crMDMlttifi boltHTM (1.., If Hitnnli.l1 *1!" rattl<M' 'at,! 1,1 1116 afternoon 0kee characters. To manufacture thl SeUI"K ,,lc ball near the boundarv
P when the la.st arrived. Hundreds of peculiar type, special type moulds had I u''nK followed with a hard single it
employees accompanied the trains,! to l,p prepared. The last "dress" of I r|Kht EverB sent him to third w! M
and formed a continuous string of (h0 Advocate was made by a type I anotber drive to the same territory
it mi Li] 11 l« in ^ditinn i„. h"iianlty from the railroad to the foundry In Chicago and the moulds and Schulte dropped a fly safely
imJ!" . hl'w Krounds near the ball park. have been retained as a curio. Of
The union/Hug i>f the show was I course all the composition Is hand set.
witnessed by an Interested crowd of There are but four men now living
spectators, as were also the opera- who can set this type. They are Cale
DENI80N*bi CHARTER. tlons at the grounds. Here acres of Starr, Wattle Foreman, George Wof-
ime following mi', uitong tho sal- canvas were spread after the hands ford and Joe Sequleche. Two prlnt-
iinUWd benefits «rsii came to the man
wljfo toils to prudun- the staple—rais-
ing a higher grade gf cotton, holding
KlftAed, having it itNBfjres.sed at the
gfQ and put up in letter and more con-
cofiter, Kling scoring. Dvers tli
to make third on the hit. but w-
canght and run down by a swan-
of Detroit players. Schulte advancin
to second. Renlbach cut a low b: '
over second base, sending Tlnl r-
home Coughlln then caught Slagle*
high fly.
Manager Jennings decldcd that Sle
lent i>o4 tfl in the oharter for the had eaten dinner under the big dinners could set all tho type used, and
city of Deoinou, TV* tent tent and everything was put in whenever it was found that one of
A Mayor aiid t.urn lidormen are the shape for the parade and exhibitions the printers was likely to leave, a,
only elective offtrtvo, and constitute today. Sunday with a great circus Cherokee apprentice was brought in I ver ^ failed to make good, so KHHa
the city council are elected by was a new experience with a major., and taught to set the type. appeared ;n the next inning. He wa:
th© pcopk* at larg«'. for a term of two jty Gf the spectators, and the opera-! In the Cherokee alphabet there are' K^^d warmly enough, two doubl
•years QuailHeJtLnwi . of all are the tions proved very interesting. This 86 characters Instead of our 26. and f, .R,, s'ngle being gleaned o'!
sajn<\ vis: Their must be qualliled morning the regular "wash-day" a the cases from which the type is set ? <lf>,,vnrv ()n,y one run rrsulte
va^ers and must h,\re resided in the large crowd gathered at the grounds were correspondingly larger and com-i "owever,a the hits alternated with
city Ave oonsenrfiv^ years prior to almost as soon as fhe first streaks of plicated compared to those in use in . °"t8, Yhunce secured the first don
e#ootli>u and minf. not bo Interested dawn appeared, and the work of the1 English newspaper offices. I . <on8(>(luently «cored the run
In any oooirot^ mHii the city or in army of employes was watched with I" the advocate was printed only
any way Indehlmi <a the city. The the livliest manifestations of inter-
ereotiom of a nwyir protem, to be est.
known as such 4«njag his term of of- *
lice at flrul meeting (Jf the council, to
The "KVPPENHEIMER" Make-None Better and Few
So Good—The New Browns-Ask to See Them
| $15.00 to $25.00
• Madden, Jarrell S Gee
official news. This concerned new
Cherokee laws or government regula-
tions which effected the Indians.
There was no politics in it and it was
as far removed from so-called yellow
be.
<*l*cl8e Uio po«<*v wJ duties of the Did Not Purcna,e a H°me , __
•najror during hiv ummioo or dlsabll- Commissioner-elect Watson of the journalism as It is possible
Uf, except that li« 4taU not have the sta'e corporation board upon his re- The full bloods learned to depend up-
■ r/fftit tit reiuovn \a^ affioer or head of lUTO t0 'lls orn<' 'n Shawnee last on )t f0r their information and they
Mijr departmont ' of the romov- wei>,( after visiting at Guthrie stated pot Information from no other source.
x( of the mjyor u«*uiluentlr for any ,hat cvery Kta"' offlcer elected at the when Mr. Boudinot resumes publlca-
reiuou he .ilmH myyo until an elec- rfc<>nt e'ectlon Is besieged by Guthrie tlon of the Advocate It will be printed
tfiw to ail the vitmanr '■ called which real e8tate mcn antlo"a to sell him half In English nnd half In Cherokee
oiuflt be wltliln ui i|Ayi, ,if the occur- a *lonle at """ P'ace but up to dato nnd It will be circulated almost ex-
Canoe of the varvuiiTr not a single one has secured a home cluslvely among the Keetoowaha and
A city seerotJirr i«l«e of the corpo- t*lere A P)01' Prlce '8 set on the Night Hawks. These two organizft-
nution court <itliii*i. ui,| heads of do- Pr"t'or,>' aIU' th<3n 'be offlcer Is told tlons represent full blood Indians who
fmrtiuenU shall be. Mipointed by the to ,ak" fc'8 tlme ahout I'a>'lnK 1"lt so are averse to the white man's plan of
w* or with the uitH of the coun- far no sa,es have b<,en ma,le' I living an,) government and want to
ctt for a term of two , *rs. and can be refa,n "u'lr old "nablt8 and cu8toms and
r6mov(si only fer :««««, 'which shall A Criminal Attack. Ithelr property as a communal Interest
tie entered in tie- ■sty archives 011 an Inoffensive citizen Is frequently rather than Individual property^
The mayor ->k.u receive |i,800 per a,ade in that apparently useless little
rtsar aMerman iCSO** each pay to tubo called the "appendix." It's gen-i , ....
noted fo, tiay absent from <'ra'ly the result of protracted con,t'-1 te^g61 |'3 000 The SnJrfnirteM^n-
■city beyond 15 daw* patton followlni, liver torpor. Dr. tents 18 ' , uu' T11® spjrlngneta m
may bo re- X'^'8 New Life Pills regulate the 8uranc° Co™™D/ will InveBtigate the
•noveJ by .-ofcwaluii. election for !! er. Prevent appendicitis and estab- .
TST°r' ,Tn,rqUeM athal|edrugrglat8JlU °' th6 b0Wel,,' ^ y°"r druggist so°me mUe'oandy CoM
of 20 per cent of J*i<5 roters; the said a" aruggisis. '
«4fctal at this to have his
verywhere now are dispensing Pre-
ventlcs. for they are not only safe,
but decidedly certain and prompt.
PrevenMcs contain no Quinine
iiome printed < « 4>«ito' as candidate Must Answer to Charge,
for rejection. I*hoenlx, Ariz., Oct. 14.—John
Franchises be.*-.- effective only Mclntyre, arrested In this city on a 1V,a'tlver'noihing""harih nor"""sicken"
after being at u special warrant charging him with murder, al- , Taken at the "sneeze stage"
election hehi before or after 'Wl to have been committed In .n- Preventlcs T,,n prevent pneumonu,
approval or o.«WI, «j>ense of elec- dlan Territory ten years ago, has been nroneh|t|a , „ 0rlppf etc Henr<, the
tlao to be paid Ii, Uie applicant for ' kPi ^a^ 8Ceo,B "i.11 name. Preventlcs. Oood for feverish
<ranchiae. llooku tit all grantees of ^ Deputy United States Marsh.Ua chU(lren Preventlcs 2S centB.
^nchlse, ope. ..apectton at all ^nVre^en neUfled that the offl- I8."'^8 PT''T^\
During abseaoe .* lUablllty of the °ers would take htm away expressed Mr "8 cen a' " by a ,
judge of tb.- cervM^Ueo court mayor himself as pleased with the action, •
All act ai Rfiri/*. .r H„rin„ m0 ,k as he Is anxious to have the matter
MttiM) or dlsabiltLi tb« ainvor mv. tern Bet"e'l UP- At "ie age of 20 Mcln- Jalled for Contempt
act ^ tyre accepted employment with a Chickasha, I, T., Oct. 14.—Judge J.
Couaoll shal « executive sen- ,;'aeksmlth named Rogers. In the '.It- T Dlckerson of the United States
ta n oonUntitMul^Air He town of Ada, I. T. Rogers was Court, sentenced James Lee of Duncan
,PU,rh^,Hi P«>r pay. and In a controversy for to ton days In jail for contempt of
' ? d J * ,ho ordl" wages the blacksmith, considerably an- court T,<* violated a restraining fir-
nar>' buainoss iuJ idministratlvo af
For the rext three Innings the locals ■mm
Tth' rjvr1derr,re,,t,,n;h8'ev no« Anowed B0nd.
enth, when Stelnfeldt received a ba f i
on balls after two were out. Kllng'a' Tulsa, I. T., Oct. 14.—Judge Law-
high twisting foul to Coughlln fol rence in federal court dented an ap-
lowed. Peal from a decision given three
Detroit lost their first <*ance to weB,ts W in which the court refused
score In the fifth because Tinker In ha" on a habeas corpus to C. E. Wll-
tercepted end turned the catch into a 80n rnd Frank McGlothin, deputy
double play Rossman was first up, United States marshals, Indicted for
and was safe when his hard hit groun ' flrst degree murder for the killing of
er bounced off Tinker's ankle. Con; h the Rev. Sylvester Morris. Tiw olll-
lln was passed and Schmidt's ground cers will be compelled to remain in
er down the first base line ndvanc<«i the federal Jail at Muskogee mtil
both runners. O'Leary smashed a liar I their trial, which may be heard In a
line at. Tinker, and the latter Jumped state court.
and caught the ball and stopped i: The Rev. Mr. Morris was mistaken
second base ahead of Coughlln, retir by the officers In the darit here for a
Ing the side bootlegger several months ago, as ho
Detroit's one run came In the next was returning home from the country,
Inning. Killlan made the first cleai and was shot and killed when 'ne failed
bit off Reulhaih. Jones received a to halt at the word of command l?e
base on balls, and then was doubled was quite deaf, which It Is believed
np with Schaefer In a lightning play was the reason he failed to obey the
Stelnfeldt to Evers, to Chance Craw officers command. He was a retired
ford and Cobb followed with hits, Kll Methodist minister and wealthy.
Han scorlnr on the former, but Sla |
gle went back to the stands and cap-
tured Hossnian's effort Anothei
chance to -score was lost in the next
session. With one down, Schmidt
walked, O'I.eary struck out and K I-
llan scratched a hit toward Evers
Jones was not equal to the emergency,
going out, Tinker to Chance. Rossman
started the ninth with a hit, but waa
forced at second by Coughlln, who. W
was forced to remain on first, wht.r ©
Schmidt and O'Leary lifted easily @
rani'ht files' 2T
The teams left for Detroit, accom J?
panted by a small army of enthusi ®
asts. Two rames are scheduled foi @
that city. The receipts for Thursday gj
$11.213.50, divided as follows
^ee
Harry
Johnson
if you are in need of awn-
ings of any kind. For
store fronts, for windows,
business or dwelling, he
bandies all kinds in the
celebrated Cog Gear Rol-
ler Awning. No chains
to rust or break. They
are the best awnings that
money can buy.
PHONE 459
123 NORTH BEARD.
©
Open an Account With
The Union Savings Bank
SHAWNEE, OKLAHOMA.
were
To thp National Baseball commission ^
$1,621 25; lo the players, $9,727.50; t( ©
each club, $2,431.85.
M3ii hmimi"Li"]'II'TT_" Tu pered. appTonched Mclntyre swinging (,er toe Judge. Lee haa been en-,
or subject to call bar of s(eel |n a ttm,aten|nK mann ,r gaged In a divorce suit with his wife, j
Members ^ th,, oouooU are lnel'gl- MeInt*re had « ««> penknife in his J dfe Dlckerson granted a restraining
WILL SELL PRIZE WINNERS.
Mrs. Joh'i Gerkln Is Most Success ©
ful Hand'er of Horses. j
^ „ , ,, . v - . _ New York. Oct. 1'.—Mrs. John Ger ®
htatob^ld oth.T^T offiwBor^er h!uul anJ ,n a Btr"KKle cut thu "'.T t°Preve°t lnt,p^e(r- kin, one of the most successful women f
. "fl smith In the shoulder. Two weeks ™ce with his wife. Lee attempted to workers pf h,)r8ea ,n m% p(nmtry and @
the owner of Gerkindale farm. Grave §
send, L. I . has decided to sell het ®
stable of prize winners. The sale wil i
Include the noted pacers Newsby anil ®
Shop Girl, but It will not take place|®
until after the horse show In Madison ®
8quare "Jarden in November. Mrs.
Gerkln's reason for disposing of her A
OKiccrs: F W. CHRISTNER, Pres., F W. M0HR-
BACHER, Vicc Pres., G. M. CHRISTNER, Cashier.
■ ari.> .. . . blllllU >n lite BUUUIUer. I WU ri'M r"-
elty d,,r'ng: later Rogers died. Two attending phv- Ko to his wife's home the other night.
°ne 7W a siclnns stated that death resulted 'mu "d when lie could not secure admlt-
I hnS ^1, _ ' . . heart failure. Three vears later Mcln- tance he went In search of her attor-
Sohooi rommliwuiwrj are appointed tyr0 w,la lnd|Cte(, for"murder and sev- "PV- Robert Burns, county attorney
i>jr major ana en years after the indictment was re- °t Stephens county.
Any quaiitleu ttmar may become a lurnt3(i i1(> « arrested He renched Burns' office and saw a
candidate for eltrfton. lurn0<1 ne arre8tea' mBn romlnK ont of the door wnom ne
The rroateet at all times The 7eJtaa WOndeP took to be the attorney. Without
it providtvj for. | ^ ,, warning Lee pounced upon the man
and gave him a severe beating. It
When in n*e« ft (timber get It from mat,c Troubles; sold by all druggists. „eVPloped that the man to whom he ®table is lh'u, sW expects to make
home con<jer Phone 14—The A two months treatment br mall for gave the beating was not Burns, but
Home Lumbar On. 181 W. Main. We $1.00. Dr. E. W. Hull. 292* Olive 8t. ft cIlent who #ad been in his ofBce.
Iiaye the quality price is right.
17-tX
St. Louis, Mo
lals
Send for testlmon
10-Julv-D-W
If real coffee disturbs yotir Stom-
ach, your Heart or Kidneys, then try
this clever Coffee Imitstlon—Dr.
Dr. Shoop has
POi-ITKMJ. NOTES. J
Robert H. YMrey of Lynchburg Presented 8peclal Feature Saturday. Shoop's Health Coffee
nUI try for CActoc 1-laas' seat in the The Rathborns at the Bijou as a closely matched old Java and Mocha
Sixth District or Virginia this year. Bpecial fenture Saturday night were Coffee In flavor and taste yet It has
. (^plonel X. O. Mabbowa, department clever. Their work took well with not a single grain of real coffee in It
cmnmander of Illinois G. A. R., the audience and met with their ap- Dr. Shoop's Health Coffee Imitation
annonnood liis laadidacy for th#1 proval and appreciation. Is made from pure roasted eralns or torses In ihis stable rrp Brandon n
long trip in Kurope.
Mrs Gerlcin has been prominent as
an exhibitor and horsewoman for n
number of years, a' d she has unusua1
distinction of having by herse'f picked
her horses in the rough and trained
and galted them. The gelding Newr
boy is many times a blue ribbon her-o
credited with more than 100 f! ?
prlre8 at the New York and o
horse shows. Shop Girl is almost
valuable a harness horse. Otl
lieutenant govenumAip Colonel Ma- The interest was manifested from cereals, with Malt. Nuts. etc. Made
f#ew« haa been at public life for beginning to end with the high class In one minute. No tedious long wait,
•any yoars Hi? served a8 flrst comp- good commedlan and original while You will surely like It. Get a free
trailer of the rTnftrjd States treasury his wife lias a good voice and to- sample at our store. C O. D. Grocery
tmder President Htniaon, was the gether they wake a good team. Co. •
Belmar, the ponies Doncaster Mod 1
Torchlight*ind Cock Sparrow and t' •
saddle horses Mayo, Red Wood ant
Surprise.
® @@@ isHst isHsJ ® ® ® @ ® @@ @@@ @® @@ @
f. ®
It's what you S ivc, not what you Farn, that makes Wealth
CALL and GET
ONE of THESE
FINISHED
Savings Banks
'union Saiings Bank
Shawnee. Okla
NEAT and
HANDSOME
WHICH WE
Will Lend You
Save your Dimes, and Dollars will take carc of themselves
&
9
| It Will Help You to Save Your Money «
CORNER MAIN 5 BROADWAY %
<
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The Shawnee News. (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 354, Ed. 1 Monday, October 14, 1907, newspaper, October 14, 1907; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc138300/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.