Enid Daily Eagle. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 173, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1909 Page: 1 of 8
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♦ + ♦ + ++ +• + '+ + + « +
* Subscriber* to tlx- Kiigta who <•
+ Itoitl to receive the pAper wipu- <■
+ larl.v wiU turn nil com- *
+ plaints in to the ofUce direct. •!•
+. Phone . *
+ + + + + ♦+ <• * + + * + + +
ENID DAILY EAGLE.
♦++*♦+♦♦*+♦♦♦♦♦♦♦
+ All tIk* news while it w new*. ♦
<• Eagle reader* are the liest in- ♦
+ formed jteople on earth. Are
you one'.'
+ * + 4
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\ <)!.. VIII. \<>. 171.
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PRICE FIVE CK.YTS
GREATEST NOW
FINE NEW STRUCTUfiE
THE NORTH SIDE
n '
All Past Records Broken in
| V Present Month
WHO WILL
a ,\i,i:\\\in;i; w
bcildi.no next
month.
LUCIEN BANK ™ " *M «THIS JOKE HAD !««!L CUBAHTS MAT
PAV BIG FINE
local mills raised the prie
on wheat today to S 1.4 l!. two
J Two of d landmarks ot' the
! period whe ' was a hustling
| town will n« ntli ho dismantled
| to give way wo-story modern
j office building h will Ui erect-
i ed. The fram ^ings are located
I on the north side of the square on
! Randolph street. They belong to
. Messrs. Ooulding and E. O Alexan-
j tier.
Alexander purchased one of the
| buildings some time ago from (Joul-
| ding. The two men have agreed to
erect a thoroughly modern store
I building where the two frames are at
I present. The present occupants will
; vacate about May 1 -"*•. when the dis-
i mantling begins.
{ A. A. Crowell, the architect, has
just completed the plans for the new
Yeggnien Initiate Harold
Houston Into Their Ways
higher than it was yesterdayy. Very
little is < oming in, neauly all who '
have wheat left are holding it for
$1.51). As a matter of fact, how-
ever, it is not thought that there U;
much wheat being held in this com-
munity.
Y ARIOl S ESTIMATES OF NT M-
BKH I NDKK CX>NMTIll7< TION
One Carpenter S ys Three Are Stari-
Every Day On the \Ve*t Sid**
and a Visitor Says I HO An*
Building On East Side
That two hundred houses have
either been started absolutely new
or have been in course of const ruc-
tion from previous starts within tin-
past thirty days is the statement of j building which will have a fifty foot
carpenters of this city to an Eagle front on Randolph street. The up-
:i.m CASH. $9,000 NOTES AUDITOR CHOSEN
FOR NEW RAILROAD
FATAL CLIMAX
In Emporia, Kansas, Brother
Kills Brother
WANTED TO SCARE FAMILY
Wichita. April hi. \lbert
i'ornev
hide
if (Charged With Defrauding
Government of Revenue
TAKEN ll\ OUTLAWS W «< I SED
MICH DYNAMITE.
Knld .Men Lon^tit the Bank Only Ten j
Paj> Aj(o—(Wtlcer* Have (iood
Description of Burglar* a*
Seen YeNU-nlaj
.
The Bank of Lucien, at Lucien. . j
TELL1 NO 111 M \
WAS i\ THK CKI
lit lUil.Alt
LA It.
reporter today who sought to learn
the actual number of residences go-
ing up. The month of April alon
AMI MOOllELAND IIEINHITS Till
isoi'TK in Kwoit.tiu.i: ron
<X \HTItr< 'tion.
\V. T. Haggert, who has been
special clerk to the vice president and
general manager of the Pecos Valley
Ami Stealing P< uii In not! red The
Joker Falls a Victim to Hi*
Brother's (Inn Who Knew
Naught of the Joke.
Emporia, Kan., April hi. Griffith
nt and luana
of the retail department < f
llockaday I'aint company. at
Kast Douglas avenue, shot him
in the temple, death resulting
stant Iv, about ti: ISO o'clock last
night, while his wife ami Miss Mat-
tie Maffltt, his stenographer, v ere
engaged in conversation within nn
arm's length. |
Mr. Korne) was sitting at his desk
in the rear part of the store, and I
the other employes had left. His | WHlt 'II Is SIHJKCT TO TKN
wile and .Miss MaflUt were th«• onl> I CENTS l*EK l*OI Nil TAA
witnesses of the tragedy, which. It is)
rumored, came following domestic
ON COLORED OLEOMARGERINE
small town thirty miles east of here unes ()f the Santa Fe system since I "ll^u's" eighteen, died today
and just over the line in Nobl
county, was burglarized last nigh'
and about $1,000 in currency and
$9,000 in notes secured. Tin- bank
safe was blown into a thousand
per rooms will be rented out for of-
fices. Neither Messrs. Goulding or j pieces and the hank building badly
Alexander would say this morning damaged. The robbery was dlscov-
will show nearly a hundred homes just what the new building would ered at half past six o'clock this
completed in this city. I cost, but the* plans call tor a fine i morning.
A carpenter employed on a build- j structure. Ten days ago the Bank of Lucien
ing on West Maine street in Waver-, q wa8 bought by L. N Houston and
ley stated that he had been at work j j his son. Harold, of this city, liar-
there three weeks and there had not
been a day when he could see two
new houses going up and most oi
the time more than three founda-
tions could be seen each night not
visible the night before. "The num-
ber will average at least three a day
for the time I have been working,"
he said.
A gentleman who came here with
the intention of locating a factory
rold the Eagle that for his personal
information he had tried to count
the number of buildings under con-
struction east ol the Hock Island
tracks and he states that he counted
one hundred and sixty in that part
of Enid alone The Eagle has th"
highest respect for this gentleman,
who is a prominent citizen of anoth-
er community, but thinks he must
have counted some of the houses
t wice.
"Some one ought to take a cen-
sus ot the new houses so we would
know what is going on," said a real
estate man today. "I have heard
the number of residences going up
estimated all the way from one hun-
dred to live hundred. No one puts
it less than one hundred."
Every part of the city is teem-
ing with activity. With all its splen-
did prosperity in the past and the
well remembered building booms the
city has had none in years gone by
approached the present. Enid Is
forging ahead at a rate so rapid that,
her own citizens do not realize how
fast the young city is growing.
And yet. every house is occupied
and there is as .strong a demand as
ever for new ones. The builders,
with all their activity, are having j
hard work keeping up with the city'* j
development.
CIVIC LEA6UE MEETS SUNDAY
The Civic, league of Enid. Okla.. j
will meet Sunday afternoon at the j
Evangelical church to choose offi- j
cers and discuss further methods of
assisting the county and city officials •
in maintaining law and order in
i old was in charge. Last Monday,
j John P. Cook, cashier of the Guar-
anty State bank of this city, said to
! Harold Houston that he thought the
| Lucien bank was carrying too much
currency for such a place, and on
! that suggestion $1,000 was sent to
Enid. Otherwise the robbers would
have secured more than they did.
After burglarizing the hank the
Enid and Garfield county. Members L .. , . . f
, , robbers stole a horse from Thomas
ol practically all religious denomina- ,, ,, , . . ,. ...
. . , . , , i ( ollard and a buggy troni E. 1).
tions and many who do not belong to I , ,
. , „. 1 Mocland. farmers near Lucien, and
any church are active workers tor ...
.,1 with this outfit the outlaws escaped,
the Civic league Tin- meeting will j , , ' .
I Telephone and telegraph wires had
ocenr at .: p. m ; . . A,
| been cut ou both sides of the town
° | and communication with Enid was
not had until hours after the rob-
bery was known.
The officers have a good descrip-
tion of the men who did the work.
One was tall and slim and the other
was short and heavy. These descrip-
tions were procured from merch-
ants whose stores the robbers visit-
ed yesterday to buy soap which was
used in dynamiting the safe. One
merchant did not have the kind of
INDIAN LAND OWNER IS
ASSASSINATED AT HIS DESK
Claremore, Okla.. April 16. John
Builete, a wealthy Indian land owner
and widely known throughout Okla-
homa and Texas, was assassinated
while sitting at his desk in his of- j sonl> wanted and the purchase was
fie
here last night. The assassin
made at another plac<
part of a
as found
escaped. Bullete was to have been j j):lr V10 soal> bought
married in the near future to Miss j *n bank.
Pearl Eddleman. a clerk in the gov-j |nstl'ution was insured the
eminent Indian agency at Muskogee. r°bkery will not result in Joss to the
No motive is known for the crime.
t roubles.
Mrs. Forney and Miss Mafliti at.
both suffering from the shock and
were unable to make statements to
Coroner McCclllster. or any other
persons.
1 *!♦! , has resigned to become audi- i us 1 resu,t of paving been shot last ; Ml information which could b«
tor of the Enid. Ochiltree and West-! Mi^ht hv llis younger brother Owen, j gathered by the coroner last nigh
ern railway, now being surveyed j wll° m,8look l,lm ,wr a burglar. The \ imitates that Mr. Forney commit
from this city to Dalhart. Texas. Mr. Iyouth had jokingly told the | ted suicide, although some claimed
family there was a Injrglar in the eel- I the shot was fired accidentally
lar. While they armed themselves, o—
preparatory to descending to the
basements. Griffith, thinking to
frighten the others, stole down to
the basement by way of an outside
entrance. The younger brother rush-
ed to the cellar and when he heard
a sound in the darkness fired, fa-
tally wounding Griffith
Haggart has been located at Amar-
illo. Texas. He is well known in
Enid and Oklahoma.
Meager Information has been re-
ceived from Mr. Mooreland, the civil
engineer, who left Enid Wednesday
on a tour of inspection over the pro-
posed route which the E. O. W.
will follow from here. Mooreland
says that the route as far as he has
gone is perfect, and that the road
should he built at a fairly reasonable
figure for inanv miles.
ENIO MEN TO MEND
OCHILTREE BANQUET
IMMIA MILK BKJOICI \(i 0\ Kit
PIUISPECT8 FOIl NEW BOAIl
INTO THIS CITY.
Next Monday evening at seven
o'clock a delegation of Enid men will
leave over the Frisco en route to
Ochiltree, Texas, where a big ban-
quet and celebration is to be held to
show the interest of the people of
that vicinity in the Enid. Ochiltree
and Western railroad
AMERICANS KILLED
WITH ARMENIANS
EYE WITNESS TELLS OF
NOTOAIOUS EL PASO CASE
The announcement in a Spring-
field, Mo., paper that J. F. Mitehim,
was too ill to journey to El Paso.
Texas, to testify in his trial for the
murder of Monroe McClurg Harrell,
formerly of Oklahoma City, is inter- ,
est ing to several Enid people. Mitch- j
iui, while editor of the El Paso Daily j
News, shot and killed Harrell, whom
he alleges threatened his life. An
Enid newspaper man was in El Paso
! Constantinople, April It). -Infor*
| mation today from Alana, Asiati •
! Turkey, declares two American mis-
I sionaries were killed in the anti-Am-
erican outbreak there.
j The American missionaries at
Adna, who are under the control of
the American board of foreign mis-
sions, are Itev. William Chambers
and wife of Chicago, and the Misses
Webb, two sisters of Missouri
Ii Im Alleged That Only a (Quarter
Cent Per Pouiul Bevenue Has
Been Paid—Big Concern May
lie Forced lo llisgorge
Topeka, Hans., April hi. Indu -
ments have been returned by the
federal grand jury against the
Cudahy Packing company of Kan-
sas City on seven hundred and thir-
ty-seven counts for defrauding the
I government out of fifty thousand
dollars by violating the internal rev-
enue law .
I The revenue law provides that
each pound « t uneolored oleomarge-
j rlne must bear a revenue stamp of a
quarter cent. but. to each pound to
which the coloring matter has been
added, a ten cent stamp must he at-
tached. It is charged that the Cud-
ahy company has sold the colored
product under a quarter of a cent
tax. The minimum tine on each
count is a thousand dollars.
BIG OAMAGES SOUGHT
BY OLIGSCHLAEGER
LAST MEETING OLD COUNCIL:
official
of the
Tonight will be the last
A. j council meeting that aomi
«t the time of the shooting and was „|y (llul„ w,„ hav,, an 0„p0rtliail}
a principal ill the events which led I trttnsactlnR any ,IIiporlam ,)Usi
up to the killing of young Harrell. j „„„„ althn„ffh ttlPV w,„ ho|l,
office until May 1 A volume o?
business will be transacted tonighl,
in order to start the new fiscal year
FIFTEEN DEAD IN FIRE
IN SAN FRANCISCO HOTEL
San Francisco. April lu. Five are i
known dead, and probably yen oth- ,
o- I ers buried in the ruins of the St. !
Miss Luella Porter, of Welling- j George lodging house, which was
ton, Kans.. is visiting with Mrs. H. | destroyed by/tirse early today. The
.] Sturgis victims are laborers. Bight other
. small buildings were burned.
Mrs. C. L. Hoyt and little daugh- i * °
ter, Louise, left today for a week's I It will pay you to read all the
visit with relatives in Okeene. ' ads.
BALDWIN BELIEVES AIRSHIP WILL SAIL
SEATTLE TO WASHINGTON IN FOUR DAY
bank except perhaps as the building
was damaged. Taking the notes
will prove a source of much trouble
though the bank records will be suf-
ficient. to show the indebtedness In
each case.
r— -c-
ADVENTISTS DECIDE TO
HOLD CONFERENCE HERE
The Seventh Day Adventists who
held a very successful meeting in
Enid last summer, were so delighted
and pleased with the manner in
which Enid people treated them,
that they have decided to hold their
annual gatherings in this city, in-
stead of going from one city to an-
other.
J. It. Bag ley, superintendent of the
; Oklahoma Adventists, is here today
from Alva conferring with J. J. Cun-
i ningham. secretary of the Chamber
I of Commerce and other business men
I about this summer's session
Mitehim is said to be suffering with
a stroke of paralysis and his recovery
now bv'ing j is said to be doubtful.
built out of Dalhart to Enid. It is j After the shooting Mitehim was i wjt^
not known yet. just how many will released on bond. He is now at De
go but there will likely be at least Soto, Mo. The affair was about aj
a do/en, and perhaps more. i certain picture which was taken of
Mr. L). E. Wentz of Ochiltree, is in ; an El Paso dive, which Mitehim had
the city today for the purpose of ex- j been trying to break up. A party of
' v n... ..........
tending an invitation to the business i News reporters, among whom was
men, citizens ami Chamber of Com- j fhe Enid man, went to this place and
iperce to be the guests of Ochiltree | took a flashlight. Harrell was there
Tuesday night. Ochiltree will take I and his likeness was found in the
care of all who wilt come and Mr. | picture. He demanded that It be
Went? asks that if be understood | killed," which Mitehim did, but Mar-
that there is no limit** to the number j thought that the entire pltcur^
invited. Leaving here in tire evening I should be kept from the paper. The
the Enid delegation will go to Avard jtwo men argued over the matter and
and there transfer to the Santa Fe Harrell threatoneded to kill Mitehim.
going south to (Hazier. Texas. Thta (Hh^r words were used and on the
point will he readied at f> a. m. From j n*tfh of May 'JO, the killing occured.
Ochiltree a number of automobiles
will be at Glazier to meet, the guests
of the Panhandle and they will be
hurried across the plains to the town
where the banquet and celebration
will be held.
Judge Whittlnghill said today that j
he intended to go and that at least a
half dozen men will accompany hiui
ou the trip. Mr. Whittlnghill has re-
cently engaged in the business of sel-
ling Panhandle lands and he states
that the demand for sections of land
in the vicinity of Ochiltree surpasses i
belief. Since it has become settled
that the railroad is to be built from |
this city to Dalhart the Panhandle
ALVA DELEGATION
INSPECTS PAVING
VISITOILS SI KPIUSLI) AT ENID'S
KAPID DBVELOPMEXT AND
KITLDINOS CJOI NO I P
Hagby says that while two thous- haa been flooded with buyers who did
Seattle, Wash., April 1 ti.—The
balloon and airship have suggested,
in keeping with aeronautical prog-
ress. that there is a possibility of
mapping the air currents, and an
attempt to do so is about to be made
by Capt. Thomas S. Baldwin, fa-
mous balloon expert.
Since the very latest types of the
airship and the big modern gas bags
are to be exhibited at the Alaska-
Yukon- Paritic. Exposition at Seattle
this summer, and numerous flights
and tests will be made, Capt. Bald-
win , to further demonstrate that
to manage a balloon in long
cause he is in search of adventure,
but because there is a scientific pur-
pose back of it all. H. Helm Clay-
ton. of the Blue Hill observatory,
one of the most noted students of
atmospheric conditions in the world,
is behind the proposed Baldwin bal-
looning expedition from Seattle to
Boston.
Clayton, by the use of kites and
the modern meteorological instru-
ments, has fetched just enough
knowledge concerning that mysteri-
ous spafe overhead to the earth be-
low to venture the opinion that at
an elevation of about 15,000 feet
flights, is oue of the great scientific there is always a steady wind from
problems of > the day, proposed to the westward. Now Clayton further
make a balloon flight from Seattle • believes that should a balloon be
to Boston. kept constantly at this, or even a
This Is the longest balloon trip higher elevation, the great bag
ever talked about and if attempted , would enjoy the full power of this
will be the greatest in history. While steady wind, and should. If all theo-
the date for the start has not as K"n—1—
V.
been set. it Is expected that Capt.
Baldwin will leave the exposition
grounds during the coming summer,
at a time when atmospheric condi-
tions are right.
Capt. Baldwin will take this hap-
hazard voyage through space not be-
ries pertaining to ballooning prove
correct, traverse the continent rap-
Idly. Again If these same atmos-
pheric conditions were exactly right
at the time, Capt. Baldwin will land
his balloon on Boston common with-
in four days after departing from
(Continued oo page five)
and attended last year, that the at-
tendance this year will be largely in-
creased. Many prominent Adventists
from all over the country w ill attend.
Bagby is arranging an extensive
program for the session.
FINE STARKEHEA6ES0N
BUILDING NEAR COMPLETION
Work on the new Starkey-Fergu-
son building is rapidly nearing com-
pletion. The building when finish-
ed will be one of Enid's most mod-
ern and best arranged business
houses. The New York Brokers
will occupy the first floor, and a
boarding and rooming house will be
run on the second floor by Ferguson.
+ + + ' + *•«• + + + + + +.> +
+ *
WEATHKi; l OKl.CASJ +
♦
*
*
♦
* ♦
♦+++♦+♦♦♦+++♦+♦+4
Tonight and Saturday,
all fair.
not. want to go thereuntil a railroad
was secured and thousands of acres
of laud change hands dally. "There
will likely be fifteen or twenty Enid
and (Jarfield county men. at the Och-
iltree banquet," said Judge Whltting-
hill, who will deliver a toast on that
occasion. The Chamber of Commerce
has received a formal invitation and
expects H. S. Mooreland and Frank
Hamilton who are now surveying the
route to reach Ochiltree in time to
represent that body.
o—
ONE RAILROAD CUTS RATES
Alva has fourteen men In the city
today inspecting Enid paving with <
view to getting a decision as to what
ktnd of street paving the thriving
young city to the west of Enid
should have. In the crowd are ad-
vocates of brick and advocates of
asphalt. None had heard of Imper-
ial until they reached here but nou
are. looking thut up also. Late this
afternoon the visitors were shown
over the city in automobiles and
they expressed great surprise at
Enid's growth and especially at the
scores and scores of residences and
lean slate.
Itowes Funeral Not Announced.
The funeral of Mrs. Hester L.
Bowes, wife of John L. Bowes, who
died yesterday afternoon of pneu-
monia, has not been aunounced as
yet. The services will be postponed
until F. W. Bowes, a son. arrives
from Riverside, Cal. He is expected
today.
JAPANESE PATTERN
AFTER AMERICANS
TokJo, April I ti. A tremendous
sensation developed here today with
the arrest of nine members of the
lower house of the diet. The nature
of the charges are withheld, but It is
believed bribery is alleged in con-
nection with recent difficulties of
the Japanese Sugar company. a
twelve million dollar concern
I II n DOLL A l(S 1 KH DAY FOIt
N EAKLY A YKAK ASKED
CITY OF ENID.
An action growing out of the
washing out of the bridge over East
Maine street, betweeu Second and
Third street, on May 4, 1 !>08. was
filed in the district court this morn-
ing Pete Ollgsehlaegor owns !M
town lots in the original townsite.
On May 4, last the Rock Island
railroad bridge and tho bridge own-
ed by the City of Enid Immediately
adjoining it were washed away by
the food. The timbers and rubbish
were mostly thrown upon Ofigschlae-
ger's lots. Maine street as a public
thoroughfare was blocked as a result.
(Higschlaeger says that he has re-
peatedly asked that the street be
opened, but that his requests have
fallen on deaf ears.
Through Messrs. Kruse and llllls,
his attorneys. Mr. Olisehlaeger prays
the court to award him judgment of
)f,0 a day damages since July 1,
1908, and an order compelling both
defendants to clear away the rubbish
and debris aud also to open Maine
street. He says that his lots have
been damaged considerably by the
closing of the street and he wants
such other relief as the court may
determine is just.
Mr. and Mrs. McHugh. of Hia-
watha. Kans.. are the guests of their
son and wife. Mr. and Mrs. Chatles
McHugh. of MS West Maine.
BLAINE COUNTY BLACK BOOTLEGGER
SHOT DEAO BY WOUNDED DEPUTY SHERIEF
Geary, April I ti Taylor Sim-
mons, colored, is dead and John
Foster, deputy sheriff of Blaine
county is seriously wounded as th--
result of a duel here Wedncsda;
morning. Foster may recover.
Simmons was suspected by Blaine
county officers of traffioing in li-
quor and Deputy Foster was on his
business houses now under construe-j trail expecting to make an arrest
St. Joseph, Mo., April TH. The
Burlington railway will made a two
and a half cent rate in Missouri
probably May 1. This announce-
ment was made by officials of the
company in Chicago today aud no-
Lice, was immediately wired Judge O.
M. Spencer, in St. Joseph, general
solicitor of the Burlington
Mrs. j. W Lloyd, of-Pond Creek,
was the all-day guest yesterday of
Mrs C W Wheeler,
tion. Following are the members of
the visiting party:
Kent Eubank, J. W. Colom, A.
W. Kavanaugh, J. W. Monfort. t eo.
W. M<\Wf)e\ . I. \v. Itirkel. J E.
Peoples, .1 P. Renfrow, D. C Dates,
Wm. Weaver, (his Downer. Jack
( rvenh* . J M. Powell. \ I Sfev
fnpeka ClerkX Full.
Topeka, Kan., April 16. William
Eugene McClelland, clerk in th«
■potrtoffice here, was arrested by
posto/fiee inspectors today He ad-
mits pilfering letters and packages
which contained money and jewelry
aggregating several thousand dollars
The negro escaped and arming him
self with a forty-four, he started af-
ter the sheriff. Foster was in the
grocery store of Shelby and Morrl
son when Simmons entered the
store. Without a word of warning
he opened fire on the deputy who
was taken completely unawares as
were bystanders in the store. A
wfld scramble for exits resulted in
the destruction of part of the sum
and mist of the show cases In the
store and slight injuries to one or
two persons who were cut by broken
glass. The enraged negro emptied
his ctiu at the unfortunate officer,
three shots taking effect. Otle bul-
let entered Foster's mouth and broke
his jaw. and a bullet took effect In
either arm. Dazed, wounded and
bleeding. Foster pulled his revolver
and fired the contents of five cham-
bers at his assailiant shooting him in
the neck, in the region of the heart
and making several flesh wounds. \
bullet from the deputy's gun that
entered the left side ot the negro
will cost him his life. Both men
were taken In an unconscious con-
dition to rooms over the grocer\
store and medical attendance sum-
moned.
The noise of the shooting Was
heard over the town and a crowd
quickly assembled. When the dep-
uty turned on his would-be murder-
er the negro turned and ran out of
the store Beaching the curb he
fell, to the ground mortally wounded
and Foster was caught at Che door
of the store just as he was about to
fall with his smoking revolver still
leveled In the direction of the h '-
gro. Simmons almost hopeles* con-
dition alone prevented the use of
violence. Guns were drawn • on ev
ery hand by men willing to "finish
the nigger.'* but he was left to di \
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Enid Daily Eagle. (Enid, Okla.), Vol. 8, No. 173, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1909, newspaper, April 16, 1909; Enid, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144148/m1/1/: accessed April 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.