The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1916 Page: 2 of 10
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LEW WIIOCR Kills « prisoner SHOPMEN 6IVE ULTIMATUM
Nervy ih«fiff of Crvsh County FotU IEVKNTEEN
J«il Break.
RAILNOAOt F AC i
new strike problem.
*epnlpa.~ Alva Taylor I* daad an 1
" & Hhnrjff Lrw Wildor. w.th four bullet
MOB or CITIZENS TAKE CHARGE U his body. I* in a hospital .
or RUNNING THINGS IN
OILTON.
(|0M Hoyr D , Ar.it Ic An Hour Ad
vaecs Wanted By The R
pair Man.
HEWS OF THE HEW STATE
Kan M flly, Mo a « i* Increase
Little incidents ana Accidents hat Oa
Ta Make Up a Week's Hirtary
af a Gr«at Comma*-
wealth.
Oilton.—A
armed ith i
mob of local miiens
long rope. went to tha
th.- result of an attempted jail break
her# by Taylor and llarb Farmer who
were recently non toured to forve ten
y^ars In tha penitentiary. following , , —
their conviction on the charge that , f® • hour •«•« « demand for
they hald up and robbed the Pioneor 10 rl,hI hour *** throughout the all
j drug tore located here allied craft* of railroad shopmen of
| One of the J*Ik prisoner* became III western railroad* a«
and «aa removed from the corridor UP°® *l a conference of tha
C 0. Hlleman. jallet, opened the cor here The crafta prepared
rldor door and was pla< ing the nick , ultimatum outlining tbelr demand*
man Inalde a hen he was attacked by wh,ch t * presented immediately
Taylor and Farmer Taylor aecured ' ,0 r 'lroada employing tha crafta-
lllleman'a automatic platol and rushed mra
through the corridor door Into the The findings of tha conference were
Jail office, leaving WHeman struggling 'he result of a recent conference here
City hall for tha purpose of proteatlng a wLe LLL.J * , ,conwr#BC* her«
__ . , *1"1 r,r®"r. Sheriff l-ow Wilder en- when the demand* of the craftsmen
again., the approval of a contractor ■ „red the office from a aide door and war. refused by the railroad. Then
bond, submitted for approval was shot four time* by Taylor. Wild- a demand for a I cenia an hour Ip-
Several months ago cinxena of Oil- j "r- "tough wounded. shot Taylor In the crease wan demanded by the a hop-
Ion *oted 135.000 In blind* for the con- region of 'he heart and fled from the m*n. The railroad declared thefr
fourth floor where the fell la located willingness at that time to allow the
to the third floor A hort time later eight hour day for all stationary work,
unded sheriff " " ....
coping
Btruction of a system of water work
The bond* were approved by the pro- .'"j'
. , . :">e wounded sheriff wax found on the
per authorities, and the contract let
for the construction of the system. In About the time that v udor flred at
the meantime, cltlren* who opposed Tavlor. Hlleman freed tnself from
the bonding of the town for the build- Farmer and grabbed f the platol.
Ing of the waterworks, sought to stop Taylor flred three futile ota at Wie-
the work by securing an Injunction fnHn an<* floor Fanner ran
against the approval of the contract- i L *V!jr C,orii,,n: d°"r- ,h*
. _. , . . „ wounded Taylor and pulled him Info
or a bond They bore the contractor lh# corrJdnr then Iorl(|,(1
no in will. | the corridor door and went !n search
A mass meeting was held and the of Wilder. Wilder was taken to a
two rouncilmen who favored the ap hospital In Tulsa Three bullets MORE TIME TO CAPTURE VILLA
proval of the bond were requested to ! "'ruck W llder about the hips and one
resign. The two refused to do so. 1 ,hp ba< k- Hospital physicians nay
.... .. . j Wilder mav recover
The visit bv the citizens to the1 . ,
Taylor died a few mlnutea after
Farmer had dragged him into the Jail
corridor.
but declared a nine hour schedule «aa
necessary for repair on rolling stock,
which would take the men out on the
'Ine.
official* of the shopmen declared
the ul'imatum of the crafta would b«
delivered immediately to the railroads
Involved.
Oklahoma lines .are among the sev-
enteen railroads affected.
Conferees Asaert Carranza Will Start
New Campaign Against Bandit.
council room followed the return ol
a committee from Sapulpa where an
attempt was made in district court to
enjoin the construction of the water
works system. The court held that
the #35.000 bond issue had been voted
and approved by the proper authori-
ties and that an injunction could not
be granted. ,
When the mob arrived at the city
hall the members learned that two of
Atlantic City.—Major General Tas-
ker H. nilsa, assistant chief of staff
_ j the United States army, appeared
SAYS SHE NEVER MARRIED HIM again before the American members
of the Mexican American Joint corn
Mrs. Eva. Bowman Objects to Being
Defendant In Divorce Proceedings.
| Ft. Smith, Ark —Declaring*she never
I married the man who is now suing
her for divorce and for a division of
the three councilmen had just ap- her property, Mrs. Eva Marie Fisher
proved the bond. As E. K. Srank, one ! Bowman of Tulsa, came ehere to
of the councilmen who voted approval, j investigate the records of the county
left the building he was seized and was t clerk's office which shows that
being roughly handled when two offi
cers arrived and rescutd him. Srank
was taken into the building and there
he summoned an automobile by tele-
phone. A woman drove an automo-
bile to the rear of the building and
Srank jumped into the machine. As
the automobile sped away the mob
followed and S. W. Abshire took' ad-
vantage of the situation To leave the
building.
After Srank got beyond the city lim-
its he met a man traveling toward Oil-
ton. Srank had some keys belonging
to the city. He gave the keys to the
man; told him to deliver the keys to
the proper authorities, and said: "Tell,
them I am not coming back." Srank
has not been heard from since.
After the mob learned that the two
members of the council had escaped
eomeone announced that the district
court at Sapulpa had enjoined Mrs.
William Murdock, postmaster here,
from moving the postoffice building
within the local fire zone from a lot
beyond the Are zone. The mob rushed
to the frame postoffice building and
moved the building and its fixtures to
the lot selected by Mrs. Murdock.
on July 28, 1915, a marriage license
was issued to William Theodore
Pahaieyer, 35 years old, of Oklahoma
I mission. Later it was intimated that
| the discussion by the joint commia-
j slon of the various schemes for bor-
i der control would not be forced i«y the
Americans, until a sufficient time had
elapsed for General Carranza to show
the efficiency of his latest punitive
expedition, relative to which new as
surances were given the commission
ers by Ambassador Designate Arre-
dondo through Luis Cabrera, chair-
man of the Mexican commission.
Mr. Cabrera said his government
would begin at once an • intensive"
I ftoumatUana ure eouuter attacking Anaim-Hungarlana In mouutkliix oB
fight hunk of Klv« r Alt taft. 2—Austrian aud German monitor* have dcatroy*
ed pontoon bridge* acroaa Iiaiiube In rear of Itouinnnlnn forces Invaillug
Bulgaria. 8 General von Mackonaen lias ordered withdrawal of Teuton
forces from Koumanlan fortreaaca of Turtukni anil Xillatrln. 4—On aouth-
eni from In Dobrudja Itouinanlaua are attacking viultftitly along entir®
line.
WILSON CONSIDERS O-BOATS
PRESIDENT DISCUMES LATEST
GERMAN STUNT.
May Subject Withdrawal of Subma-
rines From American Waters, In
Line With Previous Policy.
m gui
ro be n
MANY STATES TO CHOOtK NEW
CHIEF EXECUTIVES THIS
VIAN.
ONLY MONTH TILL ELECTIOH
LATEST ENTRANT IN BIG WAR
OFFERS STUBBORN
RESIST ANC.
Oiaappearaneo ef the Progressive
Party Puts New Alignment up
Te the Vetera at TM«
Election.
Washington — In thirty-four states m
governor and all. or nearly all. thn
elective state officers are to be chosen
In the elections which take place four
weeks from neit Tuesday. The elec-
tions will differ noticeably from those
of 1 12 and 1914, Inasmuch as the dis-
appearance of the progressives as an
organized party leaves the republl
cans and the democrats to flght for
the state offices as was the case be-
fore the birth of the so-callcd "tblrr.
party. The prohibition and socialist,
parties have named candidates for tbf*
principal offices in many of the state*
and in some of the states there are
several minor tickets In the fleld. In
all of the statea, however. It is re-
garded as a practical certainty that
the new governors and other principal
officers will be either democrats or re-
publicans. *
Following are the republican or
democratic candidates for governor
in the thirty-four states where guber-
natorial el^6tIons will be held:
Ariion—Republican, Tom Camp-
bell ; democrat, George W. P. Hunt,
(incumbent).
Arkansas- Republican, W a 1 la c e
Townsend; democrat, Ca. H. lirough.
Colorado—Republican, George A.
City, and Mrs. Bowman, whose age campaign against Villa. The Ameri-
was given at that time as 34 years ; cans were told that "thousands of the
and whose address was given as Kan- j best troops in the country were being
sas City, Mo. j taken into Chihuahua and Durango
The record further shows the cere- | 'or a" extensive campaign which it
mony was performed at the residence j 's expected will become evident short-
of Rev. Edwin F. Wilcox, until two j ly in a series of movements that will
years ago, rector of St. John's Epis- I lead either to Villa's isolation in the
copal church. Reverend Wilcox is | mountains without a force of any size
now stationed at Webb Cify, Mo., and I or his destruction.1
Mrs. Bowman left for that city to in-
terview him for information that may
lead to the identity of the woman i
Pahmeyer married.
building
iV-LIEJMIKING SMALL GAINS
Long Branch, X. J.—President Wil-
son and Secretary of State Lansing j ('«r's°n (incumbent); democrat, Jul
discussed in detail at Shadow Lawn luti c Gunter.
American Aviator Shoots Down Hia
Fifth Opponent In France.—
Desultory Fighting Reported
On All Fronts.
WOMEN OON'T HAVE TO "OBEY"
If Episcopalians Adopt New Marriage
Ceremony.
St. Louis.—Elimination of the word
"obey" in the promise of the woman in
the marriage service was reeom
mended in a minority report dt the
joint commission on common piayej
submitted to the house of deputi-s ot
40-ACRE FARM PRODUCES $7,000
Diversification of Crops and Good
Marketing Brought Returns.
Hugo.—If anybody believes diversi- j
fled farming isn't profitable, a glance j the Protestant Episcopal general con
at the results obtained by M. E. Brad- j vention here.
lev, who tills the soil three miles
south of this city, is likely to change
his opinion. With a forty-acre farm
Mr. Bradley raised the following
crops: /
Eight acres planted in garlic har-
The house of deputies referred back
to the commission on prayer book all
proposed changes in the marriage cer
emony, in the catechism and in the
institution of clergymen.'
These matters cannot come before
lf_ w j , - , .. „ _ _ n • • ' 1 1'"""^ "i fiOi nv iJdl* | a UittllClS tJilUilUl COTTlfl DPI OTP
. Murdock is the wife of William vested 20,000 pounds, worth 30 cents I the general committee again for three
Murdock, who was connected with
Governor C. N. Haskell's administra-
tion.
MAN DIES IN DRUMRIGHT FIRE
Hotel and Pool Hall Are Destroyed;
the Loss is $50,000.
pound.
Two hundred bushels of popcorn
from nine acres, valued at $3 a bushel.
Three acres of peanuts netted five
tons of hay and 120 bushels of pea-
years. The minority report recom
mended that the present injunction
beginning "Wilt thou obey him and
serve him" be changed to "Wilt thou
love him, comfort him, honor and
nuts. The hay is worth $12 a ton, the keep him, in sickness and in health;
peanuts 75 cents a bushel. j and, forsaking all others, keep thee
Eighteen acres planted in the va- j only unto him so long as ye* shall
rious hay crops gave him thirty t _
to be sold when the market is favor-
ab'e.
Mr. Bradley attributes his success
to one thing—he doesn't plant cotton.
Drumright.—One man was burned
to death and five persons were injured
in a fire which destroyed the Morrow
hotel and Sullivan's pool hall. The i
loss is $50,000. BOOTLEG WITNESSES ARRESTED
The dead man is Gould Wright, who
came here from Kankakee, 111. fee
made his home at the hotel. The in-
jured persons are being cared for at
private homes.
Defendants in Liquor Trial Fails to
Prove Alibi.
Ardmore.—When Joseph Melugln
The fire started at 1 o'clock in the I 7nr\l\n ^ 'D ^ feferal COurt
Horning In the Drumright St*am Laun- "r SP! inE. ^thout hav.ng pur-
dry in the hotel building, but the ' ^has^d ™ta de ]er« he was
cause is not known. The flames ! " fU''ty,b^ tfle Jurv and ,h(* court
spread rapidly and guests in the hotel I ^V tW WU"
were hurriedly warned to flee. Some t i „
of them had time to have their cloth- d°n' t0 Ja" 0J1 a °harge of Periury- 11
Ing and personal baggage. It was be-
lieved that everybody in the building
had escaped and loss of life was dis-
closed only after the flre had burned
Itself out and Wright's charred body
was found.
In addition to the laundry, the build
Ing housed an ice and light plant, a
barber shop and the office of the West-
ern Union Telegraph company and
all of these were wiped out. 'Sulli-
van's pool hall wa/ in an adjoining
GLYCERINE HAULER IS KILLED
Grant Meara Blown Into Atoms and
City of Bartlesville Shaken.
AMBULANCE COMPANY IS READY
Tulsa Organization Prepared for
Active Service.
Bartlesville.—Grant C Meara in —Camped with their company
years old. a "shooter" for the Eastern P^a'leling the fence of the fair
Torpedo Company, was blown to atoms ■ ,M"'°r Ambui nc* Company
by a premature explosion of 60 quarts I t° 1 ,s " a'°"f an
of nitro glycerin. The explosion oc-i nT , a™,
eurred just south of the city limits ,hrough the ^,ro?s of flnaI mn,t*r7
while Mears was driving Imo^ BarSes! I n«t,on ,h* beginning of
J clnatlon preparatory to. being
J tered into the service erf Uncle
is alleged by the government that Mel-
ugin sought to prove by these two wit-
nesses that he was in Savoy, Texas,
when the alleged crime was commit-
ted in Ada, Oklahoma.
The government introduced evi-
dence tending to show that the alibi
sought was a trumped up affair and as
a result the defendant and witnesses
were ordered to jail. P. A. Melugin
has been released on bond of $2,000
but Joe Herndon and the defendant,
Joseph Melugln, are still in Jail.
live."
I The minority report suggested also
the omission ot the words "and with
ail my worldly goods I thee endow"
in the service. An argument ad
vanced was that the expression "en
dow" is a re.'ic of old English law un
der which the dower rights of women
were guaranteed and that today th<v
question involved is a civil one to be
taken for granted.
It also was proposed to expunge the
expression "as Isaac and Rebecca j
lived faithfully together," etc., and
merely say "living- faithfully to- I
gether." Many regard the reference j
to these Biblical personages as out of j
date. Others declare there is no rea- I
son why Isaac and his wife should be
regarded as models when there were j
many other husbands and wiv«es equal- j
ly faithful.
Numbers of changes were suggested I
in the majority report. Among them j
were the shortening of the Ten Com-
mandments as read in the communion
service, the elimination of a specific
prayer for Jews and Turks, it being j record^f' bv Rom
argued that the present prayer for
Jews and Turks In connection with in
"dels is disrespectful and inaccurate
"because It Is clear Mohammedans
are meant Instead of Turks "
London.—Although the Roumanians
in northeast Transylvania continue to
fall back before the Austro-Gerinans
from this region all along the battle
line to the vicinity of Orsova on the
Danube, they not only are giving bat-
tle to their adversaries, but at sev-
eral points, by violent counter attacks
have gained an advantage over them.
Bucharest admits the retirement of
the Roumanian forces in the Kailman
mountains, on the northwest front.
Further south the infantry of the Teu-
tonic allies was put to flight by their
artillery fire. Successes also were
obtained by the Roumanians in the
j Oituz and Jiul valleys, where violent
! attacks were repulsed with heavy cas-
I ualties. On both sides of the Szurduk
| pass the Roumanians continue on the
j offensive, but Berlin says their at-
i tacks have been repelled.
North of this region in the Carpa-
thian mountains the Austro-Germans
have recaptured the height of Cmot-
reo. In Volhynia violent fighting has
again broken out. Here both tfcc
Russian and the Teutonic allies claim
successes.
Petrograd says that north of Koryt-
niza the Russians captured a German
trench inflicting heavy casualties on
its occupants. Along the Stokhod, says
Berlin, Russian attacks were repulsed.
German trenches in the neighbor-
hood of the Stuc and Schwaben re
doubts, in the Thiepval region of
France, have been captured by the
British. To the east near Gueude-
court the British also have slightly
advanced their line.
Berlin admits that the British north
of Thiepval gained a firm hold in the
German trenches and that the French
south of the Somme have won a foot
ing in the sugar refinerv at Gener
mont.
French aeroplanes co-operated most
effectively in the fighting south of the
river Somme. Sergeant Lufberry of
I New Haven, Conn., a member of the
Franco-American flying corps, shot
down his fifth adversary, the Paris
statement says, during the raid made
by French aeroplanes on the Hauser
works at Oberndorf.
In Macedonia the Serbian troops
have made a further advance along
the left bank of the Cerna river, while
the French have cut the railway line
south of Seres. The fighting through-
out this region consists mainly of ar
tillerv duels, only Isolated Infantry
attacks having been reported.
SM'l further gains for the Italians
against the Austrians In the Carso re-
gion of the Austro-Ttalian theater are
German submarine attacks on mer-
chantmen nir the New England coast.
As a result It probably will be sug-
gested to the German government that
her submarines should not operate it*
close proximity to American shores,
i he protest of the United States to the
allied nations on the warship patrol
early in the war forming he basis for
the action.
While the conw-rence was In prog-
ress it was announced in Washington
by Counselor Polk of the state depart-
ment that the United States had re-
jected the contention of the entente
allies that ail belligerent submarines,
whether war craft or merchantmen,
should be denied access to neutral
waters and neutral ports. It also war
said that the question of legality of
the German U boat activity off the
American coast had narrowed to the
point whether proper provision had
been made for the safety of persons
taken off the destroyed ships and left
at sea in small open boats.
It was understood however, the
president and secretary discussed the
wisdom of pointing out to Germany
the inadvisability of operating her
submarines in close proximity to the
territorial waters of the United States.
Administration officials took the po-
sition that the transferring of sub-
marine warfare so close to America's
shores was fraught with grave danger
because of the possibility of mistakes
being made by submarine command-
ers ". .
RAID CHICAGO MAYOR'S OFFICE
State's Attorney Thinks City Execu-
tive May Be Crooked.
vac-
mus-
Sam.
Tragedy After Elopment.
Paducah, Ky.—The bodies of Elma
Cope, 14 years old. and Charles
Brown, 24, her brother-in /aw, were
found in a ravine on the farm of the
girl's father near Glade, Ky. The two ! —
eloped to Harrisburg, Ark., September j ,n whlch the men riding, twelve
5. but were arrested September 9 and , mi,e" *a•a, of hpr<! Five other men,
returned to Glade. Later they were *,and,nK the rear platform of the
released and Brown was put under I cab<K"i<'' Faw *be approaching train
bond, then the couple disappeared ^°°n icnoinrh jump to safety. One
Roumanian Minister Dies.
Rucharest. — Senator FIllRescue.
minister of war. and leader of the
Roumanian conserva'ive party. Is
dead He was a supporter of the en-
tente powers.
Ten Killed In Nebraska Wreck.
Elwood, Neb.—Ten men were killed
and eleven others seriously injured
when a train on the Burlington rail
road crashed Into a freight caboose
Chicago.—Armed with subpoenas
authorizing search and seizure, detect-
ives from state's Attorney Hoyne's
office conducted a spectacular raid on
the offices of Mayor Thompson, Chief
of Police Heaiey and M. L. C. Funk-
houser, deputy superintendent of po-
lice, and appropriated files of corres-
pondence to determine if vice and
gambling have existed here with the
knowledge and consent of the city of-
ficials.
The raid was tl)e climax of the war
between the city hall officials and the
state's attorney in which Hoyne has
charged that open gambling flour-
ished, saloons were allowed to violate
the Sunday closing ordinance and that
vicious resorts were gaining headway
with the connivance of some local
politicans.
Hoyne has announced he will seek
• he indictment of the police chief. He
efused to say just what he expected
to prove by the documents seized.
Chief Heaiey objected to the seizure
of his private papers until the sub-
poenas had been examined by the
•o-poration counsel, but later agreed
but the records sought would be pro-
luced voluntarily. Deputy Funk-
touser. who formerly was in charge
jf all vice raids, surrendered his files
without objection, and Mayor Thomp-
son agreed at once to let the raiders
have what they wanted.
DEMOCRATS GROWING CONFIOENT
Connecticut—Republican, Marcus II.
Holcomb (incumbent); democrat Mor-
ris B. Beardsley.
Delaware—Republlc.tn John O-
Townsend; democrat Jas. S. Hughes.
Florida—Republican, George A. Al-
len; democrat, W. V. Knott.
Idaho—Republican D. W. Davis;
democrat, Moses Alexander (incum-
bent).
Illinois—Republican, Frank O. Low-
den; democrat, Edward F. Dunne (in-
cumbent).
Indiana—Republican. Jas. P. Good-
rich; democrat, John A. M. Adair.
Iowa—Republican, W. L. Harding;
democrat, E. T. Meredith.
Kansas—Republican. Arthur Capper
(incumbent); democrat, W. C. Lans-
don.
Massachusetts—Republican, Samuel
W. McCall (incumbent); democrat,.
Frederick W. Mansfield.
Michigan—Republican, Albert E..
Sleeper; democrat, Edwin F. Sweet.
Minnesota—Republican, John A. A.
Burnquiest (incumbent); democrat,
Cyrus M. King.
Missouri—Republican, Henry Lamm;
democrat. Frederick D. Gardiner.
Montana—Republican, Frank J. Ed-
wards; democrat, Samuel V. Stewart
(incumbent).
Nebraska—Republican, Abraham LI
Sutton; democrat, Keith Neville.
New Hampshire—Republican, Henrjr
W. Keyes; democrat, John C. Hutch-
ins.
New Jersey—Republican, Walter E.
Edge; democrat, H. Otto Wittpenn.
New Mexico—Republican, Holm O-
Bursum; democrat, E. C. de Baca.
New York—Republican, Charles S.
Whitman (incumbent); democrat,
Samuel S. Seabury.
North Carolina—Republican Frank
A. Linney; democrat, T. W. Bickett.
North Dakota—Republican, L.yna
Frazer; democrat, D. H. McArthur.
Ohio—Republican, Frank B. Willis:
(Incumbent); democrat, Jas. M. Cox.
Rhode Island—RepuDlican, R. Liv-
ingston Breckman (incumbent); dem-
ocrat, Addison P. Munroe.
South Carolina—Democrat, Richard
I. Manning (incumbent).
South Dakota—Republican, Peter
Norbeck; democrat, F. D. Morcom.
Tennessee—Republican, John W.
Overall; democrat. Tom C. Rye (In-
cumbent).
Texas—Republican, R. B. Creager;
democrat, James E. Ferguson (incum-
bent).
Utah—Republican, Nephl Morris;
democrat, Simon Bamberger.
Vermont—Republican, Horace F.
Graham; democrat. William B. Mayo.
Washington — Republican, Henry
McBride; democrat, Ernest Lister (In-
cumbent).
West Virginia—Republican, Ira E.
Robinson; democrat, John J. Corn
well.
Wisconsin—Republican, Emanuel L.
Philipp (Incumbent); democrat. Burt
Williams.
This 1s Almost News.
Louisa. Ky.—The special train carry-
ing Charles E. Hughes was stopped by
Success In Many Western States Ex
pected by Walsh. —• w- iimuw n muppwi uy
' a broken rail on the point of a curva
caRO' Senator Thomas J. around a steep embankment of tha
Walsh, manager of western demo- ! Big Sandy river leaving Palntsvllle
cratic national headquarters, issued a , The rail was broken for a distanco
• tatement in which he declared the of several Inches, the ln.-,lde flange
lemocrats are confident of carrying having been knocked entirely away
IndianA. Kpntnrlrv Ui^n..ri wi, o—.:. _ . . J'
>)
'4
signals was the cause <rf the accidanu I sin, Washington. Oregoa and Utah.
special learned
of the cause of the delay.
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The Granite Enterprise. (Granite, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, October 20, 1916, newspaper, October 20, 1916; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc282165/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.