The Daily Enterprise. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 67, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 6, 1893 Page: 2 of 2
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i (H
I lis
T^e Daily Enterprise.
8hiri.it Chapman, Publisher.
Enid. Oklahoma
Akmy life is dan^oroUH at the bost.
lEvon in Brazil whero there soem3 to
bo littio likelihood o( boing shot,
fever and atnal l-pox are said to pro-
vail to a muoh larger extent than do
regular rations.
It is reported that the Columbian
puards on the Midway lost thoir
heads on the last night of the official
life of the fair, but so far as is known
no reward has been offered for the
return of the goods.
A Yot'NH man and a yonng woman
who eloped from Manitowoc, Wis.,
wore captured at Wausau, tried, and
sentenced to a year each in the peni-
tentiary. This sounds brutal and all
that, but a mitigating flavor is lent
the judge's seomingly harsh action
hy tho fact that ill ' youn/ woman in
the case happened to be tho wife of
another man.
A (JURAT historian does not obtain
that immediate recognition that is
accorded to tho groat orator, the
great novolist or even the groat poot.
Wo Francis Parkman worked for years
In obscurity, and oven at his death
he was not a popular author. lit it
is more than probable that ho will
take his rank, ultimately, among the
great historians of tho world.
Now that the casualties of tho
Louisiana storm have boon footed up
it is found that only fifty-throe of
the 2,008 victims were negroes. The
Acadians, whom Longfellow immor-
talized in "Evangeline," outnum-
bered all other racoi, but thoro was
a large admixture of Austrlans.
Creoles, Islingues, Italians. Manilla-
men, Chineso and Spaniards in the
list of tho dead.
A man, so called, has just been
eoiit to jail for four months for hav-
ing amused himself bv pouring water
from a window upon a family sleep-
ing on rags under a bit of canvas.
While evolution is being particularly
studied it would bo interesting to
llnd out what jarred th« protoplasm
that resulted in such a oroature off
the track. It evidently started out
to be a beast with horns.
Tkkoa, Wash., has adopted tho
ball and chain punishmont for tramps
and its first application is interest-
ing. Tho tramp was mado fast to a
ball and chain and put to work on
the street. While his guard was
taking a rest, tho prisoner pickod up
tho cannon ball and started to walk
out of town with it. He was cap-
tured, howevor, and was penalized
for his attempted esoape by having
threo balls and chains attached to
him.
It is gratifying to our racial pride
to learn that many of the crafty
oriental fakirs in Midway who have
been soiling plasters worth four
cents to the guiloless American pub-
lic for |3 all summor found that a
goodly proportion of thoir ill-gotten
gains consisted of Confederate and
extinct state bank bills when they
came to "cash In." Fair exchange
is no robbery, and a $5 Confederate
bill is surely as valuable as a sou-
venir in Syria m a bogus Turkish
plaster is as a souvenir in America.
The St. James Budget pokes fun at
the newspapers of this country be-
cause they print personal gossip con-
cerning literary people, who aro
possibly quite interesting, and at
least earn an honest living. Then in
a succeeding column tho Budget pro-
ceeds to detail a lot of tattle about
royalty, and His Nobs this and Her
Nibs that, people who have not oven
tho merit of being interesting and
for tho most part aro paupers, living
oft tho oharity of a nation to which
they aro of no usoovonas ornamen ts.
In his bravo ploa lor justlco to the
Matabeles, at the hands of Groat
Britain, Mr. Labouohere found him-
self In a minority in parliament, blit-
he is supported by tho better senti-
ment of tho English people and civil-
ized nations generally. In a second
so called battle between the natives
and British soldiors 1,000 of tho for-
mer were mowed down with machine
guns, while the British loss is given
at five. Whatever the pretext for
seizing the Matabeio territory, this
wholesale slaughter of tho natives
cannot bo justified on any grounds
consistent with humanity.
The discovery of poison In Boston
pies is likely to shako tho American
Athens from Commercial street to
Back Bay park. N oxt to baked
lieanf, pie has been tho staplo on
Boston bills of fare. Pie for bt-oak
fast, pie for dinner and pie for sup
per, with an oxtra large sllco as a
port of nightcap just before going to
bed, has been the regular gastronom
ic succession. Tho uso of pie as a
vehicle for the introduction of cold
poison into tho human anatomy wll
shako Bostonlan confidence, and will
as a matter of fact, cast a gloom
over the entire community.
A lively riot in which sovoral ot
',he police of Marseilles have been
hurt was precipitated by tho women
employed in tho match factories. If
tho police had any sense they would
havo known bettor than to have in
torfered with |the plans of match
making women. It has always boon
as much as any man's life is worth,
Any little isles knocking about tho
sea looking for a foster-mother noed_
not apply to Columbia. The chances
aro that she would spank them and
•end them home abawling.
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THE PRICE OF-Jjk' ON "THE
milita sadly at Bhe withdrew her
hand. ' you must uotgive me too warm
'^dnow, having -changed greet-
ings With each member of tl=e 'amily^
Prudence again seated herself in
chair at John Ingleficld s right hand
She wa na.urally a girl of quick and
tender sensibilities, eladsome in her
general mood, but with be®''S
pathos interfused among h" merrt.;st
words and deeds. 11 wasremarkedof
her too, that she had a faculty, e ^
in childhood, of throwing her own
feelings like a spell over her compan
ions Mich as she had been in the
lavs of her innocence, so did sne ap
Dear this evening Her 'rlendsinthe
iurprise and bewilderment of her re
urS, almost forgot that, she badger
left them, or that she had
iny of her claims to their affection.
In the morring, perhaps, thcy migh
have looked at her witn altered eyes
but by the Thanksgiving fireside they
felt only that their own I rudc° e ^"
;ome back to them and were
lohn In glenoid's rough v sage bright
en en with the glow of his heart as it
?rew warm and merry
(hue or twice he even laughed till the
room rang .gain, yet seemed startled
by the echo of his own mirth.
crave young minister became as frol
lesome as a schoolboy. M ary,
rosebud, forgot that her twin blossom
had ever been torn from the stem and
trampled in the dust And as for Rob-
ert Jloore, he gaze at 11 udem.0 wit
the bashful earnestness of
born, while she, with sw. at maiden
coquetry, half smi ed upon and half
discouraged him ini«r-
In short, it was one of those inter
rals when sorrow vanishes in its own
depth of shadow and joy starts forth
In transitory brightness. When the
clock struck S, 1'rudence P° red oni
her father's customary draught of
herb tea, which she had been steeping
bv the fireside ever since twilight.
"Hod bless you, child! said John
nglefield. as he took the cup from her
you have made your old father
But we miss your
ier sadly, Prudence, sadly. It
if she ought to be here
hand;
happy again,
moth
never," replied
I
her. He advanced and held out hl>
hand affectionately, as a brolhei
should, yet not entirely like abrothe
for with all his kindness, he wal
still a clergyman and speaking to &
child of sin.
"Siste? Prudence," s % id he earnestly
'I rejoice that * merciful Providence
hath turned your steps homeward in
time for me to bid you a last farewCit
In a Tew weeks, sister, 1 am tc &
HANKS GIVING!
'Tig Thanksgiv-
ing !
To church with
all i he town !
Let each give
thanks for
blsr^in^s
^ The year has
showered down.
Forget that graves are gaping
And soon shall swallow a.l -
The thankless and the thankful,
The mighty and the small.
Thanksgivingl 'Tis Thanksgiving I
Let merry hells declare
The joy that dwells within us,
The exile of despair.
forgot that graves are gaping,
That darkness stands beside
To cover each man over
And will not be denied.
Thanksgiving! 'Tis Thanksgiving 1
Let, maid and matron sing;
Let bass and tenor, chortling,
Give thauks unto the King
Forget that graves are gaping
And endless Hilenre soon
Bhall still both choir and or*an
And drown the joyful tune.
Thanksgiving! 'Tis Thanksgiving!
Back, care! Hut welcome, uiirtb!
To dav to you is sacred.
Ana all the men on earth
Forget that graven are gaping,
That mirth with care shall be
Together, undistinguished
Throughout eternity.
Thanksgiving 1 'Tis Thanksgiving!
Give thank?, then, oh, give thanks!
This life has many prizes
And few of us draw blanks.
Forget that graves are gaping,
Aud they who win shall real
Beside the luckless losers
In one oblivion dreat.
Thanksgiving! 'Tis Thanksgiving!
Fill full the flowing bowl'
Tho pant was good be erxelesa
Of what may come, n y soul.
Forget that graves art gaping;
This life is very sweet
•Dum vivlmuB, vivamtw"
Couie, friends, give thanks—and eat!
Hahhrit Eastman.
li , whom nobody could look at with-
out thinking of a rosebud almost
blossoming. The only other person at
the fireside was Robert Moore,formerly
an apprentice of the blacksmith, but
now his journeymen, and who seemed
more like an own son of John Ingle
field than did the pale and slender
student.
Only these four had kept New Eng-
hand "pMh^ad^natched f,om him loved faces that I shall ever hope to
Sr the rcvhmr1 Thanksgiving"! behold again on this ^ O. m£
Witha feeling that few would h ,v© see all of them—yourJ and wll
: T^Wted across the girl,
chair in its place next his own, and j countenance. , .k,- >•
:."t? tyjtsf (fssusa
: aesaetsui 'aw W
I that one evening'. Thu8 (lid he cherish light of this fire. a„ t-U
' U C grwUhaanotahereagrie0f which'he I - le rosebudTharhad^rownon vh<
1 Si Tain have torn^rcun his tart; s:ime stem wi,h, the -tawa^Joj
or, since that could never be, have gaxmg at her sister, longing to f,u(
rrKsri1* «ss! ST-B
ass rasarsett s!
seems as
now."
"Now, father,
Prudence. , ,
It was now the hour for domestic
worship, but while the family were
making preparations for their duty,
they suddenly perceived that Prudence
had put on her cloak and hood and
vae \ifting the latch of the door.
"Prudence, Prudence, where aro you
eoing?" cried they all with one voice.
As Prudence passe I out of the 'l°or
she turned toward them and flung baclt
her hand with a gesture of farewell,
but her face was so changed that they
hardly recognized it Sin and evil
passions glowed through its comeli-
ness and wrought a horrible deformity;
a smile beamed in her eyes as a trium_
pliant mockery at their surprise and
^'•Daughter," cried .lohn Inglefield,
between wrath and sorrow, "stay and
be your father's blessing, or lake his
curse with you!"
For an instant Prudence lingered
and looked back into the fire-lighted
room, while her countenance wore al-
most the expression as if she was
struggling- with a fiend, who had
power to f i/.e his victim eveu within
the hallowed precincts of her father s
hearth. The fiend prevailed and
1'rudence vanished into the outer dark-
ness. When tho family rushed to the
door they could see nothing, but heard
the sound of wheels rattling over the
frozen ground. , , ,
That same night, among the painted
beauties of the th ater of a neighbor-
ing city,there was one whose dissolute
mirth seemed inconsistent with an}*
M'KINLEY talks.
Tlir I'rpt.rcttou Champion a
ronton Cluli on tlio Turin;
Boston, Nov. 27.—Twelve hundred
Republicans sat down to a love feast
in the big Mechanics'hall Friday even-
ing. The galleries about the hall
were crowded with several thousand
more, while the air was alivo with
enthusiasm. Governor McKlnlcy of
Ohio was on the speaker's platform.
Tom Iiced of Maine was thoro also
and at his side was Governor-clect
(ireenhalge, Massachusetts Governor
Fuller of Vermont and Congressman
Cousins of Iowa were in the midst of
them Collector Hoard, the old lie-
publican war horse of Massachusetts,
was present and by bis side sat the
venerable Senator Hoar. President
P.ent of the Home Market club was
tho center of them all. After dinner
he opened the sneochmakiog with a
brief address, and introduced Gov-
ernor McKinley, who said in part:
I sound the note of warning here to-
night. I wish it might, reach every
corner of the country, that every re-
duction of ihe tariff will be followed
by a reduction of wages, that every
lit in the tariff rates will be followed
by a cut in the wage rates. The effect
of the proposed legislation, whether
intended or not, is an unerring blow
at labor which will be felt in
the home of every operative in the
United States.
The threat of it has already been
felt Tho friends of protection should
not now falter. The fight is only be-
gun. If temporally lost it is not to bo
given up Courage was never more
nee le i and never more expected by
the people from their representatives
than now. It is the demand of the
hour and the requirement of the situa-
tion. The tinkerers of the tariff
hould be thwarted, they should b-j
opposed at every step in their program
f destruction Republic ins and Dem-
ocrats who bdieve in the protective
svstein in congress and out of con-
gress should stand together in resist-
ing evei effort to weaken or destroy
so that tl.C
might inter-
she was re
'o° t^rave Vet the.keprno va ani and by a dread that i'rudencewastoc
, ,• A i much changed to respond to her anec-
t
chair for her.
While .lohn Inglefield and bis family
wcro sitting around the hearth, with
tho shadows dancing behind them on
tho wall, the outer door was opened
and a light footstep cam© along the
passage. The latch "f 'he inner do r
was lifted bv s >nie familiar hand, and
a young girl came in, wearing a cloak
and hood, wli'ch she took off and laid
on the table beneath the looking-
glass. Then after gazing a moment
at the fireside circle, she approached
aud too < the seat at .lohn Ingletield's
right hand, as if it ha i been reserved
on purpose for her.
"Here I am at last, father," said i
she "You ate your Thanksgiving
dinner without me, but 1 have coiue |
back to spend the oveuir.g with vou."
N e*, it was Prudence Inglefield. She ,
wore the same neat and maidenly at- j
tire which she had been accustomed to !
put uu when the household work w«-s
over for the day. and her hair was |
ted from her brow in the simple
pa
tion, or that her own purity would be
felt as a reproach by the lost one Hut,
as she listened to the familiar voice,
while the face grew more and more
familiar, she forgot everything save
that Prudence had come back. Spring
ing forward, she would have clasped
her in a close embrace. At that very
instant, however, Prudence started
from her chair and held out both hands
with a warning gesture.
"No, Mary; no. my sister," cried she;
•'do not touch me. Your bosom must
j not be pressed to mine.'
| Mary shud lered and stood still, for
I she felt that something darker th an
the grave was between Prudence and
herself, though they seemed so near
each other in the light of their father *
hearth, where they had grown up to-
gether. Meanwhile Prudence threw
her eyes around the room in search of
one who had not yet bidden her wel-
come lie had I Indrawn from his
seat by the fireside and was standing
his face averted
V
and modest fashion that became her near the door, with
best of all. I f her chrcK might other- that his features could be ''"^erned
wise have been pale, yet the glow of only by the flickering shadow of tht
the fire BiilVu-e'l it with a healthful profile upon the wall. Hut 1 rudence
bloom. If she had spent the many called to him in a cheerful and kindly
months of her absence in guilt and tone.
no t!aycJ°on'Z'gentt 'aspect.8 It you sTakehandsw'ithTour old friend-
could not have looked less altered had
she merely stepped away from her
bt NATHANIEL HAWTHORNS.
N TUB EVENING
o f Thanksgiving
d 11 y .1 o h n I ngle-
field, the black
smith, sat in his
elbow chair among
those who had been
keeping festiva at
liis board, llelng
the central figure
of the domestic cir-
cle, iho lire threw
)t* strongest light
<n ' <s massive and MUrdy frame, ren-
,1i i his rcugh visage so thatit looked
like ihe head of nil iron statue, all
t-glow from his own forge, and with its
features rudely fashioned on his own
snvil. At John Ingletield's right hnnd
was an empty cha r. I be other places
round the hearth were tilled by the
members of the family, who all ;at
?uletly, while, with a semblance of
antastlc merriment, l eir shadows
dunced on the wali behind them, nno
of the group was .lohn loglctle d's
ton, who had been lire,I at college and
was now a student of theology nt An
(over. There wi^aIki fifuvhter of
father s fireside for half an hour and
returned while the bl.i/.o was quiver-
ing upward from the same brands
that were burning t her departure.
Aud to .lohn Inglefield she was the
very image of his buried wife, such as
he remembered her on the first
'1 hnnksgiving which they bad passed
under their own roof. Therefore,
though naturally a stern and rugged
man, he enid not speak unkindly to
his sinful child, nor yet could ho take
her to his bosom.
• You are welcome home, Prudence,"
said lie, glancing siilewa7s at her, and
hN voice faltered. "Your mother
would have rejoiced to see you, but
she has been gone from us these four
months "
"I Know it, father, 1 know it," re-
plied Prudence, quickly. "And yet,
when 1 first came in, mv eyes were so
dazed by the firelight thnt she seemed
to be sitting in this very chair." "won't yop shark, hanps with ah old
Bv this time the other members of ; friknh*®'
the family hud begun to recover from Robert held back for a moment, but
their surprise and became sensible affection struggled powerfully ann
that it was no ghost from the grave I overcame his pride and resentment,
nor vision of their vivid recollections, | tie rushed toward Prndejce, seized
hut Prudence hei own self ller ' her hand and pressed It to his bosom
brother was the > >xt that yeeted | "There, there, llobert," nld ol
rf
FOR AN INSTANT rRUDKNCE I.INGERKD.
sympathy for pure affections, and for
the joys and griefs which arc hallowed
by them. Yet tills was Prudence
Inglefield. Her visit to the Thanks-
giving fireside was the realization of
one of those waking dreams in which
the guilty soul will sometimes stray
back to its innocence. Hut Sin, alas,
is careful of her bond slaves; they hear
her voice, perhaps at the holiest,
moment and are constrained to go
whither she summons them. The
Aame dark power tha' drew Prudence
Inglefield from her father's hearth—
the same in its nature, though height
cued then to a dread necessity—would
snatch a guilty soul from the gate of
heaven and make its sin and its pun-
ishmont alike eternal,
A Mnthoillitt on 1 liankftgivlng.
Let Thanksgiving day be a thanks-
giving day. A good m uiy people seem
disposed to make it a day for putting
m sackcloth and ashes. We go to
hurch to hear about national badness
and national dangers; to read from
the Lamentations and sing in a minor
strain. 'J'hat is not well. It is all
right to be reminded of our nation's
sins and perils. We should face these
problems often and earnestly study
methods of reform. Hub a '1 hanksgiv-
ing service is hardly the place to do it.
Let us rather spend the hour in re
ounting (iod's multiplied b essings to
if . The President's proclamation
is a model document and strikes a key
upon which wo may sing a hundred
songs of heartfelt praise. For
t-ional peace and general health, for
golden harvests and overflowing gran
aries; for liberty in state and church,
for marvelous growth in material sub-
stance; for sure advancement in social
and moral reform; for churchly vie
Jories upon a thousand hotly contested
battlefields, let uh rendor thanks to
tiod. We fear not because some dark
clouds appear upon our national hori
/on God reipns Ti e Lord of Hosts
is with us; the Cod of Jacob U our
refuge." "Knter into h s gates with
thanksgiving- and into his courts with
praise." —Rev. Mavens in Ep worth
League.
it.
trade imphovement slow.
All Hrnnches Waiting for Increased C'on-
h ii in j> ti on.
Nkw York, Nov. 27.—R. (J. Dun <fc
Cft's Weekly Review of Trade says:
Consumption increases slowly and
all branches of business arc waiting
for its growth. There has been a lit-
tle improvement in stocks, about 81.25
for railroads and fifty cents per share
for trusts, while the price of products
has declined a little on the whole,
but the volume of business has some-
what increased.
1'hc markets for produce have been
irregular. W heat has advanced one
nt, though the receipts have been
4 300,000 bushels, against 5,5 0,000
last vear, and the exports from the
Atlantic | < rts only «(0,000 against
1 000 000 last year. The corn receipts
are remarkably large, amounting to
t 000,<100 bushels, against 1,300,000 last
year, and the price has declined one
cent. There has been a slight de line
in oil, about one-quarter cent in eoffeo
and also in hogs, and 81.50 in pork.
Cotton is a sixteenih higher.
Money continues to accumulate,
and is loaned at one per cent on the
best commercial t aper.
Failures for the week numbered
387 in the United States, againrt ISO
last year, and thirty-four in Canada
against twenty-nine last year.
Kx-<Jovernor J.icub Falls Dead.
Wheei.ixo, W. V.i., X iv. 'i~.—Ex-
Governor John Jacob fell dead on the
street yesterday afternoon while on
his way to hold a consultation with
his attorneys a few squares away.
Heart failure was the cause. Deceased
was born in Hampshire county in
1R'.'9; was a graduate of Dickinson col-
lege, Pennsylvania, and for a number
of years before the war was professor
in the University of Missouri.
THE MARKETS
KniiiHi Cltjr.
Prices were quoted tho cloio a* follow*,
o 2 hard wheat 52-. No. .1 hir.t wli« .
c No 4 hird wheat, Mo reiectol
iirrt wheat, Hq4I>o. No 2 ret wheat. M'to,
No :i rod wheat. M[®">2!ic No 4 r'''1 whsit 4J
nOc
Corn Sold rather slowly at yesterdays
prices There were rather liher.il offerings
n.l demand w.is rjther stow Som« deilor.4
were predicting lower prices next wee c. Ex-
port bid* wore 14c higher tit 114c New Orleans
but they were relatively lower thin th*1 local
price Receipts of corn to diy, H! can a y^r
n«o can No 2 mixed corn sold
30c No 3 mixed, .'fl'jO No
mixed 29c no grade, 27^.80 No 2 white, 30'^.
; white Me N . 4 white. 2>>c. Ship-
per* bid 3,Jl/jC Mississippi river for No 2 corn
and the same for No 2 white corn rso
mixed was quoted nominally ut 36c Memphis
and No. 2 white tho santt Shippers bid 33o
river for No. 3 c rn, year shipment
ClilntK" lloir.l of
Chicago, Nov 2 7 Tin
shows the ran 0 of pric:
on hoard of tndo to d ly
Trads.
followln f tahlo
for actlv) futurJJ
Nov
25
Op'nd
Hi j't
Lo'st
Nov
25
Wheat
• Nov
6!
62
62
01
Dec
12
0". '*
62
• 2"j
May
CH't
'4
CH',
(9's
Corn
Nov
: r>'4
tf>«4
;f> 4
Ii5'4
'5*4
Dec
: 5'4
>5V
:5>H
May
39*
40
39 s
39 '4
Oats -
Nov
v7'.|
-7't
Dec
17 'i
~'7 *
27\
M <v
So 3^
; 0 '4
SOS
.0 a
Pork -
Nov
13 0)
IS eo
12 50
12 7"*
Jan
12 55
12 571,
1 50
12 67'
May 12 OPS
12 71
12 0,'i
12 70
Lard
Nov
H 7.-i
h 75
h 3,"'
h 50
Jan
7 82'i
7 85
7 81
7 H*
May
7 <V>
7 70
: 61
7 7'M
S.Rids
Nov
25
7 25
Jan
0 62 >4
6 70
0 (2li
, or 4
May
rt 70
6 7714
rt ;o
:o*
7 K2V4
7 07 -4
Estimated receipts for Monday Wh^vt
105 car *; corn. 425 cars oatn, HI I cvr* h(MS,
29.000 head, for n>'Xt week, 135,000. *>
Receipts at Chloa j > to-d \y--Whott, winter,
08 cars contract H cars «prlnr39 cars, con-
tract 21 cars corn 130 cars, contract 141 cars,
oats 167 cirs, contract 6 cir*
kansas CI * y LIVE STOCK.
Kansas City, Mo, Nov ii7 Cattle-
celpt*, 3.4IS0 calves, 953 shipped yesterday,
cattle, 3,415, calves 12! The market was dull:
half fat steers 10c lower, cows week to lOo
lower feeders active Hteadv. calves, hulls
and Texan cattle unchanged
Dressed beef and shipphw steers. f3
cows and heifers, fl,2' ®3 Texas and In-
dian steers, $2.3ft?&ftf>0 Texas and Indian
cows, *1 20 stockers and feeders ?2 15d
3 6214: mixed, HI 703,8 50
Hogs Receipts 3 618. shipped yesterday,
93.V The market was 5'<tl0c higher, closing
easy with most of the gain lost T
top was 45 and bulk of sales 16 20 to >5 40
against Ift 15 to 15 110 yestord y.
Sheep—Receipts, 2(18 shipped yesterday,
603. The market was quiet and unchanged-
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The Daily Enterprise. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 1, No. 67, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 6, 1893, newspaper, December 6, 1893; Enid, Oklahoma Territory. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc98195/m1/2/: accessed May 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.