The Press-Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, July 22, 1904 Page: 2 of 8
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I
A Question of Law
Anno Is a maid of many moods
From pouting up to laughing:
She'll swetly smile with witi-nlng pulle
Ami then torment with chatting.
T< -day sh 's languorous, soft, and kind.
Tomorrow enid and formal
And so 1 can t mak- up my mind
Which mood of all Is normal.
■sw
H'or hair Is gold, her r
They do not ehan o\
Her eyes ar«* blu<* and
At least, they seem to be
Yet oft 1 ask myself. w« re
To marry and be done, si
Were It polygamj slnee she
i- many girls In one. sir
—New Y
>eks are fair—
ou see. ho;
oft and true—
mm
* ®
Ights t
BY Ami mzv&jouz
Copyright, 1904, by The Shortstory Pub. (
rved.)
The bareness of the lofty frescoed
room had been relieved by hangings
of ancient tapestry where was por-
trayed in dim green tints, as of sea
depths, the story of Circe. Swinging
lLmps and yellow candles, thick an a
man's wrist, in tall, ecdeilasticftl can-
ellesticks, cast a soft light o'er the
sombre antique furniture. Great brasJ
bowls of red roses made splashes of
color in the deep shadows.
In a high carved arm-chair, by the
open wood-lire a woman sat, listen-
ing and waiting. She wore a loose?
gown of a soft, diaphanous material,
whose whiteness was thrown into re-
lief by tho mantle of black fur, just
slipping from her shoulders. She, her-
self, was of a strange type of beauty,
the clear pallor of her skin, like the
petal of a whito rose, being in vivid
contrast v.ith her jet black hair and
dark eyes. She might have served
to personify night.
After a time she arose and pn°ed
the room restlessly, pausing at the
great tapestried bed to turn down the
coverlet, and to touch with her lips
an instant the violets just beneath the
ebony-anei-lvory crucillx at the bed's
head. Then she drew aside tho cur-
tains of a window, and looked oilt for
a moment ou the moonlit garden, and
on the lights of Florence, far below in
tho valley. They had lived in the
villa already three months, she and
her husband, yet in that time they
had visited the beautiful city but once.
He was absorbed in his chemical ex-
periments, and she was absorbed in
tlm.
She heard his step now in the cor-
ridor, and her heart leaped with ex-
pectancy. Ho entered and stood for a
moment in tho shadow, a youthful
figure stl! 1, despite his bent shoulders
and furrowed brow, and the look of
age imparted by the skull-cap and long
furred coat which ho wore.
For a moment she could not see
what he carried in his alms, but she
divined from his air of exaltation that
his latest experiment had been suc-
cessful. As he crossed tho room, a
giaceful figure in her long white dra-
peries, he held out to her his precious
burden, twelve coal-black roses. She
gave a cry of delight.
"Oh, l.ow beautiful! vBasil, how
did you do It?"
He smiled as he watched her caress
the ebony petals with her write Unger
tips, and brush their soft blackness
against 'he pale oval of her cheek.
"That I cannot tell any one—even
you! You wished for a black rose.
Your husband is a magician," he we nt
on playfully, "and you have your
heart's desire!"
She sank Into tho arm-chair by the
lire, the roses on her lap, a dark mass
against the delicate tissues of her
robe. Here and there the firelight
caught the intense green of the un-
changed foliage.
"What are they like?" she cried,
holding one against her face. "They
are witch flowers now, uncanny mid-
night things. Ah! I know. They are
like the son of Lucrezla Borgia.
Her husband adjusted the black fur
mantle about her shoulders.
"No, no, you must not call them ugly
names, sweetheart, for 1 mean them
to personify you. You are a dark
rose—with your midnight hair and
eyes."
" 'Du hist wie. eine Blume'? Ah,
the poet never thought of such a flow-
Btroyed the rose perfume in the proc-
ess."
"The loss is slight. I lovo them,
these black roses. They fascinate me.
Suppose 1 should decorate the wayside
shrine with them at the garden gate!"
"Tho peasants would stone you for
a witch, 1 fear. No, Rosamond, keep
them in your bed-chamber."
"I shall put them by my bed ne\w,
and ring for Santuzza to take away
these other flowers. 1 want my black
roses to reign alone."
She crossed the room, and from an
inlaid cabinet took out a fantastically
carved vase of rich green malachite
In this she arranged the roses.
"How heavy they are! One would
think they were overburdened. How
well they suit the vase! They shall
give me rare dreams! You are not
going back to the laboratory? It is
past midnight. Isn't this achievement
enough for ono day?"
"Dearest, I have another experiment
still uncompleted. Go to your rest
and dream of your roses."
He kissed her and went away, his
footsteps echoing along the stone cor-
ridor that led to the laboratory. She
stretched herself upon the bed, and
m
"You have your heart's desire!"
er, I'm sure. They misnamed me who
called mo Rosamond. But tell me,
Basil, did you have to mingle a great
many poisons to produce this effect?"
"Yes, a great many. But they have
annulled each other, though they de-
Directjrs Were Dumbfoundec.
Once there was a rich man—a very
rich man—who wanted to do some
thing handfome for a struggling insti- |
tution of learning.
He called the directors together and
said to them:
'Gentlemen, I purpose giving your
institution $5,000,000."
But," they said, after they had re-
covered from their surprise, "it will be
impossible for us to raise the $ 1 <>,-
000,0< 0 that will be needed in order to
secure your munificent gift."
"You will not need to raise any
$10,000,000," he replied; "the donation
will be unconditional."
"Then the money will be invested
in bonds or real estate, we presume,
and we shall be allowed to use the in-
come in erecting new buildings and
paying running expenses?" they fal-
tered.
"Not at all," responded the rich
man. "The gift will be in cash, to be
used in any way you please, and when
it is all gone there will be another
$5,000,000 at your disposal, gentlemen,
if you have spent the first sum wist
ly."
The directors consulted together in
whispers and then quietly sent, for an
officer.
The man evidently was Insane.
Her Reward.
"The brute," exclaimed the bride of
a year.
"Have a cup of tea, dear," said her
fondest friend, "and t ii me all about
It. What has he been doing now?"
"You know I told you he has been
encouraging me in learning to cook;
has praised my nice little entrees,
takes me to the theaters as an occa-
sional reward and all that."
"No good ground for a separation
in that. I imagine," said the dearest
friend, with slight sarcasm.
"Your sympathy Is worse than your
tea," retorted the bride, who was ob-
viously out of sorts. "But I'm going
to tell you, anyway. Not long ago
he promised me a surprise if I would
turn out a nice dinner cooked all by
myself, from soup to coffee, Last
night I did so. Everything pleased
him.
" 'My pet,' he remarked, 'I believe
I promised you a surprise on an occa-
sion like this.'
"'Yes, darling,' I answered. 'Oh,
do tell me what it is?'
" i shall discharge the cook at the
end of the month,' he said."
What was this in the bed!
lay for a long time between sleeping
and waking, the light from a swinging
lamp falling across her face, one heavy
black rose just brushing the pure
whiteness of her cheek.
Her husband worked in his labora-
tory until the morning sun was gilding
the domes and towers of Florence.
Tired out at last, by a prolonged and
unsuccessful experiment, he left his
work to go to his bedroom. As he
passed his wife's room he saw that
the door was ajar, lie reached out a
hand to close it, lest the morning
sounds through the house should dis-
turb her; but in the act he caught a
glimpse of something by her bed
which made him turn faint with a sud-
den nameless horror. The roses in
the malachite vjtse had become white
again, and were gleaming ghostly in
the pale radiance of the swinging
lamp. Knowing the nature of the poi-
sons imprisoned—he had thought for-
ever—In the black roses, a terrible
fear possessed him. In making their
escape from those petals, now of inno-
cent pall >r, where hau they gone!
"Rosamond!" His voice shook as
he calle 1 her name.
There was no answer.
"Rosamond! Rosamond!"
His tones were now loud and torri
fled. No answer came from the dark
shadow of the bod. He drew nearer,
cold with apprehension. Something
very black was outlines against the
whiteness of tho linen. A great hor-
ror sickened him. For an instant he
paused, shaking as with ague. He
dared not go nearer, dared not look
What wa3 this in the bed! By i su-
preme effort he reached the window
curtain, and pulled it aside. The
morning light streamed in. revealing
the form of his wife, quite dead, and
black as ii carved out of ebony.
Do Not Whine.
Someone has said: "Whining is
poor business; it identifies you at
once as the under dog, and dors not
get you any sympathy, after all." The
man who whines confesses his weak-
ness, his inability to match his en-
vironment It is too much for him.
He cannot command the situation. All
he can do is to kick and complain.
The habitual whiner never gets any-
where, never accomplishes anything.
Cigarette Trust Reaches Out.
The cigarette trust wants to collect
$7,500,000 from Mexico for the use of
Its patented machines.
One Scoffer Was There.
"Want to see the finest work of art
in this place?" asked a French jour-
nalist at the Austrian building Thurs-
day afternoon.
We're always wanting to see, so we
followed. He led us to a picture all
done in greens and blacks. It was
tl.at of a girl asleep over a loom.
Light seemed to bo shining through
tin green blind that screened the win-
dow just beyond the loom.
The color the light took from the
blind was on everything in the room—
the head of the girl, the cloth of her
loom, and the great loom itself.
The effect was as if the picture
were on glass behind which shone* an
electric light.
it is the work of Svarisky, well
known in European art circles. We
looked; we admired; we talked of the
ability eif a man who, with two ceilors
only, could do such work.
One there was who disagreed. When
our exclamations were done he made
but one comment:
"Spinnage."
But he was hushed and hurried
away.—St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Dr. Parkhurst Guided the Guide.
The Rev. Charles H. Parkhurst
goes to Switzerland every year for his
summer holielays and climbs the Alps.
He has many friends among the Swiss
guides, whom he warmly admires.
"Only e>nco did I know one of these
men fall in his duty," he said to a
friend the other day. "I took him to
guide me on an ascent and was much
surprised that he did not insist e>n
my carrying a big flask of brandy for
the party, as the guides usually elo.
"But I soon found out the reason.
He was hopelessly drunk already, and
after he had staggered half a mile up
the slope he sat down on a rock, look-
ing utterly bewildered, and confessed
that he didn't know where he was or
where te) lead me. He had been over
the ground a thousand times, but I
had to guide the guide home."
Reckon We'll Git Thar Yit.
lie wuz always a-sayln', when trouble
come roun*.
'•I reckon we'll get thar yit *
Ain't enough r.nn for a lily io <'• wn —
Reckon we'll git thar yit!
its' i—i human natur' to growl <i>* com-
plain :
Ri:
ha
rain;
But spite .
plain.
Ri kon w
c sunshine
wild w. at!
•Ml git thar
tha
n' we . arried that eoi
way along
"Reckon we'll ^ii thar
. lighten* .1 .the burden
"Reck' «n w> '11 ^it thar yit!"
Hi wuz only a toiler In bloom an'
1.light.
With Hopes star a shinin", full blaze,
lus sight:
But he looked to the light, friends-
looked to the light
"R'ckon we'll Kit thar yit!"
Fiank Stanton in Atlanta e'onstituth
HOUSEHOLD
, AFFAIRS
HOME-MADE 'M RMTURE POLISH
A good furniture polish may be made
by mixing two parts of crude oil to
one of turpeutine and applying it with
u soft cloth.
A GOOD BUUSII.
A strip of carpet gluoel to a piece of j women are, fe> * the most part, more
wood will remove mud from boots ' thorough, more intelligent, better in-
quickly and without the slightest in- | formed, larger minded and more agree-
sisters.
> dull,
AMERICAN WOMEN.
Sarah Grand says that Ameri
| Y<>;', then cover them, before fastening
1 together, with any preferred material,
jury to leather. It is far better than
the usual brush.
CANDLE SHADES.
White lace handkerchiefs make
charming shades for candlestick
lamps. The tiny centre of cambric
must be cut out to make a place to
stick the lamp chimney through.
able to meet than their Britisl
The average Englishwoman
idle, sluggish and incompetent;
average American is busy, bright,
ergetic and capable.
figured cambric,
binding the eelges
Make a bag sonic
this cardboard cas
denim or cretonne,
with colored braid#
Inches deeper th;ia
. . and pro vi el eel with
EMBROIDERY.
For ironing embroidery or raised
work of any sort the board should
have a very heavy covering of flannel
under the muslin: all the ironing must
be done on the wrong siele to throw up
the pattern, says The Housekeeper.
Student Knew His Bible.
Prof. Theodore (\ Mitchill, head
teacher o! Er.glish in the Brooklyn
high school, often < nt> rains his
friends with stories, the following be-
ing one e)f the mejst recent:
"I was laying down the- law to a le>t
i I' fellows in the second." :iys Prof.
Mitchill, "and happened to illustrate
my remarks by a Biblical allu ion.
" 'Kee ping you in does ne> ^ejod,'
said I 1 am going to heat the fur-
nace seven times hotter, as they did
with Shadrach, Meshach and \bed-
nogn Do you remember th ir ease?'
"'Sure!' said the fresh one of tho
class. And the fire never hurt them
a bit!'"—New York Timer,.
LATEST PARISIAN II)KA.
Lace as a trimming for cloth dresses
has long been in vogue, but the latest
Parisian idea is to insert light cloth
costumes with tulh worked in little
colored flowers embroidered either in
ribbon or silks. A cream cloth dress
had near the foot of tlie skirt a Greek
kev border of such embroidered t
I a drawing string in the lop. Glue this
1 inside the case and the workbns ii
$
WOMEN.
Business wotrt'ii are forsaking tho
eloth skirt ami thin shirt-waist for the
washable shirt-waist suit: and it is
only tlie size ot the l-uindr.v bill that
j prohibit* others from also doing so.
Crash and the heavier linen weaves
1 nre not so easily crushed, or so likely
! t.. .. itiioi- itust iih some other mate*
■on and the >oft
not quickly
gather dust as
ils. Ecru, sage
and straight rows of it en the pele- j blue are colors that do
how soil, ami are at the same time
A PRETTY DOOR WEIGHT.
What is to bo used in keeping open
doors in place. Get a good, strong
cigar box, till with pebble sand, nail
the cover down and paint the exposeel
side's with melted glue. Willie hot
sprinkle coarse sawdust over the en- j
tire1 surface, pressing down into tlie
glue to cause it to adhere. A small
portion at a time should be finished
in this way. as the glue may set before
tlie* sawdust is applied. Set the weight
aside until the glue is entirely coid.
then paint tlie roughened surface with
liquid gilding or prepared gold paint.
rine capes of the short coat.
SILK INSTEAD OF METAL.
Some of the new low shoes have eye-
lets worked in heavy silk instead of
being metal bound, rays the New York
Post. The favorite leathers are pat-
ent leather and black Russia for walk-
ing shoes, with tan Russia for col-
ored shoes. The nigh Cuban heel rules.
It is well placed at the back of the
shoe, and it is not half as trying as
the absurd French heel. The widest
of silk ties are affected. Inch-wide
ribbons are used in place of the usual
lace.
A USEFUL IIINT.
When roses or other artificial flow-
ers fade, the economical paints them
with her water colors. The muslin of
which they are composed takes paint
readily, and a little patience will re-
juvenate an apparently passe hat elec-
oration.
In tinting the flowers, make the pe-
tals deeper in shade in toward the base
and leave the edges paler.
It is surprising how fresh the flow-
ers will look after being r
they will hold tiie water
longer than the
oring.
do their original col- j
B E A U TIF YING ROOMS.
So much may bo done toward beau-
tifying rooms by selecting suitable pic-
ture's, yet so much depends upon the
proper hanging of them that it is no
wonder the result is not always satis-
factory.
Indeed, the hanging of a picture
makes it a great success or a disas-
trous failure as a decoration. Where
there is a blaze of light, for example,
either from windows in the daytime
or lamps at night, it is unwise to hang
pictures whose colors are vivid, and,
on the other hand, those same pictures
perceptibly brighten dark corners, hall-
ways, etc., says the St. Louis Globe-
Democrat.
Small pictures should be grouped;
they gain style in tlii* way. The ar-
tistic plaster me dallions also look much
better together than when distributed
at intervals about the rooms.
Much more interest is given a pic-
ture if a portrait of its author hangs . . r
, . iii his life trying to win her favor
near, and a model music room had | , ,
numbers of good photographs of mu-
sicians, framed uniformly, hung at a
regular height around its walls..
cool to the eye.
If you should desire white get tlie
Russian crash that sells for toweling.
Get it in its palest shade—a soft cream
that is almost pure white, but will
stand hard wear.
For very hot weather a white Swiss
with black dots woulu cool.
Ginghams in black or blue and white
checks of all descriptions are an eco-
nomical investment.
If you must be very, very saving
why not try cotton crepe, which needs
only washing to make it again pre-
sentable. We do not advise this for
steady business wear, but for one of
those prostrating weeks of hot weath-
er which we must expect now and
then.
&
FANCiESl
summer girl is beginning to sit
up and take notice.
The girl whose grandmother lias be-
r<Hl. and | queathed her a lace collar or caps is
much very fortunate just now.
BIT OF ADVICE TO WOMEN.
Don't pick out a man for a husband
simply because you love him. The
most important thing is whether lie
loves you. A woman who loves her
I husband better than he does her is a
doormat on which he treads. If he
loves her better than she elot s him, he
looks up to her as a goddess and spends
TYING COMFORTABLES.
If one has a grass plot with over-
hanging trees, secluded somewhere
from the public eye, a special joy just
now is the tying of comfortables out
under the trees. This is the very
poetry of labor, especially when the
comfortable is one of the pretty cheese
cloth ones, light, dainty and large
enough to "tuck in."
If tlie cheese-cloth or challie is a
yard wide sixteen and one-half yards
will be required. Two rolls of cotton
batting and twenty-five cents' worth
of Germantown wool to match the
color of the cloth are also needed.
Cut the cheese-cloth into five breadths,
having one lejigth cut in two so as to
give two and a half breadths in width
on each side. Stretch one side on the
frames ami catch in place. Spread the
cotton on the cheese-cloth in the frame
and cover with the remaining side.
Baste the edges together, then tack
with the wool, having the knots in
rows ten or twelve inches apart. This
can be elone in a few hours, especially
if there are several at it. After it is
taken oft' the tie frames buttonhole the
edges together.
A too adoring wife bore, a man with j
her affection, but no woman ever had i
enough love given her to satisfy her.
and the more affection the man lav- ;
islies upon her the stronger the claim
lie establishes. After marriage a thou-
sand things draw a woman's heart to I
her husband; a thousand things
estrange him from her.—Woman's
World.
"f
GOOD OF EXERCISE.
Woman's innate tendency to overdo
anything that interests, her and run it
into the ground militates against her
success in physical culture, according
to Mine, de Goliere Davenport, who,
while confessing to sev6nty-four years,
is said to look not more than forty-five
or fifty. Exercise in moderation is
good for every woman, she thinks,
fencing, swimming and riding being
among the most beneficial forms, when
properly followed. Clubwomen and
fashionable women are strangely
enough the principal detractors of
physical culture, she thinks, the ambi-
tion of the latter leading tnem to sacri-
fice themselves, their husbands and
children, their home duties, their own
stomachs even, to the inordinate crav-
ing for social amusement. On the
other hand, fashionable wonem fre-
quently take it *jp with great enthus-
iasm and make excellent pupils.
A woman wants her husband to do
as he wants to, biu she wants him to
wa. t just what she wants.
Pretty little Japanese card cases are
of a soft Japanese leather upon which
are printed designs in color. ,
Another way to prevent low-grade
cats from carrying contagion from the
alleys is .o clean the alleys.
If you don't 'are whether you are
happy or not, be happy for the sake of
others. For cheerfulness is as infec-
tious as the measles.
In Paris parasols this season are
rather small and very convex, of ger-
anium or white taffeta material with
three rows of lace o embroidery
round the edge.
The labor .qient on the designs and
workmanship of the new ribbons has
brought its own reward, for ribbon as
a trimming has not played such a part
in . ears as is assigned to it this suiu-
m ?
pretty
iings —
Wear
and
rve Five pounds or | removed, though the
I and cut in halves,
SMfco.
recipes:
^wwr"1 '• -• ———— .
Tumbler Cake—Two tumblers brown
sugar, two eggs, one tumbler butter,
one pint of raisins, one tumbler mo-
lasses, one cup currants, one tumbler
sweet milk, five tumblers flour, two
tablespoonfuls soda, one tablespexmful
each of cloves and nutmeg.
Cranberry Con
cranberri is wast
five pounds of sugar, five oranges
seeded and cut into small bits, and
two and a half pounds of seeded rais-
ins. Cook fill thick as jam. Put into
jelly glasses and seal while hot.
Maple Ice Cream—To one cup of j
maple sugar adel beaten yolks of four j
eggs. Cook in granite dish until it
1 t>iIs. stirring it all the while. Strain
through a sieve and cool. Beat one
pint of cream, adel stiffly beaten whito
>f eggs, whip syrup until light. Mix
nil together and freeze.
Breakfast Stew -Chop fine whatever
cold meats remain on hand; adel a pint
or more of rood soup stock; season
with salt, pepper and a small pinch of
ground cloves. Thicken with browned
flour, and pour boiling hot over little
squares of nicely toasted bread. Gar-
nish with slices of leuion, and serve at
once.
A Chicago physician is of the opin-
ion that, under proper and filing cli-
matic conditions, ninety- per cent, of
all cases of consumption can be cured.
TO WHITEN LACES.
Laces and linens which have become
yellow with age, or greatly soiled, can
be whitened by folding them carefully
and placing them in the sun to soak 111
a strong solution of borax and water.
As the water is absorbed or clouded.
add fresh water, and if the waier be-
comes quite cloudy from the loosened
dirt, pour in a new solution of borax
and water. Turn the lace or linen at
least once while It if? whitening. In
the warm weather tho yellow is easily
oaking may con-
tinue two or three days and nights
without injuring the most delicate fab-
rics. Care should be taken, however, 1
in removing the lace, when once it is | sleeves
clean. It should be taken out folded.
Cavalry buff is good with while
gray combinations.
Bands of flowered net furnish a pret-
ty trimming for frocks of plain net.
Taffeta petticoats are supplied with
adjustable flounces of white embroid-
ered lawn.
Collariess gowns rrre most comfort-
able just now, but they never look well
with a hat.
Sequin trimmings, like the poor and
the blouse, it seems we are to have al-
ways with us.
Pointeel bodices with a suggestion
of basque in the back are more and
more in evidence.
Hats this year run to every extreme
of sizes and shape without transgress-
ing the laws of fashion.
Tan pongee is the coolest of all the
colors in w h < h that fabric comes, and
is besides apparently elu.it-proof
Many taffeta cloaks are belted in at
the waist, but quite as large a number
are left loose from the shoulders.
Kiel belts, burned and tinted with
exquisite autumn icaf designs, are
among the most charming innova-
tions.
rale-colored silks painted with deli-
cate misty Mowers make the most
charming evening gowns and dressy
wraps.
gathered full into the
folded towels, pinned out neatly and 1
left in tho sun to dry. If the lace
sticks to the towel, let it soak off—
don't try to pull it away.
, . , ... . f ,, . arm hole, and as a rule fall only to the
not squeezed, but unfoleleel carefully on • > ... , . 1 ,
. I eiiiow, nece>siiaUi.g long gloves or a
'op lace cuff.
j Parasols follow the fancy for trim-
1 ming. Many have tucked bnnels fag-
1 ot" ! together and show a hemstitched
border of contrasting color.
A pronounced teature is being made
of lines of ribbon velvet, interesting
eunbroide red trails of sequins, the
round behig net, chiffon and crepe de
CONY E NIE N T A'.' CTtKP.AG.
A e-onveiiient workbag that can be
easily made at home at the e-ost of a
few cents would be something like the
following: The size of the bag being
decided 011—its base should measure
at least nine inches square—two pieces
of light cardboard should be cut in the
shape of an envelope, supposing that
its top and bottom flaps were both
open. The points might be rounded
off a little. Measuring off nine inches
in the centre of each piece of card-
board. bend It upon the two lines thus
secured. The flap ends will then form
sides, when you set the pieces of card-
board one inside the other, crosslwse.
chine.
The newest sleeves have the upper
puff separate from the lining, but
shirred and wired to stand out. Tho
lower or under sleeve is sewn in above
the elbow.
In the more "dressy" examples of
white blouses, one still sees the droop-
ing shoulder effect, but squarer should-
ers are really more modish and are
safer, as the tendency in all garments
is in this direction.
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Fisher, A. C. The Press-Democrat. (Hennessey, Okla.), Vol. 12, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, July 22, 1904, newspaper, July 22, 1904; Hennessey, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc98423/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.