Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 149, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 24, 1909 Page: 2 of 8
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^a. .uM.di di>d Amu. ^ rwwara . r* <r«d troin public lift *M
A stocky, red-bearded man paceo ' ,n1ed hlli dayB as a farmer Qtlltt
■teaiu hip's deck, telescope In band t[# ,ullan i,iand be had bought.
From time to time he halted and |
i
throuch bis glass scanned the Brazil-
ian shore, past which bis vessel wa
churning its slow way.
The red-bearded man was Guiseppe
Garibaldi, a joana Italian sailor. He
bad taken part in an attempt to free j thl
Italv from the tyrannical yoke ot An - ! 3;i
triu. The plot had failed, and he had
Measurements.
"Father," said little Rolla, "what ti
meant by 'a Sabbath day s journey?
"1 am afraid, my son. that in too
many cases it means twice around
the golf liuks."—Washington Evening
ar.
There be
escaped to South America.
bad plunged eagerly into the maze of
revolutions that have always con-
vulsed South American States. Garl-
bal It's genius as a born military leader
ma le his service valuable. His rough
honesty, In that land of graft and cor-
ruption, won him universal trust.
He Joined the party that was In re-
bellion against the Uraeillan Empire
and won a ; eries of brilliant victories
against stronger foes. Several times
he was badly wounded, more than ouca
was taken prisoner and one time was
jjut to torture. From place to place
in South America he wandered, always
drawing the sword for liberty and
against oppression. It was on a day
when bis fortunes were at their ebb
that be sailed past the Brazilian vil-
lage of Barra, examining the shore
through his telescope.
Sees Future Wife Through Telescope.
All at once the glass was held sta-
tionary. Garibaldi had see the lovely
face of a Creole girl looking from a
window in the distant village. Long
and earnestly he gazed on her. The*
he dropped the telescope and ordered
the ship stopped and a boat lowered.
He rowed ashore and set out to find
the house at whose window that face
bad appeared. He searched In vain.
He could not locate the dwelling, in
despair he was about to return to his
vessels when he chanced to meet In
the streets a man with whom he had a
Blight acquaintance. This Brazilian in-
vited the disappointed Italian to come
home with him for a cup of coffee and
a cigarette On entering his bo.-t's
bouse the first person on whom Gar-
ibaldi's eye fell was the girl he had
been so vainly seeking. The owner
of the villa Introduced her as his
daughteg Anita. Garibaldi, |n Ills
autobiography, thus describes the
scene that followed: —
"We both remained In ecstatic si-
lence, gazing at each other like two
persons who do not meet for the first
time and who seek In each other's
face something that shall revive re-
membrance. At last I saluted her and
said: 'You fust be mine.' I knew but
little Portu^ lese, so I spoke these au-
dacious words in Italian. However, I
eeemied to have some magnetic power
In my insolence. I had tied a knot
that death alone could break."
He Knew It Was Her.
An old countryman had heard of •
the wonders of the telephone, but |
would not believe he could hear lii« ;
wife talk a distance of five miles by Its
aid. Ills better half was in a country
shop several miles away, where there
was a telephone, and the sceptic was
also in a branch of the same buslnesi
where there was a similar instrument;
Knowing his doubts, the proprietor
offered to put him through to his wife.
On being told how to operate It, lie
walked boldly up and shouted, "Hello,
Sarah!"
At this Instant lightning struck the
telephone wire, and knocked the old
man out of the box, and as he scram-
bled to his feet he excitedly cried,
"That's my Sarah! That's my Sarah,
every Inch of her!"
BIRDS IN LEGEND.
Interesting Notes Anent the Tradi-
tions of the Feathered Tribe-
The folklore of Christian lauds is full
of birds. Our forefathers had not our
modern privileges, our cheap press, oui
tinned food; they believed in miracle,
and knew little about machinery; but
they were able to find joy in the red of j
a robin's breast, to see in it a sacrd j
meaning, and to weave lovely fancies j
around it. It is a curious fact, showing |
how they lived with nature in a way
which we have ceased to do, that in old
England the birds had each their Cliri*
tian name. Some of these, writes Rev.
R. L. Gales in the Detroit News-Tri!>
une, have survived as .lack Haw, Tom
Tit, Fobin Redbreast and Jenny Wren.
Many folk-rhymes express the sacred-
ness of familiar birds. In Sussex they
say:
IN LOTUS LAND. ler «U (vaut le severed with led, the
padding astiea ef raia is prevented. As
the roots grew the soil particles are
wedged apart in some places snd crowd-
ed together ia others, and by means ef
ti!en'n!Vni^'r>ui!.-rtnw.iT' .frQBie'c|j lime and other salta, the small soil grains
become cemented into larger ones, and
thus the open and mellow characteristics
of virgin eoil is restored; and not ouly
ths but by the accumulation of plant
Eardent j food in the roots, the eoil is made more
fertile for succeeding crops.
In order to maintain soil fertility and
at the same time make the greatest prof-
it in farming, a practical and scientific
rotation of crops should include the fol-
lowing: (1) Grasses and perennial le-
gumes. (2) Pasture, with an addition of
manure a year previous to breaking the
soil. (3) Cultivated crops. (4)
crops.
.Grain crops must be grown on every
farm. Often they are the greatest money
making crops; hence they must be giver
t prominnent place in the general crop ro
tation system. Cultivated cropB are also
often the money making necessary ia
every rotation plan in order that the land
may be cleared of weeds. Especially is
this true in a locality where grain is the
main crop. By continuous grain growing
land becomes foul and weedy, and the
cultivated crop in rotation is necessary
in order to destroy the weeds. Cultiva-
tion conserves the soil mo sture, develoj s
become sod-bound and less productive I the soil, and increases the supply of
The available fertility of the soil h,.| available plant-food by producing those
Laatf nlr it the fairy boatman enm•
T. waft mr o'er the Slumber Sea.
Th«' firefly lit his .lamp ot riaine
An<I «ll th * winds slept peacefully:
An<1 sv ift a-.'i tar aor<
To Dr
Wh -
\ nfold their petals in the dark.
And sweet the dreams In that dim land
Hatv odors float from inatjic Mowers,
BU'-'-oni - by softest breeze^ f 'nnea
8way ll*tit1y in the dusky hours,
Ai ! muni • ii. vcr h rd I
through the dewy
sweet,
And on a dim and hhrvlnwy 4 l0re
The whlsperin* w.iwieta s tt'y beat.
There blooms the mystic e*fh' del
Th.it rare and v - nd. s iKv. unseei
Bv mortal ey.*. win. h no«-ts t> i!
In heaven uplifts its silvery sneen.
i And pale, pure lliles there un«*t ise
i Their blossoms in the fragrant dusk
And breath of Jasmine and of tose
| Blonds with tha orange and the musk
| O fairyland of rem and sle^r
That lies beyond the i?aleii "f nay,
I Where youth and love their vision- keep
I And pleasure holds Its gentle sway. j
Your magie rn'isio soothes the bi ,in
Worn with the daily streps and strirej,
Your lotus-blossoms « .. <• the pain j
That comes from all the thorns of lire
it.In Virglnie Antiey in New Oilean
Times-L>en oci at.
J5be
Public
N
aL*
ye
The Story Corner
PROF. TEN EYCK'S ANSWERS
Concerning Grasses.
As ppstures and meadows get old tliefj
SLAUGHTER OF INNOCENTS.
Protests Against Women Wearing
Birds on Their Hats.
By Beatrice Fairfax.
What would you think if you paw
ft woman wearing a bat trimmed with
soft little baby hands?
The bare suggestion seems too hor-
rible inhuman, does it not?
And yet it is no worse to kill a baby
From that moment to the day of, chopI)lng 0ff n8 hands than by
Anita's death the strangely met gtanrjng t0 death.
couple adored each other. Anita was. Every woman who wears a grebe
Garibaldi's first and only love, and she ^ breast 0n her hat ls ti,e unconscious
■was just the sort of a wife for such a j meang of tour or five baby grebes
man. She shared his terrible hard-,
ships without a word of complaint,!
faced wretched poverty with a smile ,
and walked serenely with her warrior-!
husband on the ragged edge of mortal
danger.
In battle she fought, sword in hana,
at his side. Once, during a charge,
when a soldier fell dead, she snatched
up the slain man's musket and con-
tinued to load and fire It until the
enemy retreated. In a South Ameri-
can sea fight once the deck of Gari-
baldi's ship was swept by a hall of
■hot and shell that drove the defend-
ers to the shelter of cabin and fore-
castle. Garibaldi paused in his task
Of commanding the manoeuvers long
enough to shout to Anita to go below
for safety.
"1 wilt go," she cried, "and drive
back te the deck those cowards who
ar sulking down there. Then 1*11
Join you again "
A WarrlorWoman nd Her Battles.
In a battle far inland Anita was cut
oft from her
found herself surrounded by the en-
emy. She was ordered to surrender.
Instead she fired both her pistols In-
to the ranks of her foes and put spurs
to her horse. She broke through the
hostile line ,but her horse was shot
dead, and, di mounted, she was unable
to escape. When captured she wait-
ed for nightfall, then stole a horse and
galloped Into the forest. The enemy
pursued her. She was forced to swim
a swollen river, clinging with one
hand to the tail of her horse, and for
several days fled without food or shelt-
er through the wilderness. It was a
week before she could shake off her
pursuers and rejoin her husband. At
another time she had to ride In wild
Bight from the enemy, carrying her
tweive-days-old son across the saddle
la front of her.
To Anita's Inspiration much of Gar-
tbaldl'i later fame is due. He went
home In 1847, taking her with him.
There he fought once more for Italy's
freedom and was again forced to flee
for bis life. Privation and eiposure
bad proved too much for Anita. Af-
ter her husband's defeat she sickened
and died in Ravenna, In 1849. Gari-
baldi. heartbroken, fled to America,
where be lived for some time on
Btaten Island, only to rush back, at th«
starving to death.
The mother grebe goes forth to for-
age for food for her nestlings and nev-
er comes back, because she has fall-
en a victim to the hunter's gun. And
the hungry babies wait, with their
peeping, chirping mouths wide open,
for the food that never comes; and
after a day or two of suffering the
chirping ceases, and life ls over for
the baby birds.
Every year tens of thousands of
grebes are shot solely for the adorn-
ment of women.
A few years ago In Egypt, day af-
ter day I used to watch the Arabs
bring the grebe breasts to the hotels
for sale, and the women bought them
up like hot cakes. For 2 francs—40
cents in our money—you could buy
a beautiful breast.
Not on of the women purchasers
would have done a wantonly cruet
thing If She had thought seriously
about It; and yet what could have
husband's troops and' been more pitiable than those moth-
erless nests with thetr starving bird-
lings?
Every time you buy a hat trimmed
with a bird, a breast, a wing or an
aigrette, you are the means of short-
ening th life of one of God's free
creatures.
Have you ever watched a bird
swoop through the air, the very em-
bodiment of palpitating, joyous ecsta-
sy? Could you bear to think of short-
ening that brief existence by ona
hour?
There are ribbons, and laces, and
flowers a-n'-riv. to trim our hats
with. Let i" h°"a the birdies alone!
It ia sheer vanity that prompts us.
We do not mean to be cruel, but w
are.
Do you know that the aigrettes that
wave so softly over your hat wer
plucked from the breast of a living
bird?
Think of that, and then wear anoth-
er aigrette If you can.
Think of your own precious baby or
Infant sister or niece, waiting to be
fed and slowly starving to death be-
cause some great monster had kill-
ed the person who proTldes the food.
Teu are tender and womanly where
hwnat babies are conoerned. Let
. some of your tenderness and woman-
first chance, to his native land, there gB#i| wtend to all bablee—those of
to continue the flf nt for liberty, until ^ ^eaits M well as ct humans
all Italy waa at last tree. Then the _Hln^ ^ your foot down abeolutety
lonely hero who bad done HBuob for ^ ^ birdt>
-wedoa's eaaae refined ail MUae Hi - " •
largely been exhausted and much of it is
locked up in the immense root system
which hns been developed by tho thick
growth of tho grass, if the field is on,
which can be used in growing other crops
the best plan is to break the sod wlieu tli*
grass has reched the stage described and
seed new fields to grass.
If it is desirable, however, to confirms
the use of the meadow or pasture, a neit
growth may be secured with soma grasses
by thoroughly disking and harrowing tli-
sod early in the spring. This will have
the effect of destroying part of the gran
plants, whose roots will soon decay, fur*
nishing plant food for the growth of ne\
grass. The disking also breaks up tie
compact condition caused by the tramp-
ling of stock and aerates the soil, ami
the mulch of mellow earth acts to con-
serve the soil moisture, thus serving in
the winter as a cover to protect the grn\
roots from the extremes of temperature
As spring opens, the rain carries the nu.
trient from the manure dotvn to the roo'l
producing an early, strong growth, which
continues throughout the season. During
the summer the manure acts as a mulck
to keep the water in the soil, thus pro-
tecting the plants more or less from the
influence of dry weather.
There is no more convenient place t®
I haul manure than on the grass land;
' there is no crop which responds more read-
ily and gives more profitable results from
tbe growth of the gras9.
Fertilizing Grass.
Now, if wi'h this treatment fertilizes
be applied, the yield of grass may b
profitably increased. No better fertil-
izer can "be applied to grass than fa-in-
yard manure. The top dressing applied
the application of manure than docs
grass; and it is not necessary to wait un-
til the pasture or meadow is old and wors
out before making liberal applications of
manure. When the purpose is to plow up
the sod, the manure should be applied s
year previous to ths breaking. This wil
not only cause a larger growth of grass
during the season following the manuring
but by incerasing the root growth the lan4
will be left more fertile for succeedin'
erops.
Grass ia a soil protector, a soil-renew,
er, ftnd soll-builder. Covering the land
with grsss is nature's way of restoring te
el.l, worn out soils the fertility ftnd good
tilth characteristic of virgin eoiL Ths
true grasses do not add nitrogen to the
eeil, as do clover and alfalfa, yet they
ire'in ft sense nitrogen-gatherers, in thai
ths nitrogen of the soil is collected and
storel up in the roots of the grass in ths
form of humus. Thus grasses prevent the
waste of nitrogen and other plant-food
elements and serve to protect tLe soil and
to maintain its fertility. By these ex-
tensive and deep-penetrftting root systems
many grasses also tend to break up and
deepen the soil, gathering and stonn|
plant food in their roots, and thus ac
tuallv increasing the available plant-food
of the soil.
When the wild prairie is first brokes
ths soil is mellow, moist and rich, pro-
ducing abundant «.rops. After a few
years of continuous cropping and culti-
vation the physical conditions of the Boil
changes; the soil gains become firmer
ths soil becomes more compact and heav-
ier to handle; it bakes worse, and often
turns ever in hard clods and lumps when
plowed. This compact texture and bad
mechanical condition of the soil make .
difficult for the young roots of plants
develop properly, causing at the sin
time sn insufficient supply of air in ti
soil, which is almost, if not equnlly, t
detrimental to the crop as an insufficient
supply of water. After a soil has bees
eultivsted and chopped a long time il
tends to rnn together, snd is very stick-
when wet, but when dry the adhesive
characteristic disappears almost entirely
The grass roots which formerly held
together are decayed and gone, andJ|0"
when loosened by the plow, it is
drifted snd blown away.
Ths perfect tilth and freedom froir
elods. eo
alwsys mors
conditions which favor so 1 decay and ti«
notion of the soil bactcria. In a sense
"tillage is manure."
Grasses anil legumes maintain the snj-
ply of soil nitrogen and restore the prop-
er soil texture; besides, they are proti'
i.le crops, and ill tact absolutely ne •
sary on every farm ujioii which stock
ke] t. Pasture must be nad cn every fa
:tinl it is quite essential that it be ma e
a part of the ragnlar crop rotation. Mam
soils become too light and rr;.lii w i
continuous cropping, and need the tram]
ling of stock to firm them. Then, s
much more grass can be produced wIvd
the pastures are kept fresh and new, and
the increase of fertility and improie-
ment of soil texture results in larger oru;S
of corn and grain when the pasture
broken up and planted to those crops.
A convenient and desirable time
manure land is while it is being used f
a pasture. If the manure is applied a
vear or so before breal-irig, it r
iilate the growth of grass and cause a
greater production of pasture, gnii
more and better grazing; meanwhile ti.'
soil is enriched by an increased ror.t
growth and the formation of humus
sides these beneficial result, some plant
food will be supplied by the manuring ft
the first crop which is grown on the break I
ing nt a time when it is much needed, be
cause the larger part of the fertility i I
the new breaking is in an unavailablf (
state, and cannot readily be used by the
A. M. TEM EYCK
The Merchant who h:is the best success
in the business world will tell you he owes
it to advertising. He keeps his goods con-
stantly before the Public Eve and the result
is simp'y this: His home people see what
he is doing and know the prices he is quoting;
they see that his prices are just as low and
in most cases lower than those of out-of-town
Merchants, then they give him their patron-
age and not the Mail Order men. If your
business is not what you wish it. why not
improve it by a reasonable amount of adver-
tising in the
DAILY
Enterprise Times
BEST ADVERTISING MEDIUM IN FERRY
&
m
P^rrv Custom Mills
KOELZER & SEARS, Props
Having purchased and thoroughly refitted
this Mili with the latest and most improved ma-
chinery we are prepared to do work that can
be excelled bv none. Custom trade promptly
cared for. Trv our
"WHITE LILY"
Brand Flour. The best in the market,
X
x
X
x
x
x
x
x
x
new crop
BAOBfcR
Just the Thing.
Bug Barber. Isn't It lucky I bought
that stick of candy for a cent when I
opened the barber shop!
FUN.
OF SKIN ERUPTION
Broke Out on Hips and Legs—Was
So Sore, Irritating and Painful
that Little Sufferer Could Not
Sleep—Scratched Constantly and
Kept Growing Worse,
CUTICURA'S EFFECT
QUICK AND PERMANENT
When about two and a half years
old my daughter broke out nn her hips
end the upper parts of her legs with a
verv irritating and painful eruption. It
began in October; the first I noticed
vai a little red surface and a constant
desire on her part to scratch her limits.
She could not sleep and the eruptions
I jot sure ami yellow water came out of
,hem. I bad two doctors treat her, but
she grew worse under their treatment.
Then I bought the Cuticura Soap, Cuti-
cura Ointment and Cuticura Resolvent,
end only used them two weeks when she
was entirely well. This was in Febru-
ery. She has never had another rough
>lace on her skin, and she Is now four-
een years old. I used only half the
bottle of Cuticura Resolvent and less
than a box of Cuticura Ointment. Mrs.
B. K. Whitaker, Winchester, Tenn.,
Sept. 22, 1908."
A Narrow Escape.
If there is one thin? I hate,'
marked Mr. Jones, "it ls after-dinner
speeches. Well, once I found myself
et a big banquet, where I knew ve.-y
few of those present. To my amazr
ment toward the end of the festivities
the toastmaster fixed his eyes upo,
me.
We have with us tonight—' I
heard the old. hated formula roll out
unctuously from his lips—and then
my own name—'Mr. Jones, the well
known,' etc.
The toastmaster concluded, but I
made no move to get on my feet. I
felt paralyzed; my tongue was seek
lng to climb through the roof of my
mouth
And then the guests, from all sides
began yelling: "Yes, Jones, Jones
—which ls Jones?—where Is Jones?
"A brilliant Idea came to me. Sit
ing close beside me was a little ma'
\ho dearly loved speechifying. Liko
a flash I Jumped to my feet, 'Jones
Why, here's Jones!' I cried and clap-
ped the little Demosthenes on the
shoulder. Then I yanked him to hi
feet murmuring In an omnlous sotto
voce; "Don't give me away! Speak
now!'
"He rpoke. And In the guise of my
elf, he made a most successful little
oration. There was loud applause and
much shouting of 'What's the matter
with Jones? He'B all right!
WOMEN
Everywhere Use Cuticura Soap
and Cuticura Ointment
For preserving, purifying and beaut if jr-
the skin, for cleansing the scalp of
Do You Get Up
With a Lame Back?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
Almost everyone knowsof Dr. Kilmer's
Swauip-Root, the great kidney, liver and
, bladder remedy, be-
lj- il cof its remark*
i able health restoring
IL properties. Swamp-
r Root fu lit lis almost
ever y v. i h in over*
' i rb umatism,
.] iiu the back, kid-
■ ncYS, liver, bladder
anil ev ry i art of the
urinary passage. It
corrects inability to
hold water and scaldingpain in passing it,
or bad effects following use < f liquor, wine
or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant
necessity of being compelled togo often
: through the day, and to get up many
! times during the night.
Swamp-Root is not recommended tor
' everything but if you have kidney, liver
or bladder trouble, it will l>e found just
i the remedy you need. It lias been thor-
! oughly tested in private practice, and lias
proved so successful t that a special af-
i rangement has lx*en made by which all
' readers of this paper, who have not al-
i ready tried it, may have a sample bottle
I sent free by mail, also a l>ook telling
| more at>out Swamp-Root, and how to
' find out if you have kid-
| ney or bladder trouble.
When writing mention
reading this generous
offer in this paper ami
send your address to
Dr. Kilmer Sc Co.,
Binghamton, N. Y. The regular fifty-cent
and one-dollar size bottles are sold by
all druggists. Don't make any mistake
but remember the name. Swamp-Root,
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad*
iress, Binghamton, N. Y.,on every bottle.
f
tap-Knot.
ing I
crusts, scales and dan-
druff, for dry, thin
and falling hair, for
softoning, whitening
and soothing rod,
rough and sore hands,
for annoying irri a-
tions and ulcerative
weaknesses, and for
many sanative, anti-
fentic purpoFos as well as f«.r all tho uses
of the toilot, bath and nursery, (luaran-
toed absolutely pure and may be used
from the hour of birth.
CnmplPt* External antf Interna! Tmitrnfnt for
Every Humor of Infnntn. children and Adults ron-
Every
■llltfl of Cutli
Cuticur ~'~
euro R>
the Skin.
Ointment (50e.) t' Il«*nl the Skin and Cutl-
, ni-nnlvent (BOr.). for In the form of Chorolate
ruin 25e per vlnl of VO> to Purify the Blond.
Bold throughout the
Cornf*o.|p_ Prop*
potter l>rug A Cheia
Ronton, Mum
Mailed Free, Cuticura book on Skin Dlaeaaea.
A« for me, I sipped wine and grail
characteristic of virgin oil iij aally recovered from the nervous
leu completely reetoredl shock occasioned by my narrow es
KILLthe cough
and CURE ths LUNC8
«"™Dr. King's
New Discovery
for C8SSP* JS,
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.
whenever laid ha. been laid down t« cap* from
cn* far a wffielemt length ef toe. At Tork Ttmea.
being eloquent."—Ne
GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY
OB MONEY REFUNDED.
Beware of Ointments for C:-
arah that Contains Merdu •.
u mercury will surely <lestrf|y :c
sense of sinoll mid completelylifc.
antte the whole system when Ai!<i-
in(i It through the mucous sur4«i.
Such artcleB should never l>4i:i d
except on prescption from reptHiMi-
physician, as the damage they will
do is ten fold to the good you 'an
possibly derive from them. Mall's
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by
Clieny A- Co. , Toledo O. , contaM*
no mercury, and is taken internally
acting directly upon the blttod and
mucous surfaces of the system, in
in buying Hall's Cataruh Cure be
sure you get the genuine. It is tak-
en internaUy and made in Toledo,
Ooio, by K. J. Clieny A Co. Testi-
monials free. Sold by Druggists.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Take Hall's
Family Pills for constipation.
Neat, complete, and] accurate
•bitract* complied while you wait
TUCKER 4 FERRYMAN
\
i
Cou'd Not Be Better.
No one has evov made a salve
ointment, lotion or balm to Comoro
with Bucklin Arnica Salvo. Itstho
one perfect healer of Cuts, Corns,
Burns, Hrulsos,Soros, Scalds,Bolls
Ulcers Eczema,Salt Rheum. For
Sore Eyes, Cold Sorea, Chapped
Hands its supreme. Infallible for
Piles. Only 25c. at all druggist,
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Perry Enterprise-Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 149, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 24, 1909, newspaper, June 24, 1909; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc118264/m1/2/: accessed June 6, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.