Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 113, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 24, 1921 Page: 2 of 4
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CAGE TWO
OKLAHOMA LEADER
BILL PRECEDED
U. S. Congressmen Take To
Proposition In No Cheer-
ful Manner.
bet friend lu the w.r.t pony 4pff) her PALS— Well, Well! It Isn't So Bad to Be Color Blind
enemy of their government.
The special rule for hastening '
Sometimes.
—By CLIFF STi.HKi. J i
the appropriation
and the committee
of
VttH
WASHINGTON. Dec. 24. The
pat>sago by congress of the bill to
givu $20,000,000 for the relief of fam-
ine stricken Russia. was not accom-
plished without some interesting
committee sessions.
At one of the meetings, the fol
lowing took place:
The Foreign Affairs Committee, in
executive session, had agreed to re-
port favorably the appropriation
asked by Secretary Hoover for the
immediate shipment of corn and of
seed wheat to Itussia. The Rules
Committee met to agree upon a spe-
cial rule to expedite Its passage.
"Terrible."
"The doctors has been Instructed
to feed only the children that have
a chance to survive." said a spokes-
man for Hoover.
"Terrible, terrible!" commented
Chairman Campbell, and Represen-I
tative Kreider of Pennsylvania ech-
1 oed. "Pretty rough."
"Why did the president recom- |
i mend only the sending of 10,000,000 j
' bushels of grain, while now yoti i
want J20.000.000?" asked a commit- |
plee member.
Why Wo Wore!
! "Because the president acted on J
^Information which was earlier than ,
: that now at. Mr. Hoover's disposal. .
| Governor Goodrich of Indiana and
"Vernon Kellogg have just returned
fcfrom extensive investigations in the
famine regions, and they urge the
larger appropriation."
"Why not give them more""
"Because the grain must be ship-
Ted In over two railroads -one run-
ning from Riga on the Baltic and the
nther from Novorosslsk on the Black
Sea. Those railroads' ntmost capa-
city is 100.000 tons a month, and this
appropriation will keep them loaded
for the entire period of the famine."
Eye For Business.
The expert then cannily suggested
■that Russians are learning to eat
American corn, and that this famine
gift may stimulate future American
trade. The corn will be bought from
American elevators at a very low
price. Some of the dealers will
handle it without profit or charge for
their services. It will be delivered
to the village mills in Russia, where
it will be kround, and the products
will be distributed to the famine vic-s
Urns.
"I never favored any of these gifts,
but they're starving and I'll vote for
this." said Riordan of New York, un-
comfortably twisting his hat. "But
l m totally opposed to their govern-
ment and all they stand for."
Campbell's Idea.
"So am 1." responded Campbell of
Kansas. "And if it weren't for that
government of Bolsheviks this awful
famine would never have occurred."
"Well, of course that is to say the
drouth would not have been avoided,
but better measures would have been
possible to deal with its effects." put
jn the expert, hastily.
"They would have had the drouth,
but they would have been able to
furnish relief from their own vast
grountry.** Campbell agreed.
"Rich Territory."
"Seems as though in all that rich
^territory they could have got enough
•fo feed them." put In Schnll of Min-
nesota.
'They paralysed transportation
fcftnd production," added the expert.
•'The soviet government seized a
(great share of their grain in 1920
and discouraged production on the
land. The grain was given to the
jjted army."
Garrett's Wit.
"Without compensation of any
-isort," Campbell remarked, as though
challenging anyone prosent to dis-
pute him.
All hands pondered deeply when
Garrett of Tennessee suggested that
the Bolsheviks would be glsd to try
to tear down the government of the
"United States in return for this food.
Adjourned.
Mr. Hoover's advocate offered com-
fort: Vernon Kellogg had talked with
'Kalinin, the president of the soviet
lepublie, who had told Kellogg that
the Russians were beginning to re-
alize "what a capitalist country can
do that we cannot do," and that th«>\
realized that America was both their
passage
adopted
Journed.
«u!d i'rohlciu.
i O.er In the senate the floor wag
i_ secured by Senator Fiance of Mary-
land. who offered a resolution call-
ing for the appointnieut of a com-
mission by the president, to visit
Russia to discuss with a committee
from th< de facto government of
Russia the settlement of all ques-
tions now at it-sue between the two
government.s .t resolution, in short,
looking toward recognition of th«
soviet republic and the resumption
of political and economic relation*
between Russia and the Fnlted
States.
He a kcd that th measure be seut
to th« Committee on Agriculture, be-
cause it was Intended to relieve ills
distress of American farmers
through resumption of foreign trade.
The Foreign Relations committee
had failed to take notice of a pre-
vious resolution of similar natun
Pittman of Nevada. New of Indi-
ana, Curtis of Kansas. Robinson of
Arkansas, and King of Utah jumped
on Frnnce and his measure was sent
to the Foreign Relations committee
for cold storage.
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LDSQ
LPROBL
ELECTRICALLY
Legal Fraud"
Perpetrated
By Railroads
Walsh Charges Evasion of Federal Law—Straw Corpora-
tions Do Repair Work—Hannauer Admits
His Knowledge Is "Dubious."
the railroads of the country would
revolutionize transportation, effect-
ing great economy in money and ef-
fort. in addition to the admitted ad-
vantages in convenience and comfort
to the public.
This is the conclusion reached by
the United States Geological Survey
after an Intensive Investigation.
Truckage Saved.
Chief among the economies effected
would be that of trackage. For in-
stance. the Survey states, the entire
traffic between Philadelphia and
Washington could readily he carried
over the rails of the Pennsylvania
BY CARROLL BINDER. ! got the idea of farming out his re-
Cede rated I'rrui Correspondent. pair work, the manner in which the
( HICAGO, Dec. 24. The "legal contract for this work was nego-
fraud" of the rsllroads in farming ; tlated and the way in which the re-
out their repair work to companies pair work is done at present, proved
In which they are interested and very weak and his power of recol*
thereby evading those parts of tho lection dimmed, as Walsh probed into
federal transportation act which de-j the deals with sub-contractors. The
mand decent conditions for employes road's attorney, S. C. Murray, was
was exposed by Frank P. Walsh, at-; obviously pained that the vice presi-
torney for the Railway Employes' dent of a railroad should be quizzed
[Department of the American Federa-jso pointedly and he resorted to all
Walsh
United States Geological Sur-
vey Thinks Unified System
Would Be Good.
WASHINGTON. Dec. 24—(By U.
P.)—Unified electrical operation of'jj0n 0f i>or. who appeared before the legal technicalities to have
tbl ITttited States railway
board In the case against the In-
diana Harbor Belt Railroad.
Walsh handled the situation with-
out gloves from the first. He took
the position that the small road is
but a flagrant example of the way in
which the roads of the nation arc
scheming to make huge profits at the
expense of their employes and the
public and charged that the hold-up
labor | called off. but to no avail.
i> In- Walsh invited Hannauer to admit
i that his road retains absolute control
over all work done by these contrac-
tors, having its own employes in
charge of the operations with abso-
lute power to modify them in any
way the road desires. "You're simply
paying these contractors 5 per cent
for their work while you evade the
rules of the United States railway
game Is directed
WHICH WILL BE A MILLIONAIRE'S BRIDE?
Japanese Sick
Of Maintaining
Siberian Army
Fear of Spread of Bolshevism Declared To Be Main Reason
Troops Are Kept in Far Eastern Republic,
While f.'ation Vainly Protests.
TOKIO, Dec. 24.—(By U. P.)—The pan and the Far Eastern Republic*
Japanese soldjers in Siberia want to ,The delegates of the Far Eastern Re-
come home. They'ro not in love with public, which has its capitol at Chita,
the beautiful snow. The people want and which, theoretically, is a nou-
'em to come home too. because the Bolshevist buffer state between Ja-
tax payers have been told that from pan and the rest of Siberian Russia,
$25,000,000 to $30,000,000 might be re- have insisted upon a specific Japan-
duced from the next budget if the j ese agreement for troop withdrawals,
cost of the Siberian expedition could J There is a rather general disap-
be eliminated. ; pointment in the Dairen conference.
There are evidences, some think. In fact the Japanese and Russian
that the military authorities them- newspaper men covering it got so
selves are coming to regard the Si-1 disgusted not long ago that they met
herian affair as a white elephant on ' in solemn convention and unani-
their hands, and that they'd like tc mously passed resolutions that un-
unload.
lebszifea sf!£Lrisci
TDolljy: /.vrt |
Wall Street labor board,"
Rumor has it that cither Yansci Dolly or her twin dster, Roszlka, will
rican millionaire. The Dolly
now in London. Roszlka recently divorced Jean Schwartz,
song writer, and Yansci is on the verge, she hopes, of obtaining a decree
of divorce from her comedian husband, Harry Fox. One jr ineir more
persistent admirers, according to reports reaching New York, is Alexander
Smith Cochrane, multi-millionaire husband of Ganna Walska, opera ulnger.
Mr. Cochrane is seeking to divorce his wife. Dispatches from London
quote Yansci Dolly as saying: "When I marry, Broadway will get ihe
surprise of its life."
Walsh cbalenged. j K00U become the bride of a prominent Amor
through the Association of Railway I Asked about individual foremen, 8,ster8 are now *n London. Roszika recen
Executives. , Hannauer was unable to say whether
Nation-wide Conspiracy. they are now on the payroll of the
Developing his case by cross-exam- contractors or of the railroad, so in-
system tinder electrical operation, j inatlon of George Hannauer. vice ; volvcd are the relations of the two.
leaving those of the Baltimore and ' president and general manager of the More Costly.
Ohio for future growth. Indiana Harbor road, u lino only 120 Throughout the hearing Walsh
Similarly, electric operation in the: miles long but very sympathetic to i Queationea the good faith of the road
viclrfUy of Bostdp and Nev* York) the policies of the larger roads, Mr. !jn itR sub-contracting. Once some j
body protested that he reflected on
the honesty of witness Hannauer. "I j
vouch for his honesty." replied
Walsh, "but I have a right to chal-
lenge his statements." "I think he'd
keep an honest golf score." he added.
Attorney Murray told the board it
had no jurisdiction in such a case
and Hannauer introduced figures to |
demonstrate that by farming out its
work it saved 40 per cent on car re-
woultl leave a margin of track eapac-I Walsh showed that there Is a na
Ity so great that no money need be tion-wide conspiracy to avoid the
sent for many years for further ex-
tension of track, it Is shown.
Less Machinery Needed.
The total cost twenty years heuce.
If electrification Is begun now. the
Survey states, would be less than the
cost of the added track and termi-
nal facilities necessary under steam
operation to provide for the inevit-
able 100 per cent Increase in traf-
fic within that time.
If the operation were made elec-
trical and unified, less men and ma-
chinery would be required. There is
great waste now, the Survey holds,
on account of separate reserves of
motor power. Further, the steam l<v
comotive can run but eight hours a
day. while the electric locomotive
can operate twenty hours.
Naturally economy of operation
would result In reduction
freight and passenger rate
provisions of the transportation act
by contractlug and leasing out to
sub-contractors and padrones the
most important functions of the rail-
roads.
"The so-called 'private contrac-
tors.'" said Walsh, "are pretending
not only to actually maintain the
rights of way of the railroads but.
safet
Refused to Negotiate.
C. J. McGowan. vice-president of
the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen,
told the board that the road had re-
fused to negotiate with the unions as
prescribed by law; had let the car
repair work out to companies w hlch
both j had not previously been engaged in
the railroad business; that one of the
companies was not incorporated until
Statistics show that the majority ten days after the road posted a no-
of men commit crimes of violence tice that repair work would be per-
between the age of 3b and 40,where- formed by this company instead of
ns women commit similar crimes be-! by the road; that the company had
tween 21 and 30. ! Increased the hours and decreased
-u-unnr.r.-Lrj-.anr - fhe UR W«ll SS IntrOdUCed
fiwjqc Prp^iripnt piecework- all in violation of the
rules of the Unitetf"States labor board
and the provisions of the Federal
transportation act; and that the con-
tracting company discharged em-
ployes without investigation and
threatened to discharge employes
who served on union grievance com-
mittees.
Qui/. Hannauer.
Walsh then quizzed Hannauer
The latter admitted that Iv
I and asked for no competitive bids
Jin awarding the repair work of his
Independent of railroad control, to pairing and 47 per cent on mainten-
have charge of the repair devices j Ilnoe ot way expenses. Board Mem-
upon which the lives and limbs of j ber Wharton challenged the raetho i
the traveling public must depend for j by which those figures were obtained
and Walsh said he would prove that
the contractor system was more
Lfl
DECLARE?
:o
1IOPK.
They come, the great minds of the
earth,
To speak for all mankind;
God grant their words may prove
of worth,
And wisdom they may find.
No Mere to Withdraw.
Information from a source very
close to the late Premier Hara is that
just before his assassination he was
considering plans to effect soon a
withdrawal of the Japanese Siberian
forces. This informant says Hara
bad guaged the situation in all its
aspects and had deliberately con-
cluded that even if the militarists
opposed him—which he was not cer-
tain would be the case—he could go
to the mat with them and win.
That, however, is merely a matter
of speculation now. No definite
movement is under way for Siberian
withdrawal and there seems to be
no prospect of any for the present.
The severe Siberian winter is set-
ting in, and the general opinion is
.less the conference perked up, they
I were going to leave it flat, to strug-
gle through a bard winter as best it
could without them. These resolu-
tions were presented to the confer-
ence the next day. and gravely re-
turned to the correspondents by thq
official press agent, as a part of that
day's conference communique,
Bolshevism Feared.
Since then the only news has been
that the conference is still dead-
locked.
Some form of trade agreement may
come out of the Dairen affair, but it
is not believed here that it will in-
volve formal recognition by Japan ot
the Chita government. While profes-
sedly non-Bolshevik, Chita is sup-
posed to be under the wing of Mos-
cow, and it is said in Tokio that uot.
Expected Looting of Shops By
Unemployed Fails To
Materialize.
They come from lands where sordid
bate,
Has festered untold years;
Where war has raised grim sorrow's
gate,
To flood a world with tears.
that it would be very difficult to the least of Japan's purposes in sit-
get out before spring, because cf ting on the lid at Vladivostock and
weather handicaps. [ Far Eaitcrn Siberia is to choke off
tliilter IState.
Meanwhile the deadlocked confer-
ences at Dairen continue between Ja-
any possible spread of Bolshevism to
the shores of Nippon.
LONDON. Dec. 24.—A plot to loot
sostly than work done in the railroad fashionable London stores during the
shops.
EIG
EO
Haphag - Harriman Official
Says Shipping Board Will
Meet Rate Fight.
TOD A Y'S EVENTS
i entenarv of the birth of William
1'rederick Poole noted library expert
and originator of "Poole's Index."
The Capper-Tincher law. for the
legislation of grain trading, is to
come into openation today.
Millions of dollars in Christmas
bonuses will be distributed today by
banks and business houses through-
out America.
The Washington and Jefferson foot
ball team is to depart today for Pas-
adena. Calif., where the University
of California eleven will be opposed
on January 2.
A three-day convention of members
«u the Young People's Socialist
league from the Eastern States is to
be opened today in New York city
Christmas shopping rush was be-
lieved thwarted by police today.
Five hundred unemployed of the
West l^ondon districts had planned to
mar^h to Oxford ostensibly to dem-
onstrate against Christmas shopping
extravagance but in reality to loot {
stores, police said.
Many of them were armed, it was
declared.
Two thousand others from the east ,
eud were to commence looting at the i
Strand and work westward, accord-
ing to the police diagnosis of the
plot.
The scheme was frustrated when
police mobilized 100 mounted men at
points of \antage along the route-
Warnings were issued to storekeep-
to be prepared.
Where kings have wrought with
bloody hand,
To drive men to their doom;
Where masters proud burnt in their
brand,
And hearts broke in the loom.
With hearts that yearn we give them
hail,
And hope they bear the light.
To lead man from hate's lothsome
trail.
To fields of peace and right.
ISJ
RYS
n ZEB
Six More Republicans Said To
Have Demanded That
He Speak.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 24.—An un-
expected development which for the
first time during the long fight over
his campaign expenditures definitely
Would their great pride but stoop to!<"ar*8 Jeopardy the senatorial seat
* Truman H. Newberry, has oc-
road and that he had taken this step J
\sithout consulting the directors or
other officers of the road.
The head of the firm which re
[calved the contract for the car repair
work ran a coal yard In Hannauer s
BERLIN. Dec. 24.—(By V. P.) - A
new trans-Atlantic freight war. which
the United State shipping board will
lose after having caused losses to all
shipping companies, is predictod by
officials of the Hamburg-American
line, as the result of the shipping I , .' "/• '
. i . . . ® i demonstration.
boards intention to put three new.
received larg® *teamers on the New York-
Plymouth-Cherbourg • Bremeu - Dan-
. .. are approximately 2,000.000 men out
'he Haphag-Harriman steamers t)f work
America and George Washington are Tlu. ro , family gpenrt ohrlst.
a ready covering the route." a high mas at York rott Sandri„gham.
otficial of the Hamburg-American -iv . n , , ,.
. ., * nuKan The party will include King George,
line. said. .
... 'the queen. Princess Mary, the Duke
ic trans-, t antic shipping pool. nf York. Prince Henry, Queen Alex-
hear,
I The voices near the soil,
j The web they weave would longer
wear,
' Think we who sweat aud toil.
—'W. C. Pike.
< OMIW RATIVE 1J \
"My d
RY.
Several hundred unemployed men | Pt'°sPer°us
marched to Hyde park closely mifht give me a few dozen eggs as
watched by police. There was no a ^ ^ristmas present.
"Can't afford it. darling. You will
England's cup of joy at holiday'have to content yourself this year
season was somewhat embittered by with just a diamond necklace."—Bal-
these reports and the fact that there j timore American.
home town. Hannauer admitted, and
comprising the 'Haphag.1 Harriman
and several other big American lines
andria. with the king and queen of
his knowledge of the business of car """ "Vu,|; AU,encan unes, \0rway. and his son. the crown price
pairing was dubious. Walsh asked as we «"« hnc" h' U*l- 01a1-
hether this man d„i not drive a coal 'talmn "n" Uutch llnes- «*
re von facetious?" asked Iobllft,,d '° "'otect ,h^ members
This man is a substan- 1 th,c sbi"I>1"s 1,oarii- *
thus taced with overwhelming oppo-
sition. even if it obtains the support
of the North German Lloyd, which
wagon ?
Hannauer.
ttal citizen."
"A man may drive a
and yet be a substantial
torted Walsh. "1 drove
L-oal wagon
iti/.en." re-
one myself j
FREAK GIFTS USED
BY COPS TO SPRING
JOKES ON FELLOWS
does not belong to the poo.."
I ontructor a Bay Laborer.
The experience and competen « - f
the contractor who received the
award to do the locomotive work was
vague to Hannauer. Walsh asked
The Christmas tree at tli« police
I station was beiing used by members
of the force to spring some rather
, practical joites on each other. All
j their weaknesses and peculiarities
j and incidents in which they had
Several persons in the alley next 'been the "goat" wore reminded by
COPS GET REAL
KV KLUX THRILL
ROftCgT KAAS ,*ui
Robert Haah has been elected
whether it was not true that this to the police station had a little Ku;frlft
There were d
miniature clubs,
with a meaning,
cops received a
man had no tools or equipment and | Klux thrill late Friday afternoon,
no capital when he took over the Just as It was becoming dark, two
yards of the road, that he drew on sheeted figures were seen to leave
the railroad for all his supplies and . the rear door of a building, glide
lacked even a single week's payroll, through the fog for about fifty feet.
Hannauer was uncertain but wit-1 and enter another building. Inves-
nesses produced by Walsh testified tlgation proved that they were wait-
A hearing is to be held today to i president of Switzerland by the fed- that the contractor is a mechanic resses who had pulled white aprons
^ons er a ucw trial in the case of eral assembly for the year 1922. He who has little money and even now ' around their heads, shawl fashion
*.«i(<onn anzetti. w hose conviction will take office on January I. M. I goes to work dally with a crew on before stepping out into the cold
on a murder charge at Plymouth. Haah. who is a member of the fed- a hand car. mist
Mass.. has aroused protests from the oral council and also minister of Not a Perfect Baj.
raidlcal organizations throughout the ■ posts and railways, succeeds Edmund i Hannauer had a most uncomfort-j Germany is the only country which
jSchulthess as chief executive. 'able day. His mcmoi^y as to how he j has formally abolished tipping.
cks of cards, dice,
kewpie dolls, all
One of the younger
list of telephone
numbers and the names of persons
to ask for. which included "Honey."
"Gladys," "Beckie," and several of
her sisters. Sergeant Jim Montgom-
ery received two cigar stubs, each
almost an inch aud a half long.
There was a nursing bottle filled
with milk for one and there was a
nipple for another. Tin
remembered with several
For Miss Outdoors.
currcd in republican senate ranks.
Six republican senators whose
votes Newberry backers have claimed
have served notice on Senator Cur-
tis. republican whip that they will
vote to unseat the Michigan senator
unless he arises In the senate and
as vou have been fairly Imakrs 11 rl,'"'nse of ,hc m"n^ SP™<
this vear. I think ^u ',n his campaign against Henry Ford.
Should Newberry fail to speak in
his own behalf as he has consistently
declined to do ever since he was in-
dicted. the addition of the six re-
publicans to the anti-Newberry ranks
will make his unseating probable
when the vote is taken next month.
Thirty-five of the thirty-six demo-
crats are regarded as certain to vote
against him. Seven republicans al-
ready are said to be against him.
Thus, if the ultimatum of tire six
republicans should fail to break Ihe
Newberry campaign of silence, a to-
tal of forty-eight votes or half of
the senate and just one less ihan a
majority would be against him.
From reliable sources the names of
five of the six were learned. They
are Capper, Kansas; McNary, Ore-
gon: Jones. Washington; Kellogg,
Minnesota; Willis. Ohio.
It was believed by senators in close
touch with the situation Iliac Sena-
tor Cummins, Iowa, was tho sixth
member of this group. Republicans
already said to be against Newberry
are Borah, Kenyon, Ladd. Johnson,
LaFollette. Northrek and Myers.
BOAT RUNS INTO CAR
IN STRANGE COLLISION
DUBLIN, Dec. 24.—The first rec-
I orded collision between a ship and a
trolley car occurred here. The vessel,
a three-masted sailing ship, the
Cymric, was about to enter the King-
stead Dock, and was waiting for the
trolley car to cross the revolving
bridge at the dock entrance, but
swaying with the tide her bowsprit
projected o\f r the bridge and
rammed the car, smashing the win-
dows and terrifying the passengers.
The trolley car retained its balance
and successfully negotiated the
bridge.
GUARANTEE
SHOE REPAIRERS
Work called for and delivered.
S. E. WOODY, Prop.
Bring this ad and receive 10%
discount on $1.00 or more.
820 >. Broadway Phone W. 7S80
L (,. WARNKfc CO.
Buy of the makers.
Rubber and Steel Stamps, Sten-
cils, Seals, Stamp Supplies, etc.
320 W. Main—Walnut 64GO
p;
ioneer Shoe Shop
Established 1880
General Shoe Repairing
if. PUFFY
110 SOUTH BROADWAY
UNION MEN
Buy your gas and oils of
NALL& CLEVENGER
FILLING STATION
Deep rock products.
Seventh and Kastern M. 1102
er
A charming outdoor combination. =
The hut i* of tan wool aud the scarf §f
of tan camel's hair, with a gay bor- \ m
dor of plaid.
I'lNMiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiyf
1 MERRY CHRISTMAS
Claussen Catering Co.
26 Broadway Circlc
Caterers Bakers |
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' 7
\ y - V -/
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Ameringer, Oscar & Hogan, Dan. Oklahoma Leader (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 113, Ed. 1 Saturday, December 24, 1921, newspaper, December 24, 1921; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc109629/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.