The Okeene Leader. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1913 Page: 3 of 8
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THE LEADER. OKEENE, OKLAHOMA.
ACCOUNTING FOR “HOT AIR”
6tatesmen on Electioneering Tour
Each Thought He Had a Good
Joke on Hia Opponent.
*'You can't always tell who's It."
mused Representative Taggart of Kan-
sas City, Kan. "When I was election-
eering out iu the prutrle section of my
district during the campaign last fall
I chanced to see, as 1 entered a rail-
way car one day, my opponent Bitting
with a vacant seat beside him,
"We had never met, but l recognized
him at once from photographs. Ac-
(«^rdingly, taking my seut beside him,
\wva not disclosing my Identity, I
launched forth in extravagant praise
of hlin. To this he strongly demurred
and forthwith poured forth a flood of
compliments to my humble self that
made me tingle w ith pleasure ull the
way down my spinal column.
"After two hours of mutual flattery,
we reached our destination, and, as
we parted on the platform, I thought
it a good Joke to tell him that 1 had
known his Identity all the time.
"So, still keeping my own identity in
the dark, I said to him:
•• 'Mr.-, I knew who you were as
soon as I sat down by you!’
'"And I,’ said Mr. -, without
turning a hair, ‘knew yot were Tag-
gart the moment you came in the
door.’"
■
“You’re Safe”
so long as you keep
the Stomach, Liver and
Bowels working regu-
larly and when the first
sign of weakness ap-
pears be sure to take
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
promptly. It will help
you keep the appetite
normal, digestion per-
fect and liver and
bowels active. Try it.
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS.
llyoufeel'OUTOFSOKrS 'RUS DOWN'or'GOT 1HI. BLURS1
SUFFER from KIDNEY, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEASES,
CHRONIC WEAK NESSES.ULCERS.SKIN ERUPTIONS. PILES,
writs (or my FRBK book, the most instructive
MEDICAL BOOK EVER WRITTEN.IT TELLS ALL about then*
DISEASES and the REMARKABLE CURES EFFECTED by
THINEW FRENCH REMEDY. N.1. No2. N ,3.
THERAPION
lilt's the remedy for YOUR own ailment. Don't send a cent.
Absolutely FREE* No'followup'clrculars. Dr LF.ClkrC
M*D. Co. HAV&KSrQCK RD.HAMPSTkAI), LONDON, iiNO.
American Business Hustle.
Here is an instance of the thorough-
ness with which England’s commer-
cial rivals do business. A leading
municipality In the far east is order-
ing a large quantity of electrical ma-
terial, and the head of the department
concerned was authorized to visit Ger-
many, Great Britain and the United
States to inspect plants. He crossed
to America first and found that the
American agent from the city from
which he came had notified every
manufacturer of his visit and his mis-
sion, with the result that when he
landed he received a sheaf of letters
of invitation from manufacturers, and
of offers of hospitality. As a result,
he saw everything he wanted under
exceptionally favorable conditions,
and every courtesy was shown to him.
The German representative is doing
precisely the same, but nothing what-
ever has b,een done by or on behalf
of the British manufacturer. If the
representative wants to see anything
in this country he has to dig it out for
himself, for nobody seems to care for
the business and nobody knows of it.
—London World.
Also Had Time to Think.
• “Why is it that you have never
‘ #married?”
"When I was a boy my father and
others who possessed the benefit of
experience, advised me not to marry
until 1 had saved up at least $10,-
000.”
“Haven't you ever been able to save
that much.”
"Yes; but a fellow learns such a lot
while he is saving $10,000.”
Woman's Place.
Woman’s place may he the home,
but, judging from recent statistics, she
seems to have deliberately ignored
that fact, for there are 239,077 stenog-
raphers, 327.635 teachers and profes-
sors, 481,159 In various trades. 770,055
engaged in agricultural pursuits, 7.-
355* physicians and surgeons, 7,395
clergy “men,” 2,193 journalists, 1,037
designers, draughtsmen and archi-
tects. 1.010 lawyers and 429,497 wom-
en in various professions.—Baltimore
Sun.
Eloquence Appreciated.
K “Docs that man ever say anything
worth listening to?" asked the cynicai
statesman.
“I should say so.” replied Senator
Sorghum. "You ought to go out with
him and hear the way he can order a
dinner.”
TRUCE HALTS
HAN TIFF
PRESIDENT WILSON GOES TO SUM-
MER CAPITAL FOR A FEW
DAYS
WANTS MESSAGE TO SINK IN
Ready to Return at Moment’s Notice
If Any New Developments Arise
—Wants to Give Mexico Time
to Think it Over Carefully.
WusMMngtun, Aug. 30.—President
Wilson left Washington lute today for
the summer capital at Cornish, N. II.,
still hopeful of favorable culmination
of the negotiations undertaken by this
country to bring about peace in Mex-
ico.
Although no affirmative action on
either side had been reported up to
the time of the president's departure,
encouraging dispatches were received
from Nelson O'Slianghnessy, in ehitrge
of tlie American embassy at Mexico
City, bearing on the general situation.
These reached the president a few
hours before train time and led him to
determine upon a short rest over Labor
day.
Nothing in the advices from Mexico
City gave tlie administration officials
cause for particular anxiety and it was
the general conviction that a lull In
the diplomatic exchanges would he
beneficial to all concerned. The pres-
ident, it is known, feels that good
may come from an opportunity for
tlie position of this government as an-
nounced in his message of Wednesday
to "sink in,”'
WOMAN IN
TERRIBLE STATE
Finds Help in Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable
Compound.
Bellevne, Ohio.—“I was In n terrible
state tie fore 1 took Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Com-
PUT A KINK IN HIS PLANS
Awful Contingency Youth Hea Not
Foreseen In Hie Laying Out of
the Future.
Eleven-year-old Tommy has quite
decided opinions us to tho duties of
fathers to their little boys. The other
clay he was describing to his mother
the sort of father he intends to be
when be grows up,
"I'm going to he the host father to
my boys. I'm going to play marbles
with them and baseball and every-
thing they want me to nmt I’ll give
them dimes 'most every day and tell
them they can buy all the Ice eroum
they want, and I'll get them each a
pound. My back
aclieduntil I thought
it would break, I had ' pony, und well, my boys’ll have lots
pains all over me, 0f fun."
nervous feelings and Tommy's mother with n twinkle in
periodic troubles. I her eye Bald: ‘ But, Tommy, what If
was very weak and y0u shouldn’t have any little boys,
run down and was what If your children arc all girls!”
losing hope of ever , Such a possibility never entered
Summer Annoyances
such ns prickly heat, Ivy poisoning,
Insect bites and offensive perspiration
are quickly relieved by applying |
Tyree's Antiseptic Powder. 25e. at
druggists or write ,1. 8. Tyree, Wash-
ington. D. C„ for free sample.—Adv.
Not Working.
"May I ask what your business is?"
"I'm a seeker after truth."
“Do you expect to And it In this
community t"
"Sir, I'm taking a little vacation
now."--Birmingham Age* Herald,
being well and
strong. After tak-
ing Lydia E. Pink-
Tommy's head The suggestion was
appalling A look of blank diemay
passed over the child's face.
“Gee! that would be the dickens!"
he ejaculated,
BRING FUGITIVE INTO COURT
Superior Judge Has Agreed to Grant
Writ to Rush Trial.
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Aug. 30—It
was reported in Sherbrooke early th!s
morning that Superior Judge Hutch-
inson, returning from his vacation, has
agreed to grant to Canadian lawyers,
acting for New York state, a writ of
habeas corpus calling for the produc-
tion of Harry K Thaw in court at
once.
This move, if carried out. might de-
feat Thaw’s lawyers in their attempts
to keep him in jail indefinitely. Wil-
liam Travers Jerome of New York re-
fused to affirm or deny the report.
Dominion Immigration authorities
who had left, town hurried hack here
to await developents. Samuel Jacobs,
chief counsel for New York, hold a con-
efrence in the matter with Mr. Jerome
that lasted after midnight.
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Aug. 30 N'ew
York state made no step forward to-
day in its fight to return Harry K.
Thaw to Mntteawan asylum. He re-
mains in the Sherbrooke jail on a com-
mitment which will not bring him into
court until the king’s bench convenes
in October, and William Travers Je-
rome, conferring with Canadian coun-
sel, lias been unable to secure the
throwing of the holt that detains him.
Roger Thompson, erstwhile Times
Square chauffeur, lounged about the
hotel corridors this afternoon, lunched
and (lined near Jerome, wrote letters
to friends, walked the streets unmo-
lested, and kept silence as regards the
Thaw case. He was released on $500
hail today on the double charge of
having entered Canada by "stealth.”
and having aided an undesirable.
Thaw, to cross the border. He will
he tried on these charges, barring fur-
ther postponements, on Wednesday.
Urges Troops Be Sent.
Colorado Springs. Col., Aug. 20.—“1
would send every United Slates sol-
dier into Mexico to protect American
women if necessary." declared Gov-
ernor Colquitt, of Texas, in a speech
at the governors’ banquet last night.
“I know that I am treading on danger-
ous ground, but the United States
should not stand idlv bv while Ameri-
cans are being murdered and outrag-
ed in the rebellious republic.”
Shot For Editorial He Wrote.
Sulphur. Okla., Aug. 20.- John hind-
say, former county treasurer of Mur-
ra\ county, shot and killed J. Y.
Shem-k. edilor of the Sulphur Demo-
crat, Friday morning following the
refusal of the editor to “eat” a paper
containing adverse editorial criticism
of Lindsay.
Flier’s Biplane Is Demolished.
Hutchinson, Aug. 30.—Four daring
attempts to fly before a home audi-
ence in his first public appearance as
an aviator, ended in John A. Bixler's
narrow' escape and the wreck of his
biplane when the machine crashed
into a fence.
Theatrical Manager, Cornered, Yield-
ed Passes When Threatened With
a Distressing Affliction.
ham’s Vegetable Compound I Improved
rapidly and today am a well woman. I
cannot tell you how happy I feel and I
rJSKSt'KSS; CHOSE LESSER OF TWO EVILS
It cost three times the amount"—Mrs.
Chas. Chapman, R. F. D. No. 7, Belle-
vue, Ohio.
Because your case is a difficult one,
doctors having done you no good, do not
continue to suffer without giving Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound &
trial. It surely has remedied many
cases of female ills, Buch as inflamma-
tion, ulceration, displacements, tumors,
irregularities, periodic pains, backache^
and it may be exactly what you need.
The Pinkham record is a proud and
peerless one. It is a record of constant
victory over the obstinate ills of woman
—ills that deal out despair. It is an es-
tablished fact that Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound has restored
health to thousands of such Buffering
women. Why don’t you try it if you
Deed such a medicine?
Revolt Suppressed.
8he was giving orders at express
rate, for they were married; and he,
as u rule the uiost meek and sub
misBlvn of men, was, like tho pro
verbtal worm, beginning to turn
"Do you think," ho Inquired, "that
you rule tho whole of the universe?
"No," she snapped; "but I rule the
first letter of It."
Compensation.
"1 hear that young author ip'nda you
some very clever stuff."
"Yes," replied the editor, "but we
nlways give him as good as ho sends."
FEEL ALL USED UP?
Does your back ache constantly? Do
you have sharp twinges when stooping or
lilting? Do you feel all used up—as if
you could just go no further?
Kidney weakness brings great discom-
fort. Wliat with backache, headache,
dizziness and urinary distilrbunces it is
no wonder one feels all used up.
Doan's Kidney Pills have cured thou-
sands of just such cases, It's the best
recommended cru cial kidney remedy.
A South Dakota Case
“Kwrii Picture
Trill -i NC'irj/." *
tiny H. c'liiwi",
A Ir tiuicl rln, H. D..
anya: “i'alns tn
my Imrk nearly
brnl in a doublR-
My avamm waa
nili'd with urio
arid. My uppettta
1,-fi tn« mnl l lost
Weight. Th*' fcld-
lley a c e r e * I o n a
Were in .inly nnd
illleil ivich white,
fully like aub-
alanei a. Doan's
Kidney pill. help-
. <l in,- f ruin tha
first nnd rontlnnad
nae cured me. Tha
cure hue beau per-
manent."
Gat Daan’t at Any Stars. BOc ■ Box
DOAN’S ■VJWV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
Make tew promises und keep what
you make.
A bachelor guesses that most of the
women haters are married men.
Fussing with the neighbors will not
right your wrongs.
A poqt with a precious scrapbook
of his own writings under his arm
wandered by a theater, when suddenly
the idea struck him that he would
like to see a play that night, so enter-
ing the plnce lie neked for the press
ugent. That gentleman was out, but
i the manager was In. He was ushered
in. and the deus ex machine Inquired
his business. "1 would like two seats
for tonight." faltered the man of verse.
"An' who might you be?” asked the
manager The poet mentioned his
name. "Urn, yes," smiled the other,
"I’ve heard of you, but why Bhould 1
give you seats?” The bard murmured
■something about courtesy to the presB,
and added that probably Identifica-
tion might be necessary, so, as he had
a scrap-book of his published poems,
he would be glad If— But the mana-
ger cut him short, and calling out to
his secretary to make out a couple of
passes for that night, said: "My dear
sir, I'd rather give you the whole
house than read your poems!”
Catarrhal Fever
8 to fi often rare.
One 60-rent bottle 81*011 N'N Rniiriintemt to cure a cam*
Hnfo fui inly mu re. horse or colt.
lxittm botiiee •.*>. <««*t It of druggists, bantu dewier* «>r direct from
tuunufaeturera. «»*pr«n>* paid.
s 1*011 N 'S is th*» beat preventive of all forum of dhtotnpor.
8rollN MKIHCALtO.,
Cltoutlet* mid Hacterloloiflld, (i«almn, lml., 1.8# Am
It is no compliment when a woman
says, "Oh, all men are alike!”
Every time a woman takes the con-
ceit out of a man she adds to her own.
At the Hospital.
“This man lias water on the brain.”
"Naturally; he's a stock promoter.”
Odd Position.
‘‘Why does a chauffeur get under an
automobile?"
“To overlook it, of course.”
Weary Listener.
“You can’t answer my arguments,"
triumphantly exclaimed the man of ag-
gressive loquacity. "No,” replied the
sarcastic person; "I haven’t a chance.
I can't, stay awake long enough.”
ERUPTION ON ANKLE BURNED
Kingsville, Mo.—"My trouble began
eighteen years ago. Nearly half of
the time there were running sores
around my ankle; sometimes it would
be two years at a time before they
were healed. There were many nights
I did not sleep because of the great
suffering. The sores were deep run-
ning ones and so sore that. I could not
bear for anything to touch them.
They would burn all the time and
sting like a lot of bees were confined
around my ankle. I could not bear to
scratch It. it was always so sensitive
to the touch. I could not let my
clothes touch it. The skin was very
red. 1 made what. 1 called a cap out
of white felt, blotting paper and soft
white cloth to hold it in shape. This
I wore night, and day.
“I tried many remedies for most of
the eighteen years with no effect.
Last summer 1 sent, for some Cuticura
Soap and Ointment. The very first
time I used Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment 1 gained relief; they relieved the
pain right then. It was three months
front the time I commenced using
Cuticura Soap and Ointment, until the
sores were entirely healed. 1 have
not been troubled since and my ankle
seents perfectly well.” (Signed) Mrs.
Charles E. Brooke, Oct. 22, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-
card "Cuticura, f)ept. L, Boston.”—Adv.
Nest on a Sheep's Back.
An extraordinary story of u star-
ling's nest on a sheep's back comes
from Bideford, Englund, und is told
by the Ball Mall Gazette. During
sheep shearing operations on Gourn
wood farm one of the shearers cut into el
a fleshy substance, and examination
showed that ho had cut in halt u young
starling, which was in a neat that had
been built In the sheep's wool, and
which contained two other fledglings
still alive. The nest was composed of
moss and twigs. For some weeks
previous to the shearing the sheep,
with the others, hail the run of three
fields near the farm.
Eliminating Mr. and Mr*.
A correspondent of the London
Dally Citizen suggests that the un-
necessary and unpleaslng prefix “Mr."
should be eliminated from the super-
scription of letters. The deprivation
of this prefix was one of the penalties
enforced in our American colonies
during the seventeenth century. The
records of Massachusetts show that
in 1680 Josias Plaistowe was con-
demned “for stealing four baskets of
corn from the Indians, to return them
eight baskets again, to be fined £5,
and hereafter to be called Josias, not
Mr., as he used to be.” The Massa-
chusetts penal code also provided for
docking woipen of the prefix of Mrs.,
but there is no record of this clause
having been enforced.
Driven to It.
“My husband doesn't care for grand
opera.”
"But I notice he applauds vigorous-
ly.”
"He does that to keep awake.”
Offers No
"Corkins is
he?”
‘-Not now; he
ago.”
Resistance Now.
a booze fighter,
surrendered
, No Wonder.
"My business is always humming.’
"What is it?”
‘‘I keep bees.”
Proper Dignity.
“Is your cook easy to get on with?"
"Oh, yes, indeed. She is most kind
and considerate, but she makes us
know our place.”
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTOR1A, a safe and Bure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that It
Bears the
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
"A Man, My Son.”
The fellow who acquires the phys-
ical strength to handle a big plow and
to manage a mule; who learns to love
an honest furrow; who gets the moral
courage to kill grass, In spite of the
shade trees that Invite him, and who
can be patient, realizing that he is be-
coming, clay by day, a real man, has a
thousand things more to thank God
for than the fellow who hasn't the
physical strength to carry a walking
cane unless one end of it Is in his
mouth; who hasn't, learned to draw a
line without a straight edge to go by;
who hasn't the moral courage to get
out of bed before 10 a. m., and who Is
impatient because he thinks the "gov-
ernor” is too hard on him.—Atlanta
Constitution.
«* •' >.■
Opening
Fort Peck
Indian
Reservation
Uncle Sam’s last big land
opening—1,345,000 acrcsof rich
prairie land thrown open to white
settler*. 8.406 hunienteails of 160 acres
each are waitins. Located In Northesst-
ern Montana, Ju*t north of the Missouri
River, on the main line of tho Orest
Northern Railway. Rich, Handy, loam
gull capable of raising 20 to 30 bushel* of
wheat and 40 to 60 bushel* of oats per acre.
Register at
Glstgsw, Havre or Crest Fells, Moataaa
Daily Sept. 1 to 20 hcluaiv*
Drawing at Glaigouf. Sept. 23
Thin land ha* been appralied at 12.50 to IT.*#
per sere. Can be takan op under United States
homestead law,.
rnrr Illustratodtnap-foldernnd full tnfaraa-
f RLE. atlon about this big land opening will
be sent free if you write at ones. Send a postal
or letter to
E.C. LEEDY.
General
Immigration Agent
Dept. 0000
Crest Northern Ry.
ST. PAUL, MINN.
Idea.
wouldn't give me
Wrong
"The magistrate
an interview.”
"He takes the wrong views of
things. A magistrate has no business
to be non-committal."
Puzzle.
"Dad, tell me one thing.”
"What is it, my son?”
"It the fathers were to hold con-
gresses to agree on what they wanted
like the mothers, would they be ‘pop’
concerts?”
The Way of It.
“Miss May made a hit with Jack the
first glance she gave him.”
“1 see—a sort of glancing blow.”
What It Costs.
"Politeness costs nothing.”
“Nothing, eh? Costs me my Reat
twice a clay,” declared the tired strap
hanger.
The Portland cement output in this
country between 1870 and 1880 was
only 82,000 barrels. In 1912 the out-
put was 80.000,000.000 barrels.
A lock that should never be bolted
is wedlock.
Tuffs Pills
The dyspeptic, the debilitated, whether tram
excesa of work of mind or body, drink or ex-
posure In
MALARIAL REGIONS,
will find Tuft’s Pill* the moat genial restore
tlve ever offered the suffering Invalid.
0n« Thousand (1000) Whit# Fualll** wa 1«4 to ftftttle 18
Harrison Co„ Texas. Flue la d« cheap. Plenty raln-
fall,timber,rv-llro d«, uralrouuw^horch* ,«cbool«y
For inf. write Young KuaiaoM Qab, ■snhalV, Tn*a,
rnrr Unique Illustrated Booklet explainingTollei
iflCE Preparations, Manicure and other Instru-
ment*, lute renting to Indio* und Tamil km. Postal
bring* It. K.Wataon Caaptn* 1941 Ho. HUio Nlreot, Iklgaf*
YOU CAN MAKE BIG MONEY
at home with my Mailorder Plan. Others have mads
thousands. Von can do the same. Complete plan
X cents. EUGENIC HILL, Hutte, Montana
PATENTS SsSErSHS
WICHITA, NO. 36-1913.
Lots of girls have a tine time run-
ning a powder race with a marsh-
mallow.
Raw cotton from Africa and Asia
imported into England and re-export-
ed to the United States during Janu-
ary April weighed 58.000.000 pounds.
WNCHEsrm
20 GAUGE
'Hammerless repeating shotgun
The Model 1912 Winchester is the lightest, strongest
and handsomest repeating shotgun on the market. It
weighs only about 5 Y\ pounds, yet it has great strength,
because its metal parts throughout are made of nickel steel.
It is a two-part Take down, without loose parts, is simple to
operate and the action works with an ease and smoothness
unknown in guns of other makes. See one at your dealer’s or
Send to Winchester Repeating Arms Co., New Haven, Conn., for eircatar.
THE LIGHT WEIGHT, NICKEL STEEL REPEATER.
The latest proportion of suicides
In European countries is to be found
In Germany.
The best way to kill bedbugs is to
fill their mouths with snuff and let
them sneeze themselves to death.
Killed After Fist Fight.
Wilburton. Okla., Aug. 30.—Elmer
Cowan, aged 22, was shot and killed
today near Left Ore. by Frank Will-
iams, a farmer, who at once surren-
dered to the authorities Cowan re-
cenlly was released Un:n jail at Wil
burton, where* lie served a term for
] .selling liquor, li is said by Williams
that Cowan blamed him for his convic-
tion. and threatened to harm Williams
Tiie tvvo indulged in a fist fight today
and later Williams secured a gun
and shot Cowan.
Nothing pays a bigger dividend on
a small investment than politeness.
The wise rnah follows the lines of
least resistance by telling all women
how well they look and all mothers
their babies are beautiful.
Isn’t it queer how many of your
friends are broke when you want to
borrow a few dollars?
The level-headed man is not apt to
be a rounder.
The love of money proves that the
w-orld is full of rooters.
Nearly everybody In a small town
pretends to despise an amateur show
■—yet nearly everybody goes.
The man who first ate a lobster had
nerve, but he who first manipulated i
a dish of chop-house hash was a hero. 1
WANTED
HOMES FOR THE FAMOUS ^
FAULTLESS STARCH DOLLS
/Bond 8 top* from ten rent package* of Funltleoal
/Starch «nd ten cent* in «tan>p» no .cover po.to*ot
' «n.i packing) and so'- Mi-« Elizabeth Ann. 2 incheo I
high. Send three top* from ton cent package* and
■ I four cent* in ntnrop* and g« t Misa Phoebe Primm or
I Mina Lilv White, twelve Incheahigh. bond tope from
1\ Are cent pai kage* If you wiah. hut twice a* many are
V required. Out thU ad. oat. It wnl be accepted n
. plnce of one tea cent or two flee cent tor-,. nly
©u© ad. will bo accepted with each application.
* Write your name and addreea plainly.
THE BEST STARCH FOR ALL PURPOSES
FAULTLESS STARCH C0^^||j;
KANSAS CITY. MO.
m
F
m
You Look Prematurely Old
Beoause of those ugly, grizzly, gray hairs.
‘LA CREOLE” HAIR DRESSING. PRICE, SI.OO, retail.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Ragland, J. H. The Okeene Leader. (Okeene, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1913, newspaper, September 5, 1913; Okeene, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1172437/m1/3/?q=virtual+music+rare+book: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.