Pittsburg County Guardian (McAlester, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 30, 1920 Page: 4 of 8
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the pittsrurg county guakdi vm
The Pittsburg County Guardian
(ESTABLISHED
fiit.
FORK 10ST A. GARItKTT
Published livery Thursday at
118 North Main St riot, McAlester, Oklahoma.
Editor anil Publisher
One Year-
ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS
Phone No. 4.19
— In Advance
Entered as second clas- mall mattei March 1, 11)17, at the postoffice at
McAlester, Oklahoma, under the Act of March .'1, 187'J,
Any erroneous reflection upon the character or standing of an> person,
film or corporation which appeal, in this papei will he gladly corrected'
if brought to the attention of the publishers'.
Don't worry about a new set of,
New Year's resolutions. Your last
year's set still have all the "shine",
on 'cm, like as not.
President-Klect Harding says that window at a time when the"waiting-1
he will announce his cabinet in Feb- room was crowded, ti.i.. .i I
Reports from Tulsa state that the
police officers of that city were
4 greatly mystified" in trying to run'
down a couple of thieves who had '
lobbed the clerks at the depot ticket |
ruary. Until then, the cabinet will on of the
be in the locker, so to speak. | to become
This is the sea-
par when it is very
.... * i
mist -ified, hut we hope
r- l, r ... . i ""thing so serious as this really hap-
When (.reek m«-et.s Greek they pened to the Tulsa police while on'
set up a shine |>arlor close to some duty.
hotel lobby and in a few months own !
"Don't drive with the belief that
the pedestrian is familiar with the i
rules of the road." says a bit of ad-
the whole landscape.
Let's see: How much do you sup-
pose the city treasury lias been en
riched the past year by fines for
traffic ordinance violations?
Paradoxical as it may seem it is
.ill quite true that the more Clara-
fied the Hamon case becomes the man
difficult it is to explain as an acci-
dent.
Another insect that ought to be
introduced to the germ killer is the
professional bondsman for law-break-
ers, all the way from the booze ped-
dlers to the bogus-check ertists.
President Harding received a grand
spread of Xmas presents last week,
ranging all the way from cigarettes
to 'possums. What do you suppose
the 'possum thought about the fellow
that sent in the cigarettes?
v'c<;to auto-drivers. It isn't the lack
,a.T'lm,"t-v w'th the rules of the
road that bothers the poor pedestrian
like it is the lack of ability to figure
out the rules of the particular au-
tomobile driver that he has to cross
bats with every 30 seconds, and who
may be driving an automobile when
he ought to be taking treatment in
an infirmary for daffy-dills.
The
The Oklahoma tax late i
high. Anybody that feels like
getting $4.82 cents worth of admin-
istration value for every $10(1 of
property he owns is just feeling fool-
ish. That's all.
. Shawnee News thinks the
single tax idea is becoming more or
less popular in Congress. Let us,
hope it becomes more. The single
tax idea is not a bad one at all It I
would force out the land-grabbers,
who buy up a little vacant stuff here
and there and sit tight waiting fori
their neighbors to improve adjacent
pioperty to make their own valuable
— and with never a thought of doing!
too | any improvement themselves. Of -.ij
he is lank iinil ci'Hil,l«.. ....... u .. ,
After the next president announces
his cabinet, it will be in order to foim
rank undesirables, gentlemen of this
class measure well up toward head
\\ hen we reflect on the fact that
the farrrtcrs and stockmen are work-
ing overtime trying to make both
nds meet, with the present dis
a new society entitle,I "The Amalga- ' I.(,.t i . /bsrupt-
mated Association of Almost Cabinet ! doesn't t-ik.. Inn t" '."'lct's* 't
Members." From present indications 1 h- * !' "! ""
it would lUTT the American Legion a',,. „„ .i,,, . 1 m'mdual, whetli-
close second in membership. ! concern m- ti so,n<1 private
o 1 j lonctin 01 on the pav-roll of the
■tat.. county or city, who goes around
acting for a raise, when lie is en-
•oyinjr a reasonable
should not only he
should he
the peace.
The Old Year Passe
The winds that from the Northland blqw,
From regions of eternal snow,
At midnight now are chanting low ^
Their Miserere drear
The while the Old Year, bent anc^
Goes desolate upon his way
A King without a realm to sway,
Like sad, discrowned Lear.
In silent woods low droops the fern
And seems for summer's flowers to
But holly berries gleam and burn,
To grace the Old Year bier;
And from the blue of heaven's expan*
The stars look down with pitying glai
And softened seems the radian
Of moon at midnightjjleSrt
The Old Year passes; lo! he stands
And watches Time's fast falling santis,
Like dying flames from dying ^
That soon will quejictHiW^igM;
And now a last flame fit^hroSys
Its flickering light o'er wintry stiow^
And lights the way the Old Year goes
To distant realms of night.
But while we stand, silent, devout,
O'er eastern hills, old Time's redoubt,
There comes a gladdening "Hail!" and sh
That brings to us new cheer. \ i
For Twenty-One, both lithe and young, ^
With merry peal from glad bells flung,^
Has come with joys as yet unsung—CIH
A new King now is here!
- t-HrfTsujJuth, in N. y. ivorij
Ponzi, the Swindler, sent gieetings
from his jail cell Xmas morning to
his many shorn creditors and "hoped
they would live to get their money
back." I'll fortunately they don't live
that long any more since the days of
Methuselah.
compensation,
'filed" bodily, but
prosecuted for disturbing
of Mini
S( HOOI
tatcd that the Miami
with 10 bov and
offering to students, want- an appiopimtion of
sugar grow- 0111 of the state fund to build
—u ' Xew ^ ork bankers a
Has anyone seen Clara winking the. lend .$.">0,000,000 to thi
other eye lately? If so, kindly wire!,.,- ,.f p,,i,., <„ ,, ,
it to the front-page, double-columned, j | . ' " 0 "'em from loss
editor of our "metropolitan noo. ' "'cau-eot stagnated conditions in the
papers " They are getting iow on ' market. Wouldn't it be well for the
I to remember that there are a lot of is to get a
1 ' ■", . K,">X|1iV'"'at-producei s, corn- will forever after have
.' s ,an.'Ls -breeders infesting a | come" from the state
school up and educating tin
I'hool
girl
OUR FARMER
FRIENDS:
As the Fall Season is drawing to a close and new plans
and arrangements are being- made for the coming year,
we invite you to place your account in our hands.
None of us can intelligently prophesy as to what the
coming year really holds in store; but friendly con-
nection with a strong bank is the liest security against
the uncertainties of the future.
THE OLD RELIABLE
THE BANK THAT SERVICE BUILT
TOM HALE, President
F. M. SOWi 1,, Cashier.
art, hasn't nearly so delicate a sen-,
of the aesthetic as the fellow with
• i) cents worth of "impression" that
h.' wants to convert into a few thous-
and dollars of good Oklahoma
money might suppose. Tln-re isn't a
b:t of danger that some infuriated'
ilizen will get out a wan ant chart
fuel.
Every good farmer should own his jai.soi'
own farm. Farm ownership, which. I section of the I'nited State-
to the farmer, means HOME OWN'-| "1!,t feel like they have the fi■—t ca'l
FT?SHIP i♦!- « .... n ..-on «n\ *> •* . <• c, ■ 1 i
KRSHIP, is the foundation sill of
farm success. If you haven't yom
own farm, Mr. Farmer, don't rest easy
until you get one.
Our notion is that the world will
either have reached a state of glor-
ious tranniiility or a degree of howl-
ing anarchy before this country will
ever lie able to get more than three
or four of its 105-odd million "best
minds" agreed on a world peace plan
at the same time.
my sort of financial loan New
lot, or anvother financial center can
make. I his is a mighty good time
toi our metropolitan financiers to nut
into practice the motto
First."
buildings with and establish the
school on a firmer basis. In otliei
words, Miami has joined the list of ing the statehouse custodian with
m ' state towns that thinks the main thing maintaining a nuisance, merely bo
" tate school" and then it cause the 640-acre tract between the
"steady in- fiont steps and the far-ava.v bend in
keeping the the North Canadian Riven isn't spik-
ed with Richmond roses and Prince
Feathers.
HERE'S ( H \XCE II VOl
WANT TO BE MAIL CLERK
Just
A tip to legislators: When the head
of some department come- snooping
around during the coming session of
the legislature and wants to get lu-
office force help increased, get liusv
with the hook and get you a new head
for that department The depart
ment head doesn't need more help
half ns bad as the help need a new
department head
Oh, yes; another beautiful thing
about a $2,000,000 state hospital
would be the battery of functionaries
that would have to be maintained the
year round on state pav. And rirht
now, what this state needs is the
lopping off of at least a dozen state
institutions, with their batteries of
functionaries, flunkeys and all
Governor Robertson is to be highly
commended for putting the brake mi
the pardon and parole business at
Christmas time. Anv govcmoi who
gets mushy and grants pardons and
paroles right and left on the occa
sion of the Christmas season is not
few years ago, the postal
authorities prohibited the circulation
of a genuine classic, The Kreutzer
Sonata, on the ground that it was too
obscene in its language. Yet tile
raciest pages of this famous Russ-m
story, are tame as a family nag and
White as a Illy compared with great
hunks of the nauseating stuff that
has Jwen hawked about in tho *o-
called metropolitan press of cer'ain
sections, since tho Hamon-Smith case
dragged its dreary self across the
pa a of the reading public. And they
all it news paver enterprise Ye
gods and little fishes
joung-
ters of the town at state expense.
We are willing to stake our reputa-
tion as a good gui -sor on the guess
that fully half of the so-called "no: -
mal students" in the state "normal"
America schools are not ready for normal
school training. Some of them, of
course, are, and should have it. But
everyljkdy who has taken the trouble
to look into these matters knows that
n t'nni ..-I,u i i i Examinations will be given at the
Lawton Muskogee, Oklaho-
ma ( itv, Shawnee, Vinita and Wood-
ward, to fill vacancies in the railwa
a laige proportion of the students at family wallet
i niei large bed of catnip and a '• Cnthi
i ng-branch for capitol law n deco-
at ons would have been fully as de-
■' ie from the standpoint of their
Meet upon the legislature and the
tatehoiise colony, and a long-shot
ffecti\'e as a picserver of the
Applicants must be ho-
of 18 and
tor mr
ucli institutions are "prep" students,
iust getting ready for the work that
the school was originally designed to
provide. Not only thi.-, but a large
proportion of such students comes
from the immediate neighborhood of
the school from the particular town
in which it is located.
■n other words, he is plumb tired of
these fancy ball effects, and he ha
a good and sufficient reason for beiii"
Weary of them. Let's pass th..-m up
th -os. ion for a change.
\\.
MORE MANAGER!\L
MACHINERY?
inclined to doubt tho
mail service
tween the
and must
110 pounds and. for women, at least
no pounds. The tests include spell-
ing, arithmetic, letter-writing, geo-
graphy. penmanship and copying
from plain copy. Salarv at entrance
M000 per year. Application blanks
may be had at the local postoffice or
by addressing the Civil Service Com-
mission, Washington, D. C.
n, at ' least U 'ifiht officiating.
In other words, many of these so-
called "state schools" are little le.-s 1 'iom of the "road superintendent" or
than state-supported high schools "road manager" idea of Senator E P
for these particular towns. Hill, as merely adding another bit
I hole is no more unfa'i method of of machinery to the operation of road
slipping something over the rest of --"ne it is ion. Unless it can be worked
0 'he state than in locating one of these out by the simplification and elimina-
From tho |„„L- ,.(• .1 ■ ., statr institutions, and in t on of some of the present machin-
looks of things, it would all fairness there should be a lot of cry, we don't see any use for it There
em that some of these drivelling abolishing before the "system" gets now the following plan in' effect ! tllou<rh, so far.no person appears "to
feature writers" who nn> ran, in„' any further hold on the rank and in handling county roads: Countv! "ave beon Particularly injured
SEVERAL Al'TO WRECKS
DI'RINC XMAS M EEK
The holidays wore pretty fair days
the auto repair man, judging by
the number of accidents reported
some of which were near serious, al-
on the very common-place trail'lTone ! filt °f f0mmuni.tips,°f state. Two
Glara Smith and who paint fo, ? WOuKI tak<
her wan fact '
genuine normal school
. , - care of all the actual needs of
bonne r f .j, f , day and her radiant state, for instance, and one <
e'o.tnlv l"'° l,v mo°nlight will maintained agricultural school
out next advising us to buy a state expense is enough The -
PiUed'vo'lnmn '''"mh- is Hue of "schools of mineralogy. ,i„ x
■in.I it i "i /• ' """derful life engineering, etc. The request for a county
r,lteS3Lh,,/#Trr;' t0 ^a^-^aWiKhed institution to meet burdens
world's best litlrat 1 of the j the whims of every cross-roads com- salaried
ti ^ . t♦ '«ltul< as ♦elopt^j },, munitv is the verv limit nf «mll TKo road vvn
Countv
commissioners, county engineer, coun-
ts- surveyor, road supervisors, fore-
p, , .. injured
line ot the smash-ups occurred on
the east end of the Grand Avenue
the men, etc. I his looks' like machinery ^ iaduct, Saturday aftemoon, as two
.•eli- enough. If the job of road superin-! 2utos attempted to cross the bridge
( '• • ' mer went to Hlock-
uesday to i.andle the William
i uck sale of livestock and farm
equipment. He reports an unusuallv
attractive sale. Mr. Buck is prepar-
ing to remove to near Hot Springs,
Aik., where he has bought a farm.
Mr. and Mi . Joe Cowell are plan-
ning to reuio > to Oklahoma City, Mr.
( owen, who has been with the local
postal service for several years, hav-
ing been promoted to service in the
Oklahoma City office. They will re-
move as soon as a home is secured in
Oklahoma Citv.
at tendent can be
ame county engineer
i , , , , ... ..... v./,..- ----- ■ officers in connection with a,rr'vn'' at the entrance to the bridW
Prof. Elliott, iriook "to 1. Bk.. o oe'o.l/ 'f r V*P't fc'a"'. The r0a Some«mos we think there *b? t.thp same time, it annears. and
lot of news-winno-n,. - i« . like a : pec pie of the state have a right to i< vast amount of pure illusion in 'ot'1 turned west. The Win en to
-D'lvined and m- ^ ,a.vr (ronp ["'am- call a halt on these various forms of this "supervision" and "managerial" f'c'B'hed ahead slightly un ettin.
Playing Santa Cbiu;: Ct I 1" the genera public y'Tnd thevc,it wanl^bl «oh«"ls If a town i.lea anvway-moiv than anvother and badly' daZgin" if
plainlv violating the law he is swoVn |t,newspaper the'dav" and ".tax-paye, has. to ^.te s_car_ was also ready foAhV
to uphold
, . . . ., class of stuff they
Senator Cabot Lodge. Vice-Pr - ^ueh Jl.'.i ° Was anothp|' namr f'"
dent Elect Coolidge and others took h riu8h-
part in a ceremony the other dav re- "
storing the famous Plymouth Pock
m re«ting-place on th,
various lines where
will he benefitted.
l ire Tuesda\ morning d/troyed
the junkshop of Pat Sweeney, on
North .Main Street Three horses in
a stall adjoining the building were
i> two j.'escued just in time to keep thorn
, v.. .v, wUIU. bridge I l'0?1 be,np wasted. Sweeney was not
>e combined with that of I M)ni oas^ at the same time. One I • .J?e the time of the blaze, it
ii , . ?er* then the ulan mav he ,>v ^ov ^ innate and the! '? s? nor it known how the fire
worth while and workable. Hut the | ot?®r by Elmer Sail is. started.
Mel Thompson, chairman of the Re-
publican county central committee,
was in the city Tuesday. Mr. Thomp-
son is regarded as one of the impor-
tant factors in the turn of the poli-
tical tide in the county in the recent
general election, and is being spoken
ot in connection with several politi-
cal plums that are to be plucked soon
by the doctors.
doesn't want to add anv new ^ '"K®te was driving south on Main
m the way of supervision 0r:a"ls was coming north Thev
a means to better enforce the
.saw-wr p":: i """ " Chi-
when !'■ o.iv s and let -tate institutions, as such, fill foot the hill for. We are aware tint repair man, but not to as burt
' °f ^ ^ i PaH°w!,ththa0 ^ Into" Tj
to getting better roads for the countv, charge of reckless driving. In police
but unless it can be done without am rourt Sallis was fined $10 and Win
I'OW DKHIN'G THE STATKHOl'ST! mon> l>n'aigement of the operative.: ,was acquitted. Sallis has an-
NOSE. 1 supervising and managerial force v.e Ppa'°o h>s case.
^ould h«vr to have more light than i n Another car. said to belong to Claud
The poor old state capitol needs /".J10,"' h<,>fore u\ to favor its adop- n.una^fn left the Jefferson Highway
As
"restor-^tv " Pnrt °f t,,p general! |,a^ nlnealVd" iVtii "f "'at C'ty 111010 n,onpy wi'h which to powder'its til,n fov t,1<, county
i . • nf 'he repub- m '1 a 10 the new governor of nose. The $200,000 appropriated In o
lican administration, but the farmer! the b!iaH°nfUn^"i^ tlu' ^l^'ation of the last legislature for beautifying " l,(',Kt.1 1N(;KI{KI'
and stockman would be more inter- U!elbo*rd of iwoles and pardon'-.
ested in it if it had a
bearintr on restoring the
more direct!
at least
It
. . grounds (for the benefit of'the I
1 his is good sense. stenogs on the third floor) didn't get!
VT ACT OF PARDON HOARD
• - I." KUUU sense. ^ 11 t
price of farm I * -not. on-v suspended for a J*er>' far because it took $147,000 to I That the indisci imin-itn nvt « •
?he level otete-^ % feCLST e'0Un" ^ ^
ife/nv its ^RMAiJkNT SUS- The people of Oklahoma, many of ( the ' U,°USm,r tho ,r" "*
j 'f1 one of the best means whom never have seen and never will
ot engendering respect for the law. the state capitol, would like to
„ , the present tow-sack arrange-1 know how much longer thev are go-
m< nt. with loop-holes here ami loop- intf to be bled to furnish appropria-
holes there, the average criminal nev ' • ■ ■ ■ '-
Railroad engineers out in Oregon
are endeavoring to get the legisla-
jPass a Jaw forbidding auto-
mobile drivers from racing with the
railroad trains for the railway cross
n}eaf.ure 18 as a mat -
ter of "protection to fool auto driv-
ers, it is asserted. This
, ,. average criminal nev- tions for what-nots and embellish-
> > ngures on serving a sentence, even monts for the said building and
fL„?r„V"C i" Al)d with the constant ffjounds. They are painfully wearv
ti,..;. .Pardons and paroles in °f the dull routine of "commissions
to j t hei i faces,
juries are becoming pain- for architects, landscape gardeners,
des of idiot. If he wants to'raceTor i box davnftm f a K'"ucllinK i'"'.1. a" tho Tst of the family' of'"ar
the crossing and get there just in room ,ln a j«r>- . JMSSL^"^0. "" "
us as a bad law. We can't see any I fully a
Tie j little «
Tor ■ box da;
in room t
in-! to pro|
«d | ors of
le- j time, t
of SnTner.i Vi„, ' ""ie 01 rne sun. 7 ra> me state capitol
then abolish it " bus,ne8s' an(} ?;s_n P'??e of business_ rather than a
good in trying to propagate thls sn'^! Mtt'le S"', °f lthe fact that it does mural decorators, gew-gaw peddlers
■ J,-A t" wants to r J'ttlf j,ood to sit in .1 iminiiinff <ind nil tho met nf tim • .a 1.. <1
get there just
for a first-class
0 it. What we i
rotect the sane
. instead of foste
nincompoops. The family
time to make up for a first-class fun i ! 'ryinff t?,reach a judgment as th.at something will be left off that
era], let him go to it. What we need ors of f LPlU™'S "l""} for the vio|at- 5V,fir'?t off<'nd the aesthetic sense of
Is more law to protect the sane ele ' limn ti, i ln the me n- the tax-payers by its omission.
ment of society, instead of fostering grows wth'ev^ °- 1cl'imina' aots t a ***" CiU7'? who ''avs th,>
the nincompoops. The family ,feever.v circle of the sun. taxes and regards the state capitol
apitol
-han a
j consen'atorj- of cracked ideas in near-
irousing the
leading judicial minds of the
country is shown in a dispatch from
Chicago, which asserts that Federal
•ludge Kenesaw I.andis, of that city-
was angry when he heard the other
('a\ that someone in Washington had
sent an order to Leavenworth prison
setting free James A. Dorsev, mil-
lionaire Illinois cattle king, sen-ing
an 8-year sentence for selling tuber-
cular cattle to farmers over the
country. The original sentence had
been commuted to 4 years and last
week a full pardon was issued liv
the L. S. Pardon Board.
Judge Landis was about to sen-
tence Thomas Conroy, Merville P
Burke. Ernest R. Bramlev, Fred Let-
teau, C'hauncey Harrison' and Daniel
and David Ahammo for breaking the
about two miles south of the city
it was Passing a culvert, and when it
••topped at the bottom of the little
,!taVw-;' VT S° bf},'lv wrce^ed that
u > "ai(l several hundred dollars
wouldI be required to put it in usable
twk"ed°ei |f,'0nt wheels weiV
tested clear back to a close neigh-
borhood of the rear wheels, and the
ei'ed Thhedm?H,im' was ''adlv splin-
Tbe ml V "nhurt.
I be machine was a brand new 7-
passenger Buick, driven only three
iT t ' u,R sa ' A nrw casin - attach-
ow-ner <\Var an<l Which had cost the
toTnn I ' Tt" rePorted to have been
ovemiCari Whi,° remained
eve 1711ght at the place of the wreck
*s happened Christmas eve
w"i, mPI- accJdprlt reported was on
almost opposite the Keuhner Hotel'
llZ"? Jt,s' tho north-bound car
\eeied to the west side of the street
and crashed into the car of Phil
Keuhner, owner of the hotel, it
The fire department has returned
to the fne station, after "camping
out for several weeks following the
lire at the central station which put
the quarters in such a state of dis-
lepair that it was necessary to get
a temporary lodging for the equip-
ment on Grand Avenue. The station
has been so far repaired as to pro-
vide for the return of the trucks.
(Dec
' j920> Jan. 6, 13, 1921.)
notice of publication.
o. . „ No- R256.
State of Oklahoma,
Pittsburg County.—ss.
r W' L.vnch, Plaintiff, vs. Mamie
Lynch, Defendant.
t1 thc. DJstl'Lct, Court of Said County.
State of. Oklahoma to the Above
t Defendant:
Said defendant, Mamie Lynch, will
ake notice that she has been sued in
the above named court for a divorce,
on the grounds of desertion, and you,
said defendant, must answer the'pe-
tition filed therein bv said plaintiff
on or before the 30th day of February,
or said petition will be taken as
H"? ana a judgment for said plain-
tiff will be rendered accordingly.
MACK LESTER, Court Clerk.
Bv Margaret Grady, Deputy Clerk.
Thos. W. Smith, Atty. for Plaintiff.
-eals and robbing freight car when i stood parked bv the en..k;„ v
he Ilea:d of the Dorsev pardon i was hui but V„ rl K' Nw onc
He leaned back in his chair, his Tabout J75 wort^ "5n7 need'
fate blushed. "I can't sentence you I make it ready fo se. 'L °nn,f to
men today in the face of thi- news." These are iust « f , f.f'
he said. "Vour robbery involved onl>' I reported. ' ' cases
a few hundred dollars. The robberies j 2^
ot this man who bus just been tet 1
free, involved hundreds'of thousand.- 'Z **********
of dollars ,n money and the healt of
hundreds of thousands of people.
"I would advise you when you get
to prison to get in touch with Dorsev
and learn how he did it. It would be
edifung to learn the methods of the
Pardon Board. Then you won't need
to worn about how heavj a / nt ne
I give you."
* ADDITIONAL LOCALS. *
★
,, °f Indianola, was in
■McAlester Tuesday on business.
K. II. Matthews, republican rep-
resentative-elect from this countv. is
in Oklahoma City to attend the cau-
cus of republican members of the
legislature, scheduled for Friday of
this week.
\\ • i,. Dysert and Miss Mary South-
aid were united in marriage fast Sat-
urday afti 1 noon at the home of the
bride s mother, Mrs. Mary Southard,
-18 West Comanche, Rev. W. M.
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Garrett, Forrest A. Pittsburg County Guardian (McAlester, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 19, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 30, 1920, newspaper, December 30, 1920; McAlester, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc141703/m1/4/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.