Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 15, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 18, 1943 Page: 1 of 6
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PATROLMEN CHARGED IN SHOOTING
!_ iii _ .. J ----___ « ■- - 1 y*- I ■ 'i " "
Allied Forces In Italy Regain Lost Ground
And Push Nazis Back; Isles Off Naples Held
BOND DRIVE AT
HALFWAY MARK
THIS WEEK-END
Aussies Take Lae Today
After 12 Day Jungle War
WITH AUSTRALIANS. LAE.
Guinea. S'-pt. 16. < Delayed* (IP>—
New outside the town until Portresses had
unleaded the- last bombs and fighters
By Richard D. McMillan
United Press Staff Correspondent
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS. Sept 18
(UP-Allied armed forces have seized
three more islands—one within artil-
lery range of Napl's—off the west
coast of Italy, while the fifth army
has captured the village of Raccadas-
pide in a drive deeper inland with sup-
Sapulpa And County Muddy Australian troops ciptured pi^ty^steht.
FATHER DRAFT
CONGRESSIONAL
DEBATE DELAYED ,n',x
The Italian Island of Proclde, two
_ . ~ . . . ... miles long and 12 mUes southwest of
Question Recessed Until Napie was occupied by lhe Amc*
j win. iir J and iat r lhe larger uland ot Tsch^'
Monday When Word IS miles southwest of Naples, surren-
. _ lie* dered its garrison and was occupied.
IS Expected rrom. It controls the north end of the Gulf
i «« i ii of Naples and the sea approaches to
General Marshall, that great port toward which the
—— fifth army—now firmly join1 d with the
WASHINGTON. S**pt. 18 <LP>— British 8th army—Is pushing^
A third Island. Ponza, which lies
%.
there Congressional hearings on the father
Rome and 67 miles west of
SHOOTING OF A NAVY INDUCTEE, Howard Darnell. 22. of Detroit,
shown in a hospital, right, has led to the filing of six charges against
each of two Chicago policemen accused of seriously wounding the
youth while off duly. One of the two policemen, Joseph Murray, la
pictured left The shooting occurred in a cafe. (International*
Washington and Moscow
Headed Toward Basis of
A Better Understanding
HfTVC Reported Half Lae today and the only live Japanese Craters pockmark the town Here
____ . , left were a few prisoners, their arro- and there lay a Japanese body the
Their Quotas In With gance gone Australians hadn’t time to bury Not
IJ J Ilf I *L J Wreckage of 15 or 20 bomoed Jap- 100 yards from headquarters a Jap-
rlard Work Ahead. anese planes lay the Lae airdrome unese marine was stretched where
_ area but the runway can be put to a gun gat him while he ate a can
Sapulpa had practically reached the Immediate use. of pineapple,
halfway goal today in the war bond The commanding ertitter of an ad- 'British radio rtraft question have been recced un- south
ulth a total of $311455 75 sold vanced Australian force which swept were many cases of alcide ameng d wtvn the final word Is Naples, also was seized.
In this area The local quota Is the Japanese from the Markham rlv- the Japanese a here they had bom " f oin Oco!ge C Mar- The fifth army, which now has pwih-
S64J 050 er valley ran up the Australian (lag themselves up with their own gren- "MI " ;v,Pf ! ed about 13 miles inland on the Sal-
The county likewise was at the from the signal tower and tired ades > ‘ ^ do-' bilitv that Bernard erno front and stU1 J?
halfway mark with $.586.929 75 of the troops cheered. Y.sterday a suicide squad of Jap- a JUlll> retiring enemy, was gtv n the beneflt
*1^4000 quota retort'd in. The 12-day bottle lor Lae estab- are-'* momei.tarily slack'ned the _■ „,n‘ .d ‘ p Bvrr„, of aerial cover from flelcK Including
I * Drive leaders urged Sapulpans to lished a record for this type of jun- Australian drive at Edward- planta- r?renUvdcon-DleUd »«t man Montecorvino, within the ^™°sec*
(Uc a lltUe deeper during the next gle fighting. What remained of the Uon tut half of them were killed, * v £ VX i and no long.er had, ‘-.'furrier?
vre-k and invest In war bonds "This b mb-rerirred township was deserted The advance was through a lane of - " . -iimittce wit- *l6bter suPP°rt *rom^lr^ra*M that th"
:8 'a TJv said Zty coordinators The enemy troop, the A. I. F didn’t condoned enemy wea^ns and am- ot closln« committee wit- (ln lo ndon It was ^los^t halt £
Harold Dodd and Lon Jackson. kill or capture fled with our troops ir.muuon pvt R-„ Evans Senate debate on a bill by Sen. ^K^ipt»rt oT^Ultary operations In
Guy Beny. county chairman, was °0_ their^he#* ^ ^______ (hc ccmiriV d. Burton K Wheeler. D MtL, to t^„ \\ days after the Salerno Jn-
niro >P'irrir# county areas to renewed So swift was the advance that the of f^ney driver o tjc defer drafting pre-Pearl Harbor fath- v^^ flying an average of more than
efforts. _ trPm the wrtheact who got tng ofilcrsjeep. captur.d two Jup Jan scheduled to star. 5^ l^unblng sorties a day to provide
stone wos being left unturned in two hours antad of those ir ni anese huddled in a car one naa » w *
the realization of full quo- the other side—actually had to wait oavonet but he didn t use It.
Naval Station
Blast In N. J.
Is Fatal To 24
WASHINGTON. Sept. 18 <LP)—
President Rooscvelt’j war message
references to the red army and a
western (second* European fc'nt may du,tries,
N'
toward
tas
On Sept 28 the third edition of
Bondzabustln will be presented here
at the junior high school audito-
rium under the auspices od the Jun-
ior Chamber of Commerce as a part
of the month’s drive Camp Gruber
wll. bring entr rtainment features here
on this occasion
Investments from the county, m-
and
Tuesday.
| In the
Houston’s Gull
Area Is Bracing
Milk Shortage Is
Becoming Nation’s
business firms and many
t-’st the accumulating evidence that other sources ate helping swell the
collaboration between Washington figures toward the final goal but
Against Hurricane No. 1 Food Problem
HOUSTON. Texas Sept 18 (LP>— WASHINGTON Sept 18
500 bombing
record aerial support for such an
Interim, congressmen are operation. On 56 occasions Alll'd
<udyin? the Batuch’s recomrrenda- bombers carried out attacks in direct
turns based on his west coast survey. ajr support of the Invading troop6.
The report was designed to cover once dropping almost 400 tons of bomba
only west coast aircraft plants but 0n Nazi headquarters at Frascati.
Baruch said ‘some of its recom- Other raids were on communications,
mendations can be appUed else- air fields, railroads and brld*“
where “ The capture of the islands off Naples
As a result of the report-,ub:nlt- veas one of^the mostOfficial
♦ed Aug 19 but hen to'ore kept se- ments ^“da^u, urovide
rrc:-BjTr.es Instituted on the west statements because tte^ wU^p^vld^
coan a program
channelim; of labor to vital Indus-
reduction of labor hoarding Naples^ Qf 0„ lhe Gulf
of Naples surrendered to Allied naval
— the communique
luted on the west siau-niniw .U, _ M«rit W
for mere efficient flanking bases agains G'
Clark's main Immediate objectives
i trie,
(UP—War aud transfer of wf,r contracts from
aeute labor shortage areas.
NORFOLK. Va Sept 13
Twenty-three sailors and n Wave are d|ffPrPnt
dead today following a mighty explo
si on at the naval air base here, and
It Is feared more of the critically In-
jured may succumb before the day
Is over
and Moscow is .novlng rapidly toward Individual citizens are urged to make
a baas cf beti.-r urdeistanding. their investments as large as possi- ----- ” "r-,'nffirials aer ed a ute labor mortage an-ai. w«nb*r 16” the communique
c« s %m -m«- r - srs szrsjz'Si an -s ^ ssk&sv ."skk
SS.WS*-. xzrp&ppy? s vgs sTtr.-rtri tssss jST-Ktjs rssjr
over and over again. _ I The Houston weather bureau an- oniciais --- — 11
invasion of Oenr. >ny ltcrif." and rc-
buked those who hive clamored for
war strategies to aecom-
rnec ate specific theaters-such as an
invasion of western Eirope or an
acvplerat'xi pace in the Pacific.
Tnere Las been no previous indi-
_ , . . _ ____cation that Washington or London
I*le.L*P. “ °H; knew whether Prune Minuter Joaef
Stalin intended lo sena his arinles
ir.lo Germany or to •■’tep at what
hr regard, as the western frontier
of the Soviet Union There has been
plenty of evidence that both Wash-
ington and London would like to
“ammunition in transit." rocked the
City of Norfolk yesterday morning,
shattering windows two miles away
and could be heard at Suffolk 20 miles
from its point of origin.
Th re was been no report as yet
from a four-man naval board appoint-
POLIO CLASSES
HERE COMPLETED
officials . ----
, .. . ,v-o . ...r*. Milk shortages have become acute lctor budgeting in shortage areas un- ready have occupied about twice «
noiinced chat the stonn. of - 'tre due to heavy demands der a program which would amount ^ Italian territory on the maln-
and ‘ dangerous proportions, was^ ex- military and lend-lease " ’ ‘ ’ ------- -------------
. . , .w u> cc.c ________________________ Many to decentralized national service leg- land ^ they did in occupying Sicily,
pected to strike inland In the Free- dalrmen a^0 have sold off their herds islation. which required 37 days of fighting.
p-rt-Galveston area of the lexas becausf hlgher (e d and labor costs Biruch would have the war xan- The Allies now appear to control
c'art late this afternoon or tnmght make producUon unprofitable at pres- commission direct the flow of about n.679 square miles In Italy pro-
Pusiness at both Galveston and
A report of the polio classes held apparent focal points
here tins week, spo’iaored by the - - —
p. A- P W club, reveals that 60 wo-
men attended. The classes wer, con-
ducted by Miss Jessie Younger
prices
The WFA plans to announce a na- cnt and product needs
labor to plants on the basis of urg- per as compared to approximately 9.-
• T—___ mi : 1 _ 'T'W. Vf a I inn lfIVQ a
ed to investigate the tragedy, nor nave uv answer to tnn question ana -- „• nurse
would the navy disclose any further many others regarding Russian plans ‘ L*. ‘ Bt)V gcouu acted as P»-
detalls and strategy . . ,v.p . lnanrn
Fire following the expiation destroy- But despite unavoidable diff.cul- _
ed three hang rs at the air station, ties in our relati?ns wiUi Moscow,
and other buildings were damaged, there is encouraging and public evl-
Wlndows at the past and throughout dence of more understanding col
the northern section of the city were labomticn in all ph; -ses or the war ---• .. w, _-i.
broken by the concussion effert except our engagement with ' olun • s
Th- number of dead, first reported tj,p .Japanese Stolin Is playing hands corned
to be 17. rabidly mounted during the off ---1—
____ — The last weather bureaa
Following these classes an urgent the stifj waming that
need for packers In the polio war at re,aching a
St. Johns hospital In Tulsa has been couid tie expected
nh.'ses of the war announced.
‘ with Volunteer- workers
and if on full time
shift.
afternoon as those mast seriously in- jV' u.^U wcrw' rondttloms''Ini-terUllv Workers would b- tn wards where
. ..........„ ________ l411 _ ,_________Em- 900 mUes in SicUy. The Italian inva-
the storm was paralyzed Virtually tl3nal program shortly to limit fluid „ioym wouid have to do all their si3n has been in progress 15 days,
all ctcies nave been closed for two mllk distribution, but the question h,riUK fron- the 'AMC pool and work- Reported officially still holding firm-
dav. ~ 0f production remains to be solved. would be limited in their choice ly the initiative, the fifth army has
Repcrts from Freeport said the sen Rob rt F Wagner. D N Y.. . . regained all ground lost to the Ger-
town’d population had dropped from said he believed some form of subsidy Baruch renor'ed there Is labor- mans - arlier this week and now Is mov-
z.’.t. ;* mmm mmrn
in
jkPaa mule eimcinv nittnx vpx• i* *o i a-* -1 • • •
contract
tncen-
until rency commi ........ .............
Is chairman . , ,, -----
One was a flat subsidy to producers A stjokesman for a group oi u> American Flying Fortresses and me-
et things
the cen- Food' TrimmisTrator Marvin Jones *5Pe cf contnf^ n-^ .c^as 'mt'uri th^Nazl command’appeard to be pull-
. nf thp arfa lRC proposed three milk subsidy plans yes- that cost-plus be replaced as ravid-i ^ lu forces ,or defense of an
At H Jon th^ barometer had ’erdav to the senate banking and cur- as posMble by ' ^inict wh^ch llne from gaierno to a point
f„nP ^tonriUv' fmm mk n eht until renev committee, of which Wagner would give manufacturers an tncen nQrth q{ Brlllsh.heid Bari on the east-
fallen steadily from mlon.giu unui ; ,rman tive to reduce costs. .
tiie last r< port at 6 am. __ a fiat snhsidv to Droducers A SDOkesman for a group of ln-
------------- — • . uiuu aviiu wuuH-v/iu Old hurricane hands along the e5tlmat,d C06j jso.OOO.OOO over a dustrial manufacturer.- also thought dlum powers from the northwest Af-
S toleStelnpSU£urer^of ’M-?U <? St S? TtioSTinSStoi may^ll ££ “*?. prid“t*dJhf-.!L0^1 T'8 ’. X?. three-month period The second was Batuch’s praposals ^wmh Jrv.n^ rican alr ,orces .truck out ahead_of
enlisted personnel
The Biimter ^ Favorabln developments already In-
rried meTcomldtred U, be tn ert'- ^ ^ian parttejljation in the
tical condition Ita!lan a™lstlce commission and the
The Wave. Seaman 2nd Class Ell- sicn-to-be-announced cifation of a
zab'th Korensky. Philadelphia, is be- permanent Mediterranean commission
lleved to be the first member of the with Atiglo-R'if-vlar>-American mini-
naval womens auxiliary to be killed bership. Tliat. gives th» three great
in line of duty powers engaged in the Eutopean
- theater a forum for discussion of
Edith Cowman
go much has been demanded of
workers on the Job that they are
near exhaustion in the Tulsa polio
warns, it has been sUted.
he increasing In intensity as it dal- & combinatipn of producer subsidies and declared that
lied tn the gulf, nudging and bat- ^ areas where milk costs now are high contracts were a ''necessity at the_______________
tcring its way against a hlgli pressure and prlce celllng mcreases in low cost bee inruns' of the war, the govern- Mare o{ R0me, destroying many
coid front sweeping down from the arf£US xhe third was a feed subsidy ,nent was now discouraging this type afrcn-aft on the ground. Other planes
though cost-plus the advancing armies to pound enemy
airfields at Camplno and Prattica Di
IT. ma**** «*>’
HEN GOES MATERNAL
LOS ANGELES Cal (UP' Ben Burke
has a Rhode Island red hen that has
the maternal instinct devoted to the
Although pr vlously
in the;
when she woke up one morning and
BEN REITER IS
TAKEN BY DEATH ST &TSS ’Si
- . Al'o encouraging is the plar. for sjtpped mto hrr nest the night before.
Ben Reiter, age 70. retired grocer- „ meeting of foreign ministers in ‘h(, began at once mothering the whole
man of this city, died yesterday at his m rerw. perhaps next mon'h, which M M though she was an old hand at
residence at 1141 East Hask' ll avenue
He is survived by his widow. Mrs
Ada Reiter; by two daughters. Mrs
Wade Manning. Sapulpa, and Mrs
still ts r,n official secret hereabouts
but appears in news dispatches from
London. No cne reasonably familiar
with the Lackpround ot Russian
Jancie Myers. Pampa. Texas, by three Amer'ran lela'lons or with the ear-
brothers. Andrew. Albert and Frank. nf>st ,,ff ,rtJi to arrange a Ro. sevelt-
of Kansas and a sister, Mrs. Chris- fjhurchill-dtalm conference would
tine Wheeler. New Orlearuv fall ,0 g|Ve Vie. Roosevelt high murks
Funeral rites will be held at 2 oclock conduce of our relations with
Monday afternoon at the Skinner ,ne conmci fnr Pllmc
Kr-RT’ -6ur- « >“Sa;:s££il‘ iS&
The botiv will be taken to Coffeyvllle buttons to allied Russian policies,
early Monday by the Landrith funeral too
home R-v Jeter of the North Ridgeway But some of lhe pr., age.
in Mr
the game
Rockies. to keep feed costs in line with milk
At Galveston, only a few restau- prices. estimated to cost $28/^)0.000 for
rants, rtiug stores and grocer stores three months 'The cost of the sec-
remained open You couldn't buy a ond pian was not given *
pair of socks or get a shave without a farm bloc group, headed by Srn
standing in a line longer than that John Bankhead. D. Ala . who Is also
of a Hollywood premiere on the banking and currency commit-
Storm-wise residents pondered over tee. countered Jones' suggestion with
rep rts and shook their hearts in a demand for a price increase af one
wonderment The hour for the storms cent a quart to producers
a’Tlval had been set five times, and He said he was not “heU-benf
five times it had failed to arrive. against subsidies, but doubted that
For mure than nine hours Friday Jones' proposals would solve the prob-
the storm had held stationary In lem
(Continued on Page Two
of contract.
B. & P. W. Club Meet
One cent may not sound like much."
t'ontir'ied on Page Two.
Badoglio Escaped Throagh German Lines Around
Rome; Held Safe In Allied Controlled Territory
Rv Phil Anil 1 His arrival In Allted-held territory German headquarters at Milan were
United Press Staff Correspondent In Italy assured Anglo-American au- reported to have ord red the modlll-
t nVDON Sept 18 (U P*—Premier thorltles of contact with th only le- zatlon of all Italian soldiers in the
Ptruo Badoglio escaped gaily-con.-muted government of Italy territory under its control and at the
- So far as la known, there la no civil same time increased patroLs which have
blasted and strafed enemy troops on
roads around the battle zone and main-
tained patrol over the battle area
An air communique disclosed that
I U U I MicrKt Allied fighters and flghtrr-bombers
IS irPlCl L.aSI lxlgiiu Q0W wpre operating from airfields on
- the Italian mainland, enabling them
The Business and Professional Wo- to Increase their already record aerial
men's club held a dinner meeting umbrella ov-r the ground forces
,meiu at *he Loraine Coffee For the third straight day. the Allied
Sod and later met at the Sapulpa air squadrons failed to encounter any
L. enemy planes,
son-ice center. ullle S;,n- 'These recent bombing attacks.
Ninth district dlr^ . reaching extr me concentration Sept,
decs of Clamnore. w» 'the ^ ^ ^ Qf battle ta
speaker. Sh? outlinec. aims Salerno area, have been virtually
the federation and ninth district for uncomested by mp
Marshal
Baptist church here, will accompany Roosevelt's war massage may temnt throifh .^‘.s,t,ar°^d ^JJay' aovennnent'’actir« iu "the 'oerman-oc- been arresting all Italian male civilians
Moscow to challenge his logic. He lt was revealed ?u^ed portion of the country between 18 and 40 Many civilians
the funeral party
____________ had the choice in drafting his m»v-
FAMINE PLAGUE# INDIA sage of tempering his remarks to
NEW DELHI. India. Sept 18 (IP) Russian sensibilities or of mislead*#
—Famine Is cre«plng across Iivalii's hl< oven people regard mg th* immi-
most lienvlly p:painted provincr of ^nce of » second front in western
Bengal and responsible sources »»- Fu"fpg. He argued thm W» terewte
sert tl'flt at least 150 persans ar« m« giving Russia much Rhs‘s*a*
c'yinz daily In Calcutta iikuw dus to by out mUliArv aperirttans a#
hunger and disease In Calcutta, as the world, notably m nw\
well ns tn other parts, of Bengal, one obja^ted to etrtlcs
hears again and acain the wail for each front * parately
"rice" but authorities say there is
Swiss report* said that Oerman ef- alrt ady have been shipped in box cars
and is safe in
nomlrlynnanctal ^nd foTte “to s7t"u^ a new Fascist puppet to unknown destinations, a frontier
wno would
and
view
not enough to go around d'-spite nf
forts and appeals.
Walking through the streets
dawn the writer saw dozens
on the sidewalk" where they had
collapsed 'rout hunger.
BUDGET PROTEST4NTS MEET
A prntesiants meeting on county
budgets foi the purpose of reviewing
the year. Three others of Claremore
attended Mrs. Florence Reynolds was
in charge of the meeting.
These new members were Initiated
Mrs. Agnes Drewry. Lula B Andrewu,.
and Elizabeth Hoagy.
Patsv Andrews, accompanied by
Mrs. McMichael at the piano, gave
a vccal solo.
RODEO SHOW WILL
START NEXT WEEK
There'll be a oig t'mc in the old
town next weekend when one of the
German troops were reported to have blRgest travelling rodeos in the ccun-
- for a three-day pe-
Up club. , . __ Naples. Thursday night.
The date Is Sept 24, 25 and 28. Reynolds Packard, United Press war
The place is at the city park. correspondent wtth the fifth army, re-
Rodeos will be held each after- icontinued on Paee Two,
nlioL slue,- the Oerman occupation support and rumors were circulating completed the occupation of large try comes here for a tnree-aay pe Prrmy communltsations at Po-
BadogUo -star vh* that the former Duce actually Is dead towns in Lombardy province by seizing | Hod sramsored by the local Round (enM ^ 75 mUes MUtheast of
reB ^ aumo -ed dispatch dateltned Radio Berlin ate sought to quiet Como and Varese At Como O-.rman -«..k ------- —--*•*
"whth Orn EUenhowe? at an advanc- the d-ath rumors by broadcasting a Tiger tanks moving across the piazza
Allied command past” tn the Medl- report that Berlin morning newspapers cavour ran into high tension wires
- - j. saiH ti,p Allies recog- were printing photographs of the for- dropped by saboteurs and 13 were set
o.™.n mn.rol,« vtchy „d J “sss/nr.s"pri: jrr ™
iSs rrj-.rs ssLffsaawJssa r ~
ernoon *n"“i m rt-own as trie "pt*vUton#l seat gf the Fascist the pope might lead to an open change at t oclock
I
!Y
ess )
MY.
oush
weU
nore
teglc
lean
oved
Tont
the
reat-
i toe
had
were
iner,
t an
wift-
(ress.
lam-
enemy." the com-
munique said. "His available strength
has been concentrated in intermitent
small-scale efforts against shipping."
Two enemy planes were shot down
off Salerno Thursday night, while
three AUied planes were lost during
the 24 hours ended.
Once again American Liberator bom-
bers from the middle-eastern command
joined In the aerial offensive, putting
ray and railroad Junctions out of
action in a heavy raid on Pescara, on
the Italian east coast 115 miles north
of Naples.
Bridges across the Uescara river
were hit and a large oil fire was start-
ed.
British Liberators and Hallfaxes,
also from the middle-eaatem command,
Buy. sell, rent
trade
elfecttve Dully Herald want ads.
using I All departmental budget." were dls-
KlftR Victor Emmanuel IU and CYowji 1111 pi#vtsk>n*l geat yi th,
1 Prince Umberto to Sicily iu had Va n governin' ill
in the political attitude of the few
1 cussed.
taken to Atnca
cur| th- unrgat remaining neittral states
Old papers for sale at Herald office, aftemoqp,
sslng
Vreas
d no
and
rhlch
has
• of-
otten
. the
and
joln-
» as
e In-
ihera
i last
. tat
» for
asm-
uodos
Oen.
cam-
lsque
a “a
Ital-
rltlsh
Afro-
four
cap-
ihow-
h al-
Lteut.
army,
os of
said,
ifhth
meed.
a the
iplsts
below
coast
cap-
fifth
n the
army
In Its
from
d run
demo,
lng a
Naples
Naples
zdcast
troops
alerno
. with
* and
. field
vaders
i, pro-
to ro-
il and
fifth
in of
<1 and
id yes-
of the
sneen-
offen-
troop
satlons
s was
led to
§ and
rralcan
tya af-
effact
rs dis-
d sup-
•d the
Weather
OKLAHOMA: Warmer today and
tonight; wind 25 mUes an hour west
and north central portions this
ltd the
of an
to was
i Cor-
se the
Italian
1 them
f Oer-
• VV*s
m
taoe-w,
w
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Young, John W. Sapulpa Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 29, No. 15, Ed. 1 Saturday, September 18, 1943, newspaper, September 18, 1943; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1525579/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.