Muskogee Daily News (Muskogee, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 193, Ed. 2 Sunday, January 17, 1926 Page: 1 of 8
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HA TBOX FIELD NEEDS YOU; YOU NEED HA TBOX FIELD
TODAY
YNEWS
Arthur BrisbaneVOL XXIII No. 193
MUSKOGEE, OKLA., SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 1926
PRICE 2 CENTS
BIG WELCOME AWAITS LEGION’S CHIEF
BURKE ADMINISTRATION IS ROUTED
WdWorture | ANOTHER EXAMPLE |DELEGATES TO
PLAN
CARL W. HELD,
con-
call-
con-
COMMANDEH McQl IGG
•!BIfl CHANGES
/X)RN prices arc low, "liogs
high." This puzzles farnr
Tom Graves, detective, becomes I afternoon and mlght be lal(1 be I
for th«
the
EX-SOLON ENTERS 'PEN'
house
of
BRUSSELS, Jan.
THE DAILY NEWS
THE WEATHER
was not1
destined to be
forty millions
in population
An adequate
center of that
the
sub-
Hale left the Jail today for the
first time since his arrest January
measure
for pre-
Weaver,
County
careful
bo
the
On the contrary, it was
that perhaps Russia's ab-
will facilitate greater har-Smacks Too Much of Protec
five Project For Indian
Commissioner, They SayConvention Twice Overrides
Rulings of Chairman; De-
nunciation Is Withdrawn
have'
said I
the |
able
C. It. Hinson be-
crowtl discovered
waa not his own.
All But Four Bodies Are
Recovered From Wilbur-
ton’s Coal Mine Disaster
OSAGE MURDER
CHARGES COME
UP FDR PLEAS
An-
etc.
For the ANSWER as a great
woman novelist sees it readPublicity, Estate and Inherit'
ance Taxes Will Fur-
nish Pyrothechnics16 Caskets, Piled Three High,
Are Transported At One
Time to Cemetery
unrecovered
They are ex-
to be found before night-
DEAD HAULED
TO GRAVE BY
TRUCK LOADSIN THE
SOUTHEAST
CORNER
Woman Stabbed 30 Times By
Insane Man and Wife While
Held to Improvised Altar
MARRIAGE CAST
ON THE SCRAP
HEAP?LONDON, Jan. 16.—(INS)—
Some six hundred British inves-
tors are convinced that bootleg-
ging is unprofitable. During the
bankruptcy examination of
Broderick Hartwell, the rum
running baron, it was stated that
about $1,250,000 is owing to some
six or seven hundred creditors.
It is understood many of them
are investors in Sir Broderick's
rum venture. Seizure of 36,000
cases by prohibition authorities
and the failure of a partner to
account for the sales made is said
to be responsible for the failure.
The Pay of Judges.
The Right Air Ports.
Soup Is Good For You,
Our Land Is Booming.
state governments sharing in the!
levies.
the Izetinier
announced a
After spending the greater
part of five mlnutwi tn attempt-
ing to unlock the door of a small
coape jiarkeal on Fourth street
between Okmulgee anti Broad-
way, Friday morning, ' County
Commissioner - —
fore a large
that the car
Just at the time when the cum-
niissioner was about to lose his
temper he discovered Ids ouu car
was |Mirked next Io the one
which he was attempting u> ua>
ARE MADE IN
REVENUE BILL
war veteran's organtza-
that time Is a
and a measure
LONDON, Jan. 14.—(INS)—The
soviet government is dispatching a
note to the !<eague of Nations de-
clining to attend any disarmament
conference on Swiss soil, but em-
phasizing its willingness to attend
a conference elsewhere.
Russia's absence from the pre-
liminary disarmament conference
at Geneva is not regarded as any
hindrance to the success of the
conference, according to British of-
ficials,
stated
senca
mony.
Despite rumors of a possible
postponement of the preliminary
conference, the foreign office stated
today that it is fully expected that
the experts will meet at Geneva
on Feb. 15, as scheduled. Ger-
many and France are held respon-
sible by the British for the rumorsSenate Committee’s Measure
Widely Dissimilar From
One House Passes
WASHINGTON, Jan.
(INS)—The Belgian debt
ment was ratified by the
today by the overwhelming ma-
jority of 814 to 14. Democrats
who had opposed the Italian set-
tlement voted with the republi-
cans in approving the Belgian
terms.
Within less than an hour after
the Belgian settlement had been
ratified, the house agreed on the
settlement of the Rumanian debt
of $44,590,000 by a vote of 285
to 38.INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., Jan. 16.— !
(INS)—The national executive
committee of the American Legion ,
in session here announces the 1926
convention of the Legton would be
held from October 11 to 15 at
Philadelphia was
National Commander Spends Six Hours in
Muskogee Tomorrow Evening to Make
Address When Banquet Is Accorded Him
at U.S.V.B. Hospital No. 90.
MILWAUKEE, Jan. 14.—Otto
M. Hunter, until recently a chem-
ist in a nationally known soap
company, attempted to hang him-
self in the county jail here today
Sixteen at One Timo
burials began. yesterday
They vv ill continue until
Will the men and women of
TODAY SEE
Tlie leases on the property
•- The cost of
, will
; be too great to take a chance on
fore the senate Monday. I the leases being renewed at their
A difference of only $15,000,000 expiration. Although the company
s< parated the totals of the house: carried insurance on Its property,
measure which slashed taxes by llone ot ,ho victims had such pro-
Mor. Art/1 AAA ___it. . _ *4 notion
(NEWS HPKCIAL)
GUTHRIE, Okla.. Jan.
- - -,------ ----- ----- ,ho»sb following his arrest on a charge
showing their no order granting continuance
OUR British brothers have also
their worries. The year just
closed the worst for trade in Brit-
ain's modern history, the balance
being almost two billions of
dollars against the British. Forty-
five million additional pounds of
imports, a loss of thirty-three mil-
lion pounds of exports, make the
British unhappy. But they "mud-
dle" through in the British way,
and will come out on top.
By ADELE GARRISON
Beginning in
Lieut, colonel foulois,
commanding air forces at
Mitchell field, says there should be
a great "terminal" for airships in
the east, located on the Newark
meadows, west of Jersey City,
close to New York, connected with
New York by subways.
The idea is sound, including the
suggestion of an elevated landing
field. Connected with it there
would be arranged at minimum ex-
pense a water landing for the
navy's hydroairplanes, thoroughly
sheltered. This plan had previously
been discused by Dwight Morrow,
head of the President's air com-
mittee.Parollo had gone to the
home with friends.
couple, grieving over the
of selling narcotics on a largo
scale. He was cut down and re-
vived. Hunter was arrested at the
bedside of Jack Pierce, son of a
wealthy capitalist, John Ely
I’ierce, with heavy interests in
New York and New Orleans.
Narcotic agents said he was seiz-
ed in the act of delivering druga
to Pierce.
o------------
LEGION’S CONVENTION
DATES ARE ANNOUNCED
charge in which W. E. Smith's
wife, an Osage heiress to more
than $2,000,090 in headrights on
oil royalties, was killed, would be
postponed from Jan.
SIMILAR great combination land-
ing fields for hydroaeroplanes
and other airplanes should be es-
talflished in the principal cities of
the nation, Chicago, New England,
San Francisco, Seattle, Los
gelcs, New Orleans, Galveston,
“QUICKSANDS OF
LOVE”
s’ IV
A ? A'-
(NKWH SPECIAL)
WILBURTON, Okla., Jan. 16.—
A slowly creeping motor truck
wends its way into the town's ceme-
tery, pulls up beside a trench dug
by state convicts and deposits a
load of caskets.
Back to the morgue it goes only
to return with another load of dead.
For Wilburton today Is burying
Ito dead, victims of Thursday’s
disaster in the Degnan-McConnell
Coal company's mine.
At noon today Carlton
editor of
Democrat,
compilation of figures, which show-
ed the death list stood at 94. Four
more bodies remain
from the death pit.
pected
fall.
JvORN prices arc low, "liogs are
higb." This puzzles farmers,
and packers. Corn and hog prices
should go up and down together,
since the pig is really corn, chang-
ed into meat. There is always
something to puzzle and distress
the farmer. He has no sufficient
national organization, and after
election day, he hasn't much influ-
ence in government, compared with
railroads and other big financial
units.AT the Midday Luncheon club in
New York you can see eating
at tiie same time, those that con-
trol ten thousand millions of dol-
lars. Farmers are scattered all
over the land, and if you could get
them together, there wouldn't be
any hall that could hold them.E. C. Hyden. 511 North Fifth,
went under treatment today to
avoid affliction from being bitten
by his dog which was afflicted
with rabies. Hyden was injured
several days ago. The dog was
last night pronounced suffering
from rabies and was killed.
Hyden Is the fourteenth person
bitten by mad dogs in this city in
lha Last two mantleATLANTA. Jan. 16.—(INS)—
John W. Langley, former con-
gressman from the tenth Kentucky
district, arrived here today and
went directly to the federal pri-
son to begin serving his two year
sentence for conspiracy to violate
the prohibition law. I-angley was
greeted by hglf a dozen former
Kentuckians when he arrived at
the terminal station.
"I'd sooner see my brother going
to prison than you John," re-
marked one of the group. Langley
made no statement.-----------o-----------
SOVIET OFFERS HUGE
PRIZE ON NEW RUBBER
SOON
"QUICKSANDS OF LOVE" tells
the Whole Truth about modern
marriage and its most modern
enemy, “The Consciousness of
Love.” Read tilts amazing mas-
terpiece as it unfolds daily.
Whatever y.our situation in life
it has a message for You con-
cerning the most tmnetxlous
problem before America and the
world today.
Order your copy now.
—.... i <'om-
mander McQuigg will attend a
public reception given in his honor
at the hospital and will leave ax
11:30 o'clock with other membera
of his party for Oklahoma City.
Commander McQuigg in his ad.
dress at the banquet at the hos-
pital will stress "that a govern-
ment by all is entitled to the serv-
ice of all and in a national emer-
gency for w hlch service a reason-
able compensation should be giv-
en."
No Slackers Nor Profiteers
That no citizen should be per.
tnltted to make a vast profit cut of
the exigencies of the nation.
That the American legion la
very much of the opinion that
should we be forced into another
war it should produce neither
slackers nor profiteers.
That the legion bill which waa
drafted in 1922 by a legion commit-
tee and which has been re-afftrm.
ed by every national convention of
the World
tlon since
for peace
pa redness.
/CONGRESS should not neglect at
VJ this session the question of de-
cent pay for federal Judges. All
of the judges in the national serv-
ice are underpaid. For justices of
the supreme bench and all through
the federal judicial service, the
shamefully inadequate pay Is a dis-
grace to the richest nation In the
world.
It is impossible, of course, for
the judges to make any campaign
on their own behalf. But the
country that depends upon them
for justice and protection should
pay them at least enough to live
i^cently.
Officials of the Aviation club
Saturday announced that workers
In a drive to collect $5,000 from
members of the organization to be
I used in the erection of a radio
hut at Hat Box field and settling
|old debts of the organization, were
success and that
the amount will be
the next week,
will be used in rc-
UNCLF. SAM is riding along on
velvet. Severe competition
abroad in the world's market at
home is said to be ahead of our
producers, but everything, includ-
ing providence, seems to be with
us now.
Arriving in Muskogee by
auto from Tulsa at 5 o'clock
Sunday afternoon, National
Commander John R. McQuigg,
of the American legion, will
spend six busy hours visiting
in the city and at the U.S.V.B.
hospital No. 90. Legionnaires
from all parts of the state will
welcome him.
On his arrival Commander
McQuigg will spend the first
hour in inspecting the hospital.
At 6:30 o’clock he will attend
a banquet given in his honor
at the hospital dining room, at
which Robert S. Kerr of Ada,
state legion commander, will
act as toastmaster.
Following the banquetCONVICTS PAY FOR
SENDING LAWRENCE
BODY TO MUSKOGEE
Several times this morning the aged interest of
prelate lost consciousness. Queen ' (BEE ..H.. ON j,AaB TWO)
Elizabeth visited the bedside of the !
dying cardinal for a few minutes
today.
--o-----------
MERCIER IS NEAR END
MU8KOCEE>IMIA1CCAPITAL /IMK10D
MUSKOG1
The Program
The following program
banquet is announced by Col. Hugh
Scott, medical officer in charge of
the U. 8. V. B. hospital No. 90.
"America," audience and orches-
tra.
Salute to the colors.
Invocation, Dr. R. L. Mitchell,
chaplain Memorial Post No. 219.
(SEE "L" ON PAQB TWO)
JAILED ’M1ELUNG
WE,'TRIES SUKJDE
NEW YORK, Jan. 16.—(INS)—
Joseph and Rose Musca, husband
and wife, are under restraint in
King's county hospital today await-
ing psychopathic examination
while Mrs. Rose Parollo, with 80
stitches in the arms, legs and ab-
domen, recounted hysterically how
police snatched her from an im-
provised altar in the Musca home,
where she was being fiendishly tor-
tured.
Mrs.
M usca
Tlie
Illness of Mis. Musca’s brother, un-
der treatment for a mental disor-
der, wore apparently seized by a
religious frenzy.
When they began to rave inco-
herently, Mrs. I’arollo's friends
rushed out for assistance.
Musca then locked the doors and
lie and his wife, chanting wierdly,
began to attack her with knives.
She was almost unconscious when
brought In to the apartment.
BRIAND STAYS
CABINET FALL
11
meeting with
they expected
raised within
The money
tiring obligations of the field and
to assist in installing material to
be used in the erection of the hut
which is being built at the re-
quest of the air service to receive
and broadcast weather reports for
the benefit of the air service pilots
using the air-ways north and
south.
The wireless station will also
be used in sending and receiving
'government messages for the local
federal building and other offices
south and west of the city.
The hut when completed and
eo.ulpped is estimated will cost the
government $15,000.
--o----------
1$ BITTEN BY MAD DOG
■o------ ■■
RUSSIA BALKS
ON ARMS MEET
The administration of Charles
H. Burke, commissioner of Indian
affairs and Its followers, were giv-
en a crushing defeat yesterday aft-
ernoon at the convention of Indians
held at the court house.
By an overwhelming majority
the convention defeated a resolu-
tion authorizing the ghairman of
the gathering to hand-pick a com-
mittee of five to serve as delegates
to Washington for the purported
purpose of furthering the intenst
of Oklahoma tribes before
gross.
This was the main object in
Ing the meeting.
On two other occasions the
vention manifested Its dissatisfac-
tion with the administration by ap-
pealing from rulings of the chair
and hating the convention sustain
the appeal.
Deep seateq suspicion became at-
tached to the Washington move-
ment as soon as the Indians learn-
ed that the convention was con-
trolled by the Burke administra-
tion. The chairman and the reso-
lutions committee ho picked were
considered interpretative of Burke.
The Washington project became
fixed in their minds as a protective
proposition for Burke to combat
the wide-spread criticism
Burke administration is now
|ect to in this state.
Override Committee
When the resolution was put be-
fore the convention it was voted
down by a large majority.
O. K. Chandler of Afton, one of
Burke's severest critics. Introduced
from the floor a resolution to place
the convention on record as urging
Burke's dismissal from sen ice.
This provoked one of the big pyro-
technlcal displays of the after-
noon. The resolution waa submit-
ted to the resolutions committee
which promptly Ignored it and re-
fused to report it back to the con-
vention with or without recom-
mendation.
Chandler then proceeded to bring
ft up from the floor. Bill Brown
of Sapulpa, on Indian land apprals-
?r employed by the Five Civilized
Tribes, made a point
against the resolution,
the position that the
could not be introduced
of order
He took
resolution
from
(BEK "C" ON PAGE TWO)
-----------o-----------
SUPPORT FOR
HAT BOX FUND
TARIS, Jan. 16.—< INS)—Aris-
tide Briand has maneuvered him-
self out of another crisis and saved
his cabinet temporarily.
Combing bold defiance with
suave cajolery, he has convinced
the finance committee of the cham-
ber of deputies that there is hope
of a compromise on the Doumer fi-
nancial plan, by which a crisis can
be averted.
As a result, debate in the cham-
ber on the financial program has
been postponed until Tuesday. In
the meantime, the finance commis-
sion is working upon a plan of
compromise.
Although Briand had intimated
he would accept no compromise at
the last moment, he changed his
tactics, but so maneuvered that it
is still difficult to say whether
Briand is recapitulating to the fi-
nance commission or whether the
finance commission is making con-
cessions to Briand.
...... o----- ■
ENGLAND LEARNS RUM
RUNNING DOESN’T PAY
16.—
W. K. Hale, cattleman "king of
the Osage hills" and his hench-
man, John Ramsey, unassuming
cowboy of the wealthy rancher's
acres, came before tho bar of Uncle
Sam's federal court hero today to
enter a plea to tho government's
charge of the murder of Henry
Roan, a rich Oaage Indian.
If the government can success-
fully meet technical Jurisdictional
attacks by tho state of Oklahoma
which is fighting for custody of
the two on state charges of murder
of W. E. Smith of Fairfax, an-
other of the alleged scries of
"murders for millions" among
America's richest red men, their
case will be brought to trial in
Oklahoma City some time in Feb-
ruary.
But with tho announcement of
Hale and Ramsey's attorneys at 11
o'clock today when formal arraign-
ment was called "that every ad-
vantage would be taken by the
state for their custody, a long
The body of BUI Lawrence, ban-
dit, hanged at the Arizona state
prison, Jan. 8, for tho murder of
a Phoenix policeman, will be sent
tomorrow to his former home at
Muskogee for burial.
Prisoners at tho Arizona peni-
tentiary raised enough money to
permit Lawrence's aged mother,
Mrs. Lucy I.awrence, to take her
son's body to Oklahoma.
Mrs. I-awrence and her 16-year-
old daughter, Fay Gene, who
been prostrate since they
goodbye to Lawrence
night before he died, will be
to travel tomorrow, physicians at-I
tending them said.-----------o-----------
TWO CHANGES
AMONG POLICE
----- ------.1 under the bill are i parged that one of tho fire bosses
placed in a modified form, with dtd not havc a gtato certificate.
CHICAGO AND ALTON TO
OPERATE MOTOR BUSSES
City to Be Mecca of
Ex-Service Men When
McQuigg Comes HereThe
afternoon,
tomorrow.
One motor truck this morning
hauled 16 caskets to the graveyard.
They stood three deep on the
truck.
Tho dead are being buried in sec-
tions. Twelve caskets are deposit-
ed to each section.
A Baptist minister holds a short
ritual as each body is lowered into
the earth. Tho Knights of Pythias
and Masonic lodges have repre-
sentatives here. They, too, render
a ritual as the bodies of their
members are interred.
May Be Abandoned
All of the white dead have been
recovered from the mine. Most of
the victims were negroes.
Eight of the negro victims be-
longed to a Masonic lodge. Their
organization conducts the burial
service.. . the| It Is doubtful whether the mine
Two Important changes w ere | tax bill was being polished up by will ever be used again, it was wild
announced in the police depart-'"10 8onate finance committee to- today.
ment today. |day Indications it would be expire within a year. The coi
... ' . , ready for the printer late this repairing the plant, it is said,
loin Graves, detective, hr rnnwtt i.. . . * ’ ’
(Editorial)
FROM Prescott, Ark., where they also read THE
DAILY NEWS, W. J. White sends me his gas bill
for December.
The bill shows he consumed 10,000 cubic feet of gas
for the month, for which he was charged 58 cents a
thousand. The company adds 50 cents as a service
charge, making the bill total $6.30 cents. A discount
of 30 cents reduces the bill to $6.
Now here is the significance. The gas Prescott con-
sumes is piped a distance of 150 miles. It is sold for 14
cents a thousand feet less than Muskogee’s gas, which
is not piped more than 50 miles.
Ten thousand feet of gas transported 50 miles costs
the Muskogee consumer $7.20 under the new rate, effec-
tive Jan. 1. This is $1.20 higher than the same quan-
tity costs in Prescott, where the transportation distance
is three times that of Muskogee.
Some more cards on the table for you, Mr. Gas
Trust.
BLOOMINGTON, HL. Jan. 16.
(INH)—To meet competition on
motor bus lines, the Chicago and
Alton railroad announced today
that as soon as permission had
been obtained from the interstate
commerce commission it would
start its own motor bus service
between Jacksonville and Rt.
Louis and other terminal points.
Unprofitable trains would
erased from the schedule,
road officials stated.WHISKERS ON TOMCATS
ARE SUBJECT TO DUTY
LONDON, Jan. 16.—(INS) —
"The cat's whiskers" are dutiable
in England. The "Outfitter"
says thjit an importer of toy cats
was forced to pay duty on the
cat's whiskers because they were
made of silk and silk is UutULIa. of postponement.
NEWARK, Jersey City, Hoboken,
Elizabeth, Ellzabethport and
New York City arc
one great city with
of people, equaling
England or France,
air terminal, in the
future city, should be bought and
built by the government now, for
postoffice and cotijpiercial flying in
peace, tho other thing in war.
There wouldn't be any war, if we
had the right commercial fleet.
That's why President Coolidge
constantly urges the development
of commercial aviation.
chief of detectives.
fioone Clark, another detective,
becomes night captain of police.
Graves succeeds Ed. Holloway,
relieved from further service.
Clark succeeds ike Fisher,
lleved from further service.
------------------o ■
RATIFY SETTLEMENT
OYER BELGIAN DEBT
Fights For Publicity
Insurgents led by Senator Nor-
ris, republican, Nebraska have al-
ready announced complete opposi-
tion to repeal of the publicity
(1^^) clause of the bill. The democrats
Cardinal Mercier is slowly sinking. wlH an amendment in the
successful business.
MISSOl R$—Increasing cloud-
iness with probably rain today
or tomorrow night, warmer in
east portion; tomorrow partly
cloudy and aomewtiat colder.
K A N S A S—Partly cloudy
colder in southeast tomorrow.
OK LAHOMA — Today partly
cloudy; tomorrow unsettled,
colder.
ARKANSAS — Tomorrow In-
creasing cloudiness and unset-
tled, colder in west portion.
$325,000,000 and the one over
which tho opposing groups in the
re- jsenato committee have been argu-
|ing for sersral weeks, but in de-
tails tljero was wide dlssimllar-
!i'y- w
Fight Brewing
WASHINGTON. Jan. 16.—(INS)
—Carrying a total reduction of
approximately $340,000,000,MOSCOW. Jan. 16.—(INS) —
A first prize of $60,000 and a
second prize of $25,000 has been
offered for the collegium of the
scientific technical department
of the supreme council of econ-
omy for the invention of a proc-
ess for the manufacture of arti-
ficial rubber from materials of
Russian origin.
-----------o-----------
OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 14 —
James T. Robertson of this city. ____
claimant of the old fiddlers cham- Philadelphia. ___________ _
pionship of Oklahoma and Texas, chosen for the convention city some i
has wired a challenge to Mellie time ago but the date
Dunham, protege of Henw Ford ! agreed upon until today. A number
for a fiddling contest anywhere at ot appointments to tho various le-
say Uaia. I gion committees were announced. ,
lection.
Deny Boyle's Ct targes
Relief was pouring In from all fight was looming to prevent the
sections of the state today for those prisoners from facing a government
left husbandless and fatherless by trial jury.
. the explusion. However, so far it
has not proved sufficient to take
Repeal of all capital stock taxes'car0 of tho d0»'»nd-1’. as the families
and an Increase in the corpora-' of thoso "ho suffered from the dls-
jtlon tax of one per cent to 13 1-2 ash'r aro In distress. Ramsey was brought from Okla-
per cent were among the Import-! Kd Boyle, state mine Inspector, homa City by L nited States dep-
jg. ant changes effected by demo-' cont|nued his inquiry today into u,y marahals.
settle- cra,s with support from several tho He says he will not Hale's attorneys said the prellm-
completc his work until Monday or inary hearing on the state murder
Tuesday.
Boyle's charges that the mine
was manned by Inexperienced men
is vigorously denied here. The fire
, bosses were proficient and had
state certificates
I republicans on the committee.
The storm which leaders of all
factions admit will sweep the
s< nate when argument begins will
center about repeal of publicity,'
estate and Inheritance taxes.
Senator Smoot will lead the fight , - -
against the estate and inheritance qualifications, it Is said. Boyle had the case had been ordered
taxes which under the bill nre (harv''l 'baf one „r th.. -------- -----------
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Held, Carl W. Muskogee Daily News (Muskogee, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 193, Ed. 2 Sunday, January 17, 1926, newspaper, January 17, 1926; Muskogee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1598471/m1/1/?q=ellis: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.