Coweta Times. (Coweta, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1914 Page: 2 of 12
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C O W E T A O K L A T I MGS
"
SYNOPSIS
John Valiant a rich society favorite
suddenly discovers that the Valiant cor-
poration which his father founded and
which was the principal source of his
wealth has failed He voluntarily turns
over tits private fortune to the receiver
for tha corporation His entire remaining
possessions consist of an old motor car a
white bull doe and Damery court a neg-
lected estate Tn Virginia On the way to
Damory court he meets Shirley Dand-
fidge an auburn-hatred beauty and de-
cides that he la going to like Virginia Im-
mensely ' Shirley's mother Mrs Dand-
rldge and Major Bilstow exchange rem-
iniscences during which It la revealed
(hat the major Valiant's father end a
man named Sassoon were rivals for the
hand of Mrs Dandrldge In her youth
Bassoon and Valiant fought a duel on her
account In which the former was killed
Valiant Unde Damory court overgrown
with weeds and creepers and decides to
habilitate the place Valiant saves
Ihlrley from the bite of a snake which
lies him Knowing the deadliness of the
Bite Shirley sucks the poison from the
wound and eaves Ills life Valiant learns
for the first time ttmt his father left Vir-
ginia on aocount of a duel In which Doo-
fer Southall and Major Bristow acted as
bis father's seconds Valiant and Shirley
become good friends Mrs Dandrldge
falnta when she meets Valiant for the
first time Valiant discovers that he has
a fortune In old walnut trees The yearly
tournament a survival of the Jousting of
feudal times Is held at Damory court At
the last moment Valiant takes the place
sf one of the knights who Is sick and
enters the lists
CHAPTER XXIII— Continued
The twelve horsemen were now git-
ting their restive mounts in a group
at one end of the lists Two mounted
monitors had stationed themselves on
either side of the rope barrier a third
Stood behind the upright from whOBe
arm was suspended the silver ring
The herald blew a blast calling the
title of the first of the knights In-
stantly with lance at rest the latter
galloped at full speed down the lists
There was a sharp musical clash and
as he dashed on the ring flew the
full length of Its tether and swung
back whirling swiftly It had been a
close thrust for the iron pike-point
had smitten its rim A cheer went up
under cover of which the rider looped
back outside the lists to his former
position
In an upper tier of the stand a spec-
tator made a cup of his hands "The
Knight of the Golden Spur against the
field' he called "Wbat odds?"
"Five to one Spotteswood” a voice
answered
“Ten dollars” announced the first
"Good” And both made memoran-
dum on their cuffs:
A second time the trumpet sounded
and the Knight of Castlewood flashed
Ingloriously down the roped aisle — a
inlss
Again and again the clear note rang
out and a mounted figure plunged by
and presently in a burst of cheering
the herald proclaimed "The Knight of
the Black Eagle — one!" and Chilly
Dusk in old-rose doublet and inky
plume cantered back with a silver
ring upon his pike
No simple tulng approaching leis-
urely and afoot to send that tapering
point straight to the tiny mark But
at headlong gallop astride a blooded
horse straining to take the bit a deed
requiring a nice eye a perfect seat
and an unwavering arm and hand!
Those knights who looped back with
their pikes thus braceleted bad spent
long hours in practice and each rode
as naturally as he breathed yet more
than once a horse shied In mid-course
and at the too-eager thrust of the spur
bolted through the ropes Valiant
made his first essay — and missed —
with the blood singing in his ears
The ring flew from his pike catching
him a swinging blow on the temple in
Where Had John Valiant Learned
Thai THck of the Loose Wrist and
Inflexible Thrust
its rebound but he scarcely felt it As
he cantered back he heard the major's
bass pitting him against the field
And then suddenly stand and field
all vanished He saw only the long
level rope-lined lane with its twinkling
mid-air point An exhilaration caught
him at the feel of the splendid horse-
flesh beneath him — that sense of one-
ness with the creature he bestrode
which the Instinctive horseman knows
He lifted his lance and hefted It seek-
lng its absolute balance- feeling Its
point as a fencer with his rapier
When again the blood-red sash
streamed away the herald’s cry
"Knight of the Crimson Rose — One!"
set tha field band-clapping From the
next Joust also Valiant returned with
the gage upon his lance Two had
1 gone to the Champion of Castlewood
' and two to scattering rldora When
Valiant won hie fourth the grand stand
thundered with applause j
HALLIE ERMINIE RIVES
ILLUSTRATIONS SC LAUREN STOUT
cowovr an' ao&o 5 -srfr?c t cdtmk
The trumpet again pealed its silvery
proclamation Judge Chalmers was on
hla feet "Fifty to ten on the Crimson
Rose" he cried This time however
there were no tskere He called again
but none heard him the last tilts were
JoO absorbing
Where bad John Valiant learned
that trick of the loose wrist and In-
flexible thrust but at the fencing club?
Where that subconscious management
of the rein that nice gage of speed
and distance but on the polo field?
The old sports stood him now In good
stead "Why he has a seat like a
centaur!" exclaimed the Judge — praise
Indeed In a community where riding
was a passion and horseflesh a fetlah!
“Oh dear!" mourned Nancy Chal-
mers ''I’ve bet six pairs of gloves on
Quint Carter Never mind if it has to
be anybody else I'd rather it were
Mr Valiant It'll about time Damory
Court got something after Rlp-Van-Wlnkling
it for thirty years Besides
he’s giving us the dance and I love
him for that! Quint still has a chance
though If he takes the next two and
Mr Valiant misses-—”
Katharine looked at her with a lit-
tle smile “He won’t miss" she said
She had seen that look on his face
before and read It aright John Va-
liant had striven In many contests not
only of skill but of strength and dar-
ing before crowded grand stands But
never In all his life had he bo desired
to pluck the prize His grip was tense
on the lance as the yellow doublet
and olive plume of Castlewood shot
away for a last time — and failed An
Instant later the Knight of the Crim-
son Rose flashed down the lists with
the last ring on his pike
And the tourney was won
In the shouting and hand-clapping
Valiant took the rose from his hat-
band and bound it with a shred of his
sash to his lance-point As he rode
slowly toward the massed stand the
whole field was so still that he could
hear the hoofs of the file of knights
behind him The people were on their
feet
The mounted herald blew his blast
"By the Majesties of St Michael and
St George" he proclaimed “I declare
the Knight of the Crimson Rose the
victor of this our tourney and do
charge him now to choose his Queen
of Beauty that all may do her hom-
age ! "
Shirley saw the horse coming down
the line its rider bareheaded now
and her heart began to race wildly
Beyond wanting him to take part she
had not thought She looked about
her suddenly dismayed People were
smiling at her and clapping their
handB From the other end of the
stand she saw Nancy Chalmers throw-
ing her a kiss and beside her a tall
pale girl in champagne-color staring
through a Jeweled lorgnette
She was conscious all at once that
the flanneled rider was very close
that his pike-point with Its
big red blossom was stretching up to
her
With the rose in her hand she curt-
sied to him while the blurred throng
cheered itself hoarse and the band
struck- up "You Great Big Beautiful
Doll" with extraordinary rapture to
the tune of which the noise Anally sub-
sided to a battery of hilarious con-
gratulations which left her flushed and
a little breathless Nancy Chalmers
and Betty Page had burst upon her
like petticoated whirlwinds and pres-
ently when the crowd had lessened
the Judge came to introduce his visi-
tor "Mr Fargo and his daughter are our
guests at Gladden Hall" he told her
"They are old friends of Valiant's by
the way they knew him in New
York”
"Katharine's fighting her Incense
now I guess" observed Silas Fargo
"See there!” He pointed across the
stand where Blood a willowy tan fig-
ure one hand beckoning to the con-
course below where Valiant stood the
center of a shifting group round which
the white bulldog mad with recovered
liberty tore in eccentric circles
As they looked she called softly
"John! John!"
Shirley saw him start and face
shout then come quickly toward her
amazement and welcome In hts eyes
As Shirley turned away a little later
with the major that whispering voice
seemed to sound in her ears — "John!
John!” There smote her suddenly the
thought that when he had chosen her
his Queen of Beauty he had not seen
the other — had not known she was
there
A few moments before the day had
been golden ahe went home through
a landscape that somehow seemed to
have lost its brightest glow
CHAPTER XXIV
Katharine Decides
Katharine left the Held of Runny-
mede with John Valiant In the dun-
colored motor She sat In the driver’s
seat beside him while the bulldqg ca-
pered ecstatically barking from side
to side of the rear cushions Her
father bad declined the honor remark-
ing that he considered a professional
chauffeur a sufficient risk of hit valua-
ble life and that the Chalmers' grays
ware good anough for him — a daotslon
which did not wholly displease Katha-
rine -
The car was not the smart Pan-
hard In which she bad so often spun
down the avenue or along the shell-
roads of the north shore It lacked
those fin-de-stecle appurtenances which
marked the ne plus ultra of Its kind
as her observant eye recognized but
it ran staunch and true The powerful
hands that gripped the steering-wheel
were brown with sun and wind and
the handsome face above It had a look
of keenness and energy she had never
surprised before They paseed many
vehicles and there were few whose oc-
cupants did not greet him In fact
as he presently remarked It was a
saving of energy 'to keep his hat off
and he tossed the Panama into the
rear seat On the rim of the village
a group raised a cheer to which he
nodded laughingly and further on a
little old lady on a timid vine-colored
porch beside a church waved a black-
The Tournament Ball at Damory Court
That Night Was More Than an
Event
mltted hand to him with a sweet old-
time gesture Katharine noted that he
bowed to her with extra care
"That's Miss Mattie Sue Mabry" he
said "the quaintest dearest thing you
ever saw She taught my father his
letters”
Where the Red'Road'stretched level
before them he threw the throttle
open for a long rush through the
thymy-scented air The light late
afternoon breeze drew by them sweep-
ing back Katharine’s graceful slnuoua
veil and spraying them with odors of
clover and sunny fruit They passed
orchard clumps bending with young
apples boundless aisles of green
young-tasseled corn and shadowy
groves that smelled of fern and sassa-
fras opening out Into more sunllgbted
vistas overarched by the intense pene-
trable of the June sky
John Valiant had never seemed to
her so wholly good to see with his
waving hair ruffling in their flight and
the westering gun shining redly on bis
face Midway of this spurt he looked
at her to say: "Did you ever know a
more beautiful countryside? See how
the plnk-and-yellow of those grain
fields fades into the purple of the hills
Very few painters have ever captured
a tint like that It’s like raspberries
crushed in curdled milk"
"I've quite lost my heart to it ail”
she Bald her voice Jolting with the
speed of their course "It's a perfect
pastoral so different from
our terrific city pace Of
course it must be a trifle dull at times
seeing the same people al-
ways and without the thea
ter and the opera and the whirl about
one — but the kind of life
one reads about In the nov-
els of the South you know
I suppose one doesn't realize that It
actually exists until one comes to a
Southern place like this And the
negro servants! How odd it must be
to have a white-haired old darky in a
brass-buttoned swallowtail for a but-
ler! So picturesque! At Judge Chal-
mers' I have a feeling all the time that
I'm walking through a stage re-
hearsal" The car Blackened speed as It slid
by a white-washed cabin at whose en-
trance sat a dusky gray-bearded fig-
ure Valiant pointed “Do you see
him?" he asked
“I see a very ordinary old colored
man sitting on the door-step" Katha-
rine replied
“That's Mad Anthony our local
Mother Shlpton He's a prophet and
soothsayer Uncle Jefferson — that's
my body-servant — Insists that he fore-
told my coming to Damory Court If
we had more time you could have
your fortune told"
"How thrilling!" she commented
with half-humorous Irony
He pointed to a great white house
set in a grove of trees “That is
Beechwood” he told her "the Beverly
homestead Young Beverley was the
Knight of the Silver Cross A fine old
place Isn't it? It was burned by the
Indians during the French and Indian
War My great-great-great-grandfath-er
— ” He broke off "But then those
old things won’t Interest you"
“They Interest you a great deal
don’t they?" she asked
"Yes" he admitted “they do You
see my ancestors are suoh new ac-
quaintances I find them absorbing
You know when I Uvsd In New
York—"
"Last month"
Ha laughed a little — not quit tha
laugh she bad known in the pasL
"Yes but I can hardly believe It I
seem to have been here half a lifetime
To think that a month ago I waa a
double-dyed New Yorker"
“It's been a strange experience for
you When you come tack to New
York—”
He looked at her oddly ahe thought
"Why should I go back?"
"Why’ Because It's your natural
habitat Ins't It?"
"That's the word" he said smiling
"It was my habitat This la my home”
She waa silent a moment In sheer
surprise She had thought of this
Southern essay as a quickly passing
Incident a colorful chapter whose
page might any day be turned But
It waa Impossible to mistake hla mean-
ing Clearly he was deeply Infatuated
with this Arcadian experience and had
no thought at present but to continue
It indefinitely
They were passing the entrance of a
cherry-bordered lane and without tak-
ing his hands from the gear he
nodded toward the low broad-eaved
dwelling with Its flowering arbors that
showed In flashing glimpses of brown
and red between the intervening trees
"The palace of the queen!” he said —
"Rosewood by name”
She looked In some curiosity Clear-
ly If not a refuge of genteel poverty
neither waa it the abode of wealth
so from her assured rampart of the
Fargo millions Katharine reflected
complacently The girl was a local
favorite of course — he had been tact-
ful aB to that It was fortunate In a
way that he had not seen her Katha-
rine In the grand stand until after-
ward Feeling toward her as she be-
lieved he did with his absurd direct-
ness he would have been likely to
drop the rose in her lap never re-
flecting that the tourney being a local
function the choice should not fall ujb
on an outlander
The slowing of the car brought her
back to the present and she looked
up to see before them the great gate of
Gladden Hall She did not apeak till
they had quite stopped
Then as her hand lay in hla for
farewell "You are right in your de-
cision” she said softly "This is your
place You are a Valiant of Virginia
I didn’t realize it before but I am be-
ginning to see all It means to you "
Her voice held a lingering indefin-
able quality that was almost sadness
and for that one slender Instant she
opened on him the unmasked batteries
of her glorious gray eyes
The tournament ball at Damory
Court that night was more than an
event The old mansion 'was an Irre-
sistible magnet The floor of its yel-
low parlor was known to be of delecta-
ble hugeness Its gardens were a le-
gend The whole place moreover was
steeped In the very odor of old mys-
tery and new romance Small wonder
that to this particular affair the elect
— the major was the high custodian
of the rolls his decisions being as the
laws of the Medes and Persians — came
gaily from the farthest county line
and the big houses of the neighbor-
hood were crammed with over-night
guests
By half past nine o’clock the pha-
lanx of chaperons decreed by old cus-
tom had begun to arrive and the great
iron gate at the front of the drive —
erect and rustless now — saw an impos-
ing processional of carriages These
passed up a slope as radiant with the
fairy light of paper lanterns as a Japa-
nese thoroughfare In festival season
The colored bulbs swung moon-like
ADDITION TO HIS EFFICIENCY
Business Manager Would Do Well to
Remember That His Personality
Counts for Much
“He’s really very agreeable outside
of business hours” How often we hear
this remark about a certain type of
man at the head of a large enterprise
He is the man whose office demeanor
la characterized by the coldness of a
snowball and the Indifference of a
stone
In his desire to become efficient and
make every one about him the same
he squeezes every bit of human feel-
ing out of his relations with his sub-
ordinates and becomes a part of a
working system as dehumanized as
his filing system or his adding ma-
chine or the typewriter which hla
stenographer manipulates During of-
fice hours he is a machine which dic-
tates letters looks over reports and
develops efficiency But — "he's really
very agreeable outside of business
hours”
This man needs to know that hla
ability being efficient he becomes
more efficient as he becomes more hu-
man Just as a machine is more effi-
cient the more machlne-llke it be-
comes He needs to learn that the
tnn gt the head of a big concern
from tree and shrub painting their
rainbow lusters on grass and drive-
way Under the high gray columns of
the porch and into the wide door
framed In Its small leaded panes that
glowed with the merry light within
poured a stream of loveliness: In carriage-wraps
of light tints collared and
edged with fur or elder or wide-
sleeved mandarin coats falling hack
from dazzling throats and arms hair
swathed with chiffon against the night
dews and gallantly cavaliered by mas-
culine black and white
These from their tiring-rooms over-
flowed presently garbed like dreams
to make obeisance to the dowagers
and then to drift through flower-lined
corridors the foam on recurrent waves
of discovery Behind the rose-bower
in the hall which shielded a dozen
colored musicians — violins cello gui-
tars and mandolins— came premonitory
chirps and shivers which presently
wove Into the low and dreamy melody
of "Carry Me Back to Old Virginia"
Promptly as the clock In the hall
chimed ten the music merged Into a
march Doors on opposite sides of tha
upper hall swung wide and down the
broad staircase came with slow step
a stately procession: two heralds in
fawn-colored doublets with scroll and
trumpets wound with flowers behind
them the Queen of Beauty her finger-
tips resting lightly in' the hand of the
Knight of the Crimson Rose and these
followed by as brave a concourse of
lords and ladies as ever graced castle-
hall In the gallant days “when knight-
hood was In flower”
Shirley's gown was of pure white:
her arms were swathed in tulle
crossed with straps of seed-pearl over
which hung long semi-flowlng sleeves
of satin and from her shoulders rose
a stiff pointed medieval collar of Vene-
tian lace against whose pale traceries
her bronze hair glowed with rosy
lights The elge of the square-cut cor-
sage was powdered with the pearls
and against their sheen her breast and
neck had the soft creamy Ivory of
magnolia buds Her straight plain
train of satin knotted with fresh white
rose-buds (Nancy Chalmers had la-
bored for a frantic half-hour In the
dreBslng-room for this effect) was
held by the seven-year-old Byloe
twins berlbboned knickerbockers duly
impressed with the grandeur of their
privilege and grimly intent on acquit-
ting themselves with glory
Shirley’s face was still touched with
the surprise that had swept it as
Valiant bad stepped to her side She
had looked to see him In the conven
tlonal panoply a sober-sided masculine
mode decrees What she had beheld
was a figure that might have Btepped
out of an Elizabethan picture-frame
He was In deep purple slashed with
gold A cloak of thin crimson velvet
narrowly edged w 1th ermine hung
from bis shoulders lined with tissue-
like cloth-of-gold From the rolling
brim of his hat swept a curling purple
plume He wore a slender dress-sword
and an order set with brilliants spar-
kled on his breast
The costume had been one he had
worn at a fancy ball of the winter be-
fore It had been made from a paint-
ing at Windsor of one of the dukes of
Buckingham and it made a perfect foil
for Shirley's white
The eleven knlghte of the tourney
each with his chosen lady if less
splendid were tricked out In sufficient-
ly gorgeous attire Many an ancient
brocade had been awakened for the
nonce from its lavender bed and ruffs
and gold-braid were at no premium
(TO BE CONTINUED)
must have personality If he Is to hold
his business together and that per-
sonality is a good thing to keep on
top
The man who subordinates his per-
sonality to his position is the man who
lets his position run him and who la a
Jobholder before he la a man A pitia-
ble state Indeed for anybody to find
himself In Being a man with a per-
sonality aa well as an executive with
a high degree of efficiency Is an ideal
which every business man might well
hold before himBelf inside of business
hours or otherwise— Milwaukee Jous
nal
Japanese Theater
To a foreigner stage management
in Japan would appear somewhat ec-
centric When an actor is killed dur-
ing the play a man in black rushes on
the stage and holds a large clock be-
fore the supposed corpse who soon
rises and runs off the stage
The scenes are never shifted but
the whole stage revolves on wheels
while between the acta the children
among the audience rush behind the
curtain and play until the drum beats
for another act The performance be-
gins’ at 10 a m and the audience pro-
vision themselves for 4 hours curling
np on mats and smoking ths wbols
time
Cleanliness is next
to Godliness —change
clothes frequently —
big wash of course—
not much trouble
though Use RUB-NO-MORE
CARBO NAPTHA
SOAP No rubbing —
clothes soon on line
—sweet and clean
RUB-NO-MORE
CARBO NAPTHA
SOAP should also
be used to wash
the finest fabric It
purifies the linens
Makes it sweet and
sanitary Itdoes not
need hot water
Carbo Disinfects
RUB-NO-MORE
Carbo Naptha Soap
Naptha Cleans
RUB-NO-MORE
Washing Powder
Five Cents— Ml Grocers
rhe Rub-No-More Co FtWayneInd
TANGO AS CAUSE OF CRIME
Brooklyn Judge Blames Theft by Two
Youths to Nights Given to
Modem Dance
In suspending sentence in the cases
of two youths who had pleaded guilty
to attempted grand larceny County
Judge Fawcett in Brooklyn listed
“white lights and tango nights” In
the catalogue of incentives to crime
’’You can't expect to dance all
night” he said “ and lie abed half the
day yet always have money for your
carousals unless you steal it And
let me tell you our jails and peniten-
tiaries are full of people with just
such Ideas If your family had given
you good beatings instead of money
to spend It would have beefi better
for you"
The boys John Colver twenty years
old of 487 Hancock street and Carl-
ton Chapman sixteen of 362 Jefferson
avenue had been Indicted for stealing
money and jewelry from Adelaide Wis-
ton keeper of a furnished room
house where they lived for a time
They belong to respective families
of moderate means Both promised
the judge to go home and begin
again Chapman to return to school
and Colver to work Both wore tan-
go pumps and silk shirts when ar-
raigned — New York Sun
BODY COVERED WITH ECZEMA
R F D No 1 Tazewell Tenn — “My
disease started on my legs In a small
patch and kept spreading until my en-
tire body was covered It would Itch
and burn till I could not sleep at
night I would scratch till the blood
would ooze out and run down my body
and legs The eruption came out in
small red pimples and when I
scratched the whole surface of the
skin became Irritated red and ugly
looking My clothing seemed to Irri-
tate It The pimples were on my
hands arms legs feet and entire
body especially between my fingers
and toes I also had dandruff on my
head until my hair was all falling out
“I was told It was eczema and took
a treatment but all remedies failed
Then I got some Cuttcura Soap and
Ointment I first washed with Cutl-
cura Soap and warm water dried well
and then applied the Cuticura Oint-
ment Cutlcura Soap and Ointment
cured me and they also cured my
dandruff and falling hair” (Signed)
Charley Alston Jan 31 1914
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world Sample of each
freewith 32-p Skin Book Address post-
card “Cuticura Dept L Boston” — Adv
Scene: the Woodshed
She — Tell me of your early strug-
gles He — There's not much to tell The
harder I struggled the more the old
man laid it on
Matter o’ Money
”So my daughter referred you to
me eh? Well I hardly understand
it She never consults me except in
a financial way”
“Well — ah — that's Just it sir”
Query
Trooper — I’ve got to attend rifla
practise tonighL"
Friend — Are you learning to be a
pickpocket? — Judge
For poison ivy use Hanford's Bal-
sam Adv
On the municipal rolls of Copen-
hagen Denmark are 9889 men and
4094 women With their families they
constitute 73 per cent of the popula-
tion Cum Old Som Other Remedies Won’t Cara
The woret eases ne matter of how long standing
ere cured hr the wonderful eld reliable Dr
Porter’s Antiseptic H saline OIL It relieve
Pain and Heal at tha earns time tie 50c SI 00
Before following the advice of a
man who tells you how to run your
business it might be well to have a
look at the way he is running his own
Barring hand organs some good
comes out of everything
How To aivo Qulnfno To Children
FBBRILINB it tha trade-mark noma riven to an
Improved Quinta It it TaiMlan Syrup pleas
sol to ttkt and does pot disturb tbs aiomaeh
Childrsn take It sod newer knew It Is Qulnioa
Also especially adapted to adults who cannot
take ordinary Oulnina Does sot nauseate nor
sauss nanrooaoaas nor rfafinf la the baad Try
It tbs nest time you peed Quinine tor any pur
pose Ask for e-ouoee oricina! paebafe Tbs
tans FBBRILINB fa Mows la bottle is seat
b t
7 -fv
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’ r ' V f
V - ' " -1 -
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v v- a a' j ' i
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Leftwich, Mark A. Coweta Times. (Coweta, Okla.), Vol. 10, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 23, 1914, newspaper, July 23, 1914; Coweta, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1744110/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.