Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 19, 1943 Page: 4 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Oklahoma City Times and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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AY, JANUARY 19, 1943
EM
Leningrad Victory Spurs
Reds to New Advances
IS SI
Cl
,VA
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BRvambi
POLAND,
l wow
al»
no
KVM
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T1
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j
ANKARA
SUITS—TOPCOATS
AND “ROCK KNIT”
TOPCOATS
Now
IS THE TIME TO BUY
»
QUALITY CLOTHING
I
AT A NICE SAVING!
1
force
t
SUITS
»
2985
99
>
2385
3985
• SIZES 34 TO 54 •
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FOUR—tu:
• KM Co®,
•see, too.
■ffl
/ngeniou# Reds Hit Germans
When the Nazi Guard Is Down
I
i
I
1
1
Vital Nazi
Supply Base
Is Threatened
SAVE YOUR
MONEY AND
YOUR LIFE
“BUY WAR BONDS'*
TOPCOATS .
Regular Price 48.50
NOW
m
T
th
1
w*
►civi
am
hai
tun
to <
ual
tax
the
pro
«a
ttor
one
abo
ar
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of
no
th
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crt
Wl
pi
Us
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Um
Um
eat
cil
UM
P"
•OB
for
filled handkerchief* with now.
item over their face* and carried
tree to safety
&
.—133 WEST MAIN
_______Oklahoma City Times
Burma Raids
I RUSSIA
I 0 200
Attomey Charle* Mart of Um Kaiser
company told Judge Fm Um NRLB 1b
prejudiced and that Um company
would suffer a damaging production
toe* if the yard*’ contract* with A. F.
“HARRIS TWEED”
Baaaiaa Drives Sparred
The lift which the Russian
tot out of the breaking of the
ade of Um city, named for their revo-
lutionary leader and considered the
home of the revolution itself. bolstered
army morale and lent new momentum
to the serie* of drive* against the
aiia armies all along the 1 JO* mile
South west of Velikie Laiki, where
Oerman resistance ha* been excep-
tionally strong. a Russian advance
captured six populated piaoss and
added to the growing toll of axis
prisoner*.
(London military quarter* pointed
out that Hitler'* satellite annlea have
drubbing
ling that
; —— ________;
excite men with children by naming a
date no one can be certain of."
He said size of the armed force* will _
be one factor in determining the date. Be sere m JA
of asking that the Japanese please do
something.
Jap** Air Beetetanee Weak
The softening-up process going on
in Burma is a necesssry prelude to
any allied operation* tn that area.
Although allied bomber* have dumped
explosive load* on nearly all the moat
important center* in Burma, our air-
craft fosses ar* relatively small With
British ground action moving slowly
against Miff Jap resistance in th*
Akyab region operation* of the Royal
tert vr is* sola ef RbRMMUeeu
kJmMM lenevU.
••aeew — ee Mgntn
Man ****** er**l
a i* • aw**te* •*
■‘•’’J ** r*» 1
let NV Al TO ea tea aaereeMa |
Adv,
TOPCOATS
REGULAR PRICE $38.50
NOW
“Ch/da-Camahon "
TOPCOATS
NOW
"HAKBIS TWEED'*
Freezing of Pair
In Auto Probed *
■dK
erintend Siberia'* guard against pos-
sible attack by Japan.
Marshal Voroshilov was sent out to
the far east a year ago last month to
do Just this job. Then last August
he turned up in Moscow during the
Churchill-Stalin conferences Now he
i* battling Germany, and Timodienko
Men of the stature of Voroshilov.
" ___.. __J
the switch could well have been made.
Wherever Timoshenko ia it can be
taken for granted that Moscow will
not disclose his whereabout* until it
ia ready to do so.
And also it may be taken for granted
that Berlin will not heaidtete to "an-
” where ha is. whether it
MOSCOW. Jan. !•.—Gf>—All Russia
thrilled to tha new* of great accom-
plishments of the Rod army Tuesday
as th* fir* of enthusiasm was stoked
by word of Soviet —eehro into
sagging German forces all the way
- - - outside
to Um
By DAVID M. NICHOL
LONDON. tod .rm, hM
•truck a new blow against the Nazis during the winter offensives,
i It hag begun at the tardy daybreak which cornea to these northern
reaches about the time American commuters arrive at their town
offices. Each time that is, until the new Voronezh drive.
--------------— • Th* German* had learned suffid-
entiy about Soviet tactics
Poundipg Away at Japs on Guadalcaanl
.. U. 8. marines, having pushed ahead to advanced positions on Guadalcanal island open fire with
pieteiy from east s*4*. puppet** way 155 mm howitzers on Japs based beyond the ridge. (Wirephoto.)
Whereabouts of Famed Soviet
Marshal Ne w War Mystery
Th* Associated Pres*)
Whereabouts of Marshal Semeon K. Timoshenko, one of the
LONDON. Jan. 1I.—(UF)—Sweden,
evidently guarding against a pomibl*
German lightning invasion as the re-
sult of Russia's victories on Um Len-
ingrad front, took emergency action
Monday to Insure Its defense.
Oen. O. O. Tboernell. commander
CAMP POINT. HL. Jan. IS —(f)
coroner's jury was summoned Twe
for am inquest into the deaths «f a
and girl who. Coroner Bugen* jq
■ton said, frose to death tn an R_
mobile parked on the main street
Camp Point
A third youth was tn critisal n
dition in a Quincy hospital wNfr a
other occupant of the car appam
suffered no ill effect* from Un <
posure.
The dead were Ties nor Bragta;
year* old. and Donald MscMeans,;
both of Camp Point.
Although townspeople walkag ■
the car several hour*, non* notM
was occupied *nd the first indiej
of the tragedy was late Monday eg
Meredith Davis. 31, stumbled sag
Um car. He apparently suffeng;
ill effect* but reported a dead nwaf
in the rear of the car.
Johnston mid MacMean* and Da
were last seen late Bunday nigM, g
were to rejoin Louderbact and H
Bradley, who had gons for a rMa
■aid there was no indication Umt |
of the party had been drinkhw.
taken a particularly hea'
ta ths winter drive, calei
atx of nine Hungarian division* on
th* eastern front have been badly
mauled, seven of lb Italian dtvtsious
have been knocked out and that It of
N Rumanian diviskme have been
liquidated as casualties and prisoner*.)
Rasta •emataihM M iiaMagrad
Th* army moving southwest from
Voronssh H tha sixth and news*!
of ths Rod otfOMtvoa in th* south
was reported withta IM mitasM Khar-
kov after eaiituM of Afanastovta. K
Mltab north of th* railway sonnet-
ing Bvoboda and Kupyansk.
A* the Un* of advance was straight-
ened in this sector. Rumis n foroee
were reported to be enwuntogtof "ex-
ces*tvviy etaibbom resistance" from
Oerman and Hungarian troops to
anma oa**s
A* the squeea* on ths t
Of W.tM German* at
tightened an increasing number of
prisoners was taken. tndicaUng th*
Neste were taking heed ef the Rus-
sian ultimatum to surrender or die.
■ads Crees Deaeto
The plight of the Oerman* to this
area was heightened by the nrnMing
of the Manych river and canal, an-
nounced Monday- This endangered the
supply base and ate field at Batek
from which material has bom flown
in to th* surrounded dlvtatona Th*
Russian* already have reported cap-
ture of Um last usable landing fteld
in Um vicinity of Um trap.
Farther south the Rustens were
fanning out into the Ukraine at point*
40 mites west of Um Moscow-Rostov
railway. One of Ums* oflstwot* is
striking down th* MlUerovo-Voroshi-
lovgrad railway.
BtiU farther south along th* railway
to Rostov the Russian* erc—id th*
Donets river, captured th* Kamensk
railway station, and fought their way
into the city. It was announced. Kam-
ensk ta only M miles abow* Rostov,
and the next apparent Russian goal
was Likhaya, II mils* onward where
th* railway running west ef Btaltagrad
joins the north-south line to Kostov.
___ I
uxMaUM
family loai
C O M e A N T
MANWF BUIIMH*
314 No. Roteinton 5L.nr.ThW
. Teiepboae M4M
r $M. 2OL MAJQTK UM
301 W. Main Strwef, Cor. Hen
City. Otte. • Pbsm
from tee-bound Lek* Ladog
newly reopened Leningrad
high Caucasus tn tbs *outb.
Jxvestia. government newspaper,
reported Leningrad is now in dirset
land communication with the rest of
the nation after nearly a year and a
half in which its 1.00* 000 war-time
inhabitant* were supplied by air
transport* and by roads and a railroad
ever th* winter tee of Laho Ladoga.
bvestia mid the Oerman army has
lost M0.000 men in the unsuweesful
attempt to take Leningrad.
Fash Clseor to Latvia
While the Red army continued to
Oerman
"C^^~Cajn£Jwn
“CUSTOM”
SUITS
North Burma Town
into defen*e* that the Oerman* had Captured by British
NEW DELHI, Jan. It —<jF)—British is missing
troop* in northern Burma "have aeixed LZ .* ____
the village of Kjauktaw on the Kala- and Timoshenko ar* not many and
dan river. 40 mite* northeast of Akyab.------------- “ ‘
a British communique said Tuesday.
Little opposition wa* offered by th*
Japan***, it was reported.
British troop* also made a small ad-
vance Monday in Um Dundalk area on
th* Mayu peninsula and th* forcee
•ecured nounce" 1 ~
the know* or not.
Sweden Bolsters
Invasion Defense
batter at the
arrows around Ruertel aeeond city to
widen a flve-mite eorrtoer through
which Um ll-anonth stag* was broken,
ether Boviet forces ssovod further tn
th* direction of the Utvton border
oeutttweel ef VWikte Luki. threateMd
Balak. Oerman supply canter for its
•ajrappsd southern annlea tightened
th* via* in the Btaltagrad area and
made further pragrem in the direction
of the steel eity of Kharkov, th*
FiiUburrh of the Ukraine.
Dtapatehe* rotated that th* Lenin-
grad offensive began al • a. m.
January 13 with a hurricane ef ar-
tillery fir* on Oerman poeilion* on 1
th* elevated left bank of the Nev*
rtvw.
Ba terrific wa* ths barrage. “Fiav- ,
SU^^'al^'sSinuSirwSeiite Drive Now Hm Seven Prongs
pillbox** a* though they were match- Map locates the seven prongs which now have developed In Rus-
^MThVTUMlln, ‘'r° h0U” •**’• c««P<itn* The Soviet effort extends from Leningrad
- . u. (1) to the Caucasus front (7) 1J00 miles to the south. The Rus-
Then Soviet infantry which had -an effort eliminate the German army pocketed on the west-
•teod ta their tronch«s tmpatiently ,rn outskirts of Stalingrad ia Indicated by (5). (Wirephoto.)
ewetfing ths attoofc MMMlfctftotl
across Um frossn Neva toward the
Germans. Pravda said.
Good organtastton and speed ta ths
crpMing operation kept 1 cross "tasig-
nljlcant,” the dtepatch said. Ths en-
thusiasm of th* Russian troop* was
so- gnat that many of ths wounded
insisted on continuing in the battle.
In many places heavy Russian ar-
tMery wa* pushed across the frceen
rtdrr by band and nudged up th* high
banka wtth ths help of toy taw ropes.
Vhiss snow-covered stapes wen
h«vily sown with land mfoea which
capper* were forced to blow up
estass they wees froesn tec tight
Animal* cought tn Alaska ta IS
year* have produced over 0.500.000 fur
pelt*.
BOWEL WORMI
_ . CANT MUAT Atff
> rev *4
Pte*** wav ta.taste* row risk* sew,****-
tag troWbl* wttbevt year kaswiag hWara-
aerveuw
_____|
--to Aaaartae** toedlnx
■edMaei ealaatMteally
’ million* Art* saaiie.
LTXWB VXRMIFUGZ!
book*. It will try anything once and communique said.
Large tiros *tartad in r
by allied bombers Bunday
R1*?1? B>lnllay nl<h* Mond*y
tacks on enemy targeto and Japanese-
occupied viltagM in the Mayu river
Area.
In Um Chinhill* area father north.
Indian troopi have contacted the
- . —--------enemy, it was reported, and then have
which canted them over and which been occasion*! fight*.
Water transport on the Chindwin
and Imwaddy river* wa* attacked by
* a* .^s s^n*. - - a * . a_ _ a —
the ktorming of the Velikie”Tukl**out- U’v Burmese coast aoulh of Akyab No
po*to and were found of Impromptu
valuable service in the bitted street
fighting which followed. The Oer-
man* had fortified a stone house
heavily and were blocking the Soviet
advance. Nazi position* were mostly
on the first floor of these building*-
With tbs tadder*. the Red army fight-
ers took the second floor, then pro-
ceeded to blow Um building to bit*
with grenade*.
der* must act on their own imitative,
even without order* from their supe-
riors, to defend the country.
„ He warned the nation. ■« had pre- (
in southeastern BengaT Bunday m4*r Fer Alben Hanaaon Monday, that
—----enemy agent* were likely to spread
false report* ta a fifth column oper-
ation accompanying an invasion
"Any report* that order* have been
given to cease fire will be false.’
General Thoernell announced
Reltabte Ankara aourse* reported
that Hitler »u hastily strengthening
German defenses in the Thessalontke
(Salonika* are* of eastern Greece be-
cause the swift British advance in
Libya and the prospect of being
kicked out of Africa.
Pair Rescues Three
Women From Blaze
KAN8A8 CITY. Jan. lg_(jp>-A
tavern custaansr and w jantter. who
improvised amoks masks freai hand-
karahtet* and mow. reeetsed thro*
women from the ascend ftoor of a
burning buiMtag Tuesday.
Jack Wamn. a customer ta the
tavern, and William Blaekburn. the
janitor, attempted to reach th* aeeond
ftoor whore the women were trapped
and were fareed back by th* *e»oks.
ggt Russian Successes
Put Finns on Spot
BBRN. Jan. 1»—(CDN)—The lift-
ing of the siege of Leningrad and the
capture of Bchluaselburg have prop-
erty put the windup of both the Finn*
and Bwedse. according to all report*
reaching here
Ftanish circle* make no pretense of
hiding their disappointment with their
friends for failing to hold the
strong positions defending their coun-
try* southern approaches, nor do they
Ladoga front should th* Russians
continu# north
Certainly Finnish-Oerman relaUons
will not be improved by this latest
hifch^OB^and ”'<*r*Wal Finnish
summer that the objectives of th*
teitod to th* Caueaaus but should
•tao include th* elimination of ths
danger which ths Russian Uningrad
•rmtos constitute for Finland.
An Immediate result, ot souroe, of
®r •ehhisssiburg
is the virtual cutting of all road com-
beterwm Finland and K*
Although Ftanish official circles
Mtehte^* u hkely 10
I*?* -p *** Finnish will to fight,
most foreign oteerver* here incline to
the oontrery belief Three circle an-
» •‘"nkthenmg of pacifists
antl-*xis tendencies
Tomato Crop Bigger
, MKPCO CITY. Jan. It—The
cr°P •< northwestern Mexico
2? yS^rStah^o^of1 toe
B«rtcu]tur« re-
Frospect* are that
t.OOO carloads ct tomatoes will be ex-
United State*, as against
5 804 tost year, the ministry added.
NR (Nature s Remedy) Tablets.
I 5^”* *** ^Mnnrata. w minerals, w
Phenol dsnvativm. NR Tablets m dif-
■■rent—etf different Ferefy s*f«tcAA—a
CMBbuMUon o< 10 vegetable ingrwhents
fcrmulated over 50 year* ago. L nco*.ed
y 5*?^ mated. tbe»r action is da-
—————>
Decision on Kaiser
Injunction Plea Delayed
FORTLAND. Ore.. Jan. lg—<JP>— ,
Federal District Judge Jam** A. F*e
took under advisement Tu**day a
Henry J. Kaiaer Co. plea for an to-
Soviet Union's top generslx, became a leading milltAiy mystery junction against a national tabor rota-
te the outside world Monday night with issuance of the Soviet hearing-
— - - — tm company, opcraim* uuw »nip-
under the muter-mlndlng of Marihals Oretory Zhukov and Kle- *7ih"
menu Voroshilov. »■ a. P. of L.
Family Men’s Draft
Called Still Uncertain
WASHINGTON. Jan. II.—(*)—The i»f L. were thrown tut and a tabor elec-
date for drafting married men with uon called.
children Tuseday is *ull uncertain m
the opinion of War Manpower Com-
missioner Paul V. McNutt.
Asked at a pres* conference about
th* posaibility that father* might be ____
drafted about th* middle of the year. «te* m ttaakl But wb
MeNutt .aid I TffXKtog vm m,
"I don t think It would be wise to »— --. -----Y •
rig* r*^ZTvfefitta,l?Sri***!
rraortstary were,
tested a*g wd ta
Are Beginning
To Hurt Japs
By A. T. STKKLK
(Ctocsso Dally News gorvisa 0*rviss>
CHUNGKING. Jan. IK — The
month-old Anglo-American air offen-
sive against Japan bases ta Burma is
beginning to hurt. The Jspsnses are
not saying much about their losses but
are giving full publicity to complaints
of the native population, thousands of
whom have evacuated heavily bombed
centers.
The puppet Burmese government
has been permitted to extend its
' thanks to Japan for, dcmatKms to the
suffers of allied bombing. In a state-
ment quoted by Japan’s Dome! news
agency, a high Burmese official waxes
Indignant over the widespread allied
air raids, pointing out that it is now
more nscssssry than ever to eject the
Anglo-American “aggressors" com-1
No Longer a German Secret
♦
I I
t
A
‘‘Cii^dsi-QamsiJiDn ”
REGULAR 28.50
SUITS
were a grett aid ta the middle Don
break through. _
The lee ladder* were used during a,Uwl Blrrrtft which alao ranged down
___. a —. ... w tbam Kumm *^«*A*a - <- —a * , - _
enemy aircraft were encountered, it in chief of the Swedish armed forces,
was reported. iasued a special order that ta event
• u,hu’‘- loc*1«—“■
were bombed Bunday night with "good
results," it wa* reported.
The communique reported Japanese
planes bombed the silled operational
area __
night, but caused no casualties and
only minor damage.
Negroes to Raise
Paralysis Funds
Oklahoma Negroes have pledged
themselves to raise SI.000 of the state's
quota for the national foundation for
I infantile paralysis.
Negro churches anil conduct a
"March of Dime*" for the next two
weeks, toe school children will con-
tribute pennies to wishing well*, there
win be a basketball game tn Okla-
homa City January 28 between Doug-
ina* highschool and Boley, a dance
January M at Slaughter * hall and a
bridge party that same evening in
the Negro chamber of commerce.
Member* of the state committee for
Negro partlcipatkm are Dr. H. W.
Williamston. Idabel; Amos Hall. Tul-
sa; Dr. W. A. J. Bultoek. Chickasha;
L. R. Kirkpatrick. El Reno; Mr*
Ceoorta Johnson. Oklahoma City : Mr*. >
O. Douglas. Okmulgee; T. JL Rags-
dale. Muskogee; C. A. Jackson. Ana-
darko; C. Lamar Harrtaon. Langston
waiytty. and Mr*. Dolphin Ashley.
Oeorpe R. Regie nd ef Oklahoma
City is state chairman for Negro**
NEURIT | s
.(■MINI FAIN IN fgW MINVYgg
I Nronu* Nrerotato, (. „
n-ro ths ww* iitrtty* M
ro^nWiriddUS«5i u!m‘ thi'uX^d otf-n-w^wM tf
trt|u aswa^s. BBu^ Msa.Ear.mtnNinn M KWremmBamlm BT IR. ........... . ..
In the meantime, th* American air mentl Vorothilov.
forces based ta China and India are oermsna had broadcast only 1®
attacking railway junction*, bridges, day* aso that TUnoahenko wa* in
supphr centare anta important bams at ehU. on the Leningrad front, and
widely scattered point* Weak Jap thu had seemed plauaible. because on
retaliation so far has been confined January I th* Russians off totally dis-
to occasional small-acai* night raids cloWd he had been replaced on the
ia Calcutta and occasional hlt-and- southwest front by Ehukov. His where-
run attacks on th* periphery of the I abouU officially disclosed.
British-American air network ta but Moocow dispatches said he waa
Assam and China. believed to have assumed another tm-
Neeeasity of recapturing a suffl- portant command
ciently targe part of Burma to permit I Many Usee fer Him
reopening of the overtend supply line With Zhukov and not Hmoshenko
to China remains the most urgent al- announced as in charge of toe groat
lied problem in this theater. If the Stalingrad offensive, the German an-
United Nations eould force open a noun cement a few day* later placing
big enough corridor to permit entry of TUnoahenko in the lake Ilmen region
say 50.000 ton* a month to Chins, the outside Leningrad seemed logical
J strategic picture would be radically But Monday night * special com-
altered. munique stated that co-ordination of
Several China Reales Needed operations of the vast Soviet offensive
It would then be feasible not only' against the Germs n« was under
to supply a large American air force Marshal* Voroshilov and Zhukov, and
ta this country but also to equip quite the actual break-through at the long-
a number of Chinese divisions with besieged city wa* carried out by Col.
artillery and other armament to meet Gen. Leonid Govorov and Gen. Klrkill
the enemy on anything like *v«n a Meretskov
terms. ■ • . Thus the present occupation of
Even this volume would be far from TUnoahenko a former defense minister
enough to strike a decUlve blow rated high both a* a general In the
against Japan but would probably, in field and a* a directing strategist, is
opinion of military men. enable the again open to * peculation
Chinese to collaborate effectively with ! The Boviet Union is a vast country
the antes in smashing open other line* a J a* a nation at war its military
Into China. There must be several tasks are countless. There are many
•uch feeder line* to handle the great missions which the marshal might be
traffic of materials and perhaps men undertaking in secret,
needed for the big push against Jap- May Be ta Siberia
. —..V.- an * major continental base*. Despite the fact that Russia's big
. . .. . . ' Seizure of French Indo-China would battle at present 1* in the west against
placed the heaviest guards during the provide at least two more good lines Germany, and that there are many
ot highway and railway. Re- duties he could be performing there,
lengthy batUefront, withdrawing them capture of Canton and Hongkong tt may be that Marshal Timoshenko
for a rest during the day. The Red would provide another of the utmost has been sent to the far east to sup-
army answer wa* simple and direct, value. ------------- .
Boviet infantry force* in the district The flrat stepping stone ta any case
of Bhchucie. south of Voronezh, at- must be Wurms
tacked at midday.
Bed Ingeaaity Misjadgsd
The initial drive carried three miles
spent six month* building and opened
the way for the subsequent breax
through. Thu u typical of the essen-
tial difference between the Boviet of-
fensives and the Oerman blitz.
Just a* the Nastt misjudged the
stamina of th* British and the extent
of American isolationism, so they went
wrong on to* ingenuity of the Red
BMqr. ___ ________
The army that Btalin has built re- operating sg’ainst Rathedaung sec
fuse* to fight according to Nad hand- a foothold north of the village,
try again if successful. Th* result is I
the only yardstick of applied tactics
no matter what the theorist* may
have said.
■now Walls Overrents
Hug* snow walla soaked in water
have become an icy barrier behind
which Um Nada felt aecure ta aeveral
Placet. Th* Red army built tedders
I
I
IT FROM I
. IF ITS
MONEY YOU
WANT, GET
Q
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a
IM.is r¥
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 207, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 19, 1943, newspaper, January 19, 1943; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1760048/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.