Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 235, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 20, 1943 Page: 3 of 12
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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i
Oklahoma Qty Times
i
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10,
Full Accord
Nazis Have Reason to Scram
Seen for All
Free French
MT10U* difficulty.
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CAPITOL
RODEO
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GAIETY
UPTOWN
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nPENN
Criterion
□TATE
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Ptetenoi Ui
«tMh MB,
S4m7mN,
doS??i-
FRI
TONI
S.. Wiliraillir • M. p*9«ktv*s
"TARZAN’S Now York AAreatere"
faeeroii Un — Jake UUI
"BOM OF BIG TOWN"
Base
ain
1, who at
Ade this
•>
PREVIEW 11:30 TONITE
“HONKY TONIC*
Clark OaMa 9A4
Laaa Terror...... roV
Oaatag SOM ;
RANDOM HARVEST
•MS,
. IMO
*aaa Mrrrrr
•WMSODI XXXMT"
Beyfaiai — Oh. "Oster" Bam
-SOUTH OF SANTA FT*
POl," WM
n with
tufacture.
mder for
applica-
id fatal*
Flans Not Disclosed
("The newspaper has not disclosed
these plans in full." Radio Moscow
said. "But it demands the annexation
of Soviet Karelia and the Leningrad
region to Finland.**)
The Helsinki newspaper Suomen Bo-
sialldemokraatti said that "one of the
most important tasks of the recon-
structed government will be to find
the right moment for Finland to de-
cide to detach herself from war."
Steel Man, Daughter
ATmp/.. . 7%r sAbbi
Maksut bag afterjsu’vs
stopped bugUng!
_ Killed by Flames
President Manuel Quezon of the Phil-
ippines warned his people Saturday
possessions h—htrwl take
munition and proceed
Finn Request
For U. S. Peace
Aid Predicted
IMG BOTB! MW SaOWBMH
ACTIOM!
mnui . _a
Quezon Warns Against
Jap Freedom Pledges
WASHINGTON, Feb. 20.—(UP)
Peace Rumors Sweeping Europe
Are Traced Back to Goebbels
fMOlU.
The experience wl
John D Bulketey ■
boat terrors" gained
contributed much k
of the new type. F
elded naval authorttl
expansion in their H
Tte Bae et tt» P
revealed but It is
which should offer
axis.
JMmb Crete
•see ^Seeesv
"OMAHA
TRAIL"
I Beto Skew TenMe M am.
Leslis ■swart e Lserrroe OBvter
“THE INVADERS**
Vtrvtata WeSAsr e Bro MeBsroM
“BORN TO SING**
Oeee l.we e-su. Me te t, BMa 9fa
“TUTTLES OF TAHITI**
On 118x01 ■ ■ • See Mak
“SYNCOFATION**
Jackie Cesser • BsaMa OrsavMe
Ooee It Ween Me to 1—Tbee tee
Oeee like P. K.
Me *e 1 PJB,
Thea SOo
Joao OaMa e Ma Leets i
“MOONTIDE”
For the past fortnight, the Rue-k-
sians have been "koohing" the Ger-
mans which may be a good thing but
' ‘ ‘ , The fact remains
Iceland Rations Gas
REYKJAVIK. Iceland. Feb. 29.—(T)
—Iceland began to ration gasoline
Saturday at the rate of three gallons
a week for private atotorteta Stoos
motor vehicles end homes are shooer
the only means of transportation here,
the situation is regarded aa aertoos
and officials eaid they hoped to ln-
ereaae the ration during the summer.
When Russians Start 'Kothing’ Navy Gel
New|lmi
Torpedo
WASHINGTON. 1
A new model motor
mere potent and awn
its predecessor which
with the Japanese to 1
German Submarine Crew Off to Internment Camp
Members of the crew of a German submarine who beached their craft after British depth charges
had seriously damaged it are held under heavy American guard at Oran en route to an Internment
camp. (Wirephoto.)
“FLIGHT
LIEUTENANT**
Pet X»elra Gtero
traaiaw • una o fobd
"Ms ■ teen Spttflre** YliphiM
loon KBhOL • Vsro VklMX
► SB BBS orgjf Ida P.SL
I SkeHro * MroO Wesker S
aetk«rt«e< Be*4r MrnewsOS
I ^>1
Lete abew^teaMe^lkjam. I
-Hoyal AW
1 Another
J smd'otk?
■»»ny Fri-
announced
R t
____4MMHM
Metals • I
Tkea Me « I
___Oren 1PM. -I
wim* • i
_____ Welter Breaaroi < I
rsmau, or mbsa errr*
— ' Vlrrteli Vais -ft
3 its tai s
Tkea Me M
Oeea 1 TJL ; J
_________ a Batk e«inr a
-rnau mzn fbom tsxas**
Wm. OarC o Baeaefl ■■yQ«a , .
rWHMnBnBT? lee tm s
ATWi Tbe» 1S« a
WteJBjmiaP O*ea 1»
DAMCX. GtBI. SAW « I
■aeweea O'Oeea o Leeie ■aywatOO
•*BOA» SGKMT” •>
Mek Perea O AaOr Bevtaa <1
StmHUHiiiMiiteHHhi
w -
»»s: d®*.—
rum mrau m mm um
Grocer Aids War Effort
PBORIA, W., Feb. 20 —0P>—Gro-
cer John Ferris is letting his wife
operate his store for the duration
while be does his bit toward the war
effort. Ferris, who said the* store
brought in enough to support him and
his family, got a job in a war plant
but he doesn't draw any wages. He
told the personnel clerk to put all his
pay in war bonds.
The Man Who ]
Returned to Life
____1K3
■ a. w. seta »ae wwtim j
Urraak Mereaa O Katkrro Qrareea
H “Vanishing Virginian” ,
■i Lee Bewmaa o Jeaa Blows
“Pacific Randaavoses
lstx snow tomiomt
epara tocy
the New
set of my
with my
Mstic to-
Mare Hanes Sighted
“The next morning we were taking
more water than the books said we
could and keep afloat, but we kept
her up.
“At 4:25 p. m. we sighted more
planes on our beam. We were making
only four knots under tow. The Japs
dropped their torpedoes well out be-
The Chicago was a member of a
task force patrolling south of Guadal-
canal when 24 Japanese torpedo
planes attacked in two waves an hour
after sunset January 29. The escort-
ing fighters had left the task force
15 minutes earlier.
Jarman said “there was just enough
light to silhouette our ships. We
opened fire at 7:25 p. m. one torpedo
just missed us. The first wave of Jape
dropped float lights to light us up and
marker flares to designate our posi-
tion.
Crippled Chicago’s Crew Waits
Inevitable Torpedo Blasts
(This is the first detailed start of the sinking of the Unit-
ed States cruiser Chicago since her loss was announced by the
navy department in a communique on February 16.)
Iikeey Boek Brown
“Vtahetec Mg Foeeer*
Base SMe KMe
"UT*S OBT TOUGH"
By CHARLES MTKL’KTBT
AN ADVANCED BASE IN THE SOUTH PACIFIC. Feb. 10 —
(Delayed.)—GP)—The United States cruiser Chicago, already pow-
erless from two torpedo hits the night before and being towed
slowly, never had a chance as Japanese torpedo planes attacked
again the afternoon of January 30.
Eleven torpedo planes concentrated on the cruiser.
"Five torpedoes headed right for us.*———————————
We sat there knowing at least three
pr four would hit us.” said Lieut. Ed-
ward B. Jarman, 25, of Staunton, Vaw
the Chicago’s air defense officer.
Four Torpedoes Hit
“It was still for a minute or more
before they hit—four of them,” he
added, then:
“One torpedo hit the forward
magazine which already was flooded.
Three struck aft where we had been
hit the day before.
"She laid over on her starboard side
and went down fast but smooth—in
19 minutes.
"She fired a five-inch salute to her-
self as she went down—shells explod-
ing from the heat of the torpedo-set
firee—and with her colors flying."
Only 42 Men Lost
Despite that concentrated attack,
one of the most intense yet hurled at
any U. 8. ship, the Chicago lost only
six officers and 50 men of more than
1,109 personnel.
"We got off every survivor on
rafts," Jarman declared. “We had
nearly 300 recruits but all were or-
derly and waited orders. There was
no panic.”’
Isa throat
As for Russia, ft Is said that once
Be bas reconquered her loot territo-
M stay well make peace with
0«inany and, while she pursues the
mrfc of reconstruction, leave the other
jeDigerenU to bleed themselves to
cause we were a cold shot, and then
came straight in to strafe.
“I don't believe any Jap escaped.
Our ships got six Japs and our fight-
ers got another five. The Chicago
got at least three and downed i_
fourth Jointly with a destroyer which
fired at the same time. One PBY on
patrol tried to break up the attack
but failed. He flew around and be-
tween those Japs alone, before our
fighters could get to them, but they
came right on. He had lota of guts.
It’s a wonder he wasn’t shot down.”
Sixteen of the Chicago’s casual tiro
were men who had been wounded in
the first attack and were trapped and
drowned in the sick-bay during the
second-day attack.
In the first attack Lieut. John H.
Brandt, 30. of Seattle, Wash., suf-
fered three broken ribs when he was
bashed against a bulkhead by the con-
cussion from torpedo explosions. He
continued to direct the fire in the
main battery director until the attack
ended.
Lieut Donald C. Kirk. 23. of Mus-
kogee, Okla., was badly battered but
remained on duty at his anti-aircraft
control post.
Special DANCE
Saturday Night, 9 till ?
Public Invited
AMERICAN LEGION HALL
19th and Biktessn
YOU^I
WERE NEVER LOVELIER**
BMe Hajwroth, FtaB Aatahe
sorseraa veeca prom dkatbi
DANCE
3
-ft Dorothy and Bella
Novelty 8» ills Hets
dr Virginia Clark
Dance Arrebatire
h Sheila Terry
Sengs Bveryewe Levee
*co*mteal Master of Ciironio
Special Dinner
C \ Mmfe by the
irVICTORY MEN^J
Starts S ». M. /Wi
—Ths
New York
orchestra
orchestra
to renew
irbitratiou
the cases
heir jobs,
made Fri-
wad. CaL
ischarged.
I Local M3
1 of Mu.
i the in.
that "ths
mic have
« to re-
attb JAMBS HIMSW
"^Der Fuehrer’s Face*
•*» Denald Duck
ItUELTILI
^MQSTUHIQUI J <s <
Hte Atealro
—to y
“Holiday
Inn”
wwt before the WuHn “hntfuia"
roach the spec That h> Um advante
geous upset of “koah peins." But
there is the rteky sipict aba
Once the mntefa ta the
launch a koch attack, it b abate ha-
pooslbte for them to dbact nperattena
according to military prtnrtpieo.
It is still harder far Meecow baaS-
euarters to rotain control, ar even to
know precisely whore the front Uno
stands. Msantbnr, an is waQ.
R. A. F. Blasts Jap
Airfield in Burma
NHW DBLHX. India. Fob. St —<F>—
R. A. F. Uhsrator bombers unloaded
their cargo on the Japanese Airdrome
at Toungoo, in southeastern Burma,
many mem ana startecz a numoer ox
f tree, a BritMh coaununique said Sat-
urday.
Rncmy night fighters attemptli« to
intercept ware driven on.
Two villages on Akyab island wen
bombed and atanhtne gunned Friday,
the British said, and small shipping
and rail Unas wen attacked by fight-
er pianos ebewbsro aa the Buraia
front
PAUL HKBMANNto^*-
and ms Orchestra
Marsarel Bassdale
TRIASOI
1
■
I * ^ey. remaining neutrals are
oils, the |
has tom I
leir Chi-
iths, Dr.
ildent in
iced Sat-
undertaker, three times to put out the
light he was carrying. Patience ex-
hausted. the warden stepped up to en-
force his order, and apologized. The
light was a diamond pin Uf Duryea’s
necktie, glimmering in the moonlight
PREVIEW
Tonight 11:
ALL 90# INCL
SEATS TAx
LONDON. Fbb. 20—(CDN)—In-
formation roe rhing London suggests
that arrangements for co-ordinatin«
the direction of and actlritiea in all
STS?<£££.SPSS'S •___
be completed quite soon and without that moot Rusetan generate conduct-
serious difficulty. tag the Ukraine winter offensive aro
Evidently ths talks between Gen. Coeeacks and they have been caught
Henri Otraud. French North African "
high eommbsionsr. and Gen. Georges
Catboux. imiroory of Gen. Charles
termedlary in a negotiated, separate
peace with Russia.
Observers considered most signifi-
cant the relaxation of censorship
which allowed Helsinki newspapers to
discuss openly the possibility of peace
with Russia.
Overtures Ignored
So far. however, the Russians have
ignored Finnish peace feelers, and it
was not believed that the Soviet, rid-
ing the crest of a great offensive,
would be willing to consider negotia-
a tions.
(The office of war Information said
Radio Moscow Friday night denounced
the re-election of President Risto Ryti
of Finland as "Illegal’’ and Finnish
claims of fighting a defensive war as
a "false slogan . . . to keep the Finns
hitched to Adolf Hitler’s wagon at
any cost.”
(Radio Moscow quoted one Finnish
newspaper that the Finns would con-
tinue the war until they had achieved
the "military-political and military-
geographical requirements of Fin-
land."
'Red Menace’
la Stressed Tn
Propaganda
By PAUL GHAU
KBN, Feb. 20.—(CDN)—Waves of
Nee rumors are sweeping Eutods
days. Finland is said to bspav-
m for negotiations with
. Nsscow. Rumania is establishing eon-
■cb with the Turks. Hungary
fcroagh various clandestine channels
b trying to enlist allied sympathy for
tfr cause. Bulgaria, too, is extending
feelers toward the allied camp,
is gently pushing open a back
al i ttWh which, at the opportune
| Mtekt. tee hopes to escape from her
place. obligations and the war. Even
Owmany te wondering whether the
lines night not be Induced tc make a
Okla, ^ye 1
g|K>taw >G^Se«
The Germans* next important
dumps are far westward. They aro
known to be making desperate efforts
to move certain supplies eastward so
their rear-guarding army can be giy-
en something to fight with.
German ability to call A holt ta
Russia on the line of the Dnieper
river depends on whether they ean
bring up sufficient supplies from the
IS
M point a
tors w<rs
up by the oldest traditions of their
people.
ian peasants and troops as well.
What koah moons in wars is just
this. Supply cieases to be a problem
_ _____ for a quartermaster general. As a
meat Into a basis for setting up a village or town te liberated, the ca-
dence. He said they were meaningless
since "our independence te already a
reality.”
In a short-wave radio message to
the Islands which was broadcast to
other parts of the world by the office
of war information. Quezon outlined
a statement of future policy by the
United States toward the Philippines
which he said had been approved by
President Roosevelt.
“The only thing lacking te the for-
mal establishment of the Philippine
republic,” he said. “This cannot hap-
pen until our country is liberated from
the Invader—until you, my fellow citi-
zens. can exercise the full right to
elect the officials of the government
of the republic.”
Diamond Threatens
To Spoil Blackout
NItW YORK, Feb. 20.—(UP)—An
air raid warden during a blackout
provisional government for all
France are not seen hero as bright.
Pences most recently arriving here
from France profoundly believe that
ft is n«cceeery to build up a national
spirit, but conceive that this would
only be possible If representative
groups of political opinion in Prance
could secretly choose leaden who
would then readily escape from
France to join such a governmenL
Beamingly, this is not practicable at
present and the wisest French heads
here freely admit that those political
figures who have arrived so far have
not sufficient standing in Francs.
The work of the north African eco-
nomic board, announced in Washing-
ton Friday by British Minister Noel
Hall, is seen here as being more large-
ly a matter of redistributing goods
within that territory than of calling
for the shipment of supplies on a
large scale.
SsppUes Taken Inland
It has been discovered that im-
mediately after the fall of France,
the inhabitants of north Africa moved
all their supplies inland while every-
body having cash decided to invest it
in commodities.
Consequently, many have great
stocks of clothing and other articles
while it has been discovered that
there are immense stores of wheat
LONDON, Feb. 30.—(UP)—Finland also available. The immediate need
Saturday was expected to ask the aeen here is increased transport and
United States soon to act as an in- efforts will be made to ship out large
numbers of lorries for redistributing
from the Interior to the coastal towns.
British. American and French
bankers and currency experts are now
working out the implications of the
arbitrary arrangement reached by i
President Roosevelt and Prime Min-
ister Churchill during the Caiablanca
talks fixing the exchange rate in
north Africa at 200 francs to the
pound, while francs in Ds Gaullist
territories are still stabilised at 175.5
with appropriate dollar equivalents.
BeMv Orotee #|
Jeks Ferae l,;s
Vie y*ere
“FOGTUGiaT |
LONDON, »b. BL—(CDN)—Tfee Russians’ great athrancs
throughout the Ukraine has assumed a negr and strange charac-
teristic recently. The Cossacks have a worA for it. They call it
"koah”—that is the nearest phonetic spalling Koch is coouBunlty
moving nomadically. By adding an appropriate suffix, the noon
Three Shot Down
“We shot down at least three Jap
planes and other ships in the task
force got at least three more. We
filled one torpedo plane so full of
steel that it almost exploded on the
Chicago. It miroed our boat 10 feet.
It burned three or four minutes, sil-
houetting us for the second wave.
"Two torpedoes hit us. They all
concentrated on the Chicago, appar-
ently mistaking her for a battleship
because of her construction. No other
ship was hit. Fire broke out in our
enitinerooms and we lost all power.
The fires were not serious and we
had them out in 25 to 30 minutes. We
were taken under tow and headed for
port while the task force resumed its
patrol.
PITTSBURGH. Feb. 20—(A1)—Stan-
ton 8. Hertz, 45 years old. vice-presi- 1
dent of the Copperweld Steel Co. at
Glassport, Pa., and a daughter. Alice
13, died and his wife and another
daughter were injured Saturday when
fire swept their Pittsburgh home.
Fire Captain W. H. Thompson said
Mrs. Herts, 45 years old. and a daugh-
ter, Lois, 15, were injured when they
leaped from a second floor window.
He said the victims were apparently
trapped upstairs when the blase,
which started in a first floor library, ■
spread to a stairway cutting off ac- I
cess to the first floor.
ITheNew TO|
Gee. Mershy • Aaa SMrter
“MAYOR OF 44th ST.” T
Marrarat Chaaataa • Bar Barria K |(
“PARACHUTE NURSE”
FL MW.T4W _ J
TOWTTB
Cmn st 10 P. M. Cm UM
Fasten aad These 1 Big
PBEYUB PTS . . .____
cu-opoa-
*4 eiectris
nee.
! *nny co-
were lost.
raid in a
ire U-boa*
Prime far-
Kht attack
testroyed
1
M^pereona I
i <mr £ f
>45 hoars. |
— I*®
sbeow* iBT
> 1 tart
Propaganda Probed
Ibero are some of the stories which
ire being told and diecu seed in for-
fan circles here today. Most serlous-
ptoded observers pay relatively little
jttwitinn to them beyond seeking to
■elite the propaganda that clearly
Im behind them. There are so many
pcfUcting tendencies at play;there is
to much propaganda and counter-
toopeganda that the astute observer
Ittto it wiser to watch and listen and
|vsit farther developments.
Ont fact which emerges from all
UM stories is that axis solidarity
today exists only in the mouths of the
fad and Fascist satellite leaders. The
^eviction of German victory on
iMeb the axis coalition was originally
teaad bas been completely shattered
to the military developments of the
past four months. The axis satellites
ftw know that false speculation has
faced them on the losing side and
bto realization is causing them great
facomfort.
- Sympathy Sought
UM today with axis satellite propa-
pada designed to enlist allied sym-
pthy for the countries "whom fate
tai » cruelly placed in false poal-
Tba Finns, Hungarians, Rumanians
M Bulgarians are eager to establish
Bed contacts with whom to plead
Mr eountries's causes. They assert
Mt aD their sympathies are with the
Mm except regarding Russia and
Ifaimuly ask what plans the allies
to protect them from the bol-
beriet menace. Conveniently, they
■rjat to mention the three years now
bat they have been granting every
Mstsnce to the alllea’ enemies.
Den the Italians are employing the
MM tactics. It is amazing the num-
"antl-Fascist Rome circles” who
ta*® recently turned up in Europe’s
fartral countries to renew acquain-
bacs with their old allied "friends."
Uttening to these advocates of "ro-
Matant gamblers,” one gains the im-
g-taon that the axis coalition is
BP* to disrupt. But answer them
Mb "unconditional capitulation” or
wmsnds for deeds to prove their good
ban and this impression very soon
RMBM. These peace-feelers — with
fa possible exception of Finland—are
■ backed by a genuine desire to
»fth the axis. They are merely
' bondings of allied determination, in-
M revealing national phy-
Naal Foliey Different
The Germans adopt a quite dlffer-
B policy. They do not suggest that
■y are in any way interested in
JMg for peace. Their view is that the
JBm would be well-inspired to make
fto. them in view of the Rus-
pa threat. AU German propaganda
Fpa days is directed toward one of
• ends- magnifying the bolahevist
Py and driving a wedge between
bBa and her allies. The Nazis be-
atrong Ideological and polit-
■ ufferences between Russia and
Anglo-American bloc stUl exist
, H are the only weak spot in the al-
a coalition. At this spot, they are
■■facing and wlU continue to ham-
Ly*1 *bk desperation of the
2p»d animal who sees but one pos-
•B means of escape.
not be very long before one
Fwa members of the axis coalition
; ■ ganulnely sue for peace. At the
Ry» ft appears that if it were
ante to trace all these various
^a-Tl rumors to their source, the In-
Bgator would find himself standing
of Propaganda
kbdame Chiang Rests
Slj Afrom Speech, Parleys
^WABHINOTON. Feb. 30 —(Jp>—Ma-
- * Chiang Kai-Shek, wife of the
y** generalissimo, rested Satur-
[efter a flurry of official appear-
to the nation's capital.
. P*" »he arrived Wednesday to be
L’** M the White House. Mme.
JJBg addressed the senate and the
yl attended a luncheon given
Z "y foreign relations committees
and Friday participated tn
press conference with Presi-
** *nd Mro. Roosevelt.
>>77? to Mme. Chiang’s arrival tn
“tongton. Mrs. Roosevelt said that
• first lady would not crowd
te^yny appearances into short pe-
''’LX ^“1® because her doctors
Wfad her to have sufficient rest.
Ctattle Rustling Increases
^AtBUQURRQUE. N. M, Feb. 30 —
McCue, secretary of the
.Tyrico cattle sanitary board, re-
u ^a*turd*y that cattle thefts
. T ■•out 5 percent more than last
F*kd attributed the scattered rus-
'T to operations of the "black mar-
ts'E
FIS? ’’ ■
■‘Sy*
t' ’ .....* -k*
CWM YOUR FAY ROLL
IT CHECKS AT BROWIIS
smoothly.
Natfroml Spirit NeeSei
On the other hand, the prospects
for converting this working arrange-
a Tiuage or town is uoeraiea. tne en*
Of tire population is told to go koshing.
CUrte Tewd CbiMrea
A handful of girls are told off to
take care of the youngest children.
The rest of the people, male and
female, are detailed to leave their
their un-
bind the
army to the next village. They'D find
food there.
Thus the army does not need to
bother about lorries, petrol supplies
and such-like. It just advances, liv-
ing on supplies captured from the
enemy.
The Germans are particularly em-
barrassed by his strange unorthodox
advance. Their quartermasters were
ordered by Hitter to lay aD their
plans on tiro basis of continuous ad-
vance eastward. Obediently, they had
established the greatest dumps im-
aginable. in such centers as Kharkov
and Kursk, which now have been 1
seised almost intact by the IhMtfini i
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 53, No. 235, Ed. 1 Saturday, February 20, 1943, newspaper, February 20, 1943; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1760076/m1/3/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 9, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.