Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 186, Ed. 3 Thursday, September 4, 1947 Page: 1 of 4
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Oklahoma City Times
¥
EVENING EXCEPT SUNDAY
VOL. LVIII.
NO. 186.
PRICE FIVE CENTS
Of Rabbitskin
‘Mink’ Arrested
V
k.
U. S. Asks Huge Sum
BULLETINS
Sept.
4—(UP)—The
government
ment on shipments of explosives and ammunition during
t
extra cash payment, and Woodward Iron, which recouped a 1-point
Peddlers
Another Heat Record
money which we believe were unjustly collected” with be collected.
Americans Get
Put to Torch
City
I
m
Moslem Threat
5
Yanks Held
The
*
had became such a habit that Mr.
for return
A Deceptive Critter, Is Shy Jackrabbit
livery service
Jet Power
in Both Rear Paws
Sizzler
U. S. Seeks End
New Price Boosts Hit
To Greek Crisis
Grain, Animal Marts
J
!;
; i
I
ft
Hoax
4
i
Wes* to 161 BMlth
September oat* for tl.U'A.
| week, if the hot weather continue*.
1
I
V
jinn
Hum
is
City Gets New
Mail Service
to »H NE 25. 27. 28. 29 and 30; 1500
to 1899 Allee boulevard. 1
Admits Kidnap
Battle Staged
Peace Reigns;
Gandhi Stops
73-Hour Fast
Gty Postal Receipts
Climb Seven Percent
17 Freight Train Cars
Leave Track, Cattle Die
iswnlna lemon *t Tto mUr OX**N»—* > Snterto a* the OXiatxMBj City, IM la txana Potottk* at aeeond elaaa mall mattet under UM act ot March 1. t«i»
THIRTY PAGES—500 N. BROADWAY, OKLAHOMA CITY, THURSDAY," SEPTEMBER"47 1947
Mr*. Etoe M. Gerald''"
She wanted $200
of the facto. She won’t'believe that
rabbit kicked me tn Ute eye. She
FLZsaS TURN TO
FAOK 1. COLUMN •
Arnold
former
Federal
Abruzko
FLKASB TURN TO
rAGl 1 COLUMN 1
11 to K
Il ■ a
I to a
» to a
Maughan hesitated to do more than
i hint at a thin hope for relief from the
, heat. .
CHICAGO, Sept. 4— (VPi— A new
round of price increases at the na-
tion's big grain and livestock mar-
ket* threatened another Jolt Thurs-
PLSAM TURN TO
FAOB $. COLUMN 4
The board voted to allow dismissal
of all grade* in city school* at 12:>»
a pound.
Wheat
cento
/
ft
//
EEur,-
fir
™’BIES3IIIII
the war.
Attqrney General Tom C. Clark announced that a com-
plaint has been filed with the interstate commerce commis-
sion to recover reparations for the alleged overcharges.
Rain Cancels.
‘Truman Plan
To Scale Peak
—U*A9 Ptoto to Gw»t« Bate
Albert J. Bronson .. . From a rabbit’s point of View
but the damage was done. ‘
If you ever tried to convince the
better half of the household you got
a black eye by running into a door
knob, vou have some idea of the
static Bronson got at home.
For Rail Overcharges
' WASHINGTON, Sept. 4—(UP)—The l __________
Thursday began action to obtain from $30 to $40 millions
' i it accuses of overcharging the govern-
labor relations board and its ruling
that non-communiat affidavits must
be filed by officers of unions wishing
to use the board s services.
School Board Rescues
Sizzling Youngsters
The hot weather Thursday had
come to the rescue of the youngster*
who would rather be at home than .n
the school room—and a kftidly school
Postal receipts at the Oklahoma
City postoffice j dm ped 7.88 percent in
August this year compared with Au-
gust of 1946, the money increase
amounting to 51S.33S.90. Fred Shaw,
city postmaster, reported Thursday.
Total August receipts were $250,-
852.02 compared with the receipts in
August 1946 of g232.529.12. Last year,
the city postoffice passed the $3 mil-
lions mark in total receipts and took
a higher rating in the first class
group. Shaw believes that thia year
will send the city still further over
that mark.
DENISON. Texas. Sept 4—(Ah—
Seventeen freight cars were derailed
near here early Thursday, causing in-
jury to a switchman and killing or
Radio Chases Crows
RED LODGE. Mont., Sept. 4—OP>—
Scarecrows didn't frighten winged
pesto on John Comello'a farm so he
started using radio Now the crows
really flee, reports Comello, ' no mat-
ter what the program is.” *
$750-Million Stock Dip
- Laid to Europe Crisis
•’ ’ ‘■■■'A' .
ATHENS. Sept. 4—<*)—Par-
liament decided Thursday
to postpone until Saturday
action on Premier Constantin
Tsaldaria* request for a vote of
confidence.
heat in
as many
4$ 3000 to 3299 NW 46; 4600 to 4699
NW 45. 4500 to 4799 Hamilton drive:
4600 U> 4799 Ardlee drive; 2400 to 3099
N Ea«tern_ 1910 to 2099 NE 26; 2000
* and 30. 1500 , wi««<
2500 to 2599 the price rise was caused by the
NE 16. 17. 18 and 19 and Success, and August
500 to 699 SW 48
Big* Cold Front Drags Heels as Mercury
Climbs to 102 Here Shortly After fyoon
Far from dead, amnmer lashed out with a whip of
Oklahoma City Thursday and broke the second record In
days
When the mercury touched 102 degrees at the Classen observa-
tory at 12:30 p. m., it set a new high mark for September
old record was 1014.
Only Wednesday the Classen weather station recorded 105.4
degrees to set an all-time record for the entire month ot Septem-
ber. The former record was 103.7.
----Breaking September heat records
Hint British Plight Worse
Than Revealed Spurs Losses
Ranging to More Than Point
NEW YORK, Sept. 4—(UP)—Stocks extended their
loss of the previous session, losing more than three-quarters
of a billion dollars Thursday as the list sagged fractions to
more than a point.
Selling, according to Wall Streeters, came chiefly from
more timid stockholders who have been “scared” by develop-
ments abroad and by the many and sometimes conflicting
proposals for stabilizing European economy.
Some quarters, moreover, saw in British Foreign Secretary
Bevin’s suggestion thkt U. S. gold be redistributed worldwide a sign
that Britain’s plight is worse than has been revealed so far.
All sections of the list shared the dip. although ait occasional
issue countered in response to some particular news. Included were
Cunningham Drug, up 5 on a 100 percent stock dividend and an
Wheat continued to rlae in price
on the Cfflcago Board of Trade
i September futures
'ednesday’s all-time high
with a”price of 82 65 cento a bushel.
September corn sold at in iU-
on'tba Chicago Board of Trade.
Heat Wilts Nuptial Dignity
,The current hot spell is no respecter qf the dignity of matri-
monial rituals. During the wedding of Arthur Cook apd Mary
S Bennett at El Reno. It wouldn’t even allow the candles to
stay upright. Miss Betty J. Crenshaw, 1501 NW. 20. is pictured
fruitlessly trying to do her duty as candlelighter at the cere-
mony.
Two Peddlers
* ~1 drouth, which Inflicted
: heavy damage to corn, the nation's
It was the eighth complaint of similar nature involving
wartime shipments filed with the ICC.
The complaiitt charged the government was entitled to rates
lower than those imposed by the railroads becausce of the “magni-
tude of the shipments ... and the successful safety measures placed
in effect by the armed services, and other favorable transportation
characteristics.
Clark said repeated efforts were made during the war by the
armed forces to obtain lower rates but the railroads “persistently
refused."
Assistant Attorney General John F. Bonnett, anti-trust division
chief, said the action was Instituted at the request of the armed
forces and It is hoped a “considerable portion of the large sums of
More than 3,000 families, here-
tofore denied regular Oklahoma
City mail carrier deliveries will
get the service beginning Tues-
day, Postmaster Fred M. Shaw
announced Thursday.
These families arc among the thou-
sands deprived of regular city earner
aervice last May and June, when the
department at Washington rejected
Shaw's applications for extension of
service to outlying districts
No CaUeettoa Boxes
Shaw said Thursday he also was ad-
vised that the department to again
giving consideration to his appiica-
tion lor other city aervice extensions
“I hope we can get more extensions
this month " be said
Although the families are to get de-
livery service “I was advtoed by Wash- (
ington to atop even asking for the
boxes ' Shaw said
The extended aervice will be the
same as that maintained in all resi-
dential sections of the city, twice
daily on alternate days and once dally
on the others, except for mounted
camera.
HIGHLAND PARK. Hl.. Sept.
4—(UP)—A nursemaid who
was acclaimed by press and
radio 10 days ago after she told
how she fought off a husky
would-be kidnaper, admitted
Thursday that she made up
the story “to gain fame and a
possible reward.”
“I thought that if I had been the
family, I would have given a maid
in a position like that at least $200.•
the nurse. Mrs. Else Msrgaretbe
Gerald, told police.
Mrs. Gerald. 26, a widow with two
children, admitted the story was a
hoax after lie detector testa Wednes-
day night.
She was employed by James H.
Moses, a Chicago advertising execu-
tive. to tend hto three-month-old
baby daughter. Laurie Ann. while
he and hia wife and an older child
were on vacation.
Last August 25, the night before
the family was due home. Mrs. Ger-
ald carried out her remarkably real-
istic hoax.
When police arrived at the Moeee
home in response to feeble telephone
calls for help, they found the maid
lying on the floor near the tele-
phone, apparently semi-conscious.
The brassiere of her two-piece
play suit was knotted about her
neck. She had a long scratch on
her back and two large bumps on
her head. \
She mutb^ed a few words about
'Heroic Maid
September On the Chicago mercan-
tile exchange shell egg and butter
futures rose to new highs. October
/ m eggs sold for 854 40 cents a dozeq,
-• “ and November butter tor 73.25 cento
in a pound.
Wheat futures closed l%<r3H
.£m cento higher. September 82.63 >9
Cold Front Stow.
The hope centered in a huge cold
front now in the non hwest. It looked
good Wednesday and earlier Thursday,
but it was moving slower and begin-
ning to weaken
The official forecast for Ok to horns
City to for fair and hot. but with tome
tempering again by fresh to strong
southerly winds which eased the heat
here overnight It should be increas-
ingly cloudy Friday and somewhat
cooler.”
The statewide forecast atil! 1____
cated that the cold front might reach i
the Panhandle during the afternoon
with high* there expected to be in
LAHORE, Sept. 4—(UP)—Re-
sentment against the presence of
Americans in strife-torn Pakis-
tan Was on the rise •“
with open threats of violence
against them being heard for the
first time. _
Several American businessmen ware
sending their wives out of the new
dominion or were planning to do so.
Native sentiment against Europeans
also was increasing, but no action had
been taken so far against Britons.
> Correspondents Waylaid
One minor Pakistan official angrily
denounced the Americans, and told
George Parker of Nahant. Mass., a
Goodyear representative:
“Now that we have cleaned out the
Hindus, we are going to clean out the
Americans. We are sick and tired of
them living in luxury while millions
of Moslems suffer. If you do not leave
we will kill you. too.”
A group of American correspondents
was waylaid Tuesday night while re-
turning to their hotel by a band of
Pakistan youths who threatened to
beat them up for "insulting'’ the gov-
ernment. Some fast talking by the
Americans averted what might have
beep a bad situation.
Several American businesses were
completing arrangements to move out
at a moment's notice. They had sent
word 'to their headquarters that the
outlook for carrying on business was
most gloomy, even if they reorganized
their staffs to put Moslems in the
places of Hindus and Sikhs who ran
off or were Hlled.
Natives Venting Cockiness
Throughout Lahore a general de-
crease In respect for foreigners was
noticeable. . ,r
Repeated Incidents and minor Insults
against Americans were insignificant
singly. But collectively they were
growing to large proportions.
The natives seemed to be venting
the cockiness of their new indepen-
dence mostly on the Americans.
A scathing editorial in the Pakistan
Times against foreign press reports did
not help the situation.
By MARK SARCHET
mHE next time Albert J.
A Bronson, 510 W Lockheed,
sights a jackrabbit loping
across a Tinker field runway
he Is going to start running
the other way.
Jackrabbits are pure poison.
Bronson, a Tinker flight test
engineer, win take an oath
they have more thrust power
than a J-35 jet engine.
If. In Bronson's opinion, the snny
wants to regain the speed record
from the navy all the researchers
have to do to harness a couple to a
“Shooting Star” and take ofL across
the Oklahoma countryside.
T)RONSON discovered the latent
D power of the jackrabbit when
he and Albert S. Clayton. 4118 NW
18. overhauled one as they were
peacefully riding a tug. The jack
took one look and dodged into a
pipe marking the runway's edge.
Bron ton and Clayton made a per-
fect landing near the pipe and. tak-
ing position* at opposite ends of the
marker, started to grope with their
hands for the rabbit.
Bronson lost the contest. He got
the jack by the front legs and pulled
him out.
Wham I With \ throttle wide open
the rabbit let Bronaon have both
lear props in the stomach. Bronaon
jerked the beast skyward.
Kerplop! With his turbine gaining
speed the jack landed a neat left to
Bronson's right eye and the contest
was over.
Bronaon lost the contest. He got
applied first aid. The firemen traded
a hunk of raw beef for the rabbit.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4—(Ah
—The interstate commerce
commission Thursday author-
ised the, Pullman Co. to in-
crease its charges for sleeping
car service by giving 20 days
notice to the public.
CHARLESTON, W. Va.. Sept.
4—(Ah—Federal Judge Ben
Moore ruled Thursday Mrs.
Kathleen Nash Durant is “en-
titled to be released" from the
federal reformatory for women
where she la serving a five-
year term in the Hesse crown
jewel theft.
NEW YORK. Sept. 4—(Ah_
F. Kivi, 26-year-old
army sergeant, told
Judge Matthew T.
Thursday that he
wanted to plead guilty to a
charge of stealing secret pho-
tographs of Los Alamos, N. M.,
atomic installations.
ftoettona Ltetod
Two-trio foot aervice every other
day—north aection Midwest City; Noa.
1 to 99 on BE 37. 2M to 299 SW 12;
200 to 399 SW 13 and 14. 1300 tz» 1499
B Harvev and Hudson 2700 to 2899
NW 47; 2700 to 2799 NW 48 and 49.
4700 to 5099 N Miller and Steanaon
«nve 2100 to 2199 8W 36; 4000 to,
4099 NW Park and 11 3900 to 3999
NW 14 800 to 999 BE 21; 1900 to 1999
NE 5. 1900 to 2099 SW 9. and 1100 to
1399 SW 41.
One daily mounted trip goea to the
foliowint aeettona of the city:
^7* thZl^a^lfe'. budget.’"
The price of butter, ogga. corn,
wheat, oau and meat-on-tbe-hoof
rose to record high levels.
Grain traders said that much of
the 90s. while readings of 100 to 106 i
were forecast for the remslnder of'
the state.
Alias One of Natien'a Hottest
Most ot the cooler breath to ex-
pected to be in the northern half of
the state over Friday.
With 115 de-rees, Altus made (he
national wire news Thursday aa one
of the hotteat areas in a huge heat
wave centering in the southwest but
extending from the Dakotas to Texas.
Scattered thundershowers, however,
were beginning to develop from the
northern Rockies across much of the
Picture, Page 1
purchased from a New York furrier
for $382 was taken from one of the
men.
When detectives Jake Robertson and
Walker Cassidy arrested the older of
the two men in a business establish-
ment on NE 23, he was in the act of
offering two “mink” coats for 81.000
each or 81,500 for both.
The two furrier* had told prospects
--, basic crop. The other prices, the
Th- puihrr traders said were tied to corn in an
economic chain reaction
Fair Mrtkweat. possible a few wide-
ly scattered thundershowers ia the __ __ _______
east and aenth tonight, clearing Fri- Thursday with
day; some rosier central and north topping Wednet
tonight and extreme northeast Fri- ,
day; wanner tn northwest Friday , __
1M time^hTr $rii\ a rnibel Tht^-
day __ ‘
September wheat sold for
and p, ■ — ■ , ■ • — — — ——• — T
Both prices were record highs for
JI- • — —-------
TB
Hourly Temperature
ia a a ..... lai
« aa a « .....MS
» » 9. a. m
• aa » a. ......in
5______
r !i.m a Z.
aa ’I S t Z
St l:M a. »
M IS* p. a.
a* l:N a
■a SiN p. a.
fDecember oddlv ckwed higher than
September at 83.64*; corn ended 3
cents lower to 46 cento higher. Sep-
tember 82.50‘6, and oats were steady
to m cento higher. September
81.16%.
At Chicago’s Union stockyards,
top grade steers Wednesday equalled
the 1947 high of 835 per hundred
pounds. • ,
Market analysts said the record
prices soon would be reflected in re-
tail and grocery stores and butcher
shops.
A major factor in the price up-
swing, they said, was the govern-
ment's commitments to export food
to needy countries.
Here to the way the price chain
became entangled, all the way from
farm to dinner table:
Floods and drouth cut the com
crop to about 800,000.000 bushels
below last year's output. Farmers
need com to feed to meat ani-
mals. dairy cattle and poultry.
Many farmer! planned to use
wheat for feed where com is un-
available. This sent the price of
wheat, already high because of gov-
ernment export purchases, still
higher.
The price of livestock and dairy
products rose because of the higher
cost of deeding ths animals.
RIO DE JANEIRO, Sept. 4—
(UP)—A cold drizzle cqt short
President Truman's budding
career as a mountain climber
and orchid hunter Thursday.
Rain forced the president to stay
Indoors at th* United State* em-
bassy residence He had planned an-
other try at mountain rambling, an
adventure to which he took with
evident seat Wednesday.
Mr. Truman gave local opera fans
an unexpected thrill Wednesday
night when he entered the Munici-
pal theater during the second act
of Tosca. Hto daughter, Margaret,,
and Brig. Gen. Wallace Graham.
White House doctor, had gone to
the opera earlier.
The president decided later he
would go. He slipped quietly into a
box during the act which contains
some of hia favorite music and left
shortly before the final curtain.
Bohannon Believed
To Have Fled to Texas
I MUSKOGEE. Sept. 4—Special
agents of the federal bureau of Inves-
tigation Thursday joined the search
for Julius Bohannon, escaped Okla-
homa slayer of two officer*, after U.
8. district attorney C. A. Summers ia-
‘ sued a warrant charging the fugitive
had fled across state line*.
Summers' office indicated there is
reason to believe Bohannon, who van-
ished Monday from Um state peniten-
tiary at McAlester, has gone to Texas
Bummer* Wednesday denied tem-
porarily a request from prison Warden
Clarence Burford for a fugitive com-
plaint, saying It had not been estab-
lished then that Bohannon violated
the naUonal flight act.
loss when a 100 percent stock distribution was announced.
Reeve* Brothers ran up nearly a .-
point on improved earnings Coca-
Cola. down 3 in the *oft( drink*, had
one of the widest declines. Gimbeto.
Western Union. Lion Oil. Johns-Man-
ville. International Paper; Limo Loco-
motive. Chrysler. Mack Truck. J. I.
Caae. International Harvester. Bethle-
hem Steel. U. 8. Steel. American
Woolen and Santa Fe all, lost a point
or more.
Non-ferrous metals were softer wfth
McIntyre Porcupine. Anaconda, and
KennecoU down a point or more.
American Smelting also lost 1%.
CALCUTTA, Sept. 4—(JP>—Mo-
handas K. Gandhi Thursday
. _Z.’ broke the fast he threat-
ened to keep until peace was re-
stored between Hindus and Mos-
lems in Calcutta.
Just 73 hour* after he began hto
fast Monday, the beloved spiritual
leader of India's Hindu millions, ac-
cepted a glass of lime juice mixed
with bicarbonate of soda. He had tak-
en nothing but water during the fast.
About an hour before, the govern-
ment announced in a communique
that all had been quiet tn the city for
24 hour*.
Gandhi's strength was slipping dur-
ing the fast. Hto doctor. D. K Metha.
reported Gandhi was “distinctly weak-
er than Wednesday.” (Related new*.
Page 88.)
“Sarah," Bronson Mid Thursday, board concurred with the weatherman,
“take* a very narrow-minded view
p. m.. Thursday and Friday, if the
temperature readings officially are 10«
won’t even believe the o(her boys in plus The same may be done next
flight test,** j week, if the hot weather continue*.
ently has been a lucrative
racket for two Wichita, Kan.,
men—the business of selling
dyed rabbitskin coats as mink
and sable—when detectives
arrested them in the 400 block
NE 23 Thursday. A third
member of the group is still
at'large.
City detectives have asked the
FBI to step Into the picture be-
cause, they said, some of the
•1374 the two men had may be
counterfeit.
19 Coat* Arc Seised
Impounded when Um two men, 32
and 24, were arrested and booked on | 1 HUrsaay began ac
charges of peddling without a license. I from 717 railroads
were two 1947 automobiles and 19 fur 1
coat*. An invoice listing 16 fur coate
the cars.
The cars were on. a northbound
Mtesouri-Kanaax-Texa* freight train.
They were derailed at a switch on a
Ray cutoff spur. The main line was
unaffected.
T7ie cars, other than the xix cattle
cars, contained canned goods and oil.
There was no fire.
Dublin Transit Strike On
DUBLIN, Sept. 4—<4^—Two thou-
sand bus and street car operators
struck Thursday for higher wages. All
Dubliners had to walk to work.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 4—
(UP)-i-The labor department
reported Thursday that aver-
age wholesale prices edged up
another 0.3 percent last week
to set the ninth new record
in as many weeks. The depart-
ment's bureau of labor statis-
tics said average wholesale
prices for the 900 basic com-
modities surveyed as of August
30 were 154 percent above the
1926 average and 20.1 percent
above a year ago.
ATHENS. Bejil. 4—(UP*—The
United State* Thursday intervened
strongly in the Greek political crisis,
throwing it* full weight behind * new
effort to obtain a broader and more
representative Greek government.
Ix>y Henderson, special representa-
tive of the state department, went into
a series of whirlwind conferences with
Greek leaders. Including both Con-
stantin Tsaldarto, premier of the pres-
ent government, and the opposition
group*.
He met with Themtotokles Sofoulto.
86-year-old liberal leader who ha* re-
fused to enter a government unles*
given a free hand. Bophocle* Venizelo*.
son of the liberator of Greece and lead-
er of the liberal republicans. George
Papandreou. Social Democrat, and
Panayoti* Kanellopoulo*. Republican
leader, in an effort to arrive at a so-
lution.
By Slav Army .
TRIESTE, Sept 4—l-P)—Two U. 8. ■
army officers and an enlisted man ■
sent into the Yugoslav occupied sone
•fW Veneste VtMEC to negRttaSw tea 48* |
release of three other American sol-
diers charged Thursday they were
"literally dragged" at gunpoint acrora
the Morgan line by Yugoslav soldiers,
and then detained six days.
All six were returned to Oorizia
headquarters Thursday, ifhey said two
other Americans, detained by the Yu-
goslavs in August, still were held in
the Yugoslav zone.
The first three enlbted men were
__ _ __ _ „ detained after their truck made k
wkrd the Taft’-Hartiey act? the new *ron« lurn lnU} thr rflnf They were
• - • — — ■ ...... halted at a Yugoslav outpost. They
are T/S Stephen O. Novotny, Union-
town. Pa.; Pfc. Richard; L. Donnell.
Mattoon, Hl., and T/5 Ha.Mno Keiji,
Honolulu.
Maj. Gen. Bryant Mopre, 88th di-
vision commander, sent Capt Clifford
H. Shea. Randolph, Maae.; Capt. Ja-
cob D. Conrad. Lexington. Ky.. and
T/3 Milan Bortah. Denver, Colo., their I
interpreter, to negotiate
of the three.
They said they were forced by Yu-
goslavs to cross the line dividing the
the British-American from the Yu-
injuring half of the cattle in six of goslav zone of Venezia Giulia, and
were held at a Yugoslav military
guardhouse in Tolmino.
°®-1 CIO Strategists Meet,
Map Convention Policy
PITTSBURGH, Sept 4—(Ah—Top
strategists of the CIO closeted them-
selves with President Phil Murray
here Thursday in a policy-mapping
session in advance of next month's
Boston convention.
Murray, the CIO's nine vice-presi-
dent* and secretary-treasurer James
Carey were expected to discuss the at-
titude the organization will take to-
il
*•
it
M
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Gaylord, E. K. Oklahoma City Times (Oklahoma City, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 186, Ed. 3 Thursday, September 4, 1947, newspaper, September 4, 1947; Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1767714/m1/1/: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.