The Medford Star. (Medford, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 3, 1907 Page: 2 of 8
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TOSTOPABOYGOTT
An Injunction Is Granted Against
Kansas City Live Stock
Exchange.
UNDER ANTI-TRUST LAWS
A FORECAST OF THAT MISSISSIPPI TRIP.
Fred 8. Jackson, Attorney General,
Brings Proceedings in An Ef-
fort to Make Market
Open to All.
San Francisco, Sept. 1!!).—The fed
eral grand jury* Friday returned in-
dictments of 124 counts against tho
Southern Pacific Hallway company and
tho Pacific Mail Steamship company,
charging violations of the Interstate
commerce law. These Indictments, it
followed by convictions, are suflicicnt
to render tho corporations liable to
lines aggregating from $124,oou to
$2,480,000, the minimum line pre-
scribed by law on each count being
$1,000 and the maximum fine $20,000.
The •defendant corporations are ac-
cused of secretly cutting to $1.00 the
published rate of $1.25 on the rough
shipments of matting from Japan to
San Francisco and thence throughout
the United States.
Under the rules or the exchange a
member must not recognize a yard
trader who is not a member of the
exchange. No member of the ex-
change may pay uionev as a fee io
an order buyer not a member of the
exchanee.
'i'he exchange lu:s a penalty of rv> \
suspension and ultimately expulsion
from the exchange which it imposes
on members who fail to obey the
rules.
The restraining order issued Friday
Is a temporary order, but the attor-
ney general will ask for a permanent
injunction. There are thirty-eight
corporatipns and 470 individuals
named as defendants in the proceed-
ing. The temporary order forbids the
enforcement of all the non-intercourse
rules of the exchange. The Traders
exchange members are also Included
in the restraining order. It seems
that the Traders' exchange have their
rules printed, but since the former
proceeding against the live stock ex-
change that organization has not pub-
lished non-intercourse rules, although
the attorney general says the rules
are still enforced.
Fred S. Jackson, attorney general,
who presented his petition to the
court, said: "This action is nut begun
•to injure anybody or any legitimate
.business, but to correct some alleged
wrougs of which there have be< n
many complaints come to my office
from stockmen all over Kansas. 1
bave seen Mr. Swift's statement yes-
•torday morning, and d"sire to say
■ihat this action has not been brought
-without the most careful preparation
and investigation. Mr. Swift's state-
ment does not cover the question of
the connection of the Kansas City-
live stock exchange and its members
with the members of the traders
live stock exchange, which is one of
the most serious grounds of objection
on the part of the cattle dealers.
"The market at Kansas City should
be an open one, free to all, and where
full competition obtains. It must be
apparent to everyone familiar with
the rules of the Kansas City live stock
exchange, which has been declared by
the supreme court of this state to he
a trust, that said rules have not. been
modified or changed in any way since
that decision.
(J DAILYM 1(S
There'll Be Sr
CUBANS ARRESTED
Generals Parra. Ducassi and Miret
Charged with Conspiracy
Against Public Order.
HATCHING A REVOLUTION
HUGE PiPE LINE PROFITS
Americans Believe There Will Nothing
Serious Result Although Admit-
ting That Agitation is Ram-
pant Among Negroes.
Havana, Cuba, Sept. 27—The secret
police early Thursday arrested Gen.
Mass-
A Standard Oil Branch, in One
Year, Made $4,091,022.
Parra and a litti • later took
Which Was Twice the Total Amount
Invested—Claim Some Lines
Are Private Property.
Now York, Sept. 27.—C. M. Payne,
who has general supervision of the
pipe lines of the Standard Oil com
pany, on cross examination Thursday
at the hearing of the federal suit
against the oil combine, t< stifled that
the pipe lines of the New York Tran-
sit company, or the National Transit
company which, it is sometimes called
w re public carriers, and as such to
he Hepburn law had built
on- j a
quoted tari
,'n.o'custody Gen. Juan Ducassl ^d , conformjo t^^. ^ ^
Its lor oil shipments to tha
('Jen. Lara Miret. charged with
*"•"* 'E"'nSt odiSSr Mr." Payne ..Id .tat the p.p.
Gen. Parra is tlif
the conspiracy to start a revolution
against the Americans In Cuba with
the use of funds supplied through
some form in New \ork. Simul-
taneously with the arrival of Parra
at Havana three Santo Domingans,
well known on account of their previ-
revolutionary records, also ar-
QUS
rived.
It is known that the conspiracy was
hatched in New York by Americans
whose names, it. is said, are in the
possession of the United States gov-
ernment and it. is stated that the lead-
ers here were professional revolution-
ists hired for the job, which it is be-
lieved will result in a fiasco.
Gov. Magoon, howevtr, is
prepared with 5,000 American soldiers
and O.OuO rural guards to crush any
movement.
A NEW CATHEDRAL.
President and BiBhop of London As-
sist In Laying a Cor-
nerstone.
Washington, Sept. 30.—Sunday wit-
nessed two events here of general in-
vest to the religious world at large
and especially to tho ICplscopal
church. The first and chief of these
vents was the laying of the founda-
Ion stone of the Cathedral ot Saints
Peter and Paul at Mount St. Aihan,
Wisconsin avenue. The other wad w __
the great open air service on the niui should be encouraging to those
;ame grounds, under tho auspices of | who are looking about for a new
lie international convention of the home in which they may better their
rotherhood of St. Andrew, which' conditions. The following is a copy
.nought to a close the convention of the article referred to:
which has been in s.ssion here lor, William Knowles who cultivates
h,. past week. The cornerstone laying ; some twelve acres of land just below
was under the guidance of the Eplsco- j Middlechurch ferry on east side ot the
... Hirivh In America Red River has probably as fine a dis-
' with befitting ceremony and solenv play or horticultural products as any
t„ foundation .ton. £. ■ U«. J-J.
promises to equal in point of archly E nrlA.I with cntamlfri
PROLIFIC GARDEN
ENGLISHMAN'S FIRST AND SUC-
CESSFUL ATTEMPTS IN MANI-
TOBA—SOIL PRODUCES
STRIKING RESULTS.
The Winnipeg (Canada) Free Press
of a few days since contains account
of the success that followed the ef-
forts of William Knowles, an English-
man who located near Winnipeg, Man-
itoba. This is but one of many let-
ters giving experiences of settlers,
remises to equal in point or arc,..- ^
",'lUre t0^8^ Se" world'Ta. ^talile sjecimens, which have for-
licent cathcdials in the world wa'( tunale|y eBcaped damage by hail, al-
laid at noon. though heavy storms have more than
It was a notable occasion, made j ^ occun.ed wlth!n a fow mile8. The
more so by the presence ot tne presl- tat()eg are a wonderful crop, and he
dent of the United States and the exi)ectg to raise j r,oo bushels from
bishop of London. ! his 0f 4 acres. A half dozen
Among the prelates who took part of tuber8 Belected yesterday average
in the exercises were Right Rev. A. V. more U)an a llound L,ac.h. Adjoining
Winnington-lngram, tho Lord Ilishop the potatoos Iliay be seen a marvelous
of London, who delivered the saluta- co]lection tomatoes. There are CiiO
Hon; Bishop Satterlee of the Diocese p]antai a]i growing under an enor-
of Washington, who performed the moug wejght of fruit. One single
ceremony of laying the foundation 00k picked yesterday contained
stone, and many other bishops of the eighteen tomatoes and weighed four
' pounds. This extraordinary example
of marvelous growth, together with
.'Iiureh.
FAIRBANKS WAS DEFEATED.
Indiana Methodists Refuse to Elect
the Vice President as Delegate
to General Conference.
Pure Food.
The puro food law does not prohibit
the sale of Cream of Tartar Making
Powders because Cream of Tartar i«
as puro as Alum—bat it is a well
known fact that a baking powder In
which Alum Is used Instead of Cream of
Tartar is le3S injurious. Dr. Herman
Relnbold, the expert German chemist,
In a recent official report concerning
Halting Powders, declares that a pure
Alum baking powder is better and less
Injurious than the so-called Cream of
Tartar powders. He says that if the
quantity of alum contained in a suf-
ficient. quantity of baking powder for
a batch of broad or cakes for an ordi-
nary family, be concentrated to one
mouthful of food, and taken Into the
stomach of any one person, no matter
bow delicate, It could do no harm.
On Wit and Humor.
Man is the only animal that laughs
and weeps, for he Is the only animal
that is struck with the difference be-
tween what things are and what they
ought to be. We weep at what
thwarts or exceeds our desires In seri-
ous matters; wo laugh at what only
disappoints our expectations in trifles.
We shed tears from sympathy with
real and necessary distress; as we
burst into laughter from want of sym-
pathy with that which is unreasonable
and unnecessary, the absurdity of
which provokes our spleen or mirth,
rather than serious reflections on It.
William Hazlltt.
Starch, like everything else, is
! )ng constantly improved, the patent
Starches put on the market 20 years
ago aie very different and inferior to
those of the present day. In the lat-
est discovery—Defiance Starch—all in-
jurious chemicals are omitted, while
the addition of another' Ingredient, in-
vented by us, gives to the Starch a
strength and smoothness never ap*
The Society for the Propagation of
the Gospel hopes to have -a new prov-
ince in Central Africa and new dio-
ceses in Manchuria, Singapore, Ed-
monton, Khartoum, northwest and
northeast Rhodesia.
Colors in Bank N^tes.
Atlantic City, N. J.. Sept. 2*. If th<-
secretary of the treasury will grant
a request contained in a ri solution
presented Friday at
Banker's Association
tellers desk of the 1
bank will somewhaj n
l,oa counter of a department store
The resolution proposes that each de-
nomination of bank notes be made of
a certain color, as follows: Onejlol
lar notes, slate; twos, brow -
green; teas, blue; twenties.
fifties,' pink; and hundred and over,
white. The resolution was referred
to the incoming executive council
Bank Deposits Increase.
Topeka. Kan., Sept. 28.—Deposits in
Kansas banks have increas- d $2<i.0t.0,-
M0 in the past year, according to the
official "call" statement given out
Thursday night by Hank Commission
Hoyce. Individual deposits, which
represent the deposits of individuals
and not that of banking institutions,
American
convention the
vc-rage national
emble the rib-
fives,
illc
Washington, Sept. 27 — Official word
of tie- arrest of conspirators in Ha-
vana reached the war department
Thursday in the following cablegram
addr< .-sod by Gov. M:r;oon to Acting
Secretary Oliver: "information more
prcilie and certain than heretofore
ti was secured late last night.
that Maso Parra, angered by failure
bring about an uprising, threatened '( nmnt-allege t
,0 dynamite some buildings in Havana '
then escape. The local police ar-
-I him and two of his gang named
t Mirei and Dacassi and they are
now in jail."
War department officials while ad-
mitting that agitation is rampant
lining the negro population in Cuba,
>ecause of their failure to receive
tlvir proper share of the offices, dis-
redit the probability of any uprising
one year ago were:
In state banks,
line of the Standard from Unionville
to Tidewater was a private line qp
not amenable to the Hepburn law.
John G. Milburn, chief counsel of
the defendants, said that he had ad
vised building the station at Unionville
and thought it good legal advice.
The Indiana Pipe Line company,
subsidiary of the Standard Oil, made
a profit of $4,031,022 in 1903 on
total Investment of $2,228,758, accor-
ding to the company's figures prr
duced by George Chesbro, controller
of the National Pipe Line company
who appeared as a witness Thursday
in the federal suit against the oil
combine. Mr. Chesbro testified that
amply the Indiana Pipe Line company was a
common carrier and engaged only in
the transportation of oil. From bal-
ance sheets ot the company Frank B.
Kellogg, conducting the government's
case, sought to show that the In-
diana company was making excessive
profits and that it maintained a high
schedule of tariffs to prevent ship-
ments of oil by independent oil pro-
ducers. Mr. Chesbro testified that the
Indiana company trauspirted practi-
cally only the oil of the Standard Oil
company. The counsel for the govern-
hat It will be shown that
the profits made by these pipe line
companies, have, in some cases, been
20 times the actual cost of operation.
some of the potatoes were sent to the
Free Press office.
The proprietor was the first in
town with several specimens, includ-
ing green corn. The season has been proached by other brands.
favorable for onions, and one square
Columbus, lnd„ Sept. 29.—Vice patch 0f nearly an acre is looking re-
President Fairbanks was defeated mark-ably healthy. In addition there
Friday for election as a lay delegate are good crops of cabbages, cauliflow-
from Indiana to the, quadrennial con- er, turnips, parsnips, carrots, pump-
iVrence of the .Methodist Episcopal kins, marrows, cucumbers, celery, peas,
church to be held in Kaltimore next lettuce, rhubarb, etc. The floral dc-
Mav Seven lay delegates out of 18 partment. has not been neglected and
who'were proposed were elected by a charming display of all the wed
Indiana conference 011 joint votes of known blooms were shown, including
the ministerial and lay delegates. The a specially choice lot of asters.
vice president was not. himself a Mr. Knowles, who gained most, of
candidate but his name was urged by his gardening experience in Lngland
friends who assunud his election is loud in his praise of Manitoba soil
would follow bv acclamation. Instead for vegetable raising, and is gratified
of this it was bitterly opposed by the with the result of his first attempt at
radical temperance element in the extensive horticulture.
conference who took the ground that (
electing him would be equivalent to J
KNEW WHAT PAPA SAID.
condoning what they regard as an of- ^ Something of a Variation
ft-nse against temperance the alleged of Old Adage.
offense having been serving cocktails ^
and wines at the dinner of President j Tommy was stubborn and his teach-
Roosevelt in the Fairbanks home last ^ wag havlng a hal-d time explaining
Memorial day. a amall point ia tlie geography les-
Controls Street Railway Also. 8°«Tommy," teacher began, "you can
Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 30.—Announce- th(g yQU maUe up your mirid
ment was made Sunday by the Lin-
coin Traction company that it will
comply with the order of tho state
railway commission, that it will sell
six fares for 25 cents to adults and
ten fares to school children to be
used during certain hours of the day
for 25 cents. The most significant
feature in connection with the rail-
Pettibone's Trial October 15.
Boise, Ida.. Sept. 29.—George A.
Pettibone, one of the men charged
with the murder of former Governor
Frank Steunenberg, has so far recov-
ered from his recent illness that he
was able to appear in court Friday
and listen to an order fixing his trial
against the provisional government 011 j ^ 0ctober ^ Both prosecution and
that account. I defense announced that they would be
Acting Secretary of War Oliver was 1 ready at that time. Pettibone plainly
at the White House Thursday but he j ghowed the emaciatng effect of his
did not regard the stories of a Cuban . receut indisposition.
revolt of sufficient importance to
bring it to the president s attention. | Mining Promoter Arrested.
Gov. Magoon is keeping the war de- j Mo Sept.. 30.—Major C. M
It's not one bit smart to appear dull.
I know," she continued, coaxingly,
"that you are just as bright as any
boy in the class. Remember, Tommy,
where there's a will there's
"Aw," broke in Tommy, "I know all
dat, I do. Me fadder's a lawyer, he is,
an' I've heard him say it lots o'.times."
"You should not have interrupted
way commission's findings is that it mc" reprimanded the teacher, but
places a valuation on the plant of the 1>m gla(i that your father has taught
traction company and the Citizens' you the old adage. Can you repeat j
railway company, and limits their jt for me?"
earnings accordingly. This action, it "Sure," said Tommy, confidently. ,
is believed, Is an innovation in deal- «Me fadder says dat where der's a
ing with public utility companies. In- win_fier's always a bunch o' poor re-
terchangeable transfers were denied latlons."—Lippincott's.
by the commission. | ^ fact_ any Kn0 j
^ash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to tha way they
are laundered, this being clone in a
II
SICK
ti STYLE
PILLS.
gifwnl
Positively cured by
these Llttie Piiis.
Tliey also relieve Dls
tws« irom Dyspepsia, I n-
digestion aucl Too He-ii rty
Ealing. A pcrf.-et rem-
edy for DUzlnesB, Nim-
sea. Drowsiness, Bad
Taste i n the Moulli, C.jal-
Tougne. Pain in ilia
, TOKPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Pureiy Vegetable.
SV'ALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PR!Cr:.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
IssT'l REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
CARTERS
PSlTTLE
ft tVfc'R
& P''-LS.
New
and Liberal Homes«e 4
liegulations it*
WESTERN
CANADA
SCC.550,343.77; in national banks, $r>S,
207.805.09; total, $124.818,149.40. At
the present time individual deposit
are: In state batiks, $79,242,74-1.07; i:
national banks, $64,977,744 >4; total
$144 220,518.71. showing an increase in
ono year of t20.000,()0( .
Kansas Girl Murdered.
ir.'t, Kan.. Sept. 29 —Miss May Sipp,
th- beautiful daughter of John N. Sipp.
var de-
partment advised of the situation and j W1'^^ 'a we'u
is consulting freely with Oen. Barry ^ 1(, years ha
in command of the American army of
pacification. His dispatches for pru-
dential reasons are not made public.
The agitation has been alike in Ha-
vana and Pinar del Rio provinces, 111 j retFnc.es jn connection with fraudu-
the latter province being among the ^ )anU,B htm
lawless classes, mainly negro&s. uov.
Magoon reported that private and of-
ficial advices from Santiago. Puerto
Principe, Santa Clara and Natanzas
known operator, who,
as been engaged in the
formation of mining enterprises in
the Missouri-Kansas lead and zinc
district, was arrested Sunday, charged
with having obtained money under
Violated Safety Appliance Law.
Washington, Sept. 20.—United
States district attorneys in various enhance their textile beau-
,arts of tho country Wednesday f^ing would be equal-
\v.-re instructed by Mterney General 7- ^ attention was
Uonararte to institute suits agamst lj ti^ firgt caaential
•«—
appliance law. The department of the g . 5snt1tiv surnrlsed at th ,_„ ,, , ^-i Some of tha choicest
iustlce and the inter.slato commerce you will be pleasantly si 1 lamU in the si-ain urow-
commdssion have dccldcd upon a rigid Improved appearance of your wotk. KiJS A.b^a'h^
enforcement of this law The facts, Trlpped. toT&men? Z'Slt
upon which the prosecutions are to Gunner_So you th5nk the DeBlow- ofcan^
■s are faking about their extended | Thousands of^hom^
.European tour? nviilal.le The new^herniations make it
j ouyer-I should say so. They said L^'e.t^tole^ade by p ox
Destroyed By French Flood. 'there were so many Americans 1 tUnii,-that roans_in *^b^fea
Malaga, Sept'. 30.—The greatest dis- Venice that many had to walk in the ^ wai^ ^ other member^e^amil^wh^rosty
he fcnlUlei '° "^aTeVefo'retheAeent
be based were developed by inspect- ; their extended
ors of the commission. The number eys are ia™
of alleged violations aggregate 287
> II vr
Ith his fam-
if Mora
s count
i.y in vt.e '
miles east of h- re
found deae with her throat cut. in the
back yard of the family home Fnda;
nl<*bt There appears to be no reason-
able explanation or the cause of the
deed.
A Brewer far London's Lord Mayor.
London. Sept. 29.-Sir. John Charles
neu ex-sheriff of the city of London
-nd'head of a big brewery company
waa Saturday elected lord mayor of
London
Settled With Mrs. Devlin.
Topeka. Kan., Sept. 27—The trus-
Principe, Santa Clara and Natanzas 1. of the Devlin estate have made
provinces indicate absolute tranquil- a Hnal se(tu>nient with Mary A. Dev-
ity there. jjn> wjfe of the deceased. Mrs. Dev-
lin gives the trustees $50,000 out of
the half million dollars life insurance
collected by her. All suits pending are
Statement from Hadley.
Jefferson City, Mo., Sept. 28.—Re-
plying to the claim of railroad com-1 tQ be dismissed and dower rights are
panics made Wednesday in St. Louis j wajve(i
that they had lost $1,500,000 from com-
pliance with the 2-cent fare law in
this state. Attorney General Hadley
said Thursday night he did not be-
lieve the ralulroad companies know
whether the operation of the law
tress everywhere is prevelent as a re- middle of the street.
suit of the storms and floods of last Gunner—Well?
week. The governor with difficulty is Guyer—Why the streets of venic
preventing famished people seizing are canals.—Chicago Dally News. ;
and eating decayed food stuffs that that blows contrary
have been thrown out by storekeep- ItB an : of the weather
ers. Many bodies have been found to tne preaicuuuo
in the mud. A band of immigrants prophet
which was encamped on the quay, c.000 HOUSEKEEPERS
nrr a steamer, lias not been seen Use the best. That's why they
.IncSd J! "f«r«l .11 Int.
The damage done is place,', a . $3,S00,- Tq dQ the comm0n duty of each day
000, 1,500 stores were ruined. I uncommoniy well—that Is success.
Railroads Denied An Injunction. | Ymi always get full ynlue in Lewi^
Omaha Neb.. Sept. 28—Judges T. Single Binder straight 5o ce-ar lour
C Munger and W. U. Munger, in the dealer or Lewis'Factory, Peoria, 111.
United States court Thursday night gome people can't help making
denied tho injunction asked for by the molehlll8 out 0f mountains.
railroads operating in Nebraska
, the oppor-
have been
family "i y make
r Sub-
. jsfby'the father, mo.he'r. son', daughter, brothef
sister of intending homesteader.
"Any e'en numbered wtlon ot
«.not^e^red. nmv Be bam*
'^by.aay.P^
less."
, e'liead u'f a tnnilly,
or «• -T Of afW.
quarter section, of ICO acre*),
The fee in each case will be io,oo. Chtirchet,
r- b
i«be, .« 1
j. s. crawford.
Bo. 125 W. Ninth Street.
Kansas City. Missoorl
St. Louis Author Injured.
St. Louis. Mo., SepL 30.—Rev. Wil-
liam Poland, professor of philosophy
at St. Louis university and well known
as a contributor to religious maga-
will result in an increase or decrease z)ncs_ was struck by a Grand avenue
of net earnings. Attorney General j gl[vet car Sunday afternoon and seri-
Hadley quoted from figures supplied 1 ously injured.
bv the railroads during the trial of
the maximum freight rate ease 10 J a Cow Caused a Wreck.
show that the passenger business in j Hawarden, Iowa, Sept. 28.—A south
the state had been on a paying basis , bound passenger train on the Chicago,
and held up the passenger earnings j Milwaukee & St. Paul railway was
of $1 079.Crt3, in 1905. sworn to by j partially derailed pear here Fri-
the Wabash as refuting the statement' day afternoon. One person was killed
of that road that it never made money ( and five injured. The wreck was
on passengers, even at the 3-cent rate. | caused by the engine striking a cow.
prevent the state railway commission
from enforcing the laws reducing
grain rates. The restraining order is-
sued some time ago by Judge 1. C.
Munger was dissolved. This is re-
garded as a decisive victory for the
state, although it is presumed that
the case will be appealed by the rail-
road companies.
A Brakeman's Foot :n a Rail Frog.
Moberly. Mo.. Sept. 20 — Edgar 12-
Crow, a Wabash brakeman, caught Wa
ff>ot in a frog near the Wabash
foundry and was run over by an
engine. His right leg was so badly
crushed that ampuiatio.i was neces-
sary.
w. L. DOUGLAS
$3.00 & $3.50 SHOES THESWORLD
$2S,OOO^^jr^&-
Reward ofl.«r m*nutactur*r.
THE REASON W. L. Douglas shoes ^wVrn ''^'^8
.•m xval^oturotliHn.Hny otter quMitiej.
5*|CeCsel".-tion of Ulelol '^r!,1 by
.tilled .h^mnkera vrho ^ ^ ,
tTl'" «Tl tIke lurgn faetories at Hr<«-kton.Mass.,
Illconul t ike y f .. - j l>ouffla5«b« esaremade.
5CE.R'S
HAIR BALSAM
the hate
Clean** and
luxuriant erowtl
Never Paile to Bert ore Grey
Hair to its Youthful Co
: • •! i I
wear longer and are nl.greater valuectmntlcd el ony priom.
My |4 mOO Mnti BSsOO QOt E i)oacias name ami price &tani{>e«l on bct.oin. Take
"AUTION! The ^edhX for W L shoe«. If he cannot fnpply yon. send
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Wood, E. A. The Medford Star. (Medford, Okla.), Vol. 14, No. 18, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 3, 1907, newspaper, October 3, 1907; Medford, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc186280/m1/2/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.