The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1902 Page: 3 of 8
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} OKLAHOMA CAMPAIGN |
■<o<.<.<.< <o<o>.>. .>. >.>.>.,
AMES THE DODGER
Inslnoerity of Hi« Oklahoma City
Statehood Speech.
HARD STRUGGLE TO SUPPORT CROSS.
' Lack of Candor Arrayn Him Agatnat HI*
Own P«opl -r lli to Ulicnu tha Merits
of the Statehood Inane—Wrote the Plan*
at fcntd.
Having written the statehood plank
in the Democratic platform at Enid, it
is natural that C. £. Ames of Oklahoma
City should be defending it, as he be<
gau doing among his democratic friends
at Enid only a few minutes after the
convention had adjourned. He declares
that bis party is for immediate single
statehood. Some of the best known
Democrats in Oklahoma challenged this
statement almost before the delegates
had finished shouting, after witness-
ing Chairman Nell's antocratio scorn cf
prniwty. Indian Territory has no pon-
tic lands for the support of schools, col-
leges and public buildings, and never
will have. The sale of her mineral
lunds to the highest bidder and the
pocketing of the proceeds by tribal citi-
zens in severalty precludes forever the
possibility of any provision for these
pnijAxtes. Will congress appropriate
from the United States treasury enough
money to eqnalise this difference? Not
•while water runs and grans grows. Snch
action by oougress, however, is the only
way this irregularity oonld be righted,
and a child should know that it ia a
vision of a disordered mind.
Immediate statehood under the Flynn
bill would give Oklahoma time to pro-
tect her treasures, without fear of hav-
ing to struggle with the rapaoity of those
who would seek to n st them from her
It is here that Amet is without candor,
bravery or patriotism. It is here that
the voters of Oklahoma, irresjiective of
politics, are leaving Cross to give their
support to McGuire, in their anxiety to
enjoy the protection guaranteed to
every loyal citizen of Oklahoma by the
Flynn statehood bill.
WITH THE SAGES..
W« Judge ourselves by what we feel
capable of doing, while others Judg«
us by what we have already done.—
Longfellow.
By a patient and loving endurasca
ot annoyances are we preparing our-
He Never Csllsd Ajal.u
Oassidy (proudly): "Comt, now;
did yex lver see such a baby as th'ol
before?" Casey: "Cure, an'01 caa'l
remlmber, Cassidy. .i hovn't bin to
a freak museum or a solde-show for
twlrty years."
CONGRESSMAN W11B ER SAYS
Tbe Pe-rn-na Medicine Co., of ColamMS. 0.]
"A dote in time save* lives." Dr. Wood's
selves gradually for the discipline o. Norway Piue Syrup: uaMren remedy lor
the rights of other candidates in his
mid zeal to see that nothing should jre-
vent the nomination of his friend Cross.
Ames was still fired with the spirit of
the single statehood convention at Mus-
kogee where Roy Hoffman offered to
give the people of Indiau Territory all
-the school lan:ls of Oklahoma, and in-
vited them to hitch onto the public insti
tutionsand haul them out of Oklahoma.
Ames has the reputation of an houor-
able man. Bravoiy gois w.tli honor,
and if ho is bravo he world not have
made the evasive, timid speech whioh
he delivered at Oklahoma City. As nn
•x|>erieiiced lawyer and a man of wide
reading,he knows that immediate single
■tafehood is impossible. He known
further that the Flynn bill is commit-
ted irrevocably to single statehood, and
to immediate statehood, with this great
improvement over the democratic plan,
that Oklahoma can get statehood at
once without wailing years till Indian
Territory is ready to be united. Ameh
has allowed unreasoning partisanship to
corrupt his candor and good judgment.
He devotes a greater part of his speech
to showing that Indian Territory has
resources that woutd make single state-
hood desirable. No sensible man de-
nies this, and is conscious tiiat if ail In-
dian Terr.tory were a trackless desert,
the pmyers of the people of both Indian
Territtry and Oklahoma could not in-
duce any congress, Democratic or Re-
pub ican to grant separate statehood.
Four n -w United States senators are
not d sirable in the East.
Ames attemps to repiy to a speech by
Dennis Flynn at El Reno in which the
latter called attention to the absence of
any considernble amount of taxable
property in Indian Territory, and ttte
palpable injustice of ft rcing Oklahoma
under the Cross-Ames schema to sup-
port a stati government for the benefit
of a large p ipulation without means t<
pay for their lodging. Am s ap]iarenttj
fe.t that he hail won his case when h<
showed that Indian Terr.tory did have
some taxable property which Flynn noi
ainbody- else ever denied. The issm
hinges on the^word "some." WhatOk-
laeoma demands is a fair and equitable
proportion of taxable property in Indian
'.territory; not "some," l nt enough t
offset what Indian Territory would gel
as her per capita share of the stati
funds. This wou.d be impossible under
immediate single statehood, becMi.-.e In-
dian Territory is and will be for years
without nit aus to contribute her fair
share in the support of a single state.
Cross anil h s managers demand that
Oklahoma shall wait until Indian Ter-
ritory is ready to come in.
The people of Oklahoma resent this
effront 'y and dictation. They have
mere cause, however, for repudiating
the Cross gold-brick echeme than the
mere fact of an int quality in taxable
GRUBBERS' GREED
William Halaall Telia What Indian
Territory Would Do
trials.—Dean Qoulburn.
A beautiful eye makes silence elo-
quent; a kind eye makes contradiction
an assent; an enraged eya makes
beauty deformed.—Addison.
The only happiness a brave man
ever trouoled himself with asking
much about was happiness enough to
get his work done.—Carlyle.
It Is the demands, not the promises,
'hat make men of us; the responsibil-
ities, not the enjoyments, that raise
us to the stature of men and women.—
P. T. Forsyth.
Let us be content to work;
To do the thing we can, and not pre
sume
To fret because It's little.
—Elizabeth Garret Browning
Before emergency a manly heart
ieaps up resolute, meets the threaten-
ing danger with undaunted counten-
ance and, whether conquered or con-
queiing, faces- it always.—W. M.
.uaci.eiav. %
Rose&ery Gutters from insomnia.
According to the Yorkshire Observ-
er I ord Rosebery Is suffering from a
recurrence of insomnia, which caused
him much trouble while he was pre-
mier:
there
be able to undertake his projected
autumn political campaign.
OKLAHOMA WOULD BE STRIPPED BAR!
congLn', coIiIk, pulmonary diseases ot every
sort.
The volunteer department had re,
►ponded to a man when the cry of
"Fire!'' was scattered over the wire-
less telegraph system of the village.
The conflagration proved to b9 in the
top story of the hotel.
"See," exclaimed one of the bucket
brigade, the fire is in the third story
and our ladder will raaoli only to the
second."
"That's all right," replied the noble
chief the department. "We'll adjourn
and take a drink while waiting for the
flames to come down to our level."
Hundreds of dealers say the extra
i,uantity an-1 superior quality of Deli-
Starch is fast taking place of all
other brands. Others say they oannot
mil any oilier starch.
A woman's head <s outiu mnch softer
than her heart,
Cnre« croup. sore throat, pulmonary trou-
ble Monnreh over pain of uuy sort. Dr.
'1 Iiouiub' Kcleotric Oil.
Never pluck your copious before they
are rijw.
"Pe-ru-na is AH You Claim For It."
LOVELY WOMEN OF EUROPE.
Millionaire Cattleman Paint* a Plctnro
How Crow and Hl Manager* Are Try-
ing to Enrich Indian Territory at Ok-
lahoma'* Co*t
William Halsell, the millionaire cat-
tleman of Vinita, Indian Territory, is
an uncompromising advocate of single
statehood. Mr. Halsell is a Democrat.
In an interview published in the Musko-
gee Phoenix, October 12, he said:
We can not get out of it, we will
have to go in with Oklahoma soouer 01
later. And we can swing 'em too,
when we do go in. The people of In-
lian Territory need no fear of being
governed by the Oklahoma crowd.
Two or three more years of develop-
ment like the past two in this territory
will simply place us so far ahead of Ok-
ahoma that she will not be our class.
She may h ive larger cities and she may
not, but we'll have the people, the snap,
the get np and getness, so to speak.
"I believe it is best as a purely busi-
ness proposition. We may not like the
accretion now, bnt we will get over it
in a short time, and when we have the
state capital, the statj university, the
penitentiary along the line of the Katy,
and get a new Katy depot at Vinita,
why in the words of Monte Christio, 'the
world will be ours.'"
.Halsell must hnve b?en inspired by
Cross and his managers. The proposi-
tion of Cress, woo asks Oklahoma to
wait for statehood, is just what such
,nen as Ha.sell want. McGuire offers
'he only way in which the people of
Oklahoma can escape the disaster
pictured by Halsell. McGuire champ-
ions immediate statel ool for Oklaho-
ma, without waiting for Iudii-.n Terri-
ory, and offers Oklahomans an oppor-
tunity to support their interests by or-
ganizing their state government befor<i
indian Territory can overpower anil
detp in them. Cross ami his managers,
witn pious hypocrisy, ave imploring
Okinhomaiis to walk into the trap
wh eli men like Halsell are laying for
them.
Thousands of Democrats are not in
sympathy with the Cross scheme. They
prefer to stand up for Oklahoma above
everything eJsn, to keep in line with
national Democracy which has con-
demned the Cross brand of statehood,
His friends are anxious and 8T1Ti or Ohio, Crrr or Toledo, i -
e Is some doubt whether he will lccas CoD*Tr-
Frantt J. Cheney makes oath that he In the
senior partner of the Ann of F. J. Cheney A Co.,
dolnK business In the City of Toledo, County
and State aforesaid, and that said tlrm will pay
the sum of ONR HUNDRED DOLLARS for
ench and every ease of Catarrh that caunot be
•— " u '"" " "HSJSr? 8BW
Sworn to bofore me and subscribed lu inv
presence, tbisbUi day of December, A. D. lWtt.
. A. W. GIjEASON,
(SCAL-l Notary Public.
Hall s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally, and
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. Send for testimonials, free.
* jr. j. CHENEY A. CO., Toledo, (X
Sold by DruKkrists, 7Sc.
Hall's Family Pills are the best
Every Nation Has Its Peculiar Type
of Beauty.
Every cation has its peculiar type
of feminine beauty. The American
woman, whom Americans think is the
loveliest of them all, would play an
Inconspicuous part in a beauty show
it Constantinople, In Algiers or in
Vienna, where the facial features,
dress, manners, customs and styles
are vastly at variance with the Gib-
son girl or her cousins.
The Egyptian woman still clings to
a blousy dress, patterned something
on the order of the Chinese nanta-
Icon. The march or civilization has
had no effect upon the women of
Egypt. But it costs more to dress one
of its beauties for a year than it re-
quires to keep an American woman
clothed for twice that period.
Instant Relief from Rheumatism and
Neuralgia.
Here Is a case: Mr. T. Shepherd of
Whitburn, Sunderland, Ohio, says:
"My wife suffered severely from rheu-
matism, and neuraigla. She could not
get one moment's rest and was nearly
crazed with pain. Obtained Instant re-
lief and a permanent cure by using
and to vote for the good of all Okla-
homa, instead of voting to elevate Cross
as the champion of Indian Territory.
THEN AND NOW
A Democratic k.iilur sells of the Plea
qiude for Trover* In 1802
"When O. H. Travers was rnnning
for oongress, Roy Hoffman, C. B. Ames,
Tom Doyle, Horace Hagan, E.l Dunn,
Col nel Johnson aud every other demo-
cratic speaker in the territory told the
people to vote for Travars, because he
would b3 in harmouy with Graver
Cleveland, with the democratic heads
of the departments, with a democrat o
senate an ! a democratic house of repre-
sentatives."
If that was a good argument to make
then, it is not a good argument now?
A thousand times more i? at stake now,
than then. Political supremacy and
the loaves and fishes were the only
thing in sijfht then, now the political
liberties of nenrlv a million of people
is at stake. Oi r public institutions are
not only on wheels, but are on sale to
highest bidder. Oklahoma's maguifi-
cent educational heritage agregating
nearly 2,OX),000 acres of land and near-
ly a million of dollars cash on hand is
at stake. The efforts of a great people,
aggregating over 600,000 to secure
emancipation from the unsatisfactory
Democratic newspapers whose editors
are so unfamiliar with the statehood
question as not to know when they are
exposing their ignorant>e are still talk-
ing of "immediate statehood." A
schoolboy should know tiiat immediate
single statehood is an impossibility.
Cross knows it, Mose Anderson knows
it, and the Ee nocratio managers know
it, bnt they dare not say so, and are
continuing in their futile attsapt to de-
ceive the people of Oklahoma. Single
statehood in inevitable, bnt the only
way to get immediate statehood for
Oklahoma is to vote for Bird McGuire.
rule, and to enter into the lull enjoy
ment of all the rights and benefits of
the people of the soverign state is at
stake" and these are of transcendent
importance, compared with the pett;
struggle now going ou, in the feeble ef
fort to elect a candidate to oongress,
a candidate to congress, who is opposed
to statehood, and is not identified even in
the smallest, way, with the taxpers of
Oklahoma."
The above was written by Thomas F.
Hens:ey, one of the ablest democratic
editors in Oklahoma, and printed in his
El Reno Democrat.
Chinese actors are expected to fur-
nish their own cnes.
WHY I* 18 TH1 BEST
la because made by an entirely different
process. Delia nee Sta rch Is unlike any
other, belter and one Oilru mora for W
can la.
An optimist is a man who is satisfied
with what ha doesn't get.
To Cure a Cold in One day.
Tnke Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab ets. All
<ru£gists refund money if it fails tocure. 25c.
3
Df. WILBER.
YORK.
Congressman D. F. Wilber, of Oneonta, N. Y., writes:
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbia, Ohio:
Gentlemen—'• Persuaded by a friend I have tried your remedy and I have
almost fully recovered after the use of a tew bottles. I am fully convinced
that Peruna Is all you claim for It. and cheerfully recommend your medicine
to all who art afflicted with catarrhal
Pe-ru-na a Preventive and Cure for Cold*.
to all who are
Any woman who regards beauty as
superfluous has never tried it.
DON'T SPOir. YOUR CLOTHES.
Use Red Crow) Ball Blue and keep them
white as snow. All grocers. 6c. a package.
Mr. C. F. Given, Sussex, N. K., Vioe
President of "The Eastime Boating
Club." writes:
"Whenever the cold weather sets in
I have for years past been very sure to
catoh a severe cold which w is hard to
thr w off, and which would leave after-
effects on my constitution the most of
the w.nter.
'Last winter I was advised to try
Peruna. and within live days the cold
was broken up, and in five days more I
w;ib a well man. 1 recommended it to
several of my friends and all speak the
highest praise for it. There is nothing
like Peruna for catarrhal afflictions.
It Is well nizh Infallible as a cure, and
I gladly endorse It."—C. F. Olven.
A Prominent Singer 8 ivod From I.o« of
Voice.
M r. Julian Wei ssli tz,175 Seneca street,
Buffalo, N. Y , is corresponding secre-
tary of The S ingerlust, of New York;
is the lea ling second bass of the Singer-
lust, the largest Herman singing society
of New York and also the oldest.
with catarrhal trouble.' '—David F. Wilber.
In T8l>9 The Sangerlnst cAebrated its
fiftieth anniversary with a large cele-
bration In New York City. The follow-
ing is his testimony:
"About two years ago I caught •
severe cold while traveling and which
settled into catarrh of the bronchial
tubes, and so affected my voice that I
was obliged to cancel my engagements
In distress 1 was advised to try Peruna,
and a I though I had never used a patent
medicine before, I sent for a bottle.
"Words but illy describe my surprise
to find that within a few dayB I was
greatly relieved,and within three weeks
I was entirely recovered. I am never
without it now, and take an occasional
dose when I feel run down."—Julian
Wcisslitz.
If you do not derive prompt and satis-
factory results from the use of Peruna
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a
full statement of your case and he will
be pleased to give you bis valuable ad-
vice gratia
Address Dr. nartman, President of
The Hartman Sanitarium. ColumbuatX
Sickness is the interest we pay on life's
mortgage.
_ Mr*. WlmloWl Booming Byrnp
the contents of one bottle of St Ja-
coba Oil. There Is no other remedy in
Motor Cars In Paris.
Nearly 8,000 motor cars are now In
use in Paris and the neighborhood
3.800 of the cars having a registered
speed of over eighteen miles an hour.
The number of licensed "chauffeurs"
at the beginning of the month was 13,-
C00.
Do Your Feet Ache and DnrnT
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and
Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and
Phoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FttlfiK.
Addressi\l).cn S. Olmsted, Lelloj, N. Y.
There is nothing more musical to an
ass than the voice of another a-s.
the world that will do this. The In-
stantaneous effect which St. Jacobs Oil
produces Is a part of Its half a century
record." St. Jacobs Oil Is sold in 25
cts. and 50 cts. sizes by all druggists.
The words "Acts ilke Magic," "Con-
quers Pain," which have been used ifl
connection with St. Jacobs Oil for
more than 50 years are wonderfully
and truly descriptive.
Scald head if an eczema of the scalp—very
severe sometimes, but it can be *ure;t.
Poan e Ointment, qui k and permanent in
its rusulta At any drug store, 60 cents.
mm^ m A# Instead of g:ving a list of ailments
Km we will say use it on your horses or
cattle for almost every ailment and
It will cure every- u.MT-flU/Tl you be sure
thing that, good MUST Aral* s?!"'"1"w
liniment ought to lollow.
cure—that's what horse-owners say of m lUfilifrifT I
riexican flustang Liniment LUVflNrLIW f |
A married man snys the best alarm
clock is his wife's elbow.
GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS
Use the best. That's w iy they buy Red 1
Cross Ball blue. At leading grocers, i> cents.
NOW
FORGET
A man may be able to argn with a
woman, but it never floes any good.
You never heat any one complain
nbout "Defiance Starch." There is
none to equal it in quality and quantity.
1# onnces, 10 crnts. Try it now and
Bave your money.
The ma8teri. ssateaoo.l argument of
Sidney Clar.e, in which be-declared
for McGuire and the people of Oklaho-
ma, as against Cross and his managers,
and the making of gifts to Indian Ter-
ritory was so unanswerable that evrn
the nimble-wittcd Oklahoma City Ok-
lahoman was compelled to submit in
silence, saving the statement that
Clarke and Dennis Flynn were Mends.
A good many persons have long be-
lieved that Colonel Roy Hoffman
thought he owne.l Oklahoma, but none
of them ever dreamed that he would be
foolish enough to offer to give the whole
"shooting match" to Indian Territory.
The campaign of deception by which
Democratic newspapers are vainly hop-
ing to save Cross is shown nowhere
more'clearly than in the following
paragraph printed in the Oklahon a
City Oklahoman: "The Indian Terri-
tory is as abundantly equipped for
statehood as Oklahoma. I* possesses
the population, taxable valuation and
all other elements which enter iuto the
preparedness of any territory for state-
hood." As abundantly equipped for state-
hood as Oklahoma.1 There is not an in-
telligent man in all Indian Territory who
will look np this ridiculous statement
The hatpin is mighter than the swoul.
Antiquity of "Shoo."
" 'Shoo' is the only utterance you
ran make to startle chickens," says
an observant young man. "You can
fhout at them until you get blue in
the face, but that won't frighten them
away, if such is your Intention. But
the minute you say 'shoo' they scam-
per. People 'shoo' chickens the world
over. The Jap 'shoos' his chickens,
and so does the Hindu, the Kaffir, the
Russian. German, Briton—everybody.
Why does this hissing sound instantly
startle fowl, when a s'aout or ether
human utterance will not? Have you
ever thought It out? Well, you can
put It down that 'shoo' was one of the
first utterances that man learned to
make. In primitive days the world
was overrun with reptilian creatures,
and these no doubt preyed on fowl,
just as pnakes nowadays have a fond-
ness for birds. Feathered bipeds nat-
urally came to recognize in the hiss
the presence of their mortal enemy
and took fright when It was heard.
Primitive man would, of course,
notice and appreciate the effect of the
sibilant utterance. It's a cinch that
Monev refunded for each package of
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES If unsat-
isfactory.
When jnst- ce and lov> go band in
h >nd it's a case of blind leading th<j
bliml.
Defiance Starch is guaranteed biggest
ind best or money refunded. 10 ounces,
0 cents. Try it now.
A Good Legal Decision.
A late legal decision is to the ef
feet that a man who works nights
and is trying to sleep daytimes is
justified in throwing his boots at the
door of a neighbor who disturbs aim
with her pans and kettles.
WHEN H>fJK OPOCER SATS
he does not have Defiance Starch, you
mny be sure he Is afraid to keep It until
his stock of 12 or. packages are sold. De-
fiance Starch Is not only belter than any
other Cold Water Starch, but contains 16
oz. to the packaee and : ells (or same
money aa 12 os. brands.
Deftes Father Time.
Ireland's Vice Chancellor, the Rt
lion. Hedges Eyre Chatterton, age
eighty-three years, has just got mar
ried. He has held his office since
1867 and appears in a new wig every
time it Is reported that he means to
retire on the ground of old age.
Don't forget when you
order starch to get the
best. Get DEFIANCE. No
more "yellow" looking clothes,
no more cracking or breaking. It
doesn't stick to the iron. It gives satis-
faction or you get your money back. The
cost is io cents for 16 ounces of tne best
starch made. Of other starches you get
but 12 ounces. Now don't forget. It's at
your grocers.
riANUFACTURED BV
THE DEFIANCE STARCH CO.,
OMAHA, NEB.
Fa:nt heart ne'ver wot a fat jackpot.
no one would over be bothered with con-
stipation it every one knew Low uitun.lly
and quickly Burdock Blood Bitters regu-
lates the stomach and bowels.
PILES
no money till cured. 23 ve4ks established.
We scad FREE and postpaid a 1U0 pace treatise on Piles, Fistula and Disease* of tlMl
Rectum; also 100 pafe illus. treatise ca Diseases of Women. Of the thonsaaJs cured
by oar mild method, noi.e paid a cent till cared—we furnish their names on applkatioa.,
PRS. THORNTON A MINOR, IQIO 0 k {.t., Kansas CU>. Mo-|
nnXTTlfi City, County and Bchool District.
DUi' I/O Territorial Warrants. We Buy
them. Write ns before t)la>-inK them.
OKLAHOMA BOND AND TRUST CO.. Gathrla. Mia.
Thompson'# Eyo Wa «r
$25 on
5 TON
Geniua and Hard Work.
Henri d'Almeras has written a book
our remote forefathers would put the fun 0f anecdotes about Frenchmen ot
hiss Into use when the progenitors genius, their failures and success.
of our modern chickens came straying one thing they have all had in com-
where they were not wanted, and mQn—a capacity for hard work. He
there, you see, we get 'shoo.' A chick- instances Bourget,- who, as a young
en runs when you say 'shoo' because man, used to get up at 3 and work till
of an Instinct that has come down 7, Then he gave lessons all day long. I quick relief nnd cure* worn
In the breed from the days when fowl end in the evening he was at his desn j
recognized their foe by the hiss." again writing till late at night. I • •
J>' H. U.-OKLAHOMA CITY. NO. 43. 1902
IS WHAT YOU CAN AVi
We make all kinds oi scj^J
Also B.B. Pumps
and Wlndmilli. rue
Beckman Bros., dcs koines, iowa.
DROPSY*6"D,SC0VERY: *lves
i No fee for exaiuinatiuii or iiivico We procure patents I
i tha PAY ami help Inventors to suoces*. AH branches I
I U. *nd Foreign Patent practice. Pr^n i<; terms ■
I rlgli* Members Supreme Court D. C. O"* business ■
I bui'.t on experience and honor, not on schemes. ■
I Highest references, valuable Hand-Boo. ctc.,fire«. L
R.M. k A. R. Late?, Wnor «. Piselle BldgJa htnKly P.f. |
ft
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Burke, J. J. The Norman Transcript. (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 13, No. 50, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 23, 1902, newspaper, October 23, 1902; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc186759/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.