The Stillwater Gazette (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, March 25, 1927 Page: 2 of 10
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1
PAGE TWO
The Stillwater Gazette' LOWER PRICE HIGHER TAX
DISARMAMENT?
BT KINKEL BROWN An initiative petition prepared for filing by The reason given by the French government
latervd It Stillwater postoffieT tor trill0- ICampbell Russell and certain house members :for refusing to agree to the Coolidge proposal
e
—A A
ar1
naission through the mail as i proposes a constitutional amendment levying a for a naval armament reduction conference
Wm' at Stillwater postoffice for tratui-
secondciess matter
12 per cent "severance tax" on oil and gas with ! was that it might interfere with the plans of
SUBSCRIPTION RATES a 1 per cent tax on lead and zinc and other the league of nations for reducing armament
WIthia First Zeno minerals 1 and promoting world peace
One year 11110
-15 In bance e new e same a
st the bill is the that ! Yet it is evident that France does not rely
ta
for lteha ' su
- 60 i
Ibroo alai ho 00 which the house defeated by a vote of 64 to :J7 very much on any early tangible results from
Boyea4 First Zoos i
Iv the year St SS I It is much more severe than Initiative Petition what the league may be able to do along this
h Citaada ens year
°thee foreign tountriee IN ' No 89 by Russell which the people defeated i line For the government according to press
Vt7:lobti"riic"7 iaT fiy"ce a ! at the last election by more than 300000 votes dispatches has recently adopted a scheme for
Os stopped tThem: P414al!turg lolPrartv tar:
per eantlauously shoskin eatch"the datc ea i I T n effect - it increases the oil tax from 3 to 5 per increasing greatly the fortifications on the
U little yellow Label and eeriest before esni- i
ce
retina Bach webers cannot always bit sop-I
nt and the lead and zinc tax from 1 : per cent i Italian and German frontiers In addition to
plied
1 to 11L) per cent this the French chamber of deputies is perfect-
414yertising Rates — Display' advertiginZ AU
I " ssell and his aids contend that because the I ing a plan for the mobilization of all French
11 la SS Canto an inch according to position
sweat tuatara Locals or reacting notices I Oil man is receiving a lower price for his pro- citizens citizens men and women alike and French re-
tau per counted line each insertion Want
turtic"
olne 8 il"deril:dagwcoarrr lttitchesorl arealinglou "s sour I duct now he should pay a heavier tax to the sources in case of war The first article of this
fraternal aociety vent Wilting $4TONOSIVII il I state How would that argument appeal to the I plan reads:
(barged or revenue derisoll ress!ar rates i
ttnomision Ire All traasient sitivertisingifarmer as justification for a higher tax on I "In time of war all French nationals without
aysale ID advaate
Published Every Friday at
littilaater Payne County Oklahoma
Gaeette pulldIng No 620 Malt Otreet
Telephone No IS
FRIDAY IIARCII 274 1927
GAZETTES
As a practicing attorney Jim Reed
appears to as great advantage at
least AS in the forum of the
ate
Well we're not surprised Fact is
we should have been surprised if frost
had not ruined fruit Crops as usual
Ilej of it is they usually are not so
eoiripletely ruined as first impres-
uions and reports indicate
The Italian chamber of deputies is
considering drastic measures for in-
swing purity in the Boot of the Adri-
atic Sorng job for any legislative
body to tackle we'll say but per-
haps no harder in Italy than in New
York
Weather conditions of the last
week have furnished a fine illustra-
tion of Stillwater's immediate need of
a street sweeper and flusher Anyme
who tries to persuade himself that
Stillwater is a clean city is as crazy as
the March wind
Matters rapidly are approaching a
crisis in Mexico The economic pol-
icy of Ca Iles has paralyzed business
and stopped the flow of foreign
money into the southern republ!c
The coutitry is not growing enough
food for its own people
There are definite signs of effort
' to commit southern states to support
of Al Smith for the democratic presi-
dential nomination but a safe pre-
diction is that the movement will die
in the effort One can but admire
the courage of the attempt however
Some folks might call it gull
Stillwater residents will heartily
support the efforts of the American
Legion to make Stillwater a more
beautiful city It is an enterprise
in which everyone can help and in
which everybody must help if it is to
succeed The first step is one to-
ward therealization of the rights of
private property if we are to make
and keep it so the public may enjoy
The last five or six weeks Cover-
or Johnston has been writing mes-
Sages to the people through the press
making his letters primarily for the
weekly papers in which he has cx-
pressedi more confidence than in the
daily press but for those of the lat-
ter class which want to print them he
has made release date so that the
weekly press would have at least an
even break with the dailies This
release date supposed in newspaper
ethics to be held sacred has been
violated by one or more dailies much
to the disgust of the governor and
the fact no doubt has deterred a
number of weeklies from pritJng the
Johnston letters who otherwise would
have been Willing perhaps glad to
have done Ro In his latest letter
that of this week the governor ex-
presses some satisfaction in the fact
or the feeling as he expresses it that
his program of legislation has been
partially carried out It and he is
particularly pleased with the success
of his highway program To the gen-
eral reader who has followed the ac-
tions of the legislature up to the time
when it seemed about to adjourn on
Thursday it may seem strange that
the governor can find much satisfac-
tion in what the legislature has done
and failed to do but there still are
some constructive suggestions in Gov-
ernor Johnston's letter He again de-
dares there are too many depart-
ments and that they are too expen-
sive—with which declaration most
readers will :zree
homa citizens NVill not aid the persons sponsor-
ing this new movement either by signing the
initiative petition or by voting for the amend-
ment if initiated
NO ALLIANCES
t ming itgiiiiizt it alai tile C011111111111iitS Ul 1 that year the Mohamedans captured
Sir Erne Howard British ambassador to the I
course against - Tt outside f ' ale an! militarism atism ou si e 0 Constantinople and it was converted
i into a mosque Four minarets were
United States in a recent address to the Twea-lRussia
built at four corners but the form of
tieth Century club in New York very sensibly
i not up to us of course to criticize any the church was not mutilated Of
stated that what was needed between English 1 It s
i military preparation3 which the French may church were twheeredegTisttitnns inside e emblems
1 e ot 11 ise
speaking countries was not a hard and fast al-
I deem necessary for the defense of their coun- crosses
liance as has been recently suggested in vani-
try That is their business and not ours But angels virgin faces hetc
tSroi ne id e toof iti hide es ewtiht pMl ao shtaenrt e dpaan
paint t aan
Otis quarters but a spirit of cooperation
the action taken shows conclusively that the
screens but we could eas
brought about by friendly attitude of mind and
French do not put any faith in any immediate ilhy trace
inhi a ind)e- t i) sf itt eo n I e e tl
The
egttl o p of e tr ye stone d o me
not by entangling alliances Any Anglo-Saxon
results from a disarmament conference even every column every capital in fact
alliance he declared with the suspicion that every piece of material in this mar-
though it has the backing of the league velous edifice was taken from heath-
it was formed for "bossing the world" would
The French are evidently suspicious of the
en temples up and down the world
simply make enemies for the English speaking
Germans and Italians an the other European
rEothst ool ttlhee ctoeloul mones coar iluoto tol f the ot
countries in the rest of the world
nations are suspicious of one another That is Ephesus eight came from the an-
"The kind of unity I would like to see be-
why it will be almost impossible to get through
tween us" the ambassador said "is a fraternal aciner stoeliplceaomfethferosmunhaehoBpaotbeiko
any effective all-embrac disarmament isarmamen pro- g
t E ypt and so on around Imagine
Otis quarters but a spirit of cooperation
brought about by friendly attitude of mind and
not by entangling alliances Any Anglo-Saxon
alliance he declared with the suspicion that
it was formed for "bossing the world" would
simply make enemies for the English speaking
countries in the rest of the world
"The kind of unity I would like to see be-
tween us" the ambassador said "is a fraternal
attitude toward each other—a sense of confi-
dence in each other's determination to prevent
tt‘- 114 11 VYLII-& W LI "U" L" 1" ceed is one which would attack the phases of
anything in the wide world rousing U3 to the
disarmament one at a time as in the Coolidge
Pitch of fraternal conflict" proposal
To use a common American expression it
In the meantime France is getting ready to
might be stated that Sir Esme has the right protect herself in case of trouble That is
idea No real American would view with any- France's business It is the duty of us Amer-
thing but dismay the thought of conflict with
icans to see that Uncle Sam keeps in first class
Great Britain Such an unforseen calamity physical condition
might be stated that Sir Esme has the right
idea No real American would view with any-
thing but dismay the thought of conflict with
Great Britain Such an unforseen calamity
might it would seem almost presage the end
of our civilization' Of course we don't want
vac- with any nation and we are willing to ex-
tend the fraternal idea to all peoples who are
willing to reciprocate
But there have been recent suggestions that
an Anglo-Saxon would alliance for preserving
peace might be an excellent thing The Brit-
ish ambassador very wisely voiced some of the
objections to any such scheme
We 'ant friendship with all nations and en-
tangling alliances with none We have had
more than a hundred years of peace with Great
Britain and we will hope that it continues for
additional centuries Certainly our relations
with the British empire are vastly improved
over what they were a hundred years ago This
improvement has been brought about without
any alliance Instead of continuing it an al-
liance might have the opposite effect At any
rate the situation would seem to justify the old
slogan of letting well enough alone
There are many reasons aside from those
quoted by Sir Esme Howard against any such
alliance reasons which are valid from the
American viewpoint at least But it is com-
fortable to know that so eminent a Britain ap-
preciates the American viewpoint and adopts
it as his own
The Wrong Burns
Mr Scribbler had promised to de- However old the shades may be
1
liver a lecture on Burns and when their names are decidedly new Some
the appointed night arrived the hall of the inventions for the coming
was full and overflowing 1 spring are "monkey skin" "red ba-
ne began with "The Cotter's Sat-1 nana" "shadow" "violine" "vert
urday Nig ht" "Tam o' Shanter" and! d'eau" "nile" "rosebud" and "mak"
"The Jolly Beggars" and was pro- Pretty names all of them but not
ceeding with "John Anderson" whenl all of them mean what they seem to
there was an interrupt:on I mean "Monkey sk:n" is a light tan
"What is it my man?" inquired but who after visiting the monkey
the lecturer cage would have guessed it? "Vio-
"When are you going to give us a line" is a blue but "very d'eau" and
few hints?" came the reply "nile" are both greens "Shadow" is
"Hints?" one of those inexplicable shades and
"Yes hints!" repeated the man "I "mais" doesn't have any connection
came in because you were supposed with the color christened with it
to know all about burns and there There may be nothing in most names
you stand spouting poetry like a par-1 but in these new fancy names for
rot while my wife who's upset al colors there is confusion for husbands
saucepan of boiling water on her who go shopping for the women-
foot is waiting to hear whether she folks--Colerado Springs Gazette
should rub it with oil or shake the -
flour dredger over it!"—Tit-Bits
Bondon I Cleopatra No Heavy Spender
He'd Be On The Job
The manager of a touring company
wired to the proprietor of a theater in
a small town where his company was
to appear:
"A ould like to bold rehearsal in
your theater at 3 o'clock tomorrow
afternoon Have stage manager
stage carpenter property man elec-
tricians and all stage hands present
at that hour"
Later he received the following
reply:
"Al! right He will be there"—
Tit-Bits London
Her Ability
Post-Maud is a splendid execu
tire
Parker—That work did she get
out of you?—Life
THE STILLWATER GAZETTE STILLWATER PAYNE COUNTY OKLAHOMA
New Names For Old Shades
Cleopatra No Heavy Spender
Cleopatra has been regarded as
somewhat of a spendthrift in con-
nection with the gorgeous feasts she
gave for Mark Anthony but a statis-
tician has spoiled the illusion by fig-
uring that the parties only cost about
$1 cash
In those days a large jar of wine
cost only $1 and this probably lasted
a long time A pigeon was dear at
5 cents and a great quantity of veg-
etables that would last months could
be bought for about $2 Slaves were
Easy enough to get and their dress
was so scanty that liveries could not
have been expensive Cleopatra once
went in for a very costly drink She
melted a precious pearl in a glass of
wine and presented it to Mark An-
tony Lut she did not go in for such
extravagances every night--lklontreal
Family Herald
the country either as combatants in defense of
the country or as non-combatants for the up-
keep of the material and moral life of the coun-
try" This article passed the chamber of deputies
by a vote Of 300 to 30 only the communists
votimr aizainst it and the communists of
war and the arts of peace A prominent oil
man says:
"If one were casting about to find a single
industry whose story would be most character-
istically American most calculated to assure
that our natural resources will meet our needs
most adaptable to shifting requirements most
fair and reasonable in its dealing with the pub-
lic most liberal in its contribution to the public
revenues most efficient in methods and read-
iest to adopt improvements I think the indus-
try of petroleum would quickly command at-
tention I even suspect that a survey covering
all the factors would have to award it first
place"
The firm which fails to appreciate the value
of newspaper advertising cannot hope to keep
up With the progress and prosperity of the
times
And That Was That
A Highland farmer handed a rather
frail-looking box to the porter at a
small railway station
"Dae ye think this is strong enough
to trust in the van?" he asked
"I dont it" replied the porter
"but we'll see"
Ile lifted the box high in the air
and let it fall with a crash "It'll get
that here" he said "And it'll get
that" giving it another bang "at the
junction An' at Dundee it'll get
that!"
The third "that" burst the box and
its contents Were scattered over the
platform The porter shook his head
"Na" he sad "I chink it winna get
past Dundee If it's goin' farther
it's no' strong enough"--Tit-Bit's
London
The Hero
"Yes" remarked Jenkins "I gave
it to him straight I can tell you told
him exactly what I thought of him—
and a bit more perhaps Bigger than
me?" he continued noting the look
of interrogation on Robson' s face
"Yes I should think he was and he's
got a temper like a—"
"I know he has" said Robson
"and that's what puzzles me D'you
mean to say he didn't try to go for
you and hurt you?"
Jenkins shrugged his shoulders
"Really I can't tell you" he sighed
"You see when I'd finished all I had
to say I hung up the telephone re-
ceiver and walked away !"—Tit-Bits
London
Clara—They've put my photo up in
the beauty salon
Cora—I sutpose it has "Before"
printed on it?—Answers London
mallv
mv 31ND is sTR4lL1NED” 1 viunitimininititillunimionhomulthilitiumitputElmmuls
PARAPHRASES WILLIAMS I g
I yattonat
Another letter from the Rev Vir
tes Williams former Stillwater Chris- c '--
tian church pastor now a resident of 3 ?lielitirs
Wagoner bas come relative to his s r--
travels in and near the holy Land ti
in
It was written to Mr and Mrs Wal- 74 Dy Frank P Litsbert E —
ter Starry who have given it to this i
I 1 vinitinlitMilltlint1111111111I :r
paper that the hundreds of the writ- 5 ---
nitiummaiinitimpitimiiiiiitil
paper that the hundrias of the writ-I g-
ers friends in stillwater may rend it Orminevatallaumuniumuumatilmainafintritimunt
Constantinople Turkey
February 22
Our ship is anchored today beside
Constantinople We went ashore at
10 o'clock this forenoon and spent
four hours visiting famous things in
this great old city Of course the
center of interest was the Mosque
St Sophia It deserves all the fame
which now belongs to it all over the
world It is one of the most magnifi-
cent structures ever lifted by the
wisdom skill and persistence of the
human race The first St Sophia
was built by the Emperor Constan-
tine in 332 A D It was a wood
structure and was burned in less than
one hundred years A little later a
second St Sophia was built on the
same site and it too was burned
Then the present wonderful building
was finished by the Emperor Justin-
ian I in 537 It is written in history
that Justinian exclaimed when he
stood under the vast dome of the
finished building "0 Solomon I
have surpass d thee! This build-
ing was erected as a Christian church
and was used as a church more than
a thousand years or until 1453 In
that year the Mohamedans captured
yourself standing under that vast
grant The only plan which could possibly sue-1 dome of this mosque built of this
historic material and remembering
that on Friday after the Wednesday
in 1453 when he captured it Mo-
hamed II rode his war horse into the
immense temple and dismounted in
the center and bowed down and
prayed Don't you think you would
have been stirred? I was It would
take a book the size of a dictionary
to describe St Sophia Now a sur-
prise it was a surprise to me I
never knew it
There are two other mosques in
Constantinople larger and grander
than St Sophia the Blue Mosque and
the Mosque of Suliman I I saw all
three today
Mohamedan architecture reached
its climax here in Constantinople
Today trembling and in awe I have
walked amid the mazes of its almost
incomprehensible splendors
OIL INDUSTRY CHARACTERISTICALLY Constantinople larger and grander
than St Sophia the Blue Mosque and
AMERICAN the Mosque of Suliman I I saw all
More than 70 per cent of the world's pe three today
troleum is in the United States Its utilization itsM e d lillne r a r c tounrset a n
has revolutionized transportation by land has Today trembling and in awe I have
given us aviation an Amcrican invention and iunacioknedp rae ItlindSlee mspal7eensdoorfsits almost
undersea navigation another American con- I Perhaps I am using too much space
! describing Mohamedan glory You
tribution It has remade alike the science of I no doubt want something about the
Holy Land We spent last week tour-
ing it Of course with the good
roads they now heve and with mo-
tor cars we could see more in an af-
ternoon than President Mc Garvey
could see in a week when he was
there I saw many things I never
heard of and never read of in all the
books I will only state in a general
way that the Holy Land is strange
entrancingly strange Indeed I
think it must be the strangest land
in all the world I will not attempt
to explain here You will have to
wait for my lectures And besides
my impressions are somewhat jum-
bled I have not had time to classify
them yet Things are coming so fast
as the negro said "my mind is
strained"
However I will try to give account
of my trip from Jerusalem to Jer-
icho We started at 9 o'clock a in
in a car from the Notre Dame hotel
in a blinding snow storm We went
out by the Damascus gate over the
side of the Mount of Olives by Beth-
any and down among the great bare
hills desolate as the infernal regions
themselves Remember Jerusalem is
3700 feet higher than Jericho The
road was firm smooth and had no
steep inclines but how it winds and
curves and horseshoes and hairpins!
Down down down we went In
twenty-five minutes we had come be-
low the snow area and it was rain It
poured The wind roared end roared
The gulches were filled with torrents
of water Still down down we went
We passed the Good Samaritan Inn
ruins piled on a blek hillside but
had no inclination to leave the shel-
ter of our car for a closer inspection
On down and the great hills were
more desolate A little farther down
w rounded a hill and came into the
Jordan valley The clouds were
breaking There were spots of blue
sky showing the sunshine came warm
:nd comforting But the Jordan
valley was bare like a desert indeed
it is a desert along here We turned
northward toward the ruins of the
ancient Jericho Following this di-
rection about two miles we turned
toward the west again through some
low gray hills and down to the Jor-
dan There in the springtime warmth
I dipped my hands in the ' muddy
water and filled my pocket with shin-
ing pebbles from the river's brink
We lingered awhile and then rode
slowly back toward the hills We
went up a little valley out of the Jor-
dan plain past orange orchards laden
with ripe luscious fruit the best
oranges I haveever tasted to a broad
low hill and saw the mounds of de-
bris which 350a years ago were the
walls and palaces of a proud city the
mute but tbleing testimony of the
immutability of the prophetic word of
Jehovah We bad come down from
Jerusalem to Jericho
I would like to write to many
friends at Stillwater but in the rush
of the journey I don't have time I
want this to be a letter to them too
FRIDAY MARCH 25 1927
-
7alanal
Not long ago a number of inter-
esting newspaper stories came out
of Florida to the effect that Edison
and Ford were experimenting on
three acres of the Edison estate
with a view to growing rubber from
a "vine" It waz announced that
the success of this experiment which
seemed proballe would revolution-
ize the rubber industry of the world
and forever free the United States
from the clutches of the interna-
tional rubber trust
The vine it was said N'as peren-
nial that is would continue to grow
without replanting and could be har-
vested each year without further cul-
tivation By the use of a cobina-
tion reaper and presser Mr Edison
said labor charges could be greatly
reduced and it has been the labor
costs which Leretofore have inter-
fered most with the practicablo cul-
tivation of rubber in America
Whether the experiment will ulti-
mately prove successful or not Fine
alone can tell But it is only fair to
say that Ir Edison and Mr Ford
have hit upon the proper solution of
the rubber question so far as Uncle
Sam is concerned and that solution
of course is "growing our own"
There are a number of foreign mo-
nopolies controlling the world supply
of certain commodities like rubber
sisal coffee and so On which are an-
nually forcing the United States to
pay tribute And the reason they are
exacting this tribute is that the
United States has been unable to pro-
duce these commodities for itself
That this list of monopolies has not
been extended is due to our resouree:
fulness and our prctectivo tariff
Everything which tends to encourage
manufacture and production at home
makes us less likely to fall into the
clutches of foreign monopolies We
produce part of our own sugar and SI
have been able up to this time to
pruvent the operation of a world wide
monopoly in this commodlity We now
have our own merchant marine and
are so able to have something to say
about shipping rates If we repealed
our protective sugar and let our
merchant marine go to the sticks
how long would it be until we were
at the mercy of a foreign sugar mo-
nopoly and a foreign shipoing trust?
Free traders used to say that the pro-
tective tariff promoted natienal mo-
nopolies It can be said with nu-)re
reason that our protective tariff can
be used to prevent international p101-
°polies - - ' "
Word comes from Europe that af-
ter all it may be possible to hold a
three-power naval conference with
Great Britain Japan and the United
States participating And strangely
cnough it is hinted by some of our
correspondents abroad that if such
conference is held Great Britain will
be willing that Uncle -Sam's cruiser
strcngth be increased Great Britain
herself has ambitious plans under way
for greatly increasing the number of
her cruisers which she needs to pro-
tect her empire The British naval
experts it is claimed will agree that
we build up to the British They 'be-
lieve that our strength in cruisers
would be employed principally in the
Pacific where thcir policy in the main
agrees with ours So it is barely po-
sible that a naval conference held
right now might result in increasing
rather than diminishing the number
of our cruisers For of course we
wouldn't want to fall behind Great
Britain in strength or to permit Ja-
pan to get nearer to us than the 5-5-3
ratio agreement permits
You will know the ones read it to
them Or perhaps it might be pub-
lished See my friend Mr Ned
Brown Your good letter reached me
today It made me very happy
Very truly your friend
Virtes Williams
Satisfactory
"Why do you feed every tramp
wlo comes along? They never do any
work i:Jr you"
"No" said the wife "but it is
quite a satisfaction to me to see a
man eat a meal without finding fault
with the cooking"—Weekly Scotsman
410iie F
't
SCRIPTURE
I
fit
0i-pee 11 c
:
f
St Luke si:14-28 i 1
Jesus was casting out a devil and it was tl'
dumb And it came to pass when the devil 0
was gone out the dumb spake and the
people wondered p 0'
But some of them said Ile casteth out y
devils through Beeizebilb the chief of the i
devils
And others tempting him sought of him Y'
a sign from heaven 1
But he knowing their thoughts said un-
to them Every kingdom divided against it- 1
self is brought to desolation and a house
divided against a house falleth
If oaten also be divided against him-
self how shall his kingdom stand? because
ye say that I cast out devils through Beel-
zebub And if I by Beelzebub cast out devils by
whom do your 8 tin S and daughters cast them s I
out? therefore shall they be your judges 4
But if I with the finger of God vast out V
devils no doubt ths kingdom of God Is 01
come upon you
When a strong man armed keepeth his P!
palace his goods are in peace r
But when a stronger than he shall come 4
upon him land overcome him he taketh i
t
from him all his armor wherela be trusted fe
and divideth his spent
F
lie that is not with me is agairlat me and -
he that gathereth ant with me scaltereth
When the unclean spirit le goue out of a t
t
a man he walketh through dry places seek- t
ing rest and finding D44ne be saith I will
iT
return unto my house whence I came out
And when he cometh he findeth it swept I
and garnished
Then goeth he and taken' to hits seven b I
ether spirits more wicked than himself and
they enter in and dwell there and the last
state of that man is worse than tha first
And it came to pass as he goalie these
things a certain WOntlitn et the company lift-
ed up her voice and said unto him Blessed
is the womb that bear thee and the Papa
which thou bast sucked
hut he said 1-ea rather blessed are they
t 'vit !loir t hft vitro! of Citil lira' 1 11 it
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The Stillwater Gazette (Stillwater, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, March 25, 1927, newspaper, March 25, 1927; Stillwater, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2202974/m1/2/: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.