Pawhuska Daily Journal-Capital (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 63, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 29, 1967 Page: 6 of 6
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Page 6, Pawhuska Daily Journal-Capital, Wednesday, March 29, 1967
GW
Loss Of Effective Leadership Only One Problem
Time Is Taking Toll Of Red Leadership
.__. moa hoc mua oirthar pro. nist leadership is growing old. munists gained a million over Italy’s party of 1,350,000 is hopelessly split.
CICA eICe
67 Frank L. Spencer
DON'T STAND on your head to read this. We are making
a test run on a flip-top page in the J-C today. It is an experiment
that may--or may not- help the readers continue stories that they
start on page one.
WE WILL give it a try today and see what the reaction is. If
it is favorable, when the "jump page is the back page, we’ll
print it “bottom side up” to make finding the continued stories
less of a problem. If it is to no advantage we’ll stay the way we
have always been. It is up to you, the readers.
EDITOR’S Note — Commu- ment has made further prog-
nism claims history is on its ress The lowest ebb as a result
side. But time is a double-edged of the differences of opinion
sword, and ts taking its toll in begun by the Mao group has
the Red hierarchy— just one of been overcome. The struggle for
many problems besetting world cohesion and unity is spreading
communism today. This is the throughout the movement. The
second of three analytical arti- overwhelming majority of tra-
des on the state of Communist ternal parties now believe that
affairs, favorable prerequisites exist for
--a new discussion among Com-
By WILLIAM L. RYAN munist and workers parties."
AP Special Correspondent Translated from Communist
The Soviet Communist party language, that means Moscow
is cautiously probing possibili- wants a world meeting to deal
ties for a new world Communist with the problem of China and
nist leadership is growing old.
For 50 years the Communists
have plotted for power in those
nations. Today they seem farth-
er away from it than ever.
One reason, many Western
Communists seem to feel, is in
Moscow. The demand from
Moscow under Stalin for total
obedience to all Kremlin flips.
the 1962 French elections. The
number of Communist deputies
elected rose from 41 to 73. In the
first years of President Charles
de Gaulle's power, card-carrying
Communists dropped by 30,000
but then began increasing again.
Today the party claims 20,000
more members than it had
THE MOST ill handled group of people in the nation today
are the housewives. And, it may well have national implications.
THE SOAP operas, we hear, were off the air today due to the
TV strike. Gad, you don’t suppose do you, that it will be twi-
light for days on end because “The Edge of Night" will never
fall? Do you suppose we we will have constant twilight, too, because
“As the World Turns” lets us hang up in space, with no earth
rotation to change from night to day? And, the medical profes-
sion may hit a terrible snag and the mortality rate zoom to
unusual proporations because the Doctors and Nurses will be
out of operation.
IT IS A FATE too horrible to even dream about-soap—operaless
afternoons!
THE ONLY thing that may save the day is that they cant
tape any new commercials while the strike is on. Can you guess
how smelly will be the nation (if the commericals are effective)
if all the deodorant, mouthwash, etc., advs are off the air?
The commercials get worse, so perhaps the strike will help—
we will just be stuck with the ones we have and not have to suf-
fer through the new ones. At this point we have gotten to where
we wouldn’t buy the stuff advertised by those kook commercials
if we had to do without.
ANOTHER by product, and we hope the government looks into
it-with some of these programs off the air-perhaps the air pol-
lution problem will correct itself. Don’t see how all that stuff
can be spewed into the air without polluting something-besides
the people’s minds who watch it.
meeting whose purpose would Mao Tse-tung. The Kremlin has
be to examine all the ailments had about as much as it can
besetting the movement. take of Peking’s accusations,
The likely time would be in insults and interference.
November. The China phenomenon has
The proposal for a meeting contributed much to commu-
comes from Neues Deutsch- nism’s woes. It has caused
land, the party paper in East splits and splinters in parties
Germany which, in a back- around the world. But there is
handed way, acknowledged an more to communism’s troubles
atmosphere of crisis, than the Chinese.
“On the whole,” it said, “the One important factor is that
international Communist move- in advanced countries, Commu-
flops and whims did much to before De Gaulle took over in
damage parties abroad. Today 1958. But the claim cf 425,000
there is a growing tendency members seems exaggerated,
among them toward independ- There is another side to the
ence of action. coin. In order to make these
Moscow has a word for that gains, the party had to sacrifice
sort of thing: "Opportunism.” It cherished tenets, make compro-
means deviating from the line mises with non-Communist par-
for the sake of improving one’s ties of the left. To gain a look of
own fortunes, respectability the party had to
How have the Communists criticize Moscow for such things
been doing in advanced coun- as jailing Soviet writers for ex-
tries? Not well, pressing their views.
At first glance, the French The gains the party made may
Communists would appear to be prove to be temporary. When
making gains. They express De Gaulle leaves the scene, the
elation with the recent legisla- leftist alliance can fall apart.
regarded as maverick. It, too, in the United States, the
seeks alliances, not only with Communist party pins its hopes
the left, but with the center, In- on the appearance of wide-
cluding Catholics. It has become spread ferment over Vietnam
respectful of the Vatican’s in- and civil rights.
fluence. Italian party leaders "Our party is the main force
espouse the dea of "polycen- in the (U.S.) leftist movement
trism," meaning that Moscow is and the most influential party
not the only source of authority among leftist groups and
in the movement. Italy’s party youth, wrote its leader, Gus
often balks at Soviet initiatives. Hall, in Pravda, the Communist
It is as if the leaders feel their party paper, late last year.
only hope for future power is in
being less, rather than more That points to Communist
Communist, hopes and ambitions in the Unit-
In the rest of Western Europe, ed States, but has little to do
Communist parties, though with reality in terms of Red
tive elections.
since all parties in it compete
In terms of votes, the Com- for the same votes.
Sweeping—
Continued From Page One
former state Supreme Court
justice now serving a prison
term in Seagoville, Tex., for
federal income tax evasion.
TV--
Continued From Page One
AFTRA and the networks.
Negotiations between the net-
works and the union broke off
Tuesday night. They had re-
Welch left the commission in sumed Tuesday for the first
1958 to join Hale’s law firm. time since March 8.
Earlier, it was reported that The principal issue involves
Welch’s successor as general 100 newsmen at network-owned
counsel for the commission, stations in New York, Chicago
William L. Anderson, had re- and Los Angeles. The newsmen
ceived some $6,000 in small are seeking a $325 base salary
checks from Hale over a period and a 50 per cent return of all
of time. commercial fees on sponsored
Last week, two members of programs on which they appear,
the three - man Corporation AFTRA would permit the sta-
Commission, Chairman Harold tions to recapture 50 per cent of
Freeman and Vice Chairman all commercial fees on news
Ray C. Jones, confirmed they programs until the amount of
had received contributions to all fees equaled the worker’s
their campaign funds from util- basic salary. After that, the
ity firm representatives, newsmen would retain the en-
The commission regulates tire fee.
utility firms in the state and Previously, newsmen on net-
must approve all rate increases work-owned stations have nego-
or decreases, tiated contracts on an individual
Clyde Hale Jr., son of the late basis. Salaries range from $225
lobbyist, has been a key figure to $350 a week, but some news-
in revealing the payments to men have earned as much as
public officials. $800 a week with commercial
“My records will indicate cer- fees.
tain contributions to guberna- The newsmen also have
torial candidates,” Hale told charged that they are not com-
newsmen, He said all of the in- pensated for overtime work.
formation at his disposal would The networks had offered the
be turned over to the Senate in- newsmen $300 a week minimum
Oklahoma
News Briefs
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A law which lawmakers said
would protect against loss of some $6 million in federal wel-
fare aid was signed into law Tuesday by Gov. Dewey Bartlett.
The law brings state statutes regulating the nursing profes-
sion into line with federal requirements for home nursing care
programs.
WASHINGTON (AP) — A $12,000 loan for preliminary plan-
ning of 60 low-rent homes at Mangum was announced Tuesday
by the Department of Housing and Urban Renewal.
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Ten of the 12 purchasing company
representatives who testified before the State Corporation Com-
mission Tuesday called for a cutback in the state’s April oil
allowable.
At the monthly hearing, the state’s 28 purchasers of crude
offered nominations totaling 627,416 barrels per day, a drop
of 5,232 barrels from March .
The current allowable is a 50-per cent market-demand factor
applied to the depth-acreage table. The commission will set
the allowable at a later date.
OKLAHOMA CITY AP — An autopsy was to be conducted
this morning on the body of an unidentified man found in a shal-
low grave in southern Oklahoma Tuesday.
The body was found near Tishomingo after a several weeks
search for Herbert Ashley Carter, Fort Worth, Tex. Herman
Ford, Johnston County Sheriff, said he received a tip that
Carter’s body might be somewhere in the area near the Butcher
Pen Resort on the shore of Lake Texoma.
However, the Oklahoma crime bureau said late Tuesday
there was "no substantial evidence" that the body found was
that of Carter.
Carter has been missing since late December.
The body was found in an 18-inch deep grave which was covered
by a pile of rocks and leaves. Officers said the man had been
dead for some time.
Rockets--
Continued From Page One
the planes were called in again.
A second attack set the fires
going again. By nightfall the
Tulsa County Ups
Welfare Pay To
Two Hospitals
TULSA AP - Per diem rates
for county welfare patients will
flames had disappeared and a be boosted beginning Saturday
massive pall of smoke hung from $22 to $25 at Moton and
over the reef. Mercy hospitals.
Prime Minister Harold Wil- The rates were approved by
son, vacationing on the nearby the County Commission Monday,
Scilly Isles, was among thou-
noisy, are tiny and ineffectual, strength. Communists in the
All are plagued by splinter United States remain a puny
movements generated by the force, often scorned by Moscow
Moscow-Peking feud. itself. And, small as it is, the
Communists in West Germa- party is plagued by the same
ny, Austria, the Netherlands, process of splintering which
Britain and Scandinavia are bogged Communists everywhere
sliding downhill as a result of in the wake of the Soviet-
difficulties with tired dogma, Chinese rift.
tired old leaders and scanty fi- --
nances. The Belgian party is NEXT: The Castro lament.
Legislature Fetes
Our Miss America
By STELLA ROBERTS
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP)—
It was back to the business of
vestigators when they are ready with a $75 a day guarantee for
for them, sixth and seventh days worked.
______—------------------The networks also offered to
s allow newsmen to keep 13 per
Sro 1 i cent of their commercial fees
The giant saguaro cactus, for the first 18 months of a
found in Arizona, stands some three contract and 25 per
M^ T.S S0 - X ^^^
to 200 years. At age 15 or 20. months.
the sianc to be is only about a tr/aenive To Nov. 1, 196€, when
_________the old contract expired.
The local newsmen are seek-
ing the same provisions on com-
mercial fees that the networks
OKLAHOMA CITY AP — The 17-member group which will
have the job of coordinating the state’s image-boosting efforts
was named Tuesday by Gov. Dewey Bartlett.
Earlier, the governor had named Howard Cowan of Tulsa,
an employe of the Public Service Co. of Oklahoma, to head the
group. Name of the committee is the Advisory Council on Pub-
lic Relations.
Bartlett said the council would help develop a four-year pro-
gram for the state that would do a more effective job of improv-
ing the state’s image.
Courthouse
News
MARCH 24
JUDGMENTS
Betty L. Bowers vs. J. Bill
Bowers-$50 per month child
support.
DIVORCES ASKED
Marva Jean Watkins vs. Teddy
Wayne Watkins.
MARCH 27
DIVORCES ASKED
Randy Lee Carey, an infant
under the age of 21 years, who
sues by Francis E. Carey, his
father and next friend vs. Linda
Kay O’Neal Carey.
PROBATES
Will of Fred L. Revelette-
executrix, Sylvia Revelette.
BEVERAGE LICENSES
Georgia Barrett, 1101 Lynn,
Pawhuska, dba “Cozy Corner.”
CIVIL CASES
Osage Point, Incorporated, a
corporation vs. Richard Mc-
Laughlin - - money judgment, ac-
counting and cancellation of
mechanic’s lien.
Gladys Wilkerson vs. Robert
Leroy Estep - - money judgment.
Kenneth J. and Pauline S. Cay-
wood vs. J. Leroy Sadler, et al-
quiet title to real estate.
DIVORCES ASKED
Walter Avery Milliken vs.
Hazel Floetta Milliken.
MARRIAGE LIECENSES
Ronald Dale Gibble, 20 and
Julia Ann Hampton, 17, both of
granted to network newsmen
last January.
Other issues unresolved in-
clude commercial assignments
for staff announcers and the
question of automation on net-
work-owned FM stations.
Two-
Continued From Page One
ior play committee, PHS choir,
small choir, triple trio and an
officer in the FTA and YAC
groups.
Alternate delegate for the aux-
iliary is Miss Judy Ann Bradley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Seth
Bradley.
Miss Morledge, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John Morledge,
is a junior student at PHS, vice-
president of the FHA northeast
district, FHA queen of the local
chapter, a member of the sen-
ior high 4-H Club and the PHS
library staff. She is a candid-
ate of the Pawhuska Business
and Professional Women’s Club.
Alternate candidate for the B-
PW is Miss Ann McFadden, dau-
ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mc-
Fadden, Pawhuska,
Both organizations sponsoring
a Girl Stater base their select-
ions on scholastic standings and
citizenship.
OKLAHOMA CITY AP — The Senate Judiciary Committee
will approve a court reform plan and submit it to the Senate
within the next two weeks, Sen. Robert Gee, chairman, has
announced.
The committee conducted a 312-hour public hearing on a
House-passed plan Tuesday and Gee, a Miami Democrat, said
some action might be taken at the committee’s next meeting
Tuesday.
“We might take action at that time,” he said, “but we defi-
nitely will take some positive action to report out a plan with-
in the next two weeks if we don’t wrap it up next week.”
The public hearing was called for discussion of two House-
passed proposed constitutional amendments, but Gee opened
the door for consideration of other proposals.
OKLAHOMA CITY AP - Beverly Drew, a 19-year old coed
who once roomed with Miss America, was named Miss Oklahoma
City Tuesday night.
Miss Drew formerly roomed with Jane Jay roe when the two were
coeds at Oklahoma City University.
Miss Jayroe, who went from last year’s Miss Oklahoma City
title to the national crown, presented Miss Drew with a bouquet
of roses.
TULSA AP - The City Commission agreed Tuesday to refer
a request for a $17.5 million bond issue for the Port of Catoosa to
the City-County Citizens’ Bond Advisory Committee.
The port bonds are being sought to finance development of a
port at the head of the Arkansas River Navigation Project near
Tulsa.
Port Attorney Chairman Early Cass asked the commission to
set the bond election no later than July 1.
OKLAHOMA CITY AP — If Oklahoma motorists would make
use of their automobile and truck seat belts almost 400 lives
would be saved in one year, said state Safety Commissioner
Bob Lester today.
MUSKOGEE AP — Oscar Napoleon Johnson, 84-year-old Musk-
ogee man accused of slaying a former county commissioner,
was committed to Eastern State Hospital at Vinita today for 90-
days observation.
Dist. Judge Claude W. Garett approved the order.
Johnson is charged with murder in the shooting death last Fri-
day of Frank W. Hanson Jr., 48.
Vote—
Continued From Page One
Wynona.
PROBATES
Estate of Dickson Lee Jacobs-
administratrix, Fannie B. Ja-
cobs.
bank. D. A. Bland trustee from Ward One
faces Bill Christenson and Gary Harland Moore
in that race. Martin H. Stuteville and George T.
Bohon seek the ward two trustees post and Lucille
Weiser faces Charlene Faye Kuykendall in the
town clerk’s post.
BARNSDALL: L. C. Sullivan and E. M.
Bruce face each other in the race for Barns-
dall’s major,
SHIDLER: In Shidler, in the Ward Two race,
three candidates are on the ballot. Phillip E.
Page, Joe M. Rash and Marvin W. White seek
the two seats.
Balloting is also scheduled in Osage, Webb
City, Avant, Prue, Skiatook and Fairfax, but
no races are in prospect in these elections.
legislating at the state Capitol
today after a day of festivities
Four other Tulsa hospitals - honoring Miss America—Jane
sands of Britons who watched Hillcrest, St. John’s, Oklahoma Jayreo from Laverne,
as the bombers pounded the Osteopathic and St. Francis - The Senate, which holds
broken tanker, now receive $35 per day for care morning sessions, passed 15
Home Secretary Roy Jenkins of county welfare patients. measures Tuesday before join-
said that when the bombers ing the House for the “Jane
struck it as estimated that 12 PPARSPPP Jayroe Day" activities.
million gallons of the Torrey W/AP
Canyons cargo of 35.8 million VV ea/lef The House managed to clear
gallons of crude oil remained x-wx-ssx:^^ only fl** resolutions before in-
inside the shattered hull.terrupting its work to listen to
Jenkins said the main prob- Continued From Page One —and look at—the 20year-old
lem was getting oxygen into the and extreme west, near .25 inch Oklahoma City University coed
hold to feed combustion. central and up to .50 inch east, who won this year’s Miss Amer-
He said the government occurring as showers beginning ica title.
decided Monday night to blow in the west Thursday or Friday, Also on hand to brighten the
up the Torrey Canyon after it spreading eastward and ending lawmakers' day were 10 con-
became evident she was beyond east during the weekend, testants for Miss Oklahoma City
salvage and could not be towed ------and Miss jo Ann Purdue, who
out into the Atlantic to be sunk, was introduced at the joint Sen-
It was reported earlier that Oklahoma Zone Forecasts ale-House session as the “‘night-
the government delayed the Northeast - Fair and warmer ingale of Kingfisher County."
bombing until the owners today; partly cloudy, windy and Miss Purdue sang two songs
decided the ship was a total a little warmer tonight and written by the wife of Senate
loss, since she was aground on Thursday; highs today mid 80s; Democratic Floor Leader Roy
the high seas and beyond the lows tonight upper 50s. Boecher of Kingfisher. The
jurisdiction of British maritime songs were tributes to Miss
law. ---America and her hometown of
Jenkins said the government’s LOCAL TEMPERATURES Laverne.
ar Pollution Bi-houriy temperatures court. Cov. Dewey Bartlett and his
shores, and financial considera- yLight F wife were on hand for 4 recep-
tions were not taken into ac- N 61. / --. 4 p.m 69. tion honoring Miss Jayroe fol-
count. The ship was insured for Noon 615.2 p.m. 67 f 58. lowing her appearance before
$16.5 million. 6 p.m. 6918 p.m. 62, 10 p.m. 58, the legislators. He proclaimed
The disaster has touched off s‘ Tuesday the day “Jane Ann Jayroe
demands for international ac- ? „ m «:«>. 4 a m 51.6 a.m 49: Day" in Oklahoma.
tion on the problem of oil pollu- - a.m. 5 1 S 60. ' ' 69. In the serious business of the
tion at sea and adoption of 8 a.m. 52 4 n rn 75 6 53: day. Senate President Pro Tem-
measures to prevent another 2 p.m. 74: 10 c m 57-Midnight pore Clem McSpadden named a
such incident. 8 p.m. 63’ 10 p.m. 5 ’ special investigating committee
.to look into campaign contribu-
France---Wednesday a.m. 47. tions to public officials—and the
Continued From Page One 3 ^ El fo amt is, noon &
nuclear-powered subs by 1975,__- to appoint Pan Interim House
each equipped with 16 Polaris BARBS committee to investigate any
type missiles armed with atom- -----------------------------matters he deems desirable.
ic or hydrogen warheads By WALTER C. PARKES The House also authorized in-
The keel will be laid for the terim committees tostudy the
second French nuclear sub in Home is what the bachelor Central Oklahoma project, jun-
about two months in Cherbourg, comes back to after all the
This craft is to be completed in joints are closed.
1972. A third is to be finished in
1975.
Countians---
Continued From Page One
of the Tulsa Area Planning Com-
mission including the Osage
county area of Tulsa.
There were 35 persons at the
meeting, according to Smithee,
including Ira “Moon” Mullins,
county commissioner from Os-
age county and in whose area
the section of the county is lo-
cated. Fay Kee, Tulsa city
finance commissioner also at-
tended as did Gene Blake, Osage
county democratic central com-
mittee chairman, and Gary Dot-
terman, chairman of the com-
mittee for the Osage county area
of Tulsa, also attended the meet-
ing.
Guatemala
Guatemala, which faces
both the Caribbean Sea and
the Pacific Ocean, has the
largest population of any
Central American republic.
Approximately 70 per cent of
its people are farmers produc-
ing coffee, bananas and the
world’s best chicle, which is
a basic ingredient of chewing
gum.
We Service All Makes
And Models In
Central Heating and
Air Conditioning,
Refrigerators, Freezers
and Room
Air Conditioners
DONNELL’S
Household Mart
812 Kihekah 1 Ph. AV 7-1205
Daffynition: chafing dish
-a topless waitress.
In courtship, the man is
usually more aggressive; after
marriage, the reverse is true.
When the final statistics
on 1966 highway deaths are
published, most people will
express the depth of their
horror by saying “Tsk,
tsk!”
Ladies Footwear by
l&ton
DOROTHY’S I
SEE THE
First National
Bank
In Pawhuska
st
Member ....
The Bank of Friendis Service
M. K. & O. LINES
UNION BUS DEPOT
Phone AV 7-4010
BUS SCHEDULES
East Bound
4:45 a.m.
4:49 p.m.
40:47 a.m.
West Bound
9:00 p.m.
8:30 a.m.
2:18 p.m.
ior colleges and mineral inter-
ests and authorized a trip by
five House members to the Con-
gress of Cities in Boston.
Major measure passed by the
Senate was a bill to raise the
minimum gross income which
must be reported for state in-
come tax purposes from $1,000
to $1,100 a year for single per-
sons and from $2,000 to $2,200
for married couples. The bill,
which now goes to the House,
also eliminates a requirement
of present law that all persons
filing federal income tax re-
turns also must file state re-
turns.
Sen. Roy Grantham, D-Ponca
City, was named by McSpadden
to head the campaign contribu-
tion investigating committee.
Grantham presided over the
Senate Court of Impeachment
in 1965 when former Supreme
Court Justice N.B. Johnson was
ousted from office.
Other members of the investi-
gating committee, which is ex-
pected to start its probe next
week, are sens. George Miller,
D-Ada, Don Baldwin, D-Anadar-
ko, Richard Romang, R-Enid
and Finis Smith, D-Tulsa.
CUAEL)
Box-office Open 7:15
Show Starts at 7:30
NOW THRU THURS. —.
• the switched on thriller!
WARRE N°
BEATTY 1
SUSANNAH
YORK -
TECI
• FROM WARNER BROS
STOCK COW
DISPERSAL
SALE
Due to other employment and being unable to properly take
care of my farming operation, we will sell the following
described property located from Chautauqua, Kansas, 7 miles
south, then west on blacktop road 1 mile to cattle guard, then
11/2 miles south-west or from Pawhuska, Okla., north on
Highway 99 for 23 miles, then 1 mile west to cattle guard and
then 11/2 miles southwest.
Sat., April 1, 1967
Commencing at 1 p.m.
102 HEAD OF CATTLE
20 Whiteface Cows, 3 to 5 yrs. old, calves by side.
4 Whiteface Cows, 6 to 7 Yrs. old, calves by side.
14 Whiteface Cows 3 to 4 yrs. old, heavy springers.
10 Whiteface Cows, 5 yrs. old, heavy springers.
10 Whiteface Heifer Calves.
9 Whiteface Cows, 3 to 5 yrs. old. Springers, to calve in May.
1 Black Cow, 3 yrs. old, to calve in May.
7 Whiteface Steers
I Horned Hereford Bull, 4 Yr. old, Registered, with papers.
2 Horned Hereford Bulls, 20 months old. (Husker Mischief
breeding with papers).
PLUS MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS
1 Quarter Horse Gelding, 6 yr. old, well broke.
1 2-Wheel Trailer with bed.
1 Pig Creep Feeder.
Terms; Cash, Not Responsible for Accidents
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson G. Batdorf, Owners
Maxson Bros.
Auctioneers & Sale Managers
For Information Call:
Dale D. Maxson
Phone 922-7360
Edna, Kansas
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Spencer, Frank. Pawhuska Daily Journal-Capital (Pawhuska, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 63, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 29, 1967, newspaper, March 29, 1967; Pawhuska, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2281550/m1/6/?rotate=270: accessed July 3, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.