The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, November 8, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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TURKS OtfMTIO:
ARMY RflRWIS
MMtTIO TH4T COmTiHI1^
HI N*| 'HUN
f.Mwtr ' Ml lW p»»el'«dftf* »•
EH-"?- - ~~w~ TRIUMPH fOR BULGARIA
FtthM Kiffy Frtdty
l*»br * WUr
j*f )tnf m nhfJitr#
Dt»fU> Advert***! iy j*r inch,
I ««• »!> y f*» ( in#.
A He' M'« *t O..S
C«"W »o
»*1«« IMI T»'» *w
MlOISIS# l| lM<
OKLAHOMA MW'S NOUS
N»«etiib*f :: w Ag"«*tttirai «
Okutw*.
Colltaseitle i» pun lag in permanent
feger ln<ii«i> a»-hool ol Cokmy b»a
MftiiN • »»«> pupil*
Tbe t(l> ot U*imi jorpoeea !<• h«W
ft b-dar <hauieu<jua am >«-ar
Sri dlsroterieo of fold and eilver
w> t.riue report cd from ib» Albion
>•14.
At the (lata e< bool for deaf loeatad
•t Sulphur, :<••! children »ra enrolled,
lit bo>s and M girls.
Ilea trae In l>»l Norte neighborhood,
OarflHd county. yielded eight galons
•f boitajr.
Alva will be boat to the Woods eoun.
tf Sutiday School association Novetn-
bar 12 and 13.
Elk City I* soon to hare ona of tba
bast broom factories In tba state.
Bcckham county Is long on broom-
corn. ,
At a recent public sale In Lincoln
county $2,000 was realised and not a
note given. Wblch goes to show that
the farmers have the cash this fail.
Col. Cross Longendyke of King-
fisher has leased large tracts of land
nea# Ripley and will soon begin the
drilling of wells. Longendyke says
the conditions are excellent.
Deputy United States Marshal Al
Colt of Guthrie is carrying one of the
late Heck Thomas' favorite sixshoct-
ers, a handsome pearl-handled gun.
The weapon, a .45, was presented to
Coff prior to Thomas' death at Lawton
several weeks ago.
Up to Thursday of last week 5000
.bales of wagon cotton had been re-
ceived at the Inland compress yard in
Hobart. Considering the lateness of
the season this is a good showing.
Cotton is being marketed at the rate
of about 200 bales a day.
A load of buckshot was fired Into
the stomach of John Jefferies on the
Dangerfield plantation, twelve miles
south of Hugo. A quarrel had arisen
|between two other men and Jefferies
iwas acting as peacemaker. Jefferies is
not expected to recover from the
wounds.
Major Farrell, United States Indian
agent for the Poncas at White Eagle,
has been transferred by Acting Com-
missioner Abbott of Indian Affairs to
Darlington, as agent for the Cheyennes
and Arapahoes, and Col. A. R. Miller,
agent for the Kaws, takes Mr. Far-
rel's place at White Eagle, the Kaw
and Ponca agencies having been con-
solidated.
Postmaster W. M. McCoy of Guthrie
Is feeling of the business men, on in-
struction from Washington, for the
purpose of getting an idea of to what
extent the new parcels post system
will be patronized by the merchants.
It goes into effect on Jan. 1. Post-
masters in the larger cities through-
out the country must get all the ad-
vance information possible on the sub-
ject.
There is still plenty of cotton in the
fields near Waurika, and owing to the
scarcity of pickers, the price in many
instances is running as high as $1
and $1.25 per 100, and it is yielding
In many places three-fourths of a bale
per acre. Both gins at that place are
running day and night and everything
possible is being done to handle it as
fast as it Is picked. The compress at
Waurika is loaded to its full capacity
and is making good headway, al-
though it is short a number of hands.
Fire at Addington destroyed the
residence of Mrs. Martha Adams, to-
gether with all its contents.
Texas county alone will harvest l.ftno
cars of broomcorn this fall, accord-
ing to present announcements. Buy-
ers figure Guymon will ship 350 cars
and that twice that number will be
marketed from Oklahoma at Liberal,
Kan., just over the line. The yield is
unusually big, considering, too. the
acreage 1s the smallest in several
rears.
Tha State Prohibition convention. Ir.
acssion at Guthrie, completed its work
with the election of J. E. Brewer of
Guthrie as state chairman: G M Had-
dock of Oklahoma City, treasurer, and
these to act with the following as tha
state executive committee John
Weaver of Stillwater. A. H. Crawford
ot Perry. H. E Strtrkler of Enid. Mr*
Mary E Streeter of El Reno. Tha J
resolutions ante the Immediate work
of oraaaisina prohibition elube over
the atate. the orgaalaation of ooua-
tleo for the purpose of nominating
■ty ticket two years bancs, and
i to
gaaiai l*a*M. ih# twfc
lab ssiateia# ut aar a*4 ruaiiurt»r
la ran la Ibmr#, ha* barn »|iM
IM M taken ^ftaofta* « owI'M k>
• 41a|»alth (tutu li*>Ba lo Ik* fu*<
A M date feattte »a t*rar« has
et>ded la IH» triumph ot lb" Mm *a
nan fa chief. tleoeral
dttoR • b<w« eh'Rful nrat*«y baa
probably brought to a doa* "O" of
the aborteal and Wtai remerfcable
wars of record
A ('*«• "furbish It*)), eatima'ed
•I over 300 600 men. baa b»»# «i»
leafed and la la retreat (JOMtMtli
in. pie is be I ir tad le be al Ibe merry
of iba victorious Bulgarian army and
I* a council aim tig al the porta Is die
euseing iba advisability of suing for
peace
Such la tba news wblch cornea
from Constantinople
It Is only a fortnight ainca Turkey
declared war The Ural week of the
campaign closed with the dramatic
fall of Kirk Kiliss-h. fully revealing
for the first lima tha disorganisation,
bad morale and inefficient commie
sarlat of the Turkish army. Today
that army is defeated, routed within
fifty miles of Constantinople and pos-
sibly Its retreat within tbe capital's
I' line of defense is cut off
Only the briefest and vaguest ac-
i counts of the great battle have been
I yet received, for the war has been
remarkable In that not a single war
| correspondent has been allowed at
the front except In the case of the
little Montenegrin campaign against
Scutari.
SAN ANTONIO ORPHANAGE
BURNED TO GROUND.
Brave Sisters of Charity Lose Their
Lives in Rescuing Children
Intrusted to Their Care
San Antonio, Tex.—Seven persons
perished in a fire which destroyed St.
John's (Catholic) orphanage and one
boy is missing and believed to be dead.
The dead:
MOTHER MARY OF THE CROSS,
who was Katherine Rossiter, 51 years
old, a native of Dublin, Ireland.
MOTHER MARY FRANCIS PAS-
TEUR, Sylvia Simpasteur. 65 years
old. native of Lyons, France.
SISTER MARY LEOCADIA, Cath-
erine Nolan, 35 years old, native of
Dublan, Ireland.
SISTER MARY PETER CLAVER.
Catherine Slevin, 29 years old, na-
tive of Dublin, Ireland.
SISTER MARY MONICA, Martha
Montez, 60 years old, native of Chi-
huahua, Mexico.
GEORGE YORK, orphan, 12 years
old.
FRANCIS O'BRIEN, orphan, 2
years old.
CHARLES MATLOCH, an orphan,
missing and thought to be dead.
The nuns gave their lives to save
their charges. The death of Mother
Mary of the Cross was as heroic as
any of those at the head of a charge.
She had come down from her room
In the orphanage to the chapel on the
first floor. There, mustering her little
pupils, when the fire broke out, she
attempted to count them and learned
that Francis O'Brien, a baby, was
missing.
Without hesitation she went back
upstairs, found the boy and struggled
to a window with him in her arms.
When about to be rescued by firemen
who vere mounting ladders, she was
overcome, fell back and she and the
little boy were seen no more until
their charred and blackened bodies
were taken from the ruins.
Sister Monica reached a window and
Jumped toward a net upheld by police-
men. She missed the web and was
dashed to her death.
The origin of the fire has not been
determined but is supposed to have
been due to defective wiring.
Railroads Upheld in Case
New York.—Regulations of railroads
limiting the use of excursion tickets
sold at reduced rates to the dates
shown upon their face were held by
the Interstate Commerce Commission
to be just and reasonable. In a case
against the Southern Pacific Railway
Company and others, where it was
shown that the buyers of tickets had
not used them within the limit, but
had been compelled buy local tick-
ets for a part of their journev. the
commission held that the additional
fares were exacted legally and prop-
erty.
Marshall Cancels Dates.
Chicago.—Governor Thomas R.
Marshall at the end of his 7.000 mil"
apeaking tour to tbe Pacific coast
states and return, bas cancelled fur-
ther campaign speeches because of
tba death of Vice President Sherman.
JNVS S.SHfMM
"SUNNY JIM"
SHERMAN DEAD
VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED
8TATES PASSES AWAY
DUE TO ORIGIN'S DISEASE
Unable to Rally From Attack of Urae-
mic Poison—Death Comes
As Blow to Family
and Friends
Utica, N. Y.—After a long illness.
James S. Sherman, vice-president of
the United States, died at his home
here Wednesday night at 9:42 of urae-
mic poison, caused by Bright's dis-
ease.
Soon after Mr. Sherman's death, Dr.
Fayette H. Peck, the attending phy-
sician, issued the following statement:
"The vice-president died at 9:42
p. m. without regaining consciousness
for a moment. He was very quiet. He
died in the presence of his wife, his
brothers and sister, h\s two brothers,
his three sons and their wives. He
had been entirely unconscious since
7 o'clock when he had a peroid of
partial consciousness lasting for about
fifteen minutes.
"He died in an uraemic comatose,
of Bright's disease and arterio scier-
osis."
Mrs. Sherman bore up bravely under
the shock of her husband's death as
also did the other members of the
family. Although it was said at the
house that the hopelessness of Mr.
Sherman's fight against death had
been realized since Friday, the blow
nevertheless was a crushing one.
Mr. Sherman was regarded as the
first citizen of the city and all dif-
ferences growing out of politics died
with him.
Vice President Sherman was born in
Utica on October 24, 1855. He was
married in 1885 to Carrie Babcock in
East Orange. They have thres sons,
Sherill, Richard U., and Thomas M„
all living and In business In Utica.
Th«> vice-president waa an Elk. a true-
tee of Hamilton college, a member of
the Chrlat Reformed church, a mem-
ber of many clube, and a buelneaa
man of wide Interest*
Washington.—News of Vice I'rt-ei
dent Sherman's death, though It had
been expected hourly, was received
with profound Borrow In olliclal Wash-
liiKton. At the capital where every
attache considered him a friend, in
the government departments where he
was a frequent visitor, among the cab-
1 inet officers and In the diplomatic
corps where he had many close
friends, the announcement will cause
genuine regret.
The vice president's death leaves the
present senate without any regular
presiding officer. The late Senator
j Frye's place as president pro tem
| never hus been filled. Neither Sena-
i for Gallagher, the candidate of the
j regular republicans, nor Senator Ba-
' con, the candidate of the democrats,
has been able to command the neces-
I sary vote. Progressive republicans
have prevented an election. Mean-
I while during the vice president's sev-
| eral months' absence, the senate has
been presided over by Senators Gal-
linger and Bacon, alternately, by com-
mon agreement.
According to the constitution the
succession to the vice presidency now
goes to Secretary Knox of the state
department, who also figures as a
presidential possibility should the elec-
tion go into the house.
Mr. Sherman was the fifth vice pres-
ident whose death in office shocked
the nation. W'illiam R. King died
during Pierce's administration; Vice-
President Wilson during that of (
Grant; Vice President Hendricks dur-J
ing that of Cleveland, and Vice Presi-1
dent Hobart during^ McKinley's first !
term.
Surgeon-General O'Reilly Is Dead
Washington—Major General Robert 1
Maitland O'Reilly, former surgeon
general of the United States army, per- j
sonal physician and intimate friend of j
President Cleveland died h^re of urae- i
mic poisoning, eneral O'Reilly, who i
had been ill for some time, was born i
ia Philadelphia in 1845 and partici- :
pated in many of the stirring events !
of the nation's military history in the j
last half century.
CAR SHORTAGE
RfMfOr COMING
IbTBMTATl COMMCBCC COMMIb
*0* O* MfklC
CONDITIONS ME CRITICAL
l«k a* r*e> T»»a«ia«« laOalnf
la Ma»» y««»tau»
iMf Ca*ia<»-OtN' *eao of
Oo*a'*i ime'eoi
Waablaaitai - tfboiego* »' ffafebt
(if*. Ib> NMMMK* of a *«*al bulk* aa4
oolaairtal p*ial>ele la vm* part# al
I be rwmii) baa bar*** •»> eMKMM
iba I iba tularemia mnamerew ruMwla
ah* baa pfop»**«J lo ahipp«re end fall
■••ode draal it racwmiaeiMlailMna lor lla
i« Hrf. a lib a ibialt WW ibiimailua
thai abouut tbe> (all lo t»Ki.«I> <ba all-
uaiton ib» Iteelf would
1.1.4 a lu «l«i ao
"Tba rttadilion la arule." declared
t'untniiaaiuurf Franklin K Lane, aba
lor a*t»rnl «•*!» baa be* n •ahdorliag
I en inquiry Urvai ineiituilane of Iba
• iiuniry are prarllcail) out at fuel at id
j cannot gel li beeauar ib»ra are sal
• at. for tie iranepariaiian. In an tb>
j mediate remedy ia noi found, people
! hi different parte of iba country will
] be (reeling to death be. au»<> of Ibelr
inability lu gal coal "
Tbe tar aboriage ia eaid lo be found
[to be due to delay in unloadina. the
' alow movement of frelahl car* and
I failure of railroads to reiuru care to
| the lines uanluK them In the latter
caee it waa aaid railroads hold care,
paying a nominal charge for their use.
J Thla ibe commission denounces a*
i "nothing leaa than theft " The Inves-
' ligation of slow movement of freights
I developed that a freight car averaged
about twenty ml lee u day and that
■ while one was moving, thirteen were
standing still.
BACKACHEM0ETS
ON THE NERVES"
M**f sto e«l» fswea fceabaab-
•M *«e» b*»**ie »«• o***Utft»U«
MM U4 »**ess M
Mil <tm— hs#gaab» >1
a* '*« a-#v..,be« bod »4«iet*M
to etMrio*i» aH Ike ena ar«4 turn
lbo eoatao*. a«M* om oe*4 imwie#
Iba t*o *e» <"•§«•
a ad *»«•!»•
imino Itoii Matowy |4tu nn
Ibaaa itte tf OUnag Iba kfc*Mr«e
M-twa t ^
A Cabf-toa \ vJ lkJ
C*ao>
a ie.ua Me*
a»»
... ... * ....
I *.« ■
&
V.
DOAN'S "iwr
Here's Your Chance
To Own a Calfle
Ranch or Stock Farm
It Is iba Uuli for Iba mnM lodvt«*defl|
etiMence ol ll»a l>me«. Cattle #'• bigb.
grata Is a sua sud csnn.a be Ir«aed for
aar length of lima. Iba bpor Itaacb
(Te**»t is a lam«.u» oi l iiim r*ucb ouw
being cui up. and I rum ii v»u can get ona
seruon or fifty, uiib any <le«ired i« mbina-
ti- n of splendid farming bind for raising
Winter faed. Pri* es low — t<-rms easy
Suture jr.sir ranch tract beb.ro it ie
t<«> lula. Many •aiectirms in many sires.
We alsoofler xiaight farming lands. Wrilo
Cbas. A. Jones. Manager lar
S. N. Sweason A Sans. Spur, Tex.
•SINGLE
BINDER
AUMY3 IIUMU
oovtHNo^RwoooRow wil»onnd 1 |f| j^ESE DAYS OF DIVORCES
Really Nothing Remarkable in tho
Simple and Frank Explanation
of the Small Boy.
Automobile Strips Bump In Road, ;
and Candidate's Head Hits Steel I
Rib of Top
j Princeton, N. J.—overnor Woodrow
I Wilson wears a narrow strip of col-
i lodion and gauze across the top of his !
I head, covering a scalp wound three j
I Inches long, which he received early |
j Sunday morning in a motor car mis- |
hap on the way home from Red Rank, |
N. J. His automobile struck a mound I
; In the road and jolted him up anainst
a steel rib In the roof of the limousine
car. The wound is not serious.
c—*—
; To Name Sherman's Successor
[ New York—After a conference be-
tween President Taft and several j
members of hiB cabinet and republican
senators and representatives, it was j
officially announced here that no suc-
cessor to Vice President Sherman on i
the republican ticket would be select-
ed until after the election. Although |
President Taft was understood to
have approved earlyeannouncement of i
a vice presidential choice, he was won
over to the other view, and it was j
said that the national committee at its
meeting November 12 will make the j
selection.
MRS. GROVER CLEVELAND MADDENED FARMER
TO WED PRINCETON PROF. SLAYS ENTIRE FAMILY
New York—General Mario Menocal,
who was elected to the presidency of
Cuba on the conservative ticket,
cabled the following statement to the
people of the nited States: "My own
success is nothing in comparison to
Cuba's demonstration of its ability to
hold law-abiding elections in which its
disapproval of a corrupt government
was thoroughly established. We feel
and will soon prove that we are wor-
thy of that confidence which the peo-
ple of the United States and the out-
side world once puaced in us."
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES
We were walking down the street
Sunday and we saw the most beauti-
ful child sitting on the front Btepo
of a pretty house, says Ted Robinson.
His eyes were so big and blue, hia
curly head so golden, his innocent
smile so frank and inviting that wo
could not resist the temptation to en-
ter into conversation with him.
"Well, son." we said in the Idiotic-
ally genial way with which. <n adult
usually addresses a child, yhow old
are you?"
"Four." lisped the infant. (He didn't
really lisp it. because you can't lisp
when you say four; but that's the way
children are supposed to do.)
"Isn't that fine!" (It would have
been just as fine If he'd been three,
though, or five. More Idiocy.) "And
whose little boy are you?"
"Mamma's H'l boy."
"Aren't you papa's little boy, tooT*
"Nope."
"Why aren't you papa's little boyf
"The decree gimme to mamma."
Then we went on our pleasant way.
—Savannah Morning News.
Old Foes.
"How was the labor strike defeatr
ed?"
"It was done by capital manage-
ment."
Listeners seldom hear any good of
themselves—or of anybody else.
Wife of Former President Announces
Engagement to Prominent
Educator
Princeton, N. J.—Mrs. Grover Cleve-
land announces here engagement to
Thomas Joseph Preston, professor of
archaeology and history of arts at
Wells college. The date of the mar
riage is not yet determined, but will
be announced later.
Mrs. Cleveland is a graduate of
Wells college and has been a trustee
of that institution since 1887.
Her wedding to President Grover
Cleveland, which took- place In the ex-
ecutive mansion during his first ad-
ministration, was one of the notable
events of the Wrhite House.
Two Are Drowned.
Marietta, O.—Ward Boaz, of Olean,
N. Y., and an unidentified companion
were drowned in the Ohio river when
a canoe in which they were making
a cruise from New York state to New-
Orleans was carried over the falls at
Kerr's Island. The bodies have not
been discovered.
Denied Permission to See Wife Roehr
| Kills Her Father, Mother and
Grandmother.
Sheboygan, Wis.—Alvin Rohr, a
I young farmer of Plymouth, shot and
killed his father-in-law, Philip J. Ott,
Mrs. Ott and Mrs. Ott's father, Fred
l Haut, 80. Roehr had been refused
permission to see his wife from whom
j he lived apart.
Roehr's body was found this after-
noon hanging to a tree in the woods
about a quarter of a mile from the
j scene of the tragedy. It is supposed
that the assassin, fearing summary ac-
tion at the hands of a posse, commit-
) ted suicide.
j Mrs. Roehr and Ijer baby escaped
by hiding for three hours. About a
; year and a half ago, Roehr married
Ort's daughter. They did not get
along peaceably and Mrs. Roehr some
time ago took her six months old
baby and returned to her father'i
house just across the road. She then
started a suit for divorce. Roehi
started suit for the recovery of the
1 child but failed.
Sn««* Soon Melt*.
AmariCo. Te* -firees Nvm coat
•4 wi»b enow were Ibe unneual show
forwiefced la tbe Panhandle Thur*
gay by tbe weather The enow fell
Wednesday Bight l« «otch!y Mite*
$11,000 for Husband's Death.
Fort Smith. Ark—Mrs. Essie P
Caver secured a judgment of $11,000
In tbe circuit court here against the
Midland Valley railroad for th<- death
of her husband, a brakeman. who was
killed at Nelagony. Okls. six months
ago. _________
Steals Socks: Gets ligM Years
Crawfordsvllle. Ind—For the theft I
of one pair or eocka. John Wiliiaae. a
profeaaional tramp, wae taken to Mkh
Utai City pneoa to serve from one to
eight yearn. j
Rob and Burn Depot
Parie. Tex.—After ranaacking the
Texaa Midland railroad depot al
Cooper, near here, burglars set fire
to tbe station to cover their tracks '
Three carloada of merchandise and
one car of cotton waa destroyed, caus-
ing a lose of 135 00. There Is nc
duo to the robbers-
Bird Protection Costly
New York -The sum of S«0.400 waa
epent by tbe National Aaaoclailon ol
Audabon eocietlee thla year for bird
protection
The passenger steamer Cecilian,
Montreal, sank drowning sixteen pet-
pi®.
The mills of the Woodstock, N. H.
Lumber company were burned. The
loss is *100,000.
Ten spans of the Louisville and
Nashville railroad's two-mile bridge
across the Hay of St. Louis, Miss.,
were destroyed by fire. A stiff north
wind was blowing and it was two
hours before the fire was under cos
trol. The fire was discovered after the
passage of a southbound passenger
train. A large force of men are at
work, and trains will be running soon.
In tests of aeroplanes for war serv-
ice being conducted at Fort Riley,
Kan., by the war department. Lieut.
Arnold, aviator, and Lieut. Bradley,
wireless operator, both of the United
States army, sent many messages from
an aeroplane to a field station five
miles away. It is said this is the first
time such messages have been sent
wltb success.
The Peruvian government has ex-
pressed the determination of punish-
ing the authora of the Putumav rubber
Held atrocities Lieut, .elex de Villa
arretted by order of the mlnleter
of Justice for complicity in the out
ragea.
W. C. Dourlaa. a St. Ix»n1a flnanei.-r.
waa burr.'d to death and twenty ci'ier
penmtu were Injured in a Orr whim
destroyed the Berlin hotel- One hvr.
dred and fifty gueata were forced lo
tee la their night clothe* The Iona Is
oatlanted at WM.000.
U
"PROUD AND GLAD"
Because Mother Looked So Well
After Quitting Coffee.
'I
f
An Ohio woman was almost dis-
tracted with coffee dyspepsia and
heart trouble.
Like thousands of others, the drug
—caffeine—in coffee was slowly but
steadily undermining her nervous
system and interfering with natural
digestion of food. (Tea is just as in-
jurious as coffee because it contains
caffeine, the poisonous drug found ia
coffee.)
"For 30 years," she writes, "I havo
nsed coffee. Have always been sick-
ly—had heart trouble and dyspepsia
with ulcers in stomach and mouth so
bad, sometimes, I was almost dis-
tracted and could hardly eat a thing
for a week.
"I could not sleep for nervousness,
and when I would lie down at night
I'd belch up coffee and my heart
would trouble me. It was like poison
to me. I was thin—only weighed 12S
lbs., when 1 quit coffee and began to
use Postum.
"From the first day that belching
and burning In my stomach stopped.
1 could sleep aB soundly as anyone
and, after the first month, whenever
I met any friends they would ask me
what was making me so fleshy and
looking so well.
"Sometimes, before I could answer
Quick enough, one of the children or
my husband would say, *Why, that la
what Poatum Is doing for her'—they
were all ao proud and glad.
"When 1 recommend It to anyono
I always tell them to follow direc-
tions In msklng Po*tum. ss It Is not
good to taate If weak, but fln«» wbea
It baa th« flavor and rich brown
color" Nam" given by Poetnm Co..
Battle Creek. Vlch
Read lb* mil- book. -The Road to
Wellvllle.- la »k*e "There's a re*-
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The Duke Times (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 5, No. 20, Ed. 1 Friday, November 8, 1912, newspaper, November 8, 1912; Duke, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc404613/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.