The Snyder Signal--Star. (Snyder, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1906 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
ft ▼ '
TseF^iAlD
STORY
^ « - - ~ m
s=?^n?
I FOR LOVE
j h IUMH I1«M 1
M |f gl~ H 6 P
etSArffcft v-c-
11
m «•
L
fc'>»
- [Firmer** Co-Operative Union
I—--- r -«■ Of Af?»« fl* I -- ■ ■■
t|M« »IM
hm i tuiftii
V IfU I*l4 !*#?!•
m4
UMfiaat f
MNUii).
H)4( UIIIMI Mf mniMI# Mi
IM •*!»' in to Mi IM
*| Vufl in i totofc*
V'« Mm i *u<i»4i
ever I Ihn «4 M. Mil IMMM a**1*
»D> tulshl tv«v" mmM mm lb»l
•via. lu m) I be I owl. «>•(
UM of the** a bniiW of dl*»f*
IM wbUk *u«M |M<< M« falHf
rrodilabl* Ml • H" IMlIf* ol dlplo
■Me?.
itu, while ib* gyggpnUMUa p#«t ***'
•m tiyiw out lur • rM#<* l» u.k
Million* IklNltlml danger over tllk
a»tue un*. she l*m #WW»i4lF
to ibo Reverend »»llly’s mood- •huh
•u one of iroiilc entbu*la«m; >kl>
without (H*]u4ln to a deie«.
Oilnallou i«» luirrvrne In behalf of fair
p.ay lor WlntoB It abo could Ond a
way.
Hit the wax obatlnately refused to
discover Itself. Tho simple thing to
do would Iw to appeal to her uni t* ■
■Hit)m> of Juitlrr. It wa> not Ilka bltn
to light with Ignoble weapons. sue
thought, and a tactful word In season
might make hi in rvall Hie order to
the superintendent. Ilut aha could not
mako the appeal without betraying
Jnatrow. Slit) knew well enough that
tho MrKtarx had no right to ahow
her the trlegratna: knew alan that Mr.
Somerville Darrnh’s Aral word would
he a demand to know how aha had
learned the company'* bualneaa secret*.
Regarding Jaatrow as little a* a high-
bred young woman to whom sentiment
I* ns the breath of life can regard a
man who la quite devoid of It. *he wai
still far enough front the thought of
effacing him.
To this expedient there was an un-
hopeful alternative: namely, the send-
ing, by the Reverend Hilly, or. In the
last resort, by herself, of n warning
message to Winton. But there were
obstacles seemingly Insuperable. She
had not the faintest notion of how
nuch a warning should be addressed;
and again, the operator nt Argentine
•was a Colorado & Ornnd River em-
ploye, doubtless loyal to his salt. In
which case the warning message would
never got beyond Ills waste basket.
■'Getting too chilly for you out here?
—want to go In?” asked tho Reverend
Billy, when the scenic enthusiasm be-
gan to outwear itself.
“No; but I am tired of the ser.try-go
part of it—ten steps and a turn," she
confessed. "Can’t we walk on the
track a little way?'
••We can trot down and have a look
at their construction camp, If you
like,” ho suggested, and thitherward
they went.
It was Virginia who first marked the
boxed-up tent standing on the slope.
"What do you suppose that little
house-tent Is for?” she asked.
"I don’t know,” said Calvert. Then
lie saw the wires and ventured a guess
which hit the mark. <
"I didn’t suppose they would have a
telegraph office,” she commented, with
hope rising again.
"Oh, yes; they’d have to have a
wire; one of their own. Under the
circumstances they could hardly use
ours.”
"No,” she rejoined, absently. She
was scanning thj group of steel han-
dlers in the hope that a young man
in a billy-cock nat and with a cigar-
ette between his lips would shortly
reveal himself. v
She found him after a time and
turned quickly to her cousin.
"There is Mr. Adams down there by
the engine. Do you think he would
come over and speak to us it he knew
we were here?”
The Reverend Billy's smile was of
honest admiration.
"How could you doubt it? Wait
here a minute and I'll call him for
you."
He was gone before she could reply
—across the ice bridge spanning one
of the pools, and up the rough, frozen
embankment of the new line. There
were armed guards here, too, as well
as at the front, and one of them halted
him at the picket line. But Adams
saw and recognized him, and present-
ly the two were crossing to where Vir-
ginia stood waiting.
• Eheu! what a little world we live
in, Miss Virginia! Who would have
thought of meeting you here?” said
the technologian, taking her hand at
the precise elevation prescribed by
good form—Boston good form.
"The shock is mutual,” she laughed.
“I must say that you and Mr. Winton
have chosen a highly unconventional
environment for your sketching field.”
"I'm down,” he admitted, cheerfully;
•‘please don't trample on me. But
really, it wasn’t all fib. Jack does do
things with a pencil—other things be-
sides maps and working profiles. I
mean. Won’t you come over and let
me do the honors of the studio?” with
a grandiloquent arm-sweep meant to
Include the construction camp in gen-
eral and the "dinkey” caboose In par-
ticular.
kit
|k*l
nk • m
gbiiy i
>it*m n
ftr tti*— Ip **-«»t|.lt
IfSSffi
•Ml IM "f II
a** a gwctsl i .q to bravo th* * •
******* -*ll 1*4 IfcWS *M *M *****
t‘*it*ti * not f»r IM *ii|t*rf (footing
uf IM !*• kiMi*
U*.* u* hi* uss dunslB Adam* dl l
iM honor# uf lb* ramp « Ihofoush
lx and tuSvMiMilx a* If Ik* h-«*r
Mid su ran* b**il*i ikis Ik* enler-
tainmeui uf Ml** Virginia r*n«t«i
■ oh, hoar rumfwnahl**!“ kk* •*•
claimed, •ben M had sh»wu her all
lha spare saving wilflfllfff uf tha
field olllr* "And Ihia I* where yon
and Mr wini»n work?**
•’ll la wki*r* «• *al and sleep.” Mr-
reeled Adam* “And speaking of eat-
in*; R la bopelesely the wrung end of
tho day—or It would l*e In Boston —
but our Chinaman won't know ihe dlf
ferenre. |o*t me have him make yn* n
dish of lea.” and tba order waa given
before she could protest.
* « AJ.fc
• ••* •
Bd4
* ““|r
i k -irt
Ik*
1 # a
|t Irt
• .gf,
4«v*f a
4 up
* 1*9
lb* bBM
-| Mtoi#
1 bat*
•mb »t«ryi
tba*
a*»w 91
bat trfti
puir« Up lb
►••a."
tu.l tw.M-f «a’ l 1 I f
T v---v -v -
A'Udtt cal*
Ml up ai
ftAfhrr •ffll
la «»f
%• <|<i|e*n vt|rv
'•&<» Would
• 1 M»
1 i raf
|« uilf l*toi
r |H KHi lir
* Th*
lb**#* ithil
afeirb
la hnoloclafi
all of ablra a
IB B
M’thiar
**J <$niTI bn
otv wbjr
I nhoul l m
va to.
but I do. ’ *he rrpl
and childlike wl
of them trudged
la the operator
Mol to evade
any part. Adam
need of n ”fron
leret waa piopei
”||ow lunten
rd. with < harming
IliflllU
>*•*. *1 111" Ihro*
hi
1 up
th" slippery !•»*&
• *|rf»
on Iho slop*
hi* h
.■•pliable duly -a
I ri|i!
aln-Nl the t ae and
lb
1” uli
re, and Ml— Car-
•ly la1
’"["•ted
* any n»
>••*’11 hat*
r. Ihirfe**, "I
>« af*e. and. Clod
imI of one
nt! • aha comment® 1.
"While we are waiting on Ah Foo
I'll show you some of Jack’s sketches,”
he went on, finding a portfolio and
opening It upon the drawing board.
“Are you quite sure Mr. Winton
won’t mind?” she asked.
"Mind? He’d give a month’s pay to
bo here to show them himself. He is
peacock vain of his one small accom-
plishment, Winton is—bores me to
death with it sometimes.”
"Really?” was the mocking rejoin-
der, and they began to look at the
sketches.
They were heads, most of them, im-
pressionistic studies in pencil or pastel,
with now and then a pen-and-ink bear-
ing evidence of more painstaking
after-work. They were made on bits
of map paper, the backs of old letters,
and not a few on leaves torn from an
engineer's note book.
They don't count for much in an
artistic way,” said Adams, with the
brutal frankness of a iriendly critic,
"but they will serve to show you that
I wasn’t all kinds of an embroiderer
when I was telling you about Winton’s
proclivities the other day.”
“I shouldn’t apologize for that, if I
were you,” she retorted. ' It is well
past apology, don't you think?” And
then: “What is this one?”
They had come to the last of the
Sketches, which was a rude map. It
was penciled on the leaf of a memo-
randum, and Adams recognized it as
the outline Winton had made and used
in explaining the right-of-way entan-
glement.
“It is a map,” he said, “one that
Jack drew day before yesterday when
he was trying to make me understand
the situation up here. I wonder why
he kept it? Is there anything on the
other side?”
She turned the leaf, and they both
went speechless for the moment. The
reverse of the scrap of cross-ruled pa-
reverse of the scrap or cross-ru.eu pa- ~~‘ent word for word.” Then, for Lie
per held a very fair likeness of a face wllllam., benefit: "Winton
which Virginia's mirror had ofteuest | of sn
portrayed; a sketch setting forth in
a few vigorous strokes of the pencil
the impressionist's ideal of the “god-
dess fresh from tae bath.”
■'By Jove.” exclaimed Adams, when
deserves all sorts of a snubbing for
taking liberties with your portrait. I'll
see that he gets more of it when he
comes back.” ,
- (TO aS CONTINUED J *"
A Riiumi of Cancer Research.
William Iranian Italtibrldtf** •*•*•••
K rancor cm«w» with tin' Min« «•**
«*rl»llr* thmuishoMt ttm
rn*atl<*0. Th**n* In a fa*
uti Him nit •»%!•!••««■«• in k r*
i* tnflucwu uf «ll«*t oft III** <1***
of cancer. However, cancer
iitvoly rare In hot count Hen.
In thou*' whoa* Inhahltanta
kH> on v*cetahle illct With
rc|»itona It a«em» to In* |»rcv*
re animal diet la moulljr con*
clu
flail)
who
• H I-M* 0W*e *«w* k* u« *-s«n*|
*«#sn Vssg r»ct*«
SMI MM
fHS* IM pee." *4 «•»-♦* ■••*•#
- anBsn n.. d is..,# — - ■• A*.*agn
t*«i **4 !*•*-• i •■* r' p*
tr Pw • * • t- • • • • "rt
Mi# In isoit’i w 4 u> sfeg *• o» Ik-
• *- A
•f»4 nMI id fi««k us a# sirson
T**»* l a nt a issd %*•*•
ts s "e sonny rsosnes **--»*! *** oiw
Mgioi **s n nnreh... «e. tM fnrnsofg
Tasso 1 * - ** *s* 1 la M is i»s • •
p*, IM ktles la Ml II *
pan
.r ■«* s«k* |’"*S(| #ie i*s* *1 *M
f* t mmhI o# nan aiioodr sesii - #4
444 |*| m*[*||j4 a** h*M gist-
Too |:<tto } Si it ** ■* ’*' *B
*W»| Baled* Ml'«is *M»'I »»• *
I,* it sol •• anal *o iwi'e# sa-io**1
OHldS Mttef seed*. M‘ »S bf**d>
If II# P#>w*ofo I’iu* draw# • a*W
be *aig liae #1 all. It a ol nsrsuffif
BB* MUeS Mattel# IB Ob - 1 1* *• *
M a sifntgbt lino, ant n •isa-’gfct Una
S«| sal TMae IK sill • ***• *'*
f,* 444 0<M* 10SltefO as* eSIta**- -*»
•ad a** 1 se * lo be b<*Hfo> *•»'* •’■*'
4(isi nninhero will rat uot
• In non it snob* s **d Sontarg and
!**• is •.-•)* nbn SihI t laska bad
s.t 1 hat IS out la* MHof lisiag M
tu- u>■ -«i* A iwal f«*n>e • 1 • !ag on <hn
lap, #< Using
r4- .. * |* *1,1*1 Ik* **fe*l pi ho lu f ISO
live line I'ensurin' JuwsnnL
pf 100**1 PARMINO
■S'allotted tt.’keRaa •* a *!»"•«•*
Tha Xiinrii’ I'M -n haa nt >plo4
letcr lo >-ft tains ***"■ 1 s*ar• ihaa
#aven real* a* fie n tm«n prIf* I f
gtvstof ptwdoru*** *
uili"a II us IM daly IM aalw*
Tkeif- •# »e a • *e»ilit!**4 to *»e.
nretnbnrahip In h*dd fur Ihot pile*, ant
nf tkll s*s.l la n taiga S»einMl>b p
ibex nlll Th* u«n union farmer nbo
e"i...,i ihe raised paa and fount*
has not mada a study of lb* aaum
tl»a las.ai on n p*»(e«t uadaiktaod
. met hot of eunlrulllag IPSIkelS nlll
tact
dump bis eoiioa ua the nliesdy lusr
What I* m isa apprapflaia than lur
naikei. and tba* down bitaself sat
Ihe faimoi* lu meet odor ibo bass
drag other rottou prujarr r* d»na with
•"•■.Hi uf p> tdwTkiu Is p**t sat agteo
■ him ■ Usogs llliuan Col Naas.
no a hat la a fair reaoit fur Iholr sea
—
*»a ■ rffoft?
If ihera is ju*l one f >1 and safll-
W h"0 tho tun shlac* or th# elmsd*
e'ent russoa nhy Ihe new •papers of
aie lowering. wbrB Clop* ale large or
Ibo ffouth should But help to aisle and
whris they are *msll; when price# *f#
mold sentiment la favor of lb" fann-
high or when they nr# low »« *r* ab
ers bolding ration f»r th# union’s a 'a-
way# doffioslle about the A H of !.
unuin price of eleven rent#, wo would
It I# nece»*ary to alt th# t»’»* Interest*
ha glad lu have Just one uf Iho*# pa-
of th# country, henco It l* bound lu
pers prenenl lo Its frailer* that gout
' come In It* full p«w< r
ant sufli’ ent rea*un. Farmers JjiiP
Th# farmers, .
1 nal.
tho gtiMsant poBtton i" ! • iHnlljii ■
—
any data. Any p**raon can do without
a auit of clothes awhile longor. Th
old machine may he made to laat an
other year; Ibo note msy bo paid off
are* nri’ ■«•■>■•■I fit- Interest stopped by foritf'iitig Ur own wool! went -/........
II I :ill< ■ I yellow iare* are |(|ma cj,cr|g|,Cd trip or Iho procuring jerlty, while tlitro year* ago It went
to It. while Ihe White rarea < f d,.„lrt.j object; tho band u ■ lt-t „ther way by 39. Tho reversal of
Itlark races arc remarkably
| urine from cancer, yellow races
more prow
Prohibition carried In Brown Court*
ty Saturday bv Ki7 majority. Not a
Binglo anti tun In the whole county*
Threw years ago the pro majority wus
13D. Drownwood went pro by 23^ ir.a*
i" ............ ...... of so 1110 U' HiM’u uwjtvs, ------- , irt oiner way uy • u«
nre the most MiMcptihle It hlred If you work A little harder ori >enllrnent OII this question In Tcioa
when the tu >1. » are Uliderg dug lel.o- ^ llut when It comes to . . , ,own, w|tlllIl ,J»e liat tew
"And you can come up here and talk
to anybody you like—just as if it were
a telephone?”
“To anyone in the company s serv-
ice,” amended Adams, "it is not a
commercial wire.”
“Then let us send a message to Mr.
Winton,” she suggested, playing the
part of the capricious ingenue to the
very upcast of a pair of mischievous
eyes. "I’ll write it and you may sign
it.”
Adams stretched his complaisence
the necessary additional inch and
gave her a pencil ana a pad of blanks.
She wrote rapidly:
"Miss Carteret has been here admiring
your drawings. She took one ot them away
with her. and I couldn't stop her without
being rude. You shouldn't have done it
without asking her permission. She
says—”
"Oli, dear! I am making it awfully
long. Does it cost so much a word?”
“No,” said Adams, not without an
effort. He was beginning to be dis-
tinctly disappointeu in Miss Virginia,
and was wondering in the inner depths
ot him what piece of girlish frivoi..y
he was expected to sign and ocud to
his chief. Meanwhile she went on
writing:
“—I am to tell you not to get Into any
fresh trouble—not to let anyone else get
you into trouble; by which I infer she
means that some attempt will be made to
keep you from returning on the evening
train.”
“There, can you send all that?” she
asked, sweetly, giving the pad to the
technologian.
Adams read the first part of the let-
ter-length telegram with inward groan-
ings, but the generous purpose of it
struck him like a whip blow when he
came to the thinly veiled warning.
Also it shamed him for his unworthy
judgment of Virginia.
“I thank you very ueartily. Miss
Carteret," he said, humbly. “It shall
grade metamorphosis. Cam <t Is un
doubtedly on the Increase. The prin-
cipal Increase involves the aituieittary
tract. There are certain district called
’’cancer bells." Such ureas are usual- i
ly low lying and damp.
Women are attacked by cancer far j
earlier and more often Ilian men. >
Much recent experimental work points
to tho cell ns tho essential element in |
the development of cancer. The para- J
Hit lo theory Is discredited by the I lur- ,
yard commission. The report of tho
imperial cancer research fund destroys
all known theories of tho origin of
cancer, but proposes no new theory.
Surgical treatment lias been estab- |
lished on a firmer basis than ever bo-
tore.—Medical Record.
Many Races in Abyssinia.
Tho most Interesting part of th« ’
dark continent is Abyssinia. Here i
the beasts of the field and the flowers
of the meadow from the Mediterra-
nean region meet those ol tropical
Africa. Here the snow capped moun-
tains retain a wild goat; here also is
a peculiar and aberrant dog, and in
the western lowlands is a true wild
boar. Several of the antelopes and
two or three species of monkey are
peculiar to Abyssinia, as are numer-
ous l’drds, a few fish, two or three rep-
tiles. and a great many plants. Tho
human races are of varied types and
widely different origins, speaking a
diversity of languages, some of them
as yet unclassified. In the extreme
southwest are negro types, in the
southeast and south they are hand-
some Gala-Hamitic or Somala stock,
in the north there are Hamite and
Semite, and traces of ancient Greek
or Egyptian colonies, and dark skinned
Jews whose origin seems to ante-date
the destruction of Jerusalem. Abys-
sinia has a history going back to a
thousand years before the Christian
era.
Pigeons as Doctor's Assistants.
A doctor in the north of Scotland
finds carried pigeons of much use to
him. He has a scattering practice,
and when on long rounds he takes sev-
eral pigeons with him. If °
his patients needs medicine Ini me
diately. he writes out a prescription,
and by means of the birds forwards
it to his surgery. Here an assistant
gets the message, prepares the pre-
scription, and dispatches the medi-
cine. If. after visiting a patient, tne
doctor thinks he will be required later
on in the day. he simply leaves a
Pigeon, with which he can be called
if necessary.
Just Two Looks.
He climbed down from the pay car,
says the New York Life, with hi3
month's wages still in his hand.
"Sure ye must be feelin' rich,
Pat. with all ye have there," said a by-
stander.
"And what does that signify to
mei” answered Pat. “Just two looks,
wan whin I get it, and wan whin I
give it to the ould woman.
Reversing Things.
“Aren’t you on good terms with
vour relations, Mr. Ruralite? I have
been till they all wanted to visit mo
this summer, hut now they are not
on good relations with my terms.
If on* Rerkshiro or Poland hog can
be raised as cheaply as two raiorbacki
and then sell for three times as much
an four raworlmr.lv*, Unw long will It
take a cotton farmer to catch on to
bow to starve tho boll weevil? Doio
hum Herald.
It having been demonstrated that thn
producers of cotton can obtain a fair
price by standing tc*ether for it, the
man or pnper or firm that would dis-
courage them In their effort to do so
!c an enemy to tho farmers nn-1 n
friend to Iho farmers’ enemy.—Earn*
ers' Journal.
a lilt!* louger. llut when It conies toi n|lj towns within um> •—
what must be procured from tho farm ( j,,UIg remarkable. — Farmer* *JUl*
ers. we must have food every day. We 1(lb
can not put the farmer off with the
excuse ‘,’1 can do without food.
COOPERATOR CLIPPINGS.
It is 11 cents.
Let's never be a datnpar-
Every union man has only to do his
full duty and It will be success as
sured.
The work Is dono. The organization
is safe, it Is to be National and not
sectional.
The speculator has run the prlco ol
cotton down and Is gambling on our in-
telligence.
Dive working locrfls and Co Opcrator
dwells in tho same house. Let 'is
build all the time.
Now, let every union man go to
work the harder. There are now no
tbstacles in the way.
Let's briDg them into -ic fold. Tel.
them how we are going forward and
they can not help but come.
A great foundation for a great organ-
ization is now laid. Let us build of the
very best material the great castle in
which are to lodge the hopes and the
destiny of the producers everywhere.
Yes, we are going to be mission-
aries and send the glad word to all
the agricultural States. What a beau-
tiful thought, and what a privilege it
is thus to aid in bringing about that
perfect understanding. ^
AN EVEN DEVELOPMENT.
A few years ago the Farmers A
Uance spread nearly throughout the
country. It is reported to nave had
over three million members in the
Southern States alone. But where is
u low” It was easy to understand
the object of the Alliance-which was
__t0 buy cheaper. The object was
soon realized and soon found to be in-
sufficient. What is buying cheaper
compared with selling higher? As i
matter of fact, the cheaper farmers
bought, the lower they sold, hence
what they saved at one end they lost
at the other. When the members clam-
ored for more substantial benefits the
leaders promised to lead them to
•the promised land by the political
route. We ail know the result.—Up-
to-Date Farmer.
Shall we continue to auction off our
cotton on the street to the highest
bidder In the same old way? Or shall
we erect warehouses and prepare to
market the cotton crop gradually and
systematically? Do the farmers ol
your section wish to sell in bulk to ’.ha
spinners? If so what steps are beins
taken toward being in a position thl9
fall to do so.—Southern Farmer.
Are you ready to hold your cotton
if the price does not suit you? A
farmers’ warehouse, owned and con-
tro"ed by farmers themselves v/ill a»
sist you in your efforts.
Producers must not compete, but act
in concert. In the broader and truer
sense, the general interests of all pro-
ducers harmonize. The great battle ot
the ages !b between producers and non-
producers—between the laborers and
the leeches—between the workers and
the shirkers.
The systematic plodder often out-
distances others of twice his ability
in other respects, who rely on irregu-
lar. haphazard “spurts.” Rational, per-
sistent effort wins. The slow-motioned
tortoise, of the old fable, by "keeping
everlastingly at it." outdistanced the
fleet-footed hare.
One-crop farming is poor business.
To grow one crop year after year
means to encourage insect pests and
fungous diseases. Another considera-
All are agreed that nothing is so -------- .
Important In farming as a thorough tion Is. that by rotation of crops the
preparation of the soil. The more grass fertility of the soil is Indefinitely re-
and weeds can be covered up, the bet tained, even if the use of fertilizer*
is neglected.
Aside from the profit in beekeeping,
it is one of the most Interesting occu-
pations. The modern bee, and th«
modern methods of handling, have very
much simplified beekeepiug.
Cotton left on the ground or out ill
the weather will lose in weight and
quality, and consequently in price
Keep It off the ground and in the dry
The cost for covering It under a shed
SOUTHERN FARMER SAYINGS.
Hold for the agreed price ’ till the
cows come home.
Education is a debt due from the
present generation to the future gen-
erations.
Who has a better right to price
farm products than the farmer?
The best place to pray for corn is
between the rows when plowing. , . ----... ---------------------
Commercial suicide—dumping your will be more than met by its improved
cotton on the market below the agreed - condition at selling time. Keep yous
price. .^J cotton in the dry.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Allison, W. M. The Snyder Signal--Star. (Snyder, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 45, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1906, newspaper, October 5, 1906; Snyder, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc496312/m1/3/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.