The Waynoka Tribune. (Waynoka, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, February 2, 1912 Page: 2 of 8
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THE WAVNUKA IKIBUNL
Col. M. E.. Springer, Pub.
WAYNOKA : : : OKLA.
NO ONE'S ENEMY BUT HIS OWN.
A dlssipat* (1 man who was found
dead In his bed the other clay ut a pri-
vate reformatory left « note declaring
that he hail “found It Impossible tc»
make rood In this world, fate having
It in for me." and seeking to extenu-
ate his failure by the remark that
"after 1 am (tone no one can way that
I ever did them an. Injustice " The
writer of that letter wan evidently one
of those men—their number la con
alderabla—who are disponed to blame
everyone but themselves for their lack
of success and of whom It Is sale! by
Indulgent and sympathetic frlenda
that they are no one a enemy but their
own. says the Philadelphia Inquirer.
That Is what shlfth ss and Improvl
SECRETARY KNOX
HAS EXPLAINED
GOT FIFTY IN JOINT RAIDS
MOTOR CARS CARRY PRISONERS
IN WICHITA.
ffter Defying House Committee, Tells
oj $20,01)0 Fund.
WLN f FOR WINE AND FLOWERS
Many Jomtists Taken for First Time
—Liquor Scarce, as Move Was
"Tipped Off" as Usual.
Says Mistake Was Made in Recording
Expenditures as Part of Secret
Fund—Vouchers Cover En-
tire Amount.
Washington, Jail. 27. One gorgeous
dinner at $10 per cover for tile elite;
a lifty-eent luncheon for ordinary
members of the legislatures; cock
tails, wines, traveling expenses and
a bouquet of lilies of tne valley lor
drill and undlHrfpllned people have tile wile ol 111** poslltius er geneial
been doing since the beginning of
time, and the plea is Inadmissible No
doubt some ure luckier than others,
and In case of a few. misfortunes mul-
tiply to aura un extent that It does
seem as though they were flu* victims
of uu unpropltlous and avenging des-
tiny. Rut In the grent majority of
crises dr-feat Is self Inflicted To say
of a man that he Is no one's enemy
but his own Is to utter a fallacy The
man who does badly by himself must
necessarily do badly by others He Is
a source of loss and sorrow within
the whole circle of his acquaintance,
and he Is not to be excuse d upon the
ground that he Is himse-lf the greatest
sufferer from his wrongdoing
of Canada, accounted for every penny
of the mysterious $20,not) fund appro
pritced in 19011 for government par-
ticipation in the now famous cele-
bration at l.ake Champlain.
After defiant protests for nearly a
week. Secretary Knox, under sub-
poena, appeared before the House
committee on expenditures for the
State department and laid bare
vouchers covering the entire expendi-
ture. Also he announced that a mis-
take hud been made when these ex-
penditures had been recorded as part
cf a secret fund. This was done, he
said, under the direction of Assistant
Secretaries Adee and Hale and he
promised voluntarily that at least
during his administration it never
! should occur again.
Dinner Cost $9,444.68.
A dinner for .'{(id guests was given
at. the Hotel Chumplaln July Id, 1909.
President Taft was there traveling on
his own funds. Hut the commission-
ers wanted Senator Hoot so badly that
I they paid his fare and Pullman
i charges of $29.80 from Washington.
Ambassador Bryce paid his own fare,
! $4.20. but was subsequently reim-
bursed. Altogether the hotel aecom-
The census bureau Is on band to
support the Borrow# of the poor hus-
band In respect to the cost of women's
hats. It Is mounting up Into the
three figure per cent. Increases. In
1903 there were 213 establishments
furnishing the trnde with plumes,
feathers and artificial flowers; In 1909,
six years after, these establishments
Increased to 412. The value of this modations and dinner cost $9,444.68,
millinery product Is given at $5,247,- j or nearly half the government appro-
000 In 1903 and $23,981,000 In 1909, or j prlatlon.
an increase of 357 per cent., says the Scattered through the list of vouch-
Oblo State Journal. That far exceeds ers explaining the expenditure of the
our increase in population, wealth, i remaining $10,000, are many items of
salary or personal efficiency. It rep- cocktails. wines, luncheons, dinners,
resents a solid, wearisome, crushing cling
weight on the shoulders of that unfor- ;
tunate class of people who happen
to be born men, and for whom there
doesn't seem to be any sympathy any- ’
where In the wide, wide world. And
yet, strange to say, we do not notice ,
Wichita. Jan. 29. The police gath
ered in a half hundred men and
women upon whom liquor sales have
lx en fastened by secret service men.
Several motor ears were pressed into
service by Chief Cubbon and they left
the station at 2:20. simultaneously,
each ear carrying a chauffeur an I
from one to three policemen. The
whirl of the returning cars, accom-
panied hy the shouts and laughter ol
the victims, drew a large crowd to
the police station.
Little liquor was found, as the raid
had been "tipped off" several days
ago. The raid was directed primarily
against the pool and billiard halls,
where It was apparent that loiterers
have been “dealing from the hip," a
small quantity al a time. Every way-
farer In such places was arraigned on
u John Doe warrant.
Several Jolntkeepers wore valuable
diamonds and watches and those were
taken |»y the police for safe keeping.
Some of them were arrested for the
first time on the charge of bootleg-
ging and to be thrown in jail pro-
miscuously with negroes and the riff-
raff was a bit awkward. There were
many complaints. After the raid the
prisoners were taken in squads into
police court where Judge Sounders set
their cases for hearing 'and placed
each under $750 bond. Dave Leahy,
secretary to Gov. Stubbs, was an in-
terested spectator at police head
quarters during the raid, but he de-
nied it was due to orders from heud-
qua rters.
BRIBERY IS CHARGED
ENDED THE SPELLING LESSON
Present.
up-to date to
TWO INDICTMENTS CHARGING
CLARENCE DARROW WITH
“FIXING” VENIREMEN.
BAIL IS FIXED AT $20,000.00
Was Result of Four Weeks’ Probing
by Inquisitors—Lockwood and Bain
Were Corrupted—Darrow Retains
Earl Rogers Who Directed Work of
Securing Evidence Against Dyna-
miters.
BIG FUSS OVER SMALL ESTATE
Property Worth $22 Made Court More
Trouble Than Some Involving
Thousands.
that the men are raging about It. They
are bearing It as meekly as lambs.
They are smiling under the torture;
they are heroic and uncomplaining.
We suggest at the next woman’s ban-
quet the toast. The Men—God Bless
’Em.
I
A Michigan Judge decided that a
man has a rignt to throw his mother-
in-law out of his house If she refuses
to go quietly when he demands It.
The married man will brighten up con-
siderably to learn that he has a few
legal rights left In this age of domi-
nant femininity, and especially that he
can get even for many marital wrongs
on bis mother-ln-law.
expenses and freight
charges to and from Lake Champlain.
It does not appear that any lady
other than the wife of the postmas-
ter general of Canada was honored
by the receipt of a bouquet.
Loose Practices.
Governor Prouty of Vermont, in ap
proving the expenditures, appends a
foot note in which he explains that
he thought it best to let the New
York commission take charge of the
fund. The New York commission in-
cluded several senators, and when
they had completed the last expendi-
tures, not a penny of the $20,000 re-
mained.
“Loose practices have existed at
times in conducting the secret or
emergency fund.” admitted Secretary
Knox. “Your investigation directed
my attention to the abuse. 1 think
a few expenditures should not be
made public. Some, of course, must
not be.”
Topeka. Jan. 29.—The settling of an
estate where the total appraised
value of all the property amounted to
just $22 and a canary bird, took more
time in the probate court of Shaw-
nee county than the settling of estates
worth thousands of dollars. The heirs
could not agree on the disposition ol
the property and finally Judge Shoch
had to take matters into his own
hands.
When Mrs. Emma F. Newberry died
she left three heirs. Her property
consisted of a trunk filled with the
woman's wearing apparel, an imita-
tion leather couch, an excelsior mat
tress, some dishpans, a water pail, a
big brass kettle, one bed sheet and
the canary bird. The heirs were Mr.
Newberry and e son and daughter.
The court distributed the property
piece by piece. To the husband went
the clothing, which he cannot wear
two dishpans and the water pail. The
son drew the excelsior mattress and
two blankets and the daughter got the
lone bedsheet, the brass kettle and
the canary bird. The three heirs went
off grumbling over ihe division, but
as they had agreed to abide by the
court decision it had to stand.
“SUFFRAGE FOR REVENUE 0NLV
i SOCIAISTS GAIN IN GERMANY
According to the government ser-
vant in charge of the Alaska reindeer,
in 26 years from now at the present
rate of Increase tn the herds there
should be 3.000.000 prime beef rein-
deer In Alaska to furnish fresh meat
to the people of the United States.
Santa Claus's team will then have a
new and even dearer meaning to us.
‘Arch Enemy of State” Enters New
Reichstag With 110 Members—
Kaiser Alarmed.
Mince pie and apple dumpling have
been banished from the menu of some
college girls In Massachusetts because
the college authorities found the girls
sleepy after partaking of these delica-
cies. But the so-called torpor may
have been only that supreme content
with good things which bais ambi-
tion.
A Judge of the Supreme court of
New York has decided that a woman
is not necessarily insane because she
Is a bargain-tjunter and does not al-
w-nys need what she buys In this de-
cision that the large majority of
women are sane the learned Judge
hardly challenged the fame of Solo-
mon.
The emperor of China Is urged to
resign. It Is not at all unlikely that
this august monarch, if left to his
own Inclinations, would cheerfully ex-
change his tottering empire for a nice,
fat puppy or a big red ball, and show
more than a child's wisdom In the
case, at that.
Berlin, Jan. 29.—Thoughtful Ger-
mans are more concerned than they
are publicly admitting over the as-
tounding predominance won by the
Social Democrats in the Reichstag
election, just ended.
The party which Ihe government
has pilloried throughout the campaign
as the “arch enemy of the state" en-
ters the new Reichstag with 110 mem-
bers and is now the strongest indi-
vidual body in parliament. it dis-
places from that position the hitherto
invincible Catholic center. The kaiser
has summoned the new Reichstag to
convene February 7, but it would not j
surprise political observer#; if the im- j
perial chancellor’s first appearance in ;
the house were marked by the read- ,
ing of an imperial order dissolving I
parliament for the purpose of making
a fresh appeal to the people. The j
government, of course, even with 110 |
Socialists in the house, can carry on i
business, but the majority on which ;
it has hitherto relied—the so-called
"black and blue commission,.” the
conservative and (Catholic center—is
too narrow for comfort.
Kansas Women Will Not Employ
Eastern Speakers Who Demand
High Prices.
Loh Angeles, Jan. 30.—Two njontliB
of uncertainty and suspense ended to-
day for Clarence S. Darrow, the noted
union labor attorney, when the county
grand Jury which for four weeks lias
been investigating allegations of cor-
ruption in connection with tjie trial
jury in the .McNamara dynamite cases,
returned two indictments charging
him with bribery.
There are four counts In the two
hills. Two of the counts charge Har-
row with bribery and attempted cor-
ruption of Robert Bain, the first juror
sworn to try James B. McNamara, the
confessed dynamiter anu murderer now
serving a life term in San Quentin
tho bribery and corruption of George
N. Lockwood, a venireman summoned
in the McNamara case.
Bert Franklin, the detective who Is
alleged actually to have passed the
bribe money to Bain and Lockwood,
is accused of the sumo offenses in in-
formation filed some time ago in the
superior court, and his trial lias been
set for February 27.
The maximum penalty that could be
imposed upon Darrow for conviction
on all counts is thirty years’ impris-
onment and fines aggregating $10,000.
He is under $20,000 bail, but tonight
the former chief defender of the Mc-
Namaras said he was glad the sus-
pense was over and that he faced his
arraignment Thursday in the superior
court with an equamnmy horn of his
own conscience.
‘‘One guiltless of crime could hardly
expect anything else than acquittal,”
he said smiling.
Darrow had several days’ notice of
the impending accusations and on
Saturday he retained Earl Rogers, an
attorney who directed the first work
of unearthing evidence against the
Times building dynamiters and who
later as a special prosecutor, had
charge of the grand jury investigation
which resulted in the filing of first
dynamite indictment against Bryce
(James B. McNamara), Schmidt and
Caplan, early last year.
Judge C. F. McNutt, formerly of the
Indiana superior bench, and associate
counsel in the McNamara defense, also
was retained hy Darrow. Today an
intimation of the district attorney’s
office reached Mr. Darrow- that the
charges against him would be reported
today and he at once set about ar-
ranging for bail. Mrs. Le Compte
Davis, wife of one of Darrow’s as-
sociates In the McNamara case, and
Colonel Charles S. Young, a friend of
the accused lawyer, supplied the bail.
Bobby’s Education, Under Aunt's
Tutelage, Afterward Proceeded
Under Different Lines.
Miss Thompson, whose form nature
has endowed with all-too-ample
curves, was giving her little nephew
a lesson in spelling the other day. He
had spelt b-e, be, and b-e. he. and
now she was trying to get him to tell
her what ui-e, spell.
"Listen, Hobby," she said earnest-
ly. Then closing her lips site pro-
nounced tlie sound of a long m, and
opening them, the sound of u long e.
“What does that spell?”
"Bobby looked at her and shook his
head. Again she tried, and this time,
wlille pronouncing the sounds, she vlg
orously tapped her own rotund chest
with her plump forefinger.
"Mmum. ee. What letters am I say-
ing and wliiit do they spell?” Hiie
asked, still vigorously tapping her
chest.
“I don't know what the letters are,"
replied Bobby,, watching the plump
forefinger, "hut 1 guess they spell
Fut."
Man of the
“A man has tn b«
anything nowadays."
•'Yes'' replied Ilf Dustin Stax.
"When I talk to an Investigating com-
mittee I find It desirable not to dwell,
needlessly on the past.”
Y-
ga
PILFN « I lti:!» IN « TO 14 DAYS
Yourdruui^t will rwiuml im*m*jr If 1’AZ.O OINT-
N P fan* »o <-utf any. cams of Itchmtf
Ml
b w-txi.ug
m* tu cure any cam* or itcrim*.
ut proiruaiuu I'll*** in 6 u* 14 tiujfc.
RbiuL
h0»\
Not Original.
Author—This story Is the child of
tny brain.
Editor—Then it Is an adopted child
IT ALWAYS
DOES GOOD
No matter how long you have
suffered from a weak stomach,
inactive liver or constipated
bowels you will find a fair trial of
WORSE.
Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters
will result to your great benefit.
It makes the appetite keen, as-
I sists digestion and improves
| your general health. A trial to-
y day will convince you.
Li
GET MOSTETTER'S.
AT ALL DRUGGISTS.
»-' . - r ’V,r
44 Bu. to the Acre
itkimonlou
Choily—They’re saying that the
valet whom you discharged yesterday
used some plain language to you.
Reggy—Plain ? Baw Jove, it was posi-
tively ugly!
Is a heavy yield, but that's what John Kennedy of
on, AlDertu, Western Canada, koL from
tea
istrlct-s in that prov-
ce showed other excel*
160 Ack
urn Cunudu, got
i of Spring Wheat in lUlU Kepo:
from other districts in t hat pre
*12
m
BABY’S HAIR ALL CAME OUT
wed other excel
jults—such as 4
000 bushels of whoa
from 120 acres, or 881-
bu. per acre. 26.80and 40
bushel yields were num-
erous. As high as 132
bushels of oats to tho
acre were threshed from
Alberta fields In 1010.
The Silver Cup
at the reeent Spokane
rdedtothe
Topeka, Jan. 29.—It is not likely
that the Kansas Suffragists will have
many speakers from eastern states in
tlie suffrage campaign this year. A
considerable number of men and
women of note have offered their ser- I
vices for speaking campaigns, but
most, of these people are for suffrage
for revenue only.
A few widely known suffrage work 1
ers in the East have offered to come
if the Kansas women would pay the
expenses and they will get an op-
portunity to speak to Kansas audi-
ences. But the Kansas Equal Suf
frage association is not going to pay
front $.70 to $200 a night for suffrage
speakers. The Kansas women are
planning to run as economical a cam
paign as possible and they believe •
Kansas women could do more on the
same amount of money than the East
ern speakers.
Cravens Again Denies His Identity.
Guthrie, Okla.., Jan. 30.—“I am not
guilty. I am not Ben Cravens.”
This was the answer made by Ben
Cravens, alias Maust, when he was
asked by Federal Judge Cotteral today
if there was any reason wny sentence
should not be passed upon him.
Cravens’s voice was husky. He leaned
on a table while he spoxe. Around
his ankle was the frame work only
of the Oregon boot, the weight having
been removed.
Prior to sentence neing passed. At-
torney Al Jennings for the defense
presented a motion to arrest judgment.
This was overruled by Federal Judge
Cotteral, but the right to file a bill
of objections my time during the
present court term was allowed.
In accordance with the jury’s ver-
dict of "guilty without capital punish-
ment,” which under the federal stat-
ute carries life imprisonment at hard
labor, Judge Cotteral then sentenced
Cravens to Leavenworth at hard labor J
"for the remainder of your life.”
"When my first baby was six months
old he broke out on his head with little
bumps. They would dry up and leave
a scale. Then It would break out
again and it spread all over his head.
All the hair came out and his head
was scaly all over. Then his face
broke out all over in red bumps and
it kept spreading until It was on his
bands and arms. I bought several
boxes of ointment, gave him blood
medicine, and had two doctors to treat
him, but he got worse all the time.
He had It about six months when a
friend told me about Cutlcura. I sent
and got a bottle of Cutlcura Resolvent,
a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of
Cutlcura Ointment. In three days
after using them he began to Im-
prove. He began to take long naps
and to stop scratching his head. After
taking two bottles of Resolvent, two
boxes of Ointment and three cakes of
Soap he was sound and well, and never
had any breaking out of ary kind. His
hair came out in little cqrls all over
his head. I tjon’t think anything else
would have cured him except Cuti-
cura.
"I have bought Cuticura Ointment
and Cuticura Soap several times since
to use for cuts and sores and have
never known them to fail to cure what
I put them on. Cutlcura Soap is the
best that I have ever used for toilet
purposes.’’ (Signed) Mrs. F. E. Har-
mon, R. F. D. 2, Atoka, Tenn., Sept.
10, 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and
Ointment are sold everywhere, a sam-
ple of each, with 32-page hook, will
he mailed free on application to "Cuti-
cura,” Dept L, Boston.
Fa I r was uwaraeu to t he
Alberta Government for
itsexhlbltof grains,grosses and
Vegetables. Reports ol excellent
yields for 1910 coruo also from
nd Manitoba In
Saskatchewan and Manila
Western Canadi
Western Canada. ___
Free homesteads of 160
acres, and adjoining pre-
emptions of 160 acres (at
93 per acre) are to be had
In tne choicest districts*
Schools convenient, cli-
mate excellent, soil the
very best, railways close at
hand, building lumber
cheap, fuel easy toget and
reasonable in price, water
easily procured, mixed
farnilng a success.
Write os to best place for set-
tlement, settlers’ low railway
rates, descriptive Illustrated
“Last Best, West’* (sent free on
application) and other Informa-
tion, to Bnp’t of Immigration,
Ottawa. Can..ortothe Canadian
(86)
Government Agent..
W. H. ROGERS
125 W. Ninth St.. Kansas City. Mo.I
Please write to tlie agent nearest you!
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER’S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
gently but firmly com
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con-
stipation, In*
digestion,
Sick
Headache,
and Distress After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PR1CB.
His Test of Religion.
The ordinary man cares only fot
what religion does, and not a jot for
what religion is.
Genuine must bear Signature
MONEY IN TNAPPINI.
W« ««ll you how ae4
iybeatprl«e« Writ*
r weekly price lilt
| au-d reference*.
M. SABEL A SONS
, locistilu, ar. _
Gtalerala Furi, Nldaa. Waal p If RS
I Eatabllalud 185«. ■ —— ■ ■ ——
A Poor Weak Woman
ANOTHER BANKER IS RELEASED
t Esther of Milwaukee Bank Served
Same Time as President of
I nstitution.
TWO MORE ESCAFE FROM LANSING
Black and White Prisoners Climb
Walls During Fog and Slip
Past Guards.
A railroad carrier of New York sub-
urbanites has ’ntrodticed a whispering
whistle Most commuters will have to
regulate time at breakfast In a new-
way
Luther Burbank's efforts to grow a
.'(Seedle-s prune brings up the ament
question “Why i? a prune*’
Lansing, Kan.. Jan. 29.— William
Joiner, a negro, and E. M. Jenkins, a
white man, escaped from the peniten-
tiary in a heavy fog. The two con- !
victs were in what is known as the
"pen,” waiting to go into the
mine. * Under cover of the fog they -
climbed a pipe against the wall and •
made their way undetected through !
Leavenworth. Kan., Jan. 29.—Henry
(7 Goll. formerly cashier of the First I
National bank of Milwaukee, left the
federal penitentiary here on parole.
Goll had served nearly six years of a
10-year sentence, serving to a day ;
the same length of time served by J
Frank G. Bigelow, president of the
bank.
The parole came so unexpectedly |
that Goll had no time to telegraph
home for money and he left prison
wearing the ordinary prison suit giv-
en to all released convicts. He left
at once for Kansas City and took the
C., M. (t St. P Southwest Limited for
Chicago.
Meta! Tariff Revision Bill Passed
Washington, Jan. 30.—The Demo-
cratic metal tariff, to make reduc-
tions averaging 35 per cent from
the existing steel and iron duties
of the Pavne-Aldrich law, passed
the house today by a vote of 210
to 109. Republican efforts to amend
or debate the bill were orought to a
sudden end when Democratic Leader
Underwood refused to permit the of-
fering of further amendments, and
forced the house to a vote on the fin-
al pasaage of the measure. Twenty
Insurgent Republicans voted for the
measure while the Democratic dele-
gation ° from Colorado. Representa-
tives Martin, Rucker and Taylor, vot-
ed against the Democratic majority.
Died at a Meeting.
Laundry
New York
the new Ci
line of guards.
Fredonia. Kan.. Jan. 29.—As
the
ttempted to escape
* last Ali-
Wilson county
Sunday school
fnsti-
was wounded bv
tute was call*
?d to order her.
p the
nt up from \\ yandi
principal speak
er for the eveninj
t. the
I. 1909. to serve
ke to tea
Rev. C. Hun
ible of Chicago.
wa s
burglary. Jenkins
was sent
acute indigestion
and
Sentiment Hurries Parole.
Atchison. Kan.—Harry Felling, who
had served but a few weeks of a six
months' jail sentence for shooting H.
P. Watts, a divorced nusband of Mrs.
Felling, received a parole as a Christ-
mas gift. In ' granting the parole.
Judge Jackson said he was not influ-
enced by the season. Public sentiment |
has been clamoring for the young
man’s release since he began sentence*
The demand became more insistent
as Christmas approac bed.
As she is termed, will endure bravely and patiently
agonies which a strong man would give way under.
The fact is women are more patient than they ought
to be under such troubles.
Every woman ought to know that she may obtain
the most experienced medical advice free of charge
and in absolute confidence and privacy by writing to
the World’s Dispensary Medical Association, R. V.
Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce
has been chief consulting physician of the Invalids’
Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y., for
many years and has had a wider practical experience
iu the treatment of women’s diseases than any other physician in this country.
His medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy.
The most perfect remedy « -’■er devised for weak and deli-
cate women is Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG.
SICK WOMEN WELL.
The many and varied symptoms of woman’s peculiar ailments ere fully set
forth in Plain English in the People’s Medical Adviser (1008 pages), a newly
revised and up-to-date Edition of which, cloth-bound, will be mailed free on
receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing only.
Address as above.
?v. S.
Upcoming Pages
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Springer, Merritt E. The Waynoka Tribune. (Waynoka, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, February 2, 1912, newspaper, February 2, 1912; Waynoka, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc847946/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.