The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, March 26, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: El Reno Daily Tribune and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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The El Reno Daily aTribune
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tgle Copy, Five Cento
meseSay
ivasion Starts
RyukyuM
[Enemy Claims U.
[Seeking Spring!
[To Strike Homeland
IY ASSOCIATED PRESS
onflimed Japanese broadcasts
(rted today American amphlb-
forces were “attempting to
ide" two of the Ryukyu la-
in the center aif an area of
bunced air and naval attacka
knocked out 25 Japanese
and crippled war lnduatrlea
Japan and Formosa.
Japanese Invasion report
seaborne Yanks struck at Toka
l Aka Islands, about IS miles
of Okinawa, major Island
[he Ryukyu chain.
|panese propagandists said the
ids were being attacked as
ngboards for an assault on
proper about 360 miles to
I northeast. If true, the action
lesents a departure from the
Int practice of heavy and
[thy pre-invasion bombardment.
ral Chester W. Nlmltz an-
iced the Ryukyus were shelled
[the 18-inch guns of America's
modern battleships Friday
Saturday while carrier planes
over half a dozen Islands
erlng their attack around Ok-
va.
Convey Wiped Out
Bborne planes reached to the
hem tip of the Ryukyus where
wiped out an eight-ship con-
I consisting of three cargo ves-
and five escorting warcraft.
-based B-29s to the
raid on Nagoya in about
months destroyed much of
Mitsubishi aircraft engine
|it and damaged four other war
In a low level attack in
tect bombing weather. Three
lies fulled to return,
ftpanese ground troops to cent-
' China advanced as much as
| miles along a 90-mile front
their comrades In Burma
the Philippines suffered
, reverses. One Japanese
seized Iching, 148 miles
UJD MEANS UNITED
El Reno, Oklahoma, Monday, March 26, 1946
Volume 64, No.
Gliders Take TrooiRS Across Rhine
from a U. S. air base,
fritlsh forces captured six towns
Central Burma and in one 15-
advance seised two loaded
|tary trains.
Counter-Blowi Repulsed
Jap counter-attacks were
by the U. S. 25th and
divisions on northern Luzon
ad in the Philippines while the
|t calvary began a drive to-
the heretofore untouched
hern arm of Luzon.
of Manila, sixth division
pps were meeting only sporadic
litlon after wiping out several
ay pockets near Mount Bay-
gan. Several heavy guns were
Inced to the drive through the
Imby'llne “octopus" tunnel de-
Ises.
I’orty-thlrd division units, which
|ke the southern end of the
anese line, captured Mounts
and and Balidslran, nearly 20
|es east of Manila.
he first cavalry division mean-
lie continued Its drive southward
|ng the main ro.id from Santo
nas in Batangas province and
nearing a Junction with 11th
|bome units, working around
Taal.
,1
In the bridgehead on the east side of the Rhine, British second
army men rest while tow planes and gliders of the first allied airborne
army pass overhead. <U. 8. army signal corps photo by NEA, Telephoto.)
Coup Is Staged
By First Army
Sensational Gains
Made in Germany
WITH THE U. 8. FIRST ARMY.
Mar. 36—(U.R)—First army troops
in a sensational coup today sprint-
ed 23 miles through Oerman lines.
Dements of an armored unit
wheeled northeast of Coblenz,
*3 s,
tlon," an officer sold.
Lnnual School
[eetings Set
nual meetings of all Canadian
|mty school officials and patrons
be held Tuesday at different
ntry and consolidated schools,
|ss Qlen Evelyn McCarty county
erlntendcnt, announced today,
he meetings will be conducted
2 to 4 p. m. In the country
ols and from 2 to 8 p. m. in
consolidated schools.
Section of a member to the
ol board will be held, dlscus-
In of the mill levy will be con-
jeted and voted upon and some
the districts will vote upon
jinsferrlng their schools to other
btrlcts.
Manpower Bill
Has Opposition
Senate May Reject
Compromise Version
WASHINGTON, Mar. 20 —OP)—
The compromise manpower bill un-
der which War Mobillzer James F.
Byrnes could freeze workers to es-
sential Job* headed into further
senate opposition today.
Bqqqlaz Imspli - C. O'Mahonay
'Democrat, Wyoming) declined as
"“""r j a senate conferee to sign the meas-
was tlmed with othei ure agreetj upon by a senate and
tank drives farther north In the , hoUse group 8nd said he colUd not
Irst army sector. 'support the compromise when It
On the third army front, third | reaches the floor>
army tanks entered the southwest- | ., ,
ern suburtw of Frankfurt today. ,Uttle °PP°sltlon was expected in
At the 12th army group head- the house *'hcre 14 w111 come «P 4o*
quarters. Oeneral Dwight D. El*en- 1 morrow- Chairman Egbert Thomas
hower held what was officially de- ) 'Democrat. Utah) of the senate mil-
scribed as "significant conference” ltary committee said he did not
with Lieutenant Oenerals Omar N 1 know whether the senate would ac-
radley. George 8. Patton and 1 cept the bill. Thomas said all of the
Courtney H. Hodges in the Rema- i conferees signed the conference re-
gen bridgehead east of the Rhine. port except o'Mahoney and Repre-
Earlier Oeneral Elsenhower, smil- sentatlve Dewey Short 'Democrat,
ing and in excellent spirits, visited
the U. S. first army east of the
Rhine and declared he expected
the first army "to lick everybody
they come up against.”
Flippen Dodges
Mortar Shells
IWO JIMA—'Delayed'—Private
First Class William J. Flippen of
El Reno. Okla., operates a mortar
In this battalion of the 26th Regi-
ment, fifth marine division, but
Missouri.)
O'Mahoney told reporters:
"This Is a tremendously danger-
ous bill. It's worse than either the
house iwork or jail) or the senate
'voluntary) bill.
"It's true that it docs not con-
template the labor draft of men 18
to 45 years old as provided in the
house but It gives the broadest pos-
sible powers to the director of war
mobilization to control men, women
and children in war plants who have
been patriotically turning out war
during the first few days of The prodUctlon U,at haa amazing."
battle he was on the receiving end Under questioning by newsmen,
of more mortar shells than he Thomas said It was "a very strong
fired. | bill" which delegated tremendous
Flippen. son of Mr. and Mrs. P°werz to Byrnes.
J. B. Flippen, of 210 South Ellison f--
avenue, didn't have much chance
to put his weapon Into use because
the Japs were doing all the fir-
ing with their mortal's. Their
positions were well hidden and
there was nothing to do but dig
a foxhole and wait. ___. . . . . .
“I thought I was going to be a" exploded about 1:30 P'm- ««••**
busy shooting my mortar," Flip-
pen said, “but all I was doing
was ducking. They had the Jump
on us end there wasn't much we
could do."
Finally he got a chance
House-Passed
Community Tax
Law Rejected
Senate Committee
Calls for More'
Comprehensive' Bill
OKLAHOMA CITY, Mar. 26—OF)
—The senate revenue and taxation
committee In effect killed a house-
passed community property law to-
day by voting not to report the bill
to the floor and to let the house send
over a new bill which committee
members believe will come nearer to
meeting constitutional requirements.
Representative Robert Sherman of
Oklahoma City told the committee
he had prepared a MU which more
nearly embodied the proper "histor-
ies 1 background" which the U. 8.
supreme court insisted such a bill
must have to avoid being a mere
tax evasion measure.
Court’s Rating Recounted
The court, in declaring In an earl-
ier state community property lav
unconstitutional for purposes of
federal taxation, declared that such
a law must have been established
on grounds of permanent tax poUtp
rather then for the purpator 'Of
merely helping Oklahomans get’out
of paying taxes to the federal gov-1 t
eminent.
The community property system
permits husbands and wive* to di-
vide their property equally for the
purpose of paying Income ta^ei.
A group of Oklahoma City attor-
neys appeared before the committee
as it opened hearings on the house-
approved community property meas-
ure to warn that the new law must
declare policy rather than have the
effect of cutting U. 8. taxes for
state taxpayers.
Rinehart Comments
Senator James A. Rinehart of B
Reno declared that “If we peas a
simple policy law we’re liable to
wake up with a community property
law and no tax benefit.”
The legislature today neared the
crossroads of the 20th session and
must decide eoon whether to:
1. Oet down to work and fit to-
that will counter-balance appropria-
tions, or
2. Spend eeveral weeks at per
diem pay of only $2.
The legislature returned from an-
other of Its customary four-day
week-end recesses for the 62nd leg-
islative day and to begin the 14th
week of the session.
Bombers Return
To War Plants
Airmen Again Hit
Strategic Targets
This Is How They Did If
| _____
Third army engineer* lay down a pontoon bridge across the Moeelle river in a dress rehearsal for
crossing of the Rhine. The actual crossing was made In conjunction with a crossing by three other
armies In the “final push" against Germany. Scenes like this were duplicated for miles up the broad
stream. (NEA Telephoto.) •
Crop Insurance
Rules Prepared
Cotton Producers
Offered Protection
Canadian county tanners have
until Apr. 25 to place their 1945
cotton crops under protection of
the all-risk federal crop Insurance
program, It was announced today
by Walter E. Goodman, chairman
of the Canadian county AAA com-
mittee.
Under the new insurance pro- j
gram, farmers have a choice of1
two insurance contracts, one pro-■
Vlding coverage up to 75 percent'
of the average yield and the other I
up to 50 percent. The Insurance ,
vldes coverage against crop:
ies from drouth, floods, hall,}
wind, frost, winter-kill, wlld-llfe, i
hurricanes, Insects, plant diseases
and other hazards determined by ’
the federal crop insurance corpor- j
atlon to be unavoidable.
Contracts Being Written
Contracts are now being written '
by county AAA committeemen and ,
other authorized agents in the'
county, Ooodman said. Contracts '
must be signed before the crop Is :
planted, and at least 50 appllca-1
tlons must be made before crop |
insurance becomes effective in the |
county.
The stage of the cotton crop's!
development will determine the'
maximum indemnity to be recover- !
ed In the event of loss. If a loss !
occurs after It Is too lute to re- !
plant the cotton, but prior to the -
first cultivation, the Indemnity!
Did You Hear
| IEUTENANT JOHN W. FOX,
^ who completed 35 bombing
missions as co-pllot of a B-17
Flying Fortress with the eighth
air force In Europe, now Is as-
signed to the army air forces
training command pilot school
at Perrin Field, Sherman, Tex.
The son of Mrs. John W. Fox,
1111 South Macomb avenue, the
22-year-old filer went overseas
last June and returned to the
states in January.
Staff Sergeant Max Dull,
formerly of El Reno, serving
with the 387th Infantry, has
arrived In France, according to
word received by his sister, Mrs.
Lloyd Chiles, southwest of El
Reno. Sergeant Dull was grad-
uated from El Reno highachool
in 1937.
James L. Horsley, son of
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Horsley, 701
South Rock Island avenue, has
been promoted to first lieuten-
ant In the army. He has been
in the army six years and over-
seas the past year and one-half,
serving with the quartermaster
corps of the 88th division.
Airplane Crashes
East of Hinton
An army airplane believed i
P-38 was reported to have crashed
Navy Considers
Future Tasks
Reserve Fleet Would
Be Free of Rust
WASHINGTON, Mar. 26—(U.R)—
The navy has developed methods
to keep the entire post-war re-
serve fleet free of rust and to
condition to operate on 30 days
notice.
The preservation of the reserve
fleet will cost only one-tenth of
1 percent of the cost of the ships,
the navy said today.
The size of the Job allotted to
the bureau of ships will depend
upon how many ships the govern-
ment decides should be preserved
for possible restoration to active
duty.
, The. methods evolved by tu«
bureau Include dehumldQicaUon, a
rust - preventing compound, hot
plastic paints, and plastic film for
the packaging of deck equipment.
Methods Compared
These methods will not only
preserve the fleet Intact lor future
use but will also speed demobili-
zation of ships and personnel after
| the war. Under navy regulations,
i no ship's crew may be detached
| from a vessel passing Into Inactive
j status until the ship has been se-
cured for future readiness. The
! bureau can now prepare a vessel
| for preservation In a matter of a
few days.
J All naval vessels are tiow treated
with hot plastic antl-foullng paints
| as a routine practice. Thus, an
average ship will need very Uttle
[hull treatment upon Its arrival at
The
plastics quadruple the
of drydock of active
ships. For inactive .ships they
will preserve a ship’s hull for five
years In salt water. This will
stretch to 15 years In fresh water.
Unprotected steel surfaces are
The small force of heavy bombers jlent °l 75 percent of the maximum the children—boys and girls who 4reated gainst rust quickly and
spilt into two task forces over Lelp-1 rovera«e Indemnity for losses oc- have known no leader but Hitler— ! *nexPenslvely by spraying or
zlg. One went for a synthetic oll|currln& after harvest but before to “never capitulate." brushing a thin film of rust-pre-
plant and natural oil refinery at, ^1^ «* «* gm would be 100 j captured prisoners said the Nazis. ZcT 27" ^onTo thta
Zeltz, 20 mUe. south of Leipzig. (P<*cent of the maximum coverage.! conviPnced of the abmt Qf Amerlcan face8' About 10 Rallons of thls
while the other flew to Plauen, 10 | "damntt,cs '£yab,(\ unde4 (tha I bombs and artillery to pulverize a
miles from the Czechoslovak border i|1I0grnm mHy 1x1 u*ed as co atpl a* I cltv had decided not to defend
and blasted the twin war factories. Isecurlty tor Eovemment sponsored j “ ynk‘1uBd aec,defl not
commodity loans.
Berlin had its usual nightly air
Germany May
Hear Bad News
Officials Reported
Meeting with Hitler
LONDON. Mar. 26—(A*)—Two oil
plants, a gun factory and an ar-
mored car works In southeastern
Germany were attacked today by
300 escorted American bombers as
the airmen switched back to stra-
tegic targets after a week-long
bombing prelude for the Rhine of-I cultivation and the end of harvest news.
' would be indemnified to the ex
BY UNITED PRESS
Adolf Hitler was reported planning reserve berthing area.
new hot -■—**— ------
time out
would be 40 percent of the max- _________________.___________
Unum insured production. The to meet with his ministers and dls-
land. of course, would be released trlct leaders tonight at Berchtes-
for another crop. Goodman said, j gaden. A Oerman war office spokes-
Other Rules Stated man was quoted as saying Germany
Losses occurring after the first "must be prepared for unfortunate
fenslve.
,
Nazi leaders, however, called upon
boys and girls who
Third Army's
Tanks Crash
Central Plains
Other U. 8. Forces
Making Sweeping
Gains in Germany
BY ASSOCIATED FREES
The third army bestaged Frank-
furt on the Main today and sent
its tanka crashing across the Main
at Aschsltenburg into the plain*
of central Oemany, a bare 280
miles from Russian lines.
One unconfirmed report said
Frankfurt had been entered. The
last "dimmed out" battle account
hours before bad placed Lieuten-
ant Oeneral George & Patton’s
mighty shock troops six miles
away. The city's radio went dead
lost night.
The luurth armored division again
had burst loose 40 miles beyond
the Rhine In a sweep so swift
that the Oerman* were caught
without time to blow the Ascnail-
lenburg bridge, 22 miles southeast
of Frankfurt. The break-through
division's coup , was so complete
that Frankfurt was hopelessly out-
flanked. Frankfurt, a city of
547,000, is the ninth largest to
Oermany and one of the celeb's
greatest railroad centers.
Solid Front Established
The first army made sweeping
gains to the east from a break-
through from its original Renugep
bridgehead. Oeneral Dwight D.
Elsenhower visited the first army
during the day.
The U. 8. ninth and British
second armies In and north of
the Ruhr were 10 miles past the
river on a solid 31-mlle front and
battle dispatches said a general
break-out there was expected
momentarily. ,
The ninth army fought to the
northeast suburbs of Duisburg, vast
Inland port of 431,000, and within
10 miles of rubble-piled Enen
where the sprawling Krupp muni-
tions works have been rebuilt seven
times after bomber call*.
The Germans reported fighting
outside the Baden capital ol Xgrl-
■tenet- sufgmtlng jrt - sodta
crossing by the seventh simp
which had cleared the Mattnoto
and routed the lost Oerman* wtot
of the Rhine between Switasrlond
end Holland.
Bosstana Poshing In
The whole western front was
becoming fluid as Oeneral Elsen-
hower’s offensive turned Into •
powerful floodtlde. The humblest
Infantrymen sensed complete vic-
tory over Oermany because the
Russians also were pushing to from
the east In massive power.
Two huge Russian army groups—
the second and third Ukrainian—
were fighting through western
Hungary on a 90-mile front only
36 miles from the Austrian border
and 77 miles from Vienna. Ttaey
gained up to 16 miles Sunday to
the drive along the Danube.
Red army troops were within
six miles of KOmarom on the
Danube, had outflanked Oyor and
had taken 83,000 prisoners.
The attack was the 41st heavy
| bomber assault on Germany In 42!
"Crop insurance Is the only
I days, and was part of another two- i means of protcctl"e tlop lnvest-
way blow coordinated with the U. 8. | t^JnnT!ra.ble_.,haz;
15th air force In Italy.
1 raid.
| on the Vernon Nix farm about
(nine miles east of Hinton, the as-
sociated PresvS reported,
j Residents of the area said it
jwas not known whether the pilot
to do was ln the plalle wl>en it exploded.
Bulldozer on Truck
Is Cause of Fatalily
some firing when the battalion Officials of Will Rogers Field at
made Its way to the front lines.' Oklahoma City said they were
There was a path that had to j checking to determine whether
be cleared for our troops and j the plane was from the field.
Flippen set up his mortar and A committee of officers also was
went to work. sent to Investigate the crash.
It .didn't take long to rid the —-——
Survey Started
On Boxcar Needs
KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Mar. 36-</Pl
—Frank T. Mahoney, district rail
director for the office of defense
transportation, wlU make an Im-
mediate tour of the grain-producing
ards that go with cotton growing,
Ooodman explained. "It offers as-
sured production returns from
planting to delivery at the gin. It
seems to me that most farmers
Appeal Made For
Coal Production
wax-like compounds’, at 75 cents a
gallon, will care for an average
ship. Machinery treated with the
substance can be put Into immed-
iate operation without removing
the film.
Another Machine De Yelped
Another great scientific advance
In the preservation of these ships
I Is a *1.500 dehumtdlficatlon ma-
! chine. Tills machine causes the
Mar. 28—(U.R)—The 12
blade of a bulldozer being
ansported on an army truck cut
■rough the top of an automobile
Id killed William J. Duran, 27.
lilac, ln a collision south of Blxby'
|sterday. I
Ugh way Patrolman H. T. Wither.!
reported the army truck was
Its portion of the highway, but
zt the car, driven by Robert
Tulak, "drove too close to
army truck, driven by Cor-
Bdwln S. Russia, was enrouts
Camp Oruber to Fort Riley,
I area of Japs and the troops mov-
j ed forward another few hundred i
yards.
Two El Reno Men Are
Listed Among Wounded
Red Cross Score
El Reno's share of the Cana-
dian county quota of $28,300 ln
the current Red Cross war fund
drive U *16,350.
The total collected at El Reno
up to 4:30 p. m. Mar. 35 was
*14.493.10.
Amount now needed to reach
D Reno's quota Is (1,856.90.
Have yuu contributed all that
you can to keep the Red Cross
■t his side?
Sergeant John, W. Crockett,
husband of Mrs. Opal R. Crockett
of El Reno, and Corporal Leo O.
Loeffelholz, husband of Mrs. June
R. Loeffelholz, 151 Reno route 3,!
Roosevelt Asks
Tariff Reductions
area to Investigate the shortage of ! WA8HINOTON' Mar' 28 ~(/P)~
— —- ssr jstt—r
storage of millions of bushel* or
grain, he announced today.
Mahoney said he would oonfer
with grain men, board* of trade,
railroad official* and elevator op-
erators to determine how many cars
WASHINGTON. Mar. 28 —Iff)— •vessel to breaUle, Inhaling dry air
who need returns from their cot-1 Secretary of Interior Harold L, *nto 1,8 compartments and exhal-
ton crops need crop insurance.” j Ickes, stressing the necessity for un- 1 moist air. This protects
- (Interrupted coal production, today llle, Interior of the ship
called upon operators and miners to aga*nSj deterioratlon from rusting,
continue under the present con-: *n dewbl® or absorptlon of mols-
I lure. Not more than six machines
to alleviate the situation.
were_ listed todajT'among' thorny [ wm report muTtatf^ “‘h°“!y
personnei wounded In Pacific re-, ODT official, ln Chicago and Wash^
”, .lngton, he said.
Their names appeared ln the1__
casualty
thorlty for the administration to
reduce tariffs up to 75 percent of
the statutory rate on some Items.
In a special message the presi-
dent endorsed a bill introduced by
Chairman Robert Dough ton (Demo-
are needed and what can be' done i cra4> North Carolina) of the house
ways and means committee propos-
ing extension ot the reciprocal
tract at least until May 1.
Any wage adjustments reached
ln the present negotiations would
be made retroactive.
Ickes, it was learned, sent a letter
to the wage contract negotiating
conferences expressing his opinion
as to the critical need for keeping
up the "minimum production” re-
quired for war munitions.
Ickes took over the nation’s coal
mines two years ago when the ne-
gotiations collapsed to strikes.
list released for publica-
tion today by the war department.
In ell cases, next of kin have
| been notified earlier by the war
i department, the announcement
! stated ln submitting the names of
I casualties.
trade act plus the additional author,
lty to change rates.
This new authority is needed, Mr.
Roosevelt said, as part of an over-
all plan to lay the economic basis
ALARM ANSWERED
Firemen were called to the Rltz for * “cure and peaceful world,
cafe ln the 100 block of East Rus- j Under the reciprocal trade act
sell street st 7 a. m. today after ! of 1934, the president now has au-
grease around thi kitchen stove I thorlty to reduce duties up to 50
caught fire. There was no damage percent below the stipulations of
CMted by tbs bias*, Unman sold, the Hawley-smoot tariff act of 1980.
Pair Charged With
Disturbing Peace
Haskell El wood Brown, 23, of 1215
West Penn street, and George Cap-
linger, 21, of Robbins addition,
charged with disturbing the poaco
ln the 100 Mock qf North Bickford
avenue at 2 a. m. Sunday, forfeited
bonds of (11 each In municipal court
today, according to records of Lea
Harvey, chief of police.
would be required for the largest
naval vessel.
The last Item ta preservation is
a plastic film for wrapping deck
machinery, ordnance and other
deck equipment. The materiel
contains a drying compound to
protect machinery against corro-
sion, mildew and mold. Once the
film Is peeled off. the equipment
Is immediately ready again for use.
Cage Coaches To
‘Do Something*
NEW YORK. Mar. 28—(U.R!—The
nation's basketball coaches agreed
today to "do something" to curb
the height advantage of tall play-
ers, but, falling to hit upon a
definite plan, left the Job for
their research committee.
The national association of
(coaches heard various plans, some
of them drastic, In discussing the
problem of their annual meeting
yesterday. A majority agreed that
steps were necessary. The senti-
ment for rules changes crystaUsed
last week during the national
tournament* now In progress at
Madison Square Garden, when toll
centers ran the show for their
teams.
Coach Bruce Drake of Oklahoma,
leading the legislation against "big
men dominating the game," asked
his colleagues “where would we
be if we didn't change our weapons
to meet new problems?"
The committee, of which Drake
is chairman, will work on the
proposed changes and present the
draft of new rules at tht nest
annual meeting.
Bonds Forfeited For
Traffic Violations
Two persons charged with traffic
violations Sunday forfeited bonds
ln municipal court today, according
to records to the office of Lee Har-
vey, chief of police.
Walter K Starry, Banner, charged
with double-parking, forfeited a (1
band, while Melvin OUbart, 1209
West London street, charged with
running a stop-Une, forfeited a *3
band.
Weather
State Fasocoi
Increasing cloudiness
Tuesday; warmer northwest j
lowest tempera tuns a to E
panhandle to 50 to.
change to tompanten TtoDfegU
nc.tKT"—
3:30 a. m.
at 8:30 a. m, 4*.
«** . \i I
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 22, Ed. 1 Monday, March 26, 1945, newspaper, March 26, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc921169/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.