The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 32, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1942 Page: 4 of 6
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FOUR
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Ulur Ribbon Newspaper Serving • Blue Ribbon Community
EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
Issued daily except Saturday from 207 South Rock Island avenue,
■Qd enteied as second-class mail matter under the act of March 3, 1879
BUDGE IIARI.E
News Editor
11AV J. DVElt
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD
Advertising Manager
What’s What
In Oklahoma
By Howard Wilson
State Press Correspondent
The ASSOCIATED PRESS is exclusively entitled
publication of all the news dispatches credited to It
this paper, and also to all the local news therein.
to the use of re-
or not credited by
All rights of publication of special dispatches herein also are reserved.
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASS N.
MEMBER
OKI.AIIOMA IUESS
ASSOCIATION
/OKLAHOMA CITY. Apr. 0 .SPi
— "Just let the people guess,"
said H H. Mundy. member of the
beard of agriculture, this week-
end.
HELIX)—SWEDEN? HOWS THINGS WITH YOU?”
MONDAY, APRIL 6,
RATES
DAILY SUBSCRIPTION
BY CARRIER
One Week_______________g 15
fhree Months____________jj 75
One Year
--------------*7.00 One Year
Including Sales Tax
BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
ADJOINING COUNTIES
Three Months____________
Six Months__________...*3 00
------------*0.00
MONDAY. APRIL «. 1942
ESTHER GLORIOUSLY FILLED IIER DESTINY BY I EARLESS-
M SS AND F AITII. MAY HI. YOU HAVE A PROVIDENTIAL TASK
TOO?: Who knnwelli thou ml conic lo the kingdom for si.eli a lime .s
this.—Esther 4:14.
Today the people are doing Just
that. They nre guessing why lie,
board failed to act on the election
of agricultural college presidents
thereby leaving .suspended in miJ-
uir the official decision on the re-
election of Dr Henry O. Bennett,
president of Oklahoma A. and M
college, who has been expected tr
announce his candidacy for gov-
ernor.
Conscience and Country
QNCE avail) (he problem of the conscientious objector dra-
matically forces itself upon an America at war. |,ew
Ayres, popular and accomplished actor, poes to an Oregon
camp to cut timber and clear underbrush rather Ilian man a
Kim m the hour of bis country’s greatest peril.
Ayres’ profession of laith reads ns the word of a sin-
cere man who has loop pondered what he well realizes mav
nun his career. We have no-reason to doubt his sincerity
Americans, however, may well doubt his reasoning.
♦ ♦ *
“IN mv opinion we will never stop wars until we jndivid-
nallv cease fivhlinn- them and that is what I intend to
4 Avrf*;s ‘•xnh.ined. The first part of that statement mav
)e trup. but how annlv j| f,, thf Jaj 1anese airmen who
bombed Pearl Harbor? How ani.lv it to the German
troops who overran Poland and made people of that
a “subject” race?
Would Av.vs have retired lo his California mountain,
op home, lilted not a linjrer come invasion and cheerfullv
.ceil assimilated into Nippon’s co-prosperity sphere or Hit-
ler s New Order? These ideologies certainly must be as
repulsive to Ayres as is war itself.
Some may come to the defense of the actor with Sam-
uel Johnson s ‘‘patriotism is the last refuse of a scoundrel ”
or Geonre Bernard Shaw’s “you’ll never have j. quiet world
until you knock natriotism out of (he human
l
panzer
mil ion
race.” But
in rebuttal. Cato held that “love of country is more potent
han reason itself, while Thomas Jefferson said “mv affec-
tions first are for mv own countrv. and then, penerallv
or all mankind ” l ord Rvron felt that “he who loves not
bis country can 'olhinjr”
in
does
the
not
may
face
win
rortimately, few must choose Isdween the dictates of
heir consciences and love of their native land. Usually (he
two are entirely compatible. Lew Ayres found it otherwise
and m one -«sped it must he admitted his decision
nave taken ho much courage as a soldier needs
<»t enemv tire. But such connive as Avers’
wars and that happens to he the bijf job.
* * *
TTIE a.,wwer ............... objectors and those who are
too lazy or too indifferent to do their part lies in the
Ivpc.l enemy We fare. This is no War of ||,e Spanish Suc-
cession where armies bat I led under codes of honor and the
loser knew nothing would he lost hut u few acres of
territory Our enemies in this war not only want our
sources; they hate and would destroy our way of life.
„ , V ,that w<*v of *ire is n<»t worth fightinfr for, it most
certainly is not worth the energy we expend in peace time
to keep it functioning Ft isn’t worth haviny at all,
his
re-
means SO hole we would see it crushed rat tier "than sacrifice
lo save it. Most of us say: “It is better to die on your feet
than to live on your knees,”
Hollywood is where noople jm to find somethin* to
1 they can #et into the movies.
«.......................*
• Down Memory Lane
Apr. (i, 1917
Washington, D. C.—War was declared at
ohdionthf ,)reside"tJHI>ni»iK at that 'mTnute The joint
olution of congress declaring a state of war
United States and Germany.
i). m.
res-
between the
Apr. 6, 1932
With a total of 2,360 votes being- cast in one of thp
5avVreetainS the” "l El Reno Tues-
mJnt h! Hrn ei,v mann*er form of municipal *overn-
men by a count of 1,285 to 1.025, turninv down a nr .
nosal to return to the councilmanic type of local adminis
tration. Voters also elect,mI R. C Rice! Dr. SLtZhg
and B. I . Reelor as members
I, elec
extra 10-mill levy for
, 1 o. . necior as members of the municipal vovernimr
board, electe,! Clyde M.Uh. w, dlv lrea,u,w'“..p^IfdTh?
amendment netting up P^d ‘ ,'h,'rte''
Miss Rose Witcher, Miss Mary Ashbrook and Mrs
farl Lyons attended the waffle iron banquet viven Tues
evening: in Norman by Theta Sijnna
<luy eveiiin* in i>ornian py 1'heta Sijnna Phi national
honorary women’s iournalism fraternity. Miss Martha June
Dowell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. c. 0. DiiwelkToO North
pledge to the organization, took part on
Evans avenue, a
the program.
St'K ^reh i"
ciyde TXr’Mls8'.rw1">yiori-‘ ^nn^Smith, Mrs!
yde lalley. Mrs. J. W. Lewis, Miss Wynona Thompson
and Miss Leta McAdams.
at &K,*: to r;tllrn, Wednesday to bin home
M Ai. rthr‘ x” afler u few days visit with his sister
“nkins street Morris°n’ an<l Mr- Morrison. 218 West
and Mrs. J. W. Dulin
Mr.
have as
O’Brien Vi **** ' ^
fflsaitaSr -■Mr>-RayB,iis-Mr-
Ellis, of
Mrs. D. L. Wagoner of Toledo, Ohio, left
SriiTL^rn22L„h0i2? aft!r Jisitij>g several weeks’ with
J T Lewis, 120 North
the latter’s parents
Macomb avenue.
Mr. and Mrs
The guessing game has so far j
provided at least four possible an-
swers, namely:
1. Bennett Is wavering and i>
ii'klng Uie bunnl for more time to
decide finally on running for gov-
ernor and relinquishing libs college j
presidency, a ixadllon he has heltl I
since 1»2H
2. The stale administration i.s 1
trying to persunde Bennett to run !
for governor and Is withholding 1
Ills re-election pending Bennett's
final decision.
3 The board did not deem it
wise to re-elect college president*
during tlic absence of one mem-
ber. Prank Keller. Hlutwnee seed
dealer.
4 Bennett was In San Antonio.
Tex., on official college business at
the time of the meeting and could
not be present to speak for him-
self.
What, makes the Indecision on
the part of the board even more
mysterious Is the fact that on Fri-
day, the first clay of the two-day
session, both Joe C Seotl, board j
president, and Mundy said that ae- I
Hon on the election of presidents |
would be taken on Saturday. But |
when Saturday came the board
with Mundy us spokesman, saldtj
“It Is not the proper time 10 elect 1
officials."
There was no lurther explmia- !
Mon.
Not only did the board fall to
elect the president, but It also de-
clined to approve the faculty rec-
ommendations for the Panhandle
A. and M college, Ooodwell. Ed-
ward L. Morrison, president of th-.
college, who presented the recom-
mendations Is slated to take Ben-
nett's place at Stillwater. This
would indicate that the board U
contemplating Bennett's resigna-
tion and Morrison's promotion.
Another mysterious occurrence
was the fact that Keller, who had
been absent from the Friday meet-
ing. thereby delaying the election
of presidents on that day, actually
appeared on schedule for the Sat-
urday meeting at 8 30 a. m. When
he arrived, only Scott was present
Keller waited for hull an hour for
the other members to arrive and
then left the cnpltol building with-
out explanation.
One high official slated that
Keller actually saw (he other three I
members in the building before
leaving.
The meeting did not start until
after 9:15 a. m. At that time the
college presidents were called In
for routine appearances before Mu
board Bennett was absent.
The next board meeting was set
for May 6. three days before thr
dose of filing for slate office
Meanwhile the war of nerves con-
tinues.
* * *
3HE Oklahoma congressional del-
egation will meet Tuesday to act
on the letters from Sandy Single-
ton chairman of the Oklahoma
highway commission, asking the 1
delegation to obtain approval for I
more than $6,000,000 wortli of toad |
work on strategic roads.
Congressman Wilburn Cartwright,
chairman of the house roads and
highways committee, pointed o ;t
today that the delegation faces the
order of President Roosevelt, issued
last December, that only essential
nccess highways be constructed.
Cartwright said there is little
hope that the delegation can do
anything about the big program as
all the roads listed in the Singleton
•otter must have BDproval either
of the war or navy departments.
The army reiew board turned
down four projects involving *416,-
000 on the ground that they are
not necessary to nnflonal defense
The state also has *2.913.600 in 12
projects Hint have been approved
by the bureau of public roads here.
In addition the Singleton letter
liste nine other road protects In-
volving a cost of $2,900,200 which
the state wants to build.
Singleton advised the delegation
that there is now available and
allocated to Oklahoma $8,668,742 In
federal funds for road work. This
money cannot be spent unless the
25 projects which Singleton sub-
mitted are approved.
Cartwright and Will Rogers, con-
gressman-at-large, said they failed
to receive one of Singleton's let-
ters. Both senators. Elmer Thomas
and Josh Lee, and the other six
congressmen received copies.
*v
\
f .
V-
Hollywood
Film Shop
Unknown Write
May Find F;
By Ernest Foster
Uhlted Press Correspondent
L V N
f/J
LTOLLYWOOD. Apr. c — (UP) —
MacMiiray wears the weird-
est man from Mm-s" costume ever
donned by a film star when he
appears: ns an instructor of "smoke
jumpers" in Paramount's technl-
roior outdoor picture, "The Forest
Rangers.”
A smoke Jumper is a parachut-
ist employed by the United States
forest service to attack fires from
the air. He is trained first.to fight
fires on the ground and then Is
selected for aei ial service on the
basis of his aptitude.
They have been part of the
forest service personnel since 1934.
Some ol' their technique has been
adapted from army parachuting.
The costume weighs 80 pounds
and does not include tools, which
are tossed from the plune on a
separate 'chute, it consists of u
football helmet with a baseball
catcher s mask attached to pro-
tect the head and face from
branches.
Hie suit Itself is of padded
extra-heavy duck and zips on and
off like Wlnst.011 Churchill's blitz
I suit. On the back Is a static
I line 'chute which opens auto-
matically when tt« cover is pulled
Qtt by a line In the plane On
NORMAN1. Apr. 6— (Spec
Some unknown writer may
out a best seller through th
Sooner book award of $1,00
announced by Wllllum Mono
company through Waller s. 1
bell, director of the profei
writing courses at the Culver:
Oklahoma.
'X he competition, which end
1, 1913, is open to any wri
student who lias either ati
one of Hie O. U. writing
courses or who has complete
ol tin? school’s courses In |
s Iona I writing .
Any original prose mnnusci
genera! interest and suitabl
book publication will be eens
Campbell nnnoi need. It ce
fi.titu or non-fiction, of his
Interest, or u book on currei
fairs, a mystery or a |kmj
1 hfldreu.
Army’s Flying Hroth<
Hold Shi|)l>oard Ren
manually operated
; y!
'Jt;r
Behind I he Scenes
In Washington
All Is Reasonably Quiet on the Labor Front
With War Production Stoppages Now at Minimum
Plow
Points
BY PETER EI1SON
NF.A Service Washington Correspondent
-For
By Tom M. Marks
County Agent At Large
Y^ASJlINf.TON.—For 14 days hearings of the "little steel" labo.
cose have been held before a three-man panel of the National
War habru Board. In this time tho four companies, Bethlehem
Inland, Republic and Youngstown, have stated their cases. There
will be a week or o in which reports will he pre-
pared by the board fennel. Them will come rebut-
tal and posmb'y re-rebuttal. It may be the end
;; A„T' , w ,'e ;‘ny ,k’< isiun ■* handed down on
he Steel Workers Organizing Committee demands
check-off'dUy Jncrenses’ unio" clo*°d Job and
The important fact in this situation is that while
these bearings are in progress, tlie
industry employes are on the job
slrike involved.
You rrmy criticize the slowness of this procedur,.
as much us you please. It is costly for
ment, lubor and government,
aches, for in
OTILLWATER.
-There are
040,000 steel
There is no
manage-
it is filled with heud-
pounding on table's,
whilTal|rSil But y0U Can t overlook the fact that
stopped 1 *UeS °n’ War producti°n has not
. "ever"”!'“ *«»
Apr. 6—(Special)
a number of sim-
ple soil conservation practices that
.will be applicable during this >\ar
periixl. The following are some of
the most easily applied oonserva-
tlon practices for Oklahoma.
h The application of barnyard
manure is applicable in all parts of
Oklahoma with the exception of
the extreme western portion.
2. Contour farming can be up-
plied in all sections of the state
and where it Is not possible to fol-
low strictly contour fanning, crops
can be planted crosswise of the
slope.
Edsun
partment of I^bor. UnfortuTaTel^T’iak" ^b"'C by the De'
3 The practice of sowing slop-
ing fields subject to erosion to any
of the close growing or drilled or
broadcast crops will aid in check-
ing sheet and gully erosion and
this practice is applicable in al!
parts of Oklahoma.
4. The growing of legumes where
T
taken occasion to b^st ZH fp,,oe^d,nS month- a»d N- A. M. has tllity of the land and adds organic dUClng thP
N. A M survev Ls howeter^^ ) ^ department statistics. The matter to the soil.
newspaper clippings received up To'theUendyofP^h ChCC!h ba*jd °n 5 In the extrt‘ni,‘ western sec-
iiardly be dignified as upstanding statistics P C ' mon,h> und (;"1 jJon of the state the practice of
rpn . " leaving grain sorghum stubble 1C
* Dofls_th„ h, Str ke, P'eture, you have to put together three re- inches h‘*h nids in checking wind
ment of the Conchhahon Se^c ,Stat!f,i? s‘rjke sum,Tl:,'.V. the state- erosion 1,1 cases where wind
:,,ld the defense strike summary of erosion is
the front is u
Chest 'chute.
A reinforced belt protects the
lower spine when the 'chute opens,
and a collar does similar duty
for the neck. Heavy leather ankle
braces are worn over loggers' shoes,
since most injuries lo smoke jump-
ers have b en to Uie ankles.
In the pocket on the lower leg
die jumper carries u coiled rope
so that he enn lower himsell if
njught in upper brandies of a
tree. A knife In a sleeve pocket
permits hill! to cut himself free.
On the opposite side from the
rope and knife Is a portable two-
wav radio, communicating with
the plane pilot.
* :(! 4c
A SWARM of bees once put a
* motion picture company in rout.
Several times films production out-
fits on location in wild regions
have bad to deal summarily with
bears, bobcats, catamounts and
coyotes.
Bui for the first time n movie
unit lias taken a beating from a
bunch of skunks, and right in
Mm- middle of the RKO Pathe
lot in suburban Culver City,
j It happened as stars, execu-
tives. cameramen, grips, players,
extras and assistants assembled
for the start of "The Moon and
Sixpence,” a picture that deals with
the antics of a scalawag artist de-
scribed by script authors ns a
"human skunk.”
Undeniable proof of the pres-
ence of the little animals came
when members of the company
approached the set. The actors
and workers retreated. The film
went into production as sched-
uled, but on a stage two blocks
away.
Studio workmen maneuvering to
the windward side meanwhile began |
poking into corners. Bookkeepers |
of the Loew'-Lewin
ST. LOUTS. Apr. 6—(U.R)
brothers from Webster Groves
a St. Louis suburb, were both i
army air corps and both en
to Australia, but they didn't
until they were 011 shipboani
under way.
They were Robert C. and Itl,
Seibert. They had been in
Francisco for more than a wee
fore they embarked and met
strolling on the deck the first
out of port.
Robert, 27, had been stailom
Fort Wayne. Ind„ until he
shipped west. His brother. 24. t
ed at Sheppard Field. Tex., b
he entrained for San Frnnciso
daily lesson
IN ENGLISH
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED:
icnt is both singular and pi
"Ten percent was the profit. •
percent of the men are emplm
OFTEN MISPRONOUNCED:
bies (canine madness 1. Pronoi
ra-bi-ez. a as in ray, i as in
as in ease, accent first sylliblc
OFTEN MISSPELLED Pea
We; cea, not pearable.
SYNONYMS: Guess (verb),
peel, surfise, conjecture, dlvm.
WORD STUDY: "Use a v
three times and it is yours."
us increase our vocabulary by n
tering one word each day. Tod
word LENIENT; not severe
merciful, "Time, that on all till
lay his lenient hand."—Pope,
story for United Artists rele
figured cost of removing the sku
and deodorizing the atmosphere
$1,600 and charged the sum
"emergency expenses beyond
control."
George Sanders, who plays
scamp's role, terms the invas
a case of professional Jeilousi
"1 never knew it to break
in so violent a form before,"
says. Imagine being outskunl
by a family of skunks. It's
perfect tribute.
Incidentally, there are no skui
company, pro- j in Tahiti, principal location of I
Somerset Maugham 1 picture.
COMEDIAN
W.ir Production Board’s labor division
*55? &SEWS
69,(ill
cover crops
as against the logs -m „ "CW strikes> involving 57,000 work-
. against the 1935-39 five-year average of 182 strikes involving
it was, in other words, a
a New Bedford textile mill accounted for a fourth'of -ill the time
r sari,
Z’lSlS 5’23?&w lh"
a problem,
are applicable.
6. Rough type of tillage Is ap-
plicable in the western part of the
state in checking wind erosion and j
conserving moisture.
7. Where applicable crops should
be rotated.
8. The prevention of fire and
burning of pastures, meadow lands,
and woodlands will apply in every
section of the state.
sections of
prcm*w- "™"* * •
mg tnectively, too. strictly cash basis.
T“E r0,c*o*ng figures cover all industries, whether on war or civil.___ * * *
mn production. When the ft cures are ...... .. ........... COMB 2 000 visitors are expected
U at "Feeders' day" at Oklahoma
A. and M. college on Apr. 18. They
tiul 18(1 hilli.m —•" “",l ‘"“'“p mere were a polen- wl11 see nnd ,lear faults of tests
33 800 m!nS,d0PP!1feSt SS^dlc're were
57^mionm^,Hvbmub:Ualy’ 1U""' when tllerc w‘‘*c an'estimated
loss of 378 uiiii in |)Ul 1,1 0,1 defense and strikes caused a
•lii-s year ’ m^n-tiays—nearly 35 limes as high a percentage as
Ups like the New Bedford ruckus, all through the war ncr od hT 9' In rol,gh rroded SPCl101
g,et C0nt,0.> ()f '°cal situations and they raise hob, but while ,he state. the application of
When the figures are narrowed to war produc-
Fe
lim'.an1S .24..„Warking toaV'monlhrthe^were a poten-
hon the pieiure looks like this, u£dn for U,e m^' of“eb™^
Tlaue were in that month about 7.5 million workers -
on war produc-
• LOOK AND LEAKN • PROBLEM A DAY
long have airplanes
t'LUBS HELP SCHOOLS
DRUMRIGHT. (Special) _ Ap-
proximately 2.000 glass jars were
collected by the Boy Scouts for
the Drumright Lions club to be
used In canning food this summer
for the Work Projects adminis-
tration school lunch-garden-cann-
•ng program.
1. How
flown?
2. Which Is the largest city on
the Mississippi river?
I 3. What are the best years of a
man’s life for competitive sports?
4. What is the average rate of
growth of tile fingernails?
5. What is the distinction be-
tween the words "healthy” and
"healthful?"
, ANSWERS
1 Dec. 17, 1941, marked the 38th
anniversary of the first flight by
the Wright Brothers.
2. St. Iaiuis.
3. Between 25 and 30.
, 1-32 of an inch a week.
5. Healthy means a condition of
health, while healthful means pro-
moting health
It is between 8 and 6 unlock.
The hour hand is midway between
the minute hand and the figure 4.
What time is it?
ANSWER
36 minutes past 5 o’clock Ex-
planation—Subtract 2 (number ol
hours between 4 and 6) from 12;
add 25 and 5; divide by 10; multi-
ply by 12; count 36 minutes past 5
o’clock,
made bv the agricultural experi-
ment station, using state-grown
feeds to produce quality beef, pork
and lamb.
With food production needed and
transportation facilities crowded
the home-grown rations worked
out by tlie station's research menj
take on new importance.
Tests show that oats, barley
sorghums, miing beans, silage, cot-
tonseed meal and other crops suit-!
ed to Oklahoma can be used prof-j
itably in livestock feeding.
horizontal
1,4 Pictured
comedian.
12 One.
14 Short sentence
16 Mornings
(abbr ),
18 Pe.g.
20 Submarine
(abbr.).
21 Golf peg.
23 Entrance in
a fence.
25 Writing
surface.
27 Arabic (abbr.)
28 Scheme.
30 Slip away, as
time;
34 Before.
35 Aetatis
(abbr.),
36 Encountered
37 From,
Answer to Previous Puzzle
mixture.
49 Baseball team.
51 Western state
(abbr.).
52 Sacred song.
56 Ark builder.
58 Distinctive
system.
39 Compass point 60 Garden tool.
40 Touch lightly. 61 Obstruct.
42 Long Island 63 Mineral rock.
17 Chart.
19 Continent
(abbr.).
22 Artist’s triiiod
24 Merit.
26 Dad.
29 In want.
31 Ascertain.
32 Postmaster
(abbr.).
33 Pertaining to
botany.
38 He has made
several-.
41 Ache.
44 Symbol for
chlorine.
46 Snells.
48 Upon.
50 Hearing organ.
(abbr.).
43 Twitching.
45 Periods of
time.
47 Debase by
VERTICAL
' 1 Steal cattle.
2 Half an em.
3 Immerse.
5 King’s College 52 Hole in skin,
(abbr.). 53 Prophet.
6 Otherwise. 54 Pound (abbr.)
7 Crowned with 55 Angry,
laurel. 57 Edge of dress,
8 Bathing vessel 59 Middle.
9 Bone. co Amateur actor
10 Snare. 62 Corded fabric.
11 Joke. 65 Myself.
....... . , 13 Tilt. 66 Symbol for
-m of mcnt-15 °ne who holds titanium.
(0 Pints (abbr.). to,a heresy. 67 Near.
64 Mohammedan
inn.
67 Deceased.
• LOCAL BRIEFS
KIDDIES EAT PRIZE PORK
SAPULPA, (Special)—Sam Shef-
fel, Sapulpa merchant, purchased
one of the prize hogs at the
Creek county 4-H club stock show,
had it butchered and divided the
meat to the city school
lunch program.
Mr, and Mrs. Newman Cooper
and children, Helena, Ruth and
Guv, of Oklahoma City were guests
In the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clar-
ence Cooper, 906 South Hoff ave-
nue. Sunday.
Miss Barbara Taylor, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs Paul R Taylor.
1101 South Hoff avenue, has re-
turned to Stillwater where she is
a student in Oklahoma A. and M-.
WPA college She spent the week-end
in the home of her parents.
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 51, No. 32, Ed. 1 Monday, April 6, 1942, newspaper, April 6, 1942; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924558/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.