Luther Register. (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, May 25, 1923 Page: 3 of 8
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THE LUTHER REGISTER
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Peter frowned and chimed his keys.
"Mother, brother, friend or wife—
Will you summon one from these
Here to vouch for this, your life?"
Spake the spirit where he stood,
Slowly: "One alone and he
Knew all evil and all g-ood.
Call my dog to speak for me."
—F. F. V.
By JOHN DICKINSON SHERMAN
EPKESENTATIVE HARRY BAR-
TOW IIAWES of Missouri mod-
estly asked unanimous consent
In the house just before adjourn-
ment to extend his remarks in
the Congressional Record “on the
subject of an agricultural bulle-
| tin.” Permission was given and
I what do you suppose he put Into
the Record? Why, nothing less
than three solid pages of first
j rate rending about “The Dog.”
Ills point Is that the Department
of Agriculture has slipped a cog
In never having Issued a bulletin on the dog, al-
though It Issued bulletins “upon nearly every con-
ceivable subject that relates to agriculture and In
addition upon domestic fowls nnd animals."
There Is nothing in the Congressional Directory’s
“biography” that tells how Mr. Hawes comes to
he so much interested in the dog—except that he
is evidently an all-around man and therefore Just
naturally loves a good dog. It appears that he is
a practicing lawyer. He is a member of the Sons of
tlie American Revolution, Sons of Confederate Vet-
erans und American Legion. He enlisted in the
army, served in the military Intelligence depart-
ment, psychologic branch, nnd was assigned to the
general staff at Washington; later to the United
States embassy at Mndrld; was retired in June,
1910, with rank of major. He was president of the
St. Louis police board for five years and was in
the state legislature In 1917. He Is prominently
Identified with the state good roads movement.
He has been prominent In national politics since
1904 and is “a member of all leading social, civic
and business organizations of St. Louis." The
Directory says nothing about his having a wife.
Of course Mr. Hawes Is from Missouri and love
for a good dog Is part of the make-up of every
man In the “Show Me" state. You remember Sen-
ator Vest’s address to the jury—that American dog
-classic. Well, Senator Vest was from Missouri.
And you remember Champ Clark’s campaign for
the presidential nomination and his “houn’ dawg.”
Why. Mr. Hawes himself says there must be over
300,000 dogs In Missouri.
Reading between the lines of Mr. Hawes’ ex-
tended remarks on an agricultural bulletin. It’s a
safe guess'that he Is a breeder of fine dogs; that
he exhibits at dog shows nnd has blue ribbons
to show; that he loves a hunting dog and has
bagged many a quail over pointer and setter; that
he doesn’t hate a collie or an Irish terrier; that
he can enjoy with the best a greyhound or beagle
•coursing match ; that he rides to hounds; that he
understands a dog as only a dog-lover can, and
that he’s no slouch of a trainer himself.
As to the pictures herewith, you will note that
■only two of the dogs are given names; regard the
others as types. Jackie Is owned by W. E. Mackey
and family of Atlanta, Ga. He is a local hero.
The Mackey home caught fire when all the family
was away. Jackie, on guard, fought the fire tootli
nnd toenail till the firemen came. The picture
shows him convalescent.
Stubby I know personally, ne Is a valued mem-
ber of a family that has a summer cabin in the
■Colorado Rockies, right at the foot of Longs peak.
He’s Stubby because an automobile ran over the
tip of his tall when he was a pup. He’s probably
not a blue-ribbon collie, but he’s a gentleman and
a good/ellow, with a 100 per cent disposition that
any human might well envy.
Unfortunately there Is not room here for nil
that Mr. Hawes has to say about the dog. Among
■other things he says that It Is estimated there
are over 300.000 dogs In Missouri and 7,000,000 In
the United States. Each stnte has legislation nf-
fectlng the dog; every city of 5,000 people has
some municipal regulation. A valuation of only
five dollars'on each dog would give a national In
vestment of $35,000,000. Every large city has an
annual dog show. There are more than 15 weekly
nnd monthly publication devoted to the dog.
There are at least ten large factories producing
dog food and as many more that make a specialty
of dog medicines.
If the number of dogs, their value and utility
should impress the Agricultural department with
their practical use and cause demand for a bulle-
tin, It should contain this Information:
1. Description of useful breeds and their stand-
ards. 2. Feeding. 3. Housing. 4. Disease. 5.
Breeding. G. House training, farm training, nnd
special training. 7. Digest of state and municipal
laws. 8. Outlaw und criminal dogs, sheep killers,
etc,
The following paragraphs are In Mr. Hawes’
own words:
Evading the Darwinian theory ns applied to
the dog, for fear It may become Involved In that
broader field of present debate, it may be said that
the modern dog has developed in much the same
way ns our domestic fowl nnd utility animals, but
he must not be classed with those, because his as-
sociation with man Is closer and more personal
nnd Is better described as “domesticated" than
“domestic."
We find his drawing upon the tombs of Egyp-
tian kings, upon the tiles of the Assyrians, In the
sculpture of the Greeks and Romans.
He has not been neglected by history or forgot-
ten by the poets.
Columbus discovered him in the West Indies,
our American Indians found him useful, and
whether at the North pole or the Equator he has
had a home and a place in the affairs o'f men.
There are more different breeds df dogs than
of horses, cattle., sheep or poultry.
He Is the oldest domesticated nnimnl, nnd as-
sisted his master to procure food ar.d defend
against his enemy before horses, cattle and poul-
try came under control.
Ills story runs back to prehistoric times. He
was used as a sacrifice upon the altar of Pagan
gods. His place* In history, art, fiction and poetry
ranks second only to man.
Next to mnn he ranks highest In Intelligence,
being susceptible to all human passions—hatred,
love, fear, hope, Joy, distress, courage, timidity and
Jealousy.
Man requires service from all animals, but only
from this one receives friendship. He is the only
animal that eats all of man’s food, flesh and vege-
table. •
Man Is taught chivalry; the dog has It natural-
ly. He never attacks the female of his species,
even when feeding.
He Is the delight of the poor man’s hovel and
the rich man’s mansion. Faithfully follows his
master who tramps the dusty roadside, nnd sits
proudly upon the cushioned sent of the million-
nlr“’s de luxe machine.
Wealth, caste, social distinction are all one to
him. He is content and useful in every station
assigned to him by fate.
But be knows the Just from the unjust, the kind
from the unkind, the chnrltable from the unchar-
itable, the true from the fulse, the man from the
hypocrite.
Disguise does not deceive him. Paint, tinsel,
silk nnd Jewels are no more to him than tatters
rags, worn shoes, or ragged hat. But It is what
these things cover, the man. who wins his ulTee-
tlon or dislike. .
His master’s friends are his friends, his mas-
ter’s enemies are his enemies, no matter what their
station. •
He does not count the cost, but gives his life
at his master's command, ami. even without com-
mand, In his master’s defense.
When master is gay he Is merry; when Rad, he
grieves nnd understands his master’s moods.
With teeth bared, eyes ablaze ami hair n-hristle,
he has saved n wife nnd child from assault and
then played nurse all day.
With devoted strength he has rescued his master
from a watery grave and dragged a child from an
angry fire.
Over hleak and frozen mountains he has carried
food and drink and brought assistance to the
wounded nnd those in dire distress.
Peary could not have reached the North pole nor
Scott the South pole without the faithful dog.
He has taken the place of the horse and the ox,
his skin has been used for shelter and for clothes,
his flesh ns food, bis eyes have found the things
his master sought, his nose has bared the trull his
master could not find.
Dne small dog in a home has more terror for the
burglar than an armed man outside. In the yard
he sounds the warning and the night prowler
sneaks away.
In hunting he Is almost Indispensable.
An American, Paul Rainey, surprised the sport-
ing world by hunting the lion In Africa with dogs
trained in Mississippi and Louisiana,
^ ben properly trained he can handle cattle,
sheep nnd swine better than a man. He excels as
a ratter nnd destroyer of mink and other vermin.
The expressman and peddler, in delivering their
packages nnd wares, usually leave a four-footed
guardian In charge.
Troupes of performing dogs delight the nudi-
ences in our vaudeville houses and demonstrate
what they enn do when skillfully trained.
There are many thousands of farms In the Tnlt-
ed States. Prnctlcnlly all have one dog; frequent-
ly two or more. They guard the home, destroy de-
structive animals, act as companion nnd care for
the stock and protect the garden and orchard.
The bench show brings into competition the best
dogs of the various breeds. The dog winning ten
blue ribbons In open competition in different
shows becomes a champion. This Is not easy and
sometimes requires years for its accomplishment.
Field trials are held for sporting dogs In various
portions of the United States. The setter and J
pointer here compete in speed, bird sense, deport-
ment nnd scenting qualities. They extend all the I
way from Manitoba, Canada, down through the
Eastern nnd Southern states, the championship be- I
ing run In Tennessee each Jnnunry.
Greyhound coursing matches are held under !
much the same conditions, ami the contest between
beagle hounds Is particularly attractive. Tf'e dogs
winning their championships only tinder the most i
exacting conditions then become exceedingly vain j
nlrte.
Buy a pup over three months old nnd, unless you |
nre sure of forming his acquaintance, do not buy
one over eighteen months old unless purely for
breeding purposes.
Feed a pup frequently ami an old dog hut twice i
n day.
Feed from a pan. never on, the ground or floor.
Scraps from the table, when fresh, are the best
food, nnd cost nothing.
Food the dog yourself; you will control him bet
ter.
No other nnimnl shares ns fully the life affairs
of tnen as does the flog. He resents Injustice nnd
has the same respect for fair treatment and de
clslon ns does the human being.
If lie jumps upon you In caress, gently press
your shoe upon a hind foot. Do this n number of
times and he will stay on the ground.
Do not kick your dog or strike him on the head
Use a switch or. grasping him by the neck and
hack, give him n shaking.
Do not “holler" nt n dog nn'ess he Is at a dls
tnnee. Talk to him in n moderate tone. f|p |g
guided more by Intonation than words. You ex-
haust your emphasis In continuous “hollering" and
he falls to understand.
Do not borrow n dog nnd do not lend one. Yon
may spoil your friend’s dog or he yours. A dog
must know bis own master.
Poison Gases May Be Health Agents
W
• ASIIINGTON.—Experts of
the Chemical Warfare
Service believe that the
possibility of curing Influ-
j enzn, tuberculosis, paresis und other
ntflictions, by the use of poison gases
lias been demonstrated by experiments
now being conducted ut Edgewood
arsenal, ncur Baltimore.
It Is asserted that through experi-
ments with chlorine gas, the chemists
have established that epidemics of grip
and colds may be checked almost In-
stantly by the introduction of weak
concentrations of the gas Into the
rooms occupied by those exposed.
That mustard gus is a specific for
tuberculosis apparently seems to be
demonstrated by the experiments con-
ducted under the direction of Lieut.
Col. Edward B. Veeder of the Army
| Medical corps.
As a result of experiments with the
burning gas known as lewisite, the
chemists have evolved what appears
to be a remedy, If not a cure, for
paresis nnd locomotor ataxia. Lewis-
Ite is composed of arsenic nnd acety-
lene gas. Dr. Loevenhart of the Uni-
versity of Wisconsin has been studying
the effects of lewisite upon the hu-
mun system In conjunction with the
chemists at Edgewood arsenal. He has
the records of 42 persons committed
to Insane hospitals with paresis, which
have come under this treatment. Of
that number 21 have been cured nnd
have left the hospital and taken up
lucrative employment nnd seven hid
fair to be discharged as soon as a cure
is effected.
The fact that chlorine might be used
to prevent or cure colds, Influenza and
pneumonia was demonstrated during
the war at Edgewood arsenal by acci-
dent. It was remarked that cases of
Influenza or pneumonia did not occur
among the workers fa the department
of the laboratory where chlorine was
being made although 10 to 20 per
cent of others on duty at the arsenal
were victims. Investigation showed
that In the rooms where chlorine gas
was being made there was u slight
leakage of chlorine, Just enough to uct
as a germicidal agent.
Following out tills Men, the chenil-
cal warfare service nnd the medical
department have made great ndvances
on this line nnd It Is now believed
practicable to Introduce small quanti-
ties of chlorine into school rooms,
factories, churches nnd other pluces
where persons gather.
Harding Deals Himself a Pair of Aces
T
HE Washington government Is
looking forward very hope-
fully to a restoration of diplo-
matic relations with the re-
public of Mexico In the near future.
The appointment of the Joint Inter-
national commission to discuss terms
of agreement between the two coun-
tries Is known to he a matter in which
President Harding personally takes
great pride.
The choice of the Amerlcnn commis-
sioners, Charles It. Warren of Mich-
igan, former ambassador to Japan,
and John Barton Payne of Chicago,
who will represent the United States
in the negotiations, also Is the work
of tl«e President, although both are
known to be perfectly satisfactory to
Secretary of State Hughes.
Both the Amerlcun commissioners
have distinguished records of public
service. Mr. Warren’s most Important
work was in connection with Ills post
nt Toklo to which he was appointed
In June, 1921. He conducted much of
the negotiations In connection with
participation of Japan In the Washing-
ton arms conference and more recent-
ly took part In the exchanges which
led to abrogation of the Lanslng-Ishll
agreement.
Mr. Warren has been engaged In the
practice of law In Detroit since 1893.
He was associate Justice for the
United States before the Joint high
commission to determine the Behring
sea claims In 1890.
In 1910 he was counsel for the
United States In the north Atlantic
fisheries arbitration with Great Bri-
tain before the Hague tribunal. He Is
a Republican, having been a member
of the Republican national committee
and executive committee since 1912.
John Burton Payne, nlso a lawyer
by profession, Is a Democrat In poli-
tics.
For many years he practiced law In
Chicago and served as a Judge of the
Superior court, Cook county, Illinois,
from 1893 to 1898. In 1917 he became
general counsel of the United States
shipping board, Emergency Fleet cor-
poration. Mr. Payne then became
counsel to the director general of rail-
roads, serving from 1918 to 1919. For
the year following he Rerved as chair-
man of the United Stutcs shipping
board.
Front February, 1020 until March 4,
1921, he was secretary of the Interior
ih the cabinet of President Wilson.
On Octobet 1, 1921, Mr. Payne was ai>-
polnted by President Harding as chair-
man of the American Red Cross.
H. C. L. Has Advanced Canal Protocols
TUoNG opposition In Costa Ulcu
Is preventing approval by the
^ j national assembly of that coun-
try of the protocol with the
United States providing that In event
an Interoceanlc canal Is built In Cen-
tral America the rights of Costa Rica
In the San Juan river wou'd he made
the subject of special negotiations.
This protocol was agreed to and
signed by Secretary Hughes and the
Costa Rican minister. Rafael Or^am-
uno, during the progress of the recent
Central American conference.
The opposition In Costu Rica Is un-
derstood to he based on the claim that
the United Sta^s, which previously
had upheld the treaty of 1858 between
Nicaragua and Costa IUca which pro-
vided that neither country should ever
make a treaty with another country
regarding the building of a canal with-
out Informing and consulting with the
other, afterwards practically Ignored
with Nicaragua without the knowledge
and consent of Costu IUca.
The opposition to the protocol, It Is
asserted, Is due largely to some anti-
American Rentlment which bus been
fed by the charge that the United
States did not play squure with Costa
Rica.
It Is understood further that certnln
Costa Ricans feel that Nicaragua,
which received $3,000,000 under the
BryUn-Chnmorro treaty for her rights
In the Interoceanlc canal route, should
have been paid more generously; or at
any rate that It was foolish to sell
those rights so cheaply when by wait-
ing a few years she might have been
paid much more handsomely.
These opponents of the protocol
fear, It Is said, that Costu Rica will
have to sell her rights when the time
comes for less than their actual value, j
which they hold nitty be many millions
the existence of the Nicariigun-Costn j above the figure which Nlcaruguu re- i
Rica pact und proceeded to negotiate celved.
Marine Band Is a National Institution
United States what good music was.
NE of the most remarkable
institutions of official Wash-1 The marines were appreciative of the
ingtou Is tiie Un'ted States
Marine band, generally re-
garded ns the finest organization of
the sort In tlie world. Now that radio
cun carry music to every corner of the
country the playing of the Marine
band promises to be better known than
In all the 125 eventful years of Its |
existence.
Tlie early history of the band sug- f
gesfs the daredevil side of the well- I
known marine corps temperament.
President John Adams established a |
marine corps In 1798 and authorized as
a part of it sixteen drummers and six- |
teen flfers. Tids little fife and drum j
corps was the beginning of the Marine '
band, but the band remained in that
insignificant Rtuge only a short time, j
In 1802, during the wars with the 1
! Barbary pirates, ('apt. Daniel McNeill |
brought the frigate Boston to port at j
i Messina, Italy. Word went out that
Italians’ skill, so appreciative, In fact,
that Captain McNeill Impulsively
tripped anchor and set out for America
with his guests. The thirteen kid-
naped musicians were frantic hut
helpless.
When the ship reached the United
States the Navy department promptly
expressed Its otticial disapproval of
Captain McNeill’s system of recruiting
musicians. Records of all this wore
lost when the British burned Washing-
ton In 1814. If Is known, however,
that the government was in no hurry
to return tlie fine musicians to Italy.
They were put on duty at the marine
barracks at Washington? where no
doubt they taught the American nut- !
slclans and served as an inspiration.
Certainly the Marine hand was play-
ing In good form the next year, for
old order book of the marine corps
Americans were In port and a regl- shows that the hand was to play at
mental band of the city came aboard the presidential reception at the White
to show the “wild men" from the' House, New Year’s day, 1808.
Friend of the Boy Scouts Is Promoted
^ It. WALT ion ll’il'dll. unthro-
I pologist and ethnologist of In-
W ternutlonul reputation, has
md home life
specially
Geese Make Good Field Hands
8aid to Be of Great Help to the Cot-
ton Grower In Clearing His Land
for Spring Planting.
Geese, ns cotton field hands, sounds
unique hut Roy Godsey, field man of
the Missouri state board of agricul-
ture, tells how they come In handy.
He Rays, according to the Kansas City
Times:
“It Is n common saying among the
cotton growers that you enn tell the
number of acres a farmer will have In
cotton the next year by the number
of geese around his door In the win-
ter.
"As soon as the cotton Is planted
nnd the grass starts the geese are
turned Info the field nnd kept there
until the cotton plants shade the
ground. To raise good cotton It Is
necessary to keep the grass down nnd
the geese will do this. They will not
damage the crop In the least, because
they will not out the plants.
“After the plnnts have grown to n
size that a goose cannot step over
them the entire flock Is headed nt ore
end nnd driven down the middles, a
used ns runny ns ".000 ^eese to keep
the fields cleun of grass. Frorr one
to two geese an acre will keep tlie
fields In good shape for a cotton crop.”
Corn Statistics.
The average yield of corn an acre
In the United States varies from j.|.8
bushels In Florida to 47 bushels In (’on
goose to o middle, nnd they will stay n«ctlcut. according to reports of the
on their own row. eating the grass j United States Department of Agrlcul
until they reach the end. lure. The average for the entire coun-
“One South Missouri cotton grower try for the last ten years Is 27.1 bush-
lias farmed 2,500 acres In cotton and l els an acre.
Just been made head curator
of the department of unthropology In
the National museum.
For thirty-six years Doctor Hough,
who celebrated Ids sixty-fourth birth-
day last Tuesduy, has been n member
of the museum staff, serving succes-
sively as aid, assistant curatur division
of ethnology, curator of ethnology,
and uctiug head curator of anthro-
pology.
Born nt Morgantown. W. Vu., he
was educated at the West Virginia
university, taking Ills A. B. in 1883,
concerning the history
of the early Indian tribes,
tlie Hopi and Zunl Indians.
In 1914 he discovered at Luna, N.
M., and thoroughly explored two years
later, a village of pit dwellers.
Doctor Hough Is the author of nhout
seventy-five scientific papers relating
to ethnology. He described the first
collection received from Corea and
wrote the first account of the armor
worn by American Indians and the
first scientific description of the Are-
making apparatus of the aborigines,
from which was derived the system
now In use by the boy scouts. Tlie
In the
A sure, safe
way to end
CORNS
• mtai_ _____
corn* with Dr. Scholl
m
Y<____
danger
utc you can end the pain of
•J •Ztno-pad*. Thei
ive the touts — friction-pres»i
riak no infection from cutting,
front corroai
trey
iur«.
■Otect while they heaL
. ic; waterproof. Sl*e* foe
corn*, callouses, bunions. Get a box
bunions. Get l___,
[gist sor shoe dealer's.
>m cl
ive adds.
_-padi prntee
Tkm, antisepti
corns. rallouse_.____
today at yoar druggie
JDl Scholl's
'jLino-pads
Made in the lahoratoriet of The Stkotl
Mfi Co., maker t of Dr Srkoiri f oot
Comfort Appliance t, .Ink Support!.ttc.
Put one on—the pain h gone !
To know
how good a cigarette
really can be made
you must try ay~
LUCK!
STRIKE
‘IT'S TOASTED*'
Tribute to Civil Engineer.
From the standpoint of the artist,
the civil engineer type represents tl
highest type of masculine perfection.
He has the Imagination to conceive
ami the practicality and Intellect to
execute his conceptions.—Emily Nich-
ols Hatch.
Vaseline
KagUS AtfOt
CARB0LATED
PETROLEUM JELLY
No skin break too small
for notice.
Be very wary of cuts, scratches
and skin abrasions, no matter
how slight. “Vaseline” Carbol-
ated Petroleum Jelly—applied
at once—lessens the possibility
of infection.
It comes in bottka—-
at all druggists and
general stores. •
C H E S E B RO U G H
MFG. COMPANY
(Consolidated)
State St. New York
Every "Vaseline" product
mended everywhere bemuse a
lute purity and effectiveness.
\OU ARE INVITED TO THE
OLD TIME REVIVAL
And Gospel of Healing Meeting
BIG TABERNACLE
TULSA, OKLA.
7:30 p. m. Daily;
2:30 and 7:30 p. m. Sundays
April 22nd to May 27lh
RAYMOND T. RICHEY, Ev«ngeli*t
A. J. RICHEY, Song Leader
COME AND BRING THE SICK
-
■ Th,
■ edit
■ don
■ the
■ n, jr
| Sen
■ Ail'
w
THE F111 L GOSPEL ADVOCATE
That little (Interdenominational) paper
edited by Raymond T. Richey which la
»o much good and becoming known
>rld over should he read by every
man. woman and child. Only 5Cc per year.
Send tot Free S tnple. The Full Qomi
Advocate, Bo* 87H, Houston, Texas
FORD OWNER!
Don’t throw away pitted and groomed timer thefts
Install a Positive Timer Roller
and double life of abAll.
Can
rill run like' ne*v.
tnlrtH, Improves starting, mileage ,
power. Introductory PRICK 50c, postpaid.
POSITIVE TIMER ROLLER CO.
S63 East 1 55th St. New York. N. Y.
Live agent wanted for this locality.
mileage aou
postpai
tut ouei
C fails in the
treatment of ITCH, KCZKMA,
RINO WORM,TKTTKR or other
chlng skin diseases. Price
gists, or direct from
MtdcnaCo thareas, lot
Itching sk
75<- at drug*!*
il Ricitargi Midi
,n,l hi. A. M. In 1884. Two ye.ni later ! vhapter on flre-miiklng In (he present
hoy scout manual was written by Doc-
tor Hough.
lie cume to the museum. In 1804 he
received his i*h. D. und in 1890, while
on his first archaeological expedition
In the southwest, he met und married
Miss Jennie Myrtle Zuck.
Again In 1001, 1904. nnd 1900 he
visited Arizona and New Mexico,
(nuking extensive explorations which
resulted in valuable collections for the
museum uud u fund of knowledge
“There were several methods," Doc-
tor Hough explained, "and 1 kept the
skin rubbed off my hands for nearly
two years working them out nnd test-
ing them. Tiie first method described
Is the simplest, hut it also is the most
difficult. T he second Is the one in use
by the scouts."
Gray Hair 111
ah» l« by ualiig Q-ltan Hair Color Ilvaiorvr - S«fa
at vatar — try It. At all good drugglat*. 7* cent*,
or Air*rt from NFMIC. -FI.IIS fWaurf. Taa.
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Keyes, Chester A. Luther Register. (Luther, Okla.), Vol. 23, No. 43, Ed. 1 Friday, May 25, 1923, newspaper, May 25, 1923; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc925167/m1/3/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.