The Sentinel Leader. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1918 Page: 2 of 10
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{WS* 53 * *
4
the sentinel leader
WAR BUDGET IS THE
4,000,000 IS GAIN IN VrHcA
ARMY APPROPRIATION BILL
OF $12,089,000,000 IS
PASSED.
NO CHANGE IN THE DRAFT AGE
Draft Law Amended to Provide Quota*
On Number in Claes One
, Instead of State
Population.
Washington—In passing the *12,-
•tt.o00.000 army appropriation bill the
senate emphasized sentiment for ea-
barktng the army beyond the three
million men provided in the measure,
but declined while awaiting the war
department s new expansion program,
specifically to direct the president to
raise an army of 5.000.066.
After a week’s debate and withont a
roli call or dissenting vote. the huge
■upply measure—a world's record
breaker—was sent to conference be-
tween the two houses, where it quickly
became law.
None of the appropriations for the
army's part in the war for the fiscal
year beginning July 1. was reduced by
the senate. Instead it increased many
items, approved without change the
house clause clothing the president
writh unlimited authority to increase
the army by fun her draft calls and
added scores of important legislative
riders.
OKLAHOMA HAS HARVESTED
A BIG CROP.
Dats. Corn and Cotton Shows Much
Better Condition Than Last
Year Thi* Time.
j Oklahoma City.-Oklahoma has bar- ;
vested 53,7SO.*,>0 bushels of wheat this I
fear, according to the June crop re- '
Port of the state board of agriculture.
The total yield for 1917 was 29.756 000,
! recording to the board records. '
The June crop report shows that
the condition of al crops at this time
i compared with the condition last year
s much better. The report shows
that the condition of the soil as re-
gards moisture is 65 per cent. The
condition during May was 83 per cent j
and the condition of the soil a year
xgo this month was 60 per cent.
The growing condition of wheat at
the time of harvest was 65 per cent.
. cndit.on on same date in 1917 was
^ *cent. The estimated average
rte'.d per acre of wheat this year is
12 bushels. The average yield last year
»as 10.5 bushels per acre Based on
he above figures our estimate of the
otal yield for the state this year is
i3.750.000 bushels Total vield in 1917
amounted to 29,756.000 bushFls The
estimate for the total 1918 production
* -I be changed some according to
threshing figures which will be pub-
lished in next month's report
The condition of oats at the time
of harvest was 71 per cent. Condition
of oats on same date one year ago
»as 59 per cent. The estimated aver
a-ge yield to the acre this year is 21
bushels. The average yield" last year
was 27 pushels pr acre. Our esti-
DRAFT AGE LIUS
STILL UNCHANGED
ARMY OFFICERS BELIEVE
CLASS ONE WILL BE SUF-
FICIENT FOR 1918 CALLS
KERENSKY SAFE IN LONDON
>'
OVER 900,OOG NOW IN FRANCE
500,000 to Be Called in August. *50.000
Each in September, October and
November, and 125.COO in
December.
Russia's Strong Man Hopes His Coun-
try Will Again Fight the Hunx
London — Alexander A. Kerensky,
former provisional premier of Russia,
arrived in London on bis way to the
United States.
Kerensky was introduced to the Brit
ish labor conference here this after
Washington—Senator Chamberlain
announced that it is proposed to call in
August 300,000 draft men. in Septem-
ber 150,000. in October 150.000. in No-
vember 150,000, and in December 125.-
000.
These 875,000 men. he said, are ex-
pected to exhaust class one.
General March, chief of stafT. al- !
ready has announced the army is five
months ahead of schedule in troop j
movements, over 900.000 men having
been shipped abroad.
During the debate, however, it nas
disclosed that if the highest hopes are
realized. 1.450.000 men will have
reached France sometime in August,
and there will be a total force under
arms of approximately 3.506.000.
Baker and March Positive.
Secretary Baker and General March
were positive that the reservoir of
fighting manpower would, meet all
ENEMY FINALLY CLEANED
OUT OF LAST POSITIONS
IN BELLEAU WOOD.
STOPS BEER IN THREE MONTHS
BREWERS UNABLE TO MAKE*
CHANGE IN BILL.
Dry Nation in Year; Proposal Will Be
Taken Up After Needs of Army
Considered.
AUSTRIAN ARMY CUT TO PIECE
Retreat from West Side of Piave
Turned Into a Rout. While Italian
Machine Gunners Slaughtered
Thousands of the Enemy.
Washington.—Manufacture of beer
p ’rflI st°P in three months, and prohib
- tion will be effective nationally June
30. 1919, if congress adopt* the fn..
000.006 emergency agricultural apprtv
P nation bill, which was reported tc
the senate.
Washington.—The capture of 240
prisoners, including five officers,
the American forces operating in fbe
Chateau Thierry region and the auc-
The probation amendment offered by
Senator Norris of Nebraska, a* a sub
stitute lor that by Senator Jones ot
Washington, was adopted by the sen
bj^ate agricultural committee It pro
bitiits me saie of distilled spirits ancf
the manuiacture of wine or the re-
cessful bombing of the railroad yards moral of liquors now held fn bond
|nd station at Conflans by American afIer June 30. 1919. The manufacture
aviators are recounted in General of would be stopped ’hreq. months
Pershing's communique. The names after th<? Passake of the bill.
of units, officers and men of the first
American division who were cited for
bravery at the battle of Cantignv by
/ the general commanding the French
army, with which the first division
is serving.
The Americans now are In posses-
The amendment was approved by
he committee at a three-hour session
during which opponents made futiie
efforts to have it amended to permit
the manufacture and sale of beer foi
six and then four months after enact
fiient. Efforts to hare the committee
sion of virtually all the valuable tacti- recomm*nd passage of prohibition lee*
cal positions in the Belleau wood
Army Enlargement Proposed.
A futile effort was made by sen-
ators desirous of specifically ordering
an army increase. An amendment by
Senator McCumber of North Dakota
proposed to “direct" the president to
enlarge the army to 5.006.000 enlisted
men as speedily as equipment and
clothing could be obtained, was re-
«ct*d 45 to 19 and an amendment by
Senator Flail of New Mexico, propos-
— calls upon it under the best possible
s "9 IJaec^1! Tr* L**1 prodactioE conditions, of mobilization and trans-
S;9.126.<X» bushels. The final figures portation. until
crop
*as 25.854,000
for the 1917
Jushels.
Corn shows a growing condition of
?0 per cent. Condition last month was
i- per cent and on same date one
•ear ago the condition of corn was 75
her cent. Some reports show that in
he western and southwestern pins
hf the state corn has been damaged
by recent hot winds and scarcity of
moiature In the eastern pan of the
is slightly
teg an Increase of 3.000.006 men went
out viva voce. Many senators declared 1 ,!ate the condition of corn
to voting they were only temporarily aboTe the average,
postponing action in accord with the Tlj* condition of cotton is 86 per
war department's request for two or 'enE The condition on this date last
three months' tint to submit the en- rear w*s 71 per cent.
teregi program -—--
Among important legislative
visions added by the senate to
bi.l. many of which the house leaders
congress has an op-
portunity to take up age extensions
later, with the data now being com-
piled by the war department at hand.
The table shows a total strength in
class one of 2.362.082. deductions of
334.634 for delinquents; 36.770 for the
emergency fleet list; 215,539 for limit-
ed service classifications, and 50.268
for remediable defective* leaving 1.-
<24.871 fighting men of those originailv
placed in class one. To that number
it is estimated 206.000 will be added by
the re-classification process now going
on and 400.000 from the class of 1918.
With the July call deducted, the
tab.e listed 877,359 as the number of
a valuables left in the fighting ranks of
A. A. Kerensky.
noon and was received by the dele-
gate with applause.
Kerensky has been in London for
several days. His health is bad and
those who have seen him say he has
gone through remarkable adventures
in escaping from Russia
I believe. Indeed I am certain.”
added the former premier, "that the
Russian people wiil shortly join you in
the fight for the great cause of free-
dom.”
, t°r- Most of the prisoners taken be-
long to the 347th German division.
The Germans placed the crack 201st
division opposite a portion of the
American line. Despite this the Amer-
icans went through in steam roller
fashion.
The American artillery again bril- ____
iiantly carried out it* part in throw- among the chief opponent
ing the entire German line into con-
islation in a separate measure a 1st
were unsuccessful.
Extensive hearing* on the questici*
of prohibition during the war wer>.
held by the committee The proposal
was opposed and approved by high
government officials and others"
Chairman Hurley and Bainbriuge
Colby, of the shipping Board.
were
GOOD PROFIT IN PACKING
Five Companies Clear $140,000,000 in
Three Years.
Washington -
mendous
Profiteering on a
all
already have agreed to accept, are the
foaowmg:
Authorizing the president to organ-
ize volunteer Slavic and Russian le-
gions;
Proposing the rank of lieutenant
general for Provost Marshal General
Half Million
Damage Done
Twister.
by Small
Oklahoma City.—Oklahoma City suf-
fered I50O.OOO damage late Saturday
aigh: from a 75-mile blow, the most
[teriffic in the history of the city a
Crowder in recognition of his selective £oraad° funnel came perilously near
draft administration; touching the vicinity.
Provid.Dg for training and equipping Houses were unroofed. light struc-
of foreign troops, designed especially ^Eres lifted from their foundations,
for the so-called "pan-Amen can" smokestacks toppled, telegraph poles
Army; i is mantled and many blown over, and
Amending the draft law to provide probably five thousand trees uprooted
guotas based on the number of men >n with.n the city and suburbs Insur-
Class 1 instead of on state popuia- “c® men and city officials agreed the
ti°n; losses mey even exceed $566,666.
Giving effect to the British-Amer- The Oklahoma Gas and Electric
ican reciprocal draft treaty and other Company's power plant was disabled,
similar conventions which may be usd with
roncluded and permanently debarring
from American citizenship citizens of
aeutrai nations who have filed pre-
iminarv citizenship applications and
who claim exemption from the draft:
Authorizing formation of an $100.-
900.600 corporation under the aircraft
board;
Distinctive Badges Provided
z tornado HITS OKLAHOMA .a.. <*;““«£)
- j the rest of the year are placed at a
total of 875.000, which would leave
2.000 men still in the class on Jane-
ary 1, 1919.
There is strong opposition in con-
gress to placing the minimum age be-
low 20. but it was regarded as prob-
able that eventually a mutual com-1 „
promise would be effected, satisfactory lhe report Mjrs and
both to congress and administration of- in ^''!°*anc^8 and expenses
fleial*. under which the draft would show incre*«Lt ,nstance* Padded to
cover men between 20 and 35 years. ; bSteesL °f
possibly up to 40; and that, in addi- i 0f . .
ur a!1 the big profits disclosed by
investigation, the report savs the
profits of the meat packers and thoe *
a.lied with them and by the flour mill-
ers. stand^foremost. despite the fixing
up to 50 years.
Age Change May Be Delayed.
Opposition of the administration to
proposals before the senate for imme-
diaie extension of the selective draft
fusion. Prisoners said that the posi-
tion from which they had been taken
was like an inferno under the Ameri-
can fire They were happy to get out
I alive.
The new sector held by American
troops in Alsace Is to the region north-
west of Gebweiler. This sector is not
far from the famous Hartmanns-Weil-
erkopf. the scene of so much hard
fighting in the past
France and Flanders Draw Attention.
With the return of almost normal
conditions on the Italian front and
with no indications apparent that it is
the intention of the Austrians in the
immediate future to launch another
Daniels, who did not appear as an
advocate of prohibition, but at the
tequest cf the committee, said that
around !he Mare Island navy yard an.f
after the sale of liquor was prohibited1
the Newport torpedo station, the work-
men showed greater efficiency, the out-
puts of both plants increasing.
He said this increased efficiency was:
further indicated by the record
launching of a torpedo boat destroyer
at the Mare island yard m seventeen;
and one half days after the keel was-
laid.
reported
to the senate by the federal trade com- stroke against General Diaz's armies,
mission, as the result of an exhaustive tlle eJ’®s of the world are being cen-
investigation. j tered once more in expectancy on the
Reappraisement of properties were battle arta in France and Flanders as
made by great concerns, when it be !he possib!e theater qf early encoun-
came evident that the government wa< Iers on a larpe scale-
about to fix prices on a basis of return A!thou*h the infantry operations,
except by the Americans in the Bel-
leau wood, have not risen in import-
Senator Sheppard of Texas and oth-
er prohibition leaders are confident of
the passage of the prohibition amend-
sent. They said that since the sen-
ate last year adopted by a two-thirds
vote the resolution to submit to the-
states a prohibition constitutional
amendment, a majority vote in sup-
port of the present proposal easily-
could be obtained.
Opponents, however, expected a
strong fight to be made in view or
xnce above patrol encounters recently, tee fact that the constitutional amend-
is awaiting action by th»
tion. there would be written into law . the
an application of the work or fight
principle already inaugurated by Gen.
Crowder among the draft eligibles that
would reach even older men. possibly
many crippled circuits vir-
tually the entire city remained in dark-
ness until sunrise. The street railway
system was partly out of commission.
A few cars were able to run on short
trips
The Southwestern Cotton Oil plant
was damaged to the extent of *40.660.
The American Brick and Tile Company
•uffered a *30.060 loss Commercial
by the
Swift.
nevertheless the Germans are trying
nut with their artillery the stability of
1 ‘-he British and French positions on va-
rious sectors from Flnaders to the re-
gion of the Marne.
Southwest of Armentieres. on the
rirer sector, and between Givenchy
ind Robecq. the British lines have
been heavily shelled with guns of al!
calibres and with considerable num-
bers of gas projectiles.
ment now
states.
29 IRON MINERS ENTOMBED
Only Three Have Been Rescued at
Virginia, Minn.
of prices by the government.
Manipulations of the market
five great packers. Armour.
mission «*1— - a-ad 5'udahy the com' ' The French hare been receiving sim- Pit mine.
•*— <----“ ”ce tVe7 deT C,i !ar Tis;tations between the Oise and —.—„ mure man tnn
w.tnout regard Aisne rivers, especially in the region dynamite and black powder, had taken
north of Vill-rs-Cotteret*. where the 001 three miners alive, but uncon-
that is useful to
to law."
' lrginia, Minn.—Rescuers working-
in the levels of the wrecked silver open
destroyed by a premature
explosion of more than thirty tons of
Providing distinctive badges or but tel«Frt>ah companies place their dam-
tons for men dischargd from and re-
jected for military service;
Authorizing the president to com-
mandeer timber and lumber and con-
duct timbering operations, proposed
for the aircraft and ship building pro-
grams :
Providing medals of honor and dis-
tinguished service crosses and other
decorations;
Authorizing officers to buy their
aniforms and equipment from the gov-
ernment at cost, and
Providing more general officers and
promotions for the medical corps
xge at *10.600. The telephone
pany's misfortune will reach *20 060.
400 telephone* being out of conci-
sion Buildings at the State Fair
grounds, valued at *7.500, were virtual-
ly ruined. Tin roofs, elec'ric s gns
tnd awnings of every description were
smashed and torn down in ail par's of
the city, many window* being blown
oat. sash and all.
age limits, voiced by Secretary Baker
and General March, chief of staff, be- Th^, rp K
fore the senate military committee, ap- «ras Ciar?f ,lut ^ -eeent German offensive reached its scions, and had located five others
pa ready served to increase the senate m0E0P°ljaGc control of the greatest depth in the attempted dash entombed :n a cave by the bast who
controversy over an amendment by I ,n*uttr? aEd aE* "reaching for to Paris
S-ecavor Fall of New Mexico, to the ; * doE»ination sn other products."
*1X660.000.000 army appropriation bill During 1915. 1916 and 1917. the re-
proposing the age limits be 20 and 46 • ?°rt savs' tbes- companies "pocketed”
; *140.006.600.
reported through air pipes that they
Under the fire of Italian machine wer* injured, probably not fatally
instead of 21 and 31 years
Crowder Can* 125.000 Mere.
^Uhite and colored draft registrant*
numbering 124,520 were summoned to
the color* for
in a call Issued by Provost Marshal
Building Fall*; 39
Sioux Uhy. la-Thirty-nine bodies
recovered from the ruin*
guns and artillery which were brought
ap rapidly the Austrian withdrawal
across the Piave soon became a dis-
orderly root It Is estimated the Aus-
trian losses total more than 260.600.
It was a terrible sight as the
maddened Austrians fied under the
deluge of Italian bulle'* and shells
ANOTHER NUSIANCE NAILED
Eugene V. Deb*. Candidate fer Job at
Leavenworth.
r.
General Crowder Mobilization
take place at Itoterval* during
month of July. This
with that for 226.660 to be mobilized
July 22-25 and
Officials of the D. R. Hanna Corn-
pan). owners of the mine, reported
that twenty-nine men had been en-
tombed. but say the exact number off
dead probably will not be known until
the entire pit has been explored bv
rescue parties One body aireadv has
been recovered
According to mine officials lightning
was responsible for the explosion.
•nth it two
smaiier adjacent struc-
with various spec ai r tare*- Thirty-three persons were to-
calls wUl remove during Juiy a total “»ce probably fatally The a a
I iority of the
NEW WHEAT PRICES NAMED
victims were burned
Increases Made By Federal
Grain Corporation^ t
Army Will Not Lack Beef.
Washington. — To safeguard any
temporary shortage of beef for the
army in France, the war department
Is constructing in that country refrig-
erating plants with a capacity for
freezing a total of from 30.060.000 to
46 600.000 pounds of beef. Ice making
plants are being built in connection
•1th each. All the machinery and
materials for the plants will be sup-
plied from the United States except
the lumber and concrete. The lumber
will be gotten out of the forests of
Prance by forestry regiments.
Liquor Auctioned 8y U. 8. Officer*..
Port Worth. Texas — Confiscated
ffqoor was offered for sale here n
®rT territory by federal authorities
Some quarts brought as high as *5.56
Beer sold for *14 for five dozen
Cleveland—Eagc-n» V Dev«*. fnr
time* Socialist candidate fer the pres-
idency of the Uu'ted States. w?3 ar-
rested here 6 Ur *? i v
Charles W. Lsrn as he was about to
de’iver a Serialist address. The ar-
rest was m»de m a federal warrant
in concert o*! with Debs’ speech at the
Socialist state ccarentiers in Canton.
O- June 16 last
The arrest was made cn a secret in-
dictment returned by the federal grand
jury. The indictment contains ten
specific count* under Serticn 3 of the
espionage act as amended by the pase
age of the sedition bill on May 16 last,
which provide* a penalty of twenty .
year? in the penitentiary and a fine of
*10.066 and costs for each violation.
In the speech for wh.rh he wa* sr
*ested Debe said America is fighting
for plunder.
,-eached the opposite bank they were Slight
vgain caught by the fire of Italian
guns which had been trained accar- ___-
Uely on the eastern bank for some N>w York—New wheat price* neces-
iaT» sitated by advanced freight rates were
announced here by the food adminis-
was
men
go to
middle of the month.
By that time it is expected the add;
Momello Slaughter Terrific.
tte the Montello the slaughter
t ration
of 367.961 men. the largest number ------ - —- .<«««, were corned to
summoned in any one month. ! death. Of the thirty-ciae bodies re-
A1 though the order issued last night ' ,°1r-r*d- t»emy-five have been ideari-
for 220.006 men probabiy will deplete j Ce<1
the present available* in c’asa one In ---
!y Empress Ekatenaa IL was sunk 50111 banLs ^f the river were strewn Th* corporations’ announcement
f a «r and also several de- **ith dea<l *=3 dy-cg. while hut- sa-d Gxat No. 1 wheat of the northern -
the new reristraiion r,t *i _I_ 1 J*njmere sank in an engage men! -^*<1* of bodies were carried down in spftoff- hard winter, red winter, doruta
gram corporation. It ws»
__ *u stated that a minimum price of 12.0m
terrific. Bodies of Austrian troops a bushel *
anti! after the
uons gained by reclassification and by ! s’roven . v. . *_, ,
| 21-yearoM j imm, MmmieM sfcp*V?i^£!£^ ^n^olhe
youths, will he available
Oklahoma is called on to send 2 000
negro draft registrants to Camp Dodge
Iowa, between July 16 and 20
About 5,000 Oklahomans had already
been called for July 2X
according to a *eai-oSciai Berlin re- At one Ptoce * correspondent count
Port- In the course of this fighting 309 bodies while walking a distance bas’c prices:
’fin •• - 'am . * . a w ~ _ m a. • w _ . a* ..
«ou red white grades will be sold in
th* various market* at the
following
the sailors of ;he fleet changed their ls*,f a
one regiment of York. *2.39 V*; Philadelphia.
poses
Heat Liberty Lean Bit
I* Pa*eed
Telegrapher* Order** To Strike
Wedding end* In Tragedy.
Memphis. Team—Robert L Temple.
Wii*«n Take* Over German Dock*.
v.'ashington—President ’.Viison by
proclamation formally took over the
wharves aad docks of the North Ger _
M. J. Hoboken son** ,be hit authorizing
_______ _ scdttiooal bond issue of $5,060,666,060
state cf a. egiance several time* The D0TeriB* troops which was originally *- 39. Baltimore and Newport News"
entire Russian Black sea fleet, these =on:po**d ot tnore than X600 men. but ■ Duluth and Minneapolis!
report* adc & zow at Sahastopo! an- *ghty-eight to the coapanv were *7224; Chicago $2.26: St Loui-
der erman control tad flt for war pur- "
rere prisoners
$9,000,000 More Loaned to Belgium.
$2 24; Kansas City and Omaha. $2 18.
New Orleans and Galveston. $2 2*
Tacoma. Seattle. Portland
'oIZ.------- Aa!or’a San Franc.-ro
-te asd with virtually no debate the Lbe total loaned •© 'ha* coont-v <* v-Tb* pnc* ***•’* for No- 3 wheat will
Hoboken. no«e tke bill anthnn^. *n tl3U66.666 .nfl the total ,o the 7u£ t clnTbetew^o^1 ** N°
. Oregon,,
and Loe
te *$>81.5601660
!cago—S j. Konnencamp prest- a traveling salesman of Chicago, was
tent of the Commercial Telegrapher* shot and killed here within an hour of
onion of America has issued a call the time set for his marriage to Mis*
h»r a strike of members of -he onion Lena Graham of Meridian. Mia* by J
ssrpiored hr the Western Union Tele R Graham father of the voting wom-
paph Ca. effective Monday. July fl *n. According to a police Staten rat.
-—— Grahm dec ared after hi* arrest that
Union Men Good Stamp Peddler*. Temple jus* before the ceremony was
Oklahoma City —Ok ahoma City la- ,0 taT* ,ak»n pi ce, admitted that he
•or anions sold *53.000 worth of War i ^ ^ h*en siarriei. ani that
L-Boats Take Toll of 233^39 Ton*.
Washington — Allied and neutral
No 3 will be dealt
Grades be ow
in on sample.
Atlanta.-
• Ratifies Prohibition.
-The Georgia legislature
Savings stamp* in one day. beating all
previous records fer the War Saving*
I Vs
—’•« rtf’* t r-B-
■4 not beets divorce!
Aaok here by more than 166
per cent
from whom
Graham S«
French Trts^, Usti Ana* La.
•hipping sunk by German U-'hoeuT^ f w”
^ :“T dMT9 c* *»T ••• torp-dued sad ntnk on the na« ** prohifciti.n oon.ti- c,rcu" ^
=r- •« uss&svsxs
Engineer Only Reeponsibie.
Hammond. Ind—Investigation of the-
HagenbeckWaUace dren* wreck by
Senate Approves Fore.gr Legon.
Washington.— Reorganiza- - Df *
ve’enteer “slaV legion :a the luted
Stages for service at the fr*-. com- <
”t»ed of member* of »pprea*«i
' Ac stria *n«i Germany.
1512 were saved. Six hundred
thirty-e gbt wetM drowned
ratified the prohibition
Austin
Teva* Goes
—The iiqeo
the senate
approved
Texas we* abolished
rhen the state-wide
lecame effective
Dry-
husmess
idnigkL J
Pruhibitioe
in exoneration of aU
- w hav*. connected with the two trains except
,u,» s*rhin'" -• "■*
token fvaorsMe action are- Anion* b Ferfr>nn«» speeding car*.
chaaetta. MarjUnd Montana Missisa-
•P1 North Dakota. South Dakota.
•oath Carol na, Texas. Virgiaia
doors. Eagiuerr
bargent and Fireman Gustave Kiaoss
who are under charges of mauslaugh^
ter. did not appear to testify.
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Fields, John. The Sentinel Leader. (Sentinel, Okla.), Vol. 15, No. 6, Ed. 1 Friday, July 5, 1918, newspaper, July 5, 1918; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc937613/m1/2/: accessed March 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.