The Dover News. (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1911 Page: 3 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Cleanses the System
effectually; Dispels
colds and Headaches,
due to constipation.
Best for men, women
and children: young
and old.
Toqet its Beneficial
effects, always note the
name of the Company.
(aufosnia f 10 Syrup 0.
plainly printed on the
front of every packaqe
of the Genuine
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by^
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable
—act surely and
gently on the
Farmers' Educational
and Co-Operative
Union of America
Matter* <?Especial Moment to
the Prcgrewve Agriculturist
CARTERS
ITTLt
IVER
PILLS.
Biliousness,
Head-
ache,
Dizzi-
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
\ name
to remember
en you need a remedy
COUOHS and COLDS
HARD LUCK.
Many a six footer la a little short-
Most rat holes will bear looking
into.
One way to raise money is to raise
mules.
Isn't the lover who braves the storm
a rain beau?
It doesn't require an axe to cut an
acquaintance
Sometimes the clothes speak louder
than the man.
Co-operation spells recuperation
among tanners.
Keep busy and you'll have no time
to be miserable.
Many things are well done that are
not worth doing
Corn on the cob Is more acceptable
than corn on the foot.
The lawyer thrives upon the conten-
tions of his neighbors.
Cut down your cotton acreage and
try to Increase the yield.
There Is no Impropriety In using a
spring wagon in the fall.
Tlnie Is the most expensive Item
that enters In the average job.
A cross husband Is about the mean-
est cross a woman has to bear
Most farmers want to be considered
as men before they are labeled and
ticketed as farmers.
Co-operatlon nnd the employment of
truln^d business men In the selling Is
the salvation of the farms.
What proflteth It a man If he raise
the best crop In the country and
loses money In the selling?
The real leaders In farm work or In
anything else are the men who say
"come on boysv' not the men who say
"go along."
Its easy to be thankful when we are
prosperous but It takes real optimism
to be thankful things are no worse
when we suffer heavy losses.
Urges Farmers to Farm as If Staplt
Crop Net in Existence—South
Carolina Plan.
To the Officers and Members of the
Farmers' Uniou:
At this critical stage in the cotton
I situation, with the Farmers' Uniou
1 and scores of business leaders and
general southern factors battling to
1 stem the tide of unfair prices, the
first duty of the farmer is to huld his
cotton.
Those who sell at present prices
are simply giving away a margin of
t several million dollars to sprwiers
and speculators Quotations alter the
first of the year ill establish the
truth of that assertion. The most
difficult part Of the campaign is
now upon us. To waver is to lose
the effect of the spleudid work ai
ready accomplish d.
In South Carolina, under the lead
ershlp of E J Watson, president of
the Southern cotton congress, they are
instituting a system of pledges * blch
binds the planter to hold his present
cotton for thirteeu cents, and further,
not to sow more than sixty per cent,
of the arable acreage iu cotton for I
the coiuiug season The plan is au j
excellent oue Statistics and our o*n
common sense tell us that the crop !
now in band is worth much more than ,
is being ofTered for it. But If civili-
zation needs the sharp lessons of a
short crop to emphasize the wisdom t
Don't Hesitate
To Take
Hostetter's
Stomach Bitters
It has a proven repu-
tation in cases of Poor
Appetite, Belching,
1 leartburn, Flatulency,
Indigestion, C'ostive-
ness, Colds, Grippe and
Malaria. Don't exper-
iment—insist on having
HOSTETTER'S
IT TONES AND INVIGORATES
ti sick."
er news
LOOKING AFTER THE DETAILS.
reot.TELLUM
PROFITABLE FARM IN SOUTH
Prosperity Seen When All People
Live on Farm Products and Grow
Cotton as Surplus.
The Fortune Teller—You are de-
stined to marry great wealth.
I. M. P. Cunious—Fine.
The Fortune Teller—Unfortunately,
death will claim you two days after
the event.
His Suspicion.
"Why did you leave the place in
which you were previously employed?"
asked the head of the firm.
"1 think," said the applicant for the
position of office boy, "de boss was
afraid if 1 stayed I might git his
place."
Indefinite.
"I want a putt.' suddenly announced
the petted, spoiled star.
"Yes, my dear Miss Starlite," meek-
ly answered the long suffering man-
ager. "Shall 1 call on the confection-
er or the press agent?"
Bush Leaguers.
Professor—You know that the low-
est type of human beings is found in
Australia What are those natives
called, Mr. Fanning?
Student (captain of the ball team)—
Bush leaguers.—Puck.
If thought photography ever be-
comes practical the world will learn
some astonishing secrets.
WORKS WITHOUT FAITH
Faith Came After the Works Had Laid
the Foundation.
A Bay State belle talks thus about
coffee:
"While a coffee drinker I was a suf-
ferer from indigestion and intensely
painful nervous headaches, from child-
hood.
"Seven years ago ray health gave
out entirely. I grew so weak that
the exertion of walking, if only a few
feet, made it necessary for me to lie
down. My friends thought I was
marked for consumption—weak, thin
and pale.
"I realized the danger I was in and
tried fai'hfull.v to get relief from med-
icines, till, at last, after having em-
ployed all kinds of drugs, the doctor
acknowledged that he did not believe
it was in his power to cure me.
"While in this condition a friend in-
duced me to quit coffee and try Post-
uni, and I did so without the least
hope that it would do me any good. I
did not like it at first, but when it was
properly made I found it was a most
delicious and refreshing beverage. I
am especially fond of it served at din-
ner ice-cold, with cream.
"In a month's time I began to Im-
prove, and in a few weeks my indiges-
tion ceased to trouble me, and my
headache stopped entirely. I am so
perfectly well now that I do not look
like the same person, and 1 have so
gained in flesh that I am 15 pounds
heavier than ever before.
"This is what Postum has done for
me. I still use it and shall always do
so." Name given by Postum Co., Bat-
tle Creek, Mich.
"There's a reason." and it is ex-
plained in the little book, "The Road
to Wellville," in pkgs.
Ever rexul the above Idlerf A new
one itppearn from lime to lime. Tlo ■
ore Kenulne, true, and full of liiutiua
G 11. Alford. one of the agents of
the government representing the ag
j rlcultural department and w ho has
| been working chiefly in Claiborne
county this year, talked to business
.lien and planters at the Vicksburg
Cotton Exchange last week and said
some good things, among them the
following:
"The planters who keep their la-
borers and force them to grow plenty
of corn, rice, potatoes, molasses, hogs
and poultry for home use, and to cul-
tivate say six or seven acres of cot-
ton, according to government Instruc-
tions, will grow more prosperous ev-
ery year. They will not grow as
much cotton, but it will not be neces-
sary for them to send two-thirds of
the money obtained for cotton to oth-
er sections of the country to pay for
farm products. Boll weevil or no boll
weevil, prosperity will be the rule
in Warren county when all her peo-
ple live on the products of the farms
and grow cotton as a surplus crop
1 meet planters every day who are
anxious to sell their plantations
They tell me they are In debt and
will never be able to raise the mort-
gage. They say that the boll wee-
vil is here to destroy cotton—their
money crop. They are mistaken on
two counts. Profitable crops of cot-
ton can be grown in spite of the boll
weevil and cotton Is not now a sur-
plus money crop. They will grow
profitable crops of cotton as a sur-
plus crop in a year or so. They will
then all live at home and grow say
two-thirds as much cotton The cot-
ton money will then raise mortgages
instead of paying for corn, bacon,
lard, mules, hay, etc. The boll wee-
vil means diversified farming and
stock raising. Tola means fertile soil
and good farming Fertile soil and
good farming means high priced land.
The boll weevil will probably keep
the price of land down for two or
three years, but diversified agricul-
ture and the raising of good hogs,
cattle, mules, horses and other stock
will force the price up and up until It
will sell for four or five times Its
present market value. Let every
planter bold a tigh grip on his land.
There is no excuse for the blues.
The northern farmers are getting
rich. They cannot grow cottou They
cannot grow sugar cane, rice and
many o'ber crops that can be grown
in Warren. Any crop will grow here
that the i ortherners can grow Diver-
sified farming and stock raising and
the growing of cotton a a surplus
crop will put Warren county on the
high road to genuine prosperity.
of fair dealing with the farmer—then
so be It!
The south is In better position to
be absolutely independent than any
other section of the country Just
assume, for the sake of illustration,
that soil conditions were such that
we could uot produce cotton. We
would then proceed to realize upon
the south's heaven-sent heritage by
producing the great staple crops rais-
ed in every other section of Ameri-
ca, the crops they rely upon to sus-
tain life, to bring in revenue, to pro-
mote prosperity
Think what southern soil can yield.
Corn, wheat, oats, barley, rye, sweet
potatoes, Irish potatoes, turnips,
peas, vetch, burr clover, alfalfa, rib-
bon cane, sorghum, watermelons, all
kinds of vegetables, cows, hogs,
sheep, goats, mules, poultry and poul-
try products, dairy products, and all
manner of fruits.
We could simply wipe cotton out of
consideration, still make a living, and
bring In enormous sums from the
world-at-large for southern crops.
In the face of these tremendous .is-
sets, it is nothing less than criminal
folly to concentrate on cotton. Cut
down on It, ruthlessly! Make it
strictly a surplus crop. Produce any
or all of the other crops 1 have enu-
merated Then the perennial cotton
problem will cease to be one, the cot-
ton we do raise will bring a fiilr
price and It will not be incumbered
by the large amounts now Insanely
sent outside o fthe section for staples
that should be raised here.
CHARLES S. BARRETT.
Union City, Ga.
General Lee's Real Kindness of Heart
Made Manifest on Such
Occasions.
There are some new. or. least, un-
familiar stories of Robert K. Lee in
Gamaliel Bradford, Jr.'s articles on
"l^ee After the War" In the South At-
lantic <Ju:trt rl> > I • - n . ti
proof were peculiar to him. A stu-
dent was once called to account for
absence. "Mr. M , 1 am glad to see
you better," Lee said to him, smiling.
"But, general, I have not
"Then 1 ain glad you have '
from home." "But, general, 1 have
had no hM MVI "\h, 1 took it for
granted that nothing less than sick
ness or distressing news from home
could have kept you from your duty
' In the same vein was his remark to
a student who had been late for pray-
ers. "Mr. Page, will you kindly give
i my compliments to Miss and ask
her If she will please have breakfast a
little earlier for you?" To a negligent
student he said: "How is your moth-
er? 1 am sure you must be devoted
to her; you are so careful of the
health of her son "
Summoned to I^ee's office, a lad was
told that only patience and industry
would save him from failure in col
lege and in life. "But, general, you
failed," the student replied, with
sophomore Inaptitude "1 hope that
you may be more fortunate than 1,"
I was the quiet answer.
WISE WORDS.
USTIBU
ALCOHOL-3 PFH Cr N'T
AVescl.iMf Preparation for As •
ximiliitmg theFooJaiKlRffiiila
--.
Promotes Digestion,(hcerful
' nrssamllii'M Contains neither
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral
Not n aim qth
yiv.jw •/ot* iu. i < iit'innfsn
CASTtmiA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
OTHER FELLOW GETS PROF.T
Pork Can Be Raised Just as Cheaply
In South as in West—Picture
by Prof. W. F. Massey.
"But go down in the cotton country
and you will see thousands of men
year after year growing a small crop
per acre of cotton by the aid of a lit-
tle low-priced fertilizer bought on the
credit of the cotton crop, and paying
big prices for western bacon that the
Dutchman raised and made a profit
from, a railroad made a profit on car-
rying the hogs to Chicago, and the
packer became a millionaire, and an-
other railroad hauled it south and the
local merchant, who has a chattel
mortgage on many a crop of cotton,
puts a big profit on bacon because of
his risk, and the cotton croppers try
to make all these people rich out of
their one crop, when they could make
the pork cheaper In the south than the
western farmer enn, because of the
cheap land and the great variety of
crops they can produce for the hogs
to gather for themselves."
What do you think of the abovi*
picture by Prof W. F. Massey? It
It true? We regret to admit the cold
facts as Btated by Professor Massey
Now let us call our wife and children
around the fireside on a cold winter
night and make a vow to live at home,
practice the most rigid economy, and
stay out of debt and the problems will
soon be solved Then we will be in
dependent prosperous farmers.
Bings—Wings would not propose to
his girl until he got out in a boat I
Dings—Why?
Blngs—He stutters and didn't want !
her to have a chance to away.
CUTICURA OINTMENT HEALED
BAD SORE ON LIMB
"Some time ago I was coming up
some steps when the board crushed 1
under me like an egg shell, and my j
right limb went through to the knee,
and scrai>ed he flesh off the bono
just inside and below the knee. I
neglected it for a day or two. then it
began to hurt me pretty badly. I put
balsam fir on to draw out the 'poison,
but when I had used it a week, it hurt i
so badly that 1 changed to olnt- ,
ment. That mnde it smart and burn
so badly that 1 couldn't use it any
more, and that was the fourth week
after I was hurt.
"Then 1 began to use Cutlcura Oint-
ment for the sore. It stopped hurting
immediately and began healing right
away. It was a bad-looking sore be-
fore Cuticura Ointment healed it, and
I suffered so I couldn't sleep from two
1
A'' rtonntf -
Apcrffcl Ifcmedy foi'Conslipa
r'.f lion Sour Slomarh.Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions feverish*
ness and Loss OF SLEEP
'!;} Fac Simile Signature of
Till: l I NTAUR I OMPANY.
NEW YORK
vGuarmiteed mulct- the Hood
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
The Agent—Do you believe in ad-
vertising?
The Merchant—Yes, sir. It's better
to be a live man In a dead town than
a dead man in a live town.
Naive Optimists.
j "Six months ago there was another
j outburst of optimism as naive as
11 hough the world were still living In the
| sentimental era of glass exhibitions.
I Since then there has opened another
! era of political earthquakes and con-
j llagratlons, nnd the area of disturb-
I ance continues to extend. Before the
j Tripoli problem has been safely liquid-
ated or the peace of the Balkans Is as-
sured, we have the outburst in China
of an insurrection which may change
the face of the far east and give an
incalculable Increase of force to all
Business.
A train in Arizona was boarded by
robbers, who went through the pork
ets of the luckless passengers. One
of them happened to be a traveling
salesman from New York, who, when
his turn came, flashed out $200, but
rapidly took $1 from the pile and
placed it In Ills vest pocket.
"What do you mean by that?" asked
the robber, as ho toyed with his re
volver. Hurriedly came the answer:
"Mine frent, you surely vould not re-
fuse mo two per cent, discount on a
strictly cash transaction like dls?"—
Pun.
in
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CUSTOM*
Defiance Starch
1 6 ounces to tlie package -o'her starches
only 12 ounces same pure and
"DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
and Hi* hair.
I' lu«uri .it
Never Falln to ll««tore Gray
Hair to ltd Youthful Color.
Cur** < p * l.nlr tailing.
iTtllSl Thompson's Eye Watir
W. N. U., WICHITA, NO. 49-1911.
a
days after I fell until I began using the impulses set moving by the trl
Cuticura Ointment.
"Cuticura Soap is the best soap I
ever saw. I have used all kinds of
soap for washing my face, and always
it would leave my face smarting. I
had to keep a lotion to stop the smart,
no matter how expensive a soap 1
used. 1 find at last in Cuticura Soap
a soap that will clean my face and
leave no smarting, and I do not havo
to use any lotion or anything else to
ease it. 1 believe Cuticura Soap 1b the
best soap made." (Signed) Mrs. M.
E. Fairchild, 805 Lafayette St., Wich-
ita. Kan., May 8, 1911. Although
Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold
by druggists and dealers everywhere,
a sample gf each, with 32-page book,
will be mailed free on application to
•Cuticura," Dept. 22 K, Boston.
No Soap There.
It was a modern version of that an-
cient saw that shoemakers' children
go barefoot. A ten-year-old boy had
presented himself at the settlement
olayground coated with many layers
of city soil. The teacher lost no time
-in administering a reproof.
"Gee. how can I help it," sniffled the
boy, "when me mother's a washwom-
an and takes all the soap away wid
i 'er?"
umph of Japan. All we can be certain
of In the region of world politics is
that nothing Is certain. Do we need
further lessons to convince us that
the peace of civilization is founded
upon the crust of a volcano?" asks
the London Observer.
TO DHIVK UI T MA I.AKI \
AN1 > lt( 11.1) I P TilF RYHTKM
Take the Old Htnndiird UllOVKH TASTKI.KSH
CHILI. TONIC. You know whot you ur i tuklng
The formula I* plainly printed on every buttle,
hIiowIiik It I* ftltuply yulnfiw and Iron In a t aim-1 ess
form, arid the most cfti .iuul foriu. fur grown
puuple und children, 6U cunt*.
Fore.
Jones—Do you think the horse will
survive the automobile?
Brown—Not if It gets in its way.—
Woman's Home Companion.
In Hard Luck.
Hewitt—You are always broke
Jewitt—I know It; I could't raise
the wind with an electric lan.
St iff neck! Doesn't amount to much,
but mighty disagreeable. You will sur-
prised to see how quickly Hamlin* Wizard
Oil will drive that stiffness out. One
night, that's all.
Located.
Stella—If the third finger Is for the
wedding ling, which is for divorce?
Bella—The finger of scorn.—Judge.
LIPTON'S
OVER 2 MILLION PACKAGES SOLD WEEKLY • -j
DEFIANCE
STARCH
Gives a touch of freshness to
summer dresses, waists, and the
like not imparted in any other
starch.
Ask for "Defiance" Next
Time — The Best Hot or
Cold V/ater Starch.
Full weight 16-ounce
package^ for 10 cents.
If your grocer does not
keep it have him get
it for you.
Work for Humus.
When all fall and winter seeding
has been done then utilize the time
whenever the weather and condition
of the soil will permit In plowing un
der all the vegetable matter on the
cultivated lands to furnish humus
Whenever the weather Is unfit for
outdoor work we can repair harness
and gear, work In the blacksmith shop,
and so on. When the soil is too wet
and the weather will permit, we can
remove stumps, construct broad hill-
tide embankments, repair and build
I feneeB, whitewash outhouses and 60
forth. We should value our time in
I '.he winter more than we do
Teachings Bear Fruit.
The old mortgage antl credit sys
tem Is rapidly wenkenlng The teach
Ing of the Farmers' Union is bearing
fruit. Every true blue farmers" union
man Is living at home and practicing
the most rigid economy. Thousands
are leaving the land of bondage and
entering the promised land—the land
of pay-cash-as-you-ga Let us all join
the band that Is marching to the
promised land.
FCR MORE BEAUTY IN SOUTH
No Good Reason Why It Should Not
Be Made as Pretty ?s Any Coun-
try on the Earth.
It Is said that one cause for the sta-
bility of the English government and
the loyalty of the people is to be found
in the content of the rural population,
and that content is largely due to the
beauty of the country. The humble
thatched cottage, but rose-covered, the
turfed stream, the hedged field, the
shaded road, are more potent In creat-
ing content, peaeefulness and love of
the country than the rhetoric of writ-
ers or the eloquence of orators.
There is no reason why the south,
with Its rolling land, its delightful cli-
mate, Its varied growth, its lovely
flora, may not be made as beautiful as
any country In the whole world, If
only our people shall decide that It
shall be, writes Mrs. John Van Land-
Ingham In the Charlotte Chronicle.
Having shown their loyalty and pa-
triotism upon battlefields; having test-
ed their energy and resourcefulness
In days of darkness and despair; hav-
ing proven their recuperative powers
by wonderful industrial and material
progress. It only remains for them to
be aroused to the necessity for action,
and there will be no tardiness in re
suits
IT WEARS YOU OUT.
Kidney Troubles Lower the Vitality of
the Whole Body.
Don't wait for serious Illness; begin
using Doan s, Kidney Fills when you
first feel backache or notice urinary
disorders. John U Perry. Columbus,
Texas, says: "1 was
taken sick about a
year ago. My limbs
and feet began to
swell and my doctor
said 1 had Bright's
disease. 1 then con-
sulted a doctor who
said I had dropsy and
could not live. Doan's
Kidney Pills relieved
me promptly and I
owe my life to them."
"When Your Back Is Lame, Remem-
berthe Name—DOAN S." 50c,all stores.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Natural.
Lady Visitor—Doctor, the hurt tn
iny little dog's paw looks so angry.
Veterinarian—Naturally, my dear
lady, when you consider it 1s in a pet.
BEAUTIFUL POST CARDS FREE
Henil 2c Htauip for fl «> samples of my Terjr chi le-
Ml (iold KuiI'ijsm "1 Birthday, Flower and Mutti
I'oht Lards: Ix-aunful colon and l# volie*l df>s'«na.
Art 1'ual Card Club, 'All Jackson St., To,>uka, iv*ii.s<i.<
t ' l c
Somehow or other the fellow who
knows it all is never the one who
wins the bets.
Manufactured by
Defiance Starch Co.
OMAHA, NEBRASKA
rH
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES
Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10r packaK<* colors all fibers They dye water l^ter than any othtr dye. You can
dveanv i-anm-nt without riDDina anart. Write for free booklet--How to Dye, Blearh and Mix Colore. MONROt DULG COMPANY. Qulncy. u
Practical Suggestion.
A new association proposes to have
all American railroads lined with
flowers and hedges, but what our
railroad rights of way really need is
to be lined with feather beds. What
good would It do anybody to fall on
a pansy when trains collide?—Detroit
Free Press.
Get Rid of Old Ewes.
This is a gooil time to get rid of th
old ewes. Don't pay to ninter them
Likewise the tough old roosters
What's the use In ever having mi
rooster on the place?
Notice to inventors—A device for
squeezing water out of stocks and the
xnilk supply would fill a long felt want
Constipation causeu many serioun dis-
fnses. it is thoroughly cured by Doctor
'li ne's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative,
hree for cathartic.
Mm. Whislow'H BoothIne Syrup for Children
tcetbiotr, Boftena tlir trutns, reduce** Inflarmna
uuu, allayh paiu,uureii wuu colic. UJc a boi.it*.
A woman may not be able to reform
•lie man she marries, but she 1b rea-
sonably sure to inform him.
Ills heart was as great as the world,
but there was no room in It to hold
the memory of a wrong.—Emerson.
T.ewis' Single Binder gives the smoker a
rich, mellow-tasting 5c ciznr.
No man is ever quite as helpless as
a woman without a pin.
There is no leftover stock on the
political pie counter.
V/. L. DOUGLAS
*2,50, *3,00, *3.50 & *4.00 SHOES
All Styles, All Leathers, All Sizes and
Widths, for Men and Women
THE STAN HARD OF QUALITY
for over 30 years
The workmanship which has made W. L.
Douglas shoes famous the world over is
maintained in every pair.
If 1 could take you into my large factories
at Brockton, Mass., and show you how
carefully W.L.Douglas shoes are made, you
would then realize why 1 warrant them
to hold their shape, fit and look belter and
wear longer than other makes for the price.
Shoes Sent Everywhere All Charges Prepaid.
, How to Order hv Mull. irW.l.lMug-
s Hhoesiu * not will in ?o«r town wirt rtir^t to
Take measurement* of foot a* Miown
ili-alr*! . 'zp aim wt.lth
.•Hpt.H', In-litT, iiirUiuni
the liin/r't «Ao« mail
In the u orld.
itril CutiiloK Pree,
!,. DO I'll l<Aft,
r 146 Spark St., Urorkton. Mass.
r 1IOYH' '!. •2.5©o
ft'l oo hHOK* will positively out
TWO HAIItSot ordinary boys uliooa
Fast Color tyelit* Utt<i £xclu/>iuely* ^
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Lower, Sue L. The Dover News. (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1911, newspaper, December 7, 1911; Dover, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc107043/m1/3/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.