Prague Patriot (Prague, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1907 Page: 2 of 6
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PRAGUE PATRIOT
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
W. S. OMKSIHIII, tilitor and Prop.
• > i >
LOT'S
CHOICE
THE WHITE PLAGUE
SYSTEMATIC WARFARE WAGED
TO WIPE OUT CONSUMPTION.
A dull man is half-brother to a dead
man.
Sunday School Leison for Feb. 17, 1907
Specialty prei>.we<l for thi* paper.
Within u year Kngland will have r.'J
submarine boats, while France will
have SI!, Russia has 29, Japan 10.
Keeping h secret, forgetting an In
Jury and making good use of rich ,
leisure is the most difficult task of
life.
I.KSSON Ti:.\T.
try vi't Hcs, .h and
salt i:t 1-13. M«r
UOLDKN TKXT. "Take hec«i and be-
ware of I'ovetouniieHK." I.uk* 12:1
TIMK Probably within a few years of
I Abraham's arrival in C'aiiuuin in 1921.
PI*ACE5—At a place near Bethel, \l
1 miles north < f Jorusalem. After the sep-
aration he moved to llebron, 31i tnllt'H
i further south.
I gl'ltlPTUItAL HKI"KKKN«'KS. —lllus-
of true ! trativr of Abrahiun. ltl«ssed are tin*
religion, and unle.. It I. laid deep I. "trot £" 7ZZ
the heart and soul of niau tin ru u i commandment n'I unto you: John
no lasting happiness. M:34. In honor preferring one another:
I Horn. 12;10. (Charity sufffereth long and is
put of the ex j kind. « t< i <\,r. 13 4 8. If it be possible.
peiises of the 24 slaughtering and j -"•"■j]' 'SV'S
meat-packing establishments of Lnl- hov«. f :2. i.«i brotherly love ron-
CagO is for wages. tlnue: lleb. la I Heboid how good and
— j how pleasant it Is for brethren to dwell
The largest bird of prey In the world lo«t,l,u;r j" «" ]'Sil]\u
Is the bearded vulture, which mean (V,;|
ures, from wing tip to wing tip, as j ti.i.t sthati VK OP l.OT Not to
much as nine or ten feet. ; k''''P ••■nnpHny with an iilolnti-i-. raller.
ft. . I Cor. r,:9-ll; 2 Ttifs. >'6. 14.
Dublin corporation adopted a | Kv" eomnnmieatw,,.. ™r™pt *>«* man-
the captain and
Justice is the cornerstone
Loss than five per
The
proposal to provid
mate of the mud barge Shamrock with ungodly
gold lace uniforms of Irish manufac |
that walketh not in the
If sinners entire,
walk not thou In the way with
.them: l'rov. 1:10-1 ♦ . Enter not the path
lure* I of the wicked: l'rov 4 ! . 211-24, 25. A
_ _ | companion of fools shall «l *stroyeil;
The Norse Christian name Haakon | rov Be >« t not unequally yoked
nnd the English family name Hawkin j together, etc. 2 V'or. •; n-iv He not par
or Hawkins come from the same root, tukera of in>r *Iiif
Thinks Little of Chinese Army.
Dr Morrison, the well known corre-
spondent of the London Times at Pe-
king, went to see the repent maneu-
vers of the modernized Chinese army
n the neighborhood of Chang te-fu.
He describes them as a repetition of |
the performance of 1905—a set piece;
•awfully prepared long beforehand by warning That Intemperance Increases
number of Japanese advisers The the Liability to Contract Disease
Inefficiency of the officers is still con-
spicuous and the Held training of the
men Inadequate, but the material is
food. Dr. Morrison hints that with- J Organized effort is now being made
AILING WOMEN. j Ownership of National Banks.
— Tbo ownership of the national
Keep the Kidneys Well and the Kid- hanks of the United States is not in
neys Will Keep You Well. the hands of the rich few. as is com-
monly supposed, because fully one-
Sick suffering, languid women are half of the banks have a caj.ital of
learning the true cause of bad backs less than $100,000 t acli. Twelve per
and bow to cure | cent, have capitalizations of from
them. Mrs. W. G. $io0,000 to $250,000, while only seven
—Neglected Colds a Prolific
Source.
• lit Japanese officers to direct affairs throUKhout the United Stated to flfiht
the contending armies would
been little better than a rabble.
have
receive not of
and are pronounced In the same fash [ 'VonsiVk-r '"Vin-
ton.
—
As the censor has suppressed the
last, volume of Kuropatkin's "Lessons
of the War," it is apparent that the
general had not learned his lesson ac-
cording to governmental standards.
A fashion magazine says the girl
of 1907 is tall and slim. She will have
to wait awhile because tho man of
1907, so soon after Christmas, is still
rather short for a good appearance in
her company.
Tho Pall Mall Gazette expresses
pride and wonder in having received a
letter composed of a single sentence
of 209 words. Henry James will pro-
bably say "tut, tut" in a much more
elongated fashion when he sees this
Mrs. Ella Hurr McManus, in pro-
viding for a memorial of her jour-
nalist father, stipulated for a com
petent and gifted sculptor, remark
ing also on tho "many atrocities in
the name of art Inflicted upon our
American cities."
that
ev, 1K :4.
moral problems at Issue,
the arguments, the dangers, the results.
Comment and Suggestive Thought.
Two Imperfections in Abraham's
Faith and Life. Abraham was still in
process of making. He had not yet
attained. He made two errors.
1. To escape a famine, which he
might- have escaped by going to an
other part of Canaan, he left the
Promised Land and went down into
Egypt, which had already attained
a high civilization, full of heathenism,
worldllness and luxury, which has a
great fascination and charm to one
who first enters its enchanted circles
especially when, as was the case in
Egypt, there* were many good precepts
in its religion. This environment, the
moral malaria of educated and bril
liant worldllness, doubtless made him
more susceptible to the next tempta-
tion.
Caution.
Imitations have been placed upon
the market bo closely resembling All- j
cock's Plasters in general appearance |
as to be well calculated to deceive. It !
is, however, in general appearance
only that they compare with Allcock's, -
for they are not only lacking in the
best elements which have made All-
cock's so efficient, but are often harm-
/ul in their effects. Remember that
Allcock's are the original and only
genuine porous plasters—the best ex-
ternal remedy known—and when pur-
chasing plasters the only safe way is
Vo always insist upon having Allcock's.
Universal Atmosphere.
The Swedish savant Ryberg has
suggested that the discovery of the
element metargon in the air strength-
ens the theory of the existence of a
universal atmosphere extending be-
tween the planets and throughout the
solar system. This, it is said, was
already known to exist In the sun be-
fore its discovery, some eight or nine
years ago—that is, in the Immediate
surroundings of the sun, in all com-
ets and In meteorites —from which
facts the Swedish scientist infers that
It constitutes a common atmosphere
Tor our system.
consumption. A warning Is given
against intemperate habits, which in-
crease the liability to consumption.
Davis, of Groesbeek,
Texas, says: "Back-
aches hurt me so I
could hardly stand.
Spells of dizziness
an.I sick headaches
were frequent and
the action of the
kidneys was irregu-
lar. Soon after I began taking Doan's
while spitting is public places is de- Sidney Pills I passed several gravel j One application of Hunt's Cure, how-
precated, as the disease Is frequently 8tones j g()t well and the trouble has ever, relieved my itch and less than
not returned. My back is good and one box cured me entirely."
strong and mv general health better.
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Oats—Heads 2 Foot Long.
The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse,
Wis., are bringing out a new oats this
••ear with heatls 2 foot loiig! That's a
vondcr. Their catalog tells!
Spetz— the greatest cereal hay food
America ever saw! Catalog tells!
Our mammoth 118 page Seed and Tool
Catalog is mailed free to all intending
buyers, or send flc in stamps and receivt
free samples of new Two Foot Long Oats
| uid other cereals and big catalog free.
I John A. Salzer Seed Co., Box W, La
2. In Egypt he felt in danger of his | Crosse, W*is.
life, because his wife was very beauti |
ful. He feared that the Pharaoh would
The officers of the better managed
and most successful cotton" mills of
Japan pay a good deal of attention!
to the improvement of conditions
among the help and to Increasing the
facilities for education, especially ed-
ucation along textile lines
Over in Philadelphia the newspapers
are raising a great howl because deal
ers in lacteal fluid are blending skim
milk with the other kind. Compared
with other stories of clover financing
in that city, this one does not seem
to deserve the prominence that is
given to it.
In order to let them know who Is
ruler the new shah of Persia Is going
to start business by cutting off a few
heads. He might make a more last
lng Impression and prove that he Is up
with the times by giving each of the
refractory ones an operation for ap-
pendicitis.
It Is hard to understand why a Mon-
tana girl in her teens should have
eloped with a man over SO. In Mon-
tana girls are so scarce that they can
take their pick of the men. Now, if
it had been in Boston we should not
have In n surprised, for no unmarried
girl In Boston ever gets out of her
teens.
Frederick J. Strater, of Boston, n
metallurgist, who has spent 'voral
years experimenting over the smelting
crucible, believes that he has discov-
ered a hitherto undreamed source <>f
wealth in common coke, the melt inn
of at least $30 worth of tin from a
ton of coke costing only $4 now at re-
tall. His method, known only to him-
self, Is a simple one.
Four-fifths of the operatives In the
Japanese nulls are women, probably
due to the fact that they will work for
less than the men. who can do better
outside. Men are only employed when
absolutely necessary, such as for
bosses, loom fixers, the heavier card-
room work. etc. Weaving In Japan
Is almost entirely a woman's job, as
spinning is with us.
i has written
in which he
the beloved
exalted, tin
The sultan of Morocc<
a letter to the president
addresses the latter as
the most cherished, the
most gracious friend, the most hon
ored and excellent president of th<
United States who is America's pillar
the most celebrated preserver of the
ties of true friendship, the faithfu
friend. Theodore Roosevelt." That
ought to give the Bellamy Storers a
Jar.
Ml
An Ingenious beacon !►
Arnlsh Rock. 8tornowa> ba>. in thf
Hebrides. Scotland. It is a cone oJ
east iron plates, surrounded by an at
rangement of prisms and a mirroi
which reflects the light f: tin the light
house ou Lewis Island, 500 feet dls
tant across the channel.
The Chinese at Singapore, to the
number of 180,000, have resolved to
discontinue the practice of public an
cestor worship, including feasts ami
public processions, and to levote the
money thus saved, estimated at $ 100,-
000 a year, to educational purposes.
kill him in order to obtain her
for his harem, nor were his
fears groundless. "Possiblly," says
Prof. Hods, "he may have heard I
the ugly story which has re
cently been deciphered from an old |
papyrus, and which tells how one of j
the Pharaohs, acting on tho advice of
his princes, sent armed men to fetch j
a beautiful woman and make away
with her husband." To escape this
danger he told a lie which was a for j
nuil truth, that Sarah was his sister,
for she was his half-sister.
Lot's Imperfections. -Lot was a goo ti
man at heart. We are told In 2 Peter
that "righteous lx>t" was "sore dls j
tressed" by the lascivious life of the
wicked, "For the righteous man dwell- |
lng among them, in seeing and hear |
lng. vexed his righteous soul from day
to day with their lawless deeds" (2
Pet. 2: 7, S).
But Lot's life and character were on
n much lower level than Abraham's,
lie was repelled by the gross wicked-
ness of Sfuiora, but the less obtrusive
sins of the heart were not so repul-
sive to hint
Lessons About Family Quarrels.—
(1) There Is special danger of quar-
rels in the family and among kindred,
and In earnest churches where there
are strong belief and active work, be-
cause there are so many conflicting in-
terests among them. Those with noth-
ing in common may be an hundred
times worse in character, but their
evlK deeds will not take the form of
strife. (2) Quarrels almost always
begin in little things. Very often they
arise from the distribution of prop-
erty . "There is always trouble about
money, or without money." (3) Fam-
ily strife Is an exceeding great evil
to all concerned. (4) It is a great in-
jury to the community and to religion
when these strifes arise among church
members. For, as Dr. Parker says,
"The Canaanite and Perizzite are still
In the land." (5) Stop every such
quarrel In the beginning, before a |
match's flame becomes a burning city,
or a little leak a devastating flood. I
(C) Trials, like that described in this
lesson, both reveal character and de- j
velop It. as the fire reveals the dross ;
In the gold and purifies from it.
Abraham's Brotherly Love.—(1) It
was a most unselfish act, renouncing
his own interests in favor of his
friend. (2) It was a giving up of his
rights Abraham had the first right
to the land. It was promised to him
and not to Lot. Then he was the elder
and the richer of the two. Ix>t had
accompanied him. not he Lot. (3) It
was an act of taith; for it seemed to
be giving tip to others, for the sake
of peace, the land promised to him
self.
Practical Points.
Selfishness is the climate In which
every wrong, every bitter plant flour
i ishes
Christians in the world are like
' ships in the oceau, safe so long as the
I ocean Is not in the ship But when
[ the world Is In our hearts, and we
! parley with temptation, we are already
more than half fallen.
In the history that follows we see
Into what Lot's foolish choice brought
him—the loss of his property, the ruin
of his family, a lonely old age. a warn-
ing when be might hare been a bless
New Canadian "Homesteaders."
According to the Canadian depart
merit of the Interior the total number
of new "homesteaders" In the Cana
dian northwest in the last fiscal year
was 41.6S9; made up of 12,485 Ameri
cans, 12,370 Canadians, Ti,897 English
2,193 Austrians, 1,657 Scotch, 1,024
Germans and 543 Irish. The total
number of immigrants from the Unit-
ed States during the first four months
of the preesnt fiscal year was 17.907,
as compared with 12.604 in tho same
period of 1905 fiscal year.
Ecor.omy as the Boy Saw It.
Paul Morton, in a recent address on
Insurance, said of a certain proposed
economy:
"That would not be an economy, but
an extravagance, in the long run. It
reminds me of the boy and the jam
" 'My son,' said this boy's mother,
'isn't it rather an extravagance to eat
butter with that superb jam?'
" 'No, ma'am, it's an economy,' the
boy answered. 'The same piece of
bread does for both.' "
Eleven-year-old Sportsman.
The heir apparent of the Sirguja
State, a boy of 11 years, has developed
a remarkable aptitude for shikar. He
began to use a gun when only seven
years of age and up to the present
time has accounted for seven tigers
six panthers and two bears, not to
mention other largo and small game.—
Allahabad Pioneer.
MAY BE COFFEE
That Causes all the Trouble.
When the house Is afire, it's like a
' body when disease begins to show, it's
no time to talk but time to act—delay
I is dangerous—remove tbo causo of the
' trouble at once.
"For a number of years," says a
Kansas lady, "I felt sure that coffee
! was hurting me, .and yet, I was so fond
1 of It, I could not give it up. I paltered
with my appetite and of course yield-
! ed to the temptation to drink more,
i At last I got so bad that I made up my
mind 1 must either quit the use of cof-
fee or die.
"Everything I ate distressed me, and
I suffered severely almost all the time
■ with palpitation of the heart. I fre-
quently woke up in the night with the
feeling that I was almost i*me.—my
heart seemed so smothered and weak
in its action that I feared It would stop
1 beating. My breath grew short and
the least exertion set me to panting. I
slept but little and suffered from rheu-
matism.
"Two years ago I stopped using the |
old kind of coffee and began to use j
• Postuin Food Coftee. and from the ;
very first I began to improve. It j
worked a miracle! Now I can eat any- j
thing and digest It without trouble. 1
sleep like a baby, and my heart bents j
full, strong and easily. My breathing ;
has become steady and normal, and j
my rheumatism has left me. I feel
like another person, and It is all due |
> quitting coffee and using Postum 1
Food Coffee, for I haven't used any j
medicine and none would have done .
any good as long as I kept drugging
with coffee." Name given by Postum
Blttll Creek. Mich. "TI.ere I ft
Reason." Read the little book, "The
Road to Wellvllle," in pkjs. All j
fcrocers.
contracted from dried sputum.
Colds should not be neglected, as
they leave tho lungs In a peculiarly
receptive condition for tho tuburcu-
lar germ. The following simple for-
mula will break up a cold In twenty- |
four hours. A leading authority on
lung trouble says that when pre- ;
pared from pure ingredients, it will
cure any cough that is curable.
Take half ounce Virgin Oil of Pine
(Pure); two ounces glycerine and
half pint good whisky. Shake well
and use In teaspoouful doses every
four hours.
The ingredients can be secured
from any good prescription druggist
at small cost, and to avoid subsltution
should be purchased separately and
mixed In your own home.
Virgin Oil of Pine (Pure) Is put
up in half-ounce vials for dispensing.
Each vial is securely sealed in a
round wooden case, with engraved
wrapper, with tho name—Virgin Oil
of Pine (Pure), prepared only by
Leach Chemical Co., Cincinnati, O.—
plainly printed thereon. There are
many rank imitations of Virgin Oil of
Pine (Pure), which are put out under
various names, such as Concentrated
Oil of Pine, Pine Balsam, etc. Never
accept these as a substitute for the
Pure Virgin Oil of Pine, as they will
Invariably produce nausea and never
effect the desired result.
A May Irwin Story.
The Irrepressible May Irwin tells of
& little New Yorker who had a bath
so seldom and wore such dirty clothes
that It was more than the children
and teacher could stand. So she was
sent home to be made more bearable
but returned as dirty as ever, ac-
companied by a sister who inquired
what she was sent home for. The
teacher explained. Then the sister
burst out: "Well, say, me mudder
says does our Rosie come here to git
smalt or to git learnt?"
"We Have Many Similar."
The following is an extract from a
letter received from Mr. H. H. Mey-
ers, of Stutgart, Ark.: "You would
greatly oblige me if you would intro-
duce Hunt's Lightning Oil at MUlidge-
ville, 111., as I have many friends and
relatives there, in whom I am much
concerned, and I understand the Oil
is not kept there. I can recommend
it as the best medicine I ever had in
my house. It cured me of a bad case
of the Bloody Flux in less than one-
half hour, and it cured my grand-
daughter of a bad case of Cholera
Morbus in a very short time."
per cent, range between $-00,000 and
51,000,000.
"Nails."
"Nails are a mighty good thing—
particularly finger nails—but I don't
believe they were intended solely for
scratching, though I used mine large-
ly for that purpose for several ars.
1 was sorely afflicted and had it to do.
J. M. Waiid,
Index, Texas.
State Prison Makes Money.
The Connecticut state prison for after,
the fiscal year ended September 30. ,,
1906. established a new record of rev-
enues. Earnings from productive la-
bor aggregated $57,411, while receipts
from various other sources swelled
the total income to* $61,015 This
showing, representing nearly 74 per
cent, of the operating expenses of the
institution, surpasses the income ex
hi bit of any previous year, and en-
abled the prison management, despite
the high cost of supplies, to limit to
$22,861 its drafts upon the state treas-
ury.
And by not
men manage
getting
o live
married nom
happily eve
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,
a eaf« and *urc remedy for infunu and children,
and eo that it
Siguatarc of
In Ubo For Over ao Years.
The liind You Ilave Always liougut
A reform champion's husband be
lleves a reformation would be good.
S1GK
Positively curod by
thrsfj ' iltle Pills.
Tlicy a'M relieve Ills-
tress from Dyrpcprla. l:i-
dlgestlon and Too Hourly
Eattng. A perfcct rem-
edy for DlizUiess, Nausea,
Provrslnesa, Ead l'ssto
In tua Mouth, Coated
Tongufl, Pain In the Sid©,
TO HMD LIVER. Tilt*
regulate tbo Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SMALL HOSE. SMIL PRICE.
Genuine Must Bear
Fac-Simile Signature
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
Thompson's Eye Water
CARTERS
ITTLE
PILLS.
CARTERS
IT7 LE
IVER
PILLS.
St'HD :'OB rkit L.UJ3.1 hiatus o* «c-:Ta .
_ *DlS1AM. V*l, \\ NAMC3 Of P 0«lHu T CUBE
KANSAS CITY. MO '9«ANr Horner at Si ixjoia j
[aiT^C-KO MONEY TILL CURF.D
Ijjr prs THORNTON i MIMOIiroO" st. k/
34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT
i'Mi,7r'tr a?'VTcect•,hil'I' rVx m.na'r IVtJZ
appiotBlaud K'.iantntee .l-llv^ry. u aie out nothing
j It not Mnibllt-J a* tostx lo, .|ua!ity and price.
We Arc Thf Largest Mannlactorers In Tbe World
RntadleSeat. wHlna to tho coM'i.nw exclusively, WeiaakflMOitrleilOf -J.
uiar UrlTlnS VeliiclM,#6stylesol llarn««. Sendforlarg ,.rot. ata.cyu.. Ramona ;
I Kin. Guar- yiusurt 1'jirrlnqe A Hh-'HCM IVWi^. 1
Flkharl, Indiana.
Vo. 1. f trap.
tvlui Curven*
_ oliar. i*rl3« I
coil" iote, $11.lift.
Observe what direction your
thoughts and feelings most readily
take when you are alone, and you will
then form a tolerably correct opinion i
of yourself.—Bengel.
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER.
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL C0UNTER-1KRITANT.
CAPISICUM
VASE LI NE
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLA.JT
A OUICK SURE. SAFE AtO ALWAYS READY CURE FOR P~1N -PR!CH
IScT—IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES- AT ALL DRUCG1STS AND DEALERS OR
BY MAIL ON RE JEiPT OF 15c. IN EOS I ACE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT
TILL THE PAIN COMtS KEEP A TUBE HANDY.
A substilute for and superior to rr.ustard or any other plaster, a d will not
blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of
the article are wonderful. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve
Headache and Sciatica. We recon n.end it as the bestand safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an txternai remedy for pains in the chest
and stomach and all Rheumatic. Neuraigic ar.d Gouty con,plaints. A trial
will prove what we claim for it. and it wiil be found to be invaluable in the
household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. Many
people say "it is the best of all your preparations." Accept no preparation
of vaseline unless the same carries our labei. as otherwise it is nc • genuine.
SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WII.L MAIL OUR VASE-
LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU.
CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO.
17 STATE STREET, NEW YORK CITY
3?1W
t
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OF
T5 fM
s ?\
• ' v; ■
_ \\ V-fN
& - \ 4
V.
Personal Knowledge^ *
Personal knowledge is the winning factor in t'.ie culminating contests of
this competitive age and when of ample character it places its lortunate
possessor in the front ranks of
The Well Informed of the World.
A vast fund of personal knowledge is really essential to the achievement of the
highest excellence in any field of human effort.
A Knowledge of Forms, Knowledge of Functions and Know!-
edge of Products are all of the utmost value and in questions of life and health
when a true and wholesome remedy is desired it should be remembered that byrup
of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured L„ the California Fig Syrup Co., is an . /• 7'^V
ethical product which has met with the approval of the most eminent physicians and -/.V 5 - ;
gives universal satisfaction, because it is a remedy of 'ji !,;<£• >) ^ ■! -J
_ Known Quality. Known Excellence and Known Component / u • ; .
Parts and has won the valuable patronage of millions of the Well Informed of th.
world, who know of their own personal knowledge and from actual use that it u the hrst
and best ol family laxatives, for which 110 extravagant or unreasonable claims are made. ^
This valuable remedy has been long and favorably known
under the name of—Syrup of Figs —and has attained to world-
wide acceptance as the most excellent family laxative. As its pure
laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well known to physicians
and the Well Informed of the world to be the best we have
adopted the more elaborate name of—Svrup of f igs and
Elixir of Senna — as more fully descriptive of the remedy,
but doubtless it w ill always be called for by the shorter
name of — Syrup of Figs—and to get its beneficial
effects, always note, when purchasing the full
name of the Company—California lig Syrup
Co. — printed on the front of every package,
whether you call for — Syrup of f igs
— or by the full name - Syrup of
f igs and Elixir of Senna.
/ •
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t- ,Jrf. a. -
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Overstreet, W. S. Prague Patriot (Prague, Okla.), Vol. 4, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 14, 1907, newspaper, February 14, 1907; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116162/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.