The Stroud Democrat (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, May 30, 1913 Page: 3 of 8
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l>*
VETERANS TO MEET
ON BATTLEFIELD
Big Reunion of Survivors of Civil
War at Gettysburg on
July 1.
40,000 EXPECTED TO ATTEND
Men Who Wore the Blue and Gray
to Again Gather on Ground
Made Memorable by His-
toric Conflict.
By EDWARD B. CLARK.
WASHINGTON. — During the
first four days of July the
battlefield of Gettysburg, Pa.,
will again be the scene of a
meeting of the Itlue and the
Gray, but this time they will meet in
amity and affection. A half-ceutury will
have passed since last these men of two
great American armies met on this
northern field. Then they were face
to face in deadly couilict, for the Issue
It was well understood to both con
tending forces, was the success of the
southern cause, or the beginning of its
defeat, to be followed by the restora-
tion of the Union as it had been before
the first shot was fired at Fort Sum-
ter.
The United States government find
the government of nearly every state
In the Union have combined to make
the Gettysburg reunion of the soldiers
of the north and south one of the great
peace events of the century. The state
of Pennsylvania some time ago ap
pointed a "Fiftieth Anniversary of the
Battle of Gettysburg commission" to
mako preparations Jor the four days'
reunion, al which Pennsylvania as*
state was to act as host to the vet-
erans of the war between the states
and to the thousands of visitors who
would follow their march to the field
of battle, and appropriated $150,000 for
the purpose of entertaining the vet-
erans.
40,000 Veterans Expected.
It is expected that 40,000 veterans
of the war, not all of them, however,
survivors of the Gettysburg battle, will
be found encamped upon the field
when reveille sounds on the morning
of July 1. It will be a different re-
veille than that which the fife and
drum corps of the two great armies
sounded fifty years ago. The call to
awakening will be a call to a peaceful
celebration while the call to the awak-
ening in July, 1863, was a call of
armies to conflict and, to thousands of
men, a call to death.
For ye!%rs the veterans have been
looking forward to this reunion. It is
probable that there "will be present
many thousands of survivors of the
battle. The United States government
under an act of congress has appro-
priated money for the preparation of
the camps and for the messing of the
soldier visitors. The average age of
the men engaged in the Civil war was
only eighteen years, but fifty years
have passed since these soldier boys
fought at Gettysburg, and so if the
computation of age was a true one the
average years of the veterans who will
meet in Pennsylvania in July will be
about sixty-eight years. Many of them,
of course, will be much older and a
good many of them, men who entered
at ages ranging from fourteen to sev-
enteen years, will be younger, but all
will be old men as the world views
age.
Many of the states of the Union,
north as well as south, have made ap-
propriations to send their veterans to
the Gettysburg reunion and to pay all
other expenses. The battle of Gettys-
burg is recognized as the turning point
of the war between the states. It has
been called time and again one of the
decisive battles of the world. Gener-
ally it is recognized that Gettysburg
decided the great conflict, helped in
the decision probably by the fall of
Vicksburg on the Mississippi, which
took place virtually at the moment
that the conflict on the Pennsylvania
field was decided in favor of the nortlv
ern arms.
The preparations which the govern-
ment is making to care for the veter-
ans at Gettysburg are interesting.
They have been under the -charge of
James D. Aleshire, quartermaster gen-
eral of the United States army, and
Henry G. Sharpe, commissary general
of the United States army. Two years
ago last March 14,000 regular troops
were gathered in camp at Texas. The
health of the soldiers throughout the
Texas encampment was almost per-
fect, made so by the plans which had
been carefully laid to see that perfect
sanitation was maintained. The Unit-
ed States army was taught a lesson
by the Spanish war, when lack of
proper sanitary precautions and unpre-
paredness in other ways cost the gov-
ernment the lives of more men than
were sacrificed to the bullets of the
Spaniard.
The estimates of the commissary
and quartermaster authorities are
based upon an attendance of 40,000 vet-
erans. It probably will cost the gov-
ernment about $360,000 to act in part
ns host to the survivors of the buttle
and other veterans who attend the
Gettysburg reunion.
Big Task to Feed Men.
The survivors of the war from the
north and south who will be present,
being old men, must be cared for in
a way which would not have been nec-
essary fifty years ago. The messing of
the veterans will require 400 army
ranges, 1 great field bakery, 40,000
mess kits, 800 cooks, 800 kitchen help-
ers and 130 bakers This helping per
•onnel will be required to be In camp
lor at least ev«n daje. and many of
them for a longer period, for the pur-
pose of Installing the field bakery, the
field ranges and in dismantling, clean-
ing, packing and storing material after
the encampment is over.
The old soldiers are to be supplied
with fresh meat directly from refrig-
erator cars drawn upon the field. They
will be given fresh vegetables and spe-
cial bread with the be6t coffee and tea
which the market affords. For them it
will not be a case of hardtack, bootleg
and poor bacon.
The Dattle of Gettysburg commis-
sion of the state of Pennsylvania has
a large sum of money at Its disposal
for the entertainment of the visiting
veterans, and the thousands of persons
who will accompany them. Hospital-
ity is to mark the days. Fifty years
ago Pennsylvania aided in the work of
repelling the visitors from the south.
In early July next the same state will
have its arms wide open in welcome
to the men wearing the gray. Enter-
tainments of various kinds will be of-
fered the visiting veterans, but it is
pretty well understood that their deep
interest in revisiting the scenes where
they fought, Little Round Top, Oak
Ridge, Cemetery Hill, Gulp's Hill,
Rock Creek, the Stone Wall and other
places will hold them largely to tho
pleasures and to the sadnesses of per-
sonal reminiscences. Arm in arm with
the Union soldiers the Confederate sol-
diers will retramp the battleground.
They will look over the field of Pick-
ett's desperate charge. They will re-
trace the marching steps of Long-
street's corps. They will go to the
place where Meade had his headquar-
ters and to the place from which l>ee
directed his southern forces in battle.
Pennsylvania is going to make a
great celebration of peace of this fif-
tieth anniversary of what probably
was the decisive battle of the war, al-
though it was fought nearly two years
before the war ended. Other states
will help Pennsylvania in Its work, and
from every section of th« country,-
north, east, south and west, the vet-
erans will assemble, most of them
probably to see for the last time in
life the field upon which they were
willing to die for the sake of their re-
spective causes.
The veterans will not be directly
camped in the Gettysburg park, which
is dotted with monuments to the vari-
ous commands which took part in the
fight and which is laid out in approved
park fashion, with fine drives and
beautifully kept lawns. There will be
two camps, known as No. 1 and No. 2.
No. 1 will cover 14S acres and No. 2
will cover 44 acres. The layouts of
these camps are based on the use of
conical tents, each of which will, w ith-
out crowding, accommodate eight per-
sons. Inasmuch as accommodations
are to be furnished for 40,000 visitors
5,000 tents will bo required to give
quarters to the visiting hosts.
Visitors to Be Cared For.
Every possible care is to be taken
of the visitors. The sanitary arrange-
ments which have been made are said
to be the beet that are possible and j
they are the result of careful study by j
medical officers of the service. All the
experience of the past has been drawn
upon to make it certain that the health |
of the veterans will be conserved while
they are In camp.
With so many thousands of old sol j
dlers in attendance, and taking Into;
consideration the probability that the j
weather will be warm, it is expected
that there will be sickness, but the 1
United States government and the J
state of Pennsylvania are preparing
for a hospital service which shall be
adequate to any contingency. There
will be hospital corps detachments
present ready to render first aid to j
the Injured, and there will be many
field hospitals with surgeor.6 in at-
tendance, where the sick can receive
instant attendance.
It is said that this contemplated re-
union has Induced more interest
among the old soldiers of the north
and the south than any event which
has happened since the day that the
war closed. There is today at Gettys-
burg a great national park, in which
is included a cemetery where thou-
sands of soldier dead are buri<d. The
T'nited States government and the leg-
islature of Pennsylvania worked to-
gether to make a park of the battle-
field and to mark accurately every
point in it which has historic interest.
When one goes to the field he can tell
Just where this brigade or that bri-
gade was engaged, just where this
charge or that charge was made and
Just where the desperate defenses of
positions were maintained until tho
tide of battle brought either victory or
defeat to one of the Immediate com
mands engaged.
It was In 1895 that congress estab-
lished a national park at Gettysburg
and gave the secretary of war author-
ity to name a commission "to superin-
tend the opening of additional roads,
mark the boundaries, ascertain and
definitely mark the lines of battle of
troops engaged, to acquire lands which
were occupied by infantry, cavalry and
artillery, and such other adjacent
lands as the secretary of war may
deem necessary to preserve the impon
tant topographical features of the bat-
tlefield."
When the Union and the Confeder
ate veterans reach Gettysburg on June !
30 next they will find on the scene of
the old conflict between five and six |
hundred memorials raised in comment-
oration of the deeds of their com I
mands on the great fields of the I'enn j
sylvania battlefield. There are, more j
over, 1,000 markers placed to desig !
nate historic spots. There are great
towers built upon the field by the gov- i
ernment so that bird's-eye views can ]
be obtained of the entire scene of the
battle, line roade have been con
structed and everywhere attention has j
been paid to every detail of the least ]
importance in setting forth the history |
of one of the greatest battles ever
known to warfare.
WOMAN COULD
NOT WALK
MIGHT HAVE MADE A MISTAKE
Cindy Claimed Caller Was Her Bro-
ther, But She Was Willing to
Take Another Look.
The woman left the girl arranging
the dinner table and went to the
kitchen for something. A great, hulk-
ing negro was sitting in the kitchen
rocker. Indignant, the woman hurried
back.
"Cindy," she demanded, "what have
I told you about having your beaux in
the kitchen?"
"Laws, miss, he ain't no beau! Why,
he's nuflin but my brudder."
Somewhat mollified, the woman
went back to the kitchen.
"So you are Cindy's brother?" she
said kindly.
"Law bless yo' no, miss," ho an-
swered. "1 ain't no 'lation 'tall to her.
I'se jes' keepin' comp'ny wif her."
The woman sought Cindy again.
"Cindy," she asked sternly, "why did
you tell me that the man was your
brother? He says he's no relation."
I Cindy looked aghast
bepan taking Lydia E. Pinkham s Vcg- ; ,.[.v (1
She Wat So 111—Restored to
Health by Lydia E. Pink*
ham's Vegetable
Compound.
Pentwater, Mich. —"A year ngol was
very weak and the doctor said 1 had a
serious displace-
ment. 1 had back-
ache aud bearing
down pains so bad
that I could not sit
in a chair or walk
across the floor and
I was in severe pain
all the time. I felt i
discouraged as I had
taken everything 1
could think of and
was no better. I
Just Like a Man.
A man suffered from Inflammatory
rheumatism, and his wife nursed him
patiently. He had a very fault-finding
disposition, but she was verj patient
and also very foud of him.
After an especially severe attack, a
friend called to inquire after him
The patient wore a mournful expres-
sion.
"Well," said the friend, cheerfully,
"how are you today?"
"Very badly," replied the rheumat-
ic sufferer, "and it's all my wife's
fault."
"Why," cried the friend in astonish
ment. "Is It possible?"
"Yes," moaned the invalid, "you
know, the doctor told me always to
avoid damp places; and there my wife
sits and cries just to make the air
moist around me."
Good Seat.
Madge— Pld you have a good seal
at the opera?
Marjorie—Lovely! We were near
enough to one of the boxes to hear
every word the society people said.—
Judge.
Changed Man.
"Are you the same man who at«
my mince pie last week?"
"No, mum. I'll never be th' same
man again."—New York Mall.
ECZEMA ON CHILD'S FACE
r table Compound and now I am strong
and healthv."—Mrs. Alice Darling, |
K.F.D. No. 2, Box 77, Pentwater, Mich. ;
Read WliatAnotUcrWonian says:
Peoria, 111.—"I had such backaches
that 1 could hnrdly stand on my feet. I
would feel like crying out lots of times,
and had such a heavy feeling in my right
side. I had such terrible dull headaches
even' day and they would make me feel
so drowsy and sleepy all the time, yet I
could not sleep at night.
"After I had taken Lydia F. Pinkham 'a
Vegetable Compound a week 1 began to
improve. My backache was less and
that heavy feeling in my side went
cwav. I continued to take the Com-
pound and am cured.
" You may publish this if you wish."
— Miss Clara L. Gauwitz, r.R. No. 4,
Box 62, Peoria, 111.
Puch letters prove the value of Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound for
woman's ills. Why don't you try it?
Now Well
"Thedford's Black-Draught
is the best all-round medicine
lever used," writes J. A.
Steelman, of Pattcnvi'le, Texas.
"1 suffered terribly with liver
troubles, and could get no relief.
The doctors said 1 had con-
sumption. 1 could nof work at
all. Finally 1 tried
THEDFORD'S
BLACK-
DRAUGHT
anc to my surprise,! got better,
and am to-day as well as any
man." Thedford's Black-
Draughf is a general, cathartic,
vegetable liver medicine, that
has been regulating irregulari-
ties of the liver, slomach and
bowels, for over 70 years. Get
a package today. Insist on the
genuine—Thedford's. E-70
R. F. D. No. 5, lexington, Tenn.—
"My little boy broke out on the face
with that terrible disease, eczema,
when he was Just one month old, and
Lawd's sake, miss, did he i j jugt thought sure it would kill him
Ixive conies and grows through
serving, not through being served.—
Henry Clay Trumbull.
Red Cross Bull Blue (rives double value for
your money, jjih-s iwlee it* fur as any other.
Llwu't put your uiuaey Into any other. Adv.
New York is now planning popular
opera. It will probably bo ragtime in
tlireo reels.
Smokers like 1 I".WIS' Single ninuc.' cigar
for it's rich mellow quality. Atlv.
A pood beginning is half tho battle,
but a good ending is the whole thing.
say dat? Jes' yo' stay here a minlt as it killed our other baby at five
an' lemme go look ag'in."—Chicago ] months old. It would break out in
Record-Herald. pimples and scab over, and he cried |
day and night. I thought that there
Loss an Illusion. I was no cure for him at all. His face
James C. McHeynolds, who lnves WOuhl itch and burn so bad that 1 had
it
tlgated the tobacco trust for the gov-
ernment, thereby bringing on a lot
of things, says that just after he
started practicing law In a small
to tie his little hands down so he could
not scratch his face.
"We began at once to have him
treated until he was seven months old
town down In Tennessee, a few years and he got worse all tho time I sen!
ago. a stout billsman came into his and got a box of Cutlcura Ointment
office one day and announced that h" nnd one cake of Cutlcura Soap. I had
desired to sue a neighbor for $10,000 not used them a week until I could
"ho
damages.
"Two years ago." he stated,
called me a hippopotamus."
"Tmo years ago!" echoed McHey-
nolds. "Why didn't you sue him
sooner?"
"Well, suh." said the injured party,
"until that there circus come through
here last week I thought all the time-
he was paying me a compliment."—
Saturday Evening Post.
Aged Survivors of Our Wars.
1 am informed by the United Stafrs
pinsion office that the last soldier of
the rebellion will die in 1955. That
j is the estimate made by those who
I tnake a study of vital statistics. If
; the last veteran survives until that
j date he will have lived ninety years
j after the surrender of Lee.
Kronk. w ho died a couple of years
ago in New York state, was the last
soldier of the War of 1812, and he
lived considerably more than ninety
i years after peace had been signed
| llakeman. the last soldier of the
Involution, lived for eighty-six years
: after the peace of l"So.—Philadelphia
Public Ladger.
see a great change, and they cured
him sound and well and never left a
single scar." (Signed) Mrs. Lillle
Slkes, Feb. 17, 1912.
Cuticura Soap nnd Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32 p. Skin Book. Address
post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, lloBton."
Adv.
Not So Polite as It Looked.
i Crowds were on the street car when
when the tall woman struggled up
I the aisle and grasped a strap. Twelve
men were seated on each side, but
I not one arose and offered her his
seat. At last a small boy touched
her on the arm.
"You can have my seat, lady,"
1 called the youngster.
"Thank you," said the tall woman.
I seating herself in the vacant space;
"that was very polite of you."
' "No," replied tho boy, "it wasn't
politeness; there's chewing gum all
lover tlio darned seat"
It's
Good night
to all such ailments as
POOR APPETITE
SOUR STOMACH
SICK HEADACHE
INDIGESTION
CONSTIPATION
if you will only begin
your meals with
HOSTETTER'S
STOMACH BITTERS
It tones the stomach
and assists digestion in
everyway. Try it today
99
K
d
DAISY FLY KILLER
At the School.
"I never saw such brads as you
girls have* Who's got your rats?''
"Old Miss I'rim the cat.''
• and kill
n.'Ht clei
lontal, o« n\ «nl*n'
Easy Bargain.
Having tried unsuccessfully various
' highly recomnu nd< <i recipes for dit*- j
' lodging selfish passengers from covet- j
ed seats, the woman who swung from j
a strap in front of the sandy man
tried talking at him to her husband
As a peroration to her harangue, she
said impressively:
"If you, James, should ever be pig
gish enough to sit down while there
was a woman in the car left standing
1 would never speak to you again as
long as I live."
The sandy man looked up then
I "Lucky devil." he said "Not many
of us could, purchase peace at iLut
price."
That $50,000 prize for flight across
the Atlantic mi ;bt safely have been
made $50,000,000.
Old liars are young romancers gone
to seed.
ail
WilnrantiMxl
All
•ipreM imid for • I 04.
BAKOLD iOMEEB. 130 U«*alb A". Brooklyn. M t.
PERFECT HEALTH. ^
I utt's Pllla keep the ayat«*m In perfect order*
They regulate thebowel««od produto
A VIGOROUS BODY.
Remedy lor nick headache, constipation,
tuft's Pills
RAILROAD SURGEON 0ISC0V-! QUININE AND IROH-THE MOST
ERSWONDERFUL REMEDY.EFFECTUAL GENERAL TONIC
Literals.
"Walls have ears.''
"1 should say so with all thoa-e dic-
tagraphs hanging on them
Reason to Be Afraid.
"I am afraid I am falling .1
"Why are you afraid, does b
domestic science? '
One
work
ay to hold a job is to do tin
WASN'T GOING INTO DETAILS
Fou'-YeEr-Old Had His Own Idea o'
Propriety of Not Airing Strictly
Personal Affairs.
One little four > ear-old boy whi !
doesn't live far from Central park
west, New York, has as bis particular !
playmate a little girl of about the
same age. The children frequently I
spend their evenings together, and the !
ether morning the girl came to the i
fence and called him.
Alton,' she cried, "come out and
play."
Alton's mother heard the call and
said to him:
"Tell her you can't come over Just
now because you have to take a j
bath.
Ho Alton went to the front window i
ti-mi ■■■BBBBiBBBWBSBWHWiJBHHai
o\er now. I Something They Hadn't Seen.
Then he turned back to bi. mother Fo„owlng a baM.ba„ game
and added. which the Yankees came to ignomin
I don't link the rest of it need be i
per Man and Bcastf the Old Reliable
Dr. Porter's Antiseptic Healing OiL
Relieves Pain, Stops the Bleeding*
and Heals at the same time.
Thousands of Farmers and StoeVtnen
know it already, and atrial will convince
you that 1)R. l ORTKR'S ANTISEPTIC
HEALING Oily is the most wonderful
Keniedy ever discovered for Wounds,
Burns, Old Sores, Carbuncles, Granulated
Eyelids, all Skin or Scalp Diseases, and
also for Itarbed Wire Cuts, Galis, Sores,
Scratches, Shoe Boils, Warts, Mange on
Dogs, etc Continually people arc finding
new uses for this famous old Remedy .Sold
by ncarlyall Druggists. .If your Druggist
hasn't it, sendus 50c. in stamps for me-
dium size,or $1.00 for large size,and it will
be sent by Parcel Post. Money refunded
jf not satisfactory. We mean it. Palis
JtfedicixieCo. it22 Pine St., St. Louis, Mo.
The Effects of Opiates.
THAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to opium and its variotia
preparations, all of which are narcotic, if well known. Even in tho
smalientdoBi*. if continued, these opiates cause changes in the func-
tions mid growth of the cells which are likely to liocoim (permanent, causing
imbecility, mental perversion, a craving for alcohol or narcotics in Ian r Iif<*.
Nervous "diseases, such as intractable nervous dyspe|>sia and lack of staying
powers are a result of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children quiet
in their infancy. The rule among physicians is that children should never
receive cpiat<« in the smallest doeet lor more than a day at a 1ime, and
only the® if unavoidable.
The administration of Anodynes Drops, Cordials, Soothing By nips and
other narcotics to children by any hut a physician ^cannot be too strongly
decried, and the druggist should not I*- a party to it. Children who are ill
need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing lead than a crime to
doae them willfully with narcotics.
Gaatoria contains no narcotics if it beare the
inprnature of Chas. 11. Fletcher.
Oentiiac Castoria always bears the signature //
Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic fombine*botb
in tasteless form. The Quinine drive* oul
Malaria and the Iron builds up the
System* For Adults and Children.
You know what you arc tak inc; wlion yon
take GROVE'S TASTELESS chill
TONIC recqgnizcd for 30 years as tho
standard General Strengthening Tonic.
It has no equal ft>r Malaria and Fevers,
Weakness, general debility and loss of
appetite. Removes Biliousness without
purging. Relieves nervous depression ami
low spirits. Invigorating to the pale and
sickly. It arouses the liver to action and
purifies the blood. A tiue tonic, and sure
appetizer. Guaranteed by your Druggist.
We mean it. 50c..
There is Only One "RROMO QUININE"
That is LAXATIVE BROMO QU1NINB
Look for signature of E. W. GROVE on
every box. Cures a Cold in Oue Day. 25c*
Get a Canadian Home
In Western Canada's
Pree Homestead Area
THE
PROVINCE
OF
Manitoba
lovonil N««w
lUntrlotn Hint
• r<t run* opportunity
taided.'
Good Advice.
Bill—I see a school of dueling, In
which prospective duelists shoot at
Ioub defeat, lrvin S. Cobb, the humor silhouette targets, has been opened in
Considerate.
My little brother ^Villiam had been
staying up rather late and went to bed |
without saying his prayers Mother
said to him. 'Why, Willie, I'm sur : ,, _ .. „ „
u " "Well, then, continued Cobb, call
them over here and 111 show them
1st, approached Frank Chance and
Bald:
"Would you mind If I gave your
team a little surprise—a little treat?"
"Not at all," responded Chance. "It
might even cho< r them up."
prised at you! You haven t said you
prayers." Aw, gee!" he answered
"What * the use of waking the Ixud up
at this hour of the night?"—Chicago
Journal.
third base."
Paris.
Jill—Take at the silhouette '<
but spare your brother s g< rt
top.
Unless you knov
will you be able to
your «
Jodge it?
it v
For Grain Growing
and Cattle Raising
this proTtnra hn.i no wnp«>rior and
iri prottmbt* n #r i rti It nr«' bliown hii
i. iitir< >t> n poriotf of over u quarter
„i h Out ury.
Perfwt climit*: gmxl tnorkfltfl;
lUi'wa)" «« i>v' rii«-tit -><>11 t hv Tt-ry
I.'.UMI bo* lal tniitiinonM Uioot
dfHlrablu.
Vacant land* arttarent to Kr*>«
Tloujfhb umy -<• purchased
ft ml alao in ti..- oi.t.-r dlHtrU'ta
i.tikIh . in bouytil at uraaou-
*ui further particular* *r)te to j
O. A. COOK.
175 * ftth STREET KANSAS CITY, *0 j
▼emuiont'Agents, or
We learn to do by doing,
learn not to do by doing.
Again tho unloaded pistol, which,
by the irony of fate, never misBt'B its
aim!
One finger in the plo Is
whole hand In the noun.
A man without an aim In life 1p lik<
a dog that has no wag in his tail.
FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS
RICH IN CUR ATI VK QUALITIES
ron BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM.
KIDNEYS AND BLADDER
FREE TO ALL SUFFE3ERS.
7 HI NPW I IftNCH Kl MfOV. N.I N 2 N ,3
THERAPION :
CREOLE
Booaueo of thOB* ugly, grluly, gray
rotall.
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The Stroud Democrat (Stroud, Okla.), Vol. 2, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, May 30, 1913, newspaper, May 30, 1913; Stroud, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc121072/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 2, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.