The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 21, 1918 Page: 2 of 6
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THE NEWS, DOVER. OKLAHOMA.
TO ALL WOMEN
WHO ARE ILL
This Woman Recommends
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound—Her
Personal Experience.
McT^an, Neb. —" I want to recom-
mend Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
,Compound to all
vpomen who suffer
from any functional
disturbance, as it
has done me more
good than all the
doctor's medicine.
Since taking it I
have a fine healthy
baby rirl and have
gained in health and
strength. My hus-
band and I both
praise your med-
icine to all suffering
women "—Mrs. John Koppelmann, K.
ts'o. 1, McLean, Nebraska.
This famous root and herb remedy,
Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable ( om-
pouwl, has been restoring women of
America to health for more than forty
ye .rs and it will well pay any woman
who suffers from displacements, in-
flammation, ulceration, irregularities,
Jjackache, headaches, nervousness or
"the blues" to give this successful
remedy a trial.
for special suggestions in regard to
your ailment write Lydia E. I'inkham
Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result
of ita long experience is at your service.
Happiness comes only to those who
try to make other liuppv
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
by I.OCA I- AI'l'LM AT1UN-. as they
cannot rea«h ttie neat of tlie UiseaHe.
Catarrh 1* a local dln«*aM \ greatly influ-
enced by constitutional < ondiUoriK. HALL'S
CATAKItll MKIjK INK will cur.- <;r.rrl.
It In taken Internally ami a tlwougi.
the Hlood on the Mo-ouf Hurfa — «.f t• «•
Hyetfm 11 AlJ/H <'ATAHHII MKbK.'INK
1h cornpowed of some >.f the hehi tonU *
known, combined with home of the heat
Mood purifier*. The perfe. t combination
of th - Ir.KredlentB In HALL'H CA'I AHItil
MKDH'INK Ih what produ> es h k h won-
tl'rfijl renuItH In ' aturrhal < orxlltlona.
I triiKKlHts 7fx\ TeHtlmonlals
J-' J Cheney tic Co., i'ropa , Toledo, O.
A mnn «*:in be humble without adver-
tising t 1m* fact.
WOMAN'S CROWNING GLORY
Ih her hair. If yours is streaked with
ugly, grizzly, gray hairs, use "La t're-
<de" 1 In I r Dressing n rul change It 1"
the nuturul way. I'rlce $1.00.—Adv.
Tea Long Used in China.
Tea was used anil eultlvated In
China as far Ian I. ns tin third <« n
i ury. A. p., i mi t il was not until the
twelfth iM-ntury that it became known
In Japan. when an nhhot of a Build
hist inomisli'.v learned about it in
China where It- virtues v ore already
veil kimu n. < Hdnlnlng weed, he planted
Nome near Kyoto. In later years some
of this was transplant* d near Shi
Kuoka, which vleinlly lias ever si nee
been the center of the tea Industry of
.fapun. It was not until about tin*
Seventeenth ntur.v that teil heeailio
generally known in lairope, when It
was exploited by the Dutch Must. In-
dian company as a new arliele of com
iner e. The In t L a sold In Kiiglnnd
brought s 1 Ti to sI> a pound.
She Couldn't Deny It.
M i n i'luthu ill I i" tinl Bensonhur t
hmx his wife didn't know what she was
talking about. Von can't say that
unit me.
Mr. I hitIn;
"WImii did
hen I didn't
I can.
ierir me talk
I ins talking
■Titmum; ififxasflL
r
A Baked
Cereal Food
Different from the usual
run of toasltd or slcaiu-
cooktd ccicals,
r.
?\T C
Vi CJjfiV.il j
is I' ked in fiiant ovens—
baked for nearly twenty
hours under accuralc con-
ditions of heat, so tliut the
whole vvh it and malted
harlcy flours may dev elop
their full, rieh sweetness.
You don't need sugar on
Grape-Nuts.
'There's a Reason"
' gtltnilltlHIIIIIIIIiJtlllllllllllllllllUlltlllllltllllltllllllllllirtltB The Boy Scout* Fund rampant
g =| closed at Oklahoma City with the to*
= tal subscription aggregating $18,000.
Ej The planting cf peanu'-s as a war
Ej crop In Pontctr e and other south
S eastern counties is heing urged by
|§ county agents.
§E The second annual short course foi
H highway engineers which will be held
at the University of Oklahoma Feb
ruary 18 to 24.
A warning to bootleggers, gamb-
lers, and other following unlawful oc
cupations or no occupations, has been
issued by business men of Temple.
"Mother" Hanks, ID-years old. wid-
ow of a cousin of Abraham Lincoln,
and pioneer resident of northern Ok
lahoma, died at her ho; . at Enid
She was a native of Illinois.
Congressman Dick Morgan of the
Eighth Oklahoma district has intro-
duced a bill proposing to establish a
new system of short term farm cred-
its, designed to aid tenant farmers
in building up a better system of pro-
duction.
The Farmers arouhd Mannsville
have organized the Mannville Co-
Operative Peanut and .Sorghum Grow-
ers' Association, with u view to help-
ing solve the scarcity of sweets and
oils through increased production of
cane and peanuts.
The city commissioners of Okmui
gee have authorized \\ M. Mathews.
Dr O. A Lambert and \V. B. Pine tc
purchase and hold in trust of the
city of Okmulgee, the eld Creek coun
cil house which stands in the center
of a block in the heart of the city
The department of tae interior is
willing to sell the property for its ap-
praised value of if the city
desires to buy it.
The referendum petition circulated
by chiropractors for a submission of
the bill aimed at chiropractics pas-ed
by the last legislature, was declared
by J. L. Lyon, secretaiy of state, to
bo sufficient. Mr. Lyon ordered the
chirpractors' bill placed on the bal
lot of the November ele.tion. It was
announced by Senator* Warren K.
Snyder and O. J. I gan, who repre-
sent physicians protesting the peti
tion. that an appeal would he taken
from the decision of the secretary of
state to the supreme court.
Willard R. Bleakmore, a member of
the Oklahoma supreme court commis-
sion, was appointed assistant, attor
noy general by Attorney General S
P. Freeling, to succeed the late W
T. Hutchings. Judge Illeakmcie
whose home is at Ardmore, formerly
was a member of the supreme court,
having been appointed by Governor
Cruce to fill an unexpired term in
1914. In his capacity as assistant at
torney general. Judge Bleakmore will
be attorney for the state school land
coinmis. ion.
FARMERS URGED
! Neivs I
j Notes j
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
John R. Spurier of Bigheart, has
answered the call to war and offered
to disi" of his herd of eight buf-
faloes to the Btate.
The Confederate veterans' reunion,
which was to have been held in Tul-
sa this year, has been postponed un-
til the first year following the war.
A verdict of guilty was returned in
United States district court at Mus-
kogee against George Lewis, formerly
a banker of Coweta, on the charge of
misapplying funds of the bank.
Persons who enter all public places
in Miami, with the exception of res-
taurants, are required to show a cer-
tificate of vaccination against small-
pox. There are 17 cases in the town
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Headley of Poe-
na city received a cablegram from
their daughter, Miss Mildred Head-
lev, Red Cross nurse, announcing that
she had arrived safely in France.
One hundred officers and enlisted
men of the Thirty-fifth division, Camp
Doniphan, received the consistory de-
grees in Scottish Rite Masonry in a
special convocation of the Guthrie val-
ley.
Neal Sewel. special enforcement of
fleer of Walters, has been sentenced
to jail because he refused to divulge
the name of a man concerned In a
charge of violation of the prohibition
' law.
W. H. McCowan of Ringling, who
made a snug fortune out of oil in the
Ringling district, recently purchased
of If. M Vandersllce at Alex 350
acres of Grady county land for whicn
he paid $20,000.
Hogs worth $10,000 have been
j smothered to death in snow drifts and
frozen In recent storm in Harmon
county, according to a report of the
county agent. Hundreds of chickens
also have been lost in the storm.
Henry Seals, confined in the county
Jail at Miami, was killed when a
blanket rope on which he was at-
tempting to escape from the jail broke
under his weight, and he crashed to
the ground. Charles ( row, who left
his cell at the same time, succeeded
in getting away safely.
Patrolman Glen Allison was fatally
i wounded at Tulsa following the arrest
of three highwaymen who terrorized
a residence section in a commandeer-
ed taxlcab. Woody Russell, a mem-
ber of the trio, who was captured,
seized Allison's revolver and shot him
through the abdomen after fracturing
his skull with the butt of the weapon.
Russell made his escape.
Mrs. Durah Walker, wife of S A.
Walker, well-to-do farmer, was placed
in jail at Durant, charged with killing
; Mrs. Ola Heath, wife of Lawrence
Heath, a neighbor farmer, in the
! northwest part of Bryan county. Mrs.
' Walker is alleged to have fired five
j times with a revolver She is the
mother of three children, one an in-
fant. Mrs Heath leaves a husband
and one child.
Congressman Carter's bill for the
sale of the h tseil and unb- tsed coal
and asphalt den', its underlying ap-
proximately 44f .ooo acres in the
Chickasaw and Choctaw nation was
■
asked to redojjele efforts
IN CAMPAIGN TO OVERCOME
FOOD SHORTAGE.
STATE/HOUSE BREVITIES
I
In a decision handed down by the
supreme court in the appeal of the
Rock Island railroad against a judg-
ment of a district court in which Will
Weaver was awardei a verdict of
$141.70 it is held th..« an interstate
passenger on a railro.il has no right
to ride into the state, get off a train
at the nearest stop over the line and
get the benefit of tho two-cent Okla-
homa rate to cross the Mate. The
Judgment of the lower court was re
versed.
The State Corporation Commission
has ordered demurrage rate sput into
effect on intrastate buiness to con
ha ordered demurrage rates put into
eli' < t by W (;. McAdoo, dire-'tor gen-
fillers of Soil Are Asked to Increase
Crop Acreage and Forego Raising
of Unnecessary Articles—Fats Are
Crying Need of World.
Washington, Feb. 10. Planting of
an increased acreage to spring wheat
and the production of an increased
'•u; ply of other food products and of
live stock, especially hogs, is recom-
:n« nded in a supi lementary food pro-
duction program issued yesterday by
the department of agriculture. It re-
• mphasizes and amplifies the program
for IS issued by the department
lit August and later suggestions re-
garding increased rork production
| and increased production of foodstuffs
; in the south.
'Notwithstanding pn increased pro-
duction of staple crops in the United
States in 1017 there is need for more
! food,'" the statement says. ' Taking
into account our own needs the neer!s
of the nations associated with us in
'he war, and the needs of friendly
neutral nations, our best efforts will
be required to provide enough food
' in 1918 Whether the war continues
or not. the demaads on this country
because of the incerasing population
and the needs of Europe, will be
great.
"Chief emphasis should be given to
the production of the great staple
food products, with specirl stress on
wheat and hogs, the leading war
| foods. It is believed that the neces
sary production can be secured
through the use of the best known
farm methods, but it may be neces-
sary to a small extent to sacrifice
certain of the less important farm
crops temporarily in the interests of
others which rank highest in im-
portance rs food for man."
To raisers of hogs and beef an-
imals the world need for meats and
fats is made clear. Farmers are
urged to join with the men on the
ranges in providing sheep whose wool
j is needed to equip Eoldiers.
Discussing the farm labor problem
i the program says that while the la-
! bor situation still presents difficul-
i ties, the farmers succeeded in over-
coming them last year and that, v.itn
better organization and especially
with deferred classification of skilled
farm labor, the difficulties again can
be surmounted
The number of hogs should be in-
creased by at least 15 per cent.
TLiRNED DREAMS TO ACCOUNT
Novelists and Musicians Have Scored
Triumphs by Their Remembrance*
of Dreadful Nightmares.
Nightmares, as well as ordinary I
dreams, have more than once been
turned to profitable use. The famous
Mrs. Radcliffe, the great sensitlonal
novelist of the early nineteenth cen-
tury, obtained her "Inspiration" for
such blood-curdling romances as the
"Mysteries of Udolpbo" anil "The Ro-
mance of the Forest" from phantom
horrors seen in sleep taken after .sii|>-
I ing on pork pies.
A remarkable story is told about the
production of Tartini's "Devil's So
nata." The musician had made sev-
eral vain attempts to write a sonata
to his own satisfaction, but without re-
sult. At last, in a fit of dejection, he
retired to rest, and no -ooner had In*
dropped asleep than he fell Into a
troubled dream in which the devil ap-
peared to him and took up his violin.
At first he was in an agony of ap-
prehension lest the fiend should de-
stroy his greatest treasure, but in-
stead the Authoi of Evil played the
most fascinating and weird music Tar-
tin! had ever heard. lie then implored
the devil to write it down, but Beelze-
bub flatly refused, and went off in such
a rage that the musician awoke in a
great fright.
But the lilt of the wonderful music
was still running in his brain and he
leaped out of bed. rushed to his desk
and put down all he could recall,
which, he always averred, was the
worst portion of the wonderful whole.
The sonata has ever since borne the
name of its true satanic author.
De Quincey is usually called the
English Oplum-Kater, and lie obtained
the greater part of his fame from the
awful, though often enchanting,
dreams that visited him while he lay
in the power of the drug. Ills "Con-
fessions of an Opium Eater" contains
some of the masterpieces of prose de-
scribing in wonderful language his ter-
rible nightmares.
u nks Arc
Wr.ikciK <1 15y
llard Colds
CASCARAfc* QUININE
M family remedy — In
form Itmlr, n'itr, r ,m f to ♦ akt No
Opiate* no nt afeffects.
ril !• in ik wri (jt'.p in 3
A"iey bi < k i f itfails Get the
fr'nir.e bo* With
rr«i T- p ■ •'! Mr
H. • i ' ure on it
24 Tablets for 2Sc.
At Any Drug Stora
11/VVP YOU BAKWrN COWS?
Aim yntir ntm of sowa tn 'jfjiod
with Alx.rt.'.i.' Overcome ttio dlX-
UcuUj IttfdlW
l i. DhvIiI Jtfih«rtf)'
nm i ionic trier ti 00
1* are. I II tin- uH'il/iH <jf r -pM/<luctlon
nr.'I pup- tin* uniuui) in hotter breed-
In^ • ■ (Million.
^Krad tin I'r•clical Home Velerintriia,
hru«l fur fr « om Abortion l low®
If no<!• iil<-r in your town. wriw
Of 0<iid floborts' Vat Co, 10U Grand A>inue. Wiukt.fta. Nil,
POWERFUL,
PENETRATING
LINIMENT
Qyickly healuig and sooth-
ing the pains of Neuralgia,
I leadache. Rheumatism, Cuts,
Burns, Sprains and Bruises.
35c and 70c bottles at your
druggists.
A B Rtcktrdi r!ed Co , lac
Sktruiii, tan
D1AMONDSETPIN
■ral
ads. The new r;<
ht hours free tii
ruling of all eomii
uirrage rate on
-. time has eln
lie next three c >
Berlin, Feb. 19. Operations have
been resumed on the Russian front.
The Germans have cross'd the Dvina.
This announcement was made by gen-
eral headquarters last night.
The text of the statement reads:
"On the great Russian front hostili-
ties in. in at noon tod a.- with an ad-
vance on Dvin-k. The Dvina has
been crossed without fighting.
••( uled upon by Ukraine to help
In their heavy struggle against the
great Russi . our troops have com-
menced their advance l.oni the direc-
tion of AO vol."
\s ociate 1
ia in the
and her
)f the Jin
I're-s)
Pull Hard for Sammies.
B. F. Lea veil, a Tipton broker, has a
grandson he says is the greatest boy in
the world. The chap is about six years
old and Is I>enny Bates, son of
Charles Bates, a Tipton business man.
The grandfather was accosted by the
youngster, who seemed very interest-
ed in an incident, nnd lie desired the
grandfather's information. He asked
Mr. Leavell: "Who was the kaiser?"
The grandparent, in his plainest way,
told the youngster, and asked why he
was so Interested. Benny spoke up
and said: "Well, when school was
out today ti little boy in our primer
cbu s throwed up his cap and said Hur-
rah for the kaiser!'" The granddad
interrupted nnd said: "Why, Benny,
j that was when you should have licked
j the boy." Benny, in his youthful man-
ner. said: "Oh. granddadd.v, I didn't
i have to, George Elbert did that."
I (ieorge Elbert is a son of George Shor-
tle. another Tipton business man, and
the youngsters are both in the primary
I class and both "pull hard for the Sam-
i mies."—Indianapolis News.
Archaeology at Rome.
If one stops to think of it one won-
ders whether, even at a time when the
i world seems intent only on war, the
I astronomer in his watch tower of the
; skies ever allows his thoughts even
| temporarily to be drawn away from
: the wonders of the universe that it is
his privilege nightly to behold. IIow-
I ever it may be with the astronomer,
; recently reports of excavati >ns in
Rome show that the archaeologist has
not been diverted from his loved pur-
j suit and that to him "the grandeur
| that was Rome" still fills his imagina-
; ' ions and dreams.
\s shown in a recent letter in the
I London Times by Eugenie Strung, as-
history nnd letters, in the British
. Send us th«* i
««suf 5 rri«*n«l^. a
11 ,i nd rs-
•diamond.
City. Mo.
Failure Is one of the tilings that
are spoiled by success.
AND NOW THEY ARE COOKING
TOBACCO TO MAKE IT BETTER
For a good many years The American
Tobacco Company have been conducting a
] series of experiments havinj; as their
object the improvement of smoking
tobaccos.
And it is interesting to know that one
of the greatest of their discoveries was one
of the simplest, and that was, that cooking
or toasting tobacco improved it in every
way, just as cooking iriost foods improves
them.
i They took a real Burley tobacco, grown
j in th>3 country; toasted it as you would
toast bread; moistened it to replace ths
natural moisture driven off by toasting;
made it into cigarettes, called them
"LUCKY STRIKE, the toasted cigarette,"
and offered them to the public.
Theresult has been the greatestdemand
ever created for any tobacco product in a
similar length of time.
The change produced by toasting is not
only most wholesome, but the flavor ia
greatly improved, just as cooking improves
meat, for example.—Adv.
If pr<•!H'l-Iy c!:issitii*<l, about 110 per
cent of the novels nre dry goods.
RECIPE FOR GRAY HAIR.
To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay
Rum, a small box of Barbo Compound,
and 'i < /.. of glycerine. Any druggist can
i put this up or \< u < < 11 mix it at home at
j very little o< -t. Full directions for mak-
| in_r and use come in each box of Barbo
j (Compound. It will gradually darken
stre ed, faded gray hair, and make it soft
and :--v. It v. il n f color the scalp, is not
stick) or greasy, and does not rub off. Adv.
est repoi
after toll.
di p.
that
Dvin
Dnsecd
b
Tii
"rs the
•r a quarantine, according ti
moment by Frauk AI. Gault,
The quarantine on Texas
eeil is brought about on aci
ho prevalence of the pink
j;;is in worm in certain sections of T
me< from and the potato embargo is occas,
)u ;ii gab by the presence of dangerous bu,
It fur The supreme court announce*
llation of j intention of refusing to order
• located roads to erect new stations d
city, the the period of the war. The dot
i" m>t w:n announced in the case of
II cira- St. uis iV San Franci «o r;i.!
i. tej- (ompm minst tho utato, .m<|
• • • : '
1 its
nil-
j incee Ei t h mla and IJ\ onia the
, taking of w hicli completel ■ isoli t is
I Rus-ia tin;I! the shores ol" the Hal-
tii and ti< ■ - the ci • > . in uddi'.ion
! to the tort of Higa, the <'ity of He
I vat. situated on the Cu'f of Flnlfnd,
o
! easi'1 mltiht operate against l'etro-
grad by s a
Shin Builders Return ti Work.
! \V:i ;hin;;ton. reli. Pre t'lent
| wlls- ' in 1 v '■ ti n has tertvn " • d
! , ,,rt ■' i-l>-lit i .'lh ' -h'l'plns I'Oii" l
l
>f
i'r. wiin
m,irl< about the Ked
. being held under I
vhicli ho furnished.
\ a - visiting re!ati\c.-i in Harry coun
v. Mo . during the recent Ked Cros
ne :nei hip drive, is alleged to liavi
en.ii I on its property of I'M,'.. -id
in 17 was refused in a decision h;uu|ed
down by the st ite stiprenie court The
company had fixed Its property \. l-
uation for the three years as follows:
1915, $1,162,001; 19 lt . $1 .M G,000; 1017
uttered rema«rk about the women $1,047,000. The equalisation beard
who asked him to subscribe which fixed the valuations at •lJ.5oo.OOo fo*-
i lused his arrest. According to the 1915 and 1916 and at VJ.S25.000 for
district attorney's ofllce, Fletcher de- j 1917. The valuations set ny the equal-
• hired he had been drinking and does ization hoard are approved by the
uot remember what he said. i court.
1
I marks to be devoted to Herman prop.
I aganda in Voli-h • ritory, nceordin^
to an oflcial dispatch today from
Swit /.erlatul. It is r< orted that, the
Germans are preparing for an ox-
tensive campaign of Prussianism in
Silesia. Bosnia and West Prussia. An-
other dispatch says Austrian troops
recently fired on Poles in Loin berg,
who were meeting in support of a
United Poland.
idn ■>' the sentiment of a bouquet with
ihe practical utility of confectionery.
The happy C0i lbinatlon is the ihmight
nf a rhiengo woman, who has assigned
her patent rights to n firm of that city,
which litis already turned out some
vi ry attractive "bouquets" of sweet-
meats. The sweetmeats are molded
in the forms of various flowers which
lend themselves to the purpose, and
these are wrapped In suitable colored
. j \\] rs, and when arranged in ti group
! they resemble a beautiful floral compo-
| sition. After admiring tliein for a
while the candles may he stripped of
ilieir paper covering and eaten.
Ocean Furnishes New Food.
Iptellij ent commercial de\ eloi m< nt
of a little-known fish for other markets
is shown In a new Japan* se product,
. . \ plk >, and is p ?< ullar to t ? wa-
i i •> s of Japan. A Japan, so packing
■ i nj ;iny <-onceived tin* Idea of put-
'ing it up in cans, in kippered or
j smoked form, nnd the quality is pro-
; nounced so good by e\p. its that it Is
! believed a market can be created In
this country.
Swiss on Short Rations.
Under new food regulations, the
Swiss people are allowed only ti pound
of sugar per month per person. The
butter ration *s one-fifth of a pound
per mouth.
SOAP !S STRONGLY ALKALINE
and (.distant t: •• will burn out tho
scalp. Clean- the ; alp by shampoo-
ing with "La Creole" Hair Dressing,
and darken, in the natural way, those
ugly, grizzly hairs. Price, $1.00.—Adv.
n
WblilL'ift Cd't J hill
NEED SWAMP-ROOT
Thous.nda upon thousands of women
have 1. liny and bladder trouble and
never suspect it.
Women complaints often prove to he
n<it g ebe but kidney tr uble, or the
result of kidney or bladder disease.
If the 1 ineys are not in a healthy
condition, they may cause the other or-
gans to become diseased.
Pain in the back, hea<h« he, loss of am«
bition, nervi isne are often times symp-
toms of kidney trouble.
Don't 'Viv starting treatment* Dr
Kilmers' vamj Hoot, a \ i sician's pre-
script ion, obtained .■ '1 d =:... t toi e, may
be just ti i medy n led to overoomt
M. .i ■ ;i.i or } •(> bottle im-
mediatc!y ti in nay di u" store.
• u first to test this
great preparation 1 ten cents to Dr.
N. Y., for t
•ample 1 v. • • ing b< sure aad
Optir.ih
Dnippl'-t^ rye n.l :
t'.rslttppiu.it. t.
IS to 14 r>nv«
i' \/. V t; '.'i Mie-T filli
, 1' ri-.triiUu.fe,' 1'iiott
let. wic.
Time is always represented by men.
Women are calendar shy.
When Your Eyes Need Care
Try Murir.e Eve Remedy
No HmftrtiriK — Kyo Cotnfort. 60 a%
Oruggluta «>r mail. Writ* fur Free Hye Hook.
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Barrett, W. K. & Barrett, M. A. The Dover News (Dover, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 40, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 21, 1918, newspaper, February 21, 1918; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc136605/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.