Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 13, 1905 Page: 3 of 8
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TUBERCULOSIS IN CHILDREN
Appalling Mortality Among th Little Ones Due
to This Cause—Proper Attention to Health of
Mothers Would Save Many Lives
-A
The number of deaths due to tuber-
( ulosls is tremendous. When the word
Is spoken one Instinctively thinks of
lmlmonary consumption. This Is the
form which attacks adults and which
we see daily gathering in its victims.
There are other forms, however, more
common in children, that levy trib-
ute upon them without calling atten-
tion to the relationship between these
diseases and consumption of the
lungs.
Dr. Jacobi is authority for the state-
n erit that "Tuberculosis kills as many
people, old and young, as diphtheria,
croup, whooping cough, scarlatina,
n.easles and typhoid fever taken to-
gether.'' In all of our cities active
steps have been taken to protect the
I eople from the above named dis-
eases. Until quite recently, however,
a few years at most, nothing was done
to reduce the mortality from tuber-
culosis.
Now, however, the attention of the
world, the common people and the
health authorities, has been called to
Its curability and preventabllity.
The causes, the modes of scatter-
ing, and the prevention are all being
studied, and an educational campaign
is on to wipe out this "white terror."
The children suffer from tubercu-
losis of the bones, the bowels and
l>mph glands. Tubercular meningitis
is frequently found in early life and is
uniformly fatal. Only by careful at-
tention to the food and dally habits
can the rising generation be made im-
mune from these varied forms of tu-
berculosis.
The fact that over one half of all
babies born die before they reach the
age of five years, proves that the 'con-
stitutional capital" bequeathed them
is small. Is the proper attention paid
to the diet, exercise and out-of-door
life of the mother? If this were done,
the child would undoubtedly have
greater vitality and could by proper
care and education live above the tu-
berculosis of childhood and of adult
life.
Cause and Cure of Gastric Catarrh.
Chronic congestion of the stomach,
known as gastric catarrh, is usually
caused by one of the following errors,
or by all of them put together: Eat-
ing too much or too fast; swallowing
food insufficiently masticated; the
use of such coarse foods as cabbage,
greens, etc.; mustard, peppersauce,
ginger and other condiments and
spices; pastry containing animal fats;
free fats, which lodge in the stomach
and remain there a long time; pork,
griddle cakes and burned fats—these
are the things that produce gastric
catarrh.
The first and most necessary step
ir. the treatment of this disease is to
remove the cause of the trouble. We
may induce activity of the skin by
hot applications followed by cold or
liot bath followed by a short applica-
tion of cold; fomentations followed
by a short cold application to the
stomach. These treatments are use-
ful, but the most important factor is
the regulation of the diet. A fruit
diet is best, for the reason that in gas-
tric catarrh there is a great accumula-
tion of germs, which are destroyed by
fruit juice. A well-prepared diet of
toasted bread, zwieback, granose bis-
cuit, etc., is also useful in these
cases.
Bedroom Climate.
A person at the age of sixty years
has spent about twenty years of his
life in his bedroom. Have you inves-
tigated the average sleeping room cli-
mate? If you were sent as a mission-
ary to some distant pestilential spot
the climate of which was as unhealth-
ily as that of the average bedroom,
would you not feel that you were risk-
ing a great deal for the sake of the
heathen?
On the tombstone of tens of thou-
sands of those who have died from
tuberculosis might appropriately be
inscribed, "Disease and death were
invited and encouraged by a death-
dealing bedroom climate."
To show that this is no exaggera-
tion it is only necessary to call at-
tention to the fact that fully half of
the tubercular patients placed in out-
door consumptive hospitals make a
satisfactory recovery. If fresh air
will cure the disease, it is certainly a
wonderful preventive of it. It is not
more reasonable to deliberately
breathe impure air than it is to drink
impure water or to eat unhealthful
food or wear infected clothing.
Tender-Hearted Savages.
One of the most anomalous features
of our Christian civilization Is the
slaughter house, especially the abat-
toirs of our great cities, where veri-
table torrents of blood perpetually
flow the ebbing life of millions of in-
nocent? which die that man may feast.
Indians ara not noted for being
over-sensitive; and particularly de-
spise any exhibition of weakness. The
interior of a slaughter-house, however,
is said to have proved too much for
their powers of self-control. The Chi
cago Record states that "a party of
fifteen Blackfoot Indians recently vis-
ited the killing room of Armour's
plant. One fainted, three more were
ill, the rest covered up their eyes.
They were hurried out of the place
into the fresh air."
A Good Reform.
The abominable practice of wear-
ing long skirts for the street is dying
out. Pretty as it is to see a summer
dress negligently trailed over a
smooth lawn jeweled with daisies, the
Bight of a woman dragging her gown
in the street, sweeping up the filth
and collecting millions of microbes,
Is a revolting spectacle; and yet with
a long skirt the only alternative is
to hold it up a practice which in-
duces cramp in the arm, as well as
cold fingers in winter, and gives a
decidedly ungraceful walk and atti-
tude.
A Cure for Cold Feet.
An excellent and simple remedy
for cold feet is the application of cold
water. Step into the bathtub, let the
cold water run in a little faster than
It runs out. Standing in the water,
rub one foot with the other, rapidly,
ten or twelve times. Then change and
treat the other foot in the same man-
ner. Keep up this alternate rubbing
for about three minutes. The feet
will have become very red, and as you
step out of the water, you will find
them burning and glowing with the
warm blood brought into them by this
means.
Some Chinese Baths.
A traveler in Mongolia writes:
"There are some hot springs on the
road about twenty miles north of
Chingpeng. The place is named
Tangshan. The arrangements for
those anxious to benefit by their heal-
ing properties are very primitive. A
row of twenty to thirty wooden boxes
the size of an ordinary packing case
Is ranged be3lde the road. In these
sit bathers of every age and both
sexes, with their heads protruding.
Attendants with buckets continually
refill the boxes from the springs. For
less luxurious bathers there is accom-
modation in a pool which has been
dug out close by. In this they squat,
scooping up the water and pouring it
over their heads with brass basins. It
is curious to reflect that establish-
ments like Homburg and Aix-les-Bains
have had their origin in such begin-
nings."
Training the Skin.
The usual effect of a draft of cold
air upon the back of the neck is a cold
and a sore throat. Many years ago
Dr. Brown Sequard, an eminent
French physician, devised a means by
which sore throat from this cause
might be prevented. By blowing upon
the back of the neck with a pair of bel-
lows, increasing the time each day, he
trained his patients until they could
endure this treatment for half an hour
without injury.
It is not necessary to be exposed to
a draft of air on the back of the neck
in order to obtain this result. By
means of the cold bath, the wet-sheet
rub, the shower bath, towel friction,
etc., the skin may be educated to con-
tract on the slightest increase of cold.
Daily exposure to the contact of cold
air is of the utmost importance. It is
because of the lonstant exposure to
cold that the Indian's body is "all face"
—the skin of his whole body has
learned to take care of itself.
Dr. Lorenz Strict Teetotaler.
At a banquet given to Dr. Lorenz,
wine was served. He pushed the
wineglass aside. Someone enquired if
he was a total abstainer. He an-
swered :
"I am a surgeon. My success de-
pends upon having a clear brain, a
steady nerve, and firm muscles. No
one can take any form of alcohol with-
out blunting these physical powers;
therefore, as a surgeon, I must not use
any form of spirits."—Journal of In-
ebriety.
In Harmony with Nature.
Modern science as well as experi-
ence has shown that contact with nat-
ural surroundings, especially fresh air,
sunshine and the ozoning emanations
from growing plants, has marvelous
health-imparting virtues. In these
natural agencies is active the power
which created and maintains all things
and which is constantly communicated
to all living things as the essential
condition of continued life. The more
closely man comes to Nature, the
more deeply he may drink from the
fountain of life and healing. To live
in harmony with Nature in the fullest
and truest sense is to live in har-
mony with God; and to live in divine
harmony is to be happy.
Hens for Hatching.
In spite of the fact that Incubators
and brooders have been brought to a
great state of perfection, the old hen
will still be used on most farms. The
hen is a more skillful producer of
chicks than is the incubator in the
hands of the average man and woman.
Where only a few fowls are kept and
only a few chicks are desired the hen
will still hold her popularity. We
believe that where the farmer desires
to keep a good-sized flock of hens
and to raise yearly in excess of 100
chicks the incubator should be used.
But we realize the fact that on mil-
lions of our farms just enough fowls
are kept to consume the scraps from
the table.
The hens for setting purposes must
come from some of the breeds that
have not had the maternity instinct
bred out of them. We would not
think of selecting any of the Leghorn
breeds for sitters. Probably there is
no breed that produces better sitters
than the Plymouth Rocks. But in se-
lecting a fowl for this work, prefer-
ence should be given to those that
are light in weight, as the heavy fowls
both break eggs and trample chicks to
death. We have found the lighter
weights to give most excellent satis-
faction. While they cannot cover so
many eggs as the larger fowls they
will bring more chicks to maturity.
Beef Cow and Calf.
Does it pay in Illinois and neighbor-
ing states |o keep a cow a year for
the sole purpose of rearing a beef
calf for th" general market? No. This
has been proved so often that it .seems
unnecessary to go Into the natter
deeply. On land worth $100 per acre
and under general methods of agri-
culture as followed in this country, the
man that does this loses money every
year. Yet there are a good many farm-
ers scattered through the middle west
who make the mistake of trying to do
this. Some of them are old fellows
that ma-.s money with the beef cow
and ber calf half a century ago when
land wa.5 worth about nothing. The
feed of the animals cost almost noth-
ing and the chief investment was not
in the land and the equipment but in
the cow herself. Now all conditions
have changed.
Frequent Sprayings.
The novice in spraying cannot af
ford to be so careless about his spray-
ings that he will miss the end for
which he is working. Neither should
ho try to get along with the fewest
possible number of sprayings. The
best sprayers have indeed reduced the
number to the minimum, but they
are experienced men that have
learned to make every spraying count
for the most possible.
In many cases it has been found
that so far as the orchard is con-
cerned, four sprayings in spring give
the greatest returns, while spraying
every two weeks from the middle of
April to the middle of August give
the greatest proportion of perfect
fruit. The additional sprayings cost
more than the additional fruit is
worth, as a general thing.
Taking all things into consldera
tion the method that will pay the best
consists in spraying the trees as soon
as the blossoms fall and then every
two weeks till four sprayings have
been given. The sprayings must be
well done if they are to be of any
value. Slipshod work will not
prove effective in preventing the rav
ages of insect and fungous pests.
Leaving the work to the boys is nev-
ier profitable. It requires mature judg-
ment and thoroughness to do the work-
as it should be done.
In the Creamery.
The man that has charge of a
creamery has all he can do to keep
things moving, if conditions are not
of the best. However, he will do well
to spend as little time in the cream-
ery as possible if he wishes to pre-
serve his health. The creamery is a
wet place and often It is both a hot
and cold place with drafts at times
Sometimes the buttermaker works for
hours with wet feet. It is said that
a large proportion of buttermakers
have to give up the business because
of poor health, the conditions in the
creameries being such that continu
ation of labor there means undermi
ning of health. The creamery man
gets too little sun and fresh air. II
he can take the time to get out more
among the patrons it will benefit both
hirri and them.
Small Egg Producers Infertile.
Contrary to general impression, the
fewer eggs a hen lays the more are
they likely to be infertile, if we tan
judge anything from experiments car
ried on at the Maine station. There
an attempt \\a3 made to breed down-
ward in egg yield as well as upward
The experimenters were surprised at
finding an unlooked for obstacle, name-
ly, the infertility of the eggs fron
hens producing the fewest.
A 480-ACRE FARM YIELDS
25 PER CENT PROFIT IN A YEAR.
What a Mercer County (Ohio) Farmer
Received from One Year's Crop.
Extracts from an interesting letter
from P. H. Rynhard, of Starbuck.
Manitoba. Canada, gives an excellent
idea of the prosperity of those who
have gone from the United Slates to
Canada. He says:
"I bought, August, 1903, 480 acres
of land, paying $12,000 for it. We
threshed 2,973 bushels of wheat and
between 1,200 and 1.300 bushels of
oats and barley from 200 acres. But
part of the wheat went down before
filling and was not harvested except
for hay. The crop was worth at
threshing time, $3,000. Besides 120
acres laying idle except a timothy
meadow, which Is not included In this
estimate. Counting the value of the
product and the increase of value of
land will pay me more than 25 per
cent on the Investment. Two broth-
ers in the same neighborhood bought
160 acres each six years ago. They
have not done a single thing to this
land except to fence It and break and
cultivate about one-half of it. Har-
vested last year 28 bushels wheat per
acre. This year 27 bushels per acre.
They can get any day $25 per acre.
These are only a few of many hun-
dieds of such chances. It looks like
boasting, but truth is justifiable and
the world ought to know it, especial-
ly the home-seeker. I know of quite
a few farmers that have made for-
tunes in from 10 to 20 years, retired
with from $20,000 to $100,000.
Writing concerning another district
in the Canadian West, S. L. Short
says:
"Dear Sir—I have to inform you
that I have just returned from the
Carrot River Country In Saskatche-
wan, where I located land of the very
finest black vegetable loam, which I
am proud of, and will move in the
spring. Farmers are still plowing
there. A mild climate and beautiful
country to behold. Cattle are fat and
running outside. Wood and water
good. Saw oats weighing 42 pounds
to bushel. Potatoes large and well
ripened; also wheat that brought
there 82 cents. The country exceed-
ed my expectations. Saw oats in
stock, thicker on the ground than ap-
pears in many of the illustrations
sent out In descriptive pamphlets. I
have been in many western states,
but the soil excels any I ever saw."
The Canadian Government Agents
at different points report that the en-
quiries for literature and railroad
rates, &c., to Western Canada are
the greatest in the history of their
work.
ONE OF LIFE'S PERPLEXITIES.
Why People Admire Something Pro-
ducer Thinks Little Of.
He had two lectures. One was dig-
nified, noble, grand, well-pleasing to
himself. The other was common,
simple, earnest, popular, but thought
little of by himself. One of the per-
plexities of his life was this: Why
should the people admire something
that he thought little of, and think
little of something which he thought
so much of? Some thoughts and ser-
mons aro for those who create them
and should be kept in a sealed case
in the owner's private laboratory.—
Earl M. Pratt in ' 'Short Talks.''
Vast Forests in Northern Belt.
The northern belt of forests is per-
haps greater in extent than all the
other timber belts and reserves of
Canada combined. It extends from
the eastern part of Labrador, north of
the fiftieth parallel in a northwesterly
direction to Alaska a distance of some
3,000 miles, with an average width
of perhaps 5,000 miles.
A donkey knows when he has
enough—unless he is a two-legged
one.
What the Dentist Says.
Toledo. Ohio, March 27th—(Special.)
—Harry T. Lewis, the well known den-
tist of 607 Sumit street, this city, is
telling of his remarkable cure of Kid-
ney Disease by using Dodd's Kidney
Pills.
"I was flat on my back and must
say I had almost given up all hope
of ever getting any help," says Dr.
Lewis.
"My kidneys had troubled me for
years. The pains in my back were
severe and I had to get up several
times at night. I tried different medi-
cines but kept on getting worse till
1 was laid up.
"Then a friend advised me to try
Dodd's Kidney Pills and In about two
weeks I started to Improve. Now I
am glad to admit I am cured and I
cannot praise Dodd's Kidney Pills too
highly."
If you take Dodd's Kidney Pills
when your kidneys first show signs of
being out of order you will never have
Hright's Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy,
Gravel or Rheumatism.
Paradoxical though It may seem
it's the idle tongue that works over-
time.
You never hear any one complain
about "Defiance Starch." There is none
to equal It In quality and quantity, 16
ounces, 10 cents. Try It now and save
your money.
STOCK
Buying a Stallion.
It has been mentioned in this and
every other farm and live stock jour-
nal In the country that our horse-
breeding operations have led to the
mixing of many kinds of blood rather
than the straight breeding of any
particular kind until practically pure
blood could be obtained. This has
not been wholly the farmer's fault.
He has made one or two top crosses
of the same blood and has later
found it impossible to find a stallion
of that blood to go on with. This
being the case he has perforce used
the stallion nearest to him and that
one lias often been widely different
in blood and type from the one first
used. Mongrels have resulted from
this method of breeding, and we have
made little real advance in the pro-
duction of pure-bred horses of any
one breed of the many imported into
this country for breeding purposes.
This spring men are again trying to
find the kind of stallions they most
require and approve of, and, if they
cannot be found, they will have as
heretofore to breed to any horse that
can be most readily used. Meanwhile
the stallion peddler is busy through-
out the land. He is taking into the
country districts imported stallions
and forming companies to purchase,
them. The company consists of
prominent farmers in each communi-
ty, who buy shares In the horse until
his price amounts to several thou-
sand dollars. Were the horse always
a good individual, always sound, al-
ways pure-bred and always deep
enough bred to prove prepotent, the;
price would not count so much as it
does at present; for a really prepo-
tent stallion is worth the money now
asked for company horses. The
trouble is, however, that very many
of the stallions imposed upon farm
companies are cheap, poor, shallow-
bred and often unsound animals.
They have come here largely owing j
to the fact that they could be bought j
Cheaply abroad—from three to five|
hundred dollars a head—and men are ;
paying a big premium when they
combine and invest thousands of dol-
lars in such horses.
But the worst feature of the ped-j
died stallion business is perhaps that :
the horse bought by the company Is j
often not the one that is most re-
quired in a given district. The horse
to buy everywhere Is the one that is
in blood as like as possible to the
blood predominating in the veins of
the mare stock of the district inj
which he is to serve. If, for example,
Percheron horses have been most
used in a district, the advent of a
German coach horse, or coach horse
of other breed, or even a draft stal-
lion of breed other than the Percher-|
on, does harm, in that he stops prog-
ress towards the production of prac-
tically pure-bred Percheron horses. It
might require but a few additional;
top-crosses of Percheron blood to ar-
rive at pure-bred horses, but the use,
of the coacher commences a new ef-|
fort and incidentally destroys the-
good effect, of previous crosses of Per-
cheron blood.
So with all other breeds. In some
districts Clydesdales or Shires have
long been used and into them the
peddler finds his way with Belgian or
Percheron stallion, often with a
French horse that Is not a Percheron,
and the company is formed by subtle
and hidden methods of persuasion. In
his proper spherb each pure-bred stal-
lion is capable of doing grand work
in the grading up of our stock, but
out of his sphere of usefulness, intro-
duced where there is no blood of his
sort, he is often an actual detriment
to our horses. We shall say nothing
here of the unsound and impotent
horses that are sold to companies, of
the shady methods of some of the
company formers, of the exorbitant
prices paid for inferior animals. The
chief point we wish to make in this
article is that it Is high time to wake
up to the fact that company horses
are not only too dear, but likely to be
other than the horses most required
in district. The way out of the trouble
is for breeders in a district to get
together, decide what they want, the
breed most likely to give good re-
sults, and then go and buy a suitable
horse at the headquarters of a rep-
utable breeder or importer. In this
way the horse will be bought at a
great saving, there will be a number
seen to pick from and the right breed
r.t least will be procured. Reputable
importers, and there are many of such
firms In the country, would be glad to
stop peddling horses. They would
like to sell at their home stables, and
such business would be best for all
concerned.—A. S. Alexander in Farm-
ers' Review.
For incubating purposes care should
be exercised to make sure that a large
proportion of the eggs are fertile. It
will also pay to candle the eggs after
they have been In the Incubator for a
couple of days, removing the eggs ?hat
are not fertile.
MISS BULL RECOVERS
rEAItFUL DECLINE OF STRENGTH
COMPLETELY ARRESTED.
.11 rtlirnl skill lln.l Almost K* haunted It.rlf
in Vuln Attempt* to Itetievr Her—A
Iteiiinrkuhle Kemill.
The recovery of Miss (ii'rtruile I.. Bull
is of great interest to the medical world.
A very bad cough followed a severe at-
tack of pneumonia. It seemed impossi-
Ma to break it. up or to restore her
strength, which had been sadly under-
mined. Iu spile of the best efforts of
the doctors and the use of s. vera) adver-
tised modes of treatment her condition
daily grew more serious. She finally
discontinued all medicine and gave her-
self up to desjiair. I
" What, was yonr condition at this
time?" she was asked.
" My stomach was so weak I could not
Iceej) food down. I suffered from con-
stant nausea. My kidneys were in ter-
rible condition. My feet and ankles were
swollen so badly that it pained me eveu
to stand on them. I was very bilions.
My heart was in barl shape so I could
not go up and down stairs or staiul any
exertion or sleep in a natural positiou."
'• It seems a wonder that, you should
ever have recovered. How did it
happen ?"
" You may well call it a marvel, but
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills wrought it.
None of my friends thought I could live
many mouths longer. My parents had
no hope. Just then a pamphlet adver-
tising Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale
People was thrown in our door. It was
ti great eveut for mo. These pills saved
mo from the grave. Within a wi-ek from
the time I began to take them 1 felt bet-
ter, and in three months I was entirely
well. I cannot praise Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills too highly and 1 dearly hope
that my experience may bring gixwl to
some other sufferers."
Miss Bull, who was no remarkably
cured, resides at Union Grove, Illinois.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills act, immediately
on the blood, purifying and enriching it.
In all debilitating diseases, such a.<
lung troubles, grip, fevers, and in all
cases in which the system is thoroughly
run down, these pills perform wonders.
Thoy aro sold by all druggists through
out the world. A valuable booklet on
diseases of the blood, will lie sent fret
to any ono who applies for it to Dr Wil-
liams Modieiuo Co.. Scheuectady, N. Y.
Some people cast their bread upon
the water with an anchor attached to
it.
The bookkeeper, like the tight-rope
walker, shouldn't lose his balance.
CHE THE FAMOt S
Reel Cross Hall Hluc. lairire 2-0/.. pjwkiwre 5
cents. The ltuss Company, South fiend lad
Generally (tie family skeleton is the
liveliest thing in the family.
There is no reason why a girl
shouldn't set her cap for a capitalist.
TO C!!KK A COI.I) IN (INK OAV
Tiiko Laxative Brotno t/uinitio Tablet*. AH drug*
Kinta refund the money If It full* i< cure. t. W.
Urovo'n signature Is ou each box. 25c.
Everything moves faster on a down-
grade; especially a fast young man.
GOOD POSITION.
Drauuhon's Business College <V>.,wbose nil
will be found elsewhere in this issue, will take
live students from each county and accept an
agreement to pay tuition after course is eorn-
pleted and position is secured. If not wctired
no pay asked. Clip this notice and send with
your application.
A patriot is a politician who is try-
ing to break into office.
Perfumery that costs a dollar a bot-
tle may not be worth a cent.
IMMENSE TOBACCO PURCHASE.
Forty-Eight Thousand Dollars Paid
for a Fancy Lot of Tobacco.
The biggest purchase of high grade
lohacco ever made in the West bv
a cigar manufacturer was made last
Wednesday by Frank P. Lewis. Peo-
ria, 111., for his celebrated Single bind-
er cigar. A written guarantee was
given that the entire amount was to
be fancy selected tobacco. This, no
doubt, makes the Lewis factory the
largest holder in the I'nited States
of tobacco of so high a grading —
Beral4-Transcript, Peoria.
Philosophy is the salve of disap-
pointment.
A man's heart is blamed for a lot
of things that his head is responsible
for.
Snlirr'B Home llnltiter Corn.
So named l>ecause 50 acres produced so
heavily, that its proceeds built a lovely)
home. See Salzei's catalog. Yielded in
Ind. 157 b*., Ohio lfiO bu., Tenn. 19H bu.^
mid in Mich. 220 bu. per acre. You can.
beat this record in 19(15.
WHAT no YOU T1IINK OF THESE YIEUM&
120 bu. Beardless Hal-ley per a re.
310 bu. Salzer's New National Oats per
HO bu Salzer Spelt/ and Mararotii YVheat*
1,000 bu. Pedigree Potatoes per acre.
14 tons of ritTi Billion Dollar tlrass liirt.
60,000 Ihs. Yietoria Kape tor sheep- |ier A.
160,000 lbs. Teosinte, the fodder wonder.
54,000 lbs. Salter'* Superior Fodder (.Jom
rich, juicy fodder, per A.
Now such yields you ean have ia 1905,
if you will plant my seeds.
JUST 8KND THIS NOTICE ANO
in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed < o„ I,n
Crosse, Wis., and receive their griat cata-
log and lota of farm seed sample*, f W.N.U.J
X ✓
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Peters, S. H. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 25, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 13, 1905, newspaper, April 13, 1905; Garber, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc143668/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.