Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1915 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
THE SENTINEL. GARBER. OKLAHOMA.
I )
'CMOS" ACT
NUTRITIOUS AND CHEAP
No sick headache, biliousness,
bad taste or constipation
by morning.
Get a 10-cent box.
Are you keeping your bowels, liver,
and stomach clean, pure and fresh
with Cascarets, or merely forcing a
passageway every few days with
Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor Oil or
Purgative Waters?
Stop having a bowel wash day. Let
Cascarets thoroughly cleanse and reg-
ulate the stomach, remove the sour
and fermenting food and foul gases,
take the excess bile from the liver
and carry out of the system all the
constipated waste matter and poisons
In the bowels.
A Cascaret to night will make you
feel great by morning. They work
while you sleep—never gripe, sicken
or cause any inconvenience, and cost
only 10 cents a box from your store.
Millions of men and women take a
Cascaret now and then and never
have Headache, Biliousness, Coated
Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or
Constipation. Adv.
SHE HAD MET THE "DUB''
Nice Young Chap Probably Regretted
His Somewhat Unkind Char-
acterization.
At a dancing academy dance the
other evening a nice young chap was
introduced to a perfectly dandy girl.
She was young, sympathetic and,wise
to all the steps, and the kid fell for
her at once. Then she said:
"Well, I don't know anybody except
that funny-looking dub over there in
the corner. He and 1 belong to the
same lodge. Did you ever meet him?"
"Indeed I did—years ago. He used
to come and see me a lot—brought We
Powers and candy, and all that."
"He did? That old guy? Well. I
didn't think it was in him! This'li
be a joke to tell to the other fellows.
How did you shake him at last?"
"Married him. Come on over and
I'll introduce you."—Cleveland Plain-
dealer.
WHY CRIP IS DANGEROUS.
When Greek Meets German.
A Companion subscriber, jealous of
the claims of the classic languages to
superiority even in the length of the
words the ancients could upon occa-
sion invent, writes thus:
"I notice that the Companion says,
'No one can compete with the Teuton
In word joinery.' Hut what do you
think of the following word that you
can find in Hiddell & Scott's Greek
lexicon? 'Lepadotemachoselachogaleo-
k ranioleipsanodrimupotrimmatosilph-
o paraomelitokatakechumenokichlepik-
FISH DISHES THAT ARE REALLV
WORTH WHILE SERVING.
Baked Mackerel Properly Prepared
Should Be Popular With All—
Haddock Stuffed or Served
With Tomatoes Is Good.
Baked Mackerel.—Wipe out twc
mackerel with a damp cloth, and cut
off the heads and tails. Split nearly
through, so that they lie flat. Take
out the backbones Place them inside
upward in a covered fireproof dish
Pepper and salt well, cover, place in a
slow oven, and allow to steam in their
own juice for half to one hour, accord
Ing to the oven. Serve in the same
dish.
Mustard Sauce for Mackeral.—Put
in a basin pepper, salt, a little fine
sugar and plenty of mustard powder.
Pour on about equal quantities of vin-
egar and salad oil, and beat or whisk
till thoroughly mixed and smooth. The
result should be a sauce of the con-
sistency of thin cream. A little taste
of garlic improves the sauce. The gar-
lic should be rubbed on the basin in
which the sauce is mixed
Baked Stuffed Haddock. — Wash,
scale, and wipe a large fresh haddock,
and remove the eyes. Prepare a stuff
ing with two ounces chopped suet, one
ounce of bread crumbs, one teaspoon-
ful herbs and parsley, and season with
salt and pepper. Mix the stuffing with
half an egg. Stuff the body of the flsli
with this, and sew up the opening.
Pass a trussing needle, threaded with
string, through the tail of the fish, cen-
ter of body, and the eyes, draw the
fish up into the shape of a letter S,
brush It over with beaten egg, and
sprinkle some breadcrumbs over it
and a few pieces of dripping Bake in
a brisk oven for about half an hour
or longer, basting frequently. Dish
up and serve with brown sauce or
gravy.
Haddock With Tomatoes—Wipe the j
haddock and put it in a pie dish with j
a little milk and water, and cook it in ,
the oven till tender. Skin three toma-
toes, and cut them into slices; peel j
I and chop finely half an onion. Cook
{ four ounces of rice in salted water till
tender, and drain Skin and bone the
| haddock, and flake it Melt an ounce
j of butter or dripping in a saucepan,
| add all the above ingredients, season
| with ealt and pepper, and beat up
thoroughly. Serve on a hot dish, and
sprinkle over some chopped parsley.
'i
It requires a good tonic laxative to
keep the body of the patient as strong
as possible to counteract the effect of
the poisons created by the grip bacil-
lus. An expectorant tonic with soma
laxative qualities Is the Bafest rem-
edy. Such Is Peruna.
Mrs. Gentry Gates, 8219 First Ave..
East Lake. Ala., writes: "I had a
bad case of grip. I tried Peruna and
It cured me. I can safely say it la a
fine medicine."
Mr. George E. Law, 13H N. Frank-
lin St.. Brazil. Ind., writes. "I am
satisfied that Peruna is a wonderful
remedy for grip, and I do most heart-
ily endorse and recommend it."
St. Genieve.
St. Genevieve, the patron saint of
Paris, was consecrated at the ago of
seven to the Bervice of religion by St.
Gerinanus, bishop of AuKerre, who
chanced to pass through the village of
Nanterre, where she lived, about four
miles from Paris. She acquired a
great reputation for sancity. The
church of St. Genevieve, completed in
1764, was named in her honor. Dur-
ing the revolutionary period it was
withdrawn from the service of relig-
ion and called the Pantheon, but was
afterward restored in name and to
ecclesiastical uses.
INDIAN HAD SENSE OF HUMOR
At Least Enough to Ge< Off Good Joke
on the Cross-Examinlng
Lawyer.
Prom Penimore Cooper and "ther
authorities we have gained the im-
pression that the Indian is a stolid,
severe individual, with no sense of
the white mail's humor, but one red
brother showed himself quite a civ-
ilized joker the other day in the Unit-
ed States court at St. Paul. He was
a witness in a hotly contested case,
and a lawyer was after him in the
most approved style to cast discredit
on his testimony. After apparently
frightening the Indian with the awful
const qui'nees which would follow the
slightest deviation from the truth, the
lawyer solemnly said:
"Now, sir, 1 want you to tell me the
exact truth, without any shuffling or
! evasion. I want you to look me
I square in the eye and tell me how you
get your living?"
The Indian looked straight at the
| lawyer and, with that grave air fa-
; miliar to all acquainted with the red
I man, simply said: "Eat."
The courtroom roared and the law-
i yer let the witness go.
ossuphophattoperisteralektruonopte g-
kephalokigklopeleiolagoosiraiobaphe, t-
raganopterugon.' The meaning is A
dish compounded of all kinds of dain-
ties, fish, flesh and fowl.' " That is cer-
tainly an elaborate way of saying
"hash."—Youth's Companion.
Information From Headquarters.
"Jinx has written finer plays than
Shakespeare ever did."
"You surprise me? Where were
Vbey produced?"
"They never were. But he told me
bout them, a«d he ought to know."
Just Punishment.
Mrs. Hemmendhaw — This paper
says a woman burglar was identified
by two missing teeth.
Mr. Hemmendhaw—Serves her light
for not keeping her mouth shut.
OUR NATIONAL DISEASE
Caused by Coffee.
Helpful Hints.
When separating yolks from whites
of eggs, sometimes a speck of yolk
slips into the white. To remove this
dip a clean cloth into warm water and
wring it dry. Touch the yolk with a
point of the cloth, and it will cling to
it at once.
A pretty and inexpensive couch
cover can be made by taking a white
bedspread that is worn thin and mak-
ing it the right size for the couch.
Then dye it a pretty green or a dark
red.
In home dressmaking a. very impor-
tant point to remember, especially in
making coats and skirts, is the fre-
quent use of the iron. Unless the
Beams are carefully pressed with a
hot iron over a damp cloth the gar-
ment, however well cut, will have an
amateur look.
NO BAKING POWDER MORE
WHOLESOME THAN ALUM
POWDERS.
Washington, D. C.—Alum baking
powders are no more harralul to a per-
son than any other baking powders.
Such is the conclusion of the ref-
eree board of consulting scientific ex-
perts of the department of agriculture
as the result of experiments to deter-
mine the influence of aluminum com-
pounds on the nutrition and health of
man. The report gives the results of
three sets of extensive experiments on
human subjects conducted independ-
ently by members of the board and
was in response to questions put to it
by the department of agriculture. The
board's report was unanimous and was 1 washed away the building lot.
JUST A BIT TOO STRENUOUS
Owner of Bungalow Not Altogether
Thankful for the Labor of the
Firemen.
In the lobby of a Washington ho-
tel the other evening the conversation
turned to the enthusiasm of the vol-
unteer firemen. Congressman Ed-
mund Piatt of New^York, smilingly re-
called a story along that line.
A man named Smith, the congress-
man said, had a bungalow down along
the Jersey coast. Recently the bunga-
low was burned, and meeting an ac-
quaintance one afternoon Smith sad-
ly cited the harrowing details.
"What was the trouble?" finally In-
terrupted the acquaintance. "Haven't
yo<t got a fire department down that
way?"
"Oh, yes," answered Smith with a
reflective sigh. "We have a fire de-
partment, all right."
"I see," thoughtfully mused the ac-
quaintance. "Got there too late to
put the fire out, 1 suppose?"
"Oh, no," rejoined Smith. "They
put the fire out, but in doing it they
Phila-
Physicians know that drugs will not
correct the evils caused by coffee and
that the only remedy Is to stop drink-
ing* it.
An Arkansas doctor says:
"I was a coffee drinker for many
years and often thought that I could
not do without it, but after years tNf
suffering with our national malady,
dyspepsia, I attributed It to the drink-
ing of coffee, and after some thought,
determined to use Postum for my
morning drink.
"I had the Postum made carefully
according to directions on the pkg, and
found it just suited my taste.
"At first I used it only for breakfast,
but I found myself getting so much
better, that I had it at all mealB, and I
am pleased to Bay that 1 have been re
lieved of indigestion. I gained 19
pounds in 4 months and my general
health is greatly improved.
"I must tell you of a young lady In
Illinois. She had been in ill health for
many years, the vital forces low, with
but little pain. I wrote her of the good
that Postum did me and advised her to
try it.
"At the end of the year, she wrote
me that she had gained 40 pounds in
weinht and felt like herself again."
Name given by Postum Co.. Battle
Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well-
Tille," in pkgs.
Postum comes in two forms:
Regular Postum—must be well boiled.
15c and 25c packages.
Instant Postum—is a soluble powder
A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a
cup of hot water and, with cream and
iugnr, makes a delicious beverage In,
■tantly. 30c and 50c tins.
The cost per cup of both kinds Is
sbout i he name.
"There's A Reason" for Postum.
w. . -gold by Grocers.
To Boil Fggs Properly.
There are three good ways to boil
an egg that has been cracked. A very
simple one is to add quite a little salt
to the water in which the egg is to be
boiled. This will prevent the white
coming out. If the crack is very large,
wrap the egg in a piece of soft paper.
The wet paper adhering to the egg, pre-
vents the egg coming out of the shell.
If there is only a tiny crack at one
end, make a tiny opening in the other
end with a needle and the desired re-
sult is secured The latter method may
be used to boil eggs preserved in
water glass, the puncture being made
at both ends.
signed by Ira Remsen, president of j
Johns Hopkins university, Chairman: J
Russell H. Crittendon, professor of |
physiological chemistry in Yale uni-
versity and director of the Sheffield
Scientific school: John H Long, pro-
fessor of chemistry in Northwestern
university; Alonzo E. Taylor, profes-
sor of physiological chemistry in the
University of Pennsylvania, and Theo-
bald Smith, professor of comparative
pathology in Harvard.
Ambition and Humility.
The highest ambition is the parent
of the truest humility; It makes one
realize that our ultimate aim is so
high that we need a power far beyond
our own for the accomplishments of
so transcedent a work; that if we
are truly to be co-workers with Al-
mighty God himself in the working
out of the great scheme that rules the
universe, the task is far too great for
our unaided efforts, and we may con-
fidently rely upon a power divine to
help us in all our needs.
delphia Telegraph.
QUIT MEAT IF KIDNEYS
BOTHER AND USE SALTS
HAIR OR NO HAIR?
It la Certainly Up to You and Cuti-
cura. Trial Free.
Hot shampoos with Cuticura Soap,
followed by light dressings of Cuti-
cura Ointment rubbed into the scalp j
skin tend to clear the scalp of dan-
druff, soothe itching and irritation and
promote healthy hair-growing condi-
tions. Nothing better, cleaner, purer.
Sample each free by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Stuffed Leg of Pork.
The following would be better by re-
moving the bone from the leg of pork
to ms.ke room for the stuffing:
Make a deep incision in the meat
and fill with dressing made ss for
cflicken and seasoned highly with
ouion. Skewer the places together and
nib the outside of the meat with salt,
pepper and a little powdered sage.
Bake very slowly and baste often.
Strain the contents of the pan, put in
a little cold water to make the fat
rise, then skim and thicken, using a
rounding tablespoonful of flour to one
cupful of the liquid. Let the gravy
ccok eight minutes.
Mulled Buttermilk.
One quart of buttermilk, one round-
ed tablespoonful of flour, two rounded
tablespoonfuls of granulated sugar.
Pour the buttermilk into an enameled
saucepan and put on the range to
boil; upon boiling add the following
mixture: Break an egg into a bowl and
beat until light and foamy, add the
sugar, then the flour, stirring until
smooth, and pour into the boiling but-
termilk, stirring rapidly to prevent
scorching. Boil up once, remove from
the fire and serve hot or iced as pre-
ferred.
Hotch Potch.
Take one cupful of pearl barley, one
Bmall cabbage, two carrots, two onions
one turnip, parsley and herbs, piece o'
butter, pepper and salt. Put threi
quarts of water In a saucepan and ad I
all the vegtables and cook for two and
one-half hours.
Putting It Up to Ma.
"Pop!"
"Yes, my son."
"What is this war about over in
Europe?"
"Don't know, my boy, but you might
ask your mother. She knows a lot
about fighting."
Take a Glass of Salts Before Break-
fast If Your Back Is Hurting or
Bladder Is Irritated.
If you must have your meat every
day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with
salts occasionally, says a noted author-
ity who tells us that meat forms uric
acid which almost paralyzes the kid-
neys in their efforts to expel it from
the blood. They become sluggish and
weaken, then you Buffer with a dull
misery in the kidney region, sharp
pains in the back or sick headache,
dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue
is coated and when the weather is bad
you have rheumatic twinges. The
urine gets cloudy, full of sediment, the
channels often get sore and irritated,
obliging you to seek relief two or
three times during the night.
To neutralize these irritating acids,
to cleanse the kidneys and flush off
the body's urinous waste get four
ounces of Jad Salts from any phar-
macy here; take a tablespoonful iu a
glass of water before breakfast for a
few days and your kidneys will then
act fine. This famous salts is made
from the acids of grapes and lemon
juice, combined with lithia, and has
been used for generations to flush and
stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to
neutralize the acids in urine, so it no
longer irritates, thus ending bladder
weakness.
Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in-
jure, and makes a delightful efferves-
cent lithia-water drink.—Adv.
Stcknchn&n.
ytlada %2M
Reliable evidence is abundant that women
are constantly being restored to health by
Lydia E. Rnkham's Vegetable Compound
The many testimonial letters tnat we are continually pub-
lishing in the newspapers—hundreds of them—are all genu-
ine, true and unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude
for the freedom from suffering that has come to these
women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
Money could not buy nor any kind of influence obtain
such recommendations; you may depend upon it that any
testimonial we publish is honest and true—if you have any
doubt of this write to the women whose true names and
addresses are always given, and learn for yourself.
Read this one from Mrs. Waters:
Camtikv, N.J.—'"1 was sick for two yoars with nervous spoils, and
my kidneys were affected. I had a doctor all the time and used a
galvanic battery, but nothing did mo any good. I was not able to go
to bed, but spent ray time ou a couch or in a sleeping-chair, and soon
became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went away for his
health, and my husband heard of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and got me some. In two months I got relief and now I
am like a new woman and am at my usual weight. I recommend
your medicine to every one and so does my husband."—Mrs. Tizxn
vVatkks, 030 Mechanic Street, Camden, N.J.
From Hanover, Perm.
Hanover, Pa.—"I was a very weak woman and suffered from
bearing down pains and backache. 1 had been married over four
years and had no children. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
proved an excellent remedy for it made me a well woman. After
taking a few bottles my pams disapjieared, and we now have one of
the finest boy babies you ever saw."—Mrs. C. A. Kiukrodb, U.F.D.,
No. 5, Hanover, Pa.
Now answer this question if you can. Why should a
•woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compour d a trial ? You know that
it has saved many others—why should it fail in your case?
For HO years Lydia F. PlnUTiam's Vep;otab1o
Compound lias been the standard remedy for fe-
male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments
does justice to liersolf if she does not try this fa-
mous modieinci made from roots and herbs, it
lias restored so many suffering women to health.
Write to LYDIA E.PINKIIAM MEDICINE CO.
SPJF (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS., for advice.
Your letter will be opened, read and answered
by a woman and held iu strict voulideuce.
HORSES FOR EUROPE
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
•of
from the Unltod Stat*** for the war Th«
not in tioud condition and free from ct>n-
VVIien tin* Lniyt'r* come you must bo rnuly to
in salable condition, prevent and cure
Knrop* Is bnylnu thousands of hoi
army agents ret use all horses t hat
tiieiotis and infectious dlM'
sell. KeepYoril-
I'lnk Kyo, ttplwwtli
"Tloari r"B",d'spoHN.s DISTEMPER COMPOUND.
Absolutely safe for all a«en. One bottle
....... . .. Wrlto
sVoHN'MEii'lC^L COM^PANY/'chenHsls'anVBacu'nolooials, (ioSHENri*NOiANA
An insult is only mud thrown ac.
you, and like mud is best brushed aft*
when given time to dry.—Ivan Panln.
Out of the Frying Pan.
David Starr Jordan, a peace meet-
ing at the Hotel Aster in New York,
said to a reporter:
"Half the world at war, and the
counsel we are getting Is that we
must arm more heavily. That counsel
reminds me of the African kings.
"An African king feasted a white ex-
plorer royally. Then, at the end of
the feast, 300 girls were led forward.
" 'Choose from among these 300,'
said the king, a wife.'
"Hut the explorer blushed and stam-
mered: *
" Oh, but if 1 took one, then the re-
maining 299 would be jealous.'
" 'That is easily remedied,' the king
answered. 'Take all.' "
snip 1
YOUR]
TO U9 FOR BEST tES0LT9
CHEAP ?£3jrAgnce BATES
LIBERAL LOANS MADE WRIlfcUS'
COYNE BROTHERS
118 W. SOUTH WATER ST.. CHICAGO
PATENTS
WntHou R.Colcninn,Wft.Hfil
linfton. 1 .C. Hooksfree.
i.st referent**. Jieut remilta.
For thrush, cleanse and dry the foot
and make thorough applications of
Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh. Adv.
A man never wants a thing after he
gets it half as bad as he thought he
did while chasing it.
His Mistake.
"John," she said to her husband,
who was grumbling over his breakfast,
"your love has grown cold."
"No, it hasn't," he snapped; "but my
breakfast has."
"That's just it! If your love hadn't
grown cold you wouldn't have noticed
that your breakfast had."—Stray Sto-
ries.
Nothing equals Dean's Mentholated Cough
Drops for Bronchial weakness, sore chests,
ind throat troubles—5c at all Druggists.
We are making today the memory
of tomorrow.—J. R. Miller.
Wichita Directory
Will Trade Wichita Residence
Electric and ;zu iltfhts. hot water ho&tlng f ysU in,
rimuis larj;e burn; located 1127 N. Toi*rka A ve.
Easily worth 110.00(1. Will trade on a hahls ut l-.t.lHJO
for a well locnted Kunsas farm, prefer alfalfa land.
If you ure eon.Inn to Wichita to live fc.-n-& your
chance toyetasplendlcl houieon a trad". Please wita
J. W. Peck. 831 N. tmporla, Wichita, Kansas
SECOND HAND AADQ
ALL MAKES vHnO
Full line Accessories, Odd Radiators,
Wind Shields, Axles, etc. THE JONES
AUTO EXCHANGE, 114, 116, 118,
120 N. Topeka Ave., Wichita, Kansas
w. n. u., wichita, no. 6-1915.
Willing to Oblige.
"I just dropped in to see If you could
let me have five."
"Make it minutes, and they are
younf."
Beautiful, clear white clothes delights
the laundress who uses Red Cross Rail
Biue. AU grocers. Adv.
To work on, serve on, love on, un-
noticed and unpraised, Is perhaps the
flneBt heroism earth can show.—G. H.
Morrison.
Home Medicine Chest.
Keep your medicines in one place,
out of reach of children. Re sure to
have Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh on !
hand for emergency use. It should |
take the lire out of burns, heal cutB, j
remove soreness and be worth many
times over its cost. Adv.
What a lovely collection of pessi- j
mists we would be if we could see our-
selves as otherB see us!
Obstinate sores should bo cured by
Hanford's Haisam. Adv
Ijibor is necoBsary to excellence.
This is an eternal truth, although
vanity cannot be taught to believe or
indolence to heed it. John Randolph.
Deep cuts should be healed by Han-
ford's Balsam. Adv.
Narrow minds think nothing right
that ia above their own capacity.—
Rochefoucauld.
Waiting for you
Yes, waiting for every farmer or farmer's
son — any indu::rious American who is
anxious to establish for himseit a happy
home and piosperily. Canada's hearty in-
vitation this year is more attractive than
evjr. Wheat is higher but her farm land
just as cheap and in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta
160 Acre Homesteads are Actually Free to Settlers and
Other Land at From $15 to $20 per Acre
The people of European countries as well as the American continent
must be fed —thus an even greater deiaand for Canadian Wheat will keep
up the price. Any farmer who can buy land at $15.00 to $30.00 per acre
—get a dollar for wheat and raise 20 to 45 bushels to the acre it bound to
make money—that's what you can expect in Western Canada Wonder-
ful yields also of Oata, Barley and Fla^. Mixed Farming is fully as prof-
itable an industry as grain raising. The excellent grasses, full of nutrition,
are the only food required either for beef or dairy purposes. Good schools^
markets convenient, climate excellent.
Mi itary service is not compulsory in Canada but there Is an unusual demand for farm
labor to replace the many younu men who have volunteered for service in the war.
Write for literature and particulars as to reduced railway rates to Superintendent
Immigiation, Ottawa, Canada, or to
C. A. COOK
I2S W. 9th St., Kansas City, Mo.
Canadian Goverment Agent.
Booftutt of thOM ugly, grizzly, gray hairs. Us* "LA CREOLE" HAIR DRESSING. _ PRICK, SI.OO, rtiSlL
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Peters, Kay. Garber Sentinel. (Garber, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 18, 1915, newspaper, February 18, 1915; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc144830/m1/3/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.