Mayes County Republican. (Pryor, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1913 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Mayes County Republican and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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§oda fe
' - ' Proverb Contest 1 -' v
This may be given orally (like a
spelling bee) or it may be a written
game Limit each one to a half-min-uta
it played orally after the first
word Is named The class Is con-
ducted In this way: The teacher
mentions the first word of a well
known proverb the pupil called fin-
ishes It If unable to do so In the
time It Is passed to the next one and
so on down the line until some one
or no one finishes it
If the proverb begins with "a" “an”
or j "the" or any very small word
two or more words should be given
to start the pupil off To help make
out the list a few proverbs are given
here:
A stitch In time saves nine
All is not gold (hat glitters
Honesty is tbs best policy
A friend In need Is a friend indeed
A word to the wise Is sufficient
Half loaf is better than no bread
When angry count ten before yon
speak if very angry count a hun-
dred A bird in hand Is worth two In the
bush
A penny saved Is a penny earned
' Procrastination is the thief of time
Make hay while the sun shines
Never put off until tomorrow what
you can do today
Every cloud has a sliver lining
Appearances are often deceiving
Ble8ings brighten as they take their
flight '
Never count your chickens before
they are batched
A little nonsense now and then Is
relished by the wisest men
No news is good news
Look before yob leap
Out of sight out of mind
Let them laugh who win
He who Is down need fear no fall
More haste the less speed
Spoon Shower
A young girl who was to marry a
man not blessed with a great store of
this world's goods was the recipient of
this novel and acceptable shower The
girls twelve In number contributed
the price of a dosen spoons Each one
was dotfe up separately In tissue pa-
per and put in a lovely pie made in
the shape of a" wedding bell a white
satin ribbon ran to each place When
the bride pulled her ribbon a spoon
bearing this jingle was forthcoming
One spoon'for two
Oh! what fun!
But then you see
Ton two are one
'the rest of the girls each drew a
spoon and exclaimed that as they
just matched the one drawn by the
bride-elect1 they must all go to her
Street Costumes That Have
Found Favor This Season
For the costume at the left any colored face cloth would make up well
The skirt has a group of pleats let In at the left side of front buttons
and loops are sewn above the pleats
The coat baa a waistcoat collar and cuffs of light colored cloth buttons
and loops trim the front the sleeves are set In under wrapped seams
Drake-bat of satin set to a galloon band and trimmed at the left side
trim tba wrists and right idge of front vieux rose cloth Is used for ths
revere and collar
Hat of velvet trimmed with a feather ruche
Materials required: -( yards serge 4 H Inches wide lfi buttons yard
doth for collar asd revere 4V4 yards silk or satin for lining eoaL
The refreshments were a little out of
the ordinary so I’ll tell about them
First shrimp saird served In heart-
shaped cases with coffee and but sand-
wiches mixed with mayonnaise dress-
ing Then a delicious tuttl-fruitl in
beli-haped molds v
Portrait Party
Get common wrapping paper a light
brown or white and cut into squares
a foot and a halt each way Put up a
sheet across a door and have the light
from a lamp arranged so that the
shadow of a person's head w-ill be re-
flected on the square of paper - (
' A guest Is to be placed sideways so
that the outline of the face will show
on the psper With a heavy pencil or
a crayon draw the outline or profile
One guest at a time Is brought into the
gallery and the name Is put on the
back of the portrait
When all have been taken an assist
ant helps cut out the silhouettes
which are pasted on black paper and
pinned up like a portrait exhibition
The guests are provided with pencils
and paper and write down who they
think Is who
A prise Is provided for the one who
guesses the most correctly and if the
hoBtess wishes a consolation prize
may be awarded
Sheet and Pillow Case 8hower
A young woman who belonged to a
sewing club composed of six members
announced her engagement and the
other members planned this most
unique shower to which they asked
the men that Is each asked an escort
These girls conceived the happy Idea
which made this affair a reality
Each one made a pair of sheets and
a pair of pillow cases Then arrayed
In these ghostly garments they pre-
sented themselves at the house of the
bride-elect They all met at the house
next door and dressed The bride’s
mother had been taken into the secret
and looked out for the refreshments
which the men had sent up After the
surprise was over and the white cos-
tumes taken off it was explained that
the sheets and pillow cases would next
be seen neatly laundered and tied up
with sachets of lavender for the linen
chest
Primrose Day
If any of you happen to be enter-
taining on the nineteenth of April it
will add a touch of novelty to remem-
ber that this is the day celebrated by
our English cousins as “Primrose”
day and everyone wears a primrose
on his coat There Is a single variety
of this dainty flower that is perfectly
adorable in Individual vases at each
plate or at the four corners of the ta-
ble I speak advisedly for I sat
around the board recently where they
were the only decoration and the re-
sult was more than satisfactory The
large donble primroses In pots may be
used for prizes If bridge is played
They come in all of the delicate pastel
shades and are cheap in comparison to
other spring flowers which is very de-
sirable for most of us I forgot to tell
you what you may already know
viz: that Primrose day Is in remem-
brance of the death of Lord Beacons-
field MADAME MERRI
New Serge Dresses
New dresses of white serge and
white satin have the serge carried up
above the girdle where It ends exact-
ly as If the Skirt were very high In-
deed - ' '
Advertising
Talks !
CLEVER RUSE OF
A FRENCH CAFE
In Order to Revive Trade Pro-
prietor Did Some Matrimo-
nial Advertising
The Cafe de 1'Homme Heureux is la
a small street in Marseilles but in
spite of the name of this establish-
ment Marius Jocquart the proprietor
was not particularly happy writes
John N Raphael In the London Ex-
presa Business had been bad for
some time It was so bad that morn-
ing that Mme Artemlse Jocquart the
proprietor's wife had nothing to In-
terrupt her crochet work aa she sat at
tbs high desk Cesar the'walter was
asleep in a corner
Marius Jocquart unfolded the Petit
Marseillais He bad read all the real
news at least once already and was
now again perusing the advertise-
ments And presently a shout from
Marius Jocquart startled Mme Ar-
temlse and woke up Cesar
- “1 will tell It to you Immediately
my cabbage” said he to madame
"Wait then an instant while 1 write
a letter” Marius Jocquart composed
his letter on the paper with the neatly
printed heading "A l ilomme Heureux”
and the address read It over and
chuckled Then with bis letter In one
hand and the Petit Marseillais in the
other he went up to the desk and ex-
plained matters to his wife
Waiter Saw Them Laugh
Cesar watched them in astonish-
ment saw them laugh (a thing he had
not seen for several days) saw mad-
ame also write a letter and beard them
laugh again Then M Jocquart
(Marius) embraced Artemlse Mirandol
(femme Jocquart) and Cesar was giv-
en two letters to post Marius Joc-
quart had written to Mdlle Pelicie
Plinguet
Mme Artemlse Jocquart bad writ-
ten to M Hector Verinet captain In
retirement Cesar knew neither of
these persons and he wondered who
they could be all tba way back from
the postoffice
This was what Marius Jocquart had
seen in toe Petit Marseillais advertis-
ing columns Mdlle Felicie Plinguet
was thirty fair haired blue eyed with
a small dot and distinguished Capt
Hector Verinet was tall dark haired
of affectionate disposition and distin-
guished also The captain wanted a
wife the spinster wsnted a husband
Mme Artemlse had written to the cap-
tain in retirement M Marius had writ-
ten to the spinster so distinguished
The two letters had made an appoint-
ment for the following day at eleven
o’clock at the Cafe de I’Homme
Heureux
"When they find out that neither of
them wrote a letter they wilt be too
b’appy to mind” M Marius had said
"And the consummations" (which In
cafe language means the refreshment
ordered) "will pay for the stamps and
the letter paper" said Mme Artemlse
Two Matrimonial Advertisements
In the course of the arternoon Cesar
wondering greatly was sent with two
advertisements to the Petit Marseil-
lais "Bachelor distinguished good situa-
tion wishes to marry I-etters only to
Romeo c o the Petit Marseillais" ran
one advertisement
"Spinster with comfortable means
considered good looking would marry
honorable Mr Letters only Juliette
Petit Marseillais" was the tenor of
advertisement the second
“What can it well wish to say? 1
know not me” grunted Cesar to him-
self as he took the two Advertise-
ments to the Petit Marseillais office
and paid for their insertion as he bad
been told
Next day and the day after Cesar
was sent for answers to Romeo and
to Juliette There were sixty answers
In envelopes of every shade and size
“Things sre looking up” cried Marius
Jocquart jovially as be saw the bundle
“And they took three consommations
each those others and will return to-
morrow for I beard them say so"
murmured Mme Artemlse
A Game of Matchmaking
Then the envelopes were opened and
sitting on a stone topped table with
a little bowl of pins between them Mr
and Mme Jocquart played a little
game
"I” said madame “have here a func-
tionary retired with a small pension
forty-five years old”
"It Is well that” said Marius “I
bave a demoiselle an orphan twenty-
eight” ("thafa forty” murmured Mme
Artemlse) “with a small dot and a
disposition of thd most affectionate
There pin them together my blue-
bird” Bo the game went on After half
an hour’s work twenty-four of the thir-
ty couples bad been paired The oth-
ers M Marius paired at haphazard
“What will you?” he asked “We
will write to all If they like not each
other they will bave paid for the con-
aommatlons all the same”
“And those who like themselves
beamed Mme Artemlse “will return
and return and who knows to make
their repast of the wedding here We
shall be rich by old one ”
“We shall be rich my old branch”
£
4 The Smart Store Wins the $
Trade
' By Walt Mason -
'I I often go to Jimpson’s store
£ to trade my bard-earned chunks 4
m of ore for prunes aud kindred a
things there everything Is kept 4
so clean the atmosphere is so
T serene the patron smiles and £
sings There is no rubbish on l
£ the floor there are no cobwebs £
f on the door no corners foul and
Z dark no wilted things are ou
4 display the product of an an- —
1 cient day when Noah saileo 'he
4 ark
£ I’ve always seen a tempting
£ show of eatables as clean as £
4 snow whenever 1 have called: £
T the cucumber and lima bean £
I don’t taste of grease or kero- £
sene the gutter's strictly bald 4
-4 The clerks the smoothest are
J In town their whiskers neatly £
curried down their shoes shin-
£ ed np in style they all deserve £
£ a laurel wreath their clothes 4
i are natty and their teeth don’t 4
4 Jar you when they smile 2
And everything that Jlmpson X
£ owns Is slick as grease he X
spends some bones to keep 4
4 things np to date his wagons 4
Z and his horses are the neatest X
j on the streets by far his bar- 4
v ness simply great £
4 Some people say be’s a great p
X crank he ought to carry to the
4 bank tho wealth he thus ex- 4
i pends Hut he Is building np a £
4 trade that makes such caplng £
X critics fade and he Is gaining X
4 friends For every man w ho £
sees bis store Is pretty sure to
j go some more and buy his £
shredded peas his three-ply X
T herrings fine as silk Hen Davis £
pears and potted milk bis figs
i and kippered cheese £
A Oh Jlmpson Is a wise old
lad! No man could have a bet- £
- ter "ad” than he springs every --
’’ day A store that’s clean and X
v neat will make a hit with the
elite and bring the trade your £
“ way!— System
f 4
4 -- S
answered Marius and Marius and Ar-
temise embraced over the little sugar
saucers The plan worked admirably
Custom increased and multiplied In
some mysterious way a rumor got
about Marseillais that several mar-
riages had come to being in the Cafe
de 1’Homme Heureux There was a
wedding party there a repast of the
wedding as Mme Artemlse had
prophesied One of the guests was
actually one of those misters of the
"Petit Marseillais” He wrote an ar-
ticle of the most spiritual which ap-
peared next morning and which de-
clared that "the Cafe of the Happy
Man had made a man of the most
happy"
Sold the Trysting Place-
Whenever business dropped land
Marius was not content now unless
the custom at the cafe kept Cesar and
the two new waiters running ail day
long) two more advertisements were
published and Marius and Mme Ar-
temise aat up till the small hours pin-
ning pairs together and writing let-
ters with rendexvous at the Cafe of
the Happy Man There was no trouble
until an old maid who had answered
six advertisements and had been dis-
appointed half a dozen times con
trived to have the owner of the cafe
summoned before Mr the Commissary
of Police
"This advertising business is ille-
gal" the commissary of police ex
plained The owner of the cafe did
not understand
"What advertising business?” be In-
quired "I bought the good will of
the Cafe of the Happy Man eight days
ago I have not advertised at ail "
M Marius Jocquart and his little
cabbage Mme Artemlse had sold the
good will of the cafe and retired
A Decided Economy
“I overheard two rather elderly men
talking about the high cost of living
and the effect of advertising— newspa-
per and otherwise — regarding the high
prices for foodstuffs prevailing at pres-
ent" said a young suburbanite the
other day
’’One of the gentlemen Insisted that
ths consumer was paying for the ad-
vertising when be paid the market
prices for his produce The other said
that the consumer was getting his
money's worth because advertising
made living easier and better that
without advertising one would have to
chase all over town In order to find
out where he could buy the best good
for the least money and be would be
more than willing to pay for the mer-
chant’s advertising after the days
buying
I think the last named gentleman
was entirely right Advertising espe-
cially newspaper advertising baa made
life much eaaier and better than It
would be without It One's wife can
get the morning paper and alt in the
parlor and order dinner and compar-
ing tbia with former times when the
housewife had to go down to the mar-
ket and ‘scrap’ over a piece of meat
or some choice vegetables advertising
la much to be desired”
Publicity Neceasary
Whenever a man says that ths qual-
ity of bis product Is tba only advertis-
ing he needs we recall the words of
Pliny: "No mao's abilities are so re-
markably shining as not to stand lo
need of a proper opportunity pa-
tron and even the praises of a friend
to recommend them to the notices of
tbs world”
POULTRY FOR THE BOY
Desirable to Manage Them Sepa
rate From Other Fowls
Plan Given for the Construction of
Suitable House to Accommodate
Ten Hens and Male— Coop
May Be Enlarged
(By KATHERINE ATHERTON'
CRIMES)
The boy who has fowls of hit own
will want to manage them to aa to
keep them separate from the other
poultry on the farm The following
plan which la arranged to accom-
modate ten or twelve hens aud a male
has been found very satisfactory It
nay be enlarged for a greater number
dwaya remembering that each addl-
Jonal fowl meant from five to eight
iquare feet more of floor apace
The coop In question la five feet
wide and twelve feet long giving a
Boor apace of sixty square feet — five
or alx square feet per hen It la aix
feet high at tho front and four feet
at the back and is built from cheap
lumber and covered with tarred roof-
ing On most farms there are odds
and ends of boards enough to put
A Splendid Specimen
op such a coop except for the roof-
ing Aa no glass la used the only
additional expense will be for nails
hinge a few yards of cheap cotton
domestic and a little poultry net-
ting The door Into the coop Is put at one
end of the front wall It Is not closed
with a solid door but with a frame
covered with wire netting having a
curtain of muslin on the inside for
use In cold weather The upper half
of the remaining part of the front Is
also left open and covered with net-
ting with an Inside muslin curtain
in warm weather these curtains are
kept rolled up but In cold weather
they are let down over the openings
They should be large enough to cover
them well aud bave weights at the
botom to hold them In place If a
hen is run In and a rather heavy slat
thrust through the casing thus formed
they will stay In place very well
The only other openings in the coop
are four little square doorways eight
by ten Inches in size If the henz are
very large these may be made some-
what larger each way One of these
little doors should be In each end and
one In each lower corner of the back
wall They are closed with a sliding
panel set In a little frame which
can be raised or lowered by a wire or
stout cord Only one is of course to
be used at a time
In the center of the back wail two
feet above the floor fasten i frame
two feet wide and three feet long
carrying two rooBting poles This
frame should be hinged to the wall so
it can be raised out of the way when
desired Under it a foot from the
floor make a little platform of boards
to catch the droppings Do not fasten
this anywhere aa you will want to
take it up to clean It On the front
corners of the roosting frame put legs
a foot long which should rest on this
dropping board when the roost is
lowered In place Have both roosting
poles the same height not set so the
frame will slant
On the ceiling directly above the
roost nail strips of Inch boards so as
to make a frame the same else or
trifle larger than the roost itself To
this tack strips of burlap sacking long
enough to reach the floor and wide
enough to completely surround the
coop when they are dropped in place
At the lower edge put slats to keep
them In place as on the other cur-
tains On cold nights this makes
nug and yet not stuffy sleeping place
for the biddies In tbe warmer parts
of the country this Inside eurtain
will not be needed but In the colder
states it will givs ample protection
through the winter U should be
rolled up during tbe day
The nest boxes — two are plenty-
should be placed In tbe darkest part
of tbe coop Tbia will be against the
front wall In the corner farthest
from the outer door A box three
feet long and foot deep with parti-
tion In tbe middle and doors cut in
tbe ends makes a good nest when
turned bottom side up over a nice
deep bed of clean straw
SHE TURNED
GREENISH YELLOW
Her Sons From - Suggestion of
Friend Paved Way for
Mother Recovery
Wicomico Va — In an Interesting
letter from this town Mrs Senora C
Sea well says: “I want to say that I
cannot express the gratitude which I
owe to Cardut tbe woman’s tonic To
me it was Indeed a God-aend
Before I began taking Cardul seem--iagly
my days were numbered and
my relatives and friends despaired of
my life and why not? I had always
been so happy and cheerful which
changed quickly to misery and wretch-
edness My complexion turned to a
greenish yellow I had no appetite
and altogether I was a wreck
I had often seen Cardul advertised
and spoke of It to one of my friends
She told my boys who sold Cardul
and next time they came home they
brought me a bottle I had been suf-
fering tortures fdr eight or more
years I commenced taking Cardul
and before I had used half of tbe first
bottle I felt like my old self again I
look so well now my friends tell me
they don’t believe anything would kill
me- 1 certainly feel that I am a true
friend of and a living advertisement
for Cardul the woman' tonic”
The above letter explains itself If
your health Is low and your strength
Is waning take Cardul the woman's
tonic
K I— SV a- Chattanooca Medicine Co
udkf' Advteory Dept Chattanooca Term for
Sneii flifnaTiMi oo your case ana 64-pace book
Home Treatment for Women’ eent in plain
wrapper A dir
THE REASON
“Why are you going to church SO
early Mildred?”
“To pray for my sweetheart"
“But I didn’t know you had one”
“I haven’t — that's why"
A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY
a
The Rev Edmund Heslop of Wig-
ton Pa suffered from Dropsy for’ a
year His limbs and feet were swol-
len and puffed He had heart flutter
log was dizzy
and exhausted at
the least exer-
tion Hand and
feet were cold
and be had auch
a dragging sensa-
tion across tbs
loins that It was
difficult to move
After using S
Rev E Hestop of Dodd
Kidney Pills the swelling disappear-
ed and be felt bimaelf again He saya
be has been benefited and blessed by
the use of Dodds Kidney Pills Sev-
eral months later he wrote: I hare
not changed my faith In your remedy
since the above statement was author-
ized Correspond with Rev E Hes-
lop about this wonderful remedy
Dodds Kidney Pills 50c per box at
your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co
Buffalo N Y Write for Household
Hints also muale of National Anthem
(English and German words) and re-
cipes for dainty dishes All 3 sent free
Adv
Costly City Improvements
If all the buildings torn doxra an-
nually in the borough of Manhattan
In New York city could be assem-
bled they would make a good-sized
town Last year the number of b"lla-
lugs demolished was 819 and a gar!
tank brought the total demolitions to
820 Tbe front feet measurement of
the bouses pulled down was 24875
or approximately four and three-quarter
miles Nine houses out of ten de-
stroyed were four stories high
Not Much
"Do you believe in auto hypno-
tism?" "Well I've never seen one hypno-
tized yet"
Money la n mask that makes some
vices look like virtues
QUININE AND IRON-THE MOST
EFFECTUAL GENERAL TONIC
Crave’ Tasteless thill Tonic Combine both
in T stteleu iorm Tbe Quinine drives
mil Malaria and the Iron builds up
tba System For Adults and
Children
Von kndw what yoe ar 'taking when
foe take CROVB'9 TASTELESS chill
ON1C recognised for 30 years through-
out the South as tba standard Malaria
Chill and Fever Remedy and General
Strengthening Tonic It la a strong a
tbe etrongeat hitter tonic but yoq do nut
taste tbe bitter becana tb ingredients
do not dissolve in the mouth but do dis-
solve readily in the acidiof the stomach
Guaranteed by your Druggist W mean
4t 90c
There Is Only On “BROMO QUININE
Look for signature oi R W GROVE on
Shorthand Typewriter
A new machine called the eleno-
type ha been Invented which en-
ables tba shorthand writer to get
from 400 to 600 word a minute upon
paper In an absolutely correct and
accurate form The boai of operat-
ing a machine is phonetic spelling It
Is but a shorthand typewriter While
the nork done Is virtually the aame as
done by shorthand it haa the advan-
tage of being recorded in plain Eng-
lish characters
- His Sarcastic Fling
“I don't like to Invite Mrs Parveno
to my bridge party and yet abe a
sure loser and good pay?"
“1 don’t think you are going to get
her money without her company"
said the aarcastia husband “What
do you expect her to do frame your
invitation and mail you a check?"
will natirva NFBVore hErareaioJf
ANI lOW SPIRITS
Tb Old Stands id ssnsrsl at rangtheslftf Rts'A
OHttVtlt TAHTBIash chill TUNU: annaaa la
livpr to teflon drltwi out ktslifls And band np
syntBiD A urn Appetiser and WA4 4iaUAo
4UlU and cbUdrow WmbIa
No Cordelia an oaiifled man isn't
necessarily hard to get acquainted
with
Dr Pieros' Pellets small sugsr-eoated
easy to lake as oandy regulate sad Invigorate
stomach liver and bowels Do not gripe Adv
An open confession may be good
for tbe soul but It's apt to disfigure
a reputation
Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup toe Chlldraw
teething eoftene tbe guaae redneee Infleeawe
ttonhllnys pelnnaree wind nolle Jha a aottleMs
The wife of a shiftless man ex-
cuses him on tho ground that be
means well
p a eg
"It’s No Joke”
U to have to endure dis- LJ
tress after every meal
No wonder you are
afraid to eat Just try
HOSTETTER’S
STOMACH BITTERS
before meals for a few
days and notice the
D improvement in your
general health It is
cD
for all Stomach and
Bowel ills Start today
On
CANADA’S OFFERING
TO THE SETTLER
THE AMERICAR RUSH TO
WESTERH CARADA
IS IRCREASIRO
il' IK a
Fr RobmimIi
Ul lh TRatvIets af
oollobo hwakalr
! aA AlberUUiort
( Ibofiundi of k
loMNMdi lfi wbtrt
to lb Bto ulmfMirf
la Imn tin will N
onh frua OiioM per
ere Thvs Laixli are
well idApaO Ui ii
rolag od (tui Alaibf
HCILUn lilLRlf PACIUTTtt
la May rtw tb rtiiBin it
i-aneda bevt feewa Pant to 4-
ttore of iriilrowt an lo
burt tlmo there will t be
outer obo be More thea
lea or twelve Mil fmo e in
of reiloer He l leer Ketee ere
AU4 by IsUTWBMMl io
1
reealo i4
oUioK
BoHel Coodltlost
The iMertreo Settler It at brMe
l WMirretAMdt Uelaaota
trooper lo a eiroac lood bo-
! aeorly a mIUioo of ait oee
people a I reedy eetlled there If
iou dee t re lo k
llloo of tbef'eoodtea (tettler it
Emeparisoi write aad eeod for
ler vitro roiwo ate to
G A COOK
m vKt men imu on m
CimflAa Oorernment A pent or
ridreee Hupwrtntemlent of
Uemlfreiiuo UUewe foil
HOT SPRIHCS ARKANSAS
Remedy Ends Constipation
Don’t worry and don’t take Calom
Put your sluggish Liver Id fine cc
dition and get rid of tick headact
biliousness and dizziness
Get n box of the famous HC
SPRINGS LIVER BUTTONS of ai
worthy druggist to-day 25 cent
Gentle blissful wonderful works
they surely are: take one to-night ai
fre tbe bowels from poisonous vn
and gaa You’ll feel bright and bapi
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Allen, Willis F. Mayes County Republican. (Pryor, Okla.), Vol. 6, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 17, 1913, newspaper, April 17, 1913; Pryor, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2330136/m1/2/?q=%22new-sou%22: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.