The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 229, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1912 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:
THURSDAY EVENING. APRIL 18.
THE SHAWNEE NEWS HERALD
THREE
MADAM If YOU BON'TFEEL RIOHI
TAKEDELICIOUS'SYRUPOFFIDS'
HAHTK-CIiOGUEU 110 WE US, TOKl'ID MVKK AMI DEC'AVIMJ HMM
!> STOMA! II CAUSE THE SICK HEADACHE, WAS, BACKACHE,
SALI/OWNESS, BILIOUSNESS AND INDIGESTION.
All women get bilious, headachy
and constipated—simply because they
don't exercise enough. They don t
eat coarse food, or enough fruit and
green vegetables. Those are nature 3
ways of keeping the liver and thirty
feet of bowels active; but very few
women employ them. The next bea.
way is delightful, fruity Syrup of
Figs.
Nearly all ills of women can be
overcome with Syrup of Figs alon*.\
There is no need to have sick head-
ache, backache, dizziness, stomach
sour and full of gases, bilious spells,
gallowncsB, coated tongue, bad breath,
bad complexion, nervousness, and de-
pression. The surest and safest
remedy is one or two teaspoonfuls of
delicious Syrup of Figs. Try this to
night—you'll feel splendid In the
morning when the sour bile, clogged
up waste and poisonous matter have
been gently but thoroughly moved oil
and out of your system, without
nausea, griping or weakness. Your
head will be clear, complexion rosy,
breath sweet, stomach regulated; no
more constipation, gases, pains and
pches.
It is simply a matter of keeping
your stomach, liver and bowels clean
and regular. Then you will always
be well—always look and feel your
best.
But get the genuine—the old reli-
able. Ask your druggist for "Syrup
of Figs and Elixir of Senna." Re-
fuse, with contempt, the so-called
Fig Syrups sometimes substituted to
fool you. The true, genuine, bears
the name California Fig Syrup Com-
pany; look for this on the label.
One He Didn't Break.
The man who sometimes spoke his
thoughtB aloud had been more con-
cerned with the things of the world
than with things spiritual. One day
his hand fell upon a boo'; containing
the catechism of a certain Protestant
churcU, and ho was soon earnestly
engaged In reading the Ten Com-
mandments. For some time he pon
dered over the "Thou shalts and
"Thou shalt nots," which hid been
forgotten almost since childhood.
Then, laying down the book with a
sigh, he muttered, "Well, I've never
killed anybody, anyway."—Every-
body's Magazine.
CONDIMENTS OF VALUE
side dishes that give zest to
the dinner.
Two Ways of Preparing Stuffed Cu-
cumbers—Approved Fashion of
Serving Lettuce—To Get Most
Good From Tomatoes.
Fox Climbed to Roof of Barn.
A fox, hard pressed by the Blen-
cathra (Eng.) hounds, Cumberland, at
a recent meet, climbed a two-story
barn at a farm at the foot of Skid-
daw, taking refuge on the roof. From
this coign of vantage, and in full view
of the field, numbering some hundreds,
he watched intently the efforts made
to dislodge him. A terrier was put
on the roof, but the fox played hide
and seek with him; it was only when
a young man climbed up a rope
thrown over the gable that he slipped
down the face of the wall in squirrel
fashion, and, alighting, fell to the
clamorous hounds.
B1FT1NT LADIES TO HOLD
GENERAL BAZAAR.
The ladies of the Baptist church
will hold a general bazaar Thurs-
day. Friday and Saturday in the
store room at 112 East Main, across
from Kress*. Good line groceries,
dry goods, toilet articles, notions,
confectionary, aprons and rugs do-
nated by stores all over the country.
Lunch, consisting of soup, sand-
wiches, coffee and pie will be served
a tall hours at 5c each, and Saturday
a big chicken pie dinner will De
served. 16-4t
Know Little of Corn's Value.
The use of Indian corn as a food
product is very limited In the United
Kingdom, and there are reasons for It
other than the absence of taste. Ap-
parently the British public is not
properly enlightened as to the various
ways of preparing tinned corn, corn
meal and hominy. It would seem that
little is known of the vegetable itself,
as recipes In some English cookbook*
make very meaner reference to Its
preparation.
Education.
While the drift of our modern life in
the outside world may be toward tech-
nical and scientific education, the
drift in college is still toward the
great teacher—the man of thought
provoking power and of spiritual
capacity; sincere and genuine both in
scholarship and manhood, of whom
one can speak, as Carlyle spoke of
Schiller, "a high ministering servant
at Truth's altar, and bore him worth-
ily of the office he held."—The Cen-
tury.
British Interested In Qa*.
m addition to 14M fas undertakings
In England, there were last year It
British companies owning gas wo*fc
ob the European continent and ta
other parts of the world.
Poor Children Have Best Teeth?
A doctor in the British Medical
Journal makes the statement that the
most perfect teeth he has seen have
been in the mouths of the children of
the very poor—children who never
possessed a tooth brush. This physi-
cian states that these youngsters eat
more carbohydrates and less deter-
gent material; also, they eat fewer
sweets, and, possibly, which is more
to the point, there is something In
their organizations which resists both
sweets and starch.
Great Writer's Secretlveness.
Ibsen'6 secretlveness while com
posing a drama made no exception of
his wife. Says a biographer: "When
the Ibsens and Sigurd were traveling
by rail Fru Ibsen picked up a scrap
of paper that had fallen unnoticed on
the floor. The only words on it were
'the doctor says.' Conspiring with
Sigurd and putting the paper out ol
sight, Fru Ibsen presently asked hei
husband, 'What sort of a doctor have
you in your play?' After a moment ol
speechless horror, the poor man pour
ed out a torrent of protest. 'Was hia
desk unsafe? Were there spies in his
home?' And so on and so on." Even
when the practical joke was explain
ed to him it was some time before h€
was calm.
And Then Thsy Blame the Las*.
Opportunity has knocked at many a
man's door when he was down at the
ooraer saying "Here-s good luck."
No Limit to Its Stretching.
The most elastic fabri* la cne tromt
fum
First Mall Coach In 1784.
▲ theater owner was responsible for
the first mall coach In 1784. John
Palmer, Bath, England, saw that It
took four days to get his actors from
London. He went to the government
authorities and persuaded them to
start a number of coaches to carry
the malls, and that these coaches
should be built for speed and drawn
by the fastest animals In England. In
a little while a revolution was worked.
Deadly Habit of Hoarding.
Gladly, if I could, I would live for
ever on pine buds, however full ol
turpentine and pitch, for the sake c
this grand independence. Just tc
think of our sufferings last montl
merely for grist mill flour. Man seem
to have more difficulty in gaining food
than any of the Lord's creatures. Fo)
many in towns it is a consuming, life
long struggle; for others, the dangei
of coming to want is so great, thf
deadly habit of hoarding for the fu
ture is formed, which smothers al,
real life, and is continued long aftei
every reasonable need has been over
applied.—From John Muir's "My First
Summer In the Sierras."
No Room for Improvement.
11 was about 1720, at Amsterdam,
that Fahrenheit made his first ther-
mometer. which has -erred as a model
erer since-
Material Is There.
Some are thoughtless, some cant
think; there Is hope for the former.
—Success Magazine.
Uncle Pennywlae Bayet
It makes a wife purty sore to write
tor money and get nothing bask hut
a hard luck poker story.
For the Teeth. /
The chemical action of peroxide of
hydrogen upon gold teeth, which
makes an unpleasant taste In the
mouth, can be destroyed by using salt
with the liquid. Its whitening virtues
are excellent
What H« Miflht Expect.
"TTimmlni baa a flrst-rats vo!o«," !
■aid the critic at tbe concert; "but he
always comes in behind time." "Yea,
replied the man who lend money. "1 \
guess it's force of habit. Trimmlni'
notes are alwaye overdue."—Stray Bto-
rl«a
Inkstand of Hiatorlc Interest.
The Inkstand which was used by
Adam Smith when writing the
"Wealth of Nations," and which was
recently presented to Kirkcaldy Cor-
poration, FlfeBhire, Scotland, haa been
placed In the public court room of tbe
police buildings. Tbe ~ .ang Toun" la
badly In want of a muaeum, and the
oouncll intend to create one shortly.
Child's Last Earthly Vision.
Some mysterious revelation of thi
unseen as well aB an indescribable
pathos were contained in the lasi
words of a little girl, upon whom ai
Inquest was held at Gllllngham, Kent
England, recently. The child was ten
an age when the child-mind often hai
strange qualities for probing into th<
mystic. A witness related that sh<
cried out, Just before falling dead
"Look, mamma; It is over there,'
pointing to a corner of the room. Th«
mother inquired, "What Is over there?'
and the child replied, "My beautlfu
home."
8tuffed Cucumbers No. 1—Pare eli
medium sized plump cucumbers, too
ripe for salad. Cut off the stem down
to the seeds and with an apple corer
scoop out seeds. Let them stand for
ten minutes in cold water, to which
add a little vinegar. Then parboil for
three minutes. Drain and lay in Ice
water to chill. Drain again and fill
with chicken, veal or mutton force-
meat. Line a bake pan with very thin
slices of fat pork, lay the cucumbers
on these, season with salt, pepper and
minced herbs; baste with melted but-
ter and bake, covered with buttered
paper, for twenty minutes. Arrange
on a platter and pour a brown gravy
around them; garnish with parsley
and little pickled onions, browned
lightly in butter.
Stuffed Cucumbers No. 2—The cu-
cumber® should be of good size and
just turning yellow. Pare and halve
them crosswise, scoop out the seeds
with the handle of a teaspoon and
simmer in boiling salted water for ten
minutes. A filling Is made with any
cold meat on hand chopped fine, a
spoonful of chopped ham, a spoonful
of fine crumbs, salt and pepper to sea-
son and enough stewed tomatoes to
moisten. Each piece Is filled with
this, then placed upright in a deep
pan. A cup of thin brown sauce,
mixed with tomato sauce, is poured
round them and then they are baked
lor 45 minutes.
Stuffed Lettuce—Take five lettuce
headB. wash well In cold water, shake
and drain. Then carefully open the
leaves and put in the stuffing, which
should be highly seasoned, whether
cold meat, chicken or bread stuffing
1b used. A little tomato pulp, green
peppers, onion and parsley, with bread
crumbs, a sprinkling of grated cheese,
cayenne or Worcestershire sauce
gives a nice combination. Tie up the
heads with narrow strips of muslin
and place in a deep saucepan or boiler
with some good gravy stock or broth
and cook Just long enough to make
very hot through and th ough. Then
serve with gravy which has added to
it a. little aalt fat pork sliced and
slightly browned.
Stuffed Tomatoes—Scoop out the
seeds from round solid tomatoes, place
them In a saucepan containing a gill
of salad oil. Chop about half a bottle
of mushrooms, a handful of parsley,
four shallots and put them to stew
with two ounces of scraped bacon or
ham. Season with pepper, salt and
a little chopped th^'me and fry five
minutes. Then add the yolks of three
egga and at once fill the tomatoes
with this mixture. Sprinkle with but-
iered bread crumbs over the top and
bake a nice brown.
Marine*.
Marines—soldiers serving on ship-
board—date back to the year 1864,
when an order In council, dated Oc-
tober 16, authorised 1,200 English
soldiers to be raised and formed into
a regiment. More regiment* were
later formed, and by 1769 the marines
numbered 18,000 men. In the latter
years of the French wars they num-
bered 82,000. The marines are today
a feature of every navy, and in most
oountries officers of the marines are
equal in rank with those in the army
and navy.
Best Inducement for Work.
The simplest affection may become
a thing of beauty; the love of any
human being comes to our lives as the
great revealer. Hy this alone wo hear
and see. It Is also the great health
giver. Our work no longer continues
selfish when the thought of another
la constantly with us; there is always
an avsnue for relief from the deaden-
ing routine and tedium. Work with a
thought of some one else is living
work, and that which la living be-
ouwua beautiful.—Arthur L Salmon.
Joke by Accident.
Tou may wrong the child by the
name you give it In this matter the
girl baby has the advantage of tha
boy. She can change It at maturity.
A friend of mine whoae name was
Creamer had a daughter who was
christened Constance—very thought-
lessly. A good name for a baby, per-
haps, when you put them together.
But It took her twenty-three years to
change It and spoil the Joke.—London
Chronicle.
Amusing Trick of Messengers.
The stamp trick is a very common
one with messengers because of the
amount of amusement derived from It,
It consists In sticking a new stamp on
a atep or Bome prominent place, and
watching the variouB attempts ol
passers by to pick It up, which, of
course, are unsuccessful.—London
Mall.
Again the G. P.
"My gseatest profanity provoca-
tion," writes J. S. L., "la to be taken
to a church entertainment by my wife
and have to remain calm while a
gawky, Bix-footed thing which calls
Itself a tenor and has a faoe like a
carp, warbles, "I Wish I Were s
Rose.''
AT THE
FOLLY
I,EMI,EY & WILSON Managers
The Musical Comedy Snecess
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday
"Happy Hooligan's Troubles"
A Musical Comedy In I wo Acts
RUNNING 1 hr. 45 ml.
THE BIGGEST. AND BEST YET
16—Peoplc-16
DOORS OPEN
MATINEE DAILY 2:3# p.m. Any Seal 10c
Night, 6:30 to 11 P. M.
General Admission 10c. Reserve Seats 20c.
Commenciug Thursday Matinee, "The BAKE-SH0PJ
Alvo Theatre i
LKMLEY & WILSON Managers I
High Class Vaudeville |
CLAUS 6? RADCLIFFE
Comedy Singers and Eccentric Dancers
Pictures Changed Daily
This is One ol the Besi Acts Ever Seep Here
ACT CHANGED TUESDAY MATINEE
Ladies' Souvenir Matinee on Tuesday
5 and 10 Cents
Would Hardly Qo Around.
Willie—"Wonder what all the anl
mals did during thoee forty days In
the ark." Tommy—"Oh, they Just lay
around and scratched thelrselves. 1
guesB." Willie—"Scratched their
Helves nothln'! What'fi they scratch
for when there waa only two fieuF
•—Boston Transcript.
Her Artistic Appetite.
"The young lady seems rather frag-
ile," remarked the observant man.
"Yes," replied Miss Cayenne; "she
has one of those artistic appetites.
She doesn't care what kind of patent
food is in the box so long as the pic-
ture on tbe label Is pretty."
For Holding Face In Water.
To enable a person to keep his face
immersed In water for several min-
utes, as for facial maBsage, a Wash-
ington man has Invented a clip to
close the nostrils and a rubber tube
to admit air through the mouth.
Cold-Blooded Prompter.
A very small child almost bustei
up a matinee performance of a Broad
way show one recent afternoon. On«
of the characters, after having a rut
of domestic difficulties, grabs up t
bottle off a table, and cries wildly:
"Prussic acid tablets! Shall I tak(
one?" His "business" is to hesitat«
a moment, then put the bottle down
saying, "No—not now." But this day
while he stood clutching the bottle, s
little delighted voice plpeu up from
the orchestra: "Yes! Take one!"—
Cleveland Press.
As It Sounded to Him.
"I think," said Mrs. Cumrox, who
was arranging a musical programme,
"that we will have a mezzo-soprano."
"All right." replied her husband
"Don't bother me about It. Go ahead
and Bee an architect."
Every six minutes, day or night, a
railroad employe is killed or in-
jured—join the Yeomen Accident and
Life combined in one policy.
26-30t
Read the Daily News-Herald.
Longfellow Married His Heroine.
Longfellow was one of America's
writers who married a heroine of his
story. His second wife was the
heroine of "Hyperion." The tragedy
of his life happened when she was
burned to death in 1861.
Yeomen campaign la on
whirl 100 new candidates
initiated June 3, 1912.
witfh a
will be
26-30t
GermsSpreadlnSkin
.. Ti'„ Lnnn 'n.iA ovnarlanM irllh mnnv
Eczema, Psoriasis and other skin
troubles are caused by CTiyriajClw of
irerms at work in the skin. Unless
these Kerrns tire promptly destroyed
they rapidly multiply, gnawing their
way deep into the nensitive tissue.
This if- what causes that aw .il itch,
and what seemed a mere rash
nui prow worse and develop into a
loathsome and torturing skin disease
with its years of misery.
Hon t take any chances! Destroy the
Kerms at the beginning of the trouble
with that soothing and cleansing wash,
the D D D. prescription f«r Eciema.
A •itc bottlo will prove this to you.
We have had experience with many
remedies for skin trouble but have
never seen such remarkable cures as
those from D. D. D. Prescription. In-
stant relief from the very first appli-
catlon. . ^ _ _
We are so confident that D. D. D.
will reach your case that it will cost
you nothing if the very first full sizo
bottle falls to make good every claim.
If you have skin trouble of any
kind we certainly advise you to drop
In and Investigate the merits of D. D.
1). anyway. Wo know that D. D. D.
will help you.
F. A. Reynolds & Son.
The Living Room.
In choosing chairs for the living-
room, th© Individual requirements ol
th© members of the family should be
remembered, so that when the family
is gathered togethef there will be a
comfortable spot for each member.
Curtains, too, should be chosen in
accordance with the needs and de-
sires of th© family.
Sine© th© living-room is always
where th© privacy of home life is en
Joyed, th© curtains should, If neces
sary, serve as protection from pass
ersby.
On th© other hand, the room will
probably require all the light possi
ble. A happy arrangement Is often
mad© by having upper and lower cur
tains. Such sash curtains are mad«
in two tiers, and hung on two sets ol
brass rods, so that either the upper
or lower half, or both, can readily be
drawn aside.
Cure for 8norinfl.
Th© Invention of a light steel ba
to be held against the upper lips by
clamps to prevent persons from snor
ing is announced In the patent office,
but many persons are convinced that
a crowbar driven deftly through th«
cranium is th© only permanent cum
World's Longest Rivers.
The longest rivers of the world are:
North America, Missouri and Missis
sippl, 4.676 miles; South America,
Amazon, four thousand miles; Europe,
Volga, 2,300 miles; Asia, Yangtze, 8,-
000 milea; Africa, Nile, 4,100 miles,
and Oceania, Murray and Darling, L
600 miles.
We Are Our Own Fa tee.
One of the worst things that can
ever happen 10 a person Is to get It
Into his head that he was born un-
lucky, and that the fates are against
him. There are no Fates, outside at
our mentality. We control our owi
destiny.—Orison Swett Marden In 0uo-
oess Magazine
WANT ADS In the News-Herald, U NEWS-HERALD Want Ads bring
per word. results
Very Emotional.
"Ever see one of these barefoot
dancers? Their steps are symbolic;
•very step means something." "I saw
one of 'em land on a tack one night.
Her steps were full of meaning for
the next few minutes."
For the Typhoid Fly.
Agencies to kill the "typhoid fly"
used In the home should be non-
poisonous, or not dangerous to chil-
dren or adults. The following are
non-poisonous (a) being the cheaper
and easier to make: (a) A seven per
cent, solution of bichromate of po
tasslum made up with water and
sweetened with sugar. Place in shal
low dishes where0needed. (b) A two
per cent, solutfon of cobalt chloride
made up as in (a).—National Maga-
zine.
If the Alarm Clock Is Too Loud.
If the alArm clock rings too loudly
for th© peace of the household, slip an
elestic band around the bell to dimin-
ish the noise; the wider the band, the
stronger the suppression, and a few
experiments will demonstrate Just
what width is most desirable. I be-
ing accustomed to rise at the same
hour daily, find an inch band about
right; the alarm is more in the nature
of insurance against oversleeping than
a necessity to early waking.—Wom-
an's Home Companion.
Law Will Be Hard to Enforce
For lower Austria a new law con
talnlng various regulations concerning
servants has gone into force. It de-
crees that servants must no longer
be called "servants," but "employes."
The employer must feed the servant
properly, and the servant is forbid-
den to chatter or gossip to other serv-
ants about the private affairs of the
family. It is not stated how this pro-
vision shall be enforced.
Spirit of the Times.
It is an age of artificial devices
Rare indeed is the man, and rarer still
the woman, In whose physical make-
up there is not something false, eith-
er eyes or teeth or hair.—Prom the
Atlantic.
Lentils.
Pick the lentils over carefully, wash
thoroughly and soak over night in cold
water. In the morning drain, then
cover with boiling water and simmer
gently for several hours until tender
After this their treatment may b€
varied. They may be sauted in butter
with or without a little onion, then cov
ered with a brown sane© made by add
lng a tablespoonful of brown flour and
_ teaspoonful of vinegar. The con
tents of the pan may be made Into
croquettes by seasoning lentil pulp
with salt, pepper and parsley, mois-
ened with a little cream and shaped
Into croquettes. These are dipped in
egg and bread crumbs and fried in
deep fat. Serve them with mint or
tomato sauce.
Baked Eggs.
Butter a smooth saucepan, break as
many eggs as will be needed into a
saucer, one by one; if found strictly
fresh slip each into th© saucepan. No
broken yolks must be allowed, nor
must they be crowded so as to risk
breaking th© yolk after thfcy are in
Put a small piece of butter on each
and sprinkle with pepper and salt.
Set into a well heated oven, bake till
the whites are set If the oven Is
rightly heated, it will take but a few
minutes and the cooking will be far
more delicate than fried eggs.
Vegetable Salad.
Take any left-over vegetables, such
as peas, beans, carrots, beets, pota
toes, turnips, and cover with a good
■alad dressing and arrange on lettuce
leaves. This will make a very appetis-
ing salad.
No Chance for Him.
A Kansas City man has obtained a
divorce because his wife insisted on
keeping 36 cats in the house. It waa
a physical impossibility for him tc
kick them all around at once.
Never Straight.
Th© cocoanut palm has one peculiar-
ity. It never stands upright. There is
a Malay maxim to th© effect that "He
who hath seen a straight cocoanut
palm will surely live forever."
Daily Thought.
We live In an ascending scale ^hep
we live happily, one thing leading to
another In an endless series.—Robert
Louis Stevenson.
Making the Home.
A house is no home unless it con
tains food and fire for the mind aa
well as for the body.—Margaret Ful
ler.
8ecret Worth Answering.
Wouldn't you give a good deal for
a waiter's secret of getting money
without asking for it?—Atchison
Globe.
The Reward.
I am to see to it that the world Is
better for me and to find ray reward
In the act.—Emerson.
Knowledge Must Be Put to Use.
The mere possession of knowledge
is nothing—it Is totally useless unless
It is used.—Herbert Kaufman.
Seldom.
It is seldom that a man succeeds In
•verestlmating his own unimportance
Easterwood Bargains
A SNAP—328 N. Pottenger street is a dandy 4-room house
newly papered and painted and goes for $900
FOR SALE—A very desirable 5-room cottage, 200 feet from East
Main street, fine location, is a bargain on terms of
$100 cash and (15 per month payments.
FOR SALE—3-chair barber shop and fixtures. Price right.
TOR SALE—219 N. Philadelphia, good 4-room house, 50-foot lot.
Price - WSOO
FOR SALE—Good 5-room cottage, well, gas, 400 block, East 10th
street, with 100-foot lot; goes at a bargain.
FOR SALE—425 N. Tucker, good 4-room house, 50-foot lot; on easy
terms Price W60
FOR SALE—C>ood 7-Toom, two-story residence, 400 block. West
11th, with mortgage of $1,100 at 8 per cent; will
trade equity for smaller home with modern, con-
veniences.
TOR SALE—Modern 5-room bungalow, in 700 block, N. University;
is a bargain at fiWOO
SOR SALE—3-room house, cistern, 500-foot lot, 600 block, S. Louisa,
is a snap at $400. On easy terms.
FOR RENT
4-Room house, 621 N. Kickapoo $8.00
Neat 5-room house, 419 N. Aydelotte; is a snap at W/i
5-Room cottage, 1135 East 10th street $10
3-Room bouse, 1121 East 9th street W.00
Modem 9-room house, 208 West 9th street
5-Room cottage, 132 N. Market
Modern 6-room bungalow, 400 block, N. Broadway $2*
4-Room house, 900 block, N. Union -IMO
C Room house, 637 N. Broadway $12'/a
C. E. Easterwood
Phone 505
119 N. Broadway
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.
Barrett, Charles F. The Shawnee Daily News-Herald (Shawnee, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 229, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 18, 1912, newspaper, April 18, 1912; Shawnee, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc91644/m1/3/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.