The Week's Review (Apache, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1917 Page: 2 of 12
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THE WEEK’S REVIEW
Bn the
Promotion
of Health
It is imperative that
you keep
THE STOMACH NORMAL
THE BOWELS REGULAR
AND THE LIVER ACTIVE
ToThat End-Try
HOSTETTERS
Stomach Bitters
|jf|. is worth liviiiK wlini tin'
llrl in the next tiiwrtment in pructiclug
lit r piuuo li'siwii.
IMMEDIATE ATTENTION
ahntiltl he civfii to sprains, swellings,
bruises. rheumatism mid neuralgia.
Keep Mansfield's Made Arnica Uni-
incut finriily on tin1 shelf. Three sizes
—Ii5c, 60c und $1.00.—Adv.
Girls learnflie to skate prefer fat
uien as Instructors because they arc
so soft to fall on.
SOOTHES ITCHING SCALPS
And Prevents Falling Hair Do Cuticura
Soap and Ointment.
On retiring, gently nth spots of dan-
druff and Itching with Cutlcum Oint-
ment. Next morning shampoo with
Cuticura Soup and hot water using
plenty of Soap. Cultivate the use of
Cutlcum Soap and Ointment for every-
day toilet purposes.
Free surnple each by mall with Hook.
Address postcard, Cutlcum, Dept L,
Host on. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
If the average woman had to choose
bclwi-cn brains ami beauty she
wouldn't hesitate long.
IRELAND’S GLORY
THE BANKS
sf
avonmore
Gently cleanse your liver and
sluggish bowels while
you sleep.
Get a 10-cent box.
Sick headache, biliousness, dlzzl-
Hcbh, coated tongue, foul taste and foul
breath always trace them to torpid
liver; delayed, fermenting food In the
bowels or sour, gassy stomach.
Poisonous matter clogged in the In-
testines. Insteml of being cast out
of the system Is re-absorbed into the
blood When this poison reaches the
delicate brain tissue It causes con-
gestion and that dull, throbbing, sick-
ening headache.
Cascarets Immediately cleanse the
stomach, remove the sour, undigested
food and foul garths, take the excess
bile from the liver and carry out all
the constipated waste matter Bnd
poisons in the bowels.
A Casearet tonight will surely
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you sleep—a lOcent box
from your druggist means your head
dear, stomach sweet and your liver
and bowels regular for months. Adv.
« —————
Where a man's hair is ashy gray It
may he owing to the fact that lie had
money to hum and hunted It.
Weak, Fainty Heart, and Hysterica
can be rectified by taking "Renovioe ' a
heart *ud nerve tonic. Price 50c and >1 All.
innocence Is like utt umbrella. When
once It Is lost It Is useless to adver-
tise for it.
|T WAS the foundation of St. l’at-
B rick’s greatness that his renova*
1 tlon of Ireland was not a revolu-
* tlon. lie left old Institutions and
traditions untouched, wherever they
could be purged of u taint of super-
stition. There were septs and clans,
laws and Judges, hurds and kings be-
fore him, and they continued after
1dm. He built his church carefully.
To disunn polltlcul opposition he ap-
pealed straight to the heads of the
clans. He aimed at the creation of
a native clergy. He tried to give ev-
ery community a place of worship. At
Ids death 365 churches lay along the
routes his Journeys had taken; 363
bishops were distributed throughout
the land, 3,000 priests ministered to
the spiritual wants of the nation. He
attempted to throw Into the church
thus suddenly created a strong element
yf stability by systematizing It on the
models of the cunona and making ec-
clesiastical law effective In every de-
partment.
He did not believe In sanctity un-
ussoeiuted with education. Under him
religion created great monasteries, and
monasteries created great schools. Ity
those schools St. Patrick is a factor
in the history of Europe. Even be-
fore he went to Ireland he had seen the
days wlicn Ostrogoths established
themselves In Pannonla nnd 1 brace,
when the Visigoths sacked the Italian
peninsula from end to end and carved
out a Spanish kingdom within the do-
mains of great Itoine, when the Huns
rode their blazing course up the Duu-
ube uud the Ithlne almost to the
ocean; when the Vandals terrorized
Statin and crushed the power of. the
empire In northern Africa, when the
Kalian Franks took firm grip of north-
ern Caul. His long life stretches over
period during which the whirlwind
of barbaric Invasions swept away all
hut a remnant of the undent learn-
ings. ltut now the world went to
school to Ireland, and the Irish brought
their school to the world. Religion,
the ancient classics, law, history, nat-
ural science, agriculture, manual
training, the use of Implements and
the forge, all came within the scot**
of these Intense u'd practical schol
urs
Not without reason has the name of
St. Patrick been held In veneration
through these many generations.
There is nowhere u teacher whose
services for learning exerted so wide
an Intluruce in a time so critical for
all culture. There is nowhere a states-
man whose activity so completely re-
formed the character of uny people.
There Is nowhere such a national hero
whose fame Is sounded across fifteen
centuries and can still stir emotions
of enthusiasm far beyond his nutlon’s
shores. There Is nowhere a saint
whose teachings are blended like his
with the destinies of his nation.
|1 ere! Grandma, here'a a preaeol. Il
coma a dialanca. loo.
*Tia a little pol of ahamrocka and U
cornea addreaaed to you.
Yaa. all lha nay trom Ireland, and «b*
card bera meoliona more—
They were fatharad al your birtbplaoa,
on lha banka ol Avomuore.
Prom trained, do jrou tell ma? O. dar-
ling; ie il true t
Acuehla. Id ma feel ihein-and you aay
'inaa Iherv they grew?
Wall. 1 can acarce beliava Hi ia S
really what you aay?
Prom my own birthplace in trained,
poor Ireland, lar away.
I'm old, and aliff. and Iceble and in
darkneea —God be praned,
Yel, k.iie, bow il etire. bow my old
heart ii railed.
To led u here ao near me, the aotl that
lave me birth- .. .
Tbe very eoil ol Ireland, let me kiee toe
eacrcd earth.
Theee hlened little ahamrocka; I can’t
ace them, yet I know
They hriut ma back tbe eye>i|ht of many
yeare *|o.
And ftleamhil through the darkneea
cornea the vieion that I love—
The dear, green held, ol lrelaaJ and the
auuny akiea above.
I can •«, a. once I aaw them, when a
girl like you I atood ,
Amid the lur/e and heather; there • the
chapel, hill and wood,
there'i the Abhey, clad with ivy, aod
the river'* winding ahore
And the boyi and girl* all playing on the
banka vt Avoumore.
God hleaathe little ahamrocka than, for
calling back the acetic.
The beauty ol the aunahiue and the
brightneaa ot the green.
Through long, long yeara to ace rt. and
to ace it all ao plain
O. child I'm aura you rc amilmg. but
I'm feeling young agatu.
And though I'm truly thankful for the
bleeemgr that God'a baud
brought around me, Katie. 10 toil
great and happy land,
I can't forget the old home. inid»t CM
comforts of the new, ,
My heart is three parts buried where
these little ehamrocka #rew.
ERIN’S HOLY PLACE CALOMEL WREN BILK NO! SLOP!
For Fifteen Centuries The Reek
Has Played Important Part
in Country’s History.
[T IS In the month Tuly that the
greut annual pilgrimage of The
I Iteok tukes place.
^ The Reek, sometimes known as
Crouch Patrick, Is the Mount Zion of
the Emeruld Isle. For on its summit
St. Patrick Is said to have wrung from
the angel many promises for the sal-,
vutlon of the people he bud made Ids
own. _ ,
For fifteen centuries inis mountain
has played an Important part In the re-
ligious history of Ireland, nnd year
by year imople Journey by the thou-
sands up the mountuln, which Is ubout
3,000 feet high. It Is a steep and dif-
ficult ascent, occupying the best part
of three hours, und most of the pil-
grims make It In the evening, so as to
hold their vigil on the summit. There
I Guarantee “Dodson’s Liver Tone” Will Give You the Best Liver
and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Had—Doesn’t Make'You Sicki
Stop using caloraell It makes you
lick. Don't lose a day’s work. If you
feel lazy, sluggish, bilious or consti-
pated, listen to me! „
Calomel Is mercury or quicksilver
whlcji fa uses Tecrosis of the bones,
faiomel, when It £pm§s Into contg^
V'lth sour bile, crashes Into it, breaking
It up. This is when you feel that aw-
ful nausea hnd cramping. If you feel
"all knocked out,” if your liver Is tor-
pid and bowels constipated or you
have headache, dizziness, coated
tongue, If breath is bad or stomach
sour Just try a spoonful of harmless
Dodson's I.lver Tone.
Here’s my guarantee—Go to any
drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent
bottle of Dodson’s Liver Tone. Take a
WHY THE SHAMROCK IS WORN
Custom Not Only in Honor of the Saint,
but in Remembrance of Days
of Famine.
Few who put a sprig of shnmrock
In their buttonhole on the 17th of
March realize that these little green
leaves more than once kept the Irish
from death In dire famine times.
In 1506 the poet Spenser declares
that the war had brought the miser-
able inhabitants of Munster to a point
where they “flock to a plot of water-
cresses or shamrocks as to a fenst.”
In his “View of Ireland" he describes
this as the depth of ruin to which a
land formerly huvlng abundunt corn
und cattle had been plunged.
The troublous times continued und
the shamrock Is mentioned ns an ar-
ticle of food again and again. Fynes
Morrison. In 1598, writes that the herb
Is still “being suutched out of the
ditches for food.”
Withers in “Abuses Strtpt nnd
Whlpt” (1013) slugs:
And for my clothing In a mantle go
And feed on shamrocks as the Irish doe.
spoonful and if It doesn’t straighten
you right up and make you feel fine
and vigorous I want you to go back to
the store and 6et y°uE ®25£I’
fion’a LlveT Tone Is destroying the
sale of calomel because It is reaMlver
medicine; entirely vegetable, therefore
It cannot salivate or make you sick.
I guarantee that one spoonful of
Dodson’s Liver Tone will put your
sluggish liver to work and clean your
bowels of that sour bile and consti-
pated waste which Is clogging your
system and making you feel miserable.
1 guarantee that a bottle of Dodsen s
Liver Tone will keep your entire fam-
ily feeling fine for months. Give It to
your children. It Is harmless; doesn't
gripe and they like Its pleasant taste.
—Adv.
Consolation. •
Little Joe’s mother was the proud
possessor of a new automobile, which
she w as learning to run with some dif-
ficulty. Watching her efforts to hack
the car out of the garage one day. Joe
consolingly said, "Anyway, mother,
you know how to work the self-starter
tine, don't you?"
nnnnn
IRELAND’S ANCIENT GLORIES
That Knife-Like Pain
Have you n lame hack, aching day
nnd night? Do you feel sharp pains
after stooping? Are the kidneys
mire? Is their action Irregular? no
you have headaches, backaches
rheumatic pains.—feel tired, nerv-
ous, all worn-out? Use I>oun'« Kid-
ney Fills—the medicine recom-
mended by so many people In this
1 M-nlity. Read the experience that
follows:
An Oklahoma Cam
C I* Cutter. E.
Main St.. Wstongu,
Ok In »ay»: "I had
kidney and bladder
dtnnunc for year*
nnd was laid uiV for
»«*>ks My back wa*
*•> lame and painful
nt time* that I could
hardly move and I
had almoin given up
hope of wing cured
w a e a I heard of
Doan’* Kidney Pill*.
They re*tored me to
good health and dur-
ing the . past few
VC'-* I haven't lmd „
»lk-n of the old trouble.
Get Dose'* •» Any Slere. SO« » Bo*
DOAN’S",',”.""
FOSTER MILBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y
V...,I’"-1'*"!:Lv;'iu miUXSul
NoW be my theme, flibemioj' wvcient
fcloriej.
Druid moNvjmentr w\d Dtsrxub/orhr,
Tbll-rleivler conic tower/ v/bo/v
dote end
lr\Mwn bnueAniityJone/ toil'd to/Tnd.
Let vlt likeviA» ber nWdenrvg
abbie/ view.
Shrouded ir\ivy:tb« thorny old cwtle/
frovNr\& ipemendou/. een in ruin/’
In Education and Sport*.
Among the Irish educators lu Amer-
ica may be mentioned Horace Greeley,
William Raluey Harper and IN llliant
H. Maxwell. The Olympic games of a
few years ago were planned by Sulli-
van. Ilalpln and Mike Murphy. Mnr-
tlu Sherldai. the great all-around ath-
jete, Is Irltn, anti the national game
of baseball Is claimed as of Irish
origin.
River Shannon.
The Shannon Is the longest river In
Ireland and tbe United Kingdom. Be-
, low Limerick It widens Into un estuary
6<j tulles long and two to ten miles
Wide. Many Irish Imlluds huve beeu
a rltteu about ibis river.
Not until later was the shumrock
used us the national emblem of Erin.
Nathaniel Colgan. member of the
Royal Irish academy, says the eurllest
record of the “wearing o’ the green"
is contained In tbe diary of Thomas
Dlnely. who wrote In 1087:
“17th day of March yearly Is St.
Patrick, an Immovable feast, when the
Irish of all stations uud conditions
wear crosses In their bats, some of
pins, some of .green ribbon, uud the
vulgar superstltlously wear sham-
rogues, three-leaved grass, wftlch they
likewise eat (they suy to cause u
sweet breath). The common people
and servants also demand their Pat-
rick’s grout of their masters, which
they go expressly to town, though half
a dozen tulles off, to spend, where
sometimes It amounts to a piece of
eight or a cobb uplece, nnd very few
of the zeulous ure found sober ut
ulght."
A inter reference to the wearing of
the shumrock appears In the works of
Dr. Caleb Threlkeld, a botanist of the
early eighteenth century. He says;
“The people wear the plant In their
hats In commemoration of St. Patrick,
"believing that St. Patrick used the
three-lohed leaf to explain the Chris-
tian Trinity. This belief Is generally
said by antiquarians to have arisen
In the fourteenth century, almost a
thousnnd years after the time of Fu-
trltlus," who died In A. D. 493.
In that year, says the Annale of
Ulster, “Fatrittus, the arch-apostle of
the Scott (Irish) rested on the 16th
day of the calends of April (March
17) In the one hundred and twentieth
year of his life, the sixtieth year after
he hnd come to Ireluud to buptlze the
Scotl."
The Reek.
is a little chapel on the mountain top.
ltut it Is so small that few can find a
place therein, und most kneel outside.
The sermons preached are In Gaelic,
and the musses continue from day-
break until noon.
St. Patrick is on record as having
visited The Reek In A. L>. 441 and
spent forty days on Its summit, hid-
den from the world by the mists hang-
ing about the lower portion of the
mountain. The legend says that he
was assailed by huge black birds,
which only took to flight when he
rang Ids bell against them. The bell
rolled down the mountain, but an an-
gel cume nnd restored It to the saint.
All the men of Erin heard this ring-
ing of the bell, and It Is stated now
that It is often heard again.
Afterward St. Patrick was visited by
angels, and from their lender he wrest-
ed the following pledges: That as
many souls should be suved as could
till the horizon which he looked upon;
that on every Thursday seven souls
and on every Saturday twelve souls
should be freed from purgatory; that
whoever recited the lust verse of his
hymn constantly should suffer no tor-
ments lu the next world, und that on
the last day he should be appointed to
sit in judgment on the sius of GaeL
GOOD HOUSEKEEPERS WONDER
How they ever got along without Red
Cross Hall Blue. This really wonder-
ful blue makes clothes whiter than
snow. Get the genuine Red Cross Ball
Blue at your grocers.—Adv.
Good Way to Test Diamonds.
Suspected diamonds are frequently
tested by placing them between two
coins and pressed hard with the
fingers. It Is said to be Impossible to
make the smallest Impression on a real
diamond, hut, in the ease of a paste
article, the edges may he crushed. The
effect can be discerned by a critical ex-
amination with a lens.
FEW MOTHERS REALIZE
how many delicious dishes can be pre-
pared with Skinner's Macaroni and
Spaghetti. For this reason the Skin-
ner Mfg. Co. have prepared a beauti-
ful Cook Book containing recipes tell-
ing how to serve it in a hundred dif-
ferent ways. NVrlte Skinner Mfg.
Co., Omaha, Neb., for a free copy. All
good grocers everywhere sell Skinnera
Macaroni and Spaghetti.—Adv.
Solar Surface Temperature.
The latest estimate of the absolute
temperature of the solar surfuce is
that of F. Blscoe of Warsaw, whose
computation Is based upon the in-
tensity of radiation for individual
wave-length In the solar spectrum as
obtained with the spectro-bolometer nt
the Smithsonian astrophyslcnl observa-
tory. He gets an average of 7,300 de-
grees plus 100 degrees Centigrade.
Do Tell!
Uc—So you let Lieutenant Tipple
kiss you?
She—Yes. How do you know?
He—i heard hltu brag he’d smelt
powder.
FAILING MIR HEINS
DANDRUFF IS ACTIVE
Save Your Hair! Get a 25 Cent BottlA
of Danderine Right Now^-Also
Stops Itching Scalp.
Thin, brittle, colorless and scraggy
hair is mute evidence of a neglected
scalp; of dundruff-that awful scurf.
There Is nothing so destructive to
the hair ns dandruff. It robs the hair
of its luster, its strength and its very
life; eventually producing a feverish-
ness and Itching of the scalp, which
If not remedied causes the hair roots
to shrink, loosen and die—then the
hair fulls out fust. A little Danderine
tonight—now—any time—will surely
save your hair.
Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s
Danderine from any store, nnd after
the first application your hair will
take ou that life, luster and luxuriance
which Is so beautlfuL It will become
wavy nnd fluffy and have the nppenr-
nnee of abundance; an Incomparable
gloss and softness, hut what wilt
please you most will be after Just a
few weeks’ use, when you will actual-
ly see a lot of fine, downy hair—new
hair—growing all over the scalp. Adv,
*****
Four or Five-Leaved Shamrock?
Some suy the four-leaf shumrock Is
the shamrock of luck, and others that
It is the five leaved one that holds the
magic touch. This latter Is rare and
prized and Is said to grow from a de-
caying body, us the nettle is said to
spring from hurled human remains.
The shamrock of luck must he found
"without searching, without seeking."
When thus discovered. It should be
cherished and preserved us uu In-
vincible talisman.
*****
Presidents of Irish Parentage.
Presidents of Irish pareutuge were
Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson.
James Folk. James Buchanan, Chea-
ter A. Arthur nnd William McKinley.
Calhoun, also Irish, wild, "War may
make us great, hut peace alone cun
make us both greut uud free."
*****
All of His Own Race.
One enthusiastic writer tells us that
"in New York toduy an Irishman muy
rise In the morning and bnthe in the
water from Croton dam. built by Irish
Jumos Coleman; breakfast on Cudahy
bacon, then take the subway, plunned
by John McDonald, past the College
of the City of New York, built by
Thomua Dwyer, to his office In a sky-
scraper built by John D. Crimmins.
Arrived ut his office, he may cable to
Alaska over a telegraph line laid by
L)avid Lynch, order certain freight
sent by Jumes J. Hill’s Great North-
ern railway, and then may rest and
read Willlum Luffln’s New York Sun,
delivered by the Amerlcun News com-
pany, founded by Fatrlek Farrelly.
Then, If It happens to be springtime,
he may lean from his window and toss
a colti to the hurdy-gurdy man who
plays ‘St. l’atrlck’s Day.’ ’’
*****
Irish Leaders in American History.
The Declaration of Independence
has twelve Irish nurnes. Matthew
Thornton, Jumes Smith und George
Taylor were horn lu Irelund; John
Hancock, William Whipple, Robert
Treat Fulne, George Read, Thomas Mc-
Kean, Edward Nelson and Thomas
Lynch were of Irish purentage. The
secretary of congress who prepured the
Immortal document from the rough
draft of Thomas Jefferson wns Charles
Thompson, a native of Derry, while
Captain Dunlop, still another Irish-
man. printed It and published It to the
world. Captain Dunlop wus the found-
er of the first dully puper In l’hlludel-
phla.
*****
Wasting Time.
“Are you un efficiency expert?"
“Sure am."
“To what extent?"
“Well, for one thing, I think It ts a
waste of time to wink at a girl in the
dark."
is cruel to force nauseating,
harsh physic into a
sick child.
Look back at your childhood daya.
Remember the "dose" mother Insisted
on—castor oil, calomel, cathartics.
How you hated them, how you fought
against taking them.
With our children It’s different.
Mothers who cling to the old form of
physic simply don’t realize what they
do. The children’s revolt Is well-found-
ed. Their tender little ’‘lnaldeB" are
injured by them.
If your child’s stomach, liver and
bowels need cleansing, give only deli-
cious "California Syrup of Figs.” Its
action Is positive, but gentle. Millions
of mothers keep this harmless "fruit
laxative” bandy; they know children
love to take it; that it never falls to
clean the liver and bowels and sweet-
en the stomach, and that a teaspoonful
given today saves a sick child tomor-
row.
Ask at the atore for a 60-cent bottle
of "California Syrup of Figs," which
has full directions for babies, children
of all ages and for grown-ups plainly
on each bottle. Adv.
Sky Splitter.
Marcy, the highest mountain In the
Empire state, was named In honor of
Gov. William L. Mnrcy. Its Indian
name Is “Tnhawns" (he splits the
sky).
COVETED BY ALL
but possessed by few—a beautiful
head of huir. If yours Is strenked with
gray, or Is harsh nnd stiff, you can re-
store tt to Its former beauty and lus-
ter by using "La Creole” Hair Dress-
ing Price $1.00.—Adv.
The oldest fun in existence Is In the
museum uenr Cairo. It dates from
the seventeenth century B. C.
The gntsuma orange raising Indus-
try has been introduced Into Alabama
nnd Georgia.
Grippy weather
• this. Better get a
box of—
cmRjDcpwE
The old family remedy-ln tablet
form-safe, sure, easy totake. No
opiates-no unpleasant after effect*.
Cures cold* In 34 hours—Grip In 3
days. Money back if It fail*. Get
the truing box with Red Top end
Mr. Hill’s picture on it—25 cent*.
At hut Ore* Store
Tull’s Pills
enable th* dyspeptic te cat whatever ha
wishes. They cause th* food toaaaimUat* sad
nourish the body, give appatlte, and
DEVELOP ELESH.
Or. Tutt Manufacturing Ce. New York.
Irishmen Given Credit
The roster of the Revolutionary wnr
Is bright with Irish names. General
Montgomery was a native of Donegal.
Lord Mountjoy In a speech before the
house of commons declared, "You huve
lost Amerleu through the Irish."
*****
Ireland's Towers.
The towers, which are numerous
throughout Ireland, have been the sub-
ject of much controversy among an-
tiquarians. They are thought to have
been used us s means ot defense.
Sudden Death
Before nn Insurance company will
take n risk on your life the examining
physician will test your water nnd re-
port whether you nre a good risk.
When your kidneys get sluggish nnd
clog, you suffer from backache, slck-
henduehe, dizzy spells, or twinges and
pains of lumbago, rheumatism nnd gout,
or sleep is disturbed two or three times
a night—take heed, before too late 1
You can readily overcome such con-
ditions und prolong life by tnking the
advice of n fnmous physician, which Is;
“Keep the kidneys In good order, nvold
too much meat, salt, alcohol or ten.
Drink plenty of pure water nnd drive
the uric acid out of the system hy tnking
Annric, in tablet form.” You can obtain
Aniirtc, double strength, at drug stores,
the discovery of Dr. Fierce of invalids'
Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y,
WOULD TESTIFY
Norman, Okla.—“I certainly can
safely say that Dr.
Pierce's Pellets for
liver nnd bowels,
are the best rem-
edy I have ever
used for constipa-
tion. I used to
have constipation
Q which has been en-
tirely cured by
this medicine. I
also hnd nu attack
of nervous prostration nt the age of
45 nnd after taking Dr. Pierce’s Favor-
ite Prescription I am as well ns I ever
was In my younger days. I think this
ts a great medicine to restore youth
nnd health, nnd I heartily recommend
It to the women who nre suffering as
I have.”—MRS. ALICE BILLS. 409 N.
Main St
Pleasant Pellets nre for sale hy all
druggists as well as the Favorite Pro-
scription.
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Miller, John K. The Week's Review (Apache, Okla.), Vol. 16, No. 29, Ed. 1 Friday, March 16, 1917, newspaper, March 16, 1917; Apache, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc952177/m1/2/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.