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- 00041408 accessdate "2015-06-27".
- 00041408 date "Autumn 1960".
- 00041408 date "Autumn 1969".
- 00041408 editor1First "William A.".
- 00041408 editor1Last "Duffen".
- 00041408 first "John H.".
- 00041408 first1 "Phocion R.".
- 00041408 isCitedBy Jerome,_Arizona.
- 00041408 isCitedBy List_of_wolf_attacks_in_North_America.
- 00041408 isCitedBy Madstone_(folklore).
- 00041408 issn "00041408".
- 00041408 issue "3".
- 00041408 journal "Arizona and the West".
- 00041408 last "Lindquist".
- 00041408 last1 "Way".
- 00041408 page "289".
- 00041408 pages "233–46".
- 00041408 publisher "Journal of the Southwest".
- 00041408 quote ". . .they tell me there is one danger which threatens out door sleepers during July and August, which fills me with more dread than all the venomous reptiles and Indians thrown in- this new danger is from "mad wolves."37 I have always associated everything that is horrible with the disease Hydrophobia and I would run faster from a Mad Dog than I would from a legion of Devils. The wolves are numerous here and in the two above named months they sometimes go made [sic] and in this condition they will enter a camp or town or even a house if the door is left open and bite everything in their course. At this season the Mexicans generally sleep on top of their houses out of reach of this danger.This horrible disease is much more common here among the wolves than it is among our dogs in the States. They are a terror to the whole country. One of our men told me of six persons who were bitten in this thinly settled neighborhood last year. One of them was badly mangled by the rabid animal, and in one instance the wolf entered a house and bit two persons. But what appears very singular to me, only one of these persons died. I have always been accustomed to look upon this disease as incurable, but here they have a stone which attracts the poison and when it is applied in time it never fails to cure.38 This fact is so well established that I cannot reasonably doubt it, and it should be known far and wide that others may profit by it. Footnote 37:The wolf was common in the area at that time. Way's informant probably included the coyote, with the wolf, as subject to hydrophobia. Footnote 38: An interesting documented instance of the use of a madstone to draw poison from an animal bite. Described by the Encyclopedia Americana as " a vegetable substance or stone which, when applied to a wound caused by the bite of a mad dog, is said to prevent hydrophobia," the madstone has been celebrated in literature and is occasionally chronicled in the annals of Western lore. Some 130 cases of healing, attributed to the madstone, are on record; and there are reported to be three authenticated stones in the United States today. Madstones and Twisters, ed. Mody C. Boatwright, Wilson M. Hudson, and Helen Maxwell , is reviewed in Arizona and the West, v. 1 , p. 185.".
- 00041408 title "Overland via "Jackass Mail" in 1858: The Diary of Phocion Way".
- 00041408 title "The Jerome Deportation of 1917".
- 00041408 url "http://www.jstor.org/stable/i40004452".
- 00041408 volume "11".
- 00041408 volume "2".