Mr. Albert Miller, a Stockbridge Indian, of Keshena, Wisconsin, brought to our school his two daughters, Florence and Orpha Miller, and Mary Johnson and Martha Doxtator of the same tribe.
'April 13, 1888 INDIAN HELPER
A SULPHUR SPRINGS EXPERIENCE.

     Martha Doxtator has been living with some kind people at Richfield Springs, N. Y. She says: “It has done me a great deal of
good and I am very glad I had the chance to come here. The sulphur baths do a great deal for people who are suffering with rheumatism
and people are in the bath house nearly every day taking these sulphur baths.
     Some people drink the sulphur water cold and somedrink it hot. It is very helpful to some and others cannot drink it.
     One sulphur spring is in the bath house and the other is out in the park which is right there and the park is very pleasant to sit in.
     The band plays in the morning. I think Richfield Springs is just a lovely place to live and for summer resort for everybody.”

September 8, 1889 INDIAN HELPER

Mrs. Abbie Doxtator Schuyler writes that since leaving Carlisle she has been trying her best to live the
way she was taught while at Carlisle. She is living happily in a nice home; she has a piano, and, better than all else, four dear children. 

May 17, 1912 ARROW

Abbie Jane Doxtator Schuyler is also living in Wittenberg with her husband and four children Her husband is a carpenter and a hard-working man He has the reputation there among his Fhite friends of
being able to do the work of two men in the time of one other man

February 1913 RED MAN