OklahomaHorses Magazine January 2023
28 OklahomaHorses • January / February 2023 t? t? �@li��� Insurance Agency Inc. Trusted in the Equine/Livestock insurance industry since 1993 Competitive rates with 5 different companies allowing us to write complete coverage for your horses, livestock and farm. Our experience and background make us an insurance agency you can trust. WILL YOUR BUSINESS PURCHASE AN AD FOR A LOCAL EQUINE RESCUE? We will do all the work, as far as ad design and content. All you need to do is open your wallet for a rescue. It can make a huge difference in the life of an innocent horse who is facing euthanasia through no fault of its own. SO WE’RE ASKING FOR YOUR HELP. WILL YOU HELP A LOCAL EQUINE RESCUE IN 2023? As you may well know, our equine rescue organizations are at over-the-top capacity, and are drowning in vet bills. They’re also short on volunteers and donations. It’s a sad, critical situation for our foster equines. If you can help, please contact Marilyn King at (918) 520-0611 or mking@oklahomahorsesmagazine.com if you can help with the homeless animals. Famous Near and Far After Robertson left Hollywood and moved back to Yukon permanently, he went to breakfast at the same downtown Yukon restaurant every morning at 9:00 or 9:30 a.m., where he accom- modated autograph hounds, Funk says. Locals recall running across Robertson, who frequented Poquito’s Mexican Restaurant on Main Street. Lifelong female residents tell of swooning when Robertson appeared in Yukon’s bowling alley. A star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame gives a shout to Robert- son. He received the Golden Boot Award in 1985, along with Er- nest Borgnine, Audie Murphy, James Stewart, and Amanda Blake, aka Miss Kitty Russell on Gunsmoke. Robertson was also inducted into the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum’s Hall of Great Western Performers. But Robertson never called himself an actor, saying he was a personality with a distinctive style. And Funk says Robertson was a kind and gentle person, always giving his time to those who wanted to talk to him or get his autograph. February 2023 is the tenth anniversary of Robertson’s death at age 89. Fans may still catch Tales of Wells Fargo weekdays on the GRIT cowboy television channel. And the Cheek family now owns Haymaker Farms. The Robertson structures and land are part of Cheek Ranch, a working cattle ranch that includes a monthly beef subscription delivery service. Penning her late husband’s biography in her 2019 book Bucking Hollywood, Susan Robertson says, “He didn’t compromise himself in the film business or in life. He was his own man. He didn’t want to do anything that a family couldn’t sit down and watch.”
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