The Ringling News. (Ringling, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 1920 Page: 2 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 20 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-V
' ' - ‘ ’Si -
'
THE RINQLINQ NEWS
i ' ‘
A A
A
f
r
Mil IS ASKED
! TO BEMEDIATOR
i ARMENIA-TURKEY TROUBLE
IS SOURCE OF THIS
I REQUEST
Says hostilities ost stop
V i -
fwnr la ought Capable of Undertak
tng Humanitarian Taak of A- -rranglng
Fata of Suffering
Nation
T i
1 Genera — Ilia council of the league
of nationa cabled President Wilson at
the same time as' messages of the
- same purport were sent to the various
i powers asking whether he will accept
the role of mediator between Mua-
tapha Kemal Pasha the Turkish Na-
tionalist leader and the Armenians
The test 'of the message to Pres-
ident Wilson follows:
“The assembly of the league of na-
tiona passed on September 22 a reso-
: lutlon couched in the following terms:
“The assembly anxious to cooperate
with the council m order to put an
and within the shortest time possible
to the horrors of the Armenian trag-
edy has requested (he council to ar-
rive at an understanding with the
governments with the view of en-
trusting a power with the task of tak-
ing necessary measures to stop hostil-
ities between the Kemalists and the
Armenians
"The council of the league has af-
ter consideration decided to transmit
this resolution to the governments of
all states members of the league and
also to the government of the United
States The object Is to find a power
which will use its good offices to put
an end as speedily as possible to the
present terrible tragedy
America Offered Task
The proposal does not involve a rep
etltion of the Invitation to aocept a
- mandate for Armenia The council
' does not wish to suggest an assump-
tlon of duties which might be unwel-
come but has felt bound to offer the
United States the opportunity of un-
dertaking this ‘humanitarian task
since the fate of Armenia always has
been of special Interest to the Ameri-
can people and the presldetn of the
United States has already agreed to
delimit the boundaries of that country
As the matter Is of great urgency the
council ventures to ask for a reply
with the shortest possible delay-"
' The -message is signed by Paul Hy-
mans president of the council of the
league of nations
BAKER REVOKES PERMIT
—
Secretary ef War Directa Subordinates
to Refuse Landing Privilege
Washington — Secretary 1 Baker an-
nounced that he had revoked permis-
sldo granted the Western Union Tele-
graph company last May to lay certain
cables at Blscayne Bay Miami Fla
The permit was Issued by the district
engineer at Jacksonville Fla and Mr
Baker directed Its withdrawal by tele-
graph Mr Baker made an explanation of
bis action He merely authorised
through his secretary the statement
that the permit had been rescinded
The announcement followed however
the statement in New York of New-
comb Carlton president of the West-
ern Union company that his company
had not only rights granted by act
of congress but specific permission of
‘the war department to do certain cable
work In the vicinity of Miami with
which ‘the navy department has for
months arbitrarily interfered" at the
request of the state department
CHINESE STARVE BY SCORE
'Millions Affected By Long Drought In
Provinces
I San Francisco — Chinese men wom-
en and children are dying by the score
In two northern provinces of China by
famine and countless thousands are
(destined to he victims of lack of food
i This was the word brought here by
passengers from China who arrived
bn the liner Tenyomaru
Twenty-five million Chinese are
Slowly starving to death because of
hunger and despite all measures of re-
lief only 10 per cent of this number
can be expected to survive
There are 26000000 inhabitants in
the two provinces where there is no
food Winter has set In and relief
parties are experiencing great difficul-
ty In rushing needed supplies to them
ln an area of 200 miles by 400 miles
-where the famine exists there has
- been only three Inches of rainfall In
ffift eon months
Hospitals Will Get Narcoties
New York-More than a million
dollars’ worth of narcotics soon will
Be available for use ' In hospitals
‘ throughout the country as the result
of seizures by government agents
Sere within the past two 'months It
'as announced by Frank L Boyd
aupervlaor of the prohibition enforce-
ment department ‘ The drugs princi-
pally morphine and cocaine will ' be
eat to Washington where they will
bo examined and standardised for
gpodlcal use
SICK OF mm SEEK FHJEF
ARE WITHOUT PROPER MED-
ICAL ATTENTION
-Treat ’Em Rough” Boys -Are Diseat-
' lolled and Aak Transfer as Re-
sult of Naval Board Quiz
Port Au Prince Haiti— There is no
doubt that many of the 1200 marines
on occupation duty In Haiti are sick
of the Job They want to go homo or
somewhere else It la s hard Ufetof
youngsters who are sent Into moun-
tain regions in the north along peaks
as high sa Denvsr
Often they are away from post for
weeks and they declare they undergo
many hardships the least of which Is
lace of Ice in a climate whore It Is
essential
Since the first session of the naval
board of inquiry in Washington the
marines have been hearing from
home folk anxious to know If they
are taking part In "indiscriminate
killings" Tlhs charge first made by
Major General George Barnett former
commandant of the marine corps and
corrected by him has gone over
where marines assert dedarlfig that
overtaken by the correction This
ths first statement has never been
week’s steamer brought hundreds of
letters all seeking the truth about
conditions The marine contend that
they are on rongb duty and then are
held up at home as rough men with
the gun
Major General Neville a member of
the naval hoard of Inquiry Inspected
every part of the fighting plant here
and found many things to commend
but declared it was not properly
equipped This he found was par-
ticularly true as to hospital facilities
There Is not an X-Ray machine on the
island and naval doctors In charge
assert they cannot provide adequate
service for the men Appeals for help
are said to have brought the answer
that there were no funds Haiti Is
not n health resort and there Is much
disease
The brigadier commander and his
staff have made every effort to keep
intoxicating liquor away from the
marines ' hut with almost every shop
selling 1L the task Is difficult It is
a wild thing Marines who have tasted
It say it Is powerful enough to drive
motorcycle
THE S00NERS TAKE TITLE
Drake Falls Heavy Before Oklahoma
In Final
Dee Moines lows— Unmasking n
baffling assortment of forward passes
perfectly received by fleet forwards
Bennie Owens’ Sooner won the Mis-
souri Valley championship by decis-
ively defeating Drake 44 to 7 This Is
the first year In ths Valley' conference
for Owens proteges -
After a 7 to 7 tie with the Kansas
Aggies on the Sooner’s home field a
much closer game wjs expected but
the mixing up of new plays combined
with the perfect work of the heavy
Oklahoma line showed that the "Cow-
boys" had again ths old form that they
possessed In 1918 and had shown la
ths Washington Mhuourl sad Kansas
games this year I
In spite of the light Drake line the
Sooner men ‘ were unable to tear
through it with much succesl and
early la the game resulted to Bennie
Owen’s old standby ths famous “Ok
lahoma Aerial attack"
After that Drake never had a chance
to win the Owens machine tearing up
ths Des Moines gang in the last half
for a score of 28 against their oppon-
ents 7
Oklahoma outplayed and outgeneral-
ed Drake and clinched Its claims to the
Missouri' Valley conference champion-
ship Oklahoma made one gain of 60
yards by the aerial route
ASKS FOR OIL SETTLEMENT
Secretary Colby Tells England U 8
Must Be Reoognlzed
Washington — The American govern-
ment has informed Great Britain po-
litely but firmly that It does not pro-
pose to exclude from participation in
the rights and privileges secured un-
der mandates provided in the treaties
of peace Furthermore It expects to
he heard regarding the terms of those
mandates before they are put in force
The position of the United States la
set forth In a note by Secretary Colby
to Earl Crucon the British secretary
for foreign affairs and the spedflo
question discussed is that of the Mes-
opotamian petroleum fields Mr Col-
by’s note Is dated November 20 and
was made public following Its delivery
to the British foreign office early this
week -
It is In reply to a British note of last
August 9' which has never been made
publio and which deals vflth the ap-
plication of the principles of equality
of treatment to the territories of the
Near East to be placed under British
mandate
SIX U S PRISONERS ESCAPE
One Man Under Life Sentence Evades
i Military Authorities '
Cherbourg — Only one of the seven
army court-martial prisoners from
Coblenz who escaped' from the trans-
port Pocohontas by breaking the glass
in a porthole is still at large He is
Robert J Watson who is under life
sentence
Four of the escaped prlaonersjrerf
retaken an4 t£o pther tf
DEATH TAKES
IAKELHA
OKLAHOMA NATIONAL COM-
MITTEEMAN AND MULTU
- - MILLIONAIRE
ACCIDENTAL O WOO FATAL
A - i i
Many Prominent Men ef the Nation
attended the Funerel of Noted'
' Oil Man and Itallread i'1
’ Operator ' - i
r ' omm r r
Ardmore Okla— Jake L Hamon re-
publican national committeeman died
here of a pistol wound received Sun-
day night Nov 21 According to
Frank L Ketch hie business manager
the wound resulted from the "acciden-
tal discharge” of a gun which Mr
Hamon was cleaning
AU trains and transportation on the
110 miles of railroad owned by Jake
L Hamon stopped and operations on
all leases of ths Hamon Interests shut
down for a period of one hour from
2 until S o’clock Nov 29 in respect
to the funeral of the republican na-
tional committeeman and deceased
owner of these interests who died
Nov 26 as the result of an alleged
"accidental discharge” of a pistol
Men prominent In the buslnese and
political affairs of the nation attended
Mr Hamon’e funeral Last minute
sickness in the families of some of
the prominent men who had expected
to attend prevented several from com-
ing i
In 1898 he was graduated from the
Jaw department of the Kansas state
university and immediately after his
graduation hs came down into the ter-
ritory to seek his fortune with very
little else in his pockets besides his
diploma His first Job was as s clerk
in a store at Newkirk When the
Klo wa-Coman ch e country was opened
to settlement Hamon went with the
crowd of new settlers to Lawton and
there became Lawton’s first city at-
torney taking a prominent part la the
orgalnsatlon of Lawton’s city govern-
ment Hamon was a doer of big things
One of his first big ventures was an
attempt at the building of a couple of
railroads ons from Lawton to Ard-
more and another from Wichita
Falls Texas to Oklahoma City This
project brought him a good deal down
In the southern part of the state and
he spent several futile years trying te
get his paper roads bonded
Then he became disgusted and con-
Jake L Hamon
eluded he would Just start on the Job
himself so with John -Ringllng of
New York City the circus man as a
banker he built by dent of hard work
thirty-one miles of good railroad from
Ardmore to Ringllng Building rail-
roads was one of Mr Hamon’s chief
hobbles It seems and when he died
he was perhaps the only individual
owner of any railroad In the world an
honor brought to him when he pur-
chased the Hamon-Kell road in Texas
Mr Hamon made his first venture
in the oil game when the Healdton
field came Into prominence as a pros-
pective producer When the first
Healdton oil was brought In Hamon
went over to thht territory "to look
things over" '
He did not get as excited as the
other operators in the field and pur-
sue wbat might be termed a Fabian
policy He did not appear as desirous
of getting rich "too quick” ' So he
Just waited for a spell and watched
them bring in one well after another
Then realizing that the fellows who
were bringing them in were generally
at their ropes’ Ond for ready cash he
"got a wise” hunch on the propinquity
of bis old friend "opportunity" He
began to buy production and bought it
at a very low figure Then by selling
It high he amassed a fortune of (5-
000000 within a period of three years
Oil Fine At Houston ' v
Houston Texas — Twenty-four stor-
age tanks containing 190000 gallons
of lubricating oil belonging to Humble
Oil and Refining company were des-
troyed bare by fire The lose la esti-
mated at (200000 '
Dr Stephanek Arrives In U 8- -
New York — Dr Roerick Stephanek
newly appointed Czecho-Slovaklaa
minister to the United States arrived
here on tke steamship Argentina from
Trieste Acoompaflled by members of
his family “ '
SPEED DED1S ME KILLED
DRIVER AND MECHANICIAN
5 DIE IN THE crash
- - -
100000 Spectators Witnaoo Collision of
’ ' Two Caro Bpooding At S Terrific
' ' Speed ' f- - -
' Los Angeles CaL — With ' Gaston
"hevrolet national auto race chant I
plan ' pilot and Lyle Jolee median-1
Milan for Eddie O’Donnell lying dead
In a Los Angeles morgue and O’Don-
sell said to he dying In a field hospital
st the track Roacoe Series trlth tears
streaming down his face nodded his
bead aa the checkered flag denoting
the winner fell In front of him as ho
grossed the line at the finish of the
annual 250-mlle moo over the Beverly
Hills speedway -
The annual speed classic which '
jost the life of one of the most fam-1
pus pilots In ths world and which Is
txpected to cost the life of another al-
most equally well known driver within
s few hours was won by Sarles in two
hours twenty-five minutes and twenty '
seconds an average of 1032 miles an '
sour - v ' - 4
Thousands 8oe Accident
’- More than 100000 spectators lining
the big mlle-and-a-quarter snpeedway
gasped with horror as ' the cars of
Chevdolet and O’Donnell came togeth-
er at the east end of the stand as the
pilots Here completing the 147th lap
pf the 200 lap grind Both were trav-
eling at terrific speed and as they
prashed both were thrown high In the
sir turning turtle and rolling to 'the
bottom of ‘the incline where both- pol-
pts and mechanicians were burled un-i
ier the wreckage
Chevrolet was Instantly killed and
foies died shortly after his removal
to the field hospttaL O’Donntll was
terribly injured suffering a fractured
ikull both arms broken and Internal
injuries His body was a mass of cuts
and bruises - An operation was decid-
ed npbn later in an effort to aave his
life although attending physicians
held but little hop tor his recovery
John ’ Bresnahan mechanician for
Chevrolet escaped with slight Injuries
Silence Greets Winner
Scarcely a cheer greeted Sarles as
hs crossed the lino a winner The win-
ning pilot pulled up at the turn a&d
with tears streaming down his oil and
dust-stained faoe naked for details of
the accident and the oonditlon of the
Injured men In marked contrast to
previous races where the winners have
been enthusiastically acclaimed by
hero-worshipping thousands the huge
crowd filed silently out of the oval and
those few- who Would have mounted
the winner on their shoulders Sarles
waved away with the comment that he
did not feel like calebrUlng
It developed at the end of the race
that Chevrolet had won the national
automobile racing championship for
1920 on a point basis Bosooe Sarles
Winner of the race being tar behind
BREAK GASOLINE RECORDS
Billions of Gallons Refined During 8ep-
tsmber
Washington— AU gasoline output
records were broken during the past
year the bureau of mines announced
Refineries produced a dally average of
16000000 gallons making the total
for the first nine months of 1920
(600 00000 as compared with 2900-
000000 gallons during the same period
la 1919
Consumption and exporta continued
high however the bureau said so
that while storage tanks on September
J held 298000000 gallons the amount
on hand ‘then was actually less than
that on hand August SO ’ - I
Exports for the first' nine months
of 1919 amounted to 465439992 al-
most 200000000 gallons more than J
was sent abroad during the same pe-1
rlod In 1919
HOGS TO PRE-WAR PRICE
Increased Shipments ( From Farm Is
Factor That Forces Decline
Chicago — Pte-war prices for live
hogs became general throughout the
United States Bet receipts from the
farms appeared to be the immediate
cause the total supply ot hogs sale at
the ten principal markets of the coun-
try being estimated at 182000 bead aa
against 124000 a week ago
In Chicago the market closed at
the bottom figures of the day the
lowest since December 16 1916 The
practical top at the finish was (10 at
-hundred Weight whereas on July 31
1919 hogs commanded (3360 the pin-
nacle point on record Five years be-
fore the curretn price was (815
Harding’! 8ister la U 8 Appointee
Washington — Appointment ot Mrs
Carolyn Votaw sister of President-
elect Harding as head of the sods
service department of the public
health service was announced by Sun
geon I General Cummlng Mrs Votaw
who recently resigned as a member
of te Metropolitan police force
000 Attend Funeral In Italy
ogna Italy — Nearly 100000 per-
son! witnessed the funeral of Deputy
Gloijaana the constitutionalist who
slain during the riot at the mu-
nicipal hall The wife and mother pi
the dead man followed the hears ‘
Jugo-8lav Minister Quite
ilgrade Jugo Slavla — Anton Tram-
resigned aa minister ot foreign
ilrs He will be succeeded by Dr
lenko R Vesnltch former Jago-
tv minister to France
b!
I'JIIAT IS D0III6
i
A REVIEW OF EVENTS OF WEEK
FROM ALL SECTIONS
WOULD HOLD YEAR ROUND
Drive New On te Rule (400JXX) for
Final Touches) Many Matures - --
- ’ In Line t
' Tulsa— All Tulsa city and county
la being told about the Tulsa Fair and
Industrial exposition that la planned
to be established here In time te hold
Its first fair next falL A hags enab-
ling drive la now being conducted to
raise (400000 to put over the neces-
sary preliminary work In aa earlier
effort more than (100000 was raised
When completed the expositon la ex-
pected to ooat more than (2000000
and compare favorably with the Texas
Iowa Missouri and Oklahoma stats
faire' - -
Aa outlined here the Tulsa Fair
and Industrial exposition will provide
the means of holding a twelve month’
exposition In northeastern Oklahoma
although during the regular fair sea-
son it would be Included ad the
schedule of fairs
Numerous amusements community
and other features are to be added to
the project '
10 OF HAS NEW HOME
Covington Lodge Te Dedicate Building
This Week
Covington — Covington’s new (50000
L O O F building was dedicated with
an elaborate ceremony lately
Supper was served in the evening
for Odd Pellews and their families la
the spacious dining room of the new
bull4ing
Degree work wee taken up in the
evening end all degrees were exempli-
fied Covington lodge taking the Initi-
atory Dllley lodge of Hayward the
first degree Hunter second end Enid
the thir ddegree E B Cline peat
grand master of Tulsa and O W
Bruce grand secretary of Guthrie
wen here to take part In the cere-
monies In September 1919 the Covington
L O O F Building association was
organised to build a new home Mr
Covington lodge and the building now
being dedicated is the result The
lodge has a membership of nearly 200
an die growing rapidly j -Vr
WEEVILS DAMAGE WHEAT
Stillwater Officials ' Suggest Early
Treatment to Destroy ‘
r Stllwater— Wheat stored in bins
end warehouses of the state this year-
is subject to more weelil Infestations
than for several years according to
reporta from many county farm agents
to the extension department ot the Ok-
lahoma A & M college Grain stored
under damp conditions causes it to
heat and soften making the grain sub-
ject to weevil attack the agent re
port and much of the toes already
sustained this year is -attributed by
them to improper storage
TJie extension department in reply-
ing to the agents suggests that In-
festations may be controlled by dry-
ing fumigating of heating the grain
the latter method being the most ef-
fective One method may he appli-
able where la another case it would
not be advisable It is explained and
farmers confronted with weevil con-
ditions are urged to consult experts
before treating grain by any measure
INDIAN0LA GIN CUTS PRICE
Decrease Believed to Be Beginning at
’ General Relief of Situation
McAlestfer — The Bynum Gin com-
pany near here announced a price of
80 cents a hundred a 10-cent reduc
tlon This is the first break In a sit-
uation which has been tense here and
presages other reductions and an im-
mediate opening of better relations be-
tween farmers and gin men according
to both sides"
Couple 8ay “13” Is Lucky
Henryetta — Thirteen has figured
strongly in tbe family of Claude
Peters and wife living near Henryetta-
the last thirteen years A baby girl
weighing thirteen pounds and the thir-
teenth child of the family arrived on
the twenty-sixth anniversary of their
wedding whloh ' Is thirteen multi-
plied by two The couple are -in no
wise euperstltltous and refuse to
speak of their number of children’s as
a baker’s dozen a bas been suggest-
ed by friends but boast of the num-
ber thirteen
Poultry 8how in December
Vlnita — The fifth annual poultry
show of the Craig County Poultry as-
sociation will be held here December
S 7 and 8 Mrs John Franklin Is
show superintendent with Wright Du-
pree as assistant
Muskogee Newsboys Get "Food ” ' -
Muskogee — Judge Robert L Will-
iams did not let his absence In Ar-
kansas Interfere with his regular
Thanksgiving day feast for the news-
boys The regular turkey dinner with
a few extra fancy trimmlnes waa
served for the youngsters
LAWTON PROTESTS RAI
Warned Will Take Hind to PrsvoaS
Inorease Being Granted-
Lawton — Women at Lawton’ took a
haad In un 'attempt of the- c)omanch
Light and Fewer Company at Lawtom
to secure an Increased electric nta '
when the Lawton clvio dub composed
of 8M women went on record against
aa tnersase At this tlme tnd’ votsd tto
appoint a eommittse to - attend tb
hsarlng befors the corporation
mission Daeamber 19 A similar
mlttee has been appointed by thw-
chamber of commerce to cs eperate-
with city officials te the ease
Application fat Increased electric:
rats followed ths granting of an to-
creaasd gas rate by4h oorporatiom
commission to the Lawton Gas ante
Electric oompany a subsidiary os
ganlsation'
r 1
Civil Service Examinations
Competitive civil service- examina-
tions will be held In three Oklahoma
towns Devpl Shawnee and Walters
on December 21 to -fill vacancies bn
tbe position of postmaster It was an
nonneed Tbe examination wee called
at the request of the postmaster gen- --
eral Tbe office at Sbawnee pa?
18800 a year while Dcvol and Wal-
tor pay (2800 end -250b respec-
tively f -
New Business Houses ct Henryetta
Hneryetta — Following to the wak
of the constant oil and coal develop- ’
ment In the Henryetta field four lum-
ber companies and two supply ‘ com-
panies will put In their opening
stocks within the next month A five-
story hotel and two office- building
and a modem theater with item
rooms end offices are also under
foliations ' -
Craig Farms Not Idlo
Vlnita — There la not an idle fan
te Craig county says George Thomas
county farm agent 'Ho has Just fin-
ished n search for a farm for a- rela- -tlve
and has had to advise ths :
go to an adjacent county
Vnaisl lLuj
oiBo o o nf — n bud o a e
Injured Workers to Reoelve State Aid
Cooperation between the state In-
dustrial commission and the stato-
board of vocational education te help
teg persona Injured te Industrial aor
cldenta waa agreed upon at a confer-
ence between members of the twm
agencies' '
Oklahoma soon will reoelve (1850 -from
the federal government to to
spent for vocational rehabilitation
Governor Robertson sccepted the fed-
eral appropriation by a formal state-
ment several weeks ago directed that
the two state industrial agenda
should unite to work with federal or-
ganization In nslng the money Thw '
final condition attacked to the Appro-
prtatlon was met by the meeting It
was said and the money Is expecteffi -to
he deposited with the state tree-
urer within short time - -
Opportunity for injured persons to -learn
trades for which: they may-
be fitted will he provided with the f4
eral money It is planned Compensa-
tion for accidents paid by order of tho
industrial commission may be used to
maintain the injured person while freo '
Instruction Is given in a new means at
Uvlihood
- - Governor Reps Lynching -
"A lyncher Is a worse menace too
democratic form of government thav -n
bolshevist who goes about waving o
red flag and throwing bombs" - Gov-
ernor Robertson said In an address be-
fore a meeting of - the Inter-RaclaJ
conference of Oklahoma in the house-
of representatives’ hall of the state-
capitol v
The governor referred to the two
recent lynchlngs at Tulsa and Okla-
boma City and deplored -the result '
of the Investigations Hearty applause '
greeted his statement that neither the
negroes nor the whites want social
equality He Insisted that they should -have
equality as citizens and that the
two races should seek to understand
each other’s problems by taking their ‘
point at view ' '
-More than a hundred and fifty ne-
groes and whites -representing BO
counties of the state were present at '
the opening of the conference by J -B
Thobura Negroes were decidedly -in
tbe majority
9 Counties Behind with School Report -Financial
reports of Oklahoma pub-
lic school have been received complete -from
all but nine -counties tbe state
superintendent of public Instruction
said The reports became due July 1
and are intended to cover financial
transactions of all school districts for
-the preceedlng year Money from the
state Bchool fund is withheld from
a county until its files its report '
To require more prompt reporting
next year 'ilson said he would re-
move any high school from tbe to-
credited list if It did not have Its re-
port on file by September 1 -
Counties whose reports are incom-
plete are Cleveland Garvin Tillman
Washita Harmon LeFlore Osage Ot-
tawa and Seminole The missing re-
ports are those of tbe county superin-
tendent! te all ercept tbe first twe
counties Tbe report of tbe Noble In-
dependent district bas not been file
from Cleveland county and that of the
Wynnewood school from Qarvim
eounty
t
5
f 1 S' T
I
1
I 8
I
-
c
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.
Spradling, D. F. The Ringling News. (Ringling, Okla.), Vol. 11, No. 24, Ed. 1 Friday, December 3, 1920, newspaper, December 3, 1920; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1918946/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.