The Jackson County Tribune (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 17, 1923 Page: 2 of 6
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THE JACKSON COUNTY TRIBUNE
LEON K? WEISE
FRARIX J IRWIN
13 ARE DEAD IN
OILJELD FIRE
BIG GUSHER BURSTS INTO
FLAMES AS SPARK
IS STRUCK
MANY MOREMAY BE VICTIMS
A Hammer or Rock Striking th Cw-
trol Valve As It Was Being
Charged Caused Spark
Which Startad Firt
Los Angeles Woman
Tells of Wonderful
Experience
DELEGATE SLAIN
TWO OTHERS ARE INJURED
IN THE SURFRISING
GUN FLAY
prwvMes pktual atlloa
! yaar
patratlaa lt ercvlccs
aa4 tkaaslag tbcaa
Them laa It aids
itgaadaa
Oh WRIGLEVS altar
vary aaal-taa Raw
aaaak better yea will
lad
Volumaa About Shafceapaar
In the lust il years more than 3'1 '
literary men aral women huve devoted tha D V A for Nsw York
thtsnwtve to the production of hooks
deuling with Shakt-apcur unil Ms
works and of then wiitr flvr or all 1
hundred liuve leeu foreigners who
have written In their own tongue Sir I
Sidney M-e ewtlumted Unit alt million
volumes (holing with the set were
published during the Nineteenth con-fury
The burglar's lot Isn't a happy one
This smoker says
Edgeworth gets
better and better
But it doesn't — and no
roYnent” are
jote
in
fdnt but ao we can refer
back to it farther down in the column
2144
St Lows Msaaowri
t d Prof Kef Coopaay
hteAmoad a
Gsuraa:
I irah to toko tba orportan'ty to
VII fvm what I tb tk o t jrou LJ(a
worib Plug SLro Tottoero
1 bn V bavt I r pa smoker for shout
19 froro sad during that tm feat
bnt orally inH maay dJfgrnt brands
04 blend of tobaen 1 eul st
- to had an Idoal blend vnil about
-s oniho ofo six n at the s'ljf a
t of O fn ltd I Uik4 I pipe of
Ldfvorth Plug Slice
I laee been ronatant mk of Edpu
wtb since end can truthfully nay
that I ay t y day io e-ry Oay
Tiirourui is gfiung betur end
belt- r
Yoa Ksy my permission to oee th
letter m nay oay yon fray d'-atra if
by no doing it odl enahia other pipe
Smoker to End e rty anl eni -v
ooia nod peneetiy eotialactory bu
MDoka
4 bg to remeia
£dfrvortli!y yovm
AL P W hitlock
We are indeed glad Edgeworth has
given Ur Whitlock auch unqualified
aatisf action but wa
feel obliged to aide-
step his sugges-
tion that "day by
day in every way
Edgeworth ia ga-
ting better and
better"
Our con-
stant aim ia
quits to the
contrary
Just as it Is
Edgeworth
-pieties thou-
sands and thousands of pipe smokers
throughout the country
If wa should try to "improve
Edgeworth or change it in the least
we might be doing an injustice to the
men who have smoked Edgeworth
for years and years and who expect
to find it always the same good
smoking tobacco
And ao we hops Mr Whitlock will
agree with us that all things con-
sidered it ia best for us to go on
making mors of the same Edgeworth
To add to our list of friends are are
always glad to send free samples to
anyone w ho cares to send us his name
and address
Just drop us a postcard and wa
shall immediately forward to you
generous helpings of both Edgeworth
1'lug Slice sod Iteady-Rubbed
For the free samples address Lams
£ Brother Co 68 South 21st Street
Richmond Va If you will also add
the name and address of your tobacco
dealer wa shall appreciate your
courtesy
To Retail Tobacco Merchant: It
your dealer cannot supply you with
Edgeworth Larus £ Brother Com-
pany will gladly send you prepaid by
parcel post a one- or two-dozen
carton of any size of Edgeworth I’lug
Slice or Ready-Rubbed for the asms
price you would pay the jobber
GKZEN MOUNTAIN
M Cu3 A
coerouN
f Mf yawn warrant w i loo
IHnal aaS I'
Pr J H- Oath
SOI Trtaita
-
WSg SIMM bf
0al)rmu TUAl
e n inhat tit
REjirs
J W UPliaOOCX kL'fwT VT
City H 23-1121
ii(L
IfOROVSKY CCCLY SHOT DOWN
Touts Wa wit ones Rjs:an Sa'd or
Biot Fati! S“et at Ytijt-ica ra
8a d m a Suta-ntnt Aftar
Bsieg Ar'aitai
- --
Lausanre— M Vorjirkv untlj-
den yue-i from Fat'icr Rjla at the
Lat’sxnne Iis dead ealn by a i-nlss
lot nici : ri olLi- lu :lie Hj-cja
arvice ard two of !: lieutenatr are
r(ii'ul vii'juifd i ach w:j tvo but
I in hie body
One of the wounIJ cien Is Her-
mann -hins a bolai-vlsi froii Her-
Hu who it the Ruslai pra agut
at btl tl-e fits and s-co I i c
conference the other 1 J Pidwll-kows-ki
Yoiot sky's you: Russian
ttci tary
The aschssln whose name is Mau-
jrlre Alt zander Cunrudl and vriioae
THOSE OF COL MARSHALL 'borne was In the canton of Grlxons
AND LIEUT VVED3ER
’lana Is Thought to Hava H t Moun-
tain S da In Fcg and Fall
Wreckage of Ship Ind citaa
San liiro Cal— Remains of two
men found on Cuyanmca mountain In
t h is county near the engine and f rag-
man of an airplane were postlve’y
Identified as those of Colonel Franc'
II Marshall and Lieutenant Charles
Webber whose fate has been a mys-
tery since they left this city IV-cemher
7 on a fight to Tucson Arlz Guided
by G TV McCain cattleman who
found the bones and wreckage two
reporters reached the spot after a
Light lost on the mountain In a
deie fog and discovered a military
cap in which Lieutenant Webber
name was 1111 legible
The skulls of both ofTlcers were
numbed and other bone were broken
Indicating that both died instantly
alter the fatal crash Into the moun-
tain wilderness at an altitude of near-
ly C'ioil feet At a leay fog lay
In the mountains at that time it la
sup-oed the aviators had lost their
way snd crashed against the mountain
hefote they had time to realize their
danger
An army' revolver and saber and
throe fire blackened silver dollars
were touud with the remains Cloth-
ing other than the cap evidently had
been burned In the fire that followed
the crash among the pine tree sev-
eral of which were broken off at tops I
TWO ARE BURNED IN FIRE
Entire Business B ock Wipad Out As
Caraga la Lest In Blaze I
Ft TVor'h Texas — Fir and Police
Commissioner John Alderman an 1
two flnnn-n were Injured recently
when flames prac'ically wiped out an
en'lie block In Ihe business d'strict
the main buildings of wlich wet oc-
cupied by the Gat-ert gaiage When
the fames vere placed und-r control
the loss was estimated to te between
$1 3"i" 0 ard f 2'MiOOu
The fire which origlnaf'-d on the
second floor of the building spread
to the paint dejartni-nt and In a few
momenta the entire structure was a
flaming mass Th northwest resi-
dential sections of th city for a time
was threatened because of Ihe strong
wind
I V W Strike Is Faiiur
Fan Francisco Cal — The general
strike of the industrial worker of the
w’oild called April 23 has ended in
Oregon and Washington hut is con-
1 1 nu: i g at Fan Pedro Cal The strike
was called by two branch'- of the I
W V th lumber worker and th
marine transport workers
Oil Price Cut h Three States
Pjillas Texzs -The Maimoha Petro-
leum company announced a reduction
of 10 ceui per barrel lor Kansas Ok-
lahoma and Texas crude oils Tor
giadeg over 31 degrees gravity me
new rate ranging from 11 30 for 21 to
329 degrees to I22J for 41 degrees
and ovrr
Sioux C'ty Gets Moos Convention
Tcpeka Kan — Sioux I'Jty Iowa was
selected for th next annual regional
conclave of th Lziyal Order of Moose
at th final business session of th
conclave In session her
Fruit Staamar Is Burned
New York N Y— An estimated losa
of llf'Ot'OO wa entailed by th de-
struction by fire of the Santa Marta
of the United Fruit Line's fleet of
streamer at a Brooklyn dock recent-
ly Ford Consul la Transferred
Washington P C-— Richard Ford
of Oklahoma recently appointed A
consul of the United States of class
8 has been assigned as vice-consul at
Colombo Ceylon
State Bank Is Rubbad
Guthrie Okla — The First State
bank of Heasant Valley eight miles
north of here wa entered by robber
fiecently Approximately 13000 q
bonds and aome money waa taken Tb
robbers tunneled under tb building
Death Stalks In Wake Of Tomad
Nashville Tenn — On person was
repotted killed and several places
were demolished when a storm struck
Edenwold a station eight mils f:
Nashville -
was seized Inmudiaiely after he ahot
the three II us dan a while they were
dining at the hotel Cecil headquarters
o the Ilusshin delegation
Corradl told the police that Ms an-
cle and brother had been tortured and
murdered by the bolshevlkl u'Jrlag the
terror In Russia His act In shooting
the Russians he declaied was one of
verpi ance
The assassin was seized a he at-
Umpted to escape front the hotel
Conrali is 3S tear old and was horn
a! Anders He expressed no regret
and admitted that he had formerly
served in the Russian army
CHEMICAL IS UNDER LEVY
Tariff on Calcium Arstnat Not
Ba Lifted Treasury Ruling
to
Washington May 9— Final announ-
cement was made at the treasury de
partment by Assistant Secretary Moss
that the department would adhere tr
Ita former ruling that a duty of 27
percent ad valorem would be imposed
on calcium arsenate whhh the sgrt
cultural departcien’s has recommend
ed to cotton plant ra for use In the!
fight to exterminate the boll weextl
Senator Harris of Georgia who hau
taken a picmlnert part In the fight for
free arsenic Insisted with the treas
urv officials that It had been the In
tectlon of congress to place Un the
list the arsenic in the form In which
farmers would use it The d-pait
meet however found no SKcial pi
vision tor calcium arsenate and do
dared It must be classed In the bas
ket clause with those of chemicals uf
on which a 23 percent ad valorem
duty was Imposed
SMALLER GRAIN CROP SEEN
Bureau Bases Estimates on Condi-
t on Existing May 1
Washington I C — Smaller crop?
than lt-t v-ar of winter h-at r e
ard hay - e forecast by the dpait
inert of ag icul'ue basing its es'i
ma'es on cor-J tiorj existing May 1
Product ion lue-r will be larg'-i
than the average ol the last ten years
Winter wh at sown last autumn on
the second larger-t acreage ever plan
ted to that crop s iT-red heavy aban
donment and on May 1 the area re
malned to le Larv ted waa 14 3 per
cent less than sown
Firm's Payroll Stizsd
Ft Louis Mo— Louis Fkralnka
present of the Fkralnka Constiuctior
company was tubbed of I3u payroll
money by three masked ard armed
bandits in Ft Ia!s coun'v recently
Fkralnka asserted he was earning the
payroll In a svch-i m his summon')
ard was approve! I' g tne company’s
plant when the bandits riding In
another car dov alongside Two o
'he men held him up while tn third
pushed him out of the car and de-
manded the morey
Kansas Wheat Croo Btlow 1922
Top k Kan — An 113 M'Hf'M bushel
wheat rrop In Kansas this year Is p-e
dieted In the fl : wt production forecast
of the season made public bv Edward
C Paxton statisMclan for the UnlteJ
Fta'es burrau of agricultural econo
mies This Is s'ightly below the crop
harvested this yenr Th report mad
on conditions up to May 1 estimated
th condition of the rrop st 77 percent
of normal This compares with a con
dltion of 74 iwrrect May 1 last year
and a ten-year average May 1 condi
tlon of 83 percent
German Given Death Penalty
Duesseidorf May s— Albert Schlo
getter one of the chiefs of the so-called
“murder gang" which has been car-
rying on a caippaign of terro ragainst
French occupation In the Ruhr wa
convicted by a cou-t martial and sen-
tenced lo death He waa charged with
espionage and sabotage One of Schlo-
getter aides Hans Sadowaky was sen-
tenced for Ilf at hard labor Five
other Germans of th “murder gang"
were given Jail sentences varying from
five to twenty years
Teapot Dome Bids Rejected
Washington D C— Bids recently
received by the Interior department
for a five-year contract to purchase
government royalty oils iu Wyoming
outside the Salt Creek and Teapot
Dome fields were rejected Each of
th bidders offered the current field
market price but Secretary Work de-
cided that Inasmuch as tb govern-
ment already was receiving these
prices It would be Inadvisable to con-
tract for so long a period at the same
figure
MRS GUSSIE E HANSEN
Mrs Gu-sle E Hansen of 11T West
T2nl Street Is now numbered with the
multitude of Los Angeles men and
women who have realized the wonder-
ful merits of Tanlue In relating her
experience Mrs Hansen said:
"It Is wonderful what Tanlue will do
for ore suTerin fr-m stomach trou-
ble nervousness and run-down con-
dition I have tried It
"Before taking the treatment every-
thing I ute disagreed with me ao that
I actually dreaded to alt down to the
table I suffered from constipation hud
aw ful pains across ruy back and was sa
nervous und run down I was In ms-
ery all the time
‘Tuiilac was helping so many
others I thought It might help me to
and It certainly bus Why my appe-
tite is Just splendid and my stomach
Is in such good order I eat to mv
heart' content Sly back doesn't
father me anv more arid I sleep like a
child at n'ght I can't say too much
for Tanlac"
Tanlue Is for sale hy all good drug-
gists — take no substitute Over 37 mil-
lion bottles sohL
Fox Caught in Trap
Caught In a trap in Lincolnshire
Fn-dand a fox drig-M the trap fr
fwn miles nnd sheltered for the night
In a ill-noed dog' kennel (-n a farm
It wa discovered In the morning a-id
ho Wed no fear hut -only gratitude
when tti trap wit taken o(T and Ih
wounded foot dressed The animal
hnd iilniovf to he driven anriv
CORNS
Lift Off with Finders
hurt a Mt 1 Prop s llttte
'Freorc" on an aching corn Instant-
ly that com f-p hurting then short-
ly you lift it right off with fng-rw
Truly !
Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of
“Freezone" for a few cents sufficient
to remove every bard com soft com
or era between the toes and the cul-liio-
without r-Teness or Irritation
Kidney L Bladder Reytedy
“Blanchard Tax
Oct I lilt
Yon stir m to writ and
t!l mu what tli Holm b u
dona for my ami It aura haa
cured him of Bright dlaaa
but h took t or 4 bottlaa be
for wa coi-M tall It waa dotes
him any food
Now ha la ax well aa ba
ever waa tho ha still taka a
I it 1 1 alone about on or two
hmtlM during tha yaar H
took alv-ut ao bottles of tha
Hobo mad ic laa
R M FI aware
Late in the winter of 1918
Homer Flower was suffering
from what the family doctor
said was "Brights Disease"
The story of his taking Hobo
snd the complete recovery
that followed has been told
in our advertising since that
time The letter above was
written in answer to an in
quiry of another sufferer ad-
dressed to Homer Flowers’
father
Hobo Kidney and Bladder
Remedy Is an herb remedy
— it contains no alcohol or
habit-forming drugs — gets re-
sults and leaves no bad after
effects Druggists sell Hobo
for fi jo per bottl& I
Corsicana Te— At least thirteen
wo kinea perished Instantly when the
monster producer of the Hughe Level-
oplrg oumiany'a No 1 exploded tea
Uiles southeast of here
A spark from a hammer or a rock
as the control valvue was being char-
ged at the ui Ignited the oil aod
gas fiom the gustier
A cuw of twenty men which came
from M xla has uot been accounted
for The crew was wot king in th
near vicinity of the well when It
caught fire The hot-es ot five men
have been r-coe:ed
Two Cant Ba Reached
Two other charred bodies ave been
locand mar the will but canuot te
reached so Intense Is the heat from
the blazing Inferno
Those recovered are ao badly char-
red that Identification is !nipossdl
One man who was on the derrick
floor with the crew escapej by run-
ning His clothing not being oil soak-
ed did not Ignite A boy 13 years
old escaped with him
One man said that the remains of
the dead men were where they fell
when hv blast occurred' and with ihe
well still burning It would be Impos-
sible for some time to remove them
The fire started while hundred
were In the vicinity rf th well and It
Is commonly commented that It is a
miracle that no more wer killed la-
stantly
A number of au'omoMI-a near
well were reported to have been
strojed by the fire
CAPTIVES FACING DANGER
Armed Ring ' I Thrown About
gands' Stronghold In Hill
Bri
Shanghai China — Report received
xa'a the t-audits who raided the I’e-
kirg t-xpresa recently at Stichow Pro-
vince of Klanrsu capturing a large
party of pt'acnee: Including foreign-
er have demanded iMex )
ransom lor all of the captive
KtcM u! tle sev nte-n f in-jitiieis
held bv the bandits In the mo mtaln
of south Shantung hate been rdeaio-d
and are now on tlo-lr way bark to
IJncheag the nearest railroad point
to Ichow near which they have been
prisoners for the pat week accord-
ing to meager reports received
The kidnappe d Americans ard other
foreigner held by the Suchnw bandits
tn the MU back of Linchlna face “dire
consequences” unlevs the troop sur-
rounding the hrl- ands' stronghold are
withdrawn according to a message
which ha been sent out fv ore of the
rap'Ives J n Powell American new
par-t-r nrtn of Fharghal
Necota'lor ir the release of the
bar ids' prisoner are cnr'lming and
It Is r- ortnl they are Taking a fav-
orable turn Tie re -o' ia t lor are
belrc conducted on 'lie spot by Ameri-
can French ard I'aliar consuls
IS DENIED SUGAR PETITION
Injunction to Prevent Dealing
turet Turned Down
In Fu-
New York N Y— Federal Judge
Maier announced that the govern-
ment' ar-pl'eation for an Injunction
to restrain the New Yo-k roffe ard
sugar exchange snd the New York
coffee and sugar association from dent-
ing in sugar future had been dented j end
The tejuporarp Injunction had been
at plied far fe-ndlrg final hearing on1
the charge that transaetions In raw
sugar futures as operated by the ex- 1
change nd Ps clearing asoc'atlon
const'tuti-d a conspiracy or agree-
ment in restraint of foreign and In-
terstate trade and commerce In vlo’a-
flon of the Sherman law and Wilson
tariff act
Band-ts Rob Barntdalf Bank
Parnsdall Okla— Pone are sconc-
ing th hills In search of two bandits
who robbed the First National Rank
of Painsdnll securing about twenty-
fir hundred dol'ars In money and a
large maount of traveler' check Th
bandits wer unmasked and on enter-
ing th bank forced th assistant cash-
ier and five others who were In the
bank Into th vault then secured th
cssh and other valuables making
their get away wtihout apprehension
Thirty Million Donated to Charity
New York N Y — Thirty mlllon dol-
lars an average of It 43 for each of
the twenty-one million citlxena of 129
American cltlea waa given to charity
In the last year through 2500 welfare
and philanthropic organizations which
hav combined under the “community
chest" plan with only one fund raising
campaign in each city It waa ahown
In th report of a nation-wide survey
just completed by the national Infor-
mation bureau
'Korn Sweat Horn' Bung
New York N Y — The onehundredth
anniversary of the first public singing
of Horn 8weet Home John Howard
Payne' famous song waa celebrated
In New York’s public School recently
when more than 900000 children sang
the old favorite at special exerclaea
Exercises also were held at Eaathamp-
ton Long Island about the old house
tn which Payne lived aa a boy "Home
Bweet Home" a number In Payne’a
opera "Clari or the Maid of Milan”
had Its first public rendition at Con-
rent Garden London on Mag I 1821
Leon K Wait ia American R4
Cross director for the Saionica dis-
trict In Grace Th Amancan' Rad
Cross ia caring for the health of th
refugees from Smyrna and other Turk-
ish occupied territory who fled t
Greece and ia feeding half million
Of thorn a day
MEXICANS HAYESIX COURSES
RECOGNITION BY U S TO
BE NECESSARY
Return cf Nat-onal Railroad To Pri-
vate Control Will Bt Settled
Later it it Thought
Mexico City M-x — Th Instructions
which the Mexitan commissioners
must unalterably follow during th
conference with the American dele
gates which began May 14 on ques
! Uon' hsUe h' wo coun
rU' w‘‘r glT-n th-n cntly at
I fl 'commissioner a Ramon
’ Ros " Fetrando Gonzales Roa had
with Fresid-nt Obregon and Albertc
Fan! minister of foreign relations
’ l“Mruf‘or‘®' h
commissioners must
Inxlst upon absolute respect for Met
lean sovereignty
Acre to non retroactivity In o fat
aa It affect petroleum right acqulr
ed prior to May 1 1917 or of article
27 of the present constitution nation
ailzing subsoil mineral product
Announce the administration's silt
port of the new oil law recently en
acted by the chamber of deputies and
now pending In the sera' which Is
intended to satisfy ohj-ctlon of for
elgn Interests against alleged retro
Activity anil coiUM-atory interpret
tions of article 27
Agtee to a settlement of the Cha
nilzal dispute grarting the United
State land which the Rio Grande rlv
er ha swept northward hut insisting
on indemnification of Mexico togethe
w-i'h an egre-ment tn arrange sonic
method for settling dli-putc In the
future Involved through changes oi
the river's course
Announce that the Mexican govern
ment will not permit more than 4f
1-ercent of United States capital to be
invested in the proposed national hank
of Issue leaving lull control of the
bat k In the government
Propose arbitration for the settle
riept of all questions In dispute b
twt-4 n the two eourtrle a't'T 'he qu-s
tlon of recognition of Mexico is set
tied
FARM WAGE TO BE HIGHER
General Harvest Labor Will B 4
Day Labor Exchange Resolves
Kansas City Mo— Ird'cutions arc
that wages for general harvest laboi
will be at least $! a day according tc
a resolution adopted here at th ninth
annual ronfeienr of the National
Fa rm Ioibor Exchange Represent
tires wer here from Iowa Nebraska
Missouri Kansas and Oklahoma
General labor conditions both on th
farms and la th cltl-s wer discussed
It waa decided that In general
farmer would be required to pay a
little higher wages to their workers
this year than last An upward trend
In wage wa noted In o'her Industrie
ard It was declared the farmer must
meet this Increase to some extent m
order to attract labor from the cities
Urge Expert of Ca'd Surplus
New York N Y— En ortatlon of
much of the gold that flowed to this
country because of th war wa urged
by S'-cretary of Commerce Hoover t
stimulate foreign trade and prevent an
era of unparalleled credit and oric
Inflation In this country and aid sta-
bilizing of European currency by mak-
ing their paper convertible Into gold
The United State has a gold reserve
of I30ononoono on bll’lon of which
Is not only useless hut potentially dan-
gerous to It he told an audience of
member of th United States cham-
ber of commerce
Payroll Band'ta Busy On Killed
New York N Y — Payroll bandits
worked briskly In New York attack-
ing three carriers of money and es-
caping with two of the payrolls One
bandit was ahot dead by policemen
who pursued him and his companion
after they had snatched 11700 from
two Rjckiieiigrra and fled
Price of Lead Raducad
New York N Y — The American
Fmeltlng and Refining company re-
duced the price of P-ad from 750 to
725 cent ter ound
Cantonese Army Captures City
Hong Kong — The Contooese army
of Sun Yat Sen haa recaptured Shlu-
hlng on the Writ river It is reported
here Th Kwango! troops are a!d
to be withdrawing from Shlukwan on
the North river to another line of de-
fense Florida Flower For Mr Harding
Washington— Mra Harding was the
recipient of a bouquet of Florida flow-
era on Mother's day as an expression
of aentlment of the people of the west
Florida section
A sure safe
way to end
CORNS
fa one minute ima rxa n4 the peH d
aMb Ur ScSuUaZ toe-sad Thrg
mm the — lintiua-ief n
Vo nrk iikwtlea from cuiuaa ao
rtnurr (rota oortumw aerda
Zma-psda prauc while they laraL
fl sntiorptici troterpmu ! toe
corns crlXonm bunion Get two
fewfimy dHl (ftWt IOfdMP(NkHf K
DXScholVs
Xino-paas
Hair m r Ikrrwi if TV Srtoff
U't Ct Mhu V bfkatCl fm$
ttn2rrMoiAnaxrrwuK
Put one on— th pain la gone I
To know
how pood a cigarette
really can be mad
you must try a
XsH) j
nuctr
mm
'ITS TOASTED
Tribute te Civil Engineer
From the standjuilnt of the artist
the civil engineer tyi" represent tl :
highest tyja of inusculine perfection
He bas the liniig'tiutlon to conceive
and the practicality and Intellect to
execute his conceptions — Emily Nich-
ols Hatch
Vaseline
uifwod
CARB0LATED
PETROLEUM JELLY
No skin break too small
for notice
Be very wary f cuts scratches
and skin aSraxions no matter
howxlight “Vaiclinc’’CarSoL
ated Petroleum J city — applied
at once— lessen the possibility
of infection
II (omrl in bottle—
at all druggiit and
general tore
CHESEBROUGH
MEG COMPANY
1 C anaolt'JaWaJ I
State Si New York
Ewnr "ValM frwodiact la tdroai
nwdd fwrnslugf ktianM mf iil dt
iittd fr7 0nd ttfcclwffWM
YOU ARE INVITED TO THE
OLD TIME REVIVAL
And Go pci of Healing Meeting
BIG TABERNACLE
TULSA OKLA
7t30 p tn Dailyt
2x30 and 7x30 p m Sunday
April 22nd to May 27lh
Raymond t richey Ermnut
A J RICHEY Son Lcwfat
COME AND BRING THE SICK
fne evil cosm lotocitt
That lltrW (ntrdnommrlonl)
wilted bv Raymond T Klchay vfkh
dome o much ood nd bacocnm knows
th world over ahnuld b md by ryyyy
mn woman nd child Only SC
Sand tea fay Samp! Th FuU r-— i-yj
Advucaw Boa S7A Hawks Tan
FORD OWNER!
PnVltnamtfiMsrfpwwfiw
Install a Positiva Timar Rallar
wt donbl lit of bU ft wUI run llko ow
Coat mU laproy atartlng mil
gowar Inuwlaciurr PRICK Sue — (paid
rosmvE twer roller co
ml taSchSs hmYniKT
Li ogam waa tad tor this looalltg
Mnv bwrk wlthoot avmtaa
ItHfMTa hXIVI fall in tka
trimn) n ITCII II ZtSl
RINilWORMTKTTRRorolhae
lirkioa klo dlcwaao prtro
TSc at ilruciu or dimes from
total Mam ra ltomastm
A to ao otto ai—!
Gray Hairs:
1i4d hf MU 9-Bm lair Oolea lUaair M
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The Jackson County Tribune (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 17, 1923, newspaper, May 17, 1923; Duke, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2342370/m1/2/: accessed February 11, 2026), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.