The Jackson County Tribune (Duke, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 17, 1923 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
TII-S JACKS OM-COUH TV TRIBUNE
A ' '
" — COMBINE bob sled and FLIVVER
i ¥ - c'! ' -
3 ry i J
43Sf r-
w w f
P’rf' :t "fib If () i lh
a
-
m'-'vI i
L
rr
pYoa pftotogrspti how croa Mg bob sled am a flivver 'tha blta-
idrp ahd atomia the p am winter throughout the MUldl West furnished the
ig)utirta for Dr II M Blegan at the left and Andrew U AmltTtuti right of
VYarntu' hllsu to Seek some means of travel lug over Ui snow-covered roads
tl'&e front wheels were removed and steel runners put la their place
r -- ' 1 '
RUT-PROOF TIRE IS 5
mu nAin an vrA NOT ON ANY MARKET
RAILROAD GATES
flptorist Begin to Realize There
Mon ' Room Behind a
Train Than in Front' j
The great volume of propaganda
rected at the evlla of carelessness
hen a "Railroad Crossing— m
-ook Listen" njgn looms 7tip Las
rought most niot‘lt t r a renlizatlen
at there la tnufe romli behind ft tfaln
an before ltff la lthsnmMng
a shock then that one reads a re
rt of 'the Chicago aafey cofncjl
iiiOvfThg qst27 per rant of the gisto
(kts'who anra-h' railway crossings
tarelealy are an Mindly Impatient gnd
0olbajv!y thst tTiej Isismrr t h cross-
Vg rt tecrfnfi vtjaliuriefif- tftvtded In
4n affort to make the dangerous spota
gwilpfoof
i - Drivers In Hast a '
Railroad crossing watchmen of 18
Iwda In and about Chicago last Tear
jted St7 raus ef rarelrae driving
St their crossings to tha safety council
Cf these reMirts PC or 27 Ier cent
Bdlcate that the drlveM Wvre'Ig such
baste to get over the tracks — to -"beat
tie train to It that Ihgy damaged the
lulpment pnoldcl to keel the crvss-
ft gs safe Disregarding warning belli
i nd the whistles of the watt tiaoiu
I any of them kept going even after
t ie crossing gates had started to te-
end It la tbis type of driver that
luaea the aafety engineer to tear Ms
l lr and have' a moment of terrible
1 ’Ubt as to whether trying to save life
h worth while ! ’
Fifty Per Cent in Some Cases
In some caws the number of In-
lances In which the gates were dune
nged' amounts 'to mere than fa) per
rhut The Chicago aad W esters
Il dlAoe reported 3 cases of w hich 17
rt-suliod in damaged equipment ludl-
rortwg that a driver tried to hekt'lhe
gates Of 51) cases retorted by lle
Illinois Central 35 bow el damaged
gates Light out of the 12 reported
-hr vfla North thre Electric tine were
“damuged gates"
' The work of the safety council has
done much to spread the "careful
Crossing" Ilea effectively Italic ed
'gutemen hare been Instructed tj their
fflclals to note the license number of
ftny car driven carelessly1-'T’"thefr
Crossings These reorts go to the
(Safety council w Mch sends a letter to
jthe car owner calling attention to his
gurelessness and a-klng ?r ceopera-
Con In reducing the cumber of rail-
way crossing accidents and In rnmt-
ll f motor safety In general The care-ili-a
crossing evil la thus attacked at
41 source
REMEDY SLIPPING FAN BELT
Irgsnleus Motorist Overcomes Troublo
! by Applying Littla Compound to
' tha Surface
J On Ingenious tuwiorlst who 'mu
troubled with a kllpplng belt cured the
txoulge- by lapplylng a llltl belt com-
pV'und W the 'pulley" surface Belt
tx-mpound hy the wiy Is g-aorrvwhat
ftxky substance that t used la'hiu-
ttiin shop power plant and facto-li-
to Insure the gripping of the
pUllcfhy Uw belt with auilhlrn) force
tft transmit the pow er’ without al p-
ng r Just a trlfflitg amount gone
und Is’ en-nlgh for a fun Belt Often
Itj niky by tUaltwiI from w gannge sue
Cl Ins shop but If not there It-will be
fUund almoat anywhere that bells are
Hied Such a atnull amount 1 required
Jhat U la not wirtb while te buy a can
I It— Scientific American’ ’
1 ri ’ '
C ACT AND' FANCY I
t- r
Tftara -aa a man wby fabdfd
that
By tidvigg grd and fast Ill
Ba'd get hi car across the traok
Before the train came past
UsM miss the engine by an Inch
And make the train crew sore
Tb wag a man who fancied
ithla- t i
Dut-ethera snt nay more I J
i '
A Cheap Radiator Shield
In place of the expensive metal
CVald for radiator protection from
i ld wnather an ordlnarj nhevpf desk
I tutting apw or mfliMifel tufty be
iftadlly and cheaply mad to fli thd" ' iltprlng ahaekla play or looseness bo-
lt of any ear t ftwabn the aprlng and and the shackl
may (iva much annoyance until the
of troublo la discovered
tJy e a e
Hava ta Clean Tirea
II A atmple way to claan off a lira ra-o-yrti
atones from tha tread design at
tvtrjiff xp the ctmcw a H
Ailed with water er gsaoltna beneath
the wheel then tmra U elowty while
crwUAng off
- j i v r
ai j c
C
A1
u
tfxM
k s ‘1V J M i
Not W're Plan Tor Automobile
Driver to Follow Straight and
Narrow Path With Carj
Tie old axiom nbout the ft lvljinhll-
Ity of following the straight nnl nar-
row path bolds as food fodnf at ever
but the autolst whs trterprets It at
meaning that be should drive In ruta
and car tracks will dad It pretty ex-
pensive advice A rat can lie classed
with flies monqiiltoes and ether pests
It was made for no renan at all
Some tuen pick out rata to drive tn
because It saves a certain amount of
tee ring but the law of rompensathia
la an Inexorable one at tle rut fiend
soon discovers when he Cnls Ms tires
chewed to bits It would te quite
Impossible to build n tire that could
with any degree of truth he termed
a rut proof casing because of the fact
that the side wall cannot he made
as heavy and Inflexible aa the tread
No great amount of re-enforelng ma-
terial ran he ballt upon the side wall
of a tire In rut running both the
side walla become the tread much
trs do- that portion of the rasing
which wag Intended to come In con-
tact with the road In fact In rut
rannlpg the aide walls under such cir-
cumstance are subjected to even
More abuse tban the tread for the
reason that the tread rolls over the
surface of the ground while the aide
walla are scrafTed and subjected to
a!de-wip!ng motion that very aon
wears away a rubber tire Of course
It la quite true that there are times
when bad road cannot he avoided or
wlien condition make It absolutely
necessary to drop Into a rut — 1L W
Slausoa tn Leslie's
BE PREPARED FOR REPAIRIN3
One of Chief Factor In Doing Good
WoA of Any Kind— Equipment
r of Importance
One of the principal factor In doing
g"d work of any sort lb- In being
prepared for the Job you are going to
tackle This I Something the new
car owner often fall to realize Ton
Cannot pro-rly wash a car grind the
valves clean a spark plug or do any
of the other Jobs necessary for keep-
ing the car In good order without be-
ing ierfe-tly equipped fop the work
I!y degree the car owner collect the
equipment to enable him to finish each
Job he tackles In a workmanlike and
satisfactory manner
BEATING TRAIN TO CROSSING
Approximately 1000 Autos Struck at
Grade Crossings and 2000 Par
sons Killed In 1922
Approximately Vast automobiles
were struck by trains at rrade cross-
ing during 1P22 killing some 2fi
l-vrsons and disfiguring about Sn)
other The driver of each of these
ctpw flgxred he could teat the engine
to the crossing
MJTT®K©I)1LE
! thwHl brake depend on gsd brake
lining and proper adjustment
: 1 j
When a car has had a severe shock
flo teacjngs should be Immediately In-
spected Never varnish the body of a car
With i1fmieratur below 70 degree
Fahrenheit
e e
Experience ha taught that one of
the beat way to save gasoline on the
road t to keep the spark well ad-
Viaed --Drain and flush out transmission
and rear axle and refill with lubricant
suitable to temperature rang of lo-
cality e a
Iuor rattles can be eliminated by
wedging small pieces of tin under-
neath the door bumpers This la equiv-
alent to Inserting new rubber bumper
only It require far lea troubla
A mixture of 83 per cent kerosene
and 13 per cent denatured alcohol If
uaed regularly will kaep tha cylinders
clean
fi
The moat severe strain that ran be
placed on rear axU or driving gear In
to try to gat out of u amdhola by
backing up a Uttl and than plunging
forward on low gear
T Jl rm f-eT If
cmxo:o:
SUrrS REIGN lioui
b j‘ i 1 ' - I If
OXCOXCXiKX:O90OX0XXOKX0CO:OECXCO
FT'OALT requires fuur Itilet t
A pell he w ool "suit1 Put It woo hi
take the entire alphabet multiplied Into
a dictionary of adject Ives to descrtlie
the intriguing allare taenia and versa-
Hilly of liluutiihWMI n Um two-
piece' anl three-piece suit moleW cre-
ated this seaMon
There la a Mvlahneaa of Ideas seldom
equalled apparent among anils of the
present vogue and there la n type fur
every Individuality v
Versions of short Jackets are legion
Tbw Striking mode shown In the plr-
Jsy W
One of the
ture la a particularly happy manifesta-
tion of tailored art It Is of I’olret
ue nertaU of
1 the day It carries style In every detail
rf Jacket and skirt It Kntlsflcs from a
tailored point of view and It pleases
from the standpoint of novelty and
tendency to assume an air of dressi-
ness Rraldlng finds nnlqtie place-
ment on sleeve and pocket In military
style The long nurrow ribbon from
Two Alluring
the thmnt lend a feminine charm un i
the gold tnetul ribbon bolt I distingue
In ais-urnni-e The skirt etnlmdle
plaits pot bxi ninny but enough to re-
tsnd to the season's defunds
All-over embroidered side-fastened
Jacket feature In many of the new
suit The skirt Is nf the plain cloth
with all the claliorntlon concentrated
on the short eont or Juequette
Ilenvy canton rreje suit dendy
braideil or embroidered are the mn-
terj’lcce nf the si son's suit develop-
meat Sheer merit bring them to the
topmost round of apularlty These
tunning braided tyi-s are cither In
olid color or In some Instances tha
braid contrasts especially In the com-
bination of black and white
Theoretically wrap and summer-
time are subjects foreign to each
other In actual practice a raver-
all cape or wrap la a treasured
For Each Gown
Combs for evening wear are numer-
ous and varied and It la quite possible
to have a different one to match each
guwn One beautiful high comb of
Jade another of red and black era two
of tho many new styles
Throo-Floco Cootumo
A three-piece costume of black
erene designed for spring In entirely
covered with a design ta black sou-
tache braid White satin collars aad
cuffs rail eve tho blackness
essential regardless of tht calendar
Only in the superlatively warm cli-
mate doe a modish wrap Iw-conie a
negligible quantity With most of ns
a charming cape or lwe lightweight
coat which caole thrown at will over
a lingerie frock or carried at protec-
tion against capricious weather la a
greatly to he desired possession
Tills season fnney drifts to cape
the straight-line kind of elegant ma-
terial To a surprising degree Inter-
est centers In the a'l-Ma-k wrap deep
soft pile fabrics leading In favor Just
Striking Suits
such a cupe as la shown In tha pit
ture I receiving a tnnjority vote
Not all cues are of strictest aim
pllclty for fashion swing the pen-be
turn to the extreme of ornate novelty
This la esieclally true of rape styled
of allk crepe which are tucked ruf-
fled paneled and plaited In most
unique way While black even In the
crepe rne leads tliere are ninny al-
luring tics In fawn colors and grny
Wraps
Not all capes are straight Hue lul
even la dolman effects (lie cnie Ides
Js Introduced in a sleevellke way
This Is evidenced In the model to the
right a bleb In the original Is the new
p-en ii shade embroidered In self-colored
floss It Is an liiiMirtuiit art of
the style program to embrulder one'
wrap frock end hat
tne may choose between embroid-
ered collur aa demonstrated In the
picture or fur for fur are to !
worn on many nqes and wra
throughout the summer Whit and
light colored furs will h excellent on
rree garment of similar shade Aa
exception to this is tho use of gray
or whit fqr n tirtt
I ft UH Wsstsra SMs Laws)
Knit (port Waer
Knit wear for everyday and for
porta la edged about the collar
sleeves end pocket with ribbons and
ribbon embroidered In soma rases Tht
tennis girl can And comfortable and
beaotlful suits with ribbon collar and
tie at tha T tn front
A New Celer
A new color rilled cork is destined
to bo one of tho popular shades thin
prtag It la n soft odor rather like
fawn
amSIoGCOLTDY
iifiim iiabb vomc
Sometimes Necessary on Aver
age Farm Where Mother Fails
to Supply Milk Needed
CO’S DK IS SU3SHTUTE
When Net Rich In Butterfat It ftheuld
Be Dilutee With About One-Fourth
Fresh Water Add Table-
peenful af Sugar
(Crsparse bjr IS I'nltrt a 'a DiputauM
( AtiKUtan I
Raising n colt by baud sometime
necessary on the average farm when
the mother falls to provide enough
uillk fur the fual U nut n Jub toe the
careless and Indifferent On the other
band says t!w United States Depart-
ment of Agriculture It requires pa-
tience painstaking care perseverance
Judgment and cleanliness
Cow's milk furnishes a logical sub-
stitute fur mare' milk but a the
composition Is somewhat different
certain change or moUiflc'atluns are
n-esrjr In order that the aupplled
diet le not too dissimilar from the
natural The follow lug table gives the
average composition of the two kinds
it milk:
W’tr Prat is r Iwtr AS
C W mllk iCi lit ts - wl
Mate's iuiikist 'if 121 1(7 Jt
Mixture Favored for Colt
3111k from a fresh a raw as ptwslble
nd which U not rich In butterfat
should be diluted about one-fourth
1th fresh water A tuldespoonful of
sugar nud about three teasimoiifula of
htuewater should l-e added for each
pint Till mixture almuld be supplied
lo the cult at about body temperature
A bottle with a rubber nipple or even
a Anger of a kid gUae with a fair-sized
bole in It fitted over the end of a spout
of a vessel such as a teapot will serve-
as a convenient utensil lu getting the
foal to take the milk If the finger of
a kid glove 1 used It should be dean
At first about ope-hulf cupful of
milk should be given every hour the
quantity to be Increased slightly and
(he Intervals to be lengthened gradu-
ally aa the foal grow older In about-
two months skimmed milk may be sub-
stituted for whole milk and In addi-
tion one of the following ration
should be fed: One part flaxseed meal
boiled to a Jelly and two or three
parts bran or two parts ground oat
one part rarnnieol and one-half part
luxseed menl or two part bran two
part rarnmest and one part oil meal
Feed a double handful a duy to start
with and increase the amount grad-
ually Keep lltanall Clean
The vessel In which the milk Is sup-
plied should be scubled thoroughly
each time It I used Unclean re-
ceptacle for the milk and Irregular
Interval for feeding likely will cause
scours The quarters aliould be very
rlean and the orphaned foal should
have rampnny of some kind Another
font I desirable but even a calf t
better than no company A gray
paddock with abundant shade fresh
water and protection from flies in-
crease the orphan's ebunc of proiwr
development
ECONOMICAL FEED FOR SOWS
If Abundance of Pasture la Available
Animals Can Bs Fad Chsaply
During Summer
A hrnnd sow fnin the time she Is
bred until she farrow can he fed
very economical ration during the
summer time If an abundance of al-
falfa or other good pasture 1 avail-
able and she ran tie fe almost as
cheaply during the winter ncnson If
part of her ration consist of a good
qualify of alfalfa liny Such a sow
can be wintered on one pound of corn
per hundredweight dully If the grain
I supplcmente with a!! the alfalfa
hay nhe can eat In the corn tlt
tbl I probatdy the most economical
ration a man can ue especially at
the present price of corn
BOWEL TROUBLES OF CHICKS
Prevention by Using Egg From Non-
Inf octod Flock la Wisest Coursa
for Poultrymsn
There Is no rare for hncllllary w hite
diarrhea In chicks The only remedy
Is prevention by setting eggs from non-
Infected flocks Saultuilon will help
xntro an outbreak Chirk will he
kept from picking up lulected drop-
pings hy keeping the Incubator dark
from the time the chick are hatched
until they are removed to the brooder
Separating the chick Into smol! lots
will help and frequent cleaning and
disinfecting of the quurter are Im-
portant DUST BATH DESTROYS PESTS
Llca and Mite Ara Mora Troubla-
aome In W Weather — Wood
Afhsa Ara Satisfactory
Lice and mite are more trouble-
some In the flock In damp weather
for tha reason tbot a dust ran b
found If wet weather prevents your
chicken from getting a dust bath
placa a box tn a dry ptaca Uaa
clean wood aahea If no dust I ot-
talnable Coal aatiea with tha ctndars
Sc ned out will answer Add a
: nail amount of insect powdr to tha
aahea
FEED BROOD SOW LIBERALLY
Supply Flanty af Fratala far Har Own
Gw4 and for Oavelopmant af
Mar Pigs
Feed tha brood aow liberally Glva
her plenty of protein for har ow
good and for tba development af tha
embryo Don’t neglect tha supply of
mineral matter Dry sows raa be
carried along an alfalfa hay ear
nd perhaps a Uttla tankagw
GARLIC ROT FOPUIAII
FLAVOHIRG FOR DLK
Dairymen With Infested Fields
Familiar With Complaints
Dairy Specialist af New
tag Has Helpful R
bans ta Offer— Ctaanlinaaa
Great Factor
Jersey CM
la
Garlic la not a popular flavoring for
milk and tho dairyman with bis garlic
Infested pastures U all too familiar
with complaint that arise at this time
of year about off flavored milk
Natural grassy flavors ara palatable
to moat peopla hut avea people wbc
can eat the atrobgauielllug garlic
straight down object to swallowing
It In their milk 8lnce so many pas-
tures are Infested with garlic and
U not so practicable to attempt te
eradicate garlic In niuny of our perma-
nent pastures tha dairyman Is often
confronted with tha problem of bow
to pasture cow on garllc-iufeted pas-
ture and still keep this flavor out of
the milk
Till Is often very difficult bnt 31
II Keeney dairy specialist of the New
Jersey State Agricultural college has
the following helpful recommendations
to offer Bring the cows from the pas-
ture from two to four hours before
milking Aerate the milk thoroughly
and coed It to 50 degrees Fahrenheit
a ann at uillked The milking
should take place In a milk house sep-
arate frotu the stable If these pro-
cautions are followed religiously the
garlicky flavor can usually be con-
trolled Another aeriou trouble causing that
"olT tuate In milk I the high bac-
terial count which results In sour milk
Warm weather of course Is conducive
to the rapid souring of milk This
must be overcome by cooling the milk
to 50 degrees Fahrenheit as soon a
milked and holding It at a low temper-
ature 84 degrees or below until It 1
delivered Get a thermometer and
check up on your temperatures
Cleanliness Is a paramouut factor
In the production of good milk Clean
tables dean cows dean utensils and
dean men are all essential Unless
milk Is clean when it leaves tha
tables no amount of car thereafter
can make It good milk
FEED FOR DUCKS AND GEESE
Heavy Supply af Grain Not Nocoooary
If Fowls Ara Growing Rapidly
an Good Pasture
So Irng as the geese and ducks ara
growing rapidly It la not necesnary to
feed grain heavily provided they have
good pasture Just enough grain to
keep them strung and vigorous Is all
that they require A they neur-ma
turtty and are tn be fed for market the
grain ration sUuld te gradually In
rreaed until they are getting all that
they will eat up twice per duy Old
corn la the tiest feed for fattening
geene
MINERAL MIXTURE FOR HOGS
Easily Mad by Mixing Charcoal or
Wood Ashos Limo Common Salt
nd Cepparaa
A good mineral mixture can he made
on your own furm hy mixing together
two hushels r charcoal or wood
ashes one eck nf alr-sluked lime one
peck of common aalL two pound of
ropiera and two pound of sulphur
All of this mixture should lie finely
pulverized and thoroughly mixed to-
gether Tills mixture can be put tn a
self-feeder or fed to hog In a trough
In the en Hogs will not rat enough
to harm them any
DUCKS FAVOR GRASSY SPOTS
Digestive Apparatus Not Fitted
Taka Cars of Gram— Fowl
Also Require Grit
to
Ducks graze like cattle and should
he kept In grassy lots Their diges-
tive apparatus Is not suited for digest
lug grain though they enjoy some
once In a while They should le fed
twice a duy on a mush food the same
as hen eat Ducks will also require
grit oyster shell and charcoal con-
ifuinlng nearly twice a much a the
tuiue nuniticr of chickens would eut
CURE ALFALFA CROP SLOWLY
If Dried Toe Fart Laava Dry Fatter
Than Stem and Bacom Brittle
Closing Pore
Alfalfa aliould he cured slowly and
a much In the allude a po!Me j
almuld be air cured a this method
allows the water in the plant to pn
nut through the natural course If
dried too fast the leave dry fater
than the atem and la-come brittle
thu cloalng-the pore and retarding
the etuioratlou of moisture In the
stem
Vari atlas of 6ey Beans
The name of the leading varieties
of any twane a agreed upon hy mid-
west agronomists are: 3Iunchu Mid
west Elton Ito San Medium Green
Wilson I’ekfng Virginia and Hamil-
ton Sunflower 8sd to Acre
Sunflowers are snld to produce from
W0 to 1ftk) pound of seed per sere
tn California lOui pound I the av-
er gw This seed la used mostly In
chicken feed mixture
Scrub Makaa Troubla
Tha cur dog may be s Arm friend
the mongrel rat a good mousar but
tha scrub bull makes nothing but Iron-
bl now and forever
Very Sour Crosm
Tory sour crests Is never first grads
It la tba result of bolding cream ua
long end at too high temperstura
Fertilizer Coats Little
Commercial fertilizer enough for
tha garden coats vary Uttla conalder-
Ing Its vela
lLMdi5
cr
Li::
K-m-m
A Crsrt IZrZztn
Mw 1L I Biter B & Be I ta BL ChP
tWsas wnusi
qkmwiFVMlMlwvNSaM
H u!4e ng sa4 catena M cwf mf
Min saSTSe a us e-IS vkaa I see
f-o-ss kei acSIM—
twrtav tOc hfl SfT nos h-nw Ml
hmmm pum m lL mUm
fur flBisftfe o4 W9Tf tszertpUuff whstM M
Ifthf l)M ftMft IfcRBl BlBMMlk
Br hisa Pwfews Is hwM
sw pyaffeje ftaftiiBft ftlfllftBl VAf fw
ftfftlir N ftfftBBBi Cft8 U WM IM d
UftAlia
CtHEmyetsrt
Yiuhg niurrleil ieoile start out ns
If Ilfs were s Jolly excursion
Ibthy'a little dresse will Just simply
dazzle If Red Cross Rail Iilue Is Bed
In tha laundry Try It end sea for your-
self At sit good grocers— Advertize
menu
Tliere 1 more or lea chnrlty In tha
heart of everv msn — uanaUv lee
conns
Lift Off with Fingers
Diesn’t hurt bit! Drop little
‘Krtv-zone' on an aching corn Instant-
ly that corn stop hurting tlu-n short-
ly you lift It right off with fingers
Truly !
Your druggist sells a tiny bottls of
Treczone" for B few cent sufficient
to remove every hard corn soft corn
or corn between the toe end the cal-
luses without soreness or Irritation
Constipation
Raliavad Without Tha Use
of Laxatives
Nujl is a lubricant— not a
medicine or laxative — so
cannot gripe
When you are constipated
not enough of Nature's lu-
bricating liquij is produced
in the bowel to keep the food
waste soft and moving
Doctors prescribe N'ujij be-
cause it acts iiks this natural
Ju lines nt and thus s-urrs reg
uisr bowrl movements by Na-
ture's owa method— lubricstloa
Try it today
iry ii lousy
l§ldafl®II
j J LUrtHKANT-MOT A LASATIVC J
GREEN MOUNTAIN
ASTHMA
CONFOUND
lekly rellevM ! SMtrsssr
Ug vsrasrsois Vu4 tac
V K year aa tooalt W Mas
! UWUMl M
throat aoS lass tiosM My
TbzztuaL
'&± pt
&
I w'v f Dr 1U 0114
I t MOX Troatlas aa katas in
rsHts Insiasm su asl
las reet S' a4 Vi
m zrogetota j outiai co iti'FzitT rr
CockrmrSn sn4 WassrUus
Boot nos sow Mvtaa M mil
ltOMSM Ol
WHS aowdsrw
arvMtsiluat
lytfUftft BRUftmTiW
CSLB KVEaTWNZXX
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.
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/m1/4/: accessed February 8, 2026), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.