Oklahoma's Choice Weekly Volume 5 Issue 48

Page 1


C- G CAT TLE COMPAN Y

UPCOMING EVENTS

I Ain't Afraid - the World of Lulu Bell Parr, Wild West Cowgirl by Diane Helentjaris is available in hardback and softcover. book signing at 101 show in Blackwell.

101 RANCH WESTERN AND ANTIQUE TRADE SHOW

The annual “101 Ranch Western and Antique Trade Show” will be held in Blackwell, Oklahoma on April 11 and 12, 2025. The twoday event at the Kay County, Oklahoma, Fairgrounds features 101 Ranch and other Western collectibles including leather goods, spurs, saddles, firearms, photos, posters, postcards, books, artwork, coins, tokens, antiques, and other items. The show, presented by the 101 Ranch Collectors’ Association, is open to the public Friday 12 to 5pm and Saturday 9am to 4pm.

ADMISSION FRIDAY $8.00 (ALSO GOOD FOR SATURDAY)

SATURDAY $5.00 &CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE

RUNNING FREE HORSE RIDING ACADEMY

Spring classes have begun. Improves focus, listening, awareness, coordination and goal setting! The benefits are priceless! Call 580-401-0509

It's time to fix, clean and paint!

Royce Montgomery Construction 620-705-2453 Ponca City

SELLING CAR COLLECTIONS

50's & 60's

Taking bids on lots: Ford, Chevy, Mopars, Studebakers. Imports: Citroen-1, Fiat-6, Peugeot-1, Audi-2, Mercedes Benz-5. or bid on all.

15 Acres available with all 405-250-8312

OR

GEORGIA'S FINE FURNITURE

Pocket Knives, Hot Wheels, Chairs, Lot's of Jewelry, Furniture, Hutches, and Framed Pictures. China

Hutch, Glass Top Coffee Table, 2 Glass Top End Tables, 6 Drawer Dresser, Oval Table with 6 Chairs and 3 Leafs, Floor Lamps, Lots of Lamps, TV Armoire, 4 Drawer Filing Cabinet, Hall Tree w/ Mirror and Drawers, Stacked Bookcase, Assorted Neckties, Plant Stands, Many Dishes and Glasses.

GEORGIA'S FINE FURNITURE

EVERYTHING IN THE STORE ½ PRICE

207, 209 & 213 7th St Perry, OK 732-600-3949

MEMORY LANE CONSIGNMENT

Handmade items, books, glassware, games, tools, furniture, guitars, CD's, DVD's, 3D printed items, purses/bags, framed art, puzzles, clothes and so much more to explore.

107 W. Main St. Oilton, OK

Monday Closed Tuesday 9am-5pm Wednesday 9am-5pm Thursday 10am-4pm Friday 9am-5pm Saturday 9am-5pm Sunday Closed Facebook.com/ MemoryLaneConsignment

$$$ I BUY WALK-BEHIND MOWERS needing REPAIR $$$ Up to $40 and fast pickup!

Text Pictures of Mower for Price - # 832-410-0933 Shawnee, OK

USED STRUCTURAL CORRAL FENCING MATERIALS FOR SALE TUBING

2-3/8”, 2-7/8”, 3-1/2” CASING

4-1/2”, 5-1/2”, 7”

SUCKER RODS

5/8”, 3/4”, 7/8”, 1” TRUCKLOAD PRICES AVAILABLE

918-225-5533

AKL SERVICES, INC. Cushing, OK

BARGAIN

Wonderful lake lots for rent. Waterfront park, easy camping, fishing and fun. Part time help needed. Living quarters and utilities furnished. Mobile home for rent. All hookups, storm cellars, boat storage. Lake Eufala 405-273-3326

I Ain’t Afraid — A Cowgirl’s View of Oklahoma History

New Lulu Bell Parr biography highlights Wild West show life

Lulu Bell Parr was one strong woman. In 1903, twenty-six-years old, divorced, and fed up with life in backwater Ohio, she left. What she did next was outside the bounds of acceptable Edwardian womanhood — she joined up with Pawnee Bill’s Wild West show.

PLAN NOW TO ATTEND THE 2025 SHOW AT THE KAY COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS LIVESTOCK CENTER

In her latest book I Ain’t Afraid — the World of Lulu Bell Parr, published by Alkira Publishing, author Diane Helentjaris details Parr’s adventurous rise to celebrity as a bronco-rider. Along the way, Parr’s life meshed with Oklahoma history. Pawnee Bill was her lifelong mentor. She headlined for the 101 Ranch Miller Brothers and was part of their first foray into the silent film business. Parr married “first cowgirl” Lucille Mulhall’s brother for all of three days. A remarkable horsewoman, her career was cut short by the Depression. Lulu Bell Parr retreated back to Ohio, died in poverty, and was buried in an unmarked grave. In the early 2000s, local amateur historians resurrected her story and succeeded in having her inducted into the National Cowgirls’ Hall of Fame.

TWO DAYS: FRIDAY 12 - 5 pm & SATURDAY 9 am - 4 pm BUY – SELL – TRADE – FREE APPRAISALS

Featuring Western Memorabilia, 101 Ranch Collectibles. Firearms, Leather Goods, Spurs, Saddles, Rare Photos, Posters, Postcards, Ephemera, Books, Artwork, Coins, Tokens, Clothing, Glassware, Pottery, Antiques, and other items.

MUSEUM QUALITY EXHIBITS

ADMISSION FRIDAY $8.00 (ALSO GOOD FOR SATURDAY) SATURDAY $5.00-CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE Sponsored by the 101 Ranch Collectors Association

I Ain’t Afraid is described as “Infused with wry humor, this book is both thought-provoking and a genuinely fun read – a look into rarely seen corners of American history and a rousing chronicle of a fearless life.” It’s available as an audiobook, an eBook, as well as in hardback and softcover editions. Author Diane Helentjaris will be signing copies of I Ain’t Afraid at the upcoming 101 Ranch Collectors’ Association’s Western & Antique Trade Show April 11th and 12th in Blackwell, Oklahoma. For details, visit www.DianeHelentjaris. com.

Oklahoma's Choice Weekly #smellslikefreshink

****VENDORS**** May reserve 8’ Tables for $60, 12’ X 12’ spaces $120. (Discounts available if paid before February 1, 2025) For more information contact Mike Dvorak 580-307-5076 or e-mail Al Stehno at Goldspur101@gmail.com

Tom Mix: “Straight Shooters Always Win”

Thomas Hezekiah Mix was not a cowboy by birth, but in a dazzling rise to fame he became the most flamboyant and popular of all early movie cowboys. Mix was born January 6, 1880, in the northeastern Pennsylvania hamlet of Mix Run. His father, a stable master for a lumber merchant, taught his son to love horses, a quality that paid dividends for the boy who one day would set the standard for cowboys of the silver screen. Not liking the name Hezekiah, Mix took his father’s name Edwin, and though he dreamed of becoming a circus performer, his parents discouraged it when they caught him practicing knife-throwing tricks using his sister as an assistant.

With the outbreak of the Spanish-American War in 1898, Mix aspired to soldiering and enlisted, but his army unit remained stateside guarding an artillery base in Delaware. He re-enlisted in 1901, hoping to see combat action in the Boer War, but that all changed when he fell in love with Virginia schoolteacher Grace Allin, marrying her in July 1902. Mix then took leave from the Army, but never returned. He was listed as AWOL, yet not court-martialed or formally discharged.

Following their marriage, the couple moved to Guthrie, Oklahoma, where the multitalented Mix worked varied jobs, including physical fitness teacher, pugilist instructor, and bartender. His dashing good looks and flamboyant manner won him many friends, including Oklahoma Territory Governor Thompson Ferguson who helped him be named as drum major of the Oklahoma Cavalry Band despite the fact he was not a musician.

Mix & Tony, who became the most widely recognized horse in the world.

His band travels contributed to an eventual divorce, but Mix gained valuable contacts, most notably Zack Mulhall, the Miller brothers, and Will Rogers. In 1905, he rode in Theodore Roosevelt’s inaugural parade with several Rough Riders who had served with the President in Cuba. Years later, Hollywood publicists would muddle this event to imply Mix had been a Rough Rider himself. Later that year, Mix was invited to work at the 101 Ranch. He knew horses and riding from his boyhood, but his “reviews” as a working cowboy were mixed. Some veteran Miller cowpunchers claimed they had to teach him to properly saddle a

Generic Studio Publicity
Photo

cow pony. One even observed that “He could get lost in an eighty-acre pasture.” The Millers paid no attention to the criticisms because Mix was hired as a showman.

When the Millers prepared for their first public rodeo in the summer of 1905, they sent Mix and other performers to appear with the Zach Mulhall show in New York. Oddly enough, he was billed as “Tom Mixco, the “Mexican horse runner,” an unlikely description that may have taught him how easily he could reinvent his life story; something done many times over his career to the consternation of biographers who still have trouble separating fact from fiction. In truth, Mix was never a Texas Ranger; had not fought in the Boxer Rebellion in China; or the Boer War; or the Spanish-American War. Neither had he been a U.S. Marshal, nor did he ride with Pancho Villa in Mexico.

His second marriage, to Kitty Jewel Perrine at the end of 1905, barely lasted a year. In 1908 he met twenty-two-yearold Olive Stokes whose family owned a ranch near Dewey, Oklahoma. They toured the Wild West Show circuit together; Mix performing as a trick rider and expert shot. In January 1909, while in Billings, Montana, he totally surprised Stokes, not by proposing, but inexplicably organizing the necessities for a wedding, evidently not thinking he needed to consult the brideto-be. At first, Olive thought it was a joke, but then accepted, and the couple tied the knot.

Over the next two years, Mix won the National Rodeo Championship for riding and roping. He and Olive spent the winter months at her family’s ranch near Dewey, where the town appointed him “night marshal.” The connection ultimately led to the creation of Dewey’s Tom Mix Museum.

Mix’s growing reputation in Wild West performances soon gained the attention of Hollywood, and the jaunty cowboy in the big white hat landed his first role in silent films. The Selig Polyscope Company cast him in a documentary-style short film titled, Ranch Life in the Great Southwest. The movie was shot in Dewey, and included Oklahoma’s Henry Grammer in which the duo displayed their roping talents. The film launched Mix’s movie career, and for the next twenty-five years he appeared in nearly 300 films, only nine of which were “talkies.”

Olive gave birth to their daughter Ruth in 1912, and they moved to the “Bar Circle A Ranch” near Prescott, Arizona. Olive appeared in several of Mix’s silent films during that period, and over the years, 65 Mix movies were filmed at Prescott and other Arizona locations.

The family lived on the “Bar Circle A” (now a suburban Prescott housing development) until 1917, but between his travels with the 101 Wild West show and his blossoming movie career, he was not often home. Mix frequently performed opposite twenty-year-old actress Victoria Forde, and in 1917 the duo signed with the Fox Film Corporation. It was the final straw for Olive, who claimed abandonment, leading to a nasty public divorce suit. Mix and Forde were married in 1918, and four years later she gave birth to Thomasina “Tommie” Mix.

During the 1920s Mix made more than 160 escapist matinee cowboy films in which he performed his own stunts and was frequently injured. Most of his movies were simply a means of displaying actionpacked stunts, trick riding, and attentiongrabbing costumes.

Even his intelligent, handsome horse

“Tony” enjoyed celebrity status as a result of his films, especially among young movie-goers. As it

happened, Mix’s remarkable steed also came from humble beginnings. One day in 1913, a fellow actor spotted a fine-looking colt pulling a produce wagon on a Los Angeles street. He paid cash for the horse and began training it for his own, later selling it to Mix. For the next thirtyfour years, “Tony” co-starred with Mix in dozens of movies and parades. Tony was so well-known to movie-goers that he became the most widely recognized horse in the world, receiving thousands of fan letters from children each week. With or without Tony, Mix was one of the most sought-after performers of his day, yet he knew his limits as an actor. He made fun of his shortcomings by asking the directors, “Which expression do you want, number one, two, or three.” Although he sometimes left Hollywood to travel with a Wild West show or a circus, he invariably returned to the movie business. In 1929, his last year in silent pictures, Mix worked for a small studio run by Joseph P. Kennedy Sr., which later became film giant RKO Pictures. By then Mix was forty-nine and by most accounts, ready to retire. Although his voice was considered adequate for sound movies when they became the standard in 1927, he thought sound would ruin his action films and had no interest in them. Over the next two years, Mix appeared with the Sells-Floto Circus at a hefty weekly salary of $20,000, but by 1932, when he and Victoria Forde were divorced, the Great Depression, coupled with reckless spending and many exwives, had wiped out his savings.

Shortly after divorcing Forde, Mix married his fifth wife, Mabel Hubbard Ward. Universal Pictures approached him that year with an offer to do “talking” pictures, which included script and cast approval. Mix was broke, so he did nine pictures for Universal, but because of previous injuries while filming, he was reluctant to do more.

In 1933, he permitted Ralston-Purina to produce a radio series called Tom Mix Ralston Straight Shooters, a popular show from the 1930s through the early 1950s. He gave them his name but never appeared on those broadcasts, letting others do his sound work. In the meantime, Mix concentrated on the circus business. He joined the Sam B. Dill Circus in 1935, a company he later

purchased. His last film, The Miracle Rider, was released in 1935, but by then, Mix wanted to stay with the circus performing with Ruth, his eldest daughter. In 1938 he went to Europe on a promotional tour, leaving Ruth behind to manage his circus. The circus failed, and Mix blamed his daughter, excluding her from his will.

On the afternoon of October 12, 1940, Mix was driving back to Southern California from New York in his 1937 Cord 812 “Phaeton.” On a lonely unpaved road near Florence, Arizona, he encountered construction barriers where a bridge had been washed away. A work crew watched as his car skidded into the gully. The impact sent an aluminum suitcase careening off the luggage rack into the back of Mix’s head, breaking his neck, and killing him instantly.

An investigation gave speeding as the cause, and while some say alcohol did not play a part, several acquaintances stated he had been drinking heavily the night before. Four days later, thousands of people attended the funeral of the man hailed as “King of the Cowboys,” at Forest Lawn Memorial Park in Glendale, California.

For all his shortcomings, Tom Mix insisted on demonstrating strong values to his many young admirers. He didn’t smoke, drink, or curse on screen, and asked that his youthful followers abide by the motto: “Straight shooters always win, lawbreakers always lose.”

His contributions to motion pictures earned him a star on “Hollywood’s Walk of Fame,” along with boot prints, palm prints, and the hoof prints of his horse Tony at the famed Grauman’s Chinese Theatre. In 1958, Tom Mix was inducted into the Western Performers Hall of Fame at the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City.

Today, on State Route 79, seventeen miles south of Florence, Arizona, there’s a monument where Tom Mix died. It includes a bronze plaque that states: “In memory of Tom Mix whose spirit left his body on this spot and whose characterization and portrayals in life served to better fix memories of the Old West in the minds of living men.”

Tom Mix was one of several famous film stars and show people to have started their careers at the 101 Ranch. They, along with the unique history of the ranch and its people will be the focus of the “101 Ranch Western and Antique Trade Show” in Blackwell, Oklahoma on April 11 and 12. The two-day event at the Kay County Fairgrounds Livestock Center features 101 Ranch and Wild West Show artifacts as well as antiques and other Western memorabilia for viewing or sale. The show, presented by the 101 Ranch Collectors’ Association, is open to the public Friday, 12 to 5 pm, and Saturday, 9 am to 4 pm.

PLAN NOW TO ATTEND THE 2025 SHOW AT THE KAY COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS LIVESTOCK CENTER

TWO DAYS: FRIDAY 12 - 5 pm & SATURDAY 9 am - 4 pm BUY – SELL – TRADE – FREE APPRAISALS

Featuring Western Memorabilia, 101 Ranch Collectibles. Firearms, Leather Goods, Spurs, Saddles, Rare Photos, Posters, Postcards, Ephemera, Books, Artwork, Coins, Tokens, Clothing, Glassware, Pottery, Antiques, and other items. MUSEUM QUALITY EXHIBITS

ADMISSION FRIDAY $8.00 (ALSO GOOD FOR SATURDAY) SATURDAY $5.00-CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE

Sponsored by the 101 Ranch Collectors Association

Mix and 3rd Wife Olive Stokes
Mix joined the Sam B. Dill Circus in 1935 and became full owner in 1937.
Mix and 4th wife Victoria Forde in 1926
Generic Film Scenes
Generic Film Scenes
Generic Studio Publicity Photo
The Tom Mix Memorial Near Florence, Arizona

Antiques & Collectibles,

& COLLECTIBLES

GEORGIA'S FINE FURNITURE

Pocket Knives, Hot Wheels, Chairs, Lot's of Jewelry, Furniture, Hutches, and Framed Pictures. China Hutch, Glass Top Coffee Table, 2 Glass Top End Tables, 6 Drawer Dresser, Oval Table with 6 Chairs

EARLY AT GEORGIA'S FINE FURNITURE

EVERYTHING IN THE STORE ½ PRICE

207, 209 & 213 7th St Perry, OK 732-600-3949

ESTATE SALE Fri., April 4, 2pm-6pm Sat. April 5, 9am-2pm (closed 12-12:30) 1109 S Springdale (Country Club) Stillwater Refrigerator, Freezer, Washer, Dryer, Queen, King beds, Recliner, Shelving, Bar Stools, Chest of Drawers, Cedar Chest, TVS, tables, Jewelry, Clothing, kitchen, collectibles, Flow Blue, Transferware, Jos. Bros, Fiesta, Fostoria, Fenton, Vintage jars, Depression, Uranium Glass, Shawnee Pottery, Linens wheel barrow, Dyson, décor, misc. tools, PLUS MORE www.thetagladies.com 405-612-2016

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#smellslikefreshink

ESTATE AUC TION

SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 2025 @ 10 A.M.

Location: 8132 E. 123 Rd, Wetumka, OK. 2 miles east of Wetumka on Hwy 9. Estate of Finis & Colene Pack

INSPEC TION: FRIDAY APRIL 4, FROM 10 A.M. TILL 3 P.M. REAL ESTATE ** TRAC TOR**PICKUPS** TOOLS**FURNITURE & COLLEC TIBLE ITEMS Real Estate sell first @ 10 A .M. – 2 Acres with 1596 sq

bedrooms, Kitchen & dining area. Living area, Large Porches and Carpor t. 2 Acres is fenced. 25 x 30 Metal Shop Building , Plus other storage buildings. Cit y Water Plus water well.

TERMS: 10% Escrow day of auction with balance upon closing Any announcement made day of auction shall supersede any previous adver tisement or statement and prevail as the final terms and condition. Open House on Real Estate . Sunday March 30 from 2-4 P.M. or call Tom for information. 405-712-3211

PICKUPS: 2016 Dodge Ram 2500 Laramie Package, 6.7 Diesel, 4 Doors Extend Cab, 150K miles. 2011 Dodge Ram 1500 5.7 Hemi Gas, 4 Door Ext. cab, Remote Star t, 192K miles, 2007 Dodge SXT 91K miles, Single Cab 4 x4 4.7 V8 Eng . 1996 Ford Tractor. 4 Wheel Drive. Frontend Loader 27.7 HP 14 52 Hours.; 2009 Hear tland Cyclone 40 Ft. Toy Hauler 3 Slides, 4 Seasons Package, Sleeps 6, Queen Bed, 5.5KW Onan Generator, Fuel Station, Electric Leveling Jacks, w/d Hookups, 2 AC (1 year old) 50 Amp Ser vice , 2 Walkin doors and Ramps Door

TOOLS & MISC. Air compressor**Chopsaw**Scrollsaw**Jointer**Craftsman Table Saw **Drill Press **Husqvarna Chain Saw**Grinder**Sander**Dewalt Weed Wacker**Nail Bars**Split ting Mauls**Garden seeder w/ plates**Craf tsman Front Tine Tiller**Hustler Raptor 23 Hp Zero Turn Mower **Bat ter y Charger**Saddle Stand**Hand Tools**Chains & Boomers **Camping Equipment & Supplies**Creeper**Lawn Items**Alum. Ramps **

COLLEC TIBLES **Antique Garden plow**Old Shopping Car t**Old Tonka Toys**Antique Bath Tub **Ironing Board Wall Box**Galv. Water Tubs **Single Trees**Canning Jars**But ter Crock Churn **Stone Jars**Lunch Boxes**School desk **Well Bucket**Cast iron Pots**Varmint Traps **Antique Tools .

FURNITURE & HOUSE ITEMS: **Kenmore chest freezer**Porch table & 6 Chairs**Large Bookcase **Ornate China Cabinet**2- Full size Bedsteads**Assor tment of Dressers and Chest **Book Shelves **Large Dining Table & 8 Ornate Wooden Chairs**Several Recliners**Sofa **Loveseats **Lamps**Big Screen Television***32 Day Wall Clock**2- Johnny Hawk Pictures **Sewing Machine **Sewing Supplies**Large Amount of Linen**Lif t Chair**Humidifier**Mini Banjos **Fiddle**Dressing Mirror**Large amount of Glassware, Depression, and other t ypes**Large amount of Stainless Steel Pot & Pans**Mixing Bowls **Kenmore Mixer **Large Selection of Electric Kitchen appliances. ** Toasters, Cof fee Makers, Cookers and Etc . **Sets of China ***PLUS MANY MORE UNLISTED ITEMS

RELOCATION AUCTION

SATURDAY, APRIL 12, 2025 @ 10 A.M.

Location: 417558 Bridgeport Rd, Eufaula, OK. From the intersection of Hwy 69 & Texanna Rd, Go west on hwy 150 about 200 Ft. to Bridgeport Rd, Turn South approx. 1 mile. WATCH FOR SIGNS. DO NOT DISTURB TENNANTS.

INSPECTION ON FRIDAY APRIL 11, FROM 10 A.M. TO 3:00 P.M Charles Neal, Owner Classic Roadsters Automobiles--- Roadster auto parts--Tools-- Neon Advertisement signs—Motorcycle –Tractor – Travel Trailer -- Equipment Trailer –Autos & Trailers sell approx: 10:30 A.M.

1931 Ford Rebuilt Coupe , 400 Small Block, 350 Turbo Transmission Reverse Dry Body Shift Kit, Positive Trac t Rear end Kit with 5- 13 Gears, 500 miles on motor. PARADE READY 1931 Ford Rebuilt 2 Door Sedan 350 V8 Chevy Motor, 350 Turbo Transmission, 490 Rear End, Mustang II Rack & Pinion frontend. PARADE READY 1938 Ford Rat Rod (needs to be finished). Summit Frame, 350 Turbo, 350 Tram mission, Stahl Convertor, Big Cam 8.5 Rear end, Mickey Thompson Back Tires & New Front Tires,1948 Ford F600 Truck (52K miles) runs good. Wrecker Bed. ** Will sell separate. Not attached. 2022 Forest Rive Prime Time Ultra Lite 25 Ft. Travel Trailer. VIN# 52T2TRJB523450. Front Bed, Rear Bath Shower, Bunk Bed. Lots of Storage ** Like New. Used 3 or 4 times. Massey Ferguson 230 Diesel Tractor. 36 HP. *** 5 Ft. 3 Pt. Brush Hog,*** Ford 772 Front End Loader w/Bucket. *** 38 Ft. GN Flatbed Trailer with Ramps, Dual Tandem all New Tires & Spare. 2016 Yamaha Bolt Star Motorcycle. 7700 miles. ***E-Tov Matrax R-4 150 Motor Scooter***Velocity M P 150-12 Motor Scooter ***Shop Made Go Cart ***SIGNS: Neon Budweiser & Bud signs. ** Metal Signs ** 450 Trubo Transmission & 350 Motor (79K miles )

ASSORTMENT OF NEW AUTO PARTS STILL IN BOXES : Stainless Steel Fuel Tank, Lokar Shifter, Vacuum Brake for Roadster, Seats for Roadster, Glass for Roadster, Metal Floor Kit for Roadster , MDS electronic ignitions , Electronic Door Actuators’ , Lots of Parts for Vehicles. Table Fish Cooker, Fishing & Hunting items, other outdoor Items MORE PICTURES ON WEB SITE. www.spitlerauction.com

Auction. April 12

TOOLS & MISC: **Sand Blaster **Versa-Cut 60 Plasma Cutter***Ceramic Heater**Cub Cadet 54” Zero Turn Mower. Kolar 7000 Series. 24 HP Motor. **Ford Pickup Bed w/ Ford V8 Tailgate **Lincoln Electric Mig Welder. Ideal-Arc 250**Large Shop Fan**Creeper**Assorted of Wrenches and Hand Tools **8Floor

Buy. Sell. Trade. Connect.

Oklahoma’s Choice Weekly is your go-to marketplace for buyers, sellers, and traders across Oklahoma!

Whether you're looking to sell fast, find great deals, or make the perfect trade, we make it easy and effective.

ANESA K. CHASTAIN JONES

General Manager/Graphics Director 918-285-1314 graphics@oklahomaschoiceweekly.com

JEFF NIEMAN Sales Director 405-740-4249 jeff@oklahomaschoiceweekly.com

JON MCQUILLEN

Central Territory Manager 918-873-0097 jon@oklahomaschoiceweekly.com

COLETTE BAIER

Northern Territory Manager 580-401-0509 colette@oklahomaschoiceweekly.com

WENDI STULTZ

Classifieds/Accounting Manager

918-528-7689 classifieds@oklahomaschoiceweekly.com

MISTY CROUSE

Distribution Manager

918-528-7689 distribution@oklahomaschoiceweekly.com

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