The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 160, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 9, 1937 Page: 1 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 22 x 16 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:
You Can Buy It For
i
Less In El Reno
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Daily Newspaper Serving Oklahoma’s Blue Ribbon Area
The Heart of the Rich
Canadian Valley
I’ngle Copy, Three Cents
‘V UP) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
--
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1937
OI.PJ MEANS UNITED PRESS
VOLUME 46, NO. 160
24 Teachers Hold
Pluces In City Schools
Large Portion of El Reno Staff Beginning First |
Term In System; Training Is Outlined
STREAMS HANDLE
’ases Are Assigned For
Trial During Session
At El Reno
Twentv-four new teachers are
includ'd among the 73 Instructors
who assumed classroom duties in
I he El Reno public schools this
week.
Individuals who are beginning
their first terms in the system here
ure Anderson Green. Rex Kelly,
Twenty-five veniremen have been R a Mantooth. Delbert Scott, Tom
uinmoncd for .service during a Jury j Shirlev. Walter Wilson. John Bry-
etm of Canadian county court ian Waldrlr. Eunice Cormack. Jack
cheduled to open before Judge! Dougins. Cecil Colley. Janies Or-
Immett Thompson at El Reno
londay. 8ept. 20
The Jury list includes H. M.ver,
land Harrel. Keats McKinney, Ag-
nes .Schultz. E. Worth Walter.
Vauahncllle Joseph. Elmer P Cecil
Ilnton; Robert Collins. J. D. Stejs- Margaret Eaton. ^ Vivienne
:al. J. E. Dobrv and Clyde Eskew, *' '**' "
11 of Yukon; C. W Van Gundy,
'ohn Brannon. J. I. Penwright and
•Yank Boinhoff, all of Calumet;
Waldrtp. Mary Lois Knie, Verna
Mitchell .Jenninas Newman. Kath-
rlne Rumberger and Eugene My-
J. C. Colley. L G Wrssel and Phil 141 E1 Reno «:hools after a year’s
•Ivery, all of Piedmont; L. G.
Vdams. Harry Mathis. J. C. Pavy.
Jteve Chappel, Ben F. Anderson,
lalph Bolinger. Charles Pettit.
Jaude Haynes. W. F. Finn and
J. L Bachman, all of El Reno;
'oe Masopust and L. H Mohr, both
>f Mustang; and H. L Morise of
3eary.
Assignment of cases for trial has
wen made as follows:
Monday, Sept. 20
State vs. Archie Crawford and
Jecil Crawford; possession of a
till.
State vs. Aaron Jackson; posses-
ion of intoxicating liquor.
8tate vs. BUI Cross; transport-
ng Intoxicating liquor.
8tate vs. Jack Sadler; transport-
ng intoxicating liquor.
8tate vs. J. W. Wiewel; posses-
ion of whiskey.
SUte vs. Delwin Myers; bastardy.
Tuesday, Sept. 21
8tate vs. Oene Slate. Rex Bar-
ow. Dan Williams and Rayburn
Jassel; possession of still.
■ State vs. Leo Branch; posses-
ion of intoxicating liquor.
State vs. Edgar Armour; assault
ind battery.
8tatc vs. Georgia Thompson,
malicious destruction of property.
State vs. Albert Douglas; assault
»nd battery.
8tate vs. Walter Carter; assault
’and battery.
Wednesday. Sept. 22
State vs. Buck Kennedy, Carl
England. Jim England Leslie Watts,
ShermRii Bramblett. and another
man named Watts; dynamiting
’North Canadian river
SUte vs. Flank Buffalo, bastardy.
State vs Ernest "Chick" Stroud:
drunk in a public place
State vs. Fletcher Handley; as-
sault and battery.
•PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 8)
absence.
Jack Douglas, instructor of speech
in the highschool. has an A. B.
degree from the University of
Oklahoma. Ke it the first speech
major graduate of that institution.
Of Oklahoma Given
Deep Soaking
junior highschool. She ha* a B.
8. degree in home economics from ,
Oklahoma a and m college, sttii- Fields In Scattered Areas
water, and has done graduate
study at the University of Colo-
rado Iowa State college, and Colo-
rado A. and M. college The past;
seven years Miss Schultz has been j
Instructor of home economics in
Tipton highschool.
Vauzhncllle Joseoh of Elk City
Is second grade and music teacher
at Lincoln school. 8he has a B
S. degree in education from South-
western State Teachers college.
Weatherford. For the past three
vears she has been in charge of
music and a teacher In the elemen-
tary grades at Mountain View
IM1U lau^riK in* J ginviuo at ivit/nmaiu view.
while Ina Lane has returnee! Miss Joseph is an accomplished
pianist and accompanist
E. Worth Walter, Instructor of
mathematics in the Junior high-
school. holds a B. S. degree from
Central State Teachers college. Ed-
mond He taught mathemetici
and science in the Junior high-
wlfh 55 semester hours In speech school at Guthrie three years, and
and dramatic art. Mr. Douglas, prior to that time he was high-
whose home Is in Norman, has school principal at Marshall. The
been teaching the past two years past two vears Mr. Walter has been
t:s a graduate assistant in the uni- an educaUona! director In the Civl-
verstty He has done graduate ban Conservation corps He is
btudv at the University of Wla- married
cons*n Vivienne V'aldrip, first grade
In Junior Highschool , teacher at Webster, has a B S.
Agnes Schultz of Frederick is degree in education from South-
teacher of home economic* in the (PLEASF TURN TO PAGE A)
EL RENO INMATE
Refusals of Germany And
Italy Answered
Oklahoma's stream beds apparent-
ly were handling without difficulty
today the sudden loads of water
dumped here and there by freakish
storms of the last three days, thl
Associated Press reported.
Even the Salt fork, which was i
draining off three feet of water!
left in the business district of
Cherokee by a nine-inch rain, was
nowhere near flood stage. t
The North Canadian river had
risen half a foot overnight to five
feet at Woodward, but still was s
foot below flood stage there.
The Caney river was three feet
six inches above normal at Bartles-
ville after 3 16 inches of rain, but
no flood was feared.
Showers varying from light
sprinkles to several of more than
an inch fell over Oklahoma again
last night and today, soaking
fields that already were laden with
moisture from a week of scattered
rains.
Clouds To Remain
Harry Wahigren, federal weather
observer, at Oklahoma City, said
there was little danger of floods
| on any of the state's major streams
| unless more heavy rains fall. "Hie
forecast for tonight and tomorrow
was for general cloudiness, with
probably local showers.
The North Canadian river, usual-
"I tic tii'i of major
Barbara Stanwyck, Rob* streams to flood after a heavy rain,
ert Taylor May Wed “iETX 3T* “ *
HEADS LEAGUE j
ACTRESS REFUSES
TO REVEAL PLANS
FOR LOST CHILD
Possibility of Death From
Exposure Spurs
Searchers
OAK GROVE. Ark . Sept 9—</P>
—Wearied searchers, nearly 500
strong, took up again today a
widening hunt through the Ozark
wolf country north of here for
little Florence Jackson. 4-year-old
daughter of an Oklahoma coal
miner, who lost her way in the
forest Monday afternoon.
„„.K___ ,, _____ _ , While her distracted parents. Mr.
H Pa‘n,el *ormer Cana- and Mrs. Arthur Jackson of Chel-
on y. "P,rrnlat,Vhe 1,1 ^ *«■ Okla.. kept constant vigil.
hRS ,**'! Sheriff John Morris expressed con-
mdu. fide nee the missing child still was
E? wr 2L,£fr hi? aIlve' “'farmed by the wild beasts
i w l T" locat*d which range the hills.
“ Wiishl,1*u,n ‘wM fPW Searchers, including CCC wotfem
from Harrison and Berryvllle, Ark„
i and Shell Knob. Mo., started beat-
! ing through the underbrush at
i dawn In a pouring rain.
Searchers hoped to find the girl j
alive, although they admitted the
I possibility of death from exposure I
or starvation.
Child Turns Back
Florence disappeared in the wild
. Ozark section a few miles south
Attorney Questions Con- the Mlssourt-Arkansas line when
, , she accompanied her parents Into
stltutionallty the hills In search of relatives who!
were reported living in the vicinity
of a sawmill.
The Jacksons became lost and
Florence went with her grandfa-
ther, Arnold Armentrout. of Oak
Grove, along a little-used road in
search of the mill. She turned
back when one of her feet develop-
ed a blister. Armentrout returned
COURT WILL TEST
El
Did You Hear
lyiiss J08EPHINE HODNETT.
iVI head of the highschool
English department who last
year served as faculty adviser in
charge of The El Reno High-
school Boomer, says she has
completed plans for her Journal-
ism class to edit an even more
interesting page of school news
this year. Miss Hodnett spent
the past summer in the Univer-
sity of Missouri where she was
a student in the institution's
school of Journalism, and she be-
lieves the training she receiv-
ed there will be invaluable to
her in supervising the school
news page which appears as a
weekly feature in The Tribune.
-o—
Miss Marybeli Kelly, industrious
court reporter at the court-
house. who never has been able
to find time for a vacation this
year, still has little prospect of
“getting away from it all," now
that a Jury term of court is
Just about ready to convene.
From now until that time her
desk will be piled a foot high
with legal documents, and dur-
ing the session the stack may
be three and a half feet high.
She probably will be thankful
if she gets a vacation by
Thanksgiving.
TAX LEVIES ARE
Lobs In Revenues Due To
Homestead Exemptions
May Reduce Budget
LONDON Sept 8—UP'— France QUEBEC. Sept. 9—<U.R)—Barbara
and Great Britain answered Oer- Stanwyck. auburn-haired movie
man-Ttallan refusals to take part star, locked herself in her hotel
in a Mediterranean “anti-piracy" i room today and refused to dls-
< onference today with new deter- > cuag reports that she planned to
mlnation to use their warships to sail for England Saturday to Join
prevent attacks on shipping. Robert Taylor, Hollywood's public
Both the British and French heart throb No. I.
also insisted that the conference There have oeen persistent re-1 town.
Water Runs In Stares
There were no rains in the state
last. night to compare with the
deluge that struck Cherokee Tues-
day night, nor the five inch down-
pour in Comanche county. The
water had receded at Cherokee aft-
er standing three feet deep in
some stores in the lower section of
In Switzerland tomorrow would pQfjj, that they planned to marry,
achieve definite results—despite re- and when Tay|or galled from New
t.isal of Faeist powers to take i york on Aug ji he repeated that
l,art- he was "very fond" of Miss Stan- _________
Even a* the Faeist powers re-. WyCit Who is four years his senior j North fork of the Red river. The
Repairs were being made on a
water main at E3k City that went
OKLAHOMA CITY. Sent 9—<U.P>
j-The constitutionality of a legis-
lative act providing for the refund
t>f excessive taxer paid without
protest slrce 1931 was attacked
today by Assistant Attorney Gen-
eral Randell S. Cobb In a brief
filed with the state supreme court, to the car later and found Flor-
The test case will determine ence had not reappeared,
the state tax commission's ultl- Worn Shoes Recovered
mate disposition of the claims of When a hasty search failed to
58 corporations for refunds total- find her. peace officers and CCC
4,000 JAPANESE
TROOPERS SLAIN
Chinese Ambush Sets
Line Back Five Miles
mg about $10,000
There will be a flood of claims
for refunds, probably running to
$75000 to $100,000. If the act is
held constitutional. Dr. J. J Rog-
ers, tax commission secretary, said.
Most of the claims ask for
refund of taxes pa|d as corpor-
ation license fees. Many fees were
paid or. full capital Investment,
including bond Issue money, be-
the state supreme court held
out yesterday when struck by a « ***•» roukJ not ** l<’v‘ed 0,1
wall of water gushing down the
Prisoners Charged After
Attempted Riot
fused to parley, the French navy Bul he added that he had no
ministry mdered another destroy- mortage p|»ns.
er division to be ready to rush to I have nothing at all to say
the Mediterranean about Robert Taylor,” Miss Stan-
The German reply given to the WyC|t said after she had come.
French and British charges d'af- unannounced, to this port of de-
lates tn Berlin was drafted In parturr for London. She went into
complete collaboration with II seclusion at the Chateau Frontc-
Duce. | me
Italy's reply was three pronged Taylor and Miss Stanwyck had
It said: , been constant companions until his
1 The Faeist government at first | departure to make a picture in
city's emergency supply was suf-
ficient to meet the demand.
SEVEN ARRAIGNED
IN THEFT OF BEER
was Inclined to accept the tnvlta- London
lion to the conference which is! Miss Stanwyck, who divorced j Three Youths Admit Part!oct that h* "used to fight an-
bond issues
Reasoning Explained
The test ease was brought by
the Oklahoma Broadcasting com-
pany fbr refund of $299 61 tn sales
taxes paid during 1933 tn 1936 on I and be heard,
broadcast programs.
Oobb attacked the act on the]
grounds that private business or-)
ganlzations were permuted to pay]
taxes under protest but that they
ure prohibited from paying taxes
without protest and then asking
for a refund
Cobb said that he used the same
legal reasoning In attacking the[
boys were drafted in the hunt.
8earchers Tuesday found the lit-
tle girl's worn shoes and stockings
and a bunch of wilted wlldflowers
where apparently she had slept
Monday night—only a few yards
away from the road where she dis-
appeared.
The telephone operator here,
nearest outside communication
point, said “at least 150 CCC boys
passed through here this morning
on their way to the search. It's
still raining.”
The girl's parents remained tn
the vicinity of the hunt last night
and pickets were posted at inter-
vals In hope the child might cry
designed io find a way to stop Frank Fay, the comedian, began
' pirate" attacks on the snips of her screen career tn 1929 Taylor,
many nations In the Medlter- ] a bachelor, got his start in 1934.
ranean. : As he fled from a crowd of ad-
U B B.i». hU hiKlcultoout | ^ MmM Into mo *<m-
of a window on the eighth floor (ton wm never wash mv hand1"
of the federal building at Oklahoma j The Faeist government hence jw 1 ___“* _ • __
City today, his final gesture of de- has come to the conclusion that
fiance after
charge of attempting
riot at the reformatory. 11 on-lntervcnllon committee In Lon
Armstrong was one of four In- t <$°n'
mates arraigned on the charge be- 27-power committee, set up j —
fore U 8 Commissioner Oeorge nion,ha «" ln an atMnPl CHICAGO E-pt 9—The
J Fhrnck Th.- other* Dnvle syi- lo^lSn men and arms out of I Dally Times said in a copyrighted
iL-err! lawrence 19 r mu n„, v I Spain, ' has had experience also article today that "in uniform's
I Jnvri Brooks 19 Willamsnort ind • I *n ,<*rhn‘c*> R',(1 nav** questions strangely suggestive of those worn
1 which perfectly adaptedi by Adolph Hitlers Nazi storm
and O C Butler. 15. Fort umlth,. ,_____ » _____I -.-.,. ____„ u...__
its tmai gesture ot ae- his come to the conclusion tnat _ . . ..
pleading guilty to a the argumeru to be considered |'unnr ( U*(*Lc I In
[tempting to incite a ran he examined adequately by The c
Nazi Movements
Ark., all pleaded Innocent, the
Associated Press reported.
While he was waiting in the
marshal's detention cell for prison
officials to return him to the In-
stitution. Armstrong slipped the
cuffs from his wrists and hurled
them through the open window
They bounced off a lower roof
four floors below and fell to the
alley
"Throws One Tin Cup"
Armstrong also was the only
member ol the quartet to
I to facing the problem Indicated.'
troops, a relatively small but rap-
idly growing armv Is preparing for
the American counterpart of -der
lag' when it planned to sel/e con-
trol of the United States”
The newspaper said the article
___ resulted from an "exhavistlve ln-
Program for the young people's vestlgatlon of American Nazis
division of the Canadian county made bv three reporters end in-
Sundav school eonventton will be veatlgators
i Janned at a meeting Sunday at
Convention Plans
To Be Discussed
any rebelliousness during tire ar-
raignment.
“I plead guilty to throwing ot?
tin cup. tile slight, lair haired lad
said
Earork entered the plea as guilty
to the charge which carries a 10-
year maximum sentence. The com-
plaint must be brought before a
grand Jury and the youth will have
an opportunity to change Ills plea
If indicted
“If you're guilty of pait of ltu«,
you're guilty of conspiracy." Earork
toUt him
Bond was fixed at $5,000 each for
the First Christian church ol El Ppolncn Dlufltimc
Hrno The session will be held IVCIIUSC 1/IMIdlllN
show 1 ^onTpson^'rm.e^en^l To BlirV HUSbaild
NEW YORK, Sept 9-t/Fi—A
Seven El Reno youths charged
with theft of beer from the Pro-
gress Sales company's warehouse
at El Reno were arraigned belore
Judge Emmett Thompson in Cana-
dian county today at which time
three of them pleaded guilty.
Thomas Hutchinson. 18: R C.
Iaa-son. 17, J. B Roush. 17; Carl
Perdue. 16; Frank Casey 17: and
Otha Bratton, 20. were charged
jointly with theft of 11 caaes of
beer valued at $29 IS from the
warehouse on Aug. 30 while Mau-
ine Heilman. 19. was charged with
taklnc seven cases of beer, valued
at $18.55. from the warehouse on
Aua 1. The warehouse Is operat-
ed by William J. Schulte and
Carlos Weaver.
Hutchinson and tawson pleaded
guilty4 as charged. Waiving pre-
liminary hearing* they were bound
to district court tor trial under
bond of $1 000 each.
Heilman pleaded guilty In his
case, with sentence date continued
to 9 a m Sept. 15. Bond was
set at $500
Roush. Perdue. Caaev and Brat-
ton all entered pleas of not guilty.
Their preliminary hearings are
scheduled to begin at 9 a m.
Sept 15 In county court, with bond
lor each placed at 11000
PEIPING, Sept 9—I/Pi—A detach-
ment of 4.000 Japanese troops was
reported today to have been wiped
out by a deadly Chinese ambush
ln the rocky hills west of here.
The Japanese line was said to have
been thrust back five miles by
the sudden Chinese onslaught.
Japanese commanders obviously
were more and more worried over,
the fate of their operations ln this
area where their advance has been
held up a full month by dogged
Chinese resistance and astute
strategy.
Heavy reinforcements were flow-
ing through Peiping to Lianghslang.
30 miles to the south, and to the
sorely menanced Japanese right
flank ln the western hills around
Mentoukuo. 24 miles to the west.
The steady stream of wounded
Japanese coming back from the
front was almost equally heavy.
Several thousands have been
brought here ln the last few days
and last night a train load of
wounded was evacuated to Tangku.
the port of Tientsin, where they
will be sent back to Japan Most
of the Injured were lying flat on
the floor of cattle cars
Reliable Chinese reports front the
! Mentoukuo front, where the whole
Japanese operations is threatened
I by a wide Chinese flank attack.
were drawn
retreating Chinese
Allocation of ad valorem tax
levies in Canadian County was
continued at a meeting of the ex-
cise board Wednesday. Board
members began deliberations Tues-
day and recessed Wednesday after-
noon until the next meeting at 9
j a. m. Tuesday.
The following allocations have
been set by the board;
Mustang and Calumet schools. 5
mills each; Yukon school. 4.25 mills;
towns of Yukon* and Okarche, 4.25
mills each; town of Mustang. 1.48
mills.
These allocations compare with
the 1936 levies as follows: Mustang
and Calumet schools. & mills egeb;
Yukon school. 4 mills; towns of
Yukon and Okarche. 450 mills;,
town of Mustang, no levy.
New Law Applies
Last year the same levy waa
fixed for all schools since the state
constitution allocated 5 mills for
schools without a vote within
the districts. The limit for ad
valorem levies was 10 mills.
Under the new state tax law,
levies must be allocated to each
school, city and town separately
and must not exceed 15 mills.
A 4.25 mill levy for the city of
El Reno and the same levy for
city schools have been set tenta-
tively by the excise board Rep-
resentatives of the city appeared
Wednesday before the board, urg-
ing increase of the city levy to
4.50 mills. County levy has been
fixed tentatively at 650 mills.
Items Approved
The board has approved 25 per-
cent of necessary Items involved in
operating schools, including sal-
aries of teachers, janitors and truck
drivers.
Loss ln city and county tax
revenues accruing from homestead
exemption threatens to raise levies
and reduce the budget, officials in-
dicated today.
Assessed valuation of taxable
property in El Reno amounts to
$3,134,290 while homestead exemp-
tions total $713,967. Valuation of
county property totals 115.066,972
with homestead exemptions amount-
ing to $2,004,433
--1-
other act of the last legislature ]*jcnjr Hn(l Ra||v p|Mnn„H s»ld U1' 4 000 JaPanese
In Warehouse Robbery providing for the refund of income * Kmc *na rcany riannea lnt0 a trap by retreat
tax money oald the state before Darlington -
1931. ’I | AMERICANS SCURRY
Governor F W Marland filed - TO GAIN REFUGE
the test case in this instance ask- A Boy Scout court of honor, AMOY. China. Sept 9
ing for a refund of some 314.000 rally and Dlmic will be held from' American residents of this South
The tax cominlss*on allowed claims
in both case* so that the attorney
general might throw the cases in-
to the supreme court for a ruling
Auto Store Now
Beinjj: Remodeled
The Western Auto associate store
will be opened at 115 South Bick-
ford avenue about Sept. 18. C. L.
Echols, owner announced today.
The building, formerly occupied by
the Lanman Supply company. Is
4 to 9 p. m. Thursday. 8ept. 23.1 China port of Fukien province
at the state game farm at Dar'mg- were forced to scurry under ground
ton. Henrv C. Coates district today Into bombproof dugouts for
commissioner, announced today j protection against a shattering two-
E1 Reno Bey Scouts, their par- nour raid of Japanese war plane*
cuts and city Soouters will attend and war ships
Ihe rally. Bob BllUngton. execu- ] Americans lives were gravely en-
tlve of the Ceptral Oklahoma area, I dangered and the United States
and Mrs BllUngton will be ln at- , warship Ashvlile was caught In
EXHIBIT SPACE IS
Downtown Showrooms
Are Donated For Fair
tendance.
Each troop will • cook and serve
supper to Its members and guests.
Ice cream and soda water will be
furnished bv the council
Following the picnic supper. Mr
BllUngton will give a talk Discus-
the bombardment. Several bombs
fell only a short distance from
the Ashvlile and forced her officers
and crew to hurry below decks for
refuge from the hall of shrapnel
The El Reno Motor company has
donated its showrooms and used
car lot for display of exhibits tn
the Canadian county 4-H club and
F F A. fair to be held at El Reno
8ept. 17 and 18. H.i O. Keller,
chamber of commerce secretary,
announced today.
Club exhibits will be housed tn
.-.howrooms of the company, while
livestock will be displayed on the
used car lot tn the 100 block of
West Wade street.
Use of the company’s facilities
was offered through courtesy of
B T Marshall, manager.
Chamber of commerce officials
were unsuccessful ln their quest
to find an empty building in the
mix- LaniMimu oujipiY wiiijwuj, minimum win Rjvr n ih'k uiacus- ■ p a w iina an empty ouimuiK i
being remodeled for the new tenant, sion of the mounted troop project YY Cl t HTf Atl 1V111 t'S business section for the fair.
Mr Fchols served as cashier for and a meeting of the press club1
the Oklahoma Cotton Growers' as- are scheduled at the rally. Com- ]
sociatton at Oklahoma City 13 poaed of older boys from each'
„ . * ; For a time, it looked as though
Related By hi hot t m**ht ,iavf to hoW lhe fa»r in
years. He resigned recently to take
a course of training given by the
Western Supply company at Kan-
sas City. Mo.
Robbery Suspect
also with hiding a hammer and
chisel In his cell for use as weap-
ons His bond wns net at 610.0(10
The four are charged with
throwing plates at prison attaches
dining a brief disturbance In the
reformatory mew hall Monday.
CHURCH CONTINUES
the voting people'* division
The Oanndlan rountv Sunday
school convention will be held at. _ _____ .. „ lw,,. ..
the virst Methodist church in I «*-ye»t-old recluse who pollre said i _
Union City. Oct 15. All county 'old ’-hern she had slept for nearly Kell el WOrKer IS
Sunday schools are ask'd to Mod a year with the corpse of her i
delegates to the meeting tn H husband was held for observation
B*no 8unday'_ iodav fa Bellevue hospital _
“I was walling for him to get < OKLAHOMA CITY. Sept 9—*A*»
! up." said Mrs. Emily Gudas. 8he | —A 30-year-old WPA worker, who
refused to hrlleve her husband. Dick Herwlg, state highway patrol-
man. said waved a roll of 910 and
120 bills while buying beer for
........ .........friends at Okmulgee, was held to-
fv,nmorM milu^tTa«m152 5m VmV" and "aii ed wliv she had not I day as a possible suspect In the
Dnmngr suits h<,r himhanri ] recent robbery of the Exchange
Bank of Perry.
Herwlg said the suspect would
be taken to Perry to be viewed by
bank officials and employes The
Perry bank was robbed by one
man who dropped half his lio.noo
loot, as he fled.
Damages Sought
.. . ■my , | | reiusru w) nrueve ner
By C uster Youth
_ ] Police found In her possession a
OKLAHOMA CITY. Sept 9--Mb ^h. ™ 36
all except Lawrence, who Is charged were on flic today In district court l>ur,rd ,ler husband
here brought bv 14-year-old Louis | “I was told that I could keep
Chains and his father. Ulysses M him for a year." she repllrd "And
Chsllls. Custer county fanner, jjt l* not 8 V*t."
against the Ohio Oil company and ----— 1 1
D 8 Burton. Oklahoma City, an jA|L SENTENCES
employe. i **
The boy asked 850,000. alleging
he was Injured Aug. 12 when a
car driven by Burton struck a
wagon In which
U. S. Defenders
Staying In China
unit, the club gathers news for the
council publication.
Plans for the Bov Scout circus
here Nov 26 will be made at the
rail*’
"Ths rally and p.vnlc will be,
held regardless of the wrather." | ne^av
Mr Ooatet. said “In event of
rain, the meeting will be held Ir.
the library room of the Darling-
the old fair building." Mr Keller
- | commented. Through courtesy of
A report of child welfare actlvi- the compkny. the fair wUl be held
ties was presented by W C. Elliott, m the business area. Attendance
chairman of the underprivileged
children's committee, at the El
Reno Klwanl* club luncheon Wed-
WASH!NOTON Sept 9-oPi— j ,on lftrm "
Secretary Orrdell Hull indicated---
today that the United States does ( 'n|||i( l In Mfliintl’c
not Intend to withdraw Its troops A/U 11,14 V/ll i7«UMN|
or naval vessels from China so
long as the present undeclared war
between Japan and China con-
tinues
The secretary of state asserted
HYDE PARK N Y Sept 9--(/Pi
President Roosevelt today asked
at his press conference In re- John D. Biggers of Toledo. Ohio,
sponse to a direct question as to take charge of the unemployed
ihe American government's In- registration authorised by congress,
lentlons on this rrspeci that this; Blgrers said he would give his
government n refiponslbllltv for pro- Washington next Wed-
tectlng Its nationals In disturbed nesday. At the same time It was
f0,‘ tn* duration of | undrrstnori that preliminary con-
GIVEN BY JUDGE
anotri/moi______M__the father and 33. both of El Reno, were ordered Biuker avenue^Dai^^Wedne^
REGULAR SERVICES I son were riding two and one-half to serve five days In Jail and pa.vj(lav f(,r chu-ngo III acoomimnled
_ I miles south of Clinton The fa- court coats after pleading guilty to I by her mol her Mre H Bril ten
Regular service* will be held at ' "'*>l r°‘ W5il6 asking 91.000 charges of assault before Judge, Pll|Ur Tex , w w M
(he Church if Christ Russell ]fnr >""" nf "on* services and Emmett Thompson In Canadian R 0 Brewer of Phan and Mix'
i.trcet nt Evans avenue, despite the * ***“ •-*—*— *“'■* “ 1
r-pairs now underway Hugh
HcycUUm. minister, said today
A group of reorganized Sunday
school classr* will meet Sunday
In the new addition living con-
structed at the ohurch.
the remainder for his own Injuries, county court, records disclosed Io- c." W. Smith of Oklahoma City
dHy They plan to spend two weeks in
Earlier plriu^ of not guilty were Chlcaco with Mrs Britten's sister.
Mrs Emerson R Kelso and Mrs
John T Nn.vlon are spending a few ] withdrawn. The pair had been
days at the Pan-American Bxpoal- clmrgrd with attacking John Lor-
Uon In Dallas, Ttx.. and Uie Fron- enaen and Lester D Lorenzett on
tier Fiesta ln Fort Worth, Tex July 9.
Mrs. Olnf Jernbrrg. and Mr. Jern-
berg. who will celebrate their gold-
en wedding anniversary during their
visit.
the period of danger. H
Hull, recalling the United Bute*
efforts to evacuate It* nationals
from the danger zone In the far
east, said nevertheless Its respon-
sibility for protecting them Is
clear
i side rat Ion was given by the presi-
dent to utilizing local election and
postal machinery to make the count
which will be kept on a Voluntary
basis.
will be Increased since more peo-
ple will be able to visit the exhi-
bits as a result of their convenient
location."
The club has sent two children ] club and Individual displays will
to the Crippled Children’s hospital be exhibited Frldav and Saturday,
at Oklahoma City, and has ar- Sept. 17 and 18 Livestock wUl be
ranged for a tonsillectomy In El displayed at the used car lot on
Reno. One boy has been set to the Saturday only,
state school for blind at Musk- Pens will be constructed for
u6*« livestock at the lot.
Walter P. Marsh, highschool
|| a | . ^ WrtHPI r. IY1HIMI IIIKUM'MOUI ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ -
unemployed Due •£ Armstrong Seeks
Reforms In State
urged cooperation of civic clubs
during the ticket selling drive
Delegates and alternates to the
Ttxas-Oklshoma district Klwanl*
convention at Fort Worth Oct. 10,
11 and 13 were tunned at the
OKLAHOMA CITY Sept. 8—DPI
James R. Armstrong, former Ok-
WEATHER
Enreeasl
' Judge Emmett Thompson in Cana
dlan county court. Wednesday.
Mo»Uy cloiMy ^g^t aitd Friday, j anl al!n»lr,mnent ^mduotad^'b^fore
For 24-hour period ending at 4
p. m. Wednesday: high. 65; low.
67; at 4 p. m.. ftj.
State of weather, clear
Rainfall, none.
Sun rises tomorrow at 5 4R
Sur. sets today it 6 45
meeting Wednesday Delegates chos- county district Judge and
en were W P Marsh J N Rober- ]ac,lv* ln Oklahoma politics since
son and Ray Dyer. Alternates In- "'“tvhood. suggested today an In-
clude Wilfred Ward. C F. Bn»s OfP«hdent convention of stata
and R T. Howie j Democratic voters be called to write
__ a reform platform and draft a
FAIR ARRAIGNED aSUTaXTSST' convention.
IN COURT HEREj^^^ jg^J £
YOUTH HELD FOR j R. w Schulte. 40~ of Oklahoma ,rom
ALLEGED ATTACK,SSK ^
Trial of Willie Teague, 19. of El Thompson Ui Canadian county i|0n"d\n *uta '^gownmeot r0rn‘P’
^ court late Wednesday on charfee
of driving an automobile while In-!
toxteated. Bond was set at $500
Reno, on charges of assault was
ADOPT 4 TUMI
*»u, *- *■« 5-fJSZL IS i r
lynii
Jointly wlUr Howard Tcuguc In an
alleged attack upon Howard Thom-
as Aug. IS, Hr entered a plea id
not guilty and Is being held under
bond of $2Q0 pending trial.
E. T P. Ellington. 43. also of daughtar to whom theyTiave given
OklalMxria City, who wa* riding! the name Janice. The child was
with Schulte, pleaded not guilty born June 27. Mrs Wilson I* a
to charges of drunkenness Bond sister of Mrs fYrrto NorvelL 80S
for the latter wag pleoed it »iot> 1 South SUlsar r-enue
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.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 160, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 9, 1937, newspaper, September 9, 1937; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919215/m1/1/: accessed May 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.