The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 86, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1930 Page: 1 of 6
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EL RENO: Roek Island
headquarters. Location
of Fort Reno. A com*
good farms and good
churches.
munlty of good homes,
THE EL RENO DAILY TRIBUNE
VOLUME 38.
UNITED PRESS
Okla.
Historh
CRUDE OIL
PRICES CUT
IN OKLAHOMA
Carter Oil Co., Makes Re
ductions Of 24 to 41
Cents
Society
Successor to The El Reno Daily Democrat and the Peoples Press
EL RFNO. OKLAHOMA. THURSDAY. JANUARY 16. 1930
WEATHER
Fair and continued
Cold.
UNITED PRESS SERVICE
CROWDS PROTEST RUM i^LLINGS
PRODUCERS MEET
Further Proration Con-
i
templated; New Gush-
* er At Capital
TULSA, Okla., Jan. 16. (IP) —
The Carter Oil company today
slashed crude oil prices in Okla-
homa to meet the drastic reduc-
tion posted yesterday in Texas by
the Rumble Oil & Refining com-
pany.
Price reductions ranged from
24 to 41 cents a barrel, the most
severe price cut in years.
(-rude oil of 25 gravity was cut 1
24 cents to 66 cents a barrel and
4 4 gravity and above was cut 41
cents to $1.44 a barrel.
Rapidly mounting production in
Oklahoma because of flush fields
Huch as the Oklahoma City pool, I
Rast Karlsboro and others is re- j
sponsible for the reduction, it was
said. j --
The Overproduction has come Lfni.|AV pAni;AO n
at the time of the year when gaso- KopIlCS (O IvCQUOSt
U. S. OBSERVES
10TH BIRTHDAY
Anniversary Finds Move
Under Way To Im-
prove Enforcement
DRYS ARE OPTIMISTIC'
Feed The Birds and
Squirrels While The
Snow Is on, is Plea
"Don't forget the birds and
squirrels while the snow is on
I lie ground as they can not find
their usual food supply,” is the
Pl< a of hundreds of local nature
lovers.
Everyone is asked to remem-
ber those little friends of man
during the rigors of winter. A
handful of crumbs and a few
nuts placed outside where they
can he found may mean life to
either the birds or squirrels
flint do not desert the colder
climate during the winter
months.
NUMBER 86
While crowds ripped down coast Ruard recruiting posters on Boston
Common in a demonstration against the killing of three rum run-
ners by coast guardsmen near Newport, K. 1., inquest into the mat-
ter is continued at Newport. Photo shows Captain Charles Travers,
left, wounded and lone survivor of the four members of the crew
of t.ie rum runner, Illack Duck, and his attorney, John Backus, leav-
ing Newport courthouse.
Cost Of Enforcement In
10 Years Exceeds 261
Billions
FOR $100,000
Former Brakeman Sues
Rock Island and Ana-
darko Company
INJURED ON OCT. 7
Knocked From Top Of
Box Car By Guy Wire
Over Track
Police Chief Demotec
WASHINGTON, Jan. 18. (IP)
Natuma. Vrohiim,on, called ^Five-Day Lecture Series !!
President Hoover a "Noble experi
nient,’ celebrated its tenth anni- Arousinir Illforosl \monir a petition filed in the dMrlct court
L rv t/l/tu V llrlt h rrhAnA hnf.ln ” * n | ■ r. ...
JONES TO 0. U.
Central Parents And
Teachers Meet Friday
versary today with congress begin
Ring work upon an elaoorate pro-
gram designed to take it further
Horn the experimental stage. No
special observance was scheduled
here.
Housewives
After being assured that his posi-
tion is a legal one and that he will
not be subject to political attack,
James K. Davis, above, has agreed
to step down from the office of
chid of police of Los Angeles to
that of deputy chief. Roy K,
here by C. W. Padgett, former! is succeeding Davis as
■outs
for personal injuries is .sought m
Roek Island brakeman. against the
Chicago, Hock island & Pacific
railway, tlie Traders Compress
emergency chief.
El Reno housewives attention! I company of Anadarko,CharlM Dos-
That prohibition still Is In tho I . , 6 you complete plans us . „ ,, . .. .....
experimental stage is demonstrat- 1' 0 ‘Blend the opening lecture 1
of Mrs. Lona Rusk llirig. fumed f,ral name is unknown.
ATHLETES ARE
gaso
line consumption is the lowest and
storage tanks are overflowing.
Other major crude purchasers
were expected to follow Carter's
reduction today, it was believed.
The cut came a few hours be-
fore state operators met here to
draft plans for further reduction
in production to prevent a price
cut.
Oil men were divided whether
the large Humble cut in Texas was
justified.
Plan Further Promt ion
From Oklahoma Un-
iversity
The Parent Teachers association
of Central s "hool will hold its reg-
ular meeting Friday afternoon, on
January 1<, beginning at 3 o'clock.
All friends of the school are in-
vited. The program is as follows:
“Health Play," fifth grade pupils
Talk on Health, Dr. A. L. John-
son.
Talk, Miss Picklum.
health nurse.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 16—(LP)—
Secretary of War Hurley said to-
day he would he unable to assign
Capt. Lawrence (Biff) Jones, re-
tiring West Point Football Coach,
REPORT LOST
PLANE FOUND
to the i blven Ity of Oklahoma R
TULSA. Okla.. Ian 16. (IP) |° T C. detail. __
Plans to curtail the state’s flush The future of the former Army /xrr- • » * „r
)il production were discussed here j football mentor is in bis own UlllCialS OI W estern Air
loday when Oklahoma producers bands, it was pointed out. He has
net at the request of the Oklaho-! expressed desire to be assigned to
na City operators proration com- special field artillery school at
Fort Sill and his desire has been
Further production curtailment granted. Although the order has
s planned to avert a crude
•rice cut in this state.
Kansas operators wore invited I elded,
o attend the conference.
New <■ usher Comm In
Express Una hie To
Confirm Report
not been issued, it is understood
that the assignment has been de-
OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 16.—, kwmu.nd, Okla., Jan 16. UP) tor au years. Four nresidenu
iSrEf 0^#',oma. L115' »•“' br„"'.’nd"'',ed Graham Ze hart t aury !,r«h*d 10 wit" lh- probiem
EDMOND MAYOR DIFS
EDMOND, Okla., Jan. 16.
LOS ANGELES. Jan. 16. (IP)-
Officials' of the Western Air Ex-
p: »ss were unable early today to
ed by the legislative program suu-
mitted to improve enforcement af- ll!lm,,y expert; who
ter lu years—a program as com-11 0UK*lt
prehensive and as sweeping as has
ever been proposed since the en-
actment of the eigliteentn amend-
ment.
Ten years ago today there were
many hang-overs" in every part
of tne country from farewell celt-
orations incident to the new dry
era. Even staunch prohibitionists
admit today there still is plenty ot
count) * liquor available.
in congress and out, wets insist
the law never will be enforced.
In congress and out, drys insist it
can be enforced. Dry organiza-
tion leaders say the ten year test
has come up to their most optim-
istic expectations.
Today, it is at least certain, the
country is face to face witn its
greatest drive to get this law en-
forced.
No one can foresee what the ul-
timate solution of the experiment
will be, but the congress which
l ow is considering a program for
better enforcement is preponder-
antly dry, in fact the dryest of any
since the law went on the hooks.
Modification any time soon seems
out of the question, if ever.
President Harding said prohi-
bition would be a political issue
for 30 years. Four
1
Is being i In his petition, Mr. Padgett set
to Kl Reno by the Daily out (but be wan employed an a I
Tribune to conduct the Cooking brakeman for the H<.' k Island on
School for fiv • days, beginning Uctob-r 7. 1929; that Mr, Spark Ppnrtt Pun rinK fir as
•Monday, Jan. 20? Those who miss wan was manager of the Traders ‘ v illi) tilYCS
the event of the year, will not have Compress company at Anadirko.
another opportunity soon, since and that Charles Dosaey was cm
i ployed as a conductor for the Hock
Island, in charge of the railroad
switching at Anadarko. lie nl-
| leges that I he Traders Compress
company had erupted a guy wnv to
icld had another producer today row for G. II. Fink, mayor of Ed-
plane had been found.
in 10 years, beginning with Preal-
vhilo several wells bailed down mond, who died at his home here (,f Telephone eonununica- dent Wilson, who vetoed the Vol-
Banquet For Football,
Basketball Teams
A four-course dinner was served
I support the smoke stack on Its ,0 wembers of tho El Heno high
plant, and that the guy wire ex-
| tended over the truck and down so
I near the ground that it would not
clear a man working on top of box
cars.
The plaintiff alleges that on ()c-
school football and basketball
teams by the Pepett Pep club,
Wednesday, January 13, in the
high school dining room. The
tables were arranged t,o form the
letter “E", while the place cards
were miniature football and bask-
tober 7. 1929, he was riding on top etball players with small pennant,
o a box car preparatory to setting in their hands, which bore the
! i" ,ra*vl'H 0,1 (Hrs wb' b were be* tame of each guest. A blue and
ing switched at the plant of the white color scheme was observed
Traders Compress company and throughout, tall white tapers tied
that he was struck by the guy wire with blue moline being placed on
ami knocked from the car. Ho tie* > the tables and festoons of blue
DELAY ACTION
ON FRANCHISE
UNTIL FEB. 10
Councilmen Want Time
For new City Manager
to Study Matter
N E W APPLICATION
J. A. McCurly Seeks Fran-
chise; General Discus-
sion Held
Action on the application of the
Oklahoma Gas & Electric company
for renewal of its electric light and
power franchise in El Heno was
postponed by the city council, in
session Wednesday night, until
Monday night, February 10. At that
time, it Is expected, some definite
decision will be reached.
The ‘ouncilmen Rtate last night
that they desired to delay action
on the matter until after the new
city manager. J. H. Bender, as-
sumes bis duties here on Febru-
ary 1, so that lie may have suffi-
cient time to go into the matter
and advise the council intelligent-
ly.
McCurley Seeks Franchise
J* A. McCurley, PVal cotton gin*
nor and well-known citizen, ap-
peared before the council last night
accompanied by his attorney, J. L.
Trovathan, prepared to file ah ap-
plication for an electri light and
power franchise, also, but since
•hree members of tho council were
absent and awe Mr. Trevathan
desired to revise the application
slightly, it was decided to have Mr.
Trevathan place a copy of the ap-
plication In the hands of -each
councilman within the next ten
days.
After the council had voted to
postpone ib*,lion on the O. O. & K.
I
vith oil showing.
Coline Oil No. 3 Ulauer flowed illness.
L>0 barrels the first hour after It
vas bailed down and cleaned it-
elf. The well has ten million
eet of gas.
late yesterday after an extended turns
them
FIRE DESTROYS
COUNTRY HOUSE
'Jew Residence O f J.
Frank Wallace Burns
Wednesday Nitfht
>1 HIM THY GOES DOWN
OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 16.
(LP) As skies cleared today tern- tho Bristol Mine,
peratures dropped to low levels,
adding a sling to the punch winter
has given Oklahoma the last two
weeks.
7 a. m
ckires th:i» his hack was broken and white crepe paper hanging ‘ ...... u*‘
and that he was painfully and per- from the celling. ’ 1 8°' a round‘table discussion
barges the Traders rempress i ^Ireiw; Coach J. E. <).<;. * R was D?e«Snf as Ure
company and Sparkman with neg- ^‘mmons, response, Betty Lee t( .vavinn ' .
ligence in ererting and malnialn-. Rauh’ «olo dance; Captain Paul *?h 1 ’n S*? ♦!
MRS. LEONA RUSK IHRIG ing the guv wire over the fracas 1 captain's problems; Miss V al <.0UnclJ *or the
this will be Mrs. Husk's only up- and the railroad companv with neg’ K™;* ditcher, Pflncipal, Afhlelici l"'[?“y'J\
pearance in this territory during ligence In permitting the guv wire "! h,*h 8(hoo,; Popett ^nclng , ' . (®"!e n,*n*fpr
the present year, and indications to remain in such postitionas to fJ1l°ru8» 0,f *,iine Nav,e*1 ^ lf Bllended the meet,nK
-------- —......................—, nllu tclucu luw vol. at lhe moment are that it will be endanger tho life and limb of its '"n r I’1!!1 . Sn‘l,h; Kr'i ni .
in Ploche, Nev., prevented steart Act but was over-ridden by vory (,ifficn,t ,0 secure her return employes and in failing to Inform ' ('tl' l 'iV'i Vll?inii‘ J>ovc* r,D scu*8 Len®.th nof Franchis«
from cheelcinir „nri nfimii h ( (,ngress. * next year bfvause of the number and warn the plainliff of ||,e loni- < T 11<\''U£h{ 1 nun,,,er; Sl,Per* I , roun(,,,man brought
r “ . ^-leral prohibition enforcement for her serves. (Ion and rtanaer ot the ,,!y wire : \T J!,J.® !Pn«,h
up
the
advicM that Oruham s abandoned | has cost the taxpayer a grand AbBolutely free in every re.peel, Atiorneva A <;. Morrison ami and John-1 ptopoaed framhtae. declarlnR that
plane bad been found 16 miles from total of $264,475,384 for the ten n,e taxing contributions this re- Sons are emmsel for the plaintiff. v'1’.,!! ,ah'l,1)K,itu,,n« ...........
t lira If r i vt i >1 VnACR. itCnirrllmr ............Li ftlftrknhlA u-nmou will _ * ' 1,1 ,S ' OllllCcljlt a 111 Of t lie l»HS-
LAS VEGAS. Nev., Jan. 16. (IP)
An extensive ground search for
years, according to treasury esti- niarkablc woman will be able t<
mates. in !li“ one short week
is here, will prove a revelation to
15 NEGROES TO GRADUATE
HOBBLItS < ’ON VD TED
OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 16.
ketball team. This was followed
by the entire group singing the
high school pep songs, aceompan-
swSi
'SSrw'Nao^Sav ^ Virginia'Thom ind Uwb,
The menu wliicIPwas served by
of household finance, menu bul 1 and
sun broke
which have hovered
since January 6.
ages average ' ante, actual cookery, ii onomical fa«*efl five-year sentences in tin
3 fun buying, accompanied by a visual'Htate Penitentiary after their con
from Platform demonstration of each and 'h'tJons by a district court jury of
was expected today aMImugi, 'the Kri"”> *•» underway today afte, ,U" InKlJL*,^‘.!!,!d hjr. n vlsua! ‘•“"l ^ IHet. Pep club
nit n l.ent/,. K.LI.J i_.. , t Wn 111(411 PAfUirtAfl ftw/1in*r nvl I ! , U‘K‘l • •* **001 (IlplOIllaS
the Booker T. Washington i „ .................
here in May. They have been at- preparation of a meal that is as I here *N’oveniber 19, 1929.
ROYS IN BAD
isn't a marker to what we had iniamon& the cattle. Places where
the winter of 1884 and 1885. That callle drifting south as they all
year I and a cattleman by the (1,d. wouiu reach an abrupt hill or
| name of Ruben Payton was hold- bank. The cattle so weakened by
ing a hern of cattle on east Cedar b‘ck of feed that could not make
Six Cushing Boys Hailed ot Med- ifve "ouiLpl!L.u.p„iiv.e
EXECUTION DELAYED
EASTLAND. Texas. Jan. 16.—
(IP)—E. V. Allen, sentenced to die
in tlie eloctric chair at Huntsville,
for iiis part in the robbery of the
bank at Carbon, will not be exe-
- cuttd tonight
A ... . 4 . 1 Blxo Been, judge of the 88th
Hre of unknown origin destroyed d,8trU.t court here, today granted
ie newly .erected country home of Mfttlry Hugh,H. All<,nV al(ornpyi
Ir. and Mis. J. Frank Wallare, on an appltcatIon for a sanity hearing,
/odnesday night. Date for hearing on the appllca-
riio family was not home at the tion was art for February 10.
me the fire w*e notl neigh-1 -«_____
on • Mrs. Wnllnce end children
re visiting her parents, south of
hickasha, and Mr. Wallace was
ttending a play rehearsal with
lembers of the Fidelig Fraternity
t the First Methodist church.
The El Heno fire department
as called to the blazing building
ne mile south and a half east of
ie cemetery, but were unable to
(tingulKh the flames which hda
radically destroyed the house be-
ire their arrival.
Mr. Wallace was notified of the
itastrophe by phone and rushed
i the scene to be greeted by only
;hes and frames of Iron beds and
oves. He said later that although
» carried fire insurance on the
)use and furniture it would by no
eans replace his home. Mr. Wal-
cc today notified his wife of the
ss and Informed her to remain
1th her relatives until he could
ake a home lor her and the chll-
*en.
NEW FACTORY FOR ENID
Enid, Jau. 16.- (LP>—A company
tllch will manufacture stock and
>ultry feed prodtfl Is is planning
i erect a factory here sometime
iring the coming spring, It has
jen announced here. The product
made from cotton seed cake and
her grains.
frnm hnhin i „a Iw0 men reported flndimr thp avi , UB®U ‘“KU N J1001 uiptomas from uemonsirauon ot each and ay a nisirict court jury or
o^red o "r thoS UlanTln a mTEn willr t T***M™“" *^.ml every -eremnny Involved In t„(. I robbins a filling ..............ra.or
. , . hern ill \tnv Thflw Kbva I>nn» ... nrnnurolInn ■> i .. herp \mVpiiihop 10 14»***I
ness near the Bristol Mines.
They found no trace of the mail
pilot. The plane appeared to be I tho diploma. One of the graduates i over themselves Yu’startling'rapid
| w*U be a 76 year old negress.
wns ai follows:
Soup, Turkey, Dressing, String
be was opposed to granting a 25-
year fran hlse to any utility. Mr.
Owyns replied by saying that Ills
company would gladly In^rt u
clause in the franchise permitting
the city to take over the light and
power franchise and operate its
own plant at any time during Hio
25 years that was s0 desired. He
said that the company desired a
25-year franchise, however, in or-
tending school two days u week scientifi ally balanced as modern
ior seven years to entitle them to! dieticians can provide, will trii
undamaged, they said.
“PAWNEE BILL” SAYS THIS IS A
MUD INTER COMPARED TO ‘84
By ..UTTU ; h"ld “P a horse. This prevented
TltlCK IMtlVKIt Ml.I,I I)
OKLAHOMA CITY, Jan. 16.—
It v mb thin nP„i,iU r.t .i.„ wan it ,.n.i ' fun'r“l a rrunKementM wore
ervinJ"LT'Z t 7'^^ Robert Morris. 21.
( ream, and Cake.
PAWNEE BILL
(Written For United Press)
PAWNEE. Okla., Jan. 16.—(LP)
Yes, this is quite a storm but it
the -cattle from reaching the win
lor feed beneath the ice. It lasted
for three weeks and then began to
break. I saw^many pitiful sights
killed instantly late yesterday
Count Speaks Again
Hefore Judge for “Am
bition” To Work
IcJno l^odge Kansas.
We had started to build us a
dug-out to live In. The storm
aught us when we had finished
three sides. The weather was so
bud that we could not work on tt
FEATURES DELAYED
Due to demoralized transpor-
tation, occasioned by the snow-
Horms and floods, several of
the features appearing dally in
Tribune have been delayed In
lhe mails. These include the
cross word puzzle and the Ques-
tion Box. These features will be
resumed us soon as the material
irrlvea.
six head deep and thousands of
them would be found dead in silr.h
piles.
The Berry brothers ranch on
Stillwater Creek found sixty big
four year old steers that had jump-
ed off the cliff forty feet high. So
so we hung a wagon sheet over the
CUSHING. Jun 16.—(LP) Six south Bide until the storm passed fr?ntlc..were llle-v for that
boys whose average age was twelve over. The weather was so cold and , J, lhe cliff they
and thirteen years were hailed he- bad that we were never able to
fore the police judge here because 1 work in it. By spring our cattle
had nearly all frozen or starved to
serving table fascinates her and-
SSV sff&A's I S£rj?;'ar- ■■■
drawing crowds ot thousands o!
the nation’s best posted women,
to her classes.
In few lines of endeavor and m
few fcitles. is such a remarkable
ensemble of instruction, entertain-
ment and edification available with-
out the slightest charge or obliga-
tion on the part of the women at-
tending.
The attitude of thousands of in-
terested women, as evidenced by
the fever pitch of excitement on
every hand, regarding the marvel-
ous personality and message of
this great woman, indicates crowds
that will test the capacity of the
Baptist Church basement to its
limit. The doors will be open at
2 o’clock. The lectures start
promptly at 2:30 o'clock. First
come, will be first seated.
The Daily Tribune wishes to
warn its feminine readers that
Late Flashes
of their supposedly ambition to
work. In fu*t they were so amhl- death, so we had no use for the
tious they spent the entire
on the jol).
Near morning the boys
night
dugout and it was never finished.
every precaution lias been taken to
Insure maximum seating capacity.
jumped off, ludlnft on the Hollll I f"* of 'h<“ '“'P^'edeuled
ice. Their limbs were broken and ‘
all were dead. ! 081 t,liH famous woman should
When the ice began to weaken
from the ray of the midwinter sun
On Chrlrlmas day I rode the big i 'he heaviest of tho steers were able
were range the entire day and only saw ° ,n>., 1 irol,gl1 ,he J,uw
found and they insisted that they | fifteen of our brand, the severe a»Wa# 8 “n0W and lce to nl)t,ljn
were assisting in doing janitor du- north wind blowing forty miles an!,,1 ben®»th—Invariably the
lies at a theater. They said they hour, and down to zero had driv- , rde?t 01 ,,le Younger tcattle who
hid stayed after the show to sweep «n all cattle south. That night l|l ,iad v;ea,hered the Ht0,m
and then waited a couple of hours could not make it back to our dug- fwould )e Beei1 follow,aa UP ‘he few
to let the dust settle so that they out so I stayed with an old ranch ; i?RI?e?t8 lpft l>y the ,arRor catl,(‘
could dust. After their work was friend of mine, our nearest neigh- ? 0 ,,1,cm rbelll,8 aM they walked
finished they said they went to a bor, twelve miles away. ,m !HC , Htr‘‘Ugtli.
bakery, bought a njcklee worth of During the evening iw> “u 8 ate fI,rinR 1 Btayed at a
U X IhS K‘"‘" 'M «,
insure their attendance by arriving
as early as possible.
Court House
News Items
theater to eat them. Before they
knew it the officers came and tolil
Ihem lo Ro home with lhe order to and four your old steers out of the
next'mornhiK.Ce B,# 0" ”lnC thc: «t UHr'y-five dollars per head,
Nine o’elcvjc came but th(> boys
did not. When apprehended later
they told the judge they had gone
on a rabbit hunt before going to
their homes. ,
The theater owner said he had
and I figured I lmd driven a good
bargain as out of the fifteen head
I had seen that day eleven of them
were dead.
That year many of the streams
were frozen solid to the bottom,
the ice being fully two feet thick!
ordered the boya not to stay In the [t started with « light snow that
show at all and the bakery owner fell to a depth of six Inches then
reported that noys pad been steal- turned to tain und sleet that lasted
Ing cakes and pies from his bak- for nearly two days, forming an
|e^y• l<,e cost on the earth that would
save the remainder of the herd.
None of them after receiving their
first feed would attempt to forage,
hut just stood there waiting for
more feed. Thousands of them dy-
ing in their tracks. The stench of
the dead cattle was so horrible I
could neither eat nor sleep. I was
happy to get away from tills de-
pressing scene.
That storm broke every cattle
man in Oklahoma. So 1 should sav
compared to the storm of 1884 anil
1885 the present storm is s mere
summer sepher.
Oil mill (.ns 1,1‘iimvn
Alvin A. Mitchell and wife in H.
K. Dcnrdiirff, SK«4, Sec. 34, UN. ,\\V
16fl acres.
Worm ill) Denis
Minnie May Miller et al to O. E,
Hurst NEH, See. 7, UN. «W, for
ft 0.000.
A. J. Thompson. Jr., M nI to Kun-
Ice Foster Thompson, NW, Sec. !i.
41N, 6W, and NK’/i. See, K, 1 IN, fi\V,
for $1.00.
A. P, Trotter to C’larcnoe T. Tros*
prr, BWii, Sec. 35. lIN. 5W. f«»r |fl.-
400.
W. H. Mann and wife to H, T.
•tones, block 5 In Llmcoln A roes, N«».
2, In Kl Heno, for $750.
W. H. Cobbs and wife 4o King
Solomon Madison, bbs’k I In Lin-
coln Acres No. 2, K| Keno. for $760.
Councilmen Murphy, Hensley and
Hampton were absent last night.
'I'" ,|Rr 10 11 'eaaler and more
KuIIm, Cranberry Salad, Coffee, lee .„ ,mom ial to obtain financing for
extensions and improvements and
which world be necessary.
A short discussion of rates wa;
held also, duriny which the fact
was brought out that it is useless
to stipulate a maximum rate in
the franchise, since the (corpora-
TRAIN HITS SCHOOL BUS tions commission governs the rates
ELK CITY, Jan. 16.—(LP)—Lock- it would be a simple matter to vio-
wood Kinkle, 16, was killed, and lute the maximum rate clause.
Fay Northit, 16, was probably fa- Municipal ownership of light
tally injured late today when a plants was discussed freely for
Rock Island freight tram crashed several minutes. The city council-
into a school motor bus near Ca- nien have been making an inves-
nute. ligation on municipally owned
The victims, students at the Ca- plants in this state and In other
nute schools, were the only occu states as well, In recent months,
pants of the bus and were enroute
to releave another bus stalled in
the snow.
WOULD REPEAL DRY LAW
WASHINGTON,—Repeal of the
18th amendment was proposed in
a resolution Introduced in the Sen-
ate today by Sen. Blaine Republi-
can, Wisconsin a wet on the 10th
anniversary of prohibition.
DEMONSTRATION IN HOUSE _
WASHINGTON—Speaker Long-
worth was cheered by the House Chamber Of ComiTHF*
today for his successful fight
against President Hoover s propos-
al that a joint congrersional com-
mittee be created to deal with thc
plan for reorganization of prohibi-
tion inforcement agencies. The _
demonstration occurred during a
speech in which Republican How- fcLMINOLh, Jan. 16.—(LP) lhe
ard, Democrat, Nebraska, Congrat- (Mlamber of Amerce of Scmlnol*
ulated Longworth on his stand. wxpotU t0 put on (me nf thp most
Howard proposed to put to a vote noVel c,v,c advertisement stunts
on his responsibility a resolution 'ovrr to ,)Ptrled »n the nation. All
PL AN AIR TOUR
Flans Novel Civic Ad
verlisins: Stunt
of approval.
ANTI SALOON LEAGUE MEETS
DETROIT, Mich.—While church
of the leaders of Rio civic bodies
have been asked to take part In
un air tour of the vountry in a
bells of the nation tolled a tribute , hi'!y uh18rter(:(1
s cr rtrs i
fare is estimated to cost in the
neighborhood of $100.
Declaring the dangers which face
Kuropc today to be more serious,
in many respects, than in 1914,
Count Michael Knrolyi, Hungar-
ian aristocrat-Socialiit, made his
first political speech in the United
States in four years at New York
recently, Count Karolyi had been
refused admittance by the state
department as an undesirable
alien until the other day.
here issued a new declaration of
war on liquor. The league admit-
ted its task had not been fully ac-
complished and called for resump-
tion of scientific temperance teach-
ings in the schools.
TARIFF BOOST DEFEATED
WAbHINGTON-Jan. 16- -
The proposal to increase the tariff
on sugar by 25 per dent from 1.76 M„ C. S. T. Flelschman hour.
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cents a pound to $2.20 cents a lb.
was defeated in the senate today.
An amendment proposed by Sen-
ator Pat Harrison, democrat, Miss-
issippi, was adopted eliminating
the raise written Into the bill by
the republican majority on the sen-
ate finance committee.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Blair, James R. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 38, No. 86, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 16, 1930, newspaper, January 16, 1930; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919221/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.