The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 308, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 26, 1936 Page: 1 of 6
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The Heart of the Rich
Canadian Valley '
The El Reno Daily Tribune
You Can Buy It For
Less In El Reno
A Blue Ribbon Daily Newspaper Serving Oklahoma’s Blue Ribbon Area.
Single Copy, Three Cents
ASSOCIATED PRESS
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 26, 1936.
<U.R' MEANS UNITED PRESS
VOLUME 44, NO. 308,
[THREE JAPANESE
MILLION DO*. ’ S IN JEWELRY
iave beenl
iy ol tliel
lect, but|
d be suf-
.tate's de-
r author!-!
—ifP)—The
film actH
rnrd today
ghter, Su-j
reporte
IK
ourth wild
:rt, screetl
tay pair
over the
I lit them '
i lauthter
adcap md-
d in an I
i. one ol I
. as well
• • • Pic- I
end
M>\'
IMER
WIFE’
onltht
or AIR”
l
IN ARMY’S COUP
remier and Two Other
Cabinet Ministers Are
Assassinated
V
TOKYO,
officers of
Feb. 26—(/Pi—Ycuiur
the army who said
.hey wished "to remove corruot in-
I fluences from around the throne'
assassinated Premier Gkada arc
I two other cabinet ministers today
The government declared a state
I pi emergency and ordered twe
lleets from the high seas to police
duty at the great cities of Tokyc
| ind Osaka.
■ Emperor Hirohito was stated by
Li government source to have com-
manded the strong nationalist
Fumio Coto to form a new gov-
| eminent.
The insurgent officers, who de-
cimated the cabinet, said theii
■
l .
■
• •‘•Tv
. *
A
NEWSPAPERS SILENT
TOKYO. Feb. 26—(A*.—Only
four of Tokyo's many afternoon
dailies published today and none
of them mentioned the day's
main events—a military coup
and assassination of several lib-
eral leaders.
• Their pages were well filled
wilt) columns of foreign dis-
patches and pictures of the city
blanketed with heavy snow.
_w
REPUBLICANS TO
253 Delegates Scheduled
To Convene at El
Reno Thursday
Did You Hear
I EONARD DUNGAN knows
Li how the absent-minded pro-
fessor feels. Or he should, at
least.
Last night Leonard was stand-
ing on a street corner, when he
had an invitation to ride home.
He accepted. Alter entering his
house, he happened to remem-
ber he had left his own auto-
mobile downtown, so he had to
about-face and walk a full mile
back to town ko get his car.
I purpose was to protect the na-
| Clonal policy.
i In addition to Premier Okad->
khey killed Admiral Viscount
IMakato Salto, lord keeper of the
(privy seal and former premier, and
(General Jotaro Watanabe, chief ol
lilitary education.
Another Reported Dead
They also shot Korekiyo Paka-
| ihafhi, minister cf finance and
I Admiral Kamparo Fuzukl. Lord
| Chamberlain cf the linoerlal court
Reports by the Japanese foreign
| office to embassies abroad, stated
at Takahashl died cf his wounds
Postal defense warships already
arrived off Tokyo late to-1
light
assassinations were carried
a snow storm which blan-
(8EE NO. 1 PAGE 6)
Wearing an estimated "million dollars' worth" ol Jewelry, here is
how Mrs William R. K. Taylor. Jr.. 'Kathleen Barrie) planned to
appear at the forthcoming Diamond Fashion show In New York. The
necklace bears the diamond. Star of Bombay. The huge stone on her
left hand Is a 49-carat emerald.
a RENO GAGERS HIGHWAY MEETING
ARE ENTERTAINED PEANNED AT ENID
James M. Blair Host At
Country Club
■ migni.
|; The
Ifoul in
Members of the El Reno high-
school basketball squad and several
other guests were entertained by
Move Made To Promote
U. S. 81
H G Keller. El Reno chamber
of commerce secretary, will attend
a meetlngg of the International
Meridian Highway association in
James M Blair at the El Reno Golf i tnld on Tuesday. March 10. when
and Country club Tuesday evening j p**uis fur promoting O. 8 highway
Endorsement of Governor Alf M. j
Landon of Kansas as candidate for
president of the United 'States by
Canadian county Republicans at the
party's county convention here
Thursday was predicted today by L.
K Butts, chairman of the county's
central committee.
Two hundred and fifty-three del-
egates from the various county pre-
cincts are to convene in the district
courtroom at the courthouse at 2 SO
p. m. Thursday to prepare for the I
approaching campaign.
A new central committee will
elected; delegates to the congres
slonal convention in Anadarko
March 9 and the state convention
in Oklahoma City March 16 will
be designated; and a county nomi-
nee for district delegate to the na-
tional convention in Cleveland.
Ohio, June 9 will be selected. The j
district delegate will be elected at
the congressional program.
Interest Manifested
In addition to the probable en-
dorsement of the Kansas governor,
another matter creating a great
deal of interest in tomorrow's meet-
ing is the rivalry in the selection of
a county chairman and state com-
mitteeman. Keenest competition is
being shown by Mr. Butts seeking
re-election as county chairman over
William Funk. Virgil Shaw is work-
ing to replace R B. Cobbs as state
committeeman.
Other Officers Shown
Other present members of the
central committee Include Mrs. J.
M. Woods, vice chairman; Mrs.
Blanche Standard, state committee-
woman; T. G Jackson, secretary;
and Hans Paulsen, treasurer.
The 253 delegates expected to
take part In the county convention
were named at precinct meetings
throughout Canadian county Feb.
17 at which time new precinct of-
ficers also were chosen.
El Reno chamber of commerce
officials were pleased today
wnen they learned a $30,720
contract had been awarded to
grade, drain and gravel a farm-
to-market road from Yukon
southeast to the Oklahoma coun-
ty line. The El Reno cham-
ber had been working with Yu-
kon citizens several months to
obtain approval of the project.
Incumbents File For Re-
Election; Joint State-
ment Made
DECORATED
ESTATE RECEDE
15 Persons Hurt During
Storm at Turley
BV ASSOCIATED PRESS
Fifteen persons were injured in
a wind storm at Turley, near Tul-
sa. early today as wind, rain, hail
and dust swept over Oklahoma.
One of the Tur»cy victims was
the day-old soil of Mr and Mrs.
Tom Bradshaw. The baby was in-
jured when it was blown from the
house to a pile of brush nearby.
None of the injured was hurl se-
riously. Homes and stores at Tur-
ley were damaged.
Rain and hall fell in central por-
tions ol the state and eastern sec-
tions were soaked with rain.
The three members of El Reno's
city commission whose terms ex-
pire Jhls year had filed for re-
election today, it was disclosed by
W. D. Patterson, secretary of the
Canadian county eection board.
They are Herman Dittmer, Robert
L. Hadley and Charles B. Tye.
No other fiings have been made
with Mr. Patterson. The period
for candidates for city commission
to file opened today and will close
March 6 The election will be held
j April 7.
Serve Without Pay
Under the city charter, there
are nine members of the city com-
mission. All serve :ur terms ol
three years each, and the terms
are so fixed that the terms of three
of the members expire each year.
All commissioners serve without
pay.
Alter the election each year, at
which three corwmst jners are
chosen to fill vacancies, the newly
formed commission elects a mayor
from among its own members, who
server as commission chairman
throughout the year.
The commission selects the city
manager who, In turn, selects all
other city employes witti the ex-
ception of the city treasurer, which
post also ts elective and for a two
year term.
Other members of the city com-
mission. whose terms do not ex-
pire tills year, are J. A. Brown,
Roy Leas and John E. Tiedt, who
have another year to serve; and
Dr. Ernest Ewing. Henry Behne
.
IN MURDER TRIAL
Emma Willis Adjudged
Insane by Jurors; To
Enter Aslyum
Here is a new and exclusive
picture of Ocrtrude Atherton, fa
mous author, wearing three decor-
ations recently conferred upon her
by the French They are the Mr-
daille d'Hosineur, the Medallle dc
la Republlque Francalse and the
Medallle de Legion d'Honneur. Miss
Atherton’s latest novel, "Golden
Peacock." a story of the Augustan
age is soon to be published.
GAS SERVICES AT
EE RENO HALTED
Main Breaks At Border
Station Early Today
when the Indian cagers were guests
| of honor. Dinner was served at 6:30
j p. m.
| Squadmen attending were Victor
Hackney. Kenneth Taylor. “
Cecil
El Reno residents were without
gas for a brief period early Wed
nesday morning after the Okla-
homa Natural Gas company's
............. | main Line broke a t a point three
storm was not' severe and abated I In filing fo, re-election the three jd^rt^ of * ^
Light dust clouds i commission members made the fol- der station, wnere me tr
” .... I.. ..... . I Ihn etf AJ Ill'll
a" dust~storm settled over Guy-! and W. C. Grove, who have two
mon in the panhandle but the ! more years on the commission.
at midnight.
firs!
the gas line
rared over southwestern Oklahoma ! lowing Joint statement: | enters the city limltt.
horn Hollis to Elk City. "Feeling that the office of city | The break, which was the
- I commissioner should not be sought to occur at El Reno in 13 years
FAIR WEATHER i after by any one, it was our In- was caused by a weak jcint oi
IS SCHEDULED | tention at the expiration of our | pipe It was said by I
Fair weather is scheduled for
I the state tonight and Thursday af-
| ter the cooling rains which fell,
! over eastern and central Oklaho-
(SEE NO. 2 PAOE 6)
Yukon-0 k I a h o m a City
Road To Cost $30,720
81 will be (UKtttwd
At tills session which Is schedul-
ed to epen at 10:30 a. m . dele-
gates will formulate plans lor high-
way 81 to get 1U full share of | _____
1 ES|22£r Battered Body Discover-
| Donnellan. Joe Slattery and Ralph : now
tlon. Mr Keller has been advised
Leading chambers cf commerce
along the route have been request-
ed to send large delegations to the
Canadian county is one of the 12
in Oklahoma where new highway
construction was provided for to-
day in *425 617 worth of projects on
I1 which the highway commission an-
' nounced low bidders, it was dis-
closed by the Associated Press
Dan Sweeney of Oklahoma City ; toastmaster
was apparent low bidder on the |
| Clovis.
Bobby Shuttee and Otto Hess also
were present, tn addition to Dick
Horton, basketball coach, and Franlf
Crider, fdbtball coach.
Others attending were H.
Fogg William Fogg. E R Kelso. N
A Nichols H L Merry. Major Ho-
bart R Oay. Wetzel S Weldcn. Ray
K Bannister. Don D. Cole. Walter
J. Avcoek and Senator James A
Rinehart The latter served as
ed Near Mangum
MANOUM. Feb 26—uPl—Search
for a clue to the identity of the
slayer of a 30-year-old man. whose
, Enid meeting. , ——-----
1 We have an opportunity to put | bantered, bullet-torn body was
ma Tuesday night, tne United Press
reported.
The rain failed to reach western
Oklahoma and left farmers fac-
ing the prospect of continued dust
storms.
El Reno had .47 Inch rainfall.
At Miami an inch of rain fell. I
slowing down traffic on the high-1 (’ounty Farmers To Meet
way 66 detour near Fairland. Sev- .. . »
eral trucks were reported bogged MBTCII I
CROP BOARD ID
BE REORGANIZED
U. S. highway 81 into the inter-
national limelight this summer if
we work together in boosting this
route," 1* 1* declared by William
Y. Hoehn off Enid, president of
the International Meridian High-
way association.
project to grade, drain and gravel' I /»r»4pn V'lCCS
a farm-to-market road extending LiClIlvll ijCl v ItCS
from Yukon southeast to the Okla- 1
homa county line. Sweeney s bid
' was *30.720 -
■ The El Reno chamber of com- j special services to be conducted
Now Scheduled
Parent-Teacher
Council Meeting
found beneath a bundle of feed be-
side a railroad track south of Man-
gum. turned toddy to southern
Texas.
Sheriff E. N. Clabaugh of Greer
county asked officers at Big Spring,
Tex., to hold a inan there whose
name was found scrawled on a piece
of paper in a bloody coat found at
down on the detour.
Temperatures will drop in Ok-
lahoma tonight, the weather bureau
said, and may hit the freezing
mark In most sections of the state.
The maximum at El Reno yester-
day was 80. the minimum 45
The light hall storm which ac-
companied the rain in this section
last night was said to have been
too light to have caused severe
A. Wood
of" Oklahoma City, district superin-
tendent cf the company.
Mr Wood explained that In re-
cent weeks the ground had b;en
Ircaen almoft to the 8-lncli main
line, burled 36 Inches under the
ground, and that as the ground
thawed, the surface soil was loos-
ened sufficiently to enable the
weak Jclnt to break
Repa'r* Made Hurriedly
Today s interruption In the gas
company's service, which began
when the line broke at 3:15 a. m .
was the first to occur since 1923
when the main was washed out at
Reorganization of the Canadian
ANADARKO, Feb. 26-i/T*)—En-
ina Willis, 18-year-old farm girl,
was acquitted today of murd r
charges in the she*gun'slaying cf
her .'hare-cropper father.
The Jury held the girl "net
guilty" by reason of insanity.
Attorneys said the verdict mean
Miss Willis must be committed to
in Institution for treatment.
Judge Will Linn announced he
will commit her to the Western
State Hospital for Insane at Sup-
ply early tomorrow She will b*
taken there by Sheriff Elmer
Finley.
Keels Lots Better
“I feel lets better." said the
lirl as she was returned to her
tall cell. She appeared unmcvc l
In the courtroom.
It was learned the Jury tool:
■even ballot*. On the first it w
to S for acquittal. The three
switched to acquit on the fcurtlx
md the final three ballots were
cn whether she should be released
nronditlonally.
The case was given to the jury
at 9:50 a. m. today. The Jury re-
tired to start it* deliberations af-
ter Country Attorney Amos 8tovall
made the closing argument for the
state.
At noon the Jury of 10 farmer ;
and two Anadarko buslnes- men
sttli was deliberating.
Faces Haggard
The faces of the 18-year-old de-
fendant and her mother were drawn
and haggard as they waited for the
verdict.
The courtroom remained crowd-
ed.
A sordid story of beatings and
abuse was related during the trial
by Miss Willis, defendant; her
mother. Mrs. Zona WllUs; and 20
other defense witnesses.
"He beat me Just like he did the
stock,” the brunet defendant testi-
fied. 8he also testified of alleged
Improper proposals made by her
father. Iddis H. Wlllts. 51. slain by
a shotgun blast in his farm home
near Eakley last Dec. 21.
W. H. Cooper, defense attorney,
stresaed In evidence four incidents
tn which the father was said to
have knocked his daughter un-
conscious and had Miss Willis show
the Jury a v-shaped scar over one
eye allegedly the result of a beat-
ing.
Three Verdicts Possible
Three verdicts were possible un-
der Judge Will Linn’s Instruction
to the Jury. They were acquittal
by reason of temporary Insanity;
conviction and a sentence of death;
and a penalty of lue
» river crossing during a flood.
Although the line had been re-1 conviction
County Crop Improvement asso- j n,,^ py 5 a. m. today, lea* than I imprisonment.
........ ...* two hours after the break occurred, Stovall. Caddo county prosecutor.
the gas was not turned Into the I made no recommendation except to
1! mcrce had sought approval of the I g| Trinity English Lutheran church.
I, project for the past several months, poi South Hoff avenue, during the
■ working in cooperation witli Yukon [entrn reason have been an-
citixens ' nounccd by Rev. E. H. PUtclV.o.
—————— pastor. Each service will begin
. 1 a. \T t at 7:30 p. m. Dates and subjects
I resident VCtOCS 'of the btoaruphtral series are as
Feed Ijoan Bill I p,b 26 ju‘ias Apume wuo
Peter, the Boaster
Meeting of the Parent-Teacher
association council Friday alter-
ncon will be preceded by a lunch-
eon at the Kerfoot hotel to be giv-
en by llie fcU Reno Public School
Health association, it was an-
nounced today. v
Reservations lor the luncheon
may be made with Mrs. W. E.
York, chairman ol the sponsoring
body. AU person* interested Iiavc
been invited to attend.
The council will convene at 2:30
p. m. at the new administration
building, north ol the hi Reno
hlgluchooL Mrs. Guy ScUrldgr.
Altus Jan. 22
Clabaugh said the
bloodstained
clothing undoubtedly was that of
the slain man. The man had been
dead more than a month, the sher-
iff said. The body was only partially
clothed.
A coroner's inquest, scheduled
tills morning. Was postponed until
this atfernoou.
Turned Traitor.”
WA8HTNOTON. Feb 26 '4 ' 7.1 HumldPl
President Roosevelt lod«y vetoed Marrh ..
' the *50.000.000 feed-loan bill. cured.”
The measure was returned to the march 18. Pilule, an Easy Way
^sarin- p^. ■-»»*-.
*40.000.000 seed-and-feed loan bill j RruB|Cu* Novelties."
In 1934 "I did it on the theory | Apru | Tea*as. an Example ol . ia • i
that It was proper lo taper off the Bllh(1 u|ll1 mtur Unbelief." OlIUWIlCC lVall
' nop loan system, which had been Ap|ll ln toood Friday), "Jesus,j . • jii i
initiated on a large scale as early Uic crucified." IMllDlUYC 151101
Ml 1931 - r *
Th* president added, however, that! TT1
he would Issue an executive order JalllimllfP Appointees HG1.UL.NV LLt
th. next few days to meet any | ^ Tunw| D|«|R£r« .hot twice
—-- and critically woiuided today as
ATLANTA. Oa.. Feb. 26—11)<. beside the eastbound
DONNELL SILENT
ON RESIGNATION
OKLAHOMA CITY, Feb. 26—(-»’
—Colonel Phillip 8. Donnell would
neither deny or affirm reports to-
day that he has submitted his res-
' Ignatlon as Oklahoma Public Works
| administrator effective March 15M
“Anything official will have to
come from Washington," Donnell
said-
elation will be effected at a meet
Ing of fanners in El Reno March
7. James R Childers, county agent,
announneed today. The session lr
scheduled to be held at his office
In the federal building
_ _____________ “The association is valuable to
damage to crop* In the urea where I farmers for tire assistance given
it fell. ; in obtaining pure seed for plant-
The coldest weather in the na- | ing, for not even a perfect sea-
tlon today was at Havre, Mont . | son can make a cron newer thun
where the mercury stood at 18 de- I the seed that is planted." Mr
grees below sero. j Childers pointed out
So getting a good crop requires
starting with good seed," the agent
Albert Fall Is
| continued. “Good seed" was de
fined as purq seed of imoreved va-
I L>i 14 vY'Ckfl IIvilllE rletles tliat are adapted to Okla-
DCIICVrU ISJ'IIIK homa Krowlng conditions.
ask that Emma be sent to a hos-
pital for the Insane.
EL PASO. Tex., Feb. 26— (Av-
Albert B. Fall, secretary of the
Interior during the Harding ad-
ministration. was critically 111 In
William Beumont general hospi-
tal here today.
The 74-year-old man's physician
reported a definite turn for the
worse and that death might come
at any time. \
Fall, also a former senator frem
New Mexico, had been 111 of pneu-
monia several weeks, but had ral-
lied in response u> physicians' ef-
forts to build up his falling
strength.
Seed Available
Such a seed supply Is available
to Oklahoma farmers through Ok-
lahoma Crop Improvement asso-
ciation. an organization of farmer
seed growers working* In coopera-
tion with the Oklahoma A. and M
college extension service, accord-
ing to L. W Osborn, extension
agronomist and secretary of the j
association.
This organization has Just l«su?d ,
Its spring seed n't, showing psme* I
mains at El Reno until 7:30 a m
as a safety measure, Mr Wood
J explained.
Thirty-five employes of the
company were rushed to El Reno
from adjoining towns to assist in
making a house-to-house canvass
of the city, notifying all consum-
ers that the line had broken and
that gus had been turned back I
into the city mains at 7 30 a m.
"This was an extra precaution to
prevent possible asphyxiation among
late sleepers." Mr Wood said.
Inquiries Answered
In addition, the gas company |
used four telephone lines to re- _
eelve call* from local customer ~
v, ho were making Inquiries lu re- I DAB EL, F»b 26—</Y>—A search-
gard to the break More that 1|Jg rty braVed a heavy downpour
2 000 telehone calls were handled j of r>ln lodiy m hunt for Hester
SCHOOL GIRL 111
ME MISSING
Youth Held in Jail For
Investigation
during the early morning hours. It, john*on. 17 - year-old hlghschool
was said.
VandcnberK To
Consider Race
i,:, 26 ■ I1
1 tmoUty Culhuun. 55. a Rock Is-
nreds for loans to produce new
P riops.
COUNTY PRISONER
ESS
Fulton National bank of Atlanta to- I flight train No 74 near Holden-
day refused to cash a cheek lor i V|]|C ^ pens W. A. Barno;
ENTERS HOSPITAL $100000 presented by J B. Daniel,!^ locomotive engineer on Uu
who was named by Oovernor Eu- . wus held for questioning,
gene Talmadge ns state treasurer to mcn IMC residents of 8luiw-
suecred the ousted Oeorge B Ham-
El Reno Persons Invited
To Appear In Pageant ISH
WASHINGTON. Feb 26^/1’
c? growers and uie t^d a'v.liable Senator V.ndejd,^, cf MUrhUan.
The list may be obtained from the I In a letter made public toeUy, or
run tn the Ohio
Thuraday
render1!
mnra. Helenl
Arthur Plrr-I
Abe Lynvatll
William Mosier. 27. was removed
from the Canadian county Jail at
H Reno to a local hospital at 11:30 I Utoh. _
p in. Tuesday upon advlcs of the I
county phyairlan when it was learn- Mr. nnd Mis Herman Mervcldt.
11 r(t the prisoner had developed l,lfl South Williams avenue, were
| pneumonia, according to W N. Far-1 Oklahoma City vlsltora Tucnday
‘ its. tindersherlff
Moaler. who lives near Bethany,
was arrested Feb 20 on a charge of
larceny of domestic fowls. He had
pleaded not guilty when arraigned
before Judge Emmett Thompson
Markets At A Glance
_____ _ NEW YORK. Feb 36—</t*i—
Feb. 21. and"was being held for pre- I Slocks Irregular, Industrial 'spee-
llmlnat v hearing scheduled at 10 a. | laltie* recover lit dull tradleu
nee.
Undersheriff W W Cotton, who
arrested Barnes, said the engineer
Ink! him the two men had been
experiencing trouble for seine llnte.
He quoted Bar ties as saying Cal-
houn was shot after he advanced
on the engineer with a brake club
lu hla hand. Calhoun was given
emergency treatment at Ute Hol-
den vtllr hcapltal.
KIDKR"
4IDAY
lurray
nv Feb. 28. Bond had been set at
*1.000
Moaler was charged Jointly with
Otis Rfflngrr with theft of 14
chickens front Mollle M Loughmun
on Feb 19.
HOUT
IS”
LEAVE HOSPITAL
Mrs C. R Horton and Infant acn.
Richard Maxwell, were removed
Wednesday from the El Reno sani-
tarium to their home at 300 South
Barker avenue.
Bonds lower, secondary rails and
Japanese loans down Curb mix-
ed, Home rpectaltlea higher. For-
eign exclturxges steady, Japanese
yen breaks sharply. Cotton steady,
liquidation, trade and ft.reign buy-
ing.
CHICAGO. Feb 26 (V*--Wheat
strong, crop damage feara. Corn
higher, unfavorable weather. Oat-
tic strong to 25c higher. Hogs
steady to 10c lower, top $10.25.
TWO FINKS PAID
J. W. McKenna pleaded guilty to
charges of pOMamlng whiskey and
transporting whiskey when he ap-
peared before Judge C. Q. McCain
in municipal court at El Reno
Tuesday nluht, according to records
ol Tom Shaeklett, chid of poller
A fine of *20 In each of the two
eases was assessed.
An Invitation has been extended
through El Reno's rhttmber of com-
merce for local residents to partici-
pate in the 1936 presentation of the
annual Wichita mountain Easter
sunrise service near Lawton.
"The Easter service In the Wich-
ita mountains has become of na-
tional Importance and we are sin-
cerely Interested In having some of
your people participate In the 1936
presentation." it was stated by Rev.
A M. Wnllock. director, ln a com-
munication received today by H. O.
Keller, chamber of commerce sec-
retary.
Three Groups Invited
Rev. Wallock explains that H
Reno persons may take part In any
of the three following ways;
1. Singers participating In the
general chorus of the prologue,
numbers ranging from 10 to 50 per -
sona. The chorus will sing "I Love
to Tell the Story," "Rock of A”"s."
and "Lead, Kindly Light." ) he
Mrs. Neill B. Waldo and Mrs.
Blanche Fischer spent Tuesday tn
Oklahoma City
un association member, bearing the
1 association's tag. he knows he Is
exactly what he call* for."
the county agent,
the association permits lta tag
aeed
girl, missing since Monday.
County Attorney C. D. Wilkinson
held a youth ln the Idabel Jail for
Investigation.
Sheriff O. F. Stewart said the
youth held was Miss Johnson's es-
cort Monday nleht. He told officers
he left her within a block of her
home at midnight Monday
Mrs Zeke Holman of Idabel, with
whom the missing girl stayed, aald
Miss Johnson did not reach the
house.
The county attorney obtained the
aid of Civilian Conservation corps
workers to help Ip the search
office of the ccuntv farm agent, mally declined to
or hv writing to Oborn at the presidential primary but did net
®r., , u ..oil*,.*, nun- close the doer to his future con-
wate|10mA A d "**' ' slderatlon for the Republican nom-
• When a Nnner g-t* reed from to ^ R^ucan ctate. -------,.. .
.....„ ri o|,|o in reply to an The parent* of the miasma at
mSv^ to wtther he would .r* farmer, in die Battiest comma-
aLL^e run. Vandcnberg asserted hi* sole
to' Interest" In the Rrpublican con-
.! ventk.n was that It should make
the wisest possible decisions re
nlty.
take part in the resurrection scene j be SLr^rSrtTtfl inspection I "tne wisest pemme urvm.i ,.■> n-
as angels. They will bo expected to I ^ 'y* fu-id '«hHe^ ^crop'^pectin* both party lead, rshlp ano
furnish plain, white robes Wings both in the Wdwhle the crop £
Will be loaned lo them by the asso- I was growing and In the bln after 1 ---
elation. I,inru'' ita(, Inmrnveil CLASH TO MEET
3 A group of 20 adult* both men j ..Teernficvtl.n Unity class will be conducted
and women, to take part tn the dra-
Suspended Sentence
Drawn Ry (’olcnian
Such Inspection and cert If text I'm
„v v..« I rt vartetv elves rise!"* 7 ,!S n m Thursday In ,he r0urt MV.ral weexs ago, waiw
malic acencs of the PMrant. jnte , "" *o ^^VittcTname of "cer-1 home _of .Miss » L* appeared before W
Having pleaded guilty to charges
of transporting whiskey when hr
was arraigned In Canadian countv
court acveral weeks ago, Montle
women will be expected toJumtoh | •«rs^s^llw tag I B**» Wade street, by Ralph Rhea Eniniett Ttimnpwn Tueaday to re-
Uietr costumea. These ran be ">*<1 nsme Reg I ^ the Oklahoma City Unity Crn- cflve „nt,nre
of Inexpensive materials and must | with ,he ler, It wav announced today. All | The defsndent was ordereri lo |mv
be characteristic of Bible days.
Rehearsals Necexaary
UonrT1 blue*'tag"uT'produeec"'Tinder person* mterested In the class have a of *50 and to serve 30 day •
. .. . ' kaan iirnrH t/X nttrrxH Lit H.a«t. iKa OIW'K hr tiff M
"We would like to have one or all | still more careful reguletlona. and t>cen___ ___
these groups from your city." Rev is used "v tnundeffji seed ln P^°-
will be named In the program In the ( high quality this season.
manner outlined in last year's serv-1 reported. "Their work lv leading
WEATHER
Jail, with the sentence being sus-
pended since Coleman la under 21
years of age.
The youth had been charged with
transporting whiskey on Oct. 12.
K'oieeasl
Fair, colder ln east and extrem
pya7T Tn «:*; ! ^ in OM- aouttx portlets tonight. Thureday |
service are doing so from a religious
point of view and not from any
commercial Interest."
El Reno groups who desire to par-
ticipate In the pageant will be rc-
slngers' costumes will be furnwnrd I qulred to notify Mr Keller at the
by the pageant association. . chamber of commerce office at
2. A group of 10 women who will once.
i"ho!r<* erects, as the grow- j lair
Ing of pure varleM»s well adapter!
to Oklahoma conditions la con-
cerned."
El Reno Weather
high, 80; low. 46;
Mrs W Arthur Btgrert wav re-
ported 111 Wednesday at her home,
420 North Reck Island avenue.
p m. Tuesday,
at 4 p. nv, 71.
Stale of weather, clear.
Sun rises tomorrow at 6:57.
Bun seta today at 6:08
.r£‘ .r_
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rftft.
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YM
.
1935.
FINE COLLECTED
Fine of *20 was paid by Oklaho-
ma Tire and Supply company in
municipal court at 15 Reno Turndav
after Ute concern had been charged
with oilowng waste oil lo accumu-
late on the street adjoining its
place of business, swording to rec-
ords of Tout Shaeklett, chief of po-
lice.
BE- ^2
_:_M
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 44, No. 308, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 26, 1936, newspaper, February 26, 1936; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc919298/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.