The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 37, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 12, 1955 Page: 4 of 6
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Four
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Newspaper Servlnf A Blue Ribbon Community
taued Dolly except Saturday trom 201 North Rock Island Avenue
and entered as second-class mall matter under the act of March 3, 1879
RAY J. DYER
Editor and Publisher
DEAN WARD LEO D. WARD
Business Manager Managing Editor
HARRY SCIIROEDKR
Circulation and Office Manager
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for republlcatlon
of all the local news printed In this newspaper, as well as all (/P) newi
dispatches.
MEMBER
OKLAHOMA PRESS
ASSOCIATION
MEMBER
SOUTHERN NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHERS ASSN
DAILY
SUBSCRIPTION KATES
BY CARRIER
One week _________
One Month_______
One Year____
BY MAIL IN CANADIAN AND
ADJOINING COUNTIES
-----1 .25 Three months ________________$1.75
-----$ 1.10 Six Months__________________$3.50
$11.00 One Year
Including Sales Tax
$050
Tuesday, April 12, 1955
I have sat Jehovah always befort ms, bscsuss he is et my right hand
I shall never be moved.—Pselm 16:8. A firm faith will keep him there
for our protection and delight.
Wide Open Field
WE live in a country that depends more and more on techni
cal advances, not only for its safety in a hostile world but
for its economic well-being. Yet apparently we aren’t develop-
ing enough technicians to keep pace with our expanding needs.
According to the United States office of education, Ameri-
can colleges this spring will turn out about 23,000 engineering
graduates. That may sound like quite a few, but in fact it’s
less than five percent more than represented in the class of
1954—which was a postwar low.
Worst still, our principal competitors, the Russians, are
reliably reported to be producing more than 50,000 new
engineers a year. And the word is they are stepping up the
total.
^MERK’A’S production of technical men looks even sadder
when set beside the projected need. An organization
known as the Engineering Manpower Commission estimates
the total 1955 need for new engineers at from 45,000 to 70,-
000. So our deficit in this field as of June this year will range
from 20,000 to 47,000, depending on whether one wishes to
be conservative or liberal.
The commission forsees some rise in the number of U. S.
engineering graduates, perhaps to 35.000 a year by 1965. But
meantime our need undoubtedly will have gone on increasing,
and this total still will be inadequate.
To Walk The Night
By William Sloane x( •
El Reno (OklaJ Dally Tribune
Own*
I
© lfJ4#
Now we can t force more people to study engineering, as
the Russians can whenever they decide to boost the pace. Rut
there must be many things we can properly do to increase
interest in engineering among our young men.
It is a field bulging with opportunities. Engineering in
ike at—:--------------
i-P ...... unbilled iiift jii
exciting new areas like atomic energy and electronics beckons
brightly to many. The men who work in these and other
developing new fields will quite literally hold a considerable
part of the future of this country in their hands.
•••O ” **'-*«« 141 It MlUUll) IIUIU (I
the future of this country in their hands
rjON( ERTED effort should be made by both government
and industry to lift our output of engineers to a level
t« min (mha » .___1 £’ L . I. I • • . . .
.. v/A Cii^iucna IU it level
closer to our true need. Scholarships and financial aids of
other sorts should be offered on an increasing scale. Much
more should be said publicly about the engineering shortage
especially by men in high places who have the responsibility
for advancing this nation’s welfare.
And while we are making the country more aware of the
problem, we should endeavor to halt the considerable waste of
good engineering manpower which somehow or other has
been shunted off into other work.
Some say many engineers are performing nontechnical
of talented men may exist
V ‘’“J 4I4W14J AllglllCL'ld U1
jobs in the army. A fair reservoir
among foreign refugees admitted to this country A west
coast firm recently found one, an Austrian, who had been
working as a bus boy.
We think of ourselves as the greatest technical masters
of modern day. If we are now, we won’t be for long unless we
find ways to make up this serious deficiency in engineering
manpower. 0 6
Most of the singing commercials on TV are completely
out of tune even though they’re in key.
Dice were used in the very early Roman era. We knew
they had wooden horses, but not box ears.
a wSeTMVA«rrhyubb,tArr own “0kin6' says
The universally favorite scent is said to be lilac. Aren’t
they overlooking the smell of bacon and eggs cooking?
Safety is the top concern of automotive engineers Drivers
and pedestrians should follow suit.
SE* horae'
Down Memory Lane
April 12, 1935
jyjR. and Mrs. James M. McCormick, 921 West Wade, have
left for Brayton, Iowa, where Mr. McCormick will trans-
act business for several weeks.
• Madonna Fitzgerald of Stillwater spent Thursday
night with her mother, Mrs. M. Fitzgerald, 819 South Macomb
She was enroute to Pauls Valley.
mi Mrl' L[Ilie Su ms and daughter, Mrs. Frank Vogt, of Mexico,
Mo who have been guests in the home of their daughter and
sister, Mrs. Neill B. Waldo, 810 South Macomb, are tempo-
rarily located at the Sams residence, 711 South Macomb.
„ April 12, 1945
^yASIHNGTON, April 12—W)—The White House announced
late today that President Roosevelt had died of cerebral
hemorrhage. 1 he death occurred this afternoon at Warm
hemorrhage.
Springs, Ga.
Lieutenant General William H. Simpson’s ninth army
rn0,ss.e.d‘,he E,he river today, a scant 57 miles from Berlin
and 115 from Russian lines, and began the push toward the
devastated capital and the eventual linkup with the Red
armies, now poised for the final march from the east
day^to^he Home and’chM Eg S"' W“ W'd"“-
MrsM^N^WU^n’^Oo’IoutM^coitib^1165’^ ‘n lh' h<""e
The El Reno Golf and Country club will meet at 7:30 p m.
Friday at the country club for a desert and card partv
w The DYWYK club convened Wednesday in the home of
meeting^ ^ode^son’ South Ellison, for a regular business
WASHINGTON, April 12—UR—Chairman Elmer Thomas,
(Democrat Oklahoma) of the’ senate food investigating com-
mdtee said today he has received reports that a small, un-
identified group within the OPA wants to eliminate small meat
packers.
XXX
A FTER a while he went on, and
his voice was lower and grav
er, somehow. "LcNormand was
killed hy some kind of chemical, or
else a ray of some sort. And it
must have been because of his
work. There was no other reason
to kill him.”
“There was Selena.
‘'Yes,” he said. ‘‘Selena Selena
who won't tell me who she was
before we met her. Bark, can you,
for God's sake, tell me why she
<hould be so silent about her past
unless it would connect her, or
mmcone she is sheltering, with that
nurder?" His voice was suddenly
strained and urgent. "You see what
have to think, don't you, Bark?
know it was a scientist's murder,
am certain Selena knows who did
t. That's why she's keeping such
a careful watch against giving any-
thing away about her past.”
“And she married LcNormand
just to keep an eye on him?"
He nodded grimly. “Yes. Do
you think I like this? Do you thfhk
i enjoy suspecting my wife of being
implicated in a murder—a horrible
murder, at that, and of a man I
liked?”
"I think you're building a lot
on a pretty slender foundation.rt
''You see, Bark," he said quiet-
ly, "if I can't eliminate this hor-
rible idea 1 have in my mind,
I’ll have to live with it for the rest
of my life.”
* * *
WE got up, after that, and start-
ed down the mountain. The wind
was cold at our backs, and we hur-
ried. Several times 1 should have
liked to smoke another pipe, but
the matches were all gone. 1 mut-
tered a limit that annoying fact to
Jerry, and was surprised to find
that he was very bothered about
it. He was certain that the matches
we had used there on the mountain
were the last ones in the house.
Neither of us liked the idea of a
fireless evening, a cold supper,
and a long drive into town the
next day. Suddenly he stopped and
turned back to me with a grin.
"Say, 1 know what we can do!
We’ll get a fire with a spark from
the car battery. Why didn't I think
of that before?”
* * *
OUR path brought us round the
shoulder of a ridge and into sight
of a mile ahead of us. The moment
we saw it, both of us stopped. The
window at our end, a living room
window, was glowing with light.
From the orange warmth of it in
the shadow of the wall, from the
way it flickered, even at that dis-
tance we knew the light could come
only from the fireplace.
Jerry looked at the light awhile
without speaking or moving. For a
minute or two his expression was
incredulous, and then it changed,
tightened, altered, in a way that I
'could not analyze.
"Maybe Selena thought of the
battery stunt before we did, or
maybe she found a match,” I sug-
gested.
"No," he said, "the car’s still in
the shed and there wasn't a match
in the house . . .” His voice trailed
off slowly, reluctantly, I thought.
Sure enough, when we entered
the living room there was a big,
crackling fire on the hearth, dried
desert wood that burned intensely
and was gone to ash in an hour.
Selena was sitting on the settle,
looking into the flames.
"Hello,” she said. "Have an in-
teresting walk?”
"Sure," I said, “only keeping up
with a long-legged mountain goat
like your husband is no job for one
who hath been long in city pent.”
Jerry was standing behind the
settle, behind Selena; he took out
his package of cigarets, and put
one between his lips. His voice was
perfectly casual.
‘‘Gimme a match, will you,
honey?”
That woman could think, and
think f$st. Only the smallest trace
of some expression went over her
face; then she stooped and pulled
out from the flames a long twig of
mcsquitc.
"Here," she said, and held it to
his cigaret.
He drew in a long drag of smoke
and looked at her across the flame
without saying anything except
"Thanks."
She tossed the twig back into the
flames.
"We were worried,” I remarked
"Jerry was positive there wasn’t a
match in the house. But I see you
found one.”
Jerry came round the end of the
settle and stood at the opposite side
of the fireplace, looking down at
his wife. "Yes,” he said, "where
did you find the match?”
* * *
SHE looked up at him and there
was a sort of stillness in her face
that I shall never forget. "Does it
matter?"
"No,” he said, "it doesn’t matter
at all where you found it. It mat-
ters If you found it.”
The remark made no sense to me
at all, and I still don't understand
it, but Selena did.
'You shouldn’t have said that."
There was no anger, no sharpness
in her tone, only what sounded to
me at the time like despair,
Jerry was staring at her; the
look on his face was so thinly
sharp, so direct, so full of horror
that I was instantly aware that
this conversation, which was mean-
ingless to me, possessed some sort
of positive and dreadful implication
for him. "So," he said, “so that's
it. I've wondered for a long time.”
She looked at him calmly. "I
tried to stop you."
(To Bo Continued)
ISN'T it wonderful? Looks as if
1 the National Foundation for
Infantile Paralysis had practical-
ly worked itself out of a job. I
can think of nothing finer than
such a victory. There will, of
course, be residuals for whom
I suppose the foundation will
care, but the terror is abated and
soon there must be protection for
everyone.
It isn't going to be 100 percent
effective but any is that for
which we can be duly thankful.
And what a triumph for the polio
victim who died ten years ago
today. His unflagging interest in
the pursuit of such a vaccine
sparked the efforts of the NFIP
to ultimate success and his mem-
ory wears a crown.
Short Stories
About Home Folks
Mr. and Mrs. R, p. Ford of Ok-
lahoma City transacted business
in El Reno Tuesday. They former-
ly lived here.
Dr. Jack W Myers, 519 South
Hoff and Jack Williams, loot South
Rock Island spent Saturday «at
Lake Texoma.
Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fox, 709
South Macomb, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Modrall, 09 South Hoff and Mrs.
Elsie King, 419 West Wade were
the 7 o'clock dinner guests Sunday
evening of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Hess
In Oklahoma City.
Short Stories
About Home Folks
Mrs W. L. Williams and Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Williams all of south-
east of Ei Reno and Mr. and Mrs.
James A. Williams and children,
Jimmy, Sharon, Pamela and
Penny, 903 South Miles, were guests
Sunday in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. K. D. Greiner in Stillwater.
Mrs. W. L. Williams is the mother
of Frank Williams, James A. Wil-
liams and Mrs. Greiner.
Mrs. R. E. Lake and daughter,
Susan, 505 South Rock Island and
Mrs. Jay W. Porter and son, Jay,
810 South Ellison were Oklahoma
City visitors Monday.
Mrs. Marie Powell, 402 South
Hoff, was the 1 o'clock dinner
guest Sunday of her daughter,
Mrs. John H. Byrd in Oklahoma
City.
A M watching with no inconsid-
erable interest the bill sent
to the Senate Monday which pro-
vides far reaching regulations
for the solicitation of funds for
so called charitable institutions.
This has become one of the na-
tion's biggest and most lucrative
rackets and I am surprised that
A1 Capone and his followers
haven't muscled in on it long ago.
Maybe they have. It is such an
insidious operation one cannot
tell who is in it.
The bill as proposed isn’t a
cure all but it does cover a mul-
titude of sins. It requires that
organizations, other than a few
exceptions, register with the
secretary of state and file a state-
ment giving purposes for which
the contributions are to be used
and whether the solicitation is
to be made by professional fund
raisers.
Organizations would also tie re-
quired to file a statement each
year showing the gross amount
collected, the amount expended
on the charitable purposes for
which the fund was raised, the
amount of expenses and that paid
to the professional fund raisers.
We’re such a bunch of softies
that any group with a tear-jerk-
Mr. and Mrs. George Burge and
children. Nancy. Wayne and War-
ren of Russell, Kan., returned to
their home Monday after visiting
with his mother, Mrs. Lena Shep-
ard, 821 South Roberts and her
mother, Mrs. Louie Andersen and
her sister Miss Marie Andersen in
Calumet.
Corporal Jimmy Moore of Fort
Ord, Calif., is visiting with his par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Moore,
806 South Williams.
Mr. and Mrs. Estle lies and
sons, Herbie and Jimmy, 526 South
Reno, and his father, Rolla lies,
407 South Admire spent the week-
end at Tenkiller lake.
Scouts Hold
All-Day Hike
Tuesday, 'April 12, 1!
Look and Lean
Girl Scouts of troops 16 and 39
met Saturday morning at the home
of Mrs. R. A. Bachler, 902 South
Rock Island, leader of troop 16, for
an all-day hike.
The girls and Mrs. Bachler hiked
to the Sherman farm, north of El
Reno. Purpose of the hike was to
paint trail signs for other troops
to follow on their picnics and troop
activities.
While at the farm the girls prac-
ticed building a fire and for treats
they made Girl Scout S-mores.
Mrs. Loren Spurr, leader of
troop 39, and Mrs. A. F. Zent,
troop mother, furnished transporta-
tion home for the girls at the close
of the day.
Members of the troops present
were Nancy Bachler, Darlene
Frachiseur, Zetta Spurr, Ginger
Zent, Betty Blanc, Carolyn Effen-
beck, and CarolyiTLovelady,
Sondra Coffman,
H. C. Evans, Wed
Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Cornelius,
911 South Rock Island, have re-
turned from a three-week visit at
Benson and Tucson, Ariz.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Muncy of
Geary were El Reno visitors Tues-
day.
ing proposalcim get money from
lalPTi
Mrs. H. A. Dever, 701 South
Bickford, spent Sunday with re-
latives in Oklahoma City. She was
accompanied home by her son and
daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Mil-
ford Dever and Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Whitter.
Ruth Ann Carter, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Carter, 1014
South Rock Island and a senior
student of the Oklahoma A. and M.
college in Stillwater, spent the
Easter vacation with her brother
and sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs.
David D. Carter in Kansas City,
Mo.
us without hatPtrying. Many such
organizations, particularly those
who claim to assist children, they
being the heart and purse opener
extraordinary, spend about 75
percent of their funds to keep
their employees on their jobs
and in collections and the pitiful
remainder, if any, goes to the
children who are being amply
cared for by the nation, the state,
the county and nine jillion small
groups who are looking for some-
thing to do to exercise their char-
itable impulses.
Mr. and Mrs. Hayward Wright,
1521 West Shuttee, returned Mon-
day evening from a fishing trip
at Lake Texoma.
Mr. and Mrs. Conrad Wool-
dridge. and Mrs. Howard Jameson
and children, Linda, and Gale, who
were the weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. A. L. Cady, 1214 West
Wade, left Monday afternoon for
their home in Oklahoma City.
Joe Frank Marsh, 1021 East Oak
and his sister. Miss Martha Marsh
of Oklahoma City spent the Easter
vacation with their brother in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Edsel
Cornelsen, near Fairview. Joe
Frank is a student of the Oklaho-
ma A. and M. college in Stillwater.
Get Our Low Price*
WALLPAPER « PAINT
BOTTS nULME BROWN
LUMBER COMPANY
Phone 804
lAON'T misunderstand me. I am
** for any group or individual
who will relieve suffering be it
child, adult, aged, blind, crippled
or just the victim of circum-
stances but I despise the agency
that exploits the unfortunate as
a means of lining their own poc-
kets.
If counties would follow suit
and draft ordinances in line with
this bill, refusing permission to
solicit funds without giving the
agency a microscopic examina-
tion we could stop screaming
about the multiplicity of ‘drives’.
When we do away with the sins
committed in the name of charity
and stop the duplication of effort
for which administrative costs
must be paid, we will have
money in our pockets and a
righteous gleam in our eyes.
Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Mclntire of
Geary were weekend guests in the
home of their son-in-law and daugh-
ter, Mr. and Mrs. Glen A. Brown,
1800 East Rogers.
Philip Walch left Tuesday morn-
ing for Austin, Tex., where he will
resume his studies at St. Edward’s
university after spending the Easter
vacation with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. James Walch, 221 North El
Reno.
Joseph W. Dambach, 1021 '<4 Sun-
set drive, returned Monday from a
10-day visit with his son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Uhl in Kenmore, N. Y.
The wedding of Miss Sondra
Coffman, daughter of Mrs. Leola
Coffman of Roswell, N. M., form-
erly of El Reno, and Airman Sec-
ond Class Henry Clifton Evans,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Ev-
ans. Enterprise, Ala., was solemn-
ized April 6 at Roswell.
The bride is the granddaughter
of Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Coffman,
221 North Barker, and Mrs. Asher
Stephens, 912 East Foreman, and
the daughter of Glen Coffman,
former El Reno resident.
For her wedding Miss Coffman
wore a gold colored street-length
dress with white accessories.
Attendants were Miss Theresa
Zimmerman, sister of the bride
and Airman First Class Claude E.
Zimmerman, of Roswell.
The bride attended school in El
Reno until moving to Roswell in
1953. She was a sophomore at St.
Peter’s highschool in Roswell. Air-
man Evans attended school at En-
terprise, Ala. He is now stationed
at Walker airforce base, Roswell.
1. Which arc the 15 large
cities, according to popula
2. What is the current
cost of crime in the United
3. Which U. S. president i
the greatest number of e
votes?
4. What was man's earlics
implement?
Amwart
1. New "York, Chicago, I
phia, Los Angeles, Detroil
more, Cleveland, St. Louis
ington, Boston, San Fr
Pittsburgh, Milwaukee,
and Buffalo.
2. According to the FBI
than 20 billion dollars.
3. Franklin D. Roosevelt,
523 votes.
4. A stone (which in late
was sharpened for cutting;
Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Mci
Calumet plan to leave Wei
for Detroit, Mich., where
transact business.
Clyde R. Max
POLIO, AUTO APi
GENERAL INSURA
207 E. Woodson-Phon
Mrs. J. A. Macumber,
Former Resident, Dies
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney P. Wharton
and their grandson, Jamie McMul-
len of Oklahoma City were guests
Monday afternoon of her brother-
in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Haydn G. Davis, 512 South Rock
Island.
Seamen Ronald LynrySchroeder,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Schroeder in Chickasha and grand-
son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Carl Mc-
Cain, 207 North K., is attending the
naval training school at Norfolk,
Va. The Schroeder family former-
ly lived in El Reno.
INVESTORS
Own Your Share of American
* Business
INVEST IN MUTUAL FUNDS
CORDER PAULSEN
101 Professional Bldg Phone 508
Associate Clisbee-Thompson Co.
Mrs. Jess A. Macumber, Omaha,
Neb., a former El Reno resident!
died this morning at Omaha.
She is survived by her husband,
John A. Macumber of Omaha: four
brothers-in-law, Clarence Macum-
ber of Clinton; Walter Macumber
of Covington, Ind., Charley Macum-
ber of Stella, Mo., and Homer Ma-
cumber of New York, N. Y.; and
two nieces, Mrs. A. V. Yanda, jr„
of Yukon, and Mrs, A. R. Daggs
of Blackwell.
Funeral arrangements will be an-
nounced by the Benson funeral
home.
SUPER
KEM-TONE
NEALE LUMBER
118 North Erana Phc
lasting Relief
PILE PAIN:
CLINIC-TESTED
Thornton-Minor Oin
You fool soothing comfort
That's because Thoi
irnton Mino
mont in a complete formula wi
acting, long lading special ing;
iug, IOI _
to chock itching, burning.
in t mont
------- ------ —, w. 00, A*L
: any drug store hut insist 01
help reduce swelling. Ointr
punitory form, only $1 00
at any drug store hut ins
----- ---"R mu Minim «_»l
ine Thornton Minor Ointment.
FOR REN
Lawn Aerator
Lawn Roller
Fertilizer Spreader
____50
Adding Machines
25<
Ice Cream Freezer
Sewer Rods
(Gal.) .50
____ 50
Poot Hole Differi
_____ 50
Floor Polishers
50c
Electric Hedge Trimmer 2,*(
Electric Drill (4” 2 M
Tabic Sanders
_____ 2.0<
Spinner Sanders
2.01
Floor Edgers
Typewriters .
Floor Sanders
EL RENO HARDW/
Mrs. Wayne Mason of Ames,
Major county was the guest Mon-
day of Mrs. Ausic Estes Sawyer,
210 South Rock Island.
beer facts
PAST AND PRESENT
for the dedt
NOVI
Air Conditioner
for 1954 & 1955
FORD . MERCURY
Lincoln . Cadillac
buick . Oldsmorile
and Chevrolet
<xnCq O Q C 00
O Jr w installed
satisfaction guaranteed
NATION-WIDE
distribution and service
distribution and service
NOVI Sales & Service
115 SOUTH BICKFORD PHONES 800—220
Operated by Davis Electric Co.
SPEAK FOR
YOURSELF
John Alden met Pris-
cilla because beer was
a staple in the Pil-
grims’ diet. A cooper,
he was taken along to
insure proper barrel-
ing of the colonists'
beer supply.
THE PEOPLE’S VOICE created an important industry
for Oklahoma 22 years ago, when a landslide vote
legalized temperate 3.2 beer. Each year the beer
industry payroll puts $15 millions into circulation in
Oklahoma. Taxes and operating expenses add many
more millions.
C1955, U. S. BREWERS FOUNDATION • OKLAHOMA DIVISION
1304 First National Bldg., Oklahoma City
hose who
have passed
from this world
die only when
we, whom they
loved, forget
them.
I FREE BOOKLET
i Como in or coll for fro* copy of our Norman
| Rockwall brochure and the halpful booklal
| How To Choosa A Family Monument”. Or
i u»e this coupon. >
1 M
I NAME..
ADDRESS
CITY..........
STATE htUS.hi
We Invite You to See Our
ROCKWELL PAINTING EXHIBI1
This special exhibit is built around a painting of
unusual interest by Norman Rockwell. The paint-
ing itselt shown above—is also reproduced in
a full-color Rock of Ages advertisements in recent
issues of many magazines. We cordially invite you
to drop by and see our beautiful display that fea-
tures this appealing Rockwell painting.
%
MEMORIAL
DAY
MAT 30
Order Your Monument Now
So That It Will Be In
Place by Memorial Day
Open Sunday* (thru Memorial Day) 1
Appointment — Just Phone 942 or 5G«
F. E. ARNOLDM0NUMENT
COMPANY
1220 S. Macomb Phone
— Your Authorized Rock of Ages Dealer_
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 64, No. 37, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 12, 1955, newspaper, April 12, 1955; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920638/m1/4/: accessed June 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.