The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 175, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1941 Page: 1 of 6
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SEPTEMBER 21, 1941
BOY, 9, LEAVES
GENEROUS TRAIL
ALBUQUERQUE. N. M„ Sept 20
-(U.R)—Anyway it was fun w)Jle it
asted.
A 9-year-old boy walked into a
Nlling station while the attendants
were busy and "borrowed" all the
money in the cash register—$400.
Then he strolled out.
Five blocks away he met another
boy. age 9, and handed him a $20
bill. The second boy appreciated
so much he told his father who
notified police.
The officers immediately started
an 'the trail of the young Santa
Plaits, who continued his little
game.
"Want some money?” he asked
everyone he met, shoving a green-
back at them.
He got no refusals.
Two hours later the police
caught up with the sunshine
spreader—thanks to his trail of
money.
He had disposed of $204.65 and
was looking for a likely person to
accept the remaining $195.35.
Police turned him over to juve-
nile authorities for a lecture.
1
Public Records
Marriage Licenses
Henry D. Williams. 20. and Lois
Lucile Moore, 18, both of El Reno.
Martin Luther Condrcn, 48. and
Fay Frances Brosseau, 44, both of
Oklahoma City.
Harold Gathers, 27. of Utokeba,
and Elsie Slanaker, 19, ol Hinton.
Decree
County court to Rupert M. Fogg,
administrator of the estate of John
H. H. Ellis, deceased. NF. 7-11-5.
Quitclaim Deed
Mabel Clement to Letltia Steele.
Lot 6, 9-12-6. __
FAY PORTA STUDIO
Violin and Piano
708 West Watts
Phone 1199-J
DANCE
FLINT HILL BOYS
From Radio Station KCRC, Enid
Eagles Hall
WEDNESDAY, Sept. 24th
Adm. 25c Before 9 P. M.
35c After 9
Sponsored by Ladies Auxiliary
Today
Thru Tuesday
ARS ARE OUT TONIGHT!
RAWTORO TAmR H
-.adconmaRSHAU
Ji?kMeet' • j
•Ith SPRING IYINGT0N
-PLUS-
OF DESTINY”
f Dr. Josef Ranald, famous Palm-
and predictions of the future of
id Mussolini, made year* ago, are
sliny is Hidden In the Palm of
TODAY
THRU TUESDAY
IT IINDIAY
McHUOM
TODAY
THRU TUESDAY
New Request Would Send!
Total Spending Above
$65,000,000,000
WASHINGTON. Sept. 22—(U.R>—
The United States Is working on
an armament program that will
reach a grand total of $66,195,000,-
000 if the new lend-lease appro-
priation request Is approved by
congress in its present form, of-
fice of production management fig-
ures showed today. World war 1
cost this government around $32,- j
000.000,000.
Since June 1940, when the de-1
fense program really started, a
total of $56,536,000,000 hi ex-
penditures and loans has been j
authorized by congress. This fig-1
ure does not Include the contracts.
placed here by the British before1
tills country embarked on war-aid
for anti-axis nations or ihe pend-
ing new lend-lease appropriation.
Breakdown I* Made
With these Included, this la the
way the defense program shapes
up:
Army—$24,607,000,000.
Navy—$16,978,000,000.
Lend-lease — $7,000,000,000 appro-
priation with another $5,985,000.-
000 pending.
Other defense agencies, Includ-
ing reconstruction finance cor-
poration—$7,951,000,000.
British orders—$3,674,000,000.
Since the inception of the pro-
gram, the treasury has disbursed
$9,187,000,000 for defense. Accur-
ate figures on the total of con-
tract awards are not available be-
cause the army and navy have
not made available such computa-
tions since last June. However, de-
fense oflicials estimate that the
awards total more than $30,000,-
000.000.
New Figures Estimated
President Roosevelt's second lend-
lease appropriation request went
to congress last week. It included
$1,875,000,000 for food and other
commodities for the British. In-
formed sources said that a large
sum also would be used for equip-
ment and repair for planes and
ships ordered under the previous
lend-lease measure. Another size-
able slice of the new money for
antl-alreraft guns and convoy es-
cort ships, small vessels similar to
the British and Canadian "Cor-
vettes."
Officials pointed out that de-
fense production schedules now run
through 1943. Hence, they said,
large additional orders for com-
pletely finished articles such as
airplanes could not have been
filled until well after 1943 How-
ever, they added, they believed
that the type of materials covered
by the second lend-lease measure
could be Integrated Into existing
production schedules.
Warlike Preparations Are
Reported From Sofia
As Tension Mounts
NEW YORK. Sept. 22—Here he is again, folks. This time Mayor
Fiorello H. LaGuardia is showing professional models how they should
wear clothes at a fashion show in New York.
El
Rinehart Still Without Pacific,
Carmody’s Approval ] ments
Atlantic Ship-
Are Revealed
WASHINGTON, Sept. 22 —</P)— j WASHINGTON. Sept, 22—(U.R)—
Mystery surround* the four-day j American supplies already are be-
session of the Grand River Dam lng shipped to Russia over the
authority's board of directors here! North Atlantic as well as the Pa-
wtth John Carmody. federal works ;clflc. official sources revealed to-
admlnlstrator, and his staff.
iday.
BERNE, Switzerland, Sept. 22.—
(/P)—Advices from Sofia said to-
night that an unstated number Of
Communist deputies In the Bul-
garian parliament had been exe-
cuted and legislators of the former
peasant party Interned.
When the reported execution*
occurred was not stated but ap-
parently they preceded Invocation
of martial law decrees over the
week-end.
(According to the 1941 statesman
yearbook, nine of tlie 160 members
of Bulgaria's single chamber legis-
lature were Communists.)
These reports coincided with
warlike preparations in axis-
aligner Bulgaria which were In-
terpreted by some neutral observ-
ers as a part of the German plan
to high-pressure non-belligerent
Turkey into making concessions
which would aid the Nazi cause In
the east.
Berlin Denies Report*
Unconfirmed reports said that
King Boris III Of Bulgaria was en-
route to a meeting with Adolf Hit-
ler. Berlin authorities declared
the report was "out of the ques-
tion
Well-informed sources In Ankara
predicted that Turkey, guardian of
the strategic Dardanelles, gateway
between the Mediterranean and
the Black sea, faced an imminent
showdown.
In Berlin, the Wilhelmslrasse re-
ported that Bulgaria had been
"brought into a state of higher
watchfulness.”
Speculation Aroused
King Boris' reported visit to Hit-
ler aroused a speculation that Bul-
garia. now almost completely mo-
The United States Is experiencing
a brand of prosperity more spec-
tacular In many phases than the
4929 boom — but government and
^public alike are worried lest times
get too good in an unbalanced
Way.
More people are at work and
drawing more money In wages
than at any time since the first
World war. The cost of living
still is below 1929 levels, but rising
steadily. Industrial production is
at an all-time high So is govem-
government Is spending more In
a -week than It spent in a month
only a few years ago. Some of the
ranking policy-makers of the ad-
ministration fear a damaging ere
of inflation unless new trade re
strictions are imposed.
Retail sales have risen steadily
down. The government Is at-
tempting to discourage the public
from investing In articles the pro-
duction of which competes with
the defense .program. The new
tax bill, which will take $3,553,-
000.000 more out of private purses
is one move -toward that end.
New deductions from wages for
for three years. The federal re-1 social security are being discussed
serve index of industrial activity j as a further means of diminishing
at the end ol August was 161, com- purchasing power. The treasury
pared with 124 a year ago. In j is pushing the sale of defense
June 1940, the purchasing power bonds and stamps as a means of
of the dollar was placed by the | absorbing some of the cash that is
merit spending. And so are taxes.! labor department at 129 9 of “nor-1 pouring Into thousands of Ameri-
vhlch «tt up a large part of boom
profits.
The nation feels the first aches
pf an economic hangover even be-
fore the sqiree has reached its
peak. Despite increasing wages
and dwindling unemployment, pro-
tests over recent price Increases
have caused government leaders to
request President Roosevelt tc.
speed legislative and admipistra-
tlve action to check the nation’s
growing boom.
The boom is being fed by the
mal;” now It ts less than 115. j can billfolds that were thin a few
Steps have been taken to slow j years back,
tlie upward spiral as much as The signs of the times are many,
possible, but such leaders as Henry Employment (excluding agrteul-
Morgenthau, secretary of the treas- j tural) was estimated by the labor
ury, and Leon Henderson, pries department at 39,240,000 in July,
control director, say tlie country i an all-time peak and representing
already Is In the early stages of - an increase of 3,785,000 workers
inilation. 1 over July 1940, and 2,200,000 above
‘Absolutely No Comment’
Comes From London
On Italian Assault
Restrictions have been placed on
installment credit. Morgenthau has
advocated tlie release of govern-
ment-held agricultural surpluses to
help keep food and clothing prices
the level of July 1929 More than
380,000 found new Jobs In July.
Looking at It from the other
side, the American Federation of
(PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 8)
State Senator Curnutt 1st
Injured Fatally
"General discussions of broad' A Panamanian freighter with a j bilized, might be preparing to enter
OKLAHOMA CITY. Sept. 22-
(U.R)—Three persons were killed In
week-end highway accidents In-
cluding State Senator H. M. Cur-
nutt. 47, of Barnsdall.
Curnutt, who was president pro
tempore of the last Oklahoma sen-
ate and floor leader in the 1239
session, was injured fatally when
he was struck by a car at 11:45'
a m. Sunday near Blxbv. He had !
started across the highway when
he was struck He died two hours
later in a Tulsa hospital.
Others Are Victims
Did You Hear
J^ENNETH HUBBS. who had
spent a furlough of two and
one-half weeks here on a visit
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
George (Hubbs, 502 West Oak
street, departed Friday for Sac-
ramento, Calif., where he will
be stationed with the army air
corps at Mather Field. Before
his transfer to Mather Field he
had spent 24 weeks at Chanute
Field near Rantoul, 111.
-o-
Geraldine Donnellan, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Don-
nellan. 519 South Roberts ave-
nue, has been pledged by "Q"
social club at Oklahoma College
for Women in Chickasha where
she Is a freshman student this
term.
Taylor Submits Schedule
For Current Year
First holiday of the 1941-42
(school year for El Reno public
school students will be Friday,
| Sept. 26, when schools will be dls-
1 missed in order that pupils may
attend the Oklahoma City state
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Italian “suicide crews” manning
tiny secret assault boats were re-
ported today to have carried out
a spectacular raid under the muz-
zles of Gibraltar’s great batteries
during the night, sinking three
ships and badly damaging a fourth
In the harbor.
Authoritative quarters in Rome
said the raiding craft, each de-
scribed as little more than a
human projectile, were operated
by men who knew there would
be slight chance of returning.
The fate of the crews was not
disclosed.
Aside from an Italian torpedo
attack on Gibraltar shipping last
year, It was the first naval as-
sault since French and Spanish
ships unsuccessfully shelled the
British garrison there In the win-
ter of 1782-83.
British Are Surprised
In describing the bold raid, the
Italian high command Identified
the attackers merely as “assault
units" which "entered the bay and
Inner port" of Gibraltar to sink
three ships outright and damage
a fourth so seriously it was as-
sumed lost.
Authoritative London quarters
met the Italian claim with "abso-
lutely no comment.”
The attack apparently took the
British by complete surprise, since
Gibraltar harbor protected by nets,
minefields, and great guns h.gh on
the rock, had long been considered
secure against close-in assault.
In the 93-day old Russian cam-
polities affecting the project" wasjcarg0 0f petroleum products and) the field as an active ally of Ger-
the comment that come daily from | other supplies purchased here by 1 many.
Carmody's aides after each session Russia wa8 understood to have Such a plan would be the logical! other Sunday traffic viotlms i
held behind closed doors reached Russian waters near the | sequel to the swift German drive I were Vance Morel lead, 49, of Ca- i
Members of the board also were Arctic port ol Archangel after a Into the Ukraine which has made I nadtan. Tex, and Charles H Nlco-
falr on school children's day.
Rural schools of Canadian coun- J palgn. the Germans reported that
ty may be dismissed If the dls-- about 30 Soviet divisions—perhaps
trict boards and teachers wish. 450,000 troops—had been annihtlat-
accordlng to Miss Glen Evelyn j ed so far in a trap east of Kiev.
McCarty, county superintendent. Red Armies Struggling
Paul R Taylor, superintendent Four Red armies encircled there
silent. James Biggerstaff. a di-, three-week voyage from an east-
rector, said merely that PWA was ern united States port.
I the banker and that any state-1 Thf routp ^ Archangei is ex- against the possibility of attack
ments on the conferences should, ^ (lsed lncreaslngly from any quarters, Informed
come Irom Carmody. during the next few weeks before sources said.
Decision Expected Soon that port becomes ice-bound, for Dutches from Ankara indi-
Just why James A Rinehart, thp Rusgian nreds have become ur-1™ted >*»»> the German eastward
state senator from El Reno, was gpnt gnd for lhe tlmp bplng thlg push as (Well as development in
not approved by Carmody as gen- cou„trv concentrating on help- Bulgaria were causing keen anxl-
eral manager of the authority j , (hp Russlans rather than the ** *monS the Turks,
while he and the board were In Br»t,sli
Washington was not disclosed. . „ . _
One PWA aide said the board ,"’n* R""1' l'ollow,‘d
would meet In Oklahoma tomor-] To reach Archangel, the Pan-
row for "further consideration" of amanlan vessel had to travel overj
matters brought up here and he the North Atlantic to the Norwe-
added a decision on Rinehart’s ap- Blan sp»- imsslng between Ameri-1
polntmcnt might follow. can-occupied Iceland and Ger-
A close friend of Rinehart said' man-occupied Norway. The U. 8.1
here the senator was "drafted" for; navy now protects all friendly
It imperative that the Nazis taka la, 43. of Alva. Injured was Charles
steps to protect their right flp.nk | Rigsby. 7. also of Canadian. The I
automobiles were involved dn a col-
lision south of Laveme in Harper
of El Reno public schools, today
announced the school schedule for
the entire 1941-42 school year, with
Friday as the first holiday.
Holiday Periods Specified
8chools will be closed for the
usual Thanksgiving week-end start-
ing Thursday, Nov. 27. and for
the Christmas holiday will close
E
IN NE
COUnty. i . C L A 1 J i\ jw,c uiuibuiih uuuuay wm ciuar
Curnutt had parked his oar oft j * *18CUS810n oCiMKlUted tin Dec. 19 until Dec. 29. Only other
the highway and had started | Children's Diseases scheduled holidays will be Friday,
across the road to plrk rome wild
flowers for his mother’s grave. She
died during the spring legislative j Officers of the El Reno Business
session and Is burled at Hunting- and Professional Women's clubem-
Cu™“ ™ “"T t0 phaslzcd today that there will be
Huntington with his two sisters,
Mabel and Edna Oumutt. both of:no adm,s*lo“ ch*r*e for U,e *■-
Oct. 24. for district teachers meet-
ing and Friday, Feb 13. for the
Oklahoma Educational association
convention.
The complete schedule:
were repotted struggling to blast
their way out of the Nazi ring.
While the Oermans asserted the
beleaguered armies were tightly
sealed, Moscow dispatches said
they were seeking to fall back to
Kharkov, in the heart of the
Donets river Industrial basin.
The Red army tersely acknowl-
edged the fall of Kiev, Ukraine
capital and Russia's third largest
city, out declared that a Soviet
counter offensive on the central
• Moscow) front had recaptured 32
villages and driven the Germans
from a strongly fortified line.
Leningrad's poeltoln apparently
Sept. 26—Holiday for Oklahoma was growing more critical by the
Tulsa, at the time of the accident. by Dr James Hughes, Uni-
Wldely Known In Slate v»r*iiu nf T.nn«™« «>*'>»' «• 1
Oumutt, known as "Puck" to
his friends throughout the state
formerly was city attorney at
Barnsdall He served ln tlie house
E
the plaee and that hr would not shipping at least as far as Ice- Alllliqiierque, Roswell And In the 10th and 13th sessions be
be terribly disappointed If he were (land. From the Norwegian sea, . , . ... .. , fore going to the senate. He was
not approved the vessel followed a route Into ( arlshad Hit Hardest ,n xallhina He neve, mar
Disney Stand* Aside ! the Barents sea and then into tlie
Representative Wesley E. Disney, White sea on whteh the port of
City state fair. | hour
Oct. 24 — Holiday for district
versliy of Tennessee, at 2 p. m.: teachers meeting.
Wednesday ln the hlghschool au-1 Nov. 27 and 28—Thanksgiving
dltorlum here. | holidays.
Dr Hugnes, a nationally known *** 18—Receaa for Christmas
authority on children's diseases. holidays.
will give an Illustrated lecture on! *JeC- i9 ~c*a8SWOr*t resumes
"Keeping the Well Child Well"
of Tulsa remained completely out Archangel ts situated. The vo\aKe Torrential rains raging over 1 of Oklahoma in 1915 and enroled
__1_____ ... __. mvornl a riUtnnra iif nhnllt i 700 rams raging Over ...
Dec
I Jan. 15 and 16—First semester
, _ . examinations.
ried. The meeting will be open to the i .. _.___ , ... _ .
..... . I _ . 7. .. . ... I Jan 16—Close of first semester.
ALBUQUERQUE N M Sept 2VI Curnutt attended the University | public and all mothers of school
the matter here. He did not]cowed a distance of about ^, pntlrp fastPrn Npw Mexlcr, left a[ J ln Cumberland law school the next,
attend any conferences
Biggerstaff. who remained here
children or children of pre-school
age throughout Canadian county j
are being urged to attend by B. j
Other Dales Fixed
Jan. 19—8eccnd semester begins.
Feb. 13—Recess for state teach -
(least 50 persons missing today, | >«*r. later receiving his law degree ----------------—I an convention
Pioneer ovement (threatened the city of Roswell with the war. Curnutt and P. W. club health committee er»
Tprrnrkt* T-ivon WurnimrFrldny T". r* Pft' Thf sh‘P- lnvolvpd ln what k flood, shattered gas ilnes ^rved u months ln Frame He .members I May 22-Classwork ends,
i crrurisis t.ivrn v» urmiiK aalri thp purpose of all discussions 1<mounted to a pioneer movement! t0 Albuquerque and aen» walls of >*vod In Yale after the war. work-'
Personnel Report Is Made
By Superintendent
May 24—Commencement service
Of the 62 teachers. Including the
Of Full Revenue
I was to make the project a paying 0f American supplies to Russia via water roaring Into Carlsbad
one and as good a project as pos lhp North Atlantic, is a former a dozen persons still were miss
slble but he went no further. American freighter. It was trans-
VICHY. Sept. 22.—<JP)—A vow In | BlgRirstaff also expressed hope)ferre<1 l0 PBnamanlan registry re-
tire name ol the oerman army, de- action would be taken by the (<.ntly. and then made a voyage _________ _________
llvered at the funeral of a captain govenunent In the near future to to the British poits of Liverpool urday night. Authorities expressed
build hydio-electrlc projects at Hn<j Qinsgow. fear the fate of some might never
lng at Carlsbad after a 22-foot
wall of water came down canyons
on the outskirts of the city Sot-,
killed bv (terrorists In Paris, "to .. . __
• Markhams Ferrv snd Fort Olb-
einplnv every means that these at- ^ Qk|(|
tacks which rouse indignation In ; -
all honorable -men .shall not go un- | Cf nrm YY'irniniru
punished" wr.s disclosed today |g | tJvUI III Tv <11 lllll^r*
the Paris press
Hoe fact that the slain officer,
a Captain Scheben, was given an
official funeral yesterday at Made.
Posted In Texas
CORPUS CHRISTI. Tex, Sept,
laine church, ln tlie center of the 22—(A1)—The weather bureau said
occupied capital. Indicated that the today a severe tropical storm
Germans attached oonsldeiahle Im- due to strike between Oorpus
porta nee to the attack. Christ and Brownsville within the
The press account of the funeral, next 20 hours,
disclosing that the captain was Persons in low-lying sections |
shot last Tuesday, was the first w-ere warned to prepare to evacu- i
revelation that a commissioned of- „te boforr nightfall and owner* of j
fleer had been killed ln disorders small craft were advised to mooi I
It was believed to be carrying
motor fuel needed by the Russians
in operations supporting the heavi-
ly-attacked city of Leningrad.
Some quarters speculated that
the Panamanian was not alone,
pointing nut that the dispatching
of Just one ship to the northern
Soviet port would not be of tre-
mendous aid.
be known.
Rescue workers today searched
the banks of the Pecos (river, Ut-
tered with debris from Carlsbad*
third flash flood this year.
No Bodies Found
No bodies had been found and
official* were hopeful (he 22-foot
wall of water, which hud swept
down out at Kackberry draw and
Dark canyon at Carlsbad Saturday
night had taken few lives
Water continued to recede In
Dark canyon despite continued
C hurch Rally
Opening Herein
1 weie believed unlikely unless
rainfall Increased
lng, for the M K. and T. railroad |>ost-gradu*<e course on children's
He moved to Barnsdall ln 1921. diseases for physicians of the
where he worked for a time fc r the county, a course sponsored by the
college commencement.
May 25-27—Final examinations.
in one and two-teacher rural
schools of Canadian county. 3d
■ v ■ .. .. • — — vwuiivj, a viruiror uivrixu i/j wiq •• no m »
Barnsdall Oil company before be- state and county medical societies , " Elementary and Junior have received their bachelors' be-
ginning the practice of law ..... ......... - .... hl«h P™motlon exercises.
Traffic Violation
and open only to the physicians.
At his public appearance Wed-
I nesday afternoon, ln addition »q
' tils talk Illustrated with slides, Dr
May 28—Report cards and dis-
missal
In which members of tlie audience I
may ask him questions on health!
greee and two of them have ob-
tained masters' degrees.
Average number of college hours
of all the 62 faculty members la
117.6. >t wn* disclosed today In a
Fines Collected Hughes win conduct a question box Reckless Driving
i In 'vnlrh mpmiws of rtiP aurilpnr.* I # “
Fine Is Assessed penw,iw| r*'p°rt compuea by miu
_ l Glen Evelyn McCarty, county su-
perintendent.
One toachtn- luis two bachelors’
boi up nuy not ™er *
of 810 each on charges of reck-i™ 1COtUre__
less driving, operating a car wtth-
Ire T. Goddard, 48 of Oklahoma
City, was ordered to pay a fin" of
icm nilviiiK, upci miiig a oai wi'.ir • • « viw.t, won murini iu piiy h Iin” Ol
out a driver's license- and Illegal i iJrUllKen DriVlIllf $100 and court coets after pleading rte*rpp8. ^ the two who havq
possession of Intoxicating liquor, I „ . guilty at his first arraignment be- a“° lmvc bsche-
accordlng to records of Lee Har-j | Is IVeVerSefl ,ore J,*d8e Burnett Thompson In *or* fle*ree"
vey, chief of police. Canadian county court on a charg.- Only 5 8 percent of tlve personnel
In other traffic cases Pete U- tlTVm annllMMmi ftf r Pp„tn °f reckless driving. h* less than 100 hours pf college
bonl and Iris Watson Mxuk for-1
about that time.
It had been known that a non
them securely at once.
Approximately 200 out-of-town| Many u* ,,ooo person* who
visitors are expected to attend a PVacusfed at CarUb-d re-
S^l?n^ 1°? SSft£i'Z.
stalled prevlou.lv that It was for , clotKla tJw entire horizon ® O Edmundson pastor of the
. . -j-----------‘-4rith • few lower cloud, to the ho?,' , h, i A I JL HP
I It I* a tally of the Oklahoma- down tlie Peciv*. Two railroad tnil
sottUtrm Kansas district. Pente-1 two hlglvway bridKWI WPrP waJ,llPd
Highway tirofflc, however, wax
the death of the non-conunlsslon
ed man that. Ure Gonna ns »hot 13! wp^‘
h out age* at Rul* last Bat tuxlay
Meanwhile, a blunt threat to w
German Runs and troop* swiftly
and forcefully against any organ-
iaed attempt at revolution hung
ominously over occupied France
Tills fateful word rame from au
day in the E'l Reno church, R8V. I iie btdkttniB.
Bridge* Washed Out
score ol homes were swvpf,
• WEATHER
Foreeast
Mostly fair and continued warm;
thortred Parts source* Jiud af'er l mostly cloudy except fair In south-
Marshal Henri Phlliupe Pouin east portions; occasional rains and
broadrno.1 all appeal to Frenchmen j cooler in northwest and extreme other
costal Church of God of America, ^ ^
H. M. Collins, Ponca City, presl- pxxpocted to be restored today
dent ol the national organization. Mnmbcni «f the state guard and
and all district olflcer. are eg- [ ^ aheritri of-
pceted to attend tlie event, flcsrs ln aiding the homeless and
AU sessions will be open to the searching for Carlsbad's missing,
urday night.
| lng charges ln*t Aug. 18 was with- rctcrd* disclosed.
Of >iie 34 touchers who do not
Floyd W. Porter. Billy Calton draw/n and yjp Judgment and sen-i The second Information filed lmv<! 'lr!’rcc8' l1,v* nvorethun
H'n^ r?dl*u Enld tence Of the court on that date against Godda.d by William L 100 to'*™' ,lw hav^ *»
and costs today ;w.lva ^ aside by Judge Emmett Funk, county attorney, charged *nd bour». four have between
were fined $5
when all three pleaded guilty to ppoinpM,,,
charge* of disorderly conduct.
the defendant with operating a 80 90 hours, four Iwve between
70 and 80 hour*, two have between
_ . ... , . , After withdrawing tlie original oar an U. 8. highway 86 at the | _
Chief Harveys records also di*- p[pa 0f guilty, perrin pleaded not »»toisection of Main and Nlivtli,80 and 79 hours and only om has
nlOMd. guilty Ba-turdav and the cbao was streets in Yukon Aug 2 at a speed ’,>N* 80 h°ura of coll*»ge credit.
assigned fc-r trial at 9 a. in. Oct. 8. "greater than would permit him to Of the 38 teachers with degree*,
[ At his original arraignment, Per- bring the vehicle to • stop within | they range from nine who earned
! rln was HAaesaed a fine of S100 snd i the assured clear distance ahead," their degree* with the minimum
In Sihori'l ^(fmltollrl coM4' afU!r f,lr*dlnu *^*ty.J Hw first information filed | 134 hov*n' to rour who f**1 >50
ill kiii/ci 1(1 trt. '-'■I I hut upon pnjment of Uie coat* ami agalnM Goddard alleced Uiat nn 1
Japanese Move
upon twyment of Uie coat* ami against Goddard alleged that nn houn‘ <>r morf WKl <mF wh<> had
| $25 of Uio fine, the balance of $75 1 Aug. 2 he drove an automobile on *s many M 170 h«*urs of collego
-(Ah—Ai leant J of ttie fine was siuqienaed j U. 8. highway 88 at Yukon while cro(Mt'
to halt attack* on Oermnna to save we*t portions
all conquered France fium Nasi
reprisal*
El Reno Weather
_______... MANILA. Sept. 22
mvi !r.(nn[V r,'!!*0".m0,t 01 *t'om m «H>anhh-11.OWI.000 Japanese troop* huv. been I Perrin was charged with driving j v.rvtor th^ toftortv* of 'lntoxkiuna »x teacher* obtained degree*
invit.non* are being extended to Amertrons and negrou*. (sent to Manchuhuo «nd Korea to g truck on U 8 highway ril thna- liquor. Goddard entered a plea of during the paM wimmer Mis* Me-
iJsstfSMSSs si sr -“inrsToiSajs*■“ ,u",r ........“■
Tlie (list meeting will open at by two oinnlar floods hut .-gain,) Miner Uuit June, rvenla within
ia. m. today; High, 84; !<ow. 67:
Mr and Mrs Thomas N Colt | at H a m„ 70.
of Mustang visited In El Reno I State of weather partly cloudy
Saturday, Rainfall, non*.
For 24-hour period ending at 8 7:30 p. m tonight, another at K> aincr many famtUe* had rebuilt on Japan have pointed inunUtakably
a m Tuesday, another at 2 p m. j higher grwmd and the Hood | toward a move again*' Siberia
Tuesday and the last one at 7:30 alrtick of the same places washed event Germany should be succei
p m Tuesday. A lunch will be lout and condemned after Uie other
served at noon Tuesday. flood
ful In her struggle with Russia.
Ulew- source, said
Mr, and Mra. Art Jacoba,
on (iu* charge Aug 4. at aliloh
♦ Imr ho*u! was set at $350 pending Mis. Bernice tnrenaan.
•106 trial. Thlz art Ion, however, a-at Hadden avenue, and
East Wndc street, are moving to dkmlsaed Saturday when the de- Dean Tiuax Oklahoma City.
Norman wheie Mr. Jacob, will la* (feudant nnterod the plea of guilty depart Thursday morning for
uastsiant manager at the Okla-1 at hi* arraignment on the reckless Angeles, Celtf. where
homa The and Supply company. | driving count. ) employed
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 175, Ed. 1 Monday, September 22, 1941, newspaper, September 22, 1941; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920885/m1/1/: accessed May 8, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.