The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 273, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 11, 1939 Page: 1 of 6
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JANUARY SALES
MEAN SAVINGS
FOR TRIBUNE READERS
toe El Reno Daily Tribune
JANUARY 1939
VALUE EVENTS
WILL SAVE YOU MONEY
A Blue Ribbon Daily Newspaper Serving Oklahoma’s Blue Ribbon Area
| Single Copy, Three Cents
UP) MEANl
XJIATED PRESS
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1939
OJJD MEANS UNITED PRESS
VOLUME 47, NO. 273
HOLD RELIEF AT
readers Are Doubtful Of
Success In Restoring
Full Amount
WASHINGTON. Jan. 11—(/T*;—
Administrative forces openly doubt-
ful of victory endeavored today
to restore to the relief bill the
$150,000,000 lopped off by a rebel-
lious house sub-committee.
House leaders said that If the
full appropiations committee failed
to make the restoration tomorrow
one of Its members would offer on
the floor \an amendment to appro-
priate the full $875,000,000 which j
President Roosevelt requested, to
keep WPA going until June 30.
There were Indications, however,
that the administration would take
a licking in its first test of
Cast SelecttS &rom Junior Class To Present Play | EL RF.NO INDIANS
TAKE TOP PLACE
OF CAGE CIRCUIT
Classen Comets Dimmed
By 30-14 Verdict In
Mid-State Tilt
MID-STATE STANDINGS
Team
W.
L.
Pet.
El Reno
2
0
1.000
Central
1
0
1.000
Classen
2
1
.667
Capitol Hill
0
1
.000
Chickasha
0
1
.000
Shawnee
0
1
.000
Norman
0
1
.000
Did You Hear
DLOND bobby boardman,
first string center on El Reno
highschool's up - and - coming
caging squad, must be about
ready to decide there's no Jus-
tice. He scored the basket which
enabled his team to pull even
with Norman Tigers last Fri-
day night, when the Indians
barely won 29-26, but an error
on the part of the scorers
Students in the cast are: I Kelso, Elizabeth Cox. Mildred i Boyd Wilson, jr„ Bob Woodhouse,
Front row, left to right: Charles 1 Gardner. Pauline Bruce, Bud Hard-j Nancy Naylon, Barbara Taylor,
strength in the house which may I Blake, Gloria Gilbert, Jertlza nick. Marjorie Hunt. Kenneth Sain,
send the bill to the senate by! Moore, Billie Jeanne Torpcv. Jerry Second row, Stuart Chambers, Jack Evans, Jimmy Canon.
Pi'id ay night.
Senate Faces Trouble
Over in the senate, too.trouble
j’ was storing up for the relief meas-
ure in two spots:
1. Chairman James P. Byrnes
• Democrat, South Carolina! said
he would submit to the senate un-
employment committee a formula
lor distributing relief funds to the
states. An attempt may be made
to write it into the appropriation
bill.
2. Conservative Democrats receiv-
ed what appeared to be an invita-
tion from Senator Charles McNary
• Republican. Oregon', the minority
|j| leader, to work with Republicans in
* • erasing politics from relief.
In a radio speech last night,
McNary said Republicans would
“Join hands with any group to
drive the political racketeer and
Third row: Hubert Marsh, Bob
FVistel, Raymond Wagner. Sammy
Shackelford, A. J. Stitt. David
Wright.
&---
RESULTS TUESDAY
El Reno 30. Classen 14*
Central 37. Enid 28.
Capitol Hill 24. Cushing 20.
* Mid-State conference game.
Action In “The Night of January 16’
In Courtroom Setting
Will Occur
READY FOR TASK
POLITICAL RANKS
A cast selected from the junior | who are assisting with the pro-
class of El Reno highschool will i duction are M. L. Bast, Miss Vivian j
present the play, "The Night ol Mattox, Miss Josephine Hodnett, |
January 16,’’ in the highschool Miss Mildred Mcliew and Mrs. j
- auditorium at 8 p. m. Monday, James Blair.
Enthusiastic Cooperation Jan 16 construction of the state setting i Popularity Increases With
Action will take place in a court- is being supervised by LoVorn j Conservatives
Leading the conference after their
slaughter of Classen Tuesday night,
El Reno's Indians will go on the
warpath again Friday night when
they invade Capitol Hill’s Redskin
tepee for another Mid-State scrap, j
Saturday night they will return '
home for one of El Reno’s biggest
basketball events—a triple-header
climnxcd by an Indian-Tulsa _
Braves light, a return match toi
the 26-21 defeat handed the In-1
dians at Tulsa earlier in the sea-
credited the goal to another
player. Then last night Bob,
who ordinarily doesn't do a
lot of point making, tied for
second high honors in the El
Reno lineup against Classen,
but the account which appeared
on an Oklahoma City sports
page gave the glory to "Tom"
Boa rdman—Bob's brother who
Isn't even on the El Reno squad.
"But I always am mentioned
when I get four fouls and anr
ejected from a game." Bobby
laments.
EL RENO JAYGEES
VILL DO SERVING
AT CIVIC BANQUET
Chamber of Commerce Is
Holding Annual Event
Thursday Night
Mrs. W. R. Holt doesn't think
there’s anything wrong with
deferred Christmas presents—
especially when the gift Is six
glasses of home-made jelly. She
received such only yesterday, as
a gift from a friend who lives
right here in El Reno but who
was a bit late on her deliveries.
Is Assured Phillips
or - i
I rocm where a girl is on trial for , Walker and John Waldrip, high- j
I
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jail !!
—Legislators, pledged to ent'.usi-
pMic cooperation with Governor
murder. Jurors will be selected , school teachers.
■V from tiie audience to hear evidence The part of the girl
spoilsmen out of the admlnistra- I leader, said a resolution would be
........ - Introduced in each h iusn today
and upon their verdict will depend wm he portrayed by Jerry Kelso,
which of the two endings written while Bud Hardwick will charact-
I eon C. Phillips, plunged today ;n- | tor the play will be used. erize the prosecuting attorney. The
to the giant task of reorganization! The play is under direction of attorney for the defense will be
anJ reform outlined in his first1 Mjss Ruth Torpcv. speech ins true- diaries Blake, and Bob Wood-
iegislative message yesterday. 1 lor; sponsors of the junior class | house will appear as the judge.
H. M Curnutt. ;e.)ii'v tloor| ——---- — --- *—
Oil trial ' WASHINGTON. Jan. 11 <U.R ■
Vice President John N. Garner L
becoming recognized today as the
inevitable master strategist of con-
servative Democrats if there is a
Coaeli Andy Green# Tribe inn
over, around and under the help-
less Classen Comets Tuesday night
on the El Reno court, holding the
visitors to a pair of last-minute
field goals and finally emerging •
with a 30-14 victory.
El Reno All The Way
The Indians overwhelmed the
Central, Lincoln Win
Opening Contests
Remainder of the schedule for
El Reno elementary school basket-
i i
tion of relief.’ t
Roosevelt Standing Pat | authorizing research into the prob-
Tliere was no doubt that Presi- j able revenue for the next biennium, j
sssi
dent Roosevelt still wanted an $875.-
000.000 WPA fund. When a reporter
guessed at a* press conference that
50.000 persons might be dropped
Phillips recommended that such i
a ■study be made to establish p. 1
ceiling for appropriations and en-:
able the legislature to hold ex-1
greater as the 76th congress de-
velops.-
from relief rolls because of the: penditures within the stales in-'
house sub-committee’s action, the come.
president suggested he check again.
Mr. Roosevelt added that in his
position lie had to think not only
in terms of dollars but also in terms
of human beings—a factor which
lie described as important.
Some relief experts were under- I
stood to believe that as many as
460.000 might be dropped bv a
$150,000,000 reduction in WPA
funds.
Floyd Harrington, chairman of
the house committee on retrench-
ment and reform, announced four
bills embodying recommendations
made in Phillips' message were
being drawn.
One would provide a pie-audit
Jack Benny Pleads In- Program Is Planned
nocent On Charge George Nitzel Farm
genuine bolt away from President j dominating play fvom the baU ^"’t'i^nred'Lav'bv'Kerts
Roosevelt. .. , ... , . „ , ff ... „,„ison was announced today by Keats
The vice president's intimates !{jnal wllistlc sounded. • McKinney, director of grade school
insist he will not seek the leader
ship of any anti-new deal move
I went. There are. in tact, some and 23-7 TlThe end”oL theAhTrd Lincoln walloped Webster 10-4 in
grounds to believe that Democrat .j0{) the first two games. Webster was
dissention will be less instead of Not untu lhei.c werc only three scheduled to play Central this
minutes remaining to play could I afternoon.
. Classen connect with the basket! The schedule was announced as
But hope of party peace is found- j Irom the floor, against El Reno | follows:
cd primarily upon a change of j reserves, and then a second-string Jan. 12—Irving vs. Lincoln at
Irving.
Jail. 18—Lincoln vs. Central at
Irving.
Jnn. 20—Weoster vs. Lincoln at
White House tactics. That would Luard named Holland hit the loop
Juvolvc assigning congress, especially lrom the mjCldle of the court.
the key commute chairmen, a. with only a minute to go Hol-
greater part in shaping legislation J ialU| duplicated the feat, sinking
to be presented.
Would Accept Compromises j far out.
It would mean that Mr. Roosevelt Alert, heads-up guarding pre-
would limit his recommendations to I vented the Comets from gaining
general outlines of methods toward j more than a few chances to score
his objectives and. .specifically.' two-pointers, and when they did
that he would be willing to accept j shoot they, couldn’t hit until they
Committee Chairmen Are
Announced Today
NEW YORK. Jan. 11— ol*.— Al- Lamb and wool growers of Ca-;
j ben N Chaperon, ex-convict and nadian county will meet at 10
foreign film broker, pleaded guilty (a. m. next Tuesday on the George
today to an indictment charging | Nitzel farm five miles west and
system, another would restrict l,e’’ i,im and Jack Benny, movie and three miles north oi El Reno for
l.sc or revolving funds by insMtu- mjl„ with smuggling a special program on sheep produc-
tions and departments and return ,vort|, of jewels into this tion. M. Lee Phillips, county agent,
control to the legislature. port last Oct. 31. said today. Isuch compromises as might be
Other Measures Drawn Benny flew back to Hollywood i R ts; demonstrations, discus-; ‘^XL^fSroS 'ifcmoSts
A third would establish a Inc uIter pleading innocent yesterday isicns bv slale authorities and a of dd of the road Df.iociats
inventory system for the stale prop-. l0 t!)„ same jnriictiv^it f '.'l saving
erty and the fourth would provide; „x an utterIy amazed that i mogram.
uniform regulations covering mile- houlci br accvlsed in the Chaperau afternoon. \- - , - . ,
» — «"•«•"> «*•“• > •»« •!«» «*«"' ’ M Keep ol the National Com- »»■■>“> SmISTSS1
in oteter to.be indteledMtw«s_nee- ,nL.S|OII company. Oklahoma cltv.IOamcr 011 a showdown would be
j another almost impossible sliot from Webster.
Jan. 25—Lincoln vs. Webster at
(PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 6)
,. , 'ion his side of the legislative dis
- moving picture will make up the j teg
f urogram, which will last until mid- '
Palling developmerts along these I
ed state employes
Curnutt said the senate would I fssary to be guilty of some criminal,“‘jjf‘coo^rotiv^Market-
throw the tax commission reor- jntcnt •• l and Crcdit in the Production
ganization bill, passed by the house Th(, federal grand jure which and Market of Lambs.” the county
yesterday, into conlerence. j indicted the two renewed its investi- agent said.
Both houses passed the highway uation of reports that other not- , Others Will Speak
_ commission reorganization bill yes- j rbl(,s were involved in the evasion
, . , 1 terday and it went to Philips ior nf customs laves
Appointment of committee chair- j sl„na£ure
men to serve during 1939 was made I „„
ITALY FOR TALKS
expected to stay with the con- j _
servatives l
Gamer's strategic position in the [British Prime Minister Is
76th congress practically assures
him of an opportunity cither to
at today's luncheon-meeting of the I
El Reno Kiwanis club by Ray Dyer,
president.
Principal speaker for the meet-
ing. held in the Southern hotel
dining room, was Smith Cunning-
ham of Watonga. past president of
the Kiwanis club at Watonga and
The senate prepared to re.i >v ■
■ this afternoon the first appoint-
To Await Trial
Benny is due back Jan. « “« "w‘| attempted to make more trouble
„ nr PhitiinR to his official t trial ln fe?eral C0Vrt' " c?‘ ' Marketing in Oklahoma with i Spe- than ,,s nuinerical 8trength war.
menus of Phillips to ms niiciai . jie coxl\$ be imprisoned six years1 rial Reference Lo Canadian Coun-1 . ,
family—the members of the high- ami fined $i;,,oo0. which is a little tv."
way commission and the board oi iporr than lie earns a week on the1 Wilson Farrell, Alva, will talk j
affairs. radio. on "The Midwest Wool Marketing
It was reported the governor al-1 unjjjje f,is fellow comedian. Association and Its Plans for 1939.
Welcomed In Rome
Webster.
Jan. 26—Irving vs. Central
Irving.
Feb. 1—Irving vs. Lincoln
Irving.
Feb. 3—Webster vs. Central
j Webster.
I Feb. 7—Lincoln vs. Central
' Lincoln.
Feb. 8—Webster vs.
Irving.
Feb. 15—Lincoln vs. Webster at
Webster.
Feb. 16—Irving vs. Central at
Irving.
Feb. 22—Lincoln vs. Irving at
Irving.
| Feb. 24—Webster vs. Central at
| Webster.
Mar. 1—Central vs. Lincoln
Members of the EH Reno junior
chamber of commerce will serve
tiie dinner at Thursday night’s an-
nual meeting of the senior cham-
ber. H. G. Keller, secretary, an-
nounced today.
The dinner-meeting will begin at
7 p. m. in the auditorium of Etta
Dale junior highschool.
The menu will include fruit eock-
itail, linked ham, pineapple, lettuce
land tomato salad, escalloped corn,
I baked potatoes, rolls, coffee and ice
i cream.
After the banquet, for which the
El Reno lilglischool band directed
oy Tom Shirley will furnish mu-
sic. a varied entertainment and
business program will be conducted.
O'Shaughnessy Is Speaker
Tiie El Reno Elks lodge choral
club will sing several numbers to
open the program, and Timothy J.
O’Shaugluiessy, executive assistant
of the Rock Island railroad at
(Chicago, will give tiie principal ad-
j dress.
Conuntttee reports and the elec-
|tion of a 1939 board of directors
will conclude the meeting, Mr.
Keller said.
Jaycees who will assist in serv-
ing the banquet will be Jack Cham-
ness, Charles Henderson, Kenneth
Brown, Harry Schroeder, Don
Smith, Jack DeAtley, Bill O'Toole.
Guy Shelby, John Flaherty, Leo
King, Russell Gibbs, Dick Horton,
diaries Lainka, Jennings Newman.
Carleton Jackson, Robert T. Ash-
brook, Wayne Leach, Johnny Spen-
cer, Roy Klnkade, Shannon Ahern,
Oscar Bigler and Eugene Myers.
Other Activities Sponsored
While major activities of die
chamber of commerce will be cov-
ered in conuntttee reports, the or-
ganization has sponsored or as-
sisted many events and activities
which will not be reported on, Mr.
Keller pointed out.
They include the federal sym-
phony orchestra concert, improve-
ments at the El Reno federal re-
formatory, the Federal Housing ad-
ministration project, vocational ag-
riculture department at El Reno
lilglischool, crow dinner at Darling-
ton stutc game farm, city clean-
up campaign, hand-sweeping of
(PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 6)
Irving at
ARE ISSUED TODAY
Eviction of Farm Tenants
Being Investigated
ROME. Jail 11—(/Pi—Prime Min- • Irv,nS
Complaint Is Filed
ister Neville
ly welcomed
sought to learn Premier Benito
Mussolini's terms for cooperation
ill his efforts to bring appease-
ment to Europe.
Less than two hours after a
at | WASHINGTON. Jail. 11—(U.P.)—•
Tiie agriculture department threat-
Chamberlain, warm-' Mar 3 Webster vs, Irving at !ened reprisals today against land-
to Rome, tonight iWebster- ! owners who evict llreir tenants or
ready had decided on “the person- G™Burm. A^nofTe' entltfed“ Fab-1 To ReVOke LiceilSC Italian
past lieutenant governor of this nel °r both bodies. Sandy Single- (0 tllc same charge, Benny said he ric" will be shown.
ton of Duncan, former legislator. was not guilty. i Other features of the program1
is scheduled to be made chairman Tbey and Mrs. Edgar J Lauer, * will be the election of the 1939
of the highway commission, and wjfp pf a justice 0f the New York lamb and wool marketing commit-
E. tV. Smartl. of Muskogee, cliaii- .supreme court, all have been ciiarg- (ice i® Canadian county and dem-
of the board of affairs. with dealings with Cliaperau. (lustrations on parasite control.
Kiwanis division, who discussed
flood control in the Canadian riv-
er valley.
The following committee chair-
men were named: j
Agriculture—J. N. Roberson. !
Attendance—Ernest Tanner. ,
Boys and girls work—Fred H.
Hampton.
Business standards and public af-
fairs—H. Meric Woods.
Classification hnd membership—
R. F. Jones.
Inter-club relations—Walter P.
Marsh.
Kiwanis education—Charles W.
Ruckman.
Music and program—B. M. Mc-
Ginley.
Hearing on a complaint for the
revocation of n beer license issued
to B. H. Carlisle of Calumet will
be held before Judge Emmett
Visiting Minister
1 reduce their status to day labor-
It ordered an Immediate in-
■ ers.
jvestigation at Sikeston. Mo., where
To Give Sermon'lluo°
ibeen evicted.
Confidential reports to the de-
ai.ni.HHi w.c uwwo,. flev' A- ®' Arnold, Oklahoma jpartment showed that the practice
premiers and theirloreip™minTsters 1 pth^ [iS natioj]^e'a tS.“?uni£^S
of God. It was announced by Rev. j families.
The negotiations opened in a |
cordial atmosphere but were con- :
i Ira N. Burke, pastor.
!
Rev. William Kitchen of Okla-
Would Withhold Payments
"All benefit payments will
7‘"~"Tszrxzrsn.....hW , ,,
January session-. guan consul general wliicli exempt-1 A rPP°rt 011 activities of the 1938 c°i s sc ose n< av' it le ls pl 1 ,n . . . . . . night. Rev. Lee Panick of El1 to liave evicted tenants or reduced
Held By 4-H Units;!’-8,ve"'Mr »SSiST »
*tt” ™UV E“ 'STS M„s Ann Blascr. «. No,.,, Choc'S?S’STc.i ^cUon“ j
wealthy persons in the United taw avenue, spent Tuesday in Okla- station, west of El Reno, to persons I with this issue.
i 4._____ _____,.. ______ ___ • 'TU* XlriHttVi
Rlven iew and Lone Stai * > and jewels which lie peddled to
clubs held January meetings Tues- wpamiy nersons in the United
J day. Miss Doreen Fickel and M., states.
I Lee Phllliiis. Canadian county ex- [____
tension agents, reported today. A J ni* J 1VT..11
At the Riverview meeting Oma [ . lj^cli I >1111(1 ItIcHI
Belle Needham discussed a timely IV.c T rij
topic, while team demonstrations (yltJo 111 I lalllca
Publicity and KINotes—H. Merle i were given by Oleta Fay Dodson --
Woods. land Doris June Beard on picture SHAWNEE. Jan 11—i/P»—Blind
House and reception—C. E. Bro»s. | framing and by Earl Bollinger end crippled Jim Allen. 90, burned
lionia City.
; under 21 years <5f age.
The British considered settling
Underprivileged cnild work—W.1 and LaVerne Dodson on selecting! to death early today when fire
C. Elliott.
eggs for incubation.
destroyed the two-story Pottawat-
Vocntlonul guidance—W. R. Buck- ! At Lone Star a team demon- tomfc county poor farm three
tier. * i stration on testing seeds for gene- miles southwest of here.
Kiwaniqucen affairs—Mrs. Henry ! ration was presented by Ivan Hause Nine other helpless occupants
Combs. i and Eugene Wilkerson. and timely | of the frame building were rescued
--- ! topics were discussed by Thelma1 by Shawnee fire-fighters. ,
! Mae Wilkerson and Donald Reimer. J. H. Pemberton, 67-year-old
Songs, games and captains re- superintendent of the farm, told
ports completed both programs. j firemen he was awakened by
- smoke pouring up from the base-
GUEST OF FRIENDS [ ment. Investigating, he found 40
Mrs. Harold Wolverton of Lake tons of coal in the basement a-
Ailment Fatal To
Herman Oliphant
WASHINOION, Jan. 11—</!*,—
Herman Ollphant, general counsel
of the treasury arid intimate ad-
visor of President Roosevelt, died
today. He suffered from a serious
heart ailment for about a week.
Ollphant, 54 years old, was best
known in the administration for
his reputed authorship of the
Charles, La., arrived Tuesday for blaze.
a week’s visit with Miss Sarah- The building collapsed before
Anne Fox, 1111 South Macomb ave- rescue workers could reach Allen,
nue, and with other friends here, who was the last person to reman.
Mrs. Wolverton, who ls the form- ! -
controversial undistributed profits j J. P. Wolverton, In Chickasha be
tax. tore returning home.
er Miss Jane Nave of this city.; Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Lewis. 1105
plans to spend some time with Mr. South Macomb avenue, have de-
Wolverton’s parents, Mr. and Mrs., parted for North Little Rock,
Ark., where they have been called
by the illness of her parents.
For The NYA
Organizations and individuals
are joining in an effort to sub-
scribe n fund of $100 to enable
tiie National Youth administra-
tion to continue its work among
die youth of Canadian county
for another year.
Those who will aid in this
cause are urged to bring or mail
their donations to The Tribune
office as soon as possible, as
the total amount must be ob-
tained by Feb. 1.
The $100 will be used for the
purchnse of pssential items in
operating the NYA youth cen-
ter in El Reno, the first to be
established in the United States.
Those who have contributed to
date are:
1. The Daily Tribune.
2. Anonymous.
3. J. M. Flippen.
4. West Way club.
5. Anonymous. .
6. Lions club of El Reno.
the Spanish civil war was as per-
haps the greatest question-involved
Hopkins Testifies ^ ^ *-•
Special music will be provided ,ed officially,
at each sendee, which begins at j Claude A. Wickard. AAA north
7:30 p. m. every night, and the I central division director, ordered
. . ^ . ti l ! but Italians indicated that II Ducc
At Senate I robei would inform the prime minister
| that he preferred to let the In-
Francisco
an Immediate Investigation of farm
tenant union charges that 1,700
Rev. Joseph B. Lewis, pastor of families had been ordered to leave
the Faith Tabernacle at El Reno, I their lands or become day laborers
preached Tuesday night, while Rev. I at Sikeston. The Farm Security
H. A. Chaney preached Monday 1 administration sent Virgil L. Bank-
roll to Sikeston to investigate.
| "Southeast Missouri always has
. been a trouble spot in
WASHINGTON. Jan. H—i/pi-j surgent generalissimo, „
Harry L. Hopkins said today he | Pranco' flght 011 t0 a fma '1ctory' | night,
had done everything in his power' ’ ‘ ‘
2n.Ck,",““ ^ | Pope Nomination , Oe0TO-^1“r-P=U
At a hearing before tiie senate j HoltllUJ, AppTOVill!IU1(1 huetl $5 this morning in. Wickard said. We are determined
FINE ASSESSED
relations
commerce committee on his nomi-
nation for secretary cf commerce.
; tiie former WPA administrator de-
nied emphatically lie had ever
' made tiie remark: "We will spend
1 and spend and tax and tax and
elect and elect.”
Hopkins also testified in a dis-
cussion of his qualifications for
his new office that “if anybody
has had an intimate experience
WASHINGTON, Jan. 11-i/Pi—
Tiie senate agriculture committee
approved today the nomination of
James B. Pope, former Idaho sena-
tor. to be a member of the TV A
board of directors.
Tiie committee instructed Sena-
tor, Elmer Thomas. (Democrat.
Oklahoma), acting as chairman In
the absence of Senator Ellison D.
municipal court at El Reno on a 1c*ean UP evel1 strong action
charge of speeding, according to j ** necessary,
records of Tom Shaklett. chief of j
po,,ce Dunn And Hunt
with business during tiie last six J gmpj, (Democrat, South. Carolina)
! years it has been myself." | tQ ^ the senate to confirm the
| The "spend and spend" remark nomination tomorrow.
1 had been attributed to Hopkins by
I several newspaper correspondents.
(•three of whom were called in to-
I day’s hearing.
Mr. and Mrs. H. Norman Snyder
of Oklahoma City visited with
friends here Tuesday evening.
WEATHER
To Retain Jobs
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 11—OP)
—Appointments of Jess Dunn and
Forecast
Considerable cloudiness tonight 1 Fred Hunt as wardens of McAles-
and Thursday; slightly warmer in | ter penitentiary and Granite re-
west and north portions Thursday.1 fonnatory. respectively, will be sent
El Reno Weather j to the senate for confirmation to-
Por 24-hour period ending at 8 i day. Governor Leon C. Phillips an-
a. m. today: High, 51; low, 31; announced.
8 a. m„ 35. I Both men were Martand appoih*
State of weather, clear. j tees and will hold over under PblK
Rainfall, none . 1 bps.
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 47, No. 273, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 11, 1939, newspaper, January 11, 1939; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc920954/m1/1/: accessed March 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.