The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 264, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 5, 1944 Page: 1 of 6
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The El Reno Daily Tribune
.____ _ i,3s
1
Sincrle Copy, Five Cents
UP) UAMB ASSOCIATED PRSB8
El Reno, Oklahoma, Wednesday, January 5, 1944
(UJ9 MEANS UNITED PRESS
Volume 52, No. 264
Did You Hear
--o-
/I UST APARO, Port Renos
“kayo kcrporal" who has
been standing middleweight foes
on their ears all winter, is
training for a place on the
Oklahoma City Golden Gloves
team whieh will meet Kansas
City's best at the municipal*
auditorium in Oklahoma City
nexl Tuesday night.
——o-
James R Etreitenberger who
recently was Inducted Into the
armed forces, has arrived at
GuHpcrt. MUs.. to begin train-
ing as an aviation cadet in the
army air forces. He Is the son
of Mr and Mrs O. A Streit-
enberger. 735 South Ellison ave-
nue.
Two other spaa of Mis.
Etreitenberger also are serving
in the anny air forces George
Howard, station'd in.England,
recently was promoted to the
rank of technical sergeant. His
brother, Curtis Howard, is a
staff sergeant at Randolph Field.
Tex.
Asa R. Johnson, jr.. son of
Mr. and Mrs. Asa Johnson. 501
South Buuford avenue, who
serves as a tclety'pist in the
signal wing of the army air
forces, lias been promoted to
the rank of sergeant. He has
been stationed at Camp Pine-
dale. Fresno. Calif.
Redskins Grab
37-19 Victory
From El Reno
•^;^vlashy Capitol Hill
vers Outclass
experienced Tribe
Liberty Smiles
Railway Wage
Case Reopened
Playing against a team which Is
unanimously recognized as the best I
higlischool quintet in Oklahoma at
| the moment, Coach Jenks £im-
i moils' inexperienced but hard- |
, lighting Indians met their first J
defeat of the current basketball 1
i season Tuesday night, falling be-
hind Capitol Hill Redskins 37-19
at Oklahoma City.
It was the 13th straight victory
i for the Redskins, who last year
| were regarded by the experts us
the class of Oklahoma, even though
they lost one ball game last sea-
son—falling behind Enid by a single
point in the finals of the state
tournament after winning 37
straight.
Several of the lads who helped |
carry Capitol Hill to the heights j
last year again are members of
the Redskin squgd. while every i
member of the El Reno roster
was without experience at the out-
set of the season.
750 .See It Done
The Hill gymnasium was pack-
ed by 750 howling spectators to
^ee the Redskins blister the El
Renoltes.
The Indians played by far their
Postal Receipts
Top 50-Year High
By 25 Percent
Unprecedented (Jain's
In Business Reflected
By El Reno Figures
An unprecedented amount of bus- j
iness transactions in tDis locality I
was reflected in figures of 1943 I
postage stamp sales at the El
Reno postoffice, released today by |
Jesse W Hay don. postmaster
The 1942 50-year high was sur-
passed by nearly 25 percent in
1943. Haydon's total revealed. Total
1943 stamp sales were $67,044.94.
In 1942 the postoffice set a 50-
! vear record high with sales of
$53,519.64.
Increase Unexpected
The 1943 Increase was unexpect-
mother and her child, who holds a can ol army rations. They are ed locally, as Haydon prophesied
'Newspaper Office' on Arawe Beach
Symbolic of the happiness that allied liberation has brought to
Italians arc the smiles that brighten the faces of this Neapolitan
among the hungry hundreds being fed daily by'allied military govern-
ment officers in Italy.
Axis Bolstered
By Slave Labor
* Secret Police Keep
Home Front in Line
Curfew Support
Is Left to Units
Individual Groups
(liven Assignments
Parent-Teacher association back-
WASHINGTON Jan 5 — (<P| —
best game of the season thus far, I Bolstered by big reswweo^of slave mg of the curfew hour proposal
j everybody conceded, but they nat- lab°r *nd by secret police to keep uf the jUVenue council hereafter
; urally were no match for Coach J the home front from cracking, both d nd u aclion Ul(.
Join) Prvor's polished, fast-step- Germany and Japan can take heavy
Non-Ooeratinff ('lainw veteran quintet. The El Reno punishment before collapsing, the Individual school Parent-Teacner
k ^ v/ « -■> handled the ball well and office of war information warned groups It was decided Tuesday at
I O lit* ( onsidered worked it In for a number of good today. a regular meeting of the Parent-
In a report on war progress, which
shots, but they simply were out-
WA8HTNOTON Jan. 5 — (A*) — classed ' weighed past gains against the Job
President Roosevelt has ordered the j^s Tribe was held to five field “head. OWI dashed cold water on ^ne council, composed ol rep-
recoilveiling of an emergency board n , ‘ while Prvor* la-oraae-. chalk I miy ideas about a quick, easy vie- resentatlves from each of the city's
.I.- ......_____ » rnuicaea cuaia p _T * omllr>« herelnfnve has
Teacher association council
The council, composed of
in releasing the 1942 tigures in
January 1943. that sales probably
would decline in 1943.
This Is the first year that stamp
sales have equalled the annual
; payroll at the postoffice, which
averages around $60,000 per annum.
A low for postoffice stamp sales
was reached In the depression
year of 1933. with a total sale ol
$30,523.36 Sales have been rising
markedly since that year.
Steady Rise Revealed
Since 1933 stamp sales have been
as follows annually:
1933 -$30,523.36
1934— $34557.00
1935— $39,096.22
1936— $39,711.05
1937— $41395.31.
1938— $43,042.88
1939— $44,595.16.
1940— $44,655.87
1941— $48,176.58.
j 1942—$53,519.64
1943—$67,044.94
Germans Admit
Nazi Fortress
In Ukraine Lost
Pressure from West
Is Maintained With
Massive Air Blows
Front-line newsmen who went ashore with U. S. fighters at Arawe,
New Britain, work together in an open air "office" on the beach. While
Thomas L. Shafer. NEA-Acme photographer, gets his camera back In
shape. Ralph Teatsorth, United Press correspondent from Columbus.
Ohm. taps out a dispatch.
Planes Smash
Jap Positions
Additional Landing
Assaults Foreseen
I
to consider the unsettled wage
claims of the 1 100.000 non-operating
railroad employes.
These claims were not before the
Ixiatd when it recommended sliding
scale increases of 4 to 10 rents an j
hour. -*
The board, headed by Judge El-
wyn R Shaw of Splng field. III. will
consider the claims for additional
pay. cither for or in lieu of over-
time
“Wlf Tort-opera ileg employes re-1
fused to accept the president’s offer
(PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 3)
Half of Berlin
Now Destroyed
.Much of Remainder
Is Damaged Badly
tory P.-T. A. groups. henioioK R$
About 550.000 square miles of axis- endorsed the curfew hour
I conquered territory have been liber- Representatives of the juvenile
ated In recent allied offensives, an council were requested by city
area bigger than Oermany. France commissioners to prepare signed
and Belguim combined, but this Is petitions lor the curfew. At the I
! only a fraction of the territory December meeting of the Juvenile
overrun by lhe Nazi panzers and group P.-T. A. representatives were
Nipponese hordes, OWI said. asked to obtain signatures on the
Enormous Areas Held petition.
I The 390 000 square miles recap- As a result ol Tuesday's action
I turn! Irom Oermany amounts to by the P.-T. A. council, any lurthei
one-fifth cf the area originally work on -signing petitions for .«a.. |,
taken by Hitler, it was pointed out. curfew must be accomplished by
One-Act Plays
Set Thursday
Hijjhschool Students
In Stage Productions
to arbitrate additional claims except BERN. Switzerland Jan. 5-«A».-, whu<> [h(. 160,oO0 odd square miles Cach school group working with assisti
on Condition* to which the carrier | The Baslar National Zeltung said . wrt.>u>d nom jHpan k ., mf,n. 2n.h tllc jumdJe council ! whlch
of the territory grabbed by the
disagreed The president aud lire
carrier held that the arbitration
should consider the slldinu scale
increases as well as the additional
claim, and the employes want arbi-
tration limited to the overtime
claims '
The executive order, dated Jan. 4.
was made public today.
today that allied bombing so far
had destroyed 50 percent of great-
er Berlin, with another 25
The curfew ordinance as
Poles Promise
Keels Little Aid
Twenty students of El Reno
highsrhool are participating in or
assisting with the all-chool plays,
are to be presented at 2:30
I p. m. and again at 8 p. m. Thurs-
island empire . ---- ----- ------- — re* I day in the higlischool auditorium.
- ft- - : njsxs - r— i
Mu h of the remainder of the Qf her (anati(. troops lnto battle. ° "ge mUM ** °U lhe f’lreel"s by Hwtructor.
city L* without windows, and in I OW[ estlniated. 11 p m The all-school plays, which are
many cases without roofs, the dis- j Tiie strength of the axis in the ^ was announced at tlic Tues- | being presented in place of the
patch said, adding that an area of ! H„. ln manpower, in industry, and cla>' P*T A meeting that lhe j annual all-school thre-act play,
several square kilometers had been i jn food reserves p, nowhere near annual founder's day tea of the include a comedy, a war drama,
wiped out broken, the report concluded. clty P.-T. A will be held at 3 | and a mystery.
Well developed air raid shelters . ... , p. m Feb. 8.
Internal ( ullapse ( nlikrlv 1
: ^ ‘ rTo ^
. ' . ' , the lines collapse like Germany In
LONDON. Jan 5-.A*-The Pol-| A Berlin dtopatoh to the B«- , und ,,,m,imlf slraln of waglng
Lsh government in exile implied to- , tor Nachlchten said Ber Inera only war aKulnsl superlor allied pro-
m.nl , ~ U,ndfrr*rOUndi W"“ld i ,ope h*‘l thc alr “fS I ductlve might Is offset to some ex-
u I < n n? I “ - weapon which has not tpnt bv trempndous of slave
and avoid all conflict with Soviet | yet appeared but which is touted worgers
armies entering wliat it regards as ; as being capable of "putting Eng- oeograDhv logistics and the na-
Polixh teritorjr but indicated there | land out of the war as an effective turr of tpe Japanese soldier do not hlands liit Jalult twice and Mill
Characters Ursignutrd
The comedy will be "Cleaned
and Pressed." with parts being
taken by Bill Sliirey, Margaret
June Seiver. Rutliann Hampton.
Barbara Coil and Bill Bayne.
Cast oi "Guns Against the
Snow," the war drama, includes
American bombers battling Jup- ; Bob Fowler. BUI Bayne. Victor
uiu se positions In thc Marshall j Dubberstein, Patsy Cooper. Don
Japs Pounded In
Marshall Area
WASHINGTON, Jnn 5 —vl'
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS Charles E. Fewell. 46. ol the 500
Far-ranging allied planes arc block South Barker avenue, was
smashing thc Japanese positions bound to district court for trial
in every sector of the Pacific on charges of assault with a dan-
battle front in what appeared gerous weapon after a preliminary
likely today as the forerunner of hearing was conducted before Judge
new landing assaults on the en- Baker H. Melone in Canadian
emy’s ocean bases. county court today. The defen-
Froni bases in China. United dant was released on his own
States 14th air force units struck recognizance pending the district
into Thailand Monday, while other court trial.
fighter bombers hit an enemy- Information Hied by William
occupied town in western Yunan U Funk, charges Fewell committed
province of China. assault and battery upon BUI Tack-
The broad scope of the primarily cr the night of Jan. 3, striking
American operations was shown by wllh the blade of a butcher
recent attacks on the Japanese knife,
stronghold of Paramushiro. 790
miles southwest of Attu In the
Aleutians. It is in this northern
sector that the Japanese assert
the United Elates is massing .a
great fleet of planes and ships.
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Germans said today that|
j the eastern half of Berdichev,
once the fortress headquarters of I
Nazi armies in the Ukraine, has!
i been lost to the Russians who hadl
j split Adolf Hitler's winter defensel
j line into two fronts of 360 and!
j 480 mUes with “a very deep pen-|
etration."
Berdichev is an important mill
junction 25 miles south of Zhit-I
omir. A German military spokes-l
man told Swedish correspondents!
that the Nazi winter line had!
been severed and expressed doubtl
that the army could restore its|
position by counter-attacks.
Although Stockholm Is the center
for German propaganda plants
the facts emerging from Moscowl
indicated that for once the Oer-|
man's were telling the truth.
Huge Forces Separated
The "deep penetration" is the
; great Kiev bulge into the PolisH
Ukraine just south of thc Pripetj
marshes. separAing upward of 500,-
000 Germans in the south froni
other Nazi forces of the rentetf
and north.
Another 4.000 Germans were slaiiJ
as General Nikolai Vatutin press!
ed his drive to isolate enemi
armies between the lower DnlepeJ
and Bug rivers.
Von Mannstein counter-at tacked
sharply on thc western peripher
of the Kiev bulge and succeedet
in breaking one Soviet ixwitiotl
before the Russians restored tha
situation, capturing 400 prisoner!
and destroying thc others, Mas
cow said.
In northern Russia, the Siber!
iau army of the Baltic killed l.lod
more Nazis, cleared a 40-mil J
stretch of railway between Nevrl
Fewell was arrested by city and velikie Luki and captured 1
Assault Trial
Is Ordered
Fewell Is Arrested
After Wielding Knife
policemen at 1 a. m. Tuesday and
was turned to county authorities
for further investigation Lee Har-
vey, chief of police, said Fewell
was taken into custody after a
fight which occurred in the rear
Chinese Would Be Ready
If thc allied command should °f a cwlf In the 200 block of
decide upon a general counter- South Rock Island avenue,
offensive in China this year. Liang Harvey said Fewell is employed
Hun-Chao. minister of information. as » carpenter foreman at the
declared in Chungking today, the P*>rt R«M> prisoners of war camp.
Chinese armies will be ready to Tncker, 37. also resides In the
carry it out. but such a drive, he block of South Barker ave-
said, would be contingent upon nue and ^ H civilian employe at ed an estimated 3.000 ton* of bom
0|>erations In other theatres. Port Peno- Harvey said.
In current ground fighting, -I—
American marines shook off a TfOOpS 'TVclinini^
towns on the approaches to LatJ
via.
The pressure on Oermany Iron!
the east was accomplished h|
massive air blows from the wpi
Berlin Pounded Again
British Mosquito bombers attack!
ed Berlin without loss last i [
in the third blow a( the tleval
stated Oemian capital this yeaJ
Other R A F. planes struck north!
ern France.
Nearly 3.000 allied planes dump!
sharp counter-attack at Cape
"“h ."T III North Africa
lorce at 8aidor on thc north
Coast of New Guinea occupied
a position three miles wide and
three miles deep: and Australians.
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
ALGIERS. Jan. 5—(4*1—American,
British and French troops are
would be Utile cooperation with the i force
Russians. __________
In a statrnies>t issued to aU the A _ _ i ■-» ■
united nation.' the Polish govern- I Cl SOUS 111
mint said that on Oct. 27 it had xj ■ r ii
Instructed it* undeground to co- iNCCCI 01 llOfllCS
once In a series of attacks on
Jan. 3 and 4.
| One enemy cargo-transport ves-
•sel
support any opinion that conquest
of Japan will be relatively quick
I and easy, once Germany Is defeated.
lhe report pointed out ',('1 W:!s slru k ’«>>'<* bV bombs I participating
Japan is believed to have a two,a^ Jalult, thc navy said today in Other* Assisting
Smith and Clyde Purcell
The mystery will be "Smoke-
screen.” with Barbara McCullough,
Jack Tomlins and Don Douglas
Raids Made On
French Airports
to three vears' supply of all war •' s;dt,'mont prepared bv Admiral
operate with command-| An appeal for boarding homes I materials stock-piled, and thus can Chester w Nimttz. commander-in-
* " " ,ua ° a r,sumP 0,1 ° [or 0]d agc clients of the Canadian maintain her war economy at least chief of the Pacific fleet. One
Polish-Soviet relations.
It added that if an agreement
had been reached between the two
countries before the frontier had
been crossed, the Poles would have
coordinatd their action against
Germany with that of tire Soviet.
Influenza Epidemic Is
Reported on Increase
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 5—(UR>
—Oklahoma's epidemic of Influ-
enza js on the Increase through-
out thc state. Dr Orady Mathew*,
state health commissioner, said
today, except In thc Oklahoma City
area where a decline has been
noticed.
Fbr the week ending Jun 1,
there were 2.769 cases reported
In the state as compared with , . . .. ... ... . ,,
2.022 caw reported the week end- 10 take tt M,nllnr
ln« Dec 25 and 999 cases for thc h'lL . m ' ItU,h° .
Wi ck ending Dec 18 Francis will report to Ills new
Mathews .aid that Oklahoma to !’W'U'0n *^Ut f‘nce CO'n'
l.i the midst of ip. worst Inluen- n“ t0 ® h,e, has
») epidemic since 1937 However. ln w“k .of tbe L,on’‘ tlub' whlch
the attacks are mild n>mparKl he 1* serving currently
county public welfare office was
Issued today by Mrs Edna We-
wrikn. director.
Mrs Wewerka stated that the
need for persons who either can
board the ofd people In their own
homes, or visit homes to care for
them, when 111. Is urgent.
Places for two elderly persons
j must be found this week, she add-
ed, and anyone able to care for
ar board these persons to re-
quested to get In touch with her
office
Francis Resigns Duties
With Local Association
E. H. Francis, manager of the
El Reno Retail Merchants associa-
tion thc past four years, has re*
Pacific.
Mrs. Bassett's
Sphere Defined
with the severe type of "flu” of
World War I, and lew cases have
developed Into pneumonia.
Veteran Employes At
Hospital Kccoj>ni/<‘fl
WOODWARD. Jnn. ii —(U.R)—
Fifteen employes of the Fort Sll|>plv
hospital who have served In thc
stale mental MUiiUuiuin lor 15 years
nr more have hern awarded cer-
tificates for extraordinary service
by the state board of affairs
H. D Bury, who joined the staff
In 1910. to the oldest employe In
polid of wr' lcii.
| as president.
Lctmu Is CommandinK
liritirih Eighth Army
ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN
1
ALGIERS. Jan. 5—up)—Lieutenant t
Oeiicral Sir Oliver Lresc to the '
new commander of the
that long. His weak spot is shipping. American fighter plane was shot
hard hit bv U 8. operations In the d°wn by anti-aircraft fire
Mill.
The announcement also told of
raids by Japanese planes, with-
out success, on American positions
at Tarawa. Makin and Abemama,
In the Otlbert islands.
Stiff opposition to "softening-up"
OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 5—(Jb— rnici. on Japanese positions in hr
Attorney General Randell S. Cobb Marshall Islands Indicated today
today told Mrs. Mabel Basset, In ■« possibility that the enemy may
efiect, that she was commissioner of fight desperately to retain hi*
charities find corrections, and had bases there
no say In the discharge of Inmates -------
from the stale training school for Cinllrn- I.
girls at Tccumseh. ligUTCS AlHIOUnCCQ 111
In an opinion which she request- Pparl fLrhor Rnflrf folp
cd, Cobb Informed the commissioner rcaM ''flfUUI DUllU >dll
that the authority to discharge girls OKLAHOMA CITY. Jan. 5 —(U.Ri
from thc Institution rested with the Tire navy's Pearl Harbor annlver-
achool superintendent, or the county *ary war bond campaign conduct-
judge who made lhe commitment ed at Oklslioin* naval stations
Cobb said ilia* while the board of D,'t' 7 "e11’’'1 *1»«,706 for Uncle
affairs had no specific statutory Swn's WBr budget, the navy an-
authorlty over the school. It has noimced today,
been treated by thc leglslatura since Officers and rnllsted ihpd par-
1929 us the governing body for the tlctpated almost loo percent hi
trslnlng home. the drive, which was aimed at
Recently Mrs. Bassett attempted staining sums not normally In-
to release 12 recalcitrant girls from v<sl rc* 1,1 through lhe navy's
the Institution, an action which was 1 l>ayroll savings plan. Tlic
opposed by the school superhiten- *M8 * 300 percent Increase
dent and Oovernor Robert 8, Kerr ovcl *"'lt ^eBI-
Business managers for the plays
are Dorotliy Maddox and Leon
Smith.
8tage scenery and settings have
at been constructed by members of
the stage crew which consists of
Oeorge Cullers, Billy Waller, BUI
Blake. Don Simons and Franklin
Wlrges
Spanish Soldiers
Assist Germans
| NEW YORK. Jan. 5—(45-Span-
! ish soldier* are fighting slde-by-
slde with the Germans on the Vol-
khov front ln northern Russia, de-
spite assertatlons by Ocneral Fran-
cisco Franco's government that all
Spaniards have been called home,
a Russian comunlque asserted to-
day.
The communique, boadcast from
Moscow and recorded by United
Stales government monitors, quoted
a captured Spanish soldier. Jesus
Peres Sanchez, as authority for the
assertion.
who advanced 15 miles in three undergoing training ln French
days, reached a point 80 airline North Atrica for coming assaults
miles from Saidor. across the Mediterranean.
■......... — North Africa was described offi-
cially as "one vast training center
lor troops destined for future op-
erations," with cninps scattered
throughout Algeria and Morocco.
Realistic training in landing op-
LONDON. Jan. 5 — Strong erations Is being given at Medl-
foraiations of U. S. heavy bombers j terranean and Atlantic coast cen-
today attacked air fields at Bor-1 ter* while Inlard troops are being
deaux and Tours ln France and trained In battle conditions ln the
shipyards at Kiel and other tar- mountains, muddy plains, swamps
gets In western Germany. ' j and heavy woods
The raids by the big American The American and British are
bombers were part of widespread newly arrived troops while the
operations by both the U. S. and ITench are those recently re-
British airmen over the continent anned
during thc day. RAF. fighter--
bombers hit at military objectives |< IIicrhtW TomnLu-
in northern France without loss 1 V lll|JI«ll
and R. A, F and Canadian fight-! I If | ipppu
ers swept over a large area V/llllCln 11 IcM<1111II
Tlie U S heavyweights were At a meeting Tuesday night in
escorted by fighters on all their the Masonic temple. 1944 officers
missions except the strike at Bor- for the Ascension cominandery No.
deaux, in which they were given 4 of Knights Templar were ln-
wlthdrawal support. Opposition stalled by 8enlor Knights Charles
from enemy Interceptors was re- W Draper and J. H. Wilson, act-
ported spotty by thc Americans. Ing as grand Installing officers,
who said It was strong at some Charles E. Oamble was Installed
places and mediocre at others. as commander. Other officers in-
Winds Bring Shivers
To Oklahomans Again
ducted into office were:
John L. Scott, generalissimo;
John H. Bannister, captain gen-
eral; Ivan D. Cates, senior war-
den; Edwin Jevttt. Junior war-
on the Germans yesterday ln ou|
ot the greatest daylight assaultf
of all time. U. S heavy bombed
pounded thc Kiel shipyards anj
the rail lines at Muenster as
| continuous stream of lesser |
assaulted the French invask
coast.
In all. the allies lost 25 planel
including 18 of the heavyweight!
and thev destroyed at least i|
Oerman fighters.
Light naval forces exchange
shells in the English channel.
Bulgaria Feels Bombs
Unstable Bulgaria thudded tl
allied bombs dropped south «
Sofia on a rail bridge and yard;
As the cabinet crisis developed J
the Nazi puppet kingdom ol &
Balkans, the Germans were r«
ported extending their control
virtual military occupation Wli^
ther Premier Bojoliv still wn
power was unclear, but neutil
'<>itrees said he was under trenj
endous public pressure to repudla
the Oermans.
Both allied armies in Italy seizi
new positions, the Algiers oon|
munique said. Bitter. inronclusiJ
fighting continued in Yugoslavia!
The Moscow radio said 1.000 Gel
man railroad workers were o
trial on charge' of "defeattsnfl
and that 200 had been sent I
to death.
Identity of Ill-Fated
Destroyers Revealed
WASHINGTON, Jan 5 - Of)
The navy has disclosed that t«
destroyer Which blew up off
Hook N J., Monday was the 1.7( |
ton U 8. 8. Turner, and that
destoyrer lost in the AHantlr nf)l
being torpedoed on Christmas ej
was the 1.090-ton U. 8. 8. Leary
here for visit Roosevelt Working
Mi and Mrs A F Dychc, 1205 ('ll Allium! Message
British i South Elltoon avenue, have as their WASHINGTON, Jsn. 5 — <g’> —
eighth army fighting In llalv, sue- ' *uc,il-s u,eir tluuk|lter. Mrs. Devere 1-resident Roosevelt, recovering Horn
reeding Oener.l sir Bernard U | JPI,'mrH 'hp wrtl enough today
, Russell, of Herlni ton, Kan, lo start work on hla annual uim-
Montgomeiy, It was disclosed to- j and their son and daughter-in-law, rage lo congress U) i„> delivered
day. | Mr, and Mr*. M. H. Dychr, of Nor- Tuesday
<A dispatch from the Canadian 'oik, Vn Mr. Dychc to a boatswain's He had no appointment*, how-
front In Italy said Deeae already mate with the coast guard and to ever, and remained in his bedroom
iv i. Ui Ule field, i JlUUoiicU ut Nut folk . lu vvurk.
Lieutenant (>umble And
Sister Here for Visit
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Oumble. 717
feoutli Hadden avenue, have as
their guests their son. Lieutenant
Edwin Oamble. of the United Btates
marine corps, and their daughter.
Mr*. Wayne E. Olenn. who to en-
I'oute from Hobbs. N. M.. to Ponca
City where Mr. Olenn has been
transferred Mr*, olenn I* the
former Miss Barbara Oumble.
Lieutenant Gamble Is being
transferred Irom Camp LeJeune,
New River. N O., to the west
coast. He arrived here Tuesday
and will report to hto new post
Jan. 19.
rien; J. A. Johnson, prelate; Oeo-
Wlnds lunging as high us 4(1 rKe E. p.lrcPn, treasurer; H E
| miles per hour brought the shivers Harrison, recorder; William K
bark to Oklahoma today, with Mlsenhelter. standard bearer J _ _
temperatures In the '20s expected U CranflU. sword bearer; Willie Initiation (VriMnimi
lo spread eastward tonight to h. Wallace, warder; H$nrv Her YlTtniOfn
'refrigerate sections missing the non, .sentinel
Elks To ('ondiu't
| new cold wave so far. the United
Press reported.
A forecast of wurmer weather
tomorrow In the panhandle In-
dicated the spell may be short-
lived, Travel conditions remained
good. Ice from last week's cold
Weather
Members of the El Reno El
lodge will conduct s meeting »i
initiation of candidates at H p h
Thursday, it was announred tod
by Baker H. Melone
Light ref reshine uis wm be m
vrd after the Initiation ceremoi
Ntale Eoercasl
Fall und colder tonight Tl.urn-
blast nad disappeared before the day fair with little change In
new freeze aet In. temperature except warmer ln pan-
Temperature* last night ranged handle,
rrom 14 at Ouymoti to 36 at Me- El Reno Weather
Alestor. Ardmore was the stale'* Fur 24-hqur period ending at 8 holidays in the home of Mr
warmest locality veslcrday, with:*, m. today: High. 4(1; low. 26; i Mr*. L B. Craig. 920 West Woo
a 63 MiHxIimnn Highest readlng'at 8 a. tn, 26. I street. Other guest »| in. r ial
at El Reno yesterday was 45, while1 8tale of leather: Fail unci ran- (during the holidays were Mr. a|
the low here Tuesday night was i tlnued cold. i Mrs. Phil Craig and son*, rial
«9L I Freclpltutlou Noue «nd Jimmie of Burtlcsvlllc
VISITORS DEPART
Stall Sergeant and Mrs Hol»|
F Prnlg have returned to Laf$J
la., after spendint. lhe Chr
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 52, No. 264, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 5, 1944, newspaper, January 5, 1944; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924153/m1/1/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.