The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 123, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 22, 1941 Page: 1 of 6
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I
MONDAY, JULY 21,1941
ftp?
wse
tie Pioneers
lie Redmen!
there he was, striding up the ramp.
Barbara was coming out of the
garden, her arms full of peonies,
when Uncle Hank's car swung up
the drive and stopped In front of
the house.
"Barbs,” said Uncle Hank, get-
ting out of the car, "this is Chief
Leaping Water, but I guess he'd
want you to call him Dugan Blake.
Dugan, my one and only Barbara."
Barbara Chase didn’t quite real-
ize it, but she held her breath as
Dugan Blake uncoiled himself
from the back seat of the con-
vertible and stepped out lightly.
She found herself offering her
hand in greeting, but as yet she
hadn't said anything.
The man smiling faintly before
her was tall and dark, very dark.
The pressure of his handclasp was
firm, almost powerful. .
"So this is the famed Miss Bar-
bara,” she heard him murmur, just
as it occurred to her that never
in all her 23 years had she ever
met anyone as handsome as Chief
Leaping Water.
He held her hand for a long
minute, but she made no effort to
draw away. Anyway, she had an
idea he wouldn't have allowed it
even if she had tried.
(To Be Continued)
in®.
United States
Savings Bonds
d Vitamins
era need vitamin B-l, the
ng, pepper-upper vitamin,
lat extra wallop which gets
i quicker and better.
i an electric range has most
sealed-in. That's because
7 requires a minimum ol
neons no steam or vapor to
th building vitamins away
'oking process. The food
>0.
> an electric range today,
will be happy to show you
3l it is and how much better
11 find it to be the last word
ing cooking.
ECTRIC COMPANY
Oklmkmmm Twrritary, 1901
Hcno DUirirt
Zlect’ucull-1
FOOD AND MONEY
V
t
The Heart of the Rich
Canadian Valley
i %
The El Reno Daily Tribune
A Blue Ribbon Daily Newspaper Serving Oklahoma’s Blue Ribbon Area
You Can Buy It For
Less In El Reno
|N Single Copy, Three Cents
«*) MV 0 ’’OCIATED PRESS
— sk---
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1941
(U.PJ MEANS UNIfED PRESS
Protest Bei?*^ Tontinued
Against H^k \Valuation
Cherry and Hulbert Conferring / ith State Board
Today In Effort To Retain Present Tax Figures
definite Extension Of
Draft Period Brings
Many Protests
o WASHINGTON. July 22 -(/Pi —
Delator Robert Taft 'Republican,
io) proposed today that congress
jse the service of selectees, reserv-
■juj i and national guardsmen to 16 in-
ad of the present 12 months.
1;lal|f'aft laid this proposal before the
’, pate military affairs committee
^leder a group of witnesses, most of
ifm opponents, had testified on the
arliects of pending proposals to ex-
Claude W. Cherry, state represen-
tative from Canadian county, and
Sam Hulbert, county assessor, re-
turned to Oklahoma City today to
protest the proposed 20 percent in-
Canadian county received approxi-
mately $100,000 last year in state
school aid and that the county
should be self-supporting.
County officials refute the tax
crease in county tax valuations, con- commission argument by pointing to
fident that they could persuade the; other counties of similar wealth
state board of equalization not to with far lower valuations and where
order the increase. no Increases or only small increases
They entered their original protest i were recommended.
Monday after the state tax com- The Increase was suggested only
mission Saturday recommended to for personal property, valued at $1,-
thc board of equalization that tax 884.699 in Canadian county, and
valuations in Canadian county be real property, assessed at $12,251,386,
increased 20 percent. a total of $14,136,085. Public u’tili-
Conferring Monday and today ties, valued at more than $3,000,000
with individual members of the in Canadian county, are assessed by
equalization board, the county as- the tax commission and were not
lessor and the state representative included in the property for which
will enter a formal protest at a valuation Increases Were recom-
;wffd indefinitely the period of ser- h “ ,' " .T , “ “
fs. e for citizen soldiers. b°ard °f equal!zatl0n hearlng AuK mended-
“• A 20 percent increase in valuation
airChairman Robert Reynolds i Dein-
-Wat, North Carolina) directed that
neral George C. Marshall, army
:as4ef-of-staff. be queried as to the
nn*iator said would provide for the
,ii
.
,
ect of Taft's plan which the Ohio
Canadian county already has one
ease of 75,000 draftees from the
ny each month with none serv-
13 more than 16 months.
Hitler's Aims Discussed
Jeneral John McCauley, retired, J
d the committee earlier today It I
s his opinion Adolf Hitler, in or- j
wC to accomplish his alms, must
ftnqucr or encircle the United
unites.
lev. A. J Muste, representing the
lowship of Reconciliation, opposed
i legislation on the Mounds “If
of the highest valuations in the
state, county officers said, and the
20 percent increase recommended is
not in line with valuations and in-
crease recommendations of other
counties.
would mean a 20 percent increase
in the tax bill on real and personal
property unless the county excise
toard should reduce the levy, coun-
ty officers pointed out.
According to a table prepared by
the state tax commission, the Cana-
$425,000,000 Is Provided
By Federal Agency With
Low Interest Rate
BOMB BOOMERANG: BRITISH BLAST GERMAN SHIPPING
~ 'T'......................... .............................. .................. ....---------....
VOLUME 50, NO. 123
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ili
HITLER'S HEN
SAT GREAT FIRES
si: i-.
HIM
ini
The tax commission asked for the • dian county valuation per acre is
I valuation hike on the grounds that I (PLEASE TURN TO PAGE 6)
:ent pay were offered." sufficient i Play Continues Tonight In; Armv Will Use Target
ire ny volunteers could be obtained1 1 6
uy vuiuiiuccis iinim ur uuimutu o mi ■■ m
:hout what he said would be the 00111)811 lOUmey
''1
p 'ach of an “implied promise” that
at ectees would not be retained more j
in a year.
en Opposition Weakening
El Reno Eagles walloped the El
Near Cherokee
CHEROKEE, July 22 — (U.R> —
Congressional opposition to keep-
4 selectees, guardsmen and reserv-
ists under arms for the duration was
asjakening, however, under Presi-
Jssnt Roosevelt's pressure and new
rnlngs of German threats' In Eu-
and Smith America.
UThe senate may begin considera-
■ n of the military service problem
July 28
j Reno Roundhouse 12-1 and Minco Graders scraped over the flat,
downed Port Reno 12-4 In El Reno sandy surfaces of the Great Salt
WASHINGTON. July 22 -t/P>-
The federal loan agency announced
today a $425,000,000 loan to Great
Britain against an estimated $500.-
000,000 worth of collateral to help
the British pay for war supplies
ordered in the United States prior
to enactment of the lease-lend
program.
The loan was authorized by the
reconstruction finance corporation
with the approval of President
Roosevelt and at the request of
Jesse Jones, federal loan adminis-
trator, the agency said in a state-
ment .
The deal was arranged, the state-
ment explained, “for the purpose of
providing the British with dollar
exchange without having to sell
their securities and Investments at
forced sale.”
$100,000,000 a Month
Funds to the total of $425,000,000
will be paid out to the British at
the rate of approximately $100,-
000,000 a month under terms of the
deal and the loan bearing interest
at 3 percent annually will mature
In 15 years. It may then be ex-
tended for five years provided two-
thirds of the principal has been
repaid.
Interest and dividends from the
collateral securities to be pledged
to the RPC, however, plus earnings
assigned to it from United States
branches of 41 Insurance com-
panies, were described in the state-
ment as adquate to amortize the
entire loan by the end of the ma-
turity period.
Authorized By Law
The loan agency's statement said
this new financial assistance to
Commercial Softball league touma- Plains today where workmen hast,
ment battles Monday night on the J ened preparation of » mile square
Legion park diamond. area for use as a bombing range
Kingfisher will meet the Minco by the U. S. army air corps.
ash^wUinil!tle8 Conchn’^^)Construction of roads almosl war-harried Britian was authori-
asna will battle Concho at 9:1a had been finished, but the erection
p. m. tonight in the third dav of j 0f a lighting system for night
ie annual invitational tourney. j bombing proctice was expected to
the Monday night opener deiBy opening of the range for
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LONDON, July 22—Besides devastating German military positions in the west and war industries,
tile British are pouring heavy bombs on enemy shipping. This remarkably clear closeup was made from a
Blenheim bomber. Other Blenheims are hovering over the enimy vessels while bombs burst near the
Danish motorship Delaware, In a German convoy somewhere off the Netherlands coast In the North sea
Tokyo Will Continue To
Uphold Axis
TOKYO, July 22—(U.R>— Japan
has assured Germany and Italy |
that Its alliance with them remains:
the basis of its foreign policy anil
Lliat It will continue to uphold:
the axis In spirit and aim, It was I
disclosed today.
Admiral Teijiro Toyoda, foreign |
Gilmore, Eagle
. ..... soundman, not actual use. A generating system,
r. Roosevelt’s message to eon-1,,nlv he“ 1116 Roundhouse to two poles and wire must arrive and be
;s urging removal of the 900.000 j Angles but he also smacked a 1 up.
lit on number of selerfe-.'s in ser-1 bomer and a double out of two, c. j
Bombers from the army's air
* * at onp time and his request lor | platc Performance bettered only by; b , w)„ fi,n
thoritv to keen all rla ‘e of short Nicks, Eagle second sacker, who; . ... ..
tnoriiy io xeep au classes or snort | ^ ^ ^; homa City will use the target and
m soldiers under arms Interested l rac^Pd up a homer
ishlngton most because of ,ts em- doul)les out of three.
■ katic insistence upon the iinme-
range,
zed under a law enacted last {mhiister, gave the assurance Sat-
month which specified the RFC j uraQ-v' onl>’ one day after the new
Altogether the Eagles battered The ran8e from 0,8 w111
could make loans to a foreign
government to enable that govern-
ment to get maximum dollar ex-
change value for its property in
this country.
When the lend lease program
was enacted, the British already
had piled up huge orders for
munitions here.
It was said at the time they
J. Hill for 12 bingles. Each club apPear Tn daytime as a huge bulls- had funds, securities and other
BWtofiw errors Tr^dhouse 1 ** ** “• «”aU. pyra- PWjy available u, meet those
nerlca He did not ask rei)eal of
e prohibition against sending se-
ttees and guardsmen outside the
Astern hemisphere.
(irrmau Inirntioits Studied
Tliere Is every Indication of mls-
Vlng here regarding German ln-
ptlons and potentialities in South
.nericn. Mr Roosevelt was not
Dt
erstating administration alarm
Jien he said that "the United States
d the rest of the Americas are
finitely imperiled In their na-
. mal interests.
counting Its lone tally on a slnele m*d structure—surrounded by
and three errors tn the third wries of “"centric circles. f
stanza. To Erect Towers ; needs
Minco Follows Suit Asphalt or contrasting colored I
In the finale Minco 'ollowed the sand will form the circles In day-1
same method in shoving over the time: at night the rings will be j
Soldiers, splattering 12 hits over lighted from the electric generating
a obligations but required lend-lease
assistance in supplying future
cabinet took office, to General
Eugen Ott and Mario Indelli, the ;
German and Italian ambassadors,
Koh Ishii, chief government spokes-
man, said.
Ishii added that Toyoda had not!
yet even seen Constantin Smetinln, |
ambassador of the Soviet union
with which Japan has a friendship
and neutrality pact only a few
months old.
“Active Measures" Predicted
Tokyo newspapers predicted in!
a new editorial campaign late to-
day that the government would |
adopt 'prompt and active meas-
Did You Hear
DOBERT "BEANY" ASH-
^ BROOK of El Reno, attach-
ed to Company A 26th battalion,
at Camp Grant, 111,, has been
advanced to rank of corporal. He
now is part of the permanent
personnel of the company and
probably will spend the remain-
der of his service at Camp Grant.
Flank Palas of Yukon was
among 33 students recently
pledged by Kappa Delta PI, na-
tional honorary educational fra-
ternity at the University of Ok-
lahoma in Norman.
R. F. Roselle, superintendent
of schools at Union City, is one
of a group of 24 school adminis-
trators who are studying prob-
lems of school finance In a class
at the University of Oklahoma
this summer. Members of the
group are using the report which
a special committee of state ed-
ucators made to Governor Leon
Phillips.
Committee To Meet with
Rock Island Officials
ures” to deal with Japan's three
the park from the offerings of J.
Mongold while Froneberger, Minco
moundman, was holding Fort Reno
to four scattered singles.
Tlie Soldiers counted, three runs
unit.
In addition to the target and
range lor the bombing, observa-
tion towers will be established to
enable spotters to mark hits, and
two errors and two singles, and
"We have definite responsibility i they ccmpleted their scoring In the
every country In the western | third with another run off a lone
imisphere," he continued, "to aid single and errors,
ch one of them against attack from Big Minco Inning was the sixth,
|Me hemisphere." when the Independents grouped a
L Active here Is speculation whether [ homer by W Douglas and live
ljc Nazi putsch conducted by Oer-
|0fans alrpaf|y ln South America
In the opening chukker off a walk, a range for aerial gunnery prac-
tice will be established nearby.
A landing field may also be es-
tablished on the flat plains area
in the vicinity, although army
authorities have not definitely de-
cided on this point.
Planes Awaited
ft^alnst one of those governments
Tilt without more than moral sup-
Ljrt from Germany would be an "at-
rVk from without " The week-end
Pvealed a putsch-that-failed In
.ilivla, source of much tin. There
,>o have been hints here that Gri -
my fomented border clashes be-
•een Peru and Ecuador.
singles with two errors and tallied) Although the delay ln obtaining
six rimes Minco made four field- j electrical equipment will hold up
Ing mistakes. Fort Reno eight. 4 completion of the range, It could
---— ] not be used anyway until the arrl-
Fino Is Set For |val 01 plane8 for the wm Rogers
itangihle Tax
Valuations Set
| base.
I Iiwflirhmtr Oklahoma City, army authorl-
I/KMUI *1111^ I CdtC ,1^ Mid they did not know when
-- the bombers would arrive.
Ivan Niles. 24. who lives southwest | The range Is located 90 air miles
] of El Reno, was assessed a $10 fine from the Oklahoma City air base,
j and court costs after pleading guilty or 20 minutes flying time away
at his arraignment before I. W
Alexander ln Justice of peace court
here Saturday on charges of dis-
turbing the peace, records disclosed
today.
Information filed by William L.
oTntanglble property valuation In
llknadlan county totals $2,870,944, j F'un't' Canadian county attorney
FEES’ ACCEPTED
$70,000 Received On Two
Cantonment Contracts
WASHINGTON, July 22 —<U.R1—
Webster L. Bull nun, a lieutenant
colonel ln army engineers reserves,
acknowledged today he received
more than $70,000 ln fees on two
army cantonment contracts over a.
period of nine months when he
could have been called to active
most pressing foreign problems—
' Anglo-American encirclement of
southern Asia," settlement of thol
Three members of the El Reno
| city council, Roy Stevenson, Henry
Behne and Eugene Stansbury, were
appointed by Mayor Otis Cox at a
special council meeting Monday
night to confer with Rock Island
railroad officials on a compromise
solution of the railroad's water rate
problem.
After the city administration
| boosted sharply the Rock Island
water rates earlier this year, the
railroad began considering plans to
i instal its own water system and
liegan paying its monthly water
[ bills under protest.
Monday night Mr. Cox read a
communication from C. L. Bakke,
general superintendent for the rall-
rosul at El Reno, stating that the
Rock Island would accept com-
promise rates offered last month by
the city and asking that a com-
mittee be appointed to work out
with railroad officials a definite
rate schedule.
Red Army Leadership Is
Reported Crumbling Un-
der Nazi Invasion Impact
Saving Considered
The compromise rate schedule will
war with China and "preparations \T»vv V-.rrl ^ at a lrvel lfhe former schedule
for any eventualities resulting from j ^ y ' drd. ' r°tectl0n ,fV plua “PP^Ima ely the amount
a possible Russian collapse." Objective , S“Ve? by l,he rallroad throuph the
The newspapers prominently dis _ ! purchaS* 0f th*t already has
played allegations that China had fl Id"
concluded a secret agreement with I WA9HINGTON July 22—<U.R»— | Rock Island water rates were
that he had offered his service* to ptre-parat ona * transport
the engineers for active duty be- lroopfi 10 80Ulhem Indo'
fore the contracts were let, but
--that he was not called, presumably j y, . II
I 1 ft* I because at the age of 59 he was 1 UrCnilSeS T TOITI
Lack of License i considered past the proper age . * .
Under questioning by Represent- KllSSlH 1 TODOSed
Great Britain and Free France!The sena,e considers today a bill j boosted originally on the basis that
under which China woidd attack whlch woulcl authorize the navy softening of the water increased its
French Indo-Chlna. department to establish a civilian j cost and the railroad should pay Its
Other Allegations Published ,K)llce force to Protect navV yarc,s share °f the Increase tn expenses,
It was alleged that at the sani" ”nd establlshments aRatnst sabo- and that the railroad would save on
time Oreat Britain would attack laRe lts watcr cost Inasmuch as It no
Indo-Chlna from the south. Senator Htrain W Johnson (Re- lo,18pr would have to treat water for
The allegations were published Publican. California) has attacked use bi boilers,
tn the form of a Domel news1 'be bill as an attempt to establish Ordinance Amended
agency dispatch from Hong Kong a privac polire force for Frank T,'e municipal governing board
Domel salu Chinese troops tn the I Knox" (secretary of navy). Monday night also amended the
southern provinces of Kwangsl an.Jj The bill would limit the author-1 plumblng ordlnance to permit use
ity to June 30, 1943, and would of black gas P‘Pp as well as gal-
•uthorize annual appropriations of vallli!Pd "on or steel pipe for gas
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
German luftwaffe pilots reported
they left great fires raging in the
heart of Moscow today, while in
the field the Nazi high command
asserted that the leadership of
Russia's Red armies was crumb-
ling under the impact of the
month-old blitzkrieg invasion.
DNB, the official German news
agency, said Nazi war planes also
blasted retreating Soviet troop
columns, railway lines and tank
concentrations along the entire
eastern front and that a number
of trains on the Leningrad-Moscow
line were derailed by bombings.
While the Germans declared
Moscow was hard hit by thousands
of Incendiary and high explosive
bombs, showered down in a five
and one-half hour raid during the
night, dispatches from the Soviet
capital Itself said the assault was
"comparatively harmless."
First Raid On Moscow
Berlin described the raid—the
first of the war for Moscow—as
“one of the heaviest carried out
by the German air force," com-
parable with the luftwaffe's fiercest
attacks on England.
On the fighting front, Adolf
Hitler’s high command asserted
that Nazi break-through operations
"have torn the Soviet defense
front Into a number of disconnect-
ed groups."
“Despite stout local resistance
and stubbornly conducted counter-
attacks, uniform leadership of the
enemy no longer is apparent," the
German communique said.
Soviet Defense Described
Russian officials said at least 200
Nazi bombers struck at the capital
but that night fighters of the Red
air fleet and a thundering barrage
of anti-aircraft fire downed 17
planes and prevented all but a few
from getting over the city.
"Several private dwellings were
set afire and a small number of
persons were killed or wounded." a
Soviet communique said "The at-
tempt should be considered a fail-
ure.”
Japanese Move Anticipated
Meanwhile, new tension arose
from a flurry of rumors that a
Japanese military move was im-
minent.
The London radio said all re-
poits Indicated that "big develop-
ments" were ready to erupt end
that "a large scale mobilization is
proceeding throughout Japan Re-
servists are called to the colors,
lorries and horses are requisi-
tioned."
On the diplomatic front, the
Getinan government demanded that
the Bolivian charge d'affaires In
Berlin leave Germany within three
days ln reprisal for the expulsion
of German Minister Ernst Wendler
from Bolivia.
$1,000,000 The force would be
Installation.
A T^* UUUCI qiH'Mionintj uy itepmeiU-
KringS ♦piu. rlU0 atlve EwlnS Thomason (Democrat.
. Texas), chairman of a house mill-1
WASHINGTON. July 22-l/Pi—
-------- ----------------- . ---------- William Straight 8hawnee, 18, | t*l[y a*fal” sub-committee bivostl • ^ Jpsge H jQne( {edfra| |Mn #d_
Cffi Tok£? I p“ 'be M M * OoUleii* re^ence! j order Tic "pTaVlO VZS’cZ I i SKy Tny Sggf nSl£
i which Russia might want
Ijima City by the state board oi I 819 North Choctaw avenue, on July, costs after pleading guilty at his! 800 81 CiMUp Llvlngston and $40,900
headed by a civilian director, but. Plumbers of the city requested the
would operate In connection with! amendment because they no longer
the naval Intelligence. arp ®blp to purchase sufficient quan-
Pipelinr Measure Advanred I tllv of aalvil,UzPd P'Pp on account
Meanwhile, the house may com- i 8 abortage caused by the natlon-
plete congressional action upon a u* d,,fel,se emergency,
measure which would authorize thr| I
government to finance the con- I Ll ID II O’DC
struetton of pipelines from the ^ailia^CO
Texas oil fields to the east coa.it
to alleviate an existing shortage.
The senntc yesterday approved
a conference report reconrillng dlf- ,.^n 8 ^"mage action filed in Cana
Plane Deliveries
To Navy ‘Short’
In Road Mishap
I 17.
juallzation
Although a form of personal I ,--
uperty, the intangible tax valua- j m* r n
S>n la not Included with personal: Iviaiiy if Hi 11 TOSSeS I toinoblle without a driver’s license. I
real property for ad valorem! n • il.,4 The defendant was charged with |
i xat Ion purpos< i, It was explained 1 UllieO l III l driving a car on
»Half the InUmgible property tax I _ J miles northwest
turns go into the county general I Twenty mattresarn were made 90 without a driver's license in his
arraignment beforel wAlex.nd^81 CamP Polk' ^ ln fprences in the bill as paas^l bv dlnn f0llnty dls,rlct “"rt today,
in lustier nf ™ pn«bieer architect for service, * hf ^nlted ?tates 10 be,P PH; both houses The house will decide Mrs 8a,“h Allpe Rowp of El Reno
day on charg^ of o^rilnR a.^au- rou«hly coverln8 8 p<,rlod ot 1C 1 C_pUrchy? 0f W,r ,upplte? herf I today whether to approve the re- u 8 Judgment of $1,000
WASHINGTON, July 22 — C2PI—
Rear Admiral John H. Towers, chief
of naval aeronautics, told a house
committee today that actual de-
liveries of naval planes for the first
six months of 1941 fell 20 percent
short of estimates.
The admiral said granting of
higher priorities to land planes than
to naval aircraft was causing "grave
concern."
months.
----—-.......IT1 .... .. stantlne Oumanaky, Russian am- llftllirP
a county road 10 Iff |t|£; |i | 01111(11 HIT !,>aM8dor about » week ago but1
of Calumet July , c' i did not know when r deal was
_______________ zer's license In his | llkely’
Cmd ami hiilf go io (lie public, | ijy Canadian county farm women I possession The complaint was sign- j 1 Tlie only difficulty, he explained.
|«iools of tlie county. | under the mattress program of *d by Vernon Slsney, state highway ~ “ waa the problem of getting the
patrolman stationed here. | LOND°”- July 22—i$»i—Strong materials, particularly mangivnese
, R. A. T. units roared across the i nnd chromium from western Rus-
Jones told a press conference! 1)ort‘«nd ,en<i t|10 measure to the n«aln*l Benjamin Harrison 8penre
(hat he made the offer to Con-1 whlte House for presidential slg- of Los Angeles, Calif.
The petition filed In the office of
Jokes To Give Details I Taylor' col,rt clerk' relatM
Harold L Icltcs, defense oil M;nt on thp aftrn,oon July » «»
ordlnator, L, expected to announce pl“"'lln W8S drlvl,,K WMt on u 8
Btate’s Employes
the federal .surplus commodities
corporation Monday at Union Cltv,
| Miss Doreen Flckel, county home
\Y tinillKF 1 demonstralIon agent, said today
Fs I Twenty more mattresses will be
'nixie eiUSh O) tOT (he nexi wei'k
OKLAHOMA CITY. July 22- 4/Fi llt th* Union City renter, she
XTovernor loon Phillips declared | llddrd
day that any department head 1 Women who have been notified
th tlie Itch to run for governor | to appear for their ticking but
|ould realgn now and splashed : W|,„ tmVe failed to do so are being
*>re cold water on the ho|>es of | u» rontact either Miss Flckel
y stale employes who would like | „r Mni Mvrtle Lowe, supervisor of
hitch on to some promising , yie program at Union City.
Mdldutc s ruinpalgn. I Under the federal program, de-
iPlillllps told a presa ronferenee i Increase consumption of
wrver, (hat published reporfa of' cotton, matcrlala required for the
impending conference with K making of the maltreiwes arc given
Smmtt. chuirman of the board
J affairs “probably did an ui-
,stlce to both of us."
to low-income farm families In
exchange for their labor in making
tlie mattresses.
New Oil Barges
1
I channel this afternoon in
, tlnuatlon of widespread raids of
To Supply’ p]ast|lMt nlRht Rnd lhl* mornin« °n
I German-lield territory,
con-!,la the far east ports and then
getting ships to carry the materials
to the United States.
Testifying before the naval com-
mittee. Towers asserted that origi-
nally he had estimated 1.955 planes
would be received tn the six months
but only 1,547 were delivered.
He explained that original sched-
ules contemplated that If early de-
liveries were slow "It was hoped late
deliveries would mount up as plans
got underway and that the year's
total delivery would approximate
the total deliveries scheduled."
soon niter Mr. Roosevelt's approval
88 about one-fourth mile east of El
DUNCAN, July 22—UP)—A newly | Objectives in western Oermnny,
Invented, low, cigar-shaped oil i Denmark, the Netherlands, Belgium
barge which can be built In three I antl northern France were attack-
days at one-seventh the cost ot|pd overnight, the British said,
a regular tanker of the same ca-
• WEATHER
Forecast
of the bill the route and other Rp»o when a collision occurred with
details of tlie proposed pipelines 1 * r"r drlV,,n by 8tM,nc*' Mrs Rowe
Under the bill, the government, llPr p*'' wrecked ar.d
could either sssUI private com- thal ,lhc *uffewd "'‘rl0,w Injuries,
panics financially In construction Negligence °n Hie part of the de-
of the pipelines or undertake the tondani is alleged In asking the
projects itself. Judgment for personal Injuries.
Two lines from Texas fields to I
New York and Philadelphia have FIREMEN CALLED
been dlacuaaed. One is a 24-lnch! ?() BLOOM HOME
"I no longer entertain such hopes,"
he added.
Texas Resident
Leaves Hospital
crude line while the other la a
jsclty i. expected to help golve i Tu, ",! i! ! ^ CTJ
the oil shortage In the east. | Calais snd Boulogne where anti- Wednesday partly cloudy nnd con- — Bloom, 4(HI North Macomb avenue
Erie p Halliburton. Duncan. I aircraft guna blazed into action j rinued warm I by a fire which started in a win-
prealdent of the Oil Veil Cement-1 from the French cliffs, dimly out-' f.i Reno Weather AD\mh KFRIoi'fllY ILL dow curtain shortly before 10 a, m.
lined Uirougli the haae. The nun For 24-hour period ending at 8 Ad8m, 414 8,11,1 u lod*y. N1 Kenn firemen reported
ble of explosion* rattled door, and a. m today ' Utah M low 72^ .? f Z r,,p01^' lod#v 1 ^ bUw' ^'«>ypd Hie curtain
today High. 98. low. 72. at to be in critical cr-wiin™ ., nn<1 dama|r ^
Ing company, who submitted the
idea to federal authorities, left to-
day for Memphis. Tenn.. to seek a
site for construction of the new
barges.
windows on the English coast | 8 a. m.. 80
where watchers could sec the burst- State" of weather, clear
ing anU-alrcralt sheila. | Rainfall, none.
Tlie blasr de
to be in critical condition at e.
Clinton hospital where he ha.-> window woodwork and surround-
been receiving medical treatment, lug wallpaper before it waa ex
since Saturday. tlnguii
ed, firemen said.
Oari Edgar Frick, 48, of Lames*,
j Tex., was dismissed Monday from
: the Catto hospital, where he had
! been receiving treatment for a
| chest injury, lacerations and other
Injuries suffered In an automobile
accident July 12 near El Reno.
His daughter, Billie Jean Frick,
; 12, and James shawver. 26. of
j Qeary, were released from the El
Reno sanitarium Monday
Mrs Prick, 42, was Injured talal-
| ly in Uie head-on collision, which
occurred 14 miles west of El Reno
j on U, 8 highway 48. and two other
I persons were injured.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 50, No. 123, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 22, 1941, newspaper, July 22, 1941; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924217/m1/1/: accessed April 25, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.