The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 78, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 30, 1945 Page: 1 of 6
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1
The El Reno Daily Tribune
Copy, Five Cents
(UJO MEANS UNITED PRESS
ilistic Drama
IBattlefield
itaged Here
|ar Bond Show
rovides Glimpse Of
pantryman’s Job
'* Your Infantry," a com-
ecislon-timed and fast mov-
|ima of life—or death—on a
pld, played to a "standing
|nly" audience Tuesday night
football field at Legion park,
tense and highly dramatic
ion. beginning at 8:30 p.
ured in the first half of the
ie use of individual weapons
nd-to-hand combat,
narrator, a highly-skilled
gave the entire show an
Welles touch, as, when each
both as firing pieces and
[J in the silent way of dls-
the enemy, was demon-
to the audience.
:ept a running commentary
nd. in an off-hand manner,
didn't really make any dif-
but still subtly stressing
rtance. gave the price of
cartridge, or a clip, or the
firing a mortar, or the ba-
nd flamethrower,
erin Urges Cooperation
e Intermission, John C. Ke-
lrman of the Canadian coun-
flnance committee, was in-
d by the infantry unit's nar-
nd spoke briefly on the nec-
for complete cooperation in
the county over the top in
ond sales for the seventh
live time.
then introduced a rep-
(itlve of the state war finance
ttee, wha speaking at some j
on the importance of di-
an all-out effort to defeat I
lanese, introduced Major Ed-
Neal. Fort Reno, who is-
warning received from head-
rs of the eight service com-
Dallas. Tex , relative to the
lloons being carried by pre-
winds to the shores of the
States
ugh Major Neal stressed that
formation was not available
ease to the press or radio.
censorship on the subject
ted to the press a short tin*
rmitting an official eommen-
be printed.
"Foundation of Armv"
ax of the "Here* Your In-
show followed the tnter-
when the infantry squad,
mndatton of the army, the
unit that can take and hold
|l," to quote the narrator, was
ft into use. In an effective
stration. the squad, facing
fire, machine gun bursts and
related perils which emanate
battlefield, were carried to
dlence
only was this effect creat-
the narrator, but the au-
got a pretty good Idea of
k>w noisy and dirty a job it Is
icularly those persons who
«ated In the north stands A
wind carried the smoke and
ftf the TNT explosions right
ieir faces
show was not all noise and
In the intervals between
ring bursts of machine gun
nd the deafening blasts of
mutated mortar fire, the ta-
uten. hugging the ground.
'd and rolled and crept for-
Thls. from the words of the
was "what the Jap liked
Quiet 80 quiet that the
lng of a twig brought a hall
d from the pillbox "
Flamethrower* Do Job
ax of the show, and the fea-
or which every one in the es-
d audience of nearly 3500
* was waiting, came as the
From All Of Us
*r**§§
A
in
Thi
El Reno, Oklahoma, Wednesday, May 30, 1945
Nation Mourns_
War Dead On
Memorial Day
Wreaths Are Placed
On F amous Graves In
Fitting Ceremonies
VP) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
■ An Editorial-
What So Proudly We Hail!
-By R. J. D.*
r - ~
*•» r-
■ ,
~T '■'•-■--w.jC
The world is girdled with graves of American boys who gave their lives in defense of democracy.
Though we at home cannot decorate their resting places this Memorial day, we can honor them in
our hearts and work for them with our hands, the quicker to bring a victorious conclusion to the
great battle they so bravely began .
_____ »« «,
Japs Seek To
Boost Morale
Balloon-Bombs Called
‘Fantastic Effort’
WASHINGTON. May 30—<UR>—
Conscientious objectors and veter-
an army paratroopers are standing
ready side by side to quell any
forest fires started by Japanese
balloon-bombs, it was learned to-
day.
Meanwhile It became clear that
Japan's "fantastic eilort" to bomb
the United States irom a distance
of over 5,000 miles away was made
largely to bolster sagging moiale
among Japanese workers.
Lyle F Watts, chiel of the agri-
culture department's I orest ser-
vlet, said in a radio inteiview last
night that tile balloons were
launched at war plants in Japan
“They take a couple of balloons
to a war factory, make a lot of
speeches, stir up the workers to
a frenzy, then launch the balloons
for their tilp to the United States."
he declared
Watts said the forest servt.e
was 'less worried about this Jap-
anese balloon attack that we ate
with matches and smokes In the
nands ol good Americans iiikm,
and camping in the woods"
Details Disclosed
Revealing hitherto undisclosed
details oi how the .toon-bomb*
are rigged to liy the Pacific and
drop their bombs on the U. 8. ,
Watts said they made the trip in I
the stratospheie by means of an
ingenious auanggment of weights
and barometric pressure swltcnes.
He said they crossed the Pa-
cific in three and one-half to live
Did You Hear
--o-
DOLLEN H. A NTH IS. 29.
commanding officer of an
army transport command base
at Marrakech. French Morocco,
has been promoted from lieu-
tenant colonel to rank of colonel
His wife, the former Miss Evelyn
Barnhart, and their 4-year-old
daughter, Penelope, are residing
with Mrs Anthis' parents. Mr
and Mrs E. R Barnhart, 501
South Ellison avenue Colonel
Anthis is the son-.of Mr and
Mrs Leo Anthis. 840 South
Ellison avenue.
Andrew J, Gist has been pro-
moted to technician fifth grade
at headquarters of the £an
Francisco port of embarkation
where he Is on duty with a
headquarters and transportation
corps detachment He is the son
of Joseph M Oist, 102 West
Foreman street Hts wife and
their son. John, make their
home- in San Francisco.
Navy Worries
About Damage
Repairing of Ships
Is Major Problem
WASHINGTON, May 30 — UP* —
The navy let it be known today that
it is frankly and openly worried over
the problem of repairing ships dam-
aged in the Pacific.
At ail unusual new* conference
attended by the department's three
civilian heads as well as uniformed
leaders, reporters were told any re-
laxation in the repair yards "means
more and more people killed on the
beaches.”
The navy men, emphasizing se-
riousness of west coast repair work-
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Millions of Americans, heartsick
over the rows of fresh new graves on
the battlefields of Europe and Pa-
cific Ulands, mourned the nation's
war dead today.
Work for victory over Japan con-
tinued in most war plants and gov-
ernment offices as the nation ob-
served its 77th Memorial day with
parades, religious services and quiet
ceremonies in gatherings.
Saddened by memories of soldiers
who rest at Gettysburg and Flan-
ders field and. more keenly, by
thoughts of those who died on Nor-
mandy beaches and Iwo Jlma, In
Italy and on Okinawa, Americans
also gave thanks for V-E day and
for the safe return of many fight-
ing men from Europe
Roosevelt Paid Tribute
Wreaths were to be placed on two
famous graves—on the grave of the
Unknown Soldier of the first World
war in Arlington national cemetery
and on the grave of Franklin D.
Roosevelt in Hyde Park.
“Rarely in history,” said Postmas-
ter General Frank C, Walker, In a
Memorial day address prepared for
ceremonies at Mr. Roosevelt's grave,
"have whole peoples so taken from
one man's fire the flame of courage.
"Never before did whole peoples
look so searchlngly and hopingly to
one man to win for themselves and
their children peace among nations.”
Comrades Remembered
Mor< than 300 survivors of the
U. S 8 Franklin, bombed off Jap-
an's shores, paid homage to their
fallen comrades at a special ser-
vice on the flight deck of the "U.
S S Fighting Lady." a model air-
craft carrier in Rockefeller plaza,
New York.
Meanwhile. In Europe and the
Pacific. American fighting men and
diplomats attended Memorial day
services in honor of the dead of two
world wars Taps sounded over the
craven of the dead throughout the
European war theater while sol-
diers placed flags and flowers in
military ceremonies.
T'ODAY is Memorial day—the day on which America
pays tribute to its hero dead of all wars. Perhaps
never in the history of its observance has Memorial day
meant as much to us as it does today. With the war in
Europe successfully ended and American forces steadily
advancing nearer to the heart of their other enemy,
Japan, the prayers we breathe as a benediction to our
honored dead include a note of hope that ere another
Memorial day shall dawn, the awful conilict shall have
ended in victory on every front.
For the families of the 60 or more Canadian county
sons who have fallen in this terrible war, this Memorial
day is poignant with personal sorrow; sottened somewhat
by the solace of their pride in the sacrifice those sons
have made so gallantly. Their grief finds an echo in the
hearts of all ol us; we beg leave to share with them a
measure also of that pride.
# # *
the some 3,500 residents of Canadian county who
packed Legion park Tuesday night for the war spec-
stacle, “Here’s Your Infantry,” todays observance must
also carry a deeper significance. For in its short hour of
action was depicted the horror, sweat and awful suspense,
the suffering and dying that make up war as our sons
must fight it today.
No detail was omitted. The infantryman, who shot
and bayonetted the Jap sniper, and turned again to bash
his skull with his rifle butt, wiped the blood from his
gun on his victim’s clothing before rejoining the forward
attack. Machine gunners methodically “knocked down”
enemy troops fleeing a concealed position, which a mo-
ment later was made a billowing, olazing, living hell by
American flame-throwers. From the moment the first
blast ol mortar fire threw a haze of smoke over tne field,
until the commentator called back to life the taken deati
at the close of the show, it was more than realistic, it
was real.
APPROXIMATELY $300,000 of Series E war bond sales
were represented in the tickets collected at the gate
last night, loo bad the hundreds in the county wno have
liot bought bonds—and there must be hundreds from the
number thus tar sold in the seventh campaign—couldn’t
ha\e seen the show. It would have made bond buyers of
them il anything could.
On this Memorial day, dedicated to our fallen heroes,
other heroes are fighting and dying. Ask yourself as it
uiaws to a close, “What nave I done today that an Am-
erican boy should give up his life for me now, perhaps
at this very moment.
It jou are honest with yourself, you can’t answer
your own question without resolving to buy more and
more bonds to bring this suffering and dying to an end
amt America to a speedy victory.
I SERVICES CONDUCTED
I at EL RENO CEMETERY
I Memorial day services were con-
: ducted today at the Fl Reno ceme-
ers quitting their Jobs. Indicated j J2 *’S"
broadly that only the necessity of Featured speaker
Lasting Peace
Held Possible
Vinson Calls For
Concerted Efforts
WASHINGTON, May 30 —uP—
The 8an Francisco conference and
other International conferences will
succeed “because the people of the
world have demanded it." War
Moblllzer Fred M Vinson declared
today
In
keeping valuable information from
the enemy prevented telling the
whole story.
Casualties Noted
Pointing up the problem. Sec-
retary James V Forrestal said It
was estimated tlie aircraft carrier
Franklin, how under repairs at the
Brooklyn navy yard, would require
nine months to get back into ac-
tion. Some cruisers will require
six months and a number of destroy-
ers three months.
The secretary said naval casualties
in the battle for Okinawa dating
from Mar 15 total 4,270 through
May 23. including killed and miss-
ing In action, compared with ground
force totals for the same period of
5.332.
wai cead.
at the sendees
today, held at the monument to
the Unknown Soldier, was Chap-
lain Leonard W Cronin. Fort
Reno.
Services at the monument, lo-
cated in the northwest comer of
the cemetery, began at 10 a m
Various patriotic groups conducted
their memorlil rituals, which were
concluded by the firing of a salute
to the war dead by a thing squad
brought from Port Reno.
After the services, the various !
organizations and individuals dec- ;
orated the graves of their deceased
members, friends, or relatives.
Food Rationing
To 1950 Is Seen
Reasons Stated By
Senator Wagner
French Position Is
Given in Broadcast
Two Collisions
Are Reported
WASHINGTON. May 30 —<4V-
Food rationing until 1950 was fore-
cast today by Senator Robert Wag-
ner i Democrat. New York».
The chairman of the senate bank-
ing committee told reporters that
controls on prices and volume of
edibles would be necessary until that
time,
Wagner's committee yesterday ap-
' pioved legislation continuing the
j government agency handling those
Horn, vice I Two automcb11* roll talon* were ■
is fh), I reported to tha police department1
! problems—the OP A—until June 30,
1948
The chairman reasoned that per-
haps another year or so would be
Damage Increases
Admiral Frederick J.
chief of naval operations, said this '7 ur^“,l,"cnl required to defeat Japan
an address prepared for de- should give some idea of the extant ; *cf°.rd n8 recor<**' avoid
days, traveling at a speed of
and tired foot-soldiers, their' to 126 miles an hour in a
n.arked with shell holes and | of air constantly moving from west
made their final | to east at an altitude of between
25.000 and 35,000 feet
j livery at Memorial day services In
Arlington national cemetery across
the Potomac from the capltcl. Vin-
son said "the homage we pay our
•lead here today will be a mockery
unless we use to the utmost the
j opportunity for which they tought
layer ,and dl<d ••
of damage to naval vessels, since the °f Harv?y chlif of police
comrades
lit on the objective—the plll-
It was here the flsmethrow-
|wo of them—burned In ■ mat-
|f seconds the enemy strong-
"We can author the shape of
things so that war no longer 1* an
He described them at hydrogen- V,nsen con‘
filled bags made of five layers of .....*
V
silk paper 35 feet in diameter (the i
army-navy announcement said 33 !
feeti carrying sandbags and in- I
cendiary bombs
Each lialloon. he explained, rises
to 35.000 feet and then gradually
loses altitude.
Process Repeated
"When it descends to 25.000 feet,
a barometric pressure switch auto-
matically drops a sandbag," he ex-
plained "Still traveling east, the
rating a heat of ion* de-
the effect of the flamethrow-
f dreaded of all weapons
against the Jap--could be felt
far end of the stadium and
yon the upwind aide
flowing this the narrator rloaed
•pecUcle of what It takes to
frarw-war bonds, men and guns
appropriate commentary, and
ting field artlllat v hand play-
national anthem.
ding to figures released hv I,eet ThU Proc*’M of UP "n<1 down
ft today, a total of over $300000 ' U n‘pfl"*d unl" thr balloon m,ch*
at (mated sold This estimate H th* Am,,r,c,n COMt And ,f the
s^onthenumberof ticTeSlJ,P* h#V: ^
ted at the gates, .nd tickets 1 h“ b**n dropped
,d but not used "A second automatic switch then
——-——™___ I takes ovar. In place of the sand-
tegz, this one controls Incendiary
bombs When the balloon drops
2.700 feet an incendiary bomb Is
released The balloon goes bark up.
then down again and another In-
cendiary Is released and so on as II
in - - .............. ■■■c travel* B-ro*» the United States.
t * "P*,k "When the last Incendiary Is
lhiage was confined to the dropped a fuse Is lighted auto-
Vng, URoy oo.u cy, flio chief, , inatkally and sets off a demolition
f ! ch*rir which destroys the balloon."
Unued "It Is within our power
as men. as members of the united
nations, to accomplish this"
Wars are not acts of Ood ' They
, *r* caused by man. by man-made
Institutions, by the way in which
|man has organised his so-
ciety What man has made, man
can change,"
To prevent future war*. Vinson
said, the world must work together
He added:
The separate nations of the world
naval casualties were suffered
aboard ships In the supporting force
off Okinawa.
"Damage to combat ships," the
secretary declared, "has Increased
Ui the past few months, largely be-
cause of the long sustained opera-
tions against the Japanese In wa-
ters around the enemy homeland
Increased aerial activities by the
Japanese also has been a factor "
The department announcement
disclosed critical labor ahortages
exist in vital west coast repair
yards.
Undersecretary Ralph A Bard said
a few weeks ago the repair picture
was "In pretty good shape" but now
workers are leaving by the hun-
dreds
A 1935 model sedan driven west
on Wade stteet by Ernest ONan.
33 of 714 Sunset drive, and a 1934
model sedan operated south on
South Rock Island avenue by Neal
Niles, 17. El Reno route, collided In
the Intersection of Rock Island and
Wade at 7 45 p m Demage to the
ON an car was estimated at $25,
while damage to the other vehicle
wa approximately $15. Harvey said
A 1941 cosch driven north on1
Bickford avenue by Robert Lee >ou<laUon ot government food
Arnold, IS of »l« South Barker a&enc,e8 mto * d*P«rtment of food
a disruption of the nation's
economy, the government would
have to keep a clamp on food con-
trols for another three years or so.
Would Revise Picture
Wagner noted, however, that an
unexpected foldup of Japan or some
other unforeseen set of circum-
stances necessarily would change
this line of reasoning
At the same time, the national
planning association urged the con-
solidation of all
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Neitncr France nor tne govern-
ments of Syria and Lebanoa allow-
ed any inclination today to com-
promise their dispute which took
a more serious turn with leports
of new outbreaks of violence In
Syria.
Fighting now has been reported
through the whole length of Syria
from Aleppo in the extreme north
to Dera.i near the Trans-Jordan
frontier.
The Beyrouth radio said Syrian
artillery had been brought Into
action against the French lega-
tion oliloes and all French mili-
tary positions In Damascus" last
night and added that "French
Then, to military authorities thereiore have
taken all necessary measures "
Volume 54, No. 78
Americans Take
Jap Fortress On
Okinawa Island
Air Attacks Against
Yokohama Leave
250,000 Homeless
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Yanks crashed through crumbling
Japanese delenses on Okinawa is-
land and Chinese troops reported
victories on lour continental ironts
today as the Japanese homeland
coped with the greatest disasters its
cities ever h^ve experienced.
Enemy broadcasts reported 250,-
000 Yokohama residents were lelt
homeless and uncounted numbers
killed by yesterday's buperiortress
attack which transformed the port
city into a sea of flame.
More than 61 square miies of
Tokyo—an area greater than the
city of San Franusco—has been
uestroyed in six mass incendiary
attacks in the last three months
which cost the 21st bomber com-
mand 50 Superfortresses.
Deep Thrusts Made
Uu the doorstep oi Nippon’s home-
land, U. S. marines and iniantry-
uien cracked into Okinawa's an-
cient Shuri lortress, virtually com-
pleted conquest of the capital city
01 Naha and made deep thrusts to-
ward southern and eastern tips of
tne island.
Japan lought fiercely in the out-
skirts of Naha and north of Shuri
but American field officers pre-
dicted the southern shore would be
reached today and invading ground
iorces would "take at least half of
what is left on southern Okinawa
within a week."
The destruction of virtually all of
industrial Tokyo within three
mouths was described by an As-
sociated Press war correspondent,
LeU Erickson, as "an unparalleled
achievement in strategic bombing.”
Surprise Attack Staged
Marines of theiirst division fin-
ally cracked the powerful defenses
of the inland fortress city of
Shuri, central anchor and key-
stone of the Japanese Une aciuss
the southern Up of Okinawa.
In a surprise attack Irom the
west, they advanced 1.100 yards in
three hours through the rubble of
Shuri city to the shell-pocked walls
of Shuri castle, until only a few
hours before Japanese army head-
quarters for Okinawa.
There was no immediate word
whether the marines had entered
the ruins of the castle itself, but
Major General John R. Hodge,
commander of the 24th army corps.
Jubilantly told newsmen;
"I think we've got them! I think
the thing is busted now!”
The main Japanese force appar-
ently had abandoned Shuri to es-
cape encirclement, but suicide de-
tachments still were resisting bit-
terly northwest, north, northeast,
east and southeast of the city,
Sixth division marines cleared
all of ruined Naha on the west
coast after crossing Naha canal
into the eastern portion of the
city under cover of darkness. The
Japanese also had pulled out of
Naha for a possible stand farther
south
Highway Safety
To Be Discussed
OKLAHOMA CITY. May JO—flJ.P)
The Syrian and Lebanese legs- -A national safety council represen-
tluns in London said that the ■ t*“v« will confer with state official!
Flench bombarded Damascus In- 1 n®t’ M°nc'ay #nc* Tuesday on a traf-
ffc accident survey looking towtrd
standardization of highway safety
balloon goes up again to J6.000 ha^^nLT^
jcurlty but they should assist each
! other to attain It. There must be a
who seek by violence to attain sel-
fish and anti-social ends.”
•venue, was damaged to the extent
of approximately $15 In a collision
which occurred in the 100 block of
South Bickford at 10:10 p. m. A
1937 model coach came from the
west off of Woodson street and
made a wide turn to the south on
Bickford, colliding with the Arnold
car near the Intersection, officers
weie told. Name of the driver of
the second car Involved
I learned
was not
Automobile licenses
Will Increase in Cost
Bremen Are ( ailed
Apartment House
^emei were csllrri to Um Hahn
■pnent house at 509 North
Pord "venue at 4; 17 p. m
"fter a bed caught fire
» elgaret "park.
«"ge wa* confined to the
lng. LcRoj' Svaicy. flic chief,
Boy Recovering From
Copperhead's Bite
Mrs
agent,
Huge Douglas Plan! Al
Tulsa To Close Jan. I
TULSA. May JO—(U "1—The huge
method for working In concert, with plant here, which has been
force If necessary, to put down those building A-26 attack bomber*, will I
close by Jan 1 with an estimated
3 000 workers to be laid off this |
week. Plant Manager W O Jer-
rems reported today.
The plant Immediately will go on *n
a five-day week to ____-_____! U* "n a" ,#4ft car ll*
PAWHtTSKA. May 30— 01 —Six- person* wmkino
diy, ____a
tvw. -kiM .. .. A P°"*Tblllty remained that the
hJ irnu VP T r'"nt m,cht •* ust>d olhar
w.\ mo ' f. h*“de “ l0* H* "uch as an army air depot
, Wttwi OU Uie hand. ^or for some commercial output,
8 E French. El Reno
announced today that
keep aa many ceniM
a* possible An I Formerly,
to prevent "dangerous" post-war
food surpluses
NPA, a private research organiza-
tion. said "It is not good for the *
peace of the world for settled gov-
1 ernment to have both elite needs
| for food and food surpluses "
SuggeeUana Offered
It suggested to President Tru-
man and his newly-appointed Sec-
retary of Agriculture, Representa-
tive Clinton P. Anderson (Demo-
I crat, New Mexico), ways and means
to raise the dleU of people through-
jout the world to adequate levels
Meantime a bill to extend price
control "aa la” through June. 1948,
headed toward a battle on the sen-
inte floor. Wagner a committee ap-
proved the measure, 10 to 6. yee-
terday after turning down amend-
ments that would have limited the
extension to six months and forced
| revision of OPA price policies on
agricultural commodities.
Although they talked with federal
terventlon ol the British mlnbtei
stopped the bombardment of the
Syrian capital, the legations said
in a Joint statement but firing
continues
Reporting heavy fighting in pro
gress in Damascus the
radio said that "French troop* en-
tered the city nnd the parliament
house" and added that the Syrian
youth movement had decided to
resume the general stitke.
This Is the French position as
outlined by the Paris radio in a
measures in a seven-state region
C. F. McCormack, Washington,
the safety representative, will talk
with officials of the state highway
British and “Trty departments on mean* of
Improving traffic safety in the poet-
war period
Leo Hennlgan stete secretary of
the highway traffic advisory com-
mittee of the war department, said
a major topic would be inclusion of
safety measures in the vest post-
broadcast quoting foreign ministry : war highway construction program
according to Mrs
French, It wras neceaasrv for *
car to have reached an sue of
seven years betore tax rates reach-
ed the minimum Now. however. Mency heads nearly a full day, the
a car must reach the age of 10 | committee members could not pro-
years before the late becomes J mine more meat soon for the aver-
table, under the new law. age housewife.
circle*:
"France intends to Insure the
guaranteeing of her strategic and
economic interests, Including the
use of certam Levant air bases
•nd ports on the route to the Pa-
cific war theater, and her rights
to a share in Mosul oil. Prance
also Insists on the assured pro-
tection of her cultural interests.”
Holdcnville's Airport
Given High Priority
HOLDENVTLLE. Mrv JO—<b»—
Mayor J. E. Davis said today he
had received assurance from the re-; tonight and Thursday; not much
"We also hope to standardize
safety markers and other highway
features as much as possible In
the region." Hennlgan said
The two other statea In the re-
gion are Texas. Kansas. New Mexi-
co, Arizona, Arkansas and Loui-
siana.
Weather
glonal office of the civil aeronauttce
Stale Foreoast
Partly cloudy through Thursday
with scattered rain and thunder-
storms snd In north snd central
authority at Fort Worth. Tex., that
the Holdenvllle airport construction
program Is high on the government's
priority list.
Approved in February 1944, the
construction coating $450,000 has
been rtciavcd because of manpower I Cloudy
and materials shortages. Rainfall
change In temperature, lowest to-
night lower to middle 80s
F.I Reno Weather
For a 34-hour period ending at
8:30 a. m. today: High. 84; low.
63; at (.30 a. ni.. 70.
State of weather: Clear to partly
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 78, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 30, 1945, newspaper, May 30, 1945; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc924361/m1/1/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.