The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 106, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 31, 1928 Page: 1 of 4
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Ota Blliwen lidO
* *
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•i H -
I
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The bearded wheat complains that after the annual barberlng process its face is disfigured by a mass ol stubble
WEATHER
Tonight and Friday,
unsettled. Probably lo-
cal showers. Cooler in
west portion tonight
Cooler Friday.
THE E RENO DAILY DEMOCRAT
TOMORROW
I Sun rises
Sun sets -
Moon sets
.4:47 A. M.
..7:09 P. M.
.3:41 A. M.
VOLUME 37
UNITED PRESS SERVICE
EL RENO. OKLAHOMA, THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1928.
WOMEN COMPETE
IN BAKING TEST
<$•-
1
FOLKS YOU KNOW
I
Canadian County farm club worn
en combined business and pleasure at
the first annual rally, which was
held in this city Tuesday. The morn-
ing was given over to an exhibit of
bread and rolls by the club women,
which was judged and criticised by
Miss Martha McPheeters of the Home
Economics department of the A. and
M. college.
After a noon luncheon served by
the ladies of the Baptist Church, a
program was given in the auditori-
um of the Baptist Church In which
the various Farm Women’s Clubs of
the county participated. The entire
day was accounted a success from
every point of view.
There were 46 entries in the bread
and roll baking contest. Awards were
made by Miss McPheeters as follows:
White bread—1st, Mrs. Esther
Johnson, Yukon; 2nd, Mrs. Jimmie
Bennett, Mustang; 3rd, Mrs. Frank
Blanc, El Reno. Plain rolls—1st,
Mrs. J. Bennett; 2nd, Mrs. Esther
Johnson; 3rd, Mrs. D. L. Todd, Calu
met. Brown bread—1st, Mrs. Frank
i,ianc; 2nd, Mrs. Dick Rinderhagen
3rd, Mrs. D. L. Todd. Fancy rolls-
1st, Mrs. Dick Rinderhagen; 2nd
Mrs. B. S. Taylor, El Reno route 2
3rd, Mrs. Ralph Whitlock, El Reno,
route 3.
Mrs. Price Thompson, chairman of
the Advisory Board of Farm Worn
eu, presided at the luncheon and af-
ternoon program. She announced
that the Farm Market held each Sat-
urday in the City Hall was proving
highly successful. Mrs. Frank Blanc
is chairman of the market and Mrs.
Dorothy Lorenzen is manager.
During the luncheon hour short
talks were made by Mrs. Clyde Mus-
grove, secretary of the Chamber of
Commerce, County Superintendent
Irma SouJh, L. T. Mohnike and others.
Reports were also made by the sec-
retaries of the various clubs.
At the afternoon session, songs and
plays were given by the clubs pres-
ent, and the program was featured
by a burlesque staged by the farm
women south of the city. The com-
edy portrayed the adventures of
County Agent Fred Percy, along mat-
rimonial lines, in which the farm
women took the parts of Mrs. Clyde
Musprove, Miss Irene Hanna, Mr.
Percy and others. The burlesque
was so cleverly staged that the real
Mr. Percy congratulated the women
in a brief speech.
Clubs represented in the afternoon
program were: Sunshine Cluo, of
Mustang; East Walnut Club, Union
City, Old Calumet, Red Rock and
Pleasant View Clubs.
OLD TIME DANCE
Saturday night, K. of C. Hall. Good
music. Adm. 25 cents.
From Over The County
I
Mrs. L. A. Garner of Memphis,
Tenn., and Mrs. G. A. Puryear of
Nashville, Tenn., are guests in the
home of their parents, Judge and Mrs.
M. D. Libby, 708 South Hoff.
• • •
Miss Virginia Dvorak of Chicago,
111., will arrive this evening ,tor a
visit in the home of her uncle, Robt.
M. Mallonee and Mr«. Malionee, 112
South Barker.
Dr. and. Mrs. W. H. Martin and
daughter, Mias ^Wlllabel, 318 South
Hoff, motored to Chickasha Wednes-
day.
Miss Eleanore A*derhold, 405 South
Williams, has returned from a sev-
eral days’ visit in the home of her
sister, Mrs. Gustavus Funk and Mr.
Funk at Altus.
Mrs. Chas. L* E*ngfe of Okmulgee
is visiting in the hone of her sister,
Mrs. M. D. Libby and Judge Libby,
708 South Hoff.
• 9 «
Roy West and L. C. Gadberry rep-
resented the local American Post at
the Memorial Day services in Union
City Wednesday.
• • *
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Ellison,
604 South Barker, returned Wednes
day from a two weeks’ sojourn at Min-
eral Wells, Tex.
—<$>
Okarche
You'll find wonderful bargains
one-half price suits at M S & M.
Maj. Henry J. Weeks, Capt. L. C.
Ewen and ^.ieut. George Williamson
of Ft. Reno are attendir" the Polo
tournament at Ft. Sill. Mrs. Weeks
and Mrs. Williamson will leave Fri-
day to join their husbands for the
week-end.
Mr. and Mrs. "Lee J* Stoneman, 110
West Rogers, motored to Oklahoma
City Wednesday evemug.
• • *
Hal Townsend, daughter, Miss
Sara Ellen and Miss Ellen Rice mo-
tored to Clinton Wednesday.
■ • •
Glenn Bonebrake, Ralph Schwartz
and C. W. Ruckman returned Wed-
nesday from a few days’ outlug in
the eastern part of the state.
Mrs. Ellen Doa*k, *who has spent
several months with relatives at Tex-
ico, Ner Mex., is expected to arrive
Sunday for an extended visit in the
home of her daughter, Mrs. R. C.
Rice and Mr. Rice, 505 East Wade.
• • •
Mrs. Emerson Kelso, daughters,
Jerry Mae and Marcia Jane, 811 South
Hoff, left overland this morning for
a few days' " °*
Durant.
Miss Frances'Early, who has been
the house guest for the past few days
of Mrs. Mary Salmon Johnson, 406
South Choctaw, left Wednesday for
her home in Detroit, Mich.
• • •
Mrs. Ernest Liebmann of Oklaho-
ma City, visited Wednesday in the
home of Mrs. Tura B. huodes,
South Macomb.
Miss Minnie Wegener and Fred
Wegener of Fairmont were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Wegener and Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Luber the first of the
Week.
Miss Matilda Ludwig returned from
school at Guthrie Sunday evening.
She was a member of the graduating
class of St. Joseph’s college.
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Koepke and
children of Enid were guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Gorman Sunday.
Lawrence Naberhaus returned from
a several months’ stay in New York
City Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hunter and
daughter Maxine went to Chickasha
Monday to attend the Commencement
exercises at O. C. W. Miss Kathleen
Hunter being a member of the grad-
uating class. Miss Kathleen and Miss
Harryette returned with them Wedn-
esday.
A crowd of young people gathered
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Luber Sunday evening when they en-
tertained with a miscellaneous
shower and picnic supper in honor of
Mr. and Mrs. August Kremeir.
Mr. and Mrs. George Hoebing of
Chickasha spent Sunday with rela-
tives in Okarche.
Mrs. Mattie McCarrick, Mr. and
Mrs. B. C. Pippin, and son, and Miss
Alice Cade were guests Sunday of
Mr. and Mrs. P. C. McKemy.
the home of Mrs. Ed Ludwig where
a three-course breakfast was served
The rooms and tables were beauti-
fully decorated with white roses.
Among those who attended the
play “Everysoul” given by the Sacred
Heart school at El Reno last Thurs-
day evening were: Mr. and Mrs. Har-
ry Hunter, Mr. and Mrs. Eld Eischen,
Mrs. M. M. McCord and daughter Ber-
nita, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Brueggen,
Mrs. R. J. Brueggen and children,
Mrs. John Detterman, Mrs. Joe Det-
terman, Mrs. Immenschuh and Miss
Georgia Immenschuh.
Mrs. Henry Brueggen was hostess
to the Fortnightly Bridge club Thurs-
day afternoon. Favors for high
score were received by Mrs. F. H.
Loosen and Mrs. F. M. Heinen.
Otto Krey and Walter Krey of Fair
mont visited Mr. and Mrs. August
Kremeir Sunday.
Wednesday, May 23rd, Holy Trinity
school, when twenty eighth grade
school, when twenty-eight grade
graduates received their diplomas,
which were presented by E'ather
Steber following a short address, af-
ter the Mass. Each of the girls were
accompanied to the altar railing to
receive their diplomas by a little
flower girl carrying a basket deco-
rated in silver and green (the class
colors) and filled with sweetpeas and
ferns, while the boys were attended
by tiny lads also carrying baskets of
flowers. The High School pupils
sang the hymns during the Mass.
In the evening a program was given
at the Public
UNITED PRESS 8ERVICE
Additional Society
DUrFand*llrs. R. S. Fales, 509 South
Roberts, announce the marriage of
their daughter Miss Vernle to Mr.
Ralph Deau which took place in i e
toskey, Michigan, Sunday. May 27
Mr. and Mrs. Deau will be at home
to their friends in Petoskey where the
former is proprietor of a music store
NUMBER 108.
Go.., G.locta.
club will entertain their gentlemen
friends with a picnic on the North
Canadian river north of the city Erl-
day evening.
• • •
Guests at Dinner
Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Ashley and Dr.
and Mrs. A. J. West attended a din-
ner party Wednesday eveniug in the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence King,
721 West 34th Street, Oklahoma City.
LM“h*G«V“. .no Mr., Crock. I
ett were hosts at a delightful lunch
eon-bridge Wednesday in the home of |
the latter at 2919 North Roblnaon, Ok- j
lahoma City. .
El Reno guests in attendance were
Mrs. J. W. Elkins, Mrs. W. P. Crites,
Mrs Roy isoblett, Mrs. Sam Wallace,
Mrs. A. J. West and Mrs. E. A. Ash-1
ley.
„r js: its sLtss': ft#
Miss Kathryn Kittburner enter- There was no high sch g
Sff iSilV SiX Euphrasia and Sister Salesia
eluded the Walther League and a few
Family Dinner
Mr and Mrs. W. J. Leeper, south-
west of the city, were hosts at a love-
family dinner Wednesday when
were Mr. and Mrs. Ralpu
Guest and daughter Joyce of Okla-|
homa City. Mrs. R. A. Bradbury and |
Miss Irene Leeper.
iy
guests
other friends. The evening was spent
playing games after which the host-.
ess served dainty refreshments.
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Wegener and
their guests, Miss Minnie Wegener
and Fred Wegener of Fairmont, spent
Sunday in Minco with relatives.
Miss Mathilda Ludwig went to
■Wichita Monday where she will spend
the week with friends and relatives.
Mrs. Herman Wieman of El Reno
visited her parents Mr. and Mrs. J.
C. Shieber Sunday.
Dick Post of Oklahoma City visited
visit with relatives at
left Thursday, and Sister Monica and
Sister Ventura left Friday for Hays,
Kansas, where they will attend the
summer term of school.
Mr. and Mrs. Win. Meyer left Sat-
urday for a visit at. Independence and
Winfield, Kansas.
Jerome, the 13 years old son of
Mr. arid Mrs. Frank Detterman was
painfully injured last Wednesday,
when the buck rake with which he
was working in the field turned over,
throwing him a considerable distance
and injuring his arm near the elbow
tq such an extent that the bone pro-
truded through the skin. He was
HENS INDUSTRIOUS
MODESTO, Calif., May 31.—(IP)—
A team of ten white leghorn hens
raised on a poultry farm near here
are believed to have established a
world's record for egg production dur-
ing a 30-day contest.
During the period covered by the
contest, the Modesto hens laid 271
eggs, or an averaTe of 27.1 eggs in
30 days for each hen. One Dird made
a record of 30 eggs in 30 days.
James Dryden, owner of the hens,
has a reputation for producing choice
fowls. He recently sent a shipment
of hens to Japan which brought an
average price of $65 a bird.
TODAY
320
friends ill Okarche Sunday.
The services at Holy Trinity Drougiu iu iuwu iu.
Church were very impressive Sunday and is at the home of Mr. and Mr».
when a class of twenty-eight girls John Detterman under the doctors
Ld boys made theTr solemn Holy Ho is reported getting along
Communion and renewed their bap- nicely.
tismal vows. After the 8 o’clock Mr and Mrs. Jesse Han8en are
Mass the class, and the four tiny proud parents of a daughter born
girls who acted as angels, went to Wednesday, May 30th.____
Dance Revue Greeted Patient Mine Mule
By Capacity Audience To Follow Army Pal
A year ago today Charles A. Lind-
bergs was decorated by King George.
Fifty years ago today saw the open-
ing of the great Tay bridge in Scot-
land, the largest girder bridge in the
world.
Seventy-five years ago today Dr.
Kane’s Arctic expedition sailed from
New York in search of Sir John
Franklin.
Ten years ago today 28 lives were
lost when the United States transport
President Lincoln was torpedoed off
the French coast.
Many messages of greeting will
reach the Vatican today to remind
Pope Pius that this is his seventy-first (
Mr. and Mrs. T. J .Chambers and
son, Lawrence, 201 North Hoff, at
tended the Wichita-Oklahoma City
baseball game in Oklahoma City
Wednesday afternoon.
Darby Quinn* will* leave Friday
morning for Clinton, where he has ac-
cepted a position with the Leo Hass
Clothing Co.
• • •
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Woods, daugh-
ter, Miss Bertha, Mrs. H. R. Siler,
daughter, Mary Jane and Leonard
Snodgrass spent Wednesday at Dev-
il’s Canyon.
• 0 •
S. Boyd Wilson Jr.. 1121 South
Hoff, is reported ill.
• • •
Leo Mozley, 405 South Choctaw,
will leave Friday morning for a few
days' visit with friends at Tonkawa.
0 0 •
Mrs. Thomas E. Graham of Okla-
homa City spent Wednesday in the
homo of Mr. and Mrs. James Blair,
1108 South Hoff.
A capacity audience greeted the
pupils of the Coletta E. Finn school
of dancing, Wednesday night at the
Criterion Theatre, when they ap-
peared in their annual dance revue. ]
Natural grace and cnarm of Terpis-
chore, was in evidence as the youtli-
ful worshippers at the shrine of Ter-
pischore, piroutted in interpretation
of their art.
A Russian dance by Emil Zahourok
of Oklahoma City and a final number
by Miss Coletta Fiun and Mr. Za-
hourek added to the entertaiument
of the evening. The dance revue will
be given again tonight at the Criter-
ion in connection with the regular
treatre program.
Those participating in the revue
were Eileen Marie Finn, Helen
Brown, Anna Maurice Cobb, Deloris
HAZELTON, Pa., May 31.—(LP) —
The mine mule, underground laborer
in the anthracite colleries of Penn-
sylvania is passing, and he soon will
be one with the Dodo bird and other
animals of the past.
To the mechanically minded a piece
uf machinery may become an object
of affection, but to the hard coal
miner, the faithful, unselfish and
sometimes temperamental mine mule
Is a close frler.d and companion.
No lumbering piece of machinery
propelled by such mysterious things
as si 'age batteries and trolleys can
ever ,ake his place.
Coal operators, however, look to
tile practical and economical rather
than the sentimental and the passing
of the mule has been decreed.
Electrically powered coal car en-
Mr and Mrs. R. O. Brewer and]
aughter, Dorothy of Oklahoma City
r. and Mrs. H. N. Britten, daughter
Joiene and son Harry, of Norman,
Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Skinner, daughter
Margaret and son Harry, and Mr. and
Mrs H. B. Skinner made ul> a picnic
party east of the city Wednesday.
OLD TIME DANCE
Saturday night, K. of C. Hall. Good
music. Adm. 25 cents.
-ft1
A regular nose-dive in suit prices
at M S & M., suits now one-half
price.
STATE BRIEFS %\
^ ________________
IlOLDENVILLE—Confined to hi3
bed V a local hospital here from
wounds sustained in an encounter
early last Friday morniug with a burg-
lar, S. H. Roach, night policeman of
this city, declared late last night that
Itay Prince, alleged police character,
wak the man who fired the shots.
Prince Is held in the county Jail iu
connection with the shooting.
WYANDOTTE—Shortage of pickers
is forcing many workers to toil at
night in an effort to harvest the
$100,000 strawberry crop in Ottawu
county. Shippers sent out 12 cars of
berries last week.
OKLAHOMA CITY -Twenty-five
pounds of air mail leave Oklahoma
Citv each day and 28 pounds are
brought into the city by the plane
method, according to figures com-
plied by the chamber of commerce.
The total outgoing air mail last
week was 181 pounds, 10 ounces, and
the incoming 202 pounds, 12 ounces.
Harrison, Virginia Barringer, Dorothy Rines are rapidly replacing their four-
Fugate, Florene Trasa, Cathrine footed rivals.
Emrick, Katherine Chamness, Mickey Most of the mules are blind, due to
Johnson. Gladvs Sides, June Fergu-j their long stay underground, for it is
son, Jeannette Raizen, Lois Hlpgeu- , seldom if ever that a mule enters a
bothain. Paul Scott, juanita Garden- jmine and Is brought to the surface
Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Morris, 600
South Williams, spent Wednesday In
the home of their daughter, Mrs. Jos-
eph M. Rector, Jr., and Mr. Rector,
in Oklahoma City.
# * »
Mrs. Julia Bingham, 414 Elast Rus-
sell, returned this morning from a
month’s visit with her motner, Mrs.
L. A. Bryan at Effingham, Kas.
birthday anniversary. • * • . „ .
After functioning sixty-one years. E\ B. Patterson has returned from
the “Senate” of the Province of Nova a brief visit with relatives at Great
Seotla 1h to cease its existence to- Bend, Kas.
day. . . „ , , : Mra T E Dowe*ll, *903 South Rock
The Second Division Veterans As-, *«• , ’ 1 ‘ f,irned from a few days’
soclation opens its annual reunion to-1 Island, has returned rrom tew uay
day In St. Louis on the tenth anniver
er, Betty Walsh, Fred Wheeler, Polly
Marie Weeks, Nancy Humphrey and
Monita Trotter.
Just think of getting a Hart Schnff-
ner & Marx suit at one-half price at
M S & M.
years
APPRECIATION
The President of the W.
R. C. de-
before lie dies
But blindness does not end the
mule’s usefulness to the miners. So
well do many of the blind mules learn ] school,
the routes which they dally travel
that they never stray from their
track. Coming upon an open switch,
where a closed ono should have been
found, the mule stops dead In his
Beatings, pleadings and curs-
STILLWATER—Very few people in
Oklahoma know the value of rollon
or how to determine the things that
enter into the price received for the
crop. This Is one of the reasons for
holding the Oklahoma Cotton school
at the Oklahoma A. and M college
beginning June 2, according to L. L.
Llgon, cotton specialist. ,
A thorough knowledge of the uni-
versal standards of cotion is acquired
by students at the school before they
begin grading or stapling. No one In
the cotton business can afford to bo
without a thorough knowledge of
these grades, said Lignou. Anyone
Interested in cotton und at least II
old is eligible to enter lue
ACHIEVE HONORS
IN PUNCTUALITY
The following students have been
neither absent nor tardy for a period
three years or more:
IRVING 8CH00L
4 Year*
Gladys Adair
Fay Adair
Edward Jones.
3 Year*
Walter Walters
Carl Underwood
Betty Lou Chilton.
CENTRAI* SCHOOL
6 Year*
Hadyu Davis.
• 4 Year*
Eileen Jackson
Edith May Thompson.
3 Year*
Elizabeth Matson
Gladys Jensen
Bonnie Holden
Geraldine Snow
Paul Lee Hunt
James Ridenour
Billy J. McCartney.
WEBSTER SCHOOL
5 Yeare
Alta Phillips.
3 Year*
George Lewis
Eugene Glass.
LINCOLN SCHOOL
4 Year*
Charles Palmore
Robert Carter.
3 Yeare
Lyle Bross
James Kennedy
Alma Lovell
Elma Lovell
Avanelle Vurmeier
Harvey Slade
Katheryn Blanchard
Marty Miller
Gloria McGee
Artie Faye Dresser
Serena Niles ,
Billy Blanchard
Eld ward llarvell
J. W. Offield
HIGH SCHOOL AND JR. HIGH
8 Year*
Rubye Var Wagoner
7 Year*
Ina Fay Gaubert
O. W. Kivett.
6 Yeare
Mary Jane Schooling
Mercedes Noah.
6 Yeare
Catherine Dyer
Julia Kleeman
Mary Lee Andrews.
4 Years
Paul Noah
Lorene Wllhoit
Clifford Jessup
La Veta Kennedy
Iris Jones
Vance Jones
Mary Tilley
Elsie Jessup
Nedra McCormack.
3 Years
Howard Brown
Alam Schmidt
La Vone Huff
Homer Bartlett
Elsie Offield
Ruth Thompson
Max Compton
Eugenia Page
Glennie Belle Watts
Mildred Hamby
Gertrude Davis
Rosa Miller
Josephine Bartlett
Roberta Arnold
Howard Jessup
Leona Bell Bethard
Ernest Girard
Frances Brown
Anita Pyle.
CHICKASHA-Citizens of this city
were to meet and greet the new offi-
cers and directors of (he local cham-
ber of commerce at a public banquet
tonight. Four new faces are among
the newly elected directorate.
Carl Mag e, militant editor of the
Oklahoma News, was to be the prim
sary of the Belleau Wood battle.
King Alionso and Queen Victoria
of Spain, the possibility of whose
marriage annulment Is rumored, have
been married twenty-two years to-
day.
--♦----
OLD TIME DANCE
Saturday night, X of C. Hall. Good
music. Adm. 25 cents.
One-half price on Hart Schaffner
& Marx Suits at M S & M.
visit In Caldwell, Kas.
Mr. and Mrs* Herman Youngheim,
814 South Rock Island, had as their
guests Wednesday the fatter’s aunt.
Mrs. I. Daniels and Mr. Daniels of
Oklahoma City.
Mr. and Mrs. Marquis Stone Mor-
ris, 1106 South Hoff, spent Wednes-
day in the home of the latter’s par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs.
Oklahoma City.
| pro'perl?
ly assisted the Corps in observing set. I dual speaker
Memorial Day. I On several occasions mules have L P • _____
-v--— - carried their miner friends to safety pAWHUSKA Approximately 100,-
•S’ A POPULAR INITIAL through the smoke-filled passages of Oo() lR>a(j cattie are estimated to be
LONDON. May 31.—(IP)—“S is the | flre HWppt mines; on other occasions falonlnB on ()gage county grass at
from flooded gangways and eventual- th,H t)me of ypar The estimate Is
ly saved their lives. | iJast<d on tho numbers handled by the
But the death toll among mules is i ^rioiie railroads by which method
heavy, especially since the use of elec- j most of them arc shipped into this
trlcity has been Introduced into the | country for the summer.
Plodding along some steep
K. of C. MEETING
Special meeting tonight. All mem-
bers urged to be present.
Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits now
selling at one-half price at M 8 « M
Clothiers.
BEES ON WARPATH
ORLANDO, Fla., May 31.—(IP)-H-
L King, who has been in the bee busi-
ness for 20 years, has found a colony
can make war as unitedly as it
makes honey. ,
Mrs King was attempting to chase
the bees Into the apiary recently
when they apparently became an-
gered They bit tho woman, not se-
riously, and then turned In swarms
on the King chickens. Thirty-eight
fowls were slung to death.
most popular initial letter in the
English language, according to fig
urcs compiled from the uew Oxford
English Dlctiona-y now uearing com-
pletion.
The total number of “main
COOKED FOOD SALE
Tho Young Matrons of ihc
John’s iu. E. Church, will
cooked food sale Saturday
Rudder Motor Company.
St.
hold a
at the
~—'9y--
words
listed as beginning with S is 27.929, c^'he8-wbh his feet deep In the BARTLESVILLE
Other popular letters are I and C 1 ■ the paH8age floor city will probubly be asked to vote on
with ttlB »•»' 21.295 rwpectlvGy. | J[. ton/Mr. \, —•..........- -.................
-Citizens of this
BASEBALL
for the great ]
Latin prefixes account »«• B‘v”‘ | iniinsulated trolley
number of words beginning with these | ,g ln„tanUneou8.
BASEBALL SUNDAY
Chickasha
(William Halsell Frazier
Co.)
El Reno Eagles
Adm. 25c. 3 o’clock
Ed 8. Vaught nt
letters.
Other letters, unexpectedly import-
ant arc l and U, their popularity be-
ing accounted for by the number of
words beginning with in and un.
* » • I —. . -9
Mrs Don Fahey, daughter, Frances, Florshelm Oxfords now $7 85 dur-
and Dona Mae of Helena, Okla., are ine tho one-half price suit sale at M
visiting in the home ol Mrs. E'shoy a ,8AM.
mother, Mrs. Julia Bingham, 4i4 E&et
Mules, once they ure iu the mines,
become filled with curiosity. Often l
they break away from their under-
ground stabbs and wander about the;
workings. Storerooms often have ]
bond Issue of not less than one mil
wire. Death! lion dollars In tho coming Novomijer | Washington
I election, according to chamber of p;uw York
commerce directors. Among other i
expansion movements, a water plant Detroit . ...
for the city Is planned. ChvslIM -
American Leagun
.000 000 000—0
...Oil 020 OOx—4
..340 0 —
____010 0 —
...320 030 0 —
bocn broken into by the mules, necsk- j from jum, j to 3, in connection with
lng forage and considerable damage gtnte young peoples convention of
National League
Russell.
Mrs. Maude Villiams. 420 South
Macomb, attended a one o clock
luncheon glvon by Mrs. P, P. Duffy
in Oklahoma City today.
# • •
and Mrs. N. M. Wilson. 509
and Mrs. iv »• » prefers September
Bickford, will loav* overland havc mature<
Mr.
South -------P
for a several days visit with
tlves at point# in eastern Kanaaa.
4)
| done before tho animals bavo been J ^ church of Cod.
— - 1— ] capturod.
TREE SCORNS 8EASONS i ___—----
SANTA PAoLA, Calif.. May 31— Ptlllfully Hurt
(LP)—A walnut tree owned uy W. H. j —-—
Henderson of Santa Paula has no re- Miss Eva Dowell was
spect for seasons. i Jurod Tuesday at her
The usual time for walnut blooming ] South Rock Island Ave., when she
but Hendorsoti'* leaned agalns: the door of an auto-
Other trees1 mobile, and It burst open, throwing
generally havo matured fruit In Oc-lher to the ground. She "M severoly
tobtr. but It is bearing at tho present bruised about th* head, but will be
Tho tree Is nine year# old and able to return to ber duties la Okla
CORDELL—Singing convention of
painfully ln-
home, 901
Is csrly in June,
(Coutinuod uu page
time.
ha* a good crop.
bonus City Friday.
the United Counties Binging Assocla
it Ion Is to be hold at Lako Valley,
Sunday, June 3. .
Singers of Kiowa. Caddo, and Wash-
I ita counties are members of tho as-
I soclation.
The convention Is to meet at 10
a. m. In the consolidated school
building and continue until 4 p. m.
A basket Ulnaer la to be served at
noon.
Boston . - -
Philadelphia
St. Louis - .
Pittsburgh -
.070 10
. .000 30
..Tno ooo o
...001 001 0
Mary Ann Stalg *nnouno*a th*
of a iiiismtr class In vlo-
opening
lin, June 1.
Phone 665
I
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Maher, T. W. The El Reno Daily Democrat (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 106, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 31, 1928, newspaper, May 31, 1928; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc909474/m1/1/: accessed April 20, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.