The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 18, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 25, 1934 Page: 4 of 8
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MEMBER 1934
f lPS“«d daily except Saturday
from 207 Soullt Hock tilniid avc
111,1 ■, a"d entered mt Becond-cl.taa
•Oall matter under the Act ,,f
■March .1. 1878.
DAVIS O. VAN’DIV'ti:rt
Editor and Publisher
tv.,' w'aSe: ,7‘ *";“■« "•
------llnghasts teum last week
The ASSOCIATED PRESS la ex-
clusively entitled to the use for
re-publication of all the new*
dispatches credited to It or iu,i
-rdlted by this paper, and also
the local newa therein.
, All right* of publication of spe-
cial d apatchea herein are also re-
served.
Semi-finals of the annual El Re-
no Junior highschool debate tour-
nament will be concluded In the
| auditorium Wednesday morning
[ with the 7A-1 class encountering
I the 8A-1 team.
Winners of the class will meet
Miss Lottie Baker's ninth graders
in the finals next week, the lat-
ter having defeated H. V. Tll-
ln the
semi-final round.
The 7A-1 class, sponsored by
Miss Ina Lane, the team, coached
by Miss Monlta Trotter and Miss
Ruth Duff, includes Reba Jan?
Test. Helen Little and Burrel Gam-
ble.
' iins class. It Ls composed of Hel-
en Wallis, Billy Hendrix and Clar-
Aullooul AilvrrtlaluK
KrprmrnlnliwH
I must. 1.1 Mils A KOHW,
New X ork, I IiIchko, llrlroll.
*'• ,<"tl«. Hall*., Xtlnutn.
_ *«» I HUM MM ••
min M IIM It II-1|,,S II \ | is
lb (nrrlrr
■me week _______________ | |i
Three mouths ______* 11 IS
On* v**r
H> Mull III I nIIIIillnII niiiI
Alljolulll* I Ollllfll-S.
OiT« year ............ $| 00
Hx month* _____ I.» rlft
Thr»»#» month*
**' >fnll On it I ilr tlunr ('•laiillra
« me year
£'x. .........::: ::imo
• tminlhe ii.OO
SUNDAY, MARCH 25, 1934
ence Pearce.
The team that has already won
its way to the finals ls made up
of Thos Douglas. Myrtle Ann Tlm-
berlake and Charles Hubbard, and
is coached by Miss Barbara Oam-!
I ble. Mr. Tillinghast’s team, coach-
ed by Miss Pauline Evans, was
composed of Mary Sue Garner, Joe
Wallace and Corte Truax.
Look and Learn
Bible Thought
GODS OENEROSTI Y: O Ood.
let nil the people praise thee.
Then shall the earth yield her
Increase; and Ood shall bless us.
And all the ends of the earth
shall fear him.—Psalm 67 5-7.
1 What Is the aggregate wealth
of the United States?
2 What Austrian archduke once
ruled Mexico as emperor?
3 What does the term "mag-
nitude" means as applied to stars?,
* How many church edifices
are there In the U 8?
5. How far from Jerusalem Is I
the city of Nazareth?
Answers
Estimated at $329.700.006,000.
Archduke Mnxlmlllan of Aus-
vrrsity „f Oklahoma prepared ml , ' ° ,r°m' |? d Will., Oklahoma ( ity;
present Klmer Rice’, play "The ?y revolving the stage, requiring 'v -V. Howe, McAle.ter; Marcus
Adding Machine," or a revolving mil"** . U'° ,n,nu.,e,> »u <•" 1 "h» a'"l Julius Einhorn. Tulsa;
Hagc Thursday and Friday night' \ * .'l',I*rfnl ,ct t'»" l,c "lieeled Alex Victor, Fort Worth; Josephine
>«- .... Z, zzr -*,h' "1" ■'w"1 - sr-tr......• <££
tA'trx&tlrJjzz'uZ-.....n........,* ^ssJSSusr
the rapidly moving production. Larry veil. I\ in ,.*' \ia-vcfmr .....WaMacc Wolverton. Lawton,
Hayden, instructor of dramatic art,; Holibj. N. 'I : » i -V An‘,eri0B- ^and
Annual operetta, "The Count and
The Co-Ed." sponsored by the mu-
sic department of the El Reno
high chool, was presented Friday
night in the highschool auditorium
before a large crowd of El Reno
and Canadian county folk.
More than 50 members of the
department appeared in the pro-
duction, directed by Miss Mary
Edwards and assisted by Miss Ef-
| fie Jorns, head of the public
| speaking department, as dramatic
I advisor.
Plot of the two-act operetta was
•Jir™ 11 bcin8 concerned over a
$50,000 donation to the Mard?n
college from an erratic foreign
count, who. although failing to
pay his expected visit t0 the
institution, finally sent ills contri-
bution by mail.
The actual performance was the
i d8;V Pr0Rram Prepared by stu-
dents of the campus in the count s
hvnMi VT dancln« was directed
by Miss Virginia Dove. Miss Ellza-
jbeth Walker served as piano ac-
companist.
E
Problem A Day
Ccorge F. K. Mann
The fhrill of wearing a cap and
gown has come much sooner to
George F. K. Mann, above, than
it ordinarily does to most college
students. Mann, the first student
at tho University of Chicago to
complete all undergraduate work
under the institution's new course
plan, finished tho normal four
year* of study in two and one-
half years.
Auxiliary Adopts Projee
At Saturday Meet
Plans to cooperate with the Itr
Cross in its charity work wer
formulated during a business mcM
ing of the Canadian countv Medica
Auxiliary Saturday afternoon n
the home of Mrs. Malcom F
Phelps. 803 South Hoff avenue.
The preparation of layettes fo:
needy expectant mothers was adop.
ted as the Auxiliary’s partlculai
Droject at the present time. It wai
decided to hold meetings on the
first Monday of each month, whirl
will include a noon luncheon ni
the Soulhern hotel, followed bv i,
regular session in the apartnicn!
there of Mrs. W B. Catto.
Miss Evelyn Roberts, a meml>-r
of the faculty of tho El Reno
highschool. Is spending the week-
end with relatives in Enid
EASTER WEEK SPECIAL
Finger Waves Set and Dried. 2<lc
RUBY DAVID CROWLEY
1565-W
Five years' experience.
1.
2.
trla
3.
seen
4
5.
CONDITION IMPROVED
According to word received by
Their relative brilliancy
from the earth.
206.000
About 50 miles north.
REMINISCING
ll»m« Krprodurrd from The
•'»»« «f ZS teari
March 25. 1909
Oeorge l/pwls and Howard Bone-
brakr went to Pond Creek to
bring home a new automobile
which Mr. Lewis purchased there
IIIESE COMPANY UNIONS
Traffic Towers of Washington und
New York
By BURTON KLINE
The press lias been mentioning
of late an Institution little known
to the public until six months ago.
The public will not hear the last
of it for six months more The
Institution referred to is the "com-
pany ur.ion." Ana since it may be
the Sarajevo pistol lo start the!
mast serious Industrial war we1
ever have had II may do to glance I
at this thing with the boresome
name and the bombshell nature.
Whatever Its status now the
company union haa an honorable
history. Twenly-somc years ago I John Curtis will hercufter sleep
what labor now damns to its in his feed barn with a loaded shot
Irlcnds as a bane was hailed as a «un right at his hand Last Bat-
boor by every true friend of labor urday night some graceless cuss
Then as now the country suffered entered (he barn and stole a set
a pestilence of strikes—with this *of new double harness
dramatic difference Life now Is a! -
hell lor millions of Idle workers;! George Flanigan sold two lots
It then was comparative Paradise 'n Lakevlew addition yesterday to
Inr a people nearly fully employed A. 8. Matthews, mall transfer I
Yel the strikes of today are back-1 clerk at the Rock Island depot
page piffle. Twenty-some years ago, -
they were front-page war Powers, the new station on tlir
Workers who then were fired Roc8 Island between El Reno and
Iroin liiriorles turned round and Union City. Is to have an elevator.'
Itrrd the fHetorles Along with and It Is said that a general store
pro|art,v, lives were destroyed will be established there.
' Massacres" happened, so deep had
became the suspicion between em- —-——-----I
plover and employe, so hot their this eflort to rentier industry a
^ ,N.0b°?;V knoWs *'hHl ,mmrv morr sociable undertaking It *cut
uis lost by these ceaseless strikes, out the war. It turned the old
in wage* to workers, profits to foes Into friends II stopped the
h»h£yrthr i,Mkll?M !hr ,pubUf ah00t‘' gs at Ludlow, the burnings
looted iht bills and look lo hating | at Bayonnp And In stopping this
^ El Reno friends the condition of
■j Maynard L. Rtiss. who has been
seriously III for the past 10 days at
’ St. Joseph's hospital In Fort Worth,
Tex. Is Improved. Mr. Ross was
able to be moved lo his home the
j latter part of last week,
I —■—■■ , ——
Miss Marjorie Hoover, of Nor-
' man. was an overnight gurst Fri-
day In the home of Mr and Mrs
George W Brinkley. 1066 South
Ellison avenue.
entangle, embarrass.
WORDS OFTEN MISUSED: "I .......
expect to be there" merely Implies wold
belief. "I anticipate being there" *“
expresses pleasure In the belief
OFTEN M I S P R O N O UNCED
Mock Pronounce the o as In
lock, not its In soft.
OFTEN MISSPELLED; Exem-
plary; ary. not ery
8YNONYM8: Involve, Implicate.
complicate,
embroil
WORD STUDY: "Use a word
three times and It Is yours." Let
us increase our vocabulary by mas-
tering one word each day. Today s
DOGMATIC; characterized
A gas meter registered 11.800 on
the first day of the month. 35.800
on the first day of the following
month. A cash discount of 2
cents on the even thousand cubic
feet was allowed. At 27 cents a
thousand cu. feet what was the
charge for the month's gas con-
sumption?
Answer to Yesterday's Problem
65 oranges. Explanation -Subtract
1 from 16; multiply 15 by 4; add
b0 and 5.
b.v positive assertion. "His speech
was dogmatic, but also convinc-
ing.”
Misses Martha Keeney and Betty
Enlow ore spending the week-end
with the latter's relatives In Tope-
ku. Kans
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Hoops, of
Fort Cobb are week-end guests in
the home of the latter's sister. Mrs
Marshall, and Mr. Marshall.
512 South Williams avenue.
It is reported there are over twenty fam-
11l,eJ®omin* as employes at the reformatory.
They all want houses and there are no
\acant houses in El Reno at present.
We have about fifty houses, all rented. We
are offering these properties in exchange for
our stock. Taking our stock at par.
I* >°<*s I’ke this is a good time to take on
a little El Reno property. Call at our office
lor a list.
Kl Reno Building and I^oan Assn.
FOR SOME reason TlggleJbut bis previous night', experience I hm. w‘fn Je Oil, a ^ond Dm.^ng
roril.N of I lifttf Quickened Ilia ImavInallAn $a .hI.l, ..i..... _ . ® OlOllfl
I bought* dwelt upon those words of
Viola's as lie returned lo ‘The Sru
l.lon* lor luncheon. Why had ahe
called this grout happiness of theirs
a fool's paradise? lie had put her
misgivings away at the time wllhou!
had quickened Ids Imagination lo an
extent which he hlmeelf would nor-
mally have described aa morbid. All
that life could hold of misery and
despair seemed to be expressed In
those dismal echoes, and he broke
....... "Iioom ....... Uii.ii.ai C< MOTS. *0(1 ne tiro
any dittlrnlty ns the outcome of her 'Hi" a run and literally fled Inland
then both
Il began lo lie clrm that ludua-
"v Mopped unless thl* stopped
Tl» ipicsttoii was how. 'riicn
suddenly somebody saw a light m
the giurt* of burning buildings at
thing it started another imitation
In not very long one industry
alter another caught on to tills
mode ol lurcxtnlling strikes West-
lllghoii.se, Bcthldiriii Steel, the
I udlnu .....* ■“ Pent *y Railroad, and many an-
New Jc™v £ *r,d J^yo,,nr olhrr W'1 cn.plove reprraenta-
,2 nnS«ko?1i M,"llrbody **“ Mo" l" ™»n»n* the works Belore
Thr.^ i?nkw' ' >T, ‘bis Amrrlcan business had been
lhrte little letters of the alpha- itin by Mussollnls A town meet-
bd. he learned, had sturted the ing was now to rule it
war m Bayonne The cost of llv- All mid nearly 700 corporation*
lig had risen and under Its pres- laid hold ol this simple means of
sur< the employe* of Standard Oil gettli g themselves and thrlr men
rend «“ dav“° Anrm ^ ^ *?. ,OKrthrl The lion and the lamb
• tils a day. As things then stood had lain down at last Then two
ih' request was justified, a* the things happened Ule World war
stennerMn aKrari Md,,,*Ued. Drama opened, and so did the eyes ol
stepped in ahrad. organized labor
he Keographlral dlslunee be- Organized labor looked on this
'*ren Bayor.ne and the company | fraternisation ol employer* and
O rrfi mii^rr •n'mdW*y ,u"ll>rl Uulr workers as a kind of elope-1
lance between SUnd'aT’od t Work,’n' who «'» tlTsr
iis H«M. nr Lfi,,, d | dH ° andI repreaenuilor. blandishment* were
the B< ir2ixim?. n7 IT*chrd 'nurrylng outside the elan If this
^iihrr'Zwle^t JRS crumbleP lh" l,*M ^
l^bcw. in .....ping th.* gap. helS" il
ui.re utfie dXnmeit«e?;.I;:aif Ks^'srs'
b«ly1'*1 udI? e*rJSwL "LbV JT*' pr,nflplr 01 representative nunage-
BOfly stupid, eareles*. <n vicious, mrnt went by the board and with
The modest request for a rise of
20 to 40 cents a day was read by
I he directors as a demand for 20
lo 40 percent per day. They voted
II down Their workers haled
them worse than ever, and hell
broke loose
Distance had done it-the long-
est distance
kind
It was natural enough. Buslnest
had but recently organized. Ur
had labor Bach was afraid of Up
other a size, mutually hostile, r adv
to tight at the drop of the hat
rite \tmtger Rockefeller saw this
n/fishnosN creating wars In indus-
tries besides hi* own and thought
out u way to bridge It for any lo
ropy who would.
The whole Idea was to democrat-
ize, to bring the cactnlc* together.
It the company union
Now It Is bark The Recovery
Art assigns to the two old foes
'who ought to hr eronlesi the same
right lo organize on (he biggest
scale yet Industry Is about that
business but busier still in block-
lnK un,on organization The old
all. the personal, happy thought of representative
mat iigeiuent has route to mind,
bringing harmony within the
works and breaking up the rliii
outside.
So the millennial plan that once I
made (rtends of manager *nd man
is making them enemies now, The1
Irstliutlon that stopped one war1
may start another Mr Oreen ol
the A F of L. says the elan, fori
self-preservation will fight It out
Senator Wagner backs him with a
bill that he warns hi* colleagues
^ 10 awp' °* look for "collapse." |
coun?JI*k i ». ° 111 Tbl* lhr bot'k-drop behind the
counijls with the mstiagement dnunt centered about the company
• tit tllttxlt.il ____I___ mm
and have a real voire In running
Hie works Above everything else
UtB Iwo sets were to get acquaint-
ed.<
Mackenzie King, later premier of
Canada, hud Ideas of tills sort
mtd was drafted to pul (hem In
forte In Btundard Oil When I he
director* heard of the scheme they
tainted IOi a man Thla was rom-
tiiunlsm And In Standard Oil I
As the plan worked out the
hitch was to get the worker* to
take a swipe at the ball They
Union II miii remember, these
Towels have more than once noted
that through all the Recovery
moves two force* weir thrradtng
toward each other- capital and la-
bor Thl* looks like the clash,
Mr Oreen says lalxir Is ready Mr
Mi Miill.il. In The Whirligig, says
business Is keeping Its powder dry
And yet—
In a world now chiefly engaged
In flying to plereg, and when viol-
ence here at home never had a
better ekcunc for being, Hie oul-
ZZ per*"
B , rtl| ? brllrvn P“' °f ■'""«»* ^1, thrlr
1 ht !£!!*,• ,«Maoui»dl.»K patience »nd calm
Bui one thing unergod from 11Copyright 1934 for The Tribune i,
nervuiis .late: tint now they returned
upon him with curious force, lie no
longer had any doubt as to her feel-
ing for him but somehow that fact
no longer llllr.l In,,, „n|, rc-Masy
Me whs conscious of a weight upon
tils spirit for which II was dintnilt
lo account. Though lie knew that
Mils wonderful thing belonged in
him. lie could not rejnlr* In Its pos
session Was It some premonition
of disaster dial hung Upon him? He
luid nevrr experienced II before
never l»llevrd In II Hut now. like
» bird of evil omen. II spread tls
wings between him and Hie light
M."l he Ind.-ed walled In n fools
l itintflM ?
lie made s resolute effort lo shakr
off his depression ns he trudged
tank through Ihe now driving rain,
and falhni! assigned to II. with a
determination Unit would have heen
comical If n had not lieen In a way
desperate, all the most comuinnphirr
reasons Mint m-curred to him
Nalucnlly, the weather came flrst
\\ ho could feel elnled on a day Ilk'
Mil*, with ihe wind and the sea
moaning together and the aim com-
pletely hidden * The rain. too. pat
terlng all around him with desolate
ptralaleime a necessary evil, of
course, bill how unwelcome I Me
had not noticed it when setting out
to go to her liut It wne mint, heav-
ier and much darkrr-than It had
been then At least. It seemed so to
him Who could maintain any
mmsl approaching high spirits on a
day like this? The very dogs slunk
•Ih.uI with thrlr drenched tails
tucked out of sight l.imklng about
him Tlgglr decided that, for real
desolation and doom, liter* was no
place on earth like an English Imm
let at Ihe seaside on a wet day In
the summer Then he became aware
l»»f»t Mil* tin miufi rx|»rr-.nr<1 tIm*
ha seat ingratitude, and endeavored
10 n* tU» depression to another
Mi« mind lie gared arroe* the
Weak shore with Its floating mist
wreaths, went hat k to the nigh!
before, to Ihe Klhnhy Rock and the
awful peril which Imd driven him up
Its slimy aurfaew Me recalled Ihe
turmoil the terrtfle tight for life, and
what—hut tor Harvey—would have
been the uMtuuila failure. Were
there not ample gmunda here for
Mile oveiwhelming depression? Mow
zould he expect to escape some
physical reaction after smli an ad-
venture? Kurelv he would tie some
thing more than human tf he did
not feel It* effects for several days'
II* had not I •ecu eotieelnue of
fatigue, lull he nseuied himself that
Mils was Ihe cauar the natural and
inevitable cause-of Ills depreseloti
Whsl tie needed was a decent meal
and a real, and
would look different.
The long-drawn-mil wall of the
lightship siren off the distant Hllm-
by l*«thl heie broke across Ihe gray
silence. It seemed to pierce through
end thiough every cranny of the
elilTx, awaking lu them echoes that
lame forth in melancholy cadences
to spread far o.er th* dreary waatea
and mingle Wdlh the cries of the
startled sen hlrde a* they flew out
from their iisky ehelter.
Th* alren flmehed Tlggle. He was
Jot Fenny was standing In his
porch and received him with a grin
"Hot wet again, air!” he remarked
"Damned wet." said Tlggle tersely
and tramped Hi without further
words
lie was alttlng at lunch when
Harvey Joined him with a oounte
"""* w> black that even Tlggle w.v
roused to comment.
.......... looking a hit off old chap
What's the matter?" he said.
Harvey glared at him aa though
resenting Ihe overture* of a com
plcte stranger, nnd opened his paper
without a word,
Tlggle wa* too depressed to tv
offended Besides had not the man
saved his Ilf* only th* day befoie
lie merely *lgh*d and continued his
meal.
Marvev continued burled In hli
patier until tils own was brought
When he devoured It with the speed
of a famished animat and then de-
parted in unbroken silence.
Tlggle heard him eurtlv order n
holtle of Whlskv at the bar to he
'•ni up to hla room, and ahrtitged
his shoulders. Harvey"* melhod of
counteracting depression did not
appeal lo him. hut for th* moment
he almost wished It did
He had on* more look at the
weather when h* tiad finished his
lunch Imt It was still so unpromising
that he turned from further content
plat Ion and finally drifted up to his
own room to smok* his pip* in soli
imt* fp weariness of soul and bodv
he el retched hlmeelf upon his hed
"mt lav staring at th* dark cellinc
Why did her words haunt him so*
What strange fore* was at work*"'
"I must keep my paradise a little
longer-even If It la a fool * psr.i
dls* * Whv had sh* said It? And
"lid It nol forget?
Drearily he smoked his pipe to an
end nnd put It down. Hut h* con
tinned t.x lie gailng at th* celling
and wrestling with the problem n»
• hough some evil magic were at
work.
Hillside Ihe rain streamed In tor-
rent* and heat upon th* windows,
and thr rising wind howled d**o
lately Alt th* happy summer day*
had fled He eould not look for
ward, and a veil seemed to Idol out
th« pest. He ceuld only II* and
wonder- and wonder I
■ He remembered afterward* that he
mad* on* great effort to recover his
common sense, as he turned upon hie
side and closed hie eye* to shut out
th# black cloud of depression that
enveloped him and poor Harvey aleo
“All Tommy roll" he said aloud
and distinctly, and the word* com
furled him almost a* much a* If
•onieon* ids* had uttered them
Five minutes later he was snoring
peacefully, and th* burden hail
Hie shore and cut off by the tide?
Ho pulled open the door and went! I
"'It In*" the passage lie saw at J
II " 'ey'* door was open ! I
1 $*'1 misgiving went through ‘
him to which he could give no name.
The burden that had oppressed him
hefore his sleep hnd returned upon
him with a ten-fold weight lie went
down the narrow Malrs with a sense
of doom at Ida heart.
He renrhed the dark hall, hungi
with anltere and rlothes" pegs, endi
slopped in grope for his coal and
h"* As he did so the sound of
voices came to him from the her-
pallor, and In n moment, as though
a hand fiad clutched his throsf. he
wne standing motionless, with caught
breath For Harvey was speaking—
In Inne* of deadly Insolence.
"I'm sfrald rotl‘ve hren misin-
formed regarding Captain Turner
If he has a wife—she* not her* "
"Not her#'" Another voice, luirrh- |
1v raised, broke In upon llnrvev's j
deliberate accents "Not here' Then [
where Hie devil la she? Anyhow. ,
where ls he?"
"At the present mmnhnt.* *nb| |
llnrvev "I am not In a position to
tell vou Blit nn doubt he will make
ehnw at dinner He usually does"
Dinner!" The harsh voice barker"!
then everything . pr,, y' *•* tha burden
| slipped fpvtn his shoulders. . , ,
When lie ultimately awoke, It wns
with nn urgent sene* of being tale
for something, lie started upright
mi the lied and looked at his wstoli
The room wa* shadowy. The rain
Still fall In. rsssntlv To his horror
he dlacovsred that tt wa* past seven
o'clock Exhaustion had rlalmrd
payment with n vengeance, ami he
was already two hour* lat* for his
evening visit to Viola.
It* sprang up and dragged on hla'
bunt*. What on earth would sh* lie
the wont, "It'e past seven now
What time ilo you dine tn this out ]
taMliiti hole’***
"I'm »'" 'he Imdlnrd" said Mar-
vev, supremely contemptuous "Per i
sonallv. I dine when II suits me lo
do so nmt nt no other time"
"Well, where Is the landlord then*"
There was a sound of Inmallenl
feet proving across the oilcloth and
In n moment the door of the hnr.
parlor swung open, nnd Tlggle
standing motionless against the
coals found himself confronted hv
a short Ihh k set man with Iron-
gray hair nnd a small cvntrat-looklne
muatarhe of the name color His
eyes also were iron of hue with a
llnre of rust that gav# them a red.
dish glare. ,
He stopped short at sight of Tlg-
gle nnd chnlleneed him aggressively
"Hullof You th* landlord of this
place •*
"Did yon apeak to me*" said Tie-
ete. prompted bv some Instinct of
self-defense that he did not step to
question.
"Who else?" said the eggresalve
man. pausing tn take stork of hint
“I asksd If you were the landlord*
but I suppose you're not. es »eu
don't eeem In any hurry to lay clelmi
to this blasted cove,"
Harvey's voice, cool and sarcastic,
her* apok* over I he newcomer's
head and his tall thin form *V>w*d
In th* eioom behind "Hullo Tig
gtel You haven't seen Oapisln
Turner anywhere. I suppose? Been
hogging tt upstairs all the afternoon,
haven't you?"
Its mail* a rapid sign with (he
words whlrh was too pronounced tn
lie Ignored
Tlggle stared for a second nr two
then said. "I haven't seen anyone.
Yes, I've been upstairs*
“Here! In>| me paaat" said the
stranger, nnd stamped away from
between them nnd down Ih* passage
towards Ills kitchen.
Harvey mad* nn Instant dtva for-
ward. "llulckt I'nnin outside I
Don't wait for anything*"
lie strode out Into the rain aa he
was. and Tlgal* blindly followed,
mechanically vltngglng on his coal ns
.h* did so.
(TO Ull VONTINUtlt)
Get Your Kiddies
Ready for Easter
III the Cute Little
Togs from
Kelso’s
4
Q
• ••*,• *
*••• O
yv
Youngsters love
spring-time and East-
er, and all the new
clothes they bring
with them. They are
especially fond of
ours for they are
bright and gay just
like themselves. And
you’ll he equally fond
of our low prices.
Darling little dresses
of dotted swiss, em-
broidered organdy,
net, silk crepe, flow-
ered batistes, fine
lawns and gay little
prints! Some of them
have hats to match!
U
s
Ir u ^
" 6'*? 'r^fci
t. \V V/i
//♦
J.
‘KM -A
•if
/ iM
rTv
i|ki,"ei
fa
Suits for little men are as
tailored and mannish as Dads!
Linen suits, seersucker suits,
whipcord bicycle pants—cloth-
es that little hoys are proud
to wear!
Little Tots’ Dresses, 1 to years
79c r 2.50
Wash Frocks, sizes :j to ti years—
*1.00.: *2.95
Wash Frocks, sizes 7 to 14 years—
*1.002.95
Silk Crepe Dresses, guaranteed
washable and fast color, H to It)
years—
Linen Suits, coats and pants, sizes
2 10 8- *2>98
Wash Suits, 1 tn N years—
89c r 1.981
*1.00
Dicycle 1'a ills—
Jackie Jum|HM‘s-
1.00
fFttgyrlgki by FI Art Mar* ga,egef
* . -
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Vandivier, Davis O. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 43, No. 18, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 25, 1934, newspaper, March 25, 1934; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc918440/m1/4/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.