The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 158, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 7, 1937 Page: 1 of 6
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You Can Buy It For
Less In El Reno
The El Reno Daily Tribune
1 ngle Copy, Three Cents
i---V
(/P) MEANS ASSOCIATED PRESS
A Blue Ribbon Daily Newspaper Serving Oklahoma’s Blue Ribbon Area
EL RENO, OKLAHOMA, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1937
%
V7IETY GIRL RUNS AIRPORT
i ihn L. Lewis Cheered As
Potential President
Of United States
[WASHINGTON, Sept 7 (UP)—
lie two great arms of the Amert-
|n labor movement reach'd out
renewed organising efforts today
[ th animosities intensified by
e bitter assertions of their
' iders on the golden anniversary
I^abor day.
| William Green, president of the
nerican Federation of Labor,
edged his trade unionists to
[ tve no part in any labor thtrd-
rty movement. John L Lewis,
j -ider of the Committee for In-
| si rial Organization, was cheered
250,000 as a potential prest-
nt of the United States
| Both spoke yesterday over na
iiia) radio networks, Lewis at
ttsburgh and Green at Dallas,
| x.
I The government's spokesmen
nslstently Ignored labor's inter-
| il strife
Employer* Blamed
Chairman J Warren Madden of
[ c national labor relations board
J ativ'd industrial disoutes of the
[ at vear on employers.
Secretary Francis Perkins regret-
| d the piight of middle-aged and
>ed whom industry will not hire.
[ he condition in industry is «en-
nlly better she said. 2.000.000
ore persons being at work than
year ago.
President Roosevelts labor day
atement was a message to the
atlonal Federation of Govern-
, ent Emploves convention at
! irfngfleld. 111. He said "militant
etlcs" would be "unthinkable"
>r organised federal workers.
“Sit-Down" Strike* Condemned
Green attacked as "deplorable"
| le record of the C. I. O in keep- j
| ig contracts, condemned its slt-
■>wn strikes as leading to "Fas-
st dictatorship.” charged that
liore than 250 of its organizers
I rp Communists and called the
m SEIZED
IN KM SECTOR
Heavy Artillery Roars In
Advance of Japanese
Attacks
SHANOHAI. Sept. 8. 'Wednes-
day)—(/Pi—Tlie Japanese army to-
day seized the huge American
| Seventh Day Adventist mission
| property in tire Yantzepoo district
north of Shanghai for military
| purposes.
1 Roaring flames across ail north-
western Shanghai earlier today hid
the path of a third Japanese ef-
fort to batter down the Chinese
resistance that has brought their
Shanghai offensive to a stand-
Rosa Laird, a Wilmington, Del., society girl and the only licensed still,
woman airport operator in the east, is everything at a Wilmington Naval and heavy artillery guns
all port—from grease monkey to radio dispatcher Here she is in over- i roared in Yangtzepoo-Chapcl-
Did You Hear
Y17HEN Alfred Plaut came over
” from Germany eight and
one-half years ago, he bought
some pills to take so he would
not get seasick. He still has the
pills—having been so terribly
sick he didn't have a chance to
swallow them. He remembers
that he even hoped the boat
would sink to end his misery
-o-
George Satrapa. son of Mr
and Mrs. Frank Satrapa of
Yukon, has enroled in the
Marion Army and Navy college
at Marion, Ala. where he will
study during the 1937-38 term
in preparation for entering the
United States Military academy
at West Point, N Y.
-o-
Eddie Curtis, El Reno cowboy,
was deadlocked today with Cliff
Halm of Dallas for first place
In broncho busting as the Will
Rogers Memorial rodeo contin-
ued at Colorado Springs, Colo.
ALIVE 10 PROVE
STORYJS FALSE
Former Neighbor Relates
Account of ‘Slaying’
During Night
PHILADELPHIA. Sept. 7—(/Pi-
After a man had told police that
! he caused their death. Helen Wheb-
lcy, 6. and her brother. Frank, Jr.,
3. missing more than 24 hours, were
( found alive today near their home
! by their uncle, William Dillon.
The children at first appeared
i unharmed, but Dr. John T. Turner.
| police surgeon, examined them and
| said they had been attacked.
They told police that they had
No Deaths, Few Injuries
Reported Monday
In Oklahoma
alls, greasing a plane.
DUTIES ENLARGED CROP CONTROL IS
N REHABILITATION ESSENTIAL PHASE
Kiangwan and North Station dis-
tricts. laying down blankets of shell
fire in advance of tremendous at-
tacks on the Chinese front line*.
; Fires spread across the whole
area. The Commerlcal Press build-
| ing. rebuilt after the 1932 8ino-
Japanese hostilities, was reduced to
] ashes again after it was struck
I by three Japanese bombs.
Americans Resentful
‘Graduation’ Of
Families Ordered
Farm Farm Program To Meet fo^ig^'^eMdenu^'^rawh^
All Needs Considered
steadily closer from the fighting,
■ ringing the international settle-
--- . --I ment, the American chamber of
County representatives of the! . planning a farm program to fit1 commerce of Shanghai protested
the future, it was Announced by^ all farmers, admitted 31 « |n cmna at thelr own rlak.
Loren L. Ware. Canadian county producers from all over Oklahoma The note addressed to Secretary
farm supervisor, upon his return wn0 met in Stillwater this sum- 0f state Cordell Hull expressed
from a week's conference at Still- mer to recommendations to "resentment" of American mis-
water. . - Wavhinuton officials of the AAA sionaries and business men and
"We -were informed by national ‘ urged greater protection of them
headquarters that Washington and [for the 1938 agricultural conserva- and Uie,r lnterest
Dallas offices will shift more and tfcm program, according to a report The An,ertcan consulate general
more work to the local offices, the j sublnitted to James R. Childers, urged immediate evacuation of all
supervisor said. "Recent drastic re
ductions in personnel at national county ag
and regional headquarters is ex-
pected to be only the beginning
800 000 unionists claimed bv the But no reductions are expected l*> j the meeting.
by J. W. Rhody-
back. Jr., of Banner, who was Ca-
nadian county's representative at
I O. .neatly "paper member-
dp."
In the heart of America's
■ Ruhr." Lewis lashed at two of
Lie steel companies which his
eel workers orgamzii.u committee
[ t rue '< unsuccessfully lost slim-
ier -Republic and Bethlehem
nd he Included all "lndus'rtal
Plutocrats who oppose labor "
In San Francisco, where the
Jurisdictional battle wages fiercest
In the maritime unions, there was
[<rlef armistice CIO and A F.
Af L. paraded together, but '.he
federation's teamsters shunned the
J-narch because industrial unlon-
, sts rir in the column
Mast of the farmers selected to
the county offices
“r *■"'“Sllmaie the recommendations agreed
mittee ^ &me leads lor county f |... nronram that is to serve the
flees. This committee recommend- “ SL.’ , nroducts
Americans from interior towns in
the Shanghai-Nanking area.
The U. -8. gunboat Sacramento
was ordered into refugee service
It will take Americans out of the
area, either to Manila or Hong
Kong.
Strong Terms Applied
E SCHOOL
TERM JS^ OPENED
Faculty Assignments Are
Listed By Ninman
public
term
Teachers to serve in the Okarche
ic school during the 1937-38
have been announced by
Leonard T. Ninman, who is be-
ginning his first year as superin-
tendent there.
Mrs Margaret Dorland Leltner is
serving as principal and instructor
of home economics and history.
She has been a member of the
Okarche faculty a number of years.
Other Okarche teachers are be-
ginning their first terms in the
public school system there.
Mrs. Marie Vohs Ludwig is
teacher of commercial subjects She
formerly taught at Okarche. out
has not been on the faculty there
during recent years.
Miss Mary Virginia Swischer. a
graduate of Central State Teachers
college at Edmond, is instructor of
mathematics and English Her home
is in Oklahoma City.
Miss Alice Ruth Slelnholtz of
Norman, a graduate of the Unlver-
GIRL ON STREET
EK-Se — E&"£v33-imarwrs . — . —»
sor. and an assistant. a home sup-, L Il„ ^^jj! ,Tnlcl*d 1,1 Ul® strongest terms the seventh and eighth grades and
ervtsor and two clerks “This unit1 8lmP|lflpd In'™™1* all Uie com- ^ warning said in effect that - - -
££T ZlT &SL3* *» ~ “ °T‘ T,2
standard loan families and carry I twf „r. i insulate told missionaries and
on a successful rehabilitation pro-1 what lw has oUlPr* ln thp Interior that the
gram with both the farmer and. ^ ^nd w at hLs bombing of Halchow was “indicative
the farm homemaker." he ^ '^ when he has I of what happened everywhere' and
"Th‘V*‘“ unu w^id enable th. ^ lhe piogntms prov.- that they might as well go there
'j-<"mm —<«-»>•
sive assistance with individual prob-, ‘ ‘ , __ _
.. other Proposal* Made
At least one-half of the farm] One plan considered was a uni-
famllies in this county now recelv-1 form system for the United States
j ing rural rehabilitation aid must that would set a payment that
be "graduated” within the next few could be earned by an individual
(years to an Independent and self- farmer by balancing his crop plan,
supporting place ln the commun-1 along specified limits. Another pro-
I itv. the local supervisor said. As posal was based on an experimental I
■ ‘ plan now ln use in an Arkansas
these "graduates" go out. their
place* are to be taken by new farm
families drawn from the bottom of
the pile, who are ln turn to be
helped up the ladder.
The local home management sup-
Many Persons, Some Arm
si. Attracted By
— tions with other farm and edu-
A group of neighborhood rest- callonal agencies.
I dents, some armed with shotguns]
also is in charge of music.
To Coach Girl Cagrrs
Miss Maxine Frances Hunter c-f
Okarche a graduate of Oklahoma
College for Women at Chtckasha.
Is teaching the fourth, fifth and
sixth grades Miss Hunter has been
designated as coach ot the girls'
basketball te'.m.
Mrs Velina Harvey Ward Is
teaching the first, second and
third grades She is a graduate of
Central State Teachers college, and
{has had a number of years' ex-
I pertence In the teaching proles- j
i slon
Mr Ninman taught ln Mustang j
| school two years, and also was
county, whereby farmers may earn1 ... , •> T q* j * teacher In McAlester htghachool
a payment by matching the land j 4-' <181*168 u. lye lO nenu two years. He was superintendent
diverted from cash crops with con-1 IlgHorv H Votorunv
serving cropp or practices, while liBIiery U veterans
other farmers may earn a payment I --
entirely by adopting soll-conserv-1 Ust Mtulg c)ub Was formed dur-
ing practices, the agent said. lng the first annual reunion of
Work now is progressing in Wash- Battery D. 90th division. 343rd field
ington in the planning of the 19381 artillery of the United States army
program, based on the recommend-1 in the El Reno American Legion
stayed with a woman who said she
needed children. They spent the
night at her house and were taken
by a man ln an automobile to the
corner where they were found.
At first the children seemed un-
concerned but when they saw their
parents, both started to cry.
When the children were report-
ed missing last night, police pick-
ed up a man who gave his name |
as Phillip Krho.
Arrested Frequently
He was questioned throughout i
the night and today Mayor S. ]
Davis Wilson announced that the
inan had told him and police of- 1
fleers that he caused their death
ln Fairmont park.
An extensive search was started
And while this was in progress the
children were found.
The 27-year-old man. who Is a |
former neighbor of the children,
had been arrested several times on
complaints that he molested wo-
men.
He gave a detailed “confession
to Mayor Wilson, claiming he "kill-
ed" the children after dark last
night as they trudged at his side
toward home, prattling about the
amusement rides and the ice cream
and candy he bought them at the
park.
Body Is Found
The man was among a score
picked up for questioning after
their mother, Edith, told police
last night thdt they had failed to
return home.
The mayor also was ln charge of
an investigation into the death of
Nancy Glenn. 5. whose body was
found last night ln a shallow pool
beneath a pile of tin cans near a
Fred Bail, 180-pound guard from
Oklahoma City, will be playing his
third and last year on Coach Tom
Stidham's University of Oklahoma
football team this season. Fred,
who performed on the gridiron for
EH Reno during part of his high-
school career, was graduated from
Capitol Hill hlghschool after mov-
ing to Oklahoma City. He is the
son of Fred Ball. 220 North Rock
Island avenue.
E
Johnson Foresees Danger
Of Smallpox Epidemic
Unless more parents arrange for
„ j their children to be vaccinated
' against smallpox, there is grave
danger of a future epidemic. Dr.
Alpha L. Johnson, county health
officer, declared today.
Only 10 of the 45 children ex
amtned at a recent pre-school
clinic in El Reno had received the
smallpox serum. Dr Johnson re-
ported. Twenty of the 45 had been
given the diphtheria serum, while
Only four had received the Schick
test for diphtheria immunity.
The Schick test, the physician
pointed out. indicates whether or
not the child is immune to diph-
theria after having received the
serum. A positive test indicates
BY UNITED PRESS
Oklahomans returned to week-
day routine Toesday after one of
safest observances of Labor day
in the history of the state—no
deaths were reported and injuries
were few.
The two-day prelude to the Mon-
day holiday, however, was marked
by seven traffic deaths and Tues-
day one of them had resulted in
a murder charge being filed.
At Cordell. Wade Medbury. 17,
of Clinton, faced murder charges in
connection with the death Sun-
day of Mrs. A. C. Noble of Des
Moines. Iowa, who was killed when
two cars crashed head-on near
Canute.
Youth In Hospital
Medbury, who officers said was
driving the car that collided with
Mrs. Noble's, was ln an Elk City
hospital. Arraignment will be de-
layed pending his recovery. Ray-
mond Plumlee. Washita county at-
torney. filed the charges. He said
he had received a complaint against
Medbury from J. W Wheeler, state
highway patrol sergeant, who al-
leged Medbury was speeding and
intoxicated.
Six other persons died in auto-
mobile mishaps Saturday and Sun-
day but the only serious accident
Labor day was at Okmulgee where
Al Campbell. 80. was injured seri-
ously when an automobile struck
him.
At least 47.8 persons died violent-
ly ln the United States during the
labor day week-end including eight
in Oklahoma.
Highway Deaths Lead
As in previous years, motor traf-
fic again was the chief cause of
accidental death. The fair weath-
er and the double holiday drew
motorists to the highways by the
tens of thousands.
A survey showed 302 auto traffic
deaths in 44 states. There were 271
during the corresponding period last
year
In Oklahoma, seven persons were
killed ln automobile mishaps. An
eighth. Delbert Harman. 34. a
machinist, was electrocuted by a
to repair a
Nancy's slayer.
E!
years.
at Carrier for a time He has suc-
seeded Vernon C. Walker as Okai •
1 che superintendent, the latter hav-
| Highway Force Is 8“u"’,y “d *maw' “
for a negro
fie Tarter 22. In the 600 block of
West Woodson street about 10 p. m.
Monday.
The young woman was returning
from a theatre to the home of her
sister, Mrs. Ed Christopher, on
West Woodson street, when the
negro, who apparently had been
following her several blocks, grab-
bed her.
She screamed, freed herself, and
run into the yard of a residence
in the 500 block of West Woodson
street Tlie negro attacker, who
had maintained a strict silence
when he seized the girl, fled down
a driveway near the home of her
sister and then returned to run
I west on Woodson street.
| The young woman freed herself
I from tlw negro Immediately after
I lie seized her Alarmed by her
I outcries, neighborhood residents
bet an switching on lights and the
wmild-be attacker began his flight
Two youths who Joined the
[ searching party reported that they
| encountered a negro who tallied
I with the description offered by
I Miss Tarter. He was described as
1 having a lighter complexion and
weighing from 17S to 180 pounds.
I His height was miniated at S
j feet. 8 Inches.
From 50 to 75 persons, some of
( thom armed, were attracted to tlie
scene, officers said Belief was
I expressed that the negro was a
transient.
I Miss Tarter Is employed In the
I home of Charles Oamble, on West
Wade street.
was announced today.
Ing taken the place of superin
tendent at Calumet O E Alatr,
former superintendent at Calumet,
now is an Instrucor in Seminole
hlghschool
that he still Is susceptible to the
hobo junile’~There"^as no indiica^ I dlseaz*. whU* a negative test »howsj™““£ ^
tion that Nancy was a victim of immunity. machine In his shop at En'd.
a degenerate, but an autopsy was "Parents should arrange for their Fifty-five drownings were report-
ordered. children to take the Schick test anc| 71 persons died ln various
Mayor Wilson ordered a 1600 each fall. ’ Dr. Johnson added. other accidents. Airplane crashes
reward posted for Information lead- [ With the exception of the spinal caused six deaths in the nation,
ing to arrest and conviction of, meningitis scare two years ago I Three persons were believed to
which resulted in rinsing of schools, have perished in a plane which fell
the county has been free from cpi- into Lake Erie near the Canadian
demies for a long period. Several' shore,
infantile paralysis cases were re-
ported during the summer, but no (
new cases have developed within
the past two weeks
At a county teachers' meeting
| ln El Reno during the week-end. i
[ Dr Johnson advl/ied tenchers to I
j observe tlie temperatures of their |
charges for slgas of fever.
"If a child's temperature is 99.61 -
Busy With Investigations F,l Bonn Man Appointed
home." the physician warned. "The ia TrunH
appearance of skin eruptions also | ljW,8c
should be cause of the pupil's dls- ; --
n^a,a*'_ I Oeorge M McLean of El Reno,
who long has been prominent in
M1EAN IS GIVEN
Deputy Sheriff Keeps
While C. A Thomas, deputy sher-
iff. was Investigating an automo-
bile-truck collision early Sunday
morning on U. 8. highway 06.
southwest of El Reno, he watched
n„' ,, / program committees and the pro-1 chf!rl<(!, b. Tye of El Reno whsi teaching manual training and Eng- scene of
r>t?inj4 V Ul 1/trt pt‘l I gram planning committees in each named plrstdent and Ernest Dok«\ t llsh classes, and will be In charge mishaps
_ state. Tlie program will be an- ^ ^ _______
OKLAHOMA CITY, Sept 1—<#>l22!2£j !!—lt,1Te lhU wlnler Mr j Plans were made to hold next)
—The state highway commission y | year's reunion at El Reno. [
cancelled a 10 percent pay cut ,or .. - . . _ .
all employes today but ordered a I ullforillMII I Mil'll
deeper reduction in force account ^dlllUrilldll mill*
construction work which Dr W E j
Orison, chairman, said would result
In dismissal of at least 400 ad- j
ditlonal men
Himself To Death
Ward of Rosston, Ark.. Mr and
___ LOS ANOELE8. Sept. 7—<JFl — j Mrs. John Marshall of Elk CKv,
to, mmmt tfSL£
ing of Orant. Mr and Mrs. S. W.
Tnppc of Yukon. Mr. and Mrs.
Leo Murphy. Mr and Mrs. J. W
Witcher of Calumet. Mr. and Mrs.
J. P Barrett of Ponca City. Mr.
and Mrs. W J. Hester of Pauls
Valley. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Hilling
of Pnmpa, Tex.
Visitors during the reunion ac-
tivities Included Mr and Mis.
Roger Ross of Chllltcothe. Ohio,
Mr. and Mrs Charles Brindley and
In addition to serving as Okarche a third machine, approaching from
superintendent. Mr Ninman is j the south, go into a ditch at the
the first collision. Both
occurred within a 30-min-
Reno. secretary and treasurer. I of the boys' athletics a* coach. [ul* period.
In the first crash at 5 a. m.
| Sunday, a car driven by Earl King.
__.___ . .___. . .__.... u, i vji uuun ■ ii .iiuiw, | 238 North Donald street, collided
and Mrs. Carl Wagner. Mr and I *”■ • •• a . x-. • with a truck driven by Walter Sul-
Mrs. Charles B Tye. Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Doke and Martin Keller of! --
El Reno. Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Committeemen to arrange exhibits
Seminole Man Is
Groups To Make
Exhibits At Fair
11.372,526 the reduction previously | * (^i^tt^YJ^^unge^to
M-T*?-W>nJL<|,Tt..uC death through the roof of a dwel-
n 1<>>' south wool section of the
ordered two weeks aga-was for,
5800.000.
Police reports quoted
.Bigg Oage, pilot of the plane, as
A. L. Commons, mem be r - sec re - saying R was a suicide,
tary. said "we'll sfeve enough on
overage on Jobs now under con-
struction to make the total savings
11.500.000”
He explained by that he meant
many of tlie Jobs would be com-
pleted at less than the original
estimated cost.
"I tried to stop him but I
couldn't," Pilot Oage reported to
the police. "He ordered IS worth of
flying, saying that ought to give
hlin a lot of flying.”
"As we were over 93rd street lie
for the Canadian county 4-H and
F F. A fair at El Reno Sept 17
and 18 were named at a meetng
of the Emerald Valley club Monday.
A Joint meeting of boys' and
girls' club units was held at the
Ehierakl Valley school under di-
rection of James R Childers, coun-
ty agent, and Miss Harvey Thomp-
son. home demonstration agent.
Club members gave reports of
the summer encampment at Camp
Little Wolf, near Clinton. Club
exhibits for the fair were checked
llns of Elk City. King's machine
was (brown Into a ditch adjoining
(he highway. King and a com-
panion. Jim Richards of El Reno, [ molybdenum mine, were riding in
both escaped injury. The truck | the back of the truck, which was
i state and national activities of tlie
Benevolent and Protective Order
Victim Of Mishap
- man of the auditing committee
LEADVILLE. Colo Sept 7—)4>i— | in addition to Mr McLean, tlie
J. Oordon Whiteside. Seminole, committee Includes two other tn-
Okla. and William Delias*. New dividual* named by the national
Castle. Colo lost their lives In the | organization.
overturning of a truck near here Prlor Ulr annuaI convention
yesterday, 0f the grand lodge which will lie
The men. employes of the Climax j held next year at Atlantic City. N
J.. Mr McLean will spend con-
utileashcd Ills safety * belt and **• ^ K6U*r.
[ stood up tn the front cockpit I
WEATHER
forecast
Mostly cloudy, probably scatter-
ed showers tonight and Wednes-
day.
F.l Keno Weather
FV>r 34-hour period ending at. 4
p til. Monday: high. 86, low, 87;
at 4 p. m . H5
State of weather, partly cloudy.
Rainfall, none
Him rlseiwtomorrow at 5 46
H Sun tetf ttsls; at 6 39
The figures Include Uie original | banked sharply and this threw him
reductions ordered two weeks ago. back In his seat. He raised again.
■ - | trying to go over the other side. I
, . c* | again banked, maneuvering him
Shortage hound >*<* »«> <»*
■ « | »a | j "Unally In a third desperate at-
lll School r UlldSltwnpt he leHped over Uie side of
_ | the fuselage.
OKLAHOMA CITY. 8ept 7-4*1'“? Carson, occupant of
Charles Morris, assistant stale ex- bungalow, heard a crash In her
Htnliifr and inspector, announced I She rushed Into the kltch-
today an apparent shortage of more; 111 81,(1 fou|,d the man dead nuild
than 540.000 in the accounts of pub- n VJ?’ PjR8tPr 8I,<* debris cifr-
llc school district No, 1 at Walters' rlp<| (lt),n t/u‘ ,n l,l,>
lutd been disclosed by an audit [roof whk!h hp 'n*dp "> lhp P|un«p
Hr said Dick Sawyer, clerk for j
more than IS years and school |{|tu. |)anulu> Walt/,
district l reasurer for the past year. . Tll, * I conducted In
had resigned from both poaltlou*. I lllSH s r H\orilt* | ,,ol|l1 l(, |,-|
Mr and Mrs. Nad V. Scott, 700 TULSA. Sept. 7—<*1 — A m\-
West, I guidon street, have returned wide poll conducted by the Tulsa
from a brief visit with Ills parents.' symphony orchestra dtscloaed re-
Mr and Mrs Clark Scott, In Pack- j cehtly that Strauss' "Blue Danube
woodi Iowa They were accompanied I Waltz" Is foremost In popularity
home by their daughters, Miss I among Tulsa music lovera.
Madeline and Miss Beatrice, and! In second place but well be-
thelr son, Rollerl, who had spent hind was Schubert's "Blossom
Knight Arraigned
At Oklahoma Citv
Archie Knight, 22-year-old Pied-
mont farmer, was arraigned before
Judge Ben Arnold In district court
at Oklahoma City today on two
charges of first degree rape. Ilia
Associated Press reported. He was
released after making bond of *5,-
OOO on each charge.
Knight pleaded Innocent to as-
saulting Geneva Comer, I8-year-old
Yukon girl, and Christine Yukl. 19,
| of Bethany.
Pillowing I preliminary hearing
Canadian county
Reno last week. Knight
was ordered held for trial here on
charges of attempting to assault
Allern Little. 17, of Oklahoma City,
and was released on 51.000 bond
driver also was unhurt.
In the second accident, a car
driven by Charles Phillips of Nor-
man missed the turn at "cemetery
corner," slid across a graveled road
and finally rested against some
guy-wires attached to a high line
on the west side of the highway.
None of the four occupants of
the machine was injured. Tlie
group, composed of Norman Legion-
nulres enroute to the Enid conven-1
tion. included W J Miller. Ray
driven by Joe Christenson of
Sallda. Colo
Mrs. Ann Burnside. 18. Lead-
vllle. suffered n possible fracture
or the skull
Schools Abandon
siderable time traveling over the
United 8tates to examine financial
records of the lodge at various
points.
Mr McLean has been serving, as
a member of the state associations'
committee of the grand lodge He Is
I h past president of the Oklahoma
State Elks association, and also has
■ , , , | served as a member of the activl-
Uutmoded Hasins tie8 committee of the grand lodge
He |i ■ past district deputy tn
Oklahoma, and was exalted ruler of
tlie El Reno Elk* five years before
being succeeded by William U
| washing their hands ill running | Fogg In 1936 '
, water even though many schools are I —
. Canadian county rural school
S?tanX‘budS mSdum^V- l^mpI1' “nd Jt>h" 0mnam H"d 'e"lldre» nppd * »°rry “bout
nlng Items, home Improvement and i --
Boys'exhibits will comprise crops. ElUployHMMlt Aid Ilot equipped with running water, i / Wiitliflpill
•SW ----------- Is Extended Here 'IT' -...... mmi Kes,aml
„ ... , .. A special technique ha* been
The Oklahoma City office of the | worked out by the health officer
Enterprise and Center Orove clulis
were held today.
Schedule of 4-H club meetings
for Uie rest of Uie week Is as
follows:
Using ‘Iron Lung’
state employment service, which I for UM. m rural o,lp puplI 1 TUE8A. Sept roo-
now Is In chgrge of work for Cana- Mtlng as nuailtor. dispenses liquid dlUon of Hprbert Nabors of Cordell.
^ ^ . a idl,n countv wh,ch form«r,y soap while another handles a buck- brought here for Infantile paralysis
Wednesday Highland at 9 a rn . handled at El Reno, will send a rep- et of water A third monitor of. | treatment In an "iron lung." was
fbuit Walnut at 10:45 a m ; Ftau 1 resentallve to El Reno once each I (ers a towel to the pupil washing i dp8cr,bed a* “very low” at St.
Walnut farm womens clu^a^^p. month it has been announced by j his hands. John's hospital today.
The pupil s hands thus are clean- 1 ,n,p 41-vear-old man was placed
ed In running water, a procedure ln 1 be mechanical breather early
which eliminates possibility of coll- j today after Oklahoma City firemen
lamination from h filled bowl had stepped In to aid In the race
--with death by administering emerg-
ency treslment wlUi s pulmotor
m.
Thursds.v- B3 Reno home demon-
stration at 9:30 a. in ; Piedmont
at 2 p. m.
FYldsy- Mayvlew home demon-
stration rluh at 2 p. m.
Oklahoma Mules Take
R H Krogstad. district manager
A representative of the stale em-
ployment service will be In the
courthouse st El Reno the second
Wednesday of each month 9 a m.
to noon First of these monthly
contracts will be made Wednesday,
Sept 8
ci..|„i;„ Residents of Canadian county de-
Sidalia ( nampionsnips giIin( l0 thrt, rP|llKlraUon
the summer there Miss Madeline
Sontt plans to attend the Oklahoma
City university this term.
Time" Friml'S "Rose Marie" was
third and the Llskt "Hutigarlan
Rhnpaodj No. 2" was fourth- .
Mr and Mrs. Jess Oyler, 300
South Foster avenue, spent the
week-end In Atoka and Durant
They were accompanied by Carl
RohIyer, who will enter the South-
eastern State Teachers college at
Durant for the 1P37-38 term
STILLWATER. Sept. 7—(*i Is
the proverbially stubborn Missouri
mule giving ground to his long-
cared brethern from Oklahoma?
Mules Irom the Thoms* N. Berry
(arm* near Stillwater won the
grand championship and i large
number of blue ribbon* at the re-
cent Missouri stale fair In Heda-
IIa.
cards nr who desire to register with
this service can contact the rep-
resentative at that time.
GOING TO SCHOOL
Buddy Fox. 1111 South Macomb
avenue, departed llteaday for Han
Antonio. Tex . where he will atudy
this year at the Texas Military
Institute.
No Questions Asked
If ('annon Returned negro sentenced
m-TOBUKO Km. 8,pt. 1_» JEEd
The city fathcni here want lheir county jail and pay court -**1- «f-
old |»ark cannon returned and are tar pleading guilty to charge* of
willing to pay a suitable reword murmpted assault before Judge
and no question* asked Emmett Thompson la Canadian
county court, records diaclneed to-
day The defendant allegedly
threatened M J. Moore on Aug
9 Date of Rogers' setilcuca wo*
ordered to bey.in Aug 10, the tlma
of hi* srrest
The old 12-taamder. 113 veara
old and of B|iatil*h make rested In
a park for 30 veara. Recently It
was stored In a scrap yard while
the park was landscaped From
there it <ii*ppe*red
I
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Dyer, Ray J. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 46, No. 158, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 7, 1937, newspaper, September 7, 1937; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc918682/m1/1/: accessed March 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.