The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 1, 1931 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: El Reno Daily Tribune and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
i
FOUR
THE EL RENO (OKLA.) DAILY TRIBUNE
The El Reno Daily Tribune
I'll. HBXO IMII\TI\(i A 1M HMSII-
l\«i COWlMXt
Hn\In O. > iiiiiII\ icr, I'renlilent
IxsiiPd every evening except Sat-
»nd Hun day morning from
J1- Kock Island avenue, and t il-
lered as second-class mail matter
under the Act of March :t, isitt.
DAVIS O. VANDIVIKK
., JOdltor and Publisher
prison-----Advertising Manaffei
Paul Wade........ _ X, ws Kditor
n\ll.\ SI IIM'IIIPTION HATES
II.V I nrrler
Ono year-------------- $5.00
Six Months -------- $2.60
Three Months $1.:;.#
Ily 'tall In liinad In it mid Adjoining
< OllllficN
Dne Year------ $4.00
Six Months________ . _____|2.f»0
Three Months $?.-*»
M> Alnil Outside Aliove t'oimtleM
11 tie A' • •: 1 r $»; on
Wx Mom hi
Tliree Months. $2.00
Bible Thought
FRUIT OF THE SPIRIT: —
I.ovp, Joy, peace, long suffering,
geiiileness, goodness, faith, meek-
Jiess, temperance,• against, such
there is rfo law. Oat. .1:22-23.
tallty figures today. The greatest
damage, it appears, is done among
people in the period known as the
prime of life.
Some of the leading heart spe-
cialists blame the growth of heart
disease and the concurrent mal-
ady, hardening of the arteries, to j
the hurry and worry and hustle j
and high pressure of modern life, |
particularly in the big cities.
Some of the more eminent are
inclined to place much *of the
Maine on the increased emotional
pace of our civilization.
"It is an unhappy condition of
the mind caused by 1111 fulfillment
of desires, conflicts, thwarted am-
bitions and man’s effort to escape
from his environment and per-1
soiml limitations Ilia! prepare the!
way for heart disease," says one. I
“Ten, coffee, tobacco and alcohol
may make the heart more sen-
sitive to emotional struggles," lie
continues.
He urges out of door games
played with congenial partners as
one important aid in treating or
uverting heart strains caused by
emotional stresses.
UNIVERSITIES IN I
II
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1931.
Aggie President Says Col-
leges Have no Apology
to Make
WHAT’S WHAT IN WASHINGTON
State Department Finds
Japanese Government Is
Queer One to Deal With
LIBRARY NOTES
IN Chile 51.’! funiilie own tin per
* cent of the tillable land.
COLUMBUS’ MAPS
T
T
IT Is interesting to learn thut.
1 the map which Christopher
HIS again shows that the1 Columbus used on Ids third voy-
t'nlted States is Hi ■ country I nRe A,1,ori( :‘ ,mH < nmn to Ught
“of the people." And it is Inter-: 1,1 11 Tm'klsh nmseum, and will
esling to know lhat the number! s,lortly ho *,ven 10 "»« world,
ef nillllonaries in ihe country i Tl,ere iM " "orl<1 of romanco in
has been cut nearly half shire1 mal|s' ''•“Po laliy lo vury old ones;
19'20. I a,ld tho map which carries great
* * * j blank spaces along its borders, in-
ni.AN now to attend ill Charity I ,I|, :|||"K ,hl" •ho cartographer did
* football game which will hi- "ol know what lay the
staged Friday at Legion field be-
tween El Reno jnd Kingfisher.
The El Iteiio and Kingfisher posts
of the American Legion are spon-
soring the contest. Proceeds will
he divided and used for M al re-
lief work.
call fort h endless
horizon, can
d roii ms.
Thai, of course, was tho kind of
map Columbus used. On ills firs!
C1 L RENO has one of
*-J and coming’’ Legion
the "up
posts
of the state. It’s growth
has been steady and It fills an
important place In the commun-
ity.
STATE Itoth TAXES
AVfllO pays for the highway ?
” It is «' the rail-
roads pay a huge share. And
then the highways are us d by
the bus and truck lines to tuke
business from the railroads.
A tabulation of l!. 8. Depart-
ment of Commerce figures fori
14 suites in which the Hick Is-!
land Lines operate shows that !
only 39.8 per cent of the money j
used for rural roads comes from
auto license and gas tax sources.
This is an uverage for the years
1926, 1927, 1928 and 1929. The
balance of fit).2 per ceiit is paid
by general taxes
NEED RADICAL CHANGE
voyage maps were of little use to ' lean culture.
Stillwater, Ok!a„ Dec. 1 (Spe-
cial) Although ihe American
university "haH drawn from for-
eign universities those ideals of
scholarship, technique and man-
ners which are indispensable to
society, yet it has remained re-
sponsive to (lie democratic so-
ciety which supports it," Dr. Hen-
ry C. Bennett, president of Okla-
homa A. and .VI. College, said hero
in an address to the 160 mem-
bers of Ihe Oklahoma Academy
of Science, who concluded their
twentieth annual meeting hero!
Saturday.
‘‘The American university has!
no apology to make," Doctor Ben-
nett asserted, “it serves the I
full range of human needs with-
in our society, yet it remains alive
to the dangers arising out of
that very service- The Amer-
ican university comprehends the
whole field of human knowledge.
It Is as it should be -peculiarly
American-eonserving, Interpreting,
enriching and expanding Amcr-
By CHARLES P. STEWART
Central l‘rrn.i Staff Writer
WASHINGTON, I). C.—
Who said so can’t be told (for one
of diplomacy's fi\pt rules is so-
crecy, whether there is any sense
in it or not), but Japan has a
mighty queer government to deal
with. This Infer-
H
U ‘ i
Premier
XVakatsukl
Dim. He expected lo fetch up
aguliist Die Asiatic coastline some-
where, and he probably had such
charts of Chinn, Malaya and India
as 15th century Spain could pro-
vide. Hut all the way t lilt her was
its mysterious and unknown as the
other side of the moon. What
good is a map to a man who
charts a course due west into a
shoreless sea?
"It Is not true tliut the United
Slat a lias no distinctive culture.
It Is as definite and unique as
any culture which lias ever risen
on the luce of the earth.
"American culture is creative,
lynanjlc, objective and pragmatic.
It Is as yet unpoisoned by the
virus of defeatism which festers
in tho culture of effete clviiizu-
(lion. Beauty, to Ararelcan peo-
ny the time he made his third t Pie, as well as knowledge, exists
flENRY FORI) always was dlf-
** ferpnt . When he told the
United Press the other day that
he expects to see prosperity come
back in a bigger style than ever
before, he hastened to point out
that lie was not in the least
anxious to see a revival of condi-
tions that existed prior to the
1929 crash.
"I hope," he said emphatically,
“lhat we don’t recover the old
system." And then he went on
lo emphasize a point that is well
worth a little thought:
"Think of a system thut sud-
denly becomes hupp> and hopeful
when the wheat crop is reported
to have failed. The wheat out-
look Is worse. Therefore the fi-
nanclal outlook is better. Does j
I rip, of course, lie probably bail a
more or less , makeshift set of
charts. He knew, at least, that
sooner or later he would make a
more or less fn miliar landfall.
Somewhere ahead there were Is-
lands and channels lie hud seen
before.
But all the rest was darkness.
To Hie north and south stretched
almost infinite readies of empty
ocean .which might conceal any-
thing from tho lost Atlantic to
the Happy Isles that Ulysses sail
ed for. What, one wonders, did
Ihe old navigator think, what sort
of speculation took hold of hint,
as he sal in his dim-lit, creaking
t cabin, a chair braced against the
i bulkhead for security, and studied
Ills Incomplete map?
to be used, and we find both la I absolute.
million is an-
thcnlic; I had It
directly from a
stato department
ofliclal, who has
been up to his
neck for 'weeks
i n negotiations
with Tokio eon-
e e r n i n sr the
island empire's
Manchurian ac-
tivities.
lie continued
thus:
Oil paiier Em-
peror llimlilto Is
a strictly con-
stitutional ruler.
Resides a diet, for lawmaking pur-
poses, lie has a cabinet (mnro like
England's than this country's) with
a premier, whoso Job nominally is
about on a par with I'rendcr Itanisny
MacDonald's in London.
England also has a king, Just ns
Japan lias an empdvor, hut luRween
England’s king and Japan's emperor
there is a difference, which Is ail the
morn confusing to Mridcntnl diplo-
mats, In surli negotiations ns the j-r-
eent ones over M.inrhtuin, lieeauso It
does not show on the surface.
• * «
KINO G HORDE figures very
prominently In llio English govern-
mental picture, but all persons who
nro at all "familiar with Its details
are perfectly aware that ho pos-
sesses no authority whatever; actual
executive authority is vested ^n the
premier, approximately as It Is vested
In tho president here in tho United
States.
In Julian the emperor Is, In fact.
Insist that their monarchy Is pre-
clsely what it amuses them to make
believe that it Is. They recognize lhat
absolute monarchies nro out of date
and do not propose to ronrede that
theirs lingers in tho world, a belated
survival.
• • •
INDEED, there are a few Japanese
who play at constitutionality with an
CLASSEN DEC. 12
Comets Would Substitute
for Lawton
tween Lawton and Yuko^i called
off, arrangements are underway
to fix a
enthusiasm that suggests downright j*e,s and the Classen Comets,
acceptance of it as a fully established | The proposed contest would be
i a charity event probably played
A story for younger children,
“Joan and Pierre” by May Mul-
| vany Dauteur is selected for re-
i view below with “The Iron
rlorse” which is written by Adeie
Gutman Nathan ami Margaret S.
Ernst.
Pictures in “Joan and Pierre”
are also by May Mulvany Dauteur.
Joan was a little American girl,
j Site spent a -summer in france
With the post-season game be-' wlth hPr cousin' PI*Te. In Paris
they rode on the Caterpillar In
"The fiois,” saw the Punch and
Judy show, had a birthday party
gam1 between the Mil- w'‘Gi a boat ride, and visited the
' Eiffel Tower.
i “But they had the best time
Brittany when they went
institution.
out ^premier,1' for' example! 'has*" tic" | al Oklahoma City under the au-! [fsl'Ins wil1'. Yvon- 11 was « (ip‘
haved during tho Manchurian crisis I spi<'es of the American Legion, | i' ,tfu vlslt aI1 ai'°un(f. May
in a fashion which almost has con- | according to the tentative ar. I Mulvany Dauteur is a French
virned foreign diplomats thut ho con- j rangem. nts released Tuesday, The artlst wll° can picture her eoun-
sidcnd himself a genuine premier— J date for the game will likelv be try Kay,y al1<i vividly for Amer-
oi', at any rate, that lie was trying Dec. 12. ; Lean children. '
Had ftie Manchurian'issiio not been I A <ll‘al is also underway to ar- j an j '^ticUu'rls 'what evls 'l' "T**
of a nature to align (lie strongest I range a game between the Comets I .. . ', ' U P y ,)oy. ha:!
rival Influence in Nippon against him, | •ll(1 Lawton. Classen suffered
it Is even thought- tlint tho baton
might have hern successful in put-
ting ids office upon a permanently
tinner basis.
• • •
HOWEVER. It happens (so, at
least, the state department feels cer-
tain) that Japanese acquisition of
Manchuria was an enterprise to
which tho dominant military ele-
ment among the islanders was com-
mitted.
The other- hook
id pictures what
always wanted to know about
, its lone r,verse of the season at lofaniotlves—!how they are built
I the hands of Lawton, while nei-!a"‘ h°'V th,ey are run- 11 be3lna
with travel In America in the
Corner Door
our bridges, our automobiles, our
textiles, aud our advertising.
"In the service of this culture,
the American university lias evo-
lved."
Doctor Bennett’s.address, enti-
tled "The American University
and tlie American Culture," was
an answer to the book, "Univer-
sities. American, English, and
German," by Dr. Abraham Flex-
cer, which, Doctor Bennett said,
"released a swarm of gadflies
which college presidents In the
last year have been attempting to
smite."
"Through its growth, the Amer-
ican university has been domlnat-
Tho constitution, the cabinet, the
premier, the diet, the whole outfit
exist simply upou Hlrohllo’s suffer-
ance.
The Japanese system would be
easy enough for occidental negotia-
tors to adapt their policies to If the
Japanese themselves wop Id admit It
as a reality.
I Jut they refuse to do so. |,
From tho emperor on down, they
liter Yukon nor Lawton have a' . , ,
defeat chalked against them ! days of the povered wagon and
___ __| stage-coach, describes the build-
ing of the first railway, the Quin-
cy Granite in 1826; and carries
the story of the development of
American locomotives and train
Mrs. R. L. Brisman and son, j syst‘?ms ul> t0 the Prp»«nt.
Now. it*Is among the anomalies of j J""'1 t0 Edmond last 1 "There are P|ctllrM
Japan’s fictional constitution that tho......
chief-of-statt of the islanders' army
and the commanding admiral of their
naval forces are independent ef the
Jurisdiction of tho cabinet ministries
ttf war and tho navy respectively;
that they look Instead to Die em-
peror In person-for their orders. lame auu ..any, oi uatanoma i of today, which pull such trains
- t v, Mr. ami Mrs. Roy Richards | ag (he Twentieth Century, the
and ( barley Uarmicheul and fam- rapUol Limited, the Empire
ily, of El Reno, were guests of Builder, the Chief.
Mrs. F. M. Rukes and family | "Mrs. Nathan collected fhe ma-
hanksgivlng Day. | terial for 'The Iron Horse’ when
I Maretta Rukes, Gladys Brisman she was directing the Baltimore
| and Ado Fox were home for an(j Ohio Anniversary pageant in
| Thanksgiving vacation. 1927, and is an authority on rail-
Jesse Meade and family were roads and engines- Among: her
Sunday ,. dinner guests of Otto acknowledgements are listed many
Re mers and ramily. | 0f the most important men dlrect-
Mrs. Hattie Fox and sons, Arlo ,ng ,he railroads of today. Mrs.
and ( onard visited with the Bris-| i-;rnst. who is the librarian of the
man family Friday evening. city and County School In New
Tho war and navy ministers are
supposed, to lie sure, lo shape their
plans In harmony with the rest of
llie cabinet's, but whether or not they
will be carried out depends on what
Instructions their technical subordi-
nates have had or may get from an
entirely different source.
Wednesday | mous ear'y locomotives, inclnd-
Emerson Meade and family *he J™ STn’u ^ ^
were Sunday dinner guests of!F ’ . 16 1 pVV itl ( ,lnton. ar-
Joe McC’rav and family ranged chronologically, and show-
„. r , ling the new device.* to increase
uriey Rukes and family, of i speed, strength and safety which
Mountuin \ lew, Mr- and Mrs. |jiave resulted In the great engines
Bone and baby, of Oklahoma
TO SUMMARIZE:
Japan's constitutional government
(the only government it has for dip-
lomatic purposes) Is constantly sub-
ject to the whims of h i intangible
but all-potent super-government, on
tDo ono hand; on the oilier hand it
is subject to termination on short
notice by assassination at the hands
of an overwhelmingly superior and
wholly Irresponsible power for which
it theoretically is answerable.
It is difficult to negotiate satisfac-
torily with such a government, ac-
cording to tho state department offi-
cial w hoso numo I mustn’t mention.
ed by Ihe national ideal of util-
( ily." the A. and M. president said.
We shall never know, of coitrae. j 'Mere culture has been broaden-
)•> . i’fl ■•(»» . .. 1.1 * I a . . .. .1 it. . .
therefore am inclined to minimize
tlie importance of manners when
I observe their superficial nature
In many who applaud them. Nev-
Kverett and Lyretta Rukes visit- York, wrote the text, with Mrs.
ed with Ed Nuenschwamler and Nathan ”
wife Tuesday evening week ago. j _
Mrs. R. L. Brisman and daugh-,
ters, Gladys and Mrs. Joy Van!
Buskirk called at the home of(
Hershel King Saturday to see
Biil King who has been sick. He1
Other Events of Interest
in Community
By Tribune Correspondent
Union City. Dec. 1.—The Lullies'
Aid society of tlie M. E. church
will meet Thursday afternoon
witli Kate Hoovers at which time
they will elect officers which
has been post phoned at other
meetings. Every member is urged
to he ..here.
Family Reunion
In celebrating Thanksgiving and
a family reunion Mr. and Mrs.
W M. Mathews enteretained with
a turkey dinner last Thursday at
1 o’clock p. m. This being the
first time the family spent
Thanksgiving together for thirty-
five years. Those to enjoy the
courtesy were Mr. J. M. Swindler
of Hamilton, Mo., Mr. Willie
Mathews of El Iteno, Harvo of
Union and Miss Mary Seay.
UNION BRIEFS
Mr. and Mrs. W. Welbtirn and
Jno. Morrison of Oklahoma City
spent Thanksgiving with homo
folks.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gatz had
ns their guests Thanksgiving day,
Mrs. Rose Kridek and daughters,
and Rev. Vander Crimea. A
Miss Josephine Hentzen ;UtW
cousin s|ient the week-end visit-
ing the former/- parents.
Rev. J. L. Hefley, A.B.. M.S., of
Norman will give a lecture at the
M. E. church each night tills week.
The general subject of Ills dis-
course will he Life and Religion.
The public is invited to attend
these meetings.
Mr. Leonard Haas and Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Haas left Sunday
morning after spending Thanks-
giving and week-end here visiting
relatives and friends.
Albert Hattermun and George
Shoemaker left Saturday for Ho-
bart to attend the funeral of
their cousin, Mrs. Kl Vongler.
HOW CAN I?
By ANNE ASHLEY
j to dissolve one teaspoonful flour
of sulphur in hot milk ami sip
slowly.
Q. How can I change ordinary
Is slowly improving- Q. How ran I remove mildew bread pudding?
Marvin Rukes called on Harry from white clothes? A. When making bread pud-
Van Buskirk Sunday. j A. Put a teaspoonful rf ehlor- ding, sprinkle each buttered slice
Mrs. R. I,. Brisman and son, ide of lime into a gallon of water of bread with desiccated cocoanut
Roy, called at the Ellison and E. Dissolve thoroughly. Put garment instead of currants, and strew
Sea-faring men are seldom com-jed lo practicality and technology.
mnulcatlve, and Columbus was no| Now th university curriculum j obligatory, it would he better to
become an aggregation of Institu-
tions for the conservation, organ-
ization, Interpaetatlon and dis-
covery or knowledge, as well ns
fot the training of specialists. irtheless, 1 am willing to grant Meade homes Sunday afternoon in and stir until the mildew dis- some ou the top.
"Educational values, however, jtliat virtue in mod ration in Johnle Griffin called on Roy ] appears. Rinse thoroughly. As -
have not been debased. Tlie tji-.bolb !,IK,al|{'1 L and that extremes Hrlsman Wednesday morning i chloride of lime bleaches, do not Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Harper, who
tinfate test of tlie right of knowl-jare ,ab’,"f ,0 “voided. I re- week ago. I use it on colors. have been visiting for the pant
Christine Mead? will soon be
a Die to attend school again.
edge to survive is utility. Util-
ity determines what knowledge
skull flourish. If choice were
exception. But since tliat Is
closed hook, the next lest tiling
Is u glimpse at tlie map lie used;
and ihe man who could not pore
over It by the hour, lost in
dreams, lias no appreciation of
romance.
One trouble with our world tie
day, you see, Is thut our maps
are loo complete. Around tlie
poles are dwindling white spaces,
and Asia and South America still
Imve small areas that are un-
known, Bat for tlie most part
every headland has been charted,
cent.
u j contains about everything from raise the standard of living of
archaeology to Eiirythmlc dune-tall by 1 per cent rather than that
in®- of a limited number 100 per
"Tlie present movement for
adult education promises further
changes as revolutionary as those
Initiated by the engineering in-
sHlutes and the land grant <’ol- j unaj.ating'Valence
leges. Correspondence ami
every mountain range has been
anyone want thut kind of a system ! JDD-ri .in, every river bed lias been
to recover? It Isn't common
gard with regret the increase in
the number of university profes-
sors who do not fsel that they
are under obligation to the stu-
dent to set him an admirable ex-
III MINIMUM.!
Items Reproduced from
The Daily Democrat
of 15 Yrears Ajro
sense.
Henry Ford never was infallible.
But in this comment lie has put
his finger on the strangest feature
of tlie entime American depres-
sion flip fact tliat tin- nation Is
hi trouble lieeauso it has too
much of everything Instead of not
enough.
lias tlie absurdity of the situa-
tlun ever been sufficiently ex-
posed? The United Slates has
ever so much more than its share
of money. Its farms are piling
up enormous surpluses of wheat,
cotton, (ore anil other staples. Its
factories cap make more goods
necessities, luxuries and In-be-
tweens—than ever before In till
history, amt can make them more
cheaply. Ii has a supei ulmmlunce
of sudi things ns coni, oil, iron
anil so on. Its railroads are In
sliupe lo take cure of twice the
amount of traffic they are now
hauling.
Anil yet — in spile or these,
tilings , |mt heeause of them ' " ' *
business pus been In ihe dumps* When a man's down tils enem
lor two yours urn! some 6,(inn,(ion‘
workers have lost tlii’lr Jobs.
As Mr. Ford says, "H isn't com-
mon sense" The old system, after
expanding human productivity In
« wny tliut would have niude old-
lime economists think tlie millen-
nium Dud com*, made It inevit-
able that productivity would bring
disaster Instead of happiness. Is
It any wonder that men like Mr.
Ford tire convinced tlmt the sys-
tem needs a radical change?
traced.
What wouldn't we give
for a map that was half-empty!
ex-
tension study have expanded with
unbelievable rapidity Graduate
schoo's are crowded. Summer
schools are filled Professional
uiPti are under an urge to keep
puce with rising requirements
of their professions.
acter. But I am confident that
us the university catches up with
the sudden demand for teachers,
which It experienced, tlie moral-
ities will lake care of themsel-
ves."'
An appeal was made that
"knowledge for its own sake must
>mH . , not be entirely abandoned for the
Ztl Sinn ,aM am ** "Uerlon of usefulness." and that
specialization and erudition. ••appreciation of fine arts should
Concerning the second, he said,! be cultivated."-
It Is my personal conviction tliat1
hell is well populated with gon-
I elle Kelly and Beulah Quigley!
ample of morality and high char-j spent tlie Thanksgiving holidays!
Q. What is a remedy for a three weeks with relatives and
sore throat? friends at points In (Kansas, re-
- j A. Gargle with a warm solution j turned Monday to their home, 212
Misses Ima Pennebaker. Mary-] 0f salt water. Another remedy is! East Wade street.
Doctor B.nnett discussed three
conflicts In education, which he
said "must lie watched over with
One Is be-
tween Immediacy and the ah.so-
luto, another between manners
. , , , tlemen, but has a scarcity of
Ike American university has those who are truly moral. I
BIG SISTER
Mrs. (’. M. Bowlin, Sail Her-
naiHnn, Calif., arrived here for n
visit with relatives at Calumet.
with relatives at Geary.
Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Shacklett |
and daughters, Misses Marie, i
Thelma, Georgia and Louise, al- [
tended Ihe funeral of Mrs. Shack-
lett's brother, Edward McComas,{
in Yukon Monday afternoon.
Mrs. J. A. Puckett and daugh-:
ter, Miss Anna Lou, have re-
turned to tlidir home in Oklaho-
ma City following a few days'
visit with their daughter and sis-1
ter. Mrs. Sam Tlmberlake, 1203
Seat It Macomb avenue.
Best
Genuine
McAlester
McAlester District
Matfic City
Every load comes fork-
ed clean to you.
N. B. WALDO FEED & MILLING CO.
Phone 10
Success Is Not an Accident
By LES FORGRAVE
Dec. t, | lit (I
Marriage license was Issued to
William G. Oppeiilandcr and Sel-
ma F. Meisner,
Mr, and Mrs. Lee Rohde at- I
lentil'll the O. C.-Aggie football i
game in Oklahoma City yesterday i
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Rosson en-
tertained yesterday with a fam-
ily dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. R. (\ Rieo. had
as their dinner guests yesterday,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Finch and
daughter, Miss laiulse,
I les stop kicking
friends begin.
MORE HEART TROUBLES
THE Immaalng part which heart
1 disease is playing In lucupac-
•t«Hng and shortening the lives
of people in the United states
has become a matter of major
concern ami consideration among
Ihe medical profession recently.
Statistics gathered by Insurance
uml medical organizations show a
decided increase in the number
uml percentage of deaths from
tills malady and also that It is
the creates! single factor in mor-
him and his
Modern Etiquette
By ROBERTA LEE
'S *15 TRUE WHAT
1 HEAR BOuT YOU, 0£Th?
Did YOO,HOtOE3T, PASS
YOu>R ZAMS AKt SET
PUT UP (KtTO TW'
CLA5S AWE.AO ? ^
YES,
BuDOy,
OP COURSE,
IT'S true/
WSffi 1 -L
m
vJyj-J- A
I
FL_
/2-/
f«pvil|Ht. 1 DA 1. I»y Ontf.ll |*ri"w A-xoriAlion, In. I
WELL GEE whiz!
YOO'RE KEEPttO
AWFUL ■STILL
‘BOOT IT?
AREN'T yoo
SLAO OR-rt
AUYTHltOG e
0
WHy, OF COURSE
1 m glad! I'm
really TICKLED
Pink ove.a cr!
but The.to, you
SEE .1 MEANT TO
pass! why do
You THINK t
STUDIED SO HARD0
WHY Do YOU THINK I KEPT UP my
studies since long ti me ago vohek)
I HAD TO QUIT school'5 jes' so's i
could do thus verv thing whenth’
Time, came! ano it all jes'goes
to PGiovE that vp you want a
THINS YOU'VE
SOT TQ <30
AFTER IT.'
1! lllJllllUli l!UlltllllllllllRlUUBUlll! UlUi aiU
AND IF YOO SOAFTER (T
HARD ENOUGH YOU'RE.
eOUtUD TO GET tT. MO'.D
.RON ALONG - I'VE
WELL JES’\ GOT TO WRlTCL
TH' SAME, V, A LETTER
r'M PROUD llhrn TO OAD-
OF YOU,
BETH' >1
r-temaa^
FTTA KKTT
-
Q Who receives ihe guests with
the hostess al a reception?
A. Always tlie guest in wlioite
honor the reception is held.
Q. What is the correct dress for
women at supper parties:
A Kvening dress for efter-thea-
ler parties; for Isle, Informal sap-
pers, restaurant or dinner frocks.
Q How should luggage he
marked when traveling?
A. Inllltils are preferred, hut
I lie full name is sometimes uscui
on lisnd luggage,
#
K. M. Dellinger, of Oklahoma
City, is iransaetlug business here.
Tlie condition of H. T. Farris,
1219 least Walts street, who him
keen seriously ill for the past
month, is reported us uiirhsnged,
.
VtELL I VOTED PoR ETTA lM OUR
SCHOOL'S POPULARiTN OOnTfST-
THt NEW QUE6H OP THE CAMpltS-
Tjiilli be I r —-koNii
ip
i
m
J (
Sweet Bribery!
lUULJJi
ML THE OTHER GIRLS
Are vaioRcing tvieir
heads OPP To Gtr-
VOTES—got ETTA
KEEPS GAJNINO-
I OOnT- tCNOH
HON SHE DOES IT.
<U>
By PAUL ROBINSON
i
IW
ltd t» n r*»
, INI. r«nt*wl t*f«M Am m
ETTA NEEDS
YOUR
Support
ID WIN THIS
POPULARITY
CONTEST
vert roe. her,!!/
GET YOUR PftlENDS
TQ VOTE TOO s
t*or c/f t/vs
ba/tot and mail
io ctta Kerr m
can c/'t/nf
mcospapyri r
I'M VOTING
FOR ETTA//
name.........
••M... ............
address...
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Vandivier, Davis O. The El Reno Daily Tribune (El Reno, Okla.), Vol. 40, No. 260, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 1, 1931, newspaper, December 1, 1931; El Reno, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc918855/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.